Star and banner. (Gettysburg, Pa.) 1847-1864, December 05, 1856, Image 2

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    PRESIDEN'I"3 MESSAGE.
I
Fellow Citizme of the Senate I ; ;
and of Out liante of Reprkee4latire
The Conititution requires that the PreZlent
/
shall, front thno to time, not only'rectirdend
to the censideratiutt of Congress stud men:llll.ca
0 he may junge necessary
h a d
t isp«lic 14 but.
also that he shall give infot orr 43 thein , of
the state of the Union. To du this fully in.
valves exposition of all matters in the actual
condition nt the country, domestic or foreign
which eSSentinlly concern the general welfare.
While perforating his constitutional duty in
this respect/ ( tan'. rresidialt I di aim', Mit taPP4'
merely to exp•ess personal convictions, but AA
L ve ..xecittive minister of the Government, en•
aided by his position, slid called upon by his
official obligations, teleatilitit pitiimpartial
eye the iiiieresti or the witole, and of bvery .
yam, (11(4110r1;41441.4,411c.4•• ... , • •
(if the condition atilt!. dOm7siTCliiteie , ds'of
the Union, its
.wicithnre,,titittes, Inettufne•
titres, navigation, and ertintnerk'.,' it hi iteeess•
ary ottiti,io,tts,ooo9..interniti.Airosperkty of
the mtatilry, ittt i ctimyn.ttetti. a till'Oetidi tithrttneet
meat in i pplllt and,rciputil ) iSiV,' nod in Private
at w At m , v AlgiekieliiikingratteAtg the vri a d imt
of oannstittitiblit; 'lnd' tho predominant ;apirit
of in tiff*MicOuted •pntriotistm.which,uotwillt-,
ntandiMgsticational trregalarity uf opinion or
netionoroultingnfrote,l ikortOr,, ll, :e4piu, lias
di4titTooll 9 4,44Cliaraaerre.tar the people tit
:1111(11pp :1 , 'o h; ~,.,i t : '..; t ,
In lie Metenlerat,betivetM the termhinlion
or the lota ant(gt'e, mintilik6itient'of the'. pres.
eat sY4 I dly , of • Mhzildks, the publiit abort: hilt
1. , ..91"61-`oliNiftt 1 Willt. iholcke of: nelecting,, for
a•totlliA" , etalst itntionitt term,- the •President nod
Vier Praiident.of tile ,Unitetl,,States.. , 1
'fhetdetotmittt,ieti of the persons, who are
of riglittcoatitigently,Ao prelirlti over the. ad- 1
iniiititr t ftiin the . gyverunient„' undilr 'Our
Wecientnitteir,to tit Stack of the people.'
We itin" . lis; their' voice pi:Ohnutteetl in ,
, I
tlikYllifitiof 'law,' 'tit call whomsoever :ffihy
will lb first' of Chief Magistrat4, , . ~ •
Aust thits,it. ls,thatas the, senators represent
the respettive;,*lntes , the,..Union,,itorl the
ineadiurs,occha Afinisepf, lrpicselitative'sthe
seveull l constitpeAcipl of each tattl; the
President reitresents I,ll'e aggre'ga'te . jiirfiiiln
lion >ftliq i r one d StaleS: 'lhtlir election' of
! , ;711, 1 . 14 1 thrl lid 'solvent' het of the sole:
a .vdteigreillithtirity ofthe'inicet. , ,
ittititimputtiblo to .misappichend,, the great'
prirecipJea •twhichr by,flifie,revent , ,pelitieni ,
tian, the people or the United §ta,t,es haves:Mel
irtntimiticed. sr . r ,
lure , the' dMiStitiltional . e:
tilalitijaPheletintr,iilt the States'itit hi; Unithl
lLi St446l"fheY"lthve affirmed ttlto cotistitie ,
tionhl;ihfeitlirpof leach and : Atli of the citizens
Or tlttr United - Olt:dee as citizens; whatever their
twherevee thetst bjrth, or ,their resi.
41 '"1'T.4 ;Or Aav , . , .iikiii4:llimi.,4 l k 9 ..
of kriu , l egmtitational .t.titplt .o'r the different
sections of; the„t.rnion Nave • ire' 1
claiiiiestTlieirlik'vrifed - find itnalteritlilenttaelivj
moat' frS"the• constitution,:us
nitieitrA 'itlittert:4eltititorirti.to 'ail objects of.,lnyl
ctl or sectional" CA itttrcii•Alitiy,. tit t , stifegultil,l
of ticoli4liti ofalf, as ( the ttpirit iptd , ceseuqu„
I OA. At t iat,y,, pr,4,ce, and grentnessof tlitt
e •
oyt Pnvlµy 'w , 'they t have, at the RAMh titne,
e Orlifelnifed -the idta'brtirkililik:
i thclitlr tliiitrid"thates nt geograpiritl ,
parties-WPinatishollingin filealle itrray.tdwitrtls
c rill tudiffe relit i ,parts• oft the tcatilltrYi
NittlisOnSetith,,kinstarilN
4glienips,sl,f this nu,AnNe.
cola ie pi elttq tin }finch he tni;ddcriite
seitsp.A 'lms ejled;'"Cen Ed' have
codittenaljbe in ne r ,oii l rt"of te• Grit{iiriy, Idol
theiEt6t , lioZrikTitYttuted•lly ggeslio`tisl plans
cult iii- , :qpi>erinitt se, tithing ' , upon an - exciter]
stata 'illy publia mied § ,!induced.lby causes
teilipnctirq eliarnetei , ,,ivid, it ,is
,hoped
transient in their influence. • I , ~
Perfect liberty of association for political
.ohieets. atid.the widestscnne of disetissioti.are
erdsVhllt'l(ftt ear • !Our: tisti tiitiont, I
frarnedi in the spiritiof ern tlitle nue in
treoxleiand , tba integritylof lig 1)4001. .
f)1 1 411 to,gitlier.it3r4riflot4 l ,y,OP,ths , POo
RAe,,
et poystea orce, tie Consti tn.'
tmo Iln a ' thq ,VerfexiitMice 411'1116
Until!Ptli4 deltbrs• 'of 'this' gteitt liberty, mud
itroteetbddrftlitit . ltitts'aild'Asligifs I.ei the' g c) e,
erkirilintli they! 114.41'4:xi!, lEnssridittions ..liaVe been.
fortued t liti -sositti:id .1 lie Sttites, of ,
tvllOntl.retettlling sp; 1 ; oittYPl , P.r.Y•vPit) till
B PEtlrtaP(Aq,lPltjtll 4 , l B".. , if shlY.yrx lots). the
itreig/tt "orfittlirerlioate toles" . or tile
are reallY itainnie . de'slq in cfutnl a tric e
the:6:(nitittk Stme4.-u ,
To-"ttCdoitlplislf tfitlr , ollbetti , ,.. they 'dedicate
tliemselresitld thooodiolis tasklof depreciating
tlie;grivcrunient I organization, which, stands in
ttince,.ollll4Coll.llut only citizens of pollen] r
StAtr i ii,oli r sy l linselaws they knit built. )1401
()triers of their li.dlew.citizetis thi;Ottglititit 'the'
dli'ilui'firiktitip l zit 'with
thtAr CdtiStitritintt, framed
and', adopted by lour , fitthers, and:.claim log for' ,
the privileges it has secured. and: the, blessings ,
it hat conferred, the steady support and grate
ftitretteretice,.of their children., , They-seek an
014 cat tliich.thity , will know„to, be r revolu
tiotiar,y, on. T,liey are,
,perfeetb, aware that
the 'cliatige in the . relative ; 'Of the'
wlilfe' 'and iueet4 ' the' slavelibldiiig I
Stti*l,' , WhieiCtriey pidnitite, 'bf!'olllt}
Obit' iaMilli'irittUrity that* to then' Is a tbrei. ,, ti'
object.; 7;that cannot /to, , effer:“....l. by-:a ny'
PAmteful r instrumentality, or; theirs ; that; for
titept r apd the. States pfwhjeli they are citizens
the,pnlypatb itu. , icebtriplislnnolit is
b‘friiitig Leit iet, an] ra '4lit iL
eried"polnitailonx,'stildall titer's
inififragit; trial; Vad'
l
%Mi; intld 'that:titer tirit istept in :the •itt tempt
t hen frnii Wel disruption; of - it country out bra.
titaihrond.,bosma,,a,dagree of,ijerLy,
t,lll9tt9l,pf individual and pa j blie ; prqs-,
pirtt i y, iowiticA there is nu parallel in history,
and stilstitiiting . to its splice
at oh . Ce and intO t tinit.
tint itievtislatiOn mad frittrreidai , catintlie,. trans;
fartnittelhe ddvitipatoful and' fglicitons broth.
el•portiLintort,vast, pertuattent, camo ofiartned.
' l 4; 41 1 0 rival tuottarchies : of, Europo and
Wilt konwlng that such lnd such only' ,
are
thc inemb4 and tho cons'eijuences' of their plans
v •pr'epare. die
people of the United States for civil war by
doing every thing in their power to, deprive
tie CbitslitutiOti and' the !mesa* moral audit-
atity,timd kut:ttltdefOtint: the , fabrii'oli• the' it;
icavbf uppealit in-pos.lloli tip(' ! sectional. prej
%lice, OUCtrititing, itg pp.pp le withi : recip. ;
Altid /00IticAting tjtotti, .et:tini .
fitecto lace' 3,44, rather than slionitier
• • •,ot
it is 14 tilt) nyeney, of Rudy tinwhrrantah
~.e.
ilit6if4i•ent..44 . fuivi:gli
niiittli.Of loony otheil‘l:;e 'Wove
kketiiitt ihtliittted ieloftnt 1121 , 14itniate: . ilindtitit
toiho/mf.' the' tlthueitia inxtittlious of the
southern Stutex, its atleagth lubis insensib.,
ly to almost, equally pasxitaiate I.o:tility to
-11":0:1!"*.f01(1Y,,tiilir4:1:4,ut tlaig.St ales.. and
1 v .+ 1 ? ,1141, 4 - I s . NI iota tethi)or4rlt fellpyship,
K> fist.; ulliiweET ha active eite:hites of The'
eZpaitltion: - "Wtl6Atli34ttuelied It, liberty in
tite'llfhtit.rtaW , th*Y do hot Atop ta''consiiler
lirtstitichtlyilthw 't>l)jertz tiMy would. tittnin
pNital**ecittuplislted, nor to retlivt that, evOlt•
if the evil were.aat,greot aS tlay, deeithit,.!iltry
have tio retuNly to :11+1,1y, nod that it can be
tAlcir v : iolutte , e eina, tuuc o n .
,lltuttoniti, action.
4 l inestto i n,A Its otts:pcthe. eg0.4 1 teu
ktrirctii% solphl hiKtittiti4tt,
''ecoilontyhurt
,stateki4itiltili'.,tlieY:tiikitt
itittt utitifitNotting it,,tiat Twin her tif t11444111.r.d
lldig l' lixtrt.rt*lbeget extrante.l.•• Violeta
SttlACk tu tbe Nortkrflutts its inerkaLle , coast:*
~,m ee is t he growth of a spirit ((an g ry deli
a lthe •Souih. That ift'the regresi of
otoitttwrairskatt renclvd that , comumtantion
Atititit'4o3 vAatilvr thi PeuPht bm , mow 40 polut•
ftikv, t.l4‘i# l yf Akv ntAvinP4PcP Ismiint!ur tbia
Stattrt hr a votional urganuatitai mon
vaaat, wart, %ht rootrol of the gore:um:a
*tile VAII;e4 z•utts'e- I
ottl;otiv h-tw-te Volt the grant 1‘ 0 ,1 ) o f
om ts who hi..,osi !..srmoy t ok !hi% tht.il ef r p,
et , l .I nt v,lo.t .t.t.ttl4r4 to ;Le Cu.htitution and
the llnion.
nkThe would, upon delibvration,
!..-with to4fectedhot . Tur r frpm any. cwt.
IA tof isUnionkr ettalovat. Atilt th/y
T,77eiterfd itla pith whieblesida nowhert,
1 ‘
unleits pt be oivil Tir iantidtsunion ian i
d 1
wht has' n 4t)fer .plsvil)l4l oulfet. , They 1
have lifroeCet d Oltus fat iii that,tliveriient in 1
conseidtence of the suct•esiirti stages' ortheir i
firor„reits liaving consistild of teserieb of accou- 1
ilaro-ittott4s, ttaub'of %Ilicit prOfev to be eon.'
fine''d within comititutionel and peaceful liiiiits,
/ 11
but nide!' attempted iiiiliieetiv Mutt few men
were willing to do directly, 4
,i, to act ag
gressively against Lite roost al rights of
nearly one•half of the thirty of e ,Steies
Lille long series of nets of hulireet aggres
sion, the first wt thg strenouS ogitation, Lr
citizens of the Hort hpre States, in Congrem nod
Out of it, of the question of negro ennineiption
in the souffle:ft ',,ftates.
...
'file second step insthis path of evil consis
ted of acts of the people ofthe northern Stares,
'and ift - sevOtil instimees of their governments,.
aimed to facilitate the escape of persons held
to ser \ iewin the' soittliern Strites, and to pre. , .,
vent. their (Ntxtulition When reclaimed tletlor
'ling[ to law. and in virtue of express provisions
I: of the Constittitioe. „ TopromOte
. this,
.ohjeid.
legislative enactments'ttinl "Other means were
ladepted, to take :twat or (1461 'elgilts, 'Whieti
the Constitution snlenitilt' goeniottect... In Or
der to nullify the theft art ofCougrests
~concerning the :extritilltion of fugitives: from,
Service r laws were.ettacted in many States,: fig,,,
bidding their rapers itiuder the severest pea•
allies, to, participate ,In the execution of . atiy
net of Congress whatever.
In this way that's stein of InoinOtilett's coop '
eretiOn betneeti' thb' authdrities iif thed./elt.:(l'
Slates and attic, Several Ststes, tor: thq. twin,.
' tenants of their o ntlion iwititutions,: width;
I,existed In thomtrly years ofdlio 11.epulitic, was
1 destroye;l; conflicts,eljnrisilietion came to, be
'frequent; tunl Congress Plum: Ilself etnnpelled,,
for the stippp,rtof k ite, c otitlitution, it ti.l,thd vitt- ,
, dicatiou ul,its power, to authorize the appOint
nnt of new 9:beers Clitirg',6ll with; the' n.reett
',tiottq
if its tkts, "as if and . thethey tho otlicON'of
the Stutes ' Were 'the 'Ministers,' respectively of.
Iforeig,ti governinctitein a'strite. of mutual , hos-.
tility,.ritther than fellow magistrates , du omit,
I ' Mott country; ,peacefully stinsiding initior, , the
I jiroteittiott of,. tto , well-cetc , tintted . Union,-
I Chits bm, also, aggression was followed by re - ,
i action; and the tittaukS (wee the Constitution
.01 this'peint (11(1 bit t'serve-tri raise tip ittiwbar..
riersTor'iti'defence and setutrity:::i : • ' •-: , 1 . • ,
The 'third stage- of this unhapny sectional 1
controversy %VMS in connection with Au °rpm. 1
Umbel of territorial govortiments, and the a(1..1
tnisF,ion of new 'States . into the Union.. AN: hen :
4t, wasp,, proPutied, to admit tie State of Maine,' 1
by ciepttraitoo of territory from thin of Massa'.
'clinietts; and thOStaie orMiSsouri, f,rtned of a
poriiim of'. theterri tMy Ceded by ". France to:
the thiited States. repotsentatives in • Congress:i
1 '6l(jecled to the, a tiniS;(ieu el' the , hitter, noless,,
..,.
witlt,e enditions, suited to particalar views,of,
I public,,policy., The imposition ufstielt it cutt 7 - 1
blition, Nlll4 VN:CS:4IIIIV .
