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Secession movement at the South. Warlike Preparations--Rev. Dr. Breckinridge--Miscellaneous Items, &c., &c. The mails from the South bring further "note of preparation." The Norfolk (Va. ) Argus is "credibly informed" that the various offers to Governor Gist, of South Carolina, of the personal services of Virginians, in case she should need them, already embrace bands comprising in the aggregate 16,000 men. The Montgomery (Ala.) Mail says twenty-five hogsheads of gunpowder, for the State of Alabama, was received there last week. The steamship Montgomery arrived at Savannah, Ga., a few days since, with 1,000 Sharpe's carbines and 40,000 conical balls, from Hartford, Ct., for the State of Georgia. A letter from the Rev. Dr. Breckinridge, the distinguished Presbyterian divine, of Kentucky, to a friend in New York State, is published. He thinks if the North insists on using the National Government to put down slavery — or if the South insists on using it to perpetuate a
eing unwilling to exasperate the South, will yield the District as soon as Maryland and Virginia go out; that a defensive alliance will be formed between the two Republics, and peculiar privileges in the way of navigation and postal arrangements will be agreed upon; so that a very few years will find us, in the language of Jefferson, "one as to the rest of the world, several as to each other." I was thrown, yesterday, in contact with the man who, beyond a doubt, carried Maryland for Breckinridge. He tells me that the National Volunteers, of Baltimore, organized at first for political purposes, is still kept up for purposes which may be necessary if Lincoln attempts to march through Baltimore with an army of Wide-Awakes behind him.--The volunteers number 1,000, all young men, and all true to the South. As Virginia goes, so will Maryland go. This was the conclusion of the Electors of the latter State in private meeting the other day. The disposition of the various parties in
The Daily Dispatch: December 10, 1860., [Electronic resource], The Burning of the Kentucky Lunatic Asylum. (search)
eing unwilling to exasperate the South, will yield the District as soon as Maryland and Virginia go out; that a defensive alliance will be formed between the two Republics, and peculiar privileges in the way of navigation and postal arrangements will be agreed upon; so that a very few years will find us, in the language of Jefferson, "one as to the rest of the world, several as to each other." I was thrown, yesterday, in contact with the man who, beyond a doubt, carried Maryland for Breckinridge. He tells me that the National Volunteers, of Baltimore, organized at first for political purposes, is still kept up for purposes which may be necessary if Lincoln attempts to march through Baltimore with an army of Wide-Awakes behind him.--The volunteers number 1,000, all young men, and all true to the South. As Virginia goes, so will Maryland go. This was the conclusion of the Electors of the latter State in private meeting the other day. The disposition of the various parties in