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NEW YORK HERALD, SATURDAY, MARCH 29, 1862.-TRIPLE SHEET. Me. F., to speak @ invite you to return to allegiance to the must come forcibly Biternative. Secession ‘ out.” You can do nothing to ad- . sig the gov- | just its fragmentary and insiznificant parte, Think you Agi oath. upmindful of qroession i ao wil further : ‘nd the other for @ da:awab! high © nstit tional to guarantee tw every come s og oy nen Cuiontsta are the | State in this Union a a sy of government, an | Union men as weil as er aowntrodien and oppressed people ou tie [ace of ‘and immed! the rebellion from ite birth, an they ae imprisoned, aud tortured ani est in hay s y upon to witness Te ent its instigators Ad triumpuaatly over ? Recoilect hey will ise up as One® man to wel- and their dupes, you will find, too, that the Unionisia,ca- | fellow citizens, this all transpired before Abraham Lin- : them." pecially of Tennessee, have coln called out his seventy-five thousand men, and recol- | rise again iu resistiess strea,th. Ln allusion to his lust gover duty to their country and their 4 cna Hae what eg wore poy meenyn election, Mr. M. gaid his vote had been a that he bs const y Siates, is one of the funda- | to tell the of Nashville a truth—you have got it received. Now, my fr: . listen at- | ever received before. His instructions been impe- Feud more tal sone wee one polinioas existence, by which | to tive in Union, with your negroes if you to what I have to say. One week: to-day | rative to represent his o nstituents as members of the an Keutucky, by the Gap of the Cumberland mountains. |. every part of the country is alike bound, and from which | will, without them must. The Unwo show ilscif in Nashville, 69" Unios. His most pamfu' recollection was that they were | against intrenchm not on our left, and supported his Ho waa sent } caiur, and thence transported by oar. |°00 part can escape. This obligation the national govern- | is worth more tham all “the ‘Recess nists and | ment aiust be maintaived, and wo demand your loyalty | being perseci.ted by the mirerab.e would-be destroyers | movemeuts by Hpmery division. The enemy’s pickews ciage wo she byyills. Hore ho was detamed by General | ment is now attempting to discharge, Ihave been ap- | negroca in the world. Ab. the beginning of pplavae.) A few words more: | of their country. He woult do everything in b's power | and Guards were driveu into his intrenchments, Ha doo for wou day po Pointed, in the absence of the regular and established State | this rebellicm, President Lincoln aaked you to lay down hat’s ina came 7 Kod with So miniater 10 their deplorable eituath o—every thleg te Gnd the skirmishers forced their way close to the mais jy 1 i r i for the time bein, ‘our arms. You refused. He oall ty five question whether a nesses again to overnment, r faa detiroyed al. io prsere ‘he punts propery of fe 5 ive ro] t : iaws, and cootrary {0 tame @ child Aaron; | the goverument to Teunoseee. Twill be the fender of 4 furious thunder storm began to rage about eleven Supremacy of the laws. when we shall seo those who have b en overpowe: bel stores mat it. Tt ap eserne the public verty of the State, to gire the pro- | thousand men to enforce the laws, and contrary (othe i poo ager yhoo fatale, ieee ot ienieoe at ks ao ef Tao ‘actively enforced to her citizens, and, as | constitution yo: fo-co am alliance with the traitor In | 20, neither would an Arnold name a Tam | Tonnossee, and, as far as possible, her protector. I hope} O'c\Ock (hat night,and continued almost without imter- ume of. Browniow’s arrival at shelbyvilie, wag | spe dily as may le, to restore her government to the sume con- | alluting to slavery, he said it had ed from Eu- | 20t superstitious, geatiemen, but allo again to return to my native district, anc will endeavor | ruption until Just before Night General ed emoving bas ebores at that place. He de} iti as before the existing vebltion. In this grateful but and was tn this country more easily defended 1 hall always steer clear of the init 5 . to prevent retaliation, on the bd of these who have eee i crencene with a covinien oy vw we tes after duylicht @ yom i J been.oirbed in their ‘liberti . “ af arcu us under aking, I shall avail myself of al the aid than an aggressive thing. The government | indicates Jobo Breckinridge; J. B. atands for James ibertics ie vn ten Ga eke that may be a lurded by my fuliow citizens; for this ver attacked the imetitvutions Of the South, and ; J. B. sug judab Benjamin; J.B. stands] who have been participants in the uncalled for rev»lu- | of truce approached our be'te: os, with imformation {1 was not uti! Lae stores were removed that he was al- | »urpose | respectfully but earnestiy inviteall the people | those institutions must not be made the pretext for over- r ton, He woloomed all as friends, not euemies. They | the enemy hadi evacuated b ks, Small towed 0 progeed, He had been under guarc ali the time, | of Tennessee, desirous or ing to see a restoration of | throwing the governtnent. Let the Unien survive though id 3 wore chiidren of the house of America—one in origin and whore be bad to gubinit t the grasest insults from the | her ancieut government, without distinetion of party plover porigh | Mr. Etheridge hemorously alluded to Mr. destiny, and should west bp commen for the Weal 6f thelr whole coau . 1ie@aays that our forces at Florence huve ar ping past Pe opinions or astion, to unite Se f,. Pegeihwborgrmn | 3 those of the devil, and a os: a me land, a easlonatl quade jecatur, and that the | with me, by counsel and co-operative agency, toaccom. | sailed the po! ivines in acrimonious terms. | ; hanked attention and begged os ou wowaris Decatur. ani that thy | ih this great end, Ifind ment, if ot sil, of the offices, | be pitied the poor tmisied secessionists, aa'® mass, from | a8 the foregoing report, which has bece furnished from | pardon for any utterance of his which should ca.so a paug. e both State and federal, vacated either by actual al his heart. If he hadte punish them, he would put ten | momory, has not been rovised by him, many glaring im- a mies memnaiion showed aastyand pre : donment or by the aetion of the incumbents, in ia the aaytom while he Imprisoned one in the peniten- | perfections must appear. But the great length of the Speech of Wm. G. Brownlow. cipilate had been tne of theenemy. their ‘erver but they think he is at least five men. attempting to subordinate their functions to a | tiary, Toall deluded ones, heMffered redemption ; but | speech and the rapidity of ite delivery mst be our DELIVERED IM NASHVILLE, MARCH 19. Sound wnbaliets ele Sanne ae on Chinks “that the thing is abous payed oat, a vower in hostility to the fundainental law of gome of the knavish leaders, ‘said he, oaght to be apelnay fee Une lnlvaheg shia ne, nopemecliy euiceey Guxrizzx—I am in ® sad plight to say much of tn- tagiebies nee A op er Gre every other man wr ize | State, subversive national jiance. These a le |= want know where vi it Pe coac! Vidence iagracel ‘panic. vate - Chom. Coren sce emiea te oo infune's © offices must