The New York Herald Newspaper, February 17, 1864, Page 1

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THE NEW YORK HERALD. — e+ ———— - —— E ~ < NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, FHERUARY 17, 1864. PRICE THREE CEN ee ' WHOLE NO. 10,014. address op no bill bop beon passod to strengthen the | tonger Agenticman, Tho South doos aot beliove today | arab liw ont there, Then they wonld bave civilization | war, BO man who is not whi) inwe FROM WASHINGTON. ee oe Peete te ‘Davie said Sc hpmeon py clause Ming govornmons. het us, ho aud, addvems out- J bab ber senso thoro ty feotlewnan north of Mason | hiko that, at the Nortn—ihat iv, they would have the | he .enj9 shall be wit to ‘ine can ene Reaee eee ise oor nad waid 10 tho oourse OF provious do- | wolves tO praciioal questions if wo sagan 60 emppors the | aad tbxon%y lino—thas ig iw the seago of a laboring class | permission of the New Yors Harsco for an amendment | pilot of & dark night \s aot halt so goed af @ Dates that ho (ir. Davis) waa very fond of recurring to | goveromens. eres devoted to work. Until, therciore, | to the constitution, provided that no State shall re-enter | Capable one. Now, what we want in that fature ist the past. Ho would mow recur to the past, and how Mr. Wnson, (rop.) of town, sald tho gentioman fram f she ither cured or converted thero 13 no piace for | the Union, and no State shall exist in it, where siavery | to mm pete, 0 =~ going; we have a right to it, : ed path of the ‘pureat biood of ay trator. | Now York was not the proper poreon to deliver lectures | BOr ¥e Adinixsion into the capital Mf you wont a homoge. [sor mvoluntary servitude oxisis. Bue that is notenougn, | ha po = ean aN Gn vemes\ cf ine at to | tothe House, considering that tho gootiowan and bw | BOOM democracy and repudlicapiem working thore—i | alibough wo nye got a common level for pollticiaba. and | from New Orleans; we have givon V % Success of the Whiskey Specu- pty, wy, pore, Dalcyon days of tho past. Looking | friends bad heretofore wnconrcious!y consumed must oF Spay Youth Carolina unyibing bud a neutralizer of | Kummer and Wilken in the Congress, and the civar bine | tho mother of Presidente’ —we ‘ poy hs Tranny be ropes tho decline of the re: | the timo of tho Rouge. Work have known @ Southern wan loso his pas of the New York Hprarp, are unanimous on that | bave given hor thatof the grave of martyrs. Sock @ lators and Monopolists. publi bad" commenced i tbo full Dioom of its | Mr. Dawns nid be had not sought to break slaneo | Age Gh, A railroad train waiting for nogro to put bis | pelnt: But J will leave his arena of the war and | war iS not to be sacrificed for half remuits. No. by as us hea lode tbe hope that it | with tho gentloman from Maryland wor to wrentlo with to the froighs car. A frlond of mino at Nasnvilie | como to the limitation of State ove! elpnty: mie chapter | every mother that listens and nover hears the voive rhe Caren would bo ftinmortal opti] the new poiley of | hie friend and colleague from Hossachusette. CP ‘saw & whilo taan vlad in rags come io the Provost Marebal of Se conatitation lisaile the rigs Bintes by gortale joved ret hy dag pare oy the heartbetone. by i " ; t | the lator was not true to tho avcient ns. They cannot conclude treaties'nor declare | every danger \ ature, | claim of you, net only for the administration was evoived. ‘The President | # enggee war; they must not coin money, nor grant tities of nobi. | the negro’s sake, bit for the sake of the 1wenty milo Bp’ on and we foarte! Maseehueette op tho a. For he (Mr. | down tho Missinsippt river, The Marshal replied irits n Not to pA vd ae craeatos be belay, someteey 20 ae Dawes) had been aaa in a aifferent school. ae WABY gratis names ax! dare to pubtbere.”) “I iby. Our fathors dreaded the cousequenccs of such pow- | Of white men, whose prospority is in the valance, that edges apon which he bound bimeelf Lo conduct the war. bi ad ns ” : ‘admitted ich | had stood shoulder to shoulder with the ‘Old Man Klo- ungry and want io get home, 1 capnot belp that,” | ere, and saw it right to give uweo far some |imits toState | you be vot wanting iu vigilance, sincerity aud daring in Taxed. a Esnps i ae abe eivihswey eo Soen ue saazene Wit ‘weouting to tho humbiest iodividuola in the | sayn tho Mursiinl. Yho sceretary of tho Marshal looked | sovereigaty. Wo want another provision aleo that no | this hour of the nation’s crisis, that you duiand of every power. hope of the furthest vook and corer of tbo country. @ right | Up and said —''My good fellow, strong and hearty ss you Btate i} have el . Abd @ third thing is also | man to explain bis record. Weleome criticism, and if a werner of another President, and this originated ot Igerely to come biher with their petitions, but to ore only 40 go om board a boat, handle a little | needed—that no State sball de permitted to make avy | man asks to lead the couniry, let him show bimeeif capa for the continuance of the war on havo them referred to @ commities for the purpose’or ‘at the wooding station and you may have double | distinction among its citizens on account of race. (Ap- | ble of doing it and show us his plan. holding office. Whi ‘examining into the tacte and vautes and reasons fur com- | YOUF passage and rations beside.’” Rags looked down for | plause.) In New Kagiand, when they firet had colored | Mr. Phillips resumed bi Exciting Debate in the House on tho | io tne' coming campaign. aint and griovanco, i Order that they may de & moment ‘1 never did work for ap hour andl xuese ! | schoole—e long time eyo—he well emembered how a Pilin’ adron iar Acta pabdued, fottae fous. tm the vonree of bin he sball vot begin now.” Cooma.) The Northerver | colored master, who was over one of these institutions, , Rebellious States. parties,” the right of the people to representation, a provided for | euggested thas It bad yome lo tho question between starv- saenees the Turkish system, and whipped the scholars NEWS FROM NORTH CAROLINA Status of 4 jy by the conetitutton, and demired the credentials to be 40 whioh Kagu replied, "1 will starve © | 00 tbe #olea of their fect, after that fashion. The practice ° fate ort examined apart from tbe question of Stato reconstruc: work an hour.” (Laughter.) You '@ horrible oue, but it Look the people many monthe . would ton. ave Dot converted that poor white ma: you bavo not | to get the man turned out. The reason of this wan plain. Ne ee a tee ieaeotety oo. Be po mnana tom ccuuonl crharainrstaa'as | ours whore Wettane ei average | mane Samana Teton Seas Stet | Aetivity of the Union F. of viood. Mr Scugnon, (rep.) of » wail le! y Ov aif of @ poor, Tho President's Reconstruction Schemes De- | Smnmeas coord rN eaters this eulightened | closed the fact oP aor the quoation ue to the admission a poor whit bu), and go pto the cap sheaf of South: | despised avd igolated class, If the cage bad been difter ctivity 0: ie Union Forces age without a provision the protection of private | of » member there was the more importavt one, viz: | ero Btateemanebi}— to the ablest man west of the moun- | ent, and the child of a banker or some jead- Under General Peck nounced by Republicans, y. This was ae the great ends for which | whether there was a Btate entitled to representation or | t#i0s, perhape, to the ablest statesman on eitber slope— | ing clergyman, the schoolmaster offending would ‘was formed, and one of the groat attempted | not. Ho therefore moved the referouce of the creden- | } mead Andy, pay y sepevee p- | Dave been turned out immediately. Hecause the ee, &e. &e 40 be scoured ‘by the constitution. In relation | tiale, with instructions to investigate, toquire