kai Hay 4, 1864. Editor * Proprietor." TERMS r° n Doi**«MidFMrt» 3«HM gniioic, in aoWKse; otherwise Two'Dot- .■ ue *c£arg e d. No paper discontinued ' a ,u arrearages are sefUed, Letters and communications, 67 mail, 4 .11 have prompt attention. ' 1 ’ .* * ‘ ’ : !•_ .a Separation or Submission. G en ,, Sickles made a denjjjtby add 4b le s p c eeh while I passing ‘tl-rjugb that'City, a few days since, Mje make>tbe following j'cqaen!. and sjtrikiiig quotation: ' .wr.uTaliou: my country rac'd, sep is war—endless .war. and the j’tiine and lull of tiiCi.Ecpublici— i, - t .j uh.irai is peace; | linioii is the riinieiiiation ‘..four free institutions; makes us ono.-as a Republic,one • Americans. 'This peace., this union, huiied iii the earlier days of the ifc iiit WiU . V.oukl be possibly through the ot'm:son to the Sooth,through’ : a •perception of the impopibilty and , c ,.k)c.-Micss of eesUtlrigftho- tjnited j 1 would compel Submission in dm lawful authority of the U government.’ These . hopes, '’i lllusive] .This peace!' SViiat is h? T. are exacts 'n.- submission. to 'vhat? Tu ihe'.'ConMitifiiou’ of the TJnitTed t(*. the constitu te •v.aViv4xpri;«'«i- , l will of-the rnajori ukij’ile ot th‘e United States • • —;,i;.iml:iieu to eminent that iij/ co fiie- .Moment viMiCii this rebellion drew su-oVif and tired -its first .glut, ; hsd never ir/li'-u-.i a grievance upon ' # i,y man SVutfc of .VTasoirand Dixon’s aai‘. r [i. ii<-rTiiifg.] Submission? Yes. io what? * To a Government.that the. w)utli of Mason and Dix (r.‘!ine were conspicuous in influcnc n,d in ana conducting 3: ruling down toj llio Lour of life . . , I-■ ' ' . .'I 111 <•) p When do tv'e hear 'from the South ,1 word about peace except it is ac ,"-,';ipaiifotl‘hy -thfe condition of sepat - - t To the honor of the No'rfb ho 'it said. that few, v.efy few, are sotlost in -Vruil is duoTotheir eountryti& to ; ..:ra!,i. mo fiiea of . sopiiralTajn ; aiitl [yVpplaiise.i]., The armies of liiir Vuion tiiat lii the front ; 10-dliy w'w.iu'h siiiv.hioiiC'/J to the field for jisy*•••.• \i '\p.r!':-' , :Uron.s as that, ‘j [Loud h.aTiiii; j ' I vt-raid not .envy the fate-; •f Unit s':y•■■Jihan, the loader oi ' lha’ti tty -who w-.uli,-.f they. :had_ the j over, mas?-a. I -e '•!ra ‘; -.'i i-'i iiiyso l_ ytie.i Spates, j , fon that r.,rn»y c ! su»C| bo«te to! comionl a’liij tiWiiors. ‘ ! ' j • X'mv and tor live-future. the only ! peace that, ;s poWibie, is |bo peace ilistit.'* Lo be cotujuerod. (Cb bence.) a peace th bejwnn.aiid priiscrdcd \v 1 iuaiibjiis; by sidlil’nl generals, ly Mate/moii. by -the^epustant,.trteaf f»si. lyv.al-people;’’that .peace will- be' iioii..riiV'l.?, il edit I>»; pyrmanoHljlML p-iir'>vi!l give. u~ a • t'eSpiiblie which nur i’adhjt> iuternled we sbouUi have, -.a r.-n-.ibHe ailogethe? wliptly and fopJ . CVCi ft V --, -r *5- _!' | 1 Ki.’iv ’'.lu/'.t.ahv bill,C‘|».m* j ■iy . - lu a tabic. • of 1 “Remarkable; eveiits that transpired in connection with organization of the Southern Confed eiacy”'ibis' Almanae has the fpl jto'wihj;: ■ • ; • i i. December 20, 1800—Sbddon evacu 7 atiojn of Fort Moultrie by Major-An- United Slates army. Ho spilios the guns, burns, the guh earfia (g°s,! and retreats to Ft Suniter, yirbich lie ioctunies.