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iiift. . ? . '- r, -1 . - 1: rj . i i i : i i . i i i i i ' - - ; - j jv pi., m -r r . j i m n i Oflee la TFoodward Xtloek. M Sta Are Tliey 'Petnrmts or Aboil- J '- Intnch n it is conatantlj charged by un- cmpuious punj orgsm inai jnemocrau are "Jtl IUuknit8 of the North, we fTe--below -4ecantiona from leading Southern Union ineh 'to-show , who th regard aa 'Aiinemiea in . la'jpection. , , X'S- t i 'i r... V-.' ! ' ' -Wfomiqence with Goremor Ahdrew John-on; of TennesJtee.;' InhUlate speech at Naeh-VilK rn that" State. be says : 1' ' Tl " iThere are two ' parties in existence who .'want ."dissolution slavery and . a Squthern Confe.ieraey iaththobbr: Sumner wants to break vp OU Government, and to do the Abolitionists gen- ray. iney iioia tftat it slaTery survives the , , Union can not endure, Secessionists argue .that if the Union contisue alaverysIosL-a-'AbolitionisU' want na compromise i hui they reeanj, peaceable .secession as a humbug.; Why ? Abolition-is disunion ;' dissolution js . secession ; one is the other. Both are etri-in o accomplish the -aame object. One thinks it will destroy, the other save, slave- I Hon. Joseph Holt, of Kentucky, in his Louisville speech, last summer, said :.' 'fv7e make no apology for this wicked effort In the Soth to destroy the Government, We .grant the necessity of suppressing it ; but Ab- olitionism, that produced itt must also be sup-1 Ereseed. Abolitionism and Secessionism must e buried in the same political grave." '.TSTIOXT Or PARSON MOWN LOW.' .-. Parson Brownlow,in his Upera-hottse speech ia Cincinnati, a few days since, said : '" 1 hve to say that if two years ago . I bad 'been authorized to hunt up and collect them. 1 would have selected about one or. two hundred anti-slavery fanatics (for I knew them all, well,) and about an equal number of Godforsaken, hell-deserving Disunionists, I would tare marched them to the District of Columbia, I would then have dug a ditch a common' ditch and wrapped up their bodies in grmpsum weeds and dog-fennel, and buried them there. Had this been done then I should pot have been here to-night." The .Louisville DemtcraU a stanch and reli able organ of the unconditional Union men of Kentucky; to whose efforts, in connection with its able colleague., the Louieville Journal we are greatly indebted for the preservation of :i " ... ytiuiium Tarty 'are" ' " bouth eer being represented 5 tongress. .It would upset all their calculations and disappoint their hopes. They don't want the Union restored ; it is not their in-terestr T bey and the rebels South are a unit V opposition .to the Union. ; A restored Union will be the death of both of them.? - The! same paper bears the following testimony to the Northern Democracy : "MCJfO FOa TH CIO!f . The local elections in Ohio show a vastly Increased Democratic vote. Dayton, the home r-Vallandigham, has elected a Democratic Mayor by 150 majority ; the-majoritr against thew last fall waa 403. Let all Kentuckians bear in , mind that, in the . present Congress, wherever you find the vote of the Border Slave States you will find the Northern Democratic vote with them: The Northern De mocratic press and the loval press of the slave f eitates apeik the same lan'euaire. : I We a lout that some of th T?nnKlina in Congrrsa are conservative, and still more of contented chattels. . We counted upon in-them.are sq at home ; but they are constantly surrections terrible and wide spread insur-subjected to party pressure; and in' their ef- rections-aroong the servile population, as an forts for a wise and moderate policy, they will inevitable and almost immediate consequent have to depend chiefly on their political oppo- ces of a' war between the Government and the nents to sustain them. - On the other hand the j Pemoory o 'the North are not onlv sound for the Uuion, but for the Union the right . way." ; ' . Now, in connection with the above, read the 7 following. Less than a year ago Wendell Phillips made a speech at the Tremont Tern- - fie, at Boston, in which he said : . . . , - - , Th"antislavery party had hoped for and planned disunion because it would lead to the development of mankind and the 'elevation of the black man,' r filAvery. aJ . teea and Described .Ohid Bepuhliean ColoneL an We have heretofore stated the fa'cf,; that Wm UGiBsoir, the Eepublican ex-treaaure'r of ctaVe," a ipolqnel of a regiment (49th) - of " Ohio volunteers. !;Hia: was the first regiment which entered Kentucky from Ohio. "This was inritembej lasi'rAt the battle jf Pitts-bu.Lania.raa plwed'arihe head f a ' brigade, and the Slots Journal annbunceithj he reach ed Columbus, few. days ago suffering fron a bjoaei, wound which he received dur wg. kha hattla.1 Franks Sessions, in his letter to that paper, autes that Gea, McCook 1 lays Gibson's and Diekey'e regimenu covered IhevBselvw all re With y tXorrl on TtmA' w intrpdueii riminding the reader thai Gibaen. JuU been ode of xhaxnostetloquent and imyaaaJonid antialavery tathpera in Ohui; we too.w ?irbJk eJ eall VtientioD o the following ei- fceirrote homs abort, llxfore the ,bUlea.t Pittsburg and which erakfMhlished ohlhiftlt'or April in the- vVXa" ti is reoa'every onpowaa oaoormon slave Tilexe aa elsdwJiere beM 4 have- been; ihelsrrea.are'i well treated and ' well t revkied forj.ThexappaarjrarrnKaaiewtawtxlWe and dxtaaubetter than tie . poor whites or the rscesro Af,Ohidor the NotUu Theji'M ?"51lltr,a,PB th.doth;inVl rv77f lW aside: from imixe believed it. But the aesro her. WinH.U dreads the Nrthr rAy loa t4s &m and mr ihaya witnessed toch!a$-s)eeBa t ?-wte 'W waste rs, rttzTfii id. their hor have comet LxAbpDji kfm Jtiotzselan(i.in ihfpityth l jrlwU sluldrf and, blackr , pJay. together fTSid aistes 1 frjmfrtyiM.Mpm ion.ai in. ueiK DresenK miMiM-a t kiujta uo Theyonly regard their appetites nd,coin forts J They are well houseiLjwell dressed and wel fed. They appeaMo rwaat no more. Thes faca constitute no excuse.tfor slavery, but I mention them ni trading (q thovitMtatesrjuri had belter lettU 'flff atone at present, afao a'd-i dress themselves to suppressing this great e-beMioft'.' '.r' .-.'- o , 'The Presidents late, reaolatiea ; and taes sage,- as t6 aiding: emancipation, is .regarded here as urtwonbv of his position. it contains Eropoeitioris -which are not only untenable; ut weak in the extreme.! ; : . '.' ,, s : Here il the unasked testhnonrot a man whose whole 'political existence has rested'oni is the testimony, nots4 prejudiced witness but of! at toaa -wbo'haai.takeu his life in his. hand ia deience o the Unionl He speaks no longer as a political - ataniper anxious & inflame the minds of his hearers' against th e h-ted. Southern Oligarchy." ., i testimony is that of one who baa come to see tht his- be lief as to the condition of the slaves was gross ly erroneous, and that the interests of a bleeding country demand that , the-, actual truth should be known-by the people of the North. Let .all good citizens of every party. ponder the statements which he makes. Let. us all keep especially in remembrance the fact which he states, that the slaves for whom we have so deep! v eympathised. appear M happier" and "cerfaihly live and dreaa-;beUer,r than thousand of our own white neighbors in the advancement 'of whose welfare we " spend so little thought and ma-nifest each cold and constant indifference. Newark AdtocaU.- A Host Ittr&OT&inirt Article from Tnurlow Weed's Albany Erening Joux- naL ; -.-t;: ; ' ' - ' ); : - We publish the following article from the Albany Evening Journal, edited by THCatow Wnnand a son of Secretary Skwasd, and is generally supposed to foreshadow the views ofthat gentleman. It confesses to a sad disappointment of Abolition theories : TBXNxoao not parrAXSB roa libxtt whiti MZH THE OSLT aXtlAMCX. From the Albany Ereojac Joarnal. The people of the South, ia terainstiag their voluntary silegiaace, placed taeauelvea bejoad tho protection of the power to whlck alUgianee had ba rendered. . If the servile popalatien of the Senth had takes the opportanity it Might have accomplished iU own freedom, and aided the .North . ia aoeom pLUh ia the discomfiture of the enemy. If it had been prepared for freedom, sa)h conrae woal-f have, aadoabt-edly, been takes, ier h history of the world hows that those oaly are really free who obtain liberty with their blood.. Whatever the aeatiatents ef the JS OTth may have been ia relatioa to the negroes, it i very certain that any assistance they eoald have, rendered would have been received by the eoaatry; and the fact that no advantage was taken ef the oppcrteatty "'' - - -. rt?irrw-veve1ow' f-. It-' must be confessed that-the negro has played, thus -far an unexpected role in the drama of revolution He hat not mantfesltd that alacrity to embrace the opportunity for freedom which toe had anticipated. The most san- Suine has, we presume, by this time aban-oned the idea of his being -a very essential auxiliary in the ' work of putting down the slaveholders' rebellion. Nothing, we take it, has been more clearly established by the history of the past few months, than that whatever is done to break the power of the oli garchy and destroy the political influence of slavery, must be done rather by white' men of the North than the blacks of the South. The latter may indirectly assist, but they can not be relied upon as a "constant quantity," in the fearful problem we are called upon to solve. ' - ' ' We had expected a very different state of things. We doubted whether the rebels would cfarr liazard the acciden;s of war, menaced, as I we supposed they were, with a "foe in the rear" in th 'hsne of four million of mal Secessionists. Indeed, in the earlier months of the rebellion,' appearances seemed to iusti- fv euch an expectation. ihe- air was rati of strange ramorsi- Hints of Moody outbreaks were dropped from oracular lipv Intimations of the ripening of long-concealed plots , were daily gisn : out. Prophecies that with . the eotnipg of the Christmas holidays, at furthest, we shojAld witness extensive uprising : of the blartks, were rife. . .-. , ' .; -: .. We counted, upon this disposition of the negro to; take ad vantage, of the rebellion of his master to . inaugurate- a rebellion Ton his own behalf, as one ; of. the chief: elements of the weakness of the South.