1 i MM iv r j i U Ui JACOSY, i BblisbcrO Truth and lUgbt God and oar Country. two Doll as per Annum. VOLUME 14. BLOOMS BURG. COLUMBIA COUNTY, PA., WEDNESDAY SEPTEMBER 30, 18G3. NUMBER 49. STAR OF THE NORTH tl0n, or hd who rememberB the obIisalions . of race, of kind ted, of religion 1 He who f CBHSH1D XTMT WDif80.T BT . ! . , " W II JiCOBf ; gives them a cause lo fight for, or he who : rrt. , . . , , , ... . takes away all cause for fighting V Clflee on Sain SU Sd Sqnirc belo Sarket - VVn0) inhe 6eld wi(l-he r;bel8 moM s .TLKMS:-Two Dollars n-r; annum If paid ,boge who 8topped tecrn!ling at the begin-V-tilno bix months from the time of subpcn- , . . v - bint: two dollars and fifty cents if not paid Ing of the war. or those who wished to go 'within the. year. No subscription taken for on with it t Those who profligately ware a lew period than six months; no discon-j the resources of the nation, or those who unaar.ce permitted until all arrearages are paid, unless at the option of the editor. Ihittrms of advertising will be as follows : One square, twelve lines three limes, 51 00 Erery subsequent insertion. 25 One square, three months, . . One year, . . . . .' . . 3 00 8 00 I) nice .poe trrj.' DRAFTED. BTi tTHCL linn. Have you heard that Rob is drafted Brother Rob, who loves me well; And to morrow, bright ar.d early, He will leaf is this happy deli, Where we all have been so happy, Auntie Jane and Rob, and 1 ? (I know i ouztit to give him gladly . For his country) but 1 sigh. . Well I knot that gallant soldiers Sbol'd come forward staunch and a; ran; ; And Auntie tells ine very olien ' That rebellious tears are wrong; ' Bui ruy mother in the churchyard Close by father ilei I its ; And Rob alone i" led to lore me, , Only Rob below the skies. Tit vet told my patriot Auntie How t hoped some twit or mar flight disapprove oar gallant soldier Fit for servica in the war. -But six feet without a Memib,. Falcon eye, and nerves of steel, Honor qladty the appointment Ol: tba fatal whirling wheel. For my saks- thos long he linsered, I have seen the hot blood come Whon there sounded through the valley Martial note trom fife and drum. Nov that honor claims him fairly, I may speak no halting wod. For I know how bravely bowidiog . Is the pulse wiihiii him stirred Ere he goes, with careful scanning 1 shall every leainre trace, Lest a marring rebl bnllet Phaw ! the tears are on my face. And ghastly things come all unbidden, raul fields where dead men lie, Gaping wound , and hair bedabbled, Silent lip, and staring eye. ...-. . . .'.''' He has gon. I'll wonder over " AVhe re he parly posies bloom,. And the son hzmgs tattered shadows On the well rernerr.bered tomb. Kneeling there, beside my mother, O'er the consecrated sod, I will try tUrii'M my brother, Conscript tho' he be, to God. XV 12 O THE REBELS ASSISTS The latest dodge with which to frighten Pennsylvanian from a conscientious depos it ol thuir ballots consists in the cry that he who votes against Governor Ccrtih assists lhe rebels. Or e woold have thought, judg ing by the small e fleet that this same howl produced on the Democratic voters in 1362 that it was not as perfect a method ol intim- idation, or even argument, as could be de- ! jured. But as it is revived now, and the ' sons or their property. South Carolina se changea rung opon it by every Abolitionist ceded on the election of Curtin in 1860 press and speaker, from Generaf Butler op, it is wttrtb while for the people of Pennsyl ania to examiae this question and serious iy ak themselves, Who does realty assist the irebets ?,tho Black Republicans or the Democrats ! In the fi'st place, who made iheomh rebefs thnie who wete willing j ibaj they shoufj enj y their leai ri?hts, or 1 thos who denied thera? Those who re- j fusel to kneel at the same altar, or those rho wwe glad to worship with them ! ( Tho-e wbo stigmatized an institution which vas every Southern man's inheritence whi:h -was bom with Lien but could not die with him as the crime of all crimes, the ora of all barbarities, or those who judged , them as they tvished fo be judged ? Those j whe thought ttat "all the boots in Massa- j buiisetis cook! not kick the south out,"and that "an old co w and a bait score of men could walk from -lie Potomac lo the Gulf," cr tt.ose who believed in their sincerity and acknowledged; their .Talor! Those who prof hecied lb exhaustion and destruction f tt.e South