Daily patriot and union. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1858-1868, July 27, 1863, Image 1

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    BATES ON ADVERTISING.
Pour lines or less eonstitato half a square. Ten lines
MOTO than four, constitute a 'guars.
114.20011 80 00 Oat mi., one day.— DO so
Gee week-- SO " one week.... 200
" one month.. 800 " one month.. ODO
cc three months 600 '" three months 10 00
14 ' SIX linatlia.. 800 " MI months.. 1600
4 oneyear... —l2 GO 44 one year —2O 00
g Bubo= notices inserted in the LOCAL COLUMN,
eit bet. re marriages and deaths, vot osiTs rim LIIII for
eh insertion. To merchants and others advertising
T the year, liberal terms will be offered.
1j The number of insertions must be deaignated on
/111 advertisament. -
Marriages and Deaths will be inserted at the SILVIO
syg:s regalar advertisements.
Busi nos darb.S.
SILAS WARD..
110. 11, NORTH THIRD' ST. I RAILITISBUSG.
S TENN W AY'S
higLOD4ODA VIOLINS; GITITAItS,
Banjos, Flutes, Fifes, Drums, Accords:one,
BTEIHeIIa MINN MID MOIL MIRSly s 49.1 49,
PHOTOGRAPH FRAME'S. ALBUMS,
Large Pier and Mantle Mirrors, Square and Oval Frame
of eseryllescriptun made to order. Rewinding done.
Agency for Heare's Sewing Machines.
Ey. sheet Music sent by Mail, oetl-3
JOHN W. GLOVER, .
MERCHANT TAILOR!
Has just received from New York, an assort
ment of
SEASONABLE GOODS,
*MOIL he offers to his =dome= and the 'Wag in
nov22) MODERATE PRICES. dtt
TIT HARRY WILLIAMS,
V V •
t7iaALII%I JELarMI\TIC,
402 WALNUT navvy.
General Chime far Soldiers promptly collected, State
Olalms adjusted, &c., &c. mar2o-dlm
BMITD. & E WING,
ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW,
THIRD STREET, Harrisburg,
Prattle* in theseveial Courts of Dauphin county. Col-
Melons nuns promptly.. _ A. C. SKITS,
J. B. RWRIG.
iCOOK, Merchant Tailor,
• - 2? ONSSNI77 132., between Second and Front,
Hes just returned from the city with mistesortment of
CLOTHS, CASSINIEDRS AND rzsrnvisgs,
Whieh will be sold at moderate prices and made Up-to
order q and, alio, as assortment of READY 'IUDS
Clothing and Elentleagealo isrultddisi Goods.
novittlyd
EN 113TILY.
elbpn, Di D. Sy
N 0 . 119 MARKET STREET,
181 & ICCINKWEI BMIDINO,IIP STAIRS.
jagatt
RELIO-lOUS BOOK STORE,
lOT - AND SUNDAY SCHOOL DEPOSITORY,
E. S. GERMAN.
17 0017TH MRCOND STREIT, ABOVE COUIONIIT,
zassissuao, PA.
Depot for nasals of Stereoseopes,atereoseopieViews,
"Wadi and Musical Instruments. Also, subscriptions
taken for religious pubEcatiens. n 08047
JOHN G. W..MAHTIN,
FASHIO.NABLI s
DARE , WRITEI,
HEM'S HOPRL, HABB18B11( Bar, PA. •
All manner of FIRMING, WEDDING AND BUSI
NNSS CARDS executed in the moot ortrutto styletand
emit reasonable terms. deel44tf
IJNION. HOTEL,
Ridge Avenue, corner of
HARRISBIIIIG, PA.
The unlersigned informs the public that he has re
eentiy rrnevatrd and refitted hie yell-known " Union
aptsl on Ridge avenue, near the Sound House, CM is -
prepared to &mom ambito citizen% st - angen and travel
el f . . •
afford, and at his bar wit be found superior brands of
liquors and matt beverages. The Very best eacomma
diatoms for railroaders employed at the Amps in this
vicinity. ran WI illilifilf BOdTGILN.
FRANKLIN I10:138R, _
DALTIMOBI,
plessemt and commodious Hotel has been tho
rougltly re-fitted and re-furnished. It is pleasantly
situated on North-West corner of Howard and Franklin
streets. a few doors west of the Northern Central Rail
way Depot. livery attention paid to the comfort of his
gusts. IJIISMIMG, Proprietor,
(Late of Selina Grove. Pa.)
THEO_ 11 1 , BOHEFFER,
BOOK, CARD AND JOB PRINTER,
. 18 DILRIEST 81111112, RARRIBIII7IIO.
17 Particalszattention paid to printing , tiding and
binding of Railroad Blanks, Manifests, Insnranoo Poll.
Cm.Gbooks. 0111-11oads,
104, lag, RIiMINI and liminess Oar& priott4 at TIIJ7
low prices and in the best styli. Janll
ROBERT SNODGRASS,
ATTORNEY .Ar LAW,
Office 24'orth Thiid street, third door ab - ove Nor
garriaburg.
N. 11.—Vension, -Daunt.? Mid Rllituy claims or all
Wads ptosecnt d and collected.
