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. :Mm l J I Tr't 4fcJS vvi Mi mi V?'. t. 'ava-ti'-lu 2-: TOLUliIE: 1 f"V . S- aW. 5n -;.-f I I - I 1 ' Til! I . , , , I j Twin? U7' tr I I 1 I i ' II I - I I rv-n ii iji .'.' .! 1 ... 1 t'1 r r - -i a si r -w a I- . r w a 4 'v -! a a i J . a w.I I I i ll .11 k?fI Mf :-H ill I . B I' ll t . -t : ( l a 1 ' B I S i i' ;J fel.' vJ; KTim vr ? ' ' i Aloft . - a. "X a"X -v - . -a. r - - - -: av a - rpium crxf v.Ttmoif noutnrs t OI3e ta TTaKMlward Dlocli, Sd Ciory. -. r.-jrv aiiar aaxpi" Abolition llceting: at Gamtiier. From a Student" at Henjok 'Collets. , In tb bftsemont o ftose Chapel, of Kenyon' Collfge.-apon the evening of the 18th, i' fair audience assembled to listen to thai marvel of the pregentay, an Abolition H War" Dem ocrat. 'Farmers from the country round bout the Hill' citizens of Ganvbier, Profeasora, all the$3 with their neveral families. and lat-ly, and perhaps least, not an inconsiderable number of students without families,"paid, from variousi mouvea, careful attention.,. It, seems from a report in the Critu that Miami VTJni-versity - has interdicted, by positive statute, one-J. M; McGregor, a Senior, from expressing in public or in prit atk, opinions wLich thongb those of a majority of a million or so 1u the "loyal" States, happen, unlbrtuna'eiy. to radically disagree with thone of the expiring Administration. Such medieval, Puritanic intolerance as this has not yet been manifested here, and very properly ; for, as soon as a College becomes a College inrtting none but Abolitionists,' the Democrats will, of course, leave. .However, we doubt. ,very much if the I Hon. CIa. Vallandighatn or S. Medary were4, to make -this village a visits be would be tendered our Chapel ; we doubt, too, if either were to e peak. in Mt.-Vernon, if leave of ab-ence could be obtained ; and why not? ; In this country, especially, it id a habit not only entirely consistent with the Constitution but even essentia i. to its stability x to regard the Administration at any time existing as distinct and separate from the Government itself, and to canvass the proceedings of the one : without thought of disloyalty to the other. This is the dictum of Win. H. Seward. As I have -aid tefore. ur Faculty have not coerced fcUfcir pupils politically; recognizing the fact that a knowledge of the classics and natural sciences, however extensive, confers no criterion by -rhich to test the merit and demerit of national questions, tliey remain content with their 7 views Upoa the war giving us perfect liberty to entertain such" as we choose to call our own. But alas! this is not all. A pseudo " Union Xjeagne' fnrmad .nndaB.provoot Khal an spices, and jwlging all the World from Cincinnati, and this Township, as seen through the Commercial, . emulating or trying to emulate, thei conduct, of Russia xr Poland. We " shall" not wear copperheads ; we " inubt" not wear butternut pins! Now, taking tltese as samples. There is no law against the freedom of speech and the press, to say naught of mute emblems. Do not our Abolition friend ee that if they abrogate law and inaugurate reign ofntrt torce, that tley miist inevita-tly fall before the. stal wart! Democracy (who are not blind) forty, thousand majority, strong in Ohio, seventy-five thousand emphatic in Pennsylvania, and one hundred thousand majority determined In New V"ork, to omit "Srir J ersey. Wiw;onsin,.Indiara and Illinois ? Or, admitting a falsehood of the gravest kind for the sake of the argument,' ,tbat " the army" will finish -the bloody work, they will have be- : gun, do they wwh the South to succeed by , having no enemy to: .fight T for the " soldiers, in such case, are to be brought Aat. Leaving these truths' to the careful consideration of those concerned, I pass to notice some of the aaiient points of the address. . .. : Imprimis'.-The elections in Connecticut, Missouri and this commonwealth were instan-ced as "great Union triumphs.' In Connecticut, as may be seen by-referring to the Crisis of th 8th instant, Thomas H. Seymour was defeated "by a mere "corporal's guard; and, when the blush conies In,' .It ' was owing to ahameful uieasurea, uch as furlooghingptot Abolition soldiers and acting upon the poverty of lalxwirg-meaV The ballot-box in Missouri, as Medirr'a paper for the paet y ear ! wUtW clusively prove .aecpadary tohe bayonet;; the elections", resemble tho voice of the people about as much as the sighs of the captive Tdo V his common conversation. ' ""As'for Obio7 the results (as in Indian ao rIIliriois everywhere, CoBnecticnt -and Missouri excepted) are magnificently, encouraging, r In hundreds of townsLips-any of them, Lincoln in56--the Democracy aaet'with no opposition whatever. If Ohio be' notfrofn' twenty to forty thousand Democratrc, then there, is bo such thing aS ve-: racity. The distcbes ; to the:nfarr;and other journals enthusiartically demonstrate 'this by the geuerafiyt onJerM?gainsiiB; almost every countylThi ordHUtution' was eonstantiyoiipled a."-wbj.il cannot conceive.: -How-r much rregard is paid io the ConsUfciUoa byOAbolPi uoiusu r-ieinocnusr' ' jet, Tbadeas SteprngTcrJpnat juii 'jylttt'Mpij in his speetTpoq lhsadmissioa'.qf ' West era ViftfalkSn 'Lti Ceni Laiei. Bea.r Bn'tfc and a boslr.bewvrs J Ser t.ttminjU was frequenify1 coofideii tly aflrme 1 . thai Jefferson and Jackseo, IfiJivin would Upproye f,ha eoiM oi me caoai in power. 'Arainsi; in isaea-ecratinf charge.ua;onajet protects to hirU- r. aaous resoIatioelorfSSCemVcrs -In his -F-r.'AJsas1t!btutlbn ennot U tauuartftlaed ft the'Uoprirvej ia oppw"e,ta rlenlimfiat fcy Ha-XU- am .a .ai ' - w ; desire 10 K37 And persecuting HcJj CitJM ' elergy btP not a rsscall eontraetor kho' I ttol ittnate y pairiotwm." fWTeaoiaera ftr twen- tj jearft aaBerey ; morarecenUj . tlie- oidifrs Were taken io charge and bo vtb copper beads are Demg nerceir aaeked. w ben -air tbeee are annihated or-distrcled, we enppoee ' Be civilized globa wity b drgooned and. Jracted into spiritualism, QnitariatHsm and w-os ' in- definitelj and conseeni j t!,-:a potv 'prospect for the peace or thei Bogsr ' William portion of humanity. , Bui our orator toonjht.;tl) utilitarj would aaaist both, morally and -hn morallyvito propagate tnnlatto principles: Now, to dispose orihialiad the feiters ' ot the soldiers. Ninetentha of them Are.dierna- 'ted with negro equafity.anifprvy .God-epeedid all who hate ftv Tha Drvpotkhtos fbrget'thai the troops are not machines ; these .see and testify that the slave is in hia only possible and endurable relation to the . white. Let as appeal to history and see if this be not eo.- negro labor ;" the " free'' negro will-, pick cotfee-lerries from wild bushes and. dig ginger in the woods, but, he will not cultivate, he wickedly allows the wealth that the creator has lavished upon the soils upon Jwhich he Ubernaclea to be hid. aqd Christendom in the scarcity of somprim necessities and the total want of others is liberally subsidizing the 44 free" negro for relapsing into prouu&cuoua intercom se, brutishnesa and idolatry. If anv- 'bodv would like to denr this, do so. and von shall be convinced out of your own mouth. In the beginning of the present ceniury (he West Indies and the United States produced an equal amount or cotton. 17.000.000 pounds ; now, the South produces by slave labor nearly five million, bales, the West Indies (slave Cuba, and Porto Kico honorably except ed) scarcely five ounces. Sugar-estates ,are abandoned, the mills and churches silent and mouldering ; the machinery rusting along the roadsides. The South' is what: h ft ia the West Indiea and every free" (?) negro settle ment are shrinking from the superior light and enterprise of the Anglo Saxon into the gloom of savagism ; indeed, the bright spots of the World where the negro is are the&w spoul Cast your eye over the map. Compare Mexico with Brazil, Cuba with Jamaica. The people, in enormously increased bills for household expenses, in the curtailment -of a dozen indispensable articles o clothing and diet, jin the general stagnation produced by the comparative stagnation. of trade, have , beea,,re and will be bitterljr regretting their 0oheervi ency to that invention of the Devil, "eman- pauon, -compensaieowucii more tuaaH that which kindly does not rob us to huThe dagger that is to in aim or slay us. Saint Paul well describes t be wolves iha are now ;i bowling in frantic triumph over the battle-field and store-hoase. . I 'refer to I Tiin. 5 1 1--5. As to the Conscription and the Constitution (did the lion, gentlemen ever read It?) Art. 1 section 8, subd. 16, is overridden by the ' f money or your life" bill ; and ; yet,-' such ' " eminent Democrats oh ! as Groesbeck": pronounced the Conscription act constitutional I vBjlthe part mentioned the Democratic -' constitution-. al lawyers" who " sit on store-boxes" aa af whittle sticks" are right, such " emminent" Democrats to the: contrary.. lThe Union' ".