SlideShare uma empresa Scribd logo
1 de 4
Baixar para ler offline
VOL XXIII. NO. 11.
Ijtatfmn] gurti-^townj £tnn(XM.
rnni.ispn-:!) weekly, on satuhday.
IT WO DOLUU 10:11 Isxnii,
AMERICAN ANTI-SI„Vi;itV SOCIETY.
PENNSTLTANIA ANTI-SLAVERT SOCll.TV.
IOC ,„rll,.T. n lh Strut, I'liilwldphi'i.
,!;"''• "". •/"<"". •>' rcl. c In any w,,y t„ ,],
'Vi'i'
>.',-;;!'!,,
«'r,' m'
1
;;'-, ^
!
'" Mr
:
''' ."''""
NEW Y011K, SAT[
t
RDAY7 JULY 26~18627
one iherc without tenia, ns fn,t as marchin
gluing could hnve taken ii 9 (hero — [he n
uidll.g UN liy liny—by night, bringing lllilltcll
[Wn whmh our cob, , ,XII1 |.] sab-ly „„i r ,-
"rely win vicUirics. l'bc a |„yP u Bfng our
id pnmpiiicn m Virginia had now boon clone
ic heart oi (lie rebeTlion hnd nearly ceased to
low'tana il with us. on the contrary? H7,t
U the truth ofth* condition of IhiM army?
1 Liivn talked uilh ninny irniilligmii ,'„cn of
i this subject. The superior nun of nil in k
[' I'm,,." I one. day ,lr,,v l,r„. oi,i of hi. gu
k-n.v I'll Mils theuic hi saying, " 1 aw mrr
>».. ihnt the negroes in ibis Peninsula don't
WHOLE NO. 1,155,
.v II..].".. h. - ,-,],, i
light wiihoni
nnil impede, I
"1 red; on •
, Mr. Y. Yon kne
geUtims,
AN ALLIANCE WITH
'n one know. I
battle, save Ira wh
Ir. e WMlO 01
" I'i by don't limy fight for us, Tom r
'
rboy expected to. B i r , ni.a nil ihe ,
"" ,, " rv L " '•Ml*. eV|.CCICll to."
iVhj.li.ki-, it,,, .
'
"inn kuuw .n ...II as |. Yl„ W1 .
r„
ir lilies mill crimp., nnil prcity plain
i ili.lnl want miyiliing Io do null ii
or lo lunkenslavi-ol any ol ihcpnille of (hi.
, school, lly nnd by tliev will gut |u reading
xiutuH ns " 1)„ ifiiti) others na lliou ijouldst be
nlo," mnl unking personal applications of the
Am! ihci, iihiii'n io 1.1,-nw ol il,, r,. r ,siiiu-
d property io "niggers"?
McM.iihsiLssiBtnnt.. were nil volunlfrs from
-
n blnik In
:itz
iiii.i i
> i^i n-
d.i i
I inn of |.
I., !l,„ I
lin.1i ,
llniiit, .1 (Dlilicrn Ironi the picket riuullin
i;round,nud the sentry *s path, tn every linrd lain
l-n.iwn io ilihn-iv.i warfare, nnd [lie 'opfniii" an
kcltlciiiout of a wilderness country. Drum rs. In
your drums, mid . nil mm ...II- Sergeants, and lin
me, il" you can, PL'tn meiiort-mklc.'s Brigade, Wh, ,
are tho rest? 1 lake tlit.-c negroes ol Vitamin i
"llni - i _-i,- -i 1 1..- mnlriciilHl polio) of carrying o
n >v:u ii^sijn,! our tminlrv il,rl,'Hli of gcni|i,| .in
eounlry'a eiumi..-. ili.-.t iL.'v lum> Ih.ti killed will
the shovel mnl the pieknxc—Ihnl (bey have literally
n j;rnves nnd channelled their iwrnm-
™ into our Hwauip-cnoirded lioipil.1.,
-s of Virginia I lie wiineii-i.-i'— ihiiiIhim
f Fn oiloiu hut lliua liir has only been n wnr
of her oitn wsrriofJionB
,oll.er. Why do v.,- mil
u tin- whole ipicM I>v
undo the waves ol llic
du^' llicir
The i
hi].,,-
{re-iftiul the I'
rntiiicd in Gem
ihe Union ui-mir
«1U mull a
.ed.mi.i
Imvo In inslil) lint i.lliriiiiv. 1 iudnMilnlili|;ly add Hi-
le.-liuinn. of a i|imvH'r of h vein's en perlomnj in mil-
l'eiiinjulTir Wat. lb,I it is utterly ititpu&ibli for m
to fwl.tliw th' Tchds without -til nfli.iNc,- irilh Inmr
i. And, uim-k my »-i
without tloiag axjustii • ittli f ii oirn
jKilUiotl j/.ll-.ru. <ipji/ i/iiiii- r.i. .,.! •
i
III. i .'^l:iiid
tcill be Ihe principal ageo I. H I r«o nun
in W.isliin^lon wlm know the  < I II"' iliiiinT
li.blo liilk u'l' e resit nun, mid .'ell. Davis., .mill Keitt,
and Floyd, have iil.vuja miide modi of the je.iluiiny
Engirt lid of the iipsniiiln.lurera of your North.
You hn
Mi radical rensor, for tbi? fiiilh it
eniiUi-farryonwiirwhicliisliol.;
Inr ilnim^li lliis war. ihe first thiol
the lii-ginning of I. ibrob. bint
tbe » „d ,,
tn felL
iftbe
1 ilm bund nlilwii
. .
..I ,badwovcu,baakrupIey(lcepli
into it, nnd I'n-i'i.srtd for ua in.-v.Mble fi.di.r,;. Ilul
1 find in iho clmr-n-tcr of ihe Snilln-rn country, in us
iiiiiueiific extent, nnd in ihe implnesilile, domitieei'ing
temper of its while |iopiil:iiion, iiwiiimounliible oV
rtlin-l.;. io our [in.iided success.
IVc demonstrated before Maiuuwu tlml conceded
Ibe nid of the slitves. The hiilory ol wnr do.s i.oi
nf lin
i.nip.il
worth of pranerly
stolid' under f.pr hi months, withi n nuh'--
foe. When they bic.an lo evneiinle n en
'
wlii.-b oulv olir ll.ii k iijiir.r.-.iiie hid .onu-rii
.-, ,,i-i..,[.,.i. rre km-" nolblng of il- Tboy u
awny wiihesiimon, wi. FK on-. fn..d, lifi^i-i
tluribi —not leaving n. dollar*
behind—innkiii!! n fnullliaia
nuihing of il- A pedler from a New England HtH
drivinii n horse of ihe linrebom . lined, Has the li
man to enter llw evaciiated Hunmsu, and ta
Ki.wd up in his wa--oii front. jii|ipiuy hit, clolbcs-l
reins, una the l">< man lo wonder at Ibe pnei
uhaniitir (if ihe •< hool-v.ird dirt works before wb
nn army ol" over -.'iin.dui n had L,-in kepi al li
Nay, noi Wept nt bay by the children', diri-workt
but by the ioiiRnpiini.s of mi ignorance, which could
not posaibly linvi U..n r,Lir?i-d nnd rouiniaintd, bud
(ho right hi.inl nf lirotlicrboiid hien stretched out i
tin- neyrotJi in lin hnioud, ul.d had Ihe President i
t'ommnnder-in-rhiif said : "Tell ua wlinl jour Wi
Department doe« ; where th,- rein 1 forces nn
*
miin lh' are, and I>;11 m ihw dnile. mid v.
forever be free." Wi-lls, Butlerlield 4: Co
r.n n i-nr.'r express bttwc.n bmKlo ami Albnny
tban the underground n.ililary e>|ire.'a I hat would
have been run In-iween Itichmond and IVnshiugion
on thisinilinl nllinnie b.tw.:.-ii the while Union men
of the North and the black Union men of lliu Soutb.
!„l.,lru3 rviib.nil these btneks, or es posed to bn
bniard. Landed bI Fort M'inroe, and llounden
throu-li the main road up to Hampton and nbotc
—where were sro! "Without, uinps, wilhout giudi-.
The country wan u vtildemeKs.  c bud not a nerop
of il survey tu big nvg the hand, that showed tbe
courses of the innumerable wood rondo llinl wound
through it. The old Const Survey chart of the
oiindings of the York and James lliirem, wit'
«in»le turnpike to Yorktonn, WiHinnisbur 4
rtwhipyn,
hope to "Ou .V,.r/-„T,r „„„. If your noli
' rat n k. l ]: U ,:.ivi,;.w,.wil||ryloi,,iil
villi il„. rebels. Il ul you had belter uargnin
with lls-lind belter fn..c. m and arm um. How loi...
Id Ibis „nr l„,t if we were (reed by net of Con-
t'roclnninf ion —both of Ibti
I nlone hesi of all, though.
r books. Will, il,.- nnmr.-.l e.-.-iiti
r .|i,l,lr,.„,,.ll ll,„ |ii,|.,|, ,,|„I,„ : ,I ,
id graliliea
.1 i'r.1. i- e Comnmndora of nil
ntboSoulhi Wliy,ihureljelnt
hed.i. ,1 Ihe C ni
ml rcrudi
lir,..,^(it
height, dihijiidiiti d (like ,„„-i iSoiiihern
hoi)-cs),nnd standing upon nil open fonndiitiun ol
hnek, with two toll, forn.nl cbiraneys, npparenlly
growing through it, nnd |.., n h,-- in 'front mnl rear
the former luiiking n.-nward. Like the house of the
eevn in Uhi.iic,.,. it ,„ nil " pilmdoweil Willi oreone
ecs," the cedar, the collou-wond, the live-oiik, lig,
u'berrj.nnil ini;in.li.i, all , r^ing from ihe .-mnl'
light toil siL.Tiiir,^ from vi^rialdc duouipo-ilion.
*,V.'-:( '
:.!' S
l
!i^t(
,
"t:SroT1^ln^-''n^'-C^•'=Sl^.rts- oei< =h-
mped in front.
Tfio ocension Wn. nilher
Dnpont and stall' being presei
Uov. Siixlon (whose headi pin r In m lire now at He
I) bad nl-io been ex peeled, but did not nppui
,-ildj the ariivnl n( a imiil iVoin ilie North, :
ni'in^iliilitii-.s tlurrlioni. ileliiiiied them. A linl
moil be tbe Itei. Mr. Cubby,
us, Jli. IV. Hur elim uram.
tin: ,..-. of Ihirt
o take political action, and h
.e Iheir Gngora lo set tbeni tooei- upon yon, nni
you Northward. Yoa had letter take us. Mi
Indeed, you huvu got to take us. For if yo
'o incA- out of this aar you teon't be permitteil t
lb..
c got tc
know 111.' sin Velio I, I.T.-.
ViT, I I' 1 HI
I New Vork', IIUJ lieili l.cons'lrinl lin- Unio
themselves at the lop nnd you nt tbe hollum.
•
>f thv Nurlh irillooiiito dJin-ry, unl
ink* its Worf- man of the South out of tit - -
t not a limit deal •/
w/iid lo'tftciile what yon teilldol"
iki. the seiiliiiR-iit.i of" Ins r:i.e. Stale-iunu
nnd nol.hers will heed lb
:,ne kft
I SUNDAY AT TOUT ROYAL.
— THE COSTRi
lehelil tbe two best tbitigx that hn 1
f this war—a Sunday-school lor n
c of South Carolina, nnd an cuihr;
In accordance, with a promise e
L'ent letter, 1 »ui about to give n
id impressione with regard lo then
iiond. is ihe cuide i
I
„,„„.,,' win
i ;,„l,,,!--„l,
1 led t
Win
„ Vorklo-.vi
would strike the
1,1-Jllll give Grin bottom
. limy were tn.-1iii.-iL lin ir
bed nc
No oi know, aava Mm
wn woi ,1 hud a purl o
bolar* nppeared, dro|
,ing in by ones mm iwos—I'.rat thu ehildrcn, (be
Vnj> n mnl girls, and grown-np men mnl women. Tl
very first —n shy, dn.-ki urchin of five, who cmr
deeuron-lv in ami deposited himself in a. corner-
wua promptly rewarded for Ilia icnl with a quurlt
dollar, gneu ta bun by a middle-aged gcntlemni
clnd in u loose Ilm I eotii, nuijde, blue, military
trowsers and straw hat. Ills ipiieily-re.-olute fn
and Ihin. grinlcd lnuslache, wen- strongly indie.it
ol character ;
one did not need the removing
touching of btiln on tbe part of by slander* to (in-
nounco thai be wns Kwnefiody. It wna M.nj.-(ien
llunli r. t'omuisiinli-r of Ihe Di.|iarl.neiit of Ihe £'oulh
will be known in future bisiories of the rcbelliot
who lirst a, led upon llle nei-essity of wrest
- "f the froc- nnd lixu-if ,j;.t„rl,. ,|'
- ........sled on the Drnyl
In t'-n. llunlei- belongs the hoi
ns regiment. Tin. men, gatln.r.d (ogeiln
ml il... adjacent i-lnnrls, havo all been;
• uignnl ..',,i„in „,I,ui i),.., ;, r,.
n ,
M ,
do Did United .States service, coii.coi
eeive nn pay, Well fed, however, n
eaie.l. ihey nn willing and
'' K
7 '"• -'Idi..™; only, m„
••" pbwlatioii life after working
lr ° rkwl by th„ nccessare resTaint
tbtrelore, some run ollns tiuna lo.ec mfe oi
'•r.'ll.l returning II,., ,v,.il Ir.r.l „. il,
""'" l "'1 ", at the risk of uiidc.-ervcil dcri
u/"")li<y- Too moeb credit can hardl'y be
.. ,h,„ ,,llu:ers-lhey are all y „nE
_
their niunil e„„r„g,. ,„ „i,„,„j nM
positions rendered omrous by minonnon,
uiipiWnnl by il„. „„.... r .,i,|,, [.„.„„,:,„ „„„. ,;„,..
a ingger r..-g.ni,.-nl." Where ail are gno.1 ,i ,, r
be thought invidious to ,j, l; H , „„,. .
i,,.,,:,!,,,,".
1 would e-peciallj iimti r.int i
I, i.J, . I ri.n I..,,!~ r
" ujipani' A. II. w .ik. j ... I,-.. ,, !,.(„,,,,
,','
I'guuent will he
history.
of Jae.
1:1,11 0., July 8.1SC-J
in* I,
irilaled Juno I2th,ii
-'- "'< com leoltoi..
deep ,v, mils. I eame up
itli .iiiii,, a L-illagi- i'i ii
"'' .,» I,r:,,„,
. io the Louao ii
oldfashioi
jing by (he n i tin
Irill began at f.',_. pin . ill nn open spine in
of Ibe liotifC, bordering il litlls grovo Ol livi
d other tree, whote brum hca reneli ihu lliict
owth bvnenth and create n ilinde oven in ihe
.., shelleiing thu solitary tomb of "Jiniius
who died nt bin late lesnlener, nn Hilton
Klitnd, he Kub ol February. !&!'•, aged
be embryo regiiuenl, snniewhstt ItiS ihmi 500
icr, wa. drawn up in line, facing ihe o veiling
e, and put through the iuniin.it of inns by an
Gei>. Hunter's, temporarily its head in ibe
. of Col, Mnn.in.ic, who recently relumed lo
e Suite uf Illinois in .barge of Mnj. Wright,
in Island.
•m.','. nn
iM,'.' h ,i
II liud
llioj lone been under [he
'" Mllilell.i.li ,
I, ;.,k, .
., .1,, |, i,,,.
'
-i "' In " n.-i i. , wort:.
-
Irnola would be of 1nlerv.1t
"»""'. J.vi are 1,1 liberty 10 u-c tim
n-e ii? withhold the name ol Ilie
received since Ihe enclosed, it appear,
fifty abtves are now in the .Inybi.wkcrs
yot, nltltoiigli sln.i-.
1 iuu camp almost dad,
1st be utilised and degraded
"g liei.ernls.nlinr Cmgnss bas .),-
1 110 pnrt of ihe busim
that
1 slai
uglil corn I
d while the
j house, and
p:,j Mr'bi,".
.lily- Allerweleft.lwo
.1. Km;
e. lijit Tlovt found
learned that he bin
mid c:
and got
llegoi then
laud No. Ill
Jen. .Mitchell's
ind be Ireatcd
L-»uf hisbUvcs
I. ,11 1 M.
-,u,ui-.i...
1 ml keep away from hi
ie hud an order from
nek, and ordered tbe 1
order from Gen. Mil
fold them to come wit
Simuis informed
:,.,. michell 1 ink.- 1I..11.
'" '-'nl-. l-u II,'.. -.,ke .,i ..,'.' ,. •
'. .
... -...;.- 111.. I II,. I. 111... IL I.,- Ill-i ll-IHl-1. , "I II
regiment of our troops 10 Order No. 3, will Ihe
fuel warrant an. i:oiammnli- leprice lie- cnunlri
ii" the service* of ihe latter, becnueo MaManioni5ta
lose those of the former, which wns made, mid will
be made, i-huuhl imolber opportunity oiler, available,
directly or indirectly, Tor ri.bt l puipoi
'
.pion Inn ol Congress ,
ck. 1 bid thu negroes, n.
.11.. li c.tuip. mnl 1 tell you Jennison's
ere aro,„e,l I At first, he gol Mitchell
la help I find them , hut the Uciiernl,
e of excitement which prevailed in the
amp, wisely
.,-,!, r li. .1 lie
.[unl number or while men, tu
could have done. An obserm
school, 1 noticed n look of hm
blnck fnccB iii.lici.iiv.. of nn nn
their docility el .-leir" 1 I rent)
'.thai th.-.r |.n,'. „.,-..i,l-l,. Wlm.
reglnnni was mm. h. d l.i il.ii.k.tl the parndc-
eround, until it mi-ived 11, front el heiiilqiiarters mid
llmre formed by divisions in • double row, I thnught
- "
.Igleilmed.as briglilli.im ranks stood
.-1- 1. Mild. 'II l-i----l an oppniluiui,- in In i.j I'lili.i
Hi.ll.-eks Onler No. 3. or let the " Jnyhawkera " " f..r
nmn)- 1 I had
,lulv-|.une.l ! I.e,v-|.-i[.. r-
LUve
1 New Vork 1.
Also. Ih.it T
s who hn1 bine been ilnvea—sin*
iibiindoned or been abandoned by lb
Talk to them, nnd yon shall hear their
BUggeslive enough. Thai intelligent-looking sergeant
(who
i,dcl.iiiii'!tu.Mr.t-i,-wi.i
nisked by thnt
when
tbcni. ILiere-t 11 was prupoi-.-., ... 0..1. .... m. ,0,-
w'ar.l 1 Lib, how must the tji -nni- ol llebellion have
grinned, from her onilook, at this unguided wander-
ing in an unmapped wildirn, -s of an nriuyot invasion!
Mnp.il Useless works of the engineering art, when
lie» roes, live maps, that ciu.hl see, nnd walk, nnd
tnfk, and poinl with ibe index fineer— crowds ol
them—to ' vviil.il. reach of our nrmy,
11.1/ ireiie.1t parts oj
eheit had thrown up
I'eni.
.till
from Ibe r .els
pleas,
Geo. Hunter than many another 01 his rai
that I could name.
in filling. Immediately
tbe principal teacher's tics
laciu" Ibe scholars) in a bench, seating nearly a
dorrii very young children—none, 1 should say, older
four yearn, (wo or Ihree senrcely one; hardly
,f Iheir little, blai k, lu.re legs 1,.,uch Ihe groinnl
Th'uy nre all cleanly dressed ;
one has a gay Btniw
decorated wiib nblums. but the majority arc
^bended. Tb.ir enli-ski I, dosky, ialiiiitile
tnecs and while ... -bulls look upward ill us,
the close-curling black wool, with Hint a]
glance peculiar 10 ihe negro—alwaya, to m
nig, irresistibly touching, and .-ugg..-,n.i> ol
eneo on, humility toward, and euireaty fur
consideration nt ihu Immla of, a sii|Mirior rai
ban a reully charming cou life nance—none i
lively iifilv. The physiognomy of one rjui
thing ic, indeed, comically suggestive of
Hia
Prime distninied the uteil S. .nil, em lid. on that
ibe Yankees would iransport hi in lo tuba, and there
sell him, being somehow pemunded that hi: freedom
luy in their direction, mnl this conviclion hu presently
acted upon. That muscular mulatto, owe a Geld
hand, possesses such strength thnt his owner required
that be should pin k Iimj nir.ri^inundii of cotton a da;
than bis fellows—beii.v, ./,nl'» buck is "cnllnscd
with lushes. A third has lived for sii month
together in Iho swamp—In en hunted by the Stale
louei-e'l"'/
:n! :!. r
rage, he w
rebelled, armed himself wilii
"ilnssa." For thia, he la;- th
weeks in irons, in Beaulorl jail,
tlu-k,
1 manhood, Ihu sla
an ax, and defied
I.Uul. Amholiy, who
iiciirring, ami he cam
.s acid nut to be bid. bill
is table nnd let them Ink
wns read) lor llns i--u
' ini (hi
I llnl guard I
u trying lo force
onhl punish any
1.1, V
,
"'
i
ll -'
,rr"'|"-""""'.''l'eol (he Hbue pop,,-
..Hon. netine fr „ m ,|„. !„,,„„.,;,„ ,,,..„„ fj|
' i
'""" "'"''ni ') servilude, (linl |l„. a^p.-araati; oi
our nrnue." .,-
„ tn awaken everywhi
notwiih-:i:ii„l,,.g (|,e pro-slavei-y pr,
! ' "' '"" ,; '.'n(-r:lls. Ii|.|lia;.-il'l„ .,
'"'."'"I tin- ,.,n„„| „, ,,„„ ,„„.„.;,
'""" ll
C 1 ' n.tlip-lllll,. r,„„.,|,-
»-«vs, never ,„,.:,. any i.peeo.l ,",,-,
"!"' '•' ''
'. 'oelii.-,.i,ri,g,.|l,..,rll„.|,
other hand, wi,,,, „„„,„, ,|„- ,„,,
liheiva, 1,. iheir c.,,,-..,,,,,..,,,.,,^ ,,
-'"l
'- ,] --'I™ !•) driving (hem
fulval
IU
,'
l
,"
K" l, '7-""-X '"II- Ami for ItTis
preialenco ol I,,,,,,,,,,,, feelings over in nn uiilitnry
refiulaiions, some of Ihe oil,. B nr0 ,0 l,„ ,-o.,rl-ma r.
"*
i"!'!',
,""' ° 1' ' L '' "-""t " la 'ure.ile.itd to be
tBl»*'«a 'hat. in the cases nt Ibe bolloni of
ouble, only maulers acimlc .|i-l..-, ,1 ,,,,„ ,,,-
t «p (o (he appearance of (ho Union troop,
iccnied, I ask, what shall ho thomdif of ihia
1
pohoy m ihe protein
iflairaT 'il. g.....r
,.!.,..- .,.1,1,,
.1,11, Csto'ii
Itching 1 Uo
1.1 1
.-
adroit black*
raodhowever
onfn.g only to the iilipr.:'.-.l.-m.-,ll , nlf-rri lin'l, ..(
."" ;-'.l i.-i do I..-I,,-, ,„ ,„, [iri,,i,,j ,. v„„, t
iuu prefer (hat rl,, , ,:..,
ilations nf il.r.
-tales to Ihe nnli ,lni!l I..- ,„-m-„,.,||,. r. -,,,„. ,
rithoul dislurbnii I .| K.
i unt it ut ii>n ami if ||„H
fjere done, my whole il,,| V , in thin n'cneci' unih.s
hu Constitution and my oath ol ulhee wo'ull I
l-crf.irmcd. b,,t ii i, not dor,.-, and wu aro Iryino 10
-icronipbsh it by war. The incidenla of the inamiol be avoid...], ll th. war coulinuei Inn,. ....
"""'.'!" 'i >«' so 1- ..I. -d.ihe'r.,!:
ilium invoiir^iites will bo e.liiiRuiriKjd by more
ricliiiii and nbrnaton—by the moro incidenla of
lluv
do irender us peeun
heller for vou, ,-is n-iu-i, 1, 1- iim •' .......1.
10 sell aul and buy mil ihut wiih.uit which Ihe war
could never have he- ihii io sink both Ilia thing
10 bu sold, ami ll.e price of il, in culling one ano-
ther's ibronis
l«-ik of . n.mnipniion n( once, but o( a
>..•! 1
in- e. ., dually. 1 loom in
l",',,' i.'i '.,.
..,'.,."." .'.
.1 when nmnbers shall
... 1. 1.. 1 .. . ..., nn; nnd • r r. mi
,,1 .,
nuunecd in. liable hypocrisy * Will nu
{jim I'roniilencc, BUChrouideriog lo lb
y cause of the rebellion retard the 1
1st
Among the officers placed under ,1 for k it of
i-uelit of rebel
„ .,..0 had lusl som.i ol ihu. .Imiiel.,
I iieinin-i .I'l.nliih- 1I..--I.V *u-o^ I..- ,.,,.- 1 li.-ur.-i nl- I.i. li. Anihoii, nnd I.14.I. John L.
~: "=-', Merrick, of Ihe Till Kansiia lavalry. U't Geo.
llalleck, 10 whom they had lo report iheuiselves
1 here, order
Vv-bur,
111I1I.-.
cvi.ll the disgrncc ultimately 1
OEN. BAXKS AND TUB "
• rcsoluliiin ol I nngre.-s 1,
blacks were allowed to ruh- in ilie
eons ir- lie iitr-Mt from Slriisl.iir--
bj Hen. Hanks in ihu following bll
o lake a slaver from Ihe
ih. qnlar. "
liuind en, .ugh
.liiibnwkers' camp-
All the froojis here, unless it be Ihe 2d Illi
l':i, iln .
I.gti-i iv 1 ill tin- .In; lun. kers. but the)' look
10 the Jajbnwkers lo take the brunt of the thing
and those who do not agree with us do not want 11
exiled upon to enter our enmp lo get staves,,!
ie " luvhawkers " bear the name of making a sin
;*nof their underiakings.
M^Biil tuiitinue I" urne in, ami I .Mint 10 -• Ihe
iiiig tested, ^linuis's negroes have all got employ,
ent us cooks.
t.lcn. Mitchell is one of tin: liiivc.-.t of Southern dirt
iters: anil I hear thai lie said, about the lime hi
10k command, that "ho had got the Jaybnwken
1st where be wmilcd tin in, and he should kec]
icui there," Hut 1 have faith Ihnt he hns taken lot
ig a contract if he intends lo make slave-bun tern
3. Cipl. Hoy I ui.es ample sal is tin. lion (is. yul-
An i
,.,ug I
I il il
Get Uuoter ,s nn honest n
as, and 1 bop.- atill is, my friend 1 valued him
inc the less for bis agrn-ing with nn- in the general
.ish that all men everywhere could bo treed. Ho
proclaimed all men free within cerium Statcs
;
ni
.nid I-
11 froi 1 I c ild
not olTenee, to many whose support
ihu country cannot iill'onl to losu. And this is not the
end ol it. The pre-sure in this ilir.-.-t s slill u,
mo nnd is jiicreasmg. By cone, ding what I now ask
...until- in this iiaporiant poinl.
Upon these eniisuleratuoin I have ngi.in begged
y.iur allenli'jn to the Me.--:e-c ! 1 1 .' r.
';.
I., -i |I.f„rc
leaving the Cnpilol, consider and discuss it among
you nn ilvea. Vou lire patriots and slnfe-mon, and 11a
inch I pray you consider this proposition:, and at
Ihe least commend .1 to ibe consideration of your
Sinles and people. An you would pi-i| atn popular
euvernnwnt fv>t Iho brst |~-ople in ihe wmld. 1 be-
seech that you do iu no wu- uui.t lb it Our common
Cisir KKAB T. — lenn,
While engaged
heard an unusual 1
30 looking arm.
Iiigelber with tv
of ruj I'-nl :u. I
daily. Thu murks
.-"ut.si-ipu.-nlly, he
ocinri- .1, i-.iced ihe Yankees.
man as Southern ndveriisem
neat little nut of a negro run
y d align rolls.'' I
fort; lushes
his body, tu testily of il.
ipiiortuaitv
,„I,.|1,I',.V
ingl.l 1.1..
ig away, describe as
bono he will prove so when
Willi Ilm wboln Ko.mraliui. of
nl" Ihe 11 belonging to our r.-gi-
.ggiug a fonrlh man, who had In .-n
ripped ufnll his ilntliiug. exc.pt his panes. Ub,llml
.... ,„ l„,|r.,r ..ml ,l--|,.ii- He. 1
-.i- ,1. |.nli.-l on lh»l
ism's face! It was as ihougti all hope had lied, and
1,-L despair, with all its allendanl horrors, had s.-i-
ll.d down upon bu,,. God grant that 1 ; nei.r
in behold slieb a scene! It was enough to draw
,|>'illiY li. he hnrdent heart.
nil tb.s dark picture was nut allowed lo pass
wilhoul us gleam of Irglil. SinlJeiil; a 1. nut. -i. ant
(bclun.'il.n 1'. lie- -:.iii,i con, nam ihat the two suhtieis
hit ,.|7. ""-a ti.n - lem nnd in. 1
,ir...l wlm it nil
/and was lohl that " the d—d nigger had run
away from tbi
,,!.,.- ,. llle, nl - 1
-i, .
r ' "' ' ' "'-. '
1 '
- 1 >' I
eii.iu- I.I my tiiuwlidnc. fill -eii-, ir.el.-i-. ., (ugcei, ,111.1
nielli,-., n.re or,-!.-, i-.-.l In Hi. n,-cu|.ii.iey eiri.nn
nn. li..,,i.| i- «"i - i;..v.-nuucin iraln
Icr. 1
nn fai-lliei.
;i „i| lor . ,,„,„.,, In llicrenr
iltnil.lv ,11., .nice ,- n r.-li, "c .o.-ri-s-', ., -11. J II
il.,„.,|lienc,l l.y Mime viijpic Jrc iililiiirlj. lo
S". P. U.s™'.°il'i,j. tli,i'
l
('inun':iii,liiil,.
a pity Ihnt iho resolution did not ask, also.
hones ami wnggon. belonging lo blacks
/yd and used for iho Iranspurt of government
troops. Mur-li, we me nssiired by an eye-wimess, was
ihe iiiet Al Wiiu hosier, where ll iiuinler ,-! the
, ilorctl people nwn bouses, lauds nnd l.-ams, n. black
an, clhi-
onceivahly grand.
., ll,.- privihg,.- ii gl-
d nwell thai gram!
,- 1, _!., nl .111.
_ up in it, who, turning their bncki
iipnu liioso accursed cords of shovels nnil pickaxe.
docked nl lorlress Monroe, nnd walking away fron
them with snlvation speed, would have led 0111
nrmy right up lo the |ilnces ot weakness, and ball-
ing iis in ibe wood, said to the conn minder. ' lbs am
de place, masMi. whcie do army of do Lord and of
Freedom cm bust fru.jusl as fru a garden lenee.
Gib em du bayonet, ami l.-avo de rest wid de Lord 1
1 knew in^.tlllil men in April last, who, under such
guidance mid such God-speed would have slonntd
the gates of hell.
How selUvidciit it is that this alliance with Ibe
slaves would have saved Ilm precious,
prepnratioiis 10 besiege Vurklonn—hnve uvuideil Ibe
having recently
as to
'
,,-k Hi
it H-g
".ngbl.i
nn Ihe Ws
I Mills.'
r.and
burg, w
11 IO the mu-h,
and being dubious
s in my car) ; and
,
loinjj loo small for
engrossed wiib hur Iocs, to
ns lo "results fas n friend whmpers in my car) ; and
seated upon ilm gro I. being 100 small for
(he exclusion of all other sources of'interest; bill all
'
Southern phrnse, "likely " children, and well-
fa chnved.
llcl I them, al l.-n-t fen.- forms were occupied by
iieitro men, young t.-ll.iwo tor tlm uiosi part, with --
Uf (bu lalter. one hnd a li
I'rieati bishop of the
all black.
occasional old
ihat might have beseemed an Ai
ageol'Bl.Augaslino. The juni
-ill, HOT) bll- 1
-
g hint is-;
n|,|,r.,pi 1:
..,,1
nluiv hardness
.Osgood soldiers ol Jesus Christ.' It was nol above
Ibe couipiehelision ot Li. aiulieuie. who h-t.icl lo il
ntlentively. Then, on a reriuest from Ihu nimster,
one of the negroes prayed, his prayer being of n
touching and even cluifuent character.
lie began by expressing thanks for the occasion
for that Ibe while man," Ins superior In eidoi. though!
it n.jt rul.L.r, to 1 nnd O-inli .lis "il ' bul, I
men do way out of bondage into liberty .'*
lie bleise.
those set over bi S eoui[ mis, trnniing that Hie laitm
mighl learn from th.-ui their duty tot
Aycrs's lUchgSuritlctteu bands, stretched
dripping will. Dames and shouting shot 1
lould scarcely pluck from Iho bloody r
which imbecility hnd Hung ih.-in. 1 on. wh
nnd tears dale from ll,.' sn. niuinl day or Williams-
fort you 10 know thai our niLick
s unneecusnry —that roads , irclcd
the cuerays position— thai slaves could have con-
ducted us through them, and thai by ll an Is attacks
vve could have bagged .»r crushed the entire army
were pursuing- Then , /..nil whatever ol
this. Oh, so unfortuniii.lv, ilmru is jusl as li
doubt Ihnt we had reins' d alliance lo the slave,
retribution of our tuiUtary
it cot just 1
The Only
but one exception, that of a wrinkled negresn of at
least three score, with her lieit.i bound up in a gay
handkerchief, and her hands testing on a statl or
crulch- Probably she name hither influenced by
devotion or curiosity. With partially closvd eyes
she sal looking al the younger women, whoso heavy,
but not unintelligent features were sometimes intent
