The Pittsburgh post. (Pittsburgh [Pa.]) 1859-1864, February 03, 1863, Image 1

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~HON. C. ~ L, N ALLANDIGHAMI ,
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SE' OF ARPRgA,d .i"
4IN MI IiCitT NTATIVRE4
' l . 1 ' iiiiitia4 - yriih. is' 63 .
ie. F.ll'l i'': a S.',. :' : 4 0 . : 'l . l.l , l•''' ..', , ' I
'h i ''.Biii- !M;;' , /b#eisoll,"'3rbed New Eikland
Lli Vaitlineil eiceision-isonii silty years ago 4
t
jj
ilh‘lic4- let us - keep - Vim - Yankees to quarrel
With. 'I Ah, sir,
.he forgot" thatqtuirrelitipi
:is always a hazardous experiment ; lind
II after some time, the countrymen of Adam
I: prove , themselves too sharp at that work;
Vidor th e Piruntryinid4 of Jcirifsere.t - Mt,
4 4
- ;IdYeti ' W . ' the' -. contest mow" - hinds'
i ll again ita natural and original elemental
ITU many parts of the. Northwest-4 might,_ all'd'nfi 'Pentsktvania,Weli Jersey and
New York city—the prejudice against thil
,VlTanlieese has always been almost ,itabit:
"fer
,eras the Sandi. — SUPP4B - sed fora little
ly".hilebk, the anti slavery sentiment and the
yfar,,it.threatepa n io v, to reel foth in
ctiiT i tfithosit , gr t but unfortiltititpop- .
itlitr p lingsri he - Midiit of whic h re d ..
spit and justice are for the time utterly si.a .
lanced. i f, speakr,advisttilli; andlet New ;
Englidi heet,"else `s'fit; a n d the - Whole
;
Bast, t o, in their struggle for power„ !
i4y.,..14.n.yet from the y West the .Bame!
164,0,t*bich '.tiivklwartiugliti, to Rome;
that erulgalo imperil areano, posse print -i
: pcm alibi,
quani Rowe fieri. The;
Penn/0 - 44401 West dethandiPeace, , and'
they begin to more than suspect that New!
~. England is in the way. The storm rages;l
.. and they believe that she,
_not slavery, is!
446: - TheihiP is sore tried: , and emu, 1
stingers and crew.are now almostreaditoj
prqpitiate the waves by throwing the ill
oiffefed;: Apphet, ~overboard.., In plain
4404.1 L - - otixeiy , ohmic., but - most ex-
' ,l:t
_et Ok. threaten to
, 'set New En-
Eti li r;fit iithi - i - e - old. - ” - - g
,1 4 -4 1113 trx Mr, idatlttive not a droppf
ivoy gni! 'did bhAtottliia,k_. - -iireirti, but' asW
boini in Ohio, atid'ilizriehollY of Southern
itzthOtryi.=Jaith alightlerona ofPennsklia
ni Seititeltrrislwouldspeak a word - to
. it litenO the West and South, .in behalf
Of New England. Sitc . ;:sortia: years ',ago,
in lle midst of itiglC-sectionali.centrover
sileiganderialtjegiee.,a,weiten, mini , I
sai same .things , haralPtf the 'Nertb,
whit wh'fiCovi l 'itt a - metre Catholic etpiiit.as"..tt
T. l *o - (d - Siatieniiiii, and for the sake of ni
, union"' would recall. My prejudices, in
deed' nponlthis subject, are as strong la
any; man's; but in this, - the great national
huniiiiationl and calamity, let the voice of
prejUdice be hushed.
S k lithey.,who 'would exclude New Eng
lark/ in . any. reconstruction of the Union
assume that all New Englanders are
"JYtinXtetts"" !and ± -Puritani;: 'and that' L the
Pant 'in or pragmatical element, or type of
civilization, has always held undisputed
87 114,,Xankess, , certainlx) they
ai - ; t4fid stfitololdiEggititul
ire are, Yen ees;llorth and South; and
tot itelSouth, just now, or a little while
ago, le of the Middle and. Western Slates.
