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. - "V-'" i i : i. J'-: - .A r ! : t -j 1 t " - - .. i- - L. HABPEE. i OC2e in xrwt ward DIocIt, 8d Story. TKXMS. Tw IMUri pw uiini, payable la d vsaoe j SZ.5S vitnin sue moats; f3.00 kfter tbe expt ritioa ef the year. .T v-.?-.""--, .-'... IDITKD BY HABPEB. Jewett and VlIm(Hgliamj ; j Tb gtory circalate117:ih6 Abolitiofl papeni tkat Mr. Jewett declared tbat he 'repudiated Hr. Vallandiidiam personal! j land political- I j," in coneeqaenee of hit recent speech, the Ciofinnati Enquirer proooTiaceB- V an an mitigated lie, made out the whole cloth.V. "' Oae Abolition 8Ut. ' ' v The onljr. State ever brought into the Union ander Abolition rule, has been the State qf iSiaery. It is boanded on ' the North -bj the Lake of Despair, on the East by the Slough of Deepond, on the South bj the Field of Golgotha, and on the West b j the Hirer of Destruction. . It chief "productions are Soldiers and Shin plasters, graYe-yards and poor-houses. - ." Oea. . Iforgan. ' The Washington (Pa.) Examiner of a late date says : A letter baa been received by Mrs. Morgan of this place, mother of Gen. George W statir g that he is well and was unhurt in the battle of Vicksburgh. A prirate letter from a Washington boy, who was in the baH tie, awards the highest praise for bravery and heroism to General Morgan,- in that furious fight. . -V ;-:',;: ' ' " Vaflandium for President. ; At a meeting of, the, citizens of portions of Washington and. Greene counties, Pennsylvania, held at East Ftnley, on the 3d of January, a resolution was unanimously adopted, recotn-' mending IIonC.. L. 5fcrallamdigham,'of Ohio, as the Democratic candidate for the next Presidency. We suppose if Abe Lincoln had beard of t&at meeting being heltf.'he would have ordered some of his hired tooU to break it up as a " (reasonable assenoblsgft'J , ' .. '.Z. I An. Abolition- Sentun'entl i . ' N. C. Hill, an Abolition member of the Ohio Ilouse of Representatives, in a speech on the floor of the House a few days since,' uttered this beaotiful sentiment : .. , Z ':; . I would as Kef be an African a tome Dutch men I have teen." , -'-v This .In, not the sentiment of all Abolitionists, tmt weretleve it is ihe opinion of a Targe" 1 bddy of the party, especially those bigoted and fanatical creatures, who controlled the Know Nothing organization.' ' Gor. Stanley Resigned. GoT."Stan!ey. who . was appointed .Military Governor of North Carolina; by President Lin-coln, has resigned, 'because, of his unwillingness to either indorse or execute Lincoln's emaBcfpatlQn proclamation.- Stanley is a good and true 'Union man, but not a negro-equality Abolitions; and hence he could not please (he. destructives who. control Lincoln's Adminis-tration. t-s ' j.. . . -.- '' - , - 'V. Very 'Appropriate.' .' All the negroes iii Washington City are go-' ig to senenade Old Abe. . That's right ! So tchUe man. should ' ever -stoop so low as to j-in !n serenading each, a Pref ident fis&o There is a small army of "fiee Africans of American descent contractors apd todies- whoang aroand Washington, who will serenade Abraham at any time, for the sake of the crumbs that fall fromlhe Executive table. . ,tThs -Caufo bfltno XTaxl The HilhboroVtwea pertinently remarks that the true cause of the present war is so . plain that'any honest man can understand it. It has been.. Occasioned solely as; we have "often said, by the run warrantable interference of the Northern An&etavery tnett with jthe-cal insthn&oos jof thejSIave States i and so reA sol vnd were they upon having Jtght, that they would not permit these Staies to remain in ' the Union ik'peace., nqr let them go e9Aj't with .out JSgkL ' ' ' Thev hare' already had several fights and ought to-be'satisfiea5;- V : Tho 8choolinMter; Abroad The Ohio Statesman avouches for the fact that the-following is a copy, of a petition 'presented in; the Ohio State SenateCtrbnv the Be-serve, where'"the big' Abolition' majorities are given Uyv.i , . A rXTtTIOX W TBS 'XOXSLXTXa or OHIO, : . we the undersiried Citenseha of -' tbe Town- hips of Nortei and Wadsworth'Madina and Summit Countey s llumbley Pray yourUondr--able Body of the Legeslatar of Wo to alter or nendthe,Scool Law. 8d that we May have a Bord of-Exatmien tor ScooJ teatcbers iri Eatch Township U. B& Elected -t'itient - Election? Evrer tojfirihi Eateh Townt Jfifrfcrtisirit Conuaea3ee4v Taylor.Webeter;. Ej .of Mwldletbwn'-But- ler coaBtyi ObiOfc who was. arrested" aome time last soxumer by .DavidiCQnover, Deputy- jj; 8. MafahaCBpoo tbef athorUy pSf the Secreta.. ry of War, on the cbargeoftdiurafiogren' listmenta, and Jittering .trewonable and sedi- -:. tious language and whp was. Was "confined in a militarj prfpn a. Cincinnati, until October, wheati wsm tezhizzzi, . l-i irtfht suit a- iTreas of Eat- i"2o,CC0, "for 'fel-sa lprUcJ3rat.'J. lib ' r rnps- are C'L'. itzz Izirjen to presa thiaraiC aid Ui tls ; Indiana, vith a population of bas furnished 102,100 .- soldiers $ Ior the'warwhile Masaachusetta with a population of I,21S,000, baa furnished but 60.000 soldiers for the war. j Thejdraft h"a been Hgidlyandmercilessly enforced In Indiana, 'while,' after beink poet- ponea several umeev nas at lengin oeen maet- iniieiy posiponea in jassacauseiu. Indiana is a Democratio State, 'while Maa- sacbusetts is the blackest , Aboliiuin State in the -Union. . 1?:?. ," r ;; ''J. Loeniti iit '-Coaiaigrtlili iTear Josepb Harris writes to the! St. Clairsville Chrynicte that the locusts will be on band this year, ,it being the seventeen thince their last appearance. He says': : :'5:fV;v' Tne Pharoab'-.toeusts mada' their first ao- pearance on the wing Mayr 19,-1846 j on the 22d commenced singing ; on the 31st commenced" boring, the trees and laying eggs;' June 6, commenced dying; the males, firs. On 26th all dead. : (Taken from notes taken on above dates;!-- , .. - . ' . , ' ' Z This year there- will be ?ocnsts-in abundance. Prepare your small trees, by; tying them up with straw for twentr-five days, and you are safe, if you do it right. , ; v.-'- Oreeleye Hine Hundred Thontand. It is stated that Mr. 'Greeley went to see the President a few days ago, when the latter made anxious inquiry after the nine hundred thou. sand abolition rolanteers which GreeleyAn- drew'& Co, promised snonld swarm the roads, when an abolition policy ahould he proclaimed. Mr. Lincoln adopted this policy on he first of January, but can very rell : tell Mr. Greeley that he has not yet seen a single company, ev en; ortnose volunteers. ;i ne tact is tney nave shirked the business of fighting so -farand still mean to shirk it.' ; The bill in-' Congress requiring the President to raise a"' negro army for five years is intended to relieve the aboli tionists from fighting, as well as to give the ad ministration a corps of janissaries ready to do its bidding whether the institutions of the enemy or our own are aimed at. I.- . , Praying to Free the Uegro and Work- uig wium nomes to xieauu The three' thousand New England Parsons who sent a letter to President Buchanan du ring the Kansas troubles, have just sent a letter from Boston to President Lincoln, urging bimHo persevere in -his efforts at emancipa ting all the Negroes in the South.' r- . $ The Boston Posteays there are now in that city hundreds of poor white womyn-f-many of wives of soldiers making shirts lor government contractors at five , cents' -each, and by working sixteen boars o'ut of twenty-four "can only nlake two a day.! . '.V:. :r' ' '. .'" '""' We have no doubt some of .the Yankee JZian$ nrmjKmtBAftam, and while pray inn To free the negro, they are getting !rich- by ;roa king the poor' white women labor sixteen hours a day, for ten centsto buy bread to keep their children from starving , ' -; r - - Lincoln's Letters. --. Speaking of the lougeatof the recently pub lished White House epistles," the New York Journal of Commerce says : . . ' ' . ; " Well may the President write appealiegly to McCIellan. Poor man I: who - could ' withhold pity from one so broken f - A sadder or -xi ore sorrow fal pare than this letter from Pre sident Lincoln- is not to be found in the whole history of Government. It opens ia a deep tone of sadness.' .It - pleads witbr the General, begging him not, to complain, but remember the awful politicaL pressure' under which- the President is laboring. He says, he can do no more than he is doing, that he cannot resist the. pressure on him, and he closee" by urging the General himself to yield to the same pressure and strike a . blow somehow' and - somewhere to gratify the same men, the same reckless men who were pressing the President, army and country to .destruction I What will be the next revelation T . - . . ; ' '. it ,,. Tallandigham na. Bingbam.. J , Tbe Ohio State Journal, the' Abolition organ in Ohio, in speaking of Mr. Vallandigham's bite speech says ; ' ; - - ' : and spit upon his detestable dogmas. He met with most scorching rebukes for bis treasonable 'and presumptuous harangue at the bands of Mr. Bingham.' . . .'. J"U'" Ah, indeed I ?,The people of : the Northwest spurn Mr. Vallandighant; do they ? and indorse Bingham, eh I Last fall Mr. Vr got 800 majority nufrf in bia old District than he received tfo years before,- hA. raat majority pt the people of Ohio, Indiana and Illinois have soundly and empbaUclly indorsedMri-yal-landigbani by their votes last (all; WhUe'this m so, Bingham, who was elected in 1860 by two thousand majority, war defeated last'fall bjr tvent-threJ hundred in ajority 'gaiost : him! And a vast majority of the North-west alsd re pndiated all Juch en;as!BingbamtjTtK and facts' not suiting the Abolitioti editors they resort to downright (ah)ebooda.'