and re- | pove you ask him, and he will tell you pi iv dap Prspige af wel “nd ‘social position wonld bave made poems eee e taney a to hip own iste, bow did the case stand’ In | port, by bill or otherwise, whether there is any such ox- | sbeaf of Southern winds je tp ite Unioniem. He will tell yoo | {8 clea I") i) 1} for bis position. My: ¢ ‘ y there were before the commencenent | ‘sting organized government 10 arkansas as entilon the 1 oy Anal thent ga he Pings maa sud tbe chit clapaee oto an, aggregate and you proiect them. He SBUNUTON, rebe!! Jeast led ip the gs 4 ul a iv! and exemptions an bas a $000's gpg shea oy sail $400 por heed, welch cea ee . am fora white ane foxsrpmpent. | That ferthe vegro | rosirictions equally divided, to tack and @bite thesame. vene the Legislature ‘HE TAX BIL). DH THE LOUSE. counting by the lower eetiunate would be $100,000,000, or | Tho motion vas disagreed to by a vote of 68 yeae | exp Mgt; LOL 1; he can work, bo ie a good | You eay that a man must wot be permitted to vote uvlers ena ea tec te Sees | Seite cma Loni nea Nl | "REESE, ware sores tose Commie on | beset Seige ra ib Rehm er| revise pam ech ed ge” St mae Me Totornal Revenue bill striking out tbe tax of forty | MERRITT Ne oe OPT eae ot Only oy chetr | Hicteosee uae were referred to the Comm the dallot.- Tho brain thes through the dark nigbt bas | shail vote if he doce not read, Granted, but let rbotbe | Lhe Tone of the North Carolina gente por gallon on epirite on band, concurring in the | own state coustituiion, but by the constitution of the THR INTERVAD. RAVRNUK BILL AND THR WHIGKBY TAX. travelled 10 the Union camp and warned tt 60 that victory | same to the negro and to the white man. Bui if they Press. jhondment by four majority, proved that the mopopo- | United states, and all the States except Wisconsin. Was The House resumed the consideration of the Senate's jo age Md defeat averted, pal ft toritone jury | should = oe the irish, oe Catholle, or the black thal 9 Yste and speculators had succeeded in buying up a suf. | DOb this arubject of magnitude? If the power were ea. | amendments wo the Internal Rovens.o bill. » he is not & mun—only a toad. Now, there | not vote unless can read, then be was opposed to Key &e., &e. erciged to deprive tho State of Kentucky of their prop AMler Fefuarks by J. ©. ALLEN and Mr. Greve, the | Dever i} be a state of mind 1 Teoneeree Nt towi down | spy such distinction. | Then his amendment +touid totorent to secure them against the propoeed tax | ought there not to be the clearest authority for it? | question was taken on the following Senate amendment, late on the interests pocuviary and bonorable | be considered that no State sball come into the tw probable that tbe yote by which the Hove xon- Nolthor ‘resident nor the military ‘officers acting eaten wae disagreed to by # voto of 41 yeas against pire Btate uot)! Andy Johnson sees Jobo Han- | Union that makes distinctions among its citizeus red in (be sliding scale of taxation adopted by the | Under bie authority bad got one particle more authority | 105 nays. os under ® black skin. (Applanse.) That is iny idea | on account of their color. When they come to under ‘i : ‘ to Iidorate the elaves of Joyal masters of Kentucky than | And upon ai) liquors that may be, distilled after the pas reounstruction, Yon may not liko it. The reason is | stand this principle, let them come in as soon as they | The United States transport ateamer &. R. Spaviding, Genato, under which the tax will be increased to | had the Levy Court of the county of Wagbington, without | sage of this act, and sold or removed for consumptien or sale | that you have not seep Jobn Hancock under a black skin. | please. This, thep, was bie plan. Why, ve aeked, | which arrived at this port yesterday from Morebend ity Mighty cents per gallon, will be reconsidered, the Bouse | just compensation to t! owners. Mr. Davie denied the ‘and the lat day of July next and previous to the 1st | You bave that same prejudice against tbe negro, more of | should be trouble tbe public with it. Asa single ina) | i} y neventy cenis on each aud every gallon “ ‘ > " Fotueing by a large majority to lay that motion on the | T8bt of # United Staves officer to iake private property ey ear atoree thot may be diated efter the passage of | ’* than (be Southerner bas. Jo a vertain senso the conse- | vidual, of no particular public Erominenoe, perhaps’ be via Fortress Monroe, brings North Carolina news to the in Kentucky and place bis own valuation upon it. The | this act, and sold or removed for ooo fon or sale on | 1U6NC0 iz, you do not recogn:zo that four millions of men | had no right to bring it before'the public. 19tb inst. ‘adie. Tho whiskey mon are jubilant to-night ever the | government that would allow such a proceeding was ty- ea F the ist day of January next, eighty cents on each | Ald women whom you are willing to uee as cbampins, | themwhy. 1 donot, he continued, distruat Preei- Major General J. J. Pock, who bas acquired an tocored waecess of thoir labors. rannical, a it violated the rights and Jiberties of the ci- | aod every gailon. nd og such, for the people, you aro not willing to recog: | dent. ae.) I think be i@ all God made him. | | stom in resieting sloges, bad arrived at Newberp tizen. Negroes vever should have beep evrojied. Jt was ‘The House agree’ to the Sevate’s amendment striking | Dug that theroby they have won the right tocitizensbip, | (loud ) “I tbink be bag grown wonderfully in | Teputation in rr B sioges, reived at Newbern YHE ENROLMENT BILL. @ great and fata) mistake, and the best we cou'd do | out the additional tax of twenty cents on adoiterated spi- | 10 land. to the ballot, to education, and until the nation | three y (Laughter.) At fret he would not touch | aud aseumed command. His presence, togetber with the ‘Tho Houve Committee of Conference on tie Korcimert | was to retrace our steps in this respect, as the rebellion | rite gold as whiskey, brandy, £6 dove recognize it North apd South the opoch of civil dis- | the negro. A year or two after he could not ure the | extensive preparations he was making to receive the exe- , . ‘gp | SensiOns is not ended, ( Applause.) Now, the Southerner | negro.- The South in the meantime was biding ‘bill hag not yet been appointed, but will probably be an- ue enn afer Ao oa incalculable degree by the Zhe Hesse ae ee at io ki8 agreed ro Pp liye 2 | koowe that perfectly wail. take filincie and Masencbu. | tbe nogro’ under yarieas forme. Fire be was | DY, had inspired all with the belief that the rebels could to-morrow. ‘The friends of the bill. hope to ob- (bell ea. pened setts; they pot their sovereignty in common. The two} man, then a thing; you could not touch | never take Newbern, The following order shows that he @ report from the committee and final action upen it A message was received from the House announcing ‘Without disposing of the bi)) the Bouse, at balf-past States have a} their futore, thelr interests, their tariff, | bim as either. As! have been accustomed to illustrate | js ole, ing the deck for action should the evemy fee) dis. hei i. ot Weir prosperity, their international relations depending | !t to you, the father of the rebel General Lee was a bank re Raving the present week. The committee on the part of | their adkerence to thelr amendments to the Lorolment | Aye v'cicek, adjourned. on the votes of both. Magsuchusetta can appeal to tbe | rupt. He oad s:rosidence vear the national capital, built | Poeed to accept battle:— the Senate aro Mensre. Wilton, Grimes and Neswith. bay erat apn eerie bd joo Minos mind. Ye I ° | bet ‘Stal ! v p 5 On motion of Mr. Wagon the