JUL - - s " ' " " ' " 1 BY S. J. now. CLEARFIELD, PA.. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER -23 186-3. VOL. 10 WO. 4. rpHOMPSUN. WATSON. Dealers in Timber I eaw Logs. Board and Shingles Marysville, -Garfield county, Penn'a Auguet 11, 1S63. "j w Thompson : : : : : Jas. e. watsos. AIT.M. ALBERT A BRO'S, Dealers in Dry Goods, V Groceries, Hardware. Qneensware, Flour, i-fn etc.. Woodlanl. Clearfield county, Penn'a. extensive dealer in all kinds of sawed lum ' It ihiniie' and square timber. Orders solici .j s Woodland, Aug. 19th, 1363. t i l"I ION All persons are hereby caution j el I'jsirit purchasing or in any way med--l ir,,w;t'h the following property, now in the - ,ies?!onof James Evans, of Graham tw'p. viz: rise nay mare- oce iron gray horse, one two year Vj cou. and four cows, as the Batne was purchas 'j b uip at S-beriJ Sale, and have only been left the said Evans on loan, and are subject to JOS. C. BRENNER Morri'dale, Aug. 19, 1863. -Hf.Rlr'F'S SALES. By virtue of sundry N Writs of Venditioni Exponas, issued out of the 1 0f Comaiun Pleas of Clearfield county, and "uie dirtctcJ. there will be exposed to Publics lif we Cjurt House, in the borough of Clear fitli. oa :ie Fourth Monday of September next, i V s.t 1 o'clock. P. M., the fallowing de tcziool Keal Estate viz: A certain tract of land situate in Chest town .' :d. Clearfield county Ptnn'a, bounded as fol- ijas: Beginning at a post corner, thence north deg west one hundred and fifty perches to a rot. thence by land of Anthony McUarvey ami .iwrence Killiam two hundred and four perches r, a Dost thence alon the line o: Aaron i letce to i shire pine, thenco by land of Isaac Kirk to r :nce of beginning, containing one hundred and erenty-one acres more of less, being part of a ;rger survey in tne name ot ueorge Musserwitn ucTsniall log houses, blacksmith shop and log ( -rii thereon erected and about seventy-five acres ;.?ired with a young bearing orchard. Seized. . km in execution, and to be sold as the property :i Kobtrt McPherran. Also a certain tract of land, situate in West liberty, in Clearfield county, Penn'a. and bound ed nil the west by lot No. 19, on the north by the l ri Turnpike, on the east by nn alley, and on ::e south by land:? of Jacob (leberJing. being each f,L, ti-et in front and running back 120 feet, known j:i pint of said town as No. 13 and 15 w:.fa two torv frame house erected thereon Seiiej, ta knin execution: and to be sold as the property uf Joseph Kishell. Also a certain tract of land situate in Fergu son township. Clearfield county. Penn'a. bounded fcy lands of Wm Heed. Joseph Moore. Win. Moore, Alexander and John Ferguson and Thomas llen :v ci.ii!aiiiiiig two hundred tunes more or leas a t't.ut forty acres cleared thereon, and a large i'.m.k Barn erected thereon. Seized, taken in ex-f-cuuuo. and to be sold as the. property of Benj. H:ir?-hr'rn and Thomas Henry, Administrator of Thouia Mccracken, dec'd. Also a certain tract of land situate in. Chest tnwii.'hip. Clearfield county. Penn'a, bounded by 'sadaot simou Korabaugh. Andrew and Solomon in:crnd lands late of Moees Pierce and others, .training eighty-two acres, about an acre cleared i.'.t'riin. Seized, taken in execution, and to bo mid as the property of Aaron fierce and Austin Curry. Aio P.y virtu ot Sundry writs of Levari i'jfiu.i. the follow ing described real estate: All those three several tracts of land situate jn:i!y in Liecatur township. Clearfield county, f.i partly extending into Centre county, State i.f lVnncylvani. originally surveyed upon wnr ur.l dbtt-d July 1st I7a4 respectively granted to ) ii.HMiel Fletcher. Elizabeth Harrison ayd John inrrU. n. adjoining lands conveyed to Joseph liirrifyn. Thomas Billington. Francis Uat.orcpand he's kikI Paid, ted April I860 to the said Hen 1 '.li:ug'n. cciitr.ii.ing in the aggregate eleven h'.::.'ired ltd eightv-scven acres and twenty two ! .Trhei of bind with the aliowor.ee, excepting en- i ut iir.d tlu refroui two lots, one of 200 acres hi all 'Wam-e ared to be sold and conveyed to hi. and Abruhfun Goss. their hirs and As- '.. the other in the po-isession of the heirs : i.--uni uf Abraham Goss now dee'd. and con : u.'. oiic hut.drcd and fifty four acres and one i.-hurc t ai.i fify-four perches Recording to a cer inx, survey by Thftnai Uosa of Clearfield county jtcit. bcirg together thre hundred and fifty f it: aiMes and or.o hundred and twenty-four ;rol;ej. thus excepted from the original tracts m.