1 4. I -s N nr'VT 1 1 .itf j w u mi l j - 11 si 1 BY S. J. EOW. CLEARFIELD, PA.. WEDNESDAY, ' SEPTEMBER 9 1863. VOL. 10.-NO. 2. a: - v w rnHOMPSON t WATSON, Dealers in Timber, JL Saw Logs, Boards and Shingles, Marysville, i Irarfield county, Penn'a August 11, 1863. i. w. Thompson : : : : : jab. b. watson. JM ALBERT A BRO'S, Dealers in Dry Goods, Groceries, Hardware, Queensware, Flour, Bacon, etc.. Woodlan-, Clearfield county. Penn'a. Also, extensive dealers in all kinds of sawed lum ber. h ingles, and square timber. Orders sol ici ted. Woodland, Aug. 19th, 1863. CAlTTIO. All persons are hereby caution ed against purchasing or in any way med dling with the following property, now in the possession of James Evans, of Graham tw'p. viz: one bay mare, one iron gray horse, one two year old colt, and four cows, as the same was purchas ed by uie at Sheriff Sale, and have only been left with the said Evans on loan, and are subjeft to my order. JOS. C. BRENNER Morrisdale. Aug. 19. 1803. SHERIFF'S SALES. By virtue of sundry writs of Venditioni Erponas, issued out of the Cowrt of Common Pleas of Clearfield county, and tome directed, there will be exposed to Public a!e. at the Court House, in the borough of Clear field, on the Fourth Monday of September next, A. I) 1863. at 1 o'clock, P. M., the following de scribed Heal Estate vis: A certain tract of land situate in Chest town chip, Clearfield county Penn'a, bounded as fol lows: Beginning at a post corner, thence north hi deg west one hundred and fifty perches to a , heart is also in that cause at home which will tiost, thence by land of Anthony MeGarvey and ! v, ,. ,,, , - . , . ... Lawrence Killiam two hundred and four perches ; he!P lhe arm-v' 1 no not 1 Mnnot aSree w,,n to a post, thence along the line ot Aaron Pierce to , the Di-mocrats with whom I hive slways act a white pine, thence by land of Isatic Kirk to ; t.(, tJ , o( he d d , place of beginning, containing one hundred and ' ' seventy-one acres more of less, being part of a j with sorrow. Localise it cuts me loosefor the larger Survey in the name of George .Musser with ' time Irom all rnv political associates but I 1nin (hereon erected and about seventy-five acres cleared with a young bearing orchard. Seized, tsiken in execution, and to be told as the ptoperty of Robert McPhcrran. Also a certain tract of land, situate in West Liberty, in Clearfield county, Penn'a. and bound ed on the west by lot No. 19, on the north by tbe Krie Turnpike, on tbe east by an alley, and on tl.e ou;h by lacdiMtf Jacob fleberling. being each i'ii feet in front and running back 120 feet.known in plot of said town as No. 13 and 15 with two ptory frame bouso erected thereon Seiied. ta-k-p in execution, and to be sold as the property of Joseph Risbell. Also a certain tract of land situate in Fergu son township. Clearfield county. Penn'a. bounded hy linds of Win. lieed. Joseph Alooro, Wm. Moore. Alexander and John Ferguson and Thomas Hen ry, containing two hundred acres more or less a bout forty acres cleared thereon, and a large i'auk Barn erected thereon. S.ized taken in ex ecution, and to be sold as the property of Benj. Hartshorn and Thomas Henry, Administrator of Thomas McCracken. dee'd. Also a certain tract of land situate in Chest township. Clearfield county. Penn'a, bounded by Undsof Simon Korabaugh. Andrew and Solomon Toiler and lands late of Moses Pierce and others, ei.niaining eighty-two acres, about an acre cleared thereon. Seized, taken in execution, and to be s.-ild us the property of Aaron fierce and Austin Ciary. Also By virtue ot Snnrlrv writs r.f 7-..s. l Wt(JS. the following described real estate i.,rt!v in Decatur township. Clearfield countv. i M'(i partly extending into Centre county, State it I'eiiiipy ivama. orijrinn.'iy ynrveyea upon war rant il..u.-d July 1st 178-1 respectively granted to ... .(jiiel Fletcher. Elizabeth Harrison, and John liarri.-wn. adjoining lands conveyed to Joseph ilnrri-wn. Th"in is Islington. Francis Lathropaud lii rs -md f alentea April IOjU to the said Lien i; i iluniitoii. containing in the aggregate eleven hui-lred and eighty-seven acres and twenty two ; ei lii: ot" I-ind with the allowance, excepting ;iitre mit and therefrom two lots, one of 200 acres nr.'! iiUuwtuiL-e agreed to be sold and conveyed to .' Lr. ilu.-.- aiid Abraham (loss, their heirs and As Mi:.aiid the other in the possession of the heirs it ;isii:os of Abraham Goss now dee'd, and con :.ii.in2 one hundred and fifty four acres and one I -:ilr.'il nmi fi ft v-fnii r TtrriVi niifr.t i n.r tr. u i t:ur, furvey by Thomas iloss of Clearfield county ! are U'6al v'r- nd in their names at once Surveyor, being-together thre hundred and fifty nnd be assessed that they may vote in camp, fnur aetcs and one hundred and twenty-four ,. ,. . . "j...