Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, June 19, 1863, Image 1
EE io ES - rily be mwanufactored of the cheap and worth | of the wurld that would speedily have revol- -~ ja Dauphin, and Armstrong, fifteen in all, and Huge it is seen that in these Mr. Frost. washeaten & Wyeth i br § 600, votes. while in the same counties, |in 1856, Mr, Buchanan had 23, 061 majori- For the Watchman | ty, being a change against the Democrat- MY EARLY HOME. ic party of 20,616 votes! By deducting — + from this aggregate the total mnjority | 41 omel 2emow _e Toe an} ue egainst Mr Frost in this State, 25284, Bn fan iy and ati, it will appear that the entire change since A if they knew not wa. 1856 was produced in these filteen coun- ties. } cone genet grees en bigls “These facts are very eanclusive. Treen — ever may have heen the cause, it is true that | a ted froma ae we gained largely in the North and West on our vote of 1856 and lostat a most disaster- oug rate in the mining and manufactoring districts. Other facts can be given to con- firm the view we present, for instance, our What- | Still where the high road's dusty track, The bare ridge rans serosa, Ard takes upon its tswway back, A housing of red moss. {1t may be u<eful. and indeed necessary, once [by army refolutions published in the admin- [cipally the work of Abolition and weak- ABOUT SOLDIERS, So much having teen said by the Aboli tionists about the feeling in the army in fa- vor of the Administration and its measures, in a while to give the public the other side We have long since ceased to be troubled istration press, kvowing that the privates bave little or nothing to do with getting them up or passing them, and that they are prin- kneed Democratic officers, sho have © axes to grind” at the headquarters of the army. Whenever we hear dircetly from the privates and non-commissioned cfficers we hear a tale very different from that told in speech es and resolutions for publication to the! neighbor Col. Martin, who was a candidate ‘ongress and known to ‘be -dissatistied | e poltey of the Administra jon of the | { Zanens question, and who wis stoully ad- | {voeated by Col. Forney and yet he was bea- Yor sibenpinitableiecertsy | ten as badly as was Mr. Frost, a Lecompton { and still he shared #®ommon fate with oth- 1 The 8chasl house etands—the spelling Looks: | or Still piled against the wall, joa ic erocks, i . As fall the dry ritis out, . } T:om the poor skeleton of dreams, wy I've lived my life aboot, {ers, The cases of Mr. Montgomery and Mr. { Bickmen cannot be presented neainst this view, for they were virtually the nomir ces of | ablican party in their respectivedis- Fame's stepping stones are vainly cought Where round my youth they Iny, The lover of my riper youth, ath scared them «ll away, { tricts. i Thus it will be seen, by the light of uner- i 5 gai teadier trust : : : 3ut faith has gained a steadier s ing history and figures, that the editor of the And hope no more is driven Either to trail slong the dust, Or strike in vain toward heaven, Press, with his anti-Lecompton issue, who has made the 4Iministration at Washington And fiom he unsatisfring guest To know the final plan, I turn my sonl to what iz Lest In uatuie and in man, 1 | | { claimed the whole credit of the cleetion, and | { holeive it, sinks into insignificance ns a pow- i er 1 the State beside the famous Seoteh pipe i contract of 1850. Aye. it appears by these facts that his support damaged the Repubh- can or Peoples party to the extent of ten! { thousand votes, z Hiseellanvone, Hor, we sre quire confident that if the =e | 3. 1.4. F ree ennsyivania could forget the his- ==! try of the last two years, thoy would not ! bout (o state for their : t the present Aminis- | { tration has revoked the executive order of { drs. Duchnnan, which directed a preference BETRAYAL OF TEE I20N INT EET BY TUE ADMINISTRATICR ¢ in the approsching eanv stion in Pennsylvania (he y : } cers will not permit tha Ad, ty be given to American iron and other (o- stic produets in the purchase of govern. , when it was clear- teredit what we are 1ation—v for the State Democratic sp tration fo escape unseated for its ment material's, that, t toward the Tron inter It is true . an iron at any (Iv tis duty toprefer Ame ki war farmish he wistunagemeniof t ut , ico fo ung s1 ‘on ciads, on recount es abundant material for assailing the Ad- {Price lor guns sic forisoncia Sonn 3 of its acknowledged superiority. Yet the rutnistrat on, without resorting to sny oth- ! sceptical have only to turn to the advertise- er. Eat itis also trae that there are thous. ! ! 