ti-lli-1 UJJiimj T-W'L.aiflml I I II I Mil II H I I I II IIIJUVg Swotcft ta politics, literature, gviatltuw, Stizim, iMaraiitij, axxb (Stnttal Intelligence. VOL 20. STROUDSB UKG9 MONROE COUNTY, PA. AUGUST 29, S6I. NO. 3 Pblishsd bv ThCOlloTC SfliOCh TGRMS.1-TWO dollars per annumin ndvanoc-Two doll'irs and quarter, hnif yeariv ami if not paid be- S"fCStS5Sw escapi u the option of the Editor. , irjA lvcrtisements of onesquare (ten lines) or less, one or iiircc insertions, $100. Each additional inser- tCU1'0nK- OIJ PKSKTJKG. u..in,li n.,r,mnntonarcC.niain and or . nanenui Typo, e arc prepared-to execute every de senpuo iirl. Cnr.ulars, Uill Heads, Notes. Blank Receipts, jutio"s. i.e-itaiid other Sinnks, Pamphlets .v., pi in HJihis,lomrelt:'Ci:S andjQSI),Uch,ou rcason:il',olcr"iS ' 1 1 1 QATIDS OP GOLD ' c v, V TT t' h "H" If wpescll oi Hon. Josepn. xLOlu Fellow-Citizens: A few weeks Pinee, in another form, I ventured freely to express my vies upon thee tragic e - vents which have brought Borrow to eve- ry hearthstone aud to every heart in our detracted oouutry, and it is not my pur - pose on uija view-, u u ,uKa- ,u ..uj, extended (wussion of the question then examined. It is not nccestary that I should do so bince the argument ia is hausted, and the popular mind is perfect ly familiar with it iu all its bearings. I will, however, with your permission, sub mit a few brief observations upon tho ab sorbmg topics of the day, and I.Jo so with an oaroestness and emphasis due a- like to siucontj of my convictions and to thfl magnitude of the interests involved. it is tru.-tcd that none will to oflended, not even tboo who may mo,t widely dif- fer from mo. Gould one, an entire stranger to our hi tory, now look down upou the South, and tec there a hundred or a hundred and faf-" tv thouanu men marcuinj 10 DO-tue ar-, ray, threatening the capture of the Capi tal and tho riiJincmbermeot of the terri tory of the Republic; aui could he look a-'ain and see lhat this army marshal led nnd directed by officers recently oc- capjinc iis!in- ui?l.cc ptccs in lac civu sod military seivice of the country; and,fidcdand hom ,h had mogt boDOre3 further, that, tho states from which ihu . tnen wicked enough, cither secretly to be army has been drawn appear to be one j tra. thl.m ULt0 deatb or openj tQ seck vast set-thing caldron of ferocious pasMon, lu.ir overtbrow bj lawiC3s vioienco. The lie would very naturally ooucluac that the jll bIioof EDg!ami bad is Monk. tbe Government of the UartVJi States had f Hepubiic of Franoe had its Bonaparte; the Tiomraitted som- gvc at crime against jR.ipubjc of Rome bad it, Cassar aDd it, people, and that this uprising wa-. in re- j Gatiiiuo aod tbe Saviour of the world biatance to wron and outrages which had T , t , .m j l had its Juda Iscanot. It cannot ue ne- been borne until eudurauce was no Jon T , . ner no lDle. And yet no conclusion 1.1 1.., r,.t. r ,i, tr-r-tu t,nt.;a fit i iu 1117 1 11 I 1 lit: i 1 1 u m 11 tilll iiiu 11 1 u 1 1 . . tt jo. . t 1 1 n i-rnrnrnir.pnr. 01 Tn umiEii i;"s uus - maintained ttc national nonor at IjosjC - . 3 , ' ., c . , msttce. has eiven to th'.-title ct an Amcr i scan citiz- n an elevation asiong the na tions of the earth which the citizens of no republic bare enjoyed since Rome was unstress of the world. Under its admin ivtration the national domain has stretch cd away to the PaciQc, and that constel lation which announced our birth as a people, has expanded from thirteen to tbirty-fbur utars, all, until recently, mo Tiuir undisturbed and undiaiuied iu their orbs of li;jht and grandeur. Th( riaht? of no , . , -, , . f J. , - j i. i:r I , . 