-; Wa argued-that the people confronted, by the horror of a ; Servile uprising.. would aUdly ' seek! the proteei tion of the Government SrainSt which ri'oey had so msdly revolted. i . We supposed that so far from continuing ? to resist, they would invoke tho.aBsistaaca ofour troopa to save them (roaa.th Airy oC their , own iosuiYut chaw But the : reMiu anticipated has not corns to pass. Slavery, so far rom. being an element of weakness has been an element of strength to therehla. The blacks home failed; except hi a ftwoases.ttembracs fa opportunities of freeedom. i hey have failed as a ciaaa to prove1 that ibey "ry ardently -cvet a change ofeM"cmnst.n?es. It is true they have sought our cavips U Ui numr bers; but they have not exhibited a thing Ipfeaf 'et-tledpurposfo strike fa liberty. They "have talked vXgueW about the " Canaan of the North." but ther have not struggled, very desperately to reach tb,e promised lead. Itmay be answered that they have received no' encouragement from tm Government? irat the - very, faot that they haveevoe taken the ibktativec bat waifed for others to do the work bf emancipation -fbr tham; ia-a stfoaj presunlfoBf of their lake-vrarmneet and wanfrof trioMjoeuagei. ! So deep has the canker of bondagV trtcn into the aoat f the afctejotaaBa' le'bfetwine halfenamor! pf tit ekalej LVC" baiteitde toi expect from him iirthe fearful jtrnrgleHtt whioVwarerknga tor nins, must, forthew rsssug it leasts be snr-es :bTt,arves E Wneattly show hin Uwis;teaeii loto vsik. I "STi f V'FFrl&Wi to , learn, but fjf WOfoui -armel .Wien,. Lge?hBHWM&.of babeuJ pu ncr$i v-r weii mf icneperepiiea f :?.Xea .wr awe p x: : ; eo r &irttOh:&tsi$ -aMrp toyixrWlbxbl oTrihenitsi States Scnatora-froDabt fateieh -VasJimeton;4U'aded WthrlTotf l&&&AiA, akjftrroHAM aaa4tnan'whd bever'-badtiy raipa'thwHh'thls if breath 4e ievotei! t itsrd6etnetJoin1'sra U M hi tearr Wlllda.re pttxmU&' Mr. VALLAxmoHAif , in noticing this speechlh the House 6t BepfieBefttaUVe)fiibrlnded tneW thorj lTon.Bp Pi WAftt,' as a1llAV, WSconhdrtl and a coward? r Th'es are" ifrdWg thelav btit my mprjr justified hj thif rafigaag!--whicb WAPxused toward Vjtxt4!rPtoA.'Mr.Vki landiobav, we think,i may well Qompare'Tjis Teeord of detotir to fhe" -UViiorf ifli- Mr. Wai; In 'August, 1855; ifr7Wiii iriade1 speech at Portland, Maine, which was report ed in full in the1 Boston : AVai;1' Bepablica'n journaL-one friebdry to MrViifti; ' " ": 4hi speech has been pabllshed ' in1 JfetUus- V Po&Hcal Text book, and the extract was giv en at the time in all 4b e Democratic Jdnrnab of the conntry. " Its 'authenticity was never denied by Mr: Wax, and it ' stands" roilajr without challenge on his part. ?ln thai speech Wax said ; '.!-; ' - ' " There was reallr no Union now betweeh the North 'and the Sooth; and "he believed no two nations, upon eArtht eatartained ? feelings o more outer rancor towara eacn other , than these two sections of the'He'publie. ' The only salvation of the Union,-therefore,"1 was to' be found in divesting it of all taint of slaverr: There was no Union in the South. Let us hoe a Union, or let us sweep away, this remnant which we call Union." ' r V. . , ; , ? " Those were the sentiments of . the, patriot, (in some people's estimation,) Bxicjamiit r. Wadx. His action ever since that ' time has been in harmony with; his declaration. ITe has done almost as flinch as anj other man io aestroy me nepuniic ana onng on tne pres ent state of things. t Tour years after that,, in 1850, we clnd Wadx making a'speecK to some females of the Western Reserve, who had presented the "Sons of ! Liberty, of Ashtabula, (which is Wadx's county) with ' a banner. The presentation was made at tbe time the application for habeas corpus on behalf of the res. cue Abolitionists was pending at Columbus In the course of r his speech, which was pub lished at the time in the Eepublican papers pf Cleveland, Wadx said :" " Ladiks: I stand before 'you "to-night to say that those men of Oberlin and Wellmgton acted just as I should have acted, and willact whenever occasion presents itself. And more: I will seek opportunities to vioLate the Fugir uve siave Act. " Ladies and fellow-dtixena, the bonr of trial has come. Twenty pf our, aeighbora-jr n rn4y7r ehJfihIr oa-i to" Canada- rsnall we tamely eubin.it in the face of all our boasting and threats? In the nam of iroa lei us be true a our words.- Jt as be true to our professions and principles,. ' If theSupreme Court of Ohio does not grant the habeas corpus, the people of the Western Ittserve tAutt arant ' it- sword in hand if need be regaAileSs of the cry of save the Uni'.n regardless of every thing but duty, but moralitv. God and justice... We will march to Cleveland and liberate these Christian felons. There is no other alternative left for us. If we are hot cowards, cringing slaves if we are not dead and insensible to the principles of our fathers if there is one spark of 'give us liberty or give us death' left in us if -we a're not ready to become field hands on a cotton plantation, we will' rise and shout in the ears of tyrants, reig:, yspeopUP until our State and nation .are relieved from the base thraldom into which they are . now plunged." The Supreme Court, underlhe auspices of the patriotic Judge S.vrAtfp. did : not grant ""ine writ, but still Wadx did not move, sword in hand, upon Cleveland; for the purpose ' of res cuing those who had violated tbe United States laws. . . ' ' "0: ; , .- ' :;: v:; ,Now,' having )ooked:at the record of Wavx, the soHcalled poiX,.let us jiurn to that , of the so-called Oviitor VallandiohaM, and see which is beet. 'The Horn; C, L.; "VALtAirnioRAit: ifl some rnVarks which be. made! jatejy thi Hoo8e,'alt Washintoa. spoo' the bill . for the abolition of slavery in the Dtstrlet oK Cblum-bia, saidt l''f.ift?it?iJ$ 5 A ; "Had I no othef o.be7 J'm' onpo-'.te"'; because I regard all fbif class of iegialatioh as tending to prevent a, restoration of th U;n'0fX of these States as it was; and that is the grand, object to which I Jook, .Ikn6w,well'tJat, id a verjr littler-Vhile''the 'qhestioh wifl be 'be-tweaa the old Union of theso Htsdm-ihi'Un ion aiovrJafJfas-madA and om-nwt onsor some new unity Government., fr eternal1sparw' tion-ditunion. . To'boPslJujte latter Jam Unulter-, abfyaJMlMJi&Mhylffi Uratia f the Union, as it was mi 17S9, and coniik u4M?mjy&SitJ ia ths last hour of my 'poitilg.nperspnaixUnee f it be witAtn the limits of possibility to restore and maintain that Union. . ' v. How the Sorprif e- was Effected. ' ' 'Tift lftouiytAVP Philadelphia Pgfvese following new account of .the. raa.nnefln whieh,Gi.Craiita ,.'Thi Utile wasunq.uetuabl tha avet languinry sf . the, war and was, likewise ' of the most singular and critical on record, The great body ofoor meojwwre located about three miles' from lW ri teVlVnthTrf. ;tnati described tem Wirclei bi flOtaineitf lb a wwa Tcwsxance, naa no covert measures resorted to fearful looking Mississippi knivesVtbeq gtfil Some doien bthtrs, and hurried tUem with- They exchanged ;4anbrttaSr!AhoVm thef taied,' prf5rmed;-"talmn3 gukrdtTand'-'eU lenUy the wh6U'f5rce of BeanregarJ, 'cofislflf-, ing of 100,000 men, under A.'SidneyohnsOn, CheathararPoBrsf Vnd other celebrated soldiers, crept aEa&t4ata car camn. and im- ped'uitelypefted;aereufirer.nn.ratont 4Wfjme.aj J3ecwecii4aapretarfiU; .:aitfoe ptrrcd iusfea4jiislit onandiy tacrnie & IUlktljeaaiiten-taldewi;ht3 a fc.ay. taatv'Tiafcaitsrti!ai dxittetz'f tLii fil. fall 'l,w3 ew-.rcc:i--rr i.r.1 licreimzS xzlr contract; t XziZzLl.fSCl?? - 'ttzir t tl-Tcdtlt Lefcre' tieii eCsal ore 1 i r,;3iAei by the .eaemyr The' latfrfri J aai derstaad.'cpnftived to1 learn theaatertlgTit of Ihe ulghl,' Shd used it tdlhcJrgTtltidranuge, Their butchered some' of oar ciclcti with' their &t i TZMaJthV (hi "negrd ami fif iiii'yrcl'deW&eTrW. Ident. T.lHPP'iVii lition of slaveWin the" .fby the arbitra- ry eaerels)f aacenati. .tioaal poweivi iHe' aaya the, coostitatioer ' ahoriu,sar,aioiH; ean-.deal with thU qaesti i .with, any op, aaiuary results. . Jy u is tnat anyas-ml&itf,VM&i-. rvvHtev woalf War the work, aad inighl ref bslaSrn dyitairy agaU tempptaxily o pstv r4VWiJ ni trJ. J 2.. He4eniea &t eUtw r ia the caase af 'the war and that iU aboUffaimU a4 tbeetrag-gleftiiHeiaayi .-WwtiV'K'so-t fiiiidKx; il Ery inaa acqpatnted ihffacU, xsrow-s that it is fallaoioys to eall Slt jflaTeholdV ers'.1 rebellibnJ'1 If suck was, the fact, iwb dlrlsidha of Wkmyco.J have suppressed tt without dlfecnlty r tbe -fcegroee themselves could. easily pttV4own the' lwe hondred and fifty Uvouaand slaveholder! but is a matter of history that the slaveholder, as a body, were the last and most" r,!ctant to join the rebellion', m - . . AirVc; . 43,1 Id the tbllowing1 pasiL he re-asserts the theory of the rebellion JLs- . : It was thnegfOijaestlph andot the slavery question which mad i jj rebel lion questions entirely different ahB requiring entirely different treatment; and st'Uas1 neceasary to understand the diatfactkm f enable sa to deal with t successfully, as it i tbat the: physt eianhould know the diief $ Which he is called btitb treat andT td cart f If the rebellion was made bv two hundred i nd flftr lhonaand slaveholders, for the sake f f perpetuatine sla very, men it migm -oe cc lpiete remedy to extirpate the Institution t if the rebellion has grown out of the; ab,M Knee of the aon slaveholders for emancipat In and amalgamation, and theif dread of "n- Jro quality how will their discontent ' ba r lred br th " very measure; the mere apprehj Bion Of which has driven them into rebel tua i ; 4. ColBLAtit charges tl It Ihenl 'nltra ahti- siaverTtmen-90roprae wii wit I iherela inter- est to making questions i a .ecting slavery but lot airectiy toe contrary pr maa.''. .ile says; i - - i - - .... s i -. The North is a unit, and ftbe Sooth ia divided on the question of. tbelTnieni Could the gentlemen' who are adverting for a 'policy for -uc AaiDiaiiiniiiQiy improve toss conoition uy a policy which would divide oar frieada and unite the South T They, iriagine, indeed, that by decreeing . emauapatidn they could get more efficient help fromtSe negroes. If they could show any reason ' supposing that the negroes wouia run a wr iTv reater num bers than they now d i -a decree. there Fiihtlbion- ' vj - ?htt ft ere 4" notThet Sigtxt&Mn- for .sapao&ing Ihht Atl run away now, I believe," who can get away. . It is only wlMn our armies invade the wlave regiona that they caa get away, and it would still require that the1 forts' they are cooiptiUed to build, shoakl ba taken -Inr our armed men. We could not strengthen ou selves at toe ionn,uy.tOtt measure certamly; we have already the whole force of that gioaf and we could not strengthen ourselves at the&outh, for we eanoot reach the slaves by such a proclamation except bjr force,' and we should add to the force of the free men to oppose ns. ' ' 'if - - . , Colonel Blaik holds that the separation of the two races and the colonisation" of tbe ne groes is the true, policy for the Administration a policy which will open the fertile territory -'' M- " ' a 'a w. .' "" ' of tae soutn to. toe utoor or wiuie men. Statesman. ; Cbafiseatioa 01t. ; The wo Rouses devoted pretty, much the whole of yesterday to this subject, and in each the debate was yery iptcy. MrcDana, of Kentucky, in the Senate, closed bis speech a follows r - ' : "' L: If, the party m power was not, going Ho Keep its pledres, but going tomaJte war oo the rights of States and their ' domestic ori eerns, then the'war had only-begun The Union men 6f the Sooth would never submit, and he avowed It as their; EepresentatTve. ,' i Il the House of Bpreseutativesr ' ' -sir. Dickman or .irensjyivania, made a fierce assault upon President Lincoln, assert ing that Us cowardice and shirking' from 'res- pomnouiues assumed oy nim ' -Wben be took the ''olith'' of jb'ffice, had forced Congress to! adopt'. measures io bnnz turn no' W his dulv.' Had iTackio bcenlideiit, said Mr.1 Hick4 man, no legislation of this contemptible char-' acter would nave beelTxequired, but now Con rress is compeledolfeerbrattaown duties aod taace: ol tke President aldi M X .;rV bis best efforts. Ut opposed the general proposition of "the billwhicit conteniplated-'the deetroctioft tof ;all the righta 1a the1r"'Vtperty! qf cUUenalofi the States now in rebellion, and !elwe,;rreJ4ewratt; qrerseer, oXvv.mil-lkn nexToes. as contrary to the. Constitution and the'most saterd principles ofJU'w ' tile also defended the -President in - elooAiei "terms: deaying that he was a coward;, in declining to dp what the,.Ckm8tjtutfBfivea hhnTio, power bSKiYtefioW imaiedi ad the members gathered closely-ar-uh41dm.to emUhiavery? word atteredv Mr. Crbtaoden cpased himself against a jjeneri al Confiscation Bill, tbe effect which ' would euiKiae the raialf protriu 4u'ttermiaa-tion. Could they not snppresathe' rebellion witksumei waJtont reaorting to weaeaimre hot only. Bbwdmtvcleatly against, the lCoaatite tkm which provided that no raaatehalt be ds K red of hi pTftpcrty khotrtthtwosJ of r t , Ha stressed tb Hoaee at4eirthi as-sertinB? that the beotde wxmkt twrmitTUehher the Abolltioistr aojitha slgi tpot 21i4 vt tiittlnc-r u?rf!'mffdARted9 .tv thexmutera" feyitie-tljTtsjiad aadtliirtlrei benevolent aascciitions for white raeaThere!!::cl rer! -scf thelat ter-clasare:C aiPlrr. TUye utUi:tiL..r:.-Ul U it, j t-sliypvMMl of tLVt!aTesi 1 -r? tiPJ la fox r4A vuc at oh4tQ 3TGSi. .ao J ucyi' Thf foDowiflg 'tiies were ' re ssggejded ' by seeiag aa : inteaOv kaAlU'v nT tie AmarW" mi ' ai tt tfWttroi. tkdWe ef Aae eV htiefi h-Ssu XiisS-rppl, wamvihey Isethatlaf iI. eld leveletiaasry soldlayaas nee atlas earliest set- id-jfVK??? W7 Pe :!! gave me erlaa4 Ir Jeve Jfyt oouty love . I lfe Tsnnessee: I vm sorry I ever left aer. I want U Et; wWehat flac ware.' I doat Tike theW plefMiuass! )' fSUy :aU mi a arfler'iUwf'-. aveeerae:Baibl!ea 'o Teeoercruer savage Tee," " ..; i;. Waese. ravasiag deeds oa ear than fasatters, h s '. Brosrht terror, death and. wee. " . ' "And bow we nferedBid tofl aadpam,-': ' ' ,o .-Tiahhaory.wia tell yea how ;- ., ' " Yet those, whose peace those wars did gau vi Can call xee a traitor now. ';:'-; : .: 'Ht vilimo--:q.V--vji-r tt' :i.:Li V'Vi i'; V .VXbore that flag in JSew Orleaaa,;' .. ' Which eitys doom was thought Beyofed the fewer of patriot SMeas, - vi -r tat glorfoas Xighta was feagbt ; ... . : . Bat when I saw to the stripes and stars 'The British How bow, . c r ; I little teoagbt ta mj grabsfal prayers, -T To be called a traitor now. : . -KspeUcaaftag was beard of them j : - Mo moon's lone star was found; : : No palmetto bosh', with shaggy stem, ' And the serpent ooUed 'aroaadj Bat the stars wd stripes aWae remained, and. seal saa yow tell me how, -That he who bore, that flag, no stained, . Caa be called a traitor aowf . " , Oh, had I votpalned ia my native State, : Where nty chieftain's grave Is made, Or had I baea doomed to similar mte, - . ; . ..And my bones near his been laid t-, Or had he been spared for his country's good, -' ' Tm swre he'd not allow"- - . - . Those friends who by aha In arms had stood. ' , Shoald be branded as traitors now if But why, my age, am I thus assailed? To my name why apply this stalaf Have I to myeomntry ever failed, ? : Or to society proved a baa4 T ' ' Jle I ao such charge or kindred orime . ' Call bo stamped on my furrowed brow ; Bat beeacse rebelltoa I mast deeliae, They rail me a traitor now. . .-.' , , But yet, in my heart, T can't despair , My eouBtry, so free and pure, Whose toils and triumphs I helped to share, -For ages will yet endure. . When madmen cease, and calm react, .' And reason their miads 'eudow,'--They'll then these erael words retraet , ... That make me a traitor ow. 1 , Sunday Battle. :. The late terrible struggle at Pittsburg adds another to the long list of Sunday ' battles. The facts are so clear in ' this and numerous other conflittSv and the reeults have been so uniform and decisive, that comment U not only warranted but demanded, .alike by philoso phy, patriotism and pietr. Th general statement cannot be gainsaid, that the more important movements of the National forces, in the early stages of. the present war were- made on Sunday ? and that theywere undeniable fail ores. . ratterson a column -.was notonous. Tor its' manoeavrelog .on Sundays, and for. little else. Big Bethel, Bull Sun, and Ball's Blaff were' the great blunders- and defeats of attacking armies on Sunday. : AH these en gsgeraenta, exceptine Ball's BlufL under the dow imoris- oned Geo. Stone, preceded Gen McClellan's noble Sabbath order. , Thenceforward the rebels have made the Sunday assaults, with invariable' loss of the battle thus waged. - Mill Spring opened, their career of Sunday fighting, which closes with Pittsburg.. The battle of Winchester was begunson Sunday morning.' The first of those cost' the rebels Kentucky ; the second,' the Valley of Virginia ; and the third,. the Mississippi Valjey. The Merrimac,-too, after its destructive Saturday's raid, ran a muck against the Monitor on . Sunday, and hae spent a month in repairing damages,! Add to the facte,', that most ef the Generals Com mending whose names .figure ae assailants in these battles, were slain in them,: or are die- Saced on account of them ; and There is food r reflection in ' these bits of history,':' "What has become of our General Pearee ' of BijJ Bethel . memory f -What . of Gen.; Stone ? Where are Zollicoffer and Sidney Johnston ? In short,; since we have ceased the business of. -Sunday fighting and the rebel took, it up, we have had onlv victories to record, aad they only. defeats and aurrenders.v Fort Dqsielson and Island No. .10 were our Sunday morning bent-son oa week day prowess. ; v .Nor are these isolated historical facts, History ia. full of them. The British forces assailed na on Lake Cham plain and at ;New Orleans on Sunday, and were defeated. . We assailed then at Quebec ; our army was re-puiaed and ite leader slain. - We: began the battle of . Monmouth and had the worst of it. Napoleon ' began the' battle of- Waterloo, and lost bis army and his snpire. The battle of Blenheim, which has been repeatedly cited by O Herald, with' its usual accuracy, aa a successful Sunday battle,' was not fought on San-day but began on Wednesday." '. - . . 1 VJ - TIiTniiTtg DiecoTery. v:i ; The follywing wonderful story is told by the London correspondent of the'Dwo&t jSrs-ning MfaUr . :' -' -v-- ' ' ' - This is the age of discoveries, and one of sack a' startling nature' has just been made fri aa English county that it seems . oat of place hi the region of sober fact; and to bel6ng porV ry to the atmosphere of the three-volu'me novel. Here are the circtiinstahees v the narnee for tb'e(momeat I am act at liberty to indicafel The Earl of . married not long agoand brought hie bride home to one of-the old fam ily manaiona which members, of the Euglish aristocracy regard with, an" aflectioa' amounting to veneration. ltThe lady, howeTer, being more continental ia her tasteav- after 'a -abort residence - ia the ' apartments appropriated to her tise expressed wish to have a. boudoir in ftbe iciaityr ef her bedroom. The noble carl vroaidgladJjr have complied with the requeat, bat, upon examinatie.it was -found fthat rooma, as eoeaetimee happens in antiquebaHd-ings,-were so Awkardly ciatritnited -that br no eonceivablrplaf of Te-erranstraentcoala-.tie pouaotr pe nwea w.-iDereupon oe- came necessary, to invoke ' professional assist ance, ahd aa etniaent architect war aommon- ad iftVmi LimcLseutrHaiaxaJliiaed'thAV boaa ad jroraji Londoewr -lie- exami aedthe house narrowly, and said there seemed.to bftiaUlid for tt to bqiid, taona.MXX.tae-same-time ' he could aorwirt? irrcJXriM there must be another ,nd;scover?I rooti -soTaewhereTia tiif srifj: 'crthe- taansfcal Tteot!a earl iie'lici at the llzi the'elir t issrvaaf ra.nd rctiioers-cf.-tls firsily VereVcaes t.o'ae'Vsifl "!ir?I t" thtrr vcir 1 -zz r'ea vrub.c?- cfl lit ,x: ; ZS9:JIL: cr.-rT,,r' he J i. ct f Xt.TJVir'r.:.: t 1 ' " :i Vi f t!? tIoa,"lc :!-rr I LiSil.f r;s:tt.tti!:? crt Lit'coos : - U.a? irVUv f aad, whea the opeaiaj L. karaatyac - sy--wMuw.sweBi.KnuKi,.iisv a-igu wmbich, Itself which almost defeat. .aUemptfaides' enpon, , . a ne apartmen vwaa tuieo- up io .ton rtcbesx and most luxurious style orisu years ago A quantity of lady's apparel lay about; the btoi jewels were ttereaoa!the -dreas- jne-tabletAadi ba, for.the laded aspecv.wbich VYmrjfMiar yrTU uicaimoer ,mias. nave peen cnaavea nau-an-aour previously, vn rapproachinr the bed the most canons sizht all' was eseavand this it is which affords the only cine, to, the-mystery t The onch; held thejkeleton of a female, end on the floor, derneata toe bed. Half ra bair Out, lay anotU? er skeleton; that of a man,' presenting evident traces of violence, and proving thai; before he expireU in that position, he must have . receiv ed some dreadful injury. . The secret connected with this tale of blood has been well kept, for not merely had All tradition of the 'scene faded away,' but even the existence of the room itself was , forgotten. The eurvivors, proba bly, walled up tne apartment at tub time, - and its contents remained hermetically sealed up till the present day, when, according' to the beat calculations, after the lapse of a century and a-halt, daylight baa accidentally peoetra ted into this chamber or. horrors, whicb, to the surprise of all concerned, has been discov ered in one of the noblest mansion in the consaty of. ; . - r-,-:-. Story of th.6 Prince of Wales beinjf Al- - reaay xiamea. - .. .. An excellent story is told .by the London corresponJent of the Detroit Advertiser, .