Daily State Sentinel, Volume 12, Number 4176, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 March 1864 — Page 2
DAILY SK:
Li ULM
FRIDAY MOKN1NG, MAKC1I 4 Tho i:sclians;e (juration. Ai thU (jufjtion i eicithig ctiiJfra.i!e introt i;i th community at the p-eent tim. we rfpctliib from the New York WorM the following account of the rjfKOtiatior.a ai.il ihm preent canliiion of what b occurrcl !u refcrrr.ct to the echnge of priaonera between the Fewer! .Mi Rebel goretnmenU: From uifurmttioo ierirrd froci Washington, Fortreet Monroe atxl eUewbere, axul which e know to be titterlj reliable, we make tlio following atatemeDt of the pt h.itrj ani rreenl condition nt ibeeichim of prlaonera qit.on: 1. From Augut, lfcG2, to Aujrut lt03, the ichanpe of pciaonera waa couJucte! through Lieut Ul. Lu.llo of Oeu. Dix'tafr, on the one Robert Oald lb." nt of the rebel piernment on the other. A all the pre linvoariea under the cartel h4 to he arrange! by thee grutlemfn, Ihe duticof the position lhey he!J were much more delicate and anbiotia than thej couM r,-oiblj hire been uben.et.tlj; but Uith Kenia were deteruiine l t j:rec r i ther than diflof, and theie w,a no 1;hsiün on either aide to orerreicii the other, the eirhanze went on without iuletrnpllon until Co I. LuJIow 11 reliefs). During the ear, he wa on tnty, it will he remerbrrl tint the tebei. had the advantage in the number of prisoner, but lie auccccUtd aotuehow in gelling them all tlthansed. 2 W further underatarxl that neither Colonel Ludlow nor Mr. Ould were erriliirraaeI by in tructiona from their reMctive Uorrrtunciits The etch, therefore, had full power to settle all question ai they came up. (Jen. llitchock, who figure io u (lici t I ducuaienta a CommUnioner of Escbauge, had nothing to do with the rn-itter while Col. Luilow was in charge; indeed, under the cartel there i no auch ollicer remgnize! ftg Cuaitniaaionera, only amenta are fjxjken of. (Jen Hitchcock w .tu, and e heücve tili h, a kind of pener 4 1 military advi'er of the lVoaalent and Hecrelary of War, and thia title waa given him to farttl.th an excuse for hia pmcuce at the War Depart Dient. II. During th Ludlow Ould ivitn it waa iiiutuilljr agrt?l liut llmir corrtJ.-'tHiti'.eiH.'O aliouM Le cotifijci.tUl, u 1 ahoulJ not Lc jjven to the ulIi. It on lelt thai the i..ljuu.ic.it of tl.j delicate iu(.'tiijii tint woul l arie wuuM be e riouaU erub irra..-J, if not rendered impoiMc, by making litem the theme of violent p wli.nn di'ttibc North att'l Soutli, which would he inevitable upon their publication. The te-iults whkh hire foll-ed the publicity pivi n to (tent. MertJith'a and Ilitr'tcoek'a Uttel how how ie waa thia pie-aution. 4. The hlliculty in t!ie exc!.tt;e jweiioii ooni mence! with the rirl interview between (!eicr:il Mcriditn and Mr. Uu'.d The amenta of the to povetuinent hnd jrviou-ly met a ffjinN, cich anxiout to per I or tn the lutiea a.-'ind to him tJeo. Meredith, however, at once uumcd that he w-ia the reprx.'.eiit.itive of a legitim Ue de il'tij with a ri'bel pow-r. .Willi th'n lie i . hnt?itly entertained, no douht. lie tin dertook to dk l tte f4thcr thin agree to teinn Ould promptly resenlfu the innige of tone, and nuttera hive gone on from td to wor- ever aine. ITnfor-lunttt-ir, it provcl, Meredith a-kc 1 for in Iructiom when he pot into ditH 'ulty, anl Mi the quetliun in ilipute could not nnihty he under toot nt either Washington or Kicliniond, he re eeivetl itnperative order which rn.dr uitttera worse tlian ever. Thia wna m tde m inifet hen the correspondence between Ould :m I Meredith w.a pnhli.he I. The litter, a Adiniristratiou pipers like the Boton Advertiser and Springfield ilepubliciti admitted, waa put clctrly andcxplic Illy in the wroti. This became t.o evident to the War Department iu time that he w.i.t per heded and Gen. Iiutler appointed in hia pi ice. 5. The appointment ol (rencr.il Butler leJ to a new complicilion. Ho h id been outlawed by the rebel government, and Ouhl could not treat with him. Now it mty h ive been very foolish in the rebel to hive .lone this; but it i clear that If the Federal Congress hid null awed Wi-e, Floyd, or any other Southerner, ihe Administration would never consent to have formtl relations wilh them. It h a iccognized rule anion"; all nationa that it ambas idor. charge, or consul, ahall not b nerao.nallf ollVmive io the rviwer wilK. which he i to h ive otli trial relations. It is gains; all precedent, therefore, for tlie (iovcrn ment of the Unitel States to forv-e a peculiarly obnoxious agaut upon the rebel government. It it will be aeen, therefore, that the difliculty touching the exchange of prisoners commenced when Col. Ludlow, was relieved, upon Gcn'l Dil bein pent to mother iepirtmnt. H id another oftii'er of et on I discretion, and with the same power he wielded, been scat in his place, the brave fellows who hive been captured while fighting in the same armies of the Union would have been aived the long moiithaof weary captivity, which have fallen to their lot for want of a litlle common en.fce, moderation and tact on the pirt of the Washington War Department and its agents. We do oot wi-h to be understood .is indorsing Colonel Ludlow at the expense of cverv one e!e. There ate no doubt thousands of officer who would prove as efficient as he has been, but unfortunately the war Deputment does not .eein to have hid them at hand. As the W.ir Depirtment his submitted to Congress tho Hitchcock and Meredith corttspon deuce, wouhl it not be well for Rome senator or represent itive to call also f..r the cot i e-potnknce between Co! Ludlow nd Kobt. t.ild. wh'ch is understood to be tn a file at Forfiess Monroe, in the eire of Oen. Uutler? 1 this hotihl see the light, we have no dou.t that it wtm'd sh 'w thv I Col Ludlow .uccetsltsi no wed, and aiJo why Mere!ith. Butler. Hitchcock, and S: inton have not ucveeilei at all. in en-hang'tig the prisoners. .Ict'lcllan'a Ileporf. Thia doH?iinient has been in tie hindofthe public for tnic dais, arid Ins been extensively read by the more intelligent p'-rt'on of the ieopV "It has" nay? the N. Y. Herald, "fully establishd that atddier before the country a the only person who nt the outset of the war fully appreciated the vatnes of the rebellion, hik! had a clear comprehension of the mean? by which it could be put down; and in this way, this icporl amply justifies the eclat with which he is received wherever he makes hi appeirsn-e, especitlly by the oldiers, and gives the li to ail the m ilin state ments made against him by the Administration j and Its aupportera." Since McClkllsh removal, the Army ot the Potomac has done little which will tend to shorten the war. The President has carried on a struggle the only result of which seems to have been to tnrovnish the countrv without ntr.g tu enemv much harm. ; I The Herald thus sun; up ti e doings of the Ad- j ministrai.'