311 • • 4 I C - . 4 ( 1 Mk 7 • ki t. i t / t r t 34 " rilll Iti; IbL o r t 0 PUBLISHED WEEKLY IN THE CITY OF READING, aliliS COUNTY, PA.---TilltivlS: 81,50 A YEAR IN ADVANCS J. LAWRENCE *GETZ, EDITOR.] PUBLISHED RIMY . SATURDAY MORBIBG Mice, No Widow rth•Weret Me Farmers* corner of Penn Bans of Bito owl la's/. Fifth strait, ad / Tlll3lB OF 81:1FSCRIFTION $1,50 a year, yard* fa advance. 1,00 for six months, in advance. Tv CLODS: Fonr copies for $52 in advance. Ten copies for LA, 14 421papere dismontinscid at the expiration of the time pact for. BATES OF ADVERTISING IN THE GAZETTE. It. St. IMO. Smo. 8mo: ly I( Sanaa, § °* toys,oo 75 3 , 00 301 5,0 0 10 ' 00 1,00 1,26 3,0 r 3,..1`. 6,00 2 20 " 1,00 2,00 2,50 11,00 6,00 13,00 3 30 e, 1,50 3,00 3,75 7,30 12,00 20,00 tLarger Advertisements in proportion] Executors.' and Administrators' Notices, 6 limertione $2,00 Auditors' Notices sod Legal Notices. 1,50 Special Nonce!, as reading inciter, 10 cts, a illlo for One insertion. rp" Marriage notices 25 cents each. Deaths will be published gratuitously igr • II Obituary Notices, Resolutions of Beneficial and other Private Associations, will be charged for, as adver lbements, at the above rates. Atar- Advertisements for Itelleiceut. Charitable and Edu cational object % 9110 ball tbo abcTs calks, Jblf• All advertising will be coneldered payable in cash, on the first insertion. Yearly advertisers shall have the privilege (If desired) Of renewing their advertisements every three weeks—but not o•tener. Any additional renewals, or advertising ex ceeding the amount contracted for. will be charged extra at one half the rates above specified for transient &dyer fieements. Yearly advertisers will be charged the seine rates as tweetet advertisers for all =Were not relating strictly to their business. PRINTING OF EVERY DESCRIPTION. Executed in a superior manner, at the very loured prices. Oar ametment et Jos Tres in large and faehionable, end *di Work glints for Welt BLANES OF ALL KINDS, . . Including PARCHMENT and PAPER DEEDS, MORTGAGES, Molise, ARTICLES or AGREEMENT, LEASES, and a variety of Je,,Ttess' BRANEN, kept constantly fur sale, or printed to order. EDWARD H. SHEARER, ATTORNEY AT LAW.—OFFICE IN COURT street, North side Reading, Pa. - [aril 26-6 too. REMOVAL. WILLIAM IL LIYINGOOD, ATTORNEY AT LLW, has removed his office to the north side of Court street arm door below Sixth. [dee 22-tf JESSE G. HAWLEY, ATTORNEY AT LAW, OFFICE WITH S. L. YOUNG, ESQ., PENN Street, above Sixth, Stendlog, P., imp Will be at Friedensburg, every Thursday. September 29, 1860-Iy* Charles Davis, TTORNEY AT LAW—HAS REMOVED HIS omce 0 th e QHcc loioly occupied by the Hen. David Gordon, decsamed, in as= tomtit, oppecite the Court 1141111113. [april 14 Daniel Erznentront, ATTORNEY AT LAW—OFFICE IN NORTH thuh.treet, Carper of 001111 alley. [sag 13-1 y David Neff, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN "T Foreign and Domestit DRY GOODS, No. 22 Sant see street, Beading, Pa. [March 10, 1860. LIVINCO OD'S United States Bounty, Back Pay and Pension Office, COURT STREET, NEAR SIXTH. AAITING BEEN ENGAGED IN COLLECT- Iug claims availed the Ouvernment, I feel eel:lndent that all who have heretofore employed me will cheerfully endorse my promptness and Sdellty. My amigos are moderateand no charge snide until obtained. WILLIAM IL LIVINOOOD, oct IS-if] Attorney at Law, Court St., Reading, Pa ASA M. BART, Late 'Mart & Mayer,) InEALER IN FOREIGN AND AMERICAN J DRY GOODS, CARPRTINGS, &c., Wholesale and Re a% at Philadelphia prices. Sign of the Golden Bee Hive, No. 14 Said Penn Square. [aprill7-13 P. Bnahong & Sons, . ANUFACTURERS OF BURNING FLUID, Absolute, Deodorized and Druggists' Alcohol; also, hie Oil, which they will sell at the lowest Wholesale prices, at Reading, Pa. .rir Orders respectfnlly solicited. DR: T.. YARDLEY BROWN; SURGEON DENTIST. GRADUATE OF PENNSYLVANIA , • Dental College. Teeth extracted by Fran ' gi a a cis' Electra Magnetic process, with Clarke's improvement. With this method teeth are =ratted with - much lees pain than the aerial way. No extra chimps. Office in Filth street, opposite the Presbyte rian CAurch. [april 2-1 y Dr. G. M. MILLER, SURGEON DENTIST, FROM THE 7 " -- 7 College of Dental Surgery, Philadelphia. Odle." At Ids reddened In Main street, •• Hamburg, Pa. Nip Teeth extracted ender the influence of Ether, or by the Electro.Magnetio Machine, without extra charge. Scurvy cured. Ea- lie ha. also Patent and other MEDICINES for sale at hie °flee. [may Si DR. D. LLEWELLYN BEAVER, - united States Pension Surgeon. MIXAMINATIONS OF INVALID PENSION ERB and applicants for Pe11610215, from say State. and Wboth the Army and Navy, madeat the cornerof Fifth and ain% gad, Mu, 4 ir 4)Sce houre—from 12 to 2 P. n. R@ B. DISSLER H AS CONSTANTLY ON HAND A LARGE .upply of Muslin., Print., Ohoeics, Ticking.. Shoat age, Flannels, Crud, Tewvllugy &c ,, , which will be sold cheap. Give as a call before Dorm elsewhere. August 16 S. M. PETTENGILL & CO., No. 37 BASIC ROW, NEW-YORK, & 6 STATE ST., BOSTON, Are Agents, for the Reading Gazette, to those altos and an authorized to take Advertisement' and Banditti:me for tug at our entabligglied ram WATCHES, GOLD AND SILVER, CLOCKS AND JEWELRY. II RELIABLE IN QUALITY AND AT LOW - MGM WATVII li - SYMAlML—Wittobes put in per (era order and every one warranted for one year. JACOB LUNEN. 21. North Filth Street, Reading, Pa. no. 1.5-6moj F. P. HELLER, WATCHMAKER, JE WELER, AND DEALER IN. WATCHES, CLOCKS, JEWELRY, QPOONS, SPECTACLES, GOLD PENS, ke., 1,3 Signor the "BIG WATCH," No. 83..4 Ea Penn Street, above Sixth, north Bide, Rending, Ps.. Wir Every article warranted to be what It is sold for Watches, Clocks, Jewelry, Ste., repaired with particular attention, and guaranteed. [feb 1-tf FRESH GROCERIES —AT— REDUCED PRICES. AT THE Corner of Tim and Spruce Streets. March 1 IL KEY RER & SON. NOTICE. A PBEIIIIIII WILL BE PAID ON (a-coma:2,Maa iSMX-RI7.EVIL. -AND IP.EILMIL 33.,EL1V1C. nrcrrmiso I=l EXCHANGE AND BANKING OPFICE —OF— G. W. GOODRICH, READING, Pa. August 10,1861-U] CIR.