Refer to Rona John O. Kunkel, David Mumma,
and R. A. Lumberton. inyU-d&wika
WM. H. MILLER,
R. E.:FEitGUSON,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW.
OFFICE IN
BROM MAKE R'ELBUILDINGS
SECOND STREET,
BETWEEN WALNUT and MARKET SQUARE,
ap-29wh.41 Nearly opposite the Buehler House.
THOB. O. MAODOWELL
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
MILITARY CLAIM AND PATENT AGENT.
Office in:the Exchange. Walnut at., (Up Stairs.,)
Haying formed a connection with parties in Wash
ington cur. wao are reliable badness men. any busi
ness eauseated with any of the Oeportmerda will meet
with immediate and earehil attsatien- m 64
DIL . C. WEICHE - 14 ,
SUMMON AND OCULIST,
RESlDltinfll THIRD NBAR NORTH STAMM.
Re is now folly prepared to attend promptly to 110
datleaef profession in all its brandies.
A LONG s -ND irpsy inFOONSEINVI. IineDICAL Bizessmas
jastfles him in promising fall Ind =pi luthitselaos is
all who may favor him with a sell. be tladisessebhzead•
or one atium natal% Tvilsl4/ 1 1 ,0
TAILORING.
43i- 33 C7l O . .dge... Mr.. i_. 17 43- g.
The subscrib.r is ready at eO. 94, MARKET BT:,
four doors below Pour% street, to make
MFN'S AND BOVA 0140 THING
auy deßired etyla, and with akin and prompt - nem.
Porous wishing mating done can hare it don* at the
shortens outline ap2T-dl7
CHARLES F. VOLLMEB,
UPHOLSTERER,
C7lestnue street four doors above Second,
orronrrn WaseuxQion Hann Romeo
Is prepared to furnish to order, is the very beet style of
workmanship. 4 pring and Hair blattreseee, Window Our
taint, Lounges, and aU other artiotea of furniture io
line, on short notice snd moderato terms. Raving ex
perienoe in the business, he feels warranted 'Lakin
abate of Debne Patronage, confident of his ability to give
emit on, janiTolt?
MILITARY CLA MS AND PEN
BOONS
The cede. dried have entered into an essodation for
the colleepon of Military •CU hes and the seentring of
Pensions for wounded and disabled sol4bres
It slot-in *34 Master-oat Rolla. officers' Pay Rolls,
°Mew acid VtllilliN** B * ll Pawl. perta n-
lad to tb•' m MATT siirslee will be MIMI out properly
se& Papeditieualy
Moe in lbw Vnehange Hnildlnge, Walnut between
&we a awl Third streets, near Omit% Hotel. Harrill
ba a. Pa. 'VHOB 0 MAt•DOW Lb,
i!2l dtf THOMAS ♦. MAAKiata.
**if
PIANOS,
INFALLIBLE LINIMENT,
GREAT EXTERNAL REMEDY,
FOR RHEUMATISM, GOUT, NEURALGIA,
LUMBAGO, STIFF NECK AND •JOZNrS,
SPRAINS, TIMM, CUTS & WOUNDS,
PILES, HEADACHE, and ALL RHEU
MATIC and NERVOUS DIaORPERS.
Dr. Stephen Sweet, of Connecticut,
The great Nntnral Bone Setter.
Dr. Stephen Sweet, of Connecticut,
ze Aroma all over the United States.
Dr. Stephen Sweet, of Connecticut,
Ie the author of " Dr. Sweet's Infallible Liniment."
Dr. Sweet's Infallible Liniment
Cures Rheumatism and never fails.
Dr. Sweet's Infallible Liniment
Is a certain cure for Neuralgia. •
Dr. Sweet's Infallible Liniment
Clime Burns and Scans immediately.
Dr. Sweet's Infallibie Liniment
Is tao innt known remedy for Sproins sad Bruises.
Dr. sweet's Infallible Liniment
Curesliesdathe immediately and was never known
to fail.
Dr. Sweet's Infallible Lhainient
Affords immediate relief for Piles; and seldom falls
to ears.
Dr. Sweet's Infallible Liniment
Cures Toothache is one minute:
Dr. Sweet's Infallible Liniment
Cares Cuts and Wounds immediately and leaves no
Dr. Sweet's Infallible lEnalinent
Is the best remedy for Bores in the known world.
Dr. Sweet's Infallible Liniment
Has been used by more than a million people, and all
.praise it. .
Dr. Sweet's Infallible liniment
la'truly a " friend in need," and every family should
hays it at hand.
Dr. Sweet's Infallible Liniment
Is for sale by all Druggists. Price 25' cents.
ItIONARDBON & Co., •
Pole Proprietors, Norwich, Ot.
For sale by all Dealers.. ap2o eow-d&w .
kW. WORK PROMISED IV
-Broad atnet,
STEAM DYEING ESTABLISHMENT,
B.STWERN FOITATZI AND ri - E173,
WA-RIABBIIRS PA.
Where every description of Ladies , and Gentlemen's
}amen% Pies* Goods, &c., are Dyed, Cleansed, and
Waled in the bast maims? and at the shortest notloe
not-mewl, rtirman A, 00.. reurrlptm.
r F. WATSON,
MASTIC WORKER
eND'
PRACTICAL CEMENTER,
Is prepared to Cement the exterior of Buildings with
ha New York Improved
Water-Proof Mastic Cement,
. This Material is different from all other Cements.
