P 11- • c ri ca t ) _ Sy; (1\ I,t .E„ /, PUBLISHED WEEKLY IN THE CITY OF READING, BERKS COUNTY, PA.-TERMS: $1,50 A YEAR IN ADVANCE. ( I. LAWRENCE GETZ, EDITOR.] OBISSRED EVERY SATURDAY MORNING comer of Pawn and Ma abed , ad the Fanners' Bank 'f Balding. THINS OF SUBSCRIPTION. $1.50 , par, payatte in advance. Old !Of ! , ix smalls, in advance, City,: Your copies for 40, i n advance. 'fee ropier , for 12, 4 - F A I popers discontinued at the expiration of the pnd fiTr. g y r pj DF ADVERTISING IN THE GAZETTE. It. It. lmo. Imo. 6mo. ly. 1..,Te, !titre's, or less, 50 50 75 7,00 3,00 5,00 %. I 0 " 501,00 1,25 3,00 6,00 3,00 1,00 2,00 ^5O 5,00 8,00 15,00 :. ~ :411 " /AO 3,00 Z 713 1,00 12,00 20,00 [Larger Advertisements in. proportion.] ~..,..„...„,,,,..- and Administrators' Notices, 6 insertions $2,00 ~.„3. 0 r„, tioticos and Legal Notices. 3 " 1,60 ~..tllstoticet, as reading matter. 10 eta. a line for one ._.rare notices 25 cents each. Deaths Will be i. 1 .Tatniteney :;; tto-taary :Crakes, Resolutions or Beneficial and p..y its Se,oelations, will be charged for, as solver • • (to above rates. - MOW' for Religion.. Charitable sad Bilis.- , ,re' ••okais, ono-half the above rates. H,l,:tiOag(reconsidered payable in Cash, • L e o o • r insertion. whorti-ers shall have the privilege (If desired) s -Wit,.; their advertisements every three weeks—but any additional renewals, or savor/Wag ex lae amount contracted for. will be charged extra Leluif the rates alcove speeified bee , iransitait adceillsell will be charged the same rates as sdrortisere for all matters not relating strictly • vEINTINO OP EVERY DESCRIPTION ie x superior manner, at the very Lowest prises. .1.-o - two& of Jos Trrs is large and fasbiunable, and poalcs for itself. BLANKS OF ALL HINDS, • PAACHMENT and PAPER DEEDS, MORTlllalle, AKTICLFA OF AGREEMENT, LEASES, and a variety of BLANKS, kept constantly for sale, or printed to DANIEL E. SCHROEDER. ATTORNEY AT LAW. f l incE WITH J_ HAGERMAN, PENN ST„ ti +We tlixtb, Reading, Pa. • [June 6-3 m _ - - C. A Leopold, TToRNET AT LAIV.—OFFICE IN COURT treet, Bret door below Sixth, Reading, Pa. y _ JESSE G. HAWLEY, ATTORNEY AT LAW, REMOVED HIS OFFICE TO NORTH n_ Slt.th Street, oppeente the Keystone House, Heading. ni 15tio"-tf JOUN RALSTON, ATTORNEY AT LAW, OFFICE WITH A. B. WANNER, NORTH Street (above the Court Hone,) Reading, Pa. Filzaary 21.1563-ly - REMOVAL. 'LLIAM H. LININGOOD, ATTORNEY AT `FLAW, bee removed his &flee to the earth aide of C first door below Sixth. [dee 22-tf Charles Davis, A IT - IaNEY AT LAW—HAS REMOVED HIS 11 [he Office lately occupied by the lion. David deceased, in Sixth street, opposite the Court [aril. 14 Daniel Ennentront, TTORNEY AT LAW—OFFICE IN NORTII t h greet, Corner of Court 01107. (au 13-1 y David Red, rifOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN I Foreign nue Domestic DRY GOODS, No. 25 East Yiat,rrt:, Reading, Pa. March 10, 1860. LEBANON VALLEY INSTITUTE, .V.VVVILLE, LEBANON COVNTY, PA. z'..1. - EGT BOARDING SCHOOL.—COURSE hntraction thorough and complete—number of p. limited. Vacations in September and October. Iti.-As per quarter ilds. For Circulars and Information, W.J. BURNSIDE, Away!Re, Pa EMI= LIYINGOOD'S United States Bounty, Back Pay and Pension Office, COURT STREET, IVRAR SIXTH. 11.1VING BEEN ENGAGED IN COLLECT -1-aIV 'claim. against the Government, I feel confident who hare heretofore employed mg will cheerfully my pr.:aptness and fidelity. My charges are L-Itioie and no charge made until obtained. WILLIAM H. LIVINGOOD, Attorney at Law, Court M., Reading, Pa. DISCHARGED SOLDIERS CAN NOW OBTAIN THEIR $lOO BOUNTY 1,111 the 11. 8. Government, by application to ABKKR K. BTAITITER. M,n't 7-tf] Collection Office, CourtBtrece, Reading. ASA M. HART, (Late Hart & Mayer,) T -, ,F.ALER IN FOREIGN AND AMERICAN DRY GOODS, CARPSTIAGS, &c., Wholesale and Re !: .: UN:le:phis prices. Sign of the Golden Bee Hive, • Ea 4 Penn Sqaare. laprlll7—tf P. Brushong & Bonn, Ii.ci.INUFACTURERS OF BURNING FLUID, _,fete, Deodorized and Druggists' Alcohol; also, •i•L-• • ;.!:which they will sell at the lowest Wholesale Reading, Pa dsr•• uJers respectfully solicited. [march 12 G. M. MILLER, M. D., Eclectic Physician and Surgeon, (ntiDUATE OF Tllll ECLECTIC, sl College Pbiladelphia, offers bie proreeelonal 1.• the citizens of Hamburg and vicinity. Painful operations, such as Setting Broken and Dislocated amputations, Cutting Cancers, Tumors, do., will rr 1 , : , orllled under the influence of Ether, at the consent patient. office at his residence in Main strest,Hamburg, Pa. I_C63-tf • DR. T. YARDLEY BROWN, SURGEON DENTIST. GRADUATE OF PENNSYLVANIA wDental College. Teeth extracted by Fran. ak li, cis' Electro Magnetic process, with Clarke's improvement. With this method teeth are ati,:e..l with much less pain than the usual 'Way. No 11,2 elarge. Wise in Fifth street, opposite the Presbyte r:. (lurch. [april 2—ly CHARLES LANCASTER, MEDICAL ELECTRICIAN, Fourth Street, above Penn, Reading. ;unary 24,16634 f SOLDIERS' - - - ZOVNTY-DIONEY. SACS-PAY AND FDDITIZON aIimAXIES PROXPTLY ATTEMISID TO BY A. H. STAUFFER, Attorney at Law, Office In Court Street, iznsi-O] BEADING, PA. F. P. HELLER, WATCHMAKER, JE WELER, AND DEALER IN WITCHES, CLOCKS, JEWELRY, izpooss, SPECTACLES, GOLD PENS, &c., Signof the " BIG WATCH," 1f0.533g Must Penn above Sixth, north side, heading, Pa_ Ur Esau article warranted to be what it is sold for weth w „ moo, Jewelry, dm, repaired With particular I, nadon, and guaranteed. Uebl-tf TRUSSES. DUPTURE CAN BE CURED BY A TRUSS 5 1. 0 F TUE RIGHT KIND, IF PROPERLY FITTED AND Liar ATTENDED TO. This has been abundantly de- L . t.trated in innumerable instances by the use of the 314 LTIPEDAL TitU of DR. RIGGS, during the last few Thls truss, being covered with Hard Rubber, is waterproof, may be used in bathing, and is al ceenly as well as indestructible by ordinary usage. , ctisfactory after a fair trial of sixty days, it may be relreal. It challenges comparison with any truss known. „br RIGGS' Offime, No. 2 BARCLAY ST., New-York la-ly rill SALE AT TILE OLD JAIL, 200 WHITE ....Lite Tea Setts of the newest style. NI 'd SALE AT THE OLD JAIL, 300 GRANITE I+;zner Setts of the newest style. 