o$
als l 4irecrei.-- weft; 'Yankees, too. -- Bat
there fie. really to very large and, most
liberiiliand conservative non-Puritan ele
triennia the, pop u lation of New Ing.land, -
whickArcir :Ma*. kiars,f. Struggled for , : the
master, and sometimes held it. It di-
vidediNaine, New Hampshire, and Con
necticut, and - once controlled Rhode. Is
land wholly.' It -held the sway during the
Revolution, and at the period when the
Constltlutiou was founded, .and for some
yeant*lteriYard; -'--Mr. 'Calhoun said very
justly.; it, 1847, that to the wisdom and en
. Mrgedlintriotism of Sherman and Ella
worthlkin the slavery question we are in
debtedlciiabia2 rintaiirabig Government;
and that, along with Patterson, of 'Now
Jersei,4"their names ought to be en
graVed on brass, and live forever." And
I,lr. WA:later, injti3o. in one of those
grant irphistorie moskpaintings,
„ . i . n .. 'M. which
ne,-was,ao great a master; sai d of ena
ch)l4tt...il'and South. Carat/ea: 'Hand in
habdthey stood around the administra
tian-z,oflrWashington, and: felt jis own
greaS arm lean on them for support."—
I ndued : 4 ,sir, it was not till some thirty
yeara ago' that thanarroty, 'preadi - pptuons,
inter:Meddling and fanatical spirit- of the
old Puniarr element begaiil,to reappear- in
a form very much more aggressiimand i)e
stractivOithan at first,and threatened to ob
tait4badinte mastery is cliArcb,atig schopl
and - lib:tie. -' A littie - earlier,- ; it had , atrug- '
gl4hard, but the conservative 6roved
too strong for it; and as Ittig as the grititt .
statesmen and jutas . ! oft - the Whig slid
De, cnitie.partieslurvived, it male but
snit prokreas,thor:gh JolitfQuincyAdains
2,
ga to it the strength of his
. great- name.
Buts their death it broke in as a floOd,
unwept away the last vestige oflhe se
dent,' libiral and tolerating: conservatism.
Then evetk fornihnid development off's
naticismiSprang uilifirankland moat lux*.
iant.:;groiyth, till abolitiohism, dig chief
fungus ofall,overapread tht" wholOt New
E ~. • dant, and .then the'Middt6Stetes,
an . .nail'every State in the Northwest.
.„. . ii y, sir , the more liberal or non-
Pun : n element was mainly, though not
sito g eth * f rom - the - old - Puritun - ,stIOVT - tr
latigypie vithltZatit'ptimEentkii.
ha
tftlotif re afterlife - I - adding Cirlhi
Pilgrims,tioppre,mt..liFgeklitt Aelersting
Civiliziffbniwiti ilitTodiTeed. Roger MI
/4413A1' i II -q4 l k.t ff i llk: l 44oo,4,34l , though , a
Puritan Nu n elf, arid thorotighlk. imbued
with all ite Peculiarties,,pUt t it and creed
and f orn ii"lf 3 liehliViti3eths , yet to have
had naturally a more liberal spirit; and,
firsittethaixttoCell .men, some three or
more yeare before the Ark agiljbe Dove
touched th elMi r eilifirti l sr" - Mary's, in
Marylearght -the apb4megioctritreipt .:
ffeeiloiii Ibpibiait add4ractice- i l d - ie-' '
ligion.Threatened first with banishment
to En g ll 4 .36: saitomi'remo'veitia far as
possible tbolinfection of his principles,"
and after ultrilfriCtilabbidsliOlekiind
titedurl4t.. ,itin - Vflitisisclitiletti: became'',
iti:uthecledjetaka saCthiPieideniti itit the
General Ctitirt, he.9iiiitiaed and divolg-
ed dilershltwanditrangeiliktrinestiffiatit
the authority of le magistratea",over tlte•
religious opittii- °P oP r ilin;'• thereby:Mt
, •‘ftag.ttltV4iiiaelibt-thig oialiihiyi , ha be
came the fiPandetEttilhade Teltind,l add,: .
indeed, 0f,14 large part of New England
so4etir. . '",. ,d i it N ether 1
httea c i te dn's=
a e an, le, ', apd kmithe era a his
desclen. , ',,s and' those of is s ass
_ ,a
or fFottled '_,,)htoa and another stock,.
there' him tail b,
throng Otil , ew England of.„.4 n mair b,
called :pger. Williams •Zet‘,le4ti, jail
anguish: . ftem the extreme Puritan or
Na •, ij; • ix fi - illytnouth Rock type of the ..
N-• ; '' .t ` ll.l ." •
-I ll 'irrid its influence' till late t
,__ I '
Y e e l 4 "* Artja kffiti Po.' i ntU . 1.- T ...
ritelirieerer:-LTtre 'antiiiiiiiiia i erou p e 3
haemiceld Nparati.:;:f"2.,
NDIGHLV-1 ask fora short w
time I l i llit " I 4, .1.4.,'
Ma. Oini.-1 hope there will be no -11
ob * .ti onatfremthiasitle- of - itase. e
o flrk4kin t.% -4t Alterif- be n o objec-. 1
tiontbitogiatalolen will allowed: further 1
timi4, , '' :- lg) ; ,-,, .
