Daily State Sentinel, Volume 10, Number 3699, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 August 1862 — Page 2
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f OSnocHtic Unloxitato "TicEct
i rot rtrTtT or strati. !! . JAMES S. ATHON. : ; , Of llArion Count? . S0 Al'DITUft Of tTATly ' , JOÜDPII RISTINE, : .' . Of FoonUin County. roz TtBAKci or rraTt. , MATTHEW L. BRETT, ' Of tUfica Countj. , - i to ATToOKY df-saAl, - : OSCAÜ II 1IORD, ; Ol DsC jr C.c.ntT. ro sirfc.tixrkfi'txr or -rustic I5tri;ctios, j samukl l; kcgg, Of AlleuCo.itrtv.' . . ' A Jlttnlfr Ärct j We puMisli on lh t,rt pr of this moru'rig' i.Mut, speech delivered by Mr. Sisott, in Boston, which h4 the? ring of the tr metal. In sinking contrast are the utterance of , our Governor in a Ute i; wrh in CiticnnAti. Mr. - Sfc.?5oTT 14 tli same man who took his carpetbag in hand, ami went down to Virgiou to insist that Jon Liowx should hare a fair trial, and to ! riadn-ate the ri-jht of free speech upon the soil of the Ol '1 Dominum. There, at ia Bosioti.Lc ' b'.ddrj ilioktnited what he conceived to be the , riht of evert American citizen. Governor Motto take his carpet sack In hand and goe dowu to Clncmtiati tu make a speech to an immense a?etulilie of freemen. " Mark the difference LetVreu the true i,d tle timid mm. Speaking of the dutjr to sustain the Government, the Governor, according to the Cincinnati CommerCd, aakl: " , We aoEietimesi hear the question naked, will jou dent the right of private judgment the right of a mm to examine and criticise the act.-) oC the Government? I $j certainlj not, but we roust nlway consider the orcumUricea surrounding u?. There ii a time for all thing, a time to ; laugh, in mourn, to criticise, aud a time to hush our d'atisfdction. and come together as ootj 1 man. ' Aud iu the same spirit occur the following lentimcnt: "' The theory of republicm government h that the m ijunty shall govern, and that the miuority shall Mihmit. We cannot carry on Republican Gareminenl on aiiy other principle. Hut tint U not alt. The power or right to gor-' era spring from the Coustituiioti, and that name t lustrunient gnardx and protect with ai sncrcd care the rights ' of minorities as those ot majoriti". "The majority shall govern," , only in subservience und within the limit of the Cotiatilulioti, aud "lite luinoiity shall submit" oi ly when such is the government of the major . ily. It is evident thai iu making these trong, uni-ualifkd declaration., the Governor was a little beyond his depth, but ot he rises in the scale of fUtemain.ship he will, perhaps, be better able to comprehend the theory ot republican government. This, we believe, is a Government of the people, or it is no professedly. The Federal . Government is not Li.vculn's Government, nor the Government of Indiana JIorton's Govern- , nieiit. They hate neither legislative nor judicial functions. .The duties of the President and the Governor are simply executive. They are bona J to support the Cun-titution and faithfully excute the laws. Iu performing that duty honetly-they are entitled to the sympathr and cordial support of every good citizen. The Governor says there is "a time to criticise and it time to hush our di-ualisiaclion," and intimates that this is the time that the ot Ixen should cease to criticise officials and the time to hush dissatisfaction. - That is aping Lot is Naroo.o und Faaxcis Jubiru a little too closely it is but the adoption of an exploded dogma '"that the King cm do no wrong." Let such a doctrine as this be adopted, then our free institution would be but "a founding brads and a tinkling cymbal" the form might remain, but the spirit, the life, ' would be gone. What cuibs unhallowed ambition what the . most powerful restraint upon cOicil corruption what influence that keeps the public fcrvant within the liutiu of the Conutuiioi nud the line of duty? Is it not the responsibility uf the otliciat tu the ple a.td their verdict by ciitici.-m - and dinsalirtfaction upon bis public acts? It is U.c votitant review and crit'ein of the acts of tlu?e In power that gives health to the body .otitic. The right of privnte judgment and ficedom of speech ia the very life of our political system. In war, as wU as in (x'ace, the right to criti cise and e I pre J dissatisfaction with the acts of! public tfficers, fhould be freely exercised. Mut the i eople be dumb when thieve., a.- it ha bevu .proven, are robbing the public treasury? Mu.the voice of the people be huhed if a l'resiJent from want ol ability, energv or iil f.iil in trie discharge of his duty! If ur General in the field, either lrvm incouipeteary or trechtry, fail in their duty, crmit our army to be overwhelmtsl and the enemy to triumph, must the voice of the people be Mopj-ed? God forbid! We are not aim id to trut the popular instincts. The voice of the people is the toice of God. They seldom ; a i .i it err. o u ne-.i man ueea tear tnetr unoiasseu judgment. The Pretended Presrntmcnt of t Ue (rand Jttri' Ou Monday last the Journal contained what purported to be a presentment of the Grand Jury, alleging the grave crime of treason gint certain persons, said to be citizens of Indiana. That pretended rorntinent is supposed to be a fraud or fiction, from the fact that each member of the Grand Jury of the United States Courts solemnly swears or affirms j that the counsel of the tiute, his own and his j fellows, shall be kept a secret, unle-n calleJ upon to make the disclosure in acoutt of justice. This oath would necessariy preclude any jnror from making any dinclo-Hire- of nny testimony taken lcfbre th. jury, unless as a wit:e- in a; court of juticj. Xot believiug that any Grand i Jurvman would perjure himelf by miking dis-J closures from which he is prohibited by solemn j oath, yudr the pains and penalties of peiiury, i we are conMrained t believe and pronounce the pretended presentment o! t!ie Grand Jury; as publish in the Journal of Monday list, a: b- fabrication or turgery. We append, in vin-1 dication of what we hire stiJ, the oath which; jch Grand Juror tike when entering upon the j discharge of his duty as such: j oar to roatMA or graxd Jtar. Yen do tolomnly ttctar or ajlrm, that, saving i yourself and fellow jurors, vou, as foreman of! thi gtand iiHuevt, halt diligently inuire and true preentment innke. of all n t h matters and j tHr m shall be iveti vou in ch.re, or other ! ... wue tome to juur knowfetie. touthiL the pre- ; cut service; the rour uf tht Slate; your oten mnd jfottr JrlUtrr, yon tlall krrp $rertt, unle-s j cmIIcvI on in a court of juti e to m ike i'i-v!,-iire i You sbnll prrsrntno f-ne thmujh inilice, batre!, or ill will, nor shall juu Iciive any er?.ou unpre- j re-tiled through f4r, favr, or affection, or lor j any reaard or L thmf; la.t in all your re-; seiitmeni. you hall rrr-n-nt the truth, the whole j truth, and nothing but the truth, according t the best of your skill and nnderU:Hlirii:: nd this jou do m$ you trdl aasrrr to Gait at the j (t'fft I'ty, er mnutr te y na yriay mf Tits likk to Tiir ,aap at aoaa. You ainl each of you itusoleaiolv tvtar or of Jirm, that the same oath that A. lt., your foienun, hath now taken. Ifoiw you, on his part, - you and each of you shall well and truly ofsere and kerpon Ji-ur respective pits, ai d thta von do, u$ yau hall antirrf to Cod ut the (treat fay, Pf nmJtr the faint mmJ pemahut tf jxrjurf.