1:011 SALE AT THE OLD JAIL, 1000 SETS c , lntaeo Teaware. a` Oil SALE. AT THE OLD JAIL, THE LARG t,„te assortment of Liverpool Ware ever offered in Vitt g SALE AT THE OLD JAIL, A LARGE ArAurtmelit of Pittsburgh, Boston and French Mae& every description. Vilit SALE AT THE OLD JAIL, 60 BARRELS Mack.rat at Philadelphia prices. tarn 23 WILLLUI BROADS, Jr. BALTIMORE LOCK HOSPITAL, SSP - ESTABLISHED AS A REFUGE FROM gisecgtat. The Only Place Where a Cure Can be Obtained. DR. JOHNSTON HAS DISCOVERED THE most Certain, Speedy and only Effectual Remedy in the World for all Private Diceases, Weakness of the Rack or Limbs, Strictures, Affections of the Kidneys, and Blad der, Involuntary Discharges, Impotency, General Debility, Nervousness, Dyspepsia, Languor, Low Spirits, Confu sion, of Ideas, Palpitation of the Heart, Timidity, Tremb ling. Dimness of Sight or Giddiness, Disease of the Head, Throat. Nose or Skin, Affections of the Liver, Lunge, Stomach or Bowels—those Terrible Disorders arising from the Solitary Habits of Youth—those HECRET and stately practices more fatal to their victims than the song of Syrens to the Mariners of- Ulysses. bligpting their most brilliant hopeeor antieipatione, rendering marriage, 3m., impossible. r=i'w"r3r•-71 Rapecially, who have become.the victims of Solitary Vice, that dreadful and destructive habit which annually sweeps to an untimely grave thonsaads of liming Men of the moat exalted talents and brilliant aptellect, who might other wise have entranced lieteninaT•enate“, with the thunders of eloquence or waked to ecstasy the living lyre, may call with tall canailanca. iIfiARRIBGE. Married Persona, or Young Den contemplating mar riage, being aware of physical weakness, organic debility, deformities speedily cured. He who places himself under the care of Dr. J. may religiously confide in his honor us a gettelahlah, and con fidently rely upon his skill es a physician. ow:tamale VITWKWEISSI Immediately Cured and Fell Vigor Restored. This Distressing Affection—which readers Life and Mar riage impossible — in the penalty paid by the victims of im proper indulgences. Young persons are too apt to commit excesses from not being aware of the dreadful conse quences that may ensue. Now, who that understand the subject will pretend to deny that the power of procrea tion is lost sooner by those falling into improper habits than by the prudent ? Besides being deprived of the pleas ure of healthy offspring, the most serious and destructive symptoms to both body and mind arise. The system be comes Deranged, the .Physical and Mental Functions Weakened, Loss of Procreative Power, Nervous Irritabil ity, Dyrpepsia, Palpitation of the Heart, indigestion, Con stitutional Debility, a wasting of the Frame, Cough, Con tmmption, Decay and Death. Office, No. 7 month Frederick Street. Left hand side going from Baltimore street, a few doors from the corner. Fail not to observe name and number. . . . , Letters mast be paid and contain a stamp. The Doctor's Diploma hangs in his office. A CARE WARRANTED IN TWO DAMS. No Mercury or Nauseous Drugs. DR. SONNSTON, Member of the Royal College of Surgeope, London, Grad uate from one of the moat eminent Colleges in the United States, and the greater part of whose life has been spent in the hospitals of London, Purim, Philadelphia and eine- Where, has egeeted using of the most astonishing ewes that were ever known; many troubled with ringing in the bead and ears when asleep, great nervousness. being alarmed at sudden sounds, baehfulness, with frequent blushing, attended sometime With derangement of mind, were cured immediately. rit- 1,1 4-141 - 4 w , c.afl Dr. J. addresses all those who have injured themselves by improper indulgence and solitary habits, which rain both body and mind, unfitting them for either business, study, society or marriage. THESE are some of the sad and melancholy effects pro duced by early habits of youth, viz; Weakness of the DUE and Limbs, Pains in the Head, Dimness of Sight, Loss of Muscular Power, Palpitation of the Heart, Dys pepsia. Nervous Irritability, Derangement of the Digestive Functions, General Debility, Symptoms of Cense mption, 81c. hiattrat.mr.—The fearful effects on the mind are much to be dreaded—Lose of Memory, Confusion of Ideas, Depress. Siang of Spirits, Evil Forbwiings, Aversion to Society, Self Distrast, Love of Solitude, Timidity, &c., are some of the evils produced. THOUSANDS of persons of all ages can now judge what is the cause of their declining health, losing their vigor, becoming weak, pale, nervous and emaciated, having a singular appearance about the eyes, cough and symptoms of consnmption. YOUNG MEN Who have injured themselves by a certain phictice indul ged in when alone, a habit frequently learned from evil companion% or at school, the affects of which are nightly felt, even when asleep, and if not Cured renders marriage impossible, and destroys both mind and body, should ap ply immediately. What a pity that a young man, the hope of his country. the darling of his parents, should be snatched from all prospects and enjoyments of life, by the consequence of deviating from the path of nature and indulging in a cer tain secret habit. Such persons NOW, before contemplat ing 311WRIAG111, reflect that a sound mind and body are the most necessary requisites to promote connubial happiness. Indeed, with out these the journey through life becomes a weary pil grimage; the prospect hourly darkens to the view; the mind becomes shadowed with despair and fitted with the melancholy collection that the happiness of another be comes blighted with ODX own. ammo.= OP xszinuorizrom. When the misguided and ;imprudent votary of pleasure Ands that he has imbibed the seeds of this painful disease, it too often happens that an ill-timed sense of shame, or dreadof discovery, deters him from applying to these who, from education and respectability, can alone befriend him, delaying till the cmastitutionat symptoms of this horrid disease make limir appearance, snob as ulcerated sore throat, diseased nose, nocturnal pains in the bead and limbs, dimness of sight, deafness, nodes on the slain-bones and arms, blotches on the head, face and extremities, pro gressing with frightful rapidity, till at last the palate of the month or the bones of the nose fall in, and the victim of this awful disease becomes a horrid object of commis eration, till death pate a period to his dreadful sufferings, by sending him to "that Undishovared Country from whence no traveller returns." It ie a melancholy fact that thousands fall victims to this terrible disease, owinglo the unskillfulness of ignor ant pretenders, who, by the use of that Deadly PofBo% Mercury, ruin the constitution and make the residue o life miserable. STZAZIGBU Trust not your lives, or health, to the care of many Un learned and worthless Pretenders, dustitnle of knowledge, name or charade, who copy Dr. Johnston's advertise ments, or style themselves, in the newspapers, regularly Educated Physicians, incapable of Curing, they keep you trilling month after month taking their Silly and poison ous compounds, or no long an the smallest fea can be ob tained, and in despair. leave yon with ruined health to sigh over your own galling disappointment. Dr. Johnston is the only Physician advertising. . . . . The credentials or diplomas always hang in his office. ills remedies or treatment are unknown to all others, prepared from a life spent in the great hospitals of Europe, the arm in the country and a more extensive Private Practice than any other Phyeician in the world. INDORSZOMMINT OW Wl= MUM. The many thousands cared at this institution year after year, and the numerous important Surgical Operations performed by Dr. Johnston. witnessed. by the reporters of the San," "Clipper," and many other papers, notices of which have appeared again and pgain before the public, besides his standing as a gentleman of character and re sponsibility, is a sufficient guarantee to the alicted. Skin Diseases Speedily Cured. air No letters received unless post-pad and containing a stamp to be used on the reply. Persons writing should state age, and send portion of advertisement describing SyMptOnla. JOHN M. 3OENSTON, M. D.. Of the Baltimore Loan Hoepital, Baltimore, Maryland May 23—ly Desirable City Lots For Sale. RE UNDERSIGNED OFFERS AT PRIVATE Sale at moderate rates, • i.e Banding Lots on North Ninth street Five Building Lots on the west side of Mom alley, Bast of Ninth street. •••. - - - Three Building Lots on the west side of North Tenth street, and Fourteen Building Lots on the east aide of Moss allay. The conditions will be made easy to purchasers, the pro prietor being willing to leave two-thirds of the purchase mosey stand op the premises, if secured by Bond and Mortgage, and allow payment to be made in installments. of 10. 