19 Ikkit Ea 0 n Attie!. tlig+ 41.1* (Arias s*Eninsrt ef the tit ar t ero • It has t hinJetttei tbn Nati Depart dosthattr,eate__t Woof 144 vaW#lsl, , ,i men who hire returned home,condom the state teenV4thieh Ceettlif‘ateeasiolloe! etearty 31seetneala Charlia.lintrbor. One of thin: Is hear_ etatakter t . There_y• a rephot that tho Obstnol9oo,ate washing. an t' or Chart.tatun Sew. bit 44L,stsefes be!e boon larded too. erten to beitst. Tbn varlets molts we IntrArne•Pred fbt 1101p0 days past,of•retaforeernents Te tongstritet, are now said to bantams, Longetrect,, tt - 1s Setif, , bas mike no' attempt to adranco, and no forward moventstpt,,hifiared. NO, the Garrison at Cum berimad.alp hail been strengthened, and Feder al ralartreetnerrts have - been pent to Knoxville. , Ong. gribt hairs") to Stiotis. There itiVerplittle. from tho„Arniy of the Po ,. tomite. A Confederate:cavelry force, number tag 1 44 ernipaal,ths itspidaa a fare day. aim" on area se3iapae, aid a_ *bolt slitruifilL.,!. . - retired. &Fedi - ref scout from the'estap tqwarla the Potomac it Opoquan, shore .I.tnin, disoor l era mii•fores of the enemy. Liegertera franilthe specs& now say that Lee had Bout no forest) the Wert. Thep., dosettera are strattge . ,penple; they sae anything which auks ateir Yearera. %demerit bottler .has sent a reconnoisance to Fort P.dwhattsue, fifty miles up the •7111311VIki , .er, wh,: h retailer.] twenty-nine white men: t aunty - funrthousand pounds of,,pork and ninety-uino negroes. There was no Federal I.,es. It is reported tttad..the enema here quite a Skills in the lore'. Rappahanneek)aud they sonteasplate a raid upon the Fedora' triwsports we C:harapeaks Ray. Never Despair. 11 - 0 &IN to suppose that such a crisis anus maw upon UP, such an upheaving of the paitrical elements, will notbring forth Kneailorthy cif the peop'e's confidence. It n 'kw that toe poifer . now held by the revaluLionarp.R‘ailcrs of the Aboli tion,pactg will be au9iciont to smother f - ir a thee the matte), imp or di,eontent, lind-abisithe , hands of those who seek the -cations ,good ; but ate time will come4than ttit,sse murmurs can no Moro be stifled flianthe roar of .Niagra. when tive effort:scan Ito more be stayed than the yasistless rush of, tlutt riVghty eatirset. Mite 90;ploare beginning , to doubt ahe Nintegrity- of those who oat deali'lptiosecamjasts, while the liras of thairiellonoinen.are bqing larished as Lb, leardkof-tiattoun, and the wealth of the4etuotsy.isa away at .the rate ofirrs-asalitut abars a day. While whits aeon, mist were elected by wiuTr. MN, kr *a AVMS MAWR GOOD, can lea4atrattns of their brethten to. the rani es *Wile shrines of the. Aftieau diriaity *NJ:are set ep, and laugh at the stiaeiilittr have entailed upoti us, 'thecase is 4esperate ind'eea, if ire had no hopes-efitighterdays. . Mk . Torkkips of society, and of polities in tforesolar4taxe ahrays been a mystery. Somas petty dumegogue is able to control • Wldide eaties n to a certain point, and dupe a. tiabe -emelt when the brain of the mightiest statesmaa shrinks from the Olanipwows position, or ns is the eftse of .A.brahawdoincoki, who is tod much or an ass to be &leader in any great measure, the ship .wf state is permitted •to drift wherever wiid and tide may carry -it, until the people become aware of the &agora Which threaten their exibtenee, and willittow uphold the statesmen who Aire' aZtAI rescue them from the impe * danger. - We believe that Kuala time is even now' upon u 4 and slat the elements-Which are to 41'4 us atealready at work. We believe that tke Arm of tho Adudnistration ' arc too uni f tly and glaring to have• escaped the notice of the periblo, fatally blind as they appear to hare beepme. It has been maid that the boiling cauldron casts the sewn to the gurfaoe, and the agitation the politiatl elements casts up the corrupt ones We believe that 'libeller year will bring forth minds. eapage of griaping the fearfully interestingrpstions which now - agitate oar enuntry ind that the' people will sustain them. We cannot. believe that 11eaven will permit the best government ever ,ttunvid by man to be overthrown by alureffortsof a few-iusanc fanatics. We • cannot *ink that ottrgeneration Las not ben single mairworthy of the Nina who au nobly led no fltrougly the trying scenes of the past. We sonnet despair while a cotUidn anditlialfOrdion stand ready to Sias& 41 hope and labor op until the last ;limner of out star fades iiithe darkness of de - s - potim{ \ or inill I% !Maui' Tort* in its ancient spiegidov Jamie ,the pit in' which its anessiewhate teseiteugulphed. Mokeve apt to ',shrink' from a contest mith lows; Isithilk has *mighty allay to do its indtliktirisad to give agin , Impala, when our Plealdent threatens to peopillat hilmollo, means of that as its samikiiimksodassidefo. - • Anvil s% ' it.. is' true ' , ate:. ' 444; liiitty dotterels ta lihnre4 belt they 0 . 