;l ; T -1) CLEARFIELD, PA., WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1864. VOL, 1L-N0. 10. BY S. J. BOW. 3 c i p THE JOURNAL. " ' "... 1,,,-RNit. is published on Wed . Jterum in Advance A Ts7rtcJ at SI. CO per Fciunre. for three leosertioM-TwelTe lines (or W, conn tin n a-nre For every additional inaert.on 2j cenW gduetibn will LjU to yearly .drert.sers. TRVIJf BROTHERS. Dealers in Square Sawed , I ' . riniir drain, i "a . Ac, Burmide Pa.. Sept. 23 I'M. TlREDERlCK LKITZINOER. Manufacturer of h 11 kind! of Stone-ware. Clearfield. Pa. Or der goljgitei wholesale or retail Jan. 1. 1 M CRANS A BARRETT, Attorneys at Law. n".lr fleld. Pa. May 13. 1S54. L j trans. : : : : : : waltek hakkett. ROBERT .1. WALLACE. Attorney at Law. Clear , field. Pa Office in Shaw'a new row. Market street, opposite Naugle'g jewfclry store. May . Hp. NAUOLE. Watch and Clock Maker, und . dealer in Watches, Jewelry. Ao. Room-in Uraliom'i row, Market Btreet. 0T- 10 EUCHER SWOOPE. Attorney at Law. Clear field. Pa. Offict in Graham's Row, four doo s west "of Graham A Boynton'g store. ZSov.lO. HART6WICK A HUSTON. Dealers in Drugs. Medicines. Paints. Oils. Stationary. Perfume ry. Fancy Goods, Notions, etc, etc.. Market street. Clearfield, Pa June, 29, T? A FLEMMING. Lumber-city. Pa.. Nnrsery man and Dealer in all kinds of Fruit and Ornnraental Trees. Plantsand Shrubbery All or ders by ruail promptly attended to. May 13. J P KKATZER, dealer in Dry Goo.ls. Cloth-imr- Hardware. Queenaware. Groceries. Pro- ii.iom Ac. Front Street, above tne e.enaemj, CIcartield. Pa. April 27. TIT LIAM F.IRWIS.Marketstree.t. Clearfield, ' .'- V T7. ..:.. .nJ 1i,imi.i i, Mer it r ueaier m ruic-ii .,. - .i!.nrti. Hardware. -Oueeiisware, iroser-a. and f itiiily articles generally. X" iTiHN ei'FXlCU. Manufacturer of all kinds ol J Cabinet-ware, Market street. Clearfield, la lit aiso makes to order Coffins, ou short notice, and bltend funerals with a hearM. AprlO. I v n M WOODS. PRACTtcisn Pnrsicn, and I ) Examining Surgeon for Pensions. ..v,ce Soutli-wf-st corner of Second and Cherry Snort. Clearfield. Pa. January 21. ISkc IV'IOMISJ M Cl'Ll.OL'UIl. Attorney at Law. ! "01e.ufield.Pa. Office, e ist of the -Clearfield ..i.ai.k l)od and other legal instruments pre pared with promptness and accuracy. .July 3. 1 8 M EXALLY, Attorneyat Law. Clearfield, ,) . P. Prsctiers in Clearfield and adjoiuing -uunlies. Office in new brick building of J.Bifyn tou. 2d street, on door south of Lauich's H .tel. O IC11 RD MOSSOP, Dealer iu Foreign and Do l inenio Dry Goods. Groceries. Flour, l'acon, U'qiior Ac. Room, on Market street, a few doors west of Journal Offi.c. Clearfield, Pa. Apr27. r ARRIVEK A TE-T, Attorneys at Law. Clear j field. Pa. Will attend promptly to all Jngal and other business eutrusted to their eare in Clear . field and adjoining counties. August 6. 166. DK. W.M. CAMPIIELL. offers his professional serrices to the citizens of Moshannon and vi cioity. He can be consulted at his rcs-idecce ut all times, unless absent on professional business. Mohs;innon. Centre co., Ta.. May 13. 1So3. TTM. ALBERT A BROS, Dealers in Dry Goods, W Groceries, Hardware. Queensware. Flour. Bacon, etc.. Woodland. Clearfield county. Ponn a. Also, extensive dealers in all kinds of sawed lum ber. sLiu'les, and square timber. Orders solioi ttd. . Woodland. Aug. mh, 1SG3. 4 I'C'TIONULU. The undersigned having x been Licen.-cd an auctioneer would lmorm the citiior. ot Clearfield County, that ho will at !cnd to calling sales in any part of the County whenever called upon. Charges Moderate Address I M. SMITH. IJejrartys X Roads, Cluarfiuld Co.- Pa February d !Sri4 - A rCTIONEEK.Th undersigned having Clearfield County that ho will at- tend to culling gales, in any part of the county, whenever ca led upon. Chartres moderate Address, JOHN M QL ILKIN. Mav 13 Rower Po., Clearfield co.. Pa. N. IV Persons calling sales without a proper li cense aro sutjoct to a penalty of SOU, which pro vision will bt enforced against th sa who may vi '-late the same iONs7NI NOTKM tOll SALE.