Franklin Repository
Scrap of History
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The Cincinnati Gazette says: A friend of ours has sent us one of the unbound sheets of a Confederate school book, entitled "Geographical Reader for the Dixie Children," which shows the state of happy innocence in which the youth of that favored land would have grown up had not the unbelievers been permitted to prevail. The chapter under the head "The United States," is a compendium of the political, moral and religious history of the rise and progress of the rebellion:
THE UNITED STATES
1. This was once the most prosperous country in the world. Nearly a hundred years ago it belonged to England; but the English made such hard laws that the people said they would not obey them. After a long bloody war of seven years they gained their independence, and for many years were prosperous and happy.
2. In the meantime both English and American ships went to Africa and brought away many of those poor heathen negroes and sold them for slaves. Some people said it was wrong, and asked the King of England to stop it. He replied that he "knew it was wrong, but the slave-trade brought much money into his treasury, and it should continue." But both countries afterwards did pass laws to stop this trade. In a few years the Northern States, finding their climate too cold for the negro to be profitable, sold them to the people living further South. Then the Northern States passed laws to forbid any persons owning slaves in their borders.
3. Then the Northern people began to preach, to lecture and to write about the sin of slavery. The money for which they sold their slaves was now partly spent in trying to persuade the Southern States to send their slaves back to Africa. And when the territories were settled they were not willing for any of them to become slaveholding. This would soon have made the North much stronger than the South. And many of the men said they would vote for a law to free all the negroes in the country. The Southern men tried to show how unfair this would be, but still they kept on.
4. In the year 1860 the Abolitionists became strong enough to elect one of their men for President. Abraham Lincoln was a weak man, and the South believed he would allow laws to be made which would deprive them of their rights. So the Southern States seceded, and elected Jefferson Davis for their President. This so enraged President Lincoln that he declared war, and has exhausted nearly all the strength of the nation in a vain attempt to whip the South back into the Union. Thousands of lives have been lost, and the earth has been drenched with blood; but still Abraham is unable to conquer the "rebels," as he calls the South. The South only asks to be let alone, and to divide the public property equally. It would have been wise in the North to have said to her Southern sisters, "if you are not content to dwell with us longer, depart in peace. We will divide the inheritance with you, and may you be a great nation."
5. This country possesses many ships, has fine cities and towns, many railroads, steamboats, canals, manufactures, &c. The people are ingenious, and noted for their tact in driving a bargain. They are refined and intelligent on all subjects but that of negro slavery; on this they are mad.
SOUTHERN CONFEDERACY
3. This is a great country. The Yankees tho't to starve us out when they sent their ships to guard our seaport towns. But we have learned to make a great many things; to do without others; and, above all, to trust in the smiles of the God of battles. We had few guns, little ammunition, and not much of anything but food, cotton and tobacco; but the people helped themselves and God helped the people. We were considered an indolent and weak people, but our enemies have found us strong, because we had justice on our side.
4. The Southern people are noted for being high-minded and courteous. A stranger seldom lacks friends in this country. Much of the field work is done by slaves. These are generally well used, and often have as much pocket money as their mistresses. They are contented and happy, and many of them are Christians. The sin of the South lies not in holding slaves, but they are sometimes mistreated. Let all the little boys and girls remember that slaves are human, and that God will hold them to account for treating them with injustice.
5. The Southern Confederacy is at present a sad country; but president Davis is a good and wise man, and many of the generals and other officers of the army are pious. There are a good many good praying people in the land, and we may hope that our cause will prosper. When the righteous are in authority the nation rejoiceth, but when the wicked bear rule the nation mourneth. Then remember, little boys, when you are men, never vote for a bad man to govern the country.
An Important Decision
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Judge King yesterday delivered a most important decision in the court of quarter sessions of this county, in the case of Rowe vs. Stenger. Mr. Stenger was returned as elected to the office of District Attorney last fall, and Colonel Rowe contested the election on the ground that the majority of Mr. Stenger was made up of votes cast by men who were deserters from the draft or from the military service, and are disfranchised by the act of Congress.
Judge King held that the penalty of forfeiture of citizenship could not be inflicted without due process of law, and that deserters can be disfranchised only upon conviction of the offence by some competent tribunal. As the act of Congress makes no provision for the judicial ascertainment and conviction of the crime, and the laws of the State make no such test of the qualification of the voters, the votes of such men must be accepted. In the decision he does not raise the question of the power of Congress to impose a penalty effecting the right of suffrage in a State, and he expressly waives the issue raised as to whether or not the act of Congress is an ex post facto law, inasmuch as the point decided is conclusive of the case.
