The Erie observer. (Erie, Pa.) 1859-1895, March 07, 1863, Image 1

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    THE ERIE OBSERVER
ATATE Si I.Eicr. oiloo-trrr. 'PM pt.,
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.BUSINESS DIRECTORY
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ATT.III.IMY
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40:16aidy of IL,. 1 .
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•I'LNCER & MARVIN
!ask.l w & VOCPIIrtk:L LOUD L %AI
rlick. Paragon Nock, near North
•6' tlf 0 L ^a.re, lin.. Pa.
aLWILLI.
J P tt,oks, Proprktur.
aaA Batik re:a, tAgrreasid, 0. .XI 31
Cit !WAN/F*lllN
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.uvr of Want &Rolm aad IV:It/mg Int .tL
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at• 7 C_LLUU• Lao au, :Ms.. &.l
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tus.ALL.,.Ile CUICILIVIESUISILIMCV•Vra,
`l6.,Fr %GA, Luck, La,: •Msert
1011 tioQar h., r ,
rud,.our, r , 1%
-11:ars Li vimlusa s , W *r* 110Lse
I'Nul 'b;
er 4ro t , .," •• • $
(1111131 , 1tate, atlrg
Ye. Term. rr..r n.Z.e , ACC , $
u.tw•t Hotel clt,, un., tc. 11..- 5.. T.,
iSilkti.a..)ll.:A has It,
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,likt.lt 1 101%1 V .r 1 . .ate ...•litnia to city or country, Stone,
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, I,4lchei, Hote:a, 1 beatnik, Factories, Public. Garteas,
•
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~.. & , srk 1 1•1 r g'ilr be adapted to Cu Work. Dow to
- •, peratidta. at %et , lilt!, infielliii.
W• wi.1..1.1...r of filtlicr 4 ler Citiel, Tn.rtnn, tlooottee
r tatre, at toodterate pliant. but fotiber partiaolara
).FI. ~ ,.11, •;,., ~ T H. TU rt LK, See' y,
k • V. ti je, I.ttnl 314 W.!nut Street, PhtlifipipMa. p.,
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A TTOKSILY AT •.r t. a. oo , ectou r i malt•elk OI& &W I
o, ts, rime street, "PP"lit. LLe I-.
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Jen! haat
•11 .,Harr.rape .
•• in . t. harp', WO
•. n•qort t.c •trint'
Int.. 1 1..3. /Nerliger Pat
IMEII
ERIE
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THE
I 14 , 1.1. AR AND A HALF PER YEAH ll' PAH! IN ADVANI;E
VOLUMh 33
- - -
B EN ER BrRGIESS
s'o , ce.c.or, to F F. Ald
Ekt k AND pirni grs, fiHIE , PA
DEALEILA I •
I CONFECTIONERIES,
FRUITS, NUTS, &o
'll VS F. :s; CV iii) 1,1 us, YANKEE
NOT1()N,
BALTIMORE OYSTERS,
HiorcE T 11. A s s CIGARS
AND FAMILIt
'upp ted with No Cre+n), FMK/ CllllOll, Falb 4001,
Vyraml!.s, Pruit, &c
Flue Heat), k ut.kLuons •u 4 hare iscoite, o( cf et)
MEM
L*ij ~ )110061, C 00.4 Nets, PaLin♦ F4l, Data*, &
cRACKEIti: cRICKFtIIS!
v-0 u r. 4 1,- 4 101, 4ti g •r
k I %1 A Y E E
F as- Il N 0Y S CERS
".4 v , er, cl.ree.t from ^so,*
A t\ iFI) Frtk.:Bll AM) sW.P7T
1211
W.. 1 Mt Turt.rolar att•rttoo to d!ltrii "rtierr for any
I.2Stf Gund. fo their liar.
14 n E 11. A .1 X E '
.1. H. wilsw.oLD
WANTS ASH LUMBER'
1 3 000,111.0 r - tet fq 111, 14 it
u leuetb
ato., 1 111,h,, /1%, I 1-2, 2, 2 1-2, S •ad 4
f'/4LAIL
WHITE WOOD LDIIBEII.
1 , 300 . 000 ,„,„! ,5 W,,ul fu:l tttielnes.
.500,1100 •• 4-4
500,000 dA. 4 1i21,1 N hit« R w N•ak.
300,000 t. uluatn.,
ko.•
CHERRY LUMBER
501),110111 feet ~: 4 4 I.l"ardp
STAVES
• 1
1410,000 Red Os. ilud rt 'C. A. 44 Inch long. 1 l tic ti
et, ..n mud. 4 ihel, wtS
I, Whit. Otk Kb!. ''lr 94 ILO/ 1 14
inch U.i rl on heist ....1g.., 4 nide,
rat ni gap
1., • Cl.! t' r opr..•ite r F R R
f•t, Ittn J H 10{1,14'111,1i
1 ,,,am,
~.,
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~lal. e E 1 Y,11 . 3 , 11 'I In.! a 1, ; -, ,-• A r•lele ..pf GRM' 4r.
F . s• It.. Jet 21), 41 ~ , bu Le. 1.,
.... the • tout.ier %to,
-1 , 111 .S. WI •lii.,\RT
1 ) t'l D1:I . I .• NI C 11 1 1) FFEE.
mitt...est Pad l.l.raprit
.1, ;;i : v i . i tt . i .,, ,
i tl , , , Tr i.
F o u l
b u : ar fr !:
i t . h . : P
t ur t DANIA
D
1 Lo.r, at 1,,,, and , c. at .
mt i r 1 if' " Ban
~,.AN 4. i,'i REAItY
T %v.v.% -rLt.
