• ..0, ik A I lAtig CI z v ) ) PUBLISHED WEEKLY IN THE CITY OF READING, BERKS COUNTY, PA.-TERMS: 81,50 A YEAR IT ADVANCE. J. LXWRENCE'GETZ, EDITOR] •lIBLISHED MOM SATIIIUNLY BLPRVIIHG. offm le.-„lh-weit earn& of Penn and Filth street, ad joining the Farmere Bank of Reading. • - TERI'S OF SUBSCRIPTION. 51,50 a !par, payable in adarrnM. 1,0 0 for oix months, to advan I ce. To Cursa! FOOT cola 101 $3, E. Ton coven for in, ea- All paper* diSCOWIRICIft at the expiration of the time/J:10/N% HATES OF ADVERTISING IN THE GAZETTE. It. at. Ism, 6mo. ly ease, tsses ""." )4 Sonars, lines, orleas, 50 50 73 2,00 3.6 l 3,00 • lO " 50 1,00 125 3,0 ) :Lao 5,00 20 " 1,00 0 2,00 2,50 5,00 5,00 i 3.0 1,50 2,0) 3,7:i 7,50 12.1.0 20,00 • [Larger Advertisements in proportion.] Ellecalers' and Administrators' &takes, a Insertions *l.OO n; Botta.. and Legal Notices. 3 " 1,50 Audito Special 'Notices, as reading matter, lo Ctn, a line for one insertion. Marriage notices 25 cents each. Deaths will lie published grartutonel air sit tlbitoary Node's, Resolution. of Beneficial and other Private tostociatione, will be charged for, as adver dements, at the above rates. AP' Advertisement" for Religions. Charitable and Edo wtioual ohjoets. one half the NT all sdie , Whig will be considered , maids in cash, on we drat iusertben. Yearly advertiser. shall have the privilege (if desired) of renew ing their advertieeweate every three weeks—but n. 4 °lour. Any additional re ne wals. or advertising ex ceeding the amount contracted for will be charged adver- extra at one-halt the rates above specided for transient tisements. Yearly advertisers will be charged the same TM ee Wendel.' advertisers for all matters not ranting strict/y to their busistesB. . . PRINTING OF BERRY DESCRIPTION Ea...sled In Al 'superior manner, at the very lomat prices. Our sumo , Orient of JOE TITS is largo and nenbionalela, and oar Work speaks for Welt: BLANKS OF ALL KINDS, includiug PAr.CIOILEUCT and YUMA DMA MORTUAGES, DONAU.. Awnetze op AGICEIOtr-cf, LEAREAS, and a variety of JINTICEI BLANK.% kept COuutuntly for lola, or printed to order. EDWARD H. SHEARER, • TTORNEY AT LAW.-OFFICE. IN COURT street, North aids Reading, Pa. (sprit 26-6 mo. REMOVAL. AITRALIAE LIVINGOOD, ATTORNEY AT vy LAW, au removed hie Mem to the north side of Court street drat door below Biztb. (dee 22-tf ABNER IL STAI7FFER, ATTORNEY AT LAW OFFICE, COURT street, below Sixth, Herding, Pa. [april JESSE G. HAWLEY, ATTORNEY AT LAW, OFFICE WITH S. L. YOUNG, ESQ., PENN guest above girth. Read ing, Pa. Asir Will be at Friedenebarg, every Thursday. gariamber 39, 185d-17* • - - Charles Davis, k , TTORNET AT LAW—HAS REMOVED HIS Office to the °Sloe lately occupied by the Hon. David P. rdon, deruasad, in Sixth street, opposite the Court House. Capri' 14 Daniel Drazeniront, ATTORNEY AT LAW—OFFICE IN NORTH Bath greet, corner or Court alley. [aug 13-17 David Ned, untorzsATA AND RETAIL . DEALER IN my Fortigq ped Domestic DRY GOODS, No. Ss Moe eon street, Healing, Ps. Diesel 10, 1860. LIVINCOOD'S United States Bounty, Back Pay and Pension Office, WERT STREET, 11Tskle SIETE. AVING BEEN ENGAGED IN COLLECT ing claims against the Government, I feel confident that all Who bare heretofore employed me will cheerfull, endorse my promptness and fidelity. fily charged are Moderate and no charge made until obtained_ WILLIAM LI. /AVINGOOD, eel IS-tf] Attorney at Law, Genii st., heading, ea NEMIEMI DEALER IN FOREIGN AND AMERICAN PRY GOODS, CARPETING% Ste., Wheless...le and Em ail, at Philadelphia prim. Sign of she Ooldeu Bee Hive, No. 14 peat Penn Scinare. [April 17—tf P. Swaim% A Sons, N I I AISTUFACTURERS OF BURNING FLUID, absolute, Deodorized and Druggists' Alcohol; also, e Oil, which they will sell at the lowest Wholesale pricers at neadleg, V. W Orders respectfully solicited. DR. T. 'YARDLEY' BROWN, SURGEON DENTIST. - GRADUATE OF PENNSYLVANIA Dental College. Teeth extracted hp Fran i* g g Elects° Magnetic promo', with Clarke's improvement. With this teethed teeth are a-traded with much lees pain than the usual way. No extra charge. Once in irifth street, opposite the Preabyte nan iihurch. [april 2-1 y Dr. fa. ur.. - ntruzirrn. SURGEON DENTIST, FROM THE • College of Dental Surgery, Philadelphia. I ilia, Mice: At his reeidence in Main street, Hamburg, Pa. air Teeth extracted under the Influence of Ether, or by the Eleetro-SUguetie Machine, without extra charge. &taffy cured. WHe has also Patent and other MEDICINES for oat., at his office. (may 31 FALL AND WINTER CLOT DING, FOR MEN AND BOYS IN GREAT VARIETY, BOLD WIRY LOW Mr JA_MESON & CO., Corner 6th and Penn. sept 6 D. DISSLER Iff AS CONSTANTLY ON HAND 4. LARGE jr.i supply of Muslin.. Prints, Checks. Ticking% Sheet ngs, Flannels, Crash, Toweling, &c., which will be told atop. Aire 111 a coil before buying elsewhere. Afloat 16 LAUER'S BREWERY • READING, PA. HE SUBSCRIBER respectfu ll y announces to the public that he has recently enlarged his BREWE- R to a considerable extent, and introduced steam-power, nod IN now ready to supply all demands for garrin.TOß imam statroluis For borne and distant consumption. We stock 'of Malt Liquors, warranted to keep in all climate& Is se follows: BROWN STOUT. PORTER, BOTTLING ALB, DRAUGHT ALE AND LAGER BEER. junto 19-tf FREDERICK LAUER. N.B.—Atiberal per eentage will be allowed to Agents abroad. THE -•GREAT POINT ATTAINED !! ! A NEW STYLE OF SHUTTLE SEWING MACHINE , Q.O SIMPLE IN ITS CONSTRUCTION, LIGHT ki to ran, and eary to learn, that any one can operate it without instructions. Sews MUSLIMS and the heaviest ARMY CD Villa olualty well. A splendid Machine for Tailors, Vest And Pa n t makers, Hat and Shoe Madera. &0., at the low price of S5O. A Idler Machine than amp dhow in the market, at 167 5 . Call cunt eree G. W. GOODRICH, Jan 2.1-tf] Noe. 3 and 5 Penn Square, Reading, Pa, F. P. HELLER, WATCHMAKER, JEWELER, AND DEALER IN W TCRES, CLOCKS, JEWE LB, SPOONS, SPE(AACLES, GOLD PENS, &c., aignor the " BIG WATCH," No 53),1 Ea Penn Street, above Sixth, north side : Itoading- OW. Every article warranted to be what it Is sold for Watches, Clocks, Jewelry, Ate., repaired with particolar attention, and guaranteed. [fell I—tt B. M. PETTENGELL & CO, No. ST PASS BOW, NSW-TORE, & 6 STATE ST., BOSTON, Are AReate for the Iloodirag Gazelle, In thou Mies. and are sothorised to take Iduarthomssits and Subscriptions he us at our established ratea BALTIMORE LOCK HOSPITAL jarEsTAol.lbliLD AS A REFUGE FEIOSI QUACKERY The Only. Place Where a Cure Can be Obtained. TA R . JOHNSTON HAS DISCOVERED THE Vinod Certain, Speedy and only Effectual Remedy in the rt orld for all Private Ottawas, Weakness of the Rack or Limbs, Strictures, /Incline of be Nidnoye and Blad der. Involuntary Discharges. Impotency. Oeuerai DeLilt ty. 'Nervousness, Dyepemia Languorehbow Spirits, Confu sion of Idea., Palpitation of the Ream 'timidity, Trembling. !Menem' of Sight or Giddied's, Diem.e of the Head, Throat. Nose or .kin. Affections of the Liver, Lunge, Stomach or Bowels—those Terrible Disorders arising from the Solitary Ifebite of Yonth—thdee soresr and eolitary pranticee more &tat their victim* than the song 01 SYMMS 10 the Mariners of Ulysses, blighting their most brilliant hopes or anticipations, rendering tontringe, &c.,impoeolble. 