a. A. IIARKER, Editor and Proprietor, j. TODD IIlITCIIItfSOX, I'ublislier. I WOULD RATHER BE RIGHT THAN PRESIDENT. Hsxby Cut. TERMS: f?" 1EIUAV31 t $i.5o is advance; VOLUME 4. DIRECTORY. LIST OF IOST OFFICES. Post Offices. Beiia's Creek, IJethel Station Chess Springs, Cresson, Post Masters. JJistncts. Joseph Graham, Voder. Enoch Reese, Llacklick. William M. Joues, Carroll. Danl. Litzinger, Chest. Wm. W. Young, Washint'n. iubensburg John Thompson, Ebensburg. Fallen Timber, Isaac Thompson, White. (l!itzin, J- M. Christy, Gallitzin. He-nloek, W'm. M'Gough, Washt'n. Johnstown, I. E. Chandler, Johnst'wii. Loretto, Mineral Point, Minister, Pershing, Plattsville, Uoseland, St. Augustine, Scalp Level, Soniuan, tsuinmei'hill, Siiin:uit, Wiluiore, I'. Shields E. YVissinger, A. Durbln, Loretto. Concm'gh. Munster. Francis Clement, Conem'gh. Andrew J Ferral, Susq'han G. W. Bowman, White. Wni. Ryan, Sr., Clearfield. George Conrad, Richland U. M'Colgan, Washt'n. 15. F. Slick, Croyle. Miss M. (llllespit, Washt'n. .Morris Keil, S'inerhill. Presbyterian Rkv. D. ILvbison, Pustor. Preaching every Sabbath morning at 10.J o'clock, and in the evening at 3 o'clock. Sab bath School at 1 o'clock, A. M. Prayer meet lur cverv Thursday evening at C o'clock. 'Methodist Episcopal Church -Rev . S. T. Show, Preacher in charge. Rev. W. Long, Assis tant. Preaching every Sabbath, alternately at 10$ o'clock in the morning, or 7 in the evening. Sabbath School at H o'clock, A. M. Prayer meeting every Thursday evening, at 7 o'clock. Welch Independent Rev Ll. R. Powell, Pastor. Preaching every Sabbath morning at 10 o'ciock, and in the evening at 6 o'clock, isabbath School at 1 o'clock, P. M. Prayer meeting o:i the first Monday evening of ech month ; and on every Tuesday, Thursday and Friday evening, excepting the tirst week in vac ii mouiu. Laloini.itic .Methodist VLkv. John Williams, Pastor. Preaching every Sabbath eveuiug at 2 and 0 o'clock. Sabbath" School at 10 o'clock, A. M Praver meeting every Friday evening, at 7 o'clock. Society every Tuesday evening t 7 o'clock. Disciple Uev. W. Lloyd. Pastor. Preach in.' every Sabbath morning at. 10 o'clock. Particular Dap ists IIe . David Jenkins, Pastor. Preaching every Sabbath evening at 3 o'clock. Sabbath School at at 1 o'clock, P. M. Catholic Rev. M. J. Mitchell, Pastor. Services every Sabbath morning at 10$ o'clock and Vespers at 4 o'clock in the evening. EEESSISlttCi JIAILS. MAILS ARRIVE. Extern, daily, at 10 o'clock, A Western, at 9 o'clock, P M. MAILS CLOSE. Eastern, daily, at A o'clock. P. M. Western, " at 8 o'clock, P. M. fiegrl'he. mails from ButIer,Indiana,Stronffs t wn, ic, arrive on Thursday oi each week, at 5 o'clock, P. M. Leave Ebensburg on Friday of each week, at 8 A. M. The mails from Newman's Mills, Car rolltown, &c, arrive on Monday, Wednesday aud Friday of each week, at 3 o'clock, P. M. Leave Ebensburg on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays, at 7 o'clock, A. M. RAILHOiD SCIJEIii'LE. CRESSOX STATION. West Exnress Train leaves at 8.51 A. M. Fast Line " " Mail Train " East Express Train 44 8.5G P. M. 7.35 P M. 7.42 P. M. 12.17 P. M. 6.50 A.M. Fast Line 44 14 Mail Train WILMORE STATION. West Express Train leaves at Fast Line 44 " Mail Train 9.13 A. M. 9.18 P. M. 8.09 P. M. 7.20 P. M. East Express Trair 44 " Fast Line K " Mail Train 44 11.55 P. 6.23 A. M. M. COOTY OFFICERS. Judges of ths Courts President, lion. Geo. Taylor, Huntingdon; Associates, George W. tasley, Henry C. Devine. Prothonotary--Joseph M' Don aid. R';ji't-r and Recorder Ed.vard F. Lytle. Sheriff John Buck. District Attorney. Philip S. Noon. Counti Commissioners D. T. Storm, James Cooper, Peter J. Little. Tr iiamrer Thomas Callin. Poor Utuse Dirertors lacob Horner, Wil liam Douglass, George Delany. Poor Jlouse Treasurer. George C K. Zahm. Poor House Steward. James J. Kaylor. Mi-reantile Appraiser John Farrell. Ah litors John F. Stall, Thomas J. Nel son, Edward R Donnegan. County Surveyor. E. A. Vlckroy. Coroner. -James S. Todd. Sup't. of Common Schools Wm. A. Scott. EIIEXSKI'KG ISOR. OFFSCERf. Justices of the Peace. David H. Roberts Harrison Kinkead. Burgess George Huntley. school. Directors E. J. Mills. Dr. John M. Jo nes, Isaac Evans. ' east ward. Constable Thomas Todd. Town CouncilW'm. Davis, Daniel J. Davis, J. Waters, John Thompson, Jr., David W. Jones. Inspectors John W. Roberts. L. Rodgcra. Judge of Election Thomas J. Davis. Assessor Thomas P Davis. WEST WAUD. Constable M. M. O'Neill. Town Council William Kittell, H. Kinkead, William "nStn' EdwArd D' KvaQ8 Thomas J. Inspectors