in sixty dayt, or those who ap preciated its reaoarces and the spirit which osed. thsrn? The answers to these ques-li-onii w? are willing te leave to the popular T cait. Is it not most probable, then, that Ujdsb who taae'e tt.e Sooth rebels will coo lirsa'is to give ciiuse for rebellion, and that those who wetH have originally given no s-roacd for rebellion will now endeavor to rentova it ? The incendiary is not gener ally lisa first o extinguish the Came pro iJsced by bis own crime. - - Mto in lbs Cabinet assists the rebel no's! : he -ho divides their feelings of re si:ance, or he who consolodate thern ? II irho makes rebellion the only path of safely to the Southerner, or he who makes the Union hia harbor of retug9 I He who ttl'i hita that his life is liable to. treason i h'a p?opeity to be confiscated by proc lafni.tioi, f-nd j;tves hira no assnrrance that -yt iir? bat success can save either, or he iUVciid aj to hiraV "In ,h Union your r-t d?rd fba'l be fcotten and jour prop t-f fecsre'P' He who would make a retsin to tha Union an advantage to the r.'j. cr ta trjiD woold make it their de- t i. .n)t ftrMrniT Vr t'ICt'CI i tJ ;wuw v.'juiu J i w.- ?To'd tiis tba emblems of their discomfit r.s Ha c-to would excite a servile race tt-H' wesea and children, and ss:h r:St applies tSsstt ar.ertntna would husband them ! Those who put shoddy on the backs and straw paper on the feel of our brave soldiers, or those who expose the frauds ?, Those who furnish shells filled with sand instead of powder, fuses i hat burn in the loader's hand? Those who deprive our army of its most cherished and competent leaders, and fill their places with political Generals and partisan leaders? Those who opposed Hooker and Tope to Lee and Johnston ? Who assisted the rebels roost McClellan or Pope ? Fitz John Por ter or Fremont ? Buell or Bornsides ? Franklin or Schenck ? Dupont or Welles ? Who assisted the rebels most Curtin, when he invoked distrust of the Government by asserting that "be would not play the part of the Administration on the bank of the Rappahannock," or Woodward, when he wrote to Col. Biddle, "never mind the po litical aampaign, but hurry and defend our State, and take as many men as you can with you 1 Who has assisted the rebels abroad the most be whose dispatches are the laugh ter and derision of the world; who by a persistent course of fabrication has so dis honored the American name that verifiea tion must always accompay assertion to en sure belief ; who has given away for naught ihe traditions of our Government the right of search and the Monroe doctrine and was desirous of sacrificing "the militia o! our seas'-' our privateers ; he who shameless ly offered an enemy's troops, coming to take position against us, a transit over our on soil ; he who has made the American name a synonym for empty gasconade, frothy exaggerations and empty threats. Who did ti e roost for the Southern cause Seward or Mason? Cassius M. Clay or Sli. dell ? Carl Schurz or Spence ? Whose interest mo$t is it to assist tkt rtbels to prolong the war, to break up the Union the Democrats or the Abolitionists? Who have the contracts, the power, the influence which the war give? Whose Jaclouts de clare sixty-six percent, dividend the shod dy ones in the East, or the iron ones in Pennsylvania ? Who will lose power, lose place, lose fortune, incur distrust, resent ment and lasting dirace. the moment the Sooth return the Democrat or the Re- t publicans ? ho will, by the restoration of the Union, gain place, power, confidence and a gratitude which the memory of the past will render ineffaceable .!ie Demo crats or the Republicans ? All these ques rions we ask, and are willing to wait for their answer by the people ai the polls on the I3ih October. The success cf the Repute lican party in October is the guarantee of South ern Independence. It will confirm, to the peopte of the South, those apprehensions and fears which are the only support ol their leaders ; it will assure them that they need expect no mercy, either tor their per will she be more likely to return on his re election in 1863 ? On the contrary, the success of the Democracy will awaken tbera from their error, by showing them that they have misunderstood the temper and policy ot the North It will declare to them bi! the success of Republicanism in 1860 was but a temporary hallucination, and meant no permament hostility to them