®. GBAY NEEK, SS RELLEFORTE, PA. Friday oraing, May 22, 1853. PIT ET Se Ty ra on Fanstigism. low traly i} Derry Clay express the sentiments and fuelings of the avolitionists of the prescuy day witn, twenty vears ago, be spoke of them as filluws: With them the rights of property sre nothing; the de- ficiency of the powers of the General Gov. eeament is nothing ; the dissolution of the Ugion and the overthrow of a Government sy which are concentrated the hopes of the emiliged world, is pothing. A single idea Img tekken josgegsion of their minds and vuward they pursue it, overlook 'ng all bar. vistn, Tectia and regerdless of all conse. y noes? Hew true a picture of the ad- ginistration pmity tw-day, Heedless snd 1ogrrdicrs of nll consequences, they mady rush { reward in pureanit of the *one-jdea,” tiampiing® upon tke righis of properly, u-n ping powers nol belonzing to the Gen- oral Government, oventiding State Cousitu- ons ang State laws, spd in their zeal m the Lot chase after negro freedom and equal ty, have forgotten : Ing foree of the Copaiitation of the United Bates, sud under ihe spreicsa reasoning sud tyrants flea of “military necessity.” Ceprive the citizen who 18 he true Foveieign vi tha nation of his mog* waluslle rights, 7 dal.by jury and the benefice of the habeas corpus, the two great bulwarks of American ixrty sre peaccably wrenched from the gnople in localities where no reb Lion exists vy interfera with the execution of powers fiom the civil law courts snd without trial the citisem sovereign is hurried off lo prison ihe victim of one idea faraticism that rules tho hour, Bow wcritably true is the fir t part of that grest patriot saint's Jdescrip- rion of the abolitionist; sod how fearfully trua is the second, that to them the dissolu- tos of the Union and tke overthrow cf a troveroment in which is centered (he hepes of the civiiizd world, 18 nothing. the shelition of slavery tle cne great para. wouht idea? Does any wan pretend to be- bere, for a moment, that tits abolition fa- naucm wil tolerate a resloration of the Uuion under any circomstances unl 8s sla- very te abolished 7 Does not everything that has been dune by the men who control tie administration of Abahiam Lincoln ioe &'cutn their sole purpoie to he the abolition of 8'avery at no matter hat cost? Does mt elt tie edicts and snd proclamations of tho President show conclusively that he 1 geids the freedom of ihe slaves as para- mount to the restoration of the Union ? Docs mot the sppointment of many of his g-uerals, such as Fremont, Scharez and Hunter, men neted or nothing except their r dical abolition’sin, render conclusive to every reasoning mind that his purpose i. Just to emaucipa'e all he claves as the pumammount idea, treating the restoration of she Unten as a secondary eonsideration ? The same dea iehiowled from the sump and the pulpit Ly every wholitun orator in the land when they attempt Lo convinee sa honest peop’e that slave-y is the cause of the war, an! theiciore, slavery wust te wiped out no matter how or at wha cost, They do not, nay, they cun not caterian ay idea of a restored Union with negro gla. veey existing in it, In short, they do not want the Union restored with slavory and rather then iv i cumliutg to cxist, they would have the i ¢ obligations and tind. un broken into ten thou. ssad fragments, the Constitution {rampled Ja the dust or committed to the flames, and ensrcly aud ruin follow. Aye. as Henry Clay bas truly said, “The dissolution avd overti row of a Governinent which 13 cone eentiated the hopes of the civilized world, waotlarg. A single idea has taken posses- sion of thew minds and onward (hi ¥ pursue ft. over eoking all barriers, reckless and re- gardiers of sll consequences.” They per. verted the war from its original purpode in tr a erusade szainst the tustitution of sla- very, knowing full weil that the omsequen- oe would 1a to unite Lae scuthern people in oppesition to the id Union snd divide the sentiment of the North and render the con- flict doubtful. What good did the em2aci- pation proclamation sceom phish, which the President declared hie hid no powar to issue and no inclination to do so if be conia ? Did # divide and distract those ia rebellion, cre- ates war smong themselves, and unite {ne people of the North io n determinelion to enbius the ‘‘rebellion’’ snd preserve the Umisn¥ No! but just the opposite. It united Ba one man the people +f the Southern States (who were at list divided) in their determination to over- vow the authority of the United States iovorntnent, and establish their independant aparate existence; while at the same time divided snd disirsoied tho people of the iorth 10 such 8p exient as to bring about be necessity of a Conscription law ; to raise broeg to prosecute the war. Yt these men eed pot the terror taught in this experiment, at madly, recklessly and reagardless of al) paseqr nes, pursus the one ides, and will , orsue it, even to the entire destruction of this, vba best govertnent under the sun.