Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 7 July 1866 — Page 1
SEBIES—•VOL, XVn, NO. 45,
BTTSINES3 CARDS. Ileal Estate Agcucy!
WIS. undersigned will soil or buy Heal Estate.— I Any licraon haying Farms or Town Lots for sale |l do w.oli to Icavo thorn with us.
For Sale!,,
[4 or 5 Uood Farms, Tbwn Lots. 1.1 Residences. II Brick Store Room. It Brisk Koaidence, with 1*3 aoron ground attachI WEBSTER, MAY A KliENEY. inquire lit tho Recorder's Office. (dcc23'65.
Bartlett Sewing Machine. $35 ICENSKD under patents of Howe, Wheeler A Wilson, Grover A linker, and Singer A Co., and only Cheap Machine in the United States having right to use tho Wheeler it Wilson or four motion |der-Feod.
To want Agents to sell them. Will pajr SSO to $200 month, or allow large Commissions. Will send lohines, to bo paid for whon sold. For Circulars, rms, to., oneloao stamp and address rAGK BBOTIInits,
1
GENBHAL AOBMTS,
bitherof our Offices, Philadelphia, Pa., Toledoi Jio, or St. Louis, Mo. ISE-.vi with doublo or (single thread. ""-^SCIENTIFIC
IEUICAN.
I*EB. ALL othor cheap machines aro I.SFMNOEand the SKLLER or USER aro LIABLE TO AHKEST,
IS'TSANDiMrii.iso.NUF.NT.
K, Circulars KKKK. Address, kail upon Shaw Clark, Biddeford, Maine, or pcago. 111.
QA
A
IIONVU !-AGENTS wanted for
KJ SIX ENTIRELY NEW ARTICLES, jast out. Iress 0. T. (JAREY, City Building, Biddeford, line, dccl-J3'05-2tglwey.
msion, Bounty, Back Pay,
immutations of Rations for Soldiers mho j/tave been Prisoners of War and Prize iMoney also, Claims for Horses and \Othcr Properly lost in the Service, and ]»?i fact every species of Claims Against Xthc Government' llcctcd with Promptness and Dispatch by
•. JP.
BRITTOW,
Attorney,
AND .#
GOVERNMENTCLAIM AGENT.
toUFOffice in Washington Hull liuildI/, over Simjisoii's Grocery Store, Crawrdsville:
Vder the present Laws, Soldier* and Svld%ers leirs are entitled as follows: .... When a soldier has died from any cause in the lrico of tho United States, since the 13th of April II. leaving a widow, she is entitled to a pension of jper month also a bounty of from $75 t° $402, bolos all arrears of pay. |d. If the soldier loft no widow, hrs ohildren un10 years of ago are entitled to the pension, book jr. and bounty. Id. If the soldier loft no widow,child or children, pn tho father is entitled to the bounty and back j, but no pension. Ith. If tho soldior left no widow, child or father, |if tho father has abandoned tho support of the aily, the mother is entitled to tho back pay and unty, and, if she was dopendont in whole or in rt on her son for support, to a ponsion also. Ith. If tho soldior loft nono of tho above heirs, pn tho brothers and sisters are ontitlod to the back and bounty.
Discharged Soldiers: "f? ,. Jst. Whon a soldier ip discharged by roason of tho Ipiration of his torni of servioe, ho is entitled to 1 arrears of pay and tho balance of tho bounty
j)misod
to him after deducting the installments
(id. fd. Soldiors discharged for wounds recoivod in is OK DUTY aro ontitlod to a
BOUNTY.
Id. SoUliors discharged by reason of disoase conleted in tha servioe, or wounds rccoived. which III disable them, are ontitlod to a TENSION in adLION TO TIIE ABOVE.
