if r A TtfTEV SICKT ER, Proprietor.] NEW SERIES, Jtortjr $ raw! femumtt. A weekly Democratic .J-—^ paper, devoted to Pol tics, News, the Arts = 1 y >w. i I . aod Sciences Ac. Pub- / ■ jjrj.Ap-4 i ished every Wednes- y-jGuSfflkS "day, at Tunkhannock, ; -1 Wyoming County, Pa. / \ v .ffvfl IJ' * BY HARVEY SICKLER. Terms—l copy 1 year, (in advance) 81.50. If not pain within six months, $2.00 will be charged. ADVERTISIKTa. 10 lines art . less, make three ' four , tico '.three ' sis ■ one one square tcecksf reeks mo' Ih mo th mo'th ' year 1 Square l.Ou 1,-5; 2.25 > 2,8 i 3.00. 5.00 2 do. 2,00. 2.50< 3.23; 3.50 4,5C< 6,00 3 do. 3,00; 3,75! 4.75; 5,50; 7.00! 9.00 J Column. 4,001 4,50 6,50$ B,oo> i do. 6,00'- 7,00; 10,00 12.00) 17,00.25,00 I do. 8 00; 9,50' H,OO 18,00 25,00 35.00 1 do. 10,00 12,00 17,00 22.10, 28,00 40,00 Business Cards of one square, with paper, S3. JOS WOUK of all kinds neatly executed, and at prices to suit the times. Uusiiifss ,i]otiffS. BACON* STAND Nicholson, Pa. —C. I. JACKSOX, Proprietor. fvln49tf] HS. COOPER, PHYSICIAN A SURGEON • Newton Centre, Luzcrue Couuty Pa. /-lEO. S. TI'TTOX, ATTORNEY AT I.AW. II Tunkhannock, Pa. Oilice in Stark's Brick Block, Tioga street. ATTM. M. PI ATT. ATTORNEY AT LAW, Of- V fice in Stark's lirick Block, Tioga St., Tunk hannock, Pa. IrfTLE & HEWITT, ATTORNEY'S AT J I.AW, Offico on Tioga street, Tunkhannock, Pa. It. n. I.ITTLE. J HEWITT. JV. SMITH. M. It. PHYSICIAN k SI RGEON, • Ofice on Bridge Street, next door to the Demo crat Offi. e, Tunkhannock. Pa. HARVKY SIt'KI.ER, ATTORNEY AT LAW and GENERAL INST RANCE AGENT - Of fice, Bridge street, opposite Wall's Hotel, Tunkhan nock Pa. - DR. J. O. C:ORSEI.U?S, HAVING LOCAT ED AT THE FALLS, WILL promptly attend all calls in the line of his profession —maybe found et Beeiner's Hotel, when not professionally ahs nt. Falls, Oct. 10, 1361. T >l. CAREY, M. I).— (Graduate of the E. l • M. Institute, Cincinnati) would respectfully announce to the eitizcus of Wyoming an 1 Luzerne Counties, that he c ntinues his regular practice in the various departments of his profession. May ne found at his offiee or residence, when not professionally ab sent Particular attention given to the treatment Chronic Diseas. Centremoreland, Wyoming Co. Pa.—v2n2. DIL J. C 15K('KEK & Co., PHYSICIAN'S Ck SURGEONS, Would respectfully ni.n ;n c to the < : t*.7erts of V"y oming that they have I' . ite l a> Melw-opany. where they will promptly attend n> all calls in the lire of their profession. M.tv he found at his Drug Store when not professionally absent. J. W. RIIOiYDS, M. ID., (Graduate oj the University of Pernio.) Respectfully offers his professional service? to the citizens of Tunkhannock and vicinity. He can he found, when not professionally engaged, either at his Drag Store, or at his residence on Putnam Street. WALL'S HOTEL, LATE AMERICAN HOUSE, TUNKHANNOCK, WYOMING CO., PA. THIS establishment has recently been refitted and furnished in the latest style Everv attention will be given to the comfort and conven'enee of those who.patronize the House. T. B. WALL, Owner ami Proprietor. TfcnkMnnook, September 1! : I Q 6I. fIORTH BRANCH HOTEL, MESHOPPEN. WYOMING COUNTY', PA RILEY WARNER, Prop'r. HAYING resumed the proprietorship of the above Hotel, the undersigned will spare no effort to reader the house an agreeable pl.ice of sojourn for all who may favor it with their custom. RILEY WARNER. _ September 11, 1861. WAYWARD*S HOTEL, TIXKTIAXXOCK, WYOMING COUNTY, PENNA. JOHN MAYXARD, Proprietor. HAVING taken the Hotel, in the Borough of Tunkhanncck, recently occupied by Riley W arner, the proprietor respectfully solicits a share of public patronage. The House has been thoroughly repaired, and the comforts and accomodation? of a first clas Hotel, will be fouud by all who may favor it with their custom. Septeuber 11, 1361. M. OILMAN, DENTIST, MAILMAN, has permanently located in Tunk • hannock Borough, and respectfully tenders his proftsrionnl services to the citizens of thus place and •unrounding country. ALL WORK WARRANTED, TO GIVE SATIS FACTION. over Tutton's Law Office, near th e Poa Offiee. " Dec. 11, 1861. Blanks:: Blanks !!! BLANK DEEDS SUMMONSES SUBPCENAES