- ■ o ! ;•, , | ! -- December. of Ft. Moul trie' and (^ast!o : Pinckney by* South Carjolim.i troops. Capt. Coste surren ders! th-> revenue cutter Aikenlj "January ii;,iHGl I—Capture1 —Capture of Fort Tuljiski. ijj ; Savannah troops.. ; jpnuary 8 —’.phol arsenal at‘j Mount Votjnon, AJa , with 20,000 stand of anrjs, seized by the Alabama troops." ! •Jpnuary 4—Fort Morgan, in Mobile Bay, taken by the Alabama troops. ■ Jpnuary l!—The stca-insliip Star of ihcj West tired into and driven off by tiiejSou'tii Carolina balteries, off Mor | risJl.siahd Fail arc off the attempt to jrcibforcei Sumter. , » j, January 0 —Mississippi seccdpdjvotc P|>f jtliM convention, 84 to 3ft. f Jjanuary 10—-Forla.Jackson, St. Phil iipjand Pike, near Xew Orleans'cap ; •tured'by the Louisiana’troops. 1 Jjancary 11—-Alabama seceded; vote 'Jf 'Convention. it'd to 20. - j Jkhiiary FiWCaptu-rfj of, Pensacola', .NTayy l.ard and. Forts Jlarrancas and j Me (tea. Major iCtfase.' sliortlj- after-*! ;-.January Surrender of Bato|v T*" k'ulgo Ahenul to Louisiana troops. J •IP'"S ifM*' jlimuiry I&—(iuorgia;secedeJ; vote /that oilier , ..l 4onvenlio:i, 203 to 87. ,/ j itffa |:¥ i jiaiiuary 21—Now O rleana M.iul anil ~l° sa "j -1 '[Custom House taken., ’ t'• ■ ';i sduvlowiji I . IJeW.uajy'Nl—Texas seceded: vote’! M iem ]j of b>iiven[tio.i|, 16(5"jo 7; submitted to| a vbtt} of pbo people, Feb. 24; the act i at Vf tbo|k‘elfecf. Marchi 2, . jmeiey.. i =I I * I i - '.'-i ■*rf ♦ Y' 1 El Vol. 4Q-3STO. 3:8. i„ , A^eoeshAlmanao—Who ■ :. & 0 War ? ■ A friend in tljo South, says change, has Had the kindness a sccesh almanac, for 1862 j pi' Na;bville, at the Southern Sf Bock Concern, 'Re v, Tl O. Si P- I)., Editor. The second pt taitjs.a wishy-waaliy.secesh boi tlodj the ■“Stars add Bara." - \V( the opening verse: f ■•” is sixfy-'tyoj!—and sixty-onej With the old Union, now is gone) Ileeking wlth bloody wars; ' , Gene with; that ensign, once so priz . _ The Stars r and Stripes', now so dear - [Struck for thle Stars and Bars.”; [' ‘‘V t>„ i; i.listcn; to tlieir sepulchral voice, thel emotian'lie could not con 4 1 r br ; l !I y *f L ! 1 - 10 Under lUir drnoplngUv?*^and yon j ta / nsl , g t 0 Ai fheniM said: ! / \ V JiT\ difr of the vev will* read plainly a story of .gnawing j., ~ria ng -it,' bo’d, lalie'a ‘ray’iiioi telwruttTv 3— f>urrondcr ot the rev-,. , • « , 1 ' ? ’ *1 : - , enle cutler Cut*] lo I UvJ Alabama-fta,! 9 pmeamg pold.of you know . . \ ' " y.. u 1 ■, s f U . , r . -; fovefj, of days ot weariness and nights ThevelT felt, will bo a brayoi '‘lpUfoary. &[—Soailiorii , ' 0 I W af * d “H?* 1 *? * "> the fifldV } .noble,_ a tnij. •'f ' .i 1 , <, V) 1 1 • ' ‘ r-spair'. T.hev are our. friends ana [ ow . -Mien who 1 have a rignt.and met iu M.jnigomorv, Ala. • 1 1 * - -,, -i- - .■ . .1. • kbru-it-r ?-Tho Provisional'Con- ' brothers.. .They were facing the thick- a ,, pro , latl()n ot their country c, I. .. :... ~, ' ' 1 ! Iv-lirirl JiiT missiles of death in defence ; are . j oV erg of their home and; of I slit 11 tion adopted- , ! J ■ jA • ,” ,i ,! • * !- • • Fobruary-p—Jefforaorl Davia. of-Mie-| * w<> ' wer *: 9, “ ,n S bj i -°“ r m ■ i. ■siXinpi, Lnd Alexander H. Stephens,, firesides They were suffering eveiy jj owl T 6m- Him of Georgia, elected President and Vico i P a .''fij aid every pirivution, while we o]d Farmer fc, senfhin President." • ‘ • - . ' 1 j comfortable they were sick Tom to Memphis Uitb a flock of a February Id -.Gen.Twiggs transfers : idlin' p -won, while: we were well apd | Tom . the shec'p an public prophnv in Texas to thb Slfctc‘ fr *« And what at® wo <* b«P thc moliey , but; falling in icom; kthorftieil-.