RATES OF ADVERTISING. Your lines or lessoonstitnte half &square. Bight Lines or note than four, constitute a square. B o g eq., one day..— $OBO One au, one day.-- $0 60 one week-- 120 •' one week.... 200 c. one month.. 800 41 one month.. 000 three months 600 a three months 10 00 " aix months.. 800 .c aia months.. 16 00 0neyear.......12 00 CC one year.,.. 20 00 LIT Business notion inserted in the LOCAL comma, ow before marriages and deathe, TZS CENTS Pee LIIII for sea maanion. Ts merchants and others advertising year, nevem eerme 'nu be offered. DJa sa..aut.uem of WeertlOne Milt be deal gusted on adeerusanrewl. Marriagea and Deaths will insertel arum cams rates ea regular admtieements. Business laos. R OBERT SNODGRASS, ATTORNEY A.T LAW, Office North Third street, thsrd door above Mar ket, Harrisburg, Pa. N. B.—Pension, Bounty and Military claims of all kinds prosecatEd and collected_ Refer to Nona_ John O. Kunkel, David Mumma, 0. 3 and B.A. Lamberton. myll-d&wfim WM. H. MILLER, R_ E. FERGUSON, ATTORNEYS AT LAW. OFFICE IN SHOEMAKER'S BUILDINGS SECOND STREET, BETWEEN WALNUT and MARKET SQUARE, ap-291h1cd Nearly opposite the Buehler House. THOS. C. M&oDOWELL, ATTORNEY . AT LAW, MILITARY CLAIM AND PATENT AGENT. Office in the Exchange, Walnut et., (Up Stairs.) Having formed a connection with parties in Wash ington City, wno are reliable business men, any bunt mew connected with any of the Departments will meet with immediate and careful attention. me-y DR. C. WEICHEL, SURGEON AND OCULIST, BZELDREIGII TUMID NBAR MOUTH OT MUIT. lie is now fully prepared to attend promptly to Uts duties of profession in all its branches. A LOWS AID MT avocisassoL INDIOAL isrmainitOs justifies him in promising full said ample satisfaction to all who may favor himmith a call, be the disease Ohrimis or any other nature. MILITARY CLAIMS Ni)A PEN SIONS. The undersigned have entered into an association for the collection of Military Claims and the securing of ' , onions for wounded and disabled soldiers. Master in And Muster-out Bolls, °Macre Pay Boils, Ordnance and Clothing returns, and all papers pertain ing to the military service will be made out properly andlixpeditionsly_ Office in the Exchange Buildings, Walnut between Sevvudlynd Third streets, near OmiVs Hotel. Harris burga. THOli ILLODOWELL, je2s-dtf THOMAS A. biA.GIIIBE. 81.1,A8 WARD. NO_ 11, 31013111 THIRD ST., EARILISSMUL STEINWAY'S PIANOS, MELODEONS, VIOLINS, OITITABS, Basjat, .Flutea, Fifes, Drums, accordeono, etiottan, army AIM Boor mvsta, Be. , As., PHOTOGRAPH FRAMES. ALBUMS, Large Pier and Mantle Mirrors, Square and Oval Prams of every description made to order. Reguildiug done. Agency for Howe', Sewing Machines. ILT - Meet Munn sent by Mail. eistl4 JOHN W. GLOVER, MIERCHA.NT TAILOR! Ms just received from Now 1 - (0, an mart' ment of SEASONABLE GOODS, which he offers to his customers and the public at SOYA) iIiaLkETATE -PRICES- - dU T 8008, Merchant Tailor, eh 27 CHESNUT ST., between Second and Front, Has just returned from the city with an assortment of CLOTHS, CASSIMERES AND USTMOS, Which will be sold at moderate prices and made up to order; and, also, an assortment of READY MIA Clothing and Gentlemen's 'Furnishing Goods. nov2l-Iyd DENTISTRY. „A- B. IL GILDEA, D. D. 8., ' If 0 . 119 MARL ET STREET ICIINSZTA urnpxNa, VP SEMIS janB-tf R ELIGIOUS BOOK STORE, TICACT AND SUNDAY SCHOOL DEPOSITORY, E. S. GERMAN. 117 5013111 11100 ND STREET, ABOVI ORMINUT, IiAIIIBEI7II.II, PA.- Depin fortlesale of SteroosoopnAltsmigastphiritTffil Made and Ilitalaal Isstraments. Also, suburiptiong taken for religione publications. n0304y JOHN G. W. MARTIN I FASHIONABLE CARD WRITER, BMWS HOTAL, HARIIIBBITEG, PA. Allmanner of VISITING, WEDDING AND BUSI NESS CARDS executed in thentost artistic styles and moat reasonable terms. deel4-44 UNION HOTEL, Ridge Avenue, corner of Broad street umutissiffie, kA. The undersigned informs the public that he has re cently renovated and refitted his well-known " Union Hotel" on Ridge avenue, near the Round House, and is prepared to accommodate citizens, strangers and travel ere in the best style, at moderate rates. His table will be a - applied - with the beet the awoke% afford, and at his bar will be found superior brands of liquors and matt beverages. The very best accommo dations for railroaders employed at the shops in this vicinity. 10.4 dtf] HENRY BOSTGEN. F RANKLIN HOUSE, BALTIMORN, This pleasant and commodious Hotel ham been tiro ronghiy re-fitted and re-furnished. It is pleasantly alloatot on North-West somas of Howard and Franklin streets, a few doom; west of the Northern Central Rail way Depot. Iyery attention paid to the comfort of his guests. U. LZIODNRING, Proprietor, jel2-tf (Late of Selina Grove. Pa.) THEO. F_ SCHEFFER, BOOK, CARD AND JOB PRINTER, No 18 MARKET STREET, HARRISBURG. 