inn a VOL. 1. BANY, LINN COUNTY, OREGON, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1805. . NO. 11. rrnri Bin nirmin tmtti m Tn n ttt a mi II I 1 : t 1 I 1 J V, "V. til i i i i S JUL JL JO JJL JLI 3 JJ-Uy LL Vi Jl-JLi. JX. -US Jlfl X JLL V ' - - -Ji i STATE RIGHTS DEMOCRAT. ISSUED EVERY SATURDAY, IX ALBAS Y, LIXX COlTXTYi OCJf. PUBLISHER AND EDITOR.' C2ee, over the Store of J. Norcross 8t Co. TERMS: ron sucsciupncrj One Copy fbr One Year - -One Copy for Six Months - - SS Payment to be made in advance in every ease. The Paper will not be sent to any address Bales ordered, and the term for which it Fhall be ordered be paid for. Ao departurt till b madt from MM frriu in any imtnnct. X. B. Timely prior notice wHl be given to each Subscriber of the week om which his sub scription will expire, and unless an order for itt continuance, accompanied with the money, be given, the ' Paper will be discontinued to that address. Far One Sinatw rf Timln XJa.CS. or Ies, n Insertion - - - $3 For Each Snhncnt Insertion - 1 XjB A Liberal Reduction from these Rates to Ona-rterlv. Half Yearly and Yearly Advertisers, and neon all Lengthy Advertisements, will be made. GENSRAX. NOTICE: Correspondents writing over assumed signature -or anonymously, must make known their proper names to the Editor, or no attention will be given to thsir communications. All Letters and Communications, whether on business or for publication, should be addressed to -the Editor. A DIABOLICAL ACT. A White Man Flowed by a Xe gr so that lie Died. . The following appears in the Cincin nati Enquirer of a late date : - I noticed in your issue of the 19th Inst, an article from the Louisville Demo crat, giving an account of a disgraceful affairwhieh took place at Jeffersonville, Indiana, by the drumming and parading through the streets of a white soldier, surrounded by a negro guard, which calls to my mind a far more disgraceful and inhuman act which I witnessed at Fort Delaware. The barbarous act which I acj about to narrate, and the circumstances which induced it, are briefly as follows: The white man who was flogged, was a citizen, and employed, as a deck-hand on a steam boat called the " Osceola," which made daily trips to and from the fort. After Mr. Lincoln had been killed this man, in conversation with others, remarked that Mr. Lincoln was '; only one of the many thousands who had been killed, during Y'he past four years, as the result of this 'Via warranted war," and said while "his (Lincoln's) assassination was a sad affair, he believed it would have saved thou sands of lives, and be better for the coun try, had he been killed at the commence ment of the rebellion." - For indulging in the above remarks ' he was brought up to the eomnianding General's headquarters, when the Gen eral, assisted by members of his staff, beat the unfortunate man in a most bru tal manner, after which he was taken to the guard-house and tied up by the thumbs, his toes only touching the ground, ior two hours. After that was done his head was shaved and he was flagged by a negro, "under guard, from the fort to the wharf, about a quarter of a mile. When he reacbe i the wharf he was perfectly red with blood 'from head to foot, and his body was scarred all over from the effects of the whip. Ili3 clothes were complete ly torn off him, and .he presented a sight that would make any one who had a spark of Christianity about him shudder. lie fell at the wharf, and was unable to snp- port himself, when he was picked up by some of the guard, by order of the Pro vost Marshal, who i& charge of the ex ecution of this most atrocious act, and placed in a skiff, taken to Salem, New Jersey, where he resided, and given to his family in that condition. I was in formed afterwards that he died. I was also informed that his mother was' a wid ow woman, and he was her sole support. This, no doubt, will appear horrible to -the public, and seem hardiy possible that a man, claiming to be civilized,and with the rank of Brigadier-General in the United States Army, would be guilty of -meh inhumanity and barbarity; but, nev- ertheless-it is true and I was an eye witness t the same. But, Mr. Editor, this u onh one of the many barbarous and treacherous acts which were prac ticed on prisoners by these scoundrels, ind which I intend to make public as soon as I can devote my attention to them. I make this assertion, and challenge refutation to the same, that the manner in which the prisoners of war were treat ed at Fort Delaware was fully as bad and cruel as, it is charged, and which I be lieve was so, the Union prisoners were treated at Andersonville. This I will prove erelong, by giving a full statement i&f the tacts. I). Jclanegan'. : ' Socxn CorxsEt.The Ypsilanti (Mich.) Sentinel gives the following sound counsel! , Look to your children, fha ready pens of a thousand writers are busy infusing false hood into their minds, concerning late events and their causes. All the channels ot our literature are filled with their perversions, prejudice and malignity. It we 6xpect to preserve a free government, we must watch the influences that are brought to bear in forra