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- . - 1 Viw:ie-A'Ba '' :T V; , , V", V v ; . -1 TSaa mm pWm TTod wmrd CImIl, Sd BUry wivpia uaanu;ji.w after to zpi mwmu mntx f , ; 7 L;Mas CoarentioxL ; -. v ':. -JVhjr mot make tb dertDth of June Co-; veittlou-ji raiJ ua x?tlh-ri fig of t lie whole "people lUe 81 ' le; hre nunUier of promi-' neM Dmorrntl& gfitnkrn from abruail, im1 trt lle rampntrw with roofing Democratic BiaM Meetiu al ibr. CirpiUlT What ur oor DeinocrMtK; coteinportrte ? Ijan Ga-Kit. , . , . ' V-.- W wit re .. Let n hare one of the larpeft Conreaiionf that evvr UMetiMtf l in Ct.l omUu The Crawford Dmrtcraey will eeiid a delegation of 200 at least. Vravord V nun. OU Knox ran and will send a lafjre delegation to tlie June Courentioii,' and we prebume neurit every county in the State will do the cuune. 1 lie penioua condition of the country demands that Denjocrata should make every aacrifice, Kut principle and honor, to nave the Union and the Constitution from dectmcti n. Iet one hunIred thousand of the thinking men of the Democratic party aseiubie in Co luubaA and deliberate as to the bet means of preserving our Government from wreck. Truthful "'Words. The Chill ieothe A'hterllser,. in commenting vpou the arrest of Hon C. L. Vallasdioham nyi wrtli gre a truth and force: V'e have, indeed, fallen upon strange time, when the utterance of moh viwH when Much " teachings" are punif haMe a "calculated to cauoe Civil w ir ia the X rtli." Tj thousandd in private con versatiotm and jniblic addresses in J 11 the Halt of Congress aid upon the hustings without an ora; a ilr. Vallandigham has invnrib!y licld ib- Cti'lowing language: . "-I sun oppi4 1 1 any esce which shall be p-irchis! at the price of Disunion." If, then, thu sentiment i a crime, lei him be punished, anI let it a -ljiwn Into Iiistory. to be read bv fjtufe generntiou-i with detestation, that in the year 103. V i!hn lih in differed piiiiitilimrnt from an avow il of iiiiyie'd 114 devotion to the Crsti:uion .ot ih United States, and the lTtii.-n U, wV ;-! ! n-f Viiiictifled by the Yd tbers o '.Ik- l?v,t.!Ti. 'of 177(5. - ' Capt! H. 3. E!tl!y Auglaize roni tli iifii'v.V n-l rt-J iltc- triivli Alter I'HTii.ga n vli t-4Hipliti 1. rhe. Han't niu cfxiipiiijr Wat aiini.i , j; : Now; hit w it ive ait Killed .luwn isi 4ur office. v ;f UM..l ?rt ytr i hot'o'ii-.di lyui ocT i ic pt ; r- -V e-fniU r 'V. , ..?: 1 o he-seMi- neH.' aSI-controHur u; f r ;im' in tbe DemocrHtl V tuin.d of?, ttj'ii!, jH.I'tal cliaiise ir tlwf ' r'iir of to; ;ivuii:tnctit. We tshal! main 'via tetrlw"tlv the Constitmi'jti'j!' -ribr". wot oi'4y of every Be-titr-, tmt off-vorvi;djvi--iis! 44 the w bid country. 'Ve hj',l ctnubat tbe here-ie. fallfit!, irririd4. In j'j r.iej. rna-lignancy, meanness, ai.d Tre -.( u of AlT-li.ioii- ; ' '': No Half-Way House. . The Pacific fcho, puLlit-hed at Kapn, Cali-7fornia, sfiys: -The poiitical halt-way boue has gone in, diel out", met with i; grave; anil nor4 lies buried with the past. One:; mut now"le either Democrat or Abolitionist; either for white man or for negro all over ; -either for iatellect, mind, education, civilization or for wool, a black skin, and ignorance. There is no use of denying the fact for it is plain as the. nooaday sun. The AbolilionibUs, under the names of Republican and Union, have got possession of your national and .State Administrations and what are they doing? Creating laws constantly for the advancement of the negro and. the hanging of millstones about the " necks of white men. A Word of Warning. A portion of the Reiblican leaders in this county are doUig.all they can tp foment a civil rar a home, and array one set of citizens against another in strife and bloodshed. Some of these men have no property to te destroy-ed, but.there are others who have property, and if they have no regard for political opponents, the Ought to remember that in times of tumult they may become the victims, instead of the indiscreet men who are forming secret political leagaetand going round calling - Democrats traitor,at.d other epithets. ? These are times when it behooves erery good citizen tot ase bis. Mtioost indaenca for $ he maintenance of order, instead inciting by, hu acta and words, ill (celing batret aad; a spirit of reyengf among men.; , f,e, caution the B. publicMa leaders, o beware exe it is too Mate., Jo, our lellow Democrats, wt would aay, be dirVr M give no. cause tor an outbreak., IWA'uMa oorselves like a ejeaarmr oCtrntU r bekiadt our principles, and awaiV OrenU, pj pruleut reserve we can do mora tbi i:an? rotber ;way io -dieaw Wr n-mlfvrml 4U,f.U r auditors (1m? Cm Itd3th EegtmenK W ar rhmiia Cadixr-- rOU AbratamVXfot wfioitSrec tbe army Ttar. J'thei2o' Ertira.mu acomitiV Into cam pretty boa ad for'fliaIIortbf I impp6 yotrwi'.l 'Cnd,uj pleyttivt fit aWortltCifiKr- -llttf airwrVRt bafi I'jr ;Prts.!iJitayte aert rjJtspatjraiIf ae male tJi'em CjLt, I sup BOMXhef will waef to Vote- 4t:ilim "i doo itf llilK Govcrtrieit, 1 WttHZZtf , the Ohio PsauM-isi.) THE The Sbtsdert glat ; tie Den&crcy Expoted Seatlaesti cf Xexdia; He-putliejtln and Denocntio Stitecaea-8hnring who are the' Frieadi of the .TJnion. - " - ' We call the whole people tgethet as a jury submit to them the following evidence ionciiing me joyaiiy 01 ioe uttpuwican anj Democratic parties.. Partis Ibave diatinct principles and theme principle are enunciated Drincinlea an enunciated by the standard bearers of tbe different par ties, and the masses of the respective parties follow their standard bearers, aad by so doing adopt and indorse their sentiments. Here and there a leader will give, oat aentiraents that his party is not bound by, but when yoa find the majority of the leading men of a party expressing tbe same ideas it is conclusive that hose ideas represent the principles of the par ty, and every follower of uch inew is bound hereby. By this test we will first try the Re publican leaders, every one of whom is now in high places in the Administration. We will take their own almissions. which is the strong est evidence known to the law, - to produce conviction Let every honest Republican now pay attention, while we have the witnesses sworn and examined : 8WXAK THADDKCS BTtrXKS. I will not stultify myself by supposing that we have any warrant "injbe Constitution for tins proceeiing, Thw talk of restoring the Union as it was. under the Constitution as it is. is one of the MtkHurrdities which 1 have beard repeated until I have become sick alout it. The Union can never te rertoied as it was. There are many tiling! which render such an event impossible. This Union never shall, with my consent, be retoretl under the Constitution as it is. with slavery to be protected by it. Thaddxps Stbvims, Tbe Administration leader in Congress. The above is an extract from a speech of his, delivered in Congress. 8WKAR UOKACX CKBKLKT. From the New York Tribaae, (KspaMicaa,) Fesraa- ry.iwx. Speaking for ourselves, we can honestlv sav that the old Union, which was kept in existence by Southern menaces and Northern ion-cessions, we have no Tegrets and no wish . for its reconstruction. . Who wants a Union which is nothing bnt a sentiment to lacquer Fourth of July orations withal ? SWEAR W. MT OASKISON. The Fremon! party is ewonldtng public een-tmietit in the right . direction for the specific work - the Abolitionists are striving to accomplish the dissolution of the Union, and the altolition of slaverv throughout the Jatid. W'U J'tyi (WWW. . . . . . SWEAR WEN Dtt.L PHILTM. ' . ' " Resolved, That .the Constitution of. the Uiiiteii .Slat- is a covenant with death, and an agreement- with bejl, which ought to be intinediately aimuild." I'kUips in a Boston Meeting. SWEAR JOHN" A. BIJiaHAST. Who, in the name of Heaven, wants the Cot ion States, or anv other State this xi.er of perdition, to remafn'.in the Utiiou if elaverv is to continue 1 Hon. Mr. Jio.ham. Mr,: Bin "haul Ii.ih Uen a Republican Coa- greretnen iroiu Ulno tor leu years, and ts a prM-aive candidate of that ; party tor Gov ernor at the next election." SWEAR Mnxr. SDCtRTOV. . 1 tell von there actX 1 tr tn (m m A !umliit!ni of that ijuioo. aift I do not care how auiak it comes; all I want is to give tbosa fellow (the O . . . I . 111 ... ... . ooumroitn; a good ncKing ana men kick tbetu out. dirtnej IiMlgerton. Mr. E.lgerton is another Bepublican member of Congress from Ohio. SWEAR BKNJ. J. BTAXTO. Seven or eight States now denv their alleri- atif e to this Government : have orsanized a eeparate Confeleracv, and have declared their independence ot this Government. Whether that independence is to be maintained or not. is with the future. If tbe? shall maintain their position, and if public opinion in the se ceded .states shall sustain the authorities there lor a rear or two to come, so as to show that nothing but a war of subjugation and con quest can bring them back, I, for one, am dis posed to recognize their independence. Ban. F. Wanton, February 28, 18C1. Stanton ia tbe Republican Lieutenant-Gov ernor of Ohio, and was formerly a Bepublican member of Congress. Ilia speech, above was delivered in Congress. SWIAa BEX VAUX. The only salvation of the Union, therefore, was to be found in divesting it entirely from all . taint or slaverv. There was no union itb tbe South. Let us bare a Union, or let tw sweep away this reruaant which we call a Union. ,1 go? for a Uokm where -all men art equal, or for no .Union at all, -and I go for right. Extract from F, . Wa&'s -Mauu spsecA, 186o,;;-. . ; .. . .... . . - ; jtow twaaa'A lot . or tux, ; ; : From the speech of Carl Scburs ia Efew u jsaivV ircao aoi-'be.7it rd1 f From Mat. Carpenter apeech at Chicago: . "Tbeae. caviling Cbatnwa snwra mvak sow eotuelo ttmel; ' ' .' , ', In tsorUWes. dtt&ercMwtfxnile4 power.?, ' i J"rom Heorr Ward.. Beecber.. whoa acwa. paper fmbrishea th taw of tha Uaited Statea, , ! A jeat tuany peopJ rajsa aarj about tat v ion ana i nevnsii i ur ion. aa uue tvo taen- Tcal ; buttb truth is Os ktletn tbefomndatiokandfatM warpaatak.arMrtuerAM aJo- I ; mom xs.p. zseoiui t ; .V: I ' "I am willing, ia a certaib atate of circusa Tliia Bpeecb w dalirercd ia 1855.; ; There can be no Union till slaverr ia stroyed. xfrrfra4 0a Ixxxfry -Epttd. svaue ezir.Vsrtn. " i say, 1 om notjor iAt imm w e aijnmti - Understand me ; I was Tor the Union as it' was, becanse T saw, or thottrb.t I saw lfpon bot having undergone tlKsetrotJea. ; fcrring spent all this blood,' and this treasure. f "do not measi to' go tacfc again anl be cheek t-fJ.'Jo' wtU boutb Carolina a 1 was before. if 1 can help it: (Cheers ; You're rightl) 'J : Extaact from' Gen. Butler's speech ia Hew . York, A pril, 1863. . ; V''-" : - . ' . . 