glut veitaill. CARLI.S.6.E; PA.. Friday, March 20, 1863. S. U. PETTENGILI. & CO., O. 37 Park Row; New York, and 6 State St. 4oston, are our Agents for the Ilcanto n those cities, and are authorized to take Advertise ments and Subscriptions ter us at our lowest rates. BOROUGH OFFICERS We publish below the Union Ticket for the Borough Offices. The candidates, it will he observed, are among our best citizens, whose loyalty, probity of character, and business qualification, preeminently entitle them to the support of all good citizens who desire the el. ection of competent, and efficient municipal officers. Chief Burgem, Robert Irvine. Assistant Buryess William I,'ridley. bre. sor, Joseph W. Patton 1 Willi 7', L. J. W. Faulk EAST %VAUD Tmli Council, Frederick Watts, Charles W. Reed, Vet. Itarnifz, Thomas Paxton. F. Gardner, Gen. A. 1411 men, JllO. %alliuecr, Gen. L. Murray, John Plank. School Director, Henry Saxton lei lye', Jahn flyer, hisp ct'o r, James Callio, Jt Tax C,,llcrt,r, Chas. Fleagir, Tiis~ire - oT t~rr fr;r~~~ No nomination /I N /, Joshua Fagan UNPIN LEAGt E.—TllO Patriotic Spirit Of the people i, now fully aron.ierl, and (.vprv where throughout the land men. withoul tinetion of party, are aetivc., in the mati.,n of Union Leagues. The one recently form in Carlisle is already in a highly pro , peron. Bondi ion, and nPw names are lieing con stantly added to it; list. At, die meetin..: na Tuesday evening last. 'nen who hove always acted, in conjunction with the -Democratic party came turward and placed their names upon the rolls of the associati , m. Patriotic: addresses were delivered by Rev. J. A. less. Chaplain of Ca - rlisle Barta.eks, FarnElocK CORNMAN, GEORGE ZINN and JAcon Es(ir's. The next meeting will he held in Rheem's Hall on Saturday evening.. April 4th. YVIIERE TIII: COIN IS lIOARDEI). 1.:1-! , 1 'Net k an appraisement was ;wide 4 tII elb.cts ul an estate in Derry township. Paur,hiu roan ty, and the sum ot two thow.and lice hun dred found a imitspaii.s iTdiehiii afore it had I.),en secreted. Now that the gold is worth sixty cents premium, this amount will run up con siderably. No doubt in the same way there are large amounts of the precious metals stored away throughout the country. In,iiiii.—Congress has pa;s..,l a bill create a m'w Territory out of hidstern Ore gon and Western Dakota, under the name of Idaho, which is India / .12 fir n Clem f the Mountain." It extend'.- ft: 4 om the I: :stet n boundary of Oregon to the 27th uteri has of longitude. covering a hundred nil twenty-live thousand siltia;e miles. The whole breadth of the Rocky Mountains, and all the head waters of the great rivers, are included in it. t'zi)—The Pennsylvania Reserves are still garrisoning the forts near Washington. It is believed they will remain there for some time. The act placing them upon the same footing with other military regiments from this State has passed both branches of the Legislature, and has been approved by the Go - rumor. The offices will now be filled by regular line of promotion instead of ele.ction, as heretofore. • LOSS OF THE HUMAN VOICE. —By the sles people lose their voice, at times, by colds, the bearing and voico is often partially de stroyed. Now, for a cold, edugh, horse nese, or Fore throat, try a few of Bryan's Pul. monio Wafers. Sold by S. ELLIOTT:Lt 25 cents a box. GEN . : ROSECItANS.—This patriotic and suc cessful military commander, has • made him self obnoxiOus to the Copperheads, simply because, he has dared to denounce their trea son. He has excited the ire of all the hounds . in and out of the army. 'Thei'growl and bark and show their teeth, but do not 'venture close enough to bite„ the soldier. Some of them have got hold of an anecdote told. by a chaplain, lacking sense, plausibility and grammatical construction, and on such high testimony they Book to ridicule and damage a soldier who has bean periling his life, de voting his timeThi gaining splendid victories in defence of leis country. Tho warfare of the Copperheads is as changeable as their _c_ourago.L._W_lma a_die can'iint_ba used with_ effect, tkey devOTe themsolitos To ridictile—,, and when that fails, they turn to lies. It 'matters not :What a man. has periled or what _he. itas_-iaccoMplished..for -Ttio- benefit of his countri; all is for naught if he - ventures- Word or . a deed again -A-slavery acid the up: holders of treason in the North. Rosecrans has done all Allis.- 110 has denOunced Cop perheads and successfully fought the Robeld. 