20 and e 0 Dollars, until the whole debt is paid, provided that one-third of the purchase money is paid on delivery of the Deed. This is a rare chance for Laborer. and Mechanics to Se cure homes, as the lots are in the neighborhood of the Steam Forge and Intinstrial Works; and Ho it de understood that all the Depots of the Junction Railroads will be put up near the property. Fr Plane of the Lots may be seen at my office, or that of C. Oscar Wagner, Esq., Conn street. Jan 31-tfj FREDERICK LAGER. PHILOMATHEAN INSTITUTE, Near Birdsboro, Berks County, Penna. rytHE ELEVENTH TERALOF THIS INSTITII j_ TION commences on Monday, August 10th ISO. The Principal is prepared to accommodate in his own family from sixteen to twenty boarders of both emcee. An early application is advised to secure a place. In addition to the usual thorough coarse of instruction given here, a NORMAL DEPARTMENT will be opened for those preparing to teach, during the Irk and WI quarter of each term. The especial care and attention of the Principal will be constantly devoted to the health, safety, habits and man ners of those placed ender his charge. bay scholars received as usual. For full particulars apply for a Catalogue. BERMAN SMITH, A. B Birdsboro, Pa, July 25, 1863. Commercial Broker. MBE UNDERSIGNED HAVING TAKEN out a License as a COMMERCIAL BROKER, is pre• pared to negotiate for the pnrchase and sale of REAL ESTATE, COIN, - STOCKS, . MORTGAGES, and other Securities, Goods in unbroken Packages, Collec tion of Bente, and any other business of a Commission Broker or Agent. /$1?- Parties haying business to do in his Use are request ed to give him a call. JACOB C. SCHCENEE, OFFICE in Court Etreet, next door above Alderman schwaer. Ifeb ZS CURTIN'S POLITICAL PORTRAIT Drawn by One of his own Party The following articles appeared in the Pitts burgh Gazette, the most prominent llepublittan newspaper west of the Alleghenies, previous to and on the day of the meeting of the late Abo lition State Convention. The statements they contain cannot be attribUted to partisan preju dice or hatred, nor oan they be eueoessfully refuted. We never saw a blacker record pro duoed against any public man, and it cannot but tell fearfully against Governor Curtin with the intelligent, thinking, voters of the State. Row any honest man can vote for the re election of so unworthy a Governor with such oVerwhelmn iog evidence of his corruptibility and dishonesty staring them in the face—fastened upon him, too, by his own partisans—is more than we can see. We do not believe they will. But let them read the articles, and be astonished at the fact that, with such a record against him, his tools and dependents were permitted to renomi nate him in the Pittsburgh Convention: Pram the Plllmburgh . Gazette, July 20. "We have already suggested that we would regard the renomination of Governor Curtin as a great calamity to the party and to the country, for the double reason that we should expose our selves to the imminent risk of a defeat, if we did not even show thereby that we have deserved it, and that we should render service very doubtful to either, by electing him. We now proceed to assign some of the reasons for that opinion. " It can not be 'disputed, we think, that his administration has proved eminently disastrous to the party which brought him into power. That it has been an unfortunate one for the State, the present condition of her plundered sinking fund and dilapidated revenues will abundantly attest. It is not clear that it has been a whole some one for the country. It is but too clear that it has been a damaging one fur himself—so darn aging, that it is more than doubtful whether the Union sentiment, strong as it unquestionably is, would be sufficiently powerful to over-ride the unfavorable opinion so generally entertained of his integrity and wisdom, notwithstanding the more than charitable reserve of the press, which has flung a mantle over his faults, and perhaps Oficefiraged hi@ friend@ and himself to believe that the history of his administration will eon • tinue a sealed book or be forgotten amid the clangor of arms and the strife of the battle field. "He came into office lees than three years ago with a huge majority, and a Legislature of which nearly three fourths of both branches either were, or claimed to be, Republicans. At the end of one session he had thrown all that majority away. . . . " Concurring in opinion with those of our Pennsylvania statesmen (?) who believed that the disease of the nation was one that could be salved over by further humiliation, and would only be aggravated by seasonable measures of defence, one of his first acts was to demoralize the party by taking seperate counsel with the "Con seryative" Republicans and Democrats, who coalesced and co-operated throughout under his auspices, in refusing to arm the State, and re cognized the traitorous doctrine of State sov ereignty, by sending en embassy to Gov. Hicks, of Maryland, and accepting an invitation to con fer on Federal grievances, with other States, to the prejudice of the rights and interests of the nation, and in clear and manifest violation of the spirit and letter of the Constitution of the Uni ted States. "Entrusted with the privilege of expending the first appropriation made by the Legislature for the common defence, he gave to his own creatures the power of making contracts, as his private agents, in relation to tirades with which they were entirely unfamiliar, to the great injury of the soldier, who was victimized by their un 'skillfulness or fraud. This fact was found by a committee appointed by himself, under the pressure of a public clamor, which grew out of the treatment of the volunteers who had assem bled' at Harrisburg. Those brave young men who bad responded so generously to the first call of their country, were in rage, with shoddy vestments, shoes whose soles were stuffed with shavings, and blankets almost as thin and trans parent as a window pane. It was reported and