7 to pardon mil- | Went {or proposals for arming iron clade which appear in the Administration ends of voters who are v s, however ; commit- | &-. &.. taught {journals to perceive the truth of what we einual itary Blurde ted by rulers whom they have beer to beleive tre endeavoring to save the |siate, : Wm, who would never forgive an ast of | Let not the iron masters who were delud- to the grent industrial { ed into the support of the Republican party nsole themselves with the reflection that treachiry orinjiny interest of the State. And the condition to co ' th th : the neglect of any means of success 8¢ our this species of protection is un mportant in command. cotaparrison with the tarift which they have be remembered by the people of {obtained. Whatever the value of this d's : it | crimination in favor of American iron in the sented by the | purchases of the Government may have been Ivanis, whi on ene of the issues pre ' that of Government patronage | during these times of unprecedented expen, weiiean iron— thst the Republic: ditur ! defeated the Democracy of the Stale and na- | prohibitary tariff. Nor isit alone the pat- ticnal cleefions of 1858, which gave it thelronageof the Government: which the iron contrel of the pationage of Le Sate and the | wasters have lost by this breach of faith of position to inavgurate, two yearsafierwards | the Republican party. Had the Admimstra- the present Administration of ihe Federal | tion kept faith with the iron interest, the of American iron clads must have Government. The details of the transzetion cut of which this issue arose, are yet famil- | been attributed hy foreigners to the supedi- iar to the pubic mind. General Meigs, then | 0viy of Americ fron. which was in fac! the Superintendent of the Washington Aqueduct | first theory suggested in Larope, Had the entered in‘o a contract with Mr. Myers, of | Administration strictly required nothirg but Philadelphia, to turmsh the iron pipes for} American iron to te used for this purpose this werk, but neglected to msert in the sd. | and had the Secre ary of the Navy in his no- veriisements fur proposals and in the eontrae: | table letter on iron elads referred to this res the clauge m favor of American iron. The | quis ition, who cculd measure the importance consequence wag, that the contract was award | of the fact to the future of the iron trade of ed to him at rates a8 which it was kuown/ this countiy 7 have roduced a rush for Amer h tojreconstruct the navies that they could not be supplied if nade of tw American iron, and that they must necessa-| €an iron with pig iron. utionized the iron trade of the country.it not This inudvertance or oversight of a sub-| all countries, giving to us supremacy in this ordinate was repesented by the opposition | trafic. And let it be born in mind that this as the deliberate act of the Adminiatrat on, poliey of discrimination in favor of Am It was in vain that Mr. Bucharan revoked {C25 iron wasactuallyestablished by the Dem” the contract on learnirg the facts, and dirce-! 00ratic party, and was in operation wh n the ed, by an executive order, the insertion of a | Republicans cume into power. The treason | clause ia favor of domestic products in allj of this party to the people of the mannfactur- | advertisements for proposals and inall eon. | ing States consists not in neglect to promote tracts for Government supplies, a most im-| the nanfacturing interest in the mannce portant messure for the manufactoring inter- | proposed. but in the abrogation of the very ests. The voice of reason and truth was policy to which it was pledied by the most drowned ia the popular clamor, and Penns. | Solemn protestations and declarations in the ylvania lost to the conservatism of the [annuals of representatives government. Union. The Pennsylvanian of the 15th] But this is only one of the many of Novewber, 1850, in reviewing the op-| vulnerable features of the Administration erations of the political battle-field illus-| Poiicy with respect to the iron interest.