11 49, 1 5 t entflit - w O W4 III O army to attempt., in the approaching presidential election. The_ people know their danger, anti sLifte hothi,4 4)_,k___Vila who _nhOrnets_thez-14: -of y ~O V6LL~ in the history of the . pa 4 :The Democratic tirOlcabeceacallte& by IncNti Uu4to vyru, and his chstplqyed its strength iii snot' a waylhat violent, hands will nol. soon again be - laid upon , its members. 'Let us organise in the name so ;wired to our sires in the revolution.of the poet; And stand up, boldly and fearlessly, for whoever may be chosen to repregent is, in the posi tion s) di d lgefully occupied by 'Abra ham' Lineolub • Proclamation. "it .k i lm Slide" Banks' 'hay issued a pr tenth" to come forward and organize a State Groiernment for the remaining . "nine tennis" of the voters in the State otlsmisiana. This is, is our; readers will at once understand, in acchrdance. with the programme, as raid dotrit by bineqln in ids last Message—the pro crannee,' to 'insure his owh dection, contrary to the ‘sishes of four' fifths of the American oenplo. No& where is there the semblance of right in so high handed a proceeding, iftirstopping to in quire as to where you can find tae cons titutional authority ? The Constitution has openly been iinored.by the infamous and we must say to their credit, that they do 'not propose to be guided by thst sacred instrument. Abraham Lin coln wishes. to' be re-elected, so that the blood of American citizens may be shed upon Aniariettu soil four years longer. He desires to be re-elected, so that the abolition demons, who, have become milliottsires arthe expense of our coun try's treasure. they continue their organ ized system of . downright robbery and plunder for another term of four years. He desires to be re-elected, so that any possibility of a reconstinetion afthe lin ! ioh may, for seertaioity, become an possibiliAy. He desire* to be- re-elected do that in the next presidential' term he ',nay accomplish his hellish work of an nihilation rnd destruction of the lives and zaopeity Of our brethren of tLe sonthen States, who have been provok ed into a n armed -resistencxt against a long threatened invasion of their consii tntioutd by the tmifOrous, Union hating -horde of northern abolitionists, under Giddinge. Greely, Sumner and kind red spirits o!the John Brown school. In order to accomplish their nefarious ends—it is our sole pea conviction—Lin coln has bred the rtmiius "one tenth" State government heresy. Abraham Lincoln's projeo is ~rust this: lle in tends having all the southern States, who hate him, aria him Followers, as eve ry body else should hitte thorn--as much as ratan—send electors to the next.pros idential elcetdl dollege,in favor of him self, the great abolition dqmigod, for President I What n novel sight this would be, indeed, to havn thoe States pronounce in favor of the destroyer and author of their catamnities, as their ru ler 1 The first step in this work is Banks' proclamation, ordering an electiOn, by the "one tenth" to organizo a State government fur Louisiana. Next in order will come North Carolina, "ono tenth!' i ill organize, and domineer over the re maining nine tenths, and- the humbug and farce, has been promised the sup port of the army and navy by Abrahani, to bolster it up, to,continne Ittltsalx in power. This. Will be done in all the con federate States in which Lincoln can stick soldiers, even though they be negro sol diers. Should Democrats, Enlist ? We have been asked time end' again if Democrats should enlist and help to' prosecute this war, as it is now conduct ed. 'Like persons that belong to any other party, Democrats gave a right to do ai theypleme l .and as they see propel about going into this war, and we , 84- ),os° they will regardless of our opinions as to tho propriety or impropriety of do ing so. In a war or this hind, waged by the General Government aguinstoSever eign Etatee, by which theft* principles of Democracy are' Violated,' itigtati have but little faith in any one claiming to.he a Democrat that gives it encouragement in any manner4WloTer; 70z if a man degree to fight to free ''i . paW, of lazy worthless niggers , , the of being Itirhid,' ixrdegrade his own ratted a 'lard with them—if he wishes to destroy as -prppmV, and homes, of those who ask, aulyfortheirrighte, nat.. ont4l. ,aiii(Fy . ; mod destOtion, nponw people Ship .zuf rev harried hinilifikytMloo` e* -the 4nditatAd ' a , 1 4 instal% azd - fr — ged the peopled the North o become sd? ~ o r of Ki A.. b *lol•4=/, Oi t a 4 . i in g tablish a monarchy upon its ' 11*I ittr i litrU t V I . l . l 4 ml mo r =f rmereide • • • 4ea r' 7 , • l iaiil. f F ivit ' been aver long 'Lanni. 