The Lebanon advertiser. (Lebanon, Pa.) 1849-1901, August 14, 1861, Image 2

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    know, andevWry well.,infordind man knows, that'
the existence or a really oPprbssive - titeiff in this
country has always been limited to a very short
period. It must always be so. The reason is
plain. Nine out of ten men. in all domMoniiies
are consumers, and of course .pay the tariff. As
all vote, at least with us, it does.not take lung to
convince the nine, that a blab tariff taxes them
unnecessarily for the benefit of the manufacturer.
So true Is this, thnt-if ever that question, alone,
is made the issue between parties again, even in .
Pennsylvania, she will, as she did when it was so
done formerly, again give her. 30,000 majorities
•for moderate duties.
'I rejoice to think that it will hereafter be treat
ed as it is, as n . question of finance, and be with
drawn from the arena of parties, 'with whilth it
has proper nffinity. So far, thervifo:e, as the
fluctuating legislation on this subject constants
your rebellion, it neither deserves to be, nor COIL
it be, rived to the dignity of oppression,
.• 'Having, 'I think, shown that the argument
whereby you compare yourselves to the heroes
and patriots of the Revolution (who unlike you.
were loth to take up anasewho put -off the evil
day until the-lust moment, and .vho clung to
their allegiance, until.the: prison 'ship,' the 'dun
geon, and the gallows, were Offered them •as tire
tender mercies of their king.) is wholly
I next proceed to your second at gumen t..
You charge directly Upon the Werth the settled
purpose to destroy slavery. It is not so. 'The
great conservative masses of the 'North know
?Abet the evil ismot , your. fault, and no little 113
-yourselves can they see an inlequate and practi
cal remedy, consistent with your own well being.
Until they did, they would never have interfered
with it, nor then, except with your consent and
• co-operation. Hew attend the facts f Ido not
speak of opinions but of deeds. Yon know that
it is an eletnente'ry principle bpth of the common
•and the civil law, that oo man can sustain an ac
tion, unless he can, provAltilt h`eitas sustained an
injury. So by the law of nations, no people can
justify a revolt unless they can establish ammo of
oppression. Of coarse they -may, 'without that,
succeed and establish a new goverment, .Thist
Is the ease now trying. , It is by the laW, adiac
-cording to the low, that we Northern men desire
and intend - as be goo...tied, and not othervrtso,—
Whet has been/done by the North to injure yuu ?
Has slavery ever, been attacked by legivlationl-•
'Not-so. :There are-Macy acts' of COngress in
.
tended to secure:and estahli;li it; not lltip thot is
"leveled against itAirenlyer ',lf there
be one or two, whose Indirect operati,m tends to
• weaken or destroy its hold, such we're .plsli at
the instance of your statesmen, by the votes of
your reprebentatives, and with purposes directly
the contrary. So true is this, that, the last (-on
: dress, with a clear Bla:elt 'Republican inrijoritY;
• after the cotton States seceded, granted you ail
you have ever claimed, by passing bills erecting
the whole unorganized possessions of the United
, HtateeititotTerritories without the Wilmot pro.
-viso,•an - d-tltuspunder the Dred Seott decision; the
acknowledged and undoubted law of the land,
Opening the whole of them to 'your slaves, *-
Tided you were willing to 'lake them there to
'grave. Nay more,. When, 'this revolt broke out,
the control of Otte Senate of thetHaited States, so
far as conasirned legislation on this subject, was
absolutely in your hands for four years, that of
the House of Representatives, certainly fur two,
probably for four years ; and the Supreme - Court
of the United States had decided the law in your
favor, and could not be changed. So, entirely
bas its decision been respected, that the present
:Executive, the only power In the Cloven:tweet
that the Republican party could have wielded
• bad the South remained loyal, , was obliged to
recognize slaveams property, 'ire- consequence of
, Generarßutler'a famous "contraband" letter, soil
only yesterday 'Senators Trod:Anil' and Wilson
recognized•tbem as Both, by inefieding them in
'The eottllaentionliTll. On this pOint;tlren,lf you
'have any Me at all, It is•tlnenrem abnue irijur n.
`You may reply, if there 'he no real miss for
'this rebellion or revolution, heir came it about..?
'Men do not plunge ibte all the horrors, of cirri
war without some good ;mason. No indiv.idual
_risks hie life, unless drunk oriasine. without an
adequate cause. Neither do nations encounter
, the expense and all the known evils of. war from
'the-mere lomat fighting. It is true. There ere
two main evils, for one of which the war furnish
es no remedy, but rather exasperates it; whilst
for the other it may. These, with' minor ones,
have enabled your demagogues, 'with the aid of
mob-law, , to inaugurate this civil Neer, end to get
your people to present n pertlalry united front.
The first of these is, that the agitation of the
slavery question'has rendered your labor ill:M-
C*lre. Although the fanatics of NO! England,
supported by tho example , and money ''of - Exeter
Nall, are responsible, for the coin'amneement of
this abhorrent agitation, yet their e(rorts would
have been of little avail, if they had not been
aided by the politicians of both eectiuns, These
'wretched vultures, whose groVelling alumna dis
• abletiqbeni from - attaining -th/altid entinenie of
AlasestanetsuutAtatulol4austeiongtit office at the
orth, bytpandeiing-to end ;xciting, the natural
anti•otlavery'sentiments of - ourgeople,-ond-at the
.t-South,k by thellite course toward-the- pro-ilavery
'opinion 'of yours. In the North their success
• made 1 lOU iltflerenee. All knew. theConsti to tiao,
few were unwilling:to abitle•W ;He provisions,
and there could, therefore, , tse.no premien, result:
lit was meribrutumfuranen. Their exertions only
served to give office to men, who, for the most
part, had no real iittachinent to the- principles
they professed; and who eert flinty were not ready
to make any perionareacrifines for them. In the
South it, was different.' The etern'il - harangues
bf your candidates Orillat.ery, could net bui•• vii
feet your rlavitif."' Thar 'ore then. Itwetel'' igrio
/runt and stupid, and'will think, and when upper
tunity offers tans, gradually. het eurely they
have done so. 'Thereat/It ierhititgits•you-wiii of
their fidelity, that Mass of their -ownera 'are•in
•eonetont dread or an- inentreetiao. Notit
Justified-that dread4e.,the names of Nat. Turner
and lieumark Vekey will retniiid yea with a flyild
of horror. It ont.t niledithe evoking nf C new
Toussaint L'Onertetre hVeedeert iumginatinilinto
/reality; It is not surprising that a people expos
.ed to the perbapit irrepressiblefury•and nameless
tartrate of a servile ineurrectlon,. should lead A
iteady ear to the phiutiAlloplans of the 111111.1tittus
•and•deeigning•istie,propeeed to relieve thein aim
itsierrere, o*mM-they knew that their • Skeen
lien must be• attended-with heavy secridees Of
their interests, their peaceend their liberty.