'This damns him in the 'estimation of the , Copperhead Democracy. But'it endears him to all loyal men. Suppose'tho Rebels held Ohio, as we do Tennessee, lowa, and, Wisconsin, as we do' Missouri and Arkansas; Massachusetts -with Boston,-as WO de Louisiana with New Or leans, the shores of Connecticut as 'we do that of North Carolina, the coast of New Jersey as we do that of South Carolina, and besides Boston, the harbors of Philadelphia, Newport and Portsmouth, as we do those of Norfolk, Pensacola and Savannah; suppose them furthermore to have command of the. Mississippi up to St. Louis as we have it, down to Memphis, and to be laying siege to Pitts burgh-as we are to Vicksburg; suppose them to have nearly five hundred vessels, includ ing mote than a dozen monitors and other iron clads, and to be bloCkading the whole of our coast and preparing with immense strength to at York and Portland, as we are preparing to attack Charleston and Mobile ; suppose them to have an army one half larger than our own hovering upon every exposed point upon our contracted lines, while we by conscription had dragged into our army every able-bodied man, and they had not begun to draft; suppose that by unrestricted commerce with all parts of the world they were able to supply themselves_ readily with all the comforts and luxuries of which the rigid blockade was depriving its ; suppose ail this,—and we have but faintly represent , id the disadvantages ender which they labor in the contest.,—what, we pray. would lie the state of mind of these wretched men who load the air and stake day anti night hideous with their whinings and croak ings ? Would not their knees smite with fear and their voices fail them? The condition in IA hieh we have for illus tration imagiloqi ourselves, is really not so 141 as that in which the rebels are to-day. And yet, craven-hearted tacit are found, who tell us that we must give up, that it is of no use to push on, that we must confess that we ueh oleo Hot ashainua to walk. about Ott , rireels 1011 till them.seivei American descend..nti revolt' wary heroes. What a descent, indeed! Away with the lolly, or worse than folly, that they talk. See the brave with that has laani done already. Sie our giitherit g busts haugin: , like clouds o f d es t ruc ti o n tiler Charleston :mil V icks huriz, and ji,,t about to give their terrible blows, and have new enura,e-e. Cherish a faith conister t at least with obvious facts, if you cant attain to cute altogether worthy of the founders of tl.e Republic. WEST IVARD James" Hamilton Samuel Wetzel, G eo. Weise, I.lfrel Rinehart, 1. L. 6ponsler Jacob Bretz ln an address delivered by Sir Rubel I Peel at Fa zely, Englastd, un ,the 27th of -January , lie said i'.4gt one of tho , “ who hoped, as nn indi voliod, to :-!ee the stated ultimately Income serumed ond it.depentleni 01 each other—for he was COUVilleed IL coarse 01111111 feud In further the en.anripat ion ot the 81,,ve3 Fur fitim t-dniple rea-en : If they saw the comm• (went ,tgain united, they woultdsee Ignin r to tinned the ,ttite t;ting3 whin;' exi,te I tt1f,.1 . 0 tde brett king out of [ht.: war." No doubt, the establishment of a Southern Coafeder.tcy would be a severe blow to the t.V.e..*.--ast tn. on thi.s,coutinant.-- -IL was ...Olen 5.,1 Nt :ailing!) , to southern men, before the war, that for thew to secede from the Uuioa would be to brink 7 Canada down to Mason mit Dixon's line." The Garrisonian abolitton ists sontetimes professed to be willing that the Union should be destroyed, because they say that in this way at least a fatal blow would Le t-tri,tlt at slavery. They wrongly thought, moreoNer, itthe Union was and would be ill the tut tire only a bulwark and support for slavery t and Sir Robert Peel, and we suspect soino other Ilaglishmen, fell into the saute mis- L,tlse, That it is au error the great and evident tendency of public, opinion in the United States for man}• years past conolusisely shows. That tendency has been distinctly and con spicuously opposed to the spretd - a - Slavery. The pro•slavery party made the most noise in the land ; its lea lers brawled in Congress and intrigued in conventions; but year by year 1110 nation quietly took more decided stand aganst the slave system ; election after elec tion, in all the states where the question was permitted to be discussed, showed a growing opposition to slavery among the American people ; and the election of Mr. Lino& In, on the one principle that slavery should be nb further extended over now territories, was