3 b, ' - ;, - the ticr pnu-s upon hi prey. Ihc lr KopartfiZ'.'d bv tbe action 01 this gov- . .3 . T, . Ct r i , J J rT ,3 . , . -a ! Presioont of the United States is heroic ernment. Under its b-nign lufluenee, , d lriotioal struggling to baffle the nils of public P"eP;opeM;tboanchiuatio3 of thesfmost wicked w w Hints into rivers ever brimiuiuj iu their fullness, and everywhere, and at all pc- rioU ot its history, its unmstrations have i fallen as gently ou the people of the Uui . , . c j . , j 1c . i teu estates as ao me aewe oi a smuuici i fcutes as ao ine aewd oi a summer t j ou& pf th(j wboje C0UD)rj anJ j ground a3 Hublimo as that on which our i6ht on tho flower s and gress of tho gar-, j. M without offeDCO tbat be j fathers stood wbeu they fought tbe bat ons and fields. ' -jj rectjvo tbe support of all who justly ' ties of tbo Involution. I am for throw- Ul den Whence, then, this revolutionary out tuiarevo:uuu.UJ,J'""n the secret spring of tbw brrak ? Whence t-ii?antic cousDiraey.whieh, like home huge boa, had completely coiled itself around the limbs and body of tho liepublio, be fore a single band was lifted to resist it? Strange uSd, indeed, startling, as the snoanoomtnt mu-l appear when it falls on ippear wnen it la.ia ou the car, of the next gfe. T'BtaUnV, tioual tragedy, in whose httdo"e Btan to-night, has come bc , November last, John G Brec " Pre8'!el,t ,off lhUnvMVatbe ! and Abraham Lincoln wa .whole story And I would Q , :inow ou what was Joan C rd8 fed that be has grow n so r grot, t?at a , .republic founded by nd . .cemented by the best blood that er coursed in humjn veins, to be over-, thrown because forsoot its Pro-idcntI Had he been o on. we , well know tbat we should not have beard . r .i.s., -i.iKn for flip Ipvpt with whlcb - . it is being moved would have been , want-, it is being moved wouia nave UBU ing to the bands f" Even after bis defeat could it have been guaranteed, beyond all poradventure.that. Jeff. Davis or some other kindred f pint tuak m,0 uuvw -h would be suceresor of Mr- Lincoln, I pre- when an.iyiea s.mpiy ,. . j anticipation wo are doomed ,ume we hazard nothing in assuming that no phyaio. I force Bb to disappointment; if tho people of the U- .u:. ninv.nn.nl gainst the Dbved in execattng the laws or upholding A n.n .n government would not have been set on tnegovc.uu,--H. ----- - degenerate may I not nay ao craven foot. This great crime, then, with which practical administration sucn u Joup.o , as to Burren- cd .ui profligate .WU.?- b. eh batgiUtna o roarod tbo .taodard of rcolf agab.t ,, that "would rotber reign in bell tbJQ o vou woow Know woo. A , h , , ,h ,u o( Amer can bis- lttz The conspirators of the South read in il. -ii r: i . J.nlnrotinn that the democratic party had been pros- trated if not finally destroyed by tbe sel- fish intrigues and corruptions of its lead- ers? they read, too, that the vieious, cma- ciatct flD( sPa?iued bobby of the slave- ry agitation, on which they had so often roue into power, could no longer carry them hoyond a given geographical line of our territory, atid that in truth this faj - . . . tious and treasonable agiUtion, on which P0 a,an of. them U8d Srown gat by de- bauching and denationalizing the roiud of ' a PeoPle naturally generous and patriotic, had run its course, and hence, that from the uational di-eur.t for this demagogue- the uational di-gut for this demagogue- ! int and from the inexorahln lnw of non. , ,. ,, , , ,, r, ulatton, the timo had no other political capital than this, would have to prepare !or retirement t0 private life, to far, at t least, as the bighe.-t offices of the country, j were concerned. Uuder the influence of . j these grim discouragements they resolved t0 conrUffilriato at once what our politi- oal bisjtorj sbows to bavQ beeQ a jong. ( ehcriabed purposethe dismemberment of tbo government. They said to them- ,HeUc9 . .,Sinoe WQ oaQ UQ IoQer moDOp. 1 oHze tbo Rrcat officos of tho ilepublic as wc bave bcen accustomed t0 d0j w0 wm dustrov jt aDA build unoa its ruius an em- 1 C5 pire that shall be all our own, and whose sonable guarantee for the safety of South spoils ueither the North, nor the Eat, j era institutions, which the 'honest coovio nor ihe West, shall .