The Beaver Argus. (Beaver, Pa.) 1862-1873, November 07, 1866, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    T h e
Will be Prblisird Stinaodai,
d.
Tli't
kt,s2,oolitifitTO4in'pl A,
Letters aß4i..Flo.plattion
.
6111118143 prompl. / !‘t entitili, • •
J. WEYAND:Editiee..&;Pigi
To t
ITTS.
„
ppl•••• • • .., •
tiaand an er July "St: Train
Stations Sundays eieence
lows: (Train leaving Chic#go at,
tarps ,
TIIA6:8 bOING
EIZI
1 ~-~
210111
820."
1180 "
413'"
oe
510 "
GIS "
715 "
y . ittaburg
Reheat
s, Blight °' 11 ,
Earn . ... ..... .
t'oluinbiants! ,
i a Tern .........
Alliance
Canton . .
Vona:ter .44
LOUdOUVRII
Mansfield '..t
Lrestuneifre
726
805 "
535 "
9s;r
-scw,is
1100
115 b 14
112 r.
107 "
149 4 ,
300 .4
Deems .....
AsOusky
Forest. . ... . . . .
Limn_
336 "
405 "
545 ~
628"
MBE
Van ert
Fort Wayne
eolumbin;....
lierecton
722 b".
i II
819 $.
958 A.
, ill
I=
Bourbon ....,
Plymouth,/
Wanstah ......
Valpntri 0...
Hobart ......
ISM
1:1( 1 .1t1t.Cros
J'n.
4130. 46
; 741.1,1:
Eir's
; —4—
' 4iOnm
.1 tine
Cros
clark •
Ny:rt
vtdpaiaL4o...
II .
HpitnutG
Bourbon
w
Eli=
..J.. ,'
8p8„
EMI
Fa i t Wayne,— ",115t1 li V3lil ;i 1.071. N
1`e!1!..c.1" .... j 149 "
tin! ~...i., 11 224 ‘•
MEI
: qe• ' : ..L. 1 ;MS ".",
.•
17 Sa ..I") , qky.. : 421' " ..)1p "'
;241) ..1
~r c, • ~.. ' A 4 , i ',.45 "I
'.384104, ..j
.0C I,OA 11
, •
A:?.10f•.••1(1..... (1r,5 ." la i r ..1
1.. , 111‘1011"A:\ !._.. 142'• 1 . 4,1). " ) •• ' ',-
lc Quhler...::.. s; , ;il •• 835 ‘ , .1 sdB .4,1
(1rri11,,.. ..... ..10 "' 1413 . I 'l 641 ~ I
1:,,,i1:,:i..... .010 '. ' tt37 "1 507'1
i ' , own-- ..., 14!•2 ", 057 ,k 61 1 5 "f '
.kKi'tllCe ... 11 , 15. -•l, 3 folij „: . 1.. 1
1 . .;01 "01' 1 5 •1 i i i i
`',l4Tlrm;ll47 'ti 8 0,...• 1
•, E'.2 . 2 " 1 222 AN11 . 8 5 t 1
'i,l7 . ''t sal 9 1 22' 11 ,
335 " 1 110. ',' ll's ' ' '.P
35) ‘‘ 220 " 1 40 ' ,4 1
Erie nail I it tslOrg Express Tanin leaves New
'3Ftls at '1:05 p.m.,- arrives inlPittaburg tit t
0
.:1;', pm‘..iv Returnino, leaves ,Pit 6;buri at s•'
, . ••
oja . arrir i es in Pie..sv Castle at 8:5 a:tn. •
latton
New Chltle. full Pittsburg, Ateoinr
arrives
Tr s;.:1 leaves - New Castle at 7ioo i." a: I Y es
in Al!eglieny at ;0:•45 a.m. Bet' .ining leaves
rt! New Castle.
.Vleglienyint 2:25 p.m., aryiri - I •
it t3:15 p.ikk. 1. , '_____—
Ticket Ag't.
. -----
ME
Fr:
N. B,right
I'itr.siturg,ll .
• F R •AIYE ts'P • erkl
PITT S•H
Clit F.. 1
1 trains
t i on i ( 01y, Sundays. excepteci
ficoiNG ,
•s • •
I'4
Tr —.
Clevelatid 810 Joi
Euclid site& 821
'Hudson'. ; 925 "
Akron •
Millersburg
3.000 "
1455
Ur
105 PM
Itavenns..
klliance
Dayard
ellQville
MEM
ti
MAIL
= • 11
•
We 545/04
•'.
.s.ifi!nce '•
"
Akron ~....... ........
Hudsoi ....... -1.243 PM
ET/CH! st reet l 1 ,17 '
tleTelinti t2OO "
GOING
: I-010,011 - 11r146ort t 19.5 •
1 ; 113:1 •"t 721,1'
'Sieu,btaville. I'llsB "1 7.13 i ‘
lls;r1lle 1.1.23 PM 845,
8 14illesPerri 147 " 9 °l
217
.Ropli6ter 223 ' , 1 950
Sitti6uriti 310 "005
•
GOING wr.ft
Gan
Pitt'iltrgh ~'.. I:lsrm 435.
i
Itc , d4ster .."' 300 " -5 4 5 -.
Beliver- ....... - '••••••••t; ••••"
8111 10e8Ferry ji 330 ~, i , 028
I Tehieville .:.: 1 .4 2 0 i‘i 715
StiuVenville: ::.528. 1 1i 813
Lagritage......i 543 1 , 1 830
Bridgepot_ ii 037 ~ 01!7
Bellaire...-: - .1. 1 050 " WI
FL SCA.RAIy
Levices. -
Is 0.50
riyard, - 11.45 L N
t
I • F. R. MYERS, Gene
•
•
R. HA.
• ATTOItNI , .Y
COLLECTIONS ani;lo
4calve prompt atten
inhorited agent forth
- pay, pensions haunty .
teir Oihee:Distriot
goat, Braver, Pa.
•
+; 'VBIIC~I~,
. au 4
etot?.
MMI
r ')' • 01'.
•.