- jerchM. thus excepted from the original tracts ! If Section should he raised to Una, we trust :i- 1 leaving eight hundred and thirty-two acres that the Government will permit them to come ael fitty-for perches with theailowance now con- hom(, to exercise- a right of which none but a ri ved tv the sume. more or less, together with all ai.ii .-ir.gular ways, waters, water courses, rights, Copperhead Judge would attempt to deprive liberties privileges and improvements. Seized, them. The matter is important, as contrary Tnkfii iu execution, and to be sold as the proner- . . . , . . ,, ty of David I Pruner, A.G. Curtin, John M. Hall fo propriety, Woodward, the Democratic can ami J. J. Lingle. didate tor Governor, retails his seat in the Also all that certain twostory house or build- fcupreme Court, and may construe acts bear ing situate in the township of Woodward and i . . . .... . .... , ciunty ef Clea, field or lot on south side of road ln? on tn 13 r,Sht to be conMifnlional r un-i-ailing from Alexanders Fording to Philipsburg ' constitutional to suit his prospects. By all n. the village of Puseyville bounded on the west i means , t the sodit.,9 T0te at the coming e ly lot owned by Ileury Peters, east by land of fc'jbtrt Alexander, said house being in size six- j lection. teen feet by twenty feet, and the lot or piece of We repeat the recommendation, that tbe ground and curtilage appurtenent to said build- ! , . it,', the sum of forty dollais and fiftv oents. bei-tr 1 "oldiera from this State, in every case possi- adibt coutracted for work and labor done by' said Constantine Bonktnmyer. Seized, taken in j execution, and to be sold as the property of Geo. V. Miles. Also By virtue of sundry writs of Fieri Facias, tbe fullcwing real estate, to wit : Two certain tracts of land situate in Brady tp , Clearfield county, Penn'a, one beginning at a Lin corner, thence extending by improvement of Levi I'nle south sixteen degrees west 85 perches to a Hst. thence along the turnpike road sooth eighty fix degrees west ICO perches to a post, thence rorih one degree west 72 7-tenth perches to a fut. asi thence north eighty nine degrees east !-4o-tentb perches to the Lin and place of be gisi.ing. containing fifty-one acres and forty one perches, being part of a larger tract of land sur tyeJ on warrant to Henry Whyroff, about forty acres cleared with a two story frame dwelling boue 32 by2 feet and log stable erected thereon All defendants interest in a certain tract of I In r. .I.:......- . i . J C , hing allottment No. 5 of tract No. 34. bounded ' changed, and his election will of coarse be se on the south by the above named tract.on the west ; d b the practical disfranchisement of the "7 Unds of fe. R. Lobaugb. on the north by Long-. .; t r ndonihe east bv Wm. Garr's heirs eontaininir ! soldier. Hence, we urge, let the soldier be acres more or lets, about 12 acres clearer with '." story plank frame house erected thereon. Seized taken in execution, aad to be sold as the property of Tolbert Dale. Also all that certain tract of land situate in LprtiMde township, Clearfield eounty, Penn'a be- . , . , . i . , ,t. n-umK ai b mxnia corner. inence dv ana oi i xii. iirothe. ,1.7:X:1'X"a Ii: .:"SJZ ';JZ. ; vow uuo u u uvt i crva, suu aiij wvvu pvivi n fn a maple, thence north fifty-five degrees west Zr"' e? , rr-d aud sixty-two perches to a post, thence ! ".i?LIIi.ace!i0hinJ,1rti!,t fortJ-wo ! k- hundred and eighty perches to a vte pice, thence by land of Jaoob Tingling and J-.ber? touth foor hnndred and nine perches to j ibilCOr?erJand Place of beginning, containing ; y hundred and nine acreicore or less survey-i ,(1 the third day of October, A. D. 1834. on war- dated 18th December, A. D. 1793, granted to , ttnel Bartley with log bouse, log barn, and! mill greeted thereon with about fifty acres ! i'dr'4' s"iied- taken in execution, and to be a the property of Benjamin Yingling, dee'd. ! Office, aeaffield,?. lf,Rl!?3 Sh'ff-" TEUST IN GOD. In this world of sin and care, Sorrow, pain and dark despair, Friends the truest earliest die, Hopes the londest soonest fly ; But when cherished dreams depart, And tears unto our eyelids start; When friends and kindred pass away Like snow before the breath of May; Trust in God, and lie shall be Worth all the world beside to thee. Trust in God. and when to death Yieldeth thou at last thy breath, Angel. pinioned, thou shalt fly To His mansions in the sky; There thy long lost friends shall meet thee, There thy Saviour-Hod shall greet thee; There thou shalt be ever blest On thy dear Redeemer's breast. NOBLE SPEECH FROM A UNION DEMOCRAT. The