Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 23 June 1866 — Page 2

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CRAWFORDSVILLE, INP Saturday, June 23,1866.

Prlnledund Piibliilicd ercrr Snturtlny lUoru*r

A E S O W E N

lVaililngloa Street, in Story, Lrc't IVen Brick. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION:—$2,00 IN ADVANCE.

I A I O N

LARGER THAN ANY PAPER PUBLISHED IN Crnwforl*ville "Advertisers, call up and examine our List of

ICPSUIISCKIBEKSicQI

Louisville, Xciv Albany «fc Chicago Railroad.

GOING NORTH.

Accommodation 10.38 a.m. Through Freight 2.5V p. m. Express 7,00

GOISO SOTTft.

Express. n.si a. m. Through Irvight 10.3A Aocommodbtion 5.tX3p. m.

Good connections made with all other roads. R. F. MASTIS, Superintendent.

JOTErtrcCBAflC STATE TICKET.

SECRETARY OK STATE.

Gun. MAHLON D. MANSOX, of Montgomery. AUDITOR OK STATE, .CHRISTIAN G. BADGER, of Clark. ,,v vJ. TREASURER OK STATE.

JAMES B. RYAN, of Marion.

ATTORNEY GENERAL,

JOHN R. COFFROTH. of Huntington. eLTERINTESDEN'T OK PUBLIC INSTRUCTION. R. M. CHAPMAN, of Knox.

DEMOCRATIC!

PRIMARY ELECTION. The Democracy of UNION townsliip will hold a primary election, in the city of Crawfordsville, on next Thursday, the 28th of June, to indicate their choice of candidates to be nominated on the 30th.

Democratic MassilMeetino!

Liberty,

N I O N

A EQUAL Taxation.

The Democracy of Montgomery county, by instruction of the Township Committccs, will meet in

CONYENTON

1

'Wf

AT THE

City

of Crawfordsville,

the

ghc ffgmlwtr.

%n

Saturday, June 30,

for the purpose of nominating candidates to be voted for at the October election, ior the offices of Representative in the State Legislature, County

Treasurer, Sheriff, Commissioner and Coroner.

All conservative citizens who arc in'favor of the immediate admission of the Southern States to all their

Bights Under the Constitution*

and all who are

Opposed to Negro Suffrage,

and the

Exemption of Government Bonds and Greenbacks from Taxation, Are invited to be present and participate in the proceedings. order of the Miosis CENTRAL COMMITTEE.

MAI—— A P. Morton. Thin beastly wretch made a specch at/Indianapolis on last Tuesday night. His harranguc was a tirade of abuse and calumny upon tho people of the State, expressed in the UV

brothel

IK

-P' »lyk of slaig and low blaek-

uardism

tha*-

would bring the blush of shamo

the cl ock of a sava

go. A more ungodly,

infamous and debased being does not exist, than- this self-same Morton.

W „,

The followin is a

sample of his speech.

calumny which this man, himself a

^cgade democrat, flings at the great party

f0UBdcd

Jefferson and Jackson:

Th6

Democratic party may be described as «°®mon sewer and loathsome receptacle, inN0nHh1C»n^fieni?uied

0

7

ery olem

a

••_*

ent of treason

and th and

every element of inhu-

W 0 a

So Platform.

Th6 rad5oal

oonTontioa held: here on the 9th

48 8ilont 1111(1 mute an

flA:,^

h*Tp0CriUcal deBi«nB are

amount of

.g00i

W&.

TJ

oyster «a tho

great issues agitating the country. Their

BO transparent that

cant—as "my good Lord and

d®vil"

will s&vo them, this fall.

,ei'ed aad

is so recorded."

Gold closed at 152 j. I

The Tribune's Montreal dispatch says the Fenian prisoners will be hanged.

It is denied thai the Government ever gave the Fenians any assurance that they would not be iuterferred with.

Tho Chicago rolling-mill was destroyed by lire on Wednesday night. Loss 5200,000. Insured for §40,000.

RICHARD TURNER, (lie turnkey of Libby Prison during the war, who has lately been imprisoned, has been released by the Secretary of War.

Tho committee on Election have awarded the Pennsylvania seat in tho House of Representatives, which was contested, to Mr. Dawson, Democrat.

Governor Cox, of Ohio, will not call an extra session of the' Legislature to a'et en the constitutional amendment, unless it is asked of him by the convention.