-about a clandestine marriage which H. B. H the Prince of Walse ia said to liave . contracted witk an Irish girl. ,The. afiair came off eo the story goes six. xaonthe or to ago, and here are the particulars : ; -'. The enthraller of the Prince's 'heart and reciment of his troth is a beautiful y'ounir Hi- berian lady whom he met and fell in love with' during the military training at the Car ragh of Kildare in Ireland, where Hie iioyal Hichnese had appropriated to him, a little re moved from the main line of tents which form ed tbe encampment, a neat hut wtta a gar den attached to -it. Though he had every thing to make him comfortable there,, during the idle days and . long- evenings,- he sometimes cantered off to see some of the leading j gentry of Kildare, whoee demesnes fringe the great plain on which the Prince was stationed, j To one of those houses in particular, and which was inhabited . by a family of ancient and almost historic standing, hie horse's bead was often est turned; end his visits became so j frequent that they ceased to be formal. ' Nothing was suspected by the Prince men tore untilone afternoon two young- ladies, galloped over the green sward, . palled up in front of the Prince'e hat. and the "alacrity with which he came out to -meet them,- and hie par ticalax manner to the 'younger one, attracted the attentioo'of aa'; officer is high .rank: who happened at the moment to. be. calling on. the Prince, 1 and who, being a veteran in love as well ae la war; fancied that lie saw . something more than mere politeness of a young Prince to a yonng.lady. The jisiis were repeated, and ther were also seen riding about the coan- tsewjj gowewen te. wVa oag story oe-ur a certain utile cburcb not Jnanr. muea; from Newbridge (the next town , to : Currah ) .there were, one morning, unitea in maxnmony iwy voone people, one of -whom was 'the: lady in question; svad the -ether .rei A ppesuuit' to the throne ot iireat,inuunttneon(y.parues present being, beside the clergyman jt brother officer Of the Priace and the bride f brother. . ' - ";' CoBfMiioni of EsptbUcai. ; I voted for Lincoln That'a so. I carried a lamp sixteen nights ; and wore out as many as two capes. Yod see I am about to eoafess all, and. make a clean breast. X voted for Lincoln, because I was told that bis elec tion would pat an end to slavery agitation. and quiet the country. The 'Tribune' said so; a larre committee of New ; York BeDublicans vouched for it; and all the Republican leaders of the country -confirmed it; I don't pretend to know mach myself ; but I supposed otir leaders knew, and I believed them.:- . ! '- ; ' I voted for Lincoln to make ' times . gooxL The leaders told us that times would be. bet ter than ever, if Lincoln was elected. That six dollars was only a Locofoco price for pork, and that I might better have the Linooln price which would be eifbt. ; ' - I am cot a rich man; . I was not able to give land to my sons: but X wanted each of there to have a farm. Our leaders told me tliat my bots should each have 160 acres when Lin coln was elected. Poor Jads I .One of them sleeps in a trench at Fort Donelson, and the other is in the hospital at Mound City. . After Lincoln was elected, and the fuss fair: Ir begun,' I wanted the Crittenden compromise adopted; but the leader persuaded me out of that.- They asked me 'if I wanted to saerifioe mr manhood, and break , up the Great Re publican party 1 : I did n't know what to re- en they told me that the South was only 'gassing,' and that we could not kick her - on t of Jibe Union, if we should try. - That all the secession there was, was only paper secession, and . would come ' to nothine. That if: th e Sooth should secede, we wonld be better with out her; and that if we wanted her tack, it would only be the job of half a day to thrash her into submission. That the whole world. and especially England and' France,' would this,-And much more of the same sort, our leadexa told tne. : : w - .V r 4n - in j I Thus I was deceired. and led from one ter- nixe miuuermio anoiucr. adu au., uiw uhic, and npoa achv and all of these matters, the Democracy told me- the truth. Thiars hare turned out just as the aaid. : It would -have been much better for me and for the country. if I, and all of ua, had been Lemocrats. Jjogan vnncii- . .- 1. 1 - . In tie Heosa 'yesterday j VaUaadigham denounced Wade as a liar a scoundrel,, and a coward.- for alluduBg to hud.. m a. speech Ooade in Waahingtoaa abort time .'ago, as a than who never had ayrTmp4thy" with lie Bepttbliciat whose evry breath - is devoted to Ua deatradkoa iaat aal&r aa jest aa far ae his. hearty dare permit hitn to ri will tne 001a ; and lioahearted Trade al low: ValUoSigham; to escape chti?eaeBt' for sacii'-aB?uae 1 -1 auc,"Oh -one occasion. shook bis fist benctth .thef eose of; Calhoua jTrue, Calhoun wa a -xna nn5b. Jaferior to t Vt. Kn;.Tt : .,4 V. : -i, u L: ' iraae raysicauy.-ana ae u eira sbooa.his fist beneath. Wade's pboscis; bat Ben has enibyed a'ronJerfoT reputation lor cvsurae erersineevIIe aaps-rsi it m -little -at au Can, whers(fct taaasthe fiti time ireccri-el He-ran ; tow?rl Washin(m '.e-'ir.zt a cry t wHoci that Ll broken" loose from; a Li;-, tJ tc-t the t&I!ock by severil LiJ. If Ls d-s't lriVaw'eaxa1 abwf Ea wUMjr Lis rt'itlia fi tratery estiny.- lie r.is ri e fvr-iry whose f -Iti--; rnal''es tre'ef a'Li-'i crJ?rand thejiJ t.ar ivebii - tftftatie,-tutiltiist be uue.' tle rlioi besxtf s-sxiUtfcUreiiwElie -lailtr ct a sheep's tfZSCttMp.) -Tl1xp the jfollowia er T:tn Ilba CcreafiionjjreetiI',;' s 1 4 jV-,;. rHtZr&Ji rpeech deliver r i ia thli c!ty the c! r Csfr ate,' for ae iucbr; r tm-li-ji fo? erated,thers hs i.. .-rut .-'r;ti 5. a deliberate wirpose ts t' t it- judical tribunal and tliw . U ,1 -s't theouaeor iiepret-u..j ci t States, and every-whera : cr awe,-mumidate ajKXj.trac?' 5, t-they can. the men who boldir t 1 -' 1 1-..If: rtrerrai its moTemestcrer eince that partj rt tr'.b- . House, aa Chairman ofthe'Committ c'a : i olutions a man whcf.'bever' bad aay if tti thy with this lpubUovbotwhoeeevpry t---'J-is deroted to ita destruction jaai :mUfjtJ- , heart dare permit him to go,' j ;" v ' Mr. Vallandighainv-.Here, fn- placela this Boose, -and a' alUpresebtadver bounce and 1 speak-it advieedly th -4 thor 4 c that speech aa -.- liar; a. acoundrtl ;. and a . coward ?- His name is JJeiy amia Tt SVJ HcCTenat., Xiaeola' tad gtsTrt?i.: The Philadelphia Ledger, lw' aoticfag lbt report bf Mr. Stanton's probable .xesisaatloej. give the following iafbrinatioa which 1 im rtanViftroe: ' Iv.-?t ,.vi-; r t5.e'"f ' The above ramor Is -probably iirematar b4 it points to a- ednanot-hh setxTe likely to happen. Mr .Lincoln;. i ia; eaidf does not approve of the manner in which Mr. Stanton is represented to Ear rejected the adV vice ofour best generals and insieted car- Sing on the campaigir aocordiagtTtdbJ Own eas. Ai an illustration of the Atiaastrona re suits following froiD- this system, it" taay be mentioned that the pushing of Banks 'across the Potomac was done," It is alledgedJ'ln-tSi face of a decided opposition ob the part of Qm McClellan. It mav now- besaiely mentioned that it waa a part of Geo, McClellan' rigir nal plan to move on Bichjooad while the ene mr were still at Manassas, "and to cut ihenz otf and capture them. When' he found tha Bankawa to be made independent of hjan4 sent over tbeTPototnac, haprotested arainsl it. vointme oat that such, a measure would re sult in the Immediate evacuation of Mabai&aa, aad that thedan ofthe campaign would iba be aUosrether broken?ip,:! The evenV taa jusr, tilled the prediction. The txoables iatheCab- met, u 1 saia, grew out 01 me uiu.'rve- w views in regard to1 the Virginia earn pairs. Mr? Lincoln himself supporting OenJ-McCi4liaha plana, . such ouieioc eaonosv exisfe anrn leading to a result, such a the abov rumor probably asticipatecL.. ' r ' I'jj'S, v : The following circumstance say (heE2ch--mond Whig, recently - ocenred at Petisacola,-and its truth is vouehed for by "ar trastworthyj " aeieosa 01 vaeir country, no- this "glgafatio rebelliOB,-; P t-T v.i.. loaz-ft. I havw- eeea it in secret 1 1 1 l A soldier in the Confederate service rtUlnr to a long and profoand sleepv frbmr! whicbhisr ceearadea ; vainly essayed to arose him -. At last he woke up himself. He' then, stated that fie should die the next afternoon,!; 4Vcloclc,' . for it was so revealed to him in hii'dreaixu- He -said " in the' htst Week - of the' month of April fonld be fought the greatest and bloodif est battle of modern times,, and that early, in. May peace would break upon the land mora suddenly and unexpectedlr than the war -had done in the- beginning-; -The first part of-tbe; prophetic dream has ; been. realixed,, for; the. soldier died the next day at four o'clock p, m. Will the rest be in ApriT and May t Let be-, lievers in dreams c wait and ee lioWr Ad--verfiser. . - - :' " ' 1- i ' -ejeyeytr 1 .- .J'j' . . Showing Ma Colors. .1' ,.'; r On Uie 12th nlt9 in Congress, John A. Jing ham, an Abolition member of CoDgresa, froca' Ohio, in a debate on the Tax Bill made use' of the foUowiag treasonable language t;. Who- v the name of Heaven wants th cotton Stale or . any, ' other jStair this- side of perdition to ranain in th . Union; if slavery is to continue f.. . : 1 . J . . .- Mr Buf chaji is considered by hia RepobH- . . can friends a first rate Union bob, at least vra presume so, as he has never been - assailed "ia any of th eir rresses for the" sJbo ve declaration. Bad a. Democrat said he did want any' of th cotton States to remain ia -the ! Union -anlee Uiey retained slavery; they' would have scried at one fox his expulsion from the ; House. Yet Bikghak's sentiment is just as obnoxious-to an unconditional Union man as that would, be. ;The troth is, the only opponents . io ' the Union in the free Sutes these. who do not desire its restoration are menjaho do sot bv long to the Democratic peirtyCSn.'229 ' 7- . 1 T, 2IoiiPT; to whom Whea Sooth Carolina was makiag ready to. go out of the Union Got; Adams, f :thatr- . Sute, eaid: . .;: ; ".The aboiitionista are our best tneoU, Thank. God for .what they have already dont and for the inestimable blasibgs'they ar abouV to confer ther "are' entitledr-to' orV warmest; : gratitude. Their assault hav."peen'.nceaW ing, bat all for bar good. Tbey bavefaraib us with a justification foe dissolving ; our; cea aectioa with them,, i : Cil;v .--. j In the same cpirit,' W-cedell Phillip .thaaki ed God that be had created Qen. Beaere'rdV ' and inspired him to fire oq Fort" Sumter YT " ? . . The we see the rebel South -and th rtbelr North the Abolitionist and the Sssergloa ttr ekndwledge their obligatkma to,. andL their, . admiratioB for each other. Lo axx. '. JL.rptdal i :'eTtmei fronr Tortresi lloa? " roe says It i tated by-coetrabaaiaa tlui the -most .Intenae ; exeitenel.'existrcrii Norfolkand tbey bare great fearxf aa rV-crj by Buroside. Nearlj all the troops taiefrt, , to'Louth Mills, to repel any advance Lsru.cLt make.' - Coatrabaada etate that the &"ew- prtrw - '-oa thMerrimif twtlvetjrtioirrof wrought j iron and tel-peiarj.-- j 1 r rltlienM sif NorfiilkTLre IsaT ; : 'err-one.-.. ..-..-v -'':r: . r"..-.", . - -'" -" - - TreTfr' ..-'" v A3 AT km! . v . ii 1 m :'-lTar Ybxx.'A: rH .V!.: f Ciir C3 I ' - - V - .1- - i - tal rout ef two ccr. " - ! r-' .1 esrt j sixty ct 'i-cr. r-"-.. " . rr:y"t- -r . - i. : - . , - ..".. son and tl!. :.: Ur!t:!C:-'-r- " - 9 ren f-?mj;e 1 h l'f " " jl"' 1- t, - -j l ...... L 0La 1, ticr C; I - . -c tax rt'lcpL Ti.r i-d ltil :. ei aad woondel. !.oscatr:'' .ed.- ;: - , - - ; '-" 4 - W ry J :
Object Description
| Title | Mt. Vernon Democratic banner (Mount Vernon, Ohio : 1853), 1862-05-06 |
| Place | Mount Vernon (Ohio) |
| Date of Original | 1862-05-06 |
| Source | LCCN: sn86079142, Mt. Vernon Democratic banner (Mount Vernon, Ohio : 1853), 1862-05-06, Vol. 26, No. 6 |
| Format | newspapers; microfilm |
| Submitting Institution | Knox County Public Library |