12
Ith
`will lOirrei
'as lol
;,35:1%
UM
El=
1100nk
1210Axt
ME
162. "
230 "
816 ' 4
288 4 '
- 4101"
4481"
547': , '
645.«
720 "
785 "
800 4 '
884 4 '
901 gi
1005 "
1086 "
1103 ' 4
1235 rm
114.;•
BM
567
-4-
609
130 - 1«
159 "
44
254 "
gal
415
CM
!El
MI
Effil
MEI
MEM
600
MO "
~tqa>s{
ME
MM
720 AM
102Orm
11l
ME
1
1245 Am
il
1033 .1
1828 : 1
6i
235 ~
3'45 "
I'_'ll rat
• 126 4 .
226,
255 4,
32.5 ••',
1"3
1:9 ',,
538, ,1 1
Goa,.
C3O
701 , :1
745 4•'
446 •
615
737
814 I.
I 848 , 6
1016
1048
1155 .•
1230rn
1:10
200 , c
245
335
400
435
AAA:
555 "
lop
11P,
12p
124,
MI
627
652 "
ilB..
898 .'
820 ‘•
930'"
RR• •
ill leave eta
s follows.
1 ACCOM
Exr's. 1
4 401.
951
345 , t ;
lOrm
3 •44
'36'•~
' 1 ,30 "
415
600 i ,
5:35 ','
655 .1,
, 401t1"11
I
EXP . 9I.
I
ME
MEM
4151.
535 1"
if)2
30 km
"
MIIM
91 2: "
921 "
935
721 ,4
'
,
819 '‘ft
8301..
Ave om
05e3t
415 ";
510',•
528
710 •'
732 4.
610m4
645
733 "
745."
900 "
805
915 ~
-teem(
IM!
Eta
350r34
445 "
455
644 "
630 "
610 Am
• 725 "
734 "
805 "
840 "
950
1010 ‘:
1105 "
1125 1'
BRANCH.
,Aces
litAyart,. 0.55
Iniladel. 2.35 P. M
'al :Ticket. Agent.
]pt. ,
T L%W k ,
er ,business will re-
Also legally
collectlea, of .back
d all soldiera' claims.
lorney'a office, Court
[aug2 t,'66=.ly.
•
I=
Eli
• '
=I
,[k4 , . . r
WM
. -"4:14.•
.1411;ft0r't . ...1 .! • t;irerifq . g .. : a
1...0"-1194.earVervii
'• editor Argos ' " lii e - t i pe' chtoen tf o
the
. ,Prisf - deet'' of Ake 'MI tedStlttee
ha l e • 'Of
,lste . heen f tbe litiit fill ' theitin' 'ol' l
specolation . of `gOssipitigeorresPeii.d-V
eats., - desperate,political adVenttifers,-
radical 4 monenfailiies and thoughileis
pelt:Wails.- •'When ; this idea wits first'
ads-a - need; its atis,urd4iiith'ili aiiiiU;:
06 t ' th de it - wite getiorally'e . Ogiirdod - as .
theoffsPrino of "ii".iiiiff crazed liritin' i .
and did net *tract' even a iiiamiti. VS ' i
tliMight.' But from eatiatia',Which - 'ive'
-shall' hereaiter notice tbieredogi i iied
absurdity 'cif l a' few morithieinee 'bait
DOW asettipeti the shape of it'd angerottsi
well-sPread dogniti, among ttiewadvoj
cates Of ; d/iv hieti. are ,te be intini.manyl
of the good and trde Med' of the da- , •1
tiOn,..- .. .The , relitil l atid:the . rostrum
haivetilike contritiiitialte' hies:if:B; thiit
result.' ' , Rietti . , ihili'latter,;: . 0164 V
461
bui:AatiAefons-niek,who seek notoriety
by extrovagiintlextires . siens,'first an.:
aintnteal the design, :a n the fermer,
actuated, hy,the ebaracteriStie Weak-
Deis of 'American journaliste fir "the J,
new • and strange, published' far, arid''
wide fheir utterances, treated' their 1
madness with - respect, and thus scent
ed the attention of the people, and
finally the approval 'of some. So easy ,
is it fere, radical' error - 1 • to take root
and generate, even in good Soil, that
no time should be, lost'inendeavoring
to uproot it. - • ' • •
This dogma originated with radicals
of_ the W endell
. Phillips school, , who,,
intent upon ac complishing their own
mid sehernes, would bear down or
destroy,all who oppose them. Prost.'
dent,.Joh teem having - rejected their
plan or - remnstruetion they Saw 'fit
ntie' that if he was allowed - to pra
t:mid with ) his own, by, the Lithe his
term had 'expired restoration would
be accomplished, ands their social
equality schemes frustrated. Lookine'
to the end they:wished to accompleg;
and the danger that intervened, with
out a moment's thought or regard for
constitutional difficulties; they imme
diately Pronounced• for impeachment:
And 'why ? , inlet . conetitutional
groundsare there for this proceeding?
These qaestiors never'entered into
their thought; . ,in arriving `at the cOn
el usion,hecatisie w.!th accustomed haste
they jumped from -degree' to conclu.
sion, satisfied if the latter• would re.
move the former without soonuch as
ingniring . i.whother - it was -right ,or
practicable. It was all . the same to
them whether the PreSident was pro
ceeding:if:cording to law or was not.
Ti.,....,, 1s nsAll denounced - Gen Grant
in squa t as severe terms, :ind,Cl6-;
manded , his removal, and yet tb,....,.:5a
not pretend to assert he . ,Pso remove
the law.
the ,P e li e ...9, 0 6 -- -ircipeachment
'the
was demanded at
1 9. - The President, unfortunately
c -
or himself and the country, about the
same time apostatized fruits the prir.-
eiples he had professed' and the party
which elected. him. That the Presi
dent Is a had roan controlled by bad
men, we "are sorry to believe.- IPe
cease , to wonder at his faithlessness
to paity:an.d principles, hOwever, be-, w
cause we' now; believe him capabln of
faithhilriese to nothing but vice. This
recreaney tolthe party that elevated
him to Rower as a matter of course
arraYed„the party : against him, and
men - disappointed and betrayed are
apt to be revengeful. _Add to thts
another. cause Of ' offense • in the eyes
of those interested—the worst of on—
to wit, the displacement of hosts of
office-holders, who, having helped to
elect; were naturally furious at being
turned out by this betrayer of the
party. Hasty men of theliorty.many
of whom felt particular y agrioved
because of personal wrou a, actuated
by feelings of hatred an unnatural
(we trust) fears,imized :bold of the
idea of impeachment, -discussed it,
speculated upon it, until they began
to regard it with favor, and thus what
at first seemed only an absurdity,now
in their 'view appeared practicable
and oven desirable. Let us examine
now the' grounds upon which these
men propose to base an impeachment.
