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- : . In HAEPEB, .' k- j In, eodwsr4 Blekr3l Htsu-y. JJCBMS Two .Boilers per snnsun, piyalleiVaci. Tinee; $1.50 within six months: $3.00 after the expi ttoh eftlnYyear.- .'..-- A- J 1 , , BROCGII'S PLATFOftlf J -Jfo Iea60 Until Slavery is Torn'' Out, Eoot and Branch. ! j . ' ' '.;i 'The following is from the apeeoh of John Brongh, at Marietta, Ohio, June 10th: ,f ' "It U said the Crittendn resolution might bring it bout The resolution was offered to tbesn before they fired npon Sumpter, and not a man' was "ready " to take it, and the North would hare been very orrj if the had accepted it; f,for one, SPUR.v the Crittenden rttolntiun, and. I do it for the reason that the first gun fired npqn Sumpter rolioved us froia the thrall, dou of slavery, and I never desire to sib pkacs BB8TOBBD, WITH THE POLITICAL POWER OF THIS IN STiTtmox reinstated. See Ji'etoark A'ortk American') JnneZO. " -. : . John B rough,' in hs Cleveland speech,' saldsfLFor many years, you are aware, I have held ideas of a Conservative character on thi slavery question. I have changed my view.- I' now see the iuapos-: sibility of permanent success in our rejnibVic-so long as any portion of it is ufttictcd with the leprousdis--ease. Eithkr slavery mhst bk torn out, ROOT AND BRANCH, or oub Oovbrnxent will exist ,KO LONGER." See Ohio State Journal, June SO, 1863. Sentiments of Vallandlgham. Dorijent; and trust to GOD. and TRUTH, and the PEOPLE Perish ace, perish life itself, but do the thing that It tight, and do it like a man." Speech of January 14th,. 1863. ; "Devoted to the Union from the beginning; I will not desert it now, in this the hour ofits sorest triad." ! Extract from BpeevbV "Not believing the soldiers responsible for the war. or Ha purposes, or its eoneeqaca4 1 never withheld my vote where their separate interests were concerned." Speech Jan. 14th, 1863. " Sir, 1 am against disunion. I find no more pleasure ia a southern disunion Ut than in a northern or western disnnionist.'. Speech Dec. 15th, 1859. . frV'Iamnota friend of the Confederate States or their cause, bat its enemy !" " ' Extract from Speech. u t am a Democrat for Constitution, for Law, for Union, for Liberty." Extract from Speech. : " Never with my eonsent sha.'leaoo be purchased .-t the price of DISUNION." - ' . Extract from Speech. ' No ' order of banishment, executed by superior .-force, ean release me from my rights. Every sentiment and expression of attachment to the Union And devotion to the Constitution to my country Twhleh I have ever cherished or uttered, shall abide unchanged and unretracted until my return. ' His address before banishment, . . I . . : .' '. : The Disuruonists. . On the let of February, 18C0Senator IIali, (olNen Hampshire,; now a ,- loyalist' - prt-itented to the Senate of the United. States' two petitions from- citizens of Pennsylvania, prayingj that ' Bomeplan miglit be "devjeed for the . dissolution of the American Union." Every Republican- Senator votrd for Oiese pe-,., tions. Mark the names of the traitors : John P. Hale, of MftKsachuxett; . ' William II. 5bwari. of New York ; Salvou P. Cu asb. of Ohio. . fin. the ;Lfnu8e on the iloth of the sivme i month, the petitions were presented by Joshua !R. GibniWGS, now an - otftcer under Lincoln's Ion. ' Administration. Every Rrpiiblican Representative, voted for tie petitions, tQ ,wit ; Chas. -Allex, ot Massachusetts ; ' ' Chas. Dorkee, of Wisconsin; - . Josnti R. Giddimgs, of O'tiio ; JicFUo K. Goobexow, of Maine ; .. .Geo.. W. Julian, of Indiana; i , J. M. Root, ofOhio. ' '.How verjr wdnderful it is, (hat these avow- d dinuniouista of 1850 " have become such ar- : dent Union'u tain 1863 ? Then they claiuied the" right-tor petition for a dissolution of the T "Union, and now they" deny their political op" . ponents, the right to even jetition-or liberty !; o speech apd th presa... 37;n.tliey Uiought at not disloyal to attempt to sever the States, ' And nd they profess to believe that criticism . -of (he acts of the Administration is ireason. .Then, they denounced Democrats sia u Union . avere," and oto, they. profs to believe tlat thet aldrie' have a right to thartUle. Imuu '; dent hypocrites J '"They cannot see .that tl4ir ' design atill ia to'deatrby .thja .Union,- while,' pfe-r Xeadior to save it? ,Like the treacherous as- - Ji aaaaiir who smiles while ha murders, they are ;TTvoiuuoniBtng-' vn uovernment wnue pre- vy aeoaiar io preserve lu urnry. ' - -:t wj ' .VoVfc'TisV But Draft , Storjr. i J;CTtdenc' i ;rAv dxned 'Irwhmah called utxo: ne jotir lawrern . m I Saturday ,' , and . desired- to' have! t-MMi prepared claiming exemption . from . tnilitary servlea for the several reasons which - named: v :. : y- . ' ; ' ': r r . : l.iThat be traa the nly son of a widow de- pendent pan bfm far support. : , ! .2. That hi father was ia such in8rra health aa to be unable to get his ofwn Jiving, ..; ,; : t v 3. That ha had. two brothers already in the f -: aerfrioa'all which fads Patrick i.deairsd .then ;d there to verify byialSdavit. , ;i t :. -,-: - -:: :' ' . y?f donV beJieve the drafted man wa' an .; YrUh'miui:- Thi Vtonst haw ben' iusi -' taken. WeTI wager that bis. vim. wa ;xot -atrQiu Jonathan ad-that- hav.waa a ;oyal laaguer." - MOOCSJimi Z u Viai.-m Wtt?T A,' - tTb border oonntiea of Northern IDs-C Drif;int UmentabU-, cpodition JJm, Itne, the celebrated AJboTiVvillian, has determined, with. his robber corhrades, to deic- latff tnoe coaniieu w uu uro ana ewora tn re- . '"'--' '. t , r y Yfvf;dv":-1 r ---; ;jr4rrTB0oVBdPIaisDoYsayti'Joha .rogV dsetiaeda to rvn foresraor; orttil . ' 'the leaders proittUed they iwfeuli tnalcop tha ndifferBCsrbeta thiGnWviar'Taalaro.:il-- lIia6rilbrtheJnia88actat Lawrerirfr. While v;lV epr ytojiathL rith tfie' rnored fcWpre Xff Iwrebce wwpitfi wKh'qail etajo6ohvjth Innocent bwDe'of lllisoar! whb hare suffered '""'0. d hU-aalaryasTRjijlroad Prideot,'C4 "jSS1 teybaa o sir him s boBoa u 1 'H500 Of thOBf rtobicW tJtio.'aBdrwkUrrictUtoidossMd people- stur tost?Jtiin Uy oa lbs Railroad. caiaui'Uirii aw-. ef(bHfc:yvMf"i2,i first cIjsJiftb(J otjft ln;fi;tC or.tho fxOtetJ?r. cuy. It wnrrkoducelO(KXaoTdief8. It will cost a million of money. ; On theobjeOt'hY New York jltlus em . I Exp8msit REcaoiTiNd. In addition td more tKKKZ&JXXR M3ie?riTpToj4l in this it is esiimatea inai at least zu.uuu " omciais, such as PjrovisL.arshal8,tlraft-commissioners. DhvBician. Clerk 'fcnri,' enroIlinr? offlcera ' are now j)l0y'by'ih06vetBmeQtt at salaries averaging more tfaaiveigui tlmeatbe pay of priat: aokJiere.7 Indefed,-1 hr 4a a feet that the expense of. enforcing the conscription is about equivalent to the pay of an army of 300, 000 men. If the money tfrua disbursed had been offered in bounties for - volanteera, : there; carj be no doubt. that the effect woold have been to secure' three times as many men as Wiirbe raised by the draft, which ho taken as many from the army as it has contributed :to its ranks. The draft in this city, for instance, yUl' not) probably -Tais,a"pne thoueapd while there can be no doubt, if our citizens had been called ucfon to furnish, volunteers instead, the whole quota would have been raised without difficulty; by" ilie payment of bountlas which woiild not have cdst -'half the amount tlt wil be, expended iu carrying out. anf (JWbxloui cotiscription,; ; - ' : r, i- i f - - ,,,- ''"V j . 2 fl; Trora Dayton, Ohio Henry H, Brown Acquitted of the Murder of Boll-meyer; ' ' :. " '' , ; Datto.v, September 10. Th Dayton JocmaZ aayf Ihejuty thiven ing acqairtrdj Henry H.&owkn;of the charge ormufdering J. F.'riollmeyer, formerly editor of the Dayton Empire. -CommgrciaL - , A moat, iniquitous judicial, farce baa now been con sum at ed, and a guilty man has been turned loose, with the blood of a prominent and estimable citizen, wickedly shed, upon his garments.' ur. readers are familiar vita this case. Mr. Bollmetes was the able and fearless editor of the Dayton Empire, and was shot down, in cold blood, is tlie streets of Dayton, without provocation, by this man Brown.-Mr. Bollveter was a-Democrat, and Browk was an Abolitionist, but such was the fiendish hate of Bollmever's political enemies that they immediately attempted tQ screen the perpetrator of the foul deed, and have- net, H ap-paa'ra, jw5tl Booceas, The trial waj Itad id Ae Abolition cpanty bf Warren, and a' Jary . lias ieen fbdnii'to render a verdict, wlilch virtual" ly outlaws every Democrat in principle, and puts his life at ih,e uiercy of any AUclition mivcreant who aiaC choose to takeiU We have already reached a fearful state of society when such trials as those of Brown occur, and. when political feeling jg , successfully invoked to shield criminals from their deserved punishment. Cia. Enq. - ' . - " Handcuffs for Freemen. " A few ditvs ago we law ir the treets of this fkir city a sight calculated to ntV .every heart with KortOr; ; : talking', between affile of sol-tlers in one of our uiost cro.wdedthorougb-ftirea.- were'fiMe' white freemen, handenffed and strongly guarded by. their military; escort. (iverthe iron manacles that round the fwrists of several vere throw liandkerchrefs; and the downcast lofjk aud sorrowing eye of . the- con-teripta told how deeply they felt the .degrada tion they were' compelled to sufier. These tn en had committed no crime. Their names had been drawn from the fatar wheel; and, in (he agony of doubt, whether they should re main witu tneir Jovec one in itiese sore times of want and. trial,' or eagerly march to fill the ranKs oi ilie army in tins -war lor ine Arncan and hia race;" ther had ridt pfohiptly reportetl to tli Provost Marshal's office, and were. called deserters'. ' This eight, we are informed, is no extraordinary one. It -5 is of .frequent and almosthourly occurrence. Compelled to suffer the grossest iudignTties,, thousands are daily, tortured with thegalJing though t.tjiat in this! land Of freedom "they must meet :the fate of slaves. Bht, bepatfent ! ATew weeks more' only must pass away, before the freemen of. Pennsylvania will have an 'opiwtunity of smitiitgat the balldt-box the nuscreants' who are now striving xo deprive ineni oi ineir no erties In going to the- polls, rerhember1, free-J men, mat tne - Aooiiiionisis or tits . proi city have forgel handcuffs for white men and given ; shouKJer'tstraps -'to; negroes' I Phiia, Age, Hth. - ; ' Hegro to Fight BTegrp. Jefll,' Daxis, so it seems, and, was 'expected, learns. from Abraham Lincdln, as Abraham LincolnearnsTrom him his last session taught viz: the employ met of negroes,' half a million of whom Sen. Davis now threatens" to britog into the:field--wprettrae,- because his whites hae giVea'ouU . . i . Upon' the whole, in this' neerp. ,figh,t, ; we think th Rebel -Jeff will have the' advantage over our President, With hie negroes, Iube first place Jeff; Davis haa the-most ' negrdeX, ten to our one, and in" the second place- he knows best how to handle them, as ; a .home master knows mora of negro . nature than : a master sent from abroad, t Bat between " the two kings', alas for; the podr negro. ... '. , fow, that (his is to ecotne a real lve' iie-gt6 war. it is a pitf that the whites on' both sides North and South could not setf ' oat, arid leave the battles to the egrpe?, with rthe original Abolitionists' Utti! Secesaibnistfl 'frokn ih4s'K,6rthaad South, to Officer them, "if thjaf could pnly be done there wl&oM''te'iu bills' aiBbng the wbitee eterywheW, whl theoe uon ot slavery would De settieu as air numan- larian questions -gerleraflyars by"onje 'of ex-term inatioo of the. pegro pa both sides th"e ope hy thaxrther. What was the1 fiterf poif Indian once, jp America woaM'tfhn "tebmi. the fate of the nirgro.