| Type | Text |
| Digitization Information | 300dpi, 8-bit Grayscale, Model: NextScan Phoenix Upgrade, Software: iArchives, Inc., 3.240 |
Description
| Title | page 1 |
| Source | Reel number: 00000000004 |
| Format | newspaper |
| Extent | 7911.92KB |
| Submitting Institution | Knox County Public Library |
| Type | Text |
| File Name | 0090 |
| File Size | 7911.92KB |
| Full Text | iiift. . ? . '- r, -1 . - 1: rj . i i i : i i . i i i i i ' - - ; - j jv pi., m -r r . j i m n i Oflee la TFoodward Xtloek. M Sta Are Tliey 'Petnrmts or Aboil- J '- Intnch n it is conatantlj charged by un- cmpuious punj orgsm inai jnemocrau are "Jtl IUuknit8 of the North, we fTe--below -4ecantiona from leading Southern Union ineh 'to-show , who th regard aa 'Aiinemiea in . la'jpection. , , X'S- t i 'i r... V-.' ! ' ' -Wfomiqence with Goremor Ahdrew John-on; of TennesJtee.;' InhUlate speech at Naeh-VilK rn that" State. be says : 1' ' Tl " iThere are two ' parties in existence who .'want ."dissolution slavery and . a Squthern Confe.ieraey iaththobbr: Sumner wants to break vp OU Government, and to do the Abolitionists gen- ray. iney iioia tftat it slaTery survives the , , Union can not endure, Secessionists argue .that if the Union contisue alaverysIosL-a-'AbolitionisU' want na compromise i hui they reeanj, peaceable .secession as a humbug.; Why ? Abolition-is disunion ;' dissolution js . secession ; one is the other. Both are etri-in o accomplish the -aame object. One thinks it will destroy, the other save, slave- I Hon. Joseph Holt, of Kentucky, in his Louisville speech, last summer, said :.' 'fv7e make no apology for this wicked effort In the Soth to destroy the Government, We .grant the necessity of suppressing it ; but Ab- olitionism, that produced itt must also be sup-1 Ereseed. Abolitionism and Secessionism must e buried in the same political grave." '.TSTIOXT Or PARSON MOWN LOW.' .-. Parson Brownlow,in his Upera-hottse speech ia Cincinnati, a few days since, said : '" 1 hve to say that if two years ago . I bad 'been authorized to hunt up and collect them. 1 would have selected about one or. two hundred anti-slavery fanatics (for I knew them all, well,) and about an equal number of Godforsaken, hell-deserving Disunionists, I would tare marched them to the District of Columbia, I would then have dug a ditch a common' ditch and wrapped up their bodies in grmpsum weeds and dog-fennel, and buried them there. Had this been done then I should pot have been here to-night." The .Louisville DemtcraU a stanch and reli able organ of the unconditional Union men of Kentucky; to whose efforts, in connection with its able colleague., the Louieville Journal we are greatly indebted for the preservation of :i " ... ytiuiium Tarty 'are" ' " bouth eer being represented 5 tongress. .It would upset all their calculations and disappoint their hopes. They don't want the Union restored ; it is not their in-terestr T bey and the rebels South are a unit V opposition .to the Union. ; A restored Union will be the death of both of them.? - The! same paper bears the following testimony to the Northern Democracy : "MCJfO FOa TH CIO!f . The local elections in Ohio show a vastly Increased Democratic vote. Dayton, the home r-Vallandigham, has elected a Democratic Mayor by 150 majority ; the-majoritr against thew last fall waa 403. Let all Kentuckians bear in , mind that, in the . present Congress, wherever you find the vote of the Border Slave States you will find the Northern Democratic vote with them: The Northern De mocratic press and the loval press of the slave f eitates apeik the same lan'euaire. : I We a lout that some of th T?nnKlina in Congrrsa are conservative, and still more of contented chattels. . We counted upon in-them.are sq at home ; but they are constantly surrections terrible and wide spread insur-subjected to party pressure; and in' their ef- rections-aroong the servile population, as an forts for a wise and moderate policy, they will inevitable and almost immediate consequent have to depend chiefly on their political oppo- ces of a' war between the Government and the nents to sustain them. - On the other hand the j Pemoory o 'the North are not onlv sound for the Uuion, but for the Union the right . way." ; ' . Now, in connection with the above, read the 7 following. Less than a year ago Wendell Phillips made a speech at the Tremont Tern- - fie, at Boston, in which he said : . . . , - - , Th"antislavery party had hoped for and planned disunion because it would lead to the development of mankind and the 'elevation of the black man,' r filAvery. aJ . teea and Described .Ohid Bepuhliean ColoneL an We have heretofore stated the fa'cf,; that Wm UGiBsoir, the Eepublican ex-treaaure'r of ctaVe" a ipolqnel of a regiment (49th) - of " Ohio volunteers. !;Hia: was the first regiment which entered Kentucky from Ohio. "This was inritembej lasi'rAt the battle jf Pitts-bu.Lania.raa plwed'arihe head f a ' brigade, and the Slots Journal annbunceithj he reach ed Columbus, few. days ago suffering fron a bjoaei, wound which he received dur wg. kha hattla.1 Franks Sessions, in his letter to that paper, autes that Gea, McCook 1 lays Gibson's and Diekey'e regimenu covered IhevBselvw all re With y tXorrl on TtmA' w intrpdueii riminding the reader thai Gibaen. JuU been ode of xhaxnostetloquent and imyaaaJonid antialavery tathpera in Ohui; we too.w ?irbJk eJ eall VtientioD o the following ei- fceirrote homs abort, llxfore the ,bUlea.t Pittsburg and which erakfMhlished ohlhiftlt'or April in the- vVXa" ti is reoa'every onpowaa oaoormon slave Tilexe aa elsdwJiere beM 4 have- been; ihelsrrea.are'i well treated and ' well t revkied forj.ThexappaarjrarrnKaaiewtawtxlWe and dxtaaubetter than tie . poor whites or the rscesro Af,Ohidor the NotUu Theji'M ?"51lltr,a,PB th.doth;inVl rv77f lW aside: from imixe believed it. But the aesro her. WinH.U dreads the Nrthr rAy loa t4s &m and mr ihaya witnessed toch!a$-s)eeBa t ?-wte 'W waste rs, rttzTfii id. their hor have comet LxAbpDji kfm Jtiotzselan(i.in ihfpityth l jrlwU sluldrf and, blackr , pJay. together fTSid aistes 1 frjmfrtyiM.Mpm ion.ai in. ueiK DresenK miMiM-a t kiujta uo Theyonly regard their appetites nd,coin forts J They are well houseiLjwell dressed and wel fed. They appeaMo rwaat no more. Thes faca constitute no excuse.tfor slavery, but I mention them ni trading (q thovitMtatesrjuri had belter lettU 'flff atone at present, afao a'd-i dress themselves to suppressing this great e-beMioft'.' '.r' .-.'- o , 'The Presidents late, reaolatiea ; and taes sage,- as t6 aiding: emancipation, is .regarded here as urtwonbv of his position. it contains Eropoeitioris -which are not only untenable; ut weak in the extreme.! ; : . '.' ,, s : Here il the unasked testhnonrot a man whose whole 'political existence has rested'oni is the testimony, nots4 prejudiced witness but of! at toaa -wbo'haai.takeu his life in his. hand ia deience o the Unionl He speaks no longer as a political - ataniper anxious & inflame the minds of his hearers' against th e h-ted. Southern Oligarchy." ., i testimony is that of one who baa come to see tht his- be lief as to the condition of the slaves was gross ly erroneous, and that the interests of a bleeding country demand that , the-, actual truth should be known-by the people of the North. Let .all good citizens of every party. ponder the statements which he makes. Let. us all keep especially in remembrance the fact which he states, that the slaves for whom we have so deep! v eympathised. appear M happier" and "cerfaihly live and dreaa-;beUer,r than thousand of our own white neighbors in the advancement 'of whose welfare we " spend so little thought and ma-nifest each cold and constant indifference. Newark AdtocaU.- A Host Ittr&OT&inirt Article from Tnurlow Weed's Albany Erening Joux- naL ; -.-t;: ; ' ' - ' ); : - We publish the following article from the Albany Evening Journal, edited by THCatow Wnnand a son of Secretary Skwasd, and is generally supposed to foreshadow the views ofthat gentleman. It confesses to a sad disappointment of Abolition theories : TBXNxoao not parrAXSB roa libxtt whiti MZH THE OSLT aXtlAMCX. From the Albany Ereojac Joarnal. The people of the South, ia terainstiag their voluntary silegiaace, placed taeauelvea bejoad tho protection of the power to whlck alUgianee had ba rendered. . If the servile popalatien of the Senth had takes the opportanity it Might have accomplished iU own freedom, and aided the .North . ia aoeom pLUh ia the discomfiture of the enemy. If it had been prepared for freedom, sa)h conrae woal-f have, aadoabt-edly, been takes, ier h history of the world hows that those oaly are really free who obtain liberty with their blood.. Whatever the aeatiatents ef the JS OTth may have been ia relatioa to the negroes, it i very certain that any assistance they eoald have, rendered would have been received by the eoaatry; and the fact that no advantage was taken ef the oppcrteatty "'' - - -. rt?irrw-veve1ow' f-. It-' must be confessed that-the negro has played, thus -far an unexpected role in the drama of revolution He hat not mantfesltd that alacrity to embrace the opportunity for freedom which toe had anticipated. The most san- Suine has, we presume, by this time aban-oned the idea of his being -a very essential auxiliary in the ' work of putting down the slaveholders' rebellion. Nothing, we take it, has been more clearly established by the history of the past few months, than that whatever is done to break the power of the oli garchy and destroy the political influence of slavery, must be done rather by white' men of the North than the blacks of the South. The latter may indirectly assist, but they can not be relied upon as a "constant quantity" in the fearful problem we are called upon to solve. ' - ' ' We had expected a very different state of things. We doubted whether the rebels would cfarr liazard the acciden;s of war, menaced, as I we supposed they were, with a "foe in the rear" in th 'hsne of four million of mal Secessionists. Indeed, in the earlier months of the rebellion,' appearances seemed to iusti- fv euch an expectation. ihe- air was rati of strange ramorsi- Hints of Moody outbreaks were dropped from oracular lipv Intimations of the ripening of long-concealed plots , were daily gisn : out. Prophecies that with . the eotnipg of the Christmas holidays, at furthest, we shojAld witness extensive uprising : of the blartks, were rife. . .-. , ' .; -: .. We counted, upon this disposition of the negro to; take ad vantage, of the rebellion of his master to . inaugurate- a rebellion Ton his own behalf, as one ; of. the chief: elements of the weakness of the South.