11 1 WBl E ' STATE DEVOTED TO THE POLITICAL .AND - GENERAL. INTERESTS OP THE PEOPLE. VOL. I. EUGENE CITY, OREGON, JUNE 7, 1862. NO. 22. THE STATE REPUBLICAN. Published every Saturday by H. SHAW & CO. Term, of Subscription. Tha Ripublican will be published at ti 50 a rear in ad vance ; $3 00 if paid at tho end of six months ; or M 00 at tho olos. or tno year, una aeuar auuiuomu win oe charged fur each your payment is neglected. fjfKo papers discontinued until all arrearage, are RntAa nf Advnrtiainff. i?n square (ten lines or less) one month, - - $3 00 Kach additional insertion, - - '-' 0 business Cards, one square or less, one year, - 12 00 " " - " six months, 8 00 Four squares and upwards, one year, per square, 10 00 " " six months, per square, 7 00 three moutliH, " 6 00 Administrator's Notices, and all advertisements re lating to estates of deceased persons, which hare I be sworn to, one square, (Our insertions, 5 00 AH communications to this otttee should be addressed to 11. SHAW Itugeuo wy, Oregon, To AovsnTisEns. Business men throughout Oregon and California will tind it greatly to their advantage to adver tise in the Stat. Kbpiibi.icax. For the State Republican. THE SOLDIER'S ADIEU. Farewell, I must leave thee, thou star of my heart; But do not forget me, although I depart. Ilcmembcr me ever in kindness, I pray ; Forget not thy lover, though far far away. Thy bright eyes are flowing with tears unsnpprcsscd, 'Twill be long ore again on thy lover they rest; Oh, life can no pleasure away from thee give If I may not dwell near thee, I ask not to live. TUB BBPLT. " Forget thee f forget thee t oh name not that word j Our vows have been plighted, high heaven has heard In the dark verdant forest, where stars shone above, Our lips have repeated the soft accents of love. '" By tho deep murmuring fountain, by the hoarse sound ing sea ; At eveniug's still hour, I've wandered with thee ; When heaven aud Anna nlone heard the prayer, You cast at my feet your heart's tribute there. "I'll never forget thee, by that heaven above, Till cold be these lips that told thee my love. Forget thee? forget thee? repeat not that word, Our vows thut we plighted high heaven has heard." Then away to the field, where tho rebels are camped ; Thy Anna would trust her life on that word. No tears of regret thy spirit shall dump, For the bravest are always the truest, I've beard. - - . . -- Kuokxh City, May 10, 1802. Fugitive Scrap. The following "poetrce poetri" was found posted up about town and at the place of voting last Monday. It is evidently the production of some incorrigible joker who not having tho fear of the unwashed before his eyes dared to poke a little sly fun at the pitiable condition of those who for the bare hope of get ting a little "Democracy" would devour any amount of secession, toryism and treason: , Fellow townsmen, old and young, Who, from nnttiot fathers sprung, Rouso your minds to that cause Of making criminals fear the laws. Aid that cause with voice and votes. O'er which the starry banner Boats Union, above all party clan. The motto of each loyal man. . "I'm for party, if the nation falls!" Is the voice that treason bawls Such would go for a party call. And let the nation's Union tall. The test Is now before each man ; jle who puts country under bun, And goes for party, first and last, Let his hatciul memory blast. Let his narrow, ignorant mind, rjome genial region tind: .Some dark vale, where all is narrow, Jo suit a gnt of " dimmtreratlkk" marrow. The marrow is old, and half rotten The lacking parts are stuffed with cotton ; To make the gut a little bigger They've stuffed it well with nigger! nigger! ! He who sucks to get that marrow. Will surely see a day of sorrow ; For he'll get soma treason, a little marrow, rotten, Plenty of nigger, nigger, n'uj'jer, and some cotton. UNION ADDRESS. The following is the report of Mr. Applcgate's (evening speech of May 27 : Conspirators and traitors were sitting in the .Senate and House of Representatives of the United States. They remained there to retard .defensive Legislation. He drew a parallel be itween Old Crittenden and Sempronius, a Roman .Senator. When Hannibal defeated the Roman army under the walls of the city, the Roman .Senate was in great consternation, and there was fio voice but for compromise, and the only ques tion was, what shall we ask in the surrender t They were about to compromise the glory, the honor and the power of the Republio of Rome, into the hands of the African invader. At this perilous moment the old hero and Statesman, braving all earthly danger, and looking only to the future and posterity, spoke out the convic tions of his soul the emotions of his heart : f My voice is still for war can a Roman Sen ate long debate between slavery and death V That thrilled and inspired the national heart, and the people arose in their might and flew to the rescue. The invader was driven from the land. Rome resolved to "carry the war into Africa," and finally beer me mistress of the world. Old Crittenden in the extremity of bis country, raised his voice for war war against traitors this is Crittenden'a last Compromise, The dis-Union politicians of the South had systematically indoctrinated their people against those of the North. He nr.il from Southern speeches, and from the Southern papers, showed that