13j . ' Particular attention paid to printing ruling and of Bantus' Blanks, Manifests. Insurance Poll. vies, Checks Bill-HesAs, Wedding, - Visiting and Business Cards printed at very low prices and in the best style. janll • TAILORING. The subscriber is ready at NO. 94, MARKET ST., four doors below Fourth street, to make MEN'S AND BOY'S CLOTHING Ia any desired style, and with skin and promptness. Fn'enna whiling nutting done on have it dwiii it Use shortest notice. ap2T.d CHARLES F. VOLLMER, UPHOLSTERER, Chestnut street, four doors above Second, (OTPOSITH WASHINGTON HOSE House,) Is prepared to furnish to order in the very beet style of workmanship. Spring and Hair Mattresses, Window oar. tam' Locirges, and all other articles of Furniture in his line, on short notice end moderate terms. Having ex perience in the business, he feels warranted in asking a share of public patronage, confident of hisabilityto give satisfaction. qICY—LTGHT GALLRRy,—The rooms on the corner of Market square and Market erreet„ opposite the Jones House, occupied as a Gallery for Daguerreotype, Photograph and Ambrotype purposes, are FOR EMT from the 9th of September next. APPIY to JOHN WTETH jrig-4114*3* WEBSTER'S ,AJMY AND NAVY POCKET DICTIONARY. Jtuitiointriii and for sale at BOBIFINR 2 B BOOKWORM NB‘VORLEANB SUGAR !---FINEIT IN m MARIN! !—Por sale by WIL DOOR & 00. ~. . ~...-•--_--- _.-'-‘,-, V' - --- , : l .-- - 7, -; ---- ..i•i; •IF.-'- '-] 7 2 • -- , ,....t•i1i5k......** -.----'-- , .. -' 2 • _ i,.;,....L.' , .." :.II _. •?„ , • ''',...,- ' • -t. - "A• '''''' ille' ' l l- I ''''''' .'-'''' - --'' • , ~ ,. .E . A. Z .;- ' 11 : , ,, , ' .' I. . -- - - 4't... -!'-' - . 1 7- . ' • ,:.-- .* , •i 1 :_,., - --./.,4- 7 . 1 1-„.-.^:• - ..., - - -- - ..----1.-- --- . f•A , __, ~ . • . , , .... • S f, -- ..17j , - -- 1- - ..;__-_ .-- VOL. C.-NO. 10. ‘,ll atrint tt SATURDAY MORNING, SEPT. 12, 1863. FACTS FOR THE PEOPLE. The Abolition Leaders Convicted out of their own Mouths of Disunion-Aboll. tionism-0 I' Insurrectionary Doctrines— A Design to Change the Government, Override the Constitution and Form a Central Despotism—Of Falsehood, Cor ruption and Treason [Prepared for the Patriot and Unionj "SIR, THE ABOLITION PARTY IS A DISLOYAL ORGANIZATION. ITS PRETEN DED LOVE FOR FREEDOM MEANS NOTH ING MORE OR LESS THAN CIVIL WAR AND A DISSOLUTION OF THE UNION. HONEST MEN OF ALL PARTIES SHOULD UNITE TO EXPOSE THEIR INTENTIONS AND ARREST THEIR PROGRESS."-AN DREW JACKSON. PROPHECY. "If these infernal fanatics and abolitionists ever get the power in their hands, they will override the Constitution, set the Supreme Court at defiance, change and make laws to suit themselves, LAY VIO— L - Nry HANDS ON THOSE WHO DIFFER WITH THEM IN toPINION, or dart question their fidelity, and finally bankrnpt the country and deluge it with bIood."—DANIEL WBBSTER. In the Senate Mr. Clay said in relation to Abolitionism "To the agency of their power of persua sion, they now propose to substitute the power of the ballot box ; and he must be blind to what is passing before us, who does not per ceive that the inevitable tendency of their pro ceedings is, if these should be found- insuffi cient, to invoke finally, the more potent powers of" the bayonet." FUNDAMENTAL DOCTRINES OF ABOLI- TIONISM-HIGHER LAW. "I have always hated slavery, I think, as much _as any Abolitionist. I have always been an old line Whig. I have always hated it but I have always been quiet about it until this new era of the introduction of the Nebraska bill again. I always believed that everybody was against it, and that it was in course of ul timate extinction. "We are now far into tht fifth,/ ear since a policy was initiated with the avowed object and confident promise of putting an end to slavery agitation. Under the operation of that policy, that agitation has not only not ceased, but has constantly augmented. In my opinion it will not cease until a crisis shall have been reached and passed ; a house divided against itself can not stand. I believe this government cannot endure permanently half slave and half free. Ido not expect the Union to be dissolved ; I do not expect the house to fall ; but I do expect it will cease to be divided ; it will become all one thing or the other. Either the opponents of slavery will arrest the further spread of it, and place it where the publio mind shall rest in the belief that it is in the course of ultimate atinction, or its adir . O4i4S6 will push it forward till it shall become alike lawful.in all the States, old as well as new, North as well as South."— Abraham Lincoln—campaign edition of hie speeches_ Afterwards, commenting on this, he says: "I only said what I expected would take place. I made a prediction only; it may have been a foolish one, perhaps. I did not even say that I desired that slavery should be put in course of ultimate extinction. Ido say se now, however ; so there need be no longer any difficulty about that." "Correct your own error, that slavery has any constitutional guarantee which may not be released, and ought not to be relinquished.— Say to slavery, when it shows its hand, (that is the Constitution,) and demands its pound of flesh, that if it draws one drop of blood, its life shall pay the forfeit. * * Do all this, and inculcate all this in a spirit of moderation and benevolence, and not of retaliation and fanaticism, and you will soon bring the parties of the country into an effective aggression upon slavery."