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f - . . - -a,-..-., , in e .-i aa r - - a. J -rf.- r ' - ' - - " 3 !- f3 L.HATT: TEft VS. Tw tIUri pr udio, MTsUi d nitM vrtk yvM. ' - .?-:' ; ,' KDITTCD BT.J- HARPEX." For the benefit ofllha ungodly wrew of AholHid preaebrra, who desecrata the palplt. aaf fnedlt high ITearen, by deliTerin pIUil I. apeeehen im the SAhbath ., day, wemake the ftUwinx"hc4ov and appropriate extract from ?eUoke daoe of Ti me." If some of the 'But' hypocrite who- hara beeq "malmf the . Xdttor of the Homjkt, and .othr. troe HJnioo Domocraia the eubject of fheir foul . abase on -the Lord-'s Day, woold reflect opon - this ex tract,' it might Induce them to repent of their ? manifold sins and wickedness,", and lire a Vmore godly and righteoua life hereafter: THE FALSE PRIEST AT THE BES- ti .VXliiKGTIMS - raov roLLKs conn or nn. Xmvg ik seenraed, who aoag&t hldiss pise tlm Tio, ttmm lreMsa ef VahrVs ff, Amd from tb bot4UpUMT of the Lab, . Moss, vretokea, moft eoatewptible, moat Tile, fiUed Urn fiOs prtoat, m1 In hu eoasoieaee felt Th4 mDMt kanw ef the Usdylsj Worm, ': Ami h mlrht, fr ha had m hia hands TWUm of eomla, that wold not wipe sway. Iloar what ho was, ;. IIo swora. fat slrht of God . I f And man. to Breach hU maatcr. Jlut Chriat t . Koaeeaehod hlmtaltt ho cworo that love. of tool, Aloayhaj draws htm to the ehureh yt strawod Tho path that lod to htU with tempting flowers. Tho way of death, ho whljpored peaee : he swore "Away all lore ef lucre, all desire. , ' , Of eartly pomf and yet a pdaeoly seat Be liked; and t the slink of Mammon's hex . One aoi rspaelons ear. : JXU propbeeiea, r. He swore, were from the Lord ; and yet, taaght lias, Vorgala rwlth eaaekUh olatmeat, healed the woundefc Aad hrslses of th seal, eataido, hat left, "wTthla, the psatileat matter aaobaeryed, . To sap thomoral eonstitatioa qoito, . s Aa4 soo to hont agaia, ineorable. Ttm. v IV. a.n. . Of Zioa, sayiax, Poaee, when there was aoae.-:. The aaa whs earn with, thirsty seal to hear -! Of Josa. waat awav aasaUaSod t - . t tfr.ha uathar aoaoaI nmuturl tiiam Put. . . " lid one that had no Sariaar ta't) and yV ; ' 'trL. tiJ . ' w.:tt. .C.-:. j Uft utw mmm wv.. ut, uMHf mh aw, TTnmlTIlT. farrlreaaaa. holinoac' " ' - JStm words well lettered ia hU . sabbath ereod j Bat with hJiTiar ti t . ylaaw.1 W t wnga,' " -?,7ridvTJraBy, aad last ef wealth and power ; laoeaasxeraahiadstm assihsmU . . T .. . II wM a wotf in elethmg of the lamb, Tbet stole bite tae fold of God, -sad on ' The blood of soals, whieh he' did seU to death, . . . Orow tat; aad yatwWnfaay woald hare torned V rlla eat, heeried, ToaAaot he pTiert of God." " And that ho was aoointadfoals bolioredj 1 ; - ' Bat know, thai day, as waatho daril'i prioat, - : Aaaiatad by tho haada offtia aad Death, . AaA sat pecaliarly apart to ill, t . n While oa him smoked the rials of perditioa, Poarad aaamralaam. Ah me! what cursing than : vWss heaped apoa his bead by rained aoals,-' iThat eharjtdhha with their marder, 'as he stood, - With eye of an the aaiadaemed moat aad, wj -Waitiaa; the eominf of the Son of Mast . 'Bat lat aaa paaao, for thoa hast soea his place Aad paaiahmeat, beyoad the aphero of lore. "I Taxes to he Paid ia Ohio Honey. a . T2eCeIina 5!ar says -G.: Volney Dor-aey. State' Treasurer, has' ordered their County Treasurer fa recelveoalv Ohdn -aaoaey- in oaT- ment dftaxaa. " He discards Linco!ns "green hacks,'" although Congress has declared them , equal to gold and silver legal tender. A few jnoutha ago a man was put in prison for refu-.eing greenbacks.' and if there was justice in euro T 'Vjtbat, ws thing the same punishment should ' Wil AiirRMUTnuUHMP Rut ftnru, ia' " m Ui Jtrow-j irog an . aooiiuonis anu ine .qnnntsirsiion smuea ainuty on ausacn. I :lhereforf be la likely to . escape that pnaish- was a. Democrat. H Seml-OflclsJ JMsdosixre. .Col, Forney's " Washington Chronicle being t M !.', the aeml-ofScial .month-piece of the Gorern- -Blent, any statement he makes about the war " ' r",ls pf usual importance. Forney manages to a I ' . 1" J ' ' ' .t . tiJi arnow iar mere man ne ougni, anu is mailing . much ttfiaclue! hy letting out all that be knows. " -j We' quote th-following from him: That a . ' ClO.ii. 14 will be iount near Krarfencicaiiurr w I ,t.fve, no doubt, and the heavier it is, be,. worse Ij'-fbfA&b JttbeJs:-..iesermy srhweofe defense aad life of the Soothern caase a defeat of that imJ w Ifll HI ..U ... M.W .WB.IVU. K overthrow of this armr of Lee is the work of .tc-vi the army ef thePototnao during the coming -month. - That it Is oomDetent to the task no 5.H necan donbt. It ia Superior to the rebel arJ -: x3V la every ea turn end narticnlar. , Strarlin t-.k:.9 dm -rijhs' cause and field, 'with redoubled vw aSreosth, and well Jutnoled, a elorioua vietnrv rii waita "Ics: Tis rmy eMe Fbttmmill ana' JZickmumd oik th liapptrmnoek M lusaif ctfts f i?inf icec7Tr tial ciiy.and show to the X.T"worii thetra matness of all that com nosed an A-ia aooia army now iin quicuy oeiore r reo- aeTicKsourgt jr. .w - .-s,--iiw . '- j wI Va haya seen and heard -of many eaves In ,r-r :i Frth '6t thVworl Jj'buf the'roosi grand , 1 etupenuobs'cAyV everear ribOo this r.?jmi::: r-:.raadiscoyeredtifew r d i a.?.. . It I -' j tie rreaf IZmmetA Cave, l : :::-tr sr. hc:w -kaw, C : - - ti i. r eays jh-,t;pe -jaf A.'. ...j c'.ls Ahol.', iljai;!; r-.:: f- : or t f?r J eff. Davis, 1 I iter w "ii.tfilb3T4rt Abolition ITewagt, from lh AIbnj (N. . Y.) 42Sb tmdAisr. vi4:4r':t':'' ' Tb con4 ITcms of PrwJdent Uoceta. l!k hit fint, m eharaeterixcd, a to ittyle, ; lovc?cttahMOift8 to though by loatnew onwortby of a etatcamM. JL an cTidene of the porpoeee of the Ai- miautnition. sod of tb iacipIee of tht pre-4 dominant factum, st In ool Ua lea aaitgerDtu i for being o elamey and imwrfeeW' .It propd ees a eerie of meuores jn!ch, if ; atlqpted, muet wholly i'nWert.tiar eyetein t of GbTernr meat, and erect upon jte ruins a great central- irjn- aoi borbiog daepotlsm " I neweaK noce or cotnpiaini nuerea ngnina foreign powera, becaage thigj'' hare jot ret ra- ceded from their recognition of ihe , seceding States rtcertavemid have been enti- nger-jna, wwa mt. ucew cm,',lail maJa tbe remark that lha arm ia least t ed to mora conaidtteOH UV j v.s. sed them by negotiations, cartels of exchange. by releasing parties conTicsed of piracy, and treating alleged traitors as prisoner of war. m The refusal of foreign gOTcrumenta on this continent to adopt into citixenship the free negroes whom the President proposes to . colonize, seems to give him pain. Hayti aad Liberia are exx eptions; bat the negroes refuse to go to eithei of these places, much as the President thinks against their own interest, : The coolness with which tha proposition ia put forth to organize a general banking - system, u pod the basis of Federal stocks, by a sweeping act of &Bgre3sV ia another indica- catitfn of the obtasenesa of views and tha apa thy of conscience, which characterise all tha diseassions of th President on questions of Federal authority and constitutional limitation. ti intended to bring about aa extinc tion of the 8tate Banks, and the substitution of an inferior system under the direction of the Federal Government. Its. main desigUt is to keep up the credit of United States stocks, but this will be at the sacrifice of hundreds 'of ' Lmillions of State securities, in which the peo ple are already directly interested. -?be President propoaea,no alteration of the Uoostitution to eCect toM revoJuUonv in re-galfd to bis fsvorite project of emancipation and colon ixation, he proposes such a change, and offers his crude Amendment to Cbngifesa. It UvOn that no Slate will ever assent to; and l$5&h no class effected, by it the whites who (ire to pay. the expense, or tha blacks who sre to be the subjects of the experiment will ever tolerate. - . '..';. . " The arguments which are addressed to Congress to justify these &rUma changes. would xcite mirth if the sense of impending calamity did fot repress the'senae of the ludicroos. Never before was ewch reasoning eddresaed to airiatgewt-peaaj,..LJge are asked to aban-don our Government, and submit to" 'asurpa-tions and revolution, by appeals which 'only prove the imbecility of their author. Unable to cite any precedent for his propositions be quotes himself as authority, and tells us be can nowhere else find his - views so well ex-j pressed as in his own inaugural. Nowhere else indeed, for his crudity of ideas, none but i himself could be his parallel." Republics 1n other ages have been over-' -thrown by artful conspirators, or armed aggression ; and the knife of the assassin has struck down liberty in the dark,or. the sword of a military chief cleaved it on the battle-field. No such dignified fate is offered to us by the Lincoln Administration; but we see in its rao cess, only the body of liberty hacked and mangled by the dull Jknife of a mwerable bungler. .But he will not succeed. ' It is impossible for so much incapacity to be successful even in folly. ' - . . BialLop TsTdpple xen. HsClellaiL Bishop Wairru (Episcopal.) of Minnesota, after visiting the battle-field of Antietam, and the wounded in the hospitals, wrote to a friend as follows: Never live Teeen such love as . thes men have for McCiellan. The men would die for him. I am convinced more and more of tha injustice of the assaults upon him. A man who can take a demoralized army from defeats and drive a superior force as he did, deserves our praise. One thing I do say; don't doubt MpCleTlsn. A braver, truer man don't live, and more, he is the only man whocan take that army. Bet ter than all; he is a Christian, and cares for his soldiers when wounded or sick. He tojd me the Minnesota first was " s noble regiment as ever honored any army, and never; faltered a hair's breadth. - The boys send lore io you. Yours, faithfully. -u H. B. WHIPPLE. , .The latest test, th Dayton -Bmpin says, haa just come to Tight at Camp Ghase. A lad aome thirteen or Jou teen years old, a hand on on of the Ohio steamboats, had soms wash ing dons at Parlburg. Vai When hs settled the bUl the wasn-woman cJaimed,iIfteen cents more than, lie was willing to pay, According to his arithmetie he paid all be ought to pay The intelligent colored person lhought differ ently. To have revenge aha reported; th lad disloyal. .? A charge of that kod fom;:ani. a high eonree did net admit of any donbi. .,He waa arreeted and sent to Camp Chase, polit-Ical prisoner whsnc'siac tbs I'ection after fonr montha, imprwoament. r he haa been 'dis- charged in a eery sad eondition. U i Tdntrlnaasd VaWiamaXfci the colored population, In speaking of them i 1.1. . -?.. - .