— The only security that yetremaing rests with the honest wasurg of the people, those who love their country more than the negro, and whose only desire is, that peace and onion ray foon sgiiu shed their many Lless jogs around us as in days past. The wa. “ww of tho propla sre hareat and patriotic, Is not | i and, slthough many, vary many who are classed with the republican party, and who endorse every act of this adminis- tration, are running the same mad course of their fanatical leaders, yet they are, doubt lesa, honest in their convictions of tha rec. titude of their course. Led astray oy the false teachirgs of their leaders, they have unconsciously arraycd themselves apaivst their own interests—against a restora ion of the Union, and among those whom the great patriot stetesman more than twenty years ago so truthfully described. Can sny old live whig, who loved the great [4sriol, and reveres his name, look upod the party so truthfully described by bra, and continue to act and identify hiuw- self with the R:publican party 2 Can any honest republican, (and there are some.) whose only desire in these trying times is, to see the Union, regardless whether slavery be abolished or not. look upon the lvadery of that party, and say, they are not the men described by Henry Clay ? We appeal, ther und honest republicans, to cast, oft their al. fore, to all eld line whigs :gisnce (0 the party that hag shamefully misused ther snpport—that has prostitutes the war for the Union into a crusad e agains® the institation of s'avery, thereby rendering a reunion simost, if not entire'y, impossi. ble, that by 1ta fanatical course has pro- lon; ed the war, and been the cause of wuch sacrifize of hfe. It is time now that rvative men should unite under the uselesy ail cu broad banner of the gool old democracy, that so gnccessfully administered this gov- ernment for more than sixty years, and at | the poils next fall, rebuke this wild favaii- icism that 13 destroying as fast as possible. | the best government in the world. . ee apr Euppert Principles. In al! ages of the word,and in every Coun- | try that has existed on the face of the carth, there has been schemeing, designing men estly secking to overthrow and revolu | tionize the form of government nuder which they have lived and to cstabhish upon its ruins anoth tr system of laws, Every man is actuated by certain impulses, and every object that has ever been accomplished, has been the result of some preconceived dea or 2] an, Napolean the great re: o'utionizer of France was incited to action by vain ambition, and the guilded picture of glory that he saw fur in the future, through the tears and blood of many bitter campaigns, lured him on, und, fillkd his breast with high hopes of dazzling fame, the airy bauble for which be sacrifized every trait of his noble nature to obtain. He, in the cortain kind of glory, for which he waa striviug. climbed to the lofti- est pinnncle of fam ; but what a sight must have mel his eyes as he gazed far back to hia boyhood's days, through the rivers of tears. eas of blood, and piles of bleaching Loner, ‘h ongh which he had tei'el hig wes- ry way. We, the people of America have hed the bloody scenes that were trans- ¢ in other countries, across the seas and arn pris biessed the generous nobluliear.ed mau that framed the form of Government under which we nave 50 long lived in peace and prosperi- ty. No Country on thé Globe bas Hoursh- ed a3 ours has done, anl no people on the face of the earth, have accumulated the weaith, extended their boundaries, aod at the same time enjoyed the liberty that the p-ople of America have done, in the short space of time that has elapsed since ihe iron- hearted men of the Revolution of 1770 wstab- lished the glorious system under which we have lived. and which has heen locked upon Ly other nations as the greatest the hap dest, and most magnanimous governm ent that mortal nan has ever yet established, But why, look at the proceedings of other nations when we have such palpable proofs of Revolntionizers in our own land. There is a war in America? Thousands of inno. sent victims, oceans of blood, and valleys of bleaching bones of our slaughtered country- men truly, bat sadly testify. The tears of weeping widows and the cries of fatherless children is lieard in the remotest corner of | the nation, and desclation, rfin and death 8 tha order of the day. Despotism has raised its iron cel amongst us, and anarchy with its hideous form and devastating step, is already the result of the foul teachings of thie fanatics who have plac- ed an administration into power who have no respect for the constitution of our coun- try, and who are blindly and ignorantly gtecring the noble old ship of state through the boisterous billows nto the Maelstrom. Already she ig in the fri htful vertex, and without a powerful effort will soon be dash- ed upon the rugged rocks of fanaticism, and lost in ihe gloomy abyss. But how is this effort to be made? low can we rescue from the grasp of these designing men who are willing to sacrifice every principle upon which this government was based, for the abolition of slavery and the centrahzution of power, the sceptre that ‘has leen so wrongfully used, and the power that has been 80 shamefully wisapplied. We appeal to every candid, honest man, to go to the ballot box, and there, by honest, lawful