the last and crowning manifestation of this spirit. Moreover, it is a fact that, wherever, in the course of war, a slave state has beet' diNeu• thralled from the rule of the rebellious slave holders, who constantly stilled free dismission, there a strong anti-slavery sentiment has at once become manifest. In Missouri and Del aware,. in' Maryland and West. Virginia, in Louisiana and North Carolina, no sooner, was speech made free by the expulsion of the alaveholding conspirators and rebels } than a strong party—in some cases, as in Missouri and West Virginia, it majority—appeared, op fosed to slaiery. I Sir Robert Peel shows himself entirely ig norant, therefore, of " the state of things - which existed before the breaking out of the war." Ire seems not to understand 'that-a great nation _can. progress in right.sentiment slOwly but surely ; that it shall determine calmly to do right; that it may hold itself bound by constitutional obligations to tolerate. an evil where it is; but shall , nevertheless be inflexibly determined aglinst its extension.— Yet.this was the mind-of tile.Atuericanpeople _ Lefnrn _ tLu_iva~biolco=aut.- \Viten a—destructivo tooth gots into a bee hive the Isis° bees do .not tear their.honey cowl) to pieces to get rid of - they..do.not destroy their honey to starve the :intruder; init.they •oarefuJly , enclose the' moth on all sides with wax, and lot it struggle in its pris on till it perishes of exhaustion. Now, . this is rireoiselY whnt .tho people of this r oountry dot ermine4l by the election of Mr. Lincoln to do with regard to slivery. They would not violently put an end to it whore it already existed.; but they wore determined FOR THE CROAKERS TIIE UNION AND LIBERTY peacefully to prevent it going farther, and ruining more of the national domain. Were they, in this, less wise than those who wanted, at any price--=at the price of the Union even —to get rid of slavery tit once? We think not—for the Union is a great . blessing to us, it makes liberty and free government, and peace and prosperity possible on this conti nent. Surely it was riser to hold fast. to the Union, and to seek, by peaceful and constitu tional means, to eliminate the evil which has been our curse and reproach. This was what the Republican party proposed to itself and to the nation. When the sinveholders saw the American people approving of this peaceful, just and constitutional, yet undoubtedly effective pol icy, they at once rebelled, and made nar on the Union. Then the American people rose to arms in self-defence ; they proclaimed their determination to protect the Union ; they will do so, at every expense; and will restore peace and Union, though it cost the life of every slaveholding rebel in the country.— That Mr. Lincoln in the meantime as civil magistrate exercises no authority over slavery, and as military Commander-in-Chief exercises authority only over the rights 'and property and slaves of rebels, shows that he thorough ly comprehends his constitutional duticq ; when Englishmen find fault with him for "not going far enough," they only show that they do not understand constitutional govern ment at all. LIBERTY FOR ALL From the .Iniriiolit Ponsbyterittii, we ex tract the following able aftiele, iit refermic, to the real ro-fults to he aceutiiltli3ittil b: - ; the sticee , ;s of our arlll3 in this rebellion. It argue, from that text which our people imve been taught to venerate and revere as a sl givcn sentiment, viz : the Deri,fititioit .I.ltt ticpcntlttiice. That that in s trum en t non t a i a .. 3 something more langilde and real than the - glittering gene-raliLies,." ,xvhieh alone the Copimrliead., of the present duty find in it, is 4i,riTofigrraled by this masterly Pro d ;dlion. ponder : I Youhitless the stron . Lrest aspiration of the Meat \°" rate it for 5,11.-.2-,,,crit me t. It worl,s Imv;ir s rroblern iu its wit .I.• history. (),1 his n o, tinent, its aspirati At is fulfilled no other portion of the rate or of tho human family. The lin WC, 4 , the enterio He, the in telligcnee. the 1.1.11 g -ions lei vor of this part of Ilse race have achieved what others dream of ; . 111,1 sit , ll for in vain. Yet here a most ex traordinary anomaly prevails. In our try. the Idessin, , ,s of Illwrty arc jus;'y re,r•ird. as desigm_qt her all races. The Declarmion of Indep-mlence is wordeil iii tlle mf.,t nb solute inanner. All men aro treat d ft re and equal. Life. liberty, lind the pur- , nit of happiness are the inalienable rights of all,— These truths are de( lured to he self-evident. EN.ceptions are not even hinted at. li:or what cre..lenen could..men_e_xpect .to _gain. declarations thus and thus condi:hint tl, SCI . ? llr !tow could they teutuno, without divine authority, to announce tis.