be lieved that they had been given over in the tender mercies of a few heartless epeculators who were then hovering about the capital. The officers at Camp Curtin, justly indignant at what they saw, drew up a spirited remonstrance to the Legisla ture, which was presented to the House, at their instance, by one of our own members. It sug gested to him the propriety of an inquiry as to th e nature of the contracts made for supplies, and the names of the agents, through whom they were made, and he offered a resolution accord ingly. He wished to know and let the public know, whether it was true that sundry individ uals then loitering around the capital, who were pointed out by the tongue of rumor, and known to be entirely unfit for the purpose, had been actually commissioned by the Governor, as his agents, to make contracts for the soldiers. One of these individuals was a certain Charles M. Beal, an active ward politician, and acting Commissioner, of Philadelphia, who was under stood to be an intimate and cbnfidential friend of the Governor. The answer of the Governor ignored Ilse fact of his employment, although the record shows that on the very day preceding or following his message to the House he had en dorsed and approved a contract for clothing made by the identical individual with the Frown fields of this city, in that special capacity. On this contract Neal was afterwards indicted here, and it was while that indictment was depending that the Governor felt it necessary, in order to appease the public clamor, or divert it from his own head, to raise a committee of his own op • pointment to inquire into his own conduct. That committee proved very unexpectedly a fair one —so fair that it was deemed prudent to withhold its Report from the Legislature at the next en suing session of that body. It found however— although it passed over the Frownfield case be cause it was depending in the Courts—that the soldiers were in rags.' With every disposition to deal gently with the Governor, it condemned his appointments and the mode pursued by the government in making its purchases.' It de clared that ' the absence of a district supervisory power had been the cause of much of the mis chief that had befallen the State.' It remarked, hi observing upon the character of the Geyer fleets agents, that 'it could not for a moment be supposed that there were not men in Penn sylvania, whose services could have been com manded, and who by education and ability were equal to the occasions that had arisen, and that I the appointment by an executive from personal or partisan motives of incompetent agents to offices of great responsibility, is, at all times, a grave dereliction from duty, never more so than in great public emergencies, when the disasters resulting from the ignorance or incompetence of the agents, for whose appointment lie is respon sible, will inevitably excite suspicions of fraud, and return home to the executive in humiliating charges of collusion.' And it closed by observ , ing that they also report, in general, as the result of their investigations, Ellat they have found instances of ignorance, of incompetence, of sharp dealing never praiseworthy, and here eminently disgraceful, of bad appointments, which, although under the peculiar circumstan ces of the times to be expected, are none the less to be condemned.' BONDS " The judicial investigation of the Frownfield Cage having proved a failure in oonsequenCe of the arbitrary and extraordinary intervention of Chief Justice Lowrie, followed, as it was, by the disappearance of the witness, a new. Committee BoMitzi. SATURDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBR 12, 1863. was raised at the next session of the Legislature by which it was found, among other things, that the case as' shown by the absconding witness, who had afterwards returned, was a clear case of fraudulent complicity between the contractors and Charles M. Neal ;' that the clothing furnish ed to the soldiers could have been afforded 50fl per suit less than was given, anti yet have left to the contractors a profit of $1 50;' that a large portion of it was entirely unfit for the use of the soldiers and much of it fell to pieces in a short time after it W 49 worn by them and 'that the flight of the Frownfichis was almoet conclusive evidence that they, at least, were con scious of having defrauded the State.' Our readers will judge of the quality of this commit tee when they find thorn adding, that while the testimony of Murphy seems to excite strong sus— picion against Neal, the testimony of Neal himself, one of the parties implicated. seemi to clear him from all but a great, WO fii of ,ju.l4naent in his pur chase and misapprehensions as to his duties,' and that his testimony shows that he did not. con sider himself bound to inquire either into the actual cost of the goods used or their fitness for the purpose intended.' lt is rather surprising that they did not hunt up the Frownfields them selves as witnessess, who would, no doubt, have made a clear case of it for the defendants. In convicting them alone they forgot that the of fence charged was one which either involved the complicity of the other party, or did not exist at all, and therefore furnished no 000ssion for running away. They do, however, set down the case as ono of a failure of justice, occasioned by the interference of Judge Lowrie. We are in , formed, however, that the confidence of the Gov ernor in Neal has been in no wise shaken by the transaction. He still continues to be among his most intimate and cherished friends." Prom the Pittsburgh Ousette, August 4th " The Convention, which meets here to mor row, will have a grave and delicate task before it. If It represents the popular sentiment with any reasonable fairness, it will endeavor to name a candidate who combines the essentials to sue- Coos with an ability and honesty which will in sure a faithful and favorable administration of the affairs of the State. Wo do not expect of course, from this or any other, representative body thus selected, either the very ablest or most honest and courageous men in the State. This would be looking for too much in the pre sent condition of poor hunnin nature. The best man is seldom the available one, because he is generally either a reserved or an outspoken man, eschewing politics and courting nobody, because he despises the arts- which are supposed to be necessary to secure 'the sweet voices' of the people—or proclaiming on all occasions pre cisely what he thinks, without fear or favor, Such men are never popular, and never, there fore, acquire that notoriety which is derived from newspaper puffery, which is unquestionably one of the passports to greatness and glory in this country. We must wait a few generations to improve the tone of popular sentiment, and the system of public representation, before we can hope to develop the best abilities of the na tion in the places of highest trust. " Trusting ourselves, therefore, to the time, although