EXECUTIONS QONSTABLE'S SALES Justice's, Constable's, and legal Blanks of all kinds, Neatly and Correctly printed on good Paper, and for sale at the Office of the '' North Branch Democrat." LIME FOR FARMERS, AS A FERTILIZER for sale at YERNOY'S. Mcihoppen, Sept. 19,15C1. port's Corner. THE LIGHT AT HOME. The light at home ! how bright it beams When evening shades around us fall; And from the lattice far it gleams To love, and rest, and comfort all. When wearied with the toils of day, A strife for glory, gold, or fame, How sweet to seek the quiet way, Where loving lips will lisp our name. When through the dark and stormy night Tho wayward wanderer homeward hies, How cheering is the twinkling light, Which through the forest gloom he spies ! It is the light of home, he feels That loving hearts will greet him there, And softly through his bosom steals TVe joy and love that banish care. The light at home I How still and sweet It peeps from yonder cottage door— The wearyjaborerto preet When the rough toils of day are o'er! had is the soul that does not know The blessings that its beams impart, The cheerful hopes and joy that flow, And lighten up the heaviest heart. miscellaneous. (3 O THE FIRST WRONG. My story opens in a New England setting room. There wore three persons present. Let me introduce them in in order.—Fist there was Deacon II >1 brook, an old man, not far ft m seventy now, with while hair, a tall spare form, and decided features. Next, his wife. a m< therfv old lady, with an expression f such calm benevolence on her face as to charm all who knew her. Yet, at this mo ment. a .x ety. grief, and entreaty, struggled j for the mastery. The third figure in the ta bleaux was a young man, with a frank, hand some face, of years not exceeding twenty, who stood in the middle of the floor with a downcast look, shrinking from the angry words which his father uttered. '•Henry," said the deacon sternly, " you have disgraced yourself and me, a deacon of ri:e church. You have embittered the de clining years of your parents." •• Don't be to hard with him, Deacon Iloll brook," interposed bis Wife. " Remember it is bis first fall." " If he were anything el-o," said his father still urappe.vcd; "but to think mT son sin aid Become a gambler ! my son who lias been so carefully tiained in the way he should GO." " It's only once," urged his wife, with a.! a mother's instincts. " There are some crimes which cannot be committed once without sinking the soul deep in sin," returned tie father with uua bited severity. AH this while the young man had remain ed silent, although bis varying colors showed that he feit deeply the harshness of his fa ther's vr.nls. At length he spoke: " Father," said- he, firmly, " you will one day repent jour severity. No sooner had I sinned than 1 rejtented, and made immediate confession to you and my mother. Instead of encouraging me in my repentance, you loaded uie with reproaches, which tny con science had anticipated, and which Heaven knows I did not need." Di.aeon Ilollbrook was about to speak, but Henry rapidly continued : " You tell me I have disgraced you. I will remove myself and disgrace from your presence." As he was about to leave the room, his mother asked anxiously : " Where would you go to, Henry ?" " Stay him not, Hannah ?" said the dea con, sternly. "It is well that he should leave a place where he cannot look an honest man in the face." " Deacon Ilollbrook, he is our son," said his wife, reproachfully. *' Would that I could forget it," was the unrelenting reply. These last wcrds reached the ears of the young man as he stood upon the threshold, and an expression of pain, half of indignation swept over his face. He knew that he had done wrong, but he felt that he had not for feited forgiveness. M ith but one farewell glance at his mother, full of unspoken grati tude and love, he left the house which had been to him so long a home. This was the fault of which Henry Iloll brook had been guilty : Having been sent to New York by his father to collect a sum of money due him, he had been allured to a gaming-house by a companion, and there in duced to play, though not until after much persuasion. Having lost a part of the money in his charge, he kept on playing in the hope of recovering his losses. But, as might have been expected, he lost all that remained of the money. Then thoroughly ashamed, and bitterly upbraiding himself for his breach of trust, he went home and confessed all. This confession was received, as we have seen, in such away as to chill his confidence, and ex cite his iudignatiou. And now he had gone "TO SPEAK HIS THOUGHTS IS EVERY FREEMAN'S RlGHT."