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NEW YORK HERALD, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1864. 5; ——— fused (nfo them coverses i Croakors | bringing as paagongore, under fag ef truce, three Conte. | slavery, 00 guarantcewnan, f 4i4 net want ani 3 Py fis IMPORTANT FROM THR SOOT. | Sis, it po ahi ete | ae remen canes neni | ok gia he tact neg | ae (oa faeries || * Malls rot eondee com! cl man aa jo Baa ta: . b nnn. a Pg ph a ery te ‘sod children:—Airs. Genoral, @. {saw thal” the samiiguiion of “alarory was | mon says, ako thie thing out of tho wap sad 1oh the | Cmportaws ¢rom Temmcancccttems from are to decide the groat cause are buoyant and confident, | W. Smith, Mra Norris, hire. Capt. Davidsoa, Mrs. Why? Docause I eae that thore was | goveramont go o—. oswe) Ur you aro @ presrios oan’ the Guirt—Neows from Central Amoertea, Pre rati fe the 8) rin trusting in that eas which hag vindicated ite supe. | Mord, Mra. Joha Weat and sou, of Kentucky; Mra FS a im gol between tho two aystoma of labor. 1 etand on that m aod bolp ua, for we x'0d hoip. Mexico, © '. pa ions for PEANG | vority ia overy (air Nord, and unable to believe that the | Cooper and child, of Nortelk; Mra & Gravesend two | aaw tbat the Dusting, go a boadative mon of tho North, | We want the, government rosterod, aod we wat it ro. » Cuba, St. Domingo, So., dc. subjection of @ people whose exhibitions of civic and } childrea, aud Mrs. W. Baker. ‘Also, Major Jones, C. 3. A. | whon they had peopiod thoir aection of tap country, would | stored rapidiy,/and wo want it restored permeaeont),”. 40d ‘The Cunard mai) atoamah|y Canada, Captele Mosdio, Campaign. military virtue have so sigaally proved that thoy aro | Teo tous ‘ot Creight wore alse brought up by the Now | look were al eed re send Cheratere tates | oe eee Orcleht salonsaly beloce tenree Uba°° 8 | will leave Bestoe ou Wedaestay,, for Liserpool tonal book aout c ; ‘ restore Unis govern: that ta | , . . worthy of national life con ‘te writies |e _ & govorumont with n powar of expansion wostward to the | prass your’ columos forwards (Loud choors ) Do yon | _T# €BAils (0r Europe wll clove in Gis oity at « quartee mtecalt ance Teasigd Ce tte wn sonngainanraa’icrt | ithteg Wt anode tate’ Tro ‘asaese wt | Coneanaat RM Ge oc un farm The Northern Pi ntial Election. Tho Richmond irer of January 28 gaya:—~''Tho “uba and the ighiuds contiguous Looreta twas | impiore you (0 soud & “tho hear my by raiicoad Anticipations for the Safety of (From the fiokmond Reamiaer, Jan 26.) Rev. Dr. Buocan calle ‘atvontion of our poopie to the | Upon that wo made the isaua. We of the South woutld not | people, born and reared ‘a thee “p00 Naw Yost Hursno—fdition 200—1 Richmon Leap yoar brings round agaia in the United States tha } condition of the Second Louisiana rogiment, who are now | lislow to aay compromisa, andamaa could uot séand of my boart throbbing with thoira’ }O—FdIt1ON for Kucopomweill be turmoil and-excitemont of a Prosidential election. Events 4 in tho snows of Virginia, doatitute of almost y com: | wodor that irresistible tide of human passion and talk | don't want to seo this war drag along, and now loads of | publiaced at otovoa o'clock this Morning, aad wih aman Of fearful weight and tmportance have passed in tho } fort, aud tho whole regiment cao muster onty forty pairs | Sbout Compromine and keop his hoad upow bis shoulders, | woo, anguish and sorrow wolgh that peoplo down; but £ Particulars of the operations of the Uaioe fatervai which bas elapsed since we of the South descend: | of shoos. ta this coaditioa tho rogimoat aow waikn | ANd Yot men tale about souding down poace commissiow | want thom rolavod at oaos T want ‘ j a r ed toto that arena and took part inthe atruggio. Thoy | nine miles to pickota.”’ era to the Bouth now. (Applausg.) But_who would you } atrong, poworful blow aleuck, im ordor aud robot forces in Raat Tennesse, tho tatont oowe frome HE FOOD QUESTION. | pitas a hideous and blooy. gut, hich blocks | "RH Mostors of tho Coafsterate Treaaury aote cutting | 800d Four peace cominiaaanore tor. To Jo. Davis? | thing may collapae. (Cheers.) Amd when you talc to} the Army of the Potomac ; Important nows trom the up all return to the feelings and the interests which | bureau, bas been arrested for abstracting $11,000 in | Treat with him as the Preaidsat of the Confederate | them of paace on any (orma, aad about Peace convoa- gwayed us thon. Yot aa it bears upon the prospects | Momumingor's promiaos to pay Btatos’ That is what those mea would do, [ trons, and about missions to them, and about olociing & Gulf; Tae Iatea? Despatchss from Charteston; Intoranting and the vicissitudes of thia ruthieas war, wef At Atlante, Ga., on the lat of Janu the thor. | @UpP%e. Tho quostion could nol be compromised. What | peace candidat (or the Prosideacy, you give | Gews from North (Narolina; [mportant aews from Contrat BRMARKABLE ORDER OF GENERAL LEB, | mu with watchfulness and curiosity ‘upon | momoter alood twolve degrees ely oto, anton tha ai | sare wo to 40, then? “Wosubmiiiod U» tho laa arbitra: | thew Ald aad” comfort, whother you datand” ie | america, Tho latest oma from afore>, Cubes Bt we the recurrence that periodical strugale for place | two degrees above zero Mant, and Chal was the aword, Tam a litte too fast 1 | or wot (Ronewod choors.) Why, thoy do look forward @ringo, &c., and a vactoty of mmiscoilanvous eows of tho and ' power. though “it is difficult. to pene- | The Atianta Confederacy ayn tno acaccity of aboos in | Sid that wo wore williog to resort to the sword. Wo | to ble thing, acd { coll you horo,as’@e. honest man, 10g, Bc, trate the dark curtain of the future, and to | the army is attributed to io icatborbeads in Richmond. | 4!4 906 bolieve that you had any Gght in you; wo thought | and [ bave no motive in deceiving you; Laat the leaders ia | Past week. AUR COMING ELECTION FOR PRESIDENT, | discera exactiy how our own welfare may be affected by Gonoral Bragg {a about to take command {a tho Btate | toscare Now York. i boliova tuat you talkod about ae. | tho South say Lo the people, «Hold on juat twelve months Binge copies, la weappors, candy (or ma.iiog, Myo 1 | the political complexion of the United States, yot it ia | of Mississippi. coding—aomabody among you—and mz idea was chat | longer, these moa in powor will bo overtu 1, 00" | cong &o. &o. evident that the whole solution of the mighty quoation | Governor Smith, of Virginia, hag madoacali tor dve | Now York would sacoda and catablish commorcial rola- | party will como tn, aud thoy will give you peace, How P 1) &o which agitates the continent may hang upon it, and Serosly Possible that it will not be essentially concerned y it. Lincoln's term draws rapidly toacioas. Already it ia counted by months, instead of years. Tho political caul- dron is beginning to bubbie, and expectation is arouaed to gee what form will emerge from its agi Caucuses, conventions, resolutions, platforms, and al! that Parapherpalia which is adroitiy managed to form and guide popular will, and which, ia representatiyo gov: ernments, takes the piaco of courtly pomp, rarce shows and military display in movarchical oountrios, are in full vogue. Tho democrats resolutions of pa- tions