1:1731 irnuld never have been. iihireeed with aQ Aboli4on . partyngain' Foronr ..part ,we ye never'takep stock 45?, - , this _ fir PAN :Power it will bn,prolonged—,Aelien they Ire no longer tote has ituniet atop, and peneeMth'ite many lOr t elhigi wilt !hen be 00,14)Yed 1. before. " "~~ Puritanism and thn Conscription. • When the presentOmeess grzt . met, itwas generally lxdie+ed that it world take important •iltinger fu ltie Cep scription sat, ana that it NO almosteer 7 Main to expliiige the three hundreddellair clause. For opr pert, we never thought -such a thing of an Aholition Congress, we never believed. , them- capable of so -leech regard-forthe-poorer clasa of fellow citizens as that won't' indicate.— We know that these puritan- faMitics pretendto be greatly exercised about the rigid* amen, that.shait they sleep; at*" dreams are disturbed pool. ,Cuffee, groaning tinder -4 '4e lash of &south. driver," andthat ever since "ye go'dlie pilgrims" disposed of yurlastock in hu man flesh, and received the price in. Southern gokt,their consciencehas never ceased to upbraid them and urge them :to lobs° the bonds which they were bi struniental in putting upon the negroes of the South. They mightdeceive slhno with their hypocritical cant, but we had -heard of them before • we remember to have read of .01iyer prionwell and •his army of long prayers, and longer lames and we remember how that they mocked_ God with their impiety, and murdere their anointed King, how they plundered and robbed, and all in the name of the Prince of Peace. They were conten ding then for the rights of humanity, yet they never forgot their own interest and their own pockets: they prayed and cast duet upon their heads, but, when a wirte cellar fell into their hands, they were the veriest drunkards in England. And we have traced them, through the pages of history, from Old England to New England, and we have seen them display the same elements of character which Made them hated and cursed all over Europe. - They are eternally seetinir to take the mote from a brothers eye and see not the beam that is in their own, they triad° war upon `slavery' and 'slave holdeYtt,' but refused not to coin fortunes from the productions of "slave" labor. in their humane efforts, they forgot not their pockets. And ' now, when they have embroiled ifs in a horrid war, and shed more blood than all the puritans who ever lived and died can atoine for, they have an eye to theirown interests still.— In passing an act to sweep all their poor fellow-citizens into the path of deft! h, they take care to insure their own safety, and it is folly to suppose that they will ever close that avenue of escape. Any ono who looks for such a thing is not acquainted with the character of thelln lilies who rule us now. It is not compa tible with their temper as displayed in the past, or consistent with the spirit of the Aristocracy tte,y propose to rear, to give a poor man an equal Aimee with the wealthy, and all who "expect such things at their hands will be griqveously, disappoiatells 4- It is now believed, by almost every one, that Abraham Lincoln will here-nounha 'ted for the Presidency, by the abolition patty. In his last message he strove to accomplish one great object, viz : to unite all the differentselements• of which his party is composed upon one platform, and to all appearances heJas surfed d. The ;'radicals declare, their satisfaeffon with the dociunant, and all who been known as • conservative Repuhli cans, echo Amon: We see in" the men-, suree ofXr. Lincoln A deeper pelicy than Is capable of inaugurating, and we Cannot but think that a vast danger is threatening the nation, and that titulni heeile president is still to be the inotnt went, in the hands of bad' met, for our destruction. WF - hti - aliiays 'thought that the L.'tectitive ,ileilartineht of the TJnitgdjiittiteadisploye4 the Clemente 0E weakness and of sttengthiri awopdeltfai and' mysteifiointiiner. In sonid" Of its measures-we see.ortlY the fool, Whqsfilij= lien are hidden frardAdinself end anoint ' 1 to the world, ''' others, lie see , &elm mistaltable. iirldinOi „On 810,t4 whose follies iuselnoWnonlY• to, and hidden from the world In bun We rraolltaYs oiee'LitiOtk In the other, %id, the Mohr/6Ra Ai4d4:'. 