-I lciv:iig eight hundred and thirtv-two acres i r.itv-f.nir perches with the allowance now cou-v-ye i i v tht- sftine irore orles3. together with all j.iJ -iiktniar ways. waer3. watercourses, righ's. '..:.Tr:: privileges and improvements. Seized, t-k ,-; i.i ixecufion. and to be sold aa the proper u i- i'uvid I Pruner, A.G. Curtin, John M. Hall !. i .!..i. LiLg'e. Alo ail ttist cerUin two story housi? or build .iC'iiuate in the township of Soodward and : i.f Citaifiela or lot on south siJo of load it .-i.tii.i; frcm Alexanders Fording to Philipaburg it. the village of Pu.eyville. bounded on the west ty lot fwncd by iienry Peters, east by land of ioittrl A'exander. said hou-e being in size 9i.x tirr. feet by tweiity feet, and the lot or piece of zrmiid and curtilage appurtenent to said build--) it i the sum ot tony dollars and fifty cents, bei'ig s tirbi contracted for work and labor done by "ii Constantine lionkinmyer. Seized, taken in txecution, and iu be sold as the property of Geo. Milea. Ato Ey virtue of undry writs of Firri Facias, the lo:iowir.g real estate, to-wit: Two certain tracts of land situate In Brady tp , CtarS-ld county, Penn'a. one beginning at a Lin corner, thecce extending by impiovement of Levi L'aie jouth sixteen degrees west 86 perches to a rost. thecce along the turnpike road soutn eighty degrees west 1U0 perches to a post, thence t- rth one degree west 72 7-tenth perches to a ft. i thence north eighty nine degrees east j-tenth perches to the Lin and place of be KtWicg. coEtaining fifty-one acres and forty one trche. being part of a larger tract of land sur 'evei t,D warrant to Henry WhyrofF, about forty rej c!red w;ih a two atory frame dwelling -ittst 32 V.y 32 feet a;id log stable erected thereon Ail defendants interest in a certain tract of :tu&ie township, county and state aforesaid. 'itg allottment No. 5 of tract No. 34. bounded a the south by the above named tract. on the west b7 lands of S.'r. Lobangb. on the north by Long. Jtd on the east by Wm Garr'a heirs containing 'cres more or less, about 12 acres clearer with JJo story plank frame house erected thereon. rt taken in execution, aad to oe sold as the FTOterty of Tolbert Dale. Also all that certain tract of land situate in WniHde township, Clearfield county, Penn'a be K csicgatamaplecorner.thence by land of Wm. """tiers test One hllnHreJ nr) ai'rt. un nitrith. - to maple, thence north fifty-five degrees west i.r'5.v s; perches to a white oak, thence by land i"""-n rVicbin north eixteen degrees east two JMred and sixty-two perches to a post, thence -i wild of Horace Patchin north forty-two de Li"."1 on bund red and eighty perches to a Mh Plre' tbence by lBntl of Jacob Yingling and tat" Utl1 f0ur nnnd,'e1 n perches to 'brV0r?ean,, P,aoe of beginning, containing n ,i anln.,lred and nine acres more or less survey raV, ; 'i day of October, A. D. 1834. on war Wl1 18th Deniber, A. D. 1793, granted to ia I' m Banley tn log house, log barn, and -a ec.ted thereon with about fity acres o'd ,V geileJ taken in execution, and to be me property of Benjamin Yingling, dec'd. !- , EDWARD PERKS. Shff. "MT. Office Clarf.eld, Aug. 19, 1S63. CV t .. ow SrViiHfiiiiflH mvuxmu C0PPEEHEAD SCOTCHED BY A BEKOCSAT. The following correspondence between Mr. Browne and .Mr. BiddU; will explain itself. Mr. Browne U one of the-most conscientious 8nd respectable citizens of Philadelphia, a Democrat heretotore,and we believe Postmas ter ia Philadelphia under Mr. Buchanan's Ad ministration, bupwho came into the loyal par ty with Dickinson, Butler and Brewster. He made a speech, in the course of which he just ly spoke of Mr. Justice Woodward as an ene my oi the country, and a follower of the doc trines of the late Mr. C;i!houn. This state ment lie strengthened by asserting a former political frieudsh ip for Mr. Woodward, aiI a knowledge ol his views, which every other Democrat in the St.ite abundantly possessed. Hence the correspondence : South Sixth Street, August 27, 1803. A B. Bowne, Eng., Sir : You are report ed in The Pi ess of tiiis morning as stating to a public meeting your personal knowledge ol the opinions of Hon. G. W. Woodward, the Democratic candidate for Governor of Penn sylvania You say of him: "He is, if possi ble, a conscientious Secessionist. .Voman in the Soi.th carries the doctrine of Secession further than he, &c." Force is given to this statement by the claim that it is made upon intimate acquaintance with Judge Woodward. You introduce your version of his opinion with the declaration : "2'A speaker was intimately acquainted with, the gentleman, and he would say that if it wore possible' to call trom his grave that arch traitor, John C. Calhoun, and place him in the gubernatorial chair of Penn sylvania, he would not be of more service to the Southern cause than Judge Woo J ward will be, it elected." Will you inform me whether you are cor rectly reported in the newspaper in which these remarks appear? If you are, will yon please to say when aud where you have had the intimate acquaintance with Judge Wood ward upon whicn you impute to nun opinions which he has never uttersd to his friends or the public Yerv respecttullv vours, CHARLES J. B1DDLE, Chairman Democratic State Cen. Committee. 