i , - - O IP 331301-1 OP Hon. JOH.V S. CiinMLEj ,t the lireot .sis Tferlms ! the Ie mocrarr nd CnerTlle C itizen of Indiana larld at Indlunasolla
Joff 30tU, IMJ.'. " - . (cosCLLfiLD.) , The Senator, in his zeal fcr the nero, f ill to remember that it Is only because these States art States, and Sutra ia the Union in contemplation Cf the Coastitntion. ti-.at w e are waging this war. The President' call for troops in April of last year was to enable hTci to execute la the Union the laws of the Union, ai d to protect and hold the pihi properly s th Union, and to suppress n ronibtnntion of cit'.z-n in the Union fowertul ent)u;l to resist successfully th or :i;nr jud ciai oflicer. It h be?u? tl.e-e Sutc have oVclarl themselres cut t'.f l.e Union. uI do not re-;c.t thr!r trnt:tntiori il i.bügvtiona t the Union, that we are jutiCed in wi:ing this war. Yet th sentimeuis, such as I have.re.ul to you, control your congressional Irll iti-m, anl the-e mcu arwl such as then: you are urged to continue in power as nncoinluional Union men, and members of the Union party. Upon principles ai:l purposes such as these, avowed by the Senator fioni whom I have qaoted, would they conduct this war. If their assertions fe true if the ?eir!ed States are already out of this Union, or have ceased to exist, and theieforc no longer members of the Union, it is becau-e of the ex erciso by them Of a legal right, lor if not a legal right, a constitutional right, their act csn he of no validity fur any purpose-whatever. If valid, as Senator Harlan tontenJs, tell nie your justification for making war uiion them? It is Lecau?e tliey are not out of the Urion, and do still exis-t as States in the Union, their xple owing alle giance to the Union, that we are justified in waging thi war, not against the St.ttes us States, but against the rebellious citizens of the seceded States. This Government of ours has no jxiwer to coerce a State In proof of this. I will read you a short extract from one of Mr. Webster's speeches: I am for cordon bylaw; that coercion wb'ch ct only upon delinquent iiHtivloTMl. THIS CaiXSinUTIU.N 1)KS T A1TEM1T T ) L'OKJiCK fOVKKKKiX IMJDIFS STATE IN TilKlK 1DLIT1CAL CAI'ACITIO. If we h'ttM attempt to -xrcut the Uw ot tfi Union by n'u. an srnn1 frce fainnt a I-iiniunit State It wiiult Involve the gor r"i th bsd.thc InM-rent and tLe r'iiltjr. In tbe same ralau.itjr. Hc t ima i.roL cokimiom aiMILK OCT TRR r.HLTV IMI llCaL, ASO MS lift ES HIM FOR SRKAkl.SU VUC LAWS OF TUB U.MOX. Again Mr. Webster taid: Tbe Union U too fall of berefit to be baiarded In proponitior.s fur channiii? Its ordinal lais. I go fr tbe Ccnti:ut on as it ia and tbe Union as It 1. - We have heard much of thed.ingers of foreign interference. We have far more to fear from tho doctrines now sought to be forced upon ihcc-oun-try by the dominant party in Congress, than we havfc to fear from foreigu govern mcnLs. Who believes that six miiliuus ut hostile eople, united in purpose and determined in action, occupy ing seven liurxlred thousand square miles of territory, ein be either sujucatel or exterminated? It: has never been done, and until God shall ch ne his laws, never will be done. In view of thia fact, what should have been our policy? We know lhat one jo;ir npo there wan in every eceJt-d State a lure Union clement, so l.uyethat the leaders of the couspiraey to never the Union, did nuttlaio to trust thc.-e-cfiior of their ropective Statrn to the peoj!e, but, taking advantage of their position, holding, . for the time bcin', the ollioes, und consequently the power ol their State (iovcinments, taking advantage of power conferred upon them by an hori-e-t and confiding people, thev letrael the confidence of thoso who hud elevated tbeni to place, and turned the powers of the State Governments a.tiii.-t tlm Jei'ple, and forced thetil into thid witkcl rebellion. We were told that, after the capture of Fort D ne!son, many of the rebels in arms wept uj n again behoiding the flag of tl;cir country. Sine then, the Republican pres Ihs been engsged in impressing upon the mind of the country the truth thut the South i a mot, aud resolvel upm pertinuent sepsralion. Why is this? How comes it that thc.-e people, who were divided :t few months ago, are united now? Turn to your CougresVional records for the list eight months, und you have the reason. Congress, at its extra sesaion, declared thai the war should be waged to maintain the Constitution and to le store the Union, with nil the lights, dignity and equality ol the States unimpaired. Congress, at its regular session, by its legislative notion, has declared the war shall be prosecute I for tho overthrow of the established rights of the Staes,whieh in their icw no longer exist. The States say they are territories, to be governed free from constitutional restraint, ami the j-eople thereof have no right to constitutional protection.. Jn other words, Congress would have this not a war for the Constitution i.nd the Union, but a gigantic crusade against the established rights and institutions of ihe seceded State. The remedy for these evils, inv fellow citizens, is in your hands. If nt the ballot Ikx this fall men shall elected to the National Legislatur who will aid your armies in the field by stu h wic ami judicious leihttion ns will show to the great masses in the it eded States who were betrayed into recession, that ou will hot permit the powers of the Govern uifiii to be wielded for the destruc tion of their property, rights, and their right of self-government under the Constitution, you will, I feel confident, 'soon' have the Lrratitijation of seeing the rebellion suppressed, and of witnessing the bow that promises n early peace extending itself across our political sky. There is not power enough in Jett. Davis and all his co-workers to keep an army in ihn field ninety d ays l'ter you have removed from the people he assumes to govern the apprehension that the powers of a cotomoji government, created for common protection to lh interests uf all, were to he wielded against them It was this apprehension that gave to the authors of this rebellion ihe physical force, without which it could never have been inaugurated. Never would I have have lelieved; prior to the meeting of Congress, that in this struggle for national existence, men could be found willing to sw!)onlirate the integrity of the Union, and the rights of the eople tinder the Constitution, to party, and attempt to wield the powers of the Government for the accomplishment of party purposes, rather than the maintenance of the Constitution, and the preservation of the Union under it. The faith I once had in the representatives of the people is gone. 1 rely alone upon the people themselves), and believe that you will not allow a thought of party to come between you and your country. Again and again are you ' told that the existence of the institution of slavery in these States is incompatible with . the existence . of the Union. This is a slander upon the wisdom of the men who founded the Government and who framed the Constitution, our only bond of Union. The Union is the result of the Constitution, and he who mjs that the existence of si t very is incompatible with the existence of the Union, announces to the world tint this Government of ours, this experimeutof self government, founded by the patriots and wie men who achieved for us our independence, has proven a failure. Yet this is their cty al morning, at noon and at dewy ee. aud il may be il is uttered in sleep when visions of power ami place and treasuries to j lunder flit before them. The American Government, our Go ertiuient. w as formed bv slavchoMing and non slavclulding States, Twelve of the States were nominally