L wIUR PER ANNUM INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE. TOWANDA: ! ftursaay Morning, May 9, 1861 Silccttb Ipoctrn. [Prom the N. Y. Tribune ] THROUGH BALTIMORE. fO) TOICII eV TUB rKHNSVLVAXIA TOLCJfTBM#. 1. 'TM Priilay morn, the train dre* near. The city end <•'"? ahore ; fu through the sunshine, *>rt nnd clear, I We lew Ihe dear old Bag' appear, > d in our heart* aroe a sheer p„r Baltimore- AeroM tha broad Patapaco a Old Port Mclleury bore The "tarry banner of the brave. • a when our lather." went to .save, I or la the tranche* find a grave. At BeltiMore. nr. j Btloren*. pillared in the sky. We sw the statue aoar Of Washington, serene and high— I Could traitor* view that form, nor fly T Could patriota see, nor gladly die Tot Baltimore f ,r " " Oh, city of our father a song, Bv that swift aid we bora Wbts sorely pressed, roeeive the throng, ■ who go to shield our (lag from wrong, ■ An J g "t welcome, warm and strong, lu Baltimore 1" T"e had no arms, as friends we came. As brothers evermore, I To rally round one eaerod name, I Taecharter of our power and fair.a : K We cever dreamed of guilt and -haine ■ fa Baltimore. vt. ■ Tha coward mob upon us fell r Me Henry's flag tbey tore : I Surprised, botue back by the awe.;, I Baatdovra with ntad. inhuman yell. Before s* yawned a traitoroui bell. in Bs'.ixmort I nr. The streets our soldier fathers trod Blushed with then children's gore : We saw the craven rulers cod. And dip in bh oil the civic rod Shah' each things be, oh righteous God, | In Baltimore ? vt:, Xa, never .' By that outrage black, A solemn oath we swear, Tj bring the Royslone's tiio ,sands ba-k, Svke down the dastard* who attack, i:d leave a red and Her/ track Through Baltimore. tx. /w down, in haste, thv guilty uead ! God'e wrath 13 swift and sore : The iky with gathering bolts is red,— C.esn.t from thy Airts the slaughter abed. Or Kihc thyself an ashen bed— j ' h Bait re' ' Hfiisctllanious. Tha Qusstioii of Allegiance. A remarkable im-tance of the painful emo tions which aro produced by mental excite ment, in regard to a real or supposed conflict of ilu'y, occiirre 1 in this city on Friday. A comaaiiiler o( lite United btntes Navy com milted suicide lit tlie .Merchants' Hotel. He *k n native of the Stute of Georgia, bat has rc'ided near Bristol, Fa., when r.ot engaged in I dual service, it is supposed the motive hich prompted this fearlnl act was au aver ton to acting either in hostility to his native Sate or the Federal Government, whose corn If? won he held. However much we may de v"re his sad fate, ami pity tiie delusiou which odium to become the victim of the demur* fi t's doctrines of the iipo.-ties of -Secession, i>resolution not to employ the anility which tad been educated by the General Govern- I at#t against its authority, was that of n brave, ! honorable, and conscientious man. It is easy for us to imagine the system of nphistry which those officers of Southern nativity adopt when they throw up their comm:-sinus, and range themselves under the tanner cf rebellion. It remits from that per ' ous theory of State allegiance, which lias Lfen taught to the two last generations of Njathtriiers— a theory which to obtain force Bust admit a position fatal to tiie integrity -i the INpiiblic, and eventually subversive of : 'f'v Inv but that of a mere township, town, municipality. It were to discriminate too cicely for us to draw the parallel between Male allegiance and National allegiance, to blow where the citizen of Pennsylvania may 1;' ISC 1° be a citizen of the United States. But we think that no positions of social lite or Rational service present u clearer path of - s tv tnan those cf the army and navv. They arf; nation*)l institutions to every intent and . u pnsf, i'hey exist by the will of the Geue- Government, and whoever enters them -ecoines its servant. The General Govern t educates, protects, and provides for its - iters, uud they swear to it in return, iife, '' '"J, and obedience. Tbe military and "'stitutions are so peculiarly national, ■' 1 the duty they enjoin is so distinct from required by a mere State, that nothing F,e most absurd reasoning can create a Ambiance. rt ta:e theory of State allegiance, like most • ttie Secession theories, indeed, is peculi c,'' end has been almost fatally in- U.'