N II II 11 MONDAY BIODSING. AVG. 24. Union slate Ticket. 0o►DBHOL: ANDREW G. ruurni, of Centre 5103 /VDU OF TIM 517PIMIL 0013 AT DANIEL AGNEW, of Beaver. truiot County Ticket Car Prvoidog 1.4 p. of Oa Maria Cbekft. YOB® ILSPIPTOIS. Areal*. mei ortasa. • ALOONDSLAON. An email B. SHOWN. a. DiIINUTO V. TEM J. arinum IL . • Ps. Ofori fgr O m *. W. J.HXBROZI. ri - me rf DAVID / 1 11N.Ji. Ps. litissiii" spina. mounts. ?Cr Stiktr, - ;WH. J. HIGUARDBON. 4310 'S RANILTON. Ter DV, ier of Nii Pror. - JOHN f. more. Where to the National Intellltelmer The pope above-named, which is sup. posed to repreinutt the coneeriative eletztent, hoe an article of nearly four columernpon Aka questlori "where are we 7" From its exordium, or key note, our impressions very naturally were, that It was the whereabouts of lhe country after whist' it was groping. We' did not suppose there was any thing else, which would pay for the easulie. It turns out, however, that the "we" means merely our indicidual aloes, that the lead tag inquiry is, "where is the intellipencer Well, supposing the object to be worth ell ibis search, we are not clear that the inteitigencer has beenable toiled-out where it ii, or whether it is not lost irretrievably in the-jog. It la clear, however, that it has not:pada much p rogress la the discovery of the whereabouts of the cowry. Its first two columns are expended in; 'hewing that the object of the war, ita:pro. elalitted by Congress ; and by the President wise not to interfere with the pe culiar institutions of Cho rebellious litotes, bate maintain and defend the supremacy of the Constitution,andthe integrity oF the Union. A paragraph of a dozen lines would I are settled that point. We do not kno'w that any body has ever disputed it. Ito subject of complaint is the proolama dolt- of freedom. It is not, however, the met Itself that It projeiser to quarrel with. While it would make the impression that this was a deitarture from the principle, by convert ing Wit into an end or object, which wail as a means, it does not un dertake to charge it—but, on the contrary, distiectly admits that-"the Proclamation as ceneeived;" and explained by the Presi dent:4 was Soo expedient -4 =one 'to an end,and not an end itself." The fault , is only that Mr. CHU; and come: other people, have expressed the opinion tint t it makes no difference, ;,if slavery dies by 'Leonia bands, whether this road Is s eor.seguenes,eor an diem otthe war.'.: If the latter be the fact—if there be ' any Who propose to continue the war he ' yowl' the object originally and constitu tionally assigned to it—then theAtelligen. cer cmnnot support it, and must hold all stuthito be "enemies of their country." Ws cannet t etre, however, what difference it makes what Mr. Clues, or any body else, says er thinks on this subject,, or whit it ham to complain about, so long as the things donermre air admitted cleans to the= very end, *blob it professes to desire, and we would suggest, therefore, a pasty:moment or, Its dennaclations, untathe Intended object is aohieried, and it can find some one to_pro pose 0011 that we shall go beyen,d it. When the rebellion is once subdued , ; It will cease to be a manna and bean:tie en object—if por sued4brit - not till then. Thijettelligencer suggests, as &deduction from these views, that it Is easy then for it to miner where it is—that it is now where It eras in the beginning, and that it had. away, opposed whatever had "a tald(Sulf to overlay the original theory of the war." prior!, its position la always easy to hand; because, though the world zanies, the litelligencer never either 'forgets any thing,`or learns any thing, and therefore never changes, or mores at all, unless he magnetic pole, slavery, happens to shift a little, in the convulsion, of the times. It li come thirg however to know from lie own cOnfeesion, that Ittas always opposed not only etich measures as involved a de. parttime from the original idea—but such othe lei:especially as had a "tendency" in that dill:lotion, by involving conseqUenees to slavery that could not be aimed at for their own sakes, and as an object of the war. F.verything therefore that might possibly destroy thatinstitutiort was, in its judgment, to be avoided for its (cadencies, no matter what the,Conseguences might be ,i1te0,../Tnion, or how:many -tree. White 4 Northern !lyre it Wight oast, to experiment upon Odom remedies to pat down the rebel- lion, without hurting rte authors. When it comes to the subordinate inquiry —as irdoes it the foot 'of its 'third - Oa. umn—qwhera the Matti be its answer Is, that.