8 WX A R TBE OHIO ST A TI J017RX A L. .' The Union baa done nothing for freedota. Then why should ireemea deplore the losf 0 the U nion. . . Separate, peaceful - existence . of the- sections are preferable to a Union .which ia dissatisfactory to . one, aad wbicb : retard the progress of the other." - . .. , . , , .Ohio State Journal, Mareb 27, 1SS1. Having shown that the leading Republicans are opposed to restoring the Union., we- will proceed to prove that the leading roes of the Democratic party are for the old Union.-"' "W. first call some witnesses wbo are enemjes of the Democratic party. " ' - HEAR TI. H. SSVAitD. . I know tbe Demoeracy - f the "North." I know them now in their watdng "strefigth. I do not know a possible disunionist among them all. I believe that thev will be as faith ful to .tbe Union now as they were in the by gone days when their ranks were full, and their challenge to tbe contest was always tbe war-cry of victory. Win. II. Seward 1861. In this country, it is a habit not only entirely consistent with the Constitution, but even essential to its stability, to regard the Administration at any time existing as distinct and separate from the Government itself, and to canvass the proceedings ot the one without the thought of disloyalty to th other. Secretary Seward 1862. . ... BEAR CONORE8SWAK COXWAT. 1 "jThe Democrats will hoi of course listen to separation for an instant. ' Such a suggestion in their eyes is treason, for which one ought to be hanged. Their plan fa simply to oppose the Administration on its anti-slavery policy and on that issue to carry the country. . Extract from the speech of Ir. Conway, Republican Congressman from Kansas, in Congress, Feb. 1863. ' : ' HEAR SENATOR CO WAIT. . " ' Sir, I had rather have tbe moral and mater rial aid of the Democratic jarty in this war than all the legislative projecta that could be hatched in the brains of a Coneress coiuposed entire! jr of reformers.'. r ; , .,':- Extract from a speech of Senator. Cowan. Republican, in U. S. Senate; from Pennsylva oia, March 2d, 8C3 . :;; hoit. wx. nriR, or xew tork. I certainlv can- enter info no combinations wilh Republicans to oven brow the D mocrats 1 hey are in the msm loyal and patriotic.-- rhev-are the chief bulwarks azamst the as saulta of the Northern dimionts. Upon them reals in a treat decree the hones of the union. Extract from the letter of Wm. Duer, a Clay .Whig, of N.V., to a Republican Convention in 1802. - ;.. . . - . HEAR THE NEW TORE. TIMES. ' . J ne iNew York times, reckless as is Hs coarse roward the Democrats, concedes f April ith, 18o3) that Governor -.Sevmoor and Par ker Jusc sAotoa a disposition to lift afaqer io- war J etu6arrasing Preidet t Lincoln and it has 1 no Jifutt thai thev will tTtctHollv co-oneraU with. him whenever or however it shall be found ntcetsa- ry. v - ' . - : Having given the testimony of some of tmr political enemies,' as to "the' position' of 'the Democratic party we now call live Demo crats to the stand. " ' ' ' TAXLAIDICHAX TOR THE tTXtOX. " It is in the restoration of the Union as it was in 1798. and continued for' over ' seventy years, that I am bound to the but hour of my .... , . . . - . - political existence. The above is an extract from a Jate speecb delivered ia Congress by tbe Hon, C. L. Val- landigbam, of Ohio. .i.. HEAR WX. A. aiCHARPSOW. '.' Without the Constitution and tbe Union there i no liberty no Government and whatever stands in thtir way I am prepared to strike down. Whatever stance in tbe way of our Government and its integrity, must be destroyed. But I do not propose to go beyond tbe Constitution. -'- - ."' - Extraet from speech of Wm. A. Richard son. Democratic Congressmau of Illinois, March 10. 1862. v.. 'r:. : tho. b. svTxoca roar the vaiox. We solemnly dedicate Oarselvea, apd1 'all we bold dear to a restoration of the Union as it wax. : To thu and. tbe ranks of out armies shall be kept Aill,' and tbe Treasorj of ' thet aation replenished." . - . -r I am for getting; back tbe . Sotttbera; States by fair and honorable meanril ueb' a' tblng bijnossible ; and 1 wilj hope for the best.' " The Union I desire. ia a ; unioa ' of bearti and of hands, such a our fathers gav us. ; Nothing lea will alisfjr me ibaa the wbol Simtbera Stater. 1 H"" H: ' ' '-;,- "vlS Pcmocratici' caodidata 4b 0o veTTioi of Coa? aaiat.r.-, Extract from- a lata epeacb.' - -. . 7 f o;.rTav Aioif, or ioarioV 1 1 u The Temoeraer o tbe North went witt;op pose sepanuiOB to tne iasi. ; tney wm enng-to tbis Unioa a tbe unfbrlanata' mariner elinea UlbebutJWTc2 oT4bo" nn1foriaaata462lL Extract from bis speech OFeb, 2, 1863, VV : cvci j5jt n?a fxaTwi: fVba miam,Af tbe Damocrattd "party to aattl 4bt Conaatation-: Ujr tariB It,? I mean tbat you are ta aTav it for ?t&p .-whole . - e n.m ,aar tr6m: 3? i sTaaX BOX. S, Jf. COX itt k - Vr wma o : i Cor UtatSeM,'" W Upioa. bat tbe oae that we knew before 4eo kxax xox. a . cox tMaJ paniea ectniwiaieO UieJr Work ha tred. It is foathie CowtkcUoa aa4 this Cai-4 c ra eKIOfuaeramy'iaftoVM larotit ita blood on tbttC4atata tor, W the tatleys aad aa the pUiisB.:Xtaaao(, lelW DeoMcrata. ecase to guard; 4efe4 aad protect aad prise Jt above all earthly gpod.-' - - - f Extract from UapeaV ? :v v fe'.taTuicva . -f Whether we -voted Ibf tb present Admini wtraiioa pr not. we are equaiiT" interested ra preserrjnjr the Govern then td - Adminiattiions are buf for a daTw": .Thank Go.1. this . eountrr ia ours.4 ' We had-better expend alt wi Bare in presertink a wd lea vtnit to.our children than to ieavf them anything else v:yx , bxixact worn as .rpeec at ..Washington, HXAB SXXATOR TEX ETCTC, r XW JIRSET. "Sir, all our measurea here sbonld be to save tbr Unkm.and the Constirutioti.' This war is for tbe.Cotedtuttonr abd to comoel obe-' diehceo it. ' 1 i ' - ; . Extract .from' 'tbe speeca; 'oT-Senator! Tea Eyck, Deinxer)t.il62,?.:it Xy?-- im aon axrxocR or xiw Toar. J v " We ineit"iipoeVbediee to laws and rea- pect for constitutional authority. : W mean with all our power of mind and person tosup- uon ioe vwwutouon ami urnoid the union. We wish to see our Uulon-?eaved. our laws vindicated and peace once more restored to our im. : ' ' - ; Extract from speech,' of ;ljoratio Seyrooor, Democratic Governor of New York, Sept. 10, 1862, ' ..-I:. " . :. : : LAST WORDS OF STSFHX A. aoVOLAS. - On his deathbed, b iit -wife: asked the dying standard bearer of the Democratic party tf he md any message to send urbi sona. Railing for a moment.' his eve flashing.' hi whole frame dilated, Tell tbeni.sald be " to oy the laws and support the Constitution of tbe United "States'." " ' -'T prophest or oix. Said the old hero to a friend at the hermit age a short time before bi death: "Tbe Abolition' partr bri disloval organi zation-.' Its" pretended lore Ibr freedom means nothing more nor less than a diswolution of the Union; Honest men of all parties should unite to expose their intentions and arrest their progress. .'".' " ' 1 " -' jraorHEsr or paxieL webstr'r. "If these fanatics and Abolitionists ever get power in their bands they ' will over ride it votisiKuuon, set me supreme court at dep-anre, change and . hiake law . to suit thera-setves. lay violent band on. those who difier with them in opinion., and-finallv baukruut j ne country and deluge it with hlood7 Keuiai ka of Pamel .Wbter. ia 1850c ; " . . ' ""Wer?P 9 1 . , - .... A Eairoa Ban iter--., -.i-i t-- v7--- In the Mt. Vernon RpMican ' ofth e 231 ult.; will lie found an article, said to have e menated from the jn .of one -Geo. O. ni)l. 2d Ijeut. Co- A. 4th O, V. 41., in which lie pnbTighes a note said to be a " verbatim et IM- eratvre" copy of one received '-frommytfelt--Now, Mr. Efilor, I wish to. give you a true statement of the fact connected with mv send ing copies of VaiUndighftia's speecben to Mr. Hill, and for which be1 bftterly complains, de nouncing the act aa being a traitorous one in myself, Tlat I did send cooies of Vallandigham's speeches to Mr.' Hill I do not deny;" but as to tne note puoiiKiiea wtin a is tetter oemg a ver batim copy of iho one sent to him by myself. it, is false 'a' charge a could be made and couhi only originate' io the addled ' brain of each "Linc-toola:' aa LieuU flilX,' JBut to the consistency ot Mr. Hill -in charging f me with traitorous conduct, in forwarding' bint copies of the epeecbei of the said Vallandig bam. ' ' f :i ' ' ' ' - ; ' Previous to tbaait lltU a-, promotion ' to a 2dXient'. position, - be was second sargeant in Co. A. of the4tb Qhio Regt myself serving ' ,r private capacity'',, in the same Cjo. t was necessarily much la company with Mr. Hill, and have frequently beard bim say Che war waa conducted on unconstitutional 7 principles. and bad vio higher aim than the liberation of tb slaves' of tb aoutbl 1 bare beard bim call tbe President U,S, more bard aames than be eyeMid tbe ' devils and frequently, say be was tired of; fighting Abolition battles, and that if he could; onoe ret out of tbe array tbey would never get him back again; aad further. there is in tbi placet a; discharged aobliet of the 4th Regt that has heard binr say that it be eould not jret ootoffb army bonorablr. 