-The i undersigned is prepared to furnish, to thoso M-eking inresUncnts, Goverainent aud county bonds Also five per cent Government notes. . U B. SWO0PE. Clearficid.M.iy 4. 1SU. Att y at Law MISi K. A. P. RYNDl-Hl, Teacher of Piano-Forte. Melodcan, Guitar, Har Uiony. and Vocal Music. Sixty private, and twelvo class lessons included iu one term. Rooms wirh Mrs. 11. D. Welih. Clearfield. July 1. W-i. DK. LITCM'S MEDICI N ES. Afresh sup ply of these invaluable Family Medicines ar j for sale by M. A. frank. Clearfield, consisting Kt ',.; Cttrtt; Rr.ttorative.a gi eat cure for colds nd c.uigh ; and Anti-Bilion Physic. They have ' een thoroughly tested in this community, and are hijjhly approved. Trt them. DENTISTRY I DENTISTRY ! ! Dr. F. M. M'Kiernan having located at Smith's -V:lls. Jancsvi!!e.) Clearfield Co.. Pa , informs the citi.ei.s of that place and vicinity, that he. will endeavor to render satisfaction .to all who may fi-r him with their patonage Professional eaii.s to any part of the country promptly attend ed to. Work done on Vulcanite. Terms moderate. Miyll.lh31.-3m. Dr. V. M. McKlEKXAX. yew watch & jewelry store.- 1 The undersigned having located in the bor "ua of Clearfield, (trt the ihop formerly occupied h It Welch as a jewelry shop.) is prepared to ;1 work of all kinds on the most re:konable terms, ibeeash will poMtively be expected when the ork is delivered. He is confident that h can Kf'i U-excelled by any workmen in town ot county Cum, , com, aU totheSisrii of th Ji'S Wattk. April 9,'62-ly-p.l. S. 11- LAUCULIN. pLEAltFIELD NURSERY. EXCOUR V7 AG t HOME lNDi:STKV. The undersigned uiyinj established a Nursery, on the Pike, about if way between Curwensville and Cleai-field B jrnughs. is prepared to furnish all kinds of Fruit (Standard and dwart.) Evergreens. Sbruh "trv. virape Vines, Gooseberry,, La wfc-n Black t?rry. Strawberry and I.ai-pberry vines. Also, "itrian Oruhtrees.Uuir.ee and earl v Scarlet Rhou- bib. Ac. Orders promptly attended o. Address; A,, . , r t i i. r r. M-r n . .. : l ? Ol , 1O04. J U . M lklUUl, V Ul w CU, , IW, LARGE STOOK OF GLASS, painta. oi , ADDEE33 OP THE USflOU STATE CEN- ; THAL COMMITTEE. To the Loyal Men of Pennsylvania. Rooms of the Union State Central Committee, Phil' a, Oct. 21, lsG4. ) To the Loyal Men of Pennsylvan ia : The smoke of the lirst engagement has cleared a wav. and uuuu the vote of her citizens at honte Peniisj-lvatiia stands by tha Govern- j meat of our fathers, while her brave sons in j the deld will not uive less than twelve thou- j sand majority lor tho good cause. The last hoje, therefore, of tlie supporters vi Gener- ! al MeGiollau ha, disappeared, and the only result of continuing to sustain him is to i:ive j aid ai d comfort to the rebellion by increas- j icg the' appearance of disunion among our telves. ' ' ' General Sheridan, dealt a terrible Mow to treason on Wednesday, and every atnot a heart thrilled with joy upon hearing it ; but a great majority lor Abraham Lincoln m Pennsylvania would be far more fatal to tne armed conspiracy against the Lnion ana me Constitution. . Every vote lor our tried and faithful President will paralyze some arm raised to shoot down the f.ag, while every vole for the base surrender at Chicago, anu the men who cany its white ilag, will en courage some rebel to shoot another North ern Foidier. The ticket nominated by al landiirliani.Wood and Seymour is now black with treason, and alter it is voted will be retl with the bbod of our brothers fighting for u.. T!ie war has existed for the !at year only by reason of our divisions, and its con tinuance to-day is solely owing to the activi :y of the disunion party of the North and the platform of its convention. V.'h'de any hope remained of the election of its candi dates, plausible excuses might be found by u.i.uided men fur giving them their -uff ra pes; but, after the verdicts of 3Inine, 'or uiont, New liainpshiro, Ohio, Indiana and Pennsylvania, ail sensible persons know that Ui.j election is already dSi led Lv the peo ple, and that it only remains to a'scertaiu the majorities. Jf fitoirs. titr-fui-e, that even) voir far McGhil'in and Pendleton u on eor HCi'iiiV t'it ton to J-jJfr.wn Da via