- - In hU message, he says: - Appucwums save eays h5t ,ohe joll bei rnadte me by many free Americana; f I ihIntoeWtJri T.TOIJH.T :' ' .VJ3RI "No Oescrtl IToom will betto? General cat that reateatVI QneTaGnj Mi, la permtted. to Uka command ol the 1 Admilfitriion then wa abaU eet ott to t EichnJOfli' It ia stated b eood suitbority jtbrt no 1eaal than one tond ashty thadot the aoldiera whoseWmea sow fill tbJ tnoater-rolls I ara ibaet.wlthorwUhoot leavetr0!ki WDOttt aiscxptinw bva essawiHvn uw y; i facta like this rKeenee snblineUed totha Bt most attainable limit. , Tba . Preaideat, too, ia reported as having I unla thai wlien ihwlalaeTWi mad fnr thra hnndred thousand man r J f ; I ,'Dr. BauLowa, President of the United States sanitary uo in mission, a lew weeae etnee, wnta i acknowedgeing the receipt of the $100,000 do-1 nation from-San Francisco, stated that we had I 150,000 sick and wounded aoldiara ia the vari- oua bospitais of tae union army. . tue army i . ' m, - I number arithmetie then thoa atandar I Abaent men , 180,0001 Sick man 2.'w 150.000 a -. ' " -. . ;. : ' 530.000 "What confessions these are of tneir inca pacity and incompetency to carry pu the war ? Why, in lieu of turning out McCLattAaT. or Mxigs, or BoassiDB, not have a telf turn putt Fernando Wood, in a speeeh, in New York, . .... . .. . . .... on ssataruar nirnt,'sai(J ne naa receirea inror-i M.f iW m-it tt . tl,. o. I 'ihaSontwaarandrcto'-m leading autesmen in the Sonth, maaof poat-l twin and influence in tha Ranthera CnnfederaeT I lial expnasMa desire to retain nnder n Dem- 1.:-1.1 L,ii' .t. t. lie debt on toth aides.' to be provided for, and I as they were wiMine to let br eones U by ranM if lh NflHh aanM. ami lhi Hbmii I once arain be restored.! This, announcement was received with'tremendona cheers. The New York Tribvnt commenting oo the speech remarks We have abundant and au- theatie eonfirmationa of our . former statement that .communications lookiner t an Madiust. ment" bva Paased between feadimt' Demo-1 crata here aad leading rebela at -Richmond ; the onlv material correction of onr former atatamant inaiafad on imnliaa that thVincMtia. tions were Ot led through a -ewes Unionist from Maryland, and not through an emissary, elandeiitrnelraentfrom thia oitT. . . JUiiL u.OJawawsaaaawit.i.X'. r Gallaatry of General ILoseeraat, ' W. D, B," army corre ponden tof the Cincinnati Commercial, ia Assistant Provost Mar- shal General at the headquarters of itosecrans, and has charge of the female departmeQt. A letter sayst . : . . . . Occasion all r a refractory : female breaks away from Capt. B.. and insists oneeeins the General. : One ef these yesterday rushed up tft-l Gen. Rosecrana, introducing herself betweeh Gen. R. and Gen. Hamilton, saying? "Is this Gen; Rosecranar V ? "Yes. madam . v. V 'Well. Generalcan't I havei a paaalM " "Madam," (with a low-bow) it ia not my business to ghre you a, pass; it is my1 duty to refnse' ttJr'-ia ' .i& -ttcf--.-.- Another 4aly approached on- another ocea- pioa. ana oegan wiin pas iu eiory. in regar-i to ner Mpow,:nenr..aMk ncie -- " I condole with you, madam." said the Gen- eral in that qniet way of ba It is? an fort u- nate that nneles will sometimes ret enouly indisposed. I, too, have a dear afflicted ntt- . . , . i. "Then yon can aympathixe with me." she said. - Yes madam. I do. and when roy Uncle . 6"- V' 1-u-pva.Myu, wu. give you a pasa.' . - . It won Id of coarse be an anti-climax,which would ruin the etorv to tell -what the ladvl did. i. .' .' . ' IotlieT tHifMtl&sr Crtnei. ! . , i v - JJ We learn from the Wabash Express that Charles Hopkin.,yrho wV wneatthe bat- tie of Perry vill waa ahot by h swn &nMer. He was within twenty feet when Jie ahot him. end then came to him and told him that he did it on pnrpose, gave him water from his The brother who shot him ia ajnan. of family. ,Tht boy Is nineteen years t of age. li s lifMit TranavfltA .fa:i J: vt v. Selew of &Ut Irixauxav 1 ; The r Washington correspondeai of theta. Lmfa RepmlRca 'eo aa'-tollow ' The. recent Democratic triumphs' ar.voi doubtedly the cause of the release of State prisoners from loyal States. It is understood the President told his Cabinet plainly he could net stand the !pres8uja. " Oa dif. that John Van Buren told Abraham Lincoln the writ of KalZu eorjntt iaoX hencefbrth-be held in violate in his Sute, or, if not. New, York that , Governor Seymour and the said J oho Van Daren would not be responsible for the consequences, ,:r. -When the reurrilla' chief madehia Ista 1A into Kentucky, he called at thaTrappast mon MtftneGe vott0; eurrender hls horses f?r fhe ess pf the eMva. b Accordingly he t &forahaiadIni jaV whfclilooSci rslf ir rytadf :!;! tret? tv?n,ti nju'.rrsi v fir- -1 r 3v i- di-tistand innire CtLerhcfTs re .3 fit "4- ".ti. 11 I ativa. V-t," said L.cr had r- C3? r rs a t -1 r-t It ge :rfS blood ayeAUih to0' ' ' -5 J hid It LiKi, what woaU - ' " rl ea aror taow norrora. ; ae iia.eartna.fOf'-j nseeft hia eya,anmad him waljijsons apvthe dark in amanrtneibi to1 aec nrhb tntghi be t? K rtaa2h- ty foe, who would jBjto"'eaetLs tiered mhi 04 AUtrm J unfijmg HHHti j".i That oil i tlMU drank hts ntn warm r.-'Uil 1 poare out treef to swctw ttiai whtclt 1ho foe are how mAald his era fkU - On lh Crttlfeh Koa. ii of th old wnritlf . HSH lie WOtoU beaoU deformed sblnci.of srnpes. a nag -tnaue oy jnwura aoM ywMci ation.' Sevea sUra aad three bars would lead fierce matricidal hosts on niurder M Js atruction, ' to ;the "completion ' tit rthose "dark uesus iiuco nave . oee ' weguart mvvmik 1 t 1 1 1 I L . t 1..1T scheming, traatoroitaIemagognea,,' if depart- ed spiriu are permiued'toltao the'aaira of Earth; tnethiaks that throes, of agony must pierce even the Uest inea whw went up amid the strife thai gavs birth to our noble Eepub-ticC to aee het disgraced, acoffed and hiased at. jtttesdy to become on ed; those thf- that. were, but are not. to see the country for which they died becomiag the theaUrv pf fratrieida ; ICrjuntrv' eood. dissevered, and its divisions yr "i , . . waning ika oppoatas; torrentv to destroy eaen In tbeJeginninS oToor country a lnOepenr dence, there existed in .her la an,- evilrr-tbia fib Oatners of the -ConsruatToo neglect ed to I destmr: ihinkln'" toerbsna. rthat it ' Would ahnnk-and die before the bright light of liber- ty. For the introdactioa of thia evfl oar gor wuwmww back on Great Brittain all her taunts and jeejtf with regard to slavery, for it was while aadef her government that it was first introduced in to the' American colonies. -After our Independence wasestablishsd in aotnetf theSuteait I seaanbolianed; while in ethers H wasperpetua- ted, by the govcrnmea of xkoao atatea. .' The e"" goyernineat filter; rsaptmaibie ior I ttaiatroductiOtt horpenmtiationt- el wa art I toW, (nerallt by person) who StST at tldme. I and are carerui mat no pari w tne pus un meat I PO ims.-tea,, a war w sen a 1 cluMUsement lor or naosiaJ ataa. i Wbten u eo moss ciiaacu.fl in sira. Oftne fi? ernmefit are tha minor suffrrera. " While thousands of young men in their mf nority, swell.: the. ranks of Our annyit)rphan-: ed citildren, widowed wives.- .childless moth ers, robbed aaddesolated. families, are among those on whom th great calamity tUe with' the ntost crushing wrieht. Tb immWiate MUMia th a-iiror t th Jtlietm- Htatesl I YT.xl n:l .wl : ir i. " ; -e-- -ap wwaww aw il W-iir W Tr South.; JJat what ia the remote, ot prmlispo' sing cause t - Slavery, some will tell us, very true. But if the people of theiIorth had hot injttdicionsly meddled" with domestic "institutions of th South,' woakl, lhiavstate of afiaJra have existed at the present time??ly j'C i' l l r- That siaverv is an . and a very rreai . .. ... . 1 -AL J r , ' r" rD ,eui - V5 -J- 1 if.the paradoxical ; expreesion, will be al- I lowed, at least th remedy-, would be wbrse tb. the diaeaaa. tbe hld the dark tmae he a - - r-w . , - .-ar - ?tied CoaBVa M I Uontst poetically say it would be followed by a I still darker one. . irv..,. -t.aaaa1.1 i . - w - rr.'r I amuieB wno naa tunnatim oeen aeeus- tomed to lirihr in' wealth and luxnrr wnuld I nilllM tfm'in aranf anif lMnMv 'anil . " -rf "too"" ry ia neacainoeinM.ine ajavea. nnusea to think or car for- theniaelvea,: would roam broad cast over the land, nuisance' and pest ahapsUedestrn fojbeen oj aM vbd fanatics of ths-North- to sOr op W-.S. r.i,- iviil I o .xt tnres to .a wfi-. . . . fi..W In exagt rated colors the awful sinVof s anajtne.carK, condemning unparqonaoie guiit of thrsU vehoTJer, have .been; conspicuous . organs in drawing the fearful1 of calamities vpon naCl Hora4?Greely; Parkerand nhy otheie have cafe th sehlimehtVthat it ia the: duty "of the slave to obtain hia freedom, .eyen. though he should murder hia :nuuter; and mistress, and wade throu eir: I n the pros ecntion of hia plana, and .hare exalted aa aphero, a sain and a martyr, Aat.old tnmomanime tiinUw. ooBjtBaoww; and fcy and untimely,, if net fcaisa and inhuman means, otrViUtthr that to them Uia aitraaUyea sink or "swim, Fesrs with re"dlo liisir unmixed with abitkma mcCvtod: an' inn-holy esire"'E-T pow rebel-: lionr VsidV:ietct Their crime is treason;' itzj tav s iXzzxX a. 4i-ricir blow at the tkrtf iCi- Ccstryj; hat tre there lflmanyfcxtc -: .