1(0 could ,dp, aoin ;v 4ibonbrablV maanjer s aod to whkb J4. dacbarged -eoldier ready tOttStrff, ' ' J ! ; ? . -i. -; - l rBut since gfomotioo, tRarlr bow:bi aeht(-' mS U iansard jo, fbaW J cbafged 10 ow talks loud of U0 and JUbtrty,'usUia- ing tba ExwsbUraaatbpritr abaddinr tEe but drop of Upod,a.nd many other .jwtriotiebraa-re. Jail botuTOiar wbaooaverting nower -tra la aaJncTeasip Backa or awilbly aalary I : Ynr-JtlriEdU tor, if fae fiadreeatred . Ui It'a. ebnfmla- aioa, Dfl would Qav laueo aown ad worsbip- Y MfI4jnrWe., QfMvtxuma ironw who b aoqaaioted with Oryill wlUfbr !.eoo- tea it? fci rail leiLIta iatber thjiiac :Vom ;we leave it for tba r6plbjof!Cly-id i a tba r'JatfEt.est oft fi':u!lx-lV":V.c it' tt mentsappos bltrto be the real aatber cf the leltef aiapvoye btafe!niU5 (ntbe Bfiff el iH,'b..?n jW.MTt rrit- ,4eciv3 5ia;a-tb8.p"5fEt..aiatwfrsooii laadl'banT, Kit .call in tb arar .jaf hia'siaalle Wa doaot now bataluuiaU objeeta tba bav ia it f iA it f wbJcbHr ?ry mucb ooubt) tbey really- barbor tba tSe- wg ol"Tmbliiair tbe anloa f all tbe Sftrteaj ia aaf sbapVaad aaJer aajr ;0tlt- Uon whatever, tbey set about it In a Tery awk ward wninaer '-' - c.sjfiij;... L i Ia tbe first plaee, tbey bav by tbeir Uafor- tuikate emsRcipaUoa poQcyi'aJieaated every v .".. wnw . m jwwr otater; so mat wt boJd .Wary land, Jlissouri, Kentacky aad J, aeasee, only br milhary oorttpatiosi oaj- do jmtmoa over those States stretchtag ao farther i wan me range oi oar guns, and obedience to irv .w ooiy aetaared at tba point of tbe bayooei.-: j AH these border State, if the war ceased to-moTrow. wotildTrequtre, as tbey now do tbe! presence' ofa large military .force ; tbeir sympatbies for tbe South being . sow atroager than at tbe beginning of this unfortaaaie frat ricidal war. ' v - ' " Tbtcottates; if they, were placed to subjection to-niorrowV would only wait for a freab opportunity to rise, and tbetr people Would toolc with suspicion and hatred on every manr whet bef adventurer or capitalist,' 'who BiiuuHi iic so asiortnnaie, as ;y settle among tbem. v TberV 4 woahl baf private lends . ud breaches of tbe. peace, whk-b, apart from a threatened rise en masse, would render the pres- erit ui a arge conatavuiary force iirrrsoarj to public tranquillity. . . . The Aliobtioo war. ia now devattinV th " ,".!T'".'k"1TO"', jwiu yei we' nope, alter the establishment of peace, to wring taxes from an impoverished people.- In the ui mates of the Secretary of the Treasury, a large ixtciiuc iivw wiernw ua ui reel taxes was expected from the revolted States. The U. State taxes were imaginahly assessed among them as, in reality, among the people of tbe North; hut it is alolutelv certain that tbe . Southern fcrfate will be unable to par them.: and that the whole burthen, of taxation, will fall upon tbe North. Tha. while we shall reomrc. a large sUnding army to keep tbe &outb in sub jection, we shall le oJdiged to Aaxlhe North wita the support or that army,, and spend so manj million oi Northern money annually in the Southern States to support and feed our trOOpa... ;-. t ; j. -ij.:-f;--: & . .-.... Im case ot war Mkb ,a foreigw'power. tbe South will become our Vendue, brwhieb we will require fortified "places and lanre earri- sons to prevent the people from taking sides witb the enemy History tells us. on every one of its pages, llutt j national dislikea and bat ret bs are hereditary, that they arexraas-raittet from sire to son for generations an J centuries, and.that it is precisely among kindred nations, or people of the same oriein. that (liese hatreds are most' intense and last-n. , Taketbe example of Poleaawd Russian. PrtuviauA andr Aneirians. Dines and Germans, and, in antiquity. Atbeii!is.andSnartaniii IThirty years e0-the UniD'ror' Nicholas o ferrd .the cower of bis youth to . the armv of i Caucasus- ami tbe men to Iberia; but the women who remained ami who married Russians, brought their children up in the hatred of Russia; and after : a generation, the ehi! dren have g-Own into tbe men who are now in auts to avenge the wrongs inflicted on the lad of their mothers, v. No country wa ever so completely conquered and subdued as Gaal by Ji ucs C&sar ; yet. after generations, the (i an Is remained and the Romans disappeared. A thousand vears later. Cbiilmiiiki ik Prauk. conquered Gtul again, and engrafted hi coun try n name. ' France.". 01 bis" conquest. The Gauls became Fraakuh men. or Frenchmen, in aame? Iut not in feelinv or jangaage. and they nave paid the original rraaka-aud tbeir kinsmen the Germaae. witL compound interest, tbe injuries, and humilia tions they suflered at their hands. ' :; ' But it is neeiilese to multiply the examples of I hat sort,; which must naturally, euggest themselves to everr reader of bistorr. No military conquest endured, unlesfttheconqaer- ea people were admitted on equaJ terms to the community oi toe conquerors,, partaking .wnfJ .1 hem, in all respects, of the same, political righ is a hd , pnv tlegea. . Tbe same- srincfple win mid ns application here. We may -fight the Soutliernera aa we -pleaser we mav drive them from -oae part of the country to tbe other, we may kill and destroy the fl"wer of their male population, we way drive tbe men ' iBto exile; but in this manner we shall never succeed in tnakine tbetn our friends. Thee ; will continue, to hate uv and i tbe Northern mea tliemsel ve who may go and live in tbe South. wjw oecome lioutliera men jo ieclweand. mar rying Southern women, will beeomeefiemtea at the heart of tbeir Northern brethren. JTai i a law of nature, against wbicb no' human power and no avstem of pailoopbr or. ethics nan prevail, and without which any dominant race might Jong ago have , conquered and de- aesiroysd an oiner.. Yet the HLrher Law men " who their inspirations from the passions of (amities and demagogues, believe themselves equal to a task which, neither Roman nor Persian. Greek W Tartar." Norman or Frenchman, neither Mahometan. Uhrtstiao or Jew,, ever accomplished I Jknd to that chimera tbey sacrifice, now,' tbe 'bonor, fame, wealth! and blood of the country I, .'i Attitnio xf raac toti TJaiUd CtAUal i Tba . Faria i eorrespondent of tbe Loodos ThMt' writes' aa foHotr -1 bear from various auarter that tbi ' distress occasioned ': br 'the cfoa famifls ia bv ao means on tha decresseL anoviimBomeujjng mow ,oe oons prevent lit. i J? . J what wbicb- th interaal tranquility tb ampir among tbe manufacturing class.; -It is believed that sooneKor jUticoerciv meaaurea wI3 become I tbe'Koribera .iierv-iat nesolratioaa 1rilt le ; resumed ? Let we a 'fl Cnrlia and FretKaSoveranienia.wiibaL to.tntrr.'Tcsij cf some kind, r If tL satepafa kea tr l ;ac3 tt. as&iE-ton - bare taJad. ft b f rttty eertala liat the.meastirea. adoTt&J tor.irij 1 xica trilUaoaa! Li: crowaei jariii ti Ia l.ZT tUlsctica tar rrr-i- r l.tf tiarsJ r. iuri f r".. y l'. n "'. :' tr : i ;:-rb M aow atmply "criaia" from aqairtnr. a year, nence; tne maimuBGe or a disaster " roi2bt;"baTe. erioua eonsMueBcea m 7 .M a ri"-gT- Ti J 1 TTkick Kiawlwm ink akar, - Vf i-i Ami, saadrUg; tob a tthm Is mmsl tLmVb Ctoi. t2ta wt2L -f' Iftbry w War ara taaiU t-: ; tnUewtoaBaa.taat still I - . ' f Vae staada im Csaess as stoat Saal f- ' , H ks4 aaa sk Vises bigWr tkaa aU i JXu tank sssailsatSj gnu aa uaaQf '-"' - ,:,wW was II Ibr TaenTaaws i - Caio's mm Beastss Tim, - --i; Vttfwka Wtvuj Wad, -Arwtdr . - ' ' ' '. SI . Tai i AswaaAX. Wke fa tba xaa ef irse eaonld, Bravfag the storm wttb Vesring bold, ; " A Gsrr aad JirVia aidof oM t - . - U.i:" U :-...r V' - .TAtXAxataaux- ' -' ' ' . t ' "T1 wbea Ibis vsiga'af atadaesi aads. ' ' :' , WiS Sad im aU tb g4, bis Meaia, "... ;:, Aa4 tot ais wioaga kava great iiarads? ': :. ' ' -. ': TAUASSieaAX.' i ki::t-tTtbal!UwarkAvr - " ' 1 ,i Self-Gorerxtme-at. ' ;v ' It is the eonstant habit of Governor Tod and others, when refering to tbe present dvfl war. to speak of it a a struggle to test the ea pacify of the people for aelf. government. ' If mere was truta m that, viewj)S the case bere- , " - .- a a V- ----- - - fc - -.--- - . tofbre, certainly there ia grave doubt' thrown arcwd it by the mroada whicb the Federal Admintstratioa has been graiasjly making on. tbe right of tbe People. A brabam ' Lincoln. as Commander-io Chief, haa riven order Jbrough fam subordinate Generals, that?Y Peo- ptre o longer to oe auowe.1 to' differ with or eottdrmn the policy on which be conducts tbe war. Is thw what the Kepublicans mean by aelfGoverament? What nehthas Lincoln to prescrile such a rule ? ; Are the People' bis slaves, or are tbey still freemenIf - Are the officials at Washington (Lincoln mctinleil. ) mas ter of tbe People, or their servants? Is the Prestttent a Moaarcb that the People have no right to examine and condemn boidlr and un- qualihedly. any policy, whether in ace or in war. which they believe to lie destructive to to the lest interests' of them'ves, of their children, and of the Uiiion? If they teliee the war policy of the: Adnunifi ration i the result of pressure,,rbrougbt upon it ly. wicked and ambitious men whe have ihj wish to save the Union, are tbey serfs that the shall not be allowed to sav so? . ? ! : - Tbe course of the Feileral AdministratKm seettis equivalent to .denying the ca pacrty rof tbe reople lor self-eovernment. v if thw is not tbe true interpretation of its conduct, then the President of tne United States, admittincrtbeir capacitv. has assumed to deny that thev have a right to hold or exprem any opinion differ ing from his own tn reference to tle policy of the war and its good or bad influence' on7 the eountrr. - - :; ' -r " " - ' Against this course at Wesbineton. we en ter the otitspoken protest of air American ciii-ren." In doing tbV we feel, before God. " that we not ale exercise a freemanV- ri-hti ; but what ia of bigher moment, discharge "ja1 free man's dutv. .