RATES OF ADVERTISING• /Pour lines or less constitute half a sqnsre. Ten Una OD mere than four, constitute a square. Mai 4 1 1.1 031 e d 01..- SO 30 One sq.. ODO day. —.. $0 OP U one weer. 140 oce week.... 200 4( one mon th_ 300 u one month.. 600 " three months 500 gc three monthsl 00 " K six m mths.. 800 - six months.. 15 00 54 one year 12 00 " one year TA 00 'Or Business notices inserted in the Locix counts, or before. marriages and deaths, Ise VENTS pen wits for each insertion. To merchants and others advertlaing by the year, liberal terms wilt be offered. 1 The number of insertions must be designated on the advertisement. 117 . Marriages and Deaths will be inserted at the same rates as regular advertisements. • ,filitsallantoug. pENBIoNs, BOUNTLES i BACK PAY, War Mims aid Claims for thdomnity. BTEWART, STEVE SS, CLARK it CO juternems and Counsellors-at-Law, and SOlieitora for all kinds of Military Claims, 450 PENNaYLVANIA AVENUE, LASHINDTON, D. C. • This Ares, having a thorough knowledge of the Pen sion Business, and tieing familiar with the practice in all the Departments of Government, believe that they can afford greaser fatillities. to . Pension, Bounty, and other Claimants, for the prompt and successful accom plishment of business entrusted to them, than any other Arm ih Washington. They desire to secure lunch an amount of this budnees as will enable them to execute the business for each obsimant very cheaply, and on the basis oftheir pay contingent upon their success in each ease. For this purpose they will secure tbe services of Law Mini in each prominent locality throughout the States where such business may be had, tarnish such with SU the necessary blank forms of application and evidence, requisite printed pamphlet instructions, and circulars for distribution in their vicinity, with asso• elates names inserted, and upon the due execution of the papers and transmission of the same to them by their local associates, they will promptly perform the business here. Er Their charges will %Jen dollars for officers and ite mr. dollansfor privates, for Mich Pension or Bounty and Pay obtained, and ten per cent. on amount of Claims for Military Sappliat or Claims or indormity. TET Soldiers enlisted dace theist of March, 1801, in any kind of service, Military or Naval, who are disabled by disease or wounds, are entitled to Pensions. AU soldiers who serve for tiro years, or during the war, should it sooner close, will be entitled to 8100 Bounty. Widows of soldiers who die or are killed, are entitled to Peneloas, and the $lOO Bounty. If there be no widow, then the minor children. And if no minor Children, 'then the father, mother, gluten or brothers are enti _led as above to the $lOO Bounty and Back. Pay. JOSEPH B. STBWART, NESTOR L. STEVRNS, SDW ARD CLASH , OSCAR A. FTBVIINS, WILLIS E. GAYLORD. Wilittlll67oll, D. C 1.1802. Ha" Apply at our office, or to our Associate at • Minussuse, PA.—JOHN A. BIGLER, Attorney and 'Counsellor. PrrISIMIG, PA.—ARTHVBS as RIDDELL, Attor neys-at-Law. l'orteritais, PA.—WM_ R. SMITE,. Attorney and Counsellor. • PRILABELPIIIA, PA.-4. O. MINNICHILD, 48 Atwood street, WM. M. SMITH, Attorney and Counsellor. Wastunavou, PA.—BOYD ORITM.RINCE, Attorney and Counsellor. jyBl-dly • JACKSON & CO.'S SHOE STORE, O. Mt MARKJT STAIN?, RAILEISBFRG, PA., meta they niand to deride their entire time to the BOOTS AND SHONS all Made and mielles, In the neatest and most fish. °Wile styles, and at satisfactory prices. Their stodk win eotudet, in part, of 47enrienees Arne Wand Paton Leather Boots and Shoe; latent ntyttai Dienes , and Misses ) Gaiters, and other„,Shoes in peat minty; and is fact everything onneeted with the Shea busineia. CUSTOMER WORK will be Particularly attended to, and in all cases will satisfaction be warranted. Lasts mud up by cm of the best makers is the coveystry. The long practical experience of the undersigned, and their thorongl► knowledge of the business will, they trust, be sufficient guarantee to the public that they will do them jiurtice, and famish them an article the will recommend itself for utility, cheapness and dears *City. Lian 97 JACKSON & CO. lIKINGER'S PATENT BEEF TEA, Ar f sohd, concentrated extract of BEEF AND VEGETABLES, Convertible imniediately into a nourishing and deli cious soup. Highly approved by a number of eminent Ykysicians. mowlintrotto article condoned Intel Market form, blithe substantial and attritive properties of u large bulk of meat and vegetables. The readinesswith which it dissolves into a rich and palatable Soup, which would require hours of preparation according to the usual method, is an advantage in many situations of life too obvious to need urging. Its highly nourishing qualities combined with in; delicacy, renders it invaluable for the itch; while for those In health, it is a perfectsabstitute for fresh meet and vegetables. It will keep good in any animate. It is peculiarly well adapted NOR TIikVELNIIS, by land or sea, who can thus avoid those accidentaldepriva lions of a comfortablelneal, to which they are Reliable. NOB INVALIDS, whose capriCious appetite can thus patistled in a moment. FOR SPORTSMEN said IaIIIIRSIONTSTB. to Whole, both its compactness and easy preparation will recom. mend it. For sale by eeped-tf gliAll TER OAK FAMILY FLOUR! lANNIVELLED BY ANY IN TER If. STATBS! AND SUPERIOR TO ANY FANCY Mt WI- NTA 191 OFFERED IN PENNsyLvANIAr IT ID MADE OP CHOICE MISSOURI WHITE WHEAT. 