11'...ii,"±te4. lillt . lii - t)iil ' l
the;Same period,• the question was IWeseiiteil 1
lof helm:llmi re . strictions Itithn the 'residue-of I
kite' territ.my' Ceded' by France. : 'Flint :ivieif.
1 tioll . Ml.4j foe the tittle, ili,ipatell'hfibv the adop•
' tient or a geographical litte'oflimitation.,„ i. 1
In thiseminexion it should not be .fingolten,,;
that. France. of her own nee,onl,, resol?..ell, for . '
Considerations ofthe most Lir:sighted sagacity,
to cedeLniiiSti:ii ft 'le . tll'' 0 eill4l Statu s, . And
that aceesSion'Wit,> : nedented by ' the"' LI a I led-
SMtO.l, the hitter expressly eiignged . tliatt."ihe .
inhabitants , of ,the ~outled terrltory itliall,,ne,int
porporaled in the, Polon of Abe f_Jltite(l l Stole,i?,
and admitted (450011 rti, int:!iihle,'itcettrding to. ,
the priticiples of t 6 Fedeiril ,Constittilinni c to t
the iiiijoyinent Of till: tlid rights, advidthiges 1
•
and lie inanities .:: of citizen s of I : the , (colited - .
Stittesi and iti:the meantiine they (shall: be •
maintained had protected, in the, : firgc unioP,
meat. of Abeir liberty, 'priquirty,,nml the religion,;
which,they, proless"--,that
p is to say, :while it
remains in a territorial condo hin 16 iffliabilatittB'
are...ninintained. Mid, pytitecti.A'ln the ft. .at "en'
frigltt;thetild pass :into tho'colidition•Lf Stittlis.
on it foot ing 'efperfeet equitlity With.the erigle‘i
nal,;States., . ;''‘• ij 7 , : ' ...'!...l ', 1i'..3 :.I , ',;
'l'he clotetntent, which,,estaldislic)l,the ri'.
strict ive r ullograpliiettl.'litie
,was (nig:tie:tend' in
`rather than apprOvedliY, tfit4S'intil 'or thetro• :,
'too: It goad' on the: The' etlitulelb6ol;:iviwiitor, 1
. for iiiittinther of ytivs;' and the people of the , i
respective States'acquidsend •iii the so-enact.
mient of tho . principle .as mpplied ,t o Jim ;Slate.
;of Texas ;And it,was prope l -led, tonequiesce,iii.
its forther. application to the lerritory,acqai,red,
he the Unites! Apnoea frnm • Alexivo• But .Ibi'f
prUpositiim wait' ',iineeetifullY' resiAtiql ' hy' Ihe
repr6ientutiVthi frc'on : the' northerti.Statesi *die;
regarille'ss.ilf the hail oil iii.4 l ..i A4idte4 , npote!up.
, „
plying gest rietion to the; r.cw torritorygentsniuy,.
whether lying. north.or south °fit, therens,re-.
pealitig it i ns.a.legislative,comproniise'ottel, on.
, the , , part of „the. i .Nortli, perspiteopy vitilaqug,
the coup pct, if eninpact there tin:S. • . ,
I ' thereupon "!lily enn'etteent c'eased' to' have
I Moiling vier tie in . lill ' . i"re use, vault : ll'er tisiiespects:
I :the North or the
,South ; and so in effect it.
was treated; ell the occasion •cif (ilni'inbnissibil
o f the. State •)f, California, awl, tins organization.
,of the Territories of Now; u tt x,ie.o, : quip: and
lYitshingtint.,.,., , ~ i . ,
Such was th estate or tide questiOri, when
the tinie,iii:riViid for this orgatiiiittiOn of the'
Te'rritOris'iif liatisa4 and 'Nehrt'Skti.'' ' In the'
• , .ie • tonl
~,
progreSs . of etnistitutiOnal 'mot :re
-
Lain; it bud noir , at length ,come to gut scent
Clearly that Congress does not; [loves(' consti,_
tutionalpower r Pa in.poso ,restrietions ,of.this i ,
char,acter upon any ,present,Oir future state i r ll
the Union. In a long stiriessof dceisionS, en'
the : fullest argitinetit,,Winl 'after the' hoist &lib , '
erase einisidertitionVilid'tinfirente' blurt of did
thiitint States had liiiallyideterinined this puha;
in:every fora* under .whiCh .the.question could;
arise,, whether. AS At'cetiugt Pa 1 ,1 4.. 4 , l.: . privoto -
riglits 7 r.in questions of theimblie dinnatiu,,ef.,
religion, of itavi(mtion, mid of servitude.
. .
I.lq, fieyeral Smtn.slof ; the Mni o n, by :
force of the LJonstifiktutm. co eqvu
legislutive:lgtver: Congress cannot eltungo i
law of domestic relnlioie i i ihdlitito
no more can Win tige Shitii'of MisAutlti.; • any
Ant ne which •rop.;ieht to do' this is it .inere
lity; it tnio.ix =apt° tv,iglit; it confers none.--.
If it
n retnniink on tlke,stittkkedkook inkrelkenled r it .
reinitikis utere:uply n.i . n monument orerFor.,
imda.heacou or t i c? . the lerislator and,
mit
staicin: to.re'poid tt wilit,le' may Le ,
ireperfectithi from
in* either: lit tht 'seltae of pe . rilkission 'or
prollibitinin, the uttion•of the Suttes;gr dr their
Sti thpi pomionti • rpito lion • of .144
ikqt-Prrl 0 1. ' 1 14 , !t lettq 41 ;
ti rius repealedl.?,y the, livst Copgres.4i , n filar to
a :iet orzaporing thp, territor i es of Ihlti
nttiand .NO,ritklia;" tli3trLfiiulcwasinade
oCcitiion of kv•Vviiid-stireliti ilait 4 erblth Eil,4 1
.1
It , trots alleged , that the ierigihef , entietment
being, m compact of puipinualloortil.,'Obligu•
'ion, its repaid eutistit owl n Wham Lreaeh,&i
faith.; . • 1
An act of Congress ' µ•b;1;1µ•b;1;1µ•b;1;1 tt retutt4s, uure.:
pealed, inore,y'spemaily, if it be constitutionally
valid in PM 'itedginent.' those Palk' fnetimv
titles whose , •duty!it'qs'ltO , prutioiftiee ou that'
'point, it undoubtedly binding ,on. the con
seictite •Of eitch good •saf the Republic.
But in what sense elm it be asserted that the
enaetnientin question none invested with pct.-
petoity and entitled `to' the respect 6r a solemn
contpactY.. :Between whom was.thu,compset ?
No disiinct contending .powers of the govern
ment, uo separate sections Union,treat
ing tut wadi, entered into the treaty stipuations
on the subject.
It was 'a mere dense' of an 'act of Congress,
and like any othe'i controverted ' matter of leg.
illation, received its final shapc•Mid was ,pass
ed by counproutiec of the.conflictin. , opinions
or ....entinumts„of the inetnhers .of,Congress.—
It ut if it,4wininnidauthority over ,tnen'a con
seiences,to whom did this authority .attach?—
Not to those ofthe North who had repeatedly
refused to confirm it hy extension, and who
had zealously, striven to establish other, and
incompatible regulations upon the subject:—
Atal it, as it thus appears, the supposed corn
pact, i lted no old igawry • force, as ; to :the. North, •
4,4„murse it could maltase had afny Its, to the
ktouth, for till siteli criprieitf - tunst. ho mutuo,
fwd of reciprocal obh,;:.titihn.
it has nut unfrequeutly happened that.. law
givers, with undue estimation of the value of
the law they' give, of in the view of imparting
Ito if peculiar strength,malce it perpetual in
terms i4but they eannot thus Mod the con
scienee, the judgment, and the will of those'
who may succeed them, invested with similar
'
responsibilities!tud clothed with equal author-,
..its. More caretulAnvestigation may prove the
I litv(to liennsoiutd in principle. Experience‘.
may show" it . imperfect in detail and impnicti
cable in execution. And then both reason
rind right combine not merely to justify, but
require its repeal.
'rho Constitution, supreme as it is over ell
the departments ofthe government, legislistit : e,
executive, and judici , d, is open to amendment
I by its very terms ; and Congress or the States
, may in their discretion. propose amenthneuts
to it, solemn compact though it in truth is bc
, tweet, the Sovereign States of the Union. In.
the present instance ( , political; enitctment,
whirh land ceased to have legal power or author;
ity•ofany. kind, was repealed. .The,ppsitiou.
assumed, that Congress has no moral right to
coact .Bttel. repeal, . ; Mss strange enough, and
shield:o,ly so in view of the fact that the argu-
Ment.,catne from theM who openly refused
, obedience to existinglaws of th . e land,'
.
the same popular designation . and , eur. t etY as
iiit proin iso atts ;- ntiy, more, uto imequiver
rally 'diiree:nrd awl condemned the most ob ,
ligatcry injunctions of this Constitution itself,
nod seOght; by. their3nuch,
to deprive a is tiott of their fellow cilisKous of
the eqnale,itjoyment,of those rights ,and priVi
leges c . oarattlied alike to all by 'the fundateen
tr. uonipo,ct d our tlition.
Thii ,fr r ittinent againgt 'the repeal of the
statute line to question was - accompuided by
another of congenial character,'and equally
with the former destitute of teundation in rea-..
sou and truth, :it wasimputed, that the meas.
ore originated in, theconeeption ;of extending
the limits of slave labor beyond thoseprevioUs•
ly assigned to it, and that such wait its natural
as well as ititeMlinfeffect ;Land theSofbakeleski
assumptiottb were nunlif in the nort bete States)
the groiind of tniceiming assault. upon.Constitur,.
,
tinted right.
-• . , . :
1, The repeal in terms efa.statote„ which was
.already obsolete,, and ; also nun for ,Migonstitu
tionality, could have no
,influenee to
,Cdistreet,'.
t promo ait.he:prePagtitien
views of political or Social When
the net:recognising the . ' Territtiliet , ef,Ktostts ,
and • ifebritrka we's passed,' the 'inherent etEect,
upon thato.portion.of the public slotuain, gnus
opened to legal! settlement .iwas,to.Miant,scr:.
;hors fl'o to, t all the. ;States of the „lJaion
eachAvith Mit convictions of, ; pablic policy and
private interest, there to found in' their diserit•l'
.ttott.'snleci tic such bout itinna 113
' 'tittiett 'And nets ''cif`Corigreis . might pre:seri*.
time Statesyltereaiter to be admittied, into-the ,
, Uttione , " : •
It tine a,frem. fi eld, open. alike to all, wheth-,
.er the stotute-iine.of assetatutzestriction .were
repeated or not.. nut repeal Aid not °pelt to
,freo, competition 'pr ii(o.diversg' °Pinions and'
dettnistie oiStitiltionS whieli„Lyrithoitt' ,
Mich' repeal; Wohld • littVe been closed figainst •
them : tt, fettled that field ercemPutitionalready:
limm4ll,iiti fact ,and in litiV4 Alleirepenhiljd
relieve:the statateibenk of an abjection.„
able • ennet mem,
,nueonstitutional in effect, end
injurious in , ,.terins,.to a large portion of the'
Sautes. .
Ttilt the 'feet; that.. hi all' the' p ro
giotitf -theffiiiteAt Suites, lf
left free to-art , hi this respect firritself,,,without,
legal 'probiliillonit on. 'eitlier
will .spontettenuslY 40,.OverPvherg, in , qufer ,
nce;tq iftlioflnhor ? .4 it (ho
States prissesFt
aypntie is:PreelY opetirto ill' the
Twerld;'thei"will'pertefiate tor.thefeteltisisit :Of •,
ose;of tit C.Therthern (State:in:As : it .-the.:fact,
klutti the , fertner. , enjoyi couiptired,withi the :int ,
, ter,sgch,lirresistible , Snowier ; 11 1 1 01 ) °,'Y 'r.
A 94 ,, al1L90 1 9! tleci4p l lMA
otomitow.;o4, a to y ]b able ,teprOilitee the
Posed jO,l l PlteCf Avkii,
;tl,:' w ore pci l ioationlar the nottheni
Status ~ ;„ i•
. . .
-
The. aroment of those wholad voeate the.ett.:
netment af, nun ,laWs . of restrlotjou n ntid ;
.cen r ,.
dome the repeal of old, oneAlneffectevets that ;
1
their partnil:lnt miews ef governinnut have" tio ;
self extend; it ti ' or solitsustaining poWer"(ifilitlr •
"min nntl , : . yill ; go Wowbere %en" 'foreisi hr net
of . Congress.' ' Add if C'ongrcsa .do butA,-paitse
bit. it-incenent iii-the Tolley ofstern Tow:Tian ,:-
nit venters to try the experiment. ( ) Cleaving.
teen. to itidge ,for themselves,what institution
1 'Ol I,bestsuit diem : ; if it be not strattic i dup fo,
I"perpetual h‘gislative exertion on this point ; ;it.
t Congresa proceed - thus' to 'net 'in the l very
spirit of Illiert y it ill at once'chanted ivith'-niin
ine:"to extend slave labor into all the new Ter-A
rit7iries'-ofthe Unitsitt Stntets. - • 1
Of mune, 'thew) imputations on the inten t , :
tions 61: congress in this ,rtes tit, egnecirol:stl
i they were,, prejtolire„ anti !lissetninated i
l n '
M
I passiniOare !Welly, destitute id any ,j l ,iiiliero. -
tint) in the nature of things; and - 'contrary' , l'o
all the flindainental "1166triiieg . Anil' pritteittles. ;
of clillibe'frir find Seffgeverliment: •-I 1 :1. ~'
iVhin;`thorctrore, in general, the people ,ofe
tho'inirthern States have neYei,ltt any time
at:Mg:dal for the federal government.the tionr- ,
er to interfere clirectlpwith the domestiecep
ditinn of persons in Om southern. Stntes, hut
nn: the contrary hare liiSIVI4Wed rtir, such . in
tentionq. and have shrift:4-4:Front epasPicuoVs
affiliation with those fora who pujsue their'
I ' anstAical - obleehi avoWe'llly through 'the ''coil-'
teiitla led - Means of Yeinhitionnty change of
the government, - and srith acceptance of the
necessary consequettees-.-a civil, and' servile
wa'r4-isot many citizen§ -,have- suffered. them.
selves to 110 .( 1 rnyn into one, evanescent politi l
relias,ife, of ttgitation after entailer, appertain
int to the same sot of opinions, and Whiel)
snliAtileil"aii"rapidly as theY - VtiCse 'Wheit'' It
came to be seen, as it,nniformly did,.that, they
w - ert) indannetible With the. compacts of , 'llke
Constitutiewendlhe existence oUthe .Union.
Thus, when the nets of some
„ofthe States; to
r• • '
nullify the existing extredttpn law imposed
upon,Congresa the duty Of passing a new (me,
the country was invited by ;agitators to- tinter
,
into party organization: foe ,its 'tepeari i bet
' ,Mitt ngitation speedily 'ceased by . reason-of
the' iinpractienbilityof its' ohjeett , &N. when
the'statute 'restriction , upon. the .. institutions
of new Stntes, by, u, geogrephicitUine, had
been revealed, the country Wes ,orged to 4.
mend its restoration,. and that project also
died almost with its birth: Tlien rotioiqd
the c'ry efalariti from the No'rth' agnitist"im
ptited southern encroto-lithents; ‘rhielt'' erY
strung in reality from the spirit of reriolution
; ary:attnek; on-the domeitie institutione,of Abe,
South, and:.nfter a troubled existence of a few
months, has , been rebuked by the voice of a
' patrititie people.
- O(this list agitt4ion, one lamentable fen.
turn was, tliat it Wati"carried on at, the bonnie
diatii expense (tf the peace end' happiness "of
tile people of the Territory of Kansas. That
*as made the hattle.fieldolot so,much, of op
posing faetions.or interests within itself asof
the cnnflicting passions of the .whole : people ; of
the United States. Revolutionary
; (linor ; der
in Kansas lied its origin in projects 'of in6V
,
volition, deliberately arranged 'by 'certain
members 'of that Congress: which enacted the
law for the'orgnnization of the Territory.-..---
And when propagandist colon;zation of Kan
sas hnd.thus bean undertaken in one.. section
of tine. Union, for the sysmatic'promotion ,cf
itspopylinr vieweof policy, there" ensued, its
R ola ttey of course, a counter-action'with oppo
site views. in other sections of 'the Union.
