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ouraged by his Government to perpetrate his outrages, whereas the latter, if caught, would have forfeited his life to the law. There is no difference between the Yankee Generals in respect to their habitual violations of all law. McClellan, like Seward, affected to be a great conservative, and a determined enemy of the Abolitionists. Yet he allowed his troops to strip gentlemen's plantations of their negroes and their houses of everything valuable. Fredericksburg is a standing monument of Burnside's unbounded rapacity. The next two generations will execrate Pope in the Piedmont country. Milroy, the coward and oppressor, immortalized himself by his zeal against women, children, and old men, and his total lack of zeal when it came to fighting. Rosecrans threatens to hang every Confederate caught with a Yankee uniform on. Grant deluged an enormous district in Louisiana, with the avowed purpose of starving the inhabitants, and afterwards pillaged and burned Jackson. As for Beast Butl
Look to them. --Some of the citizens of the Peninsula, who have suffered severely from Yankee raids, give it as their opinion that most of the information furnished the Abolitionists as to the disposition of our forces and means of defence are furnished by professed Yankee deserters, who skulk about the country under the pretext of seeking employment, and who are very often treated in the kindest manner by our people. When these characters appear in a neighborhood they ought to be arrested and sent to headquarters at once. However pitiful their stories, they should be disregarded, inasmuch as the entire Abolition army has been but a high school for hoods, taught by those accomplished professors Gens. McClellan, Pope, Burnside, etc.