— trates by the official returns the influence Its poiiey is in facet a war upon this as whice this infamous canard exerted over the | Bpon every other material interest of the most important election in our history. Tt|country. It bas discontinued the use of iron on *¢ I'ake for evidence, the vote in the coun, | Public buildings, as is seen by its erection of ties of Allegheny, Beaver, Bradford, Butler, | the United States Court House and Post Of- Lrie, Bik, Indiana, Jefferson. Lawrence, | fice at Philadelphia of granite.instead of iron "wean, Mercer, Potter, Susquehanna Tio- though the jast act of Buchanan's Adminis- wn Venango, Warren Washington, Wyom-| tration was to sct aside ihe award of a con. ing and Wayne in all 20, being those m which tract for lhe creciion of this building of the question of siavery has uniformly wield- granite because the iron masters had not a ed the greatest influence, and it appears that | chance to submit plans and proposals, tae majority against Mr. Frost, the Demo-|tight demanded by a memorial signed by ceatic nominee for Canal Commissioner and | SVery meiner of Congress from Pennsylvan- an open and avowed Lecompton nan, was|18 10 1860, 1t has made io flort to retrieve but 1-818 votes, whilst the same counties | the New Grleans (xperiment of the iron in 1856 cast a majority of 27,474 agains: [marine bo: pital, though that city Fas been Mr. Buchaoan for President, being a Demo- | 10 Our pesiacssion for more than a year, and s + 5 j the bmlding is now 1 use by the” Govern- « oa} e free 3 of + ; cratic gain in the free soil counties the ment nits unfini-hed state,” We need not State since 1856, of 10,660. refer mi this connection to the tax on iron “Then tarn to the manuf ctoring and | farther thin to say that it more than conn wining districts, composed of the counties | terbalance tie increase of the rates of daties : on the foreign aritele, thus excluding the { Ca . t S , = : : i } of Carbon, Centre Chester Clarion, Hun tariff from the calcalations of loss and. gain tington, Blair, Lehigh. Schuylkill, Luzern, | tq the iron interest in the election of a Re- less Seo 8ay8 : far better {or the iron interest thanap | resolutions read, Montgomery, Philadelphia, Montross, Berks | publican President — Constitutional Union, Lincoln press; for instarce, something Hee] this : ; . Resolutions Representing the Real Senti- ments of Company F., 14%h Regiment, P. - $e Cane yean Bern Prams. Va ’] March 22, 1863. Winsag, An effort has been made by a certain party in the North to obtain the mor- al influence of the army in the field in sup- port of a political principal which should, and can only be, decided by the people in their sover¢ign capscity at the ballot-hox ; And whereas, The commanding officer of the 140th P V. has, without due notice and process, imposed a set of resolutions upon us, the privciples of which we eannot en- dorse and sustain ; Therefore resolved, That we are in favor of a vigorons prosecution of the war, for a restoration of the Union, the Constitution, ard the authority of the laws—AND Foz No OTHER PURPOS Resolved, That we consider the attempt 0 accomplish anything further by force of arms as a darger.us precedent, subversive of the rights of the people, and contrary to the letter and spirit of the Constitution ; and that we consider it our duty to frown | upon every attempt to intimidate the free | action of the pecple of the loyal States on any suf ject pertaining to the political con- dition of the country. Resolved, Thut we are opposed to the ineipation proclumation of the first of Jarry, 1863, as an uncalled for and ijlle- grtimate proceeding ; which has proved dis- ise, as well as subversive of the principles of a republican form of government, Reselved, Toat efforts of persons in the North to obtain the real sentiments of the people North and South, mm a general con- vention are conciliatory m their influence ; and are destined 10 produce beneficial re- sults, if properly respected by the adminis- tration. Resolved. That while we earnestly and anxiously desire a return of peace, yet we are not go slavishly attached to it as to be willing to &ceept it on any terms; nor in- deed ean we accept-any thing short of a res- toration of the Umon and a recognition of the supremacy of the Constitution and the laws. These being our real sentiments, we hereunto affix our names : William Carr, Charles Larrimer, James II, Dougherty, Abednego Cran, John R. Bali, William Pierce. Edward Goss, Wm, H. Tke, Jumes II. Bush, Wm. L. Taylor, J. II. Ogden, Oliver Swith, B. B. M'Pher- sm, Jumes A. Rhinehart, Charles A. Garri- son, B. F. Carr, Wm. IL. Phillips, George W. Ardew, Geo. W. Luzier, Uenry Hum- mul, D. Breen Brrnard, Hiram I. Hawk. Frank Freel, Christian Lainch, J. W, De Haas, David Cranmer, Wim. F, Krise, John {I. Mason, Peter Curley, Nathan