IV 4 i i W. MOORE. I Editon B GOODLANDER, J--1-0"' PRINCIPLES, not KEN. TERMS-!?! 5 per Annum, if rMd in .rlveice m:wsf.1i:svoi, ii.-ivo 27. vol,. XXXII. WHOLE, NO 10fJO GXKAUI'IKU), Wi:i)M;si)AY,.lAN h:g. Clear I If tl 1 0 (J f 5 tint oflrn. NOBLEMEN. Tho noblest men I know oa earth Are men whose hands are brown with toil W ho, barked by no nnccstriiil graven, Hew down the woods, and till tho ioil, ind win thereby a prouder fiuno Thnn follows kin); or warrior's name. The wlrkinjj, men ! whatn'er thoir Insk, To carve the tone, or bear tha hod They wear upon their honest brown The royal tnuip and seal of God ! And brighter aro the drops of went Than diamonds in a coronet! ',o, bless the noblo working men, Who rear the cities of the plain ; Who dig the mines, and build tho chips, And drivo the commerce of the umin ; find Wei's them ! fur their swarthy hands Have wrought the glory of all lands. Fntu Good IIaiuts. Thero aro four ,4 bits a wio man recommends lo io es fiitia y nccessuiy lor the mnnairemcnt of , ., , , ' , , . i .. t i ii tof opposing tho war po icy of John Ad firiDoru concerns ; and these were punc , 11 ' ' , , ' , . r i i- . i auisjmany papers w.re suspended. Oi), iubiIV, accuracy, steadiness ami dispu oh. ' 3 1 i . ,, ', ' ',. ' , , , r.i i posi'.inn was almost silenced in Congress, A il hout the first of these, time u waisted ; . M , ,. , , .. n i i . , .1-. 1 . ; Halls except Albert tmll.it in. hven Jef s to our own credit and inter- , f tvas 'obliged to shut l,im,elf up for ,t, and that of others may be corns b Monticello. and al- BItl ; wuhout he h.ra . noih.ng can , denue Ksl ,U ell clone; and without tho fourth op- , I d , ' p,,tuni los of greo advantages are lost, f fa Administrntion. w hich sou-ht btch it is impossible to recall. j ou to pPr9ecuta lim under the . 3. There are somo who see.Ti to think that dition Law." Hundreds fell away from .liejjoklen age of literature is past -that the Democratic party under tha pretrnce nothing modern is worthy of notice, and of "no party- support the (jovernment ;" .hat it i.s one of the vices of ago that uoiue straggled back, afterwards, like the me discard so much the teachings of the prodigal on, glad to feed on the husks of literary fathers. I'ut the world of thought Democracy ; others strayed along gloomily in fxhuustiess, ard we have only to pro- in the quagmires of "black cockade Fed -duct a liner civilization than the world eralistn." Democratic members of Con iiu8 ever seen, to sccure.as its consummate greswre insultedat theutres.and groaned Jottor, a Ikeraturo of corresponding ex- in public meetings. The haheas cotj,t was silence. j partially suspended ; and all opposition If you have great talents, industry will KM besilence-.l by mobs or . ,1 it. 1 - . -I-!-.: , supprewi-d by the strong arm ol the An- lustry will supply their ... ' ' ' 1 1- deliciencies, .vnt!iiPji is denied to vyll direct jiolliing is CVftr he atiaincd without it A man ni i "lit Irnme ana let loose a ::ui , . . . 1 1 . 1 .iH' to roll in its orbit, and yet not, liavo done so memorable a thing beforo Uod ns he wlin lem go a golden orbed thought to run vuruiigu 1110 g.iici uuuus wi iiim-. ,, 11- 1 1 r .-ii iio Mness is b ind ; whereof it is still in . , 1 , 1 ' 1- cot'iise, but goorl in execut on. ror in 1 ;, fc 1, , . cou 11 sol it is good to see dangers ; in exe ..,, 1. . .1 1 cution not to see them, except they Lo verv cre'it ' L' ' I Iicligion is not n thing which spends itself. It is like a river which widens I'onlinually, and is never so broad or so deep as nt its mouth, where it rolls into the ocean of eternity. (led has not taken ra much pains in fiutuiiig, and furnishing, and adorning this, world, that they who were made by liiiji to live in it should despiso it. Tho mind of a man of genius is a focus allien concentrates rnto one burning beam the languid lights and fires of ten thousand surrounding minds. Time is like a creditor who allows am- pie space to make up accounts, but is in e.ilorablo at last. "I bnve or.e request to to make of you, my : My dear widow, I ; u say." "Well, sir, ; denr Mr. Grant. fill grant anvlhintr vou sav 1 want to be Granted myself." Lndy Yat mouth asked Garrick one day wtiy Love was always represented as a child ? He replied: "Because Love nev er reaches tho uge of wisdom and experi ence." ..I . . . The famous William Tenn had a scape. I gnco relation, whom his punning con tempo. arics described as a fen that had, been "otten cut, never mended." v 1 one aro so seldom found alone, and 1 are so soon tired of their own company.as j uiuso ciiacouius uo ui v on ine uesi lerms wiiu tnemseives To give moral subjects their true relief, you require, a in the stereoscope, to look through two glasses that of the in tellect and ttiat of the heart. 