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I ' * * * w * r - ^ %fii iii 111 iI~Ti iitTi I : rdr ^ - - i BY F. M. TRIMMIER Devoted to Education, Agricultural, Manufacturing and Mechanical Art*. s-2.00 IN ADVANCE VOL XXIII. SPARTANBURG, S. C., THURSDAY, MAItCII 15, ISGC. NO 7. f . * \ T II K (gianmi. ftMim&r JP IS PUDLI8IIKD E V K n V THURSDAY MOllIVIIVG A T Two Dollars (Specie) in Advance. RATES OF ADVERTISING. One Square, First Insertion, SI ; Subscqacr Insertions, 75 cents. j rruiu wic niciropomnn ivcroru.j RIU Arp lo Mr. Tammany Hall jWiu.kdokvii.t.k, Feb}-. 1SGC. Df.au Tammany : You arc a gloriou old Teller. You've pot a heart?a gron big heart?and if you were hero 1 woul exclaim in the Inngwago of my unkl Hilly, "put your hand in mine, honey, ain kiss me." Wc are whipped at Inst, ol< Tammany. Wc rebs arc conquered, sub ducd and subjugated, not by bayonets o j bullets, but by your friendly overtures, you manly speeches. You and Sunny Soull Cox and Company have captured us, takci us prisoners, and we are now as dosile a we have been hostile. Dident I tell yoi that wc would meet yuu on halfway grown Dident we strcteli forth our arms lor syni jiuiiij, unu woaviii ?'u auuui 10 turn awa in defiance and despair for the want of it 41 We spread the mantle of oblivion over the put If you of the South hare the spirit to accept, ire < the North hove the heart to tender you the otfuea < kindness. We will help you phut again the see trhose perfect leave*, jotters und fruits shall I yours with ours to enjoy." Did Mr. Cox say that, old Tammany nnd did you clap your hands and sa "onirkhorc 7" 44 lie are to-(Liy or, ; / d against the contentio concerning the black ra v, and are loohiiui fortcar to the white race for the welfare nnd greatness a our country And dident you say that, too, old Turn 111307 ? and dident all hands jewbilco am exclaim "that's it, them's 'cut, that's tin doktrine, the nijigcr may be a bi^lish, bu the white man is a whale." And diden you all take another drink on that, Mi Tammany ? Wish some o! us rebs hai been there, old fol, jest to havetcchd turn ^ biers with you. Thank the Lo-d that then are jrood men North of Dixey. Thero's i heap of 'em here, Mr. Hall, and thpir heart aie juttipin and a lminpin and a thitmpi. as big no yours. Their hearts were castles and their buz tins sitadels, but you hav< taked 'em. Dout be alarmed, tlont reseed <iont take bark nutfr.n; bo kulni and screen and wo of the rebellious South will \v ip out the last spark of hatred to sueh as yuu M e arc now wipin away the curves tua were upon our lips. We arc risin up lVon our humiliation, :.nd like strong men an shakin the dust from our garments. Thiol ot it, Tammany. What a glorious sigh to sec a brave peepul lifted up?a w In h nation of white folks rekonsilcd. W ha spirit, what gost, what inspiration told yo? how to reach us? How did you knov that wc was weak whore we was stronir. ii the same secret corner of our buzzums ? You've got um Tatnmany, ami we'll respond to you, we'll reinforce you. Wcvi f said some hard things, Mr. Hall; we'vi tried to skorch. and l>li^trr and excoriate but, you see we were guarded, gored b; bulls?Trutnbulls and Republican bulls 1'hoy hollered and we pawed dirt. The; punched us in the cage, and we growl-, d They put tax under our saddles and Wi kicked. What else could we do ? .Jos think of it, Tammany. Ruined ami desu late, the people in tnouruin and the! homes in ashes?no luxuries, no comforts no Christmas worth a eus, no Santa Claws no nuthin. Could we lick the hand tha laid us low i Nary time?no, never U'Ktln trn icoc I.. t~ ~ - ,, ...iw nv IIU.7 Pli u-rllllp 111 I|7?u I 1 <MII (lit the wreck, to breath the air above us, t< take an invoice and sec if there was cnu left to live lor, our enemies were a shoutii hit him, kick him, smash him agin. We were then at the bottom, Tammany Wc didn't know there was any lower deep but our enemies were huntin, and they stil arc huntin Bomo deeper pit to put us in ^ and somo pcudulum of I'oe to swing am cut us. Well we aint heathens, we'vi been to mectin, we've seen liiisshior.ery? we've got churches, and sermons, am hymn hooks ami prayers. We've got pi ous old men and wimincn. and bravo hovs ami