-y. ri Expret'. . , r A ici)nTsraaJr!sirheaJ bjr oar r - i. . it iT porter: -. ; . .. ; .' . . t.I)-.!Qti& ttoTaiatO Baady tha draft f -4 v f- hf jetiI mtdmXs G "JUad Jrtjf nif distracted1 conn try naeds tn If aba require thsaaBrliloa ;af'Ith uwu insL-touenngt eaiaearar-ooTt g Union needs to b crmrnnlA withnr&v ihrt'I with HreJjfWiii- oth4y bua ty-j,Vs tha CUector'a-oBovsjnd pay toy iktaeHin.) dred tfolhwe rHarernUl Uaxatu. mm tr.L aaar-savpa. tjjaw'lcm v ?t Titlr hWirt!prepd fbtaay .adftrfOi. 4 fir-triist . Vitina )Proidan ,ir nhall JIs look at dis aar aigger, aressap iajofeoaa, ( lie ae anap 9 pnu tnmt en oia usuaa xreacnar 'sa"1baSi'rt ' ' - T" iw l,"' lie sab hew rbt dreaa btaawavaail filer em 0weUoatJinalMt, taniahuB MM aaye store. .'5. : J v lo :;-ifj2 waits aaan,work for.iaBw,,whiphAae1)-i . J&ir dpne befpre ; "' " ' Wkat biiUy ran tt wfll 6aher40 iNkm tfstteaJgb. Wid. nigger sleepin'-ta desnn, whila maua.sei t ?" - W away tllgt!" ' .; libi ia asm ;dar keuifts :grafiV whan iQt w ..vanrveaawavea, , -.j i.r-hn ; jyie inAMa sweats juxd boa 4e. land, well 4ah "ttVil JalT ba'lnmen'' penis' "toi'iV. aome high n i?im?sBtTrat: ' " -M ! And prape when wtS hs wr"gt 'tkfbagk- Presi- t. . InK-;.! P w7 nigger C.., rWhy bo? 0 ! sfeKl 'waV taijrinv 1 r ; There is a magaifteent fatnre fff freedom" ftjr yen, the gift ef ynr generous "rrieiHia.', . .. v ; . . ; ;' . From Our Szchangea. ... - - i . : - v. : - SM AWlition freedom of speech." ikile-ing Mr: Vallandighaia: for beating tjieni io.ar- gument. , - . - .. ,. .,,1'- TliW Abolitionists in"; Oh lo. worsted iW argument, get excited ami threaten bayonets. m .. i . Wl a. . . C i 1 . . . . . . v. ; Douglas said the RepublicaTi ' party is responsible tor the war.. Let hry -pretended Abolition admirers: Chew thit cud. ' . BSTThe Republicans call Vallaji.lighftirt. tt " branded traitor." We suppose thy. caU Brough a inimiittd patriot1, r. , - i S- If the people are in favor Of vreorotis prosecution of th war, why do't; they volunteer and fill up the vacant ranks? " ' :.lw be President has onset hia proclamation freeing the negroes, by issiune aaolker enslaving, the whites. '. .' . ' KSr The tact that drafting haa to be resorted to, shows: most emphatically that the Deoole are tired oi the war and. Want peaee. : JT Brough refused to carry siok soldiers at half-fare; He had them put ' off tlt cars be eauee they had no money. t&F Fnhn the number of dis'essed 'persons, who were quite healthy before the draft;' ij would seem, that the poeple- were titsrally "sick and tired of the war." -- " Bread and BoTraa" The consolii dated rail road plotters, promising to pay. John urougn sxx thousand, dollar a y ear to be 'Cov-ernor of Ohio. , : , . , ;: ' " We do-not wh to do injustice: even to Vallandighatn." Jeffervmian. . .- .i : Then why don't you correct that lieoX yours wuen you can nim a convicted traitor, ; The radicals call all. Democrats and conservatives trsvitprs, ' because they do not agree with them in seek trig Sanfbb's freedom at the expense of the white man's liberty. ; Jk5- BrOnghi prelera the defeat and annihi lation of all the Union armies.' rather than be defeated himself fOrGovernor. ! Soldiers, c4 i you vote forf such a. man f ' : An Abolition psper speaks of ,JIeieit John Brough' Whenever AboITtionitits put ,he word Honest" before a candidate's name, look out. ' It is al moat certain tliereV some' rascality on foot 1 : ' . . ' ; 'i Democracy seems to be a . popular thing thesedays. A man matt 'ber(,'orj: have Iwen, it" Democrat,1 "to ; be eligible" to ' bfflce'. Young me'n'Wh6 are about form io 'their po- iiucai aiiacnnrema Bnouia rememoerthi8. . S& Brough 'a speech in tliia place last week did not' suit the Rcpublica'rrs. We have beard of three in Blanchard township who ware o disgustftd that they aow 'rapport the . Demo-cratic; tiakeC Hancock Courier.i( .. ; iQiTh'e Logan Gazett say's we are now spending more thaty a thousand million a year.. A great portion of thip inuaense sum goes into the hands of Office-holders, and cornea otf the poor laborint people; - ' : : -; '. i ' ' ; jjLet no .Democrat1 sit with' fofdedhands. Let every man be at worki; OnV Kbrrtel Dfon- erty, life, depend irponi the triumvir of tJhreV'Hb)-erty candidate.' Val must be 'elected,'' if-' W shall have a Russia ioOhio. ' - f. ;- .;'i.Cbeering hews comes from all portioned ui liii; crwi.io. j.ue,i-emocracy. areoong poftiy." The.Pjepple; seem to feel4hei jungrand are wheeling into line gloriously. - E'rerj meeting is a success a granu auccess.... 2 f . . , BSF- Ut. r-yaU.alghafit''.;'is-j;th tnep-d. .. 41 emoted .'to iBcrease their pay4 uiova to giv tutm Quiciea.. lie .ioted give thent ea,hne I60;acrea,efJaftd. .;. - .id-; .' . . ,.') V. . to i " " ;2ralo;lIeat?.'.!: - '; ' The Cfenfeder)ate''roifl5or Vrh'd is 'writing ;d tailed account of wllat took -ofatje inside 'Fort Hudson during-its beieagneiiiient-, says tbatl raUon of Vheetanpeen.rgrveif o'uT The troop btthelsfbruryaVh bt many officers, a wounded mule seasc kilted aoo cnt ap ( Jexpej1metaJ,aiingritvth4e who jBartook,ofj. spoke highlyofUhe dwh ;TUe fieshof JlA?Sithft. ffriurdeaojjbea aa4js ing of a darker color than beef, of 4.ner grain," quite tender aodjiiicjr, and.aahaViojg ..flavor TOmethine between thatof -bfef and rroiaon. Jhere waaio itrtnsediate deipanfor thi kiad or rood, and nf .BnJea kHe by iha -comsais- aay inaa.',;ionie aorfea weraHliad alaughtcrad, AneV thenr 4Jeh .as .lovMtOj be very ocrf .eaftiogi bof ,ot t equaj jnu4e,Xl EatvoC.hjch -ther vera plenty abpqt. th.ada-aertaiJ.cmpaiwera alao caught fey jnany oftl- pr hi fwwm jpyrw -a njpea ftgite a j 1 n VII W S trwik Wl A aa fka naaM.A iL u- . t. 2 "f a Wi)em,wapBgtsr.'aaao ,vt3 l,,,. Pfr :n)flii ! l I i isiesr, .m im T i.ai! y&n'fQ Votor!Brotighihb tstM$4rVt! fn iKvororthe' war goinrh, ttWtlivHIis''abo lflhed'! JtrtarigweTthat qftekh,1eforo ww ccv io wing cat ieu an. AOTi nioB 8t? " . 1'lO-TTra teahinl4'orth'rjaat h'atw bew 4tabjbikei-Froln yrVouttf:up;.w1ivfcfei utugntnat Tternai vigtiaaccf ta tae JprtcW Liberty.' -Itshr ahowtVre-'A were worth noairj; fir' lias than nothing. ; as now worm caca irom .ou.iaaj to i-iUUv?, Jlira the zraaiwa-; ofaorrahcV. ahl and thb ttfiyrieriteBtt efetoclb'isia di tuif j . .J.rrf-i-: .TWh t-vLiMt.; Carolina and tha Galf ro.34iinuStTT Uboc an iDdepeodent CotJe4racy. ; CPtnidJttibis srell known fang. f?t tXvli i, dT n -1 9. -f. Mh no tha.Temocra HIS -Tt-l'Wili; ? 3 nomaated for the poeiUcn he naw hoida; : H risvanrieaadiaace ior eupreras no gel to dnietfaciWfcflbn-in ihe'pomica! ea AW.PfS'i""? Wu:Wsrelory.i-reaa .with iMM veji uiterett by ,tha people Qbk. :IW-Ioiw and approriateeas nll ,bs zeu now as wcu o in .aou. -n it as to now a ici; "i'. . ...... . f. : Mr. President ld Gfntleme f iAt Convention For the very distingniahedlionor which jon have juatconfefreupoo ae, by ray unanimous nomiaaiion asj a Democratic rejandidate for Jtidjre of the Court oi Coaufsoo Pleaa .of this subdrvuio of thejodicial , District, I ten der: to yoit-my-iatost pratouadand grateful:ae-knowledgementa- i-j Thia -clattering .testimonial of you friendship aadregartL U; not ,the leas gratifying nay, it is for that reaaoa,ithe moat eiwinently grateful to my feelings, because-: its being tvholqr-ansoliortedoM my part, r.J neither expeated ibciesired. afcy pobiiion .before the peopronrhich would take me .from that ouiet uii repose. Wiiich ia much - dtore coagenialy to me present temper oi. soy mind aaU. cireuxn- i stances than the taraaeu and axoitement of a, rxUticaJ,cn(assr Indeed, theae are., tjrrres in wMch'tSO than' need be-'an.rrt to 1 mingle in. the ptrifieaattd bitter feelings ofa political campaign ; times; too",' whjch makV eiuiueiftly ttriej and forcible the maxim, that "-the post of honor; is a private (btatioa,V- And yet there cornea to most.'men, in 6ome, period of their linclina- tions and -eva-their interests, ,to the' "wishes and feelings of other?., You have decided that thiaia a period, in whifh .1 . should , yield : my own inclinations to yors. ..I.acknowledge the force of the: obligation ; and accept the nomination promptly, unreservedly, thankfully ; with a full appreciation of all its responsibiO-ties, at. a period and under circu mat an pea which . require aomepiHig . more than mere physical, courage taba-a. Democrat. T accept it in the spirit. jthas been tendered ; not as. a reward (or mere partisan services. not in. any factious spirit of uartT.orfranization : but as an endorsement of an honest independence in 'stand ing, up for the rigut anid tne whirlwind oi excitement and fanatichjBi which rules the hour; and as a rebuke to that spirit of vindictive ha tred and persecution which haa been showered upon me py nearly tuwnoie mass oi tne tve-publican party here, for no other reason than that I have modestly but firmly exercised the common right of an American citizen to think and speak of the acts $ud doings' of the servanit of the people. How long you and I shall be permitted thus to think and speak of the ofli- LciaJ ajta of those nowea(ed' in the 'high ..pla ces m w e uovernnieny, uow .aoonnae gag, upon "ilie Treedoin .of mm stocLtha . freedom ; of the press shall change from a universal order of things, produced by secret raKinight orders irou the councils of the .nation the;. history of the uext tew montus must deteriuine tor the Anerican people. If this great right, baptized in blood and gttaranteed to as by the .dearest fro vie ions of the Constitution under wh if b we ive, thus to think andto e peak of? the adinini Utratkm of the Government,. is to be ; wrested from the people, at a lime and in a crisis when jt ia most important and essential that it should exist unimpaired and inrestricted, .' why then we have but the mere shadow of liberty, a tnere carioabtrs of copstitational government: ana bo .jar as repM,- genuine practical ireeqom. is concerned: voa miirht iust as well 'live' .under tbe.deepbtlsm oi Jpseph of llapgburg, of Aus tria, as that Of Abraham" Lincoin of the United States of America. , Ahy manly and. indepenr denjt stricture's, i ther upon the blunders or.the corruptions of the AdrninTstration, are at once qietorieu-inio treason, ana aysioycuiu to tne xjo-. ernm'ent,'hy .k set of.crave Sycophants' and Informer's, whoare .always, 'ready,' whether iu Pfe-O1, f,n war -V : 'n, ""r'i " ,' i- .i Crobfc the pregnant hinge! pf,tle kn4 :. , Where thrift may atUowawniag"';:SVt J. .,' . :A;ref6il td'shont bosairnahs to the Wncon- stitotidnaVaets and usnrpationi of! the President;' Sftch ' as" no "monardi" ot ' England has-dared to assume sine the iron reiero of the Tudors, .dffiltynC&yipnpa.thy with rebellion,'1: pSccomrye-1eycftiwna l is hunted down wun an tne raoeor Of tbat leu f sbirit of perBecdtion, which) has made .the' hisj- t ta-ry of other Aimesbut aimilar "Qontroversies, the great landmarks and beacoa ltghtam the atroldedof the people for tha eBtablishment; tw:t6e mamteoanee -of civu aadaonstitatioaab liberty) i Tbti gieftt" principle i fori which , the Democratic