«1^5nyshistoricnewspapers.org/lccn/sn83031566/1864-09-15/ed-1/seq-1.pdf · «mtbm*er the call trf...

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mmmmmmimiBmmmmmm "f 4 \ i v \. '"^|^'^*"^^ v ~^^^^^^*^C^eS^^S^3ir« ,-j.^,j^si^$fe S •?*? •j^s l l i l ^litlaue fabllahetfevery thursday Morning by J. «T. &> JF. li. S E A V JB*Sfc» OiBee', $6. Si gotoq Block, Malone, H. T. Village Subscribers, serred by Carrier. ... S3 35 Mnii ml OHiio Sat»cru>era .................... .... S jW For Three, *lonUjj... ,. ................. ».-_ .... >.. 80 For iiIx:Si>dth» .... t...,, .... -. 1 W Ta«tNt ilteawexoeewradreqalrs all aaojwipuoas (a bs psidstriictifla advance. -, SAfSt «r AUVRBTttHtft* t ' tCeaUneaorus»in.»kea,Square,! l«inwell Week. WW Isquare lyear ..„...« WW Eici subsequent ins'n 45 j$f column 1 y e a r . . . , . . .SO Ot) U^nref6?ao<i»b3...... 500} lcolaianoaey«»r ..... 7000 VearW «d»e«ber» are entitled to three chiinges-during the years all ch *ngesln excess orttus will be charged extra_ Boswras0*BO3.oot-«.t«eBJing»IJt tines,|4p*sjg[fe-for every additional 1 unit 75 cants per year. " ^ ^ AH ajcouols far advertising are dua at thetlra» of the first insartioniofthe ad»erdae<heut. irtrertisemente shjuld&e mantel the lengHi of ti.ne to oe inserted, otherwise tney will B4 continued till lurbM, or at (ho option Of thm publishers; j. ind charged accordingly. • - * • ^ssssb •*e w {Btqir TIIIE J&VESTJ e. s.; mm, mm a. X agent for the sale of T. Gilbert A I'o.'s Ctlefcra.fi Planes! Thisfaone of the oldest and best Piano'Manufacturer) In the eoontijy aaj uo drm uatei a Setter Jfitirumeut. M 18-ly. OiiDEitd soncrrtiD. TAyLOft & H03I33, .Ittan.ena and ^oanaeitors at Cato« •>l j. ^ {|ai<>a>jSitjee—»WP f. T. Jieatb'a Oro; Store. ! it a L o a a, s. t. a. a. TAttoa. luai r - a. BOBBS. : (A. 8. J AftMELEE ^Ittjqita and ditihgeilar at Cam, 1455 loaice .Mo/l Oaloa Block. M. M. ROBERTS Attorney aad Ojaasallor, . ( cgiraApgjLr, s. Y. |s. P. BATES, Physioian and Surgeon, R«i teace,totnoasaEsilofthe MethodistOhareb, ' '^ ttilOSt, N. T $. T. HEATH; Dealer In 0 i>raxj t llklictuss, Ratals, Oils, Dye Staffs, Purfa nary. Stationery and PaKcy Oooda *o. So. a ffaloa BIock.'Malbne, K. V. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ D«AL«R I? HatONlf, Jf. T. »»..«, WOMtf.i(*^liOCK, * *V ' 44 it' .**i_j :'£ SEIYMOm* HOUSE, fhts ITooatls ;ll)?lbIjittn*tedOnth»eorne>'«f Ford and «latenM e t». ! Itha»>ecebtljb»:eDr«fltt«aandr«far»J.n»cl. andin allliia »ppointmeDt« l s « flrj.t^p:i«t^4^»eV raaionaWe,,.. . . r ...<„v. , ii«0.«S i wURGEOX DEKTIST. ittnl iiruie fUlwu neefv-f iui, aiiu ui» (thee ataulea ana jpau- auii vn-'iuHy, ' aitom ' sptenai(t < Otn. No 'uiwutljjma tojiefc ut ^eeutu now; jrtrmiiiieu.ijJj^ocaleU I* .rea. vtuuiy 4ui«iiM, Ujijicimeuior ilmoiit »i nt; ia n'ciSircu'iu' pcrtorui a-U aeslul up«r> onmery,' aiur-i ?— *-}• W . SiVHT^H 1MTB I LAWRENCi, alaauf^cturer»anaHfhuf<«tieU«aisr» |«. ,. ( U l l i u e o Uuua>,:iall^^uj>a.ay c <j:'sabr«llitaj ao» '. jf«arats)uia>t "• 11 Matiraj aiid ai (ff'^tttcaSti;; JSew YoVk i>a>i*i.d.i.iv»mi.scii. ^aaasia. uaious.- jd^a>Jilltiaacsi .JSahd-aoUea'a'edCreehJiioo^KWro^ AuosMSSAc'aarr, i . (Jia»iol*ttAiMi8tict»Ti, >WtuaniS.ttiaa!»«« i .f •;• fl!^*!*!}. 'MrWWii , I*ia , >irj|.3irAaa«u*Oi,. ^ '(=..,". If 1 •'•, _•'." ' ; > : . . . , _ > .... v/ t /i-^-..- BROWN, PANGBORN ACo. fioporter»aD4Jrobber»of. - v *£*. 'so" o Ttr-'- -©r- «a^ioac*«f; i ' ta^hjry,Vii,olieI}^^*i,|||.;;:f 8*Leonar04ire»t,ta'o4oor»rroiniJroad«ray,N*w-jrork .raaoBOBs, l«aaeor.Jj it...4c. f Combs, Outtbnii Tbread»,.>'t l ir.«»;.OAriB - o. aaoioi. , f CtaUerjt.Jjejrellj % «ated»Yare»J. »i*ft»di«. >HN D.FISK, BAILDWII-N, FISHERY CO., Boots, 4ft*^j|f|J*|hi#«6' S*»' CLOCKS, fe9felrj*j8itf$r aid jsiirof ttateH Ware* Sfukohm Qlwtif* aai Jewelry fiepaired! !lo. 4 Unloa Block, Malone, S. T. £.10SLTO&0 ABCBI^KBEItS _ •» - m T qi e c<*ti$Tti] t»f FBAW»||«tff. inctlon Salea attended to and Ellis ^arnjihednhepreqalrsd. Wholesale and Retail DealeVln. Brn ii93, ^weg a.nk Whiskeys, Ale M4 L-^er Beer, Pote'en-and 3pptch'<ThI«ltey. ^; Jf a*», irraifja and OanfoBtlotterr Codalautly Wen end jirthe Brlil|e,.«ain St.^Malnne.If. T. A -LI VMH 3T ^JL'^i3JL,JB, Ac ram; iiihhKi. ajcau, A. Ojr##ifisr, : '"': r>. ieu usr x'a'^r^JcT.p'... - • I ' Manafactarerof D oorSj iS as a and Blinds, SaRtHI*VTia1^C*,*J«,.fc -,' .* * Doors and Sash Aonrtan^ly on hand, and made to order. So.iBParkttoir»6ppo«lt*the-4atorHoMe,formerIoeaU»t ' kW M Ve,.V«ir-Vork. »ATH'i.naai!». usaroix. oftHifark>Pii?»Ve, B. M. «aU)lt». ^fifEtt- (Kit aw* PI AW a lktii.op¥^|r §.! SHEET Ml|»3IC AND MUSIC BO C - JLJEf]*i>i§jg & H,E.|Fi5f|" . ,j 0ftDKS8BBH6I|[f iCtfe iole Ageotf fortbeJcflehratei}. Ballet, Paris % Co,!s.Kxn< Kurteajaniltb); ODrivalled Katey Js Green JJflodepns. , A}s< lealera In sheet Udslc, -atoslc Bogkt *nd MBSICWMerchai- flse generallyJ Mefr Music regnlaxty re'cefed. " 'Be|iIei:rri'itid'iii&4l¥«V«« : " AJ.K. S£AV£R, Brinte'ra ^rand"Dealeijs;in- Waaa«»rt^iMtili : ' ' ' ' OB«iili'tfoaroiaii, r ; t4Jir-aLvnt-Di|ki>a, ttax, «S»i« UoatBaoia, lusa Ouscjaijia, „ .' OoijJTO* doaoa, »' ttioaaiTttuf lijea^is, Biim tViiuuirrS, Jw » » » « « ' » I * U t a k t , i t t l i r e a ° t Vmrtttj, Ja»vprlnt«J,!niaoiiernjtylejiad oo extra paper., • f«i > Mn3i.»iitU'5il^orrd.att,.(.ttie PtLLAOtOt Ornoi. i—— 1— r^ : £ : .-• •••;.>. •• ' ,•'.; ^ . * a«mamber ; ltwiUmaXeiaia«jBabestac«p ".-.'. MISSISlBSLLAMcHtTGH'S Ut Ditor wegt of 4 . Cleath'a, Ifalo Mtraret «al*«e. _ - -<e« tWic »,<,* » ur(< aioek of .aabUaaU* HUltnery Go- • I«, »hlch will be opened e s ^. THfJBSDAlT.^I'allt. rtb. Ilif S&wk eomurtsdf^Booaata, Ribbons, Belt BlbbaaavtM at, ^Ipare I.«e, »to#err»V«Btti*a Braid, Oaaaw V «,!•, UnlWrtn's H i U , * * , * 0 . FOB Ttre rjPRjSt* pi]D SUJl^STItADB the fV^^ >«r« raagMetfally larked t* aall aad axamlaa ' ttwoMlna. a* ahe «*at< eonMeat that tbey •« tftctl™ koth la qwJlly aaa S*4M. Pi •>V'tt: rt• KiO« TO OaTr « U . « t * * # W it, O h w i p «%*>«« Q s j a J o l ( r ^Jt fat **•»# •Fatches, ^."-'ciacKs,' rdlfnoItha'Mammpth-Wa^eh, . lie Block, fltaloae N. %. Bo or sJlS'frm'-i^n-fo&'&Mmd*. Sash.Doorsud Mna>conit»n*!j ot, band^nd all order. rUlfttfpromptt^atfeiifdedld. '' ' One o JWoodiro|pth'*P)anInj; Machines has beeaaddsdt t the machinery In this Shop, and the proprietor leriotfread} ta plane all kinds of iuinber on short notice, and at the most |ejr matchingdooilboards.*c. ; •• .".: J.-i-iri.^^*3$*-' M1L0NETC C. C. WAIHWWIQHT, MOPRIETORs Keart* SIALOBI psJsfag. ' Bitoox,; uectlng rl^es at ".all errisndt an'^ expreU baslBi^ nroperly atteildad .to aBd,char|[ea-rea»o|iab% re :. , - r '' ~ ^ T " ' ^ r i i i ctecl BlACI coi, , ^rrtabaa^tMIriainthamldtt^f adrsr, InaiVaaeuteo'nbe^uJmyjSfly^r^aytr .. .^.JloJtiniyJheartto thespot; ' •" "' Made fr.Tf'roWlt. ."rir.^oleied fro*;ili^. . Calm and contented In qnlet and a'fona' ' • 1 would llTsanddleotitJiatWandhota*. " AnAf#j^ajiojsftfer|y«^%.^.d#>; v ,,, ; , . ^', Would be wearing aur Island home away, andtho' sad to ! st»" li grow less and hit, TfilsiiUnitruUionjoy heart I woald prras; That llmgwaa only a little lale . . - .. J , ; ... , Worn leas all the while " SythewastlDgwareaofafttrnlty'ssea, On whose awlal bpsom taj, yenture a est b»; And knowins; there o&nsl, must P«rW> ,, , Uke-ihc sinking disciple to the Lord I chrrisb, <. I should cry "Oil I saYe my soul with thte j" "'« A-nSdeareratfd-oeWfj' " <•''•" ••••• < . * . eys? nearer .," , ChrJa>p?«r||if wa^rrfnJiibetTtllklpjtpsBa. And atlatt-VhtnI djarl^nj^erayt, ibat my body ^ftljn aftHiMs'graVe, ' Fart under the" soil-part under the war*; Then I know wheVihVi'l.gel'or'eod shsll stand n Ith^ene loot'an'sea ehifcone on land, lhattoyteilrawfiich'sleip- ' - 'Neattt-thea^entaod;aodth«.iargJof deep «MtBM*er the call trf tb,e twofold tread, whole surface "But if ydd could break the ehdl mm^^^Wi^^smwt^i^f^ wii«» «1^5 just as iard blows upon thQ..I3^r«hd.' - Tba -wliolftsliell-will 'now bo' etsily crashed,for it llllS^f fa't^ittl^wltJl' <Rp CXBSUriflollB Of Tt*' M^m^^ US' .ettl Iorio«T» ifctory Mm* .ingood time for "Jfeybjy jaj^^i%B9en'ii'.we mast, lo end ihe w«r.- l'ou wcrpg«ttiiiic* litilB Vired of^eloDg delays and clifciprjotated ekpeciationa, in In- diu'u*, portion of.tlie people inMiguted b^ reb- el plott ^ , W the CIinonlionse > 'in^nHda,were imponiii^Briiiali revolvers in bojees which pas- ted the Gaitt.m House, as stationery, under pro- i, That thrills into life all the stonioeriDg dead. J. P.! ,oF£ECB OF SBORBTaiBT 8BWARD. MilitaryandPoHUc.T'sit^tionE.^w^. ^ THE . CBJCACO COrHVEXTIOSl. ,-,:-" '- ;«-<• •«• e r i ^^4,... ;. ^ r 'I j Sutarday, ^September ^d, wafe.a gala day in Auburn,\N.Y.,i(yer Hie splendid victory of Qen. slierman, in the capture of Atlanta. At five peal, and about the ,spme hour, a salute of one uundred guns Was fired! Immediately a large crowd, including >»everai hundred *volanteeri}, who were wiiffiingtobe mafliertldaX»w*inibted^ lonned in procession and marcned to the resi- dence of Gov. Seward. On 'arriving ui front of . life Governor's residence, the assemblage ib^- ; came so large, that 4fo waa found neceigary.to continue the march tdTiie park, adjoining Gov. v After the procc^lon l»a hsdtedrcio^ ^ d was called for, and cume forward lindad-' siBJsa^d thei crowd ia-onq t of Jji^itjojlAilamest' s«nd efft^live speeches, which Vaa received-wilh unlMiu^dtd reathusiasm.. Afierh,e concluUed, iuree.cheV« were called for, and given with ii T Wili 1 ,forthe^llo'wingperaons rSherrna^iGrapl, oheridan, Medde, Stanton, Farragut,: Lincoln >nd Seward. Three more musing odes were given for the soldiersand the Union. The crowd ^.Uenseparated. . , „».,,. ,.,.