maidens who arc finished all tho w,r up like the corners of a teiuple. (lod l?le.? em Tammany, partikler them last, lor ii connection with tlicm are centered tin hopes of posterity and tho jrys ol our life We've all got hearts, old Tammany, am there's many a good Samaritan among u who wouldcnt pass you by ami go over t< the other side. Wc'vo got charity, too nnd long suffering, and patience, and hop in abundance, though we cant believe then lladikals will walk right straight into lion ven without knoekin at the door. Tha doktrin of elcktion is a powerful tiling Tammany, but as shoro as you are horn i looks a little unconstitutional t<> us for then fellers to enter tho celestial city. Thc_ may pass amendment cnuf to do it, aud rekon that's what they aretinkcrin so loi?-4 ut the old dokumcnt for ; hut somehow or other when I hear of one of em a dyin, my thoughts natcrrally liavc a downward ten- ( dcncy. I can't help it Tammany. 15ut maybe we'll get over sieh feclins. ; My wife says we will nttrnchilc. Wo arc j all right towards you, old Hall, and our legislature have been tryimr lor about two months to harmonize things generally,and I any reasonable man ought to be satisfied ! i with the efforts they have made. Hut we cant satisfy them P.adiknts, I dont care ? what we do. We clcktcd M r. Stevens and licrshcl Jolinsin to the Senate, and they arc mad about that. They wanted .John ' llill and Jecmes Johnsin because they was I 'nion. Well, now, Mr. Tammany, its b"t^ tor always to take men who have done t sumcimn Mian u on who liavo done nuthin. j Mr. IIill delivered his farewell address hefore he was bet, and he said he would like to know why we sung hosanna to Andy I Juhnsin, who fought agin us, and yet we wont clekt him who dident. That's whats j the matter Joshua, il I may he allowed to apostrophize you, you didnt take no side at l' all. You say you can take the test oath and git in. Well 1 dont sec how exaktlv. You run for (iovernor in sixty-three, and you. writ a letter agin rekonstruction, and y compared the old union to a porcrLiin vane that trait Lrolcc, and eouldent never be 1 mended agin?no never, v And don't you know if you'd been elektc 1 you would have had to take the oath of \ olfiee, and be swore to support the (Jonsti\t tution of the eonfcdcrato State, so called, </ now deceased. Hut you are smart Joshua, " and it was funny what you said to the (ieneral that night, when he axed you if you would have taken the na?h. You ) paused Joshua, for nearly a minct. It was u urny mi* cjursnon, censuierin tlx- puree" lain vase that was broke. I don't blame , you for pausin, my friend. Finally, says you, "Well?(icr.eral?I?I?dident? much?expekt?to?l>e?el.-k tod." Dully ,] for you, Joshua. Hut new about that see2 saw bisncss you spoke of. Von said in your t speech that you was playin seesaw in polit tix, and if your end ol' the plank went >. down in (jeor^y it would up in Wa.-dii inoton, by which I suppose yoaoneant that . you was ready to swap ends j.-st to suit P your pckulinr secumstunres; and t'^nt'-i wllllt'a ftlA II nff.il* n.ri.. v - 1 ? ' 4 J ...V . M.i? . I. I ??U I III V i* ? been ace-sawin ti.o long :in< 1 changin ends ^ i too often. Twnscnt no time to be swappin , 1 hos -es my friend o I Hut sec here Joshua, Mr. Marsh ill may be a clever reporter, but lie treated you ? badly. lie's lei t out a heap of your speech, lie aint hail printed that seesaw liger at 1 all, anil it was, 1 assure you. a most beauti? j tul uivtaior of speech An 1 hec< h-ft out , them little sparks ot Southern patriotism [? | which you cniittc'l. llows.uncver, maybe ; these tilings wouhl have been in the wav f | ot the Hoslmtj!' n an 1 >! the -av iw. I ii , it II you my friend, where v< u w tin e ' t in your remarks. You "-.ii 1 that if we I , didn't clckt you uov wc might want yon ; c hereafter, arid we could'n git you. hunt , worry yourself on our "akkount. l)ont eross the bridge before you git. t-> it. It will be I . time enut", Joshua, for yuu to refuse when ? ( we ax you. We haveut been running you e ; down to give you oflis, and we aint a goin I to. I>o you sec-saw away n you plank, and take good care that you dont fall oil \ our speech was sorter spiteful, Joshua,! ^ ' ami if reduced to its gum would read about j i, thus : "Hoys, I'm a whale, I am, and I'm L> a prophet, and if you dont clckt tne to the ' t Senate, I'll go to Washington and give you [ j the devil." r Well, we dident elect him, Mr. Taintnat ' ny, and the devil may come. In the lan- j ' ! gwagcol l'atrick lienry, "let hint come." i t | 1 repeat sir, sur, " let him conic." There ! t j was another candidate, Mr. llall, whose , t namo was ,leetns Johnsin. Well, 1 like , , ! deems purty well. Ho dident run nobody f I down, nor put on airs. 1 must have voted , , lor him it' lie had lived in the State, and I ' hndent liked llershcl better. The truth is, 1 was part ial to .I coins for his " old lang sine. lie was a powerlul war horse ) I in sixty-one. I low glorious lie figured at i | the Columbus war mcctius. lie encour| aged the boys amuzin, and ho beat anybody . i a gcttiu volunteers. Ilow proud he was it id him that night, when he and Colonel I I Sims made friends on the stand, and the j Colonel ]>ind a scivshion cockade upon i Jceins* coat collar. He then got inspired y and spoke for two hours in words that s ' breathed of ditches and death, and was n full of the spirit of '7t>. His watch word L? i were " JJrnm'iiif ami trccshton," and he .. I voted lor 'em both. Oh he's a whale in 1 gettinupa war. Alas', lie were, si/,- s> m* \j?r then, but he are sik transit now. So 5 mote it be, Mr Tuinmany; I couldcnt help i it. llowsuiiicver, it don't matter tuueh, 1 ,x rtipLni) t'ui* wAf'cii ##/?* I .i.?. u .... ?- II..UU.I. riMlliaill, i and tiny arc a high roostin family, shoro. j i* Now you understand the trouble, Mr I t Tammany, about this election. Wo was j huntin lor two lull tdood I'nion men who 11 could find their way to Washington and a back without a way bill, and we oouldent y find cm. They nint in tho State, I tell j I you. So we fell back upon tho old land I marks, ivc arc ridin Hie old wagin bosses, .% and our opinion is, that Andy wont raise any row in partiklor about it. If he docs wc don't earc a darn. pill ahp. " 1*. S.?1'tn gcttin (o be highly loyal, Mr. Hall, 1 know 1 mil; for a idler trio?l ^ to sell me a little nigger to-day, and I at wouldcnt buy him. 1 heard of a Lill that's cumin up to bind out the niggers for 1?1? years, and 1 a'm agin it. Darned if I'll y vote lor more than f?0. You can tell Thad. j] Stevens of these hopeful signs. P. A. The Pastoral of the HI. t; Church. Mouth. ^ liAIiTl.MORE CONFF.ltF.NCr?JUDGE DONU's p, OPINION. Last week the Kev. Mr. Clcmm, Pastor w of the Methodist Kpiseopal Church in Al j cxamlria, Ya., delivered an address before t] the congregation of which he is pastor, st against w:e l'astoral Address of the late Haititnorc Confcenco of the M. K. Church, c South. After claiming that the Conference vj had ocen influenced by an unchristian and |1( uncharitable spirit, he also introduced ,l( Judge Hotid, of Baltimore?a brother of (j( I one of the authors of the l'astoral Address w | ?who gave a short account of the distur- r< I bailees which occurred in the Church in 1844 and 1801, and their causes. The I Alexandria (Jar. tte says that Judge Bond "admitted that his portion of the Haltimore J Conference, at Staunton, Va , ha J commit- ^ ted a fault and a sin in agreeing to ignore ' : the subject of slavery?in relinquishing a j ?' principle for the sake of peace. That in ( 'j uiui cum ere ii cc no Had acted with the , l; majority, ami had gone further than an ' honest mar. ought to go. lie said that the history of the I'nited States, and the histo ' 1,1 ry ol the Methodist Church in the Unite 1 st States, were parallels; that as there could he 110 peaceable secession of a State from a the Union, there could he no peaceable fJ secession of one portion of the Church w from another?that if a member of a firm did not like his association he could ijuit it 'll ?there was no law to compel 1 him to stay, w hut lie could no' take the property of the ; firm with him; the Church property in tlie 111 \ alley of Virginia belonged to the Haiti- w more Conh renee, anil that Conference a> meant to retain it?supported hy the wliole i '' power of the Northern Church. so called. i 1,1 an 1 assisted by the She>ih s writ, if iicees- 'l sary, the soldier s sword, if essential. He read extracts from the 1'astoral Ad NV dress, c unmerited upon theui severally, und said lie was af'uid the d ?I was leading its authors into the unknown paths of the j (] wilderness, and it they persisted in the i >sj course they would sec the end of Christian ti forbearance and brotherly love, hut in t of ^ the strife they were engendering ; that j.