There, ifrur no objectionuand it . . was-
.: was- or
dered, acciiidingly.... -:,-
MiiVtionetair"l would not'
,- .-- r-- : ilititit.f,,/rIJ-:
~ - -J1E " ..)1'.; '3. -, : .....
Ig
deny or:disparage-the austere virinei`of
the ohl P uritans 'of 'England Or America:
Bat:Ldoleliete that, in the very . natur
of things., commu n ity could ' esaiitlon
in,peage L and no Government endure lon
alone, or lecome great, where
,that Ale
ttlent.l4 ite,eatlietit omits more reeent for
kal4 ,l 4lfPrit4o . •Otiti'ol. Andit ip Insr,s.W
than - I:Conviction that there canhe do p ossible
of.igirible reunion of these °States - anti
4C,44 11 .. liti,li4ll 'aiaio alibttattited . to
otneriann more liberal and .conservative
s isPinients, and; above all, until its worst
and Mischieviousdevoropment,Aboli
itionista, has been utterly extinguished!
Sir' the pence, of 'the . Union add. of thiS
ccnaVnenldenfanda it; Bat; unfortunately/
those very cilenrents elan'. abundantly. id
NetrrEnglaiid -herself: arid :to her I' 100 h :
withi l oonnce tc) mecnte, to: them!
the migtfiltf iiikei within :her. limits... Ail :illct4
sk,rthe true • t *nine "of New En gland has
rir;',iftfme years : past beed lin rarely
lOW here or . elsewhere in public
sinks.. Men . now control her politics an ,
v**ttilighplaces, State and Federal, "who
.twitify-ynate, _ago,. nould, not lave lie
chnsen asselectroen in old,Massitelneetta.!
Balk het reminnber at last 41 . 0; ( itintileng
renown: let:ter turn from vion-glorionit
adtrarationiLtif the stone monuments of
her lieroaa . aad'pat ri ots of' a former age,
tqlkierons,.emulation of the noble and
madly,vitthes-which they were designed!
te'coinniettiorate. Let us hear less from'
her of Plymouth Rock,and more of Roger
1 “4. 1 ,hi5 - compatriotH, and his tol-i
;Williams 'efatiom 4 .- Lef her liiinislinow and forever;
her dreamer& and her sophists and heri
fanatics, '=and! call - back again into her:
State Administration and into the Na-:
tional councilp her "men of might, heri
grand in„aouP'—aome, of them atill live—:
tiqd stCe Will'ytt escape the'datigers which!
iiti*Thirgaten' her 'with isolation.
,Then, air . , while lam inexorably hos
!tile to Pu ritan; domination in religion or,
*orals or literature or politics, I am not
litilitor of the proposed exclusion of New
England. I would have the Unicin as •it
'was; and first, New England as she was.
But it !New England will have no
union with- alaveholders; if the is not con
tent with the ?Union as it was," then
upon her own head be the responsi
bility for secession. And ,there will be no
more coerWttow.',_.r;:inif-14.,30-7-11tr
exactly cops - intent. • 1
, ,
And no
. 2 :isirj: can the' -central St n
Nes Yor asTew jeraey, and
,Perituai A
nia, cons, , Cie separation? - "Om _ W
York city' air, the. trade : Of . the_ S gh s
made her :...:-.IY Whit - shiris:‘"She ; -
the factor :-c!s.aiilter"althe,-Seuth—kOti
t i
ton filled , fir '• 'bor ::with 'Shipping 41iid
her banks ,-_ But-in-an-evillitnr
the fooIiCAPC .. ' - iiiiiiiiiiio.-5W_ r r gkraitili. of
GothaVl L , , .'"lTAieri.in, Aillailite.ii.tin
: ces-- . , tb 'fifiereitgWiaa blase
labiihillotrataii.vr. fo'icejtiaok the
S ' trialibi war. ' - WarMiadifedputs
given an
her, just now, a new Unaihe4c . ,, , Litnd
trade greater dimore profitablelgin the
ii . ' But with disunion that, ifON'Finust
, 3 ,--•And let,uot _Walt_tareet; - or. any
k_ isit,
ILo ii: - .great interest, mercluitile; menu
factoring, or commercial„ imagine that it
shall hairepower enotigh'or*wealth efibugh
to stand in the !way, Fof reunion, through
peaceil 'Lei thenilesen, otie'indtall;; that
a public man, who- hail the people , at; his
support; is stronger than they, though he
may hot be worth a mill ago ion, nor even one
A litte while: the banks said
'theywerer‘Flking,: Lit- President' Jackson
ilspeedily taught them their , mistake,—
Nexti raged - ads anatimed to be king; and
cotton once vaningdlargely his kingship;
Sir; these are only, of the royal famili—
Lprincea of the .blood. There is but one
king on earth. Panties is king.