between ‘he two countries, But men bavo changed. ‘Thoro ia & migb!y Sismoot climinated from tho furnace of thia revolution that ia chaoging tho whole curreut of men's thoughta, aud ovory maa, ualess he be @ poiltical hack, who ia afraid that somabody will cry out ¢o him consistency, will march with it and do bia part in tho glorious work bofore bim. Much of our oducation haa been wrong. The off and efole dogmas of tho past Lavo 09 More Application to the stato of things at the t time than they do to the condition of the Foaj90 siands. When tho struggia commenced thera wore two idoaa About what wo were to do, and they revolved around the nogro Ono class of peopie aid Wat they would atay iv the Union to protect the negro, thab was what a gros’ many of my Unioo fricods said. Buch a thousand maid slaves to work on batteries, to bo dra from Aifty counties. The call for this foroe haa bean mads by tho President undor a resolution of Congress. A VOICE FROM REBELDOM. HON. E W. GANTT IN NEW YORK, ARKANSAS FOR THE UNION. ‘Wo have Cul! files of the Richmond Ezaminer and Senti- to the 29th of January ult, from which we make ighly interesting extracts. coaledoracy with Jol. 1 negrons to boot, (Applause. at the hoad Now [ tell Papers aid commented upon just to of those peopte, and they ai an Boo evidence of weakosss general revival in the spirits and @ of our people relative to the war. And there ing | nobly, and is in : three years’ terms ‘approaching their close have ceased to wait upon From all quarters—from Johnston before parliaans go; lot platforms go d down, perish institutions, but eury: ig too jerioug @ thing, tot {t waa vory fun HeCloltan, at one time, seemed ta have a chance, but Mr. Gantt: Why, Cam going ont of the Calon to pro- ona Of a manl: men are (00 utilitarian to appreciate triumphs which | ~ 20 Uniom Soldiers to People the tit we have saffered doaply, wo have shed many bitter have the singular result of placing the object of the baitia ‘mination to unite in harmonious effort, each io tears, wo bave lamented grisvously, aud wo are anxioud Bis Not peace wiih your aogroos and the Unitod States gov- ornmont, but peace with your rotten, misorablo, foul articles written bere in toa country that hold out those ideas are circulated in the South, Luay are copied ia thoir Suit the spirit led to belove that upon of tha United States government, and that thoy have inuch to bope from these things. Be united. oy times to have some excitoment tnat run over the surface: My country is a fix their National Convention for tho Fourth of Juiy Union aaa would say, ‘Thore is going to be a fugs, and | but this goss to the’ heart slcinga of the great govern: and from Leo on the Rapidan—glorious place flomobody is poing t be hurt; fam going to atay by tha | mont, it Miia thotand with ®mouraing. jeome from these gallant veterans. Without any fuck bei sh ithay a assim ype cans ie ee ee Gnion (0 protect thoaegro, But what are you going (0 do, | wasts and a desolation, and 1 sinad hore at, aave the promptings of patriotism and the Cy this mighty people to ‘stand by the government. Send iC 1 wore to say it dosiring you to soad tho bayonet homo MAILS FOR THE PACIFIC, of tt, aad your you that Important Intelligence from West Vir- Gtnia ead Bast Tenncssee—Late from ¢Re Union Armies in the Latest News from the Soath--Import- aat Iateliigence from Kurope, dé. The steamstiip Champion, Captain Jouos, will leave (bis port oa Wedaesday for Aspinwall. 9 mails for Central America and: the Sout? Paoifie Will clos@ to-morrow morning, at half-paat toa o'clock. Tho. Naw Yorm Himaro—Fdition for the Paciic—wit te Teady at balf-past tae o/clock to-morrow moruiog, an@ tho part Let Politicians go country, it ay im political to plead before I Will contaia:—fmportant Entelligence from’ West Virginie courage, they are coming forward THE OLD PLAN ONS DO tect tho nogro.”” {have bad my fight for the oegro, and | on your mon. —pross forward ‘your columns. die ‘the uimoi! enthusiasm, Uy fepiments and bripaden, (0 Po (povieiretan eyalhag ett ronrcne la rere eer oa E OLD PLANT OMED. | tect tho nog, day aapocimen of those mournful objects | parse bo robols, aud. lot my tand come up | 804 East Toanossce, giving details of ther Movemoate of meer for the war, Our armies are also in oxceliont | the genuine article, In vain does he write s long report RAR RAR ARR AAA AN that some of those lachrymose peace goutie- | from her mourning, 96 that the country may | tho Union aad Robal Armies; The Latest Atcounta of the ith, and will give a good t of themselves in the | Or°uis campaign, and rt that he was victorious in moa at the North wail over so much—a subja- | be once more powerful and onited 1 could uot Bombardment of Charieaton; Intoresting Despatches (ross campaign. every battle before Richmond ‘except ons. His couatey wield aecassonist. (Laughter aud great applauso.) | aay this to you [ would be a brutal aad tobuman monater f ‘The spirit of our peopte is also good. There is a gene Moado’s Army in Virgioia; Accounta of the Moyomoats of to tue haarts of my peopio. [t is kindness, charity and | Leo's Rabels in Virginia; Late and Important Intelligenee , to wage the war with our grandest ies. i South, to coms hack to the land of our fathers to aasist them ia | humapity to thom, it is humanity to the world and tothe | cr, ; The news from the enemy is likewise encouraging | oon tive Contaderale conitan eriea ee eae 8, Bar upholding the conatitution which our fathers gave us. | eepublican institutions the world over. (Choora.) Thane | (2m tho Robst Capita; Thtoresting Acoust, from our are finding, much greaier difficulty in recruiting thet? | might have had a better chases . &e., &o., &o. But waon wo get pack again what do we-reckon upon? | about dissousiona fa tho North. Lam glad to Gud that tt | Special Correspondent, Mr: fh. A. Hendrick, of bis Cape ies we have fore su . soldiers J Grant, with the gory of Vicksburg encircling his brovw, has certainly aclipsed all the military leaders. The New Yori Herat, once a zealous partisan of McClellan, is now en thusiastic for Grant. \t proclaims him contioually as the man who has so long been coming; who is completely to crush the rebellion, and to restore, {a all its splendor, the “glorious Union.” "His chance is, at present, apparently an excellent one, as the army will, probably, give a powerfut vole for him, and his military fame wili give him grea cont in the country at large. If bis reputation ta carefully auraed it may be potent enough to secure Why, my friends, itis that wo shall git down aod hold on to our oogroes That is what wo expect our domo. cratic friends of (ua North to do for us. Thoy do aot yet thiol it right that thair property should be put up against their property ‘10 oggroes. That is what they oxpect toair democratic frieada inthe North todo They waat the government to changa, but they do aot want the goy- erumeat 40 chaago their relations with regard to to nogro, GENKRAL ANDRRAON'S APPEARANCE. At thia momoat tho boro of Sumter, General Robert not re-onlisting io the numbers that have been laimed. Meade's army will be composed of new levies, 4 how can such as they stand before our veterans? And hat a difference in the spirit of thearmies. On one side Pits of a thousand dollars are necessary to win reluc- It ts the evanesceace of frothy polfticians Ths Cooper [natitute was crowdod last evoning to over flowing, aotwithatanding tho iactemeocy of the woathor— many ladies being presaol—drawn together to bear tha Hon, E. W. Gantt, ex-robol Brigadier Genoral of Arikaa- saa State troops, deacan! on “Tho National Struggle." ‘Treated by ono who had himself been, aot a wayward sister, but a ‘wayward’ brother and brigadier genoral and the constitution of our fathers. (Ct moo ia Ly and ia the count bittor spon secesatonists. They aay, thom, but for tho Lord’s sake don’t tou it mon, many of whom wil! sever return from their is, On the other, without bounty or bribe, our mon aro roonlistiug with shouts. We are fightlog for ‘eountry and home—tbeir men are fighting for money. ‘The money crash is coming, also, to add its perplexitics he gays, “Kill the man, touch the dog.’ We, ta Arkansas, have mi tion and submitted the matter to the peop our enemy, Their clustering difficulties will make e he Sl ia the rebel ai tho subject ch J Anderson, looking woli and smiling, and bowing to the | middto of March, will kill the dog and save the man, Theargive un tho struggle, tor they can atord todo i succuoued with Powsberton, apse Leo or Solneree eonat | on ee Ca ka ee ieee ey ee || onene which gceeted bim with enthusiastic | Kentucky was ous of the fow States that was lagging: Our diificutties, though in many respects greater, cannot hardly last tilt November.’ His politica! opinions have ample justice an 9 a0 pions is 80 | applause, caine on tha platform aud took aseat. Whoo | Marylaud wag coming up to it with hor few negrocs, and ‘#0 Incline ua, because we cannot afford to yield. Let us not yet been defined. They are, probabiy, not very well | 1iace that. before they saparated @ rosolution | the applause which greeted the General aomewhat sub- | abe waated to remove the cause of the war; but Dela evor maintain our energy in full vigor and aspirit that ‘Bevor droops, and let us strike bard and bravely when- ver we havea chance, aad our enemy’s resolution will Mecay and dio under disappointment aod despair. Our uccess is cortain if we will be but men, and, thank wea, the sky brighten: Fears for the Safety of Richmond. {From the Richmond Examiner, Jan. 16.) aided the speaker contiauad [have oot had the pisasure of tho acquaintance of the distiaguished gentioran who bas just mado bis appear. ance, but F unterstand be is the man who haa tuo maa- hood to stand up for bis country and bia flag when atrickea down by traitors who struck the Grst vile blow on behalf of Southora secassionism. (Applause, ) MR. GANTI'4 NBGRORY ANO THE PREBIDRNT, f do not recolisct whora | lott of—yea, { leit my dear known to himself, and will be veiled in ‘glittariog gene ralities’’ until after the election. Lincoln is by no means disposed to give place to any olher candidate. At one time it might have been supposod that he would dispense entirely with the formality of an elec tion, and retain his seat on the pretext of the nocesaity of 80 doing until the termination of the war. To do this would require the cordial support of the army, aod tho soldiers will naturally be disposed to resist the exclusion waa unanimousty adopted to the effect that Mr. Gaatt pe Toquested to addrosa Now York iu a larger public place of gathering. Tho Acadomy of Music was designated for the purpose, aad, aa silgnce gives consent, ao it waa ar raged, Tho Hon. Crarias P. Dac aommated ag President (Laughler and appiause.) Poor Kentucky, for ber; for when the roba's waated ber coucorn of Davis, aud Aight for the negro, ' she wants us to jola with bor and holo to ai does not go deep down into the manhood of your aocicty. heart of the peopie beats true to tho flag of the country It ty like a man who geos avothor bitten by @ rabid dog; but for the Lord's sake don’t ware, with oaly nogroes sufficient for two plantations, had kept herself back. Kentucky was lagging behind, but if ahe didn’t kill her dog {t ‘would be starved to death. go; but now that wo (said the speaker) have come back turoand Confiaoment ia the notorious Libby Prison af Richmond, Va.; Tho Latest News from Europa, with re porta of all important and 'taterestiog eventa of tho peat ten days. Single copies, ia wrappers roady for matling, ctxt conte. but the great neers.) [ bear ry _extromely “Extermioate ch the negro.” Wonderfal, Delictous, Inimitab! Ra vishing. These are the au vee universally applied to PHALO®N & SON'S Night Blooming Cereus. And why now It has no peer among perfumes otther in permanence or i 1 pure and ethereal (ig although aroma 2900 ot in Conven- 18, who, in the ‘ob, 1, 1864. s 4 33, 64, 21, 38, BT. ho was aorry to go into the abe would not Tv & 00, jortngon, 1 we ek | OMtetal Drawt " 3 . Haran we fought (or and got whipped over, and we are aot of the Shelby Colloge” Momspapec columns are not precisely. the best media | or their own tavoritechies, The United States tare roach, | ghee oe em Arter a Com comaarks, introduced 4 aemocratic trieada holding on to the wogro., (Cheers | going to do It A centloies troy Kentcche ean | Lottery of aig Yor conveying information of a general’s plans or pur. ed that stage in the progress of war when military | tbe speaker of tho evening (who, fo said, was compatied | and iaugutor.) Butt had onough of that question. [let | Navis—said there wore two. parties in tho country—one | 56 G5, 24, 21. 77, 4, G4, 45, i, 34, 13, Lh, Te tard Pye tie Mer RC a talent asserts Its supremacy over al! others. The favorile | tO leave a sick bed to keep his appolntmonty, ne my pertpes some time babe is they wee e- ee be bs ‘ = F sesae gaye That Fin si. Cbisibeaeh Le I t nou rv 7, Asad " lacated, and they left me. a8 Only remained and { | was rue. 9 poloaged @ = secession "93 : of donoas than of gonoralissimos, of travelling bod oe ab rate errno astar aera hia | Mt: Garr, wno was received with eathusiaatic greet ehrough, cod Lincols kald Os weald parderena att 22, 62, 38, 24, 27, G3, TL, 23, 1, G4, 44, 30, 56, 1@. Party; but he quit (hom, aad then tried to than of disciplined columns. Yet, in this war bs irouaes Of anomalies, it is nof impossibie that deep Inid strategy vimay be discussed in this unusual manner; and, amor le 80 much given to the emotions of a busy and iog own. The subtie fotriguer, Seward, seems to have bad his-day. Though a powerful agent in exciting the war, his is not the temperament fitted to ‘ride on the whirl- him free, and bo went, a0 between Mr Taagota aad Jol. Davis | am pretty woll settled on tha negra question. (Cheers aod laughter.) Jail. Davia con- SPRRON OF HON, 8. W. GANTT, MR. Oaritan, Laois AND Ee ‘ —You hare been told that'In justice to m. 1 should aot appear bo the question, ground —a sort of gradual emancipation platform to atand 00; but hecouid not fd it; there was no middie ground Who wore the doatructives? Although flod a middie Circulars seus by addressing 1. B. SIMMONS &-00, Official Drawings of the Library Asser ” i " flacated my negroes, and be would havo confiscated | Garritt Davia didn’t moan to say ao, they were the men | ciation Company's Lottery of Kentucky. ional pross as the Yankees, {mportant military secrets | aya And direct the storm.” hie tet powarisl } pefore you to-night: but it is riglt that sometimes we | my neck “Aci { botice Ua that when T come back bors | cote more for peace oa auy'terms—the mon who attempt: Butea Cass O4)—Fed. 1, 1854: knay be foreshadowed through this active rellector of | radicals. Oiticial infuonce and corruption will, of course, | Suid alaad taco to taco with éach other. Our groat | tothe Nort a aubsgated fatividual—roforrieg to the | od tomtand inthe way ofthe mighiy march of erarts | AL, 29, 27,8, 67, 52, 45, 18, 68, 31, 6, 16, 10 Popular soutimont. Already nave there been instances in | ho Drought to bear iu favor of ‘the different poiiticiana, | CuBtry for years haa been separated too much ia seo- | old gove this, it is knowa in the coun- | aod bold up an institution Which bad gone “ O1A98 GidmFol, 1. 