HMUiMWKW.V. T. 'r (ilD If If f 1 a f It'll t ITlfTW (I itW'fiTf a .'. .. - .' :t ' " Z7 0. B. GOODLANDER, & CO. PRINCIPLES, not MEN. TERMS-$1 23 prr Annum, if pnid in rw.vance NKW.SKIUK.S VOL. I. NO )J. vol. xxxi. wiiou-: no ig.w. ckkai.hklo, ia. vki)NK.si:av, apkii. m, nir,:. c.txin jioiim v.. "Oh, I m so happy!" a little girl sabl. As the (.prang, liko a lnrk, from alow trundle led; "'III esraitig bright morning ! lood morning, PP! 0, glre me ono kiss for good morning, mamma. Only just look nt my pretty canny, Chirping bis snoot '(io d morning to M.vry;' The ion is lieopinR straight hit" in y iy Good morning to you. Mr. Sun. for you rise Early to wake, my birdie and me, And make us buppy 1,8 ''"PI1)' '" bc "Happy ynu mnv be my dear Uttlo girl," A the mtthor struck f.flly a clustering culr 'Happy yon can be hut ttiink of tbe Ono Who wakened thismorning. both y uund liioiun. The girl turned her bright eyrs nitli n nod : "Ma, may I say, then, good morning toiiod ?" "Yes, little darling one, suroly y hi may : Kneel as you kneel every mo ning to pray." Mary knelt soltmnly down, with her eyes Looking up eunestly into the skies. And two little band, Hint were folded together, Softly the laid on the l;i! of her mother, "Good morning, (tctr Father in Heaven. "she said, " I thank iheo for watching my smut little bed' For taking gooi cure of mo all too d.irk night' And waking mo up with the beautiful !i;:'..i: 0, keep me from hhiik" tiuvn s 1 1 the long :' . Dr fattier, who ,.iujht children to limy." An anirol luoked don n in the sunshine ai. I -l.ii'c cl. Hut she uw not the angel, that beautiful child From the Jtaovil.'e (Jiturterly Itovicw. OtTE COUNTRY: IT PERIL ITS DELIVERANCE. Itc'V. KollllHT -i. I'. ir.CKKNr.IlKT., J an villo, Kentucky. . I). I. 1. What wc propose is, first, to ma ike such ft flaltmont of tho condition nl af fairs as may bo of use to upright men, in enabling them to determine what ought to bo atltoinptod inidwhat cut) bo accom plished, in the v ny of p1 eventing the ru in of their country ; am1, .wccivlh, to make clear tr nil m n, the pn-hiim of u vast party in this country, who iL-Mre mnl wlo leserve, in nil pii.-ilile cv etin, ta he un lerstood by posterity and who, r von if thoLr principles aie overborne Mid their counsels art now njecte l, may. if liiey nre faithful to ihenielve, retrieve iYom the wreck of llieir country, whatever ur vivt wner llie period of exhaustion small co mo upon its destructive nifKliicst, Thern is no esson which tho univer-: snl courio of human alliiirs teaches so thnrooifhlv. as their owr. instability. And i vet there is no lesson so lniru lor nun to learn : no lesson so pregn:int of results. and so little heeded. How f.iithful ought men to be when overtaken by defeat mid ndveraity if they would consider thai defeat ami adversity, with coinage a:ut wwdom, are n preparation for triumph ? Mow just and foidx-aring ought men to be in the midst of power and prosperity, ii they would consider that power and prosperity, in the degree that they are corrupt, make tho road to destruction broad t)d sure ? And how immense, how wwxpectcd, how ell'ectual are the resour ces of God in the accomplishment ofwh.it he ordains to bo results of human eun Uuctf 3. Look fit the actual condition of pub lic afluirs throughout this great nation consider whither they me lendk.g con sider whence that, tendency lias arisen consider by w lint means it is propagating itself: and then relleci upon the unex pected and extrnordiinr.y nie.ms by which ruin is overtaking every interest and hope of the, country and upon the ab-o-' lute completeness of the ruin, w hen t liese means shall have worked their full eilee!. in a state of security apparently pr.'ect, and of prosperity apparently complete n small and fierce parly scattered through some of the Northern States, commenced ft systematic and persistent .'i. i'.ition con nected with the l'.lack nice on this conti nent; and in tho heart of their system lay this idea, that laws and institutions and rights and duties and interest cf ev erv description ought to five way, if there Ttas need of it, to the iioeomplishnietil of their design s. In the progtess of time jind events, tmd the ruin of political par tics, this fundamental idea w hich h tho essence of lawlessness an I anarchy at taches itscll in the public mind of roim of tho Northern States, to that particular Aspect of the (piesiion of (ho Lhick Itaee which relates to the obligation, under the Federal Constitution, of delivering fugi tive