Eg the minds of the young. Banish from your houses everything that savors of the ".doctrines of federalism, or a fondness for despotism. Drive out the partisan histories ci the war, by Tory and Abolition writers, if you cannot take the bettor course of put ting the truth by the side of them. The school, the press and the pulpit, ire at pres ent doing the work of indoctrinating the vouth of the country -with the love of strong Gavernments, admiration of military imd contempt of civil power ; and the pro priety of blendirftj church and State in gen eral crusades of reform. Take heed that our children, and through them the country, is not politically drngzed to death. , Helpfulness Jii3 wages. never comes home without SPEECH OF HOX. 9IOIVT. GOttEttY BLAIR. He Shows np the Perfidy of Sew ard, the Treachery and IntUmy r Stanton and llolt, and Ver- the Charges Against Them . All which Democrats have made, but which Abolitionist have As serted to be FaleSeward, Holt and Stanton Beshonsible lor the liar. We give below the main portion of a speech in Marylaud by the Hon. Mont gomery Blair, formerly a member of Mr Lincoln's Cabinet, and one of the most influential and prominent leaders of the Abolition party. We ask our Democratic readers to show it to their Abolition neigh bors. The Abolition organs of Oregon will not print such speeches. They fear the effects upon their party readers. Head and preserve thus speech, Mr- Blair said : Fellow-Citizens : It cannot be said that States or men loyal to the Union, that remained steadfast to it uutil vanquished by the superior force of a victorious usur pation which reduced all the civil and military authorities within the States to subserviency, became rebels by submis sion. Much less can it be said that such States and individuals, entitled by their allegiance to the General Government to its protection, but which were surrendered to that usurpation without a blow struck in their defense by it, became traitors by ceasing to resist when effectual resistance was no longer possible. Now, this was exactly the case of the loyal people of.the South, a majority of whom were unques tionably loyal before the iall of r t. Sum ter, but who found themselves at that mo ment absolutely at the mercy of the con spiritors against the Xatioual Republic. This State of things was the result of the connivance of the Government of the Uni ted States with the traitors, who by the aid of secret societies, had organized an overwhelming military force, and secured by political intrigue the executive, legis lative and judicial power in the slave States. But mark especially the part which the Federal authority exeried in establishing this usurping power in the South. The President of the United States, Buchanan. was their executive. Every Cabinet offi cer appointed -by him was of their dicta tion. Thevhad a controlling majority m both branches of Congress. The Supreme Court was at their devotion. The head of the army, the venerable Lieutenaot-Gen-eral Scott, stood alone, of all Buchanan's controlling functionaries, true to his coun try. Every other head of administration, with the exception of this time-worn pa triot, contributed to betray the South into the hands of its enemies. The Senate and Ilouse of Representatives in their de bates were converted into hot-beds of sedi tion to fire the Southern heart. The Su preme Court fulminated a decision, meant like the papal bull which once consigned the newly discovered continent to the yoke of Spain, to reopen that part of it which had been freed by State constitutions or territorial compacts io slavery again. The Pre-sideut declared that if the slave States seceded, as it was proclaimed by the Representatives in Congress they would, if balked in their designs, that there was no power in the General Gov ernment to coerce them to submit to the Constitution and laws, and to defeat even the attempt at coercion, the army was sent under Gen. Twigg3 to the Indian border of Texas, to be surrendered to the traitors there, and the navy were dispersed in all direetioaa to the end3 of the earth. This was the situation at the opening of the Congress which was to usher Mr. Lincoln into his severed government. But in the interim between the meeting of Congress and the accession of Mr. Lin coln, the influential men in the Cabinet designated by him, and those playing thir last cards, in Buchanan's Cabinet, were buried in intrigues with conspirators, who were setting up their power over the slave States. Buchanan's Secretary of War was doing all he could to Confirm it, by stripping the armories of the United States, surrendering the army and its arms. and handing overall the munitions of war and forts in his power to the enemy. Tou cey did the same with everything in his power, by putting disaffected or imbecile officers is the navy yards and fortified places in the South, to make th6 conquest of them easy. Almost a 11 were lost before Mr. Lincoln had time to organize his de partments and look about him. . Meantime Mr, Seward, as the es?gna ted premier of Mr. Lincoln's Cabinet, still retaining his place in the Senate or the United