Parson Brownlow lias called the bogus Legislature of Tennessee to meet in extra session at Nashville on the 4th of July. The object is io ratify the constitutional amendments of the Hump Congress.

The sugar crop in the French West Indies was large, but the supply for market will fall short, owing to the ravages of the cholera among the laboring colored population.— About lo,000 of this class of people had died.

It is rumored that Mr. Seward, Sccretarv of State, will decline to send the constitutional amendments passed by the Hump to the States, unless ordered by the President's direction. On the contrary, it is said the amendments have already been sent to Columbus.

The storm on Sunday and Monday did immense damage in the western part of Ohio.— Ln Huron county some farmers lost as many ns one hundred and fifty sheep each, by the exposure to the storm, they having been recently sheared. It is thought 10,000 sheep were lost within radius of ten miles.

We have the account, of the murder of a poition of a family in ork, Pen., which, in atrocity, almost equals the lccvi«g tracedv iu the same State. Itobbery is supposed to be the cause of it. The alleged perpetrator lias been arrested. The victims' names are Squills, and tho arrested party is a man by the name ot Donovan. W-

DON­'T fail to attend the auction.

Hold Tliein To It.

Some of the Radical leaders will be denying. before the election, that they are in favor of negro suffrage, for the purpose of inducing soldiers to vote their ticket. Hold them up to the record and tell them it is too late in the day to crawfish now.

POME of the more obscure radical papers in the State charge the Democracy with rejoicing over 0. P. Morton's affliction. The charge is talse and is intendod to manufacture sympathy for a played-out humbug, who for tho last four years has been rioting on the fast line, aud who now finds himself pretty much in the same condition as the little darkey who fell into a hogshead of molasses—ht[s. got too much of the good thing.

A

SUSCS

Great Rush at tlic Eagle Clothing Store. L. & M. Dessauer have just received a large and magnificent stock of summer goods, consisting of Linen Coats, Pants und Vests, also a largo stock of fine fancy Cassimere Pants and Vests, which they intend to sell lower than any house in Crawfordsville. Their motto is quick sales and small profits.

AUCTION room iu the I'urscl building.

THURSDAY morning last Nehemiah McKinsey and John Willis were taken before the city Mayor, charged with having, on or about the first day of March last, stolen from Myro T. Ham, of Ripley township, in this county, a pocket book containing .'5820 in green-backs. Marshal Ross, accompanied by U. W. McMaken Esq., pursued theso men and arrested them near Bloomington Illinois. The witnesses in this case, some thirty in all, reside in and ne-- Alamo, and as it was impossible to procure their attendance earlier than Saturday the 23d inst., at 10 o'clock A. M., the hearing of these cases was adjourned over until that time, and in default of two thousand dollars bail, each, the prisoners were committed to j*»l- '-Mf' lull

A CARD—TO TOE PUBLIC.

MR. BOWEN— I wish to call altentioni through your paper, to the fact that J. H. BENEFIEI, signed a remonstrance presented to the Commissioners setting forth tho statement that I was not a man of good moral character. I felt indignant when I saw tho name of this man on the remonstranco. But he was only carrying out his character as hypocrite. If I remember rightly he was tried by an ecclesiastical court and censured for "indiscreet conduct" and yet with brazen offrontry ho dares to attempt to impeach better men than himself I wish to exhibit him to tho people of this county in histruc character.

ITT HENRY LORENZ.

TITTLE,GREW & Co. are the auotioncers.

HON. JOHN PURDUE has purchased the Lafayette Journal and will take possession of the same on the 1st day of next month. Ho intends to support President Johnson's reconstruction policy, and will oppose tho radical disunion party in this district.

'Go to the auction room to buy goods.

SNOW fell at Rock Island, Illinois, last Saturday.

TURTLE soup is now served up every other evening at Hays' Saloon.

REMEMBER the graad ball on neat Wedneiday night *.