The Constitution of the 'United States
says the President shall only be im
peached for treason, brihery,and other
high crimes and inisderneiseors.
He bee not been Charged 'with
treason or btibery by those who are
clanioraus for impeachment, and there
fore we-take it for granted is not guilty
What 'offenses; then, have been laid to
hi's charge that, will come under _the
hiSt named , in the Constitution for
Which he may , be, impeached"? ; . The
principal Charge against him is that
his-plan of , reconstruction- la wrong,
and ,if pursued ; dangeroua to the fu
ture welfare
. of the country. Grant
that the President isorrong, tont sup
pose he is, hotiestlyldo.' The
_Country
is pretty nearly equally divided upon
that question. 'One peat party as
strenuously assert that, the 'plan is
right, as theother does that it is wrong.
The President, play then be honest,.
because honest " men differ. Who
knows to the contrary??' If he is lion
.eat, and is doing" what in hie judgment;
is beet ter . the eountty, especially tis
this is anew question,i Where we have
no precedent to 'guide, by he guilty of
a high' crane and misdemeanor? His
removals and appointments of office
h-olders,coustitute another charge. It
is " conceded , by 'those why Complain
that the
. President tn his removals and
appointments pursues •the letter 'but
not the spirit of the Constitution. If
the objectors will take the, trouble to
examine bistOry, they will find that
thus far President Johnson has erred
. . , . . •., ~ I. 4...- - 7 . t - ...-.-:-$---' v t -' ' - l !. . . 1 .- •
.- . . - - wy:. • . •
. , , I . ~
•
• .1 / i 1
. . , , :- . ' •'t I' -'• - ~.1 7- 0 ....,,. .-.'- - 2 4:' , ' , -, 1 , -; : ' . '. , -' l'
.....,—.--
••••••=ma
- '' '"' \-_" -'' - ' '-'.. . ..."-*-- -'''' - - ' n
;.,: ''''' . 4 --r " -* - ' :'-' . • . 4 ' . ' : •.' ..:
' 4
.. .ea' ' '..
..:* -:- . 't ?....,‘ - '-]' -. : 7: ' . ••.-4: - - , -- -- :- - -- . . ,-, ;.4.- - -7,- - - - , I ct • . ' . • -
. . v .. , i... ~". ' • -..-- - - I: , _ , ' , .....1-.; ...,... 1. ~ i ..- - ~: :-,-. '- , ~: ';..., , ,..x.. - 1-, —-.- , ...;-- :4 :;4 .,,- ,,. , ..5. , - ..'„ , ....7..,.- , - ~ . .„, . .,:1,1 4 . - ,i...i. , ,:-.i..;.i..,... - • ..:,.. , -... ; - 1- -......,,... :- -;:- -
, • . ,-, . ,
.....,......, .; ~
~-;.-. 7 , • ",....
,_ ,
... Ir. - 1 •
•_ • .
;:,-.,,,,,..,. • -..,. -.
... . •
..:::, : '.- ••, ; • 2 ......-.7, •• . I "".z. D ., : - ....„......-
_.•:-, .
::...„„.,...„,•:,.,
„,...,,„ ~.
_ •
,••L•,. ,f,„.._, .,.-,.......,•
I .
ii.'-' ''S E t ;10 1, i s t .!..., ':t' . 1 . .A. , t,iii , ...0 "' ' Me 7.. '
„'t t t .4' A in:* •'.
• '
c• i
i 1 ;•:- it 1 I."' 1 . - _)+ . .il / 1 ':! 1t • 1 ::r fv :.. : -
• c 7 0
~. i , ''.---k r i '.. 11' 1: ii ti l : ~.;'!' ! '. • ':'.. '
::_4ll/' :, i..' i '., ".. '..,..;: ':r; ' i '.l: - ?:! - ii i..%' . : :°- 't:j ~ ~ r-: '-';• - .1. .
.-: . 1. . .-.7:7 4 .-! ,^ l '...'
l'
‘'l' ; ', •I.l',''i tr,bii` - •:: ;', -. J':'. 7 . 2 '..), !...e.if tli;:; 71*i.P. ! 41. i i 7,, : .1, c,fi! 7 .
~ 1 • Ilti. : . .. 4 r 77: :' )i 1.1
...
• • s ,
- - ' ':
' ' ':
''
.i ' •
fl ii" 40P-40::. ,,- ,,' , 1c 4, - ; . , :,.1,,- , ..,, .-„ „', ..• .. , ~... _.- , , . •., .. ~,
~: 1 .
..:,-,—,-:,,- ; .„..,,, ~,,.; ~...„...-.:...,„-,,,- ~ , ,; 1 : 1, 1 L...1 . . ; ,5; . ........_1_ L1!. _''J r` f't 11 - 'f..'i , ~ .,, , IT ..t .. "l:"fr-- t rz..• -.. • —• ••• • ... . .
901. h: ;.4.'vt _,j r'': , i , ;.,51.."..`, 7.------
• P"
no earth s r isocio ;
114' been"guitlefl f preceilebts; 'W.J4
AO:041m ,
beorr ;-,C1 , 40.61 - 141 the' .
vrron 'Than ' far n 4 atiointMehta,'
hard; heen! Made With Out; Sing
tifittales:tfie *ii;priWifled by;
the .-. COOOtstiititipo,:liii! . 4co.rse:rti' that
rbeily!wliajn !SO SO* '.134 - B ut.
he Eirtß"..ppOlritoil*,fi.orne i t. '
'.
rreject:o4 :The 'l4ter , ttie„
Orkstii4tl4 l 4'':glies him this= ipw r,
abaft . 'll et4oniita' their
te' the'Sermie . again 'When' I t' . nectS . ; h'e
eauriat'lio , iripeached fort ` ise . ,ir • er,efie
! pOwer.,: • -•: -
! JrO ' ttMOnt, 'Of
• „Ws-a , use ot:t%
e. par main- no
w ;
er,eOsst ripe ir charge, Tbat
he is gniYly bf a iireat i wino g,
itflerk Vet.