In consequence of theie and Other incidents
many nets of disorder, it is undeniable, lime.
been 13erpetratedin - Kansna, to the occitsientil
interruption, rather than ;the permanent 'sus
pension.. of regular goveriunent. Aggressive
and most. reprehensible incursions, into, the
Territory. were, undfrtsken, botn in the North
and the South, and entered it 'on its northern
border by theway of lown; "as Well as - on the
eastern by the way of "Misseuri ; • mid 'there
has existed within it a state of insurrection ;
against, the constituted authorities net without
countenance from inconsiderate persons in
'each of-the grant sections of the Union.;, :.T3at
the difficulties in that have been ,exfravagant• ,
ly exaggerated for purposes of politie,:d egitn- ,
tion eliewhere. The number and gravity of
the sett 'of violence have been 'magnified pail.:
y by statements entirely untrue, and partly
by reiterated accounts of the ammo rumors or I been hot about $18,000,000. It is believed
facts. Thus the Territory has been Beamingly • that, under an economical administration of the
tilled 'With: extreme vielence, where the whole I government, the average expenditure for the
aithotint of f sueli nets has not been greater than ensuing fief; years; will not exceed that sum,
what occasis y plusses liefore 119 in ',. einglo unless estraorninary,oceasioniOr its increase
c ties to tl' s ' of all good, °Miens, but should occur.' The acts granting bounty
ithout b . vied as of general . , or., per- lands will stem haye been eiecuted, while the
anent p consequence. ' ' , extension of our frontiersettlements will cause
impute ulnrities in the elections ',had I a continued demand' ftr lands and augmented
•ie Ransn2s, like occasional irregularities of receipts, probaldy, Irom thaCsouriee. • Thep;
thasame'deseription in the States, were'be- considerations will justify n-reduction'.of the,
yund the sphere of action of the Executive.— revenue from cudiouts, so as not to exceed 48
But incidents of actual violence or of organ- or $50.000.000/ I think the exigency for such
iced obstruction of law, pertinaciously renew- reduction is imperative, and again thge it upon
ed front time to.titne, have been met an they consideration of Congress.
oceutro 1
l, by such means as were available, 'rho amount of reduction, as well ae the
and as the' eironuistendee required; ;and ; manner of effecting it, are questions bf great
nothing of this character new remains to effect I and general interest; it being essential to in
the general peace of the Union. T ie attempt 1 dentrial enterprise and the public prosperity,
of a part of the inhabitants of the Territory as well as the dictate of obvious justice, that
to erect n reveletionary
. goyernment, though the burden , of -taxation •be made to rest es e
sedulousis; encourci?,fitr and supplied With pe- I•rtilailj , es•Possilife ll tipoh CIF cleans, end all
cunittry,sid fte"n active ngents of disorder in sections and interests of the country.
comae of the ;states, hoe completely fitilests:--' These hetetofote recommended to your eon-
Iludiesef. armed mon, foseign to the Territory, sideration the revision of the revenue laws,
hays been prevented fmin entering or cent- prepared under the direction of. the •Stleretary.
"pallet; to leave it. Prectitory•bands, engaged of the Treasury, and also legislation upon some
•,,,i nets of-rapine, undercover of the exulting special questions affecting, he business of that
phlitical disturbances, have been arrested or.. departikent,' more bapslcially the•inactment
dispense. Asid every well disposed perso n
.1, of a l a * to , rin
is, now enabled brim more , • to &IVA:L.-hie:lgen •'h oo ka: ar imb the abstraction .of - dal:dal
in peace to the pursuits of, prosperous, hides- P l sperifibut the files of the govern-1
:- menti• Mid i•equiring Clisneh• beekttand ;pas I
try, for the prosecution of which he undertook ; ,
,to partiCipate in the settlement sf'" the •Terri- ` pare and; :all ' , ether peblio property: os hd
toffy(,turned over by the' out.going officer to , hie
It affords me uni:tingled satisfection, thus ; BocceB9er ;' of , a' law requiring Idisbursing
to announce the peseefideonditini of things' Offieers'in deposit's all' publiemoney in. the
in Knn'llit, l especially considering the; motes
flul, ictoltil - of the` trettiorY or in :other Rigel des
to which it was necessary to have reoPOrge- fe r,l,positctries ,'where the Mime are:conveniently
the attainment of the end, namely the employ- I
I anent of a part of the Military force of the' acce S ib l e t e, 1 , 1 d -Iti ' l l I.
i° extend . 'existd,ng ,
United States. Pbs withdrawal of that force I Pe.ligliTwigio n g le all'T e r adusrOno mkt De
from its ;;roper ditty' of hiefendingthecolintr3f I oonierpossasitied - of publiemoney by daposito
against foreign' 'fees' or the ( savages .ot, the; or othhiewidd, and •• who shall 'refuse or iteg-;
l'frontier,lto einploylit for the; aupProsign, ll lq,lect, t op dtiedemandi to:riay the ism° into
,
donteetielusurresitipn.ia, wtoins too ex' pup; f. OM '1: 1 61841 . y. ; , `ltiteette , your tatention anew
•
occurs, ainetter,oftjte most earnest edliettlide.l du Lb
dffalle ' id ' bi j e°t° ' I
On this oseasion of inipeitative riec6sltY it line I: to i ' 2 ; '
been doh° with the tilise resells r and nir l eritl I " 1.,1'6,1417:4; daring the pa hostile: In.
ti . tyetiri bay been
isfactinn in, th eitittiiiiMent'ofinetfttieults by I go bslllllgotol employed against f
,suclintertntile. greatly enhanced • ity- the-'con- I tii 111 : 114 . in V llll 9 llll o° l4 l l rge °hat' it. can' 41gre.d.
Si deration i• that,' thrinigh the wisdom and en- I: ly be said, wi th ' propriety of -•langengv to
orgy Of the present ,Exenutive of Kaneech cent be a p eked establiliiirnent. - Its duties .have
• :the, prudeeen„ firmness, and , vigilence of the ,
'military cificerhien iletythere, treoquility hat; beetreittisfuotorily 'trortbrmodi and We babe
beep restored witlio4orie drop Of bleed hay- ve " lg ," ° J td . '°/ , ii.ect,'.."Bl° result ;of the "an'
in. , been Sited h' a te
•acentaplishincht - by • tlib operations, greater security to the . frontier
;forces of the United fliitee.' •' --•: 1 '. , , inhabitantalthin"has'been'hithertp enjoyed.
The restoration of eamnaraiien tranquility Extensii•Mermnbiluttiens among-the hostile
in thavTerritiwrfurnishem the means of ob. \ Indinits 'of' the Territories of Witshington
it ' vrib ir - °°/ ''' l •Y'' -ar t+ OPMe iati t t g e i tbekr,lind Oregett, at; 'ode time threatened • the
...
:test •value, tile °Youth?, whielt. occurred, there, ' devastation of the nbwly fortued•settlementa
--and-thl'dievissimes et which the geyernutent :of t h a t remote port io n . • • pf . the country.—
of the reiritory Ints'been stul t iect. •,,
We pbreeiVe thheinntrove,rey 'ioncerning I
1.. -
Frani rebetit itiferroation, Wei lire 'permitted
-
its f u ture doMeistidiiietit•itionsi was inevitable; to hope that - theenergetio and successful
,'ttitit no , buitien•predlinee, rio'fnrin of legisla- bperations - • ;Conducted.. therdo Will . prawn; t
tisin; one wiedont on:, the part of Congresii, 'such `Obrabitrationii in future,-and Apatite to
e 01111111 " 13 1 1 ve`AtediOis• ;;: ; .; .. , ; • thoriererritriries 'lin' opportunity to make.
" We idle te : q:ppointhat the particular pro , -It an d y p i ng i es , in
'the
of tifforprgetile law. were 'the cause or . the development of their
egitetiee., r110, , e respti e lee . B were but' the 00 0 agr . icuitural and mineral resources, ,
elision; or•tlipretexi of' tin agitatiiiri, 'whit+ II Lettlg, l l l "tio° hog het ll l l Temuule ude d by me
wris inherent in"Ste:tiatine rif - things." Oonleri proviouslodetasione to dere defeats , in dhei
gross legislated upolithe etilect in such terms t existing organizationoind •to int:Swiss° the
as 'were Mosteint.onant with the principle of I efficiency, of the ;limy, and further observe
' nopulat soiereigntystrbigh underlies our gov- timi has Itueleerved 'to confirm'. me iu the
t ;fritaiont. Jtoould lint have' 1
, gislattei other- •
;wisp' 1- d
eiv' then'eirpressed; and' to enforce entny
;v1 1 1•I9 4 c•• 0111 6' )- 1 1)-e 'l l i•-• - •
' Iprineipie shfeur institutirms, the mm •
bl a tight l ar ettintlikVOr the eei•id States: ' • not oil lireltel' ,hOt• I neeeogr3 r - J " • r ;
'Wee peibeive;else; Alert Siectiehil intermit I thaVOiriti additicin,' to Invite the atten
:sn'illially'Lliessienel Inive' thh•en 'the _it reat inn- tied 'of Ciingrbes" td a change ofpoliey in the
, . ,
, - pediment' to'ithitaMintitry operellemof the or , distribution - of troops,lintl. to• the necessity
, genic: priiiiiiples ode rated, and the chief client of of providing a more rapid increase of the
the seveassivisdist, OalliCCAol,/t - inisas. The ~. • • F detailsof these ,
,• ..., • military armamen t:
aseepiption f dint, b 00180 . 18 1 I , O'grg!nIZIIIIM
a the Territories. i C:Nebtalllt and 'Hakes, and other subjects I ,
Y, l
re a mg 'to the army, I'
, 0 0 ,40 1 ,:s t caliitaiii,I'd from firmasing - n:trim - di' refer to the report of the Secretary of I,llar.
tipoh Mein' fis l t,i'lli el 'Certain-oilier Territories•. The condition 'of the'nevy is not meiely
, had been istihjeet,•..t mediae disorders ocatirree satisfaetury, but exhibits the most gratifying
:nettle Ismer Teethe ; is cauplintically.conteis evislenees of ,jueresised vigor. „l As it ill cen t e
rl feted:by :hit,Not ~ rat neat twee :ocourred ie , partitively smell, it is more important . thetit
• •I*.--- • • r•••••••,,- ,-e-shee•
of tiff, ~..,...,- .... t . .A.,,,,k,,1141.1ta he efficient in the character of its ote
conseenenee. sera Itenencesisseireessoni Ul Seir- `errs, JO WV T.(%) iiiid ,iii.
..r,:3' ~k,,,_ ...AM, 2.
• gueerstilient - concedes:: to" Mat 'TM:thug by'' the refinbilits - •ot ;us oranante, antlin the ms
- CeligrehM. but" dr' tiniest interferesiee 'on' the levity of its shipe.• In ulithese various qual ,
• port 'lepers/ids tibt iiititibiatiA'of die Territory. Ales the navy liasrnadogreat. progress within l
:sea interterettem'eybarehier it has exhibited 1 the I.ist few years The execution °film law
:iiselth' lite sets' of iniff rrectionary• elle nut ter, or I, of Congress.' of I:‘6lnuary '2B, 1855; ''lo • pro-
' off obstruction to, processes., el , mw, bee been f mete the etlieleney'or the 'llAvY,'' lute - been at •
',repelled er.s9pe,rt•Peds 4,4. 1111 ! ,111 eang w 'itch tended by the most aaantageou's' results.— ' l
• abe J . :ensiles eon tunit i the le,ves place, in
,tlit? The law for premoting discipline amine the
''hands ortlielExectstfise.' " ' • ;, ` ' men is found convenient Md' salutary ' The'
• • lit iliosil'parCe - ofillie t lr.: l fititiri." Where; by systeei ref granting nn lffnuirable discharge to
reis 'it bt thelltifihattlll seie of the 'plitiliii in Weft faithlul seatheis on theeXPiration of tbe period
,l,n, fse mimeo; an& inistestinersentations 'have Ilie of their enlistment, iind perinitting them to re l
greatest bit rreney, , , it: line been ' Mum nod that, f. • enlist after a ledYe ofalssenc'e Of afewmtniths,,
I :was the slug of the .xecuti voiletooly, es sup s without iffaisatioo or leg, is highly beneficial
f
firegs,j!isprtectionar ,moyernents in Kansas, in its influmice. The apprentice system re-:
• but °lse 'to Si'.' ii, tle . rtivilprity , of Focal ease- cently itilirpted le•evidently dehrtinekth incor-,
liens.' 'li I theishilieltr ingementtlo slime; filet florae hitch the service a large number'of our l
'rasa Preside nt has ireach power.. ;All gov- entintrynien hitherto so difficUlt to ermiure.—
. moment 'i the Chi tales .refine, substantially Several hunitlred Araericarcboye ;Irene° , on a I
, 'upon , smellier, elect 0. , irliti, f(eettoito of *dee- three years' cruise lia our national vessels, and
timmis„liahle NA; : impaired by the intrusion will return well trained eeninen. .In the ord.
, u f,sniiiityled,,viies, ! - the exoltesieti . .Of lava's) mince dolisortinent there is a decided and grati- 1
emes,,hy itispimper eilooneeo, Ny'siole'Wee, or lying indication of, progress creditable to it
' hy trallif.'" Bet The pinplitiirthe•ll'.'SelteS' an, 'and to the eountrY,, ,•The ,seggestions of the
theineffl;iirislilie sill- efficient kenrilititel of itudr • Secretary of the Navy, in regard to further im
own rights, *edit° 'impair:o' l om; they will nut provement•in that; branoh-of Ale; service, I
rettiedye *due' s on,; miy -.Stich; incidents or co m mend to *ter favorable action: • ;
civil freedom; is t sappesit,then; to
,liiive ems. The new frig ates - ordered by Congress nre
sell, te.,,he ,capahl , ef,selfgoserreneet, The tier afloat, tend two of them in active service.
I President of the.Statehi trims cot poWer tb They ttresupetior itilididsof naVidarehitetture.
itartpese tit elecii its* to i see to dielf freedom, anti witiftheir fOrthidable bettegaddlargely
M'eativa4l3 tin it v eS l . l at'iti Ifiltivt:Atlio'n' their le. tdpublictstictigth•andseenrity. ' -', '..
I, ga li tyi ihlt he Pete erfesin tit , ;mere than ib the '4dt:incur' in; th esriews expressed by the Sece
Settee: 'lf fie' lied euelt , power the: gb•vernment i lretary ,of the Department, lo leyor .of ct,stili
might .lie republic' chin form,, b,ut; It w (Auld. be it ! fnrtherinereaserif,our envoi, fem.' , •, ,
monarchy in taut; and if he,hail eedertakeitto 1 ,. TittLeeport Of thin Secretary of the Inteilar
exercise ,it , ; In di , ease of ii:eitens„ l ie would !preen*, frietsaridviestis in icilittidit tic InterneU
have beep Justly s 11 , 1ve; io thioclirgeof neut. effairs over which` this suphrilefort• of
i hied°.