Our Frederlcksburgta Correspondent. FREDERICKSBURG, June 17, 1860. EDITOR REVIEW.—The action of the Radical Convention, in your city on tho 9tli, has settled the fact, that the larger portion of the Republican party of this county, aro opposed to the reconstruction policy of Andy Johnson and in favor of negro suffrage. -Tho feeble attempt of the leaders on that day, to humbug the people, by getting tho Hon. James Wilson to attempt to pour oil upon the troubled waters, by praising the disunion rump Congress and the President in the same breath,* was only another illustration of the old adage —"drowning men catch at straw*." Honest Republicans who sustain the President, now see plainly that they can no longer affiliate with a class of men who openly oppose the Government and the union of the States-

A painful spectacle is presented the leaders of the party in this county, when stripped of their masks of loyalty and patriotism, are nothing but traitors—traitors at heart who never reverenced ourglorious Union but who for years past have been silently plotting for its destruction. The hypocrisy and malevolence of these fellows is a marvel. One can but wonder, how humanity can become so depraved and debased, as to dissemble with the cunning of the devil their real character in deceiving the honest masses for the last ten years, and still to continue with unblushing effrontry the palpable fraud.

Honesty the best policy, is a truism that seems never to have entered the heads of these tricksters but thanks to the good sense of the people of Montgomery county, they will never follow these traitors in their war against the President and the country to foist upon us a centralized despotism and degrade the white race to an equality with the negroes. The party that stands by the constitution, and opposes its being destroyed and obliterated by abolition amendments, will triumph in October. The Democracy may rest assured, that the conservative Republicans of this countv will be with them in the good work of strengthening the hands of our noble President, aud staying the tide of despotism and anarchy that threaten to overwhelm us. Let the con* vention on next Saturday select a ticket of K""'1 »«»«, competent to discharge their duties as public officers, and my word ror H. tUo ticket will triumph with an overwhelming majority. There is a ground-swell, a popular uprising, a change of sentiment, a revolution of ideas as to who are the friends of the country, that will astonish and amaze the negro suffrage party of this county in October.

The appointment of Col. Wm. C. Wilson, of Lafayette, as Assessor for the eighth District, regarded by all conservatives as an excellent appointment. The guillotine will soon be at work in your city, and among the first who will feel the keeu edge of the axe will be Mr. James Heaton, sen. His doom is irrevocably fixed. No military commission, organized to convict, could make it mere rortain and inevitable. Wo admonish him to set his house in order, and prepare for kingdom come, the year of jubilee, that is to witness the casting out of all unclean things from the Temple of American Freedom, now desecratcd and despoiled of its beauty and purity by the hungry hordes of Abolition vandal?,

tp

A JOHNSON RKPVM.IR.KY.

:-l'Printing

Press for Sale.

We have a I*oster, double medium printing press which we will sell cheap for cash. This press is in good order and our only reason for selling it is to make room for a steam press. Any person designing to start a paper can get a bargain by immediately addressing the editor of this paper.

111

Tlic Jfcw Drug Store.

Dr. T. W. FRY & Co. have opened anew Drug Store, on Green Street, opposite Commercial Row. Their stock has been selected with great care, and will bo sold to purchasers at the lowest figures. In connection with their drug department they keep on hand the very best quality of sugars, tcos, coffee, tobacco and cigars. Read their advertisement in another column.

AUCTION every evening.

Miss JKNNIE BROWN and Miss SAI.LIH HART, of Louisville, were found suffocated in the vault of a privy on Monday. The floor of the closet had fallen through, grecipitating them into tho vault.

Choice Cigars.

We are under many obligations to Mr. W. R. FRY, of the firm of T. W. FRY & Co., druggists, for a bunch of choice cigars, which we unhesitatingly pronounce the best in the city. Smokers who wish to enjoy a good cigar will call in at their establishment on Greon Streot

A large and elegant stock of fancy spring Soarfa and fancy Paper Collars at L. & Dessauer.

A la,rge number of the Masonic Fraternity of our city attended a Masonio celebration at Greoncastle on last Thursday. They took with them tho celebrated silver band of this place.

PI

1

New Store at Pleasant Hill.

Tno.MA8 W. FRY, jr. has oponcd a new establishment in Pleasant Hill, where the citizens of that place and surrounding country will find a general assortment of drugs, medicines, dry goods, and groceries. They will find Mr. t. a gentleman to deal with and one who intends to sen his goods at the lowest rates.

REDENBAUOH'S City Saloon, on Green Street, is supplied with the best quality of liquors and cigars. Jerry McNeeley, the gentlemanly

ol°rk,

1

is always ready to wait upon custom-

Afraid to Endorse the President.* The Radioal Convention of the 9th dearly evinced their hatred to the President by refuting to sustain hla in his policy of restoring the Union.