=By
a late act of Congross ovory soldior who ... have lost both hands, or both feet or who Jill have lost one hand and one foot in the service, lill bo entitlod to a ponsion of $20 per month, uflioens returns to Chiof of Ordnance, Surgeon fnenvl and Quarter-Master General made up, and Irtifioates of Non-Indebtedness, obtainod. Vera Reasonable and uo Charge In Any Case Unless lecedsrul. IfiSyS/'eaVzi attention given also to the settlement
Decedents' Estates, and other Legal business. uly8'05. W. P. JBBITTOI*.
*:isgss§s
OINTMENT
lioliablo
Scralehcs
BINFORD
Crawfordsville
ff'rc 35*J
[t'cbfl'fil.
EW FIRM
^lOFFET & BOOE,
EMPIRE BLOCK, NO. 4,
CRAWFORDSVILLE, ind.
mm,
Ifi-' -i DEALERS IS I'fllE
irugs ai
faints, Oils, Dycstuffs, Perfumery, Fancy Articles 'urc Wines and Brandies,
For Medical Purposes.
latentMedioinop, Also, Lamps, Glassware, Letter, Cap, and Nolo I'apcr, Pens, Poncils.nod Ink.
PRESCRIPTIONS farofully prepared and pr"inntly attendee: to. We pypoctfully fiH'-itpatronRge frotn the public in »cnrul. jan«0'M.
MEDICAL.
MRS. M. HOOVER, sr
.a.
3sr.
Offlcc and Besldcncc on Vernon Street, Nearly Opposite the Post Omce. WTILLgiveexolnsiveattention to the practico of
Medicine andobstelrls also to the treatment of tho diseases of Women and Children. A share of iu_o puoiic patronage is rospoctl'ully solicited.
May s. ifcOG. [wtf
K. J. BINFORD, I S
AT TIIE OLD STAND OF HENRY OTT,
ir« Side of Court IToute Square,
CRAWFORDSVIULB, INDIANA.
-X DR. J. W. BAIRD,
Physician and Surgeon!
w'"-—Having
may3-'66-3m.
KAA I'ER YEAR! Wo want f,J Vjvy agents everywhere to soil our IOVEU $20 Sowing Machines. Three now kinds, lor and uppor feed. Warranted five years.— livo salary or largo commissions paid. The ONLY vhinea sold in tho United States tor less than $40, Ich are FUI.LT LICENSED BY IIOWE, WIIKELKII &. li%ONi GROVER AUAKEH, SINOKIIA CO., AND BAOH-
permanently locatcd in
CM A ir 0 S 1 E, offers his sorvicc.s to the oummuuity. OFFICE—Over tho National Bank, and residence on College street. (marlo'66.)
FOE THE LADIESCelebrated Pearl Drops, FOR
beautifying the complexion and curing diseases of the skin. For sale only by E.J.BINFORD. Price 2."i cents a bottle.] decnu-180.5
K, M. 'MiRATH & Co.,
MACHINISTS,
Manufacturers of Corn Shcllers, Horse Powers, Drag Saws, Sugar Mills, feuyar Kettles, Castings, Brass Caslings and Machinery of cv-' cry description.
a E a
Can turn out Repair Work in a fexo hours. Shop on 3c St., south of Bramble House,
LaFayette. Ind.
mar24wolty w.*Sp5bl0d.
DR. J. C. SINNARO,
HOMEOPATHIST!
ri Crawfordsville und vicinity.
Measured by thopropor standard—SUCCESSFUL TREATMENT—the Homeopathic System deserves all the praise which has been given it.
ONE EXAMPLE—"In1B49, twelve Homeopathic Physicians in Cincinnati, treated 2410 cases of cholera— recoveries 2325—deaths 63—mortality about 3M por cent. OFFICE WITH TOWNSHIP TRUSTEE,
Ijun30'6G] CKAWFOKDSVILLE, IND. (we3m)
GLYCERIN.
j- r..
For Chapped Hands,
D»c Binfortl's Olfccrin ami Camphor Ice,
For Chapped Lips,
line Binford's Glycerin and Cntoiphor Icc.