- xl;zzr: ttait' c;s-;3ESttira;:lb i: :"-ry cT;;' t. '.. j r ' Hrr:.- i-inst - v t - . j, t r ...... 3 ' !. frc? " -V -c . .tir -If-.., f reesei iota te cr . til tra L sirnd cn bjf ttit !:!:;': 3, , trsitoroaS leaders, 4hroc!? kardi J 3, ,;ria2, i J. . JpetraU cl ioae i&e deedathaiiAta intended ) to work out the destrctiioa goxexaaent, can wf aot ahed. A Ur C tiess aawnj tie tain j C.ltTUlI tar ojjamJa sad defiwidera of t : turn 0TtaT,-iti'"" fesf-f-'i. WToawWarobmittedV din ..ifei.Ufe.rtw u4rtratJioMa heart muet ceaee to - alsata. and nis hl'S-Jt Hhreatena to- daBtroy all tKat ia fair aad good Im oar nsioa, that escapes the scathing breat b of treason The riot, thi mob. tha rope,, the-gU ht, a beinj ia-iJ keaia. tha TrAi efVi .t, . . -h-r'iw K... t-, -.u.'tht.?. Id-ith. " i. i.- a -t.u den, ta-eutt ouhaaea belored'Jand, all tllkoau'ofwiUiaringv hnrrihhi Though freedom of eprech and of the preaa ia; should be fedMted, ii any ttars ta anest tik wonrietw or padleney - of rajomise j T ZTrt T7T:7 V Tr,0rrC-1 murderons war, A ; cro xtzu OStBtf wuLgather around biro, denounce ntm.aen r traitoe," and deliberaU .on the propriety of kaving him .hanged; and ona more philan- throphie than the rest gneronly profTer to furnishtht rope. I y lien . assembled ta . gtuUy , conelave, wmmously rdot the dest those to whom the .Union.; is dear aa Iifej . who have offered up their eonsJiyin on their Uonntry'a altar, ana who arejieterre only ly a from oflerlfag their -own lives at tho aame ahrina. OAnd thia darkv muxderoaa, cowardly plotting, ia done by proleased Patri- ota and Christians t Oh, Inconsistency I 8hame, ahamel lv . ' ; " Beside, there ia iniqaity in high phvees,-Persona in elevated station and those in mora subordinate ones,' are becoming enriched hy means of frauds practiced upon our treasury. In etew of all the catamitiea that are.befalliag the J contrythos to whom all should be idear aa their own souls, and who are solemnly worn to protect , her : interests, , are . spending their . lives in inglorious ease, as if all was well. .; -The great fabric- of the BepabliO ; ia being shaken by Internal commotions,' and rnoved from ltstasei-hieh 'vjs;liad fony hoped was aa -flrnt'na the pillara of the Earthy . ; ve Brftiah: ?lon "Is bristling his mane th bopet of retrfe vln'g Ms lost onor, ; and ' of oh taming revenge ff thenuniltfoa beanfferM when, he was obliged to cronch; a -tbe feet of oni noble BannerBird.' Frtm our former friend and anylategardTngneV unfriendly eyea;".TPha hoepiuls idtToyer IfJie land are filled with suffering soldiers. Many A young, fiery life, is being eaten away tfy the alow but nnsaJUblsnisw ef disease, which had bpwCIf inmost .b leaderndCnpIlo'Aaf e beerii soldj dearly, on te.battVfield. ..T lha pride a nd hope. ofthe Cutry , are cbw- awming away: preys to inaction, or ;ajre- becom ing demoralised by the nnwhohaiome . unden Thotisandaofyonn&rhotbUess,au are; pouring out their .blood like rai and of beloved, tenderly reared forms.1 lie ' .i ' " - m r , liL r"".- . Alexandria. .Jhe . cold .rocks JpfBaltsf Bluff ri rdinl with the lifavtide of the noble Ba- ker. -The blood of tyohei enriike the soil ?! .t iL.irtiiH.r it- - - - ion both banks of James rier, so that we. are 5P? T? i .'"'"jfre to act in any direction aud with thtj ai Missouri others languish in southern prisons., .'Mothers. sisters, wives and daughters, are weeping over their dear one lost or far away. Orphans abd widowi'a'ahedngVteaJe of bitterne aad ntterlnsT wauinas, snacnently patuette to licineara-from - anrela. ' Think of lhfc 't .i j.:i...v. i.. i. . Bjaxsmew --------- - - - - - " - - - - - iimvw latn a waana- inima ef tohringatioiiVthtiorri . .. all the anguUh it. has already caused, were concentrated in one mighty groan, it might fill the earth with horror,, and remove even the everlasting stars. from tbeirprhits. And yet. in foil view of all theee calamities of all thia pnysicai anguisn ani meaiai won, persons wiio occapy stations where they migbtrelieve or al- l r t . . : 1 . "' . . - . - . l 1 leyiate much of this suffering, can indulge in indolence, and lhe.vain, even lioenj-ioua follies of fashion l Yt.song and dance and. rerelry appear to be the order of cxercioea, in ear conatry'a fortified capital I .1. v 'j" Ah Uttle thiak the gay, lieoaUoas proad, " Whom ploaaara, waalth and aiOaejs aarroand. Ah little thiak they aaaes along, : How maay at tho rery moment feel death ;' v Aad all the aad yarioty of psla." .,; - ' WiL aojJtddliJ while Rome was Win?, and'wby may not Jlrs Lincoln dance if tho countrr is going to ruin f .,, X. ' What must be tha thoughts of soldiers on thaevei of battles.' If chronicled they would fill volumeal.wUhkeartrlongmgs . and heart-wailing that mighty drsw(?4faf leren from "eyes aansed to weepTbe soldier In his lone ly ten, daring his hoars of meditative musing doea pot dreztn of battles, pt plundentr f lkme or of glory, ;-"lTo-!hi mneng are of home, of children.' and the dear.aesiationg of hia ear ly Jifa. .Tha present, wiyrall. ita cares, and thaj, dark theatening f fotnre, are ; no longer thought of. .IIe is oncemorO; kneeling , by a rootlerfide,lispmrFsiheT,orrom in yrortiye jypusly thrpegh the happy scenes oi c-nhcolIUt ttiti Ucghihg brothers and tls-terey ot VithJte4"rapsnio 9 " Is Jiving over h bHSchool.ays, or perhaps Vith. - a. 'chosen mate aft!3 K--2 standing at Dymen's Altar, pllghtin fdieaacred sow tolovthrongh yftll and woa, iTThafa dreary .Tacuum must parvus hUIsol, iben the&e pllising VemfniaV cences, ar4 Czl and ithe-prcsen 14 ill .aJl Its dfiaicnlnsiwTi: c blood tizzl rrs locrsa o p hefors tfaiif Ah; 1 1-r c czzztzzi'l zzz-'riz'z Z t Z era the ein- ;ef &o8e fir tr. ZTZSB, 3 I. .- w.J i ...... . 4- .. "... - X7ke lottxt ones c. . w e : t kI j iL e k J telore the to&fLMm C.t fa of ica, tin t?- Iheir work of dedinxctiou Por kamaa tor XufZJ eaa'taair : " - ' v is traca the caaz to foal firmn fair. Tvr3- VTahi 's thenwsy while the cold, purettaa Of lis deaUi angel yet Uaera upon their brows. and think of then niraja aa aleeplnj in itxert cnarbledika heaaty-a dreamless, untroaUed With o ottBtry,-ifsh must die Tf hrt lieainoegthe ruina of the desJv would tLat wn cwuLl be spared the ptiti of witnessing , her death- agonies jj. wouhl that oar ears eould be cloaed to th dirge-wail cl her eeverios hesrt WngaBui aw l ct3usr;lehold aU Ijeri hame and tier dlagraca, xnizi aee the mahtld Uf acorn thrown over her hipsa.who went wont to reverence her, tn tht daysjof prosperln ty f. inns- jritaeaa . Jong -yeaec of atraggliog gasping agonies; moat see her orimsonad oieri bltotl of ohildTe,nml groanai beneaA the wirhtTol tnefr erishka. awntilaieJ. "TK joo ad nWnerwTtiercr ana groans iiKineseunaoicBTeTneau4uriar, and at last behold " her . dissevered fHTgrnetita, like the absxf beauiy. lying ia aQ the loath? soreenesS of decay 1 Only a band divlnalean heal her pierced heart; and bind op her death ly wounds. . Oh ! fs there no voice that can say to. the .conflicting elements,; "peace, be atilL'hno hand that can.eiesr away the sable cloud, thai the bright sun of peace may again snea aia oauny rays over oqr oeioveu country .-. ; - ' - ..' i'. -' - on. UAiixcxa iiepost. i " . ' WasaiaoTOsr, Dec. 2, 18C2.' ' - Genera Ttalleck has written to Secretary Stanton an exceedingly long report of military operations since the 23d of July last , when he took command. He says he visited Mcdellan to ee whether there waa any probability of success by that mode of advancing upon Richmond, and if not, o form some plan of uniting Pope's and McClellan's axt&ies on seme other line; ;". '...'; :. . " . v- .; '" s.: Upon arriving at Harrison LargvMe Clallan told him he must have at least fifty thousand additional troops, j QaUeck jtstima- ted that twenty thousand waa the utmost nem ber that could possibly be found no send.- McCiellan took iss" night to consider. He then told Halleck be would make an attack on Richmond wHh the twenty- thousandL rsin-forcement;rvitlt,that understanding Hat leek returned to sjhlngton. , There he ; received dispatch from-MKelUav 'Myimr; le could net leer without thirtyvw. thousand-It being whollt ttmposaible ' then -to- furnish thWhntnber; Halleck" ordered the' withdrawal of the army frotv xt rentastua. uouieiian f " ' ' sw - m a ' - a a ' r a . at once forwardea thefollowibg protest j Bkbki ar Va.jr August 412 Mj To 'MajorJaaarai Halleek, Cpmmaader-ia-Chiof?r ; 4.--" i vur uinrainwi twKsrunii w o n nj. I' nfnst .conies Urat t lias caused me the great - tt IU WilliJiww i to oorcaoee. i jearu win vm a lawri, woww lMavral dm va- a rOLaecfS as nr Comnleta t tha iethiai ,WhiIe they ate m ' progrt, I .beg that careful consideration may be given to my 1 statement. Thierroyia oow m exttllent sistance of the gunloats, I cousider our .com- mnnications as now secure. '.' - ' " y We are twenty-Are miles of. Bichmon J, and are not likely "to meet the enemy in., fere sufScieat to fight a battle ..Until we have reach- , d fifteento eiehteen milea, wbicn nnojre us Dracticallv with"" ten j practically within ten miles, of Richmond. 