Valley of the Shadow
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The Situation

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Recent events in the political world, and more especially the success of the Radicals in Maine and Vermont, have cast a gloom over our people and caused a feeling of doubt and uncertainty about the future, such as was never experienced before, even in the darkest hours of the late war. Men anxiously ask each other "What of the times?" and the answer is invariably desponding.

Many feel that the Radical Jacobins of the North will carry the day, and that even the great mind of Andrew Johnson will not be able to resist the pressure that will then be brought against him. This feeling affects and permeates through every transaction of a business character in the South. Sober-sided bank officers, in solemn council, after reviewing their correspondence from all parts of the country decide that, financially, business must be conducted in a view of a "civil war North and a servile war South." Old men talk about it, and mothers clasp their children closer to their hearts as they think of the future. Veterans of four years bloody work look to the future with no pleasant thoughts, and ask, "Is it for this we surrendered?--is this the return for a faithful discharge of all the humiliating conditions put upon us?--is there to be no end to these petty tyrannies, and is our confidence in the pledged word of Gen. Grant and the amnesty of Andrew Johnson to be rewarded by the extermination, confiscation, or worse still, the rule of the vile crew, called "loyal men of the South?" Business is deranged by this feeling and the condition of affairs in the extreme South is reported worse.

All this is bad, but there is something to hope for yet. Like the man at the bottom of the well, any change must be for the better for us. It would be well for our people to look hopefully to the future and never despond. When the worse comes, we can meet it like men, but there is no sense in anticipating troubles. If we are true to ourselves; if we are the men history shows us to have been in the past, we certainly have a future before us that is not all dark. The Radical Jacobins must run their course. Andrew Johnson and the Conservative North may be overwhelmed; another war may be inaugurated North, but for us there is one plain duty, and that is to be cheerful, to work hard, to manage the freedmen so that they will be our friends; to fully develope every resource of our glorious country; to raise up our children so that they will excel in every business, and especially in the mechanic arts--and, come what may, in a few years, we can defy the Radicals, the devil, and all his imps.

What has the War Settled?

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Abraham Lincoln, in one of his speeches, delivered on his route from Springfield to Washington city, said, in substance that a civil war would settle no principle; that after blood had been shed and lives sacrificed, the same principles would still exist. Did the war settle any principle? We think not. It simply confirmed what every body knew, that five men were stronger than one. It affirmed Napoleon's declaration that Providence was on the side of the strongest army. It has developed the fact, says the Register, that this government cannot exist, as a Republic, unless it is administered upon the doctrine of the reserved rights of the States--or the sovereignty of the States--and the restricted powers of the Federal Government--departing from this cardinal idea, it must either run into a military despotism or wild anarchy. It has exposed the purposes and natural tendency of the Radical party, and proven to the world that the true supporters of the essential principles of the Federal Constitution, were those who sympathized with and participated in the struggle of the South; or, if more acceptable, those who approved the principle of the Democratic party. It is compelling history to repeat itself. It is fighting the battles of the Colonies over again. It is Andrew Johnson leading the column of Constitutional Freedom against the power of Radical Tyranny, as George Washington and the Colonists resisted the oppression, outrage and despotism of King George the Third. It has established the conclusion that Radicalism must be crushed and the Constitution vindicated, or this Republican Government, springing from the people, and designed for the good of the people, must go down in a furious sea of blood, never again to be vitalized, strangling in its dying throes the hopes of Freedom throughout the Christian world.

Danger to the Republic

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Some of the most sober and reflecting minds of our country, says the Transcript, are settling down into the mournful conviction that our Republican experiment is a failure, and that the United States, like all the other free governments of history, will end up at last in a monarchy. Up to a comparatively recent period, little significance was attached by the unthinking to the following solemn words of Washington's Farewell Address, but read by the portentous lights which are now blazing around us, their almost prophetic tone must impress every mind.