-; Wa argued-that the people confronted, by the horror of a ; Servile uprising.. would aUdly ' seek! the proteei tion of the Government SrainSt which ri'oey had so msdly revolted. i . We supposed that so far from continuing ? to resist, they would invoke tho.aBsistaaca ofour troopa to save them (roaa.th Airy oC their , own iosuiYut chaw But the : reMiu anticipated has not corns to pass. Slavery, so far rom. being an element of weakness has been an element of strength to therehla. The blacks home failed; except hi a ftwoases.ttembracs fa opportunities of freeedom. i hey have failed as a ciaaa to prove1 that ibey "ry ardently -cvet a change ofeM"cmnst.n?es. It is true they have sought our cavips U Ui numr bers; but they have not exhibited a thing Ipfeaf 'et-tledpurposfo strike fa liberty. They "have talked vXgueW about the " Canaan of the North." but ther have not struggled, very desperately to reach tb,e promised lead. Itmay be answered that they have received no' encouragement from tm Government? irat the - very, faot that they haveevoe taken the ibktativec bat waifed for others to do the work bf emancipation -fbr tham; ia-a stfoaj presunlfoBf of their lake-vrarmneet and wanfrof trioMjoeuagei. ! So deep has the canker of bondagV trtcn into the aoat f the afctejotaaBa' le'bfetwine halfenamor! pf tit ekalej LVC" baiteitde toi expect from him iirthe fearful jtrnrgleHtt whioVwarerknga tor nins, must, forthew rsssug it leasts be snr-es :bTt,arves E Wneattly show hin Uwis;teaeii loto vsik. I "STi f V'FFrl&Wi to , learn, but fjf WOfoui -armel .Wien,. Lge?hBHWM&.of babeuJ pu ncr$i v-r weii mf icneperepiiea f :?.Xea .wr awe p x: : ; eo r &irttOh:&tsi$ -aMrp toyixrWlbxbl oTrihenitsi States Scnatora-froDabt fateieh -VasJimeton;4U'aded WthrlTotf l&&&AiA, akjftrroHAM aaa4tnan'whd bever'-badtiy raipa'thwHh'thls if breath 4e ievotei! t itsrd6etnetJoin1'sra U M hi tearr Wlllda.re pttxmU&' Mr. VALLAxmoHAif , in noticing this speechlh the House 6t BepfieBefttaUVe)fiibrlnded tneW thorj lTon.Bp Pi WAftt,' as a1llAV, WSconhdrtl and a coward? r Th'es are" ifrdWg thelav btit my mprjr justified hj thif rafigaag!--whicb WAPxused toward Vjtxt4!rPtoA.'Mr.Vki landiobav, we think,i may well Qompare'Tjis Teeord of detotir to fhe" -UViiorf ifli- Mr. Wai; In 'August, 1855; ifr7Wiii iriade1 speech at Portland, Maine, which was report ed in full in the1 Boston : AVai;1' Bepablica'n journaL-one friebdry to MrViifti; ' " ": 4hi speech has been pabllshed ' in1 JfetUus- V Po&Hcal Text book, and the extract was giv en at the time in all 4b e Democratic Jdnrnab of the conntry. " Its 'authenticity was never denied by Mr: Wax, and it ' stands" roilajr without challenge on his part. ?ln thai speech Wax said ; '.!-; ' - ' " There was reallr no Union now betweeh the North 'and the Sooth; and "he believed no two nations, upon eArtht eatartained ? feelings o more outer rancor towara eacn other , than these two sections of the'He'publie. ' The only salvation of the Union,-therefore"1 was to' be found in divesting it of all taint of slaverr: There was no Union in the South. Let us hoe a Union, or let us sweep away, this remnant which we call Union." ' r V. . , ; , ? " Those were the sentiments of . the, patriot, (in some people's estimation,) Bxicjamiit r. Wadx. His action ever since that ' time has been in harmony with; his declaration. ITe has done almost as flinch as anj other man io aestroy me nepuniic ana onng on tne pres ent state of things. t Tour years after that,, in 1850, we clnd Wadx making a'speecK to some females of the Western Reserve, who had presented the "Sons of ! Liberty, of Ashtabula, (which is Wadx's county) with ' a banner. The presentation was made at tbe time the application for habeas corpus on behalf of the res. cue Abolitionists was pending at Columbus In the course of r his speech, which was pub lished at the time in the Eepublican papers pf Cleveland, Wadx said :" " Ladiks: I stand before 'you "to-night to say that those men of Oberlin and Wellmgton acted just as I should have acted, and willact whenever occasion presents itself. And more: I will seek opportunities to vioLate the Fugir uve siave Act. " Ladies and fellow-dtixena, the bonr of trial has come. Twenty pf our, aeighbora-jr n rn4y7r ehJfihIr oa-i to" Canada- rsnall we tamely eubin.it in the face of all our boasting and threats? In the nam of iroa lei us be true a our words.- Jt as be true to our professions and principles,. ' If theSupreme Court of Ohio does not grant the habeas corpus, the people of the Western Ittserve tAutt arant ' it- sword in hand if need be regaAileSs of the cry of save the Uni'.n regardless of every thing but duty, but moralitv. God and justice... We will march to Cleveland and liberate these Christian felons. There is no other alternative left for us. If we are hot cowards, cringing slaves if we are not dead and insensible to the principles of our fathers if there is one spark of 'give us liberty or give us death' left in us if -we a're not ready to become field hands on a cotton plantation, we will' rise and shout in the ears of tyrants, reig:, yspeopUP until our State and nation .are relieved from the base thraldom into which they are . now plunged." The Supreme Court, underlhe auspices of the patriotic Judge S.vrAtfp. did : not grant ""ine writ, but still Wadx did not move, sword in hand, upon Cleveland; for the purpose ' of res cuing those who had violated tbe United States laws. . . ' ' "0: ; , .- ' :;: v:; ,Now,' having )ooked:at the record of Wavx, the soHcalled poiX,.let us jiurn to that , of the so-called Oviitor VallandiohaM, and see which is beet. 'The Horn; C, L.; "VALtAirnioRAit: ifl some rnVarks which be. made! jatejy thi Hoo8e,'alt Washintoa. spoo' the bill . for the abolition of slavery in the Dtstrlet oK Cblum-bia, saidt l''f.ift?it?iJ$ 5 A ; "Had I no othef o.be7 J'm' onpo-'.te"'; because I regard all fbif class of iegialatioh as tending to prevent a, restoration of th U;n'0fX of these States as it was; and that is the grand, object to which I Jook, .Ikn6w,well'tJat, id a verjr littler-Vhile''the 'qhestioh wifl be 'be-tweaa the old Union of theso Htsdm-ihi'Un ion aiovrJafJfas-madA and om-nwt onsor some new unity Government., fr eternal1sparw' tion-ditunion. . To'boPslJujte latter Jam Unulter-, abfyaJMlMJi&Mhylffi Uratia f the Union, as it was mi 17S9, and coniik u4M?mjy&SitJ ia ths last hour of my 'poitilg.nperspnaixUnee f it be witAtn the limits of possibility to restore and maintain that Union. . ' v. How the Sorprif e- was Effected. ' ' 'Tift lftouiytAVP Philadelphia Pgfvese following new account of .the. raa.nnefln whieh,Gi.Craiita ,.'Thi Utile wasunq.uetuabl tha avet languinry sf . the, war and was, likewise ' of the most singular and critical on record, The great body ofoor meojwwre located about three miles' from lW ri teVlVnthTrf. ;tnati described tem Wirclei bi flOtaineitf lb a wwa Tcwsxance, naa no covert measures resorted to fearful looking Mississippi knivesVtbeq gtfil Some doien bthtrs, and hurried tUem with- They exchanged ;4anbrttaSr!AhoVm thef taied,' prf5rmed;-"talmn3 gukrdtTand'-'eU lenUy the wh6U'f5rce of BeanregarJ, 'cofislflf-, ing of 100,000 men, under A.'SidneyohnsOn, CheathararPoBrsf Vnd other celebrated soldiers, crept aEa&t4ata car camn. and im- ped'uitelypefted;aereufirer.nn.ratont 4Wfjme.aj J3ecwecii4aapretarfiU; .:aitfoe ptrrcd iusfea4jiislit onandiy tacrnie & IUlktljeaaiiten-taldewi;ht3 a fc.ay. taatv'Tiafcaitsrti!ai dxittetz'f tLii fil. fall 'l,w3 ew-.rcc:i--rr i.r.1 licreimzS xzlr contract; t XziZzLl.fSCl?? - 'ttzir t tl-Tcdtlt Lefcre' tieii eCsal ore 1 i r,;3iAei by the .eaemyr The' latfrfri J aai derstaad.'cpnftived to1 learn theaatertlgTit of Ihe ulghl,' Shd used it tdlhcJrgTtltidranuge, Their butchered some' of oar ciclcti with' their &t i TZMaJthV (hi "negrd ami fif iiii'yrcl'deW&eTrW. Ident. T.lHPP'iVii lition of slaveWin the" .fby the arbitra- ry eaerels)f aacenati. .tioaal poweivi iHe' aaya the, coostitatioer ' ahoriu,sar,aioiH; ean-.deal with thU qaesti i .with, any op, aaiuary results. . Jy u is tnat anyas-ml&itf,VM&i-. rvvHtev woalf War the work, aad inighl ref bslaSrn dyitairy agaU tempptaxily o pstv r4VWiJ ni trJ. J 2.. He4eniea &t eUtw r ia the caase af 'the war and that iU aboUffaimU a4 tbeetrag-gleftiiHeiaayi .-WwtiV'K'so-t fiiiidKx; il Ery inaa acqpatnted ihffacU, xsrow-s that it is fallaoioys to eall Slt jflaTeholdV ers'.1 rebellibnJ'1 If suck was, the fact, iwb dlrlsidha of Wkmyco.J have suppressed tt without dlfecnlty r tbe -fcegroee themselves could. easily pttV4own the' lwe hondred and fifty Uvouaand slaveholder! but is a matter of history that the slaveholder, as a body, were the last and most" r,!ctant to join the rebellion', m - . . AirVc; . 43,1 Id the tbllowing1 pasiL he re-asserts the theory of the rebellion JLs- . : It was thnegfOijaestlph andot the slavery question which mad i jj rebel lion questions entirely different ahB requiring entirely different treatment; and st'Uas1 neceasary to understand the diatfactkm f enable sa to deal with t successfully, as it i tbat the: physt eianhould know the diief $ Which he is called btitb treat andT td cart f If the rebellion was made bv two hundred i nd flftr lhonaand slaveholders, for the sake f f perpetuatine sla very, men it migm -oe cc lpiete remedy to extirpate the Institution t if the rebellion has grown out of the; ab,M Knee of the aon slaveholders for emancipat In and amalgamation, and theif dread of "n- Jro quality how will their discontent ' ba r lred br th " very measure; the mere apprehj Bion Of which has driven them into rebel tua i ; 4. ColBLAtit charges tl It Ihenl 'nltra ahti- siaverTtmen-90roprae wii wit I iherela inter- est to making questions i a .ecting slavery but lot airectiy toe contrary pr maa.''