~, w~ ~-\_' The Guru.“ 12 published every Mundny morning. by "INK? J. Snnu, at N 75 par nqnum if paid strictly m annex—s 2 00 per annum if not paid in ndvunce. Na sulmcriptinn discontinued, unless at the Optlon 9f the publisher. until .u ”M 333 the phid. _A nvzknsu syn inserted at the usual rates. ‘Jun l’knrnu done with amines: and di~patch. 3 Orrxc: in South Bultimore straet, (lit-9311 opposim Wumplers' Tuming Extablishmont ——“CuymLu I’nmnsu OFFICE” on the aim). Valuable Real Estate. T vann mun... A; .\‘o. l. GREEN-MOUNT FARM, adjoin ing 1h:- liurnugh oTGotlyshurz,cnntnining ['24 acres. Land grind and hujldinnu new, ‘5... 'l. CUMBERLAND FARM, four miles 1011“ of GeltyußHrg, on the Tam-flown road, ..‘glnining 138 acres. Land red soil and the Wdingu good. , o. 3: A GOOD GRIST HILL, with 38 nI-res of Land in Germany township, 1} miics from Link-stown. All in good order mid wiil be sold cheap. _ No. 4. A COMMODIOI'S BRICK DWELLING HOI'SE, in the Borough of Gettyaburg, iu comph-te'onTeis. . . All ol'whicli'uill be laid on nrcommmhning terms. GEO. ARNOLD. Gettyapurg, Sept 2 1,1862. ' Dr. James Cress, CLEC'EIC PHYSICIAN, oflers his prnfes- E sionnl sertigesm the citizens of GeHys mrg and Vicinity. Having been "snorinud with Prat. Paine mo yeru'é. nnd a gruane ut’ the Eulrctic Medical Cnlk-gé of l'hilqul-uvhin. I um prrpare] to prunin- thx- reformed sys"! m of medic-hm. “Echelic” monna to r-hoow or so hut ”once we QQMH the best, nufeslxmdmost n-‘iahlc- rewedies- frnm nll ovhrr secnu'm u medical schools, which have hecn remnum-riTl («I Imm Ihe rxpericncc nnd :umfliont‘er prur li: 1: ol Ihn nhlcstHm»;rt'rxc.l’urrlHummus, mu; nim‘drd Hum- mui-o injurious, such n maximal-3', nrfl-nil'. mc-rcury, Mm: pullh [do u] In-Hing. .'.‘v. nth-1- in Baltimore sin-H, nppuqlc .\lx l'rrnufs Fudh-rSan. Vuluuvccra"anlu-anlh-tidmljnc u! (barge. ‘ [OOL ‘27, lfio'L National ‘Hotel, . ‘ LITTLESTUWN, - W; J Adam: C'uunly, I‘n. . "I V -lIE sllbsrr‘lhvr llfl\ihj.{ mkn-n the :Ihme F enmmmliuus Hotel. in prbpnrcd to rchhe uml r-ntorwin the tl‘l‘L'lilLLPllllliC. in HM: must. upprvn'ml Myh'. "iii rlnugi-s \\'iN he numb-mu: nun! Mi m‘t-nfinn nun-mining In :1” “hr: may Lu nl' him with Lln-ir [mlnmmgm H}: lqu \vui~ at "H lixmu lg- Mam-Hm! \\ivh n..;.1.-livm~i«« 01 III!- foam. ~m'l hid h .r In lnrnikhwl \\'ll-h Um (hniN-fiv liqmuw. , ~ "TM-VH-Ihllng i-x mum-nu nnd nl' tf‘c lust c name“, and l'u'nlu'wllf «nv! all-'ullu- Jubi ]. r; n-fimlumh m :H mnjm‘m'. 3pm :1, .2. u .\l. H. ('mn'SE. Arch ‘ Strq‘t 'Carpct .'.HKEH‘II'NH-—(D‘L|H)| .\- k RH'KVER. xx Nu :70: \wh S'nl-L '2 door»: lu-luw .\mm. |"IH.H)'J.W|I.\. urn; nuw rt-q'vinu; lln-ir FALL .\T‘M'Ktt-l'r'l‘iuglfdn um! .\nu-ru-nn ('AISI’IJ'IVIN IhLllIHfiJI'L' nll tlu- Irvu' ~r_\lt-:4 ‘ul '\ I In .Hru)‘ ~I L. 1'3,” "J.“ livll~'~A 1~. Thu-1:- ‘l‘! . Ingr'igwuugl \L'lgi‘id‘ln, “uh .\ ~picmhd 11 "NH”: '.I or " _ UH. L‘LHHIA‘. .1, ‘1 ‘ _ mum; Hrs, ‘ ’ . - . MATS. kn'. ‘ T'm‘ inn-Minn nl' purlh'xwrf uuLux u~ ii (- lit! I?) :m’ I'} I'll I: Minn u! ‘.lw uhtn'v. i\.~ \\'(- hn‘ :n-ql ~~llw-\.x].|~vu 1‘ fun whh \\r- v-r'- {aw-- I.;rml fr. uA-H ul \mvll j-Infih. mu! hnH uuL mud“:[withh‘murl‘zla m ('.\:4H I}! Yfijlh. HIKTIIUIA‘UJ. I‘u'u « ‘ E . J ‘ ‘ Threw Fan and Wiutgr ‘ u).(‘»"s._.\. N'UT'l‘ & S’JVII-Hc In store (I ”'1“! un- nnw ‘.ll'ng‘ :m vln-qp M II)" ‘ uO‘.:pl'7j .1 gum! mun-rid: nt ”1‘3”“ timnls, cou .~‘l~hug_vint hull-.\. “Ir-« 4 Hnuvlp ~Hx“| .H .‘Jumntu. Quin-IL“. I‘l'lwn-d Thnfiipnu ltll‘ll . \|]l|(l'n~, kw \lm——~ !I)l)|=,":IS -.:zmnr1-<, Salim-11> U «w-nuuuui, , T“(l"~.’-h‘n!h. Hum: 3‘ .'.‘r. tr \\hi- it we im'u- mu .vt‘v flinn u: hater: .\ll \\'- .nkkhi- un c\nm|n.n Uu l-«l'u‘v [nun'h King ci-c'rH n 3. .\. ECUT l‘ 3: SUN. ‘ .\m. 3 ISITZ. ‘ ' AN ESSAY . Read before the Adams County Teaché 119ady-made,,olothmz. ' l em, Association. , V Ennm: Autumn his nmv an up In: full 1 ‘ (KI up! my“ r .\HN Ruff].thin-:.mn~l»liug uf Uh r "amid ‘in “5““ ("in-l) , \qu clump, . Dru-s (‘w-h, ' . I ' 1 ‘ . ’ ilianCA'l‘lON' icérrxvriu. TO THE WELL;~ Bu: uo-zs (‘ofi'<. ' ‘ mam; UL" SUGH‘ITY. .\luulxvyJu'kvlS. , i~ , , . . . I V .