%,,% h :- lorhior of J Ir. L..,
of
J
) ri, “•..I_,,
J P L It K , Th . o isiewirn , ,
• v,,.. , • Batioor - oit sl,'Zi To, yonotnd
) j, INA' j 'Lulu & IL . ROSARY
- - - -- _
N , . 1 I l: E .
I'l`..'ln. u s 0-41 e
MI
Ntro •iu %fl• it Re kllie
ki(4.l/3 lee. LI lbt.l
t iI uI NI, s v
INi RE. -1) FACILITIEs
n a•r prrkarr.l t.• fill all urtiera
oi,KiNi; AND HEATING .2,TuVES,
( i P!utiT\6
t:g F, •••••••" • It I•rie Z . 1••••: I(lr.m , pr•rtu%s to
briag glues u. a deClle4 aAlwantage,.
❑ p:t t,t -torte ; o•er 111•CufA who 1:1111V• boat
ht prexect prioe*
T:r.• or., .4. u•rp.. by inn, t alt.ut, u
C•4Unu. to t
tt n►,n•
fr.l
iN , 16157. ,HIKK At.o
\V .1 ER: 4 E'l 1. L
I, \• 'n }ht frr [:rape.
IL.l.perrttot, Straw—or-lea, Blackborrit C:
1..1., : u, ur 211 •Cfo4 r0.r14, 6,t tLa iol.u•
keg 'nr Itir prrrro t, tIL . 20 semi f,Ar $5)O, :0
$1.(0. D sores f , r $6O, *ore. for S4J. 1 sere for $2O
tkayat, to. flaw eek.
Ale d i rant:terry land*, and vti:ag. it to in C1.16:T
trS 01. 100 fett, at $lO each, payable b• on* dolor
w •-••Ig The &too,- land sod taring are attnat.-d at Cl et
wood, a..ttiogt.n Tor lastop. Burangtota t ”uaty. Nen
JerapT *wither • P
:•tatt 1., rr a ttr,ultat, to Ili FRANKLLS CI.AkK
la:7 6 , 1. No CO Cr/ Streat i. t, Sew York, NV.
163
pIiILADELFIHA ERIE R It
Tt La great Roe trueenea the '4:them
eut rt , ..reet coontes rT rennejlcanla to the eft:, or
F to OD 1,41... Erie
It La, been leased b., the Peasuppioaaia Railroad Csair
paw', and under tbeir •uBptelea .8 tBB , rig oixted
t tt. entire I.ogth.
It - .• le us. tor humor" and Freight basin'..
•Da i t , • ~) ur, inilro.e Fiat (11l males) on the Eastern
fr..rn. 5L•81...d,0 En:, on the Western 14-
rlsl,u, Ti au.es )
1=111=3:1ZEIMil
'1!. • a I,aves
AZ, 17./.0 .al.tOP 1 iuu LeA,P.
Mail Tratu 4 rrlrei
A ee.•l7 nit lation Traub Arrytto
F 4 • ~ .t rrustloc roupoet.tog Pasiethrer Marinas IWO/
tb. 4 !. but uer 1 Ith awl eta • bud for Freight
bu. QCSS of tb• r 4, ).4.ny's i‘g•cts
R 10•61TOS, Jc . corner lit 6 bad Karit44 qtreuqa,
r
J REY nLr'S, Frio.
J 1i 1 , 411. i.. lurytit N , 1301 in,, re.
, .
ri . General ireight. Agent, rhlia...:a-
LV. •VI- L. *Prirl'r, teeneral Tt,aat
r , . eneral Manager.
jalrftw
CITY
1 1 1 l 1 E
4
13 0 0 K
R 01 .STJTE AND Fill?!
ir r 0.,! roop.otfJll7 rrtnno thanks fo•
w. palmokgr Ortlytofone rittudod to him, and SoWit. a
8.1 e to,
int.le rtt•oPl'r laapn,, , D3rL4, all,C.Lif
l'.‘(llN(i MACHINE,
1.111.1“. 4.1 Whit tl VtlllbieJ
• • ~ a' • imat a d ~.ap
a, cam uat eons in iimaiia4o.
11,6,112 LAJaa
i,XI l'W EIS 1' 1'
=2ES
I r.n •rn-os; tho public piktrnen.v.
4 .1 la• 0 M • VI, •••0.14•11el.,0
A NI) \
OF H ORK I 'tMI LOA;
' •,. ^ ..tontl hAtlai a !Me •tt;•pl;
I; I. A N K
t eta, alba./ Int. V 1.14., atluth•wout asxt.er •1i Slat* SO
kW:. at :N. ta, Ir.-ou4 /tor r, prat door to the ••iiortte •
tri E W COLE
r•• , - • 1 h, 1 . 563 3m
A 1.1 4 ; in s
A.
111 E IL E. 1 -IS - A (;A•
r—t I. I. "ILL, on• lT 1.61'.
r.,)l.4.orwagral) tarp A t 1 wenn! Ac,•ne..,
~• .• •,„-- g• ,;'rettviit Arrutin3. It can
l'Elt 1,0011 CUBIC FEET
nt. r , ,nerrr LTI 14.111111 loglll
tt , t , ed t,..,thor tier riptrol•san
: t. a., hit h utus4 •Teutu•lly take the Winer
r • „r ale. 1,. ttu chriLyness with shlch it
.:• :••n.l ugbt , it. g.rign.4 noimplfeity
t• • .1 4, t..t •to all ....re 1.14011.1, g,.0.1 light le re-
(N. • •
10a
t Stl3
3 30 r )1
6 4,
1) r: A X
.....6 16 r x
BINDERY
as sad giNes •
ERIE
AL:
• -.7.