1 0ur lareeet lineOf transportation woukl be a v - .. ILukaM f hia a fmummmm tin. mint 1 mwmnt v fi v Y I Iam hat avitK thai suppl. th army ,by water dunnr its advanc certainly to within twelve miles of Richmond. At Acjma Creek we would be seventy-hv miles from Rich mood. "with land transportation all the way. iFrom here to Fortress Monroe is a march of - about seventy miles, for I regard it as impracV i!mM. ia ithffM mw (ni. mAm iti.i.M.I ticable to withdraw this army and its material except by land. The result of the movement woold thus be to march one hundred and thir ty-fiv ntilea to reach a ioint now onlytwenty-five miles distant, and to deprive ourselves entirely of the powerful aid of gunboats aud water transportation. . "' - - " Add to this the certain' derooralizatlon of the army, which would insure the terrible depressing effect upon the. people of the North, and fiie stern probability that it won Id influence foreign powers to recognize our adversaries tand there appears : to . me sufficient reasons to make it my imperative duty to urgei in the strongest terms afJordud. by . oar lan- Sage. that this order may ts rescinded, and at, far froitfrecalling ibis army, it be promptly reinforced, to enable it to resume the offensive. -It may -b said tber are no rinlorce-meats available. I ; point' to Gen.Bayards force; to that of Gen. Pope not necessary to maintain a strict defense in front of Washington and Harper's Ferry ; to those positions of the army of the. West not required for a strict defense there.; Here directly in front, of, the' army jaJhe heart .of rebelliot,- It is here that all our resources should hs collected to strike the blow which will determine the" Cit of this saxion, allttmata of Secondary importance slsewhrre should be ; abandoned, and every available man brought here. ,,A decided ic-" tory here, and the military strength of rebellion wonld be crushed. It matters not- what rsrtial reverse. we may meet with, elsewhere, ere is the true defense of Washington. - Jt is her on the banks of the Jsmea river that the Cate of the Cnioa lahonld beLdiciied.. Clear is my eonvictlons of right, strong in ths cOn-scientionsBesa. X have, everJeen and am .Still actuated solely byjove of my country r know-ing that no ambition cr stlSsh. motives hav inoeneed me from thecoraAencerrtent of this war I do now-wliat I never did in my ' life before i-I en treat flat the .order may be rescinded. If mr coniresl; does, not' prsvaiU: ! will, with a sad 1 eaTt, obey your orders: to the ntaicst'ef ray pbwer, devoting: to the movement, cr.ecf t'e etlzst dallcacy anddiScnlty, whatcrt'-r.l 1 my pc?s. r Wfcateytr the result risy ts. zv.& mav God grsnt that' I ara muUlsn it r?y fort' !1'.tz.J shall at .lesxt Lave ths - rrt-'i-ti th-t I hsvt written td rpcita frzr i:.r -,rd hsri ttrc'.t trdo tl3 ? rr is cy r orz: t2 a:rt Cs&z'.tt Lz3 c?y receipt rafVrashmii; "tie , c:.-eat , j u'rougk Gen. IZaSe&kvoa the Cih cf-i v;:ratel the order to Oeo; llcCIelitn itl 1 1' r ul L!i to-; withdraw5 hla ' axciy f.ira"la v Jams iti cr. i facts t-at havs"i!:? tr -.' pired show lz ? ' J cf OenersJ i::C!.S and ta folly oi' t-4 c. - c ;1 C i -L, iTheVpprbachof Thankf tric-:t:.. ; ? U-it the disjiNtiona of-the AtotliioH c':- w, on political ailairsC They auiLrsc xLa .. eion to make an exhibition ot tLcir rt'-iit S I ignorance.' bigotry and ihtolerancs tad to in-jsult-riJsalyinsalt the feelings. tf the c-n'l seryauve ana Democrauc ponion ftieTr audience, VThe Gospel they preacu ia net -lat ' ' '- of ttieSAvlor u is not love, chaV.ty end r M . wDI totnen, but it is bate ami revc.,3 c. ;!. --must xoeohing character. " They . eeejc-t3-in t twirr.ana .au4 bitterness to ar rsst TisI-froiibles they swsk to extejid, inte&d pf try . j" tj to allay them by words xil ChrUtian' eaa . al--- There ta no enormfiy;; ftoai' which they ; rseeal in; order K earrv out their cieriIi'eil. po. , . I&raliews.. The boldest and niOHta ud ir na-atlvocalea of the extermination policy cri-ia--- s?otn i.4:mare found among the- AboUtloW rlery. To mostausMa la us o a servile .tnsurrrrVon, the murder of women and chikfren ami -non cotnliaatnta by barbarous . nejrro , slsres" is" - shocking ; but thesepulpit poliUcuns cotiteuv plate it with great eorapfaceiice,' if net-j !?s-are. ?While urging on the; pet-pie, t: r&Jjf ! . .. through seas of blood, from Their. cusLined-pulpits, they take good care tVpted exemps f tion from the draft, and are careful not to x pose their precious persona to the bullet or the bayonet. -They much prefer to live at xtomtf . upon the fat of the land and draw- their large-salariea in ease and jlenty than JOienJnry. th dLcomfort and bardnbipe of . camp ife fo .;,' . thirteen dollars a mouth. ' ' ; "V If there Is anything the Arwlition'xiergy .' particwlarly and expressly detest,-tt ia ai com promise thai eheald reetore that Union as U tormttij t existed.: Bitterer, enemies, joTt the Union, can not be found upon th contivtiit.- They have done an they could to break: op : this-Government, to destroy our- Constitutioo, . - and are. mainly reapoosible for the preset;! tfii ' tressing condition of the. country. ItacT cf" . tbem have is bored for yearn Xo sow those seeds of hatred between tbe Nortlr anil the South of which we are now reaping tLs titter1 - fruits, wuu hearu nu trmaieyJe-exand - . hats to these who differ. with them, and Ire&th - ing vengeance and slaughter, they, claim to be faithful representatives of the Prise cf Peace V and C3a47 ' ; t Vt4 " : .---;' ' -.-' .' : ; These remarks w apply to a portion cf tha . clergyto.tbt ranting and. fervent wersbiiers v o the negro. There sre handmts c f ciergyf ,v men who do honor to their sacred raian ana by their. precept and example strsngtben the cause of virtue and truth, and make Christian' . ity the greateet of all blessings to the worU Cia. 'Ejr-z.i ? ?-.-vivl ?V 'f .''-' ' '-'J.'x.V r: v - " u-m "" 'im' -T 'V ''I " " i The Abolitkniista. are trembliag ta thetf boots for fear the Union may : be restorad. be - fore slavery shall have been wiped out at the Souths "'; -'; - f ' t'-r- i?' . .nThe shoddy v and-paper and woodenoled;:i.. Shoes vonfrartora, and othem t hat- elftss,-who hv been 'making rfortunea off.th Gov- ernment. and who want tha war tv-fUL; ahead - i - . . . . . r , 1 Ji . il!.V!Lir T. . . Aiu-J.. s ?rr;W iio X at e i. rcifsi v . axes to gritid. and wTT6ar ' not n r rro erAxed"' are anxious tor af rpredy endv boborableron' elusion of the war. . They ee v its confinn . a nee nothing bnlthe ruiovpf tbemelvee- and" ' the' destruction --or. their; chtry." ' Homes --made desolste everywhere nnd'Srrindirl -taxsv tion nnivemtl are aspowerfnl toresurs to peace as arc millions of moey coVrscrs and negro fanaticism incentives tothecohdncancs-of the.war. Could a peace bemads bysa fair and honorable tempromis th wbole-srtd woold glow with bonfire, and hcnt jta, t j - J fill tbeyalleys and rejoicing crown, the -.'vl v at the restoration of brother-hood snd a bro) t '- U nion.- Let no paf riot, therefore," be aehs t. c4 to proclaim MKiiy tor:peace oj comproTt3e, ii it can oe auaineo inuti wiyj Ttit WTilesei of a ITiea Xirtli: :ld T1.W Nam Yart WmrLL: ln"ariLin " cf dlsUnction drawa'by the AbolUioo riperilV tween the President as a civil xScr, Sad 111 L. President as Commander-in-Chiefof tbjtirtan and Navy7, ridiculss this Idea hy the -rj: A C spt illostrstlon : -'""." -;. ' f ,!( V ; This is like ?he Engfish CTshop wT, frew' .-alsa a Instica of the peace. ; Gtinr ery kaw V cry one day in tha preseact of his ifcntlet, ih Bishop broke into a volley of oatba The for' . aAtBw2rtl-ii1r OSfTla M STI m la aTalaS nshit fll 1 1 ST t- -- Sv4 . VS a? as warn a - W er vtv. see a s m tUi latsafl his master of the unbecom'raz- chRiactesTof' anch -an exhibitic, -- I did nct aeesr-f ik w Bishop, he said, but as a mflrtrnt.' .SLV -? your revereneC' Trstnetted. the bntler. w hen the Pvil. gets the ma-trsta, : -'v-it wilt te' nrvw gets the matrst , ' .; of the Xiahop I' , 7h e a eome I swore to preserve 'protect and dri:. i iv Con-? stitution ortb United eitatea, hectk. tuc. self, u woold seem. in two parts, and U-k tha oath in anch a manner thst-wbHe it trcsd hii , conscleTKMPwdenUfcewrreet3T?rnpI ; the Constitution under foot a a" mlliury com- - mender. 'And this in jt Goyemajent tr LV , whn fundamental axioms is the etitc'Ii! ttow of the militsry to the eiyil powcr. , . ArrfTai cf a Lire Ccrilla Oa Xirtrr : iL Br.thc arrivafof the AfHcin ttrr?r Arms- dian at La verpool. there, has, tfTi.trc--btto that port nJEn male pectmen of te inu. . He appears quits docile fa nd ."atnnsee himsflf . in dancing around th room at Mr. IJtibr'tiij-the eminent naturalist, and 'atfenfJlr f " tew- ' pieces ef blankets toiler. - Jlis akia ii f aa olive color, and, e be is ycteryyonr:-. only slightly.covrred with heir, .Heisrera-rswy lond or goo4 livms. and pears to l-- vean across the chest, while bis eras f - . t zo strong and sinewy.dplayinar f- ; , - h, ns has a eresl bsbit of-puttir L'j . , t-.tar ' my sf ray J ?' d t oes ?. k r -? la 1 in about, and when he l l;rov . M i I ; j Veaks he ioarialIy rnns t3 r I; "... r ' ectioo-who may te prrrrRt. : KIs f. :, . - . tha generally entertained cr"r.i?i. n r ; repoisive Jookir.'j, alihon- t ; r:-'oth bread and Learn- -TL:s iatic.. .x'. - -'; peciraej of the :rlila, trs It -It jv,.;.;.. .uus fttry.-r; -.i -. . :.:, ;.r'; loVtr-hare ecr.cr:-r nttljEt:'.::i cf ".i TTZ-'.'rltlzi especial rel;feb Tor beefsteak ana mnuaatnorw and fruitv-Yonni Mr. Gorilla "ia aLct : thrt fet-anJal)alfMTilchtery trr-'.r ' " r5-r!;cs.li:;to l; tSs nameeresf-of'tT.'d 73 -.c!;:-; i li-r"ti .41 e " Z3&craiaVaa ------i Yr ' " 1 - '.rr.r, it: d t. " a r. i-. v--v!..M';.;:':,ir: 1 -v.V .a ii cere than cae'instance. them t-3 icr. -v i. .-i '- -Jir- 3 eft
Object Description
Title | Mt. Vernon Democratic banner (Mount Vernon, Ohio : 1853), 1862-12-13 |
Place |
Mount Vernon (Ohio) Knox County (Ohio) |
Date of Original | 1862-12-13 |
Searchable Date | 1862-12-13 |
Format | newspapers |
Submitting Institution | Public Library of Mount Vernon & Knox County |
Rights | Online access is provided for research purposes only. For rights and reproduction requests or more information, go to http://www.ohiohistory.org/images/information |