'ne dangers that close- - around-us are dark fel:midrib:le; theiaisiemitie part t 7 its - elemettieJfite PiciPoy 00ti4444_ against thoins. , 'Lotus hive; s -Inns .of Anik and~, whom tthe .0; - " 1 i" *oo* F IW ifikutilool4lo nuke, anktbougli (Rents °Mat' fill thit we hope to yet MO therida,:. oo nitt 1 4. 141:19104,,..011,14 1 44016.1.411 0 -,_- wh l at, o efe viskited 434 fapt.y cmidtry—re ,_ # l o 4l *. ..14;b4. 3 t ttaf *II; ; 1 41114 ' ' ' d• Give us a Man religiotheir fato._ incites ti_''Leta 'AsrDevit would blush to own ;,but,Men i who revere the kmemories of the patriots of thii` !Wok in ct-r" siler . plP , thevesiOlbihr=th* dieditp eittaith*-- iri .11,11W1, deflator Bayard returns to his ,hguie heir' lair:with hint the' respect oiNerttiy ;Quest, rnan,;ind' they!, surrOneded " by. these who know and love his ma'ny vir tues, wiil &keine peach, until called forth tole a reader in the.,o4Cwor/4- thstwill wrench from the 1111UiP of the tyrant's, the liberty they are trampling , upon, auttililir . l froze river the. miserable I despot that now curse our country: ,--The,Oineinnaii Enquirer is one of the ablest 'Onducted journals of this' moat:y e . While its discussions of politi" cal etiestions ariabiumehiratrterird db b vigor, literary taste are such *s wi elicit the warmest commendations of the most earnest friend of true literature.— We like the soundness of its principles, its &airless and able defente of the Chou ' • • and the earnestness with which it battles for the Union and against the Abolition heresies of civil war and dis union. To disseminate sotrnd political information, is rendering the country a great.service. None of our' Democratic friends could hjsitate to endorse the ENQUIRIaIt To nob of our friends as desire to take an Qldo• paper, w e com mend it. So tapas exchango--and_ so eisyii`e• 1111—Itisnbtright that Mr. Lincoln should have negroee visit him, and when white men call upon him compel] them to sit in the same room, and associate wiklbent.—Erches ie. It is perfectly right. Old Abraham' can ehooee niggers for associates if he desires to, and irldte men have a right to say whether they will . viait him and his black *lends or not. A than that has no more respect. fbr himself than to as sociate with a person who considers a nigger his equal, should not oemplain if he were sat at the table, or placed in the same bed with thew. If Abraham Lin coln has come - to the conclusion that a nigger is as good as lIIMBELF, It is about the only sensible conclusion 'at which be has ever *rrived. —lf there is an.rt)ting menner, more contonniniblo or traitOromt, looking, thnn one of ,your poisongtut, enoßpish copper heada, we should like to see Errhange.. Look in yont Sir, and you will seo something meaner and more detona ble, than your deg-laded Imagination could pietarn—soinethin&lowerand more despicable than the most contempahlo ereatta,N that crawls—something with the brand of Cain upon its brow, and the stain of Judas upon its shriviled; cowardly heart--a thing, only, not a man. Look in yOur glass and' see ! —The Democratic county of Seneca •40 the find in the Tate of New York to furuhdi the quota under the Preeithutt'ai hat curl fur troupe. —I s.. . . Fine Demoemoi they must-be up in Seneca county; that will furnish men to steal niggers; niurdir white mil and women, and prolongthisinfamous Abel itite•uoir,"and then boast about it I .We eau'tieeliliero the DeMocracy comes in, and doubt very inuoltifSenees, poun-; ty is Dunptitkric.', Shame on such Deui oeracy. 1. , --Ourfnend of the CLINTON - DEM. oonar nays' that Bill Blair, , new Provost Marshall of thin district was "`honest wen ho was a democrat." If he was not honest except when Le was A Demo erat,.there never was any honesty 'Strout Setting up a New Nation. MMII:=9 ' Iv is believed by some that Jefferson Da vis is striving to set, up it) “new nation," though we doubt it Dams; in all his public life, ever used the term t. nation,". asappli cable either to the United or to the Confed erate States. ' And scone deluded people really believe that Abraham Lincoln is stri ving to preserve the old 'nation,' though even they meet admit that be resorts to very -questionable means to aocomplish- that ob jock Ncer It *certain that the Goverment presided over by Mr. Davis .is a °minder atctilevarement, Ilitemommon agnat of the thirteen - Stites that. 