slaves ; and laws of various kinds are passed, throw ing tLe weight of State au thority against the obligation of the very highest national law. And so tho idea, and process of disintegration, ns the ten dency to lawlessness & anarchy strength ens, has thus risen from the coin.titi.in of fanaticism, to tho dignity of a principle recognised by Stales and asserted in hws. As if to wnrn men of tlio 1 ireiulili nf i he i ruin involved in this tendency, and to 1 fjot those institutions wiiich everywhere mark the extremity of tho peril arising 1 have been esteemed most sacred, and ev from its con tiect ion with the question of'lcrywheie despises the most venerable and ihe. IMack Race, one of the slave States ! the most chei ished traditions of our cuun- hacl a rtatly, under a similar, but direetlv opposito ten Jeney, formally asserted it's nguv, not ou:y 10 onstruel the e execution , Ot too laws ot ue l nite.l States, but to j.uoojr ... -"..., an i upon its own Wind see, that when laws are violated in 'solo and sovereign discretion ; BO that the. name of morality and order, and con the sp rit ol lawlessness ami anarchy, in titutbns are set at nought in the name of its aWuto and universal tendency to liberty ami security, ami revolutions are disintegrate all things-moved, though accomplished by terror and conducted riot first, yet more tapibly nixl by lm-c underihe guidance o( irresistiblefanatieism dccisivo ucts, at tho south :im at the thai there eat, be no result to such a ca- r"rl- . .. , . i 'er, as long as it has way. but the des- 4. Once more in (he progress of time (ruction of evenhin,t n,i t, ,,,.. .,..... ind events, and the ruin o p. litie.al ).,- tnents m instituted lo protect; ami that tios tho whole nation finds itself array-, at every stop of Ihe career, the overthrow ad, in the hist Presidential election, into , of every salutary power and tho diinte - ,tvo onposito parties, (of which the de-; ration of every healthful foiee of society linn Iai I An.. ..t. a - . I ... J tself into three) ; and this same question f the Black Knee, both in the aspect rf vie-i.s mail euougii to suiKiiviue uiuon oi tugitivo slaves, and in (ho - " " '""'0" ill,'. eso sanio questions of supreme law and lawlessness corrected therewith counting to tho highest national impor- -nice, .iio nppnrentls-swallowing up all HiiivoTV in il,. i ..,-.. ts,s,& ether (uestion.s, nro resolved, ho far it" that election enuld resolve them. Hut the solution is every way remarkable. For while Mr. Lincoln h elected 1'reM dent the majority of the nation :n so de cidedly uijfimt t him, that ho would have been beaten if the power of Congress to to create uniform electoral diKtrict.s had ever been cxerciced ; nay, would have been beaten under thn existing syBtem.il all oprosed to him had been allowed by the corruption or folly of parlies to unite on one opponent. Moreover the solution is further remarkable, in this, that both Houses of Congress, and, at) is alleged, the Supremo Court of the United States, held his most duiiLreroiw onitiion to be unconstitutional ; and it is still further remarkable in this, that Mr, Lincoln himself, while representing the Northern section of the anarehial tendency of the times, is knoivn to repudiate tne original principle of that faction concerning the rendition of fugitive slaves and is by universal coment, even of his candid op ponents, an i hlc, Lonost, and patriotic man. At the end of thirty j ears of woi k ing of the spirit wo have been tracing, a decisive event had thus put the country in a io.il u re where it would clearly ap pear whether the I lie hereditary la. v -abiding; spirit, of our lace remained, the great prop and safeguard id' ail our insti tutions; or whether the spirt of anarchy already so signally liianile-ted at hi. Ill ex'.remoties of llw nation, had so far poisoned ! he national life o? our ra.'e a! it fountain, that the time had come for one of tlnce great explosions of human pasM.m which till o many mcluneholv pages in t :ie hi -lory of our l ace. ,". It is not easy to conjecture, and it iv itnposs rvould e to sav with certainty, "-hat ive occurred il the late I'rosi- dential election had terminated dill'eienl ly from w hat it did, in any one of the vni ious ways in w hich a dill'erent termi nation was. possible This lar wo may now spik willi cert duty, that in some form or oilier, the spiii'. of turbulent j miticisin which had pervaded the States of ihe extreme North so long and so deeply, would not w ithout a miiacle, such as history does not record, have been al layed cr composed under any defeat that j was povsible, in ihe slide of national par- ties as they are now Utio'in to have exis ted at thai time, l-'or there was this fulal element. Ioiil' concealed not ireneinllv believed but openly avowed since the secession of South Carolina that seee; sion, as the final and d liberate choice ot tho ex: rente South, win the point to wich pop. leal opinion had beer, long and care lully trai. ed, and political parties, long and singly directed. This kital training, j added to the widely diti'uvcd spirit o' at,.