be flied until the State shall be piemen lately 0 blatant of their belligerence, were to | tially as follows:—I may have caused a terest—too thoroughly incapacitated to do justice to you | cers and knapsucks of men were left behind. Nolther Cause, bad, as [Or the evil, hd is jealous of Davis and | restored 60 far to its accustomed quiet, that the people found. He produced and-read the call for's ‘pike | some of my audience. pt oly Kn sd or myself, My throat has besa disordered for tne past Strait ot b the ‘an peaceably assemble at the ballot box and select | meeting’ in Nashville; said he truly honed the signers | mustbe told. You will all have to ask pardon of three years, and I have boon compelled to almost ab: agents of their own choice. Otherwise anarchy would | were inthe rebel di was particularly jo- | for worse gims than I bave committed to-nij; OP 4 andon prevail, and-no man’s tife or property would be gafe from | cose in of “shakey men"? in those times of war, public speaking. Last December I was thrust.intoen un- a r ‘he desperate and unprinci T shall, therefore, as | buthe tity ve-them, He asked where are those neighbor comfortable and disagreeable jali—for what? Treason’ bin. 6 early as practicable, te for ponit sublime declaimers who have so long har the mul- C gia ‘ Treason to the bogue confederacy; and the proofs i mi { ander the Stateand county governments, from among | titude with theirdelectable metaphor and epecula- | the government “ their congratrlations. e dl ray fellow citizens, persons of probity and inlelligence, tions about Southern liberty and fabulous wealth? They | converted {nto an arsenal. Ho . cof that treason were artices which appeared tn the were friends in the city, bi eariny| ince to the constitution and government-of | hav on the: Jace to swallow their sugar coat- | ditors for their atteation, and closed by assuring ‘Knoxvi:le Whig in May last, when the State of Tennessee) fad arrived. While yet the United States; who will execute the functions of their f i ‘ahd bonorabie physici: that he should continue to trust in the good fortunes wasa member of the imperishable Unk the Maynard and @. :. Trigg. Biv: og hua tai oeee cunts ding ne action ty Singer 7 —_—-* = - | hie country: trae ceag week to Decaum ; ¢owar s the hote! frm tue Capi ‘Their authority, w! their appointments | ing , they flee, ani ve r o ver, and wag remov. arcm * foot distant T:igg 0. 0.ulan, the fare0d., al been made, will be ‘according! Fespected and | hope, 0, ticee mon of plenty! their sia Speech of Hon, Horace Maynard, guard of seven men kept me company. | aubse. fhe bounded forwa:d, followed by Maynard. The Purson | observed. To the people themselves, the protection of | thesum of all villanies—and the slaught DELIVERKD IN NASHVILLE, MAKOM 20, quentiy became so weak that [ could uot ture over ip my ‘cred ‘Why, inigg? “Oh! Maynard!’ Tears were i: | the government is extended. All their rights wili be duly | poor and friendiess parents, who have sont forth Fa.row Crrmxxs oF Nasaviis—I come to-night to ad. | Ded, and the guard was crested to twelve men, fur four | the! * hus voice. Ho saw the crow: gathoring arouud and he | -especied, and their redreesed when madeknown. |} the sole objects of their affections, will haunt their ‘ou in bebalf of an imperiled try, Hoar me, I should suddenly recover and run away to Ley re place, kept the tiood mounting to bis yes, His voice was | thoge who through the ‘and weary night of the re- | every stop to the grave. There is no repen- | {res y' pe ‘countey: a was removed J turned upon the river, atuied with emotion, and, choking. te said:—*Let us £ hellion have maintained net Coknare Sapir ae Ca HE - steeped meiuphon in earmy pray you, for my cause. It is now morethan a year sinde soe © my room.” They assisted ve inte tl ernmant wi bonored. orri misgu over pe for . Those amon, secessionists o t f 4 they abaa- Teupeenegerthe suck of Maynard, Mee rinead ar toy eeeenedon their return. ‘and while tema te- — paver cunee a hanes se oC pine fre. a ae ial gt pis al ra rye yo. low, you an ‘the edérate g ment, which trina Noto aconavatntce oe ae cohouiees rows part e atch iad come. necessary, in vindicati violated majesty law } cotton an those wn rom jance Conf overbi * ey mycin oe ind | ting de yooak wo poo Ziotigent not a particle of either. Said he, rake the depths of hell | have conspired to destroy your liberties. Icall your at- | will not only entitle you to @ specdy relenso, | #0d ten large steamcrs which wore there are out oif (rom ‘The tight of the evemy was so hasty that ia iS gotu a 1 probal in New re-asserting we we 1 oni Tex fete fe Hagxaty | ond conscious in high places, no merely retalia‘ory | for the concentrated ‘ecsence of everything wicked and | tention to the addresses of these men, threatening the | Dut insure your protection.”” “sir,” said 1, W, and must either be destroyed or fall into our Cor him, and how happy ite editor wou. be to welcou: im tic i Adopted. "To those, eepecialiy, | abominable, andthe distillation will produce nowcom- | toe. ction of the government should Lincoln be elected | -‘Defore 1 would take the cath ’ to. support | hawis. | Isiand No. 10 must be evacuated, as @ him w the est Ho promiaed he would cail; te, unofficial capacity, have assumed an | pound so hateful and dammable aa the enormouscrime of | “esteucti go such a hell-foreaken institution, 1 would suffer myself to | an neither be reinforced nor supplied from below. i btm. uutitude of hostility to the government, a full and com. | secession. The publio meetings held during the progress | to the Presidency. South Carolina commenced a series | rot or die with olt axe. Mie my friends, these dema bart ma of the forces he lote amnvsty for ail past acts and declarations is ofred, | of the Fort Donelson fight, and the exulting scenes pre- | of aggressions, basing them upon the imagined wrongs | goRues sotially boast that the Lord ts upon, thelr alge, ‘asa upon the one condition of their again yielding themselves | ceding the arrival of the federal army, were recurred to lare that (od Almighty is assisting them in the panes gp eps cmeet spon ful eltizeos to the just supreryacy of thelaws. ‘This | in illestration of the weakne oft she would suffer in the event of republican success. These | rurtherance of their nefar In Knoxville and * Abandonment of Murfreeshoro' by the Kelels—Where Bicy | \ gavige them to do for their own fou! and for the peaco | Where are the eager pikement cho, preliminary encroachments need not be rehearsed. The a Special mention of those more divectly voucerued in the Iniend to Kally—Mail Faciliiiea—N-wo Postmaster o | snd welfare of our beioved State, cndeured to mo by the | where he would have been, ten months ago, preaching | threatening condkion of public affairs called for some 4 ed ee were ere U7 . Na bvillea—An ther by Governor Juhs he. associations of long and active years,and by the enjoy- | the doctrines of Union in Nashville? A yolce measures of pacification, hated fede catego d to hi The Teu:b and Sixtevnt mois, commanded ws meen ee rapist ment of ber highest honors. And, appealing