113 South Fifth Strkes, Aug. 2S. 1863. Hon. Charles J. BidJle, Chairman of the Demo- ciatic State Central Committee : Sir I have the honor to acknowledge the receipt of yours of the 27th tr.st.. In regard to my remarks concerning Judge Woodward, on taking the chair at the meeting of the Xatiou al Cuion Party on Wednesday evening last. The published reports of the speeches deliv ered on that occasion are obviously incom plete, and not intended ta be lull or literal. I certainly did not undertake to represent Judge Woodward's opinionnon the issues now pending, from my own personal knowledge; for I am not a ware of having exchanged wordn with hiru Miice the outbreak of the present re Indlion. On the contrary, iu commenting up on the opinions which I attributed to him, I expressly stated either my authority, or the nature ol it, quoting partly from his speech of December 13, 18ti0. and partly from current reports of his opinions, unreservedly given and made public by thetr frequent repetition; and, in reference to these latter, xla; ing that I had them from undoubted sources, and could therefore "peak of them as confi leutly as il I hjd them Jrom personal knowledge. Ent. as my remarks have been thought wor thy of your attention, and that there may be no room for misapprehension in regard to them, it is but fair to myself as well as Judge Woodward that I should repeat them tor your information. 1 do so from a written draft of the-u. In speaking of the remark recently made bv a leading Southern journal, that since the de- feat at Gettysburg atld I he surrender of vicks bnrg.the oniy hope of the 'outh was in French intervention or Democratic successes at the Noith. I said "that foreign intervention w is too remote a probability for them to depend upon; but as to the latter part of the program me, the Southern rebels themselves could not well have chosen more fitting iiiMruments thau the principal Democratic nominees at the North. To say nothing ol the candidate for Governorship of Ohio, it might bo afQi uifd of Judge Woodward, the nominee in this State, that if John C. Calhoun himself that arch traitor could be raised from his dishonored grave and placed in the gubernatorial chair of Pennsylvania, he could not serve the iu terests of the rebellion better. I say this without any want of respect to Judge Wood ward ;for his ability, high character, and sin cerity, are undoubted. But these very qual ities, in the present case, make such opinions the more dangerous, and lend them au influ ence more potent for evil. "To prove this have I only to ask your at tention brieSyto bis views on the three issues, at this time transcending all others in import ance; I mean slavery, secession-, and the war for the Union. On each ot these Judge Wood ward entertains the views of the most extreme Southern radicalism. 'First, as to slavery. He is not content to stand with the State Kights Democracy of oth er days, and leave slaveholders in the posses sion of such rights and proteciion as they had under the Constitution ; but in his speech of December, 1860, he boldly proclaims that 'hu man bondage and property in man is divinely sanctioned, if not ordained;' and that 'negro slavery is an incalculable blessing.' These o pinions thus uttered, have lost nothing b) the lapse ol time ; for,on another occasion, be de clared, unreservedly and emphatically, that-to think against slavery is a sin, to talk against it a crime !' And more lately he has affirmed that 'agitation on the subject of slavery is in fidelity, and comes from the instigation ot sa tan.' - "But, as to Secession, Judge Woodward ap proves of the course, aud justifies the act of Secession, if be appears to hesitate as to the absolute right of it. Although looking in the opposite direction, he yet sustains and encour ages Secession, and no man heed go further. Practically, the people of the South have reached Secession by the same road. Ue may be sincere and conscientious in his views, bat he must bear the responsibility ol having giv en the sanction of his name and higb position to tbeir rebellious coarse. For il his speech ol I860 left any donbt on (bat point, the re cent approval and endorsement of it, on his behall, by the Chairmen of the Democratic State Central Committee, removes that doubt. To republish such sentiments, after the fact of Secession, is an aggravation of tbe original offence hard to reconcile with loyalty. "Thirdly, Judge