'elected him as their -Preladont 7 , and which States have delegated. lefts% powsrs . to this Confederate agency. • it is equally teittin that the political aliment. , at the head tot:which stands Mr. Davis, in- eludes whjto people only, sad , neither- W . : I - nor; pds Congress have anyrtnose•righl !if Matti isr freeman do* not stegrovalave t %JIM' they. inviStsewoop a kingo , ~.. . ' . ; tio Thoonaqiiifesgeliati,- iajnaO4hle I Davis repreccate the Confederate OF Federativeepi-, 4 14 taw Coder liteliete have alkihredda= ty .psmit 'end , Widoh - leyetent.. . lithe- go' on* But how; 4•411- with Abraham , 1 It ireartain that jinni* fast rind Are fir so. hie *mho' marsh 'be, ithillishielailvery,lthatidOinolohhothenegroes denthe political 'yawn ~ It4lj aGsemertain, Alult.itil kaiesavolutionfehdtih pip no, overthrown the Federal system, andlocieri 'clithltalfii-million ntarearinithe lieldn *bi 'Vier te astahlish a nationiklkevatentient,toti theatropeacideat. HitiDavis tionehriei r ciliebld."Atededietw: Iterablhatts whiteedjortemliereeddisiiainiwthotarar., Mono -BIWA/ Abradistur Onager sneeeeds, *new Coithohigni rde viliiippoture;Jand weare r , 1 .1 sati lii i of 3 th ' ' iit *milt** - fot AN 'BU ql•peark so% wramishd ininoritpsidnehe-, witty: le.. weldor , ilwilaillino4lict , , * ' llindohniach .olli j bx4hessaimbril *kW. illiiimdflildpili 'Paileenctoti*Oladit there hoover, up la ItiWati,l, Its ..ocill. ha lin * :—.llerheehi . I.:•141: 1, .: ow.: : ..-- 1212111 Ca izrithiy til=)Ls =CZ astute is oft eaten up with iypy arttole ofsakrohanlihts Ls rel. ihitripSgrffsrateritt I= about his head before he know it. But there Is anotatir'iiiNs' oyfg imM4 the Abo lition irpins'are look tape of re gret. "Our taxes,",saya the Tribune, "ore yielding lees (baptise hundred malted. per aannm, • ineteml i 1itin 8 9 1 1,1 8 4. 1 .4 Ind 47. Anima* eipeeted,„`f as if of deep regret, the bitnactilate, Itlaine law-den't-totteh-A-drop arettle, Greeley, re- Werke: 'iThere must have been a great fall• ing off the consumption of whisky!" Lord bless'res, that is too bed! No - doubt Greeley now considers drinking whisky an evidence of true "loyalty," for noartiole pays a higher tax to Abraham' I. Greeley has dot for temperance' now-14er,' though% few years since his piper groaned every morning with' editorials , upon• the crimes Iguleutrages committed by rpm.-1t to .11V', to 4rink now. Ent St eten • iie4einking-millwithcaltheinoome detriVe frOm other sourges, wq are sadly de ficient in the sum necessary to preserve the public credit: , Thus far, the war has been tarried on by borrowing. The pay day has been postponed, put (dna far as possible, 'hut this fishnet WV winch longer. The •people must begin to pay for the fiddling which Lincoln, *ma Chase, and SewardLATe been indulging ip., , It seems Pretty Certain !hit the•greenbaeli • fever is reaching its clime*. Exactly when it will collapse and leave the patient weak, prostrate and emaciated, 'net even the most skillful among the financial doctors can tell. There are many signa that it cannot be far off. We scarcely doubt that itlsill come du , ring 1864 ; especially should military reverses oc s bur the eollapselwould be inevitable. Any evidence going to convince thapopular mind 4bat-thismar is not to_be settled this year, the. It would tumble down hi a p, leer, ing therhoddy men with their shoddy goode and their shoddy money, all in inextricable ruin. Alas !if it ruined - onlY lbeni, we might well rejoice; but thousands of innocent "se pia will be ruined with them. Besides, the amount ofxneaey, actually .atolen from the producing and laboring classes by this cheat of shoddy money can never be eatimateir Paper motley it the beet is a adeial - Writ end do a-pnes end simpliMit :Democracy, might and ought to be diapeOsied with, bat when the difierence bet Ween paper and specie. be comes as wide as it is now,lhe ,effect upon. the masses cannot be estimated. But the present heartless oo.ptioeunt et. upon Ale t* of the country byte no . particular desire to estimate it. To steal, rob and plunder seems to be the Alpha and Dineggrof- their creed. The Efhoddyito reigns -by virtue of greenbaoks, and he cares for no one whe miters, salting as he rolls in con tracts aud en 'us the smiles-of "the government," But all this will end some day.. Taxation will never bridge it fully over: i The' temptation is too great hot to be indulged in ontirit, is too late to retrace the fatal steps. Like a thief in the night, ca lamity will come upon the' Shoddyite. His riches will tale wings andlly away. Some 'few, who see the day of doom coming, will cry .aloud for taxat ion to prevent it, but the many will say "thateo-morrow shall be as to-day, and much more abundani. Greenbacks our god, and lo ! Cline° is their's:4a Away -- with the croakers." Thus shall it be in the last days of the Shoddyites. Let all who can prudently take in sail. About these times, as the Almanac writer says, "look out for storms.