&ENSI (TEALTAT.) GRiAl` "S CAN CONSTANTLY BE HAD AT LAMM S BREWSILY, corner of Third 11.11 d chestnut ECM Doceinber 7,1863-H JUST RECEIVED, 2000 FLOWER POTS, AT THE OLD JAIL oat 44f WM. BROAJW, Jr. BALTIMORE LOCK HOSPITAL EAVABLISHED AS A REFUGE FROM QUACKERY. The Only ?lace Where a Cure Can be Obtained. DR. JOHNSTON RAS DISCOVERED THE ta o St Certain, Speedy and only Effectual Remedy in the World for all Private Diseases, 'Weakness or the Back or Limbs. Strictures, affections of the Kidneys and Mad* der, Involuntary Discharges. Impotency. General Debili ty, Nervousness, Dyspepsia. Languor. Low Spirits, Conti:t alon of Ideas. Palpitation of the Heart, 'timidity, Trembling, Disoneas of Sight or Giddiness, Disease of the Head, Throat, Nose or Skin, Affections of the Liver, Longs, Stomach or Bowels—those Tet nide Disorders seeing from the Solitary Habits of Youth—those sacker and solitary practices more fatal to their victims than the song of nyretra to the Harluera of Ulysses, blighting their most brillimle Toped or anticipations, reudering marriage, &c., impossible. YOUNG WIEN Especially. who have het...teethe ' , nettles of Solitary Tice, that dreadful and destructive habit which annually sweeps to sm untimely grave thormancia of Young Men of the most exalird talent!, and' brilliant intellect, who might other wise have entrauc..d listening Senates, with the thunders of eloquence or waked to eestasy the living lyre, may call with fall confidence. AMMVIMULGII. Married Persons, or Young Men conemplating marriage, being aware of physical weakness, organic debility, defor mities, Sic., speedily cured. Be ylacen Wm.!f under the ear; of 1E1E..1 way ea ligioualy confide in bin boner as a gentleman, and confi dently rely upon his skill an a Physician. Immediately Cared, and Fall Visor Restored. Distrmsing Affection—which renders Life miserable and marriage impossible...ls the penalty pail by the Tie time of improper indulgenees. Yung persons are too apt to commit excesses from riot being aware of the dreadful consequences that may ensue. Now, who that understands the subject will pretend to deny that the power of procrea tion is lost sooner by those falling into improper habits than by the prudent I Besides being deprived the pleas ure of healthy offspring, the moat serious and destructive aymptotnn to both body sod inOlod RAN, Tbct system be comae Deranged, the Physical and. Mental Functions Weakened, Loss of Procreative Power, Nervous Irritabill ity, Dyspepsia, Palpitation of the Heart, Indigestion, Con stitutional Debility, a Wasting of the Frame, Cough, Con sumption, Decay end Death. Office. 270. 7 South Frederiok Street. Left hand side going from Baltimore street, a few doom from the earner. Pall hot to observe name and number. . . . Letter. mnat be paid and contain a stamp -The Doctor's Diplomas bang in his Mace. • A CU& WARILANTILD IN TWO DAYS. Aro Me mary or Nmsarcrese Drawn. DR. JOHNSTON: Member of the I:oyal College of Surgeon., London, Gradu ate from one of the most eminent Colleges in the United States. and the greater part of whose life has been spent in the hospitals of London, Paris, Philadelphia and else where, has effected some of the most astonishing cares that were ever known: many troubled with ringing in the head and ears when asleep, great narrow:m..B, being alarmed et sudden eunuch, buchfulnetni with frequent blushing, at tended sometimes with derangement of mind, were cured immediately. TALI= rawricuLan. NOTICE. Dr. J. addresses all those who have injured themselves by improper indulgence and solitary habits which rain both body and mind, unfitting them for either business, study, ...ety or marriage. THESE are some of the sad and melancholy eifccts produc ed by early habits of youth, viz: Weakness of the Back sod Limbs, Pains in the Head, Dimness of Sight, Loss of KM. miler Power, Palpitation of the Heart, Dispepsy. Nervous Irritability, Derangement of the Digestive Functions, Gen eral Debility, Symptoms of Consumption, ke. •lEENTA/4.l".—ThS fearful elects on the wind are rottek to be dreaded—Lose of Memory, Confusion of Ideas, Depres sion of Spirits, Evil Forebodings, aversion to Society,Self- Distrust, Lore of Solitude, Timidity, Stc., are some of the evils produced. THOUSANDS of persons of all ages can now judge what is. the cause of their dr Mining health, losing their Tiger,. be coming weak, pale, earrona and emaciated, having' a Sill* gular appearance about the eyes, cough and symptoms of consumption. 'NOUNS ZICEN Who have injured themselves by a certain practice indul ged in when alone, a habit frequently learned from evil companions, or at school, theeffects of which are nightly felt, even when asleep, and it not cored renders e imposible. and detitroys both mind and body, should ap ply immediately. What a, pity that a young man, the hope of his country, the darling of his parents, should be snatched from all prospects and enjuyrnerith of life, by the consequence of deviating from the path of nature and indulging in a cer tain secret habit. bash persons moor, before onnieniplat lag iffummaximim, reflect that a soiled mind and body are the most necessary requisites to promote connubial happineos. Indeed, with out these the journey through life becomes a weary pil grimage; the. prospect hourly darkens to' the view; the mind becomes shadowed with despair and ntled with the melancholy reflection that the happiness of another be comes blighted with our own. DISEASE or ITNZPV.VDENOE. When the misguided end imprudent votary of pleasure Ands that he has imbibed the seeds of this painful disease, it too often happens that an ill-timed ismae of shame, or dread of discovery, detere bim front applying to awes who, from education and respectability, can alone befriend hire, delayiny, till the constitutional symptoms of this horrid dis ease make their appearance, ouch no ulcerated sore throat, diseased nose, nocturnal pains in the bead and limbs, dim ness of sight, deafness, nodes on tub shin-bones and arms, blotches on the head, face and extremities, progressing with frightful rapidity, till at last the palate of the mouth or the bones of the nose fall in, and the victim of this aw ful disease becomes a horrid object of commiseration, till death puts a period. to his dreadful sufferings, by sending him to'• that Undiacovered Country from whence no trav eller returns." [march 12 It is a melancholy fact that thousands fall victims to this terrible disease, owing to the unskillfulness of ignor ant pretenders, who, by the two of that Deadly Poison, Mercury, ruin the gonotitutlou and gnat Sin rooidoo of life miserable. STRANGUELS Trust not your lives, or health, to the care of many ISn. learned and worthless Pretenders, destitute of knowledge, name or character, who copy Dr. Johnston's advertise mente, or style themselves, In the newspapers, regularly Educated Physicians, incapable of Caring, they keep yen trifling month after month taking halt filthy and poison ous compounds, or as long as the smallest fee can be ob tained, and in despair, leave you with ruined health to sigh over your own galling disappointment. Dr. Johnston is the only Physician advertising. His credentials or diplomas alwaye hang in hie oSce. His remedies or treatment are unknown to all others, prepared from # life spent in the great hospitals of Europe, the Ural la the country end a more extensive Primate Proc ure than any other Physician in the world. INBOUSEDERN I I I Or TUE PRESS. The many thousands cured at this institution year after year, and the numerous important Surgical Operations performed by Dr_ Minden, witneespd by the reporters of the "Sun," "Clipper," and many other papers, notices of which have appeared again and again before the public, besides bie standing as a gentleman of character and re sponsibility, is a sufficient guarantee to the afflicted. Skin Diseases Speedily Cured. lettbrm received unless post-paid and containing a stamp to be used on the reply, rer•.eaa wriannsboold state age, and send portion of advertisement describing symptoms. SOHN M. JOHNSTON. DT. If.. Or the Batrimovi Lock Hospital, Baltimore, taryland. may 10-Iy] ASTOR HOUSE; NEW-YOLK. rriHIS