States, took his part in the game played for and against the Union the contest, until war in the field broke out, being confined to the halls of Congress. Mr. Seward.s policy, then and sipee, and his motives are still a mystery -t but the re sult of his devious course was manifestly detrimental to the cause of the Union. In response to the leaders of the rebellion on the floor of the Senate, and who in effect as the executive power directed the con spiracy from its council chamber in cau cus in Washington, Mr- Seward answered, '' I hsye such faith in this republican sys tem of ours that there is no political good which I desire that I am not content to seek through its peaceful forms of admin istration without invoking revolutionary action. If others shall invoke that form of action to oppose and overthrow govern ment, they shall not, so far as it depends on me, have the excuse that I obstinately felt myself to be misunderstood. In such a case I can afford to meet prejudice with conciliation, exaction witn concession, which surrenders no principle, and vio lence with the right hand of peace." This declaration was justly construed to pledge him to sustain President Buchanan's pro gramme, "not to coerce a State, and therefore, not to resist the . dissolution of the .Union, the proclaimed purposes of the Senators and Representatives of the slave States, who were about to leave their seats m the National Legislature, and call Confederate Congress to assume all the power over the South, from which it was resolved that the Constitution of the Uni ted States should be banished. The first step (the inauguration of Mr. Lincoln iu March accomplished) after "Mr. Seward was confirmed as Secretary of State by the Senate, brought John Forsyth, Martin J. Crawford and A. B. llonwn, 'Commis sioners from the Confederate States," who, to use their own language, "asked audi ence to adjust, in a spirit of amity and peace, the new relations springing lroui a manifest and accomplished revolution in the Govcrnmout ot the I nion. lhis application was not answered until the 8th of April, although Mr. Seward's declina tion was prepared on the 12th of March ; but a memorandum at the close adds : "A delivery of the saino, however was delay ed to Messrs. Forsyth and Crawford, as was understood, with their consent. In the interval, communication between Sec retary Seward and the Confederate Com missioners was carried on by Judge Camp bell f the Supreme Court of the United States, whose conversations with the Sec- retarv of State were witnessed bv Judtrc j - Nelson, also of the Supreme Court, who sanctioned the following note of the result given, on the 15th, of March, 18G1, to Judse Crawford, for information to the Confederate States :' " I feel entire eonSdence that Fort Sumtor will be evacuated in the next five davs : qnd this measure is felt as imposing a grat re spoimbility on the Administration. "I feel entire confidence that no measure changing the existing status prejudicially to the Southern Confederate States is at present contemplated. 4 1 feel an entire confidence that an an swer to the communication of the Confede rate Commissioners will be productive of evil, not good. I do not believe it ought now to be pressed." I Mr. Seward, it seems, made no direct reply to a letter of Judge Campbell refer- j ing to the pledges he communicated from him to the Confederate Commissioners, and stating to him that " the pledge to evacuate Fort Sumter is less forcible than the words you employed. These words were, before this letter reaches (a propos ed letter by me to President Davis) Sum ter will have been evacuated." Mr. Sew ard did, however, in an authorized state ment made in the Albany Evening Jour Journal, by Mr. Thurlow Weed, admit that he, '-Gov. Seward, conversed, freely with Judge Campbell; we do not deny, nor do we doubt that in these conversa tions, at one period, he intimated that Ft. Sumter would be evacuated. He certain ly believed so, founding his opinion on the knowledge of General Scott's recom mendation." Now. this mode of escaping the respon sibility of his assurance to Jeff. Davis that Sumter would be evacuated, is like that of Teucer skulking from danger by shoot ing his arrows under the cover of the shield of Ajax: It is well known that General Scott, before Buchanan sent his non-coercion message to Congress, and as soon as preparation for revolt in the South was seen, urged the President by letter to put all the forts in Charleston harbor in a state of defense. In this he evinced the alacrity that prompted him under General Jaeksoo's orders, when he brought Charleston and the rebellion into submis sion by bringing the guns of the army and navy to bear upon that city when it: hoist ed the flag of nullification against the Union in 132. Scott meant to crush the rebellion in the egg in this instance as in that ; but Buchanan foiled it as his supe rior. When Mr. Lincoln came iu, and his premier undertook to quell the revolt by concession, Scott could only say in the confidential letter he wrote when acquies ing under the superiority of the civil to the military power, " Let our