- If we subject ourself to military duress therefor, we ehall neither ly our own effort nor that of our friends, seek to resist an arrest. -We shall patiently bide the issue of events. In the mean time, we shall trust that he Administration wilt discover in the fact that its measure wont bear the criticism of an ntelligent peoule. a convincing reason for doutung their expediency The Designs of tb. Abolitionists---Th9ir - I&tentioa to EsUblisa sv lIoriaxehT, . Day by dar tbe evidence accumulates to prove that it is the design of the Abolition party to entirely overthrow our system of Gov- ernment, and to establish a monarchy on its . : rw. f a i - ruiua. au ireqaciii an UHgran . rioiaiioas of the Constitution perpetuated by Lincoln's Administration are too fresh in the minds of the people to aeed recapitulation.- The latest one is Lincoln's proclamation admitting into the Union aa a State a few counties m Hbe north-western par of Virginia, which no more constitute a State than Crawford Count v does. and which have-no more legal or const national righi to enter the Union-- a a State than Crawford County baa. The Destitution. how-J ever, is nothing to Lincolovho Jias Irani pled it under his feet every week since be bas been in office! What be and his Aduiinistratioa aretrying to do what they 'are dstermioed to fto-r-ia to invest Mr.' Lincoln's sucoessor, - for all time, to come, wita the kingl powers which ,Jhe now wields. ;The Piiiladejphia Prs. one of the chief organs of the Adminuv tration, boldly says,': that Our -Governmeat rau be reorganized What we want is pow-. er and strength. Tbe MobJem will be to com bine the arms of a republican ; govern m'eDt with the strength 6t"si monarcfrv.-, And tba item simenam, nnoiner Ainu nisi ration journal savs i M-Tbia war bas shown that the pow er o." theGovermik at must be vnJunitcJ."-These atrocious seotimeata are-, daily -quoted oere. and warofiy appiaaaed. ;, I o this com-pexMJn.thea. have we been brougbt be 'Abo lirioo rule. What will ' the- remaining two yeara unas wnn it.rwrora j-mrttnu.r. . R M a . wm a wm w OeaersJ JohiLllorsan aaif t(i -I7iia. I Our -dispatches . last week stated that- tbe rtfe o? General Momax,. tbe scorioua. guer- miA, Had teeu t&xeo a prwoner. . A correa- pondeot of tba Rkbrnoad Enjwvrt jm a letter from tba McMiawiyille givea the' following de- aeriptioja of Moaaia and, bi. young :wife;. Johx MoaoAX i not my moxlel lor fnAeox; is, nor IU wiis altosetber wftjvijt Mxwct. In strict obeervsca aa4fOod loeediag, tbey are toth 'air tt pea oi lbs- better eaaaf mea and "womewr ia, tba ta;ia - States j firotn wbicb tbey relatively ' springTbe Oos tall,r florid and full--aa athletie, eigorous ' personl used Xo extJOMr,; bard ridmg and Uiign clear, bloodaflf hair aad beitpyand eyea of ' grayiab bias M.ffc s,eoTneJysirv fpmpuZUeX forallasoioely graeefol a are toot JfoaWg womea of sou ad" health anT edaeation. IXis Rcnar was tae2aubtc ofjDaaaua Crror. ot Ceedy ville. A bisryerof -emineace, a matt cf talesn. lad fcr aaeeial'y esrait a fimi r ia X ::;rciJ Ills tsAf. LavevLaJ -t!l e;.J - al-'wa ii t' s si a! -3 th srcj-t1 i ,t.?wu.t 3- 1eaF daya-av "fcHouTa; ia LzZLL 2 alaa dleda fctreU tcfre, lea Ic- ct ; km Vftt TsA IW.' L f betweea wbeaa existad a lad.sitelalIr'tLii i tbey aboeJd aaaTry eae atb fceaj lili were freed irom legal Ampedimeatg, tLuzJ respective partaeW tbea r living; .Tbe gesUj maaa wiic, U appeara, was tbe firrt to tali'i-aeraeil good aatsredly 2; aad aooa kJ1owc4 tbe lady'a bosbaadV 'Ia lb inea&lim bj! ever. Mrs, BaibLxr ia4"loaadiinl a third lover, arbom aba liked tb beet, ud 14 rcfed to com ply with i be condition efJaef bond.T To tbia .docuraeBt waa attached a peculiar pes alty," and', the discarded .lover commenced '' . suit a poo it, wbicb tbe fickle widow' pmpoeed to defend.' r Her weddiag day" wa Hxed As4 every thing in -xeadleese .fbc; -tbereeremoayi I when she suddenly sickened aad died-Jcavic.-r . oer nvai suitors in ineiarcn H&e one tosw-r the "amount of bfs bond, and tbe other bU T bnde, with tbe balance of ber Ibrtatn?. Irbica - now goee to ber late basband'a rebtUvea.-.:If you can. beat the. romance of tbi. biatorj i Hake my bat. itcu ia a una van iu America, yob. esa m.m. T..J- vji ;j i : -f Tbe Loyal Leaguers ot Zaneatine tldaglt to make a IhtW Wpftal by getfng a tpee '" from CotUawkiua a paroled prisoner. We learn that Colonel Hawkins toad aa interesting discourse. -"lie gave tb I.ers soma ihform'atioR that voukl be useful La iKrn-v if they. would only lieed tVdonel Hawkins informed the Leaguera that be was a Ufliea , a a a a a - a a man, ana would ngni tne rebeia until the ua armed retet laid down his arms. .But b, wsa4 no abolitionist.-v". Be owned slaves, aad 'Jzqw.' a true Union aian- iu Teuaeseee ibat owpedT . , ; three hundred slaves. Colonel -Ha.nkinstp.ldy the Leaguers I that he did nof appro te th pol1 icy of Abraham Lincoln, bis eabiaet.' or-thsr last Coogma. Such a policy aa tbey ink iatad i was calculated to unit Southern mea and prolong the war. lie ridiculed the idea "that tbe slaves would revolt and make war a tbeir masters.' lie had.twenty negroes, and be Ss-.-fieif any abolitionist present to steal or seduced bis negroes .to run otf. Colonel Uawkins said . the Republican party bad not managed the, se-cession difficulty sensibly or , successfully, and( , be' had bis doul4s whether thev could succeed! without they, soon changed tbeir policy. Tbei ' Loyal Leaguers experienced a cold abowcr . A Bogus Union AddxessV C The Ohio SUtesmaa saris . - . ..' : Z ' The ' Administra'tion member of tbe lata General Assembly bare published aa address to the Ohio oldeits, - Its tone aad. texture are the same that characterize tbe :ebtieeeriajc."' articles wbicb wt find daily in Repablieaa pa-. ' pers.- Theplyed out" Senators aad jRep f reeentatives assume to speak for tbe royal peo' pie of the State l That is decidedly cool, wheA' the fact ia considered that they are repodiatfd--aiid reprobated by tbe people. .Our brave, and, gallant soldiers will duly appreciatthfaourea. from which it emanates,' aad treat it a it 'ds- ' serves t be treated. , ' The names of Hon? Martin Crain and UoavV A. Thorp, are signed to this 'document-, wjtbV; out tbeir knowledge or consent "Tbey werat" ' elected, in 1861. by tbeso-cled Uic rjarty ' I.... .i i . t i . i. m 4 uui , ii nu wilder wriuug ui 1. nry mrm nfwt sound and reliable Democrats. The political tricksters and demagogue who get up tb Ad. 1 dress; ought to be careful bow they siga otbex ' people's names to their lectioneering doca- ' raents, without authority to do so. - Tbey will. certainly not promote, the iuteresta of tbeir T party by it. " ' '-. v- :. ' . Mr. Patterson's Bams is also arresdedV anot?-be bas been in bis grave tar Meeral weakaf - .r- -,- ; r : The Harmony of Ksuaicil ;i' I 1 The old "Articles of Agreement-mada t tween Greelyi Raymond, Ttnd tbsls brother. Abolitiouists, on tbe one side, aad, the :'eces sionista of the Southern State on. ih other; A side, by which veacKbouDd Ihemselves to .Iba. . other to lalor for one couimoa end the des V truction of the old-Union, bated by botb,ranl,. the overthrow the ConathutiooT obstractivs tO -' tb e scbemesoC botbrr-a ppear still, (q 114 good-Tbe Richmond IVkia. Secession organ. pub - 1wbes an attack" upon-Gen. McCJeiiaa, wbcv tintuBla. tonvther witb all Xhtf AtHtion oreaita ' of tbe State; re-produce tba Whig's assaalt up. ? op the UnioaCbramaadef aad xoslca taerrr a over ru auemptsa luernese.- ; -: 4 --.i 'r 1 It is fittine that these 'brothers, in arm.'.. wbo have together Tailed at tbe" Constitatioo-anl reviled the Union ia bygone dava,1 tbouI4t no unite m denunciation of tbe? soldier -wbor ' haa proved faubfal to the one and risked biar life torjrhe-otber, -- It was-to "be expected jHat their estimation of Mcdellaa would prove birr; monions. and that bis removal from tba ' coip.- rna'ntt of the Federal forces would b sxxfeep able to the enemr he would bare subduedj c3h to tbe Northern traitors who hate tbeUsicu-he would bave restored. T. MrgnC It is rather aremarLable fact thatlia aIo-t. Ktioa Lepidature of 1801-2 refoaed to pass aau; -1 act rjermittfng the soldiers is the anr; v ta Tcti t alleging tlat eutb. aa act would .be tinae; ,but.fipdin siaca tb't .ti3Je t ' t,t- DeniocTata' were largely in the biajo:. y : phioTaAd that Abolition igra Liu4 5 ndj-t r b something cxmlJ la doua to; aa t.3 LeUIatare otiC2-3 wer.t to work at cv----.: if their 4foasUtauoniJ scmjlcs, trj t'. lz' r. i. yDceesded, stt r&x ta ri a Izrt i;' .r- ;. tog tb itoL!'?r to relet and r-?. tr ' standing tier are two D?n:c:rt a tic Uoalit ia tis I i.,.-J trrT.v t eSJirs' ti zin L bossi that iLtr v ;U c eleetianaU Cctdcr. t : t 2. cry V . soL'lcrs ic:.!l.Lrrs to,'. c '-r. e- ' ' t Abolition t''-et, itV- z L ' ' - ' ;: zZzllzstzTi ct M-z':---r izil ;;;r:. U cDte;t ; a- ti . lie, l-:y c; j - rt ':-;'J r.-.'';.v"':f-J-' t after the pattern of its Northern ailica, it troa t icailyjdcetguaten a the Young , Napoleon and the New York 7hmes and TViitow. Abol - k : ll ;. i t . 3 "' r .Ui.S. eapreme;Jud iaTTcji; - '(Iri &U::tX t'fr . . ,"it '-..-" i "-"; - . ' ' ' 1 ' ' ' . ." . ' " ( 4,: , 'wHMBkarf. 1 f 1 1 m 11 m isnc ". -- ilff . - L 0 :Ti0w f.- be-" W 4.. - rf i 1 tit.4;:aw,jc:;ii t . fCIru fa rr J '.v:- Jr,. u; ;r - t 1 : ' ''", ., .. . f. ... ...4,'"..V1-Ji.C, .f
Object Description
Title | Mt. Vernon Democratic banner (Mount Vernon, Ohio : 1853), 1863-05-16 |
Place |
Mount Vernon (Ohio) Knox County (Ohio) |
Date of Original | 1863-05-16 |
Searchable Date | 1863-05-16 |
Format | newspapers |
Submitting Institution | Public Library of Mount Vernon & Knox County |
Rights | Online access is provided for research purposes only. For rights and reproduction requests or more information, go to http://www.ohiohistory.org/images/information |