1 poton, and of vio neon the' dearest:rigida or Itiatiiiera l extends; irritant% interest and im
thepeople Of the tliteTSlaiek4 ' ''' l'' ' l ' portanea. .1. .),;:- . , •,,: )..,,
- ItiliNite haws', (fealty' withirregolerities' at 'rho eggregate tales of the public lands, des
elections,,M, in periods of greatexcitement,,;i2g•ifis lefet•fiseril feat', amour i rtffll,227;B7B
the oecasional ineldents,tif even Abe fteest'llml roiYeai; - foeiiiititt•hatvtinem retxtived the. snm
best political institutions:. Out eiteSpetience I M4021,41;4. During the-same , pariod there'
demonstrates; thatle a coi!ntry like nurs,,where . y el bee n _ located, witliartilitau•neriF:lllld
'ties ri gh 1. ,of self elitist i tetiere t oxi s ter in tic s tl c,t
30 d.wrieraiits, and far oti n ier o ptirpesee,3,o,l9,-
1
rs l it,;l l ::l B ti r ist r i ll l l 4•Vs:S i r t t% il le t s , Ol7rdo e i ni t 'letter 1 39.328 er 1 e 0 5 S !l a l sTrli i r i s3n n ilie t fil i tletig l e t inb ° o f r
of place ;lionstitheli as existing '1441 'i ta- last, surveys :hail been made 'of r 16,873,699
dons a ff ord nuire'prompt and efficacious earls neres, a' large ,portion of which is ready foe
for the redress en wrong. • ;.;„ 0 ", , market. • • • 1
I 11011fidentlY,:trian that new, whee ffloeeace- • The r suggestione in,thiereport in regard to
furl qoinli , iOn . 01 16118888irOrds opporl:iitilli lor the compliesition and prbgresaireCkpansion of
ca in teilection anal wise legistssinic'either the; the ha'ainetss Of the' 'different beatnik . ' of 'the
legielative Aisenibly of the TtNitory, or Con- : dephitrrieti,i ; 'to Ttlieleairsita . system ; 'to (the
,areas, will ' see` that no act, shall monain , on its I colonizatifin of Indituf tribes, and then rneom
statutehbook violative o f the provisionssof tire! inertdationsinreletiento.varitmeimprovements
I , Constitution; or subversive et the great oh.li'cis 1 id tho , Distriet of ,Columbia, especially ;
I, ter which Mat
was ,ortiallie,o and yeisiblislivit, commended toloneconsideratien, ,. , '
,end will take all
,othei• ne c essary steps to as- i nfo 'report' of the Paelmetsier cieneral pre
sure to its inhabitants time enjoyinent; WithofitSeat's fully the condithin either department
- Chat Motion or ;thrittgarii;lir, or iilrtite cenrititu- I, of the Government. Its ekpoinlitilisirs 'for the
;11011111'righlR; 'privili.ges, mid tommuities of oft. list fiscal ~ ,, s'eltr.
were 510,407,8684, and its
,
'semi or the 11:StateK as eontemplute_d. by the 1 gross receipts $7,620,801 --making an excess
-organic law oldie !buil:ore. . Full information i of esPeriditisre oval:rah:Wig of $2,787;04121.- - -
in relation to recent events in ibis , Territory Nrhe de fi ciency of thin. - miartment• Is thus
I will , he found imtbe deee - Inen%s communicated 115744;000 grsafer•than for the year ending Jorie
herewith frem'the Der11:1111e111114"bile 'Si war• l 3o,; 1853. Of this , deficiency, $330,000 is to
f refer you 'to rile report' of the Se'ere'tary of be attributed to the additionel ,compensation
the Treasury for paitiCallir information concern- allowed postmasters by theuct l orCongres- of
fi
jag the nancial condition of the Government, I.Jurib 221: ISM." The Mail facilities Au bvery
and tbo•various branches of die public service '.piirtlot the,einintry, have teen•very nmelt,,in
connected with thelrreasury. Deportment. ,
customs were, for the first time, more than 64 has added.lagely tette; Cost oltranaporeatinn.
Pitting - Eh° last fiscal yea r, • the receipts froir e a r i l e t " ,; e t i c l o i a n d
inillion dollars, atei from all - seeress, $79,918,- Time inconsideiable ithgthisniation'of the in
e,ctil e r t v period, leo.;l ,
o rt u n p d t
i i n i g i cil i s ) ; r 7
li g ; 480 4,
ii i t t i t4 o : ,
131 • which the bidance on fiend up to the lit ' ••come, eftbe ,Post O ffi ce Department under the
of Jtily s 11155;made the' total leaources a o
; • a , r• f th en roducettrates of Jiestale; end its iqrensing'
year to amount to' $9 .8.' 0,117 . TO ' ex !" . , expenditures, 'must, fur Val prelient; edits; it
,stares, including $3,000,000 ,in execution:eft dependent to Millie extent upon • the treasury
the treaty, with Mexico, nod excluding emus fdt• support. "The recuinineedatione of the
pod on account, of the 'l l l l blio •ciPbt, euteurqed .I ) (istniitster , General, in relation •to the obeli:
t056,0.17g,4,0t ;,and t , including the latter, to
$72,948,702, the pa'y meth: on this account bait- t h e esta bli s h ment .
tion of the franking privilege, and his views
.
ing amounted to $12,776,'390.
, , , • , , deserve the consideration of, Coegrese,
~ I also
On the '4th of Mandl 1859; the ;Minuet' of I cell the sPecia: attention of Cortgress to the
' ' - ' n ' '
the Hahne debt tes, Se 94 i?:9,037. lob was; statement of the, Postmaster General respect
•a, 'aithaS•qintit increase Of $2,750,000 ter Mel leg the sums now paid for thetransportation
dehi rif Texats-I-orinking a' to tal'of $7 t,879,937. 1 of toils to the Pa Immo Nail road Con:many,
• Ofthis the sun
,of $40,525,319, inoluding , pre-! and _commend to their_ early and favorable
milll7l. has heendischarged, reducing thehiebt io `consideration the suggestions of that officer in
.$30,737,120; all which might he paid, Iv ilhin a' relation to now contracts, for mail transportn
, year without embarrassing the public service, I tion upon that route, md,also upon the To" 1
but being pet, Vet due, and only-redeemable at I hunutepee and Nicaragua routes.
the optibn of the holder; cannot he thrissed•to II , 'rho United I States continue in the enjoy
payment h Gove ment. . ; meet of amicable relations with all foreign
On'exstilininit the expenditures of the lest; poivere,; •:' ••- •• : ,:, , :,,- . .lo ~,,,
. 1
''five years, it,vill be seen that the atterage;'de-I, When my last ennead message was trans
'ducting flay M Snot on °Coon et of • the lin bile debt ' nutted to Congress, . tro solueets,of eoetroyer
and ten edifices paid by treaty to 5 exit), has sy, one relating to taw enlistment of soldiers
in this country for foreign service, and the ooh-• a right of little value to olio elms of States,
er to Central Americo, threatened to disturb' but Of essential importance to another and ei. •
good understanding between the Vicited States. far largpr .c1a55......1t. ought not to have been •
and Great Britain. • Of the progicaitamd ter. anticiptited th,a4a, measure so inadequate to
inination Of tho former question you Nero dn.., - :' thu acts mplishincint l of the proismed object,
formed at the'tithe ; and the other is ti ow int and FI) antipliil iiirits operation, wordd receive •
the way of satisfactory adjustment. $ , ; '; I the Media of all inatitime powers. Private
:
The' pieta of the convention befWeSii the! Proertywould lie still left to the depredations
United States .'uoa Great Britain of' tiff; 19th ;of t he public armed cruisers.
of ANN, 18,lift „was to secure, furthe 'recited{; I hale Orpreseed iti readiness on the part of
of all natl.:m.3;llm neutrality antl'tte•commott.,-.lliii, geornment to .tmerde to all the princi
ples, e o ct a ined in the debaratfon of the col:-
use of any transit way, or intermennic corn- ,
nitinicatien, across the isthmus of Panama,_ ! formes of Puris, provided that the one reins
which might be opened within the limits o f ; ting to the alatiolonment of privateming can-- -
Central America. The pretension subsequentt. I be so amended us to effect th e object, for which,
ly asserted by Great Britain to dominion or; as is- presumed, it was intended.Lthe isnrinti•:.
control over territorieS,'in or near two of the I tarty of private preporAytak the f
ocean ront/tom •
routes, those of Nicaragua and Ilonduram, 1 tile capture. 'llti•tifeet thus of lit lls•Tro
wore deemed by the United States, not mere- I 'jestsl to told to the declaration that Irivii- •
ly incompatible with the main object of the j teering is and remnins abolished" the oficrirl -- '
treaty, but oppressed even to its express stir : log ane,ttilment : 7 {. 1 l that the'private prop
ulations. Occasion of controversy on tint; j orty- Ml_ euiljects Hurl eitiionslofha belligerent
point has been . removed by an additional j on the high seas shall be exempt from seisare
ti 3 ;e i r li c e nt li" ex 4 r il ept ua4 it, ji ti asse e c i t a itrat h n e n pili d." gr.bali This
trerity; - which - Obi 'thinister - at tondow•ha.
n-i
concluded, and which will be immediately
-submitted to the Senate . fair its iiiiisttleration. amendment bait ;haunt pretended mot only to
I Should the proposed supplemental arrange- I the powers which have asked our assent to the
1 merit he tioncurrertin• by ittl!the'partios toll; 1 declonition is nbollSli priiateoring, bat to all
; affected brit,. the Alijocts,• contemplated bythe j other tpari,ti lint, .4 . i.!111'a.- . Thum ,fat . ,it ifialf)appp
• tlfiginal. nonyention,,will have Amen,.fully, at., heel' rejected by' any,nnd, la favornei,Ti j egter
tained.. „!; , j , ~• .•.. ; . „ ~, , „ : Mined 1 ?) . 0 1 W r tiehlyie.made . atOepitntnii- .
,• , The treaty lanneen 'AM UniteitStateSl tia'd : 'nation in rOply. ~ . ti
preatßrilaiii of the sth iii ' T a unt /854,,W1'1141 ' §,!lmrat 9f:th,e,pirmprn . mputs,regar tug ytith j
tiolitllutit effeetiiioopernilort lit'1115.1; put iiii , 'favor the' proposition 'or the United. :Stales,
end:W.64oes lnflirniatioir between "the two have delayed, definite, nation nponit, only • fer.,.
'Countries, by.ireouring to•the United States the v the purpose of continitintwithotlf`ers,,pmftei
I
right' of thditiry on: the .coant-.,0f th&British,, , ,to the conference of Taris. • rhave the Satin
' 'North American ~preyinces, with ady,antagait„,ffietian; of stiniiip-howlever; that ibertniperkiel
:eqnstl,to„,those,,etuoys4 by., ' l3xiti,sh subiecte, of
, Russia has entirely and impliuitly *prey-
Besides the signal beactits.ef, this treaty, to ti •ertef that modifienterni and will tro-operatediir
Jorge, class , of oar' eitisepiengligetl in a• pin; endeavNig to obtain the aim:thief other Po
w 'Cromelfeiti I to no incolisliliwahle degree . • •orn r• and Ihnt - anstiinncen of Maimihir pniticat.
With' dirFtintidlialipiesperitr Mt , strength:lit ; have been; received in:relation to the dispoei
'has-hint a:lardrablo effect nn tither interelds; .tioit'•of thn'Emperorof the Treneln .•, , m; • .Itl 'II
in the:prevision it.; thadefo o r .reciprisract freo-, j The present aspect af thin impurtatit-sub
ilora•rif tradatbetween the Uttet'cd Sintes,and ; Jed alloWs-ustoolterieh!the , lmpectilat a'priti4
'the British, peOylilcga ; ilLAmprAca. :, I '
~ ciple so Iminnno in its• character.;so•jnst and
. , The. eiportl ,of deinestie artiefes ,ftrilietai equal in itli operntion . , se essential the proe4
provinces ilurtn•g the: ldSt Yee?' ldni,,anded - MI; parity of commercial nations, .and- eis COMM
indrillhan I,Weitty l tvre Million distlitrk; exeett= 'tient to 'the mentiinents of this enlightened pe.
Ins. Anise Of 4 the • Preceding 'year! by ;nearly . riod of tho 'world, Will committal therap pro seven . inilliiM dollars;: and Any iinportsthOre- thin of tar; maritime powers, • and -thin • be'
•frord;.during,theisante, period ~amounted jto incorporated into the toile of international
inure thon; twent•Y-mter million;am increaso,o,f law. •,. •• ; , .
~ , ~ , . , ,
~
six miltiontipoti those of the preyitios year., Illy views on a r m subject arc mo ire fully net
The improved condition •of this trench - of l forth Am the reply of tile Secrotary'of" Stale,a,
our eintimeree 66;11'4 littrittutahleAn BM copy of Ilvidell is herewith trait:Ml . 4(o, .teilitr
above-intentioned treaty. .- " , ''"'- - ' -,' ,- communications tin the sitbjeet irlid o to; this
' Provision' wan" M'ado• in the first ,artitlef of governinent; 'especially . tvi thu coiniatilileatitiii
. :, •
that treats ntiommission to designate the of Vratice. ,_ . , I'
~ ,
Inman of : rivers to whiCh the conimon• right The government Of the 'United Stateshas 'at
of, tighery,..ea f the ;mast of the,Thlited States, all times revirded with friendly interest the
and the Ilritish,proxinces,wesuot to extend. other .States of, America, formerly, ;like thin
Thii emumbision Met been empioYtid a part of country, European colonies, null 'noir Ind&
two seasons, bat without touchprogress :in pendent members or the great fondly of nit
itecemplishing...the.o4.ltet fne_wlficlii_t_Wasliw. _tiiMi. BitSgiiinsM. led condition of so of
stitittett, in tionatlrynenee of a serionstlitllltrime• ,- them, (fisfinefed - TY fiqqieitt•Orofitileint, lut, :"•-•'
'of ;opinion beta-0011 the chtninislionee4,• tit flout incapable of. ;regular. and:firm , interrittl
roily al to the precise point. where the rivers• administration, has tended to etoloarrntr occa-
~
• torminate,:lint in ninny i 113111110011,11.4 10 Wll3l lio n ally our puldieintercoarse. by reason •of
.constitutes a river. These diflicnities, how- wrongs which our citizens tearer-et- their
over, may, be evercimM by resort to thm•untpir- hands, and which they•are slow to redress.;
age. prM'iled for'tiy: the treaty. •'. • ' • Unfortunately it is against - the mobile of
' Thti '6iroris - peHieverineylitiAernited•iiilloo Mexico;' with which it is. our special desire to
the commeaceinent ,of my 'administration tol maintain a good understanding., thine:Hach;
' reliere'eur.trade to the Baltic front the. exec- complaints are most 11111110r0104 ; 81111 although
titm of Sound' dues by Beninark have not yet earnestly urged upon its attention, they•have
beim sitcoodod with success. Othe; govern- not as yet received the consideration which
meats haio
. alsostinglit, to obtain, it like riAlef this ' ger ernment' had It' ' right to &oiler'.
to their cethmeree, and'Deninail l was th tie it. While reparation for .pitst injiiiies !MS been
(laced • to' piopuinfi• aft' M'rmigeiiientto all the withheld oth ersi hate been added. Thil P•ilit-
Europeifi - perivers interested • iii the subject . ; ical. condition of that country,' lioweVer, Ira
and thernanner _in which,ber proposition was been such •ns fo l dennind forbearance on 'BM
•re6eved, ' Warranting lidr•Mbeliinu Uinta eat- part of the ,United StateS. • • I' Call ef infinite
isfecterfarrangement with ' them • tmuld addit my effbrts to procure fur tho 'wCongs• Of 'on'e
be tioneltulek slie made a strongappcsl tothin citizens that redress which is intliliensable to
government for tomporary,,stutpension:ef deli- the bontinued friendly. association of the two
niter action snits part, in eonsideratiep of the republics. .
eritharrassment which might result to her - The peculiar condition of ,ffi t ir s i„.N;i ca n i -
Eiqopettn negotbdions by tin hinnediatend- gust in the eqrly part of the,presetit,year reit
justMent 'ilf the question 'With' the United tiered it important:that. this government should
Stsit&i.. This request' lets•Beeti seem-bid to - ;np- have diplonnitic ref/about with . that. Suite.