They must be undeceived in this respect before there can be a chance of their giving way, and the success of the Democracy is the only method of undeceiving them When this belief, for which a ready portal has been furnished by our recent successes, shall enter their brain, then, if already they have not grasped with too firm a hold for release the first round of the ladder of their Independence, will come the glimmerings of the dawn of restoration. PA'a. Age. What We Owe to Limcolw When the tax collectors comes around with his war rant. When we have to go and buy a stamp to put upon a deed, note, &c. When we have to take out a license to boy or sell. When we go to a store and pay forty cents a pound for coffee instead of ten. When we look at our public debt and find it accumulating at the rate of over S2,C0O,000 per day. When we loot at oor sons and brothers dragged from their homes to fight in a war for negroes, and When we look at the vacant chairs, or pew made graves of those who have died, let us remember that all these we owe to Mr. Lincoln and tho party that aupports him. '.' ( A big strapping fellow from Montgomery county, who had beeo drafted, wa asked to this effect : "Have yon, or have yon had, any disease about yoa which would not naturally show itself on the examining surgeon?" Montgomery replied, "Yes, sir-ee, I was ...,,T V I J v M V. V "Please stata when and under what cir- cussstances." - . ; , - r Montsotaery replied, "Weil, I a'posa you'll dotibt my word, bat I c an prove it by Nandy Wood. 1 waa crazy st the last Govercor's election, Ifislar, when I voted f?r Andy Ccnio." ; ' The True bine ttcgro Inferiority A Democratic paper says : 'The ad- ; ministration means emancipation, and av ows it. The Democracy mean peace ; why should they equivocate and shrink Jrom the confession ?" We cannot understand the logic of the above, nor, indeed, does the writer himself, else no such nonssnse would be written, lint accepting trie pre mise, let us see what is in troth the logical consequences, and henct tho duty of the Northern Democracy in the Ml of elec tions. The administration means emanci pation." Well, what does "emancipation'' mean Sorely no citizen, no American, no white mnt vfoman or child in all . this broad land is a slave, or needs emancipa tion. It is then negroes four million of negroes in the South that ate to be ''eman cipated." Bui God has made them dif ferent and subordinate being, and thej are in their normal condition and natural rela tion lo the eight millions of white citizens What then, can Mr. Lincoln do ? He can not set aside the work of the Almighty, or "abolish'' this natural subordination of the negro. His physical structure, his brain, in a word, his organic inferiority cannot be changed the millionth part of an atom by "honest Old Abe," even if he brought -five hundred millions instead of five hundred thousand bayonets to enforce his denign. With the physical structure untouched, jvith the gross organism, the small brain and big nerves still the same, of course the mental and moral qualifies remain intact. Ha is still the 'almighty nigger," the same crea ture that God made, and fashioned, and designated at the beginning, a different and subordinate being, and"tbouh fifty millions of white men sacrifice their lives and waste their subsistence to "abolish" tho etefnal order or to "emancipate" this inferior crea ture, their work is in vaii:, for that which the Almighty has fashioned and shaped, human power, madness nor crime cau never modify to the extent of even an ele mentary atom. It is simply absurd, therefore, to speak of emancipation in the case of the negro, or any other naturally inferior creature. But while God does not permit us lo eman cipate, abolish, change or modify either crea'ures, He does not permit us to go road and abolish ourselves. A husband cannot change the sex or nature of his wife, or abolish the natural inferinrtyof his chili ren, but he may so depauch and degrade his own faculties as to sink, even in his physi cal capacities blow their level. So, too, a white comtnonit) , as the Spar.iardsin Mex ico, Socmay degrade themselves by "im partial freedom" with a subordinate race. This then, is what "Old Abe" proposes to do in respect to negroe s. He has issued a proclamation that the eight millions of white people in the South be degraded to to a common standard, or "ipartial freedom" with lour