::i Foip Chapped Facc,^ '.-
UBC Binford'IT Glycerin nud Camphor Ice.
For Chafed Skin,
UMS Biuford's Glyccriu nud Cniuplior Ice.
PIS
MADE OF THE PUREST MATERIALS, and is unequal ed by any othor article in allaying all irritations of tho skin, with which so many are annoyed during the inclement season of the year. Price twonty-live cents. Prepared and for sale, wholcsaleand retail, by E. J. BINFORD, dec20'G5. Washington st.. Crawfordsville.
Call at the Sign of the
TEA-POT!
IMOAH S. JOSLIN,
(Succossor to Joslin .t Bocm,)
A FTER returning thanks for past fa vors, wishes to XV call the especial attention of tho public generally to tho largo and most perfect stock of STOVES and TIJTJVARE now on hands. The bost and groaiost variety of
OOOZING- SI STOYES,
ovor offered in the Crawfordsville market, and
I
Warranted. to givo satisfaction. All article of TIJY- WJIRE manufactured in workmanlike style and from tho best tin-plate in use. S or hum Pans always on hand. Country Merchants will find it to their interest, when in want of anything in our lino, to give us a call. Wo will sell you goods at wholcsalo.for cash or .approved produce, at tho lowest living (figures.
xl
REPAIRING, ROOFING^i-c., done promptly and on fair terms. Cash paid for Copper, old Iron. Rags. Hutter. Feathers, .to.
Remember JOS LIN'S, No. 5, Commorcial Block, Green street. Crawfordsville. frtnar3'0GcU.l
4iw PLOW FACTORY!
On Main Street, a few Doors East of the Post OJflcc.
I
WOULD respectfully inform my old customers and the public generally that I have engaged tho services of MR. JOIIN BROWN, a practical and experienced Plow Manufacturer, and will keep on hand the very best quality of
Xji O W S
MYued,
Blacksmith establishment will still he continand prompt attention given to
HOKSE SHOEING
and all kinds of repairing. N.|B. Those knowing themselves indebted for work will please make inimediato payment ns 1 need the money to enlargo my business. feblT'GO, JOIIN A. GRIFFIN.
CHEWING TOBACCO.
A
,Iu!ondi
quality of Virginia Cavendish Chewing
/V Tobacco iustreceived and forsnle by dec3tf. 1.EE .t ilROTHER
So England naught rejoices, In the view of Godless flight: Has no well-wishing voices,
DEMOCRATIC AT ALL TIMES AND UNDER A-LL ClltCUMSTANCES
NEMESIS
The Loudon rhyming upon tile warcloud, says:
There's a funeral shadow I.vin" Athwart Europe far and wide .. Drifts and scuds of terror Hying,
Fierce and fast on cvei-v side!" Over Germany they darken, Over Italy they gloom boa-girt England's hushed io hearken
I or the trumpet of the doom.
Where none are in the right, Sees not Freedom's angel springing js-.v From tho blood that shall be shed Only Nemesis slow winging
O'er her due track, strew with dead!
THE folio win a tilt at tilters-
without every joint being "loyally" flexible. Yet, for all that, it would seem to be wanting in something necessary to great godliness, and to the proper maintenance of the saintly character, of the
political party it so much rejoices in. The Rev. Mr. Coxe—a gentleman who united his religion and politics BO thoroughly for tho paaLalx years as to make it impossible to distinguish the one from the other—recently addressed the Christian Union Society, and drew the following picture of the pie tic condition of the people in Western New York. He thus presented it: "He had lately been on official duty in Western New York, and would illustrate the evils of our present system by what he saw there. He saw a village which had jive spires all pointing up to tho same heaven—a beautiful symbol, one would say, of the unity of protestant denominations. But what was the fact as to the real state of the ease? There was not one settled minister iu the placc, just because there were five parties, while their united strength would have been no more than enough for one good strong parish. Each of the fve buildings was large enough to contain tho whole worshiping population. There were twenty ot thirty towns in a similar condition in that county and the one next to it. Of those five buildings four were shut up, locked and barred. 6nly one, that of the Baptists, was open on a Sunday morning, and a Baptist minister drove over several miles from another town to give them one service, and this was all the means of grace now employed by that whole town. He asked, when there, what the people now actually believed in—what sort of religion they had? And the answer was, that many believed in spiritual rappings, and others went after lecturers on one thing or other, and heard preachers now and then who 'told them fuuny things,' and made them laugh at some of the truths of the Gospel of Christ. If this was to be the result of your Protestantism, the land was the devil's already!"