Woodward is opposed to the war, and in favor of peace on any terms ; as much so as Vallaudighm or Fernando Wood. I have heard it staled that, on former occasions he rebuked the earlier concessions of his own party, in the patriotic war spirit of the country. But we have no need to placi this upou any uncertain authority; 'wo have his langu ige in 1860, in advance of secession: We hear it said, let South Carolina go out of the Union peaceably ; I say. let her go peace ably if she go at all. And in lS60,after South Carolina had gone out'.and ten other rebellious States -with her, to repeat such language is to say, let them all go peaceably.' Truly with the success of such a candidate and such prin ciples.Gettysbnrg will have been fought in vain, the battle for the defence of our own soil against the rebellion is still to be fought." 'These were my remarks so far as they rela ted especially to Judge Woodward, somewhat luller than the report, but substantially as de livered. Theyjare at your service. You will perceive that no Matement is made upon my personal knowledge as derived from him. but thesonices of my information are in dicated in every case. 1 may add, sir, that the most material part of the language above quoted, apart from the speech of 1800, was de rived by me from a public address delivered in this city, bv a gentleman of the highest character, several months before Jtiiigo Wood ward was nominated. The sentiment then at tributed wag regarded by t-he spenker.and I be lieve by most of the hearers, as presenting the rare moral phenomenon of a cultivated and Christian mind under the dominion of such an idea, as that "to think against slavery is a sia ;" and how little protection against the low est form of prejudice a high judicial training and position afforded, when a judge could de scend from a supreme tribunal ot tbe State to define it to be "a crime to talk against sla very." These sentiments, thus attributed to Judge Woodward, I fear, neither he nor you can es cape. That speech, which must have sound ed like a new and atrange Declaration ia In dependence Square, contains them in express terms, or by necexsary implication. The iden tical thoughts, indeed, the same peculiar turn ami force of expression, are there. So candid man will deny it. And whatever of error that speech contained originally, has acquired startling emphasis of late, repected and ap proved as it has been by you on his behalf. Eleven of the States have seceded, as he invited them to do; slavery has solemnly challenged the world as to her right to be the cornerstone nf society and government, claiming, as he did fur it, a Divine ordination ; and the rebel lion, to arms for more thau half a Presidential term, has resisted the power and resources of the Government, encouraged to do so by just such advocacy of peace on any terms. And yet at a time when the fairest portion of our State was desolate in the track of the South, ern invaders, and its soil wjs red with the blood of so many thousands of loyal soldiers who fell in its defence.-you rise in your chair and pronounce such sentiments as a signal ex hibition of statesmanlike sagacity, and join with its author in re-aifirming a speech, the whole argument of which was to prove that, in this controversy with rebellion, the South was right and the North was wro;ig ! In years pust, when the defence of Southern rights and institutions was made under the Constitution, and by legitimate agitation, I stood lu the front rank of their friends ; but from the hour that violent hands hive been laid on the Constitution and the Union, and an irnpioii-4 attempt has been made tooverturu both, I have not hesitated a.s to my duty as a loyal citizen. The example of such loyal Democrats as Cass and Dickinson, Bullet and Dix, Holt and Andiew Johnson, and a host of others, is sufficient for me." I have with them faithfully upheld the government, with what ever influence I posess. Impressed with the transcendent importance of the issue now before the people of Pennsyl vania. I spoke at the meeting on Wednesday evening of the opinions of Judge Woodward with plainnesa, and, I hope, with courtesy and fairness. If in my remarks either sentiment or language was attributed to linn which he disavows. I stand ready to make the. correc tion. But if, on the contrary, they are sub stantially accurate, you must agree with me that it would be difficult to find a better living representative of the principles of John C. Calhoun than your candidate. I am sir, very respectfully, Yourobedient servant. N. B. Brownk. The famous Marsh Angel battery, whence Charleston was bombarded, is in the midst of a marsh, 2,G00 yards in advance of Morris Is land. It