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tates.[from our own correspondent.] Fredericksburg, March 14th. --I have received the New York Herald of the 11th, and send you what of interest it contains: The New York Herald, of the 11th inst., has the following editorial: Lincoln has issued's proclamation, dated March 10th, ordering all soldiers absent without leave to return. Those who do so by April 1st, restored without punishment, except forfeiture of pay during absence; those who do not shall be punished as deser waked up to the fact declared in the first line of the Constitution, that "we the people make this Government." He owed no allegiance to any Government but the people and the Constitution. He held it as his right to condemn anything wrong that Lincoln or his Cabinet did. He said the Black Republican party was covered all over with the leprosy of crime and wrong. He concluded by urging "when the Government went outside of the limits of law, then force should be met by force. [Guest applause.
se, frenzy and folly, madness and reason. After tracing faithfully and lucidly the rise and progress of the Abolition party at the North and proving clearly that Lincoln is the most nefarious liar upon earth; after exposing the deceit and treachery of the villain and his party in the affair of Fort Sumter, in their endeavor to pututh in the wrong, by compelling her to strike the first blow; after stating "that the secret and real purpose of the war was to abolish slavery," and stating that Lincoln had proclaimed "the irrepressible conflict"--that the Union could not endure "part slave and part free;" after stating that he had usurped all constitutional powenfederate States rebels, and consequently traitors!--What frenzy! what folly! what madness! Who are the rebels and traitors, according to his own showing? Why Lincoln and the North. What has the South done except to claim and exercise the poor privilege of self defence? And this self- defence is styled rebellion and treason.
h, and will certainly be soon. The French army numbers over 40,000 men--four times the number necessary for the taking of the whole of Mexico. The News thus alluded to this interesting information: We look upon this as very important news.--The conquest of Mexico by the French; or which is the same thing, the absolute military control over that country by Napoleon, places French power in contiguity with the Confederate States on the South, as English power is in contiguity with Lincoln's Government on the North. It is worthy of note that white France has been steadily, and noiselessly establishing her power in Mexico by large fleets and armies, Great Britain has been equally indefatigable in sending some forty or fifty thousand troops and immense army supplies into Canada. These military operations in Canada and in Mexico have been going on simultaneously, and, apparently, with a like determination by both Governments to avoid attracting much observation. Under such ci
New England. That it has furnished the bravest and hardiest troops to the Union during the war, is no evidence of its intense Yankeeism of character or peculiar hatred of the South. The qualities of courage and resolution are in general allied with generosity and chivalry. The men who faced each other in the death grapple at Murfreesboro' may, in reality, be more alike and have more sympathy with each other than the Northwest and the Yankees. It is true that the Northwest is the home of Lincoln; button is in a minority in his own State, in his own county, and his own town. When we speak of the Northwest we speak of the party which is in the ascendant, and of what its evident interests dictate. For the interests of a people are the only key to its policy, and the interests of the Northwest are with the South, and not with New England. What, then, should be the course of the South to the Northwest? In the first place, to fight them with knives in both hands till we have driv
Atrocities of Lincoln's Officials --The Christian Observer publishes the appended extract of a letter from a clergyman in the country, dated February 21st, 1863: "I returned yesterday from Stafford, where I had been called to attend a funeral. I was within a mile or two of the Yankee lines. It is the impression that a portion of their army is leaving this region. Their destination is not known, I have buried in this region three females of the highest social position, whose deaths have been caused by Yankee atrocities. They were all in that situation which usually excites our tenderest sympathies. The last one that I busied was the with of a physician, whose husband was arrested while attending a very sick patient, and kept from his family fourteen days. When he was absent, some of the Yankees, with satanic malignity, came to his wife and told her that they had shot her husband. The shock which this false intelligence produced was more than her delicate frame could be