to my fel- | crowd answored—You would have been han the appointment of the Committee of Thirty-three. The | the Burnside expedition. ‘Their prayers wre partly an- tively Dy Cols. Morgan and J. R. Smith, were s ‘The entire rebel force—A. 8. Johnston, Piilows Floy: | ww citizens of Tennessee, I point thet to my long public | was particularly sarcastic in his parallel between the poor | members from South Carolina refused to act. upon | swered—the blockaue at Roanoke Island was most effec ope a deepohes aes a tives, anear- | soldiers and wealthy non-combatants of the dying revo- | the committee, and the members from. Florida | tually raised; a reci 1 of their sacrilege divinely ten- | ‘28 . end ENS Pek—Seve fae trom Gipirecsbap, | litess a pisigs De. We, semen. ey motives, & fation, Said there’ war net. a shacow'of parriotism in | followed. ‘They desired no compromise, In the lenient | dered. Gentiemen, Tam a0 abolitionist; 1 applacd wo | 12, and droves the pickets aud grand muardg of southward, They are ropoited to be Dew at Corittl vest for the performance of my present and future du- " B ‘as 0 ordered NDREW JOHNSON. it, as the universal dodging of the military | course pursued Dy the government at this hatching pe- | sectional doctrines; J am a Southern man, and ail my re'g- | Demy. they were ori + Oe én force, where tiey manifest some disposition to make | a —— rafts” bad testified, Hedid not mean to excit ie | riod of the rebellion is folt the truth of Jackson’s dec! tives and interestsarethorougbly ideutied with theaout aud without returning’ a shot ; a stan. ,and are reported tobe intrenching themselves. | Speceh of Emersom Etheridge, Clerk of As Ban bat Leica paghtl, 3 tha epee nip = Red Ethers put on ae and Southern instituticns. ropa Hirao tela the arp | pens five sons woul reserved for the nol ty of | should have hung Jo valhoun an confederates. | my relatives were born in Virginia, and they and their ‘But | venture an opinion that the ap) -arauce of a fede: the United States House of Representa- saving and perpetuating their country. ‘Two feonths ag As surely as Jef. Davis and bis subalterns have rebelled, i jenetente muriatialarebidldece Let me faites youthat | whole day and night of the 13th, under furious force within tweuly miles of them would be the tlves. he said he heard of the death of an aged and pious father, | this unnatural war against tho government wilkeees the South bas suffered no infringement upon.ber institu- mans connoe@inenomaeyy © o: beavy gigval for anothor st-mpods, They have got 60 used to DELIVERED IN NASHVILLE, MancH 18. who olung through life to the union of the States with a | down, The favorable moment, a3 they thought, had | tions; theslavery question was ac no pretext for | 6 the earnest request of their , their regi that if thei aid th Fattow Crexs op Davison Cocnrr, and fellow citi. | tenacity only less than the faith with which headhered | arrived for these rebellious men to ‘strike their blow. | (hi Unrighteous conllict. Twelve Seuators from | Sage were kept ying over our trouches, though furming now even cir generacs could muster > inttel Re 1 feel honored by ad. | % bis God. But yesterday he heard from his aged | They spurned all attempts at conciliation; they would | the cotton States to oflered a cons mark to the exemy. te courage to Nght the mom would be instantly overcom+ | 7608 0 the United States,! feel more hono: y ad- | mother, now verging on thres-score, and to his inquiries | accept no compromise. They telographed home toseiza 4 the constitution formed by our forefs 3 courage ‘of these compe, Sor ae swith their ruling passivn and take to their heels. Thu: | ‘ressing you tn the latter style, for I consider you all, es tobes conde amano ee minionger eapesata the ea gens reine pal song Ga Southern ie a es Se ey. ee somal short 5 l- inv rt home te steal ir servant al 10; coast, wi we 8! repeated ir States es them pass or whobe far tho Southern soldiers, st feast here In to Weot, hav. | voll a myself, citizens of the whole Union. I will ed- | BAC Tthoe, itany deserve it, should have a babita. | offers of adjuslment, thege bad men go. before their | rances of secession, "Yee, gentlemen, twelve Senators of the 13h, are teyond all praise, and delighted and shown themseive: far better runnors thaa M,htos | iced youcandidiy,andT trust respectfully. Who could | tion nowhere but in the hottest precincts of bu . | people and. tell them ihere waa no chance for terms of | swore allegiance 10, the ‘Gay time, and vnswore It at | astonished cvery otticer who witnessed if, The di 4y excel in the forns " aeitevo, twelve months ago, thst the fisg of Washington | He spoke of tion. Six refused to vote, in order that the Crit- | on: hort since I was called by a lithe Indeed, they greatiy excel er quality. pe i on The ¢ “ Raeo’ 4 of would bave..been trampled under foot, and that the Con. | the State of Toanersee, now amounting to millions, mnch | tendea peopesiiien might not pass. Buchanan's agminis- who, I believe, ts the Secretary of War of the | 0s-¢00108, Murfreesbor:’ is bo great ac . of which wae due to the cities of Boston, York and | tration out,and he died witht, He bad his , He threatened to hang me, anc Yt rf @ount.to the Uvion cause. There were n0 prisoners | eierate fag would have floated over (he capital of Tem | pr iiage! It now amounted to mittions, felends that Mr. Bell would carry Tennessee. Friendstold mo more mercy from bim th J 13th, to day!ighs on the 14:h, ex; qaken, nd ne report has yet docu ‘receive: | nessce? Ib le my duty to tall you that this | mainly contracted by those who purchased goods under). tim that ® plot existed in Washingtom te break uj | shown dy bis illustrious predecess ‘» | the cann made without bei: hero ote of any pubtio ty, Th] Far never ought to have begua. The people faise pretences. Yet he had.mever heard of « proposition on agers, and should Lincoln be elected, South’ | Jesus Christ. Lentered into a long correspondence wi the severe storu: Of that "i 4 t of Northern merch to dissolve the Union! would secede, all the cotton Stetes would imi- specimen of expiring humanity, but from mercy or | cvurage and fortitude wo: f the South have been misied and mis- papel he heca:se individuals in the South dad been | tate the examp'e, and draw the border States with them. . ralness; om ae permitted to faeank condugt of all the troops of 8 guided, and the State of Tennessee dragged info | guilty of such (raids aud crimes. Why then shoulda! | Buchanan wasin the plot from the first; Breckinridge | withall my dveuments in my valise, which I hope to} my expectations thet I was estouished and Y fein. Secession began in lies, has been kept up by lies | the people ef the North be held responsible for the after a while. Douglas would coerce the seveded Stat:s: | publish at no distant day. Gentlemen, when stated on | 2ud foe! very saieia predicting (or them @ brilliant ca- 4 will die in lies, Gentlemen, I am no Northern mag, w. More negroes bad been stolen under the | Breckinridge said nothing on the subject. Lincoln was | my perilous journey. was sore, distrersed in mind,end | reer in arms. : and wi " a ” is, eaves. ‘Abe tree | inat |. Theseascas alternated as usaal: Nore | exceedingly so in But the momentmy eye eu- .