.tn: ! Tho administration interfere! wHi the l'en insular campiign, an 1. bv t's withdrawal ot Ixty thousan 1 tne:i. from the number tint I. id been,' as,tnl f.eoearv toctrry that cttn; tign to ; a successful issue, caused i:s laiiurc "I lie .id-: m nislratiou. by it s,us;-ni..:i .if tlct.ertl Mc ; I'lelUa in August, 1 M, c tuHl 'he M.i.ceiv e 1 disasters of I'ope'a ctniptin. An I tin tdmi: I istration, by the removal o! ttencrtl McC'rllati ; in the lall of l?ti2. ctuso.1 liie.-ilv the mtsstcie ' t Fredericksburg, ihe gietter mti rt' at Chan eeKofviile, the tlTncetf Lee into l:.o sWaui-i, where the Oiiitry wis civi l o t' .e stubborn ' qualities ot bur iol.Iieis, an 1 LeeV eitt.tutl . cape oro the I'oimac, hicb gate antuher ! year of existence to the rebellion All this the . admintstratioQ hn dre; but it has not civen an j fft.tjv blow in the Eat towrdn th destruc- I tioa of the Confederacy p'nre tivu 1 McCleilati i was sacriflce-i to the cUnj -r of the radicals. " j Io the uw book called "Miscegenation." writto bf a joung mulatto woram, thre is the followio? comphrcenurT paasae explaining what's da matter with Lngland . a v . A a . witk Va Vn rl a tA "The white rre which ettie-i in New En jl and ! will be unable to maintain i:s vitality as a blonde 1 people. Thej naed the tuterroinzliog of the rh-h ' tropic temperament of the tiegto to fite warmih sod tulln. u theii i.atures. They feel the ! yearuiujf ud do not kuow how to interpret if. 1 At a select bill given by the Empros V.u. j jeoie at the Tuileriea oa the evening n Janusrv j 2G. Her Mtjstv jt attired ii, white drc-s h t ' with golJ, it. l with gold fringe at the bottom of ! the skirt sod the upper part ol tt.e corsage. A 1 belt of gold encircled her w.i. Her hd dress j was io jjreeo velvet ornamented with diamond and emera'dt, sua tue ne-.-klace forme J of ever tl rowt of pearls wilb drup of emeralds.
nrr.i:rii or
Hon. JOSEPH K. EDGERTO.V, OF lM'IAXs, Dtlitrrtd in the Home aj llrjTeentilet, January V, lr61. coxrtt rrn Now, Mr. Speaker, let us look more directly at the intent and character of the joint resolution before the House. Under various retenf , amon? which I mty nsrne indemnity for the past sad security for the futuie, aval lor the soldiers of the Unit. n, their widow and crpiiar.s, wive ari l t hildren. teal for the oppressed bondman, real for the onward nun rt of lreelom and the extr.v):i of our jower and K'urJ u ;i 's '-i'n. xm! for art, nnnufactnres and commerce. ie.l for acliol böiges u, J churches. bit in ur-ni ir.ee of what I believe to be in fact an unchrisliau, unwise, revolutionary, and, in many .f its elemcRts and motius, fanatical and cerrupt Kiücy of tl-.e party In power, tie r m j-irity in the .T7th Cocrcs-i pa-std tho confiscation act of Julv 17, The firt objei-t expressel i: the title, of this act was "to suppre-a insurre .tion " A to that object no man fiue-tioiis that ihe acl h is dgnallv failed, us the fXrience of history proves that nil attempts t deal with n great revolution, a generil upiising of a people educated in f.riticiples of a tree Cbitftitutioii.il government, by hurling at them the thunders of vindic tive legislation hue aleo sinall v failed. Revolutions are never conquered by vindictive laws. They but add fuel tu the ll i rue, snd n.ake what might otherwise be weakness, atrenglh by the very m-r-piration of de-pair, but they never conquer nor supi-rcss a revolution. Armies tiny 1 it, but vindictive legislation never did and never will. They are "Moody invention, which, being taught, return to plague the inventor." Liberty may be crushed out by the stron arm of material fiower, but laws cannot caush it, for liberty and iw afliliste They are twin s'Mei, co equal in origin and duration, and wheu society is n irinil, they ever cling with loving kindness to each other. Law was not born to be the tvrant of liberty, but her sister anil her ally. As an act to punish treison and rebellion, and to se'ze und confine itc the proj erty of rebels, the purptt.-es and terms ol the act of July J7, C'1. are clear enough. The first four set-lions rel ite Io ihe punishment of treason, and rebellion below the j;r ide of constitutional treason. The filth srctit.n m ikts it tlio duty ol the FiCsidcnt to cfu-e the seizure ot tho propeity, real and personal, of all tho higher or oll'.ci tl grade of persons wli i sho'ild llioteafier pattlcipate i:i the rebellion, euch property to bo nnptied and used for the support of the army of the United St ties. Section six went further, and extended the President's powrr of seizure ami application to the Mipport of the army, to all the estate and pmjierty of II other p r-ons engaged in or aiding the rebellion who ohouhl not, within sixty days alter public warning and pmclam it ion by the Pie-ident, ceae t libel or abet rebellion; and '.he act ol ei.ute w as in tde tiperstive tn defeat all a ilea or transfers of such propel ly and estate aller ihe expiration cf said sixty dais. Sections seven und eiuht preci itietl the judicial proceedings in rem by which the propeity thus setziij should be "fondeinni tl ns enetnv's properly, and become the piopeity of the L'l.iied btttes," to be Iis po-ed of as the tourt shall decree, and th? jrt ceeds thereof paid into the Treasury of tho United States for the tnuposo staled namely , the sup port of the ai my. 1 do not know who was the author of this net of July 17, 1MJ-2, but it is appirent that there is in it a strange mixing up of and attempt lo enforce belligernet and municipal rights against the same jierson-. The fiit four sections are evidently intended lo be constitutional or municipal legislation, based upon the constitutional power of Congress to declare the punishment of treason and its implied power of dechring and punishing crimes against ihe United Slates, andcleaily contemplated indictment