. .ile says; i - - i - - .... s i -. The North is a unit, and ftbe Sooth ia divided on the question of. tbelTnieni Could the gentlemen' who are adverting for a 'policy for -uc AaiDiaiiiniiiQiy improve toss conoition uy a policy which would divide oar frieada and unite the South T They, iriagine, indeed, that by decreeing . emauapatidn they could get more efficient help fromtSe negroes. If they could show any reason ' supposing that the negroes wouia run a wr iTv reater num bers than they now d i -a decree. there Fiihtlbion- ' vj - ?htt ft ere 4" notThet Sigtxt&Mn- for .sapao&ing Ihht Atl run away now, I believe" who can get away. . It is only wlMn our armies invade the wlave regiona that they caa get away, and it would still require that the1 forts' they are cooiptiUed to build, shoakl ba taken -Inr our armed men. We could not strengthen ou selves at toe ionn,uy.tOtt measure certamly; we have already the whole force of that gioaf and we could not strengthen ourselves at the&outh, for we eanoot reach the slaves by such a proclamation except bjr force,' and we should add to the force of the free men to oppose ns. ' ' 'if - - . , Colonel Blaik holds that the separation of the two races and the colonisation" of tbe ne groes is the true, policy for the Administration a policy which will open the fertile territory -'' M- " ' a 'a w. .' "" ' of tae soutn to. toe utoor or wiuie men. Statesman. ; Cbafiseatioa 01t. ; The wo Rouses devoted pretty, much the whole of yesterday to this subject, and in each the debate was yery iptcy. MrcDana, of Kentucky, in the Senate, closed bis speech a follows r - ' : "' L: If, the party m power was not, going Ho Keep its pledres, but going tomaJte war oo the rights of States and their ' domestic ori eerns, then the'war had only-begun The Union men 6f the Sooth would never submit, and he avowed It as their; EepresentatTve. ,' i Il the House of Bpreseutativesr ' ' -sir. Dickman or .irensjyivania, made a fierce assault upon President Lincoln, assert ing that Us cowardice and shirking' from 'res- pomnouiues assumed oy nim ' -Wben be took the ''olith'' of jb'ffice, had forced Congress to! adopt'. measures io bnnz turn no' W his dulv.' Had iTackio bcenlideiit, said Mr.1 Hick4 man, no legislation of this contemptible char-' acter would nave beelTxequired, but now Con rress is compeledolfeerbrattaown duties aod taace: ol tke President aldi M X .;rV bis best efforts. Ut opposed the general proposition of "the billwhicit conteniplated-'the deetroctioft tof ;all the righta 1a the1r"'Vtperty! qf cUUenalofi the States now in rebellion, and !elwe,;rreJ4ewratt; qrerseer, oXvv.mil-lkn nexToes. as contrary to the. Constitution and the'most saterd principles ofJU'w ' tile also defended the -President in - elooAiei "terms: deaying that he was a coward;, in declining to dp what the,.Ckm8tjtutfBfivea hhnTio, power bSKiYtefioW imaiedi ad the members gathered closely-ar-uh41dm.to emUhiavery? word atteredv Mr. Crbtaoden cpased himself against a jjeneri al Confiscation Bill, tbe effect which ' would euiKiae the raialf protriu 4u'ttermiaa-tion. Could they not snppresathe' rebellion witksumei waJtont reaorting to weaeaimre hot only. Bbwdmtvcleatly against, the lCoaatite tkm which provided that no raaatehalt be ds K red of hi pTftpcrty khotrtthtwosJ of r t , Ha stressed tb Hoaee at4eirthi as-sertinB? that the beotde wxmkt twrmitTUehher the Abolltioistr aojitha slgi tpot 21i4 vt tiittlnc-r u?rf!'mffdARted9 .tv thexmutera" feyitie-tljTtsjiad aadtliirtlrei benevolent aascciitions for white raeaThere!!::cl rer! -scf thelat ter-clasare:C aiPlrr. TUye utUi:tiL..r:.-Ul U it, j t-sliypvMMl of tLVt!aTesi 1 -r? tiPJ la fox r4A vuc at oh4tQ 3TGSi. .ao J ucyi' Thf foDowiflg 'tiies were ' re ssggejded ' by seeiag aa : inteaOv kaAlU'v nT tie AmarW" mi ' ai tt tfWttroi. tkdWe ef Aae eV htiefi h-Ssu XiisS-rppl, wamvihey Isethatlaf iI. eld leveletiaasry soldlayaas nee atlas earliest set- id-jfVK??? W7 Pe :!! gave me erlaa4 Ir Jeve Jfyt oouty love . I lfe Tsnnessee: I vm sorry I ever left aer. I want U Et; wWehat flac ware.' I doat Tike theW plefMiuass! )' fSUy :aU mi a arfler'iUwf'-. aveeerae:Baibl!ea 'o Teeoercruer savage Tee" " ..; i;. Waese. ravasiag deeds oa ear than fasatters, h s '. Brosrht terror, death and. wee. " . ' "And bow we nferedBid tofl aadpam,-': ' ' ,o .-Tiahhaory.wia tell yea how ;- ., ' " Yet those, whose peace those wars did gau vi Can call xee a traitor now. ';:'-; : .: 'Ht vilimo--:q.V--vji-r tt' :i.:Li V'Vi i'; V .VXbore that flag in JSew Orleaaa,;' .. ' Which eitys doom was thought Beyofed the fewer of patriot SMeas, - vi -r tat glorfoas Xighta was feagbt ; ... . : . Bat when I saw to the stripes and stars 'The British How bow, . c r ; I little teoagbt ta mj grabsfal prayers, -T To be called a traitor now. : . -KspeUcaaftag was beard of them j : - Mo moon's lone star was found; : : No palmetto bosh', with shaggy stem, ' And the serpent ooUed 'aroaadj Bat the stars wd stripes aWae remained, and. seal saa yow tell me how, -That he who bore, that flag, no stained, . Caa be called a traitor aowf . " , Oh, had I votpalned ia my native State, : Where nty chieftain's grave Is made, Or had I baea doomed to similar mte, - . ; . ..And my bones near his been laid t-, Or had he been spared for his country's good, -' ' Tm swre he'd not allow"- - . - . Those friends who by aha In arms had stood. ' , Shoald be branded as traitors now if But why, my age, am I thus assailed? To my name why apply this stalaf Have I to myeomntry ever failed, ? : Or to society proved a baa4 T ' ' Jle I ao such charge or kindred orime . ' Call bo stamped on my furrowed brow ; Bat beeacse rebelltoa I mast deeliae, They rail me a traitor now. . .-.' , , But yet, in my heart, T can't despair , My eouBtry, so free and pure, Whose toils and triumphs I helped to share, -For ages will yet endure. . When madmen cease, and calm react, .' And reason their miads 'eudow,'--They'll then these erael words retraet , ... That make me a traitor ow. 1 , Sunday Battle. :. The late terrible struggle at Pittsburg adds another to the long list of Sunday ' battles. The facts are so clear in ' this and numerous other conflittSv and the reeults have been so uniform and decisive, that comment U not only warranted but demanded, .alike by philoso phy, patriotism and pietr. Th general statement cannot be gainsaid, that the more important movements of the National forces, in the early stages of. the present war were- made on Sunday ? and that theywere undeniable fail ores. . ratterson a column -.was notonous. Tor its' manoeavrelog .on Sundays, and for. little else. Big Bethel, Bull Sun, and Ball's Blaff were' the great blunders- and defeats of attacking armies on Sunday. : AH these en gsgeraenta, exceptine Ball's BlufL under the dow imoris- oned Geo. Stone, preceded Gen McClellan's noble Sabbath order. , Thenceforward the rebels have made the Sunday assaults, with invariable' loss of the battle thus waged. - Mill Spring opened, their career of Sunday fighting, which closes with Pittsburg.. The battle of Winchester was begunson Sunday morning.' The first of those cost' the rebels Kentucky ; the second,' the Valley of Virginia ; and the third,. the Mississippi Valjey. The Merrimac,-too, after its destructive Saturday's raid, ran a muck against the Monitor on . Sunday, and hae spent a month in repairing damages,! Add to the facte,', that most ef the Generals Com mending whose names .figure ae assailants in these battles, were slain in them,: or are die- Saced on account of them ; and There is food r reflection in ' these bits of history,':' "What has become of our General Pearee ' of BijJ Bethel . memory f -What . of Gen.; Stone ? Where are Zollicoffer and Sidney Johnston ? In short,; since we have ceased the business of. -Sunday fighting and the rebel took, it up, we have had onlv victories to record, aad they only. defeats and aurrenders.v Fort Dqsielson and Island No. .10 were our Sunday morning bent-son oa week day prowess. ; v .Nor are these isolated historical facts, History ia. full of them. The British forces assailed na on Lake Cham plain and at ;New Orleans on Sunday, and were defeated. . We assailed then at Quebec ; our army was re-puiaed and ite leader slain. - We: began the battle of . Monmouth and had the worst of it. Napoleon ' began the' battle of- Waterloo, and lost bis army and his snpire. The battle of Blenheim, which has been repeatedly cited by O Herald, with' its usual accuracy, aa a successful Sunday battle,' was not fought on San-day but began on Wednesday." '. - . . 1 VJ - TIiTniiTtg DiecoTery. v:i ; The follywing wonderful story is told by the London correspondent of the'Dwo&t jSrs-ning MfaUr . :' -' -v-- ' ' ' - This is the age of discoveries, and one of sack a' startling nature' has just been made fri aa English county that it seems . oat of place hi the region of sober fact; and to bel6ng porV ry to the atmosphere of the three-volu'me novel. Here are the circtiinstahees v the narnee for tb'e(momeat I am act at liberty to indicafel The Earl of . married not long agoand brought hie bride home to one of-the old fam ily manaiona which members, of the Euglish aristocracy regard with, an" aflectioa' amounting to veneration. ltThe lady, howeTer, being more continental ia her tasteav- after 'a -abort residence - ia the ' apartments appropriated to her tise expressed wish to have a. boudoir in ftbe iciaityr ef her bedroom. The noble carl vroaidgladJjr have complied with the requeat, bat, upon examinatie.it was -found fthat rooma, as eoeaetimee happens in antiquebaHd-ings,-were so Awkardly ciatritnited -that br no eonceivablrplaf of Te-erranstraentcoala-.tie pouaotr pe nwea w.-iDereupon oe- came necessary, to invoke ' professional assist ance, ahd aa etniaent architect war aommon- ad iftVmi LimcLseutrHaiaxaJliiaed'thAV boaa ad jroraji Londoewr -lie- exami aedthe house narrowly, and said there seemed.to bftiaUlid for tt to bqiid, taona.MXX.tae-same-time ' he could aorwirt? irrcJXriM there must be another ,nd;scover?I rooti -soTaewhereTia tiif srifj: 'crthe- taansfcal Tteot!a earl iie'lici at the llzi the'elir t issrvaaf ra.nd rctiioers-cf.-tls firsily VereVcaes t.o'ae'Vsifl "!ir?I t" thtrr vcir 1 -zz r'ea vrub.c?- cfl lit ,x: ; ZS9:JIL: cr.-rT,,r' he J i. ct f Xt.TJVir'r.:.: t 1 ' " :i Vi f t!? tIoa"lc :!-rr I LiSil.f r;s:tt.tti!:? crt Lit'coos : - U.a? irVUv f aad, whea the opeaiaj L. karaatyac - sy--wMuw.sweBi.KnuKi,.iisv a-igu wmbich, Itself which almost defeat. .aUemptfaides' enpon, , . a ne apartmen vwaa tuieo- up io .ton rtcbesx and most luxurious style orisu years ago A quantity of lady's apparel lay about; the btoi jewels were ttereaoa!the -dreas- jne-tabletAadi ba, for.the laded aspecv.wbich VYmrjfMiar yrTU uicaimoer ,mias. nave peen cnaavea nau-an-aour previously, vn rapproachinr the bed the most canons sizht all' was eseavand this it is which affords the only cine, to, the-mystery t The onch; held thejkeleton of a female, end on the floor, derneata toe bed. Half ra bair Out, lay anotU? er skeleton; that of a man,' presenting evident traces of violence, and proving thai; before he expireU in that position, he must have . receiv ed some dreadful injury. . The secret connected with this tale of blood has been well kept, for not merely had All tradition of the 'scene faded away,' but even the existence of the room itself was , forgotten. The eurvivors, proba bly, walled up tne apartment at tub time, - and its contents remained hermetically sealed up till the present day, when, according' to the beat calculations, after the lapse of a century and a-halt, daylight baa accidentally peoetra ted into this chamber or. horrors, whicb, to the surprise of all concerned, has been discov ered in one of the noblest mansion in the consaty of. ; . - r-,-:-. Story of th.6 Prince of Wales beinjf Al- - reaay xiamea. - .. .. An excellent story is told .by the London corresponJent of the Detroit Advertiser, .