-OA$im. ; S&r An intimation;'-tUierNeir)7rkJtrr. mrmmmmmm .igL.w. i ' ' Tuiiiw i I' m ai " M iif " - ,..". -1'hbjiiil""l i - ik - i - -r t-ii mju- i'"Jmja S ' .n n. i m 11 iai " 1 m " r" "' ' ' j- - -- . Candidate j 'ffoxi tircblfia'ticn'efsr "tio Tbe names""I the-following gentlemen haye Ibeen suggested for oomination, : fof the respeo- tive offices named, -by the DemocraUc State C; L.V allandigbam, of Montgomery ;t' r. jlngb jJ. Jewettof MuslMnguinf -f8". fir , w? aoyiajjoa, ; a. iu.. j acKson, 01 vrawiora; Winiam Lawrenceyof Guernieyft?- 1--! t. "c'Will iam SennouT of Hetmbot ;T Joh n W Okeji of Guernsey. ACDITOa. ..- 'liiam Habbardrbf LWnjrrrt- Wdliani D, Morgan of picking '. rW.J.ry .-Prentiss, of PranUin. T"y ''-: fBtastrasat George WHoIroes, of HamiKon j Horae;sJjCnapiv of Ashlapf;- ueorge epence, or Clark. 4-; 4-.v V: r We glean these names from our exchanges. There may be others named wbicb bare esca-: ped our'bptice.?; ':i-,rj" Corruption Festering, at tbo. Henri' , The Washington Clty-cnwpoBdenr of the Springfield, Massachusetts JUpvlitcan, ti a recent letter, makes the foHowiBg" extraordinary statement i-.3k I Sh::;vri;t,-? I had; a'enriour experience the: other day t I called with L. upon a poblic- onlcer high in position. We had important .business quickly dispatched;- or yci would hot have found me there. Tsuddenly Mr. turned ' to '.L. nd said, By the wayrw'e can make you a Brigadier General. ; -L;etarer, and then answered No I am net fit for that i know norbitrir of military mariers.- - uo, no mauervyou Know as mucn as .tne most or them., and you shall have a commission for two thousand dollars.' L'. looked still more astonished; -and repeated the assurance that he wae not fit for the Dlaee. The functionary evidently thought he hesita ted at the price. "Oh? said he,MH ischeapv out we are under obligations to your iamity. which. I wish to-repayt-or-you could not have had it for double the sum 1' r- 'v s 'It must be borne 'ia" mind that the' paper in wh ich statem en t first appeared, is pne'iot, the leading Black Republican papers in 'New En gland. -. The story itr tells ; is out of school and discloses the rank corruption jthat i bracitsed oy tne adouuoq . Auiuiaieiraiiun aw. tv .asuing- ton.- Tbere are.now upwards or twenty Major and Brigadier Generals without comraaads.r- In other, words. 'they : wear the 'decorations,' draw the pay,- but perform" no" service;' .TThy seem to have fhe idea aJYashington that the j country .is: going to destruction and they may' as well make all out or, it they can before it 2" ; be Memchia corfespondeftt Of the Chicago py idftbV fagHive 'Ufeica' t Tbaegmeerar eamp;on the line of march? -fVfLili the army was moving.south ward they Bad Joof apprehenU sionW but the instant ;oti?f fccetf ere-torned horthvard, they came ruah:n to OuV arms4 in the4 UveliestT teiron'couBUesr Meltitfid& I Thousands -fithenr now bang Onthe skiftt T the array s impeding fr1U "T)rogftss cotouming its supplies ad r literatly'. tdocking tjpnhe biffbwaye; AV leUah0GO W mL W MafrtAtf tfebiohiiT&n' Clesto?deDoti daO- fu 'rwry lAfrijr ovtuw, rag a termw,' jtf sexes,' ages ana conqiuons xnat wnoiiy prevent them from earning a subsistence iaV the worlds Hundreds children are there -under eiebt years of aeand scorea of them-XwUbodt fa ther, mother, or any one to take care of them. Th verv bid and thentf plessjyytaiigi1rthe lame,- halt and blind tthtt6fcortWe4,ad fO-Deranoatedr are left to the - tender jnercies jof the Government and Northern Abolitionists. ' Very few ble-bodied,jnjddie-a ged negroes are among tbein all: "If left here they, will starve byl.bundreds.5irtaketi North the same fate awaila ihem: nnleas thev : become iatn&tof county poor-bouses and swell tne.tistorNOrth-ern- pauper- jfiT . H. k And is that the eompengattoa forthe. iu owe and orphans the warbaa; made, , the m-men public debt that has been JCTeated rand jhe three tened natidnal and Individual bank-l niptcy' that seenMsom'mtne tbe.lruits of AboIUiontsm sweet to the taste, i gaiasffriover'ia tbs Cor :Ja V ley l&X'yzfc j.'; " , bune .that General "basIeen" arrested fori ia understood aa poinUpz to Geo.' Sickles" tUMtj Old Abe appears determined to cram bia vuli colons ProcUnMtionr.'taot on!y: u'pon'tne'peo-' pie.pr tneutbbutawnJihehrcof the uemocratic Oeoeralam the ?Art8T; Jle,will have jagoodtime of it before be get 4brpngbH WemrwuWa.--4t! " Tronble. Breg, - ; i v.- . The Stark Coun ty ' Dmoerat .piiblisbee a let ter from its Columbus correspondent.'-of 4 late date, from' whipb ' we make the following ex tract r'.- .'-VO ,.; :...?..".. rr i''.., ' " There is jwnsiderable talk about the city just now, iii regard to the supposed wholesale desertions' of . paroled ; soldierf-. from Camp Chase. It was announced ; on Tbumlav and Friday of last week, that all the paroled Union .a ? . - . soldjers in Camp Chase had been exchanged; ana were unaer ma rcning orders fortlieoutn. Application was made to. -Quartermaster Burr of this cityV"for trans portion on. Moivlay morn: ing.-ior 1300 troops, com posed ,: of the ' 104t b IUino'uCtbe 106tb and lOSih Ohio. On Tues day night, when the troops f toolt seats in the cars, the number wap reduced to S20.vTh Irt- t ' .A ii r ivVl. . : ---j '-v::-iT:-i'? ercDce n utsue. u v". PH.rr aeciares ji so, be a fact; that since Sunday evening, over 70Q men of the two Ohio regiment nave- desert ' In connection with the above, ;'we also pub lish, tbe following extract' from Ihe Cairo, icbr- respondent or tne unicago 2rmt t. . sc -The 109th Illinois is said to be disbanded. The regim'ent,.except Co.' K reftueuTio do any thing more until the' President wUhdralet htiTro- A private letter from cFalraouthYa the headquarters of the Army of the. Potomac, to meiiev, urj( hprvsa, tiM uie. louoiung par V Already -pne commissioned ofScer ia nder trial foV expressing bis-' opijiipn pn emahcTpa-ion; Soroe regipjenfs, t iev. refuse fight any more... fa ms:rfa if;ivl n' f The foHowiMr Is da extract frtm?.natrttta thjs.Boeiotf lleildfrom'the Arniy bf the'Pel lo&a.da.Fmo'tK ; .The number.of deserters. .4ncreaeing foar-fully: ,and there is ho ttoul thaw as tbe men are prid'oolhosev who'are? iiclc and'ired dfty'fcftSir'Ircitftriltc pw feU-i " jSrtl 6fiKew ''l:nelaTU AirtorOL lAUitW.UifjrjrtttAMithnieni: the etaue Xof-the WarBuaerIjuLN(i. Ortans but bitter to the IjeJIy-pwhicb .'the North has sd Treefy partaken' of. V And. 4heend is aot yeC 'e lfentirwmt-ofth Thei Washington-lUgieter, 4y permission. publishes a letter written by Lwi Y. GaenBs to bis sisTerMrsr Eliza Co LLt!ts of that" place inrelatfon to tSS reeul tot tbe'ibattlo ckV buir& jlo which he wasparticWu Jnthls iiva-; orThe-i ball bftheDeocratie on .Tuesday evening.- anxious ;to listen- to' a' address by Hon. S. S:oi 'tbe ; eloquent Bep resentaUve from Oh&T ;v rH- ri;Stnce the last meeting the ball 1 baa rnder-jrone'a thoroush alteration; by -the erection of aeubetantialplatform,cat tbe rear of 'Which tbejword Uniooltgyedp In gas5 jett: ;J)n the platfornv weresi?a .number ?of prominent gent)emenemdng whom were'Honf P Wg'HoEji" p Norton," tJdolpho Wol feC'.Esq Keeorfer HofTman,' Hon James Brooksi 'City ! Judge McCunnj' Hon Gideon Tucker,iJnd Bbour, professor Mason and othera 1 'f'' 1f'e i At 8 o'clock tbe epeaker' orHhe eveninz en tered the robm,iccompanied by the officers of u : aeswuiuon, bdu was reccivea wuo IS3 wUiie ttoiiii'M Csrti?e, b5 hye f CLt-le of that rolng!?weiitjip Ilew.rri-Iande-Uleli .Puritaoi-ht, wlich;i Lancashire, in JJoJiand, at 1 tnouhv'r atXion. i fcctiits the earue atllBbd r hsaic&Lx totislli d- tntoTirast Jjjf f4raaerar tVead illwcir.dioUticai o-dar s-f-l4?rrsar4H rirnifredsref yrs aileyerrnedilinf. t ndody willin to contlJ 'wfcen u tanT Lelp" iilf. ;Cheers.' T-hei key-bbte U tbat Tai ery'ii tie ause7 of keyfe a tbat ITVery'U this vrarj andtooatb extirbated. iTh tralk by slavery Iwas. med Jldr h ad rejnreed tinj violence waajk.wae pit en m vrtis ana majice. But If does not thence foHow that sUerywas tne cause or- the - v loiencer' TteiJttrL-ie of f 'i.-s-1'v. . 'land thcforeshould-beaWished. ia samfe-aue Assdciationi Jof themtkllacy; AbonUpiibTbe m irthw ofiepring "of : Purifanlsnr. -v,TAe hmarY of ruTianisio oovb (oji n aiwayasourat iq introduce tbemoral.elemerdariavolvedn sla very into poiitics,and. thereby threw the church into the krena of politics, made' "it a'wranirler of hutnaa institutions; divided churcbesf and berrat sectional aspentiee, PerhanS Wendell Phillips plight not be considered Jby -some, as I repmteniauve 01 .toe nepunucan. party .iiiit i be does .truly represent the 'admin wtratldn.1 wtth Its proclamation orliberty.Ldok'at the votes n Von gress en , a motion or the speaker to aj on tne taoie a resolution by Thaddeu prolonged applause by the audience, 1 1A -.after quiet; bad been restored,' the President of the Association, Hon. Luke F. Cozans, In a., few ' appropriate marks, in trucied 'the Hont- S.3.,(?ox, wbo'was greetedWith' a' pro- On Tuesdaynicbt, at a.Iatelipur. we conn menoea reirean wnippea iiseo-u. . sister. do not let my rough M.nguage wound your AIigB; f I am out of all heert with -odr Gen- eraui.-ana cannot Keen trom -exbreaunthh- if .1 1 . . saa- r i , a a - . . . nei mat we wut oe wnippearm 'every engage mcn( udictb iuwt in iCDiDge ip i oeia anugine Execu ti ve-of our con n try.' i-Tbe" rebels follev- ed us to th' river.lmt the gunboats drove'tb em Dace, so mat we departed wi peace; J Ki t ; I should; 1 i ke ery' 'much (0! see y coall and withrVou foiA weckmd I hftr.il ;trriAit-.rPcyt.b4s for the present fnw 1 logbefore 1 ean have Ubaivilegeifov f4?WWC ('h0."b -5aae V-mW .mmm wmvvw wvSMVmV9 SkUlVUE longed outburst of applause. . j He began, by saying we . were surrounded by tbe Constitution .as by a mound ; that a rep tile had been boring that mound, and the dei ngedjpcean0f ar ad Swept in- to destroy.