SPLENDID HOTEL HAS BEEN 11EJU ' venated, and in at IhjeMoment second to none In ele gance. The Ladies' Ithatving Room is a beautiful one, having no equal. lls open corridors mid complete v entilation render it most delightful in warm weather. It in uusurpas.cd by any other in situation, hiving Railroads on the front and noun bidet, over which rare run to every part of the city for halt a dime. Tmvelere arriving from the North and Emit, will and the small care of tee Harlem and the Eighth Avenue an eco nomy and convenience, especially at night Cars Bull Direct to Central Park. For fniniliett preferrlim homelike and coolly genteel ac commodation, it offers s'idarior a" tiattion. All classes have manifested their affection or this Hotel, and every pains will be taken to render it a home for the traveler. The SaMe liberal system will be continued, and the at• rimet promptanne on the part Of all persons belonging to the organization will be exacted. Telegraph Office, connected with all parts of the Union and the Canaan, with intelligent and reliable attendants, Is situated near the main entrance. Snperintendents of Railroads, Managers of Public Con- Term:web of all descriptions, are respectfully requested to send notice of thelr arrangements', conneetions, changes of time, /cc., to the Hotel, for the better information of its guest.. • Milk, 'Eggs, Vegetables, &c., are produced on a farm managed exclnelvely for the Astor Rouge. Water Closets and Bath Rooms on every floor. N. 8.-I;de tiotleci.ef your intended visit hi respectfully requested, shot rooms may ho prepared. p a 7 20-6 NATIONAL HOTEL, (LATE WHITE SWAN.) Race Street, above Third, Philadelphia. rlillB ESTABLISHNIENT OFFERS GESAT inducements, not only on account of reduced rates of board, but from its central location to the avenues of trade, as well as the conveniences afforded by the several Passenger Railways running past and contiguous to it, by which gnaste can pane to and from the Hotel, should they be preferred to the regular Omnibus connected witlithe Rouse. lam determined to devote my whole attoution to the comfort and convenience of my gum, Air. Terme,lol ICS per day. I) C. SIEGRIST, Proprietor, Formerly from Eagle Hotel, Lebanon, Pa. T. V. Rapers. Clerk. • [march IS-tf =eat Gutters, Stutters, ac. WE HAVE JUST RECEIVED A LAUGE assortment of Meet Cutters, Stnffere, Choppers, &c., &c., of the latest impt ovemente, which we offer exceedingly nor 1-tf] GEO. LERCH & CO. MEM SATURDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 7, BoOvu. THE SNOW STORM. Lest night, when the lights of the village Fleet twinkled along the hill, And teams that were late with their meal•gr[sta Came tolling up from the mill Slowly drifting and falling, Like dent from the miller's Gm, On the &Ida, and the roads, and the fences, The winter's storm began. Tha bey leelted 6iii &MI6 the *hide* , Away o'er the dusky plain; "It snows," he cried to his sister. " Come, listen against the pane." Drifting It fell, and whirling Like foam where the mill-wheel goes; And the boy went off With his sister, And shonted,"lt snows, it enowe!" Out through the helf-opened doorway They peered forth into the night; It dashed ito breath in their faces, And darkened the flickering light; to the dusk they shouted, "O, mother, The valley le white below, And the teams that go from the miller's We scarcely can see for the mow." Thou the Telco of the gray-haired grouddiuno Was heard through the whispering gloom, While the dancing flame of the fire-light Flecked shadows along the room ; "Come hither," elle spoke, "my darlings, The fire at the hearth is warm ; Lot Bethink, vhilo tho ®Rosa Are driftlog, Of the shelterless lamha in the storm." All night on the Donee-top failing The snow flakes flattered down, And the church heirs voice grew husky, From the weight of hie frosty crown; Bat when the Are glaeut of daylight Through darkness began to steal, Ile shook it down from his forehead, And shouted a gladsome peal. But the hosts of the malt.elad storm-king Had triumphed throughout the night, And the banners and blades of autumn Were climbed in the bitter light; But when the red glory of sunrise Was unfurled in the east again, There wib smoke on the edge of the hill-fop, And a glimmer of spears on the plain. And the children, the merry children, Who saw the lights on the bill, , When teams that were late with their meal•grists Came toiling up from the mill; When the winter allows are falling, And the fire on the hearth la warm, May they think on the prayer of the granddame, For the shelterless lambs in the storm." Votifirsi. THE REBELLION AND THE WAR, SPEECH BY HON. H. B. WRIGHT, OF PENNSYLVANIA, In Reply to AU. Vollandlgham, of Ohio, IN THE HOME OF REPRESENTATIVES, JANUARY 14, 1863. Mr. WRIGHT. Mr. Speaker, I would not have partioipoded lu the discussion of my resolutions to-day, my health is so feeble, butt fearing that I will not have another opportunity of present ing my views and opinions which I have attempt ed'partially to embody in the pending proposi tions, I feel constrained to claim the considers (ion of the House at this time. I cannot agree, sir, with some of the views just advanced by the gentleman from Ohio, [Mr. VALLANDIGUALII,] although as to most of his argument I have no hesitation in saying I agree with him. I differ with him in respect to the continuance of this war. I am, Mr. Speaker, a peace man, but I am not a peace man if that peace is to established upon the dismembered fragments of a broken and destroyed Union. lam a peace man, if peace can be obtained with rebels who are striking at. the vitals of the Republic, upon terms that shall be alike honorable to the patriotism and courage of the North. While lam a peace man, lam no coward, and while I may desire peace I shrink from naresponsibility. I would even put myself, as a Representative from the North, in a position of absolute humiliation if peace could be the re sult of it ; I will even let myself down and kiss the sword in the hands of that arch traitor in Richmond, dripping with the blood of my own loins, if I could obtain peace upon honorable terms to my country, But as my resolutions say, while the rebellion stands in a menacing attitude, and while their 'guns are directed upon your very capital itself, and thile they themselves say they will make no terms with us, I am•not a peace man, because under those eireumetaneee I could not, be a peace man and preserve my own hotbr, and my own country. The gentleman from Ohio [Mr. VALLANDIGIIAM] said he would have the war stopped, and that he was opposed to it. What does the gentleman from Ohio anticipate by the cessation, upon OUT part, of hostilities? Does he suppose that terms can be' obtained from these men who are in rebel lion, if the North says we will grant an armis— tice? Why, sir, there can be nothing which could be more cheering or more satisfactory to these men who lead and conduct this rebellion. that to have the North say that this war shall stop where it is, and let. them have that republic whici they have been striving for during the last two years. Bad the