erringsisters depart in peace." Yet I am confident, from the patriotic course of the brave old man afterward, that nothing could have induced him to acquiese in Mr. Seward's course but the committals of 31 r. Seward, who had ardently supported him for the Presidency against Mr. Pierce, and the persuasions that his .diplomacy would bring all right after surrendering our flag, and with it the authority of our Govern ment in the South to that of the Confed eracy. The dalliance of Mr. Seward with the Confederates and the Convention committees from Virginia, np to the fall of Fort Sumter, was but a prolongation of the agreement made with Davis, by order of Buchanan, under the signatures of his Secretaries of War and of the Navy, that no act of war would take place on the part fif the United States during his term. Thi3 gave the Confederate General Beau regard on opportunity to build batteries under the guns ot b ort Sumter, which could not have been done had not its can non been muzzled by treaty stipulation Mr. Seward's acquiesence in this state of things rendered the preparation for the attack more complete, while the forbear ance to furnish provisions or reinforce ments to the garrison, on our part, effect ually madg good Mr- Seward s pledge for its surrender. It is apparent, from the whole course of public affairs, tha Mr. Seward acted in concert with Buchanan's Administration during the last three months of his term. He was, no doubt, advised, through Mr. Stanton, who was in Mr. Buchanan's Cabinet, of the policy it had adopted in reference to the seizure of everything that appertained to the nation in the South. It was to the coalition then formed be tween Mr. Seward and Mr. Stanton that the latter became Secretary of War to Mr. Lincoln. He apprised Mr. Seward of this treaty ot the V ar and j avy Departments, under - Buchanan, to make no resistance to the policy of dissolving the Union to offer no coercion to impede ita march to independence and Mr. Seward s course shows that he approved and adopted this policy, is it not strange that Mr. Sew ard should have kept that paralysis on the country from the 4th of March to the 13th April, when the conflagration of Sumter aroused the people ? Did Mr. Seward partake of the feeling which prompted Mr. Chase, his colleage iu the Treasury. to exclaim, Let the South go. it is not worth fighting for ?" Is it pogsitle that these ambitious aspirants, who have shown such eagerness for the Presidency, are willing to sacrifice that vast, rich section of our Union to the party object of per sonal aggrandizement: ' Nor was it Southern Uuion men alone whose natural promptings to defend the L nion were checked bv the enorui ot tne existing and prospective authorities in Washington who were co-operating in this purpose. It was through these influences that the movements throughout the North for the armed defense of the Union were repressed, and tha impression conveyed to the South that secession would be icaceful. Let me recall an instance. The Pennsylvania Legislature met in Janua ry, 1801, and a resolution was immediately presented which, I believe, was unani mously adopted, declaring it to be the duty of the State authorities to raise-, "organize and equip a military force for the defense of the Union. This movement was stop ped from Washington, and among the means resorted to for that purpose, as I was informed by Speaker Pennington at the time, the Legislature were told by a distinPTiished member from 3Iarvland. then believed to hold confidential relations with the incoming premier, that Mary land would secc4e if the movement were persisted in. The movement was abau doned, and it was abandoned undoubtedly through his counsel and in deference to his position as the incoming premier. Non resistance was we have seen, his publicly declared policy in the Senate as it was in the Cabinet. He agreed with Judge Camp bell, the rebel Commissioner, for the sur render oi I'ort Sumter, and when the President tame to a (liferent determina tion, he, nevertheless, made good his promise. He it was. undoubtedly, who gave -the notice by the telegram seni through Mr. Harvey, then and still our Minister to Portugal, of the President's purpose to reinforce. But the succor never came. Mr. Seward got an order directly from the President, withdrawing the Powhattan, the armed vessel assigned to the expedition by the Secretary of the Navy, without the knowledge of the Sec retary, and without the President know ing that the Powhattau was the vessel or dered to relieve Sumter. The men and provisions came, but not a sailor with them to put into the fort, the Powhatan having been withdrawn. It was in defe rence to him that General Scott rceoiri mended the surrender of the Fort, be cause the General, during the previous Administration, had wished to reinforce it, and had been refused permission to do so by Mr. Holt, then Secretary of War. Mr. Holt, now the head of the bureau of military justice, was then also a power ia Washington. While Secretary of War, as already stated, he refused to permit General Scott to reinforce Sumter, and he had, while Postmaster General, written and - published a letter, dated 30th Nov ember, 1SG0, justifying the rebellion. He says in that letter, the people of the North " have been taught that they are respon sible for the domestic institutions of the South, and that they can be faithful to God only by being unfaithful to the com pact they made with their fellow-men. Hence those liberty bills which degrade the statute bocks of some ten of the free States, and which are confessedly a shame less violation of the Federal Constitution in a point vital to her honor. We have here presented from year to year the hu miliating spectacle of free and ttbvcreign States, by a solemn act of legislation, le galizing the theft of their neighbors' pro perty. 