-haro with us.'' De- ' tions of the people not the conspirators piorable and humiliating cs this certainly j i tt t V.nt ;i rplinfirM.fi nf llio cr1 coil story of the pst. We had, indeed, sup- cd ,hat under our Christian civiliza- tjon W(J L.i(1 rt.acuej a poiut in uumarj progrcgS wi,(,u a ref.ublio could exist witbout haviRg its j;fe gou ht bj ia 0.vn offspring; but the Catilinos of the South hav0 piQved tb.u Ke fferc Uli;,ukcU- Lot no maD iagjju. i Lnt because this robel- Hon haS bet.u raadc b mi.n rcnovvDe(J 5a olirci,n aod mury history, that it U, lhvrefori.f tbe t,,s guiUj or ,be leg8 Cour- n,rt,.vi ,n k r.;,f..,? It r.r..nlBnlc this class of mon who have subverted tho best governments that have ever existed. Tbe purost spirits that have lived in the tide of times, the noblest institutions that hnve arisen to bless our race, hove found !axu00 tbo5e ia whom tbeT had ,nosl C0Q , J ,, , L. : J W M CaUWV lltliUt MIly T LJ U IWJ Ul U H IIU.W tuUH 1 Darncidal sworua are now unsncatned a - .. 4 gainst the Republic of the United States. . . jThvir names are inscribed upon a .-croU of infamy that can n- vcr psnsh . , , .. . The most tli-tinguished of them were educated by tho bouuty of the government on which they are now c aking war. For 'long yeara they were fed from its table, aud clothed froai its wardrobe, and had tbc-ir brows garlauied by itj honors. They arc the ungrateful sons of a 'oud. mother, vrho daudled them upon her knee, who lavish ed upou them the gu-hing love of her no ble and devoted nature, and who nurtuc- led them from the very bosom of her life; and now frenzied execscs of a licentious and battled ambition, they are stabbing at that boso: that bosom with the ferocity with which I hi .i .i nr.AttfiWult tt y r 1 j f t 1 1 n ri in L" t n t n rr 'that he has the courage to look p. .q q di,cb j thc duies of ho , traitors . . r of hi-? ie He is entitled to the zeal- j ar. appreciate the boundless blessings of illstitut:ona j our If this rebellion succeeds, it will in volve necessarily tbe destruction of our nationality, the division of our territory, nationality, ioo..iv.o tbe permanent di.rap It niurt rapidly dry nr linn nf KnmihMA H, c.nrna nf nnr -f - - r - r , shall grow more and more impoverished, moreud more revolutionary, enfeebled, . and debaBfid. Bach rctnrDing oleotioo ( grounds for new civil eoaiotion, and prepared to strike at 1 th countrv'that has rejected theirclaims ! J , J QD eye 6ide DlsPunion once begun will go on and on i fluence of the fatal 1 doctrine of'sece.siou, not only will states ' from ge. , j C0DSUmni'eted in each individual "uu . . K . s . f Q tbc r, ht t0 def tbe J O0MrDIDCBt. Thus w0 should have back to us the days of the rob-, fc theJr mQated cMieg rctaiDer8. This doctrine . - - TOnnrt courts of justice closed; public and pri otfl Arfldit destroyed: commerce anuihl lated; debts repudiated; conGscations and spoliations everywhere prevailing; every cbeek blanched with fear, and every hjart frozen with despair; and all over that dea - j olated land the had of infuriated passion 1 and crime is waving, with a vulture' scream for blood , the sword of civil war. And this is the Panddemonium which 1 6ome would have transferred to Ken- tucky. But I am not here to discuss this prop- osition to-night. I wish solomnly to de- olaro heforo you and the world, that lam for this Union without conditions, one and indivitiblo, now and forever. and indivitiblo, now and forever. Iam for its nrnap.rvrcrion nr. nnu nnrl nvprc onsr. , , , j , . J. , ., of blood and treasure against all its aa- Bailants. I know no neutrality between my country and its foes, whether they bo foreign or domestic; no neutrality between that glorious flag which now floats over us, and the ingrates and traitors who would trample it in the dust. My prayer ig for violory COIDpleto, enduring and o- vcrwbclming, to the armies of the Kopub- lie over all its enemies. I am against aoy and every compromise that may be proposed to be made under the guns of the rebel?, while, at the same time, I am decidedly in favor of affording every rea- of the South may demand, whenever lhpnjtli.n11.1nii rlmnii thpir nvir,: 1iiit.iint.iin. . til then. The