ger the honer of the nation. [Storms of ap plause from all sides of the house.] Far better would it be if the government would yield to the opinion of its own Legislature at home than be obliged to give in to the representations of foreign powers. But the government does what it likes with the revenues and every thing. We are in the midst of a military-dictator ship, and have a government of aides de-camp to the King in which the Ministers only gallop about and give the orders they are commanded to distribute. The indignation. of Europe is transferred from Russia on to Prussia. Europe forgets the cruelties and violence which Russia is perpetrating on the insurgents, and remem bers only that Prussia has made herself Rus sia's bailiff and hangman: The Minister-President, in reference to a statement of Twesten'e, said he must take Lord Russell under his protection. The latter had said that he did not know the text of the con vention ; but this was everything in the discus- Ron of the subject. The newspaper reports Were false. The excitement produced by the Minister's speech is, I may add, tremendous. Berlin has never been so excited since 1848. atrial 4 - Onion. WEDNESDAY MORNING, MARCH 25, 1863 0 RARRETT & CO" PROPRIETORS. Communications will not be published in the Pawnor awn Union nage.; accompanied with the name of the author. W. W. KINGSBURY, KEG., of Towanda, is a duly au thorized agent to collect accounts and receive snbscrlp- Lions and advertisermats for this paper. Nom a= 22.11162: S. M. PETTENGILL ac CO., 'No. 37 Park Rent, N. Y., and 6 State St., 4651061 Are our Agents for the Paaator AN Paws in those *Wes, and are authorised to take Advertisements and Pubsoription.s for us at our _Lowest Hates. • • FOB. 44_11E. Almond-hand ADA= rvaills,phiten SOX by Telzuhun In good order; clan be worked either by hand or steam power Terms moderate Inquire at this Mem,. TO THE. PUBLIC. Tan PATRIOT AND UNION and allits business opirations will hereafter be conducted exclu sively by 0. BARRETT and T. G. POMEROY, UN der the firm of 0. Benstrr & Co., the connec tion of H. F. M'Reynolds with said establish ment having ceased on the 20th November, inst. NovnmsEn, 21, 1862. To Members of the Legislature. Ake Dent PAisior AND llsiow will be furnished to members of the Legislature during Vas version at TWO DOLLARS. Members wishing extra alpha of the DAILY PATRIOT AND Iltion, eau procure them by leaving their orders at the publication office, Third street, er with our re- P3rters in either House, the evening previous. Dauphin County Democratic Committee. The Democratic County Committee for the county of Dauphin will meet at the public house ofJames Raymond, (White Hall), in 0: city of Harrisburg, on SATIIIIDP:, kARch 28th, at 2 o'clock P. for the purpose of _ - fizin gay for the election of delegates to the Democratic County Convention, Ahnd also a time for the meeting of said convention. By order of the Chairman. Fitemx Smrra, Secretary. Despotism and Mob Law. The Telegraph, of the 23d inst., says : "In this hour of the Governments peril, no man should be allowed to speak against it. The right of no individual, however sacred he may deem it, is not equal to the right of preserving the avernment." Goverment is of the people, and according to the maxim upon which our fundamental law iris based, derives its just powers from the 6onsent of the goveimed ; but this is net the Government meant by the Tele graph. The Government they have in view is controlled by that despotic maxim destructive of all liberty—" The King can do no wrong." When they speak of Government, they mean the poor imbeciles, that now temporarily and accidentally have control of our public affairs, and are fast destroying our once happy - Union. They propose to take from the people all those rights of free rpeech, and free- discussion of public affairs, guaranteed to them by the Con stitution, and which our revolutionary fathers pronounced essential to the preservation of our liberties. Having passed laws infinitely worse than the "alien and sedition laws," they now are attempting to inaugurate the policy of the elder Adams, forgetting, in their blind nese, that the party which he headed was hurled from power by an indignant people, and never again trusted for over thirty years, and that he himself, by these arbitrary acts, made his name eternally infamous. The Telegraph and other kindred sheets are constantly calling upon the central power at Washington to me its military arm in crush ing out whatever remains to us of liberty and law, and this the lying hypocrites do in the name of the Constitution, which the powers they represent have already trampled under foot, and the Union, which they are trying to destroy. They never were bat conditional eft l iGeists, and now they are waging a war for the extermiti.:42n of slavery, regardless of its consequences to the c,71411t17• They are merely ,Abolitioulets who are calling „leineelves Union ists. It is not enough for them that Dei.7crats denounce rebellion and are for supporting the war and fighting for the country, bat they must give in to their radical measures, or they are to be held up as "copperheads." '.There are," says that Abolition sheet, the New York Eve sin, Poet, "but two pastier to be recognized hereafter—the friends of the country end the copperheads—there is no middle ground to be taken between the two." The arrogance