j i. BI S. J. BOW. CLEARFIELD, PA., WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1864. VOL. 11.-NO, 5. HISTOBIOAL COINCIDENCES. In the Whig National Convention which met in General William Henry Har rison, a citizen of a free State, was nomina ted for the Presidency, with the understand ing that John Tyler, of Virginia, should be the nominee for Vice President. Both can didates were elected, and General Harrison, dying within one short month after his in auguration, left the Presidency in the hands of a most despicable traitor, who only had the merit of devotion to the interests of his own family first, and slavery second, to re commend him. There was always a mys tery about the sudden taking off of "old Tippecanoe," and there was not wanting those who thought he lad been the victim of foul play, and who relused to believe that an old soldier and politician could be bored to death by politicians (as was asserted) in the .short space of one month. Genera! Taylor was the next Whig Presi dent, and although he was a Southern man, he refused to lend himself to the scheme of taking the South out of the Union in the e vent of the admission of California with sla very prohibited in its constitution. It is a matter of history that when the old hero was approached upon the subject, he declar ed that if the treasonable experiment was tried he would himself head an army to en force obedience to Federal laws., "Old Rough and Ready" did not long survive t his t hreat, and after a sickness of a tew days, he died, leaving as his successor a Northern man who was pledged to the support of the Fugitive Slave law. General Taylor's death was attributed to dysentery induced by eat ing raw blackberries, a fruit that is frequent ly eaten as a remedy for the disease named. At all events General Taylor died, and the country got Mr. Fillmore tnd the Fugitive Slave law. General Pierce, of New Hamshire, and W. R. King, of Alabama, came next in-order after Tavlor and Fillmore. Mr. Kiug died of consumption one month after the in auguration of his colleague, and before he had Iteen enabled to assume the duties of the Vice Presidency, leaving "Poor Pierce" in the hands ot his Secretary or war, .Mr. .1 eflVrsun Davis. How well the renegade New Englander served his Southern keep ers. Kansas and .Nebraska will bear testi mony He was too valuable a President for the South to lose, so he escaped being bored to death by office-seekers, or being killed by " at III! a dysentery produced by eating mack perries. James Buchanan and John C Breckin ridge followed in regular succession, and "Old Buck" came very near being one of the victims of the wholesale poisoning at the Nathvial Hotel at Washington. Mr. Bu chanan was an inmate of the hotel at the time of the "rat soup" affair; but by hook r by crook he escaped the honors of mar tyrdom. Had he perished along with nu merous Northern victims. John C Breckin ridge would have been President of the United States for four years, and the sort of n President he would have made, the histo ry of the past few years abundently demon strates. We do not charge the South wi h intending to poison 31 r. Buchanan at the National Hotel ; but it is at least extraordi nary that of the many persons who were ef-lk-ted by the poison there were no Souther ners, although there were numerous natives of Dixie who were guests in the house at the time. Mr. Lincoln was the successor of Mr. Bu chanan in the Presideetia! chair, and the perils he escaped on his road to Washington, lifforc his inauguration, are matters cf no toriety. It may be urged, in answer to these im j'lied charges of foul play which we have heard made against Southern political wire wcrkers, and which we have repeated, that tliey are not assassins, and that they are not capable of such vile treachery. This fine sentiment might have had weight four years ago ; but now it is light as a feather in the scale of argument. The Southern rebels have been guilty ot worse crimes than are imputed to them by those who believe that Harrison and Taylor were their victims, and that good fortune alone saved Buchanan and Lincoln from martyrdom. The original treason of Davis, Floyd and Breckinridge was a far greater crime ; and eveiy devastat ed town, every Union victim of a secession gallows, every slaughtered garrison of de fenceless prisoners,every merchantman trap Ted and burned, and every starved tenant of Libhy or Belle Isle, is so much heaped upon the great original wrong. It may be fairly argued that men guilty of these great crimes may be held to be capable of the les ser offences that are hinted at. Now for the application. It is a matter of notoriety that undisguised sympathizers with Southern secession and rebellion, it not "entsof Southern secessionists, were prom iHierit actors in the Chicago Convention. They virtually sacrificed their "peace on my terms" principles, when they consented run an avowed war candidate for the Pres idency. But they took care to secure a rab id peace man, a,nd a most inveterate Copper od as the candidate for the Vice Presiden T. with the hope that with a non-committal I'latform, tfie war principles, and the opposed personal popularity of the one can didate, woultf secure the success of the en tu ket. if by any mischance this fine I"an should be found to work succesfully, it ould at leaat be a most remarkable coicci n.ifG8wralMcCleIlan should be pre- J"aturcly tcred to death by office-seekers, ,ake an iver dose of rat-soup by accident, w conveniently die of dysentery induced by S raw blackberries. In that event the to Kiace would be simple and easy for the ;outh.as Mr. Pendleton would not be theman 10 'brow anv linrnwaril r.Victnplfis in the wav. Ten though peace meant the destruction of, "ationility, and the possible subjugation " the North to Southern traitors. We ! e the hint for what it is worth. It, is at V? worth thinking about, between now and J ember, as accident might work the! retufo is design, and General McClel- I lan does not enjoy any immunity from the j chances of life and death. Philadelphia. JSulletm. WHAT OF THE NIGHT ? We shall re-elect Abraham Lincoln President of the United States. Of this there is little doubt, and we make the state ment not as a prediction but as the deliber i ate judgment suggested by all the signs a- round us. At me same time we must say to our friends that they are not altogether act ing as if they understood the vast import ance of this campaign. There are two ele ments that enter into every canvass enthu siasm and purpose. Ihe attraction in all multitudes that brings men together is a great power, and shrewd managers create and nurse it by poetry and pageantry. Dee per than this is the feeling of right and wrong, of truth and falsehood, that men calmly feel. A party with a purpose is more, apt to be successful than a party with enthusiasm. But no nartv can show purpose unless by enthusiasm. How is it with the friends of the Union? e have a cause that surpasses any in volved in the campaigns of our political his tory. We have shown our devotion to that cause bv three years of consuming, desolat ing war. We have advanced in our contest for its triumph against every danger and de- teat, and now we have readied that high agony of effort that always precedes triumph. Heretofore the battle has been with our bro thers in the field armed men whose mis sion is life and death. Providence now brings it home to us. The political cam paign is more important than the military paign, and must be fought at home. The enemy has arranged a platform whose genius is a cowardly submission to rebellion. The most available man that could be found, the only noted soldier who seems to be willing to forget the cause he fought for, is the candi date, and around him we see gathered a mighty, resolute, vindictive party. So far as the enthusiasm of this campaign is concerned, the friends of Gen. McClellan are more active than the friends of Mr. Lin coln. They have assumed the offensive. and they fight with malignant audacity. With them it is a great stake. We do not allude to the mere appetite of politicians for office; the longing of hungry men who must get bread or starve. That element is strong in every opposition. Thej' know that if they are successful these years of war will all be in vain. All the blood that has been shed all the money that has been spent all the sacrifices that have been made with an al-. most saintly feeling ot self-denial will be as nothing. The fruits of these wars will be in the hands of men whose grasp is death. They ask power to undo all that we have given the lives of our sons to accomplizh. They ask power that they may go back from the goal that we have reached amid so much death and debt. They ask the country to say that, having given so much for liberty and ,tability, slavery and infamy shall be a gain placed in power. On this the issue is joined. e must tight our battle with more earnestness tnau we have shown. Advance the whole line and open everj' gun upon the enemy ! It is not enough that we can elect Abraham Lincoln; we must elect him by such a majority that the world will feel that we are in earnest. We must carry every State of the Union. "We must utterly rout and crush this Cop perhead party, that intervention wiil no lon ger be mentioned in the councils ot the lu lllenes, and the llichmond conspirators will no longer rest their hopes upon the success of their Northern allies. Thi must be done, and (lie people