doctrine of the gentleman from Ohin prevailed oue year ago, the members of this House of Representatives would not have been in session here to day. Had the let-alone policy which he proclaimed here in opposition to the war been the marked policy of the country within the last year, we should not now have the beggarly privilege of occupying seats in the American Congress to day, but, instead, we would have bad the chief traitor, and his cohorts and coadjutors, occupying this Ball instead of ourselves. of the North did not bring this war and dCsolation upon the country. We bad no hand in it. When my honorable friend from Ken lucky on my right [Mr. CRITTENDEN] presented his resolutions last July a year ago and we adopted them, we declared, with but two dissent ing voices. that this was a war for the restoration of the Government, and we meant to fight it out —it may become a war of extermination before it is ended—that it was immediately forced upon us by the seceding States We of the North were not the first who made an appeal to arms for the disposition and settlement of civil and private rights. Rebellion it was that first fired its guns into the American flag; rebellion it was that first drove those States from the American Union and inaugurated the reign of terror; re bellion it was that raised the standard of oppo sition, and sent her piratical ships upon the seas to plunder our commerce. And were we to fold our arms at them gross outrages, and sit down crying "peace." "let the war stop?" Had not we had manliness enough In raise our voices against it, and our arms to protect ourselves and our children, and had we pursued this kind of peace policy a year ago, I again repeat., we should not have the beggarly privilege of occu pying seats in the Capitol of the nation. And now that the war has been protracted for the period of two years, are we to be met again by the same argument—that we must lay down our arms? No, while God gives us the power to maintain our position, while v e have the force and the vigor, let us fight like men, because it has got to come to the question of extermination. The day of such a peace has passed by, and passed by forever. These great wrongs which have been perpetrated upon the part of the re- hellious Slates, we can hardly realize; we can ha:dly contemplate. They have been the direct aud immediate cause of the sacrifice of three hundred thousand of the loyal youth of the country. Their bonis, if they could all be col lected together in one grand mass, would form a mausoleum greater than the pyramids of Egypt. There is not an inch of soil between the Chesa peake and the Rooky mountains which has hot been saturated with the blood of our brethren and children. They have demoralized our people, almost destroyed our national character, and now any, in the language of Solomon, "bring the sword, and the child shall be divided ;" and some here say. "so be it." There is one here that never will say it—never, while God permits him to breathe, will he say it. Do the rebels sue for peace? No. Let me read you an extract or two to show what these people are saying and doing. On the 26th of last December Jefferson Davis delivered A epoech atJaekson, before the Legislature of Mississippi, in which he says, amon,*pther things, "from the Northwest we look for the first gleam of peace." Whet kind of a peace does Jefferson Davie con template from the _Northwest? God grant it may net be it peace establishing a line of defence and offense between the East and the middle States. I have heard that suggested, but it is too more strous to believe. - I have too good an opinion of the virtue and intelligence and pattiotism of the people of the Northwest to entertain, for a moment, the idea that they would join hands with the miserable men engaged in their country's ruin, for any compromise or arrangement by which the Union is to be dismembered. I discard it as a vile imputation. After a complimentary allusion to Mississippi and her soldiers, Davis spoke of his love for the old Union. Now mark what this renegade `and rebel says of you Representatives, as reported in the Jackson Mississippian:. Be alluded to it, however. as a manor of regret that thy beat sateen°ns of his heart'shorsid line been bestowed upon an object to unworthy—that be should have loved so long a Government which woe totten to Its very core. He had predicted from the beginning a tierce war, though it had assumed more gigantic proportions than he bad calcu lated upon. He had predicted war, not because our right to secede was not an undoubted one, and clearly defined in the spirit of that deelaratlon which male the eight to gov ern upon the consent of the governed ; but the wickedness of the North would entail war noon the country. The present war, waged against the rights of a free people was unjust, and the fruit of the evil passions of the North. In the progress of the war there evil passions have been brought out and developed; and so far from reuniting with such a people—a people whose ancestors Cromwell had.gathered from the bugs and fens of Ireland and Beot land—the President was emphatic in his declaration that under no circumstauces would he consent to reunion " Here you have the Lead of this bosus confed eracy laying out the line of policy , ' With those flea from the bogs and fens of Ireland and Scot land, he never would tonsent to reunion_ But he casts his' eye over the great Northwest and entertains the hope that there he shall firitt see the sun of his righteousness arise. The men from the district I have the honor to represent in the Congress of the United States, who have migrated from the bogs and fens of Ireland and Scotland, are as much supyrior in loyalty and patriotism to that man Jeff Davis, as the religion of Christ is above the religion of Satan ; and ten thousand times sooner would I trust the defense of free principles and human liberty to the hands of those men from the fens and bogs of Ireland and Scotland than to Jefferson Davis and his treasonable associates. lie will entertain no terms of reunion, and yet the gentleman from Ohio says the war must be stopped, that we must have peace, and that we must reunite. Reunite with whom ? Reunite with Davis and his coadjutors, who say they never will consent to it? Let me go a step further with regard to this southern feeling. I hold in my hand rose- Naomi adopted by the Legislature of North Car olio& I will not read the whole of them. When the Legislature of North Carolina assembled on the 2d of December, 1362, these resolutions, among others, were unanimously adopted: ".12teotvett, That the confederate Suttee have the means and the will In austain and perpetuate the Government they have e-tablished, and to that end North Carolina is determined to con,ribate all of her power and resources. "Resolved, That the separation between the confederate States and the United States is final, and that the people of North Carolina will never consent to reunion at any time or upon any terms." That is the unanimous declaration of the Le gislature of North Carolina, that at no time and upon