of these Abolitionists is getting to be intolerable. As their day of power shortens, and they begin la feel the surges of an indignant public opin ion that will scourge them from office, they grow more desperate. The true friends of the Union are those who standby the Constitution and the Government of thS Fathers. To set up, as-tests of loyalty to the co untry. approval of the Abolition of this administration, is to insult the patriot ism of the mass of the people. Those - who do this are bogus Unionists. They talk Union, but mean their party and the perpetuation of their power. ` Not content with urging President Lincoln to use all the unconstitutional 'and despotic power with which he was clothed by the last Congress, to crash out a free press and free speech, the Telegraph is, from day to day, pub lishing the most incendiary articles, calculated to excite its unreasoning partisans to acts of violence, bloodshed and destruction against the lives and property of all those who chance to differ with its Abolition dogmas, and haTe', l 4* manliness to speak their honest oonvictilljs.k: Can it be - Possible that in Harrisburg„ thsy seat of government of the great Stale otreni sylvania, an alien to our soil, a descendant of a Hessian hireling shall be permitted to corrupt the minds of our people by his .nefarions doc trines, spread broadcast over our city, and Ale tate to free American citizens what is patilet.- isra, and what is !reason ? Will his supporters, many of whom are high-minded, honorable men, and large property holders, will they per mit this vile Hessian to continue to publish articles calculated to incite to riot and blood shed, and all those nameless horrors that deso late the path of an incensed mob ? Let them be warned in time. The torch once lighted, no man can say—" Let thy red waves be stayed." Faction and Conservatism.. That kind of opposition to the Administra tion Which is purely factious in its nature, from whatever source or motive it may spring, is unstable and-unsound—a change in the current of events, any day, may dissipate and destroy it.. The truly conservative and Union-loving people of the North have Sought no pretext for such an opposition. To set about the deliber ate purpose of weakening and hampering any of the rightful powers and prerogatives of those into whose hands the administration of the government has fallen, at a time like this, would be simply traitorous and unworthy of a great party professing the highest allegiance to the Constitution. Factious and, distemper ed opposition is one thing; opposition spring. leg out of fundamental and vital differences of opinion in reference to our polity, and the conduct of the administrative power of the goverment in st. perilous national crisis, is another. Factious opposition leads nowhere, means nothing, can offer no remedy for the nt tionel ills. Such kind of opposition is dan gerous to itself and to the country. It is for dispnivtt One day, and for the Voien the next. Factions opposition is political chicane, made the excuse of political organization. Such has always been the radical status of Greeley , and_ his friends. Faction works simply on the pas-' dons and appeals to the prejudices of the peo ple; it furnishes no compensation in its capa city to govern or restrain itself, for the errors it leads to and the misfortunes it may bring upon the country. Having succeeded in rear ing a great party, and placing that party in poreer, upon an issue,tertally irrelevant to the welfare of the nation, and destructive and,sub versive in its development, the Abolitionists found themselves staggering under thot it o great national responsibilit Y -- rtnernmeni they were about to adetti..! Threatened with destruction—their greed failing, as it has since fatlae: to save or preserve or main- tab! t e ne country. In this immediate exigency they appealed to the conservative' stipport of their political opponents, at the eleventh hour, in solemn pledges, which were taken and ac cepted. Sustained with all the men and money the tountry'could afford—all they demanded placed in their hands for the conduct of the war, having gained misplaced confidence be sides—they have abuse proved- thommealvea-un--- able to use the means at their dispasal with any success in the cause; and 'equally unable. to keep their plighted faith with their own people. A raging faction, continually striving in spirit within their own political organization based upon the impalpable theories of higher law, regarding nothing which actually had.part in our political condition, broke the vows the majority" of their own party had pledged them selves to maintain, and consummated its heed less and reckless endeavors in a series of legis lation which set at defiance every consideration of expediency, in the midst of revolution, and turned the purpose of the war into wicked schemes of violence against the enemies of the State, and schemes of tyranny against its loyal friends. The history of the Abolition party is the le gitimate out working of purely factious prin ciples: From its gradual decline, and the misfortunes it has brought upon the country, its opponents may learn a profitable lesson. Much' as a high zeal for the public weal should be justly honored, as sincere as the ex tremists among the opponents of the Admin istration may be, a certain compromise of their opinions is necessary to preserve that perfect organization of the conservative men of the country which alone can insure security to them and success to their endeavors; especial ly should they remain uncommitted to any po sition wherein they cannot.be sustained by the popular voice, and avoid, everywhere, the vio lence and control of faction. The usurpations of the President and his council should be plainly and unflinchingly opposed, every unlawful act of his exposed and bl ought to public condemnation ; but even these should not be made the pretext for coun ter measures equally violent and unlawful.