must do it ! We are -tired waiting ior icauers. h e are urcu icmiug upon our arms while those who should lead us on are quarrelling over council board. Let us make our own organizations in our own way. Not many days remain. What we must do we must do at once, in every county and township let the people meet to gether rnd counsel one with the other, uo not let us spend the precious hours cooing sweet songs of hope, and looking at the floating clouds like the sleepy manners of the lotus land. This is no time for rest or anathv. The country demands every citizen to give his genius to its service, and he who lags, or pouts, or strools behind, is as much the enemy of the cause as the active antag onist in the front., 1-nerds, Jet us do our duty now, and our children will bless us tor the sacrifice. PJuTa JVess. WHO GO FOE M'CLELLAN. Vallandigham, the traitor goe? for Mc Clel lan. Wall th nnfnnnns New Jersey Copper head and traitor, is for McClellan. k irArtf mtn irnA r-1-.inimnrs for peace and disgraceful submission to traitors, is a Mc Clellan man. ,. Every man who utters the standing lie that the "Abolitionists" commenced the war, is for McClellan. iVortr rVu1 (rnfirai. ( Vuonel and Cap tain, is in favor of the election of George B. McClellan. . . .. .... Everv Knight of the "Oolden Circle is for McClellan. j Every officer who has been disnonoraoiy ismissed from the army, (for proof of this you can see them in the streets of Harris burg,) will vote for McClellan. Everv contractor who has been detected in defrauding the Government, huzzas tor ilc- Clellan. , , . . Every deserter trom the army is ior ,uc- Clellan. . , , , 1.' nrlin rntnl HiramSt. the laW al- lowing the soldier a vote, goes for McCIel- .an inaroctad in the rebel loan. such as the British rebel agent, Augustus Belmont, of New lork, is a warm mc..u of McClellan. , , ,. Such is the character of the leading sup porters of McClellan. Declining M'Clellan stock. LETTER OF TBAIN TO M'-GLELLAN. George Francis Train has written Gen. George Brinton M'Clellan the following bit terly-sarcastic letter, dated Rockaway-on-the-Sea, Sept. 11, 1864 To Maj. Gen. G.B. M Clellan, Orange, AV: Dear Sir: It is a mean thing to listen at the keyhole. It is meaner to open a private letter. It is the meanest thine of all to ac cept hospitality and abuse the host. But these mean tinners are Christian virtues compared to the accepting the nomination or a party in order to destroy it. A plat form is the party's soul. A candidate is the party's body. Seperate the body trom the soul and death ensues. It is as difficult to sit between two stools as to sleep with one eye open. You cannot worship God and Mammon. Honesty is not only the best policy, but the only one lor an honest man To cheat in politics is as wicked as to cheat in money. You know the Peace men con trolled the Convention. They gave you a platform that was neither hsh, flesh, fowl, or mackerel. Yet you insist upon the mac kerel. Hence the Daily News, the Metro politan Record, Preemans Journal, and Unto (Jrti ny on trom you like hoops trom an effervescing barrel. Singleton will fol low Wood; A allandigham will fall in, and in two weeks Pendleton will decline to be shipwrecked with the rest. "Come out from under the bed," said the indignant wife to her undecided husband. Not said he, "jot long as J Juice tJie spirit of a nuin icitJtin ." Mark my words. General vou will not carrv a single btate except New Jersey, and you will sacrifice seven Democratic members ot Congress out ot ten. Jx)ok at V ermont. Maine will be the same. Indiana will ony lead the other States by a mouth. You will find it as hard as the rebels have to fight such Democratic names as Foote, Farragut, Porter and Dupont, on the sea, or Grant, Meade, Burnside, Sickels, Han cock, Thomas and Sherman, on the land all of whom are against you. The late let ters of Sherman and Grant rattle through the Democaatic rauks like lightning through a gooseberry bush. It only costs toco thous and dollars to grt vp a McClellan meeting. Younq Ketclnim said so. If the explosion of a limited quantity of gas in Union Square killed two women and wounded several the other night, what will be the disaster when your whole party bursts up in November: James Buchanan said that he was no lon ger J. !., but the Cincinnati platiorm. l ou reverse it, and say that you are not the Chicago platform, but G. B. Mac. J aid Lord Byron in "Don Juan" "The well-known Hebrew word, I am, We English use to govern d ." But to your letter. Bulwer said the ' 'Pen was mightier than the sword. ' ' Then he had not made your acquaintance, General. .Nom inated on your record. Yes. The Draft. The Proclamation. The suspension ot Habeas Corpus. The arrest of Legisla tures. .Military