* have only to look around us, to see that; "In oihsequetute of thee:44lW Rot icy that boa , been interpolated on the-orig . iztal tittiory of the war," we are worse o than ever. And to pro's this, we are pointed; to the u esaarbatiOn of political strife" :that has grown out of it—told that. "our armswouldhave made more programs" eraltoutclt.r-andreforred to the declaration of a leading secTtlonist before,. the War; that thei"atelltkotete had been thnbeitid. Iles of the secessionists." - It weld be an outvotes, it it Tin note melancholy thing, to hair: grown . men, with boards upon their otitis, bravely rer pasting a worpolloy as arse*, ecittlisst as though a elate of war was , evil to be uprooted, or dealt with ilyrodical remedici only, bat a thing to besaltivated by gentle applianeeo—snd as though cos. a t rostimi; which only another word for saving the enemy, the waY.. to . 141 - aids nation. ought ',not toe put' forth iti wkolo stiength and resources, for mulling oat a gigarttio rebellion;which was theist ening-ith v e ry Ills. Wig' north, state* Mans but inaitileugiciast•—t*Ciiiii**, and eistO.Oreefi;-!who would even think-of siring ts..!ltit l 9 l 4 ° 4' a deep thifiadra flesiging Out. the &owe probing the batten); and - 0 . 1014 rte effects , strAb* 4-;"1W ver y And yetAlris minty undoyjgpl k iago,, Snsit*,4* -1/ 0 advi l# . s t *- 1 4t *pi M M yn~ .. ` 3 .f ' r ~ tx,s . ' rf~ .- J'~s ~:~x ~~y' Xf"-i~.'t ,t~ {y ? ~k l 4 . ~„ 1 ~ ', o „ ,y,,~.% - z.r7 a s 2~.x.~N' k ~..1 ni~„ sa the Intellipencer, that the war to imp preset the rebellion was allowed to linger for soma twenty months, with our own cap _ ital-cuider siege for nearly half that time. Will the inteffigeneer inform:is r het we had gained ly taking"'the'advice of the Border State men, whose opinions it hoe represented, and retaining Sikh generals as lut favorite MoCiatta.ex, during all that period ? What was It but the delays and - 'reverses uhleh 'attended 11, that produced s, exoefrioatiaa of political strife," which It eupposes to have resulted from the in auguration, of the new' policy 1 . Will it . vatuttre,taigelere the fact that the feeling of treasonable hoetility to - the government, and to every meastwo which struck wig- I ' °rowdy at the heart of the rebellion; exieted at ilie outbreak in equal malignity, and owes only its development, to the encourage ' meat it has received from the inauspicious results of the feeble and faint-hearted pol icy, which wearied the people into disgust, sad induced so many of them to lend a fa vorable ear to the, suggestion, that the Re publican party and its adminktratien had not the vigor or ability to end the war—se cal.:rued, it was said, by themselves, in their almost exclusive resort to Democratic generals? The events which preceded rho rebellion show, that It was brought about by -the assurance of Northern Democrats that the great States would permit no coercion, and would take sides with the South, and they would have made good these assur ances, if the effect of the attack on Sumter had not shown them that they were "reck oning without their host." They etpd ap palkd in the presence_of that denienstra ken, and skulked into their hiding pieces, until the prolongation of the struggle, aad a tide of ill motes, retaking from the adoption of their own advice, and the em ployment of their own generals,. encouraged them to re-appear, upon the assurance that no administration could stand up in the face of an unsuccessfal war. If it was un fair that they should thus complain of the effects of their own policy-4t wee not un natural, on the other hand, that it should keep them in tolerably good humor,. or that an unusual "exacerbation"—ehould follow the conviction