—Thomas Jefferson. TUNKHANNOCK, PA., WEDNESDAY, OCT. 15, 1862. forth from home, a wanderer, he knew not whither, with not one effort on his father's part to stay him. Let roe do Deacon Hollbrook tho justice to say that it was not his own personal loss that excited his vigor. The 6um, though not large,—.sloo—was yet of importance to him. Still he could overlook that, but not his son's weakness and crime, as he termed it, by which it was lost. After Harry's departure, the old house be came quieter than before. All the life had gone out of it. Deacon Hollbrook himself, was a man of very few words, and in his tac turnity had abated his social tendencies.— Very long, very quiet, and very tedious, were the evenings which they spent together. On one side of tho tiro sat the Deacon, gravely reading through his spectacles, the agricul tural papers, which came weekly. Opposite him sat his wife, her fingers actively engaged in knitting, her mind intent upon her absent boy. All was staid, quiet and 6ubdued.— There was not even a kitten to enliven the scene. Mrs, Hollbrook had once ventured to introduce one into the house, but the Deacon speedily intimated his dislike of cats, and puss had been banished. One night Deacon Hollbrook brought a letter for his wife. It was such an unusual circumstance for the woman to receive a let ter. that she tore it open with unwonted haste. What was it that made her eyes sparkle ) with jov? The familiar hand writing had j not deceived her, she knew at once by ape- i culiar flourish on the top of the H, that it j was from Henry. She read it through with greatful joy. It I appears that Henry had worked his passage to California, having no money ; and, leaving the vessel at San Francisco, he went at once to the mines, where he was now working.— He had not been there long enough to form an idea of what were his chances of success He wished his mother to write, and promised to keep her advised of his movements.— There was only one reference to his father.— It was this : " I am afraid father still retains his bitter ness towards tne. If this is the case do not trouble him with any message, but if other wise you mav give him my dutiful regards, and say that I do not despair of making a gcod and true man." Deacon Hollbro- k did not look at his wife | while she sat reading this letter, though the j hand writing must have told hitn who it was from. " Joshua," said his wife timidly, using the rarely mentioned Christian name of her has- j bind, " this letter is from Henry." '• So T suppose," said he coldly. A? he spoke he took from his pocket the Weekly Farmer, and adjusting his spectacles began to read. This was a hint, and so Mrs. 11. understood it, that she did not care to pursue the subject further. But she could not help asking : " Wouldn't you like to read Henry's let ter ?" " You will oblige me by not mentioning his name again," said the Deacon stiffly.— " He has forfeited all claims to be considered a son." So days, months, and even years passed. It lacked but a mon'h of five years since Henry Ilollhrook left his home. There was little change in the air of the grave, sober mansion of Deacon Ilollbrook. The deacon himself had failed more in these five years than in any five previous. His form had lost its ancient erectness, and was bowed. His face had grown wrinkled and he spent more time in the house. Mrs. Ilollbrook received tidings at short intervals. Henry was well, he wrote ; but he did not enter into particu lars. Some time he should return to see his j mother. Of his father he didn't speak.