The Oregon Argus. (Oregon City [Or.]) 1855-1863, October 11, 1862, Image 2

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    . If nn m. ntti-mixs to haul enio
AiiH'iU'Jiu Via its khoul hint on ," t.Hl l'l
fffH. Ihr.
l)c (Oregon Slrgua.
W. L. Adams, Editor.
OREGON CITY:
SATURDAY, OiTOHKU II, Iff.-).
Prt-sl.tt-ul l.lo.rnla'11 1'iiHluewa' Wet,
Tin' President's proclamation that sla
very will bo alnilishod in all States niul
parts of States which shall be ill open re
bellion on the first of January next, is said
t., n .1... i .if .. ....... ger property; ami our
.i-,.r:,llv l.i 1, n,.P.-,t..l,l t.s ill.. I ! fell" WOllld 001110 to the S;l IUC 00IIC
j sweat to stniiil in great drops on the laces
I of the nrmy officers generally, niul made)
j " conservatives" everywhere shove both
j hands upwards with astonishment.
Among those who were for cru.sliin out
! the rebellion by the power of anus, were
those who thought slavery wouldn't stand
' mueh in the way of conquering a speedy
peaee. Some thought the presence of a
I tolerably sized tinny in tho border States,
j or perhaps just over the Ohio river " for
: nest neutral Kentucky,'' would owe the
J rebels into submission without tiring a gun.
j Others thought tlmt while it might be no
j ecssary to send the army among the rebels
with perhaps loaded guns, they ought to
pursue a liumauo and liberal policy' that
Northern conservatives would be satisfied
that we didn't intend either to "coiivc"
the South, " Mibjngite" the rebels, or in
terfere with " constitutional rights" to nig-
ml our " Southern breth
10!
Union journals F. ist, and to have inspired ,
tlie masses ot all shaibs of politics through
too, and soon be induced by such kind act
as the enforcement bv the nniiv of the fu
, , i t . ....... i .
out the North with a conviction that tl. ' Ptive uxw nlul l0"" lL u"
Ooverumeut will sueceed in nuttin, down 1 ,,s l,roviK'J ,or 1,0-in- Mim ,U B I"'1
i'... f...ii..'i;.n ii,n t.,.. oi.. i. . ' lie whipping post, to comeback into the
...V, IVUHllKII. u tin net CI.V I1UIIIII?. 1
I moi, undi r the impression that " UM
Abe" was reallv a better pro slavery man
than JetT livis. A few sap-heads I k
there has been a public sentiment being
rapidly formed in (avor of striking at the
root of the rebellion by wiping out slavery,
until there has got to be such a unanimity
of opinion, that we do not suppose there is
really an honest Union man in the cnt're
North and but few if any in the border
States, who will not heartily endorse the
President's proclamation. The President
lias refrained thus far from interfering with
slavery, because he was determined to try
the experiment of crushing the rebellion
without disturbing any of the domestic
institutions of the rebellious States. What
ever his notions might have been, we have
no invvi of knowing, b:it we have always
believed that from the beginniiri of the re-
e
Wait thought the inllamir.ation could be
' taken out of the Jog of the beast by npply
ins to the belly of the rebellion a soothing
poultice made of the " Crittenden Com
promise" and a few " democratic platform,"
with some such skillful Ksouhiniu ns lMf
Hamuli to apply it. All the while the
army was being raised, the people were di
vided among tliems.lves as to whether
the army was big enough to overawe the
rebels without lighting much, nud if so,
what policy was to be adopted by the Gov
eminent that would be satisfactory to the
army officers, and quiet the rebellion with-
hellion he occupied common ground with 01,1 imic1' hloo.Wird, or incurring the odium
multitudes o! our most sagicious statesman
who wcr-i not blinded by a slave-driving
sympathy, who were confident that there
never won! I be any permanent peace on
this continent till slavery was extinguished,
if indeed there could be a eevsat.on of hos
tilities long enough to p itch up a recon
struction of the Uiron on a tnnporiry, rot
ten, pro-slavery basis. Ind-cl we now
believe, as we uUnys have btl.cved, that if
public sentiment had been sufficiently en-
of having " destroyed the Union forever'
by " coercing'' our " Southern brethren,''
and treading on their "constitutional
rights." The army being raised, all eyes
were turned towards Washington for the
aiinouncenii nt of the programme, when the
" scarred veteran," the ' Old Virg'niu war-heirs-,"
nn intense " conservative," the
(ieiieral-iu Chief, Gen. Scott, mounted the
Capital dome, and bending under the weigh:
of years uiul profound wisdom, of course, an-
lightened on the d.iv of his inauguration to nounciU as the programme,
back him a;) in inaugurating a policy which
his own judgment would have marked out,
he would at lint Lave taken the black imp
of slavery by the throat and choked it to
ileal!" in a way that would have ended the
w.i? before this, an I saved a vast amount
of Iitimii lie- and sutT-ring. We said be
fore Mr. Lincoln w:h iming irate. 1, that the
wisest, most human, christian, mid tffectu ,
ul m vie in which he could treat the rebel-
trjf "rut: avacomu svsntu.
