grmotrai anb Sentinel. M. IIASSOX, Editor &. Publisher. I1IISMY. IV. 3. m. mmrirr S. M. Petteuglll & Co. . Advertising Agents, 37 Park Row New York, and 10 State street, Boston, re the authorized Agents for the "Dem ocrat & Skntisel.," and the most influen tial and largest circulating Newspapers in the United States and Canadaa. They are empowered to contract for us at our LOWEST TERMS. cou.vrr committee:. P. B. NOON, Chairman, George pelany, J. S. Mardis, George C. K. Zahm, Peter IJuber, Philip Miller. John E. McKeuzie, Joseph Bene, John Durbin, David Farncr, Henry Friedthoof, John Stough, Elisha I'lumracr, Lewis llodgers, George Gurley, John McDermit, Simon Dunrnyer, W. A. Krise, Thos. F. McGough, Jacob Fronheiser, J. F. Conden, John Ham ilton, F. OTriel, Michael Bohlin, Wm. C, lhvar, Johu hue, Henry lopper, Nicho las Caiman, M. J. Plott, J. W. Condon. Daniel Goufair, Wm. McCloskey, Daniel II Donnelly, Anthony Long, John Marsh, John llyan. EJ , .J ; The Past. Four years have passed since we com mitted the egregious folly of having elected Abraham Lincoln, and such four years may the Lord grant that we or any civili zed country may never experience again. We might all feel to exclaim with the prophet Jeremiah : "Oh that my head were waters, and mine eyes a fountain of tears, that I might weep day and night for the elain of the daughters of my peo ple." The rivers of blood, the groans of the maimed and dying, the tears of the widows and the mothers, the cries of the orphans and the mental agony of all, would excite the sympathy of the most avagc nation on the face of the earth, let alone tho American people who boast of a refined civilization. One million and a half of the bravest and best of the Ameri can people, since the election of Lincoln, have been ruthlessly driven ' to that bourne whence no traveler return?," or otherwise maimed for life, so as to be a burthen on themselves or the community, and drag out a miserable existence, de pendent on their neighbors to prolong their lives. Let us now, that the election is over look at this matter square in the face, and see what was the cause of all this. Whilst we must condemn tho hasty manner in which the South seceded, we have no apology for the people of the North. The Southern leaders and the Northern Abo lit ionists, both agreed on one subject, that (is secession. The Southern secessionists, not the body f tho people of the South by any means, wanted to cut loose from the meddlin" O New Englanders, who were continually harping at slavery. The New England men wanted to get rid of the South be cause they thought they were a burthen on the North, and they also thought it a disgrace to live in communion with, and be the countrymen of those that held slaves. They both, though they had the most deadly hatred to each other, went hand and hand for the dissolution of the Union. The Northern people were the first to d.-clarc openly for the dissolution of the- Union. These two factions North and South were as necessary to each other for the destruction of their country, as the Siamese twins, indeed, the one could not exist without the other. They would be entirely powerless to do mischief. The two leading North men both at the head of the Lincoln electoral ticket in their re spective States, and now forsooth, call themselves Union men, have frequently written and spoken in favor of letting the South go in peace. We allude to Edward Everett, at the head of the Lincoln electo ral ticket, in Massachusetts, and Horace Greely, at the head of the ticket for New York. We could quote by the page from these Union men, now, if it were neces sary, but every reading man knows that they are not now.nor never was Union men without slavery was abolished. Abo lition is their one idea, the God of their idolatry. The hatred that has been cultivated by these secessionist North and South, never took much hold on the body of the peo ple. The great maBsea North and South still look on each other as brethren of one common origin and one common destiny For instance, as soon as the smoke of deadly 6trife is cleared away, and the rage of battle subsides, the Northern and Southern soldiers will meet on picket as brethren and take ito trading knives, cof fee, tobacco and salt, as if there was no enmity between them. What have we gained in this negro war? Have we gained anything? Noth ing whatever. We were in a better con dition before the first battle of Bull's Run than, we are now. Grant has not taken Richmond, and we may thank Providence that Richmond has not taken Grant. The one contingency was as near happening as the other. None of which will ever happen under