the tlt
se.it may• , ba itn,crroie-of
;thnillfl.kinent:Ofr - 44 . -
ere;,nee ..
percise7it'too* freely; ie it Fof
Went . gfhtmil 'for irripeachnient
think not.. - .This. is not 'one of the poi.
hivecifto 6oB .for. !C.Onstitri
tion prirrifleS inipeachrrient: kraus
!sal to eieetitoth.o orje wilful vi•
olatione*- the . Constitution, would bo
sufficient grounds for.iiiiperiehineet
cbirgeS based ' upon - Snell . ; grounds
would !warrant imPeachineht. Men.
could not then differ as te, th e liabili-,
charge MadeNainst Pres;
"dent JOhuson originates--with
,his po
litical' Opponents,' .and every - ,,man of
the party to .which he. has attached
himselfidefends biro . ago nit all them,
because, in their View; his Conduct.
was rlght.: Party then
.Would . neces. ;
Sarily be arrayed against party, and
ttiO most intense excitement
.and
terneSsi would prevail. Prosecutions
for pelitieil reasons, says nonillion,
.wilt seldom fail to_agitateithe passions
of the - WhOle cOnr.tr,y, and divide it
into parties more or less friendly or
inimical to the accused. In many
ries it will connect itself . with the pre
veiling! factions, . and will enlist all
their - animosities; partialities, influ
ence' arid interestlon one - side or on the
other, and in
. such cases (herci-wilf al
ways he the-greatest danger that the
lecision will be regulatedmore by 'the .
comparative strength off ti* parties
than by the, real demonstrition of
guilt Or Annoderice. tVyat Ham;ltOn
feared,; would, iv the present instancei
l,avo dread lul.reality ! ckva_, war
esir
dent, 'belieVing 7 , he,' NB'!" 1.., would
refuse to :.O ce b r e tlii tr il i i :d or f 1 -
d -o e w pi Pi d , ie :an ljt d
hie
party, ieharing t eeethreatii, would
defendJtim t' th e l ast. lEvery corn: .
..1 -„ .o4'be,stiFiedl'-to - its
wbolis—onrd fly to arm
war. That tuts
none Who have ihought• sufflcieritly
Can What the result of such
.
a conflict would be, none can [foresee.
And yet to this dreadful !reality these
men, who are now end.eaVoring to get
control of public opinton',.are'last hur
rying the 'country,. Intent Upon ac,-
•complishingtheir Object„theycare not
for consequences.. .To avert such a
calamity, it is necessary that the voice
of condemnation be heard so, loud - as
to be heard and felt. - These .men will
not abandon the mad project until the,
. count is involved in war, unless the
people - speak. Slory,i, in his commen
tary on the Constitution, says of Inv
peachinent: 'lt requires 'to be guard-1
ed in its exercises against the spirit of!
'faction, - tho intolerande of party and
the t,ludderEmovementa of popular feel
ing.'! ,This counsel, ;so 'eminently
wise,:should bd heeded now.[ . There is
no ground of 'impeachment:so
takeible at last as to lwarriMt the at.
tefopt; Those who propose it should
be hooted down. -NO less than three'
Congressmen have been elected who
have pledged • theinselves to prepare
articles of impeacherient against the •
.President Tbeir election is a lasting
disgrace to their . constituents. Men
wi) have !read the history of im
peachments; in England will !never
want to :see like .seenes•inaugurated
btimlitical ;parties here... The history'
of the two Staffords, Clarendon, Bo
lingbroke, Somers, and boats of other
public men of England who suffered
more or less unjustly at, the bands of
political opponents, fOr purely
cal! offences,' abound with instruction
fcir:us. -
In conclusion, We cannot Tefrair.
eatirtioning the people against the mad
seliemes of such radicals as Phillips.
Under the guise of - truth they are -fast
inculcating doctrines more dangerous
thanAhosawhich led. to ,the French
Revolution. In France, ender the cry
of' Reform; the King was beheaded,
the Government, overthrown, ae.d a
reign of terror inaugurated.- Let the
peeplO of this country beware of our
own pi °reseed Refor,mcir4; list a like
fate overtake us REPUBLICAN.
;Beaver, Oct, 29th.
'ET TUB Biturs!--,Bven Ithe NeW York
.News says, "It is itsClem' to attempt to
overlook the . fact that the late speech.
Hying tour of the "resident was the
greatest blunder that fanciionary could
possibly have committed." It submits
the following explanation of the Pres.
ident'e blunder:
"The fact of the 'matter is . , that he
has unfortunately Allowed, himself to
be hoodwinked and bamboozled by . the
wily and unscrupulous demagogue a
the State Department, who has, deter
mined to sacrifice him that be,may not
be in his way when the time:arrives
for the people to select the next Pres
idort." i • '
1=
=ll
-PX
Wing
El
to bmtireseerear k ne..i. , ...,,
ed to , consider the Ari ' tvir2,' ; '
paralleled. losse411) . 117 n , ) fb,
Unica", Johnsori.Dlm in • pi ny
,-,;),
the.vasklua:StaitaAvbt Sid -
on !tlic 9th of .-Ooto ' : hi*:, : i s iikrti
wits . aeward.,WA . liek t - ' nib . .4EIO,
' Bandellpreaarit,.§4 in ''..-,:,-, ,f ; ir 7 ,'
I
rrKlidippkiletOsi.ri.tti„ be.itlie• ~tfnej
4A-10RO:463:Ai:toff otitif. tk. - - - /,.;- :..: ~:-.
-T.4R.o 3 ificiPFAM'w!*;ilociiii • i,-;:ir.i.
4.