-be it known, 44 is to W preserved 'so Jarl "as possi ble." This is wonderful "loyalty? truly.., ; We can claim with more reason as much latitude. Strange to record, the "iottfon. -party was ignored in drumming'up the causes which led to our existing conflict ; it was, one moment the . Democracy, which ': brought us io the swpnl : sg iin the Democracy 'were proved to have been froni of old, 1848, -identical with the black deppoticiaris (?)and, er, JBlame; less; indeed, we admire from hia Urns, of argument that t here ever vere. two parties at all t bow sad it is in 'Presidential and other' campaigns we fought the Abolitionists upon every point idavery included, with the. utmost ran-cor ; if we had only discovered:out similarity in the last Presidential cam paigb, for example, how affecting the fraternization Would have beenreeley an What a; millenial season, we missed J-jfinally, th e. Democracy is the same 44 loyal'anti-Abo-Utios organization it always was ! ' Verilyyihe ' Democrat' Who understood hls' wo1 or , lis party's position-after hearing it thxyi epooaV ded", mast be a itopels&s ionatkw or, likavthe fellow who was always sure to gaeaa wrongly. always guessed the other way. In order to. brighten the odj am ofevery thing Democratic and Southern tbe late-in-the-day Crittenden Boon;wereJUiupt4 M 1 tnnt Inn nr lrnii nr rrnn tnr li fi .! n i I I I that the war was begun by i the secessionists of the South Stephen A; s Dougias how adinirs ble Crichtc ottered, sentiments frevi- ousfy QasH before tba' war;) vts? this cCeeo aith the RepablpartyUfD . n uviv iccuvwivijur; vi m M aadToondbs , twnrjUfasi tbeir-section will be qmted by the -Critteaaeo eompramUei. II yoaill4 gtv'lhasaift Wioa to V. WarielodV tlirt disuaioa. final and eternal separatiOB.'v iCaa the btacW expect, us who claim to ba tba only real Uaidd toea tosWrwH a meaaar WhicV ficsCerent naia, adiaanion, aaf teraaJ f epa- auoa who ara gio rjAi ton TV JJU cct theariaivided T6te of theIpubHcaaHirai promise; oratof , the- SaeaTitf - a f lam asu 1 c -v a a ! - -"" " r , - - ; w- 5 - mt . uaaal partrdelSsTlhTCrTucn ffinn nfo? ForttAitiftaV c'.'.-l--I IcffgJffWPea eoyererVvl::-!- -"JxrsY v " I pf cjoIioacTcerbacse litt!t cob -t :- -4 - -s - destent Tpo3 ,J lltuicf iwearLkt-iaerkf f a8alka (tijsjtr'r-i tmiii cj 'i:a r Thai (ha otV i3elre4 ipx&nlmm It aegalived hj htrtehaciaiK itdjow- SouXA Carolina; . JLiBeoIa.ia hia lnaostral aekaowlrJ eagea ua.ti xat. tnarpieaie&co(npramiM was refosed. the Peace - ConveatioB ? iad ke labors froetrated Jbba G&talina: .vigilasee of L. Chandler, who, irith bis oohortSAra sweets If . floral" now,' no' accomjmodatioalt jv maai have a little bloodJeUingfO that ithad been but att Ah'yeeKy organ iters of the equa) ' laws' ;that "tound ! our "count: eiverse jet reciprocsDy, harmooic jopop aboni you Ab t he bloodi ' will vjoar iloloeh never be aatedf : 'iw ' tt"V'iUr?ii?:-.'v' V a Moii .pes ibiaaIy& iJ Kii ;t' -; BlMdwpoB tb 4oor '. i'i ' !. Bload that baiSMwearaadwaaaiBg.fji tu The leech forgets . ia ' his raka")b ' bmnaii gt)T, ; that even, in monarchical England fs a pafty for peace' ie just as leglUiuate asa par tyifor war ,VYbo tbat Jiaa-read htory- im k nowS'- that - since, down ' to and inclodinr Bright,: as opposed to the Critriean' (and nev)rB beiore)-the daya of Montgomefy this irss so?,, .Can tee of all nations have no Chatham, bo Brights ? Heaven knows we have- Lord Norths more; than ' sufficient J1 r ; I saw some farmers present. Tarn sorry to say most of them evidently came prepared to believe because am their predilections they wanted to believe, "though - Democratie farmers were there as well. ; - -: Because the nominal taxes are about ' the same, "the war costs j iothingl" but.doesit cost " nothing when'we'pay twenty-five cents for Abolition calico, wrth1ut ten under Democratic rule ? .' And, worse still, is it no tax to sell produce for a depreciated purfency and but J ittle even, of that? I do not pretend to finan cial acumen but' this statement appears a pos tulate., . '" ' Vallandigham's beautiful anit Chrfatian sen- j timents produced a deep' impression ; "withdraw the contending armies and send your manufacturers and merchant steamers to the South and receive her raw ma-terial in return. let Time do his heal ing work :" these were received, not as was hoped, with hisses, hut-tn a silence, deep and eloquent; yon could - almost hear it. The speaker immediately pereieved, the error of etting Vallandigham's bewitching expres eions declaim for themselves and endeavored to prove that the Dayton Representative, like the Virginia Committee of Eight, discountenanced universal auflragel- this is, indeed, a novel accusation, and one. it strikes me, by no means warranted b-the text ; who has ever heard thia ehargeto. Vsnaadighaiif hinig-jfr 1 but it will result in the Abolition) of slavery 1 ".By their fraiu ye shall know thenf.". "I a si not a Turk," Oscanyan TnTght a Well ex claim " though I was born'ofMoslem parents and itt Turkey .' . Th e meas ure--"emancipa-tion"--G. Vol nej chose to regard and defend almost exclusively' as'i military ecediy';fi this was to make it acceptable to1 Democrats of the North and West who would Justly consider such a calamity, me for which- ho appa rently glittering advantages could compensate, utter ruin, which to put the position forcibly. would ever increase in its blackness of dSrk- Wetl,'in the light 'presented (whteh it - the most im posing' 'and favorable that could J t msnifested) J the "emancipation" fulmen is not as I anlrm, but . as the two petty principalities, England and France have in; their offi-cijil Journals stated, as good as could ' be r eic-pected under the circumstances,1 hut neyerther: less, i e, aPwlutlx4thar..:T Ue prodigy, the " necessity, " for which, w axe id overturn the earth and sky -! .' --v-' ; .'l When the President cani "free'th slaves he does .not, Snd When he can not Jie 'joes yes, he f? does l", absoImelr.V does Vi-.On$ dot Judams I But even tbe proclamation will not bV enough if the people will have;it'-so! In conclusion, an incendiary appeal to .mob- violence, rwaar a eived- h? h"e - . . " Union . League.", -of tbis-r township, wbieh. judges all the country tronvGara bier."" While the armJ. fights the-enemy ior front yoa mhst fight I the 'enemies . the Temocrati Aeifie, Organize in. eveiy school-district v the drafWaa excellent measure, drawn with special reference to the good of the poor,' will be enforced; 1 1 hbpalto ieai next OctoberMC - - 1 .-; . -I nmphed over all your fnesni jnohzt bear but do not trembia. ?Wha4 was $04 done with, lha aegroea , WHEN 1 fteed' -CWaai'iss osual u poo such occasions, coDigne4 k to De tiuiocexX" great somewhere."!--thai hospital tor. deeripit stools aad; iUtebUItea-caddiee; tha Abolitionists say upon thttfidpic. - ; nrKMmr-nr - lk otm. Cat th aha rJA ar fl I ikin h all an rf a rtf I things to dilafe and to endeavor to paUratebe- loroi ma y Q'- tiuiitn .tm worei. Tt9w whjr bAvsI treihe4 time and tiatienca? Beaden will yoa heliava J'meTtis "toobKgeAblritioifrrief a.acrijpterJinjiract I politic as well as jreJigicsheyiimstlearav u wej Tow oiaer anq iravei Toore, -uar csutr IT we disagree, Iet-a sayr47eUryowlieve Uufaretj. 1, in arVUlh Ut' per OSMftLttXtBsS tshtA k''rjn.r 1&9 $JM , - . , VMt,w-! ;t . iv av t kr 1 m--J r i-" a n aw. awv XCTjla.sv speech at Castle Uarden, OcTw li.T&dfi whomXputlicag; -7actaw ! .i feet rightto bUIere W . Julm V yi&.olfi, ;fJtt'tiBelr,i' iniUea Wihe gamtw oee: thy coin SAt- urday iatha eitHf Hvw Tc rk, we ooiice one HA deaer mitc4V W'eitracz Islura nave' mmei progress flftais'a I before m armfes ar still fMfvancjng aa.l irtiMtained by theoiceVof th itrictoiinaat home,' theyi w-m trrs loAgr'ei..e:Un1s the! SoeHh.aa tie taee tketr heels v6 'th kcals' of sweating traitors in tJu JVoriA. Yti; teifvtriur'olii!iflAiA ffrn'hC V A. : , uur uenerajs wasa, uera Lvnouf lor procla-piatkna addreseedte' thshefty'f' bttt liere irhlef, addsW:4o the asaepUy, ia'. tJaAon square jassanag tbeta that tHei army; a soon aa.it, ebaii have conquered trie South; wim ba directei North, "to place its heels upon" titiej We donol kno; wbetberiGeh. Halleck refers -to thiee "sneak ing'ttrauorS io the North." who have loryeawlwn uttering trea son against, the Cbnstitutionj'enouncing our glorious Uotoq as 'an aecaed Uaioa wkh slavebolderarMMa compact With Sell,' 4c nd -who lave again and 'again expressed, thrp.ugF their presses' and their public speakf. era, a aesire ina we union mgnt teoissolvea rather than that they ehould: be contamina ted by further political association with those who, like GEbME .WASH.rKoTON, held negroes as slaves . We ,are ijot qutte sure whether Major General Hallkck means these traitors and "diss aienists, for such they are; or whether he has chosen u adopt " the, epithets of RepubUcao slang, and refera in such .choice terms as wa have quoted ta tha Union Demo crats and Conservatives, who lone are loyal to! the Constitution and the lavs. In either case, we cartel I Gen; ILallxck, that this proclamation,r will hardly increase any -claim he JJiay -have had to tbe respecj; of the nation; nor inspire anj very ' great admtratiqu for the qualities of his mind or heartlH is an act of cowardice on tbe part or a Ueqeral to threaten unarmed men, whoever they filly be, and an act of oily to say whathewit: lb, afier her shall have conquered..- jt nuil' eoi, tier first, and then, issue hia proclamation' against 'the sneaking traitors in tha North '.-"- . vy e no not know now near- tare- to tbe. finaljorwhier of the rebelltDo: J eannot tell: therefore, how soon General H tea's threats' will be carried into-execution; either dc-4 . re trwu close of the war, be comxnaadr4n-c1iief ;of & anny.f at uoids bis commission? nice every other c-mcer, during tb ptessure of the PresP den? and as 'Mr Lincoln is not ml ways of the-: same- mind, - the presenteommander-in-chief may find himself disposed of before - he has had a chance -of putting bis heel On -the heads : of his fellow-citiaens. Besides,- -w may believe Geiierai Cissies M.' ClAT; the War will never.' be ended as; long -as -General HaL'Leqk is at the head I of the arm aad if the Pidet-tOi:whe..GeeTaF Uiar gave this asssratfea to writin&'ahares .tBevpinioa- of his disUneuished,friend, ..General Siiuer nay not,evea -base an opportunity. vf .puHlg hmllsrOa-?tha? header of the tnemv in. the field, t Tha report of th wareoouratteey tDora- over,, teWs uatha.' the-. restdeJdwhew ihS judges: proper, will give nrdens ta thei geoerala' in" the'field w'tLhoutcoaaJusg thecoamaaderw m-Chiet. ad t s tbejrefore quite oasQtte tfaat when GeneraJ UaXLicC snail b ready to out his., heel oni bis fellow citizens- North, Mr, LijcoJ.s may prevent tha dire .ooseque nose bfr hat fear till etep. bv: a-seeret couatetMrder to'the subordmaiaj General, eontwiaading him 10 use aiwie more amaanujv' ana aiscretios I than is exhibited ia the meoaoe )of our mod- rern'ATIfctaiil .:'- T-'-'- ' Charles X.IIcwbrdlspJeased wit hoat. his Council of State tfiuckhotnv- sent them his boots: qukiha-' legs- were .not ta tbenVaud no' immediate danrer resulted froui ib& ivm bqlical manifestatjoOfOf fzpwer much less con wesOpppose that tha people of tbe North will be .frightened by a mere aUnsioa to Genera I H alleck's booU. no matter bo wsabstautially. . 