slaveholdin, only five or tix were so to any :ieal extent. Slavery, therefore, existed before the Government was formed, and it may be said that il was formed bv States one half free and one half slave. The Federal Government depends IV r its exi-terce upon the Stat Government and is ba.ed upon the principle that each Stale for itelf determines nd regulates its own institutions; in other won!, the (Ci'ple of each Suie piverit themselves in all matters of internal concernment. It follows, tl.ciciorc, from this principle, which is the corner stone of our Government, lhat each and evrrv State ha the right to establish, continue, abolish tr prohibit slavery with'niia owu limits frccf.um all iutrrtrirm e on the part of the General Gov ernmcnt 1 1 Congress has power to interfere for the "abolishment" of slavery in a State, it his jsjwcr to interfere fr its r.tab'ihmeut in a State. If li e public money cau le used to afford pecuniary uid to it Slate to emancipate its Uves, it can Ipe Used to uttord like jruniary aid to a S ale to I'sUblijh slat cry. The Frdeiai Gjvernment. having im power except that which Is derived from the Con-titut.on, is not dependent tor Its existence upon any of the domestic iitstitu tioiis of the States. The Union was founded by Uv eltolder and non-sUve'io'.der. It was formed for both slavehohiing and Lou slaveholdin State. Slavery existed at il formation and baa existed ever since. The existence, therefore, of the institution of slivcry in some of the States of the Union is n. incompatible with the Union, but the ex'atenct? ol a party p!r!i;e i to wield the power of the Govervmtnt apsinst any institution of any of the States, a Goverc turnt formed for the purposed ptotectinj to tl;e extent of the powers con 1 erred each and every inslitutiuu of each
and every State. Is Incompatible with the exhtence of the Union, le?au4e Pi carry out the pledge wcnM dsftit the very object of II Government which m to prMcct and ut tu" destroy, llence, I sy, a jiarty ortnize-1 upon a rrineipie of ImstHity to tbe intitutien of fifteen of the States of thiUnkin und pledged tocirry out that principle Ia lie aJmiaUtration of the O jverexnent is incompttible with the existence of the Union and if it shouUl, when p!acediu power, carry out it? pledge., it or the Government would bsve to go down. These, my friends, my be unpalatable truths, but yet I bebeve them t,uth. , It bs been sakl that the founders of this Gorerntnent looked upon the institution of slavery, to use the language ofm Senntorfrom Mssnchnett, as a "lemporary flr.J perisJcuz thin." In a speech nf Senator Wlf-r n. of Mvsafhueft; In the Senate, he said: " Waii:nton and Jeu'eron looke I tifn slavery as a tempr.iry and perishing tiling." Wa-hit 't'ii was in the Convention tht forme!
the Constitution, JefTenon w.tin Frati e. Wahing'ou ad located its adoption. That the 3cnt tor is nii-tskrii n to Washington, is shown by the ninth section of the first article of the Constitution, which forbid Congre Iwm prohibiting the imporlsiitMi of slaves for a peiii of near twenty years aller iu adoption. It is true this iroviiioii W4s iuseriel againt the vote of Virginia in the Convention that framed the Constitution, but was udopted hr the State when she ratified the Constitution. The vote in Convention was set en States for it to four against it. The States votinz for it were; Newr IItruphire, Massachusetts, Connecticut, Maryland, North Carolina, South Carolina nnd Georgia 7. Against it; New Jeney, Pennsylvania, DelaWHie and Virginia 1. (See Ma lison Papers Supplement to Elliott' Debates, vol. 5, p. 47rv) Not a single New U.iglai.d vote recorded against this provision. What Mr. Jtfierson thought of the agitation of this question rf slavery in Congress is not left to conjecture. In speaking of the Missouri controversy, Mr. Jefferson said: TbJs ruonvntnui question, like a firs-b II in the r.ipb', awakened ani PMf (I m? wph terror. I Cim.-idered it at one as the kfM-tl of the Lain. ' It is bushed. Indeed, for the prent, but that -n'y a rern-ve, not a final sen-teuc-. A fteojrraphfcul line, co'ncnünp w ith a nrked rrir.ciple, moral ami political, (nc f -i.curr-'d in, and hfld up to the pa.-don. of iun, will never te ob'itf ratel, ana every new irri'.ation will uuik it t'et-jwr and Jeeper until it will kiDdl swh mn'ual and mortal batr d ssio render eparation preferable to temal discord. 1 regret that I am now to die in ihe belief that tae iuel.H Kcrific ff thennrlv- by the generation of 177C to acquire st If k"Vrnnirtit and h.ij'j int ts for their cnanrrj, is to he throw n a ay by the unwi aiil nwjrthy pa-ion of their kff, ami that r.iy only con.-olat ion i tubeib.it I lire not to weep over It. Massachusetts vo'ed for the continuance of this African slave trade for twenty years after the formation of the Governtnct. She, therefore, could not have desire!, nor did she look upon the institution as a perishing or temporary thing, but on the contrary her citi.e;is had been engaged in the trade as will appear from the advertisement I read you taken from the Uoston Gazttte: Jut imported from Africa, a-ul to be ol l on board the bri(r Jniuiey, Wm. Y I ry commander, row lyl!it "uw t;.ttoii. a numtx-r of Itkvly nrjrr boys ait : Kiel'', f roui 12 to 14 years of ape. lniuire of said r lh ry on board said briir, where contJiut atirndance is idvcn v otic. Tho shove slaves have All had th small pox. Treasurer's notes and New n .land ruci will be taLrn as pay. When the shte trnde was abolished and Massachusetts brigs could no longer engst re in the business of exporting New Eugland"rum und trading it for captured Africans when nn honest penny could no longer be made by importing negro boys and girls all of whom had had the small pox, Massachusetts became suddenly pious and commenced reading the Declarutiuu of lnde pemJtuce, and then it was Massachusetts for the first time discovered that all men, small poxed negroes and all, were equal, und having sold these negroes to the South and made all she could out of the slave trade, pious Ma-i-achu setts, not satisfied w ith the money of the South received for the negroe, now seeks to take the neoroca from their mast eis. i-'etiow citizens, what is it thee mad people will not do? In tl.eir hatred fur the South they would destroy themselves. Nothing i-t fttcied in the eyes of these men. The Father of his Country, our own Wnshinton, was placed below a bail) nous, In uul and tieachcrous negro by Won dell Phillips in a speech made by him in the Smithsonian Institute nnd almost within the shadow of Mount Vernon. Mr. I'hillips concluded with a plowing eulogy upou Toussant IOuverture. He would tail him a Cromwell, but lie was a greater statesman than Cromwell; he would call him a Napoleon, but he di 1 not make his way over broken oaths like Napoleon; he would cult him a Washington, but the great Virginian held slave. Above all vvt.s the soldier, statesman, rnaittr Toussant L'Ouvertnre. They attack the brightest characters that illustrate the pages of our history. No character, howev er estimable, is sale from their attacks. The patriotic dead alike with the living, receive their envenomed shafts. The Constitution, the wonder of the world and the admiration of mankind the Union it has formed, with all the couutless blessings it has conferred npnn us all are as dust in the eye of theso men. When you remind them of the Constitution and intimate that it forbids their inttn Terence with the institution of siaverv in the States, ihey at onte sav that you put-slavery above the Union. Not so", my friends. It "is not shivery but it ia the riht established by the Constitution and secured to us by the founders of our Governtneut ot each S:ate to determine for itself its own domestic n stitutions, that 1 would not surrender. There is nothing that can compensate a freeman for the urrender of a constitutional right, and he who would yield il at the bidding of any man, or set of men, is not only unworthy to be free, but is already a slave. It is the riht of each State for itself, lo establish, con-j tiuue, abolish or prohibit siaverv. If you surrender thia right to-day to the Federal Govern mint, how lutijr will it "be before you will becsll-1 ed Un for the surrender of others? 