-! archy, suiai ling under a defeat etpjallv signal add unnecessary, and stimulated by considerations of the very highest im- t ortaiice connected with tho question of tho Black Kace in every aspect of that oucstion nrodneed the nnoiuentlv sud- den revo.ution which has ' . ' ... ' . . - . ready, when these pnues are wrilliii, led the six cotton States (South Carolina, Mississippi, Flori da, Alabama, Georgia and Louisiana) to pass separate acts of secession from the United States of Ainerie.t. Here then is the consummation of this spirit id' law lessness and anarchy, working as vc have already said it universally works, unto tho disintegration -the mi rcclnient of all tilings ; the consummatiiMj of it, so far as to embrace all the Males producing cotton, sugar, and rice, as their great staj ple.s. What is next to be determined is, the fate of the mixed slave States those divided between farming and planting ( North Carol. na Tennessee, Ar- kans. is and Texas); and :h n the fiile of the harder slave States, ( Delaware, ilary land , Virginia, Kentucky, Missouri): and then we may coniuloniiaiiy add, tne late or tne nation. Whatever, in Ihe inc. intinie, it is ofthe last importance to bear in mind. shall bo the conduct ol tho whole of the free States (Ne-v .Jersey, l'cinisylvaiiia, 'mio, Indiana, Illinois mid lowa), may ue decisive alike of their own fate, and of that of all II e lest of the nation itself for niuuy generations. C. Is it possible for any thoughtful per son to suppose, that- (his spirit of reckless disregard ol a. 1 existing nistilufons, has , already accomplished all the results of which it is capable '! What shall prevent it fiom the s.vailowing up all the remain ing slave States ? What shall, after that is accomplished, prevent a eounter-revo-hi ;ioii iu every one o: those slave States? What shall pu-vent its .taking some new direction With still more vehement force, throughout he v i i e North? What shall prevent a counter revolution in every Northei n State .' Anil who can venture to hone. thai, everywhere trarnnles under tf and try our race, will tinaily slake tl.n - st in 'iin-liinvr Put. lumen, h moo tail lo assuage its insaliaide rapacity universal plunder? Cannot even the reign ol universal anarchy ? It is as if G should destroy every principle ofoohosi uoie unit more conlirmi Mm nvi.-i,,.,n ...) oil on in the piiysieni universe, und leave v ery .--(. - ."...v ... . nviMUj.. l( tjQ inaction of all things. It j IU jf jc should destroy pvery idea of subjection in tho moral universe, and leave the passions of men to work out all the hor.-nrs of in ..,,.. , i' '.,io loi-ee in ,r .- . .. .. ... .. , infinite disorder. !t is as the steady work- tle one hand, or its violence on the other; ing of omnipotent force unto the produo- 'J. 'I he conduct of the I'cderal (invent tiou of universal helplessness. It is, when ment t6war:!n those States ; us it may be itshall pervade the earth, the lealiation lirm nod ) et tenipeiale, or as it may no of tho conjectures of those who expound vacillating and timid: e. The encduCt of the divine piedictions concertiing I he con- i the slave Stales eont inning in tho I 'nioii, dition in Wiiich The &n Man wiil find :ts they miiy shnie the loudness o the six all nations at his second coming tho uni- ' seceding States, or ns they m.iy arrest the vers'd reign of lawlessness after tho uni- j pestilence at tho cotton line, and by their versa! disintegration oi every element w j wisdom and course restore the Union; pable of restraining it. W hat wo say is ' -1. The conduct of the free Slates, and c not that theso results are inevitable : Hod pccially tho;e nlong the slave border ; as lorbid ! Jlut we say they nro natural j tliey shall obst ina't ly persist in foment they ure imminent they are far more to ing opinions ami performing net" i.oueli bo apprehended than what has already oo- ' ing the wholt (juestion of the black race, currod both in the North and in the ; iv hieh ( hey can now ckrly see must in South, was to be (ipprehcnded thirty ' volvo tho country in one common ruin, 'cars ago. Ami we may say these things 'or as they, by a common consent, or by u with a greater conliuenee, ol an insight ol the teiilblo future, and a more eager he seeching of our generation to beware ; since during nior than thirty years we have not ceased to lift up an' unheeded testimony, both against the principles and the i. roceedil'i's, both at the Noitli and at the South whose inghllul results tho country is now beginning, to realize. 