• un the condition that theihnins isollectett after .Through its .1 erri tory; had' been ..,pentst sine ,
Otel6th of. June last ; and-until theAtitlii of the print.ipal thrmatglifores across the istli
' ! tun* next," (rem Yeiscla and, carwoce..kulTig,- non, oetio,,,,tior t North .and ::,;teith,...ilinerien, 1111
1144,10. cur mcrunaiii,,, situ t o.,tsc,consideretitis Which ii Vast ailment tif Property Wm( triels--
; paid undo ~protest „pod subject to refute dd yorted, and to which cur eittr.ell3 resorted in
Jpsiment. There is reason to lctitire that an great iiiiiiibers iii• passing between the'Athin
nrrangement hetween Detunark•atid the inari- tic and l'acitie consts of 'OI6IND/it States.
time yMilarri 'ef Europa' on. the subject will be, The proteetiori of both ' required' Hint existing
smut eenerinicd;and that the pending,itogotia- power of that State should be regarded as a •
' tion-aith • the ,United. States limy ; then be re- reMeneilde got - Minuted r• and its minister was
' 'sowed; andterminated inns satisfeotory titan- a...cordingly received. • But- ho ;remained hero
',ner,..... ' .., ~ . . . ~, ~ .. . , only a Short 'llllle. Soon thereiller the petit"-
:With 'Sin - d0 ,,. 0m new d , iffiealties Bov e cal affairs of Tit iniderwent unfavere
nor has much prog,inissiniuti :iiiittla'm : t6 ' ad- Me Changes and becomeinvoNed in mach an
jastieent of pending co'c'oa ''' ' - • 1 ' '"'' ' ''' certainty and confusion. - Diploinntic repro..
"•Negisttiitierfrosntered Into fOrthe , titirpoSe selitatiresitom "two contending, parties linen
of reliariii,tinir commercial interioursewith• boon recently sent to this •governniont ; but.
tlle . imland hf•tittlin of sortie ofits:lairdens, nod Avitli 'tlie . imperfect 'information 'possessed, it
providing'farilio more speedy !settlement of wits not possible to decide which wits the ~,..iv- 1
1 lotall.dispntesgrowiegout of that intercourse, eminent de**;,,,itt•in r- and-awaiting. further
have nut yet licea attended with any :re:ialts. developments I have Tefutted,to receiie chit
.. . • A . the Tate • on, , itti i/'ll> tt P- .
~k36oll.ofter.the 'contioclicement or'` - late or. ' • '
rear in garoPe,••this'Aiirerithieiteatilimittert to - I '.Quastions' of''., dui most •seriotta.ninure are
the 'clorishleratidie of till •ittarithienations , tido ? peniljng between, thoynite d Stntesstml the re
principles for the security of neutral!com- publio of New •Gratiindit. 'TliCgili - dilteinent! or -
Terre: tile, that th,q,neutral flag should cover. ••tiiiit'rOimblic undertook; a . yenr-iince; mini
' erientia? gouilh,t'except•orticlen• (*intent:lnd of J poric•tounago,dutica,en foreign,' i:erMl.l.ll jll-lier
Wn'i;;; 'Sod this'other, that nontrahproporty ion Torte, but tho purpose, A resisted 'by this
lioard•marehalit vessels,of belligereuts should goi'er'ameitt; as being' ntritry'th existin g
44,4.
he . otempt frlm, condenumtien, with ,the, ex- treaty stipulation with th inited•States,lllltl
•eoptlon of contraband articles. These were :to rights i con,forred,hy,oluttter opoit . the Pima
not, presented as new rules Of: . iritertintional twit . l4,llroad'Company, and Was licentldingly•
laic; 'having hi hi
ren generally cnned by nob- ralitiiininfied 'at (hut (Hite, it' bight; adinitted.
Arabi, itiOughliol l 'ilaais • tidtiritted by +belli- that oui'Vestiele ;were' inititled;t4i• he titempt
. , . , . .
. . , ..
g'ernnts.• - Ode 'of -the parties to this witr —Rue- tom tonnage duty in the free'- its of 'Praia
ilit-'-itSwellitit several , neutralisexers,prtanpt. 'Ma - itnid - iitspinvrnll., ~ B ut.; the, •Istirposo,;hns
.ty amedoll'tii,thesa.prepositionn ; and the two ' Wen rocently:.royived,-,ott, 010 11111 A of j,lew
'other principal belligereats.,,,Preat Britain •Griniatla t by the enactment of it,itts, to en)uect
inve r t:ranee, havingcmiserned to . ebstnYe them vessels visiting her ports to the tunni/ge 'duty
,for il the present. oecanien,,a favor:oll6 oppor;- 1 of forty cents per ten ; ttio, altiriathtli the law •••
i tunny, seemed to be . pr l emeitied:fiii•obtaining a has net heeti•ptit inltiree, yetrlthwitigliktillett-
Otiortilillatogitithin• of them' birth to 'Europe 'ftirea' it le 'atilt assertedv;aird - ttutip 'at limy
v o leAmetka. ' ' ' 'I.: o: , . ;;;. •. - .: - . , 1::! r - time, be' noted on:by the governinent•4 :riot
••, •But 'area,' Britain .and Francoi•in.commen republic, ; • 1•• •,• . 'f 'WI i,: /1 1,1 , '1;: ,11'1•1•1
With.niont of the Staten of lairope,whilp for- •• 'rho Congress of JNowGranada,hol 0 1116 0n ...
•bearing
,Pt, rejoet, did notallirmapyely aet up.; a cted a Jew daring the An t it ij yetir Vi?eti.ekvies.
on the overtures of tho Untied States, ~,, la, tax uf„morethitn threa dollars on leiory
While the questien trams l n thiUmisitieri, the valid :of •inial 'Mutter •transPertOd li6 . 6athe,
,represeptatiyBofAtit;ill,. Fiance,.Oreat Bil. istliiiiini.' The stirii thins reatliireir tot ifili Suitt
tam, Attitrin. Priissia l '.Siirdfiliii, 'and Thrkey; ell• the''nutilio of , thelUnitetl .Stetee *mild be
r ittigisinaed at `Parli,' finite iiito •etinnideftifion Inearly two minion .dollars muuvallyoln.addi
thli'aubjeet pfWirtkitiiiie'riglittiatidtpat:"fortli; , tihncto, the' large.Bllllllpay4hlP•hy contragt to •
itideelaration containing the , •two .prinoiples ; he P 41181138 'Al4ll'4lOl Outtipany„, .1.. f t tlm ply
'whichtbis governmentluntsubmittedi pearly, iehieution to this exactien sere thiexexintrin-
WI, years-before,-to,thenyamideration of. mart. ,prior i its ainount, it,.4intd . not - be 'submitted to '
tiny? P9were,,and mii4logAlergtyitlitefellewtng .Ity the Witted States: .' ' t ' •:: •'' I " 11 "
propusitions,: j Privateering is and - rOiiiitins • *lie iniPosition Of it;•lMweYer; noUld'Obri
atelienedi'l aua”broCkiidete, iii,`Viiidr; hi' be MislY•teintravene %Mr treaty with - Noir; Orion
hiii!)iig, Mik / be elfeethe-=-• - •thin• lel to tiny,' riA• l • Mitt , ihfringe the; contract :oftitaktepublia
iitafatitined ',bp force 'entr:neat •tetilly•topre , 'v , •ith• the Patultuts:RailrOluLgele,PaPS,-• The
vent access-.to the cou r t of tiie•oneinril!•and •lasY,providinglor,this tax,was,hytti, temp, to
hilledeclaration thus composed of four points,. ; talee effect pin the i fir f n (if September lent ; '.but
twit of i,ilii&lie'fiad'isilrestelfbeou'peoptitied bp-gleaucal author:limn on the istlianurhaYetieen
the United - Stateir•this•grivernment has been, itia'tniedto stisPenditkoketititiori;iiidbi'airait
invited to accede:by:ol.th° poweretcpeisent,, further l iiiStrinAintiltint - the itildeet • frOttiltho
od at; Paris except, Great Britain And Turkey/ 'got•ornmeitt' of the republic. Off ant not 'yet
To the hoit„ of thotwoodditional,propositioni ) advised 'of the tleterMination-ofu that govern
_that,,in ,'relation to, bloolcuilee-;,there ean mune. Ifs measure se.. eAtiiiardinarykia its
certainlY :lie no"Oli.jaction, It IS' Merely the efuwacter, and,.so,,clearly couirary,tp„tratr
delinitilm Of
. What shell constitute the effectual .otipalation§; and the'
.enntract ,rillsts j
. .ti the
invemtitiontrif of' biockiided•phiee, •atlefinition. Romu . na Rail road CoMpariY, coca kid Valittr
for which this' governinent..has alwaytt eon- or American' °Wiens', should lie Oriented in,,,
tended,. ctaiming -indemnity for, losses wherej Wird! hollin ditty ilthe'llnittld•Sthtealtki re-.
a practical ; violation, f the:ll4 . oas delinial 1 sist its execution.
hits been injuriuns to our commerce. As Olt 1 4 regret oiceedinglyttbat.ocentdenAgints to,
time remaining article of timdeciarntionnf thin unite y . our:lattention to at sttbjeet,jof j , ,stilh
conference of Paris---"that priyateeringisand graver .unktort in our relationi : with:nhe i re-.
reimtins abolished"-.I 'certainty cannot as public efNew,Pvinada. Ott tbfflfteorith day.
1
crib!, to the poWers represented in the confer. of April riotienii . .asSembliigii of the in.
, . .. _....
mice of 'Paris any hitt lateral' and philanthrop: I habitants Of Pennine, ctinimitted'a vielentianct •
idiiewa iwthe att•eintit tbehange theunques-'l, entragethis attack' oil' tho premilies ;of f the.
tiohable rule of maritime ' law •in regard' tOl•ruilread•' company; j andl the pannengere I and!
privateering. • Their•proposition . wan oreubt. Mther.perstais to or ladarithe. Brune, invol j ving.
less intended to imply approval of the prinui- diva death ; of several citizens of, the' :finited
plotlini private property: upon :the ocean, al-.l•States,,the , pillage; of illiliq. "filar? , *all; the,
thtitigli ;,.t might belong. to the•:eitizenn -of a I destrection, of a large amount of pretiorts bi-.
•belligercutc State, 'should; be. exempted' from, hinging to the railroad cunipany.• Vedanta,
capture; .and hint that proposition been 83 1 . 011 mrestigution of 'flint event, to be made,,
froined.llB bi.giyo full effect to the'priliciple; 'and 'thu 'result shows: sntisfnetorilythot • com,
it would have received iiii'i L eiiai assent on I piece responSibility for *hat occurred attaches
behalf °filo: Unfted•Sinfes. lint the Measure j• to •tlie: government of• New Unmade. .• :•1 eileve,
prepoSed•ii inadeotiate tit that latrpose;' it,' therefores.d?lnalided of; that govcreMetht li that
to true that, if adopted, private property tip.,l the perpetrators of the wrongs, to tpiestiou
on the Ocean wout4 be-withdrawn front onel , B4ollld 110 poniiihed ; thitt Provisitntithetilit..bo.._.
modeef•pliattler, but left exposed, Meanwhile, I Made for the tontines Of citiiena of the United
to Another mode, which . could bonged with in- I Statthl' 'who were killed, with full indennaity
creased effectiveness.. The nggressivecapeci. fur the proportY pillagettur destroyed ,' o ,' r• ••'
ty ofgrent naval powers would he:thereby nag.; ' ' The presenn ; condition of . the. Inthisos .of
1
mooted, while the defensive ability of others :Panama] ill 80. far as zoos! , ds A°. security of
- Would:be reduced:. Ttiongh 'the surrender 'of. i .persone aull.property.pP#Mlng•eyer.it c requtres,
the means - of-prosecuting hostilities by tin, ;serious coosideratiMl,...,l, l esß . , l l int:ldeate tendi
;Isloying.priviSteers. - asproposed.by the confer:, , to l kilWW th tk the, toesLoutporitiee canuat to
I
mice of Paris, is 'flaunt in terms, yet, intone- relied oil
1 3.4 1 10' aiiiiitiii . the
. itublie ' panto of'
deal OEOOI, it would be the relinguielimetit of l i alialua; a d there l ls 'Stnit'grutindl foil'iPple.•
EMiIMU
bension that tt portion or the inhabitants aro
tasditat'ing furthot uutnles,xvithmat adequate
Pleasures for the IteCuracy and protection or
persona or property having bten taken either
by ttre alto of Panto'a or by the general
government of New Gromide.
Undeithe guarantees of treaty, citizens of
the United States have, by the outlay of sev
eral millions,of dollars, constructed a railroad
across the isthmus, and it has become the
main route between our Atlantic and Pacific
possessions, over which multitudes of our
cithiens and a. vast amount of property are
constantly passing—to the security and pro
tection of all which, and the continuance of
the pablie advantages involved, it is impoltsi
• bleier the government of the United States
to be indifferent.
I have deemed the danger of the recurrence
el SC4IIOA of. lawless violence in this quarter
•
au imminent as to make it my duty. to station
•It rift of our naval force in the harbors of '
Panainit' and 'Aspinwill, in order to proteet
Ilia persons and property of the citizens of ,
thy United States in those ports, and to insure
to•thein safe passage across the isthmus, And
it Viotti& in my judgment, be unwise to with
draw the naval force now in those porta until,
by the spontaneous action of the republic of
ewe 1- Onttiada,'or otherwise, some adequate
arrangement shall have been made for the'
• protection and• security of a line of inter
ommtuunietttion' so important , at this'
time,' not. to the United States unlit, tint tolald
other maritime 'States both of Europe and
Airierica. • *,
Meanwhile, negotiations have .been,
tutell,:,b Means of a special commission, to
°biot, front 316,w,Tirauttilit felt indemnity for
injuries' sustained by our citizens on the lath
ionticitid satisfactory security for the general
interests,ofithe United States.
~ , •
addreitsing to you my last annual Mes
aage, the OCUleilollatenis to nUi ah . appraprinto
one to express my toongnttulations in view,al
grctitness, and' felicity which the'
United States, now , possess and enjoy. To
plibityett,'to'the state of the varions'depart
ntenteof tlie.giivernitient,,and of,ull the great
bran Ches of the public service, civil and null
hiryi.in.iirtler 'to speak
or the intelligence and
the inte,,ority which pervade.. the whole, would dip,tolndiCate tint imperfectly the ailminisira
tive condition of tho coentry, and the benefi
cial effects of that on the general welfare.—
Nor.iiaild It Sllirle4 to any , that the nation is
• actually at peace ut home and abroad;'that
itaY indestrinl interests ere prosperous; that
the enliven; of its mariners whitens every see,
and time plough of its buslianilmen is march-,
ing.iieadilY onward to the bloodless conquest
of, the .continent ; that cities and populous
tiztea are sPringing no, as if by enchantment,'
fronythobo39lll of our western wilds, and that
the etinragetina energy:Of eur, people is making
of these, ,United 'States,' the grent - republie of,
time world: Those results lave 'net been' et
. • inipetl'. Without : passing through triale :and
by,dxnerienee Of which, and thus only,
„nations, een harden into.manhood. Our fore-,
trained ',to tlitfxvisdom which'
entionved arid the Courage 'aellioved
--- Inilornideielp :by circumstances .which
aurroonileirthem, aiisl:they,vere thus made
taipuble of the , erindlon of the rdpublie.' ,
develfetf on thienext eiierallintro consolidate
,'‘Vorlt of the revointiOn. to dclivor Abe
country entirely frout:the induences'ef 'Con ,
tramottlantie , partialities or ...antipa-
tidos; whieh attached to our colonial , and rev
olutionary histroy.nato organize the pinetient operatioirof the constitutional and legal
institutions of the Union. To us, of:this gen-,
nuntioir,- remains the. not less noble teak , of ,
untiutanung einl, extend ng the;natione pow-
er.ut length reached that stage of
our country's career - o h' which the dangers to
lie encountered, undthe'ekertiona,te,he ;node,
are.' the incidents, not of weakness, hut of
strength:.'' lii 'foreign' relations We have tol,
iitteuiper our rower to 'the less happy' condi
tion. of other republics is America, and to
• - lelaiio ourselves in the Calmnesit'and conscious •
dignity of right by the side .of. the greatest
timbWealibiest of the empires of Europe. In
. domestic relatiensWe have to. guard, ai,Thist
the•shoekof, the discontents, the
• theleterests, end 'the 'exuberant and, there-
• foreesonintimes irregular impulses of epinion,
or of notion, which aro the natural product of
tlid present Politieal elevation, the selfreli-. 1
imeetuni the_restless sp irit of tiiiterprive of
the'people of the United States:
I shall prepare to surrender 'the executive
'trust to nip Pllei•OSOC, 'and retire to private
life ,with, sentiments of iwormind gratittple to
• • - the good Providence Which, during the period,
of my administretion,,has-virochsafed to carry
-the country through ninny difficulties, domes
tie and foreign, mid which enables me to aro
template the' epee:tilde of amienble and re
speetful relations between ours and all' , other
xerertutieuts, and the establishment oftionuthz
tutionnl order nud tranquility'thron'gfient the,
Union.• - • Flt'd.NftLlNT PIERCE.