-. Puritanism is that reBitle.-. f Cheera.V . .Itmmi be ruliedan4 the aiuud rebuilt: Bptit,iriU BW.ua.uune vj ta present auminisirauon.- (Great Applause..) We must patlehtly Waft and work fort wo years aad for a better-noliev.? Mef Qwbiliael8clies(edlviaiM MBnf ,di- fibe.0rth4 I fear,itV-,becansetbe reptile brood still flourishes. It li 'of txtnnneA tnl New England. If has its Chamllee 4i4 Uieht- t.uu ,i .uinKj,an icw lurk.- lueir if we.do not effect a eompromiee;' wearerwhiit ped.V&It mrist end one wayortbe otheraooni fc for ArsrV areoeaimr hsartSu MghUtfttai i J J j - V - : 1- viiad .not enliAed when oldAbeV iasaedi bia proclamation,; I would iari.ben drafted a ana then 1 do Tiot ihln k I shoeld have i4eeir otmuch aceount; for IcouW hot. ha veieon scientioasl j fonght for the Abolition ofkery and I ;thi'nk'tbi (h4 wtimtntytA -ynas it - Untteringi sof tb.e Coining 45toxm -'"Ata great Democraric meeting is Springfield.'! IlHnbis,- Uon'.'Wm; A. Kchardson said i He"! vuuhi oppose .tne. usurpations, 01 io x svicmai Administration; and givwnoaid to a war' carried on to subvert the Congtitntioni rli ft. 8; Merrick,I Of Ohicago, said that Veonld suffer death before be would ve-Otsei willar or one man to the Aboli won4warT cam under Li nkmV proclamation. v ;it'-; v ...ou.a ucvwvu m vn izens should be carried tVOnalhV bounds of iNrstilei. "The DenO0raUlpariy h-SaTiriS.r. npits hiimi td protect the right of ciiizeos here -Mi'J.iJ i.: I 4 '. ''it. -1.. nuura mn aeeq uraius treaMxe toe. iujuiid-enceofa tdrnado. ;,The instincts oftbr.r0wine . 1 -1 ..IT , . . ' wirrno inn toe conitag storm, v - o-aqc ja: i fhe Administration iias j ntellect. ,(1 Has let- etinetT-pLlan IfastUe. ics. 'rv a 62r? J n noticing. tbe it Mt dately , toj Presir dent Lincoln by Governor Andrew, Wendell Phillips, RfV. Conwajf and other Abolition-? -; . .vj -i ;t - i . - I r Averv Daooatn vmi nave aerman iroorxir ofdiviaiOit.-eeHfi Cheers) mFLbmidmll J,hn IteTaays g&K?.? 't9Apta,f f aL'. a .'.il causeof the ia oCalaVerv.He foreets that v .iu. voHfuwuvNi, -nnwi HwrnM diii:L-.1:: t' r r one wowari -: jvi. iTniohwl ju ,u us e pro-eiaveryotng.h- n atne.ewt- canried njF? br Massachusetts not inienacMieseTx tne intend to t : t.cnirfuea breaking? negro-Iovtn form itlf speedilynew alliariceawwy nahap. SWVlSSL pHfbemadettWbe IiaanHa.t thv Detnocraticnv dunemm erf Ne w Yk l&rm"9 &!$'< . j - . President Lincoln boffht to Viu an his title of President ofrthe' United 8tatesi andaetbim elf down as "President of Massachusetta. He -ha quit; hit, own Statewhere bis oldestLaod dearest friends and rreatest dtods.. an eh 'men aaMr. Logan Ha, the .Peace Conzreesi vba.ve ejUitthimr His ome Springfield.) iUe sub uroc by'thousanda are against Wmi vHe does net nowrepresenteayoimportantf partoCrthe West, except: its Lake icounties MiCXInrdn A is? Presidet? of Massachusetts not tc the Pbilli ps. GdveVnor Andrew Co&bae thronirh bim;!the eyitire control of .thai Adminlsttatioal r.etZJT AW1 AbOliUoa lWrnAMdfir-buj: '-Abolition Trophies- C5ixWropbieev-:-.Tffxi.-4 Aooiuion ff Miomow pennKMsv-.. In. DeiBocraiics-cedlL'e Wiact-JcJ wbicb' is Pu pWt2 ,3 Wrs.aSiX roratbei laeX proctamayon. iwoulqseets thaf-Qld Abe'siidea bad gone u AtDcncttTi r coppery ,are gooeput Of theSseirVicewEUL5aa t The Mobile papers .oaote coun tfy Vut- K at59acts; r pound if coffeei atrbow4 laaje, 13,4037 per pounds flour tS05fi per lbar4ffca cts. per pound ; -Liverpool : salt; 7CtSa per ckJr?I JNfii. iextremuislat'an rsnrir, SS0O, cjs, pe? pound ; moiaesesVt LjSf: 2,00 V i-Ti-,oI1!??', printed ItC3ii! serve jjfcs; .reeo4Jfrace befJra xHet at cut ta daadle. It is betteirjth4tthie;ilbofd be tuaerstooa m u its. maguituest aaa measures taken t provide' against -It, tha the eountry : should ;be kept la IgnWbieVvf"faiijf ' ?e;puQubesi!jp ther comment than. to say- bat ,he danger tp iSjs captitol.Mnce Llneplu'a'emancfpatioi elatb'a;Tie.:imo)in' ivtf v:l-v Greeley proposer 'ta' trr it cnlyl Tir e$ and tbe.tndst Inflaentia Kepublican aper.' in thVconnl" "T f jhireeij month ar ;mbrejDX:earb'esrfiluln eball ;not. serve ifnakef aeri6uatim'rre;iibc 1 'rjicrtA- r ins pen r. urr-7 , ;tex Tixss.vt.';'-.;:., f fr rr ... f Vid men rievfe;':V:l''- V -.t, tr.i t?t!ibehevej:;;--'.' " r rJl ezzZ I cntots,. '.v- V oh the rebela-ifjhe end ..ofthatrtert:r t!ill find na no, fiirther advance 1 thsnits VezinrAt) if some mg!imiht. Faii.lia'i? -rio-i ti - ?-. , biooa ancj treasure of the rat. on )&ha'l t .crlte suaBdered iflkfruUlee? eiTortslet W loWfto ourttissuny.ana-ma.cs t)-3 pe t c rThree months jrillpt thrtai:.: by'tlie let of Ha '.': ; C : ' v. "-'.-i-iihtiA'J.: -" . --'7: " w e"i all t a v e bt c 1 i n - tL5-'cT;:tt' vrfc!';i t! ; C ttj V3 ir. .'.1'.' -' tl; 1 i: j. t!je V in It U -said the- Oovemmen t; eon Washington, refuse toyrork. Jbej are in ifa ela ipiteof alljiiat bA,bee,faidbOTtthe prafligaeviof the present. Administration.. We ,P.ue exchanges are : finding fault with, the Qoyeriwi:Me86agei YelUfbo! Mi'jptpi ex pect pot-metal u bave tbe trpe rijps-Wj ? W: ltnre have TraeBd. lound, 4aVt4ng ponVeqVently theyare.'n tcale-j frUantock -.jf51 , . "j; ii ' fr-? o 'jiij? Interiorilbreatfnsto bar ply the NewXork'-JUrr'rt'M eaystie.s Ms Truih'fuT;!?! .at 'Ttbef iTfotespierrtSn an It)antontor fcr-- Honie'.. -8ecre7 Ts D e ri ocra t ic. r r? U"de r! a ! r. ! " trjr 1 5r-?rt h e ficn.'fI0Ui.tt. ' rLI.. ..iel -vItT tl.ar :3,Chio. Indiana and .Illin ois are -full cf tra::'ire;-fvr t.n'3 ef.tb-At i;;bnLu,-ct.I, ift'-Ia 1 & trcoro'a fy -jt".".: rre v .... r . . - r-"""ttKt'--: the Wbief--rf BOta'k ak-Weeten'niaB-4onjtoI. sin'fc al fsebemerijb divisiosi etilltupp68eg them -ibuUleueak to, warn. The erection thfisasipptates nto arepibiic ttanding J nrTta JMoesougb t by Sciu'tft and East,! cnooaina Kriucii tts own eaeapeet. - peec oov tet. to. t he etteaw ad.enar:et8 at low 4rarJdaa no dreem.' at ehettettr, tr ry WeeH Stevensf hisses) to- raise 150.C0Q .nesroes- ( Hisses.) f Why, one would judze' from 1 that that the white race in this country, like the xaeKee s can. was .r preuy nearly, em .eout-" (Great laughter ; a Voice ; : . They -want to get I the niggera cheaji, so that, they won't have the ! special difference. between the republicanism that austajns emancipation proclamations and the, real H, genuine .Congo abolitiohiem; neerB.; , .. 4 uey jare two separate, Jinxs 01 tbe same saussge.made out - of the same '" dog. .These extracts, were tK 'rm bftbaC aboli tion power now overshadowing mv TheJnfla. ence invoked by these men wMthe.j'eligious sentiment in a erhsade asrainst slaverv. .This SB me tendency ,t make- govern ment a moral reform society is observable in -the Iswsotmn- ishins T jQuakers. aeainst" amokSng T tobacco Brden "On- iBuotayvel Vaoghter.)., 3,af alne liauor laws and tax laws against wbia- Iteyitastop ita use came from tbe same. Puri- ian.xe;naency ,10 mix . pontics ana, morais, to the 'detriment of botb.:rTbe aametbingis bfe servable hi the opiftion"of a. Boston '-lawver;' now the counsel tf. the War Department, Mr. Wbiting,!wbO; upholds tbeiMright:ofgovern-ment.tQmfeffere witbslavery, ormbnism,' or any other ins'titotlon, 'condrtion; ' or' social status into 'which the subject's 'bf.' the -United States ch eoter.fftrnderr-ihls ilbetrine prb laaiations against sla ve'rr Vre" issued." 'Bather thai; yield this co'nsorship over the morals of tne nation, new cngiand2 wetcombawar. a jin, mv 4 f a b mm uw uv u&o. ..u. ftoonVnlsed the natioaftor iber jdormas. - -She did. a iaJtfSS.J? MrCox. euoted Ir. Lord en irvamTBn inniennanrie. in riiruaiiMnr ua wr dnce.God to, a sbeeryjeieyito Urn Brenceayed Vu& "Aicb he regarded ei,h. Tvi counsel fect!c.sll: a.Crer-. 2 .'-A rk-ift-var? tut" tIiher c f Pcrin r:ia- ---- and GBeral'i:.iJbr the late- v-r. anf: General BatW (aJvo:ce, Old traitcr I ") fern's war.--rJ;, tIlseT.yyllt voledTaptingtiJciiVirsnand J;ck- Xr't Ti sons at crst-i-e'-aingt the ac:BisiiJOA''of JLcn- Uwna.;Itf thnnjered ersinst thone who"diA- .y . . . . - lereqin coctnne." three .fcntreJ years- t-ytTT SBd(iU tcIJa reproduced at ICew Orlear.3, ia f--. thf order from that rrecion int Hnt I r. ;r '- alM cllia luuhnHhM . ni. t.l -.- ' t rjravBccording to Butler's directions. --(Hisses and eixnrIt'-tole-the land of 1 - the Pequeds. jusaaiow jt ah psjthroogh - onr--1 ; s . Ifnes1 to dicker in. eeceesion cotton, and. it will j , f! - iMtaani pacing tue cnurcn tne lotnu 11 maoe it the th eatre f dissension;" and 'carried tnatX-s ,ir.Mi.i'ri. i.i.4LVt.i. : Kk.u .... "- eyeryaia-loriourj It. has rained mmh in 4 ". stylo Oflate, but it has .lost .more in" sincerft t " '" Hjetaa or yore, compUcentlv assumes to be r; ---a vpart bf the1 Odliheatl.!i: rApplanee.1 ilte-T,5 hanhhess made dissents ppon-dissent until i-v thighariousb)ms.it b4td reached infidelity.: . . . . It is not content wittj the order of froviiieoce. " Itmirstdrive thecharioVo what resiilt tbe "civil-" War, shows. vAyoice- v-.li .-5i 'That's 0.:'.ll peculiar. eit-ilizaUona-the.iii.sjQf pnreni of abolition which found in the Puritan ; . - v soil the right spot for its .bad seed..1 Therefore' : ' it.ROurisnes to ine ovennrow 01 cvi . iioerty..: . by intefmeddnngwitS State:' institutions'.- and - 1 . Lsocial systemev entirely alifeo to ..itself- undey - , t- the Constitution. Holding to the higher law . . f , ; ,; . and obtaining office under ita banner; it spreatl " ' v' V distrust and aprehension of its excesses, an-ong'' I ''H one half of the States; and rash 'uniuatifiable i ' :'- j.