186k 23 Buisek {ne speculations of the New York press have | yee misitary popularity is likely to override them all.’ | timent and {a purse; wo bave untoratoot too litte of | try tuas, bacause [quit the rebal service, regarding it as | down ia thevortex of cet! war—moa who would | 63, 36, 22, 32, 66, 1, 19, 62, 48, 13, 62, 55, 23,'4B. Been the feat shadows of coming events; and | 71 'ty hard to forecast the effect of this election upoa the | cach otter, and Providence, who guides and directs alike | vile, toathwome aud corrupt; besaued fr abaations’ | qo >ut little constitational questions, and let the | Ctreulars sent by addressing. Covington, fe. Ho considering the few obvious modes of pro | progress of the war. It ¢s safe to infer, however, that any | the desting of men and of nations, lias determined, siuce | (3, aod cau back heart and seul to tho goveramgme of | country go to ruin, they wero political Bloudins, who, in PRANCB, Bulls & Ct janagors, wBecuting the war. an inkling of the one adopted may | change with be benificial to the South, Liveola ana | ¥@ have saown ourselves to ba wayward, that we should ora, they took away everything T i taking a trip across Niagara, would stop and. disciiss soa Taane-aihe Oe ™ Really have beon allowed to come to light for the purpore | his “party are eo irrevocably, ‘comniltted tor aed | 02, blasted together by tho furnace of civil war and | hore nobody says anything about it-1 moan those Mace | some quibois and topple svorboard.. The true consecre Mossra. Simmons, Rogers. €¢. Cov ome ‘of tnspiritiagtthe bopes of the people, and uader the belief indissolubly linked with, tha continuaaca of the | Welded Lato one great homogeneous and prworfu! govern. | m Thay do not say it 18 a bard thing to take the last | tive was he who stopped serving party, but resolved to | authortred to rec “SIMMONS & OO. Ghat combinations of great magortude cannot at least ia | war. that’ we can hope’ for mo peace from them { Wa. (Cheers.) bo cloud of our local inatitutions that | (hiog in (ae world «mau has got; but i isbad enough | servo bia counter anti! the war was over—(cheara)— | accouut, pale eee —_—— ‘thelr genoral outline, be preserved in complete secrecy. save by utter exhaustion of the moana of Prosceuiting | S004 batwacn the two gostions, dividing + bas boon | we Koow, but justiet the Uniou Coagress pass alaw | who was for the Union unconditionally, and waa for izes Canhod tn All Legalized Lotter ore is, then, a possibility that the scheme of a grand | iy y¢ they are driven from power, they will become | Prokoo down by that war furnace and has bean trodden | spout confizcattng the negroes of rebala or a rebel horse pressing forward the war aa long aa a rebel |, information gitea. GALLAGHER & BENJAMEN, combined advance tpon Richmond by three distinct lines, | ombittered opponents of their successors, oven abould | (2 tho dust, and now we begin to look cach other in the | or mulo,anda bow! will be raisod agatast this ailtho | had arms in bis hands. The first party, if tet | $10 Chestnut atreet, Philadelphia. eit ing forces, announced in the Yankee press, | tay adont the @ policy, aud will prove a formida. | {C8 and understand exch other, (Appiausa.) Lamia! | word over. (Chaors trios of ‘That's so’) | aloas, would acknowledge the iudependeace of tho a sa ‘may be the pat murine of the spring campaign. It |. mie obstacle to tts succ-ssful maintenance, to mee! 0 many citizeos of your greatcity. Tho State | 1 do not heliove that right,aod I co not batieve In sweop- | Davis conccra, but thoy would cortainly never eavo | Prizes Cashed and Information Furce So harmony with the siratery swhich Grant, theralleged |” “Aithongh a milltary President micht te supposed to be | that I have the bonor to represent baa beea Moked | jag couiigcatioa acta, and [do not balieve that | the goverament The -poace men tated about the | nished 10 all legalized Lotteries, ‘en Bine'atrect:W. ¥. deviser and of the operation has here- | naturally warlike, it by no th foliows. Unwiltiag to | #ita you many years ia deatiny, trade, impulse | Northora hearts throb ‘to anythiog of that kind—that | vioiation of the constitution: but let us take one thing at au! 0, Brokers, 8 Pine street, #. ¥. “tofore exhivited. successes which have elevated him so | imperil hia reputation, and, ike most ar'aicrs gat more by a common saatiment, than with any f heart which baa wolcomed mo bere, notwithstanding | # time Let ussave the coustry and the country will Lottery T ® hed in Atl Legate Promincnily above all the gencrals of the enemy and probably | sitio to the evils of war than bloodthirsty politiciaaa. a f One ft Bat wo have been atran | that [have been a sacossioniat—not with bitternsas aod | save tho constitution. (Appiaise.) We are willing to tebe tata tiateeeien, the path for him to seise the glitering prize of the general in power would probably seek an accommodaton. © ‘h otuer and bave been separated, ro, but with welcome and rejoicing that will lumi. | trust tbe soldiers of the country to sustain that instru “3 JOSEPH BATES, IL ‘eet, room No. 1, N. &. have bea all won by the vigorous and unspar. | Arai events, tho olovatvou of atiew mai wort ce nose rroapored, we have beon impoverish: f nate my own'land. (Applause.) And woon [ go back | ment upon elds of carnage, aad thoy will do it, and Brown ‘application of superior aumbers—aa advantage and | the mediey of fanatics and rogues who now close every have become great and powerful, we have | to my own State | tutend to toil my pooplo all this, and | whew they return the aworde that flashed at Vicksburg Address to Smokers.—Pollack & Sow, ‘@atratogy common to him with his ues, but which | outiet from th present calamitous war. [( aot immedi- J, Arownd some Of your firosides mourning | they will be glad, and rejoicing wil! bo over tho land. But | aad streamed _o' ettyaburg and along tho rugged | Mearschanm manufacturers, 857 Broome street, ncar Sem, Rochas used toe greater extent, and in which pe has | atop iva, it would, at all ovents, give somo ground | S't4: ours are all draped tu sorrow. Woe havo « laad f ag (or the leaders iu this rebellion, I don’t think you caa | banks ge wil! strike bome to the heart | ery. neil goods wholesale and cetall, “Pipes'cut to order, £ ‘Deen favored tious chances, Alexander, of Epi- for tho ‘that both the confederacy ‘and the United | dreached (u blood. we bi acouatry dosolated: our Ff dave any grest partiality for them. (Groava.) of aay man who-dare strike out that instrument or wer- | paired, boiled and mod Pus, tavaded Gnd encountered the Romans at very | ctatos, ag well ag humanity in general, might be relieved J (7% aad vilingos aco wol! nigh impovorishod, our peopla SLAVERY THE CAUSR OF THR WAR “absence: Had they autime mplexion.