at the polls, and disojedi- e nee of orders. Is not that your record? Do you mean, by alluding to your record, that 3'ou will do the same again? "Gentlemen: I have the honor to ac knowledge the receipt of your letter, in forming me ot my monnnation ot course, who else did you suppose it was? by the Democratic National Convention certainly, it was not the Republican National Com mittee, recently assembled at Chicago, That's so; it did not assemble at Cleve land or New York, 1 as their candidate at the next election for President of the Uni ted States. Exactly; it was not' tor the last election. It is unnecessary for me to. say to you that this nomination comes to me unsought." Why say it, then? Take the whole letter, paragraph by par agraph, transpose it as I did this sentence, and you will find it as weak as dish-water undecided, incousistant, ungramuiatical, and egotistical The six allusions to the Union remind one of the stereotyped cry in the fortunes ot Nisei watches, clocks, barna cles. The bright boy who cried barnacles, watches, clocks, introduced a new idea into Scotland. "Tf a frank, earnest, and persistent effort to obtain those objects should fail, the re sponsibility for ulterior consequences will fall upon those who remain in arms against the Union. Whv not say war riarht out, not dodge round a corner this way? Don't forget that old Cass killed himself with the Nicholson letter. "lifilipvinsr that the views here expressed are those of the Convention and the people t j. . l ; i! i you sepreseni, accept me iionniiiiiun. Ymi don't, believe anvthinsr of the kind. You know better. The Northwest were all peace. So reads the platform. Five hun dred delegates unanimously agree upon a platform. Here it is: Jiesolveit, 1 o please you, iney nave war. Resolved, To please Pendleton, they have peace. Resolretl, To please all the outs, the war go on till the peace is signed. Ptemember that the Royal George in Bristol Channal went down with all on board, the result of trimming. Walter Savage lender wrote on mc Georges : "George the First was reconed vile, Viler George the Second ; And what mortal ever heard Any good of George the Third? When from earth the Fourth ascended, God be praisad, the Georges ended. I condense your letter in two lines : nfVTirr. T nwpnt the nomination. but acknowledge myself totally unfit for the position," i I mean nothing unkind in this. General, but you know that now you are a fair mark, not a large one, tor an to snoot at. Gioroe Francis Traix. A Grand Scheme to Secure the Election of George JJ. McClellan. It is now clearly understood, that the con test for the election of President of the Uni ted States, so far as the friends of Geo. B. McClellan are concerned, is to be conducted solely by fraud and falsehood. The Chicago platiorm is a lraud, because it was prepared designedly to delude and mislead uninform ed and unsuspecting people. McClellan's letter of acceptance is a fraud, because its object is to draw the wool over the eyes of the Y ar Democrats and secure their sup port at the polls. Pendleton's silence is a fraud, because it is persisted in to save the peace element. But the greatest of the trauds contemplated by the Copperheads is to be held in reserve until its effect for mis chief to the country and assistance in the defeat of Lincoln (as the Cops hore and cal culate) will be beyond counteraction. The nature of the fraud is of this description : On the eve of tJie Presidential euxtion, the copper Jicat I leaders will suddenly sprina on tlie people a projosition from Jeff. Davis to the ejject that if the people in tlu; free oiaies eiecc ueorge n. Jictiicuan the war will at once cease, the rebellious States COVENANTING TO RETURN TO THEIR ALLE GIANCE ON THE BASIS OF THE OLD UNION NAMELY, with compensation for the slave property alread lost, the return of all freed- men in the sla ve states at the tune of the ces sation of hostilities, and the payment of the iMA incurred by the war, in common by the federal Government. It is calculated by the copperheads, that this proposition will delude the people of thersorth into the election of McClellan with the hope that the war will then end I his scheme reminds us of the trick to which McClellan loaned himself on the eve of the last election for Governor in this State. A few days before that contest, Mc Clellan wrote and issued a circular letter ap pealing to his friends to support Woodward, on the plea that his (McClellan's) political opinions harmonized with those ot W ood ward's when it was well known that Judge Woodward had pronounced the war to crush rebellion unholy and unjust that the slave States should be allowed to go in peace and that the Government could not coerce a State after