I? u . i . ' . ' ' ' r- : : BI S. J. ROW. CLEARFIELD, PA.. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1861 VOL 0.-NO. 13. fTA.NTED. All inda of grain willbe taen F in payment of debta due me. for which th jihet marlet prices will be given. Dec.ll.lSiil. JAMES B GRAHAM. D' kK.LlTCII'S MEDICINES. A fresh sup "Dlyor these invaluable Family Medicines are for sale by M. A. Frank. Clearfield, consisting of Pain Curer; Restorative, a ercatcure forcolda and cough; and Auti-Bihoti Physic. They have been thoroughly tested in this community, and are highly approved. Try tbem. TO THE PPBLIC.Tbe undersigned hav ing purchased the entire stock of the late firm of Aoore t Etxweiler, and having made large ad ditions thereto, is now prepared to wait upon cus tomers. Thankful for the very liberal patronage heretofore extended to the firm, he hopes by strict personal attention to business to merit a outinuence of the same. March 26, '62 -tf. D. F. ETZWEILElt. PROVISION AND GROCERY STORE. The undersigned keeps constantl on hand at bis store room in Philipsburg, Centreycounty. a full stock of Flour, Hams, Shoulders, tides, Cof fee. Tea, Sugar. Kice, Molasses. Ac. Also, Li quors of all kinds. Tobacco. Sjegars, Snuff, Ac; all of which he offers to purchasers on the most ad vantageous terms Uive him a call, and try his articles. Imar2l ROBEttT LLOYD. GODEY'S LADY'S BOOK FOR 18G3. Great Literiky and Pictoeial Year '. The publisher of Oodey's Lady's Book, thank ' ful to that public which has enabled him to pub lish a magazine fur the last 33 years of a larger . circulation tban any n America, has made an ar rangement with the most popular ant borers in this country Mario IIakla.xd. vuthoress of -Alone.' -Hidden Path' -Moss Side," 'Nemesis," and Miriam, who will furnish a story for every num ' her of the Lady's Book for 136.1. This alone will place the Lady's Book in a literary point of view tar abend of any otaer magazine. Marion liar land writes for no other publication. Our other favorite writers will all continue to furnish arti stes throughout the year. StTty-SurtA and HlxtySrvrnth volumes of Co der's Lady's Book for 1363, will contain nearly 1300 pager of Rending matter, 24 pages of Music. 12 Double Extension Colored Fashion Plates, equal to 24 of other magazines, over 1200 wood engrav ings. 14 steel engravings of beautiful subjects. ISO articles by the best autbors in Amrrica. And all thsio will be given in 1S;3, at prices for which we our extrcaly low club rates. The oldes. the best, and the cheapest magazine in America is the Oodey's Lady's Bok. The im mense increase in the circulation of Uodey (hay icg trebled itself in the last 4 years) is a convinc ing proof of the superiority of the work, if the work itself was not sufficient evidence. And when it is considered that not a bribe in the shape of a : premium has ever been offered, it shows that Uo dey ' Lady's Book stands first in the hearts of A merican ladies, who subscribe for the sake of the Jiook and tut the premium The Literature of tbe Lady's Book i. by the first wnterf in America, ana nas always been remark s able for its Ligh literary and moral character. Clergymen recommend the Book, and it can be read aloud in the family circle. The matter is far superior to that of any other magazine, having a 1 i.i i : . - . avuiiuj Run iiiiruciive tone. Eight Specialities that no other magazine has. ana only touna iu Uodey. to wit: "Onsnnal Mu . sic," "Model Cottages, with diagrams." -Drawing otis. uriginal 1 leant) Department," -Children's Department," ' Chemistry for the Young," -Horticultural Department." and '-Double hiten aion Fashion-plates" Godey's great siiecitlity, unparalleled and unapproached. Competition dead in tbia department. Our imitators have a bandoned the attempt. Of Steel engravings, the press have unanimous ly pronounced Godey's the best ever published by . any magazine of the world. You may look in tain for 14 such steel engravings as were publish ed during the yearlS62. and those for 1863 will surpas? them. Other magazines do not go to the expenje of oiiginal designs fur their steel engrav ings. Tbe Double Fashion-plate has from a to 7 full length fashions on each plate. Other raaga sints give but twa. Godey is the only work in the world that gives these immense plates, which cost I0.