party ia ) now :atxuggiiag -ia this GovertfmeSl, iabw riew. thine iilh history, df -riianJriBdi It;iaadldatha first drawings of -cirurxatiOB; r s hh uui ana ore xeeeaietr eoa-n x . i , l i .f - - - i ten pvivewii-pofmM riTitegaNi uiwieaiuf, and executive aeurpauon qw tha , othertoe ritrhte of thPa?do.agaiaatihe One Minn Poio- tsr, when-itisedtd crash ooOthp chbarly ofy the J iWtfwfsja.ertiaeR' Jt ia thanapnaetpif4'T rhieri natapaen oiea ana didney.auaereaiana itia bi'astaiuoh dangwr noto, upon tUa shorea bf frea AjnsToaw aad iat a IPrtunBiit pC phtib-lywittea 'ico'wtitutioaai aa vet its yaftittoiha atorntiest-: dajarwbea : Gh arleajiegieaiarand. CromwelFa soadrooa Yttetia thedeadjy ahock. of battle o it a devastated jlaina of England, twebacdred years ago. :An4 what great qoea-tion.iaa.itviich.ahok the ; English v throne asid baoogiista neadLorubarles to;tfte block f UCDartv "vCrloEliiK "--Fc-J rimwB tue nicaiy oa What waa hvtbat gare up (htagraat bad.tnihqiba(t atiJl.:pnbrQkei front iae- V. break-water tad thaFengeBoe.er,ihuliad1.pBv.Ue ii aalaarrstf prirata oitiiMD.Wi'eecrjcn ders frortttbetfaitycounciLarTOilftdtheihr a-pidaiB nakpwBctoiIiha JawaLand 4tods tieUbgJwedvahaVat tioxat kx vheobat boosOry jaareeungticb4be fiereeourgea bf ciVeoBHptitefto jwt,e;:tbft Aajari4f doodIo. with the best educated fjaaasesn tie world evet Uw-Uathapeteetiti century I -thahll Mateof PsodarBj.civiUaation M aadpn rder Cc4iUtiod waich ciaarly definee tb irjode.bviwkdeh acitiaen iaJlbe-deoriTad1 bf hia parsonal liberty , withoofc rafereaoa to tw ie riramataiaos f . arm. saade aufejeW t thad a. node will of aitafatnd drajr?ed iarTthadei d I hotrr cjaidoiirht.itatha eeJlaof adi)rtant"rrla-1 OBKiuaa, income Mptoi234r JiOut . the maJe4rindbstnto ;lr tlf;rlinsVvet dikkrysi i practice ha;;ben coumittedby DmoeiOthara lei them btluiahed' bnitp0iihod fftardjrti Cjt Cfy mCutkmand tU i ThaDeac-rc.'rtftr, tadtKTthlngaacfj ndi; they win cct wU'n Jybmit tIJthbae, TiisMlhjp-fi? Constitution and by the arbitiaryirKE-!riroB T tt&lisawia ttl;arfiCi;U;aut ranch tieCiVlrfSKti !These tiner tig-sea? are teatioc ct PlIiicc ie5tItc;:.v.-ac2;Dur greatest au-ea ol other 4ays-th ablkt commentators of the Constitntioo and 'the resJ tdrHha beoptef theriresfiave labored sader si uosc ahjnal 1 TniMpwhaftawwi ia rgaM to the working; l if net thanatarai .tendency, pf,oi; potjc 'Batitutiona, in.perir oun of great pressure ana excisemen i. no f vry day'e-xperieoc tesaifies, ' that the lend I ana tutriahed aappoayjoek! thjj tbegreat pru t frtnii mr loc weak and ineu&- tciMt-aa-aninat Uejehecks and reatrainta of Uhe co-ojrdinater..ncbs ojT'the Governmonl, as iias oeen supposea uy some o; tne greatest men who have both' framed anid administered hi-ifl modrhv thneai'and recent instance of its eaereiaf harproved. it to.ba oDe); of the strongest deparUnents.,.pfjnolitul .power: known to any governinent of limited powers on the face of the earth. With whatever restraints and limitations the exerciSV'ST delegated power has been eurts&tiAowever tjxactly nd bartnious-ly nay have .heen adjnsted "tha complex ma-chinerv . of, the . crovemment wkli intrrrat weighed again t: interest,' and " a ' aystem of cnecKS ana oaiairces proTiaea azamst everv 8nnposd:poib(e abuse of no wr--4h ere still exists beneath alMhis ; splendid apparatus of laws and regtilations, as incident to all human institutions, the ,'eifirantic enenrir of the' txas- SiOns, which when aroused into phreazy, brush : It. --!.: -.1.1. 1? . away in.e? cuiweix me moes' sagaciona conin-vaheea to- hold its vibratory poiut . tru to the luagnetpf icouimoa weal. . . . . ; . . " ..,.Wh8,is ft that haa brought about, the terrible crisis which. i now upon the American people,' crushing out their national prosperity, loading them down with a burden of taxation unheard -of in moderu.. times, and delocimr tli ear fairest ttelds witi fraternal blood l it is the insane fanaticism of an Abolition pulpit on the one side, and the infernal treason of the politfca! 'club houses ; on the other. These two inptruinectB bava worked together more than thirty years it), bringing About the great calamity , which is .now. , shaking the-continent as with the mighty throes of an earthquake. It is a remarkable fact that Jblm Qniaoy Adamaaad- John Caldwell Calhaun, the two KeprosentaU ve tnen ' of. these excited factious, thirtvron'e vearn aeo. first saeeested those twin ideas of political heresy, atoLlion 6f slavery by Uongress, and the secession of States from the Confederated Government, by Leaulatite ordinance. It-was ia1S31. that John Qmncy Adams first -introduced- into, the Congress of the United State's. petitiohiS fVorn'lhe 'cTery of New England and other enthusiasts,' praying for the abolition of alaverv in the District of Columbia; and it was during the nexteacceed-ing year that the State of South .droliua through the influence of John C. Calhoun, passed her ordinance -"Of ntiHiflcation - From that, day to the -present, -these, two' : faction have worked in .harmony .together, for the same common object the dissolution -.of the Union and the destruction of 'American nationality. This collision between fanaticism and treason at last became painfully raaotfeat to the Aroerican people. They both converg ed, to the same counmoB , center; a . rupture of the political relations which "had become alike Irfceofrne to both. 'The one exhibttol lu ultra ism in the nomimvtlort of gAographileal candi- datee and the adoption O a sectional platform against the explicit and : solemn warning of the father or his country; the other blew the Counterblast of treason,' and boldly proclaimed the doctrine of secession as tha rightful reme- uy iorscn-ataae ot -political power. In this state of feeling rand in,. aach- a controversy. Abraham Lincoln became President of. the United States. dn uch a crisis: w it hr such a field lot Ibe-exereiseof broadmindedpatri&t-iah.-fraod With aach- an-opporMiaity: for great, and food,, and w.Uocpuuselsao sustain, the Union se&timent, in" the South and save . te Border Siae 6tates,--what a destiny 'for himself ami for his country- lay before that stmrte ; man 1 -The world never witnessed such a con junction of time; and opportunity for,, good I Such a pivot-point oXcreat national interests. of terrific publifirdangers and of resulting iu uiiensw up?n, iue uesuoies oi tne remote. lu- ture, for millions of ntaborp "human beingn, never before extsteil, But he was unequal to the great ippaaion; he mwu'ndettood 6r dTsf7-ganfed, the ' high', the awful ' trust committed to his charge.. Instead of d1sarmlng'"the' re- oeinon oy- uiserrarging nts wty to ttve iinofe ceii rt4rTand the whole people; he added to 'its strength, . while.. he. trashed Oqt the -reinaining union; eentimeRt- in the South, ' by- calling around mm, An his cohstitutionai advisers, men of the most- violent, sectional' views', and who ; were- thi prime movers of that .fatal contrevergy.f which;; at last arrayed tb sections in undying hostility to each other. That fatal JHtleaessi of aend, that narrow and pei e partisan survey of.the troublel political field before .him,, and the subsequent adbpfion of a policy fib clearly condemned and deprecated Icng in 'advance 'of the 'anticipated ortsia, byi Hamilton, by: Madison, by? Adates, and by. .Ed mupd , Randol ph,' h a v ing yaftly contributed to ij)ur difficulties, and Thave been, a fruitful sotircejof ail our" . national woe. God only' knows, gentleman of tire' Gnverjtron what is toibe the. fi nal issue .of h e i!ery ordeal through which free institutions on: this ooati-nent are0!arpossingIt ia possible, they may couieotihe do ret aual briirhter from the fierce aleinbie of iyil'waf, is "possible, and OJily possible, that ih'is once oonfederated Ub- ion pi iree anainuepenaent sovereignities, now prostrated dike the piJJare of Gaaai by the Sarn son of civil strife, may again be reconstructed, to give-hope, aad pee, and --eeeority to the Aaaericaw people.- 1i)ut weaaV&aB fix ad as-8,uraricew,oa reUabhj guarantee, that it will.- be ao. . We oplyf ftoow that it, is Jhe -bigk and cjonseryativa mission, of the Democratic party here in the Korth, to stand aa a shield to our Ivatsoaal Constrtutionu present' itsehaken aroun.d A hoJyAkaW,, against the- despotic assaults of an administration' .who,' seetnimrlv propose' iO'snataifl if.: by tireaWing down erery harrier erected. ' for itr pstetwn. 1-; thirl insUtii-'J.gret:cAhmily jehjeh haa, thue? befalled oar common counfry, portentioas alike tothaTilhj, eruea ana greai. irjsie oi tne A mencan pep- f hi W'? f -kmX: thtlear-: It. indicated mission of tha Democratic party nfwM be,' Iad boT W aawa ip niuBjrroy' aesumeas wai a i v prepared tostaAder fait with stagaaizatieh iFeel- V" &vwwmiwxmm todiacharss ail its duties, and recognizing all its .just claims upon tne, I have felt WeofsrjBctibna'of oo ie m'titft termlnatiAn.'SoMong s snaJJHuainiaintu.'presetji constitutjooacan-eetviaie'poeH6nr,ItnteaI te-share !ta fittcJ for ieoalorfor wos and ah all meet iu the Vutipfr atiovaad kboia',bicl:oiryj; be chaired npon vnp, if frith all jthw forbearaoca aDdt nee- neea w a cfaaiTinjjiraffT wuaau, m aira- In the dark -vail mi; liTal.iiice cs3 petictrita; -Uff itti'irtlJi with.fl frt treiJidcailiing-hirtici;h Equity; cat rse' ?a? reacri-Ci wul te Vyy f re&t, ii,bC Ciif 4 tJ 14 TTftrr&liCTi ci t Union as itvas. And l'xi Union pfEuUa, eestented b ey of tha futrjra-irLajh i les bo hu- mizz mtrm-z-ttirifji.'--. .-; A? s..':,i w uw ttyuti iu uauie-ueuiM snail oe ae-ered and destroyed by a phrewthe moe, ' iiw saae that erer raadiened the ' Boman bvart, let n have thfc proad, the aelaauining ooa-solation that no mad iaflatjeiara, ot onra ha MHlritintait tr. t.m mtoKts' 1 I t.T Vr gentleman, let tie seek consolation 1o" another poselble contihgmcyi If, nthe inscrouMe wayaof fratideaee, throttgfc ahaviaadAesan of despotic powrl ani lia. aystem f f: terrots, dn-angerat d by anarchvj and the wildest passione of men -unrestrained br bxw or' reliIoiiwe shoald beeome tbevk-timscT a fierC peraecW- nijwpuuHci opinion, tax aa Dear in miaa the lofty seBtimeat bat the end of .that roan never can com too toon,, who. falls in. defense, of the'" peace; the happiness and the liberties of his country I ' Amid all thU'' wild con-rulsion of the- social I aad , political orgaa iana nder the juoet despotic tyrranny a hich can or may be fastened upon ua by the creatures ofa mere political' accident let us still be able to say : -tiiy. .. ......t -. ' - . .'