it had resolved to leave the U nion. This last trick, to delude the loyal men of the North, on the plea that the reb els will lay down their arms if McClellan is elected President, will fail as did McClellan's tnck to elect W oodward Uovernor. THE SINEWS OF WAE. So much has been aid by men who write loosely ot hnancial affairs ot the need of rais ing by taxation alone the revenues necessary to carry on the war, that many persons have come to believe finally that such a thing is possible, and to complain ot Congress that the legislation for that purpose has not been passed. L his idea originated with the reb el synpathizing press of England, and was mere intenuea to uepreciare our prosperity by weakening our credit. Here it has been caugh up by Democratic writers for the purpose ol forcing heavier increases ot bur dens on the people, in order to render the Administration odious, that the conduct of the war might theiebv lapse into Democrat ic hands. Now. it is hieh time that the people were made acquainted with the fact that it is 'not practicable to support such a war as this has been by revenues raised by taxation alone. No great Power ever engaged in a war of vast magnitude without being com pelled to resort to loans- England with all her resources could not have carried on the war against Russia alone by the aid of revenues raised by immediate taxation, but having for allies'France, Turkey and Sardinia, her burdens were lightened. No field of oper ations other than Russia could afford a par allel to our war, and if we presume England undertaking to invade and conquer such an area as European Kussia, with no more pop ulation than the Southern States had at tn beginning of the war, her debt would have run up rapidly as ours has done. This was shown in her struggle with Na polean, and even more strikingly in the Rev olutionary war in America, in which, though she had to contend with but three millions of rude collonists, untrained to war and hav ing no educated generals, she augmented her dei)t enormously. The experiment of all modern great Powers in wars of magnitude is the same, and therefore our financial ex perience, so far from being peculiar, is quite usual. We must It posterity bear its share of the burden ef the war instead of expecting the present generation to bear the whole. KEEP IT BEFORE THE PEOPLE. That the Chicago Convention could not find time nor heart in any resolution or speech, to utter one word against the SoutJi ern Rebellion ! Let our brave soldiers in the field, our mothers and sisters in homes made desolate bv rebel bullets our starving countrymen in the rebel prisons, and our overburthened tax payers to sustain a war pushed upon the country by rebellion remember that Dem ocracy has no rebuke for Treason and Rebel- ion, and hence is entitled to the support on v of traitors and rebels. Friends of the Union and haters of Rebellion in the Dem ocratic rartv break ranks, and come out from such a cabal of treason. It is no place for you. A dried-un. herring-faced, gimlet-eyed old bachelor says he don't wonder at so many of the young veterans getting married. He says one who has faced a cannon's mouth and heard a thousand of them talk at once, can never be frightened by a woman. The old dog ! He ought to be compelled to climb ashollbark hickory tree. A maid-of-all-work. who has been missing during soma time past, has lately been dis covered: having been found in beer and tea by her kind mistress. Jafteman's journal CLEARFIELD, PA., SEPT. 2S, 1864. C0BBESP0UDE1TCE OF THE JOURNAL. Letter from Philipsburg, Pa. Piiilipsburg, Pa., S .pt. 18, 1864. Dear Journal: As I predicted in my last, o it has come to pass. There is trou ble in the wigwam. The standard bearer ch )sen hy the Grand Sachems, when in counsel at Chicago, has refused to smoke the Kin-i-ki-nick put in the pipe of 'Peace' by them ; but has filled the pipe with such a mixture of the weed, as best suits his taste. The mixture doe's not suit the radical Sach ems of the Copperhead tribe. Vallandig ham declines to take a whiff ; nary puff, of such a conglomeration. The grand organ of the tribe, Daily Xews of New York, calls loudly for the re-assembling of thj council, and tells them to fill the pipe to suit the chief or nominate a chief that will smoke the pipe, as at first filled. Jhe laithlul of this town and vicimtv, were in high glee when thev received the news that .Little .Mac rad been nominated. and, as usual, in loud manifestations of joy at the brilliant victory which was sure to be theirs in November. It was some davs af ter the Young Napoleon's leticrof accept ance was published, before the snaiks began to fall back into a torpid situation. At first it was all a black abolition lie. They could