means, dethrone the party who have buen erroniously administering the laws, and place the party again into power who made this country what it was, before the aboh- tion fanatics of the North made this war, and whose principles and creed 18 the Con- stitution and laws. Freemen of the North, rally under the banner of the Consti ution, and support men who nave advocated the doctrine that was proclaimed when this gov- ermaent was formed, and all may yet be well. Fail to do this, and adhere to the cor- rupt faction whose avowed principles have always been antagonistic to the fundamen- tel ideas upor which our system is based, and then, bid farewell to American Liberty. esi nr A destiuctive flra occurred in Lockport last Thursday, covsuming Alexander's block ou Man street, in which were the ex- temsive hardware store II, &¢ 8. Mack the office of the Courier, law office,&c. The fire broke ou in the cellar of Mack’s stote iu 8 pile of rags aud is supposed to be the work of an incendary, The Administration of Lincoln, or Sew- ard in Lincoln's uname. ia more and more dropping the masks. The fanatics of the abolition party, so far as ends are concern- ed, 7 eed have no quarrel with Swward. He means a revolution as utterly sub cersive of our o!d American institutions 2s they do, Only, he goes at its accomplishment like a fox. They go at it Tike bears and badzers, or like wolves and cats. The for is cun- ning—but itis a Jow cunning after ali— | In the that Seward the ins:iructive ture, when the hunt really begins, meantime, there is no doubt stili controls Lincoln. In we find the fox and the ape to claim Kind- | have s to each other—the fox always using the ape for his purposes. He ordered the arrests ol Police Board, and of Maryland Legislature, of the ‘bro hers Flarnd rs. and of the editor of the man's Journal Ptrarp arrests, | ho Baltimore rest, now of Vallandigham. with Aonesty and fearlessness in pohtics Vallandigham hed studied and wndersicod | Jeffersonian Democracy. Ile believed in it, [Lenrtily and gallantly threw himself for- ward as i 5 champion. His degree of abili- ity was a eccondary question. ‘Whether | others who agreed with him were more. or | tess able than he. became an indifferent | matter. Be was a (rue c¢xponent of the { i 1 { cause, and a chivairous one, and either ac- { cident or merit gave him the leaders posi tion. Weed saw it and howled, Le undor- stood that if Vallandigham succeeded, there was an end to the bargain betwee Weed and Seward, by which, after creating the infamous party that bas broken up the ! Union, they were, as *‘conservatives I” jto | float into the Democratic party, and, in its once honored name, rule the disin i North. Weed convinced the canal #4 rail | roud men who manage the machiney of New York State politics, thac if Vallandig- ham’s plan of peace aud reconstruction of relations between North and South prevail | ed, the Minsigsippt would again be opened. and the naturdd Lighway to the ocean for { the heavy products cof the North West would no ionger be penned up to seeking a market by ther arvficisl channels. Thus tthe hope of cur gains will be lost,” Those other “‘makers of silver shrines for Diana” —the conuac'ors—were vesched by the But, Vallandigham, was growing stronger in ths hearts of the peo- | ple. So, these charlatans have ordered him to be sirested. Burnside has been their "tool in the useless slaughter of so many | thousands of Demeera’s in the charnel pen Lesond Fredericksburg. He succeeded, n | getting brave men into a position where | } they were unmeraifully cut to pieces. Hej | has succeeded in arresting Vallandigham, j and has thus doubled his power, and ren- | dercd it imaongsible for the people to forget him, without forgetting the's own liber tegrated | Same arguments, Liev, { But, while Weed and Seward, and other} | charlatans professing better principles, but not a whit mers honest, are seeking their | seltish aims at the pobiic expense, our | grief is that we see incalculable woes pre- | paring for our country, The aim, or, at | least, the certain result, of thege maneu- vers, if they sncceed, must be the ‘otal | subversion of cur fundamental institutions ! Of course, if thirst for wealth, and love of luxury, have extinguished the hardy vir tues of political freedom in the mass of the | }le, our institutions are gone. It looks like that, at present. But then, what ceed 7 A monarchy, or an aristocracy, on a Constitutional basis ? We | have not the basis— we have not the condi- | tions —we bave not the livirg conditions, fur the one cr for the other. | We know how widely ihe idea of this | revolutionary change is entert:ined. We hear its advocates, diy by day. Bat we tell them neither we nor they will live to see it, Our system of representative gov- eynment may be chan.ed. Bat, if it be, a century of anarchy and of successive up- heavings, is hefore us. The changes in the command of the ‘Army of the Potomac’ is but a type of the political subversions that must Le encountersd. in the midst of these convulsions, whoever may escape. it will not be those who now think themselves eligible men.bers of the arisiocracy— wuch less their childien. is to