...: f',**iciP l 4 4 s(-., . 'i ilit ,:, Ili',
ePeel , *- ,that,bevise , _ :,, - tore'
.1
all site. 1 4 /fiktilivn gt, - :11,0;i'ii got to
1 0:
'hey hen entriastiti, gli, .volved
io tieir , :erWriP., Pit l ?- - WA` '4, ' blc"
The lault.-310, rqm,or . ea. ent be
;with. his pOltok- Pot ,ti** , hingso
r t t h r e i w n p erz o i i l rd r,Qo: 9 : o 6 e p i r t illii:i i bitgill;crl i t why
114 1Iff it er li th it e .
egos, goo the'
- I ;:li h il 3 e . , l9 u P y k , th at e i : t bl... " O si r t t °d li i ;
dimple condisha uv say kiliAlSn more
: about the war,.Or - th utualltiouble
•vhich they found the',,zli4Oto; and
reship into the arms ittpielr ;lather')
' biethren.4n4 Lakin uv em bufk jist ez
they th ey
be soblind out c ll z 4) t w O i iii i l l oo l sl ° t h w es c e 9 ol
pd i v o lt tm r : a ila
sd n da c ti
o h kr e r set
but
' ul ' uti
et
pedtbrietsear.lntr
i ' hurdo,...
ill::
l i g: 1 ,1; " ..
t : ecram:bo.7ld.: o
doi ; eo ' imenfubeeeocbanetoniedttietictdanabt ' 1
):::::;
_,
wal
: 11 17h vi e onne n itr°: o :d -Pt :: n id s
o t n: b rnri k,... °l abi'la t re , e l i rbrwy° e; t batAisict, , whiph
a larger Majority thairfri, ed ever re
seared, and he'vniz in ir in. '
• "Briniin the wretch , ; boated Lite
President, and the gaga hrung hint
..Fn...A mizable lookin cfb lz to wuz.
Es soon es he saw the ;'ll
.ra eye uv
the Presidebt fixed olito lin . he sunk
to bid knees and. lifted bbi hands
inriplorinly, withoutsayi i,word..
"Speak," sod ttrg Pt debt, "why
the result in. poor deest r l 4' •. i
"My liege? replied, o wretched
Man, "I know 'not. Fit ally I labor
ed, but tne people wood me into the
house -holdin their ' .' '
a, and , rat a
boldeouv em so iong , 4 akspeakin.
which wes'nt conduci ci` isplays of
oratory.
.Tba mg* ' - ablistup .
_
awn utterunces . MY-. -
-4.► tali& v tov , ii( A . o)i r ,, v S__
. , '' ' d iw‘
1 seekoore . , ,
en - votes, but they - wqs them ez et,ipe
-1 lated for places undePme, end I , hed
hard work to' get it em from. the Ern
' ion party, and-they were 4 siell es did
us more harm than goocl. And be
, ,
"Enaff!" sod Johnson,"remo,ve him."
. And the poor fellow wil bundled'
out. •
Secretary . W cites know& what wuz
the matter. - It cum uv fakin' 'Grant •
and Farrygut along on the excursion.
It. distracted the attention, uy the,po
plc. . lied 'there bin nobuds but the
President and Cabinet along , there,
woedent hey bin nohcidy .10 hurrah for,
and - the sublime.trooths wia the Pres-.
ident kin only jerk wood bey impress•
ed-the people more than tbey did:
- Seward wuz cnnfident.that the elec
tion wood bey bin all right,cood it hey
bin postponed ninSty -, days, while Me.
Culloh attributed •it to the' limited
knowledge the masses hod cry Injpany
hankie. •
I wuz rekested to give my views,
which I did. 1 - ' ,
-"My lords." sod I, "none,ny you hey,
go( the • ije.e. We wez beet because
we loft the landmarks-4bat's *at ail
ed ns--wuz the anshent landmarks
Wat hed we to go into -this canvass
witL ? Democracy ?, Not any. for
that was squelched at Phitadtlphia.--
1 Wat then? Why the offises, Uses
in the abstract is good; That, little
one melt I hold in 'Kentucky I cood
ent be indooit to part with 0a.,n0 an.,
count, but yon can ' t •run_ a paity on'
'cm, because there ain't enough uvt em
"My liego, on my return from 'the
Philadelphia Conventian,,llarried a
while in Berke county, which, is- in
Pennsylvania, arid is distingiiished for'
the unanimity wilt which theYorote
1 Democracy. They learned mor'n\six
weeks ago that the -war wuz aver,
and, therefore yootoodent stir 'em; tip,
on drafts. Taxes they:had got •tisud
to t , ind that didn'tinove , "em„ and so
the speaker wuz emptying, school
houses by talking ay the results uy a
glorious war, Which tbOy all opposed,
and praisin onr mattarfriend Seward,
which - they had allus bated - as aAb
liAinist and hedn't heerd yet that he
had pied the Dentok racy. Wits it any
wonder that We went; ,urider ? , Ther
aint but'one thing left;to as, and that
we strangely neglected. My lord why
wuz the Nicioza,notinadathe central
figger this yea'r 'as - heretofore ? lie is
the capital uv the Deinocrisyl—ita fe
fage—its tower •of ettength.,l. spoke
iri Berks county Myselt, following ens
of them newfangled ;;Democrats who
bet 'em all %sleep talken stuff 'to 'em
that they didn't undeistana. ' Mountie
the rostrum, I ejaculated— j •
"MEN AND .13aNTURIN PO YOU WANT
20 MARRY A NIGGER. r' . ' v
' "No! no !"' they answered etraight•
.
erne . up to , won et. f , .
' - "Do you wankniggers for sors-in
law ?" .- •
• ,-
E 4 ° f?'
,41 . -1
i"_All-4 0 !" 1 , '''' '
4 "7D0 you went taws to
fi`6l*tiutrrylit niggers?"