11. 1. I. el us now seek, art idst this chaos, for some .round ol hope and rllort. Throughout the eighteen free Mates, so ciety is supposed to be under tbe control ol the Republican party. As indicated by the riesideutial election in November last, it may be conceded that the majori ty in all those States, did at that lime, believe the election of Mr. Lincoln to the 1 1'iesideney, to be the best of the ulicrr.n ! tives then ollered to their choice; anil it j may be further conceded, though it i not strictly accurate, that, nt present, the lo cal. I'olitical and military power, in all those Stales, is in the hand is in the minus ol I lie io., 'publican party. Jnit it is alio true Hint a i tuaioi it v in those States, numerically id - most as large as Ihe entire voting popula- il ilu w hole nini; or even the greater lion of the fifteen slave Slates, voted p art of them, embracing the leading ar.d against Mr. Lincoln and are thoroughly powerful Stales, refuse to unite in the opposed to the distinctive principles of movement taken by the six cotton Stales, the republican party. It is also utide- that, movement must necessarily prove a uiiiblo that a very huge number of those I'ailuio, both as to its avo.ved, and as t) w ho voted tor Mr. Lincoln, nre far more any concealed object; a -nur.ter rcvolu Whigs or Americans than they are li"-j tion in the cotton States b vomes pres. publicans ; and it is equally certain that ently inevitable ; and those, cotton States a very large number ol the Republican must ultimately Hccomtnad.ite themselves party itself, strictly speaking, are patriot- j to the policy, whatever it may be. adopt 1 10 men, who, while they preferred the , ed by tln-'other and leading States i:: success of their party to the success of any stead of being able to force those far more other party, prefer the peace, the prcs-! powerful than themselves, to follow peritv, ami tho security of their country, blindly and scrv.lely a course disapproved above anything that could be obtained by by them, and which rests lor its intimate the triumph of their party, if any po- ! rer.son, upon nothing better than thesud ilticul result in tho future, therefore, cm ' den caprice of South Carolina, or her be considered certain, it is certain that a 'chronic hatred of the National Union. revolution in opinion, more or less deci- j There are immense considerations, alio- ded, w ill manifest ilselt throughout the free States, whenever ihe issue is clearly J i,ut to them between their country and tiny political party. And H is equally ! certain, that what ever party shall hurry those Slates, by w hatever means, into the horrors of civil war, and the ang iish of that impending anarchy of which we have sunken, will perish bv a counter I . ' . ' . . , , , rtviluuon, just as apt to no moony ' uei e ns in any portion of 'he nation. 1. Iu the position of all the t lave States there are peculiar circumstance.-, much overlooked, both among themselves and and others; hut r.evei tlielos decisive m the Iciil' run. No lorco, however small, but will accomplish its end, if sufficient time be allowed-, even that which is inh nitely miiiul il it operates through an indefinite period. The six cotton States appear to us to have taken their course in : such a temper, with such purposes, upon such principles, mid under such conclusions, that they nei'.her orcgon s le-iie to . ret m n to their forme;- position, nor would t present agree to any thing that they i believe would accomplish that result. 1 1 i s, 0f Cuui so. pnsdble that we are lilista- ' ;en iu this iaiufnl conclusion, and we should heartily rejoice to Know ma. we arc ; but, seeing no grouu 1 on w h'ch wo ' can doubt th it the ca.