on the piclures In their wtll-ll bed ?|h_>1 ling-honks.
sometimes raised in observation of (hoso around
litem. At least three rows of boys, and an eipial
number of girls on cither side of (be teacher's desk-
completed the number of scholars— less than usunl-
Tt» thia teacher's desk there soon ascended M
MtMath, a genilcinnii admirabl; iiualifled lor h:
-led tin
come hither from " the cold laail of tie North,
thu cool winds blow freedom, lo klit am
bleed ami .lie lor the i,,gr.., ex.epi ll (gin w:,
1 terrible—wn
Hu
... du I kne
,,r, -I tin: l.ii-ut.-narii
of Ihe
ihnt
ray.
belongs lo yo
1! the innns toiler.
t to 1.
.ightte
the fnin I s
gu t
few bn,
s family n
I loan,
nf the I'i
mel will,.
,. when
d Slates, ll
inswer lor ont
luuu which did n,,l h:i|,-. rk -n,.i, ,-. I,,.
,,1 I,,-.,. l;.,,,l
bom
„,- Ie
meg. :
pc by a cove
J l.e l-r.,-1.1- n, ... I.,,. .nl. dpi .1 lei.''..
._ entlikd tu expect 11
in ihe coariuTonoY lol
tho wind like another John
bushes or behind a urct .
when ihe raid was rcpuls
charged upon and driven
''
1 .
Thu following paper wn.i vcsl.itday s.-nl io tbe
I'n-nb'iit oi.'in-.l li; tin- laaj. .1111 ol Ihu IteprcsolltM-
,,.- ir.-.m tie- l:..i.ii-r.-lav.-le.l. ling Stales:
Wastiisoiok, July H, IBfia,
ii
-r,,
<
ri
V;
^i;.-;, r
V
. ,-
ir
..;|,[-. 'i:,;!,/.;;.;:^^.!
1
'^.^^;.;!.!:
in ibe two Hour.cn nt Congr, .., h„ve 1,-u -, .1 to lour
address wiib the profound s, u-ibdity naturally 111-
snircil bvihn high souree fr nhioh H c miles,
il, , .-ink,,.,-.., which marked us delivery, and the
,
, :
portai bosubjectof which it
,- before yen .
.,, .,
.- had
lint a
it.-rn olde 1,
,1 Ihe capture of fugitive slaves,
lived the prc.iui-,. nf live dollars cneh
Heeded in gelling his victim, (hey si
m wiib a firm grasp. But as limn w
is, lor thu thing inns: be dono in a hurry,
omnku as Utile excitement in the camp
possible, the Lieutenant did not wait long for the
men 10 obey his orders. Ho, ueir.ing one ol item by
tho throat, bo soon made him let go his hold, nnd the
other concluded lhat it was lies, lor him to nun be-
fore Ihu Lieulennni got his hands on him. Then they
accused Ihe l.ientnnant ol leaving Ihe prints of Ins
ibiiinb and lingers on the seul-d river's own throal.
Be that aa it may, ihe slave got away, and be di
wnnl telling to run but once, and well ought h,
ills bles-.-.l jllr |,,. ,,„_., r „i ;; f',.r dear liberly.
is glorious country, and to ley tc
ives forever." imploring for him
blessing- He added n bencilic
the President ot Ihe Uniled Stales, Iruslii
though ho might never see him in the flesh h
meet him in iho next, world, " where all are
With a final supplication lor tbe speedy r
peace, the prayer concluded.
This negro's name was Columbus Simmon
n.l.iigl.iiii'
by court-in
thaltfibiok bcsi.
I
'
-I anil
Who, for ihe pn
For this 1 of hi nit; .
t
I.-. .|ie.,-|.i
released.
-. ,|| ml h
, thet
l'.,'le,'ll
His
lie had becu in tin' guveinnieiii s.-i ic I, r .-,. n, s
and had not received a cent nf wages » « v.niu
to nay ihnt Micro is more of a mm. un.br bis bin,
skin than under the white epidermis of the mcml.
ol Conjrrois who moved- Ihu resolulion of iiiipn
ret erred 10.
if (he
a real uf thosu two n
of five dollars, would
1 the person of one of
Tim A:
mnlry rincs and overflows, bui the gm
policy is slill weak and vacillating. The people talk
a, good ileal about thee things, ami think a good deal
more than liny talk. Bullies who go round knock-
inc down people who venlure to imiuiatc tbat (.en.
MeCI-llan is noi a combination of Cu-lar, llannibnl,
Frederick, Walhnstem, Napiilcn ami Wellinglo'
cannot keep people liniii hnviiig then own uiimlsj.
months (" asked
ling. A per
; Godt what becaaiu of Iho fogi
] in caining that liberly for
.... 'li... I
p
an the esteem of bis pupils.
sea by giving out, line by line, nnd verse by verse, lie-,
liviiii., rc[n-nteil all.-r him. and then sung by the spico ol
,.i]pile. This was followed by a brief address, noo-jrhylhm
1 shall mutu lo-dny upon Ihe, thcr bymn, and the Lord's prayer j when the active respect
grant that hi
which bo so ardently -
,.[ above hiu- long been nut.-d b.r he
views so much .-u that he hn- often Liecn ull-l the
' tlluck Al.nliti.ia Lieutenant." Near!, all ihu
,1.1 ll.e
I-..-I1I.-.I Hut tho 1.
ng vou. ton.par.ju witu
,., have freely given you
t. llepudiating iho dan-
prosecuted on
opening ol th
gowl men sbm
,oled nil the men a
ir people, and ihvy a
iubl 1
,-,y valuable, uelecl. " We have gn .
half .1 ui.lliun of men." say (he ,-.ople. - and ,ou
,avO wa-'ted them, mnl have ilnlliing In stuiw
..,„. i.,,...tl>. „it „.M, Chilian before
f
',, :u-:;bs (these ate oilieir.l firju.^) he brs got-
pc";
Wasl
,ndr.,llhoiis
(these lin' clli.
lefr- Where
„ posllive'and s
not need the 3UtH.Litl additioanl troops. Moro men
ban vou think ol are miking and thinking thus .
< , nnT the number iSincrvssing.-/loJu;nCbr.V'''3-
ny friends id the regiment, and H is a tact and tl" "»
nou irjteiposeU any obswcle to tho escape, |K'<< «'/»"«"
r friends,
"le.ti «
r laltered.
Anddefendn.nl a g'--mm. nt wlm-l. p»l '
,. ,!. (or i-eu.ki ''I 1 ib.irit, auu even gicniei
it.-s vea. any sacribce, wbeci we aro satisfied
iiu'ircd io |ire-.t.e our n-liniruble formofgov-
„, ,m,l the pri.elesa blessings of conilitulional
i f»w of our number voted for tho resolulion
r. II,
icndcil by your message of llic '".lb of March
e greater portion of u» illil not, and ire will
Hinto lh« prominent reasons which influenced
In tho I'irst place, it nropoMc. n radical ehniigfl of
our Hocii.l yatcir., nnd was homed ibreugji both
Houses with undue Iinst-', without " -=•— ri - I
-1 .
-
Hw
f.ir L.-.n-iil-Tiiti.-n and debate, nnd willi no ln»" in nil
for consultation wild ..ureiiiu. cots, whoso interests
appalled bv ll» uNllwlc
rossed if oil I he Mates, i
,1,1,,-r ol .lain. Ai-enrdini
price Axed by Hi* Knnincipiilimi Act fur the J»i,-
ol (III- District, am! i:,. ttly l>. low their real worth
their value run* up lo the enormous sum of $1/100,
mi, i! ;
anil il lo thai we "dd the emit of ileporlntloi
, j
...... i,- n n. :i! I" ' . .! Il e. til. I, I- lull II Ir.n ll-n
iii n. it, in is ac I mills lull 'I I"' H"- Marc la ml i 'nlnnim
lim, Society, h* have S ,'too.tinii morel Wo wen
noi willing to impe"' ' t" *" " ur people sulUcienl i.
pae-ho inlc,-*t on thai m.iii. in addition -* >
„,,;| ,|i,ilv men .fine ilelit :ilr. .i.ly flu-d •[•
Ihc 01 If.' no in of the war; nml.il n« hnij licei
ing, the country cnul.l mil hear it. Sloti'd In tliiii form
tlic tirupo-ilion in nothing h «s linn tlto deportation
from Did country of Sl.liDU.Olin.OfW worth of pr.-lueiog
r. and llie subalitutlon In Ms place of nn intcrcsl-
hor idea in your address we fed
. After •tilting llir luct ol your repu-
nlor's proclama lion, you add :
gittioiud gtnti-Jsliivtnj $tiwilunl.
- i i-iiu iiii.l f. li-
lt. II,, ,,r.-
,--,l|n
i.'rV.illl-
,. t.iiilthril
a respectfully au I
Anil We b»T« the ononuouj sum of. i-t7i.0.1-;.l,i:i
Wc ilid not feel thai wo should lie juelifleil in eolinj,
for a measure which, if curried out. would mid thii
Treasury was rcolitii; under the enormous e.ipe.iditun
o! the war.
Again, it seemed to us that Mils resolution was hu
the annunciation ot a sentiment which could not 01
wna not likely lo he reduced to an ml ml taiinililo pro
position. No movement win lln ule lo provide am1
appropriate the fund* reiiuiri-.il to cirri it into ellcel
and we were not encouraged I" lielicic thai tun-l-
wnuld he provided. And our belief Inn been fully jun
tiOcd by subsequent event--. Sot to mention other cir.
cuiinlsnccs, it is qu.le siilllcicnt for our purpose U
bring to your noli-M lbo fret. Hint, while this rcmlniior-
was umlor consideration in the Snalc, OUT colleague,
the Senator from Kentucky, moved an atuondnienl
inline -'"'I- t..Oi.-.il..lf..l Hot. iii.l,wiHMl.-,,. [,-.,.,,. li
I'l.jiiynii 'it
,!, nine pruiiij'l, mid no urn- ii nutlinri?eil til
ho ri|jlit, or limit itn eiijoiment. And no ou
cle.trly afDrme.1 that right limn you have,
ir.il .ol'li'i =i uhih vou i_-n.itlioii..r in lliii re«|iiii:t.
"
the, country with confidence in your fair
lim! thut wo ilifTer a
I,'"!-''"!:
> yield u.
tho attempt,
it Is a right i
inid, m krmwini;, n did notice why we
of others, in lite circouiiwrn.-eu ; and we did not
why tacriGcca uhoulii be expected of ua from wl
othera.no more loyal, were evvmpl. Nor could we
si e wli.it pntiJ ihe i.mion would derive from
"
o hy u> t
siiM-si Lined the arm of this „
thai of tho eoemy. It won. mn noee?«ary m n pledge
of our loyally, tor ihai bud beeo monifeited beyond a
pouibl'c. There' viu not the re n=t probnlnlily Unit
ihe SuitCfl wu repr.,ent would i"ii. iii Hie rebellion,
nor it there now, or of their cleetina incu with the
Southern lectlDD in the event of recognition of the
independence of nny part of the dinfleclcd region
Oor States are Uied unalterably io their resolution U
adhere to nnd support the Union, They see no safely
for themielret and no hone for conatiiutiaml liberty
but by ill preservation. Tiny will under no circ
swntei i...ii'erit lo il.. ilLj.olul ;
and wo do then
pbe, they will t as long as they c
dollar. Nor will-
h the Southern Coofed
cracy. The bitter Iruita ol Hie ;ieeulinr doctriuca ul
Ibut rcBion will forever prevent them from placing
their security an-1 lm|ijirncsi In the cualody of an n«o
cinlion which ha.- ii.voij'oniteil in its organic low the
feeds of iu own destruction.
Wo cannot udo.it, Ifr President, that, il wo had
voted for the r.i"lutton in the laiioneipjtion .Mcmoko
of March liiat. tho war would now be- substantially
ended. IVe ore unable
particular lins given, or could give, encouragement to
the rebellion. '1'ho r. Milnlii.n ho. iii-*eil; and.ifllierc
tl.- .1,-1.1-. l„ iv 1 ..,11 1... ..-..IT.- ,-. ,-tll, .1.1, Hi- .1- if Ui
had voted for it. tt - have no power to „,n,i u „ r new.
In this rnpccl by our votes here; ami, whether wi
hnd voted the one way or the otlu-r, they are in tin
fiitue condition of freedom to nctept or reject in pro
rlsionj. No, sir; the war has not been prolonged oi
hindered by our nciiin on ibis or nny oilier measure
We muHt Inut for other '.'.ni-.i r-r that lamented fact
We think there b not much difficulty, not much uiicer
tainty, in pointing cut others for ui ore probable and
potent in ilnir a^ennioa lo that end.
The rebellion derives its strength from the union of
all .In-.-.- in Ihe in- urgent t-'Liiea . nnd while II
union lasts the war will nciei end until they n
utterly eii i aus ted. Wo know lli.it nt the inception
these troubha Southern society win divided, aud il
n large porlioo. perhnpn n niajority, were opposed
M-cervion. Sow the j;r.-.it io-l-i ot Southern peo[de ii
united. To discover why tlu-y ore >•> we must glnr
ntSouthern seiulv. ami ii.iti. .. the classes inlo wlii
il has beeiidi.id.l.iiii.i evhioh Mill ,]„tj,i|:uish it. They
are in aruia, hut mil (or the fume objects ; they are
moved lo a coi on .nd, hut by different nnd even
lie. i.n.i-lcnl ren-'.'.iO-. 1 lie leader., w liieli ,
.impri-hendi
what wna previously known Hi the State ltights pf
niLtion.il iudepcndetiee ami oel up Slate domiin
Willi ilum il is a war ngaim.1 intionality. Tbu
h Ashling, -
"-
iss !> lighting, il* il luppo-e.', ti: lam ami p
mi its rights ..I" |.r,,|,irll an. I doiuestii.' nt'cly, whi
1
iclievo are availed by gov
only because they li
will never rusetit I
The polloy, th-
is ay be. lleisoiro
that no harm io iulerided t.. them and il» ir iintitulions,
til ul tl.u fou riiiin. i.l i- n-.I ni.l kii'i oilr ...ii their rifhli.
of properly*, hut is •.imply defending ill legitimate
authority, and they will gladly return to their alk-
fitarice as soon ns the prcuura of military dominion
il"|....i .1 he Hie i 1. 1. it'll rale jutln-ritv m r ,-,! li ,, r u
them.
'I wi 1'. ' il,-. .u'.i I- .'.li Mhi.-i--, ..I '.'-.:,
j r, -- a.] .j.im,-
the spirit ol your .Me-sage, then bul recently scut in,
ihclan.il with »ingiilnr unanimity the objects of Ihe
war, and the country iii.tiuiil, hounded lo your side lo
assist yon in carrying it on. If the spirit oi that rcsolu-
oynl men, and exasperate and d
is and their duty Ihe people <>|
Ulilary officers, following the*
topped beyond die just limits o
[irini i
[ile '.ilii-'h Ihe [- ,i[ih --.r !l„ >. -i > r, .
f, -: uvt 1-.
-.i,.t
as ruiuuua to Diem. Ihe elfect ut these measures was
foretold, and may now bv seen in the indurated stale of
To these Dimes, Mr. I'i,>iieni, nnd not to our omis-
c con i mended by yoi
wu lelenmly bcUe> e wo are to at rihuto (he terrible
r in arms agau
i iiutilulio
rlppri'litliMelj 1
cotumou ond eoiinl
M™ the inititu ons ol tho Souihern awtes.
olTeVo the ronntr)- in tills important point."
We have unitiouily loolteil Into this passage to ,11h.
over its true Imparl, I"' 1 "* " r " vet in painful unior-
nlnly. How can we, by conceding what you now ask,
elieve you and II".' '
'nlitl'i lr..ui tin 1
in. reading pi-""-
ure to which yon refer'! «'e will mil allow ournelvea
.1 iliink that 1I1.' iiropii~itiiin is, that we consent lo give
in.la.ery to til" end 'hi' tl,..- Hunt'-' proclamation
111V he lei loomO on the SoOth-m people, for il Is too
it 1 II Ln. .wo 'hnl we would not ho parties. In nuy sue"
,
1 •. ban 1 " much rupcel h'r you 1
,
,
.
Id pi DposG iL Can it mean that b
,,, tilii 1". ' ml. rest 10 tlav.-rt v<- .tj-j Mm .( 1
i, .,.1 <! ,tprwr.,ir,.. ,->„.,' it to be withdraw
in.l rid Hie .ranln |..-lileot agitation of II
,.,,, rlDMllonl IV.- are forbidden .0 to think. 1.
' ' -ini '..
I rn't h.' .uti-H.-l Willi the 111.. .ration
r I.i.-.aoil .,,10 H" ,i!'il:ili..n. while l.ono.oi
emain in bondage. Can it mean that by ahandomi
davery in our Slnti-s, tee are rumoring the pressure
from you nnd the enuntrv, bv pr. 'paring for n separa-
tion 011 the line nf the Cotlon States !
forbidden so lo think, because ii is known
re, ami we believe that v ire, oiialtei-ubli
opposed to nny division at nil. Wo would prefer I
Hook that eon de-ire this ooriee..ion an a pledge of 01
support, nnil thus eo-.ble vou to with, land n pn'sstu
whieh weigh! heavily on yon alel the country. SI
!'i..-i,l.-nl. io-. sneh «a. ritiee i- no-cmy t.. s, euro ,.,
support, Confine voii'-elt t" vouri Illilll il nutlio
ity ; confine your iuil».rdinal' " within the same llnilb
conduct thu war -oh li lor the purpose of rcsUirlt
the L'olistitillion to its ], eliinolt.. aolhoritv 1
r ode
ea.hSial,. and its loyal ,iti,-,m their j'e.I l'l'h'- .11
we are wedded to you bv indissoluble lies. Do thi
Mr. I'rOideol.ao'l vim 'ouch the American heart nr
invigorate it with new hope. Vou will, at we solemnly
believo, in duo time restore pi m e lo your country, Hit
it from ilesponileney 101, future ol glory ;
nnil presor—
to your oonnlry nn n. their 1" pt'-nty. nnd n. in. Ihe nu
Mr I're-lleot, we hiivo iiate.l with fraiikiieii ai
eimloi- tie- irosona /.n ivhieh «• fnrhore to v..l,- f
the resolution vou hue mentioned: tint you lin .
aeain promoted this prnyio-lllon. and appealed to us,
with nn earnestne.-s and ih-iyueio:e which have not
(ailed to impress iis. lo ' consider it. ami nl the least to
commend it to ihe consideration nt ..nr .-tales and pen
pie." Thus appealed to by Hie Chief Magistrate of our
be lor nl country. 111 Ihe hour of 11.- greatest peril, we
cannot whollr decline. Wo are willing to tru-t every
ipieition rf tilling lo th.if int. I-,-'.I and happiness tn the
consideration sod ulllmsti
While diir.-rioL.' from you
pating the sir
'
NEW YOflK, SATOUPAY. JD1.V 21, 1662.
.'-.
,'
'i-.;!! r
'.
l
;
;
greatly oblige ns h
. . n'ho.l i'.f
:...-...
Idreun," Bprrao
mum HiiiKEt, Ntw jiihs.
[,ellerf.eneli.-ln( . u tl .: ri|.L|i.iii, or relating In nnr way
le le. J" ili.-.itli.-i .
! I I. I. ' !' "t inn
r Tin; Asti Si.ivsnv HrtKiitKn. No. '• Behum lrn(
.11 l.y promptly retnltliiiK what they 01
, is in need of every dollar due from
Direct, " JViKsfiff Anli-SI'iirry SomlanJ, IS
'., JVia rnrfc."
CELEBRATION OF THE FIRST OF AUGUST.
of Joly was another. All ihcsi
Why could not tho
Uecjiuso Keiitui-kj- hound n bandage upon ha eyoi,
and kept bin, blind. Instead of the simple plan of
dory through, juslice, we lrnl only it Mtijor-Cenc-
1't promise—" sborl, sharp, nnd desperate"—ttiado
our ear, nnd hrnL-en lo our hope. The pjovcrn-
int has coniluctctl the wnr on a theorj' of pence.
Our military have resembled our rresidentinl cam-
paigns. The real contest ol the army bus not been
if nrrna against tlio enemy, but of opposing ideas
lilhin itself, Uoea not everybody know Unit Fru-
nmd Met lellnn. representing two ilifl'eretit ideas,
int-agonists? And does not everybody
if Fremont lmil Ruflerrd McClellaus
dsfejit. lbo present nlraleoy-prnisera would hiite
filled Ihe (ir with their ooterien fit removal 1 When
pnsontetl iliemsetvea to tho povernmeut.
different policies of war wore offered, the
government tL.-ew uwuv tie: right one witL frcmont,
and lept tho Troog one with ileClellnn, As a con-
, if Ua goverinuent had sought to curry on
for lbo aoko ol weakening the enemy ns
little :is [los'tle, and burling ourselves ns much (is
possible. bo» eoulil il linvo succeeded better than
-Jt-'
The. h Wes lid I.L I!
will be celebrnte.1 In the usual roa
AU1NGT0N, on Frimv, August
under the direction of the Mnnajji
setts Anti-Slavery Society.
i'n event in history is more deterring ol special
1 .-oii-o.iiior.iiii.in II 1. in thl*— transforming,
marly 11 million of chattel slaves into Irce
jccta.byneto! Parliament, hnlienee lo n regenerated
public sentiment, through long years of Anil-Slavery
agitation—and demonstrating, a* It has done, iho safely
and beneficence of Immediate emancipation on Ihe
most Averse elrcu*,
-'t 1
.... Ve'heilion. and ivhih' proleniing against the
propriety nf any ettra territorial interference toinduce
.s:
loyal .States sincerely
-- -- objlacle In peace ami natoum! h.
Ing to contribute pecuniary old
coinpensat..our.-tnti. 3 .not people for ilir inconvenient
produced by such seonnge of sys wo arc not I
willing that our people tlmll eon-ider the propriely of
Hut we bate already said lhat we regnrdetl this
r,-.r,liilioo n.i the utleeiinee nf 11 -enliment, .111. 1
we
fjo'itile and [.i-.o Li- ol pre] lion, whioh would yield
the fruit* ot the saenQee il required. Our people
are influenced by Ihe same want of confldence. nnd
will ,.n
:
iilei'the proposition it 'ts present impalp-
".,
'iio"m".-.t 'linn
."'.''.'
ii'o'poro.T,', ;.;,,, „? ,i;,: v
,
:;,',pn'u"n.'.i
1.1 be cipectnl e-.ii to . nt, rlnm the proposal until
tin .-
J« n.-nri .I tint wli, 11 ilev a.eept it their just
expectalloos will not he inislratcl We reganl your
foMe«iMB™EoCi«rf
tieular manner mil .ii' hi up a valuable interest, lie-
fore they ought to e. insider the proposition, it should
ho presented in such a tangible, practical, efficient
shape ns to command their c oolitic nee lhat
contingent only upon their
trust anything to lbo contlnge
If Congress, by proper nnd ncceunry lo<i
shall provide mlUeienl funds ami plate tliem
ili-posil. to he apj.liL-.l by Von 10 the pneuietil ol
our Slates or the citi"
almlisl n', of slave .
as they may delermioe, snd ih* 1
liiniiipli
negro race.
ndaof liberty, who desire to witticps a -,li!]
ileoin our own shivery cursed laud, will, WP
doubt not, matte their arrangement* to be present, as
prneiicnble, in order In make (he occasion insiru-
1 to iln tiii-tli. rail' eot the sacred cause of human
, without regni-d lo the accidental distinetion..
( from complexion or race,
pog lbo speakers looked for and eonll kntli
.1.1*11 LlOVU G.I1H1.0V, Wkvukli, I'nfu.tin. II. C.
WntouT, Wu. Wklls Bkowk, John S. Boat, Axunxw T.
Ms, nnd others.
The 0!-i t'.Jiinv Railroad Company will oontrc) puscn-
sra. on that day, lo nod from Ihe Abinglon Groro,
the following rules, being III e same as in former
~loa Ion, Savin Hill, lion he tier, Nepon-ei. ijnio. y.aiel
lintrce—lo the tir.no and b,u t-(oc,i.;i,if,i, DUrrnfi ;
cAildrm, 25 emfs.
I'lenn.nih 1111. 1 nil iijv .tiloi...i not nlri-idy nie rvliencJ
Etc union tickets good on other trains.
Wu. Lisivd OinnjsoK, |
SimnsL Miv.Jil, I Cbnuniltce
fruits, ire
tlngencici of luture legislation.
ill ndopl the
r gradual ..r it flute.
'eporlntion
will our
....isideri.ti.-.o. for such deci-ion as in iheir indenie
ileiuiiiuled lo their interest, tin. ir honor nnd their 1
tn the whole country.
t lone the loin t In he. with gnat respei.t,
C A. Wifti-itTE, Chairman, Ciuni i:s 11. t,uoi:i,
GArju.iT Divh, C. L. L, Leutr,
R.WILSOX, ElMV-IM U Wil.-Tlll
J. .1. Ciimnsmcs-, ft, MiLUJBl,
Jons S U.iri.ii.i:, Aino.v llirmiM:.
J. W. CBtSflKLD, JlWU-tS. I!' !".-,
,1 F3. .II.'-'.!. J. W. nlKMOtS,
H. Gnlohn. Tiioui' 1. I'bICC,
.hoi -loll PS G, W.DlQIUF,
FltiSCls Tuiuus, IVit. A. II.ii.i-
lltt. Frjaiocvr 1 1
gross from the Border states, in response to y
iiil.lr.:-« ol S-llur.li) I
as. I, beg len.'e hi fill' Hint I.
The moiling «ppoir..._ ..
spouse to vour address, lhat report was mad
teniae, ami lite action "I il"' n.-ij-rity indi. nKd 1
I
lhat the rcspon-.e reported, or one in subitum
-.inn-, would he ailojiteil mid |-n- -enti.il to you.
tense of duty to the counlr]
nsistently ivith our otvi
helieie thill the whole power of tile goeoril-
III. held noil nijfl.llli.d by all the inllurllf 1 and
s ol all loyal toeii in 'ill sections, ami nf all puliei
. lit hilly oei. r>-- j ry l" put down ihe re tie Hi ind
cry s ihe " levei r of Ihe rebell
,,[,.), :1 I
9 behcl wc u
does exist,
things as they nre. nnd not ns we wou
In consi'nuenee of the existence ol tt
ikrsiaiid ihat an inimeii-e pressure is
for ihe purpuse nf sinking down
through tho exercise of military authority. The „
eminent cannot iniinlain thi, gn-Mt struggle il tin
opinions be withdrawn. Neither can tbe gov.
hope for early success if llie support of that
Such I
Is to tl
wilbdra
e condition ol things, the I'riiidetii
rder .Slsto men lo BtCD forwMrd oml
,ppcnls hnve been made to eiireme
in the North, to meet us half way, in order that
Ihe whole moral, political, pecuniary and physical
force of the nation tuny be llrndy ami earnestly united
in one grand effort lo save the Union ond the C'on-
Uelieving tlnit su.-h were the motives Hint promoted
your Address and such the results lo which it looked.
ing hour, to respond io a r,pirit ! fault-tin. I ing or (j tier o-
disposcd lo seek for the cause of present misfortunes in
tin; errors nnil Lfioti;.M ol mhira "I tt propose to
band, we moot your nildri'-s-s m Hie uplrli lu which it
was made, and as loyal Auiecicnns, declare to you and
to the world thai there i« no tacritke that wc nre nol
ready to make to wive the government ond inslitiittons
of our fnth'cw.
Thai we, few of us though there may be, will per-
mit no men Ir tho Nurth or from tho South, to go
lurlhor than we in the netoiuplishmcnt of Ihe great
work before m. That, in order lo curry
people of Ihe Bonier .-.tales, calmly, deliberately and
fairly lo consider your re commelid a lions. Wo nre
the more emboldened lo ni-sunie this position from llie
tact, DOW becooie history, that llie 1. rulers of IheSoQth-
ern rebellion have ullernl to abolish slavery among
them as n condition lo foreign intervention in favor of
their independence as a nniion.
If they con give up shit cry lo destroy the Union, wo
can surely mk our people to consider tho question of
. 11111111.11. i. re. ii to saie the Union.
With great respect, your ubedient servants,
Jomc V. Nuti.L, Wh.i.uu. i;. Bbows,
Sam. S. CtiKV, Jacon B. Uu.™,
Gbohue P. Funlltn, W. F, U'liiKv.
.V J. Clluexts,
[much Maismio, fieprescnutive from EallornTon-
neMeo, nnd whose " constituents nro not yel disen-
Ibralled from the hostile arms of the rebellion," signed
iddressed tbe l'resl-
n Ihe line spirit thai ehar.i
tally. Ho says he
uerdi,"
ivinci at Wan.—The Nnshtille V,
Ihe >urpri-e ami cuplnro of a Michlgun
I.. -I-.M. .11. I
'.I |J I.IUI-. '.I II |- I.
civs: " 7?.e l-1-.IJi..'O ft Vltlt tim nM It.MllTS llrl.-u.'l/.t
,r!„ ii f.'n -j I..J-H. rte rdKltion, nhilr onri jonml'y
..-:,, i. ili.rn- f.'.e i-e'-fl 1'ij (isi'mj eonrfiJinj o,.. I [,ir."(,,, 3 , „
en Wi io,| l/oir nonlir.o/ o.je...o. IVe .ay Ibli wfib no il
,,...n oi '.. si r.| r-,.o.li on our i.nlortoiiale s..,l,lle
longlit "ell. 'flie difilculty or nillfortune na.--.ihnl Ih
.. . ..-,, renllre tlnir itinilieiior II.. (. ople they bad loth
Vor heaven'.- ;-iKe. let there t-r to. iin,h .no I, m
takes »
largest scale, even under the the ni
> lbo c
rophes.et
1 Ignominious i
insei[iicnce!, a
IroClouBiy cab
it to the
THE PEtlll. OF TIfE HOUR.
The Itepublie is now in its worst peril eince tilt
•utbrenk of tliu Wnr. To disguise it is not only use
less, btil criminal. A month ngn, public feeling wn;
in pond cheer, from expectation ol victory. Tn-iiay,
universal annioty prevails. The shadow of a great
defeat rcali upon lim face of affairs.
Ily common consent, Richmond was to have been
ta&en. Nobody spoke of n reverse i few thought ot
it. Costly fireworks were put up in this city to celt*
hrnlc llie victory, on the Fonrlb. of duly. Thong
there bail been a bri.ik sword-plnj oferiticieui ovc
McClellan's plan of operaliona, yet nobody aecuicd 1.
dnubt that, ejtber by n yood plan or a bad one. b
would cjtplurc Richmond. Cut wu hull. iucteMi
seven brilliant disasters in the 1'en insula, which, like
the electric links round n I.e.yikn jar, gave the publi
niind a Blsggerinp, shock. Nor has it yet recoveret
Tho sense of defeat, though less exciting to-dov, i