The second cause was•first :suggested to rue by
/the returns under the banltrupt act of 1841. s If
shy memory serires•ma eorreetly the oche/lOlca of
debts' in the States* south hi Mason it Dixon's
line, wiped out by that law,-tirinounted td abeht
• $600;000;000. The appraised value of the sailed.
nlen of the assets came in the aggregate to some
thing over $2,000,000. At present the South
ewe' the North, according to the best authorities
abouts2oo,ooo,ooo. This result is not owing to
legislation,
but, as might. be •deintiestrateil, to
,moral and physical c r uses; ash MU :will ever 'kilepi
.the South in debt to stone nation, shoutd It form'
,its kaleidescoPe Oonftderery. The debtors ere
among your most wive,' vigilant, intelligent find
mritietleally influential citizen's. I ,f, 110 t 111Ciln
?that they seek or generally obtain eolith-al hen
,ess. Those aVe reserved -for your Ousters end
rprOfesBloo44.ll4u, /whom I includ e jour.
mallets. They ars practioal 'thinker& They MN!
-Men who allensty . eit irtr•/1 your daily life. They
ate your bushier/ -class, 'who with you as with us;
'really guide the- whole policy of their set-dim,
without making-the noise a tient% which the pro
fessional or gen death niy politician is apt to think
en indispeneable preliminary to the peescesion of
power. To this.silent biit mighty o hms the ervit
war is a tonveniennankaupt aet. any-of them
are trot very sornpolouli e and to the best and mast
;honorable man. the :postponement or escape from
einin',ll a relief_ whieh'/will' losenaibly- bias his
reason. Perhaps thik principle meiy extend into
other classes. The high. price of cotton for`some
years past makes it probable. No doubt many
of your planters, tempted by extravagant profits,
bars mortgaged their farms to buy' negroee and
open up new land. Our coal miners and iron
masters are apt to purses that plan• daring - sea.
:sons of -high prices, and ruin is geoerallytthe re
sult.
~ There are many minor causes which have aid.,
ed' to produce tolerable
unanimity; as; for in.'
stance, the mutual rage, brought about by long
yehre of sneers and abuse, and the litre, in addl.'
tioolO those-I have mentioned. - All'of them pat
together woUld-bare been 'unable to override the
deep love for the4.lwiort which It firmly believe
-etitilsoxkurties your rebellion, had itwot been fur
7our pertisan leaders, and, I am free toleonfess,
mere. De morttris nil wietlronttni, ie maxim gen . .'
evilly to be observed. Nevertheless, where' the*
publie acts of a man lead to such- tretnendeus
consequences, the fair discussion of them is no
Waitress on his just fame. Stephen A. Douglas
weir the onquestionable nothor of.rhe repeal of
the. Missouri Compromise. line, From which act
date all our4erious troubles. U. wits right in
prineittle, but Thee had made the compact snared.
The South assisted him and must °hese the. re
aponeibility. Hurl that, line been extended'to the
PaCitio, as was wisely end ably counselled by Mr.
Buehanan lb -his Reading letter; the present crin.•
',Olsten, would probably have been indefinitely
ponponed. It wed .not--to--be so. Tile , lesser
ilights.of free milieu , who based their notion on , .
the 'let the Union slide' school, although no ,
friends to Mr. Douglas at, that time, aided him in
the work, the result of which they well foresaw,
How nobly Mr. Dongine sought to redieur his it -
reparable error; Lhave neither tilde nor space; tti.:
Medusa.. He died honored bv , his I#orst face, he
loved by his friends.. We ult. believe tent in nil
human prObobilliy, Hi, untirlint end' I'most BU
pfultiuman tatinra,eoft blawhiet difettind -he. was as
nebnuvicelailo,l this atiinorehielmut if , tre: bad . :
.01 1 4.91-4 1 $41861:111,00 toeseprO tteirfiehdikfibetsitk,
-
The contest of 1860 which destroyed this great
man, proved two things. It showed that' with..
reasonable prudence and concillatiun, the Demon,.
racy weald returti, , rte. - 7:Power in. 1884. D else,
showed that whoa it (lid, the Northern and nat;l:
the Southern Detsmeracy,-.would for:. - ibel'uture
govern its policy. Moe Mae leschryttme.` ,
I was not a mertfber °Mite CharWien Convenv
tine, but my experience in those of Baltimore
and Cincinnati, and a c.froful perusal of the pro
ceedings of those held in tB6O, together with
tionVersation‘hrerrith tenliihers of the last Men.
Lionel, enabled use to, see that the Southern De
mueratiy, saisfieti that they'. could no longer on
-000 the highest place; of power under our glo
rious constitutional edifice 'were determined to
pull-down the OillaNntirWhich it rested, even at'
the risk of being burred in its ruins, without
thought for the true ;Ind honest hearts, who, site
rifieing their natural-and honorable ambition to
prlnciple, had been for years battling in their"
cause; caring noiliing for, if they th nght -of,
GM misery bud deselation,vwhich their pre-deter. .
mined course would hring on titans:toils of inno
cent anti happy homes at theNNorth and the
Staab. .Indifferent to the well being of the yonth
of, the nation, "its hope and its stay, who, left
at home in the walks of peace would
come totef.,l and good citisens, but now, , if 'bet
, IrAlled, may, either wonder crippled and useless to
, a-pauper's-grave, or worse still, rafted body and
seubby Abe license of the camp, return to demor
alizethe comtnabities, ,they were intended to
adorn. They -were- blinded to everything but
their mad atubition: They were gifted with suf,
ffetens nederstaddirtvitrid forecast to see, that I
front the causes mentioned and others, they could
measurably unite tterSouthern people in the con
test, anti dehberatety =nod with malice 'afore
thought, they plunged this happy and prosper-
Dui nation into all the horrors of a civil
They did it with the hope fit - factions and 'treas
onable support in the North. It cannot be de
' flied. Well; be sere that not the bitterest aboli
tionist who tread's the arid soil: ofNew England,
or the most fanatical follower Of Joshua R. Gid
dings in the Western Reonve of Ohio, feels half,
the soreness of heart, or hopes mire earnestly for
vindictive retribution, than tirt sincere .11rerk:n
ridgetnenovho so long fotight your political het
ities with ever diminishing forces,' w ith 'their
friend* sod -neighbors. Not 'retribution fin,your
people. God turbid. They are.deluded and. de
ceived_ But en the deluders a trk.the deceivers.
I. know hundredS of teen le - this State, whose tale
eats nod kitmv ledge
,woiartgrace any; the highest
stollen, - who have been content tiO Mad' a life of
ceonsparesive wbsenrity r solely eh account of their
devotion• toilhlt-Ounnieution which. was and is
your only safe-guatl. 'They thought they well
defended its sacred..gmtran tees when they. ettn.,
tended for yenr,rights under it, and which 16111
always secured'to you. When it would no lon'
ger serve the purposes of the satTisli ambition - of
Southern demagogues, they have es Plainly -de
noenced- it by their nets, - as-'a covenant with
death 'and a league with heir,' , as Wendell Phil
lips and Garrison have in. words. They bad not
the apology of the latter, of sincere eoniiertion of
the truth of the blasphemous degina. •TiXe of
these, your former frierMs, who could-go, are al:
ready int the held. fritose'.who cannot,, have -or
if occasion demands ' scud their; sons.
a feud of broken faith, of. unprovoked „fraternal
treichary,and, of course, proverbially bitter anti
unforgiving. .
