The Pittsburgh gazette. (Pittsburgh, Pa.) 1866-1877, November 01, 1866, Image 2

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TIIURSDAY, 1.613
brilliant and trenchant
ratter' is 'by air orra:s the inc - at conchisive rtn ,
swer'to SCCrttrY BISONy'NING'S CS:SaY * teas
.has appeared, and will many•fold repay
careful perusal: - • .
BEPL 44)-9mertfiTAter IBItOWNiNG.
•
To t?e Hon. 0: H.. Browning, Secretary - of'
tlo Interior . • • . . • - .
sin:—Yon have ti:on4ht it not unbecom
ing \:.Ur p':.ve. e:v.er l'auarerm a; a cora
va.qt.
• .
Marion—prrlao,is• -
.?pendiog warpt,thePresideutiltion.the Leg
islative power of the State. Whether it was
;consistent with the proprieties of your po
sition tha l .l4 l l:4loUldlinterninddlo in arai4
that &NB not below to,,t,he. Department of
whiCh you are a member, le c'qurstlon.
which you have cut perhaps taken time to
..consider.
• • - probably infeitiOu - s. TflatVe 'would ,toler
ate no dissent on the part' of Soso who live
on the breath.of-hls,npairik, anti eat what
is claimed to - he lila break was genetrillY
understood. That, he cugrw , not,. was
known to thefaid)3sntinie=ol4iattait, one
of your associates. You are, I believe, the,
last °Stile aixeellorovi . bis ministry. A Ori-•
ori, it was to be supposed that you would be
conformable in all; things. It uta.• be; 110W
ever, that the madman who.hits ,.n nclerialiou
to bent' r. nation - To maY exact
.. - somethink more than. mere. t datorntity of
.ea the part of kis - depend:lat.
Your nueney_ia the recent abortive effort
at Philadelphia to fuse the kindred, blit.de
composina elLients of disimionisut into a
new party; t ould seen to indicate that
does so, and that the tenure of rthe•highest
offices has core to partake of the rigor 01
the feudal hind. Your last 'cant goes far
to contirm it. '
Had you chcsen lo indulge in such an ex
hibition a•-i 111, , , as a private citizen, either
er. thrzat4ur; or upon conviction, or by way
of 'recommanding yourself to the dispenser
of the public bounty, ycntr nerformoice
might, for ail the . injury it was likely to
inflict on anybody hutyourserf, hare been
left to 1 . !..3,!! ; unheeded into that oblivion
which von v.-ill one daY dc.i!!!! !or it. then
ing, howerc4r, as it doeA, froth 'a
,Catanct
!officer, and paraded cc it has been, before
the public, with ti rant of official stttinpfe
-[ give it currency, it Manilas a new charac - -
t ter. .It no-longer The re:peen:hie Mr,
!Broaning of the. Court of Claims,
aildressing hii friends* in Illinois,
- accredited Minister of the *Government.,
liupeaching its Congress, and appealing
from that CougresS to tile American people,
upon'n question entirely foreign to fiat du.
ties.--In this, riowit cletlienges
thd crideistrriof 1.11.1: - :.! whose public action
it condeuns.! It trite my fortune to be one
of that number, and, the ver,y 'first, if Imia 7
take not, who feli'llitilself uptin - piib:
licly to arraign tho usurpations the En
eautive, and vindicate the rightful - powers
and jurierlicticarf,tlte
r ikpras.einatiyr,.bedi*,,
• The people indorsed my views, cud
they will not perhaps hold um chargeablek
Wi'lt egotism, if in default of a better,pl
vOcate, ltait! kit eanstraineir,- as thaw
am, to empuse your revolptionary heresies,-
and IlrealizticitheritMcc,' even with so for
addable an antagonist as yourself, - in de
(enc. of the Representative principle.
You begin by saying' that altlthilifl - &Tr
government ia.seorth pre - serving, it is i.,ot
certain that Woshall nave - it. 'flits opin
ion is not with yen a new - one. if I ate
not mistaken, you held It during the war.
You diseected from the policy tint armed
and emencipct , tl the You took
Leave Of Mr. Lincoln on that queation.
YounnEritr ,, d 'unfavorably as to the re,:ulte
of that policy., - You regarded. it t 3 ruin
cam. lam not Tura that you did reat agree
arlthAlia Chi:ago Convention, when it pro
nounced the warn failure. Ido not know
whether.yotrald not support its car.tlidatcs.
With men of your , faith. the govorhineni
was lost three years Ego. With -Enact of
your political ptliziples.'l'. Is lost DO
Thank Goa ! there wr..3 a faith that 'Laver
'wavered el:hei - itt'llie bloody t:ench.er the
horrid prison pen. Our believing armies dis
concerted the doubters then, as the loyal
people of On nation are disconcerting thew
now. ,
You fear cciatraliz , ..tirm:ll , lt it is ?aottert
trali-ttlortir, the , . F..r.etutkt - e. It. 6 the, at,
torpticm by the- jaw-matter of the pots
I. ;ndie-eroceti,,,:;= : of the
•ciary, ti.ai iu the objectof your
preach Gospel rtceerdia, , -;:to
You are one of the aportk.: , pf the
peneatioa. You cliff:a With the Fathers in
the optnioutltat " . pormr is almicelste.alluk
from the many to the few. - - Yort
of
. couree, with - thy- Pre-A:lent, thr,t
danger of t; rainy la with the many-, anti
not with the one.” You havt. uo horror or
absolutism. It Is the Itel)reserttativc itica
that. oil - sods you:lip:h.. YAM -do uot
-the law making power,,vl,the.Govertunent. I
--You anvil{ i4legtt , eti'srve. Yon - teat that
people WIN abuse it to their owneaslitvem,ut I
even with all the - clieeks that the-Caustitf - .-
tion has phiced,notiti 'youth:ice no
jection, howefir,-f6 , tfe-ne: attrition ly
Executive of the power not only to nuke
laws, but. to organize At
„Not; not
defend it. as /def.'', gitituats . fanttlt•n, bat et
though he hns nuiliitcd f. , tate laws, find sit
.aside Sts officers and even Governors,
you insist that ire has usurped._ power. t i
- Your Republicitnism;.:,...iiti ttriinger than
your faith, end your ECC; Slalom
by Itie•iteletd tax): of your opiniu4s.
should doubt .*ith.Yen Whether this Gov
.
°lament cache afeyekir.ls could agree 'yr '111"
you in dercf4,*ll.l.o, exer - ciF,4 of powers, f
that-are at war with its whole their:':` . On I
your prin.fiples it must lapse inevitably.
Into a despoihmi.
You say that thh Cez,fslativc_f_s the
strongest of the tle;Art,nients,,44ll the; most ,
aggressive, ihicriuWlrs re4pitu
sibte. to no power hut the will Of- the.domi.
mutt party tot,.*Wol usurpatibu that it
is the lolly one that it, , ,,isr• be feared; that it.'
has. heretofore exereued more. influence
than is conipatibW:with 'eafety and: calif°
freedom, over bush the Executive and the
Judiciary; thafjt-hap,aoulatinuesi ithpress:
ed a pernicious . Induental on •the action :of
the latter ; r.uft-t hat where it has failediu
accomplish that, in advaucoor judgments,
it has subsequently over:tiled and aum:ll--
ed • •
You do not swum to realize thatthere are
no less than threelmportaritcheeksiAlio,
most alletent that liMnattaltill or ingenui
ty could Gave devieed--upen-lhe Legisla
tive power; one. Lithe. qualifloder suspect
' else veto-another In the 'C0ti ., 43,j3/tioti
the Senate with its equal representation of
States,. withotrt,reitaAl Lo-1 30 *Ietioti..-and
the third and 041trekt irriifithlepen.
dent Judiciary, which may oyerni,
nullify ifs acts, as it has sometimes done:
In what instances it has;parlt`olicerllll4.l.l:
unwholesome influcTner'o, tl4 CO
cr f•orf
nates, or tither,...p,r,, , -themi.y.ou /wire not
vouchsafed to show. An intelligent and
observant Sthtp3lll4ll,.r f oticl;•:l,.. thiplr, have
004 eluded thaatioln/Inenet . lVire.prceise",.
lyin the opposltth dltOtlcin. . tunny
cases have occiiiieinn tritrideaderttive his
tory, where the firiAricea and:V44in of the,
two houses Have previaJedover over, Royal negative? Haveyou,riltOilly Torgotteu
the
effect,. of ithe veto- .of the.
_Freednaelis
Bureau 8111 , inkfitMerottii?• Tait 'not with:.
• in your knowledge; that - it-was crushed by
the bolt that was launched - front the Other
end of the avenue, and" that one, Ht.:cast,
of the most active or ydur coadjutors in .
the Philarielphiii. Couventioni, was swatch
.to. the duet. by ithat-ht ei - portering • NO?
,
Are you not !equally aware of the in
,strumentality. • o tho... , ludlciary.. in eon:roi
ling the Legistition'uf thd - Goverhuteitt for
so many years
_in the ini,irrest of the. South?
Is it neceuaryithat
„I . alobyl_reziajul you
that blot upon four lthisprrufeuee-the in
famous Dred Scott case-initich.was got -
as everybody now in. tlitrinterait.'a
, o f slavery, and in :the very crisis of the
EalaSIS struggle, fur 'the-'purpose, of con.:
trolling the National Legislature in :he
same interests.?