Senate adhered to its mind. i1iuois mind can appeal te the Massa: tween two States, Maryland and Virginia, go whenever GENERAL ORDERS—NO. 16. BITEN! “LA | amen a ity 5 ay ny |, | chusette mind. There being # mutuality of sovereignty | the Virginia sheriff called upon him he walked into his ARMY ano District or NORTH CskoLiNa, resto aveon yk wna? Pascu| Seat arta at cee wre” | WENDELL PHILLIPG ON RECONSTRUCTION. sr 'ewonuy ej chace. Pog Sime | Marae peeve he way aed | Merwe Seeman ti ” a i al ‘i » . , Yo officer will take his wife or ayy member of bis & ‘The policy of extending the President's Amnesty Pro ieee bis speech at length in evpport of hades: Wekice dee Weoeewal agi UA te thane” Get ah | RL se tae ht eee Oe es cia steer wit wie Race oe ember of bis! i @amation to colonels of regiments is much talked of. It Without » vote op the pending question the Senate League. case lowes coenuaa tas a ~~. me. Pe fa. = Rage red Baie lpviiebas pone thee ee : spapoclaeritd will bring any member of his sei eto regarded Wwtary amen i jr ad, + _ 'y re we Dave a —‘‘This is either | the field without express permission from these pesca pacts eee’ ip "a mipsary point, Svereed eh The announcement that Wendell Phillips, the well | of slaves, thoro is 00 dilierence of opinion? we ure all thiog: if he be ® man J will enlist him: if | quarters. Ail officers and soidiere who aro living Rway . Ib eppears trem the Siscloswres of rebe! «Micers, House of Representatives. known abolition speaker, wan to lecture, drew together a | dieunionwts, evory man under forty, 1 the upper covn- | be be adoliar I will spend him.” “(Laughter.) Tbe | from their proper communds without special puibor ty prieoners and refugees, that if this amursiy bad been Wasmxaron, Feb. 16, 1864, \arge Dumbor of our citisens In the Cooper Institute last | té5 there Ika different population There a white man | President, in acting thos, was very much Ike @ New | will at once join such commands, All surplus to colonels whole regiments wou!d come over to Penferese poueprapiis ABicaifieci bao evening. The boll was very comfortably fied, and on | Bethe mmo tae hie er pee ide, site down | Hampabire lawyer, who was called Jerry. Mr. Phil- | baggage will be’ turned over to the Quartermasier x P > 10 table with him, sleeps in the same room-witb | lipe then told ap anecdote of this man. He was-} Department, in compliance with orders from Army Head- fedoral side and give themeelves up, Dut uccer exist- The Sraaxke laid vefore the House tbe annua: report | the platform we observed eovera) sbiving )ighte of the | bim (there is but one in the house). Now, that wan ie | considerably over six feet high, but whon in a confined | quarters. The troops must hold themselves in readiness tag circumstances the evbaltern officers are covtrolied by of the Secretary of Btate op commercial relations betw Apti-Slavery Society. Not only and eesentially ov your side in bie feelings, but | position, curled up together, be looked a great deal | to act offensively or defensively at a momeu:’s notice, by (Who colonels, and are provented from concerted action. y ms o - rc ‘be canvot read, we offered bim noencouragement tread, | shorter, One day while he was riding out in aelelgh, | night or by day. The amount of ammin tion, subs et- the United Rtatee and foreign natiove, which was re The lecturer wag received witb loud applause om ap- | and he never bears a wpecch except what we make ai | comfortably wucked in under the robes and looking rather | ence, clothing and transportation, as wel) as We ouwber Wve Instance fe recited where a whole brigade was ready Y a all, be met the road ferred to the Cowmittee on Commerce. ring on the platform. He was presented to the audi. | elections, and we nover mean he shall. if he did. be | em met @ man on the r who rather roughly de- | of spades, shovels, picks and axes will be nt once reported @04 prepared to conve over in a body, but was prevented Mr. Eno >.) of M mitted a m a8 Dy Mr. Johnson, and spoke as follows.— would be op your side. They were fully consclous that | sired ‘bim to got out of the road. Jerry eaid we will try | by the proper command By tLe exclusion of the colonels from the amnest; ir. Enos, (rep.) of Mase., sudmi Fesolution, yr. * if Northern civilization could penetrate the walls of their | that, and begop to unrol. He went on unroiling until be Commanders of sub districts, brigades, regiments acd cleanin a which was referred to the Committee on Printing, for Lapis anv Gaen—I am to talk to you to-night on | oligarchy apd reach Qhetr magees, that the State would pot Spt abot six feet, when the man told him to top. | companies will be held respousible for the execution of EXCITING DBBATE IN THE HOUSE. printing four thourand copies for. the use of members, | Téconatruction—the way out of the war; and in the | be upbeuved, and that thelr rule would be ended. They would ot trouble him apy farther. (Langhter.) Aud | the foregoing. The debate which sprung up in the Honse to-day, upon end ope thousand for the use of the State Department. course of that talk paturally it will come in way t | kept that state of things in. order w carry Alabama | se with the President. From 1860 to 186] be began By command of Major General PROK. . . TUG CASK OF THR RAVRESENTATIVE FROM ARKANSAS. criticise the efforts and of reconstruc! whiob | out of the Up! they have succeeded. | morally uprolling, until the issue of the emancipation pro- Bays, B. Foeter, Assistant Adjutant Genera). on, and reference of the credentials of Mr. J. M. Johnson, | Mr. Dawe, (rep.) of Mace., called up the question on | bave been placed before the nation. Jes me say in the | When you reverse that etato of things Alabama wil) | clamation in 1863. No mau can be better tban the temper ; ash Nuning a seat as representative elect from the Third | referring to ‘iio Comnuttios ob Elections the credentinie of | Outset toni” thie ariticlem does Dot fow from any de- Gravitate Dack to tho Union, and re will never stay | he's made of. Every !ady gardener-bere kuows that an | 1 Henderson (N. (.) Tunss, a fearless oper tom Fessioual district of Arkapeas, created a good dea) of | James M. Jobnaon, of Arkansas, and whieb Mr. Davis, of spoediag view che pra “ hour, from any lack of hope | there permanently and peacefully until you reveree that | orange tree wili be as jarge as the box it is rooted in apd no | Paper, degires to know of President Lincolo vow he on Md., bad meved to iay on the tabie, pleasure of ing wheo } | state of thing ‘Aj . sball | make it for | larger. The difficulty between the President type of map N Nina to reluru tothe Union, robbed as #. The members crowded around Messrs. | Sir. Tiawse eid Ho had £0 acquaintance with Mr. | stood before 790 more tban a month ago, } have an un- tha bccumetuaeeee Bow, sbalt 1 ma ine diically betwen the Preedenk typeof san expert Nort Caro ian reuuru K Hb ili Spi oo }, Davis and otbers who participated in it, and the | Jobnson; but that gentleman badecome mitber witb a | doubting faith ig the two most im t points of the | men of social Influence and prestige—bow ball} make it | the root is as broad aa creation: they go down to | he is of ber own troops, au ewe wae covera) times obliged to call the House to nae of beagle Sie General Steele It keke a anger ie, neways jorth wii trivro| en ee of men, dividing them up, to bet ba ite of that creation. Reaten Geriatr Butler. | federal force in the eastern part of the Stgie to render n rom other eeurces tl e bad served as a colove! one | our Civilization sapersede that of the acation to He They were wen whose: views are as rapes a Tne debato developed the fact that both | of the