1 (as thett, since it is not tne less so because the subject of the despK cable crime chances to be a slave instead of a horse or a bale of goods." After much to the same purport, he says : "I am still for the Union, because I nave a faint, hesitating hope that the North will do justice to the South aud save tha re public before the wreclf is complete. But the aetion must be prompt. 11 the tree States will sweep the liberty bills from their codes, propose a convention of the States, and offer guarantees which will afford the same repose and 6afety to South ern homes and property enjoyed by those at the North, the impending tragedy may yet be averted, but not otherwise." Sim ultaneously with his refusal to permit suc cor to Fort Sumter, and his armistice with the rebel Secretary, he refused his sanc tion to a bill introduced into the Senate by Mr. Preston King, to author ieo thfl Union men in th South to organize thenv selves under the authority of the United States, refusing thus to allow them to de fend themselves. Mr. Stan top, now Secretary of War, then Attorney General, was in full sym pafhy with the leaders in Congress who dragged the houth into rebellion, lie met Senator Brown of Mississippi at the door of the Supreme Court as he passed from the hall of the Senate, after taking leave of it as a secessionist forever, Ho encouraged hhn; told him he was right; it. was the only course to save the South; he must keep his constituents up to it, etc, This is proved by Mr. Brown, former Senator from Mississippi, who mentioned it at the time to the lion. James S. lvol lius of Missouri. Mr. Saulsbury, Sena tor from Delaware, by a resolution offered to the Senate last. Whiter, proposed to substantiate i before a committee of that body, but the committee was not granted The fact is confirmed, too, by the known relations of the Secretary to parties at the time, and I have been assured by one of his colleagues in Buchanan s Cabinet that in his intercourse with his associates of that ilk, he was most violent in denounc- ing any uuempi uj uj4i,$ii lUD vmuu uy force, and continued bis denunciations till he entered Mr. Lincoln's Cabinet. Is it not fof this that he wag so laud ed and glorified by the Thad. Stevens party in the resolutions of the recent con vention at Harrisburg, ia which Presi dent Johnson is substantially pronounced an usurper for presuming to set up gov ernments in the Southern btates, instead of calling on Congress to take the subject in hand, to which they claim it belongs exclusively ? They declare also that these States should not be allowed State Gov ernments, and their motive for claiming authority for Congress is cvideutly be cause they believe Congress would not sanction the organization of such govern ments. Mr. Stanton concurs with them, and has been and is yet aiding them ef fectively in their scheme. This explains the retention so long ot a vast and unne- cessary military iorce ana Bome oi inc remarkable movements made by portion's of it, involving enormous expenditures, as I believe, against the wishes of the gene-ral-in-chief and the remonstrances of the Secretary of the Treasury. Beside the corruption fund thus secured, it serves to bankrupt the treasury, and thus compel the call ot Congress, a great point in the game of his associates. I revert to these facts to prove that the Government of the United States the great functionaries intrusted with the ad ministration afe responsible tor the Bnb- jugation of the Southern people to tjie usurpations of the conspirators who plot ted secession in the halls ot Congress and in the caucuses they held in the Capitol. Ig it not monstrous that our Govern ment should hold a people, put in this preaicamen.i, ii we may noi nay oy its own acts, yet certainly by its supincness and acquiescence, responsible for the crimes of an usurpation thus put over them. And yet the Hon. Thaddeus Stevens takes this stand for the Government of the United States iu the resolutions which he recently got up a convention to pass at Harrisburg. He thinks that as Pennsyl vania elected Mr. Buchanan President, who devoted his Administration to hatch the treason which has trodden down the great commonalty of our own race in the South, so it has elected him as an agent 0 complete their destruction and set op a foreign race w tafce tneir piace in tne na tional commonwealth. According to the programme of the Stevens resolutions, there