— These letters were all brought home from the , village Post-Office by* Deacon Ilollbrook, but he never signified any curiosity or interest to learn their contents. Henry's name had not been mentioned between the two for years ; yet—and let it not surprise the reader—it would be difficult to tell which thought of, him the most constantly. Behind the Dea con's taciturnity there heat a heart, and that heart was more to his lost sou than he would have been willing to admit. All at once his quiet life was broken in up-1 on, and that in a most cruel manner. One day he entered the house, his face was pallid as a 6heet, and his limbs tottered be neath him, his whole expression that of great and intolerable anguish. " What's the matter' Deacon ?" inquired his alarmed wife. " Hannah, we are paupers—paupers in our old age !" said the husband bitterly. " Good gracious ! what has happened, Josh ua ?" asked his wife turning pale from sympa thy. Littb by little it came out that Deacon Holbrook had became bondsman for a banking officer with whom he was acquainted, and in whose integrity he had the utmost confidence. But to-day the astounding intelligence had arrived that the officer, after serious defalca tions had fled the country, and left his bonds man to suffer. The amount for which the Deacon had become bound was sufficient to swallow up the house and farm—all in fact he possessed. The farm was not a valuable one. It corn- prised sixty acres of rough soil, which by hard labor bad been made to suffice for the moderate wants of a small and economical family. In the market it would not bring over three thousand dollars, and for that amount the Deacon was bound. Yesterday he reckoned himself rich—now he regarded himself as a pauper. " This is indeed worse than death." thought the Deacon with stern 6arrow," " The Lord has indeed smitten me in my old age.,, Little time was given for anticipation before the blow fell. Tho Holbrook farm was ad vertised for sale at auction, to take place in three weeks. Bills were printed and posted about on fences, and in stores. Meanwhile Deacon Holbrook sank into a state of listless apathy. All day long he would sit in the rocking chair, with his eyes fixed on the op posite wall, saying nothing, and apparently paying but little attention to what was going on about him. His wife scarcely less sorrow ful than himself, feared that his reason was undermined. Three weeks passed by and brought the day cf 6ale. Mrs. Holbrook would gladly have absented herself, but her husband exhibited more life than of late, and insisted on her be ing present, so with rnauy misgivings she be came an unwilling witness to the trying scene. The bidding commenced at $2,000 — Gradually it went up to $2,800, and was about to be knocked off at that sum to Squire Clayton, when the trampling of horses hoofs was heard and a young man with a handsome face browned by exposure, leaped from his horse and inquired eagerly the amount of the last bid. On being told he exclaimed : " I bid three thousand dollars." At that price it was knocked down to him. | "What name 6ir?" inquired the Auction eer. " Deacon Joshua Holbrook," was the re ply. There was a buzz of surprise, and the ques tion was " who is he ?"' passed from one to another. " Father, mother don't you know your boy ?" asked the young man, with emotion Deacon Uolbrook's eyes lighted up with joy. | Silently he opennd his arms. The reconcilia tion was complete. Henry subsequently explained that having been successful in the mines he had wished to return unexpectedly, when upon his arrival in New York he had learned his father's mis fortune be had instantly made what haste he could to his native village, and fortunately ar rived in time to prevent the sacrifice of the farm. " The Lord hath rebuked my vain pride and the harshness of my heart that led me to turn awav an only son," said the Deacon solemnly, ' Henctfo rth ntay ourhearts be filled with iovt that fai'eth'not." And his wife and son rever ently said, "Amen !" WHAT PRESIDENT LINCOLN THINKS OF HIS OWN PROCLAMATION. Whilst Forney, Gteeley, the N. Y. Evening Post, and, to descend from great things to small, the Abolition organ in this city, are re joicing over the President's emancipation proclamation, and anticipating mighty effects from