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rried by General Crook, and are erecting fortifications there. Our troops are in the neighborhood of Strasburg. Meeting of a "peace" Convention. The "Peace Convention" met in Chicago on the 18th instant. Alexander Long, of Ohio, was one of the prominent men present. Candidates for President and Vice-President of the United States are to be nominated. A telegram says: It is understood that the nominations will be made conditional. If either of the Presidential candidates, Lincoln or McClellan, subscribes to the platform, these nominations will be withdrawn and peace men will support him. The delegates are very bitter on McClellan. They complain that they were unhandsomely treated at Chicago, and very scurvily by McClellan. No delegate is admitted to the Convention who does not sign a pledge that he will not support McClellan. They think his dawdling polities, like his shilly shally in military policy, will only serve to prolong the war; and, between the two, pref
eported. A Liverpool merchant was bankrupted by his dealings in the rebel cotton loan. The Bank of England maintained the rate of discount at nine per cent, and was likely to advance it. The London Times again expresses the opinion that Mr. Lincoln's chance of re-election to the Presidency is greatly improved by the successes of the Union generals. A new French Minister has been appointed to Washington in place of M. Mereier. It was said in Paris that M. Mereier will go to Madrid an fetes were to be given by M. Erlanger in the English capital. The International Congress for the Promotion of Social Science has been in session at Amsterdam.--An address was signed by one hundred and sixty members of the Congress to President Lincoln, congratulating him upon the success of the emancipation policy, and expressing a wish for the preservation of the Union. The text of the convention recently concluded by the French and Italian Governments has been published along with
and oppression. The illustration employed by Forney may suit the capacity and tastes of his audience, but we prefer the verdict of posterity. The individual he names is only one of a vast multitude who have made similar sacrifices. Tens of thousands have not only given up property, but life. Hundreds of thousands remain who would sooner die than live under that despotism which Forney considers more desirable than the loss of a house and income.--There is no principle of the Constitution, or of free government, which Lincoln has not violated; no tyranny of George the Third which he has not surpassed. Yet his minions, whilst they land to the skies that revolution which resisted and acknowledged sovereign, pronounces the vindication of their constitutional rights by States which never acknowledged the supreme sovereignty of the Federal Government a "hellish rebellion." And the virtuous patriots who prefer liberty with suffering to slavery with degradation are fools and madmen!