and conviction under the Constitution. Section fie, six, seven and eight, inasmuch as they do not conform to any constitution tl provision in regard to treason and its punishment, although aimed at persons guilty of treason, see in to be bued upon tin assumed belligerent or w ar right of seizure and confiscation. Thus, while Cotifti-ss in one breath were declaring that traitors and their abettors should be hung, or imprisoned and fined, and their slaves made free, in another breath they were providing that their estate and property should be seized, condemned, Hi..o!d as enemy's property. The 1'iedJent either because less clear head ed, or more timid or more scrupulous about overriding the Constitution, did net view the law in tho light of a law based on the rights of war alone. He either did not see or would not admit the propriety in tine and the tume law of dealing with rebel a traitors to be indicted, convicted and hung, or lined and imprisoned, and as alien enemits, citizens of a "foreign country" owing allegiance to a foreign power, who, if pitrioticil ly lighting for it, weie subject onlv to the laws and entitled to the rights of war He could not divest his mind of the very natural idea tint the rebels were in I iw citizens of the United States "levying war against them," and therefore traitor, not alien enemies. He had lot at that time, as his pub-t.uent conversation with the two Chicago clergymen on the Uth of September, proves, been educated up to that clear ap prehension and wise appieciation of the wir pawer and military necessity which the gentlcm in from lVim? I vani a now vouches for ami the President has since sh.mn in his prod t m ttions of September '2J. 1?(j-J. Janu try 1 of lwi:i, and December S, lMi.'l, saving nothing of -oindrv intet mediate exeicises of the war pwcr in detlings with the htbei corpus and person liberty. The President under the instructions of the gertlemtn from PennsTlvai.it, is evidently improving in militari exeici-e. Wnen the Pres. dent ho had read lllackstone and Kent and S;ry and Mr. Madison in the Federal!-! whose pregnmt and n-ith t it ttive opinion his bee:i aptlv quoted bv mv friend from Ohio Mr. B.is applied his knowledge derived fiom those grett worthies in jurisprudence to the sweeping conti -cation declared in .sections five and six of the act, l;e was sliggered, he doubted and he-i: ted, and tirnliy concluded to change the law, or kill it bv the veto The tenlt wis his ir.es-ae to C'-ngiess, of Julv 17, L62. fo!- i lowed inline fi ttelv bv the ptss.ige by Congit-ss of the explanatory joint resolution of the s ine dale. 1 1 the President, by similar duiess per minas, h.d exercised sirailtr conservative it tin ence over the same Congress, he would hue done wisely. The language of the President's mes.igc is in itself so strong an argument ngiinst the act as proposed, tli.it I quote briedy from it. He said: That to wht..-ii I chictly object pervades most put of the act, hut m ire di-ti tntly iptemin thefirst, .second, seventh, and eighth sections. It i the sum of those provisions which results in divcting of title forever. " For ihe caues of treason and ingredients of j treason, not nmountii g to the full crime, it declares forfeiture extending beyond tiie lives of the puilty pmie-; whtiets the Constitution of the United Slates declares thtfno attnimler of treison shall ork corruption or blood or forfei lure, except tluricg the lib of the person at taine f.' True, theie is to bo no formal attainder in this case; still, 1 think thp greiter punishment cuinot be c-institution illv it dieted, in dille.cnt bum. b r tne same oileuse. ! " With great respect I am constrained to siv 1 ! think this Icature of the act is unconstitutional. I It would not be ditheult to modifv it." ! 1 The point of the joint resolution of July 17 is j in these word-: j " Nor snail any punishment or proceedings un j !tr siid act be s.i construed as to woik a forfei- ' ture rf thtf reil esute of t!ie o.Tci dcr beyond his ! n ttur tl itte." I Now, whatever mty hue been the original design of the author of sections five and six, ic. ! o the coi tä-v atron act ms to the tuhts of war. i a:.d 1. wever much the President mty hive m s- i ctit.ee. veo ir.c real pmt ot the law, u is pUi that tle joint resolution put the construction and elW.-tof the law bey o. id question, .'excert wi;h Judge Underwooti.) and ...tbtde the c.inris.-atioii of rel estate of otfrnJcrs bevond theii li'e estates, thus c trn ing out the i lain nnnnia of the CoLtiiution and the ideas of Mtiisun and Siory upvn ite ut jet t. It is tt be br;.e in raind that a, this time the j .via weic i. v.t e ii tnciriate 1. The w.tr poer in its loftiest li ghts had not atlaincl to that bad) t-ruiuei.ee. I he i cce-sity of heesoil for freetl men dil not thtn exist The President hid n Jt been t-duciul by the Hostuu Gamiliels and P.u!s i f atM.l.ti.,,,, ,,r by the gent'emin from Pennsylvania, up to the stand wJof the "procla tu ition of eruaucip tiiou " So soon as the rti'icv was adoptcl. lheertibirrament of the restriction ! on cor.fiscatiou tuder ihe hct of July 17th wis at nee i'elt. It was exposed by the Silicitor of the VYr Deptrtii.eiit on t lv for his pamphlet, entitled "the War Pow.rs of the President," where be sajs:
It ia Dinrh to be regrette-1 ihn the joint resolut on of Congrr-os hould h n e been so worded as to throw i doubt upon the ton.truct on of lb it part of the sutu'e, if not to parshie it slTects Ul'n t!;e only c!aa t,f rebel proper tv which they cannot put out of the reacb of Government, uamely, their teal estate " Put in course of time a !egl luminary aroe in Kantern Virginit, who was wier thi.n ilsdisonor Story, and l.e threw a ray of light upon the Constitution wh'ch was at once h idel as a gl id omen by the men who-e .lesigns upon the estales of the South had tteen bilked by lite expliiutorr resolution of July, IsQ Tlie briKhnt decision of Judge Underwood in tne face of the ii'.ire Unguage of the joint resolution, was considered a very timely and eo..d thing, b it ft was rlctr th at after the argument of the President himself in his veto mes sice, and after the doubt expreed by the Solicitor of the War Depirtment, it would not d j at otice t sav, even ursm the hii::i nuthoritv of