Type | Text |
Description
Title | page 1 |
Place |
Mount Vernon (Ohio) Knox County (Ohio) |
Searchable Date | 1863-05-16 |
Format | newspapers |
Submitting Institution | Public Library of Mount Vernon & Knox County |
Rights | Online access is provided for research purposes only. For rights and reproduction requests or more information, go to http://www.ohiohistory.org/images/information |
Type | Text |
File Size | 7933.06KB |
Full Text | - . - 1 Viw:ie-A'Ba '' :T V; , , V", V v ; . -1 TSaa mm pWm TTod wmrd CImIl, Sd BUry wivpia uaanu;ji.w after to zpi mwmu mntx f , ; 7 L;Mas CoarentioxL ; -. v ':. -JVhjr mot make tb dertDth of June Co-; veittlou-ji raiJ ua x?tlh-ri fig of t lie whole "people lUe 81 ' le; hre nunUier of promi-' neM Dmorrntl& gfitnkrn from abruail, im1 trt lle rampntrw with roofing Democratic BiaM Meetiu al ibr. CirpiUlT What ur oor DeinocrMtK; coteinportrte ? Ijan Ga-Kit. , . , . ' V-.- W wit re .. Let n hare one of the larpeft Conreaiionf that evvr UMetiMtf l in Ct.l omUu The Crawford Dmrtcraey will eeiid a delegation of 200 at least. Vravord V nun. OU Knox ran and will send a lafjre delegation to tlie June Courentioii,' and we prebume neurit every county in the State will do the cuune. 1 lie penioua condition of the country demands that Denjocrata should make every aacrifice, Kut principle and honor, to nave the Union and the Constitution from dectmcti n. Iet one hunIred thousand of the thinking men of the Democratic party aseiubie in Co luubaA and deliberate as to the bet means of preserving our Government from wreck. Truthful "'Words. The Chill ieothe A'hterllser,. in commenting vpou the arrest of Hon C. L. Vallasdioham nyi wrtli gre a truth and force: V'e have, indeed, fallen upon strange time, when the utterance of moh viwH when Much " teachings" are punif haMe a "calculated to cauoe Civil w ir ia the X rtli." Tj thousandd in private con versatiotm and jniblic addresses in J 11 the Halt of Congress aid upon the hustings without an ora; a ilr. Vallandigham has invnrib!y licld ib- Cti'lowing language: . "-I sun oppi4 1 1 any esce which shall be p-irchis! at the price of Disunion." If, then, thu sentiment i a crime, lei him be punished, anI let it a -ljiwn Into Iiistory. to be read bv fjtufe generntiou-i with detestation, that in the year 103. V i!hn lih in differed piiiiitilimrnt from an avow il of iiiiyie'd 114 devotion to the Crsti:uion .ot ih United States, and the lTtii.-n U, wV ;-! ! n-f Viiiictifled by the Yd tbers o '.Ik- l?v,t.!Ti. 'of 177(5. - ' Capt! H. 3. E!tl!y Auglaize roni tli iifii'v.V n-l rt-J iltc- triivli Alter I'HTii.ga n vli t-4Hipliti 1. rhe. Han't niu cfxiipiiijr Wat aiini.i , j; : Now; hit w it ive ait Killed .luwn isi 4ur office. v ;f UM..l ?rt ytr i hot'o'ii-.di lyui ocT i ic pt ; r- -V e-fniU r 'V. , ..?: 1 o he-seMi- neH.' aSI-controHur u; f r ;im' in tbe DemocrHtl V tuin.d of?, ttj'ii!, jH.I'tal cliaiise ir tlwf ' r'iir of to; ;ivuii:tnctit. We tshal! main 'via tetrlw"tlv the Constitmi'jti'j!' -ribr". wot oi'4y of every Be-titr-, tmt off-vorvi;djvi--iis! 44 the w bid country. 'Ve hj',l ctnubat tbe here-ie. fallfit!, irririd4. In j'j r.iej. rna-lignancy, meanness, ai.d Tre -.( u of AlT-li.ioii- ; ' '': No Half-Way House. . The Pacific fcho, puLlit-hed at Kapn, Cali-7fornia, sfiys: -The poiitical halt-way boue has gone in, diel out", met with i; grave; anil nor4 lies buried with the past. One:; mut now"le either Democrat or Abolitionist; either for white man or for negro all over ; -either for iatellect, mind, education, civilization or for wool, a black skin, and ignorance. There is no use of denying the fact for it is plain as the. nooaday sun. The AbolilionibUs, under the names of Republican and Union, have got possession of your national and .State Administrations and what are they doing? Creating laws constantly for the advancement of the negro and. the hanging of millstones about the " necks of white men. A Word of Warning. A portion of the Reiblican leaders in this county are doUig.all they can tp foment a civil rar a home, and array one set of citizens against another in strife and bloodshed. Some of these men have no property to te destroy-ed, but.there are others who have property, and if they have no regard for political opponents, the Ought to remember that in times of tumult they may become the victims, instead of the indiscreet men who are forming secret political leagaetand going round calling - Democrats traitor,at.d other epithets. ? These are times when it behooves erery good citizen tot ase bis. Mtioost indaenca for $ he maintenance of order, instead inciting by, hu acta and words, ill (celing batret aad; a spirit of reyengf among men.; , f,e, caution the B. publicMa leaders, o beware exe it is too Mate., Jo, our lellow Democrats, wt would aay, be dirVr M give no. cause tor an outbreak., IWA'uMa oorselves like a ejeaarmr oCtrntU r bekiadt our principles, and awaiV OrenU, pj pruleut reserve we can do mora tbi i:an? rotber ;way io -dieaw Wr n-mlfvrml 4U,f.U r auditors (1m? Cm Itd3th EegtmenK W ar rhmiia Cadixr-- rOU AbratamVXfot wfioitSrec tbe army Ttar. J'thei2o' Ertira.mu acomitiV Into cam pretty boa ad for'fliaIIortbf I impp6 yotrwi'.l 'Cnd,uj pleyttivt fit aWortltCifiKr- -llttf airwrVRt bafi I'jr ;Prts.!iJitayte aert rjJtspatjraiIf ae male tJi'em CjLt, I sup BOMXhef will waef to Vote- 4t:ilim "i doo itf llilK Govcrtrieit, 1 WttHZZtf , the Ohio PsauM-isi.) THE The Sbtsdert glat ; tie Den&crcy Expoted Seatlaesti cf Xexdia; He-putliejtln and Denocntio Stitecaea-8hnring who are the' Frieadi of the .TJnion. - " - ' We call the whole people tgethet as a jury submit to them the following evidence ionciiing me joyaiiy 01 ioe uttpuwican anj Democratic parties.. Partis Ibave diatinct principles and theme principle are enunciated Drincinlea an enunciated by the standard bearers of tbe different par ties, and the masses of the respective parties follow their standard bearers, aad by so doing adopt and indorse their sentiments. Here and there a leader will give, oat aentiraents that his party is not bound by, but when yoa find the majority of the leading men of a party expressing tbe same ideas it is conclusive that hose ideas represent the principles of the par ty, and every follower of uch inew is bound hereby. By this test we will first try the Re publican leaders, every one of whom is now in high places in the Administration. We will take their own almissions. which is the strong est evidence known to the law, - to produce conviction Let every honest Republican now pay attention, while we have the witnesses sworn and examined : 8WXAK THADDKCS BTtrXKS. I will not stultify myself by supposing that we have any warrant "injbe Constitution for tins proceeiing, Thw talk of restoring the Union as it was. under the Constitution as it is. is one of the MtkHurrdities which 1 have beard repeated until I have become sick alout it. The Union can never te rertoied as it was. There are many tiling! which render such an event impossible. This Union never shall, with my consent, be retoretl under the Constitution as it is. with slavery to be protected by it. Thaddxps Stbvims, Tbe Administration leader in Congress. The above is an extract from a speech of his, delivered in Congress. 8WKAR UOKACX CKBKLKT. From the New York Tribaae, (KspaMicaa,) Fesraa- ry.iwx. Speaking for ourselves, we can honestlv sav that the old Union, which was kept in existence by Southern menaces and Northern ion-cessions, we have no Tegrets and no wish . for its reconstruction. . Who wants a Union which is nothing bnt a sentiment to lacquer Fourth of July orations withal ? SWEAR W. MT OASKISON. The Fremon! party is ewonldtng public een-tmietit in the right . direction for the specific work - the Abolitionists are striving to accomplish the dissolution of the Union, and the altolition of slaverv throughout the Jatid. W'U J'tyi (WWW. . . . . . SWEAR WEN Dtt.L PHILTM. ' . ' " Resolved, That .the Constitution of. the Uiiiteii .Slat- is a covenant with death, and an agreement- with bejl, which ought to be intinediately aimuild." I'kUips in a Boston Meeting. SWEAR JOHN" A. BIJiaHAST. Who, in the name of Heaven, wants the Cot ion States, or anv other State this xi.er of perdition, to remafn'.in the Utiiou if elaverv is to continue 1 Hon. Mr. Jio.ham. Mr,: Bin "haul Ii.ih Uen a Republican Coa- greretnen iroiu Ulno tor leu years, and ts a prM-aive candidate of that ; party tor Gov ernor at the next election." SWEAR Mnxr. SDCtRTOV. . 1 tell von there actX 1 tr tn (m m A !umliit!ni of that ijuioo. aift I do not care how auiak it comes; all I want is to give tbosa fellow (the O . . . I . 