‘1 p‘umkmm. “,3,“ I Fine \\'nrd Soonety is very cnmptohensive ‘. . - f shinxfilir int-l“. h... kc. inns signification. All the nations of this All viF‘OanO-xp innuulnctlilc .un'l Ilcm‘c up 11l 7 “m.“ form one "rent society; and this i: the n y bc-‘t idnhm-r, nuurmh he sold \cry . ’ . ‘ P - . \tln-prl Hiw I.“ A mil. 5 ‘ (livulcrl mm smnllur. and these smaller are: (Rafa-L.."; sm. 3, ldc'l. . |in their turn suhe‘hvided into societies still ' ' ‘ - "‘l'“ 'le.~s—an. BY H. J. STAHLE 43tia. Year_ ehe nor. 'l‘lll! BAflTILED DEMOCRAT BY P. G. FERGCfiOX They bore him lo 11 gloomy cell, And lulrrvd him from theligh}, ' Bucuuse he boldly dared to tell ' Tbe_pcoplc \\'liufwas right ‘ He (hired his single min: to rniie ' {igxlingl oppressiou’s power, To Show, by trulh’s uiicrbing rays, Tll7.- dangers of the hour. Théy talk-{him by n.lmimr‘s name, 3 And. with a fienuliah lune, * Hl'zwml un‘lm; hczrd a land of gimme, ; ‘ Such as on lrlun‘: wait , . Tth‘g‘dwgml Jnm from his; peaceful hearth l'yun u Ik‘bjml'l word, > ' ' . Ahhuugh the Vlleal man on earth‘ , ' Should b, we lnw! behcnrd,‘ ‘. ,c 3 Thu: he. a man aflofty so‘ul, \\'ie-Ming a magic pen, I \\'hnu word 1110 In oplc would control, ’ Ami sway the minds 61' men', ‘ I: Ly :1 crazy tyant's nud _ (If lihorty bereft, W ' Sgrurk hr :1 hnsc- neurper's mm— In '4l rk confinement loft. >Thl~_\ .\h'll him up, but could not. chain ”is free nnni fcnricss Gaul; , ‘ , ,jflte snx‘n-d chandler of his brain ‘ V , \\'usfiroc Ym'n llu‘ir control. ‘ They wuhl not him! the eagle {ho‘ught Tlmi {rum his mind took flight,; E'Y'm'c the lesson he‘hnul taught, Km: bar the truth froug'light. For tho’ within a dungeon dump . They shut him from tlu- day, 5 Thu)" could not. quénch lrmlh’a uiry lamp ’l'lmt h'urm with fink-10s: my. But, hurk! upon (he Set! of lifp, > What wulid cnmes I'rnm nhu'! . II ia't‘ie harbingvr nf ~tnfi',‘ ‘ - (if rod emnyguincd \mr. It 3: Nu- Y’ruplq‘s voice that Brenks Lilli-grim waive on tho Mt; II it lhi- l‘uoplv's trump that ghnkes Tlu- can!) hodx fur nnd ncur. ' ‘ Lilbup U 1): [mm]; 0 InuTtyl: hrm‘c, Thy rlmins.\vxll broken be; The People cmm' their friend to save—- I-mok up. than \nlt h'c flee! '( =I 'flifirfllammfi. BY 311‘s MAR" \RET E. NEELY I er seen, and countries which he has never ‘ visited; by it he is enabled to look back | through the long history of the past, and, judging from it, to,determine what is ex— pedient in the present ; he is also made to i understand hugnan nature, how ‘0 touch ‘ the‘ secret springs of humzn/ection ; it in. forms him What the wan _of his fellows are, and hgw best to provide for them ; it 'fits him for every field of labor in which he may be plaeed. His eduqalion shows him how he may work in every inglividunl in . stance to the best possible advantage. In l short,'peréons invariably wield an influence Eli nun! pligfl brir and b. IN I i' I ‘ ‘Resolved. That. Congress have no author it to'mterfere in the emancipation oi slums, or m the treatment of them within uni, of the States; it remaining with the sigma] Stqtes alone to provide any regula ti 5 therein which humanity and the true pollicy mix require.’ " ' eoplb‘ of America, ‘you have a simple q -sLion to decide: Will you believe in th wisdom of the wise, or put your trust in the folly offools? uWill you be influen cefi by the opinions pf Everett and Web star, or the unconstitdtipnal, rgvolutionary mud nefarious doctrinée of the ultn-Abcdi tislists—fimnfics and agitators like Sum n . Phillips, Greeley find Forney f—Pulriot (.6: Union. ' ‘ ’ —-~ ——...—~———‘ lGr¢l Unanimify.—Cdptain James Hughes' on airy company. in Camp Montgome ry cg‘st the iollqwing vote at the October el¢clion= .. , gamer, Dem.. - , - -.A - 55 allace, Rep., - -’ - None Slenker, Dem., - - ,- -53 Cochran, Rep. - - - None Barr, Dem.. - . - - 53 Ross, Rep? - ‘- - - None The vote for the seven] mndidntee would have been larger Ind not the tickets run out. ' “Theh’Demoerata all mt Jrzome, and the abolitionists alllgene (o‘wzir‘W alt is said the rebels no suffering for the waht of salt. The Abolitionilts hive an abypdanoe of mandala—being at the head waters of Salt River. ___. .