„ . ^_ . ff WeU»Uii(etiim tbftiui Bp^cTi^asaiplalo" 'statement of the origin of the conflictiaXd the usuea growing out . of it,, That relative to the terms of peace, and the disposal of the Slavery luestion, will Wreadwithinteni* interest-,Tlie, .-nice ojf tnie'Secretary of.State" to the Rebel JoTcrnment is:- lay down your arms,ipturn (0 yonralltigiance f add abide by the declsidn of the 1*1 z~ w- AC did Here is not intend'to; comment, .iis- THE HFEIXnii. j ^ f ^ti»;8»tfia?Plike to sie yon come murChtiig to the time of national , T „„ „..„,. t » _ , ^- „ -. ire, under theToldjBOt'Jhe.Old nation.*]fli^>f setrtind jdolited chiefi, whldichiefs they mutu hank yon ; for thl^ hospitable and patriot^ " nii -»-="a-»^-»"»-*—'- ""'*-^---<- - - Aelcome. It proves that though you.deal rig- orously with your public « r vantoeaticjing rel^ down to'ruin.throughjH subordinate and auxil- iary civaf War. JTrtiel hd irths have been im- among yon, ana sat down In council at Chicago, with -those Indiana conspirators, and agreed With them not only that importation of arms should b« defen^ed^i^ the flection canvass^ but also to demand fke cessation of the war, upon the cheering news from' Atlanta, all' this'dlBCon- Minsftr^eJrJp^Jlc^, injbt^^Sh^nccpdakMP tffairs, and explanrt^ons for faUur«i,^nd disap. inintments in, their administration, ye^ you are e?enhel%)%^^ii^|p^ll^ hemtorejofc# with yoC* $W**j^Jpvte su|^; .•esses, victories, and triumphs, to celebrate.T-T The news .that orings us together iSjOuihentlcr U a telegram which I received, this morning romtheS>c^^ that Sherman's adwnco,, fjnteye^-Atrinta about tion. It occnrsin.the midst xrf civil war, aris- ig out of a disputed sneoGsion to! thff^Ixecu- 0 power.. I?isputedIsucce6sions are the most /requtotAau«e«ofi^a^arsinotoaly.inR«pub- lics, but evep in llonarclnes. A dispute about the iricceeiioabf tho' PresideVt, periodically be- gets an .abortivoi or a real Revolution, in each oneoGhe^paflJiiian^Americaa Bepablics.— So, the/dispuiey,succeesion ofthe8panish throne begotthat' memorable, thirty years war, which ooiwalsed all Europe,. A dispute whether Ju- arez was the lawful President brought on the present civil war, with tho j consequence of JFcench intervention in JUuxico. A dispute whether; the present king of Denmark, who suc- ceeded, to the throne lust winter, .is lawful heir toj*We'%phies> of SculeSwig and Holsteiu, brought about the civil war in that country which through German intervention, has just- now ended with the dismemberment of the Dan isn kingdom. Itiareinurki»ble,aIso, that civil wtnra produced by disputed «ucce»ion«, iuvari- ably begin with resistance, by some one or mort of the tiwtes or Provinces, which constitute the Kingdom, Empire, or BepubJtc, whiph is <li»- lurbed: It was so 1 with the United States ol Mexico. It waa so in the United btatts of Co- iuiubiu,andthe case was the same iuttie United duties of Venezuela.. Now it is certain, that in the ground that success; in restoring the Union*J ItWO, we elected Abahum Lincoln, lawfully; anu i s unattainuble. Already under theinflueflceoi oousututionaily, to bePr«tiideut°oi Uie witole 01 the United Stales of Amentia. Seven of Uit States immediately theieon rushed iuto disuniou and summoning eight more to their ulliance, they set up a revolutionary government. Tbe> levied war ugoinst us, to elieet a separation, anu esubiiah a disuuet sovereignty and indepen- dence. We accepted the, war in defense of the Union. The only grievance of the insurgents was, that their choice of John C. Breckenrjdge tor Presi- dent, was constitutionally overruled in the elec- tion of Liucoln. They rejected Lincoln, and set up a usurper. The executive power of the United States is noir, therefore, by force, practi- cally suspended, between .that usurper Jefferson Davis, and that constitutional President Abra- ham Lincoln. The war is wiged by tho usurp- er to expel that constitutional President from the Capital, which in. some/, soft is constantly held in seige, and to conquer the States which loyally adnere to him. Tho war is maintained on our side, to suppress the usurper, and to bripg, the insurgent States . back, under the au- thority of the constitutional President. The war isat its crisis. It is clear, therefore, that tve are lighting to make Abraham Lincoln Presi- dent of the whole United Stales, under the elec- tion of I860, to continue until the 4th of .March, 1805. In voting for u President 0 / the Uniteu States, can we wisely or safely votoout the iden- tical person Whom, with force of arms; we are fighting into .the Presidency? (No: Ko.) Ton justly say no. It would be nothing less than to give up the very object of the war at the billot box. Tjhe moral strength which makes our loyal position impregnable, would pass from "lis, and when thai nitiral strength '•hasJpasseu- away, material forces are no longer etfectiv^ 01 even available. By such a proceeding wo shall have' agreed with the enemy, and shah huvt. given htm the victory; '• But- in that agreement, (lio Constitution and the Union will have per- ished, because when it shall have at ionoe-been proven that a minority can by force or circum- vention, defeat tho full accession of a. conslita- Udnitlly chosen President,ao-.Prcsident there* after, though elected by ever so large* majority, can hope to exercise the Executive powers un* opp^i^vij^H&i^. Mie^wiioiljl^untry;, p m of two things must lollow that fatal crior. Eith- er a coulesi Dei ween your newly elected com- promise President, and the same usurper, it, which the usurper must prevail, or' else a com- blualion between them, tnrough which the usur- per or -his sucetaitior, auovtrtmg youriCousutn- uonaudMuostuutiughisownVWdibecoiuePre*- iaeui,liaiig or Eiup^ror of ihe Utilted Slates, Wiihoutioreigu »t,u,"ii' he can, with foreigu in- lent and this desjponde^cybave disappeared.— Weshsll have no draitibecanse the army Js be- ing relnlorced at the rale of five or ten' thousand men,per day by volunteers. (Hurrah for the volunteers.) May I iioij add that this very vic- tory ut Atlanta comes in good time as the vic- tory in Mobil*/Bay does to vindicate the wis- dom and the energy of the war administration. Farrsgut's fleet did^noij make 'itself, nor did he make it. It was prepared by the Secretary of $&$&&&&$&} -$m Record 'the history of this war truthfully and impartially, will write that since tbedays of Csrnot, no man has or- ganized war with ability equal to that of Stan- top. (Cheers for Stanton, cheers for the Secre- tary of the Navy.} , KtBut auspicious anhQ occasion, js, it has, nev- ertheless, failed to bring out somo whom we might have expected here. TVhy arc they not here,, to rejoice in. the victories that will thrill thehea.ns of-the, lovers of freedom throughout the world. Alas, that it must be'eonfessed, it, .is. party spirit-that" hOIds them aloof. Allot' them are partisans. Some are Kepubllcans.who cannot rejpico in. th> national victoriei, becanae tffls war;fortho«q.teof thenatibrijis notinall respects, coqdttct^^uJcording to. their,own pe- cnlfar radical^deaCand" theories. They want gtwrantiesfor f swift, andn Mhivcreal, and com- plete empancipution, 8r ihey do not want the nation saved. Others: stay away, because they wunt .tobeaasured that ) n coming but of the revotutionaiy »torm,*the (ship'of State will be found exactly in the same condition as when the tt" m ^st'a^ l lI 1 ed'it,or(l,ey , d(. not want the siiip •svsj^fe. atral},as,.if.oiayjbpdy cpu|d .giye such guaranties; in the name of ! the people of thirty million. Others are'Democrats. They receiv- e d irom their Fathecpr the fucipm that only Dem- 5o2rati" ^sJbtHdjsive" "theebijuHjji and ^e/ must' «tvgirby:l)anocrttic tftmntifai and jcomblna- tipntTrJlich the^progress of the age has forever explb^e^^They cannot come Wp to 'celfjbrate acbieveinenis which condemn tlich; narrow and hereditery^fgotiy;. 'I ••'.. -•,..•; • , OtherSj of;both Bejiublican- and Democratic parties', are willing that the nation shall besav- B^mri^m itis djine^by^^Qjof.tjielrclio- JW J$ : 3' ^»;oop e rAnnnm"lnva>UWjlii*»r-nce. •ana «?*• ally den<1i|Ac«^tjd : rey-Jlfii : |^h#i6Hnriot honor .Qranti^d Sheri^ A 4^^j»r^^(t,«ijd Porter, 'bejeause^byj such homage they fair that Fremont and tfcCIellatfsfsnteniay be'*clipsed. ' } Nevcrfljeless, there'^re enotigh here of the Mty**i&&$* v f#?$) eflougli of men who '6nWir^' , jl^ubliai)|s^ wordmapartii»nMnse,areBepublicansno;lon- tnrough^|dwr|«»cei- : Tie , itjsj)utedBuceessipn still r e r n ^ j nnadjusted. A ^new election has come onY' 'Tor-a time,ihe Northern Democrats, eral .