VOL. LXII. great offices of the republic as we have been accustomed to do, we will destroy it and build upon its ruins an empire that shall be all our own, and whose spoils neither the North nor the East nor the West shall share with us." Deplorable and humiliating as this certainly is, it is but a rehearsal of the sad, sad story of the past. We had, indeed, supposed that under our Christian civilization we had reached a point in human progress, when a republic could exist without having its AN ADDRESS life sought by its own offspring • but the BY THE Catilines of the South have proved that we were mistaken. Let no man imagine that Hon, JOSEPH HOLT, because this rebellion has been made by TO THE PEOPLE OF KENTUCKY, men renowned in our civil and military history, that it is, therefore, the less guilty DELIVERED AT PUISVILLE, JULY 11th, 1861. or the less courageously to be resisted. It FELLOW-CITIZENS : A few weeks since, is precisely this class of men who have in another form, I ventured freely to ex- subverted the best governments that have press my views upon those tragic events ever existed. The purest spirits that have which have brought sorrow to every hearth- lived in the tide of times, the noblest stone and to every heart in our distracted institutions that have arisen to bless our country, and it is not my purpose on this race, have found among those in whom occasion to repeat those views, or to en- they had most confided, and whom they gage in any extended discussion of the had most honored, men wicked enough, questions then examined. It is not neces- either secretly to betray them unto death, nary that I should do so, since the argu- or openly to seek their overthrow by law ment is exhausted, and the popular mind less violence. The republic of England is perfectly familiar with it in all its bear- had its Monk; the republic of France had ings. I will, however, with your permis- its Bonaparte ; the republic of Rome had sion, submit a few brief observations upon its Cmsar and its Cataline, and the Saviour the absorbing topics of the day, and if Ido of the world had his Judas Iscariot. It so with an earnestness and emphasis due cannot be necessary that I should declare alike to the sincerity of my convictions to you, for you know them well, who they and to the magnitude of the interests in- are whose parricidal swords are now un volved, it is trusted that none will be sheathed against the republic the United offended - , not even those who may most States. Their names are ins bed upon a widely differ from me. scroll of infamy that can n ver perish. Could one, an entire _stranger to our The most distinguished of them'were edtf history, now look down upon the South, cated by the charity of the government on and see there a hundred or a hpndred and which they are now making war. For long fifty thousand men marching in hostile years they were fed from its table, and array, threatening the capture of the oapi- clothed from its wardrobe, ' and had their tal and the dismemberment of the territory brows garlanded by its honors. They are the of the republic; and could he look again ungrateful sons of a fond mother, who and see that this array is marshalled and dandled them upon her knee, who lavished directed by officers recently occupying die- upon them the gushing love of her noble tinguished places in the civil and military and devoted nature, and who nurtured service of the country ; and further that them from the very bosom of her life ; and the states from which this army has been now, in the frenzied excesses of licentious drawn appear to be one vast, seething and baffled ambition, they are stabbing at cauldron of ferocious passion, he would I that bosom with the ferocity with which the very naturally conclude that the govern- 1 tiger springs upon his prey. The Presi ment of the United States had committed I dent of the United States is heroically and some great crime against its people, and ' patriotically struggling to baffie the machi that this uprising was in re)istance to nations of these most wicked men. I have wrong and outrages which had, been borne unbounded gratification in knowing that he until endurance was no longer possible.—' has courage tq look traitors in the face, And yet no conclusion could be further and that, in discharging the duties of his from' the truth than this. The govern- great office, he takes no counsel of his ment of the United States has been faith- fears. He is entitled to the zealous sup ful to all its constitutional obligations.— port of the whole country, and, may I not For eighty years it has maintained the add without offence, that he will receive national honor at home and abroad, and the support of all who justly appreciate by its prowess, its• wisdom, and its justice, the boundless blessings of our free insti has given to the title of an American citi- tutions zen an elevation among the nations of the If this rebellion succeeds it will involve earth which the citizens of no republic necessarily the destruction of our nation has enjoyed since Rome was mistress of ality, the division of our territory, the the world. Under its administration the permanent disruption of the republic. It national domain has stretched away to the must rapidly dry up the sources of our Pacific, and that constellation which an- material prosperity, and year by year we nounced our birth as a people, has ex- shall grow more and more impoverished, panded from thirteen to thirty-four stars, more and more revolutionary, enfeebled, all, until recently, moving undisturbed and debased. Each returning election will and undimmed in their orbs of light and bring with it grounds for new civil com grandeur. The rights of no states have motions, and traitors, prepared to strike at been invaded; no man's property has been the country that has rejected their claims despoiled, no man's liberty abridged, no , to power, will spring up on every side. man's life oppressively jeopardized by the Disunion once begun will go on and on action of this government. Under