e lie ?il tm ot rat. HARVEY SIIKLER, Editor. TU N KHAN NOCK j PA. Wednesday, Nov. ISG2 The news front the seat of war is comparatively ununpoi taut. A battlb is said to be impending. —. —-*•* - Two of Gen. MoClellan staff's were arrested by order of the authorities at V ash ington. Other members "I this stall, it is reported, will soon he put under arrest also- The N Y. Herald suggests that the General himself be arrested and imprisoned at Wash ington, so that in ca-e lhat city is again ihna ch ran and Ross are "spotted.' Patters' n, Campbell, Bully Grow, Landon, Armstrong, and others of the spot" school, are " spot ted," and it has been done by the people at the ballot box in the great F-yal State of tin North. Will the s e midnight rs.*assns. w•• meet in "star chamber" c< unc ls", to sp I life long patriots and pr tocl us fti e C<* stitutioh arid Union, phase remvinb. r, ti a there is such a motto as " an -ye for an eye, and a tooth for a tooth." Wise is he who does unto others as h.t would that they should do unto him.— Ex. Whither are we Drifting. The Philadelphia Bulletin , an Abolition sheet, asks the question "whither are we drifting?" to which the Evening Journal , an independent paper of the same city, replies : Y r ou are drifting toward the rude breakers, upon which you hare so industriously labor ed to wreck our good old Ship of State. Y'ou are drifting far away from the confi dence of the people, whom you and your Abolition associates have so basely betrayed. are drifting from the pinnacles of po ittic&rpower to the lowest deaths of political degradation. You are drifting to the land where " straw hats, linen pantaloon 3 and fed herring" con tracts will no longer be tolerated. Y'ou are drifting, thank God ! whefe ycti will soon be beyond the power of doing fur ther harm to the country which was once great and prosperous, but which, under Abo lition rule, has been brought, to the very verge of ruin. You are drifting fat out to sea, While con servative Democracy has made preparation to take charge of the Ship of State. Under its wise guidance, not only will Southern traitors, Southern treason, and Southern re bellion be " crushed out," but Northern Abo litionism will forever be driven from the land. How Some Men Retain 03iee. We 1 have often wondered how some men rfianagetl to ret iin dice under all administra tions, whilfe others, apparently quite as com letent, wereoftmi unable lo hold on thrnugh a single term. The following clipping from an exchange to sin *e:it ex-. a.n the mys tery. It depends n, b - of tii m dividual. A h-gh i 1 ma ,of iiupti ble principles, is s . torn, if ever, found trans ierlng himself from one adiioei-trsti >u to an other, without regard u> its politics ; but, on he contrary, often resigns und< r an admims tration professedly holding the political views which he does, when it evinces a trea cherous or vacillating disposition. There is a great differance in men ii this respect, and it is by no means to be inferred that those who hold on to office the longest are the mo6t competent and reliable. Bu to the explanation : One of the hold-on kind " being asked how he managed to k<*ep his office through so many changes of minimis tration he replied tha' it would take a mighty shiart administration to change quicker than he could."— Pat. 4* Union. That's a Fact. A facetious cotemporary remarks that the Abolitionists will have a harder time g -ing u'p Salt River than the Democrats had two years ago; not on account of the low stage of water, but because each Emancipator will likve to " tc te" a nigger on h s back !" ,K3T We find the following among the "Washington despatches of November sth in the Philadelphia Press : A murder was committed in this city to da\ . An Irishman was killed by a negro. All told in two lines. ]( the Irishmen had killed the nigger it would have taken half a •eluaa te tell the itcry. A Voice From the Grave. Two years ago the unanimous voice of the l Democratic party, and of all conservative men, in this country was raised in favor of a policy ofpeaceonthe part of the Administration. Daring the last few months ot Mr. Buchan an's Administration our noble old party labor ; for compromise aud peace with an energy and persevcrance'that was never before witnessed. And (luring the time that the whole weight of the Administration was cast into our side of the scale, it appeared almost certain that ! we must, in the end, succeed. But time flew rapidly on, and we witnessed the close of Mr. Buchanan's term without the accomplishment i of a single object for which we had contended. Mr. Lincoln came upon the stage, called about him a corps of radical, partisan coun cilors, and war became inevitable- true to their fanatical instincts, they disregarded the wise and Godly teachings of our Saviour in the mount, that, " Blessed are the peace-ma kers ; for they shall be called the children of God," they shut their eyes to the lessons of history, they would not sec the crumbling ru'ns of