are no loyal men in the South but the enfranchised blacks ; the white man who succumbed to the usurpation and obeyed its behests and this every man was compelled to do 13 dislranchised as disiovai. in logical sequence from this state of facts the Na- tional Legislature is to absorD all legisla tion, State and National, over the whole South. It is to assume absolute power over everything south of Mason and Dix on's line- and how is it to be exercised ? Mr. Stevens, forgetting that our Gov ernment was bound by the Constitution to protect the people of every State from all domestic violence and usurpation, as well as foreign invasion, and in failing to do it might be justly held to indemnify the loyal people who have suffered fey the rebellion, has the naruinooa io aeciare m his resolutions that the people of the South en masse, confounding the innocent with the guilty, are bound, out of their sub- stance, to pay the whole national ueoi m curred by the war. This is somewhat like tying a millstone round the neck of j every man or the commonalty and throw ing him into the ocean. It certainly over- whelms him in a flood from which he can hardly swim out with such a weight, But this, as it may he said, is only a hte-longencumbraneeor generations wnicn make the poor white posterity who have lived in slave States expiate as the child ren the sins of their forefathers. But lest some men who have considerable substance in land or other estate that has survived the war, may go to work and build up again an independence for themselves and their devoted country, Mr. Stevens has niuii.! .? i-ww nnnthoi eiroArtt ft another Bweeping resolution which cuts down at one blow all such as pirations. The resolution is that confis cation, like our great reaping machines, shall be driven by a steam engine of our absolute Government absolute over the South and reduce all fortunes to 510,000 value. It does not say whether the val uation ig to be Confederate paper or green backs. But whether it be one or the other, the stubble-field will be little worth the gleaning when we shall have first ex tracted the war debt from the unhappy subjects of the rebellion. To get a Gov ernment sufficiently hardened to execute these decrees, Mr. Stevens appeals to the soldiers, aud tells them that no man is ever to be nominated for any office unless he has served in the field. So they are to be the dispensers of all the spoils of the stript, thp naked children, How little this veteran politician knows the magnan imous patriots who fought their battles for the liberal and merciful institutions of our country 1 They are the last men in the world to urge to cruelty in cold blood. These men when hungry took the brcard out of their own haversacks, and gave with their canteens to their prostrate foes. Let them judge the South, and we are all brothers. Mr. Stevens next promises the manu facturers unbounded protection if they will help him to strip the South and re duce it to utter ruin. The manufactu rers, so far from doing his, will lend it their capital, at lea credit, that they may clothe them and enable them to produce frpsh material for their operatives and rich markets for the result of their suc cessful industry. He appeals to holders of Government bonds, saying the plunder of the South is to pay their debts. They will reply, We will not kill the goose that is to lay the golden egg. But who is to execute the Draconic de crees pf Thaddeus and his omnipotent par liament f Who ia to squeeze out the taxes from the desolated South to pay the whole war debt ? Who is to carry out the sweep ing confiscation throughout all rebeldom and divide the lands among the only loyal people of the South the negroes ? ' The resolutions name the President as 4 proper sort of man; hut he is plainly told that his scheme of restoring the Un ion will not do. It is too rose water too milk water too lenient j and yet Mr. Stevens says the rebels reject it. But Thaddeus knows a man who can do the business, who can compile his dooms-day book of conquests and confiscations. Who could be tetter fitted for it than the man to whose prodigious energies and excel-1 lcncics it would seem air our successes are to be ascribed ? He has a resolution of exfoliation in the platform all to himself, exalting him by name, in contrast with the poor cital made of the President, to make him like a " Hyperion to a Hatyr. The rest of the Cabinet arc thrown in the lump, not named but as " the colleagues " of Mr. Stanton. They arc worthy gentle men that must pass. , Now this is not altogether an absurd distribution of parts in the . Executive power, considering the work cut out for . , O. IT. -.1T 1 ii oj :ur. oievens. . xie is rauicai irom from the foot to the crown of his head. He is a root-and-hraneh man, and could spare nothing of the Government hut the body the Congress and that he would turn into a revolutionary club. He wants a revolution lie wants a Marat to work it up. Who can fill the function so well as Mr. Stanton ? He wants a guillotine. He wants a Santeree, the butcher, to reign on its scaffold and ply the axe. Can any one doubt that Mr. Stanton