1 i.t 1 1 ' r .t. l i ri t'e'w may nave pui or oects. ieu- feral-HALLEca's name is Yet anebniiected with arty battlefield unless; the escape Of Genera'l tSKAVaxaAKD iroto vorinia,-wtui-aj 141 tag gage; artillery and tailitary stores, laoooaidei-ed a rreat ictonr.i: B'-ia far from beinea Csaa.rst NAKHo,o'ar "FEPEaict ? and ye.t,' ff he' would wniUta4 those mer b most have a ears not to ase threats against onarnf- d people, whom tbeee great captains hare al" "d protected.' Thraats, even HMlMt Mlraial K ara in arMfceharl fast a aad suwjwnerallxlawMded-yarreat niilitary piwiBMueia. ...Agajgav. pnvm-jciuxen coey aitr' altogether iACompatihle with -that ? high. wmv viAoqQrjrweAeaoaHiMSUiimi aie-Unguisli.the Mhiiersltbf gtjntlemaji4 ,r- : -GeaeraXHAUca, act? tnuch more, than year go. was a private citixen.avjawyar in vaiitoraut aod.iia mejybea, fragaia a tyate citizen lf be were- merely soldier, weinight excuse, ala ignoraaee of thsr htwOtat aa s lawyer heiBansJtBoy,, tha;tpaxtial Iaw ceases -wuh le reatoratioai of peaoa vXUqt Sr. thai commanding Generals -thea- to place etc, hlspn. ttrcoka of their feUowzeoa and tlierr jera thereshoobji bs fraitpre qa.ny'aiateofthe Umoi-then th7-,wjllAb ajn-aableto. tba ril tranahr, ihey. wlH bay tft jbJadacte4 and tried, and fahej Und. gmh tea ptroiEhed..not br Geoeral iHaxifca'a Loos 4aw. I tha lawt'of ta laaA Jcneral - - t; la. tm . , aimseii, u verrxeppisg laess laws, ,frll .be held strictltesMijsiVU Jof his acta, nd; kfersistic; la t i. tu rppseXcl tiilitarji usurpation, pacn-HsJ yrr.a tasvasverUy d ta hiaattdicity- aiiJ;p:reia4Ti , .oailLa -iaia in rlj r.re.-is e t-4 r2A- ii iLj cer LiT;lsd r,!,:w,7 r .t" r"':,5 rant?; f nd rt'L-J 't -f l 7'l rrj't --.i" ---iou3 1 'iCi Cii- ';r'-:-' --3;- cr. r. dji"f:ctr. J -'at -! . y Cv,.4i 1 'iJ ;.'-viWsJita4rOTy Aprill863r J ' -aireaoxnisgtj adeuride'r tmilaircnmtance. t)nr ti tTi vtalk,L3. el : : .i it soytre: r t,'jr'!,i Whic5i hWI?wc&cfiiiiJcr -tJoj i -'. rr.'re jt'-jsifi-'ir-xir- !?tTjtfL-:;:ia.T.Ti i -5- k-eV- -a. ilurwvlxtsr ITmtpmlmt ;:ff Ci l 1 wish tha wJhoKpeopIe to resolve thersu selves ieto a counDittee ba the corruptioas of Uhe iwr, aad read the teatimoaji now beipg de yeloped : .. ..;;-ij.;Ai:-.v' s taat, caitxaow raosogacxa ouiltt or: m !7i4efit:rtariaoaiii t .rH AaisaifaeT:Pa pHi; fuThe m'ajoritjof the SenatoriInvesUgaUng Comrsittee to inquire whether anlawful mease were employed toaecure the recent election of Uniied State Senator - made a report ; to-day. unaiiijS i4?oen vameron gaiuyon tbe &ar geaof bribreed si hiw .by JeA rersbnl Boyer; a tne'mber of the IgisUlora: After arguing the case strongrjr against'the witoeMes in CamerouV'defensiS they say Boy-er's stat eioeiU is oorroboratSil iaaiearjy all the leading details by testimony of Other : witneas-fsV'andJt appears from tbetestimonr that oth er; members of the Legislature tiesid8 Boyer were offered money and a plan to induce him tu vote:- for - Cameron, a It- ia smdersteWdthat the minorky reportsigned by the Republican members of the committee, will differ materi ally-from these conclU8ionsr'"'Tte testimony is "verv voluminousfoccupying over 130 'par ges. rax marcBUCANS roacHASE SPEAKta - OS ASSXXBLT rOB Ul NEW TOSK HOUSE Or TWELrXSCniOKEII POLLAES. rrent the Albany ' (Nir York) : Ars sad Atlms,: Our rea-lers have not forgotten the circum stance that through the defection, of one Calli-cott, a Democratic member of tbe New York House of Assembly from Brooklyn, the Re publicans were enabled to elect their Speaker and 'United States Senator. They elected Callicdtt himself Speaker. Bribery and cor-. rupiion were charged npon Callicott. An luvesiigaiion was orueTea in tne Assemuiy. ' .The purchase money for Callicott was pro cured oa , a draft, 'drawn i- by Senator Low. Chairman of , the Republican State Central Committee, npon Isaac Sherman, Esq., Treasurer of that body. When Mr. Harris took this draft ta-the bank, -he was: required to get an ifiuonsfr,- aitu . jat.-'-vireu . Harms; noixeu nis name in that capacitv. the draft was cashed. the money paid to Caliicot, and the. Speakership ajnd Comuiittees Lhus secured tq the Re publicans. . . ., , Tlie examination of Hamilton Harris, Esq! M.r. &naQri understand, air, Jams, that the money you haid Mr. CaJlicot. was obtain ed ion adrai signed by Senator Xow, and. that - ...r ufttafcwnrff, iDtomoney at lUeTvdrtiAoVourttu omce; istLat iof I Mf keep yoor haak acooautt it i ., 4Mr. Tremain I OBJECT,. s .The objection was sustained. : ,. . . . iii "Mr. Shafer--.Was ityour individual money which you loaned to Mr? Cailicot? ' 'V1' .'4Mr, Tremain I OBJECT; Objection was sustaineS. :-iiji' wjl -i- v. ta r0a,Jr,-,Twj80y $o pcpve mat tne pion-expidMrCaTlicot waa not Mr. Harria' but aQOoey belong to'the'tafe Centrrl Committee;' before' you ;lent', the'rioneyf Mr.-llarrist did yon. pommunicai wiuj aj-r. t aerman or r ew XMrrTrernain I OBJECT. .LDTK I ' iiMrShafer Don't jou knew, Mr Harris, Jhat the draft drawn by Judge Low is now in Mr.rreioatn t CfBECtiq tlie answerj::. .Seaatof:i:lwdreVrnhe'dra referred to? OBJECTED to. Did you attend a caucus of Republicans a.t4he Dalevae douseon the f sv bij losi., in nuitu invyvaiuuus were made to bny Mr, Cailicot f ' ; , "Mr. Tremain-! OBJECr to'the' answer. . Itw pet utvlerstooii that when the pmpoe tvoq q give. M.rtJlicot 9i2UU tohj prospects services .was u p,,ja.r;. 4 remain, was jMwent to "object, --It,, is not,to the corruDtiot .that Lhe now "objects," ,4it to tha exposure of it-j tjttiS4s tbe transaction wbieb kept the lion oe so iongwwganuett agajnst whicb iemocrati protesieo auA,wajco .uey 4iriggieM so bard to 1" xarLOTMNT- or vossr ar. aop)at as 9 itEftTio t Wxarrr-rrrx pol- Aas opxslt Ai roit: Voirxa;; Bead the JbUbwing trom i the; Pro idepce R.L) Post: MMwxr. Thr Bep'ablicsasadmit that they used 540,000 in this cuy on, Wednesday.- We guess they used tnorfc 'They gave aa high . as l&for vote, and there was no cOmpetrition, eUher.! ' We ars glad thar men' 'whd are wil- Iiag.to seit ouV ambegllHBg-' ta ask a high "Je East Providence. the prices- ran high. aoswMnataoaiag ue tact taat oar- trtends did tuft .4BSe-st dot larr? ';.' S't:'p - - -In-Warwick the Republicans found Col- oaerBuUer a hard eaaa-to-beati and ofiered thirty dollars for a vote ajtdat s-c. -,-?IoI ortK Provideaca tha- Bepahlicaaa spent nueea;qrtweQtr thousand doUs re,' V T- ' .CaJt m parti, which aaetion4.;sach raaealitr . t , . . V, .11". ... . - - se-w inwa w o.eiBiicaa;insxuutionai .j-'-a.-.i ij, ne A-roviaeocaost saya lhe Jsmocracy voasMi tuav one enemy in Atbodelalaad. nam. lytnoneyrr jA einglecjporiitiott promised asyviaoosaaa oouarsjo eecuts a;Xpawicaa triamph in the Xastern Co!?njaioMli)istrifit aad tbA Post believes the mpaey ,watj ve,n aa4 oseov r 'it- Lul i'dntLiiJ-cr tt-.r deteadxWaihit' a r ii4Stt-i"Lii'uii...t:TJf; rd;nso'f Ctneral ,f These youth revu-' a.. J""-riot ia titir ;e5 if-i I 3 1 f-butt , T. W i v 5 " '- f i ? 1 i i e -.4 ' e v ca tb a v Hay carL - 'i t. a t rMrTremajoJ OBJECT to the question, thebldWtl6nWaisuse"'; "' - 'lair J J - a .. '. "ai.-' -V. . vja.r. snaier wnere-'dOTOtt 'Keen ' fSK lrrai myf thVriener-cr-;: mendtanlSrTi ::-; rt S? f AmTtItJi aid pseiKj ovtr to thera t r t a'd M -'i. 3 toHW ashiBgtoti, of -Esnchea, woratthat' serve the.m aathe Vtxs -Toil ; u Texas signifiesaa enclosure for cattle.' The! hie tat ox; " lie tils " ' -Banches'ol Madaxae th; a;that are asthaihoraaaad fajothci L.I opfdeaaretedastfc , - f v a-i t1 - koo aad the,Prorost Marshal and bis &-eiajd taake litUej effort lo interfere with theaL Another class of thieves;' not so. designated ia poiue sowety nut woriby- or tbe sme the &eoi4etlM ell theGoverBmeat roUewHad a Bsea worthy. ateamboa t tot UeveyancL or troops ana stores, saoes losiaiie aimy tbt wear oat in one day'aBarrh, ad shoddy; gar- mewu. nexner ana upper, msx ror use biomog paper Di a shower of raiai'.the' " mpexSablef people, whoplanJer under ibrm of - law- and with the decc observances of tradevfeed daily r : 1 1 : i i v lv i - 1 1 p. rt uiwKi a . uiu. yi ucr P c , piaces, , mm) iaake themselves 'eonapicuoas by -. the mag- nems or ciaret and cnampagne whicn, they coasame; and by the general loudness' of their talk and behavior.,. Theatheraamiaowirs palknand rlollers.thst' istoay men who-Mve schemes befcre Congreffl. and few- rineer"tbetr bills lhlah both Bouses. by the vnhrarestaceeicies ef dmnprhnd drink, well a by other meaoa aot i sisihle to spec taiors, , ittougn perasps more, satistactory tb ucb' members of thei Lecwlatore as are nei- Utuer ,too honest nor too proud to be par- chased, i - r- 3-"- ;, '. I'-'Z . But the ro-rtfery end rascality of- Washing ton are equaled by its misery. There-are esti mated to be no les than 40,000 sick, wounded and mutilated soldiers within the District' of Columbia; receiving such poor relief and con solaiion as circumstances wilt allow, -not one- twentieth parf -of whom: will ever again be in a condition to fight' the battles of the North. : : - '; -; - ': - . XV BXZZLESEXT tn TSX AKWTf tSAPf A ft 6l or a QtyArEAsTiBwtTir 'li20,(XX) x -A dispatch from Washington to the PhilaW delphia Tress has the following:- ' ' ar omcer in me uanermasiers . department has recently absconded " With a large amount of public funds, intended for tbe Filth Corps. He waa . seen in Washiegton on the 10th ult., when he eallei upon Riggs & Co to cash a check for some $20,000 ""The money was paid in small notes. Leaving his uniform at,bis hotel, be took, the cars for " Baltimore, -where he was seen in , company with several United 'States army, officers. He wa traced to New York, thence .to Tror, and al leamb to Toronto, Canada. The delinquent has a family in Massachusetts. It is believed that while in liquor be either lost a portion ot the monev at the garaine-taMe, or hai It sto len from him, and fearing the. conseqntnees. took flight. . .!.