* peace was the mission as ;:;ncd ,o ul1 true PC t'hrisfians, an-1 that its iurlherance could jt he ctiected more etlicaciously by other w mains than following iihnur's raiders tij when tlmy stole greenbacks on tlie lino of d the Italtim re and Ohio Kailroad. In alluding to the paragraph from the : j1( I'astoral A ldros?, which cohtains the word | j; "They take our t'hurchcs by force,and in d stall their ministerial agents by libs of sol- \ t| diers; they imperiously ordered our fitm- ,,, lies Irom their homes, and bring strangers c3 to occupy them; they extrude congieua- n, tions, and force them to anionics .] and to woods and tields," he said no in- s;( stance oi the kind had occurred to his jn knowledge, lie related an anecdote of a |? member ol ln-> Confei nee who oneo t rid . Hj another inmher, afflicted with the br oi- ri, chittis, that he had latter "Cough i.j> the di negro he > 'Id two or three years ago," and [C Concluded by as.-uring tln-e j>res< tit that 1 ... liked t>r disliked, applauded or condemned, I t)j tlio 1 >altluioro Conference meant to preach , tl the {jo.--pel in the Method-st Churches i:i | the Valley ol \ ir^iiun. Mr. Cleiinn then announced that a Committee would he appoint) i to draw up an s address in answer to flu !' uto.al Address, w to hi- distributed throughout t!io length and breadth of the land, and alter sinyiiiLt tindoXolou'V, tin1 congregation dis'eiscd,? / '.(rrtliui'i/ / J.ri>n#s. Iw ^ ti m I in I \I>I\"it i vi. KKsroxsiniLrrv. ? The moment a man parts witl: moral indepen- * donee; the moment he ju of duty not from the inward voice, hut I'roin the inter- , est* and will of u party; the moment lie commits himself to a leader or a hody, and ? winks at evil because division would hurt 0( the cause; the moment he shakes of his ]j particular responsibility, because he is but I one of a thousand or million hy whom the evil is done?that moment lie parts with j his moral power, lie is shorn of the sin- j? gle hearted laith in the right and the true. Ho hopes Irom man's policy what nothing ' but loyalty totiod can accomplish, lie i substitutes coarse weapons, forged by man's ' wisdom, lor celestial power.? Chunninij. I ll ^ When (Vsar was advised hy his friends to ho more cautious oi the security of his person, mid not walk among the people sa without ari.-s, or any one to defend him, ca ho always replied to the admonitions, "He is that lives in fear of death, every moment he feels its tortures, t will die but once." oil > Korllicrn Ewtlmute oft he Con- .4 C'edoriile LcadcrN. Wc extract the following from a long iview of the late war in the New York lT1 itizcu, a Republican paper, edited by bi oh Ilalpinc, late of the United States w riny: DAVIS. ^ Let tliosj loyal gentlemen, disciples of Ir. Abbott, who worship the character ol onaparte, make some consistent homago ?the brilliant directory of .J efferson 1 >avis. it th were men of destiny, and the m " * I I ' I of the survivor is by fur the nobler. 1 1 the fal'm angels whoso d.irl. plumage ' vept from our Senate Halls, he ma<lc tiie ! ':1 lost courtly adieu. Of all the traitors he las most entirely in earnest. Ofalldccis ?' in his was the sagest, the promptest and J* ic most enduring, lie, only, ot the con c' urators, felt that his quarrel with the cr 'iiion was irreconcilable, and stood by his ipital till the last, and has never yet ad- lH ised submission. His captivity has been 11 littled by none of Bonaparte's querulous- 111 l'ss. Blind, and grey, and wlisted, his oi ^millions are narrowed to a casemate, 1V hilo the Republic lie would overthrow 'll laches to the silent oceans. I. I.E. In Uobett Lee the same austere 1'rovi- s . nee, to purify our republicanism, shatter- ' 1 our faith in traditional respectability. ro he heir of Washington went with the rest Wi the new chivalry, and with ten times ic talent of that great Kabius, crushed u. ?.u.