to continue thi. fearful icar to -waste more of our treas ure and to murder others of our t'ons. The sublime speeraele of a united north will end the war. We invoke all patriots to lend their efforts unceasingly to produce this result. Jiv- perfecting the ward and town ship organizations; by the circulation cf documents; by public addresses, especially by local speakers; by earnest personal efforts with honest but mistaken men ;- by making arrangements to bring every loyal voter to the polls ; by sending tax receipts to every soldier a.id sailor; by the immediate forma tion of campaign clubs in every borough and community; by great meetings of the peo ple .by daylight and by torchlight, and by all the honest ageueies or' an active :ind thor ough can va a ppealin.s to the patriotic zeal, and kindling the patriotic enthusiasm of a great and loyal commonwealth, we can attest the fealty of our State to the ilag of the II nion by a majority worthy of tht5 historic character of the contest and of the great is-su-"? dependent 'jpon it. Forward, then, every lover of his country to this good work ! Looking nut to the past but, to the future, forgetting all persorndcon aiderations, and appreciating tne privilege of some sacriflce for Liberty and the Union, b't us relax no effort until the polls are closed. ! 1 his ( 'mnmiffeo wni continue to do its whole duty, and relies upon your instant, earnest and constant assistance. Grant's march of valor and of glory froni the llapidaii to the James sealed the fate of the rebellion. Since then, Sherman has turned its left wing. I'arragut is closing its avenues of scape. Sheridan has sent its vanguard again whirling down the valley. It on!)- remains for us to sound the charge along the whole line, and wrapping our bal lots around our brothers' bullets, march to the peaceful, final triumph which awaits us in November. Proclaiming ihe war to be a failure. George I. McClellan is himself the great failure of the war a general without a victory a statesman without a record, and if we are faithful, history will add to his epitaph. that he was a candidate for the Presidency with out an electoral vote. Let us all. therefore, labor without ceasing. In memory of our buried martyrs, in regard for the wounds of our living heroes, to guard liberty from its deadly peril, and the Union from its trea sonable foes, in the interest of religion, and iu the hope of the republic of the future, leva! men of 1'ennsylvaiiia, forward to victory! In behalf of the'Committee, Simon Camkkon, Chairman. A. W IJenedict, Secretarie. ten rorney, j PETTY MEANNESS. -We have often heard of persons so mean that they would "steal the pennies off a dead man's t ye-!.'' but the following from the Norristown Jlera 1I fairly surpasses any outrage upon a dead man. In the lower ward of that borough is a blind man who has a stipend from the Directors of the Poor of the count-, amounting to 75 cents a week ! lie has always voted the Union ticket. A few days previous to the election, a person was sent to him on liehalf of the Directors, and he was told in the most rude and insult ing manner, that if Ire did not vote the Dem ocratic ticket the out-door relief would be stopped, and he must go to the Alms House. Fortunately, though blind, he has friends, and lie voted as he preferred, despite the brutal meanness of .the Copperheads. What frest? Just think ot it ! a political party appeal inT in behalf of its candidates and its prin ciples to the cov.anllrr. of the American pert- rde.'f Whatau unendurable insult to tne bra- vest race on the cartn wnai latuuy n (.op tics, inconceivable if it had not actually hap-, penedi, incredible if it was net actually gana-piringt WHERE PENDLETON STANDS. The New York Democratic Executive State Committee have been sounding their candidateor the Vice Presidency, Mr. Pen dleton,, only to find that he has not bated his sentiments, previously expressed, a jot. He tells them : "I make no professions of a new faith only repeat my reiterated pro fessions" of an old one. " Mr. Pendleton's old faith was expressed very freely on the floor of Congress, and