— Every truly conservative man in the country can have at heart but a single and unfailing purpose—the maintenance of the Constitution and th 3 restoration of the Union ; when once that cardinal idea has ceased to be the moving principle of party policy and sinks into a com iizan place platitude, the end of the old and the beginni: f of a new order of things approach. es—the coon.: v is divided, the Constitution .., moral remains to teach becomes a fable, whom: succeeding ages the failure cot the grand ex periment of self-government. RECENT PUBLICATIONS. We have received Blackwood for February. Its contents are as follows : Progress in China; Caxtoniana, part XIII, No. XIX ; Motive Power (conclusion) ; Henri Lacordaire ; Lady Morgan's Memoirs; A Sketch from Babylon (conclusion) ; Our New Doctor ; Politics at Home and Abroad. Tun Nonrrt BRITIEW REVIEW for F.: , bruary lcia skis° come to hand and contains the fal lowing atticlec Convicts and Transportation ; Recent Attacks on the Pentateuch ; Professor Wilson; . Professor Faivre's Scientific Diogra phy of Goethe ; Greece During the last Thirty Years ; Novels and Novelists of the Day ; Do mestic Annals of Scotland; Dr. Cunningham's Historical Theology ; The Prospects of Par ties. Nice s3ller annum. Published by WOVI. Leonard Scott & Co , New York. The four Britis - n Reviews and Blackwood's Magazine to be had for $lO per annum. The Conscription Act. MIAs an age of inquiry—of , investiga tion—Sod men will not be. ninzaka „pen , to accommodate the administration_ and its Abo litiOn adherents. When the President and the Congress tranicend.the power with whidh the Constitution has clothed"-them, and pretend to act outside and above the fuisdasnental law, we have not yet reached that stage of coercion that wofeel our lives or liberty insperrilled by simply questioning the iviedon{ and safety of their course. •We have not hitherto advised resistance to any meaeure of government, not withstanding we consider many of them uncon stitutional, oppressive and odious, nor shall we do so; but the Abolition preen having under taken to defend the confiscation act as a mild, humane and strictly Constitutional measure,we claim the right to ask from them a candid an swer to these questions, which we find in the N. Y. World : 1. Is there any legal distinotion, and if so what is it, between the terms " armies" and "militia" as employed in the Conititution and one of its amendments ? 2. Can Congress, under the Constitution, impress (Athens into the regular army of the United States, except through the agency of State officers civil or• military ? 3. Has Congress constitutional power to take a white citizen against his will and in defiance •f the authority of The State of New York out of the National Guard of the State of New York, as organized by the act of Assembly of 1862, and place him in a black regiment., as, for example, that being raised by Gov. Andrew in Massachusetts and elsewhere ? 4. Has Congress constitutional power to draft, conscript, or impress a citizen of New York, wherever found, to serve onboard a pub iia armed ship of the United States during the present war ? General VikAlfs. The following is the latest by telegraph and from other sources : cieneral Burnside arrived at Cincinnati on the 24th. By wsy 'of Cincinnati a report has teen re ceived that the rebels have recrossed Duck river in force. General Joe Johnson is expec ted to take immediate command of the rebel army at Tullahoma. The Yazoo Pass expedi tion was moving slowly but with every prospect , of success. The ram Lioress, on the 10th in stant, overhauled the rebel eteamer Parallel with 3,000 bales of cotton, -and compelled her crew to run her ashore and burn her. The Mobile Advertiser intimates that Mobile. and not Charleston, will feel our next I.! ' The Wcrld's special correspond- • '" 6 "' ington says that p ri va te air ..ent at Wash. male that la dispatches intl- Ling news 4 " - ~ hours we shall have start- Cosy -tom Vicksburg. It is thought that .nodose Farragat has joined Commodore porter for a combined attack on that place.