The press. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1857-1880, October 09, 1862, Image 2

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    Vrtss.
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1862.
Iliir We can take no notice of anonymous communica
tions. We do not return rejected manuscripts.
W Voluntary correspondence solicited from all parts
of the world, and especially from our different military
and naval departments. When used, it will be paid for.
THE PLATFORM OF TREASON, AS PRE
PARED BY THE LEADER OF THE
BEELKINEIDGE PARTY IN PENNSYL-
VAN lA.
The following is the resolution wri ten by Mr. F. W.
Hughes, the Chairman of the Breckinridge Democratic
State. Committee, for the consideration of the State D -
mocratic Convention. It is the most lucid and explicit
declaration we have yet reed of the opinions of the leaders
of the Secession party of Pennsylvania:
• Resolved, That Pennsylvani owes her growth in po
potation, and the Morena° of capital and wealth of her
Citizens, chiefly to the advantages which the American
'Union had afforded for the development of her natural
resources; and that her glory and paramount interests
•tire idenilSed with the continuance of that Union.
SHOULD, HOWEVER, CAUSES , HITHERTO
IBESIEITED BY THE DEMOCRACY Or THE COUN
TRY PEND ASUNDER THE BONDS THAT BIND
TOGETHER THESE STATES, AND SHOULD THE
FIFTEEN SLAVEHOLDINO SPATES. CLAIMING
TO BE DRIVEN BY THE NECESSITY OF MU
TUAL PBOTECTION AGAINST THE EFFECT OF
SU 711 OAUSEB, SUCCESSFULLY ESTABLISH AN
OTHER CONFEDERACY, THEE PENNSYLVANIA
MUST REGARD HER RELATION. TO THE FACTS
WHICH CIRCUMSTANCES BEYOND OUR 00N
TROL HAVE PRODUCED.
5b6 cannot then refnee to peroeive that ehe must
either take her place in come Northern fragment of a
once•glorioua Union, and rest content to be shorn of the
greater part of her manufacturing itdustry, and of
her exert and import trade—to hold a secondary and
helpless relation to the Northeastern States, with no
outlet or approach from the ocean for her great East
ern or her great Western metropolis, except •through
the waters and before the forte and guns of a foreign
nation, and thus practically (for 'want of ability to
protect, be made to yield up eat reliable direct foreign
trade.
OR SHE MAY, IF A.MEMBER OF THE NEW
OONFIDERAOY, BECOME THE GREAT MA.NU
FAO CURIS'G WORKSHOP FOR & PEOPLE NOW
CONSUMING ANNUALLY $300,000,000 WORTH
OF PRUDUOTS AND MANUFAOTORE FRO &I,
AND IMPOBTED THROUGH THE NOR CHERN
STATES; BEE OITIBELBECOBE THE GBEA.T
COM filbitUl.tl.l DEPO re AND DIS ER (BUYING
POINTS FOR THIS CONFEDER&OY, AND HER
WEALTH, P A PULA TION, AND GLORY, BE PRO.
NOTED IN A DEGREE UNPARALLELED IN THE
HISTORY AND PROSPERITY OF ANY PEOPLE!
' , That it will be the right and duty of her citizens to
consult their own best intereets in a position so momen
ions, and decide between the lawful_ alternatives. And
that instating the truths here announced, we have no
desire to conceal that our object is to present to the pea.
ple of other States theposition they 74.141 seuerallyocces
jyy if the coercion disunionists in their midst succeed
in defeating an equitabie compromise of existing di . S.
cutties " FRANCIS, W. HUGHE3.
FONNIVS WAR, FRESS-- . UNQUESTION'''
ABLY -NEE BEST WEEKLY NEWSPAPER PUB
LISHER-1M War Press continues to advance ra.
',idly In public favor. The number f,r
NEXT contains;
A PORTRAIT Or THE LATE GE N. NELSON,
VIEW OF THE TOWN HALL, HAGER3tO
(Gnarded by the Dab.lgren. Howitzer Battery, of Philto
delphie.)
ORIGINAL SKETOH...-."The Spy."
AN HUBEI STORY, called " &sated Alive.),
SDI CORIALEI —l. The Wolf in Sheep's Clothing
2. Will France Interfere?-8. Garibaldi's Advent-4.
The Contest in the Centre District-5. Condescending
Loyalty Declined-6. A Reminiscence for Mr. Barr
7. Victory—B. The Duty of True Democrats-9. Lan
caster County-10. Aliens and the Draft-11. An Excel
lent fiuggestion-12. Promotion from the Banks- 15. The
Late Gen. Belvon-14. The Earnest Patriot-15. Shall
Ponnolvania Decide In Favor of tho Rebellion on the
14th of October?-16. The Military Statue-17. War
Intervention in a Now Bbapo-19. Eighteen
Months Ago-20. The Congressional Elections and the
Dm:dile:4dg* Politicians.
B]X LETTERS FROM , g OCCASIONAL."
[The Weir Press publishes every week all the lettere
of Oocational" that appear In the Daily Press.]
SKETCH OF GENERAL HALL EOIC. (Original),
giving an exoelle4 description of him, both mentally.
and phy . Mobil y.
CRIGINAL POETRY, by George 11. Bolter, and
other celebrated writers
A WEEK'S NEWS SUMMARY.
FROM THE ARMY OF THE POTOMAC.
THE WAR IN KENTUCKY.
THE WAR IN THE BOUTHWE3T.,
LATE NEWS FROM THE GUL.F.
IMPORTANT SOUTHEhN NEWS:
FROM FORTRESS bIONROE.
THE WAR IN MISSISSIPPI.—A Great Viotory at .
Corinth.
LETTER FROM RUSSIA.
PERSONAL, POLITICAL, AND MISOELLANE
ODI4 ITEMS. '
THE LATEST NEWS BY TELEGRAPH FROM.
ALL PARTS OF THE UNION.
CORRESPoNDENOE FROM EVERY DIVISION
Or THE ARMY.
•
CITY INTELLIGENCE.
DIISORLLANROUS.—The Oartel—Morgan , s Great
Retreat—The War in Misshisippi—The Official Report of
Gen. McClellan—The Richmond Prison's—Official Army
Vote of October, 1861—Deaths of Pennsylvania Soldiers
—Address of theUnion_
uumnore— ii retlis of . iieneral Nelsonle
Death—The Valor of Pennsylvanians Acknowledged—
Who v?ais" Responsible for the Surrender of Harper's
Ferryt—The Governor of Maryland's Order, Ac , Ac.
FINANCIAL AND • COMMERCIAL—The Money
Market, Philadelphia Markets, ico.,
WIT AND HUMOR.
PARTICULAR NOTICE
In this week's Wen Paws there aro some new Pre•
minms offered, to which attention is called. The new
work, by EDMUND KIRKE of ‘g &HONG THE
PIBEI3 ; Olt, SOUTH IN BROESSION-TIPSE," will
be sent (in addition to the WAR PRESS for a year) to
every person remitting Two Dollars.
A BEAUTIFUL PHOTOGRAPH ALBUM AND
THISTY PORTBRITB
will be Bent to any person who will raise O Club of
Twenty and remit Twenty. four Dollars. .
TEBBIS OF THE WAR PRESS t -Stegle copies,
FOVII cents, put up in wrapper, ready for mailing ; to
be had at eur counter, as well as of ail newsdealera. Two
oilers per annum, when sent by mail.
Napoleon and His 'Lima's
Over the future of nations, as over the fu
ture of individuals, Providence has cast a
veil. ' Yet, as we can somewhat judge from
the boy what the man may be, wo can approxi
mate, by inductive thought rather than mere
conjecture, what, under such and such circum
stances, may. happen to a nation. No doubt
many philosophic minds have speculated, with
keen anxiety, upon the condition of France
whenever NAPOLEON shall have as shuffled off
this mortal coil." Let him survive until his
son reach manhood, and the continuance of
the Bonaparte dynasty may be pretty..surely
counted upon. Lot him die while 'that - child
is young, and shadows, clouds, and_
darkness
rest upon and obscure the prospect. The
Empress, no doubt, would be Regent during
the boy's minority, but is France to be ruled
by a sceptre held in a woman's hand ? NAPO
LEON (son
. of JEROME) might then haVe the
ambition • of• assuming imperial sway, though
his unpOpularity in Paris would Militate .
greatly against it. Or, some bold soldier may
cast his sword into the scale, and repeat the
daring of the first NAPOLEON. That 'either
the Bourbon or the Orleans' representative
have the slightest chance of wearing the dia
dem of France seems so utterly out of the
question that nobody appears to think it
worthy of`consideration. France hates the
Bourbons, and the junior as much at least as•
the senior branch—the Count nu PARIS rather
more than the. Count DE eIfAMBORD.
It has sometimes occurred to us, and pos
sibly to others, that NAPOLEON'S scarcely
concealed leaning against tho Union cause, in
our present contest, is the result of distrust,
on account:of our having had the Count DE
PARIS and his brother serving as volunteers in
our army: These young gentlemen, it is uni
versally conceded, behaved with marked gal
lantry in, . our service, and, by their frank
courtesy and bonhomie, made friends of all with
whom they came in contact. Perhaps NAPO
LEON found something annoying in their popu
larity and gallantry, representations of which
reached Europe. It is certain that, ,even
before PALMERSTON volunteered his 'hollow
pretext of neutrality, NAPOLEON bad pro
claimed that principle, which, of late, he
semi rathei inclined to abandon. It may be
assumed that be will not be quite pleased with
the letter, dated 11th September, from the
Count DE • PAnrs to General SICKLES, now
liethe rounds of the newspapers, in which
lie manfully avows his anti-Secession senti
ments. Tie following sentence is well Tut,
and is true as well as frank:
"Depend upon it, however ignorant-and preju
diced may be the public at large, there are still on
this side of the Atlantic some hearts who follow
with emotion the struggle of a great and free
t.ation for her institutions, acid who cannot believe
in the ultimate success of the efforts of a deluded
minority to establish a • new community, whose
corner-stone shell be so odious, so dangerous; and
so precarious an institution as that of slavery."
This, aS the ovidence of a personal witness ;
aught to have a decided influence upon NA.
POLEON. That - it will favorably affect him, as
corning from one of the Orleans princes, is
very much to be doubted.
War Medals
A correspondent, who ought to be well
informed, assures na that the Naval war
medals which Congress has authorized the
President to distribute, in acknowledgment
of eminent services, will be composed of the
same metal for all classes, so that an Admiral
and a man before the mast shall have the
saxne distinction. Also, that the specimens in
gold, silver, and bronze, were executed Only
to show how the medal would appear in dif
ferent metals. In all probability, when the
war is ended, every man who has served in it
with an honorable record will receive a
medal which he and his family ought to trea
sure far above the factitious adornments of
rank and title which European aespots scatter
among their myrmidons.
Another correspondent, who assure§ us that
the Waterloo medal is the same size and
weight of an English crown piece, has allowed
us to examine the army and navy medals,
which, after marty , years' agitation, much op
posed by WELLINGTON, were granted, in Queen
Vioronia's name, to the naval and military
men who had served in the wars against NA
POLEON, or, rather, to the few survivors. They
were also issued, we believe, to the eldest sons
and grandsons. The original medal, of silver,
is large, but another medal, a little smaller
than our silver dime, and twie,e as thick, was
worn by those who did not wish to have nearly
an ounce of silver dangling on their breasts.
These are the medals which we have been al
lowed to examine, and were made by HUNT
and ROWELL ) the well-known London jewel•
lers, and executed by Mr. WEON 3 the modeller
of the British Mint. The naval medal bears
a bust of VICTORIA., and the reverse has a
representation, in relievo, of Britannia riding
a sea-horse. The military medal has the
same obverse, and on the reverse VICTORIA.,
robed and crowned, is, shown placing a
laurel wreath upon the bead of a kneeling
warrior. Surrounding 'this is the inscription
et To the British Army, 1793-1814." Each
medal has its distinctive ribbon by which it is
attached- to the coat-breast or button-hole.
The navy ribbon is white and the military; is
red, each with a narrow edging of blue. As
a cheap acknowledment of merit, such a thing
as this is not without its use. The value con
sists in its being a record of good. service, of
practical patriotism, and of national gratitude.
The annals of warfare have not recorded any
valor so great as than evinced by our citizen
soldiers during.the present war—and every one
of them, or his surviving representative, ought
to receive from his country some tangible
memorial that he, too, bore arms in the great
contest for national rights and human freedom
now waging on our soil.