. . . . . , t- ; Thy spirit, ladepeadeaee, let as sh are, . ; 1 ; Lord ef the Lioa-ke4rt aad Eagle-eye, '' : Thy step well follow- with ear beeesns hare, Nor heed the storm that howls along the sky." Thank God! That epirU aUli lives, in. the Democratic party ! I love it because .of .that spirit.' I )bve it for its untemporizing boldness in the assertion of what is right. I love H for ira atrargbtforwart! directaeaa in the avowal of iU priuciplea. ,1 love it for tlwe indomitable courage with which it maintains its organization against all the deepotie efforts to put down ; and tiHe-- ita utterance.' -'I love it' for single-minded and unalterable attachment to the Union, the idol of ita political worship for the legitimate maintainance of which it leads the column of brave hearts, now striking for its defense. I love it Because it haaliobly' resolved to 'iflk or Swim, livet or die, survive or perish'wtTU. ,h Constitution abb thi XiBKRTiftS' or tb. Count jtr. : 'r- . . tFrom the Ctaeoiaati a-tIrer. ; .. A Good Joke A Eepablicaa Cnxaca XLi. . Yallandigltam ; and - maker a Mistake s Ha HiU ooe of Si owa friendi. . A most laughable political joke occurred ia the cjtj the othe' day, which is too good to be lost., and ought to be published in the public' prints. A Democrat met a rtepublicah carrying in hia hands a volume oi the Congressional Globe, aud an appendix - for the session of Congreas ending March 1&&1. The Democrat looked at it, turned over iu pages until he came to page r 60, when he exclaimed, ".Ah I here, ia a speech delivered by the noble and patriotic ValUndigham: I bare often admired -: ' that speech, -; as ' enunciating sound political aeotiBventaU.. Let me read you an extract or two frodi it. He then., read, is follows: - ; ; ;"'' . But, Ur. Chairman there are sdme tbing3 that gentleman ought to nnderstand. v ' L grant yoti. freely and frankly, that I do ot believe this Government vcan permanently be held together by military force. I do not believe that any section or the Union will ultimately subjugate and overran the other,' and hold it as a conquered proviuce. ' I have no idea, of any sweb thing. , . It ia against the apir-itandgen othe-agei Nobody would undertake any iuch thing. I Tegard a civil war as really settling the question that there is to be ultimately a separate confederacy. I. have no idea that such a war would 'end otherwiae than in a separation of the,-Unipn, and the organization ef separate confederacies. I am perfectly satisfied of that. Anybody who Sup-pasee that fifteen or eve r eight of the States can be held Sn bjagaied as coaq nered provinces makea a great mistake. ;r But, whether they can or noty they ought not to be. It Is against 'the spirit and. genius of the ge, and saaan ought to seek to doit." "--: . :v Stop, atop, says the Republican : doh't Tead any more of such treasonable nonsense I la" it possible you will vpte for a traitor who enr wnii euvti eerajfuenia, or euppon- a parry that nominateS him for a ' htgb office ? . Give me the page of the book .'waai' to torn leaf dewn in order that ;X may nee it hereafter "rn exposing th e traitor. ' The' Democrat was handing bim the hook, when he exclaimed : I declare, I -have rriade: a mistake, this is not v aiiandigham a speech. lputMscah-Jndeed ; whose ia k. rjav f kXK aoanda. joat like hirrf... . i.-.o j .v - 5 .Democrat---Why, it u the. speech of Beh-jamin Stanton, now the Republican Lieuten ant Governor of'OhiOi and; president of the eonventiott which -nominated John BrOagh for Governor.. It was -, delivered ia February, 1861, only two months before the attack oa Sumter. Did you not vote for 'him in 18&X and: pat him in a' place where he would be Governor in case Tod -died, uotwithstandig the, qMerance ot those treasonable aeati-fmjnta? .:, " ....': . . .... . . ..JXr." Kepabircan' looks blank. . Well' Ibe-Heve-rdid. - - - ; 1 y 1 ' v. Democrat Well, aa yon "have - voted for. Stanton, can't you, permit me to. vote for Val-landighani who never uttered as extreme sen-timehtaasyour mAn, whom IO tjjebted two years ago, and whowas the Preekiept oi jour last Convention t '-':" ..' "' -'.". i ' rf- r-iri.nai admitthal r hafe been badl' sold fn Jthia bttsinesa;' bat don't for God'a sake, put k kx the Enquirer pv.l '., '-. .i '. .; i 1 lTortli Carolinfaniti tot Feaeav v s 1 A. Washington dispatch tot. the- Ciacinnati Gosetiaaaysi..?' :u .,!, i- c c ;:ia.;::i5oi ut'A i private letter rebeived , today ftOnJ m staunch Unionist ift dial eigh. says, the-eelirg in JtorthjCajvtfna against .the tyranny of the j Kichmond' oligarchy M 'Was ; intense. "Peace meetmge'are- rrequent ia the eastern and sodt a-ern sections of tha state, aad Union aaenV who have heretofore beeeirent are becoming bold and persistent ia. tbelx 'dimand for peace.- What the State, desirea js;peac first and neT gociaiipns aerwarafJ .4. Mexpecieaj-nauov-ernor Vance's next inesss ire to the "State Ler. lalatore wilt "widen the breaclr 'betweea the Stats and the Kidiotoqd Oorerameotv Gew? erncr Ysnce's frieada sar Lhe5 -will r recall.' alt tha North CaroHna troonsaervinr-in the rebel army. - taejxwiwon.aasameu oy ut rxuueign-i iSWrfrd iti favor of pece; rnetr with generiJ I omrnenasuow- ,Te- a-ui .-,. 1 . . - m Mm mm - .- 3 A reseripclisplaiaiBi thesurmy : fromlae' at the .Wertar;States, atMwmwd, to h w Jaml-Jy and frtenda, aboat a .year, eince, that , (a wanted ths war "to coatlnue until' ha obtained a safSdeat pile to bay a good farnW and then bedWn car a'dit;a-JLs-aAoTi-it sloNdt f We lesro that he has reUrned froa LlS'psW mwii sn wue inur, einnr znane tae "-pyenii xjonnt tana" c-Wert; To raise n so ott'-, T'ry: xzticll . s:iT't he taoet bays t J a Band in t:. 6nl.'ctjn br CiarterriiiUra .mthl V ALit holy and iayai tnea ezzii c "ties 3 XUteadJ -aral- 5"WOfl 't rCTTa Albany && (Ce-i.) earfjist Jcvn II.JTPaq bie; Pnvatt ft y ti L tisU!iioxs VtitaCoaaaraoT tha iarrrkties-USuna y CerUhmbloUoneaf titDepajtrawta. ; - -- - - - - ' -o.-r ...v. - . tha aay- aneetion pot. Wilt "TOtt give ta yoax tie power -of making, row law t , - Beware of ecmlttleg yonraelvee th lbs fatal doctrines ef reorgaauuag the exiateoce, in the Unkravof State; hich hare' been declared by the Preaident!, proclamation to be ia rcbellioa. . , v4 - . . .. a ' - ' 4! - - "Do not. allow throW Statea. wltlj thefr1 constitutions soakered; o rasa trie State po w- : . " The inhabitants of the conquered dWtxioti ; will begin by clalmii-i ' the right to exercisef the powers of Governinenf,' and under their construction of StaterlghU" to get control ol the Mands, peraomtl'' property;' slaves; flea' blacks and poor whites; and a legalized pow- . er,' through the instrtmetitalky Of Stata. Uws. "" -' - - . .- What will he the consequence of yielding to this demand t ' ' - - r . . - e. .,- .. . a.. " They will gain the right of managing their. affairs according to their will and plesUtfre- ami not according to the will and pleasure oi the people' of the -United States.- - - - - . - If the lawstf. these States shall again be- revived and put in' force "aainst freer blacks and slaves, we shall 'at once have reins laud in the Union, in alt its force and wiokedhew; that very curse which has brought on uw war." ': . . - Will it be possiUe that State slave law! should exist and be enforce! by slave "State. it hoc t overriding the rirhts ruaranteed by. the United States law to men, irrespective of color in the slave States ? . Will you risk theaa angry collisions of State aad Naikwal Jaws hlle you hare tha remedies and antidote .Iu yOnr own- hands T Solicitor Whiting's Let- ter. - - - -:. . .' ? -: '--;.- i The above from SoUcitor Whitinjj, the pria cipal Law officer of the Admin istratioa, ia nothing leas than treason, aad Wosld W counted so under tha adm t a istration of aaoh men; aa Washington, Jefferson, or Jackson.' But under Lincoln's rule, it is approbated loy- ally. - , - - ! . : : ; ' This may henceforward be considered thav administration, or Abolition platform ; thai one on which Brough" is, running, and tlat the Democracy - is' opposed, to. - Uaioa man ? Ohio, can you vote for such - treasonable aad disunion sentiments ? ; " i ; A lTota of T7arsisg. : The Washington eorrespondsnt of th York Sundajf Jercwry gi v as tli'e7 following warn' ing: .. - . ; ' " . . . . - - ----- . ."The most imporUat riteiatlaa aotlceabW here is tha pracuce a roar Abolition President to ride through, the streets protected by mi-moucted guard. Time was when ear PrasV deats walked tha avenasa like any other man; and freely coormingled with their fellow citizens. Nowre'sal state is aattnmed. mod Mr: I Lincoln's eowardfee. frightened oat of all prop riety riy in a cry or treason, wiucn sis parti" sane) affix to the name of Democracy, degrades him into the vileness of lurching tarocgh. the streets if he ever ventures out alone, or SDcir-1 cles himself with - a squadron of eavalrv to guard his precious person from suspected' assassins. . - .' ' ' f ;,"Some astute observers malntaia that ihia oowardice ia merely a pretense . to jostifr . tbs aaaumpUon of the paraphernalia of royalty, ts cdver'tbe designs of aome ambkiooa aepiraat, now concealed by the drapery of the throne who naj,hersafter ase the armr for Dornoses 4 which may be utterly destructive of our iiber- nesiin tact tne .present, mcumbect or tbd Presidency employs the troops for none of the purpoeses for which the people so generously and cheerfally raised it. t He marches it forta to fight for the liberation of the negro, sends" detachments to obntrol elections, or orders a! whole division la compel conscTiptidn of a new amy when disgusted with his insincerity, the people refuse to volunteer. - These uses of ths army look ominouv and we need no magic glass to foreshadow; to ua r that ws . are ut traveling to centralization fand despotism. Oar people remain blindly- impassive, appard ently blind to passing events; ant be it remembered that, Ceasar, when be passed the Babn eon, did not possess one-tenth of tha military Kwer now swayed by If r. Ltnoota. - Judnj . ths reoklessaessof the -Admisistratioa in proeeoutinr ils sovereum will ia mattsra rml and small, soma observers of. political areata seem to anticipate high handed measures from iU interferences when tha Prestf ntiJ oaxxv paign approMhea. 5 ' 'Z 1 ;. ; Cie Obttructiosj - ia -tb i i r i v""rrff .. .. - Jto48lsi the faars of-aooi AbxUkMiat frfe are. not well aaqnals tad with tha fixed and dm Uermlned porpqeea of ihsx. amlfyt aot to let thetiooth eome back into tha TJaiosi if il ofieredtov with slavery, stored, -aad wfad distrnat ita acUcH tha Kesr York IWc tha Admroistratioa organ ia York, aays f "1 there be ao r boa .ths-aotioa -of tha,Govfrnmeae, ia any eonoeirable azetejsey rrowiag out of the war' amd connected with tha Fresident's rroclamlUOri" of: &rJora. Ths stronger and Wisest of tha Sretaiii; witii three ct'ier members ataGahiaaCarilliriBs their.portfelioe into the Potomae,' sooner than yicia a nairs orraaui ot t-oeir eoortctioa tnar the phldMt'tMtmetpa fcnm md omtr; yid vvaKXaify. Utt? shrva aohraeed with id Us pfOTUionaf v ..:?X5 W T c-.ThariJUth U.ertfe,,plally 4eld thai' tha rest orst iox ofAha old Uaioti id irfJpnsaibW gf?rH'gP'U''Sg "ji.BBSI nj.". !', i i .-. nr-iffwid -sX72laXi22sSs!. It Hesit.f I fCr-rrencKorgaBised a oOttfpaay af VoK nnteers uader the law,, and withy the time limited by the Adjutant General,' itad that ranctionary-fssaea an oruer asaactng u. oeaipany T'oWpBy wma eoatpoaed of Democrat,; iA e6tajiir 6f Ahditioaists. waa caisediSrcsnMf ;taLlptad eoapietea alalatrfftklaif tiatW CpctPraachs, and it f-: '-H.'C ich.'traasaetioaa aa till .'SI I - fircladethatft i tha' design eft i ,t;V jiadfa to arm their foiiowexj 5i ( vfiaiaoia arms rroci t:' v&zv -"r..-v- .". J 4-1. Txtsli ; 7 1 . Lacolar c;i:!itaT.vrIih - a itciiaii totlich' I u.jTw'it-J CV -lral cisspilst t! i C ;eitL-l.--at; Sappoaa la daw the rebeiltoo q? 'bfjcax3, VctiUi J Li, Ifl cstiidi,' ; send every Geaeral inthe array air - - ' ' v .. - . ..-. -. - . , W - v 'f.if.m
Object Description
| Title | Mt. Vernon Democratic banner (Mount Vernon, Ohio : 1853), 1863-09-19 |
| Place | Mount Vernon (Ohio) |
| Date of Original | 1863-09-19 |