— Sickness prevails in the rebel army at Vicks burg. • ' A second dispatch states that Commodore Porter advises the government that on the 7th inst. the whole expedition arrived in the Talla hatchie, the vessels all getting through in fighting condition, except the Petrel,which lost her wheel. This movement alarmed the rebels. They are energetlially at work preparing them selves fol . defence. There is muchtlistrt:ss' in Vicksburg. The occupants hrve uo inent, but are living almost exclusively on -cornmeal. The choice necornmander or the Depiiitniew of the West lies between Sigel and Heintzle man, though a Washington dispatch states that the appointment of the latter is considered almost certain. Reliable information from the South repre sents that the evacuation of Vicksburg is being advocated for the purpose of massing the mili tary now there with the army of middle Ten nessee for strategic effect, prominent rebels claiming that such a movment would fbree Gen. Rosecrans to repeat Buell's retrograde move ments of last year. The rebels in the neigh borhood of Murfreesboro' have made several reconnoissances within a few days, calming considerable picket skirmishing along the whole front.. Small guerrilla parties have ap peared along the Nashville railroad, but so far no damage has been done, an the road is hea vily guarded. The old National Theatre, Boston, was de stroyed by fire on tho 24th. The steamship Europa arrived from Liverpool, on the morning of the 24th, but thecontents of her mails were not known. The steam tug, D. E. Crary, exploded her boiler at the foot. of Spring street, N. Y., on the 24th, killing five persons and seriously wounding others. Reports from Galveston state that the French Consul there, M. Theron, had been expelled by Jefferson Davis, it was supposed because the French official had been intriguing to take Texas out of the Southern Confederacy, and make it an independent State under French protection. . The Richmond papers are croaking fearfully over the want of food under which the rebel armies are now sufferings All the country around the localities where these armies are situated is completely stripped of provisions, and the only resource lies in the railroads, which are said to be giving out, for want of laborers to keep them in order. The wood work is rotting and the machinery getting out of repair. The Richmond Examiner says that " , if they are allowed to fall through from any causes, government end people may prepare fora retreat of our armies, and the surrender of much invaluable country now, in our pos session." Indian troubles appear to be be reviving in Utah. A Salt Lake telegram Marsh 23, says: Last night the Humboldt. Indians attacked the atmio.: eight miles west of Deer Creek, killed the men, burnt Ll.'z station, took the stage stock and a large herd belonging to private parties. The stage aint was killed and a passenger mortally wounded. TrOOre Olready reached there, and the route is again open. Secretary Stanton is confident, from infor mation in the War Department, that the rebels are about to fall back from Virginia to some point in the interior of the Confederacy. He esya they are removing tjteir foundries and machinery for manufacturing arms from Rich mond, with a view to the concentration of their forces and material in a position lees likely to be cat off by the operations of one army and navy. A gentleman recently arrived at Washington from the neighborhood of Charleston, S.. C., says it is uncertain when an attack by our forces on any of the southern Atlantic; parte may be expected. Preparations were being made for a heavy demonstration at a point which it may not be note prudent to mention. MMIIM The °Seers of the navy feel confident of sue , cosi, but times neceastddly required toigitlect all the arrangements tk - fleeure that end •The Supreene Court of the District r of Co lumbia orgttnized on -the 2811. :The Indges, after consultation, determined to adlunuster the oath - qloyatsy, as enacted by the last. Congress, to'all practitioners at the bar. Gov. Curtin had a.conference with the na tional authorities on military affairs on the 23d. All the advices from Port Royal to the gov ernment are to the tffect that Gen. Hunter is growing in unPopularity, and that neither men nor officers have any confidence in his ability as a commander. Major Halpin, his chief of staff, has, it is reported, sent in his resignation on account of want of confidence in general_ Hunter. As the attack will soon commence it is not, however, believed - that Mr. Lincoln will supersede Gen. Hunter by a new man. Hon Charles Sumner is busy at Washington in devising the organization of the negro army. His great solicitude is to have officers in whom the Abolitionists can rely. It is rumored in Washington that General lieintselman will be sent west (in place of Sumner, deceased,) to succeed General Curtis, and that General Casey will succeed him in the command of the forces at Washington. MILITARY NISTAKES. OF THE ADNIIV ISTRATION. We should not venture to eriticiee the gen eral plan of the war if'two well known circum stances did not relieve-our animadversions of any appearance of presumption. The first of these circumstances is the fact that leading features of the plan did not originate with our generals, but with civilians as ignorant of the military art as ourselves ; and the other is that the mortifying disproportion between the results attained and the means employed ore atee, in advance of any particular examination, a strong presumption that the means have been misapplied. As we aim to do neither more nor less than justice to the plans of the administration, we must confess that one leading feature, the blockade, was wise in its inception ' was adop ted with timely promptitude, and has crippled and distressed the enemy more than all the other means.employed during the war. no administration could have mites- - ...rue, u so obvi --::: ous a measure ; and yet we • Mr. Lincoln cannot refuse to and hie treating with advisers the credit of attegtm i- - - —eserved contempt the derision ~.ect to be thrown