they repudiated Washington, Jefferson and the old patriots who founded the Government stigmatized the old " Revolutionary element," referred to the speech of Yancey in the Charles. ton Convention, in which ho abused those who quoted, as he said, the " dogmas of the Revolu tionary war, " tha dogmas of the Declaration of Independence. He found the same sentiments lurking in the Corvallis platform in the third resolution, where it says, " we invite the co-ope. ration of all who are opposed to the revolutiona ry element which is now endeavoring to direct the war against secession and rebellion, etc. They and the secessionests aro opposed to this " revolutionary element I" Put themselves into the same category with secessionists, and invite all who are like the secessionists, opposed to that element which is directing the war against rebel lion, to go in with them. This sectional prejudice has been designedly taught in the South. They have been led to look upon northern people and their institutions as " mean and coutemptible." A species of degenerate northern Yankees, prin cipally from the eastern cities, have given weight to the impression of the Southern mind, that the North wero a " mean, cowardly set of starveling mudsills." These aro the northern " Chivs." They affect greatly to despise northern princi ples. They join tho chivalry to prove that they regard themselves too good for the familiar companionship of the northern " trash as they affect to consider it ; and which their masters declare too mean " for the association of a south ern gentleman's body servant." No wonder such snobs and pinks of aristocracy adopt what they are proud to call " southern principles. They are tho southern disunionist's watch-dogs- it is their peculiar business to howl for the " rights of the South." This class have general ly strayed oft from tho eastern cities because they were unable longer to mako their " wits ob tain dinners without work or money, and when some low exhibition would no longer raise the wind, or " bring the pewter." In accordance with the programme of disunion they should raise a simultaneous howl for " peace," and brand an attempt at a defense of the nation as "inhu man," " unconstitutional," " unjustifiable, outra- gious war ;" " usurpation, tyrany and despotism." But Jackson had given us the remedy. It was Old Hickory that set forth the true doctrine in the case. His proclamation of 1632 contains those principles which are indispensably essen tial to the eternal perpetuity of the Government of our fathers. Any man effected with the dead ly disease of treason lurking about his vitals would do well to read this justly renowned doc ument. As a State paper there is none other in the nation of more importance ; embracirg, as it does, the only principles upon which the peo ple of the United States can act to carry the Ship of nationality safely over the rocks and quicksands of conspiracy, treason nnd rebellion. He read a portion, bearing on tho main points, thus : " The Constitution of the United States, then, forms a government, not a league ; and whether it be formed by compact, between the States, or in any other manner, its character is the same. It is a government in which all the people are represented, which operates directly on the people individually, not upon the States ; they retain all the power they did not grant. But each State having expresslv parted with so many powers as to constitute, jointly with tho other States, a single nation, cannot, from that period, possess any right to secede, because such secession docs not break a league, but destroys the unity ot a nation ; and any injury to that unity is not only a breach which would result from the contraven tion of a compact, but it is an offense against the whole Union. To say that any State may at pleasure secede from the Union, is to tay that the United Slates are not a nation ; because it would be a solecism to contend that any part of a nation might dissolve its connection with the other parts, to their injury or ruin, without committing any offense. An attempt, by force of arms, to destroy a government, is an offense, by whatever means the constitutional compact may have been formed; and such government has the right, by the law of self defense to pass actstopunisli the ollender, etc. The assumed right of secession, rests upon the alledged undivided sovereignty ot the States, and on their having formed, in this sovereign capneity, a compact, which is called the Constitution, from which, because they made it, they nave a right to secede. The States severally have not retained their entire sovereignty. It has been shown that, in becoming parts of a nation, not members of a league, they surrendered many of their parts of sovereignty. The right to make treaties, declare war, levy taxes, exercise exclusive judicial and legislative powers, were all of thetn tunc tions of sovereign power. The States, then, for all these important powers were no longer sov ereign. The allegiance of their citizens was transferred, in the tirst instance, to the Govern mentofthe United States ; they became Amer ican citizens, and owed their obedience to the Cos titution of the United States, and to tho laws made in conformity with the powers it vested in Congress." lie commented on the application of this doe trine to the present rebellion, its pretexts, its jistitk-tion, and th dngToin political theories fabricated by the disunionists of the United States to mislead tho people in regard to the nature of their Uovernmcnt. 