-support to r the government, against the Democratic insurgents of the South. But the erne l^momtrcTorCes; which figured in tho 4ocd(£ oiiim*nQw\ai»iei»r.i4l8* political field, with positions and policy unchanged since thatUme,^* J tMakt*xc^pt for the worse. The Southern Iiemociacy is-still in arms,under the wmTper^t f fec1lntond.'' The*DdughWand Bell columns con6oIidated,are found at Chicago, and alj thcee of the parties - are compassing the «-• jection of the o»nst^utional President of tJUe -United States. Theyugreonqt only }n this au tempi, but they assign thb same reasons for it-™ iiinnely.Jhat Abraham Lincoln is a tyranr. ?/They1 agree, also, that the reaL usurper at Richmond is blameless, and pure, at least the iliebmond democracy affirm it, and the Chicagb democracy do not gainsay it. To me, therefore, ihe democracy at Kiclunond and the democracy at Chicago, like Ctcsar and Pompey.seem to re- tain all their original family resemblance. Tjiey are very much ajjike - especially Pompey. *i®ut it is not in mere externals that theuv simihjpry lies. They talk very much alike, as I hafo al- ready shbwn you! When- you considertlmt •tmong the Democrats at .Chicago, the Indiana .democrats were present, who;have imported arms to resist the National authority, and defeat, the National laws', and that all the democrats 'there assembled-agreed to justify that proceed ing, Ithhifc yWwill-agree With . nip that the •ffichniond democrats'and the Chicago demo- crats havo lately come to act very much alike. I shall now go further aUdprove to you that they notonly have a commonjpolicy, and a com- mon way of defending it, bill* they have even adoptedthat policy m concert ;wiih each other. Fou know that .when, tbp Chicago Convention was approaching ih July last, George Sanders, Clement 0. ClayVand J. P. Holcomb, appeared at the Clifton House, on the; Canada bank ofthe Niagara' river, fully invested with the confidence and acquainted with the purposes of Jefferson Davis and his confederates at Richmond You know, also, that Chicago Democrats resorted there in considerable numbers, to confer with these emissaries_pfJeffersonDavis. .Here isihe fruit of that conference, and no one can deny the authenticity of my evidence. It is extracted from the London Times, th» common organ" of all the erieriies'of tho United States. The New Fork correspondent of Ihe London Times, writ- ing from Niagara Fails, under date of August ddysays^ . . .. ;. .. ..^ "Clifton House has become a center of nego- tiations between the Northern friends of peace and Southern agents, which propose a with- drawal of^difierifnces ftom £he. arbitrament of ihe.swofd„:vTlte» correspondent then goes on to H«iostre«arBtdfro|6frewT«k wita a large Stoilfafi -*!*>-. PATENT SREEOH L0AD1M8 The >»*«t sXisitwIe suisl k>wr«Me «t \ \ sassy Risle lsiwesite«f i" caarriiooi cask*. . «•»»»,?«• Jkt&zy AstT- - o> _ ta* toadewaodta^uyaswss^eltaaias, }*l»»aw cKUrwn siirtE rtm ppstwMM : s»ac—» t+w*»*r%m9*»»*4lmm$l**. i*H*^,iMt*uBt.O-mmm*^>---> »iw»»' Sb«a«ai>aaa,«m«aia.a|k«a., ' *- s;irawi^aaT*ts^au,|riv _^ :| • - • . - .«' - "N- ., . « t S t '" twjuiifsmsi <TInfmiiiiatiiT . : aooatb^ay^fv^WWy^i^'iWd.. '^a- ; 3 i »inJst.St»Antoii^.-.^«'.<'.i'"-'.-* : .;..3.-.- jt},'- !'; '-' ithis : Bews ©omWi^ « g ^ W < p j ^ j p ^ k | i > i t : ' racts thtJ^hterest bf l l w ^ wait'fprparticulai*}-;-'.'^ -\'^\:~?.t:.';';- : ''-~% I Thlsi vicioiy comes inr'the^ghto^e^lpn^~ fe fills lit f(itl»;i^»e^^ •iaSnesand Moigan,wbich^ I understand to ; be i lie particular* of Fi*ri^ut ; s glru-jous- naval bat- 'f.e^l^^|^obik^.s^!ie^ .i[her'inAmeric«n*istory;buithtB»^ nenis of the iam^ 1 veteran admiral at New tptr-' ^risand Port Hudson, and all. >hbee have p^ •arallelinnaval warfare, totilie. battles of tht mhtiad tnOiijgiir.:'' {A v o ^ l ' i r l s l r lifrmikk: ill Farragnts.V Well my fH«nd r I f lte6ir'''tnw. i'dmlx»r.well,ar i dlc^l^thitw««llc^ ^Viaguts. Indeed", Yeryfe'w l ) f » «uir. Buk veniayUkethlscomfcrt ourselves'tbat as a *hofe pedple, we ca^ appreciate theTMerar*— Wcsu aWsppr^ has per*. toriried the m o « s o c t t ^ l and spfcmdfd m a ^ J £..roogh a jMOuntalnobs and hoattle -cbimtry' re-- : ( uMe4 i n m«Mjern history, and; In doing this w* s low ourselves inferior in virtue to no Other na- ,t:bn*: ~-~\^-,/:~:';^r , , I ;''^^l^'/- : -';' 1 t>' y!&f.-tbiway, ev^^y'*rimi^#^f^t*sS^' -viscn in climblnf to thai mast to direct th^baf- tle. But there Wasauother-particular," of that dtntea* tnatnolewsfbtdbiyhhistw^ O laraeter/ '*AdmbaV said one of hii ofBperi. vhealgirt oefbre> ttebittle, "vfoirt y6o cMsent a giveJ«cl; tglas* ofgrog t fo i^iiaoraftig^riot bough to make him drunk, but jdst enough to !»kehim : flg» ebeerfnlly" «We»^ replied ht> Admiral, "I nave been to sea cowaVlmbie, a id have seen a bartle oi 4 two, but I never found t tatTwatiitd ntm to suable me w do nrydnty. ! wHJoi tier two cntts of sood coffee, to tmck nan," at two o'clock, and at eighi o'clock I will pip. all hands to breakfast, (n Mobile B a r . " - itfarrahtorFarragui.) And he did f i r . J v k l»S isflal,-sjs»i Us—Jsa wwt i > i i ~ ^r.^nd' ^t-Mah'm^ryn^ Dermicrais, but w^p;tsJWn^tj(«it,iy^ are Democrats no longer. All of whom are now Uflionjnjenj b^otOsej they found out at the be- gionf^pfthis i tn^ridJ»^vU'^ai^brat-8ome r r*ribti|of Its ingress, t|at no" mahrTno party-^: no formula—no creed could save the Union; but that only4lie peb|He" «i*aa- savoft,and they ] im^m^ : S^t^m.Pi^M»n4 UfJion m e n . ^ •tClheewfor^tfae^flloniy i, ,-x ;, , ' '^•?%^irl^d-f#,ffl'^^ jto/Uie'rMoratlpa ofShe .^olb^iibv'fmaa then its oomlni^pei hftj was^diher arlladicalw ior »c CphseryitWej *Republksm" or ^ Democrat^ but afl:Uur S t<^e4"ajBd. U SC0pdif|p^ if.^ut*hy»li06ia partya^H^tispecialiyfat this •jft&iixy- &\ii& *hi M^d^pie. And -irkyshooldl,amiitnber Wtheixecot^r*Ad^ •jniftfairMj^ -|]B^Y^^jL»#)S^'iKS%''-||S^'V tution of our country commands thai AdmlnhV tra(ionto^rrenderftspowe^*tothePeopIe,and ilwPa»^to*^gweAgf^U,tp^« exercls*tbwmfburyw«rs. Toaxeosiw the Ex- •ic#l)re Government in a coadttlon very-differ ent andhi^hjy kBBfoyed-We found rtpricB- 1 cally expelled from the whole country sooth of tWD^ware,th«^hlo,»jnd thels^ssourl, with Ore mortof the army^and navy betray^ len infoth« hands of the insargents, and« n : ew and treasonable CoB*deracy with the indirect but effective co-bperatfon of Foreign Toiier$^ a candidate fbr the Presidency on the platform •if an armistice'and a convention of states, and to thwart by all^poesibleaneans the efforts of itfr. Lincolnforr^lecUoh.", Mark now, thait on the 8th of August, 1864, Northern Democrats and Richmond agenis igree upon three thingi to be done ut Chicagot' Namely:' FuTit.-AwitUdraWal ofthe differen- , ces between the government and theinsurgents, from the arbitrament ofthe sword. 2d. A nom- ination for President of the United States, on a 1 i>b^prn|^o| iitpt0§^ and ultimately a con- vention of the 'States,fid.*To 'thwart* by all possible,, means, ,tho re-election- of Abraham Lincoln, . ^. Such a conference, held in a neutral country between professedly ioyal cilizeus of .the United states and the agent's of the Richmond .traitors «n. armB, f has »., very suspicious look. But let ha* pass. J^pli^pajjelections^must be free,, and therefore- they justly excuse many extravagan- cies,. ; W.e have nqw iseea wlu# the, ageuts oi Pompey and Cffisar' agreed 'at Niagara, that Pompey should,do at Chicago, ; Here is what Jtoelved, That this Convention does explicitr ydeclare, ns the sense ofthe American people, Union by the experiment 1 of war, during which, .inder the pretenw|,.of •* injijita^ry necessity of bro^eiimt tui|pA^o^!Sai ! ^ *&£ COnsatution, the Ing the qtttAUbn 'Wite^ef^^ereafs^wW/-ahal^ ISi^M^Wli^^^^^ 1 ^^^&&*>& Amij6^acfetwiHtibftahda'.C^unirViWfbs. koul jiart,imd^i^rHciiberty and ^rivafo right alike suuii we vole, tntai, to nave our 'country firoui v'rodden dbym} and tho material prosperity oi, taaiiearfuiu^Bgerr'iVoteJ^ he country esseotkUyimpau^, justice, htf-; T6 Bm. R\ men, BaSfae**''•"•":; * Platfortti and 'Presidelifrfat nonjfnee' i jansatis- foctPtJ*. 