--- ...,. ___. WA [Him nsmed‘G‘reen'btc’k 0% mar ried the other day. V n wppowf‘ho is n leg-. 1 tender. ; 7 ‘ wn @EMQD‘GRATH‘Q AME) FAMHLV QDCODURWALU GETTYSBURG, PA” MONDAY, DEC)- 15, 1862- "- iety, either'for good or eyil, in pro tion as their intellects are educated.— ever, the Education of the intellect. is sufficient ofitsnlf,‘f9r its influence may, , as often is, directed for the accom ghment'of bud as of good objects. This Inga us to tbia other part f the subject, (i that ib—Religiou's Bdu'uSion. Uhiis is what. makes agnmn truly useful ' jr'od and ho‘ly purposes in society. teach -1 im 10 abhor low, Hegrading associateg, u 0 who w‘ouid drag, him down to their viii: haunts, and qkstroy‘fij‘iih, soul and y. forgtime and etergily. Buy, thepdu ! n ofilis youth pro! cts him ; he hears. r n‘ps, a. father’s préyer, or sees a moth tears, (though 'manmeiles distant they 1 be.) An inward Y‘oicg of early instruc i whispé‘rg, “Go nah in the path of evil .- ifzix'nitood and Appre wl ; nml may lhcclloicest blessings (le ull upon in in all its forms, cspcczuln'y the ; "3““ Sulmnl System. IE NEGRO QUESTION—~EVERETT I ' AND WEBSTER. ‘ ’h‘on .'tht- Dmnocratic doctrine of non; rl‘crintc v'vith the imtitutinn of clavory, is exists under the local laws ol‘lnthe as, is endorsed by such eminent men Iliclwnrtl Ewen-Mt and Dunio'l Webster. i lars, statesmz‘n and patriots, surely the I fanaticism V“! the ilay, that seeks to ill t the rckisting terfihle war from its le mme plll‘l'NJ‘t-F‘ the maintenance of the hutitution nml the restoration of the U ,n, amlv make it a V‘t'ar for unconstitutional ancipation only, hpiould pause and re lsitlor" the policy it has. adopted. Or, [a are indeed arrivkd at that degree of , try that jscorns nilike’ the opinions of Iwise and good. and the counsels of ly., prudence and! patiiotism ? ‘_ IVhen such men he :EVfrott and W'ebster ink, it is the duty of the nation to listen. living voice 01' Everett, hisfl-v; and ill-10 words, and the voiceerf Webster, nq above the eat! that covers his mortal niins, is worth indxre to the American ple today than all‘lhe harangties of :1 'er and Phillips; than all the rude and tsfilwmnus pulpit Qrations of ’Beecher l Cheever. than all the Whole gang of tali‘tien radicals hate utterell for twenty 4F pus't, or can utter in a centuryto . :3 and it would be well for the nation, ll for the ”people “tho compose the na ' ,‘Twell for themselves. if the President } llis Cahinctwould ‘lhear and heéd them. 11 iresponse to‘an invitation to Edward rétt to‘speak at alSeymour ratification eting in Ntew Yorkl he writes: ' ‘I hm heart and so I with you in (heat;- tsyou have in viev'ie Enough of treas -. and blood have ‘ en spent qun the rd question. I am; fully pol-sun ed‘that - upnwiue and untimely agitation of this {it‘bh gives étrsngth lto the rebellion. and l Cost million’sot‘ treasure and thousands lines; and that there is no hope t'orany ng else but'to restore the Union as it - and the Constitution as it is. That all rts for anything 9 a must 9nd in abor , anarchy and diailution." \ zuiiel Webster, in In letter to Mr. Peck ed January 11, 1&38, (correspondence .2, page 31,) says: ‘1 concur entirelylin thewmlution of - Home of Repretehtatives, paused as lying March, 1790, a! a calm ant? dispu- nnle period of our political hisbor .- nt resolution is in the following wordys: “nun: ls melanin!» mu. ruvun.” { ‘ LETTER l FROM EX-GOV. BIGLER. _‘__ . . Cut} «nun, Pan, I . November 15!. 1862. I My Dun Sl}: 11? reply'm) your favor of the 30th ult., I havf to say that you have been righdtlyl' inform d.’ I do not. intend to be a can it ate for United States Senator at tbecoming electiln, and ham acupress ed myself to frjendslon allptoperoccnsious. I have a number of isthmus, puhlic'and pri vate. for thispours one (if which is thut the Betstern {And No thern ‘sections of the State, make special llaitn to theSenntor,ut. 31' iih§"‘&£?