-J trouble to colonize them""l. si cannot" see anv't revolution was the once inence " 1 1. has tried r v,j - W 111! IIB IV 1U1 PUIWro. WNllllW UT ElfIHE . newybuth and beauty to'the" Ftate dismem- "' v , "- berng.it.f Applause. It bas eubstUOte! pan theism or platonism -for religionVand sunk'" (n it thai docility wbicb is chfldlike ndChria - tian.:'; iJ-.yM'AJ W ;.rl": " rAt the New Encland dinner here-Mr. Beech e"r boasted that the Yankee was the most pry-""' " - mgmeunieeome creaioie in . me woria ine - : - ' pickpocket of ereS tion. the torn radical of civ ilixation. th head in the body of the; Union, etc. (Hisses.) This is the old conscience' whtcb comes irora Boston and is copied in ."Brooklyn" r-which has been' shn by the Puritan for' threeJiundred years through" bhr own nawwl organ in his'own praise. (Great cheering and. Utugbter.) its source lev fiom tlindostan, -it j, ,; 4 comes from, the coterie of ransndantsaronnd Boston,- whose roost .clever .'exponent is Eroer--4 - son:;. It baa its priests," high- and krw.V front !1 the great .Channings,'ho-ministered inholy'v, v;. things wit b many enlarged graces t ntre: -; i? ; a to the little Channing. who. creep" '"of Sundays ' t in-theenate Chamber at; Washmgtonv tor? preach abolition and villify democracy . uo . : ...... .1... 1.1 ... fn .T - t. n n ! . r lUle iniiUHXHuniiRiiMa ib.dwwhjuii.ii'.. m i i- .-ici;-." ,witb faeilityhoekiag toitba,dtslJ! ,;aonwH iwrti ' . n'.uiuBirauowTortnese-mrtnr iir. wx saiar arid otberagoiSg SFa-tbeOre, the-, blessing is bbldlyjri of OsT if .ww 'i.- i.. -: "u"ia"u onder the plea of. military 1 eflfersod JJ&via underatnd4h e2emeots lm woric:! : w?, at J.eWnse jr rew 0Oj? tn the West, witn'no none of relief, is but an nvui'iiiunmiug mid uiucnvi kio , cot www. rlands i He Moved that the Pur fred-wll' who differed from.themV I . j v-. -a- r -a a uoaKJi4ungana,unougn , wne,- tney i England tby -called t tbeir, dear mother i fir, How tbey?inaugunted the spy ey.-1 its present disability, ivetriifigland ts The West is aware that ItfitscnditseTf I 5J ..ll" i. fi J T- SlSSr.WaibI tn. Aabapt- ; Uerar, a. t. the wvmf reoienJreriih lUe En eland t iettbeSOjtVyUlra-3 iiOreat, tbttftef tofdipr We've, bad enough of. her rl y 4V i iBntj tbee abusjej jpoay beiemedied by a new Congrysa. ;.They wonldbe borne but unbap-pUy.rfey are assocLled with1 an" element' harder dt sieiI.V(IIissea; -;Tfci la brel inf the.iene.I It iaJeamt maait atdiundrMa,' ojrearaago, Lke,beget ike, J ueneratien succeeds eeneration.wiw toe same V'sUmD of TuriD.' cf.Mctr;taiih' saecess A for justice 1 tJt rnr&tiJess; tan&Ta ' fof liberty t-f nd cs nt. for piety. . PHritanism would leform men's morals by'etatuteT.and Paradise 4 bylpottiirs. -It would practically nite church ana stats. 10 proriie its, moral anq rengwus dogmas "Uevrlii! land riay t e canning in in-y&ntioii tndr."rt i.Ia-'iar'nndaetry"; the- may bo8$t of ixer ! llrailcs. c.hccXcIi"rchea frcss she ta.iy sut8! ze-tv5 l?vc"n pilleyi cylinder 'ndheel;'ehe'r!i9y'.ftudy.aa the wprm doeei hoW to draw a;tlircd .le, a&J KLe Ul:-ipi derV'fiow-tO t.re the-tcb;ehe ci.ty'XoaatfOf, a jac rvzza i a e v ry : . : : : c rr r. us -. t: : : a u a 1 1 ate. Her i :ec. - r'-1 Hi! 5i- c .1. it: ? rrc - -jttjre Vr-1 i" c3 not nnier- f.at J the met 5 I. IV ' Ot f"- " rt tV I ; i.. i. . it 1 L I ' ' . frion M p!au?.) - It v ce f 1" cf & hanf'--cf the 1 -;forre l.-on . t .:: ...to r- aiaojdgTai Xb?al.tncxv between ith Cb left cnurcn ilans- persecu- eren those "of 1 Ik r . 41 vj 'm. A x 1 h a a- A.m i. the"burdena ofarfyfineV&ilBiirffin ? f"1?" ?F aev auntcM vut. , j i. " a Ti t: "i t:z ixie eineana 01a women iorwitcn . AoabaptSstsT'Famniafsif efee persecuted nd 'punishedT boV' the- in- ririrfjr from thisthe Infidelity of jParker-the skepf ticisrn whieb sncti philosophy bas ntredu-';. a ced.. r;Havtbi traced allthe Paritun elemen'teii- t wWcbvbavs fomented trouble he followed -.its"; "''f'Y7-course in a political point of.- viewjrom 17S7 v,w; wvr www.-, ji cf vujjuk ii ccuiraiitc j"""'- a nd, to, ericfoacb";' upon '": ; oth ernl " - W hen cat 1 ed " npoir to: xnake safcriflces Sr mi the'Tvare of this :h t.I..i -.t. -:-( jf-i.i - 1 : cv'tnirr, . eue veca latiam situ "K.-w-.j.f make themi; There' areinow 19.000 deserters -?- - UrOm the Massachusetts troops" She forfot in 181Z ber hatred- of rs te rights. When t be ti ov. - f -Mapeschusetts 'refused troops to Madison aeainati En eland. 1 ISh e fbkf ered.-aeWs iofr 1a tbe.Hsrtford Convention and dissensTbn -when-when'Tex8'"was-'sdmitted:"V'8hedisco0rsl1--Ci- er.--rt'Xol..;- j 4. - w 3l ii f.ny.r i 1 1 cf r l-----l- .--lv.y- Taseaa4Lxrmae,wafte enieity aocreea . . . . TkdM'dxterMu vtsoaraiarsja the tolr an4 Bhftte''' Of ear ihriavd, sacrii sires the PlvmoaUi. Pprim W ltC& pailTTewEoand acomplirnent for bet Wwlalrfary reswtabce;;Iit monies i'bewcAklbJavareak of Sngels,. ,fle copeidered. the, boast that thet irugnmswcrvoe auinors oioemocrattc UDer,-ty hfrp'aVutterly groundle&sproving it"' from history. Tbe compact of the Mayflower was forced from the Pilgrim teadertt-illliotWrthe historian, sayt Jhey jfjt jRes-H ideocra-: cyU ifo man could Lea voter unless a' mtra-tierof the churcbtnd;Jndge Story tlys, this disfrancised1 ve-txllis' of the 'people. t-The Knal laws rere. framed from- the CentQd code. iey punished accordir to caste.;, ;Stich .was the ruTe.in '.Harvard ;Coilee-eW,Xr2:ticd yet has ber Brahmin ' and her "Cootee , : s, Thelaws even regulated the "apparel 'of v:zh atrdi wcienv xtr. t-e iusatoo-cjii; ixv Years or COTtests fr tbe r. eft Riinst the mar' tri'M sr 1 . pventuat 'J atiatl i t ;e fee; la by thet..- 'i II. C:.-:!.?sIf.-.Cnd?rt: jtl'-.r..: c' -'i frsrfui; ':- tr - to tna: the c.. rc r ... - " ' at 2t-r ' '- - J ; ; t- I -r versal pickpocket from the Vedas. Emerson t Parker. Phillip Alcotf, only copy, the Brah . minsl rheir doctrines are not strictly iriater- -' ialiscn 'or pantheism (great'laughter): butthey ; absorb God -and namre in naan. and make - the ;? soul -all ! iHiaUhv One- of their philosophers .. adds himself personally v responsible': for the , JJ". : otliqfait.yot tbe-eartirssxterandj or cenrcer-' : croon botttMuUd.tioiiueverythi8g; ergov he yf Emerfcoq) tiasTerythingGrat. ? :i . merrimehf.UrIQ youtwonder-. there fbre. that )' ." he Tmakes'the negro a part of himself and his" ? -''' ; eqhair.5 f Increased "laughter.) f TJie Hinded; f?3 ? said. -Bieh is-that.-univerfal eelf whicb;lbod.J . .. wotshTpeat aa the eoul r Emerson jarsi I?o- V. thing is tf thou art nbf; tboa art under,' over : " ' J all; thou dost hoLl ?and '-rover "atlr thou- art; 44 Atlas; thou art Jove." The nserit: has tihels V'-:3 j most perfect.; description -of this ; ideologisiie . , Yankee 'l am generation; J. am' dwsolutionj I am;' entity and . nonentity;" -Atnonar 'iriiyi - tains I am HinSalrfyamonngr floods the ocean.;,.-.fi-Jt-among elephants the everlasting big elepltant!1. t- i-w (Great lauebter.U TbeBrabmin, of. Botori Z " attains to such, excellence, -for. he,. follows thS. -; - . directtoti of the Vevfaa and contemplate hea-' :'4 wofjf9, n uieupoi 4i is -own. noe; Mua;e? ivu Unued merriment,. r.Bv euth pT'ocessee of uni- .: .t,; fieation they proveil bfack and white'o" be' "''- "', "all on thinq." ''The"Speaker then .deduced t s the war witb Mexico by pasouinade and . t ll- i'i v pitiTi - Her 'Jdav ' of reckoni ri g,? ho vev tf . ; ha s- - f '1; ewmej IShe will not be thrust out of the Union f bo t she 'will be humiliated in it, - (Cheers). Already bey proclarh'atTons, ""tinning eounter, - " to,' thei popnlar s;nUmenf have yrtcuced-r-stAIa " paralysis of the State.-'f-A pplaus.') - '- . ' bericledaholealeaedirerwhework for wSgWajeefl 'may. bring New--'Ltaniit?1r ; to her senses.Wnaf wages.--J A 'quarter of - A' qinul..bf Kbrfb;eMot .toount Sottthyro'iXil '5r -: men 'perished alfeady.Fortunes totter, indus--f s 's .; try-palsiedJ bankxOptcy' soon 'to follow- this - riot in tpeculation.-v Sueb sft with tbe gib-wv " oerrina aooiiuon cenoxoentna proauees nwecyi v nntn.J .'If Is '-not-irften'ded to produce--union " unless alAv'ery "-'dies. -But H Is - determined . to U , prevent the Detaorracy-from-restoring the ? hdr Unionj bynakiag diyision.' eternal; 'But -Ty..,', $ '; theGod-ejf our fathers though thee States nay -. " be totnapvt temporarily...by the extremir?,: i the Pe'mocra;y,' if it takes a lustrum to do it -e"3 will never resse td labor till the-" old -C overir- ?:I -i-i! ihent andiTJnion taoursjBgaia. JTr: . endo'i . cheering r.-Three. cheers' -for - the- speaker r-.--'1-' ' three cheers for Ohio. 5 Let ll.2 Iltddle nd;'-S'--WeaterO ?tates;atand Crr.i; ; ( A 7 ; '.au-e. j The fzf-. ' dissonant dip cr thete f!ec'-;!s-u ot New Ed v gland will be drorred ia .the. "popular: .-voice: v.- ' , ' the fratricidal hate they have ennerel will . . be fissuagedand ittoJiieJaotrsteJ loia ,cf; -b - : this nation -will t poured -the HUow-el ;erd ' ' heahn s plritcf cintcsl coRf. Ier.ce- find con-""X:'Z--ciliation. :Thu3 wi'.l.tliefnation r.f Twrr ii'tli" ';? TttiriJc, -3 &ad continued applaase. 5 - T -vllrJ Cox's e teech vwas vehthnsl-silca.il r". T&'tSxP- ceivei; be vt3 most congralnLi'c 1 at tie closi cf tie nieetinby-nucieroao' f.icnJaoa LUtllJ? :er r-i A!; any -N."Y..v?. i C; 1 ,"A i rer" Ht4 ; -T1 " "-5 - " ) "Tr: .a I' t 1.. - 1 -1 - 'J II 1 A s 1 iUl'P.'ercf.tii Cecretajy f XTax to make such L!e!?.0 Lc ' t. . - ll t . V 1. . . . tl? L: :jC':. r .ere .21 1: f-. , Vri :" J; -: -7
Object Description
| Title | Mt. Vernon Democratic banner (Mount Vernon, Ohio : 1853), 1863-02-07 |
| Place | Mount Vernon (Ohio) |
| Date of Original | 1863-02-07 |
