Daily State Sentinel, Volume 10, Number 3675, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 July 1862 — Page 2

IVA IIY-SENTINEL

ATI !- JILV Thf I ntn Ii iuhiI be ,,re,,vr.. Democratic Union State Ticket roa trcmtTAiT or täte, JAM KS S. ATIION, Of Marion Count? . ro atoito or tatt, JOSEPH RISTINE, Of F&anUia County. " ro TrE or state. , MATTH KW L BRETT, Of Dirie ÜouDtf. ro attoexet ottttAt, OCAR U UORD, Ot De:tur Cointr. ro tcrtÄi-fTBiDkiT or rrtic iTEt,-CTiojr, SAMUEL L. KUüG, Of Allen Count? . üatUf led Eminently It gWr tu pleasure to Ute that the Freakier t bs exprese! hl itisfACtion, hii eminent eat'sf Action, with McCtiLLA and the) army of the Putnmtc to their conduct ia the recent battle before Richmond. The PreaiJent. it ia understood, rw-ja the me iih coraplimnt to Mr. Staxtojc. the Secretary of War. Ditto, Mr. Welles, Secretary of the N?y. It U known to the country that Mr. Liscol. In a rpecu meMare tr Cngre, exprel hlmlf satis fie-1 with Mr. Camf.ro' administration of the War Department, aud mm um! the respon ibility of the objection-lb! e acts of th.it officer. The people of the country, a, a nutter of course, xnut receive thee hilor.emenU of the IV evident as eminently 4tijf ictory .without further inquiry. 'Free peech, free pre-s," Ac. Provisional (ioveramente llltit of the State Inder fite Con! ttut.an and CUelr lift ltion to the General (iatrrnmrnl. t In the Senate on Monday Lt?t there was a very iHeretiitg Jlte uixiu tli till providing proviyiotial Government for the Sutes in rebellion agaiust the CJorciiiment. rwrc only room f r a p rt of the li-cusion, and we call attention petiilly to tlie rennt k. of Mr. Cowa.i , the Republican Senator from i't-rnixvlrania, who expresses similar eeiitiment to tljoc advocated by the Itttliutapolia Journal, ihe New York Tribune, Gairisou'ä Liberator and that school of politician gen rally: Mr. Cowan l luve aometimes been of opinion that there was dinger that we would depart, veiy materially depirt, not only from the great principles which were established by the revolution, but from the ;iiiici!ea which were decUred by ourselves tit the time we undertook thi war to unpress the rebellion. Sir, what is a republican furra of goretniuent? Is it riot a government formed by the people by their own free consent? The Government of North Uaroliu.i, before the rebellion, was a Government formed by her people, and it was recognized by this Government; awl, an was said by the honorable Senator from JTew York, the Government was bound by its guiraniceto utain and support that Government; und if it was overturned by any accident, the gu irntee extended to its restoration. Now, air, a rebellion tikes place. If that rebeiliou involves the WMole people io it, that people, by a fundamental principle of our Government arid our policy, have a ri-ht to establish tuch form of gov erumeut as they choose; and if it had been esUblislied to the satisfaction of this Congreji and of thU Government, that the whole people of the Sutft iu which the rebellion prevailed had been involved in that rebellion und were anxious to sever their connection with this General Govern merit and establish a form of government e.ch as they de -ire J, I suppose nobod would have un dertaken to put down the rebellion. I p oppose no Democrat would have underuken it; I suppose no Republican would have undertaken it; I suppose uo man who understood the theory which underlies our Government and our institutions would have undertaken it. What then was the theory upon which we inaugurated this war, and upon which we have ex fended some seveu or eight hundred million dotars and poured out the blood of perhaps one hundred thousand brav? men? It was because we decided all the people of the rebellious States were uot in favor of thi t rebellion. It was be cause we believed it was confined to a few. I had no doubt of it. I have no doubt ofit now if the truth could be known. In the di-charge of our guarantee, and in the performance of our olcmii pledges in the Constitution, we went to war to res tie the many as agiiust the few to rescue the loyal as against the disloyal. That was the theory; and upon uo other theory can this war be justified or the Government be ustained; because no one then euggestcd coLtpiest, and all denied it. In pursuance of our design not to make a conquest, not to subjugate, but to rescue und restore, we invade a particular State, nnd we put down the rebellion. What is next to be done? Guar atitee to them a republican form of government. What republican form of government, I a-k? The republican form of government which thev m de for themselves? The republican form of government which had been recognized by tins Government? Unquestionably. What other one? Who dare propose another one? Aid yet the Senator from Massachusetts would discharge that guarantee to support and maintain that republican form of government by taking t away nnd substituting one of his own in its Mead. 'I h it is most extraordinary Democracy, and most extraordi nary Republicanism. Rut he mjs pome of these laws are atrocious, and are ubhonent to the civil izd world. Very well; Iihm business is that, j according to our theory? ihe tum lies. ol the Senator from Massachusetts, or of the people if Massachusetts, or of the people of North Carolina, who had then,; hi to m ike them? I Mijpo-e 1 am as much in lavor of teaching little children to r.nl as the honorable Senator, and 1 uppo.e 1 have taucht a great muiy more to read than I e h i; but that is not the question. The question 1 i beiber we will utaml iimii m great trutii tau. I:t ! uj in the revolution, whether we will give to the j people rot the? relellijus people, but the loyal j people of North Carolina, it there are such there, ! the government which they established; and it is ' not our province hete to say whether its laws ait j atrocioas, or w hether they are abhorrent to the civilized world or t.ot. Tiie qnetion is, me they j the law ot North Carolina? Peihaps if renn-j st Irs. nil were to criticise the laws of Masachu- i ett te might, forooth, hud some of them ab- J horrent to civ ilia liu. She uii-iht find some of them which, to her nicer and more delicate en.e i ot riht nd roig, veie atrocious. Surh a1 thing mi;ht te; but, 1 a.-k, would that give iVtin-i silvai.ia the nht to interteie and to cIia.'ilC them, because .-he so decidel? Smely not. If; this is a republican form of government, it it is : Democratic at its base, then t!iejetp!e alio are, to le gov ernel bv the law are to I'. Tin thein.and not other ej'ie 1 Üiought tint riht w.is the j verv tiling which was achieved by the revolution, j Ret' lie that revolution, gentlemen ot large ac- j qu.remeiits, of fine tastes, and of large politicalj skill, fabricated .orertimeiits lor the ptp!e; but , iu this: courtry it was !eiiH that the people shouhl fabricate them for themselves, especially as they were to be affected by them, and nobovlj j else. I Well, sir, we have taken possession of a St.tte, i if you p!ae; ae hue put dou the rebeihon; what is l.ext to be doi.e? Est.t.hsh a G.iverumenu What GoverniueM? A iVuvUional Govein merit. K-Ubli.-h a Gov eri; men t d.tU reut Irom ; that which the people lud ub!ishel, or which they could establish. Mr. President, I f y, and I ' think nobody cau gainsay it. that the onlj Uv- i emmeut which can he eublihni theteisthej Government whirh that loyal people will set up i aain, having been temporarily tnro u down by ! the accident of the reoellioii. And when they j set it up again upon its original basis and Ciiry it : on Upen it trst footing, we are done. That ist all we can do, if we pretend at all to carry out I the doctiines ujwui which we entered tpoü the j war. nnely, that a State could not go out of the Union, and'that, therefore, we could ni make a coi. quest of her as if she were out. Bui itu aaid there will be an mterregcum, and the people must have a little time to reinstate the old order of thing. That i all true, but a ho is j clothed with the power to maintain th.it condition , of things wbidt will enable the people to set upj ttiat fllcn Government? I it lbs Coi.res? Our) (iovrrnir.ent Uone of delegated itn, and the ' man w h a-.-erls a power in it mu-t put his finirer i uijoii the place where it is delegated. It will not ! du to show that U would be coineuieut to hive '