in England on the utockade of two thousand miles ()roast. The deprivation and suffering caused by'the block ade, have reached 'every home in the rebel States, and they have not operated, like inva ding armies, to sting the people to rage. The more nearly all other hostile measures could have been assimilated to the character of this, the - sooner the spirit of resistance would have succumbed beneath the accumulating dis tress. The war could not, indeed, have ended without severe fighting; but it might have been so managed that the wounds would not have two or three years to fester into incura ble malignity before any attempt could be made to heal them. After the blookade, the prominent feature of the war, to which all others have up to the present time been held subordinate, was the projected capture of Richmond. It is no torious that making Richmond the cardinal point of our strategy had not its birth in mili tary councils, but in Itresumptuous civilian impatience. The idea did not originate with General Scott, but with Horace Greeley. It was suggested, not by .enlightened notions of otrateesi but by the accidental circumstance that the migratory..c.anie Gestarnment. then provisional and half-organized, had deci ded to remove from Montgomery to Richmond. The New York Tribuue thereupon published a reseript or edict, that the rebel Congress must not be permitted to assenble in thelatter city, which must forthwith be taken to prevent its becoming the temporary Capital of the rebel ( States. What peculiar powers of mischief the rebel Congress would have in Richmond which it would not t pally possess sitting elsewhere, Mr. Greeley would be puzzled to tell. He seems to have been misled by a whimsical ; analogy between the damage to the national cause which would have resulted from the cap ture of Washington and the supposed injury to_the rebels from the loss of their temporary eapitabitrwhieh they had neither publielpild ings, nor archeves, and none of the prestige of a settled seat of government. The reasons for making all the operations. of, this , mighty war hinge on the possession of Richmond were sufficiently frivolous, but, such as they were, they prevailed. Mr. Greeley thus dictated the cardinal point of our strategy, as he after wards did the leading feature of the policy of the administration. The result in neither case, has been such as to justify the strange defe rence paid to the judgment of a man whose deserved distinction as a party writer is ac companied by notorious and almost child ish incompetence as a man of affairs. The necessary consequence of the "On to Richmond" strategy was to make the mountain ous, wooded and swampy State of Virginia the chief theatre of the war—a theatre which could not have been more illy chosen for us if it had been recommended by Jefferson Davis instead of Horace Greeley. The nature of the country in iv:ticks war of subjugation is conducted may annihilate all the advantages resulting from superior force and generalship. Witness, for example, the numerous unsuccessful campaigns of the two most powerful military nations of Europe against mere handfulls of people in regions whose topographical features resemble those of Virginia—the wars of Russia against the Caucassian, and the wars of France against the Arabs in Algeria. It cost France twenty campaigns, under her most capable and expe rienced generals, to subdue the Arab tribes in Algeria ; the experience of Russia in the Cau casus was even worse. Our protracted Florida war against a paltry tribe of Indians is another case in point. The Seminole war cost us five campaigns and thirty millions of dollars at a time when it was the only military operation we had on our hands. It was the obvious dic tate of prudence at the beginning of the present war to avoid, as far as• possible, regions where advantages would be gained, if at all, at such disproportionate cost. Richmond, as an ex porting city, would be worth nothing to us while the war lasts ; as a base of operations, it .would merely transfer the war to mountain regions still more impracticable. Richmond is, indeed, an important seat of rebel manufac tures ; but if it were taken the rebels would carry off their machinery and skilled laborers and set up their manufactures elsewhere. By giving their armies so much to do in Virginia we have saved them the trouble of transporting }, , fast distances the munitions made at Rich mond. The enormous waste of military strength in Virginia and along the Atlantic coast ought to have been avoided. In the early stages of the war, nothing beyond the blockade should have been attempted from the mouth of the Chesa peake to the mouths of the Miosismippi. In file, first months of Lest year, while the array in front of Washington menaced the rebels for the purpose of retaining them in Virginia, the greater part of our forces should have been concentrated in the West, and the Mississippi, opened before the eubsideuce of the spring floods. This would have reduced the area of the rebellion a fall third, and cat off forever its dreams of dominion in the , West. Nearly all of Louisiana, the whole of Texas and Ar kansas and Missouri, which supplies large numbers of rebel soldiers, would have been ef fectually detatohed from the Confederacy, thus stopping the immense resources in cattle, horses, end other supplies fret* & the west bank of the-Mississippi, andlimusin4,4he