J udce Under w ood. that the ioint ieo!utiou meant , nothing and could he discarded, nor to iv that the Constitution did not mei'i whit the President, sustained by the highest constitutional au- ' thorities, siid it di J tnetii. Hut if that resolution j neteout of the way, tr its tfTWt neutralized by legislative enactment or explanation, there was room for Lope thai other judges, in the Supreme Court of the United Statt, might Ins found as wise and patriotic and loyal a Judge Under-i woo.!, who like him would hold that except in j constitutional law meant unle$ I say there was : some ground !;r this hope, and hv? The vast j learning and integrity of ihe accomplished Storv, j honored in both heinishcies, were no lunger in ! the Supreme Court. The massive intellect and i unsullied honor of Marshal were no longer pre- ! aiding theie The wie and pure McLean had i alsoceised lo live, and the lamp of life of the ! venerable Chief Justice, who-o mind had shone : like a sun iu that greit tibntnl for more than, thirty )ears, is feebly flu ketinj and might in a moment po out in the niht of death. True, i (trier and Nelson, Wayne, Cldl'ord and Catron j were still there; but might not this Congress, tie-1 voted to the Administration, pledged to it o!i- i cy and ready to do its work, easily provide, as I his nlieady been propo-ed by bills in this House, for addit'ou al judges, equal in judicial intt gtityj atid wisdom to'the loyal and illustrous Under-' wood, who would judicially dechre that except j meant , and that therefoiu the Constitution ! tlsl not i inhibit as a punishment of .reason the forleiluie of tlie fee simple of a traittir's t-Uite?1 Where theie is : will theie is a woy. The joint resolution could by Uonttss lc atni'ii'lt'd and explaim-d, and the Su reme Court could be so ( ranie l s, not only iu this cae but on other 1 gteit ii'ie-iiom, to dec! ire the law of the Con ! stitutioti to be in accor-i ince w'rh the policy and desires of the radio! an i revolution try men w ho are detei mined to control, and do control, this I Administr.ttiou. ' I do ti"t hesitate, Mr. Speaker, upon my ic-spon-ibility as a Kepresentatiio. to say tint ti e: Chief Mai:rae who made the det laraiiona of ; the Pifsident'it Inaugural Addre-s of M irch 4, l?fil, under the solemn sanction of anollrial; oath, in the presence of a people h'se hearts were quivering with intense interest and fear for i the nation's f ite, fetr ol disunion and civil w it. i and who whs atlerwards cnpibie of mukin and declaring us the law of this land the prorlam i- , lions of -I u.usry 1 ant! December H, Is (Id. is capable ol so organizing and intluenciiis' the Su- ; preme Court f the United Stitcs, that if, or a j majority of it will declare lhat the Constiiutiou ! of the United States nie ins just whit this Ad-j niinistrition wants it to mean, regardless of the ' history, tho wisdom und tlie judici il precedents: of l lie past We live, sir, in Ihe mi i-lof a greit ! revolution, and of the ways and me ins to ends, j w hich revolutionists will use if need be Ambi-j tion und suddenly acquitid power may and do j corrupt and drag Irom their moral moorings the; souls even of men who hive hid greitness thrust J upon them, because their neighbor and the; world applied t them the epithet or the litle ; "honest." j I hive thus, I think, tiuly traced out the mo- i tive or inducement to the intro luction of the joint ameiflitory resolution now before the! House. : 1. This resolution proposes to substitute in! place of the language of the joint resolution ofj July 17, lfG-J, which, whether tint wa the t fleet I of ihe second cl inso of section three, article three of the Constitution, or not, nb.-olutely ptc- j vented the forleiture of more than a life estate, j the words "except d ning," as ued in the Con stitution itself, instead of "beyond" as used iinlie i original joint resolution; tho word "except." oe-T mg Ihe li'tle loop whereon the astute L nderwood had hung his doubt. The word "real'' before estate in the original resolution is also proposed to be stricken out by the amendment. 2. For fear that this amended phraseology might still be construed as a restriction upon the power ol forfeiture beyond life, the intent and meaning of ihe proposed amendment is declared to be that the operiti m and e fleet of the confiscation act is onlv limited so far s to make it i conform to the Const i:ir ion, sec. 3. article 3 Inj other words, it means tint the act of confiscation j may fie treated as cmjwering absolute confiscation of all rebel nroperty, subject to the decision of th United States Supreme Court upon the ; question whether more than a life estate can be forfeited under the act. t! The amendment provides tint the President's proclamation of July t2.i. 1mV2, based on section six of the act of July 17. shall be held sullicient warning und proclamation to bring all otlending persons within the operation of confi . cation; that h, tint sin ii procl tni ition sliould i e-tabli-h the right and fact of forfeit me, as dating . sixty days after July -", l'W. This provision ! leaves no do-r of escape, except, thtough the mercy of the President, to offenders who, though : then rebels, may since have eea-ed to besuch,! :.n 1 is Another evidence of the vindictive and ! ui just spirit that pervades the confi-cation r oli. y ! Ti e President's warning of July 20. lMi-2.es-1 tablished a period of sixty d lys after that tlate as j tlo time when a life estate only should become ! forfeit, the confiscation art proluMti!i: any great er forleituie than tint Now, by virtue of this! joint resolution, if the Supreme Const decides j under if that the fee m iy be forfeited r confi j cved. the forfeiture is to be he'd fo tel ip fnrk j" to sixty dais after July ö, Irtc.'. and divest the I fee siniTle from that time; when of that time J thie w is no law bv which more th tn a lite est te i could be forfeited. This is to all intents ex post j ficto and retroactive legislation; imposing a creater punishment upon a crime than tho law warranted when theciime was commute 1. ' It is therefore appiren' tomyrrvnf.Mr Spe.ik ! er, from the term of the joint resolution itself. ' and from the tenor of the arguments of the igen- j tlemen who favor it, that it is a foregone coticiu ! sion and well understood that the julifial inter-! pretation of the act of July 17, lrC'2, after th s i joint resolution is pas-ed, is to be such that the ; party in power will be unable to consummate; their unholy purpose tf sweeping. twar from their ; present owners, and from their perhaps innocent ; an i certainlv defenceless heir, the lands of the Southern States, and substituting in their places, i as owners of the soli, tb fifed negroes of the' South, und the more ignoble white m.