would take this part ? And if Mr. Stevens would add peculiar bitterness to the execution of the process of his revolutionary tribunals in wasting the South and harrowing the feel ings of its victims, could there be a better selection of an agent to pour Ball into wounds than Mr. Stanton 1 I havo al ready referred to his urging on the rebel lion. He was the new member brought into the Cabinet, when Cass left on the ground that it would not "coerce" espe cially that it voted Sumter should not be reinforced and defended, which he con sidered as giving aid to the rebellion, and resigned. Now, if this man, who was the prompter, the Cabinet adviser of the measures which contributed to carry the South out if this man who was appoint ed because of his full sympathy with Mr. Buchanan in his whole connection with the Southern chiefs who conducted its schemes touching the dissolution of the Union if this man, who brought them into the treason for which they are to suf fer, is to stand over them in mockery at the execution, it would certainly add bit terness even to the agony of death. To the incontrovertible facts I have recited. establishing the practicability and justice ofj adhering to the plain letter of the Constitu, tion there is no answer, but ambition backed j by power will justify itself with very little regard for right or even of appearances. I Richard, when he ordered Hastings to exe-! cution, showing his withered arm as evidence that be had bewitched him, did so to scoff at his victim ; and the affected fears, of the crushed-' South, assumed by the ambitious leaders of the North to justify their destine, tion of their political riehU sounds not un. like the mockery of Gloster. But the lust of dominion from which such actions spring is the nost unreasoning, intolerant, and re morseless passion of the human bosom. It knows no Constitution, and does not listen to truth or justice. We will appeal in vain to the words of the Constitution to protect us in our rights to leaders freniied with the imperial idea of rulior the continent 1t hold ing one half of it without responsibility to its people, requiring a military force to do so which would make them masters of the whole. In vain we shall ask for justice to the Union men of the South from such men. They cannot forgo their lofty aspirations to recognise uie existence oi any sncn class. You cannot have forgotten how fiercely my head wqs demanded when I ventured to as, sort the rights of Union men of the South against this form of imperialism when broach, ed in 1863. I had boon from early manhood an opponent of slavery ; I had assisted my brother in organising the first and only vie torious emancipation party which existed in the South nrior to the rebellion : I wa in .' favor of maintaining' Fremont's prociatna . tion : and failing in that, I had recommend ed, in writing, President Lincoln to make one himself in his annual message of 1861, I bad defended Lincoln's emancipation proc. -lamation when it was made, in a speech which Senator Sumner himself did me t' honor to quote with approbation. I had a in the emancipation movement in Maryland, " and never faltered till its success wasachiev ed. But notwithstanding the furore about ! emancipation by those people, this ear;, earnest and constant support of emancipation on my part did not satisfy them. So far from it, 1 was, I believe, the most odious mtS to them on the continent. No, there was orA still better abused by Phillips, Chase, Davis & Co. I need not tell you that man was Abraham Lincoln, the author of the procla mation ; and to such an extent had these men poisoned the minds of some of our true men against me that I apprehended my continu-, ance in the Cabinet might affect the election, and therefore insisted on withdrawing, Nor was it because I had done anything to make myself personally offensive, My only of fense consisted in asserting the equal rights of my people ; and you see they would not ; tolerate any Southern man in tha CabineV. who stood tor the rights of the Union men of the South under the Constitution, The war is over. There is no slavery t make a new one. The passions connecter with it are subsiding. We nave a great caree before us. Our struggle, bloody and ex pen sive as it has been, will impart a new life t the country and a new impetus to industry. Let us set the example of inaugurating an era of good feeling. , If I have seemed in the reflections I have made in this address upon the distinguished men I have named, to be. animated by a different spirit, let me assure Tl 1 I - , . 