"I have already intimated to you," says the Father of his country, in his last words to the American people, "the danger of parties in the State with particular reference to the founding of them on geographical discrimination. Let me now take a more comprehensive view, and warn you, in the most solemn manner, against the baneful effects of the spirit of party generally.

"This spirit, unfortunately, is irrepressible from our nature, having its root in the strongest passions of the human mind. It exists under different shapes in all governments, more or less stifled, controlled or repressed; but in those of the popular form it is seen in its greatest rankness, and is truly their worst enemy.

"The alternate domination of one faction over another, sharpened by the spirit of revenge, natural to party dissensions, which, in different ages and countries, has perpetrated the most horrid enormities, is itself a frightful despotism. But this leads, at length, to a more formal and permanent despotism. The disorders and miseries which result, gradually incline the mind of men to such security and repose in the absolute powers of an individual; and sooner or later, the chief of some prevailing faction, more able or more fortunate than his competitors, turns this disposition to the purposes of his own election or the ruins of public liberty."

That Bill of Abominations--The Constitutional Amendment

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Hon. J. B. Baldwin

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This gentleman has written an able letter to the Richmond Examiner, in answer to the strictures of the press upon his first one. While differing from Mr. Baldwin in his views, we give him credit for his known honesty, and heartily endorse the concluding position. He says:

"The progress of the political canvass now going on at the North renders the complete success of the Radicals a result by no means improbable. In such and event the people of the South will have need of all the calm courage and patient endurance that can be opposed to a dominant and overwhelming majority of number and of wealth, bent upon our humiliation and destruction. Against hostile legislation, the Presidential veto, which on several occasions has been so magnanimously interposed for our protection, will no longer prove a barrier, and we must expect and be prepared for every outrage upon our rights and feelings that greed and hate can suggest. There is, however, one wrong which can only be fastened upon us by our own consent. The proposed Constitutional Amendment cannot be adopted if the States and people of the South are true to themselves, and are united and firm in determination, that come what may, they will oppose to this outrage a calm and steady, and persistent negative; and will not consent upon any pretext or for any purpose to amend the Constitution of the United States."

Staunton

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"This place," says a correspondent of the Richmond Examiner, "is 'little but loud, diminutive but determined.' It has, perhaps, more bone and muscle and enterprise than any town of its size in Virginia. In fact, it assumes all the airs of a city, and stands asking tribute and extending protection and thrift to the great Valley of Virginia. The secret of success is community of exertion. While a few in other places devote their individual energies to the growth and development of their locality, every citizen of this place joins in any enterprise calculated to advance the general interest and in that way Staunton has contributed largely over her proportion of energetic and public spirited men to Virginia.

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Flour

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Filthy

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The Colored Church

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The Right Spirit

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"Robbing Peter to Pay Paul."

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The Fire Company's Fair

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The California Fever

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Honor to Whom Honor is Due

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We see it stated, says the Rockingham Register of Thursday, that the Rev. D. Stuart, of Staunton, now in England as the agent of Washington College, to secure donations for the Lee Endowment, has procured 60,000 pounds; and also that the agent in France is doing well, and the agent along the Mississippi River has obtained $50,000, with the prospect of a large increase after the cotton crop has been gathered. All this in addition to the $100,000 in hand.

It is not generally known that Col. M. G. Harman, of Augusta county, gave the initiatory subscription to this magnificent enterprise. The project of an Endowment originated with Gen. Lee himself. Last fall he addressed a letter to Col. Harman, suggesting that he would be a proper person to commence the work. The succeeding court day, after the receipt of the letter, Col. Harman called a meeting of the citizens of Augusta, and headed the subscription with $1,000. From this the subscription commenced, and although the original idea only contemplated a fund of $100,000, it has reached the large sum of over half million of dollars! and the prospect is that it will, before the close of the year, be swelled to the amount of at least a million of dollars.

Col. Harman is entitled to the credit of giving to the proposition of Endowment shape and substance, and to have first suggested the designation of "The Lee Endowment."

County Court--September Term

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Marriages

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Marriages

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