millions of naturally suborninate negroes, and it he can bring armies nuffi ient in the field, say fifty millions or so, why hewi'.l succeed not, it is tro, in changing the nature of one single white man or negro, but in exterminating the former. True, he fancies, and his lunatic followers fancy, that they are emancipa ting "slaves," or lifting negroes to the level of whites; bot God not permitting this, they are simply striving to degrade the latter to a level, or into "impartial freedom" with negrodom ; and every white life lost, and every drop of blood shed, and every dollar wasted, are not to emancipate negroes, but to degrade oor own superior race, it is irue that the men fighting in the field do not know this or mean this, and, as recent ly wrote Mr. Lincoln lo a War Democrat, "You may believe yoa are fighting for the Union to your heart's content, as lor g as you fight and do my work for me;" but a' time will assuredly come when they will truly nnderstand that "work," and then the day of judgement and the end of the vorld will alf-n have come to those who have worked them. If, therefore, the war could be successful and eight millions of our own race so de gradeed, destroyed, beaten down, abject and miserable as to submit to emancipa tion, or"impatul freedom" with four mil lions of negroes, then we should no: only have destroyed the Union and our Repub lican institutions, but our civilization, and indeed our mere territorial unity, for it would then fall a helpless cooqnest to some unadulterated cation of the old world, as Mexico is now being conquered by France. Is it not certain that, if Mr. Lincoln were to resign the government into the hand ol Chief Jostice Taney, or was to issue a proc lamation that the Constitution shonld be administered as it was by all bis predeces sors, and that negroes conld not be citizens or amalgamated into the political syitem that the Union would be restored within J the next sixty days, and without the shed ding of one single drop of blood in the in terval ? Is it not then absolutely certain that we are fighting, not for negro liberty or emancipation for God, as we have said, does not permit us to destroy ourselves by amalgamating; four millions of negroes in our system ? ' This, then, is the issue, the true issue , the only issue before the country : Jhall the foar millions of negroes remain in the position where God, and Nature, and rea son, and the Constitution placed them, in domestic subordination, or shall we go on slaughtering the white people of the Sotttb for the impious and Innatic purpose of am algamating foar millions of negroes in oor system, and ihss destroying obrselvia or our posisrritv oTta more, disgastingly and wickedly than the Spaniards did by amal gamating with Indians f, It is simple spil ing against the wind to ask Mr Lincoln or his advisers to withdraw their armies or to cry peace, when their is no peace. We most get power in our bands, the power of the States, for that is the power wielded for two years past, and through which all the slaughter and destruction, in the interval, have been consummated. If we can carry the six great central States this fall, we can restore the Constitution, and hencs the Union. We can then stand on common ground with the border nearo-tnbordination States, and force negro equality New Eng land and the fire-eating cotton States lo make peace. But we cannot carry these States by saporting a war to amalgamate negroes in ouf system. We must combine all no matter what they are or who they have been opposed to uigerism , to mon grelizing the Republic, or to "impartial freedom'' with negroes j and if the white men of these Slates are so besotted and lost as to prefer the latter, then God help them They are not worth saving in this world or any other. Ex. Who Will Vote for George W. Wooward f The Bucks county Intelligencer having asked the question, "Who will vote for George W. Woodward ?'' the Doylestown Dewocral, (owned by Col. Davis, who has shown bis patriotism and valor upon many hard fought fields since the war began,) thus answers the questions t 1. Every soldier vho was provided by Andrew G. Curtin with shoddy uniform with worthless shoes, and with defective blankets, in order that the friends of that distinguished patriot could make large con tract profits en which the Governor would receive his commission. 