'I am afraid, sir, you are in a settled Melancholy." "No madam, my melan choly won't settle; it has too much pounds." A lie always needs truth for a handle to it. The worst lies are thosej whose han dle is true and whoso blade is false, He who is false to present duty breaks a Wad in the loom, and will find the flaw lien he may have forgot ton its cause. The right thing in the wrong place is a love-letter written on a mourning 6heet of paper. An Irish stationer, nfter advertising a variety of articles, gives tho following I'Aiionc: "To regular customers I nell afers grntis." "Does your dog take to the water?" aid a jri'iit.'omun to a rustic, who hntl a ter spaniel follow ing him. "Why, yes, lrif they put meal in it," whs the "reply. A reserved man is in continual conflict Wlio die social part of his natuie, and "in grudges himself the laugh into Wl"cfi he is sometimes betrayed. An em:grant to Port JNatal, writins uome to one of his friends, says : "We aro leiiing along finely hero, and have ol- ",y lid the foundation of larger Old mnids are cross to the 'RWI. because they have no world in husbands i mo, nt loiuper on. ow sadly true it is in these times.llmt ' evej-y man that divos into the sea of w-tnuiony bnngs up u pearl." The Reign of Terror in John Adam'i Administration THE ALIEN AND SEDITION LAW8 T11K LKSHONS OF HIHTOHV. Xumhcr I, "tiik rk.iuv or terror i. 1708." While there aro ninny things done now which ore unheard of in America, thero in much, though tew remember it, which is hut a repetition of what happened just sixty-threo years ago, in the Administm tiunof John Adams. Availing themselves of tho furious war cry against Franco, tho Federalists of that, day proceeded very much after the fiuhion of the Federal Re publicans of the presentday. The ''Alien Law" whs passed to enable tho President to get lid of sotno certain troublesome Democrats of foreign birth. The "Sedi tion Law" was passed lo allow the Admin istration to "suitress" tho Democratic newspapers of the day. Many ofthe Dem- Illlll ISLI ill lljll. Jlllly till 11119 UVIII1I.-U IIUIil !. . ., 1 , . ., . ,,, in anI I rtnnii n , ti lln.m m 1 11 lt r:ll I !,.. n :i.i .1. might, after two years, through the ballot box, and at the Presidential election of iuiiii 1 ii... ri 1 ..: 1. . 1 iov. - i, iuo ii-iuotim; puny iriuuipumi, 1 Jcllerson was e'.OO'.s;1. i !-. ar.c! John I Adam's party nn-l his measures, Alien and i Sedition Laws, and all perished, and be-( c una n uy ui u mm n ui.?aiiijj uu:i nnui- wardt. the piison doors were opened ; , l. .. ,1 , 1 the "rort La rayettes ' of that day were n , . i- .1 t. compelled to disgorge the r victims : Iem- w"'i " " fc . . ocratic presses were restored ; and oriust i . . sixty years tho Constitution and tho L n i01l were preserved, and tho whole coun- try grew and flouiished and was prosper- ous and luopv as no other country ever was, till the so-cal'ed "Republican party" obtained power, on the 4th of March, 1 SO L . We compile nod condense the following nana ive trom Randall's Life of Jefferson a work wiitten several years prior to the events of the proser.t time. The reader cannot, tall to onserve inn MriKiug simi larity between the two periods. Let eve ry Democrat take fresh courage from the result of therrible struggle for "Liberty and Union," in which their lathers, sixty vears airo, were engaged. Let them never despair of the Republic : When tha X V Z despatches were spread before the American public, fierce l"AJiol f h'd not fajJ. "but in bust throughout 'lie land. not only been insulted,' it was nfamously degraded by being aked to absolutely purchase a hearing from the French Government.' All con- siderations of prudence fell like dry grass in the track ot rushinc tire. 