71'017N ' NEON -Especially. whn have become the victims of So'ary Vice, tints drcedful and destructive habil whieh annually sWeepi to an untimely grieve thousands of Young 3les of the most exalted talents nod brilliant intellect. who might other• wise have tram nc-d listening Senates, with the thunders of eloquence or waked to ecstasy the living lyre, may call With fall Confidence. - DfiARAZAGE. Married Penton% or Young Men con?emplating being aware of physical weak need, organic debility, defer- Midge, epeedi ly cured. lie who places 'himself under the care of Dr. S. may en- Batumi!) , confide in bin honor as a gentleman, and confi dently rely upon his okill as a Physician. OILGANIC Wan NESS Immediately Cared, and lull Visor Restored. TMr ltistreseinc aßeerion—which random Life miserable and marriage impossible—lt tbe penalty paid by the vic tims of improper indulgences. Trung persons are too apt to commit excesses from not being aware of the dreadful consequences that may ensue. Now, who that understands the subject wilt pretend to deny that the power of.procrea tion is lost sooner by Moue falling into improper habits than by the prudent? lienides being deprived the pleas ure of healthy sawing, the moat serious and destructive symptoms to both hotly and mind arise. The system be comes Deranged, the Physical and Mental Functions Weakened, Leas of Procreative Power, Nerveas Irriarbiil ity, Dyspepsia, Palpitation of the Deem Indigestion. Con stitutional Debility, a Wasting of the Frame, Cough, Con eumption, Decay end Death. OißoegNo. 7 South Frederick Street. Left baud side going from Baltimore street. a few doom from the corner. Fail not to observe name and number. Letters meet be paid and &rotate a stamp The Doctor's Diplomas bang in his office. • 01/1111 ISTARILANTEID IN • TWO DAYS. Xo Yeretsi•V or Nauseous Drugs. . DR. ITOZINSTON. Member of the Royal College of Surgeons, London, gradu ate from one of the' MUM eminent Colleges in the Milted States. and the greater part of Whom lite has been spent in the hospitals of London. Paris, Philadelphia and else where, has effected some of the most adornishieg cures that were ever known; many troubled with ringing in the head and ears when asleep, great nervousness, being alarmed at sudden naiads, bashfulness, with frequent blushing, at tended sou/mimeo with - derangement of mind, were cared immediately. MAZE PARTICULAR =TIC= Dr..l. addresses all those who have injured themselves by improper indulgence and solitary habits which ruin both body and mind, unfitting them for either business, study, eociety or marriage. Watt aril some of the sad and melancholy Moto MI/M -ed by early babies of ) Guth, •ia Weakness °fans Back and Limb., Pains in the-Head, Dimness of Sight, Lois or mus cular Power, Palpitation of the Heart, Diepepsy. Nervous I rritability, Derangement of the Digeetive Functions, Gen eral Debility, Symptoms of Consumption, &e. Matersm.s.—The fearful effects on the mind are much to be dreadvd—Lose of Memory, Confusion of Ideas, Deere. sion of Spirit*, Evil Forebodings, Aversion to Sella". Self- Distrust, Love of Solitude, Timidity, &c., are *Mile of the evils produced. Toorsmins of persons of all ages can now judge .bat is the cause of their d. dining ha ith, losing their vigor. be. coming weak, pale, nervous and emaciated, baring a sin gular appearance about the eyes, cough and symptoms of consumption. Tome MEN Who have injured themselves by a certain practice indul ged in when alone, a habit frequently learned from evil companions, or at school, the efiSas of which are nightly felt, even when asleep, and if not cared renders marriage impossible, and destroys both mind and body, should ap ply immediately. what v pity that a young man, the hope of his country, the dolling of his parents, should be snatched from all prospects and'eajoyments of life, by, the cousecpWsitit 'of deviating fromthe path of nature and indulging in a. va leta acre; Stoll persons stew; bolero contemplat ing• . . sees. LIARRIAGLF effect that a nomad mind and budy are the most tisesernry requisites to promote connubial happiness. Indeed. with out these the journey through life becomes a weary pil grimage; the. prospect howl. darkens to the view; the mibd becomes shadowed with despair and filed with the melancholy refection the. the happiness of another be comes blighted with oar Own. DISMAL= or ZIPILraviiENcE. When the misguided and imprudent votary of pleaenre finds that he has imbibed the seeds of this painful disease, it too often happens that an ill-timed sense of shame, or dread of discovery, detershim from applying to those who, from education and respectability, can alone befriend him, delaying till Unconstitutional symptoms of this horrid dis ease make their appearance, such as ulcerated sore throat, diseased neck Loetnrnal mina in the bead and limb* dila - LIM of eight, draftees, sods on toe shin-bones and Rime, Nolan?+ on the head, face and extremities, progressing with frightful rapidity, till at last the palate of the month or the home of the nose fall in, and the victim of thin aw fin disease becomes a horrid object of c••mmiseration, till death pots a'Perlod to his dreadful enitertngs, by sending him to that Undlecovered Country from whence no trav eller returns." "[mares 12 . . . . It is a melancholy fact that thousands fall victims to this terrible disease, owing to the onskiafnlness of ignor ant pretenders, who. by the non of that Deadly Poison. Mercury, ruin the constitution bad make the residue or lite miserable. . .• STRANGERS . • Trust not your lie., or health, to the care of many Un learned and worthless Pretenders, destitute of knowledge. name or character, who copy Dr. Johnaton's advertlee• meta., or style themselves, iu the newspapers, regularly Educated Physicians, incapableof Curing, they keep you trifling month after mouth taking heir filthy and poison onacomponade, or as lung as the smallest lee can he ob tained, and iu despair, leave you with ruined health to sigh over your own galling Oimappoirament. Dr. Janson is the only Physicia3a advertising. His credentials or diplomas always hang in his office. His remedies or treatment are unknown to all others, prepared from a life spent in the great hospitals of Europe, the first in the country and a more extensive Private Prac tice than any other t'hysician in the world. INDORSIIDIENT TUN P/A311115. The many thousands cured at this institution year after year, and the numerous Important Surgical Operations performed by Dr. Johnston, witnessed by the reporters of the "Sun," "Clipper." and many other papers, notices of which have appeared again and again before the public, besides his standing as a gentleman of character and re. sponsibility, is a otrinciont guarantee to thetiniklad. Skin Diseases Speedily Cared. rr Bo letters received noises postpaid and containing a stamp to be need on the reply. Persons writing should