once imperial Itome, the red blood tnat once flowed in the gutters of Paris, or crimsoned the soil of South America from the Isthmus to the Cape, they were deaf to the warnings of Washington, of Jackson, of Clay, ~f Webster, and of all the noble army of pat riots, from Washingtonto Dpuglas, whose dy ing declaration that " war is-disunion, inevi table and irreparable dissolution ' will be re peated as a household maxim by generations vet unborn—repeated in tones of scrrow. | '• No compromise ! no concession !" but war bloody and sanguinary war—became the or der of the day. And who so bold as to raise ! his voice agabrst it? A mob, a rope, or a Bastile were at hand to close his " traitor' lips forever, either within the cold embrace of deatli'or the damp walls of a prison Fort! The very letters now passing through our hands were scattered in confusion, by midnight ma rauders, because they dared to represent the truth ! Liberty, even of thought, was all but denied to this people, who had so long enjoy ed the fruits of self-government. For nineteen months the party of "no com- < promise" have unlimited sway in the admin istration of the government Both branches of Congress have been entirely subservient to the executive will. No measure proposed, or adopted, by the Administration has yet 1 been defeated, in either House. Men and credit have been commanded by the Lxecuive Department without limit. And what has been accomplished ? Let us see ! ls f , the} proclaimed, at the outset, the purpose speed- j i \ to drive the rebel armies out i 1 irginia : i ii.t-v have hammered away lor eighteen j months, and now it is heralded as a great vie j lory when they succeed in driving them into ; Virginia'. 2d, they are responsible lur the ; d< ath ot two hundred thousond betrayed and heated soldiers, who enlisted to fight for the Union. But were made to shed biuud tor acheines*Upto f ian. 3rd, every hospital ech oes with the groans of dying sacrifices tu the black God, Abolition. 4th, the hundreds o! thousands ot crippled and manned men, seen from one end of the land to the other, are eloquent of the progress, oth, the sentiment of inveterate hate that animates the people of one section against tli! other, is eqnlly elo quent of the progress made towards recon sti uction of a broken Union. Gill, a national debt of two thousand millions, will stand an enduring monument to the memory ot civ il war, and upon its broad base w ill be inscri bed these words: '• Beneath this obolisk repose Two Hundred Thousand friends and foes ' TFe meant to vindicate our laws, But battled for the negro cause To satisfy a spirit fell — Born less of Heaven than of Ilell 1 We died, a sacrifice, I ween, To Abolition Hate and spleen." This will represent the profits a rifting from our investments in "no compromise." Those who sow the wind shall reap the whirlwind We have witnessed the flow of bhiod till the people have become surfeited, and turn away from the horrid spectacle with a sickening heart. It is abundantly demonstrated by the events of the past year that the bayonet and the swoM bring little love, less Union.— Indeed, it is no longer union for which we arc compelled to fight, the dusky visage of the almighty African—not the Stars and Stripes—it is that now marshals our armies to battle. Our brave boys no longer see that silvery sheen flashing forth its bright rays of promise from the smoke and flame of lint tie, but, the black cloud of Emancipation, big with ruin and destruction, hangs moodily over the vanguard. While ringing in the ears of the rear-guard come the demoniac shouts of a relentless and vindictive foe to constitutional liberty, and white men's rights. How little has been accomplished by war ! flow much might have been accomplished by peace and Compromise ! Nay, how much | may still ba clone, if the mad-uien who hold our destenies irr their hands would but pause and listen. If they trovrld but hear the words that are wafted upward from the I tombs of the great dead. If they wonl 1 but j listen to the tones of Douglas as they mingle j :ti the ceaseless ripple of the waters that roll beside his tomb ; or the eloquently stentori . an plead'rtgs of the great expounder of the j Constitution, as they ascend from the tomb | at Marshfield ; or the earnest warnings from i the Hermitage, Mt. Yernon, and Monticello, If these do not corue in tones strong enough to penetrate their blighted sAscs, let them hut heed the "voice from the grave" as it rings forth in the silvery and forcible accents of Ashland's* sacred dead ! The great heart of Kentucky still beats in harmony with the music of the Union. Uer fa vorite 6on may, therefore, still be heard in tiie councils of the Nation ! And what are his words ? Turn back to his speech in the United States Senate on tl> 7th of February, 1539, and witness with what prophetic vision he looked beyond the I grave, and hew hit very s#ul shrank frt* ths contemplation of scenes that are even now transpiring on our southern