3 RIGHT OBWROSG. WBIS RIGHT, TO 9K KEPT BIGHT, 'WHEN WROHG, TO B B PUT BIOHT. EUUXSKCUG: THURSDAY :::::::::::::::DECEMBER 10. Tlio Lute Contest -Copper- The friends of the Union in Pennsyl vania have fought a good fight, and have achieved a victory, great, grand and glorious.- And now since the smoke of the battle-field has all passed away, and the slaiu enemies of the country sleep quietly in their dishonored political graves, it may not be amiss to take a glance at some erf the peculiarities which characterized the recent contest. But, in the first place, we muse -congratulate our friends every where upon the result. Amongst the thousands of gallant and brave men who contributed towards it, we are confident there is not one who feels a more heartfelt pleasure in it than ourself. No political canvass was ever carried on with so much bitterness on the part of our opponents, and without intending disparagement towards any of the aspirants before the X'ittsburg convention, we repeat now, what we have uniformly believed and expressed, that -Andrew G. Curti n . was and is the only man who could have saved our people f rout the disgrace of a Copper head triumph, and the nation from tho -evils which would flow from a hoatile State administration: In former political campaigns and we liave participated in quite a number we Jave alw'ays found more or less of honesty tfll principle in our opponents ; but in he one just closed, jve regret to say, they teemed utterly devoid of any and all such attributes. From the moment our candidate was placed in the field, down to the closing of the polls, on the evening of theeconl Tuesday of October, they kept up a deliberate personal warfare against him, which in Its malignancy and wickedness has never been paralleled. Every slander which their malicious head3 could invent, every means which Satan could suggest, was employed by them to defeat our nomineo and elect their own. Men, too, iu our own midst, from whom better things might ordinarily have been expec ted, willfully ignored everything like manlines3andfairnc3S,and lent themselves, body and soul, to this ehamdess and dirty work. We cannot afford now to dignify thec individuals, and at the same time pollute our columns, by naming them here. We know thera, and tho public kTiow them, and this is suEcient. They have fur nished a striking proof of the truth of the old saying "Whom the 'gods would destroy, they first make mad." Their task is done, and they have their reward in the triumphant re election of tho man whom they have vilified and defamed. To this they are welcome. Tho course pursued by the leaders of Copperhoadi3m, since the commencement of the Rebellion, has been strange indeed, but not moro strange than infamousr They are themselves responsible, in a great measure, for the dastardly attempt which has beenmade to overthrow our Govern ment. In the campaign of 1860, they publicly proclaimed that, if Mr. Lincolu should be elected, the Union would be dissolved, alleging that the people of the South could not be expected to remain under the Presidential rule of an "aboli tionist." This was an invitation to the Slave States to try the experiment of Secession; and when, after the election of Mr. Lincoln, they made the attempt to go out, these same Copperhead leaders stood by with their hands in their pockets, and like poor old Buchanan, did nothing but bellow out "nc coercion V whilst not a few of the more fool-hardy among them, declared that their party in the North would forcibly resist any attempt on the port of the incoming administration to compel the South to return to its allegiance. But when Mr. Lincoln was inaugurated,' and when, after exhausting all peaceful means in vain, he was eventually forced to call up6a the military to put down the insurrection, and to wipe out tho insult which had been offered to our flag at Fort Sumter, then, indeed, these sympa thizers with treason quite changed their fcune. All of a sudden they became outUrfaM aya and patriotic, but their professions in this behalf aro now well understood to have been neither more nor less than a bid for patronage and power, for no sooner had Old Abe distributed his offices and left these men o.ut in the cold, than they all with one accord turned upon him. Could he have given them all fat places, it is quite likely that both he and the Union would now have their support. But this was impossible, and so Old Abe and the Union have had to get along without them, and so far have shown themselves quite equal to the emergency. Failing to get control of and to run "the machine" as they had fondly hoped, these Copperhead leaders have from that time forward opposed the National Ad