der for me !" This " rabble" consisted of a regiment of the line, a squadron of cavalry, a company of chaißeurs, and a company of artil lery. The Hungarians without waiting to count the numbers of the adversary, rushed forward and charged with the bayonet. After a con test of twenty minutes, the battery was re taken, and once more it poured its storm of graPe on the Neapolitan troupe, who fled in contusion across the fields. The Hungarians in this encounter, had thirty men put hays de com bat, the Neopolitans about two hundred. Gari baldi did not wait to dress his wound, but hurried elsewhere. The day, however, was now won. Pailv HARRISBURG, PA. Monday Afternoon, November 12. 1560. Position of the New President The following ' extract from a speech made by ABRAHAM LINCOLN at Leaven worth, Kansas, during the Contest for Speaker of the House of Representatives, last winter, fore shadows his course to wards Disunionists and Traitors. It clear ly indieates that while he will administer the Government fairly and honestly, and deal out even-handed justice to all sections, he will not hesitate to visit TREASON with merited punishment, no matter where he kay find it. We doubt not that this will beltis,couise. He, will extend no sort of countenance to TRAITORS, but HANG THEM UP, and thils furnish an ,example that others similarly inclined may. profit by. Thus will Dis-iinionisrn be crushed out, and the institutions which our Revolu- tionary fathers reared be restored to their original strength and purity. But to the extract referred to : "You Democrats greatly fear that the success of the Republicans will destroy the Union. No thing like it. Your own statement of itts,that if the Black Republicans elect a President,, you won't stand it I Yon will break up the Union. That will be your act, not ours. To justify it, you must show that our policy gives you just cause for such desperate action. Can you do that ? When you attempt it you will find our policy is exactly the policy of the men who made the Union, nothing more nor nothing less. Do you think you are justified to break up the Government rather than to have it ad ministered by Washington, and other good and great men who made it, and who first adminis tered ? If you do, you are very note, - • ble, and more reArnim-memen cannot and will not submit to you. While we elect a President, it will be our duty to see that you submit. Old John Brown has been hung for treason against a State. We cannot object, even though sla very is wrong. That cannot excuse violence, bloodshed and treason. It could avail hint no thiug that be might think himself right. So, if constitutionally we elect a President, and therefore you undertake to destroy the Union, it will be our duty to deal with you as old John Brown has been dealt with, We can only do our duty We hope and believe that in ne sec tion mainizgaViaa The Oregon Republican Senator. When the election of Col. Baker as United States Senator from Oregon was announced, it was said that ho was a non interventionist on the slavery question, and in that respect differed from.the great body of the Republican party. This re port is denied by a western Republican journal, which states that Col. Baker has for several years been a warm hearted Republican, and during the late campaign delivered some of the ablest .Repnblican speeches in behalf of his old friend Abra ham Lincoln, that have been heard any where ; land his name has been mentioned as one of the probable members of the new President's cabinet, more than once. Col. Baker will not be subservient to any pro-slavery doctrines, and believes to, the fullest extent that our territories are the heritage of white men in preference to negroes. If he is not "acceptable" to the party, the Democrats will find, when he takes his seat in the Senate, that he will be anything but acceptable to such dema. gogues as Douglas and Pugh. As Col. Biker was eleeted to fill a vacancy, he will occupy ..a seat immediately on the assemb ling of Congress. Xll DOUGLAS PROPHECY FULFILLED.— , A correspondent of the Albany ',Journal states that a few evenings since, in ,com panY,,with one of Albany's most eloquent and LLreputable clergymen, and several othor.gentlemen, the reverend gentleman said that in the year 1858, in New York, in conversation with the Hon. S. A. Doug las, Mr. Douglas remarked that he knew a man named Abrahan Lincoln, who, should he ever be nominated for the Pres idency, "would go to the White House with flying colors;" and he further added: reObgaise in him all the great qualities that 'distinguish the upright and honest statesman; and he is a man of uncompro mising firmness and great decision of char *toter, insomuch that his political oppo nents, with all their spirit of party molevolenee, cannot find anything to condemn in him. Such a man, sir, is. Abraham Lincoln, of Illinois." Mr. Douglas' propheoy has been fulfilled. CARRIED DIEM ALL.--Litteoln carried his own ward, city, county and State.