>i>ivii'iuui umi icsivr r^i'l'UiauillllCS, ()j II lie uict in Grant u man without a pel- (j, :rce. He was the equal of Wellington ( , i manoeuvring great bodies of troops upon p| noil interior force.". The Duke at Water ^ 0 fought his whole army upon a mile and (>v quarter arc; but bee, at Cold Harbor, r live <lays presented a solid line of battle 0_ hercvur we sought for him, till his whole jt ice seemed manoeuvred by the win!: of l|] is eye, and ev ry salient that we touched^ , as a corps. While the fortifications of p ieh.r.ond stand, his name shall evoke ad- W( iraticn. The art ol war is unacquainted :n ith any defence s> admirable. Splendid ,ir 1 were the triumphs of his engineering, j( ie vi':! >ri:s of his infantry were his host , r umnier ts. I5ut ovet the gb. rv of his ta ' * at fell a *dr dow as eternal as his mem? | !0 y?the Irown of a resolute Democracy, . hose sacrifice was longer than his art. j nl STt ART. i cr "t>( . ! in the cemetery ot Hollywood at >1' io* grave of Stuart -a space without a , re lait. Ho revolutionized the cavalry t o ros of our time, an i wn-< in dash aid His- ci >!ujonos.s tl'.o I'rincc Kupcrt ot the West. a or rest and Stoneun", Morgan and <?rior pi in, Mosehy and Kiljiatrick woro lii.s im atois. lit! inaugurated the gr.iud raid li( hicli taught Sheridan the nothinphiess o.' 1 Si stance, and citobolJcnrd Shcrtuau to tear t ic continent like a pocket map. j -d Th 1\ rvid imagin itinn <n' the Southern m *op'o, demonstrated in f. its of romance, "*k? Stuart's, made tin m, during tin- war, t"-1 to groat suggestive captains. 'Ihiy built [ ai ie first iron clad, made the first <d the 1 pt re at ri les, and under Stonewall Jackson j ca teeuted the carlh -t ol the great iii'antrv ui arches. L>ut the colder adaptability < t j pi ic Norili developed every hint from the c*r out It into a perfect system. Tho espci- ( iiciit ot the Mcrritnae has grown to the th ictator, the Pundorberg and the Iron- M' ilcs The engineering assiduity of Beau j ? gnrd, iiuiratcd by the North, has marked ur ie camps of our nrmias il the pro- A cting mountains had followed our col- ? inns. But it insy he Uoubtc 1 that any 'h vision commander has yet arisen to rival ie splendid iulantry pen ins of Jackson j JACKSON. As life was master of manoeuvre, Jack- ' ' t . _ ' . i CO >n was the great captain of aggressive | arfare. lie combitud tho cunning and >r 10 boldness of Napoleon. To cover his j rcat movement by the i'ank in lie ' ^ i<l not hesitato to fight Pope's whole army ; itli a division, ar.d tho celerity of his j jlf] arch up the Shenandoah, to appear again ; ( j, i the field of Ibili Kun, was only crju died y y the energy ot Ins nttack. lie moved ^ i fan try with the speed of horse, and havig hurled three groat commanders ba. k (.'in tl c Old Pominion, died before the istre of its arms had diminished in that II-ill t?C Vlrfnrv uli.ui r. 1n\ir.??n 1. .1 nn ..... ..v?- . f ?? ..V *? IV . I uiyu lit i ,i;muii VIS 1, inaccu, the proportions of :i nation j 0 was the most rcpuldiean of rebels, .stern i jj id simple as any Roundhead, and this i> j , hy we hold his memory greeni 1 than tlut ( t ' his companions whoso defection to the nion was augmented hy their treason to |*( >piilar institutions. There were other personage identities itli this grand historical doionce, hut these e the threat statures? 1 >avis, Lee, Jackson, -| [uart, Ucauregard. |jt ?? hi It is not what we earn, hut what we M1 ,vo, makes us rieh. It is not what we so t, but what we digest, makes us fat. It not what we read, but what wc rcmein r and reflect unon, that makes us learn t ri 1 hi Striking Letter from Kobl. J. Wailicr. At the grand conservative mooting held i New York on the anniversary of the rth of Washington, the following letter as read from the Hon. 11. J. Walker, ono t 'the most influential Union men during ic war: Philadelphia, Feb. 22, 1*G0. 