'Let us tight, if we are annihilated,' was the cry that went up from the very heart of a gallant people. Party lines perished in a moment. 1118 imocraw we re .nsranuy reuuee , w . ... I.. l,ucu'"r 11 , w" uur'i 1 ,M lJ'eJ bn.n"' day before, since ,.r o'gnn?"""" s V"ly. Some of the Doraocratic members of tho IIous 0f Representatives instantlv cluingM idts. Others abandoned their posts. Jefferson wrote to iladison, Annl BOth, IT'.KS ; iiles Clopton, Clubell and Nicholas have gone, and Cluy goes tomorrow. Pack er has completely gone over to the wir patty. In this state of things tlioy will carry what they please." This was the same Colonel Packer who had taken such an extreme position a gainst Jay's treaty ; ami hopeless must have been the struggle w hen John Nicho las turned his back 1 War measures bills for preparing fleets ami armies and fortifications rapidly t liiu i 'truiui;! tit . ictiiTia Un utrii 111,111 11a passed Congress, junta of aUen and sedition declaration ot intention and residence in Two millions ot dollars were entrusted to has became rie, Tho most obnoxious j the State made necessary. And aliens a poor, unfortunate, honest, but entirely French residents, dreading somo violent ( were required to report themselves and be incompetent editor of a paper in New action, chartered a vessel and (led homo, i registered by the clerks of tho district I York, to dispense it in t lit be-t manner Kosciusko even was among the fugitives. t courts, under a specific penalty in money, ! he could. Straightway this gentleman be Intimations wet'o not wanting among tho and under penalty cf being mmpe'led to ' g m to purchase linen pantaloons, straw inntimeu ani iriumpnani reaeransis mat even the leniocrAlie leader in tlie House, Albert uattatin, a natuialized citizen, try was made the only proof of residence should be reached by some law, and driv- (for emigrnn's coming into tho country en outof thecountry. When others sue- after (ho passage of the act ) for the pur cumbed to the power of excitement, he jioso of naturalization. Natives or nub neither yielded nor (led his jKist. jects ofcouniries with nhich the United AetdresHes rained upon tho President from military, civic, and unorcanized pub lie bodies, tendering their rupport to his measures. Hut the masses were still, it appears, divided, at least in some places. Jefferson wrote to James Lewis, ir . on tho 9th day of May, 17118, as follows : depart therefrom, within such time ns '1 ar'y passions are indeeel high. I re-1 should be expressed in such order, and if coive daily bitter proofs of people who the person ordered to depart was after nevor saw me, nor know anything of me wards founel in the country, ho should be but- through lorcupine, (Cobbett.) and imprison,;! fur three years. The President lerno , 'rederal editors.) At this mo- waa empowered to order any nlien to be ment all the passions are boilingover, and forcibly removed out of the country, nnd on who keeps himself cool and clear of on a voluntary return lo be imprisoned at the contagion is so far below the point of his (the President's) discretion, ordinary conversation, that he finds him-. Un the Ctli or July. 17'J8. an act was self isolated in every ocioty. However, pnssed that in all cases ot war, or an invn the fever will not las . War, hind tax. in, or predatory incursion m.ule or nnd stamp tx ore soiat:yes which must threatened, all natives or subjects of the cool itsardor. Ihey will hnnir reflection, hostile. nmr, in iur,,;UKigi.i nud tint with information, as nil which our countrymen need, tobring themso and I heir allairs to rights." lvcs A few months earlier Aloxnndoi' Hum earlier Alexander llton was the eartnst ndvocato ol peace tho strenuous supporter of sending for , al Inutility or other orimeagainst the pnh jthal object a mission to Franco, n hicli 1 lie safety, should bo allowed the time to should contain the names of Jcllerson and J dispose of their trends stipulated bv treaty; ! Madison. Now, on tho contrary, he was the strop- I uous advocuto of tho most extensive war p'epnrntions of far more extensive prep- nratinns, indeed, than the most inlhitnmu. ble Congress could be induced to sanction, Of course every dibit wis iiiadu to rep resent tho Democrats wLo opposed the war, ns "traitors" und "lacobins," tht l.iU tor then a term of especial reproach. Jef- i ferson was charged with sending an eniis jsary, (Dr. Logan) to France. In a letter in June, l'.l'i, to Madison, he says: "I)r. CntMiti obniit. 