-e stands thus, no;- 1 t h-r do we sue any cm wiiich we can 1 avoid statine- our belief. It would be gross injustice lo many thousands of pa- triotio men in all the cotton maies, io suppose that either of thnso States would have been allowed to bike tho course it has pu-siied, without a desperate, political struggle in its own bosom, if the eircum- -i. ,,,'.,. nf those n.i en in each of those States, had appeared to them to allow ol resistance to the organized force which sw?pt society away. There are also thou sands of persons in all those States w ho even now consider it a sland?r and a re proach, that ulterior designs are ascribed to those who direct this secession move ment, which il seems apparent to all mankind, except themselves, are. not on ly certain to bo realized if the movement, is permanently sustained, but which wero amongst tho earliest and most powerful causes of (he long cherished desire to be relieved from the real restraints of the rederal Government, ai.u the imaginary perils an 1 injuries of the Federal Union. In the actual condition of tho Sta'es which have already seceded, as we under stand (hat condition an. 1 the manner in which it has Icon brought about, ive deem it ported ly obvious that a counter revolution must manifest itself iu every one of them equally as decided, and perhaps more violent, than the i evolution vhicli has already ivcurod. That counter-revolution may be in a direction mire fatal bringing into uncontrolled power parties wholly possess it. It onllt. nnd iinw' .rlhv to nav be in r. direction enii-; neitlv favoi-ii ,h to the security and pros- perity of theso cotton States, and termin- drive matters to extremity in any diree in their restoration to the Union, under tion. tho lead of a party whose elements now; 1. Theo facts and considerations, taken lie scattered, or even as yet totally undo- in detail and taken altogether, are wor vcloned But tho. nrr-niit revolution, in thv of tho highest consideiiit ion : and its vetv n iture, its causes, and its design must go ueoper. in ono direction or ths other. In uhirh direction, depends in our opinion, in the fiist instance, in a great deg'-ee, upon theso contingencies : I. Tbe conduct of tho present ruling fac tiou in those States; its fo: l;arauce oc counter-revolution m their own bosom, restore public opinion to it condition un der which slave Stales may safely live in peace w'.ih them. Under such circum.. stances it is easy to see, how great and tldlicult is the task laid on true state- men, everywhere, and how immense and how . dubious are the issues submitted to them. . i no remaining nine n'.ave Mates, ol which live are border St.ites, and four me mixed slave States, have in each of these classes peculiarities as marked as those w hieh distinguish the cotton States; yet as the whole nine occupy a similar posi tion at the present moment, with rcgurd to the revolution which has swept over tli? (.ot'on States, tliey may, for the sake of brevity, be throvn together in develop ing the great ideas 've are endeavoring to di-close. What the exact, issue will be in these ni.ie States or w hether it will be similar in them all or in which direc tion the revailing opinion will settle, if dilleient lionises are taken are iiues- tions w Inch it, is impossible to delei inine at this time, lint it is very obvious, that gelher independent of the real merits of cf the great cause which is under tri ul why the course dictated by South Caioli1 na, and adopted by the other eottuii Stairs, should le steadfastly rejected. Amongst these nr-3 s-ilcdl lis follow ; 1. This method by secession ninihilutes the very idea of all force in permanent consti tutional union, or common government I .11:1 . . over sovereign .iatss, an i esiaonsnes us inherent in nu possinte luture unions, nie ide i of anarchy , ami deprives liberty for ever of the possibility of le ing either stable or strong : 2, The method of se cession by grmrutc State .'iction, is found ed on illusions utterly fatal and absurd, Unit the Am ericiin are not a natum I lie Federal 'onstitutini not a government the American people not bound to be loyal except to lojal authorities, which being assumed, condemns this eont incut to bu the everlasting habitation of every thing feeble factions and extravagant: 15. I he adojition of ordinances of seces sion, by conventions called by ordinary legislatures - without allowing tin peo ple to determine by a previous sovereign net whether or not tne convention s all exist, and by a subseuuent sovereign act -s, nether oi not its proceedings snai. nave force des' roys the very idea of tho sov- ereignty of the people, makes eonslitu- tional liberty and security impossible, and invites factions, in proportion