=<Latra’s Pearly the same time that his relative, “ Macedoo’s mad- from the minfortunes which the most ‘shameless aud ob. | other steeping npon gory battle fields or in slleat grave. But i waa attempting to show that slavery waa the | to attend to three hundred thousand payonets that ‘aot pages 7 of hia attention to the softer regions of Asia, stinate wickedness persists in heaping upon them yard ali over tho land, or are bald by the force of Layo. } cause of the war, and I defy any tuman boing to tetl of | pressed against tho constitution of the country? There the pe ‘and 1 eS ultuous hosts of Darius and captured bis se- nets on Co the fouleat and moat loathsome despotism that | any other case. Some may gay it waa tho | wae for manhood, bonor ai ake treasures. The {ate of the former was hyn havo bdid man onsiaved upon tho face of (be earth. | abolitionists who wore tno cause. I[odeed waa | the flag ead of sitting dowa ——_—__ --— he moralized upon the result by saying that The Food Question. (Choers.) Tha New Yorkor who. yoars visited our Fit. But suppose there “had besa 00 negroes, | defend the constitution, Me. Lincoln wag not e, A One Term President. ‘0a the men’s side of the house, while Alex. | IMPORTANT ORDER OF GENBRAL LEA TO BIS ARMY. | punny ciime through motives of silhor promt or euriosity, | how many abolitionists would shere aya been’ | aor was heso big a for aa they ail thought he waa GREAT PRIZE RING NBWS, Great hed invaded that of tho women. GBNERAL ORDERI—NO. 7 would be much struck with these gad changes. Few oid F What would they havo had to bang to? No, it | down South. He wasa long-hoaded follow, and he knew Coburn tog; Hoos. w il ome te = Aare cause to mote the difference between the Aeavquarrers, ARMY or Nortaaes Vranas, famiitar frieods that he used to moat would aow groct | was ueitber aegroes nor abolitionists. Bul you aay secos- | that fame hada higher niche for him whon he retired | rica. Heenan, Bi, Mec y es oes ews ‘@irateny he encountered at Baker's Creek and that which i Jan. 22, 1864. ither red or gone, but be § sioniem was the cause. Very But if there Crom his present position. And Mr. Lioc»in had sense | Bing io is KES ty Pe Sur DAY. the Rappahannock, or at some other point | The Commanding General considers it duc to the army truck with the chango of seu. | been no oegroes there would Lave boon nothing to secede | enough to appreciate the services of Mr. Chase— IN WILKES: SPIRIT, OUT Popar Proposed triple advance on Richmond, and to mo- | to state that tbe temporary reduction ofj rations has beea come over our people since f about. What would aay one socedeabout? There would | (cheeraj—who bad held up the great financiat IN WILKES’ RIT, OUT TO-Daf. the fate of his predeces caused by circumstances beyond tho control of those the hot biod of ex 03 ¢ been no North and o0 South. technically, (or there | fabric which the Southern poopie did not understand. Bs. ee Gora eh irae tog campaign will witness a renewal of | charged with its support. {ts welfare and comfort are } al! over the country over the institution of slavery | would have beeu no negro, But negro stood between | So also: in reference tothe other members of the Cabinet A Valaable Patent for Sal tho atercot; advance upon Richmond there is the objects of his constant and earnest solicitude; and no evens ne county. futo the vortex of ctvil war. Wo | the two goveroments. Others might it was the | I aay that there is no goveramont excepting a republican Address J. B.S, 2) aad 22 Commerce atreat, New York fadication. Yankee heart pants with ao inexpressib! effort has been spared to provide for its wants. Tt is | thought tf war commenced (aad we told you 60, @ad we | locai tarilf; but who made @ logai tariff? The simpia | government that could have sicoeeded ia putting downs | cy. Aongiog to plant its cherished gridiron upon the | hoped that the exertions now being made will rouder the | polievad it conscientiously) that grass would grow in the fi fact that all this grand, gi 4 country, with ita | rebollion of thia magnitude. If this country had been a | ~ Noug but men of means need address, Aofty site of that Capitol which looks majestically | necoselty but of short duration; but the history of the streets of New York. George N. Sanders aaid 0, and we | towering mountains, its glorious.rivers and tia fortile | despotism, and its ruler had woro a:crown, instead of dowa upon scones that the last three years bave | army bas shown that the country can require a0 sacrifice | believed It; aud, io spite of tmyaelf, when I was brought f soil, bad been kept alone for the iaterost and wall being | posseagi I four term of ry Archi nop Hime h: ey ey hack endered famous in story. They will come as | too for its patriotic devotion. into your great city last night f oxpected to have seen a | of the white man who owned sii jw white slave | pointed gen ad the politiciaas fn the country | eray, Genel th aie pe fon they havo come before, and there is no reason to ters! you tread, with no unequal steps, the roed by I sprig or two, (Laughter.) [never saw 0 many people | owners—and the industrious wi mao would oot | would havo a totriguiog for power, Pargosies ol poet pt think that they will not retura as they bave inv: which your fathers marchod through suffering, privation f in ali my life. If Jom. Davis could get hia conscription | come while siavery chall him to stay at home. | bave ovorrun the country and placed themselves to tue Fel yy, ‘umber of CARTE Aes Hppolon, dyae bofore, Every live of advance upou this coveted and blood to independence. act ia force he would catch moro abie-bodiet mon than | That made 4 local tart, for it made the groat machinery | in pewer. sentiment of the people—the | Logical JOURNAL. ony Lary 2 firet post; city bas been tried ,and it now only remains, in sheer Continue to emulate in the future, as you have in the | thers are ia the whole Confedorate limita. (Appiause | of the North aad kopt the working mea with their iv- | sentimect of the country—bas sustained eo year, POWLER & WELLS, roadway, ration of accomplishing the pur; by a porsever- | past, their valor in arms, their patient endurance of hard- | and laughter.) You bave become woalthy, you bave in- | dustry and machinery at bome: We would have had a | ernment, aod the: rebellion ts nearly crushed. —_—_—— ag aod concerted plan, that they fl seek ‘resort to the ps, their high resolve to be free—which no trial could | creaned im trade, tn commerce, in public ‘Improvements | Lowell and a Manchestor along the bunks of the Arkansas, | It ia-clear to my mind the destiay that awatts ua in tho doctrine of chances, and trust that, in several simultane- Ous assauits, luck may befriend them at one point. hopes built upon this pian must, of course, look bake, no bribe seduce, uo dangor appal—aod be assured that the just God who crowned their efforts with success, will, to His own good