'•• k • ii+Vsnitierrox, •Deeenilier 2, 1856. '
. .
1 . The a reatestWonder of the Age .
141qiiyhif pi. 'Tobias' Celetiratel Venetian
Litiiineilt. does not cure Cholera, .Dyseidery,,
CrtitipT,Cholit', , Coughs, Dyspepsin. 1 , omiting,
Mumps, Toothache, Headache, Chapped hands,
, 'Moittuito Bites, Insect • Stings,
"- • . Ilerimatism, Swellings, Old Sores, Cuts
--Burley Bruiiies and • Pains or Weakness in the
•Liihbs Back tint! Chest: TRY r IT.
, warranted his Linim'ent for
eight years without over having a demand for
-' the; return orate money—all. that is's - liked is to
.4
use it.ticcordiiig to the directions. Ax one will
vier lie without it after once using it. Ir you
doliot !tad , it beder than any thing, you' have
- , reskir tried before, pet hour money returned
. I, •l9,...;Theturimds of certificates have been re;"
.eopiied apeakiig of its virtues. Now-a.days it
• - t'is did_practice to; fill :the; papers with cortiii.
~..catta',froin unknown persons, or given by
I • those:ll4o have never used the medicine=-now
" Dr. •Tobialit, offerit to pay 1000 dollars to any
-ono who will prove that ho ever published a
-false -certificate' daring the time lie has had
-,, hirVmedielne - bdfore the Public. . •
Pali' on , the Agent and get • pamphlet con
, ‘taing geneitii , eertificates. • • . •
- As persons envious of the large sale of the
7 ,l Venetian - Wahl:milt have stated it is , injurious
to take it intertially? pr. Tobias has taken the
following oei'ti r .•. 1.• ;
I, Samuel I. Tobias, of the city of Now 'York,
being duly sworMde depose that I compound a
'Liniment called Venetian, and. that the ingre
•
;clients of which it ii compounded are-Perfect
ly h . armless'ro takeinternally, even' in double
the qua t utitylramed it . n • the .directions, 'accom
panying each bottle: ' z
'New York, January 1856.
•-• . Sworn this flay before me,
r ',E.F.BacaN DO, W.QQD, Mayon •
Price 25 and 50 cents ; sold by the Druggist
Anil: Patent Medicine Dealers • throughout the,
;? 'United States. .;
; OS-Also. for sale,,Di Tobias' Horse Liar.
Made in Pklllll,o4leil, at 50 cents, , warranted.
ItuperiorAoAti.f;other.
DetTobime• (Mee; 66 Courtland iitreet, N.
::York: ; • "
•
agk.,•Also,. by. A. D. DUEIRLEtt, Getty s burg
••,snd 11:13..Miller, East.
Aept..19;.1856,--ns, • ,
MEE
Fil z POlTDEPlux.—illessra. J. & T. Gillen
;.der. at .f`,l4 . deptric, writes us, that a gentleman
of their sequaniiance hal-been subject to spit
, ting„oplood, which - repirred so frequently a;
to the most conclusive"evidenie of a
tendency to'CgOki ption. Various' remedies
, ,
had been tried wahont effect, and consulta
• , lions were hold with physicians of the highest
.
ennnetute with no better EIRCCCB9. Cire U [Mann.
•etill?rought him accidentally to a knowledge
of the Clickener Sugar Coated Purgative Pills,
,and,eltbovii ho had little faith in their virtues,
-the.*ersitasion o'f his friends at length pro
his .determination, and he consen
ited,to,try Ppm. The first box had no pope!) ,
However, a second was purchased
* And the ssrupionts of his complaint begati im
. l ',therliittel• to ameliorate. The 'spitting of blood
• Iteurredat much longer intervals, until; finally
ltallertbn Ise of rt fewoboxes more. it, ceased
. lie 4v now.. in the full k glow,. of
health, and eapable of enduring the, greatest
the, t leastluconvenlentm./
•
. . s .N0v28,2t
TH STIR AND BANNER.
- -P4 4 ••: , ..-1-
'. - =' , -4= - J...,. • ~., - - . 1
-..i.,-.41: - ---:- : . . •- -. -. !..4..„„
-----ct,
CETTISBUIRC.
Friday Evening, Dec. 5, 1856.
'PRESIDENT'S MESSAGE.
61/I:7•We gm! the President's Message
in full t oday, according to custom—not
by reason of any merit in the document it- ,
self. Smarting under the terrible rebuke
of his administration; by the free veters of
the North, President Pierce descends from
the digrity of an Eiecutive'elficer, and
catching up:the" le* 'part i iian'slang of the
bar-room and cock-pit, belchesjr,,,put, as
cumulative evidence of , his utter unfitness
fdr the post he sO.unwerihily ; .fie
charges those of his fellow-citizens who da
red'al the .recent Presidential election to
record their cendeuiCatieti of •his, treacher
ous betrayal •uf the cause. of freetiont---:a,
.mtifority' of the people , of the Northern
.States—with a want of fidelity to their
' constitutional obligations'and love of the
Union, and with endeavoring to ;'usurp"
the control of the Government! Never
before did President so meanly demean
himself—never so outrage the . proprieiles
of,oilicial position. John Tyler's admin
istrutiob eras •a ° disgraceful, one,• and the
chief pilot passed into' an Wantons obscu
rity: Frankitu_Pierce seems mnbitious or
descending to a still lower dooth of info
my, and bids fair to realize hisaspirations.
We giye themessage, however; in lull
--such es it. If any of our readers con
wade through it , without realizing a sense
of dezp disgust and renewed coittempt for
the author, lie' much mistake their intelli
genes. It is an
„ unfortunate ofteial, docu
went. " Venal *Presses "and bigoted Yard
sans niay defend, but the .honest all par
ties must condemn it: The Philadelphia
Snn of ; yesterday disposes' of it in this
"pnEstnzaz's 'ltless,toe.-As we expected
from the last dying speech and confeision
)%ot Preitident Pierce, we lave 'not been disap-
Pointed: 'lt is' 111 of 'weak softhistribi, nu.
meaning generalities and ridiculous arguments,
nnworthy a stump speech before an election,
to say rn
nothing•of a public 'docuMent 'eana-.
ting t . rbut a•President under timievireinents
of the Constitution. if any one has the °our
?' ago to read it; let him do so, but not by otii 'ad
) vice.' it will be time Sadly Misspent. There
) was not a Stump' speaker of the smalleit calibre
,ona month since, 'who' could not have given :a
more. comprehensive argument than this Mess
t 'age &Maths. The fact Is' Mr: Ptzitca'-finds
• he has made a groat mistake in trying to out
deinagygna:3olla.'Hot:oliAS .illlBtlbegrOCtley
to the Sputh, and being ashamed to acknowl
edge that he was diiped, tries to brazen Went.
The country understunds the whole Matter'and
will laugh at the untoward efforts of thePreei•
deaf to disembarrass himself. 'He concludes
by saying that he shall "prepare ba surren
der the Executive trust to his succosor, and
retife to private life, with sentimeuts'of pro
found gratitude to the good. Piovidencen-,--and
to this all the people will respond "Amen I"
Ir7bAdviees (nice Renato state that 89,
Freo State priaoners had wade their escape ,
from Lecompton on the night of tbe 22d
of November. Judge Lecompte had ism : ,
mi a writ of lAtheas corpus in the ease of
tho muruerer Ilayes, Who had been dis
charged by him, but re-arrested by 'order
of Gov,. Geary. •
Despatches from Washington say that
Marshal Donaldson's resignation has been
accepted by the Prdsifidid, and that. Geary
will be sustaitied
t:T By the arrival of die 111itiois from
'Aspinwall, On Saturday morning 'we have
dates from California to Nov.s. elec.
tion,returna which had reached San Fran
eine en the , everking of the sth indicate a
plurality 'for' Builhanan—the 'Opposition
vote being divided between Fremont and
Fillinore. , Cr as beryl finin the vote
stood : Bachatien . 20,787 t Fremont 10,-
460 ; Fillmore 14,876. A serious fight
was in prospect between two contending
bodies of Chinese in the interior, 'but was
stopyed without gieet bleoilsbed;, by tile
intervention of the authorities. The an
counts of the mines oontinueto bo favora
ble. The Illinois brings nearly two mill-
ions in goid.
. ,
•
Bent is getting to lolz;lt ae if everybody
who was not a Democrat, at the South,
tuttet be an abolitionist. Hon. Giles M.
ffillyer, who made such gallant Fillmore
speeches before the late election is now
accused by the Mississippi Buchanan pap
ers of ;tieing an. aholitiotiist. In the
North, the Loaefocos say a cotter must be
one ef them if he would stay the 'progress
of OlsVeri In the:Sehth : :thq faille - must
, bcatke or the if he would, eAteall the area
of Slavery I • What a 'party for honest
• men to belong to?
Pr.r The editor of the Compiler coot in
untu.whine TO a whipped spaniel beettuse
we Oilos'olo castigrite'hini . for his political
indccermios. Lot Pim. be runre Fireurnspeat
ill' the future, if he wonkiescape like Wile.
Oen, Dit'he.dohs meafthau whine. He
thinks;badli ue-we are not surprised:
kt.Whuvrokuo e'er felt tho haltes p
With good apittionof the lair 1" •
Betkveen his whining and complaining we
,
sometimes have a pang of regret for having
been induced to notice him ;"but we will
prolate.) to Ispakci ,oui tender& many more
words about his paper until it becomes
more worthy of notice. We fear that it
will be some',time hence; . for to change
tho habits of a life-timelnot the 'workef
a day. But we --bops:even ; against. Jipe.
The vjitor of the Compiler may hereifter
school himself into capacity to,pnblish an
honest; decent and — respeotable partizan
paper: We 4tro dispesed in view, his effOts
at reform an anew imile, and
to wit.
•
wait with to alt nit the
experiment.
CONGRESSIONAL
O - The attendance in both branches of
Congress was pretty full op Nondsy.--
Committees 'Were'appointed by the Senate
and Hciuso to wait on the President, who
announced his intention to transmit his
annual message on Tuesday, at 12
clock. '
Mr. Whitfield presented himself as dole
go to elect from Kansas, and asked to be
morn in.. Mr. Grow chairman of the
committee on Territories, objected, alledg
it: g that the legislature under whose auth
ority th'e election 'for delogiito had , been
held, was a urtirpation characterised by
unprettedented tyranny and wrong, end
that the ,admission of Whitfield would, be
:regarded as a recognition by the house' of
the validity of these bogOs laws. On the
question—" Shall Mr. Whitfield be sworn
in?'-the house voted : yetus 97; nays
1„104. The balance a the day was Con
sumed in debeting.a motion to reconsider ,
1 the vote thefriends oil Whitflold aiming
to staye off Sloe' vote until some absent
Southern members Should come in.
The questicin ut Whitfield's. adtmenton
was debated in the House all day Tuesday
without'ienehitig a vote.
In the Senate a spicy debate sprung up
on a motion to print the President's Mes
sage. • Messrs. Halo, Wilson, and Trum 7
bull, reviewed with much severity the
'President's undignified and insulting at
tack on, the Republican party.
LOCOFOOO DEcYE CI
Ig2'Wu gather from two or three of
our exchanges the following articles, which
~
admirably illustrate the taste and tenden
cies of the leaders of. the L4eofoco party.
They also . sburi that the Compiler, in
comparing Fremont to a druulceu negro
vagrant, Bed intimating that the two are
about' equally fit - for President, was only a
little more vulgar, but not more malignant,
*art' o
ther exponents of his party. ...It will
,
also ,be seen that these leaders are equally
regardless of the feelings of ladies and of '
tho civil
rights of men wuo vote against
them. -Read those paragraphs, and con- ,
eider their spirit. One,of the 'featly. es in
the recent Locofoco torch-light proecssion
in Washington City is thus described in '
thO Baltimore SEM '
Immediately following this was mounted ,a
vessel, which proved to - be the "Harriet. Heuch
er Stowe." Oa her sides her de/ideation wal
tints announced, "Ho , l for Salt River with dis
patch I The steamer Disunion, Capt. J. D. Fre-
Monti cook and steward, Horace Greeley."—
This team was driven by a '4temaien oh color,"
with dress resembling that of a Jack Ketch. --
1 The.boat wits.shrouded in black and drawn hy
an animal fixed up—a good representation of
the eclob'rated- "woolly horse.'
In Sbonandoah 'enuuty, Va., there werii,
five men,who voted for. Fremont, and the
Democratic. Sentinel of that county has a
cut of each of them, after the manlier of
runaway uegroes, illustrated iu their :Aver
timing columns. • .
A recent' number Or.the Philadelphia
Penrtsjivanian contains. this reference. to
the men who sup Ported Col. Freinont :
party" forsooth. Why it is as old
as the first treason perpetrated upon earth.—
It is as old as hypocrisy itself; deeply dyed in
turpitude as the personikation of evil. New
puith indeed • Were there no tories in the
Revolution. no traitors in "the times that tried
men's souls," no Corr-boy's in '76, no Hartford
Conventionists to hatch treason during the war
of 1812, no Mexican sympathizers ,at touch
later period who would receive ' if they could,
American soldiers, with bloody hands and fir.
ni.sh.,tbem with hospitable graves—that, the
FreMent Republicamfaction oftraitorsand dis
organizers, should be termed "a new party?"
The audacity of this shameless pretence goes
a bOw-shot beyond the efforts of &rim
chanson himself. ,
The following paragraph illustrates the
taste and spirit of theyoungLocefoco atu•
dents at Prineoton :
The - students at Princeton College N. J.;
Thursday night, Marched around the. town
in procession, - with tratispariencies; torches,
drums. fifes; etc., four pining 'lion, bearing a
black-coffin, beading , the procession; and an
other,,,with black bonnet and dress, riding
upon •a little Canadian stallion, representing
, Fretuout's .widow," the - now diseonsolato,
Jessie. After a general round of the tawn,
a funeral oration was delivered, and the
Coffin burned: • , j -• 1 .
A a recent numbor of thn South baro-
Union contains this aragmph
CMlt33
"I who WAS once as gram, as Ccesar,"
"Am now as 10 as. Nebuchadnezzar."
The great financier; finder of buti,lo paths,
traitor' to his political Mother, apostate to his
religion; and renegad e ,generally to all that 'is
honorable; is now as the 'lawyers- say, 'Wood
teopors," and Politically 'extinguished: '
• 'the • Black Republicans , should purchase
him an estate in or .comatission him to
We might multiply these extracts indof
'The foregoing, however, will ad
fice as types of the whole. Wo desire ,it
also to bo - born in mind that these, ebuli
tions of vindictiveness and• indecency
make their appearanee efter the PresidMi
tial struggle has been decided, and cannot
be attributed:to the indiscrotionsof a bit
ter partizan canvass. Conceive, if possi
ble, the black-hearted . malignity which n
lone ceuld prompt such things, and the
reader way understand the character of
the' Men who lea the Locofoao party, and
throogh its .agenoy seek to govern the
country: And yet this is 'the party whioh,
we were , told by, the Orators at the recent
Locofoco jubilation in this • place, consti
tutes toacid!fi eboson.poople? in this coon=
try, without whose triumph the. Union
could not 14 preserved I
KrThe Empieus Eugenie (on dit) is
a good mark. . She
.reoently shot nine
pheasants in the forest of St. Cloud.