- -;"'bail I yes I" , :
.• .itito you. waist to- be, marched ut Ito
the.pcille,, by those who, tell yOn . ow
' to.vote;teside a . nigger ?"'. - :-., 1
I •iil+l6f nor' I
•'
6 m
Then vote tbo'Dee 'ratio titiket,"
tina they all replied— . . .- I •
• 9We *ill ! we will !"• nd •they-,0:
You see, your Excelene , :the Dente=
kratie mind isn't hotly
. e ough totorn.`
prebend, them; fine- arg meats as - Ito
consthoshnality, etsetry,l and whin, a
speaker deals in em 'they suspect- his
Dinioerisi and ,fight, shy ,av him.. 'Ant
nigger• they kin all understand. ...ate
soothiii_to the,Ditnekratie mind to'
continually told tbat there is aometkody
lower dont n in the stkaletthey desiria
inferior{ race, and there ore, bey kiln
'pollin tbe nigger down toward -am , for
pare. i Did you notie .whenever, *e
went it on the''nigger.e succeeded
m in awaken an enthoosii wicb, when
i t ,
we neglected or seleete other leilnei
wnfailed to god • i -- I
i il' : b : riuPn ; hjl : Pi :
i
tr T tbB.Te."rradmenir i a
mois-ibeoreansioteio . h v
itondrsto l dtatiheBao i eb:i
sillpooreiaid : e f nethanimlineeyoonotthatthmindiids
who see a
,5 cent Niue 4 seldom ez - to
not.k . now its hacker, and who keep
the flag uv: distress written from 'the
seat nv their pants, who,
of nigkers
'Wiz sellin at ,a cent spites°, coodert
raise ;enough ', to' bye the tee nail uv o f
e;
is the Most ardent triendsnv slave. .
"That pitiful man which jest,left th e
r ,
presence wuz not to blame for the l e.
suit in his deestnek. He tried to earn
hits bread, btitlwat coodl •he du? T e
Ablishmsta ' knowed be. ,wuz bou i
with a price, and laffed jat '
h him • ' t i
Deinocrusy, sich es voted, we'd v
got anyhow.
• Them ez didn't vote ; - o r
do'nothin wuz,the upper class, whi h
expected the offices themselves,
,a d
was disgusted 'accordingly.
• 4 iy liege, bey spoke. Too ca t
do tiothiti with a new party,
.for y o
kin °My girl theDimociisy to jine it
I ,
and 'they +vent do tt, onless the offi es,
is thtowed in. Yoo earltirun the Di -
oerley on onty de issue,
.and •that's
the nigger, or, its all they kin under
stand. ' So long as the nigger exists,
Ditnocrisy 1 endoora—tvben the ,race
bec'mes extinct, the pai•ty dies. , The
two is indissolubly bon d together r -;
cite wuz created fur toer, and - tether
for ono. ' When Noah ist 'Hun* - 0
laid the founclasbuns uv'{ Diinocriiry.j.'
41419.--w-tur n 0 d in tosiAizzer_b_eett nse
1 with wine; and ,wbiskey, wich . Is tbe
Inodern substitoot tbereter, bon, the
the decline - 1m tner .....44.....- ,t....„. h
:w
binhin out ov_ the Afrtcan, and th Vet
why I oppass, arnalgemashen. i on
can't hate rt mufatter one halfiz much
ezyu kinthaat toe
ite arty
uv D
fblo n od,i s and tt, w i il m l b 4,
observed
rP- T ' I: b rY u t e l li6 rt t m o4 o et e eh i re i Be i
de scarci t ye o P
— 8 t
ri,ut4.chtei
don't o z u b i 7 k t n h n e v; m e e:
t ti ti e
iv; a
any y
nn a
0...
uv talkin. ' The-Congressmen electe d;
this fall continfoo in loins, my li ge t
pat precislyl ez long ez V . do, t a
' !l :l3c s vse: i )dt t ra.' .
p n r bd o 3Tu g bt° :: .1
. a li s h— e t: d hrti , k.
think
kim ‘ n : r a. ' p ot.re g, a
tlicelyia'lnlgheev in t
our,
T ne h . e in .f . b eak .lr
cAubmiitonher.olsetui,lniz:gaitinsei,:gnidee. :t ard inc h re e
, s hi e g d i
ger snows . ail his ivories. We 41 e
hold our places two years, and then
farewell
o il ti o y . 7i i • - F , z oott3 I:
greatness,for myself6l r 'l I i
rBd e o i ; ball to 6 k iI 4
9-
r a ' t n ; i I
' s t e e m t s n u ff
r r a r e n:,
moaunutvu:tvTh grocer y e i rn n m
e . fa u rl . n e : e D I I a politics.
at
ci9sa
4.1 k
i th e
t: o a n t s p h le b u d sa c n n t d e s a a t , l t l t i ti h n c y' B l : l
r P fi r o g a td o . nu ;
. 1 :0::
•
sed." - .
The CoOferenee nded with-thi
I t
they wuz "all. Echlin, ch affected t
anything. ,Sewar murmured a
i
about it would be 11 . right in i
daysthat there , uz•no denyin
t
the people ' wuz happy—but nc
pitid any; attention to him. I .
home.teavinem sit inearo.
Prnionzum T. Nitsuv, P. M
;(Wilio ii-goetmastt
, • ~
Publics Ertinsent.
The N , ov/ York Times, the World,
'and the 'News, alt, in their 4orameets
On the Philadelp is canardi, utterly `
deny •h e right f the. Preßidetit' to
t
aestitne ibe powe that the falsO des
patch\iMpliect, home. can be ni, mid—
taking 'public Opi ion on tlie .aabject.
The,leeling that Was arouied tiy the
suggestion' \ of . such usurpation shows
how koaltlay.,l,lthe isentinient , of the
cour.trY, and go ryquickly it 'wouldire•
sPond to ; .any, Ow demand uponlits
iiiitriotiSm. i; \ I. 1
. 1•If . anybody 'loeubted wirer() the
people would be found in anotber great.
:i"
crisis," says ii Philidelpkia, paper,
"the risihg last" elloesdoy, s wken Am
drew Johnson was supposed ,tO be
'war'ming up' ' new rnbbil s i L. was
E F
sufficient to dis p el any Such debts.
The spirit, of Aril, 1861, Aligh' from
every e ye, and lied , every . bea k' with
a stern resolve, For half a alit, at
least, We bad nopaity in Phi:aclelphla ,
Nterytiody lovog the country with A
. nkirelervent love, and , eZeeratedlAfil.
clOw Johnson with' a special Oxed
ClitltiOn." •, z . ,1 .
I
I
i
iBf6.
piecrent , .y
F
i
;
kr ,
• .
. •
• ..
:.ostablishqd 1818.
rota the Detroit Nig •
I 'Heading Piesident Johnson.