ministration and all who sustain it in the prosecution of the War. It is scarcely necessary for us to particularize ; we need only utter the great truth, that they have, by every means in their power, Fought to embarrass the head of the government ; aud in proportion to their success in this, so have they succeeded rn giving aid and comfort to the ltebels. As evidence of the fact that their labors have been duly appreciated down in Secession, we may mention the well'kcowu truth that the leaders of the Rebellion were extremely anxious to see them triumph at the State election. The Richmond papers counted largely upon the advautage which, in such a contingency, would result to thrir cause, and got off numerous labored editorials to show 'that an advance of Lee's army into Pennsylvania would be a sure way to attain the desired end. It was warmly urged that this would giva encouragement and strength to the so-called "Democracy," through whom alone they could expect to obtain peace, and a recognition of their bogus Confederacy ! We havc'said that, when the call for troops was first made, the Copperhead leaders evinced a willingness to aid in prosecuting the war. Such was the case in our own county, with perhaps some exceptions, and the same may.be said of all the Northern States." When the Government had once fairly taken it9 position, few indeed were found to raise their voices asainst volunteering or the war, whilst manj did all in their power to promote enlistments. Stephen A. Douglas and other good men like him had assured the President of their sympathy and eup- rfjKrfl, and not a few of those who had beca the friends of the arch-tiaitor Breckin ridge now buckled on their armor to fight for the Stars and Stripes. Examples were set which were well worthy of emulation. Our readers will remember the eloquence which was expended by certain Democrats, now Copperheads, of our own county, and the efforts they put forth to procure troops for the service. They attended and ha rangued all tho war meetings, made con tributions, and for a time seemed to forget political distinctions and to recognize but one party, and that the party of the Union. Would that this state of affairs had con tinued ; but it could not be so... The patriotism of these men was not so strong as their appetite for patronage and gain. True it was that both the President and the Governor had recognized the Union Democrats by conferring upon them many of their best appoiutment3 ; but what mattered this, po long as they had failed to provide for these particular individuals and their particular friends I A certain so-called Democrat, not living a thousand miles from this place, fancied that, because he had had somo experience aa an officer of the militia, he was therefore entitled to be made a Colonel or a Brigadier in the army, and not attaining to either of these, he aimed at being appointed to enrol the militia of the county preparatory to the draft of 18G2. But failing in this as in the others, his last dodge we believe wa3 to visit Ilarriaburg and ask an appoint ment from the military authorities there. It will be borne in mind that, whilst seeking each and all of these positions, he studiously proclaimed himself a' War Democrat ; but being disappointed in all his selfish aspirations, he fiercely came home to inveigh against the Administra tion and the war. He has gone on in this woy until he has become literally crazy with Copperheadism. Another so called Democrat, who regards himself exceedingly smart in political game3, as in everything else, wished to be rewarded for saying nothing against the Adminis tration, lie put himself to the trouble of gcing to Washington in quest of a Sutler ship. But as such appointments arc not "lying around loose" at all times, he didn't chance to pick one up. Tho failure annoyed him somewhat, and he returned to his home, resolved to make himself both heard and felt in tho perplexing affairs of the nation. He has ever since been consistent iu his opposition to the causo of the country, and one of hij last acts was to preside at a meeting at which more solid lies were fold and more bad whisky was consumed than perhaps at any ' similar assemblage ever convened in the State. Still another so-culled Democrat had an elder brother who was urged for Paymaster in the army. The applicant was a Union Democrat the same that the younger professed to be and the appointment was urged upon that ground. But as offices are sometime difficult to obtain, the applicant did not succeed. . To show the CDnsisteucy and worth of the applicant, it is only necessary to say that he promptly entered the service aj a subordinate, and sealed his derotiou to the country