- ' , i the |nca mate fiends , who thus brave 30rne i, HporU; -. w h„ hud tliel I February 1(5— Col. Waite, U.S. Ar-' l he icor ii of mankind, flonnt thep- 1- ofmir- .j to [hold better h my, surrenders San Antonia to Col-; abolUm tit,, tholaco pf civilization do- than . !, e ho wtus •‘elcuned 01. o/el Ben McCullough and bis Texas; f - v l hu plainest teachings o ipsli- Tom wont home, but avoided tl Ringers; i - Unify; dourt thc execration of; the T lold , naUier J h(j 1 Februiry 10, —Inauguration of Pres- \ a « e ; s eptnc,- and display a degjjo & of ha T ha d bcfillW idjsnt ,I)tivU at Montgomery. Ala. .1 iWH ~ahg«uv that_wovt dd« tfa ne , w aS^ assbol February 27 —Peace Congress, ad-; ama, ) c U ' H , ' to the master of Aba minor and llisbod cotbin- : ' I I II ltarrh 2— TbeVevenueculler Dodgeb r^ ho ot a l’ as l 0 keep out of Ole way. Onodi, ee lied by tbo Texas antboiUies; »»J fafmor Ih.d aft odd to iiaaej lw,!ob.c,v:w ever.* oao •i>ltHuob. Vo.atioad lj ? i LoiS-trowonaad war occurred Üb-; 0 ? a!’S l.odaocd, thoj.beoa T .o ,»>(« mo! < b Janies Bueliafiab'Badministration, (Jiabolical TUb *“ end Bofor. Mr. l.i&olniwdni to Wash- ~kM 1 l»lo tboj room 1.01d.n ingloii;fydL fools and tractors saji Mr :^ or J ,i“ n . i his 1” c 'VVwiU,,,.. ' d internal | “Father, would iou bet anytbi Lincoln the war. very one of these feeble and i , j . A. v , j ilr-j ? tin niimiiaandthGr bfttfih of fftCtB< • ■ *■. i*— » »J«» 1 such &‘hAnd.U9 tbflt ? j BGt * no oai«n Vi mn wc have returned a healthy i T . ,-l . G t ‘ b^'CeSh alrP i n r aC ’ l^ e n ! bo has be^ii. well fed and T ell j “Well’fsaid a sigh, ginning with the .day. after lolri's inauguration: ''S March s—Gen. ojnmand of the troops besiogioffPort Sifm'.lcr. ' ;• ’ March 12-i-Pott Brown, Texas, sur?i rendered by'Captain Hill to the Tex- 1 as Commissioners. March f 12—Alabama .ratified the [Constii.ution ol the ConfcderatcStates, by a vote of the Convention, 87 to if. I i March 16—Georgia ratified the Gon> - sgjntio: i of the Confedoi ate States; vote of the convention, 96 td 5. [' Marsh i2l—Louisiana ratified the Constitution of the Confederate States; [vote oil the Convention, 101 to 7. I: March 26—Texas ratified! the Con- Btitutipn. Confederate States; , yot&of Convention, 68 to 2. f March JTO -Mississippi ratified th* V • •■ *& : ' o-43tj- -■ .. >• yi • •- tigpoio^wt joqof the Confederate Stales; pnyeritijooj 78 to ?. •-South Dprolina ratified the ion bflheConfederate States; ■ invention, 149 to 29. 11, t f ‘Fort Suih uf thirty .four hoars boms , the fort surrenders to th o ■ tc States. I —Evacuation’jf Fort Sura i jor Anderson. . , I—Lincoln, President ofthe ■ ;ato«, issues a proclamation ir 75,)00 volunteers.to put “Sou ihern Rebellion.” lorVe again: All these acts of ; d war occurred before April. • j'aha.m Lincoln tool? tUefiest :rd the defensAof the Gov :e lull sworn 'ko protect.— ■ certainly slow, ejr.ough in be* ir Hoc id not issue a call, fori e until the rebels I were .march - j iug on Washington itself; and yet, j meticallirg thcursclves Democrats, go, abog-t;tiic county j'eiling themselves; hoarse >vti,h the lie that ibis is Lin* coin'sj The miserable traitors kno w ibettor. .The rebels in the south don’t prjel md that it is ISncolnV war; Tt is i/ikv war.. They gipry in it, ;uid they despise their lory tools in thcXortb who go uroun'd deceiving the ignorant masses! with the jnonstrous lie. that this is; liiiicolii'si war. — Western, Meth \ odist ’ .t. V ! rThefbii I ,tWe : tia | more . 