- ' " HIGH OrriCIALS . SHAVING TBS" OOTXENXENT , OC MlLLlOXB OP DOfcltAaS.71 s . The Washington orreepondent of the Du- Inque (Iowa) Herald, says : You. doubtless, recollect 'that some 'weeks ago a debt of the Government, amounting Uo to several millions of dollars, frll due. Some time beforehand the Secretary of the Treasury had been interrogated to know whether the pnhei pal of the money-woaldoe paid In gold for-in Treasury-notes between- which there I now remember, of some jlwenty . - per cent,, bat tne Secretary reserved a proround silence The law then in forcer had declared that Tres-ory-notes were onljra te'gftTrideajid that they were reeef vahlelbr ill JeU. A Me-mands. public and private except for dattso on imports and interest 00, the public debt - It was to be ex pec ted that the Government would deal with its Creditors hy the rule which it had fixed av just and legal between one citizen and another, . and, accordingly the. bond by which thai public debt were secured, sold in the market at a price founded on the supposi tion! that they would bs paid In "legal tenders." ; The MsTday before thst on which the monev was o-h paid, and after the hour at which all banks are closed, the Department telegraphed tthe Afi8tantJCreaiur4iew.Tork.to pay thea bonds in gold.. They. badaU heeii bought op by tbe favored feW who", are "believed Jo bave received previous intitnariona on the sutjeot and who thus pocketed oiaay hnn- dreds of thousands-, perhaps millions, of dol lars. rii rxoroa's acrrr aitjro trsra ' to orxa- '-. tbxow Fonrtaa' coriaxlixirr."'"-a-- Aaan anothee'eVidence of thernleby-Whteh the Administrarioa party felrfaaring its ron-ductl will avert WVaetf a wholly different character. i oo recollect tbat not long ago theBepnl4icans in of e of the , houses . of tha Indiana Legislature absented themselves in a hodyfrom their Tats.' The poesibility of ob-" raining a quornns sraa ibne prevented, and the Legulatare adjnarned wit boat passina the sp propriation tiiluu . -Tbe act yras revolutionary ibq wan ho regsroeii ha ine time, -. ut 11 was believed that the' Governor" would ' obn be obliged to call an extra sesploaof the Tgi8la-tare to' prcjde.thenieana ofcarrying cot the State Government. . Li Two'days ago 40,000 were taken1 Von the secret serviee nrod-'Of -Wag? Iwpartaientatiii ent to Governor Mortow, of Indiana, to enable I him to carry on the tata yGo vera meat iade- pendently of tbe Legislature. This is no short stop ampng -act manr. othcrsvatU advancing dl recti y toward thoeoetetn plated jovert hrow- Of popular GoverQEeeat ta taeaa United SOUeai corxasrosr pr ejesipxxt! ' tco-ixrtucT , vast par,? . W have forgottea God. "Wa hava forrot- tea xaa graetoos baaa.wbKAreserved&a.Aa peare.1 aad , mahiplatd, and jenrichad, vatd strengthened us ; and we hays yaialyrmtin-ed ia the deceitfulnees bf par" hearts, that all these blessings were produced by some superi or wisdom srd vlrtde of-drwnIntoxicaf ted With snbrokea saceesa, w have becotn toosf lf-suf3cent to feelUie necessity of redeem-iog and reservlng graee. too proud to pray, to theOodlhataade tuC' -t K Xtbshooveaassiuta loxu wrselv-es pefotf jtbe the ofTeadad Power, to confess ooH national sine, aad-to caj .finatafmeocyaad srere-pat fa to one ci-ts r iilcr x ttb 9 ?. rpic us J oat - -. 'jitf. r -d t v r , witli t.-i c-?rt-cf cl-.-rrf-ilsr'i - j yc j cow, tiy pernor r&.la frienu,hoWr errcrf i..lial.wa been called ca to--Lvw 1 U. j uUiaaai stn tLa CcocriU a o o J sauld Lave leca mmUrmZ Crm. . - - - Tt--' , . a, - " msmmm oi ait j re : pea :Thi : ti - DrmoeraXs; . :.i them fc into ' a' aband, : . . a a a - a 1 1 of lltir priacrj 1 tTbr" mddVsT It facVeyert maa : that ia so jtlaallj pxitileged to ha tis owa "j TtoalaTille iTc -arat V tissCracf C. - 4 1" CrsnTp trjtgl rflV7'SJ fTT 1Taibo1liCHr 5tl!ilwi General Milroy's etteiarelatio!i to the .ae- LegisUture-of-1 paragraph; of tha Ie(tea 1 Join with my fUw soldiers of the-Uaioei ---eery warning ties truiimhswtslkut-i1 when w have crushed armed, rreuse f ihe Soutkf j, j and restored the sovereignity of our Govern- , r . , ment over these vatsgQided States (which, ob 7 ' ' der God, we will surely do) we will, epoa or - ' return, while oar hands re in. mUso eaforiU -'.ir treason at the North, by arms, if need bev a4 - , seal.bj the biood f traitors, wherever (bntj .. -" the permanent peace of our '.country -and the . perpetnity of free government to all future ga - --i eration. ., . r - -. -v . : . - - - - . .-' ' .. ... t ; , . . . - A. U. AalAXVU. ? ; Hark this language. General Milroy waroe . these traitors at home, freferring expressly to , sach nraftors- as the Democrats Of the Indi-v ana Legislature,) that, as soon as the Soathera retellion W put downi heand hia' troops willlij upon their return, and ythilpuirkandt esri in exterminate by. force of rarue-treason "in the -1 North, (such treason, as. that of the Indiana" Legislature,) and seal a peace by the blood of the traitors. .r Be it observed Uiat, Milroy. aad"-"-his troops according to hie statement are to do all this butchery, notailer awaiting theacttoa' a ' of civil or jodicial anthorities, bat at once oa-t'-eir return from the Sooth,' before' they are " diabandeil. while their banda are; ia.! - The threat, or notification or whatever it may ba , is infamous and shoclang. ' The idea of an ' army's returning from ' a success fut war ' anil.-with their country's weapons .anrelaxedpro--celling to decide Jqr themselves what i treaT soq nd what classer 6f "politicians' and civil- inns are traitors, and exterminate treason byt J ' ". a general 1 masnarie, is attrocionsi and revolt- ' ing oeyond expression. " We had not aupposedT 7 that the most black hearted A bolitioa fanatic . or lunatic in all. this land, or ia .tha .worldL could put iorth or indorse any. threat.. or sug- -.. gestion or a thing so unutterable horrible. We have no apprehension that any of our-Federal troops even any of those onder Gea4 Milroy '6 immediate command, could ever ba pursuaded to undertake such a devilish- work; . as he threatens.' . ....- . . ' . : ' -': - The Abolitioii Card. ' , Thirty -years ago-the "Abolitionists ptsyed t,. . .Ueifc.cajjrr?qUab dsaskeHta "a For sixteen years, says Weudel Phillips, , "i fought against this anion, because it tolerated slavery.''.. t3arrisoa aa)-Smith and Abby Kel -r ly and Fred. Iouglaa all have fought openly. .- against the tjniou -with slaveholdera.-. One ;: tp after "another, steadily,- preervlngly(' . have these destructives pareued' their' 'course. At first they were despis d and mobbed; But . i4 finally the pulpit eabghtjip the cry "ni,Ba-'f .' loa wUli slavehoMers.'. Churches separated.? Self-conceited christians refuse! to sit at jba 1 "-same communipn' to partake of the' QoodT of Uie.Sajriour wiLn-xihratain. nemhers who wt-ed states. TbereUgionaseoUmentofthecoaa- 4X tr WaV divUed, and - Abojaiopism exoltedr Their infernal work was then half accomplish- ed.; .Religious books sjod tracts ouldre-ot ba printed in book-houses ownjsdttriwmtn'bf; slave and non elavehoWers-the rellgioas business were sundered. Then ahrndlsh yell -of 'I of iriirmphant exultation went, up from the. .fw-,. Abolition camp. Xhe work, already hilfdon, was steadily pushed info political pKa;'an4 the Republican party ' was .orgaaixed oa ' the, . "on hleaf ' doctrine, aa .rrepirssible. coefiic r"- bet ween thelTorth.and SouthJ.TbaUitMaph , ofthis party was hailed with further" demnoV eirauene mna joy oy toe came xnaa- set, wno had so Umg defied the Coastitutiow, aad wotk--ed to break it.Akw8j.rxIt ie a great step is adf "; j yancr," said PhUiipa,, . "1 Ibobtthe.TJnioal., , With; slaveholders'sald he.l4! 'austam the-. . . : V Unioni now, because it warsasjnstslavehali- -'."' ' ers it will ae longer be aVTJotoo with theni.', s V die feels tbajLheJiaa. triumphed... Greeley, tha leaderof the. fanatiea . the past tea .jears ov-hiore. It is quite evident, bow feels the AbolK v . tion card or thirty-yeara ago baa' won at last, ' cBooaiou with slaveholders." Tha worda. tainted ia this newspaper leaf jrno room to " doubt that he fcurady jorjl lepa ration of,-t&a , ; tree rronibe slave Mates. .tt . r-. v?; i bad it is indeed fijr the Union aad toe people, ' u-'IkII K I1m rM.wb. " cAA I frrarpoaesirew TsrkUerali.t: r . ' -' " :' Strrrouc. April 12.1SJ3L At three w'cloek thtsmoraingGeq. Coreot an wa4 prcceediBg to the front of dir&oo. '. t. order otGep. Peck, when be waa halted at ' short distance from town "by', some oca" th e.n that thewsmiags of the Democracy have- aot'-- , - been heeded npon th Is AboUtiob crosade aafsai - " J-he Usior obrd T". . si 'r - v: ed hinj said he could not psss7ab"J demsretl , . to know who he wasii-The GeneriJ e-Iief v I by. saying that he was J'Gea, 'Corcraa. pro -'.: T ' eeeoiog to tae rot ay oroovcr .tj ra.- The officer ss,id. he could ppt pass wiibo-L tr.a.- coaatersignr' Gen. Corcoran said' ' he shocli,' - r whaa th other insist ed ttat; Is oil J tcC-- ' at thf samitim4 xdaktc a cioveir.t to draw '5 his swordVGen. C. c al!y 10 kr stf'.-.ir- who; h aras'his imet,?i1f.?t.T-;. -n7 the latter rer4iei.-Gen. C, t OiithatCoiL.ictr!l " r iastaatly drew his c n t - I i.. i...t ft' 1 j t v etdt. a'ndlie Tid U-Lw rr.'- J,rrtbea Qarter-nizr:cr Cc-. f ! -ST f t ' - . it- ...i 1;." )W t ' "" " -TV W S - A f ' a - : ,! 1 -.- w i
Object Description
| Title | Mt. Vernon Democratic banner (Mount Vernon, Ohio : 1853), 1863-04-25 |
| Place | Mount Vernon (Ohio) |
| Date of Original | 1863-04-25 |
