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Nl' 4 :s: A ..I'7-, .. : , • lA,. 4‘.v.,4 : :1;:kt : c:: ' : - :,;fieit l ,SVt. if 4e k •:.?4•N''k' .; k 6S. l lo.f.kliii:,' • I.:4„ Akj i:; * s fl 4 l;!: - .:74 - Nit44, 4 ~,itm4 . ~,a,..1,...,_. „,.„4.11,4.it:: ~,..,p,..4,,,,..„,,,,... 4,4.,4cf,„4„.r.,,,x., .:::„:4,,„,..,%454,i1.;t k ..-4 `4':',;;•`41.',%*,,'1'`,.-4, 4p:l'lft I --' :' g'l. '' ' ' ; ' '4 ' . : . ;7 -' 7 i:i ' i l . - . 41 . '. 1 *- :1•,:41*‘: " ..li.l A. ..-..,.,,,„-q,,,i,t,c,..,r t,"„g44.„.„.., . ,,, x -4,- . ,- ..! . ..,% , !1p,, , ,i,:i. v g - :‘ 4 1 ‘ „ii. ' ! 1 .,:,,1f . : • .14 • ,; 4.:! . ;, - .:.i. , .. 7 - :•:'i . ".;;: , : , ::;' , ':`,. ;:‘,..;!,) *44- :-:" 44 1 4 '• t' ' 7.4' '''.:- .• `-.' ' .., • .:• .` '..4 ..0 ; . ' 4 ..,' ' ; s.;'; ; i.• 1.i . 1 ... I =':'' , 4 -...,‘: .^ =ME MEM t,'•,;;=•: 'The Traitor Yatianctiglians. 1. ;" •'' ;- - 'The pltotroesh Post ig a great admirer -.of .Vallardighaaa. It A469f; with the "' ' ; ' 7 : -- fattiest ,or epithets, itery Vrominent Be- publican patriot whose loyalty is unques , -,, • - . . .. '''' ' - :. ,;..; • . "..- 1 ,:,7, , , tioned, and unquestionable; bat for; -pooh kit "... -': ;_.• . . men as Cowan, and' Valhindighom, and -.. ..' 1 m '- '6 , 1 ,' '-'' ' . - \- ... - 11 , 451 ' ''' '' - ' the tenderest sympathies In th is f . ' '' -.:." 1 ~‘..-5,- ---.. ,- --- .'" ,- .7 - ":; ' ------ , ' . . . . . ' - '1: N.- - - - ,:...s . ia:Ogo saint popular man ixt Becessps !LOW, X, : ' • •' . etiUdalear lines. If ho shbuidmieit -Bich :mood before McClelland does,they: sOsuld .r... , :,4 4':i.... , give him an oration, and Balt.liite;toi;:pte I .: ''''' 1 ':''' -:: -2 : . best and boldest defender of ' th eir Vans!., . -- -:!.... ••;'' .-'-'- r . 7" 4 1- . • , . .', . ; :f . .4.!...:- .- `f.V . .' .. '.- '. . - ' .:,- .., , • YC. 1/111 7 Y - / 14 Vitishurgh :05azettq. TUESDAY MORNING, JUNE 17 purinsuce Or • resolatbrii, adopted by tlie RE • PUBLICAN EXECUTIVE COIIIIITTEE OP. AL - LEGUENY COUNTY, nt their inserting bell on Sat' 'tidily, May filth, IE2, notice . to hereby given thit FRIBAS! MEETINGS will be held lathe various - Wads' %roughs cad Township" Of thwComity, at the usual places of holding elections In each Pre dart, on SATIBIDAY, JUNE Ms; 1862., for the ' eleettonbf TWO . DELEGATES 'trout each Pricinet; - to ' a Conasation, to be held. on tbo FOLLOWING , Tins Couvaition. vtol.. 11.1118mble ISONDAY„ lONE 23, 1.3f3, at the COGIPC HOUSE, at II o'clxk a; to nominate: a 'PRESIDENT: 'JUDGE or coM1101; PLE&S. , ASSOCIATE• 'LAW JUDGE OF CODITION PLEAS, 30., and a COUNTY, CONTROLLER. and to duct DELEGATES to the STATLRE PUB L I CAN CUICVYNTION;to be held In 3 LT, D3C2. • The Primary lifoetinge In the towneldpi,will be held between the bows of 3 And 6 p. m., and In tee cities -tad • Wrought between 3 soil 7 p. m., of ThArippointment Of the &negates in the twin ahipe will marking, And In the elfin, and tor atighe.by. ballot. — . • J. R. DRAYS, Chairmen. 'S Sctintisb JW., Secretary. The Post in Hyeterics. pn Saterilay morning the Pittsburgh Pont exhibited every symptom of an hys terical attack. We were surprised, having always considered this disease of a-pecu- !fairly womanly type, and but ill-adapted to the Manly constitution of a democratic edillr. We aiwitys knew, indeed, that the Rost had as Much billingsgate at command, and s'eerned to delight as much in the use 'of it, as any old fish-wife in that famous Markettfrom which this unsavory commod ity derives its name,—or even as the fa mous Mrs. Moriarty herself. We kneir that our contemporary had long. been approxi mating•to this - worst„phase of feminine temper: and• talent;'but we considered that it was merely a coincidencewhat Sir' Bethnal Romilly probably would have sailed eta remarkable instance of strange 'coinci dence"—without implying any closer or more unsecountable approximation. Sat urday. Morning, however, betrays-far more than the. usual compound of peevishness and fre Unities's, shamelessness and vulgarity -IViticli_go to make up th - eold, familiar staple 'of editor ddlbillingsgate in the columns of the 'Post. fonti. it has come .to