• 1 N t, 1
0
BSERVER.
lA, oui.oNPT YOU LUCK TO Ii•oOr
♦ Y•DR40•I:- By /OIrX 0 ■,LZB
I tine a girt with teeth of pearl,
tad shoulder. whit. as Poow ;
'the ItTes--ith ' well,
I must not I ell—
Wouldo' t i•ke to 1;0••. • •
li.r Mina. hoar La r„odrou• &u,
Aud avy In its tl.sr •
'•t • Lo =isle It les.
Um. Ilt•le tram
Woul iu•r .00 It to koos :
tier prof are blue--ce/eatial hu• !
Arr.' , 123.8111 a In their glow ;
rln whom they team
ith melting gleam
W. a. :n't. pia lON tO Ittio•
11. r aro red, WIN d finely wed,
t Like r...e. are ;
‘vb4tl...ror dye
fO•kw dew) ,
on like to know
Her Churl., are lite li IN (air
Wkw a Rites Larval grow;
haad thew pri—a
c 1 :1:11 earea•—
•• la ) 0 iIIJU
t ~.m.l a,..1 la La •1V
I i.r las•Pa•lak., un lb..now ,
inJws.r. ;nes
D•nw'h tho rrao -
IT 1,3 NLe k - lu• •
*lte has a haute the I.e• teat aaur
That laagaage ea heattm ;
'Two*WI break the &pelt
Ii a 6.11 d
A ...a:Stet \ a no t 0 know ?
ommullett.4.)
Deception and Darkness the Cane
of War;—Truth and Light the
Moans of Peace
I; .partial critic of the causes of the
preeent furd war, can eearcely have failed to
hrrlvt , .0 the conclu.ion that it is mainly the
re ut ignorance, and that, the effect of a
er,iPoeut rn.l I , .nz continued deception
prae
tt.ted ul n the people by tbottc whom they
I.:, iI, •r.-1 i,v e'..vat 101 l to power, anti who
hac, .crupled t., ‘l“lpite the confidence
pl iced in them, and betray the trust
)telded to their hands.
Not alone has tin South been taught to rnia
tm lee , ; ;n to hate, .t."tpNe, and contemn the
-t- th !Le opinions of a fan
al t lat.t,oti were the -en:meats of the col•
tire northern people —to consider the threat
en.* injuritee of lawlea. end ambitious fan
wrone. tCrooly perpetrated, and
th.tr litlv:hrt.• at the violent exercise of
pone , a, it3crp..t.on.4 accomplished, and dee
pliiew ut r..iiity ee , ablislied, until, acting
spin the*, terchino, and t °tally
g ti,r and cutiservalite
eentinirtil ui the North, they sounded pre/11A-
Lot el.) the trumpet ot alarm, and rushed
tow lie chi of itebellion,—but the
Northern people have been equally the vie 1131/1
f their uoprinciple I leadt.rs.
They hare been -ystematically schooled in
ignorance, and partially brought to that
wort kind of error—the errnr of which the
arch lieu 1 lituouli in the most tqrtking ez•
utople—that u; t kerwerted and prostituted
, :dellereat,4e dud are reeatly as the South
h et. erred, atel t tea 4 they have been led
tr ty t‘,11 . % and inisapprelien
z. en, their mid alttes are taut to he compared
with die vole lecepttuote and worse than hea
then darkueset, wheel; are sought to be oast,
lice a sturifying vetputie, upon the citizens of
the Northern Stateq
It vc 111 indeed ta.bk for the fu
Lure hibtorl.in ut the American civil war, to
establish for the sati,fsetion of future gene
r 01-I , d
. 111. t •cc or f gin hiliou for
0;10 r vr liat 11,64
oriwn ew btates, sad now
Like btui , etid, us ptivitont, t.:resto:" ..urs
t.‘ er.hrolow the lino* lv,tl
. an it Le aeud g hat if •Nt nug trona any true
ocenuttig ituutan rights and human
justit:‘- J: range absurdity, titut, taking even
the r uwn viewl or universal equality, the
fare:ei r gi.ts ~• latiliuus of once happy
alai cont.. wed Geings,, as establt_•hed by the
Digit satthedrlia or Aboltuontsm, should be
cute titeoause of the stibversion and final
deatruotton of the undoubted rights of thirty
Can IL be said that its toundation is on that
e.or,.e Q 1 nli Lutrian ethics—the Bible? No;
f„r slier Lase,-tog and torturing the Scrip
tures for thirty years, they hare rushed for
refuge to the arms of infttliiiity, and shrieked
,r "an an i S,laTtry 4,01e*, - and an anta Slee
et v liw. 2
Con It be 1. uud iii the Coustitutioh, Lhat
uobat bulwark of our liberties, under which,
os Livery included, i we have 1,1 oepered for
thrue quarteia ut a Cet,:ury, Is IleTer people
ptusperesl I,efura : lt,etr flagrant 110ba101111
of that luau ument disgrace the *laths' books
o: every State where they have held the rettltr
of power, aid they have d cared it "a °ova
l:mut with death and agreetneut with hell."