it, such as freeing four millions of negro slaves and setting them on to butcher their masters mistresses, bringing the war to a speedy conclusion and exhibiting in various other ways the omnipotency of Abolition pow er and policy, it may be interesting to know what Mr. Lincoln thinks of his own handi work. The report of the Chicago committee sent on to Washington city to lay the views of the Abolition fanatics of that region before the President and urge him to issue an emancipa tion proclamation, hasjast made its appear ance, and contains an account of the interview: which if its length did not preclude the idea, we should like to lay in full before our readers As it is we shall only subjoin the President's own comments or criticisms on the proclama. , tion, which was then in embryo. The committee, arged upon the President that God waspunishing the nation for the sin j of slavery that the punishment would not cease until the sin was atoned for by the wip jng out of slavery, and that it was God s w ill he should wipe it out. To which the President meekly replied, that the subject was one upon which he had thought much for months; that he was ap proached with the most opposite opinions and advice by religious men who were equally certain that they represented the Divine will; and he was sure that either the one or the other, and perhaps, in some respects, both were mistaken in their belief. Having ar rived at this conclusion, in which, we presume every one will concur, and staled it distinctly, as we have, to the committee, the President humbly, but at the same time vert shrewdly remarked: "I hope it is not irreverent for mc to say that, if it is probable that God would reveal His will to others on a point so con nected with my duty, it might be supposed, He would reveal it direcly to me ." Well, certainly, one " might" think so, and very naturally, too ; and if tho parsons couldn't see the point, it was owing either to blind bigotry natural stupidity, or very perverted ideas of God's workings. Having somewhat perplexed his pious advi sers by his singular way of argCing the point the President proceeded to say that it was a subject so difficult that good men differed upon it; that four gentlemen from New York, who had called upon him on business connected with the war, had got at loggerheads on t.ie question, two of them advising htm to issue a proclamation and two dissenting to the policy ; that even the last session of Congress, in which were a decided majority of anti-slavery men, could not unite on the subject, and that the same was true of the religious people. u Why,'' said he, (and this must have astonished the pious gentlemen,) " the rebel soldiers are praying with a great deal more earnnestness, I fear, than our own troops, and expecting God to favor their 6ide" —(what presumption!) " for one of our prisoners, who had been a prisoner, told Senator Wilson that he met with nothing so discouraging as the evident since/ Uy of the rebels in their prayers " But," said he, "we will talk over the mer 'ts of the case and now comes the -nterest ing commentary of the President on the text of his own proclamation. We give his own language, as reported by the committee, cut ting it into short paragraphs, that the lull import and force of the observations may be the more readily seen. He says : " What good would a proclamation of em ancipation from me do, especialy as we are now situated ?" " I do not want to issue a document that the whole world will 6ee must necssarily be inop erative, like the Pope's bull against the comet." " Would my icord free slaves, wh-tn 1 can not even enforce the Constitution ia the rebel States ?" [No wonder, when he pays so little regard to it himself ] • "Is there a single court, or magistrate, or iilividual that would be influenced by it t iere ?" " And what reason is there to think it wonld have any greater effect upon the slaves than the late law of Congress, which I ap proved, and which offers protection and free dom to the slaves of rebel masters who come within our lines ? " Yet I canuot learn that that law has caused a single slave to come over to us." " And suppose they could be