It forms a solid. datable adhesiveness to any surface.
imperishable by the action of water or frost. Every
good building should be coated with this Cement; it is
a perfect preserver to the walls, and makes a beautiful,
line finish, equal to Eastern brown sandstone, or any
ccnoi desired.
Among others for witOM I hat applied the Mastic
Cement, I refer to the. following gentlemen:
Bissell, residence, Pella street, Pittsburg, finished
five sears.
J. H. Shoenberger, residence, Lawrenceville, finished
five years. ' -
James MiCandlass, residence, Allegheny City,finished
fire years.
Calvin Adams, residence, Third at set, finished four
years,
A. Hoeveler, residence„.Lswrenceville, finished four
years. -
J. D M'Cord, Penn street, finished four years. .
Hon. Thomas Irwin, Diamond street, finished four
years.
St Charles Hotel and Girard House, finished five
years.
Entwining Court House and Bank, for Barr & Moser,
Architects, Pittabu g, finished five years.
Orders received at the Mee of IL Paint
gimp, 20 Seventh street, Or please a 4 firess
T. i WILTfiCH,
maylB—tf P. 0. Box 13 6. Pittsburg, Pa.
REBBRB. OHICKERING 1 CO:
HATE AGAIN OBTAINED TB
GOLD MEDAL!
AT TII2
MECHANICS' FAIR. BOSTON,
el TER rilren'y'7o7pw.ni ToR sr
Wareroom for the 0211010EBING PIANOS, at Harris
burg at 92 Market street,
neiter W,Terumuipp MITATO ATORi
ADISti! YOU KNOW IA ERE YOU
J can get Hoe Note Papers B^rotepoes Vie/ Ming ite4
Wedding Cards? At oOH BOOKSTOItg
ry UPNIOOR STOCK oe Lulu. tits.—
Wit DOOK, Js., & CO.. are now able to oCer to
their ensto..icts and toe public at I.rge, a stock of the
purest liquors ever imp .rted into this market, compri
sing in part the following varieties :
WHISK I —laid a, SCOTCH,OLD BOURBON.
wo - s—PORT. SHERRY, OLD MADEIRA.
OTARD, DUPEY & CO. PALE BRANDY.
A MICA SPIRITS.
PRIME NEW ENGLAND RUM.
DRAKE'S PLANTATION BITTERS
These liquors can all be warranted; and in addition to
these, Dock Jc Co. have on hand a large variety of
whiggy invi Brandy, to which they invite the
Particular aftentiee er the public
WESSIEWS ARMY AND NAVY
POCKET DICTIONARY.
Just rewired and for sale st
El ALE ragß'S 800 ,CBT-ORN.
NOTIONS_--Quita a Panty Qr lawful
sad entertaining articles—alteep—at
BOOKSTONII.
BBLACKINGI—bIAsorfs "Catudenes
BlLLouvie.”-100 GROB& snorted alma , jut r•
salved end For gala. orkolosade and nail.
a.eIWM. 1:1001'. .Tit.. 0 , fin
VpkTDoW Nil &DER of linen ) gllir
bordered; sad P &PBS BLINDS of am vadlras
vadriby of dodgem sad oraamenta ; ago, 01711 VAIN
'MUM sad TAMILS as very low prides Call at
Sa l e
BOOketere.
, • • .
- * T
..,,
n 5....,,,,,,
--- ' ---
a
ilk . t
...
,
911 I I illq
n t on.
_
VOL. 5.-NO. 280.
iiltbkal.
DR. SWEET'S
THE
lOpting.
ONE WEEK!
1 0 11:
PENNSYLVANIA
104 MARICJIT STUBS?,
FIARRO3AURO, PA., MONDAY, JULY 27 1403.
T H E
Weekly "Patriot Sr, - Union,"
THE CHEAPEST PAPER PUBLISHED IN
• PENNSYLVANIA!
AID •
THE, ONLY DNMOORATIO , PAYEE PUBLISHED AT
TUB SILT OF GOIMINDERNT !
FORTY-FOUR COLUMNS OF READING MAT
TER EACH WEEK!
AT, THE LOW.PRICE OF ONE DOLLAR
AND FIFTY CENTS ! .
WHEN
NOPSORINND FOR IN CLUES OF NOT LESS
THAN TEN COPIES 20 ONE ADDRESS!
We have been compelled to raise the club subscription
price to one dollar and fifty cents in order to save our
selves from actual loss. Paper has risen, including
taxes, about twenty-five per cent., and is still rising;
and whim we tell our Demoeratia friends, eandidly, that
We Can no' longer afford to sell the Weekly PATRIOT AID
USION at one dollar a year. and must add fifty Cents or
stop the publication, we trust they will 'appreciate our
position, and, instead of withdrawing' their subscrip
tions, go-to work with a will to increase our liatin every
county in the State. We have InideavOlVd, end ebau
continue our efforts, to make the paper useful as a party
organ, and welcome as a news messenger to every fam
ily. We flatter ourselves that it.haa not been without
Mime influence in producing the glorious revolution in
the politics of the State achieved at the late election;
and if fearlessness in the discharge of duty, fidelity to
the principlei of the party, and an anxionsdesire to pro-
Mote its interests, with some experience and a moderate
degree of ability, sea be rinds serviceable hereafter, the
Weekly PATRIOT AilitAlON Rill not le less - useful to
the party or less welcome to the family circle in the fu
ture than Innis been in the paid. We confidently look
for increased encouragement in this great enterprise,
and Appeal to every influential Democrat in the State to
lead es his aid is running our, sapseription list up to
twenty or thirty thousand. The ;expense to each Indi
vidual hi trifling, the benefit-to the party may be great.