that the President beast last escaped from their hands, and was about to prosecute the war in such away, as would show the rebek that we were ii good earnest and as would be sure to end it. Then as to the effect of the proclamation. While it has exasperated the politicians, it has freed no slave, Bays the Intelligences, and "eur arms would have made more pro gressvrithout If it be trueas stated, if it hurt nobody— it was indeed no worse than a Pope's _Bull against the Comet--we do not Bee exactly why it is, that the Intellistracer should make such a olamor about it. But that is not thls reason. The inted/fgeneer - knows better. The reception of that proo 'smitten at Richmond, and the acts and proclamations which followed . it there, show beyond controverey, that it did hurt somebody down South—that it struck tie • great sensitive nerve—and that the twitchinge and ooavulsione of Northern 1 Democrats, and newspapers like its own, were purely sympathetio. If it had be lieved,with its disunionist friend, that. "the _abolitionists" as it denominates the friends of the new policy are "the best allies of the secessionlats," • instead of the COLITC:3O proposition—which° every sensible man there now admits to be true, and every abolitionist in the North well kno we— that the ace:sionista have been the beat allies of the abolitionists—it would neither have complained of their policy, or so far for gotten itself, as to venture, in the presence `of the great bate of the day, and in fresh memory,g the history of thedisastersof the ScOrrariaMoCLLEL •an era, to have asser ted that our arms would have made more progress without it. Does it think that Ma- Clause; or Boca; or ElAzzatcx, would have opened *Mississippi any sooner—or opened it. ail—under the policy of closing the tamps against the negro, instead of in viting him, upon the offer of freedom, to abandon tags master he was feeding, and putting a musket in his hand? Does it really believe -that the abolitionisiswho per. eluded the iiesident to arm the black regi ments which figured at Port Hudson, Milli. ken's Bend, and Fort Wagner, are the best allies of the scoesslonistsy or "the actual alders and abettors of the confederacy," or does it Lamont the loss of the valuable chattels whloh were thrown away, ;when less valemble white men could have been El;i===lrl!Mttll serous fruiter/111°h it gees so clearly, but has so utterly failed to show? If It cannot see for Melt the obvious and necessary ef fect; ofthe Proolamation, let it inquire of any Ciandid and intelligent Rebel, and it will be told—an all Riotuuoad has told it already---that it was the first blow aimed at the Rebellion, which wont directly to its heitt " If it to aot to bo satisfied in that way,lot it look back to the era of the great change of which it complains, and then at the condition ofthe country now—With the Confederacy, theriWo formidable, now rent, arid dissulved Wad tumbllag laconic s—and then sin if it Las the hardihoeol, that 'we bar, steigiined, and llutt oar , arms irtnild , bare made " rote progiesionodis the old military-sad - political regime irldohaourke so near destroying" as. No, the lisfelligenter does not iazi Ithe Union sued, mils= Slavery .can be saved tiling with it, and therefore it is willing for once Co ,agree even with tatoTrllams, when it elle that the President hut ; not " mokoed Along," by his proclamation, aid that its effect upon.the status of theelave,' leanly a question for the Courts. it, will not be fonnd harmonizing with the .21 , 16une, when that paperieright, as it generally ie. When asserte, however, that semen who recog nises and adheres to his own obligation, is Stub a slave by it--and may atettute that Jt is void, and violate it, and then leave it So the Courts to determitut whether he had a right to Violate it or not--thew the 'Thum_ perms b willing to endorse a sentiment *Whit wotildsoont an immoral, if it did not look to the meapture of an escaped ohnAtel 7 or- the re•enslavement of a, man who has been made free. 