not see anything of McClellan's letter in any of their papers, and hence they knew it was a lie. liut truth is mighty and will pre vail, even in such a rotten cause as Cop- perheadisin, and so at last their papers con tained the heretofore black abolition lie, and then it was all true as gosjel. It caused a fall in the stock though. They could not help but understand from the letter, that George B. M'Clellan was trying to carrv water on both shoulders, and swallow the platiorm; but like unfortunate father Ad am, he choked on the core. Ihe name ol 1 1 m rwm McClellan has grown as obsolete, within the last tew days, as that of John C. rremont, They Cops, like Micawber, are waiting for something to turn up, and they will find something turned up (or it may be down) in a lew weeks. The great and grand hue and cry of the snaiits, is tne negro, uet into conversation, . ii . , r . i li argument, or taiK wun one or tnein, ana ne will invariably (after being flanked on all 'it's,' 'buts,' and 'ands' that he advances) end with the negro question. They seem to take an especial interest in the slaves ot the rebels, and the colored race generally. They find great fault with the administration, for admitting colored soldiers into the army and 5 aying them the same as white soldiers. fet they can take this much derided race, 1 ..1 .1 4t and put tnem into the held as substitutes. Look lor a moment at the list for the great Democratic county ot Clearneld. On her quota of some 500, in the call of 300,000 vol unteers on the 10th ot March last, there are nearly 300 ot these poor, despised, degrad ed and horrible colored men as substitutes for the chivalry of your county. Tlircc hun dred cflored men sent forth to fight the reb els in the field, while their principals stay at home and fight, in the rear, the very same black soldiers thev have thus substitu ted to go forth, and fight the enemies of this glorious Union. ''Oh, consistency, thou art a jewel." Not a day passes but what I see or hear some portion of these men who have sent colored men as substitutes, and first, last, and all the. time, they howl about the negro and call every man that sustains the union a woolli'-head, "black abolition ist, and everything that they regard as in famous, while they, cowardly dupes, substi tute cnlortd men to take tlieir places beneath the glorious Stars and Stripes, and fight for the maintainaiice and preservation of that Government whose liberties and blessings these Copperhead allies of Southern treason now jso happily enjoy. lbe cry of hard times, is another howl the Cops make: When asked for an evi dence of what they assert, they are at a loss to point it out. Never has a country flour-' ished as this town and vicinity has for the last three years. Three years ago, the grand total of steam saw-mills was summed up in the numeral 1 but to-day they are counted by the dozen, bcarcely a large tract of tim i. i.i.i..i ber, nereabouts, out wnat mere is seen to ascend a puff of steam from its midst, and the shrill steam whistle "pipes all hands to breakfast. ' ' Three years ago, lumber could be bought readily, at the mill, for $7 per M feet for pine, and Spruce, or Hemlock, "no sale." Look at the figures now. The most common pine boards sell at $22 per 31, and the better qualities at from $20 to $40 per M. Yet with all the iucrease of saw mills, and advance in price, the supply is not equal to the demand. "Hard Times" must be plead (with any chance of success) in closer proximity to South Carolina than this "neck of timber" is situated. But it would be a God's blessing to the country, and all the people thereof, it these croakers,who talk and do all they can to make hard times, were shipped off to the Southern Confederacy (?) that they might there leel and enioy, to all intents and nurnoses. the truth of1 their as sertions about hard times and a worthless paper currency. i ours, Leroi. A philosopher relates an anecdote of an out-at-elbow poet, who by some freak of fortune came into possession of a five dol lar bill, he called to & lad and said "John ny, my boy, take this WiHiam and get it changed." "What do you mean by calling it William?" inquired the lad. "Why John," replied the poet. "I am not suffi ciently familiar with it to take the liberty ofcallingitBill." - The -waters of the Red Sea appear to be thirty-two feet higher than the Mediterra nean, and the Gult of Mexico is twenty-two feet higher than the Pacific. COUNTY SCHOOL CONVENTION. Whereas a majority of the School Direc tors of Clearfield county having petitioned the State Superintendent for a Convention, in order to raise the Salary of the County Superintendent of Common Schools, there fore, in accordance with a call published in the county papers