The Meeting Last Night
We surrender a great part of our space to
day to a report of the meeting at the National
Hall last evening of the friends of the Go
vernment. Apart from the !fact that it was
one of the most enthusiastic demonstrations
we have ever seen in Philadelphia, we cannot
but remark the singular harmony that per
vaded its deliberations, and the presence of
men of all parties to assist in developing and
reorganizing a true loyal feeling. Its presi
dent, Mr. CHANDLER, who was one of Mr. Be-
CHANAN'S ministers at a foreign court, took the
highest ground; and among those that spoke
none were more earnest and bold than our fel
low-townsman, FREDERICK C, BRIGHTLY; Esq.,
who has been hitherto actively in sympathy
with the Democratic organization. He was
for the party until it turned against the Union,
and his duty to the Union places him where
he to-day. We see in the meeting last
night, in the character of those who controlled
it, and in the patriotic sentiments there ex
pressed, signs of encouragement and comfort.
It shows that the friends of the country are
active, energetic, and thoroughly organized.
We think we may augur from this indication,
and irom the others that are crowding around
us, a glorious triumph to the Union cause at
the polls on next Tuesday.
Mr. Covode at the Arsenal.
The Hon. Joan COTODE has been in Phila.
delpbia, on business for the Government. On
Times** afternoon, at the request of Colonel
G. H. ORMAN, Assistant Quartermaster Ge
neral in Philadelphia, he visited the Arsenal,
and, after inspecting its various operations,
Made an address to the employees. Mr. Co-
Tope impressed upon the minds of his audi
ence the great duty of sustaining the Govern
ment in this hour of peril. He recalled- to
their minds the fact that we were now is a war
for the salvation of the Union, and that if we
permitted the • common enemy to triumph,
either on the battle-field or at the ballot- box'
great danger would befall the Republic. He
did not address them as a party man, nor with
a view of influencing them to the support of
meniparty measures. He'had no motive be
yond the salvation of the Republic, and he
called upon them to do_their-tlutN-ii , - 1
—..---..y.,-.1---m-ure - nonoraele member from
Westmoreland was brief, eloquent, and well
received. We take this occasion to speak of
the high integrity which has characterized
Colonel Criossan's management of the Arsenal.
Having in charge one of the largest, if not the
very largest depot for the army in the coun
try, he has so administered its duties that the
Government has been protected, and the mili
tary operations forwarded and strengthened.
Colonel Cnoemms is an officer of the regular
arniy, and is an efficient, courteous, and in
trepid soldier.
That gallant and gifted Douglas Democrat,
JAMES M. Soovn, of Camden, has been
placed in nomination by the Union party of
the First Legislatiie -district of New Jersey
for. the Assembly, and we are not surprised
to tear that his chances of .election are good.
Mr. Scovir, is one of the earnest, con
scientious, and fearless Democrats who have
broken loose from the old organization, and
are now fighting under the flag of the Union.
LETTER FROM "OCCASIONAL."
WASIIIIVOTON, October 8, 1862.
The last and most magnanimous demon
stration of the times is the' general order of
George B. McClellan, commander-in-chief of
the Army of the Potomac, in favor of the
President's proclamation of the 22d of Sep
tember, which decrees that the slaves of all
the rebels in arms, after January: 1, 1863,
shall be at once and forever free. Coming,
as this splendid order comes, immediately
prior to your election in' Pennsylvania, and
from a native-born son of Pennsylvania,
it is regarded here as the most explicit and
emphatic expression
. in favor of' , the Tolley
of the Administration, and against the sympa
thizers with Secession, that these latter days
have called,. forth. General McClellan has
been claimed by,the sympathizers with Seces
sion in your city and elsewhere as a quiet
ally in their attacks upon the President of the
United States. They have made him an object
of praise and of preference. When bitter
partisans assailed him, they held the Adminis
tration responsible for these assaults, and
vowed that he was to be destroyed because
he was a Democrat. They insisted that he
was to be sacrificed by the Republicans. They
refused to acknowledge that the President
stood by him ; that your glorious Governor
Cuaris was his close and intimate friend, and
that large masses of Republicans trusted and
believed in him. 'Thar onty °ldea was to make
of Geo. 13. McClellan an. element of sedition, a
faggot of faction, and the best proof that the
leader of the conquering column of the Smeri
can army was in sympathy with the brigands he
was assailing. They cared nothing for him
unless they could put him in conflict with the
Government they hated. They knew, it' they
could induce him to yield to their importuni
ties, he would be the most potent instrument
in their grand scheme of first dividing and
then dissolving the American Union. I
am free to admit that General McClellan
has bad many temptations presented to him.
I am not of those who wholly confide in his
own confidants. But I can appreciate the feel
ings of a soldier who is attacked because he
does not please mere partisans, and who 'can
not act up to the expectations of exacting
patriots. .d great man, however, is silent in
the midst of calumny. It is only the small
man who winces under the attacks of his foes,
and rushes into print to defend himself against
misrepresentation. Gen. McClellan, in his order
Of Tuesday, has answered those who unjustly
suspected him, and has• rebuked those who
believed him to be willing to yield to their
blandishments. I happen to know that when
the President visited the headquarters of the
Army of the Potomac he jocularly reminded
the young chieftain of the Emancipation act,
so reluctantly issued, because it was hoped
that the rebels would be subjugated with
out it. The answer of General McCiel-'
lan is found in his general order*. , This an
swer is at once a rebuke and a reply to
the sympathizers with Beceesion who have
sought to, use him. lie tells it to his sol
diers. Every soldier in McClellan's army
has a constituency in Pennsylvania. In
this constituency are many who have been
trying to employ the name of. McClellan
as a party-cry against the Government. His
answer to them, and his responsive appeal to
the authorities who have so ably sustained
him, is to be found in the glowing words to his
own troops, that they mast not substitute
," the spirit .at Politicalrfaction for that firm,
steady, and earnest, support of the authority
of the Government, which.is the highest duty
of the American soldier." If George B. Mc-
Clellan can thus appeal to his men-in-arms,
why should not his words sink deep into the
hearts of those who profess to admire and to
love him ? OCCASIONAL.
Death of Paymaster Stamm.
We regret to see noticed the death of Levi D.
Sham, which event took place at Mamaroneck,
New York, on Monday. Mr. Slamm, at the time
of hie death, was a paymaster in the United States
navy, having been appointed to that position > du
ring Mr. Buchanan's Administration. Mr. Stamm
was a native of New York, and at an early age
entered the political arena as a Democrat. He es
poused, with all the ardor he was capable, the cause
of General jaokson, and during his Administration,
he supported with zeal all the public measures of
" old Iliokory." Ile also supported Mr. Van
Buren during his Administration. Shortly: after the
election of Mr. Tyler to the Presidency, Mr. Stamm
established a paper in, New York called the
Plebeian.. It was edited with marked ability, and
continued its existence until after the acces
sion of Mr. Polk, when his office was de
stroyed by the conflagration of the Trebune
building. It was not afterwards renewed.
During the palmy days of the Democratic party,
Mr. Sian= was counted among its leaders, and
his opinions received a great deal of attention.
While on ship-board, pursuing his &Vocation, he
contributed highly-interesting letters to the leading
newspapers of the country. Mr. Stamm was a
finished writer, an accomplished gentleman, and an
honest public officer, and one who won the confi
dence and respect of all with whom be was brougat
in contact. The funeral took Place . from his resi
dence in New York city, yesterday afternoon, and
was largely attended by the editorial fraternity,
and his friends.
FROM WASHINGTON.
Special Dempatches to 66 The Press."
WAsonterrort, October 8, 1882
The Occupation of Texas.
GOTIOTaI WALERIDOE, JOHN AUSTIN STEN-RNS,NO
.
OCILDY, LATHROP, WESENDOOK, and other New Yorkera,
are now here to urge tbe early occupation of Texas.
To-day, in company with Colonel HAMILTON, of that
State, they had an interview with the Secretary of War
,upon the subject.
'The Rebel Batteries on the Potomac.
From the Wyandanck, which arrived yesterday, it i 3
ascertained that gunboats have been engaged fOr several
days past in destroying the old ponfederate batteries
down the river—the last place at which they were en
gaged being at Cockpit Point It is not thought that the
rebels bare any guns orithe river, or have tired into any
vessels. The report to that effect brought up by, river
Men, probably originating with men on sailing vessels,
who, seeing the boats from our, gunboats putting out
from ahore after the match had been applied to the old
works of the rebels, and the explosions on shore, took it
for granted that the rebels were firing at them,
The Ho4dtals of
The Surgeon General has returned trona hie visit of in
areetion to the Philadelphia hospitals. Re found them
al in first-rate order, far beau than those which exist
in any other city which he has visited, the supplies be
ing ample and the arrangements excellent
Dr. HorEricson', of Philadelphia, whose management
of the Twenty. aecond and South streets hospital has been
ao highly recommended, has been selected by the Surgeon
General to take charge of the Chestnut Hill General Hos
vital, now in course of erection. This will con'Ain over
three thousand beds, and will be the largest in the world.
Army Appointments.
The following appointments are announced Briga
dier CrEzteral J. D. Cox, United States Volunteers, to be
Major General of 'Volunteers, U.S. A., i Dilutor GusrAvus
M. BASCOM' to be . Assistant Adjutant General of Volun
teers Captain WIIALIAM C. Cannon, to be Commissary
of SUbßileol3loo of Volunteers.
M. BLONDEEL, the Belgian ministet, is going home
for a short time. Mr. BERGEMANNS, the Secretary of
Legaiion, wi I perform hie dwiee in hie absence.
Senator Wade, of Ohio.
A private letter received here states that Senator
WADE, of Ohio, is now home, having been, for several
weeks past, making a tour through Lake Su parlor country
in that State. His health is completely restored, and he
is ready to renew ble patriotic action in the coming Con
greseL
The Internal Revenue Stamps.
The Internal Revenue Department intend printing the
revenue etampe on a finer quality or paper than they have
done heretofore.
Gen. McClellan Not Expected to Move.
Me the general opinion here that General hicOlellan
will not make any move until the Potomac rims.
Dio Bevis from Western Maryland
Little newts tonight from Western Maryland, and that
of no importance.
The Court of Inquiry
The court of inouiry, of which General HARNBY is pre
sident, met lo•day to investigate the charges preferred
by General FITZ Sons PORTER agelnet General MARTIN
DALE, in COIIIIOOIiOII With military operations on thP
ninsuia T... Try.
According to an order just issued from the War De
partment, it is made the duty of every Meer command
jag a district or post containtng a hospital or a brigade of
troops to inquire into the fitness, efficiency, and qusitti
cations of the chaplains of the hospital or regiments, and
to muster out of the service such chaplains as wore
not appointed in conformity with the reluiretnenta of
the law, and who have not faithfully discharged the
duties of chaplains during the time thoy have been thus
engaged.
THE WAR IN ARKANSAS.
The Movements and Situation of the fte.,
bel Forces.
Sr. 'Lulls, October B. — The Helena (Ark.) corre
spondenceofithe Republican, under date of the 4th into ,
coat tine the following information:
We bare late and very reliable intelligence from the
rebel forces Fin this State (Arkansas) which is regarded
by military authorities bore ae worthy of confidence. It
10 as late as tho 18th and 22d tilt., and seriously modifies
tho many reports we have heard. According to this in
formation, the rebel forces in Arkansas number and are
encamped as follows:
General Hindman, at Audio, 25 miles north of Little
Hock, with 5,000 men and one battery.
Gen. Roan, st White Sulphur Springs, near Pine Bluff,
on the Arkanese river, 60 miles southeast of Little Rook,
with 6,000 troops, tw) regiment; of whom are conscripts,
and unarmed. Also, a Texas regiment, and one battery,
consisting of throe 6-pounders, (from) one 2 pounder,
(brass,) and one Delo piece, mounted.
Gen". Mcßae on the Arkansas river, 80 miles northwest
of Napoleon.
Gen. Raines at Grose Hollows, with a (reported) force
of from 4,000 to 5,000, mostly conscripts.-
'Gen. Holmes is commander-in-chief of all the forces
at Little knock, with about 2,000 mon and two batteries,
one of pounders and threat?. pounders; the other of two
rifled 8. pounders and 2- pound howitzers.' •
Gen. Mcßride is at Batmeille with about 2,oooMen,
only two hundred and fifty of whom are effective.'
Most of the cavalry force bas been dismounted, and at
present it is not believed that they have more than 2,000
cavalry in the State. '
The 'manufactory of munitions of war to at Arkadel
phia, 80 or- 100 miles southwest of Little Rock, and all
the State records and papers have been removed thither.