Believing that the Demoitraey of the State:feel the ne
cessity of sustaining a fearless central organ, we make
this appeal to'them for assistance with the fullest confi
dence adenomas.
The came towns which - 44nm as to raise the price
of the Weekly, operate in regard to the Daily paper, the
price of which is also increased. The additional cost to
each subscriber will be but trilling; and, while we can
not persuade ourselves that the change necessarilymade
will result in any diminution of our daily circulation,
yet,• were we certain that mu* would, be the coney
pianos, we should still be eompellid to. make it, or siif
'rot a Illinois loss.. Under these eiteumelances we must
throw ourselves upon the: generoidty, or, rather, the
justice of the public, ind abide their' verdict, whatever
it way ,be.
The period for which many of our subscriber, have
paid for their paper being on the eve of expiring, we
tithe the liberty of issuing t h ie notice,' reminding them
of the 1111.1319, in order that they may
THEIR CLititS.
We shall also take it as an especial favor if our present,
subscribers will urge, upon their neighbors the fact that
the Pwrapyr AND Mums is the only Democratic paper
printed in Harrisburg, and considering the large amoupt
of reading =attar, embracing an the current news of
the ray, and
TELEGRAPHIC DISPATCHES
from everywhere up to the moment the paper goes to
press, political, miscellaneous, general and local news
market reports, is decidedly the
CHEAPEST NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN
MS STATE!
*r ha club unmet be-raised if thll pro*
made, and surely there are few places in with& die Or
more energetic men cannot be found who are in favor of
the dissemination of sound Democratic doctrine., who
would be willing to make the effort to raise a club.
DEMOCRATS OF THE INTERIOR
Let us bear from you. - The existing war, and the sp
i rroas hi us of Congress and the State Legisla
ture, are invested with unusual interest, and every man
*Maid have the news.
TERRIS.
DAILY PATRIOT AND IINION!
Single copy for one year, in silvans. • $5 00
Single copy during the session of the Legislature.. S 00
City subscribers ten cents per week.
Copies supplied to agents at the rate of $l6O per hun:
deed.
lIVISRLT PATRIOT AND UNION, a
Published every Thursday.
Single copy one year, iri &dunes ' 112 00
Ten copies to one address If 00
Subscriptions may commence at any time. PAY AL
WAYS IN ADVANON. We are obliged to make this
imperative. Is every inseams cash mast accompany
subscription. Any person sending us a club of twenty
subscribers to the Weekly will be entitled to a eopy for
his Cervices. The price, even st the advanced rate I.
so low that we cannot offer greater inducements than
this. Additions may be made at any time to a club of
lialnieftlefg by remitting one dollar and fifty mute
for each additiOnal name. it is nos neoesefiyte read
u the names of those constituting a club, as we cannot
undertake to address each paper to club subscribers
separately. Specimen copies of the Weekly will be sent
to all who desire it.
0. BARRYTY &00 Harrisburg, Pa.
1.11.—T h 4 fallowing Law, passed by Congress in IVO%
defines the duty of Postmasters in relation to the de
livery of newspapers to club snbearibers :
(Su Lurie, Brouto Co.'s edition of the Lowe of 1860,
Pad's 88,:chapter 131, ser.iios 1.)
"Provided, however, that where packages of new pa
pers or periodicals are received at any poet office directed
to one address, and the names of the club sublerlbers to
which • hey belong, with the postage fors quarter in ad
vance, *hell be handed to the postmaster, he shall de
liver the aims to their reseeative owners,"
To enable the Postmaster to comply with this Psgala•
idea:it will be necersarj that be be furnished with the
List of names comparing the club, and paid $ quarter'*
(or yew%) postage in advance. The uniform Gaviria*,
of Postmaster*• affordP the "Murano° that they will
cheerfully accommoaate club eubscribers, and thp latter
should take care that the postage, which is but a trifle
in mob osee. be paid iv ndrance, rhea 611 the dub'
A SPLENDID ASSORTMENT
• OF
LITHOGRAPHS,
FOrmerly retailed at from $8 to $5. sr• non droned at
60 and 75 cents, and $1 and El 60—rnblished by the Ar
Union, and formerly Mailed tbeltl,
Splendid Pbeletrapble Album pictures of all distin
guished liken and Generals of the army, at only 10 eta.
For sale at " SOB•EFFER , B Bookstore,
18 Market street, Harrisburg.
BASKETS!
LA DIRQ TRAVELING,
MARKET.
SIGIOoL, '
PAP RR,
RNIRR,
•
CLOMPS,
ROUND,
CHILDREN'S,
CAB'
For ode low, by
jell
34000 BUIS H ELS York State Potatoes,
of different kinds,
1,400 Bushels vork State Apples • -
A choice lot of 'York State Butt:r.