return of r a • • the troops from those - Stteseer extin guish ng th'ehopeithheir relining,* Kt of the rebel 'C'onfederacy. . haveiutalreffective block ding "diet too , the MissiasippWiould not have cost kterithparCof Whathashean expended In Praclidally fruitless camPaigasjirthe East, and had it been done early last. yea r the rebellion must ere now have collapsed. '- The great con traction of its area asd the interception of its western supplies would -have so weakened it that but one - more grand achievement - would have been necessary to give it its coup de grace. That final stroke would have consisted in send ing an irrepressible army to seize and hold well selected points on the interior railroad system which connects the parts of the Confederacy east of the Mississippi. This accomplished, the rebels wont.' see themselves hopelessly beaten, as it would be in our 'poser to out up in detail their armies, which could no longer go to each other's re lief. One of their main advantages has con sisted in their position on interior lines, with such facilities for intercommunication that they could concentrate their forces for defense more rapidly than we could convey ours around the circumference for attack. if we had first cut off the conntry west of the Mississippi, and then broken the internal railroad communica tions of the South, the blockade would speedily have 'done the rest, end the war have been ended without arousing the diabolical-passions and fixing the inveterate hatred which time will not efface in the next two generations. As the war has been actually managed, the most that has been accomplished is the crea tion of obbtacles to the resumption of friendly relations in the restored Union. The two legs on which the administration has attempted to walk are both lame legs. The abortive at• tempts to take Richmond, and the abortive attempt to emancipate the Southern slaves, have had the common effect of inflaming the hatred of the South and completing that aliena tion of feeling which, so long as it exists, is a fatal bar to anything deserving the name of Union.,—.Y. Y. World. THE ARREST OF JUDGE CONSTABI• Of all the issues which a lent in the " United States can raise with b v ei l/ P .. tb State, the most delicate .e people of a a1 " 1 been raised in the gres4._ ct . angerous has just ois. A judge it western State of performance of his ju dicial duties f rom 0 . ..,as been arrested under a warrant ..,e War Department, carried out of, his wn State into another, and "held to bail" by a major-general in the military service of the Federal Government. . The facts in the case seem to be few, simple, and beyond dispute. While the Circuit Court of-Clark-county in Illinois was in session, a woman appatre d hefnra A justice of the peace and made oath-that two persons fromlndiftna were attempting to kidnap her son upon the charge that he was a deserter from thefederal army. The.justice thereupon ieeued a warrant for the arrest of the- accused' persons. They were brought before him and at the-request of their counsel their case was carried before the Circuit Court. Judge Constable of that court heard the case. It was established that a com mission was in the possession of the accused authorizing two persons named "to arrest. de serters" in a certain district of the State of Indiana. It was not shown that the accused were the two persons named in this eel:minim,. Upon this, neither the question of desertion nor the persons of any alleged deserters being tefore him, Judge Constable held the accused t 3 bail to answer for the crime of attempted kidnapping in the State of Illinois. These proceedings having been taken, Ma jor -General Wright, military commander in • the Indiana district, agent an officer under his orders with a force of two hundred men into the State of Illinois, arrested Judge Constable, and conveyed him out of that State to answer to the charge of "harboring and protecting deserters." tY e Lo. v ca•llcld tai,,....tt, the raising of an issue between the Federal GovernMent and the people of a sovereign State. It might well Warrant the use of stronger languor - , iF sny language could. ,make the nature of such an outrage upon all policy and principle more plain than it is made by the bare recital of the facts. The courts of law are the one final barrier between administrative violence and popular passion. To• treat their decisions and the persons of the judiciary with respect is the only safety of the government against the 'people as well ap; of, the people against the government. It Wee said the other day by Archbishop 'lllighes that however sprang a gov may appear, it is the weakest thing in the world ; the remark is one which the au thorities 'at Washington will do well to lay to heart. A government which disdains its con stitutional connectians with the life of the peo ple thereby throws itself into an attitude of antagonism with the people .which leaves it entirely dependent for itt very existence upon' its own resources. Where a government can ally itself with any powerful caste in the com munity, with a priesthood, a permanent army, a landed aristocracy,, It may occupy such a position as this in comparative security for a certain time. In our own country the govern ment has absolutely no life in itself. It has no reserve of permanent interests to support it, independently of the popular will