1 1 you concede to Congress the right to say you shall not hold slaves, have they not the same right to say that you shall not exclude negroes from the jurybox or the witness stand? Our only s ifety is m exacting a rigid adherence to the Constitution. We are rapidly concentrating power nt Washington, aud unless checked, the rights of the States will be abst rbedby theccntial Government. These Slate cau only exi-t united under the Constitu tion. It is the interest of each and all to maintain the C4tn$tifn1intial I'ninn. The Oh'o beats upon its bosom to a Southern maiketthe icoducts of Indiana nnd Kentucky, Ohio and Virginia, and until recently the farmer of Indian t received (or the products of hU farm a remunerative reward. His duilv toil brought to his home the comforts r.nd the luxuries of life. To-day .vou have the same Northern markets you have always had, and ret your grain is rotting in your barns, and you go about the streets with your heads bowed down , in sorrow. You are eul otr lrom your Southern market. You are resolved that it shall be yours Mgain How will you have it jüsi as it was before the inauguration of this war? Trwitors and ret els must be put down. The Constitutional Union must be restored. Free necrots do t.ot make a market, nor is cotton produced by voluntary labor. It is to) our interest that thcie shall be no competition in the Southern States with yon. It is more profitable to the Southern planter to employ bis slave labor in the grow th of ct.itou than of corn; he, therefore, purchases fron you his hreadsiutfs and provisions. Cotton is only produced by compulsory labor; strike it down, and your nurkt remains what it is to day. The stale-nun is governed in his legislation by the inteiests 'of his country. No section ol our country has contributed so much to the wealth, and consequently the power j nnd importance of the' nation as the South. It j has grown the world's great staple; and exjri ence has shown thai no labor can compete with j i.egro labor in its production. Cotton can only tie izrown bv compulsory labor, and where negro labur has beeu dispensed with, Coolies have been substituted, which h is htukhl lulo leiug a trade far moie infamous than was the African slave trade. New England owes iu wealth to day to the South. The (treat Vest values its Southern maiket, and the centers of commerce sensiblv feel the interruption of their trade and the loss of their Southern cu-to:ueis. Kcb and every section is benefited by the other, and neither au do well without the other. It is the interest of all to leave to each St tie the regulation of its own internal affairs. Viewing this question, then, in the fiht il should be viewed by a state to an aud legislator tor the whole countiy, I would not abolish (he institution of slavery in the States whete it exits If 1 could. F.rst. because 1 would nt one blow destroy two thousand millions ol dollars of taxable property, making the nation that mm h porer ai.! mkting to that extent the tuition the ton slaveholder. Second, by so doing 1 would deprive the great itraui growing and tock-i siting; West of Its best market, the manufactuiuig districts of the.r greatest source of wealth and their operatives of the meat s ot supxit; aud thirdly, becau I would destroy th gieat staple that has given us our importance and our wealth as a peoie.
There Is still another aspect of this question I desire to bring to ynur notice. What would fil -low the turning looe up'n 'ciety of four millions ol uneduca'ed ne.TOes, crettnrcf cf an inferior race, iiicapibteof providing fur them-elve? You would uotdiive them mto the sea, nor wulj you compvl them to leave the country. To do so would not be consistent with the freedom you w'uU to bestow upon them. Whar follow ? They would scatter over the different Slates and be brought into competion with, the Ubo.-ing whites. Tbe negro must have the means of subsistence, and he can only äequre a s ubitenceby labor or by thelt and plunder. Most of them, when not under compulsion, will not work. Your alms houses, prisons and poor bouses, would soon Inform ycu. if you had not ki owntt before, tint the Abolitionist dieam had t?cn realized In sh irt, the scenes of' Mexico would le re enacted in the Un tel State. In 1776 we hid a population of Je-n tlun three millions Mexico htd eight millions. To day we are thiitv millions of people Mexico eisht millions. The Mexican Constitution nf lf-4 is modeled after our own, but the races were nolsulMrdinated to etc!) other; they are a toonsrrel people, without sUbdity iu their Government, and ate in constant war. Carry out the policy of these anti slavery fanatics, and we make of our once proud l-tcd a second Mexico, and csn read in her h story our fntore. Hut to recur to the doma of the Abolitionist, that the existence of the institution of slavery as il exists in the. slaveholding States of this Union is incompatible with the existence of the Union. And, for tbe sake of the argument, admit it tobe true. How are you to get rid of it? by opeuiy violating the Constitution, by war and through blood? or will you nut resort to the in, de point ed out in and provided for by the Constitution for its amendment? Will you not propose, either ""through Congress or in a National Convention, so tt amend the Constitution as to confer upon the Federal Government the power t abolish slavery iu the Stales. Surely you can not pre scive ihe Ciiriiiutiun by violating it. When you do th'u. you may have a Unmn, but il will not be the Union. Again, the Abolitionionist, clothed sometimes in the livery of heaven, descants the si.i of slavery as if slavery, in the providence of (Jod in
some form or oilier, has not always existed, and j who does tiot know that God's decrees will been- j forced iu despite of the puny elTbtts of unu?; Hut these lightning-line travelers, the Abolition-1 .ist, tie not content to wait the time of Him j "who hath measured the waters in the hollow j of His hand and meted out heaven with: the span who comptchendeth the dut of j the ear ih in a measure, and weigheth the moun- j tains in scales, and the hills in a balance? Het accomplishes human ends by hum iu mesns, end ! it is in accordance with his law that min mti-t firt le educated physically lefore he is intellec j tually. i Of ihe three dispensations ol God when he j came forth to rev eai and establish hi reiigion, : the fust or patriarchal oisjeus tlioii w as introdu- j ced, among slaveholder.' Abraham, Isaac and I Jacob, slaveholders, were the heat's of the earliest church, and were constituted its chiefs by J God himself, owning many bondmen nnd bond- i women, "born in the house" of. their nits tor, or bought with bis tnonov. The second or Jewish . I dispensation was introduced among a fiecd pen- j pie, freed slaves, who wer ail on an equality. The Israelites went forth out of the'r house of bondage, with their knead. iig-lrouchs bound up with their clothes upon their shoulders.' Combi; out Irce, thev constituted what we now call a lice State, which God himself took charge of as civil ruler. Fifty diys alter leiving Kgypt, this people stood at tire loot ot Sinai, and amid the thunders und lightnings of the Mount, rucived the laws tint were to govern their State. First, the ten coinnnindinents, which wns their Constitution tu- organic Iw, iheu a code of la.w biad UHn their organic law. Ixok nno theo i aw, nnd you will find the-.' constitute what our Re publican friends call a slave code. Slavery is re- I cognized in their organic law aud in their statutes. Wo find that the Hebrew servaut m iy bo bought lor it limited period, and nre to Ik; treated us lured servant. Then unothcr class m e spoken of as his, the master's, money. Of these, it is i said: "noth thy honuuien and bondmaids wmcli thou shall h tve, shall be of the heathen thai aic round about you. Of them shall yc buy bond men and bondm a ds. Moreover, ot the children of the strangers that do sojourn among you, of them shalt yc buy, and of their famil.es that uro with you, which they begat iu yt-ur laud, und they shall be your po.