Union rom. the commencement of the | salt will be ove nation, as Kan Np uA: “Tyee tive (oe popes | broaden homanity, nod Tocted te Ik Thare in aoother | {ce Cecesmnry sistance 18 Chee ofan: Jemmediale <imer ‘momortas pripciples can make them. I! you give the poorswhite of the House are greatly divided io ro- | war to the present time, While be was absent acon. | avy ustwn in history. (Applause) J donot believe shat aan abd the vegro the ballot, ihe moment be has it | type, whose views ‘are just af broud us that of the white | S°BCY- i : fo the status of the rebelioue Statce | Vention mot in Arkansas und formed a free State con. | it is possible that that reeult be the demagogue who wants bis vote will be careful that | race; but their root m in the broad and bloody soilor | The Raleigh’ (N. C.) Standard and Raleigh (N. €.) Pro- z stitution, the fret Sowiliiog. fruit borpe by the rebellion. | Dot believe that the purpose of Hoaven al ho fp taught to read, #0 that be will not get the otber | Keutuexy. One man may veed a curb and avother may | press contain amusing obituary notices of the death of the the Unton. Tbe position taken Dy H. Winter Davis, | The voters of the ‘hid Cougressional district electea | perbead of earth beneath, or the eecossioniss Ye pame op his ballot by mistake. (Laughter | peed a spur, bat you will Know the difference wheu Raleigh State Jouvnal—the second rebel print which has (iss there Is and can be no civil government in the ne | Colone) Jobson ae a Representative in Congrese | voder the earth, could er 1s. (Applaure.) And, | and applanee.) ‘Tbe guarantee of education to the lower | you mount. Our views should be shaped by the . ‘oa bs States, and ne representation in Cougress recoy | Y four or fre thousand votes. The credentials | secondly, at the same cl ‘Of the epoch in which we | maenes i giving them the power to affect the wel | broad democratic role that makes public opinion. | suspended within afow months in Raleigh, or the wavt ; s were offered through the ordipary channel; Dut with the | live—the epoch marked by the convulsion of a struggle | fare of the highest directly at the ballot box. | You must Koow whether a mao neeis a curb oF | of support from the people, says the Progress. , ntti they have formed new constitutions and or- | honorable scare of warfare on him, and with the greater | betwixt two ideas—do not understand me thatthe end tated ou this platform, and the one that preceded | a spur. This, the lecturer contended, he bad Wabaveat an aa aye the Wil endl new State governments which shat! be recognized | boner of bringing hither a free State constitution, ibis | Of the war is merely to the sense of a milita) time, and others have argued about the slave ‘The error of our politics was fo have already requested our readers, ways , the concurrent action of, the two houses of Con; tleman was denied a hearing, the gentleman from | struggie, whev we call home the cannon and fur! the available man siwave, in- | mington Journal, ‘‘to tmark the indications.” We said o_o vongness ryland (Mr. Davis) baring moved w lay the creden- | the banner; but when the real convulsion | of (g00d—slay. ble man’ wm thie | ghen, and we sey Dow, tbat we most slacerely shiox (has nd the President, and bis denunciation of the military | tials upon the tabie instead of permiiting them to be re- | @nd strugglo betwixt the two ideas is ended by the sub- | which ought to be ended, to be annibilated. We should opinione*the taan who js | “°o* wadhigerl ome tow : Peverdors appointed by tho President as wholly unau- | ferred to the Fommittes on Fieotious. Staptia) and absolute trinmph of the Union. 1 believe 4 like to Dave it to our power to doit. The ovly {ink | DOt 80 Obuoxious to our enemies that they hate him, and | 89 SHoMpt will be made tw take No scohie vilbamdie 7 4 Mr. Dawes, in reply to a question of Mr. Rarding, said | shat the nation will bea free ope when the negro, endut ing ip that man’s chain te, that we have | one that we can forgi What is the result? ‘The bise | the Confederacy. Wesay that the movements for which Worked and wiibout legal authority, and nis con- | tay Arkansas was divided (oto three Congressional ais | the Stare apd Striper, will bave bie manhood accorded | no more power over it thao Timbucto bas |, of his old opinions we do not know, but they will always | the Raleigh @bndard and Prograss are respevtivie loola Q@mptuous wancer in speaking of the President's aitempt | tricts, according to law, before the breaking out of the | As the old negro said. it would imposaibie to put a | There was @ constitutional, broad, black line between |"infuence him. and the consequence ws the man ts trusted We her, 1bi SOestadlish tate governments under and by virtue of his | Pedellion. cbieken of six weeks back into the egg as to prevent that | New York and Charleston—the constitutional State sove- | before he is kaown, and he always deceives you. We | ‘?tvisconsummation. We say, further, ‘bat we buve Mr. Brekux, (opp.) of N. ¥., anid he bad received a | result On these two points! have no doubt. But you | reigoty; but you vould not pase it ou this question. We | bad a man in Massachusetts , whose name! need not man- | reason to believe that Goveruor Vauce koows that they it many qveation. Well, you would go away from here, the most Revere argument ts ery _i# ao evi) Guementy prociamation ss worse than waste paper letter ofgintroductivn to Colonel Johnson trom Genera) | will observe the limitation, which J endeavored 10 ex- | recognized that you could not pase it. But-one day | thon. Jf 1 paint bim correctly you wil! not fail to recog- | jook to it. ected great attention. He also denounced the attetopt by request bad introduced Mr. Johpeop to the jain, at the epd of the epocb. Now we bavea familiar | Charleston loaded a cannon ana fired it atSumter,and when | Dive bim. It was not the custom of: good painters in the | Says the Raleigh Siandard:—It seems to be ‘eared that Sow making by Geveral Banks, under orders from the | gentiewan from Massachueet Land re - its (ar. Dawes). Mr. Jobn- rase that slavery Js deed—the war hax killet is. Well, | the smoke cloared away the Jine was gone. (Applause.) | Olden time to put the names of their pictures ou them, Ne tbe convention was in believe that the war bes killed slavery, just as @ | That cannon God fc into a thunder bolt and gave it | We sent thie man, who was @ convert, to Congress. | the principals of substitutes will be burried out or tbe President, to institute a State government in Lonisiana, | segsion, and was requested to remain: there till he ad- | typbos kills aman. Bot the invalid will rige from bie | into the President's hand To-day you have exactly the | Somebody made him Speaker, and he vever did an anti- | stare, without giving them an opportunity to appes! to BB an ocotrage. It was evident that Mr. Davis vad ceter- | jourpment, which he did, end was made by the conven. | bed when the fever coases; but he wiil drag bis weary | same power tO protect the negro tp Ubarleston that you | slavery act. He caine back to Massachusetts, os pr ners the re-election of Mr. Liveoln, avd that | 00a bearer of despatches to the government. He (Mr. | life in pain perbape half # dozen years before he falls wte | have io Wanhington, the cemooratic District of Colmnbia. | and we still thought he hed an antislavery | OUF judges to hear their cases, We hope not, Socb @ Sven . Steele) knew othing of the matter. Dut thonght, vnder | his grave, and yet it ie essentially true also tbat typhue | That ie she lesnoo tbat lrovidence addrecsos to this na- | heart: Dut as Governor be never did an anti-slavery act.’ | step would be productive of evil, and evil only. 1 possibio Maryland is to be carried over to the support of | the circometances, the geotieman having bees eudoreed | killed hit. So the rebellion bas killed slavery. Whev it | thou to-day. To-day ompipotence is in your right havd so | Well, Sally, the doctringoi availabiluy being @tii! in the | The Wilmington Journal of tho 19a ult. says tbat 'be Chase. The House finally decided againet Mr. Davie, | by @ bigbly responsible Body of men, Yas eutitied toa | will die peither you por] know. When it will absolutely | to curb the unconverted oligarchy of the South and to | ascendant, and the doctrine that you muet not tell of any | recangrges a gt ‘ng the credentials to the Committee ov Elections | Taif consideration. conse 10 exist depends not upon the past, but vpop ihe | merge tho machinery that produces the future i sch a | divisions In your party. If | should go to Washington , Home Guard of New Hanover, consisting of the \ine- Peferring the 3 t x Mr. Davis, (rep) of Md., said bis motion to lay the | foture, Whether jie taproot, pow cut, sbali be mbso- | shape that it ehatl produce a different set of white me. | (if 1 should have the buppiness to get there), and should | teeuth battalion, will assemble in Wilmington oo the 20th @tdout the instructions to icquire whether there was | credentials on the tuble wae ~~ for the purpoge of rais- | lutely rected up and lett to rot on the turface | Omnipotence is in your hand to-day to do it Before you | soy that | said thie in Cooper Institute, they would say | for a three months’ term of service. e@y government in Arkansis entitling thai SiMe to be {"log an issue beiween bis friend from Massachusetts apd | cf tbe ground, or whether it m to strug | part with it, unless history and the world brand | you should not uy that, for it will create division in the ‘ 4 cision ak ithe Hasse If the gentieman would wove an inquiry ae to | gle out ten, fAfteen or twenty yeark of in. | you ae bypocrites, see to it that you do | party. It ie ae much as to say that Grant should (From the Standard. } ren & ait whether there existed x State goverument in Arkansar or | Valid and dirastrous existence, depende upon the states. | the work thoroughly 10 she centre. (Applacee.) | fortify the northeast corner of bis camp,for fear Bri FUBLIC MEETING. @ENERAL BENTHAM RESTOURD TO HIS RANK, not, nobody would more cheerfully acquieece in the | manehip of the (uture—depernds npon the metbod of re- | We must reoonetruct 60 to plant thie race, typified by, | ebovld think it was weak. The people kept believiug 1 piToR—We, the undersigued commoners, trom age Daving on A ual 7, 1862, been re. | examination than be would; but when the gentleman | constrnction—that is Governor Aikev and Robert Small, the bravest of the’ | this man (Banke) they sent him down to the third uty, soeing that the peopie in fF Kettions of Gene: har a ’ * moved the reference of the ersdentiate olaimmg to be | quettion trom the battle fied to the navy, who broaght the steamer Planter to us, side by fide, | city ip the empire. What did be do’ |.incoln bad thrown are petitioning the Governor to convene the @eced from bis rank of brigadier general of veluBteers, | from the State of Aricansns, avd which eredenimls did | remand it from cannon back to politics, with ability to produce in the future tbe exact counter’ | off the chains of the black wan and Banke picked in order to cal! # conven Abrough a ccnception that be bad broken positive orders | pot appear to be sigued by the oftcers of avy State gov. | may fee the eolution of the problem hang for u coven | part of New Kogland. When that iw done the epocb ebal | up and Chained the man’s fect wt 8 ever to reflect the will and ft Jumes’ Jelund in attacking the robe! works at Reces- | €rnmeDt known Lo the Coitet States, be (Mr. Davie) | veare undecided. and it ie fo tbat respect, and considerod | end. That is.1Be statement of the problem which ought | ab order that no degre should make a won 01 earnestly request you and desired to say that euch reference of ihe credentials car- | from that standpoint. that tbe statesmanrbip of recon. | ro be discusse! to the widest extent of radicaiiem. We | for less than year. and, if once made, he should not quit | Other editors frieadiy to the peuple instrueting sheir @onyille, but no charges baving been preferred agaivet | rie with it the impitcation of representing a recognized | struction becomes-eo vitally wnportant. Now, in talking | have diffculti® enough ahend of us You are pever to | the farm without @ permit (rom the Provost Marshal, | representatives, to announce that there will be & public Dim, the Preeident ordered his case to be investigated by son arrived at Little Rock wh: State govermioent. But we have no State goverument | Of A, ) sball nay perbaps, you may think, too moch of the | see again the uation to which you were boro—the old | Lincoln set*free his limbs and Banks chained his fect. | meeting at rge W. Thomoson's store, om Saturday, the Indgo Advocate Holt, who decided that he bad not bro. | broug! t before us, and there was pone in point of fact. | segro—ot that phrase, freedom or elavery. You might | republic to which you were born ig gone forever. The | Because thie men was available in every instance we | 234 inst., for the purpose of expressing the views and We must Gret ascerta whether there 18 A governmens | think that the time had come when N could be diemiesed | Union as it wae! Why a Gonnecticut ful) of Baroume | ever stopped to ask further questions Therefore | claim | Principles Of the peopio of that portion of Wake conoty. Geo avy ordere, but had instead obeyed them to the beet | Herore we accept the credentials. There mast be such a | from the discnsKion, and tat our dase and our arguinente | could not fod it if offered $1,000 # minute for the sight of | that now, when the ation is setting sail upon asecond | Add we respecttul y suggest to our friends wd constitn- @f bis abiity. He was, therefore, restored to bie rank, wernineDt ae ie recogvived by ali the departmente | shovid take a broader eweep. But I beieve thatsi:! | it. Inthe natureot things ix gone irrecoverably. 41) | Presidentisi career, we have @ righi to know of every | eBl# in other portions of Wake to bold simular meetings and placed iM command of the engineer brigade of the | of the gepera! government, otberwine we wou! ve ied | Our treatment of it ie the pathway opon whieh the white | that is before ue will be utterly different from the paat. mab and to catecbise him Not what you think of chat } and pase such resolutions as they may deem expedient: . jnto politica! €omplieations. ~ rap’s interest apd nationa) ubity and prosperty of that | In the first place, when the epoch ende, uo mat tel slavery—that ie goue, but what you think of the Kin. | 404 we further recommend that a county mecting be held Mr. M. Y, (Opp.) of RY., inquired whetber he un- | uplon turve god will turn for many & year. God bas | we ore for @ mation developed ubcons) dred problems that make up the future ofthe courtry. | io Raleigh, at the Cours House, upon Monday night of deretood the geutieman io Boia that Arkapsas hae beer | linked justic® vo that victim people with the jpevitable | a fires rate military Power. Seaiteret If Linco ie 8 colonizationst | bave a righttoknow 1 | February court week, so Mat our Javoriug frends, mer- ited we a Stale, and must come buck just ux u | hecesmty of the white race w provide its own piace, | millione are to be one million of before be tekes the helm of State Sor anothertfour years. , Chants aud mechauics inay participare, ved into the Upion. ite own peace and its