¥§fefih "$323 “2.3311311? reasonably clnim b th for 50' long a terni. The other questio you ask, “what. cqn be done to save the gountry,’ is not 56 fend ily 'ansvéerad. The [#lqu response )8, God knows. Few’of our )est thinkers seem to :the any clear View} on the tlnbstion; and it i 4 not even certain lmt. the Admxmstmtion at. \\'ashingtnn has nfi‘well defined policy to that end. I have 52mg thoughts on the subject. which i do nbt hesiltate mlgive you. ’l‘heyvmny seem to y ucruae. am on some point: even npvel atul startling; but. they are the result, of so: 0 reflection. The sword is the duly agency at work!— But the sword canndt do all. ‘ Itls nnugent of‘(le~truction. It a n tear down but enn not build up.. It m. v olnwtise and silence the rebels in the fivl l; but it cannot. make nnnion nf Shut-s; i c.|nnut. re~torq confi dl-nce and Fraternity? amongst a people“: - trungod :unrl:lliesl|:lt I from each other. if tlm wan-wm'nguinat aneleatlers in the South nnly, as mamv'dt the beginim: Supposed. thou the nvord migllt put them down and the mugsgs could return to their allegianqé. Bflt the conflxct (111'in out tol be With the whole mass of the p ople within thélrevult ed States. old and y ling, male and fem'ale, numbering many. xfiillinns?’ Withuuch a power, sooner or I. tten we shn‘llghnve to treat and negotiate. lec swnnl alone will never refitoro (Ins pepl to the,Ulfion. ‘ , You “ell know hatl whon the presfint mluniitios monuced thé nation, [wan for ppncoful [ileum to V'e_r§ the blow. The!) mu- 1:: Pwnt ‘sufi‘erin 's :lan sacrificeslcnuld have bt‘i‘ll :Lj'vnidwl and 31s I bylieve the unityol 0.110 95.1 th pr served [bx-generations. without the‘sacrifice of principle or honor. or conwionce‘on ojl‘l (~. side; pnmipn, pre jurllcn and l'njmticlsl 1 only Wollld llpve been required to give way; and I Still Hunk. nay. lum sure that othe moans besidb warpre neoeisnry to snvg m r cuunny-oqr wliole counh-y—frdm preadnt.,ujflict_idns and-im 'pemling min. I ’ I ' . , I kncw’ how easy t isto fxdk about war and cgrnngo; about trateaic positinns and brilliant victories; in out. the prpmpt suhju- gation offbefloqlh . the North: eyep how pleasant it may be I. some to float) in the comnmn current of- achemént:l‘nr'l'pusiion ;, andmpm-ially how u plcmnnt, if notunsnfe it is to stem 111 i: 2 commmif it be no who would render h “ country a substantial service must do-this Ilc muat look at tlio “hole work< lwl‘ore’ , and strike for the right rcgnrdless ofc mor’or cou~eqrwnces to himseif personall . We hallo had wnr for eighteen months the like ol‘which the world has seldom 'itnossed . before. To sus’tnin which a nztti nul debt of startling magnitude, which n ust lmngover'postcrity long into the l'uture.§h:ts already been crea tml, and more than! n quartcr of ,a million oi'invnluahle lives sicrificed‘on the Union side alone. in mlditi n to thomnny thous nn-is that have bee ' crippled or diseased for life: and yet bull little. if any substan; tinl progress has bot-n mmer in the good work ot're-Pstahlishing the Union, or even of maintaining th‘e- ederal authority, with in the rovoltcd Stat s. “as not than, the expm-iment of war, .9 a means ot‘e trim timz lii-£3 country iro' its present‘depl rahlo condition. been alr dy tested —tcs ed at least to such an ax! tas to prove itsgfutili ty unaided by other ‘enns. ’ _ I i It was a happy th nuhtof Preside tLin cnln. expressed in h s Insugurnl,'tharl“if we wmlt to war we co ld not fight at ays; ' and whom-after in ich less 'on both sides, ‘,and no gain on outfit-you cease fig ting, 'the identical old q . stions as to to ms of intcrcourse are nguiq upon you. 