— W. H. Seward, Cleaeland, 1848. "Send it abroad upon the wings of the wind, that I am committed, fully committed to the fullest extent, in favor of the immediate and unconditional Abolition of slavery, where ever it exists under the authority of the Con stitution of the United States."—Senator Wil son of Massotolausell.i. In the year 1857, an individual named Hin ton Rowan Helper, who had been forced to leave his native State, North Carolina, in dis grace, published a book, of which he was tho reputed author, entitled " The Impending Cri sis." The book recommended direct warfare on Southern society, ft be the consequences what they might." It was so extravagant in tone, and so diabolical in its designs, that it was at first generally supposed to be the work of a fool or a madman. What, however, was the surprise of the public when the book was actu ally adopted by the Republican party as a cam paign document, and its atrocious principles endorsed by anal"-EIGIIT Republican Mem bers of Congress and all the influential mem bers of the party ! Below will be found an abstract of the principles it advocated, taken from the large edition of the work. published by A. B. Burdick, No. 145 Nassau street, N. Y., 1860: 1. We unhesitatingly declare ourselves in favor of the immediate and unconditional abo lition of slavery.—Page 26. 2. We cannot be too hasty in carrying out our designs."—Page 83. 3, D{Q man can be a true patriot without first becoming an Abolitionist.—Page 116. 6. Slaveholdere are more criminal than com mon mnrderere.—Page 140. 7. All slaveholdera are under the shield o a perpetual license to murder. —Pace 141. 8. It is our honest conviction that all the pro-slavery slaveholders, who are alone re sponsible for the continuance of the baneful tomitution,among ne, deserve to be at once re duced to a'parallel with the basest criminals that lie fettered within the cells of our public prisons.—PagelsB. 9 . Were it possible that the whole number (of alaveholdere), could be gathered together and transferred into four equal gangs of li censed robbers, ruffians, thieves and murder ers, society, 'we feel assured, would suffer less from their atrocities than it does now. —Page 108, 10. Once and forever, at least BO far as this country is concerned, the infernal question of slavery must be disposed of. A speedy and (MOW@ abolishment of the whole system is the true policy of the South, sbd this is the polioy which we propose to pursue.—Page 121. WE UNFURL OUR BANNER TO TSB WORLD. Inscribed on the banner which we (W. U. HARRISBURG, PA:, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1863. . . • Seward, Horace Greeley, and the other en dorsers,) herewith unfurl to the world, with the full and fixed' determination to stand by it or die by it, unless one of more virtuous effi cacy shall be presented, are the mottoes which, in substance, embody the principles as we On sieve should govern us. THE MOTTOES ON OUR BANNER. 1. Thorough organization and independent political action on the part of non-slaveholding whites of the south. 2. Ineligibility of slaveholders ; never ano therAvote to the trafficker in human flesh. 3. No co-operation with slaveholders in poli tics no fellowship with them in religion, no affiliation with them in society. 4. No patronage to slaveholding merchants ; no bequest to slave waiting hotels; no fees to slaveholding lawyers ; no employment to slave holding physicians . no audience to slavehold ing parsons 5. No recognition of pro-slavery men, except, as ruffians, outlaws and criminals. 6. Immediate death to slavery, or if not im mediate, unqualified proscription of its adV9- sate during the period of its existence. — P ages —_ ages. 155 and 156. 7. Thus, terror engenderers of the South have we fully and frankly defined our position - we have no modifications to propose, no coin, promises to offer, nothing to retract. Frown, sirs, fret, foam, prepare your weapons, threat, strike, shoot, stab, bring on civil war, dissolve the Union, nay annihilate the solar system if. you. will-4 ' 10 all this, more, less, better, worse, anything— to what you will, sire, you can neither foil nor intimidate us • our purpose is as firmly fixed as the eternal pi llars of Heaven ; we have determined to abolish slavery, and so help us God, abolish it we will—Page 187. Wendell Phillips, shortly after the organiza tion of the Republican party, speaking of that party said : "No man has a right to be surprised at this state of things. It is just what we (Abolition ists and Disunionists) have attempted to bring about. It is the first sectional party ever or ganized in this country, It dces not know its own face, and calls itself national ; but it is not national—it is sectional. The Republican party is a party of the North pledged against the South. "No net of ours do we regard with more eon= scientious approval or higher satisfaction, none do we submit more confidently to the tri bunal of Heaven and the moral verdict of man kind, than when, several years ago, on the 4th of July, in the presence of - a great assembly, we committed to the flames the Constitution of the United States." " I believe this government cannot endure permanently half slave and half free."