If . .the . telegraph to to be belieired,
'Secretary Ststiton has' had a quarrel,
with-the Preaident; and is to leave the
Cabinet as !soon as ,he has finished his
report, whichis . to be presented to
Congress with the President's message
and the other departmental -reports
[ next December. But;if the telegraph
18 to ,he - be li‘ved, Secretary Stantoh,io
!retiring,. like an iron clad - draping
!sullenly out of battle;has discharged
l a last shell from, d fifteen-inch gun,
I [ which, luckily fallthg upon the Pr*..
I dential magazine; - has blown ,up. the
limain store of . =elocution provided
by Andrew . Johnson for his threatened
I ;tholatorehiP. 16. Stantopin retiring,,
Ass discharged; a Parthian arrow that 1
!Vas happily pierced the joints' of the;
Ilhirness'of, the 'Pretident% revolution.
l azy schen:ol4nd effectually forestalled
the •design of
ni cing. the 'United
;State.) army'
. political.tichine to be
!used in forcing open the itepablie a
Idietatorefilp; IFor the telegrsphsaye:
"Thelalual:faote regarding the
reslgnation ot Secretary Stan-
Iton - are as;rollows: He is now engaged
in makingiout , his.report, and i .as soon
as it is finished he.will undoubtedly
!tender hie resignation. It bas been
',found by! the discovery lately midi
that_ .Mr. Stanton ; his filled nearly all
Ithe vucaheles in: the regular army without
thelnowlegge or assent of Mr Johnson:
Ile has been, for some time making
out the commissions and forwarding
them to Jibe ppointees, with orders
',':to them ty rop nrt to Gen. Grant for
:duty.- General Grant supposing them
,;(its aPpea'red from the face of their
papers) dnly appointed by the Presi
dent, has I assigned them to duty, and
Ithey are now att - service without the knowl
l edge of Me President. On hearing
i this fact the President was very-angry,
,and sent for Ur. Stanton and demand.
Led an explanation.. The result iras
the retirement,of Air. Stanton as soon ,
as he could makeput his report
which he is• Ow :engaged. • !
If this report is tfue,the President's
:game is blockild,and the army , cannot.
;be used in Rapport of his ambitious,
(schemes. _The - President entertained'
a design, which he was catrying out
gradually, to fill all the places in the ,
'regular army'. with. bread-andhutter
Officers, devoted to his Tolley, and
'pledged to support him against Con.
gives. Men were promoted cot: for
services rendered to the country, but
,tor services promised to the President. _
Promotion, was made 'to depend snot
anelnzitriotism, but upon - partisan
proselyte thn"-1.7
the fortunes of the Priirdiffen,ty-inean
ti t -git r,
leth,Power of
P??Mtmentand pro
greatest
' neatly heading off 1—
fiite
has, it appears', quietly
offices in the army without consulting
the President- Nat only that, bat it
is asserted that he his, in conjunction
with Gen. Grant, immediately put. his
appointees at work in their several
positions,so that the President cannot
!, - undo his work without actually - alit
' ; missing from the service the officers
appointed and promoted, any attempt
at.which• would create an ,excitement
and storm of indignation of itself fatal
to any attempt to control the army as ,
a Johnion political machine.
• .•
Genets' Grant is made to appear as
not kii ow i n g anything about - the
matter.! HO is, the innocent,•unsus
pectind lei figure upon which the
[ cunning Secretary clothed 'his new
!goods. But, in reality, if the Story : is
true, General. Grant has, at least, qui-
Htly ohjoyed the manainvre: It is
only anotherbit of
,that easy , and ap
:parentl:y uncenscious strategy byl
,w kb !he has bo often flankeland our.'
prisedithe enemies Of the country.
It. is iinpossible for. the President, or
•anYbody else, to blame him for "as-1
signing them to. duty," SO they "are
now at eereice wi.hout the,knowledge
of tbb President.' As a •matter of ,
General Grant, on receiving
the commissions from Secretary Stan I
ton, dras hound to suppose the cool- !
missihnr were made out by the Pres . ' : I
dent'S order. Being bound to soppose
ad, and it not• being any part ot his;
dutyl to inquire into• the Secretary's,
relations, with the President; whoshall
dare 'acceSti him •of Inot supposing;
what- be w,as legally bound to suppose?!
fie • received. his- orders through the
regular chaonel, and obeyed them. It
was no part of his.duty to inspect the
'regular channel, or run to the Presi
dent witliauspicicins of the regular
channel, before. obeying Neverthe:
less, be has probably, smoked his qhiet
cigar for a feat !, soaks with an extra
twinkle of satisfaction in• his calm
gray eye, as he saw the Ilitog line of
the flanking column glide innocently
around the ! President's- poeition, and
at last gain the'objeetive point in the
rear, of the threitened Dictatorship,
still unsuspected. And, no doubt;
while listening to the reports of the
denouement with the respeethilly oft'.
dial appearance of earfuls% he finds it
;somewhat difficult to suppress gen
tle cher:kin ot satisfaction at the adroit
audacity 'and perfect success of the
movement., • -
As, for ° Sacretery Stanton;if the
ry is true; he can well afford " to retire. ,
He ,has provided thoroughly for the
safety of the country, so far as the
BaeretarY of War can do so- He•has
headed off and forestalled any, mischief
that. Can be 'dote by:his imettessbr.—
.
for
Bak
thin
'fists.
that
One
wont,
KOTI C E TO ADVENT/SI
Adverilsoneitte :inserted it Ai_ of
per WWI . 4 - emelt ;.lneertiert
50 cents:: A liberal dilettant i !clearly
, advertisers, and on lonielatertlionania
• A iliace eqial to ieweari" this* el' this tyPO
neisived as a sinarc-7
iipecial notices '2b parvent . .-additiel to reit
tiler rates. ll. -1 •
Business* clads, .7 . ft cents ailing per ' , sir
Mandeges - iuld lieithe,
and other . Notice] of a Publie na free. -
He has whithily crowned A inatittut '
good work agskist'the anew - Ai-al:the:
Republic; and as there is h i )lhingiert;.
do E
to worthy.of ig,rean . abi Kies ftnct
) A
reputation, he may now AMC pe., froin
the control of snoh a. nias;r:suk_Akr. - .•
drew Johnirm,'not oily isti ' aatisfilk
Om to himself,- baj. with . 'credit -and
honor. Re Will retirb as a' onquera ,
er, as*the master. and ,not as be berry, ;
ant of Andrew Johnson,,disyniesed ha:
~
cause 'he has proved hitdielf this
master. . - ' . - - ;HI
North Carolina.