state age, and send portion of advertisement describing symptoms. joss 30232irSTOZW. DX,. D., or the tralstwoco Look itoonitol. naltitattra, Maryland. may 10-1 y) STRICKLAND & BROTHER, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL BOOKSELLERS & STATIONERS, 23 AS PENN 13112223% ittEAD INI G,. PA. • A LARGE AND WELL SELECTED STOCK L - 1 . of School, Miscellaneous and Blank 411011 iIED MAL ME tip PRAYER BOOKS, -ENGLISH AND GERMAN 13113 LES AND HYMN BOOKS, PERIODICALS, MUSIC and MUSIC BOORS, COLD PENS FANCY ARTICLES, NOTE, LETTER. CAP and .PIRNTINC PAPER and PAPER BAGS, 'MANIC BOONCEI • 'MERCHANTS' ACCOUNT BOOKS Made to order - Churches and tiabbath actionit; supplied with Tract Society and Sunday School Union publicatione, at catalogne prices. sir Orders from Country 'Merchants solicited and filled promptly at the lowest wholesale prices. gar- Teachers supplied with Music at the weal discount. B —BOOkii mad Music neat by mail postage paid. on receipt of Publishers' Prices. jau 18-tf DR. D. LLEWELLYN BEAVER, United Staten Pension Sorge., XAMINATIONS OF INVALID PENSION ERSS and apptleanta for Pensions, from any State. an d of both the Artny and Navy, made at the corner of Fifth sod Walnut &Mei, Evading. •ift*" Unice bourn—from 12 to 2 P. Dec, 20-3in0.1 WTCII ES, GOLD •ND SILVER, CLOCKS AND JEWELRY. RELIABLE 1N QUALITY AND AT LOW la Prim, WATC.11118P•1111140 —WltteseP 'Mt SD ',ar rant order end every one warranted for one year. JACOB LEJLtg.N. nor 15-61 no) 21 North Fifth Street, Scaling, Pe.. SATURDAY MORNING, JANUARY 24, festru. THE RECRUIT. [FROM THE UARIVIAN.I My lover. to the field of strife. •Far from bin home and me, Has gone to basard dearest life For law and liberty. Oh, brilliant in his soldier dress, But with a falling tear, Ma be receive my lea caves, • And to the field repair. The drums beat in the village road, The troop marched gaily by, Bet mid the =lade, :thrill and load, Wee heard a wailing cl 7. I, bitting et my window low, A nosegay in my band, Watobed silently the gallant show Binds by the marching band. And when my treaore onward came, Oh how my heart did loop! He proudly marched, as sore of fame What could I do- but weep ? Oh God! what were my feelings then! How heavy was my heart! I threw a aria of Laurel green, As farewell on tny part. lie could not atop to pick it up, The train quick bore bum on; Crashed in the duet lay my laei hope, When all had paes.ed and gone. But, if he missed my offered spray. Set still my heart he bath: Which beats for him, now far away, With love and treating faith. 2==ll A WINTER PICTURE. The snow, thick fallen in the silent night, • Rath laden every branch, and every leaf Droops with its dazzling weight. The fragile birch, Its thready branches thickened with its load, Strangely contrasts with yonder amoeba, That bends beneath the agglomerated rases Resting upon Its leaves. The towering plane, Its whitened tassels hanging in the sky, Surmounts the wondrous scene. Each shrub and tree Stands out in strangest Individuality Beneath its snowy pall. White blotchy lumps Mark the broad evergreen., slim thready lines The broom and eeter. Beauteously grotesque Looks the gaunt cedar, a long snowy layer Glittering on every horizontal bough, Like a colossal feather, cut in atone By noose hold mentor-Land. The gliAtening lawn • .Is searcell marked by footprint of a bird, The hidden garden path bath not a stain ; Each flow'ret hath its coronet of snow, 'And not a thing so vulgar or en mean But dons on ermined rube. Tree. shrub and flower Stand In white livery out upon the eye, Like corns height dream. That old familiar chime A narrower circle seems to nil ; the ecene • Seems vital:tad and collapsed, and nearer drawn The once far-off horisen. that dotal hold, AS With a spell, a strangely silent world. fotittraa. THE riEgg..t.uoN AND THE WAR, SPEECH BY HR.-YALLANDIGHAM, OF OEIIO Za the /Meese of Representatives. JANUARV 14, 1863 kit.. SPEAKER: Indqrsed at the recent election within the same district for which I still bold a seat on.this fiver, by a majority four times greet er than ever before, I speak to-day in the name and by the authority of the people who, - for six years, have intrusted me with the office of a Re presentative. Loyal, In the true and highest sense of the world, to the Constitution and the Union, they have proved themselves devotedly attached to and worthy of the liberties to oscura which the Union and the Constitution were established. With candor and freedom, there fore, as their Representative, and with much plainness of speech, but with the figuity and decency due to this presence, I propose to eon Hider the STATE OF TOP. UNION to day, and to inquire what the duty is. oft every public man and every citizen in this the very crisis of the Great Revolution. It is now two years, since Congress assembled soon after the Presidcmial election A sectional anti slavery party had just succeeded through the forms of the Constitution. For the first time a President had been chosen upon a platform of avowed hostility to au institution peculiar to nearly one-half , of the States of the Union, and who had himself proclaimed that there was au irrepressible conflict because of that institution between the States; and that the Union could not endure "part slave and part free." Congress met., therefore, iu the midst, of the profoundest agitation, not here only but throughout the entire South.' .Revulution glared upon us. Repeated efforts for conciliation and compromise were attempted in Congress and out of it. AU were rejected by the party just coming into power, except only the promise in the last hour of the session, and that, too, against the consent of a majority of that party both in the Senate and House; that Congress—not the Executive— should never be authorized to abolish or interfere with slavery in the Slates where it existed. South &reline seceded ; Georgia, Alabama, Florida, Mississippi, Louisiana, and Texas speed ily followed. The confederate government was established. The other stave States held beck. Virginia demanded a peace congress. The com missioners met, and, after some time, agreed upon terms of final adjustment. But neither in the Senate nor the House were thefallowed even a respectful consideration. The President elect left his home in February, and journeyed towards this capital, jesting as he came; proclaiming that the crisis was only artificial, and that ',no body was hurt." lie entered this city under cover of night and in disguise. On the 4th of March be was inaugurated, surrounded by Pot tliery ; and, swearing to sur port the Constitution of the United Stater), announced in the same breath that the platform of Lis party should be the law unto hint. From that moment all hope of peaceable adjustmeut fled. But for a little while, either with unsteadlast sincerity or in premeditated deceit, the policy of peace was proclaimed, even to the evacuation of Sumter and the other Federal torts and arsenals in the seceded States. Why that policy was suddenly abandoned, time will billy disclose. But just after the spring