—Abra ham Lincoln. The master not only governs the slave with out his consent, but he governs him by a set of rules altogether different from those which be prescribes for himself. Allow all the gov erned an equal voice in the government. —How ell's Life of Lincoln, page 279. "Qyr Legislatures, State and Federal, should raise the platform upon which our free colored people stand ; they ,should give to them full political rights to hen office, to vote, to sit me juries, to give their testimony, and to make no distinction between them and ourselves: The instrument called the, Constitution, after pro nouncing - alt men equal, and having equal rights, suffers slavery to exist, a free colored person to be denied all political rights, and after declaring that all persons shall enjoy a free intercourse with the States, suffers the free negro to be driven out of all, and excluded from such rights. Deliver me from such an instrument thus partial, thus unjust, that can be thus perverted, and made to sanction preju dices and party feelings, and note the acci dental distinction of color."—Cassius Dl. Clay. When questioned in the House of Repre sentatives, the Hon. N. P. Banks, afterwards elected Speaker of the House, and Governor of Massachusetts, by the Black Republicans, de clared his inability to decide whether the white or black was the superior race, but would leave the qtiostion to be decided by absorption or amalgamation ! He said : "So far as he had studied the subject of races, he had adopted the idea that when there is a weaker race in bzistence, it will succumb to ? and be absorbed in, the stronger race. This was the_univereal law as regarded the races of men in the world. In regard to the question whether the white or the black was superior, he proposed to wait until time should develop whether the white race should absorb the black; or the black absorb the white." And Horace Greeley, while admitting that the abolition of slavery in the States is the real object of the Rapalaßeau party, explains the reason why they did not then openly advocate the doctrine. We quote from his paper (the Tribune) of July 25, 1854 : "We contend that the abolition of slavery in the States is the real object of the Republican party. "Admit that Abolition in the States is what all men ought to strive for, and it is clear to our mind that a large majority are not pre pared for this, and the practical question is this—Shall we politically attempt what will certainly involve ua in defeat and failure ? or shall we not rather attempt that which a ma jority are ripe for, and thus, by our consequent triumph, invite that majority to go further ? Shall we insist on having all the possible eggs now, or be content to await their appearance day by day ? The latter seems to us the only rational, sensible course. We care not how fast Messrs. Birney & Co., may ripen public senti ment in the North for emancipation ; we will aid them to the best of our ability ; but we will not refuse the good now withjn our reach out of deference to that which is yet unattainable. Mr. Birney'e 'ultimatum' may be just what he sees fit; we have not proposed to modify or meddle with it. We only ask that he shall not interdict or prevent the doing of some good at once, merely because he would like to do more good, as we shall, also, whenever it shall have become practicable." W. P. Cutler, another Republican member of Congress from Ohio, in a speech in the House, said: "Slavery has caused the present rebellion, and there can be no permanent peace and Union in this Republic, as long as that institution exists." At the same session, Owen Lovejoy, a Re publican Congressman from Illinois, said : "There can be no Union till slavery IP de stroyed." DISUNION SENTIMENTS OF ABOLITION LEADERS—"LET THE UNION SLIDE"— "THE LEAGUE WITH HEW , AND COVE NANT WITH DEATH." , " The Union is not worth supporting with the South."—Horace Greeley. "I am willing, under a certain state of cir cumstances, to let the Union slide."..-Gencral Nathaniel P. Banks. "In case of the alternative being presented Of the continuation of slavery or a dissolution of the Union, I am for a dissolution ' and I care not how soon it comes."—Rufus B. Spalding. "I detest slavery, and say, unhesitatingly, that I am for its abolition by some means, if it should send all party organizations in the Union, or the Union itself, to the devil."—H. hf Addison, of the American Advertiser. "By all her reggrd for the generations of the future, by her reverence for God and man, the North is bound to dissolve her present Union with kidnappers and murderers, and form a Northern Republic on the basis of 'No Union with slaveholders."