117 Deli Tared any place In the city free of charge Terms cash ea delivery. kW Wht. DOOK, 711,, lc 00. QOLDIER'S CAMP COMPANION.- kj A very convenient Writing Desk ; also, Portfolios, Memorandum Beoke, Portmonnales, &el., at SOILEFFBR'S BOOKSTORD CHEESE! !--1.00 Bores Etime Cheese (on consignment) for sale at lees than market rate. jy3.o WM. DOCK, Ja., & 00 ATOTIONS.—Quite a variety of useful 1. 1 11 and entertaining artieles—cheap--et riGH3IOI4II , B Bowurrome. NVANTED.-A GOOD COOK at the BOMGABBNER HOTEL. Apply immediat CLARET WINE I ! I—We are closing out %. 0 a VARY suplaioa Lot at less WM. than east! DOCK n co. RIME POTATOES !-7•A LAII,GE LOT P just reeetTed and for imlo low. oclin-dtf WM. DOCK, Jsy & CO. MINCE M 1 AT superior, just JYX received and for gale by WM. DOCK, jr., & CO. CCONDENSEDMILK '—Just received and for lode by WM. WOK jr., k CO.. UERAIETICALLY SEALED Peaches, Tomatoes, Lobster, Salmon, Oysters, Spired Oysters, for sale by WM. DOCK, jr., & 00. RIKOKED HALIBUT I —A very choke to article, just received and for sate by WM. DOCK, jr., & 00. TRENCH MUSTARD, ENGLISH and Domestic 'Pickles, (by the dozen or hundred,) Su- Petior Wad Oil, Ketchup, Sauces and condiments of nary description, for sale by myll6 WM. DOCK, Js., & Co TAKE TROUT ! I—A innall invoice of LANE TROUT, (Mackinaw,) trimmed, and the quality " A 1," jnat received and for sale very low b y WU. DOVIt, .Tv.., or, ou WAR! WAR' —BRADY, No. 62 Market street, below Thirdi has received a large assortment of SWORDS, SASHES MidarltWa h will very low. 11,12.0-dif IZIELF SEALING FRUIT JARS 1— k-3 Beat laid Cheapest in the markets! Cell and inaufine them. list 'FOR RENT—Two desirable OFFICE BOOMS, 'leered artery front of WyetiN Building corner of Market &mare and Market street. Applyal tie *Mee sep23dif MACKEREL!!! MAOKKUL, Noe. 1, 2 and a, in AU sized 'leakages ceir, mod seek package warranted. Just received, and orals low by WM. 1100 Y, JR., & 00. per volume. Basso3os Thirty Years its U. S. Senate, 2 voter/n*3, $2.50 and $ll per root. Cyclopeclut of American Eloquence, containing tits speeches VON most eminent Orators of America, 14 stoat portraits, 2 roofs. $2.50 each. Parton's Life and Times of Amino .Tacksms,B noinnus, $2.50 each,. Address J. V. STBAIMAIIGH, Hs.iitisburg, Pa. General Agent for D. APPLETON & DO. DOCK, & Co. I Tor Circulars descriptive of Annual Cyclopedia. aerDE•dtcartf. --..,..„.75'• .0 4:g :.:4, : „:,_ _. _ ! ;-7 , -; . - : 1:, , .. . . , ' :-.t- ' . - •... - = - :....- . .-: ar i dll i i i i; , ... f., ,.,. ... j .,.., i‘ . . . , e '' . ' '' '- t - i?' . '- ' 7 •: ' , 77- -mg •, - , _ II , t . VI P 0 - 1 1 1 1 . . . . . . . . a:rio . i.. , ..--. : 7-,,7 1 - i ", 4 - 1 , 1 - 11 , E , if i d _• ~, vi , . __„....... . . ... , . . , . VOL. 6 -NO. 179. Business dabs. DR. C. WAICHEL, SURGEON AND OCULIST, BICSIMINCILTIIIIID NOBTU STRUM- Ile IS now fu aly prepared to attend promptly is the duties of prOfeesion in sAI its branches. AI LONG MID VIII? 811001111313701. 113 1 D/OAL instil*e him in promising fail sad ample aatisfaation to all who maytavor him with a call, be the disease Ohronie or incetker nature. nalit.dikwl7 WM. S. MILLER, ATTORNEY AT . LAW. OPPIONIN SHOEMAKER'S BUILDING 4 SECOND.STREET, BNYWAIMI WA.LNIVP AND NARKIIT 11Q17A111 * no2S] Nearly opposite the Buehler Howie. Wald? T HOS. G. MAoDOWELLI ATTORNEY AT LAW, MILITARY CLAIM AND PATENT AGENT. Office in Burke's Bow, Third street, (Up Stairs.) Having formed a connection with parties in Wash ington City, who are reliable business men, any busi ness connected with any of the Departments will meet with immediate and careful attention. mti-y CHARLES F. VOLLMER: UPHOLSTERER, Chestnut street, four doors above Second, (OPPOSITE WASHIAGTON HOSE ROUSE') Is prepared to furnish to order in the very best style of workmanship. Spring and Hair ' Mattresses, Window Oar tains, Lounges, and all other articles of Furniture in his line, on short notice end moderate terms. Having ex perience in the business, he feels warranted In asking* share of public patronage, confident of his ability to give satisfaction. janl7-dtf SILAS WARD. NO. 11, NORTH THIRD ST., HARRISBURG. STEINWAY'S PIANOS, MELODEONS, VIOLINS, GUITARS, Banjos, Flutes, Fifes, Drums, limning's, manes, BEM AND noon NOM, &e., &d., PHOTOGRAPH FRAMES. ALBLIMS, Large Pier and Mantle Mirrors, fignare and Oval Punnet of every description made to order. Regnilding done. Agency for Howets Sewing Machines. Myliiheet Music sent by Mail. ootl-1 JOH.N W. GLOVER, MERCHANT TAILOR! Has just received from New York, an assort ment of SEASONABLE GOODS, which he offers to his customers end the rails id wov22) MODERATE PRICES. dtf SMITH & EWING, ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW, THIRD STREET, Harrisburg, ` : Practice in the several Courts of Dauphin county. Col lections made promptly. A. C. SMITH, feb2B J. B. EWING. T COOK, Merchant Tailor, . 27 DRUMM ST., between Second and Front, Ras pat returned from the city with an assortment of CLOTHS, CASSIMERES AND VESTING'S, Which will be sold at moderate prices and made up to order; and, also, an assortment of READY MADE Clothing and Gentlemen's Furnishing Goods. nov2l-Iyd D E,NTISTRY. D. I. GILDEA, D. D. 3, N 0 • 119 MARKET STREET, *BY & KUNKEL% BUILDING, UP STAIRS. janB-tf RELIGIOUS. BOOK STORE ; TRACT AND SUNDAY SCHOOL DEPOSITORY, E. S. GERMAN. 