the following is a plain indication of what it was, and what he says it is: 'The South asked you to lefc them live in peace. But no, you said you would bring them into subjection. That is not done yet ; and-God Almighty grant that it never may be. I hope that you will never subjugate the South.'1 In a speech delivered in the House of Rep resentatives on the 18th of January, 18ol, he characterized the act of secession as or derly, and further defied the power cf the government to maintain the Union, in the following language : "Now, sir, what force of arms can compel a State to do that which she has agreed to do? What force of armscan compel a State to refrain from doing that which her State government, .supported by the sentiment of 1161 J'C'Ii'j is determined to presist in do ing? Ids provided in the Constitution that the citizens t.f every State shall have all the priviiiges and immunities of citizens of the several Status. What force of this Federal Government can compel the observance of that clause, if a State is determined to pass and execute the laws whereby citizens of other States shall no t have, within its lim its, the same privilege as its own citizens." Fearing that this exposition of his views might not be sufiicieutly explicit, he goes on to say : "My voice to-day is for conciliation; in voice is for compromise. I beg of you, gen tlemen, to hear that voice. If you will not ; if you find conciliation impossible ; if your differences are so meat that you cannot or will not reconcile them, then, gentlemen, let the seceding States depart in peace ; let them establish their government and empire, and work out their destiny according to the wis dom which (Jod has given them." In addition to thes expressions, we find him vindicating his faith his "old faith" by his votes.. Since the beginning of the war, in 1SG1, he has said no kind word for country; all his .sympathy lias been exhaust ed upon aiid for the rebels, and he carefully avoided voting for the pay of a single sol dier who was engaged in the defence of the flag under which he enjoyed protection. Can there be any doubt in the minds of tli0.se who have watched events, that this man contemplates not simply the surrender of all the liberty we possess as a republican Government, but the very existence of the nation? Can there be any doubt that lie intends to do all in his power to transfer this nation to the hands of despotism? Can there be any doubt that . the whole move ment of the unscrupulous demagogues who met at Chicago inte-ided to place their can di dates in power only for a time only so long as would bo necessary to make the treacherous transfer? This was the treason at its foundation. This is the "old faith" ot Pendleton , it is the faith adopted by Gen. 3IcClellan. The people of these United States will record their sense of that "old faith" by their exercise of the ancient method iu November. The Copperhead Stories about the Presi dent's Salary. General Spinner, United States Treasur er, having been appealed to for an official statement concerning the stories of -Mr. Lin coln having drawn his salary in gold and in vested it in foreign securities, replies in an official statement, showing : First. That the President has neglected for long periods to endorse and collect the monthly drafts sent him for his salary ; on one occasion collecting none for eleven mouths. Second. That when his attention was cal led to the Toss of interest he was thus incur ring, he asked -who gained bv his loss, and on being 'told the United States, added: "Then let it remain, the Treasury needs it more than I do." Third. That the Treasurer was finally compelled to request the President to draw his salary, iu order to adjust the annual ac counts. Fourth. That the sum thus drawn was placed in the United States five per cent, temporary loan, payable, principal and inter est, in greenbacks. Fifth. That since then such portions of his salary as he did not need have been, drawn for him by his friends and invested in United States gold-bearing stocks, pur chased at current rates and deposited in the vault of the