by the State Superinten dent, the Directors of the several School Districts of Clearfield county assembled at the Court House in Clearfield on T'uesday the IZtJi day of iytptember, 1864, for the purpose indicated. Theconvention being called to order by Josiah R. Reed, upon motion R. V. Wil son, was elected President, and George B. Goodlander Secretary. The convention being organized, the Dis tricts were called in alphabetical order, when the following named directors answered to their names: Bradford Alexander Livingston. Clearfield-jR. V. Wilson, U. J. Wal lace, Michael Kittlebarger, G. B. Goodlan der. Co yinoton Francis Mignot, F. F. Cout riet. Furguson John T. Straw. Goshen Wm. Graham, E. K. Shirey, J. E. Graham. Knox P. A. Howies, Lewis Erhard. Lawrence Josiah R. Reed, Milton Mc Bride, Joseph Watson. Penn David T. Sharp. Thomas Dough erty, Win. P. Beck. Union Joseph Scofield, D. E. Bruba ker, Matthias Hollopeter. Total. 22. The call of the State Superintendent hav ing been read by the President, Mr. Rowles moved that the Salary of the county Super intendent le fixed at $1000, and upon being seconded, Mr. Shirey moved to amend it by making it $1200. The question recurring upon the amend ment of Mr. Shirey ; it was lost by the fol lowing vote : Yeas Wallace, J. E. Graham, Wm. Graham, Shirey, Wilson, Ki.tleberger, and Erhart. Total 7. Nays Livingston, Mignot, Coutriet, Goodlander, Straw, Rowles, Read, Mc Bride, Watson, Scofield, Brubaker, Hollo peter, Sharp, Beck, and Dougherty. .Total. 15. The question recurring on the original mo tion to make the Salary 1000, it was agreed to by the following vote : Yeas Mignot, Coutriet, Wilson, Wal lace, Goodlander, Kettleberger, Straw. Wm. Graham, Jas. E. Graham, Shirey, Rowles. Erhart, Watson, Dougherty, Sharp, and Beck. Total 16. Nays Livingston. Read, McBride, Sco field, Brubaker, and Hollopeter. Total 6. The President thereupon declared that the Salary of the County Superintendent would be one. thousand dollars in the future. On motion of Mr. McBride the Conven tion adjourned sine. die. R. V. Wilsox, President. G. B. Goodlander, Secretary. MUST SUBMIT! At the opening of the new Club House of the Keystone Club, in Philadelphia, Mr. Charles Ingersoll struck the key-note of the Copperhead party for the campaign. He declared that if Mr. Lincoln is elected, as he most assuredly will be, it will be Revolu tion ! There can be but one intepretation to such language. A revolt in the North is threatened if McClellan is defeated. In this the party is consistant. Jeff. Davis declares that the majority should not rule, and his Northern allies make haste to endorse the doctrine. The issue is fairly presented. If McClellan is elected we will submit : but it is distinctly understood that, if Mr. Lincoln is re-elected, the Copperheads must and SHALL submit. The rule must work both ways. "What we May Expect, "The Chicago Platiorm," says the N. Y. Tinws, "means aid and comfort to the reb els disgrace and dishonor to every Union soldier, to every loyal man ; and its succes will bring about one of three things, viz: 1st. An armistice, which will give the now al most exhausted rebellion a new lease of life : or, 2d, a peace, which shall acknowledge the Southern Confederacy ; or, 3d. a cowardly truckling to the rebellion, which shall trail our old flag in the dust, at the feet of trai tors, and welcome, cap in hand, the chief rebels to the highest teats in our political synagogue. Either of these three results are too terrible to think upon ; each of them, in the guise of peace, is only the prelude to a fiercer state of civil war. ' Lieit. Gen. G rant in returning to the army from his brief visit to his family at IJurlington, iN. J., was delayed on the road between Philadelphia and Wilmington bv a railway accident, the locomotive having run off the tratk. The disaster might easily have been foreseen if the railway managers had only looked at the name of the locomo tive, which was "Gen. McClellan." The engine could not go ahead properly any more . than its namesake. "People may 6ay what they will about country air being so good for 'em," said Mrs. Partington, "and how fhey can fat on it ; for my part, I think it isowingtothevittles. Air may do for camomiles and other reptiles that live on it But I know that men must have something more substantialler." TfiarL- lin of the solar spectrum are considered proof of the existance of an ab sorbing atmostphereoi a low temperature in that body, or in some of its envelopes.. Why is talking with the fingers like a man who is alwavs changing his opinions? Because it is a specimen of . human mute ability. . "I am on the trail of a dear,'' as the . fel low said when he stepped in one o f the, fe male street sweepers.