— He aleocarried Douglas' ward,oity, county and State. Let Them Slide. The secession demonstrations of the chivalry in the cotton States are rather amusing than otherwise. They certainly do not alarm the people of the North. We have only to say that if South Caro lina, Georgia or Alabama, or all of them, desire to withdraw from the Union, "let them slide"—the sooner the better. in the language of a sensible Kentucky edit or, "let them form a Republic or Empire, or anything el e se they may fancy. Let them enclose themselves within a Chinese wall, if they want to, and here is one who will contribute his mite towards furnish ing the requisite rocks. Let them do it as, they please, and when they please, with , :. solitaryone condition, viz : that ithdir separtitions , be final. Their :absence would•be an incalculable and in valuable relief to the balanne of the peo ple of these United States. We should escape large quantities of quadrennial gas and noise and confusion and stuff. At ever:) , Presidential election, these political filibusters remind us of the poor French man who locked himself in a room with a rich debtor, and threatened to blow his ,own brains out and charge the rich one with the murder, unless the latter gave him then and there five hundred dollars, Every four years these Southern Quixotes swell up with bad whisky and worse logic, and tell the balance of the people if they 'don't do so and so, that they—the Quiz otes—will secede. Let them secede and be—blessed. We 'are tired of their gas conade, their terrific threats, and of their bloody prophesies. They were never calculated for any higher destiny than that of frightening old women and young children. They have been revived and repeated until—to use an expressive vul garism—they are played out.. Their bom bast is absolutely sickening." TEE SECESSION MOVEMENT.—The ex citement in the South still continues, and the Legislature of South Carolina has passed a resolution cajlin ,a convent mof E CLODEPAN3 me people, to meet about the middle of December, to make arrangements in re gard to the formation of a Southern Con federacy. In all the other States the majority of the people are opposed to dis union, and at Augusta, Ga., a meeting was held, called by the Mayor of the town, for the purpose of expressing the opposition of the people to secession. The tone OM- servative resolutions were adopted with much enthusiasm. Senator Toombs, of Georgia, has resigned, as has also Senator Chesnut, of South Carolina. DOWN SOUTH.--The result in the Southern States, so, far as heard from, justifies the conclusion that Breckinridge has by far the largest portion of the Southern electoral vote. It was on this supposition that thousands have voted for Lincoln. The end justifies them. Had the darling project of carrying the elect ion into the House succeeded, - no choice would have followed, and the election go ing to the Senate, Mr. Jo Lane would have been our next President, It is something to have escaped that disgrace and danger. THE SOUTHERN ClTlES.—Nearly every large city in the slaveholding States, save Baltimore, which is as erratic now as it was in 1856, have passed the most com plete vote of censure upon John C. Breek inridge. He is beaten by both Douglas and Bell in St. Louis, New Orleans, Lou isville and Covington, Ky., Mobile, Ala., and Memphis, Tenn., and is defeated in Richmond, Va., by Bell, and run cleiely by Denglas. All these large emporiums of Southern commerce are most emphati- calls^ for the Union. MORMON WIVES—A "FAIR • SHAKE" DEMANDED.—Brother Kimball, in one of his famous Morm'on sermons, served the following timely notice on a number-of missionaries who were about starting out on a proselyting tour : Brethren, I want you to understand that'll is not to be as it has - been heretofore. The broth er missionaries have been in the habit of pick ing out:the prettiest women fur themselves be fore they get here, and bringing on the ugliest ones for us ; hereafter you have to bring them all here before taking any of them, and let us, all have a fair shako. • ,WOICSE AND WORSE.,;..-GOII:, MagOffiD, of Kentucky, has designated the 29th as Thanksgiving Day in that State. As this is the day that Massachusetts celebrates, it is strange that Kentucky , should join. But "ye Democraoie" has come. down wonderfully since Lincoln's election began to be conceded. Scom—General Scott is the largest man in the American service. He is six feet six inches tall, and weighs two hundred and sixty pounds. He is , seventy-four . years Old,. yet his a health is good and ins whole systemppaently vigorous, much of which is doubtless owing:to his temperate habits. Pennopluania Qteltgrapo, iftlonttap 'Afternoon, November 12, 1860. The Restoration of Tranquility Es sential to Trade and Industry. Undoubtedly the mercantile and industrial interests of the country have sulfured from the agitation incidental to the Presidential cam paign. The eenfederated anti-Republican fac tions stopped at nothing calculated to prevent the election of Lincoln. They did all they could to produce a monetary panic; and al though the result in this respect fell far short of their designs, they nevertheless succeeded in inflicting no inconsiderable amount of damage on the great business interests. The dullness of trade, and the pressure in the money market, involving the suspension of several houses, is wholly attributable to their desperate election eering schemes ;• and if there be one man in the nation preeminently guilty, it is Mr. Buchan an's Secretary of the Treasury, Howell COL It is certainly a humiliating spectacle to see the Federal Government, .or any member of ir, leagued with a faction which has for its end and aim the destruction of that government ; and it seems to us