-.-ession, tunl ye shall take them as an inheritance for vour children niter voii, to inherit them for a possession, they fhall be your bondmen forever." -Tins law wnsnot to tike effect for foitv veus, ninl by its terms was made prospective The ch inter of laws Iii) in which I have just ouotc 1. is prefaced thus: "And the Lord spake unto Mo-eson Mount Sinai, saying, speak unto the children of Israel, nnd av unto them, when ve come into the land shall give you," then such and such laws shall be observed. And after forty years, the Hebrew free State of the wilderness wt, by the net of UoJ, as civil filer, changed info the Hebrew' shive Sutc of Canaan. To whom, or among whom, wmm the last, or Chiisthn tlispens ttion inn ilu-ed 1 The apostolic church es were composed of ri!rrs .ihd their -.laves, as nre the churches in the lavehold irg State of this Union. Why not wnit the purposes of Him "who stretcheth out the Noiih over the empty place, und haiiceth tha earth Ukii nothing?" If siaverv in the States where it exists be a sin, God in his Providence will in his own good time liberate the bondmen. If, us I believe, the negro is here to be educated physically and intellectually, until he is fitted to cany to the inhabitants of Africa civilization and Christianity here he will remain, and in the condition in which he is pl.iccd iu the slaveholding S ntes, for in no other condition would the same attention be paid to his physical and mental culture. Where, on the green earth, is the negro's wants so well provided fcr? Where has his physical and mental development been so great as in this country? Where is theie in all Europe, a labor- j ing population so well caretl tor, so cimlortanie and happy, n the slaves in the slsveholding Srates of this Union? The condition of the English laborer is better than the laboier anywhere else in Europe, and the farm laborer of England is in a much better condition th in the operatives j in their factories and in their mines. I would ask ' vou to indulge tue while 1 read from Colmui'sj European Agncuiture a lew extracts: Tbe f Jtrrtt laborer are, I w id not say in a dcira-lc 1 condition, for that would not in any s-jn.-t; apply lo thrm, j unless win it, by their own bad habit, they may have! i1t'fir..det theraseivrs; but they are in a very low coNdi- j tion. and extreaiely ignorant and servile. They larelv, ! n with us. live i t tbe li-.ue of tiidr eii!)!v)'-r. but either in ettajre ,n tbe larm r in a r eiithbor.r.(r villape They arc, usually, coralortally cUd.in this resnectcordraNtinif most favorably w i:b tbe iiit-chanic arid luaiiufacturers in the cities and larjre towiis; but they are In R-neral very fiourly led. Tbeir wstre, cirnpartd w ita tbwatsof abor in the United States, sr. very low. The cah wgn jait lo them seldom equals tbe cash lies paid to Mb'Hf rs w ith u, and our laborer?, in addition lo their wr in money, have their toard: t ut the KnlUh laborer aie obliged to subsist tbe nislv , w i'h an oocanional aIloTtai.f , in some instar res, of beer, in haying and harvesting The division of labor amo.-g them hi quite particular a ploughman b"ing always aplouicbnian. and alm st inojaraM I rum bis br-?.: a d fct er a tliteher; a sb?;iberd a shepherd onlj ; tUecons-qnence of this I that what tbey do, they io extremely well. ' Tbeir p'twufcbitifr, sonriucc.driMitiir. and d.'chin? an t drain- ; inr, re exe-.uted with atmiranle neatnes and exact ne; Iruleed, tbe lines of .hfir work cou d not be more trae vr iraibt tbau tbey Usually are if lh-y were loeaslirod bv a ni-irViMl .'al. Irch br intb. Thev relc of f hint hiiir and drilling or Ti&Ztnz by tbe inch or the half J inch; and tins width i f th urr"W 4re, or tLc depth of j the furrow , vr the di-tances f tbe drilis (roiu each other, . w;!l be found to correjH nd. with rrmarkatde precis- i Ion, l the measurement ersinne!. 1'ut tbey appear totally drt tute cf invrtitiun, aud Lave evidently little; skill rr ingenuity when called npu to apIy tbem.-elres to a work diflVrent to that to wh.cb tbey have been ac- ; customed. Ihtir (ta:t is very slow; and t'jey seem to me ' tDirosfndi'i.! nrly. Tu lormrr circaui stance ex-j p'al led pn-if to me when I examined and lifted tbe . aliorawlncU they ar accustomed la wear, aud which, . wLru, in ai liiioo to being well c iarg d with iron, they I . fraturr tlte iiaal amount of clar which a Iber to them j on havy sod, furnih at least mme reaw.ri w ty, l.ke an j Ale andrine verse "tbey drar t Jir low lenith sjonic." Tbre sre orcaionl instances of extraordinarily gwl loanaement whet they are enabled to accumulate na!l uiu; but in no case, auder the tet exertions, can tbey make, from tbe wa?e of Uuor, anything like a provision for old are atsi decay. They art little f I en to chinge (ituadons, and many of them. Loth mc o an I women, live and die ia th same service. Several instaurcs Lavecariie undtr raj obcrvatiuu of tblrty, ltirty-f.ve and forty year rcputtbU servier; an l uiaLy person, evea upon the hij- limittd moan , hav btouht uji larj- fam hea of tti.Mte n without any pro L'.al a sisj:e. I'.ut, in tbicae, th-y are 11 worki r; the cbildrm are put lo rr.e rt of -ervic a sooj av they are at !e to tlrivetLe rooks fiotn tte rt-rn, and bo Urooe are aurere-i ia tb Live. I tted cim laborer's citae, to wlitc. lwa,s carried by the farmer Liuinelf. wb wa dtmri.il ofrhowiji inc. a be a.d, ttie ct tht tt ciamplea, w,tl.ia bis kode, c f that ccuditloti of life. Th hou, rbuh very siuall, was extretoely iwat and t!d'; the Bible Jay npntb sbelf withvut an u.i' rae" cotover U- cover; thedrtt.fr wer cove rrd with an ui.j.uj! ouantttv it cruckere. ufnclriii to luriusti tabtr lr a Ure parly a k:n. of ac- . eutn.uuoti wticb, I was t.iU, wt very cotntaoa; aist their parJ..oablo vanity run in this aj, a in b:gber Cfiiditiwu of life, we rc lbs aarue paSn ciLit Hjn it Mlf la the AccuniuUüoa t f faanly jilts. TV tnen and woiueawer UW.-ri. greatly terad br their gwal conduct, uA Lad b-aii of theto boeu In tbe mtis serk-e more tbao forty rr. 1 a-ked them If, in tbe cuurx of that tnue, lUt) bod not been ab! to U by torus ruall store tf lutinee , -aak uta CMti.ortalU In tbeir old age. I out; id hot bavo urpried theo tuvre by any u,u--