the present aspect of affairs. If Grant makes a few more reconnois- sances in force like the last, he will thin his army faster than conscription can sup ply him. The truth is, and their lieing Abolition papers may cover it up as they best can. our armies, in every locality is at a dead lock, and can do nothing, and no prospect of their condition being chang ed much for the better. We can't expect that men dragged to the army by con scription and led to it in manacles and chains are the kind of men to fight, par ticularly when they are fighting under false pretences. The soldiers all know they are fighting for the negro, though they are told they are fighting for the Union. Now what is the condition of the South, infinitely better then they were at any time during the war. Our Government lias united them to a man. The South ern soldiers will fight, and fight well. We have taught them to make soldiers of their slaves, and they can make them effective. We have got only the worst of them, lazy worthless creatures who had no fidelity to their masters. Whereas they can arm half a million of able bodied, faithful negroes, who will fight like turks, they will give them their freedom and a home stead to fight for, and wo give them free dom and starvation. The former have all the endearing associations of home and childhood and country and master to fight for, and the latter has nothing but a dis mal future of hardships and starvation. Does it take any philosophy to tell which of these will do the best execution. The Southern people are right in doing this, they do it on the principles that a sea captain would do if his ship was in dan ger and too heavy laden, throw some of the cargo overboard and lighten the ship in order that she may safely arrive at her destined harbor. We trust we will now be able to bid a long farewell to Abraham and his Abolition crew. Election. The election is now over, and so far as we can judge there will not be much va riation from our majority at the general election. We will gain a little from the last election enough to make it range from eleven to twelve hundred votes. In Republican districts, where Abra ham's officers and Greenbacks were plenty, the disunionistd gained a few votes. They paid well for them. Everything is now at an enormous price, men that used to be got for a dollar or n quart of whis key, were asking twenty dollars, and no man could be got for less than a barrel of flour, with some store goods thrown in. These disunion Abolitionists closed with these men on their own terms, and many a poor scoundrel made his right of suf rage pay well on Tuesday last, conse quently they gained a little in these dis tricts. Rut in the rural districts where the honest yeomanry held sway, separate and apart from Lincoln's ollicers and greenbacks, there the Democracy increas ed their majority. The Democracy of Cambria county deserve .he thanks of their brethern throughout the country, for their stead fast fidelity to the principles which made and preserved us a nation. If the coun try dies, as die it must if Lincoln is elected. They can say it was not we that did it. The allurements and bland ishments of power and money had no con trol over us. We had a good country and appreciate it. We loved its institutions and cherished its laws, and did not go wandering after the false god 6f Aboli tionism, and now if the country be ruined, we have a conscience void of offence so far as that is concerned, and we can live in a ruined country a b well as those who put it A ?ath. If patrtotisvn has died out in the American people, we can say that it has not died out here yet, nor in deed is there any symptoms of it being diseased. It is as fresh and vigorous as it ever was, and even more so. We will then rest satisfied that the result will be right. If Providence has abandoned this country to the keeping of Abraham Lin coln for the next four years, then we have nothing to say for the present. So far as we heard, the election in this County passed off very quietly. It was fought up strong by both parties, but neither went beyond the bounds of pro priety to the best of our knowledge. Smith's Mhju, Oct. 29, 1864. Fkiend Hassox : Being a subscriber for the " Democrat & Sentinel," and not having received -a copy of it for three weeks, I have concluded to drop you a line. Has Lincoln suppressed the paper? Or is some of the little Lincoln's in the shape of Postmasters purloining the mails . Or have you quit publishing the paper on your own accord. Very respectfully, S. KLOIIE. We have received the above note, with several other complaints of the same kind from other parts of the County. The