induced, by a i proclamation of freedom from me, to throw themselves upon us, what should we do with them ?" " ITow can we feed and care for such a mul titude ?" " General Butler wrote me, a few days since, that he was issuing more rations to the slaves who have rushed to him than to all the ichite troo]>s under his command." j " TIIEY EAT, AND THAT IS ALL." " It, now, the pressure of the war should ca'l off our forces from Now Orleans to defend some other point, what is to prevent the mas ters from reducing the blacks to slavery again ? for I am told that whenever the reb els take any black prisoners, free or slave, they immediately auction them off." "Now, then, tell m•, if you please, what possible result of good would follow the issu ing of such a proclamation as you desire ?" There is the President's own commentary , upon bis own folly. Who finally induced him to post himself as a laughing stock for the whole world, we do not know; but we have in the proclamation ttself, which he issued two weeks after ridiculing the idea, that there was " pressure" enough from some quarter to do it. Let us hope that hereafter he may pray with the fervency he ascribes to the rebels, that the Lord may save him from his friends and give him firmness to be a men MAJOR JACK DOWNING. This original and eccentric old genius says he attended a Cabinet meeting just after the late disaster at Manassas. lie addresses the President as " Kernel," and tells his story as follows: " Wal," ses the Kernel, " Major it's oncom mon hard for old men like you, I know ; but i you jest meet with the Cabynet this mornin, ; an let us see ef some new plan can't be adopt i ed to get oqt of this scrape." So wen the time cum, I took my hickery an weut in. Purtv soon the different mera j bers cumdroppin in, one by one, an all seem ed highly tickled to see me, except the Sew ard, who has never forgiven for exposin his detcpshin on Linkin wen he altered my " Constitushioai Teliskope." Afiet they all got seated, ses Linkin, ses he, " Gentlemen, there's no use en}* longer of doing like the ostrcch does, stick our heads in a sand bank an say that 'we don't see it,' for wer're whipped an driven back—in a word, we have failed ? Now the rale questshun is, why have we failed? What is the cause of it ? Jest as soon as we kin find out the reason of our failure, we shall know what to do to rem edy it." " Now," ses the Kernel, " I want every one of you to give me your frank, blunt opinion as to the reason. First, I will call on Mr. Seward." Seward got up, looking as pale as a sheet, and 6es he, " Wal, it ain't my fault. I've paid no attenshin to the war, but have had my hands full in keepin furrin na-hins from ! intcrferrin, an I've succeeded ; but ef I should ; give my opinion of the cause of the failure of ! cur efforts to restore the Union, I would say it was owin entirely to (he ultra Republicans, who wanted to kill slavery before they scotch ed it. This let the cat odt of our bag before I TBrtMB x *1.50 fElt ANHSTtTIf the rite time. ft aroused and united the South an divided tbe North. They saw What we were after, JEf my policy bad bean ii lowed, of pacifyin the South an of talkin 4 Un ion' to the North, we would hate scotched the snake of slavery, an then we could have killed It at oar leisure." Then old Welles got up, lookin tery sleepy. He sed " the failure could not be charged agin the Navy. It was the most wide-awake institushin of the age. It had achieved all the victories. The army couldn't do eny thing without his gunboats. Every time tbe rebils got at them, they had to retrete to hii gunboats, In his opinion the army had fail ed because it could not carry his gunboats with it. He sed he had been tryin to invent a plan to furnish each regiment with a gun* boat for land service. Ef he could do that, he thought Richmond might be taken early next spring! The only thing lu all the war that had not been a failure wero his gun* boats!" After he got thru, Linkiu called upoß me. I jest hauled up my old hickery an laid It on the tabil, an then puttm my elbows on the tabil to rest myself, I began. Ses I u Kernel, 1 feel kinder scary to giv my opinion rite here, after