| Source | LCCN: sn86079142, Mt. Vernon Democratic banner (Mount Vernon, Ohio : 1853), 1863-02-07, Vol. 26, No. 43 |
| 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 | 8111.76KB |
| Submitting Institution | Knox County Public Library |
| Type | Text |
| File Name | 0250 |
| File Size | 8111.76KB |
| Full Text | . - "V-'" i i : i. J'-: - .A r ! : t -j 1 t " - - .. i- - L. HABPEE. i OC2e in xrwt ward DIocIt, 8d Story. TKXMS. Tw IMUri pw uiini, payable la d vsaoe j SZ.5S vitnin sue moats; f3.00 kfter tbe expt ritioa ef the year. .T v-.?-.""--, .-'... IDITKD BY HABPEB. Jewett and VlIm(Hgliamj ; j Tb gtory circalate117:ih6 Abolitiofl papeni tkat Mr. Jewett declared tbat he 'repudiated Hr. Vallandiidiam personal! j land political- I j" in coneeqaenee of hit recent speech, the Ciofinnati Enquirer proooTiaceB- V an an mitigated lie, made out the whole cloth.V. "' Oae Abolition 8Ut. ' ' v The onljr. State ever brought into the Union ander Abolition rule, has been the State qf iSiaery. It is boanded on ' the North -bj the Lake of Despair, on the East by the Slough of Deepond, on the South bj the Field of Golgotha, and on the West b j the Hirer of Destruction. . It chief "productions are Soldiers and Shin plasters, graYe-yards and poor-houses. - ." Oea. . Iforgan. ' The Washington (Pa.) Examiner of a late date says : A letter baa been received by Mrs. Morgan of this place, mother of Gen. George W statir g that he is well and was unhurt in the battle of Vicksburgh. A prirate letter from a Washington boy, who was in the baH tie, awards the highest praise for bravery and heroism to General Morgan,- in that furious fight. . -V ;-:',;: ' ' " Vaflandium for President. ; At a meeting of, the, citizens of portions of Washington and. Greene counties, Pennsylvania, held at East Ftnley, on the 3d of January, a resolution was unanimously adopted, recotn-' mending IIonC.. L. 5fcrallamdigham,'of Ohio, as the Democratic candidate for the next Presidency. We suppose if Abe Lincoln had beard of t&at meeting being heltf.'he would have ordered some of his hired tooU to break it up as a " (reasonable assenoblsgft'J , ' .. '.Z. I An. Abolition- Sentun'entl i . ' N. C. Hill, an Abolition member of the Ohio Ilouse of Representatives, in a speech on the floor of the House a few days since,' uttered this beaotiful sentiment : .. , Z ':; . I would as Kef be an African a tome Dutch men I have teen." , -'-v This .In, not the sentiment of all Abolitionists, tmt weretleve it is ihe opinion of a Targe" 1 bddy of the party, especially those bigoted and fanatical creatures, who controlled the Know Nothing organization.' ' Gor. Stanley Resigned. GoT."Stan!ey. who . was appointed .Military Governor of North Carolina; by President Lin-coln, has resigned, 'because, of his unwillingness to either indorse or execute Lincoln's emaBcfpatlQn proclamation.- Stanley is a good and true 'Union man, but not a negro-equality Abolitions; and hence he could not please (he. destructives who. control Lincoln's Adminis-tration. t-s ' j.. . . -.- '' - , - 'V. Very 'Appropriate.' .' All the negroes iii Washington City are go-' ig to senenade Old Abe. . That's right ! So tchUe man. should ' ever -stoop so low as to j-in !n serenading each, a Pref ident fis&o There is a small army of "fiee Africans of American descent contractors apd todies- whoang aroand Washington, who will serenade Abraham at any time, for the sake of the crumbs that fall fromlhe Executive table. . ,tThs -Caufo bfltno XTaxl The HilhboroVtwea pertinently remarks that the true cause of the present war is so . plain that'any honest man can understand it. It has been.. Occasioned solely as; we have "often said, by the run warrantable interference of the Northern An&etavery tnett with jthe-cal insthn&oos jof thejSIave States i and so reA sol vnd were they upon having Jtght, that they would not permit these Staies to remain in ' the Union ik'peace., nqr let them go e9Aj't with .out JSgkL ' ' ' Thev hare' already had several fights and ought to-be'satisfiea5;- V : Tho 8choolinMter; Abroad The Ohio Statesman avouches for the fact that the-following is a copy, of a petition 'presented in; the Ohio State SenateCtrbnv the Be-serve, where'"the big' Abolition' majorities are given Uyv.i , . A rXTtTIOX W TBS 'XOXSLXTXa or OHIO, : . we the undersiried Citenseha of -' tbe Town- hips of Nortei and Wadsworth'Madina and Summit Countey s llumbley Pray yourUondr--able Body of the Legeslatar of Wo to alter or nendthe,Scool Law. 8d that we May have a Bord of-Exatmien tor ScooJ teatcbers iri Eatch Township U. B& Elected -t'itient - Election? Evrer tojfirihi Eateh Townt Jfifrfcrtisirit Conuaea3ee4v Taylor.Webeter;. Ej .of Mwldletbwn'-But- ler coaBtyi ObiOfc who was. arrested" aome time last soxumer by .DavidiCQnover, Deputy- jj; 8. MafahaCBpoo tbef athorUy pSf the Secreta.. ry of War, on the cbargeoftdiurafiogren' listmenta, and Jittering .trewonable and sedi- -:. tious language and whp was. Was "confined in a militarj prfpn a. Cincinnati, until October, wheati wsm tezhizzzi, . l-i irtfht suit a- iTreas of Eat- i"2o,CC0, "for 'fel-sa lprUcJ3rat.'J. lib ' r rnps- are C'L'. itzz Izirjen to presa thiaraiC aid Ui tls ; Indiana, vith a population of bas furnished 102,100 .- soldiers $ Ior the'warwhile Masaachusetta with a population of I,21S,000, baa furnished but 60.000 soldiers for the war. j Thejdraft h"a been Hgidlyandmercilessly enforced In Indiana, 'while,' after beink poet- ponea several umeev nas at lengin oeen maet- iniieiy posiponea in jassacauseiu. Indiana is a Democratio State, 'while Maa- sacbusetts is the blackest , Aboliiuin State in the -Union. . 1?:?. " r ;; ''J. Loeniti iit '-Coaiaigrtlili iTear Josepb Harris writes to the! St. Clairsville Chrynicte that the locusts will be on band this year, ,it being the seventeen thince their last appearance. He says': : :'5:fV;v' Tne Pharoab'-.toeusts mada' their first ao- pearance on the wing Mayr 19,-1846 j on the 22d commenced singing ; on the 31st commenced" boring, the trees and laying eggs;' June 6, commenced dying; the males, firs. On 26th all dead. : (Taken from notes taken on above dates;!-- , .. - . ' . , ' ' Z This year there- will be ?ocnsts-in abundance. Prepare your small trees, by; tying them up with straw for twentr-five days, and you are safe, if you do it right. , ; v.-'- Oreeleye Hine Hundred Thontand. It is stated that Mr. 'Greeley went to see the President a few days ago, when the latter made anxious inquiry after the nine hundred thou. sand abolition rolanteers which GreeleyAn- drew'& Co, promised snonld swarm the roads, when an abolition policy ahould he proclaimed. Mr. Lincoln adopted this policy on he first of January, but can very rell : tell Mr. Greeley that he has not yet seen a single company, ev en; ortnose volunteers. ;i ne tact is tney nave shirked the business of fighting so -farand still mean to shirk it.' ; The bill in-' Congress requiring the President to raise a"' negro army for five years is intended to relieve the aboli tionists from fighting, as well as to give the ad ministration a corps of janissaries ready to do its bidding whether the institutions of the enemy or our own are aimed at. I.- . , Praying to Free the Uegro and Work- uig wium nomes to xieauu The three' thousand New England Parsons who sent a letter to President Buchanan du ring the Kansas troubles, have just sent a letter from Boston to President Lincoln, urging bimHo persevere in -his efforts at emancipa ting all the Negroes in the South.' r- . $ The Boston Posteays there are now in that city hundreds of poor white womyn-f-many of wives of soldiers making shirts lor government contractors at five , cents' -each, and by working sixteen boars o'ut of twenty-four "can only nlake two a day.! . '.V:. :r' ' '. .'" '""' We have no doubt some of .the Yankee JZian$ nrmjKmtBAftam, and while pray inn To free the negro, they are getting !rich- by ;roa king the poor' white women labor sixteen hours a day, for ten centsto buy bread to keep their children from starving , ' -; r - - Lincoln's Letters. --. Speaking of the lougeatof the recently pub lished White House epistles" the New York Journal of Commerce says : . . ' ' . ; " Well may the President write appealiegly to McCIellan. Poor man I: who - could ' withhold pity from one so broken f - A sadder or -xi ore sorrow fal pare than this letter from Pre sident Lincoln- is not to be found in the whole history of Government. It opens ia a deep tone of sadness.' .It - pleads witbr the General, begging him not, to complain, but remember the awful politicaL pressure' under which- the President is laboring. He says, he can do no more than he is doing, that he cannot resist the. pressure on him, and he closee" by urging the General himself to yield to the same pressure and strike a . blow somehow' and - somewhere to gratify the same men, the same reckless men who were pressing the President, army and country to .destruction I What will be the next revelation T . - . . ; ' '. it ,,. Tallandigham na. Bingbam.. J , Tbe Ohio State Journal, the' Abolition organ in Ohio, in speaking of Mr. Vallandigham's bite speech says ; ' ; - - ' : and spit upon his detestable dogmas. He met with most scorching rebukes for bis treasonable 'and presumptuous harangue at the bands of Mr. Bingham.' . . .'. J"U'" Ah, indeed I ?,The people of : the Northwest spurn Mr. Vallandighant; do they ? and indorse Bingham, eh I Last fall Mr. Vr got 800 majority nufrf in bia old District than he received tfo years before,- hA. raat majority pt the people of Ohio, Indiana and Illinois have soundly and empbaUclly indorsedMri-yal-landigbani by their votes last (all; WhUe'this m so, Bingham, who was elected in 1860 by two thousand majority, war defeated last'fall bjr tvent-threJ hundred in ajority 'gaiost : him! And a vast majority of the North-west alsd re pndiated all Juch en;as!BingbamtjTtK and facts' not suiting the Abolitioti editors they resort to downright (ah)ebooda.'