We have no doubt the land he speaks of is the devil's already, but not as the result of Protestantism, any more than it is the result of true Christianity and true Protestantism. It is the result of the teaching and prevaleut acceptation of New England ideas of morals, religion and politics. That is what is the matter
CRAWFORDSVILLE, MONTGOMERY COUNTY, INDIANA', JULY V, 1866.
P~
What is it, tliis black terror'' Is't but the cloud of war, By some pernicious error
Drawn near, from seeming far? No, 'tis a deeper dark'ning ijtX Thau on war's cloud can spread And the voici- for wliieh we're hcark'ning
Thrills with more than battle' dread.
'Tis Nemesis that speakcth rIn the thunder of theso clouds— The Nemesis that wreaketh
Kings' wrongs ou guiltless crowds.: 'Tis Nemesis preparing Bloody crop from evil seed— The Nemesis, ne'er sparing s,-,. 111-docr or ill-deed.
from a distinguished poet— -will b'"1 rend with interest:
[From tho Louisvillo Sunday Democrat A Tilt at Tiltcrs. 'When lovely woman stoops to folly."— Goldsmith.
I.
When lovely woman gets a tilter, -yma And finds too late what it betrays. What can the poor thing do but wilt, or
Hush crimson from all human gaze. ••-a-A
,li»'
The naughty inen—the cruel breezes— The tilt, the toss, the swell, the sway That just revcali what e'er it. please*—
What can her ehamc/or tins allay
HI.
The only act her shame to cover, j^8 To hide her conscious sense ot guilt," Appears to be, to do it over, ^0^! And show again the charms that—tilt.
Tlie llcason why ihc Land is the Devil's. Western New York is, perhaps, the most intensely loyal," so-called, of any part of the North. The Ohio Western Reserve i.* not more go, if, indeed, it can compare with it in intensity of devotion to the great ideas—moral, political and social—that characterize New England Puritanism. Like the politician's dog, which, when it wagged, wagged all over, Western New York breathes "loyalty" through every pore, and docs not move
T1
The last' 'Bill of Abominations—The New Tariff—A licpublicun Paper on a Republican Parly Measure—A PUrc Scheme of
Plunder. -w'.^"^^From tho Chicago Tfritiuno, 27.] The .Tariff Robbery. te The proposed increase of the tariff is an atterilpFon^he par\of its advocates to take about'5200,000,000 at one swoop, out of the^ockets of the rightful owners and transfer it to the manufacturers, merchants, jobbers and speculators who have goods ou hand, whether of domestic or foreign production. It is a pure scheme of plurf^Sr, without the slightest excuse ur palliation, and we shall hold every Western member of Congress who votes for it (whatever his name or politics may be) up to the execration of his defrauded constituents.