J. D. Thomas, Robert Evans. Jl.e of Election John Llovc. Richird T. Davii. EBENSBIIRG, PA., THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1862. Little Feet. Up with the sun at, morning, Away to the garden he hits, To see if the sleepy. blossoms Have bgun to open their ejes. Running a race with the wind, With a step as light and fleet, Under my window I hear The patter of little feet. This child is our "speaking picture," A birdling that chatters and sings, Sometimes a Bleeping cherub (Our other one has wings.) IIi3 heart is a charmed casket, Full of all cunning and sweet, And no harp-strings hold such mu3ic As follows his tinkling feet. When the glory of sunse. opens The highway by angels trod, And seems to unbar the city. Whose Builder and Maker is God, Close to the crystal portal3 I see, by the gates of pearl, The eyes of our other angel A twin born little girl. " I asked to be taught and directed To guide his footsteps aright, So that I be accounted worthy To walk in sandals of light ; And hear, amid songs ot welcome From messengers trusty and lleet, On the starry lioor of Heaven The patter of little feet. '1 1 m On tlie HJglats Ifaritei-'s Ferry. A correspondent of the New York Tri bune gives the following graphic sketch of the eceuery and various points of in terest" in the vicinity of Harper's Ferry, Virginia: "The view from the mountains at Harper's Ferry," said Jefferson, 4is worth a journey across the Atlantic." Let us purchase it at the lower price of climbing Maryland Hights. Bowc through Harper's Ferry, where the ruined walls, astonishing street-angles, quaint old Catholic Church perched upon tlie hill, wooden shutters, and low stoue houses half buried in the earth, recall some ancient Mexican city. Through the trestle work under the railroad ; by the sentry, who examines your pass; across the narrow pontoon bridge, where the dry planks on their anchored flat-boats give a hoilow rattle under your horse's feet, and you arc in Maryland. Over the canal, then a sharp turn to the left, up the river, along the shell road barely wide enough for two wagons. A deep gorge, cut through the Blue Kidge in some primeval period, when the Poto mac was an ocean torrent. Oa the right, abrupt rocks, ri.sing two hundred feet, overhang your head a continuous sword or JJamocle3. r ar up are great caves, gaping mouths iu the rugged face, worn by the wash of waves in tluse ages when deep answered unto deep. On the summit one huge block has somewhat the contour of a' human lace the Old Man of the Mountains. Diagonally to. the right, and your pant ing horse climbs the steep wagon road, over the rocks, through the dense woods. A great open field half -way up the mountain. Here is a battery, with its bottle shaped Dahlgrcns, sure at 3,500 yards, capable, at their utmost elevation, of three and a half miles ; its black, slim Parrotts, with iron-baiided breech, and its shiniug howitzers of brass. Some are the guns which were spiked and rolled down the hill at Ford's most shameful evacuation; others have been brought up since from Harper's Ferry. Bach conical tent of the garrison is set upon a circle of upright logs rising three feet above the ground, "chinked" and plastered. wth mud. Iu the center within is a fire place, with one covered trench leading in fo ventillation, and another passing out on the opposite side to cany off the smoke. The occupants are well protected against the bitter breath of Winter. A third of a mile to the north are the white tents of the First Division of the Twelfth Corps Banks's heroes, who have melted away in so many trying marches and hard-fuught fields who have left their honored dead at Winchester and Front lloyal, at Cedar -Mountain, Bull Hun, and Autietam. Now their stricken ranks are filled up with fresh regiments, and under Gordon, who, rising from the colonelcy of the 2d Massachusetts, has won enviable repute throughout the army, they are again ready for the field. On again, up the lonely road, then to the left, climbing the brow ot tlie ridge, over stones and fallen trees, until the path tudded with tharp rocks, grows impracti cable for horses. Tie your steed to a stump, and continue on foot. ' Here, as on all the neighboring bights the commander has a severe attack of lignomania. The treesof chestnut and pine, have all been felled ; their trunks and branches are blazing and crackling, and your eyes are blinded with smoke. The entire mountain top is burn ing off, that do possible enemy may find cover for another attack. Here is a stockade and lookout, built by the llebels