Republican Convention of Wisconsin nominated Lucius Firchild, of the Iron brig ade, who has led the old Second Wisconsin through many a storm of shot and shell, and lost an arm at Gettysburg, as Secretary of State, in accepting the nomination he said: 'I have no political aspirations, I ask no f ffice. My heart is in the army. And my cannot believe they are right now. I cannot believe any discouragement to the Govern ment can help to put down rebellion, and not believing it, I cann t go with them in sup port of any policy which is not in favor of the Administration. Whether I liie this Administration or not whether I like what it has done or not I am bound to support it, because under it we are to live or die. This country either live9 or dies in the next two years, and we cannot change the Administration, unless we doit by rebellion, and that is what we are trying to put down. Personally 1 would not turn over uiy hand foi any office in the State. I entered the army simply as a matter of duty, and my earnest wish is to stay thrre. I have been told by some friends that they thought it my duty to accept this nomination as I am. I ac cept it as an invalid and cripple.. But I ac cept it. I accept it with lhe understanding that par ty lines have been kicked dofcti and we are all Union men. Applause I do not care whom T fr.lin n-tfh rtr a-hdt tltii- fwklint- i. t.,s.tf?..l they are for putting down this rebellion in the shortest possible time I aecept the nomina- tion. I accrpt it as a Union Democrat as a Union man supporting the G vernmt-nt thro' thick and thin, through everything. That is the only platform I have in the world." The speech was received with cheers upon cheers for the gallant Colonel with the empty sleeve and his brave comrades. THE SOLDIERS' VOTE. The press of the State should urge that sol diers belonging to this State, who tmve been in the service over two years, and who at home ble or guaranteed by the exigencies of the service, should be permitted to come home to exercise the right of suSiage at the election for Governor. If any set of men are interest ed in that election, they are the, soldiers. Tbonsands of men went into the service, be cause they knew that Gov. Curtin would care lor their interests and 'the weltare of their families. These men went forth to battle be lieving that the policy of the State Govern ment would be such as to warrant the safety of all that they hold dear as men, as fathers and as freemen. In all this, they can only be deceived by being disfranchised. If George W. Woodward is elected Governor of the State of Pennsylvania, that policy will be brought bonte to vote, iiis vote is as essen tial for the safety of the Union as can be a bullet from his sure rifle or musket. His vote for Andrew G. Curtrn is necessary not only for this safety, but is demanded by the soldier to Drove his steady devotion to the Constitu- w tionandthe Laws. Let ample piovision, then, be made, for tbe return of the so.dier to Tote at the coming election for Governor and other State officersTefgrapA. mtm . " Beatiso Liscoi,n's Pboclamation. An ar- . , f m Korti, Carolina says that tbe rebel r' . . . . papef 8 received at Moorhead city say that jeff Davis has decided.aiter a conference with . ,h r.i.jOMi States to the Governors of the Confederate Mates , to call out flvt hnndred thousand black troops, who aro to receive their freedom and fifty -cres of land at tbe end of the war. A PEACE DEMOCRAT, Is one who believes in tbe docrtine of State Rights, as interpreted by the South that is that the Southern States have rights, while Northern States have none. South Carolina has a right to imprison citizens of Massachu setts, but Massachusetts has no right to re monstrate. A Southern State has a right to array her citizens in arms against the Gov ernment of the United States, but the North ern States may not call upon her sons to de fend if. He believes in tbe rights of men, but the most sacred of tbesp rights indeed, tbe od ly one worth mentioning is the right to take from other men their rights. He be lieves in maintaining the Constitution as it is interpreted by the rebels in arms to destroy it. He believe all men to be equal before the law especially he believes the poor man to be the equal of the rich man, the laborer to be as good as the capitalist ; yet he actively and cordially sympathizes with those who deluge his country in blood because they are too good gentlemen to submit to the election of a rail splitter, He believes the Democratic parly to have a divine right to govern the country, whether it has n majority of votes or not. and he is convinced that the question, which is the 'Democratic" party of the country at the present