-OA$im. ; S&r An intimation;'-tUierNeir)7rkJtrr. mrmmmmmm .igL.w. i ' ' Tuiiiw i I' m ai " M iif " - ,..". -1'hbjiiil""l i - ik - i - -r t-ii mju- i'"Jmja S ' .n n. i m 11 iai " 1 m " r" "' ' ' j- - -- . Candidate j 'ffoxi tircblfia'ticn'efsr "tio Tbe names""I the-following gentlemen haye Ibeen suggested for oomination, : fof the respeo- tive offices named, -by the DemocraUc State C; L.V allandigbam, of Montgomery ;t' r. jlngb jJ. Jewettof MuslMnguinf -f8". fir , w? aoyiajjoa, ; a. iu.. j acKson, 01 vrawiora; Winiam Lawrenceyof Guernieyft?- 1--! t. "c'Will iam SennouT of Hetmbot ;T Joh n W Okeji of Guernsey. ACDITOa. ..- 'liiam Habbardrbf LWnjrrrt- Wdliani D, Morgan of picking '. rW.J.ry .-Prentiss, of PranUin. T"y ''-: fBtastrasat George WHoIroes, of HamiKon j Horae;sJjCnapiv of Ashlapf;- ueorge epence, or Clark. 4-; 4-.v V: r We glean these names from our exchanges. There may be others named wbicb bare esca-: ped our'bptice.?; ':i-,rj" Corruption Festering, at tbo. Henri' , The Washington Clty-cnwpoBdenr of the Springfield, Massachusetts JUpvlitcan, ti a recent letter, makes the foHowiBg" extraordinary statement i-.3k I Sh::;vri;t,-? I had; a'enriour experience the: other day t I called with L. upon a poblic- onlcer high in position. We had important .business quickly dispatched;- or yci would hot have found me there. Tsuddenly Mr. turned ' to '.L. nd said, By the wayrw'e can make you a Brigadier General. ; -L;etarer, and then answered No I am net fit for that i know norbitrir of military mariers.- - uo, no mauervyou Know as mucn as .tne most or them., and you shall have a commission for two thousand dollars.' L'. looked still more astonished; -and repeated the assurance that he wae not fit for the Dlaee. The functionary evidently thought he hesita ted at the price. "Oh? said he,MH ischeapv out we are under obligations to your iamity. which. I wish to-repayt-or-you could not have had it for double the sum 1' r- 'v s 'It must be borne 'ia" mind that the' paper in wh ich statem en t first appeared, is pne'iot, the leading Black Republican papers in 'New En gland. -. The story itr tells ; is out of school and discloses the rank corruption jthat i bracitsed oy tne adouuoq . Auiuiaieiraiiun aw. tv .asuing- ton.- Tbere are.now upwards or twenty Major and Brigadier Generals without comraaads.r- In other, words. 'they : wear the 'decorations,' draw the pay,- but perform" no" service;' .TThy seem to have fhe idea aJYashington that the j country .is: going to destruction and they may' as well make all out or, it they can before it 2" ; be Memchia corfespondeftt Of the Chicago py idftbV fagHive 'Ufeica' t Tbaegmeerar eamp;on the line of march? -fVfLili the army was moving.south ward they Bad Joof apprehenU sionW but the instant ;oti?f fccetf ere-torned horthvard, they came ruah:n to OuV arms4 in the4 UveliestT teiron'couBUesr Meltitfid& I Thousands -fithenr now bang Onthe skiftt T the array s impeding fr1U "T)rogftss cotouming its supplies ad r literatly'. tdocking tjpnhe biffbwaye; AV leUah0GO W mL W MafrtAtf tfebiohiiT&n' Clesto?deDoti daO- fu 'rwry lAfrijr ovtuw, rag a termw,' jtf sexes,' ages ana conqiuons xnat wnoiiy prevent them from earning a subsistence iaV the worlds Hundreds children are there -under eiebt years of aeand scorea of them-XwUbodt fa ther, mother, or any one to take care of them. Th verv bid and thentf plessjyytaiigi1rthe lame,- halt and blind tthtt6fcortWe4,ad fO-Deranoatedr are left to the - tender jnercies jof the Government and Northern Abolitionists. ' Very few ble-bodied,jnjddie-a ged negroes are among tbein all: "If left here they, will starve byl.bundreds.5irtaketi North the same fate awaila ihem: nnleas thev : become iatn&tof county poor-bouses and swell tne.tistorNOrth-ern- pauper- jfiT . H. k And is that the eompengattoa forthe. iu owe and orphans the warbaa; made, , the m-men public debt that has been JCTeated rand jhe three tened natidnal and Individual bank-l niptcy' that seenMsom'mtne tbe.lruits of AboIUiontsm sweet to the taste, i gaiasffriover'ia tbs Cor :Ja V ley l&X'yzfc j.'; " , bune .that General "basIeen" arrested fori ia understood aa poinUpz to Geo.' Sickles" tUMtj Old Abe appears determined to cram bia vuli colons ProcUnMtionr.'taot on!y: u'pon'tne'peo-' pie.pr tneutbbutawnJihehrcof the uemocratic Oeoeralam the ?Art8T; Jle,will have jagoodtime of it before be get 4brpngbH WemrwuWa.--4t! " Tronble. Breg, - ; i v.- . The Stark Coun ty ' Dmoerat .piiblisbee a let ter from its Columbus correspondent.'-of 4 late date, from' whipb ' we make the following ex tract r'.- .'-VO ,.; :...?..".. rr i''.., ' " There is jwnsiderable talk about the city just now, iii regard to the supposed wholesale desertions' of . paroled ; soldierf-. from Camp Chase. It was announced ; on Tbumlav and Friday of last week, that all the paroled Union .a ? . - . soldjers in Camp Chase had been exchanged; ana were unaer ma rcning orders fortlieoutn. Application was made to. -Quartermaster Burr of this cityV"for trans portion on. Moivlay morn: ing.-ior 1300 troops, com posed ,: of the ' 104t b IUino'uCtbe 106tb and lOSih Ohio. On Tues day night, when the troops f toolt seats in the cars, the number wap reduced to S20.vTh Irt- t ' .A ii r ivVl. . : ---j '-v::-iT:-i'? ercDce n utsue. u v". PH.rr aeciares ji so, be a fact; that since Sunday evening, over 70Q men of the two Ohio regiment nave- desert ' In connection with the above, ;'we also pub lish, tbe following extract' from Ihe Cairo, icbr- respondent or tne unicago 2rmt t. . sc -The 109th Illinois is said to be disbanded. The regim'ent,.except Co.' K reftueuTio do any thing more until the' President wUhdralet htiTro- A private letter from cFalraouthYa the headquarters of the Army of the. Potomac, to meiiev, urj( hprvsa, tiM uie. louoiung par V Already -pne commissioned ofScer ia nder trial foV expressing bis-' opijiipn pn emahcTpa-ion; Soroe regipjenfs, t iev. refuse fight any more... fa ms:rfa if;ivl n' f The foHowiMr Is da extract frtm?.natrttta thjs.Boeiotf lleildfrom'the Arniy bf the'Pel lo&a.da.Fmo'tK ; .The number.of deserters. .4ncreaeing foar-fully: ,and there is ho ttoul thaw as tbe men are prid'oolhosev who'are? iiclc and'ired dfty'fcftSir'Ircitftriltc pw feU-i " jSrtl 6fiKew ''l:nelaTU AirtorOL lAUitW.UifjrjrtttAMithnieni: the etaue Xof-the WarBuaerIjuLN(i. Ortans but bitter to the IjeJIy-pwhicb .'the North has sd Treefy partaken' of. V And. 4heend is aot yeC 'e lfentirwmt-ofth Thei Washington-lUgieter, 4y permission. publishes a letter written by Lwi Y. GaenBs to bis sisTerMrsr Eliza Co LLt!ts of that" place inrelatfon to tSS reeul tot tbe'ibattlo ckV buir& jlo which he wasparticWu Jnthls iiva-; orThe-i ball bftheDeocratie on .Tuesday evening.- anxious ;to listen- to' a' address by Hon. S. S:oi 'tbe ; eloquent Bep resentaUve from Oh&T ;v rH- ri;Stnce the last meeting the ball 1 baa rnder-jrone'a thoroush alteration; by -the erection of aeubetantialplatform,cat tbe rear of 'Which tbejword Uniooltgyedp In gas5 jett: ;J)n the platfornv weresi?a .number ?of prominent gent)emenemdng whom were'Honf P Wg'HoEji" p Norton" tJdolpho Wol feC'.Esq Keeorfer HofTman,' Hon James Brooksi 'City ! Judge McCunnj' Hon Gideon Tucker,iJnd Bbour, professor Mason and othera 1 'f'' 1f'e i At 8 o'clock tbe epeaker' orHhe eveninz en tered the robm,iccompanied by the officers of u : aeswuiuon, bdu was reccivea wuo IS3 wUiie ttoiiii'M Csrti?e, b5 hye f CLt-le of that rolng!?weiitjip Ilew.rri-Iande-Uleli .Puritaoi-ht, wlich;i Lancashire, in JJoJiand, at 1 tnouhv'r atXion. i fcctiits the earue atllBbd r hsaic&Lx totislli d- tntoTirast Jjjf f4raaerar tVead illwcir.dioUticai o-dar s-f-l4?rrsar4H rirnifredsref yrs aileyerrnedilinf. t ndody willin to contlJ 'wfcen u tanT Lelp" iilf. ;Cheers.' T-hei key-bbte U tbat Tai ery'ii tie ause7 of keyfe a tbat ITVery'U this vrarj andtooatb extirbated. iTh tralk by slavery Iwas. med Jldr h ad rejnreed tinj violence waajk.wae pit en m vrtis ana majice. But If does not thence foHow that sUerywas tne cause or- the - v loiencer' TteiJttrL-ie of f 'i.-s-1'v. . 'land thcforeshould-beaWished. ia samfe-aue Assdciationi Jof themtkllacy; AbonUpiibTbe m irthw ofiepring "of : Purifanlsnr. -v,TAe hmarY of ruTianisio oovb (oji n aiwayasourat iq introduce tbemoral.elemerdariavolvedn sla very into poiitics,and. thereby threw the church into the krena of politics, made' "it a'wranirler of hutnaa institutions; divided churcbesf and berrat sectional aspentiee, PerhanS Wendell Phillips plight not be considered Jby -some, as I repmteniauve 01 .toe nepunucan. party .iiiit i be does .truly represent the 'admin wtratldn.1 wtth Its proclamation orliberty.Ldok'at the votes n Von gress en , a motion or the speaker to aj on tne taoie a resolution by Thaddeu prolonged applause by the audience, 1 1A -.after quiet; bad been restored,' the President of the Association, Hon. Luke F. Cozans, In a., few ' appropriate marks, in trucied 'the Hont- S.3.,(?ox, wbo'was greetedWith' a' pro- On Tuesdaynicbt, at a.Iatelipur. we conn menoea reirean wnippea iiseo-u. . sister. do not let my rough M.nguage wound your AIigB; f I am out of all heert with -odr Gen- eraui.