such a display cf larnin an elo qnincc; but," ses I, as I understand the questshin, it is this: We've been fightia to restore the Union, and we've failed. Now, what is the cause of the failure?" Set I, "Is that it, Kernel ?" Ses he, Yes, Ma jer ; that's it, exactly." " Wal," ses 1, " I alters want to gret on the track afore I start, an then I kin tell purty nigh where I will fetch up. Now," ses I, " Kernel, I want to ask you a questshin : Did you ever try to split a peperage log ?" " No," ses he, " Ma jer, I never did. Nobody would be such a consarued fool as to try an split a peperage log." " Wal," ses I, " Kernel, suppose some feller should cum to you an tell yoll thai he had been a year an a half tryin to split a pep- I erage log, an couldn't do it, that he had fail ed, an wanted you to tell him what to do, what would you say to him ?" " Say to him !—why, I should tell him he might jeat as well whistle at the log as to try to split it —that it warn't in the natur of sech knotty, nerly, cross-grained timber to split < in other words, that he wa9 tryin to do an ompossi bul thing." u Now," ses I, " Kernel, that's jest my idee about tryin to save this Union by fightin ! You're tryin to do an ompossi bul thing. After a year art a half of fightin, you all acknowledge that you have failed, an ali the Cabynet is wonderin why you have failed. Now, it ain't no wohdef to me. You have failed jest because, in the very na tur of things, what you are tryin to do can't be done :n that way. Y'ou're takin the rong way to d<> it. Then I told the Cabynet that the only way to get out of this scrape was to have an arinistiss. stop the fightiu, and go t taliiin—-that both sides had had enufl'of blood shed now to satisfy them, an that the only way to get at a settlement was to do that. No conclusion, however, was cum to about the armistigs. The Kernel can't bring him I self up tu the idee yet. Ef the Governors were only in favor of it, he would do it at once. So I suppose for the present we shall kee;,) on tryin to do an mnpossibul thing to git the Union by fightin for it. Depend up on it, tryin to split peperage logs ain't nothiu toil." Yours till deth, MAJOR JACK DOWNIHG. JUDGE CATOS ON THE PRESIDENTS PROCLAMATION. Judge Caton is the present able and distin guished Chief Justice of the supreme Court o Illinois. In reply to a telegram, dated Otta wa, 24th September, announcing that the Democratic Convention there had passed res* olutions, by an almost unanimous vote, con. detnning the President's proclamation, be wrote as follows : SPRINGFIELD, Sept. 24,1862, J. 0. GLOVER, Ottawa, Illinois:— I expected it. I regret the proclamation aa an ill-advised measure. It is a tub thrown to the Abolition whale, which may endanger the whole ship. It cannot change the actual sta tus of the negro from what it would be with out it. It weakens the hands and lays addi tional burdens on the shoulders of those who are exerting every energy to support the Gov ernment in this war to uphold and restore the Constitution and to suppress this rebell ion. May God, in his His mercy to cmr bleed- " ing country and endangered Constitution, . grant that it may have no worse results than to meet the disapproval of the Democrats ia the free States, whose whole souls are engaged in th* prosecution of this war. They cannot be drawn from this support. They will pros ecute tins war with unyielding energy, while those who have extorted this unwise measure from the President will be clamoring loadty fur a peace by separation. Seven months hence you will see these words vindicated. This country is ours to maintain as much as they are those of the President; and al th' ugh he has done an unwise or unjustifiable act, it will not warrant or induce us to aban don thein, but stimulate it in greater efforts to uphold and vindicate such sacred interests Whatever the Administration may do this people will defend and uphold their Govern ment and country until the Constitution shall be re-established over the whole land. (Signed) J. D. CATON. This reply will be appreciated, coming frorw the distinguished source U dons, by all con servative men of all parties. 7QL.2, NO. 10.