Democrat and sentinel. (Ebensburg, Pa.) 1853-1866, February 25, 1863, Image 1

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THE BLESSINGS OF GOVERNMENT. LIKE THE DEIVS OF HEAVEN, SHOULD BE DISTR IB UTE D ALIKE, UPON THE HIGH AND THE LOW. THE RICH AND THE FOUR.
11 HS k 8 R n III
4
.4 I !
- J
EV SERIES,
TaaBdisljaiu In Congress.
3 Speech for the Hcnr.
-nv C L- VALANDIG1IAM DE-
r -ri- TUi: war disunion.
flifor PECE" that we ray
9
EBENSBTJRG, PA. WEDNESDAY, FEB. 25, 1863.
VOL . 10-NO. 12.
Uttositruct
lit
--r WHO DONT LIKi' RF.CON
?CTinN CAN - STAY OUT"
trECliLLY NEW ENGLAND. -
I statesman's Views.
-jja,' W Ct.'y - - -
Co'x'uiJ-.Yf.j
in' of Plymouth lioek, and more
I.. - .... ...
.J,-;: W;:liiin and Lis compatriots,
VLL toicr.-k'ir Let her banish now
1 1 ...... w r. , I.a. Cirll1fe
-jLiamV.ics, and cad uacSt
....'.lni"i!r:ition anl into the
r ta
sos? of th -ni &Uti live and she
- t!;e dangers which now
iv'uh isolation.
while I am inexorably hos-
'..i'uri:sa domination m re.igton
r&re -'i" p'i
into her
national
of might, her grand in
i hr.ve the
r- .'-..,h
1.-,:
.ViU,
:t Y .
i jri c.i;
u V. :
iiia v
M.; ;
"r.iun
. .1 K
or
I Kin lift in favor of
.rie-n of New England.
1'r.ion ns it was: and
:s she was. But if
:II have no union
; if .-he is not content
e.s i'. was," then upon
? the responsibility for
lore, whl be no more
ment ; or else the line of separation will be
the I otomac to its head water?. All of
Delaware and Maryland, and the coun
ties of Accomac and Northampton; in
Virginia, would, in that event, follow the
fortunes of the Northern Gonfedracy. In
fact. r, disapreeablo as the idea may bo
to many withiu their limits on both fides,
no man who looks at the map nnd
then reflects upon history and the
force of natural cause?, any considers the
present actual and the future probable
position of the lios-tile armies and navies
at the end of this war, ought for a mo
ment to doubt that either the States and
counties which I have named mu.'t go
with the North, or Pennsylvania and
New Jersey vith the South. Military
fcrce on either tide cannot control the
destiny of the States lying between iIil
mouth of the Chcasapeake and the Hud
son. And if that bay were itseif made
the line, Delaware and the Eastern Shore
of Maryland nnd .Virginia, would belong
to the North ; while Norlb'k, the only
capacious harbor in the soutvastcrn coast,
d
the puns of some
:w. 1 at lea-
e csacilv
:l r.i '
the central States,
rs.-y, and l-nnsyl-.mv.iion
? Can Nev
trade of the -outi:
is. She was
it sr
mnst be command'
new fortress upon Cape Charles ; and
IJaltimore, the now queenly city, seated
then upon the very b"ur.dary of two
rival, ye?, hostile, conllMeracics, would
rapidly fail into dc-eay.
And n jv, sir, I will not a?k whetht-r
th.e North-west can consent to si-p:irat!on
from ilie Sjuth. Nover. Nature forbid-.
We are only a pu
tiie Mi?msm:!i. Ihe!"e is no line of
uonuors ana iron-c:aas, out set your ; publican arty seem ready now to lift
friendly fteamcrs and steamships again in ; themselves up to the height of this rrcat
i.ionoii. vimi u:c iunii ana csi.
Visit the South. Exchange newspapers.
atone,
times.
aiument, and to deal with it in the spir
it of the patriots and great men of other
Let slavery t countries and ares. and of the lttor dnvs
Hold elections nt the appointed .; of the United States
I -
Let us chose a new President in And nor. sir. whniMw mr,v r.-. .m
sixty-four. And when the gospel of ! the motives of England, France, and the
peace shall have descended ngain from other great Powers of Europe, in wi:h-
neavcii into their Iieart, and the gospel holding recognition so Ion" from the Con-
: i V;r ct. ti;e .itn cotton
rr.-i.: -.'.lipping aa.l her
in an evil hour
'-. iri'.l .. rj h:it " men of
";;:ri her nvjrchnt princes
:i:n or lir-; L:i-k the i
rt i-.r. War. indeed h::s (
l n..-v, a v. bu.-iness ana
.::.st :u-:v pr. li tabic than the
:".t ri;.i:ou that, loo, must
- An I let W-.H stive?, or any
rzt L:.;rc-it. nierchanti!e, mann
:t coriiUi.rtir.i. imm:i2:ine that
i:ave pv.iv.-?r enough or wealth
: ' -t-Mid in 'i.: vuy of reunion
,"L -?.ce. I.- i. thf-ia team, otre- an 1
tude on which to separate. Tire. South
would r...j di t-ii-e the old line of thirty-six
degrees thirty minutes on botli si.s of
ihe river ; and theit i no natural Louuil
jvry east and west. The nesrest, to it
are the Ohio and Missouri rivers. IJut
Ihat line v.ou'.d leve Cinciima'i ami
St. Louis, as border cities, like ISahimow,
! to decav, and, extending fifteen hundred
mils 1:1 length, v. uuid Income the scene
cx-
Sir,
!i rt
of an eternal border warfare without
simp's even in th? worbt of times.
we cannot, ought not, will nt, st-paratu
ixdii the ho::th. And if you of th?
I2ast who have fennd this war against the
ooalh and for the negro, gratifing to
your "hate or pr. ;itab!e to ycur purse, will
i till n K"ii::n -r I r.".'r!
of abolition and of hsitc been expelled,
let your clergy and the churches meet
sigain in Christian intercourse, North and
South. Ix?t the secret orders and volun
tary associations everywhere re-unite as
bretheni once more. In short give to sill
the natural and sdl the artificial causes
which impel us together, their fullest
sway. Let time do his office drving
tears, dispelling sorrow?, melting passion,
and making herb and grass and tree to
grow again upon the hundred battle-fields
of this terrible war.
Iiut this is recognition." It is for
mal recognition, to which I will not con
sent. -Iveeogniiion now, and attempted
permanent treaties about boundary, trav
el, and trade, and partition of territories,
would end in war fiercer and more disas
trous than before. Recognition ii abso
lute disunion ; and not between the slsive
and the free States, but with Delaware
and Maryland as a part of the North, and
Kentucky and Missouri part of the West.
IJut wherever the actual line, every evil
ey ot and mischief of disunion is implied in it-la!!-
And for similar rmtsons, sir, 1 would not
xt this time press hastily a convention of
the States. The men who now would
hold seats in such a conention, would,
upon both sides, if both agreed to attend,
come together full of the hate anJ bitter
ness inseKirib!c from a civil war. No,
sir ; let passion have time to cool, smd
reason to resume its sway. It cost thirty
years of desperate and most wicked pati
ence, and industry to destroy or impair the
magnificent temple... of this Union. Let
us le content iff within three years, we
shall le sible to retore it.
Hut certainly what I propose is inform
al, practical recognition. And that is
precisely v. hat exi-ts to-d:v, and has ex-
coiitmu
1
tv.een the !avtholtii:-.g
sl.iveholllnz S:r;tes. thin.
accent it, ac you di ln i thii otl.
! warnings of years past, t'w th.y
a:
b.'ii-evc
your non-
mo, and
s'w.leuin
c'irc'i
t'utl '
-.: a j.uu:-e nma wu u?.s the peopie
iujijr.-ii, is stronger than they,
-'w 12 uiav not worth a million.
'r.rn wo d.jl'iir. A little while agp
-!;s Mild they were king, but Presi--'t
kTi srvcilly taught thorn their
UiC. Next rii'reali assumed to be
:1 iviz.-n onre vaur.tcl largely his
Sitntc thry drcrcas et-. rita' J:vo c: deLn
J Sir, ci:r destiny fx d. There is not
i one drop of rain which desoendinz from
:ho heavens, a:d feitiliihig our soil,
causes it to yield an
federate State, the South and the North
arc both indebted to them for an immense
public- service. The South has proved
her ability to maintain herself by her own
strength and resource?, without foreign
ai l, moral or material. And the North
and West the whole country, indeed
these great X)wers have- scrveJ incalcula
bly, by holding b:ck : solemn proclama
tion to the world that the Union of these
States was finally and formaly dissolved.
They have left to us every motive and
every chance for re-union ; and if that has
been the puqxsc of England especially
our rival so long ; interested more than
any other in disunion :md the consequent
weakening of our great naval and com
mercial power, and suffering, too. as she
has suffered, so long and severely because
of this war I do not hesitate to say that
she hsis performed an act of unselfish
heroism without cxsimplc in history.
Was such indeed her purpose; Ict her
answer before the impartial tribunal of
Hsterity. In any event, after the great
reaction in public sentiment in the North
and west, to be followed after some time
by a like reaction in the South, foreign
recognition now of the Confederate States
could avail little to delay or prevent Ihvil
re-union : if, as I firmly believe, re-union
be not only jossible but inevitable.
Sir, I have not spoken of foreign -Arbitration.
Tliat is quite another question.
I think it impracticable, and fear it as
dangerous. The very Powers or smo
other Power which have hesitated to
aid disunion directly or by force, might,
as authorized arbiters, most readily pro
nounce for it at hs.-t. Very grand, in
deed, would le the tribunal before which
the great question of the Union of these
Suites sind the final destinv of this ivnii-
all sections, and that, in liattle, the men i party which is represented bv Horace
of the North, and especially of the West, I Gra ly, of the N. Y. Tribuix. 'Secretary
mm int. n vr-iais. iiiiut.i4U iiitriv iiiia ij.-u j tMiiin loo, i:i lunucraiicc ox Uii olnect,
a mutual and most mischievous inisiake has rec-cittly given a great dinner, whereat
on both sides. The South overvalued j Governor Curtin was present, and it is
any man
Confcde
a.);i
i flows into the
I
on
the roya!
blood. There is
Politics is king.
Jersey, too, is
f.'.ai. hir, t'.itse ar
-e pninx-a of tlie
k:::o:i fjs.rth.
m rcfni : New
4- 'iK-.v t j i.iC South, and the Siutli
anl iv,n and longer than any
-'j j-l remeu:l)crcd both her
t;.e vuiistiriitiwii and her interest
I . n-.-jo. And Pennsylvania, a sort
K.Zi j-ivund, j;sst between the North
"a.... ...a cxtenttnisr, ais-j, to
.Mississippi.
u.utei bv nearer, if
t:, to every
section, tlian
not
anv
umess it be Ohio. Slie
vet the kfVifr.:u- in llir-
wt criiivihling r.rch of the Union.
!S bor ' -r S'?l- nnl n-.-.r' Ikon
- Wu-.nurhing tiern?nt than anv of the
tT, '-c of l'er.nylva'nla' arc
'thk-, practical, and enterprising,
-t b irr' a-rirrosve. Thev have
, - '-vnfti o'.a l-aigiish and icr
ic:t ti.;.n .)nv ctj1CT e;0 jpig
--. SiOre dlligeiuiy their ov. n business.
kavTSi onc Niiosyncracy or speci
al the tarVl as1'i evpn that is retdiy
sort a mattKt tradition than of
,:1'an:ia! intfr,t 'The industry, cn-
jO.an.1 tliriff f.t Pennsylvania are
ion. In anv
resr.
7 able to tak!
-sm anv eomnp
! tl Union is of more
li .ier than any local infcr
Cl ?ti,C!- tks also bind these tates
'-va:har.d New Jersev, csVti;ll!y
rk,'JJ- and the South to te:n
." .7 aa laia-rir r. .th
h:il but
and there.
with t'.u waters ot tiiat nuhtv
river, finds it way, at least, to the (Juli
of alexico. And we must and will fol
low it with travel and trade, not by
treaty but by right freely peaceably, and
without restriction or tribute, under the
same Government and ilag, to its home
in the bosom of that Gulf. Sir, we will
not remain sifter separation f'Otn the
South, a pnnince or appendage of the
East, to bear her burdens and pay her
taxes ; nor hemmed in an isolated as we
are, nor without a sea-coast, could we
long remain a tUsiinct confederacy. IJut
ivhpr.w we married to the South or
East, v.-o bring with us three-fourths of
the territories of the val'cy to the Pocky
Mountains, and it may be to the Pacfio
tli grandes and most magnificent
dowcry which bride ever had to bestow.
And now the way to reunion ! What
so easy ? Behohl to-day two separate gov
emr.ments in one count ly, and without a
natural dividing line ; with two presidents
and cabinets, and a double Congress ;
and vet each under a constitution so ex
actly similar, to one to the other, that
a stranger could scarce discern the differ
ence. Was ever folly and madness like
this ? Sir, it is not iii the nature of things
that it should continue long.
lint wliv sneak'of ways and terms of
"J - l "
i.-ic-d, more or less defined from the first. 1 n-nt for ages, should be heard, and histo
ric through all time, the embassadors who
should argue it. And if beligeivnts con
sent, let the subjects in controversy Ik? re
ferred to Switzerland, or I'usm.-i, vr any
oiliT impartial :md incorruptible Power
or State in Europe. Put at hist, sir, the
people of these several States here, at
hom, must be the final arbiter of this
quarrel in America; smd the people and
Slates"' of the Northwest, the mediator
who shall stand, like the prophet, betwixt
the living ami the dead, that the plague
of disunion mav be stayed.
Ir, this war. horrible as it is, has
important
r lags ot truce, exchange ot prisoners,
and, ;ili jour other observances of the
laws", forms, i.nd courtesies of war are
acts ot rectgnitiou. .Sir, tkes
doubt to-dav that there is a
government at ilichmond, and that it is a
belligerent ?" Even the S.-cretnry of
I State lias discovered it at last, though he
has written panderjus f-:o of pelished
rhetoric to prove that it is not. Will
continual war, then, without extended
and substantial success, make the confed
erate States any the less a government in
fact ?
"But it confesses disunion." Yes,
taiiLilit us all some of the mosi
h
just as tlse surgeon, who sx'ts 3 our frae- j and salutary lesions which ever a people
lured limb m splints, in order that it may
be healed, admits that it is broken. But
the Government will have failed to crush
out the rebellion." Sir, it ha failed.
You went to war to prove that we had a
imed.
Eiist, it has annihilated, in twenty
months, all the false and pernicious theo-
! nes nnd teachings ot abolitionism for
J thirty jcars, and which a mere appeal
Government. With what result ? To, the j to lacts smd argument could not have un
its own personal courage, and undcrvalu
ed ours, and wo too readily consented;
but at the same time she cxageratcd our
aggregate strength and resources, and un
derestimated her own : and" we fell into
the same error ; and hence the original
and fatal mistake or vice of the military
policy of the North, and which has al
ready broken down the wsir by its own
weight the belief that we could bring
overwhelming numbers and power into
the field and upon the sea, and crash out
tho South at a blow. But twenty months
of terrible warfare have corrected many
errors, anl taught us the wisdom of a
century. And now, sir, every on? of
these lessons will profit us for ages to
coma ; anl if we d j but re-unite, will
bind us in a clser, firmer, more durable
union than ever before.
snd, the decision arrived at that he should
run as the candidate for Governor of thia
new Abolition-conservative party. It is
noihing Lut th.e People's lorty repeated
that is, a party which, through deception,
may carry Pennsylvania and then bis
bodily handed over to the ultraists, as
Geu. Cameron disposed of a similar or
ganization to which he stood as foster
father.
Success obtained. Gov. Curtin would
probably, as a zealous convert propose to
lead two colored brigades into the heart
of the rebellion instead of Csuneron's one. "
For, let it be remembered thai William
1L Seward, the wily leader in this move
ment, if the chief expounder of the hvc
sistable conflict" doctrine, who would
accomplish by torbuous roads that ' which
Greely strives to attain eniy and di
rectly. To our mind Sj ward, "and tho-e
danrerous
I have now, Mr. Speaker, finished
what I derdre to say at this time, upon I who follow him, are the most
the great question of re-union of these i members of the heterogeneous compound
States. I have spoken freely and boldly j opposed to the gvat Democracy. They
not wisely, it may be, for the present, j blind the people with sophistrr, they
or for myself persnlly, but most wisely j raise false issue?, they confuse the public
for the future and for my county. Not luind, they barvly sometimes keep the
courting censure, 1 yet da not shrink tioai j word of promise to the ear, and always
it. My own immediate personal interests, break it to the hope. We fear tho
nut my chances just now i.r the more i roi-iis when bringing presents,
tremble when any portion of
material rewards of ambition,
surrender as hostages to that
"rent
I again
heiv-
afser, the echo of whoa- footstecps
we
this riarty.
so hostile to our Constitution, smd so de
structive of our Union in tho past, nrcs-
sdready I hear along the highway of j ent and future, calls itself conservative,
time. Whoever, here or t-Jscw here, be- i and we feel called upon to warn the I)i -
mocracy, aid more especially the Dcmoc
tievcs that war can resiore the in ion o:
these Stsites ; whoever would have a war
for the abolition of slavtry, or disunion ;
and he who demands southern indepen
dence and final separation, let him speik,
fi.r him have I oficr.ded. Detoted to the
I.'nion fivm the beginning. I will not de
sert it now ia thin hour of its sorest trial.
Sir, it was the day dream of my boy
hood, the cherished desire of my youth,
that I might live to see the hundredth :m
l.ivcisary of our national in-ej iidence,
and as aa orsilor of th-i day, exult in ex
panding glories and greatness of the still
United States. That 3sien linger? yet
before my eyes, obscured iivWd by the
clouds and thick darkness and the blood
of civil war. But, sir, if the men of
this generation sire wise enough to profit
by th? hard experience of the past two
years, mid will trrn their heuits now
from b!dy intents to the words and arts
of peace, that day will find us again the
United States. And if not earlier, as I
r I
racy, of New York,against this new Tro
jan horse w hich the enemies of our party
and our country seek U introduce into
the itsidel of the faithful defenders of the
American Government.
Democratic brethren, do not listen to
the cojohng wt-rds of any wing c-f the
oppsition ; they are abolitionists of diff-
! erent shades ; we do not need thcra &n
al!ie, for their alliance is dangerous r.i
corriq-ting.
The firoud and united Democracy ca
and will without the aid of xacrccnarr
I'lience, destroy the dlfierent divisions of
the cnciay when we luive
front. Vatritf j- L'uiou,
them fullv in
iJ2f The Piesident is said to have in
hi hands a list of the g-nera! otficers of
the Annv cf the I'otoniac who are consld-
j eivd ur.l.t to bo entrusted with command,
in consequence of c-n'ertiining and cx
i pressirg opinions hostile to himself and
t'po" Mlicy. If tluat i to be the criterion
re-nmon ( bv which the army is to be mdeJ. it Is
be consumated ; that honwforth for ages, ; ,ard;v wor? h while to make cut a list the
the States and the people who shall fill up j whole army must be disbanded.' There
this michtv continent, united nndcr one nrc not. urolal.lv. m li.v.dr.-l ir,.r. ,T
would desire and bilieve,- at lea-t
that dav let the irreat work of
-3 U:
reunion now ? Hie will is yet wanting
in both sections. Union is consent and
goodwill and fraternal affection. War
is force, hate, revenge. Is the country
tired at last of war ? Ha the experi
ment leen tried long enough 1 Has suttj
..w.nt I.I.-kvI lieen shed, treasure expended,
and misery inflicted in both the North
and the Souf h ? What then ? Stop
fHitui". .Make an armisucc "o .w. ......
treaty. Withdraw your army from the
"a and New Jersey, flows ! 'J . . ..a.i;a.ml,n
n'iair jxi - i
TWLszc alsolute fiw trade between the
North aiH KecaU ets
""auDZOl;o blockade. Keduce your
Break up yot u
.-i.'ta. li telefrraph. Ite-
icc-c""1" .
foe- f, , 3
? S Iawaro and Maiylai;
p; , ire nvcr, common to both
people ot the loyal States it has, in your
hands, been the Government of King
St oik, but to the Confederate StatCe, of
King Log. "Hut the rebellion will have
triumphed. Better triumph to-dny than
ten years hnce. But I deny it. The
rebellion will at last be crushed out in the
onlvwny in which it ever was possible.
" But no onc will be hung t the end of
war." Neither will there be, though the
war should last half a century, except by
the mob or the hand of arbitrary jower.
But really, sir, if there is to be no hang
ing, let this Administration, and all who
have done its bidding everywhere, rejoice
and be exceeding glad.
And now, sir, allow me a word upon a
subject of very great interest at this mo
ment, and most important it may be in
its influence upon the future Foreign
Mediation. I speak not of armed and
hostile intervention, which I would resist
as long as but one man was left to strike
a blow at the invader. But friendly medi
ation the kindly offer of an impsirtial
Power to stand sis daysman between the
contending parties in this most bloody and
exhausting strife ought to be met in a
spirit as cordial nnd ready as that in
which it is proffered. It would be chur
lish to refuse. Certainly, it is not consis
tent with the former dignity of this Gov
ernment to ask for mediation ; neither,
er would it befit its ancient magnanimity
to reject it. As proposed bv the Empc-
taught in halt a century. e have learn
ed thsit the South is not week, dependent,
unenterprising, or corrupted by slavery,
luxury, and idleness; but powerful, ear
nest, wsiriike, enduring, self-supporting,
full of energy, and inexhaustible
cc?. Wc have been taught,
i:s.Watftr? throueh Pennsylvania
Ja !M into the Chcasnpcake.
ijSt watershed itself, extra J-
NVw l,n' t'iercfrc almost to
s Carolina line, does belong, and
Jjfj'on? in common and central
saStat under one Gorem-
navy.
roadi.
unite your exp? xnpm
No more
in resour
and now
conf ss it openly, that African slavery,
instead of being a source of weakcrss to
the South, is one of her main elements of
strength ; and hi nee the ''military neces
sity," wc sire told of abolishing slavery,
in order to suppress the rebellion. Wc
have leanied, also, that the non-slave-ho'ding
white men in the South, millions
in number, arc immovably attached to
the institution, and sire its chief support ;
and abolitionists iiavo found out, to their
infinite surprise and disgust, that the
slave is net " panting for freedom," nor
pining in silent but revengeful grief over
cruelty and oppression inflicted upon him,
but happy, contented, attached deeply to
his master, and unwilling at least not
eager to accept the boon offreedm which
they have proffered him. I appeal to the
President for the proof, I appeal to the
fact that fewer slaves hsive evenped, even
from Virginia, in nearly two years, than
Arnold and Cornwallis carried away in
six months of invasion in 17R1. Finally,
sir, we liave learned, smd the South, too,
what the history of the world ages -ago,
and our own history might have taught
us, that servile insurrection is the least of
Constitution, smd hi one Union, and the
same destiny, shall celebrate it as the
birthday both of independence and of the
Great Kcstoration.
Sir, I repent if, wc are in the tnidst of
the very crisis of this revolution. If to
day, we secure eace. an-l begin the work
of reunion, we shall yet escape; ii not,
I see nothing b-tore us but universal po
litical and social rcvohifien, anarchy, and
bloodshed, compared with which the
Beign of Terror in France was a merciful
visitation.
:my grade in that iinuy, and not two regi
ments of men, who have not time n I
agsiin spoken ygaiiist the President aal
his Kj'.icy. They wo aid be poor stick if
they didn't, abused and maltreated 3
tlay have lieen. In short, the ofheer or
private of the Potomac Army who
wouldn't damn them, isn't worth a damn
himself.
IlESunnnxw.ip. An amusing inci
dent occurred during the lattle of Newto
nia, Mo. The fight lei?ig hotly con
tested, an officer became very thirsty and
repaired to a spring r.enr by to f ct a dxsiit
of cool water. Kneeling down he drank
from the spring without the ;d of cup.
As he arose from his refreshing tod, he
sat fair and square t pen his heels,
which were armtd with a pair of tre-
ndical Kepublicans is j mendous Mexican spurs. The instant he
Tl.ev sdl seek the felt the prick of the sharp rollers, he
thouglit the enemy were ujon him siui a
bsivonet entering his llesh- When otne
of his men arrived he was bawl:;
I surrender! I surrender!" at th
his voice.
Abolition i:i Iis?u!sc.
Wc are not of those who have ever
placed confidence in the conservative pro
fessions of Lincoln, Seward and other
leaders of the Ih-ps.b'iean party. The
diffeivncc between Weed smd Greely, be
tween sc-csilled radic;il
merely one of time
same end ; th-y are all iuibueil with the
same fanatical spirit ; they equally share
liitj i IT. J -VFi ir-i jf;i ui ji v. . xa m uiu s w
calamities, and, if let alone, wiii be equal
co-workers in lli3 destruction of our :ia
tional liberties, givsitncss and prosperity.
Tliev may don the li cry of Heaven to
, " Oh
top of
A var.keo down cast has invented
.. . . i.i fTTI.. I thf (l-intprs tn which she Is rx.il'hsed
wa. S9 1. lnil'. 1 ..!.. .IT 1 .1 II I I .11 I llll IT. I r- - - 1
v- ... nKcwiAiumnmmt It ta th. i Hence, in my deliberate judgment, Afri
speeiliest, easiest, most graceful mode
susjiending hostilities. Iet us hear no
more of the mediation of cannon and the
sword. The day for all that has gone by.
Ixt us be statesmen a$ last. Sir, I give
th-nks that some at least, among lb Be
lt is the i Hence, in my deliberate
node of i can slavery, as an institution, w i.l conic
out of this conflict fifty-told stronger than
when the war began.
The South, too, sir, has learned most
important lessons ; and among them, that
personal courags ii qualify cxmnvjn to
serve the devil in, and proclaim themselves a machine for corking up daylight, which
conservatives in order to more surety com
psiss the ends of Abolitionism ; but Demo
crtiis should know thut the character of
the men, and their history, so full of hy
jiocrisy, ruse, treachery, and falschoo.1,
proves that, whether they call themselves
People's larfy, llepublie-ans, Unionists,
or Conservatives, they are nothing but
Abolitionists, imbued with the single idea
of elevating lhe negro to the kwel of the
white, sdthemgh in the vsiin eiTvrt t re
verse the d.-crecs of nature lllrtv shall
w:.l cventuaiiy superette gns. lie covers
the interior of a Hour laurel with hoe
maker? vax holds it t jx'-n to the ?un.
then su 'deiih' hea ls up thciccTvL The
light sticks to the wax and a; night can
be cut in lots to suit purehsrcrs.
Er- An Irish waiter complimeuted a
salmon in tlie following manner: 44 Faith,
it's not two hours since that salmon mas
walking round his real estate with 1U
hands in Lis lockets, never dreamir.g
nerish and the American lW-ublic beo me what a pretty inviushun he'd have to
a bv-w or.'., mockerv and scorn throughout I jine you gentlemen at dinner."
all Christendom.
We observe that Thurlow Weed is stri
ving to tirgsinize a hybrid so-railed con
servative party, ctunpol of unreliable
Democrats. Rich as C.-iHieot: and the Ke-
pnUican admri;i of tirat wing cf th r jw cfd-ath.
CT A western erlitor speaks of the cir
cumstance of a bird building its nest upon
a ledge over the door of a doctor's oIce,
as an ettemnt to rertr :t w-trrrr bi the