I'utpwer. That li not Ihe question. It mut te -h wn In the Contituti..n tj te conferral up. n Coiigie Ri.t to show that we guarantee a re ptiblrcan ftm of (I vernmetit will not warrant us in msking s j h Government as we choo-e and c-t.li-h:ng that it rnut le one alrndy mideby t' e reop'eof the State whkh we are to guvratttee. What, then, can Congress do? 1 an-wer. nothing. Rut the President, or his General actinic uuder his direction, after the rebellion is subdued, can preserve order by military rule until the old Government resumes iti wontel action. This is a military function, requiring military force, and U therefore peculiarly within the province of the General. That ia my view of it, and I am oppo ed to establishing Provisional Governments, unle?t they are purely military in their character, id if that is all this bill "contemplates, it gives the President no power that he has not now. He is bound to do the same thing now that he would be bound to do if the bill tdiould beet) me a law. He has to ho!d the State by .-nilitjry occupition and to preserve it by military rule until the loyal

people take poa.ewoi. of the re;ns ol power which the rebellion had put into other bauds, or obliged them U throw down. Mr. Howard 1 do not wish to interrupt the speech of the Senator from Pennsylvania, but I wa about to ask him a question. Mr. Cowan Certainly. Mr. Howard 1 wish to ask him what he would do in case it should turn out that the rebel States bad uo loyal people at all? How is he going to govern them, and how are they going to govern themselves? Mr. Cowan Will the honorable Senator allow roe to ak him tliat question? 1 hare stated distinctly that unless we contemplate conquest it is one of the fundamental principle of Ihii Government, one of the fundamental principles of our policy, that the people, the people of a State, if you pleie, have a right to form their own Government; or, in other words, it is the right of revolution, if they can make it good, which we have asserted, und which all freemen hive asserted for the last eighty years. Are Governments to be rerpetual; and if tliev are not, w hete is the power to change them, if uot in the people? By what power did we determine iu the Revolution to sever the connection between this country and Great llritaiu? Was it not because of the inherent virtue in the people, a set forth iu the Declaration of Independence? I never heard it denied or questioned; and to say now that that ower is uot in the people is to iay that this ex perimeiit is a failure, U to admit it, is to admit that men have been Ieming upon a broken reed. Who It id the right to day under the Constitution to make a Government lor North Carolina as rgainst the will of the people ot North Caroliua; or tor Michigan as against the will of the people of Michigan? Mr. Howard Does the Senator wLU an an 8 wer? Mr. Cowan Certainly I do. Mr. Howiird The United Stitea of America in Congress assembled have the liht to make that Government and enforce it. Mr. Sumner Ueyond all question. Mr. Cowan Then juu must proceed against them preci-ely as though you proceeieJ agaiust a foreign State in case of conquest, but that is not under the Constitution. And this doctrine of the right of conquest is f recisely the doctrine which was held by t.ie Taiiarnent und K ng of Great Britain in our Revolution. It is the doctrine which has been held by all tyrannies from the time the world legan that when a government is ome established there is no right to change it; but we proclaimed the rieht of successful revolution from the first. Jf this Government becomes a tvrannv, how is it to be changed, there is some such right of revolu tion somewhere? Mr. President, I hold tht this war is a war of rescue; for tle restoration of , ow er to the hands of the loyal people within the rebellious States; and it U not a war for the sub jugatiou or conquest of any State, to take it mid hold it as such, and was never so intended. This Congress solemnly and unanimously resolved that it was not, and it is too late now to assert the contrary doctrine, however convenient it may be. Mr. Carlile Mr. President, when the piojiosition wus first introduced into the Senate by the Senator from Massacliusets, which 1 tuke it gave rise to this bill, it met with the universal condemnation, so far as I am advised, of the entire press of the country. It is true the Senator from Massachusetles. with his usual boldness and frankness, which no one admires more than I do, called hii proposition by the right name. Heiu tended by that resolution to assert the power iu Congress to reduce States of this Union to a territotial condition; and that is what will be effected y this bill, although it comes to us under the name of provisional governments. I confess. I am surprised that as good a constitutional lawyer as we know the Senator from New York to be, should have contented himsel! with the argu uieut which he ua addressed to the Senate in t.i vor ol this proposition. He derives the power from the clause in the Constitution unking the United States the gu nantor for the St des to secure to them a republican form of government. Pirhai s no one in this Senate under.-tinds better than tiie Senator from New Yolk what is the undertiktng of one who guaranties the perform im e of act. He is not the principil; he does not make the Government any moie than . thev-var-antee upon a note mikes the note. TheGoVt-rn meut is foi med by the principal. The principal in this case is the people of the States. They have formed their government. There is not a single rebellious State to-dv that has not a Stale gov ernment, and that State government a republican form of government, as has been well said, recognized by the Constitution of the Ui ited States and all the departments of the Government created under it. That State government is. for ihe lime be.ng iu abey ance by virtue of the re hellion. It has been unable to execute its office The guarantee that you h ive given them in the Constitution of the United Slates is that ou will remove this obstacle to the successful operation ofthat State government. That is your duty; that is your jsiwer; nothing moie, nothing less. . But the Senator from Michigan puts to the Sena tor lio'n Pennsylvaidi a question: What will you do if there are no loyal eop!e in any of the-e State-; if they aieall disloyal? I understand from the Senator from New York that it is notpro;os ed to exercise the power under this bill until after the rebellion shall have been supptessed in the State. If there are no loyal people left in ti e State after the suppression of the rebellion, I take it there will be no people iu the State to govern; for as long as the eople are iiisloyal, the rebellion continues, and in t he ca.e put by the Senator from Michigm, when the lebeliioti is siipjuessed iheie are no jnople left to govern. You will have exterminated them, and it will be a vast wilderness tar a population is concerned, to be repep!ed, and when rei'Oopled to h;4ve a (Jovernmenl est .b 1'shed bv the people inhabiting the limits of the State. Mr. Howard I will ask my friend from Virginia w hether he exjects icbels aie to "die in the lat ditch," and leave the country totally depopulated, or whether there is to be residuum of human beings after the wur is over? Mr. Carlile I have pnectded always upon the theory tint there would be a residuum, and a very largo one, a loyal population left in c ich and all of these States. It is the theory upon which we have proceeded, and the only theory that we t i ttt in f! ii-im, ,il (ti ITvufSk,! St-ifw mil t wag. this war. If it is wajjed under anv other theorv. it can ot.lv be justified unoti the ground th it rebellion has' dissolved the Union, and that this is w r on the part of the non seceded States against theseceded States for the purine of compelling theeceded States to regard their contract which thev entered into with the non .cceded when theradoprediheCvn-rifntion Aftheri.ItelState. t ;1 .1. ...u .i I., i,:u ..i .;.,i it 1 UlvT I'lll) llli'l'V " 111 M 1 1 " I s- " I V lll lUTT'-l f r the Centres of the United Stiles by the Senator from Michigan can be exe.cised or can be justitiell; and then the Senator is untramme'ed by constitutional obligations. Sir, this is a Government compoed of States It the S' ate Governments that are tl.euppoil of the Government of the United States, and when the State Governnin? ce .-e to exist the United St .te Government cetse to exist. But, sir, the Senator from New York talks of conquering Slates. Where does he derive the power, under the Constitution of the United States, to cvno,uer a State and hold it as a conquered State, Territory, or Provit ce? Are the jowers of the ere itute greter than the powers of the creator? Is a limited Government formed bv these States, with certain specified isiwers. greater than the Governments forming it with power unlimited, save an 1 alone where they have been limited ech State for itself in iL own r.r ganic act? The very instant you suppress the reWllion. the State Governm -nt spring agin iato full vigor at d me: a iv i tti reis(ti a igtieu dt tri fii.itor Iran .ve .or that there mit te a perk! of time hört, however, I.e supposes it will i.e. between the uppreion of the relel liitn ami iK itr.T.i.! it'uin tif a stife f.i f-mm.Pi it lien thia bill is to upwate never can exist. teciue Sttte (i.iven n eiiU nxe in existence Each one of thee S'.ttes h it ow n St.te tJorern meut. It i reuJered ineffective and powerles bv Tutuenf the rebellion. The iustAnt vou up-