hysteria, . . ' with thil . poet. old termagant; for such -ravings 'as the following are too incoherent even for the most ill-tempered vixen to utter, unless she were hysterical •' • The Pittsburgh Gazette, utter a Year's frothy and senseless -declamation in favor of every wild suggestion favorable to the sudden ells . -Canon of the slave population of the South to an equality with — Whito min yesterday, for some reason or other, , changed its tactics, by announcing that: "Ti. emaaciliation -of the; white r ace from tke meal effects of the curei of a/decry u the .ehief object we have is oisw.:'" t; The ,inconceivable=-indacity. of . this an nouncement -is increcUblek f'emancipate the • white race from the awful effects of the curse of slavery" by setting loose among them four - millions of sieves. - ,The ecidorsement ef Wen doll Phillips' monstrous conceptions; the rtifdin . dennneiations of every Man who does not folios!, Sumner in ;his revolting schemes for negro, erfality, have all been exhibitions of 'en anxiety to *Ovate the4,r- white porde -tion-of the. South. To- What miserable drifts and_uses has Abolitionism descended ? Anz Tat), for the improvement ef the condition 01 the white man of the, South? Was the ad. 'lmlay of General. Hunter's order setting free one million of the most . debased vic lima of slavery in the States of South Carolina, Georgia and Florida, a way to serve theipoor whites residing in them t - Remember -the slave population of theie.coinmonwealths Is quite as great as that of the white; in some ,lectione the _Slaves number ten to one, and yet this infatuated - editor of the Gasette pro posts to "emancipate the whites" by letting loose among them this overwhelming crowd of ,klaita.' Will the reader reflect an instant `upon the inetedible and transparent false -I:toed?' Iniagina the hordes of swanning Asia, • spreading devastation wherever their - savage legloas penetrated; think of a brutal 'rand uldibensed.eoldie4, in a conquered coon ktY,:lustieufing beauty and booty," and .yon '. : can theit forma faint conception of the hor -; tors with which the "white race" of Hunter's :distriet would have been - :visited had habeen' permitted to enfokas 'his order. No place, however sacred, would have saved oar race, in these States, from-the most beastly eZCOBSISIS and outrages. The reflection is absolutely appalling. 'These. million of semi-savages, the most debased upon the continent, some of whom have been imported from Africa, if set free, would faro ish the World a chapter of hot ..rors unsurpassed in atrocity since brutality be `„ gun. Blabs and female and evert childhood areuld alike becoino th'e 'victims of rapine, outrage and blood.: And 'yet the Gazette ad , aerated'a Polley calculated to entail these tart tors , upon a Million of while .peoplerthree fourths of whom are women and ,children. Trimly it Is for tho • "einancipatiOn •of the white race, from the awful effects of-the . curse of:slavery," ''Oh; shamol where is thy blush?" - We have quoted the whole tirade, for the amusement of our readers: Of course it 'Will-excite no other feeling, unless perhaps' a little r pity for human degradation, arid the debaning effects of. forsaking the truth . 'of God , for the sake of maintaining the lie , . of-a party. • it were conceivable that such a writer ehould so soon have a "lucid interval," we would .ask him to-day ,how hecan dare de,: scribe the slave-system, which ho mind hik - part); have for so many years protected and . fostered, as 'peopling the Staten ,where. it prevails, al ‘.'eenu-savages?' But though 'etteh might hate been the.direful effects of 'that system upon the Black Race,. for the - , , preset:it it is notorious that all those brutal effects havebesn, by some retributive dispejtsation of Heaven, rather visited upon the whites, who are universally represented: 'bit,b6o beat 'acquainted with. reseli . „ • condition' of • the South, as sunk far below tithe deePhted Biacks in - savage ferocity and 'barbiziettt— . -a testimony which the ex,pe - , rienee - of our soldiers will fully bear out. - • 'But we do`not purpose to argue any part