11 liii-tnieht niro. sail ed for Hamburg. This was seized by tho Il'ur Hawks and given out as a secret mis- sion from the Jacobins here, to solicit an army irom franco, insiruct iiieiu us io tneir lanamg, ivc. mis extravagaucH produced a real panic among toe citizens; and happening just when liache publi-li - ed Talleyrand's letter, Harper, the Feder- . l I 1 .1 i.i.i r I . . . . I aneauer, on li e 1111 01 .li ne, uruieiy n 11 rwiii n 1 rn tli.i I I mi uj wkf K'utirnmiifi 1 11 I lives that thero existed a traitorous cone. Mr. Jawes then rcsiun, d his nrgumot.t smmUnce between the Ja.-obins here, ("sc-! 11,0 eivil apprnpnat.on bill. Ho said : oessioniUs") and tho French Directory ; 1 ,,01e ,i,re eigl.ty-thre regiment ol cayal that he had got hold of some threads n,",d lT'y' ':' ll,f,,,'",!.",1 s"''-"'-. clue of it. und would soon bo able to do- "V" ," t0 l,ul on" ' ""'T ,"" l't1s 0,1 velnne the whole. This inrrejiaed the -v. '"" ,"'ll,ro 11 " ",OVP- 1 " l,".V Millions larm, tho libetAlists immediately set to work, .lirectlv and indireetlv. to comoli cate whom thev pleased. lWui.inefUob- i belt) gave me a principal idiaie in it, as, I am told, for I never read his papers." And just about the same time, '(Junej 2'.l, 17'JS) President Adams, in reply to an address from tho Legislature of New ILun shire, said : "I am happy to assure you that, tn far 1 W nil' i ,1 fnrm 11 1 inti pvlntirL I 1 1 a nil, ,wi I i , ill to the Federal Governmnt in all the er States as well as in Niw llmiijltire, is too small to merit the name of division." So little was there then left of tho Dem ocratic party, thouirh Jeti'crson hinuell was living and at its head. dumber II. THE WAR I EVER. The ivnr fittil'if. lmrf nut nnitiv in rmi- cress. Tho President had been alrea.lv ,nl,nri-,o,l in nci,l,Kl in,,,i.a 1 1, a navy ; to expend Jf-JjO.OOO for harbor for- tilicution; to purchase ?SHt),(KiO worth of arms and ammunition ; to enlist a provis- j ional army of lO.OUO troops for three years, in the event of a declaration of war, or; imminent danger (in the President's opin ion) of an invasion; to order our navy to .,;...,.( (...!.,., inl ,,nvl. .nv nei. oil vw- sol which had attacked American vessels, or which should bo hovering on tho coast ofthe United States for tho purpose of comrnittins depredations on the vowels belonging to citizens thereof; and to sus pend commercial intercourse! between tho United States and Fiance and its depetix dencies. The next day after receiving th Presi dent's message, (June 2J, 17','S.) Congress authorized him to otlicer and uimhe pi ) provisional army. On the "oth it author ized oui' merchant vessels to forcibly re sist any 8?arch, restraint, or seizure-, from any vessel sailing under French colors, to capture tho latter, and mako recaptures. On the 28th, tho President was authorized to treat persons taken on board captured vessels, as prisoners, On the Oth ol July, it was enacted that 30,001) stand of arms bo obtained and sold to the State Govern ment. On thu "III, tho treaties between the United Siatcs and France were ele clared annulled. On the 'Jih, the Presi dent was authorized to direct our navy to capture any armed vessels of France, and to grant commissions to privateers to do the same. On the 1 lth, he was authorized to raise a marine corps. On the 14th, a direct tax of $2,000,00i) was imposed to meet expenses. On the 10th, the Presi dent was empowered to raise twelve regi ments cf infantry, and six troops of light dragoons, and oflieer, lo borrow $.", 000,000 for the public service, and to borrow .2,i 000,000 of the bank of tho United States, on the credit of the direct tax. THE AMEN LAWS. This was not all. Legislation against 'interior foes' was made to keep pace with the warlike preparations against France. On