@ Southern man, no Eastern man, nd Western man. om exhibited itself. The demented | c.untered the pickets of the federal any sae preasion ed nly £0 1: piace was quite deuertea by its tants, who had doubtices, been bmpressed with current Souther, motion that the Northern soldiers are © eet of vandal: , Geeking culy the destruction of property, the desecratio of homes and the vielaiion of wom-p, The Post Ofer markable phenomen Gentlemen, this government was made for the poor man: } portion of the constitution of Tennesree declaring she | politicians of the South kept up tho turmoil. They had | d creused, and returning health sc was socurod, iogctnr with some Cufoderate mail ma: | ‘46 rich can take care of themselves. But the poor man | free navigaticn of the Mississipp! river to be one of the too far; their disgrace must be made completo. “ate m sical constitution. yodeusion fer, etd @ number wf United States mai! bags, locks, a ta haere tho polit — daalient ne right ofthe peop of the al » Yet secession rescence ae Unk ted by: on at, oo deg ia ici Careers % ia born, and his speciad agus e 0 presen’ a y | propoadd to control the mout! that inland-sea, and (o i niow: men. is, tI ‘would-| name Davia, jr. rout ‘Gistresees we.to euch — mait agent of | iro wholly to biaise for the terrible depression of te upon ie ten aiiilivme of —peopieawho feposed | further. their objects of tredacn. ‘Ties. eammeciee ta peel nd further remarks this even: ‘the ecaien-of- y r, parm Meenas Gettionst soxtpomm Se eeaarenttas am ‘upon itto rate. ie -00n -Se before the. | ing, ia. magsalt_Sisard-nae the. pacha e- vmamotiation that @ 1g pes 1e ZO! ent ie de~ 5 is9 Ls ik, his lent Cecasion , w! wi ere the termina- iar whe are etationed thera. morkifstion of the people. ‘the domagogues and the | ed fe—adid_ nothingto-add fuel to the flame: “tion of the present week. web ORs O. Bod ‘of ee ‘rontinds wkwars 4 | e the Southern people set up the bus | They bai estadtiche secession. He found the country in the hands a eT ei mo sme cago Liseoin is to blame (or the'present wate of | oxtorting divties froma Ff ier,” and: would deal gently with them. | pe Women ofWashville ana the Federal ; or days e operl , } Maire. My friends, this is a most ‘egregious mistake; | stitntion tebe free to the goods and merchandise of Regis the ‘minds of “the | % . ‘ soe Bn sree | 4 to you that every imac who #4 ‘The spetker read a® extract from the | pe th confederacy, and ee ae Solaters. Capt.) » Firat United States who, with Gailatin, rear'y a wook ago, aad nila desu cket other than that of the repnblican wearing open the pararuount priaciples by | sa: Virginia couldonly be A Nashville corréspondeat of the Cincianat! Timeseays: of bis regiment, (A end H),’ charge property st’ tliat place, cum f\carty oe, Ir yon a Toles which t _ a er. — Cor Eo pom sree aed Le ae aid} For some unaccountable reason the-women of this section r ant bps ripen aioe comm: ckinridge jane you woul ive | federates violated every sy’ ; the leaders of | £9. Sirike a blow at Sumier, said he, and Virgmiais to 5 F notice, “A more gullant “ ucieation with the Nortt | ‘onttibuted to” the elevation of “two arch | Teuncesee were parties to the criue, He said, tet us | the Southern confederacy. Friday, the 12h ef aprit-. | 40 aot favor the Northern soldiers. In their march to. | cor lanct €0 be foand with this command, aud bie traitors And who are Breekinridge ani tane? rT ominously hangman's «. fire opened on Fort Sumter. | wards Nashville they were frequently greeted by some reduction of this place entitte coneeg: 4 ° 3 Gays. through the oxerti Colemal MacKiand, a ma! ‘reckinrédge ie assisting im the destruction of ths compare Continental Europe with the ‘The assailants kept up the a until the small garri- male dwellers by tho roadside with ‘' There goos the 4 wont eve mg by wor bet hla vest grovernment upon the face of the eprth: he is re- | before the rebellion. Protestant England was se) son who bravely defended the fort were out of provisions } Yankeos,’’ ‘‘ Wo'll soon sve another Bull run;” aud other . een received ia retirn uy te thia ‘ime, paying the people for their kindgoes by participating in | oniy by a narrow chanuel! {rom her neighvor France, but | and on tho point of starvation, and the flag was lowered. | expressions not very complimentary to Northern ears. | snd during the bombardment of the piace. He Additiveai jocemotives have been brought here by | “Pe! ity against the constituilom which he bad | che bad another religiou,emd ber spoke another | This hostile episode had the desired effect. Secesstomists | Un one occasion, as Gencra! Nelson was riding at the | the erection of the heavy batteries, and remained in boat from Cinctanst! and Loulavitle, and place! upon th. sworn to preserve. And Jo. Lane—a fit associate—is the | language. Germany, Sw itveriand, Tia’ ‘urkey, Rusia, ver the country were cheerful. Thoy must secede | head of his command, one of these fcomale secessionists | until the euemy evacuated the place. Major track, and the superin.eudent Of the road promises tha: } ‘20st ignorant vagabond that ever graced or disgraced | Ac., the same; but the peuple of the United States, ex. | now. .No better man in the world than Major Anderaop. | thrust ber head trom the window and screamed “ Hurrah, | Chief of Artillery, has distinguished himself” it oh be agsin m rnening order by Monday. the Senate. [I will tel you who caused the rebellion. | tending {rom the Atlantic to the J’ucific, profess the same | His loveof country knows no measure. When the fag for Jeff. Davis! Hurrah for Jeff. Lavis:’ Tnig was too | theoperations. To coutisue this subjoct of malls and It OMce affairs. | None vther thar the Breckinridge locofocoe. Yos, sirs, | religion and speak the same language. Kverything for- | of his adoration gave way he ed bis ‘ish much for the tempor cf the Genoral, and, riJing close to My personal staff—Major Butler, Asal Tot me moniio Ghat mach int-reet prevails bere df cde kre tecofocs, with some honorable exceptious | bids a division of the country, God himself deqgandh that | tears,asachild. Mr. Maynard read and spoke | the fence, he shouted, ‘ Madam, if you repeat that again, | <reneral, Major C. A. and Captain L. ine apprinement Of Pretinaater for this city! Wher are tho sole cause of the civil war now reging | washall be one, as we are naturally, in refigion,tab- | at length of Mr. Lincolu's proclamation. Saia that | £’ll be cursed if [Won't quarter aman in your house who | aids-de-Camp, and Major Corse, Inspector G rare Markland first o;ened the oftce he temporarily | ‘0 our jand. With bui few and houorable exceptions, I | guage, by latermarriageand soci » by commerce, | he had g sion therein for the out- | iscovercd all over with the smalfpox.”” This had the | prompt and efficient in conveying my orders under eppointed v. ¥. y as Postmaster. Mr. | c8f Saeure you Unat the great mass of the people who | &c. and rivers driaand ii—the railroads | burst of alarm which swept through the South. | dosired effect, and the adulator of Jef. Davis retired into | of the enemy.