, { i 3 VOL. 6. Ee rT BELLEFONTE, THURSDAY MORNING, JULY 25, 1861. Select Posty. THE MOTHER'S PRAYER. BY MRS. MAGARET PIGGOT. God of nations, God of might, Tu the stillness of the night. At thy footstool low I bow, Hear me, hear me, hear me now. All without is wild and drear, All without is doubt and fear, ‘Where oan I for refuge flee, God of hosts, if not to thee? What fierce scourging, Judge of all, Must upon my country fall? Must we o’er this land, so fair, Witness carnage and despair ? All withdrawn thy favoring light, All our noonday changed to night. ‘We have sinned, oh God of might, Sinned, rebellious, in Thy sight ; Pride and wrath are o'er the land, But, avenger, stay thy hand! For our children, smilling here, For our litile ones so dear— Stay thy judgements, swift and sure, Say it, God, for these are pure. By the child whose feeble ory From the desert rose on high— Bringing to the mother there, Angel cheer in her despair, By the babe that Thou didst save From the Nile’s engulfing wave, By the children he did press To his heart in fond caress, And the loud hosaunah song, Rising from the infant throng— Save us, save us, spare thine hand, For the children, save the land. Dark, still dark, no light [ trace, Hast thou turned away thy face ? Must wo take this fiery path, Scowl’d upon by direful wrath ? Aust we to the dust go down, Blasted by thy hopeless frown ? If #0, Father, we obey, But for these I still would pray. Tor the young I make my moan, Such ag this, my own, my own! These, my boys, in rosy rest, ‘This my babe upon my br ast. Little dreaming as they sleep Why their mother wakes to weep, OL, Ist me butfeel the rod, Spare thom, spare them, oh my God ! Aud for all, so passion tossed, And all this people ruined, lost, Forgetting now their ancient trust, "rampliug all they loved iu dust, Still, ¥ say, for only Thon Can’st control and save them now. By the mercy thou didst show To thy people lung ago, When, hy Thee released, restored, They, like us, forgot Theo, Lord} o prayer of Him who died, v his love, the crucified, And the tears ho wept o'er them West o'er doom'd Jarusalem, Oh, forgive us, forgive us, Lord, Let thy pity ba rostored, Fay again. if "tis Thy will, To these billows, PEACE, DE STILL Pp a SIV - ie : Stlisgellangous. DOUGLAS’ LAST SPEXCH. Delivered in the Dnited States Senate, on the 15th of March, 1861, ihe last one ie debivered in the halls of Congress. and the last official act of his life. In this state of the case, for the purpose of quieting the apprehension of the country, and demonstrating, first, that the President does not meditate war ; and, secondly, that he_has no means for prosecuting a warfare upon the seceding States, even if he desired, 4 bring in this resolution. Attempts are made te prevent its consideration. It is suggested that the discussion of it, at this time, would be, if not improper, at least injurious. What bad effect can result from answering the inquiries contained in the resolution ? If the policy of the Adminis tration be peace, and if the answer be such as I anticipate it will be, it will quiet the country ; it will relieve the apprehensions ; it will cause rejoicing throughout the length and breadth of the land. If, on the contra- ry. the policy be war, it is due to the people of the United States that that fact should be made known, and we be informed whither we are drifting, in order that we may see whether we are wiling to be drawn into war irregularly, without the sanction of Congress or the consent of the country. 1 believe that the answer to this resola- tion will guiet the country, and restore good will and good feelings among the people of the different sections. I repeat the convic- tion, that Mr, Lincoln does not meditate war. Certain I am, that, under the laws, as they now exist, he cannot, consistent with his oath, do any act that will produce a colljssion between the seceding States and the Federal Government. In the first place he has no power, under the existing laws, to collect the revenue on ship-board, as sug- gested by the partisan press. By the laws of the land, the revenue must be collected at the ports of entry, and in the custom- houses designated by law, and cannot be collected anywhere else, except in specific cases’ provided in the law itself. By refer. ence to the act of the 2d ot March, 1799, it will be seen that South Carolina is divided _ in three collection districts ; that three ports of entry are established ; one a. Georgetown one Charleston, and one at Beaufort; and a collector, surveyor and naval officer, are to be appointed ‘fo reside at Charleston.” — ‘Ibe custo house officers are required to reside ab the ports of entry designed in the Jaw. So it is with all the collection districts in all the other States. Another section —- | the country, North and South, have been led section eighteen—of the law makes it un- lawful to enter goods or collect