tho lSth of Juno the term of residence reiiiiititc to naturalization was extended lo fourteen years, and fUe years ptovious give surety ol peace and good hrlmvtorst tho eliscrelion of a magistrate; and regis- States were at war could not be natural- uod. On the 2i th of June, 1708, it was made lawful for the President to order nil such aliens as he should judijc danirrtm to the nenen and sn'ptv nf tlinllnitnd Slinim in tually naturalized, should bo liable lo lo secured or required to give seem it v for ' good liiuiuvior dt President, and on lllO elisoietiotl Of tllO I lib I'.iot'l iimat ion, oxi ..i .' cepi mat, inoso not cliiirgciibln wit 11 (n-to and the treaty with Fnmco was the next day annulled. I ho special courts of the L intra states wpio nulhniizoil, on ooni- j plaint, to npproliondnlions win continued in the country 'contrary to the tenor or intent' of tho President's prochiin ' timi 'or jother regulations' which the l're.-iilent c. , tnblished 'in the country, to give BUtet'es,' or bo otherwise 'restrained.' 1 ((.'(iioii.si'im m:rt t:crl;. ) REMARKS OF MR. DAWES OF Mass. Mr. Dawes (rep.) of Massachusetts, ad- 'essed t!ie IL.uso of Represent it ivm on tho 1,'lth, o:i the conduct of the war, in w,ich he told some very unple.isant truths. '',,, fu( rontracts he speaks of are plainly atlributablu to the Si eretary of War. Is it any wonder should find it then, that (Jen. Cameron 1 convenient to retire from 1 ,u. Ct,,inet and taken trip to l'uroiio? .0,' uoll',M ,llnvu ,luH ,'0('" sxponde i these cavalry regiments betoro they of dollars have thus been expended on left tlie ''amimients where they were mus tered into service. And hundreds and thousands of these horses have been con detuned and rent back to Flinira and to nnopons and to this cly l0 spend the winter. Any day minureils ol them can bo seen round the city of Washington, chained to trees, where they were left to starve to death, (lungs of two hutub'od oth-'hftwsiii various places have been (litis left to die, and not till the committee on thu District cf Columbia have eallod for a ineasui'9of tegi-latioi) to protect the city from the danger to bo apprehended from this horse "(iolgotha." Hesides the con tracts for these hor-.es, there are others for all the details of furnishing these reg iments, in addition to the arms in the hi'.tids of the liiiO.Oi.iil soldiers in the Ib id. Numerous outstanding enntraeis inada ' I1'1 l" iv lt0 individuals-not, mado upon "d vor t ise men t i ot I nude w 1 1 h 1 1 e k n o w I iV' ' 'u Jl" tjut ma le I'V ex- mem bers of Coniin ss.who knew no more ofthe dillerence ietn i'en one class ol arms and another than does a Methodist minister. There are outstanding contracts for the manuhtcturc of Springfield muskets the first emc ot whb'h cannot bo delivered in . ' ,HO"l" 1 hero is a kix mnnins irom mis date. 1 liere contract lor the supply of o.io m, hop lmd nmety thousand muskets al ejs piece, .'' '' 'lual.tyot musket ,s inan- i '.""""r And an ex-meinher ol Congress is hour in Massachusetts trying to get machinery mado by which he will bo able to tnanu. facturo in some six months hence, at .'l apiece, those l ille muskets manufactured today in that at mory for fl.t ,ri0. lVovi- deuce before six months will dispose of this war, or lie will dispose of us. Not one of those mu.-kets thus contracted will lie ol tlie slightest, service in this enior- eene,or ueioieiini pi o iiience oi uon, -I...H i". i r... ..;i ....ii .i: . .. ui,,!, 1 1 t , i i.m mi, niu ni.ioau ol it. lie would ask Ins I: lends Iro n the North and Northwest how tin y expect to benefit by an armory at Chiragn, Rock i Island and at (juiuey, III., when :i million nnd ninety thoutatid muskets will, nc- cording to tho two contracts, ho thrown : upon the country, and that after the war is over, and nt suc.i in enormous pt :co, in addition to other outstanding ton tracts for the manufacture, some time hence, of 1172. 