OfT went three tuiillon hats from us tinny
loyal heads, and a popular slae.it relit the
heavens with "Great is the anaconda
system!" Scott replied " lit 'i-cka!'' bowed
his head, pud retired. The ma-scs said
"Amen!" While a few on the outskirts,
of the Wait school, .-nivilled out a prefer
ence for the poultice system, and tiuw nn-l
then a pl.ilosop:; i weur.ng ft wli.te
lion would be to nnrcli on enny through hat," feareJ t'e-re was- tco much poi.kice
the rebel States,
ig and officer
the
loyal portion of the people Ua-.k and white,
and hunt the Tel. els to their holes. This
would have prevented the shi dding of in-
in it to euro the disease by removing the
causes the iieniih; generally iv. redi-posed
to take it on the n commendation of the
Old Hero. Army officers I. kid it becau-e
noceiit blood by insurrections and would it was supposed to be strictly in harmony
have so paralyz'd the rebels with fear that with West Point tactics, and didn't inter
no large armies could have been concentra- fere with the "constitutional ri.d.t-'' .f
ted by tho Confederate leaders a long as
domcst'c lijstl tutiot s needed attention at
home.
Hut then public sctitimciit wasn't yet
schooled up to a point where it would have
reb k Jeir Davis and iiis officers chink
led over it a " not bad to t ike," though
they held it up to their fellow s in nn in
lernai nijotit.on system, wiueii coin. only
be met by epposiitg to it the rattlesnake
held up the hands of the Gov- rnuient in s.v"!, m.
t'liM taking the rebel bull bv the horn- war has now been waged
Public sentiment had become so demoraliz- il'j0ut moiitln, with vuriom sue
t-J and blinded by the distribution of leder- ctsJ" We liavcg:m-(l tinny advantage-,
ol patronage at the hands of the slave pow-, ' 13 triJ0i '-" tlie rcbfll-on sti.l locks for
tr, a? Well as by the t":ieh!ng of demo- njj-luLle. Scott's ' anaconda' had his tail
(ratio politicians and c.r.uiit priests that ' coiisiderably bruised before Uichmond, nnd
his middle will nigh cut m two on the Po
tomac, only a few days ago. We have
lost in battle and by siekuesi about three
i hundred thousand men. We have tn-ated
the rebels kindly. We have guarded n.l
tl property, while the ownr-rs of it were in
the rebil nrmy. Wo have resp'cted "con
stitutionul rights" of men who denied the
the rigid to the products of a man's own
arm which rested on civil and natural law
was cvni less sacred than the " right'' to
property in man which derived its whole
authority from civil law and was in viola
tion of natural law. This corrupt and de
bauched public sentiment, fall of the gan
grene of pro-slavery s empathy, after it en
dorsed the conn-cation of rebel properly ; authority of the Constitution, nud spit on
consisting of hor, cattle, and hog", shrank ' ' " 0 liave I1,1"-1 rtb,-','i "r tlicir coru
back, when it was proposed to touch nr'TO w,"-n lIl'T " tho time stealing ours
ropcrty, and many Northern Union men J We have sent back their niggers, when
p-irtiully insane under the festerings of a ' ll'(7 wcre eeizi"? free fi"gro servants be-pro-slavery
scrofu'a (which tiny conceived 1 "'mS lt o'ir nrm.v nnd s lling them into
to be democratic gathcrngv), were willing ! perpetual slavery. We have worn out our
to wade into the fire of rebellion far enough ovvn m" ni"- 'others in felling tim
to singe the hair oft of them, rather t!,an ! 'r, digging ditches, and building bridges
incur the odium of L iug cull.l " nljoli-! a l-"irnir) sun, ratlier tbrui uso the pre
tioniMs," by favoring a pollcv tliut tlin.-nt-; c'111 lljor of rebels,' slaves. Wc have
ned to hurt slave ry. Shivery, which the "''."' '"""rly four million of stout black si r
1 u liiig rebels culled the " key stone of the Vii,tt'i raising provisions to feed white rebel,
nrch" of civil (.'oveiumeiit, Mr. Lincoln j w'10 '""lfc' t'iut cnrr! 011 n W(ir
knew full fell, ns did th: best men in the ! u"''r Ires-fit " anaconda system'' for
world, was un ulcerated, festering member ! twenty yeurs. We have failed to enlinton
of the body politic, which tuu-t sooner or ' 0,ir 1,10 ''npathy of tho masses whose
later be cut off, and we believe he thought "'ar palpitate on the side of human liber
it would need to bo done during the war, j l3 '10 worl1 on'r- '"J. Wf! '"1VC norrob
and ought to be done ot once. A goodly j "rated with them the statement Vuncey
number of the people thought so, too; but
then a large portion of them, consisting of
made to the Knglinh Commoner1, when he
said tho North was os pro-slavery us the
emocratic politicians, liell nnd IJvcrttt Soutli, umj tlmt 7.r foiiud no sympathy
ndmirers, nnd "conservative republicans," '" American Government,
thought otherwise. Nine-tenths of tho In doing all this, wo have done well, so
nrmy offieers thought ollnnvisc, and a part i long as we havo ilouo another thing that
of Lineedn's Cabinet agreed with them. lis, ve hive tatinicl the Iwjnl imrliun of
Tlie slave power had corrupted and blind
id the nution, til! men had become almost
our omn country thai in order to crunk thr.
rebellion we haee yd to lake, the caute of
callous to tho impulntg of Immunity, and I it by the throat. The people demand, that
tho statesmen of tho ago had dwindled
Into pigmies. A iuggestion from the I'tes
ident on tho day of his inauguration, that
ho would probably have to uso the scnlpi-l
and send the saw crashing through the
emollient cataplasms be Hung to tho dogs,
and '.lint tho dying " anaconda" shall bo
put up In liquor and sent to the World's
Fair or bo decently buried out of night.