before our first ocupation. A few hundred yards beyond is the long breastwork of Miles 's men, where two companies repulsed a Hebel regiment. How high the tide of war must run when its ebbiug and flowing waves wash this mountain-top ! You are on the extreme summit. Here is an open tent of the signal corps labelled: "Don't Touch the Instrumknts. Ask no Questions." Inside, two operators are azintir at distant bights, through fixed telescopes, and calling out 445, 441C9," "81," &c, which a clerk records. Each number represents some letter, sylla ble or abbreviated woru. Look through the g'ass, at one of the seveu signal stations, from four to tweutv miles distaut, which commuuicate witli this. Yu ee a flag of white ground, with some large black figure upon the centre. It dips and ries ; so many waves to the right, so many to the left ; then a different flag takes its place and dips and ries in turn. These combinations form a perfect svstem of telegraphing, by which from one to 'three words per minute arc J transmitted. I his operator signals to the one at headquarters : "200 Uebel cavalry riding out of Charlestown this way ; field piece on road, just this side;" and it oc cupies five minutes. Five miles is an easy distance to signal; but messages cau be sent between stations twenty miles apart. The signal corp3 keeps on the front, and their services are often of great value. Our troops in ta king possession here a mouth ago, came up in line of battle, with skirmishers out, to pounce upou any remaining enemy. Arriving here, they were soiuewhat cha grined to fiud the flags flying, and learn that these telegraphic pioneers, close upon the heels of the llebels, had been signal ing from the summit for twenty-four hours. You are on the highest point of the Blue Ridge 1,400 feet above the sea, 1,000 above the Potomac, 400 above Loudon Heights. Up the rocky path by which you came cli Jibs a pouy ; on the pony's back a negro; on tbe negroes head a bucket of water. Behind comes a mule, with a coffee sack thrown over his back, and iu each end of it a keg of water. Thus all burdens are brought up. Here is a pyramidal lookout of logs, 25 feet high, built as children build cob houses. Climbing to the top, you have an unobsiructcd view. In the early morning here you could only look out upon a iold, white, shoreless sea ef fog. Now, what a ,rand panorama ! You look down into all the country withiu a radius of twenty miles, as you look down into the great South Park, 75 miles in length, from that peerless standpoint, the summit of Pike's Peak, or a3 you gaze into your gardeu from your own housetop. The circle in your sweep of vision, forty miles in diameter, is - divided into four parts like the face of the compass the Blue Itidge crossing" it from noith to south, the Potomac from wet to cast. Face toward the east. To your right stretches the summit of the Blue Itidge. Loudon Heights, ouly a continuation of thee, seem distant hardly a" stone's throw. You see no hint of any break in the summit. But they are a mile away, and the Potomac in its deep, hidden gorge, rolls between. In the tents scattered over them are the troops of the second division of the twelfth corps under Oeary, who as Governor of -Kansas, iu the days of Frauklin Pierce, made the acquaintance of the same slave power he is lighting now. Before you winds the Potomac, its glassy surface broken by shrubs, rocks and islands; the canal fringing its left bank like a faint liue of silver; the villa ges of Weaverton and Knoxville, and the lonely stone piers of the destroyed Berlin bridge. There the river plunges into the green, wooded hills and is lost to view. Ten miles away near Point of llocks, it reappears a straight, smooth, flashing bar of light. To the left of it Sugar Loaf Mountain ; and still further, sweep ing around toward the north, dim, hazy hills bouud the view. At your feet lies Pleasant Valley a smooth, symmetric trough, scooped out of the mountain a great furrow, five miles in length acrvss irom edge to edge. Itie full of camps white villages of tents, with their streets and pquartb, and black groups of batteries ; but the tcene is pas toral rather than martial. You look down into the valley of white dwellings, with 'great, well-filled barns; of red brick mills ; of straw-colored plowed fields, dot ted with shocks of corn, aud jutting far up into the dark, hill side woods ; of greeu sward fields, mottled with orchards, shade trees and browsing cattle, threaded a lit tle, shining stream A dim haze rests on the mountain-guarded picture ; and the