its indefinitely, and under the influence of the benign influences the rills of public and fatal doctrine of secession, not only will private prosperity have swelled into rivu- , states secede from states, but counties will lets, and from rivulets into rivers ever secede from states also, and towns and brimming in their fullness, and everywhere, cities from counties,until universal anarchy and at all periods of its history, its minis- ; will be consummated in each individual trations have fallen as gently on the pea- who can make good his position by force of ple of the United States as do the dews of arms, claiming the right to defy the power a Summer's night on the flowers and grass ,of the government. Thus we should have of the gardens and fields. , brought back to us the days of the robber Whence, then, this revolutionary out- barons with their moated castles and break? Whence the secret spring of this marauding retainers. This doctrine when gigantic conspiracy, which, like some huge analyzed is simply a declaration that no boa, had completely coiled itself around physical force shall ever be employed in the limbs and body of the republic, before executing the laws for upholding the gov a single hand was lifted to resist it? ernment, and a government in whose Strange, and indeed startling, as the an- practical administration such a principle nounoement must appear when it falls on has been introduced, could no more con the ears of the next generation, the national I tinue to exist than a man could live with tragedy, in whose shadow we stand to- an angered cobra in his bosom. If you night, has come upon us because, in Novem- would know what are the legitimate fruits ber last, John C. Breckinridge was not of secession, look at Virginia and Tennes elected President of the United States, see, which have so lately given themselves and Abraham Lincoln was. This is the up to the embrace of this monster. There whole story. And I would pray now to the schools are deserted ; the courts of know, on what was John C. Breckinridge justice closed ; public and private credit fed that he has grown so great, that a re- destroyed ; commerce annihilated; debts public founded by Washington and cement- repudiated ; confiscations and spoliations ed by the best blood that has ever coursed everywhere prevailing ; every cheek in human veins, is to be overthrown be- blanched with fear, and every heart frozen cause, forsooth, he cannot be its President? with despair ; and all over that desolated Had he been chosen we well know land the hand of infuriated passion and hat we should not have heard crime is waving, with a vulture's scream of this rebellion, for the lever with which for blood, the sword of civil war. And it is being moved would have been want- I this is the Pandemonium which some would ing to the hands of the conspirators. I have transferred to Kentucky. Even after his defeat, could it have been I But I 'am not here to discuss this prop guaranteed, beyond all peradventure, that i osition to-night. I wish solemnly to declare Jeff. Davis, or some other kindred spirit, before you and the world, that I am for would be the successor of Mr. Lincoln, I this Union without conditions, one and presume we hazard nothing in assuming indivisible, now and forever. lam for its that this atrocious movement against the preservation at any and every cost of blood government would not have been set on and treasure against all its assailants. I foot. So much for the principle involved , know no neutrality between my country in it. This great crime, then, with which and its foes, whether they be foreign or we are grappling, sprang from that c 4 sin domestic ; no neutrality between that glo by whiCh the angels fell "—an unmastered rious flag which now floats over us, and and profligate ambition—an ambition that the ingrates and traitors who would tram "would rather reign in hell than serve in ple it in the dust. My grayer is for victory, heaven "—that would rather rule supreme- complete, enduring and overwhelming, to ly over a shattered fragment of the repub- , the armies of the republic over all its ene lie than run the chances of sharing with mies. lam against any and every corn others the honors of the whole. , promise that may be• proposed to be made The conspirators of the South read in ' under the guns of the rebels, while, at the the election of Mr. Lincoln a declaration same time, I am decidedly in favor of that the Democratic party had been pros- affording every reasonable guarantee for trated, if not finally destroyed, by the sel- the safety of Southern institutions, which fish intrigues and corruptions of its leaders; the honest convictions of the people—not ) they read, too, that the vicious, emaciated i the conspirators--of the South may de , and spavined hobby of the slavery agita- mand, whenever they shall lay down their tion, on which they had so often rode into arms, but not until then, The arbitrament power, could no longer carry them beyond of the sword has been defiantly thrust into a given geographical line of our territory, the face of the government and country, and that in truth this factious and treason- and there is no honorable escape from it. able agitation, on which so many of them All guarantees and all attempts at adjust had grown great by debauching and de- ment by amendments to the constitution nationalizing the mind of a people natur- are now scornfully rejected, and the lead ally generous and patriotic, had run its ers of the rebellion openly proclaim that course, and hence, that from the national they are fighting for their independence. disgust for this demagogueing, and for the In this contempttkins rejection of guaran inexorable law of population, the time had tees, and in this avowal of the objects of come when all those who had no other the rebellion now so audaciously made, we' political capital than this, would have to have a complete exposure of that fraud prepare for retirement to private life, so which, through the slavery agitation, has . far at least as the highest offices of the been practiced upon the public credulity country were concerned. Under the in- ' for the last fifteen or twenty years. In ffuence of these grim discouragements they the light of this revelation, we feel as one resolved to consummate at once-i-what our awakened from the suffocating tortures of political history shows to have been a long- j a nightmare, and realize what a baseless . eherished purpose—the dismemberment of dream our apprehensions have been, and the government. They said to themselves: of what a 'traitorous swindle we have been "Since we can no longer Monopolize the made the yid*. They are fighting for THE LANCASTER INTELLIGENCER TOBLISEZD B Y TUESDAY, AT NO. 8 NORTE DIM Min, BY GEO. SANDERSON. TERNS. BUBSCIIIPTION.