Mia whk-h I efnl4 bars propoai. Tbey replied that It halb n a eonvtat i mmre'e fvrlh-m to i ti:a them selvr , bt any a-.rjdu w a ticjorid th-lr rearb. ltantiot belp t tit 'kin: tiiat tbe c.rd" tin i a hard onetn wtich fairsant a-d l.b .Ll lt r, t-r o raary yea:, wi.'l nt enable the tribal an l tndatnas in make sorue jt:l prol-io fo ti period ef hei; lev-n-s atrJ Jeiay.la a country hrr- the accumntatot. of wealth gruwia out 1 Ihe sar.e IaN.r are ei.omoj. ' Ia ail my Intercourse wi'h society In tbe United State, and witt, opportunities a Urge st any nan of obx r tr. all cUsse araon tbect in tbe varion codi! (on of life, 1 bae never ktu wn an instance of a woman coin; to a pit lie bar for drink, cr ittir(- down In a put he bar-rxjm wiih men, r atore, to regain berelf. li e !e-boae and ein-sürp In Lni-laci are as tauch accustomel by wtto-en as by r.i-n. arl the reu)U of such prarf.ee are exactly what uii?bl I expec:ed an extreme vulffarlty f manners, and a large amottnl e-f dronienne icvng tbe lower clas of snmn, What. a a ravter of course, com s itb it Tired not b told; but tue rrconiaef th p lice court leave i one at a 1 In funeral, tmonj ihe laborin jj e!ara In F.rgland, their lo coudttinn, thrir irnoranco and war.t of edueulion, anil th alnioi asolulj luipstmilily of risIii2 aVivo tue eUH in wh.ih te) aro l-rn. render theiutta irrest legre rektf- aid improvident, t'hitracter 6tcoiuea Cfnsejueiilt f of fr les l.tipor;anre th-ii it wnabl otj,crwie be. there a'e. waatluff. eoii-juently. I Lit. mtiver t that elf rvsjeet wmrb constitutes the biheat security of virtue, and under ni.h a condition of things il is al arpnli.g t Und ft Uvity of m r&l whic!i pro l-ieos warm of illegitimste ehUdren. Tbl ia attended by tbe u-nal eneiet e an nixeHre on tiio part of tho parent otthat sense of oblifuUnu to srpporl and provide for their ofT-pri.". which Is lr Imj f u!il In it purity and strenjrth only In legal wedlock. There are two practices hi regard to agricultural labor, i. .it univer l by any meati. but prevailing to out parts of Kigaul and ScolJftnd. vtliith I tuny notice. The first ist-iled the "gang sj-teia." In nie place, owing V Iii ie of fa rni Wing grotlv extended, rott-ige beltn stirii-red to f ill it.to drca j and ruin, laborers have been cnti;refJled ia village w here ti iV. previiil.-d all the et U, mural and phj iw hieb aro naturally l bo expected from a crowded popelst!--, lioved it.l. small and Inconvenient habitations, n I subjected to innumerable privation. In thi case.th farmer keeps In peritianei t and steady employment no more laborer than are ab1 itely reriuired for the rnst.vnt and uninterrupted operation ef tbe f.:rni; and relies upon the obtaining of a larjre number of hands, or n g:iiip. as it is t'rm . ed, whenever any jrreat Job i to be aretmplilied. thut he may be enabled t) o?Ht it al oni-o and nt Iii smallest expense-. Under theM ein. uinstances. be applies to a g.vig master, as b is termed, who contracts fjr it execution, and through whom thf poor labor rs mtit find employment, if they find it at ail, and npon who.se terni tbey uiut work or et no w rk. The gan master ha them, then, completely in his power, lakun? care to provi h well lor binist-lf iu bis own cnmtniicb-s, which must, of co;?r, tie deducted fr tu the w-ajre o the laborers. at,d Mibjetiriir them at jd-jasttre to the niM despotic and severe eondiiioim. It is not optional wi.h tie re poor cro stures to say whether they will work or not, but wbeiber tbey will w ork or die t Ley have no other resoiirce chat.jre tb'-'r condition they cannot contract s'para:el.v for il"?ir Ubor they cannot, lecause tl.e far-ra-.-r c--n'ii:i.s his eon ract o the gar.j; n;a-ter; and we niay inf-r fr ni tl.e n-.irt .f the coniro sioners !ai 1 before the n.verniiie:i, iliat the sydem if one of orpro icil, cruelty and phurler, and in every respect leading to gro-s i:.ni.! )il.ti-i.. The d,t.lfl!ice to which tlie.se Uborera goiscf'eu a much n f.ve or miles, and t!ii u-ualiy on foot, and to return at niht. Children and pirl- a-e compelled to p. these distant and cone(uei.tiy mut rise very early in tin mTi.iiir, and reach borne at a very 1 no hour at nisht. (Jirls and buys, Jiid jotini men an t wop.en, w.rk in.li-ciiniina'e'y toc il r. To ml' of Moral in inch a e ise i iiile. I am not disposed to oj"ct t tbt employment of wumon in me kind of asri cultural Uir. Tho etiij 1 .y met t of them In iiidieritnlnt lalior is liatdo ti the most serious objmlions. Nothii g can be luore aiiiuialini;. and in iij u more heuuufiil, than, on ii ti'iO rh'Hr d a . w hen tlm golden and avm; bar. vest is rea ly for the di klo, t' st?--, i I h'ive n. verul limes en, n party of nton llirtn a hundred women and giri viil"rinr I lie fl. Id, rutting the gruin. or binding il up ufn-r the reapers. Ii. rullivutii.g tlie turnips lin y uro al' etr iu ly expert. In tending und tii&kiiijr liiiy. Miid in varion other nirrk-ulurul l ib rv tkey carry their end of tb yoke even; b'.itin loading and leading out d un;. and especially , us I have seen the in , In carry imr broken lunest uo in burkets on their ln'udstt be put in t :o kiln, und in bvaring Immv y loads of i oal from tiio pits, I huvr felt thut their str ngth wi.s niiiintiriill v taxed, and thut, ut least in their ea es, the w ere jidlo iut if ,w o man's p.here." I riiiifi'M. likewrisi. tliut my ar:t 1 1 t dry bus often ben severely tried, when 1 have re.'n them tl the bins nctlng us istl?r. brii.pinjf out the hore, jumI atsislD'S in eliii:gli:g lie eoui-li t(um. while the ciacloaaii went into Um Inn to try the atrengtlt of tho ale. When ne looks here. d;iily and hourly, upon the thousands und mi!-,o:is in In-lmid, hngl.vnd and Scotland nf unprotected, uncared f-r. siuulul, nee-leclt-d. half eld, balf-n-d, r-ckl--. iiÜVriiig ctiilOreii end y oun peroii.rowiiig up in this c.iit.try of etaMihed ehurelies nnd iiMtitulinns called Mirislinti of nrts tin ino.t polisiit-d, of learnitii; the iuot en I ti voted, nnd ofa wealth end Itixury Iritiiscendiiig even lite wildest dreams of avarice; und reads In the ev-or-lurniue pnc of ttmir certain hUtory, thdr sure progreris from tho ci.-ullu to the alreet. from the strent to eriine so enormous, s- extriiorlinur , us to tua-e one' head prow di-zy rt the rec-tal, hint one's Imir t stund on end m ith fright, and from these critne to the prison. :i nd from the prison le tin tm nport ship or to the g:itlw: t'm benevolent heart Is n ioty to burst with rratef.il Joy to eo any green spot in tlii desert, t perceive even Mio brand pluvked from lh. buriiing, even one unconscious or trug glinir victim rescued lrom tbe de-ceuding nnd overwhelming current. A tute of South t'iirolinu slavery, us far as physical conifot of tlits laborer ard concerned, Jus many ad VHtitageg over Ibis. Fellow citizen., I have detained you longer than I intended There is a work for you lo perform. Constitution liberty, free institution--, and the hopes of mankind depend upon the put we pliy in Ihe trying or Jen! through which we are p issing. To us our fathers bequeathed tbe richcet legacy ever iven to man. IShail we pre-r-crve this inheiifjince, or will we in our madness nnd zetl for u der.uied and inferior race, le.ivd to our children nut a constitutional Uni jti, but a military despotism? All that I have, nil that I am, all that I expect lo be, II my hopes in the future me bound tip in the faithltil m iiiten;ir.ce of the Constitution as it is ttnd the restoration of the Union as it wts; nod if we nre but true lo ourselves, the?e objects will be accomplished. Wo shall a-ain see the wandering tdtirs in their wonted places in our political firmament, nnd the hhip of Stttewi'.l ao;,iii ride proudly on a smooth and placid e i. Let u aid in filling up our armies, so th it the armef rebellion "m ty be snppre-se I Let mr civil tuthoriiie-i demonstrate fit it the Govern rneut will, us it has in the past, protect all nnd every interest, and that its powers shall not be wielded for the inj'iry or destruction of any riül.t of person or properly, but that as in days gone by, it w ill in the future dispense its blessings, like the dews of lie i ven, to all it I ike. Pursue this policy, and nil will yet le well. I th ink you for the kind reception and patient hearing given me 'IW The Union Democracy of Pulaski county will hohl a convention, on Siturday, Au'Us1 3 hh, at U'iuinnc, to nominate candidates for countv oJlices.