and feeling. The officials who administer 'it are certainly as liable to emir as their fellow-citizens, and tie well known effects of the possession of a "lit tle brief authority" upon average human na ture should make them even suspect themselves of an increased and peculiar exposure to mis takes. When they come or bring themselves into collision, therefore, with individual citi zens or bodies of citizens who raise a legal question of the propriety of action, it should be their first duty to see that question referred to the tribunals which command an obedience never to be wrung by force alone from a free and high-spirited people. If the government is not utterly infatuated and reckless it will recognize at once, and has ten, so far as lies in its power, to repair the dangerous blunder of its military representa tive in Indiana. Such an invasion of the sword upon the gown is a "fire-bell in the night," which should rouse the most unthinking to the perils which mad and passionate counsels are preparing alike for the people and for the government. ii - OW UNCLE SAlkt I 8 "PEELED."—The N. Y. correspondent of the Philadelphia. Sunday Dis patch gives the following recipe for making money : Talk about "making money." why its just as easy as "sliding off a log," now, ; ft days, if you are only in the secret—i. e., have the Go vernment favor. You cannot make "your salt" otherwise. In ordinary business you may toil from "morn till noon" and "noon till dewy. eve" to very little purpose in these times ; but if you can get the ear of a Govern went contractor, or a finger in the public purse, you can dip your arms into it up to the elbows, and your fortune is made. You may pull out the plums at your leisure, and green backs will spring up around you like. mush rooms over night, astonishing even your own cupidity, however exorbitant. Let me give you an instance of how it works, in this city, and I have no tiutht, it. works in a somewhat similar manner OVEri where else. Par example, a friend of mine, whom I shall call Captain Blank, is - a steamboat dealer.— He has built and sold several vessels, at a round price, to Government, and makes—eup pose we say a thousand dollars 6 day, in speo ulating in sales of a cognate character. The other day he happened to drop into the office of a feTry company. "Do you want to buy that boat 1" said the treasurer, pointing to a well. worn ferry-steamer lying up in tit adja cent dock ? "Well, I don't know," replied Captain Blank ; "what's the price t" "You may have it for $3,000." "flow long will you give the to answer yes or no?" '•Will a vr,l. do ?" "Yea. I accept the eonditioas," Captain Blank ; and off he started to Fee a vernment contractor. The latter was prey/N., to buy anything with "a margin." •-you eats, have the boat for $12,G00," said the Captain. "And the margin I' Wel 1, just say half profit." Good again." The Governme tt was "let in" for the boat at the price mentior.- ed, and the profit, $9,000, was divided be. tween the Captain and the contractor. A pretty nice three dayk operation, for it cal; required that time to-complete it from the be ginning. But the Captain is not always so fortunate. He gets "caught" occasionally. He was offer ed for_s7,ooo another old ferry-boat, recently. and ten days given him to reflect upon it. The contractor was on hand, as usual, and ready to purchase, but thought the price demanded by 'the Captain ($30,000) rither "steep.. o ,The two, however, could not agree on the "mar gin." So the contractor goes to the ferry company and privately stipulates to take the boat at $7,000 if the Captain, at the eipiration of the ten days, did not. Of course after that the Captain found it impossible to sell the con tractor the boat at any price. When the ten days were up, the contractor's brother-in-law bought the boat for $7,000 and sold her to the contractor himself for Government use at $30,000. How they divided the profits I have not learned, and am not likely to for some time to come. But you may perceive from this he it is to'"make money" if you are only la the "line of safe precedents." New Itbuertisemento. FAST HORSES FOR SALT —Two Pant Hems for elle, a trotter and pacer. Penton desiring to purchase can see the animals at R. Hogan , - hotel. Pax:on street, for two dam snar2s.lt* HOWARD HOUSL I ; kALTIMORE. The undersigned. 'LAS the plaid° of announcing c. his friends s:;,, th e public gene - rally, that htt hos re • opened ; xtensive and favorite Hotel, and solicit‘ 1 / 3 " Share of patronage laid; its highly fa'orable cation and his efforts to please may &only.). Having been eugageci for many 3rdkrit ill annoinotin,?, popular hotels in Pennsylvania, Yirgioia and this city, he feels assured of beteg able, with the aid of his com petent assistants, to meet all just expectations of the traveling comnunity in managing the Howard House, in a style surprssed by no hotel of its class in . the coun try. . Taams--Gentlemene Ordinary, $1 75 per day. " Ladles' 4: 200 " WM. O. REAMER, Proprietor. Baltimore March 25-ltd von SALE.