'l'his’pxo— phetic and highly significant sentiment sliows that even Mr. .incoln, before the war began, anticipated t 10 time, in cmofitdid _hegiu, when it won be necessary to put 'the‘sij'ord to rest, least for a season, in ’order to resume the identical-old questions ‘ about intercourse arid settlement. It does not seem to have 0 urred to‘him that the isword could do the ork. but’ that inevita bly we would havet ome back to theorlg inal point to camp}- mise and settle. If ; then, we cannot figl t lways, what amount of fighting is necess‘r to render it proper to prepare to cease, b suspend. in order to consider terms of onciliation. There has already ‘ been uch loss on‘both sides and no gain on eithdr,’ and whilst the time to—cease fighting ma; not’be. yet the period has surely comé wh n other means besides the sword should be‘iemployed in the effort to save‘the governm at and country. Cer tainly the object oft e war, and the extent towhich it is to {so should he definitely known .to the country. If it be intended to subjugato the States inrebellion, and hold them, not as States in the Union. but as conquered provifices, then the sword must be .kept in coltstant motion, and war and carnage must- bd the order of the day. New levies and fresh' supplies may b_e r 0 - erly raised, for it wiii require a formid’abiae army in each: of theseeeded States to are cute :md’mnintain this scheme. If exter mination be the ofject, then the sword should navp unrest ained license to deal death and destruction amongst the rebels, in all parts of theiri‘country, regardless of sex, or ago, or condition. But neither of these purposes. if pxacticable, would re—es tablish the Union . composed of certain States. But, when the Union is roestab lished, the South as well as the North must be in it; the family of States must exist as heretofore, else it. will not be the Union about which we have talked so much and for which so many brave men have offered uptheir lives. The physical triumph of the North over the South, in the field, as the North in the end my triumph, is not the whole of the task. The States must be brought together: the feelings of the peo— ple of both sections must be so constrained and moderated, that they can fraternize and live together. else the Union is gone forever. To subjugate the Southern States andso hold them, could subserve no good end for either section, and in no way, that I can discover, advance the welfare of the North; for so long as the South was held their lute of the North would increase, and whilst the North'so held rho South it would do but littté‘olse. maanwhileits material ia< wrists must languish anl die; 34:, in ad- EMOZZIM dition, such a work is utterly incon-iistentl‘ with the genius of our institutions, and could scarcely flil to leml’to their utter por version and ultimate overthrow, adding to :the calamitiesr-ot’l disunion the sacrifice of frée government. Conquest. ahd empire. however magnificent, could notcompensute for mph n 105 w. i Tolexterminate the inhabitants of the 1 South. would be a. deliberate emu-culntion ,oftherUnion} réndering its reconstruction l at once impracticable and hopeless. and in-‘ volve a. work of barbarity, from which the 3 Northern peopleiwould shrink in borrow—i The existence of: the Southern State‘l, and ‘ on some terms of intercourse, it; highly e‘s-( be'ntigll, nay, I will say, indispe‘nbnble to tho ‘ welfare of the North. I am, thefeforei against; extermination, and against the pol l ivy of holding the Southern States as con‘ * qhered provuxzea. This imun-l can be so! eg‘uily maintni ed on pur Aly SCifiih comiil-' . eratious fordihe North, which will occur to ’all. that neled not trouble you with their ‘ presentationmn this occasion. lam for re -9 establishing the Union as it was; or making i lavUnion as :ilinilnr a»: practicable, tlioStutt-u «to be equals nd to b? sovereign to the exg‘ itent the Sta 5 now ark. Hu‘ll to have and ienjny such: mastic institutions‘us it may! lohooue, and. ’u‘ere l in'Cfinzress, l hhnultl'i [sustain that. ‘ euure at war and that only, ‘ that would 0. early tend to the urcouxpiixh men! of tho: . ends; but no war of bubjugn. . \ ' V '. . hnn or exteummnhpn I know it fly he said in rcply to all this, i then let the outhern people laydmvn their arms 'and‘co 9 back into the Union. and all will be ri lit again. ' Would to God they could be im uoéd so to do! l There is no guarantee inl‘reaso‘n that: I Would not be willing to g M them. But do We see any iiidicatinns {such a return to’ reason and duly‘! lon see none. and'l expect to see none, so lonx as theswor-lis unaccompanied by agents to settlement and