Treasury. - Sixth. That he has habitually negJected to draw the interest on these stocks, and that on one occasion, w hen the amount of interest pavable in gold having accumulated to ei-ht hundred dollars, the Treasurer sent it to him, he returned it, saying, "I reckon the Treasury needs it more than I do. Seventh. That his losses from not collect ing interest On his bonds liaye amounted to focF thousand dollars, which have been vir tually given to the Treasury. An empty sound the railway whistle when you are too late for the Main. "THE PEACE DEMOCRACY." That faction of the copperhead organiza tion known as the "Peace Democracy" are pandering to the cowards and mercenaries of the North, with promises of an early settle ment of the war on the basis of the Federal Union, hoping thereby to delude their vic tims with the idea that such a settlement can only be effected by placing the Demo cratic party in power. There is a questiou attached to these Democratic promises, which it would le well for timid people al ways to put to the men preachimr their pow ers to secure an early peace. Why did not the Democratic leaders maintain the peace of the country when they had the control of the affairs of the Government? Before the war had assumed its present magnitude, be fore the rebellion had thrown off the mask which concealed its bloody antagonism of freedom, the Democratic party was in au thority, and had the power to make peace. When South Carolina lelt the Union, James Buchanan was 1 'resident of the United States the U. S. Senate was controlled by a Democratic majority the Supreme Court was Democratic the sinews and resources of war were commanded by Democrats, and yet the Democracy were, timd-le to maintain the peace! They were not only unable to pre serve tlie eace, but they actually, in their official capacity, embezzled the funds and ap propriated the property of the Government, to give magnitude and strength to treason. Keeping these facts in view, how can any man be deluded with the "Democratic" declaration that the "Democratic"' party, if placed in power, will be able to restore the land to peace. Certainly that which "Dem ocratic" ofiicials could nor preserve, "Dem ocratic" politicians cannot restore. The on ly party capable ol re-inaugurating peace, is that which is able to meet armed rebellion with arms, take it by the throat and choke it cither into olwdhtice or into the grave. Text? from which Every Man may he Hi3 own Preacher. The Copperhead Chicago Time chuckles not a little over 1 'rice's invasion of Missouri. It rpaotes it triumphantly as an unanswera ble argument in support of its Copici head platform, declaring that the experiment of war had been a failure. The ilichmond Srnthtel nays : "Our doc trine is this: We are fighting for indepen dence, that our great and neccessary domes tic institution of slavery shall be preserved, and for the preservation of other institutions of which slavery is the' ground work." "McClellan," said Fernando Wood, in a recent speech in New York, "would if elect ed , le the mere creature of the will of those who nominated Liui." Wood is a good judire of character, and knows his man. Uis pledge that the "creature" would prov a facile instrument in the hands of disloyal men is not an idle one. When you hear Copperheads boasting of their superior patriotism, throw m their teeth this preguaot fact : JV a single Re pvliUcan, from JIaiue to California, is in arms against the (iocemment, ichi'e nearly erery prominent leader of the Ilehcllion is a Democmt. The Indianapolis Sentinel confesses that iLs party has in view the recognition of the Kebcl Confederacy. In the event of Mc Clellan's election, it says: "His programme will be a cessation of hostilities; and an at tetrrpt to restore tho Union by compromise and reconciliation, or falling in that, taking the laxt extreme recognition." Who voted against granting soldiers the privilege of voting? The Peace Democrats : tire McClellanit's. The official returns show that, in every district throughout the Stale, just in proportion to the comparative strength if the opposing parties, so