Wariner, James Lucas, Dante! S. Kephart, Jas. W. Goss, Milion S. Lawhead. John Macumuver. From the 126: Ohio regiment, a gentie- man who was present, writes as follows: * The 126'h Ohio was ordered out on pa- rade without aims, in the snow, to hear the The gentleman says he was not more than ten feet from the officer who read them, and all that he coald hear] the officer say, was, that the resolutions had been passed by ths officers, and that the men must all vote for them too. Just as he commenced reading them, a band of the New York regiment commenced playing, and and a locomotive whistled for about ten minutes, so that the men did not hear ten words read. And to show the interest the solaiers took in them, they amused them- selves throwing snow-balls at each other, — He a-ked the men when they returned to their quarters, why they did not pay atten- tion to the readingof the resolutions ¢ “ Their reply was—-they* didn't care a d—n.’ And yet we will be told these reso- lutions were passed by the entire regiment, unanimousiy. What humbuggery,” A ‘soldier’ of the 61st lilinots writes ** Seme of the commissioned officers met here some days since—none others being ad- mitle in the roow™and drew up a set of resolutions, one of which condemned the Tllincis Legi sature, but, being so covered up with words, it was hardly discernable ; besides, some of the resolutions were very good, And, as they were all voted on ag one, large numbers of men voted for them, not knowing what they were voting for.— The vote was taken on dress parade. After the Adjutant had read them, and the com- mander of the regiment had extortea all to vote fur them, he requested that oll who vo- ted should come to a shoulder arms at the [Si astreus to oar is true, that many obeyed it: but half of them knew not what they were voting fore Some shouldered their arms because others did, and afterwards admitted that they did no: know for what it was fone, saying that if the vote was taken by ballot, they would go against the resolutions. But, when shoulder-straps, court-marshuls, and milita- ry penalties are so numerous, upon the least pretense, eguinstrihe rank and fi'e, the so! dicrs have to submit to the example as w Under such cireumstarces thousands of men would as the direction of their superiors. opmions were directly to the reverse, and: were they not bound in the ber itary despomsm they would aszert tueir true sentiments in public as freely as they do in | private.” go of ml tinto the army an Abolitionist, sends the fol- lowing: * Dear FRIEND . ed in alow swamp within sight of the ‘great city of Vicksburg.’ here. and you will be apt to hear of rome There is a great deel of sick ness among the soldiers here, John, Jet me tell you while yo: are at * * % Weare encamp- We have a large army fighting soon. howe but if you do you will be sorry for it. 1 would like to be up in Towa ence more, | am in hopes that peace will be made soon, so that the soldiers can get home. We heard down here that the soldiers in Keokuk had torn down the Constitu/ion office. 1 think they had better been doing something else. I hope they won't go to fighting in Towa. People in Fowa don’t know any hing about soldiefing to what we do down hore, * * % Uwill tell yeu that the negroes would tbe better ff wil their masters than if they I am in {or letting the black ras- cals stay in the South wish their masters, — were fice, You know that 1 was a Republican when 1 left home, but now I am a Democrat. | { don’t say this becaies you are a Democrat I wish that some of the Abolitionists that raised, or help 1 for T wrote the same home, raise, the war, had to go themselves, a maybe they would be in for peace)’ * * Lient. Bdward R. Duncgan, company K. 25 h Peunsylvania volunteers, whose nume was signed to the proceedings published in the Telegraph, denies having signed them, Capt. Wallace, one of the secretaries. that ® . ns name * was axed without his knowledge or content.” This we presume is the case in muny instances, and goes far to prove that army resolutions as prepared by the officers for the press are the veriest hum- bugs.