soft wind seems to sing with Whittier : "Vet calm and patient, Nature keeps Her ancient promise well, Tho' o'er her bloom and greenness sweeps The battle's breath of hell. "And still she walks in golden hours Through harvest-happy farms; And still she wears her fruit aud flowers, Lite jewels on her arms. "Still in the cannon's pause we bear Her sweet thauksgiving psalm, Too near to God for doubt or fear, She shares the eternal calm."' There are the regiments on dress pa rade ; long, double lines of dark blue, with bright bayouets flashing iu the waning sunlight. Each, as it is dismissed, breaks into companies, which move off towards their quarters by the flack looking from here like dark, monstrous - antediluvian reptiles of many legs. Upon a distant hillside, just on the edge of the forest a modest group of tents, are Burnside's headquarters. You see, through your field-glass, standing in frout of them the Major-General himself ; the military man with a limit to his ambition, who refused to accept the chief command of the army. Buruside, the favorite of the troops, in his blue shirt, knit jacket, and riding boots, with his fiue, frank, face, and his full, laughing eye. Further to the left, iu the midst of the valley, you note a dense little village of tents. They are 31'Clellau' headquar ters. At the time of Stuarts raid they were on the other side of the mountain, away from all the troops. The dashing Itebel passed ouly five cr six miles frm them, but he did not know what a prize was within his grasp. The next day headquarters were removed to their pres ent location. In the valley, tho sun is setting ; the shadows, a mile lonjr, have crept half across it. Here, on the hights, we have a longer lease of day. To the north-east rises a solitary church spire, cut uff ni'.dway by an intervening mountain. It iiddletown, Md., 12 miles distant. To the north and west, your eye sweeps around over a level section of country, with thrifty farm-houses and col umus of rising smoke, past Frederick, Boousboro', Sharpsbarg, and Williams port, to tlie Potomac. South of it, the conspicuous buildings of Shephardstown, Mai tiuburg ; Charlestown, behind its narrow fringe of woods ; our balloon cf observation high in the air, but still far below you ; and so your eye reaches the Shenandoah, at the foot of Loudon Heights, disappearing toward the south-west. Nearer, under your very feet, are Boli- . var Heights, looking not like a hill, but broad plateau; crowned with the tents of Couch's corps, dinged by their long cam paigns, like a spring snowdrift through which the dirt is beginning to sift. Leadin: to .them is the steep street through the village of Bolivar, which . here seems perfectly level ; theu Harper's Ferry, and glimpses of the Potomac, i goMening iu the sunset, with trees, rocks, and walls mirrored in its mellow face. The sun disappears ; the gold of the western hills turns to silver; the evening air is cold and pieicing. You de sceend the hights, and relapse into the routine of daily life; but the picture you have seen is one which memory paints iu fast colors. One Thousand Loyal Indians in Council. From headquarters wc learn that Col. Chipman, chief of General Curtis' staff and who is ou a tour of inspection iu Kansas, recently attended a council of over one thousand Indian refugees at Le Boy. O-po-the-to-he-lo was the leading spirit. The Indians insist on fighting the rebel Indians in their own way. Gen Pike's Indian' -may prepare for war, as tbey conimcuced it at Pea llidge. Impor tant movements are contemplated by the old chief Jlix&juri Democrat. Double Crop. An apple tree on tho premises of Samuel Pyle, Keunett town ship, Chester co., has produced two crops the present season. The first crop came forth in prjpcr time and was takeu off, when shortly after, the tree again blos somed and now the second crop of fruit has made its appearance. What is still more singular, nearly all the apples of the last crop are double. SS?" Orpheus C Kerr wishes to know why our people cannot realize that a na tion, like a cooking stove, cannot keep up a steady fire without a good Jiaft. 1 a sou lironuluiv a.1 Uiicago. One of the strongest and most effective speeches yet made by this energetic Teu nesseeau, since he made Lis escape from the rebels, was the one delivered at Chi cago a few days since. We make room for a few extracts : . 