THE g !REW UTfro
SOPIETT.
'The Raleigh Sentine . I con - riders the - I
, .
large t i rotit'Dockery obtained'in' liotn'ai t , '
portioni'of iiieftitt r ei,,as prooi :of ibis':
active existence _of the "Bed Stking" - .
secret society, *hich'it' -f calle" treasonit- .. :.
ble to the St - ate; furl ,desireS the greed • :'
juriea to . examine the Miitterl '. In rew!' -'
ply_ On Raleigh' Standai,dj vies 'the' i -
following account; of the asseciatifir r it '''•
1 • , • - ,
"The Red Strin gs
•,' as they, ire - cal ='
ed, are simply the
,heroes. of America. i
We do nut - , belong: to this 454der,,hutir -',
we are posted in , relation tol it- - Mr.l
Lincoln was a member orthe'Order.
General Grant is a member pi it.--;
Anchovy' Johnson is member of 'it, , '
When pursued and; shot it iiii thogoi=l; t ',.
g,es of the monntains by - Coufederate,
, troops, he, wits aided by •members of ,
the order, and perhaps owes his life , .
to them. Many of the Unioh .Gener- 1
ale and other officere ate :ifietribere;iiU , _
it. There are probably 10,00,0-heroes
of America in this State, They'have_.
their 'signs, grips, and passwords like
the Know Nothing ; to which- th ' eed- '
:6rLa Of the St;nflitetused4o hulong.--I , ' , '
They are ' uncohditi..nal Union men - '''-
and.patriots. - That is all. - Instend of
being traitore to the Union, - they. art: : : , r ' .. . •
among the best friends the Union bits .
hi the State., ' , I'
'-' The organ of Govertior'sW6rth: -,'
°wants. them
_indicted. Darin r the iv-. 1
hellion governor Vance., .t.it
e .senior
editor of the - Sentinel, And, o beT rob., :
ele,'denodnced them as Omitvs to the
* - . !
Confedersey;,no they are t alicis . t; , i i
, the Union ! . Pow; Cni, that /I ?. Gev.' .
1
Vance and
- the Senior -edit iof the -
Sentinel signalized' themeelve by per- -' -
socuting and -_irrprisoning ilk se very '
'Red Strings'
,dating the re •elliOn..._
Now they vidnti-them indict ,d. - ,__Tli4 '
_of itself proves that 'the, - Confederacy' ' '
still exists in 'this State, in livb •
rythlog , ,
except its foyms. -.Try *rgetAtletnen
- r try it. if
,'.zni dire I. TheLlny,al miiia! : -.-
lirthiState will WiekiaAiirt 46iftl.ai,:1'.
. 1 _..; _
yotl, if you attempt-to indict iheni nit" -- - ;;7.
yacocuouron!,troyf
fit. You
Uttiot.iart:.. jUre dare ;,--, I t
Yon will be cyahhell.fia...l` 1 .-
:Toti deserve, if you'llft fingerit' ' ' ''
'
r ' -
lion, 10 di t ty-;.....,, .. _
neivspaper4, show,-at-1i.,...4. ,
stated, that General Geary riitiar....,,..„;_ .
of ilia ticket In ahnost .evi..ry county ~.
inkho' State: It - im - only lair and right
.
that this.fact hhouldbe (learly under-,
I stood alike by the' reed who gtlpported a ,
I• and. those who oppoicd Ge'n. 'Geary: , .
When that- distingnished ;s4',ll(ber t w,,ai!' -
nominated for Governor bYlthe Union.;
Mon. of Pennsylvania, his oppoiieutik
' at once commenced to atthek him per-
Sonally. No -.lain ever before accts); .
a i iiitit -, for office - in Penns}lVariai wit*
subjected Ito an enslangllt - e.itniluti t*,. -',-
tbel whichtanfronted Geary 1111-1 - .4.0'
the - campaign. The record of hes cut., ,_
it Services to the Governtrient was.'en , .
tirely ignored. The history of Asia
military career' was perverted Rea
misrepresented,;and from fiist to teat
Gen. Geary was, tiAargei. iiii i ke for the . -
falsehoods andttilialevorenee Of ~ his
foes,, In maiy. Of the couhties of-the
State the earnpaign.was mSdeirrne 'co- , '
tirely of personality against the I sol• ,
dier.. Issues Were ignoredby 'the op
position that ! they might the ,easier
get their teeth6into, the character: Of
Geary; But what has the result' , es= ,
tablished ?
~ Slpiply that.
.the people.'_.
'the honest and-intelligeri, mueoes.,cit
the State, ran. Geary &heed. of 'all,the
loyal tickets, thus endorsing his char-'
actor as a .min, 'hie reputation • !Cs ii
soldier and his ability - as it-Statesman..
lde .conld. not. self; and his irieuds.do„, -
- not want a beiter vindication:77 Hur=
risburg Tdegrao.; : -1
PRESIDENT -3 . 010180N' told the people
at Newark, Ohio, that,l "unless the
couraexit Poogrefis is arrested by your
suffrage, we shill Imre another_mvil
war." TbeViebels tried the .'same
threats to Vvevetit theirelectiOn "of
Abraham tieebin ; in 1860, .bat, failed
The war came, and 'they were ri hipped;
and thlt,head ot the rebel ipcinfederae?
now Tines'. in a' traitor's • •
seorrospo dent of the
Philadelphia Press remarks that r iit is
great injusties, tu . Judak to „co_ pare
him with Andrew ohnson. judge did
not go travelling roundli the ,e6;tintry:
on hie thirty pieces of silver; but Went
and hang himself "like a gentleinin,"
and gave up his ;spirit. 3 OhnsOrt will do
neither. '1 -
I .
Ws'are dispoeed to regard with, sin
gular favor the radical officeholder in,
'Ohio who, on being assessed to aid thd
..Tobnson ticket, sent the reTaired
mount in rebel currency. - That !man
has a delicate susceptibility ;,to !!'the
eternal fitnees of things,"
.it - -1
DEE
EMI
4 , •
'aciarr
I=
ME