— Patriot and Union. et VALLANDIGHAM. The reception of Mr, Vallandigham, by our outpost guard men, the ecenduct of the officer in command, and the subsequent ob- servance -of the soldiers whose ranks he passed, with Colonel Stoddard Johnson, en- route for Shelbyville, exhibit to us a wise aignity which we trust will be marred by no future event of indiscretion. We are unable to amive at a perfect conclusion a8 to the ultimate design of the principal figure of the group. The letter of our correspondent. published in yesterday's Rebel. rather gives his own impression than Mr. Vallandigham's views. “Mr. Vallan- digham.” be writes, “is cheerful and seems to breathe freer on escaping the Lincoln despotism. He very properly desires to asks that he may find a quiet refuge in our midst, until such time as the voice of his people, relieved from despotic influ- ence, shall call him again from their mids:, He seems fully to realize the embarrassment of his position, aud will, beyond doubt, be cqual to the respensibilities. A dignified retirement and seclasion from all public matters, «ill, to the minds of all proper persors, a8 doubtless his own, be the best course for him to pursue.’ We cannot bddieve it to be the wish of one of Valiandigham's sagacity and cour- age, to scttle down into a baleful obseuri- ty ameng strangers, who can do more than respect his character and sympathize with him in his domestic troubles, his persecu- tion and his banishment, The tide which leads to fortune is now at its flood, In a little while it will ebb and flow from him and leave him like one npon a desert strand, wiio sees the bright tlue billows roll off into the night, never to come again. If he remain in the South— traduced by his ene- mies at home, abused in the minds of his friends, and at best occupying an cqnivocal position before the face of men—the day will not dawn when “the voice of he peo- ple relieved fiom despotism, shall againeall him to their midst.’ The roaring ocean of revolution, whose red surges are sweeping over the North, will presently swallow up all that remains of Mr. Vailandigham, - Ie and his labor and his fame —what he did and what he strove to do, will go to the bottom. Like little wanton boys that swim on blad- ders, and perish when the buoys are with- drawn, Mr. Vallandigham and his party must sink beneath the wave, whilst the foam and driftwood of Lincolmsm sweep wildly and triumphantly over them, Our correspondent says he fuily realizes the embarrassment ot his posi ion, and will, beyond doubt be equalto the respon. sibilities, There should be no embarrassment. There command. When he gave the command, it submit to srch resolutions whose private | A private of the 30th Iowa, who went! stay there, and never-go into the army ;! and sends with his denjal a certifieate {rom | avoid ell pubiic demonstration, and only | A INL TET fn a merely personal point of view, no an | TIE LADIES CORDIAL. { barrussment, The roads which leads up the | The ladies of Westmoreland were quite | teep assent of the future, is direct and So though seme of them shrunk back lighted all the way. It lends first out of some | from shaking hands with Federal officers. { Confederate port to Nassau, thence to Cane-| One lLidy, whose “idol was broken ag the [da and finally into the Gubernatorial chair | yoyo of Antietam. after gras ‘ot Ohio. | ping Colonel mr Ni 7 p i ¥ The return of Nayolcon from Elta | Morrow’s hand ss she said good bye, added, [was the signal for general reaction, (hous-| «There. I didn't mean to do that, by as yon ands flocked to him on the instant. Nothing | are a Virginian by birth you cannot lLe a jconld keep the “little corporal.” bars, ror | Yankee.” . (iron, nor prison, nor island. He stood once more on his own native hearth the sujersti- | : : Ci sitting down to Mis. Shackleford’s table, | tion of the popular hear: clung to him, and I and partaking of her hospitality, 8s soon Te 3 T p | 8 Ain} ‘a py} he tiumplied. Let Mr. Vallandigham’s re. 123 they had filled their bellies, they went Let the alsence of a sin : g ll . z : ! sutside and stole her horse. But then, be gle mo i im issuing an address to the |. | gle month find him issuing an address to the jing a rebel. she ought to be thankful that she eseaped with her life, [turn Le as speedy. | people of his State, from Lower Canada.yro- jeiafmirg these things to them. “I, Clemen L. Vallandigha persecuted, exiled, coerced by tyrants and bayonets, but not al Teviled ype ohicf objet of the expedition, n~d f ap 's from the following that the magers were allowed to approprinte any clisose to lay their hands on. {dead nor dumb, issue these words and declare myself a candidate for Governor of Ohio.” The fleet would be magical. Who would i thereby be proven traitor. Who? Certainly {uot Nir. Vallandigham, This is the true ’ course, and the result of months {tay they ! and