there never was an occasion when the country more needed its brightest men, we are not disposed to be unreasonable in our demands. We want a man, however, if we would succeed, of whom at least no evil can be spoken, and for whom every honest man can freely vote, without compromising his conscience or his principles. To take one against whom any eolid and well sustained objection, on the score of honesty, can be made, would be to court defeat, and show that we were indifferent as well to moral considera tions as to the probable effects of such a course. Among the candidates named, we have ourselves, as we have more than once remarked, no choice, and no interests to serve. If the privilege were given to us of saying who should be the stand and bearer, we should decline it. There is not one of all the candidates whom we have named that we would not take cheerfully, except Gov. Curtin, or one of the associates of Woodward and Lowrie, on the Supreme Bench. Either of thede men would be ineligible here and in West ern Pennsylvania generally, the first, because of his pelioy and acts as a Governor; and the other, because of disastrous decisions, and the acts of highhanded tyranny, which have exas perated and inflamed our people to an inappre ciable degree against them. On these points, Lowrie and Woodward will-both prove weak and vulnerable, beyond any other men in the State, if the advantage is properly used. Beyond these candidates we are indifferent. " We trust, however, that nobody in the Con vention will allow himself to be.mieled by the idea that a man like Curtin, and with such a record as we have shown of him, can be forced upon the people of this county by putting him in nomination against their will, We know what we say, when we give notice to those who may be tempted to this view, that he is so uni versally believed by the people hero to be cor rupt—to havo sold the State and the party both —and to be anything but well affected to the National Administration or the true loyal men at home ; they know indeed so well the sort of company he keeps, and the kind of influences that have governed him, that we have but given shape and utterance to their invineihle repug— nance to the man, and done what they desired in endeavoring to save the party, by warning the managers that they must neither touch, taste, or handle anything so unclean, if they considered the vote of the strongest Republican county in , the State or the nation an important one." From the Pittsburgh Gazette, Aug. 6 A Parting Word to the Convention• The delegates to the State Converktion are now amongst us. Before they prooeed to do their duty, we have a word to say to them. We bad reason to believe that Governor Cur tin, notwithstanding his ostensible withdrawal, was a candidate for renomination, and confident that he would be successful. WE FELT ASSURED THAT lIE COULD NOT BE ELECTED. WE KNEW THAT HE OUGHT NOT. IT BECAME OUR DUTY, THEREFORE, TO SOUND THE ALARM, AND ENDEAVOR TO SAVE THE PARTY, IF POSSIBLE. We have endeavored to show that he imposed upon the soldiers, by farming them out to his friends, and then denying that he had employed them. • We have exhibited the record to establish the fact that he had approved a bill, acknowledged by him to he wrong, WHICH ROBBED THE TREASURY OF MANY MILLIONS OF MONEY, that as the conditions of his approval be had taken an agreement for the State, which he ab stracted, and secretly surrendered to the parties who had given it—and that when interrogated by the Legislature, he confessed the fact, and offered as his apology, a reason which is known to have been untrue. We have demonstrated the fact that. he bar gained away a Republican United States Senator, for the consideration of an adjournment, and the discharge of the Committee, appointed to inquire into the means which had been used to procure the passage of that bill. We have charged that he was unfriendly to the war policy of the Administration, and proved it not only by his Message in relation to the arrest of traitors, and his conduct in relation to the draft, but by the character of the men whom he has retained about him. We have shown that thkeffoot of his policy has been to break down the power of the Re publican party of this State, and even those who merely co operated with him in the Legislature, have . been placed, almost without exception, under the ban of the people. And we have inferred from all this—without referring to other matters—THAT HIS NOM INATION WOULD BE DISGRACEFUL TO THE PARTY AND HIS ELECTION IMPOSSIBLE— as the general desire of Copperheads that we should take him for our candidate, proves it to be, in their judgment, as well se wire. All this we have been compelled, by the ne cessities of the case, to do, in order to save the cause from irretrievable ruin. We would rather have avoided this, if it had been possible. We have kept these things in the background, rather than rut the risk of crippling the State administrative, ur driving it boldly tato the em braces' of the enemy, to which we feared ils tendencies were overetrong already. We thought it wise to make the . best'of a bad bargain, so long as we could not help ourselves. When the same man was, however, presented anew, as a candidate for a second term, it became our duty to speak out before the mischief was enacted, and we have done so in language as moderate as thethets would beer. And yet even then, we would have rather waived our objections, if it had been possible, and taken the weakest man, and the wickedest of our enemies, than run the risk of disturbing the harmony of the party, at such Er tiele. It was clear to us ' however, that will Stith a candidate. IT WAS IMPOSSIBLE FOR US TO SUCCEED. We should be beaten, at any rate—as our past experience has demonstra led—and as it could not make the matter worse, it was worth at least the trouble to prevent it. And now we ask the members of the Canyon Lion to tell us calmly, whether, with the facts before them, as we have them to be, there is a constituency in Pennsylvania, that would have recommended orinstructed for hint—and whether these fame depending mainly upon the record, and incontrovertible,' of course, can be now suc cessfully concealed from them? We ask them again, who there are among the eminent speakers of this State, who enjoy the confidence of the people, that will venture to meet these issues, with the very record to cols found them ? We do not know a man, of any posi tion or force, in this county, at all events, who would not feel himself personally compromised, by undertaking a labor so herculean as this. The question then comps at last, whether there are any of the delegates inclined to the support of Curtin; who would consider a triumph now, as more important than a triumph at the election, and a sufficient compensation for a de feat at that time—or would be willing to stake the result upon a doubt? If it be true, as charged, that he insists on playing the part of the dog in the manger, and sacrifices the