Although the rebel generals, boast of their intention to
invade Missouri, it is not believed by Intelligent men In
their camps that they will do eo. If they have possession
of the capital of their State, it is all they desire at pre;
sent, and perhaps more than they expect. -•
Interesting News from Richmond
•FORTRESS IdONROE, October 7 —The steamboat John
A. Warner (flag•ohtruce boat) returned from Atkon'is
Landing to. day, arriving at - Fortress Monroe at 1 o'clock.
Elbe brings down no. prisoners in exchange for the state
prisoners sent up. I learn from Major R. W. Schenk,
135th Pennsylvania Volunteers, the officer in charge,
that the commissioner, Major Onld, of the Confederate
Government, refused to exchange the prisoners of State
bolongirg to Virginia, on the ground that they were
taken on territory belonging to the Confederacy.
Ihe Richmond Examiner of October Bth contains the
military exemption set, roomed October 4th, 1862, which
exempts police for sections of country of dense negro
population ; exempts editors and such help as they re
quire in their bnelnees; employees of transportation and
telegraph companies; ministers of the Gospel; physicians ;
shoemakers; farmers; blacksmiths; wagon masters; mil
lers ; superintendents and employees in hospitals, wool,
cotton, and paper mills; employees on Government work ;
oversee:et of plantations; one man to every five handred
heed of cattle. The exemption act passed Aprit 21st is
reveled.
The Examine/. akyk: "Oongreid had serious brisinotli
on its bands at present. Toe subject of revenue and
finance is now before Cocgre.t. The bill PrOVldest that
every citizen give to Government orte-fifthbl4 gram in
come, and receive in acknowledgment eight pet cont.
bonds. Of all toting 8 per cent. le the worst. Of a 1 taxes
twenty per cent. gross income is the Most Oppressive. By
this project Congress strikes a heavier blow at our credit
than the public enemy. Government has committed
financial blunders enough to ruin its credit, if the confi
dence of the public were not so well supported: Oon
green has postponed adjournment to Octobar 13th."
Patrick McGowan end John Kiliaher were shot at
Camp Lee, on Saturday last, for desertion. Oven Mc-
Guire received fifty lashes the same day for the eame of
fence.
The same paper contains a despatch from Mobile, Oc
tober 8, which sass that General Butler has issued orders
requiring all persons, male and female, eighteen years of
age and upward, who sympathize will the Southern Con ,
federacy, to report themselves, with a descriptive list of
their property, which is to bo confiscated, and they deed
and imprisoned, unless they renew their allegiance to the
touted States Government.
Aleo, a despatch dated Savannah, 4tb, which says
ci The 'Unionists attacked our batteries on St &Aired on
the let, and after an bones engagement wore repulted.
The Unionists subsequently landed at Greenville Point
in force, ard marched a mile in rear of our battery,.
where a fight commenced at 10 o'clock A. M. No par
ticulars have been received."
A Rebellion in Indiana—The Execution
of the Draft Resisted.
01NOINNATI, October 8 —The Indianapolis corresp,n
dent of the Commercial says : Tho 4 Copperheads' of
Hertford, Blackford county, collected on Monday last
and forcibly resisted the draft. They destroyed the
ballot box and enrolling papers, and eitloir forced or
scared the commissioners and provost marshals into re
signing. They claimed to have two hundred men armed,
and said they Prete determined to resist the draft az all
hazards. They denounced the Government, and those
attempting to sustain it.
A battalion of the 63d Indiana has been ordered to
Hertford, to enforce the draft and arrest the ringleaders
of this disgraceful proceedlLV
THE PRESS.-PHILADELPH
91118.1119:
THE BATTLE AT CORIN
FURTHER PARTICULARS.
ITS DESPERATE CHARACTER ON THE FIRST
The Final Repulse of the Rebel
HEAVY LOSS IN OFFICERS BOTH SI
CORINTH (11148), October s—[oorreapondeace . 11
Bt. Louie Dtmocrat.]-0n the mon:dot/of the 3 on
pOele were 'attacked by UO eneairin force; .11bOR
miles northeast of Corinth. Before nine o'clock
gagement became general and fierce, and a Bangui
battle was fought.
•
Oar men, under Bosecraos, steal up thaufhlir,lnd
fought with great coolness and bravery. Bat regtant
after regiment, and brigade after brigade poured in n
us, and we were forced slowly backwards, fighting de e
rately.
The rebels pushed forward with determined obstin
and told every foot of advantage ground. They t.
flanked our inferior force on the loft, and were atte t.
lag to get in our rear. We were obliged to fall back
further, 'to prevent this movement from being soca
pitebed.
The otemy were Inside of our breastworks, Pushi
us backwards towards the town, when darkness put
end to the lighting for that day. During the day's'
our loss was heavy, but that of the enemy must h e
largely exceeded ours. Three pieces of the let His i
battery were captured.
After baring stood for so many hours before the e
my's fire, the men were consumed by thirst and eubd
by the constant exertion.
Brigadier General Hackleman fell, mortally wound,
at the bead of hie brigade. General Oglesby was s t
in the breast.
The Second Day's Fight.
About 4 o'clock on the morning of the 4th the ens
opened briskly on the town with shot and shell. \
Our batteries replied, and for an hour or more heat,.
cannonading was kept up. At the expiration of the.
time two of the rebel guns had been disabled, and shortl
alter daylight their battery of seven guns were capturia
A portentous quietness soon occurred, and it was t
dent that some movement was being made by the ens
- ,
The Western Sharpshooters, under Oolonel Burke,'
wore ordered forward as skirmishers to feel the enemrs'
pcsition. At halt past nine o'clock they met the email •
within a quarter at a mile of the advance of our line
battle, advancing rapidly in heavy columns upon tt
town. They immediately opened a murderous fire'
tbo Ekirmialiers, who immediately began to .retire, ri4
turning the fire of the enemy with effect. i
i
The woods seemed alive with 'rebels, and it appetite
imposcible for this gallant regiment to escape destracia
in their , retreat over three quarters of a mile of MS
ground, which intervened between Meru and our t o
rary works of defence. - -
In -a few moments the engagement became gen I.
Oar battelies opened a destructive fire on the exp. :,
ranks of the , rebels, mowing them down like grass. a
slaughter among them was frightful. Bat with •nn :.
retitled daring and reckleenees they rushed impatuo y
forward.
They charged our works deeperatefy, broke our li
of infantry,' and captured a email fortifiestion, in W.
the battery of the let Missouri wee planted.
Our fortune seemed to be all kiet. A. temporary pe
seized our men, and the rebels once more marched,
the streets of Cloilnth.
New batteries opened upon them. Our men, nn
the direction of a few courageous officers, and Milian's.,
by their example, though thinned in ranks, fought ded
rately. The advance of the enemy was checked. ttlr
wavered, and then fell back. Our last battery was
gained, and once more it hurled destruction into tin
ranks. ,
The.day was saved, and the enemy in full retreat. sk i. \
Our loss was comparatively small daring this fesrfe&
charge. That of the enemy was fully, twenty to our e4o
killed.
Among the rebels killed and left en the field wag Iht•
gadier General Rodgers, of New Orleans, Colonel aid
Acting Brigadier Johnson, of Mississippi, and auoth r
colonel commenting a brigade, whose name was nit
learned,
The enemy was commanded by Van Dorn, Price, and
Villeplpme, with their respective army corps, numberili
50,00 men.
It is impossible now to give a list of the casualties.
Our proportion of officers killed is thought to be liar e.
We lost but tour taken prisoners.
CHICAGO, OctoberB.—Aepeclal despatch from Cairo to
the Trtburie, says that the rebel Colonels Johnson,
Bogere, ROM Morton, MoLaine, and Major Jones, wore
billed, and Colonele Donly and Pretch severely wounded
in the late battle at Corinth; • .•
The Battle at Corinth—Additional Par
particulars.
The Chicago papers of yesterday contain but few addi
tional items to what has already been published, of the
battle at Corinth. The Uhleago Tribune publishing the
official despatches of Gen. Grant, prefaces them with the
following*
In order to gain a correct idea of the battle of Corinth,
it is necessary to go back to the desperate fight at Inks
on the 19th of September: • Gen. Grant had information
prior to that engagement that the rebel Gen. Tan Dorn
was marching up with a heavy.force to flank Corinthnn
the wee, and to attack either that place or Bolivar, Ten
nettle!), while price should move up simultaneously from
lull a; Price'rdirciimiltare at Inas delayed; but did not
oath ely frusirate this plan.
Alter the battle of- the 19th he retreated by way of
Iderietta . and Fulton to Tupelo, and then, marched
northWeet to Wherii he jrinod Van Dorn and
Lovell, and the combined forces moved upon Oorloth.
It appears that their main army marched north through
Bnckersville and Jonesboro to'Pooshontas, oa the Mein
phis and Oharleeton , Railroad, and then moved down
the rood to attack Gen.. Reeecrans, while another co
rt obab;y Price's, took the shortest route by waybf
Kossuth.
The following despatch& also published in tho Tribune
—".9-17,-77-Irlacrrtrimin
•
log Iltt of Med and wcinne,
addhion to the weinigai" :
to the lowa 2d..lnfantrY
in the groin • Licit. Colour
Lieut. Onoviten, 00. I, al
killed; Lient. Bing, 00.
severely wounded ; Parke)
boiler, of Co. B, slightly •
Lient. Colonel Parrott,
wounded. •1 1 . -
All the lowa regiments at - Corinth were in the e4age•
went, sod behav,d with great gallantry.
Bowen's Battalion, Gen. Curtis' body guard, Strived
this morning from Helena.
They are on their way to St. Louis.
[PRIVATE DESPATCH.]
• CORINTH, October's.
To Capt. Dorchester, Chicago:
,6 The enemy attacked us ,with 40,000. They areftwhip
red awfully - , and retreating. We are are after titi,m• I
elk e unhurt. • ART OUR 0. DUOAV."
• K•
Canto, October 6,—1 have received the followin&addi
tiona; from Corinth:
Colonel Thrush, 47th Illinois, Was killed in the liattle
of Saturday. Colonel Baldwin, 67. hlllinoie, andl..efute
nent Colonel Sanders, 16th lowa, formerly edito the
Dave: port Gazette, were slightly wounded.
•
Municipal Election in Baltimonk.
• Bia;nmoaa, October B.—The city election for;tlldisyor,
and.meinbers of Councils is proceeding very quigy to
day. notwithstanding the , anticipation of-a dithOtllty be
tween the friends of the regular and indopendentraandi
date& General Wool issued a proclamatim anntrimoing
that as cenunander of the department, ho would.' e all
proper means to prevent dieorder. /squadron of4valry
and a small force - of infantry are on duty in the; ty, in
case of need. The proirecta are that but a vote
will be polled..
4 .
BetyitionE, October 8 —The election pailileer very
emletly, and, as was expected, but a small voti oiled.
The' Unconditional (regular) Union candidates,'ceived
8,877 votes, and Fred. Fickey, the Indepondek'd Union
candidate I,lB3—the former being elected by a l :in ajoritY
e 1 7,694. t
The entire regular Domicil ticket wat.also eleiited ex.
cept in one instance.
.
Morgan again Advancing in Kentucky,
LOIIIBTILLB, October B.—A reliable reportbaiit're.
calved here ears Morgan% advance reacted Prankfort
at 1 o'clock this afternoon, and that 3,000 more of his
men were rapidly approaching that place. Our troops
Lad left Frankfort for Lawrenceburg, Ky.
•On Saturday, near Hardinsville, Scott's rebel cavalry
cut off and dispersed a company of the 9th Kentucky
Cavalry, under Lient. Norris. The company has not
since been heard from. It is reported that Lient Morris
'and two
,privates were shot after their capture by the
rebels. • ,
General Dumont's divielon is still at Shelbyville'.
Funeral of Mrs. General Seopt. -
NEw YORE, October 8 —The remains-of the' -wife o f
Lientenant General t3Cott were landed yeeterday, from
the ship Et. Charles, and the funeral took plaoe at 1 P.
today, at St. Thomas' Church, Broadway..
Massachnseits
'MEETING OF THE DEMOCRATIC STATE OONFENTION=.•
NO STATE TICKET NOMINATED-THEY ;PROTEST
AGAINST TEE PRESIDENT'S PROCLAMATION. -
BOSTON. Oct. B.—The Democratic State Qinvention
met at Worcester to• day, and was folly. attended--Edwin
L. Bailey, of the Boston Herald, presided.
A motion to adopt the People's ticket nominated at
the Fenenil-Hall Convention wee discussed with con
siderable warmth
Resolutions were reed pledging support in theme of
all legitimate means to suppress the rebellion, urging
the President to stand by the :Oonstitntion, repudiating
the rneetkg of Governors,. eulogialog General Min.halian,
eympatbizing with the families of those who have fallen,
and denier!' g the following pr Ip:es ' '
That the province of the Government is to:save the
Union, and not to save or destroy slavery ; that we aro
opposed alike to eeceetalon and Algslitionismasinithere
can be no permanent Union where these exist., We ten
der our sympathy to the loyal men in the Border - Slates.