was located at night, by the men making their way to it on their stomachs. Planks three inches thick were driven down as the stub stratum ; on this was layed sever al layers; on these logs, and on them boards. In the meantime the ordnance was floated up by night, and sand bags innumerable, from every direction ; one night a large force piled them up, and, to tbe surprise of the rebels, a dangerous battery greeted their eyes next morning. . That the election of Mr. Justice Woodward would greatly comfort and encourage the reb els and their Northern sympathizers, no one can doubt, and few would have tbe hardihood .o deny. And yet wany of the supporters of Mr. Justice Woodward profess to be friends ol the Union, to be opposed to Secession, and in favor of a vigorous prosecution of the war. Is this isanity, or Is it hypocrisy. Jewelry Store Robbed. The jewelry es tablishment of Mr. Fred.Beck.in Tyrone city, Blair county, was entered on Friday night a week.and almost entirely despoiled of its .con tents, valued by the proprietor at some seven hundred dollars, most of the property beiDg watches and other valuables left with him lor repairs. - Why is Greek fire good natured 7 Bccaue yon can't put it out. WOODWAKD ON SLAVERY. READ! RE AD'l READ!:' The Union State Central Committee in their address to the people, have quoted sev eral passages from Judge Woodward's speech at Independence Square, in December, 1861, wherein he declare l.fhat "Ac principal ohu man bondage is divinely sanctioned, it not di vinely ordained," aud that "the Providence of the Good being who has watched over us from the beginning, his so ordered our in ternal relations as to make slavery an incalcu lable blessing to us" and further foreshad ows, and invites, and justifies a rebellion of the Slave States, as an act authorized by the law of self defence, which would entitle the slave-holders "to fall back on their Saturat rights, and employ iu defence of their proper ty, whatever means of protection they pos sess or can command." Such blasphemy and treason against God, and humanity, and the Government uuder which we all live, are shocking enough with out more. To complete the picture however of the depravity of the man, who could in dulge in such utterances, by showing that he knew better, and was wilfully sinning against light and knowledge, we wuu'.d have suggest ed to the Committee if we had been at their elbow the propriety of ro-pubtishmg his thoughts upon the same question, at a time when he esteemed no more of the negro, than of the foreigner, and only proposed to deny the right of voting and holding office to both, on the ground that the Government was mere ly intended for white men and natives. We quote a lew detached passages from a speech made by him in the Reform Conven tion in 1838 vol. 10 Debates pp. 16 21. WHAT HE SAID IN 1338. "Whatever the sin of seizing the defence less Ati icau, of tearing him from his home and country, and carrying him into hopeless bon dage in a distant land, lies at tbe door of En gland. And whatevar evil has resulted, or is to result to the colored people or the whites of this country, from the institution ot domes tic slavery, and the presence among us of large masses of degraded and wretched blacks, is also fairly chargeable to tbe inhuman poli cy of Great Britain." 'If the colonies desired a participation, in this nefarious traffic, they were excluded by the monopolizing inhumanity ol the mother country." And this policy so disgraceful to Englaod, and so injurious to the colonies so preserv ingly adhered to by her, and so abundant in bitter fruits to us, whs one of the causes which finally impelled tbe colonies to throw off their allegiance to Great Britain." "The Revolution was aot yet fought their independence was not yet established, when the "Old Dominion" and the future 'Key stone" of the Federal arch extinguished for ever within their borders the nefarious traffic in human fiefh." . "Let England's patriots dwell on her own guilty connexion witii slavery iu every part of the world. Let them contemplate tho huge sin, which rests upon her co:icieuce." . . . . She must have torn from their homes, in Af rica, six or seven millions of human beings, and carried them away into hopeless slavery. If the English .instead of srrerailling to their guilt, by attempts to dissolve our Union, and to sacrifice our liberties, were to enlighten, civilize aud christianize the remaining mil lions on the Continent t f Africa, they would scarcely atone for the deep and unutterable injuries inflicted on that race by the prosecu- i tion of the slave trade." ' j "They-(the negroes) were forced upon us. They came not, as the primitive colonists came, searching