(00 more than the old style. These fashions may be relied on as correct. They are always lh lattat styles, and hence ladies are not subject to ridicule for wearing old fashions, when they T.sit the large chits (Jodey s V.'ood engraving Novelties Of these we give double the number of any other maga ine. no matter what its price may be. Colored embroidery patterns and lingerie. Ev ery number contains patterns of soma article for lady to work-oUomans. backs of chairs, slip psn, eto Among the articles to be continued, and which have been appreciated, will be Gardening for the Ladies. Mr. 11. A. Breer, the celebrated Horti culturist of this city, will assist in this department Our Musical Department. Three dollars' worth ef Music is given every year; and if it were only for the music alone, the Lady's Book would be bcap at the price we asK for it. In the various numbers for 1S63. will be found diagrams for Chil Jren'sand Ladies' dresses ; chil dren's samples for learning ; the newest designs' tiuuuw cunams. orouene anglai.oe. slippers bonnet, caps, cloafts. evening-dresses, faney arti cles, headdresses, hair-d resting, robes do chain -ere. carriage dresses, briieg' dre&es. wreaths, ttaotillas. wa!king-dresses, morning-dresses, ri fling habits, collars, chemisettes, undersleeves, patchwork, embroidery patterns, and crochet and sotting work. ' Our designs are received semi, monthly from our agents in France. England, a iid uermany. and every new pattern of any portion a lady s dress appears first in the Lady's Book. iWi!ng in" "a variety, useful to the beginner ana tbe proficient. Fashions from the establish ment of the celebrated -Brodie" will be in every "B.??r. A, K'ves Model cottages. , y.odey s invaluable receipts upon every subject, indispensable to every family, worth more than abole cost of the Book, and a grat saving of ipense to all thote who take the book. Godey's -iy'i Book is also used aa a premium at nearly very Agricul:ural exhibition in the United States -another testimony of its worth . -end in your orders soon. The best plan of ,nKrrkbins 10 Snd ?0UT mooey dict to the publisher We recognize no subscription that is kot tent direct to ourselves. If you pay your "onty to any association, yoa must look to it for .jonr books. 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Addw. .4.W)pgY, 823 Cbastnot Street, Pbil'a Pa MY OWN WAT1TE lAJTO. I love. oh. how I love the land The land that gave me birth : , That glorious spot, by wisdom planned To beautify the earth . : 'Tis not Old England's sunny clime, Nor Erin's rock-girt sh. re ; " Nor-Scotia fair, tbe land of rhyme, ' Nor Cambria I adore ; But 'tis my own Columbia fair. 'Twas there I first drew breat'i; . 'Twas there I dwell, and only there I wish to sleep in death. I love. oh. how I love my flag ; The flag that o'er me waves, 'Twas blood-bought, on each peak and crag. And guards its champion's graves,. 'Tis not Old Englands bloody cross, Nor Erin's shamrock green E'en Scotia's emblem were but dross And Cambria's, too, I ween. But tbe flag I love, 1 proudly own", 'Though termed a painted rag; Tbe tyrant dreads tbee on his throne, My star-enspangled flag. . I love, oh, how I love that race Of heroes, staunch and true Who rode for freedom in the chase, And overhauled it. too. 'Tis not the men of England, nor Of Erin, I adore : Nor sons of bonnie Scotland's lore, Nor those of Cambria's shore. But 'tis the freemen of the soil. Where first I drew my breath Where waves my flag : and on that sail I wish to sleep in death HON. JOSEPH HOLT OS THE WAR. Lofer fc Hiram Earney of New York, in which Judge Holt shows the necessity of Sustain ing tho Government and the "War. To the Editor of the Evening Pot : The ac companying letter from the Hon. Joseph Holt was written in reply to a letter from me, ex pressing to him my personal desire that he would accept an invitation which hid been sent to him by a committee of gentlemen to attend and address a public meeting in this city upon the state of the country and the is sue of the times. Mr. Holt wrote the letter so lustily that he did not think it quite fit for publication, and therefore at the time marked it private. But be has just uow, at my request, consented to its publication; and I therefore place it at your disposal, with the remark, however, that neither in existing circumstan ces, nor under any probable change in the condition or conductor the parties to this strnjgje, would foreign intervention be, in my opinion, defensible or excusable. IIlRAM BARNET. New York, November 10, 1862. JUDGE HOLT 8 LETTER TO MR. BARNET. Washington, October 25. 1862. Hon. Hiram Barney Dear Sir: Four fa vor of the 22.1 Instant has been received. An invitation similar to that which you so kindly urge upon me, I have been obliged within a few days to decline, in consequence of en gagements here which occupy every moment of my time, and I must uow-make tbe same answer to yourself. There will doubtless be present with you on the occasion referred to those capable by their eloquence of effecting all tbe good that popu lar addresses can now accomplish. I must be frank, however, and say that to me it seems that what is at this moment needed is not words, however glowing, but heroic deeds. The tongue of an archangel could scarcely comfort and animate the popular spirit in the presence of tbe inaction of our armies. After an unparalleled expenditure of treasure, and the