revenue else- where than the ¢ ports of entry” desig- nated in the law. It expressly prohibits the collection of revenue or the entry of goods at any other place. Then a subsequent sec- tion—section eighty-five of the same law— makes one exception to this rule ; and that ig in case a vessel is prevented by ice from approaching the pier or wharf at the port of entry, the captain, on application to the coi- lector, may receive a permit to land the goods, and pay the duties at any place in the district designated in the permit. The only case, then, where revenue can lawtully be collected, or goods lewfully entered, at any other point than the port of entry des~ ignated in the law, is where the vessel is obstructed by ice from approaching the wharf at such port. It has been suggested, and the people of to believe that it is the purpose of this Administration, without authority of law, to order revenue cutiers down to these south- ern ports, and to collect the revenne on board of them. 1 wish to call the attention of the Senate, and the country, to the fact that the law forbids the collection of the rev- enue on shipboard or anywhere else except at New Orleans, Charleston, Savannah, and at each of the ports designated in the law. The President of the United States would subject himself justly and lawfully to impeachment, if he should "attempt to collect the revenue on ship-board or in any other. manner, or at any other place than that authorized by law. The law in this respect stands now just as it did when General Jackson, in 1832, called on Congress for additional legislation to en- able him to collect revenue at the port of Charleston. Then General Jackson had no power to remove the custom house from the city of Charleston to ship board in the bar- bor. He had no power to order the collee- tion of the revenue anywhere else than at the requested. If, on the contrary, the insur- rection be against the laws of the United States instead of a State, then the President can use the military only as a posse comita- tus in aid of the marshal in such cases asare 80 extreme that judicial authority aud the powers of the marshal cannot put down the obstruction. The military cannot be used in any case whatever except the aid of civil process to assist the marshal to exccate 8 writ. [I shall not quote the laws upon this subject, but if gentlemen will refer to the acts of 1795 and 1807, they will find that by the act of 1795 the militia only could be called out to aid in the enforcement of the laws when resisted to such an extent that the marshal could not overcome the obstrue- tion, By the act of 1808, the President is was before lawful to use militia. Hence the military power, no matter whether navy, regulars, volunteers, or militia, can be used only in eid of the civil authorities. Now, sir, how are you going to create a case in one of those seceded States where the President would be authorized to call out the military ? You must first procure a writ from the judge describing the crime ; you must place that in the Lands of the mar- shal, and must meet .such obstructions as render it impossible for him to execute it ; and then, and not till then, can you call upon the military. Where is your judge in the seceded States ? Where is your marshal ? You have no civil authorities there, and the President, in his inaugural, tells you he does not intend to appoint any. He said he in- Jtended to use the power confided to him, to hold, and possess the forts, and collect the revenue ; but beyond this he did not intend to go. You are told; therefore, in the in- augural, that he is going to appoint no judg- es 00 marshals. no civil officers, in the se~ ceded States, that can execute the law, and hence we are told that he does not intend to place designated by law. Because of the ab- sence ot the legal authority to do this, he called on Congress to pass a law, which | authorized hir to collect the revenue on land | or ship board, anywhere within the Earbor | other than at the place designated at the | port of entry. Congress passed the law known to the country now as the “fo bill.” i The force bill was passed March 2, 1833 ; and the first and fifth section which | gave authority to collect the revenue at any | place in the harbor, and the power to use military force, expired at the end of the next sesssion of Congress by the express limila- i tion of the act. Ilence the law stands now | just as it did before the force bill was pass. | ed, and there is no more authority to collect | the revenue on shipboard now than there! was before the passage of the act of 1432. You cannot, under law, collect the revenue! anywhere else, either on shipboard or land. | what danger is there of any collision between this government and seceding States upon | the question of collecting the revenue '—-| There is none, unless Senators suppose the President of the United Siates is going to violate his oath of office by using force to do | that which the law forbids him to do. Ido. not believe that Mr.” Lincoln is going to do | any such thing. t tut we are told that the country is to bi precipitated int civil war by blockading all | the southern ports within the United States, | blockading our own with our army and navy. { Where is the authority for that? What | law: antherizes the President of the United | Union, by recogn States to blockade federal ports at discretion 2 He bas no wore authority to blockade New | Orleans or Charleston than he has to block- | ade New York or Boston ; and no more leizal right to blockade Mobile than Chicago.