'Aur j hundred : ■ oner fj-opi i briefly [Up ! pitiable i never jfhe jI . , < 1 j CIAIIOH'W. i wtiH^almo: I icctioii ; !w I;. . i j thru* sqn ; Wei’e star j find \v|idt j devoured j from 11 <;,]■( Consli ' I vats d Began f ' ■ i:an ex-4 i to'lsend : tiled fn ’ithodist urn mors, r■ * 7 iige./cob ngjonti- .. Const' vote , Apr -ner.i bardpi Confer . ,-ApnTl tor Bjrj'Mii April 1- United S calling fo downltbe Now, job? treason ar 14, wlitln i e[ quote' ;ed, -I, liscd— step t ernmei He win gimnn soldier mkri tin For < dying I rebel,'/i .cared t iliir stv i ' *\ would i. ilig c'o.t offendi liljbr is IN Befevqt. W •M; tuii 'iL 3 ituti -il .1; lift. dition of oui; Prisoners-; ve noticed; says the ! Biilii-| erican,, the arrival of > live i md sixty-dive released pris» ! ■Richmond,- and commented ; oii Ihcfr condition. Such a! set of ’ poor Wretches was i ii in .this city. ; Their erna- • is'extreme, their feebleness j j : id at the last de : , | fas' painful to behold, and j lalor Was frightful. 1 They! fed to the verge fof the grave,! 'vas left of them was nearly J by wrraiiK Some of them, j top lonirj deferred, had lal:! i chh dnl er ed~ upon id i • “Oh, ening pallor, the drop gco u • poor- ?fn ~ the told ypn. thiit mi I I* or.ly coinqlortip —that! Jack', suji’ 1 didn’t conic out tor (outstretched arms i y O —J hilvo conic oiit td say, ‘God tj ,tc to e|ispol the evening iy 0> blessKjc And wore gathering nrt>un 4 j ing the 1 thin shawl! over; her bo? 1 I she wenjt away. f The biV fello w drew' a . bio,eye. < his lace., and Urirging do win his with a sort of ve:f!prt cmphasijj, as - ! .• .. -V * f-'V 11 deoj uml 1 had late on la 1 hat v •0(1 with thN. the mussiere 'i 1 !o\V was a blcssiujj; nnd a Look at their holiow-clfeoks, ,r. In individual cases; a sira le of returning good, for evil •e-act oh the principle of |i oi fire on the , head of the \ * . ‘ 1 -.r ' ' , r; but in this instance magna is thrown away and love’s la*' ost. i i I . - \ojtaoe or Punctuation. lalW, that in, the Iputtrng the n the'kght plaees, cannot he too isly studied. Wo lately read, country pn^r,' the following ig.accountof Ldrd Palmerston’s i ance-in the HonseSsC Commons: I Palmerston then entered on his i while hat upon bU feetjslarge jll polisheci boota upon bis brow, i: cloud in ilia hdndj'diis faithful ig stick ill bis eye, a menacing ' siyihg nothing. *>lTe *it ddim. An' PanSti stgps i pcdulo in -a Starlit appeal “Loid bead, but \v a dail walk! ‘; TheSpldJejr i At a grand tian: Commission tljr at ,Washipgton.inj the Halbaftho House of: Jtopros«niative«,,oneyxf the apeak* ew related the ■* following thuching incident, one ’ among tyg l thousands that could be lofd illnstrttibg 1 tbef pa triotism of the. loyal’ i&hjen ofl tße North: Vi; ' ; i;'-q> : ' l j I saWp’ih the city of I pany of men d raw n ; u p iifiiihd 1 : an old woman whowaajaifliifgu -shawl around her. : oj the ,poor of the earth; *Shtf : Nhf I on, eagerly, faces of the men as she stood f bcforer-a" boncdfellbw wtio adtf companions* -‘h ■’. VjfV/ - -‘ i “Well, boys.” hesmd,' < ||)9 < jrp:a'gi off, lirn’t we V\- ; ! i And they said,, , ‘reg|.w‘a|je.' rt '" He had a l iUlo' b ind I3sied up i red handkerchief, :\- “When wo got tut wo - won’t giro them They said, ‘‘Maybe wa'i&pn’t.’’ They seemed to beipakiug same misiukejwith agreairaapy < just about' that time, ftfr/fiono bt baa ail idea that saclv a i olating shadpw up in midst. > :, j". ■ . 1 ' j ■ J nst then the ofd wotosfc-pushed wayi through the ci Wd‘,dird.Sto6c fore this man. ■, Jlii ; moment, and bisfacoj i a fltsh,i and as hetirnodjbis head lifted his finger to his eyte and sh it withla twirlj*-;,' 1 ■ -isi “Now, mother, mother! You; pt mod me that you! vouldh’t come didn’t ye ? .’.Nowi you promised When I said ,‘good-hye’ jt bright '^3eni warm hearted ikeVer'while ■ft Signified a judges as W* filled tho highest seat in the bigllost court of eountry. ivHe said ho; had seen leading StatjeforhalfhU ood, and slbh to hie/ tbß fiftb. Jag her. decline, if her citizens did i not at an epd to slavery; : and he saw no ighs intention to do so, east of Ihc mbnn’tains. dt lea Lt. He bad ißjeeh whole groups of e states, pdpu- Ipus in ' his time, lapse I into waste.— Ho had seen agriculture exchanged for hu map stock-breeding, and. keenly ;feli the degrodation. The forest wa? I tfeturning pver the fine jold estate-,and.! wiul- creatures I ;which had not beeh seen for generations were re-appear ing; numbers and de eliding, and education} Snd'’manners were degenerating. It wodld not' have surprised him to be told that on that soil would the mr in battle bo when this critical [day should come which he foresaw- ■!•• Of Madison-she say's: Mfi Madison had a ci sdnguino tomper.nnd if tl thing rather than anothi hajdj learned 10 consider si thb Constitution which be a share in making. Yet that, be was nearly {n that bo had been quite sj> onizatiqn Society arose. [ admit to himself that thlo ii, ~,i :. i i i i =vn .bejlaid waste by a 1 sdaWiio whole cr strove toibelicye that- ir i gr[oes could be vcairied 1,0 ■ toj it morning,; noon a t?ci said that the clergy perv bio. [because ii was altogo slavery; that thd : color©, was increasing fabler tna'i and that the siatij of ri«m as barely permitted socic Of the issue of the cp.nl eril'sholild occur,ih'et'ee be no doubt.} A. sociej with a.slave system, cot ■pprmaucia resistance >tb I hero.c 1 ertemy; and he iwi at the funaticism'whicb 1 Southern rrien ip tlear.a pom aaw LLin eof ried W-: En ybo the fos ' US !ea-; Qiitj 1 bet' i be lt* a iritb I, he >ook oln- QUt, toe. jlh* > to* iero tip,* «gh iars ilvH,, ivei nan less om,' ivei 1 ■ arm j if Jo ’ irul, j -y y y'W/j,necessity; VjTlieii iv little laljivjGpn- j Dvos&rsleni and’ steadfast men- who •Id > hen, > Hattie, , lovv j- C n', a in to Fee the dangers: i 1 . d J /Utill lateivCGeneral lh : at the, iiist'itulioi.s for .certainty.- military omiincipnlitin,: Bdid not Vot| they periled- j-hcdl*' lives’. That 1 i —~r r-j > “ [Ubink the indispensaljle.|Ueccssily bad j ■ g. uu ;lii.'mellingawaV, arid ( A UMart THAT can Fbi^.FOß|ANr.Vconie'. ’ ; I t ; ’V• •; ■“ ‘ [ none may everjagaiu bebpld- tiie tmn* oVil.eii.4‘l give and beqr.eath to Maryj “When,- In March 1 , and and i- B hjne ; of.-National jpeace; Their com iinvwifoi the sdnV of £100; ft'year,’! 4 I^62 > . ma^c , c “ r V,l 9 \\< n a/ e . UC ’i-T anionB AaVb gone on a; returnles* il' -T ■j. j. i.