time, sead down His blessings upon and publio buildings, and ta the war spirit. You dida't know much about fighting whan thiz thing commenced A telegrapiie despatch reaching New York that Ben the White rivor and other streams but for siavery (Apoiaxse) But they age their way thore now. (Cosors.) tit othor mon say that secession came beciuse the future. ia the furnace of war. ,. ronrs. R. E. LES, General, McCullough was somewhere about oreatad a great sense. | Soucuera poopie lost power aud the goverameut. Is tuat | conatry and see whether the very disturbing element in Severeacen’ ceeds tan iakge pumoreiny trem bie- - ' tion . you" tmagived that he oul take possesion of | what made them lore that power? Way it was because | this goverament has uot answered tts great purpose aod to Meade, would all have b: Affatrs tn Lou! it in their power, nearly balf the city. You believed, many of you, | of the eteroal negro, who was brought oo all their | is ready to depart. wi all foiled, and as Richmond is DESTRUCTION OF A YANKRE SLOOP. or feared. that if you did without a crop } pistforms, The Southerners at tuoir policy | the North cold, bieak, Inbospitable (it may be hospitable | Crigtedoro’s Ha! ania po to erack at prosent than it was Pascagecta, Jan. 24, 1964. of cotton that you would ba destroyed, and that | upon it, But that is now and ow it | to you, but it is cold and bleak to me): the ad Wig depot, wholesale ero goars since, wo can afford to walt with calmness the On the night of the Sth inst. an outward bound sloop, | you could not do without slave labor. You baveshown { cust be our duty to help Goverament in | South you will fod salubrious, fertile, with dye applied by skiitu ooming of the redoubtable Grant and his threeconverging | laden with turpentine, while attemptiog to escape from | that you can do without ft: that cotton, if a King, cor. f this streggle to maintain itself, and ic this struggle wo | bright skies, clear, rushing streama, every thing ——--— columas. Yankee ingenuity has constructed oll the ma- = necessary for opening oo road to Richmond. Sed been exponded with untirin werance, yet t! 0a@ tosurmouatabie obstacle of Lae ‘sg army stil ‘bars the Pascagoula river, grounded on the bar in Middle Pass. ‘Yo prevent ber fallit was fired by her o: tainly had no right to include the city of New York with in bis dominions. You bade deflance to him, rou came to the conclusion that it was tbo province and the duty of New York to Gght for the Moion, and I tell you the must be mea and patriots. (Cheors.) I aay this truly to you; [ am not one who geeks for power, [do vot waut Place or offeo; but I say that we put that piaok ia our platform, aud [ say that from that cause the surgs of to invite man toploce his. bavitati into the hands of our pickets, she jw, who succeeded in making their boats Tho voscef and cargo, with the It is to make us a homogeneous governmout—to make us 008 people—to waid'us togethor, [ might say, by Watch the whole progress of the lake the United States—you will fina among them. Provi- deace ta shaping the destiny of nations—and the nation which. does not placa its reliance npon Providence is already well nigh on the road to ruin—bas not pressed | s*00 Chiropodist, 7) Broadway, Inverted beng — without iacH Anis. Bae. c larged Joit oF inconvenience to.the pat! Banton: 8 and ai! diseases of the feet cured. by Dr. way. requit ercome this "1 come in your history when you can cease J luman passion has rolled over our land ia auch destruc- | the world forward with equal velocity at every point. rea 8 y Befruti ofthe Prehdentiat tre hemay at ett oop pat todxet forthe Uniow. (Chaers). You might: ated t> tive waves that could they but have boon imaagined they | Now empires rise up (rom the ruins of theold, to bain thle Deafness, Impatred Stghe Ris house in order, and ‘compose his mind for the dismal enter the arena for it, but you canfot afford to lay down | sould bave been stem long ago. And | telt you now | turn succeeded by otbera, In the history of the world MOISES IN THR AEAD, lo Cross drear abodes where rest the shades of Buell, yonr arms. That is my idea about it. Trade has been | that we bave suffered so much we muat be more chaci- | you will find that invading people, although they have — echo and Rosecrans. v changed simpiy. Instead of cotton you got from the | table tojeach other—-we naust not abuse this section | spread desolation in their track, have yot diffused knowl. CATABREAL ATPECTIONS IN TI i ; South, the good of the country, ita future prosperity, li } and that, aad we must leave the abolitionist sad the | edge of the arts and sclences among the nations they ° Tho Crisis of the Confederacy. strength is what you have sought that you patriots might | slaver alone, not charging them, one or the other, | Lave subjugated. Fora time this-great eouatry of ours ennovic CATARRA, ‘From the Richmond Examiner, Jan. 26.) be upheld aud sustainod while you bors aloft the flag of | with being the cause of the war, but hopiug that | was a wilderness, by arace cow unknewo ie —ap With ‘spring will come the last great struggle of your fathers and upbeld the constit:tion that they cave | the cause is removed, and that we may agaio, | bistory, andwhich only tives in. tradition, but when the CATARES OF THE TYMPANIC MUCOUS Liacole to overthrow the confederacy. His term YOu, bought and baptized with patriot bloed. This very | a9 ia of yore, with. stout hands aud brave hearts, | wants and neccasitios of maokiod pressed the: bold mari MEMBRANE, OBSTRUCTION OF THS draws (0a close,and the oall war movement bag made you wealthy aud powerful; but | mphold the dag of our Union forever. (Applause.) Aud | ner, under the direction of Providence, acrose the EUsTACH him that he, at least mag oof bane tah CTO in it bas got to pass away, and thon a pow order nf 930 Gnishiog touchy let us remark, while we are about \t, | ocean, and colonies of adventurous spirits were OUnED. MEAD to finish vip the “dig fob’ he. #0, recktesuty * things must come up. New York can’t afford | (ho cause of this, audthe pretext of all others, which is, | planted bere, it Decossary that the CROSS RYE STRAIGRIENED 16 ONE tho campaign him no material to give up Arkaness oo mors than Arkansas | and might be, if mo’ removed,siavery, (Choors.) What | whele country. should be peopled, What was TR. aad’ should’ the Srclood Gubwassses line of can aiiord to give up Now York. (Appiaces.) | goo does itdo partially to review the question, aad not | the result? Negro | slavery was | the Instrument | And every disease of the, Rye end Bas, maintained io ite jotegrity, Ae will th to But the peace-on.any terms men would let Arkanaag go— } go deep down into ite very phi ? Toefact may be | im the hands of Provi to ‘that particular Sane ne binedasalileg 16 Br ‘neac: AG ewrcesrr of embarrassment and difficulty. let the men go who had atond fire and sword and perserr recognized that there are abolitionists and secesstonists, | mission, By degrees it came southward, and iy ox: a const rooma, Should another Presi resolve to persevere in the in- tion, who had lived io mountain gorges, and by the rugged | and mere indications that there was local irritation iu tended ever the whole Southera portion of the countr: poet a — eano attempt Seca he will find that all the im- ‘banks of homeless streams, waiting for the old fag to | government, as thedoestors would say, were @ It opened up that miasmatic country aod spread itsatt Dr. Halsted, of Roand Hill Water Care, monse oforts that ave been made tm the last. three come—these peace men would let those men go and be | dences of disease that had seized the patrent: but if | along its fertite at . Who would have settied upon Rortharopion, Masa.. will bein the city to- 01 eet ears have not pevotrated to the core of the difficult; subjugated under the dominion of Jem, Davis, aad joad | you examine the patient carefully you will fad that | the bicak, rugged Lilis of New Hampshire, Massachusetts | gay, Call atdt. Nic Hotel from {0 to & adveriion- White thoy have matorially dim!njshed and crippled the that couatry away from fhe support of New York, (Ap were Looe 4 A. the disease, bg | why not treat pod byt mie a ay it ir. aa 4 ment from: Bee. offens! ‘ pproac! hose fove } that ins! ming your shafts at the m: this fertile countr; Sout! as a a Us prigehd Savin oF Gt 0s 80 tort «tine ts foots comiaey, po il a sorbkaent peace, ton that } of tbe disease. Foe instance, a patient conv a sentine! stood there and said, “Stay there. Fine O18 im ne in the hisiory of nations. Nor does it | the Covingtoo nd | kind of peace which will enable ocr government to sa. | doctor, who has @ oail drivea ia the centre of bis arm. | And now, when the {and of snow, rocks, he two hesdred Sew ne seal D co Me Mage org fe teen ar Yi ee tere. cee oe oe eilermcat’ ‘ona’ “at 'Covington os’ the | Superale more rapidiy from ite Leeann an hme io unices woth 7 yg a} Sroaute. Sy" ah Ber et Secrets Vitoweapan | mostly originals, See advertieament. ~ 4 ie wes al brought Theo many questions have bees | 2 Mi y @ lab alnettvalial fato congenial soil py a 8 A i inst., and started ‘or isonville the themeed tm the Seatry. ne 4 sibly % might have | allows the nail to there. We bave suffered in the | Northern spindies, and that coantry bas been dev . Gouraud’s Poudre Sabtile Uproots Hate a te oprend its bach Meadow over Ae entire | same EOE tn CONT oct ibe ‘Seomye ere | been lot slone; but God Almighty has shapod it for His | <outh, and {nay that all our anguish, all oar aorrow, al! | the (ae eenstan population Of Nee Bagioad aust Wring | {com upper I glo, (oateads, oF aappert of the body. land, growth justry. bein, it of the near enemy. 0 1 ° with them: | our trials, can raced —an 0. i ii jf can as opie A eclerpein "Finenctat oorediant other two were captured, bur our informant, though re- bet reaclicall? cows foreee arent tent Sone country, | dorstand lt—directly 40 negto slavery, aod we are ta. | with (nem theirimprovementsfurtbor dowa South. And | Warranted. Y Sectrserciaeaeen an costae | antl sre cinta aetis uct anes | Sa" acy See ke EE Ue fei | Se eeRTR ee ea cet hate | Same corn ee area, Seee Satan | Mayes, Miamnshe, Wats Rermemstee Fao Gea T er bm acs fh ony ig Ae Fim suming the bulle of eoveral frecbeese 7 cot Simee” that sonia “sechisn weno | 00 the question. 1 don? care wheel mux cailed, Yoo cna | remered as, the. porat of the bepooes. ‘Fee senttols.| wrarrenwed to Lemere, fete Ate ES ‘evious uae over tatertor rottennses; bat ye + yey ot te ete dae, to hist whet You plesses but let me take holdor the | are removed,” cad” over “ther prostrate Toran deaparations containing stp, of fate before it which silently and which at are looking for the future of their country, are doing. a you 3 a " ’ on o has haa ~ MOYTR IMPERIAL COLORING fiend bear further ot | pallogophy of this tuing, and rameve the causeof this | comes this vast ux pea the bair at the, awe time, ch ae ee tae Sen be: ee ee 2° without to be aoua,. teaee "wee ieee ace Mader | war, and qive 0 my country a bright, glorivcs pathway | North, ‘and from every part” of ” the. world, | cllaand colors the hair at ho, ®. a mbstantiat basis tolrest upoo, aa, Tectmalaene ot Tepresents the trade in cotton carried on betwoen Gasacee to be lnugued st, are wot to be despised a | to the future, and Twili be satisiied. Koy Laman Now, } PoP sa ie be peg board oe faa ond JOSEPH HOYT CO, 10 Upuveratty plasm M. F. jot {8 sure to terminate in ruin. Every interest | Amite Summit and other places on the New Orieaus and | i¢ you wore to lay down your arma acd call upon them to | the evidence that there never can srmascnt perce | in the gri mt ae aoa tee w ame i Rajlroad Baton Rouge bile siavery is ia the government bas forced iisel! upon | the same way. The storm will rage roar er . I Rf Bo — as vory extensive, and | mest yoo in Sead dearlat ee ether mont out, | out minds ia Shis wise: whileabe lostituvion was (a tbe | natioual puridcation is completed aad the deilementa of Delightfn%, soothing, refreshing pn nahn ie pom pee EF hag ly 08 ethene Of | Sorprieemnadion ena Fee eee ee cing | guvormmaent tt kept up a Coastame agitation, ta the North | pegro slavery are waabed Out forever—canpiauso)—and | por sale at all iheleading grocers’ (nthe cup. ort be people of the ited Staten, The arts of banking Round Island. Others Rave protected Sup land, the power nae trom’ waa thee eee : tee a couater irr! Ration, oa the doctors would aay, to the | thea wealth, prosparity and happiness will over o 2 Direction La and ot the montary facies of commercial nti have, emer will and dotermination to boar on the flag of the cnuntry th. Well, now that we have submitted ft to the sword | the path ‘J = bw God stood, eng Be Merchandise Tags, Pua Dirscuiow, kaneis. ‘oo far, gs Oy 7 con tire te Rico aba ae at Saat) We aU itive Sree every pare oe Vane gress govers: a, whee ndeenneetetere mica aoa oe wel tio easton wae Se ths enore quitkte, (applacae.) oon 2 6, ak VICTOR nod tof ours. (Applause, it while we aro preparing - : vextraordigary exertions, But it s evident this course of . men! that says, © You | Tbe sooner it away the better for us aod for me expedionts definitely. fidence in The we published iy, gave w order of thi must remember thas all there ws another ‘come up v3, “Yoru passes Se eetacenebed telat no a he, we the ex. eee) raed our bE, bas been petiod 11 not have been spilled a pep wi Pd want them or not. country, You have it ia your power to end tl mao. thet we canoot (Applause) The fo vain. Search the records of history. fa all the up- this very year great 4 er he PINE TREE TAR DROPS, oxtan! have peace’ At the. me the abolitionists stop, tue | c 5 to describe the jer. ‘The moat popular t be pty h Ren Rn GT ag ag rool party men. comme to talk to us vad ‘saz, | fol resources that hie owa State Domaesos— Ark or Asuna, Brooctats, Couns, Ooh ‘You shan’t bave.gpeace until pov have “angrocs.”” | sosas— Popuiati eet ana efecual. eet eeaiae: thee Cat nar arersiment han started | The way the peoplo-of my State rosso, ahovt this ques: | roqisite energy end ability” to develop them AENIg' Bk rts ng asee tipen its regeneration AE tr cow. destiag-= | tion te ols: Thay aay We have got to, sta Ho wauted the ire to come whiea the white max. wou Gonvaaient for the Packet ant peace, 0 f 9 to nana homogeneous . ‘at 16 an " & ,fronter, march, of" woalth, power aad progress | 50 Nene tn tou Guess fen This could not be dooe before, for slavery stood In tho By dealers Tora - Sige have, Out Ore desolate ‘WAS, aNd God did Hot intend that ery should be pow. Suopeges, rm er Biel ty ont ebildt int of vation. buat im 8! y bOUse, vit children ae genely ‘whe po ear, potuated, and this is Hin moans of rooting slavery from Bete nea Chemical Wi ‘06 Broasmae, Therefore We tehoares a te ck about aed tee how wo | the laod. The men of the North abali inl the rich et —— ara to avoid. auch ‘roubles aa these for the presaat and for | aod fertile tants of the Arkansas and White rivers aad Patents! eight; the futuro, We want @ permansat peace, while at the present time the Southroa makes a bale of Messra, MUNN & ‘eecuring wo caa’t b8¥e& permaneal peace while negro slavory | cotton to the acre, the brave soldier of the Union, | AMBRICAN, cou UM sod ail foreign comnteian, a ‘40 ka naa thit” we aa | married to douthera women, will make ten, (Choers.