-— Si. 1 cannot consent that the President of | the United States may, at his discretion, blockade and close the ports of the United States or any other count:y. (le can do only what the Constitution and laws author- ize him to do. Ife dare not attempt to ob- struct the navigation at the mouth of the Mus- sissippi river, or at Mobile, or at any other port in the seceded States, or even those that remain Joyal to the Constitution and the Union. The intimation that he is to do this implies a want of respect for the integrity of the President, or an ignorance of the laws of the iand on the part of those who are! disturbing the harmony and quiet of the country by threats of illegal violence. Mr. King. —Will the Senator allow me to ask him a question in relation to this matter? Is it not the duty ot the President to prevent smuggling in all the ports of this Union? Mr. Douglase—I am not {talking about smuggling. Tt is his duty to enforce the laws of the land in respect to smuggling. But, sir, itis not his duty to prevent smuggling in any other mode or by any oth- er means than these provided by law. Will the Senator from New York intimate to the Senate and to the country that, under the pretext of preventing smuggling, the Presi- dent can close a port created by raw, and stop all commerce connected with it? Will he timate that, under suspicion that if the revenue cutter allows a vessel to enter the port of New Orleans she will not pay any duties, therefore the President will prevent her going there 2 The law gives him no such power, no such discretion. The sug. gestion, therefore, of the Senator from New York. that these ports of the United States are 10 be blockaded by the Navy at the dis- cretion of the President, under pretense of preventing smuggling, only shows Low loosely even Senators talk about the powers and duties of the President, It is no use to argue the question. There is no law that authorizes it. To do the act, or attempt it would be one of those high crimes and usur- pations that would subject the President of the United Stetes to impeachment, But we are told that the President is go- ing to enforce the laws in the seceded States, How ? By calling out the militia and using the Army and Navy! These terms are used as freely and as flippantly as if we were a military government where martail law was the only rule of action, and the will of the monarch was the only law on the subject.— Sir, the President cannot use the Army or | the Navy, or the Malitia for any purpose not authorized by law. Whatisthat'?! [fthere be an insurreciion in any State against laws aud authorities thereof, the President can use military to put it down only when called upon by the State Legislature, if it be in session, or if it cannot be convened, by the Governor, He cannot interfere except when i | ayainst fifteen. | use the army, the navy, or the militia, for any such purpose. Is it your purpose to rush this country blindly into war at a cost of $300,000,000 per annnm 3 to levy $2.000,000 of direct taxes upon the people, and then call upon them to pay it because you have involved us in civil war ¢ Sir, I expect to stand by my country under all circemstances ; and hence 1 will save her it I can, from being plunged into civil war ef indefinite duration, that will require a quarter of a million of men and exorbitant taxation, levied on one half the American people to subdue the other half. Remember, this extraordinary amount of revenue, these extraordinary numbers of men are to be called for in eighteen States to fight fifteen ; for it 18 useless to disguise {the fact, that whenever you make the ques : une of peace or war, the slaveholding intes will be a unit and will be eighteen Are we prepared for civil war, with all its horrors and calamities ? I repeat, it is time that the line cf policy was adopted, and the country knew it. In my opinion, we must choose, and that promp‘ly, between one of the three lines of policy : 1. Tuk RESTORATION AND PRESERVATION or 18i UxioN by such amendments to the Jopstitution as will insure the domestic ranquility, safety and equality of all the States. and thus restore peace, unity, and fraternity to the whole country. Or, 2. A Peacerur DissoLurioN of the sing the independence of such States as refuse to remain in the Union without such constitutional amendments, and the establishment of a liberal system of commercial and social intercourse with them by treaties of commerce and amity. Or, 3. War, with a view to the subjuga- tion and military occupation of those States which lave seceded or may secede from the Union. I repeat that, in my opinion, you must adopt and pursue one of these three lines of policy. The sooner you choose between them the eller for you, the better for us. the better for every friend of liberty and constitutioral government throughout the world. In my opinion, the first proposition is the best, and the last the worst. 