27 KM= DBOODD EITDDIPZ, ABOVA 011118 NUT, sesotsauoo, Depot for then% of Stereoscopes,StereoseeploYlows, Music and Musical Instruments. Also, subscriptions taken for religions publications. 000-d7 TORN G. W. MARTIN, FASHIONABLE CARD WRITER, HEWS HOTEL, HARRISBURG, PA. MI manner of VISITING, WEDDING AND BTISI NESS CARDS executed in the most artistic styles and most reaßoosble terms. deel4-dtt FRANKLIN 110IISIO f BALTIMORI, MD. This pleasant and commodious Hotel hsi been tho roughly re-fitted and re-furnished. It is pleasantly situated on North-West corner of Howard and Franklin Meeks, a few doors west of the Northern Central Rail way Depot. =very attention paid to the comfort of his poets. G. IMISBNRING, Proprietor, jal2-tf • (Late of Selina Grove. Pa.) THEO. - F. SOHEFFER , BOOK, CARD AND JOB PRINTER, NO. 113 MARKST STREET, HARRISBURG. EU' Particular attention. paid to printing, ruling and binding of Railroad Blanks, Manifests, Insurance Poli cies, Checks Bill-Heads, dco. Wedding, igniting and Business Cards printed at very low pricea and In the bent style. iffon2l DYOTTVILLE GLASS WORKS, • PHILADELPHIA, EANIIPACTIIRE CARBOYS, DEMIJOHNS, PORTER, HIWBBAL WATBB, PIOELI AND PRESERVE BOTTLES - ON lITUT DESCRIPTION. H. B. & G. W. DENNF322, oel9-4113? 27 South Front steret. Philadelphia. MUSIC STORE! 16, 9 8 lump STREET, HARRISBURG, PA. SHEET MUSIC, PIANOS, MELODEONS, GUITARS, TIOLINS, BANJO STRINGS, Of every description. DRUMS, PIPES, FLUTES, ACCORDIONS, etc. et tiro lowest OITY PRICES, at W. KNOCHE'S MUSIC STORE!, No. 98 MABERT STILYZT. A BOOK NOR THE TIMES ! America,: Annual Cyclopedia and Register of Important Events for the Year 1881. In 1 vol 8 vo. over 760 pages. Cloth 03, Leather $3.50. Published by D. Appleton 4- Co., New York. The design of this work is to furnish a record of all the important knowledge of the year. The event' at the war, owing to their prominence, will, of course , on. a conspicuous part, but all other branches-28ot. once, drt, Literature, the Mechanic Arts, Zee. will re. seise due attention. The work will be published ex clusively by initateriptiOn, and ready for delivery in Atte next. Also, new complete Benton Debates of &ogre:l,l6 vehemss,4B and $8.50 SWEET CIDER. !—A very superior lot justreceived and for sale by WM. DOON.Jr.. &Co. pOTATORS.-300 BIJAI tLS OF A superior quality Jest received and for Bale low, by WM, DUOS, Jet., & CO. tyloyD PE &CHEF—PARED AND inirreßlD-jurt 'leaved by • WM: DOOR. la., & 00. HARIGSBURG. PA:, MONDAY, MARCH 30, 1863. tVatrioi & 1.1 MONDAY MORNING, MARCH SO 1863 TAR POSITION AND POLICY OP TIE DEMO CRATIC PARTY. LETTER IPBOX CHIEF JUSTICE CATO.N, OZ ILLmois, TO GOV. HORATIO SEYMOUR, OP NEW YORK. Hon. Horatio Seymour ; Dean Sin.: As you requested, I will pencil down some suggestions which I made to you orally a few days since, in reference to Western sentiment on the present condition of the country, with some reflections upon _the late elections. Yon are undoubtedly correct that the North west will never consent to a separation of the Union, leaving the lower Mississippi in a far eign jurisdiction. Our interests are agricultu ral, and upon a market for our products de pends our well-being-1 might almost say our existence. Before the war we supplied the plantations of the South with their horses and mules, their corn and their bacon. This plan tation market consumed most of the products of the counties bordering upon the Mississippi and its tributaries, and any surplus found its way to the Atlantic cities and forbign countries through that great river. By the war we have lost this market and this outlet, and our pro ducts, which formerly went south, have been thrown upon the northern transports and northern markets, overloading the former and glutting the latter.. As an inevitable conse quence, while money has depreciated nearly one-third, the prices of our great staples in the hands of our farmers have remained sta tionary, or have receded in some instances more than half. At the last Presidential elec tion, on the Ohio river mules were worth from one hundred4nd twenty-five to two hundred and twenty-five dollars per head. Now our graziers cannot realize more than sixty-five to eighty dollars per head, notwithstanding the great consumption by the army; and horses have depreciated in nearly the same ratio. If otherportions of the country have found means to Make money by the war, to the Western agriculturalist it has proved an unmitigated burden, which can only be relieved by a resto ration of peace and of the Union. The former without the latter would render permanent that which we now look upon as but tempo rary. Hence has the West fought; and so will she fight, not for the desolation of the South and the final destruction of her plantations, but for the restoration of the Union. Hence has Illinois furnished more than ten thousand troops above her quota. If a draft has been necessary in any portion of the West, it has not been where the influence of this plantation market has been directly felt. I repeat, we can never consent that the lower Mississippi shall pass into a foreign jurisdiction. I also agree with you that the radical Abo litionists prefer a separation to a restoration of the Union as it was with all the rights of the states as they exist under the Constitution, including slavery; and just so soon as theY are convinced that a majority of the people of the North