own foture. We are to vee aire, baif fb for wi for apy. | You take a man a the Butler and Fremont stripe, and be JALVIN J. ROGERS, Borbaw bad vot been restored to bis position. Mr. Davis answered the qosetion. The State of Arkan. | Dot the senee of justice merely, but the abecluie | thing élve, They wre to bring back with them to civil 8 of the negro, ‘1 won't beymean suough to ask bim to WILLIAM LAWS, oni Gas WAR DOL eXtinguished. No citivene of Arkansat Lave | prosperity and peace of twenty-fve miliione of white | |ife veo thousand oMcerr whom they have followed, and | fight for me until! give him his rights, and | woul leave P &—We expect some public epeaking 00 the occasion. THIATY-EIGHTH CONGRESS. lost any personal privileges of citizensbip. AState may | men bang on justice to the pegro. And in the | who are their Wols. They areto come back to find the | him wotil! bave given them. (Applause.) J won'l lave ™ " Piker caeeton. exist without a government. The conetitation assumed | world’s Lstory thie ie vo ubeommon right. An ignornvi | law and medicine and counting house moderately | bim anti] give bim the meave of protecting bie risbte. e Newbern Times, a vigorous admipietration paper, | this when it compelled Congress to guarantee a republ). | workman forgot to close a drain under the outermoet | crowded. Where are they torfind places? Hardly any That te bie standard. Well, now, generally copsiceret, | which was suppressed by Brigadier Genera) J. W. Vaimer, | Gam Yorm of government. The Snpreme Court bao said | wall of Windsor Castle. Fever wiled ste way along the where except in polities. Still moore, there mto be that } four years nyo Lincols was a better type of @ man. Lin’ | ie tn nce of Goueral Peek, réeamen te peblention ep Senat | that if a military government wore established in a State | coguarded jine uni)! jt entered tbe chamber of Jy vee | which followed after the revolution of 1812—that milita- | coln was ao honest avii-siavery map. We go to Butler tc | Y Wasmixorox, Feb. 16,1804. | it Would be the duty of the government to abrogate and | Albert, and the islands were clad ix mourning and tue | ry men are to be the available candidates. There is al- | select him—owitting the adjeetive—he was & very equi- cided nem: teinpuiahe: tebclin 25s Clete Temove it. He asked the gentleman from Kentucky | queen woe a widow, Fo God linked wealth and royalty | ways to be thrown into the peale the large vote of the | veca) democrat. (Jaughter.) Bot, as | said, he breathed Fe whether he recognized the governmem under which Col, | to ignorance, intoiearnce and poverty, Aud Fo it ie to be | eoldiers, who will remember them ae partwere iv a com. | the atmosphere of New England and the other the atmos On motion of Mr. Hanvine, (rep.) of Oregon, the bills | Jonnson clauned to be s representative in Congress. im Our problem, ‘The royalty of the whte race if to} ve | mon danger and & common struggle. Suppose Borr or | phere of Kentucky, and they could uot help it. Over ranting lands to aid w the construction of military rowd= Mr. Marioky replied that he recoguired the existing | or die accordingly as it understands and does justice to | Hamilton, when the Revolution clored, came back to New | two such bearte 6 ad the torasgo of the rebeliiou, from tbe Dalles of tne Colombia river to @ point ator | Somstituticn asa form for the government of Arkansas, | tbe victim race ip ite band. (Applavee.) TLerefore ir | York and found the professions too crowded to admit | planting its seeds. What did Butler come vp’ Heeame | A Furtous " : - Dut when a gentleman came hitver ciaiming to represent | talking of this problem I sball necessarily demand stil) | them, and’they were thrown om the surface of political | up, ae bis type of man js, and said —' I won't ask a bend | 4rmy of the Potomac. In justice to General Benbam the President bas recently ordered Judge Holt’s opinion to be Pablinned, w order to correct the impression (hat Genera! Beer the mouth of the Owyhee river, and from @ State, if had doubts upon ubject be would | largely for justice to the negro. When Mr. Somver saye | life—vo food for their ambition but bere. A man ii defend me, | won't ask murc'es to work euy Pity to Whe eastern boundary of sh feter tue question to the Committee on Electrons. tbat slavery i the rebel nd the rebellion w slavery, | Burr, matchless ib ability, incessant iv activity—eunpose | ihem the right to dictate the policy in writing e Crncunan, Feb. 16, 1864, Mr. Davis resume 1, Maintaining that the | vo doubt he speaks av eerential truth, but etill i ie to be | be began, with the love of the soldiers bebind him, that | book of the country.’ (Applause.) The man who shed | A despatch from Chattanooga of the 14th sayn:— pamned TMP STATCIRS OF LIMUTATION. The § pn motion of Mr, Hanns, (rep.) of Proceeded t) cobsider the bi repealing the sta Venitation in certain cises, which was passed, Tne bill establishment of governments i uvder the | remembered that, ae Benton plot ip 1780 which pearly finiebed the Union In 1801) | bis blood bas earned tl soll, tbe education and tne c ty to a fuse of the cocstituiton, which enya Congress, shall | couple ef years before bis deaib, the rebellion w reedy | Why the federal goversiosat would Dave besnes amet. | ability. Whst elscearas it? On tne contrary, tbe ciher | 1¢ 88 ralned furionsly for the past Seeaty-four Bours. guarantee, not may guarantee, a republican form of gov. | tO break out; We sliali gous see tt: ite pretence is | ter of history, vaniebing almoet betore it commeveed. | fet of men would say to the negro:— We have ua. | THe situation of Johnstoa’s army is unchanged. ernment. Itis their dety todoso. With regard to the | slavery, the reality or the troth i@ aristocratic ‘That same m)!\tary spirit bas been the grave ol,free gov sback'ed you, did you ever expect ae mech as that’ We Geoeral “berm in's progress excites great consterostion COBSLItNHOL Of Arkansax, the people in rebellion tore 1 | MetituLone; it i to preserve thie that the etalking | ernmente in all thoe. Op the other ede we nee anotber | bave broken your fetiere thut ia a great gain, more than | among the rebels. | 10 pieces, and the payer spoken of te nota constitution | boree of ‘slavery je mace use of by the great dunger to free government--the accumulation of an | you ever dreamed of. “*Certajuly.”” Now, stay under s Provider that whenever, during the existence of the | until we Bay #0. arigtocracy of the South. Now, we are 26 pear | immense debt, | believe we shal) pay ourcwn debt, and | the barrow twenty years and you will come up some. | Fighty-four deserters came io on Saturday Present rebellion, any action, civil or erim ral, shall | Mr. Hakbixs, Copp.) of Ky., asked whether, m Mr, | in mind thie analysis of the ablest student of thie phase | tbe fouthern debt besides. | ave no doubt of it. | thing in the end. Lincoln saw ® man drowning in the | Tratne rua regularly on ali (be railroads. accrue against persous who, by reasoo of resistance | Davis) judgment, Arkaneas js in or out of the Union? of our bistory—one who, from early \ife, from deep - | Only consider what Congress ie made of. One third of | Atlantic. Butler seized bim by the Bair of hie bead and ao fo the execution of the lawe of the Cr | “Mr@favie would say Arkaceas te in the Union @o far | terest, from close observation, wae competent to under | men of bietoric ambition, Jooking down the fatore, aox- | never loft him unui! he planted him on Plymouth R Sates or ihe interroption Of the ordinary course of | that we are bound to ma:ntain that no forme without the | stand it: and it je the difference between Northern and | vs to leave