'That we will make no nominations, but are Willing to
unite with the conservative men of all parties.' That we
regfiet that the Preeident, forgetful or his obligations,
has famed bin emancipation proclamation, and we pro
test figainet it, as well as against the suspoosion of the
v. r t et habeas corpus, and call on the 'president to re
store the right of trial, and freedom of epee . * and the
press.
Judge Wells moved to amend by recommending the
adoption of the Faneuil. Ball ticket. The .Ponyention
adjourned amid , great confusion, and .wittiont clearly
leaving any record of its action.
Interesting from California. —,
... . • •
. -
SAN Fassroisoo, Oct. 7.—Balled, ship, tar of' the
Union, ;or Callao.
- • Charles Dorms, ex sheriff of Batt .Fr *O4 .died
suddenly, to-day, of apoplexy.
... , • ,
~
-
Col.ll J. 0 Kamm, member elect of 't a r e
from Los Angeles county, has been writhed "i'.6ider of
i thas
Gen. Wright, on the charge of traction, '".' ••• i • '
neceralon sympathizers are numerous .in.' e. of-the
southern counties of California, havingsneneeded in con
trolling the local elections. Mr. KewtniAbeen .soine•
thing of a ringleader among them. ' tf.jaf*ill probably
tale the oath, and endeavor to take hlenfiti the Legis
lature.
•
Race on Fashion donrt-ie.
NEW YoRK, October 8 —Bn exoltini fretting match
took place to-day on the Fashion Oath ,between Robert
Fillinsham atd Gen. Batter, to thec SOW, mile heats.
Fl!Unborn won the second heat and likater the others.
Time 2 21g, 224% ; 223, 227. Tbe4ontsc was close
tin ongtont. Theta heat was madkbv, moonlight., ".
The Democratic State C onvention- of
, • Michigan: .;
DETROIT, Mich., October B.—Ther Vemocratic Btate
Conlmition '
which met in this city 7 tii-da7,viadopted the
nominees of the Union Vonventlon. held _aG' Jackson on
the 2d Met , as candidates for State officers.
Fire at Jamestown, N V.,
JAMESTOWN, N. Y., Oct ob'er's —,Vourteen buildings.
!cclentils the scythe factory - of O. B ': Ontfj Larohes'
botel. and the Wesleyan Obaroki were destroyed bi fire
to-day. Loss about $26,0401::.fra
•Manite.
ZIEIV YORK, October 8 -,-Arriv*d, the 'hips Auetralis,
from Liverpool,,Phlladelpiiia,,d t
. )b,,,f . olbotto, do. brig
Henrietta, from Manzonillo: ,
TipSTOX, October "-El 'Ravenna from
'Trey's:. France; bezke Part, , f,c4A , ltel4,e, Marineau
froth Surinam •.Inlga Waiter, aCtireAliogl OAPS Town,
A. B. Oorke, Matanzas.,
,z
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1862.
THE MEETING LAST NIGHT.
Grand Outpouring of the People.!
The Covernment to be Sustained and the
Union Preserved at all Hazards.
NO INDULGENCE FOR TRAITORS.
'Speeches of Hons. Joseph .R. Chandler. John
Ccivade, Henry D. Moore, William D. Kelley,
William B. Mann, Ex• Gov. Pollock, Frede
rick C. Brightly, Morton McMichael Vol .
A. K. McClure, and John W. Forney.
•
[Special Report for The Press.]
An immense Union mass meeting of the friends of the
National Administration was held last evening, at the
National Hall, iSlarket etreet, below Thirteenth, for , the
purpose of endoreing' the nominations 'of the National
Union Party, and of expressing a determination to sop
port the Government in the prosecution of the war. The
meeting was composed of our most prominent citizens,
and many were present who 'never before attended
gatherings of ibis kind. The meeting could not be
termed one of party, as there were convened men of all
political creeds, who were equally enthusiastic in sup
port of the views expressed by the several speakers. '/ ho
emancipation proclamation of the President, whenever
touched upon, was hailed with the wildest applause and
the loudest expressions of approval. All present wer e
of but one opinic;n, that in the present crisis there could
be but one great party, whose solemn duty it is to lead
every aid and use every exertion in their power to crush
(mirth's wicked rebellion.
The lirge hall was filled to its utmost, the capacity of
the building being scarcely sufficient to accommodate the
masses who pouted in. A fine band of music was iu at.
tendance and discoursed the usual patriotic airs
fib only sit( r eight oiclock,Willtam H. kern called the
meeting to order, and proposed as chairman the Hon.
Jossru B. CHANDLER. This name will received with
loud and long-continned cheering.
kir Chandler took his place on the platform amid
great applause. When order • was finally restored he
spoke as follows:
SPEECH OF HON. JOSEPH R. CHANDLER.
On faking the chair, Mr. Chandler said :
MY FRIENDS AND PELLOW.OITIZEKS: My presence here
to-night conneit be a matter of more astonishment to you
th an ti le to myself. _ Raving arrived at a good old age,
I felt !that it was time for me to withdraw from public
life, and from the loophole of my retreat I have looked
out upon the world .and its government, upon your ac
tions asp arty men and no-party men, and comforted my-.
telt with the bell. f that I could he spared and could pass
away and be forgotten by those among whom( had so long
been remembered. But there are occasions when we must
sacrifice our own wishes to the views of others and our
humblest services are due when kind friends ask them.
[Cheer S.]
' The 11 quest that I should bo present, to night, to join
in your deliberations, was one that I could not decline.
1 see around mu. on all hands, those whom in former
years I met in council upon the affairs of the party to
which I belonged, and also as many of those against
whom we then pitted ourselves in earnest combat, and
'whose zeal in their cause evideuced the sincerity of
their nellef in their principles.' I'come among you this
evening, after so long an absence froanthe public delibe
rations of mY friends, not as a Whig, as you have
known me; not as a Democrat, as I have opposed some
of you; not as a Republican. not as a 4 ' people ' s " man.
not as an anti.,elavery man, or a pro-slavery man—these
email legitimate branches for differeuces of opinion in
tin es when parties may be followed, but, in this emer
gency, I look-beyond them to the great trunk out of
which they all' spring, and proclaim myself simply a
Union man ! [lmmense applause ]
A friend of the Union, and of every man of every creed
and every clime who is friendly and will defend the
Union. '(Cheers ] And I say, clearly and distinctly,
that it I thought any principle less than this was to
occupy the delibmations of those who are assembled
here, I slould feel that I aas not at home In presiding
. over such an assemblage at such a time.
Frienet and tellow-citizens, my voice is not quite as
strong as lA wee twenty years ago, when some of your
lathers wi i e wont to listen to me kindly and patiently;
but my h rt in this cause is es warmly, yes, warmer
than ever, i was in the party measures—those legitimate
movement' of men who then mingled in the public af
fairs
oftcountry. [Cheers ] I am not disposed to
occupyr time, which may be more profitably en
gaged istening to others ' who will address you upon
the,greuestion of the day.
It I lid time and strength, I would like to say a word
upon tib causes of the rebellion and its remedy. The
rebels if the South, now in armr, have manifested a spirit
Of nn
c
n which would be worthy of all commendation in
• bit cause. The North, trusting in ire numbers, Its
wealt , its greatness, and the justice of Its cause, has had
Ana that union than was necessary to the perpetuation
.01 it Government; and one of the objects of this meet
. ing idle procure, as her as possible, the union of every
lionteheart and every honest hand, at least in this city,
1
in t film ions work. [anima
. 1
A have been told abroad, and as you would ender
star • if you were to cross the ocean, it was not our
Aft ' hundred millions of acres within our States and
or teed Territories; or the 'thirty millions of- people
th till those acres, that commanded , the respect of
fer gn nations, but it was the union of States, the union
.of aides, and the common feeling of our people
a - rover they were and however they were situated.
1 '
JP in the moment it was understood on the other side of
th water that there was danger of a dissolution of the
U ,elt: that moment with their fear perished their re
-0 t for us, and we are now pointed at with scorn by
' 'gland, who is always a friend when it serves her in
,
eat, arid alwale a foe, either storotly or openly, to
hone whose existence imperil her wealth and standing.
i Fellow.citizene I will not hirther occupy your time.
I ought to have said some momenta ago what I now say,
that I thank you for the position to which you have
'tailed me; but more especially do I thank you for the
cordiality with which I have been r..ceived after so long
an absence. After thin expression of heartfelt thanks,
permit me to announce that this meeting is now organ
intd for the purl:Kilo of action, snd I am now ready to
receive any proposition of business consistent with the
call. rOheers
itton the OOLCitlifioll of Mr. °handler's remarks, the
'following vice presidents and secretaries wore proposed
jet additional officer, :the meeting :
'FIGS PRESIDENTS
Wm. Heffner,
Wm F. Emerick,
_Joseph Tlee,
Wm. MOIrIB,
James Hooley; • .
1. Wayne German, ,
J. A Neff. '
James M.' Gibson,
Robert B- Salter,. • ,
John - -
'James Evans,
.....John Patterson,
ShYl vueri
Philip Dubosq,
Geo. P. Little,
Dr N. 0. Reid,
. George Norton,
John W. Winters,
Thomas B. White
• Dr. Thomas S. Rood,
"Lemuel Y. Singleton,
. Samoa B. Morpheus,
James A. Bowie,
Wm. S.. Thomas,
Arthur White,
Eh Holden,
Frar cis Pert,
James L. Clagborn,
Samuel S. Moon,
Joseph Townsend,
Charles 0. Overbeck,
Lewis Godhoo,
Elam F. Witmer,
George Beck,.
IL I. Arbuckle,
Henry Blyei
Samuel Coleman,.
HemyO. Fritz,
.Peter Revoudt,
-- John bluer,
John B. Heim •
:Morris
Wm. Boehm
Theo. Chapman, .
D. W. 0. Moore,
Samuel Sellers, '
',Thomas . Boyd,
Abraham Borten,
Morris Dunbar,
Josiah L. Baines,
Ailen C. Mictioner,
Wm. Curry,
John W. Clark,
George W. Moore,
John J. Clothier,
John Gat drier,
Jos. B Cox,
Isms A. kheppard,
John Hazier,
Win. Craig,
Ittbert Scott,
Wesley Stevenson,
Samuel Bingham,
Geo. J. Hamilton,
John Armstrong,
Beni NOMISD,
William Weyant,
Thomas Harrison, •
Dr. John Paley,
James Milligan,
John Bromley,
Wm. Bowers,
Andrew Brodie, •
-Isaac Davis,
Dr. Joseph Longshore,
William Shields,
George Widener,
Thomas Dunlap,
John Campbell,
Perry Levering,
D. Rodney King,
Hati - W: Mercer,
• Windham IL Stokes, '
• Beckman Potter,
Reuben Sande,
Jogeph Mille,
; Watson Cowley, ,
Thomas T. , Holme,
John
•. Jacob S. Knorr,
'Job Moore,
James Hunter,
- -Isaac Van Houten,
J. Sidney Keen,•
Joseph'Bouoher,
Barton H. Jenks,
Beeee D. Fell, ,
David Jayne,
Gibson Peacock,
SBORETARIM
Wards. Wards.
1. Capt. 11. 0. Hicks. 14 W. 0. Homey.
2. Wm. Harper, Jr. 16. James. Sheridan.
. 3 J. hi. Fletcher. 16. leaao A. Sheppard
.4. Henry B. Gardnei. 17: Wm:H... Orington.
5 Joseph P. Loughead. 18. Wm. Cramp, Sr.
6. Jamie L. Ebert. 19..Adam*:Griz..,
7 F A. Godwin. 20. Charles M. Evans.
8 H. 0. Ocateld. 21. S. F. Babcock.
.9 DantA Steinmetz... 22 John W. Gibbe.
10. henry 0. Howell. 23. Edward Borie.
11 Thcmas E. Little. 24. tieorge W. Shultz.
.12. Cenral P. Grove. 26. John H. Savage.
- 18. James harper. . , ,
SPEECH OF 'EX-GOVERNOR POLLOCK.