caval. who also bronght up from ot Le Inte} will justify it. W estmoreland county and Lely there mp We hile Mr. Vallandigham over and above bardvars flange 3 Sonifennan of oll 9 zes, complexions and ages, who confiscated every species ef vehicles that ever had heen made or thought of since the inve g they A LONG TRAIN OF CONTRABANDS "These captures were made by the infantry jour respeet for Lis honesty, ability aad con. servation, beeause we Lelieve he is for peace. | Dissenting from all his views upen the pro- & i bably or possible reconstinetion of the Union 1 of toa began to Jovevins pst ’ nigeers, and little niggers, white niggers black niggers, rellow niggers aud niggers covered with gray dust, were in the train ; fascinating wenches with pearly teeth and attractive lips, and Fihjopean damsels with protuberant lips and unattractive faces. One of the inhabitants of Westmoreland county, an educated and accomplished gen- tleman, who reg we concede them to bie at Jeast the nearest approximates to sanity which have come tut ot any Northern mird, and in any event, we shold tham to be human maxims, directed to- | ward a close’of the war, We regard Mr, Val_ landigham as a faithful citzzen of the Ui ted Sates. As an upright man he has spo- ken his sentiments, ficely and frankly,— They are very clear, aud if founded in en trroneons estimate of the fielings which in- Spire the heart of the South, they are frank and honest. ted the hegira 67 so many contrabands, remarked that tha train, tak- ing into consideration the variety of (he ve. len, the grotesque appearance of the ne- groes—*'some in rags. and some in bugs, ana some in velvet gowns —sdrpasced any = Ve like them for these good and rare qulaifications. Bu I in a pub- tlic and politcal yoint of view he is our en- temy, and 8s such we are bound to treat (him. Mr. Lincoln makes him our enee I my in his very act of banishment, which lis. the first frecognition of our inde; endence hy the Federal Government. Mr. Vallan- icham ie gent to a foreign natien a3 on ex- own. Expatriation must be vol- thing of the Rind \he world ever saw. The contraliands were left at Beile Plain. cop route tor Washington, and wil! take n «ari. ety of household goods with them.’ We can all understand the above needs no comment 3 but we were not pre- pared for the cold humanity of refusing to ile from SE aged end infirm niggers the privilece c- untarly, eannot be coerced. Until the party ; \ 2 0 i Ts pritiene of 2 , manta © companying their children, fathers the {eoncerned ssséris his desire to become al pany sug thein shilnen, thermo hoth ala j considered as the evil of slavery, it s | he remains in law and in fact, a citizen of | 18 0150 thio Bless an Sa the connry whence he was drive n, Did thet 2 hiso he fussing Bl feclom. 3 { Herald ; . WAITING CONTRAI “ By the roadsides ther 8 jers. The separation of families i eitizen of the country to which he is exiled Saya the Federal Government mean this 7 sarcdly so great a blunder could not have bees made even hy the asses composing the Washing- : i negroes, watting fir the trains to eome 2 along which were to anspor ar wlory of intention, not of chance or oversight, Let 1 + Y : th 3 to glory . . : : and convert them to Yankees. These i Mr. Vallandigham himself consider the a Ins point, He is now in a foreizn country. Be = a = > “| Sexes: but the transportation was insuffi. The authorities of the United Sates admit! { cient for those who would be of no bencfit it to be so, and send him to a foreign ecun- to thet : Th ) : ! , ; heir proprietors, andy ere try. Does he desire to expatriate himself, . pret ! ey Pere fot be . hind to exhaus: the country.” and become a citizen of the Confederate States! 1f so, well and good. But as a citizen of the United States he cannot. and should not, remain here,» We da not wich to be inhospitable, but we cannot recognize the right of any power or court to'send its convicts here as to a Batany Day. The Routh is not the proper lodze for po- lifcal hermits, however dignified or popu'ar, or noble.