•, tions to uhstilute truth? NN'ould it 4 thi it work have at once been t'ejoa I). , ,trd, if it 11101 claimed that a certain s.'null lee o f th e race on this cop:intent inn t he re aided not sulj,•ct to it, Hior:tti•di ? n ut , they were n ot tit is lie :Let. all they said. The t/e.• ,171 ‘,l :1t1).9.1 .111 political syf-tom is just and tr, ; yet ntfitr the ;intim. (ion of that fro , then. ba-f ~.y..,1,01:4-4.10,11.0-trt war with its principles, arid alp-olutely - ing these inalienable and sellet ident rights to a portion of the human race, •hrown pro videntially among us. What a r extras rdi nary spec:acle ! Slavery nestlin„.; among the rubes of the genius of liberty. el:timing and re,feiving her protection ! Stripes and chains fo r in,:ocent men, under the folds of the b 111- per of iceedom ! Awl the free musters the slave, demanding evermore that one of the chief IltieS of this ITIHIMIC, founded on the Declaration tft se let Hen:, Mahon:llde rights to all, shall be to cherish, insure, and extend the despntic pret ogat ives of the slave masters ; and behold them desperately and Outbolinally attempting the ot er.hrow of the republic, SO 50011 us it , hrt , Lillt• lo:erably cer tain that it c no longer be used to foster their tyranny. We regard our present ; struggle as carry ing out the principles eff the Declaration of Independence. So the leaders of the Rebel lion regard it. They reject that charter of liberty, unless you allow them to foist their own limitations into its leAt. The question now in solution is, whether indeed till mono are to be regarded on this continent as cre ated free and equal, and as possessing the inalienable right of life, liberty and the pur suit of happiness? \‘, hether the providen tiai distinnon, of color or race, excludes any from the applicafion of these broad and self evident principles? %% Theater this nation, the advance guard of liberty in the world, shall recede from its earlier position,abandon its advance, build up again the things which it destroyed, by substituting for class distinc tions, distinctions of race: whetlher it shall perish in an honorable through fruitless at tempt to maintain the doctrines of the Dec laration in frill force ; or whether it shall triumphantly vindicate and rescue these principles from perversion and nullification; give them new clearness and vividness, ad vance them higher in the sight of the na tions dud plant thorn impregnably upon.this' continent ? Disguise it as we may, the grand dri t of this war is straight forward in the line of the Declaration of Independence. It is a straighteniwz out of the-tortuous -deviations of our national course, as the Vicksburg, cut iq straightening the coarse of the Mississippi. Ever since our forefathers, at the beck of Freedom, came to these shores, they have been working out her grand designs.— Plymouth Rock marked a great stride in advance of the past; the War of ladepon. deuce secured another ; and now we are so 111 tnoupd, as the champions of freedom, once, more to enter the lists, and- in fierce and terrible conflict to wrest from proud and passionate oppressors the concession that LIBERTY 13 FOR ALL, and to write that con eession among_the,_worltEs_ptiliticaLaximns_ in-ineffaceable,tharaeters:- Countrymen! Beware how you bedwa4 this conflict by decrying it as a,mere fitnati cal s rife for the benefit of the black. race. It is for the black race, but it for him, then for 'all. the races .who may.at any period of the world,'S listoty be liable for arbitrary reasons, to injustidelaudi oppression, Our victory will be thenviiitory of mfin. Its deep Meaning will be unfolding wnile time lasts. • 1 1.0.. A wise man once said, Oat tho" pro per study of mankind was man,'"... According to this, wh9 will .".study the niter() of Jeff. Davis." . GENERAL NEWS( .Xle" . The Supreme Court of New York has decided that marriage under an assumed name is leg .1 and valid, and that the off. spring of such marriage is legitimate and heir-atAnw to the estate of the father who assumed the name. Ae-The tt,!w style of three cent pmdage stamps are Lein is,h,d. The die is the same as the old one, but they are pri ted in brown color, on a lurk, buff-colored paper, and are somewhat like, in color; the 5 cent postage currency. A