pre the rebellion and it is only when the rebellion i suppte-sed that you propose to execute the p wers under this b II the instant, ro iutantt, tint you suppress the levelliwii, the G veminent of l!at State springs into life and full vigor agun, and gies on oj-erat'i.g as it did before, and as if no rebellion had ever occurred. Rut sir, it ia too warm to-day to make an thin like a ;eech. This I a proposition that I think cannot commird a nvjonty of this body. Mr. Ha. ra The Seuatorfrom Pennsylvania, for who-e ability and judgment I entertain th most profound repect, has started with a proposition which to my mind is a political heresy und?r our aystem of Government. It is this, and his argu merit is based upon iu that where the people of a State are unanimous in repudiating the Government of the country we have no right as a General Government to suppress that rebellion; that it is only where they are divided upon the que-tion, where some ot the people want to remain in the Union aud some want to go out of the Union, the Unite! Slates Government have

authority to hold them in the Union. 1 regard thit doctrine as a heresy and a most danger ous heresy. Sir, how does that Senator know, how does any Senator know , that there is a loyal man in South Carolina? The presumption is against it; and according to the doctrine of the Senator from Pennsvlvania, unless it hap pens that there is some loyal m m or woman :n Sout'a Carolina, the war as agaiust South Caro liua is unjust. Mr. Cowan If the Senator will allow me to make a remark just here, ia not that the very thing we are now endeavoring to ascertain? Mr. Harris I do not think it is. Mr. Cowan Is not the very thing we are trying to discover whether there are enough loyal people in the South to maintain a Government w ith our help against the rebellion. If they can not, the rebellion succeed., aDd then, instead of being a rebellion, it u a revolution, legitimate, and goes on. Mr. Harris I donotao understand it. My idea of this thing is this: that, assuming every man, woman and child in South Carolina to be hostile to the Government of the United States, it is our duty, under ihe Constitution of the United St-ites, and as citizens, ot the Uw'ed Suit, to put down that rebellion, to suppiess it; und having 'done that, what lollowa? The peoole of South Caro lina say, "You hive conquered us; you have by physical strength suppressed our determination to go out of the Union; we admit that we aie subuued. but )ou shall never hold us iu the Union notwithstanding; we hive formed a Constitution tor out. selves out ol the Union; we have organ ized a Goverument for ourselves outs-ide of the Union, ni d though you have conquered us, you mav hold us by main force of strength; but as for our ever coming back into the Union us a State, we never will." Now, what is to be done? What will ihe Senator Irom Pennsylvania do in that case? Why, sir, we can not make those people organize them selves into a government. We can not force them to hold a convention aud form a new constitution, and iipply to be readmitted into the Gov eitment. We can not force them to hold elections und elect members of Congress and members of a Legislature. We can not do that; hut we can do this and that is the object of this bill we can say to them, "until ou Co that, we will enforce as against yourselves your own constitutions and laws: we will execute upon yourselves the laws you have made and the constitutions you foiTied when you were in the Union." That is the ol ject of this bill and nothing ehe. Whenever, being conquered, rebellion being uppressed, they are ready to hold a convention, organize themselves, and comeback into the Union, we are ready to receive them, und then this law will have spent its force.. It will be no longer operative as a law. But this contemplates that temporary state of things, mid, as 1 said before, it will be very tdiort in its duration, when the State is subdued, and yet the people ure not ready to surrender their present form of government under hii nlien power, but choose to say to us, "though you have conquered us, htill we belong to unother kingdom; we do not belong to the United States, we belong to the Confederate Government; and if you w ill let us have our way, w e will stay there; wu will not go back into the Union." Mr. Cowan Mr. President, suppose the case us put by my honorable friend should occur, supHe tint we succeed in suppressing the rebellion in South Carolina, , nnd alter we h ive done so, ever) body h quiet aud submits, but they tike no steps whatever to resume their old State Government or to establish anv Government in subordination to ours, then 1 usk the honorable Senator what is he to do? Is this Provisional Government to rem ain over the State of South Carolina forever? Is it to be permanent? Ami it it is to be permanent, I ask whether that is not conquest und subjugation? What is conquest; whit is tul jugation? Conquest simply means the overruming of a tountt v nnd the ssuuiptioti of its political pow'er on the p irt of the conqueror, and maintaining it .s against the will of the peiple. What is tu'jugatioii? Making that people go under the oke, alter the fashion of the ancient!, who made the yoke the symbol of subjection. As I