Can they ciAliu tost Ilepublican Abolitionists
stneerel . :. detored, iir eh-sires, rie F rosperity .
and weilare of the whole country 7 Let the
rancorous haired en i gend.red by their altiat,
between t‘ e ti.e horrors of curd
war ; we ieroolatiun by fire and sword of en
tire Suites of ilie Ropithi.c ; the proposed
subjnglil exielll.lll.lLlun ut the tenant
taw • tL4.1.,04 a the ourrenoy
t.. c., the ulitinsitt prostration of coco
a], r,..-r—tct...ts ;oils I , Pedicitil by their opp -
heti s—all-wv,. for them patriotism and wis-
13,it :lie Nortliern popie have been taught
by west. ,vat st)ied rdurtheri, that not 'only
Aurer) :In evil, but a sin: and that not the
slaveholders themzielves are ret , pousible for it
to (loci end nosulied, but the noa 4 alaveliokiers,
tiring perhape Ih the uortli-east corner of
Maime lilts idea ,t slionhiering the sins of
row:rt. and "allowing their own to take care of
thern-el% La , been one of the stteudants
upon l'itiiieut4ut as it init. emoted &thee the
days tit the Returuiati.o3, and is th e eame now
pervading oar poiutca, and cursing our coun
try. Bigotry. vanity and !• , cll suffizleocy are
inseperahle trout Pur....ent:in. 1 wise Ladantioal
petaciples ta.are le-eu gradually insinuating
thrukarlYea through Lie eouutry, under the
guise first of Abolitionism pure and undefiled,
and then of Republicanism, until Northern
people, but chtrdy New England people, hate
almost beau brought to fisheye that to New
England polities and legisistion—New Eng
Lisa piety end education— New England en
texprive and New E,egland_thought, to to be
alkiolly attributed wi,/utivisr, is to be found is
the United States of pramperity, morality, iw
sofligesmie, or . progress.
Thus it Is that the North" has beak 14 to
--4-
111M=M11117212M15
believe, that to her as the great ex-portents of
true philosophy sod religion, belongs the's:-
tirpation of that dreadful, iniquity, slavery,
even at the cost of thotimatis of bees. the
liberty of tie people. tire prosperity of the
nation, and the preservation of the Colman
Lion. Thus it is that the Base issue has been
raised ofslavery,pr no alayerj, when the real
issue has always been and still is, the preser
vation of the constitution with equal tights
to all, —and liberty said prosperity, or the ab
rogation of that instrumea‘ with the sure re
cult of tiespotimn and anarchy.
By the arts of political preachers, dema
gogues, and needy writers of leasation novels,
the idea has been propagated that slmeholdeke
are the worst and most degraded of &skied;
that the South is a den of infamy and the last
stronghold of barbarism,--its citixens.gyovel
lag in ignorance, poverty, and misery—and
that by ealightesed, pure, and virtuous Re
publicanism, them bartominno are to be
brought to the trot!!, through the sad per
suasiveness of bayonets and arUllory.
Is it necessary to tell the iotelligent, the
trufh-loving and the conservative. that by
these efforts of puritan abolitionists they are
in danger of being bltntiel to the and
semi rged to error ' La it umessary to re
peat the larigua,ge of llorece Greele.), before
be became lost in his ormolu Innacy, -that
people are not aeoestieeily demons because
they live aerate a river, ” 7 sad titter to their
customs. and Ideas of right/ from ourselves •
Is it necessary to tell them that by the tel
umph of Radicalism, North and South, lb*
country has been brought, to its present
dreadful situation • Need 4t be t.)ld to them
that by false teachings the *wo emotions have
gradually diverged from harmony, and to
towards civil discord, as the oijeote of ex
tremists have been attalued. l nntil nit stares
us in the ties t No ; we "mi. me , utlier test
of the truth of these eminiont. than that Wag
years of the most persistent ei,itation of see
tional prejudices, the most v s eggravated abuse
1.7 extremists North sad South. of each
other's peculiarities, bas Aims required to
overoome the natural and Islet inclinations of
•
the people -
-
If, then. a be acknowledged that the utopia
of the North, as well as those of the South,
have been deceived by the false representations
of the ambitious, the doeiguing and the farm
ti eat; if they can be otervided fps most cer
tainly they can) of !deifying Southern insti
tutions, abusing Southern ehriinianity, tad,
vilifying Southern manna re, at what tend melon
can we entire but that the kid of error must
be put down and the augeeksf truth raised
her place, to ensure a remelt ofdomestio tran
quility and a restoration of our forms, pros
perity • ,
To the Chrisaima, thee, we appal by the
merits of the Primes of Pam% by hie taaci
logs of charity. love sad fartivii by,
his coademitauon of vanity ; iiatted 444 hypoc
risy. to lay aside that modern cohgtost *Mob
calla, with that ordained datautsmpq,•Boadesr,
for rifles instead of sihlee, sod abbsadoniat
Abolition chriatianity rent emao the diristina.
Ity of Christ.