Respectfully Dedicated to this Sophomore Class. The nicest of all gentlemen a

Was J. Adolphus Brown, His hair was black as raven's Ving" And hung in ringlets down.

iHie little hands and polished nails -r Jle wrapped in purple kid, And an exquisite's grace was seen

In everything he did.

Above his rosy lip appeared

••if'.A

tiny strip of down, 'Which was the daily care and pride Of J. Adolphus Brown.

He wore the "sweetest Derby" hat Oblitjuely on his head— And if he ever talked at all Vh 'Twasof something Plato said.

For J. Adolphus went to school And read in big Greek books, Although he very seldom talked, lie told it all in looks.

His feet were cased in gaiter boots o:"As tiny as a girl's, And Lubin's extracts floated from

His shining raven curls.

He had within his slender paw A cane so very small, It seemed as if he scarce could bear To carry it at all.

His dain'ty form he carried with His own exquisite grace, And all the wisdom ho possessed lie put upon his face.

He is a Sophomore they say, And "very smart" in school,' But if you judge by actions, You would think he was—"wise fool.' '/,.

A Natural Remark.

On Saturday, as we were passing along the street, two laboring men, both of whom we know to have boon republicans, met. Said one to the other: What do you think gold is this afternoon? Why, said the other, I don't know what is it? Over 158, was the reply. Well, by G—d, exclaimed the other, hain't the republicans played h—1 with this country? Indianapolis Herald.

TITTI.E, GREW & Co.'s auction rooms are nttrading immense crowds of our people. The large aud elegalit assortmont of goods which they display and the cheap prices at which they are knocked down to bidders is remarked by every one. To one and all we say if you

I W

v.ish to purchase cUoap goods go to this cstab- i»n« .. lishmenr. You will save monev bv .so ,l„in

lishment You will save money by so doing.

New Jersey, aud hope that this spirited example will be followed iu other States." We hope so, too. Let the courts settle the matter as soon as possible. And while they are considering thecaBe of the blacks, let them also include female taxpayers and youths under twenty-one years of nge, who are compelled to pav

mi

Radical I'letj Illustrated. In a discussion last Thursday, in the Common Council of Philadelphia, a member by the name of Hancock is thus reported:

Mr. Hancock—J would go down into hell and break the ashes of the grave to teach the attoruey who would go South to defend Jeff. Davis the contempt in which the people of the city hold him. I would have William B. Reed there that every flapping shred of flag may remind him of the shrouds of his murdered vietims. fjHSl "Mr. Hetzel—I move to include Mr. Thadeus Stevens. ''Mr. Hancock—Well I only say that with Thadeus Stevens I am heart and hand. [Applause.] I belong to his baud. There is only one thing left in the land now, and that is the flag and I trust that wc will ever hallow a day that shows us how despotism was broken up. Such an unhallowed idea as Jeff. Davis being pardoned is preposterous and ought not to be entertained. Jf I would see a traitor going to heaven, great,. God! would go the other way."

He "would go the other way," and, we dare say, in so doing would take the most direct route home.

THE proposed Constitutional amendment leaves the constitution this way: that each man in Indiana has to pay three dollars of direct taxes as often as each man iD Massachusetts pays one. f?v.

THE proposed Constitutional amendment is no measuro of relief. It pays no man's taxes. It benefits only tha'easL

Gbvernor Morton Opens the Campaign. Govefnot 0. P. Morton, of Indiana, has returned from Europe, where ho has been under treatment several months, for a disease called softening of the brain, acfe'ottipftnied with partial paralysis of the limbs, decay of the tissues, breaking down of the nervous system,'&ndatliat*antmortuary dissolution and rotting above ground, which seem to have become as peculiar to the gubernatorial as bronchitis is to the clerical office. He has reccntiy made a speech at Indianapolis, ou the opening of the campaign of 1866 in Indiana, which indicates that, according to the law of physiological sympathies, while his brain has been growing soft his tongue has been growing foul, aud his heart rotten. The speech has been published by both of our loyal morning city cotcmporaries, and, if wc may judge by their laudatory noticcs, exactly meets the views of both a fact which of itself may perhaps, be taken as pretty good a priori proof that it is more than ordinarily unclean, uncaiulid and mendacious. As men iu a state of senile superannuation remember best the incidents of their youth, so, it would seem, men laboring under other forms of imbecility retain only the foulest ideas of the preceding uorinal period and reading the speech of Governor Morton, we are inclined to look upon his memory as a sink, capable of retaining only refuse, and into which all that at which better men have revolted had been indiscriminately poured for preservation. It must certainly require a very weak head, or a very bad heart. I to dig up all the nearly-forgotten scan-

dais and slanders of a series of years, all the half-decayed seeds of grudges and enmities, all the lading memories of personal injuries committed and suffered* and reproduce them at such a time as this, wlic'n there are already enough of

grace and beauty of an Apollo. he has not shown bis head as weak and

TUE Commencement exercises of Wabash College will take placc to-morrow at Centre Church.

