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illing to shed their blood for their country. (Cheers for several minutes.) J. M. Bonner said this occasion was one of the proudest in his life — to be called on to speak in the cause of the South. He had been a Douglas man, but when the news came from Pennsylvania and Indiana he became a Southern man, and was no longer a party man.--This was the time for all men to come forward and enroll themselves in the cause of the South. The Lieut. Walker, of the Army, whose resignation at Augusta was bruited abroad, is in business there, and has not been in active service for several years. The importance which attached to the fact, therefore, was sensational. The Charlestown (Va.) Democrat (the town where John Brown was hung,) comes to us with its columns in mourning for the result of the election. Of Virginia's position it says: If we submit, our position in future in this Confederacy is in effect that of mere provinces having no voice in the government; mere colonies,