-about a clandestine marriage which H. B. H the Prince of Walse ia said to liave . contracted witk an Irish girl. ,The. afiair came off eo the story goes six. xaonthe or to ago, and here are the particulars : ; -'. The enthraller of the Prince's 'heart and reciment of his troth is a beautiful y'ounir Hi- berian lady whom he met and fell in love with' during the military training at the Car ragh of Kildare in Ireland, where Hie iioyal Hichnese had appropriated to him, a little re moved from the main line of tents which form ed tbe encampment, a neat hut wtta a gar den attached to -it. Though he had every thing to make him comfortable there,, during the idle days and . long- evenings,- he sometimes cantered off to see some of the leading j gentry of Kildare, whoee demesnes fringe the great plain on which the Prince was stationed, j To one of those houses in particular, and which was inhabited . by a family of ancient and almost historic standing, hie horse's bead was often est turned; end his visits became so j frequent that they ceased to be formal. ' Nothing was suspected by the Prince men tore untilone afternoon two young- ladies, galloped over the green sward, . palled up in front of the Prince'e hat. and the "alacrity with which he came out to -meet them,- and hie par ticalax manner to the 'younger one, attracted the attentioo'of aa'; officer is high .rank: who happened at the moment to. be. calling on. the Prince, 1 and who, being a veteran in love as well ae la war; fancied that lie saw . something more than mere politeness of a young Prince to a yonng.lady. The jisiis were repeated, and ther were also seen riding about the coan- tsewjj gowewen te. wVa oag story oe-ur a certain utile cburcb not Jnanr. muea; from Newbridge (the next town , to : Currah ) .there were, one morning, unitea in maxnmony iwy voone people, one of -whom was 'the: lady in question; svad the -ether .rei A ppesuuit' to the throne ot iireat,inuunttneon(y.parues present being, beside the clergyman jt brother officer Of the Priace and the bride f brother. . ' - ";' CoBfMiioni of EsptbUcai. ; I voted for Lincoln That'a so. I carried a lamp sixteen nights ; and wore out as many as two capes. Yod see I am about to eoafess all, and. make a clean breast. X voted for Lincoln, because I was told that bis elec tion would pat an end to slavery agitation. and quiet the country. The 'Tribune' said so; a larre committee of New ; York BeDublicans vouched for it; and all the Republican leaders of the country -confirmed it; I don't pretend to know mach myself ; but I supposed otir leaders knew, and I believed them.:- . ! '- ; ' I voted for Lincoln to make ' times . gooxL The leaders told us that times would be. bet ter than ever, if Lincoln was elected. That six dollars was only a Locofoco price for pork, and that I might better have the Linooln price which would be eifbt. ; ' - I am cot a rich man; . I was not able to give land to my sons: but X wanted each of there to have a farm. Our leaders told me tliat my bots should each have 160 acres when Lin coln was elected. Poor Jads I .One of them sleeps in a trench at Fort Donelson, and the other is in the hospital at Mound City. . After Lincoln was elected, and the fuss fair: Ir begun,' I wanted the Crittenden compromise adopted; but the leader persuaded me out of that.- They asked me 'if I wanted to saerifioe mr manhood, and break , up the Great Re publican party 1 : I did n't know what to re- en they told me that the South was only 'gassing,' and that we could not kick her - on t of Jibe Union, if we should try. - That all the secession there was, was only paper secession, and . would come ' to nothine. That if: th e Sooth should secede, we wonld be better with out her; and that if we wanted her tack, it would only be the job of half a day to thrash her into submission. That the whole world. and especially England and' France,' would this,-And much more of the same sort, our leadexa told tne. : : w - .V r 4n - in j I Thus I was deceired. and led from one ter- nixe miuuermio anoiucr. adu au., uiw uhic, and npoa achv and all of these matters, the Democracy told me- the truth. Thiars hare turned out just as the aaid. : It would -have been much better for me and for the country. if I, and all of ua, had been Lemocrats. Jjogan vnncii- . .- 1. 1 - . In tie Heosa 'yesterday j VaUaadigham denounced Wade as a liar a scoundrel,, and a coward.- for alluduBg to hud.. m a. speech Ooade in Waahingtoaa abort time .'ago, as a than who never had ayrTmp4thy" with lie Bepttbliciat whose evry breath - is devoted to Ua deatradkoa iaat aal&r aa jest aa far ae his. hearty dare permit hitn to ri will tne 001a ; and lioahearted Trade al low: ValUoSigham; to escape chti?eaeBt' for sacii'-aB?uae 1 -1 auc"Oh -one occasion. shook bis fist benctth .thef eose of; Calhoua jTrue, Calhoun wa a -xna nn5b. Jaferior to t Vt. Kn;.Tt : .,4 V. : -i, u L: ' iraae raysicauy.-ana ae u eira sbooa.his fist beneath. Wade's pboscis; bat Ben has enibyed a'ronJerfoT reputation lor cvsurae erersineevIIe aaps-rsi it m -little -at au Can, whers(fct taaasthe fiti time ireccri-el He-ran ; tow?rl Washin(m '.e-'ir.zt a cry t wHoci that Ll broken" loose from; a Li;-, tJ tc-t the t&I!ock by severil LiJ. If Ls d-s't lriVaw'eaxa1 abwf Ea wUMjr Lis rt'itlia fi tratery estiny.- lie r.is ri e fvr-iry whose f -Iti--; rnal''es tre'ef a'Li-'i crJ?rand thejiJ t.ar ivebii - tftftatie,-tutiltiist be uue.' tle rlioi besxtf s-sxiUtfcUreiiwElie -lailtr ct a sheep's tfZSCttMp.) -Tl1xp the jfollowia er T:tn Ilba CcreafiionjjreetiI',;' s 1 4 jV-,;. rHtZr&Ji rpeech deliver r i ia thli c!ty the c! r Csfr ate,' for ae iucbr; r tm-li-ji fo? erated,thers hs i.. .-rut .-'r;ti 5. a deliberate wirpose ts t' t it- judical tribunal and tliw . U ,1 -s't theouaeor iiepret-u..j ci t States, and every-whera : cr awe,-mumidate ajKXj.trac?' 5, t-they can. the men who boldir t 1 -' 1 1-..If: rtrerrai its moTemestcrer eince that partj rt tr'.b- . House, aa Chairman ofthe'Committ c'a : i olutions a man whcf.'bever' bad aay if tti thy with this lpubUovbotwhoeeevpry t---'J-is deroted to ita destruction jaai :mUfjtJ- , heart dare permit him to go,' j ;" v ' Mr. Vallandighainv-.Here, fn- placela this Boose, -and a' alUpresebtadver bounce and 1 speak-it advieedly th -4 thor 4 c that speech aa -.- liar; a. acoundrtl ;. and a . coward ?- His name is JJeiy amia Tt SVJ HcCTenat., Xiaeola' tad gtsTrt?i.: The Philadelphia Ledger, lw' aoticfag lbt report bf Mr. Stanton's probable .xesisaatloej. give the following iafbrinatioa which 1 im rtanViftroe: ' Iv.-?t ,.vi-; r t5.e'"f ' The above ramor Is -probably iirematar b4 it points to a- ednanot-hh setxTe likely to happen. Mr .Lincoln;. i ia; eaidf does not approve of the manner in which Mr. Stanton is represented to Ear rejected the adV vice ofour best generals and insieted car- Sing on the campaigir aocordiagtTtdbJ Own eas. Ai an illustration of the Atiaastrona re suits following froiD- this system, it" taay be mentioned that the pushing of Banks 'across the Potomac was done" It is alledgedJ'ln-tSi face of a decided opposition ob the part of Qm McClellan. It mav now- besaiely mentioned that it waa a part of Geo, McClellan' rigir nal plan to move on Bichjooad while the ene mr were still at Manassas, "and to cut ihenz otf and capture them. When' he found tha Bankawa to be made independent of hjan4 sent over tbeTPototnac, haprotested arainsl it. vointme oat that such, a measure would re sult in the Immediate evacuation of Mabai&aa, aad that thedan ofthe campaign would iba be aUosrether broken?ip,:! The evenV taa jusr, tilled the prediction. The txoables iatheCab- met, u 1 saia, grew out 01 me uiu.'rve- w views in regard to1 the Virginia earn pairs. Mr? Lincoln himself supporting OenJ-McCi4liaha plana, . such ouieioc eaonosv exisfe anrn leading to a result, such a the abov rumor probably asticipatecL.. ' r ' I'jj'S, v : The following circumstance say (heE2ch--mond Whig, recently - ocenred at Petisacola,-and its truth is vouehed for by "ar trastworthyj " aeieosa 01 vaeir country, no- this "glgafatio rebelliOB,-; P t-T v.i.. loaz-ft. I havw- eeea it in secret 1 1 1 l A soldier in the Confederate service rtUlnr to a long and profoand sleepv frbmr! whicbhisr ceearadea ; vainly essayed to arose him -. At last he woke up himself. He' then, stated that fie should die the next afternoon,!; 4Vcloclc,' . for it was so revealed to him in hii'dreaixu- He -said " in the' htst Week - of the' month of April fonld be fought the greatest and bloodif est battle of modern times,, and that early, in. May peace would break upon the land mora suddenly and unexpectedlr than the war -had done in the- beginning-; -The first part of-tbe; prophetic dream has ; been. realixed,, for; the. soldier died the next day at four o'clock p, m. Will the rest be in ApriT and May t Let be-, lievers in dreams c wait and ee lioWr Ad--verfiser. . - - :' " ' 1- i ' -ejeyeytr 1 .- .J'j' . . Showing Ma Colors. .1' ,.'; r On Uie 12th nlt9 in Congress, John A. Jing ham, an Abolition member of CoDgresa, froca' Ohio, in a debate on the Tax Bill made use' of the foUowiag treasonable language t;. Who- v the name of Heaven wants th cotton Stale or . any, ' other jStair this- side of perdition to ranain in th . Union; if slavery is to continue f.. . : 1 . J . . .- Mr Buf chaji is considered by hia RepobH- . . can friends a first rate Union bob, at least vra presume so, as he has never been - assailed "ia any of th eir rresses for the" sJbo ve declaration. Bad a. Democrat said he did want any' of th cotton States to remain ia -the ! Union -anlee Uiey retained slavery; they' would have scried at one fox his expulsion from the ; House. Yet Bikghak's sentiment is just as obnoxious-to an unconditional Union man as that would, be. ;The troth is, the only opponents . io ' the Union in the free Sutes these. who do not desire its restoration are menjaho do sot bv long to the Democratic peirtyCSn.'229 ' 7- . 1 T, 2IoiiPT; to whom Whea Sooth Carolina was makiag ready to. go out of the Union Got; Adams, f :thatr- . Sute, eaid: . .;: ; ".The aboiitionista are our best tneoU, Thank. God for .what they have already dont and for the inestimable blasibgs'they ar abouV to confer ther "are' entitledr-to' orV warmest; : gratitude. Their assault hav."peen'.nceaW ing, bat all for bar good. Tbey bavefaraib us with a justification foe dissolving ; our; cea aectioa with them,, i : Cil;v .--. j In the same cpirit,' W-cedell Phillip .thaaki ed God that be had created Qen. Beaere'rdV ' and inspired him to fire oq Fort" Sumter YT " ? . . The we see the rebel South -and th rtbelr North the Abolitionist and the Sssergloa ttr ekndwledge their obligatkma to,. andL their, . admiratioB for each other. Lo axx. '. JL.rptdal i :'eTtmei fronr Tortresi lloa? " roe says It i tated by-coetrabaaiaa tlui the -most .Intenae ; exeitenel.'existrcrii Norfolkand tbey bare great fearxf aa rV-crj by Buroside. Nearlj all the troops taiefrt, , to'Louth Mills, to repel any advance Lsru.cLt make.' - Coatrabaada etate that the &"ew- prtrw - '-oa thMerrimif twtlvetjrtioirrof wrought j iron and tel-peiarj.-- j 1 r rltlienM sif NorfiilkTLre IsaT ; : 'err-one.-.. ..-..-v -'':r: . r"..-.", . - -'" -" - - TreTfr' ..-'" v A3 AT km! . v . ii 1 m :'-lTar Ybxx.'A: rH .V!.: f Ciir C3 I ' - - V - .1- - i - tal rout ef two ccr. " - ! r-' .1 esrt j sixty ct 'i-cr. r-"-.. " . rr:y"t- -r . - i. : - . , - ..".. son and tl!. :.: Ur!t:!C:-'-r- " - 9 ren f-?mj;e 1 h l'f " " jl"' 1- t, - -j l ...... L 0La 1, ticr C; I - . -c tax rt'lcpL Ti.r i-d ltil :. ei aad woondel. !.oscatr:'' .ed.- ;: - , - - ; '-" 4 - W ry J : |