with his life' blood. All honor to his memory ! We wish we could say a3 much for his younger brother. But no! tho young man employs his leisure moments in spitting out low and scurrilous abuse against not only thoi:e who are supporting the government, but even against the government itself which protect him. We mention these little bits of history meiely to show the motiva by which some of tho more promineitt Copperhead leader of our Stats havi been governed. We measure all the leader of their party, whether in the county, fhc State, or the nation, by the Mme standard. - They all padopUdaml entered upon the same iufa f nmoufl out'ofrelv selfish consid erations. They began their oppoiuon to th-dniiuitftratioa precisely at the time thcoould uot ' use it to subserve their own base purposes. Unable to rule, they were determined to ruift. Nor did thev m go to work without a system. Early in the summer of 1361, they begin their organization under the false but captiva ting name of "Democracy," and tlius lured many an unsuspecting man into their support. Their orators and presses lied freely. They told the people, that the Republicans had brought oa the war, and were unfit to prosecute it, and that the Union could only be restored through the success atid instrumentality of tho "Democratic party." Thus they lied and labored. Meanwhile, many of the friends of the Union were enlisting into th ser vice, whilst those who remained at home were striving to obliterate party line and to harmonize all upon the great question at issue. But our readers will remember that ir the fall of 1SG1, the Copperhead here, as iu many other place, succeeded. And here it may not be out of place to refer to another so-called Democrat, who at the outset of our national troubles talked loudly for the Administration ana against the Rebellion, and in a speech pledged himself to know no p:rty until the rebellion was put down, but forgot it all when his eyes were dazzled with the prospect ol a seat in the Legislature. The Copperheads held the bait out to him, and he took it. He has been nominate! and elected three times. A poor reward for sacrificing principle, and deserting to the enemy in the hour of his country's troub!es ! The Copperhead party, once organized, has been carefully kept up, and the bit terness which characterized it at the beginning has intensified with the pro gress of tho war. . Somewhat timid at first, its leaders have grown bolder day by day. Their success in carrying the State in the autumn of 1SG2 made them almost insufferable. They fancied that this was -the sure harbinger of their triumph in i e then coming Gubernatorial contest, anu that the way-was already paved for a Copperhead to Euccecd Mr. Lincoln. At an early day, they set up M'Clellan a? their man. They made . him -their idol ho has been th centre around which they have revolved. They gave him credit for every success achieved by our army, and abused the Administration for every failure. They accused the Admin-' istration of jealousy toward him, and- of not furnishing him men and supplies when needed ; whereas, it is well known that more was done for him than for any other General in the army. No one ever had ec many golden opportunities in this war to save the country and distinguish him self ; and yet, after he had shown himself totally unfit for the high position which ho held, and was removed by the Admin istration, the Copperheads denounced the act as one of persecution ! This was but a part of the scheme to mako political capital amongst the ignorant masses. . When, during the past summer,- the Copperheads met in convention at Harris burg, to nominate their candidate for Governor, the Rebel army, under Gen. Lee, was upon the soil of Pennsylvania. It had invaded and taV.en possession of the Cumberland Valley, one of the finest portions of our State, and was plundering its inhabitants and subjecting them to every imaginable ins"ult and indignity. Our people there, unprotected as they necessarily were at the time, were flying before the" ruthless invader, who boastingly threatened Harrisburg and even Philadel phia itself. And yet, with the thunders of Rebel cannon almost ringing in their ears, the Copperhad conclave sat in the capital, and closed it3 sessions without uttering one word of encouragement for the Government, or one syllable of con demnation against the Rebels. On the contrary, the member of that Convention, with others of like ilk, boldly coined aud circulated the lie, that there waa "not a Rebel in the State," and that the report of the invasion was "a mere fabrication and ruse to get troops to carry on the nigger war," and the Copperhead orgau of Ebcnsburg, namely, the