LSP The DennKTacy of Stark county will hold a contention on Saturday, the lGiii hist., to nominate candidates for county cflices. J5""Ve ate atithorizel to announce JOHN A. P.EAL as an in Iejeiident unconditional Union candidate for Common Pleas JadL'e for the 12th Di-trict. 5?" We aie authorized to anuoutice J0I1 Tl:r.VKR, of fSouthport, a candidate for County Re-ct.-rder, subject to the decision of the Iemocratic Con vention. MEDICAL. PREVENTION IS BETTER THAN CURE. r 10 LADIES OF DEL1CATK HEALTH OK IM PA I KFD JL organizatloD, or lo thoeby whom ai increase of faiuily i from any reasou objectionable, the mdrrrijrTied would offer a orescription which is perfectly reliable and safe, and w bleb has been prescrilied in various parts of tbe Old WorUfor ibepa-tcentury. Although tl'iarUc'e isverr cheap and simple, yet It baa been put up in half pint bottles and sold very extensively at theexhorbiUn price of fa per hottle, the unflerstjrnert propo.-t o ttr-ni-h the recipe for 41, by the possensjon of whtchevery lady csnsapplyherselfwilh a perfect safeguard, at any drurr store for the tnflina-sura of 25cent per year. Any phyUn or druKKist will tel I you It i perfectly Uarink'ss, thousands of testimonial can be procured of it eWca.-y. Sent to any part of the world on receipt f tl.bvaddres. ing. Ua. J.C. bKVKRACX, T.O. B-a,!fo.S343,Xwr llaven.Conn-cticut . ilV-lttWÄt Omer. QtirrtsA-rrra's I trii'iirsT, U. S. A.J Indianapolis, Ind., .kvz. S, 1-C2. SEALED rhOrt'SAt-s dl fc received at this office unt.l lu o'cock A.M., Aufftiit IS, 14 , for the Cehvtry at the (overniner.t WareLoe In iLl city, of (lO.iMiUi Ten Tbouirul Canteens (eoverd) ard Jstraj.-, Army Pattern. In b xe. tne-balf of ihe above to be delivered In (10) Tea I) lrut date tf cortr.cr. and thebalaiHcln (! len t'aj s tbereaftt-r !stiiplr cn 1seen at ibis cSice. Ad '.ft . lYwpols a fb w: JAMEH A. EKI.T. A. W M. U. S. A , lud.auapott, lud., and endorse thera ,l'r-pwsl fur CAi.teeLs.'' au -1td PATENTS. P AT EHTS OnTAisr.D ron kf.w ixTE?rno?y of rvrkT desrnptian. Kee Cntirreiit fit auor-.. J( patent do i st. td for Circular, rivthr term, direction. Ac. Addre. ANO.H I.HOAH.NAI. vlS-dly Palri-t Attorney, VT a Krn rieft, U. f.
DRY GOODS.
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Z9 5 Y. V. e 5$ O s P ffl CHOCOLATE. r.ttiiblikltrtl In ITsO. Baker's I'.tKMira CiuxuTF.. runr it.e PXKEI Cocoa, I'-riana, Trench, Homeopathic and Vatd'la Choctdate. warranted equal iu quality and flavor to the Tari Choco-ate-; bave tod ibo let f orer tbreeqosrters of a century, anl ar prucvHwcrJ I y ail who have once ned tlieni to h mpenor to any aber. Manufactured by W. FHker It Co., attheir Mi'N.ii r rJ ehester, Ma., arid for ale at their IWaicb lepot No. 217 Fulton street. New Tork City, 'id by Grocers and Di alers generally throught'Ut tbe Union. A.ldress H. I.. i'IEI:Ci:, JclO-dm aT Fultcn Mreet, Xw Trrk. COLD ÄND SILVER. T will iav the IiJIk.! pr'.ee for Atneriean leid and Sil ver, alxi tor United Statas IVinand Notes, old issue, j KILT.Y I-KIU.USON', j Fxchar.pe r.rc ker. j C.r.ec No. 2t;' Eat Washington street, nj'-Mnir, 2d doer to rUbt hand. Jvl3-10d , MEDICAL. i FBlllF Si; 1'ilisare the result of much teady and carefl ful t.vpehetice in all varieties of f unit eomplaiot, and in cses of Irrei'srüles, Suppri-s-ion, I i bon iiea or Vbt'e, triSjuiniutioii of tiie Idadder, Kidney and Woi:ib, atid lo-vs of Nervous Energy, etc, Tht ir use Is tliove all prabe. Are entirely free from any Mercurial or Mineral polon, an purely vezetaKe, aril are free from danger; cau W U-ied w ith perfect hafety. Amoiie the many th"Usauds tbst have ued them In all pnrt of the Union ko.sb peak ill of theni. foraltbke them. ?Tk. axTJi?l M.vrried Ladies In certain situations shouM not Be theiu. Eor reasons see directions on each bov. Irlcc no Dollar I'rr llox. They are erd In a thin, flat box, postup. free, to all part of tbe United Stales upon the receipt ff the price. 1'repared aud o'.d by lilt- EU INti, No. IS Virginia Avenue. tuj-7-t'Ättly Indlanarrlis, Indiana. .1 Slight Cold, ai a It tfJCrui cn .t or gfcte. jDlitCLtit which 'tiight bs checJxd iviih a cimple remedy, r.sif neglected, cflen terminates cericucly. Few are aware cf the import arce cf ctoppir a cußL cr UqiI jcicL in, ii3 first etarje ; that wixich in the beginning would yield lo a mild remedy, if not attended to, soon attacks the lungs. were fimt introduced eleven years ago. It has been proved that they are th. best article before the public for sficjiahs, ßcltLs, mitcjictixliitt jjfLs.lh.rrLa., ataL, the Hacking Cough in fcCJt&umfiiLcn, and numerous ajffeoticns cf the j3flLc.aL giving immediate relief. Jeiblic SjpcaMtrrg V Sinpcra Will find them effectual for clearing and strengthening the voice Bold by all (Druggists and (2- i': rs in J.fedicine, at 5 cents jxrr box. c A sa au v C O X V I 12 i T I A la . Toner. Mrs who have in. SJUKED tbmelr- r certain secret habits, which ii t. til tbe in for bti.