tom, was introduced into the New York Legislature to pay c •mmon councilmen of that city, three thousand donors a year in lieu or per q uisites : or, in other words, to induce them to quit stealing. ,11. , ;...f - The amount of money to be, paid into the United States Treasury, for exemp ion from military duty, by the Friends of Indi atm, it is said, will amount to about two hundred and firty•thrce thousand dolllirs. Mir Mrs. Gen, Tom Thumb is II little pa• triot. She has a brother in ihe Union army, and at the White Idolise levee she said, if it were necessary, she was entirely willing her husband should volunteer. When Gen. Tom enlists let the rebels beware ! CENT COINAGE.—The product of the U. S. at Philadelphia, is about $2OOO per day, or 200,000 cents. NotwithstAnding this enormous product, such is the demand for " nielsels" that the ~upply is behind the or ders aleint $ r20;000, or 12,000,000 cents.- 11'hat has beconie of the clippers ? • Nrw l:nt - sTrityrur.—A new counterfeit fen dullar note on the Farmers' flank of _Reading ha 111111 k I t pperir:l9Ce nt Ynl:110 _l)hitt. 1t k altered from a plate. suppoied to he the IfarinerAi Bank of Delaware, the wprd snlirstitnterl in two p!ttres in such I -thing!iii , ! !mintier that any 011 k) can detect the deception. f,t:"..) — Fite Jraft has liven quietly going on in tbu,e counties .if where:lie tiniall has not been tilled by volunteers. Mei: ot eiasses ItttLie been drafted linetiiin. lit oily :L member at the ..State. Legislature-was- draCtilit, tool_ a4Lotiter, the 1,431',,,11 5,101.11'1l to take the nitnius Tr,,[ll the lie :tr e e Ills orm, has takeLL e, ate! lit) resistance has he -II offered. :.talt.tl that Ow irwi wan .lautti:.l , r, , ,: find \il l .;, 11,1 d n Conventi nt in recently, and tl• citl,l to ad anct• the {,rice p r cal IL pt r Il uii 1, awl to hor , t , sling iloa a liaA cent per lucancl. He 4, c .1 of lia6 , advanced in pro portion ? Is tint " coliihination Ni,.lr now said that nn State alit h Congre,..). to admit Nev,,, ta. 10 anti N bittedsa passed the senate, hut not tho liouse t the oue tur Neva !a \vonl , l pr :tidy have or.). tamed a 10 itttritv could it h a re retched in tune. Put a !notion to susi,end the laded to oltta.in the rept site two third:: vote, aud.s» the matter fell through.. :\ 1 r; the ar. 4. - t4rnittlz to ht• r.rr hTritt.'T Than th Fir:RT ; u t Not to their Ihihilitv to the ;to, the ;Arato rucellt It , v, amen to the new ssuient hill , osemiiiit thi ., in from taxation. But two metnitor- sti'ilitu to favor of it. Con that. that 11a u hith ertii lieen exellll,l, I y reit,ie ut the s.tereil (dlice, LIR! ullit:Ig!! !,-; ~Ig.lll- I .'llll. WI( )1 k 1.1 \ ---Tho tho en I t•gHt.,'• tnia, tilt L II ',II t)I Ili .t.i‘ttt‘..4_,;-mg-ati-a.tt .1- 4a will re kite an over former year , . by the lact Lila! ordinary sugar and ini.l.isses aro new rated at exorliitaut prices. "riIQ manufacture sugar and molasses will yet become a profitable business in this State, Cohotitm tiot.nirms.—Last week, ti.bolit one hundred colored soldiers, raised in the int,- riot. ot 4110 State, na,Ned through l'hilad,ll hia (iii their way to IhJston.. They wert , iir)t u , d• formcd. .As they martdied al lig, tw“ I , v two, they attiac:ed great :alentiml,l)eihg un der the ciuntnalid (11 . uniu.,..l large number of colored s.ddiers have also been enlisted in l'hiladelphia, although the business is conducted somewhat privately. THE Bit11)(:1:S THr. ()1110.--Tho ficult‘ about thel)ridges over dm Ohio codel by, Ole la hoe of the V. S!al , s Sefiatc to reach the bill. There remains, therefore, authority for the bridge at Cito, t irolati. from the Legi.,l lures. ift Uhio and Et•Wlicky, one hundred and twetity-two feet above low water mark, while there is no imiliority for those at 11 g Sandy, Maysville and Louisville. a_.3-ch vies F. Brow., (40 ernius the Sltwman, according to tie Lex' won Observer, is about to lead to the :altar one of the must beautif.,l girls in Kentucky. The young lady is very wealthy, too, pusses -, dng in lier own right no less than one hutalre: l "contrabands." Etb—lt is stated positively, at the Navy Department, that the loss of the Indianola was wholly the result. Of Colonel or General Ellet's disobedience of his orders not to sep arate his command from the naval fleet he Was supposed t' be aiding. A large propor tion of the disasters which have happened to the Union cause, both by flood and field, are to be attributed directly to gross carelessness and tlre wanton disobedience