But while these things tire beyond Cis
' puce, you liar., altogether ••fittled to show
when it, was that the Legrslnfire power
has ever invaded the Courts . to' tifflueitee
their Judgnic in
that, has •
free,!. .1 .c.a, and,
• .410 s n ot !h .- What:wuy.tuch au
influent, told& exerteli, auy more than
' I can understand hOvrtlatjudgtnects'tif the"
courts were to be successfully annulled by
the Legislative authority.. 'Xne. Constitution
is supreme. It binds the. LegitilUtUrt) ue
well at the people. The courts arc 'lts in
terpreters. If au act of C" regress contlicts
witn - It„they are authorized to dec-are it
yet& They judge and are tad judged. It Is
— rc: 71.;1.41a2 w - e
Ve por fa put •
1,t911i. Ii they . decide erroneously,
except it le. in a merely political ease,
there is no remedy, as in England,
when the judgmenta of the courts upon an
unwritten Constitution may be substantialy
reyised and reversed—as they have often
bei2l.l when they have travelled the popular
instincts or disturbed- the, old maxlms or
I landmarks of liberty—by. the trtinseendant
power of Parliament. ratherearn ahy , de-
I feet in the constitution which tlie.atenVto
disturb its JIM' balances, it Is precisely ber l2 .
The experience or nges has dernoestrated
,
that judges . are mibetter than other men,
add that in till thn-intrt4files , I>iitwcen
rogativo and privilege they haie been al
most invariably the supplest and ulo-t
tractable or all the instruments of tyranny.
And the best of our statesmen have aecoßt-
inkly felt and ileclarecl,that a power 50 great,
as' is sornetimea claimed for them, would
crttet them into au., oligarchy, aid make
'ihem[heinasters-ofthe.ntate. far,there,
fOre frok - cany tendency to their abliOril• .
lion, it will be well for the law-maker; it '
he can hold its Once agtyasb a ; rival , who
ivnetrvetson; ; and lirnnit
:us sceptre likpa,-_poisher,d, , , ,by„strikitig hid
tit-diva:tee: , dead at bin feet.
_B u t, you go inCl.lO) anst tfitek:o3lrinity:
.ieulure to say'tha it ilia present (fon
wernuottestrn,itted hy:poeitive.'and.
-- provisions or the - CoriStiintion '
they would , grently abridge, if notaltogeth
cr,anuihilate the.phiver, of aPpointruent to,
.and-removal from office,:now , confided to
'the "Executive, and, the 4alutary. restraint
Which he holds over. legislationthroughthe
- fet.6 tower.":
`..1.t is not unreasonable'. that, you should
think po, in Viedrof the present'avowed and
:shameless prosllttitleit 'of the patronage. of
the Government, and your remark. is: only
confession that-the tune has come when
JAUCb.atus'es of power. Must be corrected,
it
-this Republic is. to .live: tires-lagree;
"with you entirely:' If My - humble ccunsels
could have prevailed, the fate of this nation
should not have: been to the hazards
Air an election - Where all . the. tremut
dons enkinery - Of the army, the Post
office;:.and the Revenue, and all the appli
ances that can corrupt a nation, were ar-.
rayed against the liberties• of the pcopie.
Nov, fUrther',.il it had been my lot to hold
i piaci& in- the other end of the Capitol, I
;vou Id hare 'starved In my seat hefore.l
would have consented, to indorse a single
•eppoinuneut or removal made for epiniou'i3
sake, and Witt- a view to' the subjugation
of the Legislativn..power, to the inverial
will of the Executive. '
.
You-have not shown, however, - what
there is in the Gonstitutiori to prevent Con-
Mos from greatly abridging the power of
appointment and inmoval, and do not seem
to be aware that it is- already., armed ..bY
dint instrument with powers over this ones- .
li n, Which ',it has,
.either through. a want
of-literal courage, or a misplaced forbear.
antic, or, perhaps, the fallacibus hope that ., ,
the President. could be won back to his,"
duty by a generosity that bad already fail- I
ed to secure either bit. fidelity or his grati- I
tucle; thus far declined to exerclit. You 1
.Certainly cannot be' Ignorent - rhat at least I
'so faras rega'rds Wharttref-Calletrtitrei4iiii"
olliees, which comprise at least ninety-pine
out of every. hundred, it: In•ty take
"the ,amtver of appointment and removal
out of the hands of the Executive entirely.
It has net dorm so under thelliglies.t .prov
ocation„and in, the (Inc of an avowed pur- I
..poilt bn i the part
, otdbe Chief Magistrate! to
crt,!,plov thewliole"Maorin . ods , 'Patronage - of
the government bohreak down its leglala..!
rive fir.hon • ty4 y,F"yit"are: yottrsetr )'•
..itanding inoninifeht of the maunanimity I
of cam branch of that Legislature,. whirls ,
you the , think to disparage, in the tact that
vou are - allowed to hold the; high place
which you lire now prostitution, as I think,
in the interests of the Thaicutive. Yea.arc .
oblivious of one part.of. your origin, in your
'blind end passionate devotion to the other.
Surelya sense of. gratitude ought to have
',stayed your hand, when you were:emoted
' thus to lift itagainst:your own benefactors.
You do not like tiro. amendments:- Nei
ther tiers. the President Ton want the
Conai intim:l..al it is, and, ,thed -Union as it .
Nat , . and so does he. You think they eau.-
norbe improved, and - thin oar fathers were
.
wiser 11l a1193,11CC than we on near a cer.tu•
ry's experteneej i'Yeteignore the -War and
ks causes. You do not acres to recognize
that you cannot have the Union no it was,
without putting, back the Constitution to
whet it was also. - You have no apparent
tiOnception ofthict new „responsibilities; and
the pecessitlei of! the-beer. •'----Var -have'
slept like Itip Van Winkle during toe enta
clysin that has uphstiveti the continent and
-:-.1:,-1;e- dot-rt . :he institutions of tins South,
landatt - w ea ' up under the hallucin Alpo that
.01i:tan:its ore just a :they Were, forgetting
that ties infirmities ,if the Constitution,
which : yott would make as unchangeable as
the laws of the .Iletles and. Persians,.lieve
,passed:uathreugli a lied Sea of blood, and '
that - noir, fo r the first time, is extended - re-es:
by tilt:Laud of.Vrovideueth tile oppt3rtunitv
that initny siglisii:itfoi, bat. no- itiatr hoped,
of .rectifying the errors of the.past. You
think our passion? are too high, nail tier
'deed Z.,' hint for changes no iv. . You would
I. ttreihr...their pcseponement until the rebels
eanCcint.6 batik to: Liiip us - . make them.
I You say we have . tried 1110.0h1 COElSLitll
iLii
i , )
t s , t:r 1 .0. 7.14
11Toow new,its ce an p d a ii, hi i l t i l ti l e )e s t ; t t e n i at l l ,, T t e h , a .e v l i
, well..
• end a - Ui 4 lone: --The capabilitieryon speak
of, art: its power to put down rebellion. Its
defe.:7.b., in the capacity to breed rebellion
neer:, ere not within-your.-,4cognizene..
l'' You' Ivricid neiretHinglytlienii'only:beennse
, the tiling is not already done. You 1
I woutd hold your hand, in, the spirit...of. the n
I,
ethereal injunctido: that' the. boy slieilld
I not go into the water until he hail learned
I. to swim.. Atli:torn:oat ofipbtroge — FWF.-rsei to
[ the atueii nornintoly...miii-at,,'- , =. you would not)
" httempl'anetrihing lti tbe ivat Or ptt . greis
1 or •;reform, just because-- it is Pew and you
i lni-cre tin[ alrearly.„tried-k,or because :your
•
:ineeiders, to v., liont -- Ymr - look' for everi•-
thine, have not discovered and bequeathed
it to yotl.slong with the muniments of their
estates, ,or the Jusaber of- their:evident-15!
'rooms The ieefl enough that you would let
alone, is not the truly's - ell; that weal,' be
bettdr, tikes physic, and accordingly. dies,
• lint:She siekneis.unto death, that has Sever-
pd Our land with mourning, and is now pre
.a ~
'tringanother holocaust of our children,
while It -holds the South - itself in the throes
. Your first objection is the elanie whirl,
' provides' that "no State shall deprive any
citizen "of life, lihertypreperly,AitLialit
- due process tif' - litts:" .- - You - Year - that it
Will enlarge the power...ofi.t.longressiand
absorb the State Judiciaries - in the Federal;
.
and ken's:l4 , ', it ieunneeesary, because the
'-State Constitutional themselycs . hare pro
vided for it., ...;•= .:... ' ...- ~. I .:"
The same argument would have exelud!
ed from the Constilittiai every provision
which limits the power of 010 States • and
.partiettlarly that which - provides that no
'State shill`pass any! bill trt - ,attainder,.oi et
1 ,0 0.14tta law, or law impairing' the oblige
, lin o of colitractsr_lnAill Utak Celia there
: A ap •
appeal to the Federal tribunals. Ihe
e miense objected to isblit ii translation troll]
, agea.Caarta,riatrtvas,oafltted,' as to the
e
itteral govinainent,, in the firs t ' draft of
Corstimue
d ch e a ed i a te ra t , , o , 7 l, lf , t , ll4 . gt . e ,a t principles of that
' . t . aiouly.hecanstitt Din' Ofitights,
o h d er o i n te ls Oc ui e o so fo_ver_y ble,:g.' li T h e t d ,,, to r.,,w b , e ,s
r t , b g e n
r ig: .
o , aay contaistioap run , . from
L i f e " C l ip .) be
Plc. e l se r a ie l t d cl " , t y l' i
a rt7 , x a rQ r x , ' r w
t government u n
i na s e t o .
r l ,o s ,ior r o : r v , t . : ,
porited as an anienderent, by way
ordinary etutioninitijongh'it, tr aa.:. ,,, t4 . 1 ":.
„posed that any' government motet:sing 1 1 0
be free, would think of , „viialauhkit h - pl a ui. „ ii
principle. There was no reason, however,
tor its adoption here, which would not ap!
ply ivith - btfuab-,force lo!„thb Stakethem
ieivcs. Ton ,aay - they 'havb ad - opted it.
You know, however. tliiithaeiteert habit.