Also. a superior lot of Catawba Grapes, and 80 bushels
Shellbarks, „huh. received and for sale low by
'H W. BIBLB ac CO ,
decd-dtf No. 106 Market street.
WHITE BRANDY I 11 -,--nit PRESIKV
IWO PrOIPOB2B.--A very superior RUM, (atrial,
pared just received and for sale by
oily) WM DOCK, Jr.. &Co
EW ORLEANS SUGAR i—Fian IN
LI WEIL MAW? !—For sale by
37 1 ' WM DOME Ja.. &
ACKEILEJA!
u
NIACENNIL, Ni.o 2 man in an Wised pnidur a z
new, and each 204412* 104 "*"" d •
for side low Al WM. DOCK Js., & 00.
(We cannot find space to publish this admi
rable Speech entire, but give below copious
extracts, from which our readers can judge of
its general character. It is full or facts and
materials for thought, end we would recom
mend those who have an opportunity of read
ing whole em s p p e ,y e c r h e
p n n o i t d to fer fail
e t o
tim o e s s o p , e
n es t
i th n e g y th wr e ll b
in its perusal.]
Let us examine, for a moment, whether
those composing the Democratic party are
ra o h r o e tothe w oa
id
i g u o s v tl e y r c m h e a n r t l , e and lt w i t h
whether thoseb ein g
traitors
thus dare to brand with infamy the party of
Jefferson, of Madison, of Jackson and Polk, are
not themselves amenable to this diabolical ac
cusation. "• Democrats traitors to their country !
Assert, if you will, that the mother may be a
traitor to her smiling infant, while it nestles.
in helpless confidence. close to the maternal
fount—that the rippling rivulet harbors tree.
son' to the lilies And jasmine that diffuse their
fragrance on the margin Of its mossy banks—
that the genial soil is traitor to the seed it
nourishes till it germinates and expands into
perfect and stately tree. Sly that virtue is
treason to Heaven, vice to hell—but blistered
be the tongue, palsied the utterance, that would
pollute the air with a calumny so foul, so mon
strously wicked, as that Democrats are traitors
to their government.
Neither would I calumniate the masses of
our.political opponents from a charge so base_
The rank 'and file are always benefit, but liable .
to be deceived, ' cajoled,• tif.eled,. by wicked, de
signing, unscrupulous dimagogues, who, when
sophistical reasoning fails in support of their
groundless theiries, exeroite their* diabolical
skill in polsoniutethe impressionable mind of:
youth, through' the powerful medium of female
influenee---artfully . exi3iting the`'mOst tender'
emotions by holding up io disteinperod fancy:
highly-colored pictures of a false philanthropy.
Under these influences mews becomes sub-'
servient to sentiment—the gloriouti Ccinslitu-i
Lion of our fathers, submitted Kith - the tittered
name of Washington, Subordinate to the plena
ble "higher law" heresy,' tiubseeibiid with the
'name of Seward. The promulgation - of that
sentiment, as a political dogma; by a mat *of
the controlling influence which long '
political
experience, cOmmanding:sociaf position, edu
cation and reputation for taletits,-hadeoquired
for William 11. Seeiard, ate las a geesteir pray
- tidal inflows* in pm:toeing , the deplorable
condition in which we find our beloved country
this day, than all the speeches ever uttered,
elf the trash ever printed; be. Garriso t e, Phil
lips, Sumner, Greeley : Fred Douglas, and •the
host of other crack-brained send e '-
nrltert a "
,„,vsebn—ineluding the skulking Brook
lyn 'Berson, who, in his extensive starch after
know 'ledge, .
ledge . had read, and remembered too, a
prominent historical fact, to wit: that the in
ventor of an ingenious machine for cutting
off the heads of Frenchmen, was rewarded for
his benevolent contribution to science by a
Inleeettefelbexperitnent upon his own.
In the, utterance of that " - higher law" ..and
"irrepressible conflict" doctrine, at the city of
Rooheeter, in the year 1808, Mr. Seward may
be said to have opened wide the pandora's box;
be raised the whirlwind, but was utterly power
less to direct the storm. The author of an
erroneous, even though dangerotht doctrine,
when honestly enter! d
clee.„ may not be ILUlenfi
ble to the charge of having criminally offended
against the moral law. Not so, he who de
liberately publishes dangerous error, know
ingly, from motives of gain, or criminal lust of
power. " Words are things," and just in pro
portion to the extent of the mischief created by
their publication, will their author be held re•
sponaible by the unerring judgment of pos
terity. When, therefore, Mr. Seward told the
people of this country that there was a " moral
law," a law of sentiment, higher than the Con
stitution of the United States, and that, by im
plieation, if not in words, the allegiance of the
people was due to the superior law when it
came in conflict with the Constitution, he pro
mulgated error—most pertecious error—wil
fully, deliberately,, in order that, upon this
dangerous so phistry, h e might construct a party
out of the fl.tatiog debris of disrupted organi
zations, upon whose turbulent, ephemeral tide
be might be carried into power. In this, was not
this great leader of the Republican party guilty
of at least moral treason ?