Ix. Governor Pollock was next introduced. He spoke
:
PILLOW. 1:1111zirsa : A few yetura ego, when a distin
guish. d American statesman. uttered .the sentiment /
-desire to know no party but Ma-people, no locality but
-my country," be uttered a sentiment that met with a
full and cordial rear onttefrom ovary true and loyal heart. ,
Aid; to. night, when I say to you that I desire on this
occasion to be therrepreeentatiye of-no man or set of
men—of no
,patty name or party association—when.l
theirs to reallllre "no party but the 'people, and no
locality but, m- country" and your country—butter a
sentiment that know finds an echo in your lieerta;lind
to'which every•loyal manwill'cheerfolly -and cordially
respond. if I would enunclate.my, pr inciples to-night,
y.
thewould be three—first, I armlet. my country—seCond,-
lam for my whole country—and third, for my country
first, last, and forever. [Applause J
-6.. On this occasion, gentlemen, permit me to say that I
lave never addressed a meeting when I felt a more tre
mendous responsibility of doubt. The country that you
loiv, and I love, is tills moment engaged in a,fearfal and
deadly struggle. We are fighting, in the name of 6.1311).
ries° liberty, the battles of the world ; yet the world is
tot in sympathy with no ; the throne of every tyrant le
against na The problem of irepublioan liberty, of self
, government—the right and the &May of the people to
goiern-:-.14 to be "tried, and the question must soon be
solved whettikr that problem % I to fail in its
t1on; and I feel almost humiliated, on an occasion like
this,: that there should be in this land of ours any occasion.
.to call upon the patriots of tbia,land to come and.hold.a ,
icieinn amenably to determinebow thiigreat land Of ours
be prrea-rvw , ,•,, how tie Union shalt bit.. maintained
chow the rebellion shall be overthrown, and truth and
I ; freedom madetto.triumph from one end of our great and
glo4oua lard to the other. I Qrsot applause.l „
• • -
Geo. W. Gampher,
Lytle I. Must, '
John - Moore,
Rgbert K. Nichols,
,Jamos S. Nickerson,
i Harman Baugh,
A. J. Derbyshire,
Amos Briggs,
Wm7H. - Hrirt.
William Leach,
Peter Fritz, ..
Samuel Brenham,
James IL Hand,
Peter Bobb, Sr.,
Charles Wheeler,
Thomas T. Lea,
George S. Fos,
Wm. Devine, Jr.,
D. PIMA Brown, Jr.,
J. Fisher Learning,
Edward 0. Dale,
Frederick Lennig,
Jame Dundee,
Geo. S. Weaver,
Geo H. Bt Burnout, M. D.,
Thos. A. Robinson,
Wm. P. Jenks,
Evan Randolph,
Thomas Ridgway,
Caleb H. Needles,
Wm. P. Hamm,
Carleton R. Moore,
Fro:l'k Cladding, ,
Hobert H. Parker,
Ludlam Matthews,
Charles B. Conger,
John L. Shoemaker, -
Francis B. Warner,
Pbilip Horn,
John G.'Albarger,
Charles P. Ferry,
E. B. Shapleigh,
J. P. Wilkinson,
Y. B Shrink, H. D.
Bird, H. D.
Joseph Been,
David Cramer,
Joseph R. Bolton,
loseph'Wood,
John J. Kersey,
John Brown,
John Kessler,
James Alburger.
A. H. Shoemaker,
Samuel White, •
A. W. Wright,
James klohlanes,
John Scanlan,
Jesse Detro,
Thomas Hill,
John Palmer,
Hugh Thompson,
illa.thew Brady, . .
Jacob Jones,
Joseph Baas,
Joseph Paisley,
Bamael
!Charles W. Fay,
James Biobie,
Henry Wieder,
Geo. W. Hill,
Henry H. Walters,
Charles
Amos Bilis,
David Cameron, • .
William Hunter, Jr.,
David 'Wallace,
Dr. Joseph Castle,
H. Degintber„
JosOph S. Levering, Jr.,
T. Chariton Henry,
William J. Murphy,
John Leibert,
William Eberle,
Georgii.W.l3hallui, • I ,
Wm W..titnelley,
. Simon . R. Snyder, , ,
William Taylor,
Paschall Mopes, M. D
John B. Whiteside, M. D.,
William Stokes, ,
J. Wesley Bose ,
B. Andiews Knight,
Hiram Stanhope,
John'lL.Bodine,
Samuel H. Irvin, '
I Francis Perot.
This is the hour of danger. Never in the history of
Ott e r relations, never in the history of the world, has there
been a rebellion of such gigantic and monstrous propor
tions ter the present, and 130962 had it so little canes.
Without cause, without reason; in defiance of right,
truth, and justice, madmen have rais.si the parrioidsl
hand, and are now striking down this great and glorious
land of ours. This mighty nation is to-night slunk
to the death throes okan agony that may result in h er
latter destruction. And yet, with all this noon us, we
have men in our midst who stand aloof anti hear with
indifference the cry of our country, " Help, help
against the wicked and the m , gbty.' , They stand back,
shrouding themselves in a miserable, cowardly, SA Illtiort
neutrality that knows no loyalty, that is averse to a
noble patriotism, and recreant to everything that is true
and noble in American manhood. If there is a sympa
thizer . with rebellion to night in this room—l care not
by what name he may be called—let me tell you, North
ern man or Northern sympathizer, you are too ranched
a coward to be a traitor or you would not be here.
(Oheertug)
Your place, to-night, is with the minions of Jeff Davis,-
and nothing but your place. bkn)king meanness keeps
you away from that rebel horde. leo, gentlemen, I can
not with all the conservative character, (which, I believe
I have tbo reputation of powwowing.) I cannot treat with
common politeneee the man who will sneeringly tell me
that this is '• your war," that this is an Abolition war, that
this is a war for the negro. Be knows bitter. He utters
a lie before high Heaven when be makes that assertion.
Romp continued applause ] We have a class of nen
among us who have no sympathy with thieglorions move
ment, this mighty uprising of an upright people to save
their nation from destruction—to sympathy wha ever.
They look at the noble man who now controls the deed
nice cf the nation[cheers] not as the representative of
the people; but loo king at him with eyes that cannot see
beyond their own dirty party line, they regard him as a
mil e party man. But, thanks to the noble and the brave,
Order 163 has to-night made McOlelisn for Lincoln and
for the war. All honor to our noble, gallant chief—the
leader of our victorious hosts upon the Potomac. Let
that order be read in the presence of some of these
itikitg, malignant, cold blooded neutrals, and
let it bo a scorching, withering rebuke to their
baseness, when a hero, a patriot, and a statesman,
in the presence of thirty millions, can tell the army that
the civil power must be carried out, and that it is their
business to defend the nation and- the Governmett.
- Whet a noble contrast there is between the statesman
and patriot hero and the little slimy politician: The con
trast, gentlem n. you can draw. To name it Is to speak
the infamy of those who would strike down Mc'Jlellan
and mph the Administration.
"1 he Union as it was, the Constitution as it is ; free
speech abd free press; the .draft, taxes"—these are the
cries that you bear now from the party not for the
Union, but the party who stand beck and osy this war is
not for the troii n and liberty, but for the negro. Why,
gentlemen. I stand here to-night, and advocate fur the
freedom of speech and of the press, in all its length and
breadth. But let me tell gentlemen who are so cla no
rolls for the freedom of the press and of speech, that
there is a limit to that freedom even in a land of liberty
and right, a limit to freedom of both speech and the
press. Tell me, any one of this intelligent andi
ence,', where in on' Constitution, or where, in that book
of books, s bleb Is above all constitutions, do we find
the right of any man, claiming whatever freedom he
may, to do wrong. [Applause.] I say to that man who
speaks treason and then falls • back upon hie reserved
right, " Ton infringe the liberty of speech." I say to
the traitor editor, who uses treasonable language against
the Admioistratien or the war, "Sir, son do wrong in
paralyzing the Administration, you are abusing the
liberty of the press." The convict in your penitentiary
MU use the same argument : What right bad the sheriff
to arrest him for setting fire to his cwn home? Why,
do not these men who are now so clamorous for the liberty
of the press and of speech, fully illustrate the old saying
of Eudibras
61 7 1 0 rogue e'er felt the baiter draw,
With good opinion of tho law 7"
If more of these men felt the halter di aw, they would
just hare their I igbte, and no more.
I am here to-night to sustain the Administration, and
e noble man whole now Preeioent of the United States,
Abraham Lincolii. [Great applause,} lam here to ous
t in him. not l'y virtue of befog a potitician, but, I hope,
the highest and noblest motive that could influence you
an• myself. I sustain him becalm I believe him to be a
patriot a lover of his country. I sustain him because I
desire the brie ation of my country ; and as a patriot, not
as a politician, I onstaln him In every act of his Admini
stration. I sustain him because of his two recent procia
math no. (Tremendous cheering land prolonged enthusi •
ann.)
Mr. Morton McMichael proposed three cheers for the
last proclamation of Abraham Lincoln. The cheers were
given with the gcea eat enthasittem
In the name of the President of the United States, I
thank you for that approval of his course. Yea I ma
lain that ; proclamation, in which, despite the spurning
Mime of Northern traitors, of Northern sympathizers,
of Northern miserable neutrals, the President, in all the
manhood of a noble American, dale raise his voice, and,
before tbirty millions of people, Mtn a blow at the very
fortress of the enemy..
As a war measure, it exhibits consummate skill ana
wis
dom that generations may envy. Why should the rebels
possess a power that we have not, which enables them
to mass armies, and ee..ds them to !moot down thousands
of our fellow •chizens 3 Why should Union men guard
the homes and slaves of Southern rebels 'I Why should
they be compelled to watch the property of the masters
and cultivate their farms ' while our eons and brothers
are in the army fighting for liberty now and liberty for
ever (Applause ] The President touched the springs
of the rebellion when he struck at slavery. Why, gen
tlemen, as a measure of war, is it wrong ? ; by
every principle of humanity, onaw, and of constitutional
and religions right, God and conecionoe will approve it.
Then, gentlemen, what have we witneseed, and what
are we now witnessing, on, our borders? Who have let
loose upon the nnoffending inhabitants of our Western
frontier the merciless savage, with his cruel scalping
knife and bloody tomahawk, making the cottage to
flame, the wife to live in agony, and the hnseand to
welter in his blood ? The accursed. emissaries of this
accursed rebellion have set the davaga upon our citizens
atd they are murdered night after , night. These rebel
emissaries have been leading on their hell-hounds against
the loyal soldiers of the Union. And when we say to
the rebels, '• Your slaves shah not be your strength,"
then what word of commendation is there from our
Noribern sympathizers? None. except that ,tve are
Abelitiocitts, and that they will resist the war and
overthrow the President. Where is the rebuke from
these men when the rebels let loose the savage upon tin
'offending citizens? It is nowhere
Gentlemen, it is time this war should be a war .in ear
nest. [Applause.] The nation must wake up. I be-
Ifeve we have reached the midnight in this war; the
hours of the morning are upon us, and from the many
glorious fields, dyed with the red blood of our brothers,
there is going up to Heaven the cry for justice. It calls
upon the b; ave to rally; upon the noble at home to bo
up and doing to sustain the hearts of the bravo and gal
lant men in the field. We ere now recommencing anew
a series of victories that will drive rebellion from our
land and proclaim tho Union anew, one and forever.
I proclaim again this night, not to the partisan, the
Whig, the. Democrat, or the Republican, but to the true
and loyal man of every name and creed—we want you
on the second Tuesday of October, when an issue is to
be determined and a battle fought , results of which
may be of untold importance to our land. It you aro
nct prepare° for that final and glorious struggle, make
ready now ; prepare your ballot.
We have now a noble man as Mayor of this city—tap
•.
by justice, moderation, energy, and etsoioncy. We want
to te•elect him as a patriot, as a Union man, as a friend
of the country and nothing but the country. Will you
do it 7 I appeal tonight to my fellow•citizens, without
reffrence to party, to do your duty in tho fear of God
and in the love of your country. I appeal to. night to
the men who 4 4 fight mit Sigel" to come up and do your
duty.
Yes, while Hooker and Sigel are in the struggle, we
want their friends at home to do the fighting here. Coma
to the rescue. This country must be saved. I appeal
to you to teach thee rebels in the South, and their sym
psthigers ha the yorth, that this country shall be isre
terWed,tbis Union maintained intact. although
OCCOMP of blOod may be spilled, although friends near
and dear may be sacrificed, end although every Northern
sympathizer swing as high as Haman. [Cheers ] Let
the onward and glorious march of American union and
American liberty lead to victory now and victory ror
ever !
SPEECH OF. P. C. BRIGHTLY, ESQ.
FELLOW-CITIiIMS : For many years I have been known
to you as a Deinecrat—a Democrat of the strictest echooL
I was a friend of James Buchanan ; I voted for Breckin
ridge ; I have' upheld the rights of the. Southern people,
under the Constitution, as long as they had any rights
under it, and now you find me• on the Union ticket,
select( d by the Union- liming people of the Twenty
second ward, as one of their nominees; and you may
well ask me, wherefore this great change 7 [Cheers.]