elections, and he secret meeting in this city of the Governors of several northern aid western States, a Met carrying a large num her of men was sent down ostensibly to prevision Port Sumter. The authorities of South Carolina I eagerly accepted the challenge, nisi bombarded the fort. into surrender, while the fleet tired not. a gun, but, just so soon as the flag was struck, bore away and returned to the North. It was Sunday, the 14th of April, 18G1 ;"end that day the President., in fatal haste and without the advice or consent of Congress, issued his proela mation, dated the next day, calling out seventy five thousand militia fur three months, to repos sess the forts, places, and property seized Iron] the United States, and cumin:trifling the insur gents to disperse in twenty days. Again the gage was taken up by the south, and thus the dames of a civil war, the grandest, bloodiest, and tiaddeel ill history, lighted up the whole heavens. Virginia forthwith seceded North Carolina, Tennessee, and Arkansas followed ; Delaware, Maryland, Kentucky, and Missouri were in a blaze of agitation, and within a week from the proclamation, the line of the confederate States Was transfeired from the cotton States to the Potomac, and almost to the Ohio and the Misr south and their population and fighting men doubled. In the North awl West, too, the storm raged With the fury cf n hurricane. Never in history was anything equal to It. Men, women, and ohildren, native and foreign born, Church and State. clergy and laymen, were all swept along with the current. Distinction of age. sex, sta tion, party, perished in an instant. Thousands bent. before the tempest; and here and there only was one found bold enough, foolhardy enough it may have beeri, to bend not, and upon hint it fell as a consuming fire. The spirit of persecution for opinion's sake, almost extinct in the Old World, nuw, some mysterious trans migration, appeared incarnate in the New. Social relations were dissolved ; frierotrhips broken up; the ties of family and kindred snapped asunder. Stripes nod banging were every where threaten ed, sometimes executed. Assassination was in yoked; slander sharpened his tooth ; falsehood crushed truth to the earth ; reason fled ; madness reigned. Not justice only escaped to the skies, bat pence returned to the bosom of God, whence she came. The gospel of love perished; hate sat. enthroned, and the sacrifices of blood smoked upon every altar. But the reign of the mob was inaugurated only to be supplanted by the iron domination of arbitrary power. Constitutional limitation was broken down ; habeas corpus fell ; liberty of the press, of speech, of the person, of mails, of travel, of one's own house, and of religion; the right to hear arms, due process of low. judicial trial, trial by jury, trial at all; every badge and muniment of freedom in republican government or kingly government—all went down at a blow ; the chief law °lnter of the crown-1 hog pardon, sir, but it is easy to. tall into this courtly language—the Attorney General, first of all meniroclaimed in the United States the maxim of Ro an servility: Whatever pleases the President, that is late I Pris oners of State were then first heard of here. Midnight and arbitrary arrests commenced ; travel was interdicted ; trade embargoed ,• pans ports demanded; hostiles were introduced; "piping" began; informers multiplied; spies now first appeared in America. The right to de clare war, to raise and support armies, and to provide and maintain n navy was usurped by the Esenutive and in a little more than two months lend and naval force of over three hundred thousand men was in the field or upon the sea. Au army of public plunderers followed, and cor ruption struggled with power in friendly strife for the plastery at home. On the 4;h of July Congress met, not to Reek peace; not to rebuke usurpation nor to restrain power; not certainly to deliberate; not even to legislate, hut to register and ratify the edicts and acts of the Executive ; and in your language, sir, upon the first day of the session, to invoke a universal baptism of fire and blood amid the roar of cannon and the din of battle. Free speech was had only at the risk of a prison; possibly of life. Opposition was. silenced by the fierce clamor of "disloyalty." All husinesa not of war was voted out of order. Five hundred thousand men, an immense navy, and two hundred and fifty millions of money were speedily granted. In twenty,- at most in sixty days, the rebellion was to he crushed out. To doubt it. WAS treason. Abject. submission was demanded. Lay down yoti^ arms, sue for peace. surrender your leaders —forfeiture, death—this wets the only language heard on this floor. The galleries responded; the corridors echoed ; and contractors and place teen and other venal patriots everywhere gnash- ed upon the friends of peace as they passed by Itl lire weeks meventy-eieltt public and private acts and joifirresalntion`P aril declartifitry revs lotions, in the Senate and !louse, quite as nu merous. all fall of slanglner. were hurried through without delay and almost withuut de— b te. Thus was cern WAIL inaugurated in America. Can any man to-day see the end of it And now pardon me. sir. if I pause here a moment to define my own position at this time upon this great question Sir, I am one of that number who have opposed abolitionium, or the political development of the anti-slavery sentiment of the North and West. from the .heginuing. In school,.at college, at the bar, in public assemblies, in the Legislature, in Congress, briy and man. as a private citizen and in public life, in time of peace anti in time of war, at all times and at every sacrifice, I have fought against it. It era ma ten years' eillltaiOn from office and honor, at that period of life when honors are sweetest. No matter I learned early to do right and to wait.. Sir, it is but the devel apment of the spirit of intermeddliug, whose children are strife and murder. Cain troubled himself about the sacrifices of Abel, and stew hint. Most of the wars, contentions, litigation. and bloodshed, from the hes..inning, of time, have been its fruits. The spirit of non interventior, is the very spirit of peace and concord. I do not helleve that if slavery had never existed here we would have had no sectional controversies. This very civil war might have happened fifty, perhaps a hundred years later. Other and stronger causes of discontent and of disunion, it may be; have existed between other States and sections, and aro now being developed every day into maturity The spirit or intervention assumed the form of abolitionism because slavery was odious in name and by association to the northern mind, and hecause it was that which most obviously marks the different civilizations of the two sec— tions. .The south herself, in her early and later effori a to rid horaelf of it, had exposed the weak and offensive parts of slavery to the world. Abo- I read the President's proclamation, and become lition intermeddling taught her at last to search convinced that I had been