Mal!, disregarded ha the SOlith a , ) hit E 4 twat
as the bitch man is concerned. The condi
tion of ale icry seemed rprothprizttiOrilityZ
thing could. 'Pie slave is now free. lie is en
titled. to protection..., Ir-he ottmoteheTe it
In the-States, he hirer-fall evettirciseitbsen
of the United States, and If the! title fit .ti
Roman. citizen was sufficient to protect the,
liumbie.st to its,people;lif the reir.otestproi;
nice or that oxtendid-. .„Etuplre, how
much more was- It inentubcbt - tipen
this great I lepublic to - throw the'
1 taZia cif' itT , Constitution over its own help:
iiloss and defenseless children - 16' am! refoot.:i
cat South! Without .this„.jvhcre Is the
recuritY for the freedom 11.11%3 guaraniecd?
11.1,e, jurisdiction, which ' is appellate et
i.ieues Only Av/fere the rights IR deatiil,Ard
t4o csEe could come op only on the law,
tititiliii:iiild not be likely to Como up 'Oven '
thee, when It was, puce anderstooti th a t
there art& - a' SUpeilOr ' who wtiukt . l
- - compel
there,to respect it. "The interests In v olved
might be, as you say, the moat coutoulptablo
, iii poistt : of pecifniary value. You have to
learn,- lierie.ver, that gm great righta of
humanity are not to bp e!tllnatedlry'suen
n_s.t.tur ".mine Lie great
issue with the CIWSII upon 0 matrsrof
twenty 11 . 1ii,n4siand a penny tax, illegally
cn
itnpused, was the .ca , ,ion that liglued the
fires of Reimlnnen in the Colonies.
Your nett objection is to the second
clause, which changes the basis of repre
sentation by excluding front the winputa..
tton the elisseii that aro. OlifrancLised
Slate laws, nod which you describe As an
other blow aimed at. the Government which
I-our.-Fstbers founded. And here you coy
that it is not important how the elective
lfrauchie is disposed of, or whether exer
ciscd by fewor many, because all classes
of the counannity4tre reptesented.
. The result then Is, that you do not care
,moiler the Government is an ongatchy
or a democracy, and that a constructive rep
' I -
resentatien just es gond as nu actual one. t tette you may seek to evade . that
You might tis•avell haviz pushed it farther, the people. He will not deny, I think,
by declaring that it made no differeuce • that be refused to debate on tiny other
whether utiyhedy voted at all. you were I question—yes, even upon tee policy of the
In England, rod ; would objizet: of tzeurse ; Presideet itself,'-ou the - ground that the, is
on the, same g,romels, to the enlargement sue was en the amendments, and the berth:-
el thdfreueinse, and se ready to asseverate, en on thoie who bad recommended them.
,us-you do maw, that, everybody was repro - this, however, will not -satisfy-your
eented Whether they - had any voice in the doubts, you have only to bide your time. If
tt.lovernment or not. - - you litive not underetood the verdict °POI°.
But- then you say that there are people l people, the men 'Wee/11 , 010Y will send back,
'here—such as wieeis,•-leintiles, and tan, commissionede.
anw, as they were before,
naturalized`-foreigners--who Iforeignets—w ho do:not. vote, toZ -bear their will to the President and
I and that they are not allowed to enjoy the yourself, will tell you what they meant.
becitne they are not supposed to But then you Fay they have been under a
be sefiletently instructed in political econ- delusion—never a greater—and wereblind
way and govermental affairs. ed by their, paestous • and their prejudices.
Here is something new. I was not bo- You compliment them by the opinion of
I fore aware of the fact th4t a knowledge of theiriinteillgence, whiell the speeches of
the ithetruseet of sciences was required of the President; when be insulted them by
any body, or that either women or ellena language fitted only for sieves; show that
were excluded for the want of anstruction. you have borrowed, from him. -His error,
TllO farmer I -supposed _to he disqualified with his Southern training lind associations,
ou;the ground of their dependency upon was a'natural :One. Yours is:without ex
the male, -who to their natural represtentive, cuse. 'Yon area man ofenlture and alawyer,
and the, latter because they were bound to and have been long enough in the North
no -allegiance to the Government. They to know better; and have experience enough
are tal eemputed,:at yousay, because they to qualify you as a valuable counsellor to
have a common interest, and their interests him, if you could have chosen the part of
are cared -..fdreleeause they ale computed: a Seneca, instead of sinking into the syea-
The. - inference from all which : is, that all pliant, and ministering-to the passions of It
that is nehessary to the protection or the vulgar tyrant. You know—no man better
negro, or any hotly else. is that he-should sr-dhat at the late elections, as throughout
Ibe adusfeed, and the more he counts for his the war, the intelleet, and the enlightened
I - enernidg,.the better, of course, for himself. conscience of the North have been against
' But Ras not true, you say, that therela- you, while the refuse:aft-foreign lands, who
five strength of tit,. rebel States Will be in- are held in the chains of passion ; prejudice
ereesed by dottrel flag the fractional slave and superstition, have been arrayed as one
into no integer, and Your mason Is that the man, along with the blindness, ignorance
next census will show a diminution of the and disloyalty that exist at home, on your
black population of the South to the extent own side. Your opponents addreasedthem
of the whole dilfte awe. selves to the reasons of fthe people. Yours
You do not state how you make this out, WAR bet a war of printedixtricatureamberein
althouen yen subsequently remark that the unfortunate negro iflgnrecl even more
the non-votingliaCks, by obvious c auses largely, though not quite to the some wey
not necessary to be mentioned, will be con- as in your own letter. If the people who
scantly deeteasing. Whet are these cans- prevailed at the ballot boa mete indeed
es y Is it because you think, with Mr. acting under St (Maslen, and knew not
Coivau, 'that .their.-normal condittop is a what they did when they were crucifying
state of Serribitle, - alid that in- a condition the new Moses, then God help us all. It
of freedom they will Lot he able to perpetu• will 'be itlie to talk hereafter about the ca
ate themeelves? It is sufficient, however, nobility of main for self rule:
that as matters vow stand, even upon the The ,delusion to which you refer was,
cerisns of the basis must be enlarged
_according to yourself, that the President
Wan addition ONO - lea:4 a million Mind - a - was a traitor. Well, that is a', question
I half, Which, upon an unchanged ,appor. that nay be generally trusted ,to the in-
I lonment, would give to the Slave Suites stints of a free people. But'ycru say that
sante 'twelve addition :d Itenresentativea, It' is a mistake—that lie has usurped no
rand make one unrepentant rebel in 'South power—lnn that finding these States, after
Camila:l; the equal in political value of lhe insiterationary governments were over
.more than two loyal non here. Yoh must thrown, and the public enemy expelled by
excuse us, therefore. if we should refuse to tannery force, with Constitutions, buzz
accept your propbecits in exchange for the without any organizations under them, and
sacrifice - al the principle of equality, and deeming it to be his duty as Commander
ilin-d-itesent: cer t a i n le s s o f.. su b s t an ti a l in-ehiel—as you say it was—to prevent an
rawer. archy, and to see that the machinery of the
t • sYottklinit, however, that the unnatural- legitimate governments teas again put in
ieed foreigners:al the North bad Rest wifi operation, he had for this object only ap
ie in numbers to the black p.p. pointed temporary Provialonal Governors,
flat ou of the South, mud you compute under whose advice the peoptehrought their
I them, for the-purposee of your armment,ut regular goverznnents again into operation
of thougnids, end pe ' rlispo mil- under their Covetitutions—that thin wee a
t liotis. It did not-occur to you, however, matter of eerily military cognizance with
thdt they have berctorerc only - Aica the which Congress had notiting, whatever to
South because- labor was .not arespectable do—and that, moreover, t sees the duty of
there, Leenuse. not free. Under a ditlemut the Peoelene ns the Executive head of ties
system they will Online themselves oyer nation, to see that tin relations between
the witele cruel-}-, wherever the Noll In. the States mid the Federal - Goren:num:it
' viten them. But }ant talk Is ;Idly ns fo Hit it were restored.
',numbera They are as naliting when cone lt ell anitinie that, with the overthrow of
pared - with the blacks, ant: will copetautly the insurrectionary Governments, the pub
,diminish under the wastiug processahat is lie enemy had been expelled; and that by
anal/ally converting them into citizens. military force. It would be Interesting to
:Botifor t ill snorter to your ern-Mien:a, It know where you have discovered the evi
ought to be sufficient, one, would think, for deuce of tili , 3. You do not intend, of
so nrofound le devotee of the President as course, that the people of these States Were
yourself, that the principle or etthetstwe of driven into exile, bedause,^ in that case, {
this - very eaccptiouablo clause was sag.- there would be nobody left to re-orgaidni
gusted by himself, in e. reptirted converea- the Wien Governments, and you know
tion with Senator Dixon, of Connecticut, that thieenemy was edit there. You do
on the - lath of Slummy last. mean, however—lf you ratan any thing—
Your objection to -the haled ruction is that they had ceased_ to Lea enemies by the
'that it - dietranchlacs the great llljorily of process of conquest, and when they had
the aduCated vieniof thcl Stales that have been eoiapelad to lay down their arms, '
been in rebellion, and ezelades them •from 1 although eVeey man of teem had -forfeited
Any participation tattle :‘trair., of the State itis property mut nite, and was either an'
or re.erar Govecafiten: —
tA It loohe .116 ucipardeued felon, or a prisoner on parole. 1
though, you had not read it. It distrauetzi- Anil 0413 sln accordance wilb.tile paradox
sea nobody. It leaves nu: suilreiz - e—all that--of you chief, that the criminal is purged.
eta ever been a-hod tee auybodyt for the sad restored the moment • the - law has sac
blacks—and only imp:zees n disability on , ceeded In laying -its hands upon him
those who have. auperaddecl the mime tic Against all reason, and all probability, and
perjury to thateof treason, to bold office in by a conversion as miraculous as that of
either. the Federal pr State Governments, Paul, the public enemy had suddenly be-
.
unless urged 133- - 1 . 6:e of two-thirds of
both'llO p uses. of Congrves.