arbitrament of the sword has been defiantly thrust into the face of; the government and country, and thero is j no honorable escape from it. All guar-, antees and all attempts at adjustment by amendments to tho Constitution-are now j scornfully rejected, and the leaders of tho rebelliou openly proclaim that they are fighting for their independence. In this contemptuous rejection of guarantees, and iu this avowal of tbe objects of the rebel lion now 60 audaciously made, wo have a complete exposure of that fraud which, through the. slavery agitation, has been ' practiced upon the public credulity for the last fifteen or twenty years. In the light of this revelation, we feel as one a wakcued from tho suffocating torturos of a nightmare, and realize what a baseless dream our apprehensions have been, and of what a traitorous swindle we have been mado the vittjms. They ore fighting for their independence 1 Independence of what ? Independence of those laws which they themselves aided in enacting; inde pendence of that Constitution which their fathers framed, and to which they are parties and subject to inheritance; inde pendence of that beneficent government on whose treasury and honors they bave grown strong and illustrious. When a man commits a robbery on the highway, or murder in the dark, bo thereby de clares his independence of the laws under which be lives, and of the society of which he is a member. Should he, when ar raigned, avow and justify thereby be comes the advocate of the independence he baa thus declared; and, if he resists by force of arms the officer, when dragging him to the prison, the penitentiary, or the gallows, he ia thereby fighting for tbo in dependence lie has thus declared and ad vocated, and such is the condition of the conspirators of tbe South at this moment. It is no longer a question of Southern rights, which have never been violated, nor of security of Southern institutions which we know perfectly well bave never been interfered with by tbe general gov ernment, but it is purely with ua a ques tion ol national existence. In meeting this terrible issue which rebellion bas made up with thc lojal mcn of the coun. trj stand upon ground infinit8ly above all party Hues and party platforms iog into the contest thus forced upon us ail thc material aud moral resources and energies of the nation, in order that the struggle may be brief and as little san guinary as possible. It is hoped that we shall soon see iu field half a million of ... . .: - I PalrlOtlO VOlUUlCCrS, UiarcuiIIZ IU CU1UUJU8 wj.jcu w be Derfeotly irresistible, and, borne in their handa-for no purpose of eonquest or subjugation, but of protection ooly-wo may expect within nine months to sec the Stars and Strifes floating in every Southern breeze, and hear going up wild as the storm, the exultant sbout of that Cfn;iU3ipated people over their dehv; erance from the revolutionary terror and despotism, by which they are now tormen ted and oppressed. The war, conducted 0Q Bucb a scal0) wi nofc cost exceeding qt fivQ hundr(jd EnuJions 0f dollars; flnd DOoe uccd be startled at the vast- ness of this expenditure. The debt thus bufc sIj ht, Qn . lt .... . j i. ji u.. w,u ne paia, ana giaaiy paiu, ujr h terity, who wi which has b .( tbfiy iu its integrit been made since tne worm can secure to themselves, ntegnty and blessings, such a UltCU Diaies uavu uncauj r . . . I 1 . .1 r. some name bav in" no relation to tho past, no relation to our w v0 thei me morale 1 alty and their glory. i 1 1, f- rt Ii n nntr. But with tho ourled lip of scorn we afo ' illustrious a pat should have written for' tenderness of their hearts say: "The ef told by tho disunionists, that in thus sup-1 her, by her own chiof magistrate, a page fa9 of b,ood sick? us." Then do all" porting a republican administration in its of history so utterly humiliating as this.D your Power t0 bring it to an end. Let endeavors to uphold the Constitiou and . But yoor Legislature have determined tue wu0e strength of this oommonweaUh the