marshalling of such armies as the world has never seen, and after sacrifices which are clothing the land in mourning, at the expira tion of eighteen months from the commence ment of the rooellion we find it more defiant and determined, and more successful in its in vasions and spoliations, than at any moment since the struggle began. This is fiotn no Idck of devotion on the part of the people, who have poured out their blood and treasure like water, nor yet from any lack of courage on the part oi our brave volunteers. Our sold iers have been everywhere panting for a sight of the enemy, while the great heart of the country, in its solemn and earnest solicitudes, is like a groundswell ol tbe ocean, pressing on our forces towards the battle-field. A sad dened belief is rapidly spreading that, unless the present condition of things is speedily changed, our cause will b-i lost. An tmmedi ate, bold and aggressive movement upon the enemy .following up every blow struck and gathering the fruits of eveiy victory gained is what is required for our deliverance. To the accomplishment of this single object the lLougbts, the efforts and the prayers of the whole country should be directed. If those who are in front will not go forward, the pub lic safety will demand that they be assign -d positions in the rear. What are sensibilities, what the reputation, or what the cherished schemes of any general in the fit-Id. as com pared with the life of such a government and country as ours I If, with the cloudless skies, and bracing airs, and fine roads of the autumn, our vast and completely appointed army can not do its work, when will it be able 'to do it? If Lee, Jackson and Longstreetcan move with promptitude and dashing celerity in the cause .of treason and barbaric vandalism, why can not our chieftains move as promptly -and as fast in the canse of honor and loyalty 7 Uow much longer will tbe natioaeQdure that all its sacrifice! be fruitless? Its conviction that it possesses, twice told, the power to subdue this rebellion is not more complete .than,; in my judgment, will be its determination that nei ther the follies nor the crimes of men shall render that power unavailing. It is tbe torpor of our armies this hope de ferred for the hundredth time which basnn furled that party banner whose shadow is now resting on so many of the loyal States. - It is not disloyalty which has prompted the dcplo rablo moment, but a weariness and di scour agement consequent upon the losses, burail iations and delays wo have suffered ; yet it is the most alarming sign of the times, and can only be arrested by decided military succes ses. It is the law of the very existence of such political organizations to seek strength by assaults upon the Administration, in whose bands, for weal or woe, is the direction of those movements cpon which necessarily de pend the preservation of the Union. These assaults will grow in vgor and bitterness a they progress, and while thus indirectly af fording aid and comfort" to the rebellion win mate continual, albeit unconscious, ap proaches towards an open affiliation with it Let those who are called upon to rote a party ticket in the midst of the tragic events now upon us ponder well before doing so, the dis aatrous consequences of such a policy a pol icy from whose baleful tendencies no purity o motive can possibly detract. Let them hes itate long before they sow the seeds of d;s sensions, whose bitter Iruits may be upon the lips of their children's children. Let them not forget that by thus presenting a divided front they degrade our cause before the world they paralyze our own strength, and add ira measurably to the hopes, the confidence and the power ol the enemy. Already the con federate piess is pointing tho deluded people of the south to these risinz distractions a mong ourselves, in a tone not merely of hope fulness but of exultation. , , . If any man, as a motive for such a course snppo-es that he has ground of complaint a gainst the President, let him take heed that his ill-directed hostility does not put in jeop ardy tho republic itself, for whose preserva tion from overthrow the Presidi-nt is inces santly and loyally laboring. What has a con froversy with the President of the United btates to do with the anesticn of lovaltv t onr country in the midst of such a struggle as this I If he errs-as the best of men are lia able to do he is soon to pass away, with all bis deeds; but onr government and country should, and If we are true to them they will, endure for counHess ages to come. ThePrea- ident, with all the dignity and responsibili ties belonging to bis position, is but a pilot on the national ship, for a single watch of the night. Who will be so insane as to aid, how ever indirectly, in scuttling the ship, merely because be has a quarrel with the pilot from whose hands the helm is so soon to be