I think I do tint inisrepresetit the Northern
Democracy when I sky that they ore' thorOughly
in earnest to put'dairn. thiscrebellion, nor Its - lit.
tie, when -I declare that their attachment to State
rights, is as, firra and immutable . as ever, : The
.Douglite-Democrat and .the Dreekinryge „Dento
crat, as ready os they are to, stake their ell for the
.seppert of thetnien,'just so retolY 'are they to
wage tire sorne'stake in suppart - of strict cent
stritetiee 6f the •Constifficirrn. 'They will never
submit to a ecotratized Government, as Toreshad.,
owed in the speech of Secretary Cameron to - the
St. Andrew's Society,. whether he meant 'it or
not, There are some ominous tokens of a Wire,.
Mutt and irreverence towards the letter and spit.;
it of the grett charter AT our - liberties fFhOwn by
the Administration and ito supporters, whit% if
continued will certainly oust it-from power.,. -It
will however be dime by the ballot, and not by
the beljet - tind bayanet. Those we reserve for
traitors, and thOtigh the current news seems fa
vorable to your unholi cause, I feel an abiding
faith that God will not desert the nation on which
be has showered so many favors. 'lt has been
thy lot before now, like holy David.' to 'see the
winked great in, power, and flourishing.likea
green bay tree; nevertheleas I passed, and.,..they
were net, and the place thereof knew 'them no
more.' I remain no longer your 'friend,
JOHN WEIDMAN,
Lena..trow, July 23,11881..-...'1
baurn
-
;
'WREN DEMOCRATIC PRINCIPLEB4IEARD TO LEANIVII CEASE
• „ TO.POELOM."
BCBRESLIEt, Editoiand'Propiletpr .
- • :*: LEBAS ON° TA. -
vveDivtgryni,ltif6tWr !sq.'
_ - 'itiei r rrotte the Jetim published jig
another column,. fronts ri member of
Oath.: i l fan tes Mpa"ily, %ye learn that
e3qaye , ,repoi •pp ipAy: as yet', al ,
thottirthree , 'mettiha3:n serried. Th'e.
w Hier 6f: tIW - let(e)4Aomplains bitter=
Lyt4reof fs a,a,rh e r Its good reason.—
But _ taking Alfitqrs ttla4 'comparing it
isrth``tile : lioa.:4Kl • „anneuncemeiiC of
the” •
Courter,, last. week - , that the gay
er Men t "Oft-1i btirro .any a mdd n
necessary for7tbe i 4 . aktenance...of a
vast fleet, andd - a force in the fioldr;of
500,004;" we arb necessarily 'lead .to
exclaim, "why, thep., it_liorrow
some ,and pay off its poor soldiers?:'
Many`of iti' Cite army Wave
flu:Mires at home,; timd -lipw ti - n 3 gov
ernment expects them to live, exactpt
on charity, is boyd:nd eoMprelit.osion.
r-rph e Cen t rice giv OS It .ong row'of
names of loyal a ci - i6ns, and in timates
that beeause :we do not publii'sh
speeches del!ye ' red .
that we "withlkohl,:patriotie truth."
Cool as a cuckimberv , pcsitively. ' We
do not remember that the COltriCT it
self has published Any- safi,thekSpeech
es it refers to,• el eeptiq Sdine 're.
rn'trks of Senator "JOhnsbit in its 'very
last issue. It was only likstweck that
we published a very gebd;: sti•aight.
forward little speech`bY Qen. Scott,
and as..the Courier has. not, !and,
.we
behove; will'not, publish it;'We Might;
with equal proprietysay it "withheld
patristic t raxth." But roost of ,all,
the Courier should' 'edaiiptarq . . 04
this"wore. p '4i t: k.'ve publish nearly
all the speeches , delivered. - by
'Lincoln - 'MS - jaiiibus tour from
Springfield to Washington?. Aittlpt
'we , publish , patriotic truth, than.?
Then there was •Priothing,
nobody Fillet!" " = "
Siiirit seems that 'there 'still 'a
Dernoin'ats the ,o'fligee at
,Pitiladelp,hia, 'New yqrjc,'" aria other'
places. Thon . It44Yiegn s axe crying
.
'bitterly over ,tha fact. We. presume
the administration cannot do without,
then), or the can find no others. dug
fieier4iy'responaiMe. iste i voi.'tfieieals;
i ttnSi are still'
.okfiee *they
akt0.414-!Ecti;jeu afar go.iritq,,the
pkoper,plutal , for.DetnoeratB-+L,
41,nd,ligfittAtotattittof.itheJeuouitityll'
Air The easiest sort of a newspa.,
per contest, is that whi, is tiiVfic,-
nziliar galne oCthe': 06i:trip?: teitilay
towards us f1;04:*164. our articles,
puts the s Most forcee censtritation
upon theM, and then coolly knockS
down the men of straw which it has .
just built - up. Such, in particular, is
its reply to our' anti ;le regard to.
the Republican call far a 'County Con
vention. For ourselves, we retract no
word therein. - - While we:believe the
Democrats of this county are just as
willing as theirßepublican neighbors
to. preserve the. Constitution and,'t,he
Union, as it, was-,handed down to us,
there is.not One :whom'Ve. know .af;
that will support the principles of the
National Administration in any other
respect.. There are many Re
.
(tans i es as Democrats, who:mourn
over thevenality and corruption,man
ifest in , high places. They lookl with
misgiving upon the ready assuMption
of uu limited and unconstitutional poW
er by,theßxecutive. Even their-own
Senate rejected the resolution endors
ing' the , acts of President Lincoln; as
"legal,"; , altlioulth no doubt if differ-
e-ntlyw;erded, it would have .
~ (t is a. good sign . that a majority of .
: the-RePublican Senators refused to
stultify themselves by voting, for a
bare=faced 'falsehood.: would not
lc `clticiiit to prove; by their crates
. , .
•,and speeehes, that .Itessrs. Johnson,
'Dix, aolt, Butler, Dickinson, &e.,
stand precisely in *]thei position we
haVa defined. Like all 'true Demo'.
&tits; they are prepared With heart,
hand, and.voice, and where they-have
anything in them, with theirlpockets
a 150,.. to maintain the Constitution,
and reestablish the Union. To mist
fain any midall: meagirei
National AdMinistration has, already
adopted; or may hereafter take, with
out,. regard "to' their wisdom,- their
eco n niy,. their'
eonStitationality, 'theory that
none but a knave will 'adVncitie,'Or a
fool act
,on. The, ,Democracy, recog
nike no such blind andidiotic , submis•
sion tto 7110,n. party,
*al 'they render it fo' , the 'Republican,
WhOSe principles they condemn. ,
F .
le r In a speech •deliveked by Abra
'hod Lincoln, now President of
, the
States, at the Cooper Tesl;i•
tote, Now Yo,rk,.lllonday, Fehruary
27,1860, he closed as follims. ;
"Neither let us be '
siandered,from our duty , by
fal..e.aectum.tions Aga invt. us, nor frightened from
it by inMiliees of destruction .to.the Government,
nor uf 'd'iiiigeatis - to ourselves: 'Let us have faith
that right makes might, and hi thaffaith, lox
to the cud, darer-to do- gtur awl, -as we under:
stand it."