For the patriot who desires to see oar Re
public increase to prosperity and honor , who
recogrusea the grand prteciples of the ItAe/s
Declaration of Independence, and earnestly
seeks to perpetuate our Constitution, the char
ter of oar liberties and surety for ouirproapar•
ity, it is no less himitag. 10 scan with farseeing
and earnest eye, the black and stormy future
end see if through the Alive and pru..ke of
battle.he can perceive in far off time salvation
for our country, and in future history tile
honorable record or a br ive people, in the
picture of a people divided by hatred, and a
land t,,in by internal feud,, it. pleasant
stren.i,is stained by fraternal blood; itenoble
steers echoing with the roar of hostile cannon,
cad bearing on their swelling Ode, not the
products of peace, but the horrid trophies of
civil *trite ; its fertile fields ground into gory
clods beneath the iron wheels of war , its
people, ono* free, swaying from detput-aut to
anarchy, according to the caprtceuf tta.irptrig
factions or military leaders.--or whether in
the triumph of light over darkness, of truth
over error, it will be seen that it is not in the
clangor or clash of arms ; the pomp and
parade of a gaudy soldiery ; the violence and
ambitious strifes of military chieftains: the
dotting over our once peaceful land will marks
of the destruction and whirlwind of battle;—
the trembling of our government for years on
the brink of military despotism, that our
country will find unit:mot neird or happineu;
but in the simple though no less glorious arts
of peace ; in the supremacy of constitutional
lAw ; the exercise of the everlasting and
heaven-born principles of justice and human
ity, and the re-esuibliehment of a government
by the Wisdom of its people, ever guard
ed by their view:ice, preserved fromthe usur
pations of faction and the efforts of ambition
—descending to posterity the model of Repub
lics, the terror of tyrants an i the hope of the
oppressed. *
A Goon JOILS.-A few days wince an extra
`rain, loaded with jaoleigisee, was transported
over the Louisville di New Albany railroad.—
The telegraph operator at Salem. a boy, get
ting wind of it, sent a rumor that Gov Nlor
to-i, of Indiana, and Gov. Yates, of Illinois, *
accompanied by a lareerde'egation of Repulto.,
licence, with bands of music, etc., would pain
through at a certain hour. Immense crowds
of enthusiastic Republicans repaired to the
depot., bats in hand, ready for the expected
che..r ,When the train thundered in. an aged
and venerable owner of a pair of fabu:ous ears
stuck his head out of s stook car and gave
vent to a :crag, agonising hee-haw that fairly
shook the hills around. Consternation seised
the crowd. and in two minutes not a Republi
non was to be seen within a square of the de
pot. Compliiat has been made to the Super
intendentwgaisst the operator. and he is in
momentary expectation to quit.
wg., A Baptist clergyman, the Rev. Mr.
Elliott, was recently hung is Bianco county,
Louisiana, under the following circumstances:
• Union man, on being charged wan betug su
Abolitionist, shot. his *censer. and !subse
quently anapest in company nab his brother.
Mr. Elliott, who chanced to be at the house!
Of the Unionist a few days previous to the
shooting affair, was arrested on State autho
rity, on suspicion of being in sympathy with
the litter. Nothing, however. having been
proved against him on examination. be was
rensamied t. thesastedy of the provosionesr
sisal fora future hearing, but on his way bask
to prison he was setae by the mob and sum
molly hung.
M:===l
MEI
' I __
-;- --
NG, MARCH 7, 1863
Abolitionism is •
The following scathing rebti eto the Abedi•
Hon radicals is from the 'Temkin Congress, of
Mr. Harding, of Hy.:
"Mr. Chairman, Abolitionism has sew tem.
porary easiest of the Governinest. It shapes
its own policy, has everything its own way, -
and is fist working out its own destruction in
the eyes of all thinking men. It is doomed
and will certainly fall beyond the reach of airy
political resurrection. The danger is it may
dreg down th. government with it. And yet
I do not despair of the government-, I am
glad t. believe there iv still solid ground fur
hope. I believe the Dentoeratie home, is the
N rth and Mirth-west, have the pewee to mush
an subdue the rebellion .fferfA and math, and
save the government from ruin; and. though
always an old Whig, I am ready, and my eon
stituents are ready, to unite heart and hand
with the Democratic party in battling for the
Ut'lon against Abolitionists mullemerimaists;
now and forever. l raise no Objectifies to
the mime of that party? Democracy is as
Lid honored mune, and no man seed blush to
allf , llWO it. TlitirplatfOrni, 'the Constitutive
as it is, and Lite UiVien as it was,' Las the ring
of the pure tactual,: it is ; ekes sad werectinp
to( of loyalty. as I have more than ease wit.
nested on this door. Men who stassapt to rid
icule it never fail to betray their own infidelity
to the Cons.itutkm. It is not poosatdefor ssea
who are opposed to tAatplatfone tos truly lord.
We hate no Constitution but the Conetteution
as it is, and 1f Sou are not f r that 411 en you
are, in Meting and sentiment'', in rebellion
against it. We bare ao Union, Dever had 11107
can have, under that Constitution, but the
Union as is was formed by it; and if yen ars
tit for AM, you are against the Union, sad,
itf omelette, dieunionfitte. Hence the war upon
ithivery, when stripped of all diepties, is both-
Idg bet a wee eirem. she U r iallai .0104, 1 411 046" 4 "
Constitution. breetise it. protect* ehanoty. 444
(Acre and in that is found the heart sad core of
the AGelitson rotor-khan; and it is teething but a
rebellion against the government. Sir, what
did we hear from a prominent leader of the
radicals, the gentleman from Pennsylvania.
(Mr Stephens) but a few days since, toll this
floor lie declared—
Thir Unwn over, tr 4 my consent, be
reel 'red under the. Constautoon as it is, with slave
ry tv Lt protected by
-That is plain enough, it speaks for itself ;
and, sir, if that is loyalty, then give me trea
son "
The only way to Re-construct the
Government.