balers. Ilere are his words—they ought to be inscribed , tipoh every door of the Capitol : "Abolition should no longer be regarded as I an imaginary danger. The Abolitionists, let : me suppose, succeed in their present aim of i Uniting the inhabitants of the free states as ] one man, against the inhabitants of the slave states. Union on the one side will beget un ion on the other. And this process of recip rocal consolidation will be attended with all the violent prejudices, embittered passions, itnd implacable animosities which ever de graded or deformed human nature. A vir tual dissolution of the Union will have taken place, while the forms of its existence remain The most valuable element of Union, mutual kindness, the feelings of sympathy, the fra ternal bonds, which now happily unite us. will have been extinguished for ever. OnS Section will stand in me -acing and hostile ar ray against the other. The collision of opin ■ ion will be quickly followed by the clash of arms. I will not attempt to describe scenes ; which now happily lie concealed from our I view. Abolitionists themselves wotlld shrink back in dismay and horror at the contempla tion of desolated fields, conflagrated cities, murdered inhabitants, and the' overthrow of the fairest fabric of human government that ever rose to animate £he hopes of civilized man. Nor should these aboliiionists flatter themselves that if the can succeed in their object of uniting the people of the five states, they will enter the contest with numerical superiority that must, insure victory. All history and experience proves the hazard and uncertainty of war. And we are admonished by holy writ that the race is not to the swift, nor the battle to the strong. But if they were to conquer, whom would they conquer? A foreign foe—one who had insulted our llag invad.d our shores, and laid our country waste? No. sir; No sir! It would be a conquest without laurels, Without g'ory—a self, suioidal conquest—a conquest of bioth eis over brothers, achieved by one over an other portion of the descendants of common ancestors, who nobly pledging their lives their fortunes, and their sacred honor, had fought and bled side by side, in many a bard battle on land and ocean, severed our coun try from the British crown, and established our national independence."— Curb n Demo crat. Death of lion. James Ufadison Porter. EASTON, Nov. 14.—Ilun. James Madis in Porter died at bis residence, in this place, this | morning, in the 70 year of his age. He a son ol Gen. Andrew Porter, of the Itevolu tiouary war, and himself served 111 the war of 1812. During the war of ISI2-14. while Mr. Por ter was a law student in Philadelphia, the city was threatened by the British, and he volunteered and served as a Lieutenant du ring that emergency, until discharged by the Government. Judge Porter was one of tie framers of the present Constitution of Penn sylvania. and one of the most prominet mem bers of the Convention. In March, 1843, President Tyler appointed h'm Secretary of War on the re-organization of the Cabinet upon the death of President Harrison. This important bureau was most ably conducted . tiy Judge Porter, and although he was only about a year in the Cabinet, he had so ingra tiated himself in the esteem of those connect ed with that departm -nt that up to the time of his death the old officers of the army held him in grateful remembrance. Since then he ! held many prominent positions. I;e was President Judge of the Twenty-second Judi cial District, member of the I.egislatura and other positions, lie was the leading spirit of all the public improvements connected with ihe borough of his'adoption. lie was one of the founders of Lafayette College, and for twenty-five years President of the Board of Trustees. He was, also, for upward? of forty years, a member of the ancient an l honorable order of Free and Accepted Masons, in which body he held numerous responsible offices, and was a perfect Ashler in the fraternity.— j He was truly, in himself, an institution of his place, a public benefactor. His whole life was ■ marked with a charity as beautiful to behold i as it was fruitful for happiness in it 3 infiuen , ces on all who knew lnm. Who we have IScatcn at the I, ate Elections. At the late elections, says the Starke i County Democrat , we have defeated all kinds of fool, fanatics and traitors. Let us see whom we have defeated : We hare defeated the Negro Worshippers, t We have defeated the Abolitionists, j We haVe defeated the Fanatics. I We have defeated the opposers of Free i j Speech and Free Press. We have defeated a tyranical Administra- I tion. i We have defeated the Infidels. We have defeated the political Preachers. We have defeated the Deril. . Resistance te the Draft in Wisconsin. Theie appears to be a disposition every -1 where to oppose the draft. In Azankee coun - ty, Wisconsin, an excited mob seized the draft box and destroyed the rolls', and Carried on a high game generally : private residences were