no terms will they reunite with us. Let me refer you, in. the saute connection, to a letter written on the Bth of December, 1862, by John ietcher, Governor of the titte of Virginia. It seems that he had been.eharged with correspond once with Fernando Wood, of the city of New York. It was asserted that Fernando Wood had been making advances to John Letcher, the Gov ernor of Virginia, for the purpose of pence and a reconstruction of the Union. That oharge was made against Governor tetcher, and he came out with a letter denying it. I will read only a part .of his letter: It cannot be that the people of the confederate States can again entertain a feeling of affection and respect fur the (government of the United Sent,. We have, therefere, separated from them ; and new let It be nuderatood that the separation is and ought to be final and irrevocable: that Virginia 'will under no circumstanced entertain any proposition front any quarter which may have for its ob- Jact a restoration or reconstruction of the late Union, on any terms or conditions whatever.' " That. is the sentiment of Virginia, expressed through her Governer. I have also read to you a quotation from u speech of Jefferson Davis, president of the southern confederacy. I have given you the joint resolutions of the Legislature of North Carolina, which passed unanimously, in which theyi, say that they will have nothing to do with us, and that on no terms will they recon struct the Government ; and yet we have gentle men talking peace all over this land! Peace ! Pence upon what terms? Mr. VarLaNhicafam. I will answer the gen tleman, as I would have done if I bad been allow ed to conclude what I desired to say. What had produced end indicated the great reaction in northern and western sentiment? The ballot box. The ballot-box is a weapon in the hands of men in the South yet, as patent and just as secure t and through the agency of that ballot box, after some time, when passion has cooled and reason resumed its sway, 1 expect to see a return of Milan sentiment indicated, and who soever in the so-called confederate government or in the State governments stands in the way will be superseded by other men, just as those who would have Waded this war upon a particu lar line of policy have been superseded through the ballot hoz in the North and West. Mr. Wainer. • I cannot conceive by what principle of reasoning the gentleman can satisfy himself that such a result could possibly, under any circumstances, be attained. , Mr VALLANDIGIUAM. History anti human na ture Mr DAWES. The . gelitieniliti from Pennsylva nia will allow me to ask the get:Mei:ono froth Ohio, in connection with his remark that he ex pects that at some future day the ballot-box will work a revolution in the South, whether he pro poses that. we shall lay down our arum now and Wait for that revolution? Mr. VALLANDIGIIAM Ido not propose to lay down any arms at all. I said that long since. The laying down of arms must be a matter of common consent. But I would, if I had the power, reduce both armies down to a fair and resew:labia peace establishment just as speedily as possible. [Laughter on the Republican side of the House.] The people of the .Northwest and South can bring about reunion through the instrumentality of the ballot-box. the freeman's weapon. You saiti it could only be done by fighting. You have tried that for twenty months, and let history answer with what results. Mr. DAWIIS again sought the fluor. Mr. WRICHT. No, sir, I cannot yield any further. What the gentleman from Ohio has jut, tutored surprises rrlo more than toulbing he said while he occupied the floor previously. The idea of laying down our arms and permitting the time of our drafted and enlisted men to ex— pire, and a sufficient period to elapse to leave us without an army, is, in my opinion, a most mon• strew} proposition. Nor de I believe that if we were even to send a committee from this House, or a joint committee from the two Houses, to wait upon Jeff Davie, such a committee would ME even be received and entertained by him. I understand that the Legislature of New Jersey has been making an attempt of this kind, and that their agents were not even received by the of f icials in the city of Richmond. I have seen such a statement in the newspapers, and give it for what it is worth. Mr. PERRY. There is not one word of truth in the assertion the gentleman has made. Mr. WEIGHT. I am very glad to hear that it is not true, for I have a better opinion of that. State, being halt's Jerseyman myself. Mr. PERKY. Perhaps North Carolina could de precisely what members upon this floor have done. On the 22d of July last they passed a resolution, and what have they done since? Per haps North Carolina will do the same. Mr. WRIGHT. lam very glad to hear the member from New Jersey repudiate the idea that any peace committee has been appointed in that State and sent South for the purpose of enter taining terms for a restoration of the Govern ment. They have sustained their character as patriotic men. There is no man, I will venture to pay, I do not care what may be his complexion in politics—he may be as black as he pleases upon the esteems radical aide, er he may be as deeply imbued with secession sympathies as any man you can find upon the Democratic side— there is no man who does not desire peace ; not peace upon dishonorable terms, not peace that would lay us in an humble attitude at the feet of traitors; but peace that shall make liberty live, peace that shall establish the eternal prin ciples handed down to us by our fathers, the peace of Washington, the peace of Lafayette, whose images decorate the walls of this Rouse ; a peace upon principles that will not defame the character of these men, is that I would see es tablished in this country; not peace upon the principles that emanate from the hot-bade of treason in the South or „secession in the North. [Suppressed applause.] That is the kind of peace that I want to see established. Neither do I want to see any efforts made that tibiall at tempt to thwart or endanger the euecess of this principle. The gentleman from Ohio [Mr. Yallandigham] has alluded to the result of the late elections as though that established a peace policy_ I assure the gentleman; if he entertains that idea, that never was mortal man more mistaken on earth. The great change in public opinion as evidenced in these elections. results, in my opinion, from a want of confidence in the manner in which the war has been conducted, and the blunders of the Administration. The people of this country have not abandoned the idea of saving the coon try, but they have adopted the idea of changing their rulers. There has been no victory, so far as I understand it, in the S.Late of Pennsylvania, that has been achieved upon a principle hostile to the maintenance of the Government by a vig orous prosecution of the war. I learn by all the speeches made by Mr. Seymour, of New York, both before and since his election, that he speaks tusoualifiedly in favor of a vigorous pros nation of the war. I do not believe that any man could maintain a