1 neir states Kignts aoctrine, carried to the fatal extreme of robbing the nation al government of all its rights and powers, and the fame cunning design embraced in their pompous, chivalrio parade of independent Slate sovereignly. To war against these principles, is to war against the proposition that the . United States constitutes a nation ; and is a disclaimer against there being any such character legally as a citizen of the United States. But these dis unionists did oppose these doctrines Jackson ; and as they opposed these priuciperfliS'l 83K they oppose the same identical possitions in 1802, and continually from Jackson's time to the present moment. Old Abe took the Jackson position, and came to it following the example of Washington when he crushed rebellion in the western counties of Pennsylvania in the summer of 1794. Wash, ington first called upon tho rebels to disband and go home. Lincoln did the same thing. They bid defmnce to Washington, and he called out 15,000 troops and crushed the rebellion. So the rebels bid defiance to Jackson and also to Lin coln, and as Jackson proceeded to employ force like Washington, and others of the Presidents, under similar circumstances, to crush rebellion, so did Lincoln, but following in the footsteps of his illustrious and immortal predecessors. Jack son's proclamation was denounced by the disun ionists as " a declaration of war by Andrew Jack son against the State of South Carolina." Notice tho fundamental and dangerous falsehood con tained in that assertion it was war on tho rebels in the State, and not against the Slate, but to pre serve the State as is required by the Constitution. That sentence I quote from Gov. Hayne of South Carolina. It was at his house the disunion plot, lers met in 1828. Ho was then Senator in Con gress from the " Sovereign State" of South Car olina. In 1832 he was Governor of tho 'inde pendent sovereignty," while Calhoun was one of its Senators to tho Congress ot the " Confedera cy," as they loved to style the Government of the United States. He pronounced the procla mation the " edict of a Dictator." Again he soid it was " a Federal manifesto palmed upon us as Andrew Jackson's by Livingston or Van Buren, or some o!her intriguer behind the dictator's throne." This sort of language leads to war, to rebellion. The papers opposed to the Union movement in this State make use of the same stvla of lnniruflL'o auainst the Government. The D O O disunionists and their sympathizers in the North, who are still more treacherous, mean and unpnn- cipled than their southern master, pronounced an act of Congress " to coerce a sovereign State in this Union, a broad usurpation," and as " chang ing the character of our Government into a mil itary despotism." These are the charges of dis unionists, and their misguided tools, against the only principles and means that can be employed to save the Government from the hands of armed traitors. Ihose opposed to the Union move ment in this State say such things as the follow ing which I read from the Advertiser, " We pray that the arms ofc the Government may be para lyzcd." " He who rejoices at Federal victories is more than a traitor." "Abraham Lincoln will be the last President of the United States." Ho commented upon these things, saying that men might not know that they were being used by traitors as working to the advantage and ben efit of disunionists. Let men carefully survey the ground. It is peculiarly the duty of the American citizen, a duty that he owes to his posterity, and his God. (Applause. He showed that it was the policy of the disunionists to do one or the other of two things with the great na tional Democratic party, either make it entirely a sectional party or cut it into two parts. They They went to work at this with the deepest de sign and cunning. The plan was to get up a set of resolutions of such a nature that if the Charles ton Convention adopted them.it would reduce the national Democratic party to a sectional or ganization, and put it entirely into their their control. And if the Convention would not adopt theso resolutions, which they would call the rights of the South, then they should, with great affact ed injury at not getting their rights, secede from the Convention. To make the thing certain, the delegation depended upon to lead in this matter were made to sign the resolutions, and in com pliance with the tenth resolution of the series, when the platform failed to be adopted, they were no longer members ot the Convention, and consequently, "went oat to stand." He explained all that transaction. Said the going-out-to-stand Democracy was the peculiarly "independent sow ereignty" Democracy. Said Wigfall and others were of opinion that the northern follows in the Charleston Convention, would adopt their south ern rights platform, for they had a very poor opinion of tha northern people generally. Wig fall thought that by swearing at them that they woulJ dissolve ih Union, the would submit to anything. Wigfall also said, " these northern people, of all parties, are a mean, despicable set of starveling, unable to see .beyond a dollar, and caring for -no other consideration except money. Threaten them and they will crouch to your feet like so many hounds. Only swear that you are going to dissolve the Union, and the timid creatures will get on their knees, bite the dust, and kiss the rod raised to chastise them." To go with the disunionists is but to own up to the " chivs" that there is no United States ; that the United States never did constitute a nation ; that there never was such a character on earth as an American citizen ; and that you are a cringing hound. .biting the dust, and ready to lick the smiting" hand and, of course, M unfit lor the association of a southern gentleman body ser vant," being merely a " mudsill." There is but two sides to this question. Ibe Domocratio par ty was divided, part fell into the hands of disun ionists, the other part went for the Union, and for the Union movement, all over the United States wherever it was not suppressed by force, nnd in this State. He read from the Charleston Mercu ry as follows : " We maintain that the Demo cratic party, as a national party, has just no creed at all, on not one single practical question now before the country is it united. Let us examine them. Frst, on the fundamental creed of the Virginia and Kentucky resolutions, State sover eignty, and tin right of secession following it, is the Democratic party united ? Why, at this moment, the whole Douglas wing, and many others North, and South too, deny it." That part of tho Democracy went out to stand, claim ing tho right of secession. It is the secession Democracy everywhere. The anti-secession De mocracy have hearkened unto the voico of pat riot ism, and joined in tho movement in behalf of the cause ot the Union, ana like true men who had souls to raise above . mere party huck stering, nnd would choose their country before " party," have disencumbered themselves of all these things, and met all patriots of all parties on a common ground. Do you go for your country, or for party 1 Can ho be regarded as the best patriot and tho noblest man who would hang on to the mere name of his old party at the expense and danger of his country, when the principles of their party were changed from those he loved to those which he in his heart as an hon est man must despise. To whom is name, mere sound, of more importance than the vital principles of liberty itself 1 Who is it that would like to be gulled by the sound of a name into the service of traitors, to be a slave in the hands of the enemies of his country, and the rights and liberties of himself and fullow-citi ze.ns 1 The southern rights part of the Demo cratio party kept up their claim, still claimed their " rights," the right to go into tho Territories of the United States with their " domestic insti tutions," moaning always and invariably niggers, niggers I ihey claimed this right to dO:JU cleg. north latitude. He explained how that the Congress, so as not to leave a shadow of pretext to these traitors with which to continue the inflamation of the southern mind, organized the Territories ot the United States upon their favorite doctrine the non-intervention doctrine the fundamental prin ciples of the Cincinnati platform in regard to the Territories, nnd the accursed slavery question. So that almost the first thing that the Republi cans did was to allow the South all " their rights" in the Territories, all they had claimed and more, for, as they had only claimed the right to go into the Territories with their " domestio insti tutions" to 30:30 deg. north latitude ; slavery was already existing in the Territories to 37 deg. North latitude ; and not restricted by Congress in any Territory of the Nation. All this was done, as Mr. Douglas said, by the unanimous vote of the Republicans. Slavery restriction has existed in some portion of tho Territories of the Uuited States from the beginning of the Government, and down to that moment when it was removed so as if possible to prove to the people of the South that the people of the North were willing to make almost any concession to save the Union and that they were not " intent upon the invasion of tho rights of the South." It was expected that these southern Senators and Representatives would, when these things were offered, immediately explain to the people of the South that they had got their " rights." But, no ; not A mi to of such explanation. That would have spoiled their object a dissolution of the Union, tor if they had allowed the truth to go to the southern people, they could not have raised an army ; they could not have kept men In the field ; the villainy and deceptive fraud would have been too plain. So it was their policy to keep up their bawl for their "rights." Breckin ridge stood up before the Senate, and the world, and with all apparent honesty, claimed the rights of the South in regard to the Territories, when right before his eyes these "rights," and more too, were then law, existing on the national stat ute books. That conduct was designed to aid treason by keeping the people of the South de ceived. To see men stand up in tho Congress of the United States and continue to plead for ccr tain " rights" periistently, long after they had been granted, is the manifestation of a degree of brazen faced and pertinacious dishonesty and stolid depravity without a parallel on the black est pages of history, not excepting the history of crime itself, the criminal calendar. Liut, not withstanding the disgusting shamelcssness of such conduct, the leaders of the anti-Union party here are re-enacting the same villainous deception. They are going all over the State claiming these, rights demanding their " rights," the right to go into the Territories with slave up to 30:30 deg. north latitude. How dishonest I now shame less ! In vain you show them that they have now, and have since the beginning ot the year 1861, the right to go into the Territories with their slave to 3fl:-V) north latitude, and even , more to 37 deg. north latitude, and hold them there by law. And more still, they can go north of 37 deg. with their slaves, for Congress, to sat isfy tho South, havo removed all prohibitory and restrictive enactments on the Territories. In tain you explain these things. In valu yott point to the records. In vain you point to the acts of Congress, giving them their " rights," and more than they claimed ! They will reply with that fiendish cry, like the wail of a troubled spirit or maniac, "give us our rights I" Oh, give us the right to go into the territories With our " domestio institutions " to 30:30 deg. north latitude. Thus Breckinridge went howling to his constituents. Thus; also, his followers go howling over this State, and thoy have only one more step to take and then they will be up with their inftmous leader, and that is to shoul der the arms of open traitors 1 Ah exchange says the rebels evidently aimed at too much when they attempted to take care of No. 10. Before long they will each have enough to do to take care ot " number one." Arkansaw Traveler. It Is now admitted by everybody, and should be so recorded in history, that Gen. Sterling Price is the real, genuine, original " Arkansas Traveler." Placer liepub lican. On tho morning of tho Fort Donelson fight, Bu ih io J Johnson, while taking his coffee, narrow ly escaped death. A riflo ball skimmed off his coffee cup bottom, leaving tho empty sides itt the rebels hands. An English editor acknowledges the retfep tion of a bottle of brandy forty-eight years old, and says : " This brandy is so very old we fear it cannot keep much longer." In 1650, a man was prosecuted for selling coffee, just then introduced, as a nuisance and prejudice to the neighborhood. "I have one request to Wake of you, my dear Mr. Grant." " My dear Widow, I will grant anything you say." " Well-, sir, 1 Want to be Granted myself. i i It is said tho rebel Missourians are returning to their allegiance on the same terms that Salva tion is offered to sinners they come without money ond without Price. You may insert a thousand cxoellent things in a newspaper, and never hear a word oF approba tion from your readers ; but just let a paragraph slip in (by accident) of one or two lines not suit ed to their taste, and you will be sure to hear of it. New Historic Epistles. Grant's Epistles to the Corrinthians, written at Pittsburg Landing. Liohtniko never strikes but once in the same place therefore let a man whose first wife was a good one never marry again. Tub most likely thing in the world to make a rebel swear is to proffer to him, under trying circumstances, the privilego of taking the 'oath of allegiance. A Western editor defines a widow as one who knows whats what, and desires further Infor mation on the subject." Why is a young lady just from boarding school like a building committee 1 Because sTie is ready to receive proposals. - Feeling for Another. A Quaker once hear ing a person tell how much he felt for another who was suffering and needed his assistance, dryly asked him : " Friend hast thou felt in thy pocket for him 1" Muscle. Somebody says: "Cabbage 'con tains more muscle-sustaining nutriment 'than any other Vegctablo whatever." Yet we never knew that tailors were particularly muscular. Gallantry. A man shows as scant a stock of ideas as of gallantry, who compliments one woman at the expense of another. e Sentiment. Wholesome sentiment is rain, which makes tho fields of daily life fresh and odorous. , "You may depend upon me wife; I give yoil my word." " I had rather you would sometimes keep it, sir. "Tell your mistress that I've torn the cur tain, said a lodger to the sorvant. " Very well, sir, my mistress will put It down as extra rent." "The beautiful blue of the olden time is floating o'er nie yet," as the boozy editor said when lie dipped his pen in the paste-pot and his brush in the inkstand. Punch's Almanac advises the farmers to sow their Ps, keep their Us warm, hive their Bs, shoot their Js, feed their Ns, look after their potatoes' Is, and then take their Es. Tin Heroic Sailors on the Cumberland. The scenes on board were heart-breaking. Two of the gunners on the bow guns, when the ship was sinking, clasped their guns in their arms, and would not be removed, and went dow embracing them. One gunner had both of his legs shot away, and his bowels opened and protruding, but he made three steps on his raw and bloody thights, seized the lanyard and fired his gun, fall ing back dead ! Another lost both arms and legs, yet lived, and when they would assist him, cried out i " Back to your guns, boys ! give 'em h II" Hurrah for the old flag Y He lived til! she snnk. (WrpWmv .V. '. Twe.