-A FINE TWO-STORY itol7SE, with Back-building, en the corner of Samee and Broad sheets,: (Market square) .Lot 27 by 181 feet- For farther partieulars inquire of mar 24 dBt* MAO WOOD. OBBERY OF ADAMS' EXPRESS FIVE THOUSAND DOLLARS REWARD BALTriaoßs, Mardi 19, 1803 Thensfe of the Adams Ixpress.Company , was robbed on Wednesday night between' Baltimore and Bar, is burg. It contained various sums of money in currency and geld, a large number'of United States Ofrtificates of indebtedness, United states five-twenty bonds, and checks of the United htates Treasurer on the Assistant Treasurer of New York, paystle to the order of the Adams Erevan! Company. A reward of Hive Thousand Dollars is offered by the Company. The public are re. ferred to the list of the numbers of the tends and cer tificates published by the Company, and are cautioned not to negotiate'any of them: • Tour United States Certificates of Indebtedness, $5, 000 each, numbers 21,449, 21,450, 21,451, 21.453. 411 United States - Certificates, of 11,009 each Nos. 10,642. 59,343, 59,344. Nos. 59,212 , 611,218. - No. 59.199. Nos. 59,203, 59,204 69,215, 59,206. Nos. 59 200 59,201 59 202. Noe. 59.148, 59,149. Nos. 59,148, 59,147. Noe. 59 131. 59,130, 89,129. NOB. 59;247, 59,248. Nos. 59,190, 59,191, 59,193, 59,103. Nos. 59,533, 09,4; 5 9 ,3 34 , 59 335. NOB. 59,336, 59.818,139.819. Noe. 59,320, 59,321, 59,322, 59,313, 59,224.. Nos. 59 317, 59,325. Nos. .9 802, 69,303,.59,304, 69,305. • Nos. 58,979, 59,088, 59,0:9,69,070. Ten 5-20 'cleated States Bonds, Nds. 18,179 to 113,155 inelesive. . Thal°Bowing checks of B. B. Spinner, Treasurer or U. S., on Assistant _Treasurer, New York, layable to thL. order of the Adams Express Company : Check No. 850, for $lOBO. for ac. Cf. M. Felix, Cincinnati . " 859 " 2038 13 "J. B& T. Gibson, 4, " 855 " 1080 " Conrad & Wagner, " 866 " 4FO . u Wilson& Hayden, " " 665 -" 1220 " A. Behlen, :• " 864 " 6015 15 " J. 81011 its & Co., " 1187 a _404 " t3eo Josp, L.: " 813." 483 87 " J W Wagner &Co " BrB " 2645 A. Norton, St. Louie. . , " 361 " 1507 40 " B. F. Barry, " The public are cautioned not to negotiate any of the above bends or earlificates. RIMY SANFORD, Snperintendent Adtms' Enmesh Company mar24-dlm ROCL A M I 01V:—Whereas, the I Honorable JONNI: PrAnsort, President of the Court of 1, outman Plea* in, the Twelfth Judicial District, cop iloting of the'counties of Lebanon and Dauphin, and the Hon. SAMUEL LANDIS and HOD. MOSES R. YOUNG, Asso ciate Judges in Dauphincounty,taving belted their pre cept, bearing date the 24th day of February, 18(3, to me directed, for, holding a Court of Oyer and Terminer and General Jail Delivery and Quarter ilezedetis of the Peace at:Harrisburg, for the .county of Dauphin, and to coup mance on the third Monday of April next, being the 27th day of- A'pril; 1863, and to continue two weeks. Notice is therefore, hereby given to. the Coroner, Jug tides of the - Peace a , Aldermen,nd Om:040r O lef the WA county of Dauphin, that they be thenand there in their proper persons, at 10 o'clock in the forenoon of said dal, with their records, inquisitions, examinations, and their owkrpmembraucee, to do those things which to their office appertains to be done, and those who are bound in recognizance. to prosecute against the prisoners tharare or shell be in the Jail of Dauphin county, be then and there to prosecute against them as shall be just. Given under my hand, at Harrisburg, the 24th day of April, in , the year of oar Lord, 1883, and in the eighty seventh year Of the independence of - the 'United States. • J. D. BOAl3,l3heriff• lANOS carefully packed or removed P by R. WARD. trir23-2w 12 North Third o'reet. LOOKING GLASSES, of Orts an ti sizes, at WARD,S, mar23-2w. 12 North Third. street. 1863. • 1863. • pHILADELPHIA & ERIE RAIL. pzeb.—This great line traverses the Northern and Northwest counties of Pennsylvania to the city t Erie, on Lake Erie. It has been leased by the Penassy/rania Ran /its' Company, and under their auspices is being rapidly opew'd throughout its entire length. It is now in use for Passenger and Freight busineFß from Harrisburg to _Driftwood, (Second Fork,) miles) on the Eastern Division, and from Sheffield to Eric, (78 miles) on the Western. Division. TIME OF PASSENGER TRAINS AT HARRIS- Leave Northward Hen Train 2:30 a. m. I Express Train.. 2,20 p. w. Cara nut - through withcut change bath ways on the ,6 trains between Philadelphia and Lock Have; and be* tween Baltimore and Lock Raven. Elegant Sleeping Cars on Express Trains both ways between Williamerort and Baltimore, and Williamsport and Philadelphia. For information rupecting Passenger business appll at the B. B. cur. 11th and Market streets. And for Freight busineiss of the Company's Agents. 8. B. Kingston, Jr 'cor. 18th and Market streetF , Philadelphia. J. W. Reynolds, Ede. Z. M. Drill, Agent N. O. B. 8., Baltimore.. 11. 11017STON, Gen , ' Freight Agt., Phil's. LEWIS L. HOUPT, Gann' Ticket Agt., JOB. D. POTTS. Getin Manager, Williacceport. ItMI s-dg uROOMS, BRUSHES, TUBS AND j BASKETS of aThiegoriptions, qualities and prices, for P 4.3 by WM. DOCK. & CO. • Rif INCE PIES ! —Raisins, Currant''' . ALL Citron spices, Lemons, Cider, Wine, Brandy ag° f nn, for sale by WM. LOOK, jr., Ce. ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE. areas, letters of administration on the eatate of lOSIAII LENTZ, deceased, lite of Upper Paxton towri ship, Dauphin connty,.having been granted to the sub scriber, all persons indebted to the said estate are r t quested to make immediate payment, and those lariat, claims or demands against said, estate will make knowil the same_without delay. feb26-6tve* JESSE AUOMIUTY, Administrator. SWEET CIDER, THE PUREST IN the market ; for sale by WM. DOCK, Js., &CO