| Source | LCCN: sn86079142, Mt. Vernon Democratic banner (Mount Vernon, Ohio : 1853), 1863-04-25, Vol. 27, No. 2 |
| 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 | 8097.95KB |
| Submitting Institution | Knox County Public Library |
| Type | Text |
| File Name | 0294 |
| File Size | 8097.95KB |
| Full Text | . :Mm l J I Tr't 4fcJS vvi Mi mi V?'. t. 'ava-ti'-lu 2-: TOLUliIE: 1 f"V . S- aW. 5n -;.-f I I - I 1 ' Til! I . , , , I j Twin? U7' tr I I 1 I i ' II I - I I rv-n ii iji .'.' .! 1 ... 1 t'1 r r - -i a si r -w a I- . r w a 4 'v -! a a i J . a w.I I I i ll .11 k?fI Mf :-H ill I . B I' ll t . -t : ( l a 1 ' B I S i i' ;J fel.' vJ; KTim vr ? ' ' i Aloft . - a. "X a"X -v - . -a. r - - - -: av a - rpium crxf v.Ttmoif noutnrs t OI3e ta TTaKMlward Dlocli, Sd Ciory. -. r.-jrv aiiar aaxpi" Abolition llceting: at Gamtiier. From a Student" at Henjok 'Collets. , In tb bftsemont o ftose Chapel, of Kenyon' Collfge.-apon the evening of the 18th, i' fair audience assembled to listen to thai marvel of the pregentay, an Abolition H War" Dem ocrat. 'Farmers from the country round bout the Hill' citizens of Ganvbier, Profeasora, all the$3 with their neveral families. and lat-ly, and perhaps least, not an inconsiderable number of students without families"paid, from variousi mouvea, careful attention.,. It, seems from a report in the Critu that Miami VTJni-versity - has interdicted, by positive statute, one-J. M; McGregor, a Senior, from expressing in public or in prit atk, opinions wLich thongb those of a majority of a million or so 1u the "loyal" States, happen, unlbrtuna'eiy. to radically disagree with thone of the expiring Administration. Such medieval, Puritanic intolerance as this has not yet been manifested here, and very properly ; for, as soon as a College becomes a College inrtting none but Abolitionists,' the Democrats will, of course, leave. .However, we doubt. ,very much if the I Hon. CIa. Vallandighatn or S. Medary were4, to make -this village a visits be would be tendered our Chapel ; we doubt, too, if either were to e peak. in Mt.-Vernon, if leave of ab-ence could be obtained ; and why not? ; In this country, especially, it id a habit not only entirely consistent with the Constitution but even essentia i. to its stability x to regard the Administration at any time existing as distinct and separate from the Government itself, and to canvass the proceedings of the one : without thought of disloyalty to the other. This is the dictum of Win. H. Seward. As I have -aid tefore. ur Faculty have not coerced fcUfcir pupils politically; recognizing the fact that a knowledge of the classics and natural sciences, however extensive, confers no criterion by -rhich to test the merit and demerit of national questions, tliey remain content with their 7 views Upoa the war giving us perfect liberty to entertain such" as we choose to call our own. But alas! this is not all. A pseudo " Union Xjeagne' fnrmad .nndaB.provoot Khal an spices, and jwlging all the World from Cincinnati, and this Township, as seen through the Commercial, . emulating or trying to emulate, thei conduct, of Russia xr Poland. We " shall" not wear copperheads ; we " inubt" not wear butternut pins! Now, taking tltese as samples. There is no law against the freedom of speech and the press, to say naught of mute emblems. Do not our Abolition friend ee that if they abrogate law and inaugurate reign ofntrt torce, that tley miist inevita-tly fall before the. stal wart! Democracy (who are not blind) forty, thousand majority, strong in Ohio, seventy-five thousand emphatic in Pennsylvania, and one hundred thousand majority determined In New V"ork, to omit "Srir J ersey. Wiw;onsin,.Indiara and Illinois ? Or, admitting a falsehood of the gravest kind for the sake of the argument,' ,tbat " the army" will finish -the bloody work, they will have be- : gun, do they wwh the South to succeed by , having no enemy to: .fight T for the " soldiers, in such case, are to be brought Aat. Leaving these truths' to the careful consideration of those concerned, I pass to notice some of the aaiient points of the address. . .. : Imprimis'.-The elections in Connecticut, Missouri and this commonwealth were instan-ced as "great Union triumphs.' In Connecticut, as may be seen by-referring to the Crisis of th 8th instant, Thomas H. Seymour was defeated "by a mere "corporal's guard; and, when the blush conies In,' .It ' was owing to ahameful uieasurea, uch as furlooghingptot Abolition soldiers and acting upon the poverty of lalxwirg-meaV The ballot-box in Missouri, as Medirr'a paper for the paet y ear ! wUtW clusively prove .aecpadary tohe bayonet;; the elections", resemble tho voice of the people about as much as the sighs of the captive Tdo V his common conversation. ' ""As'for Obio7 the results (as in Indian ao rIIliriois everywhere, CoBnecticnt -and Missouri excepted) are magnificently, encouraging, r In hundreds of townsLips-any of them, Lincoln in56--the Democracy aaet'with no opposition whatever. If Ohio be' notfrofn' twenty to forty thousand Democratrc, then there, is bo such thing aS ve-: racity. The distcbes ; to the:nfarr;and other journals enthusiartically demonstrate 'this by the geuerafiyt onJerM?gainsiiB; almost every countylThi ordHUtution' was eonstantiyoiipled a."-wbj.il cannot conceive.: -How-r much rregard is paid io the ConsUfciUoa byOAbolPi uoiusu r-ieinocnusr' ' jet, Tbadeas SteprngTcrJpnat juii 'jylttt'Mpij in his speetTpoq lhsadmissioa'.qf ' West era ViftfalkSn 'Lti Ceni Laiei. Bea.r Bn'tfc and a boslr.bewvrs J Ser t.ttminjU was frequenify1 coofideii tly aflrme 1 . thai Jefferson and Jackseo, IfiJivin would Upproye f,ha eoiM oi me caoai in power. 'Arainsi; in isaea-ecratinf charge.ua;onajet protects to hirU- r. aaous resoIatioelorfSSCemVcrs -In his -F-r.'AJsas1t!btutlbn ennot U tauuartftlaed ft the'Uoprirvej ia oppw"e,ta rlenlimfiat fcy Ha-XU- am .a .ai ' - w ; desire 10 K37 And persecuting HcJj CitJM ' elergy btP not a rsscall eontraetor kho' I ttol ittnate y pairiotwm." fWTeaoiaera ftr twen- tj jearft aaBerey ; morarecenUj . tlie- oidifrs Were taken io charge and bo vtb copper beads are Demg nerceir aaeked. w ben -air tbeee are annihated or-distrcled, we enppoee ' Be civilized globa wity b drgooned and. Jracted into spiritualism, QnitariatHsm and w-os ' in- definitelj and conseeni j t!,-:a potv 'prospect for the peace or thei Bogsr ' William portion of humanity. , Bui our orator toonjht.;tl) utilitarj would aaaist both, morally and -hn morallyvito propagate tnnlatto principles: Now, to dispose orihialiad the feiters ' ot the soldiers. Ninetentha of them Are.dierna- 'ted with negro equafity.anifprvy .God-epeedid all who hate ftv Tha Drvpotkhtos fbrget'thai the troops are not machines ; these .see and testify that the slave is in hia only possible and endurable relation to the . white. Let as appeal to history and see if this be not eo.- negro labor ;" the " free'' negro will-, pick cotfee-lerries from wild bushes and. dig ginger in the woods, but, he will not cultivate, he wickedly allows the wealth that the creator has lavished upon the soils upon Jwhich he Ubernaclea to be hid. aqd Christendom in the scarcity of somprim necessities and the total want of others is liberally subsidizing the 44 free" negro for relapsing into prouu&cuoua intercom se, brutishnesa and idolatry. If anv- 'bodv would like to denr this, do so. and von shall be convinced out of your own mouth. In the beginning of the present ceniury (he West Indies and the United States produced an equal amount or cotton. 17.000.000 pounds ; now, the South produces by slave labor nearly five million, bales, the West Indies (slave Cuba, and Porto Kico honorably except ed) scarcely five ounces. Sugar-estates ,are abandoned, the mills and churches silent and mouldering ; the machinery rusting along the roadsides. The South' is what: h ft ia the West Indiea and every free" (?) negro settle ment are shrinking from the superior light and enterprise of the Anglo Saxon into the gloom of savagism ; indeed, the bright spots of the World where the negro is are the&w spoul Cast your eye over the map. Compare Mexico with Brazil, Cuba with Jamaica. The people, in enormously increased bills for household expenses, in the curtailment -of a dozen indispensable articles o clothing and diet, jin the general stagnation produced by the comparative stagnation. of trade, have , beea,,re and will be bitterljr regretting their 0oheervi ency to that invention of the Devil, "eman- pauon, -compensaieowucii more tuaaH that which kindly does not rob us to huThe dagger that is to in aim or slay us. Saint Paul well describes t be wolves iha are now ;i bowling in frantic triumph over the battle-field and store-hoase. . I 'refer to I Tiin. 5 1 1--5. As to the Conscription and the Constitution (did the lion, gentlemen ever read It?) Art. 1 section 8, subd. 16, is overridden by the ' f money or your life" bill ; and ; yet,-' such ' " eminent Democrats oh ! as Groesbeck": pronounced the Conscription act constitutional I vBjlthe part mentioned the Democratic -' constitution-. al lawyers" who " sit on store-boxes" aa af whittle sticks" are right, such " emminent" Democrats to the: contrary.. lThe Union' ".