cricis, is absolutely determined by the name which itself has assumed; call a horse Spry" and you can safely bet upon bini for speed. He calls it lair play to go to an election, and refuse to abide by its clear result. He likes the views of a two-fisted countryman ol Rob Koy, who played cards with some Hebrews, and lost his money ; he at once seized th -pile," and shook his fist at his fellow-gamblers, saying, "Dorn me, ye are enemies of our Lord !" He thinks tho United States have a right to Cuba, and no right to prevent Kentucky from being stolen from us. These several points of belief show on what a solid basis of consistency and in telligence the faith of the peace Democrat rests. Boson Transscript. WOODWARD AND THE SOLDIERS The American Soldier was first disfranchis ed by tbe act on of a Democratic Supreme" Court, of which Geo. W. Woodward was and still is one of the Judges. It is not strange, then, that the copperhead journals ol the State should extol Judge Woodward for this act. Finding that they could not aid the rebel cause, and discovering that the sympathizers with rebellion were too cowardly to take up arms in defense of a cause which they adored, si'.ch men as -Woodward were determined to give rebellion what aid they could, and hence the great blow of disfranchisement was struck at the soldier. The soldier in the Mexican war were allowed to vole, because that war was waged to benefit slavery. Thk soldiers in thb war AGAINST RF.OKLLIOS IS CARRIED OS Foil THE benefit of slavery. These are the distinc tions which such men as Judge Woodward make in the exercise of the franchise when the power is to be wielded by the American soldier. While this is the position of Wood wjrd, on the question ol the right of the fran chise being exercised by the soldier in the field bat tling for his country, the attitude of Gov.-Curtin, in comparison, is at once just nnd honorable. Gov. Curtin has ever advo cated the. right of the soldier to all the privi leges of participating in the government, the same as those exercised by the citizen at home, in the enjoyment ot his peace and Lis ease. Hence, Andrew G. Curtin is regarded as the friend, and George W. Woodward as the enemy of the American soldier. DISLOYALTY WHAT IS ITT There are hundreds of ways in which a man may be disloyal. He may speak against the Government, he may write against the Gov ernment i he may inculcate resistance toils authority by precept and example; he may en deavor to depreciate its 6nancial credit ; he may screen and protect its enemies: he may be disloyal by silence as well as by speech . be may occupy a responsible public position, and, by refusing or neglecting to throw the weight of that position in favor of the Gov ernment, may be as truly disloyal as though he should openly contend that tbe dissolution of the Union is proper, and that the States should be allowed to go peaceably ; he may be disloyal by sustaining partisan organiza tions at a time when the country needs the services of all its citizens ; be may be disloyal by endeavoring to disfranchise the soldiers, or by endeavoring to create a feeling of pre judice against citizens of foreign birth. These are a few of the many ways in which a man can show himself to be disloyal. There is but one way in which a man can show himself to be loyal by supporting unconditionally the Government which protects him, and maintaining the supremacy of the laws enact ed tor his preservation. The Bell Everett ticket was thus defined by Parson Brownlow," a few days since, while making ajspeech in Frank lin,Tennessee,"My ticket in 1860 was th Bell-Eveiett ticket, a sort of Kangaroo affair, with all its virtue in its hind legs.," - ... . Additional rolls ol rebels taken at Vicks burg, received at the War Department, swell the list to 83,0005,000 in excow of publish, ed reports. HOW THE RELATIONSHIP RXTKS. THE MARRIAGE. Married, soma time bout the year J856, by bis Satanic Majesty, King Beelzebub, Esq., Mr. Copperhead Democracy and Miss Rattle snake Slavery, both of the United States. Slices of the Wedding Cake were sent to most of the Locofoco Editors, in consequence of which they have never ceased to puff the (a bove) Union. THE FIRST BORN. Born, in the Summer of 1856. Mr. Lecomp ton Border Ruffian, son of Mr. Copperhead Democracy. This unsightly child, born six months after the above marriage,, alter a few month of sick ly existance died from a peculiar disease cal led Free State. THE SECOND BORN. Born, at Charleston, S. C, in the year.of Grace, 1860, Mr. Secession Pro-Slavery Re bellion, true son of Mr. C. and Mrs. R. S. De mocracy. Dr. Jim Buchanan acting accoucher. This child, which "looks so much like its daddy," is now