I hold as an axiom; that the Constitution of
the United States, embodying in its.provisions
the will of tire sovereign people, is, per ee, the
government of the United States. That Consti
tution provides for its own administration — in
the election by the people of agents, with power
to those agents to appoint subordinates The
official titles of said principal agents, their
terms of office, their duties, and their salaries,
being fixed and designated by the people in
their Constitution. And whenever, and by '
whomsoever, sedition to, or subtraction from.
that fundamental law, in ever so minute a de
gree is attempted—save in the manner written
and provided therein—or whenever, and by
whomsoever, another law is attempted to be
substituted for this supreme law, the person or
-persons so offending are guilty of, at least.
moral treason to the Government of the United
States.
WM. DOCK, Jr., k Oo
tke Vattint d
MONDAY MORNING, JULY 27, 1863.
SPEECH.
THOMAS J. MILES, ESQ.,
2113/011.11
the Democratic Central Club, of Philadelphia, delivered
on Saturday evening, June 27tb, 1883
"flow natural that the author of the higher
law doctrine, should also be the author of the
following words, addressed to Lord Lyons, in
November, 1E561: "My Lord, I can touch a bell
on my right hand, and order the arrest of a
citizen of Ohio; I can touch the bell again and
,order the impriaonment of a citizen of New
York ; and no power on earth, except that of
the President, can release them. Can the
Queen of England dons much!" If Lord Ly
ons responded to this interrogatory, he doubt
less said—"No, indeed, she cannot. God for
bid that she could i"
Whether Mr. Seward intended this to be an
illustration of a "higher" or a lower law, it is
a power certainly not derived from the Cansti•
tution of the United States; and whether I, an
unostentatious citizen, yet the peer of the Sec
retary of State, shall fall a victim to this arbi
trary power for thus exercising the preroga
tive of a freemen, it is impossible to tell; but
CM long as God 'in hid mowy shall preserve,
unimpaired, those faculties I received from
him, and which alone elevates man abovd the
brute creation—the faculties of thought and
of speechl will hurl back into the very throat
of tyranny the isimortal words of that warrant,
by Whose authority I gl.p,pd here to addrogo you
this night;
'Congress shall make no law abridging. the
freedom of speech or of the press ; or Um right
a
PRICE TWO CENTS.
of the people peaceably to assemble, and to pe
tition the government for a redress of grievan
cm "—Article let of the Amended Constitution
* * *
Mr. Seward is not a fanatic, or a sentimen
talist, but a cold, intellectual, calculating poli
tician. No man better comprehends the theory
and structure of our government; no man bet
ter understood the resolute character of the
Southern people, and no men knew better than
he that our confederative system could not en
dure the strain of a purely sectional presiden
tial contest, waged upon the principle of an
"irrepressible conflict" between the slave labor
of the South and the free labor of the North ;
but, reasoned Mr. Seward to himself, I shall
have become President of. the United Staten;
the goal of my ambition will have been attained ;
for the sake of preserving - the Union and avert
ing civil war, I can abandon the principles
upon which I shall have been elected. In other
words, I will "Tylerize" the Republican party
for the sake of preeerving the - Union ; parties
and platforms, quoth Mr. Seward, must all be
made subordinate to the one grand patriotic
purpose of preserving the Union ; end who
knows, we may fancy the astute reasoner say
ing to himself, but that this noble sacrifice of
long cherished opinion, on the altar of the
Union, may induce my appreciative and grate
ful countrymen to plead with me to forego a
natural reluctance, and consent to a second
term ? Alas I what a pity that
"The beet laid Wane of mice and men,
Aft gang aglee •
Theree was an old Abolition-secessionist edi
ting a paper in the city
. of New York, called
the rribletie, a pair of them in Ohio, a couple
in Massachusetts, and others, too numerous to
mention, who , having labored faithfully • for
thirty years to rescue their beloved country
from that abominable gt covenant with death,
and league with hell," to which the superann
ated old fogies of the Revolutionary era had
committed it; and, suspecting our amiable Sec
retary of not being as honestly impressed with
the superior excellence and attractiveness of
""our American citizens of African descent" as
they could desire, consulted among themselves,
and—oh, shame, shame, Mr. Greeley re
solved to avail themselves of the talents of the
eloquent orator,.in expounding their favorite
philosophy while leisurely traveling from the
Aroostook to the waters of the St. Anthony ;
and then, at the eleventh hour and fifty.min
utes let ' him down, gently as possible, but
whether gently or *roughly, to drop him at
Chicago. It was a "raditaii necessity," in
truth, fov,-if Mr. Seward had been nominated
and elected President, there would ifave been
no war ; and, consequently, no necessity for
the military.
They nominated one who, deficient in men
tal vigor, and sufficiently imbued with their
own dangerous sentiments, has been, in spite
of his better sudgtnent, graduallptaoulded to
-their will—led on, step by step, in eonetitn.
tional encroachments, regardless of the timely
warning constantly ringing out from the watch
towers of liberty, until, at last, he has reached
a point, where, to proceed farther, is to ad
vance directly into that conflagration of pop
ular wrath already lighting up with portentous
glare the political horizon; and which, I trust
in God, may serve as a beacon of warning to
those who would avoid being consumed by its
resititless fury.