'Tali - Mater the Key to Charleston t snow to tials'.qesetton the Ifs! York , aneeminitt Beierdei everdag, up The latest awns from . Charleston Is from rent roams to the ' ~20th whhh mate that nth* the bertha to tell en Benster, taloa le gal enlist long !zinnia." The game -- dli. aabolimpr"The defamer the harbezdoes not depend Manly irpon Benitez. Btu if that forinsil-dioalti - be iblittentd:doira, the kW* Ea AM he bill." This Is a *fall he that the fort my - be banned down. In that men Charleston mast be et dos mercy .1' Admiral Dallren's Pose Eitinatar le located at a point srlech aoto aliada.the inner harbor, and while it rainathed 44 1 . 6 1...ti0 vestal psuld pees. Ae a lab:Ake talent 'at:Natter, Beautagard 00 , 25cm:toted _the batteries on Morris -ad' tialilsan'.. islands, ad to a turehe.. defence of the ele- i Jcb.a Moultrie and Plehoey wet,' tpeogthened ant owed batteries aed torpe• dame were pleated so as to comeanad.tlui In ter obsonei. The other tritterica et Charleston with the exception of Wexner ' neve succumbed. Gen . Gilmore and Admiral Dahlgren are now op, sting egging Sumer and. Wagner. When the lot mer is batter., down, or ellancid, the tatter will be planed under each heavy fire tbat-it erz no longer impede the krogrtus of the fleet, Then the iron-olads can pees tip to a point whence it will be perfectly easy to atoll Charleston. Se far as this set is concern eri, thereinto, Sumter Se the key to Charleston. The rebels have taken a strong position on Jame,' Island, where they hive erected a long line of batteries extending from Pert John ston, in a southwesterly direction, to Seeen• 'tonsil's,. point near the of the island. These works have been erected to prorcut the advance of Gen. 'Gilmore upon the city, but they can have no elf of upon the fleet. Gan. Gilmore mey hicretarded in his advance elm the city, but meanwhile the gunbokts ass m oist in annoying the rebel line by abetting the entrenchment' 'hi% the city is being shelled. Great stress has been laid upon'the feet that the °Petri:cottons in the inner harbor will pre vent the twinge of our vessels. It may be well to state thattlitlt character Dwell under etoed by Admiral Dahlgren, and when the time comet be will be able to cope with them. The Laet and Noblest Work of Bab eldom Of all the outrages to which any people have been sabjeoted, the last institution of torture devised for But Tennessee Is the most vice, the most brutal, and the most =genial to the morals and spiritual culture of the rebels. no women of East Tennessee have beet forced to go into'the fields and labor to raise bread for themselves and oMb:tree. They have toiled so email' and faithfully, and anoceetied in raising such abtusdant crops, that the brutil leaders of this rebsUionThave ap pointed a commiulon to accempany conscript agents to aleartain *bother they are really women, or men in disguise. This most inhu man commission is now subjecting those pat riotio mothers to an examination the most cruel and barbarous that, hes ever disgraced humanity. We know the education and In. stinots of these animals, and can credit the statements of men of veracity who have re tautly fled from that persecuted land. Those persons who are ignorant of their characters cannot believe such a cruel method ot torture. CAJI - DIDa TES. F 0 11. Lank or abargaborg, Via bp a eco4lOate for t bortd, auktect to Om *edam or tba aomlasttog Ootmatton, whlch .111 wort to ibtapday ,049mn bet 3 • .2.41.4 „ FOR SHAW F.—JosEPu Sou krcr wi:l be a caullitete for the shore oaks, sub. Jens to the deco too of the Vain Omit, Cooteatlao. a 0.20. to .91C IFT 4111VCRTIJSIMS. BLAST P 1:111NA013 FOE BALE, situ• aud at Coital Dover, TVICIVIIVIII county, Ohio on the Cleveland d Pittsburgh Hatitund and Ohio Canal. then bo pot In blast at • small snouts. Par. sore whh•ttr to exansioa tb. property can io to upon appluatton to Air. Gau. B. DltAlttliniff, penal Darer. Tor terms, de , Address or Apply to DAVID TROMAS, Oman Ras, Pa.