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1. Correspondence between S. Teackle Wallis, esq., of Baltimore, and the Hon. John Sherman, of the U.S. Senate, concerning the arrest of members of the Maryland legislature, and the mayor and police commissioners of Baltimore, in 1861.

["<p> Pamphlet.</p>"]

2. To the people of Virginia.

["<p> Pamphlet.  Discusses the goal of the rebellious states to destroy the \"principles of republican government.\"</p>"]

3. Object of the war : speech of Hon. W. T. Willey, of Virginia, in the Senate, December 19 and 20, 1861, on the resolution declaring that the existing war, forced upon the country by the states in rebellion, without justifiable cause or provocation, was, and is, designed by them to destroy the Union and the Constitution; and their purpose, moreover, was at first, and is now, to disavow and repudiate the fundamental principles of republican government on which our fathers established the Union and the Constitution.

4. Resolutions of the legislature of West Virginia, in favor of an appropriation for the payment of military claims created by that State during the late war.

["<p> Pamphlet. Address to the Jefferson Union League of Berkeley County, [West] Virginia at the presentation of the United States flag to the citizens of Martinsburg.<br /> <br />  </p>"]

5. Address delivered before Jefferson Council, No. 3, Union League, Martinsburg, on Wednesday evening, December 2, 1863, by Major D. Titus, 12th Pennsylvania Cavalry.

["<p> Pamphlet. Address advocating the separation of West Virginia from Virginia.<br /> <br />  </p>"]

6. Address of Hon. Waitman T. Willey, delivered before the Constitutional Convention of West Virginia, in the city of Wheeling, on the 12th day of February, 1863, in compliance with a resolution of that body, inviting him to do so.

["<p> Pamphlet.  Discusses the goal of the rebellious states to destroy the \"principles of republican government.\" <br /> <br />  </p>"]

7. Speech of Hon. W. T. Willey, of Virginia, on the object of the war; delivered in the Senate of the United States, December 19 and 20, 1861.