understand, aud as I thought we all understood, that is not our object. Why did we invade Tennessee? Because when the will of the people of Tennessee was faiily expressed according to the laws then prevailing and under our Constitution, there was a majority agaiust the rebellion. So it was in Maryland; so it was, 1 believe, iu Noith Carolina; mi it was in Kentucky; and so it would have been iu Louisiana, if the poll had been fair. Then we weie in duty bound to inau gurate this war; we were in duty bound to go to the lescue of those loy al people, aud .e so decided it at first. They might not have been com batants, but they were loyal people, aud we had guarantied to them a republican lorni of govern inent We have gone there; I trust we have gone theie as men ought to go, in pursuance of the stipulations of our Government. uui if if tin us out by some accident or other that in the meanwhile they have all changed their minds and wie all now unatiimouslv against us, then our labor is lost. We cannot subjugate any people who are unanimously against Us. particularly under circumstances of t'iis kind. If that be so, as 1 said before, our labor is lost, because we have no constitutional madiinerv by which to seize upon and take hold of an exterior province and govern it by virtue of our conquest. No man desiies it, no man wishes it, because that itsdf would be the overthrow of our Constitution the admission that the seceded S:ates had gone out, weieout; and that bein out we could m ike a valid conquest of them. I have no du')t. these are gentlemen here in fivor of subjugstion, and were from the very hi-st, beeau-e almost everything that they have liie since theo h-oi indicated that that w.is their origin il idea; but 1 s ty that was not the original idea of the American people; it was not the original idea of ihe American Congress, bevatise they declared otherwise: and if thev declared what w as not their ted opinion at that lime, so much j the worse for those who did so, and it will come j to iMiight. We. as a nation, are responsible be'foieGod and before the world und to ourselves j for t bo honesty of our motives arid the correct- ! ne ss of our intentions. If we expect th it ec.ui ! violate the rieh, trample it under foot, reg trd- ; less of anvthiiig exicpt our own desire for verij ge u.ce, we shall be taught bitterly and mourn,,i!1.v ' , . ,he,U x,: "f engeam-e i mine. : ilh tl' " rePV'-. A" 1 !h.U Wxt H , ' ony a revealed truth, it is a truth in nature ; lh' ,,e,who ,,,,T vantage, whether an in- ; : ,iivi,lu kl :l V;ll,.,,n' '.T lhe n,e,e W1 "l r" i enge, will I .il; he w,, never get vengeance; the , r"' UP" ,"n"Il " ,u 1k. "V,'f";rrr ! h"' lv .s own i elard. 1 he wor d is lull of; ex urn les of it. It is not an arbitrary law because ! I , it was revealed, out it was rev eued because it was iu nature from the beginning. The experience of every man in private life who has ever tried an ex eiiment of that kind ought to have tiught h'ni so. Trample upn the neikest for purpose of vengeance, and he who undertakes it will End that he has sown the sorrow and reaped the poi u. of it. Mr. Wilk'nson I should like to ak the Senator from IVnii-y dvania a que-tion and that is whether the G iv eminent of the United States has not the right, and whether it i not its duty, to prevent any ?epiate and independent government fnm "being est ihlished within its borders, even if the w ho'e people within acertaiu arei de termine so to do? Mr Cowan Tint t another and entirely dif ferent question, not a qucsUm of constitutional law, but a question of policy; and how far it can 1 ever be a question in this country is yet to be de- ' terinincd, bee uise it has never arisen. Item not arise readilv. according to the principles upon which wc established our (.overnmettt, 1 am j very tree to say that, guided by thee principles, ! it w'ould be a vrViation of them upon our part to j se:ze upon anv contiguous territory, or even iu tn .io-ito mil mile iiiliOUHt of lerritOTT W IthiQ ou own t'ortier, tecause we believed it would I ;! to our security t ri'ur convenience. It is the j dvKrtiine of Eurotn.n politics unquestinnblj, i ; and it haa Levn attempted to be established u j 1 the doctrine in tUa country on the part of the

Southern cce,-icTv'l, that if Cuba was neces8 ry to our svfe'r. and if it would contribute tn our defense in the future, we ought to seize it, right or wroug. Mr. Wilm-: Will ray colleague anwer this qoestiou; have we a right to pre-ene the integrity of the republic against all enemies? Mr. Cowan My whole s:ech has been to answer thit very question. We have a right to maintain the integrity of the Republic, of course, under certain conditions; but as nobody supposes the Republic will be eternal, that it will hist always, and that it can last as against the will of the people who created it, my colleague will have to cousider the question as answered. Mr. Wilkinson If I have understood the Senator from Pennsylvania correctly, his argument is this: that if all the people of" South Carolina choose to go out of this Union, and to set up a separate and independent Government, the Gov eminent of the Unite! States has no right to wevent them. Mv question was, whether the Goveminent ol the United States was justified iu per