-n who are ' watchitig with vultuious eves t plunge uptin the; confisc tte I spoil of the conrpuered rebels of the ! South. Against such a scheme, sir, I would be ! untrue to the het instincts of my own nature, ; untrue to that divine religion wliich I profess to ! ho'i T. untrue to the principles of humanity, untrue to the ordinal principles ot the law o! na- j tions and tlie constitutional iuri-pru !c nee of my j vtwii country, untrue to the Union and Contitu J t'ori, for w!ioe salvation I would willingly cive ; tuv life, if I did not enter my earnest and soletnu protect. It is not bv such metns.sir, nor by any of o.ur schemes of subugation and overthrow nt States I and extermination or expatriation vi their people thit you are to conjuor rebellion and restore the Union and Constitution to their pristine peace and integuti The work of tru restoration must begin in the he irt of the people, in driving J out h itrel and malice arid mem cupidity. In re-! sr.rin2 reieienve for the Constitution audits sa- t ere! bligations, ;n a disposition to temper justice with merer, in a disposition to bury iu oblivion I the follies and sins of the past. ' It my be. sir. and ray political action hitherto i Ins been Utsed upon the idea, thit the war mar f-e a necessity of looser, indefinite duration It is ceruir.lv 4 f.ct of present exis'ence. and it resp-insibiiitie are upon us and not t be ignored r.oresoipel S 1 ng as Hrmis nre in the field, j watching and waiting to riesirov or conquer ech j other, the araiie thit fie tin to us must be fed and c.othed and suppl ed w ith tlie com I ort s and rewards which their valor, their patriotism, their labors and privations demand, and with all the material power to ßive lo war its due opcr ttioo and effect, and to our anus victory. The soldiers of the Union are our soldiers, our army; our brother?, kindred, and frit-n Is. They have been called au 1 gone forth; some freely, as patriots should ever go forth; some by lone; some tempted by giin, to fight in our cause. They hive fought bravely anil well on many a bloody Ceid, and myriads of oxmeleM grave and mo Urn
ing hou-eholJa, and lens o( thousands of maimed and shattered wrecks of youthlu! mmhoodall over the land, tell too truly how well and bravely our soldiers tme f ug!;t. Let ui arand by them and do our du'y to them and all who are de penJent upon them, as we expect our soldier to do their duty to us. If it be necessary, as It msj be, to bresk the militsry power of the States in arms against us, let it be broken speedily and effectually, not by paper proclamation and paper cor fiscations and bureaus of freed men afTtirs, but by battles, sieges, strategy, and all the highest fkill an ! power of war on lata! ani act. Rut, sir, there is a power which, in the experience of history, ever ha r-roved and ever will prove more potent than armies and navies to quiet discontent, to restoie order, establish law, and give to a government its strongest and be-t foundation in the love of iis i-eiple that is, the power of right; and by right I mean not alone justice, but njuity, clmiitj, mercy, kindness all thoe noble attributes of humani'y which unite men in the bonds of mutual respect and alTeclion. S r. have we no faith in God. no faith in the divine rd.ion of Christianity, no faith in the kind charities whose oldeu thread interlace, like nervous fibres, even the ruot rugged human
natuies, if we wiil but feci for them with a ten tier h ind, thai we, as legislator., should declare, as a majority of this House have deel ire I, upon the resolution of the gentleman from Kentucky Mr. Smith.) that " The only hope of saving this country is by the p iwtr ol the sword, and that we oppose any armistice or intervention or mediation or projiosition for peace ft om any quarter, so long as there shall be found a rebel in armj against the Government V Is that, sir, the spirit iu wliich thii Union was formed and waxed great in power and glory under the benign influence of pe ice ? Is that the spirit by which the Union i to be' restored and pie.ene I ? Far from it. Iu sober reason I ask, sir, shall ihe foolhardiucss or wickednes of one ribel in arms be enough lo silence the myriad voices pleading for peace, and continue upon this nation the curse of disunion aud civil war ? I trust it U not so. Will the world scorn us, will history reptoieh us, will wise an ! good men doubt our wisdom or our manhood, it, while we tu lititain our armies, as we should, to defend our States und our supreme law from the wwer of the mniies of the rebellion, we ulso use. all tho while, in every way, by argument,, by appeal-, by forbe trance, by concessions, if need be, tho power and iniluence of petce to bring btck, as willing liiernen, not n rclunctant tl tves, to iho common mIh Iter and fold, the wanderers from our I tthcin house of Federal Union X S.r, while I love the Union and the Constitution, and repudiate secession and tiet'ounep it as a suicidal lollev, and i r h net ns an enormous public ciitne, and while I long for the overthrow of rebellion and infidelity to the Co.i-tiiutioii of my country, I will also say, regardless of the tno tivet tint may lie imputed lo me, tint I indulge 1.0 rn dice nor hue to any man, woman, or child in the States in icbcllion, and far rather would 1 win them to our cause by words of peice thin to destrov rr subd'.io thcui by the jowcr of war S:r, let this Admiiii-liatioii give some heed and tlefeience to tlie opinions and argumenta of the multitudes of lulhtnl Union men in iilPthc Union States, at;d even in reheyious States, who tidier with its policy, and rise above and abit.don the extreme dogmas and policvof ptrtv, and repudiate emancipation and confiscation and expatriation or extermination by Federal power, und try with earnestness aud iu good faith in any form or in any wav I care not what, o long as it neither degrades nor dishonors us, nor those we would win bick to us the power of a tender of the Union u;i der tho C mstituti i;i as it is, with full amnesty and pardon