- CY le oye Of the videst and + respected citizens | roted for the dtsunion ticket ef Breckinrid; nd ' ‘1 demand it—our commercial Said that Mr. Sumner took the same ground with | obscurity until the soldiers were out of si Se ft the ranks of Why iis it, He implored the Me ot Te )aesion:! Said tenths of the we ‘ith ef Nashville. ie oo tteaieen ne aperadta toridge Prove ege e God Searle g people ot Tenney so: people were with religion, to retarn to thefts Lincoln, y red not to aggravate an internecine st just as naturally eas a talpole turos mreture. now, if you will, with your re- Hé then read the Of Governor Harris to THE CAPTURE OF NEW MADRID. frog. (Taughter,) Thore ever wae any cause for | cu! tution unimpaired. 1 mow beseech you by Tennessee Legiatature. them together POOP ~~ DORE oe +. secession. Where ia the inielligen Ted, toretnrn to your loyalty, and to « vernor Harris had accu commencing the General Pope's Oficial Report. Yennerseern—who can come forward with a decent argu: " ing the tategcity of the oous \ war. Harris, said he, bad pompously refused compliance P' tte slavehoider aud a friend and cltivan of th with the requisition for troops to qu r Heapqvarrers Dosriict or THe Missies:rF1, 5 1 ca jealous of ell attempts at the destr stitu- | recited the fab'e of the wolf and the lamb, who metgto Naw Mapain, March 14, 1862. . | the South had alwaye obtained all she asked from ( tions, but. T would sacrifice all I h 0 drink at the same stream, a8 a comparison betwcen GxxErai—I have the hoaor to submit, for the wnforma- combina :tiena were forming to drive him away,and bu: | #688, and would have continued to dogo had not South | of these States. Deluded men! let me tell you cola and Harris. Like the imprud awer of the lam, | tion of the General commanding the Department, th fe oportune arciva! of tho Union forces he woul Northern woney aud votes bought | the gor ent will maintain ite authority. The great | (hat of Harris would cause Lis own destruction. Atter | s, + Hoe: ‘Compeiied to leave with his largefamily and ide and ; and California was acquired | question now is, will you return? [am for the war going | interrogating, Who began the war? the spoakor read an act } following report of the operations which resultod in the eacritice all his property. Mr. Linds:cy ‘not been a: | + satiety the South and not the Northern Btates. The | on forever until the rebellion iseubdued. He than read | of the Confederate government, issued five days before | capture of this place. The "8 loss be a applicant for the Furt Osco, but his business having becn | SOUth mover asked anything from the Uuited States | the constitutional detiaition of traitor, and said he hated | Lincoln took the Presidential chair, calling for men to I arrived boforo this town with the forces under my | ‘#ined. Anumber of his dead wore left unburied, and Dy the political troub.es, he was wiliiug to ac | sov@rnment which she did not Cpe my Rover protest- | treason worse {lan original sin. The poison of secession | enter into their miltary service. He algo read another ¢ Y | over « hundred new graves attested that he must have it was offecedto him. Thecitizons almos: | 1 egsinet the passage of any act without effect. Ichal- | hed got the churches, and wretches who cannot | act accepting 100,000 volunteers, (tod 6th of March, and | command on Monday, the 3d instant. I found the piace | sutfecod severely. Spee Generel sneeze oe he should retain the ofice. | ‘ge the world for a denial. No, my friends, it is folly | speak in 66 good Fuglisu.as the negro waiters at the | the Secretary of War’s remark about the Confederate | occupied by five regiments of infantry and several | dient servant, JOHN ° facts; and I reiterate that you must thank the | Saint Cioud—thick headed greasere, who, in a pul- | fiag waving over the Wachington Capitol by the Ist | companies of One bastioned earshwork. Brigad: votes of the North for the acquisition to (he South of the | pit, tak of divine inspiration, ‘ea if anything | of May. What was Mr. Lincoln to de? His duty bade | COmpeo & bout half a mile be. | pbtigadler GeneraliG: W. Comm, - | Eugineers, Department of the Mississtppi, St. Louis. - territory of Louisiana, out of which several States hat id inapire them bat a bellyfull of beef— | him defend the honor of his country. He had the | “ounting fourteen beary guns, if any Wan te deserving Of the permauent appointment | ¥eeD formed. Five millions were paid for i a ong 3 the rebellion, Ged commands courage to do it—unlike the suuliess old fen-ttcaary u- | low the town, and another irregular work at the upper Dir. Lindsey ts that man to say nothing of the cost of the Midian war: to respect the powers that be. ‘They rebel age’ ~) chanan, he calls for mea from ai: the loyal Statce. | end of the town, mounting seven pieces of hearpartil- Governo: Johnson mae a sperch at the Capito! thie e la God and Tennessee. Me wezki notify al! such | Catching up the cry of Harris, the disloyal people | lery, together with lines of intreachments between morning on political a‘irs, There thing novel in rt that in preaching rebellion tuoy violated the laws of both | throughout Tennessee, in common with the Gulf State: them, constituted the defensive woiks. Six gunboats, the remarke ef the Governor, be idepeoen 1 . Recol God and man. They invoked Christ in vain to justify | barped upon their favorite expression of “subjugation.” | carrying from four to eight heavy guns each, were an Naw Mapzip, March 17, 1862. the Northern views of the war, its origin and purposes, giving to the country treason, and when they ropreseated Him as the cham- } Uh, yes! Lincoln was going to subjugate them with the | chored along the shore, between the ‘upper and lower re- Captars—I transmit the enclosed correspondence be- athe was listene! to by many men, secessionists 1 | slave laws, and that the Northern representatives, al- they exhibited their ignorance. rong military armef the nation. Suppose the lresi- | doubts. tween Major Genera’ McCown, commanding Coniederate Geniime.t but former px 1 tical friends ‘of the Governor, | ‘hough they hat strenuously opporad the repeal of the adience, for in | dent hadcalled for no mon from the Southern Statcs, | Tne country is perfectly level for miles around the | forcvs,and myself, for tho information,of, theGoneral 9 campo. Cail to be influenced by bis plain, wove: ish»! | Miseourt compromise, acquiesced with the South in the 6 i i what would have been the argument? More Tennesseo | place, and as the river was so Ligh that the guns of the | commanding the dopartm nt, Respectfully, sir, your tale. j-time | repeal. ain I ask why was this secession | the countries in Kurope and Asis in which a free press | troops are now eulisted under the Stars and Stripes than | gunboats looked directly ovor the banks, the aj ches | obedient servant, JOHN TOPE, Jogma thrust upon the people of Tennessee? I will tell. | was now found, and particularly in those He visited, | Mr. Lincoln called for. My