51 4 kill W - 5 T 1 r. FS 1•1111,‘ TP.••-••
uty, as revea a t in t e onstitutio - n, merely
to gratify the apparently popular clantior of
radical Abolitionists, although !tally spinet
the judgment of the conservative men of the
Republican party, and against the judgment
of the entire Democratic party; I respectfully
commend the words of Lord Chester6eled, ut
tered in the British Rouse of Lords, as fir
back.as 1740, w of-emery and a quarter ago :
" Those who have given up the mied to be
the slave of every popular impulse, I sincerely
pity. I pity.them still more if their vanity
leads them to mistake the shouts of 9, mob for
the trumpet of fame. Experienoe might in
form them that many who have been saluted
with the.huzzas of a crowd one day, have re
ceived their eiroratione the neat; and many
who, by the popularity of their thane have
been held up as spotless patriots, have, never
theless, appeared upon the historian's page,
when truth has triumphel over delusion, the
assassins of liberty."
tt * *
In transmitting to Congress a copy of. the
Constitution, and the resolutions of the Con
vention that it-should be submitted to a con
vention of delegates from the States for ratifi
cation, George Warhington, who performed
that duty, thus wrote :
tiThe Constitution which we now mom lq
the result of a spirit of'amity, and of that mu
tual deference and concession which the pe
culiarity of our political situation rendered
indispensible that it is liable to as few excep
dons as could reasonably be expected, we hope
anti hulieve ; that it may promote the lasting
welfare of that country so dear to us ell, and
secure her freedom and happiness, is our most
ardent wish."
Thus wrote George Washington, the Chris
tian, the patriot, the sage, the statesman, the
peerless example to all mankind,--he whose
sublime virtues have so adorned and ennobled
the human character as to cause even the
brightest in history to pale before the efful
gence that encircles his name as With a halo
of glory.
"game oprcad bee wings, and with her trumpet blew,
Grett Washington a roma! What praise is dm.?
Vb..% title shad be have She pausal. and add:
Not one—his name alone strikes every title tea"."
Contrast is, at least, an artistic arrangement.
I have given you the written opinion 01 Wash
ington upon the Constitution ; permit me now
to read the published opinion of fnother dis
tinguished personage upon the same document.
Said Wendell Phillips:
• "Away with a Constitution that recognizes
traffic in human flesh. It is a covenant with
dealt! and a leapt with hell."
Both of these personages will be remembered
in history. Phillips, as well as Washington,
has been the recipient of distinguished honors.
Dnit winter he was invited to a seat on the floor
of the United States Senate, an honor rarely
accorded in an official manner, and only to the
moat exalted characters. He has been the
honored guest of the present President of the
•United States, who alto honored him with his
presence at one of his Abolition lectures. If
I rightly remember, it was the famous lecture
entitled •'Touissant L'Oaverture," the bleak
demon of St. Domingo, whose "known rule of.
warfare" was '•the indiscriminate slaughter of
all ages, sexes and conditions ;" whose '.mer
eiless savages" marched on to victory with the
impaled body of a white infant elevated in front
of their column, in order to incite to higher
enthusiasm their "heroic valor."
This is the "hero" whom Wendell Phillips,
in the address I haie named, declared to be
greater and betlrr man than our own beloved
Washington. You hive now the recorded
opinions upon the Constitution of the elaye
holder Washington. of Virginia, and the Abo
litionist Paillspe,. of Massachusetts. Which is
it safest to follow
* * * * * *
The Matinee between, 14 CRlPOTTlitivg Re
publisau sad myself Is one of.opinion only,
MI the Wet means ter the attainment of a ant•
PUBLISHED EVERY MORNING,
VPDAYR lD ; etem*,-,
y
"-"" BARRE...pr.j: ,
"1" C
Tins Duty Pamarom AND UNION win bs woad 16)
wD
scriberereeidingintheßoroughfor tax cum ima wlOz.
payable to the Carrier: Wail subscribers, rnrs - emus
Pin Ailing.
Tun 'Wsauty PATRIOT AND UNION mangled stow°
nou.sas rift AM NON, immutably TON lapin
to one address, fifteen dol!arA
C.nnected with this estabilibikene a ache
JOB OVIPIen, containing a viristy of Plahi lint tour
type, itnegnalied by any establishment in the interior of
the titan, for "Web the patronage Of the ;labile Ii Ito -
11.-ftea.
Wally desirable result. I contend for the su
premacy of reason over passion, the lairs of
God and our better nature over the baser in
stincts of man. The Union of the Staten is
held together by powerful though elastic cables,
capable of great expansion before they snap
asunder.
These are a common ancestry, a common lan
guage, a common religion, C012121320n sufferings
and pride in the memory of the past ; the law
of consanguinity, the laws of trade and com
merce, the flow of rivers, the stretch of rugged
mountain chains and peeceful Smiling valleys.
Then there is one other great bond of union,
a cable which must 'hold when all' theeothers
hlve parted ; there is but one, and only one—
Washington
These, I have said, are elastic cables. When
heated in the crucible of passion, they expand
and continue to expand just in proportion to
the intensity and duration of the heat. While
capable of immense expansion, there is a point
where the most elastic cord will Hasp.
But let it once begin to cool, and immediately
contraction begins, until at length there is a
return to original dimensions.
Hasten, then, my fellow-citizens, Republi
cans as'well as Democrats, not to add fuel to
the already seething furnace, but to aid in
quenching this demoniac flame, before your
ears shall be saluted with the noise of the part
ing cables; that sound would fall upon our
.affrighted senses like the laugh which may be
supposed to have arisen from Pandemonium
when the angels fell from their high estate.