• or, THDAA STDSGAt, So. B Broad SA, S. Y PENN INSTITUTE, No. 27 114N0O0E bT itteburgi. rbe undersigned tog leave to eatorm th.i: freemen and*. peb!!e genet . .ltf tt at they kokee entered Into p.,Mmrdp for Oho toupees of condo . ..ten' the above Inititntlon. The en•ateg t.rm will otingps w , on NO SLAT, the Slit hit. Tuleton e 112.50 per Tzar ter et eleven week., to advance. tot cirrolare an M bad at tba ptirkeipe: Book eteren or at our rooms. Um J. hi. *WM A. IL, WiLLIAlds. A. N. wail 4 fw ' 1860 i. OTION OF PA IiTI4RIf~HIP. —The partuarabip_heretefora extetleg between 0.G8E90 and ft, V. WARING, doing I.,,elnett et le%l Motet Maw, neder the atyle of 0111360 to Wa11110,14 We day dla.oh - ed Ly tanstill coaaent, h. e. W AILING rettrtr g. 0. Gehli.a leoathorlaed tante the ILOe of the Win In in,titnit the boatoess. O. GRIM), A. WA lII'6O. EM37:I • TRA.YR I ,—On Thursday, 20th2SE Sl..e , male to tha pread , e• of the ant. soi loot, ho. 411:faeces eases,. r frit Wad, dlleabe ay City,• LOW !CND CALI. The cos to garlic Wrath. and whit.. !Tim owner is regetstad to ogee f L-reard, Wove eropsriy, pay charges ant tate Ohm twist. Or they will be told according to law. anti{ WILLI/01f 't Wit RECENTLY PUBLISHED. WAR ECTIMICS 111031 ?HEISOUTII By B. &anti, ()Arta) of Osntry in the Cookilerst• &atm ir.y. dor .31. by HAY a CO , 66 wood Otoet. 1U TIS WED TEM PHAIIIIAOOPE f 07 TEE 0. In f rot., 12 mo Cloth. Moo, 11l MEM HAT a an , 63 Wool .1. B 0 iIIiEtAITE'S BITTERS, BOIBHAVICIS BITTERS, 110EIIHAVV41 BITTZE9, The Vest care Aar Dppopora, The great ooze for Itylpopalry The groat cars for D:oirrp&o, EsMos at half yds*, by SIMOti .101125132019. aurae: Facrxt.L acid Eialtblkdd draft& avrauatiarm MCO4 T Ire •oy isct6 spill CLOTHES WRINGERS.—The " Uni- Iv vernal Atha Wringer.' I. the cagy am that will gin perieet sl4l4lllltiett. atm Use. tabir, money atiderlatcr. Every Tolosa ehdold bare oat fa h•r hours, IC vial phi 4:7 Il.lf fu a. mkt; of clothe'. Yer ale by .1. aU. PHILLIP 9, at2t Mani b St. Clair met. N OW IS TILE CHANCE IPO4 BAR. 01s6/3 In BOOTS &ND DATalnit ILI, as anf.2 88 swig IT EIT.. 8d goer frtzo SOME SOILICD BOUTd ri GAITERS A? HALT MCC • Al lIMEtLAND'B.9B3III44I its Min . & I door Ingo 11111 GO TO BOBLAND'fik ea itABIZIT arena. rot goo& and asap BOOTP. EITICZEI & a.&+ VAUGHT" AffiliFF, in the Ohio"rtvrt; - an OIL. PLAT, OD feet long to ID te.t- stn. The owner rlll ,yore forward. pin* property sad 4. 1 40 swig. It will Weald 6N:radial SO lON 1.. 1.4p1y to J. L. BOBS, at J. H. licasy i re.v &melt% laachaineir. anDSOlt- 'QOEIOOL TEAGHERB.—Tbe SACO, 11,j901.79 otilloau Vrooslitp, itintsimy roactl, will i9tast 99-iihsem 9Aboot. Elem. between 1 aad 9 p. m , op H 61 . 17110 AV, nag. 291 b, w elect sompoliianb• 0 . Now 9 00 1 0 9919 .9CIP9 that hoktinvcrdin., mt.. • so i4.t42:w WE lALINU k19U610 VOA ri4LK, oa D .6),&i , —1 otter Icr sal. at rout • TWO-6TOU7 BIJOIL DWELLING, to the bonny, of hlanehmt• tor, oteintrit do ro.,m; lath:nag a mood eleet terb tr ßlreltMll, on the o •quer tt MUM, end DMict streets Jr.r ter and feather putlesdezidaqalre en the P"°!.g.tt4'. DAVID H. BOLTS MMZI ]pitICEPORT DISTILLNRY FOR I. eltd.T.—The — soblutri6era, afloat to encase In colter bosh:lnc affrr for silo ibeir D1E1T1L4619.1. Igtoated fa impart. ',maiming county P.. Thu einablishasent Is to gout mining comellion, expel lautty lota .1 for roaoalsoka.ing P 7• Wieinltey, fog in tits it;. growing engem of Wartern Penotyl. Tanis, and enjoy. a h!gh reputation for its gradoma Also • glit,P-PB.oolf AMOK wasiuutinz. for .fond Ins. Whitey. We elm:roger for sate ear 011. rig ry fuggy. ja grad...wain' condition, Wowed on Paw 11111 nun, adjoining gm berm& of Toroparancorille. to; tinnier girth:4a e Inquiry 01 UHL& ft OD., 96 Phut Shoot. auYe2wvas DISSOLUTIi *I OF PARTN/Sit'allF.- —Tbe pain.rablp &wretches mean ender the that at LAMS. DALziGt. o p., dw a , el on the lot La" of Aaiun. nom betreitleg peewee, Pitt El Or LEWI., Bair! DM MILL, aIeD.BAILIiT. rms. UNDEMEITONED, mootesors to • J. es la'aelna of LZWLEI . DALSZLI. A 004140 to. moositooton of bon sad Nub. wrier ttur otylo and arm of LLWIB. BAILEY, DaLZILL 00. owf .olielt o.conolnnolosiol oho pottoosto CO uoratly ellon2ol to Um lota fins. :ALUNII.O.I4IWIO._ - • - ' flOOtar DALIELL. A. MoD. ;* • LEWIS..W. 1.16W1L arwanaoasiiso. Tiirator mod No. 90 nal Is. PUUboilb.• Urea 1.1881 soillehr 1111116.141.6.41, bbls. No. / for pie by imat . BIM II .00Ling. .~? J. v ~. .~~ Wit. ~hSA .._ ~ ~.,. r