wrest ed ? Who is willing that a savage shout, as of victory, shall go up from that Rrmy of fe- rocions rebels whose bands ar doubly dyed in blood of onr people ? Who is willing that thrill of joy shall run throughout the entire south, and that bonfires and illumination shall bo kindled In the city of Richmond over the triumph of the opposition in the great Empire State ? If such there be, let him vote a nartv ticket. The occasion demands the develop ment of the sublimest phases of human char acter. If, with the duties to our land and to our race which are pressing upon us, we can not rise above a miserable scramble for party spoils and power, then the sooner we creep nto our graves the better. Another danger which is threatened from the inaction of our armies is from abroad. This rebellion is as ubiquitous in the curses it scat ters as it is foolish in its spirit. Jhe conflict, from our commercial and other relations, con cerns the happiness of the civilized world Foreign nations, with a forbearance that can not bs too much commended, have, without nterlerence, waited patientlv and given us every opportunity to subdue the rebellion. But unless some decisive military demonstra- ion soon takes plce, and the south is occu pied by our forces, these nations will conclude that we lack either the will or tbe power to reestablish the Union. 1 Already a member of tbe English Cabinet (Mr. Gladstone) baa openly declared tbat Divis has made a nation of the south ;" and uch an announcement, from such a source. an not but be accepted as having a startling ignincance. It the vast army in whose pres ence, as it were, a half-beaten enemy is leis ure! destroj ing one of the most important railroads of the loyal States, does not do its work speedily, European governments must ere long yield to the clamor of their impover ished and starving populations, and there will come intervention, "with all its woes.'V Up on this will follow at once intimate entangling alliances with the south, to be succeeded by hostilities with ns, and, in all human proba bility, by the permanent establishment of the Tebel confederacy. What fate might befall our own institutions, amid tho bankruptcy and demoralization and brokenne-s of spirit con sequent on . such a dismemberment, I will not trust myself to inqoire. . We cannot hope to escape from this train of events by any ex ploits of our navyj however brilliant, occupy ing the southern coast and the cities upon the seashore. This, though well and very well, will be but fcrafching tbe extremities of the giant,' instead of dealing blows at his heart. That heart palpltata defiantly in the armies of Lee and Jackson which have so recently ravaged Mary land, and still from the banks of the Potomac threaten the capital. My faith in all the matter is simple and briefly stated. It ia this t Forallthings that are for the Union agii'nst all things that are against it.' " I am for the Union as uncondi tionally as I am for protecting ' my own body, at every cost and buzzard, from the knife of the assassin. fo human institution, no earth ly interest, shall ever by me be weighed in tbe scales against the life of my country. Least of all will I approach with unsandalled feet, or permit to be thus weighed, an institution the feeding fountain of whose being the Af rican slavery trade tho laws of; ray country have for more than forty years denounced as crime worthy of death a crime not agains any particular code, or any particular form of civilization, but a crime against the very race to which e belong. ; Host it human generis is the designation which the Christian legislation of the United Slates has given the African slave trade. , . - . i; yieia to no man in veneration for the Constitution, or in determination that its bles "'8 uan do exienaua to those who respect and obey it. Tiie door to all these blessings is widely open to the southern people, and they are earnestly invoked by tUe Presiden to enter in and enjoy them. These institutions and their every interest are in their own hands, and can be saved not only from ruin, but from the slig.'iest injury by the utterance of a single word a word of honor., , But, it in their passionate pursiii of aepaiate empire, and in their blind resent meats against brethren who have never wron gt-d them, they refuse to speak that word, and prefer to perish themselves, rather than that the loyal Slates shall escape destruction lie i so., the world will judze aright, and history will record itsjudgement. But.is it not childish prattle to say that the South cm claim to be at the same moment the protege and the de stroyer of'ihe Constitution 1 Does it not require an audacity absolutely satantc to insist that the beneficent provisions of that hallowed instru ment shall be secured to States at.d people who are hourly spurning arid spitting upon its authority, and who are