IC?.Tite r GoVerner 'of: South Carolina
itaineatee tlte, rev i val of :the slavit trale,
and thinks every . .department of labor
shOuld be in ilia bands' of 'eleven.
10,.A.lbori Sumner, , roßhor ,, ofar ea
Siimuer, with his family, was on board tho
:Fronoti_atemnor, Lyounaiso, recently bat.
licr(leeen.Viateria is golog to have an.
other baby. The ''codoloo bite inteicati
Jug event, will tranapito in Febtuary..
ILLINOIS
1
I t has at length been ascertained that 1
the State , of Illinois, at first admitted on 1
all hands to have gone Republican. meta
her Electoral vote for Buchanan and Britck;
ridge. As in PennsYlvenie, N ' ersey
and Indiana, the oppositiod co 111-
inoittlet . .pass the opportunity to the,
'... •
totil;rout of the administration party, dis
sipating their strength by a melees division
upon candidates, when a hearty ral ly for
eithei.would have accomplished 'lsilkt, all
, , • • . . .
had itt'vienr, the rabukiiijthe prettent - ad
ministration end arresting . the tide of Loco
loco tyranny and.misrulo.l , .
In regard to the result n the State, es
pecially the great thfferen .e between the
result in the northern a I the soutithrn
' parts. the Chicago Tribe/ e remarks :
1 "After the ecccuragem ut given by the!
Fremont majorities in t e hoer northern
districts, this coming do rot to , a defeat is
a bitter thing. But we,l we the consola
tion of knowing - thet i the Valet, were
weighed instead of "coil ted," we should
to day be victorious. It all parts of M
innie, where comet/mile ols are liberally
supported. where the go pet is ill telligent
rly preached,
.w Ite're:the epic tire,edacat.
ed, where men ate pant tic from, prinei
ple, where newspapers are well sustained, ,
where book *term; are, to he found in ev
ery village of five hundred people, where
phllatithrophy has
.. takentleep root for_ the
bringing lorth of
. good fruit•-- 7 we • have no
reason to be ashamed °lithe progress of
°decease or of the favor lint ..whlch Our
candidates have been i received. The
hloW comes from other quartere. ':The
counties in which ignoreice is the Most
hopeless, in which there tra few' school
lotuses and those few of !lie loWest order
in tvltich; here and there, 'dingy local
enema, ttigether with the Chicago Times,
N. ;Y._ Day Book, and CinCiamati Rn
quirer, • are the only[ sources through
which the people whoitu read 'are 'stip
pled with information; n which alturches,,
are few and far betw n :'in which,,
small datnagitgdes 'w ti- flourish where
darkness is, are the at gnates who rule
the people.; in 'whielt, though they
,lines
e l
been
,settled fifty or n . re, yeerm, govern.
ment, Moil the charter I the Illinois Cent
ral Railroad. owned net of the, IRO—
,
in These counties ,thob ow .hits been dealt:
It been a battle I intelligence. of
truth, r , , modern Awe, against ignorance
falsehood end antedel ciao barbarism.—
We ere beaten by the Fillmore diversion.
The men of the eenir whose intelligence
and, desire to hdright slitmild have taugh t.
thm. to, disrega rd t:e partisan' cry .4
t•itholiiiimis:n and Dilicion".— whose in.
wrest is the North—who know 31111,114%4
reel the' blessirgs tiflree society and the
capabilities of free territory—have dune
their misehief.° ' • '
111-3'3lr.' rillinare's.•hinne nror.n--the
Republican Advartiseti—holds this lan•
gunge in regard to - thisprnpnee
the A merican•and ReOblican parties :
Kalsoaa,is tit its (nada' a Simi° State
by titcocutiv A t Intel forctee, if Walker is to
ho aided in order to tthke Nicaragua a ba- I
sis of operations Teti the
,acquisitici ,'pf
ebb's, and thus carry cut the doct rines of
this Ostend 'Circular, i;ltielt Mr. Buylowan I
was the first teo , sign:--if Otis progratuino'is
m
to' he teaed out; why; nothidg more
certain than the complete consolidation of
the American anrl,ilepublicanparties into
a compact position If Buchanan proves
to Ile the pliant facile 1491 of,tho Zit!.
ibutiters, and s , ire-inters, we
,repeat our
warning, that the Fitly will not again be
saved front perdition by a divided opposi-
Mr. Buchanan *rept the 'Southern
`States upon the un:er:standing that lie
would pursue preciacly the • policy the
advertiser fears. -1. .l fads tir carry out
this policy,' he will cheat. the South. If
he don carry it on; he will 'cheat ~ the
:North. Which will he do ? Time , will
I tell. Meanwhile tip Buchaneers quake
' with fear. For. the went elections show
!that the North saucier be am& longer
trifled with ; .and yotSoutheru , unanimity
pr °clouts the dungtr of infidelity to the
radical measures upon which the Southern
I.?irmeaters assured .tb i llr ,friends Mr. 'Bu
chanan could', ha- trotted. His pathWAY
truly is, full of peril., hurl so.theitttelligcot
I members of his iarty . adroit. Isis , policy
:doubtless Will be. ,tol ,satisfy North
Iwithout offending thjei Smith., ...Hence ..wo
nlay look for honied fiords in his Innugur
ati het the' ptMPle willtt'forthe Acid.
They can have, no, otuVe ce , , t.
in' lici . prc;•
fessions of the man who played raise .to
both Clay and Jackson in ltl2lV nod' who
:in 1844'iMrposely , raided the, •Deinoeratie
! voters of Penusylvai4a as regardS
Clay's opinions on the .Tariff.
SAVING CABIIA.9EII.T—T4O best way to
!preserve cabbages green allwinter, so that
their good qualiti33 shalrin no manner do
! teriorate:is!as.tnllttvstr i Alt fade this: month
as the weather will allow, dig out your
i .oabbages that you, may, set apart, •fur l Nie
-1 ter usei ''dig trenches say ,eiglifeete or
tWenty, Inches, apart,' and from twelve,, to
twenty feet in length; as Mei be most coif
; veuient, and , in accordance. to the quantify
l !9'bd preserved,
,irsineplatit your, cabba
ges firuily in those trenches us closely, as
they will stand together. When your
bed is finished, raise a' platform some eigh
teen or twenty inches . over them,' !high
!e'en, be Made of nay refuse 'posts, 'rails, or
boards elicit a place; :across •phuse.a
few bean' poles or lath, and .upon the
whole throw a quantity of beau haulm,
coma talks, straw, or any material or this
kind, is, prat:Mit:to against wet and frotit,
and you can. eat green ,cabbage up to
April, finer than if 'plucke front the gar
den in October.--Ger. 'Telegraph.
.
ICT•The last wicked thing on Mops is
the following : 7 —The ladies' hoops urn get
ting so wide that it is difficult for them to
get into stirailroa4 'car,:upsF of thorn be
ing built of the ''iutrrow gauge.'" It will
be a little singular if faithion, should dyivo
'all - the 'travel . to thu six : foot gauge rail
1 7 Efforts are 'being niade to revive
the Lancaster Bank, with Strong probabil.
hies of iIICOOSS.
thivollittial rote of
Conneeticow Fremont, 42,715;t
''
• tigt.:toimeteeck,tlrove;hoiti selling
the western eptukticspf,V4giNa atcri
00 1 11 ; - 7, •,; !..
LOCAL ITEMS.
nettstottO Berwhe* [br-thb Met
Sabbath.
ri Prestylerfori t'hirich:—Serviet~ morning
and opening, Bev. Mr. Van Wyke.
Christ Church, (Lnthenin.)—Servieen-ift
the morning, Dr. Selneffer, and evening, Prof.
Jacobs.
.St. James' 'Church, (Lnthernn.) . —;-Seiiieqs
morning and enfening, Rev. Mr. Hill. " •
• 2lfelhodisi Episcopal Clairch.—Services In
the morning, Rev. lir. Signfoos, and prayer
meeting in the evening.
G'ermun Reformed Church.—Gerviceamorn
log (German) aml evening, Rev. Air. Ziegler.
:Associate Ileformed Church: 7 NQ Berrie6v.
Catholic .Clatrehe—tlo Services: '
The Piver,Veeting of the Presbyterian,
'German iteformcd,, and the, two. Lutheran
churches is held every Weiliiesdny.evening:;
Methodist, Thursday evening. •
, • 1 0 4,NOICAltIA..---O'n SaturdaY evening itext,
our citiXens wlll have
,en opportunity:4C ,
nepoing the celebrated Pinorama of Pilgrint's,
Psngress,iii the .ItethodisLcherch,,whigh Aunt
been on exhibition in, various par,ts ,of -the
conatry durng the last few ATI. / It, is no.
tired in Y'eri, , eMnplimentary terms;the
l'icsais generally, religions' and seCular, ns
one of it, beat, ov q r . brouglq be
fore the l Auterican,,,public., Admission, 1.5
„.,11011,90, Monday liesV, tho new Boa Di
rectors or the Poor. commenced, thei is
"Reforiii," out don N
5C07T. 1 4110 ;' present efficient .auil . popular.
Steward.aMie `Pair 13mise eiariblishinent.*
JACOU dui:l 4 , of this 'his successor—
the apriolnititent to talie l Mt"tici. i on the first of
April next. Orlanais d.rrrlit, Motmtplens-.
ant to'wnSliip;‘yaS•wariuiy,‘til i ded for the post,
but met the rata to 'Which Mr. Riley was
subjeeted r .at the lusialikof guy , BatholM-loringl
LocofOoo 'leadors:': the Clerktililp Steins to
be iu doubt... lusmediately.upou the adjourn-
meat of the Board D.'Ci Brinkerhoff, of Stra.
•
ban, was annotmead''as the successfbl ditqfp
taut 'of Esq.',..Lytle's cluiioyibue wry', not
permittod,long to wear, tlce, °nom o
f promo-,
tion, purl Wi ll r l ou b y l aps4,lllY.Fc°4 yie ld Lifter all
to tlu Squire._, .o f Treasurer
and Was posiponed to next.uniet
- bag. No should'net be's'arprisad to bear. of a
full-blooded "sworn” 'KnOw-Notliiug' getting
one'Or both of ili"Ae*plis l t.f: 7 ' • .
We hear of pospe'queer work itr the way of
"refotl4" effiuticefect with. topiiiehioje, of Pork
for this .establisliment, which Abe , county
makes Soine"s3o.or '535,..'.'0r0r
Rumor has' it that $7 per hundred were paid
to special friends, fur some 1311V011 thousand
weight of Pork, although mini quantity was of
-
fared ut ' '474
• STThe Rev. Wm. 31.1'axTox, of Pittablirg,
lately 'received. a cull frotn the Presbyterian
Church , in Saratoga street; Baltiiriorec lately
'ander tho' pititoral charge or ,Mr,
but bas declipiA .•
PAINEUL ACCIDENT.
On last Friday week, Mr. limit Stannnii,
of Franklin tawinililp, Was bringing, ii - load of
bark 'from, the neighborhood , of, .Caledonia
Springs, and in descending the hill,he and dn
.
other
. person wore', drawing the rubber,' when,
the laver broke. The otherpoiison wits, tkrown
dovrn, but 'clu..r of the I:ilicels i tiand escaped.
Mr.Sharrer rushed, forward to check the.. hor
ses, lint his coat s which was a nvery long an?,
wair cauglit by one of the horse's feet, and lie
WWI thrown natter the wheels of the ;wagon,
which both Pitaisild over' USbalyi ono across
his breast; the other over 1118 Ilb(10111t11:: )6.
Siiarrei , i wits, of course, dreadfully , injured, and
no .hopiia of hie' recovery wove entertained.
ritrive;daiul•eeLiiiii4 161 Barks
County be.erected.ipfri aßritti,j;witli Glan
ce) Jones for :President and Bully Brooks
(or . ;11)0
WOOD WANTED •
QlEp'-R'o,are iu Want of ‘lrboti, and hope
that thoso of our patrons who intend to send us
Wood au account of subscription, will do Ito, at
once., , • .
• 111A10014:11. AILK ET. ' '
at _ ,
AxoTuu, ueed...6,'' ;55.
bbl., from',wagous, ; •• ;.:$6 50
WilEAT,,ll;tishol, . ;, 83:10.1 , 45
ItYE, ; „ • ,
76
COltg, , 53
131JOICWITEAT,per bimbel4o
; .
POTATOES, {per buBhel - • ' '75
TIMOTH.Y.SEID, '; ';; 3"00
CLOVES-MEW,' 60
FLAX-SEED, 1 25
P.LASTEIt 9F PARIS, r r 6uo
.YDIiK MA IJIKC'I!'.
Yong, rueaday,, nod. 2, 1856.
FLOttlt, WI, from wagons, ,; • ;;. ,;80 25
NVIIEAN, VI bushel, ;1 31 ti; 1 33
RYE; • • " ; • ; ••
CORN, 4 ' . • , ; 52
OATS, , " ; ; • • ; ; . 35
TI6IOTHYSEED, 3 00
CLOVER-SEED," • " ' .6 25
FLAX-SEED, . •.; ..; - 4 ‘ 175
PLASTER OF PARIS, ton. 675
nAvrimone amiture.
[Carefully cOriiiteclblKkviMee. 5. 1856.]
Flour, Hoitard'Streot. G. 62
Eye dour a A Otl ® 5.12
Corn Meal. 'l.OO 0 3.25
Wheat. while. 4 s ' 1.50 O 1.60
Corn, .. .. .. 55 0 64
Corn, - (s 4 65
Rye, Peunsylvaidn r * - 75 (.4 80
Oats, Pennsylvania' . - -1 84 (M 41
plover Seed "7.50 0 . 7.62
Timothy Seed' ' '41.00‘ ‘o4' 8;50
Hay Timothy • '15.00 (440.110
llops'.' ...... .. . . 7 - 0 12
Potatoes, • '' ' '5O (4 .70
Bacon, Shoulder?! • • • I'.l (id 8
Baeon, Sides.. - • • 9
Bacon,' Hama ' • 9/ 'll'
?ork, Mesa 'lB.OO. at:OO.QCI
Pork, Friar 17.00 . 037.50
Beef, ." '';44'.oolfi
Lard, in barrels 12 a 121
Lard; in kegs la n,. 1 15 i
Wool, .Unwashed
".1
?•,k s 4 6 A, - al)
Wool, Pulled
32
Wool ; Flo ece, comniini cl " .30 a 32
WooVFleece,' fine • • • a
Wool; Choice Meiino i 45- a. 50
Butter,'Westerni in kegs : :, :.:...'
..a .• 13
Butter, Roll' •• •22 24
Cheese 10 - a 12
Coffee; Rio' • 10} a 111
Coffee, Java , ..... 15
Ayr' ord
rp ME undersigned, desiring to close,up his
Books, and Aceotuiti, tliced,thelP
thelknds of B. McCint.Lx, Esq., the
collection.' 'p'einons desiroyi or Basin;
costa,nre re Bested to Lill with Air. McClellan
at an early date, and make settlement.
' . 1013-N -GILBERT.
Nov. 28, 1886...-4 t
MARRIED.
Oirithe; isthcAt. 144.. kt. Ro;Fr i
' 'Nth
Ori, the' it3thYtit., t., ,
.GEOIIRE J. 11 :CR; Ilaitrore'r, arid 'Mi
LAVIisiA.'LAWV•EIt, nCFranklin town3hip.
Ou the 27th nk., by the Rev. J. Martin Mr.
JOHN ChA L''ER anti Mind 'MAIL!: Martin,
SPAN(iLEIL.