only .reply we have to make is, that Lin coln has not suppressed the paper, but some of the Postmasters who are now in stalled in these one-horse post-offices are of the class known as the beggars on horseback." Thev, nor any of their friends, ever held an office before, and they think they can't please their master sufficiently well, without doing an injus tice to their neighbor. They are so sur feited and saturated with lies, that a paper that tells the truth is as severe on them as an emetic would be to an invalid. Of course our paper was never intended to please that class of men, it is published for free men and not sneaks and slaves. We never missed one issue since we com menced the paper only at the October election and then we issued an extra tell ing the result. Our paper is regularly mailed, and we have no reason to com plain of the conduct of our Postmaster here. Although ho is a strong party man, he is still a gentleman, and will do his duty as an officer. He is none of those whom the elevation to a picayune Post- office would put to do " man and dis honest tricks. We have steeped a rod in chamber lye for some of these Postmasters which will le brought into immediate requisition as soon as we can get these gentlemen treed We intend in due time to give them that attention that the merits of their case de serve. We by no means make indiscrimi nate charges against them as a body as there are tome decent men among them, but they are the rara avis of the concern. There seems to be a general complaint through the Northern States about Post-of fiees. The Attorney General, of New York, offered to send copies of his letters or send them open, so as the Postmasters would not detain them after reading them. 'Economy am. the go." One man advertises to " save your matches and temper by purchasing the new electric gas bracket ;" another to " save the pieces " by using his glue and cement, and another with a new burner, asks you to " save your gas." Now, we think this last ad vice the most sound and applicable of any thini wc have lately seen in print. We commend it to those who are yet discus: ing whether "war is right or not." Next in order is the saving of money, and that can be done by always purchasing your goods at E. S. Mills & Co.'s cheai cash STORE. Died, at the Poor House, October 28, 18G4, John M'Neel, aged about 35 years. The deceased was a Dentist, his effects, consisting ot a sett ot instruments, a watch and a few other articles are at the Poor House, subject.to the disposal of his friends, should this meet the notice of any such persons. Johnstown " Democrat," please copy. d" The Democratic electoral ticket of Tennessee is withdrawn. It is withdrawn because Abraham Lincoln and Andrew J ohnston, in defiance of law and decency, have decreed that Democrats shall not le permitted to vote there, unless they will swear to renounce the principles of their party. There will be no election in Ten nessee. There may be a farco enact ed there which Andrew Johnson and Abraham Lincoln may call an elec tion, and by virtue of. which they may claim, should the vote of the State be necessary to give them a majority in the Electoral College, their election to the Presidency and Vice Presidency. In that contingency, they will do well in prepa ring to leave earth, for their stay on it will be brief. Chicago Times. The Military Campaign of 1S64. The gloomy tapestry of the skies, the yellow leaves drifting to the ground, the cold winds and shifting temperature, ad monish us that we are on the verge of winter. Summer went long since, and autumn has passed its meridian, so that but a brief space separates us trom the snows and rigor of the winter months. So near is the latter season that, so far as military operations are concerned, we may consider it already here, and that all further operations of importance must necessarily be postponed until the spring ot the coming year. The prominent events which will give character to the campaign of 18G4 have already occurred. Those which may follow in the brief interval between to-day and winter will not be of a character to materi ally alter the present characteristics of the campaign. A careful retrospection of the events of the campaign of 1864 forces the unpleas ant conclusion that we have made no ma terial progress. If we have gained at any one point, we have lost an equal amount or more at some other; in fact, a careful weighing of our gains and losses will, we think, show a considerable pre ponderance in the case of the latter. In this connection, reference is had to terri torial acquisitions or otherwise. The balance with respect to this is