Type | Text |
Description
Title | page 1 |
Place |
Mount Vernon (Ohio) Knox County (Ohio) |
Searchable Date | 1862-12-13 |
Format | newspapers |
Submitting Institution | Public Library of Mount Vernon & Knox County |
Rights | Online access is provided for research purposes only. For rights and reproduction requests or more information, go to http://www.ohiohistory.org/images/information |
Type | Text |
File Size | 7846.27KB |
Full Text | f - . . - -a,-..-., , in e .-i aa r - - a. J -rf.- r ' - ' - - " 3 !- f3 L.HATT: TEft VS. Tw tIUri pr udio, MTsUi d nitM vrtk yvM. ' - .?-:' ; ,' KDITTCD BT.J- HARPEX." For the benefit ofllha ungodly wrew of AholHid preaebrra, who desecrata the palplt. aaf fnedlt high ITearen, by deliTerin pIUil I. apeeehen im the SAhbath ., day, wemake the ftUwinx"hc4ov and appropriate extract from ?eUoke daoe of Ti me." If some of the 'But' hypocrite who- hara beeq "malmf the . Xdttor of the Homjkt, and .othr. troe HJnioo Domocraia the eubject of fheir foul . abase on -the Lord-'s Day, woold reflect opon - this ex tract,' it might Induce them to repent of their ? manifold sins and wickedness,", and lire a Vmore godly and righteoua life hereafter: THE FALSE PRIEST AT THE BES- ti .VXliiKGTIMS - raov roLLKs conn or nn. Xmvg ik seenraed, who aoag&t hldiss pise tlm Tio, ttmm lreMsa ef VahrVs ff, Amd from tb bot4UpUMT of the Lab, . Moss, vretokea, moft eoatewptible, moat Tile, fiUed Urn fiOs prtoat, m1 In hu eoasoieaee felt Th4 mDMt kanw ef the Usdylsj Worm, ': Ami h mlrht, fr ha had m hia hands TWUm of eomla, that wold not wipe sway. Iloar what ho was, ;. IIo swora. fat slrht of God . I f And man. to Breach hU maatcr. Jlut Chriat t . Koaeeaehod hlmtaltt ho cworo that love. of tool, Aloayhaj draws htm to the ehureh yt strawod Tho path that lod to htU with tempting flowers. Tho way of death, ho whljpored peaee : he swore "Away all lore ef lucre, all desire. , ' , Of eartly pomf and yet a pdaeoly seat Be liked; and t the slink of Mammon's hex . One aoi rspaelons ear. : JXU propbeeiea, r. He swore, were from the Lord ; and yet, taaght lias, Vorgala rwlth eaaekUh olatmeat, healed the woundefc Aad hrslses of th seal, eataido, hat left, "wTthla, the psatileat matter aaobaeryed, . To sap thomoral eonstitatioa qoito, . s Aa4 soo to hont agaia, ineorable. Ttm. v IV. a.n. . Of Zioa, sayiax, Poaee, when there was aoae.-:. The aaa whs earn with, thirsty seal to hear -! Of Josa. waat awav aasaUaSod t - . t tfr.ha uathar aoaoaI nmuturl tiiam Put. . . " lid one that had no Sariaar ta't) and yV ; ' 'trL. tiJ . ' w.:tt. .C.-:. j Uft utw mmm wv.. ut, uMHf mh aw, TTnmlTIlT. farrlreaaaa. holinoac' " ' - JStm words well lettered ia hU . sabbath ereod j Bat with hJiTiar ti t . ylaaw.1 W t wnga,' " -?,7ridvTJraBy, aad last ef wealth and power ; laoeaasxeraahiadstm assihsmU . . T .. . II wM a wotf in elethmg of the lamb, Tbet stole bite tae fold of God, -sad on ' The blood of soals, whieh he' did seU to death, . . . Orow tat; aad yatwWnfaay woald hare torned V rlla eat, heeried, ToaAaot he pTiert of God." " And that ho was aoointadfoals bolioredj 1 ; - ' Bat know, thai day, as waatho daril'i prioat, - : Aaaiatad by tho haada offtia aad Death, . AaA sat pecaliarly apart to ill, t . n While oa him smoked the rials of perditioa, Poarad aaamralaam. Ah me! what cursing than : vWss heaped apoa his bead by rained aoals,-' iThat eharjtdhha with their marder, 'as he stood, - With eye of an the aaiadaemed moat aad, wj -Waitiaa; the eominf of the Son of Mast . 'Bat lat aaa paaao, for thoa hast soea his place Aad paaiahmeat, beyoad the aphero of lore. "I Taxes to he Paid ia Ohio Honey. a . T2eCeIina 5!ar says -G.: Volney Dor-aey. State' Treasurer, has' ordered their County Treasurer fa recelveoalv Ohdn -aaoaey- in oaT- ment dftaxaa. " He discards Linco!ns "green hacks,'" although Congress has declared them , equal to gold and silver legal tender. A few jnoutha ago a man was put in prison for refu-.eing greenbacks.' and if there was justice in euro T 'Vjtbat, ws thing the same punishment should ' Wil AiirRMUTnuUHMP Rut ftnru, ia' " m Ui Jtrow-j irog an . aooiiuonis anu ine .qnnntsirsiion smuea ainuty on ausacn. I :lhereforf be la likely to . escape that pnaish- was a. Democrat. H Seml-OflclsJ JMsdosixre. .Col, Forney's " Washington Chronicle being t M !.', the aeml-ofScial .month-piece of the Gorern- -Blent, any statement he makes about the war " ' r",ls pf usual importance. Forney manages to a I ' . 1" J ' ' ' .t . tiJi arnow iar mere man ne ougni, anu is mailing . much ttfiaclue! hy letting out all that be knows. " -j We' quote th-following from him: That a . ' ClO.ii. 14 will be iount near Krarfencicaiiurr w I ,t.fve, no doubt, and the heavier it is, be,. worse Ij'-fbfA&b JttbeJs:-..iesermy srhweofe defense aad life of the Soothern caase a defeat of that imJ w Ifll HI ..U ... M.W .WB.IVU. K overthrow of this armr of Lee is the work of .tc-vi the army ef thePototnao during the coming -month. - That it Is oomDetent to the task no 5.H necan donbt. It ia Superior to the rebel arJ -: x3V la every ea turn end narticnlar. , Strarlin t-.k:.9 dm -rijhs' cause and field, 'with redoubled vw aSreosth, and well Jutnoled, a elorioua vietnrv rii waita "Ics: Tis rmy eMe Fbttmmill ana' JZickmumd oik th liapptrmnoek M lusaif ctfts f i?inf icec7Tr tial ciiy.and show to the X.T"worii thetra matness of all that com nosed an A-ia aooia army now iin quicuy oeiore r reo- aeTicKsourgt jr. .w - .-s,--iiw . '- j wI Va haya seen and heard -of many eaves In ,r-r :i Frth '6t thVworl Jj'buf the'roosi grand , 1 etupenuobs'cAyV everear ribOo this r.?jmi::: r-:.raadiscoyeredtifew r d i a.?.. . It I -' j tie rreaf IZmmetA Cave, l : :::-tr sr. hc:w -kaw, C : - - ti i. r eays jh-,t;pe -jaf A.'. ...j c'.ls Ahol.', iljai;!; r-.:: f- : or t f?r J eff. Davis, 1 I iter w "ii.tfilb3T4rt Abolition ITewagt, from lh AIbnj (N. . Y.) 42Sb tmdAisr. vi4:4r':t':'' ' Tb con4 ITcms of PrwJdent Uoceta. l!k hit fint, m eharaeterixcd, a to ittyle, ; lovc?cttahMOift8 to though by loatnew onwortby of a etatcamM. JL an cTidene of the porpoeee of the Ai- miautnition. sod of tb iacipIee of tht pre-4 dominant factum, st In ool Ua lea aaitgerDtu i for being o elamey and imwrfeeW' .It propd ees a eerie of meuores jn!ch, if ; atlqpted, muet wholly i'nWert.tiar eyetein t of GbTernr meat, and erect upon jte ruins a great central- irjn- aoi borbiog daepotlsm " I neweaK noce or cotnpiaini nuerea ngnina foreign powera, becaage thigj'' hare jot ret ra- ceded from their recognition of ihe , seceding States rtcertavemid have been enti- nger-jna, wwa mt. ucew cm,',lail maJa tbe remark that lha arm ia least t ed to mora conaidtteOH UV j v.s. sed them by negotiations, cartels of exchange. by releasing parties conTicsed of piracy, and treating alleged traitors as prisoner of war. m The refusal of foreign gOTcrumenta on this continent to adopt into citixenship the free negroes whom the President proposes to . colonize, seems to give him pain. Hayti aad Liberia are exx eptions; bat the negroes refuse to go to eithei of these places, much as the President thinks against their own interest, : The coolness with which tha proposition ia put forth to organize a general banking - system, u pod the basis of Federal stocks, by a sweeping act of &Bgre3sV ia another indica- catitfn of the obtasenesa of views and tha apa thy of conscience, which characterise all tha diseassions of th President on questions of Federal authority and constitutional limitation. ti intended to bring about aa extinc tion of the 8tate Banks, and the substitution of an inferior system under the direction of the Federal Government. Its. main desigUt is to keep up the credit of United States stocks, but this will be at the sacrifice of hundreds 'of ' Lmillions of State securities, in which the peo ple are already directly interested. -?be President propoaea,no alteration of the Uoostitution to eCect toM revoJuUonv in re-galfd to bis fsvorite project of emancipation and colon ixation, he proposes such a change, and offers his crude Amendment to Cbngifesa. It UvOn that no Slate will ever assent to; and l$5&h no class effected, by it the whites who (ire to pay. the expense, or tha blacks who sre to be the subjects of the experiment will ever tolerate. - . '..';. . " The arguments which are addressed to Congress to justify these &rUma changes. would xcite mirth if the sense of impending calamity did fot repress the'senae of the ludicroos. Never before was ewch reasoning eddresaed to airiatgewt-peaaj,..LJge are asked to aban-don our Government, and submit to" 'asurpa-tions and revolution, by appeals which 'only prove the imbecility of their author. Unable to cite any precedent for his propositions be quotes himself as authority, and tells us be can nowhere else find his - views so well ex-j pressed as in his own inaugural. Nowhere else indeed, for his crudity of ideas, none but i himself could be his parallel." Republics 1n other ages have been over-' -thrown by artful conspirators, or armed aggression ; and the knife of the assassin has struck down liberty in the dark,or. the sword of a military chief cleaved it on the battle-field. No such dignified fate is offered to us by the Lincoln Administration; but we see in its rao cess, only the body of liberty hacked and mangled by the dull Jknife of a mwerable bungler. .But he will not succeed. ' It is impossible for so much incapacity to be successful even in folly. ' - . . BialLop TsTdpple xen. HsClellaiL Bishop Wairru (Episcopal.) of Minnesota, after visiting the battle-field of Antietam, and the wounded in the hospitals, wrote to a friend as follows: Never live Teeen such love as . thes men have for McCiellan. The men would die for him. I am convinced more and more of tha injustice of the assaults upon him. A man who can take a demoralized army from defeats and drive a superior force as he did, deserves our praise. One thing I do say; don't doubt MpCleTlsn. A braver, truer man don't live, and more, he is the only man whocan take that army. Bet ter than all; he is a Christian, and cares for his soldiers when wounded or sick. He tojd me the Minnesota first was " s noble regiment as ever honored any army, and never; faltered a hair's breadth. - The boys send lore io you. Yours, faithfully. -u H. B. WHIPPLE. , .The latest test, th Dayton -Bmpin says, haa just come to Tight at Camp Ghase. A lad aome thirteen or Jou teen years old, a hand on on of the Ohio steamboats, had soms wash ing dons at Parlburg. Vai When hs settled the bUl the wasn-woman cJaimed,iIfteen cents more than, lie was willing to pay, According to his arithmetie he paid all be ought to pay The intelligent colored person lhought differ ently. To have revenge aha reported; th lad disloyal. .? A charge of that kod fom;:ani. a high eonree did net admit of any donbi. .,He waa arreeted and sent to Camp Chase, polit-Ical prisoner whsnc'siac tbs I'ection after fonr montha, imprwoament. r he haa been 'dis- charged in a eery sad eondition. U i Tdntrlnaasd VaWiamaXfci the colored population, In speaking of them i 1.1. . -?.. - .