2. Every soldier who was seduced into the service of the Uoited States for six months, upon the pledge, solemnly given by Andrew G. Curtin, that the men so voU nnteering should be exempt from the draft. A pledge which was violated almost as soon as it was made. 3. Every member of the gallant Pennsyl vania Reserves, who, after performing pro digies ol valor, were retained in the Feder al service without being allowed to come home to recruit, while New England regi ments were forlonghed; because Governor J Curtin had not manliness enough to de i mand this well earned reward of their faith- ful services. j 4. Every mechanic who is compelled to j take orders upon his employer's store, in J stead of receiving cash for his services, w:ll vole aga:ni the mar, who vetoed the bill to remedy this evil, which wrongs the laborer of bis hire. 5. Every farmer In the Cumberland Val ley, who was robbed by the rebels, because Gov. Curtin had not the manliness and the ' ability to do his sworn dory by the Com- monwealih of which he was the Executive Chief.. 6. Every tax payer who fully understands the great robbery perpetrated by the bill re pealing the tonnage tax, which Gov. Curtin signed after he was pledged to veto it. 7. Every man who believes thai a Slate is an independent sovereignty within its constitutional sphere, and who is unwilling that State independence hould be sacrificed to gra'ify a Federal despotism. 8. Every honest mart who knows all the corruptions practised by Cnrtin and hi friends, which were so groos and mnntrous that his Auorney General, Purviance, wa forced to resign his office desiring lo re main an honest man. 9. Eery naturalized citizens of Penn sylvania who recollects that Andrew G Curtin was lhe Hi?h Priest ol Ki.ow Noth ingim in 1854 i. when he was Secretary of State to Gnv. Pollock. 10. Every man who has had a son, broth er or friend drafted, or who was drafted himself in October lat When Gov Cnrtin permitted Pennsylvania to be compelled to furnish by draft a surplus over her quota when other States, which had not furnished their full number, were exempted from con scription. 11. Everyman who believes in personal liberty, free speech and free press that great triad of rights which Gov. Curtin has suffered the general government to trample under foot in Pennsylvania, in defiance of the Constitution of the Commonwealth ol the United States. 12. Every roan who believes that this government" is a goyernment of white men and is opposed to negro mercen aries to ne gro suffrage, and negro equality the great end and aim of Governor Curtin and the Abolitionists. 13. Every man who believes in the Un ion as oor fathers framed it, under the Con stitution as they ordained it, and v.-ho looks to this war as a means of preserving the latter and restoring the former, and as the great machine by which States shall be turned into provinces and negroes into equals. 14. Every man who is ia favor of peace based npon a restoration of the Union as it was, with equal rights in all the Slates, and the joberent rights of 'free men ' preserved and perpetuated. These classes will give George W. Wood ward at least thirty thousand majority in October next. JesT think of the nnmper of able-bodied men, taken from the farms and work shops of the country ! Il is certain, that of these not less than 800,000 1 have gone ' to " the graven ' 'TIS SWEET TO THINK. Tis sweet to think when far away In other lands our footsteps stray, Ol childhood's happy home Where'er we roam, what'er our lot, Fond memory clings lo that dear spot, Around the old heanh 6tone. Ti sweet to think of halcyon days, O'er which hope's rainbow-tinted rays In golden circle hiiuz When brightly rol'ed the skies so fair, Undimmned by cloud of grief and care, That o'er us now are Hang. 'Tis sweet to think of thoe so dear, By ties of love and kindred near, The friends siill faithful ever. And pine around each lov'd nrse's name Of memories s pet. an endless chain, That strengthens on forever. 