Judge Thous, of Massachusetts, (conserv
ative Republican) closed a speech in favor of
the admission of the new representstiies from
fAundans, as folknrs:
"Mr. Speaker, permit me to make ens other
prunical - saggestton to the House ; and that
h t that the 'only way is which you cut noon
strum. this Government ig . .hy the co-operation
df the loyal mot ; of the sonado4 States. If
/ 014 we'll" to 1 4 4 sep flirt .r, and try to bring
rbleser Stotesiradir. oshiestiest r oripe thee out
of exaztenee, and reconstruct them according
to _your will and pleasure, and not their rights;
you have taken upon . yourself a task which
you have not the power to execute, and which,
if you had, would result iu the overthrow of
7our tibertres as well as theirs. No overn
menr would be a fit instrument for au • work
but a military despotism. History giv no
hope'in such a war. But if, on the oth and,
you expect—as it seems to rue every rational
loan trust expect—to reconstruct the Govoria
meet wit il the sympathy, ea-operation and aid
of the I. yet men of the,e State., then I ask
you.' in the name of prudence and of justice,
not to shut the door, of this Rouse against
theta} Do not, I helmet+ you, teach them the
terrible lesson that your dowers are effective
to destroy, but pot to redeem ; to crush, but
not to save. Meet them at the threshold :
welcome and bless them, as they seek *woe
more the .helter of the old homestssid."
ma the Holton Pat.]
The Union Peeling in the South-
It is a fact that there is, at this late hour, a
body of men in the States where the Insur
reetton sweeps all , before it, who still retain a
love of the Union, the Flag and the Constitu
tion. It is not, it is true, for a negro equality
theory that never was, and until man changes,
never will be realised, ; but for the spite of
things that made this country a free, great,
happy and prosperous people Such In Con
ttilerate hind, are het rt sick of the war. We
were told iesterday that letters now coming
from Southern cities, and to families. are as
pleasant and eall•fdletori a 3 they were a year
ago and unrelenting, showing a great
change .k most intelligent Federal officer.
who Its bce at tt,4 West, end mingled much
with rebel prisiners. informe a, hat the rebe,
army is he f the wir A comm t.
nude of espressi,ni wan th•• ar,Si and Me now
ts, •• Hang a tinndrrd ,eaders South
and as many Noma, and it wou.d help to make
peace i" and it is a fact that there is little
bi t t ernes s It the West betweetithil two armies.
*ill the feeling for pease at the Smith is iso
hued, or is n.,t a power. A physician last
week was here frets a Southern city, wow, is
vested, who said there was a Union seelety is
wbieh bald stated meetings, awl who said
that the Chino feetng was growitig.
litu 1T Tlit. VLT 1iA435 I . IIINK.—The Veterans
the war of ISI2, to Phila4ielphis, oslebra
tea Washingtou'e birthday with appropriate
cerecuouie.a. Among the retolutious..adopted
I.y them was the following :
"Re , vlre f, That we - consider it the imperil.-
t: , e 1 ..y of the :Cati)nal Government to use
1404118 la its power to ferret out eat
1 the most exemplary manner, trai
t 6. perpetrators of the gigantic frauds own•
tu.ttediby unprinotpled contractors, and other
swintheis, whetter in uthoe or out of office,
from the htgileet to the lowest, without fur,
favor or affection "
gep.. The Hon. M F. Cone+ty, the Rephb
iletri member from Kansas, who_delivered the
recent peace epee. h in the House. writes on
41.. tr date of February 7 to the Boston Pose, re
iterating his peace declarations. if. sus
"1 sm opposed to thc_ forVitlLAKOMittion of
the war, and insist that it shall cease, mid
peace be resumed on the basis of ailed:nig
facts." This is the Vallandly,hani platform
e xactly, and the fact of na being pronsuloted
by a leading We..tern redicsi slims &Air is
the statement that the poses movement st the
West is one which elaims its adhttrents from
sJi sissies of the community, without respiet
te.party.
ISM
$l,OO IF NOT PAID UNTIL T: END uF THE YEAR
Seaga. Rios, Republiasa.of Minnesota, who
is a member of the Military Comvittse o f the
United States • mita, made tke following ex
traordinary statement in debate last week :
"I do not believe there is a man in this
government, in one of the departments to day,
that can tell 4/8 whether we have five hundred
thousand ore million men in the field—not
one who can come within fifty percent. of the
oumber of the sick and wounded in the hospi
tals, or with their regiments On depar
tment makes its estitiiite hated on the eupprit
ition that we have onn tunhoo two
thousand men in our army ; another, on the
supposition that we have one million five hun
dred thousand men in our army, The simple
915th to that they do not know whether we
hare that number or half that on otier. You
reel take the pay department, the commtseary
department, the medical department, the quay
toreasister's departasost, and you may take the
ceettasteeitnig pairs! and the Secretary of
Weromro you saanot, front all of them, come
within three hundred thousand or probebly
five hundred thousand of the number of men
in the earvion ; at least we cannot get the infor
mation."
Is it any wonder that •ndiass confus:3R. ex
travagant's and waste Novail in our atplies
sad tile national inatioes, when such an Sc. knowledged teat of system, management and
competency is exhibited by their. managing,
or, more properly speaking, mi-4managiug the
war
Cana CAILMIT BAG Ur 1-1 t was but a day
et two ago. while traveling upon the oars be
tween this oily and Columbus, civil a train
mopped It a small village not a hundred muss
of. The conductor *rind out, "fifteen minutes
far dinner."
The passengers, of whom there happened to
be a large number, rushed
. into the dining
apartment and took the seats at the table, one
of them depositing his cadet bag on the chair
neat to him. At the usual time the landlord
plumed around to make his collection, stalling
upon the aforesaid passenger for his payment
for dinner.
"How mach ?" says She passenger.