—Two Dollars per annum, payable in ad vance. No subscription discontinued until all arrear ages are paid, unless at the option of the Editor. DYLlMlEBMESTS.—Advertisements, not exceeding one square, (12 lines,) will be inserted three times for one dollar, and twenty-five cents for each additional inser tion. Those of greater length in proportion. JOB Pam's:El—Such as Hand Bills, Posters, Pamphlets, Blanks, Labels, &0., &c., executed with accuracy and on shortest notice. 1 1 T: ; I 8 1 YO:: p 4. II: •:I i.l . T7l: LANCASTER CITY, PA., TUESDAY MORNING, AUGUST 27, 1861. their independence ! Independence of lives; a devil obeys only his own ferocious and of battle even, if need need be, to what 3 Independence of those laws which and profligate passions. The principle on give, to save it from absolute destruction they themselves have aided in enacting _,• which this rebellion proceeds, that laws at the hands of men who, steeped in guilt, independence of that constitution which have in themselves no sanctions, no bind- are perpetrating against us and humanity a their fathers framed and to which they are ing force upon the conscience, and , that crime, for which. I verily believe the parties and subject by inheritance ; inde- every man, under the prompting of interest, blackest page of the history of the world's pendence of that beneficent government or passion, or caprice, may, at will, and darkest period furnishes no parallel? Can on whose treasury and honors they have , honorably too, strike at the government it be possible that in the American people grown strong and illustrious. When a . that shelters him, is one of utter demora- iwe have already; reached a point of degen man commits a robbery on the highway, , lization, and should be trodden out as you eraoy so low, that the work of Washington or a murder in the dark, he thoreby de- I would tread on a spark that has fallen on and Franklin, of Adams and Jefferson, of Glares his independence of the laws under the roof of your dwelling. Its unchecked Flaneck and Henry, is to be overthrown which he lives, and of the society of which prevalence would resolve society into chaos, by the morally begrimed and pigmied he is a member. Should he, when ar- 1 and leave you without the slightest guar- conspirators who are now tugging at its reigned, avow and justify the offence, he 1 antee for life, liberty, or property. It is foundation 3 It would be the overturning thereby becomes the advocate of the inde- time that, in their majesty, the people of of the Andes by the miserable reptiles pendence he has thus declared ; and, if he the United States should make known to ' that are crawling in the sands at their base. resists by force of arms the officer, when the world that this government, in its dig- Bat our neutral fellow citizens in the ten dragging him to the prison, the penitenti- nity and power, is something more than a derness of their hearts say : "This effusion of ro b cry, or the gallows, he is thereby fighting moot court, and that the citizen who makesl o h o r d i n s o. i c i k r e to s an e 'len te d t o thalelwinhye strengthoewr 1 for the independence he has thus declared war upon it is a traitor, not only in theory of this - commonwealth be put forth in support and advocated ; and. such is the condition but in fact , and should have meted out to I of the government, in order that the war may of the conspirators of the Sbuth at this him a traitor's doom. The country wants ;be terminated by a prompt suppression of the moment. It is no longer a question of no bloody sacrifice, but it must and will ' rebellion. The longer the struggle continues, Southern rights, which have never been have peace, cost what it may. the fiercer will be its spirit, and the more ul of life g it. ou violated, nor of security of Southern insti- Before closing, I desire to say a few fearf tdheerlenfroereh the onl standingawaster axot; atten frtohme thecadl a combati You tutions, which we know perfectly well have words on the relations of Kentucky to the never been interfered with by the general pending rebellion :and as we are all Ken- ButP agai y n they 4, "we cannot fight our government, but it is purely with us a tnokians here together to-night, and as brethren." Indeed. But your brethren can question of national existence. In meeting this is purely a family matter, which con- fight you, and with a good will, too. Wick this terrible issue which rebellion has made earns the honor of us all, I hope we may edly and wantonly have they commenced this up with the loyal men of the country, we be permitted to speak to each other upon war against you and your institutions, and stand upon ground infinitely above all it with entire freedom. I shall not detain ferociously are they prosecuting it. They take party lines and party platforms—ground you with observations on the hostile and n w o hi a e o h do t u h n e t y o h f etphee their t hswords e m will, s a e c r r e e l w o n i t g h as sublime as that on which our fathers defiant position assumed by the governor be clogged, must be the massacre of their stood when they fought the battles of the of your state. In his reply to the requi- brethren. However much we may bow our revolution. -- I am for throwing into the sition made upon