All right, Old fellow, but your , friends
are, pw,phreateping to hang all who
‘-‘,dar , e'!Ao differ with' them.- = Depend.
tiponithowelier, NV'e woill, be , "shall:
Bo red nor "frighten frorn ""our
duty7in-defending the Cohstitntion;
t4lte:4:rtorz, -and, 'tore enforcement ,of
lan IllAvsv.dorneviirat
is said tliat, ; old Giddings
will be a -Union. candidate, this fail,
for .Govornor oflOhio voters
who 'support our present National Ad
ministtation in its, over theleft
);ef
tforis! to niiintain the, Constitution,"
&o. ; - are. expected to support. hi ED on
pain of 'being,imsridedti'lis utraitors'
and , disunionists.".:L '1
lter The-new-U.-Sr-60 -dol-hyr notes
haia 'b
4 c .• en 4 -;41-1en.
SaoliA,o%. And op:41;0;044r ; the • head
of—:- - Cilsorn phi hind realier?
--•:t.Owen I_Jovejoy;" -the !Illinois aboli:
tionist ! :
'1153.9n e of tfie Ai l afplains of ti e'ar'.
my had prepared 4:a sermon• the;
Sunday' on which -the battle of s ita-'
nassas was Ithicflit. His text •Was
"Manassas is ours,'! TIM battle in.
terferbd with the deliiierf of the ser
mon, and it 'hap, tiot.:‘been delivered
since, the good man • considering
inappillpriate for the present'''.
ter week, froini. ,:,General'
Butllcr; on the trenitnent
'••• .
Ser!:l s l- the. Courier.is. a:oast:ugly: ,
harp i ng "ow th 6:treaSo'nfitil
'.l3eeki : nrid ,, e's' late •,ei-yeef.:b
should), ke , vitased if :it we ild point
(1 t o itS'tteasOnable thatter.
KrOur De mocrati friends )3e,rlc
Q 0 nty held large and ,enthusiastio,
eounty-ineeting on , Tuesday of last!
week. - The p., , sofatiOns, IVhile con
demning t nbeljiork r ,and .pledging
the support-of:the party, .to fill con-.
stitutienal tnensu r kes fore putting `it
down., keepyiet inview thopossibility ,
of a peacefuNkettleinent of the' Civil'
feud, wlyi neQ ;"4'nds t`fle l l4d'
is drenehingit in fraternal-blood; and,
-to that end,,tentleitim olive liritii`eti'in
thenipcsi 9n for'holding:ti c Nation
p ~.
!at Convention ,of
terra, to consider upon such measures;
as may be ealcillated.,to-b!ring,abon:t
'the object. Which- every . .true putrioki
efilWrid 4 o f bp Amity SO 'ard - dn iry •
desires:, The„coorae of its,Represen,
' tativesin , Congressind the State Serf
ate'are appro
rilTived of and endorsed:—
e . esTru pfions and misdeeds of the.
party in povver, State . 'and , National;:
are bitterly condemned. The iitmost
confidence .'in :the military skill and
patriotism of 'Gen/ Scott, is expressed,:
and thiise #ho are intp..f:erinkljyic4
has-1) 1 .9 , 4EMe 'aenoancedvas4ublic
7,1. Li31)1,..i Cliq"l 4 //'.-4rl
0::7" Gen:MeDowsli,,tbes‘,,ommand
,-
of our forpsTat.the blttle7' of Ma
nassas, ha's . ' . Aiade his report.„ and
states that. the
.on., our side
amounted to nineteen ,offmers and
four hundred and sixty-two non-com
missioned officers and privates, and
our wounded to sixty-four officers
and nine: tiundred. And, forty-seven
non-cOmmissioned officers and pri.:
vates. No . correct return . of the . miss ,
ing can as yet be made. ,
• ar.Young,Thomppon, convicted of
the aiurder of Crawford; in•Philadea
phia, was , hung last Friday.
(Kr It is said that the Governor and
Surgeon General Of Ohio; have sent i►n
order for $20,000 sverth'efalurgiefil in
stru outs- 7 in eluding obstetrica/ iestrii
jupots---for the army, at : the expense
of the-State I
- )tr - We iiublish .in* this number of
the Advertiser the sr ble.letter,.of: : Gen.
John ,WeVehmalviof- this place, ,to the
Hon. John Forsyth, of Mobile; 'Ala
barna. Theleeter ' , has' been highly.
cotiimonded tiy all wild have xetad it.
Our , , readors, of course will. give it an
attentive perusal. -
THE ATTITUDE OF THE np.mo.
• CRATIC PARTY.
Tirne always vindicates• the wisdom of
the policy of the Democratic party and of
its administration. It has done so in con
nection with recent events, with more than
usual emplia,sis. For years .and years •it
warned the.country, that this eternal agi,
tation of the'slavery question, if not stopp
ed, would bring the greatest calatnities up
on us; that it would lead, to_ a
.divided
Union and civil war, betweetrthe.sections;
to ainational and individual; bankruptcy,
to personal and, : political ruin.' It .plead
with its;political opponents North, , with
the mad fanatics of the South, to forbear, to
stay their hands,,to stop, what they called
their "irrepressible conflict," for the good
of their country: Their appeals were
spurned. Their Warnings were disregard
ed. We were tpld by the Republican
afatesmen 'that. the agitation. could go on;
that it did not enci • nger the Union; that a
seetiottaf triumph void& do no [nisei - lief;
thatin case they we i re successful, all 'would
go on as gaily'as.aniarriage s bell." The
people for once listened to their, syre, n sooth,
ing.vOice, and instated them in power.—
WeAvOtild. like to have seen the Democrat
ic
predictionsimven false—we had
lion times rather that they would have
had Ihe names of fair. prophets, `than: l to
Ira.,e seen, our county in its _present la ,
Meritable ectridition. Bid all the, worst
fears of the Denibcra)s; all their worst pre,
ifietionS, liaN been ' , fore than realiz.ed:
of conntrY-look
at the presetit-=,--surie'y its future.' For all
the evils, present ,anal prospeclive, the
Democratic party is guiltless,,ag it lifted up
its voice and warmed fite peoPle of them.
Had the Denfockatic policy not been de
parted from, and' its wise counsels been
listened to, we should have been to-day 'a
happy and United people, and 'prosperity
would have smiled upon the land.