'Gentlemen, I take the ground that we are in the midst of a wicked rebellion, for which there is not and never haa been, auy just or sufficient cause. Aud I go further than this : I make my statement still stronger aud more emphatic we are in the midst of a rebellion for which there is net, and never has existed, even fhe shadow of a pretext. "Why do I say so? This Government of ours, in its present form, and under our most excellent Con stitution, has existed a little over seventy five years. During that time we have held m this country nineteen Presidential elections. In that period, we at the South don't forget my figures and don't forget my facts we at tbe South, with half the States and Territories you have at the North, with half your population, with half the electoral votes you have cast iu a Presidential contest, have elected the Pres ident thirteen times We have gracious ly condescended to allow you to elect six times. Not only so, but we re-elected, to fill a second term, five of our men at the South. Those five men occupied the Presidential chair twice to your once not content with having controlled the patronage and power of the Government twice to your once, we seized upou, appro priated and used, for the meanest and dirtiest of purposes, two or three of the six you had elected, who turned out to be 4Northern men with Southern princ'ples.' The last one of thoe that was made the cats-paw of, and the meanest oue of the whole crowd, by any odds, was the Old Public Functionary of Pennsylvania. Laughter. An old man whose heart and soul is with the rebellion. "That's true." I have canvassed the State of Pennsylvania. I have been in Lanca&ter, and all about over that country I have not talked with him. I have not got so low yet. But I conversed with reliable and intelligent Pennyivaniaus of high standing and integrity, who had conversed with him, to whom he said, "This war is all wrong; it ought to be stopped. We ought to stop it. We can never subdue this people. They are not the people to be conquer. J." And to on, evidently showing, by the tenor and tone of his conversation, that lie is with the enemy. The truth is, these leaders at the South are aud have been for years sick and tired of a Republican form of Government. I know it. I have known it all the time, in fact. A Republican Government never did exist in South Carolina. If the letter aud spiiit of the Constitution of the Uni ted States had been adhered to, she never could have been admitted in the Federal Union 25 a member thereof, for she never had a Constitution that was in letter, spir it or form Bcpublican. I have lived iu South Carolina. I have traveled exten sively there for years. Why, in their legislative assemblies, the serjeant-at-arms and a deputy or two, with cocked hats and sword, retire and bring in the Speaker cf the House, or Speaker of the Senate, who comes robed in enough black silk tu dress out in 11 the amplitude ot fashion any two ladies here, even in tiuies ot the most ex travagant hoops. The Sheriff accompa nying them, with cocked hat and sword, gives three rape upou the floor and cries, "Make way for 3'our Speaker 1" Then he marches grandiy hi and takes Lis scat. The same pompous forms arc observed with oue of their circuit judges, lie is conducted in iu the fame way. I have seen old Judge Butler, afterwards Sena tor, march iu with his sill robe en, pre ceded by his Sheriff and deputies, with cocLt-d hats and swords, crying, "Make way lor the Honorable Co'irt !" and ev erybody squatted like so many quails w hen a hawk is about. Laughter. Do you know that a man has to own so many negroes in South Carolina before he can either vote or occupy a heat iu the Legislature? The limit is ten. . Now, if you, as a South Carolinian, have nine val uable negroes worth nine thousand dollars, you cannot be admitted ; but if 1 have ten or cleveu little, yellow,. ashy piccaniuuies, brought out of an alligator swamp, and raised ou green persimmons. I cau take my seat, while you must stand back ! Almo-t the last thing that happened to me before the Rebels crushed yut my pa per was a challenge to fight a duel from a secessionist editor in the South, Louis li. Pope, a specimen of humanity who weighs ninety-five younds a worse looking man than Aleck Stephens. He supposed that, being a preacher and editor, 1 wouldn't fight, but he waked up the wrong passen ger. I aceepted his challenge, and wrote in the letter that, being the challenged NUMBER party, I had the fiijht to dictate weapons, time and place. It was then summer and hot weather. I said : "I elect that we fight immediately after the first hard rain that comes in a hog-pen. The weapons shall be two. large, four-pronged iron dung-forks, and whoever thall shovel