GOUEV 'Jk JULY.—This old favorite has been received for the coming month. It is a splendid number.

A^cTio.v every Wednesday and Satur- u„ i. day afternoons. the st.ind.ng of its author. It is not a .ii— matter in which the minority in Indiana

THE^feW York Tribune says: have any direct interest. Governor Mor"Thc colored men of New Jersey arc Ghiel Magistrate of the Jtcpublimoving to contest legally their right to

the ballot. Claiming that',-as taxpayers, representation is due theni iii the enactment and administration of the laws, thev will offer their votes at the next election, and, if refused, they will bring the matter to the courts, and there lay open the whole question of suffrage. The most intelligent and wealthy colored men of the State lead the enterprise, which retains for its chief lawyer, General B. P. Butler. A meeting to swell the movement will be held in Newark on Friday. "We are glad that it has its beginning in

I I A I I I

d,flcrci,ct aml aUS0S of

SUA VINO 1VIOOV jertior Morton has changed from what he S a a a a a It el a is to his totisonal corps and now runs four I .' chairs. His establishment is a first class in-j remember, in the whole stitutioit where one can enjoy an cosv shave (political life, whether in and have his figure-head adorned with thej

wor or

cau

and

tin: only reason for a doubt whether Gov-

in'at'titjyi,' a single' instance where

his heart as rotten as possible.'

would not be understood as wish-

ing that the speech of the Governor of Indiana had been different, more temperate, mote true, or more rational. The speech upon the one hand, aud its acceptJancc on the other, fix 'its character, and

party, aud, we are permitted to believe

a very accurate representative of its principles and proclivities, its manners amd its morals. The Democracy of Indiana, in his view, are'alieh-' eiiehiics—traitors going nnhnng- through the unwise clemency of the General Government. The pictures wliicli he draws, and which we reproduce below, of the Democratic party is not strch a likeness as the members of the party will be quick to recognize nevertheless, it is the one which is to be taken as true by the stumpers and organs of the Republican party for tlic campaign and Democrats will do well to make themselves familiar with its appearance: "WHO CALI.KD THKMSKLYKS DKMOCHATS. "Every unregcncrate rebel, lately in arms against his Government, calls himself a Democrat. "Every 'bounty jumper,' every 'deserter,' every sneak who ran away from the draft, calls himself a Democrat. Bowles, Milligan, Walker, Dodd, Horsey and Humphries, call themselves Democrats. Every 'Son of Liberty' who conspired to murder, burn, rob arsenals and release rebel prisoners, calls himself a Democrat. John Morgan, Sue Mundy, Champ Ferguson, Wirz, Payne and Booth, proclaimthcmselvcs Democrats. Every man who labored for the rebellion iu the field, murdered Union prisoners by cruelty and starvation, who conspired to bring about civil war in tho loyal States, who invented dangerous compounds to burn steamboats and Northern cities, who contrived hellish scheme to introduce into Northern cities the wasting pestilence of yellow fever, calls him self a Democrat. Every dishonest contractor who has been convicted of of defrauding the Government—every dishonest paymaster or disbursing officer who has been convicted of squandering the public money at the gamiug table or in gold gambling operations—every officer in the army who was dismissed for cowardice or disloyalty, calls himself a Democrat. Every wolf in sheep's clothing, who pretends to preach the gospel, but proclaims the righteousness of manselling and slavery—every one who shoots dc-wu negroes iu the streets, burns negro school-houscs and meeting-houses, aud murders women aud children by the light of their own flaming dwellings, calls himself a Democrat. Every New York rioter in 1863, who burnt up little children in colored asylums—who robbed, ravished and murdered indiscriminately in the midst of a blazing city, for three days and »ight's, called himself a Democrat. In short the Democratic party via.y be dcscridtd as a common svwer and loathzoinc

receptacle, into which is .emptied every ele--mcnt of treason Iforth and South, and' every element of inhumanity and. barbarism which has dishonored the aye. "And this party composed of the men5 and elements I have described, iu defiance of truth and decency, asserts itself as the special champion of the Constitution' and& the Union, which, but a short Bilcteen'« months ago, it was in arms to destroy, and proclaims to an astonished world that the1 only effect, of vanquishing armed rebels in the field is to return them to seats in Congress, and to restore theui' to political power. Having failed to destroy the Constitution by force, they seeki to do it by construction, and assume io