political position in Penn sylvania for a day who would declare himself in favor of peace on any terms, whether with the Voyornnatut When, 9r wit.h the 94Vcrument supreme . No, sir; the change of principles as evinced by the late elections has been caused by the unfortunate failure in the conduct of the war; because never was a war so bunglingly managed, from the time of Alexander the Great. down to the time of the great Napoleon. As to who is to blame, it is no part of the pur pose of my resolutions to declare Ido not stand here for crimination or recrimination. Perhaps the evil was m the removal of McClel lan ; perhaps the Administration may have been wrong in a thousand other things. But because there have been blunders committed in the man :tgentent of the war, are we to stand up and pub licly abandon our country and liberty? Great God! is it to be supposed that because a cam paign has not come up to the public expectation, we are therefore to lay down our arms, and sue for peace at the foot of treason and traitors? Not at all, Mr. Speaker. Does it follow, even, that because Abraham Lincoln, the President, of the Uuited States, has issued a proclamation emancipating staves, therefore we, as the Demo cratic party, are to abandon our country, are to go in-for peace, and allow the Republic to be rent asunder ? Not at all, sir. We must have time to change all of these matters. The fact that certain men have triumphed at the recent elections, from their silence and a refusal to make their yields public, furniehes no ground for believing that the people favor the abandonment of the war and of its great feature, the preserva tion and salvation of the country. Politicians who indulge in this idea will soon find themselves at fault; a storm le ahead. Gentlemen who en tertain the idea that the recent elections are the result of a peace policy will find out, if the Army has to be disbanded, and if the.Goveriiment is to be cut in two, what their responsibility will be to the people of the country ; because, as God lives, there shall be a. day of reckoning. The man who is on the side of his country and on the side of liberty now, his name and reputation shall live forever; and that man who says, "down with your arms, and let the enemy proe m and take possession of your capital," shall have a reputation and memory As infamous and damnable as that of the Cowboys of the Revolu tion. Mr. VALLANDIGHAM. I say "Amen" to that. Mr. Wntairr. The gentleman from Ohio says "Amen." God bless me ! he ought to have a etrait-jacket on him: [Laughter.] Mr. VALLANDIG HAM. Will the gentlemen loan me the one he has been wearing for the last twenty months? Mr. WitionT. If the gentleman gets on the jacket I have been wearing, he will have a better Democratic jacket than he was ever wrapped up in during his whole life, and I am of the opinion he will feel so comfortable that he will wonder in amazement that he was ever without one like t. Mr. VALLANDIOIIAN. Perhaps the gentleman will have the kimluess to loan it to me a little while. Mr. WitienT. There is a reckoning in store foe men on bosh sides of this question. There is a record mode up of the men who eustain their country in the hour of its trial. I grant you that the Cowboys of the Revolution might have been very respectable people if King George had but succeeded iu maintaining his government over the colonies, but as he did not happen to be success ful the name of Cowboys and Tories has become somewhat disreputable. Let their memory he a warning to those men now who in the dark hour of peril and danger lend their sympathies to their country's foe. Let them profit by history. Est per peace men, when this great Govern— ment is restored, as it shall be ; you who cry "peace," and stay at home in the enjoyment of case and luxury, while the sons and brotherl of loyal men are doing battle manfully in the field and fur the great cause of human liherty, shall hear a sound rung in their ears from the voices of indignant men as terrible as that rung in the ears of the Cowboys and Tories of the American Revolution. -They need not think that by their crying "'peace" our Army is to be disbanded, our country destroyed. Our Al'biy went into the field for the express purpose of the preserve lion of the Union. I differ from the Executive of the nation, and I have always differed from the ultra men of this Rouse who want to make this a war or negro emancipation, instead of a war for the restoration of the Union. Here was the grand error—hate arose half our troubles. The Army went into the field for the purpose of restoring the Government. Its numbers have reached to over eight hundred thousand men, larger than any army which ancient or modern times have seen. That Army is still in the field, and its destiny is to preserve the Union and pro tect the flag; and it has the power and the courage to do so, and will do so. [Applause on the floor and in the galleries.] I do not care how many men there May be singing peace anlheing, or crying out at the North that blunders have been committed in the management and conduct of the war. The fact that there have been bhtn• [VOL. XXIII.-NO. 42.-WHOLE dere does not furnish to loyal men any reason why. they should turn their backs upon the country and stretch out their arms to embrace its enemies. We must get long with these blun ders the best - way we can. We must appeal to the ultra Republicans to let the negro alone, and to stand by the Constitution and the Union. Then you will have such a united power at the North as, when brought to bear and concentrat ed against this rebellion, will put an end to it forever. Mr. Speaker, when I cast my eyes around the galleries of this House, when I enter a church on the Sabbath day, or look around me in the hotel, how glaringly do I see the evidences of mourn ing there. It strikes home to my heart that there is some great pestilence stalking through the land. Perhaps out of every ten families at the North there are not three of them that have not upon the domestic heaith-stone the bloody footprints of those infamous men who are at tempting to destroy the Government. Their marks are everywhere. There is not a graveyard from this Capitol to Maine that does not show its monuments of sorrow and woe ; not a village that has not gvidences of mourning all over it. And yet these damnable outlaws, who have at— tempted to stab and destroy liberty, have their friends and sympathizers at the North. They are not J" my brothers," in the cant phrase of n on o l r y th l e o r y n al s m ym en pa w t h h o iz a er re s. my T 4 h r e 9 y th a o r r eje r b a e p l p .s. lau l s t e ,s Yes, sir, with all the great wrongs that they have committed, with the sufferings that they -have heaped' upon the nation, with those red handed crimes whose enormity must make even humanity blush, these men have their friends, aiders, and abettors scattered all over the North, and are held up as public martyrs. And we are asked to disband our Army for their relief and benefit. On what principle ? On the principle that if you only leave them alone six months they will change their policy and come back again in to the Union. Leave them alone Was there ever yet a criminal who did not want to be let • alone ? " No man e'er felt the halter draw, With good opinion of the law." Why, sir, these men's necks ache for the hal ter. And yet we are told that they are innocent men ; that they have been persecuted I Oh I to slay our citizens is entirely excusable. They are openly encouraged to decimate the North, mur der our people, ravage our Beas t destroy the beat Government that ever God or man devised. And with these men we are to make peace upon such terms as they tbs.'