_The
Democrats adyised.that the slavery :gets:
tion be let alone; that the dornribmiSes'tf
the Constitution in favor orate institution
be adhered to with strict fidelity. Its strong
&gamin - sense'enabled it`to perceive that
this great country couch only be - Saved by
a compromise and lconciliaticin of . all the
various interests, and that asking as neaf-.
ly onelhalf of the States Were slaveholdirig t '
it was egregious_ folly *to iimpose that doe
GeneraYGOvernment could pursbe an an,
ti-sktvery -course,'- without the greateSt
troubles and diSasters to the .whole :pond=
cal 'and social &bile. Our opponents be: ,
Wed We give them 'credit,
at feast tle•mitase.s; for hiMesth but, OR
hoir AerMlyKliaVe"they . ibeen tnrsle by
demagogties arid' politicalAdiets ^to= the
brink of destrnetion.' ••
- Tlievicl,lstereetyped charge 'of cerrup,'
tion :was also •ifistrumenta in causing ` the
people th-vote down Dember i atic men and
Democratic policy. What have we seen?'
• Why, in less-than three months if isan ad.`
mitted :fact:l-that 'those 'ptiristt whia , support
the Administration of Lincoln have stolen
mere from the govern merit , : froth the brave
,
soldiers,thairall the money that has beert:
abstractedifrOM the Treasury for half a:
century , . -Since the 4Th 'of .Mareh—Re
publican papers themselves tieing, the wit- ,
nesses-- , z there has been a regular carnival
of corruption, that puts to shame: every;
thine, we have seen in thatline. The Chit
&let of the fiernocrats.in the :war is also
another-evidence or their lwarrn :and ar
dent patrioti.sm,..that hits ettorfethpraise
froin even their political opponents.: While;
opposing - the :poi icy. which has:led:to it, be ,
lieVingit unnecessary, and injudicious, they
I were left no other, recciarse. " - Marge mat
jority of the ,officers :and :Soldiers, wha,„ are
now ;in the . front, 6ftheienemy are... Demo:
orats o while t those whohave instigated the
war,:preferredi th,at t Way , of settling,nupdif
ficulties to a peaceful ccanprotnisei,retnain,
comfortably, at home, assallipg; other.Deni
ocrats,and Union, men, who .have, ever
been,and'are now for their country as;trai-,
tOrg. These leaves; drawn'from the great
boolt'of the past, indicate-the, pAlley to, be,
Purstied by the Turn
MU the politicians of tkpiii,&:dri . strine
ribidkly as Poksitile.
themselves incOmpetenr4fo - ,gOv&W
country. Turn therh . ,titit'at 'the electiOns
as fast as you have the OPixiitunify, land
restore lei:rower' that brgainlatiiin Vhich
*..4SaRT , have; ff it had- 'been , : perniitted,'
verted' all 'enir present evils, and , Whose.
,Policy yet 'can and 'mitigate
Ta'qui'rer:'"
; A Noreen t Carlow rWEE DED.— The' ;
icLu.not ;mistakes which, are'made in' bat-4-
00.49 m the,,color. of„„the ..uniform of both
armies being alike,:stigge'sts the necessity
of* change- in the.mniforni souri ,troOps. •
!Ono of., the Vaine and one of the , MichiL;
,gup.rpgiments suffered from this cause, at
the„liands.pf Aheir friends. the, contra-,
;ry, for,fear;ofinjqing theirfriends, attack
!Wes delayed. In 'one instance, a regiments
of-the i epeiny. would , have been, ,rpost
verely handled,.if not captured, but their
!true elpracter, wus , iinistaltert until tlley
had moved' oufof the. Way. As the new
tro6ps are:piing into the field if it is not
too late; their uniformSshefild be One t col 7 .
or, and that' different Ran die color,of the ;
rebel troons, "Soine 'distinctive bad cre or ,
mark should „,he worn, So that these"fatal
rx4§io74 , wo uld not _ not Occur
„again. ; The',
itrhtigg oug h t again . 44 -
thlP '
_ . .
THE TARIFF U) DIRECT TAX
BILL.
Among the proitspntsV4e
Tariff are ..rateti-foNutp-:Has%lloWs
.• • •
On raw Sitgara t eno,:pespoulty. - :
on unrefined sugal'e, centilTrefilied
sugars, 4 cents; cloyed and tinctured
sugars, 6 cents ; molasses, 5 cents
per gallon; teas 15 cents; almonds, 4
cents ;ahelled almonds, 6 cents; crude
limeStcfne, 83" per ton ; rolled lime-
,stone,A 6; coffee, 4 cents. perponnd s ;
cocoa „3 cents; cocoa berries and shells,
2 cents ;chocolate; 6-tents ;'CasSi a, 10
cents ; cassia biids, I.s'tentfi; cinna
mon,.2o cents; cloves, 8 70cnts., - , cay,
()sine peppo 6 ct,Le n
ground! ..rcentj , ; (Ai it tis 5 cents;
tartaric acid and -Rochelle salts,
r , 10
"cep te ; dates, 2- centB;- 5 'cents ;
ginger . re.)01 ! ; Beats; ginger lf,TOut d,
5 eentS;'liquories paste and Juice, -
cents ; mace find - patine" cents;
mite 2 cents; pepper, 0 centS;:pirnert
to, 6:cents; plums, prunes and rais
in's, 5 cents; Russia -hemp, 840:-per
On.; nairillitaird other' hernps, '625;
lead in pig, $1.50 -per cwt ; lead •in
- ShCete,-' 82:25 • per ens t ;• - "tv bite Slid red
read, 2.2s.per.cwt ; salt, in sacks; 18
cents per Cwt; Salt, in bulk, 12 cents;
Soda as h ; centper pound ; bicarbon
ate orsoda 1 -cent;odt soda s cent;
CaustiOodti, 1 cent;q4deride of line,
30 cents per cwt; crude -Saltpetre, 1
cent; retitled saltpetre, 2 cents;- :tur
pentine, 1.0 cents per gallon;, oils of
cloves, 70 -cents - per pound brandy,
81.15 per gallon -; spirits of grain, 50
cents per gallon"; -gum - copal -and sim
ilar gums, 10 cent§ per pound.
The following articles-are also -ra
ted - at-so touch per centum, ad: tial
bi•eni -
Arrow• root, 20 per cent 'preServ
•ed-ginger 30 per cent; limes; bananas
and other tropical fruits, 20 per cent;
*Peruvian bark, l 5 percent ;: quinine,
30'per cent ;•rago,' 10 percent;feath.;
dr - 8 . 0 per eent3:llides 10 per bent;
soleleather,:3oper India rub ,
trier, raw;lo per cent; India' rubber
mannfactured, 30 per ten t!;:veitet - able
and unmantifaCtured ivory; 10 per
cent; all wines •50 per• Cent; gum silk
and partly , : manufactured sll k ?30. per
Cent; silk and prtly'velvet silks • 63
peryard; 0r735 Per cent ; -, silk ribbons
cent. -All :importations
beyond' flit Cape , of Good Hope, 10
per:cent •
• All ,, goods in store or in bounded
A voeli c ie- s elmin. be sEibjeet to these dit
ties.: if not withdrmini iMtlfree yoars
to h'e taken' by the Gover-pmerit'and
: 7 ;" ;:'' •••'.
TWO bill also apportions a Ai - root
tai' 0f , Z20,006,000 atnOnt,K:th'e -States
as follows : '•
B tune
NOr pOiro , „,.1,8;016 06
Vermont • 4 211 2 64, 09
Mnssaaitideitts ' ' 4 " ' '004:63 r- 33
Rho& A r: : It,: k 1116:963 '66
Connectieitt !; 1365,2[9 x ,96
. .