mitting a separate and independent Government to be established with its bordeis, although the entire peop!e ot a certain area determined to do to? and that leads directly to the argument in the case. If every man, woman, and child, within the bordeis of the State of SjuiIi Carolina, should determine to set up a separate and it de r enden t Government antagonistic to that of the United States, is this Government justified in sitting down qui-tl v and permitting it to be done? Mr. Cowan We have solemnly and unanimously decided here that we were uot seeking to conquer and subjugate the people of the Southern States, but to rescue and restore to them the Government displaced by the rebellion. That we do by virtue ol the Constitution and of our right under it. My honorable friend from Minnesota, however, goes furtuer, and asks, in the case he puts, if :he whole of the people of South Caro lina were to refuse obedience to the Goverument of the United States, whether we would be justified in permitting them to establish an independent government !or themselves? I answer that is a question of policy, to be determined after we had put down all armed resistance and found the unanimity of her people ugainst us. We would then consider the necessity of holding her as a conquered province; and 1 should say that it ought to be a most pressing necessity which would -justify us if we did do so; however, we would, by that act, virtu iliy admit her out of the Union, aud hold her the same as a foreign State which was ours by the fortuue of war. Thus we would do by virtue of the laws of nations; and not by virtue of our constitutional authority over her, and here lies the difletence; we might have chosen at the outlet of this war to consider the seceded States out of the Union, and w e might have determined to conquer them not to testore them again as States iu the Union, but to hold them at our wiil this would havebeeu conquest, subjugation. On .he other hand, we had a right to consider the rebellion as only partial, and not involving the w hole people, aud that w e would suppress it, and restore the Union as before, and we took the quest. on distinctly as to which of the two modes we would adopt when it was decided that we would not conquer or subjugate, but restore. Aud. Mr. President, I am for standing there, and under that hypothesis, I hohl it utterly impossi ble to succeed if the whole people are against us, because we can only adopt the other nivxle of conquest by going back now, and admitting what vie at first denied on all hands, namely: that the seceded States were actually out ol the Union, arid to be dealt with wholly under the laws of nations, and not under the Constitution. Are we ready to do that? I think not; but that we must go on as we have started, and tnauittin ourselves upon U consistently till the end; and then if such an extraordinary unanimity of the people is found against us as has been predicate I here, it will be time enough to settle and determine the question of policy, of conquest. jir. iiKinson I lie senator tries to douce the issue a little. He supposes thecase of Cuba. That is not a parallel case. We do not propose to go outside ot the limits of the United States. The question that I propounded to him is as to the duty of this Government to maintain it. in tegrity over its ow n territory and within its own border. It is not as to our going to Cuba. I do not bae my question upon the doctrines of the Ostend m initesto I ask whether it is not the bounden duty of this Government, as an independent, separate nation, to m lintain the integ rity of every inch of its territory within its limits, no matter what the people of a certain district mav say or do or decide in regard to it. I do not want the Senator to go off and try to draw me on to the nlalfbrtn of James Buchanan and Mr. Soule in their Ostend ramife-to. s,r i . . .... . . .. air. cowan l nave said, air. rresi-ient. as a matter of constitutional law, that theie was no authority, but that it was a question of policy; and as that question had not been settled in this country, as it had not arisen for the consideration oi our statesmen. I have no opinion to express upon it, except the one 1 have expressed, that nothing but the most pressing necesitv to enable us to secure ourselves vvoind authorize us to do it under our form of Government. A .Tllareprcscntut Ion. It is a favorite misrepresentation by the Republican press that "Democrats are opposed to slavery being in any manner weakened by the war." The truth is that Democrats c ue nothing for slavery, prr r, in its connection with the war. They are content that the imt tution shall, like all other things in the insurgent Slates, abide the natural consequences of the war. Their only concern about it U, that it nor any other Slate institution shall be made Ihe subject of unconstitutional action by Congress, the Piesident, or Generals in the field. In other words, nnd in briel, they insist that the Constitution shall not be overthrown for the sake of the overthrow of slavery. If there were twenty millions of negroes in ilavery, instead of four million, questions affecting their freedom or servitude would still be of small consequence by the side of the question of the preservation of the Constitution of the United States. The political power of slavery has already been destroyed by the war, and cannot be revived in peice, or, if it could be. there are few people in the North who would aid its revival. What Democrats want is a revival of the Constitution in all the States is well in those which are in moral rebellion by reason of their "personal liberty " legislation, as iu those which are iu armed rebellion. Let the war be lor this revival, and let both slavery and abolition take care of themselves Chic -go Timm. !"lo;ijil INotiM. 10 ADYHItnSERS.-.VhiirtrthewtnU taUv fvr a timt, und or.lfrft out lrirre tht nrjir,iii"tl Ihn titne c(,Y, tci'l tf. cKttrytrl the regular nitn$ for iht mint up tt fit time they iirt or Jtrnl out. MEDICAÜ PREVENTION IS BETTER THAN CURE. f 10 LADIF.S OFDFLtCATK HEALTH ORlMrAIRFD 1. orriiiia?!on, or to thoeby wUom an I ncr of f.uiiil i i;-.ia .i.iy .-fri-oti otijectionablr , the i ndrr-igned would :T. r irescrfpticrj which is perfctl reliable jnd afe. and which ha been prescribed in varioun part of the Old World for th past century. Although tt t article Is very cheap and simple, yet it "bat been put up in half pint ;'.tt'.rod sold very extensively at the exo rbitant price of 5 per bottle, the undersigned propose furnish the recipe for $1, by the p.ssriju of which every Udy rau supply herself with a perfect afegnard, a', any dm store tor the tnrtinp um of 2& cents per year. nj physician or druxcist will tell you It ii perfectly harmless, thousands of retimonils ran be procure of its erVica.-y. Sent to ary part of the world on receipt ofJl.tiya'Mres . ing. 1E.J.C. PKVKRAUX, P.O. lx, No.J353,New ilaven.Cuuuecticut. aly2:-dw'61 NOTICE. 7V. Lave th's day goll our Bakery to Messrs. Nickum A rarmtt. Thaukine the public In peceral for tb'lr lHeral arrona;re, wrwiuld rei-ect fully a-k tl coniinnir.re of th Hm to oar si-cce-jori. A. A J. METZGER. iBUrapvlis, July 9. 1S62. Jyll t3t COMMISSION MERCHANTS. C. L. S. Matthews, GENERAL COMMISSION -aai FORWARDING MERCHANT, Iaaic Fire-Proof nuilcliii, NO. Mi FOrRTH ST WF.KT M1E, lletween .'Hain Mrcet and Ihe fllver LOUISVILLE. KY. S5u, Con.sjrncHOU are respectfully xdicited, and Im-taed-a:e w i;h prompt returas gurL'eed. jtnl3

EXPRESS.