You say, liolvever, filar no such sweep.
lug and indnrcritnimtte prothriptiou is re.
.naembered sine:: tiw osys if . Pinito 11. 'of
6paita, and that it is not to 1w expected that
a Jnajoiity of the educated man of ten
States will long Fllbillit to be excluded
from all share in making and eduainlst,i
-ing the laws, without the constant - proesure
or art armed forcpsuZeient to coerce obedi
ence.
Your estimate of the number of educa
ted-men in the Rebel Statea who have not
only lifted their par . rteldal hands against
the Government, but stand impeached of m
still deeper turpitude, if possible, is ED
large as to make Us wonder why you should
think of leaving those communities to
their' own government. I hope you ale
rink light in the opinion that this leprosy
has spread so wide. But your apprecia
tion of their crime—if you will allow it to
be ; co-cousiderecl-is greatly short of that
of tIM model and beroie statesman, whose
virtues seem to task all your powers of
.panegyric. Mr. Johnson himself has de
clared. ou more than one oceasloit—.s
In his speech at Nashville on the
9th -of ' June, ftiel—that "the traitor
has ceased to be a citizen, and forfeited his
right to vote with loyal men, when he re
nounced his citizenship, and sought to dis.
troy our GovernMent." Congress has not
gone s 4 far, by a wholo bar's length. It
discriminates only against the traitor who
has forsworn himself, and done not even
propose to deny the light of suffrage to
film. It does no more than disable thu
Man who - It - as violated an express trust, sur
rounded by the highest sanction! that human
law can prescribe, Irmo assuming another,
and betraying no again; while it' throws
open the (Aileen of the country to the class
that befitsten practically ostracised. And
yet you characterize thi3 Watt and genet - -
ous measure—not prompted by Ten
geanece, but absolidely menu:dated
by considerations 'of public security—
its a merciless and : indlacriminate proscrip
tion, with no example in history since the
itialfolrbrof the Netherlands ran red with
the.hloOd of her people. Surely you must
lave strangely forgotten yourself to h lid
.snoh - lariguage. It is out-Iferod your thief
himself, and to l,e extravagant even beyond
the .measure of fealty that the highest po
sition in the Government could demand.
I commend you to the historic page again.
You will read it Invain tollnd a single ex
aruple that compares with thlsin clemency.
- Gat von menace us with another rebel
lion, in case we shall refuse to allow these
double traitors to make and administer tbe.
laws. You toll us .they will not submit.
:Yoh i,ild this language before in your',
Philadelphia Convention. You invited
them to resistance there, by telling them
that that they would be unworthy of their
race and lineage, if they submitted to the
flomtuatiaofiGongress, ne they would have
c n li alo 9 . e b ul en ly tn e n n g d h Ir t
brin
thek;u I vdo
Presidentn o,
trileges,and in re belll if t
h th a e t 3 ih h e a y d
n forfeited no rights, that the. Congress
of the United States
. was usurping their
mightthel,rmonott.le.anegtaminstsutrtehernof' and that they
of the: con
stipplient--tur
- Igueror." - his staredy tboetlr
Sti,little impression orlo n the cot ' 'as")
re
hearse of langnage up}, ~,in e7 -I° , ° to n
alb' not friVance the Interests of ' e l l i r r a Y' So :l n c tl u
by „leaching them such letsou, Tire lins'pasisd when they could Guy , 1. 1T 3
once did, that they would never submit.
They nine anbrnit,—ss must Lim President
himself; imperious though he bri.--.to just
such terms Its the 103'01 people, through
their Gmgreas, may think proper to iin
puso, an d t hough it should take erodes, es
yen auggirst, to enforce those terms and
keep the mice, it will be kept at the peril
ortliciae - who may resist the,will of the nu
.lion, whether they be high or low, and
'whet - het they live .North or. South. If the
fools and nusdnien who have - beau encrura
gad by the President, mad I leer by such
counsellors as yorusslf, to believe that he
they, ean dictate their own earflap, are
not aatideit to come back Into elm Union
. .
on the coutla otns which Congress may of
fer to them, they con choose the alternative I
of territorial rule until their reasons are're-
stored.
But you ate not convinced that.ttio loyal;
.people of the nation intend to have their I
- own way. > You'do.not regard the recent'
elections as an indication of their judgment
upon the question, of the Constitu
tional amendments. , ' You say they were
not the issues - .presented to, and considered
by them. Unconvinced by the thunders
of the first judgment, you are now appar7.
ently indeavoriug to stop the ears of the
Presktent egging the last and gteater judg
ment that is impending. Ii you have
doubts as to the issues, ask your friend and
c9-tiriltor, the Pennsylvania Senator,
whose judgment you will not refuse, even
coats a friend ' and 'aiet_.eutitled to be re
habilitated is Lis command, not by victory,
but by the new logic of deleat.
you tied, as you tell us, these newly
converted trieod., there' conquered...sue
luitts—not even like the prodigal, whditad
!wandered his patrimony lit riotous Ilv
:lag, returning voluntarily with confession
of sin a- d hearts full of contrition, but bay
onetted back like skulking runaways, and
breathing nuthing but, hatted of the gov
ernment that has- chastised them—again
in posses4luo, by some mysterious remitter
of the Constitutions which they bad nitro
peed and ov'eethrown; and all they want
ed, as you say, 371L15 an organization under
them. Mr. Johnson tells usin Iris prods,
mations that the rebellion had stripped
them of all civil government whatever.
You mean then, or course, that all they
:wanted was a gocernatent, though without
explaining how a Constitution could - exist
without it. '
To re•create the GOvernment, however,
by putting the old machinery in motion In
order to prevent anarchy, end by the ap.
pointmout of Military Governors, was a
duty, which, in your Judgment, belonged
to the Counandezin-Cidef, and a matter
of mere military cognizance, with which
the law-making power had nothing to do.
His task, iu your view,. wee not only to
suppress a rebellion, and then sheathe the
sword, and give place to the law-giier, but
to build up what the war pulled down ; and
re-produce what had, actually been destroy ,
ed. His neecirding to,your theory,
were not only miniaterial. but, leyislatice.
He was a new Mahomet or Alexander—leg-
Water, as well as Captain—to carve oat
and re-found empires, and thou, as the Ex
ecutive head of this nation, to see that the
relations between those' States—the lucre
creatures of ids oWn will—and the Federal
Government, wore restored, i,y seating
'their licpresentattves in Congress. Waiv
ing the question whether all these era Ez
eCutive clutics—about which no well-in
structed jurists or statesmen will be found
to differ—l think you , must admit that with
all these extraonliaary prerogatives, it
would have been quite unnecessary for
him to go back to the Freedmen's Bureau
for the powers of u:Dictato - r. If he can do all
these things, usurpation would be,of course,
impossible.
You endeavor, however, to draw the
veil over these startling pretensions,' by
very disingenuously softeuing down the
interventton of the President into a mere
appointment of Military Governors,"under
whose acirree the people brought their reg
ular Governments into operation again un
der their Constitutions.'' Is this an honest
statement of the case? Do you net know
that these Conventions were ordered, and
that the several 'Constitutions were re
formed on terms dictated by the President
at the point of the sword, and under mar
tial law, after all military resistance had
eca.ed? What says the Record on this
subject? Who has not r. ad the dispatch--
es of the President and his Minister of For
eign Affairs, to his rebel Governors? Is it
possible that you can be unadvised of the
utterances of Orr, - and liunrphreys, and
Hamptou, and others of the Magnates of
the &with, in' flat contradiction of your
assertion that it Was only a question of ad
vice ou the'part of the Provisional Govern
ors—or that the peoplf were consulted—or
that it was they who brought thew
regular .Governments into operation
again—or that they were.. brought
auto operation 'under !their old
Constitutions? You aro either not inform
ed on the subjeCt, oil you have intended to
mislead your reader. I had thought - too
lavorably'of you as a lawyer and a man, to
bulidvo that you would wilfully attempt the
latter. if you did, however, it would be
idle. If you to nut know these things .
greatly at li ly o • w w e ,4 r t . t i h n e ipo late eu elections.'
upon eetiotnhsem
they, at alte`venta, etre better advised, You
thiniethey may Le deluded, and have been
Y th a e u i can dea,
in the face of !melt evidence, that these
Governments were erected by anybody but
the President himself, any more than you
can snake,lhem believe that Its has a right
. reconstruct ..... _ . ,
to a fallen- State, or force its ; i
delegates into the Congress of the Uniteri ,
States. , , . ; • - ,
Bat you take refnie, as is usual,. in the
example of Lincoln. You know ; that he I
has a large place in the hearts of the pece 1
plc, and yon endeavor br hide the delin
quencies of hissuccessor beneath his skirts,
and 'to -seek protection front the public
wrath.by„ taking hold of-the pores of his
altar. lhey, some of your coadjiitors have
even gone so .fur as publicly to insist that
3sr. Johnson :hoed) , administering upon
the estate Of. Lincoln and therefore not re
sponsible for his policy. The subterfuge i
is an adroit one, lint It will not ayall you. I
Already hunted out of every other retreat,
you will find, I think, no 'sanctuary here.