New rilrk.
New Jeredy
Penneylvanih,
el 1 ware
aryl Ind
MCI
North Carolinh
*outh Car -alit*
Georgia.
Alabama
Mis
Louisiana
0 . 0
uckir
nnesseo
Indiana
Il7inois
Mistotiri '
Kansas 4i
4.skensas
Alichigan
Florida
Tem.'
Iowa;
WireOusin
Cpli torn in
Minnesota - •
Oregoil r ;
New MexiCo
Utah
Washingtoit-'• ":"! ''7.7:500
Nebras,kat-1 ;0,312 60
Nevada .34 02 60
00 ' 114 '22:985`,3'3
Dobollth -t '• • :4:;'41.;33
Dist. ut - ,494437'3
3
The President, will ; divide the
try !into, collection - districts and ap-:
point collectors and after the second
Tuesday ,in February ithe_Seeretary ,
of, the Treasury shalLestablish regu
latiens to govern- the•asseSsmet4, and:
collection. , Attempts to,_ evade: .the.
ttet!or, commit. fcaud,will he,piniished t •
Tile salary, of. t 4 he Assessers,„„ranges
from $2 to sa_periday.. t ,„l.o-1M event
of -u,refusal to.pay-the
•that:col
lectors shalt -collect it.,llk AigkrAtint ,
and sale. of the,goods s chattels,•or.ef.
feels of tho delinquents ae afores.aid,_
atptibljeattetiom• iThis , dis,traint does
' Rot
„inelade 4-nels,-pr implements of
trade or profession, beasts of the
plough neecssary,for the euttilmtion
of. in proved d a nds,*, mins,- usehold
farnjt ure, and ,necessary apparal.
• lA.ny collector. guitty,dl- ,opprestiOn,,
injustice - or extortioiii , aliall be' liable
• to a. fi no; of i$2;000:: , , Abp person
cif•• perjnry, shall be• liable to al fine
of X 600..• • : ; -.!:
All inecitneS` okef.` . .sBlYo 'peis ab'initn l
are' t o u .axed' -13 , r :oil . the
stirplitS•over SBOP, ; when such ebnie
is derived frem -interest on trensurY
mites, the-tax-,'Shall l e 11-;per
The tax gods.-into -effect,Jandaryi I,r
1802: All :takes__ not; viid i.fune
1862, shall draw. in terest,eltil the .rate•
o..o_l) , m:4:cut s per ,ayttld i tm;,,, ."regiett
or- , 1 74 40ai. 111 1 Y.: 1, 1ti ti..txrre.noersikhef
qtre.ooeE) 4ll 4 l .(4 o : 51 9PriPO t , a•ti
the ta?;:, is paid; Should any ofi,.the
pemle be. in netuaf, { cebe4io9 „n t. the i
tame the net goes into eff,eetlitho.Rres,
Went ; hail cause t 8 prpv , i4096,40, I ,be,
eXeCelt,ol,WiOin. such Pniits,vglie,94F,
er the .qovet7nment authority isxp o esi,
,411, , ,taA•es thus collected!,
sNakt bear inttcre4-
-
The act ifuthorizes the appointmebt,
of a commissioner of taxes in con rwe
ti o n to the trqnsary;.Repar i tnig44,;
who 04 1 OiziP.PPi-nt l 4 iby- thei - PyPsiri
'ckez4 on 44e nOrt`qq-1 1 .49 1 1 iot.thr -
ttlrh.anci-roe-e;ivO 11,151 ;v1AgferPf §,4,9:99;
acr:4ll"Yrili a o,if, ;§1 1 P: 1 4 11 i}ve- OW,n hp%
of i _clerfis,kw.liose,aggregatesalariesAo,
opt ;exceed, $6'•000.
•
. !•••Altr i oßayoikta and fliscnovvq
ceryjof; the . abolitioniete wheli fear: '
.that. - a jeomprcvn ise , wouida 4nterfefe ,
with 'Abe* plans . 7
0 1 17 :4:1 i beiatitt
Slaves i•': • • • - r•-•-• .rfars...l
agr
-91 ' 10. 1(r e P u1 4. 1 944). , itiuqlolile
"Km* Tribene__As a rr?o* . s.,qaggeirape.,
Pitev:hpr 411 ,6U4i°4 1 thqnath_frailYc ,
kit leff: Dtwirti the arch rebel. '
TREASON
Amoimst other gtieerttaings uttered
Pl
I by geeat, ,Ppeolii, Inauaa.
tike 411;:lf MarclAst, was le
:
r "Thlegeptintry - , wltti 4
its inAtaions belonged to
the people who inhabit. it ; '''ivhenever they shall !,
g row weary of the existing Government they Gan '
exercise their c onstitutional ri g ht of amending it,
OR THEIR REVOLUTIONARY RIGHT-TO
DISMEMBER Olt OVERTHROW IT."
It would seem., flint.. the Secessiotst•
ists, taking 'Mr.' Ifincoln'at his word
are "exercising ,_they, _revolutiona,ty
right. -
" :?:
LEATH •-011.: ACOB: aeob
.
Myers, familiarlrcalcd:‘,'Old Yoke,"
for many years 'editor " , of the Press
and RepOlfeirt, efl-14.400.5*, and a
we4l_ 4Argo,FmGejrnitto jp WO: ati *Nip
er, died suddenly. on Friday evening
a week at the residence of:Mr. Burk
holder, in. West Bari township; Iran.
caster ttltinty''where he •iutended to
sojourn_ for a'short time. •
Mr.'Toomhs, of Georgia, , hay.
resigned the position of Secreta
ry of .Stateln 'the Ctitrfe deft:t +3 Gov.
erntneot,lir.llunter;rif itsia, has
been , confirmed by.the - SenAte At Rich
mon`d. Mr. Toombs still retains his
seat in Congress, and -ha's accepted
the post•of Brigadier. General in the
rebel army.
O Virginia = is, the "mother of
States" G. I.l.ogaphat wantsaclitiow
how she relishes tie visits of so ma
ny of her children. grohably 'She
Inuch of .a g004.410g',
m , , .
REBEL i'lllVATEkli, SONic.- - t'4. de I.oll
ted States gun l bott.,Flag- l arrived,at
Fort Mifflin, on the Delaware, below
Philadelphia, on Wednesday morning
with thirty-six rebel prisoners taken
from a_rebel war,vessol, formerly the
revenue.outter Aifien, seized at (Thar
tes.to n-11.1.4., AY i n ter:. ~019: 4.11-Pll-, en-,fir
at the St. Lawrence, Charleston,
probably m.lstanplf
e t for a mer
e,
.. 0.
ai,„„t, teitelt,.wlreli-t t 4.tuvrence
returnpf* I;roadeldiZinkil !I" fie
ids reb
el.so ,'.'' S 'of the crow plere 1 and
the 4'4) resaod iiiid4U9'd 1 1 1bHard
the il liag,...‘ , T he. rebel, es§4WMI A ,II l
ed the 'Petrel under iller new.eottmlis
siop.. s The broadside from the, 't.