Such a decision coming from a judicial officer second to none in the State in high legal attainments, and eminent for his devotion to the loyal cause, presents the question of the disfranchisement of deserters as one yet to be perfected by the legislature if it is to be enforced at all. It is an issue of too much magnitude to be left in doubt, and we hope to see this case reviewed by the court of last resort in the State. But by the time it will reach that court, the legislature will have adjourned and if the decision of our court should be sustained, we shall have another year of doubt and defiance of the law of Congress by the only party that can hope to profit by the votes of those who deserted their country's cause in the day of peril. Just as is the penalty of the act of Congress, its enforcement must have all the sanctity and ceremony of law, and to this question the attention of the legislature should be deliberately, wisely and promptly directed. We must either have such enactments as will ensure uniform enforcement, or the punishment of desertion must be abandoned. The general government has abandoned it, and it is for the States to declare by their legislation whether they will do likewise.
We do not receive a copy of Judge King's decision in time for this week's issue, but in our next we shall give it in full.
State Treasurer's Report
The Spirit and Gen. Coffroth
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The Spirit, after long hesitation, has been brought to the support of Coffroth, and in its last issue defends the frauds of the Democratic return judges, so ably exposed by Judge Black, and urges Coffroth's admission. It is too late in the day to discuss the trickery, perjury and persistent disregard of law by which Gen. Koontz was defrauded out of his certificate; but it is something to see the Spirit find itself on one side or the other of the Coffroth fraud. It has finally concluded that he is "a clever fellow," and "personally" the Spirit has a "high regard" for him. It therefore forgives "his political slip in view of his steadfast adherence to the party since." It then goes at the rumor that Gen. Coffroth bartered his vote for the constitutional amendment abolishing Slavery, to propitiate the Republican Congressmen in his favor in this contest, and pronounces the intimation "just so much stuff, utterly without foundation--the promptings of political malevolence or personal jealousy."
Just who would be capable of "personal jealousy" of Gen. Coffroth is to our mind a problem that would be difficult of solution. If there are any such men in this region, we must confess to entire ignorance of them personally, and also of entire ignorance of any man or class of men who have reached such a point in the retrogression of the race. We know whereof we affirm when we say that he exhausted his efforts in the House last winter to barter his vote on the amendment for Republican favor in securing his seat in the present contest, and we believe that the Spirit is also fully satisfied of the truth of what we assert. It is refreshingly stupid at times we confess; but we must protect it against the imputation that it is so consummately stupid as not to know that Gen. Coffroth offered his votes all last winter to secure a seat in the present Congress, to which he was not elected. Equally at variance with the truth is the Spirit's endorsement "of his steadfast adherence to the party since." We grant that he is, in feeling and sympathy, all that the Spirit claims him to be on this point; but while he makes ultra Democratic speeches--like all suspected virtue, going farther than the farthest in denouncing in others what he does himself--and votes the Democratic ticket, he professes at Washington to have sacrificed himself in his party by his vote against their prejudices, and appeals to Republican sympathy on that ground. At home he is a Democrat of the most boisterous pretensions, and at Washington he persistently appeals to Republicans to save him because he is not enough of a Democrat to hurt anybody. On the merits of his case Judge Black has ably argued him out of all claim to be sworn, and his attempt to subsidize himself and play double with everybody must win for him the utter contempt of all. We doubt not that he will soon be officially notified that, if he would get his seat, he must contest it regularly and prove that the majority of Gen. Koontz is made up of illegal votes, and we presume that he will take advantage of his own fraud and become a pensioner under the rule that allows contestants mileage and pay. Beyond this he can have no hope, and since he has just as much claim to a seat as member from Oregon, we see no good reason why he does not shift his contest and get a good round mileage while he is at it. Go in freely, General!--Uncle Sam pays the piper!
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"The Cincinnati Gazette says: A friend of ours has sent us one of the unbound sheets of a Confederate school book, entitled "Geographical Reader for the Dixie Children," which shows the state of happy innocence in which the youth of that favored land would have grown up had not the unbelievers been permitted to prevail. The chapter under the head "The United States," is a compendium of the political, moral, and religious history of the rise and progress of the rebellion:"