—Hon. Henry C. Wright, of la, June 9, 1856. This treason was preceded by Senator Hale, who presented a petition in the Sen ate for a dissolution of the Union, and boasted that he had alrei'dy "presented Eight Petitions for a Dissolution of the Union." See Congressional Globe, February Bth, 1850, the same year in which Senator Henry Clay de clared that, "the great question before the country was whether abolitionism should put down the Union, or the Union should put down abolitionism." To those New England disunionists, Senator Dayton of New Jersey said, "Sir, I have yet to know that the right of petition has ever been extended to the destruction of the Gov. ernment to which it is addressed. It is not the right of any party to petition the sovereign power to destroy itself. This petition (presen ted by Haleq comes here and asks us to dis solve the Union. It asks us to put an end to the Federal Government ; it asks us to destroy the Constitution. Why, the first thing I did when I came here, was to take an oath .to sup port the Constitution which those men ask me to destroy. Sir who wants argument, rho wants debate in answer to such memorials ?" Massachusetts' most noble Senator, who for his reverence for the Constitution, and his deep love for the Union—Daniel Webster, for his integrity, honor, truth and justice, was stricken down by Massachusetts. Senator Webster said "I am much obliged to the member from Michigan, (Mr. Cam) for the clearness with which he has expressed his opinion against this petition. I am quite sorry that such a petition has been presented, and shall be quite surprised if there shall be any vote in the Senate for receiving it. I think the substance •of this petition is this : You and each of you took your solemn oaths in the presence of Al mighty God, and on the Holy Evangelists,that you would support the Constitution of the United States, now therefore we pray you take immediate steps to break up the Union, and overthrow the Constitution as soon as you can, and as in duty bound we will ever pray." Said Senator Cass, "That's Aral rate." This peti tion for the dissolution of the Union was in stantly and indignantly rejected, every Senator voting against it, except three. Massachusetts, because of the admission of Louisiana, sent her representative to Congress to declare the Union of the States dissolved. Massachusetts, on the admission of Texas, voted herself out of the Union, and has never voted herself in again. To follow up the course of history, look at the facts : Massachusetts was foremost in the party, which, in 1866, raised the notional flag of dis union, blotting out one half of the stars from our glorious flag, and striking boldly for dis union, as that State has always done and is now - doing. Massachusetts, in 1860, bent on carrying out her deep laid conspiracy against the Union, reorganized the party which was announced as the party of the free States against the Slave States ; the North against the South. James S. Pike, long editorially connected with the N. 7. Tribune and now Minister to the Netherlands, said: "I have no doubt that the free and slave States ought to separate. The Union is not worth supporting in connection with the South. “The Republican party is moulding public sentiment in the right direction for the speci fic work the Abolitionists are striving to ac. complish, viz ; The diSolution of tho Union, and the abolition of slavery throughout the land.” The present Assistant Secretary of the Treasury—Francis E. Spinner—during the Fremont campaign said : 4 , Should this (the election of Fremont) fail, no true man would be any longer safe here from the assaults of the arrogant slave obli. garchy, who then would rule with an iron hand. For the free North would be left the choice of a peaceful dissolution of the Union, a civil war which would end in the same. "I will not stultify myself by supposing that we have any warrant in the Constitution for this proceeding. ••This talk of restoring the Union as it was, under the Constitution as it is, is one of the absurdities which I have heard repeated until I have become about sick of it. The Union can never be restored as it was. There are many things which render such an event impossible. This Union never ehall, with my consent, be restored under the Constitution as it is, with slavery to be protected by it.—Hon. Thaddeus Stevens, the administration leader in Congress. " Whenever any portion of this Union, large enough to form an independent, self• subsisting nation, shall see fit to say authentically, to the residue, 'we want to get away from you,' we ebnil say—and we trust self-respeet, if not re• gard for the principle of self government will constrain the residue of the American people to say—Go !"—N. Y. Tribune, Dec., 1860. From the Chicago Tribune Dec„ 1860; Not a few of the RepubliCan journals of the interior are working themselves up to the be lief that they are endeavoring to impress upon their readers that the seceded States, be they few or many, will be whipped bad: into the Union. We caution all such that in language of that sort they are adding new fuel to the flame which is already blazing so fiercely; and that the probabilities now are that the result will prove them to be false prophets. No mete knows what public policy may demand of the incoming administration ; but the drift of opin ion seems to be that, it peaceable ,secession is possible, the retiring States will be assisted to go, that this needless and bidet' COT troversy may be brought to an end." As proof of what we assert, we quote from the speech of Stephen A. Douglas, delivered in the United States sedate, January 3d, 1861, on the compromise measures then pending be fore that body : " I believe this to be a fair basis of amicable adjustment. If you, of the Republican side are not willing to accept this, nor the propo. sition of the Senator from Kentucky, (Mr. Crittenden,) pray tell us what you are willing to do ? 