'Tis sweet to think that if no more We frhall met on Time's bieak shore, Ere earthly ties are riven, Tha' once aain we II re-unite In realm above, of fadeless light, We'll meet again in Heaven. t 'Tis sweet to think as on we glide, Adown Time's swift uncertain tide, Wiih cares of life oppresed That far above yon star lit dome Awaits us there a happy home, A home of endless rest. The Path of Peace The Times asks "bow the war is to end," and argues that to treat with or entertain proposiiions of peace trom any source at the South is to recognize the Confederate Government, and that such a course on the part of the Union Government is impos sible. We submit that our con'emporary has no right to raise its flag higher in this respect thant the President. Mr. Lincoln ia his Springfield letter does not take this ground. He says no Peace propositions have been made, bui that when made the public shall be informed arid clearly con veys the impression that when made by cithbr the army or those in authority at the soutn wno cooiroi ine army iney snau do i entertained and acted upon. But, be this as it may, the answer to The Times is, that it is to late to take this posi tion. Oar Government has already recog nized and treated wiih the Confederate Government. It is estopped by its own acts: The position to Tho Times, to wit : that to treat with the Confederates is im possible, in as much as it would be recog nition, was originally held by the Admin istration, bat abandoned when negotiations made fir exchange of prisoners. That was a recognition sufficient upon which to bise any subsequent conferences or negotia tions. Again, it will be remembered that in the correspondence between Fernando Wood and the President, the former submitted by authority a proposition lor a proclamation of armistice. This, certainly, did not re quire any compromise upon the part of our Government, such as Ttie Times ap pears to fear. It avoided a formal preposi tory recognition. We are not surprized that the Administration and its organs begin to feei the dilemma in which this publica- tion of the Wood correspondence has placed them. It is understood that the Edi or of The Times, just returned from Washing ton, is directed lo explain a way as best he can the refusal of the President to treat with the Southern States for their return to the Union. The article of yesterday is ih third recently written for that purpose in which this effort is made. In the lace of evidence, heretnlore of en referred to by Thk Dulv Ntwi, t'tit thi Administration is oppo.-ed to a rea oration of the Union a it on an terns, baed npon its repeat ed refusal to receive or entertain any iug qes;ior.sto this effect, together with it pol icy and outraieuti- mea-nres, it i too late lor it orga'in to explai.i away by sophistry like this ol Toe l'une. The path to peace i- open to tha Govern ment, if it desires it. Proof ol this daily accumulate!!. A cesa'ion of hostilities, preparatory o a conference a conference preparatory to a ceueral Convention ol the States, in the mode pointed on by the Constitution are, in our judgement, all that is required. From seen a csurse a permanent peace could be established, and all lhe horrors of national degradation and ruin be prevenieJ. The popular heart will not be satisfied with quibbles and trifles. The peopte astlor brad, and will not lake stones N. Y. Diily Aewj. A HlMT to Abolitionists. The Wash ington correspondent of the Anti-Slavery Standard, says: "The intelligent and well educated young Abolitionists are not doing their duty to the 3lack Brigade. Instead of offering them selves as officers by scores, as they ought, they leave nearly all the positrons in the field, staff, and line to be filled bycbance comers. Why is this ? I trust yoa will urge them to perform their plain duty." The intelligent and well educated Abo litionists, generally, are not fighting men, bnt lecturers, poets, beaox, troubadour, romancers, minstrels, scarfed, kiJ gloved gentleman, whose stomachs prefer good dinners at home, to doobltul rations of hard tack and pork in negro camps. Mas who profess themselves in favor of war to the last man and lhe last dollar and re Tase to shoulder the musket themselves, are either cowards or hypocrites. Resignation or General Bubnside. The President received the resignation of Gen eral Barnside on the llth. inst., but refuses to accept it, abd requests him to remain in r- mm tasi iennesses- Tac ' Inquirer" on Andy Curtin. - j The Philadelphia Inquirer, an Aboliti ) paper and unconditional supporter of the j iniquties of Abraham and his apostles, under j date of July 3 1st, thus ventilates the patriot ( ism of Andy Curtin Me soldier1 friend ! : T A-.J .L ". I I . .1. , ' .Its support would be required so soon in behalf of the chief ol "the gangs who have infested the Stata Capital" who "tickeled the soldiers with " honeyed words,", while ! ''his minions and followers were permitted ( like harpies to deprive them of food." Here is the record by one of bis o xn party : Etiormwi Fraud vpm the Givernmett M'tliont of Doll'irt Token Piominent Sholdy Politicians under Arrest. HRMt.LURG, July 30 Considerable excite ment has ben created here by the discov ery of enormous frauds upon the govern ment daring the recent army movements in this region, consequent upon the rebel faiJ. The amounts are slated at millions of dol lars. A number of State politicians have beer, placed under arrest, and the subject will receive the most searching investiga tion by the War Department. The most corruprpradtices have prevailed in horse contracts, and in clothing and subsistence supplies. They throw the Shoddy" opera tions at Harrisburg, in the summer of 1861, entirely in the shade Many of the same parties are implicated, and the gangs who have infested the State Capital In the winter have reaped a rich summer harvest. It is a sad Commentary that, while thousands of brave men rushed to arms to defend the State from invasion, and whi'e the Govern or was tickling them with honejed words, his minions and followers were permitted, like "harpies to deprive thera of food, and to combel them to make lo.ig and weary marches, without even the luxury of Crack era and pork. It is a matter of record that while these contractors were receiving en- ormous sums, the gallant Philadelphia sol diers were placed on an allowance ot a cracker a day for several days together, thanks to the neglect and corruption ol lhe Executive Department of the Stale of Penn sylvania. Btood-lettin; Chandler. This brandy-bibbing Abolitionist and trai lor, who represents Michigan in the Senate of the United States made a speech al Cleve land on the 1 5th in which he said : "J THANK GOD WE WERE DEFEAT ED AT BULL liliX" Upon this the Plain Dealer remarks : "Of course yoa thanked God too, no doubt when you came back from the Peninsula and defamed that true soldier, Major Gener al George B McClellan. "You thanked God when yoa obtained his removal. "You thanked God when you 'invested in the 7 20' and the 5-20s 'Will God forget you for all this thankful ness ? No ! in the languaae of Wilkes to Lord Thurlow, as great a knave as your self, 'Forget yoa 1 He will see you dumned firt. "Th Soldikr's Fricnd." The Abolition paper are in the habit of speaking of Andy Curtin as the "soldier's friend." He show ed his friendship by placing half a millionof dollar that was appropriated to clothe the Penntyvania Reserves in the hand of his particular friends, who provided the sol diers with blankets 'that they could see through, shoddy coats and pants, and shoes that had soles filled with shavings. In twef weeks the brave men were bare-footed and ! nearly naked. A pretty "soldier's friend," to be sure. How much of the profits Curtin pocketed the public never discovered. A koiksp wishes to inquire if any cf thej following causes are sufficient for exemp tions : 1 Docen't think the army life would agree with his constitution. 1 Is making arrangements to enter the second class. 3. Has two brothers who will be in the service, when tliey can get commissions. 4. Woold cheerfully pay S300 if he had it. 5. Was tried for liore stealing several jears ago, and nnjustly acquitted ; is willing to try again .if necessary. 6. I rapidly becoming a common drunk ard. If none of these will answer he would like to inquire lhe fare lo Canada. How is This? The Southern soldiers and secessionists say ihey will never come ! back into the Union, and the Abolition Re publicans swear they won't have the Union it il was. How is it possible, then, that the one class can be any belter Union men than the other ? Ccbti'n Recoup Governor Curtin in his Pittsburgh speech, sard : 'Neither the distinguished candidate of the Democratic party nor myself has any special claims to this high honor. He and 1 will soon pass away, lhe little record we make Will die with us.1' In thus promising oblivion to himself, Mr. Curtin obviously does not agree wiih Shakspeare, who asserted that "The evil men do lives after them." It is not stracge that the Republicans should assume the name of Loyalists the very one chosen by the Tories of the Revolution. We find that a great many of theUepuli- ' cans who have been drafted, are leaving 1 Vt at n,rlv uw a black afedokLIf Curtm'i Own PartySpeaks. THE SOLDIERS Git EA T FRIEND; The Tonnse Tax Swind!c- VOTERS READ THE RECORD. The editorials of the Pittsburg Gaz&le, and Pittsburg Dispatch twd abolition pa pers, against Governor Curtin are being circulated in partphlet form. They mike a truthful and damaging record. 