You aflirm that President 'Lincoln had
taken precisely the, same action in respect
to Virginia, TenneSsee,• Louisiana and Ar
kansas, "for which Ile - was - applauded and 1
indorsed by Cougrpsa during the liret three.;
,yearapf the war,andi thereafter vehmnently
denounced by the same men who now,mo,t
violently denounce' President Johnson fat
precisely the haute • reasons;_leut that, on the
appeal made by the Radicals-front President
Lincoln to the war party, they were over
defeated, and hie policy in•
dorsed by the party and tto country;" -
, AllttYr me; to spy in rep y, that it is not
true in the 'first place, at the policy of
President Lincoln was identlcal with. that
ofliis successor;and secondly, that even
'though it were, it is equally Anise to say
' that it was indorsed by Congress;or on
appeal from it,,,by either the party of the I
1 • I recollect no policy of restoratimi during
the Eras yearshf the *an, IJ was a quo
; Lion that etitild mit naturally arise until the
tido was , turned by the 'successes of our
arms. and it was accordingly shadowed
; forth for the filet time in tint Proclamation
.which accompanied Ate- message of De
cember, 18(18. Tha , Praciamattin proffered
amnesty oa ediainteims;and preposed a
I recognition•hy the President, as soon
as a glven-'number of the people •whe
had accepted. those'. terns; and taken
1 the oath ;therein • prescribed, should
I have called conventions tied reorgail
m
ad their governments, on the basis or
1 emancipation, subject, however, eipressly
to the right•of ; Congress to decide whether
their members \hould lie admitted to seats
therein. 'This, however, was but au'inri
ration addressed to I the mal-contents,
flagrante hello, to lay down their arms. It
was but an overture to au aimed enemy by
a General; iu the field. -If they accepted,
moreover, it was to by purely voluntary on
their parts, non they were formally advised
that it would still reMain for Cougre,s to
Electric, as has been already ;stated. How Mr.
• .
Lincoln - himself estimated his own powers
over this great question, may be Inferred
front his next annual message to Csdigres-s
-in December lEli4, wherein he remarks Of
the Southern people, as distinguished front
their leaders: 'They con - at any moment
have peace by laying down their arms end
submitting to the National authority under
the Constitution. " C IC questione
should remain, wo would adjust them by
the peaceful means of legistati , .,r, confer
ence, courts, and roles, operating
.only in
constitutienal and lawful channeli. Soule
cerfaia and other passible .questions are,
and would be beyond the Err - entire power to
adjust, as for instance the admission-of mem
bers into Conyfess, and whatever :might
require the appropriatioa of: mouey. The
,Exceutire ,power itAelf would be great"-
diminislted kr/ tLe ass s at:on wawa
tear, Pardons and remissions of jorfei
tures, flowerer, would be still nil the .E.t
eculica rontrol;" . and again, "a year ago a
ganerni pardon and amnesty. upon speci•
fled terms, was offered to all except certain
designated classes. • • • it is still so
open - to all. But the time may come—
Probably will come—when public duty
shall demand that it be closed, and that; in
lieu, moreLvigereas measures than hereto
fore shall be adopted."
A.nil now as to the plan of his succeBtor.
the :procinination was promulged after the
state of r.Ctual war had ceased. It was no
lavitatiou by a commander in the field to
an armed fielligermit, to lay down Ilia weap
ons of revolt. It was nut optional with
him to call a convention to re-organize, or
to refuse to do to. It was a compulsory
measure to go through the form—not of re
storing the old constitution or organizing
tinder it—hut of 'adopting a new one dicta
ted by the President. It was effected in
time of peace by a military commander
ender the operation of martial Taw, and
Truett there was practically no law • but lilt
own will, brooding over all that devastated
region, and warming into Ilfee dame and
turbalent oligarchies that arc now claiming
the rights of conquerors insteri . of subjects
Theta was no reference either to the pow
er of Congress In the p - emisee—no thought
of the "peaceful meow; of legislation opera
ting in Congressional channels," indicated
by Mr. Lincoln—no Idea of any "certain
or possible question," that "teas beyond
the Executive power to adjust"—Ao sense
of "a diminution of the Executive pow•
er itself by the cessation of actual war"—
no perception of the fact that "nothing hut
pardons and remissions of forfeitures
inmuld be left within the Executive control"
—and no reflection. that possibly the time
bad come, after all offers of mercy Mid been
refused, when "public ditty might demand
that the limn be dosed and more 'et:throne
measures adopted." '
And then reiterating, in the face of all
this evidence, that President Johnson
strictly adhered to the polity of Mr. Lin
coln, you say in his excuse, that it was not
until long alter these Gevernmetits had
been organized,' that any noticeable objec
tion was madoto his actlon•, anti that it
seemed to Meet the approval of , all parties
and sections until the meeting of the pres
ent Cougreiss in December last, when the
old issue made against. Lis:coin, and de
tided by the people then 'was revived
against him.
All you can say is that the-people Were
quiescent—perhaps lulled asleep—under
the multiplied assurances of the President
and his friends, that theta were but mere
experiments; Upon which their Re
presentatives must at last decide.
These assurances never deceived tee for a
moment. If Mr. Lincoln, a citizen Of the
loytil States, anti the President of their own
choice, bad survived the state of actual
war, it would have been expected—his
work done, and his legitimate mission ful
filled—that he would have put up the sword,
and called the Representatives of the pea.
ple together to decide what should be done
with the Territories re-conquered by their
arms, anti then la anarchy; and his known
aversion to arbitrary power, and uniform
submission to the popular will, make it
absolutely certain that he would have
pursued that course, . instead of taking
the whole matter to himself, and perpetua
ting;the reign of martial law for n period of
eight long months. When . President,
Johnson, a citizen of.-those
doom
rebel Stare, hose
doom was' to be fixed by pa, coining to'
the beim under these circumstances, by a
catastrophe that smote the nation with ter
.
ror and agony, and bound, therefore, by
every consideration; to take counsel with
the people of the loyal States, declined to
call their Congress together in such an uo•
exampled anti double crisis of the State,
I thought I understood him. There Was
no solution for his coudnet but is. the fact
that ho anticipated, as he naturally , would,
that the people of the North would flt least
demand securities for the future, and NV us
determined to forestal their action by fet
tling the whole question himself in the
interests of the rebellious swami, which
had all his sympathies. When he Issued
.Lis proclamations,. directing conven
tions, naming .-the voters, and pre
scribing the terms of reorganization,
es though he had been the autocrat of the
nation, I was sure of it... And whenhis
message cams at. last; instructing the two
Bowles of Congress that ho had done the
work in hisown way, and that they had no
Jurisdiction over thequestlon as a .Legisla
ture, and nothing ,to do 'but register his
edict in. the premises, it revealed nothing
to me that was uot,in my judgruent,alreatly
distinctly foreshadowed in his conduct. if
the old issue, as you artypleased to call it,
was not , revived , till then, it was only be
cause he had deeelted the people by ape.
cious professions and was only then,fur the
drst time, compelled litY the requirements of
the Constitution, to sheet them face to face.
He would have - preferred to govern vritliont
a Congress, but when it came together in
spiteof hint, there:mane - thither opportun
ity for imposition.
But even though it' we're trne that the
0114 of President flaunt= was Identical
.with that of his predimeesor, I will now
show as I have engagO hy.d,, , that thore
is no shadow of fdlindtdion for the assertion
that ii was either Indorsed by Congress, or
approved on appeaith ,thent,' by' the party
or the country.
You know, of noting that when the pro
gramme of blrameol s . Watt kubmitted . to .
Congwies in Doman' 1861 i, it round no
ram with either part7\ for reasons that ar_
a P` I thul . "`'dF notkttly 1, DR. CriAVSSIEWS EMPRESS La
re 1,1,0.1 tf) l t I.mi,ana r 1 'St 153PE.RATAICE. runic LESCHS
hvea Le-Or. eta:lnac been Sovoru that tile Hair. Si
ganiZed in . y it, b• ”.6".'1 C'ta
i s z vacua, turn. gray
the ,rac r .;i,_ , n, to ;au, ; , ;.. , it Thr.t . N.CliCol. l Freorn cheaitst. pr.
Rebel State,'. fty,„, IA, I,:olvi,cl a ecropitto antidote.
• tar the
Th;, 1.0) r .1.1. to Ili, hands b,7l".l.lW'dV''l"
of the Pl.....dent t t tit an lien ine
the adjournment in duly, ..el there
fote war not signed by - Lint. Tour day; I , the thaacretahle'ainelier sat.
afterwqrds, lies': he a. , 21 prods-- t trrt i tti r i!..'ri•=•- °- "l o tt l. o d ititt d r`gla ' VZl:
Ern
matiou*.eiting 'h. elm lug that he s'e-stos die new haute
:.wiuinou,n~toralcotor, or the
was unprepared to commit Itimscli fnver wit t ° l`4
of ally ',lngle plan; ILat wade. equally ha. r[1,,,';',;;‘,,,r,..?5r:eiL.:...e.a=t3-aer•tie, ecym
prepared to discourage the loyal people of xi, VI itaexcene.,. I)Zrections to
Louisiana and .kriuinsai by seals; aside •";„'',
0.0 6c.a , for ItO , burrh,' 4050011 FLEVING.
the work already done by them, . 1 - 11 .07ga0,. noirrrs
or to astert a Constitutional com
pliancy In Cong - ..c=s to el:obeli slavery
in States, he New: , fatly satisfied with the
system enntnioed in the Bill, 'and if the •
loyal I.teople of; any at the !clue! States -
elloya, to ltd. pt it, w. 9.1 1 ,1 be prepared ; ••t rttno
TO VAIL
aid ;heat bv appointing milituty governors'
With directions to proceed according to l -Pratt" ts:
the Bill; and then submitting the whole ;;1 • 1 11 4 / 1,;
Question for the cutmitlerstiou of tbe-peo.
plo. The Preoblent had been already re- j
nominated at litiltinim 0. there was any j
protest by the Radicals against, that re- 4 ,!,`
nomination, bteausT he refused to sign this
Bill, it toys withdraw - a as seem as the Chi
cago Cohvention--av -candidate mud
platform were, I think, preferred by 3-oa—
had made'the issue nimn the continuance of
the war, and the ability of the nation to
bring it to a suace.stul close. The
election took place, and the members of
Congress who had db.:seined trout the
Prc.ddent were not (th' returned, but large
ly reinforced by mcu of the very same
opinions, if not even more radical than
themselves. It makes no difference that
the President hinnellwatt re elected. Thu
question then at issue between him and
his party in COLIUCt6 could only enter
into the selection at 'that body, to whose
Jurisdiction it properly belonged. They
could scud up their opinions only through
their representat.ve.,•and the united and
almost unanimous voice of the Thirty
ninth- Congress is their answer to the ap
peal, on which you insist that they have
been overwhelmingly defeated; just as the
answer of the peoole now, will be a•
another turned judgment on the same
.question. fotsreing an% remit,
you ars already preparle ,- , In advance,
with the adroitness of n wily advocate, to .
break the force of that judgment,bv lutist
, ing - that the issue itt not now what you
claim it to have been two years ngo. Your
ingenuity will not help you. The second
judgmen, of the people ti ill lie one that the
President and La, cl - 161aff, will struggle
against In vain. ' Depend nit it, it will 't be
respected awi obeyed, and woe to those
' who may he rash c11011::11 to Iltalertala! 10
gaiaSay, or tuts a•it void. There is :t po:nt
ta which official imolenee rear he tolerated,
but it will be as ell to l'elatallilar hat •even
the patience and laug, , utfering of a people
may he eXlinUitc.i.