4‘ I address the inquiry to Republicans only, for the reason that in the Committee of Thir teen, a few days ago, every member from the South, including those from the cotton States, (Messrs. Toombs and Davis,) expressed their readiness to accept the prepobition of my ven erable friend from Kentucky, (Mr. Crittenden), as a final settlement of the ootroverey, if in tended and sustained by the Republican mem bere. "Hence the sole responsibility of our disa. greement, and the only difficulty in the way of an amicable adjustment, is with the Republi can party." PRICE TWO CENTS. Republicans will surely not discredit one whom they so frequently eulogize and from whom they occasionally quote. Mr. Douglas boldly charged the responsibility on them, and they had not the hardihood to deny it. In February, 1863, Horace Greeley wrote a leader for the Tribune, in which appears the following: "Speaking for ourselves, we can honestly say that for the old Union, which was kept in existence by Scuthetu Inenttoes and Northern concessions, we have no regrets and no wish for its reconstruction. "Who wants a Union which is nothing but a sentiment to lacquer Fourth of July orations withal " If by chance, in ancient times, the crimi nal felt the loathsome corpse, which justice had tied upon his shoulders, lipping off—he did not, we fancy, ory out : 'Oh wretched man that I am l who will fasten me again to the body of this death V If we are, in the provi dence of God, to be delivered from unnatural alliances—if the January of slavery is no lon ger to chill, by natural embraces, the May of human hope, who is there weak and wicked enough to forbid the righteous divorce ?" Dr. 0. A. Brownson, whom the Abolitionists last year ran for Congress in the district of New Jersey, opposite New York City, said in his well-known Review for July : " It is no secret now that the leaders of the Republican party were prepared, if they could not retain the border slave States, to let South Carolina and the Gulf go, and form, if they chose, an independent confederacy." "I will continue to experiment no longer, it is all madness, Let the Slaveholding Union go, and slavery will go with the Union down into the dust. If the Church is against dis union, and not on the side of the slave, then I pronounce it as of the devil. I say, let us cease striking hands with thieves and adultery and give to the winds the rallying cry, 'no union with slaveholders, socially or religiously, and up with the flag of disunion.' " Wm. L. Garrison. Mr. Bingham, of Ohio, the Chairman, of the Judiciary Committee of the House, in a remarkable speech made by him at the same session, says: ""Who in the name of God, wants the Cotton States this side perdition, to remain in the Union, if slavery is to continue ? "The Union as it was will never bless the vision of any pro-slavery fanatic or amnion sympathizer, and it never ought to. It is a thing of the past, bated by every patriot and destined never to curse an honest people, or blot the page of history again." " The fact can no longer be disguised that many of the Republican Senators desire war and disunion, under pretext of saving the Union. They wish to get rid of the Southern States, in order to have a majority in the Sen ate to confirm the appointments, and many of them think- they can hold a Republican ma jority in the Northern States, but not in the whole Union ; for partisan reasons they are anxious to dissolve the Union, if it can be done without holding them responsible before the people."—Stephen A. Douglas, in the U. S. Sen ate, Dec. 25, 1860. From a speech of Cassius M. Clay while the President was persuing a conservative policy. " Better recognize the Southern Confederacy at once, and stop this effusion of blood, than to continue in this ruinous policy or have even a restoration of the Union." " If the cotton States become satisfied that they can do better out of the Union than in it, we insist on letting them go in peace. The right to secede may be a revolutionary one, but it exists nevertheless. * * * 4 , We must ever resist the right of any State to remain in the Union and nullify or defy the laws thereof. To withdraw from the Union is quite another matter; and whenever a considers• ble section of our Union shall deliberately re solve to go out, we shall resist all coersive measures to keep it in. We hope never to live in a government where one section is pinned to another with bayonets."