3ftoe r Pre8idenfc p.nd speeches iatisfke- tory. TeUPiAU^morennttoioppose.. .. . (Signed) -- -- : - GEOVN: SANDERS. D. Wier is a RieTimoBd'»swiijplice at Hali- fax, and Phileraoreis undprs^rxidtb be the con- ductor ofthe insurgent organ in London. . Here then •m^^k'iiSM&SmsnaBSSrwpiiit- form which were made by treaty, formally con- tracted between the Democratic, traitors. at Richmond; and the Democratic opposition at Chicago,' signed, sealed, attested, and delivered in the prc-M-nce of the London 7Vff?e«,and al- ready ratified :st Richmond, ("By Heaven* aveVe trot 'em."; Got them, to be sureyoa'vegot them, my friends. Thpy say I «m a,Itvays too sanguine of the success of national candidates and of the national arms. But it seems to me that the veriest croaker in all our loyal camp will take new courage, and become heroic when he sees that tho last hope of the rebellion, bangs upontheratifi&ition.of thjsab<iminable/and de- testable compact by the American^ople; Tea, you have got them; b'ut'-b^; did'yon get them r Not by .apy skill pr art t?f tl|e Ad- ministration, or even through the sagacity or activity of the loyal people, but through the cunning ofthe conspirators^overreaching itself, and thus working out their own defeat and confusion. They dosay that the.father of evil always indulges his chosen disciples with such an excess of subtlety, as to render their ultimate ruin and punishment inevitable, ,. ^ T .. . And what a time is this to proclaim such a policy, conceived, m treachery and -brought forth with shameless effrontery. A. cessation of hostilities On the heel of decisive naval.and land battles, at the very moment, that the, rebellion, without a single fort in its- possession on the ocean.jpr on either ofthe great rivers or lakes, is crumbling to the earth, and at |he same time > a dozen new ships of war are going to complete the investment by sea, and--three hundred "thousand volunteers are rushing to-the lines, to complete the work of restoration and paci- fication. . - • - > -. There is a maxim whichthoughlfiil teachers always carefully inculcate. Xt is'that'incon- stancy is imbecility, and that perseverance is necessary to insure success. Thismaxiln was set forth in the form of s copy in ^ho writing book, when I was young: "Perseveranceal- ways conquers." Even infantile beg{nne/s en- countered the instruction in the form'ot * fable in Webster's spelling book. The storywas that after using soft words and tufts of grass, the farmer tried what virtue there was in stones, and by persistence in that application he brought the rude boy who was-stealing'apples.'down from the tree, and made iiito ask the farmer's pardon. Our Chicago teachers tell us that just explain that an effort is to be made to nominate as thorude boy is coming down; wo must lay To be sure it is so; hothttig is more certain thaii: tuat ei»uefcthKU^lfo;S^tstt>8|»uatheir Con^ siituiiunal Preaiueu I, ur the so-calted Conleder- aie butles, knu uteir "uaurpttig PrewUent, iuuo.- »:ule Hjtuia me itmiit* oi .mia.Atepuohc.^J. tiiereV foro^eiimtlue PfewdeuliMiiiiecaon as in volt - down the stones and resort agiitn to the ; use of grass, with the consequence, of course^ that the firmer must beg pardon of the tresspasser. But what makes this Chicago policy more con- temptible, and even ridiculous, is that it is noth- ing different from the pojicy with which the same parties now contracting actually; ushered iu disunion in 1401, in the closing hours »f the Admistration of James Buchanan.. , . Yes, my dear friends, when we of this Ad- ministration came, Into put .places in ihtrcti, 1801, we found there existing jjist Ihe .system which, is nowrecommended^tCbicago r namely: 1st, a treasonable confederacy in arms Sgaiu-1 ,$he re^j^ m ^>^ M^pi^J^^n tl.e Government of tho'Unitcd, States and the rebels, a veritable armistice] "Which; twits' so cons.rued that while the National ports ahd forts were thoroughly invested along the sea ; c<;ast and rivers by ';tto iWurgen}s,3tu|3fiCbUld^3teiiher reinforced, nor supplied even" with food,* by the government. 3d. A languiddebate With a view to an ultimate National Convention,, w|iicli the •^bels> ^iujwily^^pisedm^d^^ rejected.' What were the alternatives' left us ? ;Eitlierf t tO ; surrender qu^tvesand the^vemr meut at discretion, or to suutmon $Cr«p|)le to arms, terminate ihe armistice, adjourn the de- moralizing deliate,, and ^rei^scss'^onfeelvra all the treaaureihat b^bjen spent, and all the precious blood that has been poured forth, gone for nothing else but to secure- nh ignondnions retreitC and return' 4 ; t^ndof fpuifytors to the «ftop>le»i imbecility t am rapidi«l»rojcsB8 of perish and leave no rppt«frJtf ^db^lliiwwisut we have only the aiternaifves of acquiescence m a perpetual u^pation.Or of entering an'enu kasaue^sswhoi wviiand Uptiif these grounds, euiirely irrespecUve of plaU'jrn, and jCauuiaaie, Lcomwer the recommeadaiiout. m iueUouvemiou*lCuk»go,« Tert thf ^]^^:!ii^0bf0^%^pia f ) i -..t 'l , It^lft #eem,», Intra tiuiig; whert | u^piy^tbaij f ^bkrty, like the Democratic /pa^cak' either' inedisieor bliuly ad^pt mea»Mre^ » evtuthro w jtlie«ei«ibltc., All. jexperien«r,#»W9f«i shows? that it is. by the malice o* tho niadness ot" great Ika^tniitFrisaf^ to u>!t«uctioo. You otTCT hew;alarms that* party in power is subverting\ <hp .«jtste» and q sutneOnws hapjKo* so. Butuine times out pi ten, it is a party otlt of power,tlutijii Itfimpa- ^w«*««#lli ambitioti oterthrows* Republic, . " Tftt Oenwcratlcpatny, of ooiirse, leaving ofl 4l(4L^al.17iiioit Dtaaocrats, opposed the eiec esiabllihingitself on ihe Gulf of Mexico. We I Uoa of Abraham Lincoln, in 18«0., In doingso clhierfB'Jly giv* ta« GOvetanMnt back to you I t^ey divided w d orgauisod in three column*. fJSfBS^^pR fvsssasis^saa^sjytl al.ssV.fxSys|s1s]Mw :j v.. m with large and conqu^rtDa;«rniies,a»da trium- phantjtavy, wlt*tl«!h"»tefotConf(sdaafacy^ into pieces, aadtk* rwbtllkws Stat«% otaaaftar aitolsMr, rMuraiag «»their allsjtoMoe. : Regardhig myself now, thertfore, notlas a Stwretary.botslBipIy af ot>e of ths p«op*»,I, like you, am called by my vote to detarmine in- to whose hands the pnaiooa trust shall now bs) confided. Wo mbrht wtsh to avoid, or at leaat to MMBams that duty, antil the present fHrfnl CTisss tspssstd. ButitcauiotsjKl.Uosjariitsrot sstearswdsdor salJsjafBsA t t j s »Ooa«Uta- tk>tMtTisU,a«i4sWSsissB«sWStf» tbro«ft. it dsHI SfaaatyMjd brsrvely. asaJhSslasaaSksi. t^saasafaa w>Kt*t| I jwaaa WsMtMsjat- ^s^awaw^sa^ajs^ppsa^isa^^BnBi^ vsjaww ^^^ F ^^^ass F aw sawas^psss* ss> aawaww^i ^srajPS*J B JaV*JB^sjr v ssl toaslosji, sssd Hw Mssoas for tt, iWWaVllsiysajtsi. Osiea titauliwableooitttiu, of fJtjMe Sights,dit- urfoii Democrats ondei- Breckenridlge. A sec- ond, a loyad northern column,^lpder Douglas,— Tke third a coaoliatory flying eoiiwn, nndel' Joblt Bett, Ts/k© hassince joined tlie insurgents, f^e ttereopoB invited the two loyal colnmns to eonWn« with the RepubUcan party to oppoaV tJtftdtaaion dentocraikcoluBan. '. Tbey declin- ed •Jhtkwmof the eitptioahi WM,Itol«T Uw followers of Dottglaa said of BJstt, that when the eketisM should bat* etossd, tkpyimdd fls4j tkey bad busdverteauly Ikvarad djsBaioa sast rsbsiHosj. Tbey pstsistsd, assl ss^s, sttssnpssd ravestloo eawt. Dssnnlon thssj , ftjaiiiitsd ft. a«h;ra ISM practical form of sjpsJse0s4 Abra- *entibn-df ajl tho States, or p.ther|*aceal .oieaosto tho end.thata^theegrliestpracticiible ttoinent peace ina^ be restored'gta Ike basis ol ^hfiife4eral.,Pnipa^f4|f i 8^ ',i^ •' ' ^ f ho fiemb^rley : # ''^^'-Mi^fstp just what had been agreed upon with the Richmood ^nts at; 3«*tjpar% 4 l a m e ^ jpf i p j ^ d p a m ^ the Unipo agaiast,-^li« ir#oi^i%|ijrith a vieiv to an uldms^ N a t i o n Convention, and the de- feat ofthe elecUonc^" Abraham Lmcoln. Thsi wtos%y, thiypropcMisditoejwtAbiuhamLin- coln from Ihe Pi^antiklChwr at Washington on the 4th of Marcb next, andat the same time teavgtlieiisnrper t l>tyistunsasa unmolested in his se#v at Richmond, with a view to an ulUmste r^vention ofstates, which t l!atiUurperV<)on.tituticmwUlsllowjTOooeof the; ihsurgwtt. States '-to r 'eoierv r ^PUf~itby ifthere be job ConvehUon at all, orif the Conven- tion fail to igree oft a wlKtttssioa to the Federal luthorityf Jeff«sson Davis liren rtenrains in iutfaority, his Cbnlederacy esfabllshed, and the Union with sJl Wglories'ls gone forever. Nay* more, If soch a thing could happett sit that .the' Chicago candidate, nominated upon such an igreeoseat, should be elected President of the United Stats* oa th* 1st TuesdaytotNov«»btr next, whocan vouch iWtlie safety of the cbasv. xry sgainst the jebehf * i r » t the tetarral%hk* moat elapse before the new adrnteistratloo caw consdtmlooally cotwimopewtf It seems s*> national dissolution, which existed when Abra. ham Lincoln took into bis bands- the iejns vf (3oy^h|meiifc'',.^'.- J . lt , ,'".,_., ..;' ,''•'/'' accissifittiOf Abr4iiini IgneoMju^'at^ltaf Hmo the Union would in less thait three months have falle^ti.iiitb <s}t}8pjate^odJa^^e^bto^ijin. '~i "wiU)notdwelliong j pti i 4hl of ttj^Sfe] iriiignirjjd b u t f p | S n ^ t i p n a ^ p ^ ^ i # . m e n , bring against the Adminu^vtipn'pf ^br}ibam Lincoln. They complain of Military arrests of s p i « ' s ^ ' l ^ ] ^ ' t ^ ^ ^ | ^ ' ^ ^ ; ^ e B , as if the Government could ju^ifyitsejffor^^wait- States to beiovaded or to, be, carried off into flWg^l&stet;^ •^4|0>-s^.a / -.v> •.-•"• They complain that wheu we call, for volun- teers fe.jbl^it, ^j^^^^^OL-.mttt. when the ship has been scuttled the, captain Jsssursatss tbs T&fataatl tolavtss-'taWftsW. . I» ifwshssfor«• ***'*»& *° live Joe **• pi<s^,1b>t s>tboqs> tkf way In w£ M M taSSaa^sktaev dad WaattaaadbBCaVi ^sa^smsr ^^vawaw^r^pay^sa^^ ^s^^» •v^Haaaw.^sawawaa, W^aw^, i sa thsk DSavssts» yssjsrs. wee sr«t secret places, but they go up and do|v'ii.the { pub- Iki's^r^^utferinjEjjireJ^]^ to rwvpkearrest in order tltat A of a denial of the liberty of spoetdL Tte, i u - ,p^rdty%^ : *^fJ»^e^ity»ii^ tion ofooosiitntioaal debate,, shows at one and the same lime, that their erittphdota are ground - less, and tbatt the Union ie the elenieat4if moral "'• l Tne cfarrf (WsatOalttf ss^s»»st tsasIVaaadiut Is that he wHI net accept eeesi'am tislisawsof the lutejpltyof tlis Utdstt, ,i **nbeM%siarliigaajBe the •buo^soMnt of slsrery.'« WIHBT •*»* asbere b«f« -tbe iaaurgeeta tiiuitA btssa^feelsh the - •US mm*. lwaf Jstsssl » saaaSab ^aawSaaa .aVsaSai Tl*. ^»a»wf* ,*&Sli*}fl%-& . a<Mhit : ...>..*»«:».;*. e mm r.fi

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.rea. vtuuiy 4ui«iiM, Ujijicimeuior ilmoiit »i nt; ia n'ciSircu'iu' pcrtorui a-U aeslul up«r>

onmery,' aiur-i

? — *-}•

W . SiVHT^H 1MTB I

LAWRENCi, alaauf^cturer»anaHfhuf<«tieU«aisr» | « . • ,.

( U l l i u e o Uuua>,:iall^^uj>a.ayc<j:'sabr«llitaj a o » ' . jf«arats)uia>t "•

11 Matiraj aiid ai (ff' tttcaSti;; JSew YoVk i>a>i*i.d.i.iv»mi.scii. ^aaasia. uaious.- jd^a>Ji l l t iaacsi

.JSahd-aoUea'a'edCreehJiioo^KWro^

AuosMSSAc'aarr, i . (Jia»iol*ttAiMi8tict»Ti, >WtuaniS.ttiaa!»««i.f •;• fl!^*!*!}. ' M r W W i i , I*ia , >irj|.3irAaa«u*Oi,. ^ '(=..,". If

1 • ' • , • _ • ' . " • • ' ; > : . . .

, _ > . . . . v / t / i -^ - . . -BROWN, PANGBORN A C o .

fioporter»aD4Jrobber»of. -

v *£*. 'so" o Ttr-'- -©r- «a^ioac*«f; i ' t a ^ h j r y , V i i , o l i e I } ^ ^ * i , | | | . ; ; : f

8*Leonar04ire»t,ta'o4oor»rroiniJroad«ray,N*w-jrork .raaoBOBs,

l«aaeor.Jj i t . . .4c .

f Combs, Outtbnii Tbread»,.>'tlir.«»;.OAriB -o. aaoioi. , f CtaUerjt.Jjejrellj %«ated»Yare»J. »i*ft»di«.

>HN D.FISK,

BAILDWII-N, F I S H E R Y CO.,

Boots , 4ft*^j|f |J*|hi#«6' S*»' CLOCKS,

fe9felrj*j8itf$r aid jsiirof ttateH Ware*

Sfukohm Qlwtif* aai Jewelry fiepaired! !lo. 4 Unloa Block, Malone, S. T.

£.10SLTO&0 ABCBI^KBEItS _ •» -m T qi e c<*ti$Tti] t»f FBAW»| |«tff .

inctlon Salea attended to and Ellis arnjihednhepreqalrsd.

Wholesale and Retail DealeVln.

Brn ii93, ^weg a.nk Whiskeys, Ale M4 L-^er Beer, Pote'en-and 3pptch'<ThI«ltey. ;

Jf a * » , irraifja a n d O a n f o B t l o t t e r r C o d a l a u t l y Wen end jirthe Brlil|e,.«ain St.^Malnne.If. T.

A -LI VMH 3T ^JL'^i3JL,JB,

Ac ram; iiihhKi. ajcau,

A. Ojr##ifisr,:'"': •

r>. ieu usr x'a'^r^JcT.p'... - • I ' Manafactarerof

D oorSj iS as a and Blinds, SaRtHI*VTia1^C*,*J«,.fc -,' .* *

Doors and Sash Aonrtan^ly on hand, and made to order.

So.iBParkttoir»6ppo«lt*the-4atorHoMe,formerIoeaU»t ' kWMVe,.V«ir-Vork.

»ATH'i.naai!». usaroix. oftHifark>Pii?»Ve,

B. M. «aU)lt».

^ f i f E t t -

(Kit

aw*

P I AW a lktii.op¥^|r §.!

S H E E T Ml|»3IC A N D M U S I C BO

C-JLJEf]*i>i§jg & H,E.|Fi5f|" . ,j 0ftDKS8BBH6I|[f iC t fe

iole Ageotf fortbeJcflehratei}. Ballet, Paris % Co,!s.Kxn< Kurteajaniltb); ODrivalled Katey Js Green JJflodepns. , A}s< lealera In sheet Udslc, -atoslc Bogkt *nd MBSICW Merchai-flse generally J Mefr Music regnlaxty re'cefed. '£ "

'Be|iIei:rri'itid'iii&4l¥«V««: "

AJ.K. S£AV£R, Brinte'ra rand"Dealeijs;in-

Waaa«»rt^iMtili: ' ' ' ' OB«iili'tfoaroiaii,r; t4Jir-aLvnt-Di|ki>a, ttax, « S » i « UoatBaoia,

l u s a Ouscjaijia, „ . ' OoijJTO* doaoa, » ' ttioaaiTttuf lijea^is, Biim tViiuuirrS,

J w » » » « « ' » I * U t a k t , i t t l i r e a ° t Vmrtttj, Ja»vprlnt«J,!niaoiiernjtylejiad oo extra paper., •

f«i>Mn3i.»iitU'5il^orrd.att,.(.ttie PtLLAOtOt Ornoi. i — — 1— r^ : £ : .-• • • • ; . > . •• ' ,• ' . ; ^

. * a«mamber;ltwiUmaXeiaia«jBabestac«p ".-.'.

MISSISlBSLLAMcHtTGH'S

Ut Ditor wegt of 4 . Cleath'a, I f a l o Mtraret « a l * « e .

_ - -<e« tWic »,<,* » ur(< aioek of .aabUaaU* HUltnery Go- • I«, »hlch will be opened e s

. T H f J B S D A l T . ^ I ' a l l t . r t b .

Ilif S&wk eomurtsdf^Booaata, Ribbons, Belt BlbbaaavtM at, ^Ipare I.«e, »to#err»V«Btti*a Braid, Oaaaw

V «,!•, UnlWrtn's H iU , * * , *0.

FOB Ttre rjPRjSt* pi]D S U J l ^ S T I t A D B

the f V ^ ^ >«r« raagMetfally larked t* aall aad axamlaa ' ttwoMlna. a* ahe «*at< eonMeat that tbey

• « tftctl™ koth la qwJlly aaa S*4M.

Pi •>V'tt:

rt• K i O « TO OaTr « U . « t * * # W

i t , O h w i p «%*>«« Q s j a J o l ( r

^Jt f a t

**•»#

•Fatches,

."-'ciacKs,'

rdlfnoItha'Mammpth-Wa^eh, .

l i e B l o c k , fltaloae N . % .

Bo or sJlS'frm'-i^n-fo&'&Mmd*.

Sash.Doorsud Mna>conit»n*!j ot, band^nd all order. rUlfttfpromptt^atfeiifdedld. ' ' '

One o J Woodiro|pth'*P)anInj; Machines has beeaaddsdt t the machinery In this Shop, and the proprietor leriotfread} ta plane all kinds of iuinber on short notice, and at the most

|ejr matchingdooilboards.*c. ; •• .".: J.-i-iri.^^*3$*-'

M1L0NETC C. C. WAIHWWIQHT, MOPRIETORs

Keart* SIALOBI psJsfag. ' Bitoox,; uectlng rl^es at

".all errisndt an'^ expreU baslBi^ nroperly atteildad .to aBd,char|[ea-rea»o|iab%re:. , - r '' ~ ^ T " ' ^ r i i i

ctecl BlACI

coi, a«

, ^ r r t a b a a ^ t M I r i a i n t h a m l d t t ^ f adrsr , InaiVaaeuteo'nbe^uJmyjSfly^r^aytr ..

.^.JloJtiniyJheartto thespot; ' •"

"' Made fr.Tf'roWlt. ."rir.^oleied f r o * ; i l i ^ . . Calm and contented In qnlet and a'fona' ' • 1 would llTsanddleotitJiatWandhota*. "

AnAf#j^ajiojsftfer|y«^%.^.d#>; v,,,;, . ', Would be wearing aur Island home away, andtho' sad to!st»" l i grow less and h i t , TfilsiiUnitruUionjoy heart I woald prras; That llmgwaa only a little lale . . - .. J ,; ... , Worn leas all the while " SythewastlDgwareaofafttrnlty'ssea, On whose awlal bpsom taj, yenture a est b » ;

And knowins; there o&nsl, must P«rW> ,, , Uke-ihc sinking disciple to the Lord I chrrisb, <.

I should cry "Oil I saYe my soul with thte j " "'« A-nSdeareratfd-oeWfj' " <•''•" • ••••• < . * .

*» eys? nearer .," , ChrJa>p?«r||if wa^rrfnJiibetTtllklpjtpsBa.

And atlatt-VhtnI djarl^nj^erayt, ibat my body ^ftljn aftHiMs'graVe, ' Fart under the" soil-part under the war*; Then I know wheVihVi'l.gel'or'eod shsll stand n Ith^ene loot'an 'sea ehifcone on land, lhattoyteilrawfiich'sleip- '

- 'Neattt-thea entaod;aodth«.iargJof deep «MtBM*er the call trf tb,e twofold tread,

whole surface "But if ydd could break the ehdl

mm^^^Wi^^smwt^i^f^ wii«»

«1^5 just as iard blows upon thQ..I3^r«hd.' - Tba -wliolftsliell-will 'now bo' etsily crashed,for it l l l l S ^ f fa't^ittl^wltJl' <Rp CXBSUriflollB Of Tt*'

M^m^^ US' .ettl

Iorio«T» ifctory Mm* .ingood time for

"Jfeybjy jaj^^i%B9en' i i ' .we mast, lo end ihe w«r.- l'ou wcrpg«ttiiiic* litilB Vired of^eloDg delays and clifciprjotated ekpeciationa, i n In-diu'u*,:» portion of.tlie people inMiguted b^ reb­el plot t ^ , W the CIinonlionse>'in^nHda, were imponiii^Briiiali revolvers in bojees which pas­ted the Gaitt.m House, as stationery, under pro-

i, That thrills into life all the stonioeriDg dead.

J. P.!

, oF£ECB OF SBORBTaiBT • 8BWARD.

Mil itaryandPoHUc.T'sit^tionE.^w^. ^

T H E . C B J C A C O COrHVEXTIOSl. ,-,:-" '- ;«-<• •«• • e r i ^^4,... ; . ^ r 'I

j

Sutarday, ^September ^d, wafe.a gala day in Auburn,\N.Y.,i(yer Hie splendid victory of Qen. slierman, in the capture of Atlanta. At five

peal, and about the ,spme hour, a salute of one uundred guns Was fired! Immediately a large crowd, including >»everai hundred *volanteeri}, who were wiiffiingtobe mafliertldaX»w*inibted^ lonned in procession and marcned to the resi­dence of Gov. Seward. On 'arriving ui front of . life Governor's residence, the assemblage ib^-;

came so large, that 4fo waa found neceigary.to continue the march tdTiie park, adjoining Gov.

v After the procc^lon l»a hsdtedrcio^ ^ d was called for, and cume forward lindad-' siBJsa d thei crowd ia-onqt of Jji^itjojlAilamest' s«nd efft^live speeches, which Vaa received-wilh unlMiu^dtd reathusiasm.. Afierh,e concluUed, iuree.cheV« were called for, and given with iiT

Wili1, for the^llo'wingperaons rSherrna^iGrapl, oheridan, Medde, Stanton, • Farragut,: Lincoln >nd Seward. Three more musing odes were given for the soldiersand the Union. The crowd ^.Uenseparated. . , „».,,. , . , . „ . ^_ . ff

WeU»Uii(etiim tbftiui Bp^cTi^asaiplalo" 'statement of the origin of the conflictiaXd the

usuea growing out . of i t , , That relative to the terms of peace, and the disposal of the Slavery luestion, will Wreadwithinteni* interest-,Tlie, .-nice ojf tnie'Secretary of.State" to the Rebel JoTcrnment is:- lay down your arms,ipturn (0 yonralltigiancef add abide by the declsidn of the

1*1 z~

w-

AC did Here is not intend'to; comment, .iis- THE HFEIXnii. j ^ f

^ti»;8»tfia?Plike to sie yon come murChtiig to the time o f national ,T„„ „ . . „ , . t » _ , - „ -.

ire, under theToldjBOt'Jhe.Old nation.*] fli^ >f setrtind jdolited chiefi, whldichiefs they mutu hank yon ; for thl^ hospitable and patriot^ "nii -»-="a-»^-»"»-*—'- ""'*-^---<- • - -Aelcome. It proves that though you.deal rig­orously with your public « r van to eaticjing rel^

down to'ruin.throughjH subordinate and auxil­iary civaf War. JTrtiel hd irths have been im-

among yon, ana sat down In council at Chicago, with -those Indiana conspirators, and agreed With them not only that importation of arms should b« defen^ed^i^ the flection canvass^ but also to demand fke cessation of the war, upon

the cheering news from' Atlanta, all' this'dlBCon-

Mins ftr eJrJp^Jlc^, injbt^^Sh^nccpdakMP tffairs, and explanrt^ons for faUur«i,^nd disap. inintments in, their administration, ye^ you are e ? e n h e l % ) % ^ ^ i i ^ | p ^ l l ^ hem to rejofc# with yoC* $W**j^Jpvte su|^; .•esses, victories, and triumphs, to celebrate.T-T The news .that orings us together iSjOuihentlcr

U a telegram which I received, this morning r o m t h e S > c ^ ^ that Sherman's adwnco,, fjnteye^-Atrinta about

tion. I t occnrsin.the midst xrf civil war, aris-ig out of a disputed sneoGsion to! thff^Ixecu-0 power.. I?isputedIsucce6sions are the most

/requtotAau«e«ofi^a^arsinotoaly.inR«pub-lics, but evep in llonarclnes. A dispute about the iricceeiioabf tho' PresideVt, periodically be-gets an .abortivoi or a real Revolution, in each oneoGhe^paflJiiian^Americaa Bepablics.— So, the/dispuiey,succeesion ofthe8panish throne begotthat' memorable, thirty years war, which ooiwalsed all Europe,. A dispute whether Ju­arez was the lawful President brought on the present civil war, with tho j consequence of JFcench intervention in JUuxico. A dispute whether; the present king of Denmark, who suc­ceeded, to the throne lust winter, .is lawful heir toj*We'%phies> of SculeSwig and Holsteiu, brought about the civil war in that country which through German intervention, has just-now ended with the dismemberment of the Dan isn kingdom. Itiareinurki»ble,aIso, that civil wtnra produced by disputed «ucce»ion«, iuvari­ably begin with resistance, by some one or mort of the tiwtes or Provinces, which constitute the Kingdom, Empire, or BepubJtc, whiph is <li»-lurbed: It was so1 with the United States ol Mexico. It waa so in the United btatts of Co-iuiubiu,andthe case was the same iuttie United duties of Venezuela.. Now it is certain, that in

the ground that success; in restoring the Union*J ItWO, we elected Abahum Lincoln, lawfully; anu is unattainuble. Already under theinflueflceoi oousututionaily, to bePr«tiideut°oi Uie witole 01

the United Stales • of Amentia. Seven of Uit States immediately theieon rushed iuto disuniou and summoning eight more to their ulliance, they set up a revolutionary government. Tbe> levied war ugoinst us, to elieet a separation, anu esubiiah a disuuet sovereignty and indepen­dence.

We accepted the, war in defense of the Union. The only grievance of the insurgents was, that their choice of John C. Breckenrjdge tor Presi­dent, was constitutionally overruled in the elec­tion of Liucoln. They rejected Lincoln, and set up a usurper. The executive power of the United States is noir, therefore, by force, practi­cally suspended, bet ween .that usurper Jefferson Davis, and that constitutional President Abra­ham Lincoln. The war is wiged by tho usurp­er to expel that constitutional President from the Capital, which in. some/, soft is constantly held in seige, and to conquer the States which loyally adnere to him. Tho war is maintained on our side, to suppress the usurper, and to bripg, the insurgent States . back, under the au­thority of the constitutional President. The war isat its crisis. It is clear, therefore, that tve are lighting to make Abraham Lincoln Presi­dent of the whole United Stales, under the elec­tion of I860, to continue until the 4th of .March, 1805. In voting for u President 0 / the Uniteu States, can we wisely or safely votoout the iden­tical person Whom, with force of arms; we are fighting into .the Presidency? (No: Ko.)

Ton justly say no. It would be nothing less than to give up the very object of the war at the billot box. Tjhe moral strength which makes our loyal position impregnable, would pass from "lis, and when thai nitiral strength '•hasJpasseu-away, material forces are no longer etfectiv^ 01 even available. By such a proceeding wo shall have' agreed with the enemy, and shah huvt. given htm the victory; '• But- in that agreement, (lio Constitution and the Union will have per­ished, because when it shall have at ionoe-been proven that a minority can by force or circum­vention, defeat tho full accession of a. conslita-Udnitlly chosen President,ao-.Prcsident there* after, though elected by ever so large* majority, can hope to exercise the Executive powers un* opp^i^vij^H&i^. Mie^wiioiljl^untry;, p m

of two things must lollow that fatal crior. Eith­er a coulesi Dei ween your newly elected com­promise President, and the same usurper, it, which the usurper must prevail, or' else a com-blualion between them, tnrough which the usur­per or -his sucetaitior, auovtrtmg youriCousutn-uonaudMuostuutiughisownVWdibecoiuePre*-iaeui,liaiig or Eiup^ror of ihe Utilted Slates, Wiihoutioreigu »t,u,"ii' he can, with foreigu in-

lent and this desjponde^cybave disappeared.— Weshsll have no draitibecanse the army Js be­ing relnlorced at the rale of five or ten' thousand men,per day by volunteers. (Hurrah for the volunteers.) May I iioij add that this very vic­tory ut Atlanta comes in good time as the vic­tory in Mobil*/Bay does to vindicate the wis­dom and the energy of the war administration. Farrsgut's fleet did^noij make 'itself, nor did he make it. It was prepared by the Secretary of $&$&&&&$&} -$m Record 'the history of this war truthfully and impartially, will write that since tbedays of Csrnot, no man has or­ganized war with ability equal to that of Stan-top. (Cheers for Stanton, cheers for the Secre­tary of the Navy.} , KtBut auspicious anhQ occasion, js, it has, nev­ertheless, failed to bring out somo whom we might have expected here. TVhy arc they not here,, to rejoice in. the victories that will thrill thehea.ns of-the, lovers of freedom throughout the world. Alas, that it must be'eonfessed, it,

.is. party spirit-that" hOIds them aloof. Allot' them are partisans. Some are Kepubllcans.who cannot rejpico in. th> national victoriei, becanae tffls war; for tho«q.teof thenatibrijis notinall respects, coqdttct^^uJcording to. their,own pe-cnlfar radical^deaCand" theories. They want gtwrantiesforf swift, andn Mhivcreal, and com-plete empancipution, 8r ihey do not want the nation saved. Others: stay away, because they wunt .tobeaasured that ) n coming but of the revotutionaiy »torm,*the (ship'of State will be found exactly in the same condition as when the tt"m^st'a^llI

1ed'it,or(l,ey,d(. not want the siiip •svsj fe. atral},as,.if.oiayjbpdy cpu|d .giye such guaranties; in the name of!the people of thirty million. Others are'Democrats. They receiv­

e d irom their Fathecpr the fucipm that only Dem-5o2rati" sJbtHdjsive" "theebijuHjji and ^ e / must' «tvgirby:l)anocrttic tftmntifai and jcomblna-tipntTrJlich the^progress of the age has forever explb^e^^They cannot come Wp to 'celfjbrate acbieveinenis which condemn tlich; narrow and hereditery^fgotiy;. 'I ••'.. -•,..•; • ,

OtherSj of;both Bejiublican- and Democratic parties', are willing that the nation shall besav-B^mri^m itis djine^by^^Qjof.tjielrclio-

J W J$ : 3 '

^ » ; o o p e r A n n n m " l n v a > U W j l i i * » r - n c e . •ana «?*•

ally den<1i|Ac«^tjd:rey-Jlfii: |^h#i6Hnriot honor .Qranti^d Sheri^A4^^j»r^^(t,«ijd Porter, 'bejeause byj such homage they fair that Fremont and tfcCIellatfsfsnteniay be'*clipsed. '} Nevcrfljeless, there'^re enotigh here of the Mty**i&&$*vf#?$) eflougli of men who ' 6 n W i r ^ ' , j l ^ u b l i a i ) | s ^ wordmapartii»nMnse,areBepublicansno;lon-

tnrough^|dwr|«»cei-: Tie,itjsj)utedBuceessipn still r e r n ^ j nnadjusted. A new election has come onY' 'Tor-a time,ihe Northern Democrats,

eral .-support to r the government, against the Democratic insurgents of the South. But the erne l^momtrcTorCes; which figured in tho 4 o c d ( £ oiiim*nQw\ai»iei»r.i4l8* political field, with positions and policy unchanged since thatUme,^* J tMakt*xc^pt for the worse. The Southern Iiemociacy is-still in arms,under the wmTper^tffec1lntond.'' The*DdughWand Bell columns con6oIidated,are found at Chicago, and alj thcee of the parties - are compassing the «-• jection of the o»nst^utional President of tJUe -United States. Theyugreonqt only }n this au tempi, but they assign thb same reasons for it-™ iiinnely.Jhat Abraham Lincoln is a tyranr. ?/They 1 agree, also, that the reaL usurper at Richmond is blameless, and pure, at least the iliebmond democracy affirm it, and the Chicagb democracy do not gainsay it. To me, therefore, ihe democracy at Kiclunond and the democracy at Chicago, like Ctcsar and Pompey.seem to re­tain all their original family resemblance. Tjiey are very much ajjike - especially Pompey. *i®ut it is not in mere externals that theuv simihjpry lies. They talk very much alike, as I hafo al­ready shbwn you! When- you considertlmt •tmong the Democrats at .Chicago, the Indiana .democrats were present, who;have imported arms to resist the National authority, and defeat, the National laws', and that all the democrats 'there assembled-agreed to justify that proceed ing, Ithhifc yWwill-agree With . nip that the •ffichniond democrats'and the Chicago demo­crats havo lately come to act very much alike.

I shall now go further aUdprove to you that they notonly have a commonjpolicy, and a com­mon way of defending it, bill* they have even adoptedthat policy m concert ;wiih each other. Fou know that .when, tbp Chicago Convention was approaching ih July last, George Sanders, Clement 0 . ClayVand J. P. Holcomb, appeared at the Clifton House, on the; Canada bank ofthe Niagara' river, fully invested with the confidence and acquainted with the purposes • of Jefferson Davis and his confederates at Richmond You know, also, that Chicago Democrats resorted there in considerable numbers, to confer with these emissaries_pf JeffersonDavis. .Here isihe fruit of that conference, and no one can deny the authenticity of my evidence. It is extracted from the London Times, th» common organ" of all the erieriies'of tho United States. The New Fork correspondent of Ihe London Times, writ­ing from Niagara Fails, under date of August ddysays^ . . .. ;. .. ..^

"Clifton House has become a center of nego­tiations between the Northern friends of peace and Southern agents, which propose a with­drawal of^difierifnces ftom £he. arbitrament of ihe.swofd„:vTlte» correspondent then goes on to

H«iostre«arBtdfro|6frewT«k wita a large Stoilfafi

-* !*>- .

PATENT SREEOH L0AD1M8

The >»*«t sXisitwIe suisl k>wr«Me «t \ \ sassy R i s l e ls iwes i te« f i"

caarriiooi cask*. . n» «•»»»,?«• Jkt&zy

AstT-- o>

_ ta* toadewaodta^uyaswss^eltaaias , }*l»»aw

cKUrwn siirtE rtm ppstwMM : s»ac—»t+w*»*r%m9*»»*4lmm$l**.

i*H*^,iMt*uBt.O-mmm*^>---> »iw»»' Sb«a«ai>aaa,«m«aia.a|k«a., ' * -s;irawi^aaT*ts^au,|riv _ ^

:| • - • — . - . « ' • - " N - ., . « t S t

'" twjuiifsmsi <TInfmiiiiatiiT .

: a o o a t b ^ a y ^ f v ^ W W y ^ i ^ ' i W d . . '^a-;

3i»inJst.St»Antoii .-. «'.<'.i'"-'.-*:.;..3.-.- jt},'- !'; '-'

ithis:Bews ©omWi^ « g ^ W < p j ^ j p ^ k | i > i t : '

racts thtJ^hterest bf l l w ^

wait'fprparticulai*}-;-'.'^ -\'^\:~?.t:.';';-:''-~% I Thlsi vicioiy comes inr'the^ghto^e^lpn^~

fe fills lit f ( i t l»; i^»e^^ •iaSnesand Moigan,wbich^ I understand to ;be i lie particular* of Fi*ri^ut;s glru-jous- naval bat-

' f . e ^ l ^ ^ | ^ o b i k ^ . s ^ ! i e ^ .i[her'inAmeric«n*istory;buithtB»^ nenis of the iam^1 veteran admiral at New tptr-' ^risand Port Hudson, and all. >hbee have p^ •arallelinnaval warfare, totilie. battles of tht mhtiad tnOiijgiir.:'' {A v o ^ l ' i r l s l r lifrmikk: ill Farragnts.V Well my fH«ndrI

flte6ir'''tnw. i 'dmlx»r.wel l ,ar idlc^l^thitw««llc^ ^Viaguts. Indeed", Yeryfe'w l ) f » «uir. Buk veniayUkethlscomfcrt ourselves'tbat as a *hofe pedple, we ca^ appreciate theTMerar*— W c s u aWsppr^ has per*. toriried the mo« s o c t t ^ l and spfcmdfd m a ^

J £..roogh a jMOuntalnobs and hoattle -cbimtry' re--:(uMe4 in m«Mjern history, and; In doing this w*

s low ourselves inferior in virtue to no Other na-,t:bn*: ~-~\^-,/:~:';^r ,,I;''^^l^'/- :-';'1t>' y!&f.-tbiway, e v ^ ^ y ' * r i m i ^ # ^ f ^ t * s S ^ ' -viscn in climblnf to thai mast to direct th^baf-tle. But there Wasauother-particular," of that dtntea* tnatnolewsfbtdbiyhhistw^ O laraeter/ '*AdmbaV said one of hii ofBperi. vhealgirt oefbre> ttebittle, "vfoirt y6o cMsent a giveJ«cl; tglas* ofgrogtfo i^iiaoraftig^riot bough to make him drunk, but jdst enough to !»kehim :f lg» ebeerfnlly" «We»^ replied ht> Admiral, "I nave been to sea cowaVlmbie,

a id have seen a bartle oi4 two, but I never found t tatTwatiitd ntm to suable me w do nrydnty. ! wHJoi tier two cntts of sood coffee, to tmck nan," at two o'clock, and at eighi o'clock I will pip. all hands to breakfast, (n Mobile Bar ."-itfarrah tor Farragui.) And he did f i r . J v k l»S isflal,-sjs»i Us—Jsa wwt i > i i ~

^ r . ^ n d ' ^t-Mah'm^ryn^ Dermicrais, but w^p;tsJWn^tj(«it,iy^ are Democrats no longer. All of whom are now Uflionjnjenj b^otOsej they found out at the be-gionf^pfthis itn^ridJ»^vU'^ai^brat-8omer

r*ribti|of Its ingress, t|at no" mahrTno party-^: no formula—no creed could save the Union; but that only4lie peb|He" «i*aa- savo ft, and they

]im^m^:S^t^m.Pi^M»n4 UfJion men.^ •tClheewfor^tfae^flloniy i, ,-x ;, , ' ' ^ • ? % ^ i r l ^ d - f # , f f l ' ^ ^ jto/Uie'rMoratlpa ofShe .^olb^iibv'fmaa then

its oomlni^pei hftj was^diher arlladicalw ior »c CphseryitWej *Republksm" or Democrat^ but

af l :Uur S t<^e4"ajBd. U SC0pdif |p^

if.^ut*hy»li06ia partya^H^tispecialiyfat this •jft&iixy- &\ii& *hi M^d^pie. And -irkyshooldl,amiitnber Wtheixecot^r*Ad^ • j n i f t f a i r M j ^ - | ] B ^ Y ^ ^ j L » # ) S ^ ' i K S % ' ' - | | S ^ ' V tution of our country commands thai AdmlnhV tra(ionto^rrenderftspowe^*tothePeopIe,and i l w P a » ^ t o * ^ g w e A g f ^ U , t p ^ « exercls*tbwmfburyw«rs. • Toaxeosiw the Ex-•ic#l)re Government in a coadttlon very-differ ent andhi^hjy kBBfoyed-We found rtpricB-1

cally expelled from the whole country sooth of tWD^ware,th«^hlo,»jnd thels^ssourl, with Ore mortof the army^and navy betray^ len infoth« hands of the insargents, and« n:ew and treasonable CoB*deracy with the indirect but effective co-bperatfon of Foreign Toiier$^

a candidate fbr the Presidency on the platform •if an armistice'and a convention of states, and to thwart by all^poesibleaneans the efforts of itfr. Lincoln for r^lecUoh.", •

Mark now, thait on the 8th of August, 1864, Northern Democrats and Richmond agenis igree upon three thingi to be done ut Chicagot'

Namely:' FuTit.-AwitUdraWal ofthe differen-, ces between the government and the insurgents, from the arbitrament ofthe sword. 2d. A nom­ination for President of the United States, on a

1i>b^prn|^o| iitpt0§^ and ultimately a con­vention of the 'States, fid. *To 'thwart* by all possible,, means, ,tho re-election- of Abraham Lincoln, . ^.

Such a conference, held in a neutral country between professedly ioyal cilizeus of .the United states and the agent's of the Richmond .traitors «n. armB, fhas »., very suspicious look. But let ha* pass. J^pli pajjelections^must be free,, and therefore- they justly excuse many extravagan­cies,. ;W.e have nqw iseea wlu# the, ageuts oi Pompey and Cffisar' agreed 'at Niagara, that Pompey should,do at Chicago, ;Here is what

Jtoelved, That this Convention does explicitr ydeclare, ns the sense ofthe American people,

Union by the experiment1 o f war, during which, .inder the pretenw|,.of •* injijita^ry necessity of

bro^eiimt tu i |pA^o^!Sa i ! ^ *&£ COnsatution, the Ing the qtttAUbn 'Wite^ef^^ereafs^wW/-ahal^ ISi^M^Wli^^^^^1^^^&&*>& Amij6^acfetwiHtibftahda'.C^unirViWfbs. koul jiart,imd^i^rHciiberty and ^rivafo right alike suuii we vole, tntai, to nave our 'country firoui v'rodden dbym} and tho material prosperity oi, taaiiearfuiu^Bgerr'iVoteJ^ he country esseotkUyimpau^, justice, htf-;

T6 Bm. R\ men, BaSfae**'• • '•"•":; * Platfortti and 'Presidelifrfat nonjfnee'i jansatis-

foctPtJ*. 3ftoerPre8idenfc p.nd speeches iatisfke-tory. TeUPiAU^morennttoioppose.. . . .

(Signed) -- --:- GEOVN: SANDERS. D. Wier is a RieTimoBd'»swiijplice at Hali­

fax, and Phileraoreis undprs^rxidtb be the con­ductor ofthe insurgent organ in London. .

Here then •m^^k'iiSM&SmsnaBSSrwpiiit-form which were made by treaty, formally con­tracted between the Democratic, traitors. at Richmond; and the Democratic opposition at Chicago,' signed, sealed, attested, and delivered in the prc-M-nce of the London 7Vff?e«,and al­ready ratified :st Richmond, ("By Heaven* aveVe trot 'em."; Got them, to be sureyoa'vegot them, my friends. Thpy say I «m a,Itvays too sanguine of the success of national candidates and of the national arms. But it seems to me that the veriest croaker in all our loyal camp will take new courage, and become heroic when he sees that tho last hope of the rebellion, bangs upontheratifi&ition.of thjsab<iminable/and de­testable compact by the American^ople;

Tea, you have got them; b'ut'-b^; did'yon get them r Not by .apy skill pr art t?f tl|e Ad­ministration, or even through the sagacity or activity of the loyal people, but through the cunning ofthe conspirators^overreaching itself, and thus working out their own defeat and confusion. They dosay that the.father of evil always indulges his chosen disciples with such an excess of subtlety, as to render their ultimate ruin and punishment inevitable, ,. ^ T .. • . And what a time is this to proclaim such a policy, conceived, m treachery and -brought forth with shameless effrontery. A. cessation of hostilities On the heel of decisive naval.and land battles, at the very moment, that the, rebellion, without a single fort in its- possession on the ocean.jpr on either ofthe great rivers or lakes, is crumbling to the earth, and at |he same time>

a dozen new ships o f war are going to complete the investment by sea, and--three hundred "thousand volunteers are rushing to-the lines, to complete the work of restoration and paci­fication. . - • - > -.