stood the August vote for or against the soldier's right. We challenge contradiction, and re fer to the figures for proof they won't lie, if the Cops do. If MeCleilan thinks the victorious party ought to stop the war, why dou't he take those emblems of war from his shoulders? And why dou't he quit drawing twenty dol lars a day f r doing nothing, from the Treas ury, which he says Lincoln's administration have got into such an awful state? If, as the Copperheads -claim, their par ry is par excellence the party of the Union, how comes it that the rebels are praying for its success? The Charleston Courier said : " Our suc cess in battles insure the success of McClel lan, our failure will inevitably lead to his deleat." "If," said Hon, J. L. M. Curry, a rebel Senatorfrom Alabania.in a late speech, "the party pledged to give the Confederates jus tice and restore peace to our bleeding coun try shall elect their man, such a shout as was never heard before would spread over our afHicted South; our independence would be forever established. But should, Lincoln be re-elected, our hopes will be dash ed to the ground our independence but a thing to be dreamed of." The Providence Journal has the follow ing: "Without charging 'small potatoes' upon our Swanzey friend who sent us the two-pound-five-ounce specimen, we are com pelled to say that Rhode Island does a little better. The Coventry Company sent us t hree which weigh six pounds, while one of them weighs two andj half pounds. They are of three different varieties, showing that the large yield is not confined to any .one kind." General Birney died in the delirium of fever. His last words have a political value that should make a Union war cry throughout the Loyal State. Bising sud denly in his bed, his eyes blazing with the fixe that consumed him, he cried with a trumpet vtoce, "Boys, keep 3-our eyes on that iiaf V' and fell back dead. . A REBUKE TO COPPERHEADS. " If there is anything calculated to humili ate the Copperhead Tories who are doing all they can to defeat the measures of the Gov ernment for the suppression of the Rebel lion it is the fact that our brave soldiers have to resort to extraordinary methods to facili tate their warfare against 'be Rebels at home in the rear, and the Rebels in their front. When these soldiers return to their homes, "when the war is over," who would want to be known to them as the Copper heads whom they had to fight while they were yet in' the field ! Look out, 'Sons of Liberty,' your names are written where you least imagine. The soldiers will oue day de mand a copy of the record for publication. This much has been suggested by the fol lowing dispatch to the Cincinnati Gazette, dated Columbus, 20th : "An officer of the 90th Ohio, who arrived here yesterday from the front, states that nearly all the Ohio troops with Sherman vo ted at the late election; that they were forced to do so while on the march and subject all' day to attack from the rebels. The polls were held iu the ambulances following the regiments. The men were sent to the rear by squads to fight the enemy at home with ballots, which they would do with a hearty good will and then return to their positions, and with bullets open out agaiu upon the foe before them with renewed vigor and inereas ed zeal. The scene was inspiring, and will never be forgotten by those who witnessed it. McClellan was the war cry of the rebels in their attacks on that day. " Let no enemy of the Government who is either actively or covertly engaged in efforts to ruin this nation on Anglo-Chicago princi ples, think that our soldiers will forget the peculiar movements they made while they were marching, on the 11th of October, 1864. "What Copperhead Opposition to the Govern ment Means. The development made by the recent in vestigation of the facts and circumstances connected with the great coaspiracy in the Northwest, have established very clearly what copperhead opposition to the Govern ment means. While the leaders of the cop perhead factions are deluding the majority of the honest men who arc now supporting McClellan, the real objeets of those