—New York Tribune, Nov. 9, 1860. Also the following from the N. Y. Tribune, of December 17, 1860 "If it (the Declaration of Independence) jus tified the secession from the British Empire, of three millions of colonists in 1776, we do net see why it would not justify the secession of five millions of Southrons from the Union in 1861. If we are mistaken on this point, why does, not some one attempt to show wherein and why ? For our own part, while we deny the right of slaveholders to hold slaves against the will of the latter, we cannot see how twenty millions of people can rightfully hold ten or even five millions in a detested Union with them by military force. fiff seven er eight contiguous States Stall present themselves authentically at Washing ton, saying, "We hate the Federal Union; we have withdrawn from it; we give you the choice betwon acquiescing in our secession and arranging amicably all incidental ques tions on one side, and attempting to subdue us on the other—we could not stand up for co ercion and subjugation, for we do not think it -would be right. We hold the right of self, government sacred, even when invoked in be half of those who deny it to others. "If ever seven or eight States send agents to Washington to say, "We want to get out of the Union," we shall feel constrained by our de votion to human liberty to say, let them go ! And we do not see how we could take the other side wiihout coming in direct conflict with those rights of Men which we hold paramount to all political arrangements, however conveni ent and advantageous." The same paper in February last declared, that if, in the next ensuing ninety days, the rebels should not be whipped the Federal gov ernment should make with them "the best at tainable peace." "When the same paper urged a barbarous warfare that would be a reproach to the nation and the age, and stir the niOet bitter hatred in the Southern people against the loyal States and the government, it meant disunion. When it demanded, with unparalleled inso lence, an emancipation proclamation from the President in the name of twenty millions, it meant disunion. When it pressed the extreme measures of Abolitionism upon Congress, it meant dis union. When it says to Jeff. Davis and the Confede rate leaders, continue the struggle until the first of May and we will then separate, it means disunion. What has the administration and Congress meant in the adoption of its policy ? Were they blind ? Will history be so charitable as to excuse their fatal errors on the ground that their want of comprehension absolved them from criminality ? Now when the mask has been thrown aside by the Garrison Abolition ists, and they have proclaimed their ultimatum of war till May and then disunion, can the ad ministration continue the policy of these Abo. lition disunionists and hope to escape the criminality which that policy involves ?—Thur /ow Weed—ln the Albany Evenav Journal. PUBLISHED EVERY MOUNIN. IItriDAYS BEOZPVID BY 0. BARRETT it 30 TiE DAILY PATRIOT AND MHOS will be eer►et to orb. Northers residing in the Borough for TIN osmrs rma wasz, PaYeble to the Carrier. Mail subscribers, rive noLLMIS Pie ANXIng. THE WHItLY Pieatee AIM UNION is palstielked alive not.tcaa ran ANNIIIII, invariably in advance.. Ten eople to one address, Moen dollars Connected with this establishment , n extensive TON OFFICIO, containing avariety of plain and fancy type, uneouilled by any establiehment in the interior of the State, for which the patronage of the public' is BO INSURRECTIONARY DOCTRINES OF THE ABOLITION LEADERS-MASSACRE AND BLOODSHED ENDORSED AND ADVOCA TED. I tell you, fellow-citizens, the Harper's Ferry outbreak was the legitimate consequence of the teachings of the Republican party.— Senator Wilson, of Hassachusetts—Speech at Sy racuse, October 28, 1859. The Hon. Robt, C. Winthrop, late Speaker Jr! the National House of RepreeentatiVee, On his return from Europe, uttered the following proof of the true character of John A. An drews, who was elected Governor of Massa chusetts because of his complicity with the attempted massacre of Virginia women and children ; Mr. Winthrop says : "I shall not soon forget the emotions with which I received, at Vienna, last November, the first tidings of that atrocious affair at Harper's Ferry. I think there could have been no true American heart in Europe at that moment, that did not throb and thrill with horror at that announce ment. But I confess to have experienced emetione hardly MP (loop or diotrooolog When I read; not long afterwards, an account of a meeting in this very hall, I believe, at which the gallows at Charlestown, in Virginia, was likened to the Cross en Calvary, and at which it was openly declared that the ringleader of that desperate and wicked conepiraoywas right. Sir, if it had been suggested to me then, that, before another year had passed away, the pre siding officer at that meeting would have been deliberately nominated by the Republican party of Massachusetts for the Chief Magis tracy of the Commonwealth, I should have re pelled the idea as not within the prospect of belief—as utterly transcending any pitch of extravagance which even the wildest and Meet ultra members of that party had ever pre pared us to anticipate. " But the nomination is