aname that wil) float down the tide of | nigh and dry, the equal of aman. [incoln | Bl proceedings, cannot be served with process | eobstaoce ehall coctrol her citizens So fer ne | Southern civilization to day w maker the rebelliot. | Lime ou tbe honor of the good to come. No fear for them | t the line of high tide and ea commencement of Buch action or the arrest of = we are reajoneibie abe must be goverved by | fully etated. It ie because the Sovib hater labor and: | Apother one third, honor trusting to come bome | six hours, and you will be stuck in the m gon. or whenever after Fuch action, civil or criminal, | republican forms, abd not by traitors who may | Gespiees \t, and because the North ie exsentiily demo. | co that they may lock their negbOue inthe face, live | you caouct drown.” abter) J di and Stone- Bball bave accrued h person cannot, by reason of | claim to be the Legislature of Arkansas. The recog | cratic, the working men’s temple, that the twe cobere. | reepec lives and sleep iv quiet gravee No fear for Ww o say he will. man at Knosville-The Situation Un- feeb resistance of the lawe or such jnterraption ef ja- | nition of Arkaosus asa State must be by all bran bes of | Now, briefly to state che pathway apd the gon!, which if | them. Anotber thrd whe have wriggied ther way to | Very ppose he does. Harriet Martineau once met changed, &c Gicial proscedings, be arrested or served with prover? | the gorerament, not by the Senate and House of peace, Would be to sey that South Caroline can aved | offtee by every equivoca) meane porsible to devire--the #itting down ob the door steps crying. eed, a Cimcinwani, Feb. 16, 1864 NEWS FROM EAST TENNESSEE. nos | Arvivalof Generals Schofi for the commencement of the action at the time during | 8 nlatives separately, pot by the procit coon with New Y uses The 1 | Inet time they may expect to bold offes, What baw y 6 id, ‘have you hurt yourhead? Don't @hich eaid pereon shall so be beyond the reach of lege! | President, not by a grave usurpation you bave made bi hing man’s State, tht ect | (fal) beck upon? Nowsto thie third comes your §’ ery, it will be well to-morrow.’? “1 won't cry to-mor- | Generals Schofleld and Stoneman arrived at Krosvite ‘ooees. Kal! Hot De deemed OF Laken as aDY part of the | without the encroactiment of executive power. Jou bave given the f jon of her State ond potter | York Merchants. who have got to day in thei strong | row,” was the reply of the youngster. So when he b: on the O(n. ime limited by law lor tbe commencement of eich ac | Mr. Bovsweut, (rep.) of Mase. said be had a fettied | inte the hands of Mogeachusetta; and vntil you have | boxes millions of poles of eonfederme paper, worth | grown, I won't complain, but until he recoguizes the ; ‘Tho situst: Fast T nanged. Mon. | conviction that Arkaveas aud the other co-operating | done that, the epoch is not euded. You may sholimb | voubipg, but keeping it Ul! they ean go shares with those | negro’® right—mark you, that is the Fremont and Butler ho situstion in Fast Tennessee was unchang ATRRY GUE! | States in the confederacy had uo legal existence ae States | hatte! elavery—you may bring the States back conse) | who wi) make 1 sometbivg. | bold with your Kurnals, | word—I will complain, (Applause.) When the negro | Unton citizens report that Genoral Longstreet bad Snmnwan, (rep) of Ohio, intro: petition from | wn, dated into Congress, but until you have deriroyed the | who told us ex or seven years age that the debt of ove | regiment charged at Port ie wherry Plains, women of (bio, praying for the repeal of the law re ancon, (Opp.) of N. ¥,, wished to know whether | element of divergence, you have only changed (Chaitanooge | \ittle foreign Power, whch would not be age drop in the | enough to couler benefits apon the black man. It would ing the rendition of siaver, and [or an amendment to ates ceased to exist by virtue of their recension | inte the Senate chamber. (Applause) ibe bettie feild | ocean, was ebie to check the mareb of repubiicaviem tn | exbavét ite garbered wealth simply to give him bis due. constitution so that tt can be no louger coustrned to | ordinances’ If #0, be would like to knuw at whet period | Is DOL e very exceiient rchoo!noure, but ite Jere ripen | tbe Empire Stave and pot back your pelltica! progress. | Now it ie the Lincoln party that talks of benefit to te flavery. Kelerred to the Colum) ttee on Slavery and | of tine they coased to exist and got out of the Union’ quick. Politics in @ very slow toacber, ad teaches | How will the (bcosand ‘miiiions of deliare beld. tn the iw. | cegro. ‘The word | wont io béar is the right of the men. Mr. Bovtwei! replied that om the continent neither a | more tricke than anything cise = (Applause) | ep irntion Of foreign capitaliete. OARAL AROUND NIAGARA FAILS COHODY Hor a <tate ever exited excepting by the will ofthe | A® long as war lasie the nation oa rapidly Wher arletoeracy, afleet your banks and contro) y merono. | to grant ther, for ve the Mr. Doowrie. (rep. of Wis. presented a resolution from | people, and that no State could cease tO exist ae & State | ever the war ceases wo go back to the conparatively | vile currency, while our democrucy ¥ too wie to pilot | ture and the foundation of Seseaee of Commerce of Milwaukee, recommending | exvept by wil) of the people, If flow change that preceded. for, se | beve frevoentiy | us throngh that dark and stormy pigbt of militagy am- | passed and ignored, bearing fruit in rebellic DitieD, Abd the temptations.of foreign furded controllers, | eon to the nation that bereafter, if tt hi eon, the nation is not rich | Tennessee Raliroad runotog to ‘The Arabia's Mail Boston, Feb. 16, 1864, ed and wovided by ibe | gro—the whole of them. It ie not properly in cur Bande | The maile fur Furcpe per steamship Arabin close « bod « ” ‘Phe essence, the na pur government, hitherto t twoive o'clock M. to-morrow, bat ebe wil) vet sail about three P.M. construction of a ship channel around Niagara Falle, | topal power of the people troubled you with sayibg, thie ie bo new bartie in IK | ace - --——— ~ 4he American ede, Relerred to the Military Commit. | you have to admit t whatever may be the covetitu. | the South, fented Al the ballot box, fell beck oj oo the | ti!) We'Khow not whether oor cbildreo will record the | it m® t plant it om the broad basie of the | United States District Court. . Bnd Ordered t be printed ; fiona} right. the fact still remaing that the | bullet. the epoch reeme come wher. with verdict wbether it eurviver ® pure and simple demo | recoguition of the manhood. of every man and every Before Hon. Judge Nelson. INDIAN AT EATS, power i e people to declare whether | ebe wi give up the butiet, she wii) no ve, it will be the firet iwetanee Mm | race, When tbat is dove, peace, ont)! it is FINAL DBCRRS OF DISTRIBUTION IN PRIZE, Mr. Doowrri® imtroduced a bit) to amend the aet to | they shal) exist Beh, There te be power ma |" GI ‘ ie batik, the i ne rger rat Fen, 18.