My first reason is, fellow-oitizene, that I love my
country and her institutions better than I ever loved the
Democratic party. Another, and one which cannot fail
to influence any reflecting mind, is the gliring tact, to
which co tone , men can shut his oyes, that the Demo
cratic leader o in this State are in opposition to the 'Go
vernment, false to their allegiance to the Union and
striving daily and hourly for the success of the wicked
and causeless rebellion which now drenches our once
happy laud in blood. Bleed, fellow-citizens, the blood
of freemen, waters the fields of. Virginia, and shed for
what? For what is the South in arms? and for what is
the sound of the Northern soldiers' dram? The South,
in which for the last twenty years no Northern man
could enjoy the rights guarantied to him by the Consti
tution, has flown to arms because the North has one
' ceeded in electing a - Chief Magiatrate whom they could
not hope to enslave, and froth whbm they pretended to
fear °egression. And the people o. the North have risen
in their might to uphold the ClOnstitution and the laws,
and to sweep from their grasp everything in opposition
to their free institutions._:[Applause.]
This war, fellow• citizes, is not prosecuted for the ex
tinction of slavery, but if it,reeult in wiping out that
foul blot from our cetintry's'otherwihe olefin escutcheon,
I, for one, will heartily thank Almighty God that I have
Jived to see that day. When I was
,a Democrat I la
bored, it would seem, under the delusion that Democracy
'was bated on the principle of human freedom; but the
Democrats of the present day are wiser than their fore
fathers They have been enlightened—whether froth
above or from below, I know tot—with the idea that the
corner. stone of Democratic institutions is slavery. To
me thin thought is so abhorrent that, in itself, it would
have been enough to drive me from the party whioh. so
lond'y and unblushingly proclaimed it.
, :But theleis another cause, which to operating a great
change in political opinionis. The events r transpiring at
the present day go deep .te the very foundation of our
intnitutions ; they touch the diverging point between the
old Ftdoral and Democratic parties. They prove to no
that the disoiples of Jefferson were wrong In their an
ticipations of danger, from the powers granted to the
Federal Government. And they tell in a voice of thun
der that Hamilton was right, when he said that the
danger to our institutions lay in the reserved powers of
the States. .
Fellow-citizens, the r emooraoy prate loudly of their
devotion to the Constitution, and express their horror at
any violation of its provitione by. the Administration.
Passing by the question whether there has been any di
reot violation of the sanctions of the Constitution, which
I by no means admit, I wouldask my Democratic friends,
Whether it is not better, . first, to restore .the Union of
these States, before we talk about the re. establishment
of • the Conetittitiorrwhich wae framed for their govern . -
.ment. We must remember that the Constitution, as it
-'now stand?, was the result of a corupromiee. - Tbe North
ern Statee,would. not have framed the present Constitu
tion, neither would the Southern ones. The Constitution
was from d for the government of a united country ;.it
was establithed to regulate the intercourse of one seotton
with another, whilst united as ono people ; but it never
was designed to be obligatory :ripen the citizens of one
section of the country, whilst a third of it was in rebellion
Atgeiatt e constituted authorities. This was lett to be
regulated by the Military law, which is all-sulliclent for
the exigencies of the moment, and when the crisis is past,
end peace once more reigns amongst us, then wo will re
• establish the .Constitntion in all its integrity, for then
again we shall be one people. [Cheers.]
Bul wliat ilii•uier at rue present moment 2 To
orgaulke against the common enemy. 'While our sons
and brothers are battling with the armed hordes of the
South in the field, it is our duty to combat the tresolie
roils foe in our very midst. We know.thesetraitors are
active and vigorous in their exertions to oNierth - retbr the
b
Government; we,know at they plot tinder our
very noses, and we ]mow that the last hope of the rebel's
is a Democratic victory at the ensuing elections in the
Northern States, and we must organize to render their
tr, aeon vain. [Applause ] '
It is in vein to disguise the feet that a D. mooratic vic
tory in this State on Tuesday next would be worth more
to the rebel cause then a- reinforcement'oreo.ooo men.
Yon all know it—Yon all feel it—aud volt must be up and
at work if you do not wish it to take place. It is not
enough to vote tbe Union ticket; each olien Must make
it his business to induce some one. at least; of his neigh
bore or friends, who usually votes the Democratic ticket,
for this once to drop all partisan -feeling, and come out
boldly on the side of the Upton. , This is not the time
for division—this ie no time for. the •Indulgence of party
spirit—it is the duty of, every loyal man, who loves his
country, to forget these things until this rebellion is
-.crushed out, and then, when we are all agsin,United and
happy under the most beneficent GoVernment upon the
earth, let men again divide themselves into parties, and
let all things go on as before. [Nnthusiastic cheers.]
srEßcli OF COL. FORNEY.
Nearly Biz years ago, impelled by a stern sense of duty,
and impressed by the
.belief that the Administration of
Mr. Buchanan had resolved to violate the pledgee upon
which It was elected, and to prepare the way for the dis
solution of el) Union, I - determined to I eke Isms" with
the organization of the Democratic , party. Reared and
educated in the.belief, that that party was devoted to the
American Union, and profoundly convinced that the
teaching. of Ito fathers were beat calculated to preserve
this great. , brotherhOod of • Staler, I contemplated the
-treachery of Mr. Buchanan as not only a violation of the
traditions of the old Democracy, but a deliberate insult
to the doctrines wnich had been banded down to us_byr,
Thomas Jefferson. If I had one motive more powerful
than another to impel me during all these years, It was so
to appeal to my old Democratic friends' to correct' and
check the heresies and corruptions of the tedministration,
to the election at wilt.* they had eontributad so much,'
as to prevent the nation from falling to pieces, and to :A
my er and secure the triumphant ascendancy of that
timebonored party. (Applaose.) • Hence, •whanever ,
bad the honor , to address the people I sought to sneak
to an audience of Democrats • I knew right Wall that
the errors and proscriptions of the last'. Administration
would be seized by the general Opposition, and would tie
used for their 'own idyantagre but I felt that the best
way to make the rebuke permanent, and to perpetuate
through Ml time the memory of ten unparalleled be
trayal of confidence, was to ,flu the Ventooratic heart
with a keep and stinging terse of the :wrongs which
bad been perpetrated upon thei . Damooratte people. In
the whole ritual of the Democracy I could see no such
sinister idea as Sem erten. its creel, if it had any a:pm
thg, was the largo et toleration of opinion, she freest
fre , dem, the stroogest affection for all the 'niftier , *
children of men, and, above all, a lasting, religion);\
nnehanging, and idolenrons devotion to the Union, thit
one of its formulas advocated or taught any other lesson.
[Cheers
To-night I appear before (meeting composed of meteor
all parties, instinct and alive with the great idea that
the precious inheritance bequeathed to net by the homer
and sages of the past is in imminent peril, and that'll:a
deadliest foe, including those who are new arrayed
against it in the battle-field, emblnettimety claim to tight
against it in the name of Lemooraoy. Among the fierce
soldiere who are now seeking to tate the life of the Be
publies *ere is not tone who does not Procleitit that he it
a Democrat—there is not one who. while execrating the
Northern people; does not reserve for praise and reward
the men who will vote against the uncooditional
Union ticket on Tuesday next ; nor tethers a single leader
of the so- milted Democratic party, here and elsewhere,
who does not chef lab a secret, and too often an open, em
pathy for the embattled rebellion. [applause.]. It tenet
for me to solve this stupendous problem, to explain why
it is that the Democracy, from having. been tee great
soldier of freedom on this continent, has so far fallen
fr..m its high estate. has so turned upon its dazzling , re
cord, bas so far confronted the deeds that have made its
triumphs an many examples to guide and educate the
public mind, as now to be, on the one hand, the armed
assailant of the Union, and on the other the deadly and
remorseless foe of the Government. It is no purpose
of mine to arraign the masses who call themselves Demo
crats under this indictment I know well, lilt. Chair
man, bow frequently and bow sadly the people of this•
conctry and of all countries allow themselves to be.
misled and deceived. Our own history abounds with in
stances of this troth. 'ln times past we have seen anti
masonry sweep over a portion of this Union lice a pesti
lence, my fairy Mg and bewildering the most intelligent,
and changing majoritiewahnoetln a night. This popular
delirium has puzzled the phileitopttereven more than that
which we new remember and regret, under the name of
snow-Itothinglem ; and at this hour there are living thou
seeds of men, who, on the 14th of October, wit! honestly
vote 'al; sin et the Government aisd the war, and who, in an
other short year, will mourn in sack- cloth and ashes their
fatal mistake. They will then see what we see. They
will then admit, frankly, to each other, not only
the t they allowed themselves to be carried away
from a high and solemn obligation, but that those who
misled them were no more entitled to the name
of Dem.crats than a rebel is entttled to the name of
patriot, or a sinner to the name of a saint. I know how
difficult it is to break away from the Democratic organi
zation. Weak mon, as they confess to the enormities of
the Democratic leaders, are terrified at tho idea of re
elating them, and so commit themselves to the current,,
mall at last they ate brought to a sense of their errors
by some glaring, nnmbnakable, and notorious act of
shame. Never in the world's history was there a mare
causeless rebellion than this; never in the world's histo
ry was there a more causeless mid malignant mop ement,
than that which le now directed against the war, and
against the Government. in the loyal States. What
do these Democratic leaders proles, to do? Search
through . their speeches and their platforms, and I
defy any man to point me to any single practical
remedy for our public difficult Me. They witiclse the
General Administration; they misrepresent tne ants of
00Pgress ; they magnify the expenses of the war; they
appeal to the lowest interests and meanest prejudices in
our nature. But can you discover any one thing In all
their recommendations that will help the State, encou
rage the Freeidera, confound the common enemy, or aid
to fire and unite 'he loyal people? Stripping away their
professions, they stand before us unconcealed enemies
of the State, because they are known to favor the sepa
ration of the dtatee ; the adversaries 'of the President,
whom they constantly ridicule atd condemn; in close
and conscientious blipped:ix with the common enemy,
and the active dianthus of that popular unity without
which this war cannot be conducted -to a successful
cloth. I am sure I do these men no injustice
in this classification. Let me make a common
sense application of this remark. Of what earthly use
would a known Brecklnridge politician be in the Cosi
gn se of the United State.? Take any one now running
in opposition to the Union ticket, and, with two or three
inconsiderable exceptions, they are not only men who
can do no good to anybody, but all of whose acts since
the commencement of the war, as all of whose expres
sions at this very moment, will impel them to do harm to
every loyal interest. They prove this by their impeni
tence in regard to their conduct from the time James
Buchanan turned his back upon his honor, and from the
period when Sumpter fell, They prove it by their hypo
critical professions of loyalty. They prove it by honor
ing a mouth. piece like Francis W. Hughes, who flung
the banner of the dissolution of the Union to the breeze
in February, 1861, and still keeps it flying, and they . prove
It by the still stronger proof that they utter no word
of confiderce in any single member of the Government.
How can such men assist the Government in this dark
hour?.Do they propose to do this by setting up a
standard of honesty, covered all over, as they are, with
the reeking infamies of the. Buchanan Administration
Do they propose to do so by denouncing and weakening
the common enemy when they are in sympathy wi,h him?
I will tell you what their object is: It is to force a pease
upon the basis and understanding that this Union shall
at once and forever be dissolved. These Democratic
leaders pretend to be the friends of George B. McClellan.
took at his splendid appeal to the soldiers in the army,
published in the morning papers, in which he calls upon
them to stand by the constitute d authorities, in regard
to the roost assailed measure of the Administration—l
mean the emancipation' proclamation. ' He says; e, The
principle upon which, and the objects for which, armies
shall be emptoi ed in suppressing a rebellion mast be de
termined and declared by the civil authorities ; and the
Chief Executive, who is charged with the administration
of strains, is the proper and only source through which
the views and mows of the Government can be made
known to the armies of the Union."
And again that
44 It is the highest duty of the American soldier steadi
ly and earnestly to support the autitority of Me Govern
ment" [Lond applause.]