f.r the pist, to the rulers and people in rebellion; and if we do not gain our cause by the offer, we ut least do not weaken it t or strengthen that of the enemy by such effort to do il with them in tho spirit and by the methods of tlio Constitution. Sir. if the President needs arguments and pre cedents for such an eifoit of magnanimity and true statesmanship, let him consult the history of Iiis own country Let him turn to the records atid precedents referred to iu the able and eloquent speech of toe geutlem in from New York, Mr. Fernando Wood.' Let him go beyond those records to those of the Hrith P trli ament in tlie daya wheu the eh'er and ounger Pitt and Burke and Fox and Camden an ! their compeers appealed for justice, for ihe principles til ihe Ihitish Constitution, for lihcity, for law, for peice in behalf of the "rebels" in the American Colonies, instead of irY'ing against them ihe vengeance and havoc of war. Let him, an I let other men, too. leitn from such great exemplars in tiue statesm mship and lofty patriotism, that to pie id for a just and honorable peice.evcn with lehels in arms, ra not treason to the Union and Constitution, in-r sympathy with rebellion, any more than were the pleidings of Pitt and Ilm ke treason to the Crown and realm of England. Col. Mreigltt lnipc. Colonel SrnKiuiir, of the 51st Indiana, who made his way out of Libby Prison by the famous under ground passage, firmed at Fort Monroe on the 2 Ith of February, in company with the following officers: Col. Ciias W. Tills, lb'th Maine. Major .1 H. HoorEU, 15th Massachusetts. Capt. II V. Fisher, Chief of Signal Corps, Army id the Potomac. Capt. II. I. Chamberlain, 97th New- York, Lieut Kam-oi rn, Tub U. S. Attiliery. Colonel Stu eight reached Yorktown twelve 11 Ii after leiviug Richmond. The New Yotk Herald's Fortre-s Monroe correspondent gives ihe following account of Col. S. and Cupt.CHAMBMiLAiV. It w as about 9 P. M when they left the prison. Pa-sing up Canal stieel two squires, they turned to the lelt an ! went into Se.-ond street, thence goin to the right and keeping on the e ist s. of the town At th;s ejrly hour of tlie evening it was impo-sible not to meet and nassa good many persons, but they did so without exciting suspit'ioii tfoo' 11 11. e loniii'w nion?, tneysaw no one T iking a iioi th-e tsferly cour-e, thev con- j tinafM t he r jou; ,m v, proceeding slowly hii1 ctutious'y, of cour?, ttiitrl 4 A. M . when they halted in a dense wood close by the Ciuck-thomi-nv swamps, and remained the l.ext day. Several times during ihe ilv squad- of r.'heis, spur in sein hol t'emissit:g prisoners, pissi d close by them, t ul htppiiy w.thout discoveting their place of cop.ee tlnieht. At d trie, they -tirtod agiin o?i their journev crossing the Chickahominy on a fallen tree, and, as good lu-k would hue it, encountering no pickets. Tl ey ot into . teniblo thicket, and this-niiiht a.-c :-rip'i.sh? 1 only five miles. They lay in this thicket all ihe second day, and the tirqueit: ;iiin' of eins atwnit them in tteri.it! j tli-sipated whatever of poetical eijoyment tliey might othei vis.. Jjave deiivcd from their wilderness lodge. Thus iar tliey IsaJ-Ief t but l.tile in the dav; but, nevertheless, on liic third night. tlipr rn nie .n nthfr st irt. Dow .triking I'oi tlie I'.imunkf v River. The detours tliey h l t in.ikc t kn-p tJicm-elvea under rover of the woods, and imps to traverse, nnle the j itirney -!ow, and d iylilit m.l v loun 1 tiiern mi i way between Cliickiil.oihiti) I'.im.iilit y Nett d iy, they p.-sC.i j;i n s nip Heitel scuts were -tjil trow line ntiot:?: bin ihey lay low nnJ qu.it, rtnd were not di-covered Ther sufTerel teitlv from cold Next night they retclu-d the 14niunky. netr I'.jier'n Kerry, and some ten miles ahove tho Wh.te Houc. H w to cet cid.-? ihe rier which lie.-c, although not vt-ry wide, is deep and d m.'erous, and the weither. in:i mtime. h id re iched a decree of coldnes) m a k it g -.wiin-rnitis; it an ini;-osiiiiity w.is now the ij'.'etion, and it wit :i dißictilt one to olre Thus fir they hid ;:lsU'neJ fiom coining io eonUct with any or e, w iiite or ll ck They wer eomr.cili to ci!l in t ntihhai.d aistai ce, and in ccotnpiisriiog this were four fliya At length they get a nero. and the ne.ro got a boat, and in this wij they got across the river. And now food fortune smiled on ihcra. This ngio turrel them over to another negro, who piloted tlem fitteen mile down the opposite bmk of the rive-. As o-l rainj of the rebel frold.er., i.nd particularly the caralrv, living in thia vicinity and Gloucester county, were home on furloughs, they .tili had to move with exceeding caution. But the kindne? uf the i.ecrues w i e i then from ciifire. They were t.rouht down to York river, and net acroa by a kill at Bigelow'a Linlin From here thej went down the river, passing Wen Point in d iytight. Here, seeing no one save negro ioId;ers on picket. w the first positive aurance of rejehirg our line. -The conversion for the improveujent uf the Ohio river, held at Louisville on Thur-dty. paael a ?erie of reaolutioua termiuiting with a renuireraeu that au appropriation of tea millions be naked of tu FJKai Uo? eminent.
I.CM1 V.tMIIGTOI.
Ole Abe' rekliij? He-election n a Joker Itidictile of hi Pretention by tlie Saldiert-l'oltion nf ttte Lincoln Clie mid rremont Fc tlon, lc A.c. A.c. fipcclal Correpor.iJriCf cf the Chlcijo Tinif I Washingtox, February 25. Old Abe is girg in for a re election on a root remarkable and funny record. He wants to be reelected as a joker." He points to his expiring term, wiib pride and pleasure, as a fcrcat joke. Tlie record is a orry joke to the country. Already the newspapers in the interest of the joking aspirant are collecting Iiis "little anecdote," and spreading them before the people for political effect. Is it possible that the gtett American nation are to be whtel'ed in'o the support of cn didate for the Chief Mscistracv whose chief cNim to support, as urgel both by himself and his friends, Is, that he is a clow n? Lineoln miy g?t a little fictitious popularity by his jokes atal stories, smuttj and otherwise; but wise men tn it discover, in hi dTs sisitioti thus to tritfe with greit and serious question, a disqualification for the very import mt jao.