leaders, aside from and which are calculated to fol low the election of "Little Mao," may be clearly st forth as follows: L To iueite soldiers to desert from the ar mies, and to harbor and protect deserters. II. To discourage enlistments and resist the draft. III. To circulate disloyal and treasonable documents. IV. To communicate with and impart in telligence to the enemy. V. Toaid the enemy by recruiting for him, or assisting him to recruit within our lines. VL To furnish ths enemy with munitions of war. VII: To co-operate with the rebels in their invasions of loyal States. VIII. To act as the paid incendiaries and apply the torch to northern cities and towns. IXv To destroy the military stores and property of the Government. X. To assassinate and get out of the way. Union citizens obnoxious for their zeal, and Union soldiers .and Government employees. XI. To establish a Confederacy of States, with the eastern commonwealths left "out in the cold," and m;ike slavery and the slave trade the great features of the Government. This is what the Democratic leaders are at now, aud it is what they hope to accom plish by the election of George B . McClellan. THE REASON "WHY. The company which went from this coun ty a few weeks ago in the 21 1th regiment, under Capt. Frank, gave some fifty Union majority on the 11th of Octeber. Only one man voted the Iemocratic ticket. Several Democrats belong to the company, but they are war Democrats and vote as they fight. Besides, they have been out on picket where they heard the rebs cheering for McClellan ! Like sensible men they came back determin ed not to help the enemy. Their regiment is one which refused to pass under a Mc Clellen flag in Washington. Why shouldn't their friends at home follow their good ex ample. Warren, Mail, From the Mi:bawaka (Indiana) Enter prise we learn that the chivalrous Copper heads of that neighborhood, who had threat ened to egg Mr. Colfax duriug his speech at Bremeau, could not screw their courage up to the sticking point, but valorously way laid a wagon filled with young girls who had been attending the meeting, pelted the girls with eggs, and bravely knocked do n a grey-headed old man who was driving the team. "I cannot vote for General McClellan," said a mutilated soldier in one of our hospi tals, a few days ago, "because he said George W. Woodward's opinion? Mere his own last year, and George W. Woodward decided (as a . Pennsyvania judge) that a soldier had no right to vote at all." "I tell you," said a South Carolina sol dier to a Union rrisoner in rebeldom, x"tbe Stars and Stripes are just the sauciest rag to fisht under that was ever swung on a battle-field." f An old woman who lived in Lievikgee Po land, in a state of great poverty, was found to have left about 2, 00i), 000 gilders in buried gold, Hirer and paper mcTiey. GEN. HOOKER ON THE ELECTION. Gen. HoOKER got captured by a crowd in Springfield, III, last Friday, 21st OcL, and was carried to the Representative's Hall and made to speak. In the coursa of. his patriotic aud soldierly talk he said : I thiuk that all the battled we wiil Lara to fight are already fought. Tremendous cheers, j The electron early next month will pass oil quietly, and it will pass off success fully. Renewed cheers. The victory at the ballot-box will be in vindication of thia Uuiou and of our authority, it will be in support of your armies in the field, and it will be in support of the honor of the na tion. Applause. That vindication will b far beyond what the most sanguine. who ara here anticipate. It will be more than a Waterloo defeat to those who are arayed a gainst oar country. Long contiuued ap plause. It will be almost a death blow : it will be u staggering blow to the Rebels that we have been fighting in the war in which your brothers aud your sons have been enga ged for the last three years aud a half; it will be a withering blow to them and it will be worse to the Copperheads. Tremen dous cheers. I would' not for the world say anything to excite hopes that may not be realized ; but I will saj this, that it u the opinion of those who have a much bet ter opportunity than I have, that in the next election we will achieve the greatest victory that has been won from the begin ning of the Rebellion to the present time, li will fie a two edged sword, cutting both ways, North and South. Cheers. 