Von insist , howover, ient.7!li, as
tho , i amounted to in, ai zoneott, tint
tho s,tirre its tioehle rind , nntention
is ti..• giii.stion Oi negr.) that if
the Prk hod t, unite with
conga,- to tonna.: It opolt, the .Soutt,, Inc
nov.. 1., waren:plied at an idol
137.• ts•rty met nitre;
io . ntiurzly as.ati hint; had 11,111 on this con
tutu ti dt•t of the Senate
wet,'s iil n it to waive Lit testa end punleh
tnentr, and trtke havk to their :trim. the un
waykici Ultapcittratt. real tors 'a hove
hands are rain red with the 1)...'01 of our
mitt mid brethren.
Allow ma Ia Any that, yen do not scron to!
castsopisliend the but arc of this great :vacs
ti
on, or do not at ;cost deal vith it in the
lofty spirit of the a 6;11 0111 IC I 1:01 not 1
misulkeit you rue One of the.7.o who, at an
sariz. - pcFlod.of the war, Indulged and en
• prearg - s1 the o;dzian thot the ceilv way CO
prose :due it C., a t otee.,,pri, b.u.o. Was to ig
nore the negro, who was the (-ascot 01 it.
y o u still Mtn.; that tithe- la titc only *Ay CO
scams swat pet..,. Thug_ tend event:: have
p r oved that yon were rietrt-ei.therl then, as
"out are now. Yloo ought to have learned
by this time that vim ,'mast ignore the
bine!: man. •Lle win not down at
.your bid
ding,. You cannot es:cerise lons. Though
.he may nut ''push you from your atool,'i
he is An!' hereto plague voud You mar
shut your even numustE the horrid spectre,
but it wird he in o' in. Ile wiltcontinue to
reappear lea long as lie is cihongat tie.
iYou rest in taro comfortable reflection that
he is doomed to die under tho new dispen
sation, and that the atmosphere of freedom
will wither the child of the tropics like the
Boreal blast. Yen do not describe the pro.
ei,, by which he is to I - Jeri:in. It Cannet
I, o , e rer Ito its work upon Snell a Mass of
butriatilty either in a dcatide or of century.
[
' Filo present 4 here .15 eon 1124A01 tO beau. preg
haat aotwee of all our troubles, past-and
present. If he is however-a tilstureing .elo
, tisein—a snores of t•trlie—tlie statesmen
1 01,101 grapple with 11 raid de vise thereuasly.
I 'fill ore get rig of Itint—if ever—we must
to ovide or Lie protection. lie is entitled to
it by nature and just.ce. We two bound to
to it by the doable oblik, , Eadeu of gratitude
and nvecsaity.
Some people Odell—mud I era outs of
them—that the only solution orate great
Ties , ion of the permanent restoration of
Me Government, is to 1.?.3 mund in thecen
es.mmis of ite.go elig;ruge in /110 Sottiii. IL
is obelomly ciseutial Lo its' Own pt,:tCo'
LUX. this great element of ite population
sramiti la' made :secure. Just emerging,
astthe black man is, from is state of servt
tulde, It is clear that Ito will be oppressed by
those. who think they have been unjustly
deprived of his labor, nod will endeavor, of
clause, to hold hint ae nearly et possible
.
to tae place which I:epee:listed before. WO
eauttot of to keep up (untie:Misr his
1 protoction. That would not only be ex
pensive,:tint rull of danger, snd.ineonsistant
. with the .tenius of our Government. You
do not therefore like them. No more do I.
There is however a sale and cheap cud
easy mean. of defencedor the negro, that
does net es:et:a to have occurred to you—
and that Ls to provide:is I inwith Pte, mss us, of
defending himieV. For th st Epurposa he
wants fie arms. Give binuthe ballot. You
knew ha la loyal, end ten be relied upon
us a friend; Ile will protect not only him?
:set, but the loyal White man- , whom Von
propose to at:Widen Moog \ with him, and
who tells you hiumell that' there is no
ether praeticalde security for him.
Would Ic be ouunge then, if these 'Who so
think should be willing to stipulate for
universal amnesty in exchange tor univer
sal suffrage, or that they ehotild ice even die.
posed to build temples a rol a 1 tars to the Pres
. ideut who could be persuaded to give his aid
to it. The Romans deified the worst or
their - Emperors, but 110110 or them for an
act of such ((malted justice, wisdom, and
benevolence as this. From your stand
point it is obviously looked. upon ns no
more thin a Pulse sod exaggerated philan
thropy. If you hod vouch:ma:ll to it the
regSt rile of a !gale hunfli, you would Lave dia
-1 covered that it. woo something widely dir-
Toren!, You do lt.'. recut to tippreciate the
Ceboneney v hice sr old forgive all sin, uts
..o.• its ,00.iition or soi, s t„ i nim 5 ,,,,,thi e ,,
against its recurtetwa. You think that the
disabling einuse of taw amendments is
. i prompted out yby n feeling of hatred and
1 vengea lice, and 1 berefore parade it us SOille
, I thing .ineonstlitent lion the Annie men'
' who support the amendments are willing
to receive all the traitors beckon the terms
only of Universal suffrage. When con
0,11110 to. n higherlevel, as you are curia-
Isle of doing,. you will think differently of
these propositions. end perhaps regret that
.you should Lave indultzealUtt lino of orpi
ment el i te repeetsso little credit on -your .
statesmanship. ' '
But I ern now do: e with you. To so much
of your appeal—anti it is a large part of U—
na refers to the good intentions—thepurl.
ty-the lofty patriotism—and the high he
roic virtues et the President, 1 have no an-'
ewer to make; If you think you can afford
to indulge in Chat tray, 1 have no objection.
If such clouds of Incense as you, flood him.
with are grad vi to the royal senses, they
gill perhaps lull him into a temporn7
oblivion of tome harsher epintons that
have lately conic up to his unwilling ears,
nisi will do you no personal pre
judice in that direction at ail events.
Allow me, Lowevst, to any to coneln-
Mon, • that you ere greatly mistaken'
if You suppose that your high °facial posi
tion can help either the man orEcause that
you ere clinmpioning, or redound to
- your own persouni advantage Ito history.
Very respectfully, .
Your obedient Fervent,
THOS. WILLIAMS:
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS
JAMES T. BEADY &
(8... r. to 8. Jost. & C 0..)
Corner rourth and Wood Sta.,
BANKERS & BROKERS,
DIILLYee IX ALL'Ammo or
Goverzunent Seourities,
Foreign :Esc) ;nge,
Gold, Silver and Coupons.
COLLECTIONS maAe oa all accasalble poLuts
the United nate s and CaaMN.
Interest allowed on TimelDeposlts.•.
num., punen - 4 - 1
111.101:1 ": 1 °. , 'InTI:trageraitVilticoliectai
ruin ,rl.a.r.Ar..be . 7 . Aprit
y ut„la ,treolti,L,,, c,co„ IQ NOGIIRG e trieh
ItcPtl licitll Scratch: Scratdiil
t•W ANNE'S uI.I•iTMENT tUre., 11r.5 Vont 1210
lko.r.L
•1 ii.• Ten &,•.tunes Obtlywnt, "T ItTT CIL. •
••ITCII•• in. 51M1111141 . 1 •".YETTLIV•
"ITCH" NEvett E.Nows • I'ET EH` ,
••I . -•TETTKII."
TO VAIL Y.TTE It"
" LETT Ede •
••ITCH" IN CEILING "TETTEIt"
ITert. , . 20.114ENT;1 10
"TErrEtt•l
•ITC II" CON MA1X.1 . .t...
Carts rllts. Salt cad, Itl.ll,
1 , 4111
otllv by Or. ItWAY.SE 3 907•:,
....Al by 31'GL/11111AI* t .31'KEN.1.A.".,
' Slar , e ttrt.ct. GEO. A. It ELLE, , Iit Wood at.,
antl.l,), .11takctst., iltbbburgb• •
auZS.I2.::ITS
- _
TIIE GRAND ;SECRET.—The
grand secret hi medication is to help iaturs. tics-
TAR , and Ree.cCATX—these ore the Alpha and
Onteila of the only theory Of cure that has oenitnon
tonne for Itabasii.' If the nervous System is shat
tered the :nuncios weak, and the mind, like the
body. in a state of partial rodahae—what la beat to
dot limsou teattlesaa the answer: .
. .
BUILD I.ll ° TORR. MAR. .
Brace . Im up as you would brace a totlrrine edl.
boo. Thu ' , LUDO.] he needs le a Tonic Alterative.
Bring 11110 up out of the depths of ,Debility and De
-4'on
• NV LTII IIOSTETTER • tt BITTERS.