— Chattannonga Rebel. —— ese toh Cabinet, and we lock at its the result were of all sizes, colors and ages, and both It was considered a military necessity to “take horses. mules and con‘rabands,’® and we have no doubt this was gIven very po- lirely in excuse when those articles were aD- propriated from the effects of the hospitable citizens, hat it appears that military neces- sity does not confine itself to these artic leg as the following indicates : BAD FAITH OF A BLOCKADE RUNNER. A blockade runner, near Warsaw, Cap- A TEDERAL CAVALRY RAID. ta’n Philips, profussing Union sentiment = promised to produce his horses by four Col. Kilpatrick and Col. Thomas have]o'clock in the uorning, ‘and wich were heen making another eavalry raid en the hidden in the forest, and was told that i he Northern Neck, and we glean from the New did not do so Lis house would he burned York papers some parhealars of the glarie! down before the cavalry Icfi. Wis promise, ons manncr in which it was performed. We lon his sacred honor, was not kept, and his are first informed that the people behaved { house was committed to the flames while he most hospitably. The Jicro/d says: | was secking sympathy or securiy J south side of the Rappahanncek. HOLDING THE MIRROR UP. A Richmond dagnerreotypist, who had run the blockade from the North through Mattox cre. k, with several runs contam- T DENTS OF TIE NORTITERN NFCK. “The Northern Neck embraces the conn. | ties of Lancaster, Northumbe nd, West. Imareland and King George, bordering on | the Belle Plain, the Rappahannock and the Potomac. There are inciden's rleasant and | ° very unplersant connceted with a raid for | 102 his personal clothing and dagnerreotym the purpose of weakening the rebel resour | materials fell into the hands ofseur return: ces hy redneing thenumners of their horses. ing cavalry, With $1500 1 preontacks he mules and contr bands. 1t was a military Nod Bor ht S730 worth of od necessity to © the “favorite and only 2 DURRNE 5/00 worth of goods, o hoarse.” notwithstanding the grief of weep. | Motel bills, but the rest of his won ; 3 A church, in which Baptists and Methos “The grief of weep'nx girls, the plend- hats Di i D nts Phi) Tetioy ing of nzed women, and the en'reaties of 4'StS worshipped, near King George Court fascinating voung ladies,” may be all well | House, was accidently destroyed by fire enongh for people to ery over at the theatre yesierday morning. Sono of the efi the play of +Maron.? when Tarleton wpa, sympathies are with Sceessia, made his cavalry raids in ’76, but as they itn t etiatiolone) 7 are “rebels” uw, they find no pity among | ©0 that it was maliciously sot on fire, and | In plain English, this means that safer. Horses, mules and niggers, it seema, were | teloth,” and finally drove the whale coreern ing g'rls, the pleading of aged women, and | absorbed in CXpenses, . the entreaties of fascinating young la. CHURCH BURNING. Lr! dies.” VALLANDINGHANM. : I Liberty sits weeping to day on the blood- {drenched soil of once free America at the [fate of one of her noldest and bravest sons, The accumulated malice and long garner fr bate of filthy demagogies has at leneth | been gratified by the sir down, by tha ; maired hand of mititary power, of the truest, | bravest, “noblest Roman’ of ali thas» lo | irions men who Lave confronted tha fli tng h of arkbitrary power: fig | eannted, indomitable Vallandin | Chevalier Bayard of the forum —sans pens el 8 repinche, ortons record of his pnb'ia life, ver did mortal ma } 0 grandly tiltered hy him an lie nes "modern times in the halls hy in : Bhinay to Gort, the truth, and the pee. rish off perish henoi8 peri-h i. but do the thing that is tight, and do-it lite a man.” For such a man no terrors Face the dan. jgeons and bastiles, the mack t1ia's snd brag *, even death nflicted by ihe pet 7 tyrants of the hour, whose names will 50 iter sill, through lapaing years, will shine in (hatt wl Lit galaxy of names onl, an Arnold Winkelreid, a Bozzarie, and an Emmet. icorruplible statesman ! pure patriot! noe hero ! pecrless, proud Vallandighan | Your encmics and your country’s ene. mies triumph now, but beyond the dark 1 contains a Cori cloud that now hangs rs a pall over (ha fate of Your country and of yon, there pf shining out the glorious effalence of the {sun. ecannopicd by the blue of Licaven’s own bright dome, “Banished t0 Tortugas I'' So rends the sentence of the ro-alled Cours, that with. out lnw, has struck down the intrepid lea. der of the Demoeratia party, and through hit str a blow st tho great Demoorata party is Avo £¥ with Vallandigham. Send inn where Lis elasior voice can no longer denounce the nefariona plotg of Abolition conspirators against ogre country. Place b Is and bars and solid walla between |) and the gallant peopla of whom he was tha sentative man, the eXpment, and yo! f Liberty, thames + the eleetin current of will (ty { Eis priven chard ta ihn whiin he was Ss words