for liberty, but torn from their na tive soil by English rapacity, they were brought hertr slaves." j "It is the great excellence and beauty of I our syslem l hat it is fouuded on the consent of the governed, so that allegiance and Hdeli- ' ty result 3 necessary consequences, and need not be enforced by oaths and positive enaet menu. But, sir, the negroes never assented, and their presence here, since it was procured by fraud and force, could not be construed in- : to an adoption of the country, or an acquies cence in its forms of government. They were broujht here to be slavts and not freemen." ! "The act of 1780, which abolished slavery j in Pennsylvania, was a proud monument to i the humane policy ot the State. It wiped out J the stain of slavery, which England had left on or soil, aad conferred on the negro what j he hid not before enjoyed ctri" freedom. II ' securid to him those ciril rights to which he in comimn with all other human beings, of u-haec- i er dine or complexion, had an infallible title and oj which he never ought to have been depriv- j ed." . ' "fir the manifold evils which connect; themselves with the black population of this ; country there is a remedy. It is colon iza- I tion.j The negroes belong to Africa they ! werepruelly torn from that country, and it ' they ould now be returned to their fatherland, ! with the arts oi civilisation, and the lights of education and religion, tbeir bondage might ; provi a blessing to the benighted millions of; that continent." j 'Ibelieve the negro race to be capable of -elf government. Undoubtedly they deserve ' civil nd religious freedom, and with proper j cultute, are capable of enjoying it. And, sir, j veril do I believe that the much wronged ! peope of the South would add to tho tide ot ' emigation by gradually abolishing slavery, and send tig their blacks to Africa, so that we ' miglt hope that our country would see tbe ; day wen slavery on her soil would be extinct j WHAT HE SAID 1ST 1860. Think of these things, fellow-countrymen ' con Qem over, one by one dissect and ana- ' lyeetach fact trace its connections and con serjuaices ; and then, when you combine them , all irone glowing picture of national prosper- j ity, nmember that cotton, the produce of stare labor has been one of the indispensable ele- ruenl of all this prosperity. More, it must be acindispensable element of all our future' prosprity.. 1 say it must be. The world cannt and will not live without cotton. , Thofj is oot a matron in all the Union that i can clothe her family or herself wfthont it. ' Nor can England do without our cotton, j Her mills and ours would rot. and her opera j lives and ours would ssarve, if the negroesdid nor raise cotton. Manumit them and they j will never raise another crop. They need the J outhority of a rnas'er and the eye ot an over- seer to compel and direct them to the duties j of the cotton plant which must be rendered at j the right season precisely, or the crop is lost j And thus it happens, that the Providence j of that Good being who has watched over On Ironi tho beginning, and saved us from exter nal foes, has so ordered our internal relations j as to make negro slavery an incalculable bies i sing to us and to the people of Great Britain. ! 1 say to us ; for I do not enter into the queg J tion whether the institution bo an evil to the jjjeople of the Southern States. That is their concern, not ours. We have nothing to do with it. And to obtrude our opinions upon tho people of sovereign States concerning their domestic institutions, would ba sheer impertinence. But do you not see and feel how good it wa for us to hand over our slaves to our friends of the South how good it wan for us that they have employed them in rais ing a staple for our manufacturers how wise it was to so adjust the Compromises of the Constitution that we could live in union with them awl reap the signal advantages to which I have adverted! We consign them tno heathen thrall, hut to Christian men, profess ing the same faith with ns speaking tbe same language reading the golden rule, jn no one-Hided and distorted shape, but an it is recorded, rule to slaves, as well as masters. This allusion to tho golden rule reminds me of an objection which will be urged to much that I have advanced. It will be said that slavery :s a sin against God. and therefore, that ail reasons drawn from our material in terests, for favoring or abetting it must go for nothing. If it' be a sin. I agree there is an end to my argument, but what right has the Aboli tionists to pronounce it a sin 1 I say Aboli tionist, because the pastor of the f'irM Pres byteria-i Church of Brooklyn, in a sermon preached within a wee, defined an Abolition