How do thine Democratic friends of McClellan respond
to tbie appeal Let their acts answer for them There
is not a statute enacted by the last Congress, and which
was honestly intended to strike at the common foe and to
aid and fortify the 'Nations]. rause, whether it is the tax
bill, the draft bill, the confiscation bill, the emancipation
law. the revenue bill, the currency bill—there is not one
Which they do not attack and eeek to bring into contempt
and dishonor. lem amazed that these self-evident pro
positions have not made their rightful impression upon
the public mind, and ( shall be mortified and humiliated
if they do not prove to have been irresistible in defeating
the extrtctations of our op ponente next Timed bY. Proudly
and peerlessly as our young commander has borne him
self doting all these terrible months, completely as he
boa sustained and vindicated himself, he has done no one
thing that will reflect so much undoing honor on hie
name as this splendid and spontaneous appeal to big
troops to stand by the Administration of the Federal G 3
vernment. He and the men who follow him can do this
and Sisk their liven against the foe; but our gentlemen of
peace, our holiday soldiers, our magnate* who give the
law to the Democratic party, and who preach separation.•
and Secession, cannot descend from their Pedestals and
offer the poorAritute of confidence in the constituted an
_thorities.
- Ttuning from these Democratic leaders in civil life,
when it is contrasted with the. Democratic leaders in mili
tary life. While Horatio Seymour - Preschea trailed,' in
Nivr York, The ma Francis Meagher, acetates the Ad
ministration, and denounces such men as Seymour, in the
army. .While French, W. Hughes makes the State ring
with his denunciations of the President and the consti
tuted anthortriee, the gallant Cake, of his own counts',
tt a heroic Wanner, of Barks, Colonel Owen, of Phtlaul-
Oise aid other long-tried 'Democrats, write home from
the battle• field, wishing success to the unconditional
Union ticket, and hurl the bitterest rebukes upon the
sympathizers with treason. Which of theee leaders should
a true Di mocrat fallow ? Who would not rather take conn
eel from a Breckinridge Democrat like Gen. Butler, whose
scorn of an armed rebel is only surpassed by his con
tempt for an unarmed sympathizer, then of a Breckin
ridge leader like William B. Bead Whet Douglas
Democrat would not prefer to act tinder the Inspiring ap
peal of Gen. John A. Logan, and Gen. John A. Me tiler
nand, of Illinois, than to allow himself to be wheeni led
into the Breckinridge ranks by a facile politician like
James B Nicholson, who seeks to obtain a seat in Con
gress by using his past professions of regard for Douglas,
while ho disregards- the last advice of that immortal
statesman to hie friends, to banish all partisan retain,
and unite in support of the Administration in its conduct
of the war. Has it ever occurred to you, Mr. Pre •
sidept, that nearly all the splendid intellects of
the Democratic party fn. its better days are now ar•
rayed against the present sympathizers with treason in
our midst, and that what Is now called the Democratic
organization is officered and led either by discarded old
line Nnhige, or by neophytes born of the present excite
ment, without a record that is not stained with all the
corruptions that polluted the Democracy during the days
of James Buchanan'? I need only illustrate this remark
by the names of 1 Milt (lass, of Michigan, David Tod, of
'Ohio, Joseph Holt, of Kentucky, John S Henderson,
of Illistouri, Andrew Johnson, of Tenneseee ' Daniel S.
Dickinson and John A. Dix, of New York. Dr. Malden
burg, Benjamin Champneys, William Wilkins, and John
O. Ruox, of Pennsylvania.
•Alr. Chaii man, this is a contest for country, not for
pslty. - 10heers ] We are not to vote on Tuesday next in
favor (f the Tax bill, the Emancipation bill, the Confisca
tion bill, or any of the other measures of Congress.
These are now laws of the land, and cannot be re•
paled. The truly loyal. citizen, whatever his objec
tions may be to the policy of the Admiaisteationecan
beet glove his loyalty by trusting the Adinistration•
[Applause hlietakes have been made, but those who
are to correct them are not in the ranks of the sympa
thizers with Secession Observe, air, that in the Oa.
billet of President Lincoln there are gentlemen who are
known to have opposed confiscation and emancipation,
but, like good patriots they have yielded their own views
to the emergency, content that the experiment should bo
fried. The best way to put an end to taxation, to reduce
the debt, to atop confiscation, and, it you please, al
though that Is not among the possibilities, to arrest
emancipation, is to nut an end to this wicked rebellion,
to sustain the Government in suppressing it, to hold up
the hands of the President, and encourage our generals
and soldiers in the held. and our admirals and sailors
on the sea, and to vote the.uneondittonal Union ticket on
Tuesday next. [Loud and long-continued cheering.]
BR. IeCEIIRE'S SPEECH.
'
FELLOW. CITIZENS : A deadly, relentless foe has grap
pled with the Republic. Its aim is the subversion of con
stitutional liberty throughout the continent; and it can
not triumph, however partially, withortt striking at the
very vitals of order and security, and leaving - as a future
fraught with anarchy and despotism. -
In such a aids, with the well-being of thirty millions
depending upon the issue, the partisan should% be lost in
the tah let The man who now seeks to attain a partisan
triumph, regardless of the common weal, is weak and
deluded, or is a deliberate foe to the Government. When
the loyal hearts of tho North shall haVe restored the ne
tters to unity and fraternity, and driven treason and its
abettors and sympathisers beyond the hope of future
power and evil, we can then differ, as • in .times past, as
to the - true policy of the Government. Bat Until then,
there is one duty to which every- other mustbe subOrdlt
nate ; one aspiration, one hope, one prayer,.moie earnest
'thawed). the red. -It is the preservation of • the Govern
ment, the unity of the Republic.
I shall make no partisan appeals to , night- I earnestly'
beseech the sincerely loyal of all political persuasions to
make common cause in behalf of a common and a .periled
country: I isle abont me many whom I have heretofore
met in the rugged strife of: politics as foe& .0n the issues I
then ; dividing us we would be divided still; but they join
in ignoring party trines and patty triumphs, because it
is the dictate of patriotism an to do.
I do tot charge that all who shall act otherwise are
disloyal:. , The masses of the people orPenneilvimiti, of
all parties, are faithful to the Government. They may
be deceived by tricksters, and lured by their life-time
love 'of party, into unintentional but fearfal wrongs bat
they Will return to their highest and haired dtitylse truly'
as the oscillating needle will turn to the pole:
I do know, however, that every foe of the Govern
rel
. ent; every enemy of our' flag; every open or secret
sympathizer with treason; every one who has hailed
- our season of eational disaster end gloom with de
light; every fiend who has rejoiced as thousands of our
eons: and brothers fell on the gory field. vainly resisting
the foe—all these will vote against the ticket I urge upon
'you to-night. They will do it with a purpose—a deaths
rate„tixed, and solemn purpose ; and if successful, they
will not have labored and, hoped entirely in vain. They
know well that if Pennsylvania shall cast her mighty
'slice against the Union ticket, there will be Joy not only
wherever treason has a home within the State, but there
,is not a murderer of our heroic brethren in the field, from
the Potomac to the Gull', from the archfiend at Bich
'- mood to the humblest of his followers, that will not roiso
a shout of triumph. Francis W. Hughes wilt be no less
jubilant than hie fugitive Schuylkill nephew, whose bat
tery thundered its deadly volleys into our ranks on the
Antietam; and wherever a traitor's heart, beats•there
will be•glarlebes. • - . . •
A 'victory, oertainly eo intended by the political lead
ers allayed against us, and dearly to be so understood by
the Perfidious hatters in arms against the Government,,ie
not to bo permitted by a loyal people,- save_at .the peril
that j threatens every, home/ with insecurity, every life
with•danger, every species of property and credit 'with
de sfruction, and every principle of order. and 'government
withirovolation. • I believe that the loyalty of our people
would measurably defeat the - -full fruition of such a tri
umph—they would revoitand EMU those who betrayed
h. m, and bcped to betray 'a country. _lint the path of
. safety to ourselves, to our hearthstones, .and to our Go
.verensent. is that which, leads to clearly loyal .results.
The Verdict in Pennsylvania should cheer and inspire
lot at hearts—not traitors • should strengthen oar, brave
brethren in the field and our patriotic Preeldent—not
•
naive the arms of remorseless foes to renewed deeds of
carnage, to desPlate fatal thousands more of our happy
homes. •
We can only judge of what shall be claimed as the
hull), of a Democratic victory by what its authoritative
repraseritativre present as to articles of faith. That the
enmities of its voters mean to be loyal and faithful will not,
atone for the insidions disloialtY that is promulgated by
its leaders. • The treason that we see and hear about ns
trader the thinnest guises of fidelity to the Government,
needs bit the apparent sanction of a great State to,bring
it fpm its swaddling clothes into the fullest Manhood,
, and prray it with desperate determination east most dan
gerous power on the aide of this unholy , rebellion.,
Ike 10 , m people or Fenner Irani% must appreciate this
i at.ruhle. , There le danger that while we - are continent
-----
___________ ~...-._
t ... • ---... •
that a came no goon, 80 Patriotic, eo necessary G, ~.....
well being of overt' mean and every inters, t e - , es
triumph—there is doom:, I say, that it may faille . bin
the °Ver. coofidence and consequent gel e ,„„, -tette
friends. Let every loyal cde`n look well te bis c e l n ',., f , t3 t
In this dark hour it merits no divided love, tIO (le ,;„,'`_,/-
devot fon, no qualified support. It has throw n r,, j ,,,,—eu
shield of safety and of freedom over our forefithe,t,...34
ourselves, until it has reared empire after enspe; . . 4 1
ecattered, in rich profusion, the priceless b1e,,,h,'„801
our institutione from the Atlantic to ehe Pacifi c, o 3 t or
Lakes to the Gulf. It tun made a pevele ser,L34l,le
world in all that is ennobling in peaceti:thdrtaiert,rioblebei-gr :;.3
dad now, when mad ambition seeks toplonge thel",.. •
• continent into anarchy, and perpetually Setintser, tiS, — , *
1 true history with fraternal ware. surely the weicaeti.c
sylvaniev meet be WHIM to herself,
Bred thoueatid sons in arms, faithful to her twrt i ~
. Band heroic dead, and faithful to the hepetie c. 'eon.
met in thia contest in the eacred name et ~..
Constitution. They bring gifts to deetroy. I A id 'es
readers vele are marshaling the heats &giblet tbe e ve tb l
meat declare to the people frankly that tom meta G,•
Ole war oy an ignomieiotretreaty--by a reee el ,7 l , I .ti
that would leave the Government the mere prey 4 ~,.1 4
traitors who have made thirty minions mourt,..4,;',
weal' be- condemned in thunder tones at the bil l et 1,,,, - 7
Ever' loyal heart would spurn them mita °be, --''''
would be orwelcomeretarre. - , iik,
Bat they array themsolves - profemedly in bali t e or
Constitution, and appeal to the inhereet rev re ,„„* 6
faithful men to that instmtnent to giee thew v i ck ,•`. te:
I they were sincere:and lbval men , and Saithful to hei7e„,.4
I asowed devotion to the Conati.ution and the legit 1 , -- ',,.•
could be impeded even in the strictness of ceuetre.T.
that yeace ever invitee. Bat when they cetre, eite.i:'
union lingering on their lips, send wito &Derv, 0 ee•
disloe al prejudice, to• every selfish intereet, and le bt5% ..... ..
cowardly conviction, they aim at a earthen tne m i. -,
the cost of a bleeding country. Du AA
• The Democracy of Philadelphia, 1141 retiree:ma 576
chosen leaders, has not left us in doubt noto iti hes ~;"
• salon. Whee beaten in a Presidential minuet 1 4 ~,)::
• stitutior al majority, and when treason was scheoliss',,,
• murderers in the South by threats of diseolorios er.,..-
party met in this bail to deliberate upon the lay s o p's,.
members in the crieis. It was declared that they ma :
a 6 , distinct political organizatton"—that they w e ,
.7
part of the 230,000 electors of Penetylranla, we., b !
their votes at d co operation, meant to express con k
' and Thorough sympathy with our Southern en, '
and recognstion. in the• most absolute and tz , 44 2,,,
. form, of the rights of the- Sou: h as claimed, by eu tk " .4
statesmen
United States." and affirmed by the Supreme Court eiZ e
The "absolute ant extended forma the rights of tb e
' South, se claimed by Sonthereistatelmen," has nem A
new chapter in the history of the Republic. Thestete
is before ne. More than a hundred thousand tre e ,
have fallen to maintain .our Government ae e t t y,
4 , th / e
absolute and attended" rights claimed by ea cttxo
statesmen. B a te the hepnblic is one v. at field of deals.
tion, tied millions of debt and paralyzed i n d„, r ,
,_
commerce are the finite of Sonthern rights se e, 00 ,4
by our Democratic friends within these walla.