| Source | LCCN: sn86079142, Mt. Vernon Democratic banner (Mount Vernon, Ohio : 1853), 1863-09-19, Vol. 27, No. 23 |
| 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 | 8076.32KB |
| Submitting Institution | Knox County Public Library |
| Type | Text |
| File Name | 0378 |
| File Size | 8076.32KB |
| Full Text | - : . In HAEPEB, .' k- j In, eodwsr4 Blekr3l Htsu-y. JJCBMS Two .Boilers per snnsun, piyalleiVaci. Tinee; $1.50 within six months: $3.00 after the expi ttoh eftlnYyear.- .'..-- A- J 1 , , BROCGII'S PLATFOftlf J -Jfo Iea60 Until Slavery is Torn'' Out, Eoot and Branch. ! j . ' ' '.;i 'The following is from the apeeoh of John Brongh, at Marietta, Ohio, June 10th: ,f ' "It U said the Crittendn resolution might bring it bout The resolution was offered to tbesn before they fired npon Sumpter, and not a man' was "ready " to take it, and the North would hare been very orrj if the had accepted it; f,for one, SPUR.v the Crittenden rttolntiun, and. I do it for the reason that the first gun fired npqn Sumpter rolioved us froia the thrall, dou of slavery, and I never desire to sib pkacs BB8TOBBD, WITH THE POLITICAL POWER OF THIS IN STiTtmox reinstated. See Ji'etoark A'ortk American') JnneZO. " -. : . John B rough,' in hs Cleveland speech,' saldsfLFor many years, you are aware, I have held ideas of a Conservative character on thi slavery question. I have changed my view.- I' now see the iuapos-: sibility of permanent success in our rejnibVic-so long as any portion of it is ufttictcd with the leprousdis--ease. Eithkr slavery mhst bk torn out, ROOT AND BRANCH, or oub Oovbrnxent will exist ,KO LONGER." See Ohio State Journal, June SO, 1863. Sentiments of Vallandlgham. Dorijent; and trust to GOD. and TRUTH, and the PEOPLE Perish ace, perish life itself, but do the thing that It tight, and do it like a man." Speech of January 14th,. 1863. ; "Devoted to the Union from the beginning; I will not desert it now, in this the hour ofits sorest triad." ! Extract from BpeevbV "Not believing the soldiers responsible for the war. or Ha purposes, or its eoneeqaca4 1 never withheld my vote where their separate interests were concerned." Speech Jan. 14th, 1863. " Sir, 1 am against disunion. I find no more pleasure ia a southern disunion Ut than in a northern or western disnnionist.'. Speech Dec. 15th, 1859. . frV'Iamnota friend of the Confederate States or their cause, bat its enemy !" " ' Extract from Speech. u t am a Democrat for Constitution, for Law, for Union, for Liberty." Extract from Speech. : " Never with my eonsent sha.'leaoo be purchased .-t the price of DISUNION." - ' . Extract from Speech. ' No ' order of banishment, executed by superior .-force, ean release me from my rights. Every sentiment and expression of attachment to the Union And devotion to the Constitution to my country Twhleh I have ever cherished or uttered, shall abide unchanged and unretracted until my return. ' His address before banishment, . . I . . : .' '. : The Disuruonists. . On the let of February, 18C0Senator IIali, (olNen Hampshire,; now a ,- loyalist' - prt-itented to the Senate of the United. States' two petitions from- citizens of Pennsylvania, prayingj that ' Bomeplan miglit be "devjeed for the . dissolution of the American Union." Every Republican- Senator votrd for Oiese pe-,., tions. Mark the names of the traitors : John P. Hale, of MftKsachuxett; . ' William II. 5bwari. of New York ; Salvou P. Cu asb. of Ohio. . fin. the ;Lfnu8e on the iloth of the sivme i month, the petitions were presented by Joshua !R. GibniWGS, now an - otftcer under Lincoln's Ion. ' Administration. Every Rrpiiblican Representative, voted for tie petitions, tQ ,wit ; Chas. -Allex, ot Massachusetts ; ' ' Chas. Dorkee, of Wisconsin; - . Josnti R. Giddimgs, of O'tiio ; JicFUo K. Goobexow, of Maine ; .. .Geo.. W. Julian, of Indiana; i , J. M. Root, ofOhio. ' '.How verjr wdnderful it is, (hat these avow- d dinuniouista of 1850 " have become such ar- : dent Union'u tain 1863 ? Then they claiuied the" right-tor petition for a dissolution of the T "Union, and now they" deny their political op" . ponents, the right to even jetition-or liberty !; o speech apd th presa... 37;n.tliey Uiought at not disloyal to attempt to sever the States, ' And nd they profess to believe that criticism . -of (he acts of the Administration is ireason. .Then, they denounced Democrats sia u Union . avere" and oto, they. profs to believe tlat thet aldrie' have a right to thartUle. Imuu '; dent hypocrites J '"They cannot see .that tl4ir ' design atill ia to'deatrby .thja .Union,- while,' pfe-r Xeadior to save it? ,Like the treacherous as- - Ji aaaaiir who smiles while ha murders, they are ;TTvoiuuoniBtng-' vn uovernment wnue pre- vy aeoaiar io preserve lu urnry. ' - -:t wj ' .VoVfc'TisV But Draft , Storjr. i J;CTtdenc' i ;rAv dxned 'Irwhmah called utxo: ne jotir lawrern . m I Saturday ,' , and . desired- to' have! t-MMi prepared claiming exemption . from . tnilitary servlea for the several reasons which - named: v :. : y- . ' ; ' ': r r . : l.iThat be traa the nly son of a widow de- pendent pan bfm far support. : , ! .2. That hi father was ia such in8rra health aa to be unable to get his ofwn Jiving, ..; ,; : t v 3. That ha had. two brothers already in the f -: aerfrioa'all which fads Patrick i.deairsd .then ;d there to verify byialSdavit. , ;i t :. -,-: - -:: :' ' . y?f donV beJieve the drafted man wa' an .; YrUh'miui:- Thi Vtonst haw ben' iusi -' taken. WeTI wager that bis. vim. wa ;xot -atrQiu Jonathan ad-that- hav.waa a ;oyal laaguer." - MOOCSJimi Z u Viai.-m Wtt?T A,' - tTb border oonntiea of Northern IDs-C Drif;int UmentabU-, cpodition JJm, Itne, the celebrated AJboTiVvillian, has determined, with. his robber corhrades, to deic- latff tnoe coaniieu w uu uro ana ewora tn re- . '"'--' '. t , r y Yfvf;dv":-1 r ---; ;jr4rrTB0oVBdPIaisDoYsayti'Joha .rogV dsetiaeda to rvn foresraor; orttil . ' 'the leaders proittUed they iwfeuli tnalcop tha ndifferBCsrbeta thiGnWviar'Taalaro.:il-- lIia6rilbrtheJnia88actat Lawrerirfr. While v;lV epr ytojiathL rith tfie' rnored fcWpre Xff Iwrebce wwpitfi wKh'qail etajo6ohvjth Innocent bwDe'of lllisoar! whb hare suffered '""'0. d hU-aalaryasTRjijlroad Prideot,'C4 "jSS1 teybaa o sir him s boBoa u 1 'H500 Of thOBf rtobicW tJtio.'aBdrwkUrrictUtoidossMd people- stur tost?Jtiin Uy oa lbs Railroad. caiaui'Uirii aw-. ef(bHfc:yvMf"i2,i first cIjsJiftb(J otjft ln;fi;tC or.tho fxOtetJ?r. cuy. It wnrrkoducelO(KXaoTdief8. It will cost a million of money. ; On theobjeOt'hY New York jltlus em . I Exp8msit REcaoiTiNd. In addition td more tKKKZ&JXXR M3ie?riTpToj4l in this it is esiimatea inai at least zu.uuu " omciais, such as PjrovisL.arshal8,tlraft-commissioners. DhvBician. Clerk 'fcnri,' enroIlinr? offlcera ' are now j)l0y'by'ih06vetBmeQtt at salaries averaging more tfaaiveigui tlmeatbe pay of priat: aokJiere.7 Indefed,-1 hr 4a a feet that the expense of. enforcing the conscription is about equivalent to the pay of an army of 300, 000 men. If the money tfrua disbursed had been offered in bounties for - volanteera, : there; carj be no doubt. that the effect woold have been to secure' three times as many men as Wiirbe raised by the draft, which ho taken as many from the army as it has contributed :to its ranks. The draft in this city, for instance, yUl' not) probably -Tais,a"pne thoueapd while there can be no doubt, if our citizens had been called ucfon to furnish, volunteers instead, the whole quota would have been raised without difficulty; by" ilie payment of bountlas which woiild not have cdst -'half the amount tlt wil be, expended iu carrying out. anf (JWbxloui cotiscription,; ; - ' : r, i- i f - - ,,,- ''"V j . 2 fl; Trora Dayton, Ohio Henry H, Brown Acquitted of the Murder of Boll-meyer; ' ' :. " '' , ; Datto.v, September 10. Th Dayton JocmaZ aayf Ihejuty thiven ing acqairtrdj Henry H.&owkn;of the charge ormufdering J. F.'riollmeyer, formerly editor of the Dayton Empire. -CommgrciaL - , A moat, iniquitous judicial, farce baa now been con sum at ed, and a guilty man has been turned loose, with the blood of a prominent and estimable citizen, wickedly shed, upon his garments.' ur. readers are familiar vita this case. Mr. Bollmetes was the able and fearless editor of the Dayton Empire, and was shot down, in cold blood, is tlie streets of Dayton, without provocation, by this man Brown.-Mr. Bollveter was a-Democrat, and Browk was an Abolitionist, but such was the fiendish hate of Bollmever's political enemies that they immediately attempted tQ screen the perpetrator of the foul deed, and have- net, H ap-paa'ra, jw5tl Booceas, The trial waj Itad id Ae Abolition cpanty bf Warren, and a' Jary . lias ieen fbdnii'to render a verdict, wlilch virtual" ly outlaws every Democrat in principle, and puts his life at ih,e uiercy of any AUclition mivcreant who aiaC choose to takeiU We have already reached a fearful state of society when such trials as those of Brown occur, and. when political feeling jg , successfully invoked to shield criminals from their deserved punishment. Cia. Enq. - ' . - " Handcuffs for Freemen. " A few ditvs ago we law ir the treets of this fkir city a sight calculated to ntV .every heart with KortOr; ; : talking', between affile of sol-tlers in one of our uiost cro.wdedthorougb-ftirea.- were'fiMe' white freemen, handenffed and strongly guarded by. their military; escort. (iverthe iron manacles that round the fwrists of several vere throw liandkerchrefs; and the downcast lofjk aud sorrowing eye of . the- con-teripta told how deeply they felt the .degrada tion they were' compelled to sufier. These tn en had committed no crime. Their names had been drawn from the fatar wheel; and, in (he agony of doubt, whether they should re main witu tneir Jovec one in itiese sore times of want and. trial,' or eagerly march to fill the ranKs oi ilie army in tins -war lor ine Arncan and hia race;" ther had ridt pfohiptly reportetl to tli Provost Marshal's office, and were. called deserters'. ' This eight, we are informed, is no extraordinary one. It -5 is of .frequent and almosthourly occurrence. Compelled to suffer the grossest iudignTties,, thousands are daily, tortured with thegalJing though t.tjiat in this! land Of freedom "they must meet :the fate of slaves. Bht, bepatfent ! ATew weeks more' only must pass away, before the freemen of. Pennsylvania will have an 'opiwtunity of smitiitgat the balldt-box the nuscreants' who are now striving xo deprive ineni oi ineir no erties In going to the- polls, rerhember1, free-J men, mat tne - Aooiiiionisis or tits . proi city have forgel handcuffs for white men and given ; shouKJer'tstraps -'to; negroes' I Phiia, Age, Hth. - ; ' Hegro to Fight BTegrp. Jefll,' Daxis, so it seems, and, was 'expected, learns. from Abraham Lincdln, as Abraham LincolnearnsTrom him his last session taught viz: the employ met of negroes,' half a million of whom Sen. Davis now threatens" to britog into the:field--wprettrae,- because his whites hae giVea'ouU . . i . Upon' the whole, in this' neerp. ,figh,t, ; we think th Rebel -Jeff will have the' advantage over our President, With hie negroes, Iube first place Jeff; Davis haa the-most ' negrdeX, ten to our one, and in" the second place- he knows best how to handle them, as ; a .home master knows mora of negro . nature than : a master sent from abroad, t Bat between " the two kings', alas for; the podr negro. ... '. , fow, that (his is to ecotne a real lve' iie-gt6 war. it is a pitf that the whites on' both sides North and South could not setf ' oat, arid leave the battles to the egrpe?, with rthe original Abolitionists' Utti! Secesaibnistfl 'frokn ih4s'K,6rthaad South, to Officer them, "if thjaf could pnly be done there wl&oM''te'iu bills' aiBbng the wbitee eterywheW, whl theoe uon ot slavery would De settieu as air numan- larian questions -gerleraflyars by"onje 'of ex-term inatioo of the. pegro pa both sides th"e ope hy thaxrther. What was the1 fiterf poif Indian once, jp America woaM'tfhn "tebmi. the fate of the nirgro.