-im-s, pleasure or the duties of married life; a!o. middle-ared atid dd men. who. fiort. the f Iii of yo'jtb or other eai:s-n, f-,- a debility In advance of their yar", lief-jre phicmg thetnsclve under the treatmrnt of any otie, rhould fir-t red "TIIK SFCTIKT HitKNlv"' Married lädier wf I learn f.omethlnj; cf Importarirel y penisiti Tint SrcarT Ftir.sn." .Setit t any a l lrtM, ia a eled envtlor, on rec ipt of TenCei'tr-. Dlt.SI'U AKT A C). enn he consulted on all disease of a private or tonndet.ti! nature, from 8 A. XI. to it V V-, (Siir. ls fr..in J to 11 A. M ,) at tl.eir ilie, N . lJ East Third itreet. up-stair, bfiaeen Main and .yc amore, op. poite th II nrie llou. Ad lr- blt.THAS. A. SI U A KT A CO., mcLJl-rt.twly.l..' ancii.tia'i.Ohio. . HAPPINESS OR MISERY 1 THAT IS TIIE QUESTION'. fflHK proprietor, of the "l'AKISIAN C ABI 5 KT OF X IVONDEUi, ANATXJJIY. and ÜED1UNE," have determined, resrar.H-, ef expense, to ivu, free, (for the benefit, of runrinj. bontani'y) KICK of the r mont Instructive and inter-stiu Ix-cmres on Marriage and its liisqualiricntions. N'erv.itis I biltty, Premature Iiecliue ef Manhoid, Indigestion, Weaktu-s or Iepreioii, -f Enercy and Vital 1'owers, the tire at tsoctal Evils, arxl tlc Maladies which reilt fr-m youthful foI:es, Excesses ef Msturity, rr Ictiorarire d ri.jioJ. uy and Nature' Law I bese inv kI.i !) lecture, bave tvn tlie ineau of enlightening ai.d sarin; thovsaixls, and wiil )r forwarded fre on the receipt f four stamp, by addre. in? ."FCIUTAltY ramsttr Casisst tir Asarowr aar Mkpicisk, 5;3 Broadway, New York. JeU-dly DRY
1 -a .si 9m a cr . : : fZ. s. t.
ÄDB.DACIErt-.sä,
GREAT REDUCTION I3ST Spring and Summer Dry Goods Ho. 5 East Washinßton -St.
TO MAKE ROOM FOR EARLY FALL STOCK. THE FOLLOWING (iOODS WILL HE SOLD AT REDUCED TRICES:
LAWNS. JACONETS, 0R(5 ANDIE3. I'LAIN RAEEOES. FIfJUREI) RARF.r.ES, rAREfiE HOHES. CH ALLIES. MOZAMBIQUE. TISSUES. OR ENA DINKS, LA YELL AS. NU UI AS.
Tttrtlculir ttf ntion U called to liinrn IwCxxN, nnd Heii's nnd Lloysv' XVcnr. II. H. GOOD, Propriotor.
DnV C00D3.
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s JpL-l f b CAKERY. J. It. Mi KI M. 10RA( . rAKItOTT. NICKUiM & PABROTT'S (stf(.vi TO A. A VO.T7i.J k,) CO tni mcnoisrERY, No. II Nolll ll n-INNSVI.VAMAtRKET (Ik-twotu IKid I lews' ll.ii and 1'ost (Jf.'.i r,) Xlanalat tiirerst f ail ki ir. .f Ctm k-r, Cake, l'.rmd and Ties, Vbolea'.e and Letail. niaiiuftctnre and kp a otlstSJtl eupply i-f tbJ V I fo bat artii I CUACKEIfs l.utter Cracker. IV-Nk Cr-srkers, Soda Crackers, lirabsm Cracker-. (Bracknell Prirt.itn, VA'nter Crack rs, iiar Cracker, V ir-e Cracker, IVnston ('rack er, C'reata truckers. i ji:i r Crat kcr. Ut. CtiCES of all kinds. I1j!u ai.d trmatuented. ll kin-l -r Msrtni'Mn i.uA Tsrt, JePy, I aney, litner aud eucar Cakes, Ac , Ae. Wctldlncs, nml l'ariie fttriilniird tttt ! wliorf o ire. TfJ'X NDIES OK AI L K INI rs. VtiJOri r for lare q ..u.ti ;e I'.IU d at low rte. B.-'rders jTotnptly J.O. a, er,.l dtlifer! In tle ctty frs i f rba'e. -2l-d2tti DRY GOODS. Lynch ßi Keane, . S3 WEM WASIII5GTUS STHTET, cw: i tk b: ji k, aj OTHER LAlUJi: INVOICES OK SUM MER II8Y GOODS, I'"'1'' lrrisi fined e erylhitic In Ihe I.lnr, and .eurt Dcwtgtt. TACK, aid Silk MartlTIa, rew etyle afji-. Msw 1 J ai.d i-'.K.. It nted Calle., I'ra-,N ai.d iii I n-breil.!-, n...;, M..J t-. Hfmiery. Ac.; In.b Ijiieri. Ambroid, ehe ttl.'f lio.-l, Ijnen ami Cattil.rir list, lki wf. lileaiiu-.! aod t'.r-w-i rheetiur, i.l ve, otiiM.. TL H : Ä l-t Vrnr-lrxii bratida, from Se a yard Vp; MUST iWGLiSU VKE.VTSi ny USe a yard; 11 U IKS' f.XOftk.fG Cl.OTII, ?-4 tt ide, only 9c a yard: V.m. xrjF;sa m Tsa sv: very good, 3 psir tV. TRY IIALLOU S FRENCH YOKE SHIKT.S, s:l to e- bad at Lyi-eh A- Ke!!.' TltT BEST TEENCn DJU5LTS AMI WAISTS. CHOTH, CASSIMEReTaND PANTS STUFF For men's and lKy' wear; S raw (;mm1s. Hat. Cap. aud Hal erylbina- to he foaud iu a Iry ti.! Ftore. Stock complete; bought at recent auetjoti in New York; will b sold 20 per ceui. btlow fnn-r prices for cjh. KOOP SKIRTSTThOOP SKIRTS! ' Ilavinrr made arraOtretrtent witj two of tbe lartret II"op Skirt Manufactories ta tbe Eat. wa are pn-j.r-d 1 1r tbiti. wb4eaie and retail, at New Y ork prtc. Call and ei amine tbe to k; fco trouble ta slwwr f 0.1. trrdy ns price. kemtiDter urw f tb I. Iltp Pklrt- jeUK-sily GOODS. LACE SHAWLS, LACE MANTLES, SILK MANTLES. SUMMER SHAWLS, PARASOLS. SUN UM 11 KELLAS. EMUKOlDlIKIljS, COLLARS, HOSIERY. CLOVES, MITTS, -FANS, Ac.
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