That. cannot Injure: A child may take them to
el are gutted to its yearn, wittdot the pee - (Way of
harm. The enfeebled vital powers oto as sure to
erabultd eberigelleally to their t011...na1; the wilted
wass is loot . eel Its birdies under the elvifylea and
el:feral/lei rain. in ail caee •of dot:ditty the Bitters
are ab...liately required. There in no sob:di:um or
sdcoeedanetuu that will 111-their place. Resort to
thin molt ieunderfil of Modern Tonics .
AND ALL WILIOE WELL.
Sear in MOLD that In Ilyapepsla, Intermittent
Paean,ltilioub Disorders. and Alfeelona of the
Noreen, lie other v.:Moine will produce one litrwoi
tile ydoToner: that turarlab.y follows the use of
thin excellebt. Invigorator aud Correrilee told
cerrywnere.—.Y. 1. Yrteune r bet. ":7,
. _
1 3 3eli lif=l
"WM. BINGHAM Jr., Adams Express Office,
Si Fifth &reef, ie an authorimi Agent to receive
Advertisements for the GAZA'TTA and ail other
paper/ throughout the Unitod State/ and the
Chnr.dru.
Tun I'EACLIERS:or ALLEGILIR.
(.01,14TY are ri.'que.V.Al to meet to the
Fourth Wlr.l Fit to nergh, at 1 0 .L. a.
6,%Fu1t1).k1", the &I , 14Y NeFomb.r. for th.
T' l L l 'er f A ' / . .111i C
.1. WC:IO,M. lailsir. G 3lll..Lo3
.1 : 1 .1 1 .OIiAN„ E.. , 1. KTILL,
ool:n15 WILT, .1. ~H 116, ,\ . •
Orricr. Manioc Ott. ComeanV. )
'order Market and Amer Sin - tte.
rirabout.u. Oct. 3161. iwlo ) -
r j'ffEl IbiIIECTOIIS OF THE MA
s ic 011.1:0. neve tide day declared a dividend
erT)ini CENT. ant of the corrilure far the
nc tonLir Of Ct.:Ober, •poyable WI • ntl after Nov. SiTt.
rafer oak ;nosed from 166" to
RINEHAn.T. Secretarr,
units EL:II6BA iNAPPAIROZ COMPANY* t
I . II,6DCHGLI.
A_N ELECTION
FOR THIRTEEN DTRECTOII.4 OF T 111.3 CO., • •
Tn serve f‘r the ruuln^ ' will be bold at Its
niMee, in itli;;aler's I.luildina, 'Water street, on
Ttf r.acember lath, 1601. between the boars
of II a. H., nod I r.
.ItOLIEUT FINNEY, rocretser.
orriceCirizar , S . Vises:Man Ban.ers.Y CO., I
r1rr6er22 , 4,1 , 07. Ist, 1.20.
TILE EIGHTH ANNUAL MEET
sr the 7teeklsolders of the
CMTIZL'Si' I".6ENGEII IIAILWLY comr.s..Nr
Uf Oar Ctt. of Pl:t there, will be held at JACOB
CBLE No. 27 Youth street,
ON 'MONDAY, NOVEMBE2 lOru. isaa.
At 7 o'clock r. xt . at which time nod Piece a Board
of Illrectc.ra will be •lected for the cututott year,
awl eel otbor Imbibe Si traUtacted am may come be.
fore th ottet.ng. B. r. - corcw.is.•
unhurt hetretetry.
SELLING OFF
AT C OST,
To Close Gilt Business,
LA.DIES' FURS.
GIINSEMIAITSER & CO.,
No. OS ifIAMEET STREET.
A ri ORDINANCE granting Meagre.
It athono, g •hm .t Co. pod abottitlsrstr* Co.
the light to Erect Toorerapli Coles.
illCsiOst 1. Be it ordained and mutated blithe May
or, Aldermen and CM:sera of Pltte6ee24, In Bassi
and Common Councils assembled, and it is hereby
ordained and tootled by authority Of Meier's!, That
thu putt/eke be eel Is hereby /muted to molars.
Lien/nen, Rabin Se Co. and Einoeuberger it CO. to
Wect s 110 t.t Telearabh• Poles from their unlace on
ater s re.t r br the way of Ferry, Liberty. mane.
Duquesne V. ey and Etna street, to , their works In
the Fmk Ward. Provide... That the poles ahali be
of - pattern apnroved Ir the street Committee, and
thedon. to their eatisfattion. i'rorlded Jut
tier, that the city shall bare the prletlegit of milt"
en.d poles fore Fire Alum Telegraph. and permit
oCher pant.. to use the same poles. under. the d tree.
1100 oft, C ot•ent Committee. on the pigment. to
tee barites Who psld for ertellog them • fair imm
.penseilon I resided, That the • Icy Couuctie *ball
elan. time bare Abe authority. to order their re
mind -irchanke of user notation. stud In case of re
(coal to ssimpi• with aeldor. I
d•r„ he street Com
mlestoners sball be empowered to mmediatelys,-
them.'
tirdalued suit enacted Otto • law in Councils, this
7ith doyen' October. A. D J OAS. • •
AMES McAULEY.
• • Proslacnc °jacket Council.
Attest: E. S.tonnoor.
Clerk of oeltet Council.
• TilliS. STEEL
Presided& of Common Council.. ,
Attett IttOrt 11,11.0.67=4 '
Clerk of Common Council.
En
A N ORDINANCE granting Moor.
Itereet L Co. the debt to Erect Telegraph Volta.
bac rent, I. Re it ordained and enacted by the ]fey
or,Aidervisn and Mfrs.. of Pittsburgh, IN. Wed
ad Ctmeron Council: asse m bled. and et is hereby
on:W(ll4,i and enacted Dy authority etf the:ems, That
the. p.ivlltege ho and la hereby erautea to Moorhead
I Co. to steer a hue of Telegraph Pole, from their
°deceit ou meet, via Finn Wouel.atidgeeohd
Went,. to
ef e r Ise... Provided. /bat the poles
ellen be t he pattern approved be. the Street Com.
mitten end lbe work dare to their satlataetion. And.
Provided further. That the city shell have the Inde
nter of urine told poles for a lire. Alarm Tele.
gran, nod may permit other ;tartlet,' o 050 the LIMO
putt under (Do .Itlonef the OtrOtt.ool3ll9ntet;•
WI the payipeut toile pante., who pain PrGett
rig deem, 6f•lcrontoenaation. And, yme,e. s t Fur
then, That the Cite Council. shall et shy time have
the authority to order-their removal. or change of
their yoilllon, and Irt casco: refasal to Comply
aalel oeder, l he Street Committee shall be empower
ed to Immediately remote them. .
-• • _
Ordained and enacted Intp c
Inn In otitiCeta. tett.
-- - 4:11 day - of t•-etober, A. 11., - 18011. • •
JAMES MrAIMET.
President of f4lect Connell
Attest: E. N. Itonnow,
Clerk of &lon Connell.
TIiuDIAD STEEL,
• ' Prestildoto[Cotaluen Column
Attert: flvcu M•Alwortzu,
roltni Clerk of Common Connell. • . •
A N OftULYANCE authorizing the
Gradthe, Paving sod .11ettlett ttlx Crirb-none
Wylie isteser, from tattoo to Crawford streets.
bECTION 1. Be It ordotoedancrensded.bs the Xay.
or; a ',icemen, end (Nelson of Pflfsbursh, ie deka
and Camino. Counolty asiembriet, and ft Cr hefted)
encketrd by the duticority etrths Imes. That the 110.
cO, il.ng lteretator ue aud he is bertb directed to
ati Vella,. ror ' , proposals for , tirialLer,• Paring and
Corhics Wylie Street, item Fulton to ccaae,oro
streets, nod to lot thaaanselh the ineseerdirected
by an ordinance et Von hells, planed august Lett l)., lal7. mid - art Act of Aztembly„, approved
January Ith. A. IL, 1E44.
titC. 2. 'rear any ordinance or part or lir ordl.
na:co coollictlos reltilthe
the
of this oaatitarice
at the eyespot Lbw!. ite and the same to hereby re
pra.ad pa Par es the tame affects this ordinance.
ordained all enactor' Into a law fe Commits, this
27111 day of October. A. I ` ! • - • ,
&ALES 11c1X1j.lr.r. .- -
Preardent °reelect COrackell..
Attest: E. a. Blusaosr.
Clerk of Select CostactL •
-,Tllollti STEHL,
• • Pr/andel:nor Continon CciancLl.
:ter,: MPH Ste , Slatetre. " " . •
nein,. Cheek of Common COandl; ' • -
700 OGEES GOSHEN CHEESE?,
toxes Crawford County f-bee9tl
3 key ;Time Lard,
Ia s tare and tvr nle by •
nalar. a rarrov.
nm Not, in and 114 Sceetid street.
'Vcipartner
thlP l'erriorom .afelaa ander the name and
stile of T. AI. PARTON * cm Water
wae dinealvad on Qs Dl. i 01.00Tu.,
BMA 1086. by Ma death of T.aiiSTUN.
Denoes having claims !Leah:tat the Ana .w. 11., plea.*
preseat thorn for setUrlnent. •
• . ATIMITIZO.NG. Orr.,
.7011 N O. DALUAS:
Stirtlvlng Danner., aa ttmoliat.and‘;
oc'Oons3 Maar attrat.:Plasbarga.,,
MRS. S. 4.'STo.llDART*ronitihi
forM Dor cuotomerw Mit oho too t4Otzted
from t h e tut 'nth • listorsamo asooftmemt of
MILLINERY GOODS.
Hoolair rezoned to: ttoi SICONEY . TWOR. - WO. '45
avgjyr. *LLEWEIIarr tITY.
REMOVAL-Tilk AJNDERSIGN.
VD Iwo tetnorfti h. .me. of tbellOPX out
we nix tram sa **lke , street: shuts:o6 tolbsu
Wort. cm ,D4ll1 1 ,01 41
Soctog63 oeteaffat bs (no&
f!gSiiai!MWM
T 4l -dist tir<;be fore the st E
, 3! January, In art obi establlend 800 wad
tboe boust of flalladalpnial
_„.. !