-- Dag Book. From General MoClellan's Report = On the night of the 28 I sent the following to the Seeretaty of War: Headquarters Jr/flyof the POP)lnde, PACAUX STAY toN, Jens 28, 1862, 12,20'A. 11. .. —I now know the full history of the day. Minh gdo of the Blear, the right bunk we repulsedieacanl strung attaclca. On the left bank ovi Matt Aid all . and mite could do, all that soldiers could do, but they were overwhelmed by , vastly . superior numbers, even after I brought my - Mt' i•eserves into action. The loss en both sides le terrible. I believe it 104 rove to be the most desper ate Male of the war. The and nunnaute of my men, behave as' men, those battalions who fought mat bravely an:l suff6Ftd Most are still in tae beat order. The ..regtilati were. euperb,"ithd I count upon what are left to turn am:that, 'litattle,..in company with their genera comrades of the Voluuteers.-, Mul I ( 20 . 0 00) twenty thqueriod, or even (1,0,000) ten thousand fresh troops- ..to 'use to-morrow, I could take Itiobmond; but I have not a man in reserve, and shall be glad 1 to cover my retreat and. save t material and personal of the army. If we have hist the day,. we hove yet'proneweed r . - honor ; and no one need, bluitiTar'Artr yof the Potomac,, 1 have leetthinbldtle 1i aims nv force was too small. , • ),again yepeactlutt lam .not responsible for this, end I say it with the earneetnees of a general, who fpelsin his heist. the loss of every brave man Itho hop been needless ly eserifieed to=day. I still hope le totrieve mg fortunes, but to do . this the Petvegtinterit taut view t he nutter in the, sanmt earnest light that I do. Ypu must , send' me eery large reinforcements, and spud, 41,§dit !Id , I . shin draw look .to thle- alt . 4 Ale ,Chiokehoodny, and think I can VOW all our mataipl. Please tinderstmo;l4igmln thib battle we have/eat nothing but Mot.. .44 those the Wetly* have., , ,t . .... it., 1, In addition to what ,I have alnasuly wild I Only wish to say totbe Preeldent„cithininhe tOwrong in regarding- asevms solgeniwntis when hatlitthat lily forms inseams Wisak , p I merelYinfithated it:truth Which% tradayt,has Mein' ntro'plehtlYiproven. , 44 at. Ott instant I could: dispose' of , io,osaytegi!lholuand, frith wesaif..dotddttW tke - vieterif - .40-mer-,. . i bib* atiteTiib* 4 ,,' - . . Wish ,erhave ohtillW thW . .. .. Awa i t lii VlotetyPis itjsk-die. • (;- e s.. ' - 'et ' tr 3l4 Y l 4Cl - k! ) -! t i. 1 , t• '' '' ' att i t ii r ' , ~, -.,,_ _,,,. .'. ' 4. , I ' •"' .... , qa ' ' o4 * *t i i nmi el f o3l l^ , * ' ' ' -. 4i o,ottineid ! i n; -,. r , ' ) r •,• , - I erpntent, lum omit, 4. , :ttl & ' , , l' .3 . 3 1r . •,- 1 tA,91 1 44",1PA1 'A', ~0 ''',' ...,, L e , •,,, op,. V,_ 41,0 .fti A y it; kir IMO Oro-snow No*/ ' oil "on ; • .the41R 04 .4 0 4 1 4902 4, Y 0 1 4 1 4 * Oft Old :it, , 4. x01t woekitegtes, 4 ' , IN , OW 4U.,40., O ftIONP. 6 ‘OO tanikluaoo.f. puip ! .P. t r..l , 4: or . 1,:1 4 :.1 I 4 _ , g2Alftfjj:At_4_ 4 0 1 4 Ti , :;•6911 - ii - zy•,--Lif,; - 41#1 , .— , ,,YAW , i•ig Wait AU1t0144410..41iir i , . coot •::14,:ve .."' Mir oru I h i „ha,. aiitl th ur -*" one-half or $ 8,10 °niftily?" 1U ome . of worth Eight main& •, bat - now, sindeMlnisolaihis hetes chosen P.iesidtabodi do not know what it will bring; wits** Bell out WA go away: , twant . .to •goVia*sy from Aboltionielii--Amitsy froth Mai*" • Lleritntaway from *Lai ,144hirstr.athty from. Anistamatkat.- I want-ta. go away front all Bootionalibm. I: want to go. into some oonatry whore linen are , kind to molt Mbar—where men love each other'—where men are thankful and hottest to•akelk don't wait tprgo into a Gauntry w h ere men mike , hobby Bones out of Abolitionism and Neal Dowiem to ride into office on. I milt to go lilt° a nunnery where men feel as men felt abonttito timoth4U Mignon, 'Madison, Wttshingtob Adams, and ethers; whin they signed , the constitution of the United Staten. • I want to g 6 itito itomei stunn. try where xnenleied as men felt stiont , the limo that Putnam Warren WashingtOsand itark•Tdit - ted Oho Teohmatordepeet donee. I should love to go Into somneoun ti7snd live withmen • that feel tut the old, honest-gbarted soldiers felt In the time of the American Revolution. lehonidleve.to go and