sue- Impossible ! Through the torpidity of some, the tim- idity of others, aud the wnseravulous sel- | fist ness of the most active and potent on all gides, it is & most benign and cver- ruling Providence alone that can save us. And Providenca, in these political matters, usually helps only those that show a dis position to help themselves. The chains of a most vila slavery are shaken in our very faces. Every guarantee of Censtitu- tions and of laws that we have hitherto boasted ag the bulwarks of our freedom, is openly and Mfagitously violated —and stilt white men—the sons of freemsn, trot around hike monkeys, grinning at each other, gathering up shin-plasters, counting them over. and then eating and drinking as if this were the «nd of their being, and the ability to do it the height of their am- bition. A truly free people would, peacefully, but determinedly, be organized from one end’ of tho land to the other, and, in the words of Jefler-on, be ‘standing to their arms,” to resist usurpation,—Freeman's Journal. Wg should not forsake a good work be- sause it does not advance with a rapid step. Faith in virtue, truth and Alnighty gooduess, wili save us alike from rashness and despair. ea e— A word filthy spoken or written will often and profound leg nd of “Reynard the Fox,” | | » : 1 i red, and alwavs realy, if not openly, to here. on wd inaugurated the system of arbi- the I. He, too, st the instigation | of Thurlow Weed, whose man’ hn is, will | be found to be really responsible for the av | ooni In Deunrocraiic | recor hearts, Vallandigham had become identified | thav ’ £ President Lincoln has apain made n « Proc jamation,’ and one ag foolish as those that have gone before it, He bas now ‘proclaim- cd’ that all of us, ahle-bodied citiz ns. must rush forward to be drefied. Well, when we come, Abraham will hear from us! Bat the gist of Atraham's ** Proclamation’ is warn the large body of men who have de- clared an intention of beeowing cif zens, Lat who have not even etect to thir dee- larasion, to quit the country withn sixty. five days from the date of ihe ** Procisma- tion,” or that they will be liable to be drafts ed. He says, farther, which is very true, and ends in the capture of the vicious crea- |). any one who has excreised any vight or franchise peculiar to citizens has heieby become Liable to all the service that can be demanded of a native citizen eof any of the ‘This is rather hard, in view of Seward’s meilation, through ovr foreign con~uls. to the men of foreign lands to ¢ me the score hat employment WAS abundant, and that, while aliens, no a vil ob { ligation was incurred. But we say to men of foreign birth, who ! d an intention to become citi- e never ucted on it—have never © —to rest perfectly quiet. — The Auburn pettifepger; Seward, who wr Siates. | {A ¢'s Proclamat ' for him, doesn’t { know / The subject of Great Britain, or of France, or of any other forcign S.ate. « 1 who under happier suspiees of cur conn- { try, may have declared an sntention of te- nriag an American citizen, but why now, fers that intention, needs do ao more ifu the court before which he made hus decliration, that he has thought better on the subject, and renounces Ms intention to become an American citizen, By such notification he becomes an alien, with all the privileges of an alien. We will gaaran- tee to any such person his immunity by so doing. They tell us that in Ireland, within the English pale, they spoke of a certain class as © mere lish.” So now, for Amer- can citizen, they may speak of ** merg’’ cit- 1zens, tn Fort Lafayette, in 1861, we saw the irons taken oft British subjects. who had Leen thus treaten as felons because they were trying to run the blockade of Charles ton. Seward bowed to the demand of the Brirish governm nt, Next day we siill saw the chams on the ankles of an honest lish. man. We asked him how it came ‘that he was not liberated with the others who were his stupmares. Ile responded: © Troth it waa my misfortune to have become an Amer- ican citizen!’ lle was a‘ mere” American —not a British subject ! Yes, Americans! It is a fact that can any time be proved in a court of justice, a fact for which William H. Seward—conscry- ative Seward—is re: ponsib'e, that, alter a visit from Mr. Archiba d, Briish Consul at this port, privoners who proved themselves Briush cubjec s.were released from irons and shortly eftar set free, while others taken on the same vessel with them, because they were, «r had become, American citizens !