-- ir. *i -Jr tiJ'ccssiye appealsto,the .BbrdMs. States ,* n .- . ; - , - an -I ^ p ? “ n , rmy 1., ’,- AP down, meaotcr/| ! Mi- ■-, ! 1 believed, the 'indispensable necessity - ■, ,, „■ ' !i Yc-s,’’-replied tbe jifoivniilitarybrnancipation, *? . - ey i , > ;■ iusep IL n0 f so old she may! marry agaiifi-A llhe blacks! would,cbme, iuiless averted Thp generals and the- witH- I. iii 1 V i ’ . IV■v w, ,u i-bv that measure. \ TheM declined thb *We rank and flic,, who, fiifet i, allied a- t ypu.make any.icl angP in that >- .J r al| : j my best, i-ogtid tboistkrry flag tJn»), stdl j waves P a P> case? Most people do. li ■• I jud-TmentJ-drivcd iofthe:altcrnative, of in'tri.umph over the armies of fbo rp pres- -Do they?” ’saidlthe u.rfner;’ ‘well;, .ejilTer sui-rpndprinj| the Union, and Ipubliy, bap gone beyond tbe; reach lands! Write again, and say,’-l and it mv wife with it, or of laying jot Avar's alarms ;Tho pjateoo. l ”-n marries again I will give' and upon clement, as f still on he, - ,1 marncs again, x wpi give a u oc, » ~ , t I eli'oosin*»; it, shore, have also received ‘-marching I i° ®K quealb to berilbo suin c f£i:oO a year- d A !greater!gain- tbnn°losß; i orders’ 1 bave-sl-uhg thdir . ' u y cr < That’ll do, .wpn’tTt, jmenstor ?” -j b u t of this t was hoi! eidirely;'confi-y! and Jaro skwly- down -the ~" . I slio “Why, its double llie sum she .would den.t: ! Mori than a yfieai of trial’ now j slope,; to, the solemn m.uslic ol the toll- yy-.^ ’°ul|J, have if she i remained qnmarried ” shews no by itoijir foi fcign rcla-: ing .bglU.l . fo.on- ' they; •x*a| _ . • . •t. ••! i»„ it - none in'orn 1 Dopulup fecnli- swell the final cull.ol, too . >fth ,® said the lawyer; “it i B| generally the, L fierce term’ into lU,*’ with .tjio advanced ; ; ed »- oilier legacy |is,lossed if tWe £»j C( K ,1 it ar^ oC iiny wliero. | guid'd, that lijas, gone before, “Beadi' inued widow nfanips again.”i; ■ • | Qf| the .contrary;' i'tJsbows a gaiifi of j Will soon 6e[ wriileh bn , the Isalional y / y the J “Ave.” Said .the farmer, ‘‘but him as qtiite a llundrdd and record-.-i;dbad," the brief word that ■; r, and ffet , ntjr’ii desnrye it;” 1 soldiers, seirnen and labmefs. i iThcse closes the, aejebaflt, and tells .that the l v<; in- gots Uor u de6nr T : :_Ji - arc. jiapabl) facts, [about which, aft Jkst revolutionary pension hds beoit ■ „ „ r:~ -1_ i facts, there can be ho icavilingi ' WitffpaicL —State Jourlial. .' \ r f TheShacki.es Struck,orrat I.ast.- o’lfioL3P)!anil 0 ’ lfio L 3P) ! anil ;ve c0 „ld not have) 1 ' * ' ' . ;Ho J_One of ytbq victims f tbe “mstitm ha 4 them vdthQut the,measure. , I four tion,’’ Rev. iCalvir .who- -1 •-*■' j: i hcr,i 1 I man ; ,fcl- \ trie I ,nse, .heir “A h Attorney.” said Sterrio, “is the same thing to- a barrator, that ah' apothecary is to a physician— this diffeienco. that iyodr attorney does hot deal in scruples.” | ' i •t —- ■■ , . '-r: ~ !;:• Richmond Examiner propo ses that all fat jpefl bo put in the reb el arihy to show the Yankees tliere| is no rehfel starvation. But fat/ can’t stand fire'. i ; ’ ' - , _ ■ ' f .fSr’Gol. Goivan, an American, has leased 50,000, acres vjf la'hft in Eussia, to carry on; tpr similar to ikt o» Pennsylvania. • ’ ' 1 :• - f i ’ • 3-SstabHsbecl . L - I >:.iu -j .it letter ftp. ; The corr e*pondence between Preai- I jlent Lined n/Governorßramlette and others, growing out ol the late en- IroUment. .controversy] in j Kentucky. I has. been' published. j The' following ' letter, bythp President, is one of the ablest .prod actions of his pen;— ;| > ‘‘Execuxivs Mansion, :V,:i ; ) ; i V April4.