Dcm. it Stat., cried out,-: "Doq't be alarmed! it is only a big scare !" Our readers will remember ome of the shameless efforts that were made to induce men not to respond to the call for troop in that trying period; and and they will "remember, too, the long face3 worn by the Copperheads wheu General Meade and hi) noble army actually found the Rebels ilU the State," and gave theia a thrashing on the glorious battle-field ol Gettysburg. After Governor Curtiu sent hi special message to the legislature, declining to be a candidate for re-election, the Copper heads vainly supposed that he was "shelved," aud entirely out of their way. With their accastomed hypocrisy, they set up a piteous cry in his behalf; they opoke in the highest terms of him and his official acts; and said he had been victim ized by the National Administration. In the meantime, they devoted themselves to the abuse- and vilification of such other Union men as they regarded prominent aspirants for the G ubernatorial nomination. But when the People made themselves heard through their representatives at Pituburg, and in defia 'i: the often and publicly expre " af Governor Curtiu, again -ma . jr standard- bearer, then indes, " seemed to coaio over the dream ot-tno Copperheads. They at once began to writhe and show their fangs, and from that time until the clos ing of the polls were continually snapping and biting, aud spitting their poison at Tc3idnte and his supporters. They charged Governor Curtia with imbecility in the management ofour State affairs, and called him the errand-boy of the Admin istration at Washington. They denounced every measure of that Administration, and sought to fix upon him tho responsibility. They complained of theTax law publish ed lying statements purporting to hhow the proportion that ur own and other counties in the State would have to pay cf the National Debt and told tho ignorant that, in the event of Curtin's election, they would be utterly, ruined. They denounced the Conscription act as a base usurpation compared it to the highway man's plea, "your life or your money" aud publicly proclaimed that, if Curtin should be elected, another Draft wculd immediately be ordered. They made a great ado about the liberty of speech and of the Press, but they were careful to con ceal the fact, that, in all well-regulated Governments these rights are subject to certain limitations, and that individuals should always beheld responsible for their perversion or abuse. They clamored about "illegal arrests," and pointed to the Traitor Vallaudigham, as a victim aud fleave'n save the mark "ainartyr." They told the people, in the most solemn lan guage imaginable, that, if Curtin should succeed, all their great liberties and privileges of speech, of the Press, and of the Ballot would be forever gone. Some of the Copperhead orators in this town eutertained the most doleful opinions that they would never again be permitted d vote at any election. Others indeed, in their harangues to the ignorant, pro claimed with the most touching pathos, that they did not know what moment they might be arrested and imprisoned in some dark dungeon.' .It is a question whether thi3 -community, or the cause of Liberty cither, would have suffered ' much had some of these direful apprehensions come true. It was by this sort of lying clap-trap, and through the agency of the traitorous order of the Golden Circle, that the Copperheads hoped to carry the late elec tion in this State. They fancied, more over, that they iiad done a sharp thing in their Convention, by thrusting aside such open-mouthed blathering Secessionists as Witte and Clymer, and taking a man of "character," who, while bo was known to them to be "all sound on the goose," had publicly said but little on the subject, and could go through tho campaign with his lips hermetically sealed. But in the wise Providence of God, it was ordered that Ihey should not succeed. Our candi date did not hesitate to go before tho people and explain to them tho true issues involved in tho contest. The hypocritical Woodward was unmasked, and held up to he public in his true colors. .The people saw in him the man who, when Rebellion first raised its hydra head, had given aid and comfort to the Traitors by a speech .in Independence Square. They Faw in him the man who had pronounced Slavery an "incalculable blessing," and who had ever been a faithful champion of. "State rights" the same detestable doctrines entertiiued by the Rebels, and for which they have undertaken to overthrow the best Government on earth. And last, though not least, the people saw in George W. Woodward the judge who had decided that the gallant men who take up arms against