000 Knrield lilies. Hesides thero aro 7r,5bt sets of harnoss to be ilelivered by nnd by nt the cost of one million nine hun dred nnd seventy-eight thousand four hundred nnd forty-six dollars. He had not time to enumerate all these contracts. When wo appiopriated nt the l ist session ol Congress for tho purpose twenty mill ion dollars, thirty-seven million and some thousands of dollars had been nlready pledged to contractors, not for tho ,ur cl.ase of ai ins lor the men in the field, not to protect those fighting the country's hattles in this great emergency and peril, but for bouie future uo The riot of the l'.'th April in Haltimoro opened this ball, nnd on t lie 121 -t of April, in the oit v of New York, there was org in j ized a corps e,f plunderers of tho troaniiy hats, London porter dried herrings nnd for the ar.nv till ho such like provisions expended -n this way ?,j'.t0,000 of tho mon- Johnson, who gave, her a cow. ey, nnd then he got scared nnd quit. j Laughter. Thero is nn appropriation j John P. IIai.e. This republican Sena alsoforthe supply of wood to the army. ' tur, from our State, has relieved himself fins contractor is pledged tho pay ment of f)f a WHr speech, i:i which F.ngland and tho seven dollars a cord for all the wood de- president received about uu fqual share of livered to the dillerent commands-wood the geMitletna:i's attention, lie wants a collected after the labor of the soldiers fibt with b ngland and will havo one-with themselves had cut down the trees to Mr. Lincoln. It is hoped, however, thut clear tho ground for their batteries, ami tho Pre-ident will survive this attaok. this contractor employs the army wagons J, Cll ,,ttv tlso clown to perfection; but to draw it to tho several camps nnd ho w)llM, ho undertakes lo be serious bo has no further trouble to draw his seven f;ljis Ijlronia New Hampshire Ihm. dollars a cord, leaving the government to , . draw the wood. Laughter. tThe following is un excellent con- It costs two millions cf elcllsrs every day ! dcnsalion of tho proceedings of Congress, to support the army In the hold. A hun- j not only of Weelncsday, but every elay Jrcd millions of dollars has thus been ex- since the commencement of tho session : ponded since we met on the second day of December, nnd all that timo our army ' has bctn in repose. What tho expemli- ture will increaso to when that great day shall arrive when our eyes shall be irbid- ! dened with a Mght of the army in motion ho didn't know. And this hundred mil lions will go with the hundred more ha' Another hundred mil I to these before the 111, li'MIS lllliv be Illc i- t i. ti. i of March. What it may co-t In put down I tho rebellion Iih cared very little, provided nlwavs that it bo put down olb-ctinlly, liil laith without woik.s is dead, und h i'- 1 was tree to confess that his faith some- times fails him-ho ment his faith in ,i, -not his faith in . cause. When the history ol those times shall bo written it I w ill bo a (U"-lion up ui w liom the guilt j will rest most heavy upon him who has COD pi i oil to destrr y, or upon him who has i proved incompetent, to preserve the in stitutions bequeathed lo us by our lathers. It is no wondei that the public treasury trembles mid (daggers like a strong man with too great a burthen upon him. A strong man in an aii'-exluiiiste 1 receiver, is not more helpless to day than is the tieisurvol tho government beneath tho exhausting process to whicl- it is subject ed. Tho miglitv monarch of the forest himself may hold at buy the tioiee-t and mightiest of his loi-s, while the vile cur, coming up behind him and opening his fang, gives him a fatal wound, and ah though ho may struggle or. boldly and va lienlly, the life-blood is silently trickling trom his heui't, and he is ut last forced to loosen Ins grasp, and he grows faint, and falteis and dies. In conclusion he said it is impossible that the treasury of the United States can I meet and continue to met t this state of things sixty days longer, ami an iguotni notis peace must he submitted to unless ; we see to it that the credit ofthe country I is sustained, and sustained too by the con' virtion going forth from this hall to the j people of the country that wo will treat ; ns traitors not only those w ho aro bold unit muni,.' iiiiiiili i.i i.4 i ii. I',. ,,rt r r I'..,... : ,lt. ,i(,U .... ,. ,,0,e..ia0 u.1(. clandestinely and stealthily suck the life blood from ns in the mighty struggle. Hon. Mr. Ely on the War. The