| 1 \ ‘i4}r/G-&odJes, ankfort, J Kjj. ‘'.Sty Beks Sia—-You asked me .to P*4 in writing thosubstance pf what 4 Verbally said, the other: day, in your [ t|» ; woy, Bramiette fJeni. ; ..'fqlf. slavery is hptjwcong. nothing is wrong I I pan not retpomber when I did not jsoj think;:. ipd; fecL,* Andr yet, l’ have never underapood that .thcj Presidency jconferred,. Upon me an unrestricted j right to actj ofiSdally 1 upojd thisjudg jjment and feehug. _ It wa4 in the Oath took; that ! would to ithe. best of | my ability, prjeserve, protect, and de fend the Constitution ofiithe Boiled States. I could 'not take the office j without .taking the oathl Nor was it hi my view, that I might take an joath to got Ipojvver, and break,the oatli iin .using tpo| power. ‘ I j understood; 1 too, that, in ordinary civil admlnistra. lion, this Oath even forbade mi, to practically j indulge my prilnary ah • Struct judgment Lon the -moral, ques tions,of slavery. 1 I had 'publicly IIL , dared this malny limes, and "in many ' ways. And If aver that, to this day, ;I have, done no official net in. mor s de ' fertsneo to my abstract judgment iLand. feeling on slavery.* ’ j f. ‘‘l did understand however, that ijftiy oath tOpclserveCheConslilnticn jto the best pf my posed up-! jpn mo the duty of preserving, by j Levery indispensable means, that Gov- I jernmoh; —that Nation-, Of which! that 1 was the; joi-ganic ialw —■ {Was it’-ppsHibllc' tolose the Nation, I ynd yet preserve the Cor.kLtntionV : ! |l , '.‘-By general law, life and limb must 1, protected; yetiotten a limb must be j laiapuyated jtol save a life; but a life is’ |iidver wisely j-iven UVsave a limb. I; ihpasuref othetvvise wise and t Jl \$ I ♦•QP1u tiQi?^lim j ghtr- Loeoifio law'fu 1. by I nigii.t.j IHefbr wrong, I ■ irted the -Bi- ["now avow it. 1 could' not feel that. iberiasratfet w ll,c bo?t l of 1 bad ipvcn : , . f.tried to preserve tUoi Constitution, it-;. 1- population r havo s i u yeryor ■■any. minor, matter ! ,n the . white; U H | loQ i ( j pcjrniit the wreck of-■■.Govern-‘j als were pupil Mmdnf. Country, and .ConsjiitfttionJ, .all j ty to exist; ,: together. When early |in the! warj Freniont ntlompted military .I i emancipation, I foibadcr it bueause I !ould,,hc said,!' no £ t i,„ n think it|an indispensable iburdencd|i i —■ Utile Is' ■■ !0 ri; ! liecrful and j iero was ono-j ir w\iichj*ho| ecare, it was j i had k> lie ttld finei despair, 'and till ihe Col- Bather than Sou’th must war, or the ; vil war,; hcl lions iofUc*- Africa, and ’U; ±BlB President lilngoln. i - ( 'Wttewttat : ma 4« t o 7**ri/ ' v a ¥ f a a4Hn; •. Special noticeV 25ijer c«ni. kdditio* lorai klkf rdtefc! ; j; j^- r , MarfUgM and l)e«.tlii, ttcUgioiu, Polittal oiffi 'pubUo-\aW'i,'li*&- ■ „ t The ValloyoflehosaphatT'' • Toe efforiji the ’Jewshave made, ' anil the sufferings, lessee and bdritilfa tidds they, have born-for tho- of obtaining sopultuie in ’. of JebOaaph at. form' a singular! fe£- J ture in lit.man b.isiory.'’ fib other nation td live in their thVn land.biit’t'o besuflfcred* i,i to lay their dust therein. i ecripti 6ns liftvp >bieen made of - this marvellous place; bat 1 confess • npne of them ever afforded me 6 notion of its' attunl ’{ appearance. 