him for volunteers under heals at the confession, it is nevertheless true contest thus forced upon us all the material the proclamation of the President, he has, that every free people that have existed have and moral resources and energies of the in my judgment, written and finished his been obliged, at gm period or other of their nation, in order that the straggle may be own history, his epitaph included, and it history, tes w to i th fi i g n h t th f e o i r r t o h w e n ir h l o ib so e m rties an a d ga t i h n a s t t brief and as little sanguinary as possible. is probable that in future the world will people who have not the greatness of soul It is hoped that we shall soon see in the little concern itself as to what his excel- thus to fight, cannot long continue to be free, field half a million of patriotic volunteers, lency may propose to do, or as in what he nor do they deserve to be so. marching in columns which will be per- may propose not to do. That respimse has There is not, nor can there be, any neutral featly irresistible, and, borne in their made for Kentucky a record that hai al- ground for a loyal people between their own hands—for no purpose of conquest or sub- ready brought a burning blush to the cheek government and those who, at the head of inaotio r, airse not m neutrality,a cin its destruct tho ugh ion y . o u Your jugation, but of protection only—we may of many of her eons, and is destined to expect within nine months to see the stars bring it to the cheek of many more in the delude yourselves with the belief that it is so. y and stripes floating in every Southern years which are to come. It is a shame, With this rebellion confronting you, when breeze, and hear going up, wild as the indeed a crying shame, that a state with you refuse to co-operate. actively with your storm, the exultant shout of that emanci- so illustrious a past should have written government in subduing it, you thereby con pated people over their deliverance from for her, by her own chief magistrate, a damn the government, and assume towards it the revolutionary terror and despotism, by page of history so utterly humiliating as a an at i titu l d_e doforaentagnotnoisfm. the rebellion, r lli i o nactio n n d is f which they are now tormented and'oppress- this. But your legislature have determined yo v u ir d a o a no l t n ther s eb m y e give to the rebels B p ' re a cisely ed. The war, conducted on such a scale, that during the present unhappy war the that " aid and comfort" spoken of in the con will not cost exceeding four or five hundred attitude of the state shall be that of strict stitution, you certainly afford them a most millions of dollars ; and none need be neutrality, and it is upon this determine- powerful encouragement and support. That startled at the v astness of this expenditure. tion that I wish respectfully but frankly to they regard your present position as friendly The debt thus created will press but slight- comment. As the motives which governed to them:is Confederateprovedb the fact that, in a recent ly upon us ; it will be paid and gladly the legislature were doubtless patriotic and raing enactmentthe odebts e due ftom theirC o n o g w r e a s s citizensas paid by posterity, who will make the best conservative, the conclusion arrived at can- to those of loyal states, the debts due to the bargain which has been made since the not be condemned as dishonorable ; still in people of Kentucky are expressly excepted.— world began, if they can secure to them- view of the manifest duty of the state and •Is not this significant? Does it leave any selves, in its integrity and blessings, such of possible results, I cannot but regard I room for doubt that the Confederate Congress a government as this, at such a cost. it EtEl mistaken and false, and one which I suppose they have discovered, under the guise But, if in this anticipation we are doomed may have fatal consequences. Strictly lof your neutrality, a lurking sympathy for to disappointment; if the people of the and legally speaking, Kentucky must go ! friends, f se which aso e i ra t t . itles yeti s to betreated as s United States have already become so de- out of the Union before she can be neu- I purposen t o of apprehensivea h , er iveallie ? Patriotic tatesm e a rl s generate—may I not say so craven—in the tral. Within it she is necessarily either lin pining her in the anomalous position she was the presence of their foes as to surrender up faithful to the government of the United . now occupies, it• cannot be denied that Ken this republic to be dismembered and sub- States, or she is disloyal to it. If this , tucky by her present attitude is exerting, a' verted by the traitors who have reared the crutch of neutrality, upon which her well-! potent influence in strengthening the rebel standard of revolt against it, then, I trust, meaning but ill-judging politicians are i alinudn,taonbdeirs,fathmeerefovo,afamlsea Y alrikesettowhelelr lassuredya ty the volume of American history will be halting, can find any middle ground on I that this estimate of your neutrality is enter closed and sealed up forever, and that which to rest, it has escaped my researches, tained by the true men of the country in all those who shall survive this national hu- though I have diligently sought it. -Neu- the states which are now sustaining the gov miliatim will take unto themselves some trality, in the sense of those who now use ernment. Within the last few weeks how other name,—some name having no rela- the term, however patriotically designed, many of those gallant volunteers w is ho hav e e d them, on to the past, no relation to our great is, in effect, but a snake in the grass of I lef t home da are nd w kindred an der a d all tshat hee dear u d t i s r e n s e ari I sun ancestors, no relation to those monuments rebellion, and those who handle it will t expo a ing a themsel n v o es to dea t h from and battle-fields which commemorate alike sooner or later feel its fangs. Said one to death from battle, and are