live with them by day, and lor wet sleep with thbm to their tents Irr might.. I should love,to sienna umWSth Strew ehmildor shoulder, onlite bettleiptenht. .1. love the old, ,, hopewebeertdd Sehnert ' remember what they have don, for. ne. I remember them with respect and esteem. But alael by faction and sedition the walls of Jeausalton fell ;land by Abolitionism Ind Neal Dewiest our walla (Union, liberty and the Old Constitution) will fall and ortuable to the duet. A voice from the South—+t voice from the West--e voice from "Life East=—li voice from the Ijorth--a voice front the. four wind*-4- already begin to cry Wo---WrF---ifcr—t— Couttyynen. - • In civil war rich men and poor men will tumble together, and dead men will be plied up in heaps. The Old Democrat wants twain outsold gcLawity. • • Posaaa•Contar..'- HADLEY, Fdb. 2744 1861.. k 7-, . "And.that is the style of the times devils throughout the Notit• It is a pleasing oircum stance that the breeds eeems. slightly. - becoming eiliitet."=-Ctunstercigt._,...., ,. ilheithdre 'l4 Ike 'feftimens lan`guitge of the Cincinnati. Cotesiercial when apeaklaypof the Dentocruey of the-United States, a par ty that conducted the' country_ from infant colonies to the grandeur or the greatest power on .eartli—fretn polleity• to untold wealth, honor and prosperity. A party which to-day-rin the face of every %OP. 'nee, every inducement and every consider atin to tempt the human passion to swerve from ditty hind , patrlotlem--numbera over one million Nye hundred thousand voters In the North, and whose strength Is daily augmenting by thesseade„ ye have tin ted, the iiinghage of the Coninumtiatin rge type, thit our readers may be rehtlnde di of It. In nothing days—days when the 'authors will hide their heads In shame for such ut terances. .. Proud and conscientiont, indeed. must lid -Os -feelings of the friend's of peace. when viewing the platform upon which they stand to-day. Naquereenar; considenation influ ences their veinsz no walls of the widow and orphan trouble thelittlreams as the authors of their misery ; no shisk ..7, s of the pounded nor groans of the dying, er Pod for ven geance on their heads; no blood - *stbe found upon; their garments. Peace and gogd-will to man! ht their motto and their hope, apd may God grant a speedy fulfillment of their wishot.--Csincintsistti Inquirer: —The expenses of the General Goserne.. went during the first three years of see tional President, exceed the whole prwilous cost of the Okverree.nt from the time of George Washington to the last hour of the administration of Jame*. lichanin! this is what the experiment of lining the 'whole country acooktling te the ntjtions and preju dices ofn section coats thepeople in money and property. What it has coif in health, life and Gab, a halt million of broken con stitutions, crippled _riddles and 'new' mad. grates bar tOilifitaewry. .'" '• - U is now time to fail back to the old plan, and plane the Govsrnment in the handl of ,palrrote who will tube In the spirit fit those under whose guidance our Union grew greatness and strength till the whole .world looked-down with admiration r end woiiderf —Newark 'Aufeergier. . ttstanocnox—ln mot, oC tla „ borition meeting., in. Daytoa, 0bt,04 e.t?th of October, was a woman dress In ',deep mournlug, Nearing a dilapidated bonnet, 'Libeled "Dlrs. ,VaUmodighttut " It wee zot. len up apacarrioatwe'of that; estimibla AM. I ~......--- , audio ridicule of, by beart„tiOhlim. , o , . s er. 1 ,46. filitnnintATOßll NOTICE. ' '' the yeteavioue and despotta'arrestitha sane . .... - p utter , of gdmlobtrotiont on, Os_ eA.. Of der husband. It„wes a post shook Late of :TAM Cozier, deo'd, late Of Ws/kit oil O ift., ealdbltion of parhy,,,Pelignl .. tila i•liaring been granted to the IagIWAP 114 lik omit of the two, docent Itep iNtze Outer- hereby notifies all personedadebeed to the isle .ed there dlettppeooal , irldke . 't., radkoidr ; whim to maks intimate, parstant,andnieilaros ebouted Abair 9,4ultatAn t ,_ ialsorge those honing olatiorffootroklt to prism thila. An g ora „I to ir5a 4W 4 , 4 1, 610 .4 01 ' i' . dolt autkentleatesielkesiettlemeAt, ...,... victim of Russian despotism, tbougbj per ' -.,- '.l•'' 411 '" ,4 1 1:3114 * 1 ' D " " E" shitt, I fitb, slied-ilt. '''' . Adietra',Or -1 act health thee ,. bas -since been athlete' with a moot hyrible skin dosease, disfiguring hei "'AVDtPOIO.4 ythiliaL 1" , u • . istiole,fitee•with eruptive blotohYaud pail. , ''. ''.TM , inedere*S4 ofr" iblOrelf.