own son, for whorn I stil! | fo thetown Sor seven miles were com: nded by atrect and Brigadier Genorai command! % Address of Gov General Andrew | "be political leaders of the cottn States knew that thé | slavery, from some cause, had disappeared. He told the | cherisn the overflowing aifection of ear! cross fire from at least sic heavy calibre. Captain A. H. McLnan, Assistant Adjutant Jchnson ” most trivial success awaited them not without the aid of | servants to obey their masters, an¢ in regard'to mo- ‘nion host now upon the soit of at eaoes have preoee _ iy the tnirenchments, partment of the: Mississippi. ta wail 4 Teonessee. The speaker here pronovnced a glowing | narchica! (wear He said, *‘Rendor unto Ceser the things of a noble cause. Pardon my but it would have been at’ wi vy loss, and we ‘Has pquarters Mavrip Ben, March 17,1 APPEAL TO THB PEOPLE OF TENNESSER slogy upon the steadfast patriotism of bis friend, Hon. | that are Cesar’s.”” His advico was to obey the laws. rension. Regolutions, declaring that g should wt hae bee atta fold the lace half an Nour» ex- Grwetat—I have mapy ick, Pauow Crramm:—Tennessee agsumed the form of a | W. H. Polk. whooccupieda seat upon the stand. ‘To all these treasonable Onderdonkers be would say that | no right to interfere with lay re posed to the destructive fire of tha guntoats,” As there they should be placed wiiere ihbpene Meese «body. polltic,.as.ome of the United Btates of Amories, in | Spplauded him (or bis constancy to the: old standard in | the nag Bortogr whe. Wo the sorvants 9 sey Sesic: the” Farate or meteecmnives by | age seomm 00 immodiate hope of the ap; earauce af our own J-away (com, the ‘eontiot “of: ars,” Dea Yrardall the year seventeen humired eadinieaty-eiz; at ocice ent the hour of her political darkness, and. bade him’ share jm: Tnstricted ¢ lo eBes “the powFra that | J threes news territories—Dakot#, “ Nevada and | guuboats, it became necessary, to bring down a Lew peavy “| ‘irector ; is commitsidned ‘to propose ‘mi y y-aix,at once enti: | chat briltiant triumph soon to crown the efforts of’our'| be.” Sitch preachers had ag -well command slaves | Colorado were ‘acytired with “provisions that) guns by land to operate against those of thé ehemy. | rotief. Your obedientacrvant, 4: P. McCOW! Ged to ali the priv ileges.of the Federer constitut! in, ext | great government. Mr. Etheridge purposed to deal | to cut (heir munsters’ throate’as to command the | every species of property should be “protected were ‘accordingly sent for, and, meantime, forced Major General commanding Confederate forces. bound by all sts.obligations.. For nearly .eizty-five years | '° stern, race facts,-and uot in the ridiculdos | masters to miirder each other fn reeistine’ the laws { alike, what. pretext’ had ‘there rebel chiefs Pecuatolseanses wert peshed aver the while d-and General cummandiag federal torces at New pacominandnthnourrmen of alihor gun sed i» | Sora pre! pactt Furcal Livy Wa‘ehuy | Gould hwtwan ready ay hing wa ae fark eo | Seem egeee vente nsec ele | lacararal pat te tomas Soa brik esc yarns Yo ion, ch 11008 s : nal } ey felt iv the a ‘eligious happinesa of its widely. a » DW the enemy invariably retr pre. RADQC, lapRip, Marc! the perfyrmancp of al! her duties, one of the most Joyal | liad inno winglo instance been productive of injury or | eafo anit profitable. ‘Mohad been accused it atorbing | ceatvored children? Deke ar ihe ‘Confoncrate’| “cirttatelp.e Te wad found: ezporsibfe. wo iuduoc'tiets to | Bricapmn Gueumat Sourt use Hamusin, U.S, A. and devosed of the simterbood of Staves. She has been preasion; no man was ever tried Punished by i{ts'| paper of speaking unkindly to the ladies. He had termed | Commissioners sent to Europe. Said theit mission had | trust any considerable force of theit dufautry dutgide of You will please repair to the upper redoubt and aseer- honored by'the elevation of two of hor citizeus to the | {ain teas thessodinee Liberte tit Cae hems aly ands they are: bat the sien are wtoliy 10° beewagrand farce. Kead a pitagraphet thelt last do- | their iutrenclmente.- AB soon as. 1 found that it would | tain from/t, Yandall, who brought ine he enclosed late ‘ dl te troops @wagger through | cument, and applied a score! eriticiemt. He was | be necessary to awalt the arrivalof our heavy guns, / | ter, what measures he proposes ard to the sick, and highest place in the gift of the Amoricaa people, from the statare books, and thas bring « calaw!tous war bps lathe destragtinn | amused’ at the ery, ‘Cotton is King’? McSt of thowe, said | @-termined to occupy tome point on the river betow, and ee obialp from him ‘ruch’-other ag will’ enable and @ third had been mominated for the same | oon 8 ranves t innocent people. The friends of | of the only free conntry in the world, and ladies waye | he, who proclaim that cotton is king, were once over- | tablish oar emall guns, if possible, in euch position as to | me to act understandingly. Rospeetful mm? General, your high . me wed a liberal, though mekecies ae Tano, eaid he, tried to eiect Lineola, | their handkerchiefs at them, Le reiterated, shey tuuet be lantations. The man who arrogates himsoif is | blockade theriver,so far as transporia were conce:ned, | obedient servant, JOHN Por oMce, Py amore and th»y succeeded, for the purpose of producing a dis: Today I told one of them, whilo the unworthy the name of man. He then read the reeolu- | aud to cut off supplies and reimforcements for the cnemy Brigadier General Commanding. (effective support. Her population rapidly anc | r option of the Union. He to the procesdings of | cavalry were passing, indignently asked, ‘How far do | tion which passed Congrers, setting forth that war is bel Naw Maparip, March 1% 1! largely ivereased, and their moral and material interests | ‘lest Congress. In the Territories the slavery issue | your lines extend?’ “Ry ——, madam, they reach to }waged only to preserve the constitution; when that end asant, twelve miles below, was releetod, as At my request General Metown allowed me bad beem settled by wholesome laws; that notwithstand- | the North pole when I lect two ol! regiments | i# reached, the war will cea Southern men pretended | boing in a rich agricultural region, and being tho term: Correspondingly advanced. Never was @ pouple more ing all that disunion orators bad said’ and done to iru for the wee of removing some of our sick ‘esent ste} = ihe ie fh pal oo ’ How about your | to be fighting for rights. Many,who did not know the | nus of the plank road from the interior of Arkai ‘om Madein Band. only to rem ive those who are Prosperous, ¢ mtent-d and happy than tbe people of Ten- | the intentions of the government in this vital connec finances? Your ‘ederate money ts bad enouy ; igh Low, ‘allel of latitude they were living in, were setting up | accordingly threw forward Colonel Plummer, El too sick to bear transportation by w aud aiso, if it Meanee under the government of the United States, ana jer by sa b Aupetens rad Be | iteagts; | but will coon be woree, You borrowed movey on your Boor ights! rights! we pen 5 have our rights or iheneft te that point, with three regiments of - | be allowed, to reeate tbe womee nnd drew Ma mone so littie burdened for the support of the authority » the world condemned of the | cctton, and now you are going to burn your cot- ular malady. But when | ry, three companies of cavalry, und a field battery of ten | drid Bend.’ No army stores or private property v 11 be by which they were protected. They felt th most unpardonable sin of which humanity is capable— | tom. What do you make by such a trans + rights they were con- | pound Parrott and rifled guns, with orders to make a | carried on the boat, save provisions for the persvns om eas on ta the comaciows enjoyment of the berctta it | ema yt in Teabesoee, he pointed te Coupee % By sci tatve-War tine even pon tone bers + or eg a, ‘ bon the Fiver bavk, to line the bank |.board/ Madrid Bend ts the susie geet -se-teiand No. 16, id. . 2 3 even yet to prevent its . , rifle pits for thousind men, 0 SANKOK N 5 pn hear Roe bes tel ch Bp an he gloridts result of the tion on the 6th of February, passage, ir the South would send her representatires,as | Oh, demn the inkees!”’ He argued that the tablish ‘hia? artillery in sunk batteries of single Medical Director Gen. Mclown's division, i peer tm ear trys tstsmeny ioenae ay when | 186{—the choosing of Union delegates to a State Conven- | theop cuenta of the measure, it would then have a ma- | rights of the South were safe only under the constitution. | pieces between the rife pits. nis arrange Heangvarrers Usrrev 814i Forces, Cae ee wae or ae 7 vur| ose now jon—@ dignified rebuke to those who would vilely force | jority in both houses. The government offers pardon to | Iliustrated the disadvantages to ~outhern rights if seces- | ment was made to present as small a mark as possible to the New Mapeip, March 17, 1862. os r ektlinee, ane te wehtona aa’ iwen her #n.0 an alliance with traitors. During his absence at | all who will return; all must return—ail shall return. | sionwassuccessful. Said the piea oi Southern rights was | shells of the guntoats, and to render futile tha use of round Srx—Your note of this date, sent through Dr. Yandall, ound "5 COR, Grmed Rites en Washington, immediately after, secession bold. | The utmost sflence waa preserved while Mr. Etheridge | but a pretext for ame comtempiited violation of the | shot from ther heavy gun. Colonel Picramor marched | is bevore me. It is proposed tome that the sick of your — {ae teat. privimgee | Carte. Ho wveny wae nade y togororameaie | War mignt be ek to Weis dawn the sardrcomna: | Stee sy cost ak cee ee eeeSe | Ceeteas tad, tar some cannopading from gun, | onmmand be garmie Wo pans down on theriver ome duties « : jurdy cou other; they wish, from their souls, eo dwell together in | boats which ho found there, succeeded in making a lodg- | placo of safety. P| fae he bascoleres inceeiy eee enforce the collect pas eae preferring to oxer- ince of more than one spectator as he j@ of the | harmony and perce forever. They must be von back | ment, constructing bis batteries and rifle pits, abd boon (fala seem fo me a singular request, under the cireum- a oo wink | oiue,more patience phan did tbe lumertal Jacksoa ons | tombe of Jackson, of Washington, of Polk, and of Clay, | from the path of unrighteous war, into whieh they have | pying them in sufflctent force to maintain them against | stances. After as ful reduction of this place for the - = Pee oe ot eee eee Ot ae beience to the saprime law. | and beautifully enlogized the sage of Ashland as « Yenator | been led by ambitious dom: and political aspirants, | any open assault. simple purpise of Diockadiog the river, 1 am asked to on ‘onhverste Lt ~poke of his return home x0 after the memorable and stormy | ands patriot. I repeat, sald he, will you not return. | Secession had been seduct: 10 some whoowed Northern After repeated and persistent cannonading from | sus the biockade, in order that you may disembar. Cousty, @ Ge soomarte hy — seasion of Congress, gene Union wave nobly career- | Now ts the acceptable time—the amifesty is now offered. | debts. This class of men had rly espoused the dog- | the gunboats, the enemy found it impossible to | rags yourself of the sick and disabled of your command ere ene rae ee ing over the Cy aq a by the treasonable | You must accept it— » OF y ma, with visions of untold wealth and luxurious ease. | d siodge him, and he maintaivea obstinately bis p si- | during an attack which you must have anticipated long quitined, U6 Ciews, earries Ewer Ur aancherber tte wo eka = f latasion . | traltor's Little did they dream that they would be required to | tion, and the blockade of the river to teanspcrte, SRaS rae ‘thom in advance. Seaiaweh “by ceenmies felines, GtbGh Eieren Lie ce cee en i aaliee te at Union men going hand It, together with a large per cont of whatever else | curiug the whole of our operations. Meantime the | — 1 do not feel Justified in acceding to your request, ae T @aler their banners, thus ‘alvin ; ved “ttm in the House, a Rocept prof of ile the rebels were plotting their de- | they possessed, over to their masters of the confederacy. | cuemy continued every day to reinforce New Madrid | do not propore to suspend the bloc inder any cir. Gunma te motion y Bs em & treasonal) bouor of bis eve is, preferring to remain in } © ould the traitor army return, Bat that | Northern men at first thought secession was a | from Ieiand No. 10, until, on the 1h cumstances, until the 0, erativns above me are \uded. authority of the folera! Gnd supcronsed | their midst and combat the serpent of secession ondeavor- it be, never, while God ia just, and man | were political trick, loth to believe that a re- | thousand jefantry, besides a considerabl of am, sir, respectfully, your obedient servant, geo autherity of ihe foleral goverument. In this oond!--| Ing to enfold them im its polsonous coils. The speaker ‘ow, fellow citizens, if ‘you are not | sore to. arms would be hen the | lery and nine guatoats. randed bi 1 #ir) HOTIN POPE, Brigadier General Commanding, oMmoial cath bo provorvo. VF tock defend the consti: | ine protest of Bouth Carelinn agninak the latte conetinn | Yel ras ee cething ee ta heat ironed, oak onal ion Commodore Hollins, the land forces by Generals: Major General J. P. McCown, Commanding 0.8. A., &e ° ol constitu. | tre prot ful cot el! you soinething ret © it. Jolt. Davis and ‘eparations tiom, and f Dy (he law witht he dut; of suppress. | of the revenue to the fatal bombardment of Fort Sumter, | lnis blatent crowd wore not the first socessioniste by far. Ritto their siden fn peace, until the pristine 4 Tivered to Colonel Bisall's engineet soot toglensat, wha had Correspondence. ing een near < ~ . to resmt and | when, he said, Tennessee ht the consuming blaze No, sir, Satan was the first sccessionist om record. He | unity of ‘helt uation ehall’be restored. When Jeff. been sont to Cairo for the purpose. They were at once he ny ee Apia he eS disloyalty; what with the wily deceptions of bad mon | rebelled against God. Tho Kingdom of Heaven was not | read Sr. Lincoln's Proclatnation, be went into abipped to Sikeston, reached bere at sunset on the 12th, Missisaiver Raver, March 21, 1862. fe those ‘ at anvearly day found bine ‘sonia Jer Devis und vigerosa youth abe boats 6 : Yerninett Of his own’ et “God stonded At the conept. | read Davis’ fe presloaatn SRA poee rey aan Serppiaees, etanere aes the same night, wishin | New Madrid, Its Origin, Appearance, de—The Karth- ‘momen: 4 , : p , fa consp!