I believe that, could there , be a cessation of
hostilities; not that kind of pause when each
army is watching the other like crouching
tigers,, ready for a bound; but en official ces
sation—an armistice for sixty or nihety days,
hostilities would never be resumed I Each day
of that blessed probation—that (in legal par
lance) f• cooling time," affording to region an
opportunity to resume her sceptre, would be a
victory won—a bloodless victory in the con
quest of peace—and Would, as I firmly believe,
result eventually inw restoration of the Union
as it was, (save the.sed memories of the pres
ent.) and the Constitution as it is. Of course,
this opinion ie based upon the hypothesis that
the war is carried on for the purpose et resto
ring the Union.- If the contest is wagid for the
aloolibioti of Slavery, in disregard of the plainest
codatitutionaliguarantees;thewl-confess that
all I have soh:thee no force, and we must pre
pare for the disintegration of society. The only
foes of the colored man are those who would
suddenly or violently disrupt or attempt to de
stroy the social relations existing between the
Iwo saves in the•southern States.- --
I would suggest' to the Abolition pintion of
the clergy—and for this suggestion I have the
example of the Union League—that on some
appointed day, they preset' froni the text, obitt
tamped in the 44th, *tit and 46th verses of the
26th chapter of Leviticus : •
'•Both thy bondmen - and thy bondmaids
which thou shalt have, shall be Ofthe heathen'
that.are round about you ; of them.shall ye buy
bondmen' and liondmaide. •
"Moreover of the children of the strangers
thakdosojouTu,Among you; , of them shalLya
buy ' • and oft arr families that are with you,
which they begat in your land ;•and they shall
be your posses{
be 'your bondmen
Vito%
forever."
And when thr i rcliticalAbolition clergy, of
- the Reverend A • lion Giluirt stripe, writhe,
and twist, and .stiirm, and try to cheat you
with suggestions about "literal constructions,"
"old dispensations" and all the other stereo
typed saphiltries r ,do—which. thr.3r..resort when
cornered, point tii4nt, to the kite. chapter, and
almbst the lost Ilfrikof the sacred volume—
Revelations, 20 - *hap., 38th kelt 9th verses:
"If any man Atoll' add miitei 7 these things,
God shall• add unto him theSe: " that are
5 ,
written in this book: and if any hall take
away from the words of the boor' Ole. pro
phecy, God shall take away his Partnut of the
book of life and out of the holy city; and from
the things which ore written in thin book,"
After this, if he persists in his sacrilegious
endeavors to distort these plain tests of Scrip
ture, and mystify you by learned sophisms, let
him know that you believe him, to he just what
he is—a knave and a hypocrite.
I am also aware that the Constitution of the
United Hfates is treated in like manner with
the Holy Bible; perversion of its plainest pro
visions is their argument when yon quote the
Constitution, and When they find that men will
not be blinded by their sophistry, they have
the effrontery to speak contemptuously both
of the Constitution 4ad of those who quote it,
saying that the Constitution is made a cloak to
cover up treason. Was there ever mendadity
equal to this? The Constitution a cldak to
cover treason!
It might with . equal propriety be said that
the blessed light of day would be made a cloak
to Golfer up MiUtdot or anon. Ido not believe
that Washington, Jefferson, Madison and Jack
son, although slaveholders, were criminals.—
I do not believe that twelve of the thirteen
original States, when they provided for its se
curity by an express clause in the Constitution
committed a sinful act.
Not slavery, but the fanatical interference
with it, has produced this civil war. Nor do
I agree grith those who have regarded the in
stitution of slavery (as it has existed in Ajmer
ica) as a great social evil per as, any more than
other existing institutions. Religion itself,
at different periods in history, has appeared to
be a great social evil, and in the name of reli
gion the most abominable crimes have been
committed. Even at this day ? end in our own
land, those beautiful lessons of charity and
good will among men taught by our Saviour
on the Mount of Olives, are so perverted by
those of our clergy who have been inoculated
with the virus of Abolitionism. thett•our chil
dren may well be at a loss to know whether
their duty is to 1048 or to hate their "neighbor
as themselves : " — l * * • *
Mr. Sumner introduced a bill into the Senate
for the obliteration of State boundaries, redu
cing the southern States to territories.
They carved a new State, **Western Vir
ginia," out .of another State, although article
fourth, section third, of the Constitution reads;
"No new ntate shall be formed or erected within
the jurtadietiron of any other State."
They have provided for the election of mem
bers of Congress, in districts within the retibl
lions States, in a manner subversive of the
express provision of the Conptituf ion. in order
to retain a majority in the House of Represen
tatives. in defiance of the popular expression
at the ballot•box.
In order to guard, as far ss it was possible,
againehthe danger of centralised power, our
fathers provided in the eighth secteon of the
first article of the Constitniton, that "the Con
gress shall have power to provide for organi
sing, arming and disciplining the mind% end
tor governing each part of them aw may be
employed in the service of the United . Elates,
reserving to the States. respectively, the ap
pointment of the officers, and authority of
training the militia, according to th o gif ic ipli n e
provided by Congrelit "
The uodoubted object et Ibis reaervaticit was
I* preserve the militia organisation of each