} | tents for a ae tave bad scvonioes Tease! oxperiongy ig two days, General Sherman and t our t having negro | God Intended this, A men ara at home, mo matter pi Ly Ty ‘aad have acted as Atiornoge (or mane te ek them. lng element ia thia govorument. There thers, Wa want, Aret, @ rer (hoy, may bo io. Coleies of Germaa and | tina inventors 1. patent Laws and other dicr are almost what im ordi- fi jie, Ale., 00 Friday, January 15, Reory | was one groat trunk of evil, and nll the others were but jaccat paeme, aod mueny, Oe kind O% peace which ers will cover these anda where sometime ago | “Pamphlets Gontainiag etary, (areal free on: ike, ieorede. a ‘Have in the South. | Nye, on of the late Capiata Allea Nyo, of Seodwich, ‘branches planted from it, and we intend to lay the are lo J wl! se eaten me peranerate ro. our sala pothing but, oe uae 1 OF, tee taiina, waa Boar pe tao Torn oie a 4 navies fige,, Add i ’ ¥ att requi termi. AM une’ ° a the gro! a 5 5 r na teatiay re Daf of euch recklens oxtravagas ie iaiere ce plane ‘ad ‘teers been bo negrs shavers’ there outs it you det want io bo tailed an aboltinalaty Ww dinpasoa of Gy! It i not the abolitionist or Cornet t ith siroeis, Watninglan, D. O. nan ot Cae an aomnent annem bine Matters im the Southwest, Rave boon no wate cApgtause.y* Aad Why 49 { say sot | Wks MOUtuA AL UboMR, say cho ebing is doad and buried” | the siavor that ie doing Qbis: W iy. tha great baad of od th bt? d the paymest Of auch sums teudors tot, Como, Mise. Jno. 26, 1864. | Lay go because { aover saw aay bittor contest {a tbo | tot Wl) ue to bury tbe thi owact toad god of | i doing it 1 may ofesd some Southern mea in| age, h ©o., Radical Cace Se at Sores! besnene @ollat wales he ro. § Colonel Joff. E. Forrest bas Iaiand No. 60,004 | country over anything of whicl degro slavary waa ons | peas Cant will ehabia a to recuperate more readily (om | sayiag this, but 1 gagaot offend i runes, only at No. 2 Vesey Souse, ig Giiresmlikecaormous, Uribe, ‘Thus the element of mit. | all the negroes aad managers, killing Mfveen and destroy | ths touadation srowe. Waar was in thactemptad ve com, | Our © sCartyndsy aud tu onder. to. 10 that wa aust open | thay are true Union asa, Clremend ise.) | Trae ome. oof pporvers, Buoulder te A aay pois LN: I ounected) and | ing the oxea and wagons, The mules and negroes have | Heoimise rear arian” year” Was it harass. was | Up cue comptry to. the whole world, aad ia ordec to do | Arkansas bin Ope} DLAL s Hroviaioal tate Coovedtion | edaat a , Arrived here. scouts % the evacuation of Corinth, | it cata, was it dogs, waa it womea, wis 4] {uss Fru have got to opeu tino 'Iaad Ww white lador | for tbe purpose of Dading its way back to the govern Tm We Would Call At ye the conctusion that 1804 | and that the enemy blew up the fortifications and fell | meus Way no. it was the q (arongl yout every part of tha mabitadte globe waerevor | moat, and those rAace commisaionars will be opponed, Throat Discace: alltehenn back in the direction of Memptis. Fort Pillow in also | What waa it that called tho nation together in ther @ hoose to come. (Cheers) Now,T have pe to it because slavery must dio Gut before aoy odmaprom >. doa to BROWNS Bronchial Troches, We bavefouna If protractod till reported evacuated. The transports that weat down the | council in 1460, whea Clay and othor groat atatesmen f itow,, because 1 Bava studied this quostioa of oegro | cad be thought of ‘noors.) The rabdois ea | + ae poe ‘sim Wy tf Tiver with troops are sald to be In the Yazoo river watkod from ths vorwo of the grave almoat to deaw tho | slay cry a great doal lately, and { am astoaished a what rgoted. Eitlate that, of the Unica man in the South Will | oe wessioug ig allasing ieeitation fa the throat aad Bethy pace frewnog an reroment together? What dit they compromiss upon? | co npany | keep sou a8, | recollectafew years ago ye sayugat 4, 9 North to he Bt agrdng Sack co tho ehanation 2 gure 862, Then the arm: Gene Hardee. Rogrostereey What woro (ho issuos ia Fremont’s caa- } Vy partner io the practice of jaw wag a vory bitter South. | o, be pine of Jor, | cule and would commend thea fully equi and The Missive: m states that this mt aad jit vas and in tho campaigns subsoq ent to that, ta 1 =~ }forn man, and fast for tho fun Of tho thing weused to | umph of the Union arms acd the total over . kore and others tsoubiod with afeations of tho ‘infeah Hike an a guished oMoer was a guest At tho Geo tl 80 & fow igh! what was iy Ni Blavery. @ attempted theo te ) sip through tho Now Yor Pituns. Wo would shut our | Davis’ am ade the euai- | PO" mittingly oarried’ on as Since, He was on hie way to Pompe ee bart aoan compromise it, at di A you Sask, Cogut comocene -¢ ‘ if ro aus thease Lrcsrned sae’ thas boke ave hg ee eee Nene te aetna situs They are aiao a0 excorieat remedy for boarseneny, reauiiag aggression, purely . 5 ind of quan had 1 ad, » aes a wn —= Silo advil patot general bas tando 6 oonauont ot | tees for oegto sleveegt-avore, wow ‘coomtitutiodal ooue’y. | tnapected wn). L \ekeup the Tvibuneaat 190K abit now, | ciaims of Tansassee on tbe mermost See aoe ee | trom cold. ~Coagrogatiaatisi, Boston, whieh ia, they that which It t@ his wont to pur- | mont. A croat many of va said thoconstitution wav’ ot | and Laiak it i quite looking tinge of tho loyal North ~~ poe and & portion Of it specs, Mair Dye, @ Dye, U7 te Dycta the tion Goon lead to the altar one of ‘Alsbame’s fale~ ing, Because It did Not protect negro slavory ORF yeh. | Times, tho Henarp, 1! of them, tall vornment, bub had suitor orful despotinm of Soff w Tow utes Wha ee ©. £ % Coustiftion abenld ve cust roa o (hat it wit nok gt fe thet, he "wee a Tree eofer 1 looked nt Deen oo etssa that coud, be eo remelned all true, ray Ata 18 Bond aiceet. eee ote Constitution abould he changed fo ( ib WHE BOR *pratect | thet MM jay tho whole State was loyal, (Choorn.) _————— indsh. ime, it. (Applause) Wo attom; acy BO, wtaton. | all Over to B60 bo wae like and tonday th tison's Hig’ gost Premiame bey 8 ci W on maid pdt Now York, pe eit quostiga of vegro ced ‘They | peon @ live #boli ® what ti ava i Mr. inj’ enh era, sn Bf ADL org “ott ice reaeer a testes Grae thar tae tenting ot deeponsenay teomadly tarp texor Galera saettrod trom Qld Wolat, | could not do it, Tana ¥@ey good (rn0 of Pa Glien pro. | wondered tbat the mae could look in Snvbody's | meeting