accounting their their heroism, their loyalty, and their who spoke as never man spoke, ', He who ' lives as nothing in the effort they are making glory. is not with us is against us ;" and of none 1 f)r the deliverance of your government and But with the curled lip of scorn we are of the conflicts which have arisen between " theirs ; how many of them have said to me in told by the disunionists t hat in the sup- men or between nations, could this be more s tdness and in longing, " Will not Kentucky porting a Republican administration in its truthfully said than of that in which we H answeredo wm y ti have leaped endeavors to uphold the constitution and are now involved. Neutrality necessarily ! choeuliLmleLve exultingly, " Yes, she promptly, y fiut when confidently, endeavors laws, we are' submissionists,' and when implies indifference. Is Kentucky indif- I thought of this neutrality my heart sank they have pronounced this word, they sup- ferent to the issue of this contest 1 Has , within me, and I did not and I could not look pose they have imputed to us the sum of all she, indeed, nothing at stake I Has she ; those brave men in the face. And yet I could hunlan abasement. Well, let it be confess- no compact with her sister states to keep,' not answer, " No." I could not crush myself ed, we are ' submissionists,' and weak and no plighted faith to uphold, no renown to ' to the earth under the self-abasement of such spiritless as it may be deemed by some, sustain, no glory to win I Has she no ! areply. I therefore said—and may my coun tr 1 y sustain me—' I hope, I trust, I pray, nay, we glory in the position we occupy. For horror of that crime of crimes now being i I believe Kentucky will yet do her duty." example : the law says, ' Thou shalt not committed against us by that stupendous ' If this government is to be destroyed, ask steal 5' we submit to this law, and would rebellion which has arisen like a tempest- yourselves are you willing it shall be recorded not for the world's worth rob our neighbor cloud in the South I We rejoice to know in history that Kentucky stood by in the of his forts, his arsenals, his arms, his that she is still a member of this Union, 1 greatness of her strength and lifted not a hand munitions of war, his hospital 'stores, or and as suchthe same interest in 'to slay the l ca h ta l stroph .r e! If it is to be _saved, any thing that is his. Indeed, so impress- resisting a poignard whose point is aimed ashsall verily wyritateinvtehlat,ls i , n are the you immeasurable t ed are we with the obligations of this law, at the heart. It is her house that is on glory which must attend the achievement, that we would no more think of plunder- fire ; has she no interest in extinguishing Kentucky had no part? ing from our neighbor half a million of the conflagration ? Will she stand aloof I will only add, if Kentucky wishes the dollars because found in his unprotected and announce herself neutral between the waters of her beautiful Ohio to be dyed in blood mints, than we would think of filching a raging flames and the brave men who are —if h s e h i e r wishes h her harvest fields, l n e o d ww en av ea in t g purse from his pocket in a crowded periling their lives to subdue them? Hun- 1 the ! feet of h u o n stile ac s e o'lLry e arsaamftwer h garden thoroughfare. Write a us down, therefore, dreds of thousands of citizens of other ' submissionists.' Again : the law says, states—men of culture and character, of lis trampled beneath the threshings of the tempest—if she wishes the homes where her ie r ' Thou shalt not swear falsely ;' we submit thought and of toil-men who have a deep ,loved ones are now gathered in peace, invaded to this law, and while in the civil or mili- stake in life, and an intense appreciation I by the proscriptive fury of a military despot tary service of the country, with an oath to of its duties and responsibilities, who know ! ism, sparing neither life nor property—if she g support the constitution of the United the worth of this blessed government ofj grown w i th streets t a o d nf hie steamboatswnsan o r h d es rive States resting upon our conscience, we ours, and do not prize even their own I would not for any earthly consideration blood above it—l say; hundreds of thous- w rs n t w o l lie rotting at her wharves, then let 1 her join the Southern Confederacy ; but if she engage in the formation or execution of a ands of such men have left their homes, ; would have the bright waters of that river conspiracy to subvert that very constitu- their workshops, their offices, their count- ! flow on in their gladness—if she would have tion, and with it the government to which ing houses, and their fields, and are now 1 her harvests peacefully gathered to her gar it has given birth. Write us down, there- rallying about our flag, freely offering their ners—if she would have the lullabies of d her fore, again, ' submissionists.' Yet again : all to sustain it, and since the days that I cradlesbtbe and cries the and son songs of her terrorsof homes u battle—if n i nv a she e d w y ould have the streets of her towns and cities when a President has been elected in strict crusading Europe threw its hosts upon the accordance with the form and spirit of the embattled plains of Asia, no deeper, or again filled with the hum and throngs of busy constitution, and has been regularly in- more earnest, or grander spirit has stirred trade, and her rivers and her shores once stalled into office, and is honestly striving the souls of men than that which now , more vocal with the steamer's whistle, that to discharge his duty .by snatching the sways those mighty masses whose gleam-1 anthem of a free and prosperous commerce, republic from the jaws of a gigantic treason ing banners are destined ere long to make I and let h h er st d and fa a s n t i r he th r e st o r l s e an d d u stripes, which threatens to crush it, we care not bright again the earth and sky of the die- I membe o r of this a ti r nion. Let whole brave ty pe u opl a e what his name