wrong all my life, and for and defend the assumed social, economic, that all history was a fable, and all human na and political merit and value of the institution. tore false in its development from the beginning But there never was an hour from the beginning of time, I would have changed my public conduct when it did not seen, to me as cleateas the sun at also. But my COnViOtiollB did not change. I broad noon. that the agitation in any form in the thought that if war was disunion on the 14th of North and West of the slavery question must April, it was equally disunion on the 15th, and sooner or later 'end in disunion and civil war. at all times. Believing this, I could not, as an This was the opinion and prediction for years of honest man, a Union mat and a patriot, lend an Whig and Democratic statesmen alike ; and after active support to the war ; I did not. I had the unfortunate dissolution of the Whig party in rather my right arm were plucked from its sock -11354, and the organization of the present Repub- et, and cast into the eternal burnings, than, with Bean party upon an exclusively anti slavery and my convictions, to have thus defiled my soul eectional basis, the event was inevitable; because with the guilt of moral perjury Sir, I was not in the then existing temper of the public mind, taught in that school which proclaims that "all and after the education through the press and by is fair in politics." 1 loathe, abhor, and detest the pulpit. the lecture and the political Canvass, the execrable maxim. I stamp upon it. No State for twenty years, of a generation taught to hate can endure a single generation whose public t.litvery and the South, the success of that par men practice it. Whoever teaches it ie.& cor ty, possessed, as it was, of every engine of rupter of youth. What we most want in these political, business, social, and religious in- times, and at all times, is honest and indepen fluence, was certain. It was only a question dent public men. That man who is dishonest in of time, and short time. Such was its politics is not honest, at heart, in anything ; and strength, indeed, (lint 1 . do not believe that the sometimes moral to God, cowsrd and cowardice i s Truth,nti dishonesty.a theDo Union of the Democratic party 18C0 on any right.; and trust candidete, even though he had .been supported People. Perish office, perish Imams, perish life also by the entire Flo-celled conservative or anti itself; but do tile thing that is right, and do it Lincoln vote of the country, would have availed like a men. I did it. Certainly, sir, I could to defeat it ; and 'if it had, the success of the not doubt, what ealfee who dare defy the party would only have been postponed opinions and the pa,sions, not to say the mad four years longer. The di-ease had fastened too ctes, of twetdi people. Had i not read strongly upon the system to be healed no it it history ? Did I tau heetv human nature? But I had run its course. The doctrine of the " irre- appealed to Tl.llll, and right nobly hath the preesible conflict" had heen taught too long and Avenger answered me. accepted too widely and earnestly to slio out, until I did not support the war and to-day I bless it Should culminate in 811CeP11101E1 end disunion Cod that. not the smell or No much its one drop of and, if coercion were resorted to, then in civil its blood is upon my germents Sir, I censure war. I believed from the first that it, was the no brave 1110111 who rushed patriotically into this purpose of some of the apostles of that doctrine war; neither will 1 quarrel with any one, here to force a collision between the Berth and the or elsewhere, who gave to it an honest support. South, either to bring about a separation or to Had their convictions been mine, 1. too, would tint a vain but bloody pretext fur itimlishing doubtless have done as they did. With my con slavery in the State,+. In any event, I know. nr vie:ions I could not. hut was a Represenretive. thought I knew, that the end was certain colli- War eXilllllll-1).7 whose act no matter—not urine sion. and death to the Union. Tate President, the Senate. the Reuse, Had the ltelievint• thud, 1 have for years past, dennonc country. till said that there should he war—war Cd those who ti uvitt that o .otrine wit , all the for the U11:011; is union of coneent a nd go o d will. vehemence., the bitterns,, if you choose—.l Our &mourn brethren were to be whipped hack thought. it. a righteous, a patriotic bitterness—of into love and fellowship at. the point. of the Nu nn earnest and impassioned nature Thinking once Oh, monstrous delusion! I can compre thus. I forewarned all who believed the doctrine, I bend a war to compel a people to accept a MAR or followed the party which taught it, with a i ter; to change a form of government ; to give up sincerity and a depth o f conviction as profound I territory ; to abolish a domestic institution—in so ever penetrated the heart of men. And when. i short, a war of conquest and subjugation ; but a for eight years past., over mad over again, I have I war for Union l Was the Union thus made? proclaimed to the people that the success of a Was it ever thus preserved? Sir, history will eectionel anti slavery party would be the begin- matt! that after nearly six thousand years of nine, of disunion and civil war in America, I he- folly and wickedness in every form and adminis lieved it. I did. I had reed history, and studied !ration of government., theocratic. democratic, human nature, and meditated for years upon the monarchic, oligarchic, despotic, and mixed, it 863. character of our insiiitlliOnSt and form of govern merit. and of (he people South as well as North ; and I could not doubt. the event. But. thepeople did not believe me, nor those older and wiser anti greater than I They rejected the prophecy. and stoned the prophets The candidate of the Republican party was chosen President. Seces sion began. Civil war was imminent. It was no petty insurrection ; no temporary combination to .obstruct the execution of the laws in certain States ; but a iterommon, systematic, deliberate, determined, and with the consent of a majority of the people of etch State which seceded. Causeless it may have been ; wicked it. may have been: but there it. was; not to be railed at, still less to be toughed et, but, to be dealt with by statesmen as a fact. No display of vigor or force alone. however sudden or great. could he.ve ar rested it. even at- the outset. it wise disunion at. last. The wolf had come. But civil war had not yet followed. In my deliberate and most solemn judgment., there was but one wise and masterly mode of dealing with it.. Non coercion would avert. civil war, and compromise crush out both abolitionism and secession. The parent and the child would thus both perish. But a re sort to force would at once precipitate war, has ten secession, extend disunion, end, while it lasted, utterly cut off all hope of compromise. I believed that war, if long enough continued. would be final, eternal disunion. I said it; I meant it; and. accordingly, to the utmost