If tho rebellion isn't squelched before next
bones of the slavery leg on which tho benst I January, the President tells them tlmt the
of secession was hobbling, would have j saw and scalpel shall lo used, nnd the
thrown Scott into spa'tD', caused the cold beast of secession, like the serpent of Tdcn,
for ii want of a log, "W go on hi
hlli," nnd for want of provisions raised by
.laves, " thall eat dirt." This dornior re
sort, is a " military necessity." It will in
augurate a now era. in tho war. It will
bring human liberty and shivery to a back
hug, nnd we shall soo which will get a bro
ken back. It will arouse all tho latent
elevilism of the rebellion which has not yet
developed itself. It will evoke) n storm
tfi.it will sweep the continent like a whirl
wind. The writhing nnd excruciating ter
lure that will be felt by the beast when
the saw touches the narrow of its under
pinning, will only find a parallel in tin
sufferings of damned rebels in Milton's
hell. The continent will tremble under the
tread of opposing armies. Tho smoke of
the coulbct will bo seen afar off. The
North will be punishoil for letting the slave
jiower debase the nution, and control the
Government till it has grown up into a
giant monster while the monster itself will
expiate soino of its damnable villainies
Through the gathering blackness of the
storm, we sec mi approaching millennium,
llevils will set iii a how! at the close of
the ceintlict, while the righteous will "staiul
st. II u:id see the salvation ol the Lord."
Cm in ie ion.
Grave charges of corruption have been
ininle against several U. S eillie iuls on this
coast. A commission of investigation is
said to I ave been appointed at Washing
tun to examine into the conduct of the
Custeun lleiuse officials in San Pranci.sco,
against whom the late Peputy Collector
Ciishman and othe rs have uttered serious
complaints. Uul eit a long lisi ot spooiti-
cations which are on file in Washington,
and which are published in the S. !'. Mill
letin as having been made under oath, wo
, 1- i. I t t f. u
select a lew samples. .itcr allowing
excessive drnyag' on the goods sent to tho
appraisers rooms lor examination, it is
charge-el that the gooels are rather Iree ly
iniphd" by ceftain inter stod parties be-
onging to tlie appraisers department.
One of the affiants .swears that to his cor-
lin knowleelge "fancy gooels from Franco
and Germany, also Japanese and China
;ooels, cigars, ceifl'.o, sugar, and oil, have
iccii largely satnplid." These " samples''
are said to bo either distributee! to fr.el.ds,
or resi'rvi d for private use. A large lot of
eistly tea has be'eti taken out in poiiuil
pack'ig s and distributed. A cargo of Ja-
anese giiods consisting of willing cases,
adies' work cases, and other cosily speci
mens, ire largely sampled and the sam
ples sent around as Christinas presents.
An invoice of porcelain waro from Por-
iaax was sampled so heavily that it took
a large cask and box" to carry the sarn
ies off to the private resilience of the Cus
in lion officer who snmpleel the articles
Ci'lTic, tea, sugar, Ac , are stowe d away in
large quanlities in certain rooms for "fam
ily use" some times as high as lot) poniiels
of coffee being required for U ".sample."
One e,f the employees propositi to a f How
that they (.ample largely from the goee!s
sent to the Custom-House, nud then sell
Hie samples ana civnle Hie money. It is
charged that Peputy tVhmiin, in trying to
prevent this rapacity, raise d a storm around
his ears, and that Collector Ilankin, in
stead of sustaining him in his reformatory
efforts, dismissed him from office.
Very serious charges have also been
made against Victor Smith, Collector at
Port T ownsi'iiel, W. T., which, if the half
ol tlem arc true, show him to be entirely
unfit for any po-t of honor or InM.
The pap. r of Washington Territory arc
some of them publishing sptcilieations of
very serious charges against the integrity
of Indian Agent W. II. ifandnut.
Jlepially grave charges are also ma le in
high quarters against Indian Agent IJiddJc,
at L'orvalfis.
Complaints arc also made in reference to
one or two other officials, but not having
been made public, we defer speaking of
them for the present.
Now all of these officials may be able to
set themselves right with the Administra
tion, und we hope they w ill. The heads of
nil the P' pnrtments are men of the pound
est inti'gr.ty, and, while they will require;
conclusive evidence of mnlfeosiince in office
before coiidi inning nn officer, we ln-lic-vc
that with that evidence no time will be lo.st
in making u puldic exiimn e of sue h ns nro
,'uilly of dishonesty. This Administration
came into power under a pledge to econo
mize, to correct nbu-c, nnd install reform
atory measures generally. We havo ul-
wnys adve-eided such a policy on the part
of the Government, and those who took of
Ike under it did so with a full knowleelge
that lioinst men nlono were wanted for
places of public trust. Jf culprit!- cannot
be got nt effcrtunlhj on this coast in the
absence of law sufficiently severe to meet
the coic, we hopo that martial law will be
extended over ns for that purpose, for we
havo pretty much made up our mind thnt
dishonest officials, os well os rebels, ought
to he hung. It seems to bo a clear case of
" military necessity. "
Jfcjr Hon. J, Ojiinn Thornton was elect-
i:d President of tho Oregon Htato Agricul
tural .Society, at a Into meeting, C. N.