There is a maxim whichthoughlfiil teachers always carefully inculcate. Xt is'that'incon­stancy is imbecility, and that perseverance is necessary to insure success. Thismaxiln was set forth in the form of s copy in ^ho writing book, when I was young: "Perseveranceal­ways conquers." Even infantile beg{nne/s en­countered the instruction in the form'ot * fable in Webster's spelling book. The storywas that after using soft words and tufts of grass, the farmer tried what virtue there was in stones, and by persistence in that application he brought the rude boy who was-stealing'apples.'down from the tree, and made iiito ask the farmer's pardon. Our Chicago teachers tell us that just

explain that an effort is to be made to nominate as thorude boy is coming down; wo must lay

To be sure it is so; hothttig is more certain thaii: tuat ei»uefcthKU^lfo;S^tstt>8|»uatheir Con^ siituiiunal Preaiueu I, ur the so-calted Conleder-aie butles, knu uteir "uaurpttig PrewUent, iuuo.-»:ule Hjtuia me itmiit* oi .mia.Atepuohc.^J. tiiereV foro^eiimtlue PfewdeuliMiiiiecaon as in volt -

down the stones and resort agiitn to the;use of grass, with the consequence, of course^ that the firmer must beg pardon of the tresspasser. But what makes this Chicago policy more con­temptible, and even ridiculous, is that it is noth­ing different from the pojicy with • which the same parties now contracting actually; ushered iu disunion in 1401, in the closing hours »f the Admistration of James Buchanan.. , .

Yes, my dear friends, when we of this Ad­ministration came, Into put .places in ihtrcti, 1801, we found there existing jjist Ihe .system which, is nowrecommended^tCbicagornamely: 1st, a treasonable confederacy in arms Sgaiu-1

,$he re^j^m^>^ M^pi^J^^n tl.e Government of tho'Unitcd, States and the rebels, a veritable armistice] "Which; twits' so cons.rued that while the National ports ahd forts were thoroughly invested along the sea ;c<;ast and rivers by ';tto iWurgen}s,3tu|3fiCbUld^3teiiher reinforced, nor supplied even" with food,* by the government. 3d. A languiddebate With a view to an ultimate National Convention,, w|iicli the • bels> iujwily^^pisedm^d^^ rejected.' What were the alternatives' left us ? ;EitlierfttO; surrender qu^tvesand the^vemr meut at discretion, or to suutmon $Cr«p|)le to arms, terminate ihe armistice, adjourn the de­moralizing deliate,, and ^rei^scss'^onfeelvra

all the treaaureihat b^bjen spent, and all the precious blood that has been poured forth, gone for nothing else but to secure- nh ignondnions retreitC and return' 4 ; t ^ n d o f fpuifytors to the «ftop>le»i imbecility tam rapidi«l»rojcsB8 of

perish and leave no rppt«frJtf ^db^lliiwwisut we have only the aiternaifves of acquiescence m a perpetual u^pation.Or of entering an'enu kasaue^sswhoi wvi iand Uptiif these grounds, euiirely irrespecUve of plaU'jrn, and jCauuiaaie, Lcomwer the recommeadaiiout. m iueUouvemiou*lCuk»go,« Tert thf ^]^^:!ii^0bf0^%^piaf) i -..t 'l , It^lft #eem,», Intra tiuiig; whert | u^piy^tbaij f ^bkrty, like the Democratic / p a ^ c a k ' either' inedisieor bliuly ad^pt mea»Mre^ » evtuthro w jtlie«ei«ibltc., All. jexperien«r,#»W9f«i shows? that it is. by the malice o* tho niadness ot" great I k a ^ t n i i t F r i s a f ^ to u>!t«uctioo. You otTCT hew;alarms that* party in power is subverting\ <hp .«jtste» andq sutneOnws hapjKo* so. Butuine times out pi ten, i t is a party otlt of power,tlutijii Itfimpa-^w«*««#lli ambitioti oterthrows* Republic, .

" Tftt Oenwcratlcpatny, of ooiirse, leaving ofl 4l(4L^al.17iiioit Dtaaocrats, opposed the eiec

esiabllihingitself on ihe Gulf of Mexico. We I Uoa of Abraham Lincoln, in 18«0., In doingso clhierfB'Jly giv* ta« GOvetanMnt back to you I t^ey divided w d orgauisod in three column*.

fJSfBS^^pR fvsssasis^saa^sjytl al.ssV.fxSys|s1s]Mw

:j v.. m

with large and conqu^rtDa;«rniies,a»da trium-phantjtavy, wlt*tl«!h"»tefotConf(sdaafacy^ into pieces, aadtk* rwbtllkws Stat«% otaaaftar aitolsMr, rMuraiag «»their allsjtoMoe. :

Regardhig myself now, thertfore, notlas a Stwretary.botslBipIy af ot>e of ths p«op*»,I, like you, am called by my vote to detarmine in­to whose hands the pnaiooa trust shall now bs) confided. Wo mbrht wtsh to avoid, or at leaat to MMBams that duty, antil the present fHrfnl CTisss tspssstd. ButitcauiotsjKl.Uosjariitsrot sstearswdsdor salJsjafBsA tt js »Ooa«Uta-tk>tMtTisU,a«i4sWSsissB«sWStf» tbro«ft. it dsHI SfaaatyMjd brsrvely.

asaJhSslasaaSksi. t^saasafaa w>Kt*t| I jwaaa WsMtMsjat-^s^awaw^sa^ajs^ppsa^isa^^BnBi^ vsjaww ^ ^ ^ F ^ ^ ^ a s s F aw sawas^psss* ss> a a w a w w ^ i ^srajPS*JBJaV*JB^sjrv

ssl toaslosji, sssd Hw Mssoas for tt, iWWaVllsiysajtsi.

Osiea titauliwableooitttiu, of fJtjMe Sights,dit-urfoii Democrats ondei- Breckenridlge. A sec­ond, a loyad northern column,^lpder Douglas,— Tke third a coaoliatory flying eoiiwn, nndel' Joblt Bett, Ts/k© hassince joined tlie insurgents, f^e ttereopoB invited the two loyal colnmns to eonWn« with the RepubUcan party to oppoaV tJtftdtaaion dentocraikcoluBan. '. Tbey declin­ed • J h t k w m o f the eitptioahi WM,Itol«T Uw followers of Dottglaa said of BJstt, that when the eketisM should bat* etossd, tkpyimdd fls4j tkey bad busdverteauly Ikvarad djsBaioa sast rsbsiHosj. Tbey pstsistsd, assl ss^s, sttssnpssd ravestloo eawt. Dssnnlon thssj , ftjaiiiitsd ft. a«h;ra ISM practical form of sjpsJse0s4 Abra-

*entibn-df ajl tho States, or p.ther|*aceal .oieaosto tho end.thata^theegrliestpracticiible ttoinent peace ina^ be restored'gta Ike basis ol

^hfiife4eral.,Pnipa^f4|fi8^ ',i^ •' ' ^ f ho fiemb^rley: # ''^^'-Mi^fstp just what had been agreed upon with the Richmood ^ n t s at; 3«*tjpar% 4 l a m e ^ jpf i p j ^ d p a m ^ the Unipo agaiast,-^li« ir#oi^i%|ijrith a vieiv to an uldms^ N a t i o n Convention, and the de­feat of the elecUonc^" Abraham Lmcoln. Thsi wtos%y, thiypropcMisditoejwtAbiuhamLin­coln from Ihe Pi^antiklChwr at Washington on the 4th of Marcb next, andat the same time teavgtlieiisnrpertl>tyistunsasa unmolested in his se#v at Richmond, with a view to an ulUmste r^vention ofstates, which tl!atiUurperV<)on.tituticmwUlsllowjTOooeof the; ihsurgwtt. States '-tor'eoiervr ^PUf~itby€if • there be job ConvehUon at all, or i f the Conven­tion fail to igree oft a wlKtttssioa to the Federal luthorityf Jeff«sson Davis liren rtenrains in iutfaority, his Cbnlederacy esfabllshed, and the Union with sJl Wglories'ls gone forever. Nay* more, If soch a thing could happett sit that .the' Chicago candidate, nominated upon such an igreeoseat, should be elected President of the United Stats* oa th* 1st Tuesday tot Nov«»btr next, whocan vouch iWtlie safety of the cbasv. xry sgainst the jebehf * i r » t the tetarral%hk* moat elapse before the new adrnteistratloo caw consdtmlooally cotwimopewtf It seems s*>

national dissolution, which existed when Abra. ham Lincoln took into bis bands- the iejns vf (3oy^h|meiifc'',.^'.-J .lt, ,'".,_., ..;' ,''•'/''

accissifittiOf Abr4iiini IgneoMju^'at^ltaf Hmo the Union would in less thait three months have falle^ti.iiitb <s}t}8pjate^odJa^^e^bto^ijin. '~i "wiU)notdwelliongjptii4hl of ttj^Sfe]

iriiignirjjd butf p | S n ^ t i p n a ^ p ^ ^ i # . m e n , bring against the Adminu^vtipn'pf ^br}ibam Lincoln. They complain of Military arrests of spi« ' s ^ ' l ^ ] ^ ' t ^ ^ ^ | ^ ' ^ ^ ; ^ e B , as if the Government could ju^ifyitsejf for^ wait-

States to beiovaded or to, be, carried off into

flWg^l&stet;^ •^4|0>-s^.a/-.v> •.-•"• They complain that wheu we call, for volun­

teers f e . j b l ^ i t , ^j^^^^^OL-.mttt. when the ship has been scuttled the, captain

Jsssursatss tbs T & f a t a a t l tolavtss- ' taWftsW.

. I» ifwshss for « • ***'*»& *° l ive J o e **• pi<s^,1b>t s>tboqs> tkf way In w£ M M taSSaa sktaev dad WaattaaadbBCaVi ^ s a ^ s m s r ^ ^ v a w a w ^ r ^ p a y ^ s a ^ ^ ^ s ^ ^ » •v^Haaaw.^sawawaa, W ^ a w ^ , i

sa t h s k DSavssts» yss jsrs . wee sr«t

secret places, but they go up and do|v'ii.the{pub-Iki's^r^^utferinjEjjireJ^]^ to rwvpkearrest in order tltat A of a denial of the liberty of spoetdL Tte, iu -, p ^ r d t y % ^ : * ^ f J » ^ e ^ i t y » i i ^ tion ofooosiitntioaal debate,, shows at one and the same lime, that their erittphdota are ground -less, and tbatt the Union ie the elenieat4if moral

"'• lTne cfarrf (WsatOalttf ss^s»»st tsasIVaaadiut Is that he wHI net accept eeesi'am tislisawsof the lutejpltyof tlis Utdstt,,i**nbeM%siarliigaajBe the •buo^soMnt of slsrery.'« WIHBT •*»* asbere b«f« -tbe iaaurgeeta tiiuitA btssa^feelsh the -

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