- - In hU message, he says: - Appucwums save eays h5t ,ohe joll bei rnadte me by many free Americana; f I ihIntoeWtJri T.TOIJH.T :' ' .VJ3RI "No Oescrtl IToom will betto? General cat that reateatVI QneTaGnj Mi, la permtted. to Uka command ol the 1 Admilfitriion then wa abaU eet ott to t EichnJOfli' It ia stated b eood suitbority jtbrt no 1eaal than one tond ashty thadot the aoldiera whoseWmea sow fill tbJ tnoater-rolls I ara ibaet.wlthorwUhoot leavetr0!ki WDOttt aiscxptinw bva essawiHvn uw y; i facta like this rKeenee snblineUed totha Bt most attainable limit. , Tba . Preaideat, too, ia reported as having I unla thai wlien ihwlalaeTWi mad fnr thra hnndred thousand man r J f ; I ,'Dr. BauLowa, President of the United States sanitary uo in mission, a lew weeae etnee, wnta i acknowedgeing the receipt of the $100,000 do-1 nation from-San Francisco, stated that we had I 150,000 sick and wounded aoldiara ia the vari- oua bospitais of tae union army. . tue army i . ' m, - I number arithmetie then thoa atandar I Abaent men , 180,0001 Sick man 2.'w 150.000 a -. ' " -. . ;. : ' 530.000 "What confessions these are of tneir inca pacity and incompetency to carry pu the war ? Why, in lieu of turning out McCLattAaT. or Mxigs, or BoassiDB, not have a telf turn putt Fernando Wood, in a speeeh, in New York, . .... . .. . . .... on ssataruar nirnt,'sai(J ne naa receirea inror-i M.f iW m-it tt . tl,. o. I 'ihaSontwaarandrcto'-m leading autesmen in the Sonth, maaof poat-l twin and influence in tha Ranthera CnnfederaeT I lial expnasMa desire to retain nnder n Dem- 1.:-1.1 L,ii' .t. t. lie debt on toth aides.' to be provided for, and I as they were wiMine to let br eones U by ranM if lh NflHh aanM. ami lhi Hbmii I once arain be restored.! This, announcement was received with'tremendona cheers. The New York Tribvnt commenting oo the speech remarks We have abundant and au- theatie eonfirmationa of our . former statement that .communications lookiner t an Madiust. ment" bva Paased between feadimt' Demo-1 crata here aad leading rebela at -Richmond ; the onlv material correction of onr former atatamant inaiafad on imnliaa that thVincMtia. tions were Ot led through a -ewes Unionist from Maryland, and not through an emissary, elandeiitrnelraentfrom thia oitT. . . JUiiL u.OJawawsaaaawit.i.X'. r Gallaatry of General ILoseeraat, ' W. D, B," army corre ponden tof the Cincinnati Commercial, ia Assistant Provost Mar- shal General at the headquarters of itosecrans, and has charge of the female departmeQt. A letter sayst . : . . . . Occasion all r a refractory : female breaks away from Capt. B.. and insists oneeeins the General. : One ef these yesterday rushed up tft-l Gen. Rosecrana, introducing herself betweeh Gen. R. and Gen. Hamilton, saying? "Is this Gen; Rosecranar V ? "Yes. madam . v. V 'Well. Generalcan't I havei a paaalM " "Madam," (with a low-bow) it ia not my business to ghre you a, pass; it is my1 duty to refnse' ttJr'-ia ' .i& -ttcf--.-.- Another 4aly approached on- another ocea- pioa. ana oegan wiin pas iu eiory. in regar-i to ner Mpow,:nenr..aMk ncie -- " I condole with you, madam." said the Gen- eral in that qniet way of ba It is? an fort u- nate that nneles will sometimes ret enouly indisposed. I, too, have a dear afflicted ntt- . . , . i. "Then yon can aympathixe with me." she said. - Yes madam. I do. and when roy Uncle . 6"- V' 1-u-pva.Myu, wu. give you a pasa.' . - . It won Id of coarse be an anti-climax,which would ruin the etorv to tell -what the ladvl did. i. .' .' . ' IotlieT tHifMtl&sr Crtnei. ! . , i v - JJ We learn from the Wabash Express that Charles Hopkin.,yrho wV wneatthe bat- tie of Perry vill waa ahot by h swn &nMer. He was within twenty feet when Jie ahot him. end then came to him and told him that he did it on pnrpose, gave him water from his The brother who shot him ia ajnan. of family. ,Tht boy Is nineteen years t of age. li s lifMit TranavfltA .fa:i J: vt v. Selew of &Ut Irixauxav 1 ; The r Washington correspondeai of theta. Lmfa RepmlRca 'eo aa'-tollow ' The. recent Democratic triumphs' ar.voi doubtedly the cause of the release of State prisoners from loyal States. It is understood the President told his Cabinet plainly he could net stand the !pres8uja. " Oa dif. that John Van Buren told Abraham Lincoln the writ of KalZu eorjntt iaoX hencefbrth-be held in violate in his Sute, or, if not. New, York that , Governor Seymour and the said J oho Van Daren would not be responsible for the consequences, ,:r. -When the reurrilla' chief madehia Ista 1A into Kentucky, he called at thaTrappast mon MtftneGe vott0; eurrender hls horses f?r fhe ess pf the eMva. b Accordingly he t &forahaiadIni jaV whfclilooSci rslf ir rytadf :!;! tret? tv?n,ti nju'.rrsi v fir- -1 r 3v i- di-tistand innire CtLerhcfTs re .3 fit "4- ".ti. 11 I ativa. V-t," said L.cr had r- C3? r rs a t -1 r-t It ge :rfS blood ayeAUih to0' ' ' -5 J hid It LiKi, what woaU - ' " rl ea aror taow norrora. ; ae iia.eartna.fOf'-j nseeft hia eya,anmad him waljijsons apvthe dark in amanrtneibi to1 aec nrhb tntghi be t? K rtaa2h- ty foe, who would jBjto"'eaetLs tiered mhi 04 AUtrm J unfijmg HHHti j".i That oil i tlMU drank hts ntn warm r.-'Uil 1 poare out treef to swctw ttiai whtclt 1ho foe are how mAald his era fkU - On lh Crttlfeh Koa. ii of th old wnritlf . HSH lie WOtoU beaoU deformed sblnci.of srnpes. a nag -tnaue oy jnwura aoM ywMci ation.' Sevea sUra aad three bars would lead fierce matricidal hosts on niurder M Js atruction, ' to ;the "completion ' tit rthose "dark uesus iiuco nave . oee ' weguart mvvmik 1 t 1 1 1 I L . t 1..1T scheming, traatoroitaIemagognea,,' if depart- ed spiriu are permiued'toltao the'aaira of Earth; tnethiaks that throes, of agony must pierce even the Uest inea whw went up amid the strife thai gavs birth to our noble Eepub-ticC to aee het disgraced, acoffed and hiased at. jtttesdy to become on ed; those thf- that. were, but are not. to see the country for which they died becomiag the theaUrv pf fratrieida ; ICrjuntrv' eood. dissevered, and its divisions yr "i , . . waning ika oppoatas; torrentv to destroy eaen In tbeJeginninS oToor country a lnOepenr dence, there existed in .her la an,- evilrr-tbia fib Oatners of the -ConsruatToo neglect ed to I destmr: ihinkln'" toerbsna. rthat it ' Would ahnnk-and die before the bright light of liber- ty. For the introdactioa of thia evfl oar gor wuwmww back on Great Brittain all her taunts and jeejtf with regard to slavery, for it was while aadef her government that it was first introduced in to the' American colonies. -After our Independence wasestablishsd in aotnetf theSuteait I seaanbolianed; while in ethers H wasperpetua- ted, by the govcrnmea of xkoao atatea. .' The e"" goyernineat filter; rsaptmaibie ior I ttaiatroductiOtt horpenmtiationt- el wa art I toW, (nerallt by person) who StST at tldme. I and are carerui mat no pari w tne pus un meat I PO ims.-tea,, a war w sen a 1 cluMUsement lor or naosiaJ ataa. i Wbten u eo moss ciiaacu.fl in sira. Oftne fi? ernmefit are tha minor suffrrera. " While thousands of young men in their mf nority, swell.: the. ranks of Our annyit)rphan-: ed citildren, widowed wives.- .childless moth ers, robbed aaddesolated. families, are among those on whom th great calamity tUe with' the ntost crushing wrieht. Tb immWiate MUMia th a-iiror t th Jtlietm- Htatesl I YT.xl n:l .wl : ir i. " ; -e-- -ap wwaww aw il W-iir W Tr South.; JJat what ia the remote, ot prmlispo' sing cause t - Slavery, some will tell us, very true. But if the people of theiIorth had hot injttdicionsly meddled" with domestic "institutions of th South,' woakl, lhiavstate of afiaJra have existed at the present time??ly j'C i' l l r- That siaverv is an . and a very rreai . .. ... . 1 -AL J r , ' r" rD ,eui - V5 -J- 1 if.the paradoxical ; expreesion, will be al- I lowed, at least th remedy-, would be wbrse tb. the diaeaaa. tbe hld the dark tmae he a - - r-w . , - .