-iiioii he seeks to reuin. Uur army, on whoso votes lie largely relies. Ins already made the dicorery that he is the wrung man in tlie right place, and the men are not btck ward iu showing iheir contempt for him. They ridicule his pretensions. If Old Abe wants to enter the contest on the strength of Iiis mutly atories, his joke and wit ticisms. I fancy he will find the soldier mute than a match for him Iu a former communication I pointed out the three prominent facliona thst were intending in the so-called republic in Union ranks for the succession. At the head of the list, just at thii moment, ii the L:ncoln or Seward facti on. Wheu compelled to define its position on political questions-, it points to Old Abe'n record exullingly, ami savs, Are we not sound on the abolition question If Nobody will dispute the abolition tendencies of the administration. The proclamation of cm meiption, now a year old and over has settled that. Lvery act of the administration lias proven its loyalty lo the doctrine of abolitioni-in. Hut both the Chase and Fremont factions take issue with Lincoln, singular as it may appear, on thii very question. An nboliiioiii-l nil over, in every acl ol bis public cuter, these rival candid ite come forward atid denounce him. It may not be unprofitable to attempt a discovery of ihe points in which they disagree from the prosint iiiiMinihent of the White House. 1 1 may at lestt expose to the gaze of the great laboring masses of ihe North west the tioint towards which we are rapidly diiiling, and fro ui which wo may only be si vol by the earnest fl'orls of every patriot iff the land. Mr. Chte with his follower ate advocate of immediate und unconditional emancipation of the blacks everywhere within the boundaries of ihe United States It will be remembered that Mr. Lincoln's edict only emancipates the slaves in cert tin States in rebellion at u fixed date. It leave ihe xfitui of ihe negro in the holder Slates that had not rebelled unchanged. Hut, at the same lime, Lincoln shows his willingness and desire to lice the negroes c er ) where, by pressing upon Congress und the border States Ins schemes ior gradual emancipation with compensation lo loyal owner. Snhcrc i no question ing his position as a genuine out and out abolitionist. Chase avews his purjitise to go further. He would ignore the Constitution more completely than Lincoln has done, mid would exert the might of the Lxecutie in aid of universal em mcipition, Mid would support it by the army now in existence und subject to the orders of tho Executive. He comes nefore the people as a candidate for the Presidency on this ground, and on this issue ho contends with Lincoln. If Lincoln is an ab ilitionist, lie is a rn ne perfect one. He would have no slave in bondage, out releasing them, would elevate them to the grade of the white in in, or lather, would degrade the while man to the level ol the iei:ro. Fremont goes even further than either of these " loyal " gentlemen. Having allied himself with the German red lepuhlicaus, he halts at no prospect of anaichy and bloodshed, but rather gloating at the prospect as alfonling a dim promise of military renown, and e Incited by hi. other allies of ihe Wendeil Philip school, he would not only at once free tlie negroes, but would also give them the riiiht ot sullrage, w ith social equality in every res; ect wi h the whites, including the right of intermarriage. On these latter points he ecuie the most hearty support of the extreme radical abolition sis, with whom amalgamation is an essential. Euh of the aspirants for Presidential honors, with their followers, claims f. r himself the most perfect "loyalty It i most remarkable how easily they mmage to delude their adherents with the idei tint those who see the constitutional objections lo their revolution try schemesflaying nothing of objection of a moral ant) social nature are disloyal, and how readily they manage to convince them that the ground they tread upon is concentrated to the purest loyalty and patriotism. And yet each one of them openly and clearly violates the fundamental law of the land, the only difference between them be ing in tho extent to which they go in their disloyalty. Is it possible, then, that the people of the Uni ted States will extend the reign of a claps of men whose only claim of support is their persistent purpose to 'trioluce n inferior race into the wotksho; and upon the farms of the Notth. to compete with tiie white woikingmen, to their great dam igt ? Abolitionism Ii is never before, in the history of our country, been so bold in the avowal of their ie-igns. It is to be hoped that this boldness will work i's overthrow now, as all wise men and tn:c lover? of their country, its peace and prosperity, uni'e in believing it will do Moruis MARRIED. At F.ranrille, on n.ur ia- morr.in, March 3d, at tbe i residence of K. Dilbs, K-.j., j Iter. A. f-tetrett, Wii.- ' UAM H. HlJI'.HAM, r sq , t- Miss Kanxt B ncham, a. I of t.iat city HATS, CAPS, &C. Cincinnati Advertisement. riea-e l:e.id. IWe invite the attention of Merchants buvinj: goo ls in Cincinn.iti, to our Spring ! Stock of Hut, Cup and Straw fZo'tds; Palm Leaf lints and Sliaktr Hoods; Indies' and Minse$' Hat; A Large Stock ff Vol Hatt; And our own manufacture of Fashionable Silk Hits. Our Assortment of goods U now full and very ' i complete. 23T"Army butlers will find a well assorted 1 stock for their trade. Win. I?!I A: CO. Wliolesile Hat Deiters, HI Main Street, Cincinnati iaar2-ti2eodAw2w PROPOSALS. CONVICT LABOR, Frr COfH'Eils TO LET. SE At.Fn moros us wh.lbk khckivfooxthk rt Monday ia April, by tbe .nder-krEetl, at tbe office of tba lod.ana FrtMjn it. Aticbigan City, lr th labor of forty iro-d Coc.rra f-r ibe term of two or mre er. to be w otk d w nh.n tbe prln .n walls. Tbera i- a r.l w..rk -hop lara-e enonch for KjO men. w iih all iLe n-ce.ary coovenieie. Tbe loration ia a food on for bus nr., a Ure and ho p p are abundant and ran Us prucured on fatoraMe term. If de-i'td tLe labor f ttie cotivk-t may be ued tor any other merhafikal purpose, and ale an power can be had for propetl.cg ma chitwry . No t id for !e than 1h ier day will be receired. By order of tilt uard of Coutrol. aacii-Uiw TUÜ4 WOOD, Ward...
AMUSEMENTS.
