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e, which wise men may avert or brave men repel, can ever justify or excuse the breaking of that sacred bond; but such attack should rather summon all true and faithful citizens to its defence, accounting it the more honorable part to rally to its aid when misfortune threatens ruin. In the earnest conviction of the truth of this sentiment, we declare that the Minute Men of 1860 will be the last to abandon the glorious inheritance of the Union, which we have received from the Minute Men of 1776. Arms for the South. The only people gathering any advantage from the present crisis are the manufacturers and sellers of arms. The New York Journal of Commerce says: Yesterday there arrived by the steamer City of Hartford from Hartford, 180 cases of Sharp's patent carbines, containing 10 pieces each, making in all arms for 1,800 men, and 40 cases of conical ball, each containing 1,000 bullets, or 40,000 cartridges in the aggregate. These arms and ammunition were ordered by t
ted States. That in our judgment no violation of its spirit, no assault, whether by treacherous friend or open foe, which wise men may avert or brave men repel, can ever justify or excuse the breaking of that sacred bond; but such attack should rather summon all true and faithful citizens to its defence, accounting it the more honorable part to rally to its aid when misfortune threatens ruin. In the earnest conviction of the truth of this sentiment, we declare that the Minute Men of 1860 will be the last to abandon the glorious inheritance of the Union, which we have received from the Minute Men of 1776. Arms for the South. The only people gathering any advantage from the present crisis are the manufacturers and sellers of arms. The New York Journal of Commerce says: Yesterday there arrived by the steamer City of Hartford from Hartford, 180 cases of Sharp's patent carbines, containing 10 pieces each, making in all arms for 1,800 men, and 40 cases of conical ba
the grand utterance of their great orator, who prayed with deep pathos that Providence might hide from his eyes "the broken and dishonored fragments of a once glorious Union," and who with a heart stirred to its mighty depths, gave forth that utterance which is written upon the American firmament in letters of living light, "Liberty and Union now and forever, one and inseparable!" No tongue can describe, no imagination can conceive the horrors of a civil war in America among this Anglo-Saxon race. Conceive only that we exasperate each other until a federal army marches against South Carolina.--Georgia has voted a million or dollars for defence. Alabama marches to sustain her sister State. A hundred thousand Southern men as brave as we, men whose fathers fought at Eutaw Springs and Guilford Court-House, who retreated with Greene and stormed the redoubts at Yorktown side by side with our Pennsylvania line, now stand in deadly opposition to the federal troops. And suppose that
th not for his own household is worse than an infidel" Carry your religion with you where ever you go — whatever you undertake. You are not of the world, even as Christ was not of the world — so that, whilst you would aid your fellow-men by all the means in your power, in rendering your country happy and prosperous in future, show to them at the same time that you are disciples of Christ, ready to bless your enemies. Let no undue excitement pervade your actions; be calm and deliberate in counsel; determined in the accomplishment of it; be satisfied that you are right before you act, and God will make the issue prosperous. Keep your eye on Christ, and hiChrist, and his reflected image will ever bear you on ward. For my own part, I will only say, in conclusion, my every sympathy is with the soil on which I stand. I have never known any other mother than this; and I cling to her with the devotion of a child. My dear dead ones sleep in her dust; my children have been nursed on her bosom,
If Carolina falls, I fall with her. If she prospers, it will be the richest privilege of my life to ascribe to God the glory. Amen. On Tuesday last a number of citizens repaired on board the steamship Columbia, at Charleston, and presented Capt. Berry with a Palmetto cane, in remembrance of his having hoisted the first Palmetto flag at sea. Quite a sensation was produced on the Columbia as she was about leaving the wharf in New York, on Saturday last, occasioned by the displaying of the Palost violent of the secessionists. The American Sunday School Union Agency flings out a beautiful flag, inscribed, "In the name of our God we set up our banners." Strong secession speeches were made to-day at the presentation of a cane to Capt. Berry, of the steamship Columbia. To-morrow is the appointed day of fasting, humiliation and prayer in view of the crisis, and will be generally observed. Mr. Keitt arrived in the city to-night at ten o'clock. A large procession of citizen