'Pandering • alone past the tbuntafn of Siloam and by ti\e arid bed of KedrOH. it sadden-. ly opened on me n perfect mountain , of graves—a bill-side'paved with ; 6ep- Jibe 1 bodies must perocridiea • multitudes . therejiqterred. were simaltanWiibslytd ari so',' they,; w|ouid form a crowd as i dense - and’ cbmpact as if- would be I enormous'. :Short Hebrew insci iptions -. i r (sorae evidently; of great age) are on all thestoneSjj and these are" laid t6*4 ? • gethor with ' intervals pr.ly of a few ; inches,; as in djttr oldcitj'qhurchyards. The slabs aresaliriost . on , the.iqyel otf . r the ground and of equal .height, ad that it is ilten.tly one largo pavement of , death—an appalling,, almost an ■ overwhelming sight.— Fraser'* Maga* sine. L ■' -i i NeW* Hainpshice Copperherdlsni.. 1 j Theikind of Copperhendism wfu|»h - | was squelched injlfew Hampshire aft tRo recept election, may b'o inferred : j frdni the folk iwing,doli voted by. one '■;* lof jtho j loading; “Democratic’' politic J-. DJ Murphy; at_ Ncilv-ingtopi. January ,22d. -- !! Democrats; have submitted idj [ the despotie sway of Abe Lincoln fdrj ' L three years, thinking it better 16 da- 1 . dure Wrung lor ji short time than tb risk alj by a| last appeal to armsi'—,’ But now the [timo ,is* d ; >miiig ; \vlieii wo'can ciuii.gofeour .rulers.' Rather than submit fdur y.ear»! r 'longvir to AbW i s ,-* Linholn, ami lib overrup fay the hordesr- 1 ,-- Ais hiretityioidkry, .jet'us ring oas(p.t the cry of Cld.f To.iidur tents,. O' Israeli* j‘ V| j' ’P.Miocmts fifyiU'l itrm ;|; j ;; fo dylitdubf ! '--7i / nri)anii*s, 1 dttbaliSiut} rM,r ■imenls,\a nd bnjade.s, i'pt ifesc . blbod- 1 ’ ; thirsty aholi iomsts -and bfadddyita thieves and tmiiorpVare a wyihd-hroics ' en, ,'spaviig -ij-speptio race, and one '[ regiment of.-Democrats'cm; la wbiij c ‘catlU^jnp.'UlU and cf>inii)g hbnie'to vole, dotyn the j■■ liberties of-the people) and render our elections a-|as(ce and mockery to thdj,,’ worldi” V : r ' 1. ‘ , Rtvol utionary Soldi-eys. ... Orly. tWelvC of the old , veterans of ‘ the ruvhiutiomu-y hvar., survive to see , hStUilge Df JlUedom: ; But iVw. of WjjiAT |.is| the Matter mxii B$N- - ■ Nfirl? ?—James Gordon Bennett, thd proprietor %f I Vic Kew York Tins iicen Quo of Uro tnopt earnest sup- , ; I porters of General Gippt’for ■ j Kioiicy ,ini 1864, andi yet finals great • i fault with the loyal people of.the oun-/~N .itary Fair for ' presenting ’a s\Vora to hirn in preference to General ebjK»o B. M’Clellati. What is the ; matter with Gordon ?, Why does lie tiot rew qnefl McClellan to nee the sword af-., ready-" in ’ liJjgtTpossession ? , Cai; ;any tell |f— 'tyicei ' I' ' ISSf*A;Octroi i tblls off'ah athi-, able man tind wilt jp Jj hat'city-jybd :> hiiVe just,. beeomil reconciled aflerjliv ing tcgetherfive years!without iiiga word to, one another; Thewifo mode the rash vow thatsho, would no® •, speak to her husband until die upo|o> i gized fop -having her qnitS, harshly for giving an Expensive party in liisaljsence,- anil'sbe-kept iso for the length ofliyne named. v liar tU ago of a | young lad how expressed, * hecording ' ~t« •orient-;' stylo 'of 6 '.sKlW^ 'f'ta liiait eigbteeu spring* h'«f b«M> _■ . j :t. MEM • y s' .• • ITIBERS. ~5.:7 ■ thg