-y. ri Expret'. . , r A ici)nTsraaJr!sirheaJ bjr oar r - i. . it iT porter: -. ; . .. ; .' . . t.I)-.!Qti& ttoTaiatO Baady tha draft f -4 v f- hf jetiI mtdmXs G "JUad Jrtjf nif distracted1 conn try naeds tn If aba require thsaaBrliloa ;af'Ith uwu insL-touenngt eaiaearar-ooTt g Union needs to b crmrnnlA withnr&v ihrt'I with HreJjfWiii- oth4y bua ty-j,Vs tha CUector'a-oBovsjnd pay toy iktaeHin.) dred tfolhwe rHarernUl Uaxatu. mm tr.L aaar-savpa. tjjaw'lcm v ?t Titlr hWirt!prepd fbtaay .adftrfOi. 4 fir-triist . Vitina )Proidan ,ir nhall JIs look at dis aar aigger, aressap iajofeoaa, ( lie ae anap 9 pnu tnmt en oia usuaa xreacnar 'sa"1baSi'rt ' ' - T" iw l"' lie sab hew rbt dreaa btaawavaail filer em 0weUoatJinalMt, taniahuB MM aaye store. .'5. : J v lo :;-ifj2 waits aaan,work for.iaBw,,whiphAae1)-i . J&ir dpne befpre ; "' " ' Wkat biiUy ran tt wfll 6aher40 iNkm tfstteaJgb. Wid. nigger sleepin'-ta desnn, whila maua.sei t ?" - W away tllgt!" ' .; libi ia asm ;dar keuifts :grafiV whan iQt w ..vanrveaawavea, , -.j i.r-hn ; jyie inAMa sweats juxd boa 4e. land, well 4ah "ttVil JalT ba'lnmen'' penis' "toi'iV. aome high n i?im?sBtTrat: ' " -M ! And prape when wtS hs wr"gt 'tkfbagk- Presi- t. . InK-;.! P w7 nigger C.., rWhy bo? 0 ! sfeKl 'waV taijrinv 1 r ; There is a magaifteent fatnre fff freedom" ftjr yen, the gift ef ynr generous "rrieiHia.', . .. v ; . . ; ;' . From Our Szchangea. ... - - i . : - v. : - SM AWlition freedom of speech." ikile-ing Mr: Vallandighaia: for beating tjieni io.ar- gument. , - . - .. ,. .,,1'- TliW Abolitionists in"; Oh lo. worsted iW argument, get excited ami threaten bayonets. m .. i . Wl a. . . C i 1 . . . . . . v. ; Douglas said the RepublicaTi ' party is responsible tor the war.. Let hry -pretended Abolition admirers: Chew thit cud. ' . BSTThe Republicans call Vallaji.lighftirt. tt " branded traitor." We suppose thy. caU Brough a inimiittd patriot1, r. , - i S- If the people are in favor Of vreorotis prosecution of th war, why do't; they volunteer and fill up the vacant ranks? " ' :.lw be President has onset hia proclamation freeing the negroes, by issiune aaolker enslaving, the whites. '. .' . ' KSr The tact that drafting haa to be resorted to, shows: most emphatically that the Deoole are tired oi the war and. Want peaee. : JT Brough refused to carry siok soldiers at half-fare; He had them put ' off tlt cars be eauee they had no money. t&F Fnhn the number of dis'essed 'persons, who were quite healthy before the draft;' ij would seem, that the poeple- were titsrally "sick and tired of the war." -- " Bread and BoTraa" The consolii dated rail road plotters, promising to pay. John urougn sxx thousand, dollar a y ear to be 'Cov-ernor of Ohio. , : , . , ;: ' " We do-not wh to do injustice: even to Vallandighatn." Jeffervmian. . .- .i : Then why don't you correct that lieoX yours wuen you can nim a convicted traitor, ; The radicals call all. Democrats and conservatives trsvitprs, ' because they do not agree with them in seek trig Sanfbb's freedom at the expense of the white man's liberty. ; Jk5- BrOnghi prelera the defeat and annihi lation of all the Union armies.' rather than be defeated himself fOrGovernor. ! Soldiers, c4 i you vote forf such a. man f ' : An Abolition psper speaks of ,JIeieit John Brough' Whenever AboITtionitits put ,he word Honest" before a candidate's name, look out. ' It is al moat certain tliereV some' rascality on foot 1 : ' . . ' ; 'i Democracy seems to be a . popular thing thesedays. A man matt 'ber(,'orj: have Iwen, it" Democrat,1 "to ; be eligible" to ' bfflce'. Young me'n'Wh6 are about form io 'their po- iiucai aiiacnnrema Bnouia rememoerthi8. . S& Brough 'a speech in tliia place last week did not' suit the Rcpublica'rrs. We have beard of three in Blanchard township who ware o disgustftd that they aow 'rapport the . Demo-cratic; tiakeC Hancock Courier.i( .. ; iQiTh'e Logan Gazett say's we are now spending more thaty a thousand million a year.. A great portion of thip inuaense sum goes into the hands of Office-holders, and cornea otf the poor laborint people; - ' : : -; '. i ' ' ; jjLet no .Democrat1 sit with' fofdedhands. Let every man be at worki; OnV Kbrrtel Dfon- erty, life, depend irponi the triumvir of tJhreV'Hb)-erty candidate.' Val must be 'elected,'' if-' W shall have a Russia ioOhio. ' - f. ;- .;'i.Cbeering hews comes from all portioned ui liii; crwi.io. j.ue,i-emocracy. areoong poftiy." The.Pjepple; seem to feel4hei jungrand are wheeling into line gloriously. - E'rerj meeting is a success a granu auccess.... 2 f . . , BSF- Ut. r-yaU.alghafit''.;'is-j;th tnep-d. .. 41 emoted .'to iBcrease their pay4 uiova to giv tutm Quiciea.. lie .ioted give thent ea,hne I60;acrea,efJaftd. .;. - .id-; .' . . ,.') V. . to i " " ;2ralo;lIeat?.'.!: - '; ' The Cfenfeder)ate''roifl5or Vrh'd is 'writing ;d tailed account of wllat took -ofatje inside 'Fort Hudson during-its beieagneiiiient-, says tbatl raUon of Vheetanpeen.rgrveif o'uT The troop btthelsfbruryaVh bt many officers, a wounded mule seasc kilted aoo cnt ap ( Jexpej1metaJ,aiingritvth4e who jBartook,ofj. spoke highlyofUhe dwh ;TUe fieshof JlA?Sithft. ffriurdeaojjbea aa4js ing of a darker color than beef, of 4.ner grain" quite tender aodjiiicjr, and.aahaViojg ..flavor TOmethine between thatof -bfef and rroiaon. Jhere waaio itrtnsediate deipanfor thi kiad or rood, and nf .BnJea kHe by iha -comsais- aay inaa.',;ionie aorfea weraHliad alaughtcrad, AneV thenr 4Jeh .as .lovMtOj be very ocrf .eaftiogi bof ,ot t equaj jnu4e,Xl EatvoC.hjch -ther vera plenty abpqt. th.ada-aertaiJ.cmpaiwera alao caught fey jnany oftl- pr hi fwwm jpyrw -a njpea ftgite a j 1 n VII W S trwik Wl A aa fka naaM.A iL u- . t. 2 "f a Wi)em,wapBgtsr.'aaao ,vt3 l,,,. Pfr :n)flii ! l I i isiesr, .m im T i.ai! y&n'fQ Votor!Brotighihb tstM$4rVt! fn iKvororthe' war goinrh, ttWtlivHIis''abo lflhed'! JtrtarigweTthat qftekh,1eforo ww ccv io wing cat ieu an. AOTi nioB 8t? " . 1'lO-TTra teahinl4'orth'rjaat h'atw bew 4tabjbikei-Froln yrVouttf:up;.w1ivfcfei utugntnat Tternai vigtiaaccf ta tae JprtcW Liberty.' -Itshr ahowtVre-'A were worth noairj; fir' lias than nothing. ; as now worm caca irom .ou.iaaj to i-iUUv?, Jlira the zraaiwa-; ofaorrahcV. ahl and thb ttfiyrieriteBtt efetoclb'isia di tuif j . .J.rrf-i-: .TWh t-vLiMt.; Carolina and tha Galf ro.34iinuStTT Uboc an iDdepeodent CotJe4racy. ; CPtnidJttibis srell known fang. f?t tXvli i, dT n -1 9. -f. Mh no tha.Temocra HIS -Tt-l'Wili; ? 3 nomaated for the poeiUcn he naw hoida; : H risvanrieaadiaace ior eupreras no gel to dnietfaciWfcflbn-in ihe'pomica! ea AW.PfS'i""? Wu:Wsrelory.i-reaa .with iMM veji uiterett by ,tha people Qbk. :IW-Ioiw and approriateeas nll ,bs zeu now as wcu o in .aou. -n it as to now a ici; "i'. . ...... . f. : Mr. President ld Gfntleme f iAt Convention For the very distingniahedlionor which jon have juatconfefreupoo ae, by ray unanimous nomiaaiion asj a Democratic rejandidate for Jtidjre of the Court oi Coaufsoo Pleaa .of this subdrvuio of thejodicial , District, I ten der: to yoit-my-iatost pratouadand grateful:ae-knowledgementa- i-j Thia -clattering .testimonial of you friendship aadregartL U; not ,the leas gratifying nay, it is for that reaaoa,ithe moat eiwinently grateful to my feelings, because-: its being tvholqr-ansoliortedoM my part, r.J neither expeated ibciesired. afcy pobiiion .before the peopronrhich would take me .from that ouiet uii repose. Wiiich ia much - dtore coagenialy to me present temper oi. soy mind aaU. cireuxn- i stances than the taraaeu and axoitement of a, rxUticaJ,cn(assr Indeed, theae are., tjrrres in wMch'tSO than' need be-'an.rrt to 1 mingle in. the ptrifieaattd bitter feelings ofa political campaign ; times; too",' whjch makV eiuiueiftly ttriej and forcible the maxim, that "-the post of honor; is a private (btatioa,V- And yet there cornea to most.'men, in 6ome, period of their linclina- tions and -eva-their interests, ,to the' "wishes and feelings of other?., You have decided that thiaia a period, in whifh .1 . should , yield : my own inclinations to yors. ..I.acknowledge the force of the: obligation ; and accept the nomination promptly, unreservedly, thankfully ; with a full appreciation of all its responsibiO-ties, at. a period and under circu mat an pea which . require aomepiHig . more than mere physical, courage taba-a. Democrat. T accept it in the spirit. jthas been tendered ; not as. a reward (or mere partisan services. not in. any factious spirit of uartT.orfranization : but as an endorsement of an honest independence in 'stand ing, up for the rigut anid tne whirlwind oi excitement and fanatichjBi which rules the hour; and as a rebuke to that spirit of vindictive ha tred and persecution which haa been showered upon me py nearly tuwnoie mass oi tne tve-publican party here, for no other reason than that I have modestly but firmly exercised the common right of an American citizen to think and speak of the acts $ud doings' of the servanit of the people. How long you and I shall be permitted thus to think and speak of the ofli- LciaJ ajta of those nowea(ed' in the 'high ..pla ces m w e uovernnieny, uow .aoonnae gag, upon "ilie Treedoin .of mm stocLtha . freedom ; of the press shall change from a universal order of things, produced by secret raKinight orders irou the councils of the .nation the;. history of the uext tew montus must deteriuine tor the Anerican people. If this great right, baptized in blood and gttaranteed to as by the .dearest fro vie ions of the Constitution under wh if b we ive, thus to think andto e peak of? the adinini Utratkm of the Government,. is to be ; wrested from the people, at a lime and in a crisis when jt ia most important and essential that it should exist unimpaired and inrestricted, .' why then we have but the mere shadow of liberty, a tnere carioabtrs of copstitational government: ana bo .jar as repM,- genuine practical ireeqom. is concerned: voa miirht iust as well 'live' .under tbe.deepbtlsm oi Jpseph of llapgburg, of Aus tria, as that Of Abraham" Lincoin of the United States of America. , Ahy manly and. indepenr denjt stricture's, i ther upon the blunders or.the corruptions of the AdrninTstration, are at once qietorieu-inio treason, ana aysioycuiu to tne xjo-. ernm'ent,'hy .k set of.crave Sycophants' and Informer's, whoare .always, 'ready,' whether iu Pfe-O1, f,n war -V : 'n, ""r'i " ,' i- .i Crobfc the pregnant hinge! pf,tle kn4 :. , Where thrift may atUowawniag"';:SVt J. .,' . :A;ref6il td'shont bosairnahs to the Wncon- stitotidnaVaets and usnrpationi of! the President;' Sftch ' as" no "monardi" ot ' England has-dared to assume sine the iron reiero of the Tudors, .dffiltynC&yipnpa.thy with rebellion,'1: pSccomrye-1eycftiwna l is hunted down wun an tne raoeor Of tbat leu f sbirit of perBecdtion, which) has made .the' hisj- t ta-ry of other Aimesbut