-be it known, 44 is to W preserved 'so Jarl "as possi ble." This is wonderful "loyalty? truly.., ; We can claim with more reason as much latitude. Strange to record, the "iottfon. -party was ignored in drumming'up the causes which led to our existing conflict ; it was, one moment the . Democracy, which ': brought us io the swpnl : sg iin the Democracy 'were proved to have been froni of old, 1848, -identical with the black deppoticiaris (?)and, er, JBlame; less; indeed, we admire from hia Urns, of argument that t here ever vere. two parties at all t bow sad it is in 'Presidential and other' campaigns we fought the Abolitionists upon every point idavery included, with the. utmost ran-cor ; if we had only discovered:out similarity in the last Presidential cam paigb, for example, how affecting the fraternization Would have beenreeley an What a; millenial season, we missed J-jfinally, th e. Democracy is the same 44 loyal'anti-Abo-Utios organization it always was ! ' Verilyyihe ' Democrat' Who understood hls' wo1 or , lis party's position-after hearing it thxyi epooaV ded", mast be a itopels&s ionatkw or, likavthe fellow who was always sure to gaeaa wrongly. always guessed the other way. In order to. brighten the odj am ofevery thing Democratic and Southern tbe late-in-the-day Crittenden Boon;wereJUiupt4 M 1 tnnt Inn nr lrnii nr rrnn tnr li fi .! n i I I I that the war was begun by i the secessionists of the South Stephen A; s Dougias how adinirs ble Crichtc ottered, sentiments frevi- ousfy QasH before tba' war;) vts? this cCeeo aith the RepablpartyUfD . n uviv iccuvwivijur; vi m M aadToondbs , twnrjUfasi tbeir-section will be qmted by the -Critteaaeo eompramUei. II yoaill4 gtv'lhasaift Wioa to V. WarielodV tlirt disuaioa. final and eternal separatiOB.'v iCaa the btacW expect, us who claim to ba tba only real Uaidd toea tosWrwH a meaaar WhicV ficsCerent naia, adiaanion, aaf teraaJ f epa- auoa who ara gio rjAi ton TV JJU cct theariaivided T6te of theIpubHcaaHirai promise; oratof , the- SaeaTitf - a f lam asu 1 c -v a a ! - -"" " r , - - ; w- 5 - mt . uaaal partrdelSsTlhTCrTucn ffinn nfo? ForttAitiftaV c'.'.-l--I IcffgJffWPea eoyererVvl::-!- -"JxrsY v " I pf cjoIioacTcerbacse litt!t cob -t :- -4 - -s - destent Tpo3 ,J lltuicf iwearLkt-iaerkf f a8alka (tijsjtr'r-i tmiii cj 'i:a r Thai (ha otV i3elre4 ipx&nlmm It aegalived hj htrtehaciaiK itdjow- SouXA Carolina; . JLiBeoIa.ia hia lnaostral aekaowlrJ eagea ua.ti xat. tnarpieaie&co(npramiM was refosed. the Peace - ConveatioB ? iad ke labors froetrated Jbba G&talina: .vigilasee of L. Chandler, who, irith bis oohortSAra sweets If . floral" now,' no' accomjmodatioalt jv maai have a little bloodJeUingfO that ithad been but att Ah'yeeKy organ iters of the equa) ' laws' ;that "tound ! our "count: eiverse jet reciprocsDy, harmooic jopop aboni you Ab t he bloodi ' will vjoar iloloeh never be aatedf : 'iw ' tt"V'iUr?ii?:-.'v' V a Moii .pes ibiaaIy& iJ Kii ;t' -; BlMdwpoB tb 4oor '. i'i ' !. Bload that baiSMwearaadwaaaiBg.fji tu The leech forgets . ia ' his raka")b ' bmnaii gt)T, ; that even, in monarchical England fs a pafty for peace' ie just as leglUiuate asa par tyifor war ,VYbo tbat Jiaa-read htory- im k nowS'- that - since, down ' to and inclodinr Bright,: as opposed to the Critriean' (and nev)rB beiore)-the daya of Montgomefy this irss so?,, .Can tee of all nations have no Chatham, bo Brights ? Heaven knows we have- Lord Norths more; than ' sufficient J1 r ; I saw some farmers present. Tarn sorry to say most of them evidently came prepared to believe because am their predilections they wanted to believe, "though - Democratie farmers were there as well. ; - -: Because the nominal taxes are about ' the same, "the war costs j iothingl" but.doesit cost " nothing when'we'pay twenty-five cents for Abolition calico, wrth1ut ten under Democratic rule ? .' And, worse still, is it no tax to sell produce for a depreciated purfency and but J ittle even, of that? I do not pretend to finan cial acumen but' this statement appears a pos tulate., . '" ' Vallandigham's beautiful anit Chrfatian sen- j timents produced a deep' impression ; "withdraw the contending armies and send your manufacturers and merchant steamers to the South and receive her raw ma-terial in return. let Time do his heal ing work :" these were received, not as was hoped, with hisses, hut-tn a silence, deep and eloquent; yon could - almost hear it. The speaker immediately pereieved, the error of etting Vallandigham's bewitching expres eions declaim for themselves and endeavored to prove that the Dayton Representative, like the Virginia Committee of Eight, discountenanced universal auflragel- this is, indeed, a novel accusation, and one. it strikes me, by no means warranted b-the text ; who has ever heard thia ehargeto. Vsnaadighaiif hinig-jfr 1 but it will result in the Abolition) of slavery 1 ".By their fraiu ye shall know thenf.". "I a si not a Turk" Oscanyan TnTght a Well ex claim " though I was born'ofMoslem parents and itt Turkey .' . Th e meas ure--"emancipa-tion"--G. Vol nej chose to regard and defend almost exclusively' as'i military ecediy';fi this was to make it acceptable to1 Democrats of the North and West who would Justly consider such a calamity, me for which- ho appa rently glittering advantages could compensate, utter ruin, which to put the position forcibly. would ever increase in its blackness of dSrk- Wetl,'in the light 'presented (whteh it - the most im posing' 'and favorable that could J t msnifested) J the "emancipation" fulmen is not as I anlrm, but . as the two petty principalities, England and France have in; their offi-cijil Journals stated, as good as could ' be r eic-pected under the circumstances,1 hut neyerther: less, i e, aPwlutlx4thar..:T Ue prodigy, the " necessity, " for which, w axe id overturn the earth and sky -! .' --v-' ; .'l When the President cani "free'th slaves he does .not, Snd When he can not Jie 'joes yes, he f? does l", absoImelr.V does Vi-.On$ dot Judams I But even tbe proclamation will not bV enough if the people will have;it'-so! In conclusion, an incendiary appeal to .mob- violence, rwaar a eived- h? h"e - . . " Union . League.", -of tbis-r township, wbieh. judges all the country tronvGara bier."" While the armJ. fights the-enemy ior front yoa mhst fight I the 'enemies . the Temocrati Aeifie, Organize in. eveiy school-district v the drafWaa excellent measure, drawn with special reference to the good of the poor,' will be enforced; 1 1 hbpalto ieai next OctoberMC - - 1 .-; . -I nmphed over all your fnesni jnohzt bear but do not trembia. ?Wha4 was $04 done with, lha aegroea , WHEN 1 fteed' -CWaai'iss osual u poo such occasions, coDigne4 k to De tiuiocexX" great somewhere."!--thai hospital tor. deeripit stools aad; iUtebUItea-caddiee; tha Abolitionists say upon thttfidpic. - ; nrKMmr-nr - lk otm. Cat th aha rJA ar fl I ikin h all an rf a rtf I things to dilafe and to endeavor to paUratebe- loroi ma y Q'- tiuiitn .tm worei. Tt9w whjr bAvsI treihe4 time and tiatienca? Beaden will yoa heliava J'meTtis "toobKgeAblritioifrrief a.acrijpterJinjiract I politic as well as jreJigicsheyiimstlearav u wej Tow oiaer anq iravei Toore, -uar csutr IT we disagree, Iet-a sayr47eUryowlieve Uufaretj. 1, in arVUlh Ut' per OSMftLttXtBsS tshtA k''rjn.r 1&9 $JM , - . , VMt,w-! ;t . iv av t kr 1 m--J r i-" a n aw. awv XCTjla.sv speech at Castle Uarden, OcTw li.T&dfi whomXputlicag; -7actaw ! .i feet rightto bUIere W . Julm V yi&.olfi, ;fJtt'tiBelr,i' iniUea Wihe gamtw oee: thy coin SAt- urday iatha eitHf Hvw Tc rk, we ooiice one HA deaer mitc4V W'eitracz Islura nave' mmei progress flftais'a I before m armfes ar still fMfvancjng aa.l irtiMtained by theoiceVof th itrictoiinaat home,' theyi w-m trrs loAgr'ei..e:Un1s the! SoeHh.aa tie taee tketr heels v6 'th kcals' of sweating traitors in tJu JVoriA. Yti; teifvtriur'olii!iflAiA ffrn'hC V A. : , uur uenerajs wasa, uera Lvnouf lor procla-piatkna addreseedte' thshefty'f' bttt liere irhlef, addsW:4o the asaepUy, ia'. tJaAon square jassanag tbeta that tHei army; a soon aa.it, ebaii have conquered trie South; wim ba directei North, "to place its heels upon" titiej We donol kno; wbetberiGeh. Halleck refers -to thiee "sneak ing'ttrauorS io the North." who have loryeawlwn uttering trea son against, the Cbnstitutionj'enouncing our glorious Uotoq as 'an aecaed Uaioa wkh slavebolderarMMa compact With Sell,' 4c nd -who lave again and 'again expressed, thrp.ugF their presses' and their public speakf. era, a aesire ina we union mgnt teoissolvea rather than that they ehould: be contamina ted by further political association with those who, like GEbME .WASH.rKoTON, held negroes as slaves . We ,are ijot qutte sure whether Major General Hallkck means these traitors and "diss aienists, for such they are; or whether he has chosen u adopt " the, epithets of RepubUcao slang, and refera in such .choice terms as wa have quoted ta tha Union Demo crats and Conservatives, who lone are loyal to! the Constitution and the lavs. In either case, we cartel I Gen; ILallxck, that this proclamation,r will hardly increase any -claim he JJiay -have had to tbe respecj; of the nation; nor inspire anj very ' great admtratiqu for the qualities of his mind or heartlH is an act of cowardice on tbe part or a Ueqeral to threaten unarmed men, whoever they filly be, and an act of oily to say whathewit: lb, afier her shall have conquered..- jt nuil' eoi, tier first, and then, issue hia proclamation' against 'the sneaking traitors in tha North '.-"- . vy e no not know now near- tare- to tbe. finaljorwhier of the rebelltDo: J eannot tell: therefore, how soon General H tea's threats' will be carried into-execution; either dc-4 . re trwu close of the war, be comxnaadr4n-c1iief ;of & anny.f at uoids bis commission? nice every other c-mcer, during tb ptessure of the PresP den? and as 'Mr Lincoln is not ml ways of the-: same- mind, - the presenteommander-in-chief may find himself disposed of before - he has had a chance -of putting bis heel On -the heads : of his fellow-citiaens. Besides,- -w may believe Geiierai Cissies M.' ClAT; the War will never.' be ended as; long -as -General HaL'Leqk is at the head I of the arm aad if the Pidet-tOi:whe..GeeTaF Uiar gave this asssratfea to writin&'ahares .tBevpinioa- of his disUneuished,friend, ..General Siiuer nay not,evea -base an opportunity. vf .puHlg hmllsrOa-?tha? header of the tnemv in. the field, t Tha report of th wareoouratteey tDora- over,, teWs uatha.' the-. restdeJdwhew ihS judges: proper, will give nrdens ta thei geoerala' in" the'field w'tLhoutcoaaJusg thecoamaaderw m-Chiet. ad t s tbejrefore quite oasQtte tfaat when GeneraJ UaXLicC snail b ready to out his., heel oni bis fellow citizens- North, Mr, LijcoJ.s may prevent tha dire .ooseque nose bfr hat fear till etep. bv: a-seeret couatetMrder to'the subordmaiaj General, eontwiaading him 10 use aiwie more amaanujv' ana aiscretios I than is exhibited ia the meoaoe )of our mod- rern'ATIfctaiil .:'- T-'-'- ' Charles X.IIcwbrdlspJeased wit hoat. his Council of State tfiuckhotnv- sent them his boots: qukiha-' legs- were .not ta tbenVaud no' immediate danrer resulted froui ib& ivm bqlical manifestatjoOfOf fzpwer much less con wesOpppose that tha people of tbe North will be .frightened by a mere aUnsioa to Genera I H alleck's booU. no matter bo wsabstautially. . 