1 , you x nave amuiauverieu on xneir acts oniy. because they are the representative men oft the unrelenting party in the country, and S want to show them that their herii Jave also need of amnesty. J. &m willing they should have it. Bt't on the other hand, 1 should like to have Judge Campbell and Mr. Stevens, and others who had erred to be for- gi ven-fthatour people should have real peace wiu tt Biipro iu hid vmveniuieui tneir joiners founded, and which they have to maintain. And I ask this, not out of any feeling that the section I was born in is more my country than any other. J) ree government cannot last lone in either section with a practical dismemberment of the Union, or with the assertion of the General Government of greater power over any one State than the onstitution allows, or than is claimed or would be tolerated in another. The military subjection of the section entails in the end, arbitrary Government upon both, Our eagle must expand both its wings. ;Our national Republic- must poise itself on both sections if it would move safely on its glorious mission. No woman should paint, except-.bhe who has lost the power of blushing. , - To know how old a lady is, ask her friends : to know how young, ask herself, - HORRORS IX MISSOURI. Wholesale Hatchery R the State .Tiiiina jnc;e ana w oar Bona Brutally Mnrdered. From the St Louis Republican, Aug. 21. On Thursday afternoon last, Judge Lewis F. Wright and four of his sons were cruelly and inhumanly murdered by the roadside, on the. route from Rolla to Houston, some five miles southwest of the former place. The murders, as we are inibrmed, were committed by a squad of Miller county militia, some nine in number, under command of CoL Bah- . coke, who resides in cither Miller or Cole county. It appears that th!a Colonel and his squad of militia, on Tuesday last, went to the" residence of Judge Wright, in Phelpa county, about ten miles from Rolla They remained there until Thursday; On that day they arrested Judge "Wiighr wad bis five sons. Some sort of an in vestigation was made into accusations, brought against the parties, either fan-, eied or real, when it was determined to take them to Rolla, as was given out, for further trial, Mrs. WrigSt, the wife, and step-mother of the Judge, and his . sons, at first implored Col. Babcoke not to take her family away. Finding that her entreaties, were unavailing she then besought him to permit her to accompany -them. This was also refused, but upon her imploring him to do something for her protection, as she was fearful of be ing murdered if left alone, the youngest son, a mere stripling, was released. The J udge was then mounted on a horse by himself, and his four sons upon two other horses, under guard of the squad of militia, ostensibly to be taken to. Rolla. Before reaching that point, as stated above, therrdreall -inhumanly butchered andtheir bodies left lying ia the brush by the road side.' No less than twenlv-six shots were fired into the pcOms of the five! Twelve of them took effect in their heads. Before the hoflies were reached by the frantic wife and mother and her remaining son. four fthe five were dead, and the fifth in sensible and dying. About o o clock Thursday evening' word came to Rolla that the murders had been committed, creating intense feelings of sorrow and indignation. Nothing, however, was done in the matter that ning. Next morning a wagon was sent out, and the bodies of the five mur dered men were brought -into Rolla. A gentleman who saw them, says they pre sented a horribletappearanee, their faces all ghastly with wounds and blood, and blackened with powder. Judge Wright had been shot in the side of the face, the -weapon being held so close as to burn it, and leave large blotches of powder stick- 5 ing in the skin. f The Judge is represented to us as hft ing about sixty years of age, and an esti mable citizen. For the past twenty-five years he had resided in Phelps county,, and held the office of county judge for a number of years prior to the war. Ever since the beginning of our troubles in Missouri he had enjoyed the confidence and esteem of the military in command in his neighborhood, his house being fre quently The stopping plaee of officers whose men were earnping at a heantiful spring on his premises and near bis resi dence. Two men intimately acquaintedgi3Sf in Phelps, assure us that no ror J1" ble or wore re!apect'', county. ..t..:1-- 11111 ' One cold yep in a time m reat reviv al in an African Methodist Church, the ebony expounuer was ueuvering a powerlul appeal on faith," the groans and sobs of his hear ers giving token of its effects on their im pressible natures,' The tears stood upon his own dark cheek, hia voice quivered like dis. tant thunder, while he emphasized by vigor ous blows upon the table. In the midst of this, the stove, agitated by his jarying blows, rolled over on the floor,' Brother Lewis, a high man in the church, had located himself near the crQafortcr of shins ; he stood irreso lute, when the voice of his minister came ta him laden with faith " Pick up the stove, Brudder Lewis, pick up the stove, de Lord won't let ifcburn you. . Brother Lewis's mind was filled up with miracles of faith he had heard that evening, so he yielded to the appeal of his preacher, grabbed the hot stove but dropped it instantly," and turning hia reproachful eyes to the 'disciple of faith, exclaimed, " De h I he ww7.'' ' There are said to be seventy-four divorce cases awaiting trial at La "Crosse, Wisconsin Every complainant is said to be a soldier oi a soldier's wife. - v ia Dr. Franklia-gaid, A good kick out ofdaerfi is better than all tlje rich nnoles is the world," si's t 1 V i '- . ...t mr . 'if -V: