Tac Bfpforp Gazette is published every Fri* isv rooming by Meters A Me.vgel, at $2 00 per jniißßi. if paid strictly in advance ; $2.50 if pid ff j[(iiß s 'x ™ o oths; 53.00 if not paio within six All subscription accounts MUST be ■tied annually. No pnper will he sent out of ,j, c State unless paid for is ADVANCE, and all such jjhscriptioßE will invariably be discontinued at tit expiration of the time for which they are ill ADVERTISEMENTS for a IKS# term than . r ee months TEN CEN'tS per line for each in jertion. Special notices one-half additional AM rfiluti'ns of Associations; communications of limited or individual interest, and notices of mar ges and deaths exceeding five line , ten cents , tr line. Editorial notices fifteen ecnts per line. All legal Notices of every find, and Orphans' L art and Judicial Sales, are required by lav Hbt published in both jmjters published in this , date. [jf All advertising due after first insertion. A liberal discount is made to person# advertising hv the quarter, half year, or year, as follows : 3 months. 6 months. 1 year, wi'iae square - - • $ 4 50 Jft 6 00 $lO 00 f*,, squares ... 600 9 OiT 16 00 jfcree squares - - - 800 1 2 00 20 0(1 ' garter column --14 00 20 00 35 no j 3.if column ... is 00 25 00 45 no ! , t 3e column - - - - 30 00 45 00 SO 00 j ! 'Oue square to occupy one inch of space. JoB PRINTING, of every kind, done with ' jeatness and dispatch. THE GAZETTE OFFICE has. j..- been refitted with a Power Press and new type, i ; everything in the Printing line can be execu ■ :in the most artistic manner and at the lowest p es —TERMS CASH AH letters should be addressd to METERS A MENGEL. Pwblialm • Attorneys at iair. roSEPH W. TATE. ♦ ATTORNEY ,! AT LAW. BEDFORD. PA., will promptly i ad to collections of bounty, back pay. Ac., j: i all business entrusted to his care in Bedford X- i adjoining counties. .• ish advanced on judgment*, notes, military s: ! other claim- Hts for sale Town lots in Tatesville, where a j j '. Church is erected, and where a large School • ji a- shall be built. Fanus, Land and Timber j Dure, from one acre to 500 a'-r.-s to suit pur j tja?ers. off e nearly opposite the ••Meneel Hotel' and: B. k of Reed A Scbell. A ori 1 0.1666 —ly J. (JeP. SHARPE. E F. KElttt. 1 ajIIAKPE A KERR, ATTORNEYS i i AT LAW BEDFORD PA., will practice in , arts of Bedford and adjoining counties Of- S en Juliana St.. opposite the Banking House of i I (HI Be belt. I March 2. '••. i I P. nt'RBOHROW. j JOHN Lt'TZ. J nITRBOR BO \v A L UTZ,' J ) \TTORNEYS AT LAW. BEDFORD, PA., j ; attend promptly to all business intrusted to, rcare. Collections made on the shortest no-' tice. Tbev are. alo, regularly licensed Claim Agents i irl will give special attention to the prosecution! aims against the Government for Pensions, B.ck Pay. Bounty. Bounty Lands, Ac. nfii ;e on Julian* street, one door South of the j >,gel House," and nearly opposite the Inquirer ; ~ JOHN P. REED, ATTORNEY AT J LAW, BEDFORD. PA Respectfully tenders a" —rvices to the public. - -etond door North of the Mengel House. ,elford, Aug. I. 1 I fOHN PALMER, ATTORNEY AT J LAW. BEDFORD. PA. Will promptly attend ! all business entrusted to his care. Particular attention paid to the collection of M ,ary claims, Office on Juliana Street, nearly j te the Mengel H use. rl. Aug 1. MSI. lVi'Y M. Al-SIR. ATTORNEY AT I ]j LAW, BEDFORD, PA. Will'faith fully and tr icptlv attend to all business entrusted to his re in Bedford and adjoining counties. Military 'ems. biek pay, bounty, Ac., speedily collected. Office with Mann A Spang, on Juliana street, j tk ioors Sou'h of the Mengel House. 2 ' N. KINMELL. j J- W. LI.NGENFELTKR. , I " IMMELL & LING EN" FKLTER, > IV 'TTGRNKYS AT V ;n T< PA ;. H .ve formed a piumcrship in tnt. , ; the Law Office en Juliana street, two doors couth of the 'Mengel House. / t H. SPANG, ATTORNEY AT I JT. LAW, BEDFORD. PA Will promptly at-j tend to collections and all business entrusted to hi- care in Bedford and adjoining oountie-. , Office on Juliana Street, three door# south of the j Mengel House." opposite the residence of Mrs. , Tate May 13. 184 B F. MEVEBS | J. W. PICWSRSON | MEYERS & dickebson, AT- > TORN FA'S AT LAW. Bedford. Pa. office j -jij.e as forineily occupied by Hon. \V P. Schell. (itMir- east of the GAZETTE office, will practice j . the several courts of Bedford county Pensions, , ' ,rv and i ack pay obtained and the purchase j p i sale of real estate attended to. jinayll, 66. JOHN IE FILLER, Attorney at Lair, ' Bedford. Pa. Office near y opis.sire the !'•>#( j ,5,. e [*pr.20."66. —ly. iMiusicians and frtlWi |) H. PENNSYL, M. D., BJ.oot>Y j Ron Pa.. '1 >te surgeon 58th P. V. V.,) ten - hia pmY<— l -rvices to the people .-f that • ! vicinity. Dec. 22. 65-ly _ j \\ T W.JAMISON, M. D., BLOODY ' , ki N. Pa., tenders his professional rvi the people ot that place and vicinity. Office • e door west of Richard Lungdon s store. X V 24, '6s—ly i nr. j. E. MABROURO, Having : I r permanently located, respectfully tenders . - professional services to the citizens ot Bedford bf . on Juliana street, east side, nearly opposite Sinking if.use of Reed A Schell. Bedford. February 12. 1864. N hickok, 1 G - H - JR i TiKXTISTS, J ) BEDFORD, PA. •I •? in the Bank Building. Juliana St. All operations pertaining to Surgical or Me mi :d Dentistry carefully performed, and war ranted Tfkvs —CASH. Bedford. January 6, I6o. ___ itanhcts. % M MtIIU, '• '• SCHf.LL, i j) KK R AN 1) SCIIE LL, IL Ranters and iEALKRS in EXCHANGE, BEDFORD. PA., DRAFTS bought and sold, collections made and '• promptly remitted. Depoglta •ufeiwd. | <, v>. |off O y SHAWN E FKNI RKT "1 T '!'. SHANNON A HL. I'-ANK- Ik ERS, BEDFORD. PA. B \ .\'K OF DISCOUNT AND DEPOSIT. ELECTIONS made for the East, Wes'. North "• ith. an.l thf pontrftl *d acted. Notes nd Accounts Collected i d i'tMh*es promptly made. REAL LfrlAih i.'nt and sold. Oct. 20. l*6o. {IA.XIEL BOBBER, A f PITT STREF.T. TWO DOORS WEST OF THE bed ' ,R '> HOTEL. BEDFORD. PA. ATCHMAKER AND DEALER IN JEWEL RY. SPECTACLES. AC. He keeps on hand a stock of fine Gold and , il- V 'AV.cbee, Spectacles of Brilliant t also Scotch Pebble Glasses. Gold Chains. Breast Pins. Finger Rings, best 'l J 'dity of Gold Pen . He will supply to order 4:1 5 thing in his line not on hand. 0 i 20. 1865- UF. IRVINE, . ANDERSON'S ROW. BEDFORD. PA.. • m B'H.ts. Shoes. Qneensware. and Varie " v_s-or.lers from Country Merchants re tfss.'tfully solicited. '-t 2ft. 1R65. R. ANDERSON, Licetpteei Scrivener mid Conveyancer, . 1 ENTREVILLR, BEDFORD COtTNTV, P ittend to the writing of Deeds, Mortgages, "is. Articles of Agreement, and all business o-u,iiJ v transacted by a 81 rivener and Conveyan- j 1 * P atr ''t>age of the public is respectfully '6ft-tf. • 1 - . .^.., ; w ...c- v. .---. .- -v-~v. .-•- -. . . BY MEYERS & MENGEL. ftarduare, &r. WM. DARTLEV. | S. S . METZGER . Hartley & metzger having formed a partnership, on the Ist dnv of April. 1866. in the HAR DIVARE and FARM MACHINERY TRADE, now invite the pub j He to examine their mammoth stock, which they mil sell at low figures, fottook . | pr 27,'66. I RON AND NAILS, at lowest cash 1 prices, at HARTLEY A METZGER'S. IJAINTS, fresh, durahle and heauti ful; Pure Liberty White Lead; Penn Treaty V- nitc Lead; Mansion White Lead; China Gloss; l urpenrine; Flnxseed Oil; Copal and Demar \"ar mh; Brushet* of all kirids, for sale cheap, at HAKTLKY A MBTZQAR S / < RAIN AND GRASS SCYTHES, ; \ J Sneds and Harvesting Iriiplemeot.-) in great : j variety, and at all i rices, for stle at HARTLEY A METZGER S. - ERS, with all the new improvements, amo-ig which is ibe wonderful Dropping invention. Also. ! a few ■■ Farmer Mover*" tor sale by Hartley A Metzger Order .-nun as the supply is short for j this season. I) ARN IXX)R ROLLERS, of the I most improved pattern, track and all coin rilete. cheaper and better than hinges, for sale at i HARTLEY A METZGER'S. IYEMI-JOHNS, for Mineral Water, / at HARTLEY ,t MBTZGER'B. I " MMliNc TACKLE— Rods, Hooks, Lines, Ac., Ac. Shot Guns. Powder. Shot, Caps, Ac., at Hartley A Metzger's. " n BEREA GRINDSTONES ami M " and Fixtures, at Hartley A Metzgcrs. I ) A TEXT WHEEL GREASE; the f best White-wash. Blacking and Scrub Brush es in town, at Hartley A Metzger's. / t* good* will be sold at the lowest possible priees. Persons ' desirous of purchasing BU ILDING HARDM ARE will find itto their advantage to give us a call. WHITE LEAD—We have on hand a large quantify ol White Lead, which we have been tor- , innate to buv a little lower than the market, rates The particular brands to which wc would invite attention, are the Pan Unci. land. Li la it a White Lead. Same Fran It in H liiti Lead. Wat/iimriou White Lead, Washington '/.mc White Lead, Nnr fori White Lend. ALSO: — French Porcelain Finish. Demur Varnish; Varnishes of all tinds Flaxseed Oil, (pure.) Turpentine and Alcohol. \il kinds of IRON and NAILS. No. 1 CHRYSTAL ILLUMINATING COAL j OIL LAMPS in profusion. Wc would invite persons wanting Saddlery Hnrdware, to give us a call, as we have every thing in the Saddlery line, such as Buckles, I Kings. Hnines and Webbing Leather of all kinds; also a variety of Shoe Findings, consisting of ; French Calf Skins. Morocco Linings. Bindings. Pegs, etc. •.£' Housekeepers will tind at Blymyer A Son ; store a great variety of household goods Knive; and Fork of the very best quality; Plated Table and Tea Spoons at all priees. Give us a call and we can supply you with Barn Door Rollers, the latest improvements; NovaScot-a Grindstones, better than, any in use; Shovels, i Forks and Spades Grain and Grass Scythes and Snathes: fishing; Tackle; Brushes of all kinds; Demi-Johns: Patent Wheel Grease. Tar and Whale Oil, and an infiuite , variety of articles. 820.000 WANTED—WouId like to get it if our i friends would let us have it. Lc.-s will do ; but persons having unsettled accounts will close them up to the first of March, to enable ub to close our old book- This should be done. may 4, 66. GEO. BLYMYER A SON. t s I \i it \ PER YEAR! We want N J ,)' H ' agents every where to sell our i iMi'ROVKi)S2oSewingMachine- Three new ktnds. Ui.der and upper feed. Warranted five years , Abovesalarvor large commissions paid. TheONLV machines s.dd in the United States for le># than SHI. which arc fully licensed by Jlov, Wheeler \ i Wilson. Grocer br Baler. Singer W Co.. and . Baeheldrr. All other cheap machines are in fringements, and the seller or user are /table to arrest, fine, and imprisonment. Circulars free. • Address, or call upon' Shaw A Clark, Biddef rd, j Maine, or Chicago. Ills ]Dec. 22. 6o—ly t.z w v A MONTH! Agents wanted • * M ) bir sis entirely nev articles, just out. Address 0. T. GAREY. City Building, Biddeford, .Maine | Dec. 22. os—ly [ niCBASD LED, r Manufacturer of cabinet-ware, CHAIRS. AC., Bkdfobd. PA., i The undersigned being engaged in the Cabinet making business, will make to order and keep on j hand everything in hi# line of manufacture. - I Bt'KEAFS. DRESSING STANDS, PARLOR AND F.XTF.N- SloN TA3I.ES. CHAIRS, BEDSTEADS. WASH STANDS. Ac., AC-, I will be furbished at all prices, and to suit every ! taste. COFFINS will also be made to order. i sf-Proinpt attention paid to all orders for work. on West Pitt Street, nearly opposite . | the residence of George Shuck 5 July 10, 1863.—tf RICHARD LEO. * A TERCIIANTS' SHOW BILLS, printed in superior style, and upon reasons ble terms, at TAB BEDFORD Uaibtte office i< hi' hlrdfovd (liiurttf, SPEECH of SENATOR COWAN. DELIVERED AT AN IMMENSE MASS MEETING. IX THE t it.v Hall. Washington. I>. ( April 512!. IN SUPPORT OF l*ltt.Sll)i:\T JOHNSON'S POLICY. At which speeches were made by U. S. Marshal Gooding, Ex-Governor Wm F Johnson, of Jrenn'a, Gen John L. Swift .of Mass., and Gen. Green Clay Smith, of KY The honorable Senator \v;i> Governor, who elected to Congress, who elected to the Legislature, whoe' BEDFORD. PA.. FRIDAY MINING, MAY 25, 1866. r i j lected sheriffs and cfftables. Then, < ' j if there lie nobody oude a free State f who lias the power tsiy what men i , shall be elected to uv, neither is j there anybody who sll say who are 1 to be made electors : ecau-e, if you ; j will give me the righti say who shall vote. I will very quicy tell you who shall be elected. In tl country those j who vote are in the hit of electing the officers ; and for peons outside to : say who shall have e riglu ofsuf-j : frage is another way>f saying that ; outsiders may dictate tio shall bee lected to office. 1 repff that we have ; nothing whatever to dwith that (jues-; : tiou. The States of th Union are free ! States. We have a eitral Govern ment, and to it havebeen delegated certain powers carefull laid down and \ ! enumerated in the Coititution. It is ] just as if a dozen genthien here were i to meet together to forEa partnership ; : rules are laid down, nvU'rr of copart- j ncrship are entered irtc How long, ! do you think such a parWship would j bo likely to last if one uieuixr was al- ; j lowed to say, I will nianagunfltters all j my own way, and another dowed to I say, 1 will have more than ir; share of i the profit.-? So it i- with th- nation. 1 We have agreed under the .'on-titu j tion upon our terms of copatnership. ; : We stand upon those terms. We not only say we will remain in t o Union but that we will compel any efractory i member of it also to remain-to stand : just as the Constitution mite- them j stand. | A voice, "We will rake them j stand."] Yes. that's it. I sways like to get a little good hard Ingiish in. i | Laughter.] Well, who opposes this doctrine? ! They say they are a Union party. The Union party fellows who sat they are i'or the Union but will not lave it. Is not that a singular Union patv? Is it not playing Union party witi the Un | ion left out ? Is it not a rcjetition of the play of Hamlet with Himlet left i out? But they are abusive ielow- too. Ju-tas my friend here, s;id, if you want a Union upon the basis on which it wa- constructed; if you propose to stand upon the agreement which was made, they say, no, you art a Copper head. If you do not wait to kill all the women and children in the .South, they say you are secesh, you are a reb el. Did ever anybody hear of such scolds ? A great many people have thought that Lincoln was a better na tured man than Johnson. It has oc curred to me that after listening for three or fouryears to the abuse of these people, he would have been disposed to stool. 'TiieYiAvilD.-UDon the land, that when a woman acquired a habit of scolding beyond endurance, she was placed upon a stool called a cooking-stool, and there -lie sat, the ob ject of the jeers and derision of boys, and sometimes of those who ought to have known better. These people cannot keep peace with anybody. They cannot agree with a nybody. If you could only put them into a pen hytheni-elvesthefateof the Kilkenny cat-would be theirs. There would bt: nothing left in a short time, hut a few tails lying about the floor. They will not have Union now because they do not want it; and why? I will toll you. They have behaved so out rageously during the last fouryears, so overbearingly, as if they had all the patriotism in their belly, that they know very well that the people of the South cannot love them — that i- utter ! ly impossible. They never had any I charity for those people, and having gone into rebellion, they would see men, women and children, loyal and disloy al, go to the same bottom. It was not the fault of the people of the South i that the rebellion came. A majority of the southern people were not for it, and if this Government had done it.- ' duty and put down the rebellion in it inception, there would have been n< ; war. ["That's so." I But here you had Uongre-s fighting at one end of the avenue, just as they are tightingnow. (> u had a President at the other end of the avenue wanting i to do one thing and Oongres-' another, and while they were engaged fighting each other, the Southern propagandists ; and Knights of the Golden Circle were left free to act with no force to oppose them, and what could the people do ? ! What do these people up at the Capitol propose to do now? 1 o inflict then punishment upon the innocent instead .j of the guilty. They say you cannot , restore the Union now. Why? Be ■ cause rebels will get back to Congress. Well suppose they do come is there no ; way of keeping them out? If a man i comes here claiming a scat in Congress ; who is a rebel, a traitor, a leader who . j incited the people to rebellion, would ■ t here be no way to avert the terrible ca ! 1 amity of Ms taking a seat in Congress? I would not find any difficulty in i preventing it. I would not ask , the President or Congress how to i keep him out. I would take out a . warrant and arrest him under the law. L . If he were a traitor I would have hi m 1 arrested and punished. 1 would let a the courts, the marshals and thejurie t do their work; and after you have - hung a man as a traitor, he would nol ■- trouble you much about getting intc t ('ongress. j Laughter and cheers, j Oh e no, they do not want the Union or law > restored, they want something else e What was the proposition they intro i, duced into Congress the other day > They said : "Let us forgive these peo | pie down South." Well, suppose you i do. What will you require in return? 1 Let the negro vote. That is about the whole of it. These red-handed trait ors can come back if you will let the j I negro vote, f hey will swop off the j right to punish the criminal, if you will only give them the vote of thene- 1 | gro. But, you may ask, why do you want the negro to vote? Because if j ! you allow the negro to vote he will | vote for us. i Laughter.] He will vote i for us, and there is nobody else down then? who will. [Continued Laughter.] j We have behaved toward the white j ; people -o outrageously that there is not i one of them who loves us. That is the whole secret of it. I do not see any difficulty on that point. I have no per sonal animosity against anybody down there, and there i- no reason for indul- ] j ging in any -ueh feeling, except so far ] !as those people keep it up. But thatis , the explanation of the whole matter. ! There are two or three gentlemen — j ! it lias become so exceedingly unpopu- '' lar to name anybody that i will not say who they are— I do not want to throw ] the carcasses of dead dogs into that as sembly. "How about the de-ad duck"] I do not mention anybody; but there | is a man, and there are four or five mil , lions of people down there, not one of j whom loves that man. Then he is dead. , No man can be hated by four or five j millions of people without being dead, j Think of it. I should dislike mon- ] | strously to be hated by two or three j little boys in this crowd, and how much j | more by four or live millions of men, ] : women and children. They are de termined thi-s Union shall not be re stored so long as these people hate them, j ! and they have no more hope of a change i in that respect than you have. Do you ! suppose they care about the negro? They know the negro never can be brought in contact with white people j and compete with them. They know I just as well as we know that we are j stronger, richer and more powerful i j than he, and that he cannot compete with us in any of the great business j transaction:- with which weare brought ! I in contact. But admit, if you please, that he is stronger than you are and wiser, >tiil this is not his country; it i- your coun : try. He is here a kind of stranger. — ; You cannot cat with him, drink with : him, sleep with him, or marry with him. j Laughter and cheers.] I say, then, that no true friend of the colored man will bring him face to face with j the white man in any struggle in ■ which we may beengaged. Why should he be brought there? It is but to ex pose him to your greater strength and What good would voting Ad himr lit? has either got to have a party of his own, or else to mix himself with two or three of your parties. It he had a party and the majority, do you think he would elect any white man to office? j A voice. "He would elect a radical !"] Not by any mean-. He would not touch them with a ten-foot pole. Sam is a good deal too sharp for that. He understand- too well how he has been used for years as a hobby for them to ride into office, if he ever gets them off to ever allow himself to take them on again, (laughter.; Go into Liberia, where he has a country of his own, and see whether he will permit any white man to vote there. Not at all; his con stitution says that nobody shall vote unlcsshe has African blood in bis veins. Why ? Because be does not want to ex pose you to the defeat of coming into competition with his superior race.— I Laughter. ! I am a friend of his. I have protect ed hint very often, and it is because I am a friend that 1 say it is a shame to undertake to bring these innocent peo ple into such difficulties and defeat a will inevitably follow being brought into contact and competition with the white race. The negro i- one of tht happiest dogs in the world. Give him a cabin in acorn field and DIN*AH t( | love, and he does not care about poli ; tics. Not a bit of it. As 1 said before, ' the only difficulty about restoring tin Union is in this party which is not t party after all. The radicals never hat a party. I was years ago an old Whig ami they were always annoying u-.- 1 Those abolitionists did nothing bu 1 scold and find fault with everybody.— The Whig party was rather more fa vorable to them than the Democrat* nnrtv. but thev said. "No.no. wenius parijr, uui tm*\ uv, have a whole loaf or no bread. And when we wanted to elect Clay they , stuck up a candidate of their own. [A Voice — Birney. i Yes, that was the man. They got a : few thousand votes for him— enough j to defeat Ulay, and that was all it came | to. Then when the war came on they came out very strongly. They went to work, and what did they do? Staid at home, scolded, and made trouble a mong our own people. \ ery few of ■ them went to the war. The men who ; ? fought went into the contest lor the Const itution and the laws, and not up , on any hobby or scheme of reform, to j turn a black man into a white man. or j anything of that sort. They fought ; for the flag, and they were the men | : who did the lighting. But these fel- i lows were exceedingly jealous. They ; were very enthusiastic, made speeches, i wrote pamphlets, and all that sort of thing. Of course there was no objec tion to that ; nothing wrong in it. Now that the war is over they say • i they have abolished slavery. Why, ? gentlemen, they never abolished anv - thing. [Laughter.] They never abol VOL. 61.—WHOLE No. 5.349. ished slavery, n<>r anything else that 1 ever I heard of, unless, perhaps, the use of common sense by themselves.— Perhaps they may abolish themselves ! one of these days. The men they have abused a hundred times are the men who abolished slavery. The slavehold ers themselves did tenfold more to a bolish it than they, if the slaveholders had been satisfied to allow matters to remain quiet, they would have had their -lave- to-day. It would have been impossible to overthrow slavery. But they united with the politician-in i the war, and it \va- the soldier u ho a- j | boli-hed slavery, not the-|>eeehinaker, ! lor the proclamation-maker, who pa- ; ' rades himself here as the person who ) . has accomplished it. Well, now. slav ery is abolished, and what more do you ' want? Everything these people want, when you bring 'them down to the point, is that the negro shall vote. They pretend they want to give him civil right.-. We have given all the civ il rights we have. We never stipulat ed to go to the extent of overturning a State to give him rights. We broke | the fetter from the slave and left him ! just like one of us, free to go where lie | pleased. If he did not like his master : in the District of Columbia lie couid |go to Maryland. If he did not like j Maryland he could goto Pennsylvania, j ju-t as 1 would go, and I might be so j hard pushed under certain eireum ! stances as to go to Massachusetts. — | | Laughter. If the negro is not in the | right State he may go where he pleases, I and that i- personal liberty. It is the liberty we have conferred upon theblaek -man, and a thing of which I am proud. Rut 1 will not go to the extent of over turning the liberty of the States and centralizing this Government, putting the whole power in the hands of Con gre-sandthe President here to be wield ed for improper purposes. J resist it now as I have always. As I said before, a gentleman has in troduced a proposition which savs: I i i "You may do just what you please, provided you give us political power and let the negro vote." They intro duced a proposition the other day, in which they said, "if you will give up the right to fifteen or sixteen members of Congre.—, you may do what you please. We do not care anything about j negro rights or negro suffrage." The proposition now is, if you will let the negro vote that will leave u- a ; chance to continue our political power. i That is about as near the substance of | the proposition as I can state it. A j voice—"lt is near enough."} . " 1 L> ° y " n stake in the world? [j for the greai - um uuiu uicw. ' | people as a conquered people. What • do you want to do with them? If you > j were a monarchy or an aristocracy, you i might find it to your advantage, but : as a republic will you be any better off ' for it? I- not the thought itself wick j I ed and atrocious if it were possible of t i execution? The inhabitants of those ; States are of our blood, of our kith, and kin. They arc your cousins, your brothers, your friends, your relations. an your President. [Great en j thusiasm.j They will tight for liiiu ; and why? Simply because when they were con quered he treated them as a generous I man would. He did not kick and curt ! and abuse them. He said it is all over. I Let us be friends and have more sense j next time. That is the proper way to I do. it is the only way frank, honest, j liberal, human men, would'treat a fal len foe. Suppose you treat them other ! wise, and a war with England or France i should occur, they would keep the blockade open; and if they fought a j gainst us, where would this Union be? They have half a million of as good lighting men as there are in the world, ; and could we go into a war with such I an odds? Would not our soldiers say: We have conquered these people once; ! have brought them back into the U i nion. and if we bring them back again, will you he any nearer a settlement af ter another war than now ? I cannot see how you could carry on another war under these circumstances. The dic -1 tates of wisdom are that you admit them at once; that you take them hack j and let us have one common republic once more, the greatest, as 1 have said, • upon which the sun ever shone. A o\y, T ieupwcuwarns, i lmve address* el you longer than I intended. An old fellow—a Greek, I believe—once sa.d that a great many people could com mence a speech, but very few could (nd one. I thank you for your kind and respectfulatteution. I havegreat hopes when 1 look over this half acre or more of upturned faces that we will yet save the I'nion; that we will yet see this great Republic I have described pre served for the future. lam proud to say to you that, according to my best judgment, your present President is the man for the work. [Applause.]— Trust him, and he will not fail you. — lie will do the work quietly and gen tlemanly, as a man and a gentleman should do. The Senator retired, greeted by the prolonged cheering of the audience. Tlie Memphis Itiot. Correspondence Cinciunati Gazette (Radical.) THE SECOND DAY. M KM PHIS, May 2.—The riot was re sumed this morning, and continued | with much fury until noon, with con- I sequences equally as di-astrousas those of yesterday. Before daylight a crowd of some five hundred negroes attempt ed to gain admission to the fort and se cure the arms in the arsenal, but were finally met by the commanding officer I who threatened them with grape and ; canister if they did not instantly dis ! perse, when they immediately retired. General rioting commenced about 9 {o'clock, beginning by the declaration I of a negro in a low groggery that ev i cry (I—d white man in the city would I be killed before the cessation of hostil ities, which declaration reaching the cars of several white men, resulted in | the violent death of the negro. Then the war began in earnest. Startling rumors reached the business portion i of the city, and citizens arming them selves with all sorts of weapons, rush ed frantically in crowds to the scene of the riot, breaking into gun and pistol ; stores as they went, and appropriating all the arms they could find. They were ; followed by the sheriff's force, the po | lice force, firemen and a po-.se, organi zed and armed by the Mayor. South street was again the battle ground. ! Here the negroes had collected to the I number of at least 1,500, bearing aloft a black flag as their standard, and hol looing, yelling and firing in every di rection. Mo-t of them were discharg ed soldiers, still wearing their uniforms, and were armed with muskets. The citizens charged on them, pouring in a I volley of shot at the same time, which caused the negroes to run, leaving some 15 or 20 of their brethren dead and wounded on the ground. The return fire killed one citizen and mortally wounded two others. The advantage was pressed and the negroes were driv en heiterskelter beyond the city limits, scattering in every direction. Various rumors are afloat as to the number kil , | led, but it fiannot be less than fifteen. I have positive knowledge of eight, i I could not learn the names of the , j torch was applied to several negroes' ; dwellings, which are now a mass of I smoking ruins. The white troops fi '! nally succeeded in stopping the riot, , ; and all i- now quiet with the exception . of occasional firingin the suburbs. Vi ; olenceto peaceable negroes has ceased. , But very few make their appearance j- on the streets. Most of the black rioter- areskulk- I ing beyond the city limits, and the white troops, of whom there are only two companies, are disarming them as rapidly as possible. Some fear an outbreak to-night, but I think the riot is at an end, as the ne groes have been badly worsted, and there is not much disposition torn desfc them while they conduct themselves properly, although thefiremen and po iieearo much incensed over the death of their comrades killed yesterday, and are prevented with difficulty from wreaking further venganee on the blacks. How Tin: ABOLITIONISTS KEEP TIIEIR PROMISES TO THE SOLDIERS. — Major George B. Halstead, a gallant D >.dier, who last fall stumped New j j. rsey, from Sussex to Cape May, for the election of Marcus L. Ward for Gov ernor, is out in a letter, bitterly de nouncing Ward, as unfaithful to his pledges, "to appoint Soldiers to posi tions of profit and trust." He shows that every position in the gift of the Governor, to which there is any salary attached, has been filled by stay at home politicians, to the exclusion of soUlien? equally as well qualified. He names particularly the offices of Private Sec retary, Clerk of the Supreme Court, and Secretary of State. The Legisla ture last winter passed an Act, author- • izing the Governor to appoint some suitable person to write the military history of New Jersey, and 31 r. Hal stead charges that the Governor prom ised the position toacivilian "beforethe ink was dry, with which his name was written to the bill," and soldiers were told to stand to one side. WOMAN, an essay on grace in one vol- ' urne, elegantly bound. K EI:P the eyes wide open before mar riage and half shut afterwards. IT has been asked, when rain falls does it ever get up again? Of course it does, in dew time. A YANKEE has just taught ducks to swim in hot water with such success that they lay boiled eggs. WIIY is a (log lying with his nose to his tail, an emblem of economy? Bo cause he makes both ends meet. "I AM glad this coffee don't owe me anything," said a book-keeper to his , wife the other morning at breakfast. , "Why?" was the response. "Because I don't believe it would ever settle." NEVER look at the girls. They can't ; hear it; they regard it as an insult. • They wear their feathers, furbelows, , and frills, merely to gratify their mam mas, that's all.