may or may not be, or what treated South. Can Kentucky look upon 1 say to the President of the United States:— the designation of his political party, or this sublime spectacle of patriotism un- . You are our chief magistrate ; the govern what the platform on which he stood during moved, and then say to herself : " I will 1 ment you have in charge, and are striving to the presidential canvass; we believe we spend neither blood nor treasure, but I save from dishonor and dismemberment, is fulfil in the sight of earth and heaven our will shrink away while the battle rages, 1 our government; your cause is indeed our highest obligations to our country, in giv- and after it has been fought and won, .. I cense ; your battles are our battles; make ing to him an earnest and loyal support in will return to the camp, well assured that for us, therefore , in the ranks of your room . . the struggle in which he is engaged. if I cannot claim the laurels, I will at I 1 armies, that your triumph may be our triumph also." Nor are we at all disturbed by the flip- least enjoy the blessings of the victory I" I Even as with the Father of us all I would pant taunt that in thus submitting to the Is this all that remains of her chivalry— plead for salvation, so, my countrymen, as authority of our government we are noes- of the chivalry of the land of the Shelbys, I upon my ery knees, would I plea with you ou saltily cowards. We know whence this the Johnsons, the Aliens, the Clays, the ! for the lif e v , aye for the life, of our d great beneficent taunt comes, and we estimate it at its true Adairs, and the Devises ? -Is there a' kf institutions. But if the traitor's knife, now at the throat of the republic, is to value. We hold that there is a higher Kentuckian within the sound of my voice ; do its work, and this government is fated to courage in the performance of duty than to-night, who can hear the anguished cryadd yet another to that long line of sepulchres in the commission of crime. The tiger of of his country as she wrestles and writhes which whiten the highway of the past, then thejungle and cannibal of the South Sea in the folds of this gigantic treason, and i my heartfelt prayer to God is, that it may be Island have that courage in which the rev- then lay himself down upon his pillow with 1 written in history, that the blood of its life olutionists of the day make their especial this thought of neutrality, without feeling I was not found upon the skirts of Kentucky, boast; the angels of God and the spirits of that he has something in his bosom which just men made perfect have had, and stings him worse than would an adder I have that courage which submits to the Have we, within the brief period of eighty laws. Lucifer was a non-submissionists, years, descended so far from the, mountain and the first secessionists of whom history heights on which our fathers stood, that has given us any account, and the chains 'already, in our degeneracy, wta proclaim which he wears fitly, express the fate due our blood too precious, our treasure too to all who openly defy the laws of their valuable to be devoted to the preservation Creator and of their country. He rebelled of such a government as • this ? They because the Almighty would not yield to , fought through a seven years' war, with him the throne of heaven. The principle 1 the greatest power on earth, for the hope, of the Southern rebellion is the same.—' the bare hope, of being able to found this Indeed, in this submission to the laws is 1 republic, and now that it is no longer a found the chief distinction between good I hope nor an experiment, but a glorious men and devils. A good man obeys the 1 reality, whioh has excited the admiration laws of truth, of honesty, of morality, and t and the homage of the nations, and has all those laws which have been enacted by' covered us with blessings as ".the waters competent authority for the government I cover the channels of the sea," have we, and' protection of the country in which he their' children, no pared toil,'of eaorifiee, aIWAIID. 22 —BOOHALNAN LC, - A woman of a satirical mind was asked by her friends if she really intended to marry Mr. —, adding that Mr. was a good kind of a man, but so very sin gular. 'Well,' replied the lady,' so much the better •, if he is very much unlike other men, he is much more likely to make a good husband. [!' I sell peppermints on Sunday,' remarked a good old lady who kept a candy shop, they carries them to church and eats 'em and keeps awake to hear the ser mon ; but if you .want , pickled limes you must come week days. They are secular commodities.' Keep yourself innocent if you would be happy Miss Mary's Jaunty Blue Hat, and What it Accomplished. My friend Kelly was walking doWn the street last autumn, in a brown study on some obstruse" subject, his vision horizon tal and vacant, his step rapid and careless, when just as he had forded one of the cross streets, and lifted one foot to placiit upon the curbstone, a big, but cowardly yellow dog came sweeping along, followed by a blank one of the same species. The speci men, oblivious of all things but the object of pursuit, as every dog should be on such an occasion, and possibly under the control of his own momentum, struck Kelly's per pendicular leg while the other was walking, and knocked it out from under him. My friend went down instanter. His glow beaver bounced upon the pavement and continued its journey, while his shawl struck against a shopman's window like a paper pellet on the wall. Kelly gathered himself together, pick ing himself up, and looked after the dog who had done the mischief, expecting to find him hove to' in canine dismay at the accident he had caused, bat to his utter astonishment the animal seemed as regard less of his equilibrium as of any other trivial matter, and was making after the aforesaid yellow dog at as great a speed as though he had not tripped over the best fellow in town. While my friend was down, a clear, musical, girlish laugh had rung upon the open air. It was