peace. When ournrmyweiit to Mexicoit Wi‘s ecoompanicd . hy“a peace 0 inniission in order to embrace * the earliest elliportunity forseitlcmcnt. In God's name.,l would ask, should we do less i when engagcil in awar‘among our y. the party npw in pow ' would nbb per‘mit them the real rond tions nml nlon. and (I t tlngre is I they would re better i has studied mmnn mt. pose, who‘can ol Ilificow n 1 suhmilssiominvolves :‘1 'tion to villit'h" theyle I; as thav have my menus , theefl'ont :0 gain back leeir passions ‘md ride, day be wifiel‘y nsi( fired. Ihem somp 115;: gmuml, lot complete and sulmtnn . ore we can e‘xbact the-m idea of ‘rformi . ina‘their and embtaciu the old a 1 . !e of the imlzdmron and h which these nt’zggmtinns 1 -snmc. jlt bot! sectivms: re we Img ongdzml in an {is}: and nhinhrin the U trthp seémlml Strum m, hat Unioin'! ‘iw-n why sclie thonfi fro I dedruw .gnod rolntfom ith them? ly (if Slides «gm n axiut m i mtlwmrg'u- on brethrrn ‘ every paflicuh r. 'ant I n we hal a i" their de ”infirm? ; fth‘ rs- lm nny' lflng. and (I no 01 Gavel-n -cmlctl Stdth éyehouhl in spirit toivurd hé Nnrlh. nt df¢ substun in} innn get the» people and that. nished hy the‘ sword,— ‘ of Mr. Linco[n, " there :45 on boll: aid 3 and no 'l3:] the idénticn old ques :f intercnurue 11 um," uI, Izk so to adjust ‘hem an to nion on an imberisbablu sketl,.is this A {war I'm the lure that those in_ authori lg also? ~ley§ certmnly Lemnll I nitnhute to thpm l he war it not for thfe U ‘lirected With oolp refer then it it thol most stu ! t hm even haenl‘pmctised | We all know; however. I nnyof itq pnrtisnns will it}: that issue: It might . therefo'ie. tq the salva _ , when the time for re ‘l. ifoverit should come, lings on this ppint taken I uld lik6 exceJadimzly to "Le taken» in ’ he North. |‘» Englunu, bdlweeri the v .eive all the States buck ! the terms of the Consti es the) Slates oqlml and i»: r-h with the right to have titutions grit may choose, Ito reoog 57.9 the‘inrlepen uthern likmnfedomry. It ’ng. as w l nsinatruplivo‘. | criny oft. certain school I have clnwnred‘sn zealous— or the U inn. ;It Is puin~ {mt notu"thstapdinz this nt intem that the Union lfter on tag tvmu of the I is to mbrace all the i of san representation, In of fug tive slaves, are ‘onstitution which‘ they or. B*t wen ,tho matin nd the r ognitfnnpf the lzx-ncy. mu uy,ofi them: in iur I'o nqe, wmiltl snare!- l uvenion to thpse c unset; In-were a rimu‘ry cause of I hostilil of the Snuth, lould nnt yield that avgr. ir the Un on what it once coln try this Question if i problem of the nation's l, LABOR ALB YOUIWAIT. : . During Mr. Buchanan’s Indmin'utrations when, we were‘nt pence, when we were ~un in peded,and when the administration arid the Democratic‘pztrty were trying: to re veut the’destruction ol' the Union. we iiad a great and prosperou-z cOuntry. Our com merce. trade nnd industry were unimpndal; we had It circulating medium of gold and silver. Everything that the consumer used was then selling at a fair price. But the Abolitioniste made a great outcry against it ——they would make a. great change.— Where are we to-day? a double price fbr evlerything; provisions at starving rates; cqtton goods. coffee and everything thnß' the or man consumes, beyond his reach. Goldxzind silver gone and a poor miserable rag currency; the. Uniongismlved; an im mense national debt: r: hey-y everywhere and the Diggers still to be purclmsed on the people’s credit and set free to compete with and destroy our labor, The heart hickens in contemplation of the destruction which has been and is still going 09- Would to God that the people could remcv dy it at once, but. they cannot ; they must wait yet another year: before their voice can stay (hi: ruin, and two year-s yet be fore we can elect a national and constitu tioml President. Heaven only knows what will become of our country by that time, but we must hope for the limb and be prepared to work a change as fast as the bellot box will give us the opportunity.