111 ... ... . ooumroitn; a good ncKing ana men kick tbetu out. dirtnej IiMlgerton. Mr. E.lgerton is another Bepublican member of Congress from Ohio. SWEAR BKNJ. J. BTAXTO. Seven or eight States now denv their alleri- atif e to this Government : have orsanized a eeparate Confeleracv, and have declared their independence ot this Government. Whether that independence is to be maintained or not. is with the future. If tbe? shall maintain their position, and if public opinion in the se ceded .states shall sustain the authorities there lor a rear or two to come, so as to show that nothing but a war of subjugation and con quest can bring them back, I, for one, am dis posed to recognize their independence. Ban. F. Wanton, February 28, 18C1. Stanton ia tbe Republican Lieutenant-Gov ernor of Ohio, and was formerly a Bepublican member of Congress. Ilia speech, above was delivered in Congress. SWIAa BEX VAUX. The only salvation of the Union, therefore, was to be found in divesting it entirely from all . taint or slaverv. There was no union itb tbe South. Let us bare a Union, or let tw sweep away this reruaant which we call a Union. ,1 go? for a Uokm where -all men art equal, or for no .Union at all, -and I go for right. Extract from F, . Wa&'s -Mauu spsecA, 186o,;;-. . ; .. . .... . . - ; jtow twaaa'A lot . or tux, ; ; : From the speech of Carl Scburs ia Efew u jsaivV ircao aoi-'be.7it rd1 f From Mat. Carpenter apeech at Chicago: . "Tbeae. caviling Cbatnwa snwra mvak sow eotuelo ttmel; ' ' .' , ', In tsorUWes. dtt&ercMwtfxnile4 power.?, ' i J"rom Heorr Ward.. Beecber.. whoa acwa. paper fmbrishea th taw of tha Uaited Statea, , ! A jeat tuany peopJ rajsa aarj about tat v ion ana i nevnsii i ur ion. aa uue tvo taen- Tcal ; buttb truth is Os ktletn tbefomndatiokandfatM warpaatak.arMrtuerAM aJo- I ; mom xs.p. zseoiui t ; .V: I ' "I am willing, ia a certaib atate of circusa Tliia Bpeecb w dalirercd ia 1855.; ; There can be no Union till slaverr ia stroyed. xfrrfra4 0a Ixxxfry -Epttd. svaue ezir.Vsrtn. " i say, 1 om notjor iAt imm w e aijnmti - Understand me ; I was Tor the Union as it' was, becanse T saw, or thottrb.t I saw lfpon bot having undergone tlKsetrotJea. ; fcrring spent all this blood,' and this treasure. f "do not measi to' go tacfc again anl be cheek t-fJ.'Jo' wtU boutb Carolina a 1 was before. if 1 can help it: (Cheers ; You're rightl) 'J : Extaact from' Gen. Butler's speech ia Hew . York, A pril, 1863. . ; V''-" : - . ' . . 8 WX A R TBE OHIO ST A TI J017RX A L. .' The Union baa done nothing for freedota. Then why should ireemea deplore the losf 0 the U nion. . . Separate, peaceful - existence . of the- sections are preferable to a Union .which ia dissatisfactory to . one, aad wbicb : retard the progress of the other." - . .. , . , , .Ohio State Journal, Mareb 27, 1SS1. Having shown that the leading Republicans are opposed to restoring the Union., we- will proceed to prove that the leading roes of the Democratic party are for the old Union.-"' "W. first call some witnesses wbo are enemjes of the Democratic party. " ' - HEAR TI. H. SSVAitD. . I know tbe Demoeracy - f the "North." I know them now in their watdng "strefigth. I do not know a possible disunionist among them all. I believe that thev will be as faith ful to .tbe Union now as they were in the by gone days when their ranks were full, and their challenge to tbe contest was always tbe war-cry of victory. Win. II. Seward 1861. In this country, it is a habit not only entirely consistent with the Constitution, but even essential to its stability, to regard the Administration at any time existing as distinct and separate from the Government itself, and to canvass the proceedings ot the one without the thought of disloyalty to th other. Secretary Seward 1862. . ... BEAR CONORE8SWAK COXWAT. 1 "jThe Democrats will hoi of course listen to separation for an instant. ' Such a suggestion in their eyes is treason, for which one ought to be hanged. Their plan fa simply to oppose the Administration on its anti-slavery policy and on that issue to carry the country. . Extract from the speech of Ir. Conway, Republican Congressman from Kansas, in Congress, Feb. 1863. ' : ' HEAR SENATOR CO WAIT. . " ' Sir, I had rather have tbe moral and mater rial aid of the Democratic jarty in this war than all the legislative projecta that could be hatched in the brains of a Coneress coiuposed entire! jr of reformers.'. r ; , .,':- Extract from a speech of Senator. Cowan. Republican, in U. S. Senate; from Pennsylva oia, March 2d, 8C3 . :;; hoit. wx. nriR, or xew tork. I certainlv can- enter info no combinations wilh Republicans to oven brow the D mocrats 1 hey are in the msm loyal and patriotic.-- rhev-are the chief bulwarks azamst the as saulta of the Northern dimionts. Upon them reals in a treat decree the hones of the union. Extract from the letter of Wm. Duer, a Clay .Whig, of N.V., to a Republican Convention in 1802. - ;.. . . - . HEAR THE NEW TORE. TIMES. ' . J ne iNew York times, reckless as is Hs coarse roward the Democrats, concedes f April ith, 18o3) that Governor -.Sevmoor and Par ker Jusc sAotoa a disposition to lift afaqer io- war J etu6arrasing Preidet t Lincoln and it has 1 no Jifutt thai thev will tTtctHollv co-oneraU with. him whenever or however it shall be found ntcetsa- ry. v - ' . - : Having given the testimony of some of tmr political enemies,' as to "the' position' of 'the Democratic party we now call live Demo crats to the stand. " ' ' ' TAXLAIDICHAX TOR THE tTXtOX. " It is in the restoration of the Union as it was in 1798. and continued for' over ' seventy years, that I am bound to the but hour of my .... , . . . - . - political existence. The above is an extract from a Jate speecb delivered ia Congress by tbe Hon, C. L. Val- landigbam, of Ohio. .i.. HEAR WX. A. aiCHARPSOW. '.' Without the Constitution and tbe Union there i no liberty no Government and whatever stands in thtir way I am prepared to strike down. Whatever stance in tbe way of our Government and its integrity, must be destroyed. But I do not propose to go beyond tbe Constitution. -'- - ."' - Extraet from speech of Wm. A. Richard son. Democratic Congressmau of Illinois, March 10. 1862. v.. 'r:. : tho. b. svTxoca roar the vaiox. We solemnly dedicate Oarselvea, apd1 'all we bold dear to a restoration of the Union as it wax. : To thu and. tbe ranks of out armies shall be kept Aill,' and tbe Treasorj of ' thet aation replenished." . - . -r I am for getting; back tbe . Sotttbera; States by fair and honorable meanril ueb' a' tblng bijnossible ; and 1 wilj hope for the best.' " The Union I desire. ia a ; unioa ' of bearti and of hands, such a our fathers gav us. ; Nothing lea will alisfjr me ibaa the wbol Simtbera Stater. 1 H"" H: ' ' '-;,- "vlS Pcmocratici' caodidata 4b 0o veTTioi of Coa? aaiat.r.-, Extract from- a lata epeacb.' - -. . 7 f o;.rTav Aioif, or ioarioV 1 1 u The Temoeraer o tbe North went witt;op pose sepanuiOB to tne iasi. ; tney wm enng-to tbis Unioa a tbe unfbrlanata' mariner elinea UlbebutJWTc2 oT4bo" nn1foriaaata462lL Extract from bis speech OFeb, 2, 1863, VV : cvci j5jt n?a fxaTwi: fVba miam,Af tbe Damocrattd "party to aattl 4bt Conaatation-: Ujr tariB It,? I mean tbat you are ta aTav it for ?t&p .-whole . - e n.m ,aar tr6m: 3? i sTaaX BOX. S, Jf. COX itt k - Vr wma o : i Cor UtatSeM,'" W Upioa. bat tbe oae that we knew before 4eo kxax xox. a . cox tMaJ paniea ectniwiaieO UieJr Work ha tred. It is foathie CowtkcUoa aa4 this Cai-4 c ra eKIOfuaeramy'iaftoVM larotit ita blood on tbttC4atata tor, W the tatleys aad aa the pUiisB.:Xtaaao(, lelW DeoMcrata. ecase to guard; 4efe4 aad protect aad prise Jt above all earthly gpod.-' - - - f Extract from UapeaV ? :v v fe'.taTuicva . -f Whether we -voted Ibf tb present Admini wtraiioa pr not. we are equaiiT" interested ra preserrjnjr the Govern then td - Adminiattiions are buf for a daTw": .Thank Go.1. this . eountrr ia ours.4 ' We had-better expend alt wi Bare in presertink a wd lea vtnit to.our children than to ieavf them anything else v:yx , bxixact worn as .rpeec at ..Washington, HXAB SXXATOR TEX ETCTC, r XW JIRSET. "Sir, all our measurea here sbonld be to save tbr Unkm.and the Constirutioti.' This war is for tbe.Cotedtuttonr abd to comoel obe-' diehceo it. ' 1 i ' - ; . Extract .from' 'tbe speeca; 'oT-Senator! Tea Eyck, Deinxer)t.il62,?.:it Xy?-- im aon axrxocR or xiw Toar. J v " We ineit"iipoeVbediee to laws and rea- pect for constitutional authority. : W mean with all our power of mind and person tosup- uon ioe vwwutouon ami urnoid the union. We wish to see our Uulon-?eaved. our laws vindicated and peace once more restored to our im. : ' ' - ; Extract from speech,' of ;ljoratio Seyrooor, Democratic Governor of New York, Sept. 10, 1862, ' ..-I:. " . :. : : LAST WORDS OF STSFHX A. aoVOLAS. - On his deathbed, b iit -wife: asked the dying standard bearer of the Democratic party tf he md any message to send urbi sona. Railing for a moment.' his eve flashing.' hi whole frame dilated, Tell tbeni.sald be " to oy the laws and support the Constitution of tbe United "States'." " ' -'T prophest or oix. Said the old hero to a friend at the hermit age a short time before bi death: "Tbe Abolition' partr bri disloval organi zation-.' Its" pretended lore Ibr freedom means nothing more nor less than a diswolution of the Union; Honest men of all parties should unite to expose their intentions and arrest their progress. .'".' " ' 1 " -' jraorHEsr or paxieL webstr'r. "If these fanatics and Abolitionists ever get power in their bands they ' will over ride it votisiKuuon, set me supreme court at dep-anre, change and . hiake law . to suit thera-setves. lay violent band on. those who difier with them in opinion., and-finallv baukruut j ne country and deluge it with hlood7 Keuiai ka of Pamel .Wbter. ia 1850c ; " . . ' ""Wer?P 9 1 . , - .... A Eairoa Ban iter--., -.i-i t-- v7--- In the Mt. Vernon RpMican ' ofth e 231 ult.; will lie found an article, said to have e menated from the jn .of one -Geo. O. ni)l. 2d Ijeut. Co- A. 4th O, V. 41., in which lie pnbTighes a note said to be a " verbatim et IM- eratvre" copy of one received '-frommytfelt--Now, Mr. Efilor, I wish to. give you a true statement of the fact connected with mv send ing copies of VaiUndighftia's speecben to Mr. Hill, and for which be1 bftterly complains, de nouncing the act aa being a traitorous one in myself, Tlat I did send cooies of Vallandigham's speeches to Mr.' Hill I do not deny;" but as to tne note puoiiKiiea wtin a is tetter oemg a ver batim copy of iho one sent to him by myself. it, is false 'a' charge a could be made and couhi only originate' io the addled ' brain of each "Linc-toola:' aa LieuU flilX,' JBut to the consistency ot Mr. Hill -in charging f me with traitorous conduct, in forwarding' bint copies of the epeecbei of the said Vallandig bam. ' ' f :i ' ' ' ' - ; ' Previous to tbaait lltU a-, promotion ' to a 2dXient'. position, - be was second sargeant in Co. A. of the4tb Qhio Regt myself serving ' ,r private capacity'',, in the same Cjo. t was necessarily much la company with Mr. Hill, and have frequently beard bim say Che war waa conducted on unconstitutional 7 principles. and bad vio higher aim than the liberation of tb slaves' of tb aoutbl 1 bare beard bim call tbe President U,S, more bard aames than be eyeMid tbe ' devils and frequently, say be was tired of; fighting Abolition battles, and that if he could; onoe ret out of tbe array tbey would never get him back again; aad further. there is in tbi placet a; discharged aobliet of the 4th Regt that has heard binr say that it be eould not jret ootoffb army bonorablr. 