as tley are corrupt or incompetent, to usurp and to abuse, sovereign power: -t. '.lie utier re fusal to consult with Slates, all of which were united by the highest human obliga tions and many of w hich wero involved iu perils the very same in kind and high er in degree is a line of conduct, reck less in itself, insulting to all others, ap parently adopted with the. purpose of ren dering all peaceful, eonsider.U.e, or tven decoious arrangements impossible, and necessarily jeopard, in the result reached. Alio profitable continuance of slavery, it'i not its very existence, in the greater part! of the slave States, and amongst them the most potvcrful, the most loyal, and the most enlightened of them all. At tho J present moment two most important truths are perfectly distinct. The Ve' is,1 that fheactiiu hitherto txken in lb"' States whose positions wo are now eon- sideling, no matter what that action may lead to involves a fundamental dis sent from the conduct pursued by those seceding States and contomph'.lcs re- dress in a oliljerent way and n 1 il op y po- site principles. The ay. e. is, ileit a very rcat port'n of'.fach of these '.' S;ates.prob ably the majority of the people in most of t heiii possibly in all oft liom,--are warm ly alt u hod to the I'nion. are resolutely d 'termined to maintain their loyalty to that nation as their nation, at the same time that they maintain their 1 ivalty to the particular Slates of which i hey are more inclined to citizens, line, are far compose existing dilliculties. than to whatever mo issue nt kvenis may ie, tney reveal to ihe people an I to thoso they trust, the grounds on which, and the manner in w hich, Ihe country may In. saved: and Ihey diseloso to posterity the pregnant :md enduring truth, that at the Utmost peril of the country the pc"i would have saved it, if Ihey had been braM'ly and wisely led. r'or under fair and true statesmanship, the chances nre more than eipial, in the VvC pneo, to ral'y the immense unices ol the nine slave Slates whose people are now pondering their course, to such an action as w ill make their poshing secure in the Union, end satisfy them: . n the worn place, to secure such a treat incut of t he subject ol secession by tho federal Administration, , in will ul once gi e ellic.icy to the laws, ! and avoid armed collision, except in re j pelling lorco by force : in the Mm place, tosetkand rciy upon tucl: a reaction j among I he masses of the people i:i the ' free States, as will, by n common consent, or if it becomes necessary, by nul ling ' from power those who stand i.i the way, i make manifest the determination of those masses to put an end to ths reign of that atheistical and relently fanaticism, which is tne original cause of the ruin that stares 'us nil in the face: and in the,'- irt d.iv to expect and a wait with confidence, the inevitaole counter-revolution in theStates which have already seceded, which will di.-abuse the minds ol men of the delu sion thai the revolution there has been, nstolhe popular masses, either spont.i.. neons or cordial, ami rest ire those States to their tt ue position in the confederacy. 1 ol 'he ' resident win coniniunioUcd to I. is in this manner that results, eqiidiy ' Major Anderson by u special messenger, indispensable and glorious, are sittaiua'ile, I with instructions to open negotiations re-ulis capa'.lo al-o. no doubt, of being I with the military nut iioritie- at Charles defeale.i ; a'-.i that ways to various to .o j to carry the project into execution, traced here. But when defeated, let us! These negotiations have been progress never lorL'"t that they who defeat them ' '"g ever inee, and the numero js nu-seii-w ill share in full measure u ith us, nllg-is that have been pa'sing netween I resent evils, and will bear alone t he e.-j t 'Inu lesion and Washington have eoni t orations of po.teritv. And when de- munieiitcd to Major Anderson the in f'e.ited. what will remain for this eetiera" I si ructions of the (iovernnjent and to the. lion will be to iv,i!i;' that frightful condili thi calamities ol we have traced in th minieneeir.eiit of this paper :--or, as we have attempied to show on x loriu occasion, to construct even upon the line between the free and the sluve States, a new and central power competent at once to preserve all cur institutions, to devidope our national nioirioss. and todi- reet the destinies of this continent. ., - - A irozen bnip. A whaling vessel, tvhich sailed from London in the year ISM, found in the 1'olar 80S, a