party, of which, it is said, he c laims . to he the builder, to himself, is there any man in the Convention who will allow himself to be used for nth a purpose ? What is to be gained by it for the advantage of anybody but the rebels and their Northern sympathizers? We have stated more than crm—and we can not repeat it too often—that whatever may be the opinion of the Convention, and whether right or wrong, the feeling against Governor Curtin in Ibis county at lead—growing out, of his own cots and policy—is so strong that we could no more control it, even if we were so dis posed, than we could stein the torrent of the Niagara with our hands. We might ruin our selves by advocating his election, but we couldn't help him. It is not we who are responsible for the existence or origin of that feeling. We re flect it only, and have but thrown ourselves into the current, which was flowing as rapidly before we undertook to fathom or. direct it. There were good men hero who doubted in 1860, whether he could be trusted, and refused to vote for him, and yet this county gave him a majority of about 0400 votes. Less than a month afterward it gave Lincoln 10.000. With a stronger man than Curtin there should have been 8,000 et least. With an unexceptionable candidate now we are strong as ever. With Gov. Curtin, we doubt whether it could be car ried at all, and those who reflect that his con duct at the season of 1861, brought in a Demo crat even here, at the election which followed, will realize the mischief that such a nomination may inflict. It is not this county only, however, in which it is important to make the machine run smooth. There will be like difficulties elsewhere, and particularly in those counties where the strength of the Republican party lies. If he should be nominated, it will not be by the votes of those districts, which will be expected to• elect him. It will be counties like Berks, we suppose, that are to be cast as make-weights into the scale. Would it not become them to reflect, that if they want us to do the work they must put us into a condition to run with our weights? Are not the predjudioes of our people—if they choose to call them so—to be consulted? If they eon find a man who is free from ohjeciioa—and we are in a bad condition, indeed, if they cannot—what is their duty as men—as patriots—as lovers of their country ? How can they excuse them selves for insisting—from mere pride of self will--on one of the opposite kind, who is known to be unpalatable to any respectabb sec tion of the party ? We shall gauge their patriot ism by the way in which they deal with the diffi culty. With men of heroic stamp—men suited to the times—it can prove no serious difficulty at all. JUDGE WOODWARD'S LOYALTY The treasury robbers, who have their arms in the public purse up to their elbows, afraid that they will be driven away from further plunder ings by the election of Judge Woonwmtn, are crying out against his loyally. The argumeht is, that he is not loyal to "us," and, therefore, the people should leave "us" to fatten on their earn ings. This is the substance of their groans. No honest or fair-minded man has, or needs to have, the slightest anxiety on the point. A man reared. in our midst, always , living under the eyes of the people of Pennsylvania, exercising great public trusts with the highest fidelity, own ing no property and possessing no interests whatever beyond our borders—what motive to disloyalty has such a man ? What word or act of his life implies disloyalty to his Government? He has sworn to support the Constitution of the United States and of the State of Pennsylvania many times ; when—where—has he violated that oath? What patriot, what shoddy contractor, what thief, even, dare charge him withits viola tion ? Ills speech in Independence &pre, in 1860, has been garbled, mutilated and forged by such organs of the National Administration as The Press, but they dare not spewd it before tlie pub lic. We have published it in our columns, and most of the Democratic papers in the State have done likewise. IL is 11,; own hesl refutation of these slanderous perversions. As a further evidence of the general drift of Judge WOODWARD'S thoughts, we publish below part of a judicial opinion, delivered by him in the Supreme Court, on the constitutionality of the Soldiers' Stay Law. We italicise a few sentences. Such incidental expressions, uttered from the bench in the course of judioial duty—not framed as catch-words of a campaign, but grave and solemn expositions of the law—are better evidences of a man's mental condition and views of public policy than statements and professions, prepared in the heat of a political contest, as bide for votes. Our candidate has no such bids to offer. He is not an obscure or unknown man. His life is before the people of Pennsylvania—a people whom he has served faithfully through nearly all of his mature years—always wear— ing purely and without stain the honors with which they have crowned him. We ask that that life be read truly—we ask nothing more. Its Irecords are an all sufficient answer to the calumnies of the creatures who are hired to slander him. [VOL. XXIV-NO. 21.-WHOLE NO. 1985. The opinion to which we ask attention vidicat ed the SOldier's right to exemption from exeou• Lions, and other legal process, while serving in the armies of his country. It- maintained the constitutionality and justice of a law which, while it could not avail lb protect the volunteer from the plundering hand of CURTIN, secured his little possessions to his family until he could come back to maintain them once more by his daily labor. Ragged, starved and shoddy stricken by the grasping hand of a false Govern- or, this law left his wife and babies a bed, a stove and a cow; and when its validity was im— peached on the Supreme Court, WouuwAnn was its champion. Judge READ alone dissented— the only Judge of that beach elected by Abolition votes ! Judge Wood . ward's Opinion on the Soldiers' Stoy-Law. " WOODWARD, J.