laws, wo aro "submisaionists and that during the present unhappy war the be put forth in support of the governaent, when they have pronounoed this word, , attitude of tho state shall be that of strict ln ordcr that tQe war m37 be terminated they suppose they have imputed to UBthe neutrality, and it is upon this determiua- s prompt suppression of the rebellion, sum of all human abasement. Well, let tion that I wish respectfully but frankly Tbo ,onger tho strng5l0 tootinatt, fco it booonfepsod; we aro 'subsnissionists," to oommet. As tho motives which go- fiercer will bo its spirit, and tho oro and, weak and spiritless as it may be verned the legislature were doubtless pa- fearful tha waste of life attending it. -deemed by some, we glory in the position triotio and conservative, the conclusion You therefore only aggravate the aUia we occupy. For example, the law sajB, arrived at cannot be condemned as dia- tJ Joa deplore by landing aloof fro "Thou shalt not steal;" wo submit to this honorable; still, in view of tho manifest tho comi)at. Bat again they aay, "Wf law, and would not for the world's worth duty of tho state and of possible results, oanQt -fight our bretborn." Indeei.--rob our neighbor of his forts, his arsenals I cannot but regard it as mistaken and Kut Jour brethern ,can fijjhi y, aid his arms, his munitions of war, hia honpi-1 fUe, and one which may have fatal con-! with a 8ood wilI t0- Wioktdl ad tal Btores or anything that is his. In-' soquences. Strictly and legally spoak- wantonly have they commeneed ll deed, so impressed are we with the obli- ing, Kentucky must go out of the Union 'agamBt Jou and yur institutions, and li gations of this law, that we would no more th'iuk of plundering from our nei;h- bor half a million of dollars, because ernment of tbo United States, or she is found in his unprotected mints, than wo disloyal to it. If this crutch of neutrali would think of filching a purse from his ty upon which hor well meaning but ill- nooket in a crnwdfld t.liornnihfnrft Writn iudiriT nnlirininrm nr finltinn us down, therefore, "subroissionists." Again: The law says, "Thou shalt not swear falsely;" we submit to this law, and while in the civil or military service of tho country, with an oath to support the Constitution of tbe United States res ting upon our consciences, wo would not for any earthly consideration the formation or execution Epiraoy to subvert that very tion and with it the government to which it has given birth. Whrite us down, therefore, again "submissionists." Yet, again: When a president has been elec ted in strict accordance with tbe form and spirit of tho Constitution, and has been regularly installed into office, and is hon estly striving to dischargo iris duty by snatching tbe Republic from tbe jaws of a gigantio treason which threatens to crush it, we care not what his namo may or may not be, or what the designation of his political party, or what the platform on which he stood during the Presiden tial canvass; we believe we fulfill in tbe sight of earth and heaven our highest ob ligations to our country, in giving to bim an earnest and loyal support in the strug gle which he is engaged. Nor are we at all disturbed by tho disturbed by the flippant taunt that in thus submitting to me autuoriry 01 our govcrnmeni; we are necessarily cowards. Wo know whence this taunt comes, and wo pqtimntn ir if we estimate it at unA iht iiinro its true value. . V o is a higher courage in the performance nf Ant (lion in rnr unTHHNninn nfcrimn ot duty tnan m tne commission or crime. age in which the revolutionists .pf the day make their efipecial boast; tbe angels of God, and the spirits of just men made perfect, have had, and have, that cour- age which submits to the laws. Lucifer was a non-submissionist, and tbe first so- oessionist of whom history has given us anv account, and tne cnains wnion ne wears ntiy express tue rate aue to an who openly defy the laws of their Crea tor and of their country. He rebelled be cause the Almighty would not yield bim tho throne of Heaven. The principle of the Southern rebellion is the same. In deed, in this submission to the laws is found tbe chief distinction between good men and devils. A good man obeys the laws of truth, of honesty, of mortality, - .... and at! those laws wnicn nave been en acted by competent authority for the gov ernment and protection of the country in whicb be lives; a devil obeys his own fe rocious and profligate passions. The principle on which this rebellion pro ceeds, tbat laws bave in themselves no sanctions, no binding force upon the oon- A l.f nr. nnn t n..c nf inf.