1 am in favor of such amendments to the Constitution as will take that question oat of Congress, and restore peace to the coun- try. That may be done by non intervention —by papular sovereignty, as it is called ; or by the Crittenden amendment, making an equitable partition of the territory between the two sections, with a self executing clause prohibiting it on one side and pro- tecting it on the other. It may be done in various ways. 1 prefer such an amicable settlement to peaceable disunion ; and I prefer it a thousand times to civil war. It we can adopt such amendments as will be satisfactory ‘to Virgina, North Carolina, Tennessee, and the border States, the same plaa of pacification which will satisfy them will create 2 Union party in the cotton States which will soon embrace a large majority of the people in those States, and bring them back of their own free will and accord ; and thus restore, strengthen, and perpetuate the glorious old Union forever. I repeat, what- ever guarantees will satisfy Maryland and the border States (the Siates now in the Un. ion) will create a Union party in the scceded States that will bring them back by the vol- untary action of their own people.+ You can restore and preserve the Union in that mode. You can do it in no other. War is disunion. War 1s final, eternal separation. Hence, disguise it as you may, every Union man in America must advocate such amendments to the Constitution as will preserve peace and restore the Union ; while every disunionist, whether openly or secrets ly plotting its destruction, is the advocato of peaceful secession, or of war, as the surest means of rendering reunion and reconstruc- tion impossible. Thave too much respect for any man that has standing enough to be elected a Senator, to believe that ke 1s for war, as a means for preserving the Union, 1 have too much respect for his intellect to be- lieve for one moment, that there is a man for war who is not a disunionist per se.—, Hence I do not mean, if [ can prevent it, that the enemies of the Union—men plotting | to destroy it —shall! drag this couniry into war under the pretext of protecting the pub- lic property, and enforcing the laws, and collecting the revenue, when ther object 1s disunton, and war the means of accomplish- ing a cherished purpose, authorized to use the Army and Navy to aid | in enforcing the laws in all cases where it | The disunionists, therefor, are divided in i two classes ; the one open, the other secret | disunionists. The one in favor of peaceful | session and a recognition of independence : ' the other is in favor of war, as the surest means of accomplishing the object, and of making che seperation final, eternal. 1 am a Union man, and hence against war. But | we are told. and we hear it repeated every | where that must we find oat if we have | got a Government, Have we a Govern- {ment 2" is the question ; and we are told | we must test thaw question by using the | ! military power to put down all disconnected | ['spirits, Sir, this question, *¢ have we a Gov: ernment #’ has been pronounced by every tyrant who has tried to keep his feet on the necks of che people since the world began, When the Barons demanded Magna Charta from King Jolin at Runnymede, he exclaim- ed, *“ have we a Government ?” and called for his army to put down the disconnected barons. When Charles T. attempted to col- lect the ship money in violation of the con- rights of the people, and was resisted by, them, he exclaimed, *“ have we a Govern ment # We cannot treat with rebels ; put down the traitors ; we must show that we have 2 Government.”” When James IL. was driven from the throne of England for tramp- ling on the liberties of the people, he called for his army and exclaimed, “let us show that we have a government 2’ When George IIL. called upon his army to put down the rebellion in America, Lord North cried lus- tily, no compromise with traitors; let as demons rate that we have a government.’ — When in 1848 the people rose upon their ty- rants all over Europe, and demanded guoar- antees for their rights, every crowned head exclaimed, * have we a government 2” and appealed to the army to vindicate their athority and to enforce the law. Sir, the history of the world does not fail to condemn the folly, weakness and wicked- ness of that government which drew its sword upon its own people when they de manded guarantees for their rights. This cry that we must have a government, is merely following the exwmple of the besot- ted Bourbon, who never learned anything by misfortune. never forgave an injury, never forgot an affront. Must we demonstrate that we have got a government, and coerce obedience without reference to the justice or injnstice of the complaints 2 Sir, when- ever ten million of people proclaim to you with one unanimous voice, that they appre- hend their rights, their firesides and their family alters are in danger, it becones a wise government to listen to the appeal and to remove the apprehensioa. History does not record an example where any human government has been strong enough to crush ten millior. people into subjection when they believe their rights and liberties were imper- iled, without first converting the government itself into a despotism, and destroying the last vestige of freedom. 2 Let us take warning from the examples of the past. herever a government has re- fused to listen to the complaints of the peo- ple, and attempted to put down their mur- murs by the bayonet. they have paid the pen- alty. Of all those who listened to the peo- ple in 1848, and granted charters of liberty and took an oath to support them, only one has been faithful ; and he has been rewarded for his fidelity, the others will pay the pen- ally of their perfidy. The King of Sardinia granted a constitutior, took an oath to sup- port it and to-day he is King of Italy. If George III. had listened to the murmers of our fathers, and granted their just demands the war of the Revolution would have been averted and the blood that wasspilled would have been saved. If we consider this question calmly, and make such amendments as will convince the people of the Southern States that they are safe and secure in their perso, in their pro- perty, and in their family relations, within the Union, we can restore and preserve it.— If we cannot satisfy the people of the border States that they may remain in the Union with safety, dissolution is inevitable. Then the simple question comes back, what shall be the policy of the Union men of this coun- try Shall it be peace, or shall it be war ? What man in all America, with a heurt in his bosom, who knows the facts connected with Fort Sumter, can hesitate in saying that duty, honor, patriotism, humanity, re- quire that Anderson and his galiant band | should be instantly withdrawn 2 Sir, I am not afraid to say so. [I would scorn to take a party advantage or manufactnre partisan capital out of an act of patriotism. Peace is the only policy that can save the country. Let peace be proclaimed as the policy, and you will find that a thrill of joy will animate the heart of every patriot in the land ; confidence will be restored ; business will be revived ; joy will gladen every heart bonfires will blaze upon the hill tops and in the valleys, and the church bells will pro- claim the glad tidings in every city, town, and village in America, and the applause of a grateful people will greet yon everywhere Proclaim the policy of war, and there will be gloom and sadness and despair pictured up- on the face of every patriot in the land. A war of kindred, family, and friends ; father against son, mother agamst daghter, broth- er against brother, to subjugate one-half of this country into obedience to the other half, if you do not mean this, 1f you mean peace; let this be adopted, and give the President the opportunity, through the Secretary of War to speak the word ‘peace ;’ and thirty million people will bless him with their prayers, and honor him with their shouts of joy. eal AD Ir is confidently stated that Hon. Joseph i Holt, of Kentucky, still a resident of Wash- lington, will be offered the post of Justice of | the Supreme Court of the United States, va- cated by tho death of Justice McLean, of Ohio. - Bess rp BE kina iris said that the graziers and farmers of Kentucky who have sold horses and cattle land grain to the traitors, get ne money in i retain only empty promises to pay, which {can never be redemed. eer em eth rhe Farry spans the gulf of Death with the bridge of Hope. True honor can be purchased only by wor- b stitution of England, and in disregard of the ' + ARCHBISHOP HUGHES 0 Archbishop Hughes. who som made a Union gpeechin New York, lished his views of civil wer in Me Metro politan Record. We make » few extracts: Above all the wars a civil war is the most deplorable and the most destructive in its consequences, both to the victor and van quished. Tt progr desolation. It passions of hu nage, though horrib terrible to witne cannot be 1t is not in civil strife that the nobler the ty. attributes of our nature are shown ; mind of man becomes hardened and callous amid scenes of blood and