ist to be one uho holds that slavery is a sin. I accept the definition, and according : to it many of our best Christian people must be ac counted Abolitonists ; for it is astonishing how extetisively the religious mind ef the North has admitted into itself tho suspicion, not to say conviction, that slavebolding is a sin. If a sir, then it is a violation of some Divine law, for sin is the transgression of the law. Now, deny that any such law has ever been revealed. Tbe burden of showing - it is on him who alleges, and when it is shown, I -gree H shall rale out all that has been said or can be said for a Union founded on slavery. I bind myself never to raise my voice again in behalf of such a Union. But, so far from any suet. law being found plainly written for our instruction, whoever will study tbe Patri archal and Levitical institutions, will see the principle ol human bondage, and ot property in man, divinely sanctioned, if not divinely .or daiued ; and in all tbe sayiugs of our Saviour, we hear of no injunction for the suppression of a slavery which existed under his eyes, while he delivered many maxims and principles, which, like the golden rule, enter right into and regulate the relation. So do the writings of Paul abound with regulatonsof therelation, but uot with injunctions for its suppression If we go to the most accredited commentators, or consult divines really wise and good in our midst; or what is better, studv -and search the Scriptures for ourselves, we shall fail to find a law which, fairly interpreted and appli ed, justifies any man in asserting, in or out ot the pulpit, that the negro slavery of the Uni ted States is sinful. What right, then, I ask again, ha the Abolitionist to cheat tender consciences Into hostility to an institution on which our Union is founded in part? Good people say we do not wish to disturb slavery where it exists by local law, but be lieving it to be sinful and inexpedient, we will not submit to its extension, nor assist to restore th fugitive to his master. Such peo ple soou come to conceive that the more un friendly they can feel towards slavery, the more harsh speeches they make about slave holders, the more they help on tho irrepressi ble conflict, the better will they recommend themselves to God. In some churches anti slavery sentiments have become essential, to good standing According to some ecclesias tical councils, it would seem that the great duty of tho American Christain is to war with his neighbor's property ; and, if opportunity presents, to help steal and hide it. Alas ! alas ! for the time, upon which we have fallen. We must arouse ourselves and re-assert the rights of the slaveholder, and add such guaran tees to our Constitution as will protect bis property from the spoliation of religious bigo try and persecution, or else we must give up our Constitution and Union. . Events are plac ing the alternative plainly before us Consti tutional Union and liberty according to jlmeri can law : or else extinction of slave property, negro freedom, disolution of the Uniou, anarchy and confusion. And now, turn back, ye friends ot humani ty and progress, and look at that picture, and then at this, and see the effects of unhallowed ambition, and bad company , and unhappy as sociations, upon a once ingenious youth, who began the world with so lofty a promise, or as Hervey would say "grew up like a well watered plant, shot deep, rose high, and bade 'fair for manhood !" Alas but we prefer the sorrowful exclamation of Eneas, as he de scribes his vision of tbe dead body of Hector, after it bad been dragged insultingly at tbe heels of tbe coursers of the wrat'jful Achilles, around the walls of Troy, and lay all over soiled and begrimed with dust, and filth, and gore. - "How changed indeed, tho Democratic George W. Woodward, wbo finds divine bles sings and sanction for "the principle of hu man bondage," and apologies for rebellion, in tbe natural ' right of tbe slaveholder to tall back upon the law of self defence, for tbe pro tection of bis property and that George W. Woodward, who, twenty-two years ago,-could scarce find language ' strong enongh, to de nounce the horrors sod iniquities ot that sys tem "so abundant in bitter fruit to us," and. flo-n proclaimed the right to freedom, of the unhappy negro, of which be had ben robbed by "fraud aud force," as one to which he, In common with all ether human beings of what ever choice or complexion, had an inalienable title, and of which be ought never to have been deprived! - - ' -;' ' WOODWARD'S COPPEHHEADIStt ESTAB LISHED Before tbe war was openly began by the Slave Drivers' rebellion, Jcdge Woodward, the so-called Democratic candidate for Gover nor, made