1

have made the remarkable discovery that rebels who fought to destroy the Consti-'-,tutiou were its true friends, and that the men who shed their blood and gave theic,. I substance to preserve it were its only .en-, jemies."

It would be very idle rtideed to take issue with Governor M6rton uppn the foregoing or any other', portion of cou pound of falsehoods' an'd firebrands which he has cast among the people of IiidVana jof which the foregoing is about an averjage specimen. Little as we respect his motives, wc can hardly prevail upon ourselves to believe that had his judgment" been undeeayed, Governor Moiton would1 have been guilty of so gratuitous and unjwise an act as that of declaring a war ofdefamation to be prosecuted against on5half of the people of the State of which1' he is the official chief Magistrate. If ho was never too good for such a perform iancc, the day has been when he would'have been too cunning. It looks to us as if he had been dragged l'rora his hosp.ita! bod chamber by a party in a-" 6trnit so1 .desperate, that it was willrng- So tfa'lt-c* advantage of the last glimmer o-f am expiring memory, standing forlorn'over the grave of a dead conscience.— C««.-V h'ttquiL-t v,

IIk Indianapolis Ilerald reviews, in

the following graphic style, the of the diseased Morton £. I

Morton's Spcccli—Meeting of J. Brown's I Pot Lambs. I In looking into this spcccli we expected to find something worthy the executive of the great' state of In'tttarfru- "Vf1# pcctcd to find something possessing the dignity of a statesman's effort. We were disappointed. Wc felt pity for the man when wc had read his speech. Wc were satisfied that his nervous system was a wreck. Ilis speech is but the raving of a gored and angry bull. As a fellow once said, when attempting to describe a raging flow of slang from the bully of a house of ill fame, he began,- G—'d and grew worse and' wxrse aii kite way through. Another thing, tkij speech proves that MOUTOX is mad Or ricr'vous all the time.^SjThe spcech was written in retirement'. Tt was written when a man would be calm if lie ever is. It was not the offspring of off-handed excitement.

Again as the papers have announced, MOKTON has been mouths in preparing it and yet, it is all rage and slang from beginning to end. He must, therefore, be in a tempest of passion, all the time.

MORTON was so hurried along by passion that he ran away from his subject, lie said nothing about the frecdmcn's bureau, nothing about the civil rights bill nothing about the Colorado bill nothing about the negro suffrage bills nothingabout the test oath nothing about the enormous taxes nothing about the Sunday law uothirij*. about the liquor law nothing about fraud and'* bludgeons at

elections he forgot to give' ai' history of his own paTty ev.?m He forgot to" tell1 how they resolved' lliat the eonstitiiliiri' was a league with hell, how they declared' it should uot be obeyed how they passed' state laws making it a criminal offense to' obey it how he, when he was a Bifetoii'r democrat, used to denounce these things as justifying the south in leaving the Union how he finally went over to the know nothing main law republican party, iui 1854 how they adopted a flag with 10stars and procession wagons with. 1 girls how they armed John Brown how they nominated sectional candidates, drivings tho soyth into party dissolutions how they refused reconciliation and criod witin Chandler for blood how they organized' and armed, and drilled the Sons of Liberty of ISo!), and called them out undorrChase, Giddings, & Co. how they stalenegroes in violation of the constitution how they refused the south her right in:r the common territories how they refused' to obey the decision of the supreme court how Johnson says these fellows northern traitors as bad as tho southern,? etc. He forget all these things and ina4\ ny more.

His specch is conclusive that the republicans dare not run the campaign oil' principle, but will attempt to run it on slang.

A man named Decker caught an colwhich weighed twenty-five pounds and three ounces, in Cayuga Lake, ou fch®» 12th uu.. nyi-,