devastation. The transition from a peaceful republic to mili- tary despotism 1s more easily effected thro such a medium than people generally sup- Manki nd are pretty much the same of the world. Material eiviliza- . it ig tue, nfay develop the mind and sharpen micllect, but it does not purify the aspirations nor elevate the moral nature of the race. We have heard a proposition made by a prominent speaker at the great demonstra- tion which was lately held at Union Square. that we trust was either not seriously enter- tained, or had its origin in the excitement of the moment. It wis nothing more or less than a recommendation of the policy which England has pursued towards Ireland. The speaker expressed himself in favor of (aking away the plantations from the Southern own ers and bestowing them as land bounties upon the Northern soldiers. The idea as we have intimated, is not an orizinal one, ag it was partially carried into effect against the people of Ireland, and as a means by which that people were to be utterly exter- minated. Far our part, we protested against such a wholesale ‘system of spoilation—a system which is calculated to plunge the country irremidably into a war that this generation may never see the end. and to arouse feelings of hatred and revenge that may live through centuries The proposition to which we have referred is, however, comparatively mild in its char- acter when compared with the suggestion that has been published in one or two of our New York daily papers. 1tis nothing more orless thya a proposal to incite the negroes to wsurrection, and, by 80 doing, to preeini- tate the Southern portion of our conrtry into ail the horrors of servile war. They would be to re-enact on our own soil the fiendish bratalities récorded in the history of St. Do- mingo. It would be to rouse the savage ne- groes against our brothers in race and blood: it would be to countenance atrocities and barbarities at the sight of which our whole country would stand appalled ; it would be to encourage the whole black population of the South to mse in arms against the whites to murder women and children, to massacre helpless infancy and age, and {to givea li- cense to the excesses and cruelties which characterize all negro insurrections. * 4 Have we now sunk «0 low in the scale of humamty, have we so far forgotten our ohii- gations as Christian men, even © have rightly entered nts the h conflict, to calliny tolerate or proposition as fiendish and as i:ho that against whic the elder Pitt ma voice ¢ > pose. in ever 1t ey GG A Am etern Mrs. ParTinGgTON'S VISIT 10 THE FieLp.—We take the following from the Bos- ton Post :— ¢«¢ Did the guard present arms to you, Mrs. Partington 2’ asked the commissary of her as she entered the marquee. ¢ Yon mean the century,” she sard, smul ing. “I haveheard so much abont the tainted ficld that I believe I could deplore an attachment into line myself, and sccure them as well as an officer. You asked me if the guard presented arms. Ha didn't, bot a sweet little man with an epilepsy on his shoulder and a smile on his face did, and asked me if ] wouldn't go into a tent and smile. 1 tol! him that we could both smile outside, when he politely touched his chat. eau and left me.” The commissary presen- ted a hard wooden stool apon which che re- posed herself. *¢ This is one of the seats of war, I suppose ¥” said she. ¢O whata hard lot a soldier is objecteted to. T don’ wonder a mite at the hardened influence of a soldier's life. What is that for © said she, as the oise of the cannon saluted her ear. * I hope they hain’t tiring on my ac count,” Ther: was a solicituds in her tone as she spoke, and she was informed it was only the Governor; who had just arrived upon the field. ¢¢ Dearme said she, © how cruel it must be to make the old gentlemen come way down here, when he is so feeble that he kas to take his staff with him wher ever he goes.” She was so affected at the idea that she had to take a few drops of white wine cquilibriam, and to counteract thie dust from the *¢ tainted field.” re QA rena Henry A. Wisk Nor EveN ATTACKED. — The wheeling Intelligencer, of the 15th inst., publishes informafion received by Mr. Woods, of that city, who arrived in Wheel. ing on Saturday from Oharlotsville, where he was a student at the University. He left Charlotsville about three weeks ago, reach- ing Charlestown on the 4th and Ripley on the 5th. Henry A. Wise, accompanied by his son O. Jennings Wize, were both at Ripley. On the 8th a report reached Ripley thata thousand Federal troops were marching on that place from the Ohio river. The Wises with their seven hundred followers retreated back upon Charlestown. The report of the killing of Wise and his body guard, reached us on Sunday evening, the Tth, so he could not have been badly injured. as he was knocking around Ripley pretty tolerahly spry for an old man. From other cireum- stances we are