-ana cannot Keen trom -exbreaunthh- if .1 1 . . saa- r i , a a - . . . nei mat we wut oe wnippearm 'every engage mcn( udictb iuwt in iCDiDge ip i oeia anugine Execu ti ve-of our con n try.' i-Tbe" rebels follev- ed us to th' river.lmt the gunboats drove'tb em Dace, so mat we departed wi peace; J Ki t ; I should; 1 i ke ery' 'much (0! see y coall and withrVou foiA weckmd I hftr.il ;trriAit-.rPcyt.b4s for the present fnw 1 logbefore 1 ean have Ubaivilegeifov f4?WWC ('h0."b -5aae V-mW .mmm wmvvw wvSMVmV9 SkUlVUE longed outburst of applause. . j He began, by saying we . were surrounded by tbe Constitution .as by a mound ; that a rep tile had been boring that mound, and the dei ngedjpcean0f ar ad Swept in- to destroy.-. Puritanism is that reBitle.-. f Cheera.V . .Itmmi be ruliedan4 the aiuud rebuilt: Bptit,iriU BW.ua.uune vj ta present auminisirauon.- (Great Applause..) We must patlehtly Waft and work fort wo years aad for a better-noliev.? Mef Qwbiliael8clies(edlviaiM MBnf ,di- fibe.0rth4 I fear,itV-,becansetbe reptile brood still flourishes. It li 'of txtnnneA tnl New England. If has its Chamllee 4i4 Uieht- t.uu ,i .uinKj,an icw lurk.- lueir if we.do not effect a eompromiee;' wearerwhiit ped.V&It mrist end one wayortbe otheraooni fc for ArsrV areoeaimr hsartSu MghUtfttai i J J j - V - : 1- viiad .not enliAed when oldAbeV iasaedi bia proclamation,; I would iari.ben drafted a ana then 1 do Tiot ihln k I shoeld have i4eeir otmuch aceount; for IcouW hot. ha veieon scientioasl j fonght for the Abolition ofkery and I ;thi'nk'tbi (h4 wtimtntytA -ynas it - Untteringi sof tb.e Coining 45toxm -'"Ata great Democraric meeting is Springfield.'! IlHnbis,- Uon'.'Wm; A. Kchardson said i He"! vuuhi oppose .tne. usurpations, 01 io x svicmai Administration; and givwnoaid to a war' carried on to subvert the Congtitntioni rli ft. 8; Merrick,I Of Ohicago, said that Veonld suffer death before be would ve-Otsei willar or one man to the Aboli won4warT cam under Li nkmV proclamation. v ;it'-; v ...ou.a ucvwvu m vn izens should be carried tVOnalhV bounds of iNrstilei. "The DenO0raUlpariy h-SaTiriS.r. npits hiimi td protect the right of ciiizeos here -Mi'J.iJ i.: I 4 '. ''it. -1.. nuura mn aeeq uraius treaMxe toe. iujuiid-enceofa tdrnado. ;,The instincts oftbr.r0wine . 1 -1 ..IT , . . ' wirrno inn toe conitag storm, v - o-aqc ja: i fhe Administration iias j ntellect. ,(1 Has let- etinetT-pLlan IfastUe. ics. 'rv a 62r? J n noticing. tbe it Mt dately , toj Presir dent Lincoln by Governor Andrew, Wendell Phillips, RfV. Conwajf and other Abolition-? -; . .vj -i ;t - i . - I r Averv Daooatn vmi nave aerman iroorxir ofdiviaiOit.-eeHfi Cheers) mFLbmidmll J,hn IteTaays g&K?.? 't9Apta,f f aL'. a .'.il causeof the ia oCalaVerv.He foreets that v .iu. voHfuwuvNi, -nnwi HwrnM diii:L-.1:: t' r r one wowari -: jvi. iTniohwl ju ,u us e pro-eiaveryotng.h- n atne.ewt- canried njF? br Massachusetts not inienacMieseTx tne intend to t : t.cnirfuea breaking? negro-Iovtn form itlf speedilynew alliariceawwy nahap. SWVlSSL pHfbemadettWbe IiaanHa.t thv Detnocraticnv dunemm erf Ne w Yk l&rm"9 &!$'< . j - . President Lincoln boffht to Viu an his title of President ofrthe' United 8tatesi andaetbim elf down as "President of Massachusetta. He -ha quit; hit, own Statewhere bis oldestLaod dearest friends and rreatest dtods.. an eh 'men aaMr. Logan Ha, the .Peace Conzreesi vba.ve ejUitthimr His ome Springfield.) iUe sub uroc by'thousanda are against Wmi vHe does net nowrepresenteayoimportantf partoCrthe West, except: its Lake icounties MiCXInrdn A is? Presidet? of Massachusetts not tc the Pbilli ps. GdveVnor Andrew Co&bae thronirh bim;!the eyitire control of .thai Adminlsttatioal r.etZJT AW1 AbOliUoa lWrnAMdfir-buj: '-Abolition Trophies- C5ixWropbieev-:-.Tffxi.-4 Aooiuion ff Miomow pennKMsv-.. In. DeiBocraiics-cedlL'e Wiact-JcJ wbicb' is Pu pWt2 ,3 Wrs.aSiX roratbei laeX proctamayon. iwoulqseets thaf-Qld Abe'siidea bad gone u AtDcncttTi r coppery ,are gooeput Of theSseirVicewEUL5aa t The Mobile papers .oaote coun tfy Vut- K at59acts; r pound if coffeei atrbow4 laaje, 13,4037 per pounds flour tS05fi per lbar4ffca cts. per pound ; -Liverpool : salt; 7CtSa per ckJr?I JNfii. iextremuislat'an rsnrir, SS0O, cjs, pe? pound ; moiaesesVt LjSf: 2,00 V i-Ti-,oI1!??', printed ItC3ii! serve jjfcs; .reeo4Jfrace befJra xHet at cut ta daadle. It is betteirjth4tthie;ilbofd be tuaerstooa m u its. maguituest aaa measures taken t provide' against -It, tha the eountry : should ;be kept la IgnWbieVvf"faiijf ' ?e;puQubesi!jp ther comment than. to say- bat ,he danger tp iSjs captitol.Mnce Llneplu'a'emancfpatioi elatb'a;Tie.:imo)in' ivtf v:l-v Greeley proposer 'ta' trr it cnlyl Tir e$ and tbe.tndst Inflaentia Kepublican aper.' in thVconnl" "T f jhireeij month ar ;mbrejDX:earb'esrfiluln eball ;not. serve ifnakef aeri6uatim'rre;iibc 1 'rjicrtA- r ins pen r. urr-7 , ;tex Tixss.vt.';'-.;:., f fr rr ... f Vid men rievfe;':V:l''- V -.t, tr.i t?t!ibehevej:;;--'.' " r rJl ezzZ I cntots,. '.v- V oh the rebela-ifjhe end ..ofthatrtert:r t!ill find na no, fiirther advance 1 thsnits VezinrAt) if some mg!imiht. Faii.lia'i? -rio-i ti - ?-. , biooa ancj treasure of the rat. on )&ha'l t .crlte suaBdered iflkfruUlee? eiTortslet W loWfto ourttissuny.ana-ma.cs t)-3 pe t c rThree months jrillpt thrtai:.: by'tlie let of Ha '.': ; C : ' v. "-'.-i-iihtiA'J.: -" . --'7: " w e"i all t a v e bt c 1 i n - tL5-'cT;:tt' vrfc!';i t! ; C ttj V3 ir. .'.1'.' -' tl; 1 i: j. t!je V in It U -said the- Oovemmen t; eon Washington, refuse toyrork. Jbej are in ifa ela ipiteof alljiiat bA,bee,faidbOTtthe prafligaeviof the present. Administration.. We ,P.ue exchanges are : finding fault with, the Qoyeriwi:Me86agei YelUfbo! Mi'jptpi ex pect pot-metal u bave tbe trpe rijps-Wj ? W: ltnre have TraeBd. lound, 4aVt4ng ponVeqVently theyare.'n tcale-j frUantock -.jf51 , . "j; ii ' fr-? o 'jiij? Interiorilbreatfnsto bar ply the NewXork'-JUrr'rt'M eaystie.s Ms Truih'fuT;!?! .at 'Ttbef iTfotespierrtSn an It)antontor fcr-- Honie'.. -8ecre7 Ts D e ri ocra t ic. r r? U"de r! a ! r. ! " trjr 1 5r-?rt h e ficn.'fI0Ui.tt. ' rLI.. ..iel -vItT tl.ar :3,Chio. Indiana and .Illin ois are -full cf tra::'ire;-fvr t.n'3 ef.tb-At i;;bnLu,-ct.I, ift'-Ia 1 & trcoro'a fy -jt".".: rre v .... r . . - r-"""ttKt'--: the Wbief--rf BOta'k ak-Weeten'niaB-4onjtoI. sin'fc al fsebemerijb divisiosi etilltupp68eg them -ibuUleueak to, warn. The erection thfisasipptates nto arepibiic ttanding J nrTta JMoesougb t by Sciu'tft and East,! cnooaina Kriucii tts own eaeapeet. - peec oov tet. to. t he etteaw ad.enar:et8 at low 4rarJdaa no dreem.' at ehettettr, tr ry WeeH Stevensf hisses) to- raise 150.C0Q .nesroes- ( Hisses.) f Why, one would judze' from 1 that that the white race in this country, like the xaeKee s can. was .r preuy nearly, em .eout-" (Great laughter ; a Voice ; : . They -want to get I the niggera cheaji, so that, they won't have the ! special difference. between the republicanism that austajns emancipation proclamations and the, real H, genuine .Congo abolitiohiem; neerB.; , .. 4 uey jare two separate, Jinxs 01 tbe same saussge.made out - of the same '" dog. .These extracts, were tK 'rm bftbaC aboli tion power now overshadowing mv TheJnfla. ence invoked by these men wMthe.j'eligious sentiment in a erhsade asrainst slaverv. .This SB me tendency ,t make- govern ment a moral reform society is observable in -the Iswsotmn- ishins T jQuakers. aeainst" amokSng T tobacco Brden "On- iBuotayvel Vaoghter.)., 3,af alne liauor laws and tax laws against wbia- Iteyitastop ita use came from tbe same. Puri- ian.xe;naency ,10 mix . pontics ana, morais, to the 'detriment of botb.:rTbe aametbingis bfe servable hi the opiftion"of a. Boston '-lawver;' now the counsel tf. the War Department, Mr. Wbiting,!wbO; upholds tbeiMright:ofgovern-ment.tQmfeffere witbslavery, ormbnism,' or any other ins'titotlon, 'condrtion; ' or' social status into 'which the subject's 'bf.' the -United States ch eoter.fftrnderr-ihls ilbetrine prb laaiations against sla ve'rr Vre" issued." 'Bather thai; yield this co'nsorship over the morals of tne nation, new cngiand2 wetcombawar. a jin, mv 4 f a b mm uw uv u&o. ..u. ftoonVnlsed the natioaftor iber jdormas. - -She did. a iaJtfSS.J? MrCox. euoted Ir. Lord en irvamTBn inniennanrie. in riiruaiiMnr ua wr dnce.God to, a sbeeryjeieyito Urn Brenceayed Vu& "Aicb he regarded ei,h. Tvi counsel fect!c.sll: a.Crer-. 2 .'-A rk-ift-var? tut" tIiher c f Pcrin r:ia- ---- and GBeral'i:.iJbr the late- v-r. anf: General BatW (aJvo:ce, Old traitcr I ") fern's war.--rJ;, tIlseT.yyllt voledTaptingtiJciiVirsnand J;ck- Xr't Ti sons at crst-i-e'-aingt the ac:BisiiJOA''of JLcn- Uwna.;Itf thnnjered ersinst thone who"diA- .y . . . . - lereqin coctnne." three .fcntreJ years- t-ytTT SBd(iU tcIJa reproduced at ICew Orlear.3, ia f--. thf order from that rrecion int Hnt I r. ;r '- alM cllia luuhnHhM . ni. t.l -.- ' t rjravBccording to Butler's directions. --(Hisses and eixnrIt'-tole-the land of 1 - the Pequeds. jusaaiow jt ah psjthroogh - onr--1 ; s . Ifnes1 to dicker in. eeceesion cotton, and. it will j , f! - iMtaani pacing tue cnurcn tne lotnu 11 maoe it the th eatre f dissension;" and 'carried tnatX-s ,ir.Mi.i'ri. i.i.4LVt.i. : Kk.u .... "- eyeryaia-loriourj It. has rained mmh in 4 ". stylo Oflate, but it has .lost .more in" sincerft t " '" Hjetaa or yore, compUcentlv assumes to be r; ---a vpart bf the1 Odliheatl.!i: rApplanee.1 ilte-T,5 hanhhess made dissents ppon-dissent until i-v thighariousb)ms.it b4td reached infidelity.: . . . . It is not content wittj the order of froviiieoce. " Itmirstdrive thecharioVo what resiilt tbe "civil-" War, shows. vAyoice- v-.li .-5i 'That's 0.:'.ll peculiar. eit-ilizaUona-the.iii.sjQf pnreni of abolition which found in the Puritan ; . - v soil the right spot for its .bad seed..1 Therefore' : ' it.ROurisnes to ine ovennrow 01 cvi . iioerty..: . by intefmeddnngwitS State:' institutions'.- and - 1 . Lsocial systemev entirely alifeo to ..itself- undey - , t- the Constitution. Holding to the higher law . . f , ; ,; . and obtaining office under ita banner; it spreatl " ' v' V distrust and aprehension of its excesses, an-ong'' I ''H one half of the States; and rash 'uniuatifiable i ' :'- j.-J trouble to colonize them""l. si cannot" see anv't revolution was the once inence " 1 1. has tried r v,j - W 111! IIB IV 1U1 PUIWro. WNllllW UT ElfIHE . newybuth and beauty to'the" Ftate dismem- "' v , "- berng.it.f Applause. It bas eubstUOte! pan theism or platonism -for religionVand sunk'" (n it thai docility wbicb is chfldlike ndChria - tian.:'; iJ-.yM'AJ W ;.rl": " rAt the New Encland dinner here-Mr. Beech e"r boasted that the Yankee was the most pry-""' " - mgmeunieeome creaioie in . me woria ine - : - ' pickpocket of ereS tion. the torn radical of civ ilixation. th head in the body of the; Union, etc. (Hisses.) This is the old conscience' whtcb comes irora Boston and is copied in ."Brooklyn" r-which has been' shn by the Puritan for' threeJiundred years through" bhr own nawwl organ in his'own praise. (Great cheering and. Utugbter.) its source lev fiom tlindostan, -it j, ,; 4 comes from, the coterie of ransndantsaronnd Boston,- whose roost .clever .'exponent is Eroer--4 - son:;. It baa its priests" high- and krw.V front !1 the great .Channings,'ho-ministered inholy'v, v;. things wit b many enlarged graces t ntre: -; i? ; a to the little Channing. who. creep" '"of Sundays ' t in-theenate Chamber at; Washmgtonv tor? preach abolition and villify democracy . uo . : ...... .1... 1.1 ... fn .T - t. n n ! . r lUle iniiUHXHuniiRiiMa ib.dwwhjuii.ii'.. m i i- .-ici;-." ,witb faeilityhoekiag toitba,dtslJ! ,;aonwH iwrti ' . n'.uiuBirauowTortnese-mrtnr iir. wx saiar arid otberagoiSg SFa-tbeOre, the-, blessing is bbldlyjri of OsT if .ww 'i.- i.. -: "u"ia"u onder the plea of. military 1 eflfersod JJ&via underatnd4h e2emeots lm woric:! : w?, at J.eWnse jr rew 0Oj? tn the West, witn'no none of relief, is but an nvui'iiiunmiug mid uiucnvi kio , cot www. rlands i He Moved that the Pur fred-wll' who differed from.themV I . j v-. -a- r -a a uoaKJi4ungana,unougn , wne,- tney i England tby -called t tbeir, dear mother i fir, How tbey?inaugunted the spy ey.-1 its present disability, ivetriifigland ts The West is aware that ItfitscnditseTf I 5J ..ll" i. fi J T- SlSSr.WaibI tn. Aabapt- ; Uerar, a. t. the wvmf reoienJreriih lUe En eland t iettbeSOjtVyUlra-3 iiOreat, tbttftef tofdipr We've, bad enough of. her rl y 4V i iBntj tbee abusjej jpoay beiemedied by a new Congrysa. ;.They wonldbe borne but unbap-pUy.rfey are assocLled with1 an" element' harder dt sieiI.V(IIissea; -;Tfci la brel inf the.iene.I It iaJeamt maait atdiundrMa,' ojrearaago, Lke,beget ike, J ueneratien succeeds eeneration.wiw toe same V'sUmD of TuriD.' cf.Mctr;taiih' saecess A for justice 1 tJt rnr&tiJess; tan&Ta ' fof liberty t-f nd cs nt. for piety. . PHritanism would leform men's morals by'etatuteT.and Paradise 4 bylpottiirs. -It would practically nite church ana stats. 10 proriie its, moral anq rengwus dogmas "Uevrlii! land riay t e canning in in-y&ntioii tndr."rt i.Ia-'iar'nndaetry"; the- may bo8$t of ixer ! llrailcs. c.hccXcIi"rchea frcss she ta.iy sut8! ze-tv5 l?vc"n pilleyi cylinder 'ndheel;'ehe'r!i9y'.ftudy.aa the wprm doeei hoW to draw a;tlircd .le, a&J KLe Ul:-ipi derV'fiow-tO t.re the-tcb;ehe ci.ty'XoaatfOf, a jac rvzza i a e v ry : . : : : c rr r. us -. t: : : a u a 1 1 ate. Her i :ec. - r'-1 Hi! 5i- c .1. it: ? rrc - -jttjre Vr-1 i" c3 not nnier- f.at J the met 5 I. IV ' Ot f"- " rt tV I ; i.. i. . it 1 L I ' ' . frion M p!au?.) - It v ce f 1" cf & hanf'--cf the 1 -;forre l.-on . t .:: ...to r- aiaojdgTai Xb?al.tncxv between ith Cb left cnurcn ilans- persecu- eren those "of 1 Ik r . 41 vj 'm. A x 1 h a a- A.m i. the"burdena ofarfyfineV&ilBiirffin ? f"1?" ?F aev auntcM vut. , j i. " a Ti t: "i t:z ixie eineana 01a women iorwitcn . AoabaptSstsT'Famniafsif efee persecuted nd 'punishedT boV' the- in- ririrfjr from thisthe Infidelity of jParker-the skepf ticisrn whieb sncti philosophy bas ntredu-';. a ced.. r;Havtbi traced allthe Paritun elemen'teii- t wWcbvbavs fomented trouble he followed -.its"; "''f'Y7-course in a political point of.- viewjrom 17S7 v,w; wvr www.-, ji cf vujjuk ii ccuiraiitc j"""'- a nd, to, ericfoacb";' upon '": ; oth ernl " - W hen cat 1 ed " npoir to: xnake safcriflces Sr mi the'Tvare of this :h t.I..i -.t. -:-( jf-i.i - 1 : cv'tnirr, . eue veca latiam situ "K.-w-.j.f make themi; There' areinow 19.000 deserters -?- - UrOm the Massachusetts troops" She forfot in 181Z ber hatred- of rs te rights. When t be ti ov. - f -Mapeschusetts 'refused troops to Madison aeainati En eland. 1 ISh e fbkf ered.-aeWs iofr 1a tbe.Hsrtford Convention and dissensTbn -when-when'Tex8'"was-'sdmitted:"V'8hedisco0rsl1--Ci- er.--rt'Xol..;- j 4. - w 3l ii f.ny.r i 1 1 cf r l-----l- .--lv.y- Taseaa4Lxrmae,wafte enieity aocreea . . . . TkdM'dxterMu vtsoaraiarsja the tolr an4 Bhftte''' Of ear ihriavd, sacrii sires the PlvmoaUi. Pprim W ltC& pailTTewEoand acomplirnent for bet Wwlalrfary reswtabce;;Iit monies i'bewcAklbJavareak of Sngels,. ,fle copeidered. the, boast that thet irugnmswcrvoe auinors oioemocrattc UDer,-ty hfrp'aVutterly groundle&sproving it"' from history. Tbe compact of the Mayflower was forced from the Pilgrim teadertt-illliotWrthe historian, sayt Jhey jfjt jRes-H ideocra-: cyU ifo man could Lea voter unless a' mtra-tierof the churcbtnd;Jndge Story tlys, this disfrancised1 ve-txllis' of the 'people. t-The Knal laws rere. framed from- the CentQd code. iey punished accordir to caste.;, ;Stich .was the ruTe.in '.Harvard ;Coilee-eW,Xr2:ticd yet has ber Brahmin ' and her "Cootee , : s, Thelaws even regulated the "apparel 'of v:zh atrdi wcienv xtr. t-e iusatoo-cjii; ixv Years or COTtests fr tbe r. eft Riinst the mar' tri'M sr 1 . pventuat 'J atiatl i t ;e fee; la by thet..- 'i II. C:.-:!.?sIf.-.Cnd?rt: jtl'-.r..: c' -'i frsrfui; ':- tr - to tna: the c.. rc r ... - " ' at 2t-r ' '- - J ; ; t- I -r versal pickpocket from the Vedas. Emerson t Parker. Phillip Alcotf, only copy, the Brah . minsl rheir doctrines are not strictly iriater- -' ialiscn 'or pantheism (great'laughter): butthey ; absorb God -and namre in naan. and make - the ;? soul -all ! iHiaUhv One- of their philosophers .. adds himself personally v responsible': for the , JJ". : otliqfait.yot tbe-eartirssxterandj or cenrcer-' : croon botttMuUd.tioiiueverythi8g; ergov he yf Emerfcoq) tiasTerythingGrat. ? :i . merrimehf.UrIQ youtwonder-. there fbre. that )' ." he Tmakes'the negro a part of himself and his" ? -''' ; eqhair.5 f Increased "laughter.) f TJie Hinded; f?3 ? said. -Bieh is-that.-univerfal eelf whicb;lbod.J . .. wotshTpeat aa the eoul r Emerson jarsi I?o- V. thing is tf thou art nbf; tboa art under,' over : " ' J all; thou dost hoLl ?and '-rover "atlr thou- art; 44 Atlas; thou art Jove." The nserit: has tihels V'-:3 j most perfect.; description -of this ; ideologisiie . , Yankee 'l am generation; J. am' dwsolutionj I am;' entity and . nonentity;" -Atnonar 'iriiyi - tains I am HinSalrfyamonngr floods the ocean.;,.-.fi-Jt-among elephants the everlasting big elepltant!1. t- i-w (Great lauebter.U TbeBrabmin, of. Botori Z " attains to such, excellence, -for. he,. follows thS. -; - . directtoti of the Vevfaa and contemplate hea-' :'4 wofjf9, n uieupoi 4i is -own. noe; Mua;e? ivu Unued merriment,. r.Bv euth pT'ocessee of uni- .: .t,; fieation they proveil bfack and white'o" be' "''- "', "all on thinq." ''The"Speaker then .deduced t s the war witb Mexico by pasouinade and . t ll- i'i v pitiTi - Her 'Jdav ' of reckoni ri g,? ho vev tf . ; ha s- - f '1; ewmej IShe will not be thrust out of the Union f bo t she 'will be humiliated in it, - (Cheers). Already bey proclarh'atTons, ""tinning eounter, - " to,' thei popnlar s;nUmenf have yrtcuced-r-stAIa " paralysis of the State.-'f-A pplaus.') - '- . ' bericledaholealeaedirerwhework for wSgWajeefl 'may. bring New--'Ltaniit?1r ; to her senses.Wnaf wages.--J A 'quarter of - A' qinul..bf Kbrfb;eMot .toount Sottthyro'iXil '5r -: men 'perished alfeady.Fortunes totter, indus--f s 's .; try-palsiedJ bankxOptcy' soon 'to follow- this - riot in tpeculation.-v Sueb sft with tbe gib-wv " oerrina aooiiuon cenoxoentna proauees nwecyi v nntn.J .'If Is '-not-irften'ded to produce--union " unless alAv'ery "-'dies. -But H Is - determined . to U , prevent the Detaorracy-from-restoring the ? hdr Unionj bynakiag diyision.' eternal; 'But -Ty..,', $ '; theGod-ejf our fathers though thee States nay -. " be totnapvt temporarily...by the extremir?,: i the Pe'mocra;y,' if it takes a lustrum to do it -e"3 will never resse td labor till the-" old -C overir- ?:I -i-i! ihent andiTJnion taoursjBgaia. JTr: . endo'i . cheering r.-Three. cheers' -for - the- speaker r-.--'1-' ' three cheers for Ohio. 5 Let ll.2 Iltddle nd;'-S'--WeaterO ?tates;atand Crr.i; ; ( A 7 ; '.au-e. j The fzf-. ' dissonant dip cr thete f!ec'-;!s-u ot New Ed v gland will be drorred ia .the. "popular: .-voice: v.- ' , ' the fratricidal hate they have ennerel will . . be fissuagedand ittoJiieJaotrsteJ loia ,cf; -b - : this nation -will t poured -the HUow-el ;erd ' ' heahn s plritcf cintcsl coRf. Ier.ce- find con-""X:'Z--ciliation. :Thu3 wi'.l.tliefnation r.f Twrr ii'tli" ';? TttiriJc, -3 &ad continued applaase. 5 - T -vllrJ Cox's e teech vwas vehthnsl-silca.il r". T&'tSxP- ceivei; be vt3 most congralnLi'c 1 at tie closi cf tie nieetinby-nucieroao' f.icnJaoa LUtllJ? :er r-i A!; any -N."Y..v?. i C; 1 "A i rer" Ht4 ; -T1 " "-5 - " ) "Tr: .a I' t 1.. - 1 -1 - 'J II 1 A s 1 iUl'P.'ercf.tii Cecretajy f XTax to make such L!e!?.0 Lc ' t. . - ll t . V 1. . . . tl? L: :jC':. r .ere .21 1: f-. , Vri :" J; -: -7 |