1(0 could ,dp, aoin ;v 4ibonbrablV maanjer s aod to whkb J4. dacbarged -eoldier ready tOttStrff, ' ' J ! ; ? . -i. -; - l rBut since gfomotioo, tRarlr bow:bi aeht(-' mS U iansard jo, fbaW J cbafged 10 ow talks loud of U0 and JUbtrty,'usUia- ing tba ExwsbUraaatbpritr abaddinr tEe but drop of Upod,a.nd many other .jwtriotiebraa-re. Jail botuTOiar wbaooaverting nower -tra la aaJncTeasip Backa or awilbly aalary I : Ynr-JtlriEdU tor, if fae fiadreeatred . Ui It'a. ebnfmla- aioa, Dfl would Qav laueo aown ad worsbip- Y MfI4jnrWe., QfMvtxuma ironw who b aoqaaioted with Oryill wlUfbr !.eoo- tea it? fci rail leiLIta iatber thjiiac :Vom ;we leave it for tba r6plbjof!Cly-id i a tba r'JatfEt.est oft fi':u!lx-lV":V.c it' tt mentsappos bltrto be the real aatber cf the leltef aiapvoye btafe!niU5 (ntbe Bfiff el iH,'b..?n jW.MTt rrit- ,4eciv3 5ia;a-tb8.p"5fEt..aiatwfrsooii laadl'banT, Kit .call in tb arar .jaf hia'siaalle Wa doaot now bataluuiaU objeeta tba bav ia it f iA it f wbJcbHr ?ry mucb ooubt) tbey really- barbor tba tSe- wg ol"Tmbliiair tbe anloa f all tbe Sftrteaj ia aaf sbapVaad aaJer aajr ;0tlt- Uon whatever, tbey set about it In a Tery awk ward wninaer '-' - c.sjfiij;... L i Ia tbe first plaee, tbey bav by tbeir Uafor- tuikate emsRcipaUoa poQcyi'aJieaated every v .".. wnw . m jwwr otater; so mat wt boJd .Wary land, Jlissouri, Kentacky aad J, aeasee, only br milhary oorttpatiosi oaj- do jmtmoa over those States stretchtag ao farther i wan me range oi oar guns, and obedience to irv .w ooiy aetaared at tba point of tbe bayooei.-: j AH these border State, if the war ceased to-moTrow. wotildTrequtre, as tbey now do tbe! presence' ofa large military .force ; tbeir sympatbies for tbe South being . sow atroager than at tbe beginning of this unfortaaaie frat ricidal war. ' v - ' " Tbtcottates; if they, were placed to subjection to-niorrowV would only wait for a freab opportunity to rise, and tbetr people Would toolc with suspicion and hatred on every manr whet bef adventurer or capitalist,' 'who BiiuuHi iic so asiortnnaie, as ;y settle among tbem. v TberV 4 woahl baf private lends . ud breaches of tbe. peace, whk-b, apart from a threatened rise en masse, would render the pres- erit ui a arge conatavuiary force iirrrsoarj to public tranquillity. . . . The Aliobtioo war. ia now devattinV th " ,".!T'".'k"1TO"', jwiu yei we' nope, alter the establishment of peace, to wring taxes from an impoverished people.- In the ui mates of the Secretary of the Treasury, a large ixtciiuc iivw wiernw ua ui reel taxes was expected from the revolted States. The U. State taxes were imaginahly assessed among them as, in reality, among the people of tbe North; hut it is alolutelv certain that tbe . Southern fcrfate will be unable to par them.: and that the whole burthen, of taxation, will fall upon tbe North. Tha. while we shall reomrc. a large sUnding army to keep tbe &outb in sub jection, we shall le oJdiged to Aaxlhe North wita the support or that army,, and spend so manj million oi Northern money annually in the Southern States to support and feed our trOOpa... ;-. t ; j. -ij.:-f;--: & . .-.... Im case ot war Mkb ,a foreigw'power. tbe South will become our Vendue, brwhieb we will require fortified "places and lanre earri- sons to prevent the people from taking sides witb the enemy History tells us. on every one of its pages, llutt j national dislikea and bat ret bs are hereditary, that they arexraas-raittet from sire to son for generations an J centuries, and.that it is precisely among kindred nations, or people of the same oriein. that (liese hatreds are most' intense and last-n. , Taketbe example of Poleaawd Russian. PrtuviauA andr Aneirians. Dines and Germans, and, in antiquity. Atbeii!is.andSnartaniii IThirty years e0-the UniD'ror' Nicholas o ferrd .the cower of bis youth to . the armv of i Caucasus- ami tbe men to Iberia; but the women who remained ami who married Russians, brought their children up in the hatred of Russia; and after : a generation, the ehi! dren have g-Own into tbe men who are now in auts to avenge the wrongs inflicted on the lad of their mothers, v. No country wa ever so completely conquered and subdued as Gaal by Ji ucs C&sar ; yet. after generations, the (i an Is remained and the Romans disappeared. A thousand vears later. Cbiilmiiiki ik Prauk. conquered Gtul again, and engrafted hi coun try n name. ' France.". 01 bis" conquest. The Gauls became Fraakuh men. or Frenchmen, in aame? Iut not in feelinv or jangaage. and they nave paid the original rraaka-aud tbeir kinsmen the Germaae. witL compound interest, tbe injuries, and humilia tions they suflered at their hands. ' :; ' But it is neeiilese to multiply the examples of I hat sort,; which must naturally, euggest themselves to everr reader of bistorr. No military conquest endured, unlesfttheconqaer- ea people were admitted on equaJ terms to the community oi toe conquerors,, partaking .wnfJ .1 hem, in all respects, of the same, political righ is a hd , pnv tlegea. . Tbe same- srincfple win mid ns application here. We may -fight the Soutliernera aa we -pleaser we mav drive them from -oae part of the country to tbe other, we may kill and destroy the fl"wer of their male population, we way drive tbe men ' iBto exile; but in this manner we shall never succeed in tnakine tbetn our friends. Thee ; will continue, to hate uv and i tbe Northern mea tliemsel ve who may go and live in tbe South. wjw oecome lioutliera men jo ieclweand. mar rying Southern women, will beeomeefiemtea at the heart of tbeir Northern brethren. JTai i a law of nature, against wbicb no' human power and no avstem of pailoopbr or. ethics nan prevail, and without which any dominant race might Jong ago have , conquered and de- aesiroysd an oiner.. Yet the HLrher Law men " who their inspirations from the passions of (amities and demagogues, believe themselves equal to a task which, neither Roman nor Persian. Greek W Tartar." Norman or Frenchman, neither Mahometan. Uhrtstiao or Jew,, ever accomplished I Jknd to that chimera tbey sacrifice, now,' tbe 'bonor, fame, wealth! and blood of the country I, .'i Attitnio xf raac toti TJaiUd CtAUal i Tba . Faria i eorrespondent of tbe Loodos ThMt' writes' aa foHotr -1 bear from various auarter that tbi ' distress occasioned ': br 'the cfoa famifls ia bv ao means on tha decresseL anoviimBomeujjng mow ,oe oons prevent lit. i J? . J what wbicb- th interaal tranquility tb ampir among tbe manufacturing class.; -It is believed that sooneKor jUticoerciv meaaurea wI3 become I tbe'Koribera .iierv-iat nesolratioaa 1rilt le ; resumed ? Let we a 'fl Cnrlia and FretKaSoveranienia.wiibaL to.tntrr.'Tcsij cf some kind, r If tL satepafa kea tr l ;ac3 tt. as&iE-ton - bare taJad. ft b f rttty eertala liat the.meastirea. adoTt&J tor.irij 1 xica trilUaoaa! Li: crowaei jariii ti Ia l.ZT tUlsctica tar rrr-i- r l.tf tiarsJ r. iuri f r".. y l'. n "'. :' tr : i ;:-rb M aow atmply "criaia" from aqairtnr. a year, nence; tne maimuBGe or a disaster " roi2bt;"baTe. erioua eonsMueBcea m 7 .M a ri"-gT- Ti J 1 TTkick Kiawlwm ink akar, - Vf i-i Ami, saadrUg; tob a tthm Is mmsl tLmVb Ctoi. t2ta wt2L -f' Iftbry w War ara taaiU t-: ; tnUewtoaBaa.taat still I - . ' f Vae staada im Csaess as stoat Saal f- ' , H ks4 aaa sk Vises bigWr tkaa aU i JXu tank sssailsatSj gnu aa uaaQf '-"' - ,:,wW was II Ibr TaenTaaws i - Caio's mm Beastss Tim, - --i; Vttfwka Wtvuj Wad, -Arwtdr . - ' ' ' '. SI . Tai i AswaaAX. Wke fa tba xaa ef irse eaonld, Bravfag the storm wttb Vesring bold, ; " A Gsrr aad JirVia aidof oM t - . - U.i:" U :-...r V' - .TAtXAxataaux- ' -' ' ' . t ' "T1 wbea Ibis vsiga'af atadaesi aads. ' ' :' , WiS Sad im aU tb g4, bis Meaia, "... ;:, Aa4 tot ais wioaga kava great iiarads? ': :. ' ' -. ': TAUASSieaAX.' i ki::t-tTtbal!UwarkAvr - " ' 1 ,i Self-Gorerxtme-at. ' ;v ' It is the eonstant habit of Governor Tod and others, when refering to tbe present dvfl war. to speak of it a a struggle to test the ea pacify of the people for aelf. government. ' If mere was truta m that, viewj)S the case bere- , " - .- a a V- ----- - - fc - -.--- - . tofbre, certainly there ia grave doubt' thrown arcwd it by the mroada whicb the Federal Admintstratioa has been graiasjly making on. tbe right of tbe People. A brabam ' Lincoln. as Commander-io Chief, haa riven order Jbrough fam subordinate Generals, that?Y Peo- ptre o longer to oe auowe.1 to' differ with or eottdrmn the policy on which be conducts tbe war. Is thw what the Kepublicans mean by aelfGoverament? What nehthas Lincoln to prescrile such a rule ? ; Are the People' bis slaves, or are tbey still freemenIf - Are the officials at Washington (Lincoln mctinleil. ) mas ter of tbe People, or their servants? Is the Prestttent a Moaarcb that the People have no right to examine and condemn boidlr and un- qualihedly. any policy, whether in ace or in war. which they believe to lie destructive to to the lest interests' of them'ves, of their children, and of the Uiiion? If they teliee the war policy of the: Adnunifi ration i the result of pressure,,rbrougbt upon it ly. wicked and ambitious men whe have ihj wish to save the Union, are tbey serfs that the shall not be allowed to sav so? . ? ! : - Tbe course of the Feileral AdministratKm seettis equivalent to .denying the ca pacrty rof tbe reople lor self-eovernment. v if thw is not tbe true interpretation of its conduct, then the President of tne United States, admittincrtbeir capacitv. has assumed to deny that thev have a right to hold or exprem any opinion differ ing from his own tn reference to tle policy of the war and its good or bad influence' on7 the eountrr. - - :; ' -r " " - ' Against this course at Wesbineton. we en ter the otitspoken protest of air American ciii-ren." In doing tbV we feel, before God. " that we not ale exercise a freemanV- ri-hti ; but what ia of bigher moment, discharge "ja1 free man's dutv. .