1400:06`e.at Ifeek,9il o.
John Weidman . , son often. cad.
man, this' plate, is ; ale of 14 Flag's
?If
mids i pin ao. r . f_ -
The prisoners, aft a aring be
fore the J.S. Commissioner - ve
beep; 0 itieds .wiii4illAMA , ' , n.
Slier oft. a rtfize orpil-art , f, WI
term of the 'United . ; Stittes.:Cirenit
Court
.
AN exchange , want , S , tv knoW
,-why is it, that Nathaniel's . . , - flanks;
the
,IThion slider of ArassaelitiOpfO,Js
appointed a:Maj. Generaf; ,, without
itoy,;:inilittiry perikki,:,,,,Anl.;:
Safe eS)Stiieltis, now of Minn ota,'one
ofythe ablest inilitary.Mertin.th:6eOnn.
Et'y;Jal'ilOnOtibed by ",t'!474,i)ifinfk
polio?
•
gef;
,Thc 110 party - :R publicans
want all -the Democrats to join • their
pflgt,y, and give them thel4fUetistlion
they will, be satisfied. The Demo
-eras, i n tentl.Stistai fling,. the governm%
against enemies and, agayist rebellion
buti.:ll44laVe no notion! Ofyg,oing into
the Abolitibit tray.
of the,DeinoefaCy:o4t: •
en;-for , greenness.— . ..Dark Court* Deni.
T 7 ',5421i,826‘
2,60,3,916 ,
6.6
'450,134 00
1,916,719 33
7448; 35
426,823 33
937,550 66
.574,194'66
;3!i3;550• 66.
584;367„33
529;313'33.
413;084 *66
3651886 66
.1 4 597,089 33
11%695 3:3
660;498
, :pp
/,148,5,51.
'761,127
7i,743.:13
• .03,7• The son of President Lincoln
has a afinjract,for t army 4 a,n . pplies on
which hi i 1 making ti net profit of o
ver/tpin t rit&ustyril 4olAasiirjetkl
Do . tinwe i lyrff,.i . e.,) •
1 '
gyr,Tbo, Lincoln l oygan are' trying
to Ira, t tut ti 171 b vo
bo bioisi ttIA o n
46 . 1 t r . 3% o 'to -e o
here just what it does to the people of
the - Old itT'ran 'Crush
their liberty:: : -;
261,856,00
501„763 22
77 522"2.6
.366.106. 06
,4Z2,068
. 616,668 66
Z5'4,S3S` GG
t•
r. 35; 140. +45
82,648„0'
28,982 8
.4ttrialo. 4 l3affale• Express says
"Thi r enfarMar:iryliatrtng no. r• ran its es:lame r -must be shaken
froin the Schitir,"Sr: th 6 Sou th.a . n4 pla 7 .
very mast. perish Aog s etherv:- 904 s
daY4l4.4iiinUsnlVadier he sulkerTed.:
Pd„,,COP t t.M54
, 1 .1 10 *Po.lPitlYPr
flan praysl • 1 , • • •
6, Let
judge'vo wei-have not u right to
exterirkii*Pp i Our:O.rjr . on. the Ameri
can continent:"
•
' I:lo o . 7*Tiis Ta.,KeEs . pfConbr pss
termina Le d 0 n ii;es3lity• last after co n
tioutog ..one, i tgoKl,-. Daring that
shOrt poriod,Ttlie7inost, important acts
in, our national history were-enabiecl.
ken and
tent mere. iod the fartherprose•
lit tliii . e , t;iir x .." 6 The tariff:
meoded,;klcwtb:igamased, and a di
reettp4 of 041 4 00,900 levied fted.op!.!
portioned! among. the States. Tha
Sub-`lreassry -a to wits repeal:34;
and the eciiiupt'peCl) . ank system sub
stittited. passed, tct ; oop ri
tho l e 91 / 1 0,04.
is rebahiOn - againit tn.oratayernutenb:;
only •sul4ect Cron ..whi eh I,C - oit - - 6
izingr al the, unconstitutional proceed
inge.,,of the Presidont...: They dared
dotalmOst •any - titing r but ; they dareg
not that record.
,AttiSgOATßY: g !' ,
.TEPP6IOI.I 01Tirid41
kleefafeil
ofWe of ,Gpy : e ratty,. 'lAoutenant Gov eitirtl t ; 3uld..ssrereta r,y_Qt. St .. a
vow o f 46,4 0 , 25 ; tundl-141 seats .
memiters.of the present fletteiiii As
seregkly,Xenzawatect rt 3 r W4=o t0t.62
to 28.
1 '51411;, 1 ir.?Mi t ie j tkilecon
:R. 494 1.i0PEININAIINieriamzePATOV.
P. Hall, Lieat.. Reey.9rno r ; and Mr.
llordieto,t4kr4lW I,h is
querif I ng: Ervt h coal Cc ov? nth el:were
..AICO ir4 11 ... *kob, 0, 4 . YE
Pliveg m
•ta n t.• ness n-tl• thn!prevrit'iyoOnksf,
;an address c to Ott : Tenpin . of' A iin S te
bh Co ncte nttonedtirtfetheiktit
the thArd-blo•nday.iin m her un I ebb .
'soeite'r 'ea! Ped toattitiot by the New
government ae.demsrad . ed the pub -
1 ;
j •f, k c
• III !Ayr et) rerribrAiltlyti f
8441E;j0iiii.IPQ!elleiVi$117ikilliTi.ex* '6;
Sefferattfi City th
.2d tx.
ibet,44" t
=
far A prominent Maryland:et', who
visited Manassas battle-field
eas4-Weyon fede rates told..hien , Shat
Col kayeei.On „was - not .1011:0,
w.oanded and a prisoner atltiebmoed.
"lEr-HE is q, freeman who dares
speak. •
-the truth; and all are Slava
besides.
The Army of the Potothde . oitd At 8 . Reg-
The . Army that fought the battle* of
Bull's` Hun and Manasaas Junction, on, the
18th and q.lst dayapf July, had for its coat
mander-irpchf4 ilvin WHowells and - num
bered 55,000 elem.; ,It was , divided into
five Grand Divisions; had.fi[4.4e MajorCien
eratijiielfgl3lVMMEnn'tir'irfiffSiMife
Colonels, and five libtfirtlTi&l fifty Cap
tains. It had,nini kraireriei di tight
e right wing was comman ded:
Gee:rat Hunter, the left wing" by Gen.
I,leintzleman, the right centre by Gen. Ty
ler, the,left centre by Gen. Miles, the Iv-
serve by Gen. Runyon, it ,
It was organized by Genera' Order, No.