aimilar "Qontroversies, the great landmarks and beacoa ltghtam the atroldedof the people for tha eBtablishment; tw:t6e mamteoanee -of civu aadaonstitatioaab liberty) i Tbti gieftt" principle i fori which , the Democratic party ia ) now :atxuggiiag -ia this GovertfmeSl, iabw riew. thine iilh history, df -riianJriBdi It;iaadldatha first drawings of -cirurxatiOB; r s hh uui ana ore xeeeaietr eoa-n x . i , l i .f - - - i ten pvivewii-pofmM riTitegaNi uiwieaiuf, and executive aeurpauon qw tha , othertoe ritrhte of thPa?do.agaiaatihe One Minn Poio- tsr, when-itisedtd crash ooOthp chbarly ofy the J iWtfwfsja.ertiaeR' Jt ia thanapnaetpif4'T rhieri natapaen oiea ana didney.auaereaiana itia bi'astaiuoh dangwr noto, upon tUa shorea bf frea AjnsToaw aad iat a IPrtunBiit pC phtib-lywittea 'ico'wtitutioaai aa vet its yaftittoiha atorntiest-: dajarwbea : Gh arleajiegieaiarand. CromwelFa soadrooa Yttetia thedeadjy ahock. of battle o it a devastated jlaina of England, twebacdred years ago. :An4 what great qoea-tion.iaa.itviich.ahok the ; English v throne asid baoogiista neadLorubarles to;tfte block f UCDartv "vCrloEliiK "--Fc-J rimwB tue nicaiy oa What waa hvtbat gare up (htagraat bad.tnihqiba(t atiJl.:pnbrQkei front iae- V. break-water tad thaFengeBoe.er,ihuliad1.pBv.Ue ii aalaarrstf prirata oitiiMD.Wi'eecrjcn ders frortttbetfaitycounciLarTOilftdtheihr a-pidaiB nakpwBctoiIiha JawaLand 4tods tieUbgJwedvahaVat tioxat kx vheobat boosOry jaareeungticb4be fiereeourgea bf ciVeoBHptitefto jwt,e;:tbft Aajari4f doodIo. with the best educated fjaaasesn tie world evet Uw-Uathapeteetiti century I -thahll Mateof PsodarBj.civiUaation M aadpn rder Cc4iUtiod waich ciaarly definee tb irjode.bviwkdeh acitiaen iaJlbe-deoriTad1 bf hia parsonal liberty , withoofc rafereaoa to tw ie riramataiaos f . arm. saade aufejeW t thad a. node will of aitafatnd drajr?ed iarTthadei d I hotrr cjaidoiirht.itatha eeJlaof adi)rtant"rrla-1 OBKiuaa, income Mptoi234r JiOut . the maJe4rindbstnto ;lr tlf;rlinsVvet dikkrysi i practice ha;;ben coumittedby DmoeiOthara lei them btluiahed' bnitp0iihod fftardjrti Cjt Cfy mCutkmand tU i ThaDeac-rc.'rtftr, tadtKTthlngaacfj ndi; they win cct wU'n Jybmit tIJthbae, TiisMlhjp-fi? Constitution and by the arbitiaryirKE-!riroB T tt&lisawia ttl;arfiCi;U;aut ranch tieCiVlrfSKti !These tiner tig-sea? are teatioc ct PlIiicc ie5tItc;:.v.-ac2;Dur greatest au-ea ol other 4ays-th ablkt commentators of the Constitntioo and 'the resJ tdrHha beoptef theriresfiave labored sader si uosc ahjnal 1 TniMpwhaftawwi ia rgaM to the working; l if net thanatarai .tendency, pf,oi; potjc 'Batitutiona, in.perir oun of great pressure ana excisemen i. no f vry day'e-xperieoc tesaifies, ' that the lend I ana tutriahed aappoayjoek! thjj tbegreat pru t frtnii mr loc weak and ineu&- tciMt-aa-aninat Uejehecks and reatrainta of Uhe co-ojrdinater..ncbs ojT'the Governmonl, as iias oeen supposea uy some o; tne greatest men who have both' framed anid administered hi-ifl modrhv thneai'and recent instance of its eaereiaf harproved. it to.ba oDe); of the strongest deparUnents.,.pfjnolitul .power: known to any governinent of limited powers on the face of the earth. With whatever restraints and limitations the exerciSV'ST delegated power has been eurts&tiAowever tjxactly nd bartnious-ly nay have .heen adjnsted "tha complex ma-chinerv . of, the . crovemment wkli intrrrat weighed again t: interest,' and " a ' aystem of cnecKS ana oaiairces proTiaea azamst everv 8nnposd:poib(e abuse of no wr--4h ere still exists beneath alMhis ; splendid apparatus of laws and regtilations, as incident to all human institutions, the ,'eifirantic enenrir of the' txas- SiOns, which when aroused into phreazy, brush : It. --!.: -.1.1. 1? . away in.e? cuiweix me moes' sagaciona conin-vaheea to- hold its vibratory poiut . tru to the luagnetpf icouimoa weal. . . . . ; . . " ..,.Wh8,is ft that haa brought about, the terrible crisis which. i now upon the American people,' crushing out their national prosperity, loading them down with a burden of taxation unheard -of in moderu.. times, and delocimr tli ear fairest ttelds witi fraternal blood l it is the insane fanaticism of an Abolition pulpit on the one side, and the infernal treason of the politfca! 'club houses ; on the other. These two inptruinectB bava worked together more than thirty years it), bringing About the great calamity , which is .now. , shaking the-continent as with the mighty throes of an earthquake. It is a remarkable fact that Jblm Qniaoy Adamaaad- John Caldwell Calhaun, the two KeprosentaU ve tnen ' of. these excited factious, thirtvron'e vearn aeo. first saeeested those twin ideas of political heresy, atoLlion 6f slavery by Uongress, and the secession of States from the Confederated Government, by Leaulatite ordinance. It-was ia1S31. that John Qmncy Adams first -introduced- into, the Congress of the United State's. petitiohiS fVorn'lhe 'cTery of New England and other enthusiasts,' praying for the abolition of alaverv in the District of Columbia; and it was during the nexteacceed-ing year that the State of South .droliua through the influence of John C. Calhoun, passed her ordinance -"Of ntiHiflcation - From that, day to the -present, -these, two' : faction have worked in .harmony .together, for the same common object the dissolution -.of the Union and the destruction of 'American nationality. This collision between fanaticism and treason at last became painfully raaotfeat to the Aroerican people. They both converg ed, to the same counmoB , center; a . rupture of the political relations which "had become alike Irfceofrne to both. 'The one exhibttol lu ultra ism in the nomimvtlort of gAographileal candi- datee and the adoption O a sectional platform against the explicit and : solemn warning of the father or his country; the other blew the Counterblast of treason,' and boldly proclaimed the doctrine of secession as tha rightful reme- uy iorscn-ataae ot -political power. In this state of feeling rand in,. aach- a controversy. Abraham Lincoln became President of. the United States. dn uch a crisis: w it hr such a field lot Ibe-exereiseof broadmindedpatri&t-iah.-fraod With aach- an-opporMiaity: for great, and food,, and w.Uocpuuselsao sustain, the Union se&timent, in" the South and save . te Border Siae 6tates,--what a destiny 'for himself ami for his country- lay before that stmrte ; man 1 -The world never witnessed such a con junction of time; and opportunity for,, good I Such a pivot-point oXcreat national interests. of terrific publifirdangers and of resulting iu uiiensw up?n, iue uesuoies oi tne remote. lu- ture, for millions of ntaborp "human beingn, never before extsteil, But he was unequal to the great ippaaion; he mwu'ndettood 6r dTsf7-ganfed, the ' high', the awful ' trust committed to his charge.. Instead of d1sarmlng'"the' re- oeinon oy- uiserrarging nts wty to ttve iinofe ceii rt4rTand the whole people; he added to 'its strength, . while.. he. trashed Oqt the -reinaining union; eentimeRt- in the South, ' by- calling around mm, An his cohstitutionai advisers, men of the most- violent, sectional' views', and who ; were- thi prime movers of that .fatal contrevergy.f which;; at last arrayed tb sections in undying hostility to each other. That fatal JHtleaessi of aend, that narrow and pei e partisan survey of.the troublel political field before .him,, and the subsequent adbpfion of a policy fib clearly condemned and deprecated Icng in 'advance 'of the 'anticipated ortsia, byi Hamilton, by: Madison, by? Adates, and by. .Ed mupd , Randol ph,' h a v ing yaftly contributed to ij)ur difficulties, and Thave been, a fruitful sotircejof ail our" . national woe. God only' knows, gentleman of tire' Gnverjtron what is toibe the. fi nal issue .of h e i!ery ordeal through which free institutions on: this ooati-nent are0!arpossingIt ia possible, they may couieotihe do ret aual briirhter from the fierce aleinbie of iyil'waf, is "possible, and OJily possible, that ih'is once oonfederated Ub- ion pi iree anainuepenaent sovereignities, now prostrated dike the piJJare of Gaaai by the Sarn son of civil strife, may again be reconstructed, to give-hope, aad pee, and --eeeority to the Aaaericaw people.- 1i)ut weaaV&aB fix ad as-8,uraricew,oa reUabhj guarantee, that it will.- be ao. . We oplyf ftoow that it, is Jhe -bigk and cjonseryativa mission, of the Democratic party here in the Korth, to stand aa a shield to our Ivatsoaal Constrtutionu present' itsehaken aroun.d A hoJyAkaW,, against the- despotic assaults of an administration' .who,' seetnimrlv propose' iO'snataifl if.: by tireaWing down erery harrier erected. ' for itr pstetwn. 1-; thirl insUtii-'J.gret:cAhmily jehjeh haa, thue? befalled oar common counfry, portentioas alike tothaTilhj, eruea ana greai. irjsie oi tne A mencan pep- f hi W'? f -kmX: thtlear-: It. indicated mission of tha Democratic party nfwM be,' Iad boT W aawa ip niuBjrroy' aesumeas wai a i v prepared tostaAder fait with stagaaizatieh iFeel- V" &vwwmiwxmm todiacharss ail its duties, and recognizing all its .just claims upon tne, I have felt WeofsrjBctibna'of oo ie m'titft termlnatiAn.'SoMong s snaJJHuainiaintu.'presetji constitutjooacan-eetviaie'poeH6nr,ItnteaI te-share !ta fittcJ for ieoalorfor wos and ah all meet iu the Vutipfr atiovaad kboia',bicl:oiryj; be chaired npon vnp, if frith all jthw forbearaoca aDdt nee- neea w a cfaaiTinjjiraffT wuaau, m aira- In the dark -vail mi; liTal.iiice cs3 petictrita; -Uff itti'irtlJi with.fl frt treiJidcailiing-hirtici;h Equity; cat rse' ?a? reacri-Ci wul te Vyy f re&t, ii,bC Ciif 4 tJ 14 TTftrr&liCTi ci t Union as itvas. And l'xi Union pfEuUa, eestented b ey of tha futrjra-irLajh i les bo hu- mizz mtrm-z-ttirifji.'--. .-; A? s..':,i w uw ttyuti iu uauie-ueuiM snail oe ae-ered and destroyed by a phrewthe moe, ' iiw saae that erer raadiened the ' Boman bvart, let n have thfc proad, the aelaauining ooa-solation that no mad iaflatjeiara, ot onra ha MHlritintait tr. t.m mtoKts' 1 I t.T Vr gentleman, let tie seek consolation 1o" another poselble contihgmcyi If, nthe inscrouMe wayaof fratideaee, throttgfc ahaviaadAesan of despotic powrl ani lia. aystem f f: terrots, dn-angerat d by anarchvj and the wildest passione of men -unrestrained br bxw or' reliIoiiwe shoald beeome tbevk-timscT a fierC peraecW- nijwpuuHci opinion, tax aa Dear in miaa the lofty seBtimeat bat the end of .that roan never can com too toon,, who. falls in. defense, of the'" peace; the happiness and the liberties of his country I ' Amid all thU'' wild con-rulsion of the- social I aad , political orgaa iana nder the juoet despotic tyrranny a hich can or may be fastened upon ua by the creatures ofa mere political' accident let us still be able to say : -tiiy. .. ......t -. ' - . .'