_
£3431.43E42411.49:ZT.:
win" caa thilueDec s t eed tiade irk Ohio awl cst
ema Addret, with nefertilee.
nal:cu flux 18374 PUtt A- r.• n.
WANTED,
For If., MorST WA:SIII.NGTON at.113001...,%pp1y
on nr lwlore S.TIJELDA.I", Novembor 31.
(.3 NORG Clil V EILI, V. 0 ., tars.
tNTED AT- 0741 CE--To onpage
1% - a re w mono( enet re and 'UMW.. art. testy •-••
...ant to make aleuey. to a 11 ht and honora y .ble bee
,C•F (6) 6.t(1411, NE) , . ISt ENT6I)
AtritC LE. etarta: calm, ri130.000 has been made
n,e .ik within the 1.. t dAys; tiood.”taty
atlo
e• terms to ttertit generally:
A.;•TED. Call at No. 103 i st. (.'fair
Street; !team No. 3. • oC.L.9
ATITEIIt--AGENTS-O;SOOPER
11itA tt—F.verrwl,te to Introduce 111.111
!'LA FAMILY hEW I NO 11.%e11l Improv.
ed and perfreted. it alit atiteh. qntli;
1•Ind. brae! Aid erubraidet brantirmly. trice only
120. .11aktng the elasue leek ;ditch, end lelly
lat:n.liVwfoe
'atlaceerieratritgllll,llregr Ate , r . * . t r4; •
that atamlrit ran be made. Addreas en
1.4/11(1 No. Orant ett , et: riltaburth. Y., era
advertlaement of the Ink le 1. Lyon asel the Weed.
75ew Maellsr. es. in ...Aber column, tett' ma rm.
for Ladle,. everywhere, to Introdums_the , Coodnott
Sense rawly '-.too Machine. 1111PrOVed ne ,
(acted. It hem. &11, hind: braid ,
and embrol,er
bee
only $2O--mat ,
tog the elastic tact -ktltch.. and tulip warrautet tor
turee yeast. We pay the above wages. or a coin.
mission, from a bleb twice that a110t:mt....1 he
mule. Ad,lets or cali. ou (3. :lirailll a co.,
Ware No. Oas 0. Firthatreet, rbtivlelphia,
Ail hiter•anewtavd pxemptly w lrMiCliCtliat•
terms.
I an Ito
WANTED,
•
•
ACENTS AND SALESMEN
Sn every Town. CUT and Cpanty In the
EOuLbern and WeAcrn Etalea. •
Everybody out of emptcrrcent wilt Lodi; to thrtr
intercat to call at
No: 43 Filth',lt., up Stairs,
Or addrass P. 0. Buz IUI Pittsburgh. Ps.
AGENTS WAITEDFOR A NEW
Boor, NOW READY.
. ,
WOMEN OF Tl-3 1 2 WAR.
Br FRANK M X Itr. sethc of Rebellion
.." Record,"
The °Wert of this work Is to colleet 'sod present.
Untritl.:, Or the cervices of the • >men who ohare4
ttle T urils v o 4 f l t , b . e . vraAa n tg i tger,ht s t h o o thera i gsgiorle s s c ;
pages, and is I.llust:Ated with. Steel plate portrait.,
erlgraVerl is the most Improved Style. bold only by
subscription. ,
!or Lirculars, tsiciress cr apply to
I==
65 Flnn ctreet. rittobusgh
AGENTS WANTED BY TUE EU-
ItEtta. STlVlriti MACHINE COMPANY to
salt then. NEW $23 MACLUNE. sew Prom
tissue paper to heavy Beaver cloth or leather wMb •
out change of feed. nendle •:r tension. ilotPalustlng
pressure foot and newly dt,lgneo four atOtiotklial
Addtesi, onelnattlA•lap,
'.t it. HULL&Co.,
fUi FIRla tlircet:t=:,,LF,git.V..
MEN WANTED,
TO ACT AS SALESMEN,
lElther permanently or temporarily, yrhgt are rout
pm tint to engage boollaess relations,
Apply In person or addreu
D. II 0.1SEI:,
i5013L1,55 1:18 Gnat street., PltUbargt,„ ra.
110 -PARTNERSHIP NOTICE—The
s. , autlerillglnd hare this ilariformsd co-part.,
ship under taa name and style of
EVANS, "MLA'S & GILMORE.
eirooinNoss TO
M. ILIARTUN b• CO.,
For tbo parpose carry - 134°u the
TtOAAC r!ivir IE
A.ND -
SHIP CHANDLERY BUSINE S S,
And Manz/ 4c to Ten of
Cordage, Packing, Yarn!, &c.,
' AT TILE OLD ETA/4 D. • ---
Tqcs. a 0 W.stiter Siltroot.
F. EVAN's,
JOLIN B. DAI.LAS,
. , • is. p. 11. 41 , 1L110.1 ,
PrtmtrAnsr, 00..721,130. ocst
mod
TO PRINTERS.
ISLAVELICI CI.IS3CII.I\TC:IMI
FOB TUE PrECI7J.iI: or
PRINTING PRESSES CHEAP.
The following Flit:Ong Presses net elfeeed for sale
on reasonable terms. Ina antoortner leaving no fur
ther use for thew ' viz:
One Haggle. Enain• Dress:'.
One HugglesCard and Bill Tired r rezaz
lion Iturglen Yen ee Card Press; • •
Three Hand Presses, Imperial Oss.
=
Also, I lame number orSreocd-ilsud'lltrST EDS'
sultabla for use i, Country Nesrapaper
Latices. for particulars nitireva
E 3, mit.avrJura - ,
coraar Wood and 7141 rd Et., rittaburgli.
ocaJtaillo • ~
E. S. I ADORN, M. D.,
Parion. and
.97
Mei-chazirts'aiotel,"
Devote' ecyeeaaiattentionto 4.l.sesic, brake
ir r t , jw-- - -,_
_f: ,
': . -- -,-- -1 4 -. EL .EI 4: - .---:s '4
'
y.
---- . i 4772...,,
-.. --
~..s.,..l.s.__a iTac• - AN, , ql, , ?.
,
------.----::- 6. i
AND THE ORGANS OF IRE CHEST
Erobrecleirell Acute and Chronic Sfeledlea or the
Eye. rilloderst, Cross "Eye. Yelling of the Eye- .
(„ararset, Irrafnees. Roeder arid
Bors'ug 10 the Sere. Merl:urge from the
Nara, ete...Dtareses of 1.1.4 - Nose, Ca..",
BronehrUs. Arthrn. Com-
earoptlou art 4 41Yeettoos of the .
Heart 4014 btoMaoh.
eeZ):m"B
Fon se=.-.
The followtni 4enctltred pro , erty wl,ll be oZa-red
at pthate o.le anti! B ITUAIDA.Y. Norembisr . 10th
16:71 , 1M AC61.01" 14.1:1)
At ltla lina..l of 11ranot's liltad, hlct'late town.
'.O/17. will lie mold In lota to e¢ pureha.ers..
AD-ELEVEN LOTS OF-131:0132:
Inliancheater. being lots Kos la% ;07, Ira, 'Loa,
SW, U 1013.113.14, ILS and' 113 In the plan of the
extenalon of Manchester and bounded by treble
stress. Adams street. Cedar alley and iVuhmpton
street.
The aboye described property alll bo 'sea at rea
sonable prices asd on easy terns., Title lodinputn-
For fusilier infornsaiden a pply to
• • A. B tOW NINO.
Or bls attorneys. B. A. AW. U. PIUISVIANCK.
oat:lntl to. 116 Firth street, Plitsbnrab.
THE ADDITIJNA L
43100 13cmaity
=
MoNASTEIL, GAZZAM 8z CO.,
AV. 9S Grant Street,
o rittpboms-sla, 3Pe
-
.
LL PERSONS . INTERESTED
hereby notified tbAt the undersigned Vie..
arr. appointed to view, and. mesa deaootar and
benefit. lb; th• Opening of Two ilLredtl In amnia
{Vera, Allegheny.
One from the Junction of rioralarand rairmaa‘
streets East n:. feet; and
One from tbea..... or - fountain .4 71enting
_ " 7llinlo p ere t n tiMmies. on TIODAT. Novara.
Der 280. It ILI ID o'clock A.M.. tarEtaftorta
ilntlee of.thalr apyolnizocut. •
ZAK-3 G
Y EA
'.:1V131
11ZIESI
DREGS! DRUGS!! DRUGS!!!
. JAMES. T. SAMPLE
HAVING Tiotnikr ELLl6l[l%li Uti
I.loUsx ON cvaNir.U. Or FICDSBAL
ir.usirif3o24 .4.m SUell24l`,
Wlll
tup ou haFelli , fall 'acoortzunt of all klo4i of
And wa t.
tbe t UI eb, be Wit ebsapar thuo . and other
bouswo chit..
Preralptlon. earefral preparedby • tlrstaii“
! I PA r iiiirds of PILBSUNEI3I` awl PANCT 301P11
oOTB AND
B -
I . No. SS Market St., Pittsburgh,
a.vori [iris* stock skliitips or
. . . • _ _
.331:204:STRIAL.Tina sizzasans
Which al Si foiramd WeenebaiDer than theeffitiO
yb. 4 Also tall. ardor" for tas
‘MAICZ. - OrDOOTiI w9D 1150E5, • whtela tovlrar
.rogaNrig ukeuo
Mot Eta.
otikeabt= No. alr et street:
uIIu WZMIIM
; • , F1T11.1171014
itkLECTIOrN
t F i O stßaaT IBEfit,u
`La"srrwruserads
lt•PzrF
Ltra
ia[kot:
Wa
t tzoresll oa.kt usca e e . 0i,7
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