of orders. fP•.Y The Rebel Congress has adopted a novel mode of getting rid of the negro regi ments !hat Gen. limiter or Col. Higginson or General Phelps is goh,,g to lead against "'Dixie." The negroes, , when caught, are not to he shot—Lint sold for what they will . fetch—half the proceeds to go to the captor, and half to the "Government.l! fti'a-N`Ortolk correspondents say that the Conti of Inquiry, established by order 01 the Miiitary Governor at that place, bus, since its organization, collected some $:!00,000 Tor Northern creditors. TheAccisis 118 of the Court have given very general satisfaction to all parties having business before it. • Ito - secrans has ordered that all persons whose natural supporters are iii the'Rebel service, and whose sympathies and connections'are• such that they cannot give - assurance - of - their`loyal7,y;7will• hold - Them selves In remTiness-to go south of our lines within ten days. A. Clommrrnt: from the New I.l)rk Cham ber of Commerce has been,, in COIIIT 4111C11- 0011 with the President; to urge the issue of letters•of7intirque against Rebel pirates.— Certain Copperhead Senators aro trying to rirevent this, profess ng to fear a foreign war. rri3.: o 'Somo important.deci-dons in blockade and prize matters . have been made by the U. States Supreme Court. The blockade is de clured perfectly legal, and the, ships and other property of blockaded ports aro lawful subjects of capture. Copperheads--Origin of the Term-- What it-Means. A correspondent of the Cincinnati Gazelle, in anticipation of the curiosity of future contributors to "Notes and Queries," thus Writes from the very place claimed as tha " foxes c 1 ()riga" of this specimen of political neology: " Soon after the outbreak of the rebellion, the Springlield Republic, published. a xotn buta which the writer noticed th e radlesnake as the emblem of the South Car-, Mina rebels, and stated that the rattlesn,ke was a more Magnanimous reptile than the copperhead snake, as the former g, yes n-dtice before he strikes, while the 'Tatter, besides being more insidious, strikes you without giving you any warning i and applied the term copperheads to all the traitors and sym , prithiters with the rebels in the free States. Other papers Soon adopted the term, and it has become, very general, but some people (10 not See the point, and in Indiana, I see, some use the term copper-bottoms, but I can not see the point of copper-buttons. Cop perheads is a very appropriate Lame fur our free State rehelS at heart." The War in Mississippi ME:merits, March 13.—We hare nCWS from our forces near Vicksburg up .4 o last Monday tilternoon, the lith inst. It is stated that Al mind Porter had received information that the YAZOO C.Xpetiilion lit i capi urea Yazoo City nil destroyed the Confederate fleet between Haines' Wulf nod Yazoo City. The Admiral rims momentarily expecting signals. from Haines' Chill' CAtal. March 11.-I , lvices from Memphis to.lnursthy evcning have bruit received. An important movement of troops is taking, place below, and important results may soon be expected.. Vnioo 1 , n..4-15 likely to give us au advan tage not heretofore uptireehtted. fruit Vicksburg ar the stronghold lutist soon eaplin itie or do worse. r i qiirAmong the military changes soon to occur, we ma that Gen. E. V. SUMNER. is to take Curnsis 4ipitrttaPnt--A tikansas, Mis suayi, Earls;As, Gem Ct x is. to rcliey..! Gt n. of the Department of the Ohio. tu f 4 ittni-ner- hits hit cause of the E. inn; r.,St Of ditty May IH , , we lit he N‘ili zostunit. Itint sell in IL Crc,litablo manner. has many calm tricnil , in Carlisle, who have ev( ry c.inii.ience in his patriotimn, concag,, :001 military TIIE C(ollNti i/t C.—C1111:.1,1eral)10 ructiit is niroit k• telt ttirmirg crrtaiti driat. In :dill .irt.; to this s tilt, sacs 1 - t is , ou.! that. fur the pro; •cu 1111 tine (d . th • \‘...tr, an th :truly rn's l. Jon • next the tint of tho enli•ittylont of a 1:11%;, , n un‘wr of preq-..t. arniv will it i; nu1..,11:,p(),; , . 1 it . ti uttatb.2.r _ll_ l: i s i l iryy in th e ritel;!.; will :e-tettli , f. Therefore, a itvtitty t:roo,1 nunther will ti t (1 mitt he riti.