13, and from it the following summary. is mad 'e its' trifeietit Riehnerks. Thel4-
ual regimental hunther is IMO, but sortie
of the New England and New York Regl
iments exceeded - that Amount. The fol.
lowing States furnished the Regiments: •
New England had 14 Regiment's, 15,000
Michigan had 4 Regimenp, , 4,000
Wisconsin had I Regiment,
innneseta bad 1 Regiment, I,oop
Drew Englanders and of Nair „England '
Ii;01:10
New Tet,„;rltdagd: , 20,000
'cave •def s'el liatY i Reglmens • • ••' 4 7,000
Otkin: bad 2 Regimentr, "2,009 ,
renna•!vinia hair. a Regiments, ' .2/000-
Stibte.S.Repkilkrs, infantry; Ilarinee, 3
Pala lip, Artillery, . • 3,00
'
Ketrrircar Eticcrion.- The a gt`t. 1
ee ec xoiv
irr Kentucky for "rrieral*rSOf tk'Legisl4 , 2
tore„ was hag M6liday Ei Week. fie
turns; neatly full; fro forty; counties,
shows that but three secessionists have
been elecred. The counties, how
ever, have not yet 'been generally beard!
from.- informed politicians esti/nate
that each house of the' Legislature will be
threafpiqths comqoped me—
T biSh'srgloiintre ridltslisn,4oldlKatitucjcy.
Onto DatltitivAisitTlitto r nvertriox.
The zDain&raiieStalftfaMettioiiofohio
net at ,Cieveland on t . he 7th ,- and nomina
ted H. J. Jewett `.for ,Glivernbr;and..Tohn
Seott,Harris,onla son' of drelate Presi
dent flarrison). for Lientenant doVernor.
A series of reallatinAldVere adopted.--
The third recommends
of the . several . States the calking of
floral Convention tor'ife, piltpase
tling "present
. sliPeulties; ';,restriols
peace :and preserving- the 'The
sixth resolution condennts. tWT.risidelit
for his late attempt to suspend - the *tit of
habeas cgiw ztfet .
EMMO
:
•;; ft re; :
TRAVEL TO THE Socii3.-1-The travel front
the North to'the South by the °Mom:
has been'f late immense: 7 'All oth
er:Communication having beeptheLouisdille and Nashville - Railroad:is reap:.
ing a rich , harvest. For a short 'time the
direct;travel Was - interi'tihh..d;and a deten
tion of nearly. twenty-lour hours wascaus
ed, and a conseqUerit increase ofexperise,
but wq,ar4,0,141 4 leapt that this has peen
remedied. " Passengers rto l tv ~ kg '6f . irli throu
„
Tennessee and the south as -rapidly as
before the war.
Ntsr-yotic pcaTics.—PROPOSITI T CS FOR
.
UNION. REJECTED. At a .meeting or the
New-York Democratic State Committee,
held at Albany on Thursday, a proposi
tion was. received from the Republican
State Committee, fora Union Convention
of the two parties. The proposal was re
jected, and a resolution was adopted' to
the following effect: While the war should
be vigorously prosecuted, the Committee
regard. kit°, be 'the duty of the' Federal
Govekiiiefifte;Wold out ,terms
and 'accommodation to 'the dissevered!
States, assuring them of alilheir rights nag
der the constitution. . .
Tht Derrioellata StWte CoriienttoewaV
orderedztOtbAlraOlise.bffihe 4th
of i S t iptcpullet:,' „ ,
imr . g.6 TWA I ITV
Sr.• lams '
4 Attg . .l).. , - -ttOtit
trewiriqaehod beria4liat the enenwi.
IvereadtarichlA - 0114011!itEAb170,Mitnit;
Ott' 0 foircchnnitiiier,ing Awont.y.stlma
sand men. med a tely
set• out toy meatittbem, with 4.be sec
ond, an'd f.hWd7ifraiiittrikeolll44l4Yo.ll2
this city, the fourth and , ircoAdt.Kitp..
sas reginmksotif4 3 .l,:h rei
intent ;:plao; :with two, i or =,tl,t,Two• con).
reedlueoriialry. NOM criiitp,
ogmigi..,l W:4 i t , P
ok,tfkiret
.(tivw..4.l„ron eneamrped.thAte:otrillgre_
Tyrehordisk, and- on Vi : iday:sidianeed
t°4) 4 -6) tilrett 3 ) ab_ L VAAVW.A .
south west Aitt Ylipr ip•ultd . ,lOvhen he
obtained ir)furrnatico i nf,,the enemy.
A .f . ght, took place between four
and :st i le; o!elocik'' that afternoon.- :
pattyy.) f o lllundred l ,an ! se)ten
Geheral Lyori's cni . raffy ak_previdhsly
r EAfri Ffe . vrns ir ri l r.tdx 4 9 4l ,
hiyi andr part s wrip i ted . on tE`C'east
by a valley, an , scending the
hilti•eXttrerUpor . liallatli ftiitOrill the en--
ents'os• In fan tyy-/ V a eitrnMylVs tti Nran•d
iirTriThrtritit i -o(9gAindlo, tkdrit i 11, on
:tiltuld, and bet ng u n e to. retreat tboyr
charged ano :•cut 'their way it* ! bru*,F.
with iho.lostrof five men..
TI/d.l l . l 7oiErgt? Or_rOkele 1 '9,4,4310 1 -
6n the flold amounted to4cletArtanli.
s° , ll "?•:f o rY l blo .. M'! : lo4o;:Ylileß i iV e k'r
eu up. • !Irt.E , :1 - "3..:
ANOTHER siuTefitist ittliggoPol.-
We have news f optitkirthisluin another
part offflissonti;tri•rwlVt
town in northth e _extverne j -w.estern, pon.
~
tion of the Stftt:;pn'tlielDrls t'rl63-Itiver.
On matt nf fikabinelebgn. Rens, in
number.atioilt 1,000 or`-31100;echimanded
by Martin Greenr , b&therl4 ex-Senator
Grqlni•lci Novo, tuisi,` sicked. "df
U . i.doriaael:atithe place named, timinura
•abt7L_Ofitt/1_00... hcou?*
iismlnga titer: Reuel's • retreated.',! . 4and
m9 fejoliEN -14 V%: ; iltiiiiii4lig N inir
infoiced by 150 men.,,,,poringtbe,../cIaSLI6
and in the chase-ilfeehejny jopt.2s. 01' 30
killed, and ha - 111 ii , many , :rnore. wounded
and Tiallfre Fuither reinfdicernents .lutv. 7 •
•ti l oops, thek still
PA 4 lPeltli'.4o) - -)elS; tuld ,more.fighttft
was expected ` ciur loss was• 3 Itilletitnd.t
B:llrbizitdlior ' • • .
- • -- ------...._.-
- . N OCT, VEtt
~.;
A - I , trfitivo - - 0F . 111 z 110 A aCIF AtiEZ434
ITW lIAIMNON Pingit AG ,u
11.01141 M, LTURAC AEA- DLEC NI TA,MUIRTY;
will be beld in the OrniqTyAegip,sa Arealdajt e o e ..
g4ta19,.180i , e((7 0•09c 4 .16 .x. s A ripipiFitidaoe is
t hc a ti c a at , pusNes, 9fßopa. imam w4,1522t.1te..•
fore'thetiosit - t ' 7SAAO ILO Ercsecretari,
Lebanon, Auznat 8,1601,
invents.