— « Hail Columbia,” the ** Star-spangl-d Bau- nar,” and a!l that kind of tring, nas a spe- cail charm for the storo old Americans who were witnesses of that transaction! We say to aliens, who have, ** declured their intentions” to becoma citizens, but never executed those inentions. not to be fiightened --especially if they, by birth, were subjects of moderately powerful gov- ernment. They are in no danger. As a matier of precaa ion, it'will be well to give of a revocation of the purpose of becoming a citizen. But don't skedaddle! Seward's aim. now that he forever despairs of eajol- inz the foreign born into his seifish echewes, is to get as many as possi le to leave tho eoun'ry. Now, we say to them: don’t do at! —Freemad s Journal, a Arrested Foc Telling ths To uth. M. M. Pomeroy, Democrat who has wndent of the go Tunes, hag been ordered it of Gen, Preniiss for giving saw them, without gloss or transformation. It is only nesissary to say that Mr. Pomeroy has been of the + War Democratic stripes,’ and a strenuous swps porter of a “war for the Umon.,” Comn- menting on his 2rresc and exclusion from our hnes, Mr. Pom roy saysi— Our of- ¢ ¢ the Departue the facis as b truth. close investigation, we determined to give our readers facts, leaving lies 10 be spoken ny official reports of victories never won. by commanding offi ers. hike Prentiss aad the telegraph. The iden of wilting facts startled, as with the sting of Lightning, the willing t ols of the administradion, anc it should not be allowed, Tho truth’ of our letters —the existence of evils and wrongs stil: greater than we have written of, is stil mm the army. + We asked Gen. Prenciss if we had written a word that was not truth sunple and uncontrovertible. We dared hiw to deny it--gave him proof to substan. tate the articl No cue can contradict ths reply was this: ‘Mr. Pomeroy. I want you to understand that the uth shall not le written from his aistiiei to discourage the people of the North, as long as i a am here” Sn long as we remained silent to the dis- honesty and eorrnption among officers in the army, we were a prince of good fellows. So long as an editor endories every wove of the administration, or writes up a hero of every ignorant, thieving aud cowardly gen- eral cursing the army with his presence and the country with his existence, it is all right, Just so long as we see fit fo remain siienr aud s ¢ poor people pinndered men de- prived of all legal or political rights —the flag of the North marking the depository of stolen ge ods--generals stealing cotto:, col onels stealing horses, captains stealing mules chaplaing siealing negroes and pri- vates stealing laces, jewelry. clothing, bed ding, pictures and love mementor of friend. ship from innocent women and children, without writing a word of protest that such damnable vardaiism should be stopped, So long as we ¢onld witness tne persistant ef. forts in the arm: to crush Democrats rather than the rebeliion—could sea Union resi- dents of the S uth robbed and insuited by the men they once prayed to God might reach them gnickly. So long as we had daly evidence gleaned from picket post, camp fires suttler’s tents and hospitals, that the army was tecoming demoral zed, and the men that were not afraid {o speak, weary nnd disgusted wiih the life of plan- der and idleness they were leading, and mention it not. we are a loyal citizen. Nine months since Hel ra was ocenpred by fed- eral troops. Thirty five thousand men pitched their tents there in the rich cotton county of Phillips, and the work began. In nine months eight changes of commanding officers over that post have shown the un- stableness of the Government and tended to demoralize the troops. Six out of the eight commanders there have mado wide pendent foriunes in cotton, mules and other speculations, but the enemy has never been uet,—Ez. ep er re Haars JuopaMenTs. —1f you must form tarsh judgments, form them of yourselt, not of others, and, in general, begin by at- tending to your own deficiencies .firats— If every one would sweep up his own walk, prove as a nail in & sure pice. we should have very clean streets. fence was simply this: we Lad told the | publicans After months of observation and! firm spirit and resolute purpose of the Pem- ~ i & 3 “ibe Infamous Programma, The Latest Proslamation. Latter From Hon Idmund Buks Ao she Bdiror of the Nation Eagle bn Pour Mele of the 16th inke , I. roticeld |» communication dated at “Hilug Bead. 18 U, April lst, 1863" signed “GIL W, | purpotting to hove bern geritten by wu soldier, ia which I find the following sen- tenees : «1 would Mkp to come North and siop one week, [I would aprointa Copperhead funeral every d.y: and would see that a corpse was ready.” 4 . - { #1 would a8 soon shoot a Cooperhead as 1 would a snake by that pane.” From the language of the Republican press and orators I understand a “Cepper- head” 10 be a Democrat. It is a black- guard tern, but I do not quarrel with the Republican pregses, and orators for using it, they bereg the best judges of what is be coming and respectable for them in the mut. ter of ,manncra. Such being the meaning of the term, the soldier, therefore, who wrote the letter published ia our paper | avows his determination tw shoot and { murder his fellow citizens because they be- lieve in the Democratic faith, and support the principles and policy of tha Democratic party. You publish the fetter without words or comment, or dissent, from tha atrocious and murderous sentiments which it expresses, — You thus, anwittngly, I hope, cotribute the influence of your paper to stir up to deeds of violence, outrage and blood, the latent undisiplined passions of scciety which when once let loose, like famishing wolves, know no restraint or moderation, Are we, Democrats, many of us your neigh bors and subscribers (o your paper to in- fer that you approve of such sentiments, We