-te 1 wirier the new ctinititipti.ni hill, to take, tile playtiB of thei , t legally entitle 1 to be diseltar , thl. dor his new law, each State is to receive ctel;t. Humber olinen she raiio I by .1r.t...t. 1 r, ,1 r tt) 011-1, pm 1 i. , 11 iii): 1)e hall as lip av as Now I~i!I ~ ~r.it.r h t~ it -... L-------_ _..,.._ Y,ll -. .,....,v1r.rt! Cl 4 I ur:.i-11 , - 1 !pd . tip. dlari. (.I)lurt:e ;1' WN, )both 17, ~t• r 11,1 : 14.112 :";112 : it mIC not be alto„4-ther iiitere,ting to the rea.ders of Your paper in the‹e tins-s of nati•inal and political i.otiee a few pt:.stioi. events, which however taut. :111`V 111111: 12,0111, 111 iy tot n dai!, lag •in the liitur, r t.u•vot our ,w ;lien that lon a cer t. tin lZ.ti l ,e;fr,nuihe cit) of 1 :al rinhur , In /1. 111212. 111,V1i ONVII 111 - L e fty by th e ..,•,,utyriptet of Fro !lowa. The cittziens of this town, as n general thing, are eminently loyal. .Nevertheless there exits here (a ii. 111.11/1/, 5,1 2111'110 does everywhere at this time,) little of the Copperhead chi no This cleme:it has, however, only ile yemped it.,clt lively, and it happened iti this wine : tine certain Saturday evening, at f e w dit‘s prevcois to the tiine id• holding the an nual election for town officers, a ineetiv was called for the purpose of humiliating a ticket, and when the meeting assembled it was cielipose entirely of loyal. men, and conseiluently it passed a series of strong tia`l tinuul r, solut11)119, 211111 1111111211111e11 In IV men of known loyalty to the government to fill the offices for the coming year. Among others co-operating is the lortna'ion of this Leket, were it few D, mocratn of the " Old ,lefferson:ao - stamp—men who !lave always been identitied with the I)einocrittie party, but who could tio longer stand with the ultra Democrat.- in their sympathies with treason. Ulu pittriiltic action of these men was more than Uopperlicalism could swallow condor So on the iollowttig Monday evetting,„ the citizens of our r :Huge were somewhat startled by the tollowi:ig announcement, publicly pluelaiined throu..ht our principal streets : • .• A meeting of all the disloyalists and Cop perheads of Frogfomn will b e held in the ptiblic Hall 'this evening at 7 o'clock for the purpose of nominatiag a copperhead ticket for town officers." It appeared that about men• ty five of the Faithful and unterrified respond- od to the call, and the number was afterward somewhat swelled by a . few dissatisned Ire• publicans who having tailed to obtain mom itiations•at the Saturday night meeting con-. eluded to try their popularity among the cop perheads. The meeting was called to order by_a_prominent, stay at•hoine and keep-out ofdlanger military officer, who by this time having received information that the manner nutt,tititne tinder which the meeting was called was distasteful to vomit of his friends and heing of that aceomodating disposition "which ii all thfugs nuts all men' for office sake," elated, that the intention was to hold a union meeting, and lie sincerely hoped that all pres ent of whatever party would remain and as stst in — fOriffinga union fiche - . Hat allis for h u unt eoiiitted Viafian t liis host, forMe wits shortly made to nfiderstand by his ultra, friends that the meeting was m called to for a copperhead ticket, anil that they could not be, deterred frost their object by one man though he were a Colonel. The meet , ing proceeded amid much oonfusioni- and the secretary finally announced the ticket as.nona masted. It was as all expected. -Headed by the famous. Military Chieftain and running on through *all a pretty fair . representation of copperhetulistm About this time somebody be.. 'gait to think that soinetady elswivere making ;asses of themselves; and then began, a scene nnparalled even in the. great Charleston con vention; and ending finally, in the bolting from the,,tioket of one party and the adjournment de the meeting "sine dic" by the other. Rumex' says that as no ono would become responsi ble for the printing, it was ngreed upon in an outside consultation, to drop the ticket entire ly and allow the whole proceedings to pass into oblivion. This certainly would have been; deplorable, and I, have therefore endeavored to gaiher some of the proceedings as reported by persons present, and am only sorry that I could not be present in person so as to have given you a more minute record of the rise progress, decay and downfall of copperhead ; ibm in Frogtown." ( - Town Ito eon* ITatters. ;Vie — Persons knowing themselves indebted In us, whether for subscription, advertising, or job work, will confer a special favor by paying up promptly before the first of April, if possible, and thus save us the trouble nd expense of sending out collectors, FIRST or APRIL CIIANGES.