more oppressive than on ihe Fourth of July. Tbe
magnitude, oi" Ihe disaster is more clearly seen, and
tho delay which it brings upon the wnr more severely
fell. A new Napier will write lie history ol a new
l'euinsulnr wnr, whose only result lias been lo show
how Richmond might have been taken, but was not,
nnd perhaps is not tu bo.
The lexicons will hereafter note a new definition of
n blunder : it means strategy.
Consider ! The suu never shone u|ion such an srniy
ns tl.i- nation gave to Geo. McClellna. Did we not
see regiment after regiment crowding lo Washington,
tilt the holiday parades were grander limn the spec-
tack* or Paris or Prussia T Did not tbe bug lines ol
tents stretch for miles up and down the Potctuae,
gleaming like snow ia the sun ? It was nn army so
well. equipped that no critic could pick n llntr; its
supplies were ao lavish, Unit, lor .. wbito.mibto^Yiis
took ou the novelty of primal luxury ; its discipline
was so thorough thst men said, oilier armies might
lose battles, but this would be invincible. Vet, ni
u itbst.'tinliiig nil our rose-colored hopes, I tie firm
-Arniyol the IVtomsr has wnllered the grcnlestdcfe
of ihe war.
The i|ueslion nrises, IF7iy/
There is a plain answer. Nor does Ihe. nnsn
concern itsell elm ill with tin- blunders of n military
enmpnign. It matters little whether lbo individual
blame belongs to the White House on Paainnkey
River, or lo tbe While House on Pennsylvania
nuc. What concerns lbo nalioa to heed is, Ihu army
thai set out tn Richmond hnd but half an errand in
going, and tJod stopped it on llie wie. Cr.miois.siiiiied
of Divine Providence to curry forward tbe causo of
Fi-iicdnui.il wits disobedient to llie bejivenl) vision. anil
was smitten on tbe high roud. Tho grand army was
defeated, not because it was not reinforced, not be-
cause it changed its base of operations, but because
it did nol strike for n victory such ns fled counted
ivorilii II el ii I, ii,:;. d n- -
il ii- .',. ul .
military haso or operations, it would o..i !,, v. been
abandoned oflhcliod of Unities, bind it culicncljed
itself in Eltrnnl Justice, it could never have
sunken.
Rut the blow against Itu.hmond was too carefully
aimed : it wns meant In destroy the Rebellion n
save Slavery. Cut with (lod, the greater rebellion of
the twnin is Slavery If that bn struck down, I
nther Inlls nf itself. Whatever necks to presei
slavery—even lliough it be a Federal nraiy—Hod
himself will destroy. When tho plans of the govern
ment and the plans of God arc nt variance, lb
crumbles a Grand Army naif il were clay, and brenki
a jVfnjnr-Geiiernl in pices Jike n poller's vessel. Iii
baa brought two enemies fact) to race, not for tho chief
purpose of fiiving victory lo cither, but fur working
out the freedom of an oppressed race, despised ol
both. Tho solemn lesson of our lalo disasters i
and the President and bis lienerals should lesrn
that no strategy, cither political or military, can
cumvent Eternal Justice.
The plainest sign of the t.nics, therefore, is, that
the Wnr Department, with all its armies, cannot
both the Republic and Slavery. The betlei
ol die people have seen this lor souio lynu;
the government is still almost blind. If the
iioo fienso of the free masses of tie North could
liavu shaped the war-policy of the Administration
rear ago, we might lo-day have beta ringing
hells of peace. lias tho hour to strike been
iting ? So fur back as Ihe insult to Sumler, the
Ring indignation ol nil loyal hearts offend a
(0 on which tbe government might triumphantly
launched Einsncipntion. The proclnmatii
moot was another opporlunily. The memornhle
morning niter Hull Run was another. The entering
icdge of tlen. Hunter was another. The last Fourth
f IT* Oicf-rv-T, calls for no repentance, e . poses
lion lo no judgments *t the hand of God 1 See
artfully It eicludu from Its list of notional tin*
Ihe great crime which mates llie' country a byoword
hissing Ihroughont tho eivllired world 1 No, It is
slavery, according to T7ib Ous-Tt-rr, that eiposes
nation to the retributions of Heaven, bat Anti-
Slnvcry I To bo sure, it does not say this in so many
rdi, bat such evidently Is Its meaning. " We of ihe
th were not innocent In tbe causes tint led to Iho
" I Of courno not, we tolerated nnli-slsvory ajita-
i, to tbe gresl annoyance of lbo pious woman-whip-
s ntnl cradle pliioderers of tho Siullt; wu resisted
spread of slavery ] too many of us revolted at Ihc
a'liio Slave law ; and when the South complained
. has?
Is tliere u
I
t leai
nent. For all II
,111- Oc---.il
PARKER P1LLSBURY ON THE TIMES,
Iv pursonnee lo nu appointment, oar faithful laborer,
I'liiM-u I'lLi.-i:. ni-, leiture-J twi. e to a full and deeply
itenttcd audience at Lyceum Hall, Stilford, Man.,
Sunday, 13th bit. The impression made was one of
lemnlty, and I trosl profit. 1 judge of the value ot
thLs ontl-slavery mission from Ihe ovcitetucnl created
the qiIdJi of thoie whose hearts are full of hatred to
• African race and to every faithful Abolitionist.
. P. obtained thirteen nun mbicriben to Trie Stuc-
Dj«n, which I regard is no small work, especially in
ur town, where not a single copy, I think, tin prv-
lously beeo taken. I send you the following Sketch of
ho ci'ciiiiic: lector.*, reported by Mi us Clu-ever. ol West
Vrentliaio. 1 nm sure your readers will citc-tm it s
prlvlleun to rend iheio wonls of truth and timely n**
lo a guilty people, in this hour of our strife and
e judgments of God!
ords, v, supremely anxious
miiiniiig metbod lo rejoin t tho li
speak of it? Who will give heed'
nol tho President, who, ol all otbei
should he moist eager to know. Tbu only remninit
lethod is oue which Kentucky disapproves, nnd
therefor.' the President disallows. Kentucky
rules Mr. Lincoln nn South Carolina lately ruled Mr.
Riicbanm.
It ha. been noticed that a nurse who tends n si
child oilenliiues will sleep through all Iho clang o
ily fire-bell, yet if lbo child murmurs, will nn
.
So, while half the North is sounding
Iho President's ears, be sleeps ; nor wnkes
Ihe whimper of Kentucky,
earn two great reasons why llie present policy
cannot erowu Ibe wnr wilh a victorious ponce : Di
because we need Ihe great Third Army—the unetil
cd Four Millions ; and second, bceausu wo r.ecrf to i
heartily lo our side. God is for tbe sli
Bret, and McClellnn afterwards. Wo need the all
quickly, that tiod'« sure blessing may
follow. How shnlllio be induced to come I* A Mcm-
of Congress lately said to Ihe Bouflo: "Fifteen
thousand white men killed nn Ibe Peninsula I Would
been boiler lhat black men bad been
IterC instead!" This is too uninviting n way In ask
volunteers— oven with black skins. Tho War
Department has just Issued a bulletin to employ
negroes as military laborers. Why has not the Sccre-
iry, nr the President behind him, courage enough to
nay soldiers 1 Is it possible that the cjovcrniuent
does not know the one way, and the only way , to enlist
the negroes? Must it be lold that in talking lo Ibe
ignorant and lowly il must use plainness ol speech?
tinfiscaiion is a word hard for a slave to undcr-
ust ieniadeeo plain that u nu, taring man. though
fool and n contraband, cannot err therein. Congress
iving failed lo pass a simple edict of Kmnncipa-
tion, it is now the President^ duty to wrile Ihe word
with his own hand. This is llie only way lo enlist Iho
blacks. Rut Ibis will enlist them in Hocks nnd mul-
titudes— in regiments and armies. It will be the
speediest way of answering the President's requisi-
tion for JOO.OtiO more men. Ofcourse.it involves tho
disagreeable* punposilion Mini negroes are men. Rut,
conceding this point to the. emergency of the hour, let
(Jen. Butler mid the tiew.i tu the plantations or Lou-
isiana, Alnbntria.nnd Mississippi, let Gen Ruetlsend
it through the region round about his camps in
Arkansas and Slissonri; let tho blockading ehips
drop It nloig ihe coasts; let Gen. Hunter re-write,
his blotted order of Ihc '-'!>lh of May |
let Port Pick*
eim hang out Ihc notice on her weatlier-stnined walls ,
let all these camps and strongholds be made recruiting
stations— nlfering each recruit the bounty of Iretdoiii
—And ihe President's requisition will bu speedily
tilled without n draft; and history will witness an
act of poetic justice in watching how gran illy the
negroes will whip their masters.
The Tuscans have a proverb, lhat summer ia the
friend of the poor. Rut we have learned a lesson ns
IniO ns a proverb, that summer is tbe enemy of the
army. Docs not common sonse dictate thst tho gov-
ernment wanl-i an army of bluck men in the South in
the summer heats! In the name of God, then, let us
hnve Freedom—Victory —Pence I
- renew " Ihe covenant with death mid llie ugreei
tith bell," to restore the South again to the com
ionol privileges forfeited by rebellion, lo catch
eturu her runaway slaves, and permit her lorulo
is in time to come as in time past. "To proscculi
tor with nny other design " than tn bind thu K
meo more to the pestilent carcass of slavery, and give
renewed vitality to those pravlsloni of the Constitution
ilch make us the watch-dogs of
.
nil to ui
strike oil' the
"fT '
r! '
trs of the slaves, " iaa bo
igalnst (Jod and tho human race." To
ouimand, by " breakinc avory yoke and
lpprcssed go free, " would bo to invoke his
judgmental In orcn proposing such a thing
tinned " and " gone loo far astray," nnd we
pent and do oor first work*," before we can
hope that he will appear for us nnd restore
Ilero wo have
or piety— the it
name of Christ and his religion, Il
ing as Ihis thnt has debauched Iho i
rupted ihe public sentiment of the
Iho South to rebel against lbs envoi
Idcrin
IREASOX L'XliEll THE MASK OF PIETY.
 Ihe New York Observe
bled," I
iv I, n It
miller the headinfe, " Sot y
It the w
national sins, and thst
e cannot expect success for our arms until tie repent
id reform. Very sound doctrine, certainly ; hut,
before wc put IKU Obnervrr in Iho catalogue of pro-
' "
i little further, to discover if we
whioh it regards as naliooal sins,
calling for repentance nnd reformation. These nro its
" We have been iu a condition to observe the pro-
groMcd" moral sentiment 'line Ibe line begun, and we
Convtnicd from llie outoct lb.it unless liod bo with us.
il is In vain to take op the sword, iiu.l belie vinjj thst
ire of Ih Aorta irrrc mil imiorrol lo (Ac ertttttj taal li'l lo
l/i-icrir, cod therefor.: oushtt.. hnic been humbled long
n-o. and brought to n true feus,- „i' our dependence oo
.Mmiejit ni. I. lie hue ardently desired — -
l-Ll-l.-IO.i tlllt till- people JI'C i 1 1
"" ''
ivni-riinti the belief thnt Cod
delivers ice. an.l restore us to union nnd peace.
'•Antcng tbe people, iiv li.vc not sc.m the daivn of
I" Inlitil IV
hie ourselves
I
ot lenrnine.
L
...IO..I...
y has Congress di«playi
"" il bickerings, nnu cnnai
o lament thi
-S abound at this hour, i
oocbt to mourn, il it doi
ippollllOM
dav bus passed by w
t had Used for ihc pn
! (mil/ill lhat the wnr
HLf find no/uifa to btti
il i. ;.r..>.,.,.f..i iritt
.f ii- Cbmlfiidi - ,
H oWItT dcsfjll in
'Ual ond ll,c liu
have lost sight
ellie'w'iTau'u
1
letl ui.ini 1.1
llll't
-hi ho speedily olosei
iKrU it iriU t-r dosed, i
•J ond Ihc Union AM
rolel- mid o'.K pi-..ple n [o.-ot nt Ibis ll...,i-,ii, nol
folly', if they desire the help of Licsl Aluiivhti n
- Ir, tin. -olioori |. it. -i thnt n nt ion t;.' e - '
'
this liiindv year, it is well lo lay ihe.se t- i t.n.
heilrt. Ily nil the innocent hl.,.,,1 thnt has I , . „ p.
out ui Ihe bnllle-lhl-l. hi the .li ito- c-r...ins ot our
dreiiltid brclhren shun to rlciem-.- tn- ibey th.iuehtl ol
the jtl.evoioeiit of their lathers, bi ll.t I. 11= ol lle.ii-
,- 1 i nli'l.-i .1 h -. in i !-:..:- r
.
,, lo ul. i.rpbnii--.
widoes and clilldli-'s parents, who liaie given their
best lei oved lo die for the Union is it was. In/ ei-cry
, (,.,; .
in ,>n- oi f,ii«i iriln iinr^riendi in ci'-ru
y-irl ii' ll.li or.. it Mm/, nnd by every oath thai binds us
i.. i , ,i .in.l tn ...-' n i.i ii. i
'
In li'irohle .illfselve, hetore 11. .mil. und.ii'i people.
eep nt and return. We hnve sinned. We have gone
tar astray. And just so surely as there in a jealous
v. o. It e.
I, b.r Ju .
r, that e.il-
•Ib t..r jii.nii.-o -• And yet, what lithe underpinning of
Bod's throne but Juitlec—whst iho fjrest law of the
.ci-cii. all time, and 1h r ..i^-li,.o,i ,,|l l|„. nr-es of
nity, hot justice.' The greatest danger of tl.lt
ntry is. Lbal Ihere is no cooscioutneH on tl,o part Of
North of its oivn complicity in the gresl crime Ol
"In. b our war is Iho righteous retribution, It seems
lhat (his idea cannot be too strongly enforced,
e shall I look for juslice any morn in the Korlh
than in Iho South!
foil will tell mo thst slat-cry it tho cause of the war.
d what ia slavery * It it a good or a bad Ihingt If
fruit bo wnr, nnd such a wnr, then surely il is nol
nod thing. If its fruit be such society ns tvo llnd at
Ihe South, then surely it Is nol a good thing. Judging
Irtti by its Iruit, wbnt is It but the most fearful
mI ITpaa Hint ever grew on all the brond acres of
I- eee.tii.i,' Slavery! tVbo of us can ndl what it
.olliiiori isilh Ibe South, in Ihe most fearful wny
I Wl si
rot o Why, I
We have cherished llie hope thai tlio startling
developments of the last mon II i would break the spell
it tho Border Slates, in alliance with
Conservatives ol the North, hnve so
long kept ihe President subservient to their will in the
inaouieiit of the war ;
but no begin to fear thnt he
holly unable In Olunncipntc bimsell. and lhat by Ills
.latins, half-way policy the nation will be led
r ruin. He seenm to be morally incapable ol spenk-
one bold, fearless word tor liberty, or of taking
strong, otraiiihlforwnn! slop in advance. IT hi
his foot forward even n sinnlc inch, he does It st
trcic" friends "ofTi.c country win, n , I Hutu h
c- disgraced and imperilled by such weakoess in ill
:l Magistrate, lie could not sign the ConfUrj-ilioi
even nfier it had hi in modilieil in deferenco to hi!
iplcs, without commiiling the unparalleled lolly of
tine to propitiate tho slaveholders of the Eorder
Slates by lending to Congress the message which, but
for that modification. uttvU (WW hem hurled thereat as
a veto '.
The act. if not an insult lo Congress, was nn
When twenty Of tho twenty-eight members or Con-
gress trom the Bonier States, in response to hlsrarnest
entreaties lor then- cooperation, repudiated his gradual
emancipation scheme ns impracticable, and in cfl'ccl
cunfesacd that their chief, if nol Iheir only inlen
the Union arose from llie hope dial il would cor
lo be Ibe bulwark of slavery, wo said, Surely llie
President will now repudiate such counsellor!
obey the voico of lbo free North by striking quick
and bard at the enuse of Iho rebellion Ue (rill nl
onco- issue the proclamation contemplated in Ihe Con-
fiscation net, calling upon the slaves of rebels overy*
where to come lo the help cl Mm nation nnd be Tree.
is the only response, thus far. to Ihe action ol Congress
ard tho voice of ihe loyal people of the North :
tt tu [icmit.i. .t. IV.i-ui.,.,!..-,. .July 12. 1861!.
Ftr.il, drJrreJ . Tint military colli mandecs within Hie
Stales of Virginia, South Cnrolina, Georgia, Florida,
VJ li.-liol "!. t I
- -:;]: ! ni- oi i T 
in on orderly manner. Belie and use any property,
real or personal, which miy bo necessary or con-
venient for Iheir several commands, for supplies, or
for other military purpose, ; sin! lb.it, while property
may bo destroyed for proper military objects, none
sliull he ijeilr.ii . .1 in reunion Ni-^ or to due
itcosd : That military nnd naval commanders shall
employ as laborers within and from said States so
m-uiy persons of African descent as can be advantage-
ously uJcd for military nr natal purposes, giving them
Te.isioiable re ae.e, lor their labor.
37iird: Tli.it list., t....ili pr..[i.;itv and persons of Afri-
can descent accounts fluid t-.<- kepi suiliciently necuralo
and in detail to shnv. .|ti.miitiea and amounts, aud from
whom both property and sui h per- 1 ns shall have come,
as a basin upon which . pcniation can be made in
proper coses, and the pencil Ivparttt.cnts of this
government shall attend to and perform their appro-
priate parts toward tbe execution ..1"
tiicse orders.
Dy order of iho President.
I'ihu-i : M.STi.sTov, Secretary of War-
Not a word is tliere in this order promising freedom
I- dig o
vord ovc
ey will nut, when the i
The Border Slate*, it will be
tcloded from the operation
Kentucky, Missouri, Tennessi
,o permission io enipi
pulsed from our cam
equivoeolilic:, hip)
e to an end' Wo s!
.,- |'o- ... dry is lost.
The Washington eorrcsponden
.under Jato July 22,
dent s position whicli we
of 7V Evening
w of Ihe I'rcsi-
ct the war with i
llontioi;. in thi. stmel for
ill- l.elier lis, denilll.lltn:
:;"S
and henceforth should
Rumors Ion-..
rope and do t works. Wc- ,1 be
a more vieorous pro seen thin
; out in good fiiitb ibe recent
legislation ot Ciuieres-s. Irani nboi I bear I am in-
clined I u believe this i* true, and il is proleible II, ul
uch iiviirn. tiore. loive nlruadv In en sent cut.
A very lour Lit.ini 1 i„e. lin.t i. o In hi i.ii, T,le,
ipon Ihe subject . and there uics an i neoui-neing dcutree
Ilorder s.lnvo States, even on Ihe question of slavery,
-whatever low.ir.ls the t, oil sud Atlntilie sbue
I bniard Ihe opinion lhat ihe policy of the
government will be lo totally overthrew ilsverj In
-he cotton and sur-r growinj; Sidles by ever)' method
n its power. It will not slick at any obstacles, beini;
onvinee.l that Ihe only hope of making thus... siste.
he] lent is to . niir. ly lie-tr.-y slaiery io them. Total
bolilion in Ibe Matc-i ol Soulli Carolina, GcorKta,
Vlahima, Sli,si..,[,pi, l.i.iii-iati.i. nnd Teias is resolved
,p ..r I nm ,LI1-"--l.i nn- nif'TineJ. Tliere will be no
proclamation upon Ibe subject, hut ii is noon the less
tie died policy ol Iho corcrnoiout. Mr. Lincoln has «
prejudice again. t nnii slavery proclamation*, and will
quietly inform lua Li.ner.ils ol Ins purposes, and will
make any. Wilh slavery abolished in the Hull and
Atlnntic Sltlles.it will take cam ot ibiell elsei. Iierc-
nill gradually enpiro."
: Coui :
ll-.i
contains a large number ol important niu) valuable
papers, among which we notice Addresses delivered
before the Virginia ritate i.'oiiieritioo, upon the iiuesMon
of Secession, by the Commissioners front Soulti t.'lro-
lina, ...eorgis and Mississippi; Letter from Charles I),
Drake of Mittourion " Personal Liberty Lam"; Major
Sprah-ue'« paper on "TilO Tesafl Treaton " ;
Minutes ol
he Southern Iligbta Association nl St. Helena I'arlsh,
S. 0. ; Carl Sehun's Cooper Institute Speech ; and
John Stuart Mill's " Contest in America." Prcfljed to
the number are likenesses of Alexander Stephens ond
Wm. II. Seward. New York : G. P. Putnam—Charles
In spile of the arlfully-wuven drapery of cant in
hich J7ir OlKtrtCT would bidi- its true meaning from
irelleciing readers, its sympathy with slavery and
Ihe rebels is here revealed to all who have eyes to see
enso to understand. What il soys of the " rapacity
fraud
l!
of public men, of " profaneness, intempcr-
>," etc., lias a basis of truth; bul none of these,
ontly.is the great sin which, in its pious estimation,
chiefly oflcodcd God, and for which tho nation
TH£ QrasTII)N F THE HOUB FOE FREE
"^rixss.Z&SXZ "B°-"»« "»—«" - »s" <° »»» "
king of men without wages, the abolition of mar- loyal Liborers free, or be ourselves the slaves or
ringo among four million ol people, or any or all of the| traitOriT
made slat- ry Ibis the South mad it, or m 11 the
child of the North; Surely it must ic said lo bo the
Inhl liolhofthc Nor 1. and the Soul) 11 Ibis be Irue,
and if slat ry be tin
to roe, there is b t one conclusion,
Ihnl slavery ought I die, and die nt
ol self-pi if for no hlgl
I on the S'orth Is not calling for (ho abolition of
matter of sell preservation. It
matters athlng what tho war ce Is the North in
blood, In life. In science, in chnr-
nc tor, alo fan secured. !
ovcry il the dl*
llLlllV Ol our nail lissionarics from
the Easl an.l tell us of the sacred eroco-
whose J
-..--.
in. iiiil.lr.
nflbringi the t;nd Ibey worship. ;ut swims there in
Hie waters of Inch an terrible a rSRon ns in your
Southern ii wli.i'e merciless and remorse Icm
..e Weil c-e-l.-lnd
WD, minded lor the -uicriflccr That is
what -.la
"ncti at Icndclh intn captivity si all go Inlo capliv-
ily." Aro we flnding it truo? Why, from the ac-
counts yesterday, it is likely to bo literally Irue. Tor
ihe Richmond papers are proposing to Like yoor young
men and drive them to work on the soil, under die
sh. Will Ibey nut do it: Is there anything they Rill
I di. '
And no may yet find it true in (he most literal
well as the most terrible sense, lie that Icadoth into
ptivlly shall gn into captivity. Tlionrnt-bornof Egypt
list he sacrificed in every house before iho oppressed
uld go free. It is literally to be true of us, and not
only the llrsl-born sacrificed, but multitudes of othera
fathers thought, when they laid their
years ago, thnt Iheir mountain stood
strong :
that Ibe New I-ioj-land mountains, the Rocky
fountains of the West, should ns soon be started from
heir f!-t,.-n!n~s as the foundations of their government
s? removed. Hut Ihey might just as well have declared
y enactment, thnt from and after iho year ITS9, the
ightiiinijs of heaven should no more strike ; for they
tid foundations that God , from before tho foundation ot
Its world, had decreed should nol stand, because Uicy
. ere laid in injustice. And is guvernment proposliiL-
o dig deep and lay new foundations, and lay them In
justice and righteousness . Surely not. I could read
[lings of the Secretary ot Slate entirely
dlUerctn doctrines and purposes. I could show you
it the government does net contemplate any change
the condition of any human being in the laud by this
revelation, does not Contemplate ibe emancipation ot a
tingle slave, or the sulk-ring of a single slaveholder,
.imply in eensoquenco of this rebellion. Tho govcrn-
uent surely docs not call fur justice. Whu does "
We
inve proposed a measure of emancipation to a part of
be slaveholders ; bul on what condition ! This, that il
bey will emancipate, ibei shall bo compensated lor the
Oss of properly. This is llie highest we havo yet
•enelie.l. Nay, that Is tho highest the Abolitionitts
Ihcmsolvc-s, many of Idem, have come. Is that justice'
nice when wo tako Ihe oppressor, Ihe rubber,
tell by his robbery and wrong, standing up in
imptnilcnco, his criminality, his hardness ot
heart, and propoio to him thnt il lie will cease this rob-
ong, he shall be compensated fur his loss of
rile tvu take the spoiled and ruined victims
m out in their battalions of beggary to
WTlug nn uncertain subsistence from tho cold charity
ot a world that hates iliem ( And lliii is the justice for
which this nation calls— the best of iL
There is n siory of »T0ry distinguished personage
being invited by another distinguished personage to
nd his hott stood up nnd laid " Behold,
the half of my goods 1 give lo feed Ihe poor, and if I
IVO taken anylhing from any man unjustly, I rctloro
m four-told." No wonder there came frooi Ihosc
flowed lips that beautiful benediction, "This day la
Ivalion come to this house." Whool u_s has proposed
on hales the shire, lutes his color and
all bis r
rhile w
viuie collelh lor justice. Nol yel. Pilate
I his lunula on the morning of the crucifhioti,
' I am innocent of ihe blood ol this just per-
The South continues to crucify its victims, and
the North washes its hands in innocence. No wonder
disaster and defeat have to often waited upnn our
i, for il is llie dehor ah ot hosts nnd ol the enslaved,
not .letl'. Davis, who is our foe. It is God's justice
i ,t n Id. li yoi light, emir millions of slaves to-day
e their chains, and your government heeds them
11. di Ibom net. did 1 say > By all Ihc laws and pre
cedents and tests of all the post, tbe proclamation o
n. Hunter freed a million of slaves. At his voice, a,
:he voice of God. Ihey crept up the- sides ol theli
y prison, tltn hell nf horrors where Ihey had wallet
long, and were just leapinu over ihc battlements t.
cdom, nnd Abraham Lincoln sweeps tin
in to the woes Ihey bud almost , scaped
rar. Il is enslaving the children of Cod, instead
tie greatest dilliriilty is in making nursclrea c
his of our own participation in this terr
call
.1 ii tint any ol o
iciplc. I do
-
y.-jun,- le
1 belie
Hunter issued thai proclamation till he bad
ulre of his army ; bul what if every "°n uf
re n Cb-rkson or a tt'llberforco, with innch
liove them as revoke the proclamations nf
and Hunter, and still hold millions in slavery t
er law of coniclepee and the soul ore still
iscd. i,..! dies tomu things, tt" eh, I,. t once
I tl.,,-, u .hade ol Webster, woe wis utile
tad ethers enacted any other*
,o laws of God! And
1 sullen
u remember n ce tain Sanhedrim before
and Ibey said lo a Great
nhowos present. " V e stone all such, but what
u T
" And he said. 'He that ii without sin
u, let him cist the t rst slone." Whet if Uial
her had Hood on A lington Heights, Iho day
Gen. HeDo we II and bis
oats, "Ue that is w ihuut sin among you, let
tho first columbisd " Probably wo snoaPJ
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Jul 26
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Jul 26