attacked property stolen and destroyed • persons who refused to particpate in the revolt where maltreated, the provost inar ! shrl was obliged to call out GOO soldiers to assist in restoring ordea and capturing the : ' parties. "S.K Tax oh Marriage Certiticates. People, it seems, can't get married withou being taxed for the luxury. An exchange states that the Commisioner of interna! Rev enue has decided that all marriage certificates j must have a ten cent stamp upon them or else be declared iuvalid, and a penalty enforced against those rot issuing them, which in addi tion to fine; may be the separation of the par ties. 1 "Mene, >leiie, Tekcl Upharsln,* * Those sycophantic endorsers of the present Administration, the astrologers ot the New York Tribune, the Chaldeans of the Times, the soothsayers of the Post, and the less noted " wise meu" of the abolition party gen erally, are terribly exercised in the work of furnishing an interpretation of the inscription, which has just been written upon the histori cal page of 18G2. The late elections in Ohio, Indiana, Illinois New York, New Jersey and Pennsylvania, appear as ominous to the Chief Magistrate of this nation and his retainers, as the "Mene, i I Mene, Tekel, Upharsin." traced by the "fin- i gers of a man's hand" before the astonished gaze of the King Belshazz-ir did to that im- i pious ruler. And as the "wise men" of Ba- i bylon failed to furnish a true Interpretation of that wonderful warning which struck terror i to the heart of a monarch who was feasting among his lords, and desecrating the golden ' vessels of the temple of Jerusalem to drink 1 wine with his princes, his wives, and his concubines, so do the shining lights of aboli- i tionism disp'ay their ignorance in their at tempted definition of the populer rebuke i which has overtaken a ruler while pervert ing ihe sacred rights of the people, the time ! honored compact of the Constitutution, the j universally acknowledged characteristics of: freedom, either weakiy or designedly to pro long a feast of corruption, a carnival of blood, i Defeated, overwhelmed, astounded, the radical journals and orators turn to a leader who has, perhaps reluctantly, hut always im plicitly, obeyed their behests, and charge up on his imbecility in carrying out the emanci- j pation act, their overthrow at the batlot-box; or with brazen effrontery taunt the people ; who have given their hundreds of millions of t money and hundreds of thousands of lives I for the prosecution of the war, with having voted the " peace ticket" through avarice or craven ft-ar. Falsifiers. They are wilfully blind, or ; they read the signs of the times to better pur- 1 pose than this. It needs no inspired Daniel j to explain the analogy between the vision lo the- Belshazzar of the present. The one emanated from the hand of an in sulted and offended God; the othc-r is the ' protest of an outraged and determined peo j pie. " The voice of llfb people is the voice of God." Every flash of lightning which conveyed the intelligence of the triumph of coiiserva- ! tism over radicalism from the east to the west and from the west to the east ; from j Connecticut to Delaware and from Illinois to New York, repealed beneath the dry election statistics, the dazz'ing words at or.ee of war ning and of encouragement: " ME.NF, NENE, TEKCI., VPHAHSIX." Warning to abolition disunionists ; encour agemcnt to loyal democrats. "MENE; God hath numbered thy king dom and finished it." The days of official corruption, of illegal arrests, of unnecessary imprisonments, of mob law, of emancipation proclamation, of political terrorism, c.rc pass ed. T lie people have so decreed. "TEKEL. J Thou art weighed in the balance and found wanting." On the one side dead soldiers, weeping widows, starving orphans, a crippled commerce, a bankrupt treasury, an impaired credit, a divided country—aboli ionism anl wir; on the other, niti >nil prosperity; personal wealth, universal happi ness—democracy and peace. Anarchy against order ! Chaos has kicked the beam. Ultra ism, abolitionism, despotism, and Lincoln their repserentatives, have had a fair trial and aie repudiated by the people; | they have been weighed in the balance and found wanting. The ballot-box has proclaimed it. •' PKKES ; Thy kingdom is divided and given to the medes and Persians." The North is locked in deadly conflict with the Smth ; Negro competition confronts wiiite labor; Despotism is strugling with Lib erty. Is it not well, then, that the power is fin aly passing into the hands of a party whose j respect for the requirements of the Constitu | tion aud the rights of the people is as un ■ ehangable as the law of the Medes and f'er j sians ? If dyne County Herald. The following farewell order was read to i the troops composing the Army of the Poto mac, on dress parade : llr. \1)-IU"ARTERS, ARMY OF run POTOMAC ) Camp near llectortown, Nov. 7, ISG2. y OJficers and Soldiers oj the Army of the I Potomac : —An order of the President do ! vulves