—Those of our subscribers who intend moving their places of residence about the first of April, and desiring the place of sending their pa pnrs changed, will be good enough to give us timely notice, always being careful to stale where they wish them changed from: Early attention to this matter will save trou ble and prevent the loss of papers. NoTicE.-- 7 0. being about to relinquish business, desires us to notify all Lis debtors, that they must make settlement on or bulore .1 pill Ist. " A word to the wise should be sufficient. Nol 1( I, —All persons having received muskets troll) Hen warehouse or Lieut. Halbert, at. the time of the rebel raid ititol'hantber, , burg, are notified to return the e true forthwith to Henderson & Reed. WATr IT ND JEiVELETtI" . STOTI.-By an advertisement: in to-lay's Herald, it %via he drift Mr. Henry ilarver, at No. 521) Arch st r.•ef' Phda ltdphia, offers an assort immt superi,,r .fewelry, for sale. Read his advertisement. T . -We would refer our readers to the :I.l\ti , ,,,inent of the - Rev. ,T. F. CLiutu, in rtnoth, , r er lump. This gentleman has for more limn t , m years conducted a private class f.,r ..ducati p of his own arid other chil- &en. I la% ing lately enlarged his plans and secured the ~erviccs of Mr.q. Joni R. SmEip, an accompliihed tear her, he can confidently rec,mmend school, and offor an excel lent home for boardin , _!•pnpils, in the family or Ili,: Hi y. tinder their j,int care and in struction. The Latin and French languages form t of the reg td r r 7 40 of §t otLer and the oinamental branches will he taught, if desir,d. at t-achers . rates. The neat quartcr %%ill begin on the 2Gth of March. SPII N FA S' N —Litao Livingston has p,!t , lrrp) I Iron l'hi rtleinliia with an immense stock of goods lor the Spring trade, emlTT.wim; all thT- new s.yles nt genlleincit's which will 1) , ; sfiM by the Ward, or maie Ntr 1 ~1 of workmanship, and at reasonable prices. Thnie in want of good, fashionable and sub stantialkdothing, should tall and examine his immense stock. Remember, the oil stand, North llanover stree-, opposite Harman's Ilotel. • CHANGES or LocA•rtox —As the gen eral movieg time" is rapidly appr)aehing, changes immong business men will no doubt be made—in tact we notice that they are al ready taking place. our friends, Me'ssrs. GREE , II.:I,I) & SIit:ALTER. have just removed their Itry Goofs Story Zng's Corner, East High street, near time Market House, where mhey are no v • nicely fixed, and as obliging and ready as ever to wait on their old friends and customers, and as many new ones as may (Ivor them with their patronage. DEATH OP A Youxo SOLDIER.—On Sunday morning last, JOHN McMATn, for- merly an apprentice in this office, died at the residence of his parents, in the 19th year of his ag,e It is with no ordioary feelings of sorrow and regret, that we announce the demise of this young patriot. Ile was a pupil of ours, and a more faithful, earnest young man it has never been our fortune to meet. When the rebellion assumed ,the formidable ,front, which characterised it early last sumtgr, he threw away the peaceful implements of his adopted profession, and hastened to the front rank of his country's defenders. But his frail physical organization could not support the rigors and severities of camp . life, and he fell a victim to disease, and in a few short weeks was brought home so enfeebled and prostrated, that after lingering a day or two, his spirit fled to its better home. ieace and rest to his youthful shade. BRAVE CONDUCP Ot . ;' A eifliBEfiLAND COUNTY BoY.—Sergeant George W. Nailer, of the I3th Pennsylvania Cavalry, was cap tured while on a scout with his regiment, by a superior force.of the enemy. But before he surrendered, he did such hero:o service, that we cannot forbear ,giving his own' ac -count of the affair, which we find in a private letter 'to a member of his family. Ho sap : 1 ‘ When "I was take ni I-was-mitt ing- my - way through. th - em, with my sahro - stiiii fast to my arayand my pist - d in hand. I forced my berse‘'lteross the road and fired six loads nt them,,killing or wounding two, who fell off their horses ; then dropping Inv pistol, s eized my sabre, and turned to follow the boys. I was tout by two pistols prose"nted to mY head, and a demand to surrender. I re plied by a- left cut with my sabre, which knocked both pistols ,sky-high, and in an in stant I was flying -at - double-quick after my co•nrades. nefore I had got far, however, I was surrounded by a number of bushwhack 'ers,•and, seeing no possible *ay of escape, dropped my sabre and surrendered‘" SEMPER PARATUS