a speech in Independence Square, Philadelphia. That speech ho revised and published in pamphlet form, as a deliberate exposition of his views. On page II be says : The world cannot live without co ton, and cotton can only be raised under tbe eye ot a master or overseer." On page 12. he says: ".Vcgro slavery is an uncalculable blessing." This terrible war ia oae ot tne blessings ne gro slavery has brought upon us. It' is tor slavery and its perpetuity ; for the establish ment of an empire or monarchy, the chief cor ner Mono of which shall be human bondage, that rebelliou is carried on. Judge Woodward directly approves, sanctions and advises thi war tor slavery. On page 4 ot tbe pamphlet speech, we find the following words : 'It seems that there must be a time wheu slaveholders n.ay tall back upon their natural rights and employ in defence of their slave property - whatever means of protection they may possess or can command." None but an enemy to bis country and a . traitor at heart, would thus, at tbe coaimence mcnt of a rebellion, take sides against bis country and in favor of rebels, giving them reasons why they should continue in their re bellion. But this was followed on page 13, by still bolder treason when bo exhorts bU hearers as follows : Rise and reassert the right of the slavehold ers," and adds 'tuman, bondage and property , in t;an is divinely sanctioned if not divinely or dained." ,i. In the same speech, he distinctly avows himself in favor of a dissolution of the Union. On page 14 he says: ' , "We bear it said, let the South go peacea bly. say let her go peaceably." ' . Hereyttin4 is Woodward's own record, da- liberately made, hich is a mo6t emphatic an swer to evere copperhead's claim, set np in mockery, that he is a Union mn. Be dis tinctly advises a Dissolu'ionof the Union. Ev ery man therefore who votes for him, with a knowlodge of these facts will fully vote for a disloyal caudidate, placed upon a platform that has not a word in favor of supporting the Government, nor word of condemnation of the ' Southern rebellion. Greensburg Herald. A BRAVE MAN'S ANSWER.,, . Gen. Butler, 'Stopping over night in New Hampshire, on his way to the White Moun tains, was now and tbeu interrupted by Cop-perhead-. He said : .. . "In two years we have seen three quartern of a million of men raised-'' Before the sentence was completed, one of . the Pierce Democrats asked in a sneering air. "Where Bre they now f". "Some of them." replied General Butler with his customary promptness, lie sleeping, beneath tbe sod ; and others are still fighting the battles of tbtir country, while you re main here at borne aiding the cause of trai tors." In another portion of his speech Geu. Bat ler said : Will you volunteer I" , A voice replied, "No" You voted for Breckinridge," said a voice to Gen. Botler, alluding to the last Democrat ic National Convention. Yes." said Butler, -nd it I were so cow- . ardly as you, I might be tempted to deny It." He then went on to show to these New . Hampshire partisans that one might vote for a man under certain circumstances and op. : pose that man under c rtain other circumntan- -cos. When Jndas Iscariot was a true follow. , er of his Master, he wa no donbt a worthy: example to be followed ; but be was not aware that a man to preserve his consistency muxt continue to follow Judas after be betrayed-, his lord. . No Draft is Indiana. There will be no draft iij Indiana under the present roll. She has furnished 93,895 three years tro'-ps. Her quota, tinder tbe call of tbe Goverment was' 62.932, making an excess in frvor of tbe State ' of 28, 501. The number enrolled in the - first class, under tbe present draft, is 134,163. One fifth of tbe number is tbe quota called for. by the Government, namely, 26,832, which is 1,660 less tban the number furnished by tbe State or three years men in 1861 and 1862. Choose Ye If j ou were about selecting a trustee to take charge of valuable estate, or a guardian for your child, and were confined in you choice to two-men, one true, tbe otber false, your choice would be soon made. Will you find any more difficulty in choosing next October to whom you will confer tbe bonor. and interests of Pennsylvania, Andrew G. Curtin, the soldier's friend," the loyal pat riot, or to George W. Woodward, the Copper head. . . , . To Clean Casart Birds Tbcse pretty' things are like meaner objects, often covered with lice, and may bo effectually relieved of them by placing a clean white cloth over tbeir cage at night, in tbe morning it will rx cov ered with small red spots, so small as hardly to be seen, except by the aid ot a "glow; these are tbe lice, a source of great annoyance a the birds. . ' ,11 ft .A' nr ir