the Rebels, and imperil their lives for the Union and the Constitution, aie not entitled to the privilege of voting at our elections. It was enough. The Union-loving masses needed nothing more to convince them of the disloyalty of the Copperhead candidate. Strongly in favor of tho War, they steruly resolved to take the best meant to proseeute it to a successful issue. Curtiu had spoken upon the subject Wood ward promised to do so after tu:i diction. Curtin's record both as a" man and aa ofiicial was well known, and could not be tarnished by all the lie which Copperheadism could fabricate. The people knew that his pist course would be a sure guarantee for the future. Him, therefore, they elected, and Woodward they rebuked. All honor to the People! The e'ection over, Yroodward, true to his promise has made a speech. Ho has solemnly fuid that tho Conscription Act is vncontUutior.nl. What a pity it is he did not make that speech before the elec tion ! All the letters which George B. M'Clellan, and other iugrates liko him, could have written in his behalf, would not have saved im from being beaten worse than Vallaudigham himself I We have thua taken a glance a mere glance at Copperheadism as it has disrdaved itself iu 6ur count v and State. There are maiy more things connected with it upon which it w.;ght m t be unprofitable to dwell. Wemight f.r instance tel how, at first, they boasted that the Union army was ali.tost entirely made up of their political friends, and yet how careful ihey Ueu have to oppose tvt rv project which might b.t the soldier have a voice in cur elections. We ntiuht speak, too, of the TkiJy artilite which they have employed to get Union men into the army, and of the commutation money they have exf ended to keep their own men at heme ; how, in short, they Lse labored to get the Union men to do the fighting and the Copperheads the voting. Ail these cr.d more things we might speak cf at length, but time and sp:ice forbid that we should do so now. "We have, perhaps, already trespassed too much upon our readers. We can only pay, in cuuelu-ion, that we are diametrically oppoed to Coppehead isui. We regard the leaders of that vile organization as worse, if possible, than the Rebels themselves, for they are possessed of the same traitorous principles, end have not the manliness to fight for them. It i- idle to mince matters with such men. The threats which some of them havs recently made against us have but served to increase our contempt for them. " The tide which has set in for the Uidon is and will be irresistible. It has already swept nearly every Northern State ; it will swetp the country next November. The Cop perheads and their "rotten cause will go down with Jeff DavU and the Rebellion-, and their memories will live only to ba execrated by loyal millions yet in the womb of futurity. - - C.Thc brief campaign of the Army of the Potomac is over. Having success fully crossed the Rapidan, driven Lee back upon the Orange and Alexandria road, fought one brisk battle on our left wing, and nearly used up their limited supply of rations and forage, a'council of war was held, at which it was coucludcd that a return to tho old camping-ground was dictated by every aspect of the case. The main reasons for this course arc these : Short rations and difficulty of bringing up more; the enemy strongly intrenched in a position which could not be carried iu any event without. great loss; very cold weath er, making it certain that our wounded, in case of an assault, would suffer and die by hundreds before they could be' cared for. These facts led to tho order for retreat." There was no fighting not even a skirmish ; and the entire army recrossed the river with all its trains intact. rsy Gcu. John C. Breckinridge is re ported killed in the late battle at.Chatta nooga. It is to be hoped ho has gone to heaven. SyTho President has been' suddenly taken quito ill again. I'rofllablo Investment!. The Philadelphia Xirtlt American elvtj some excellent advice to those who to invest money. It is well for a!l who are in fuuds to heed the counsel ; "Though money has been temporarily, scarce, capital continues abundant; ard the recent tumble in the stock niarlet has brought capitalists toa realizing s0!ig(J cf the unreliable charaetftrjof many of tho securities dealt iu. It is greatly to th9 credit ot the Government that its ban? oc all the securities daily dealt iu on U19 market, have maintained their integrity of price better than almost anything e!s2.