On the toune'day, by t 1 sane, Mr. SAM
UM. MFrJKIX and WIN CATHARINE. N.
WOLF, nil of Tymne lowrothip, Adams co; 1
• On the llth nit., by the Rey. J. StichTer,
Mr. JAMES WINIIitiDE and Mine. CELE
NA bath of Adair.' county. ' ' 7
On the nth tilt., by the licY. 8. Henry - .
EMANUEL 1). Is..El.l.Elt.'of Adams county,
and MiniELIZA•I3ETH CATIIAItINE,'
daughter or Michael Ilyere, Es 1., or Carroll
county, Md. ' '
:cirri.
On the 21th nit, in Baltimore, CATITA
gINE. thii '6511: - Yi.lir or Ao; "•wifb
Sande , that'Lity,' forincrlyi?rOdt,
tyslarg. - • •
On the 2OtE ,diIt.;i:LSATIV.LA, youngest
danghter of Abraham :Arnold, of ..Ilowitjoy
township, aged 6 'years 6 nionths avid ;111.0ys.
On the I ith • uk, in Admits county, Mrs.
CA.TIIARINfI nitect.Bo.years and
18 clays : . • •
On Thursday, Dee.. 3, 40SEPIT.; HENRY
111.1.1510N'r, int:mason of N. kind .A.. 13: Little,
of this place, ugod 3 mouths. • •
fermsswortsvatisii*Oil-
0 ;. i 1 ,*T1,?.R5,.... 1 .L.01P.,,...10 - ::.0...K,T.
it it.-ri .E • ...,*.. •
.4::..u , .14.
r H E underniqued ht x,ltikrq. the room
Climarge Fry in
Cliamhersbori,street, and Will alWittli keep ou
lined' a slipplv ''uf the hest
7111P1!1,. PIG% FEET, nAl'oilMr refresh Merits
--41dite itPlit the baiit style . mato - the taStO of
lhopost , fastidious epicure. hi tito
ex. re Oisteii'will he supplied to' families
in such quantities .ns they may '
AVM TATE.
Gettysturgi-bcp.s„-Isath,-tf,,
ONP, . AND Att.!
• „ z :
I • •
r •
• ~11
: - elk• • 4 %
• • - 40.
GIVIZALT %RON%
, .
"GREAT 81?A-SE161'ENT CAPTURED I"
QAMlTErtiOiVEtt'linving provided him
kJ self with an entire new and costlyaplpi—
rates, is now prepared to furnith
AMtiltOTY PE'S Sz MAGI; ItItIIF.OTYPER.
in evert* style of the art, which be will wnr
.
rant to give entire satisfaction,. 418 Inng eA•
perienee and superior stpparatuit give lum, ttd ,
vantages seldom Yurnishied by Deguerrettii ed.
tallimitinClati' out:Of th neity. u hirge
namber of spceimen4 at his Gallery, i.s Ghoul
bershitrg street, which the publicaru requested
to•call and examine. • t
119—Chltrges from 50 cents to $lO. -Mute
or ?orating from 8 A. M. to 17 . '11Gold
Lon tets,.llreastpins, suitable, for miniatures,
always on hand, at the very lowest prices.
sear Children will not be taken for • less than
$lOO,
Sfur AMIMOTYPES taken from one dol
lar and unwell's.etuijn,
.02.14,5ty1e.
December r 5, 185,--tr.
1 W 194147 6'4EIE4
On :Friday the fith of December next, at 10
.cloth/ A. M., on the preinises, .
RE undersigned. Executors of the'Esfate
Of -14A•AC TAXTON, 'deceased, late of
Mountjoy township, Adams county, Pa., will
expose to Puldle•Sale thti Reid Estate of said
deceased, containing 170 ACRES,. mote , or
less, situate in IStountjoy . townehipi adjoining
lands of Jan - Horner,' Francis Allison, John
Eckenrude, and others. The Improvements
• . of large' , two-story
tR Brick lIOUSE, well finished,
, • with Back Building attached, - a
goood Bank Barn, Grain Shed,
Wagon Shed. Corn Cribs, Stone Spring liouso,
with ivuever-failing Sprit.g of water, conven
ient to dui dwelling ;• rdso tits mallard of choice
Fruit. There is a full proportion of firat-rate
'Meadow and excellent Timber. Thu farni is
of the bestqua ity of red land, and eon be made
one oldie most productive. in the county. At
t.n will he given and the terms made
known 9a the day of. *tale by . • .•
; HENRY-BENNER, •
• . HENRY. Cl.
- Executors. •
1tTcry:44,1 44. 56.—t3 . ' ;•
VALUABLE FARM AT
e
PRIVATE gALE.
utideritipned Went at Private Sale the
JIL . valuable Farm on which lit residesi-Hitatt•
to 'Thaler -township, Adman county, adjoin.
ink Bender's Cbureb, harm of Jacob Troatle,
titid'otiters,
:i0 'fere*,
more or less. The Iniprovements . are a two
story Log r 'and' , Weathur.boarded
110 USE, with. Stone l Hitek•lmilding,
a hank, Barn, Smoke House. Corn I "
Crib and other ontbuildings. There I' '
is a wellormeverd idling watc,r cotnettietil to the
honse. •• , Theire is iiliirge apillexe"ellent Orchard
ott ;be- pretniseti. - ...A, etreara , ,Or iitter. 'nine
tliiiihiglt . the farm. . The land is in a good state
of eeitieetion. ~ r •
Persons wishing to view the property .will
please call upon the subscriber.
JESS.hI, SUYERS.
: , Oct. 24, 71356.-3 t , . . • ~ . . , .- ~, ~.
A GOOD PROPERTY. AT
PRIVATE SALE.:
btscribe.r offers at Trirate.Saler
TProperty en whitAilie resides, situate to
' toWiailttp, adjoini4 holds 'or Isaac,
Kyern M Martini 'ad, Mari l'hernan, and eettfaiaitigi .
THItEE ACRES, more or lens. The ins,
prorements are new two story,
rough.enst, Duelling house, with 47' FIN
a owback-buitdi4g . ',.. 4t1,14,- iti•
Bitteksmith Shap," . Dry Mime, '-"
&e.. 'flifirsuyitt stand lbr Blsekstaithiog.
TheriitsitAariityl - tkfirst-rpta fititt,.t.rees on
the pfeiainds. stlh.46riher totem's to
to farming:Lance his desire to sell. It aot
sold the property will be raked front the first
of Aptil nest.
property :will be. sold, CHEAP.- 7
Per tertas apply to sobseribCr, ..'
JESSE SLATBAUGII. I
Oct. 310856.-3 t -•
THEACHIEIIa
Trt 4chpol,Directors 'Of F . reedoin Tow
'ship desire to 'Morley a leacher: for
saidOn!,
of the schools of township, deli itglhe win
ter. A male teacher will he preferred. Ap
plication- must he made immediately. A-lib
eral cOmpentation will be all Owed. Apply to
either of the undersigned. •
0111 i \ltli'L - gAliTo
: • -ti ".
WM. RILEY..• • • 0,•
Nov. 21,..1886.-3t z•• • • , • •
• :., . .i; • ' triario; HAIM'
p, LACK Silk mad. Slouch, Halsor %ha latest
AN
at In sad. at reduced pima - fir sale to
'. '. '' "COBBAN 6- PAXTON'S.:
• .-‘•
. ,
..• , , . ~- ---------=, ,P , ... •
• REGISTER'S NOTICE:„. ,':''.
4
w , °TICE is - lira/I,lton Wino *la'
.1.-N • outer persons coneerocol o tltO Maim.
istnciiop ; Account; fUrreitolitior - will
be`fuknenied keiho sOrpline"CitifirVo Aiiiimil„
county, for confirnutiton and stlonioco, ots,
ruisda.o• i4C 23d `day ofiticCindir'cle:Ois:t
‘ , •
.197, TLO'finit dcgount Of El4a Wintrodo
And` Henry' Moroni, ' Exeintont of Wgliatts •
•Wintrode doCencod.• ' • . ' • - '1,.• ,/ ..
108. The tsiceliant -of:Jacob Giro Jr.; Ad•
jni nistrnar of the• ettate of Jacinto Giro ' , Sr.,
deceased late of Goading townabip u
iqu, The find and float account of Claristiais
Tietnic•r,-Adrainhitraten• of the east. of 'Chihli*
rine E. Smith,
200. Thoacci;ant of Christina Cashman anti
Georges Cashman, Executor" of d/ last, nilL
tid•tirstisinVni of Witham enshnnta deceststsi.
• 201,, ; ".111e•:tiecnnd ..ticcoont of. Samuel S.
Schninekci.. Acting .1 1 :xnentor of the fart 10111
and 'Alatiohent: of 'Elizabeth gteenliciteni de,
tetised.., t--; • t • . ,
202;11& tort. 'and final net.'nuai of Samuel •
Atfinin ins nator of titer 'estatd of Jacob
Louly, (Invented, 1: • , • ;w..
, . .
203., Tim ; first.,and final nreonnt .of Ltah
teake, Administrutriic of the estate of Maim
_
" 20 , t.' The 'first' find final tteeinint Of. Peter
Yentts and Clinries•'lmam: - Administrators of
the estnio or illinm Yentts,deeetuseti.
..05, first mid final Account of-JaMell
Day radWilljant 'Jay, Executors of the bust,
will and testament tof Doy,tleseasetl.
206. be first, find thin!. nceount o( James
I) evils, Adni iniktrat or. or ilie"statei ,Rebeeets
'Whitmore, tiZ 2 reitsed. ' • .•
• • • , W.NT. F. W.
• por DA'S DM PI,AXI, DC/Miy.
Register's Office, Gettysburg, t , •-•
JUYI . Yf)i..ta.SUBSCIII-11ED
Cosmopolitan Art''Anioiiation
rove TIIE
the rain 'inducements - I The manage
.
• imité the' pleasure of announcing t
the collection •pf tY,orks 'of 'Art'desig,nedfdr
tlistrihation' ruining - the Subscrilinns, wficoo
aruneeitte rdeeireif previou s' to; the .28tlitof
iiatnistrYi's7i lager ilea 'aibnieoatly
than Onany previous year. •Aaiong- the lead
lug works iu Setiloire—executedin the fluent
Itlarbleis the new nail beautiful Statue of the
"WOOD' NY.NIPH;" The Basta of the theq
Great. Ainerican Statesinen •
r
. .
Clay. Webster and Calhoun..
Mite the exquisite Ideal Dust, "SPRING,"
APOLLO AND DIANA, in marble, life Wig:
Toqtber with the folhiwing Groups and Statw •
ues in Carrara Marble—of tea - Struggles:for
the Heart, Velma awl Apple ; Psyche ; • Mag
dalen.; Child of the. Sea ; Innocence.; captive
Bird and Little Truitut ? With imuterStitr:worlts
in Rreniti, and a culleCtitrth of
DIIED 1. ; : :j
1; 4 1'.0t OIL 11,141V1N65.
byleaditivArtists. The whole,:of ;Whieh'are
to lie distributed or allotted ttnianst . •the *soh
scribers,whose names pre received previous to
thd.'liventl&ighikoi%fototary, '57, when the
distribution will take •
'TERMS OP SUBSCRIPTION.
` Every subscriber of three defier* icoutitled
to :a copy tif: tile splendid Steel Engraving,
..Saturday, plight," or a copy 'of any of the fol
lowing $3
,Magazines one year ; also a copy of
the Art Journal one year, and a Ticket in the
Annual Di.4tribetien of Worki. of Art. •
Thus, for every $3 paid, a person not only,
gets ,a, beautiful Engraving or Magazine one
year? but- also receives the Art Journal one
year, and a „Ticket in the Annual Distribution,
inakingfinir dollars worth of reeding :sailer
besides the ticket, by hieli a valuable painting,
or piece of atateary may be received in addi,
tion.
•
Those who prefer Magazines to the Engm
rifig'"Sitturilay Night," can have either of the
following one year : Harper's Magazine ; 00.
&l i ft 1,41301 )1601{; . I.lnited . States Magazine,
,Kniekerboeket Magazine,Graham's Magazine,
Black3iiiicid Magazine, Southern Literary ;des
. No person is restricted to a single share.--'
Those taking five m ern berahips, remitting $l5,
are entitled to six Engravings, and to six tick
ets in the distribution, many five of the Maga
zines, one year, and sizslickets.
"Parsons, in remitting funds for membership,
register the letters' at the. Post Of
flee; to ',Prevent loss : on receipt of whith, •
certificate of Membership, together with the
Engraving or Magazine desired, will be ,for.
warded to any part of the country..
For further particulars; see Alio November
Art Journal, sent free on application.
For Membership, address C. L.
Actuary C. A. A., 548. Broad New York,
or.Westarmoflice,l66 Water *691, Suadiyihy
Ohio. • , , • . : ••
----• •
lar,AppNto,l). ItPCONAU ,ettont
rit, Secretary, Gettysburg; Pa. •‘•
Nov. 28 1856.. Gt •
. rms .IritISSIAJI 104112 t: I
" ' "• 1:4 .
Wz o v daVe s tig, plluieSsleu
thin popular and salenTileTvii`iTtotq can
tiow supply our' Agents' and Caavaxiiidicifh
onf deitty.• • •• • • • t.tl ;
Besides a complete History of the.
includes the LIFE AND REIGN OF 41,1(41i.•
OLAF) 1., with sketches of , SCHAMYL the
the Circassian Chief, and other distingtr .;
ahed
characters ; also doxeriptimut or RUSSIAN'
SOCIETY and. GOVERNMENT, &M;
making one of the most interesting works ever
published. It is beautifully illustrated with
line tinted plates, and hound in the beat man
ner. We send a specimen copy , with partiem,
lam of agency to any part of the United States,
free of postage, on receipt of the Airice'sl.2s.
• • J. W. BRADLEY; Publisher,
.Ni. 48 North' l'inti-th Street,•'
• • • Philculelpitia, Pa.
•
1856.-4 t • ' •
A MOST BEAU7 4 IFUI: . ASSORTMENT
• . OF MILLINERY AND
•
FANCY - GOODS .
•NOSS tiriCLELLA4 "
Hft4cied to her already larga stock II
1 , 111, new and elegant assortment of.
.11ILDINERY AND FANCY GOODS;
to which she would invite the attention of. her
friends and the public, believing tliatart ex ,
aminatiott-will satisfy them that her'Goodsara
the best , selected and most fashionable as wef
as the'clicuipest over offered iu this pisci. The
assorttueut comprises , •
Cashmeres,
..
i ' .1)e ',ones;
• . Ginghatar,Calieties, Del V:
Base, Cohere, Cloths, Mos; '
lin, Linnen, Seek Flannels,
nets .atid , ,Bottnt;t Trimmings, Satins,
'ladies'' 'Dress Tritittnings, Velvets, Art
spiels, Black VE;ils,'Hlue do., Glores,„ Hosiery
Ilaudkerehiefs. French Worked collfirs.
Cautbric,Jackonet 4 ' 1 4 Swi " -FAi g in g s '
.luseititigs,'3luslitis, Sleeves, Mu.
lair and Silk Nits, Black
• Lace and Embroider- • '
. .. ••., ed ilandkerchiefit„
, .Draids, Fans, • , •
111111Clall:and eltattitnefer'y
liettysburg, Nov:l4, 1656. ' " ' •• '
NOTIUL.
ETTERS'Yestamentary on Ibe Estate of,
it ISAAC 'PAXTON, deceased,' hits of
ilountloy township, Adams countv;l'ainse l
having been granted to the sulseribera, ihey
hereby give notice coin persuus indebted 10
said Estate to_call and settle )ho Naro - 404:
thosee having claims aro requrmed to rea l ms
them properly authenticated for ottlenumt.
. .HENRY BENNEIt,
•`• HENRY C14:11, j '
rir The first named lEseeutor realise hi
•
Monntioy townahtu. , -tbe hut nauw.d.
iieittutiownship:' :0:4*1
Nov. lit, 1840.-,be e : ,;••
=EN
:I~!''.