1st. That the Governor was the inti mate friend of Charles M. Neal and ' Frownfield. trho swindled! the soldiers in shoddy and shoes, and that the committee of investigation, were managed to cover up and smooth the fraud. 2d. That the Governor favored and signed the bill repealing the ,"Tonage Tax, " although he Ic'onfessfcit it Was 'atrociously wrong." That he signed the bill with ' indecent haste during a recess of the legislature" notwithstanding "hrf bad given the most positive assurance' that it should bo vetoed," and notwith standing he 4,was solemnly and repeatedly pledged to rcfttseit tis tfsseni." 3d. That he "signed" this tonage tat i swindle ' immediately after these assur ances were given" and that there was a "private agreement in writing, made by Thomas A. Scott, or the company to pay the sum of $75,000 per annum into the treasury, which agreement he (Curtin,) concelled from the people, and afterwards surrendered to the company, without even preserving a copy of it.'' When intsf rogated at the next session upon this' point, he admitted the fact himself of the agreement, and its surrender" and excus ed himself on the ground that "the com pany were pacing more than that amount in taxes." Therecord thowed that'tbey had not been paying the half of that amount" and the Governor's words were 'contradicted by the testimony of his own Attorney General," who swore before tha Hopkins Comtuittee that the paper waa given by Scott and placed in Lis bands as an official and public document. 4th. The Pittsburg Gazette says ia view cf these things Jihat the masses be lieved that the Governor had "sold tha People, and betrayed the State, and asks if "anybody is weak enough to think that these things are already forgiven and for gotten." 5. That when another attempt was made to investigate the whole matter Col. McClure hastened from the sick bed of a' friend to advise the appointment of the committee, that a great straggle was made to keep off all who "were bent on ruining a Republican Governor." That the committee 'actad languidly" that it was surrounded by the "companies spies," who telegraphed to witnesses about to be f uramoned, in order to keep them out of the way," and that the Presi dent and Vice President of the company evaded the summons as witnesses one by "absenting himself from the State" and the other by a certificate from a Physi cian, that he was undergoing injections of lunar caustic, although he wa walking the Efree's. The committee however found that the bill was procured 'by the use of fraudulent and improper means" to which bill the Governor, however against bis pledge put his signature. Thus was the people of Penn?ylvani;i robbed of many hundred thousand dollars. 6tb. These Abolition papers allege, thai Governor Curtin in our national matters has not only fallen far short of the oc casion, in every element of courage, truth fulness and ability,' but has enacted the part of a marplot, from the beginning," and '-created more trouble at Washington by his officious intermeddling than all tho orher Governors" of this we need not speak, as there is not much honor, truth, or decency anywhere amonj them. 7th. That the Governor pledged him self not to be a candidate, meaning to be one and lastly these papers by many asser tions regard his nomination as fatal, and his re-election as impossible. The pam phlet is lengthy and exposes rascality which the people should remember Gov. Cuitin for at the ballot box. Ifarlhumbcr land County Democrat. Tns Soldiers' Vote. The peopte should remember, that the abolitionists are the very men who objected to the soldiers vote. A democratic Sheriff was elected in Philadelphia by the soldiers vote, and the abolitionists objected to it, and carried it to the Supreme Court. Woodward de cided it according to the Constitution, and in accordance with the wishes of the aboli tionists. The decision threw a Democrat out of office, but now the abolitionists try to make capital out of their own aat. SlNCK the wtr commenced there has been more than four white men cent to their long homes for every negro freed. Ia this cot "diieoursginj enUtmtt.r r