? prescribe. I will make terms with them, but they must be such terms as shall not destroy my manhood and my liberty, and, above all, shall not destroy my country. None other have they a right to demand, and none other will the loyal men of the land ever eon cede to them. To do so would be to commit a crime as great as that charged on the enemy of the Union. Talk about making terms with these men. You can make no terms with them that will not come within one or the other of these alterna tives, and the men who cry "peace" know it Great, God! is not this country, 'with all the in stitutions of civil liberty which our fathers plant ed upon this continent, worthy of every effort that men c a n put forth to save it? If twenty million men cannot defend these institutions against eight million rebels, if, they must yield. it must be set down. not to their weakness, bat to the de g eneracy of the age ; and it is time for us to repent in sorrow over our depravity and our cowardice. Sir, I tell you we have the men, we have the money, and we have the loyalty and courage to accomplish that end in spite of any cry of "peace" that may come up to us. When "peace" men ask, can you hold con quered Stains in subjugaiin 7 f say Ide not care how you hold them. Ido not care what you do with them in the emergencies of war. They are in rebellion now, and the only thing for us to decide for the present is, whether we shall con quer them or permit them to conquer us.. One or the other event is inevitable, When a thief is caught in the act of taking your property, and you arrest him, do you atop to listen to his in quiry, and debate the question what you are going to do with him? You hurry him off to the magistrate, and leave him for the officers of jus tice to dispose of. It is not at this time a de• hatable question what you are going to do with these men. They are in rebellion ; and, as all re bels ought to be, they must be put down. We can put them down, notwithstanding all the blunders that have been committed since the commencement of the war, and notwithstanding the obstacles wo have ~to encounter. I know the people of the country are discouraged with tax ation ; they are discouraged by sending armies into the field to be slaughtered by the careless manner is which our campaign* have been con ducted. I know all these things ; but I have my eye upon a single object, which is the polar star of my destiny—the flag of my country and the gorgeous temple of American liberty ; and when cannot see and behold them any longer, may God Almighty blot out its light forever. No, Mr. Speaker, you cannot preserve or re store peace by yielding to men who are fighting to tear down this great temple of liberty. The spirit that animates such conduct cannot be ap peased. There can be no peace bat in their sub mission. The gentleman from Ohio [Mr. Val. landigham] this morning talked of a dividing line between the two sections, and undertook to speak for the great Northwest as to the course she would pursue. The gentleman could see in the East a dividing line between the North and the South in }he Potomac, or the Susquehanna; but for the West he saw no such line of demark :Aim, no line of separation between the head waters of the Mississippi and the Gulf. What was passing, pray,- in the gentleman's brain ? Why can he discover a naturalboundary between the middle States and the South and Northwest, and no line of boundary between the South and Northwest ? Mr. VALLANDIGHAM. Let me say to the gen tleman from Pennsylvania that I advocated no each line. On the contrary. I Relight expressly to show that it could not be established. Mr. WRIGIIT I will tell the gentleman pre nicely what, inference could, in my judgment only he legitimately drawn from what he did say fir VALLA NOW !Lot. I cannot answer for the gentleman's inferences. I expressly argued against any such line; and I beg. if the gentle man refers to what I said, he will not misrepre sent me. Mr WeranT, I have a right to draw my own inferences; and it may be that the gentleman cannot show that they are very far wrong after all. At all events, the gentleman did say that it was impossible to mark cut any boundary that shall sever the Mississippi river in its course to the Gulf! Now, whether it be the destiny of the great. Northwest tb unite its deetittiea with the States of the lower Mississippi, time alone will determine. I should not be surprised to find that there are men residing in the Northwest whose opinions are in sympathy with those of the South engaged in this rebellion. But in the gentleman's plan for the joining of the Northwest with the Southern States in rebellion, he leaves New England, New York, and Pennsylvania out. Mr. VALLANDIGHADS. No, want them all to go together. - Mr. WRIGHT. Well, I can tell the gentleman he will not get Pennsylvania into any such scheme as that. Mr. VALLANDIGHAM. I suppose the gentleman goes for re union, does he not ? Mr. WRIOUT. Igo upon the principle of the restoration of all the materials that formed this Union, without leaving out one State or one Ter— ritory. Mr. VALLANDIOnAM. I ask the gentleman to permit me to say that, in spite of repeated cor rections, the gentleman bases his argument., all the way through, upon the assumption of a po sition on my part against the whole tenor of my speech. lam for the re-union of all these States and a hundred more that may be carved out of the limits of this Union. I beg the gentleman not again to misrepresent me upon that point. Mr. WRIGIIIT. I have no disposition to mis represent the gentleman from Ohio. Mr. Speaker, my policy, as I said a moment ago, when I was interrupted, is the restoration of all the States and Territories, organized and unorganized, that once were united under our national flag. I desire to see them all one peo ple, one Government, one Union, with one dee. tiny and one liberty pervading the whole. That is the kind of reconstruction I want. I desire to see no peace on any other term& I want no armistice. Let me suppose a case. Suppose there is such a peace declared as the gentleman from Ohio would ask, or sue% a peace as those who, two years ago were supporting Breckinridge for the Presidency- VALLANDIGHAM. The gentleman surely does hot tabula to indicate that I supported Brockuridge. Mr. Mutant , . Certainly not. The gentleman supported Douglas, as I supported him. I did not allude to the gentleman. Mr. VALLANDICIEIAM. ThQ Maga.