-o-f nr nnBSinn nr X ' 1 a prioo, may, at will, and honorably, too, bim. is one of utter demoralization, and should bo trodden out, as JOu would tread on a spark that bas fallen on the roof of your dwelling. Its unchecked prevalence would resolve society into u. :,i.i. .i. -i;i,f. nar nrntV for life, libertv or nronertv. 0 - - j i i j It is time tbat, in their majesty, tho peo ple of-the United States should make known to the world that this government, in its dignity and power, is something more than a moot court, aud tbat the cit izen who makes war upou it ia a traitor, not only in theory but in fact, and should have meted out to him a traitor s doom. Tbo country wants no bloody sacrifices, but it must and will have peaoo, cost what it may. Before closing, I desiro to say a few words on tbe relations of Kentucky to the pending rebellion; and, as we are all Kentuckians here together to-night, and as this is purely a family matter, which concerns the honor of us all, I hope we may be permitted to Bpeak to each other upon it which entire freedom. I shall not detain you with observations on the hostilo and defiant position assumed by the Governor of your state. In his reply to tho requisition mado upou him for vol teers uuder tbo proclamation of the President, he has, in my judgment, writ- ten and finished nis own uisiory, uia epi VWU A 1 " " " - ' . . .. i 1 I . 1 i taph included and t i. ' P" , future tbo worm win inuo uouooiu it0O.i as to what his exoellency may propose to do. or as to what he may propose not to An Tha resnonse uas made lor lien onse uas maue lor iven- that has already brought i to the cheek of many of tucky a record a burning blusn to tne oneen oi many o. ...... J l t " i . tn her sons and is 'destined to bring it t the cheek of many more in he , years which aro to oomo. it is a Buam, u dee4 a crying shame, that a state wnu b befbro sho can be neutral. Within it she' , is necessarily either faithful to tho Gov- , any middle ground on which to rest, it685100. u ,a nevertheless true that every has ecaped my researches, though I have treo people that have existed have been ' diligently sought it. Neutrality, in the ?hficd at onL Penod ?rtbc! of 'r1 i sense of thoo who now use tho term, - htory, to fight for their liberties against , however patriotically designed, is, in ef-, traitors within their own bosoms, and- feet, but a snake in the grass of rebellion, and those who hand o if trill snnnnr nr ... arisen hntwnnn mnn or hptapnn nntlnn.o engage in later feel its fangs. Said One who spake, t0? le. nor d "eJ derve to do so. of a con- j 'He who is not with us is against u;" 1Ue,re 13 not tber,e e"not ! nii... Unrl nf nnn. nf u nAnfl;n, i,;k u0Q neutral ground for a loyal people be- could this be more truthfully said than who at tho hcad of armiea, are Kenaemg of that in which we are now involved.