of my ability and influence, I exerted myself in behalf of the policy of non-coercion. It was adopted by Ur. Buchanan's Administration, with the almost unanimous consent of the Democratic and constitutional Union parties in and out of Con gress; end. in February, with the concurrence of a majority of the Ilepnblican party in the Senate anti this House. But that. party, most disastrously for the country, refused all com promise. How, indeed, could they accept. any? That which the South demanded and the Demo cratic: and consetvative parties of the North and West were willing to grant, and which 1110T.0 could avail to keep the peace and save the Union. implied a surrender of the sole vital element of the party and its platform-It-of the very princi ple, in fact, upon which it had, ust won the con test for the Presidency; not, indeed, by a major. ity of the popular vote—the majority was nearly a million against it—but under the forms of the Constitution. Sir, the crime, the "high crime" of the Republican party was not so much its re fusal to compromise, as its original organization upon a basis and doctrine wholly inconsistent with the stability of the Constitution and the pence of the Union. But to resume: the session of Congress ex pired. The President elect was inaugurated ; and now, if only the policy of non-coercion could be maintained. and war thus averted, time would do its work in the North and in the South, and final peaceable adjustment and reunion be se. cured. Some time in March it was announced that the President had resolved to continue the policy of his predecessor, and even to go a step further, and evacuate Shamter and the other Fed eral forts and arsenals in the seceded States, His own party acquiesced; the whole country rejoiced. The policy of non-coercion had tri_ umphed,. end for once, sir, in my life I found myself in-att jmmet.sc majority. No man then pretended that a Union founded in consent could be cemented by force. Nay, more. the President and Secretary of State went forth, r. Said Mr. Seward, in an official diplomatic letter to Mr. Adams: " For these reasons he {the PreLWest] would not bo dis posed Or 1,11313. »cardir,l , olona.of ,Ilrn ISIS I aarbelY, that the Federal Governun•at could not reduce the seceding States to °bedlam:o by convent, al though he were diqukted cont.:lion tbst proposition Rat in feel the Preeklent atneyl., it Co tree. Only an imperial or li.Ardie GM:era)), Ott V 0 ,114 soltiagate thoroughly diBoffeet.4 and imurreetionary member. of the Slate." Pardon me. air. but T bog to know whether this conviction of the President, and his Seere ihry, is not the philosophy of the perristent, anti niost vigorous efforts •made by this Administra lion, and first of all through this same. Secretary, the moment war broke out. and ever since till the hale elections, to convert. the United States into an imperial and despotic Government? But lir. Seward adds, and I agree with him: "This Federal Republican system of oars le, of all forma of government, the very one which to most unfitted for ouch a labor." This, sir, was tin the 10th of April, and yet that very day the fleet was under sail for Charles ton. The policy of peace had been abandoned. Collision followed ; the militia were ordered out,; the civil war began. Now, sir, on the 1441 of April, I believed that anorelon would bring on war, and war disunion. More than that., I believed, what yen all in your hearts believe to day, that the South could never he conquered—never. And not that only, but I was satisfied—and_ you of the abolition party have now proved it to the world—that the secret but real purpose of the war was to abolish sla- very in the States. In any event, I did not doubt that whatever might be the momentary impulees of those in power, and whatever pledges they might make in the midst of the fury for the Constitution, the Union, and the flag, yet the natural and inexorable logic of revolutions would. sonnet or later, drive them into that policy, and with it to its final but inevitable result, the change of our present democratical form of goy ernment into an imperial desp.,tism. These were my convictions on the 14th of April. Bed I changed them on the loth, when [VOL. XX11.1.-NO. 40.-WHOLE NO. 1989. was resers-ed to Aniericin statesmanship in the nineteenth century of the Christian era to try the grand experiment on a scale the most costly and gigantic in its proportions, of creating love by force, and developing fraternal affection by war ; and history will record, too, on the same page, the utter, disastrous, anti most bloody fail ure of the experiment. . But to return : the country was at war; and I belonged to that school of politics which teaches that when we are at war, the Government—l do not mean the Executive alone, but the Govern ment—is entitled to demand and have, without resistance, such number of men, and such amount of money and supplies generally, as may be ne cessary for the war, until an appeal can be had to the people. Before that tribunal alone, in the first instance, must. the question of the continu ance of the war be tried. This was Mr. Cal houn's opini3a, and he laid it down very broadly and strongly in a speech on the loan bill, in 1841. Speaking of supplies, he said: " I bold that there is a distinction in this respectbetween a state of peace and war. In the latter, the right of with holdlrg supplies ought ever to he hold subordinate to the energetic and successful prosecution of the war. Ico fur ther, and regard the withholding eupplies, with a view of forcing the country Info a dishoniartibte peace, as not only to he what it hag been called. moral treason. bat very little short of actual treason itself." Upon this principle, sir, he acted afterwards in the Mexican war. Speaking of that war in 1847, he said "Every Senator knows that I was opposed to t h o war but none known bat myself the depth of that opposition. With my conception cf ice eta racier and consequences, it was IMpoueildu for me to vote fur it. And again, in 1848 : "But, after the mar was declared, by antherity of the Govuromeot. l acyacietwcd in what r could not nret,:nt, and Which it ;vat iniponrible jilt me to (Meg ; awl I Wen fell it to he my duly to limit my efforts to OM such di. recifon to Use War us would, ar;f:r co possible, premed the milt and dangers with which it threatened the country and its inettlatinnw" Sir, l adopt all this. as my own position and my defence; though, perhaps, in a civil war, I might fairly go further in opposition. I could not, with my convictions, vote men and money for this war, and I would not, as a Represeuta Live, vote against them. I meant that, without opposition, the President might take all the men and all the money he should demand, and then to hold him to a strict accountability before the people for the results. Not believing the soldiers responsible for the war, or its purposes, or its consequences, I have never withheld my vote where their separate interests' were concerned. But I have denounced from the beginning the usurpations and the infractions, one