our duty now to secure for Mr. Lincoln a peaceful and successful administration. It is time that the asperities of the campaign had passed away. The great are generous. Let the entire North speak words of friendship and kindness to the South, and instead of mourning a lost Pleiad, our constellation shall ultimately become a whole galaxy of glory. Maryland. The "Minute Men" of Baltimore, a political organization, numbering 2,500, formed before the election to advocate the cause of Bell and Everett, have since the election adopted resolutions denying that Lincoln's success is sufficient cause for dissolution, and denying the right of secession. These resolutions further declare-- That we regard the Union of the States as the only source of the nationality of our Republic; that to the Union we are indebted for our power, prosperity and growth as a nation; for our peace at home and abroad; for the influence we have won in the affairs of the world, and for the hopes we ar
Breckinridge (search for this): article 1
entiment of the Northern press — movements at the South--affairs in Virginia, &c., &c., &c. Below we collate the latest mail intelligence bearing on the present secession movements at the South. In our telegraph column will be found some later events: The Views of the Governor of Kentucky. Governor Magoffin has written a long letter to the editor of the Frankfort Yeoman, the sum and substance of which is, "stand by the Union." As Mr. Magoffin is a political friend of Mr. Breckinridge, this letter will be understood to contain views not widely at variance with those of the late candidate for the Presidency. Mr. Magoffin says: "Mr. Lincoln has been elected according to all the forms of law under that Constitution which we revere and regard as the depository of our rights and the shield of our safety, and not withstanding his threats and the danger of carrying out his principles, he may not do it.--We must wait for an overt act, hoping that truth, and reason, an
feeling than that it was the very extremest resort, not to be thought of until everything else within human compass had been tried. It is a mistake to suppose that even Jackson resorted to mere threatening and naked force in 1832. His proclamation is full of the kindliest appeal to everything magnanimous and patriotic in an American heart. It depicts in tones that are almost tender in their manly earnestness the consequences of disunion, and it is well known that measures were taken by General Cass and others at that time to secure the good offices of Virginia to prevent ulterior measures. We need hardly call the attention of the Eastern States to the grand utterance of their great orator, who prayed with deep pathos that Providence might hide from his eyes "the broken and dishonored fragments of a once glorious Union," and who with a heart stirred to its mighty depths, gave forth that utterance which is written upon the American firmament in letters of living light, "Liberty and U
ares it in the face, drawn the following picture of the result: We know that secession is not a peaceful remedy. We know that it cannot be allowed. But it is a mistake to suppose that wise statesmen have ever looked to coercion of a sovereign State with any other feeling than that it was the very extremest resort, not to be thought of until everything else within human compass had been tried. It is a mistake to suppose that even Jackson resorted to mere threatening and naked force in 1832. His proclamation is full of the kindliest appeal to everything magnanimous and patriotic in an American heart. It depicts in tones that are almost tender in their manly earnestness the consequences of disunion, and it is well known that measures were taken by General Cass and others at that time to secure the good offices of Virginia to prevent ulterior measures. We need hardly call the attention of the Eastern States to the grand utterance of their great orator, who prayed with deep path
ks ago she had elected on that issue a Legislature which unanimously recommended separate action. It was infamy to retrace the step. Out of his district — Orangeburg — he could say that of the sixteen hundred votes polled, not one would be for submission. In Colleton, Beaufort, Barnwell, Pedee, and ever in the up country, people were a unit on this question. He closed amid great applause. Virginia. The South Carolina students at the University of Virginia held a meeting on the 16th inst., and offered their services to their native State "whenever she shall need them." The resolution expressing this determination is prefaced by the following preamble: Whereas, the Government has fallen into the hands of a sectional party, declaring the existence of a "higher law," an intention top event the introduction of slavery into the Territories, an "irrepressible conflict" between white and slave labor and an interminable war upon the institutions of the South upon which its ha
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