and of Congress are determined to admit a peace upon the old basis, they will la bor for a separation. They seem determined to invent and practice every provocative pos• sible towards the South, in order to produce and continue a degreeof alienation which shall prevent them from embracing the tender which the conservative North is ready to offer them, to return and enjoy the protection of the Con stitution unimpaired. These provocations, in connection with the known state of feeling pervading the whole community South, render any hope that they will embrace the Democra- . tic offer to return and resume the statul info ante bellum, entirely futile at the present mo ment. They will, with bitter contempt, spurn this offer now, let it come from whom it may. Such is the present state of feeling in the Southwest as well as in the' Southeast. Vic tories must be won before they will listen to reason from any party and accept reunion on any terms. Were the . Democrats in power to day, they must win victories before they could save the Union. It these victories are won while the Abolitionists rule, may not the South accept peace from us when we attain the con trol, quite as readily as if won under Demo cratic auspices? What shall be done in this contingency ? The answer of ninety-nine in the hundred of those who voted the . Democratic ticket at, the, October and November elections is and will be—The war must be, prosecuted earnestly and to the' last— not to crush and conquer the South, but to crush and conquer the rebellion. If a ten years' war is necessary, rather than give up the Union, they accept it, sorrowfully, it is tree, but earnestly. We hope and believe Wirt what ever the fortunes of war may be this winter, and especially if success , shall attend our arms, and if Mr. Lincoln can be brought under Democratic intlences, or oven if the South can be brought to believe that conservative princi plea have acquired such an ascendency in the North as to admit a peace on the old basis and protect them in their fair constitutional rights, then peace is possible after the fourth of March, when the new Congress will come into being. To render this possible—to excite a reasonable hope that the South will return to the Union on the old basis—it is indispensable that they should be disabused of the opinion that the Democratic party is a peace party on the basis of separation. Whatever this or that Democrat may think or feel about the prosecution of the war, certain it is that a vast majority of the old Democratic party—that is to say, the Douglas portion of it, all of those who have formerly voted with the Republicans, hut at the late elections voted with us, at least in the West, and no doubt the same is true in the East—are fixed in the determination that the war must be prosecuted till the rebellion is put dqwn, or till those in revolt will submit to the gdvernment of the Constitution. Indeed, this follows, as a necessary consequence upon the determination not to submit to a dismember ment of the Union—which, as before stated, must be looked upon as a settled question, at least in the west. ,Wlten the.rebellion was inaugurated its pro moters professed to believe, and no doubt most of them did believe, that they would not only meet with sympathy, but with material support, from the Democratic party of the North; and but for this t elief it is doubtful if they could have deluded their people to such an extent as to have secured their acquiescence in the re volt. All now see how fatal was that delusion. They should be told in time that the hope that the late elections are au expression of sympa thy for secession is a delusion equally great, and must prove equally fatal. The Northern Democracy stands now where it has over stood It will support at all hazards the integrity of the Union, while it will guarantee to every por tion of it all the rights and privileges stipulated in the Constitution. To this extent end fur these purposes the Democratic party must be considered a war party, and in its support and prosecution it will vindicate ita ancient renown for steadiness of purpose—for pursuing its object with a calm and determined energy which evinces its faith in its principles, and which eier has and ever will, in the end, se cure its triumph. While we tenet prosecute the war to the end,proposed, we will do it with out malice and Without vindictiveness, and upon those humane and Christian principles which should illustrate the civilisation of - this great Republic; and, especially when warring with our own brethren for the sole purpose that we may hereafter live with them in peace and amity. The taunt of those fanatics who are blinded by rage and the itnaginary wrongs of the negro, that we . would conduct the war "with kid gloves" and -"so as not to hurt the enemy," shall not drive us back to the barba rism of the dark ages, or compel us to a war of extermination instead of reconciliation. Every act'of kindness and mercy opens a new avenue to reconciliation and peace ; every act of bru tality and barbarity closes a door leading to these results_ Acts of brotherly love beget fraternal feeling; acts of cruelty and oppres sion and injustice lead to alienation, retaliation and revenge. While we will firmly hold the sword in one hand, and use it, too, with deter mination and resolution, the other must always be open with the proffer of peace