Terry, (.'or. Secy, S. K. May, Itec. Sec'y,
and J. II, Moores, Treos.
ftar McCormick's Alumnae for JHfi.'l
has been Issued containing tho usual varie
ty of interesting statistics of Oregon nnd
Washington.
KaJ- Hon, J. II. Mitchell, of the Senate.
nnd lion. 1. W. (JilletUi, of tho House
navo our thanks for public documents.
Uitrtntt'lty ol Hie lUtrN.
Tho instances of rebe l atrocity toward.
our prisoners n well as tho brutal treat
inent they extend lownrels Union men who
fall into their clutches in tho South, are
numerous cnenigh to fill columns of our pa
per every week, if wo had room to publish
Iheui.
We loam from nn Ohio paper that a
weinnded soldier has just reached his homo
at Milan, Ohio, after having been tortured
well nigh to death by the rebe l surgeons,
lie was wounded in tho log at Carnife x
F. rry, and taken prisoner. While King
on a bed, several le lie l surgeons, ue'coui
panied by John 1. Floyd, ontcivd 'he
room. Fbyd asked, " How is this el -d
Yankee gelling nhing?" (bin of the sur
geems steppoil up to him, ami tore off the
bandage in n rough brutal manner, that
tore ope n his w omul afresh and tortured
him severely---saying that his log must bo
amputated. The wounih'd man nssureel
him there was no in-oel of it, as it was emly
n flesh wound mid was so nearly well thnt
he was now ul b to walk. It was all lo
no purpeise', lor out cauio the instruments,
and his leg w us cut off below the know in a
rougn, iirutai manner, wr.iinui regini 10
his life or his suffering, the murdering ope
ration consuming neaily nn hour. In two
or three el vs tho siirgeems returned again,
accompanied by Floyd. The! bainlagi s
were again rudely jeikod off, nn I the sur
geons announced (hut it must be e'lit e ll
again this time above the knee. The
weak and almost dying man expostulate el
ami begg'-d them to kill hiul nnd end his
misery. Floyel said, " G el el - u him,
cut off both his hgs; that will prevent him
from lighting again." Tin's time, they were
nn hour and forty minutes in the e.piTation,
giving him no stimulants or any el the usu
al helps to sustain loin wlulo under tlieir
hands. The poor sufferer fortunately so
far reoovercd as to bo able to be reineiveil,
when he was cxchange-el, and has liiuiliy
reached home.
This is the) wy the rebels repay the
kind treatment we guc their weiiiinled sol
eliers who fall into our hands
Some may think that Mich fiends in hu
man shape, are emly found in the tcbi I
States, nud that they are se iroo Veil there;
but the rfbel sympatb'.ers hero who never
condemn these savage nets in their " It. th
ron," would elo the sun.- things to us if we
should ever be unfortunate enough to fall
into their hands. We wont I sooin r place
oursi If at the luere-y eif a C.ima.che, than
that of one of the w hite live rod Villains,
who hasn't soul enough to lete liberty mid
hate treason. The fact is, a .sce-cisiouist is
a man who sympathize with rvi-ry crime
perpetrated by tho rebels, rejoices at nil
tlieir suecosse-s, nnd feels a hellish satisfac
tion cverv time he In ars of In M-i e-ove re d
w ith ele.id and mang! d o!dii rs pit-re. d
with relet bayonets, and sculped with the
knive s of their savngo nil es. Tin so seres
sleinists are all the tools of meh un n ns Jo
I.. Tie, whose mivion tei Or. goti w.ll never
be fulfilled till the Pacific cousi is " ut on
the Southern platform," in I.nni: has it, or
our streams aie red with blood sled in the
effort to iiiinex us to tlie Puv's Coio'eih r
nor. For this purpose-, Floyd shipped ifie
seventy thousand stand of aims to Cnhfor
nia that were sent back by Summ r, ami
the country to eluy is full of Jo Fun ' too!,
who are noting us spies for P.ivi-i and
wailing for some grand micci-ss of rehi-l
arms to justify lln m in showing their teeth
Wo have sai l In-fur", and we still In Ii. va
il, that the war will go on, t.ll loyal 11011
will be made to groan iiudiT the burthens
imposed upon them to support (In. Govern
mint, till the scales will fall from their
eyes so that n hin uklng cut throat Northern
trait'. r, who gives uid and comfort to lln-
em-mies of all eliceiicy will be vii-wi-il in
his true light, ns the 1 m iny of mankind, a
foe to religion nnd humanity, and un alien
who is not entiled to the protection of the
Government which ho is trying to t! slroy.
The time was, when a man would be turn
oil out of the church, and bo de te sted by
the world, for mere ly stealing n she. p, but
now-ailiiys n secessionist who aids ami
abets stealing, robbery, and munler, by the
wholesale-, nnd tries t break th- nrm of 1 lie
Government in its effort to save its own
life, sets up a terrible whine if Christian
nun refuse lo communi; with him, or if the
Government requires him to attend to his
own business.