leading forward vast armies lo overwhelm it, and with it the homes and hopes of all who are rallying in its defence? War cetainly one like this, in self-defence is clearly constitutional but if such a war has Its restraints, it has also its rights and du ties, prominent among which is the right and duty of weakening the enemy by all pos sible means, and thus abridging tbe sanguinary conflict. Xever until now has it entered into tho imaginations of men to conceive that among these duties is that of seeing that the enemy is clothed and fed. and armed before he s struck. In prosecuting the war, while exe- cising our right to weaken the enemy, we may destroy not only ships upon the sea, and for tresses and cities upon the land, but human life upon the battle-field. But what institution, what material interest is more hallowed than human life, and what material interest is there belonging to the enemy tbat we are obliged to spare, even though by so doing we perish ourselves the Constitution is achirter of national life, and not of national death. AH movements which seek or tend to the dissolu tion of the governments created by it, and of which it is the soul, are in conflict with its spirit and with tbe scope and end of its enact ments, and may be resisted to the death bv its express or implied authority. Xeither the keenest vision nor the most delicate ear can detect in any line or letter of that glorious character the faintest throb of sympathy with treeson or traitors. Pardon these hurried words, which are spo ken in crimination of none, but in grief alone. There is abundant cause for sorrow, but none for despair. No man more . sincerely desires tbe re-establishment of the Union than does the President himself. Let it be onr trust that while an October sun is yet shining, the mind on which all depends will devise ways and means to overcone every ohsticle to the onward march and triumph of our armies. New York has already sent a hundred and seventy regiments into the field. The muskets they beat prove that they are unconditional Union men. God forbid that the fathers, and brother and sons whom they hare left behind should, through a show of distension at the ballot-box, do aught to weaken their hands or to add to the strength and courage of the trai tors whose 8wordsare lilted against their bos oms. Very respectfully, Tour obedient servant, J. Holt. A Petrified Mam. According to the "Ter ritorial Enterprise," a petrified man was found some timo ago in the mountains south of Grav elly Ford. E very limb and feature of the sto ny mummy was perfect not even excepting the left leg, which had evidently been a wooden one during the, lifetikie of the owner ; which ifetime, by the way, came to a close about a century ago in the opinion of a savan who has examined the defunct. The Enterprise adds: The people, of the neighborhood volnnt.-ered to bury the poor unfortunate, and were even anxious to do so, but it was discovered when bey attempted to remove him that the water. which had dripiied upon him for ages from the crag above, had coursed down his back : and deposited a Iitnstone sediment under him. which had: glued hint to- the bed rock upon which he sat as with a cement of adamant, and Judge S. refused to- allow the charitable citi zens to blast bUn4ro i is position. , LETTEE FE0r. A SOUTHERN LAWYER. : : The President's Proclamation. e eoVT from the Aational Intelligencer; a letter of R. J. Meigs, State Librarian of Ten nessee for many years, and a distinguished Southern lawyer.' Mr. Meigs, who was born in alave State, and has lived all his life in Kentucky and Tennessee, lelt the later State at the beginning of the Rebellion, and since has pissed much of his time in' Philadelphia, This legal opinion of an eminent Southern lawyer on the President's Emancipation Proc lamation, is so Clear and to the point, that all should read it. . - v ; 15 BaOADWAt, Nkw York, Oct. 1, 1862. To the Editors of the National Intelligencer : I was called on yesterday for my subscription to the Intelligencer by your agent and having paid him, took his receipt to Nov. 15, 1862, at which time thirty-five years will have elapsed since I became a subscriber. Judging from some of your recent articles, such as the ironi cal one .of Sept. 20th, entitled "The Pursuit of Truth under Difficulties," and the like, I infer that you consider the President's late emancipation proclamation, as it is styled, an illegal measure of war against the Confederate States. I propose, not for your instruction of course, but to make myself uuderstood, to copy from Vattel certain passages, and to ask whether they constitute the law ( war betwe the Confederate States and the United States "A civil war breaks the bands of society ana Uovernment, or, at least, suspends thci force and effect : it produces in the nation two independent parties, who consider each othe as enemies, and acknowledge no common Judge. Those two parties, therefoie. must necessarily be considered as thenceforth con stitutiiig, at least for a time, two seperate bod les two distinct societies. 'Though one of the parties may have been to blame in breaking the unity of the State and resisting the lawful authority,' they are not the . less divided iu fact. Beside, who shall judze them ? Who shall pronounce on which side the right or the wrung lies? On earth they have no common sueriors. They stand therefore in precisely the same predicaments as two nations- who engaged in a contest, and being unable to com- to an agreement, have recourse to arms." Book 3, sec' 293. "Whenever, therefore, a numerous body of men think they have a right' to reMst the aov ereign, and find themselves in a condition to appeal to the sword, tbe war 'Bght to be car ried ' on by contending .parties in the same manner as by different nations. B' Oli 8, sec 294. - - - - - ; "Now, f n reference to the property of the belligerents, what is the manner of can-ring on war by different nations ?' .-. 'A State taking up arms in a just cause has a double risrht against her enemies. 1st. A right to obtain possession of her property with held by the enemy, to which must be added the expenses incurred in the pursuit of an oh ject, the chaiges of the war, and the repara tion of damages, for were she obliged to bear these expenses and losses she would not fully nxover her property or obtain her due. 2d. She has a right to weaken heV enem v in order to render him incapabltt of supporting his un just violence a right to deprive him of the means of resistance. Hence, as from their Source, originate all the rights which war gives over things belonging to tbe enemy - Book 3, sec. 160. "Wo have a right to deprive our enemy of his possessions, of everything which may aug ment his strength and enable him to make war. This every one endeavors to accomplish in the manner most suitable to him. 41 Whenever we have an opportunity we seize on the enemy's property and convert it to our own use ; and thus diminishing the en emy's power we augment our own, and obtain at least a partial indemnification or equivalent, either for what constitutes the subject of the war, or for the expenses and losses incurred in its piosecution ; in a word, we do ourselves justice." Book 3, sec. 161. "The right to security often authorizes ns to punish justice or violence. It is an addi tional plea for depriving an enemy of some part of his possessions. This manner of chas tising a nation is more humane than making the penalty to fall on the persons of the citi zens. With that view, t nine's of value may be taken from her, such as rights, cities, prov inces." Book 3, sec. 162. If I understand these passages, they show that the Confederate States and the : United States are, for the purposes of tbe war, to be considered independent States. This "being so, justice must be on tbe one side or on the other. Supposing it to be on the side of the United States then this authority lays it down that "a State taking up arms in a just cause" has a right to deprive its enemy of bis pos sessions, of everything which may augment his strength and enable him to make war;" and, with" a view to security, "things of value may be taken" from the offending nation, such as rights, cities, provinces." Thus, therefore, to weaken the wrong doer, the in ured nation may seize bis property ; and to obtain security against a repetition of the wrong, the wrongdoer may be deprived of bis rights, cities and provinces. Now, upon tbe supposition tbat the Uni ted States have taken up arms against tbe Confederate States, an independent nation, in a just cause," may I ask you to show your readers in what respect the President's eman- cipation proclamation is not sustained by tbe law of nations that is by the common sense , vuu-.,- .J. , c. of mankind? While tbe Confederate Slates declare .themselves an independent nation, nd as such commence war against tbe United States, and convert to tbe use of tbe Confed eracy the property of the United States, wher ever they can seize it by violence, or obtain posaesMon of it by fraudulent collusion with the officers entrusted with ' its custody, Is it fndeed unlawful for tbe United States to de" pri ve the Confederate States of their posses sions, of the very thing Which constitntes their strength, and enables them to make war? And, with a view to future security, is it illegal for the United States to deprive' the Confederate States of tbef right to bold men in bondage, who if they were free, would labor or fight on the side of the United States, seeing tbat thaso men, being held in bondage, are made both to labor and fight on tbe side of the Confederate States? 