and friend ship so soon as they will return to their alle giance to the Constitution; It is due , to the South—it is due to the North—ft is due to the world—that the matured and fixed determina tion of the Democratic party should be known and thoroughly understood on this subject. It is due to the South, that they may not cherish the delusive hope that the late elections mean that they may go in peace and destroy this government. IV is due to the North, that those who have come to our help for the purpose of bringing the government back within the . re straints of the Constitution, may know that they have not been contributing to the success of the rebellion and the destruction of the gov ernment and the Constitution. It is due to the world, to know that our la'e triumphs are not an invitation to intervention, or an evidence of division among our people upon the propriety of the prosecution of the war for the restora tion of the Uniot}. ' The . readings or explainations of the late Democratic. successes have been various and opposite. By the Republicans it is said that by these elections the people have condemned the tauter mode in' which the war has been ktrosecuted, although this is directly opposed to their position before the election. In Eu rope they were a condemnation of the war and a vote for separation—adopting the Republican theory during the canvass. The South is silent on the subject, awaiting events. Now, the true mode, of tunderstanding the meaning of these .elections is to ,read their antecedents. Not • what the Republicans or AbolitiOnists said of us, for that would sustain the foreign explanation: But what did our friends say ? What did our papers and 'our speakers say ? What did the party proclaim as its principles, to the support of which it invited and claimed the suffrages of the people? These were sus thined by the popular vote, and these tell with unerring certainty what these elections mean. Did any representative speaker, or did any standard paper, advocate a dissolution of the Union or a peace upon the basis of separation ? Our enemies said this, of us ; but we denied it veheule i ntly, East and West, and everywhere. They knew ancl ire knew that a conviction of thUse - charges WAS a certain defeat. All know now, all knew then, that no 'anti-war party could dimmed with the ptittple—that the popu lar vote could only be secured upon the war platform, and the only difference which we admitted or recognized was the principles and purposes for which the war should be prose cuted. We all insisted—papers, orators and conventions—and proved, too, that oar ene mies were prosecuting the war for unconstitu tional purposes and by unconstitutional means —that the emancipation proclamation was unconstitutional, and that arbitrary arrests and th'e.suspension, or rather suppression of the writ of habeas corpus, by the Executive and his subordinates was equally a violation of that instrument. It was upon these measures we took issue with our opponents, and not, upon a prosecution of the war, and upon these issues the popular verdict has been rendered. Both parties went to the country admitting and ad vocating the propriety and the necessity of prosecuting the war. The whole country then —both parties L—were for the war. There were individual exceptions no doubt on both sides, but they entertained their opinions in silence and voted for that party which approached near- . eat their views. There were no doubt some few who voted with us who have ever been disgus ted with the war, who have ever sympathized with the rebe:lien, and think the South has a right to separate and go in peace, but they are very few. There are many more Abolitionists who feel that the 'South can never be con quered but by extermination, which the history of the world shows is impossible, and that a prolongation of the war will insure Democratic ascendency, and result in a restoration of the Union ae it was under the Constitution as it is, arid hence they are for a separation and a peace, at once, which they deem preferable to the old Union. Neither party countenanced these extreme views, and to have done so would insured certain defeat. Where, then, did we get our votes ? There were not enough old Democrats to give us the victory. We must get, and did get, accessions from the' Republicans—from those who voted for Mr. Lincoln—who helped to place the present administration, including the Congress, in power. How did we get these votes? Why did they leave the Republicans and come to us? It was because the Republican party—the ad ministration—ceased to represent their views. They disapproved, it is true, but still tolerated arbitrary and illegal arrests, perhaps, because the Confederate COVernment did the same thing in a most arbitrary manner, with the Union men in the south. But, it was the proclamation which produced the revolution in the North—a peaceful and a constitutional revolution. The process of reasoning which brought to our ranks such accessions of patriotic men, and will bring to us many times more in the future, was not uniform among those who deserted the opposite party and came to us; while all were influenced by substantially the same causes. As the human mind differs in dif ferent men, so will men reason differently from the same facts while arriving at the same result. As for some, if not by far the greatest pro portion of our