. . . . . , t- ; Thy spirit, ladepeadeaee, let as sh are, . ; 1 ; Lord ef the Lioa-ke4rt aad Eagle-eye, '' : Thy step well follow- with ear beeesns hare, Nor heed the storm that howls along the sky." Thank God! That epirU aUli lives, in. the Democratic party ! I love it because .of .that spirit.' I )bve it for its untemporizing boldness in the assertion of what is right. I love H for ira atrargbtforwart! directaeaa in the avowal of iU priuciplea. ,1 love it for tlwe indomitable courage with which it maintains its organization against all the deepotie efforts to put down ; and tiHe-- ita utterance.' -'I love it' for single-minded and unalterable attachment to the Union, the idol of ita political worship for the legitimate maintainance of which it leads the column of brave hearts, now striking for its defense. I love it Because it haaliobly' resolved to 'iflk or Swim, livet or die, survive or perish'wtTU. ,h Constitution abb thi XiBKRTiftS' or tb. Count jtr. : 'r- . . tFrom the Ctaeoiaati a-tIrer. ; .. A Good Joke A Eepablicaa Cnxaca XLi. . Yallandigltam ; and - maker a Mistake s Ha HiU ooe of Si owa friendi. . A most laughable political joke occurred ia the cjtj the othe' day, which is too good to be lost., and ought to be published in the public' prints. A Democrat met a rtepublicah carrying in hia hands a volume oi the Congressional Globe, aud an appendix - for the session of Congreas ending March 1&&1. The Democrat looked at it, turned over iu pages until he came to page r 60, when he exclaimed, ".Ah I here, ia a speech delivered by the noble and patriotic ValUndigham: I bare often admired -: ' that speech, -; as ' enunciating sound political aeotiBventaU.. Let me read you an extract or two frodi it. He then., read, is follows: - ; ; ;"'' . But, Ur. Chairman there are sdme tbing3 that gentleman ought to nnderstand. v ' L grant yoti. freely and frankly, that I do ot believe this Government vcan permanently be held together by military force. I do not believe that any section or the Union will ultimately subjugate and overran the other,' and hold it as a conquered proviuce. ' I have no idea, of any sweb thing. , . It ia against the apir-itandgen othe-agei Nobody would undertake any iuch thing. I Tegard a civil war as really settling the question that there is to be ultimately a separate confederacy. I. have no idea that such a war would 'end otherwiae than in a separation of the,-Unipn, and the organization ef separate confederacies. I am perfectly satisfied of that. Anybody who Sup-pasee that fifteen or eve r eight of the States can be held Sn bjagaied as coaq nered provinces makea a great mistake. ;r But, whether they can or noty they ought not to be. It Is against 'the spirit and. genius of the ge, and saaan ought to seek to doit." "--: . :v Stop, atop, says the Republican : doh't Tead any more of such treasonable nonsense I la" it possible you will vpte for a traitor who enr wnii euvti eerajfuenia, or euppon- a parry that nominateS him for a ' htgb office ? . Give me the page of the book .'waai' to torn leaf dewn in order that ;X may nee it hereafter "rn exposing th e traitor. ' The' Democrat was handing bim the hook, when he exclaimed : I declare, I -have rriade: a mistake, this is not v aiiandigham a speech. lputMscah-Jndeed ; whose ia k. rjav f kXK aoanda. joat like hirrf... . i.-.o j .v - 5 .Democrat---Why, it u the. speech of Beh-jamin Stanton, now the Republican Lieuten ant Governor of'OhiOi and; president of the eonventiott which -nominated John BrOagh for Governor.. It was -, delivered ia February, 1861, only two months before the attack oa Sumter. Did you not vote for 'him in 18&X and: pat him in a' place where he would be Governor in case Tod -died, uotwithstandig the, qMerance ot those treasonable aeati-fmjnta? .:, " ....': . . .... . . ..JXr." Kepabircan' looks blank. . Well' Ibe-Heve-rdid. - - - ; 1 y 1 ' v. Democrat Well, aa yon "have - voted for. Stanton, can't you, permit me to. vote for Val-landighani who never uttered as extreme sen-timehtaasyour mAn, whom IO tjjebted two years ago, and whowas the Preekiept oi jour last Convention t '-':" ..' "' -'.". i ' rf- r-iri.nai admitthal r hafe been badl' sold fn Jthia bttsinesa;' bat don't for God'a sake, put k kx the Enquirer pv.l '., '-. .i '. .; i 1 lTortli Carolinfaniti tot Feaeav v s 1 A. Washington dispatch tot. the- Ciacinnati Gosetiaaaysi..?' :u .,!, i- c c ;:ia.;::i5oi ut'A i private letter rebeived , today ftOnJ m staunch Unionist ift dial eigh. says, the-eelirg in JtorthjCajvtfna against .the tyranny of the j Kichmond' oligarchy M 'Was ; intense. "Peace meetmge'are- rrequent ia the eastern and sodt a-ern sections of tha state, aad Union aaenV who have heretofore beeeirent are becoming bold and persistent ia. tbelx 'dimand for peace.- What the State, desirea js;peac first and neT gociaiipns aerwarafJ .4. Mexpecieaj-nauov-ernor Vance's next inesss ire to the "State Ler. lalatore wilt "widen the breaclr 'betweea the Stats and the Kidiotoqd Oorerameotv Gew? erncr Ysnce's frieada sar Lhe5 -will r recall.' alt tha North CaroHna troonsaervinr-in the rebel army. - taejxwiwon.aasameu oy ut rxuueign-i iSWrfrd iti favor of pece; rnetr with generiJ I omrnenasuow- ,Te- a-ui .-,. 1 . . - m Mm mm - .- 3 A reseripclisplaiaiBi thesurmy : fromlae' at the .Wertar;States, atMwmwd, to h w Jaml-Jy and frtenda, aboat a .year, eince, that , (a wanted ths war "to coatlnue until' ha obtained a safSdeat pile to bay a good farnW and then bedWn car a'dit;a-JLs-aAoTi-it sloNdt f We lesro that he has reUrned froa LlS'psW mwii sn wue inur, einnr znane tae "-pyenii xjonnt tana" c-Wert; To raise n so ott'-, T'ry: xzticll . s:iT't he taoet bays t J a Band in t:. 6nl.'ctjn br CiarterriiiUra .mthl V ALit holy and iayai tnea ezzii c "ties 3 XUteadJ -aral- 5"WOfl 't rCTTa Albany && (Ce-i.) earfjist Jcvn II.JTPaq bie; Pnvatt ft y ti L tisU!iioxs VtitaCoaaaraoT tha iarrrkties-USuna y CerUhmbloUoneaf titDepajtrawta. ; - -- - - - - ' -o.-r ...v. - . tha aay- aneetion pot. Wilt "TOtt give ta yoax tie power -of making, row law t , - Beware of ecmlttleg yonraelvee th lbs fatal doctrines ef reorgaauuag the exiateoce, in the Unkravof State; hich hare' been declared by the Preaident!, proclamation to be ia rcbellioa. . , v4 - . . .. a ' - ' 4! - - "Do not. allow throW Statea. wltlj thefr1 constitutions soakered; o rasa trie State po w- : . " The inhabitants of the conquered dWtxioti ; will begin by clalmii-i ' the right to exercisef the powers of Governinenf,' and under their construction of StaterlghU" to get control ol the Mands, peraomtl'' property;' slaves; flea' blacks and poor whites; and a legalized pow- . er,' through the instrtmetitalky Of Stata. Uws. "" -' - - . .- What will he the consequence of yielding to this demand t ' ' - - r . . - e. .,- .. . a.. " They will gain the right of managing their. affairs according to their will and plesUtfre- ami not according to the will and pleasure oi the people' of the -United States.- - - - - . - If the lawstf. these States shall again be- revived and put in' force "aainst freer blacks and slaves, we shall 'at once have reins laud in the Union, in alt its force and wiokedhew; that very curse which has brought on uw war." ': . . - Will it be possiUe that State slave law! should exist and be enforce! by slave "State. it hoc t overriding the rirhts ruaranteed by. the United States law to men, irrespective of color in the slave States ? . Will you risk theaa angry collisions of State aad Naikwal Jaws hlle you hare tha remedies and antidote .Iu yOnr own- hands T Solicitor Whiting's Let- ter. - - - -:. . .' ? -: '--;.- i The above from SoUcitor Whitinjj, the pria cipal Law officer of the Admin istratioa, ia nothing leas than treason, aad Wosld W counted so under tha adm t a istration of aaoh men; aa Washington, Jefferson, or Jackson.' But under Lincoln's rule, it is approbated loy- ally. - , - - ! . : : ; ' This may henceforward be considered thav administration, or Abolition platform ; thai one on which Brough" is, running, and tlat the Democracy - is' opposed, to. - Uaioa man ? Ohio, can you vote for such - treasonable aad disunion sentiments ? ; " i ; A lTota of T7arsisg. : The Washington eorrespondsnt of th York Sundajf Jercwry gi v as tli'e7 following warn' ing: .. - . ; ' " . . . . - - ----- . ."The most imporUat riteiatlaa aotlceabW here is tha pracuce a roar Abolition President to ride through, the streets protected by mi-moucted guard. Time was when ear PrasV deats walked tha avenasa like any other man; and freely coormingled with their fellow citizens. Nowre'sal state is aattnmed. mod Mr: I Lincoln's eowardfee. frightened oat of all prop riety riy in a cry or treason, wiucn sis parti" sane) affix to the name of Democracy, degrades him into the vileness of lurching tarocgh. the streets if he ever ventures out alone, or SDcir-1 cles himself with - a squadron of eavalrv to guard his precious person from suspected' assassins. . - .' ' ' f ;"Some astute observers malntaia that ihia oowardice ia merely a pretense . to jostifr . tbs aaaumpUon of the paraphernalia of royalty, ts cdver'tbe designs of aome ambkiooa aepiraat, now concealed by the drapery of the throne who naj,hersafter ase the armr for Dornoses 4 which may be utterly destructive of our iiber- nesiin tact tne .present, mcumbect or tbd Presidency employs the troops for none of the purpoeses for which the people so generously and cheerfally raised it. t He marches it forta to fight for the liberation of the negro, sends" detachments to obntrol elections, or orders a! whole division la compel conscTiptidn of a new amy when disgusted with his insincerity, the people refuse to volunteer. - These uses of ths army look ominouv and we need no magic glass to foreshadow; to ua r that ws . are ut traveling to centralization fand despotism. Oar people remain blindly- impassive, appard ently blind to passing events; ant be it remembered that, Ceasar, when be passed the Babn eon, did not possess one-tenth of tha military Kwer now swayed by If r. Ltnoota. - Judnj . ths reoklessaessof the -Admisistratioa in proeeoutinr ils sovereum will ia mattsra rml and small, soma observers of. political areata seem to anticipate high handed measures from iU interferences when tha Prestf ntiJ oaxxv paign approMhea. 5 ' 'Z 1 ;. ; Cie Obttructiosj - ia -tb i i r i v""rrff .. .. - Jto48lsi the faars of-aooi AbxUkMiat frfe are. not well aaqnals tad with tha fixed and dm Uermlned porpqeea of ihsx. amlfyt aot to let thetiooth eome back into tha TJaiosi if il ofieredtov with slavery, stored, -aad wfad distrnat ita acUcH tha Kesr York IWc tha Admroistratioa organ ia York, aays f "1 there be ao r boa .ths-aotioa -of tha,Govfrnmeae, ia any eonoeirable azetejsey rrowiag out of the war' amd connected with tha Fresident's rroclamlUOri" of: &rJora. Ths stronger and Wisest of tha Sretaiii; witii three ct'ier members ataGahiaaCarilliriBs their.portfelioe into the Potomae,' sooner than yicia a nairs orraaui ot t-oeir eoortctioa tnar the phldMt'tMtmetpa fcnm md omtr; yid vvaKXaify. Utt? shrva aohraeed with id Us pfOTUionaf v ..:?X5 W T c-.ThariJUth U.ertfe,,plally 4eld thai' tha rest orst iox ofAha old Uaioti id irfJpnsaibW gf?rH'gP'U''Sg "ji.BBSI nj.". !', i i .-. nr-iffwid -sX72laXi22sSs!. It Hesit.f I fCr-rrencKorgaBised a oOttfpaay af VoK nnteers uader the law,, and withy the time limited by the Adjutant General,' itad that ranctionary-fssaea an oruer asaactng u. oeaipany T'oWpBy wma eoatpoaed of Democrat,; iA e6tajiir 6f Ahditioaists. waa caisediSrcsnMf ;taLlptad eoapietea alalatrfftklaif tiatW CpctPraachs, and it f-: '-H.'C ich.'traasaetioaa aa till .'SI I - fircladethatft i tha' design eft i ,t;V jiadfa to arm their foiiowexj 5i ( vfiaiaoia arms rroci t:' v&zv -"r..-v- .". J 4-1. Txtsli ; 7 1 . Lacolar c;i:!itaT.vrIih - a itciiaii totlich' I u.jTw'it-J CV -lral cisspilst t! i C ;eitL-l.--at; Sappoaa la daw the rebeiltoo q? 'bfjcax3, VctiUi J Li, Ifl cstiidi,' ; send every Geaeral inthe array air - - ' ' v .. - . ..-. -. - . , W - v 'f.if.m |