Mais conteúdo relacionado

Semelhante a National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Jul 26

National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1863, Feb 14
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1863, Feb 14National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1863, Feb 14
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1863, Feb 14S7w5Xb
 
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1863, Feb. 28
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1863, Feb. 28National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1863, Feb. 28
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1863, Feb. 28S7w5Xb
 
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Jul 12
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Jul 12National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Jul 12
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Jul 12S7w5Xb
 
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1861, Feb 16
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1861, Feb 16National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1861, Feb 16
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1861, Feb 16S7w5Xb
 
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Oct 4
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Oct 4National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Oct 4
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Oct 4S7w5Xb
 
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1863, Jan 31
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1863, Jan 31National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1863, Jan 31
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1863, Jan 31S7w5Xb
 
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Mar 14
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Mar 14National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Mar 14
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Mar 14S7w5Xb
 
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1861, Mar 23
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1861, Mar 23National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1861, Mar 23
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1861, Mar 23S7w5Xb
 
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1861, Jan 19
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1861, Jan 19National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1861, Jan 19
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1861, Jan 19S7w5Xb
 
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Dec 27
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Dec 27National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Dec 27
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Dec 27S7w5Xb
 
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1863, Mar 28
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1863, Mar 28National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1863, Mar 28
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1863, Mar 28S7w5Xb
 
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Oct 18
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Oct 18National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Oct 18
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Oct 18S7w5Xb
 
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1860, Nov 10
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1860, Nov 10National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1860, Nov 10
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1860, Nov 10S7w5Xb
 
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Dec 20
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Dec 20National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Dec 20
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Dec 20S7w5Xb
 
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1861, Aug 24
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1861, Aug 24National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1861, Aug 24
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1861, Aug 24S7w5Xb
 
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1860, Aug 25
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1860, Aug 25National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1860, Aug 25
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1860, Aug 25S7w5Xb
 
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Oct 25
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Oct 25National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Oct 25
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Oct 25S7w5Xb
 
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Oct 11
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Oct 11National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Oct 11
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Oct 11S7w5Xb
 
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Nov 1
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Nov 1National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Nov 1
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Nov 1S7w5Xb
 

Semelhante a National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Jul 26 (20)

National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1863, Feb 14
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1863, Feb 14National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1863, Feb 14
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1863, Feb 14
 
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1863, Feb. 28
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1863, Feb. 28National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1863, Feb. 28
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1863, Feb. 28
 
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Jul 12
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Jul 12National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Jul 12
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Jul 12
 
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1861, Feb 16
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1861, Feb 16National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1861, Feb 16
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1861, Feb 16
 
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Oct 4
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Oct 4National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Oct 4
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Oct 4
 
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1863, Jan 31
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1863, Jan 31National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1863, Jan 31
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1863, Jan 31
 
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Mar 14
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Mar 14National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Mar 14
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Mar 14
 
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1861, Mar 23
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1861, Mar 23National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1861, Mar 23
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1861, Mar 23
 
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1861, Jan 19
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1861, Jan 19National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1861, Jan 19
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1861, Jan 19
 
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Dec 27
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Dec 27National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Dec 27
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Dec 27
 
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1863, Mar 28
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1863, Mar 28National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1863, Mar 28
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1863, Mar 28
 
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Oct 18
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Oct 18National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Oct 18
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Oct 18
 
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1860, Nov 10
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1860, Nov 10National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1860, Nov 10
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1860, Nov 10
 
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Dec 20
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Dec 20National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Dec 20
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Dec 20
 
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1861, Aug 24
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1861, Aug 24National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1861, Aug 24
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1861, Aug 24
 
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1860, Aug 25
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1860, Aug 25National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1860, Aug 25
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1860, Aug 25
 
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Oct 25
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Oct 25National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Oct 25
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Oct 25
 
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Oct 11
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Oct 11National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Oct 11
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Oct 11
 
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Nov 1
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Nov 1National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Nov 1
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Nov 1
 
fghjfgh
fghjfghfghjfgh
fghjfgh
 

Mais de S7w5Xb

An Appeal in Favor of that Class of Americans Called Africans
An Appeal in Favor of that Class of Americans Called AfricansAn Appeal in Favor of that Class of Americans Called Africans
An Appeal in Favor of that Class of Americans Called AfricansS7w5Xb
 
Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1836
Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1836Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1836
Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1836S7w5Xb
 
Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1837
Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1837Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1837
Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1837S7w5Xb
 
Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1838
Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1838Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1838
Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1838S7w5Xb
 
Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1839
Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1839Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1839
Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1839S7w5Xb
 
Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1840
Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1840Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1840
Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1840S7w5Xb
 
Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1842
Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1842Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1842
Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1842S7w5Xb
 
Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1843
Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1843Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1843
Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1843S7w5Xb
 
Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1844
Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1844Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1844
Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1844S7w5Xb
 
Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1846
Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1846Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1846
Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1846S7w5Xb
 
Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1847
Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1847Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1847
Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1847S7w5Xb
 
Anti-Slavery Catechism
Anti-Slavery CatechismAnti-Slavery Catechism
Anti-Slavery CatechismS7w5Xb
 
Appeal to the Christian Women of the South
Appeal to the Christian Women of the SouthAppeal to the Christian Women of the South
Appeal to the Christian Women of the SouthS7w5Xb
 
Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl
Incidents in the Life of a Slave GirlIncidents in the Life of a Slave Girl
Incidents in the Life of a Slave GirlS7w5Xb
 
Letter from Lydia Maria Child to Henry Alexander
Letter from Lydia Maria Child to Henry Alexander Letter from Lydia Maria Child to Henry Alexander
Letter from Lydia Maria Child to Henry Alexander S7w5Xb
 
Letters from New York; by Lydia Maria Francis Child
Letters from New York; by Lydia Maria Francis ChildLetters from New York; by Lydia Maria Francis Child
Letters from New York; by Lydia Maria Francis ChildS7w5Xb
 
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1848, Aug 24
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1848, Aug 24National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1848, Aug 24
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1848, Aug 24S7w5Xb
 
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1848, Jul 20
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1848, Jul 20National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1848, Jul 20
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1848, Jul 20S7w5Xb
 
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1859, Sep 3
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1859, Sep 3 National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1859, Sep 3
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1859, Sep 3 S7w5Xb
 
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1860, Aug 11
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1860, Aug 11National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1860, Aug 11
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1860, Aug 11S7w5Xb
 

Mais de S7w5Xb (20)

An Appeal in Favor of that Class of Americans Called Africans
An Appeal in Favor of that Class of Americans Called AfricansAn Appeal in Favor of that Class of Americans Called Africans
An Appeal in Favor of that Class of Americans Called Africans
 
Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1836
Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1836Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1836
Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1836
 
Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1837
Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1837Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1837
Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1837
 
Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1838
Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1838Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1838
Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1838
 
Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1839
Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1839Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1839
Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1839
 
Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1840
Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1840Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1840
Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1840
 
Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1842
Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1842Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1842
Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1842
 
Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1843
Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1843Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1843
Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1843
 
Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1844
Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1844Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1844
Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1844
 
Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1846
Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1846Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1846
Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1846
 
Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1847
Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1847Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1847
Anti-Slavery Almanac of 1847
 
Anti-Slavery Catechism
Anti-Slavery CatechismAnti-Slavery Catechism
Anti-Slavery Catechism
 
Appeal to the Christian Women of the South
Appeal to the Christian Women of the SouthAppeal to the Christian Women of the South
Appeal to the Christian Women of the South
 
Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl
Incidents in the Life of a Slave GirlIncidents in the Life of a Slave Girl
Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl
 
Letter from Lydia Maria Child to Henry Alexander
Letter from Lydia Maria Child to Henry Alexander Letter from Lydia Maria Child to Henry Alexander
Letter from Lydia Maria Child to Henry Alexander
 
Letters from New York; by Lydia Maria Francis Child
Letters from New York; by Lydia Maria Francis ChildLetters from New York; by Lydia Maria Francis Child
Letters from New York; by Lydia Maria Francis Child
 
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1848, Aug 24
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1848, Aug 24National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1848, Aug 24
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1848, Aug 24
 
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1848, Jul 20
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1848, Jul 20National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1848, Jul 20
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1848, Jul 20
 
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1859, Sep 3
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1859, Sep 3 National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1859, Sep 3
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1859, Sep 3
 
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1860, Aug 11
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1860, Aug 11National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1860, Aug 11
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1860, Aug 11
 

Último

Jual Obat Aborsi Hongkong ( Asli No.1 ) 085657271886 Obat Penggugur Kandungan...
Jual Obat Aborsi Hongkong ( Asli No.1 ) 085657271886 Obat Penggugur Kandungan...Jual Obat Aborsi Hongkong ( Asli No.1 ) 085657271886 Obat Penggugur Kandungan...
Jual Obat Aborsi Hongkong ( Asli No.1 ) 085657271886 Obat Penggugur Kandungan...ZurliaSoop
 
Single or Multiple melodic lines structure
Single or Multiple melodic lines structureSingle or Multiple melodic lines structure
Single or Multiple melodic lines structuredhanjurrannsibayan2
 
HMCS Max Bernays Pre-Deployment Brief (May 2024).pptx
HMCS Max Bernays Pre-Deployment Brief (May 2024).pptxHMCS Max Bernays Pre-Deployment Brief (May 2024).pptx
HMCS Max Bernays Pre-Deployment Brief (May 2024).pptxEsquimalt MFRC
 
SKILL OF INTRODUCING THE LESSON MICRO SKILLS.pptx
SKILL OF INTRODUCING THE LESSON MICRO SKILLS.pptxSKILL OF INTRODUCING THE LESSON MICRO SKILLS.pptx
SKILL OF INTRODUCING THE LESSON MICRO SKILLS.pptxAmanpreet Kaur
 
Micro-Scholarship, What it is, How can it help me.pdf
Micro-Scholarship, What it is, How can it help me.pdfMicro-Scholarship, What it is, How can it help me.pdf
Micro-Scholarship, What it is, How can it help me.pdfPoh-Sun Goh
 
Mixin Classes in Odoo 17 How to Extend Models Using Mixin Classes
Mixin Classes in Odoo 17  How to Extend Models Using Mixin ClassesMixin Classes in Odoo 17  How to Extend Models Using Mixin Classes
Mixin Classes in Odoo 17 How to Extend Models Using Mixin ClassesCeline George
 
Activity 01 - Artificial Culture (1).pdf
Activity 01 - Artificial Culture (1).pdfActivity 01 - Artificial Culture (1).pdf
Activity 01 - Artificial Culture (1).pdfciinovamais
 
Google Gemini An AI Revolution in Education.pptx
Google Gemini An AI Revolution in Education.pptxGoogle Gemini An AI Revolution in Education.pptx
Google Gemini An AI Revolution in Education.pptxDr. Sarita Anand
 
Unit-IV; Professional Sales Representative (PSR).pptx
Unit-IV; Professional Sales Representative (PSR).pptxUnit-IV; Professional Sales Representative (PSR).pptx
Unit-IV; Professional Sales Representative (PSR).pptxVishalSingh1417
 
How to Manage Global Discount in Odoo 17 POS
How to Manage Global Discount in Odoo 17 POSHow to Manage Global Discount in Odoo 17 POS
How to Manage Global Discount in Odoo 17 POSCeline George
 
Salient Features of India constitution especially power and functions
Salient Features of India constitution especially power and functionsSalient Features of India constitution especially power and functions
Salient Features of India constitution especially power and functionsKarakKing
 
UGC NET Paper 1 Mathematical Reasoning & Aptitude.pdf
UGC NET Paper 1 Mathematical Reasoning & Aptitude.pdfUGC NET Paper 1 Mathematical Reasoning & Aptitude.pdf
UGC NET Paper 1 Mathematical Reasoning & Aptitude.pdfNirmal Dwivedi
 
Vishram Singh - Textbook of Anatomy Upper Limb and Thorax.. Volume 1 (1).pdf
Vishram Singh - Textbook of Anatomy  Upper Limb and Thorax.. Volume 1 (1).pdfVishram Singh - Textbook of Anatomy  Upper Limb and Thorax.. Volume 1 (1).pdf
Vishram Singh - Textbook of Anatomy Upper Limb and Thorax.. Volume 1 (1).pdfssuserdda66b
 
Holdier Curriculum Vitae (April 2024).pdf
Holdier Curriculum Vitae (April 2024).pdfHoldier Curriculum Vitae (April 2024).pdf
Holdier Curriculum Vitae (April 2024).pdfagholdier
 
Unit-IV- Pharma. Marketing Channels.pptx
Unit-IV- Pharma. Marketing Channels.pptxUnit-IV- Pharma. Marketing Channels.pptx
Unit-IV- Pharma. Marketing Channels.pptxVishalSingh1417
 
1029-Danh muc Sach Giao Khoa khoi 6.pdf
1029-Danh muc Sach Giao Khoa khoi  6.pdf1029-Danh muc Sach Giao Khoa khoi  6.pdf
1029-Danh muc Sach Giao Khoa khoi 6.pdfQucHHunhnh
 
Python Notes for mca i year students osmania university.docx
Python Notes for mca i year students osmania university.docxPython Notes for mca i year students osmania university.docx
Python Notes for mca i year students osmania university.docxRamakrishna Reddy Bijjam
 
ICT role in 21st century education and it's challenges.
ICT role in 21st century education and it's challenges.ICT role in 21st century education and it's challenges.
ICT role in 21st century education and it's challenges.MaryamAhmad92
 
On National Teacher Day, meet the 2024-25 Kenan Fellows
On National Teacher Day, meet the 2024-25 Kenan FellowsOn National Teacher Day, meet the 2024-25 Kenan Fellows
On National Teacher Day, meet the 2024-25 Kenan FellowsMebane Rash
 

Último (20)

Mehran University Newsletter Vol-X, Issue-I, 2024
Mehran University Newsletter Vol-X, Issue-I, 2024Mehran University Newsletter Vol-X, Issue-I, 2024
Mehran University Newsletter Vol-X, Issue-I, 2024
 
Jual Obat Aborsi Hongkong ( Asli No.1 ) 085657271886 Obat Penggugur Kandungan...
Jual Obat Aborsi Hongkong ( Asli No.1 ) 085657271886 Obat Penggugur Kandungan...Jual Obat Aborsi Hongkong ( Asli No.1 ) 085657271886 Obat Penggugur Kandungan...
Jual Obat Aborsi Hongkong ( Asli No.1 ) 085657271886 Obat Penggugur Kandungan...
 
Single or Multiple melodic lines structure
Single or Multiple melodic lines structureSingle or Multiple melodic lines structure
Single or Multiple melodic lines structure
 
HMCS Max Bernays Pre-Deployment Brief (May 2024).pptx
HMCS Max Bernays Pre-Deployment Brief (May 2024).pptxHMCS Max Bernays Pre-Deployment Brief (May 2024).pptx
HMCS Max Bernays Pre-Deployment Brief (May 2024).pptx
 
SKILL OF INTRODUCING THE LESSON MICRO SKILLS.pptx
SKILL OF INTRODUCING THE LESSON MICRO SKILLS.pptxSKILL OF INTRODUCING THE LESSON MICRO SKILLS.pptx
SKILL OF INTRODUCING THE LESSON MICRO SKILLS.pptx
 
Micro-Scholarship, What it is, How can it help me.pdf
Micro-Scholarship, What it is, How can it help me.pdfMicro-Scholarship, What it is, How can it help me.pdf
Micro-Scholarship, What it is, How can it help me.pdf
 
Mixin Classes in Odoo 17 How to Extend Models Using Mixin Classes
Mixin Classes in Odoo 17  How to Extend Models Using Mixin ClassesMixin Classes in Odoo 17  How to Extend Models Using Mixin Classes
Mixin Classes in Odoo 17 How to Extend Models Using Mixin Classes
 
Activity 01 - Artificial Culture (1).pdf
Activity 01 - Artificial Culture (1).pdfActivity 01 - Artificial Culture (1).pdf
Activity 01 - Artificial Culture (1).pdf
 
Google Gemini An AI Revolution in Education.pptx
Google Gemini An AI Revolution in Education.pptxGoogle Gemini An AI Revolution in Education.pptx
Google Gemini An AI Revolution in Education.pptx
 
Unit-IV; Professional Sales Representative (PSR).pptx
Unit-IV; Professional Sales Representative (PSR).pptxUnit-IV; Professional Sales Representative (PSR).pptx
Unit-IV; Professional Sales Representative (PSR).pptx
 
How to Manage Global Discount in Odoo 17 POS
How to Manage Global Discount in Odoo 17 POSHow to Manage Global Discount in Odoo 17 POS
How to Manage Global Discount in Odoo 17 POS
 
Salient Features of India constitution especially power and functions
Salient Features of India constitution especially power and functionsSalient Features of India constitution especially power and functions
Salient Features of India constitution especially power and functions
 
UGC NET Paper 1 Mathematical Reasoning & Aptitude.pdf
UGC NET Paper 1 Mathematical Reasoning & Aptitude.pdfUGC NET Paper 1 Mathematical Reasoning & Aptitude.pdf
UGC NET Paper 1 Mathematical Reasoning & Aptitude.pdf
 
Vishram Singh - Textbook of Anatomy Upper Limb and Thorax.. Volume 1 (1).pdf
Vishram Singh - Textbook of Anatomy  Upper Limb and Thorax.. Volume 1 (1).pdfVishram Singh - Textbook of Anatomy  Upper Limb and Thorax.. Volume 1 (1).pdf
Vishram Singh - Textbook of Anatomy Upper Limb and Thorax.. Volume 1 (1).pdf
 
Holdier Curriculum Vitae (April 2024).pdf
Holdier Curriculum Vitae (April 2024).pdfHoldier Curriculum Vitae (April 2024).pdf
Holdier Curriculum Vitae (April 2024).pdf
 
Unit-IV- Pharma. Marketing Channels.pptx
Unit-IV- Pharma. Marketing Channels.pptxUnit-IV- Pharma. Marketing Channels.pptx
Unit-IV- Pharma. Marketing Channels.pptx
 
1029-Danh muc Sach Giao Khoa khoi 6.pdf
1029-Danh muc Sach Giao Khoa khoi  6.pdf1029-Danh muc Sach Giao Khoa khoi  6.pdf
1029-Danh muc Sach Giao Khoa khoi 6.pdf
 
Python Notes for mca i year students osmania university.docx
Python Notes for mca i year students osmania university.docxPython Notes for mca i year students osmania university.docx
Python Notes for mca i year students osmania university.docx
 
ICT role in 21st century education and it's challenges.
ICT role in 21st century education and it's challenges.ICT role in 21st century education and it's challenges.
ICT role in 21st century education and it's challenges.
 
On National Teacher Day, meet the 2024-25 Kenan Fellows
On National Teacher Day, meet the 2024-25 Kenan FellowsOn National Teacher Day, meet the 2024-25 Kenan Fellows
On National Teacher Day, meet the 2024-25 Kenan Fellows
 