ship imbedded in the ice, with sails furled, and no signs of life on board. Tho captain and some of the crew descending lino uieeainn, ion nd coiled upon the floor a lar.o Ne.vfuund-! laud do, apparently asleep, hut w hen , they touched il they found tin animal ' fro.o us hard as a stone. In the cabin j was a young lady seated at a table, her eyes open ns if gazing at (he intruders in that desolate place. She was a eoi pso ! " and had been frozen in an apparently re- signodjind religions- altitude. Beside her j was a young man, v ho it appeared v as commander of lh brig, ami brother toj the lady. IB- was sitting at the table, I dt ad, ami before hi n was a sheet of paper, : on which was written, "oarcodv lias en ! deavoied to strike a light since yesterday morning, but in vain ; all is now over. ' In another part of Ihe cabi a stood the cook, with tin flint and tinder in hand. troen, m trie vain endeavor to strike t l.ve ; kv hen (jen. lies uregard iniimaied to ;ni fire that could aloue sav them. Toe jor A nderson t hat, if lh demand of tho terrors ot the seamen led the captain ficni the spot, who took with him the log book as the sole memento of the ill - fated ship. It appeared thai she also was from Loudon, and had been dozen iu that pliU'e out fuuj'tTii years. A Lomi-Lost Sox 1'i.m ovrni n. An lint boy was stolen from his father and mother at M. Louis, nearly 111 years ago, by a hunter w ho hail lo-t his w ile mid child and "wanted something that wouid love him." He hurried the child into the wilderness, employed a half-breed woman to nurse it, and not until recently v.-as its long bt leaved mother able to obtain any definite information of her missing son, She had become a widow, and had lived jo Albany, Koches-tor. Buffalo, I VI roil, and other places " seeking rest and finding none.'' By means of a young spoiling friend, w ho fi e.iuently met the old hun ter mill his w ard in tin, far west, and ad ' roitiy cross questioned him.jhe truth was ascel lamed, and the mother and son were last week reunited k.l l.Vtroit, alter a sepal a', ion ol'alniost a quarter of a e 11 tuiv. The poor woman's hair hail grown white with ago and anxiety, ami her son will now gladly adopt civilized habits. Stwii it v i it k oi.D Fi.au. Now that war has commenced no matter who is nt fault it is the duty of nil our citizens, iiM-csp(M-'iive of party, lo stand by ,ho old Hag, with its glorious stars ami stripes, and support the Goveriiuioir. in all prop er anil legiiimalo efforts to hi ing the con test to a suecos-l'iil issue. The lirst blow was struck l the Seees-'ioiiisis, and now it becomes the duty of every pa! riot to lend his al'i m su-taining the honor ol ceir common conn try . I i' w e have a Gov ernment that is eipable of protecting and perpetuating itscll, tiiis is tho time lo ex ert its strength, and the people must st.uu 'iy it no matter w ho is at tne helm. We go for our counlry, our whole country ami nothing but cur country. J.nnrns'ir Inlrl. Iru r.Mtim N km spa or. its. Small is the sum that is required lo patronize a licj's paper, and amply lewaiilcd is its patron, I care pot Low humble, and unpretending I lie l'Wette w hi.'h he lakes. It is next lo impossible to fill a .sheet with printed mat- ter without putting into ir something that is worth the subscription price, hvorv parent whoso son is away from home al school, should supply him wi;h a newspa per. 1 well remember what a marked dif ference there was between tho-o of my schoolmates who had, and those who had not access lo newspapers. I il'ter (hings being equal, (he lirst were always supcii jr tolholast il. debate, composition and gen eral intelligence,---Un 'L W'dxt.-r. (I'ton, i ln llrri-h-ir.; Patriot A I'nion) Events Preceding the Asnault upon Fort Sumter The leal destination and object of the fleet sent by ihe ( iovel n men t to the South, as well as the natnreof the nego liidions which proceeded (he nlliick cf tbe ( 'onfederatc butteries upon Fori Sum ter, is still involved in doubt ami uncer tainty. All we know is (hat several ves sels e; osed the bar find entered the har bor of Charleston, while (ho battle was progressing, viihout striking a blow or altrnipting to nllord assistance to Ihe be leaguered garrison. Their intruelion inav luive prevented them from taking any part in (he conllict. 