"Eighty cents." replied the landlord.
"Eighty cents fur a dinner Why, .that is
extortions.l•.--
"No. sir, it. is .Fiot. eztortionste. tbot
your car-yet bye"
"Yes, sir", that is my carpet bag."
"Well, that carpet bag occupies a seat, and
of course I must charge for IL"
"Oh: is that the case' Well, here I+ your
80 ciente."
- Turning to the carpet bag, the passenger
remarked : " Well, Mr. Carpet Bag, as you
have not had much to e it, suppose we ake
something," at the same time opening its
month, and turning therein half a ham, s roast
ehicken. a plate of crackers, and sundry other
articles, amid the roars of laughter of the
other pass e ngers.
The pren►iling opinion among the passe('
gen was, that the carpet bag won. —Cauutnat
Eartirrr.
Tae GLUT 01 SILTSIL IS C.teAD•.—lt
would do a hard-money man good, says the
Detroit Advertiser, to go to Canada. The cur
rency consists almost exclusively of American
silver. Silver abounds everywhere. Every
body is loaded with it, and everybody tries to
get rid - of it, u people do of doubtful funds.
The taxes are paid in silver, and the collectors
take it by the bushel. The City Treasurer of
Toronto has half a ton of it The merchants
have bags of it in their rites. The t inks
won't receive it. The Great Western Railway
has issued printed notices that only five per
lent. of silver will be received for fare or
freight. Only think of a country where you
cannot pay your fare on the oars in silver
coin I At Toronto, London and elsewhere,
%wanness men and firms have united in a gen
oral resolution to receive silver only at a die
eetint of five per cent. for C‘u.44.1. bank paper.
This of course applies to Amertun silver, as
the Canadian ar_d English towage is a legal
Leader.
A Bria'ston STORT.—A BLASPHEMER Bißrer.
Dotes.—A startling instance of terrible pun
ishment for a thoughtless oath, is thus related
by • correspondent of the Salem (O.) R•pig,6-
Lusa, writing from the 104th Ohio Regiment. :
"Quite a strange affair occurred in Company
• few days ago Onet f the boys got out of
humor bessaume he had to prepare for dress
parade. He swore about it a good deal, and
declared he would'ut ga out; he hoped God
would neve' let him speak another ward if he
went out on dress parade. lit went out on
dress parade, and the nekt morning was ut
terly unable to speak. VA poor fellow cried
bluing,. hut it was too late. He had prajed
and was ar.swaisal Some said his language
was, 1 Lope Jesus Christ will strike me
luau , if Igo ou another dress pars& ar hot.
ia , ion drill.' But all account. agree on the
main point, that is, he wished to be malt
--ute, and is now a mute."
A Pirrnas or WAIL—The Murf r eesboro
corrsepoadeet of the St. Louis Reptibti, , m,
ellsding to the present appearance of the bat
tle fields ip that vicinity. says "The rain
storms have washed away the earthly mantle.
and the bodies of the dead lay exposed to
view; here feet protruding, there a head of
matted hair or a ghastly face. This is mainly
the case with the' rebel dead, who were buried
in the muddy fields, during the week of the
battles, and often st night. There they lay,
eons of the planters or the South. There are
yet sighs and tears for them in many a South
ern household. And I dafly the more appre
ciate the face, es I see and °Oliveto, with
&tethers people, that this war is proving far
more terrible to them than to the North, as
regards the etertalit Tue battles of Mur
freesboro here planted the cypress in the
midst of every town and tiounty in the Gulf
Stated."
Ti' Nntino 'Rows.—Our New Orleans
ilereespandeas oonlinas the minors whioh lave
hies earnest as to diffieolties between the
white and black tegiments et Ship Island and
Buten Bong*, in the Department of the Gulf.
-At. Y. rotes. (Itep.)
We have heard something of this disallow
tion from privity, sours**. It is said to have
had its origin in the masoning of a negro re-
Onset into camp where Is.'s' stationed in
itsmedisto pralositp se whits troops. some
of the "bay' eosphdeed, too—but probably
without esmits--that the blasts were better
armed sad dreamed tbaa their peie-Seeed
tiretins.-44.4 Rom* .lostrosi. (Rep.)
NUMBER 39
-imm ,, i'arnimmml_ •
RS'IWS
r-_ j • Anti prwewm i ties with teanthe•
Lions sod the rebeiiion with beyeasis" is IM
advice of John J. Crittenden. _
Wir The New York Braid repirta 41140114‘
President wile -make a, oak far froinleikakr
to 84)0,000 troops immediately. a:r•• • ; •
Mir The sontrabands et Noriblk Wass, k
is said, cost the tiovernmeet use r ileotiased
dollars per day--$35,000 per ansi . pW.
gob.
Vine-President Hamlin is"looking for
officcra for a negro brigade which is being
raised iu Louisiana, the officers of tibia aro
to be oommissioned bY the tilwratior of
Tits Drrinutasina..—gesatiss says. Ow
fernne• biome= a pig and as aboliiisaist is
this: “The pig Lao kink in his tall, sad
the abolitionist in his head."
oft. The House of Representatives lms
unanimously passed the resolution calling for
a copy of the evidence given in the mart mar
tial in the trial of Major General Pits Joh*
P6rt er.
ao, A Scottish advocate, who prowonaoed
F e w rd water wanes, being asked in *cart
'.. he enincellnr itf he spelled water with two
t' , vqlied, tt2ict, ray lord, bat I spell maa-
ne*"• A 7two zt's "
QCITa AXIMICANI.—A Maine editor sari.
that a pumpkin in that state grew so large,
that eight men could stand round it. This-is
like the man who saw a dock of blackbirds so
low, that he could shake a stick at. them. ,
14%., IL is said that at least one hundred
thousand men are yet wanting under the last
call of the PresSdent, of which not less than
tinny five thousand are due trots the State
of New York alone.
rtiL ?Kick. or CoAt. —Thirty thousand tans
of Scrantou coal Were ..Old in New York last.
week, priov ranging from one dollar and
seventy five cents to two dollars por ton less
than In December last.
NSW ABOLITION TH3oILY, AS/0173D r sox
KNGL AND ANTI FRP. NC F. —NO. 1. " Mr. tAn.
CO ii la Ihr Slate
No 2 The stkJoKITT irt Traitors: we, the
minority, are the Pi riuts
;dr An old maid who be her eye I little
sideways on matrimony, says. "The curse of
this war is, that it will make so many widows
who will be fierce to get married, and who
know how to do it, so that modest girls will
stand no chance at
or A. Washington letter says the Mons
deet'tsunk off Charleston, on which so many
plumed themselves a success, and over which
John Bull became co indignant at the time
sod aft -T., has ottasany Improved ths harbor of
Charlesmn. It is now'deeper than ever in the
channel, and is rep - hrted much better.
ONLT TWILNTT',Jess —The 11. S Senate
has passed thy bill appr,priating Twenty Mil
lions of Dollars to aid in the abolition of
slavery i 3 Missouri ! This sum divided among
the loyal Slate , according to population,
would require from Pennsylvania only about
$2.500,10)!
Air There has been another theft of nn•
signed Treasury Certificates from Treasurer
Spinner's office. The amount is not stated.
Oely a few days sj a similar theft of $2,
600.000 occurred at the same olio*. The peo.
pie have it all to pay for. This is abotilion
"honesty sad reform."
Paslcricsass..—A , Washington oorrespon
dent of the New York. Inbiour says Gea.
Fremont is desirous of s position where hs
sun be most serviceable in oarrying into pree-
tweet effect ttie Previtient'a prooLsaation. }le
eau hejuat aa serviceable at tome in that par
ticular as aitywitare else
Mean It.—liOrilee Greeley, in 11 learn *sue
of his New York Tribue, says: "I was will
ing in the ter of 1860-61, to 'let the Cot
ton States go,' if they really desired it. I
was net only taws willing that the Union
shoulddri good faith make them the effor t but
Isola deeply regret that it wu not made and
acted on."
aft. The rebel Congress have adopted a
novel mode of getting rid of the negro reel
manta that Gleueral Hunter, or-CoL Higgins*.
or Gen. Phelps, is going to lead against
Dixie. The negroes, when tinned, are not to
be shot,—but sold, foe' what they will
h*lf the proceeds to go to the captor, sad
half to the`figovernment."
hoit-CIAO INTtoore.—Aa amount, Of 1
rrp.t:t fight in R. Mary'e rim, Florida, be
tween one of oar gueboete and a body of reb
els, says: "I will give you a remarkable
feature of the tight. One of the negrom was
shot in the head. but the ball &mod of sad
pierced him in me I,g : He vas a braimal
iron-clad."
!lam Prentice, speekisz of an mealiest who
had vehemently denied &charge of hating been
drunk ou a certain OCCASIOD, says that he aim
not posiri veil state that the gentleman in ques
tion was drtink, but thst he wads seen in the
street at midnight, with hut hat off, explaining
the principles and theory of true politeness to
the toes of his boots.
pg. Persons in a position to know. *spy a
correspondent of the New York Tuna, (Rep.)
have expressed the opinion that at least
twenty-five million dollars have been stolen
in the t,luertermaster s ilspartment during the
tew owct.hi. Jae kluartermasters are to
a min f.tr. the war, wild there is a pound of
paper_to print •green backs" on.
gar A my• d. 0.1 to L•keviliti Mass., SOON
Lime since, ketiviug to ittswile oeirain propeety,
which by his will she was to have and to hold
ot)y so long sr she ruould retain the name
adopted in her marriage. The lady luta just
secured a second edition of felicity, and at the
same ume save/ her property, by marrying a
second husband whose name is the name as
that of the first.
gm, A certain Judge was onee obliged to
•'double" with an Irishman in a crowded ho
tel, when the following oonversation ensued
" Wall Pat, you would have remained a tong
time in the old country before you 'ooldue,
slept with a Judge, would you skit!" " Tee,'
yer honor," said Pat, "but you would
have bests along time in the old country be
fore you'd have been a Judge, tea
A the battle of Frodariokoken
the odor bearer of the 21st llitaineehnsena
regiment fell mortally wounded, whoa a ser.
east name d Pluakett seized the standard,
bore it to the treat, sad there held his greand
until both arms were shot away by a ShaLL—.
lie was (tarried to the hospital, sad ea*.
goently was taken to Washington, the whale
regiment turning out 1.0 escort him to the eta;.
tion. So brave a man deserved so marked as
honor
var A wawa" , in warn had bees caution
ed to give a preoiso mama, to every question,
and not Wks about what he might ADA lately
mew, woe intorrogatott as tolioarat "Teo
drive tiro itookinetanlCaossh ? "No dr;
d o W.." "Way, Mil. did yea sot NU 117
leaned Mood ao thin stontand" "So deli
I did sot." **Now. air, 1 put it to you-4 put,
it to you on your oath—do you not drive 110 E.
liockinghtun crash " str--L ditto s
norm."