I haar thir Sin wl] £28 the earning bing forgetting neti ing" Bow all. “Know yo na that after ye | Killed the body ve } more that ye ean do,” No, thank God there your ower s The free rpirig mocks v ns and laughs at your punvattemp:s to bind ic For us, if free government 8 10 Le lost in the wild whirlpool of revoli'in 1 if free and a free pres ed 1 knaves and fo can no logoor he He the Abolition can utter ther incondiade yermi mouthings une the very n and in de- fiance of ns the Who, ithe price of bi soni unetaintd he od. the jobs and contractd’ —~ the blood mos 'y of epecnlatory in war, but would to day roether re the banish. met of the patriot exile Vallanhigham, han to Rit in the Cabinet of Lincoln, in {ton 2. Puc tT §TIOS, ently -frcluding all the Democracy, Brady, inson—furled to come 3 and, still more laughable, the soldiers whom it had assembled to do honor to it. groancd tor Grecley, cheered for Seymour and Me Clellan banners, | fizz jrenegrades fiom Van Buren sud D ked the” Republi 0 speakers oft the stage, “tore thir broad. 1 7 —Pieindaaler. Sl * RETALIATION. — The Richmond Lncui-er Muy 26 says: ar two officers recently mardercd « it cially un Ohio, two cficers of equal rani, now in our hands are to suflop through th. those who are truly ‘doyal.”’ Go on brave We shall hear of * Yankee charch burners.” Kilpatrick, make more weeping girls andi The citizens thonght that G.n. Wads_ | pleading women, and pray God io Keep the | worthy aids were niggers, and the cores. | 2 4 >! oe Santhron from thy Northern home. 1 ie ses his & : this, But we are told the people treated those | POUCONt €Xpresses his surprise at their 6 officcrs —how ? with disgust? with eye. 0rance; we do not share his surprise. crations * with horror ~-no! The [raid] In conclusion, the Herald correspondent - . says: TOSPITALITY OF THE PDOPLM. +The citizens on the ronte were hospits- ble to the officers of the brizads. and spread boneons tables for their three daily meals, (Green peas, cherries and strawherries were amonz the luxuries. Naar Lytwa'ton the | 173. and beheld the dear old flag of the brignde headquarters were estatlished at| Union floating near his home, tears involun- the re sidence of Mrs, Bates, a widow lady, tarily blinded his eyes. while he exclaimed. whose ooinnd was 3 broiberof Hon, By with deep emotion, Col. Morrow, that flag ward Bates, Attorney General of the Uni- ted Sta'es. She is noi a Union lady. wes once very dear to we. It was severing At Warsaw, near the Rappahannock, athe last link that bound me to the Union most lovely village, Mrs. Shackleford, a! when 1 was forced to array myse widow lady, entertained the brigade offi- it” cers, and involuntarily contributed her best | *. | horse to the support of the Government of | tis 00 wonder that Col, Critcher shed the United States to the prosecution of the | tears at the sight of the “deur old Fiag;” amar for the restoration of the Union, though | and if Col. Morrow did not do Jikewise, it her sympathies’are wi'a the Southern Con- was because be had no sh s : federacy. Dr. Pendleton, Clerk of the| Se 0 3uaine efi fir ihe THE OLD FLAG BRINGS TEARS T0 REBYIL rene. Col. Citcher was treated with that con® sideration due to a gallant enemy after his arrest, and when he saw our infantry narad- If against are responsibnlities, and weighty, but except Courts for Lancaster county, alsé extended | 230 deeds it was made to cover, — Fae nin hospitalities, Journal. operation of the fe jalions. This infell. gence has bien conveyed tu Us), [rndlow, the Ya: kee Commissioner, by Conn cr Quid, with the additions] assurance. tha. hereafter for all Confedernte «ldis Ys or (1 f- zens improperly held of “execnted the Jaw of retaliation will te rigidly enforced, - tre 0 Sarvs one of our exchanges : I'he Yar: rested Vallandigbam for what ho said in a speech, and a mil ion tongue began to talk for him. They have banished him, and mw) Lons have sprung up to fill his place end vindicate his name, Was this the way ty supp > 8a him # comes res New York Brpress saya: if anybody, just now,i hinking of two Dem: cratic parties in this State, in the presen crisis of public sR4irs, there ig about as wuch chiace for hin to hve whoo between them, as a grain of wheat between two great millstones. = 07 The Republicans profess great anyiee ty that soldiers should enjoy the pr of voting, | et Caen To test the swoeriy 1 Y Tn ndi} + > ‘ Y World Proposes that t my of the f'eto- was be allowed to oh ¢ ther commsnder - Bid { 1 NR