There are trot lesa»±han §1^000,000,000 worth of warej, and fabriclcs in the country at the present time, of home or foreign manufacture,, which will be affected by the measure. The bill proposes to add, iu the first place, 20 per cent, to the price of every pound of iron steel in the country, of whatever shape or form. From the blast furbaeeand rolling-mill, through all the channels of commerce, down to the pedlar's wagon, where jack-knives and ueedlcs are vended by retail, this increase of price will take effect instantly, adding 20 per cent, to tho profits of the holdors. and taking it out of tho pockets of the consumers, who are, in fact, all the rest of the people of the United States. Brass uaturally has a prominent place in the list, being raised in price 15 per cent, for the benefit of all possessors of the article, including the franiers and advocates of this bill. All the coppcr iu the country is raised artificially ccnts per pound. Lead in all forms is similarly treated. Plumbago is raised 810 per ton. Nickel doctored in the same fashion (with the expectation of bringing nickel cents to par.) All the publishers and readers of newspapers are cheated, as it was through their efforts mainly that the internal fluty on paper was removed, the hope being hold out to them that the tarifl" should be removed likewise. On earthenware the enormous increase of thirty-five per cent, is proposed. This is as much as the dealers in the articles could hope to make in two years' successful trading or manufacturing. Flaxseed is increased fourteen cents per bushel, and linseed oil seven ccnts per gallon, to enable the holders of those articles to rob the community of those amounts respectively. and the holders of linen goods come in for similar grab. Cigars are lifted up again. Of course, no one has any sympathy with smokers, but why are not they entitled to as much consideration as tobacouists? Why arc they not permitted to have their own money? Why should Congress take it away from them aud give it to another class who have not earned it? The same remark applies to wines. An increase in the duties on wines will certainly diminish the revenue. It can only have the effect to enrich those who have wines on hand.
It is not necessary to go through with the items of cutlery, clothing, carpets, hemp, jute, glass, books, watches, &c., in this iniquitous bill. They are all of a piece—all intended, or if not intended, calculated, to rob the toiling millions of their honest earnings for the benefit of the fortunate possessors of the articles. Mr. Steven Colwell, of the revenue commission, the reputed author of this measure, is a sheer maniac on questions of finance, and the mystery is how he has managed to inoculate the Committee of Ways and Means with his madness. There has been no such utterly vicious and uprincipled scheme as this before Congress during the present generation, aud we again warn Western members of Congress that if they vote for it they must expect to meet, the vengeance of their constituents before they are many months older.
Olden Times.
In an old newspaper file of 1707 we observe that 011 the loth of July of that year an elegant entertainment was given in New York to James Monroe, on his return from his French embassy. General, Horatio Gates, tho conqueror of Burgeyne, was in the chair, and among the guests we notice the name of Aaron Burr, who gave as a toast, "Success to the efforts of republicanism throughout the world." After he had retired, one of his admirers offered a sentiment., which was significantly answered several years later: "Aaron Burr—may those be supported in ascending whose heads do not turn when they are aloft." General Gates' toast was, "Charles James Fox and the patriots of England." One of the regular ones would seem to have been a prophetic anticipation of the "Monroo Doctrine:" "May free governments become too numerous to be toasted, and the present generation leave the world without room for a new republic."
THAUDKUS STEVENS,when asked "what ailed him," said "about seventy years, he believed." He subsequently thought his liver was aCbcted, aud, iu reply to the assertion, admitted ^that his gall was very bitter.
IT is stated that nobody knew any thing of the irouing of Jeff. Davis, except Stanton, who sent Baker down expressly to order, the manacling to be done. ,•
Falsehoods About the Present Treatment of j., Mr. liavis at Fortress Monroe^ For some reasons Sest known to themselves the correspondents from Fortress Monroe lia've been at great pains lately to assure the public that Mr. Davis is living iii great luxury at that place. Of course'these statements arc not put forth in order to satisfy q,py magnanimous popular demand that the "State" prnUbner shall be treated with kiudness. They are mode, manifestly, for the scle purpose of cxcitintr afresh, and to the uttermost, that rage and malevolence which Btill continue to animate the ultra radicals.— That they have not been altogether ineffective in this particular is proven by the innumerable editorial articles which have fallen under our notite, in which bitter complaint is made that the Government is supporting Mr. Davisrin a style of more than ordinary comfort. By whose authority theso reports are framed aud circulated, it is impossible to say, but we can say very positively that they are not true.