-ar - ?tied CoaBVa M I Uontst poetically say it would be followed by a I still darker one. . irv..,. -t.aaaa1.1 i . - w - rr.'r I amuieB wno naa tunnatim oeen aeeus- tomed to lirihr in' wealth and luxnrr wnuld I nilllM tfm'in aranf anif lMnMv 'anil . " -rf "too"" ry ia neacainoeinM.ine ajavea. nnusea to think or car for- theniaelvea,: would roam broad cast over the land, nuisance' and pest ahapsUedestrn fojbeen oj aM vbd fanatics of ths-North- to sOr op W-.S. r.i,- iviil I o .xt tnres to .a wfi-. . . . fi..W In exagt rated colors the awful sinVof s anajtne.carK, condemning unparqonaoie guiit of thrsU vehoTJer, have .been; conspicuous . organs in drawing the fearful1 of calamities vpon naCl Hora4?Greely; Parkerand nhy otheie have cafe th sehlimehtVthat it ia the: duty "of the slave to obtain hia freedom, .eyen. though he should murder hia :nuuter; and mistress, and wade throu eir: I n the pros ecntion of hia plana, and .hare exalted aa aphero, a sain and a martyr, Aat.old tnmomanime tiinUw. ooBjtBaoww; and fcy and untimely,, if net fcaisa and inhuman means, otrViUtthr that to them Uia aitraaUyea sink or "swim, Fesrs with re"dlo liisir unmixed with abitkma mcCvtod: an' inn-holy esire"'E-T pow rebel-: lionr VsidV:ietct Their crime is treason;' itzj tav s iXzzxX a. 4i-ricir blow at the tkrtf iCi- Ccstryj; hat tre there lflmanyfcxtc -: .- xl;zzr: ttait' c;s-;3ESttira;:lb i: :"-ry cT;;' t. '.. j r ' Hrr:.- i-inst - v t - . j, t r ...... 3 ' !. frc? " -V -c . .tir -If-.., f reesei iota te cr . til tra L sirnd cn bjf ttit !:!:;': 3, , trsitoroaS leaders, 4hroc!? kardi J 3, ,;ria2, i J. . JpetraU cl ioae i&e deedathaiiAta intended ) to work out the destrctiioa goxexaaent, can wf aot ahed. A Ur C tiess aawnj tie tain j C.ltTUlI tar ojjamJa sad defiwidera of t : turn 0TtaT,-iti'"" fesf-f-'i. WToawWarobmittedV din ..ifei.Ufe.rtw u4rtratJioMa heart muet ceaee to - alsata. and nis hl'S-Jt Hhreatena to- daBtroy all tKat ia fair aad good Im oar nsioa, that escapes the scathing breat b of treason The riot, thi mob. tha rope,, the-gU ht, a beinj ia-iJ keaia. tha TrAi efVi .t, . . -h-r'iw K... t-, -.u.'tht.?. Id-ith. " i. i.- a -t.u den, ta-eutt ouhaaea belored'Jand, all tllkoau'ofwiUiaringv hnrrihhi Though freedom of eprech and of the preaa ia; should be fedMted, ii any ttars ta anest tik wonrietw or padleney - of rajomise j T ZTrt T7T:7 V Tr,0rrC-1 murderons war, A ; cro xtzu OStBtf wuLgather around biro, denounce ntm.aen r traitoe," and deliberaU .on the propriety of kaving him .hanged; and ona more philan- throphie than the rest gneronly profTer to furnishtht rope. I y lien . assembled ta . gtuUy , conelave, wmmously rdot the dest those to whom the .Union.; is dear aa Iifej . who have offered up their eonsJiyin on their Uonntry'a altar, ana who arejieterre only ly a from oflerlfag their -own lives at tho aame ahrina. OAnd thia darkv muxderoaa, cowardly plotting, ia done by proleased Patri- ota and Christians t Oh, Inconsistency I 8hame, ahamel lv . ' ; " Beside, there ia iniqaity in high phvees,-Persona in elevated station and those in mora subordinate ones,' are becoming enriched hy means of frauds practiced upon our treasury. In etew of all the catamitiea that are.befalliag the J contrythos to whom all should be idear aa their own souls, and who are solemnly worn to protect , her : interests, , are . spending their . lives in inglorious ease, as if all was well. .; -The great fabric- of the BepabliO ; ia being shaken by Internal commotions,' and rnoved from ltstasei-hieh 'vjs;liad fony hoped was aa -flrnt'na the pillara of the Earthy . ; ve Brftiah: ?lon "Is bristling his mane th bopet of retrfe vln'g Ms lost onor, ; and ' of oh taming revenge ff thenuniltfoa beanfferM when, he was obliged to cronch; a -tbe feet of oni noble BannerBird.' Frtm our former friend and anylategardTngneV unfriendly eyea;".TPha hoepiuls idtToyer IfJie land are filled with suffering soldiers. Many A young, fiery life, is being eaten away tfy the alow but nnsaJUblsnisw ef disease, which had bpwCIf inmost .b leaderndCnpIlo'Aaf e beerii soldj dearly, on te.battVfield. ..T lha pride a nd hope. ofthe Cutry , are cbw- awming away: preys to inaction, or ;ajre- becom ing demoralised by the nnwhohaiome . unden Thotisandaofyonn&rhotbUess,au are; pouring out their .blood like rai and of beloved, tenderly reared forms.1 lie ' .i ' " - m r , liL r"".- . Alexandria. .Jhe . cold .rocks JpfBaltsf Bluff ri rdinl with the lifavtide of the noble Ba- ker. -The blood of tyohei enriike the soil ?! .t iL.irtiiH.r it- - - - ion both banks of James rier, so that we. are 5P? T? i .'"'"jfre to act in any direction aud with thtj ai Missouri others languish in southern prisons., .'Mothers. sisters, wives and daughters, are weeping over their dear one lost or far away. Orphans abd widowi'a'ahedngVteaJe of bitterne aad ntterlnsT wauinas, snacnently patuette to licineara-from - anrela. ' Think of lhfc 't .i j.:i...v. i.. i. . Bjaxsmew --------- - - - - - " - - - - - iimvw latn a waana- inima ef tohringatioiiVthtiorri . .. all the anguUh it. has already caused, were concentrated in one mighty groan, it might fill the earth with horror,, and remove even the everlasting stars. from tbeirprhits. And yet. in foil view of all theee calamities of all thia pnysicai anguisn ani meaiai won, persons wiio occapy stations where they migbtrelieve or al- l r t . . : 1 . "' . . - . - . l 1 leyiate much of this suffering, can indulge in indolence, and lhe.vain, even lioenj-ioua follies of fashion l Yt.song and dance and. rerelry appear to be the order of cxercioea, in ear conatry'a fortified capital I .1. v 'j" Ah Uttle thiak the gay, lieoaUoas proad, " Whom ploaaara, waalth and aiOaejs aarroand. Ah little thiak they aaaes along, : How maay at tho rery moment feel death ;' v Aad all the aad yarioty of psla." .,; - ' WiL aojJtddliJ while Rome was Win?, and'wby may not Jlrs Lincoln dance if tho countrr is going to ruin f .,, X. ' What must be tha thoughts of soldiers on thaevei of battles.' If chronicled they would fill volumeal.wUhkeartrlongmgs . and heart-wailing that mighty drsw(?4faf leren from "eyes aansed to weepTbe soldier In his lone ly ten, daring his hoars of meditative musing doea pot dreztn of battles, pt plundentr f lkme or of glory, ;-"lTo-!hi mneng are of home, of children.' and the dear.aesiationg of hia ear ly Jifa. .Tha present, wiyrall. ita cares, and thaj, dark theatening f fotnre, are ; no longer thought of. .IIe is oncemorO; kneeling , by a rootlerfide,lispmrFsiheT,orrom in yrortiye jypusly thrpegh the happy scenes oi c-nhcolIUt ttiti Ucghihg brothers and tls-terey ot VithJte4"rapsnio 9 " Is Jiving over h bHSchool.ays, or perhaps Vith. - a. 'chosen mate aft!3 K--2 standing at Dymen's Altar, pllghtin fdieaacred sow tolovthrongh yftll and woa, iTThafa dreary .Tacuum must parvus hUIsol, iben the&e pllising VemfniaV cences, ar4 Czl and ithe-prcsen 14 ill .aJl Its dfiaicnlnsiwTi: c blood tizzl rrs locrsa o p hefors tfaiif Ah; 1 1-r c czzztzzi'l zzz-'riz'z Z t Z era the ein- ;ef &o8e fir tr. ZTZSB, 3 I. .- w.J i ...... . 4- .. "... - X7ke lottxt ones c. . w e : t kI j iL e k J telore the to&fLMm C.t fa of ica, tin t?- Iheir work of dedinxctiou Por kamaa tor XufZJ eaa'taair : " - ' v is traca the caaz to foal firmn fair. Tvr3- VTahi 's thenwsy while the cold, purettaa Of lis deaUi angel yet Uaera upon their brows. and think of then niraja aa aleeplnj in itxert cnarbledika heaaty-a dreamless, untroaUed With o ottBtry,-ifsh must die Tf hrt lieainoegthe ruina of the desJv would tLat wn cwuLl be spared the ptiti of witnessing , her death- agonies jj. wouhl that oar ears eould be cloaed to th dirge-wail cl her eeverios hesrt WngaBui aw l ct3usr;lehold aU Ijeri hame and tier dlagraca, xnizi aee the mahtld Uf acorn thrown over her hipsa.who went wont to reverence her, tn tht daysjof prosperln ty f. inns- jritaeaa . Jong -yeaec of atraggliog gasping agonies; moat see her orimsonad oieri bltotl of ohildTe,nml groanai beneaA the wirhtTol tnefr erishka. awntilaieJ. "TK joo ad nWnerwTtiercr ana groans iiKineseunaoicBTeTneau4uriar, and at last behold " her . dissevered fHTgrnetita, like the absxf beauiy. lying ia aQ the loath? soreenesS of decay 1 Only a band divlnalean heal her pierced heart; and bind op her death ly wounds. . Oh ! fs there no voice that can say to. the .conflicting elements,; "peace, be atilL'hno hand that can.eiesr away the sable cloud, thai the bright sun of peace may again snea aia oauny rays over oqr oeioveu country .-. ; - ' - ..' i'. -' - on. UAiixcxa iiepost. i " . ' WasaiaoTOsr, Dec. 2, 18C2.' ' - Genera Ttalleck has written to Secretary Stanton an exceedingly long report of military operations since the 23d of July last , when he took command. He says he visited Mcdellan to ee whether there waa any probability of success by that mode of advancing upon Richmond, and if not, o form some plan of uniting Pope's and McClellan's axt&ies on seme other line; ;". '...'; :. . " . v- .; '" s.: Upon arriving at Harrison LargvMe Clallan told him he must have at least fifty thousand additional troops, j QaUeck jtstima- ted that twenty thousand waa the utmost nem ber that could possibly be found no send.- McCiellan took iss" night to consider. He then told Halleck be would make an attack on Richmond wHh the twenty- thousandL rsin-forcement;rvitlt,that understanding Hat leek returned to sjhlngton. , There he ; received dispatch from-MKelUav 'Myimr; le could net leer without thirtyvw. thousand-It being whollt ttmposaible ' then -to- furnish thWhntnber; Halleck" ordered the' withdrawal of the army frotv xt rentastua. uouieiian f " ' ' sw - m a ' - a a ' r a . at once forwardea thefollowibg protest j Bkbki ar Va.jr August 412 Mj To 'MajorJaaarai Halleek, Cpmmaader-ia-Chiof?r ; 4.--" i vur uinrainwi twKsrunii w o n nj. I' nfnst .conies Urat t lias caused me the great - tt IU WilliJiww i to oorcaoee. i jearu win vm a lawri, woww lMavral dm va- a rOLaecfS as nr Comnleta t tha iethiai ,WhiIe they ate m ' progrt, I .beg that careful consideration may be given to my 1 statement. Thierroyia oow m exttllent sistance of the gunloats, I cousider our .com- mnnications as now secure. '.' - ' " y We are twenty-Are miles of. Bichmon J, and are not likely "to meet the enemy in., fere sufScieat to fight a battle ..Until we have reach- , d fifteento eiehteen milea, wbicn nnojre us Dracticallv with"" ten j practically within ten miles, of Richmond. 