evidently spontaneous, so charmingly musical, was so suddenly checked and had withal so good a cause that Kelly could hardly be angry or dis concerted. When the gentleman had recovered from his surprise at the heedlessness of the quadruped, he bethought himself of the music. There were half a dozen ladies in view ; but by a trigonometrical calculation, lie reached the conclusion that the laugh must have come from either a dainty little blue hat, with delicate trimmings ; or a decided sober and ancient brown one—the two being in conjunction. Of course he fastened upon the bine hat ; for never since the flood did a grave, unfashionable bonnet give out such gushing music as that. Kelly was not a city gentleman—not he. He was squire in a rural town—a leader of town affairs. A man of rank, to whom the village poli ticians looked for the shrewdest counsels ; on whom abused people called for advice and redress ; into whose hands friendless widows put the management of their scanty estates, sure that all would be done for them and their little ones that taut, fidelity and a warm heart could accomplish. The blue hat was a city hat, and the brown hair it covered, together with the hazel eyes that sparkled in front of it, were of city growth. But the sober brown bonnet wai on a rural aunt of good di mensions, both in person and in heart. Before the catastrophe which brought out laughter, the aunt was listening very attentively to the lady's eager request that she would try and procure her a school near her country home. After the accident, the brown bonnet gave a very , appropriate and impressivO lecture on the impropriety of laughing out in that way, I when the street was full of folks. 'Why, who could help it, Aunty Did you ever see anything so funny ? Laugh ! -I didn't laugh—it laughed itself. Indeed to escape another lecture, she had to cover her lips, nose and eyes almost, in scented linen cambric.' 'Why, you see, aunty,' said the blue hat, recurring to the former topic, father isn't rich—indeed, I don't think he is as well off as he seems to be ; and the family is large—all are girls too, just a bill of expense, you know ; and I don't like to have father furnish me music lessons any longer, for I know he can't afford it. But I wouldn't give up my music for the world ; only I want to pay part of the expense myself. Father isn't able—he looks more and more careworn every day. lam really afraid,' and the voice fell and became very serious. I'm really afraid things are going wrong with him. Besides, I want to be doing something. I'm a better girl when 1 feel that I am not a drone and dependent. Yes aunty, I must and will have a school— there ! Will you help me The brown bonnet caught the girl's en thusiasm and she promised. You must have known, reader, from the description of my friend Kelly, that he was town superintendent. Who else was so well qualified to look after the interest of the public school ? One morning at six o'clock—my friend rises at five and has a good fire in his office and an appetite for breakfast at six—a rap fell upon the outer door. Kelly rose and opened it. Good morning, ladies, walk in.' The brown bonnet said Good morning,' with dignity, the blue hat pronounced the same timidly, and both passed in. My niece would liked to be examined, to take the school in our district' Certainly,' said the town - superinten dent, laying the poker on the table.— ' Certainly, your aunt—beg pardon—your niece shall be examined, madam. Warm morning ma'am,' wiping the perspiration from his face wit a sheet of writing paper. Bless you ! its the coldest morning we've had this fall,' said the astonished aunt. Why Mary's face has been like a poney, all the way ridin' in the wind. Just look at it.' There was no need, for my friend bad seen something more than the blue hat, some minutes before. Certainly, mad am, certainly—very red—l mean very cold, indeed, ma'am, very.' The town superintendent was not long, however, in getting better possession of his faculties : and at length the examina tion commenced. Your residence, if you please,' said Kelly blandly. Milwaukie.' May I ask you where you were edu cated 'continued the questioner, look ing for once into the eyes which were sparkling despite the embarrassed fea tures. 4 In the public schools, sir.' Did you graduate ? Yes, sir.' The lady handed him a roll tied with a blue ribbon. Kelly tried hard to untie it, but soon got the knot into a very bad fix. The pretty fingers of the blue hat were called into requisition, and the - knot was conquered close before him, under his eyes. Opening the roll he Mary Denver. " Is that your name? Yes, sir.' " Your father's name ? Charles. . iMeroha*S' g Yes, air.' Why, I was clerk in his store when you were a child. He was the noblest employer I ever had. He made me all I am. I mean he made me nprigh . t—for , that is all I am any way?' Kelly promised a certificate—and. he world bring it over the next day, :which he did. Diming the whole term he was very faithful in official visits to the sohools ; and just before the close of the session my friend said: Mary, I wouldn't teach any more' • 'O, I must. I like it, and besides, I havn't accomplished half I want yet.' What do you want to accomplish V I want to continue my music. - What else?' I want to clothe Minnie' What else?' I want to feel that lam useful, that I am doing something.' I want to hire you Mary, and I will pay you wages that will enable you to do all this' You want to hire me ! What can I do= for you P 'Keep my house, and be my wife, Mary.' And then the town superintendent got his arm around Mary's waist, and held her tight, though she struggled a little at first. Let me go, and I will tell you.' He released the little finger, and Mary stood before him, trembling, blushing, twining the strings of the blue hat round her fingers, looking down upon•the floor, glancing once into his earnest eyes, her breast rising and falling till the cameo swayed like a ship on the billows. Do you love me With all my soul.' g Did you ever love