The Spectator, November 13, 1860, p. 2, c. 1
It is with deep pain that we announce the triumph of a Northern Sectional party. We have labored earnestly to prevent that result, and supported the only ticket which carried the flag around which all the conservative strength of the country could rally without sacrifice of principle. The ticket we supported bore aloft a national banner around which conservatives North and South should have rallied with the view of preventing the success of sectionalism North or South. Our efforts were unsuccessful, though applied in the right direction, and sectionalism has triumphed over nationality.--Though we are mortified at the success of the Black Republicans in the Presidential election, yet we are rejoiced to know that the elections for Congressmen have resulted in giving us a very safe and decided majority against the Republicans in Congress. The success of the Republicans in the Presidential election is but a barren victory, and its fruits, like the apples of the Dead Sea, will turn to ashes upon their lips. They will have the Executive, but no other branch of the Government, and will, consequently, be impotent for mischief--they will not have the power to do any harm, however much disposed they may be to do so. We have the Senate, the House of Representatives and the Supreme Court in our favor, either one of which would of itself be a sufficient protection to our rights. As we have all three there can, by no possibility, be any danger that our rights can be violated. No law can reach the President for his signature without first having passed both Houses of Congress, and we know that as at present composed no bill violative of our rights can pass either House. So that we are perfectly safe. The President cannot even make an appointment without the consent of the Senate, so that we have nothing to dread in that respect. If we remain united we have nothing to fear from the Black Republicans, because, as before stated, we have both Houses of Congress and the Supreme Court in our favor. The danger is in secession. If several of the Southern States secede, they will leave us in a minority in Congress, where we now have a safe majority. This may be the reason why some of the Southern States are in such a hurry to secede. They think that if they secede and leave us at the mercy of a Black Republican majority in Congress, that we will secede likewise. This is the way in which they expect to drag us into a like destiny with them. They will secede when we have a safe majority and there can be no danger, that we may be left in a minority where danger will threaten, in the confident belief that we will then secede and unite our fortunes with theirs. To secede when there can be no danger would be adding cowardice to treason. To give up when we have the game in our own hands would be cowardly, foolish and criminal. South Carolina, and other States disposed to secede, should remember that comity due to neighboring States should restrain them from taking action without consulting the wishes and interests of other States, particularly such as Virginia which is more deeply interested than all the Cotton States combined. As no man has a right to destroy even his own property when by so doing he will endanger that of his neighbor, so no State has the right to secede when that act will involve other States in the common ruin. Virginia has interests independent of the Cotton States, and she should take care of them in spite of the action of those States.
The Spectator, November 13, 1860, p. 2, c. 3
| Districts | Bell | Douglas | Breckinridge |
|---|---|---|---|
| Staunton, Precinct No. 1 | 509 | 300 | 48 |
| Staunton, Precinct No. 2 | 171 | 104 | 31 |
| Waynesboro | 168 | 102 | 13 |
| Churchville | 155 | 20 | 5 |
| Mt. Sidney | 206 | 121 | 8 |
| Spring Hill | 56 | 37 | 1 |
| Middlebrook | 166 | 28 | 31 |
| Greenville | 198 | 49 | 9 |
| Fishersville | 82 | 24 | 3 |
| New Hope | 178 | 61 | 5 |
| Mt. Meridian | 52 | 20 | 6 |
| Mt. Solon | 176 | 90 | 10 |
| Deerfield | 82 | 7 | 2 |
| Craigsville | 71 | 11 | 3 |
| Newport | 86 | 12 | 6 |
| Stuart's Draft | 50 | 13 | 16 |
| Midway | 36 | 13 | 2 |
| Swoope's | 27 | 10 | 3 |
| Sherando | 50 | 18 | 12 |
| Parnassus | 34 | 54 | 4 |
| Total | 2553 | 1094 | 218 |
The Spectator, November 27, 1860, p. 2, c. 1
If a soldier deserts the army he suffers the penalty of death. If desertion on the part of a soldier renders him deserving of death, what penalty should be indicted upon those Senators who are now resigning their seats and deserting their posts of duty, when, by so doing, they are betraying the trusts confided to them, and surrendering the government into the hands of the enemies of Southern institutions. If they remain steadfast at their posts and faithful to their constituents, the enemies of the South can do us no possible injury, as the Senators can control all the appointments of the Executive to suit themselves. Any Senator who, under these circumstances, should voluntarily desert his post of duty should be deemed a traitor to the South.
Actions speak louder than words, and the mere professions of fidelity to the South should be deemed false and hypocritical on the part of those who surrender the power of appointment into the hands of the Black Republican President. They profess to be the friends of the South, par excellence, and whilst expressing their devotion to the South, they surrender the citadel which effectually protects the South, and become thereby the indirect allies of the Black Republicans, for it will serve the purposes of the latter just as well to get the majority in the Senate by the desertion of the Southern Senators as by election on the part of Black Republican Legislatures. It seems that some of the disunion Senators are determined to do for the Republicans that which they could not do themselves, to wit: give them a majority in the Senate that they may have the power to make appointments to suit themselves without regard to the rights or wishes of the South.