1 0ur lareeet lineOf transportation woukl be a v - .. ILukaM f hia a fmummmm tin. mint 1 mwmnt v fi v Y I Iam hat avitK thai suppl. th army ,by water dunnr its advanc certainly to within twelve miles of Richmond. At Acjma Creek we would be seventy-hv miles from Rich mood. "with land transportation all the way. iFrom here to Fortress Monroe is a march of - about seventy miles, for I regard it as impracV i!mM. ia ithffM mw (ni. mAm iti.i.M.I ticable to withdraw this army and its material except by land. The result of the movement woold thus be to march one hundred and thir ty-fiv ntilea to reach a ioint now onlytwenty-five miles distant, and to deprive ourselves entirely of the powerful aid of gunboats aud water transportation. . "' - - " Add to this the certain' derooralizatlon of the army, which would insure the terrible depressing effect upon the. people of the North, and fiie stern probability that it won Id influence foreign powers to recognize our adversaries tand there appears : to . me sufficient reasons to make it my imperative duty to urgei in the strongest terms afJordud. by . oar lan- Sage. that this order may ts rescinded, and at, far froitfrecalling ibis army, it be promptly reinforced, to enable it to resume the offensive. -It may -b said tber are no rinlorce-meats available. I ; point' to Gen.Bayards force; to that of Gen. Pope not necessary to maintain a strict defense in front of Washington and Harper's Ferry ; to those positions of the army of the. West not required for a strict defense there.; Here directly in front, of, the' army jaJhe heart .of rebelliot,- It is here that all our resources should hs collected to strike the blow which will determine the" Cit of this saxion, allttmata of Secondary importance slsewhrre should be ; abandoned, and every available man brought here. ,,A decided ic-" tory here, and the military strength of rebellion wonld be crushed. It matters not- what rsrtial reverse. we may meet with, elsewhere, ere is the true defense of Washington. - Jt is her on the banks of the Jsmea river that the Cate of the Cnioa lahonld beLdiciied.. Clear is my eonvictlons of right, strong in ths cOn-scientionsBesa. X have, everJeen and am .Still actuated solely byjove of my country r know-ing that no ambition cr stlSsh. motives hav inoeneed me from thecoraAencerrtent of this war I do now-wliat I never did in my ' life before i-I en treat flat the .order may be rescinded. If mr coniresl; does, not' prsvaiU: ! will, with a sad 1 eaTt, obey your orders: to the ntaicst'ef ray pbwer, devoting: to the movement, cr.ecf t'e etlzst dallcacy anddiScnlty, whatcrt'-r.l 1 my pc?s. r Wfcateytr the result risy ts. zv.& mav God grsnt that' I ara muUlsn it r?y fort' !1'.tz.J shall at .lesxt Lave ths - rrt-'i-ti th-t I hsvt written td rpcita frzr i:.r -,rd hsri ttrc'.t trdo tl3 ? rr is cy r orz: t2 a:rt Cs&z'.tt Lz3 c?y receipt rafVrashmii; "tie , c:.-eat , j u'rougk Gen. IZaSe&kvoa the Cih cf-i v;:ratel the order to Oeo; llcCIelitn itl 1 1' r ul L!i to-; withdraw5 hla ' axciy f.ira"la v Jams iti cr. i facts t-at havs"i!:? tr -.' pired show lz ? ' J cf OenersJ i::C!.S and ta folly oi' t-4 c. - c ;1 C i -L, iTheVpprbachof Thankf tric-:t:.. ; ? U-it the disjiNtiona of-the AtotliioH c':- w, on political ailairsC They auiLrsc xLa .. eion to make an exhibition ot tLcir rt'-iit S I ignorance.' bigotry and ihtolerancs tad to in-jsult-riJsalyinsalt the feelings. tf the c-n'l seryauve ana Democrauc ponion ftieTr audience, VThe Gospel they preacu ia net -lat ' ' '- of ttieSAvlor u is not love, chaV.ty end r M . wDI totnen, but it is bate ami revc.,3 c. ;!. --must xoeohing character. " They . eeejc-t3-in t twirr.ana .au4 bitterness to ar rsst TisI-froiibles they swsk to extejid, inte&d pf try . j" tj to allay them by words xil ChrUtian' eaa . al--- There ta no enormfiy;; ftoai' which they ; rseeal in; order K earrv out their cieriIi'eil. po. , . I&raliews.. The boldest and niOHta ud ir na-atlvocalea of the extermination policy cri-ia--- s?otn i.4:mare found among the- AboUtloW rlery. To mostausMa la us o a servile .tnsurrrrVon, the murder of women and chikfren ami -non cotnliaatnta by barbarous . nejrro , slsres" is" - shocking ; but thesepulpit poliUcuns cotiteuv plate it with great eorapfaceiice,' if net-j !?s-are. ?While urging on the; pet-pie, t: r&Jjf ! . .. through seas of blood, from Their. cusLined-pulpits, they take good care tVpted exemps f tion from the draft, and are careful not to x pose their precious persona to the bullet or the bayonet. -They much prefer to live at xtomtf . upon the fat of the land and draw- their large-salariea in ease and jlenty than JOienJnry. th dLcomfort and bardnbipe of . camp ife fo .;,' . thirteen dollars a mouth. ' ' ; "V If there Is anything the Arwlition'xiergy .' particwlarly and expressly detest,-tt ia ai com promise thai eheald reetore that Union as U tormttij t existed.: Bitterer, enemies, joTt the Union, can not be found upon th contivtiit.- They have done an they could to break: op : this-Government, to destroy our- Constitutioo, . - and are. mainly reapoosible for the preset;! tfii ' tressing condition of the. country. ItacT cf" . tbem have is bored for yearn Xo sow those seeds of hatred between tbe Nortlr anil the South of which we are now reaping tLs titter1 - fruits, wuu hearu nu trmaieyJe-exand - . hats to these who differ. with them, and Ire&th - ing vengeance and slaughter, they, claim to be faithful representatives of the Prise cf Peace V and C3a47 ' ; t Vt4 " : .---;' ' -.-' .' : ; These remarks w apply to a portion cf tha . clergyto.tbt ranting and. fervent wersbiiers v o the negro. There sre handmts c f ciergyf ,v men who do honor to their sacred raian ana by their. precept and example strsngtben the cause of virtue and truth, and make Christian' . ity the greateet of all blessings to the worU Cia. 'Ejr-z.i ? ?-.-vivl ?V 'f .''-' ' '-'J.'x.V r: v - " u-m "" 'im' -T 'V ''I " " i The Abolitkniista. are trembliag ta thetf boots for fear the Union may : be restorad. be - fore slavery shall have been wiped out at the Souths "'; -'; - f ' t'-r- i?' . .nThe shoddy v and-paper and woodenoled;:i.. Shoes vonfrartora, and othem t hat- elftss,-who hv been 'making rfortunea off.th Gov- ernment. and who want tha war tv-fUL; ahead - i - . . . . . r , 1 Ji . il!.V!Lir T. . . Aiu-J.. s ?rr;W iio X at e i. rcifsi v . axes to gritid. and wTT6ar ' not n r rro erAxed"' are anxious tor af rpredy endv boborableron' elusion of the war. . They ee v its confinn . a nee nothing bnlthe ruiovpf tbemelvee- and" ' the' destruction --or. their; chtry." ' Homes --made desolste everywhere nnd'Srrindirl -taxsv tion nnivemtl are aspowerfnl toresurs to peace as arc millions of moey coVrscrs and negro fanaticism incentives tothecohdncancs-of the.war. Could a peace bemads bysa fair and honorable tempromis th wbole-srtd woold glow with bonfire, and hcnt jta, t j - J fill tbeyalleys and rejoicing crown, the -.'vl v at the restoration of brother-hood snd a bro) t '- U nion.- Let no paf riot, therefore," be aehs t. c4 to proclaim MKiiy tor:peace oj comproTt3e, ii it can oe auaineo inuti wiyj Ttit WTilesei of a ITiea Xirtli: :ld T1.W Nam Yart WmrLL: ln"ariLin " cf dlsUnction drawa'by the AbolUioo riperilV tween the President as a civil xScr, Sad 111 L. President as Commander-in-Chiefof tbjtirtan and Navy7, ridiculss this Idea hy the -rj: A C spt illostrstlon : -'""." -;. ' f ,!( V ; This is like ?he Engfish CTshop wT, frew' .-alsa a Instica of the peace. ; Gtinr ery kaw V cry one day in tha preseact of his ifcntlet, ih Bishop broke into a volley of oatba The for' . aAtBw2rtl-ii1r OSfTla M STI m la aTalaS nshit fll 1 1 ST t- -- Sv4 . VS a? as warn a - W er vtv. see a s m tUi latsafl his master of the unbecom'raz- chRiactesTof' anch -an exhibitic, -- I did nct aeesr-f ik w Bishop, he said, but as a mflrtrnt.' .SLV -? your revereneC' Trstnetted. the bntler. w hen the Pvil. gets the ma-trsta, : -'v-it wilt te' nrvw gets the matrst , ' .; of the Xiahop I' , 7h e a eome I swore to preserve 'protect and dri:. i iv Con-? stitution ortb United eitatea, hectk. tuc. self, u woold seem. in two parts, and U-k tha oath in anch a manner thst-wbHe it trcsd hii , conscleTKMPwdenUfcewrreet3T?rnpI ; the Constitution under foot a a" mlliury com- - mender. 'And this in jt Goyemajent tr LV , whn fundamental axioms is the etitc'Ii! ttow of the militsry to the eiyil powcr. , . ArrfTai cf a Lire Ccrilla Oa Xirtrr : iL Br.thc arrivafof the AfHcin ttrr?r Arms- dian at La verpool. there, has, tfTi.trc--btto that port nJEn male pectmen of te inu. . He appears quits docile fa nd ."atnnsee himsflf . in dancing around th room at Mr. IJtibr'tiij-the eminent naturalist, and 'atfenfJlr f " tew- ' pieces ef blankets toiler. - Jlis akia ii f aa olive color, and, e be is ycteryyonr:-. only slightly.covrred with heir, .Heisrera-rswy lond or goo4 livms. and pears to l-- vean across the chest, while bis eras f - . t zo strong and sinewy.dplayinar f- ; , - h, ns has a eresl bsbit of-puttir L'j . , t-.tar ' my sf ray J ?' d t oes ?. k r -? la 1 in about, and when he l l;rov . M i I ; j Veaks he ioarialIy rnns t3 r I; "... r ' ectioo-who may te prrrrRt. : KIs f. :, . - . tha generally entertained cr"r.i?i. n r ; repoisive Jookir.'j, alihon- t ; r:-'oth bread and Learn- -TL:s iatic.. .x'. - -'; peciraej of the :rlila, trs It -It jv,.;.;.. .uus fttry.-r; -.i -. . :.:, ;.r'; loVtr-hare ecr.cr:-r nttljEt:'.::i cf ".i TTZ-'.'rltlzi especial rel;feb Tor beefsteak ana mnuaatnorw and fruitv-Yonni Mr. Gorilla "ia aLct : thrt fet-anJal)alfMTilchtery trr-'.r ' " r5-r!;cs.li:;to l; tSs nameeresf-of'tT.'d 73 -.c!;:-; i li-r"ti .41 e " Z3&craiaVaa ------i Yr ' " 1 - '.rr.r, it: d t. " a r. i-. v--v!..M';.;:':,ir: 1 -v.V .a ii cere than cae'instance. them t-3 icr. -v i. .-i '- -Jir- 3 eft |