anybody else P Never in all my life. Can a little girl like me,' she said, looking earnestly in his fade ; can a little girl like me, devoted, loving you almost to reverence, make you happy always'!" g No one in the world but you.' The little maiden stepped close to his side, and hid herself under his arm. That jaunty blue hat is in a favorite closet of my friend's new house, in a glass ease, on the upper shelf. THE LANCASTER INTELLIGENCES JOB PRINTING ESTABLISHMENT, No. 8 NORTH DUKE STREET, LANCASTER., PA. The Jobbing Department is thoroughly furnished with new and elegant type of every description, and is under the charge of a practical and experienced Job Printer.... The Proprietors are prepared to PRINT CHECKS, NOTES, LEGAL BLANKS, CARDS AND CIRCULARS, BILL HEADS AND HANDBILLS, PROGRAMMES AND POSTERS, PAPER BOOKS AND PAMPHLETS, BALL TICKETS AND INVITATIONS, PRINTING IN COLORS AND PLAIN PRINTING, with neatness, accuracy and dispatch, on the most reasons. ble terms and in a manner not excelled by any establish ment in t he city. .ffir- Orders from a distance, by mall or otherwise, promptly attended to. Address GEO. SANDERSON & BON, Intelligeneer Office, No. S North Duke street, Lancaster, Pa. ORSE AND CATTLE POWDER., TATTERSAL'S HORSE POWDER, HEAVE POWDER, FENNIIGREEK SULPHUR, GETMAN, - CREAM TARTAR, OOPPERAB, ao., For sale at THOMAS ELLMAICKII'S Drug & Chemical Store, West King street, Lano'r. feb 9 tf 4 BOOTS AND SHOES. For the best Foote, go to BRENEMAN'S, W. Bing Street. e, For the best Women's Shoes, go to BRENEMAN'S, W. King Street For ft the best Children's Shoes, go to BRENEMAN'S, W. King Street. For the moat comfortable flt, go to BRENFAIdN'S, W. Bing Street. For work that will not rip, go to BRENEMAIPS, W. King Street. For Boots that will not let in water, go to BRENEMAN'S, W. King Street For the largest Stock in town, go to BRENEMANI3, W. King Street. For the best stock In town, go to BEtNENIAN'S., W. King Street. All in want of Boots and Shoes, go to BRENEMAN'S, W. King Street Everybody in the country go to BBENEMAIPS, Opposite Cooper's HoteL apr 2 tf 12] D ANILING HOUSE OF REED, HEN. B DERSON & 00.—On the 26th of MARCH, instant, the undersigned, under the firm of REED, HENDERSON CO., will commence the Bankng Business, in its usual branches at the office hitherto occupied by John K. Reed & Co., at the corner of East King and Duke streets, hi t wean the Court House and Sprecher'e Hotel, Lancaster, Pa: They will pay interest on deposits at the following rates. 6% per cent. for 6 months and longer. 5 30 days and longer. . . They will buy and sell Stocks and Real Estate on com mission, negotiate Loans for others. purchase and sell Bills of Exchange, Promissory Notes, Drafts, dm., kc., Le. The undersigned will be individually liable to the extent of their means, for all deposits and other obligations of Raub, lIINDEBSON 1L Co. JOHN H. REED, AMOS 8. HENDERSON ISAAC E. WESTER. mar 20 tf 101 17" ONIGNACHEIL & BAUMAN, TAN- I% nem and Corriere Store, back of Robt. Moderwell'a Commission Warehouse, fronting on the Railroad and North Prince street. Cheep for Cash or approved credit.— Constantly on hand a full assortment of all kinds Saddler's and Shoemaker's Leather, of superior quality, including Boozer's celebrated Sole Leather," also, Leather Bands. well stretched, suitable for all kinds of machinery, of any length and width required, made of a superior quality of Leather, Furnace Bellows, Band and Lacing Leather, liar. den Hose, Tanner's Oil, Currier's Tools, Mamma, Shoe Findings, &c. All kinds old Leather bought in the rough ; highest priees given for Hides and Skins in cash; orders will be prompt attended to. lob 6 ly VAN INGEN t , SNYDER DESIGNERS AND ENGRAVERS ON WOOD, o N. E. CORNER ton MID ORRETNOT STEENTS, PHILADELPHIA. Execute all kinds of WOOD.ENGRAVING, withiniauty7 • correctness and despatch—Original Designs furnished for Fine Book Illustrations—Persons wishing Outs, by sending a Photograph or Daguerreotype, can have views of COLLEGES, CHURCHES, COTTAGES, STORE BROiiTS, PORTRAITS, MACHINES, PSTOVES, PATENTS, &o. Engraved as well as oapersonal appllcatlob. FANCY ENVELOPES, LABELS, BILL HEADINGS, SHOW BILLS, VISITING, BUSINESS and other CARDS, engraved in the highest style of the Art, and at the lowest, prices. For Specimens of Floe Engraving, see the Illustrated Works of J. B. LIPPINCOTT & Co., E. H. BUTLER & Co., &c., Ac. foot 213 ly 41 NOREW JACKSON'S HE RUDDY AChanging the subject, Dr. Edgar asked him what he woad have done with Calhoun and other nail/tiers it they had kept on. "Hung them, sir, as high no Haman," was *the Instan taneous reply. "They should have been a terror to trai tors to all time, and po s terity would have pronounced it the best act of my life .les he said these words, be half rose in his bed, and all the old fire glowed in his old eyes again. See PARTON'S LUTE OF JACKSON, p. (10 R , at ELLAB BARa 00'8 New Book Store. doe 18 tt 49] OURNITURE OF 7G VERY DESORIP. F Lion warranted as good as the beet, and cheaper than the chea pest-at KETOELthiII, None QuWt BMW, 91;•• poelte 13henk's National House, Lancaster. N. B. To any one purchasing $6O worth before the first of November next, 10 per cent. will be allowed for Cash. sue 31 - tf 83 . ATTEIDI TION i MAL LIVAILE M0.01G8. 1 P04 THE MILLION: - • • IiARDEL"f3 RIFLE AND INFANTRY TACTICS. OILMAN'S MANUAL. BAXTER'S VOLUNTEER'S MANUAL—Knit* sod Ger- man. ELLSWORTH'S ZOCAVE DRlLL—With' a eleeteh ej life. THE VOLUNTEER'S TEXT BOOE, containing moist Ware. , able Information for Ofticiera, Volunteer)", the Camp; Field, or on the Maroh. BEADLE'S DIME SQUAD DRILL BOOK:. BEADLE'S SONGS KO& TEE WAS.... STARS AND STRIPES SOMBER& All the above, ant a variety of Ildlcor.Valiar, , ErOatiliala, .&c., &F., for sale at J. M . WESTHAEFIEWS june - e - tf 21] • Cornet N. Queen and Omega itreetc • • ' Fon. BOOK - AND D mum s , rourav • AsTAX .41 wptees• ligul th bac °cal!' M A4 B-0160 f ai A * , dwollts, . 7 , ,a . t .d e =at& oseet leffellai di prennt LAI 44-111 L • a Ora* 0 .• tioeJl Prol • NO. 33.