Hon. Mr. Kly, the member of Con gress Irom New York who was taken pris- Jonrr nt the battle of Hull Hun, und con- lined nt Richmond until recently was honored wit h a public reception on nni I ving at New York. He addressed the ciowd tluit had congregated in tho street, 1 and in the course of his remarks, spoke as follows : i I Gentlemen, I am persuaded that tho .vast iivniv lommilted to the trusty hands eiftieu. McClellan has loo much lo do. If ,i i i ... i . , i nave le.iineo anything in n o past it is tluit we light a penpie teiriKy in earnest. The e-ry o l'alatoix nt Saragossa "War, even to tho knife"- -is still their cry. Firm in the belief that we seek their sub jugation, they have waxed desperate, nnd neither life nor treasure will be spared to . . , i ., procui ;n uuvanee ot our arms, A re bellion so extensive and zealous as that which now- rei'Mis throughout thu South ' can only be overcome by the host nnd stronge'-t cll'oits of a united North. We inust, us erne man, shoulder to shoulder, heart to heart, forgetful ol party, of prep udice, of all but cou-.itiv, join tviih the government in its exertions lor the pres. ervation of the republic. So only may e, by God's good help, restore tho r.a- tionai bt.nner whence it h;-.s boon rudely torn ; and, by e-onquest, win enduring peice, ana etai.li-h our power to e-ni .i . :. . , 1 ., 1 wuii iiauors ai iinine as suceossiully ns we have with foes from abroad " Whilst in Richmond, Mr. L'ly had ev ery opportunity, by mingling with people from all parts of the South, to learn their real feelings, mid his conviction that they are "terribly in earnest" is very frankly aeknow! edged. The gre.'it mistake of the people- of the North always has been I lull the character and energy, -.he power, strength and de termination of the Southern people, have always been underrated by them. KiiiiiT Ciiii.nrir.N- at a Ii it t ii. On the 2d of August. Mrs. Timothy Bradley, of Trumbull county. Ohio, gave birth to 8 children three boys and live girls. They are all living, and are healthy but quite small. Mr. IVs. family is increasing, lie was married six yours ago to liunico Mo-.v-ery, who weighed 2'J7 pounds on tho day of her mar. iage. She has given birth to two pair of twine, and now- eight more, making twelve childieu in six years. It seems strange, but neve rtholess is true, Mrs. 1',. wa-a twin of thiee. hor mother and father both being twins, nnd her grandmother tho mother of five pair of twins. Mrs. H. has n lined her children niter notorious men ; one nfter J. R. GiiD j elmg-. w ho has given her a cpleiidid g,.l 1 , medal; one after the Rev. Hon. Kliiali ' ( hanipbun, who gave her a deed of filty acres of lar.d : ami the other after James Cor., N. Y. Kx press. FROM WASHINGTON. HyMnil.l ftrpnrt rtf Congress H ednesdmi. " Negro," ', " Negro," "Neiro." " Negro." "No - 'cro," "Negro," "Negro." Yours, etc., WritiMa.v. had enumerated Ecommy Advocatrd. enitor i'osser.den, of Maine, a leading Republican in Congress, in u recent speech, urging the necessity jor moio economy in the public exjieinlitures, said ; ii l' i i ... I, , ,T t , , l' 1 , ' 1 !! Lxemtivo niipears to have been tn so" who cuiild tallc liiuilest about tho largest iim't of money to bo spent, as if that would ac complish tin, I'lirpo-o. 1 warn Sonatina that wo must begin soinewhnvi in the, work of retrenchment und begin hj rodj, ly ; and, for my p.irt, I mean to begin at tie very first point that pieents itnelf to economize the public money, or ivo shall soon bo in a position where we shall havo no money to economize upon. Look, for instance, nt one example of the manner in which thingi are managed. Tho government ofthe army started with the idea that we wanted no cavalry. Pre-tty snnii they carno to the com lusion that we did want c.ivnlry, and tlioy gavo notice of that fact ; and without counting what was to bo the end of it, and what it was to come to, they allowed every man who ofiei ed to do so to raise a regiment j of cavalry. A regiment of cavalry costs something 1 1 cost about double what a I regiment of infantry costs, and perhaps I more than double; 1 presume it co-da tfl.oOO.tlOO a year. 1 was informed by a man who knew all about