1 i.t 1 1 ' r .t. l i ri t'e'w may nave pui or oects. ieu- feral-HALLEca's name is Yet anebniiected with arty battlefield unless; the escape Of Genera'l tSKAVaxaAKD iroto vorinia,-wtui-aj 141 tag gage; artillery and tailitary stores, laoooaidei-ed a rreat ictonr.i: B'-ia far from beinea Csaa.rst NAKHo,o'ar "FEPEaict ? and ye.t,' ff he' would wniUta4 those mer b most have a ears not to ase threats against onarnf- d people, whom tbeee great captains hare al" "d protected.' Thraats, even HMlMt Mlraial K ara in arMfceharl fast a aad suwjwnerallxlawMded-yarreat niilitary piwiBMueia. ...Agajgav. pnvm-jciuxen coey aitr' altogether iACompatihle with -that ? high. wmv viAoqQrjrweAeaoaHiMSUiimi aie-Unguisli.the Mhiiersltbf gtjntlemaji4 ,r- : -GeaeraXHAUca, act? tnuch more, than year go. was a private citixen.avjawyar in vaiitoraut aod.iia mejybea, fragaia a tyate citizen lf be were- merely soldier, weinight excuse, ala ignoraaee of thsr htwOtat aa s lawyer heiBansJtBoy,, tha;tpaxtial Iaw ceases -wuh le reatoratioai of peaoa vXUqt Sr. thai commanding Generals -thea- to place etc, hlspn. ttrcoka of their feUowzeoa and tlierr jera thereshoobji bs fraitpre qa.ny'aiateofthe Umoi-then th7-,wjllAb ajn-aableto. tba ril tranahr, ihey. wlH bay tft jbJadacte4 and tried, and fahej Und. gmh tea ptroiEhed..not br Geoeral iHaxifca'a Loos 4aw. I tha lawt'of ta laaA Jcneral - - t; la. tm . , aimseii, u verrxeppisg laess laws, ,frll .be held strictltesMijsiVU Jof his acta, nd; kfersistic; la t i. tu rppseXcl tiilitarji usurpation, pacn-HsJ yrr.a tasvasverUy d ta hiaattdicity- aiiJ;p:reia4Ti , .oailLa -iaia in rlj r.re.-is e t-4 r2A- ii iLj cer LiT;lsd r,!,:w,7 r .t" r"':,5 rant?; f nd rt'L-J 't -f l 7'l rrj't --.i" ---iou3 1 'iCi Cii- ';r'-:-' --3;- cr. r. dji"f:ctr. J -'at -! . y Cv,.4i 1 'iJ ;.'-viWsJita4rOTy Aprill863r J ' -aireaoxnisgtj adeuride'r tmilaircnmtance. t)nr ti tTi vtalk,L3. el : : .i it soytre: r t,'jr'!,i Whic5i hWI?wc&cfiiiiJcr -tJoj i -'. rr.'re jt'-jsifi-'ir-xir- !?tTjtfL-:;:ia.T.Ti i -5- k-eV- -a. ilurwvlxtsr ITmtpmlmt ;:ff Ci l 1 wish tha wJhoKpeopIe to resolve thersu selves ieto a counDittee ba the corruptioas of Uhe iwr, aad read the teatimoaji now beipg de yeloped : .. ..;;-ij.;Ai:-.v' s taat, caitxaow raosogacxa ouiltt or: m !7i4efit:rtariaoaiii t .rH AaisaifaeT:Pa pHi; fuThe m'ajoritjof the SenatoriInvesUgaUng Comrsittee to inquire whether anlawful mease were employed toaecure the recent election of Uniied State Senator - made a report ; to-day. unaiiijS i4?oen vameron gaiuyon tbe &ar geaof bribreed si hiw .by JeA rersbnl Boyer; a tne'mber of the IgisUlora: After arguing the case strongrjr against'the witoeMes in CamerouV'defensiS they say Boy-er's stat eioeiU is oorroboratSil iaaiearjy all the leading details by testimony of Other : witneas-fsV'andJt appears from tbetestimonr that oth er; members of the Legislature tiesid8 Boyer were offered money and a plan to induce him tu vote:- for - Cameron, a It- ia smdersteWdthat the minorky reportsigned by the Republican members of the committee, will differ materi ally-from these conclU8ionsr'"'Tte testimony is "verv voluminousfoccupying over 130 'par ges. rax marcBUCANS roacHASE SPEAKta - OS ASSXXBLT rOB Ul NEW TOSK HOUSE Or TWELrXSCniOKEII POLLAES. rrent the Albany ' (Nir York) : Ars sad Atlms,: Our rea-lers have not forgotten the circum stance that through the defection, of one Calli-cott, a Democratic member of tbe New York House of Assembly from Brooklyn, the Re publicans were enabled to elect their Speaker and 'United States Senator. They elected Callicdtt himself Speaker. Bribery and cor-. rupiion were charged npon Callicott. An luvesiigaiion was orueTea in tne Assemuiy. ' .The purchase money for Callicott was pro cured oa , a draft, 'drawn i- by Senator Low. Chairman of , the Republican State Central Committee, npon Isaac Sherman, Esq., Treasurer of that body. When Mr. Harris took this draft ta-the bank, -he was: required to get an ifiuonsfr,- aitu . jat.-'-vireu . Harms; noixeu nis name in that capacitv. the draft was cashed. the money paid to Caliicot, and the. Speakership ajnd Comuiittees Lhus secured tq the Re publicans. . . ., , Tlie examination of Hamilton Harris, Esq! M.r. &naQri understand, air, Jams, that the money you haid Mr. CaJlicot. was obtain ed ion adrai signed by Senator Xow, and. that - ...r ufttafcwnrff, iDtomoney at lUeTvdrtiAoVourttu omce; istLat iof I Mf keep yoor haak acooautt it i ., 4Mr. Tremain I OBJECT,. s .The objection was sustained. : ,. . . . iii "Mr. Shafer--.Was ityour individual money which you loaned to Mr? Cailicot? ' 'V1' .'4Mr, Tremain I OBJECT; Objection was sustaineS. :-iiji' wjl -i- v. ta r0a,Jr,-,Twj80y $o pcpve mat tne pion-expidMrCaTlicot waa not Mr. Harria' but aQOoey belong to'the'tafe Centrrl Committee;' before' you ;lent', the'rioneyf Mr.-llarrist did yon. pommunicai wiuj aj-r. t aerman or r ew XMrrTrernain I OBJECT. .LDTK I ' iiMrShafer Don't jou knew, Mr Harris, Jhat the draft drawn by Judge Low is now in Mr.rreioatn t CfBECtiq tlie answerj::. .Seaatof:i:lwdreVrnhe'dra referred to? OBJECTED to. Did you attend a caucus of Republicans a.t4he Dalevae douseon the f sv bij losi., in nuitu invyvaiuuus were made to bny Mr, Cailicot f ' ; , "Mr. Tremain-! OBJECr to'the' answer. . Itw pet utvlerstooii that when the pmpoe tvoq q give. M.rtJlicot 9i2UU tohj prospects services .was u p,,ja.r;. 4 remain, was jMwent to "object, --It,, is not,to the corruDtiot .that Lhe now "objects" ,4it to tha exposure of it-j tjttiS4s tbe transaction wbieb kept the lion oe so iongwwganuett agajnst whicb iemocrati protesieo auA,wajco .uey 4iriggieM so bard to 1" xarLOTMNT- or vossr ar. aop)at as 9 itEftTio t Wxarrr-rrrx pol- Aas opxslt Ai roit: Voirxa;; Bead the JbUbwing trom i the; Pro idepce R.L) Post: MMwxr. Thr Bep'ablicsasadmit that they used 540,000 in this cuy on, Wednesday.- We guess they used tnorfc 'They gave aa high . as l&for vote, and there was no cOmpetrition, eUher.! ' We ars glad thar men' 'whd are wil- Iiag.to seit ouV ambegllHBg-' ta ask a high "Je East Providence. the prices- ran high. aoswMnataoaiag ue tact taat oar- trtends did tuft .4BSe-st dot larr? ';.' S't:'p - - -In-Warwick the Republicans found Col- oaerBuUer a hard eaaa-to-beati and ofiered thirty dollars for a vote ajtdat s-c. -,-?IoI ortK Provideaca tha- Bepahlicaaa spent nueea;qrtweQtr thousand doUs re,' V T- ' .CaJt m parti, which aaetion4.;sach raaealitr . t , . . V, .11". ... . - - se-w inwa w o.eiBiicaa;insxuutionai .j-'-a.-.i ij, ne A-roviaeocaost saya lhe Jsmocracy voasMi tuav one enemy in Atbodelalaad. nam. lytnoneyrr jA einglecjporiitiott promised asyviaoosaaa oouarsjo eecuts a;Xpawicaa triamph in the Xastern Co!?njaioMli)istrifit aad tbA Post believes the mpaey ,watj ve,n aa4 oseov r 'it- Lul i'dntLiiJ-cr tt-.r deteadxWaihit' a r ii4Stt-i"Lii'uii...t:TJf; rd;nso'f Ctneral ,f These youth revu-' a.. J""-riot ia titir ;e5 if-i I 3 1 f-butt , T. W i v 5 " '- f i ? 1 i i e -.4 ' e v ca tb a v Hay carL - 'i t. a t rMrTremajoJ OBJECT to the question, thebldWtl6nWaisuse"'; "' - 'lair J J - a .. '. "ai.-' -V. . vja.r. snaier wnere-'dOTOtt 'Keen ' fSK lrrai myf thVriener-cr-;: mendtanlSrTi ::-; rt S? f AmTtItJi aid pseiKj ovtr to thera t r t a'd M -'i. 3 toHW ashiBgtoti, of -Esnchea, woratthat' serve the.m aathe Vtxs -Toil ; u Texas signifiesaa enclosure for cattle.' The! hie tat ox; " lie tils " ' -Banches'ol Madaxae th; a;that are asthaihoraaaad fajothci L.I opfdeaaretedastfc , - f v a-i t1 - koo aad the,Prorost Marshal and bis &-eiajd taake litUej effort lo interfere with theaL Another class of thieves;' not so. designated ia poiue sowety nut woriby- or tbe sme the &eoi4etlM ell theGoverBmeat roUewHad a Bsea worthy. ateamboa t tot UeveyancL or troops ana stores, saoes losiaiie aimy tbt wear oat in one day'aBarrh, ad shoddy; gar- mewu. nexner ana upper, msx ror use biomog paper Di a shower of raiai'.the' " mpexSablef people, whoplanJer under ibrm of - law- and with the decc observances of tradevfeed daily r : 1 1 : i i v lv i - 1 1 p. rt uiwKi a . uiu. yi ucr P c , piaces, , mm) iaake themselves 'eonapicuoas by -. the mag- nems or ciaret and cnampagne whicn, they coasame; and by the general loudness' of their talk and behavior.,. Theatheraamiaowirs palknand rlollers.thst' istoay men who-Mve schemes befcre Congreffl. and few- rineer"tbetr bills lhlah both Bouses. by the vnhrarestaceeicies ef dmnprhnd drink, well a by other meaoa aot i sisihle to spec taiors, , ittougn perasps more, satistactory tb ucb' members of thei Lecwlatore as are nei- Utuer ,too honest nor too proud to be par- chased, i - r- 3-"- ;, '. I'-'Z . But the ro-rtfery end rascality of- Washing ton are equaled by its misery. There-are esti mated to be no les than 40,000 sick, wounded and mutilated soldiers within the District' of Columbia; receiving such poor relief and con solaiion as circumstances wilt allow, -not one- twentieth parf -of whom: will ever again be in a condition to fight' the battles of the North. : : - '; -; - ': - . XV BXZZLESEXT tn TSX AKWTf tSAPf A ft 6l or a QtyArEAsTiBwtTir 'li20,(XX) x -A dispatch from Washington to the PhilaW delphia Tress has the following:- ' ' ar omcer in me uanermasiers . department has recently absconded " With a large amount of public funds, intended for tbe Filth Corps. He waa . seen in Washiegton on the 10th ult., when he eallei upon Riggs & Co to cash a check for some $20,000 ""The money was paid in small notes. Leaving his uniform at,bis hotel, be took, the cars for " Baltimore, -where he was seen in , company with several United 'States army, officers. He wa traced to New York, thence .to Tror, and al leamb to Toronto, Canada. The delinquent has a family in Massachusetts. It is believed that while in liquor be either lost a portion ot the monev at the garaine-taMe, or hai It sto len from him, and fearing the. conseqntnees. took flight. . .!.