The rooms occupied by Mrs. Davis are scantily furnished with furniture of the most ordinary kind, purchased by herself. Mr. Davis' condition of health precludes him from living ou the Government rations offered him. and he consequently draws none. His table is supplied by food bought by himself, and it is of the very simplest sort. At night he occupies a room in Carroll Ilall, on three sides of which are grated openings, and he is there compelled to sleep under the ever watching eyes of sentinels. All these tales about the luxurious accommodations aud fare offered Mr. Davis arc but repetitions of «n! of the earliest invented stories of the ir. When Fort Lafayette was crammed roplotion with prisoners, most of whom were living on foul water and hall'-cooked or half-rotten pork, the New York journals constantly published reports to the eilect that those suffering men were enjoying all the luxuries of a first-class hotel. Falsehood is never respectable. even if it rise to the magnitude of a bulletin or a proclamation. But it was reserved to a large class of writers during our lute war to present the world with a system of lying, which had, at all events, the questionable merit of being as new as it was base and low.—-JVeto York Times.
THE IRONING OF EFPERSON DAVIS.— Doctor Craven says that when "twelve strong men" had, by brute force, rivited heavy shackles upon Mr. Davis, after a brief period of insensibility the noble martyr permitted his manacled feet to rest upon the floor of the cell, and when he heard the clanking of the fetters he hurried his face between his hands, sobbed audibly, and exclaimed: "Oh, the shame! the shame!" But the "shame" was that of the great nation which permitted this vile act to pass unpunished. The fetters 110 more degraded Jefferson Davis than the crucifixion did the Savior of mankind or the offer of a reward for the head of George Washington made him a traitor.
There was no "shame," thank Got), for the poor, wasted prisoner, hurled down and bound by a dozen men—no "shame" upon the brave, noble people whose Lite President was thus outraged—but a "shame" as enduring as history, red, burning and scorching as the lightening of Heaven upon those who thus brutally abused the power of a giant.
The deed of infamy will live in history like the black crime of Judas, and the "goodly company" of torturers, tyrants, merciless jailers and brutal conquerors, whom Cante describes in his Inf rno, will have in due season appropriate additions to their "ardent circle," as the participants in that foul deed met their firey rewards.—Richmond, Va.~) Times. "f
IIoRsfc THIEF AND COUNTERFEITER CAPTURED.—Three men from near Fort Recovery, Ohio, arrived here on Friday last in pursuit of a thief who had stolen two valuable horses in the vicinity of the above named placc. On Saturday morning they overhauled the thief in the vicinity of Ossian, on the Fort Waytie road, and captured him. The scoundrel was caught in possession of the stolen horses, and made desperate resistance to being taken beating one ol' the capturing parly about the head aud face with a revolver in a most shocking manner.
After being captured, the thief made an effort to slip from his person, unprcccived, a large amount of counterfeit postal currency, but was detected in the act, and the spurious circulating medium secured.
The captors passed through here, during Saturday, with their prisoner firmly pinioned aud tied on a horse, going in the direction of Fort Recovery. li luff ton Banner.
The Two Great Lions Watching Each Other. It is stated by a Vienna paper that the Russian Prime Minister has sent a diplomatic note to Prussia, in which he says that Russia will abandon her present neutral position upon the slightest violation of neutrality by France. This means that the lion of Eastern Europe will come to tho aid of Austria if the lion of Western Europe extends any aid to Prussia or Italy. With this jealous feeling animating them, they are likely soon to be at each other's throats. Great as are the powers on the stage of action, those in reserve are still mightier forces,
WHOLE NUMBER 1243
"Morton's Overscnsatlrcnesii The Indianapolis correspondent of the New Albany Ledger, gives the latest O. P. M.news. "Moxa" was a terrible persecution said the friends of O. P. M. tut the cause for that treatment, which was produced, we are told, by over loyal weaknesses, seems tb '-horrify" his excellency still more:
It is well Jcdown that O. M, is ^cry timid in regard to ptib'ltfj sentiment in reference to his public and private acts generally,-and the squeamishness has be come chronic, causing no little irrascibility. We heard it illustrated this wise, a few days ago, an M. D. itinerant who bc& some celebrity in "special" cases, came' along a'Short time ago liftvicg atf ejfe tcr ^the case'of His Excellency, fid got
now for her benefrf.