going on three years old. Its infancy was marked by so ranch precocity, that it is universally believed that it is "too smart to live." Its back bone was lately broken by the fall of Vicksburg, its face horribly burned in the fire at Gettysburg, and one of its feet was amputated in Ohio. It has been a source of great trouble all its days. Its death, how ever, is now looked for soon. The "old man,' they say, is "raving mad" through fear that his dear son will die. The old lady is also in a "dreadful pucker;" aud some of her ' Friends" have got the "sympathetic fits." THB THIRD BORN. Bom, in Nv York City, iu Jn'y, 1863, Mr. Patrick Kiot, third son of Mr. C. and Mrs. R. S. Democracy. This monster baby came very nearly being still-born, but by the aid of Doctor Seymour and his "Friends" it lived three days. Tbe fatality which has attended these children, shows that no child of these parents can ever live. And yet they survive long enough -to cause, great trouble ; and so long as the old folks live, there is danger of 'an increase in the family." It is proposed, therefore, to be head the aid woman to prevent her from gen erating any further trouble ; and to "hang" the old man to keep him from marrying else where. The second Tuesday of October is the day fixed for this latter performance ; aid Gov. A. G. Curtin has been appointed chief "executioner." the "death" sentence was pronounced on the old won-an on the first of last January. The people will rejoice and cry Amen ! at the extinction of the whole race. FARE VS REBEL PRISONS. Some sutlers who were captured by Mosby and have been released, complain bitterly ol their -treatment in the Libby Prison. Over 200 prisoners were confined in one room forty feet broad by seventy long, arid only eight feet high. Of the eating arrangements one of the sutlers says : "Our breakfast in tbe moining, between nine and ten o'clock, consisted of four ounces of bread and one of beef inclu ding bone, which stunk so badl7 and was so lull of mi ergot s, that we, as new beginners on such fare, turned from it in utter disgust and threw it away." What we abandoned was greedily devoured by others. At sun down we were called to dinner, which we ate standing. It consisted of fonr ounces of bread and a pint of swill, composed offish oil, black beans, maggots and dirt. We abandoned our soup on the first taste of it. Immediately the men rushed from the table like a pack of hun gry wolves, crowding arround us, and begging us for what our stomachs, as yet unaccustomed to such cirrion food, utterly refused." SOUTHERN ELECTIONEERING TRICK. curious revelation has come to light in the General Land Othco, showing how the law preventing all but freeholders from voting in the State of Louisiana was evaded by the pil lars of the Confederacy. In October and No vember, 1840, John Slidell purchased eight several parcels of land from the Governmect, and deeded them in small allotments to poor degraded Southern wretches, thus making tbem freeholders and entitling them to a vote. Tbe total number of acres so purchased was only 288, and yet, according to tbe law of Louisiana, this sufficed to qualify 4,808 of the most degraded of the white people of that State to vote. This affords a notable illustra tion of the facility with which a "property qualification" may be used by men like John Slidell. All of one Congressional district in the city of New Orleans not allowed to vcfe, went out to Plaquemine and voted, thus elect ing John Slidell to Congress. Billiards with Cassom Balls. The gun ners on the Ironsides have a neat way of ex ploding their shells within Fort Wagner. It is impossible to drive them through tbe sand and cotton of which the work is made, nor can the guns b i so elevated as to toss them in as from a mortar. So tbe pieces are depres sed, and tbe shot, striking tbe water about fifty yards from the beach, jump in. In near ly every instance this manner of making the missiles effective is successful. "Those are what I call billiards," said tbe captain, watch ing the firing. "They carom on the bay and beach and pocket the ball in the fort every time." ANOTHER COKSPIRATOR CONVICTED. Time is rapidly exposing the secret history of the secession conspiracy, and the names of those who were prominent in it. Already, from evidence furnished in tbe correspondence ot Jeff. Davis, captured by our soldiers in Mis sissippi, we have Buchanan, Brodhead,. Rey nolds, Larmon, Hackley and Treat, pilloried as sympathizing with tbe Southern cause, or engaged in the plot for the overthrow or the Government. TheCb'cago Tribune publish es a letter found in the residence of Joe Davis, at Jackson, which adds another name to the list of conspirators, namely, that