desire, sn are entitled to,a distinct answer to this question. tiave you reflected uponthe probable con- scgaence of the utterance af such inflam - tory and vile sentiments as are contained in the letter of the soldier above referred to.and are too common io tha columns of the Re. publican press, and in the mouths of Re. publican orators § If they were to prevail would you be en- tirely safe 7 17 Democrats or “Copper heads as we ard calied, in derision, by a party who carr upon their shonlders the awfnl and appailing sin of being the primary an- ¢ {struction of the Unfon—nre to be shot { down and murdered in cold blood, do you { think that the public pecace wonld be | long maintained in the North, and that | you republicans, would, escapo nll dan- ger? “Lag no such thitering unction to your soul.” The beginning of such busmess 18 the boginning of civil war and anarchy here m the North. The first Democrat shot down will be the signal for tho slaughter of a Republican ana the horrible work once began, where wonld it end? And what would be the fate of the Republicans beiween the fire of the rebelson one side, and the ontraged and incensed Democrate on’ the other? I wll answer no further than to say. that the Democracy would not be the greatest sufferers in the end, and weald not ba annihilated. An to the soldier why wrote the letter above alluded to, if ne he a goidier, and has thas disgraced his patriot calling, ail 1 have [to gay is, that ho haa attered setiments worthy only of a vil. and execrabie murder- er. Let him come on, and dare attempi to execute his atrocious threats, Ue not make many corpses hefors he woud be one himself. Both ho, and yoo, and sll Re- should understand, that it is the would { ocracy to defend themselves, their property | and their rights,to any extremity which the occasion may demand. We do not enter into sny defence of our patriotism and byaity fu comparizon with the patriotism and loyalty of Repulican,— We have always been true £y ur country and to the Union. Wo have been neither the origionators nor fermenters of a section- al puty, which has resuited in the de:tiue- tien of the Union, and in civil war, We have opposed the causes and the men that have bronght these calamitious results upon tha country. Ani we have rallied with as much zeal as the Republicans to the support of the existing Administration in its uacon- stitutiopal measures to repair the huge mis. chiefs which the Repablizan party has been instrumental in bringinz about ; at the same being resolved to Wo d that arly responsi ble at the bar of G.d snd the People for their ageney m this terrble basiness of des- troying our country ; and from which res- poostblity we dunot intend they shall es- cape. by any threats or menaces of violence trourselves. And finally, the Democracy are resolved to maintain their rights at ail hazards, let them be assailed from what. ever cource they may ber And in view of the bloody menaces which appear in Republican newspapers and fall from the lips of Rapablican orators, I say to my Demoeratic friends—be ready for any emer- gency. : I therefore submit to your cool and calm jnd:ment, whether it is best, or prudent, for Republican presses orators,or sdidiers to 1m- dpilge m any more threats to murder Demo- craig, or to commit outrages upon them, be- cause they claim aud will. enjoy the rights and privileges of Americancciizens. 1 can hardly think the l=aders of the Republican party really dasire to inasgurate murder. revolution, and anarchy at ther own doors. but [ may be mistaken. Their infatuation in this dark period of our country's peril and suitering is astonishing, aud nobody can for- see to what folly, crime, and calawmoity it way lead. The very fact that you have published withous dissent and ccnsue, sach a let- ter ad that which has galied forth thiss eommmunication, 13 one of the gloymy presages of impending evil which over. shadows our now sufficiently sfl'cted ocun- try. “ . If the Administration and the Republi can soidiers would display half as wuth re- Leolntion and energy in conquering tho pebiels thors of the present civil war and the de-. 28 they manif at in their endiavors ‘to “put down the Domasration itv. they wicht win’ Pome Tiotoryes © 1yéh wenld be ereditabla to the macdyos and the coun'er, : Bu! tie corquest’and su'juzationiofl she. Demarratie party thew wl id to he Cant ntter imposihility, whetherahiy ‘attemnt to accomplish the raealt hy contumély threats orarms, Ttis high time they comprehended this fact, and acted accordingly. AsT am never ashamed, wor amid to avow pu'licly what [write for the pub- lic press sign my name, in propria per- sona. With much personal repeet and esteem, | &e., i 3 EDMUND BURKE. Newport, N, I, Aprit 18.1863, rms A me + membrane {lov Seymours Letter. ALBaNy. May 17.