Are they not measurably, if not wholly, reeentelber,
this bloody, this appalling record? When Vence' reiN
its hydra-head in South Carolina it was geeeted %kettle,
band of 'empathy, of encouragement, yea of felleee4
where I now stand, by the leaders of the Damn,
party. Bad they been true to the Government tel e,
the Constitution as they now profess to be, they v o ,
have burled their honest, earneet denunciation smi,
rebellion, and it would have died still born; welsh,
have had obedience to the laws in every eection, and a,,
then two hundred thousand American citizees nee e e m ,.
lug untimely in the "city of the silent," W 014311,113
bless and defend our free inettnlions
I have said that the hand of fellowship we, ettfrees
to ci.nnion in Ibis hall. It is a humiliating, a e1et,,..,
record; but here it is, so plain that the wayfaring
must understand it. Among the reeolutions impel. *
the 18th of January, 18131, by the Democratic De %
acting, as it declared, ~ as a distinct politics! (Tem a ,
tion," was the following :
serwellth. That in the deliberate judgm:nt orate p t .
moaner of Philadelphia, and, so far a , we k n" ' 3 if
Pennsylvania,, the dissolution of the Union by the ev.,,
ration of the whole South—a result we email reettee.
ce rely lament--may release this Common wealth t i v et ,
extent from the bonds which now connect her %ie: e t
Contederacy, except so far as, for temporary conr-ei nte.
she chooses to submit to them, and would antherine4
require ter citizens, through &Convention to be K ea•
bled for that purpose, to determine with whom he r k i
shoeld be cant, whether with the North and East, rte s
fanaticism has precipitated• thin misery upon let, or rift
our brethren of the South, whose wrongs we NI &I v
own; or whether Pennsylvania should stand by bend,
as a distinct community, ready, when occasion edle, to
bind tog( then the broken Union, and resume her rhea
loyalty arid devotion"
Francis W. Hughes, the chosen reprosentatire ct to
Deruoct alio party in this struggle, has also made
co r d, bed it is agewnst the Government. lie to
champions the Democracy that • hailed rebelliso
proper remedy for a political defeat. In a okolstio
that be meant to submit to a State aiserOlaq s of 4
party, ho portraf a, in words of glittering tresset..ite
bright destiny of Remasylvanla es. 4e a meitiber of th
new Vonfederacy," and claims that lwr wealth. pr.
lEttloll, and glory may thereby be promoted in a ie.
tree tniparalkied in the history and prosperity el soy
people."
These men meet us and claim the verdict of ot , ilis
as loyal men. Fresh from an effort to hurl Penneylree
over the battlements of the Constitution into the Usti(
rebellion, they come with falsehood upon their hold
treachery in their hearte, and appeal in the name d
Constitution they so insolently, so wantonly defied.
I would, indeed, that this terrible record were otter.
wise ; I would be glad to oleim every citizen of Pea.
Sylvania as a member of one common loyal broths:tad
We have foes enough, God knows, with bristling tine
nets, hurling the messengers of death into oar eaters
richest blood. I would not odd one to the nunie,r,sti
not disloyalty robe itself in theisacred garb of putio:ba,
and attempt an unholy fraud upon a loyal Swe.
Pennsylvania cannot falter.now. Her people cum;
misunderstand the purpose of Democratic lender& Ts;
position of - our great Stale cannot be a doubtfte one k
must be strangely bewildered by hypocrisy and frsei to
be drat' n into even apparent antagonism with the Ooseli•
talent, in this trying hoar lot peril. The isearneaut al
the State is not in harmony with those who met rebehre
on the threshold with scores of encouragement, era
held out Pennsylvania as lan offering to ttedeaderise
that hes swept over the South as the logicianoe frets of
treason. To this entertainment our people will vette
Invited. They will sustain the President, who, wait
eingleneee of purpose, has devoted himself to teatime%
Government of our fathers : and trey cannot be breast
or intimidated to approve even the shadow of didoiwe.
They owe to this Government their lives, their 110f.N.
rity, their all ; and they will preserve for themselves ad
their children thug great febrio of free institutions
They understand that be is faithless who, with M.
tendons (of loyalty on his lips, has words of denuteir•
tion only for the Government. The man who We
himself as a friend of prosecuting the war to restore tar
the Union, aid complains of every mevare adoptei is
give success to our cause, is not faithful—is not emit.
To appeal to Ignorance and prejudice by mageifors
fcur•fold our national debt, and yet claim to be is foot
of paying our brave soldiers in the field and maintain*
the credit ef - the Government, is but an eff‘Jrt to neatest
loyal men by falsehood, and to disarm a Goverzmnt by
treachery. The truly loyal will be earnead, seemed to
the Government. Be may differ with the Prsedmt oa
many issues, but he a/Waive his whole hear; lindens.
pies to ern II rebellion first, and determine snburdatte
issues albeit' we shall have a united Government to ate
far :e them.
leiiiiiTrli'Ave7titteWere r edVirtatifuTfees 4 .
unscrupulous dare not to question Ida Integrity, and bid
disinterested loyalty and patriotism challenge the ae.
vereat scrminy at home and abroad. He may err is Its
discharge of his solemn and cempliceeted duties tot ti
the preservation of the Union he makes all else anbor , f•
nate, and to tbts great purpose every true heart beat
responsive, and must Einstein him. If. bas celled menu
lead our armies, and to places of the highest unit. re.
gardless of political opinions, and he has asked of toss
only what he cheerftrly yields binitelf—untaltoriat de
votion to the Republic. .
Be has struggled until hope itself fled to recall the ts•
hellion' fitatee to obedience without laying the liras
alm'of the Government upon slavery•—*.he dews Or,
has written its vengeance against free institutions Lim
gore of every battle-field. He has now istn..4 is
teleran warning that, if ttte Republic cannot ottorca
live, slavery must die. It is natural that for this ems
traitor should denounce him. It fa fitting that 3MI
CA.Dgren that sparse the protection of the Ned art. G.e
vernment, and has disclaimed its Bunnell for dory,
should tremble and rave beosneo the President hs3 wita•
drawn the power they affected to despise. But to snsx
firet love is for the National Union will reiaireih't rot
Issue is made i that the caressed and insolent fp of DOT
unity and prosperity can survive only by obedience to
the leas, and by yielding to the progress and lisaYinHe
of a free people.
Slavery made this war. It grow wanton and ei:tal
in power, and, from being the creature of rnl,rant!a=.l
souslit to subvert the liberties of a continent .11v
nearly it has succeeded let the variable fortunes of tee
war declare. Until now it has boasted of exempts
trona the issues of battle. We might defect its smash
but it was sacred ; and, although it could rear (dram.
Goys for traitors, clothe and anbaist our foes, and yield
every white man to meet us on the deadly field. yet it
was regarded as more sacred than the Oonntitation ivied
7 be whole Christian world will now rejoice that desert
bas e at list, wrought its own doom—that it mot Odd
obedience to ths, Republic or die a speedy death, nal
either is death.
It has been the Indispensable ally of the rebels in this
conflict, and military necessity demands imp:ratite ,
that it mtistlell. Traitors may denounce--sYcitarhi z6 :
may quibble, as quibble they ever will—the timi ,
hesitate—but, as a just 'retribution. as a meestae tr
yoking the safety of the Government, and of tbonissk
of lives, it will belieartily sustained by loyal men , ' a)
eer in it the bright star of hope that points to reci ol
and peace.
The suspension of the writ of habeas corpus b to'
tiny enough distasteful to Francis W. atellae"'t 2
coadjutors. There is no criminal that does not tag'!"
avenging law. There', .is `no foe Of the Goveraolect oi
deed not abhor summary remedies. If there wee Q 7
Union men Smith, Jefferson Davis would not utterly
regard the ordinary channels of justice, and Peal"'
lentleeely, at his despotic will: every aspiration fertnit
Union of our fathers. If there wore no traitors hoc"
men who invited rebellion—who bid it God eneel—"` 7
held out Pennsylvania in their per Bilious herds ell
f. ee- will offering to treason—there would bare bees se
euspension of the highest writ of right by Prtfident Lie•
co'n. Dot such men there are in our toilet; fe•di
nnmter. It is true, but formidable in power, ho:loss dal
Lave seized the organization of a powerful Ana 1 "' 14 ,, p. „ ..
litical party, and they would. betray It and a comas
country together. There is but one adequate rearsli
such monstrous wrongs, for such a crime against 3 ear
try, an army, and a loyal people, and that is summed
runishrt ant. Let them but be earnestly loyal—tiltll
their own dear homes end to the ennobling
: Cause of tte
Government, and the suspension of the writ of Listen
crawls will be practically void.
These men, who shield themselies behind the floosie: .
tion the more effectually to destroy it, toll us they Vrg t
lasts Peace! who would not welcome it if it braciti
not dishonor or dismemberment to the • Republic?. D
would be welcomed es never was peace welcomed hs•a'
But the foes of the Government want peace only at
coat of national ea istence. They. would sever the =tea
with ruthless, fratricidal hands; they would bring WI
upon our fag, disgrace upon our heroic sons thick'',
the foul blot of dishonor upon the graven of our in num'
dead. They would do this either to reconetruct tie)
verrment upon the demand of slavery, and preserve 11
Hughes' „ natural bonds" in the revolted States for f 2
tare harmonious political action, or they would dolt bf
dieeclution, and, as declared by the Democratic levier!
in this ball, give Pennsylvania over to be &Boleti . '
tbrcugh lingering yeare in the deadly embraceeft he
Southern Onnfederacy. -I want no such peace: M v6l
14 y al heart mutt revolt at it.
As yet to State has faltered in supporting the Adadol o i'
trath n and the Government, and Pennsylvania will %.
,birtherfinst to set the example -Oregon. Oellfornis.
nolo, Connecticut. Rhode Island, Vermont, and ebia'
have spokeit—ti9ine Of them inn - the tone of deepest 6 10 " :
but neither diimeter, nor faithless mon, could motethsc i
swerve from thbir fidelity to the Union thellorula
not unmindful of her lamented Broderick. who ten. I n .
advaice, a martyr to the cause that we advocate 040 •
, and
Oregon mourned for her fallen Baker and :itere: t !
and vindicated their sacred, fame. Thus, from the
lan& and the Pacific, have.gone up the emohota,
duct that 't the Union must and shall be preserved;
Perntylvania, when she shall thunder in her nialerl%";
behalf of a united Government, will - extinguieb roe
hope of exhausted treason in the South, and P01cf...., 1 7
world to the ultimate triumph of Republican institna,'"s
We owe this to our great State;
homes and hearts veiled in sorrow ; to oar brave
Fors
who rallied around our fi in the field; to the tin:m l _7 3
to . tha thoolan a ;
of devoted Union men nowvictims of rebel destel'a: o 4
the South ; we owe it to these to en' lain the G a
and prosecute the war, by the exercise of every ;I w o
lamer, until it 'shall' be entirely successful. I f r li est
must fall, let it fall ,• if our credit must be tgr a i9,7g ; if
further, let DB stand shoulder to shoulder to istaam - oa r
still more lives must be sacrificed on the altar re the
liberties, our heroic brethren have them reed,' t he
offering. In short, there is no sacrifice so t a rrible;- 00 , 1
'sacrifice or a free Government; and, appealing t 9 t rf do)
of battles in our holy effort for the preservation s a
Republic, let loyal hearts make common cane ' a
things for our common country. -
SPEECH OF ma. It'ALICTIAEL.
aid
'Merton McMichael, Etri was introduced. If s 6 n y.
I have just got voice enough to read those reeltalt,
As I was too sick to speak, arid as wanted to do or'
thing, I obtained the privilege of reading there refiil
tions. [Laughter and applause ] I heartily eadar: (o o
that has been said. 'Nothing can be said too ailof' ,. o be
I will not endorse, if it fis for the lire"r vti°D
Union. lam glad to see that Gen. ttioCiellan Ohio%
the Administration, and has approved th e oissa''ilc
propocition. [lmmenee cheering ] I honor GA ben the
Olellen for his endorsement of the President
Preeicect. ot ttie United States shall be unirtrial l Y4
teined . by ffi
the ocers of th s' e arm who ere i t , the ;: w ,
as he his been by the commanding gals"' °` tshod loaf"
mac, the rebellion will be at an end. [ l,O
continui d cheers ]
It , fit only when our army officers manifes t 1
desire to put down the rebellion that the war iv ol i u
pa
We, CbraeiVel, have a double dote to P erfjr ib .
b net strike down the pympsthisers and tral.ors!..o
a s
While our eons are in' the army (and loco I ' o ,
there) ; while onr brothers, our fathers. acd.itic,ffebi.
gutlintanees are giving up their lives 00 o ' B De n ....to
at
in defence , of the country, we must stoodbf‘,..;t
boms;Nre,trinst confront the rebel hordes; 9 ... 5 r 6 ;00 ,
front Oki .* rebel eyrripathiZen. We will leave