accessions during the late elec tions, they saw that in his inaugural address Mr. Lincoln had proclaimed that he would maintain the Constitution, and not violate it ; that he had approved most cordially the Crit teoden resolutions passed at the special session in July, 1861 ; that he had, in fact, disapproved of the confiscation law and finally signed it with great reluctance and virtually under pro test. All approved of his Greeley letter as showing that he was prosecuting the war only for the restoration of the Union. He had re voked the Fremont and Hunter orders pro fessing to free the slaves in their respective departments, and had removed both those gen erals from their commands, and finally in his answer to the Chicago clerical committee, ha PRICE TWO CENTS. had again publicly committed himself to a conservative and constitutional °minim, and had, by most unanswerable arguments and illustrations, pointed out the danger and the folly of the course which they urged upon him. Many of these old Lincoln men—the old conservative Webster and Clay Whigs, who constituted the conservative element f the Republican party—believed, said still believe, that Mr. Lincoln had been honest and truthful in these professions, and faithfully representea his own real convictions, and the principles upon which he desired to conduct his adminis ,tration and to prosecute the war. , These men saw with surprise and consternation his pro clamation of the 22c1 of September, only ten days after his answer to the Chicago committee, before whom he had so nobly vindicated him self. How wagthis to be accounted for? They believed still in hie truth and proverbial hon esty. They did not believe that he had been merely acting a part falsely, that he might the more securely adopt the •radical measures of the wild fanatics who had been howling around him and embarrassing and abusing him from the very commencement of his administration. But they thought that his firmness of papose had given away. He yielded to a pressure which a Jackson would have defied, but which he could not resist. Of this pressure he had often complained, sometimes publicly, oftener in private. To the Border State delegation particularly had he complained of this pres sure, and intimated that it was backed by the threat of defection and desertion by those whose support ho could not spare. They saw —the whole world saw—whence this pressure came. All the Northern States were in the control of one party. Not one Democratic Governor, not one Democratic Legislature to which he could look for support and relief. All were Republican, and most of them of a radical and violent character. Many of them were bold bad men who would scruple at nothing to attain their ends, even to the overturning of the Government and a daring usurpation.— They saw that upon such men be was entirely dependent for hie army; if not for his trea sury. At the commencement of the war, 'he con sented to the plan, of raising the volunteer forces through the State Executives, and allow ing them to appoint all the regimental and company officers. At this juncture there were three hundred : thousand volnnteers assembled and organized in ; ttese States,. held and con trolled by the State . Governors and commanded by officers appointed by them,'-and still subject to their military orders as their superior . offi cers. :Nearly, if not quite, all r of these Gover nors were clamorous forradicalmettaures—for the proolamation—a measure which they pro fessed to believe would•crush the rebellion and end the war directly, and that without it there was no hope of success.. Here was a pressure. Here was a visible, tangible power, sufficient to overturn the go vernment and hurl Mi. Lincoln fro'm the Pre sidential chair—a measure which we have every reason to believe was actually contem plated, at least by a portion of these State Executives, and who shall say that it would not have been earthily accomplished had the President not finally yielded? Then there would have been no peaceful October and No vember elections. The conservatives would then have had a double task to Perform, and would have achieved a double victory. True, he resisted and complained till the meeting of the Governors at Altoona-was about to assem ble and give shape and ,unity to this mighty force. and then who shall say for himself that he would 'not have yielded`? ' ?to doubt there, are men who would.not have given way to this threatening, crushing pressure, but they are the men who would never have allowed this combination against the government and the Constitution to have assumed 'such vast pro portions. Here were facts which have already become history, and these are the constructions given to them by at least a portion of the conservative Republicans who, with Mr. Lincoln himself, had been devout followers of Henry Clay and Daniel Webster, and who believed that Mr. Lincoln told the truth when he said that at heart he was opposed to • the violent doetrines of the proclamation, and they firmly believed that he only yielded his own judgment and deserted his own cherished policy under this almost resistless pressure. They believed that the Abolitionists had, with violent hand, seized him . and demanded of him the proclamation and a change of poliey on pettier deilosltion. They saw there was no way Of *resting him from this violent grasp—of disenthralling him from the