- If we subject ourself to military duress therefor, we ehall neither ly our own effort nor that of our friends, seek to resist an arrest. -We shall patiently bide the issue of events. In the mean time, we shall trust that he Administration wilt discover in the fact that its measure wont bear the criticism of an ntelligent peoule. a convincing reason for doutung their expediency The Designs of tb. Abolitionists---Th9ir - I&tentioa to EsUblisa sv lIoriaxehT, . Day by dar tbe evidence accumulates to prove that it is the design of the Abolition party to entirely overthrow our system of Gov- ernment, and to establish a monarchy on its . : rw. f a i - ruiua. au ireqaciii an UHgran . rioiaiioas of the Constitution perpetuated by Lincoln's Administration are too fresh in the minds of the people to aeed recapitulation.- The latest one is Lincoln's proclamation admitting into the Union aa a State a few counties m Hbe north-western par of Virginia, which no more constitute a State than Crawford Count v does. and which have-no more legal or const national righi to enter the Union-- a a State than Crawford County baa. The Destitution. how-J ever, is nothing to Lincolovho Jias Irani pled it under his feet every week since be bas been in office! What be and his Aduiinistratioa aretrying to do what they 'are dstermioed to fto-r-ia to invest Mr.' Lincoln's sucoessor, - for all time, to come, wita the kingl powers which ,Jhe now wields. ;The Piiiladejphia Prs. one of the chief organs of the Adminuv tration, boldly says,': that Our -Governmeat rau be reorganized What we want is pow-. er and strength. Tbe MobJem will be to com bine the arms of a republican ; govern m'eDt with the strength 6t"si monarcfrv.-, And tba item simenam, nnoiner Ainu nisi ration journal savs i M-Tbia war bas shown that the pow er o." theGovermik at must be vnJunitcJ."-These atrocious seotimeata are-, daily -quoted oere. and warofiy appiaaaed. ;, I o this com-pexMJn.thea. have we been brougbt be 'Abo lirioo rule. What will ' the- remaining two yeara unas wnn it.rwrora j-mrttnu.r. . R M a . wm a wm w OeaersJ JohiLllorsan aaif t(i -I7iia. I Our -dispatches . last week stated that- tbe rtfe o? General Momax,. tbe scorioua. guer- miA, Had teeu t&xeo a prwoner. . A correa- pondeot of tba Rkbrnoad Enjwvrt jm a letter from tba McMiawiyille givea the' following de- aeriptioja of Moaaia and, bi. young :wife;. Johx MoaoAX i not my moxlel lor fnAeox; is, nor IU wiis altosetber wftjvijt Mxwct. In strict obeervsca aa4fOod loeediag, tbey are toth 'air tt pea oi lbs- better eaaaf mea and "womewr ia, tba ta;ia - States j firotn wbicb tbey relatively ' springTbe Oos tall,r florid and full--aa athletie, eigorous ' personl used Xo extJOMr,; bard ridmg and Uiign clear, bloodaflf hair aad beitpyand eyea of ' grayiab bias M.ffc s,eoTneJysirv fpmpuZUeX forallasoioely graeefol a are toot JfoaWg womea of sou ad" health anT edaeation. IXis Rcnar was tae2aubtc ofjDaaaua Crror. ot Ceedy ville. A bisryerof -emineace, a matt cf talesn. lad fcr aaeeial'y esrait a fimi r ia X ::;rciJ Ills tsAf. LavevLaJ -t!l e;.J - al-'wa ii t' s si a! -3 th srcj-t1 i ,t.?wu.t 3- 1eaF daya-av "fcHouTa; ia LzZLL 2 alaa dleda fctreU tcfre, lea Ic- ct ; km Vftt TsA IW.' L f betweea wbeaa existad a lad.sitelalIr'tLii i tbey aboeJd aaaTry eae atb fceaj lili were freed irom legal Ampedimeatg, tLuzJ respective partaeW tbea r living; .Tbe gesUj maaa wiic, U appeara, was tbe firrt to tali'i-aeraeil good aatsredly 2; aad aooa kJ1owc4 tbe lady'a bosbaadV 'Ia lb inea&lim bj! ever. Mrs, BaibLxr ia4"loaadiinl a third lover, arbom aba liked tb beet, ud 14 rcfed to com ply with i be condition efJaef bond.T To tbia .docuraeBt waa attached a peculiar pes alty," and', the discarded .lover commenced '' . suit a poo it, wbicb tbe fickle widow' pmpoeed to defend.' r Her weddiag day" wa Hxed As4 every thing in -xeadleese .fbc; -tbereeremoayi I when she suddenly sickened aad died-Jcavic.-r . oer nvai suitors in ineiarcn H&e one tosw-r the "amount of bfs bond, and tbe other bU T bnde, with tbe balance of ber Ibrtatn?. Irbica - now goee to ber late basband'a rebtUvea.-.:If you can. beat the. romance of tbi. biatorj i Hake my bat. itcu ia a una van iu America, yob. esa m.m. T..J- vji ;j i : -f Tbe Loyal Leaguers ot Zaneatine tldaglt to make a IhtW Wpftal by getfng a tpee '" from CotUawkiua a paroled prisoner. We learn that Colonel Hawkins toad aa interesting discourse. -"lie gave tb I.ers soma ihform'atioR that voukl be useful La iKrn-v if they. would only lieed tVdonel Hawkins informed the Leaguera that be was a Ufliea , a a a a a - a a man, ana would ngni tne rebeia until the ua armed retet laid down his arms. .But b, wsa4 no abolitionist.-v". Be owned slaves, aad 'Jzqw.' a true Union aian- iu Teuaeseee ibat owpedT . , ; three hundred slaves. Colonel -Ha.nkinstp.ldy the Leaguers I that he did nof appro te th pol1 icy of Abraham Lincoln, bis eabiaet.' or-thsr last Coogma. Such a policy aa tbey ink iatad i was calculated to unit Southern mea and prolong the war. lie ridiculed the idea "that tbe slaves would revolt and make war a tbeir masters.' lie had.twenty negroes, and be Ss-.-fieif any abolitionist present to steal or seduced bis negroes .to run otf. Colonel Uawkins said . the Republican party bad not managed the, se-cession difficulty sensibly or , successfully, and( , be' had bis doul4s whether thev could succeed! without they, soon changed tbeir policy. Tbei ' Loyal Leaguers experienced a cold abowcr . A Bogus Union AddxessV C The Ohio SUtesmaa saris . - . ..' : Z ' The ' Administra'tion member of tbe lata General Assembly bare published aa address to the Ohio oldeits, - Its tone aad. texture are the same that characterize tbe :ebtieeeriajc."' articles wbicb wt find daily in Repablieaa pa-. ' pers.- Theplyed out" Senators aad jRep f reeentatives assume to speak for tbe royal peo' pie of the State l That is decidedly cool, wheA' the fact ia considered that they are repodiatfd--aiid reprobated by tbe people. .Our brave, and, gallant soldiers will duly appreciatthfaourea. from which it emanates,' aad treat it a it 'ds- ' serves t be treated. , ' The names of Hon? Martin Crain and UoavV A. Thorp, are signed to this 'document-, wjtbV; out tbeir knowledge or consent "Tbey werat" ' elected, in 1861. by tbeso-cled Uic rjarty ' I.... .i i . t i . i. m 4 uui , ii nu wilder wriuug ui 1. nry mrm nfwt sound and reliable Democrats. The political tricksters and demagogue who get up tb Ad. 1 dress; ought to be careful bow they siga otbex ' people's names to their lectioneering doca- ' raents, without authority to do so. - Tbey will. certainly not promote, the iuteresta of tbeir T party by it. " ' '-. v- :. ' . Mr. Patterson's Bams is also arresdedV anot?-be bas been in bis grave tar Meeral weakaf - .r- -,- ; r : The Harmony of Ksuaicil ;i' I 1 The old "Articles of Agreement-mada t tween Greelyi Raymond, Ttnd tbsls brother. Abolitiouists, on tbe one side, aad, the :'eces sionista of the Southern State on. ih other; A side, by which veacKbouDd Ihemselves to .Iba. . other to lalor for one couimoa end the des V truction of the old-Union, bated by botb,ranl,. the overthrow the ConathutiooT obstractivs tO -' tb e scbemesoC botbrr-a ppear still, (q 114 good-Tbe Richmond IVkia. Secession organ. pub - 1wbes an attack" upon-Gen. McCJeiiaa, wbcv tintuBla. tonvther witb all Xhtf AtHtion oreaita ' of tbe State; re-produce tba Whig's assaalt up. ? op the UnioaCbramaadef aad xoslca taerrr a over ru auemptsa luernese.- ; -: 4 --.i 'r 1 It is fittine that these 'brothers, in arm.'.. wbo have together Tailed at tbe" Constitatioo-anl reviled the Union ia bygone dava,1 tbouI4t no unite m denunciation of tbe? soldier -wbor ' haa proved faubfal to the one and risked biar life torjrhe-otber, -- It was-to "be expected jHat their estimation of Mcdellaa would prove birr; monions. and that bis removal from tba ' coip.- rna'ntt of the Federal forces would b sxxfeep able to the enemr he would bare subduedj c3h to tbe Northern traitors who hate tbeUsicu-he would bave restored. T. MrgnC It is rather aremarLable fact thatlia aIo-t. Ktioa Lepidature of 1801-2 refoaed to pass aau; -1 act rjermittfng the soldiers is the anr; v ta Tcti t alleging tlat eutb. aa act would .be tinae; ,but.fipdin siaca tb't .ti3Je t ' t,t- DeniocTata' were largely in the biajo:. y : phioTaAd that Abolition igra Liu4 5 ndj-t r b something cxmlJ la doua to; aa t.3 LeUIatare otiC2-3 wer.t to work at cv----.: if their 4foasUtauoniJ scmjlcs, trj t'. lz' r. i. yDceesded, stt r&x ta ri a Izrt i;' .r- ;. tog tb itoL!'?r to relet and r-?. tr ' standing tier are two D?n:c:rt a tic Uoalit ia tis I i.,.-J trrT.v t eSJirs' ti zin L bossi that iLtr v ;U c eleetianaU Cctdcr. t : t 2. cry V . soL'lcrs ic:.!l.Lrrs to,'. c '-r. e- ' ' t Abolition t''-et, itV- z L ' ' - ' ;: zZzllzstzTi ct M-z':---r izil ;;;r:. U cDte;t ; a- ti . lie, l-:y c; j - rt ':-;'J r.-.'';.v"':f-J-' t after the pattern of its Northern ailica, it troa t icailyjdcetguaten a the Young , Napoleon and the New York 7hmes and TViitow. Abol - k : ll ;. i t . 3 "' r .Ui.S. eapreme;Jud iaTTcji; - '(Iri &U::tX t'fr . . ,"it '-..-" i "-"; - . ' ' ' 1 ' ' ' . ." . ' " ( 4,: , 'wHMBkarf. 1 f 1 1 m 11 m isnc ". -- ilff . - L 0 :Ti0w f.- be-" W 4.. - rf i 1 tit.4;:aw,jc:;ii t . fCIru fa rr J '.v:- Jr,. u; ;r - t 1 : ' ''", ., .. . f. ... ...4,'"..V1-Ji.C, .f |