=The fol'owing is the | letter of Gov, Seymour to the Vallandigh m meeting last nignt: - Exrcorive DerarmyeNT,, May 16. I cannot attend the meeting at the Uapi- tol this evening, but 1 wish to state my opinion in regard to the arrest of Mr. Val landigham. It is an act which has brought dishonor upon oar country, It is full of danger to our persons and our homes It beears upon its front a conscicus violation of law and justice. Acting upon the evi- dence of detailed informers, shrinking frou the light of day, in the darkness of right, armed men violated the house of an Ameri- can citizen and furtively bore him away to military trial, conducted without those safe- guards known to the proceedings of our judicial tribunals. The transaction involy- ed a series of offences against our mot sa- cred rights It interferred with freedom of apeech ; it molested our rights to be secure in our homes against unreasonable scarches; it pronounced tentences without trial,’save one which was: a mockery, which insulted sx well ns wronged. The perpetrators now seek to impose punishment, aot fir an of- ence against, but tor the disregard of an invalid order, put forth in the utter disre” gard of the principles of civil hberty. If this proceeding is approved by the Govern ment, and sustained byjthe people, it is not merely a step toward revolution —it is revo- lution; it will not only lead to military deapotism—it establistes mnlitery despot ism In this aspect it must oe accep ed, or n this aspect rejected, Ifit is upheld, our liberties are overfhrown, the safety of our persons, security of our property, will here. after depend npon the arbitary will of uch mili-avy rulers ag muy be placed over us, while our constitutional guarantees will be broken down. Even uow, the Governors and Courts of some of the Western States have sunk into insignificance before the despotic powers claimed and excersised by military men who have been sent into their torders. It is a fearful thing to increase the ‘dangers which now overhangs us by (reating the law, the judiciary, and the State Authorities with contempt. The peo- pie of this conntry now wait with the deep est anxiety the decision of the Admninistra- tion upon these acts. [aving given it a generous support in the conduct of ‘he wu we pause {0 see what kind of a Gov- ernment it i8 for which we are asked to pour out our blood and our treasurers, -- The action of the Administration will de- termine in the m'nds of more than eue half of the people of the logal Sates wheth- er this war is wazed 10 put down rebel lion at the South or destroy the {ree insti tutions at the North. We los for us decision with most solemn solicitude. (Sighn.d} HORATIO SEYMOUR. Suppression of '* Disloyalty” at the North, Alarge party of leading Union Leazuers of Phitadeiphin, headed by Morton MeMi- chat and Ex-Mayor Gilpin, arrived here to- day. Senators Wade and chandler and Col- onel Forney are their invited guests, Tt is supposed that steps are to be initiated where- by heme forees shall be organized under gov- ernment auspices to repress difloyal demon- strations and organizations in the North.— Philadelphia has already moved in this mat ter.— Wash. Correspondent of N.Y. Herald 14h nat. The object of this proposed military or- ganization in the North is to * repress” the Democratic party, and carry the ¢’cctions of Abolitionista te office. The pretense of « suppressing disloyal organizitions” is falie—it is a lie, b se and black a3 the hearts of the men who have coined it, The Abo- litionists are simply employing the power of the Government, with its hosts of armed men, to perpe uate their power and oppor. tunities of plunder. The saving of the country is no part of their business it is to save themselves from the wrath of a deceiv- ed and betrayzd people that they arc laboring, To do this they intend to organize Abolition regiments of cowardly home guards, to be controlled by the Ahohtion office holders, and the pimps and parasites of the corrupt power at Washinton. The recent demonstrations against the peoplo of Ohio and Indiana gives us warn- ing of what we may expect in Pennsylva- nia. [It is the object of the Adwministiation and its base hirelirgs and satraps to carry the elections in Pennsylvania. Ohio, Indiana, and Illinois, in order to maintain their hold on power and the publio purse. having a Democratic Governor may escape their machinations, and so may New Jersey; but that 1t ,s intended to carry the elections in the other States named for the Abolition- ists by means of the bayonet and military terrorism, cannot be doubted. — Evening Journal. te A Apt VALLANDIGISM SENT T0 Fort WARREN. — The New York World says: At the hour of going to preas. we learn that Mr. Val- landigham has becn sentenced to close con- finewent in Fort Warren during the r main der of the war. «Gen. Rarnside has filled full the measure of hls fully and shame. As a soldier, the slaughter pen of Fredericksburg is his moh- ument, the arrest and conviction of Vallan- digham his epitaph. New York ! Rumors of © i : We liao: hHwov 6675 Timars iat ohanm- ‘es nthe Cabinet. Some of then come di- trect from \Washivgton, while o'hers are istrained and filtered in reaching us by way far New York, That “anger onsliuzht is {made on Mr, Seward by he extreme radi \ cal Abolition faction, ig evident; but it & now pretended that not only he, but three ! more members of the Cabinet are about to {resizn, ann their resignation is excepted bee forchand by the President. Mr. 8 anton, Seeretary of War, Mr, Welles Segrerary of the Navy, and