meshes in which they had entangled him, that he might conduct the government and prosecute the war upon constitutional principles and for constitutional ends but in the success of the Democratic party. Thus reasoned a portion but not all of those who had become disgusted and alarmed at the new policy so suddenly inaugurated at Wash ington. Others, and there are no doubt many of them, who believed that Mr. Lincoln had at heart been' in deep sympathy with the most radical from the beginning, and had only affect ed moderation as a matter of policy. When they looked back and remembered all he had said and done they could see this radicalism cropping out on many occasions, as when he caressed and countenanced Wendell Phillips, and many other indications equally suggestive, and upon a review of his wrilings and sayings designed to create an impression of a con servative purpose, they found certain reserva tions and qualifications indicating a predeter mination to adopt the radical policy as soon as he could do so safely. They now believed that while he had "held the word of promise to the ear," he designed "to break it to the hope." This class of men left him in disgust, for they had lost all faith in his integrity. Again, there were others whose attention was arrested principally by the imbecility of the administration. While it was obstinate it was weak. It was incapable of comprehending the magnitude of the rebellion and the resour ces and the endurance of the South, and was utterly unable effectually to use the vast re sources placed in its hands so as to produce any adequate results, They believed hat the President was not a judge of men nor of things. That he could neither conduct the war himself nor comprehend the capacity of others to conduct it. That the whole history of the• administration was a combination of obstinacy and vacillation. T he proclamation as a war measure completetheir dif!trust and destroyed their last hope in the ability of the adminis tration to prosecute the war to a successful issue. It was was mere child's play on a grander scale than was ever before exhibited in the history of the world. They felt that the interests, nay the life, of the nation were wickedly trifled with ; and that the time bad coma, if the country was to be saved at all, for the great mass of the people—whose servants our rulers are—whose interests are committed to their hands—whose country and wluise gov ernment it is that is to be saved or lost—to band together under come form, some Organi zation, and form such a party , as, by its uum bees and its influence, would make itself heard and heeded at the seat of gt,verancent. The only way to do this was for all the conserve, tive..men bf the nation to rally around the Democratic party. PUBLISHED EVERY MORNING, BLINDLY'S NECINPTID, BY 0. BARRETT' & • 00' Tax rimy PA TRIO? Alb Ihnoli will be NUM 101110. II erasers residing in the Borough for Mt contra PRI watt' payebie to the Carrier. Mail subscribers, rive noLIABO is Alleltrit. TYR PATRIOT AID tistost is 'published stow. nom-cite ORR ANNUM, invariably in IMITORICO. Ten solace to one addrope,fifteeo dollars. • Connected with this eetablishnient is an aotetudv• JOB OFF/CS, containing a variety of plain end fancy typop,unoinalled by any establiebment in the Weider of the State, for Which the patronage of the public is so licited. - It is,not my purpose to express an opinion as to which was nearest right ; but by wilich ever of these varlous motive!, or consideratinne the Republicans`whe came to our supPerritere influencedoill aped in the last conclusion.— All saw that the. Democrats were as earnestly engaged in the prosecution of the war as war Mr. Lincoln himself. •They ea* that no party in the history. of..this,. or any other country, had over shown. more .disinterested patriotism than had been exhibited by the Demoorats since the breaking out of the rebellion. Before the smoke of the politiealbattle of 1860, by which Mr. Lincoln watt placed in power,,had cleared away, a civil war was inaugurated, whielt.lad been provoked and induced, though certainty not justified, by the wild fanaticism of the very leaders of the party which had . phreft-Mr. Lincoln in power, and Democrats Were tiked upon to go and shed their blood and' 'COM their substance in a war which they belieVed might 'have been avoided by a proper °bacilli,- tory course, which they had reconaneaded, but had been treated with contumely by than 'in power. But notwithstanding all this -the Democrats had shut their eyes ft• at that had gone before, and hushed the involuntary mur murings that the war was needlessly provoked by that wild fanaticism which had jtait defeated them at the polls, and they had rushstrto Idle ranks under Mr. Lincoln, only remerabbehig that their country and its Constitution vre4ist danger. These conservative Republicans hid witnessed all this and they appreciated` They saw that the Democrats had come:trio. the support of the country even more cheer fully and earnestly than had their politica opponents,in whose hands was all the patronage• of both the civil and the military adminietaa tion. All could see that the Democrats had boldly fought and freely bled from no sordid motives—to maintain no party ascendency, lint) solely to • maintain the Union and the Constitui tion. When they saw all this, the conviction was' forced upon them that to the Democratic