National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Jul 26

  • 1. VOL XXIII. NO. 11. Ijtatfmn] gurti-^townj £tnn(XM. rnni.ispn-:!) weekly, on satuhday. IT WO DOLUU 10:11 Isxnii, AMERICAN ANTI-SI„Vi;itV SOCIETY. PENNSTLTANIA ANTI-SLAVERT SOCll.TV. IOC ,„rll,.T. n lh Strut, I'liilwldphi'i. ,!;"''• "". •/"<"". •>' rcl. c In any w,,y t„ ,], 'Vi'i' >.',-;;!'!,, «'r,' m' 1 ;;'-, ^ ! '" Mr : ''' ."''"" NEW Y011K, SAT[ t RDAY7 JULY 26~18627 one iherc without tenia, ns fn,t as marchin gluing could hnve taken ii 9 (hero — [he n uidll.g UN liy liny—by night, bringing lllilltcll [Wn whmh our cob, , ,XII1 |.] sab-ly „„i r ,- "rely win vicUirics. l'bc a |„yP u Bfng our id pnmpiiicn m Virginia had now boon clone ic heart oi (lie rebeTlion hnd nearly ceased to low'tana il with us. on the contrary? H7,t U the truth ofth* condition of IhiM army? 1 Liivn talked uilh ninny irniilligmii ,'„cn of i this subject. The superior nun of nil in k [' I'm,,." I one. day ,lr,,v l,r„. oi,i of hi. gu k-n.v I'll Mils theuic hi saying, " 1 aw mrr >».. ihnt the negroes in ibis Peninsula don't WHOLE NO. 1,155, .v II..].".. h. - ,-,],, i light wiihoni nnil impede, I "1 red; on • , Mr. Y. Yon kne geUtims, AN ALLIANCE WITH 'n one know. I battle, save Ira wh Ir. e WMlO 01 " I'i by don't limy fight for us, Tom r ' rboy expected to. B i r , ni.a nil ihe , "" ,, " rv L " '•Ml*. eV|.CCICll to." iVhj.li.ki-, it,,, . ' "inn kuuw .n ...II as |. Yl„ W1 . r„ ir lilies mill crimp., nnil prcity plain i ili.lnl want miyiliing Io do null ii or lo lunkenslavi-ol any ol ihcpnille of (hi. , school, lly nnd by tliev will gut |u reading xiutuH ns " 1)„ ifiiti) others na lliou ijouldst be nlo," mnl unking personal applications of the Am! ihci, iihiii'n io 1.1,-nw ol il,, r,. r ,siiiu- d property io "niggers"? McM.iihsiLssiBtnnt.. were nil volunlfrs from - n blnik In :itz iiii.i i > i^i n- d.i i I inn of |. I., !l,„ I lin.1i , llniiit, .1 (Dlilicrn Ironi the picket riuullin i;round,nud the sentry *s path, tn every linrd lain l-n.iwn io ilihn-iv.i warfare, nnd [lie 'opfniii" an kcltlciiiout of a wilderness country. Drum rs. In your drums, mid . nil mm ...II- Sergeants, and lin me, il" you can, PL'tn meiiort-mklc.'s Brigade, Wh, , are tho rest? 1 lake tlit.-c negroes ol Vitamin i "llni - i _-i,- -i 1 1..- mnlriciilHl polio) of carrying o n >v:u ii^sijn,! our tminlrv il,rl,'Hli of gcni|i,| .in eounlry'a eiumi..-. ili.-.t iL.'v lum> Ih.ti killed will the shovel mnl the pieknxc—Ihnl (bey have literally n j;rnves nnd channelled their iwrnm- ™ into our Hwauip-cnoirded lioipil.1., -s of Virginia I lie wiineii-i.-i'— ihiiiIhim f Fn oiloiu hut lliua liir has only been n wnr of her oitn wsrriofJionB ,oll.er. Why do v.,- mil u tin- whole ipicM I>v undo the waves ol llic du^' llicir The i hi].,,- {re-iftiul the I' rntiiicd in Gem ihe Union ui-mir «1U mull a .ed.mi.i Imvo In inslil) lint i.lliriiiiv. 1 iudnMilnlili|;ly add Hi- le.-liuinn. of a i|imvH'r of h vein's en perlomnj in mil- l'eiiinjulTir Wat. lb,I it is utterly ititpu&ibli for m to fwl.tliw th' Tchds without -til nfli.iNc,- irilh Inmr i. And, uim-k my »-i without tloiag axjustii • ittli f ii oirn jKilUiotl j/.ll-.ru. <ipji/ i/iiiii- r.i. .,.! • i III. i .'^l:iiid tcill be Ihe principal ageo I. H I r«o nun in W.isliin^lon wlm know the < I II"' iliiiinT li.blo liilk u'l' e resit nun, mid .'ell. Davis., .mill Keitt, and Floyd, have iil.vuja miide modi of the je.iluiiny Engirt lid of the iipsniiiln.lurera of your North. You hn Mi radical rensor, for tbi? fiiilh it eniiUi-farryonwiirwhicliisliol.; Inr ilnim^li lliis war. ihe first thiol the lii-ginning of I. ibrob. bint tbe » „d ,, tn felL iftbe 1 ilm bund nlilwii . . ..I ,badwovcu,baakrupIey(lcepli into it, nnd I'n-i'i.srtd for ua in.-v.Mble fi.di.r,;. Ilul 1 find in iho clmr-n-tcr of ihe Snilln-rn country, in us iiiiiueiific extent, nnd in ihe implnesilile, domitieei'ing temper of its while |iopiil:iiion, iiwiiimounliible oV rtlin-l.;. io our [in.iided success. IVc demonstrated before Maiuuwu tlml conceded Ibe nid of the slitves. The hiilory ol wnr do.s i.oi nf lin i.nip.il worth of pranerly stolid' under f.pr hi months, withi n nuh'-- foe. When they bic.an lo evneiinle n en ' wlii.-b oulv olir ll.ii k iijiir.r.-.iiie hid .onu-rii .-, ,,i-i..,[.,.i. rre km-" nolblng of il- Tboy u awny wiihesiimon, wi. FK on-. fn..d, lifi^i-i tluribi —not leaving n. dollar* behind—innkiii!! n fnullliaia nuihing of il- A pedler from a New England HtH drivinii n horse of ihe linrebom . lined, Has the li man to enter llw evaciiated Hunmsu, and ta Ki.wd up in his wa--oii front. jii|ipiuy hit, clolbcs-l reins, una the l">< man lo wonder at Ibe pnei uhaniitir (if ihe •< hool-v.ird dirt works before wb nn army ol" over -.'iin.dui n had L,-in kepi al li Nay, noi Wept nt bay by the children', diri-workt but by the ioiiRnpiini.s of mi ignorance, which could not posaibly linvi U..n r,Lir?i-d nnd rouiniaintd, bud (ho right hi.inl nf lirotlicrboiid hien stretched out i tin- neyrotJi in lin hnioud, ul.d had Ihe President i t'ommnnder-in-rhiif said : "Tell ua wlinl jour Wi Department doe« ; where th,- rein 1 forces nn * miin lh' are, and I>;11 m ihw dnile. mid v. forever be free." Wi-lls, Butlerlield 4: Co r.n n i-nr.'r express bttwc.n bmKlo ami Albnny tban the underground n.ililary e>|ire.'a I hat would have been run In-iween Itichmond and IVnshiugion on thisinilinl nllinnie b.tw.:.-ii the while Union men of the North and the black Union men of lliu Soutb. !„l.,lru3 rviib.nil these btneks, or es posed to bn bniard. Landed bI Fort M'inroe, and llounden throu-li the main road up to Hampton and nbotc —where were sro! "Without, uinps, wilhout giudi-. The country wan u vtildemeKs. c bud not a nerop of il survey tu big nvg the hand, that showed tbe courses of the innumerable wood rondo llinl wound through it. The old Const Survey chart of the oiindings of the York and James lliirem, wit' «in»le turnpike to Yorktonn, WiHinnisbur 4 rtwhipyn, hope to "Ou .V,.r/-„T,r „„„. If your noli ' rat n k. l ]: U ,:.ivi,;.w,.wil||ryloi,,iil villi il„. rebels. Il ul you had belter uargnin with lls-lind belter fn..c. m and arm um. How loi... Id Ibis „nr l„,t if we were (reed by net of Con- t'roclnninf ion —both of Ibti I nlone hesi of all, though. r books. Will, il,.- nnmr.-.l e.-.-iiti r .|i,l,lr,.„,,.ll ll,„ |ii,|.,|, ,,|„I,„ : ,I , id graliliea .1 i'r.1. i- e Comnmndora of nil ntboSoulhi Wliy,ihureljelnt hed.i. ,1 Ihe C ni ml rcrudi lir,..,^(it height, dihijiidiiti d (like ,„„-i iSoiiihern hoi)-cs),nnd standing upon nil open fonndiitiun ol hnek, with two toll, forn.nl cbiraneys, npparenlly growing through it, nnd |.., n h,-- in 'front mnl rear the former luiiking n.-nward. Like the house of the eevn in Uhi.iic,.,. it ,„ nil " pilmdoweil Willi oreone ecs," the cedar, the collou-wond, the live-oiik, lig, u'berrj.nnil ini;in.li.i, all , r^ing from ihe .-mnl' light toil siL.Tiiir,^ from vi^rialdc duouipo-ilion. *,V.'-:( ' :.!' S l !i^t( , "t:SroT1^ln^-''n^'-C^•'=Sl^.rts- oei< =h- mped in front. Tfio ocension Wn. nilher Dnpont and stall' being presei Uov. Siixlon (whose headi pin r In m lire now at He I) bad nl-io been ex peeled, but did not nppui ,-ildj the ariivnl n( a imiil iVoin ilie North, : ni'in^iliilitii-.s tlurrlioni. ileliiiiied them. A linl moil be tbe Itei. Mr. Cubby, us, Jli. IV. Hur elim uram. tin: ,..-. of Ihirt o take political action, and h .e Iheir Gngora lo set tbeni tooei- upon yon, nni you Northward. Yoa had letter take us. Mi Indeed, you huvu got to take us. For if yo 'o incA- out of this aar you teon't be permitteil t lb.. c got tc know 111.' sin Velio I, I.T.-. ViT, I I' 1 HI I New Vork', IIUJ lieili l.cons'lrinl lin- Unio themselves at the lop nnd you nt tbe hollum. • >f thv Nurlh irillooiiito dJin-ry, unl ink* its Worf- man of the South out of tit - - t not a limit deal •/ w/iid lo'tftciile what yon teilldol" iki. the seiiliiiR-iit.i of" Ins r:i.e. Stale-iunu nnd nol.hers will heed lb :,ne kft I SUNDAY AT TOUT ROYAL. — THE COSTRi lehelil tbe two best tbitigx that hn 1 f this war—a Sunday-school lor n c of South Carolina, nnd an cuihr; In accordance, with a promise e L'ent letter, 1 »ui about to give n id impressione with regard lo then iiond. is ihe cuide i I „,„„.,,' win i ;,„l,,,!--„l, 1 led t Win „ Vorklo-.vi would strike the 1,1-Jllll give Grin bottom . limy were tn.-1iii.-iL lin ir bed nc No oi know, aava Mm wn woi ,1 hud a purl o bolar* nppeared, dro| ,ing in by ones mm iwos—I'.rat thu ehildrcn, (be Vnj> n mnl girls, and grown-np men mnl women. Tl very first —n shy, dn.-ki urchin of five, who cmr deeuron-lv in ami deposited himself in a. corner- wua promptly rewarded for Ilia icnl with a quurlt dollar, gneu ta bun by a middle-aged gcntlemni clnd in u loose Ilm I eotii, nuijde, blue, military trowsers and straw hat. Ills ipiieily-re.-olute fn and Ihin. grinlcd lnuslache, wen- strongly indie.it ol character ; one did not need the removing touching of btiln on tbe part of by slander* to (in- nounco thai be wns Kwnefiody. It wna M.nj.-(ien llunli r. t'omuisiinli-r of Ihe Di.|iarl.neiit of Ihe £'oulh will be known in future bisiories of the rcbelliot who lirst a, led upon llle nei-essity of wrest - "f the froc- nnd lixu-if ,j;.t„rl,. ,|' - ........sled on the Drnyl In t'-n. llunlei- belongs the hoi ns regiment. Tin. men, gatln.r.d (ogeiln ml il... adjacent i-lnnrls, havo all been; • uignnl ..',,i„in „,I,ui i),.., ;, r,. n , M , do Did United .States service, coii.coi eeive nn pay, Well fed, however, n eaie.l. ihey nn willing and '' K 7 '"• -'Idi..™; only, m„ ••" pbwlatioii life after working lr ° rkwl by th„ nccessare resTaint tbtrelore, some run ollns tiuna lo.ec mfe oi '•r.'ll.l returning II,., ,v,.il Ir.r.l „. il, ""'" l "'1 ", at the risk of uiidc.-ervcil dcri u/"")li<y- Too moeb credit can hardl'y be .. ,h,„ ,,llu:ers-lhey are all y „nE _ their niunil e„„r„g,. ,„ „i,„,„j nM positions rendered omrous by minonnon, uiipiWnnl by il„. „„.... r .,i,|,, [.„.„„,:,„ „„„. ,;„,.. a ingger r..-g.ni,.-nl." Where ail are gno.1 ,i ,, r be thought invidious to ,j, l; H , „„,. . i,,.,,:,!,,,,". 1 would e-peciallj iimti r.int i I, i.J, . I ri.n I..,,!~ r " ujipani' A. II. w .ik. j ... I,-.. ,, !,.(„,,,, ,',' I'guuent will he history. of Jae. 1:1,11 0., July 8.1SC-J in* I, irilaled Juno I2th,ii -'- "'< com leoltoi.. deep ,v, mils. I eame up itli .iiiii,, a L-illagi- i'i ii "'' .,» I,r:,,„, . io the Louao ii oldfashioi jing by (he n i tin Irill began at f.',_. pin . ill nn open spine in of Ibe liotifC, bordering il litlls grovo Ol livi d other tree, whote brum hca reneli ihu lliict owth bvnenth and create n ilinde oven in ihe .., shelleiing thu solitary tomb of "Jiniius who died nt bin late lesnlener, nn Hilton Klitnd, he Kub ol February. !&!'•, aged be embryo regiiuenl, snniewhstt ItiS ihmi 500 icr, wa. drawn up in line, facing ihe o veiling e, and put through the iuniin.it of inns by an Gei>. Hunter's, temporarily its head in ibe . of Col, Mnn.in.ic, who recently relumed lo e Suite uf Illinois in .barge of Mnj. Wright, in Island. •m.','. nn iM,'.' h ,i II liud llioj lone been under [he '" Mllilell.i.li , I, ;.,k, . ., .1,, |, i,,,. ' -i "' In " n.-i i. , wort:. - Irnola would be of 1nlerv.1t "»""'. J.vi are 1,1 liberty 10 u-c tim n-e ii? withhold the name ol Ilie received since Ihe enclosed, it appear, fifty abtves are now in the .Inybi.wkcrs yot, nltltoiigli sln.i-. 1 iuu camp almost dad, 1st be utilised and degraded "g liei.ernls.nlinr Cmgnss bas .),- 1 110 pnrt of ihe busim that 1 slai uglil corn I d while the j house, and p:,j Mr'bi,". .lily- Allerweleft.lwo .1. Km; e. lijit Tlovt found learned that he bin mid c: and got llegoi then laud No. Ill Jen. .Mitchell's ind be Ireatcd L-»uf hisbUvcs I. ,11 1 M. -,u,ui-.i... 1 ml keep away from hi ie hud an order from nek, and ordered tbe 1 order from Gen. Mil fold them to come wit Simuis informed :,.,. michell 1 ink.- 1I..11. '" '-'nl-. l-u II,'.. -.,ke .,i ..,'.' ,. • '. . ... -...;.- 111.. I II,. I. 111... IL I.,- Ill-i ll-IHl-1. , "I II regiment of our troops 10 Order No. 3, will Ihe fuel warrant an. i:oiammnli- leprice lie- cnunlri ii" the service* of ihe latter, becnueo MaManioni5ta lose those of the former, which wns made, mid will be made, i-huuhl imolber opportunity oiler, available, directly or indirectly, Tor ri.bt l puipoi ' .pion Inn ol Congress , ck. 1 bid thu negroes, n. .11.. li c.tuip. mnl 1 tell you Jennison's ere aro,„e,l I At first, he gol Mitchell la help I find them , hut the Uciiernl, e of excitement which prevailed in the amp, wisely .,-,!, r li. .1 lie .[unl number or while men, tu could have done. An obserm school, 1 noticed n look of hm blnck fnccB iii.lici.iiv.. of nn nn their docility el .-leir" 1 I rent) '.thai th.-.r |.n,'. „.,-..i,l-l,. Wlm. reglnnni was mm. h. d l.i il.ii.k.tl the parndc- eround, until it mi-ived 11, front el heiiilqiiarters mid llmre formed by divisions in • double row, I thnught - " .Igleilmed.as briglilli.im ranks stood .-1- 1. Mild. 'II l-i----l an oppniluiui,- in In i.j I'lili.i Hi.ll.-eks Onler No. 3. or let the " Jnyhawkera " " f..r nmn)- 1 I had ,lulv-|.une.l ! I.e,v-|.-i[.. r- LUve 1 New Vork 1. Also. Ih.it T s who hn1 bine been ilnvea—sin* iibiindoned or been abandoned by lb Talk to them, nnd yon shall hear their BUggeslive enough. Thai intelligent-looking sergeant (who i,dcl.iiiii'!tu.Mr.t-i,-wi.i nisked by thnt when tbcni. ILiere-t 11 was prupoi-.-., ... 0..1. .... m. ,0,- w'ar.l 1 Lib, how must the tji -nni- ol llebellion have grinned, from her onilook, at this unguided wander- ing in an unmapped wildirn, -s of an nriuyot invasion! Mnp.il Useless works of the engineering art, when lie» roes, live maps, that ciu.hl see, nnd walk, nnd tnfk, and poinl with ibe index fineer— crowds ol them—to ' vviil.il. reach of our nrmy, 11.1/ ireiie.1t parts oj eheit had thrown up I'eni. .till from Ibe r .els pleas, Geo. Hunter than many another 01 his rai that I could name. in filling. Immediately tbe principal teacher's tics laciu" Ibe scholars) in a bench, seating nearly a dorrii very young children—none, 1 should say, older four yearn, (wo or Ihree senrcely one; hardly ,f Iheir little, blai k, lu.re legs 1,.,uch Ihe groinnl Th'uy nre all cleanly dressed ; one has a gay Btniw decorated wiib nblums. but the majority arc ^bended. Tb.ir enli-ski I, dosky, ialiiiitile tnecs and while ... -bulls look upward ill us, the close-curling black wool, with Hint a] glance peculiar 10 ihe negro—alwaya, to m nig, irresistibly touching, and .-ugg..-,n.i> ol eneo on, humility toward, and euireaty fur consideration nt ihu Immla of, a sii|Mirior rai ban a reully charming cou life nance—none i lively iifilv. The physiognomy of one rjui thing ic, indeed, comically suggestive of Hia Prime distninied the uteil S. .nil, em lid. on that ibe Yankees would iransport hi in lo tuba, and there sell him, being somehow pemunded that hi: freedom luy in their direction, mnl this conviclion hu presently acted upon. That muscular mulatto, owe a Geld hand, possesses such strength thnt his owner required that be should pin k Iimj nir.ri^inundii of cotton a da; than bis fellows—beii.v, ./,nl'» buck is "cnllnscd with lushes. A third has lived for sii month together in Iho swamp—In en hunted by the Stale louei-e'l"'/ :n! :!. r rage, he w rebelled, armed himself wilii "ilnssa." For thia, he la;- th weeks in irons, in Beaulorl jail, tlu-k, 1 manhood, Ihu sla an ax, and defied I.Uul. Amholiy, who iiciirring, ami he cam .s acid nut to be bid. bill is table nnd let them Ink wns read) lor llns i--u ' ini (hi I llnl guard I u trying lo force onhl punish any 1.1, V , "' i ll -' ,rr"'|"-""""'.''l'eol (he Hbue pop,,- ..Hon. netine fr „ m ,|„. !„,,„„.,;,„ ,,,..„„ fj| ' i '""" "'"''ni ') servilude, (linl |l„. a^p.-araati; oi our nrnue." .,- „ tn awaken everywhi notwiih-:i:ii„l,,.g (|,e pro-slavei-y pr, ! ' "' '"" ,; '.'n(-r:lls. Ii|.|lia;.-il'l„ ., '"'."'"I tin- ,.,n„„| „, ,,„„ ,„„.„.;, '""" ll C 1 ' n.tlip-lllll,. r,„„.,|,- »-«vs, never ,„,.:,. any i.peeo.l ,",,-, "!"' '•' '' '. 'oelii.-,.i,ri,g,.|l,..,rll„.|, other hand, wi,,,, „„„,„, ,|„- ,„,, liheiva, 1,. iheir c.,,,-..,,,,,..,,,.,,^ ,, -'"l '- ,] --'I™ !•) driving (hem fulval IU ,' l ," K" l, '7-""-X '"II- Ami for ItTis preialenco ol I,,,,,,,,,,,, feelings over in nn uiilitnry refiulaiions, some of Ihe oil,. B nr0 ,0 l,„ ,-o.,rl-ma r. "* i"!'!', ,""' ° 1' ' L '' "-""t " la 'ure.ile.itd to be tBl»*'«a 'hat. in the cases nt Ibe bolloni of ouble, only maulers acimlc .|i-l..-, ,1 ,,,,„ ,,,- t «p (o (he appearance of (ho Union troop, iccnied, I ask, what shall ho thomdif of ihia 1 pohoy m ihe protein iflairaT 'il. g.....r ,.!.,..- .,.1,1,, .1,11, Csto'ii Itching 1 Uo 1.1 1 .- adroit black* raodhowever onfn.g only to the iilipr.:'.-.l.-m.-,ll , nlf-rri lin'l, ..( ."" ;-'.l i.-i do I..-I,,-, ,„ ,„, [iri,,i,,j ,. v„„, t iuu prefer (hat rl,, , ,:.., ilations nf il.r. -tales to Ihe nnli ,lni!l I..- ,„-m-„,.,||,. r. -,,,„. , rithoul dislurbnii I .| K. i unt it ut ii>n ami if ||„H fjere done, my whole il,,| V , in thin n'cneci' unih.s hu Constitution and my oath ol ulhee wo'ull I l-crf.irmcd. b,,t ii i, not dor,.-, and wu aro Iryino 10 -icronipbsh it by war. The incidenla of the inamiol be avoid...], ll th. war coulinuei Inn,. .... """'.'!" 'i >«' so 1- ..I. -d.ihe'r.,!: ilium invoiir^iites will bo e.liiiRuiriKjd by more ricliiiii and nbrnaton—by the moro incidenla of lluv do irender us peeun heller for vou, ,-is n-iu-i, 1, 1- iim •' .......1. 10 sell aul and buy mil ihut wiih.uit which Ihe war could never have he- ihii io sink both Ilia thing 10 bu sold, ami ll.e price of il, in culling one ano- ther's ibronis l«-ik of . n.mnipniion n( once, but o( a >..•! 1 in- e. ., dually. 1 loom in l",',,' i.'i '.,. ..,'.,."." .'. .1 when nmnbers shall ... 1. 1.. 1 .. . ..., nn; nnd • r r. mi ,,1 ., nuunecd in. liable hypocrisy * Will nu {jim I'roniilencc, BUChrouideriog lo lb y cause of the rebellion retard the 1 1st Among the officers placed under ,1 for k it of i-uelit of rebel „ .,..0 had lusl som.i ol ihu. .Imiiel., I iieinin-i .I'l.nliih- 1I..--I.V *u-o^ I..- ,.,,.- 1 li.-ur.-i nl- I.i. li. Anihoii, nnd I.14.I. John L. ~: "=-', Merrick, of Ihe Till Kansiia lavalry. U't Geo. llalleck, 10 whom they had lo report iheuiselves 1 here, order Vv-bur, 111I1I.-. cvi.ll the disgrncc ultimately 1 OEN. BAXKS AND TUB " • rcsoluliiin ol I nngre.-s 1, blacks were allowed to ruh- in ilie eons ir- lie iitr-Mt from Slriisl.iir-- bj Hen. Hanks in ihu following bll o lake a slaver from Ihe ih. qnlar. " liuind en, .ugh .liiibnwkers' camp- All the froojis here, unless it be Ihe 2d Illi l':i, iln . I.gti-i iv 1 ill tin- .In; lun. kers. but the)' look 10 the Jajbnwkers lo take the brunt of the thing and those who do not agree with us do not want 11 exiled upon to enter our enmp lo get staves,,! ie " luvhawkers " bear the name of making a sin ;*nof their underiakings. M^Biil tuiitinue I" urne in, ami I .Mint 10 -• Ihe iiiig tested, ^linuis's negroes have all got employ, ent us cooks. t.lcn. Mitchell is one of tin: liiivc.-.t of Southern dirt iters: anil I hear thai lie said, about the lime hi 10k command, that "ho had got the Jaybnwken 1st where be wmilcd tin in, and he should kec] icui there," Hut 1 have faith Ihnt he hns taken lot ig a contract if he intends lo make slave-bun tern 3. Cipl. Hoy I ui.es ample sal is tin. lion (is. yul- An i ,.,ug I I il il Get Uuoter ,s nn honest n as, and 1 bop.- atill is, my friend 1 valued him inc the less for bis agrn-ing with nn- in the general .ish that all men everywhere could bo treed. Ho proclaimed all men free within cerium Statcs ; ni .nid I- 11 froi 1 I c ild not olTenee, to many whose support ihu country cannot iill'onl to losu. And this is not the end ol it. The pre-sure in this ilir.-.-t s slill u, mo nnd is jiicreasmg. By cone, ding what I now ask ...until- in this iiaporiant poinl. Upon these eniisuleratuoin I have ngi.in begged y.iur allenli'jn to the Me.--:e-c ! 1 1 .' r. ';. I., -i |I.f„rc leaving the Cnpilol, consider and discuss it among you nn ilvea. Vou lire patriots and slnfe-mon, and 11a inch I pray you consider this proposition:, and at Ihe least commend .1 to ibe consideration of your Sinles and people. An you would pi-i| atn popular euvernnwnt fv>t Iho brst |~-ople in ihe wmld. 1 be- seech that you do iu no wu- uui.t lb it Our common Cisir KKAB T. — lenn, While engaged heard an unusual 1 30 looking arm. Iiigelber with tv of ruj I'-nl :u. I daily. Thu murks .-"ut.si-ipu.-nlly, he ocinri- .1, i-.iced ihe Yankees. man as Southern ndveriisem neat little nut of a negro run y d align rolls.'' I fort; lushes his body, tu testily of il. ipiiortuaitv ,„I,.|1,I',.V ingl.l 1.1.. ig away, describe as bono he will prove so when Willi Ilm wboln Ko.mraliui. of nl" Ihe 11 belonging to our r.-gi- .ggiug a fonrlh man, who had In .-n ripped ufnll his ilntliiug. exc.pt his panes. Ub,llml .... ,„ l„,|r.,r ..ml ,l--|,.ii- He. 1 -.i- ,1. |.nli.-l on lh»l ism's face! It was as ihougti all hope had lied, and 1,-L despair, with all its allendanl horrors, had s.-i- ll.d down upon bu,,. God grant that 1 ; nei.r in behold slieb a scene! It was enough to draw ,|>'illiY li. he hnrdent heart. nil tb.s dark picture was nut allowed lo pass wilhoul us gleam of Irglil. SinlJeiil; a 1. nut. -i. ant (bclun.'il.n 1'. lie- -:.iii,i con, nam ihat the two suhtieis hit ,.|7. ""-a ti.n - lem nnd in. 1 ,ir...l wlm it nil /and was lohl that " the d—d nigger had run away from tbi ,,!.,.- ,. llle, nl - 1 -i, . r ' "' ' ' "'-. ' 1 ' - 1 >' I eii.iu- I.I my tiiuwlidnc. fill -eii-, ir.el.-i-. ., (ugcei, ,111.1 nielli,-., n.re or,-!.-, i-.-.l In Hi. n,-cu|.ii.iey eiri.nn nn. li..,,i.| i- «"i - i;..v.-nuucin iraln Icr. 1 nn fai-lliei. ;i „i| lor . ,,„,„.,, In llicrenr iltnil.lv ,11., .nice ,- n r.-li, "c .o.-ri-s-', ., -11. J II il.,„.,|lienc,l l.y Mime viijpic Jrc iililiiirlj. lo S". P. U.s™'.°il'i,j. tli,i' l ('inun':iii,liiil,. a pity Ihnt iho resolution did not ask, also. hones ami wnggon. belonging lo blacks /yd and used for iho Iranspurt of government troops. Mur-li, we me nssiired by an eye-wimess, was ihe iiiet Al Wiiu hosier, where ll iiuinler ,-! the , ilorctl people nwn bouses, lauds nnd l.-ams, n. black an, clhi- onceivahly grand. ., ll,.- privihg,.- ii gl- d nwell thai gram! ,- 1, _!., nl .111. _ up in it, who, turning their bncki iipnu liioso accursed cords of shovels nnil pickaxe. docked nl lorlress Monroe, nnd walking away fron them with snlvation speed, would have led 0111 nrmy right up lo the |ilnces ot weakness, and ball- ing iis in ibe wood, said to the conn minder. ' lbs am de place, masMi. whcie do army of do Lord and of Freedom cm bust fru.jusl as fru a garden lenee. Gib em du bayonet, ami l.-avo de rest wid de Lord 1 1 knew in^.tlllil men in April last, who, under such guidance mid such God-speed would have slonntd the gates of hell. How selUvidciit it is that this alliance with Ibe slaves would have saved Ilm precious, prepnratioiis 10 besiege Vurklonn—hnve uvuideil Ibe having recently as to ' ,,-k Hi it H-g ".ngbl.i nn Ihe Ws I Mills.' r.and burg, w 11 IO the mu-h, and being dubious s in my car) ; and , loinjj loo small for engrossed wiib hur Iocs, to ns lo "results fas n friend whmpers in my car) ; and seated upon ilm gro I. being 100 small for (he exclusion of all other sources of'interest; bill all ' Southern phrnse, "likely " children, and well- fa chnved. llcl I them, al l.-n-t fen.- forms were occupied by iieitro men, young t.-ll.iwo tor tlm uiosi part, with -- Uf (bu lalter. one hnd a li I'rieati bishop of the all black. occasional old ihat might have beseemed an Ai ageol'Bl.Augaslino. The juni -ill, HOT) bll- 1 - g hint is-; n|,|,r.,pi 1: ..,,1 nluiv hardness .Osgood soldiers ol Jesus Christ.' It was nol above Ibe couipiehelision ot Li. aiulieuie. who h-t.icl lo il ntlentively. Then, on a reriuest from Ihu nimster, one of the negroes prayed, his prayer being of n touching and even cluifuent character. lie began by expressing thanks for the occasion for that Ibe while man," Ins superior In eidoi. though! it n.jt rul.L.r, to 1 nnd O-inli .lis "il ' bul, I men do way out of bondage into liberty .'* lie bleise. those set over bi S eoui[ mis, trnniing that Hie laitm mighl learn from th.-ui their duty tot Aycrs's lUchgSuritlctteu bands, stretched dripping will. Dames and shouting shot 1 lould scarcely pluck from Iho bloody r which imbecility hnd Hung ih.-in. 1 on. wh nnd tears dale from ll,.' sn. niuinl day or Williams- fort you 10 know thai our niLick s unneecusnry —that roads , irclcd the cuerays position— thai slaves could have con- ducted us through them, and thai by ll an Is attacks vve could have bagged .»r crushed the entire army were pursuing- Then , /..nil whatever ol this. Oh, so unfortuniii.lv, ilmru is jusl as li doubt Ihnt we had reins' d alliance lo the slave, retribution of our tuiUtary it cot just 1 The Only but one exception, that of a wrinkled negresn of at least three score, with her lieit.i bound up in a gay handkerchief, and her hands testing on a statl or crulch- Probably she name hither influenced by devotion or curiosity. With partially closvd eyes she sal looking al the younger women, whoso heavy, but not unintelligent features were sometimes intent on the piclures In their wtll-ll bed ?