it, because he is one ofthe very hiuhest military mon dial ten thousand cavuhy was all we could use, or twenty thousand at the out side ; and how manv havo wo tn-dav ? We have sixty regiments of cavalry either raised or in piocessof being raised, and most of them, as my friend fi. m Iowa stifcosts, are regiments cf two vo hundred men each. There is very littlo use fir them. The Government can do nothing with them. They are not even aruiod. and we have no arms for a verv l.u ee pro portion of them ; and vet they tire raistd. and the men aro aid. and the horses aro bought and supported by the Government. Many ol these regiments are coming here, ami others are on their way here. Thero is no provision for them ; no service to bo required of them when they eomo here. There is at least sVil 1,000,1100 to bo spent for cavalry, for which tho men who con trol the army say they have no use anil rdl because nobody inquired in the fi;'st 'lace how many wore necessary." Desolation in Missouri. A letter in tho Chicago J'rilj'ine, dated at West iVnt, Mis-oari, I'ccemper 'JTtli, gives this pio- t ti re : "I thought that somo scones previously witnessed had given tuo a vivid realization of the horrors of war, but nothing brought them so cleai ly before my mind as tho country bet veeti here and Ilanisonvillo and town of West Point, At Grand River we found the planking ofthe bridgo torn up to nliHtruct our passage, but managed to replncit tlirm so as to cross. After lear this point, till wo tvi;elied camp, tho whol i country is one scene of desolation and miseiy. Wo passed through thirty or fori ty deserted houses, with the evidence of hasty departure about them. Windows were broken, doors smashed open, fences down, und every whero the crops wero uu gathered. In one house wo found two families, the heads of which had both been kilied by tho man tiding parties infesting tho country. Only one farm that I saw in thai day's rido had gathered nn ear of corp. But 11. o desolation culminated when West Point w,i reached. This was formerly n flourishing town ol 10 or 200 houses. There is noiv but one family liv ing in it. The hous s aro windowle.ij nnd dooili hs, thn stores have all been plunder ed, and the best buildings in tho pi am nre used by Newgent's men as st ibles. Noth ing could bring up the thirg more nle;.rly than this scene. Hai visouvillo was but little better than this, and to burn a country over does not Veavo so sad a pic ture of woo and misery as this section now presents." Cost op Aiiolitionism. "What Slavery is costing," says tho Chieag) Tii'jtne, quo ting Mr. Seero'nn Chase's Repot t, ' is ?S'J71::72.8,.I2." Nay, good sir, that is what ul-J'-iiowsm is costing. Slavery was here nt th," birth of tho Republic, nnd received the protection of the Constitution and of tho 1 ias of tho United Stales. While abolitionism is comparatively a new devil, born of lust ami fanaticism, but for which the Union would now bo prosperous and hpp P.V Therefore say that Abolitionism is now costing the country almost two million of I dollars per dnv, nesine a oottoiijlesd ocoan of blood. Ilrrycn Icnncra. JCsAJ -1 1 is a curious coincidence that all tho journals which aro now bawling to lut tiiv for Emancipation, are tho very same ones which ngreed last fall with th Now York Tribune, that "tho South is worth nothing to tho Union, an 4 if she re;illy wnnts to leave it we will ' her o if." It is not at all unlikely that ti, ' Abolition cries, i-hich ring out with sin li pecubar fervor at this time, aro intended to ' help her out." Wheu.er intended or not they surely have a tendency lo do so. Wicty Observer. Two Thousand Dollars kor a Kict. At New Bedford, Mass.. tho leleree, in the ease of Ditn n ck vs. Cleveland, master o" tho bark Margaret Scott, has assn'seei damages against tho eiofondant to the a moiint of ?"2,0iii). Dimmeek was a fore mast hand on boar J thu bark, and bro-tght an notion nt-ainst the nia-ter, claiming damages torn kick by which entnphinar.t s-as permanently injured. By order ol court tho deuiii'i is made tir.al. jgy-Lato English papers state that th ' privateer NasRv ille was stili at S iuth imp ton, but tho Britibh government had IV bid her to rtn.