— The Cwited States ve, the Steamer Patras a Fegulate trade and imveroourse with the Indian tribes and | the obverse to create the State of Arkansas and to fend | covered w blood and fifty thousand deac men, before | Ibe (evitable diftiewity lies before us jot ue clear ever! another campaign, WDat < Se preonve peace on tbe frantiers. Keieried to the Com: | reprosoutatives hore unless by the cupgent aud wil of | be reaches the Gulf, but euill the iesders of shese men, | other cbstanie out Of the path tnd. mane every olber ten you gone vet of nen, anxious to reconstruct, say that he above named vessel and cargo were captured on Jndian AMuire {he people themseiver. All law was againet secession. | w thelr heart of hearts, recegnize that, uniers come bond | element in the future aurely upon cur side | contend | whoever goes into that tomivating convention with three rec 2, he Usited Sates HIV punishes the furniabieg of spirituous liquors to | But whan an individual commits the act of self destruc. | outaide wtrengibens them, their power gone forever | shat Mr Jincolp, ip December, derended to sbare ite | or four or balf @ doren States, ie eure of the noma. | Of Charleston, to May, 1562, by the United Si steam- a eo by imprisonment not exceeding two yeart, a five | tion and hie body lier before you, it if in vain to reason | There i@ vo human probabiiny that (ber figbigis for vie | rovereignty With uncovverted Receerioniam. it will oot | tieo, That i polities, On the other hand stands capl- | er Bienvilie, and browgbt to this port for adjudication, tl bitte Let every man beetir bimnelf, therefore. sce | done, war in dinguise. | Srecyes | | three hundred dollars, and the forteitare of | that unver the law he bad no right tp do it. Juet so with | Lorveit w only for terme. TmURt giv iden | be sik ab Amnesty from ibe lips of tbe yar of Kukes, | tal, ee to “ eae was tried before Judge Petts, in the Pistries : Nquore ane nalt 10 tye tnlormer. Arkansas, be by her own act bad censed Wo exiet ue a | of dictating ihe iaw to tbi belt of the ceutirect, aithongh | wbie obly meade, wetting “the, Russten. cusnnt tive Wea Re have nee eee ee okitve Ue PIRDLALH De On Te vend a decere of confemnation entered, iu Neem j On motan et en Laan Fen renege Blate in the American Union Although the State by the | they wil iil) fight fiercely for « piace | plough the land be dog not own Bot the ameesty from | fold on their iovertment at Port Royal: give us ber, t aud cargo. No appeal baying { mot iy) ane, deep.) of Kaosar, al! prior or. | action of ite own people bar ceased to exist, the conrtity. | upoo it Under that eiatement recon the lips of Mr. Lincoln to Louisiana and Tennessee means | Keep your troope don’t give them to Sherman. boeo 0, & decree of dietributios of the i dere were = and Ge Senate proceeded w tbe | tion rtill extends over tbe bh ye ‘co/mpaired as before | Sovth Carolina, the eounter par ofoe UP APG Bare the rovereignty oF the oanon There ne for Keven years, aod keep the black proceeds there, amounting to $52,400 82, woe entered, avon ot Ul Se eck pent « portion of Ube State | the eet of reversion was passed, The Stuteof Arkansas | Noibing short that if peace. What ia it wrapped | men bave nothing to do bot barge their min men | them ae apprentices, Gi in Noverabar, 1862, iv the District Court. Aa sppeal was the use gol: pa! African descent, Mr. | can agaw aint ax a Btate of the Union and be sdmitied | up i that phrune? ti euch man owning bie house, wilb tery dmbanded, bent p heme, th bow. and we will pluck @ fo by th ante of (ue vearel to the Cireuht € mondo w tong apwech on tbe aubsact to all the rights of other States, This ft keboo! boure behind bim apd @ ballot «p bis riEbt band their wealth —yawmbed, — their lony © them to wbift for themselves arrmed the decree ot se ivety LNUHPAAR OF PAY OF OPIORED THINS, ech of the peaple in tbeir vight mind re.) The North paid io 1776. in defanee of bu band. rod wealth On the other, crowd the gover! you sul these have nothing in 6 United States District Attorner their ebancer upon Providence. When | rapid reconriroction, endangering the sincerity, the per f tnd Aistribation of the proceeds ei” but one reliable government, it im where Ld boos wir (ben —— a, the freeeiion force aad ooercion ip arrangement i ing Mr. Coevan's amendasent ‘DR AI) Boldiers | government He w however, hesitate to give av y mm ith own band to prefect | Rotier # the fag my Ne r “ { Iie. therefore, amounting 0 $20.022 69 ‘The Bienviile is the only vesvel tho Fame ann of the rervice the Bane rank, pay and | affirmative vole vot! =e © O1Vi! power to protect jteelf harope toys row de to Hoe te only mertten pm the outy be ae Mat nes br gg og to give this | which shares in the prive. ‘The Patras was recent y eo.d moote found the majority of the people willing to | Poverty. « 1) be RNRIONS, 1, winder, will lake core ul th | struct (het POM en HON the bor by the Varebal for $34,000, but. haviag been in cu of the manhood of | wetter rerour attention. Why that “be Mr. Wirgon, (vep.) of Hare., propesed an amendment, Before equa! and exact jnetice to bot bieek and white, | Europe saya, lenorance, don't be anxioue. 1, weelth the poor White man #Od (be . | OverbAng Dy « Ch appes! for nearly two years, the amount for dietr giving ail soldiers in wud United States sereice the eaine | sod wre satiefod thine 50 al) periicalare the people mead | whigh m but'ancther nawe for cuiture--will woke core c! | Soul (HOC Are wartiOg en Provence teary wen eee | Ly the cor eet et ustee of ecare nutorn child: | Hontwes sone $4,000 lew than It otberwive would have x Barnite, clothing, ewolumente aod on aad from | to be loyn! to tbe goveroment The existence of buman | it: thet m, the whole world appreviicrd 10 soolth snd | oes, who WoOME be Wiking (o recupmruct on tine biew | | that oe gull Of parienal tempration—the national been uh 2, 1804. Mr, Wilkow raid be oper Hlavery being inenanpatibie with & repndlican form of | wikdom. Amerion xnyr, (nko yoursolver oul ol the lb! Mi pul 1 aN OMNIDOR and by , ie onongh to appeal the stoutest heart, and. sh ray Before Hou. Judge Betts 4 . ause affer the Ist «€ March the benefiv o ROveroment, 1 woe the Gary of Congrene to reject ery | Of sham windom and weelth each mon wn each Clase pO OOH VORE MON bY COMyonr . wherber hs vuder ® Block The United States ws. the Steamer Ana avt Carco.- A unties Will ceaRe and she ho woly wonld be one be State presenting a cohstitucion whieh eapetens it hotde io ite band the power to protect iiseil vad tw | ond Koondhadeot Foland did tot. they did we be vauion Which | fibal deeree of distyloution was this day entered in (be iy ok j Mt. Kennan, (opp ) OF N. ¥ , beheved st wan the Joty | giver iho eduwetion lo know how lo preiert Ilse ther mine Th tem murvelions thing that fh Wib the pegre on hun riot Court, in the ease of the steamer Ann nud cargo. Mr Dave, (opp) of Ky . properds & long amendment. | of all loyal men to endeavor w prererve tho tinion. He | that m democrncy (Appinuse ) That New | Hankers OF Ob are Kecomeioniat ipled by the pyejdcoot the proceed 417, and the Serquebavus, {t provitey Abat, fret, ihe government divband ord 46 | would appeal to gentiomen @ say whether hey were | York—that in New Kogined ot hed out they at Hot eho; cay treble the crop ote t in Wwe Kavawt Are ail eolored troops, aud of tach @ok red men aro ow | dolOg Ovorything to thus ond wher Khey were mpending | wot be for u tomy time, the Bat break up He tad . the debt ow thirty ot phe t 4. the Sloop Angetina and Cargo — ed He shall bo ne loborers and Leometa sce! tbat the | NOUFE 20d daye in dincumeing queagions whieh Covld BO beouteary the South In modelued SWeHty Uronmend we ' The fin of deteibativn €f Ube proceeds 0 thie yalownory of FAVER employed Wo these p Peohien ebell | postpeugd, and whe wor if gore pasting throot. F aumai seems the white h ieee Wan sig + Petia and entere bo publ a juet ¢ 0 Jnat in tho wor yice, bes maxtor shat + won a elaye Mt | Oniag thd soxtiuetion of baton Ho ta'l vate moe] Lhe people, PUrCO Mout iy Ne Aimd Dia We facie: 4b Dwi Fash Heol mite dopier trict Court Fhe Gourer width) vod The 10 of ] mle@, and took doya ont " A thie Comqrens Htva 2 he fede ot Lhe sieht awl to work aud h Hat We nate won topen bis bert aut tele bet whee y ley f woarly © ary

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