and all, of law and Constitution, by the President and those under him; their repeated and persistent ar bitrary arrests, the suspension of habeas corpus, the violation of freedom of the mails, of the pri vate house, of the press and of speech, and all the other multiplied wrongs and outrages upon public liberty and private eight, which have made this country one of the worst despotisms on earth for the past twenty months ; and I will continue to rebuke and denounce them to the end ; and the people, thank God, have at last heard and heeded, and rehuked them, too. To the record and to time I appeal again for my justification. And now, sir, I recur to the state of the Union to- day. What is it? Sir, twenty months have elapsed, but the rebellion is not crushed out; its military power has not been broken ; the insur gente have tint dispormed. The Union is not re stored; nor the Constitution maintained ; nor the laws enforced. Twenty, sixty, ninety, three hundred, six hundred days have passed ; a thous and millions been expended ; and thfee hundred thousand tires lost or bodies mangled; and to day the confederate flag is still near the Potomac and the Uhio, and the confederate government airong.•r, many times, than at the beginning. Nut a State has been restored, not army pert. of any B:s.to has v.Anuturily returned to the Union . And has anything been wanting that Congress, or the States, or the people in their most genes cue enthusiasm, their moat impassioned patriot ism, could bestow? Was it power? And did not the party of the executive control the entire Federal Government, every State government. every county, every city, town and village in the North and West? Was it patronage? All be longed to it. Was it influence? What more? Did not the school, the college, the church, the press. the secret orders, the municipality, the corporation, railroads, telegraphs, express com panics, the voluntary association, till, all yield it to the utmost? Was it unanimity? 'Never was an Administration so supported in England or America. Five men and half a score of news papers made up the opposition. Was it enthu siasm? The enthusiasm was fanatical. There has been nothing like it since the Crusades. Was it:confidence? Sir, the faith of the people ex— ceeded that of the patriarch. They gave up Constitution, law, right, liberty, all at, your de mand for arbitrary power that the rebellion might, as you promised, be crushed out in three months and Inc Union restored. Was credit needed ? You took control of a country, young. vigorous arid inexhaustible in wealth and re sources. and of a Government. almost free from public debt, and whose good faith had never been trarniahed. Your great national loan bubble fail ed miserably, as it deserved to fail ; but the bankers and merchants of Philadelphia, New- York, and Boston lent you more than their entire banking capital. And when that failed too, you forced credit by declaring your paper promises to pay, a legal tender for all debts. Was money wanted ? You had all the revenues of the United States, diminished indeed, but Will in gold. The whole wealth of the country, to the last dollar, lay at your feet. Private individuals, municipal corporations, the State governments, all in their frenzy gave you. money or means with reckless prodigality. The great eastern cities lent you $160,000.000. Congress voted, first, the sum of $250,000,000, and next $500,000.000 more in loans ; and then, first, $50,000,000, then $lO,- 000.000, next $90,000,000, and, in July last, $150,000,000 in Treasury notes; and the Secre tary has issued also a " paper postage currency," in sums as IoW as five cents, limited in amount only by his discretion. Nay more, already since the 4th ofJuly, 1861, this House has appropri ated $2,000,000,000, almost every dollar without debate, and without a recorded vote. A. thous and millions have been expended since the 15th of April, 1861 ; and a public debt or liability of $1,500,000,000 already incurred. And to sup port all this stupendous outlay and indebtedness, a system of taxation, direct and indirect, has been inaugurated, the most onerous and unjust ever imposed upon any but a conquered people. Money and credit, then, you have had in prod igal profusion. And were men wanted? More than a million rushed to arms! Seventy-five thousand first, (and the country stood aghast at the multitude.) then eighty-three thousand more were demanded; and three hundred and ten thousand responded to the call. The President next asked for four hundred thousand, and Con gress, in its generous confidence, gave him five hundred thousand; and, not. to he outdone, he took six hundred and thirty-seven thousand. Half of these melted away in their first cam paign; and the President demanded three hun dred thousand more for the war, and then drafted yet another three hundred thousand for nine months , . The fabled hosts of Xerxes have been outnumbered. And yet viel cry strangely follows the standards of the foe. From Ilreat, Bethel to Vicki-burg,. the battle has nut been to the strong. Yet every d'e•anter, except the lest. has been fol lowed by a call for more troops.. and every time so far they have been promptly furnished. From the beginning the war had been conducted like political e:trepeign. and it hes been the folly of the party in power that they have assumed that numbers alone would win the field in a contest not with ballots but- with musket and sword. But numbers you have hail almost without num ber—the largest, hest appointed, beet armed, fed, and clad host of brave men, well organized and well disciplined, ever marshaled. A Navy, ten, not the most formidable perhaps, but the most numerous and gallant, and the costliest in the world, end against a foe almost without a navy at all Twenty million people, and every element of strength and force at command—power, pa tronage, influence, unanimity, enthusiasm, con- fidence, credit, money, men, an Army end a Navy the largest and the noblest ever set in the field or afloat upon the sea; with the support, almost servile, of every State, county, and municipality in the North and West ; with a Congress swift to do the bidding of the Executive ; without op position anywhere at home, and with an arbitrary power which neither the Czar of Russia nor the Emperor of Austria dare exercise; yet after nearly two years of more vigorous prosecution of war than ever recorded in history ; after more skirmishes, combats and battles than Alexander, Caesar, or the first Napoleon ever fought in any five years of their military career, you have ut terly, signally, disastrously—l will not say igno miniously—failed to subdue ten million "rebels," whom you had taught. the people of the North and West not only to hate bat to despise. Rebele, did I say? Yes, your fathers were rebels, or your grandfathers. He who now before me on canvas looks down so sadly upon us, the false, degenerate and imbecile guardians of the great Republic which he founded, was a rebel. And yet we, cradled ourselves in rebellion, and who have fostered and fraternized