-;-ffiildi re: • ' , ~ • ' rledliythe , ConS.4l Commie* .' ...i' tam minty; komiske.dkeihistike4et /..,: i 'la .thehopde of Amen - ' ' .;,: s i rj . 'a otnallyPoneitri 4 .9, , 10i . l i t Absibilbolp hi * .0 8 0 1 4 4 194 1 .9,- to 1 , :i p P ir -"cal l ti a -4: 11 : 1000104 . 41 4 utte r. t 1404: -r,.. #l4l-411.1.wzgoitaib„,, ~$ ..,,,,; :,.,..:_.„ ...••, *.kelit , .. , ' . • „. ; 13 4' 2; t eifotim did ilk ALNIM-oodfdx. hhtinKlig gh t guldorod abolikim4 over idv, 44 Ad bid 1191010flsis. amp, R ,7 4 p is gins 30 pous t ,kl§„lutt „ kt 4 Aid ,:idtp ,4 5 1.0914 INd4 o 4lool.mdli ralWthrli r • 71441', ANN 0 1 31i* 1 " 6404 *C 10 w,, ,'r k9e d Peace Devils. and resist ili t tpleil wee , •:• • '' aequ ia V i t i the ' b . o all=p age and. adslan'. the Atonteisea .r.uspic ender enrongemay oeitaelo 6* *thine, and if commotion in thellentietioura ..hrt eons*, (pence, "Po want the. blame to U. 1114 - tb► rifht doors.,--LOostee:tteloirtiter: • .„ - . PoiIS *by the Prtudditt 17dRed um* called "Hotteet?" P tt i ,isfor'the lame reason that Loitethe Thlsteesk /who wait void of any especial virtue, was It by he Praia. pebtile " ..I.4lo‘saia:"! .1V of the 'follies of melt to ofteli-applyHtligwidels are the. revere° of the bbausetet them,. "Lo'uls the Ptuirtelatketeit= t4tuous, when but few nionarobe, have ..lted a more liotestlestaleatt . Bola id called 141 ones n , e A l a permlqed. more pbanderreg thievini, 4 intl. robbing cetlip p4blie treasury btu ever beep allowed ag,Aili g . eft *4O lethal tea. tione.put,togigter. tinder his ittleduistre dimnitelbiatcon prthe mitters and habits of the calltalifibe rafted /Meshes sunken to'a f itlitokefirdamy - ititt ifikeet be matched by, tuarcibtreeepttab• ft; the -civil ized world. When the Ducheßendentshe rcu:de was tale thatilvelkink keditecilied the r..urder of her itushand, she eadaimed, .pellati isSeelledlonit the Just ?" slid 71,11,14 we ,tionit 440 abo minations that have been committed by this Administration, vre.exoleinv e heeds the Pre sident hat ilrcalled "Honest t"--01d Guars. SIFA MgrtrlATl ,Husuit. Ur.—Douess• YerrOltt tolls the story of i man; who, reit; to a os a • • pro . y din • quake. When qweaticretad uto whu red where.the earthquake took ,pletett,,,wlth a deep look of Inquiry on his countenance he would reply : •!orkere ll that'll Just it. That enothrke; ~ g entlemen, " wai meet slatmefulV netieCdpr , b h probable from thwalk aOf thetlimur Mut the prevalence and frequency of plunder from which the National treasury le sugaring:, apt) thtad less investigations. witgout reenit„tt 144 e eountryr,lo gaily witneu, that he'poor gent lomftu'it earthqualteSay by the National • convulsions whier lire non ution` Os anti , from the adroltiere of official thiivery it let equally inietain, should the publle, credit fail and themealth of thanatigublittwalrowed up at. e_anlp in that moral catutrophe. we shall find, like the bewildered mienomintero the-whole thing tuihed up." • —The . Evenif _denominites the frauds ght theft in New York Cooom ..11othetjstion,"and "into. ibirtiee," Robbing; the 15boille of thousands lid mill rim!, is an "irregularity," and a ..bot burnt ion!"":WIt0O4 pray, does It bothrt? Not Mr. Lineoheir itclate, ? '" Lacirateadit Rviter esks-"Where: did Old Abe get the right tp make State laws for southern people f"..sehere he got the right to ovesTlll6, and Isittr.,tilinPlint State ions of. , tlie toitliene Pfaff.. asgs spring from one source. , lit wiu74"fel and revolution. 'a late speech, Pred „Penes.* said "This country . *ill have no. true .dignilf tile ilie colored mu isAallinred to eolisouad hold office." the President, a majority -of. con gross, and all the leaders of the Republican. Portriteliesa4be same thing. • —Au abolition editnisisys he is ready to sacrifice hip life on'thaltar of his eine try,. If the i e, 4trlet will spell altar With Os prefix of en h, the whole c6unU itinkissetvez4. —A respectabitt citizen :of Cincinnati, .by the name of Arinptroug,,hao been. tined $lOO unit Rent to prison for 4.‘ Mouths for harboring hie man .moo, Ores ter. , • • repullicanellitor . gaYg, "the Pg_lW corals axe busy up B . nlj, Rivorjust now,' Yip air; alo are agpawarae, and next year will come (Jura in legions. • " - • ---An author lied •better jtisreet why he in going to write *book-than be.ns key), oftocoordo why ho had oflitton iG --,-I)ecages you can't . want, don't neglect ,whoit you 644, gate *mile es of themeratil thptilteie isin Lt.. • gults or Inc!bul,ios„ bow quota by volunteering, and.tioule oe, as draft in that State. „....t` • • TAEGAL NOTICE& g is_ 12111 El
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