Wo are getting lo view Ihisc sne aking
tools of Johine in Mich a light that wo 110
longer view lln m ns worthy of being tre at
eel with (ominon respect. Their plm-a is in
the nigger quarters of some cotton planting
nabob and the quarters of mighly mean
niggers at thnt.
Niitliiu-r ti.l.t. ,,u , . ,,
l"ir ll.vi,.,0i,i. 7- 1 tul.a,.,
ur ...iU,.m ,"u"l"'""lu.1,, tl,,,,''''.
loa the Governor ,,wl .. ""'
'w his best ellorts lo rol " '""'H'lf (
l,,,"1(,"v,, "tai,d put tlo'wn"?!
wl. k..l l. I.li01l. 11 ' Ttllll.,t
Ihu Goverunient m lm ' hoill''tli,l
rr 111,, .1 . . '". Ili.
or our :ru" u.
faler" N'.m- 1I1U i.ii . . . 'w
In rebel hands 0 b0 wl.-i.i
hil tho bones , .! I,lnl W!
"',tl, finds fB ,,Piri
,U"' l'ilu '"""'''I' of ll,o2?l,,,llK
Ih-w ci-izensarelia,,, . J'ffA
fosi sto sign, has ,, ntl,(.r 0h 1, " 7
pivvent n-uiiors liu, drawi,,,, ,,,
t vnsurv ol thi. s , V",".."liy fro.
his I'voolleney truly ' ?'y, bie,
.1 1.1 ..... 1 ... . . . ,; . . ' IOff .. .
l he l'Teii-rl ( o' Vnlein.
After our iistonishiiieiit und linliguiilion
at thu attack on Sumter's fi'cblu garrison
hail somewhat subsided, and our national
self lovu hail boon plm-ateel by hurling In
successive detachments magnificent nni.ies,
counted in numbers by hundreds of thou
sands, ngaiust the Southern rebels 11 com
placent lee ling that our 1 Hurts w ore equal
to the cinergeni'y not only allayed our ex
citement, but lulled us Into an apathy from
which M'Clelhui's foveas.. s before Kiclf
niouil, nud thu mortifying consciousness
that our gallant army of soldiers In the
I'u hi found tlu-ir energies mddciily nnd ter
ribly laxod for purposes ol defense, bus
painfully rouseel us From the time when
Gen. Sceitlshut his broad palm in express
ive but amusing pantomime, as indicating
the late of Nice .ssiu through all i-haiigos of
men nud measures down to the time when
the broke n and shattcri'd lingincnts of our
grand army wen- swept bin k in the last
great spasm of the rebellion- flying from
an 11tt.u k 011 the re be l capital nud strong,
hold, to defend our own sent ol gove-ni-incut
against the 11 ut- it 1 teel e-ne iyy eil their
invasion, wo have miller estiiiiuled most
lamentably the ciie igy nnd icsoincis of
rcbildom. Another serious misapprehen
sion on our part has been in supposing tlmt
many hearts evi 11 in the rebel ranks yet
lieat resnonsive to the American idea ol
I'nion; that toiicheil by National magna
1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 v , 110 less than awed by National
pow or i-oiiepleied by kindness, lint U
than by the swoid - we should giill many
bloodless vieleil'ies ns the result ol our own
fe.l beiii aliee. Wo have been miserably elo
tviveel, Neit ill the patriotism, ier ill the
courage id our people - not in our male rial
reseiurci s to nrm and coup a mi'l.on nu n
in this contest - not in Iho supcriuril v of!
our iuvi'iilors nnd nrchilecls, culh d Miiid. ii- j 1 tai- Huii -,ri
Iv to meet the stun eh m inds ol war our Ve I n, I ihli oeltel In be ((( p .
Slouitor in the Mast mid our guiibn.ils in the rains pre tented nn.l il,. .
the West hit Vo prou el a sphml.el micci ss
tnes
should not be initln the l1MlI,K
inns, Wt. W hen he. I. ..1. . . ,our
law reulring person, , """elion
0 produce cvle,1e0or,i;,ir , 'V
ruses lo place this bnr leJ, ,"f' l,c
ourt,v,.sury l.r t).t .1. 'r" ,or,
-ur tlmt , ' '""'nil
siblo hnrilsl.i. tunny v,,l lt,lol"
i rs and nbette.rs of rn,H, 'ti, "tl'
"v "nr' ,;, Iz'"-
I nwn ml diu,u,m. Thou
fur ut, tire nun'mst 111.'' ,r
Now, I will not ,irllmp ,
Nidooflhis 1(, l ,H l.:xr,' Mi
omiobe, but w.ii (I'V ,,,7" !'r
1 ,, "imiloii
i'Vlho p-'oplewa,,,,, g
S Hicll II ,,w V.. ,. . OI"
I., . 'ri U nf,,..i
! I b.-l
llellllllll
ll... I.I 1 ... . . '
""""HUII .11 Oil! 0 I 1. ".a t. -
nud Ib pres-ntmivesnfll,,, ; 7
Stale voted In f.aor of U,f '
1.1
llltllT-l
Operuteel Imicli ngiii,,! 11B.
iToiilii
111.1 UlllL..ll II ...lllllltl 111 r.'l .lllll ill.. ill IlllVllt :
11 Ii nm I, ,.11 .1 . .1
warfare- III nil tben Iher." has been initio- j ' "'"r, uutl UnTO n 1
itMciiiliiiice onile h r,,. ,...., , .
. - r- .lliiimi ni .l.l
. . . . . 1 .1 .11'. I .1 - "V K
nieilll'. IMI. ne lime lieeil lieillllll, lllllll-
maguitude of the- n -Hiiis;!i,hty whieh d.s
liny lots impose d Up. ni us - in the iiupbie.r
ble host.bty w I, .ell the sla' r holding South
1 uti 1 tains tow ard our iiistiluiioiK, no h
than toward our people -iui, in the luilure
f ibo remedy wh.eh a ll.sease so il.-spi'i.ite
el. inaiiils
Years ego lb.- llcehirallon of liobpeii
dene.-, slutting out Willi its liisl uiiign dii-ri.t
truth, tl n!y broad an I strong loiiuda-
cei.tion; hero, wo iiiaiiitaiu our old pre nil
...... ... - -1 nu. K
oMiMle.l, 11,0 hist ,e SUIe-.fcft.fc
tt,"k l,f v,,ri kin.Isv 1 r.-,Icl of (U
farm nn.l of the dairy -., bi ,BiHf
1,1 '',tl"l l-iry, nrtirlti f biccWub
andf.mli W,. r, M ,y ,U J
' "'' "f "'' I Ht. r ir, nrtmflltl Le
evh.b.l.on w. u-,Krt n Wrr(Hriofl
what il should l.nu. I.,, t.. smllnfr,,:-,,!,
rxhib.li.m ws poor indn-d. Onlhti(.0.
I on upon wha li an einlnr i. g Kepubl c 1 nil ( there may leiti. been Inure l.oivi tt,
be bu ll, was assented lo l.y the Nation n und sh. i p nt the Sul.-lu Fair linn il '
correct ill Iheorv, but igimied nnd .1. ni. d ill 1 m ,, 1 ,... t . . . , .
uracil.-. One 'of the iMl.ho.s of lloi. I e 0- , . . .. '! '" ""'"V.,
bir ilion d-irr , to jny " I Ireinbt.- for lev
t'ouiitrr wh. u 1 r uii-M.ber tl ..t G...1 is
the S.ih in Fair w s
of s.;
ttoii-l. I. ..I .1 ii i.
" 1 1 ii.il HlC fnf
' ongl.t cut to ,c i,
just " W.ll in gbl the far-ighlid fliit.s 1 nnd shows l!M ( il,e ft.rim-rs ol Jhrioo JJ
not i-aler int.. the evh.hila,,, ith thr ,
thnt Wa rpu led of ,
I N. v.rth. I. th.rrnrnon cUliliitoei.
j "r''1"" ''' hilc l'jir vl.k-h ire rs
coiiriig'ng The ground., ,,t,Jrj for r -niiiii.
nl Fa r groiin.b, nre fn,f, and rin (r
i inu.le most bi .Mit.fnl. Tl,t l.,.l rm.ilof
eii hly ni-ri s. ul out ki.xty of w hirfi ire-(
'' I '-y f'lieffigl.t 'feel l.::h. Tlwt-
fourths id ll,.- pronn.!. on- prairtr, n.dlii
north, rn part w.ll , n, tnurmlf,
i heh wlnti lroeiii.il I ir nn.lfil.ft.li
I hLlMI lllll tt I tl oririt tl- Nit. I In 1 1. & 1.. I
,. ,..e rx.-. ........ o ...e ii-.n.e - " . ; th- --to, nnd lh- r..f,t of ll.il,
l.ut it l..s bn I. of a. I th.s,-. It f,.d i tti r,-,-,ft.-r ti-t lb. in. Tl.. rr m. nn I.
in tl, .t A lh.,.,e, lb .1 I!- j-i.bl c I, , .,,. I...... mll., r , ,,!:, ,,, .,,,
ofll.e Ilechirat...., ol I ...!. ... . I old ttir ,., ,,,(!;,;,,,, (If t, Jriumx.U
1 ' iiit.iff , re. a no f , x!nl.it.r
( t,f mi, I, n ne t j j. n .
in. ill l.eiiii l us lie saw' Willi I loi Ii lie in
tu.ti.m hat w o s-c this .1 .y Tin. genius
of Amerie-an F li- rty soeoig b. r Ii Ids niul
V ini yards i.ii reuse, laid but one- tlioilebl,
to lui 1 1 I irg- r luirn. nnd more im-g i !i
ocut stor. hous. , lieeh cl lig ti. .in jiMic.-,
oud love mercy Tins .l.y llic Aug. I of
llelr.butioii is calling Ihi- sou! of eair p. ..
pie to Jil.lgiu. lit P.'foie the r. t' Ilion,
lr Smjlhe, a li'.i.h r in Smith Cur. linn
scholasticism, in n wo.k p.ibiolieil in ,i:,,
t form, n-ks " W
in . I w hilt the i un ,!
tiou uf t, i iili!, can
.t is H e d flu idly,
N i t ill tie t I. o
ihi, t, -No! Not
p. ace'.
toy A Mounts handed to F. (,'harmnn,
F,sq , this week, for I he .Sanitary Commis
sion, ns follows:
J I! Howard,
It S Howard,
Thomas K Howard,
Jacob Wortman,
Mrs J Wortrmin,
John T Wortman,
Charles F Wortman,
Jacob 1 Wortman,
John Allen,
Peter Ki.uoli,
Ladies Union Hewing Society,
I. llunmiker,
Jacob Ilunsiiker, Jr.
Mrs A Weuthcrstono.
1 1, Ml
f.O
f.O
10,00
f.,00
'J,H0
'2,00
1,00
f,00
L'f-,00
f.O
r.,00
1,00
Amount this week
" previously ncknowledged,
Tolnl,
'iO,i!.r.
i:io:i in
MT- Ken.l Treasurer's Notice in mtother
coluuin.
Si 1 1 w, (ci -; j .
I... Al:..!s; The b.ll r quiring e: e.lis
to I ike III. I suliscrdie 1. o ith In support
thi-(JoVi rniii' nt of the I'til.d Sl.iti , nnd
the Slate of (Ii eg. ni, before i rawing nm
tny feolll the- treasury of Ihls Ste, vi ,
Gov (id.bs re(. d list weik, nnd w b.i I.
tho Senate a sc. over bis teto, by a Vote
of I-' to I, was reconsider, d in thu Hoiim-J-istt
relay. It Was debated 111 I Igth, uid
with llllleh feeling on both siif. s
Wh. II the question was put, "Shall thi.
b.ll pass notwithstanding the objection, ol
the (ioveiuoi? ' the into r. suited ns ful
lows; Mes-rs. Applegale, Coll .rd, Cony, rs,
Cuuiiiiini, lliifur. Fugle, ( i,ih lie, lliu'ung
wuy, Keiirns, MeCluie, MeCully, McCoy,
Piilincr, lliiinsby, ll cl.nnb.in, Smith, St.--Vi
nson, S.mpu.:., Wins, rinan, W.lkni,
Wnl-on, nn, I Wibon, voting for; nud
Messrs. lilair, lbow ii, Fay, Ilumason,
H.iii.e., Mullory, Mint.., Morris, !en,
Vnmlyki-, William, and Wilcox, nguinsl.
So tho bill was lost, two thirds Ining mc
issi.ry to its passage.
F ilion men arc disappoinled nnd disgust
en w.ll. me result, wlnle secessioiiisls life
chin kllng nud rejoicing over their triumph.
F..y is Ih. ir cliaiiipioii in tho Houo, nnd
Ki Ih-y In the Senate
Gov. Gibl.s, iu hi. Inaugural, r fb cls
ll.c strong, st Union seiil inri.is, but when
lm comes to act, dors ho ndliero lo his
promise? Id--ni j:
" Tim all -ilnorliiiiif rjit. linn uf j,, ,w
lo pill ilnnii III rrlirllmn m ,,y r,(.,,.r,
..lll.RHur A l ml inn; y of , ,h 0, ,
irj hi ari. I..) nl ini-ii-xilimjt )iay ,f ,,,
in in iiik t .rrniH.ii.il i.l I'.i.lr.l ,SnM, 'I'rru.iiry
" ".oi.'in n iiinr.i.iir- iu no miv i l i,, i.
.l l.y ll.n iint ot our d.ll.rr. h Iih ,,.y i,,lm.
.y ,iulKfil lo eneli otlK-r llim livr, llirn f.iMiinf .
M.rir.l l,i.,f. I., Pinal, ,,, il,,. (.,.
Thnt it hut one lm, tirlwttn I , mm nud u
......... i
.......... i niiir if nn ill , mil Int tit . .,.,,...
III. ll 1,11. Ili-.-ll oflrll mnl ,y M )M1 .. (.;,,.,.
Will -110.1.1 inn i. Il.e piirn of hl.rrlv!" Mitik lln
.rr((iiimi Inilli ill Ito. t,,,,,, , mtUi, ,UmK
wliii emji nl f,ry rrnl or t tt t. K i n ry nrr.-r of ll.n
,,'"",'"""""" '""'I'niu.K f Km " Inn
l.tll, Ix-fiKiMifi rtmuU (Hirliiili i.f tlinr f.iiliiurt in
r.ilii..:oiin.n,v ,.V Bl ,!,,.,, ,ly (
An. .lie. '
ll..iiil.li.((ri,iiifii1 iini.lvi.il i.f tn.i I.L.,
mywlf, h..ff,.f, ii,,.r, ,,,, ., ,,1(H)rl
'lli''.i.riliF(;,.im,t , ,.niililnli..iiMl
ll.. . .... lo .a,,nv ,. ,irwllt Wl( .j,,,) ,, ,M,PI .
I lie tiimuiitlinn ll.nl il,. ll... . i
. ri rirurfi iv
livwr Iu inndrn Mi mnniti, in nim in mi
niliilnil U,lv inLniq lllr,r ,!, i lrtmi lnr
tun mini hr hdnijmt ,, ,,, ;,.,frv 1, lo
miml, Inn ul, ,1 J, ,rM,, 4 ,.
iiniml ihmild hute no pin,,,!,, in ntilinri, ur
amlhiiiii '''. r,i-r'T la rowrs unit ilmutil
in Imre il in trhrl hunt,, Iu br wirlihil ,iK,h,l
in, while Hit Imiiriiif our riiiinlrimrn lire lilriirh
iiilt on llifjirlili nfa liiiiiilint lull tin, ami ,il,,l,
hiimhrili nj Ihnuinniti of our Jrtliiie rilnnii in,
liulil. In ilmr, Hi, mime fnlet roixiiler It my
l.iln'( iluly, n well. iln.uri., IimIii nil I run,
ml mi ll all Hiaii.lliiFiKK. ofmy iiiimiiiI -. (.on ,
t Ii'.inii n.nl iiliri.tul, In .iilliu ilottii ecFin
ml iirrnffvlng Hi. Iimi (Juvi.iiiiin.nt in lliti woil.l.
AmJ, ly ri-iM-iiliiiiei., Iii.m.ljiilioii uml ri.liioi.nlii.il,
tt. hIm.i.M iOIva lo fFinov hII lurllier rmim f..r
ti.ilali..ii. if(;,'a j.Mlffiiiciif) ii,o, our Hlnlf ami
n ti I the iiiiniUr Dint I
b.ru'elv in. r it - ! lor the lirjl Kir. TUflr
Wl.s ll large bll.hl ng f:r ll. rtli.lill'end
nrticle.- 10 f, .1 ly Ml - bill (iit.rrl; W
feint for the p.ii,..sr, r I. , another lm ii
ilig of iqlilll s ,-e must brinclrtl lit Kll
'fll'1,11
The grr it d'sinlrnlitnge (if llif lilt Fiif
wn. the re-u'l of Imlil iig it l.olaleilll
n-iui. 1 1 id, on hi Imtfi Iwn tirhl il Ifiit
a f,,iin'; l t .ooiii r, nn.l proUblj U
h ive be. u I, ml t),e ini,rnv.niriili Ifl
rendy nl nn rml ir ih.t. W't ti ft IfW
I .'.ii.diio l. i ( of lumber nerc I'td i
ll.l- LTollli.!..
Wc have ililiinnlid tlmt (lit fifttff f
Marlon did not com,, up lo lite fl
w ns nlitielpati d. M .mf. lijr lliij tliel M
real .- the inc. .sity of I rilipnit DfilM"'
ol their fruit, Hgetnlh., mill l,onfW
proiluclliiiis. Th.y i-rr nt'rrheniff thf.T
li.iltht be benteli; n till ItaHif ll"J tn'
Would they not be glad In U bntm bf
M.pi rior pi l inieii., in:, I In l.-irn l,o lb'"
sp.einnii. wi re pr.i.lu. . il? TlirSl'1''1''
is int. nihil lo present exhibition-of thMf
rieiilliirrl nnd olhrr proihielioM of ocr
Sluto, such as shall -bow wliat 00. M
and skill me nblo lo r.uhire.
Th. ret Is n-iother mntti-r in whick thrr
could bo gr. ut improviniciil. "ITic gtlt-rp
up and managing oft Stale Kif,,PV
and coiiipli.-aied busiiu ss. No one
eiipuble f ib.iiig it justice, worlt H i"
Irioiisly n. lm mny. Most of ll b "
the laic Fair it was observed iWltol-
id. lit of the Society wnl the only
p.r-.eiil, nn.l he wns romlM ladow
ilul i.s of clerk, in.setiger,.rori.!eiti
tendeiils of departments, fomtnilKrt.
in omu rnsr s Mipi riiili-ud llaB ' '"f
foruu.i.ci. of their dulies-iaostonb'''
milters being uiine.iialiifd 'ilb!hfl'"i;
The business managers of the SonJ
to lm consluiilly present, onJ WJj
neglect (his duty willimitrrio.iilj'0'
the success of tho Fair. r!lt tm
not inaiingo Ihcnisr-lvcs. l'l,('rt1.','lfl,fl
svslem, ami ngrnts to rnrrj out "'Uu
When tl... Falrsslu.ll ho lbrif W
they have been, great i(fMZ
snltrrom (.ni.-crs lailing to f"hmm
lies expected of tlieui. , ,)..
On ll.n first of January next W ' 'f
cleclr.l ofliccrs of Iho Hoctcljf ' .
upon (heir ilulics. Tin-so newonw-
i inn i . (less learned much from '" ',-
(nee, nnd wo trust tho p'-
tl
forts
. . .1 ITBII.
nee, mill wo irusi m r-r, . rf-lheircxi.e(.-(alimis
In wilncwi"K .
'oris to makoour Stato of
iiiiin--
i,,lf H
to Imp1""
MiTriln'tlWirnrJ k
t..t .1 ouooflilrilV
,,"'n""r ni luliOtH"
ciely mm of I he most iiscm "". . vill
tho Slate. They cnndnlM'. Vl
-mid nil tho consideralioinwo' ll,.!.,,
govern good cltlrni niij,'ht
to do It.
i(Ji
hnilttlllgivo lo nigni ..- Stliilt.
porforinnnces f-.r Iho W VJ j.
' .. t t ...rr out ",e
Hco ndverliscincnt. .
.r- Wn nrn nil.lcr ohilk'"1'01 lotttf,
for full file, of LrgMnlivc do