|h_>1 ling-honks. sometimes raised in observation of (hoso around litem. At least three rows of boys, and an eipial number of girls on cither side of (be teacher's desk- completed the number of scholars— less than usunl- Tt» thia teacher's desk there soon ascended M MtMath, a genilcinnii admirabl; iiualifled lor h: -led tin come hither from " the cold laail of tie North, thu cool winds blow freedom, lo klit am bleed ami .lie lor the i,,gr.., ex.epi ll (gin w:, 1 terrible—wn Hu ... du I kne ,,r, -I tin: l.ii-ut.-narii of Ihe ihnt ray. belongs lo yo 1! the innns toiler. t to 1. .ightte the fnin I s gu t few bn, s family n I loan, nf the I'i mel will,. ,. when d Slates, ll inswer lor ont luuu which did n,,l h:i|,-. rk -n,.i, ,-. I,,. ,,1 I,,-.,. l;.,,,l bom „,- Ie meg. : pc by a cove J l.e l-r.,-1.1- n, ... I.,,. .nl. dpi .1 lei.''.. ._ entlikd tu expect 11 in ihe coariuTonoY lol tho wind like another John bushes or behind a urct . when ihe raid was rcpuls charged upon and driven '' 1 . Thu following paper wn.i vcsl.itday s.-nl io tbe I'n-nb'iit oi.'in-.l li; tin- laaj. .1111 ol Ihu IteprcsolltM- ,,.- ir.-.m tie- l:..i.ii-r.-lav.-le.l. ling Stales: Wastiisoiok, July H, IBfia, ii -r,, < ri V; ^i;.-;, r V . ,- ir ..;|,[-. 'i:,;!,/.;;.;:^^.! 1 '^.^^;.;!.!: in ibe two Hour.cn nt Congr, .., h„ve 1,-u -, .1 to lour address wiib the profound s, u-ibdity naturally 111- snircil bvihn high souree fr nhioh H c miles, il, , .-ink,,.,-.., which marked us delivery, and the , , : portai bosubjectof which it ,- before yen . .,, ., .- had lint a it.-rn olde 1, ,1 Ihe capture of fugitive slaves, lived the prc.iui-,. nf live dollars cneh Heeded in gelling his victim, (hey si m wiib a firm grasp. But as limn w is, lor thu thing inns: be dono in a hurry, omnku as Utile excitement in the camp possible, the Lieutenant did not wait long for the men 10 obey his orders. Ho, ueir.ing one ol item by tho throat, bo soon made him let go his hold, nnd the other concluded lhat it was lies, lor him to nun be- fore Ihu Lieulennni got his hands on him. Then they accused Ihe l.ientnnant ol leaving Ihe prints of Ins ibiiinb and lingers on the seul-d river's own throal. Be that aa it may, ihe slave got away, and be di wnnl telling to run but once, and well ought h, ills bles-.-.l jllr |,,. ,,„_., r „i ;; f',.r dear liberly. is glorious country, and to ley tc ives forever." imploring for him blessing- He added n bencilic the President ot Ihe Uniled Stales, Iruslii though ho might never see him in the flesh h meet him in iho next, world, " where all are With a final supplication lor tbe speedy r peace, the prayer concluded. This negro's name was Columbus Simmon n.l.iigl.iiii' by court-in thaltfibiok bcsi. I ' -I anil Who, for ihe pn For this 1 of hi nit; . t I.-. .|ie.,-|.i released. -. ,|| ml h , thet l'.,'le,'ll His lie had becu in tin' guveinnieiii s.-i ic I, r .-,. n, s and had not received a cent nf wages » « v.niu to nay ihnt Micro is more of a mm. un.br bis bin, skin than under the white epidermis of the mcml. ol Conjrrois who moved- Ihu resolulion of iiiipn ret erred 10. if (he a real uf thosu two n of five dollars, would 1 the person of one of Tim A: mnlry rincs and overflows, bui the gm policy is slill weak and vacillating. The people talk a, good ileal about thee things, ami think a good deal more than liny talk. Bullies who go round knock- inc down people who venlure to imiuiatc tbat (.en. MeCI-llan is noi a combination of Cu-lar, llannibnl, Frederick, Walhnstem, Napiilcn ami Wellinglo' cannot keep people liniii hnviiig then own uiimlsj. months (" asked ling. A per ; Godt what becaaiu of Iho fogi ] in caining that liberly for .... 'li... I p an the esteem of bis pupils. sea by giving out, line by line, nnd verse by verse, lie-, liviiii., rc[n-nteil all.-r him. and then sung by the spico ol ,.i]pile. This was followed by a brief address, noo-jrhylhm 1 shall mutu lo-dny upon Ihe, thcr bymn, and the Lord's prayer j when the active respect grant that hi which bo so ardently - ,.[ above hiu- long been nut.-d b.r he views so much .-u that he hn- often Liecn ull-l the ' tlluck Al.nliti.ia Lieutenant." Near!, all ihu ,1.1 ll.e I-..-I1I.-.I Hut tho 1. ng vou. ton.par.ju witu ,., have freely given you t. llepudiating iho dan- prosecuted on opening ol th gowl men sbm ,oled nil the men a ir people, and ihvy a iubl 1 ,-,y valuable, uelecl. " We have gn . half .1 ui.lliun of men." say (he ,-.ople. - and ,ou ,avO wa-'ted them, mnl have ilnlliing In stuiw ..,„. i.,,...tl>. „it „.M, Chilian before f ',, :u-:;bs (these ate oilieir.l firju.^) he brs got- pc"; Wasl ,ndr.,llhoiis (these lin' clli. lefr- Where „ posllive'and s not need the 3UtH.Litl additioanl troops. Moro men ban vou think ol are miking and thinking thus . < , nnT the number iSincrvssing.-/loJu;nCbr.V'''3- ny friends id the regiment, and H is a tact and tl" "» nou irjteiposeU any obswcle to tho escape, |K'<< «'/»"«" r friends, "le.ti « r laltered. Anddefendn.nl a g'--mm. nt wlm-l. p»l ' ,. ,!. (or i-eu.ki ''I 1 ib.irit, auu even gicniei it.-s vea. any sacribce, wbeci we aro satisfied iiu'ircd io |ire-.t.e our n-liniruble formofgov- „, ,m,l the pri.elesa blessings of conilitulional i f»w of our number voted for tho resolulion
  • 2. r. II, icndcil by your message of llic '".lb of March e greater portion of u» illil not, and ire will Hinto lh« prominent reasons which influenced In tho I'irst place, it nropoMc. n radical ehniigfl of our Hocii.l yatcir., nnd was homed ibreugji both Houses with undue Iinst-', without " -=•— ri - I -1 . - Hw f.ir L.-.n-iil-Tiiti.-n and debate, nnd willi no ln»" in nil for consultation wild ..ureiiiu. cots, whoso interests appalled bv ll» uNllwlc rossed if oil I he Mates, i ,1,1,,-r ol .lain. Ai-enrdini price Axed by Hi* Knnincipiilimi Act fur the J»i,- ol (III- District, am! i:,. ttly l>. low their real worth their value run* up lo the enormous sum of $1/100, mi, i! ; anil il lo thai we "dd the emit of ileporlntloi , j ...... i,- n n. :i! I" ' . .! Il e. til. I, I- lull II Ir.n ll-n iii n. it, in is ac I mills lull 'I I"' H"- Marc la ml i 'nlnnim lim, Society, h* have S ,'too.tinii morel Wo wen noi willing to impe"' ' t" *" " ur people sulUcienl i. pae-ho inlc,-*t on thai m.iii. in addition -* > „,,;| ,|i,ilv men .fine ilelit :ilr. .i.ly flu-d •[• Ihc 01 If.' no in of the war; nml.il n« hnij licei ing, the country cnul.l mil hear it. Sloti'd In tliiii form tlic tirupo-ilion in nothing h «s linn tlto deportation from Did country of Sl.liDU.Olin.OfW worth of pr.-lueiog r. and llie subalitutlon In Ms place of nn intcrcsl- hor idea in your address we fed . After •tilting llir luct ol your repu- nlor's proclama lion, you add : gittioiud gtnti-Jsliivtnj $tiwilunl. - i i-iiu iiii.l f. li- lt. II,, ,,r.- ,--,l|n i.'rV.illl- ,. t.iiilthril a respectfully au I Anil We b»T« the ononuouj sum of. i-t7i.0.1-;.l,i:i Wc ilid not feel thai wo should lie juelifleil in eolinj, for a measure which, if curried out. would mid thii Treasury was rcolitii; under the enormous e.ipe.iditun o! the war. Again, it seemed to us that Mils resolution was hu the annunciation ot a sentiment which could not 01 wna not likely lo he reduced to an ml ml taiinililo pro position. No movement win lln ule lo provide am1 appropriate the fund* reiiuiri-.il to cirri it into ellcel and we were not encouraged I" lielicic thai tun-l- wnuld he provided. And our belief Inn been fully jun tiOcd by subsequent event--. Sot to mention other cir. cuiinlsnccs, it is qu.le siilllcicnt for our purpose U bring to your noli-M lbo fret. Hint, while this rcmlniior- was umlor consideration in the Snalc, OUT colleague, the Senator from Kentucky, moved an atuondnienl inline -'"'I- t..Oi.-.il..lf..l Hot. iii.l,wiHMl.-,,. [,-.,.,,. li I'l.jiiynii 'it ,!, nine pruiiij'l, mid no urn- ii nutlinri?eil til ho ri|jlit, or limit itn eiijoiment. And no ou cle.trly afDrme.1 that right limn you have, ir.il .ol'li'i =i uhih vou i_-n.itlioii..r in lliii re«|iiii:t. " the, country with confidence in your fair lim! thut wo ilifTer a I,'"!-''"!: > yield u. tho attempt, it Is a right i inid, m krmwini;, n did notice why we of others, in lite circouiiwrn.-eu ; and we did not why tacriGcca uhoulii be expected of ua from wl othera.no more loyal, were evvmpl. Nor could we si e wli.it pntiJ ihe i.mion would derive from " o hy u> t siiM-si Lined the arm of this „ thai of tho eoemy. It won. mn noee?«ary m n pledge of our loyally, tor ihai bud beeo monifeited beyond a pouibl'c. There' viu not the re n=t probnlnlily Unit ihe SuitCfl wu repr.,ent would i"ii. iii Hie rebellion, nor it there now, or of their cleetina incu with the Southern lectlDD in the event of recognition of the independence of nny part of the dinfleclcd region Oor States are Uied unalterably io their resolution U adhere to nnd support the Union, They see no safely for themielret and no hone for conatiiutiaml liberty but by ill preservation. Tiny will under no circ swntei i...ii'erit lo il.. ilLj.olul ; and wo do then pbe, they will t as long as they c dollar. Nor will- h the Southern Coofed cracy. The bitter Iruita ol Hie ;ieeulinr doctriuca ul Ibut rcBion will forever prevent them from placing their security an-1 lm|ijirncsi In the cualody of an n«o cinlion which ha.- ii.voij'oniteil in its organic low the feeds of iu own destruction. Wo cannot udo.it, Ifr President, that, il wo had voted for the r.i"lutton in the laiioneipjtion .Mcmoko of March liiat. tho war would now be- substantially ended. IVe ore unable particular lins given, or could give, encouragement to the rebellion. '1'ho r. Milnlii.n ho. iii-*eil; and.ifllierc tl.- .1,-1.1-. l„ iv 1 ..,11 1... ..-..IT.- ,-. ,-tll, .1.1, Hi- .1- if Ui had voted for it. tt - have no power to „,n,i u „ r new. In this rnpccl by our votes here; ami, whether wi hnd voted the one way or the otlu-r, they are in tin fiitue condition of freedom to nctept or reject in pro rlsionj. No, sir; the war has not been prolonged oi hindered by our nciiin on ibis or nny oilier measure We muHt Inut for other '.'.ni-.i r-r that lamented fact We think there b not much difficulty, not much uiicer tainty, in pointing cut others for ui ore probable and potent in ilnir a^ennioa lo that end. The rebellion derives its strength from the union of all .In-.-.- in Ihe in- urgent t-'Liiea . nnd while II union lasts the war will nciei end until they n utterly eii i aus ted. Wo know lli.it nt the inception these troubha Southern society win divided, aud il n large porlioo. perhnpn n niajority, were opposed M-cervion. Sow the j;r.-.it io-l-i ot Southern peo[de ii united. To discover why tlu-y ore >•> we must glnr ntSouthern seiulv. ami ii.iti. .. the classes inlo wlii il has beeiidi.id.l.iiii.i evhioh Mill ,]„tj,i|:uish it. They are in aruia, hut mil (or the fume objects ; they are moved lo a coi on .nd, hut by different nnd even lie. i.n.i-lcnl ren-'.'.iO-. 1 lie leader., w liieli , .impri-hendi what wna previously known Hi the State ltights pf niLtion.il iudepcndetiee ami oel up Slate domiin Willi ilum il is a war ngaim.1 intionality. Tbu h Ashling, - "- iss !> lighting, il* il luppo-e.', ti: lam ami p mi its rights ..I" |.r,,|,irll an. I doiuestii.' nt'cly, whi 1 iclievo are availed by gov only because they li will never rusetit I The polloy, th- is ay be. lleisoiro that no harm io iulerided t.. them and il» ir iintitulions, til ul tl.u fou riiiin. i.l i- n-.I ni.l kii'i oilr ...ii their rifhli. of properly*, hut is •.imply defending ill legitimate authority, and they will gladly return to their alk- fitarice as soon ns the prcuura of military dominion il"|....i .1 he Hie i 1. 1. it'll rale jutln-ritv m r ,-,! li ,, r u them. 'I wi 1'. ' il,-. .u'.i I- .'.li Mhi.-i--, ..I '.'-.:, j r, -- a.] .j.im,- the spirit ol your .Me-sage, then bul recently scut in, ihclan.il with »ingiilnr unanimity the objects of Ihe war, and the country iii.tiuiil, hounded lo your side lo assist yon in carrying it on. If the spirit oi that rcsolu- oynl men, and exasperate and d is and their duty Ihe people <>| Ulilary officers, following the* topped beyond die just limits o [irini i [ile '.ilii-'h Ihe [- ,i[ih --.r !l„ >. -i > r, . f, -: uvt 1-. -.i,.t as ruiuuua to Diem. Ihe elfect ut these measures was foretold, and may now bv seen in the indurated stale of To these Dimes, Mr. I'i,>iieni, nnd not to our omis- c con i mended by yoi wu lelenmly bcUe> e wo are to at rihuto (he terrible r in arms agau i iiutilulio rlppri'litliMelj 1 cotumou ond eoiinl M™ the inititu ons ol tho Souihern awtes. olTeVo the ronntr)- in tills important point." We have unitiouily loolteil Into this passage to ,11h. over its true Imparl, I"' 1 "* " r " vet in painful unior- nlnly. How can we, by conceding what you now ask, elieve you and II".' ' 'nlitl'i lr..ui tin 1 in. reading pi-""- ure to which yon refer'! «'e will mil allow ournelvea .1 iliink that 1I1.' iiropii~itiiin is, that we consent lo give in.la.ery to til" end 'hi' tl,..- Hunt'-' proclamation 111V he lei loomO on the SoOth-m people, for il Is too it 1 II Ln. .wo 'hnl we would not ho parties. In nuy sue" , 1 •. ban 1 " much rupcel h'r you 1 , , . Id pi DposG iL Can it mean that b ,,, tilii 1". ' ml. rest 10 tlav.-rt v<- .tj-j Mm .( 1 i, .,.1 <! ,tprwr.,ir,.. ,->„.,' it to be withdraw in.l rid Hie .ranln |..-lileot agitation of II ,.,,, rlDMllonl IV.- are forbidden .0 to think. 1. ' ' -ini '.. I rn't h.' .uti-H.-l Willi the 111.. .ration r I.i.-.aoil .,,10 H" ,i!'il:ili..n. while l.ono.oi emain in bondage. Can it mean that by ahandomi davery in our Slnti-s, tee are rumoring the pressure from you nnd the enuntrv, bv pr. 'paring for n separa- tion 011 the line nf the Cotlon States ! forbidden so lo think, because ii is known re, ami we believe that v ire, oiialtei-ubli opposed to nny division at nil. Wo would prefer I Hook that eon de-ire this ooriee..ion an a pledge of 01 support, nnil thus eo-.ble vou to with, land n pn'sstu whieh weigh! heavily on yon alel the country. SI !'i..-i,l.-nl. io-. sneh «a. ritiee i- no-cmy t.. s, euro ,., support, Confine voii'-elt t" vouri Illilll il nutlio ity ; confine your iuil».rdinal' " within the same llnilb conduct thu war -oh li lor the purpose of rcsUirlt the L'olistitillion to its ], eliinolt.. aolhoritv 1 r ode ea.hSial,. and its loyal ,iti,-,m their j'e.I l'l'h'- .11 we are wedded to you bv indissoluble lies. Do thi Mr. I'rOideol.ao'l vim 'ouch the American heart nr invigorate it with new hope. Vou will, at we solemnly believo, in duo time restore pi m e lo your country, Hit it from ilesponileney 101, future ol glory ; nnil presor— to your oonnlry nn n. their 1" pt'-nty. nnd n. in. Ihe nu Mr I're-lleot, we hiivo iiate.l with fraiikiieii ai eimloi- tie- irosona /.n ivhieh «• fnrhore to v..l,- f the resolution vou hue mentioned: tint you lin . aeain promoted this prnyio-lllon. and appealed to us, with nn earnestne.-s and ih-iyueio:e which have not (ailed to impress iis. lo ' consider it. ami nl the least to commend it to ihe consideration nt ..nr .-tales and pen pie." Thus appealed to by Hie Chief Magistrate of our be lor nl country. 111 Ihe hour of 11.- greatest peril, we cannot whollr decline. Wo are willing to tru-t every ipieition rf tilling lo th.if int. I-,-'.I and happiness tn the consideration sod ulllmsti While diir.-rioL.' from you pating the sir ' NEW YOflK, SATOUPAY. JD1.V 21, 1662. .'-. ,' 'i-.;!! r '. l ; ; greatly oblige ns h . . n'ho.l i'.f :...-... Idreun," Bprrao mum HiiiKEt, Ntw jiihs. [,ellerf.eneli.-ln( . u tl .: ri|.L|i.iii, or relating In nnr way le le. J" ili.-.itli.-i . ! I I. I. ' !' "t inn r Tin; Asti Si.ivsnv HrtKiitKn. No. '• Behum lrn( .11 l.y promptly retnltliiiK what they 01 , is in need of every dollar due from Direct, " JViKsfiff Anli-SI'iirry SomlanJ, IS '., JVia rnrfc." CELEBRATION OF THE FIRST OF AUGUST. of Joly was another. All ihcsi Why could not tho Uecjiuso Keiitui-kj- hound n bandage upon ha eyoi, and kept bin, blind. Instead of the simple plan of dory through, juslice, we lrnl only it Mtijor-Cenc- 1't promise—" sborl, sharp, nnd desperate"—ttiado our ear, nnd hrnL-en lo our hope. The pjovcrn- int has coniluctctl the wnr on a theorj' of pence. Our military have resembled our rresidentinl cam- paigns. The real contest ol the army bus not been if nrrna against tlio enemy, but of opposing ideas lilhin itself, Uoea not everybody know Unit Fru- nmd Met lellnn. representing two ilifl'eretit ideas, int-agonists? And does not everybody if Fremont lmil Ruflerrd McClellaus dsfejit. lbo present nlraleoy-prnisera would hiite filled Ihe (ir with their ooterien fit removal 1 When pnsontetl iliemsetvea to tho povernmeut. different policies of war wore offered, the government tL.-ew uwuv tie: right one witL frcmont, and lept tho Troog one with ileClellnn, As a con- , if Ua goverinuent had sought to curry on for lbo aoko ol weakening the enemy ns little :is [los'tle, and burling ourselves ns much (is possible. bo» eoulil il linvo succeeded better than -Jt-' The. h Wes lid I.L I! will be celebrnte.1 In the usual roa AU1NGT0N, on Frimv, August under the direction of the Mnnajji setts Anti-Slavery Society. i'n event in history is more deterring ol special 1 .-oii-o.iiior.iiii.in II 1. in thl*— transforming, marly 11 million of chattel slaves into Irce jccta.byneto! Parliament, hnlienee lo n regenerated public sentiment, through long years of Anil-Slavery agitation—and demonstrating, a* It has done, iho safely and beneficence of Immediate emancipation on Ihe most Averse elrcu*, -'t 1 .... Ve'heilion. and ivhih' proleniing against the propriety nf any ettra territorial interference toinduce .s: loyal .States sincerely -- -- objlacle In peace ami natoum! h. Ing to contribute pecuniary old coinpensat..our.-tnti. 3 .not people for ilir inconvenient produced by such seonnge of sys wo arc not I willing that our people tlmll eon-ider the propriely of Hut we bate already said lhat we regnrdetl this r,-.r,liilioo n.i the utleeiinee nf 11 -enliment, .111. 1 we fjo'itile and [.i-.o Li- ol pre] lion, whioh would yield the fruit* ot the saenQee il required. Our people are influenced by Ihe same want of confldence. nnd will ,.n : iilei'the proposition it 'ts present impalp- "., 'iio"m".-.t 'linn ."'.''.' ii'o'poro.T,', ;.;,,, „? ,i;,: v , :;,',pn'u"n.'.i 1.1 be cipectnl e-.ii to . nt, rlnm the proposal until tin .- J« n.-nri .I tint wli, 11 ilev a.eept it their just expectalloos will not he inislratcl We reganl your foMe«iMB™EoCi«rf tieular manner mil .ii' hi up a valuable interest, lie- fore they ought to e. insider the proposition, it should ho presented in such a tangible, practical, efficient shape ns to command their c oolitic nee lhat contingent only upon their trust anything to lbo contlnge If Congress, by proper nnd ncceunry lo<i shall provide mlUeienl funds ami plate tliem ili-posil. to he apj.liL-.l by Von 10 the pneuietil ol our Slates or the citi" almlisl n', of slave . as they may delermioe, snd ih* 1 liiniiipli negro race. ndaof liberty, who desire to witticps a -,li!] ileoin our own shivery cursed laud, will, WP doubt not, matte their arrangement* to be present, as prneiicnble, in order In make (he occasion insiru- 1 to iln tiii-tli. rail' eot the sacred cause of human , without regni-d lo the accidental distinetion.. ( from complexion or race, pog lbo speakers looked for and eonll kntli .1.1*11 LlOVU G.I1H1.0V, Wkvukli, I'nfu.tin. II. C. WntouT, Wu. Wklls Bkowk, John S. Boat, Axunxw T. Ms, nnd others. The 0!-i t'.Jiinv Railroad Company will oontrc) puscn- sra. on that day, lo nod from Ihe Abinglon Groro, the following rules, being III e same as in former ~loa Ion, Savin Hill, lion he tier, Nepon-ei. ijnio. y.aiel lintrce—lo the tir.no and b,u t-(oc,i.;i,if,i, DUrrnfi ; cAildrm, 25 emfs. I'lenn.nih 1111. 1 nil iijv .tiloi...i not nlri-idy nie rvliencJ Etc union tickets good on other trains. Wu. Lisivd OinnjsoK, | SimnsL Miv.Jil, I Cbnuniltce fruits, ire tlngencici of luture legislation. ill ndopl the r gradual ..r it flute. 'eporlntion will our ....isideri.ti.-.o. for such deci-ion as in iheir indenie ileiuiiiuled lo their interest, tin. ir honor nnd their 1 tn the whole country. t lone the loin t In he. with gnat respei.t, C A. Wifti-itTE, Chairman, Ciuni i:s 11. t,uoi:i, GArju.iT Divh, C. L. L, Leutr, R.WILSOX, ElMV-IM U Wil.-Tlll J. .1. Ciimnsmcs-, ft, MiLUJBl, Jons S U.iri.ii.i:, Aino.v llirmiM:. J. W. CBtSflKLD, JlWU-tS. I!' !".-, ,1 F3. .II.'-'.!. J. W. nlKMOtS, H. Gnlohn. Tiioui' 1. I'bICC, .hoi -loll PS G, W.DlQIUF, FltiSCls Tuiuus, IVit. A. II.ii.i- lltt. Frjaiocvr 1 1 gross from the Border states, in response to y iiil.lr.:-« ol S-llur.li) I as. I, beg len.'e hi fill' Hint I. The moiling «ppoir..._ .. spouse to vour address, lhat report was mad teniae, ami lite action "I il"' n.-ij-rity indi. nKd 1 I lhat the rcspon-.e reported, or one in subitum -.inn-, would he ailojiteil mid |-n- -enti.il to you. tense of duty to the counlr] nsistently ivith our otvi helieie thill the whole power of tile goeoril- III. held noil nijfl.llli.d by all the inllurllf 1 and s ol all loyal toeii in 'ill sections, ami nf all puliei . lit hilly oei. r>-- j ry l" put down ihe re tie Hi ind cry s ihe " levei r of Ihe rebell ,,[,.), :1 I 9 behcl wc u does exist, things as they nre. nnd not ns we wou In consi'nuenee of the existence ol tt ikrsiaiid ihat an inimeii-e pressure is for ihe purpuse nf sinking down through tho exercise of military authority. The „ eminent cannot iniinlain thi, gn-Mt struggle il tin opinions be withdrawn. Neither can tbe gov. hope for early success if llie support of that Such I Is to tl wilbdra e condition ol things, the I'riiidetii rder .Slsto men lo BtCD forwMrd oml ,ppcnls hnve been made to eiireme in the North, to meet us half way, in order that Ihe whole moral, political, pecuniary and physical force of the nation tuny be llrndy ami earnestly united in one grand effort lo save the Union ond the C'on- Uelieving tlnit su.-h were the motives Hint promoted your Address and such the results lo which it looked. ing hour, to respond io a r,pirit ! fault-tin. I ing or (j tier o- disposcd lo seek for the cause of present misfortunes in tin; errors nnil Lfioti;.M ol mhira "I tt propose to band, we moot your nildri'-s-s m Hie uplrli lu which it was made, and as loyal Auiecicnns, declare to you and to the world thai there i« no tacritke that wc nre nol ready to make to wive the government ond inslitiittons of our fnth'cw. Thai we, few of us though there may be, will per- mit no men Ir tho Nurth or from tho South, to go lurlhor than we in the netoiuplishmcnt of Ihe great work before m. That, in order lo curry people of Ihe Bonier .-.tales, calmly, deliberately and fairly lo consider your re commelid a lions. Wo nre the more emboldened lo ni-sunie this position from llie tact, DOW becooie history, that llie 1. rulers of IheSoQth- ern rebellion have ullernl to abolish slavery among them as n condition lo foreign intervention in favor of their independence as a nniion. If they con give up shit cry lo destroy the Union, wo can surely mk our people to consider tho question of . 11111111.11. i. re. ii to saie the Union. With great respect, your ubedient servants, Jomc V. Nuti.L, Wh.i.uu. i;. Bbows, Sam. S. CtiKV, Jacon B. Uu.™, Gbohue P. Funlltn, W. F, U'liiKv. .V J. Clluexts, [much Maismio, fieprescnutive from EallornTon- neMeo, nnd whose " constituents nro not yel disen- Ibralled from the hostile arms of the rebellion," signed iddressed tbe l'resl- n Ihe line spirit thai ehar.i tally. Ho says he uerdi," ivinci at Wan.—The Nnshtille V, Ihe >urpri-e ami cuplnro of a Michlgun I.. -I-.M. .11. I '.I |J I.IUI-. '.I II |- I. civs: " 7?.e l-1-.IJi..'O ft Vltlt tim nM It.MllTS llrl.-u.'l/.t ,r!„ ii f.'n -j I..J-H. rte rdKltion, nhilr onri jonml'y ..-:,, i. ili.rn- f.'.e i-e'-fl 1'ij (isi'mj eonrfiJinj o,.. I [,ir."(,,, 3 , „ en Wi io,| l/oir nonlir.o/ o.je...o. IVe .ay Ibli wfib no il ,,...n oi '.. si r.| r-,.o.li on our i.nlortoiiale s..,l,lle longlit "ell. 'flie difilculty or nillfortune na.--.ihnl Ih .. . ..-,, renllre tlnir itinilieiior II.. (. ople they bad loth Vor heaven'.