easily struck. Sherman has penetrated to At lanta, and exercises a precarious tenure over a narrow strip of country lying adja cent to the railroad leading from Atlanta to Chattanooga. This, with the capture of the forts guarding the entrance to Mo bile bay, is all the territory that has been wrested from the confederacy during the present year, and this, owing to the pres ent disposition of the rebel armies, is a barren victory. We are obliged to use .1 formidable force of men to guard these acquisitions, while at the same time we are unable to use them for further advan ces. The footholds that we had in Texas and western Louisiana have been given up, as have the points held by us in southwestern Tennessee," all of which con stitute an area very many times larger than that captured by Sherman and Far ragut. Regarded as acr.e, the number held by our armies at the present time is very much less than that which we pos sessed in the opening of the present cam paign. Nor have we been more fortunate in other respects. We have not improved the ability of our leaders, the value of our currency, our prospects for ultimate success, or succeeded in dispiriting or de moralizing the rebels. Terrific and useless as has been our losses in proceeding campaigns, they have been stiil greater and it" jossible, still more useless, in the season which is about closed. The. history of modern warfare furnishes no parallel of greater sacrifices and fewer results than those at tending the march of General Grant from the liapidan to Richmond. The relxd capital is to-day as much in rebel posses sion as it was in May last, so that the one hundred and fifty-five thousand men who have fallen in the attempt to take that place have been just so many lives completely, absolutely wasted. From all indications, Richmond will, continue to defy our efforts for an indefinite period. We have thus far made no impression upon it, and, us it has leen able to sus tain itself thus far, there is no reason why it may not continue to do so for months, or even years longer. In the Shenandoah valley, Sigel and Hunter, have loth suffered overwhelming defeats. Sheridan, it is true, has won several victories, but, despite these, he holds less than half the valley, while a rebel army still in his immediate front. Our attempts in Texas, western Louisi ana and Florida have all been costly fail ures. e have been driven ignomin iously from all these States with enor mous losses in men, material and reputa- tion. Un the ocean, we have captured a single relx-1 war vessel, while at the same time, our losses in shipping are even greater than the enormous losses of any preceeding year On land, the rebels hold Richmond, Wilmington, Charleston, Mobile, and, in short, every place and railroad of importance which they held at tlie beginning of the campaign, with a single exception of the railroad and posi tion of Atlanta. We are forced to the conclusion that we have made no progress towards ac complishing the objects of the war. Such a conclusion may he humiliating, but it is inevitable. We conimenced the campaign with the largest and best appoint ed armies that were ever marshaled upon the theatre of modem warfare. We have given those armies ceaseless employment ; we have sacrificed their life with a pro fuse hand ; we have reinforced them with two conscriptions whose aggregate reaches nearly a million men, andye we have accomplished nothing. AH 'these lives have been thrown away, for to-day the South holds its possessions of last spring intact, and presents everywhere as deci ded and defiant a front as it did at the opening of the campaign Kever in his tory did a nation enter upon a war with as vast appliances as did the Federal Government upon the campaign of 1864. Its only result has been the lsof several hundred thousand men, the adding of a few hundred millions to our nat;fnl Aoht. and a strengthened conviction on the part of the South that perseverence will secure her independence. The campaign of 1864, regarded as a whole, has been one of the most stupen dous failures that the world has ever seen. Its inferences are, that another year of such losses, failures and expenditures will annihilate the North and secure the re cognition of the independence of the con federacy. The only remedy in the case is a radical change in the politics of the war and the administration of the gov ernment Chicago Times. Samples or Abolition ' Christi anity." The Boston Traveler, a rabid supporter of the " widow-maker," speaking of the party which it represents, says: 4 We have been waiting for three years for a slave insurrection, but it seems that we might as well expect a rising in a graveyard." Is not this a beautiful sam ple of Abolition Christianity ? " Wait ing to hear " that women and children have been butchered in cold blood by bru tal negroes! " Waiting to hear " that defenceless innocence has been outraged by the unrestrained lusts of a barbarous race ! " Waiting to hear " that unborn infants have been torn from their mothers' bodies, impaled upon pikes and paraded as trophies of victory ! " Waiting to hear " that fathers have been compelled to witness the violation of even the dead bodies of their own wives and daughters all these things, and many more equally horrible, this mild, humane and genial Boston saint is " Waiting to hear !" Is there anything on God's earth blinder than party ignorance, or fiercer than reli gious fanaticism? How jt transforms otherwise amiable people into demons, and with unscrupulous hatred it lets" hell loose upon earth ? It presumes to interpret the will of God 'as familiarly as if its' devotees were upon the most intimate terms with the Deity. For instance Henry Ward Beecher, not long since, impiously decla red that God had chwseii the Abolition party as His instrument to carry out His purpose, and that it was the duty of the party to rise tu the jiatr'onn on ivliich GA stands, and thence look forward and so determine its conduct ? A few months pince Oliver Wendell Holmes published a poem in the Atantic Monthly, in which he substantially informed God that unless he setdes this war upon the Abolition basis he (Holmes) wants to hear no more about Christianity. Lest we may be considered as doing him an injustice, we quote the lines which admit of no other fair inter pretation : I-iOid strangle this ruons!er that .-trilogies to birth, Or HiGt-k us no more with thy kiiyluin vu earth." We could multiply instances similar to the above almost indefinitely, but jieihups the most monstrous specimen of Abolition blasphemy is the" following, purportir g to be a dream, written by one Mary II. C. Booth : A hundred thousand soldiers, bt'xxl at tlie right of God ; AnJ Ol'.l John Bn icn he stood before, Like Aaron, with his rod, A slave was there Weside him. And J nis Christ was there; And over God. and Christ and all, The banner waved iu air. And now, I'm dying, comrade, And there is old John Brown, A standing at tho Golde.n Gate, And holding me a crown ! I do not hear the bob-oMink, Nor yet the urum and fife ; i only know the voice of God Is calling me from life. When it is remembered that this ban ner, now waving over " God, and Christ and all," was only a short time since re garded by these very people as " a flaunt ing lie." as "hate's polluted rag," &c. &.c, how strange it is to find it now ex halted in their imaginations into such heavenly supremacy I And yet not so strange after all, if we but recollect that it now, under Lincoln, typifies all that they have ever contended for that it is no longer the banner of the Union and the Constitution of our fathers, but the blood stained ensign of Abolitionism and dis union of white slavery and negro supre macy. They have a right, therefore, to exalt it, and, in their impious rejoicings, it is no wonder that they see old John Brown and the flag in close communion. Nothing could be more appropriate, as matters now stand. Besides it gives a practical turn to their blasphemous ravings to have them hold up a horse thief and a murderer as the representative of their party. Barring their stupendous insults iqo.n Deity, and their impiety in claiming to be the interpreters of His will, we can see no objection in their doing honor to their fallen chiefs, like old John Brown, even if they do shock the moral sentiments of mankind, and " rush in where angels fear to tread." N. Y. Day Book. - 43" The wheat crop of Minnesota is stated to be 2,800,000 bushels in excess this year over that of any previous crop, At the same time that young State has sent twelve thousand of her laborers into tlie field as soldiers. C3 In 1810 Judge Taney was so feeble that a gentleman, who had a law suit, refused to give it to him for fear he would die before the case was tried. This was fifty-four years before tho great ' jurist died. Gen. Meagher 03 M'CIellan Tlie Sentiments of a Soldier. General Thomas Francis Meagher, cj. livered an address for Lincoln and John son, last Thursday evening, October 27tL in the Capitol at Nashville, Tennesste! The most brilliant portions of his speech and those which elicited the heartiett and most enthusiastic applause from an audi ence composed largely of soldiers and Ab olitionists, were those in which he re ferred to the character and services of of Gen. Geo. I