7 '. R. J. Mews. AK AGREEABLE EPISODE. . One of the most remarkable i results of the autumn election is, tbat while the opponents of the Administration have . succeded in tho middle free stares; snch as Pennsylvania, New York, Ohio, Indiana and Illinois, they have signally failed in nearly.' all the border slave states. In Delaware and Missouri, wbich-are slave states, ffie unconditional Union men bave triumphed, ind in Missouri, where the question was put,, the emancipationists have carriedthe day. Wo hav no doubt that in Eastern Virginia, Eastern Tennessee and Ken tncky we should see the same result," If elec tions could be held in these districts. -. We might refer, in this connection, to an other singular fact, which is, that the real U nion men of these border states are mora earnest, determined and" Unrelenting in their hostility to the rebels, than many of the pro fessed Unionists of tbe free states.' "Such men as Johnson, Brownlow and Carter in Ten nessee, Gralz Brown and Drake of Missouri, Holt and Rousseaa of Kentucky, Hamilton of Texas, and hundreds of others, put many of our more northern loyalists to the Mush. A.. midst tho hottest . fires of rebel wrath, (heir property - and their families exposed to- vio lence, and surrounded by : slaveholder's 'on all side9, they yet uphold the government in 'its extremest measures, and with a force and in tensity of tflort that has no parallel in tbe fre states. They would scorn to allow 'their In terests in slavery to deflect their fidelity from the higher interests of the nation; and they would scorn still more to allow their local prej udices to weaken their devotion to the 'great principles of constitutional - government.' While men at the North," who have nothing to lose bytbe destruetioaLofJtho Institution. are doing w hat they dare to nphold it, wbllo ra.n who were born and educated -trader tho influences of free society repudiate their birth right and betray their traditionalp'rineipies to prosper the eanse of the nation's enemies, these noble spirits cheerfnlly sacrifice tboir estates, their comforts," their hereditary senti ments, and the approval of life-long friends, in the earnest and perilous discharge of their duty to the conntry. . ; ' The reason of this difference is, that these slave state patriots know what the rebellion means; they know its ambition and Its malig nity; and they are no: deluded by tbe false hopes of peace which professional democrats aflect to cherish. They know that the leaders of the revolt, convinced of their otter inability to retain or recover their political power witb- n tbe Union, are determined to destroy the Union; that they hav set their lives upon the cast, and will stand the hazard of the die, come what will. The rebels jeer and mock at the foolish proposals of conciliation which sometimes obtrude themselves in the speech es of democratic ora'ors, and they tell ns, at the Richmond Dispatch did in an article of November lOtb, on "the. electios inYankea- dom," that "the old flag is the most detested of symbols to the whole body of ' southern so ciety," the boasted American eagle in reality a mere "Yankee buzzard," and that "if sla very were legalized in every state, the South would never accept the condition for a return to the. land of bondage." In such a state of feeling in the seceding states, the wise men of all parties regret to see tbat war alone can terminate the existing difficulties. But, besides, tbe slavery question has become in several of the border slave states a question of immediate and local concern. A large par ty in Delaware, in Maryland " and in Missouri has come to the conclusion tbat it is detrimen tal to the commonity, and that it mast be, in some way or other, extinguished. In Missou ri, particularly, the late elections turned en tirely opon the issue of emancipation; and the people, by clear majorities have decided in favor of .freedom. Of the nine , members of Congress chosen, four are declared emancipa tionists, two are unconditional Union . men, and only three are pro-slavery democrats.whilo the majority of the state legislature is repor ted to be in favor of emancipation. This is a glorious result, and in Itself compensates tbe patriotic heart for whatever shocks and suffer ings it may have experienced through the un toward judgments of tbe ballot box elsewhere. One more state will assuredly rank itself, and by its own deliberate action, among tbe num ber of the ' free states la' a very" short time. Her example will prove contagions in Ken- tucky, in Maryland, in Delaware,1 and In the . ; . , tt, . ... , . . western part of Virginia, nntil tbe whole line Of the border is completely redeemed from the awful' curse which now bangs npoq "It prosperity and blights its' good name. PfiiU adelphia Worth American. "" ' : " ' - One of the moat anceesaf ol military" orranl- xationa In St; Louis,' la composed of Tnen over 45 years old an,lefrally ekempiiroltfsirv4fls.' h -'J