. h ? olir good mother the nation. We military obedience in America a qnes- f n honor—other nations make it a (juts k n f lrp a e on If a province of France re , / ' Against the empire, it would be equi -- LrV? & ru[D '^ ea d court-uiartial for a 1 *• ' r*- r u-M obedierre ko fbc FVnperor's order, because he happened to be a native of [ the rebellious district. Nor do we tbintc that [ the British Govern.nent would have an liesi i tutiou in hanging at the yard-arm a captain who refused to blockade a port in one ot the | Irish provinces, because he happeued to have been born in Cork or Londonderry. The con cession once made is fatal to all military effec tiveness, and to all law, order, and discipline in a government. We have partly recognized it in the United States, and the demoralized condition of our nriny and navy shows how terrible in its effects the recognition has proved. The melancholy instance cited in tbo open ing paragraph is an exception to the general rule which lias prevailed among those officers who have abandoned our Hag on grounds of State allegiance. The ease of General Twiggs chow 3 how closciv these notions of honor are allied with what every other civilized nation on the globe calls treachery. If honor com pels an officer to spurn his allegiance to the Government, it snrely does not compel liitn to remain at his post long after the conflict be tween the State and nation has arisen ; to ob tain every secret which confidence can pro cure ; to paralyse the hand which has nurtured him ;to draw his salary from lho "tyrannical'' coffers of the nation ; to live in apparent alle gianee until the moment of action arrives, and then cross over the Potomac and draw the sword of a traitor. So long as many of these officers are permitted to live on half-pay with out service, they aro willing to rtceive their pay and waive the immediate question of alle giunce, but when the command of duty comes, they collect the arrears of their salary up to date, plead their duty to their State, send in a resignation, and next appear at Fort Pickens or Fort Surnpur, trying to steal w Government for with stolen cannon nnd pilfered powder. We certainly do not condemn a native of South Carolina for ioving that State, any more than we censure outselves for cherishing a fondness towards dear old Pennsylvania. But the soldier is the son of the nation. She is his military mother—and he owes her his life and sword. The rule recognizes no excep tion and can admit of no deviation. To aban don the nation in its hour of peril, when it ueads ail that valor and skill can afford, is to be guilty of ingratitude and treason. The Great Soldier of the Age, whose loyal arm now wields the sword of Washington, is an exatnply lor all to follow. Winfield Scott loves Yir ginia, but lis loves bis country more, and in giving his great mind to bis country, even in antagonism to his State, lie teaches the eol dier what true allegiance is.— I'rtss. How Public Opinion is Maiufactured i£ tiie South. There is uothiug more potent in society than a bad newspaper, unless it is a good one; and, accordingly, the first care of a tyrant is either to currupt the public press or crush it. With liie exception of the journals in France, we do not know a newspaper system in tiie world 1 more mendacious ur unscrupulous than that of '.he Cotton Slates. There was a time, and that not ninny months ago, when we could point to dozens ol journals in the South, and feel proud of their professional relation-hip It is now a sea of shame without a star. Wlietb j er they have been corrupted, cr crushed, we ; scarcely know; but a tuorc studied system ot calumny on the people of the North, nnd mis representation of their motives and institutions, could scarcely lie invented, a>i it is not at ad surpri-ing that the public opit i m thus created should be so ungenerous uud unjust. We have before us a number of paragraphs from Southern papers, which will illustrate the position we as-mute. Tiie following is a des patch in the New Orleans I'icayunt., detailing the late occurrence in Baitiuioie : " Tiie Massachusetts Seventh Regiment have been taken prisoners by the lialtimore ans. " Over one buadred were killed and wound ed. " Sixteen Ba'timoreans were also killed. " Eight hundred improved arms also fell in to the hands of the liaitiinoreaiM." Here are live distinct falsehoods in four brief paragraphs ! The facts of the esse are so re cent as to render a correction superfluous, but we must -ay that it woul.l be almost impossi ble tor human invention to construct ft more mischievous story out of such a plain and de plorable narrative as that of the outrages at Baltimore. From a leading editorial in the New Orleans Delta on the military preparations of Pennsyl vania wo take the fo owing startling senten ces : "The Governor cf Pennsylvania is about to take the lield with thiro hundred thousand Broad brims to invade and subjugate the South, and compels its submission to a duty of one hundred per rent, on iron nnd to the recog nition