.m i t it o i m r r r a h a i i -. ' STAGE MANAGES.... ..Xfr W. II. RIL.ET. Friday Evening, March 4th, 1864. it i: .v ; r i t t r CORSICAN BROTHERS AUTOE SOS2CEHKLD WILL f ING I 50 ALK OK rUICK5. Trivat It xp.fiT'ix prople. 14 M :S lnti Jl Wi ta 2i Cents OrchsT St .. Ir- Ore! ant Parqa! t . , (ii.hry or Kara i Circle.... JD'A'o txtr t A irjrfr tfrrtl -,;4. JTi-liox !!L t.-u .rum lo i.iiwk a. il. Uli 12 M r ojM-n at T o'cUck, Curtain rie t A fTrC m-v. il "Kerved rrtahx-tl n1r tll tb rnd of tb first .ct. FOR SALE OR RENtT SAULT STE. MARIE, CANADA WEST. ft , UK FOU) OU l.KT-.a nist Or lKhd T Cf . I sinitt- mi the lunktiif th fcfaatiful It! vsr tt. Marjr, and urarljr Mitt "Tiif Sul," in MhIii.u. 1 Ii lluse is t-silt In th rtiif.'rtaMr Kri(;!ih l, and funtai 'H, n tin k roti ii t floor, a t.hnis 1 nine rei m, tro pari r and thrse tsd-r ni. wh an exit llrtit k ichn an.1 oil. rr c.iivriiii.c attach' I. Ibe u .r part cult ef tle rHl-r'itn. C"nim.v!i.liii n m eitfiinre vlrw. A capital ce ll ir 1 ut,.Jiniaib tti bue; and lilil n-, a not sljf.t. Mmik' hour, an i nthr a-rful oututlliiit;s are ntbr prrmfsr. lht whole lav b. en rre,tri w thin the last tLrte jrar. Unre ar-alMbe twrrn .11 ai.t fill acroa of m- njnw rti I f a-tur1 Un.t, trautiru ly ornamntr.' with rvrrgrr.-n, inapt anil otbrr trre, in ludeil in the premise. Pries, if . I. fi.t-a; -.tMJ to be jiJ uh.wn.aril the rnu o'i t.noo iu tmual lnIun ut t l l.laA racSi, wi b mtrr.'.ot at 0 i ercn.t J erai.iium. If I t, lb reut w.ll he p r aii'ium, puyalU quar trrlj. Tlie prr!nlsr are aitnn'e on tbe rcrth bana f tb besunrul in! plc!ir-Mjue r vrr t. Mar, a i.1 In lb braliiet part of rptrr Ciitiaila, Th in tn ty i rnot lovely ai.J roni oit.o Hpi-ckle.t trout ..:ertbce llrh atH.und In tlie river a'nt iiHfhnnrln i-t reams, anl pood boo iiii tniy ln f" bail The property I r ally one tf the most !. ligl.tful ai J ra'u tt le" In North AllHTMH. Keftrn res nuy be maile to J Prlür4. sault St. Miris, C. W.,or I'lCol. It inert l.nrlda, Cu rl i-ia'l, ., orJ.W. liisl.l, Kmj., I'l'llaiiup t:, liiJMi.a, -r tl. VV, AN x oi'ier, Ksij ,m. I.ouf, Mo., I. S. Sacit Sik. MahiK.C. W , Jan.HM, 1J4. ftb.ttUot Indianapolis Chamber of Commerce, man "fiiAMr.r.it of com keck" w'ii.i. hr i.pennl diilv for t-iisiiiens, on au1 af'rr Monday, I . l.rtury l&tb, Is64 (Sun.laya excrp'r!) at 2 o'clmk r. m. '('hii-;e houri frnni J o'clock to 4 oVha k 1'. M. febl7 Ilm J. HiltNAl:!. Secretary. DOOTS AND SHOES. NEW WHOLESALE BOOT & SHOE HOUSE A.C. DAWKS, TM N. KVAXS, JAS.T. McUlLUN. DAWES, EVAXS & il'MlLLIX, Wholcsalo Dealers in BOOTS & SHOES 71 West Washington Street, INDIAN A IMH.tN, IMI., A UE NOW RECEIVING HtOM THE DKST MA5Uficturers in the country, aM harr In torr, tba f'li- win? co r!s to which tbry invite the attention of Country Merchants: 2t)') Cac of Men'a and llovs' Calf and Kip Boot a. H " " Krosari-i and I'l-iw Ji.a. IOO " Cair.lVedand Se;vfdhalmoraK IO 4 " Ofrord and scotch Tia. 3D ) " ofWonjeus Ca f, tioat and Calf FaBed Booiaand Balm rls. ?().' Cnsr or Womrii's Coat, Kid and Morocco ilk. Writ Hoots and Ha'niorals. iM Cs's V.'omen'a l.arvr- Coiijr. Gaiter. .-0( of Misses', CUildt. n'F, Roya and YiMitbs' Shoe of 11 kinl, sizf, varietira and tjlea, suiubl for Indiana and Iliil.ois. tt a r. liaviif-made our purchar befjre the U'e advance, wefe! a-su.-ed In faji- p wr tan oder ruierior indureinents to any House in tb-. West. Wr cordia ly invite jo i to examine our Hock before makim- purcha.se. Jlcsjf Prompt attention paid to orders. Kxira site always on b-oid. DAWKS. EVANS A McMILUX. ft-117 DRY GOODS. 'a i i B WW W H A H 82 H 111 m A i i A l ü w H CD r , a i ti n p z ft t m X REMOVALS. Tt J'Z 3X O V I-. WE UKXr REMOVED FEOit XOS. TJ 15D 77 re? TTaabinton 'ret. to tha dw cd com ,iilh.leridlnaireel, In Setinnir. Blck, where " offer tth? trale a frsütoJ wr.l e t. tca f Mtplaaift Yuxj Inj Good, Sti.ai. AeaEtlicient tn qaantsty aad farkrt to cL-ck tLe nur mciaoranduna of aoj bujr, arxi at price. Haan'. ,. in ' Wi. Uercbanu iU Cn4 it to tbir advantact to narn!n. our atockarnl prict befwro purcaaaina; Ia-rhr. r.tl-Jla CkUMlJLND 4 fU.
DRY GOODS.
NEW FANCY SPRING mm -ron 1864, AT HUME, LORD & CO'S., 20 and 2S Wvsi HVvIiinijton S. ARK RrCKITlN J OIH Jf KTT JrRI?f( Jlea of La I' Jau-y Ire ft .1, con-p.a-im 3Ioiro Ai.liquos, Thin and Fancy, V.Vrn Elccatit. Silks, Rich Fancy, Silks, Rich Plaid, Silks, Plain Black, All and (iutlititx. Plain Silks and Satins NfwStIfJ for Parly Dreee. Kept Silks, Corded Silks. Seeded Silks, iVmhled F.ice!, very fine 31onrning Silk, Poul de Soie, Plain and Ficuiel. Poil de Chevers, (Full lit e. S Ik S'iipe..,) amill letter. Talleta d(5 Anise, Corded Pique. Plain Black Taffetas, Chene Tailetas, Alpacas, Full line, all grades. Poplins, Pr nces Alice, Broc.ide. and Licht French. airs, Challis, Princes Alice Foulards, Oloiiians Orandris Jnrkoucfs iiinlrics, liiiitz. Irliilt itl ii -Jilts, ar., Ar, WINES, LIQUORS, &C. HAHN & ROSE, No. 11 South Meridian Street, state s e:ti.el -tun i.di WHOLESALE DUALE KS IX" Foreign and Domestic WINES, LIQUORS, CIGARS, TOBACCO, &C. We call particular attention lo oar fln a.aortmnt of genuine iajvorte i M'lqVOllS f.lV CIGAtlS, Al-oour Larn 5txkof OLO BOURBON YKISKY AND TOBACCO, All bouzlt Wor ta rie, wb'xh ai aMei c to a!l tb v.rj lowmt prict. We invite ia'.r to eiaisino onr tk bf"r j-nr-clia.ing s'.M-a h re. KIAII.Y & KOSE. Jan-i6m ASTROLOGY. 5 ASTEOLOOY! 5 GO AXIUEKIHK NATUK L CIITrD AfTROLOr, t H. t'Tf1 IJ OS A ! il'H. Ho ia tb arventh us of ib aavuth a-o. Bnu with tatnrai g Ji, km m- lr.m faturty w.th -jcU eaactrx-aa tkat it ia reaJI atonibiiir. lie la th Wr-a tär Xnroloftr cf tho Nlneteento Centurj. With th at-i cf a tnegle f laoa ac4 tbo card, of tto eminent lrti Sorccrc, jfadars I TirmAT A Yt ran taTI arawk a o V 1- aK - - a - j . w i4K tm v-aa w yr VäS oMtrion. Ho will tell ti. ah. rMAlt Vtn lui iV wii; marry, th- numixr of rbi drea ttey wa kae, od the lerirtb of tbMr iive for a few daya. Only coma aaxl v.no:t tb Aktr..!!,!. t Nv Krototkr Ataaotae. fim do to fcy a a tic a; tbiT are. cwpWton, aid tho va'njta tbrjr re born in, nrlojr p tba f tl, o4 paaatara 'aij'. iiiore rrx i.' iuij.ip"ii. itic cr e-nT.lta'ln ieu-ilaa. WANTED. AGKNTH WVINTEJD. WAXTEI-, AGKXT8 FROM 7J TO tltt PKI Mik. Tba Lnited Mtra Jrlnf Mabtne Caatanr want a actite Afym (mil or fowiaie) ia overr Cvoiitj to Kdicit order fur the r r 1 12 Machine, vita raaee. arrrw anm ana aira (mm, or givo iara-o Ceaaaaia. for paructaUra, terma. oncloao a Ub and aj draa tUAKUt M KB&X. CIav. aJ.4l. Ohio, f.aTS-ca' OoiraJ Ag.i.t fttba Ulta4 StVaaoa).