the other out 'tdiall be regarded as having killed him in mortal combat Vocifi crous laughter. He replied that the. terms were jruel, iuhuman, . and roBrtary, to thfi laws of dueling, and he backed?" but.' And well he might," for he kuew that T could have shoveled him out in iess than no time.' fLauiihter.! '-' It is sheer nonsense to be raising all j this hue and cry through the lind against the Auministiauon and President Lincoln about the Emancipation Proclamation. - He proposes to jive the rebels n w in re bellion against this Government one bun? dred days of tirace to reflect and do their works over again, and return to the fold lrom winch they have strayed away. If' they do not choose to do that, he proposes to emancipate their negroes, and lie pro poses to pay loyal men for their property all any Union man, North or South, ought to ask, and it ought to be done. The rebels make the negroes an clement of strength in this rebellion. They havq them by hundreds of thousands at home raising bread and meat, while all the white men are conscripted and out fighting against this government. If Lincoln diej not take from them everything which lay in his power, which strengthens and ena bles them to carry on the war, he would 1 fjullty before GuJ cf 'perjury. I there fore endorse the proclamation. "Oh! but it's unconstitutional V -Where does that cry come from ? Is it from loyal men ? Cries of "No ! no I" No ! it Comes from these sympathizers with the rebellion. - The Constitution troubles their consciences now. Ladies and gentlemen, the rebels by their.course of conduct have made that expedient, proper and constitutional, which, if they had behaved themselves would have been wholly inexpedient, improper and uncon stitutional the issuing of that proclama tion. It is a war measure. It is necea-t sary, it is constitutional and right. I say confiscate everything they've got. To emancipate their negroes, and drive the last scoundrel ot the rebels down into tbe Gulf of Mexico, as the devil did the hogi into the sea. But I find a class of men in all the Northern States where I have been in sympathy with this rebellion, and they.' might be so and behave themselves ; but they go farther they meddle and throw obstacles in the way of recruiting, and in every possible or conceivable way they attempt to retard the operations of the1 . army and the Government. - . ' i ' Gen. Rosccrans on flic Crisis . The following is an extract from a letter written by Gen. W. S. 'Rosccrans, at the headquarters of the army of the Mississ ippi, July 20th, 18G2. Gen. Roseorans is a Catholic, and a devout believer in tho testimony of Gregory XVI, concerning the "hatefulness and wickedness of human slavery." Gen. R., says : .. "For more than a year we have been engaged in this struggle, into which an -arrogant and dictatorial slave oligarchy has driven a trte, happy and peaceful ' people, fighting for the rights of all; With true bravery and invincible patifcnceV our citizen soldiers have stood . ot .this . ground to the present moment, ..agaiiist violators of the laws of war and humanity,. Remaining true to their principles," they have said by words and actions to their fel-; low-citizens in the South, wc fiiht for common rights. If we win, you win. If the Government is maintained, y.ou will dwell under its protecting shadow as freely as we. And there we stand, and thus' we" say to-day. ' - "But if the Confederates prevail, fare well peace and safety to us ; farewell freedom, forever! Their principles aud," leaders are known to us. They cheateTi as. crying out no coercion; holdin'g 'oikt fake hopes and deceitful-assurance's :Kf friendly regard, while, a.cassiu-like, they were preparing to destroy our government' and reduce us to anarchy or servitude. The past year's experience renders it cer tain that if they triumph, blood and deso lation, fire and sword, or arbitrary eubj?c tion to their will, awaits every, white -Kiaq who La manhood enough to dislike theirr system of sl-very, tolerable inly as a ciuel1 uecesMty, but as a principle hateful to God and man. ' - v . ; "They will omit ro mean?,' honest -r dishonest, to insure success. - Mure-pre-seuting, calumniatiutr our motives, ridicu ling our lioKest . efforts to mitigate ' tho horrors of war, and iiiflauiing the passion of the populace by low epithets t hoe ere among the mihW -and more ordinary means resorted. to .by his pet;do chivalry, th moanft nril --icrnc.v ' fct -r Monri, at, ti betd cf a civ.1ii.tu njcijtr.'1 - - "''.
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