1 etata this confidently, beleiving lroni those who have much better opportunities of knowing than I have, that every single State in thia Union will cast its vote for Abraham Lin coln. Loud applause and erics of "tiiat'a so." MORE EVIDENCE. The colonel of a Pennsylvania regiment, heretofore a decided Buchanan and Breck inridge Democrat, but now friendly to tha re-election of President LINCOLN, thai writes to a friend iu Philadelphia: "The election passed off quietly' but as three regiments out of thia brigade mina among them were ou picket, not many of the men got a chance to vote. One poll was opened, and out of sixteen votes cast in Company F, thirteen were Republican. Tha rebels are either strong Democrats or elsa very bad politicians. A few days Lefjre tha election they charged down . on our picket line cheering lustily for McClellan Our men heard them distinctly, and there, wera even strong Democrats, including Captain ; , who was in commaud of the regi ment in my absence, and a decided Cop perhead, who came out of the rebel Si changed in politics." British Gold to elect MoClellaD. At the great Uuiou meeting in New-Haven, ou ednesday. the Rev. Dr. Patton, . just returned from Europe, made a speech, in the course of which he said that he had hurried home to vote for Mr. Lincoln ; and that his hatc had been stimulated by hay ing observed how deeply interested tne aris tocracy of England are in our election, and . how anxious they are that McClellan thould Kueeeed. He spoke to noblemen who freely admitted they were sending gold to thia country to influence the election in favor of McClellan, beleiving that his election would be followed by peace and separation. Aew York Tribune. General Thomas L. Kane, brother of Dr. Kane, the distinguished Arctic explor er, has taken a decided position in favor of Mr. Lincoln's re-election. General Kanb was the old leader of the "Bucktails," and his heroic, gallant and, euccesful career as a soldier is not forgotten by Pennsylvania. Though disabled by wounds, he has not re signed his commission. Such a man could do no less than support Mr. LlNCOLNr and give his vote to the cause for which ha bu , risked his life. . Thad. Stevens the old hero has a way of his own of drawing portraits. Take the&a two : .; If you wish a delicate writer to indite son nets to lady's eyebrow, choose McClellan. If you wish a rugged Anglo-Saxon writer to rouse a nation,, take Lincoln. If they should encounter, either physically or ment ally, the giaut grip of the rail-splitter will tear the polished dand3f from the ground, and hurl him further than an Indian shoota hisrrrow. Which of these men will you choose to guide the rolling ship in the midat of the storm. "Two years of war," said Henry Ward Beecher on Sunday nicrht. "A"hd we hava conquered half the ReT?l territory, hold the keys of the whole, and have nearly destroy ed the military strength of the Rebellion in the field. All this in two years of war." "Four years you mean," said a bystander. "No," responded Mr Beecher. "I said two years of tear. In the first two. Gen. McClellan was in command !" "Strike for your rights !" squealed a Mc-. Clellan orator in Newark, mildly argument ative against the lawfulness of the draft, and tenderly objective to the continuance of the war. A soldier on a pair of 'Sanitary crutches ; "If you was'nt both a coward aud a traitor, you would be at the front striking at the Re bellion. That's the only kind of striking that ought to be done nowadays." Rer. John A. Brouse, Chaplain of the 00th Indiana Volunteers, who has recent ly returned from Sherman's army, z&ys that at the battle of Allatoona, Ga., the relielj nsed the name of McClellan as a battle.ery. and were 'distinctly heard to cheer, for tha hp- rnrarff hero, by our foroe. 1 ".1.1 1 f -lit hi I 'i 1. fl nr 1T"
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers