I VOLUI[E XVI.--NUMBER 17 THE POTTER JOURNAL PUBLISHED BY IL 3leAlarney, Proprietor. $1.50 PR YEA.P.,-INYABLA.BLY IN ADVANCE. ,* * *Devoted to the cause of Republicanism, the ao.grests Of AgriCulture, the advaneeMent vat 't'duciition, and the best good of Potter ':olchinty. Owning no guide except that of 'Principle, it will dndeaver to aid, in the work Of More fully Fleedomizing our dountry. A . LIVILTIBiIifiI:II3 inserted at the following ',rates, gxcept where special bargains are made. 1 Square [lO lines] .1- - 50 t l u 3 lc $ 1 50 Each subsequent insertionlessthan 13, 25 'l. Square three months, 2 50 six " 4 00 . " nine . 5 50 q " • one year, 600 '1 Column six months, 2O 00 if cc n it 10 00 ir ,II CI "•.. . '.. •• .- .. .• 700 li " per year., 40 00 iJ . sc 4C 44 r 20 00 Administrator's or Executor's Notice, 200 Business Cards, 8 lines or less,per year 5 00 ..Special and Editorial Notices, per line, 10 r i * * *All transient advertisements must be 'paid in advance, and no notice will be taken of advertisements from a distance, unless they aka accompanied by the money or satisfactory reference. * * *Blanks, and Job Work of all kinds, at ended i d to .promptly and faithfully. 1 BUSINESS CARDS. ' Free and Accepted Ancient York Masons. I EULALIA LODGE, No. 342, F. A. M. STATED Meettnjs on the 2nd and 4tltWednes days of each month. Also Masonic gather ings on every Wednesday Evening, for work and practice, at their Hall in Coudersport.. C; fI. WARRINErt,IW. M. • A. SIDNEY LYMAN, SCC'y. JOUN S. ..IANN, ATTORNEY AND !COUNSELLOR AT Li.kW, Coudersport, Pa., rill attend the several Courts in Poker and Magian Counties. All 'busicesslntrusted in his. care will receive prompt attention. 011 ice corner of West and Third streets. ARTHUR G. OLMSTED, ATTORNEY & COUNSELLOI3. AT ILVW, Coudersport, Pa., will attend to all business entrusted to his care, with pie. toßtnes and fleiity. Office on Soth-west co:ner of Main and lourth streets. ISAAC_ BENSON AfitORNEY AT LAW, Coudersport, attend to all business entrusted to him, lwith care and promptness. Office on Second st., near the Allegheny Bridge. F. W. KNOX, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Coudersport. Pa., will regularly attend the Courts in _ Potter and the adjoining Counties. . • 0. T. ELLISON, 'PRACTICING PHYSICIAN, Coudersport; Pa., respectfully informs the_citizens of the vil lage and vicinity that rlic will promply re spond to all calls for professional services. Office on Main st., in building formerly oc cupied by C. W. Ellis, Mir'. C. S: & E. A. JONES, DEALERS IN DRUGS, ,11EDICINES, PAINTS Oils, Fancy Articles, Stationery, Dry Good: Groceries, &c., Main st : , Couddrsport, Pa. D. E. OLMSTED, DEALER IN DRY GOODS, READY-MADE Clothing, Crockery, Groceries, ..te. 2 Main st., Coudersport, Pa. COLLINS SMITH, DEALER in Dry Goods,Groceries, Provisions, Hardware, Queensware, Cutlery, and all Goods usually found in a country Htore.— Coudersport, Nov, 27, 1861. COUDERSPORT HOTEL, D. F. GLASSIIIRE, Proprietor, Ccirner o- Main and Second Streets, Coudersport, Pot ter Co., Pa. A Livery Stable is also kept in' connect tion with this Hotel. I= • - . OLMSTED & KELLY,' . DEALER IN STOVES, TIN & SHEET IRON WARE, Main st., nearly opposite the Court House, Coudersport, Pa- Tin and Sheet Iron Ware made to order, in good style, on short notice. SEIZING MILLS ACADEMY. SPRING MILLS, ALLEGANY C0.,1 N. Y. ELIAS HORTON, JR., .Principal Mrs. ADA WALKER HORTON, . Preceptress Miss NELLIE WALKER, Assistant Miss GERALDINE WOOD, Teacher of Music , The Fall Term commences August 26. The Winter Term commences December 9. The Spring Term commences March 25. Tuition from Three to Five Dollars. Board $1.50 per week, ' Varnished rooms for .self-boarding at low prices. ' For further information address thelPrinci •pal or the undersigned. j President Board TCrOul3stßees Pension Bounty and War claim Agency... P ENSIONS procured for soldiers! of the present war who are dliabled - by reason of wounds received or disease contractracted While in the service of the United States . ; and' pension's, bounty, and arrears of pay Obtained for widows or heirs of 'those who hive died or beeh killed while in service. • All letters of inquiry prOrhtry answered, and on receipt by reairof a - statement of the ease of clalinant I :will forward the necessary papers for their iignature: Fees Pension cases as oak by law.,.;_. ' • • ' I ' Revismtess.—Hon. Ind° BENSON, Hon. A. G.,Oracsr* J. S. MANN Esq. F. W. KNOX, Esq. " • DAN BATH, Claim Agent COtiderpor) - Jine.B, ' Ar.INT'S BL Q OU SOSRS,--:for diese—at ITER . . . . ...., . . -. , -I . - ~ '', •--- . - :,- ,igab,,, ti . .. . . ) W.A - . " —•-0 . A 0 1 .!..:... : - .: :... ~.,. - .•• - - -.1...- -- --;•:.:., - - --. - 1,-_ _, . .. . . .. . • ..... ~. . _ .., fa,A,,0.• ,'.: 11 „ ,- T e. ..,..:::::_ n i !...z...•. ••.. i •, . „ '1 • - '' Pat Alb' .G. . .- • . . _ t,' , ..., ~. .2.,,, -.4 - . -... ... - -'... . il , - ~ ,•.'' t i 1 1 .,,,, •, ' • - . ' ' . . •- . - , ' . . . . ...• ' ' . . .. . , ' • . . , • . ._ . . . •.. . . . ' . •-„.... . . . • . • [Published by :Request.]` ~lT'soNG. [Lines writtit j m.by Dr. - Shtlierland, a "Live Yankee, of theo2d N. Y. Rnglinent,•Who was captured . by the. Rebels duritig the batte of Fair Oaks, on the 31st of MaY,l - 1362,tind con fined in Dixie'4 Land, during the hiimmer and part of the autumn of- 1862, helnt WC.orrect his capture, and their confinement; treatment, and suffering, while prisoneriLttito,.a hit' at the habits and cast Oms of the Southern' Con federacy.r] 'Twas on the the tiiirey-firit of itttiy, In eighteen s i xty-two, The rebels metlour Union force, To see what they could do. • 1 • McClellan was hear Rlc,hmond then, That nasty rlhel den,. Where whites the gentlemen•aro crowned, Where nen* are.notmen: . . 1 . They met and fought with iron will, Each eager to obtain The mead that every soldier loves— The victor's glorious name. The cannon sent her iron hail, The musket showers of lead, Which filled. the air with dying groans, And strewed thee field with dead: The Ninety-Second stood firm in front, In Palmer's bold brigade, Until in "Dales land" they had Some scores pf widoivs made. But when they Saw they were out-flanked, They wheeled 'about and fled, While many of our Northern braves. Were numbered with the dead. The double-quick our soldiers took', Soon left me far behind, That nimble dep.! could not take, Although sOvell inclined. The rebels came with savage yells, A yankee they bad found, With curses bid me "face about,!' And march iiivay to town. They marched - Me down with many more, Through mud and mire to town, • And there' With bars and prison walls, • Your honor did surround. They made tobacco within those walls In times of Peace'and trade, But now the bedbugs and the lice Hold nightly I tdrez's parades. I They give us ra ti ons twice each day, But nothing for our beds, With fleas and bedbugs without nuinber . Gently crawling zou ( nd Our heads. Our morning taTions were of bread, A slice of slinking meat, Which hunger qtacle us soon devour, • And even tasted sweet. f i At night we bad a little stitp, Solite watei.,tioiled with peas, And then we took our prison beds, To dream of lice and fleas. We were conned(' three days and 'night's Within thost iron bars, When, oh! the Svelcome news then , calne, To get aboard the, cars. They marched u§ through their nasty streets, That all the crowd might see. The "living yankees" from the , North, Tnat in that land rat free: The crowd was dense on either side, Composed of whites and blacks, While many shonted in the crowd, To shoot them in their tracks. We traveled all this day and night, Oppressed by Idust and heat ; We got some muddy water, But nothing for to eat. At length each man five crackers got; All counted 130 with care, And this they thought a'libera thing, Considering who we were. • S. KELLY Again we traveled all day and night, As we had the day before, • With nothing for our rations, While our seats were getting sore. Again our Scanty breakfast came : Five crackers as befoie, And this they , thought a heavy draft On old Jeff's:three years' store. This morning found us ell within The North Carolina State, With Salisbury's prison trails ahead ) Where we could read our fate. We found Carolina on the fence, A leg on either tide; She says it's Southern. fashion For ladies so to ride. She sends her troops to help the North, Then Northern! prisoners keep But vengeance sure is on her track, And vengeance never sleeps. NVAI Our prison walls were large and high, For spinning cotton made, When "old King Colton" ruled as king, And negiop were in trifle. Bat when they found his,glorY gont4; And cotton would not" ell, They turned their fields into buryittvgrOhnds, Their factories into hells. They fired upon our stars and strives, . They stole our arms nedmOney, Andtheit thercried, "Let us atone," In accents sweet as honey. . The rebels sung throughout the South, - In Dixie's land they'd - stand, And, if they ever lived to die, They'd:die in D,lxie's land. We found them 'standing when we came, When not too drunk 'or tiOsY,• - "Iligh - taniaFfitlie — Y'4l7rather ran and live, Than die to lire in Dixie. M! he La. TpocitoD to, fili,iliiipipW of ,thie . I).oiiophot, 4RO file itqeir?iliqtioq of fohlify, g.iteNtio:oo'..ffito. COLTDOSPORT I POTTER CORITY t PA, WEDNESDAY, lIILY 13, 1864. IVO people here are ignorant, And used as tools by rogues, • They've herded sitith the blacks so long', They've got the laugh aid brogue. • Schoolhotisen here yod never End, Such sights are seldotn seen. With truant boys and red-hheeked girls, A romping on the gielti. I'm proud to say I'M frOni the North; Where no one lacks for kharledge, For every mile'or two 1 . 0• q; • You' find a school or v:d age. Thley keep slave pens, and often dell Their very blood and bone,. For crosses with the negro slave, There gentry never own. ' They keep their slaves in ignorance, They'renever taught to read, For knowledge and old slavery Have net* -, et agreed. They breed - add sell the negro here, As NOrtliorit'iben would cattle, The whiter they `can get the skin, The liiore'veztue in the chattle. They buy our hats;oaps, Coats and ring% And 'trinkets we have wrought, As keepsakes of those Yankee boys ' They, in theirbattles' caught. The only way they have . to live, And save our precious Is to manufacture rings riorri bones, And trade for cakes acid pies. If they should get to Heaven's gate,a And find all Union there, They would secede aionee to Hell, And join their kindred there. And now we've sung about the &nth, And of their doings there, Now let us step within the bars, And learn the prisoners' fare. They give Us rations twice each day, Their coarsest negro's fare, And this they think is generous, Considering who we were. • . Our morning rations are of bread, The loaves are very small, A. little slice of bacon, From which the maggots fail. They take the liquor from this meat, Stir in a little rice; And this we have for'supper, Its flavor very nice. Our rations here are always fresh, Because they have no salt, And if they hear a man complain, He's told it's his 0!C72 fault. At vitht we sleep upon the floor, We often lay in tiers, While body lice in whole battalions, Charge upon our fronts and rears. They turn ns out a while each day, Upon enr prison hearth, T 9 pick the lice from off our clothes, The maggots from our teeth. they keep a bake-house near our den, To bake our daily bread, You'd think some children had the dough, To mate code loin-cats' heads. The bakers take Our flour ant rice, •, To make sweet cake anol'rkie, The half-starved Yanks think they 'must eat So to the bakers fly. They give the prisoners scanty fare, To rob them of their money, They say our hungry boys must have, Some cakes as sweet as honey. Our generOus keeper says to us, Tells to us one and all, I fear your daily rations May sometimes' be too small. If any want more rations here, To keep your souls alive, Just step into my sutler's shop, • And buy sweetmeats and pies. If any lack the dime or scrip, Or think his fare is bard, Just take him to the guard-louse, Or "buck" bird in the yard. And !font we've silt* alipui Aed i And how we live in there No* let us sing about our :dead. ) In "Diltie's land to fair." , When any of the prisofiers No matter what their grade; They get a negro with Ins cart To take him to the shades. They'd get a negro with his cart ) Drawn by a stubborn mule, To show their height of 'Chivalry If Southern power conlct fttle. The fifteenth of August, Carolina cant& And to the prisoners said, Just jiimp aboard my cattle cars, ' With some br my "nice hived:" I'm pledgedito take yott to your Buds, My pledges seldom fail. • " find my seats are rather bard, But easier than my rail. With bounding hearth We heard het through, Then through the gate did spring, And when aboard - her cattle care, We'made the welkin ring. In'highest glee we started off, No joys our tongues could tell; But instead_of going toonriine9; We went to "Island Belle." Belle Island is,a sandy plain; • Without a' tree or'shade; ' Or cooling spring toAnenah the ttiirSti That heat and hunger made. • Our rations here are veil , small, - Softie bread and . stinhing beef, Whibli only sharpens atipetite, And gives but faint relief. Virheii beef is scarce we soMeiiineS get. A soup of bugs and flies; , . - - And if perchance there should be beans, They seldom show their §yei. . ThiS nasty, stinking, seeesli fare, - We often fail to get ; And.thert With rage we'd gnaili otir teeth, Like' mailthen in a,fit. Here many of the prisoners lie Upon the burning sand; Too weak by far to walk around; While many cannot stand. • Starvation attires us in the fate / His jaws are open wide ; , Unless env friends send quick relief, We down his thioat miisi glide. Our numbers here grow leis and less; The strongest soon must fall, For old Grim death is on our track; And soon will on us call. - Some . six or 'eight die every day, This fact none can deny ; „. While, many, with their dying breath; For food and rations ery. It's ]laud 'to die in distant lands, Virithout 'a, kindreVnear, To wipe the death-sweat from our fii‘e; Or' drop one friendly tear. A lady came into our camp, To bring us small supplies ; They dragged her to the old guard-honse, For selling cakes and pies. They "gagged" and "bucked" a prisoner hails Until he could not stand, The blood flowed freely from his mouth Upon the burning 'sand. ' The only crime he did commit, The only . wrong he'd ddhd— Els Northern pride it would not stoop To scour ;heir Southern gilds. We are a ragged set of men,. This prison has no' charms ; . But "Uncle Sam" will own bib bops, And give them all a farm. I long to see 'My friends again, Of which I fondly dteamt ; But I'd rather see my country free, And old Jeff. pulling hemp. The Stars and Stripes again must float, O'er Dixie's sunny laud': And Southern rebels must soon obey; Old Abram's just demands. Now here's a toast for Uncle Abe, Maf he live. one thousand years; And for his firmness in this war, We'll give three hearty cheers. Now here's another for Jeff.--L• . May the gallows claim its own: And when he dangles from the rope', We'll give three doleful groans.- Farewell old Richmond's prison wall, Farewell old Salisbury too ; And now farewell tolsland Belle— Four, weeks on you will do. And now you've heard nay story through, That, happy day has come, When 'I can bid Secesh farewell. And leave this Isle for—AnsAioVis. SPEECH OF R. Jr. BRECKINRIDGR, 'On taking his seat as President of the Baltimore Convention . GENTLEtIE?.I OF THE CONVENTION : You - Cannot be more sensible than I am that the part which I have to perform here to-day is Merely 'a Matter of form, and act ing upen the hrinaiples of my own life, I was inclined, when the suggestion 'was made to me from varlets ;quarters, that it was in' the mincts*of many members of the Convention - to confer this distinction upon me,' - to earnestly &Cline accept it., Be ' cause I haie never sought 'honors, - I have never sought distinctions, f lhave been a'working man, and nothing 'eke., But. Certain' considerations .led me To nhinge I my Mind. There is a doss of denin 'the roonntry far ton 'small for the good of the conntry. These are the men 'mere ly by; their example, by theirpen, by their voice—try to do good, and all the more in perilOna litneS, without regard to the good that may nome. It isgiven to nittny buch men to Understand, by the -distine tion conferred upon me, 'one 'of the' hum blest 'of their - Blase, that there . are ben wilt° the country the:flab; 'and who 1 not be forgotten. Here is another motive relatiVe to yourselves and the country, at large. It is god for yen, it is geed for every nation dad. every people, every State and every party, to Cherish ill general itatniliee, to w aIL noble I:datinnts (and where arc men more noble, nisregenerons to purge yoniselves of 01_01f-seekers and betrayerk , ,, and to con fer dOldea, if it only in mere form, up on. thOse who are worthy to - be trusted, and ask . nothing more. Now, according 'to my i co9victlons of propriety, having said,this 'should say nothing More. _But it has bee intimated to me . film. many quarters, rul in a way _which I cannot_ disregerd, That :I shetild disappoint the wishes :of my friends, add herbaria the jua.t. egPapatioasrOf the Contention, if I did nok7a: briefly and . yotiis 3:46,0i501'y as Ne:nothing npon'th:e'.ii'ent matters- -.lob have brought tie here.— , Therefore, in a :till' 'foie : voids, and as plainly as I can, I will endeavor to drat? yetTy attention to one and ithother of these greatsmatters in'Which we are all engaged. In the fitat place, nothing: can be 'more plain than the fact that 'yen are here as the reptebentatives of a great nation--volun- Cary representatives, chosen without forms of law, but as really representing the feel itigiand principlet—and-if yohnhocise,the prejudices - of the Americanyeeple at if it were written in theit laW, sad already passed by their votes. For the man 'that you-will noininate here for Ilfe•Preside by of the United States and ruler of a reat i people, in a great crisis, is just est rtain, I suppose, to become that ruleiy s any. thing under heaven is certain b e_ re it is done; and Moreover, you will al Wme to say, though' perhaps it is hard! /strictly proper that [should, but ea far as - I kiwiy your opinion's, I suppose it is just as Cer tain, now before you huer it, whose name you will utter, and which Will be responded to from one end to the taker of this nation, as it will be after it is has been uttered and recorded by Your Secretary - . Does any .man - doubt-that this Convert _veation intends to Any that Abraham Lin coln shall be the nominee ? What I wish, hoWever, to call 'Your attention to' is'llib grandeur of the mission upon which you are met, and therefore the 'dignity and solemnity, earnestness and conscientious nets with which, representing one of the gieatest, and - certainly one of the first people of the . world, you ought to 'dis charge thCse duties. Now, beside the nomination of President and Vite-Presi• dent, in regard to which latter office I will say, nothing, because I know there is more or; Jess difference of opinion among you but beside these nominations:, you have other most solemn duties 10 perforce. You have 'to organize this party throughout 'the United States. l'ou haVe to 'put it in whatever form your:Wisdom, Will sug gest, that -will unite all your wisdotn, en ergy and determination to gain the victo ry, which I have . alreadY 'said Wis in our poWer. More than 'that, ;you . have to lay down with clearness and precision 'the principles on which you intend to carry on this great political Contest, and 'prose cute the war which is Underneath them, and the glory of the country. which lies before us if we succeed, plainly 'not inn double sense, briefly 'not in a treatise,. with the dignity and precision of - a great people—to utter by its representativei the political Principles by ivhich they intend to live, and fOr the sake Of Which thev'are willing to die, 'so that all men VveryWhere may uuderstand 'Precisely whiit We mean, and lay that furroir ao deeply and 'Clearly that while every man Who is Worthy to associate with freemen May see it and pass over' it, every man who is unworthy may he either unable to pass it, Or may be driven far from it. We want 'none but those who are like us to be with fis. Now among these principles if you will allow me to say it, the first and most distinct is that ire do not intend to allow this'nation , to be destroyed. 'We are a nation,.. uo doubt a peculiar one, a nation formed of States - , and no nation except as these states form it; and thete States are no Statta tieent as they are States 'in that nation.. They had no moreright to 'reran diate the nation than the - nation had to_ repudiate theta. _None of them hid even the shadow of a 'right to do this, kid God helping us, we will vindicate that truth, so that it shall never be disputed any more in this world, It is a fearful utterance that is set before us, butt there are great. compensations for it. Those of you Who have alluded to this subject know that , from_ the foundation of 'the present 'Gov ' eminent before and since ohr 'present Con stitution 'was formed, 'there have always been parties that. had no faith in 'ear Gov. ernment. The mitt that formed it Were doubtful of its suttess, and, the Men who, opposed its <formation did not desire'its I success. And lam bold to say. 'ivitheus detaining you on this subjectohat for all tht.outcry about out violations of the Con stiridol°, this present living genertion and thin present Union party are more thoroughly devoted to that Constitution than any ether 'generation that has ever lived under it. While I say thig, and solemnly believe it, and believe it is ca pable of the strongest 'proof, I may also add that-it is a :seat error, which is pro pogated in our land, to say that our na tional life depends upon' our sustaining that Constitution. Our fathers made it and we love•it. I intend to maintain it. But if it suits us to change it W - e eii, - ,16 so, and when it suits us to change itiiveivill change it. If it were torn into ten thou sand pieces, the nation would be as. much a nation it it Was before the Constitution was made—a option always—that declar ed its inidependeince as a united people until now—a nation independent of all particular Institutions wider which they lived, capable of modeling them preeisely as their interest' require ,We ouglit in have it 'distinctly 'Understood. by. friends. 'and enemies that while we love_ the in- , stranient Ike.. will maintain. it, and Will with undoubted oartaidty put" to death TEREIB.-$1.50 TEI( INN* friend Or Toe Who Un'derta'kes th trattiild it tinder foot,; yet beyond ` a.doiiht . t►n_Rill reserve, thb right to alter it td at* ditr; felveit from time to time and Nit' getter ation toletteration. One moce idea on that subject;: We have 'incOrperated . id that instrtiment the right of tevolntiobi which gives us, without , a doubt the riiht to change it. It never eaistedliefote id' the AmeriCalvStates, and there it no need of rebellion, ih`shrrectioulor civil itat, cept upon a denial of the furidathentii principles of all free irovernmente thtit major part - ,must ruib, and there% bo er - way of tarrying-on tollety ezdetit. that the will Of the majority ;'shall be the ~ivll of the whole. So that in one Itotd;l4 deny the principles I hti l ve tried to'stailt; is to make a dogmatic assertion that: tits only form Of government that is piissibli with perfect liberty, and , acknoWledgea 4-God, is a Pure end alksolute'desPotilth; The principles, therefore, trhiah I am try. ink to state before you, ate princitiee which, if they be not trite, freedom ie an ; posbible; and no government but oiN of pure foie° can exist et . 'ought to itidittit among men. But the iden tvhioh I wished 'to 'o'4 out as the remedy for these troubles - ind sorrows, dreadful as they are, is this This fearful truth funs through the *Mile history of mankind that 'whatWer may be done to give stability to anthotity; whatever else may be ilen'e to give perpe tuity to institutions. howem wise , how ever glorious, practical; and ju - st may be the physiology of it, it, has beet fonod that the only 'enduring,'Only imperishatlo cement of all free institution's ha's he'ed the blood of traitors.\, Government has ever been built -upon noperishablU foUndationa, which foundation's were cot laid in the blood of , traiters. It is a fair fat trnth,b a t we had as well avow it at - ondki algid every lick you strike, and ever' rebel ydu kill, every battle yoti wirt,iireadful as it is to do It; you nre adding, it may tioa year, it may be ten years, it may he a-cen tury, it way be ten centuries, to the NIA Of the Governmeat, andi the freedont of !your childrerr. Now passing over that idea,e passiing over many. other thints ' 'which it would be right for me to say, (114 titueler`tre, and were thai the occasion. ret too add, you ale a Unliin party. YeAr otigih has been referred:to an lia'ringnit• -Burred eight years ago: In one sense it In true that yon ace far older thug that. I'see before me not only primitive Republican's arid 'primitive Abolitionists, but I s'e'e, also, primitive bemocrate, 'and primitlie Whigs, pritaitve Americana and, If yon will alio* , 'min to say so, I myself iimbeie; who, all my life, have been a party to ea s y; Self. Ab a Union Party , i will follow you to the 'ends of the earth and to'the gate of death; tint 'as a Repnblican 'party, as Abolition party, as a Whig party, as a Demeeratia party, as an American paitY, I will not folloiv you one foot. But it is true of the mass of the Anderican peoPle. however` yen bay divide and Scatter, iftille this war lasts, While thie.tonatry is in peril, while - yon'eall yourselves as you. 'go in the call of the Convehtion, the Ualen party, You are for the prenervation of The Union and the destruction of this Re' el lion,root and branch; add, in in'y - ment one of the great errors that haabien 'co'minitted by our Administration ot tho Federal Government, -the ebief of *filch tie are about to nom i date for another 'faro Qin - Eke—one of the great errors hasleeu to believe that ire have succeeded *ben whe have not suceeeded,; and to eel in a manner which Fs precisely . for those ivbe have succeeded: You will not, you ean • not succeed until you hay)) utterly broken 'the military Power of this people. I will not 'detain you on these incidental Points . , ono of whiCh has been made Prominent To the remarksnf the eicellent Chain:nal:lV the National Committee. Iqo not knOitt *hat would be willing to do 'so far as, 'probe. Ally, he. would, but I cordially agree with Min in tjtis, I think consideridg what ha% been done about Slavery, taking t he thing as it now stands, Gverlooking - .lidge.ther, either Sin way of condemnation or aPpsirral any act , that has brought na in the point where we are; but believing in Or con science and with 'all my bean that what has breught us to where we are in the matter of Slaiery, is the nrigioar.sin and folly of treason flia Secession. I)ecause you remember that 'the Chicaoo,tonien thin itself was understood, and I Veheyfi it virtually did explicitly Istate, IVat ttiey ;mould not touch Slaveryilin tile 'Nate.= Leasing it; therefore; altoiietherent - of the question-hoiv we 'came ;here Vti are on 'that - print, we nre prepared to - I,tA further; than the original RepubhearisTremselves were prepared to go. We nin Premed to demand not only that The'tsitole terri tory of the United Statesislialllial be madei slave, but that the General Government , o£' the -American people shall one oe. two thinci3, and it appears, to me that thero is nothirw ellvhat can be dont% either to , use the whole povier of the GoNeroment, both war power and peace poirer,.to Slavery at nearly as possibld it was r for although that will be'a feirTal state of society, it is bette that &catchy), Mil
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