Mr Postmaster Gener 1 BY) vir, are said to accompany Mr. Seward 10 his retirement ; 80 that Mr Chase, as the Chan. cellor of the Exchequer, wil bencefor h be the Premier. Mr Charles Sumner is nam- ced as Mr. Seward s successor, while General Banks is mentioned as the successor of Mr. i Stanton. We give these rumors for what they are worth, without veuel ing for tiem Whatever programme may be agreed upon to-day may be changed to-morrow ; and events succeed each other in such rapid suc. cession that it would be folly to predict what is likely to happen within the wext twenty-four hours. A change of commanders in the army is also freely predicted. Sume of the Westen papers recemmend General Heintzelmsn for the command of the Army of the Potomac: ethers have ventured to talk shout General Franklin; while no one haz, as yet, cenfur- ed to sugzest to the President name of McClellan: The Radical faction, however, will not be satisfied with anything short of Builer or Fremont. Mr. Lincoln, we know, is attached to General Hooker, and will not change him for any other general. So chese epeculations may all amount to nothing, un- less an immediate move is contemplated, | A ‘the Democracy to be put Down A Western paver says : In consequence of Gen. Haseal!'s milita- ry ord or. and the fact that no sort of fair play is to be allowed in the coming munici- pal eluction of Indianapolis, Ind.. the Dem. ocrats there have withdrawn all their candi- dates. even for the schools, Not a Domo erat will consent to be a candidate. Eve ry Republican candidate. even down as low as for the dog pound. will therefore be elented.” Jut in those places where the Democracy are riot likely to surrender their rights so tamely and suffer the elections to go against them by default, military force is to be em- ployed to suppress them, as wil! be seen by the following bit of intelligence : A larze party of leeding Union Leaguers of Philadel bia headed by Mortou MeMich- acl and Ex-Mayor Gilpin, arrived. here to- day. Senators Wade Chandler and Colonel Forney are their invited gnests. It is sup- posed that steps are to be initated whereby home forces shall be orgnuized under govern ment guspices to repress disloyal demons- trations and organizations inthe North.— Philadephia has already moved in this mat- ter.—Wash. Correspondents N. Y. Herald, 14th inst. “Confirmatory of all this, the Harrisburg Telegraph, another gctitious, Janohinicay press, thus helps (0 foment, the 1mponding civii war in the North ; We sincerely hope that the example of the loyal men in Philad:lphia, will emulated by te people all over the Commonwealth by every loyal State in the Union. Tet ir be plainly understood, that the organization is practicaly intended to pit down tieason in the Joyal Sates. If it 1s right to pursue and 8h001 a traitor in the rebellious Stites ard it is also right to visit the game puns ment on the same deviigin the loyal Sates. Lod us orzanize, then, everywhere. Lot us show to the Government that it wil be sus- tained and s'rengthened. Let us prove toe, to traiters, that they wi'l le resisted and put down.” Well, if, the eonversative people of the North—the Democracy —are to be driven to armas in defence of their constitutional Lib- erties, let the strife come, and sooner the better. : Au upstart of an Assistant Provost Mar shal, at Fulton, Missouri, issued an order prohibiting post masters in Ais district from ditributing the New York Caucasian. Chica- go Times, Cincinnati Enquirer. and Colam- bus Crisis, of which Capt. Snedecor, P. M. at Falton, who seems to have more rezard for his oath, than fear of (he peity tyrant, Says: Post Orrick, Fouron. Missovar. ) . . Marx 1, 1863. } The order was handed to me on Wednes- day last, and I would respectfully notify the peopte of this county, and especially (hose who get their mail matter at this office, that i I do not consider that 1 belong to t. 5. stan. | ber, or subjcet to his orders. I do not recollect that I have ever diso- beyed any legal order, nor do T expect to do so. If any person asks anything-of ma in a proper manner, it wakes no difference how humble their position in Fle is— even though it. be a Loyal Citizen of African descenl— I will use my utmost influence to accomme- date them, but where any person assuwes authority thal does not properly belong to them, and they undertake to domineer r Capt. Isaac D. Snedecor; they way exfost to find an impediment in their way larger than they expected—say about 215 pounds ! i Isaac D. Sxepecor, P. M. | en i A Prayer. —The following parody ou tha Lord's Prayer was found written on the leaf of a tract on the person of a dead Yankes.on the battle field of Sharpsburg and has | been furnished us for publication, Wein. fer {rom it that the Yankee soldier was mora wrathful than pious, and withall slightly sdemoralized : \ Our Father who art in Washington, Abraham Lincoln be thy name! Thy will be done at the North Asiuis atthe Squih : Give us this day our daily R tions of crackers and bacon § And forgive us our shortcomings, i 4s we forgive our quarter mnsters | Aod commuissaries ; for thine is the { Power, the nigger and the soldiers, A For the termof three yeas. Amex .