— Sunbury Democrat. @The draft in Conneticm, has been in definitely pmtponed. We can’t see the point of postponing the draft in the Abo lition States while It, is allowed to go on jn the Middle and Western States. fiThe are tuning good Ileighing at Augtml, fie" and It Montreal. ~ , ”f“ ,or WOAEW‘ .Thr- nnlm- tram \Vuuhin‘zton fur the re icase of .t lnrun clnssol political prisoner. not confined in Government furtrewa, i» ..- 3 step in the riuht. direction. so” the 20-60? V’- Irk Journal. The people may thank them- . sélvm’that they have forced the Ailminii- . tration to this not ofiustioe. by then? em‘ phntic condemnation thrnuuh the hulloh _ Minors" the tyrnnnicnl an I illignl mans— ' um which the fanatical men in power lmver‘z - m freely indulged in. The Administration . has only exercised common prudence inde~ 1 during; general jnil delivery of the hnnda I‘etitl in; innocent perunnq nrroutml tvithnucr accusation or form of trial. Now they ‘lr-t t tobe summarily released. withoutlmin-zin-i i farmed of thechargos bmughtnknimt tin-m. 3 or confronted with their uccusqu. Thh act of liberation, while it thus adds inuult to injury. and is a virtual n-lmission of the' innocenoeol‘ull the pofitical prisonemwhioh' , the Administration is not mngnnnimou; ' enough phiinly to declare. 'is astriking in. 1 . dimtinn of the strength and virtue of our . Republican institutiona.and the sounilneui ~ ofthe mm: of the people upon the grout“ questions of Government. This genfimtiont mll prtphably never witnesa a repetition 0,? i . the terrible scenes which have distinguish-. 1 ed the past nineteen months. The wait ~ ot‘ the people ofthe North have repudiated the infamous “stem of government, which i their sc'rvnnts hm] attempted to establish : and the‘rebuke hMbeen headed by the men 2. who set themselves nbbve constitutionlb law And juwtioe. Liberty of speech and of" » the preu has been vindirntod, and hermf—i te'r will be sustained ngninst all who mrw'-l attempt to violate or infringe the sacred“ rights of the citizen, by the atrnng‘riihc mm ot' the‘people in the name of cousti u-_‘ tionnl liberty. > . I= I I= No. io., The Government has put its fun! in it' inpuin. A short. time ago with c grs-M_flour-‘ ' i ish of trumpets. it was announced that, neur- L ily a thousand officers wero to be dlsmlgsed ' \rm account of deserlion. cowardima. druln-l l ' kvnness and general inefliuienqyi. 'The first. ; {batch of numes, about eighmin all, luivoi‘ ’ been published, and amon the aresever'nlx ‘ «load men who were killefi in “little, wbllo, X in number of othgrs had already been honJ'r , ; druhly discharged on account of wuum'l:l or; I jsickncsu. This show: the utter con‘fmion . which prevailq in the munugomqnt of label 3‘ V’Wur Department. Hero ure uil‘icers gmw, { ‘ mi n5l cowards or drunknrds who warp eith-‘ : miwlain in buttloor incapacitated by «Gandhi Il‘ro‘m fur'lher serfice. I'f mialilken of thin. ; ,kind occur in the roll of'ollicorn, ponplo-u :will he apt. to inquire if there nre not. lem‘ 1 lol' thousands of privates on the {my rolls x 5 who nro pither dead or dicclmrgod from Mm, fanny. And ifag who pockets lheir pny‘F—h l {A lalunder such as this is a. crime. 'l‘hliLi gsyswm of arbirruy dismissnls mm the ah; r , mv‘ii all wrong. Everyza'leget (li-linr'iuont I! nlficer is entitlm‘m n gin] by com“? mar-1‘! itial. and he should bani; bel’ re being lg: 1 { .nominously discharged t st-‘rfice. There] . ‘ may be gross inefficiency among many of; ;" ithe subordinate officers of thghrmy, bums: :cnn never be.remedie.l by injustice such u‘, i [him—Reading Gazelle. ] i l . , l . ‘THE WAR NEW . ~ .i ' .The re was no‘ movement '0 importan'b 1. on ‘thc, Rappnhunnock yosleqluy. A dip ; ; patch from headquarters state»; that all m} !, mulet. and many of the ragimo‘ptq were on-; l glng'ud in building sheltvmni Eil’ preparingl ,l 'to go into winter qm‘trters-L but; the impros- { yßth was ‘nrevalgnt that the pmenl inno-gtl i lih’n woulc not be continuml much longer.: l 'Tha cold weather bay doubling OSHMjE 1 much sufi‘ering among the "tr-00px, several” Jdßathß llavingvheen reportéd Mam exposm'o’ ‘ ‘at the river stations. The ice in.the'Pd—‘ tomnc river and Aquin creek was forming’ “ ;rapidly, causing‘ much dllfioially in thnf ' {landing of provisions, but. notwithstanding 1’ ltho army is generally provided for Mela]; 3 J days. I .2 ‘ l A dispgtch from Nashville reporta n. haw" ' file foughtat Ilartsville between tho Federal ' ' forces. under Col. Moore. and ‘Mw Confedo-i - hates. under Col. Morgan.. The Federal ; 7 g troops fought desperately. butwererepulsed' 5 1 seyernl times, nndfinally surrendered. low»; ing sixty of their men killed and woundqf‘: r lon the field. The Confedemtos nubsequcn’t-E' * {hf attacked the Federal forces under Gum: ~ 11-‘ry at Gallntln, but were repulsed with‘ dome lms. At last hccofmts Gen. Fry hud‘r I been reinfo‘rced and was pursuing the Con} j l federates. The Federal troops captured it ‘ 3 ILu-tsville formed‘n brigade, consisting of‘x ‘ ,nne Illinois regimnnt, one frém Ohio. ‘2 ; battery, and a small detachmeht onnllingm? i‘. .Vcnvplry. Hartsville isin Sumner county. 1, ,‘Tennessee, forty-five’ miles southeast from' Nashville. v~" On Sacurday the Confederates, twenty five thousand strong, under the command of Generals Hindmnn and M trim-inks, ID tpmpted to drive the «Fedentla from Meir [micion at Cave III". Arkansas, but. were rnpulsed. Sunday mbrnin'; the Federal pickets were driven in, but roinl‘orcemant‘ having arrived, the Confederates were again forced to {all back. ‘1 Extracts from laterSnuthei-n mperl are‘ interesting. All-vices from the Rippahaugl ' nook. received in Richmond, indicate. it is! ‘ said, the near approach of a battle at. Fred-l f erickahurg. Confidence in expresied in the‘ 5 Confederuto army and its commanders.—— ' Col. Imboden is reported to' have but :4 skirmish near New Creek. Hampshire l county. V:i., recently, in which n Padang, ' General mus killed. The recent‘cuptgr H of Confederates in Western Virginia. 3y} j Col. Paxton. is confirmed. IL in stated tlu't i» seveml large veswh passed Charleston 0‘ ; Sunday. the 30th a 11... bound aouth, 3n; " hat» fleet. oi twenty vessels sailed {mgr 11mm Head n the Friday previous. Thy; destination 0 the fleet in uupposed to)»; either Georgetowm South Carolina, or Will‘ mington. North Carolina. The Federal. i‘Orce at Suffolk, Va., is unit] to be “131'th thousnnrl'. hni’ing for its object a movement; against Peter-burg, Vn., while the force at” Newbern, N. C.. will it the «limo time, it]; supposed, advance against, Weldon. 1 . ‘lt-is reported at Newbern that the Can‘- i'edérates intend to abandon all that pony tion of Nnth Carolina lying east 9! thb‘ Weidon and Wdinington maimed—Sun q/ TWZ/ , _ l. ‘O.“ -———f--—- FIRES. i aI I I A vaty (instructive fire 106 k place at anklnwen, ‘the county seat of Clinton. ' county. Pm, on Saturday morning maela-i-l : I The wind was very high, and the flames : I vvei-u‘nmf checked until two squares of\/I buildings were destroyed. including ”30' | Bulk, the Clinton House, Post-03km,“ i European Hotel, and about aixty stores, I officer: and buildings. Very little propeftyf“ I could be saved in the buildings. Thole! , is estimated at from $lOO,OOO to $150,000._ I ‘\w‘Tlm Orplmns’ Fun] School, at Z}!- linhnple, Butler county. Rn. was destro ed by fire on Saturday morning week. {llO children were mercifully saved. but the large bujlrling. costing $254M). wizh may“. ofthe furniture, provmuns. clochmg. to” was totally destroyed. 'l‘lw.scllool wan an (101' the charge of Rev. Mr. Peasavint, formerly of our immutiuns herd. W. deeply regret 8119 low. , WGa-neml, Banks lelt New York 0- Thursday night week, in tho flagship of’hil expedition. the North Star. fur "Illefiouth." The entire fleet of “autumn “7“th troom that, have been concentrated at or ~ tress Monroe, sailed from were 1m Thing day week. The<fleet comiswd of [0"]: steamers, laden with troops. and were 16- compnnied by two iron-clad gunboail‘w- The fleet is supposed to term a panic-mo! ‘ Gen. Banks' expedition. ‘ ; 38‘0“ thing is quite cert-Inch geoglh of these Northern State: will how 31 t. e um- whatit costs to on“ " 19.5,loyublie Wing“. > , ”3‘ =I MORE BLUNDERING. ‘ K fl