J. McCIellau. Here U an extract from Gen Meagher's speech, the effect of which was, according to an Ab olition correspondent, to carry the audi ence away in a frenzy of enthusiastic ap plause : Pronouncing in favor of the Baltimore Convention and its nominees, as a matter of course I pronounce against the Chica go Convention and the nominations ema nating from it. Hear, hear, hear." This I sincerely regret being compelled to do. for I widely differ from those who assert that Gen. M'CIellan personally is unworthy of occupying the Presidential chair. Loud cheers for M'CIellan Highly cultivated, rcfiued in manners as in mind, deeply imbued with a rever ence for all that ie virtuous, wise and he roic in the bistosy of the Republic, proud of his nationality and sensitively jealous of the honor of his country, I am satis fied that no man could bring to the dis charge of his duties of the Presidency b better spirit, nor to the position itself, ex alted as it is, a more appropriate grace fulness, manliness and dignity. Loud and continued cheering. In his truthfulness, in the goodness cf his heart, in his disposition to serve the country faithfully and earnestly, whether in civil life or in the field, to the utmost c f his ability, I have the fullest faith, loud cheers ,- and this faith not only re pels but resents the imputations again-: his loyalty aud courage, iu which those who do not know him have seen fit to in dulge. Loud cries of hear, hear The firm gentleness with which he has borr:: these aspersions, confirms in my mind the belief, that a temjerment so well disci plined as his, a nature so magnanimous, a demaanor so chivalrously decorous, qualify him personally, in a superior de gree, for the highest office in the gift of the people. Loud cries of bravo, Meagher, and enthusiastic cheering. At to his evasion of the dangers of the bat tle field, all I shall say is this that if General M'CIellan was not under fire at Fair Oaks and Malvern Hill, neitlter wa the Irih Brigade, (tremendous cheering,) and this I should have said before the Committee on the Conduct of the War, had I been examined by that Committee. (Loud and long continued cries of hear, hear, and deafening cheers.) An up right ard exemplary eitizen, an accom plished and judicious soldier, true to his men as he was true to his flag, (hear, hear, hear.) indefatigable as he was scru pulous in hi- work, honest and fearless, (hear, hear, hear.) nothing, I repeat, can with any perious force be justly urfi,! against him personally in derogation ot his claims to the Presidency. (Enthusi astic cheering, and cries of well done Meagher. ) For my part, if any man, in my pres ence, dare call General M'CIellan a trai tor or a coward, I will not stop to argue with him I will at once knock him down. I will answer such assertions only by a blow and an Irishman's blow at that! True and Faltte l'ropbeta. Four years ago the the Democratic party predicted that the election of Mr. Lincoln would provoke a civil war. The Abolition party said " the South could. not be kicked out of the Union." The Democratic party predicted thai the war would be one of magnitude, an J demanded that the first call for troops should be for at least two hundred thou sand men. In April, 1861, Senator Douglas urged the President to call for that number. Mr. Seward and the Abo lition party said the contest would be un important, and that " it would end iu sixty, or at the furthest, in ninety days." Acting upon this supposition, the Presi dent only called for seventy-five thousand men. The Democratic party predicted that if the war should be perverted to an Aboli tion crusade, the perversion would divide the North and unite the South. The Abolition party pledged itself if the war was thus iererted to furnish nine hun dred thousand volunteers for its prosecu tion. When the object of the war was changed, volunteering immediately ceased. When the war began, the Democratic party demanded immediate aud heavy taxation, and predicted thai if the demand was not complied with, the Government's credit would sink to comparativa worth lessness in consequence of its enormous issues of paper currency. The Abolition party said the war would soon end, and the credit of the Government could bo sustained without a material increase of taxation. The Democratic party predicted that if negroes should be employed as soldiers, the Government would be unable to pro tect them, and that the measure would lead to an inhuman and disgraceful system of retaliatory warfare. The Abolition party said the South would not dare to refuse recognition to negroes as soldier. Tha refusal ot tha Administration to