upon Major-General Burnside the command of this ar ny. In parting from you, I cannot express the love and gratitude I bear you. As an army you have grown up under my care. In you I have never found doubt and coldness. The battles you have fought under my command will proudly live in our national history. The glory you have achieved—our perils and fatigue—the broken forms of those whom wounds and sickness have disabled—the graves of our comrades, fallen in battle and by disease—are th 3 strongest assertions which can exist among ,men united still by an indissoluble bond that we will he comrades in supporting the Ccn i stitution of our country and the nationality | of its people. GF.ORGE B. MCCI.ELI.AN, Major General U. S. Army. Freemout turns Up. Simultaneous With the removal of General i McClellan, Fremont makes his appearance in New York, direct from Nqw Orleans, and j posts for Washington. We shall not be at all surprised to hear of the Pathfinders pro motion. He is under the wing of the radical disunionists. and they have undoubll j i earth, sooner or later we Shut] join him in that I blessed land. M e are at Pooles A die, M I. hut how 1 -ng ■we shall stay hers lam unable to sav. Last j ; Sunday we were chasing Stuarts rebel cavalry 1 all day, they had made a raiq intoMd. and Pa j and took ofl .1 lot horses, but owing to bad j ; manaagemcnt of the officers they escaped into ! j a - But 1 must close Good live, Please write soon. C. I'. POST. i i M. A. O riOKX. I j Sermon 011 INtucatlon; lc the Her. (Icrdy of the Stdfr .—GENTLE MEN: i .:C I.ducatl -mil State Convention, winch was in session in H irri burg i.i-t Au gust, unanimously adopted a resolution I That Ministers of the Gospel throughout ; j the Sta 0 be requested to preach, on the firs! I I Sttnday in Pecfember, 1862, a sertnVn 011 ed j ucatioii." jI- j # As toe I nvcnti iiT au ptod Ito mea'ns to mmio i > i-hes on tins re yet I 1 p. .wn to | 3'ou. ot:.-. r thou the publican >ll of ihe min utes of its proceedings, I have taken the lib , ; ert3 ,in tins- maiuier, to inv.te 3"..m attention _ | to it. • At a.l time-, the due (raining of the young , is of great importance, ami .the relation to it _| of the ( hnstian Ministers i>- plain and inti- I mate. In the present unhappy Juncture of our national ailairs, regarding the future i through the uncertain light of the present this importance is realiy increased, and the I relation of 3 our body to it seems te become,! i in the same proportion, necessary. Ihe wishes of the convention are. there j fore, cordially commended to vour favorable ' t consideration, with the hope that you will j simultaneously add your prayers to the v a j ther of Light', that He will, at this time, es pecially bless the cause of general Education, and so guide the efforts of all entrusted with j its care, that tbe youth of the land may be | come Christian citizens of a united and pros -1 porous Republic. Very respectful^-, Your obedient servant, TIIOS. 11. BURROWKS. Saperinteudant Commra S hoolc Dr.II IRTMENT OF COMMON SCHOOLS. ) . Ilarrisburg, Nov. 11. 18G2. v Editors in the State a"o requested to insert the foregoing, and County Stiperin tendants will take measures to bring it to the attention of Ministers of all denomina-i | tions in their respective counties. novll. j Com" to liife. ! Only a few months ago the Abolition presses rang with theory that the Democrat- j ic party, as a party, was dead and buried.— If this was true at fire time, they must ac- i mit that there has been a glorious resurrec | tion—the dead has come to life, and is every day giving unmistakable evidence of cxtraor- \ ! dinaty vitality. SIMON CAMERON lias returned ; lie srrivt d at his, residence " Lochiel." on Monday last. It was almost universally said at the time of his appointment, that he would not stay lon ger than to claim his outfit and salary. It is said that he has in addition to thiß effected a very handsome'speculation in coal oil. — TLLIN Noig.—The city of Springfield, Lin coln s home, gave the Democratic ticket over ' COO majority on the 4th inst. The State vo-' ting Democratic by over 14,000, a clianc of more than 30,000. This in itself should bo sufficient to cause the Proident to withdraw ! his Abolition Proclamation. i ; The Deed is l>oue. We announce to our readers this morning, with feelings which we can find no words to express, the removal of Gen. Geo. B. Mo- Clellan from the command of the Army of th* Potomac. Are we mistaken in our judgment of the feelings of the people, when we say that they will demand of the administration a reason, promptly given, for this unlocked for move ment, at a time 80 inopportune and inauspi cious 1 We think we are not mistaken. We caii not be. They will demand a reason ; and it must not only be promptly given, but satis factory when givin. , Look at the circumstances as they stand nakodly before us, and then let him who is hot already a slave, a sycophant or an idiot, Sav that it is not high time to inquire into the