induced to believe that the whole story about the atiack on Wise's par ty isa sheer fabrication. Ttis scarcely pos sols at he eould have been at Sissonville at all. Mr. Woods was several times arrested. and was detained at Ripley a week, until the Wises had left. The Intelligencer says, Our readers may rest assured that Henry A. Wise still lives, and 1s, doubtless, this minute ¢ firing tHe Southern heart” some- restore he J thy action where along the Kanawha saiines, + to gaze upon, though compared 10 | the mooral evils which it inflicts upon socie- | - ES at now, 19 10 be a Jeces- itor— according to Black Not to eadorse ail the To be a Democ i—-Rebel — Congress ig now re- ction—is to be a Rebel ; even ¢ into the propriety or constitu- y of the conduct of our public sar- daring to ask a representative nion upon a great public re righ misdemeanor, snd makes «on 8 Lraitor ; yea, not to be in all essen - ticuiars, a so called Republican, and in the language of Senator Baker, of ron, to‘ grant almost UNLIMITED {POWER to the President,” is to Le an ene- I my to the Constitution, ths Union, and the Government. Now, it is an easy matter to call hard names, to make false accusations, to use ob- scene language, and to act the black iard generally. No brains sare required to do these things, and ony fool can thus make himself conspicuous. But instead of these bold assertions, why are got some attempts made, some arguments used, to show that sach men are wrong, and support principles - justifying the application of such terms ?— They cannot do it. ‘The men who are now charged with disloyalty, in nine cases out of every ten, have always been the real friends of the Union, and are now ready to sacrifice their last dollar and last drop of blood, in support of any feasible, rational plan for the restoration of the Union. Many of them be- lieve thas this GREAT END could be secur- ed, even now, through peaceable eflorts : but never can be by the sword-—that tha more fighting the more impossible will it be to reunite our now distracted Union. And who are the men who make theses charges ? In a great proportion they are the very men who have heretofore acted eith- er as if they sought a dissolution of the Un. ion ; or else, as ifthey thou rht a dissolation of the Uniom impossible. “Better dissolve the Union, and send our Constitution to per- dition, than live in fellowship with slave- holders,” said the Abolitionists. “Let us keep slavery and slave owners o:t of ths common territories,” said the frae-soiler and the supporter of the Chicago Platform. “The Sonth will scold and threaten. hut she can do no more. You can't kick her out of the Union.” Up until six or eight mouths ago this was th language of the very men who are now charging with disloyalty th who wera i ting th der whose infl:ores od. = Clearfield Re i= i quired to [to examen FIRST UNL. The following conversation | have taken piace between a lave master. + Hallo, there, Sun rey ing “Why, why © sivs Sambe, scratching his hed dow ta de depot \ TuNmir R.'s naithar ain poor nigger.’ + Yes, mgssa, de 0 as fusi tragk of de UJ. G2. R. R., we ++ Where was it?’ «In de Red Sea, massa.” Who laid it © «De Lord Aliighty Heself.! « Well, Sambo,” mellowing down a + who were the conductors ¢ “Moses and Aaron.’ «Who were the fugiiives that run away?’ «¢ Dao children of Israel, massa.’ - “ Who wera the slascholders 2 «De Egvptiwms.* « Were they white "or black ¥° + Black, massa, dat time de slave He whit man and de slaveholder de black man. ha! ha! ha! massa.’ Did they phivsue the slaves ¥ ¢ Yes, mmssn.) «Did they take them back to &laver; * «« No, massa, they couldn't coteh em.’ * Why not?’ . < Because they took de track wy, ha! ha! good, massa, wasn’t it¥’ < Samlio, you may go dawa to your quar ters, little, Tz Late Arport oNuenT. ~The follow. ing is the apportiunment of Representalives according to the eighth censns = Alabama, 6{Soh Car: 5 Arkansas, 3/1" nurgser. 8 Calisornia, + 3 1.xas, 4 Connecticut, 4 liinesota, 1 Delaware, 1| M:gsissippt, 5 Florida, {Mise our, ; 9 Georgia, 7N Hampshire, 3 Illinois, 135 0 Jersey, 5 Indiana, 11{™ 1k 31 Towa, SIN: r* “aroling, | 7 Kansas, 3 ; 18 Kentucky, 810r: on, 1 Louisiana, 5) ei. s: lvanis, 23 Mune, 5Rhode Island, 1 Maryland, 5] Vermont, % Massachusetts, 10| Virginia, 11 Michigan. 6 Wisconsin, 6 The aggregate being two hundred and thirty-three Represtutatives. mr ee Bp ov A runaway slave who made his way to Cairo, where he did good service i the en trenchments, was asked if he did not went to go bick and tight He x plird with & grimmace that he wenld have done no wis credit to Julius; Laws no, 1 dis nigger is not a fightin niger runnin’ nigger !’ Masses |! eel Gn By Ry Change in temper —deff Davis is anxi for peace, and bis Generals sem 0 be she ing a retiring disposition. apn Wonder if the Virginians wou iq't like to see “another Richmond in the eld,’ —a lit~ tle further South