= Beginitd to address the remark to me. Mr. WHIG ITT. Well, I wilt look some other way. I say, suppose/1 peace is established ? Sup pose you declare an armistice for thirty or forty days ? If so, you need never talk about getting together your armies again. And what would be the next step. The next step, inevitably, would be to establish a boundary. How? Where? A boundary line between the bogus confederacy of the South and the loyal States of the North. What, line? Have you considered where that line shall be? Would you make the Potomac the line, and throw all of Virginia, Maryland, Kentucky, and Tennessee into the hands of the corrupt leaders of a bastard government? Would you pass over the Capitol, and abandon this place, sacred as it has treen made by the assembling within its Walla Of the beat men who ever drew the breath of life from Washington and his com— peers down ? Would you make the Chesapeake bay and the Susquehanna the line? If you grant a peace or declare an armistice, depend upon it the establishment of a line will be the next step in the programme. Then would arias that great question, whether the Northwest would consent to unite her desti nies with Pennsylvania, New York, and New England. New England has been made the subject of reproaoh. she iliks her &moult Hall, which, in the days . of the Revolution, responded to the House of Burgesses. She has Bunker Hill and Lexington, and her history is united with all the glorious deeds of the past. Because some of her people may have acted under fanatical impulses, we are not therefore to diepiace her from the chart of American States. Then arises the question, supposing that the Ohio was established as the line, how long would your peace last Ab ut as long as the peace of Amiens, Or the pow of Tile% end more fatal in its consequences than the peace which followed the dismemberment and destruction of Poland. I prophesy, sir, that if you establish a bound ary line between the North and the South, be tween free labor and slave labor, it will not be preserved for six months. It is shrinking from our responsibility, and postponing to our pos terity that which we ehoulki meet and dispose of ourselves. Let, us meet this great question now. If three hundred thousand lives emir bestyoung men have been sacrificed, let us eacrifice three hundred thousand more if necessary, and put an end to rebellion forever. [Applause.] It is bet ter to make that sacrifice now, ten thousand times over, than to make a dishonorable treaty with rebels. As much as I love peace, as much as I covet it, as much as I would like to see it, how can I or any reasonable man, ask or consent to it at the price of the destruction of the Government? Then so long as peace is dishonorable I say fight, fight. like men, for the restoration of the Gov— ernment, and for that alone; fight for the Con elitution and the Union ; fight for the old flag ; fight for human liberty ; and with skillful lead ers on the part of our Government to conduct our armies, I have no doubt that we will prose cut. this war to a successful close. This talk about peace is a delusive hope now. It is said that a desire for peace controlled the recent elections in Pennsylvania and New York. There is no foundation for that belief. Take the New York Herald during the campaign. I regard that as the paper which hat; uniformly taken a sound position. It has at all times urged a vig. orous prosecution of the war for the restoration of the Government, and the Government alone. Those who are for pacific measures, so long as the Government has strength to contend against armed rebellion, entertain a delusive hope, as well as commit a great moral and political wrong. The sentiment of the people throughout the land is for preserving the Government that their fa thers gave them at all hazards and at every cost. They are for the vigorous prosecution of the war to the bitter end for the restoration of the Con stitution and the Union. This sentiment has been everywhere proclaimed. There is univer sal concert among the masses on this auestion. The leaders may have faltered, the people have not. I know that the negro emancipation agitation has created dissatisfaction and division. I know that it has imposed its troubles and difficulties, but the Government has power and strength enough to overcome these and put down rebellion effectually. 4 word about intervention. We learn that both the English and French Governments have a desire to enter the affray on this continent. Let them come. While this might not be desira ble, we may rest under the assurance that our power and resources are great; and that, though civil war is making sad havoc over our land, we can meet them too. One benefit might probably grow out of their interference. It would unite a divided North. It would, at least, stop this ever lasting cry of peace. To Exeter Hall half of our troubles at home may be attributable. England may now make the attempt to take advantage of the seeds of discord her miserable emissaries have scattered broadcast over our once happy land. If she sends her iron clad ships of war, we must meet them. We have the means and will to feed her famished people, as well as the courage and prowess to repel her armies and navies. We must. prepare for great exploits. We fight for empire. Our battle-grounds will commemorate the deeds of a raoe•of men who, if they fail, fought for liberty and the rights of man. Our cause is worthy of sueeese. and we can only be defeated in a morbid sensibility which has found, unhappily, a lodgment in the North, which is in sympathy with the blackest treason. The men who entertain these view/ may flour ish now. but. the day of retribution will some. The mask shall be torn from the face of the lead ers. and their followers shall stand aghast at their moral deformities. There has been cause for popular complaint and distrust as to the conduct of the war and management of the public affairs ; but there has been no cause as yet for them to abandon the Union and desert their Government. Demagogues cannot. corrupt the people, and woe to the men who have deceit-ed them. The people desire peace; but peace on terms alike honorable to them and the success of free principles., They want peace, but with a whole Union ; and on any other terms they will indignantly reject it. Mr. Speaker, I am so much exhausted that I must bring my remarks to a close. Where stood when rebellion began, I stand today, on the same platform. I have undergone no change in my sentiments or opinions. I denounced re bellion at the threshold ; I denounce it now. I have no terms to make with traitors which look to the destruction of the Union. lam satisfied none other can be obtained. Time will determine whether my position is right or not. I abide it. The war has cost me its trials and tribulations. I can truly close my remarks with a quotation from an ancient philosopher, uttered over the dead body of his son, slain in battle : " , I should have blushed if Cato's house had stood. Secure and flourished in a civil war." s er A ROD produced blossoms when held in the hand of Aaron. A birch rod produce wholesome fruit in the hand of the aohoalmaa• ter.