- ;-iKe. let there t-r to. iin,h .no I, m takes » largest scale, even under the the ni > lbo c rophes.et 1 Ignominious i insei[iicnce!, a IroClouBiy cab it to the THE PEtlll. OF TIfE HOUR. The Itepublie is now in its worst peril eince tilt •utbrenk of tliu Wnr. To disguise it is not only use less, btil criminal. A month ngn, public feeling wn; in pond cheer, from expectation ol victory. Tn-iiay, universal annioty prevails. The shadow of a great defeat rcali upon lim face of affairs. Ily common consent, Richmond was to have been ta&en. Nobody spoke of n reverse i few thought ot it. Costly fireworks were put up in this city to celt* hrnlc llie victory, on the Fonrlb. of duly. Thong there bail been a bri.ik sword-plnj oferiticieui ovc McClellan's plan of operaliona, yet nobody aecuicd 1. dnubt that, ejtber by n yood plan or a bad one. b would cjtplurc Richmond. Cut wu hull. iucteMi seven brilliant disasters in the 1'en insula, which, like the electric links round n I.e.yikn jar, gave the publi niind a Blsggerinp, shock. Nor has it yet recoveret Tho sense of defeat, though less exciting to-dov, i more oppressive than on ihe Fourth of July. Tbe magnitude, oi" Ihe disaster is more clearly seen, and tho delay which it brings upon the wnr more severely fell. A new Napier will write lie history ol a new l'euinsulnr wnr, whose only result lias been lo show how Richmond might have been taken, but was not, nnd perhaps is not tu bo. The lexicons will hereafter note a new definition of n blunder : it means strategy. Consider ! The suu never shone u|ion such an srniy ns tl.i- nation gave to Geo. McClellna. Did we not see regiment after regiment crowding lo Washington, tilt the holiday parades were grander limn the spec- tack* or Paris or Prussia T Did not tbe bug lines ol tents stretch for miles up and down the Potctuae, gleaming like snow ia the sun ? It was nn army so well. equipped that no critic could pick n llntr; its supplies were ao lavish, Unit, lor .. wbito.mibto^Yiis took ou the novelty of primal luxury ; its discipline was so thorough thst men said, oilier armies might lose battles, but this would be invincible. Vet, ni u itbst.'tinliiig nil our rose-colored hopes, I tie firm -Arniyol the IVtomsr has wnllered the grcnlestdcfe of ihe war. The i|ueslion nrises, IF7iy/ There is a plain answer. Nor does Ihe. nnsn concern itsell elm ill with tin- blunders of n military enmpnign. It matters little whether lbo individual blame belongs to the White House on Paainnkey River, or lo tbe While House on Pennsylvania nuc. What concerns lbo nalioa to heed is, Ihu army thai set out tn Richmond hnd but half an errand in going, and tJod stopped it on llie wie. Cr.miois.siiiiied of Divine Providence to curry forward tbe causo of Fi-iicdnui.il wits disobedient to llie bejivenl) vision. anil was smitten on tbe high roud. Tho grand army was defeated, not because it was not reinforced, not be- cause it changed its base of operations, but because it did nol strike for n victory such ns fled counted ivorilii II el ii I, ii,:;. d n- - il ii- .',. ul . military haso or operations, it would o..i !,, v. been abandoned oflhcliod of Unities, bind it culicncljed itself in Eltrnnl Justice, it could never have sunken. Rut the blow against Itu.hmond was too carefully aimed : it wns meant In destroy the Rebellion n save Slavery. Cut with (lod, the greater rebellion of the twnin is Slavery If that bn struck down, I nther Inlls nf itself. Whatever necks to presei slavery—even lliough it be a Federal nraiy—Hod himself will destroy. When tho plans of the govern ment and the plans of God arc nt variance, lb crumbles a Grand Army naif il were clay, and brenki a jVfnjnr-Geiiernl in pices Jike n poller's vessel. Iii baa brought two enemies fact) to race, not for tho chief purpose of fiiving victory lo cither, but fur working out the freedom of an oppressed race, despised ol both. Tho solemn lesson of our lalo disasters i and the President and bis lienerals should lesrn that no strategy, cither political or military, can cumvent Eternal Justice. The plainest sign of the t.nics, therefore, is, that the Wnr Department, with all its armies, cannot both the Republic and Slavery. The betlei ol die people have seen this lor souio lynu; the government is still almost blind. If the iioo fienso of the free masses of tie North could liavu shaped the war-policy of the Administration rear ago, we might lo-day have beta ringing hells of peace. lias tho hour to strike been iting ? So fur back as Ihe insult to Sumler, the Ring indignation ol nil loyal hearts offend a (0 on which tbe government might triumphantly launched Einsncipntion. The proclnmatii moot was another opporlunily. The memornhle morning niter Hull Run was another. The entering icdge of tlen. Hunter was another. The last Fourth f IT* Oicf-rv-T, calls for no repentance, e . poses lion lo no judgments *t the hand of God 1 See artfully It eicludu from Its list of notional tin* Ihe great crime which mates llie' country a byoword hissing Ihroughont tho eivllired world 1 No, It is slavery, according to T7ib Ous-Tt-rr, that eiposes nation to the retributions of Heaven, bat Anti- Slnvcry I To bo sure, it does not say this in so many rdi, bat such evidently Is Its meaning. " We of ihe th were not innocent In tbe causes tint led to Iho " I Of courno not, we tolerated nnli-slsvory ajita- i, to tbe gresl annoyance of lbo pious woman-whip- s ntnl cradle pliioderers of tho Siullt; wu resisted spread of slavery ] too many of us revolted at Ihc a'liio Slave law ; and when the South complained . has? Is tliere u I t leai nent. For all II ,111- Oc---.il PARKER P1LLSBURY ON THE TIMES, Iv pursonnee lo nu appointment, oar faithful laborer, I'liiM-u I'lLi.-i:. ni-, leiture-J twi. e to a full and deeply itenttcd audience at Lyceum Hall, Stilford, Man., Sunday, 13th bit. The impression made was one of lemnlty, and I trosl profit. 1 judge of the value ot thLs ontl-slavery mission from Ihe ovcitetucnl created the qiIdJi of thoie whose hearts are full of hatred to • African race and to every faithful Abolitionist. . P. obtained thirteen nun mbicriben to Trie Stuc- Dj«n, which I regard is no small work, especially in ur town, where not a single copy, I think, tin prv- lously beeo taken. I send you the following Sketch of ho ci'ciiiiic: lector.*, reported by Mi us Clu-ever. ol West Vrentliaio. 1 nm sure your readers will citc-tm it s prlvlleun to rend iheio wonls of truth and timely n** lo a guilty people, in this hour of our strife and e judgments of God! ords, v, supremely anxious miiiniiig metbod lo rejoin t tho li speak of it? Who will give heed' nol tho President, who, ol all otbei should he moist eager to know. Tbu only remninit lethod is oue which Kentucky disapproves, nnd therefor.' the President disallows. Kentucky rules Mr. Lincoln nn South Carolina lately ruled Mr. Riicbanm. It ha. been noticed that a nurse who tends n si child oilenliiues will sleep through all Iho clang o ily fire-bell, yet if lbo child murmurs, will nn . So, while half the North is sounding Iho President's ears, be sleeps ; nor wnkes Ihe whimper of Kentucky, earn two great reasons why llie present policy cannot erowu Ibe wnr wilh a victorious ponce : Di because we need Ihe great Third Army—the unetil cd Four Millions ; and second, bceausu wo r.ecrf to i heartily lo our side. God is for tbe sli Bret, and McClellnn afterwards. Wo need the all quickly, that tiod'« sure blessing may follow. How shnlllio be induced to come I* A Mcm- of Congress lately said to Ihe Bouflo: "Fifteen thousand white men killed nn Ibe Peninsula I Would been boiler lhat black men bad been IterC instead!" This is too uninviting n way In ask volunteers— oven with black skins. Tho War Department has just Issued a bulletin to employ negroes as military laborers. Why has not the Sccre- iry, nr the President behind him, courage enough to nay soldiers 1 Is it possible that the cjovcrniuent does not know the one way, and the only way , to enlist the negroes? Must it be lold that in talking lo Ibe ignorant and lowly il must use plainness ol speech? tinfiscaiion is a word hard for a slave to undcr- ust ieniadeeo plain that u nu, taring man. though fool and n contraband, cannot err therein. Congress iving failed lo pass a simple edict of Kmnncipa- tion, it is now the President^ duty to wrile Ihe word with his own hand. This is llie only way lo enlist Iho blacks. Rut Ibis will enlist them in Hocks nnd mul- titudes— in regiments and armies. It will be the speediest way of answering the President's requisi- tion for JOO.OtiO more men. Ofcourse.it involves tho disagreeable* punposilion Mini negroes are men. Rut, conceding this point to the. emergency of the hour, let (Jen. Butler mid the tiew.i tu the plantations or Lou- isiana, Alnbntria.nnd Mississippi, let Gen Ruetlsend it through the region round about his camps in Arkansas and Slissonri; let tho blockading ehips drop It nloig ihe coasts; let Gen. Hunter re-write, his blotted order of Ihc '-'!>lh of May | let Port Pick* eim hang out Ihc notice on her weatlier-stnined walls , let all these camps and strongholds be made recruiting stations— nlfering each recruit the bounty of Iretdoiii —And ihe President's requisition will bu speedily tilled without n draft; and history will witness an act of poetic justice in watching how gran illy the negroes will whip their masters. The Tuscans have a proverb, lhat summer ia the friend of the poor. Rut we have learned a lesson ns IniO ns a proverb, that summer is tbe enemy of the army. Docs not common sonse dictate thst tho gov- ernment wanl-i an army of bluck men in the South in the summer heats! In the name of God, then, let us hnve Freedom—Victory —Pence I - renew " Ihe covenant with death mid llie ugreei tith bell," to restore the South again to the com ionol privileges forfeited by rebellion, lo catch eturu her runaway slaves, and permit her lorulo is in time to come as in time past. "To proscculi tor with nny other design " than tn bind thu K meo more to the pestilent carcass of slavery, and give renewed vitality to those pravlsloni of the Constitution ilch make us the watch-dogs of . nil to ui strike oil' the "fT ' r! ' trs of the slaves, " iaa bo igalnst (Jod and tho human race." To ouimand, by " breakinc avory yoke and lpprcssed go free, " would bo to invoke his judgmental In orcn proposing such a thing tinned " and " gone loo far astray," nnd we pent and do oor first work*," before we can hope that he will appear for us nnd restore Ilero wo have or piety— the it name of Christ and his religion, Il ing as Ihis thnt has debauched Iho i rupted ihe public sentiment of the Iho South to rebel against lbs envoi Idcrin IREASOX L'XliEll THE MASK OF PIETY. Ihe New York Observe bled," I iv I, n It miller the headinfe, " Sot y It the w national sins, and thst e cannot expect success for our arms until tie repent id reform. Very sound doctrine, certainly ; hut, before wc put IKU Obnervrr in Iho catalogue of pro- ' " i little further, to discover if we whioh it regards as naliooal sins, calling for repentance nnd reformation. These nro its " We have been iu a condition to observe the pro- groMcd" moral sentiment 'line Ibe line begun, and we Convtnicd from llie outoct lb.it unless liod bo with us. il is In vain to take op the sword, iiu.l belie vinjj thst ire of Ih Aorta irrrc mil imiorrol lo (Ac ertttttj taal li'l lo l/i-icrir, cod therefor.: oushtt.. hnic been humbled long n-o. and brought to n true feus,- „i' our dependence oo .Mmiejit ni. I. lie hue ardently desired — - l-Ll-l.-IO.i tlllt till- people JI'C i 1 1 "" '' ivni-riinti the belief thnt Cod delivers ice. an.l restore us to union nnd peace. '•Antcng tbe people, iiv li.vc not sc.m the daivn of I" Inlitil IV hie ourselves I ot lenrnine. L ...IO..I... y has Congress di«playi "" il bickerings, nnu cnnai o lament thi -S abound at this hour, i oocbt to mourn, il it doi ippollllOM dav bus passed by w t had Used for ihc pn ! (mil/ill lhat the wnr HLf find no/uifa to btti il i. ;.r..>.,.,.f..i iritt .f ii- Cbmlfiidi - , H oWItT dcsfjll in 'Ual ond ll,c liu have lost sight ellie'w'iTau'u 1 letl ui.ini 1.1 llll't -hi ho speedily olosei iKrU it iriU t-r dosed, i •J ond Ihc Union AM rolel- mid o'.K pi-..ple n [o.-ot nt Ibis ll...,i-,ii, nol folly', if they desire the help of Licsl Aluiivhti n - Ir, tin. -olioori |. it. -i thnt n nt ion t;.' e - ' ' this liiindv year, it is well lo lay ihe.se t- i t.n. heilrt. Ily nil the innocent hl.,.,,1 thnt has I , . „ p. out ui Ihe bnllle-lhl-l. hi the .li ito- c-r...ins ot our dreiiltid brclhren shun to rlciem-.- tn- ibey th.iuehtl ol the jtl.evoioeiit of their lathers, bi ll.t I. 11= ol lle.ii- ,- 1 i nli'l.-i .1 h -. in i !-:..:- r . ,, lo ul. i.rpbnii--. widoes and clilldli-'s parents, who liaie given their best lei oved lo die for the Union is it was. In/ ei-cry , (,.,; . in ,>n- oi f,ii«i iriln iinr^riendi in ci'-ru y-irl ii' ll.li or.. it Mm/, nnd by every oath thai binds us i.. i , ,i .in.l tn ...-' n i.i ii. i ' In li'irohle .illfselve, hetore 11. .mil. und.ii'i people. eep nt and return. We hnve sinned. We have gone tar astray. And just so surely as there in a jealous v. o. It e. I, b.r Ju . r, that e.il- •Ib t..r jii.nii.-o -• And yet, what lithe underpinning of Bod's throne but Juitlec—whst iho fjrest law of the .ci-cii. all time, and 1h r ..i^-li,.o,i ,,|l l|„. nr-es of nity, hot justice.' The greatest danger of tl.lt ntry is. Lbal Ihere is no cooscioutneH on tl,o part Of North of its oivn complicity in the gresl crime Ol "In. b our war is Iho righteous retribution, It seems lhat (his idea cannot be too strongly enforced, e shall I look for juslice any morn in the Korlh than in Iho South! foil will tell mo thst slat-cry it tho cause of the war. d what ia slavery * It it a good or a bad Ihingt If fruit bo wnr, nnd such a wnr, then surely il is nol nod thing. If its fruit be such society ns tvo llnd at Ihe South, then surely it Is nol a good thing. Judging Irtti by its Iruit, wbnt is It but the most fearful mI ITpaa Hint ever grew on all the brond acres of I- eee.tii.i,' Slavery! tVbo of us can ndl what it .olliiiori isilh Ibe South, in Ihe most fearful wny I Wl si rot o Why, I We have cherished llie hope thai tlio startling developments of the last mon II i would break the spell it tho Border Slates, in alliance with Conservatives ol the North, hnve so long kept ihe President subservient to their will in the inaouieiit of the war ; but no begin to fear thnt he holly unable In Olunncipntc bimsell. and lhat by Ills .latins, half-way policy the nation will be led r ruin. He seenm to be morally incapable ol spenk- one bold, fearless word tor liberty, or of taking strong, otraiiihlforwnn! slop in advance. IT hi his foot forward even n sinnlc inch, he does It st trcic" friends "ofTi.c country win, n , I Hutu h c- disgraced and imperilled by such weakoess in ill :l Magistrate, lie could not sign the ConfUrj-ilioi even nfier it had hi in modilieil in deferenco to hi! iplcs, without commiiling the unparalleled lolly of tine to propitiate tho slaveholders of the Eorder Slates by lending to Congress the message which, but for that modification. uttvU (WW hem hurled thereat as a veto '. The act. if not an insult lo Congress, was nn When twenty Of tho twenty-eight members or Con- gress trom the Bonier States, in response to hlsrarnest entreaties lor then- cooperation, repudiated his gradual emancipation scheme ns impracticable, and in cfl'ccl cunfesacd that their chief, if nol Iheir only inlen the Union arose from llie hope dial il would cor lo be Ibe bulwark of slavery, wo said, Surely llie President will now repudiate such counsellor! obey the voico of lbo free North by striking quick and bard at the enuse of Iho rebellion Ue (rill nl onco- issue the proclamation contemplated in Ihe Con- fiscation net, calling upon the slaves of rebels overy* where to come lo the help cl Mm nation nnd be Tree. is the only response, thus far. to Ihe action ol Congress ard tho voice of ihe loyal people of the North : tt tu [icmit.i. .t. IV.i-ui.,.,!..-,. .July 12. 1861!. Ftr.il, drJrreJ . Tint military colli mandecs within Hie Stales of Virginia, South Cnrolina, Georgia, Florida, VJ li.-liol "!. t I - -:;]: ! ni- oi i T in on orderly manner. Belie and use any property, real or personal, which miy bo necessary or con- venient for Iheir several commands, for supplies, or for other military purpose, ; sin! lb.it, while property may bo destroyed for proper military objects, none sliull he ijeilr.ii . .1 in reunion Ni-^ or to due itcosd : That military nnd naval commanders shall employ as laborers within and from said States so m-uiy persons of African descent as can be advantage- ously uJcd for military nr natal purposes, giving them Te.isioiable re ae.e, lor their labor. 37iird: Tli.it list., t....ili pr..[i.;itv and persons of Afri- can descent accounts fluid t-.<- kepi suiliciently necuralo and in detail to shnv. .|ti.miitiea and amounts, aud from whom both property and sui h per- 1 ns shall have come, as a basin upon which . pcniation can be made in proper coses, and the pencil Ivparttt.cnts of this government shall attend to and perform their appro- priate parts toward tbe execution ..1" tiicse orders. Dy order of iho President. I'ihu-i : M.STi.sTov, Secretary of War- Not a word is tliere in this order promising freedom I- dig o vord ovc ey will nut, when the i The Border Slate*, it will be tcloded from the operation Kentucky, Missouri, Tennessi ,o permission io enipi pulsed from our cam equivoeolilic:, hip) e to an end' Wo s! .,- |'o- ... dry is lost. The Washington eorrcsponden .under Jato July 22, dent s position whicli we of 7V Evening w of Ihe I'rcsi- ct the war with i llontioi;. in thi. stmel for ill- l.elier lis, denilll.lltn: :;"S and henceforth should Rumors Ion-.. rope and do t works. Wc- ,1 be a more vieorous pro seen thin ; out in good fiiitb ibe recent legislation ot Ciuieres-s. Irani nboi I bear I am in- clined I u believe this i* true, and il is proleible II, ul uch iiviirn. tiore. loive nlruadv In en sent cut. A very lour Lit.ini 1 i„e. lin.t i. o In hi i.ii, T,le, ipon Ihe subject . and there uics an i neoui-neing dcutree Ilorder s.lnvo States, even on Ihe question of slavery, -whatever low.ir.ls the t, oil sud Atlntilie sbue I bniard Ihe opinion lhat ihe policy of the government will be lo totally overthrew ilsverj In -he cotton and sur-r growinj; Sidles by ever)' method n its power. It will not slick at any obstacles, beini; onvinee.l that Ihe only hope of making thus... siste. he] lent is to . niir. ly lie-tr.-y slaiery io them. Total bolilion in Ibe Matc-i ol Soulli Carolina, GcorKta, Vlahima, Sli,si..,[,pi, l.i.iii-iati.i. nnd Teias is resolved ,p ..r I nm ,LI1-"--l.i nn- nif'TineJ. Tliere will be no proclamation upon Ibe subject, hut ii is noon the less tie died policy ol Iho corcrnoiout. Mr. Lincoln has « prejudice again. t nnii slavery proclamation*, and will quietly inform lua Li.ner.ils ol Ins purposes, and will make any. Wilh slavery abolished in the Hull and Atlnntic Sltlles.it will take cam ot ibiell elsei. Iierc- nill gradually enpiro." : Coui : ll-.i contains a large number ol important niu) valuable papers, among which we notice Addresses delivered before the Virginia ritate i.'oiiieritioo, upon the iiuesMon of Secession, by the Commissioners front Soulti t.'lro- lina, ...eorgis and Mississippi; Letter from Charles I), Drake of Mittourion " Personal Liberty Lam"; Major Sprah-ue'« paper on "TilO Tesafl Treaton " ; Minutes ol he Southern Iligbta Association nl St. Helena I'arlsh, S. 0. ; Carl Sehun's Cooper Institute Speech ; and John Stuart Mill's " Contest in America." Prcfljed to the number are likenesses of Alexander Stephens ond Wm. II. Seward. New York : G. P. Putnam—Charles In spile of the arlfully-wuven drapery of cant in hich J7ir OlKtrtCT would bidi- its true meaning from irelleciing readers, its sympathy with slavery and Ihe rebels is here revealed to all who have eyes to see enso to understand. What il soys of the " rapacity fraud l! of public men, of " profaneness, intempcr- >," etc., lias a basis of truth; bul none of these, ontly.is the great sin which, in its pious estimation, chiefly oflcodcd God, and for which tho nation TH£ QrasTII)N F THE HOUB FOE FREE "^rixss.Z&SXZ "B°-"»« "»—«" - »s" <° »»» " king of men without wages, the abolition of mar- loyal Liborers free, or be ourselves the slaves or ringo among four million ol people, or any or all of the| traitOriT made slat- ry Ibis the South mad it, or m 11 the child of the North; Surely it must ic said lo bo the Inhl liolhofthc Nor 1. and the Soul) 11 Ibis be Irue, and if slat ry be tin to roe, there is b t one conclusion, Ihnl slavery ought I die, and die nt ol self-pi if for no hlgl I on the S'orth Is not calling for (ho abolition of matter of sell preservation. It matters athlng what tho war ce Is the North in blood, In life. In science, in chnr- nc tor, alo fan secured. ! ovcry il the dl* llLlllV Ol our nail lissionarics from the Easl an.l tell us of the sacred eroco- whose J -..--. in. iiiil.lr. nflbringi the t;nd Ibey worship. ;ut swims there in Hie waters of Inch an terrible a rSRon ns in your Southern ii wli.i'e merciless and remorse Icm ..e Weil c-e-l.-lnd WD, minded lor the -uicriflccr That is what -.la "ncti at Icndclh intn captivity si all go Inlo capliv- ily." Aro we flnding it truo? Why, from the ac- counts yesterday, it is likely to bo literally Irue. Tor ihe Richmond papers are proposing to Like yoor young men and drive them to work on the soil, under die sh. Will Ibey nut do it: Is there anything they Rill I di. ' And no may yet find it true in (he most literal well as the most terrible sense, lie that Icadoth into ptivlly shall gn into captivity. Tlionrnt-bornof Egypt list he sacrificed in every house before iho oppressed uld go free. It is literally to be true of us, and not only the llrsl-born sacrificed, but multitudes of othera fathers thought, when they laid their years ago, thnt Iheir mountain stood strong : that Ibe New I-ioj-land mountains, the Rocky fountains of the West, should ns soon be started from heir f!-t,.-n!n~s as the foundations of their government s? removed. Hut Ihey might just as well have declared y enactment, thnt from and after iho year ITS9, the ightiiinijs of heaven should no more strike ; for they tid foundations that God , from before tho foundation ot Its world, had decreed should nol stand, because Uicy . ere laid in injustice. And is guvernment proposliiL- o dig deep and lay new foundations, and lay them In justice and righteousness . Surely not. I could read [lings of the Secretary ot Slate entirely dlUerctn doctrines and purposes. I could show you it the government does net contemplate any change the condition of any human being in the laud by this revelation, does not Contemplate ibe emancipation ot a tingle slave, or the sulk-ring of a single slaveholder, .imply in eensoquenco of this rebellion. Tho govcrn- uent surely docs not call fur justice. Whu does " We inve proposed a measure of emancipation to a part of be slaveholders ; bul on what condition ! This, that il bey will emancipate, ibei shall bo compensated lor the Oss of properly. This is llie highest we havo yet •enelie.l. Nay, that Is tho highest the Abolitionitts Ihcmsolvc-s, many of Idem, have come. Is that justice' nice when wo tako Ihe oppressor, Ihe rubber, tell by his robbery and wrong, standing up in imptnilcnco, his criminality, his hardness ot heart, and propoio to him thnt il lie will cease this rob- ong, he shall be compensated fur his loss of rile tvu take the spoiled and ruined victims m out in their battalions of beggary to WTlug nn uncertain subsistence from tho cold charity ot a world that hates iliem ( And lliii is the justice for which this nation calls— the best of iL There is n siory of »T0ry distinguished personage being invited by another distinguished personage to nd his hott stood up nnd laid " Behold, the half of my goods 1 give lo feed Ihe poor, and if I IVO taken anylhing from any man unjustly, I rctloro m four-told." No wonder there came frooi Ihosc flowed lips that beautiful benediction, "This day la Ivalion come to this house." Whool u_s has proposed on hales the shire, lutes his color and all bis r rhile w viuie collelh lor justice. Nol yel. Pilate I his lunula on the morning of the crucifhioti, ' I am innocent of ihe blood ol this just per- The South continues to crucify its victims, and the North washes its hands in innocence. No wonder disaster and defeat have to often waited upnn our i, for il is llie dehor ah ot hosts nnd ol the enslaved, not .letl'. Davis, who is our foe. It is God's justice i ,t n Id. li yoi light, emir millions of slaves to-day e their chains, and your government heeds them 11. di Ibom net. did 1 say > By all Ihc laws and pre cedents and tests of all the post, tbe proclamation o n. Hunter freed a million of slaves. At his voice, a, :he voice of God. Ihey crept up the- sides ol theli y prison, tltn hell nf horrors where Ihey had wallet long, and were just leapinu over ihc battlements t. cdom, nnd Abraham Lincoln sweeps tin in to the woes Ihey bud almost , scaped rar. Il is enslaving the children of Cod, instead tie greatest dilliriilty is in making nursclrea c his of our own participation in this terr call .1 ii tint any ol o iciplc. I do - y.-jun,- le 1 belie Hunter issued thai proclamation till he bad ulre of his army ; bul what if every "°n uf re n Cb-rkson or a tt'llberforco, with innch liove them as revoke the proclamations nf and Hunter, and still hold millions in slavery t er law of coniclepee and the soul ore still iscd. i,..! dies tomu things, tt" eh, I,. t once I tl.,,-, u .hade ol Webster, woe wis utile tad ethers enacted any other* ,o laws of God! And 1 sullen u remember n ce tain Sanhedrim before and Ibey said lo a Great nhowos present. " V e stone all such, but what u T " And he said. 'He that ii without sin u, let him cist the t rst slone." Whet if Uial her had Hood on A lington Heights, Iho day Gen. HeDo we II and bis oats, "Ue that is w ihuut sin among you, let tho first columbisd " Probably wo snoaPJ