of Davtd R. Atchison, who in 1856 led the border ruf fians in their attack upon Lawrance, where e nortnities were perpetrated wbicb the recent sacking of that ill-fated city no more than paralleled. Ten years ago this man wrote to Jeff. Davis as follows : "Platte city. May 29, 1853. "Hon. Jeff. Davis : Premit me to intro duce my friend Judge Samuel Treat, of St. Louis, in this State. Judge Treat is a Gentle man of Talent and a politician of the Nnllifi. cafio7i, Secession and High Treason School to which I belong. He understands the trne posj. tion of ptrties and men in this State. I desire that you wll! receive him with kindness and courtesy, listen to him and act as you think best. Tours truly, D. R. Atchison." In due time, 5f we but exercise patience, we shall have, no doubt, other mines to add to the list of Northern traitors, who aided in engineering the secession movement to mi- turtty ; and it would be well for them, if like Yancey and others of their Southern allies, .they could die before the final exposure comes, bringing a swift retribution with it. SOUTHERN RIGHTS. When Mr. Justice Woodward snid that the slaveholders might "fall back on ttieir natu ral rights, and employ in defence of their property whatever means they possess or can command," he was not as explicit as he might have been. He was disloyal enough as far as he went, but he did not go far enough. He should have told us what the "natural rights" of the slaveholders consist in. We are curi ous to know whether they include the right to hang and shoot Union citizens in East Ten nessee ; the right to hunt Union refugees in Louisiana with blood hounds ; the right to manufacture drinking-cups of dead Yankees' skulls; tbe right to shoot Union prisoners at the tobacco warehouse in Richmond, for look ing out of tbe window ; the right to burn the town ot Lawrence, Kansas, and massacre the helpless women and children. Are these a mong the natural rights referred to by Mr. Justice Woodward ? A REPORTED OPINION. The Rochester (N. Y.) Express claims to have private information that oneof the Judg es of the United States Supreme Court, sup posed to be Justice Nelson, had written an o pinion on the legal condition of the revolted States on the conclusion of the war for the suppression of the rebellion, and this opinion is concurred in by the whole bench, including Chief Justice Taney. The opinion is said to maintain that the States in rebellion have lost their rights as States, and must come into tbe Union simply as territories subject to tbe General Government and eutitled to its pro tection. .Yew State organizations may be formed by the people, under the Constitution and laws of Congress, as in tbe case of other territories, but the old States cannot come in to thc'Union with their present organizations and officers still reeking with the horrible crime they have committed against the national life- The Greek Fire. The Greek fire which is so distasteful to the fire-eaters ol Charleston is the invention of Mr. Short, who was for a long time a suitor to the Government to use this projectile, but did not succeed until it was recommended by Admiral Porter by bis experience at Vicksburg. Meantime repre sentatives of foreign governments have applied for the invention without avail. The fire mis sives, forty or fifty in number, are enclosed in a shell which is itself enclosed in one ofihe ordinary shells of the service and explodes. A gigantic Copperhead scheme of coloniza tion to elect Vallandigham Governor ot Ohio has beet discovered. The plan is to contract with and pay Copperheads in Indiana, who have no families, to come to Ohio, ostensibly for the purpose of laboring, who are to re ceive part payment in advance, and take an oath that they will vote for Vallandigham. Tbe desperate scheme will be nipped in the bud Tails in Rebeldon. The Chattanooga Rebel say : "We verily believe there are some men in this confederacy who, if they "had tails, would tuck them between their legs every time they heard that . the. AjanktJes were ad vancing." - ' '- ' : Make it the rule of yonr life to do one thing at a time. Get done slandering your neigh bors, then say your prayers. - Tbey are going, if they- possibly can, to breech Sumter, in-m Charleston, and then sack the whole.concern. It is said that the pig ran away from tbe butcher because be bad beard that prevention is better than core. If a man has but one eye, let him get a wife, aud she will be bis other I. A NOVEL SCENE IN ST. LOUIS. A strange scene was presented in St, Louis on Thursday last. J ust as the merchants were closing their stores, there ni arc bed down to the warf four companies of colored soldirrs going to the field 330 black men, in fed eral uniforms, carrying federal muskets, un der the federal flag, marching to the music of Yankee Doodle. Som e of the timid ones of .the city had -suggested that it would be safer to march these troops from their barracks af ter night fall, as thus tbe peace of the city would not be endangered. But the officer in command did not view the matter in that light; he thought the open day was as good a time as any to march loyal men through the streets of a loyal city to the defence of the nation; and so, just at sunset, without auy molesta tion whatever, he led the first regiment of colored soldiers from Missouri through tbo streets of St. Louis One year ago this would have been impossible; but Providence and the events He orders are stronger than human pre judices, stronger even than Luman hates ; and, spite of all these, Freedom goes marching on. gathering new triumphs with every advanc ing step. GETTING PEPPERED. Some of our country exchanges are showing up the antecedents ol Judge Woodward in a manner which makes it a very awkward busi ness for his adherents to defend him. His "south side" views and expressions of senti ments, once popular with tbe deluded "De mocracy," but now generally repudiated in the free States, makes up a record not calcu lated to increase his popularity nnder existing circumstances. It is reported that he desires to decline ; but those who were his rivals be fore the nominations were made, perceiving the desperate condition ot their party, are bent on keeping him "up to the rack, fodder or no fodder." Poor George! He will have a sorry time of it. A COPPERHEAD'S MEDITATION. Imagine a venerable Copperhead, when this war is over, and these stirring times are for gotten, sitting at bis home with bis children around him.- He may tell them of the wars, and the sacrifices men made and bow. people rejoiced when fhe news of each victory came from tbe army. What will he say of bis own part in that stiuggle ? "My children, in that sad time, when the country was in danger, I was against the country my heart was with the rebel when he triumphed I was glad when he was defeated my heart was Bore and heavy. My children, when I am gone, do not curse the traitor. Be silent. It is the only respect yon can pay toyour father's memory." The Indiana Messenger, an independent pa per, places the Union ticket at the head of its columns, and in doing so, says : "In placing the names of the Union ticket at the bead of our paper, we do not chacge our position wo n erely avow it more emphatically and une quivocally. We still- maintain our indepen dence in political, and all other matters. We intend, now and at all times, to do what we believe to be right, to support such candidates as are honest, most capable, and most unequiv ocally loyal, unawed by demagogues, uninflu enced by passion, unswayed by prejudice." A Valuable Well. The great Farrell well, struck on Oil Creek some lime since, is val ued by its owners at $1,000,000, and is said to have cleared over $300,000 since it began to flow. A diamond mine, if productive, might appioximate in value to a 2,000 barrel well, at the present time. But the mining stock of Golconda and "the gorgeous wealth of Ortnua and of Ind," are about "played out" and e clipsed by the oil mines at Venango. Only a shoddy contractor has any business at compe ting with such "rivers of oil." Never make a poor mouth, for if you are wjso you will always effect independence, though you maybe really as poor as Job's turkey. If you are poor don't let folks know it, or they will discover in you a thousand blemishes a host of defects which would nev er be discovered or at least never talked about if you kept a stiff upper lip and carried your self as if you had ten thousand dollars instead of ten cents. It is a natural for tbe world to hold poor folks in contempt, as it ik for rats to eat cheese. Few people realize tbe extent ot the Terri tories of the West. It is said that Idaho em braces an area of 326,000 square miles e nough to make eleven States like New York: and her extensive gold fields are attracting a large emmigration. The following is deceptively promulgated under the head of zoological information : "The Black Tapir is found in many districts of Sumatra, but tbe Red Taper chiefly in tbe Dis trict of Columbia." Tbe Southern Confederacy is called by some writers a Golgotha, or "place of skulls." Of numskulls, certainly. Tbe lady who lost her eyesight by reading a borrowed paper, has recovered it since sbe became a subscriber. Innocence is no security against temptation ; it is exactly what temptation conquers. - A lazy farmer is virtually dead, and Lis farm wears weeds in mourning for him. '