EXPRESS COMPANY. i.vciz tut sun i i a litihs. NO. 12 EAST WASHINGTON STREET. riV,HE ADtVS Kirp.ESS COMPANY I? b-aretoln-form their cameruus ptrns aud fritnlf that tbey are cow runuing Three Daily Exprese to.axd raoa Over the Indlannpoli and Cincinnati If Milroj&d Onr Ea-trn Fracht anl Mony will arrive twelrekour In advance cf lb tirn bretnf.r. . HU'(T opem-d n office In Maarma. Term., we are prepared to forward Fr IzLt and Vtonev to that ivointje2 dJw JOHN II. UHR, Ajrent, DRY GOODS. Lynch 8l Keane. 33 WEST WASHINGTON1 STREET, XOW tt H-Z rtV' MXX OTHER LARGE INVOICES OF SUMMER 1311 V GOODS, l.adieV Drei floods, everjtlilnj In tlie IMtir, it ii tt .-et I-lgn. T ACF. aH Silk Muruilla, new Hjt Saque?, Sbwl I J and Clonks, Pr nted Ctlicw, rarasoU and Sun In brella. Hoop Ski-Is, Hosiery Ac.: Irish Linen. Lmbroid erie. White GooU, Ijnen and Cambric Handkerchiefs, Bleached and Itruwu Sheetings, Gloves, Notion. Ist Ameiicau brands, irom Sc a yard up; U12ST Mrfli.ISli 2ItI.VTS, Only 12l,c a yard; LADIES' CLO.ilii.rG CLOTH, C-4 w i.le, oi.Iy C9c a yard: very R'Kid, 3 pair 25c. TRY BALLOU S FRENCH YOKE SHIRTS, only to be bad at Lynch A Keane TKY DKST F1LEXCH CUKSETS AND WAISTS. CHOTH, CASSiiYiERE, AND PANTS STUFF For nins and bovs" wear; S raw Good. Hat, Caps, arid Hats f v. rythüiir I be found In a Ory Gwh1s Store. Stock complete; b uzht at recent auctions in New York; will be b.ld 20 per ceut, bt-low former prices for cash. HOOP SKIRTSTlOOP SKIRTS! Having made arrangements with two of the largest Hoop Skirt Manufactories in the Eat, we are prepared to offer thein, wholesale and re ail, at New York prices. ('alt and examine the Mock; uo trouble to U'.w gaK Only one price. Kemember t-igu of the bi Hoop Skirt. Jel3'62-dly a DRY GOODS. CO CD GO -3 e m W u O a O mm CO cn -s t 5 m i p a r-e-ä 1-1 r. O - oo 3 n 1-3 e - m I 'A n 'r C5 co 55 5 O I a 0 sv 4 CO V m it tt 9 CO LANDS FOR SALE. The Hannibal & St. Joseph Ii.Ii.Co. HAVE FOR SALE OVER 500,000 ACRES OF THE BEST PRAIRIE AND TIMBER FARMING LANDS IN THE WEST! AT low prices on ten years credit, at five per cent, interest. Twenty per cnt. I deducted tor full put i.i-n; in cah, or in the Lund Itond of too Company, tiikrn tit jfir, if payment is tnade within two year frort date of purchase, with interest. At prcM-nt. the market price or these bonds i from 50 to 60 percent, below par, which affords on extraordinary opportunity to buy any of the Company's land desired, very much below real value. A FKKB TKIP TICKET U Riven to Land l?iiyer,and they are charged only half freight on all building materials wanted IVnin Hannibal fi-r lirnt improvements on land bought of the Ua;lroad Company. Inducements to emirate to Northern Missouri briefly stated are as fallow-: A mild, healthy climate; rich foi!; cheap land, the prirtluctioiis of which pny f r them, expenses and improvements too. much w ithin the limit of credit p'ven; a larger varie'y of staple pro.!uctnn, embracing all cereals, hemp, tobacco, Chinese sugarcane in erfectin, lri-h and hweet pota'oe?, choicer lru.t.-., ii.cludnig grape, for wine, and peaches, than nny other region furtlur South or North; pure water, timber, wood, coal, lime, tine building rock, clay for brick, and sand lor mortar, are abundant and conveniently distributed; its prairies an ready for the plo; a yprinpr emigrant can plai.t "sod corn" in the latter part of June, and gather a valuable crop in thr fuccet-ilin auniniu fir fatteiiing treat quantities of beeves and hoj.; it i only necessary to btiy land enough for buildi's, nn, orchards, vineyards and crops to bo inclosed, as prairies supply any quantify of excellent hay free of other rot than cutting and stacking, wUich is done w ith improved m-.wer or rake at lo-'s than one dollar tu r ton, ai.d as foddering Is rot.fined to three months and less, but little hay, comparatively, is needed; best of oiwn pasturase, costing nothing, neither interest nor taxes etialUnjr the Hock-rai?er or wool-grower to kep hores and muh by the "core, herds of cattle and 'viiie by the hundreds, and rbx-k of sheer by the thoMsaii.ls; all th markets are accessible by telegraph, rail ai.d water, ar.J the local ia-h tlernand for wool, hemp, tobacco, horse, mules, fat hoir, cattle and t-heep, to export, is ample for the supply. All these adr-niaees are within three days' travel f any Atlantic city, for less than ?-.'5 fare. Stall &uch mmene resources remain unimproved! Mis9orai ia Lotal! "Srcrssros is ri.aTF.o oit!" It Is now perfectly afe o rmlgrnte to Northern Jlisw-urf, and the loyal are going. It w i'l o n l e a (re State. Op-po--r concele ir, and the highest coi.tri.Hiiiir intc-rts of the State demand it. Iy;tl slaveholders unite w ith other Union -lovin citizen in boldly advocating emanripation, us advised by th Presidpnt and approved by Cor.gres. CO L(. l A TIO.'M . Emicrants settling in colonie", will contribute greatly to e.ich t her advantage. Jarge arid choice belies f land f)ffT'd, furnish them every facility. To C"lon;7e successiuii', co-op-rutioti is nHesary, easy and practical by a little concerted action. Now i the time f.r multitudes, with prudent forethoucht and action, to secu'e with Utile money, rich farnm and happy home, which must rapidly increase in value, for theni.-elve and their posterity. CATITALISTS, AND OTHERS, Can now, wiih little money, aud perfect security to t!tm-selv-., assist their more" destitute but industrious and capable friends to acptre in a little time ralutl le farms and plt-a-ant honi'stenf1. The Und will abundantly beciie th rni-i' adauce, anI it prolific produc:iors will foonenab! the emigrant to ciuccl the loan and. teT"stPAMPIILETS containlrg ke'ctn maps showing ireo-prai'b-.cal po-jtion, railr ad connections, and giving full inf"matio i, are sent gratia. EAsJt 'l wi-hirg toeclit their friends to emigrate Wim m.-m. apply for all ther want to circulate. Cvpriiou in this way wiü b of mutual adrantae to ail. Apply to, or address m onr.r. s. ii.titttis. Land Agent Har.nibal and St. Joeph Railroad Company, 45 City Eicharja Botoc, atass. JOXAII 1ICST, Land ComtnisfloE r, Hannibal, ifo. Jer-dlO-I NOTICE. I will Ixt on Friday, the 25 h in-Unf, li5. to th? bet ' Bi lder, the enlarging and raising an additional Story j ou Sch-ol House No 7, in Centre Town-hip. F r partka- I Jars as o plans n! peciÄt atior.s and term, ef payment, j inquire of Trnste ap-stalr m t'oort House j July 5. 67. JASIkS Ttio'EK, Trastee. J7-tt2 PIANO-FORTES. ALL WHO WlH TO GET ELEGANT EokcwmxI liiiO, nperioriaM and ft. i-h. are invited to examine the 11 .R)M k y " J U. Stff. of La!t.m.rc. nu n vl.lht..n .1 u. SafTera' Mast- kootts, in tbe .Etna DuiUiog. Kot.ms opeu frv.ro 7 A. M. till 8', I. I i. r. ii. J. WILLIAM M U EUN. jya-iy

DRY GOODS.

SECOND LARGE INVOICE SUMMER DRY GOODS JXTSX RECEIVED A.T TaTo. 5 East Washington St., C0NSI5TIN0 IN TAKT OT

FIXE DRESS (100DS. LACE AND SILK MANTLES. LINENS. GLOVES AND HOSIERY, PARASOLS. HOOP SKIRTS. LADIES' GENTS' AND CHILDREN'S FINE .TIciiN and Hoys' Wear,

EVERTTHING IN TUE LINE, AND AT MUCES TO SITT THE TIMES. CALL SOON ANI EXAMINE THE STOCK. M. EC. GOOD, Proprietor.