-!,ts d"truction. Your iDwhoi is no Neutrality neco-sarily implies indiffcr- j neutrality though you may delude yowr ence. Is Kentucky indifferent to the is- ef!ve3 lJhQ be,,fef tb.ttt 11 18 B0- , Wl b sue of this contest? Hub sh indncd. no'1"3 rebebllion confronting you, refuse to thing at stake? , i with her sister states fr.Jfri tn iirvfinlrl nr Has hho no compact ;aia. BUllU,J glorpto win! Has she no horror of that antagonism. r u.m or mo. of crimes now being committed a- i J ?Jrtual indorsement of the rcbolhoD, u .i . i . ii- and if vou do not thereby give to tne re gamst us by that stupendos rebellion j, , . , ,l i ii -j i r. i : . u - ... . j bels precisely that "aid snd comfort" which has ariseu like a tempest cloud m , , "'"J , i o .19 nr 4 1 l 4 i BDokcn of intho Constitution, you cer the South? We rejoice to know that she 7. , , . ' J , , u .u- tt j tamly afford them a most powerful en is still a member of thir Union, and as J . L m. . such she has tbe same interest in resist- .couragement and support. That they ing thin rebellion, that each limb of the ' rcgad .Qr Prese"' PUion a. friendly j 1 . . .. . , , . to them, is proved by the fact that, in v body has in resisting a poniard whose ! lu i ' ,jr, " ' n point is aimed at the heart. It is her, hoSP. thnf U on fir,, K,. shr, rm inrPrnt. m., 8U . - ex inguisn.ng tne connagra noai v in calm ctnnrl filnnf on1 onnrnnin 1 n 1: a! f noil. tral bfitwPP.n Mm rin, flftm-s nnd rhfi , . -ii- .1 i- brave men who are perilling their lives v o to subdue them? Hundreds of bouaanaa e i or cut - cf citizens of other states men 3 . , . .. .. , IUrO and OUarBCter, 01 tnOUgOC &Qu 01 . . rf ton men mu uavu u ueep biauc iu and an mtenso appreciation of its duties "s , i , i ! ana responsiouuies, wno Know tne wor , 01 tn,s. D,C8Sca government 01 our, ana ao , uol Pr,ze even lQeir 0WD D100,Q aove j 1 saJ. hundreds of thousands of such ! meD bave left tbelr their work- 8UOP9; tbe3r offices their counting-houses, and their fields, and are now rallying a- -j sustain it, and since tbe days thatcrusad ing Europe threw its host upon tbe em battled plains of Asia, no deeper or more earnest or grander spirit has stirred the souls of men, than that which now swayB those mighty masses whose gleaming ban ners are destined ere long to make bright again the earth and sky of the dis tracted South. Can Kentucky look upon Bublime spectacle of patriotism an - tr A nnrl (Knn anxr tn hnrdnlt I tDl I moved, and then say to herself: "I will spend neither blood nor treasure, but I will shrink away while tho battle rages, and after it has been fought and won, I will return to the camp, well assured tbat if I cannot claim tho laurels, I will at least enjoy tho blessings of tho victory?" Is this all tbat remains of her ohivalry 01 IUO OUIVBirV Ol lUfl lUi Ul IUO OUU f 1 I I I. IU I . 1 WA Shol- i bys, the Johnsons, the Aliens, the Clays, the Adairs, and the Davisea? is tbero a Kentuokian within the sound of my voioe 'to-night, who can hear the anguished cry ! of his country as sbe wrest.es ana writnes ! in the i folds of tbu .gigantic treason, .and ! then lay himself down upon his pillow j Jth ib thought of neutrality, without ! feeling that he has something in his bos- om which stings him worse than would an UUUDli UOTC IT V., TIIVU1U lllivi j, . . - of eighty years, descended so far from the mountain heights on which our fath ers stood, that already, in our degonera cy, we proclaim our blood too precious, our treasure too valuable, to be devoted to the preservation of such a government as this? Thoy fought through a seven years' war with tho greatest power on 'earth for tho hope, tho bare hope, of bo- ing able to found this llepubho, and now ; bundance, to be trampled boueath tbe that it ia no longer a hope nor an experi- feet of hostile soldiery, as a flower gar ment? but a glorious reality, which has! den is trampled boneath the threshings of. excited the admiration and the homage! the tempest if "bo wiuhea, the homes of tbc nations, aod has covered us with WQero her lovod ones are now gathered blessings as "the waters cover tho chan- jn poaoe, invaded by tbo proscriptivo Ju nols of the sea," have we, their children, ry of 8 military despotism, sparing ncith no years of toil, of sacrifice, and of battle, ler life nor proporty if she wishes tho oven, if need bo, to give to save it from 8treetB of her towns and cities grown with absolute destruction at tho hands of men grass, and the bteamboats of hor rivers who, steeped in guilt, arc perpetrating a-jto lie rotting at her wharves then let gainst us and humanity a crime, for ber joio the Southern Confederacy; but if which I verily believe tbo blackest p&go'sbo would have tho bright watora of that of tbe history of tho world's darkest po-'river flowoji in their gladncasr-if she ried furnishes no parallel! 