'Ihe following narrative, published jn the Jlalt imoi e Aiiiriii-iin before tho assault upon Sumter, gives the most sir. igh t forward and plaus ible account of the events preceding that transaction : Nearly four weeks since the l'resideut and Cabinet, on the representation of (ion. Scot I, decided to evacuate Fort Sum ter as a military necessity that is to say, the reinloieiiig uud provisioning of it was not deemed es-enlial, in view of the cost ol brood and trcasur it would require t" aci oinplish the purpose. This decision l'l i'sidenl the demands of the authorities "' 1 '"! Sout neru (. onie.le racy . It is un derstood that Major Anderson refused, umlcr instrnciioiis, un unconditional sur rcuder of the fortress to the Confederacy, but proposed to abandon it with his garri son, leaving the i'ott in possession of a corporal aim iwu privates, to prou-c. me !"q ci ty of the Government, and leave it jthus to j-.vail luture rreuU. He is ifJs under-looil to have deniantled of (ieneral j Beauregard that a pledge should bo giveu I him that no attempt should bemad to take possession of it a fie? the evacuation of tho garrison, and that he ollieer left in ' charge should not be molested, or his fos. session as the nominal representative of l lie riovernineni iiiteriereu wiiu. This proposition did net moot the views of tieiieial B":ojregard. -""die demanded I hat the Hag o ' the United States should be saluted an 1 low ered, as was done a', the IVnsacola Navy Yard, and (hat a formal surrender of the fort should be made by t he Government of (In United States to the Government of the Sou then Confeder acy, and the Con lederacy Ihig of seven stars raised on the Hag M;;U and saluted, This demand, which would be a virtual recognition by the President and Major A mho sou of I lie ei'jsUnoe of the Sot hern ( 'on lederacy, was firmly refused, and the decision ol Maj. Anders jj w as subsequent ly .sustained mid approved by the i'resi lieiit and his Caoinel. Thus matters stood up to lie c I'linieneenieni of hut .veok, i onledoraev v;is not oompin-d witu, fiu order would be immediately issued to cut 'otl all further communication between ihe fort and Churlc-lon, and (nat his reg- ' uhir supplies of inaijjeting would be ttop. 'p-'.!. 1 Ii is fact was brought to Washing ton by Colonel Linioti. as tho ultimatum '" ol the Confederacy. A Cabinet mectill? was then called, and it is said that tin lei'u-.;.; to make a formal serrender of the fi.'i-t und the lowering i.d' the t! ig was un ani non-1 v re-alli meij. Immediately after this decision orders wore given lor the military and naval pr- mi at ions that have since o-oasioneoj -o much excitem 'lit, the object lejg tu use llieni if ru'cessary in jvlicviui; the garrison of Major Aulerson troni threat eijod sbn vat ii.'ti, ami njaiut lining the dig nity ul the (iov erniiient and the honor of the ll.igiu Charh'ston harbjr ; or, if not required there, to dispatch the expedi tion to Texas to main! alu t..e treaty stipulations cd' (he Gov,?rr.uient on thu frou.t.ier, and drive back the Indians and Mexi j.is w ho j llirmtening to invadti liheStute. In the nie.intiine Lieut. Talbot ws dis patched by Major Anderson, to Washing ton w ith turl h'T information as to Ihu condition of alliiirs, in w hich iiimorbays that Major Anderson urged the Govurn ineiit not to allow the flag w hu h he had so long maintained in the face of his be siigors to be humbled as they required--an I to compel the galh'iit men w ho had -nii 1 ) jjobly by 1 1 1 1 n , mclud.ng the me chanics wle could have loft him il tliev had desired, to witness the bitnjjliatinij "'rd't any Hag t.ul that ol t W ir euun.ry (.lolling Iroin us b it tletijeijts. 'fills areouul Ijvt tier stales thu.t u. soon as information was ree"ived at Washing, ton tjj dtien. Beauregard had cut oft' the supplies from Fori Sumter, the President dispatched a messenger to 'iiarleston, .villi instruct ion-- to Major An orotj ti nitifvthe Confederate authorities lh:ii the Government propo'eo immediately to di-pati h en unarmed vessel with fool for the ga.iis'in at I'm t ."'muter: and that Im was instructed, if the vessel should he fired upon, to return tlie lire from tin fort. The ine.-seiiger an ived at Charles ton, but was denied the oppi.rtuuity of communicating with Fort Sumter. V. know w hat ol owed. Tho expedition started fVo.n New York, and immediately the s saion batteries opened upon Korj Suuiioi . w hich, in its almost defenceless condition, wiis cninpellod lo surretj dor. This acoount, which is cortainiy plilj (' bio nu d eoijijstent, will, if it turns out t be coiroet. surtc to explain the apparent change of policy oil the pu t of the A'l iuiiii iratio-i will-, rclcum.N. j, J,hnevnca- I