DRUCS. NEW FIRM. TIIAVE associated with me in r-u-iness Mr. G. VT. Sloan, who has been an asi-tant in the store for a nunjSer of years past. Htrafter the ousiness will W continued at the old stand nndcr Ihe firm of HKOIVMM; A: M. .. I feel grateful for th liberal patrvnage which wa har ever received trust hj urict attention to huness and the watits of our customer to merit and retain the same. K. ItllUWNlMi. ( VLL persons know ing themselres indebted to nie w ill please cnll at their earliest convenience and make fceitltrint nt of fcanie, and oblige K. bKOWNlMi. j UKOVMNG V SLOAN,, i (LATE R. MiOYTNING,) -U 'BC TU 9 ü 4 JL W IT W 22 West Washington Street, Indianapolis, Have in More a lsrtre and well atdected Hm .f Drug-, ' Medicines, Chemicals, Faints, t til, Vaoiishos.Dyestuffs, Ol issware. Window Class, Ilrushcs, j Cigars, Tohacro, slices. I'erfumery, Fancy and Toilet Articles, Coal Oil and Inips, I Patent Medicines, and all articles tocorrplete the stock of a Pruepist. As we purchase principtlly for csh, direct from the importers and manufacturers, and lx-in desirous to retain the reputation which our house ha ever enjoxed of setting reih ! tirls, pre.it care is taVcn in the selection of Irurs in rpferrnce lolheir juritv. Cur facilities are Fuh tha we feel ronfideat we can offer, in -ura arn1 unadulterated articles, as strong In lucenitnta as any other Western house. All orders will receive the personal attention of one of the firm Great care taken in thedispen-in? of physicians' prwecriptions and family recipes from strictly pure articles, and we f-el confident we can render satisfaction in the nricet and quality of poods. RkOWNING SLOAN, 22 West Washington street. PAINTS! OILS!YAUXISIIES! 500 KF:,iS rure Wljite 200 KEGS Pur Whii Zinci RAttKF.LS LlnsffdOil; CSKS Yellow Ochre; Q CASKS Venet. Red. W'ith a large etock of YaniMies, Taints, and Color of ail kinds grouLd ia oil and drv. For sale at ti e lowest fibres. r.KOWNING A SIIAN, 22 West Wa hinpton street. BEST American and French Window Glass; 600 boxes Window assorted, from HxlO to 36xC0, in store and for sale at low est figures by BROWNING & SLOAN. Brushes! Brushes! ()AA DOZEN Faint and Varnish Drupes, Wall V1? Drurhcs. Ssh Tod, Plendcrs, Scrub, Shoe, Hore, Hair, Hat. and Cloth Brushes of all binds at lowest figures at BROWNING & SLOAN'S. JeI4-deod.tweow3m - FRUIT CANS, &C. "71I-, in great demand. They can be purchased W at very low rates frt m a stock of T. REE HUNDRED DOZEN, Quart mid II;iH Oallonj, At No. 21 West Washington SL Hare also received a Urge stock of Nal's, Strap Hinge. WireCloth, Horse Muzzle. Belting and Backing Rope, Table and Bucket Cutlery, Toother with a large st-ck cf Hardw are for Farmers, Bu i lers, Mechanics, Machinists, and Railroad. Je23 J. II. VAJEN. BRANDY. Pure Ohio Catawba Brandy. SAMUELS 5c JACOB, PRorRIETOHS, AW SOLE APPOINTING AGENTS FOR TUE UNITED STATES. Depot 1 5 Cnlumblr M., Clnrinnatl, A. FRANCO, Iudisnapolis, Je23-dly A gnt for Indiana. Hltnoi, and Wisct.nsin. j MEDICAL. EFFERVESCENT SELTZER AFETTTnSTT. Ibi valuable and popular Medicine ha u viTera!ly re- . ceived the rn'st favrTihle revoinm-ndatior.s of the Medical Profession and the IuM;c as the ro-rst r.rrwiKKT asi aoarRaaut i It may be ued with the lest effect in I Bilious and Febrile IMeases, Costivenes, Sick Hesda-be, Naj-ea. liOsof Appttrte, Indigestion, Acidity of tbe Siotmcb, 1 orpW.ty of the I jver. (rout. Rheumatic A flertioii. Gravel. Ill-s, And ail Complaints where a gentle arnl Cooling Ajerient or I'urf nive is required. It is particularly adapted to the wants of Traveler by Sea an.1 Land, Resident tn Hot Climates, per'n of Sedentary Habit, Invalid ar.d Cv-nvale-cents; Captain of Vc'M-ij ard nnters wiU find il a Taluable additivn ta their Medicine (liest. It is in the form of a Powder, earTuMy put up In bottlos to kee.p in any climate, and merely require, water poured up-o it to produce a delightful eCerrescent beverNumerous testimonial from profeional and other gentlemen of the h!he t stsnding throughout tbe conntry, and iu steali y iicrea.s-:n? popnlsrtty for a er4., of years, tr.-r.Tjr guarantee It eff.c.cy and valuable ehar aer, and couiüjend it to the favorable notice of an intelligent put lie. Mnufacrurei or.ly by TARRANT CO., No. 279 Greenwicb street, corner of Warren reet, New York; ar.d f r sale by Drusiist ge&erally. Jy7 -Uy C O 2V F I D E N T I A L . rnrxr. vrx WHO HAVE INIJURKD themselves by eertaia serret babit, which unfit them for bnslne, pleasure or tbe dutie of married l.fe; .t.n mi.t.t'e.ared and old men. who. from the folli- f youth r otber cau. feel a debility in advance rf their .ear., before rlciriaT themelve un der the treatment of any one, should first read THE SECRET FRIEND." Married ladic i I learn svmetLing of importance tj perusmg Thi Sacaar Faiaao." Setit to any addreM, Iu a sealed euvtlope, on receipt tf Ten Cent. DR. STUART CO. can be consulted on all diseases of a private or cucifWrutial natare. from S A. M. to ft P St., (Sundays from to 11 A. il-,) at their office. No. 13 Eat Thirl street. up-tir., LeHiern Hau aad Sjcainore, op po.ite tbe lleurie llwae. Adare DU. CIlAS. A. STUART k CO., racfc2l-dJkwly.t.'ei CitMriunati,Ohio.

BLACK AND FANCY SILKS. NEW STYLES SAQUE3. WHITE ;oods. EMRKOIDERIES.