before us, (and An drews was elected). I should be false to every impulse of my heart, if being here at all this evening—if opening my lips at all during this campaign—l did not utter my humble protest —as one to whom the cause of Christianity and social order is dear, as one who would see the word of God and the laws of the land_ re spected and obeyed—if I did not enter my humble and earnest protest against such an attempt to give the seeming sanction of the people of Massachusetts to sentiments so impi ous and abominable." John A. Andrews, Governor of Massachu setts, presided at a John• Brown sympathy meeting on the 19th November, 1859, at which Wendell Phillips and H. W. Emerson made speeches. He, too, made the speech above re ferred to, and from it we make the following extract John Brown and his companions in the conflict at Harper's Ferry, those who fell there and those who are to suffer upon the scaffold, are victims and martyrs to an idea. There is an irrepressible conflict [great applause] be tween freedom and slavery as old and as im mortal as the irrepressible conflict between right and wrong. They are among the mar tyrs of that conflict. John Brown was right. I sympathize with the idea, because I wipe. thize with and believe in the eternal right. They who are dependant upon him and his sons and his associates, in the battle of Harper's Ferry, have a right to call upon us who have professed to believe, or who may have, in any manner or measure, taught the doctrine of the rights of man as applied to the colored slaves of the South, to stand by their bereavement. We are to-night in the presence of a great and awful sorrow, which has fallen like a pall upon many families whose hearts fail, whose affec tions are lacerated, and whose hopes are crushed—all of hope left on earth destroyed by an event which, under the providence of God, I pray will be overruled for that good which was contemplated and intended by John Brown." Yet "impious and abominable" as it was, Andrews WAO elected Governor of Massachu mite because he said "John Brown was right," and one of his Abolition papers, the Pine and Palm, published in Boston, says : "We would beeitate at no conceivable atrocity, we would spare neither parlor nor cradle, neither age nor sex, did we believe that they must perish in order that negro slavery might perish with them." We next quote from the Winstead (Connecti cut) Herald, a strong Republican paper: "For one, we confess we love him, we honor him, we applaud him. He is honest in his principles, courageous in their defence, and we have yet to be taught, reading from the Book of Inspiration we acknowledge, how and wherein old John Brown is a transgressor. " Be dared to undertake what you (the Re publican leaders) in the security of your sane • turns, only are bold to preach." "If I am elected Governor of Ohio, and I expect to be, I wiU not let any fugitive be re turned to Kentucky or any other slave State; and if I cannot prevent it any other way, as Commander-in-Chief of the military of the State, I will employ the bayonet, so help me God."—Gov. Dennison, of Ohio. "On the action of this convention" (the con,. vention which nominated Fremont,) "depends the fate of the country. If the Republicans fail st the balicit- We Will be forced to drive back the slaveocracy with fire and the sword." —Gen. James Watson Webb, the present Minister to Brazil. "I sincerely hope a civil war may burst upon this country. I want to see American slavery abolished in my day. It is a legacy I have no wish to leave my children. Then my most fer vent prayer is that England, France and Spain may speedily take this slavery-accursed nation into their especial consideration, tind when the time arrives for the streets of the cities of this land of the free and the home of the brave to run with blood to the horse', bridle, if the writer tie living, there will be one heart to re joice at the retributive justice of Heaven.-- W. 0. Duvall, of .New York, a leading Republi can politician. "We urge, therefore, unbending determina tion on the port of Northern members twine to this intolerable outrage," [Kansas bill] "and demand of them, in behalf of peace, in behalf of freedom, in behalf of justice, and and humanity, resistance to the last. Better that confusion should ensue ; better that dis cord should reign in national councils; better that Congress should break up in wild disor der ; nay, better that the Capital itself should blaze by the torch of the incendiary, or fall and bury all its inmates beneath its crumbling ruins, than that this wrong and perfidy should be finally accomplished."--Horace Greeley. Prom tho;Helpor Book 11. Slaveholders I It is for you to decide whether we are to have justice peaceably or by violence, for whatever consequences may follow, we are determined to have it, one way or the other. --Page 128. 4.. Against slaveholders, as a body, we (that is, the Republican signers and endorsers) wage an exterminating war.—. Page 120, 6. Slaveholdere are nuisances, and it is one imperative duty to abate the nuisances; we propose, therefore, to exterminate slavery,