- Its Five-Twenty year six per c-rut. loan the interest 011 which is promptly paid l gold, has been subscribed to, all throu'a the pressure in the money market, at an average of more than two . millions pej day. And what isnottke least gratifying fact in connection with the daily Un subscriptions t j this popular loan, scarcjy any of it is relumed to the market fjr sale. It is taken for investment, and 13 held with unfaltering cot;5denc.'j in j-j reliability. Aud why should it not be? It is seen that the Government now, aftcj two years of the most gigantic war that the world has ever known, experiences lo dilSw-ulty in commanding the necessury means to prosecute it, or in paying reu. Jarly the hit crest iu gold as it fjl!s duj. If this can be done while the wir is btiaj waged, who ea;i anticipate any di2cuy ?ii readily accomplishing it when tnj ra: shall becuuedi' What tjettei inve-aitst then, for capital, than the "Five Twenty" Government loan ? Bat if any doubt, hi him refer to the statistics famished by the ceusus tallies of the various nations of the wiffld. The facts which they present will rrove the most satisfactory mode of dispelling the numberless gloomy appre hensions which are beiu contiuuaEy conjured up by those who are disposed tj exaggerate the extent of the calamity occasioned by our rebellion. A refcreace to the state cf most of tho prosp-rou3 nations of the old world clearly disproves such a position, and shows that the high est conditions of national advancement have not been materially aSected by tie extended wars iu which those nations bava been immemorial!' engaged, aud that a heavy natlouul indebtedness ha.5 not prov ed au unmitigated evil. "For instance, Great Biitain, Francs and the NotLci lands will undoubtedly ia conceded to rfir.ie:it the hir. est r 7i peiity ihut has b 'en attained by at y if the i-.uropea.i3 u:tious. And yet no caticis havebceu called upon to eiiiure fiercer c: more prolonged wars, domestic and fcr eign, than they. The fikct haj been, unquestionably, to incur an encrmocs Tiationu! iuu -btcduess ; but neither their, wars nor their indebtedness have hai tie fliVct to destroy their elasticity, uor ta ehci-k tti y''-,.H'e?s of their general pros perity. The r".-u!t wculd have tera cii erent, probably, if the nations hal been falling into decay, instead of being, a they really were, iu a state of uevflot nur.t ; and iu this respect .their case restrain our own, with enormous advantage in oa: favor. Thi'se nations, while undergoing the trials of war, were cp preyed by tho evili of uii immense exodus of their people, caused by the deiiaity cf their population, the impossibility to p.rovide tiec;:psiioii for them, the low prices of labor, a:;d toa scarcity or territory. Compared with oxt own country, they possessed slight rcva for future development ; they were settled in every part, and no vast territojy lay invitingly open to enccuragd enterprise aud settlement. Their g'-ear problem fcis ever been what to do with their surplus population, which, in its turu, has soaght new fields for adventure and self support in countries like our own, where an illim itable territory waits to be developed, and whre incalculable resources invite indiis try and energy. The encouragement to Le derived from thesa facts and compari sons of circumstances is very great, audio the mind of any dispiionate reasoner. :3 conclusive that the course of this great country is onward and upward, and that its credit will live uuimpaired to the end. In this councction, we would rkr our readers to an advertisement elsewhero vith reference to the sale of the Five Twenties by Jay Cocke & Co , Baukcr, rhihdelphia. rf CoDgress met at Washington ca Monday, noon. Hon. Schuyler Colfax, of Indiana, the nominee of the Union caucus, was on the first ballot elected Speaker of tho Home. The vote was as follows: Whole number of votes 131; nece?sary'o a choice 82. Colfax 101, Cos 42, Kii3 4, Mallo-y 10, Stebbins S, Dawson 1?, Blair 2, Style's 1. .,. MEW BLACKSMITH SHOP. JLl The subscriber would respectfully in form the public that he has bought outtlis well-known establishment of Isaac Singer.'ia the West Wnrd. Ebensbur-r, where Its carry on the DLACKSMITIIING business . all its brnuches. Confident in rendering entire satisfaction, he hopes for a share of patronage. WILLI A XI GT.W- Ebensburjr, Nov. 19. I3G3. ADMIN ISTll ATOll'S NOTICE. Letters of Administration on the estate of John HiOrhreys. late of Cambria townshij. Cambria county, deceased, having been Prtt" ed to the subscribers, all persons indebted to s.iid estate are requested to come frT and pav their respective accounts, and tacs baving'claims against the estate will prcseo them, properly authenticated for settle"0 MR?. ELEANOR !irMPHnES. ROWLAND J. liUMPUIiEYS. Nov. 12, 18C3-Gt. . E3- Blank Summon?. Black Sutr'' Blank Executioos. Const He's Ef!un., r t for eale at taia ofiice.