- ' " HIGH OrriCIALS . SHAVING TBS" OOTXENXENT , OC MlLLlOXB OP DOfcltAaS.71 s . The Washington orreepondent of the Du- Inque (Iowa) Herald, says : You. doubtless, recollect 'that some 'weeks ago a debt of the Government, amounting Uo to several millions of dollars, frll due. Some time beforehand the Secretary of the Treasury had been interrogated to know whether the pnhei pal of the money-woaldoe paid In gold for-in Treasury-notes between- which there I now remember, of some jlwenty . - per cent,, bat tne Secretary reserved a proround silence The law then in forcer had declared that Tres-ory-notes were onljra te'gftTrideajid that they were reeef vahlelbr ill JeU. A Me-mands. public and private except for dattso on imports and interest 00, the public debt - It was to be ex pec ted that the Government would deal with its Creditors hy the rule which it had fixed av just and legal between one citizen and another, . and, accordingly the. bond by which thai public debt were secured, sold in the market at a price founded on the supposi tion! that they would bs paid In "legal tenders." ; The MsTday before thst on which the monev was o-h paid, and after the hour at which all banks are closed, the Department telegraphed tthe Afi8tantJCreaiur4iew.Tork.to pay thea bonds in gold.. They. badaU heeii bought op by tbe favored feW who", are "believed Jo bave received previous intitnariona on the sutjeot and who thus pocketed oiaay hnn- dreds of thousands-, perhaps millions, of dol lars. rii rxoroa's acrrr aitjro trsra ' to orxa- '-. tbxow Fonrtaa' coriaxlixirr."'"-a-- Aaan anothee'eVidence of thernleby-Whteh the Administrarioa party felrfaaring its ron-ductl will avert WVaetf a wholly different character. i oo recollect tbat not long ago theBepnl4icans in of e of the , houses . of tha Indiana Legislature absented themselves in a hodyfrom their Tats.' The poesibility of ob-" raining a quornns sraa ibne prevented, and the Legulatare adjnarned wit boat passina the sp propriation tiiluu . -Tbe act yras revolutionary ibq wan ho regsroeii ha ine time, -. ut 11 was believed that the' Governor" would ' obn be obliged to call an extra sesploaof the Tgi8la-tare to' prcjde.thenieana ofcarrying cot the State Government. . Li Two'days ago 40,000 were taken1 Von the secret serviee nrod-'Of -Wag? Iwpartaientatiii ent to Governor Mortow, of Indiana, to enable I him to carry on the tata yGo vera meat iade- pendently of tbe Legislature. This is no short stop ampng -act manr. othcrsvatU advancing dl recti y toward thoeoetetn plated jovert hrow- Of popular GoverQEeeat ta taeaa United SOUeai corxasrosr pr ejesipxxt! ' tco-ixrtucT , vast par,? . W have forgottea God. "Wa hava forrot- tea xaa graetoos baaa.wbKAreserved&a.Aa peare.1 aad , mahiplatd, and jenrichad, vatd strengthened us ; and we hays yaialyrmtin-ed ia the deceitfulnees bf par" hearts, that all these blessings were produced by some superi or wisdom srd vlrtde of-drwnIntoxicaf ted With snbrokea saceesa, w have becotn toosf lf-suf3cent to feelUie necessity of redeem-iog and reservlng graee. too proud to pray, to theOodlhataade tuC' -t K Xtbshooveaassiuta loxu wrselv-es pefotf jtbe the ofTeadad Power, to confess ooH national sine, aad-to caj .finatafmeocyaad srere-pat fa to one ci-ts r iilcr x ttb 9 ?. rpic us J oat - -. 'jitf. r -d t v r , witli t.-i c-?rt-cf cl-.-rrf-ilsr'i - j yc j cow, tiy pernor r&.la frienu,hoWr errcrf i..lial.wa been called ca to--Lvw 1 U. j uUiaaai stn tLa CcocriU a o o J sauld Lave leca mmUrmZ Crm. . - - - Tt--' , . a, - " msmmm oi ait j re : pea :Thi : ti - DrmoeraXs; . :.i them fc into ' a' aband, : . . a a a - a 1 1 of lltir priacrj 1 tTbr" mddVsT It facVeyert maa : that ia so jtlaallj pxitileged to ha tis owa "j TtoalaTille iTc -arat V tissCracf C. - 4 1" CrsnTp trjtgl rflV7'SJ fTT 1Taibo1liCHr 5tl!ilwi General Milroy's etteiarelatio!i to the .ae- LegisUture-of-1 paragraph; of tha Ie(tea 1 Join with my fUw soldiers of the-Uaioei ---eery warning ties truiimhswtslkut-i1 when w have crushed armed, rreuse f ihe Soutkf j, j and restored the sovereignity of our Govern- , r . , ment over these vatsgQided States (which, ob 7 ' ' der God, we will surely do) we will, epoa or - ' return, while oar hands re in. mUso eaforiU -'.ir treason at the North, by arms, if need bev a4 - , seal.bj the biood f traitors, wherever (bntj .. -" the permanent peace of our '.country -and the . perpetnity of free government to all future ga - --i eration. ., . r - -. -v . : . - - - - . .-' ' .. ... t ; , . . . - A. U. AalAXVU. ? ; Hark this language. General Milroy waroe . these traitors at home, freferring expressly to , sach nraftors- as the Democrats Of the Indi-v ana Legislature,) that, as soon as the Soathera retellion W put downi heand hia' troops willlij upon their return, and ythilpuirkandt esri in exterminate by. force of rarue-treason "in the -1 North, (such treason, as. that of the Indiana" Legislature,) and seal a peace by the blood of the traitors. .r Be it observed Uiat, Milroy. aad"-"-his troops according to hie statement are to do all this butchery, notailer awaiting theacttoa' a ' of civil or jodicial anthorities, bat at once oa-t'-eir return from the Sooth,' before' they are " diabandeil. while their banda are; ia.! - The threat, or notification or whatever it may ba , is infamous and shoclang. ' The idea of an ' army's returning from ' a success fut war ' anil.-with their country's weapons .anrelaxedpro--celling to decide Jqr themselves what i treaT soq nd what classer 6f "politicians' and civil- inns are traitors, and exterminate treason byt J ' ". a general 1 masnarie, is attrocionsi and revolt- ' ing oeyond expression. " We had not aupposedT 7 that the most black hearted A bolitioa fanatic . or lunatic in all. this land, or ia .tha .worldL could put iorth or indorse any. threat.. or sug- -.. gestion or a thing so unutterable horrible. We have no apprehension that any of our-Federal troops even any of those onder Gea4 Milroy '6 immediate command, could ever ba pursuaded to undertake such a devilish- work; . as he threatens.' . ....- . . ' . : ' -': - The Abolitioii Card. ' , Thirty -years ago-the "Abolitionists ptsyed t,. . .Ueifc.cajjrr?qUab dsaskeHta "a For sixteen years, says Weudel Phillips, , "i fought against this anion, because it tolerated slavery.''.. t3arrisoa aa)-Smith and Abby Kel -r ly and Fred. Iouglaa all have fought openly. .- against the tjniou -with slaveholdera.-. One ;: tp after "another, steadily,- preervlngly(' . have these destructives pareued' their' 'course. At first they were despis d and mobbed; But . i4 finally the pulpit eabghtjip the cry "ni,Ba-'f .' loa wUli slavehoMers.'. Churches separated.? Self-conceited christians refuse! to sit at jba 1 "-same communipn' to partake of the' QoodT of Uie.Sajriour wiLn-xihratain. nemhers who wt-ed states. TbereUgionaseoUmentofthecoaa- 4X tr WaV divUed, and - Abojaiopism exoltedr Their infernal work was then half accomplish- ed.; .Religious books sjod tracts ouldre-ot ba printed in book-houses ownjsdttriwmtn'bf; slave and non elavehoWers-the rellgioas business were sundered. Then ahrndlsh yell -of 'I of iriirmphant exultation went, up from the. .fw-,. Abolition camp. Xhe work, already hilfdon, was steadily pushed info political pKa;'an4 the Republican party ' was .orgaaixed oa ' the, . "on hleaf ' doctrine, aa .rrepirssible. coefiic r"- bet ween thelTorth.and SouthJ.TbaUitMaph , ofthis party was hailed with further" demnoV eirauene mna joy oy toe came xnaa- set, wno had so Umg defied the Coastitutiow, aad wotk--ed to break it.Akw8j.rxIt ie a great step is adf "; j yancr" said PhUiipa,, . "1 Ibobtthe.TJnioal., , With; slaveholders'sald he.l4! 'austam the-. . . : V Unioni now, because it warsasjnstslavehali- -'."' ' ers it will ae longer be aVTJotoo with theni.', s V die feels tbajLheJiaa. triumphed... Greeley, tha leaderof the. fanatiea . the past tea .jears ov-hiore. It is quite evident, bow feels the AbolK v . tion card or thirty-yeara ago baa' won at last, ' cBooaiou with slaveholders." Tha worda. tainted ia this newspaper leaf jrno room to " doubt that he fcurady jorjl lepa ration of,-t&a , ; tree rronibe slave Mates. .tt . r-. v?; i bad it is indeed fijr the Union aad toe people, ' u-'IkII K I1m rM.wb. " cAA I frrarpoaesirew TsrkUerali.t: r . ' -' " :' Strrrouc. April 12.1SJ3L At three w'cloek thtsmoraingGeq. Coreot an wa4 prcceediBg to the front of dir&oo. '. t. order otGep. Peck, when be waa halted at ' short distance from town "by', some oca" th e.n that thewsmiags of the Democracy have- aot'-- , - been heeded npon th Is AboUtiob crosade aafsai - " J-he Usior obrd T". . si 'r - v: ed hinj said he could not psss7ab"J demsretl , . to know who he wasii-The GeneriJ e-Iief v I by. saying that he was J'Gea, 'Corcraa. pro -'.: T ' eeeoiog to tae rot ay oroovcr .tj ra.- The officer ss,id. he could ppt pass wiibo-L tr.a.- coaatersignr' Gen. Corcoran said' ' he shocli,' - r whaa th other insist ed ttat; Is oil J tcC-- ' at thf samitim4 xdaktc a cioveir.t to draw '5 his swordVGen. C. c al!y 10 kr stf'.-.ir- who; h aras'his imet,?i1f.?t.T-;. -n7 the latter rer4iei.-Gen. C, t OiithatCoiL.ictr!l " r iastaatly drew his c n t - I i.. i...t ft' 1 j t v etdt. a'ndlie Tid U-Lw rr.'- J,rrtbea Qarter-nizr:cr Cc-. f ! -ST f t ' - . it- ...i 1;." )W t ' "" " -TV W S - A f ' a - : ,! 1 -.- w i |