partr alone must they look for the salvation of the• country and the restoration of peace and the Union. They , found only in the Democratic party those principles for the conduct of the war which Mr. Lincoln had always maintained, or professed to maintain, until he was forced to abandon them, as some of them believed, against his own settled convictions of right and policy: Thus alone could he be enabled to return or be forced back to his old censer vative policy, which afforded the only Impact an honorable termination of the war, or ale st oration of the Union and a vindication of the Constitution. Seeing all this, they could not heeitatc to abandon their old politisalassoeiates, who tad greedy abandoned the principles upon, which the war , had hitherto professedly been con ducted, if not the President of their choiee, and ally theingelves with the Debworsts: This-is the trap explanation where , the votes came from, and why they came, which gave . 14 the victory—which produced this great po litical revolution. • It is undimbtedly true that bat a small'por tion of the conservative Repuhlioana, who :are opposed to• this wild and destructive radicalism of their Abolition leaders, which now reigns supreme in the Cabinet and in Congress, aban doned them and came' to us during The late canvass. Indeed, only the most reflective and sagacious of them were prepared to do so, as it were, on the spur of the moment. Were the election. to be repeated to-morrow, ten would vdte'ivith Sia'now Where one did in November, The persistent and envenomed abase of ,Demo oratic loyalty by the political ;tapers, and:ora tors which altine they - were in the..,helkit, of reading and hearing, induced many to tonally doubt whether the Democratic' party, if once in power, would sustain the governtient in the prosecution of the war to restore the Union and vindicate the Constitution; while others had not sufficiently analyzed their own' feelings, in view of the altered and peculiar state of 'things, to enable them to break away from old names and old associations, and to overcome old ;pre judices so far as to allow them to vote the Democratic ticket. But, thanks to the enlight enment of the American people, enough 'saw the truth and acted upon it to overthrow those dangerous men whose manifest and even de clared object is to overthrow the Constitution of their country, and who will, in history, stand side by side with the leaders of this re bellion. Posterity will be divided' upon the question as to which are the wickedest and which the greatest traitors. The true course of the Democratic party in the future is manifest. We must walk in the light of the past. If we would maintain the ascendency already attained, and augment our ranks by the accession of those' Republicans who are disgusted and alarmed by the radical policy of the Abolition leaders, and who desire to prosecute the war by constitutional means and for constitutional ends, we Must pursue a course alike dictated by patriotism and by pol icy. We must heartily and cordially live up to our professions during the canvas. We must show no lokewarmness, or hesitancy in, sus taining and prosecuting a war which, if aban doned by the people, must result in a dismemm • berment of the Union, , the destruction of the Constitution and a disgrace to this people , which must attach to them and their posterity, through all time: A dissolution of the Union.. once admitted—a destruction of the Constitum Lion once effected, then this community States will be resolved into its original element,. and who can foretell where will be the end ?• There never was a clearer light shining before. public men than that which illuminates the way in which we ahouid walk. We may pursue a. course now which will draw to our pariy.all the reflective, substantial conservatthm ef• the• nation, by the aid and support of which , we shalt be enabled to wrest Abraham lineoln, from the desperate hands of those who are bent on the destruction of the Constitution and the government, and to take the lead of imclic afi:- fairs, and finally restore the country to•peacte, unity and happiness. Or we may by another course repel from us those who have ROW octane to our help and given us the victory, as well as the great mass of the Democrota themselves, and leave the party literally annihilated, and with it the last hope of the country blasted. Yours truly, J. IX, CAwes, OTTOWit, 111., Deo. 1862. "MURDER WILL Our."—On the' 4 2.011 of October, 1858, an unknown men was found lying on the railroad track at Altoona, with fife entirely extinct. There were no marks or bruises about him, other than a fracture of the skull, which had evidently bees inflicted by a slung shot or some other round or blunt in strument. Some ss9 in money, and a ticket. from Chicago to New York were found . in hi& possession. His name was supposed . to be /0. T. Bernier. On Tuesday morning last', Nichr , olas Ehringer, propieter of the RIAU •U o t, e l, Altoona, was arrested, on oath of titartin Hor man charged with the murder of the,Men above referred to. Harman xuade oath 'thit be saw Ettringer put the man on tho`treek the night previous to the stamping :in:srhieli,, he was found; that he told Harman that hebsd killed him, and that be gave, or promised to give, Harman money to say nothing shout it. The case will underge a' full inveuttgotior4 0 1 0tO next term Of WM.