—The 4th sew 1011 of the Ac: of 18th April, IbtiL, r. 1.. p. 409, is in these words: civil process shall issue or be eu forced against nny person mustered into the err vice of the State or of the United States, during the term for which he shall be engaged in such service, our until thirty days after he shall have been discharged therefrom; Provided, that the operation of all statutes of limitation shall be suspended upon all claims against such person during such term.' it The principal question upon the record is, whether this section be constitutional. Although it occurs in an act supplementary to the penal laws of the Commonwealth, and does not mention the militaty service, either of the State or of the United States, yet it is universally understood, and no doubt correctly understood, to be a stay law of all legal process against sol diers mustered into the military service of the Government. And it is a stay for a term—the term for which he shall be engaged. The act.of Congress of 22d July, 1861, under which the first half million of volunteers were mustered in- to the service of the United States, fixed the term at not more than three years nor less than six months, and the affidavit which was filed on behalf of the defendant, says that he had been mustered in for three years or during the war. This is the same phrase that was used in the 19th section of the Act of Assembly of 15th May, 1861, in reference to the Reserve Volunteer Corps, and means three years or less, or not exceeding three years. The term of engagement, therefore, during which the above section meant that the defendant should not be subject to civil process was three years from the date of his muster, if the war should last so long, and if it should not, then until it should end. Thirty days were to be added after his discharge, which would make the utmost extent of the term three years and thirty days, Tite reference to the du , ration of the war is a restriction of the term, not an extension of it beyond three years and thirty days. The duration of the war was, at the date of the law, and still is, uncertain, but the maximum period of the stay—three years and thirty days from the date of the muster—is susceptible of ascertainment with absolute cer— tainty. It was suggested that the volunteer might reenlist at the expiration of his first term, and because this was possible that the term of his engagement was necessarily uncertain. The answer is that the statute gives but one stay, which is to be computed from the time of the original muster, and a re enlistment would not renew the stay. The statute refers itself for the term of engagement to the laws that were then in force fixing the period of enlistment, and, therefore, we construe it according to the tenor of those laws. 4, Such being the significance and effect of the section, was the Legislature authorized to enact it ? " We have often said that stay laws, exemp tion laws, and limitation laws, are ordinarily constitutional, though applied to existing and prior contracts, and we hove followed the die tinction which prevails in the Supreme Court of the United States, between the.obligation . of the Contract and the remedies furnished by law for enforcing the obligation. We understand the . rule to be that whilst the Legislature may not impair the obligation they may modify the reme dy. But it sometimes happens that the parties contract concerning the remedy—tbat they stipulate in the body of the contract that in case of failure of payment by a certain day there shall be no stay of execution, or that the mortgagee may enter and sell the mortgag ed estate—or, that all exemption rights shall ' be waised. In suck cases the rule is, that the remedy tweomes part of the obligation of the contract, anti any subsequent statute which effects the remedy im pairs the obligation, and is tiliconetituitonal Brow,, v. Kenzie, 1 f10ward..322. sod Billmyer v..EV4IELEI, 4 Wr. 327, are illustrations of obis rule. The time and manner in which stay laws shall operate, are property lerslat que,tious, and will generally depend, said Judge Baldwin, in Jackson v. Lamphire, 3d Peters' it p 200, on the sound discrei ion of the LeAislature I no cording to the nature of the titles, the situation of the country, and the emergency which leads to the enactment. Cases •may occur where the provisions of a law may be so unreasonable as to amount to a denial of right, and call for the in lerposition of the court.' In Brown, Itaignel & Co. v. Gorges, 5 Wr. 411, we bad an instance of au unreasonable stay law—unreasonable because of the indefiniteness of the possible stay, and of the subversion of the authority of the Courts over judgments upon their records. From the ruling in that case and the authorities cited, it may be inferred that, in respect to contracts which do not treat of remedies, tvlohold any law to be constitutional which gives a stay for a time that is definite and not unreasonable, but unconstitutional if the stay be for an indefinite time, or for a time that is unreasonable, though definite. Wo have seen that the stay given by the act of 1861 was not indefinite as to its maximum du ration, but was for a period certain and prefixed, or, at the least, a period that is capable of being easily reduced to certainty. Was that period reasonable ? The stay is a long one, it must be confessed—longer than is usual—longer than can be justified, except by most peculiar and pressing circumstances. There is great force in the reasons which the learned Judge below urged against it. The enforced delay of a civil right, the deterioration of the mortgaged estate, and the consequent pecuniary bee are entitled to great consideration in judging of the reasonable ness of the law. Everybody feels that a stay of remedies on a mortgage for fifty years, for in stance, would be a wanton sacrifice of the con stitutional rights of the ci'izen. What better is a stay for a less time if it be long enough to work essential depreciation of the security ? " Yet it is impossible to separate this question of reasonableness from the actual circumstances in which the country found itself at the date of the law. Eleven States had seceded or revolted from the Federal Union, and had set up an independent Government within the jurisdiction of the Con stitution of the United States, and armed pee, session had been taken of forts, arsenals, custom houses, navy yards, and other property of the United States within the boundaries of the re volted Stales. In the judgment of the President and Congress, who were the duly constituted authorities, the occasion required an immense increase of the army and navy, and the active employment of both-of these strong arms Le sub due the rebellion and restore the Union. Ao oordingly Congress ,authorized the President to lleoept volunteers, and to call upon the States for their militia. He did both, and a vast army has been in the field for many months. "Now, if a stay of execution for three years would not be tolerated in ordinary times, did not these circumstances constitute an emergency that jus tOerl the pushing of legislation to the extremest limit of the Constitution f No citizen could be bkmed for ' volunteering. Ire was invoked to do so by appeals as strong as Ms lours of country. In the nature of things there is nothing unredeonable in exempting a soldier's property from execution whilst he is absent from home battling for thesupremacy of the Coned tution and the integrity of the Union. And when he has not run before he was sent, but hos yielded himself up to the call of his country, his self sacri ficing patriotism pleads, trumnet tongued, for all the indulgence from his creditors which the Legislature have power to grant. lithe term of indulgence seem long in this instance, it was not longer than the time fi so m id u ier , h s ic , h se t r h v e ice lresi' l d t en and was atnoet for r yr h e i s den him, ,no in raisdeidi forth us, to rejudge the discretion of the President and Congress in this