'Can it be would iiave.ftir harvests peacefully gsth nncaihlA rhnr. in the history of the Ameri-'cred tafher Varnera if abo. would have I , 1 nnn nann n CPA . t 1 : 1. ,1 ! nnrnr n7.Weneracv so low, that the work nave aircuuy ibusubu TnnMin. of Adams and Jefferson, of Haopook and Henry f l.n overthrown by; tho morally bo nd ud con9pirator who are an,i her shores once more vooal with the,, tugging at its foundations! It would ;8teamera whistle, tbat anthem of a free pow fa e a r a thAi j a nmmr thn W. t,-,. - in nf tbfl Andes bv the'.n ,nronii commerce, then let bar ' IH IUU - lil " "o " J. , w ti,os tbat are crawling in at their base. . mi :;... ;n -puv our wwn rocioasiy are tney proiecoun is. xaey tako no account of tho fact that the mas sacre-with which they hope tboir words will ere long be clogged, auuat ie the massacre of their brethero. However muob we may bow our beads at tbo son- Ith1 P,eoPle hon have DOt g"tnes at enni rnna rr n.nr n ri n n r mnn nnnnn nr V4 k3WWil fcW """i -uuwv iwu$ Jtween their own Government , . . , . RreB0. COnnsCatlOg lOe debts due from . . . 0f loyal states. Kentucky , are "preSSiy espectea. Is Dot this eig- UlUuuUU JUca lb icuvu u ivuiu tut " , . i n , , . n3 ; doubt that tbe Confederate Congress sup- uuu" , , w ,. . 6 . poso they bavo discovered uuder tbo 1 . , J .... i i? cuise of vour neutrality a lcrtmc aympa- f. , ' . ,? , ... tbv for their cause which entitles you to A t, p an i . , x Drehensivo statesmen in placing her njf anomaloU3 oosit:OQ sho now oo- oupics, it cannot be denied tbat Ken tucky, by her prosent attitude", ia ex erting a potent influence in strengthening the rebellion, and is, therefore false alike to her loyalty and to her fame. You may rest well assured that this estimate of your neutrality is entertained by tho true men of tbo country in all the-atate which are now sustaining the Government. Within the last few weekB how many of thoao gallant volunteers who have left home and kindred and all tbat is dear to them, aro now under a southern sun, ex posing themselves to death from disease and to death from battle, and aro ac counting their lives as nothing iu the of fort they are making for the deliverance of your Government and theirs; bow ma ny of them havo said to mo, in sadness and in longing, "Will not Kentucky help mo?" How my soul would have leaped, could I havo auawerod promptly, confi dently, exultingly, "Yes, she will." But .when I thought of this neutrality, y heart oank within me, and I did not, and I could not, look those brave taea in the face. And yet I could not answer "'No.1 tt I could not crush myself to the earth Hin der the self abasement of such a reply. I therefore said and ssay my oantry sustain me "I hope, I trust, I pray, nay, I believe Kentucky will yet do ber da ty." If this Government ii to be destroyed, ask yourselves, are you willing it shall be recorded in history that Kentucky stood by in the greatness other strength snd lifted not a hand to stay thc catastrophe! If it ia to be saved as I verily believo it is are you willing it shall be -written that in the immeasurable glory which mIlst ,ten(1 the aehievement Kentucky I had no panT j wiU ony add) if Ken. jtQoky wifcbfll) tbo watQra of ber beautiful j Qn- t0 bo dved blood if sho wishes hor harvest fields, now waving in tboir - a tne luemvlua si.uur, uiauiea auu iu juujb ., , if--0! - i L ,n J . ! - of faeWofces unuivaded by tbe cries snd '-mr, hf h9iH.;f .h wonld have tha streets of her towns and cities again filled - ;wJth tbo hum and throngs of busy trade, UU u wuw. i - 8tabd'fast by the Stars and Stripe?, and do ber duty. nd her whole duty, as a i'mhpr nf tills Uoioi. Let her brave ana moso to keep, no plighted oaaS J tnerooJ couae. tu Uovernment, ana assume towara u &