with every insur rection in the nineteenth century everywhere throughout the globe, would now. forsooth, make the word "rebel' a reproach. Rebels certainly. they are; but all the persistent and eupendous efforts of the most gigantic warfare of modern times have, through your incompetency and folly, availed nothing to crush them out, out off though they have been by your blockade from all the world, and dependent only upon their own cou rage and resources. And yet they were to be utterly conquered and subdued in six weeks, or three months! Sir, my judgment was made up and expressed from the first. I learned it from Chatham t tt hfy lords, you cannot conquer Ame rica." And you have not conquered the South. You never will. It is not in the nature of things possible ; much lees under your auspices. But money you have expended without limit, and blood poured out like water. Defeat, debt, taxa tion, aepulehree, these are your trophies. In vain the people gave you treasure and the soldier yielded up his life. "Fight, tax, emancipate, let these," said the gentleman from Maine, (Mr. Pugs,) at the last session, " be the trinity of our salvation." Sir, they have become the trinity Of your deep damnation. The war for the Union is, in your hands; a most bloody and costly fail ure. The President confessed it on the 22e1 of September, solemnly, officially, and under the broad seal of the United States. And he has now repeated the confession. The priests and rabbis of abolition taught him that God would not prosper such a cause. War for the Union was abandoned ; war for the negro openly begun, and with stronger battalions than before. With what success ? Let the dead at Fredericksburg and Vicksburg answer. And now, sir, can this war continue? Whence the money to carry it on? Where the men? Can you borrow ? From whom ? - Can you tax more? Will the people bear it? Wait till you have collected what is already levied. How many millions more of " legal tender"—to-day forty-seven por cent. below the par of gold—can you float? Will men enlist now at any price? Ah, sir, it is easier to die at home. I beg par don; but I trust I am not "discouraging enlist ments." If I AM, than first arrest Lincoln, Stan ton, and Halleek, and some of your other gener als; and r will retract; yes, I will recant.. But can you draft again? Ask New England—New York. Mk Massachusetts. Where are the nine hundred thousand? A k not. Ohio—the North - west. She thought you were in earnest, and gave you all, all—more than you demanded. "The wife whose lathe first smiled that day, The fair, fond bride of yester eve, And aged sire and matron gray. Saw the loved warriors baste away, And deemed It sin to grieve." Sir, in blood she has atoned for her credulity ; and now there is mourning in every house, and distress and sadness iu every heart. Shall she give you any more? But ought this war to continue? I answer, no—not a day, not an hour. What then? Shall we separate? Again I answer, no, no, no! What then ? And now, sir, I come to the grand est and most solemn problem of statesmanship from the beginning of time; and to the God of (leaven, Illutniner of hearts and minds, I would humbly appeal for some measure, at least, of light and wisdom and strength to explore and reveal the dark but possible future of this land. OAR THE UNION OF THESE STATES BE RESTORED ? HOW SHALL IT BE DONE ? And why not? Is it. historically impossible? Sir, the frequent civil wars and ; conflicts between the States of Greece did not prevent their cor dial union to resist the Pension invasion ; nor aid even the thirty years' Peloponesian war, springing, in part, from the abduction of slaves, and embittered and disastrous as it was—let Thucydides speak—wholly destroy the fellow ship of those States. The wise Romans ended the three years' social war after many bloody battles, anti much atrocity, by admitting the States of Italy to all the rights of Roman citizen ship—the very object to secure which these States had taken up arms. The border wars between Sam land and England, running through centuries. did not prevent the final union; in pence and by adjustment, of the two kingdoms under one monarch. Compromise did at last what ages of coercion and attempted conquest had failed to effect. England kept the crown, while Scotland gave the king to wear it; and the memories of Wallace and the Bruce of Ban nockburn, became part of the glories of British history. I pass by the union of Ireland with England—a union of force, which God and just men abhor; and yet precisely "the Union as it should be" of the abolitionists of America. Sir, the rivalries of the houses of York and Lanese ter filled all England with cruelty and slaughter; yet compromise and intermarriage ended the strife at last, and the white rose and the red were blended in one. Who dreamed a month before the death of Cromwell that in two years the peo ple of England, after twenty years of civil war and usurpation, would, with iota unanimity, restore the house of Stuart, in the person of its most worthless prince, whose father but eleven years before they had beheaded? And who could have foretold in the beginning of 1812, that within some threw years, Napoleon would be in exile upon a desert Weed, and the Bourbons restored ? Armed foreign intervention I did it; but it is estrange history. Or who then expected to see a nephew of Napoleon, thirty five years later, with the consent of the people, supplant the Bourbon and reign Emperor of France? Sir, many States and people, once separate, have become united in the course of ages through natural • causes and without con quest ; but I remember a single instance only in history of States or people once united, and speaking the same language, who have been forced permanently asunder by civil strife or war, unless they were separated by distance or vast natural boundaries. The secession of the Ten Tribes is the exception ; these parted with out actual war; and their subsequent history is not encouraging to secession. But when Moses, the greatest of all statesmen, wouldeteure a dis tinct nationality and government to the Hebrews, he left Egypt and established his people in a distant country. In modern times, the Nether lands, three centuries ago, won their indepen dence by the sword ; but France and the English channel separated them from Spain. So did our Thirteen Colonies; but the Atlantic ocean di vorced us from England. So did Mexico, and other Spanish colonies in America; but the same ocean divided them from Spain. Cuba and the Canadas still adhere to the parent Government. And who now, North or South, in Europe or America, lo , dring into history, shall presump tuously say that because of civil war the reunion of these States is impossible? War, indeed, while it lasts, is disunion, and, if it lasts long enough, will be final, eternal separation first, and anarchy and despotism afterward. Hence r would hasten peace nosi, today, by every hon orable appliance. [CONCLUSION NEXT WINK.] may- Taxan is one good wife in the country: let every married man think that he hath her.