7?i '>n Dropcr, rs<j.: Detained from the great Union mectin* f circnmstanccfl beyond my control, T lust address it telegraphically, and not as did after the fall of Sumter. President ohnson's veto opens a new campaign in ,vor of the Union. It arrests the over irow ot I lie States and the concentration all power in one cmsolidatcd military :spot|piu. It prevents the expulsion of even States from the I'nion, and the cction of seven Irelands within its limits, ' bo controlled and oppressed by military iwcr. [t prevents the quartering ot a rgo standing army and hosts of officials in 10 Si nth, with an cnorrucus increase of ir debt, to be followed surely by oppresse taxation, <?r di-dionoring and disgrace11 repudiation. It prevents the defeat of ic plans of the Secretary of the Treasury r the funding and reduction of the pub? 3 debt, and a safe and gradual return to ccie payment*. Repudiation is disgrace id ruin, and the probable extinction ot publican institutions throughout the orld. This result, or large standing armies and lj ressivo taxation, caused by tho policy the President's opponents, would proice an earthquake convulsion. It would tadruplo the excise and income tax-? ight every field?becalm cverj' vessel? oak every bank and railroad, and ruin cry factory in the country. It dissolves ic I'nion, destroys the Constitution, and vets a military despotism upon its ruins. * would postpone, perhaps, indefinitely, ic transfer of the command of the comercc and exchanges of the world from uropc to America. Kuropean despots ould exult, while the Iriend.s of freedom the old world, and especially in Ireland id Germany, would weep tears of blood, ihnson is walking in the footsteps Jackson id Lincoln, and teachiug their sentiment, i. ' * ' u. hall bo preserved. The pronged government c! eleven States as coni< red provinces, enforcing taxation withisjrcpriseutation, would permanently alilute the South fr./tu the North. It might ivo them to madness and dc?pair, and new the civil War when our credit and .-olirc j.s were e v liaintvrl \V'? '>?vn .......? i ate through :i great constitutional iicnJiucnt, carried only by Johnson's >!>< ) , tour millions of negroes. Let it- not attempt to enslave eight mil* ms of our erring white brethren of the utth. i hey will all wclcomo death bore such a state n> this. 1 have fought ! my life agaiust secc.-sion and disuuion the South, and L renew the contest linst it in the North. Congress has no institutional power to dissolve the Union; id to condemn eleven States to territorial ipilagc is a di-olution of the Union. I nnot go with Northern or Southern dislUUli.-U. .Illhll-i.nl'* filr.ru. ? .? - |rV..VJ UIWUU Witil actically restore the I'nion. It has already ushed the heresy of accession at the mth, and it :ilo!ie has secured a constitu>un\ inujority tor the abolition of slavery, tlit: ht.ri.sy ot secession is crushed at tho >uth, aud emancipation secured, tho owning glory rests upon the head of n lrcw Johns in. Shivery and secession - nr only discordant elements?being i:.i extirpated, the Johnsonian policy will > conquering and to conquer, not by the r 1, but by wisdom and magnanimity, wiil subdue at the South passions and vjudiccs, it will touch their hearts and nquer their affections. Wc shall hear no mora of eiecntionnl id indivi lual acts of insubordination, for j shall havo a Union of interest and af? ction; a Union of States with States, and ?t with conquered provinces. We shall tve the Union and representation of all j States as ordained by the Constitution, e shall have a cordial, fraternal, an cverijamling, an omnipotent, an indissoluble id J erjHJtual Union. Meu of the South, oni V irginia to Texas, close up the ranks, i 1 light harder to get in tho Union than hi ?-\cr did to get out of if. You fonght i undt r the secession flag with unsurissed courage and endurance to get out of e Union. Come now, our erring, but ill much loved brethren of the South, and assemble with us again at the political niily altar at Washington. Come with ynl hearts under the flag of our siros and the music of the Union, and wo will vc jouac vdial welcome. Conic, aud < i t coram.; angel will blot out, in reconli.itinp; tears, ilie memory ot human lb!? * nm I I rail ties. 'I'lie people on whom lm.-on always relied arc with hiiu, anil 11 welcome back all loyal Unionist* to a Us in both houses cF Cwngroaa. There ate two reasons why wo do not u.st n man; one because we don't know "i, and the other because wo do.