policy and objects of the administration. We have heard that they have been delibe rating, 6inC the election, on the question whether to change their polocy to accord with the will of the people, or, setting aside all scruple all disguise to change the wholij character of the government, and bring us if once unde the iron rule of a central military despotism. We ha~e heard this, and the news yester.' dav would seem not only to confirmed its truth, but to establish the alarming fact that hey had resolved to try the latter expedient: Look'at it. It seems plausible. The mea sure has not only been hinted at by leading presses and leading men of the radical Aboli tion stamp, but has found advocates among them, Before the recent elections the platf was suggested, t ofney foreshadowed it in the Presar —Raymond, with more vigor and perspecuity, illuminated it in the New \oik Times. Has it been seriously pondered by the magnates at Washington, and is the first signal of its acceptance and culmination the removal of M'Clellan ? We believe the question Ins 1 ecn serious ly considered, and we are apprehensive that the r'-nv'V.il of MeClellan is the firs: to ward-the experiment of a stronger govern ment. The history of the past is before us—a weak Executive, and reckless, shallow-brain e h advisers—and. in view of the past, we be* iieve the people have just expressed their coif deinnation of the radical policy of the admin istra ion, and their undiminished confidence in Gcti. M'Clel an—and }t' 1e is remove 1, anif that too, in 'he face of the enemy and when a battle is to onentarily expee'ed. Any other ai n nistr ition would have hesitated, under such circumstances, and at such a time to take -nch a step. This ad , niiiiistr-'.tiun, bhnd and defiant from the first —this administration, which has set aside the (.' institution, because it conflicts with it 6 pol icy and suspended the habeas corpus in or der that it may trample upon the personal" j liberty of obnoxious ci tiz.ns—this adminis ' tiati n has not hesitated ;it has rot even tak t me to in .turely consider the verdict ren dered by the people, but. apparently on the impulse of t ie moment, while yet smarting ; under the rehuke administered to it, it has 1 audaciously spurned the advice of the ballo.t box. removed M V , "an in defiance of public opinion, arid resolved to pursue a policy not only radical bat impeli us. We care not to express our opinion as to the probable result of tins most palpable blunder on the part of the administration. The effect will follow the cause soon enough, and God grant it tnny prove less serious than i we anticipate, M'Clellan Las again fallen a victim to Abo lition intrigue and malice ; the President has again shown that Lis pledges are unreliable— that he is a vane blown about by every breath" ofair—and the temper of the people is once iiiurc to be tried bv an ex' e iuient wl.i b, if it 1 should fail, will probably end the war without 1 restoring the Union. At present we shall say only this more, , The letter from Gen. ll.illeck is unsatisfac tory : there is nothing in it; it is partial, nnc j sided, unfair and calculated rather to soifr than soothe the public temper. The deed is' so startling, so foul, that those who performed' it, or had any agency in its performance, must show clean hands, very spotLss, or prepared : for curses, loud, deep, withering, consuming curses, the people, who have confidence j in M'Clellan and mme in those who rCtnovdif 1 him'. _ . 1 Senator J!ayard Rebuked SenaC t Bayard, while speaking at Wilming ton last ex; erienced an unpleasant interruption which rapidly dispersed his audience, of which a consierable proportion were ladies, stiffed the disloyal orator. Some Clever patriot had put into the stove a quantity ot sulphur and assafvrtida. which proved mori powerful than Bayard's eloquence.— It-ibiine Washington j Corrcsp jntience. it is cleverness, it is patriotism, it is what, the Tribune admires, to silence the speech t a gray-haired old man a senator of the United States, and drive ladies from his audience w 'th the stench of burning sulphur and assa foetida 1 It is just *uch cleverness as may he expected from vulgar partizans of the John Brown stripe, who glory in the degredation' of the white race to the level of the negro. I 4 I JS"ST* The jtenple have been called to j in judgment upon the Republican party and they have pronounced it and its organs want- I ing :—wanting in capacity— wanting in wis- f doin—wanting in integrity—wanting in loyal- 1 ty—wanting ih love for the Constitution a' I j it is wanting in a proper appreciation of th | blessings of peace—wanting in ability to cr- | ry on a war—wanting in fidelity to its pledg* I cs to the peolpc—wanting in respect for COD- I stitufior&l obligations. And having bee* | found wanting in all these essential qualities I it found itself, on the evening after the ele*" 11 tion wanting the support and confidence of l l| free, intelligent, patriotic, and loyal people- |