the wish that must now be upper most in every loyal heart is for the day that shall witness the expulsion of the wolves from the foldof the Buchanan comarilla from the executive departments in Washington. Now that final judgment has been rendered by the national sovereignty on the claims ofthe sev eral presidential candidates, there can be no excuse, in any quarter, for prolonging excite ment. Millions of dollars have been sacrificed by the threat of disunion—begetting, asst cer tainly did, a vague apprehension of coming disaster. The great commercial emporiums have suf fered most severely from the machinations of the anti-Republican politician.s. Repose is there fore needed—absolutely needed now. The sum mer and fall have been devoted to politics; it is but fair that trade should be, permitted, hence forth, to carry on its operations, unmolested. The stage so long Occupied by the political drama, and the actors in it, should be left clear for the industrial activities to resume their as- 1 cendancy. No plink can reverse the result of the election. What is done cannot be undone, and therefore nothing but the inspiration of pure malice can call for the continuance of an agitation which is equivalent to a crusade against the general welfare, in all the material relations of society. Let the Douglas 'man:` lay - aside his bludgeon or his broom; and the Wide- Awake the torch that lighted the path of Re publicanism to victory. Where Breckinridge minute men have mounted the blue cock ade, let them unplume themselves as quick as possible of that fantastic head-gear, and let all parties mutually rsspect one another's feelings. Next to, the, grand fact that Repub licanism is the faith of the American people, and that it will shape the policy of the gov ernment henceforth, stands the fact that the South, as a whole, is opposed to disunion. The united popular vote of Douglas and Bell in the slave States, will exceed the Breckinridge vote in all the States. Admitting, for-the sake of argument, that the Union is composed of two nations, disunion simply means the:destruction of the unity and power of one of them—the disorganization and emasculation of the South Surely, Southern men who are loyal to the South, (to use their own phraseology,) will re : , cognize &he duAy_otaccepting the verdict of' the' s;outn, and that vereil&W.l2M.t.T-fl.r.lMetiir union. Their own logic compels this conclu sion, and precludes any other. The proposi tion for a dissolution of the Union, tested by the election returns, means the partition or rather the fractional divisor& of the South. Those who imagine the secession movement has been caused by the anticipated triumph of Republicanism might peruse the late telegraphic dispatches with profit. The news of Lincoln's election it appears was. greeted with cheers and other demonstration of joy;* in South Carolina. Massachusetts herself fail ed to indul a in e seceseionists. This significant fact should open the eyes of the pro slavery meu in the border slave States, who have suffered themselves to be led off into error and incipient treason by the disunionistS of the cotton &ales. lhe truth is; the Breckinridge Democracy in Missouri, Kentucky, Virginia and the slave States immediately adjoining, Lave been duped by the secessionists. Bad it not been for the association of these men with the Breckinridge movement, that candidate would . have carried every State which Lincoln has not carried. Under the cry of danger to the South, they put thernselVes in the van of the move ment, thereby; banging disastrous defeat on Breckinridge and Lane ; and naturally enough they gave vent to their irrepressible joy at the success of their fanatics. The long sought for 'pretext having, as they supposed, been found at last ; the glorious fabric of the Union appearing to their frenzied imaginations as tot tering to its inevitable fall, they tore the con cavewith their diabolical shouts, and doubtless gloried in their secret souls at having identified a strong:political party with their treasonable I projects.: The issue of the election is pregnant with deep instruction—but the most valuable lesson which it_teaches is confidence in the people—in their manhood and inextinguishable love of right. The free States, it is now demonstrated, I cannot be duped, blinded, bribed nor bullied.— Hereafter, if evil days shall come •, if there should be an eclipse of faith in the Democratic principle, or in the nobleness of the national character, the true leader will proudly point to the result of the seven years' war—the eleCtion of Lincoln—and say to the desponding, "Be of good cheer;" and to-the infidel,. `Despaieriot of the people."—Se Louis .Ripublican: ' • . • A THRIVING Swransn COLONY.—At Bristol Hill, in Henry ceunty, 111., is a cblony of per sons from Sweden now numbering 7,000 souls. At present it is a communist affair. The domain of the colony embraces 4000 acres, about 9,000 of which are under cultivation. - To men who are accustomed to farming-on a swell scale, the operations of the colonists seem to be, imrneose. - Broom corriis a specialty with them, and theft have now . about 3,000 acres under cultivation:. .The crop averages about a ton to every fOur acres, and the price about - $lOO per ton ; upon which'estimate this year's crop will be worth about $75,000. The colonists usually manufacture about 5,000 dozen