SCN UMBRELLAS. SILK MITTS, CAMBRIC HANDKERCHIEFS, CLOTHS, Trimming, XotioiiM, MEDICAL. f Slight Cold, cr gfetc fhficat which ni-ht l-e cleiJ-:f JL vrit a simple remt-dy, if neglected, cficr. terrninzics tericutlj. Ferjj are aware cf the importance cf stepping a ßciiQll. cr Unlit ßcJLL in li3 first stage; that wuch in, iKs beginning xxuld yidi t$ a mild remedy, if net attend! to, seen attacks Lhe lungs. jQf.ttuuji.'ei ? cjxJl'lclLJ acJvrs. were f.rzt introduced elcim years agz It has lccn proved that they are the best article before the jmlZis it jl&lJwia, rfiiitLfitll, Ve Hacking Cough in fficji&urniflcn, or.d numerous affections cf the JDhtcuiU giving immediate relief. Public Speaker m ff Sin per viU fjA them effectual for clearing and strengthening the vcice Fold by all (pruggicis and (Vetera in Jedicine. at 5 cents Tr lax. 0 4 IVew .lied i en I I)irorry Fr lle sprei'y and prmtient cuf f GONORRHEA, GLEET. URETHAL DISCHARGES, SEMINAL WEAKNESS, NIGHTLY EMISSIONS, I NCON TIN A N CK, G EN II A L I R RITA Et UT , GraTel.Mrlcture.and A9ectionsof the Kidney and Bladder which ha bfen used by upward of one hundred physicians. -TTN THEIR TRITATE rU ACTICE, WITH ENTIRE SUCCESS, superseding Cu'cb, Copaiba, Capaul. r any otijer compound hltl e rt known. SPECIFIC rif.L,S Are speedy In action, often effectiu a eure In a few !ay, and lien a cure 1 en.-ctrd it 1 -nn.n-nt. Tby ar preparel from vegetable extracts trat are banc Ir. on the system and never uaUKttethf tofarh, or itrtpr'p nate th breath; and Wing nirar-caTd. all tianisMt.' tastet avt4dyl. No change of diet I n-ceary whiU using them; nor doe tbeir action Interfere with business pursuits. Each box contain six dozen Fills. TRICE ONE DOLLAR, And will be ent j mail, post-paid ty any adTertlsed Arent, on receipt of the money. Sold by Druggist, generally. None genuine wHliont mr sienattire on the wrapper. J. BRYAN, Kochesler, N. General Acrrnt. ftsT TOMLINSON A COX, Agent for Indianapol Jul19-dAw '1 f IHI-SE Fill are the result of much steady and creI ful experience in all varieties of Female complaints, and lncaes of Irregularities, Suppressions, Lruchorrhea or Whites, Inflammation of Ike Bladder, Kiduey attd Womb, and loa of iitryuu Energy, tic. Their use Is alM've all praise. Are entirely free from any Mercurial or V Ineral poison, are purity vpet.Lle, and are free from danger; can ba Usf'd wiih psTft'ct safVty. Amonc the many th-uan' that bare use9 them in all part f tbe Union ose speak ill of them, for all like them. J-sV. MJ rJ Msrri'd Tidies la certain situation, should not them, for reawn sre diretio on each box. Irlce? Onr Dollar Per IIox. Tliey are srit Ina thin, flat box, postage fre., t" all parts of iTie United tate opn tbe receipt of the price. Prepjre la:.doldby DR. EW'IMi, No. M Virtrim. Ao-tiuo, myT-ZA'ly lnli(ii ü,, sta. JJ A . SI 4P o ß ; now i, oki: now tti si Mt i:rn Jtimt I'uHimhrtt in n Sralf Irrtp. I'lMCE SIX CENTS. A LECTURE '-n tLe Nature, Treatment and Radical Cure 4 Sperrasiorrl.-a or Srmlt,.! weakne... fnvoj ji.cry K niision, ii mat lability n1 In.pe.inei t mrria? g-it-rally. Nf rvo.i.s.Consaruption, Ffd. lepsy and Fit ; Mflilal afid liyswral IlKStr'tr reti!trz Tr.,mS.-ir-bus, Ac Py HMI'.I.I:T J. CULVr RW H.I if. D., AntLor of tie rVre fc "A B.oa to rh-.u-ands cf Sufferer " snt under seaJ fn a plsin envelope, to any address, pl paid, i d receipt tdtXx ri.ta ort postage st. rup. . y . CH. J. C. KUNF., 127 Pow. ery , Nr r: T' rk, Vtoff-ce B-.x 4... aprt-di 3m U I.TIIMUTAAT Tl IAIIi: S. BMMBS DR. JOHN HARVEY, HAVING 0R C1-WAI.D OF ter.yyear ! M hi prf-i.r. tlm BClusiveiy to thetreat'ii-i t tt i emule II 1 f f Ir u 1 1 lrf and hv;nirs,i"ree- I In hu-.iM f cases in restorir.g the afHrte1 to ,ur. health, la rtow et tire con Menee fferinc p.l la'y sti. "Greet! .Imerican iltmtdy" DU. liAUVK.T'S CHRONO-THERMAL FEMALE PILLS W hich have never yet failed (when the directions have been strictly followed,) to renjovio diSJeulUes arislLf from OB.STRUCTIO. OR STOITAGR OF NATURE, Or in re.torlnp the y ten t o pcrf. ct health, w hen ifferlM fromStdnal Atrtioiia. PrUapsus. Ctert. tbe Whites, or other w.aki es .f the Uterine Urrsos. Alw, tn all ease of Deti'.itj ot Nervous Prostration; Hysterics, Falpita tions, Ac.wbkb are the forerunner I more serious disease. DS& These pill are perfetly harmless en the eonstl tution aid nay be taken by the raotM:cate female without cansine distress, at tbesametimetbey act like a chares by itrenirtbetili.r. luriorsUkjr aua" re.toiii.a; the systeu to a leaitby condition, ai.d ty brlrrlrr on tbeaaoortly period with rryularlty, no matter from what cauaetht obstructicx. may are. They should, however, not bs taken -lunce the Crst three or four Months of preirr.ancy, thoUfcD safe at any otber tltr.c, as rclscarrUtt woeld be tL resulu Each boa cM.U!n60 PH!s. Price tl, ad when desired will be sett by ms:I, pre-paid by anj drenlsed Arrit, on receipt cf the money. Sold by Druj d renerally. J. BRIAN, I Rochester. New York. General Arent. I rjjy TOMLINSON COX, A cent for Indianapolis. juijia-diwci "happiness or misery ? THAT IS THE QUESTION. TBE proprietor of tbe "PARISIAN CAWSLT Or WUNDERS ANATOMY, end MEDICINE,- have cVtermHed, rerardle of expense, to tsue, free, (foe th benefit ot uffrrine buraniry) ftUR of the r moat tostnetive aid Lntere-tinf Leeure on Mamate and Its iM-'tualifxation. Nerv.m D-bilify, Premature Incline of Marihofi, trwlirestion, Weakoea or Ieprev.irn, Lsra of Energy an! Vital Power, tbe Great 5rtal EvU, and tho Maladies which resnlt frotn Toothful fll e, Fitwi of Maturity, r I eworanre of Pbyolry anil Nature'. Law The- mvalaaMe Lecrwre bave been tbe mransof enlihtemnj in-i aarir thousaiid, anJ will t forwarded fn-e oti the receipt of f-Kir sUsaps, by tdreMrnt; SFt'Ur.T4Rt Paamaa CaaiatT oe Aiatshst Maitcia, 5a Er-adwsy, Nw Tork. ' J13-slly

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