up
quite an excitement over his alleged extraordinary healing powers, and when at its bight lie obtained an introduction to his anticipated distinguished patife'frf, thinking he could make a favourable impression. After a cursory look at the Governor, the M. D. noticing some pimples, or, perhaps, blotches on liis Excellency's foreheadj remarked, "Slightly, mercurial, Governor slightly mercurial but the dark clolid which overcame tho* Governor's brow and the emphatic re-0-mark front him of "Nothing of the kind', sir, nothing of the kind," satisfied the Doctor that he had misapprehended the' executricities of his coveted patient, knt%-/ that the unfortunate remark had lost him' the ense. If the M. D. had suggested to His Exccllency that the cutaneous G?uptions aforesaid indicated impaired diges-^ -l tive organs, which his treatment wAttld"
great
good man as O. P. M. to suffer such an-s noyances, but he makes trouble for himself by permitting his usual serenity of mind and calm composure to be ruffled by the proffered advice and opinions of itin'-i erant M. D.'s.
An lloncst Confession.
3
In the debate in the Senate on the' Tariff Bill, a Republican United States Senator from Michigan said: "Mr- Chandler said that the free-list was made up so as to favor New England. Fcrtilizcrswerccxemptfrom tax: they were not used in the North-west. Threshingmachines were taxed: they were not used in New England.
4.-,
1
"Mr. .Fessendcn said that was a great* mistake. ..... "Mr. Chandler said that'he had travel-f\ ed all over Now England, and had neve* seen a threshing-machine there. They $ used the old-fashioned flail altogether^'
If it suits New England to have" an: article 011 the free-list, it is put there audit' it is more for her interest to have another article heavily taxed, it is also done.. The whole policy of the Government irf
it
WEEN the proposed amendments to the Constitution were about to be voted on in the House of Congress as they pass' ed (hat body, Mr. Stevens, in his closing
vS
"I should be sorry to find that provts-' ion was stricken out, because before any portion of this can be put into operation there will be, if not Herod a worse than than Herod olsewhere to obstruct our actions. That side of the House tvill be filled with yelling secessionists and hissing copperheads. Give us the third sec- "r\! tion or give us nothing. Do not mock us ^5*
with the pretense of an amendment which throws the Union into the bauds of an enemy before it becomes consolidated. "Gentlemen say I speak of party—'
Whenever party is necessary to sustain the Union,I say mlly to your party and^ "at save the Uniofi. I do not hesitate' to say at once, that sectiou is llicre to save or destray the Union party, is there to savo of destroy the Union by the salvation or destruction of the Union party"
The third section waB was rejected by*®
the Senate. We suppore, therefore, ac-• according to Thad., the Union party—sor,y called—is in a dying condition—the Sen-r ate having implanted a terrible blow in. the pit of its stomach, knocking tho breath out of it VV *•& .if
GOVERNOR MOHTON, we understand, is getting up a lot of certificates to prove* that he is only affected with a "moral disease" of the spine, etc. Wc suggest th« following for one- -1 "This is to certify that Governor Morton is afflicted with a great moral disease, as follows Backbonum. rottenum—too much lovcum.
k-**'
1
spccch, urged- the necessity of the famous a the Senate, saying:
,'fc
1
(SI
T. CANTHARADKS, M, D,
Gold-Sec Saw.
Gold goes up and thcu.it goes doun, and the business men teeter, one set getting smashed up the day gold goes up,., and another the day it goes down. Beau-, tiful state of things. Great prospects, ahead, with three thousand millions of' tho rich forever exempted from taxation by a new constitutional amendment.
1
...v?