- | ri vis" last proclamation, it an, ight hundred the enemy's main fo esto Fee et eee S “Cosma! incimencous and royosi | od into the’ jaws of w fru ~ acy, hntled his Satamic majesty into hell, where unre. Dut gleful.” the speaker sald it grioved him Yo | Gonersnd that and the etver sbeve it; ad opeoed fre at goats Ne pw ime” sith eeoanne Cad ase cniizand | facta stand to blast the rebels with -& conviction, from | pentaat traitors will meet him at Ho dislaat day. One | doniemplate the present slate of affairs ‘on the 18th, just thirty-four heurs after they | Among the many places hithorto but little known out ‘that hd armstoanex | which there is no escape. As @ comparison, be ro- Wilson Dorr, of Rhode faland, rebelled, some | at the wanton destruction of property, ved at Cairo, One brigade, consisting of the | of the vicinity of their own. localities, but whigh will ‘ape. ii Previously have boom considered fabu. | called the disgraceful raid of Johm Brown into tout) Jenre n°) deposed the qonstitutional Govern. | quired years of Iabonand millioos of money to supply, . t State. But John Tyler, then President sent hereafter become ‘household words,’’ as.are Brandy. at the came iime, with almost abso! Virginia; said that Jef, Davie was s ten-fold | nor of ti He referred to the detalled ,-- referred to the burning of the bridges at Ne to cover the coustruction of Y aay eae were ee nh meaner ‘man and» greater, criminal. Rome, said | the army to Providence to coerca'ths rebel Dore, andthe | the. suderings of the clltsehe: fiven wees ot the beac tattery, end to work in the trouches. ‘They were sup: | wine,Eutaw, Trenton and Valley Forge, the little hamlet eye irpose of conquet | he, flourished in all the blessings of & proud and | in turn was deposed and sent to the saries of lifo, and asked them what they expected to gain | ported by Stanley's divinion, consisting of the Twenty- | of New Madrid, Mo., will shine conspicuous for the bri i a or = harmonious civilization for @ thousand years | Rhode Inland to tof his sins. by adherence to the government of Jeff. Davis. What is | seventh and Thirty-ninth Uhio, under Colonet Groos- | | aur achievement of al Pope. Situated a little be- +4 sb warrant = ere the lapse of a century, traitors have sprung up,and | Brigham Young, ef Utah, a faw years ago rebelled, and | this thing called the Southern confederacy? It possesses | beck, the Forty-third and sixty-third Ohio, under | | in the Missiasi| te with fs the soestad ight to undermine the mighty fabric of American | James Buchatad seut A. Sidney Jouneton—you, A. Sidney | no foreign relations; is « more ‘usur) "i Ootonal Biuith. Captain Mower, First United ‘States: | ‘ow. the oxtremity of a short eurve 0 Missiasippt ri- — 4 dignity, | Wherty. W secoasion should be to partition the | Johvston, the traitor, who has been eduoated ‘and luxu- pr hh’ companios A aud H, of hie regiment, | ver, about forty-four miles below Hickman, Ky,, and one os oe, ¢ several Siales unin | Union, his faith in the Justice of Almighty God would be | rinatly ‘kept at the expense of the government ; ‘placed in charge of the sioce guns. : ‘red and forty-thrco.mniles above Memphis, Tenn [ : d achieve, is war is pormitn J 5 operation. asthe Vrenideat conducted this. | Ferry, Levis into Fort Sumter, Bochanan ordered | Geutlemen, gimaa’ “Dor se, produce’, spaciann Of the Cebtedartee bones Sankt K mirably looxted for a large and flourishing tows. tte content until, an Commander-ia-hiol of the | troops tv invest the Ferry and apprehend Brown. Vir- | oovslou, It is treason—treason is folony, and deserves | worthloas troah, and said the poor people would suitor b; ( + population, however, is but about fiftecn hun- caused the nationa’ fag again to float vn | ginia’s just wrath fell not heedlessly upon the eare of the | ®felun's fate, Thavo occasionally hoard’a wncaking dis- | {t.. Youare ‘caving a great Union, Tho biovsings vouc! , laorap 2 at ° ial adv the Cantist tof tie State, “Menawlile the Forerninent; the invacer of her ‘sol the igno- | unionist, before and aince the war, cay that ‘our rights | saved under (ts ma tales will.pever be treme, two small reioubts, con pAienmanen» QASTR 50,180. careagaroem eceantagep, ®t sondue tae tea peared. The Executive has | finlout wour'ty his shamefal crime demanded. Who | have boon molésted.’’ Noman cao make auch a remark | planted, We ate not waging a foreign wag. fi moutib g tli tho seat of justice for New Madrid county, The towa sas abeyhien oe ‘© haa dierotved, the J diciary | would havo ght thet you, citizens of patriotic, con- | without uttering a falesbood. Let me ask you, did an; that. Tho governmont thatcould couduet foreign were ct) ng first settled by Spanish emigranta from the Lower ie se e Brat sip of State, Freighied wiih | stitution loving Teuno-see, would bave doserte! ‘your | of the living ex-Presidents ever interfere with the insti- | gucceeafully can and will crush out rebellion. The Furo- | the flanks fir two regimenteof inthawy. Our battories oy a 1 with the settler, " bi tn trtorosta and bonian hover, | firesid-#, '0 follow after Jott Davie in reeistiog the laws | tutions of the Southy No, girs. The government has | pean nations are looking on with amazement atihi« do. | opened ax coon us the day dawned, and were replied fo vn | M85 pil, cooval with lemvent of St. Lauis by Yon tus fag unforied, has heen | of your foste ing cov He advieed the od men to | done vo such thing. But the government must inter. | mestic cash of arms. hoy have anticipated ita termi- | front and om thy flanks by the whole o/ the en my's heavy | tho Frei Around the town ty® land is broken ana hve A muvineudorew, | onl home theyr children, to reno nee their folly | fere with this tebeilion, andorush it,t.o, without regard | nation by saying out modol 1epublic is atanend. 7 artillery om land and water, As our sinplyot ammunl | ayyed-—not mountainous of even hilly; but Iarge tracts the winds. aod to Oo | fra rp to thelr aleria ce = The Bonner end | tw any interest which stands in ite way. We Lave the | love not South or North. Amorica is an empire too groit | tivn for howy arvilery was very limiual, Ldireeted Cay. fort bolose, the vonte aupour te bo suukeu bedily eae queer eirfece, “Te Boistrance is owlne to the voles Tiedt, the Whig had denowesd Tm ‘The archiver and Savin a ¥ my, the favy the money, and the true cause, Congress a, 0, and afterwards became thi ud m. guanimous to solaliate acts of yanva.ism which in Mowor Lo fre only ‘uowionally. at the enemy's laud &ivorate I come sania | will not declate freedom to the slave, but will maiutaia i on i l ba , ae val "f had been perpetuated in the mame of Boutbory riguis, | batteries, aud Ww Coucentrate ail cle fire upon ble gun. |