regard. Basing ourselves on what they did; constitutionally, the question for us is, whether the stay granted by our own Le L dslotore to our CHZen OkiierB Wits UlirNlBolialfle view Of the extraordinary circumstances of the ease tee ran notpnonounce it unreasonable. Ite 4,e in it 97.0 won tan or careless dnirey Is(' of the obligation of c0.0r,,08 but only a sincere ribs; to enable the Gov. erumeat to prosecute with success a wry . which, in its exclusive right of judgment, tt resoled b• woge. -Another cileutostance whmt, beers ori rho reasonableness of the emu:Imo:1 is the pi.ovision which suspends all ctaxiites in favor of ;he s9ll.lier (hiring all the 'ime than ho ',s emi:red from process. Th , , provisions were re ciprocal and both were reasonable." From the Eational littodligencer. TO BE OR NOT TO BE? The very interesting letter inserted below is from a gentleman of intelligence and honor, per. sonully well known to us, and whose statements of fact are entitled to full credit. He is, more over, a thorough loyalist, and Las been a uni form and decided friend of the Administration. The result of his observations in a recent and extended tour in the South, he has thought of sufficient interest to be communicated to the pub lic here, and we are sure that all of our readers will agree with him. What he relates of South— ern feeling and Southern hopes can hardly sur prise any one who can imagine the extremity of suffering and the multiplied woes which the causeless rebellion has brought to every family of the south ; but it is only those who from birth or long association understand the feeling in the South regarding their slaves, who can appreciate fully the fixedness and intensity of the Southern mind on that subject. We are not surprised, therefore, that the extremity of suffering and the i h n o s p p e i l r e a s s e n v e a s n s o m f a n t h y e n r e e b t e h i n t i s ; n w c h o o m w b i e n r e a d , e a s g h e o r u 1d 10 enter into it with the desire to retrace Their steps and return to their allegiance, as well as the masses who were forced into it; and we can well understand the writer when he represents the question of emancipation—regarded in the South as involving utter and irremediable ruin to their country—as the only substantial difficulty in the way of a restoration of the Union. It is for those who rule the destinies of this great country to say whether it shall, so far as depends on them, have Union and the Constitution, or immediate and forcible emancipation with ruin to a moiety of the country, protracted war, and a violated Constitu tion. How eloquent anti forcible is the appeal with which the writer closes his letter, and which, notwithstanding its personal reference to the Chief Magistrate, we take the freedom of placing before him. NORFOLK, Aug. 29, 1863. To the Editors of the National Intellioencer. Having. ust returned from a tour through por tions of the States of Virginia, North Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, Tennessee and Kentucky, and having met in my travels many of the former politicians of these States, and, as was most natural under the circumstances, had frequent aonversaLione with them ou the subject of the war, its origin, objects, bearings on the present and future of our country, and its probable re sult, I feel assured te..ectine extent that a brief synopsis of the impressions made on toy mind will not be altogether unacceptable to your rea ders: The war, they argue, was instituted for the purpose of securing further guarantees to their own peculiar institution—slavery—and to repress abolitionism or Northern aggressious on their rights. 115 hearing nu toe instiintlon has teen to weaken and endanger its entireover throw. They admit that they have been de ceived by their political !ostlers, and that r early all their promises have proven failures They see, they feel the crushing effects of the war upon the Slave States, and admit it it 'huh-finitely continue that the institution of slavery will not only be in dan g er of annihilation, but that, their former slaves will be drafted info the army of the United States tor the y. utp,,ee of continuing the war on the South. This one single lain bears more heavily upon them i ion attyl tilin g else con. fleeted with the war; and to escape this now ap parent inevitable fate, they express a willingness to accede to any terms which shell on, humiliate andilegrade them. They affirm (in fact they ex pect, they hope, they pray for ) that it is net for them to beg for peace, but tor the President to hold out the olive branch; and if the Presi dent were to issue a proclamation holding their leaders to a strict accountability for the rebel. lion, and offer the people protection in person and property, leaving the institution of slavery to the constitutional immunity of State laws, they will not only accept it, but will hail the act as magnanimous, noble, great. Thus it will be perceived that the great masses of the Southern people are standing on a point of honor, which to them is of far greater import than defeat in battle, the lose of strongholds, or the reduc tion of their ',reties. All Glut they can bear, but dishonor thepeannot bear, and they hope, they expect, they pray that the President will spare them this unspeakable humiliation. In view of these simple truths, I would ask, Messrs Editors, through the medium of your invaluable journal, if the President cannot afford to be magnani mous? If, after the fall of Charleston, be can not afford to offer some terms which shall induce the great body of the Southern people to return to their allegiance to the Federal Union and the Government of the United States? If he be ambitious of enviable fame, he will do it; if ha dealt es to be remembered as the second Washing ton, he will do it; if he wishes to secure to him self the appellation of Abraham the Great, he will do it; if he wishes to imitate the example of Him who said "go thou and sin no more," he will do it; and, I may add, if he wishes to pro claim the popular sentiment of the American people, and the sentiment of humanity, civilise- Lion, and christianity throughout the world, he will do it; which God grant, for peace's sake. Youre, very truly, JOHN ADAMS, all. A Puoren NAMIL—The Abolition party has a proper name. It is an Abolition party in Met. It has abolished the Constitution of the United States. It has abolished the good feelings which bound the North and South together. It has abolished the Union of the States. • It has abolished the babeas,corpus. It has abolished the right of trial by jury. It has abolished gold and silver coin from our midst. IL has abolished low prices for all articles of domestic use. It has abolished the lives of tens of thousand/ of brave white men. h has abolished peace and security through out the country. It bas abolished the respect we commanded abroad as a nation. It has, in fine, nbollshed about all it can abol ish, and the neat thing it will abolish Somerset Union.