, But to return, ia
boundeloaely to the South, *andt he South
to her; and, more add longer than any oth.
ieeState Plie`tetnentbered both her duty
Ito the Constitution, and her interest in the
Union, .. And Pennsylvania, a.sort Of-mid
dle ground, just between the North and
ithe,Sinith r 'and uditendittsr, "also, to the
West, is united by nearer, if not stronger
ties; Ibmver*seetien, i ttlini any other one
State, uplesslele Oliii.l,She was—she is
,yet7---the-- keystone 46:-thtc:great bat now
crutakliagasxch ofitheßnion. She is-.a bo4areAtatm i alnhamo_re thanthati she
Ih'iii'wititin her_orthe fanatical or die-
AitigMlement thin any of the States.—
he people of: Pennsylvania are quiet,
Peaceable, practical , „; and enterprising,
jwithotitleingeggreasive: They have more
'of the'honest old "-English and German
:thrift than any other. - No people mind
more diligently their own, business. They
evil hit one idiosyncrasy or specialty--
the tariff; and even thgnis really far more
matter of tradition than of substantial'
uterest. The industry, enterprise, and
lirift - Pf ;Pennsylvania: Are abundantly' able
idtakei Card kof themselves - againat I nny
Competition. In any event, the Union is
Of more vette, many times, to her than
in local interest.
1 But otherlies also bind these States--
Pennsylvania and . New Jersey, especially
—to the South, and the Sth
,to•them.=
Duly an imaginary line s‘ mi pa rtnedthe' for.:
mer from Delaware and Maryland. The
Oelaware:rivet, commontelothTennsyli
llaria tiddiNe# jerseYsflews 4 utti'D elawain
ay. The Susquehanna empties its wat•
rs, through Pennsylvania and : Maryland,
nto the Chesapeake . And that great
atlistiihed itself, ;extending , to Norfolk, '
.ad,ithiirilfore `tiltitostto`thg North-Caro
na line, does belong , and, must ever
,le
ng in nommonito-thercentrilland'Ainth-
Statekinkler one ' GOvernment ; or
Ise the line of iseparationaill „be the Po
mac to itsleadwatera. All of Delaware
d•ldacilandiond theoofinties; of I-Aukib.
Mined Northaftiptiiii,in-Virginia,-Would,
i that . yent, follow
,the fortunes of the
orthein confederacy. In fact, sir, disa
eeable as the idea may be to many Atli
their limits on both aides, no man who
looks at the map and then reflects Rion
Aistory and the force, oQf natural causes
• .d considers the present' actual and the '.
f: lure probable position of the hostile ar
ies and navies at the end of this war,
, ght for a moment to ; doubt that either
t - States and counties which I have nam
e , must with t# 111.11 i) or Pelitisliva-:
. eager , Ws Oe Sout. a_
i , a y
erne on eit e the r side cannot hcontro ma
-1
e destiny of the States lying between
• e mouth of the Chesapeake . and the
ndson. And if that bay were itself made
e line,Delaware, and the Eastern shore
:or Marlatpd and - Virginia, would belong
tl the Noitl,`While Norfolk, the only ca
„p cions harbor on the southeastern coast,
. st be commanded by the guns of some
I w fortress upon Cape 'Charles ; and Bal
ti ore, the now queenly city , seated then
t i or , th e very Itpun t dtry o i l', -Awn ; rival; yea,
h shileconfettkamee, would *idly fall
rt
in
tiad now, sir, I will ript kaYthether Ate
Isr rthw.eit ttitOehseit folitaiatiatioitiffiiii
South. Never. Natare forbids. We
only a part of the great valley of _the
l i f p n ' trltiel T.1P:41%44.1!"T1ie l ati tud e:
wo Id not desire tk . olcllinti of 36°030' on
io h aides of - tlitrrive r '; and there is no
to ural_ boundary east and west . - The neat.;
an to the Ohio and •Missonririyers.
flu that line would leave Cincinnati tad 1
Si. Utie, as border cities i like Baltimore,
to sexy, and, extending fifteen hundred
miles in length, would becom e the scene
of
ample even in the worst of times- Sir, we
1
I
~ ~Goaslq '' ~ed,
_ __,......, 7 „.......... 4. .
can noi, ought not, will - i - kiieliiiafe from
the South, And, if you, of the E ast, who
have found this war againkt the Smith and
for the negro gratifying to your hate or
profitable to your., purse, -willrnontinue- it
till's separation 'hie 'forc'ed - Ifetiveerr the
slaveholdiag ,nd your non-alaveholding
I States; thnn, b'be lieve ine;atettiecept 'it,,
you, did
warnings o
years past , the ay which divides the Nor/from , the Sidi . that selfsamvday de'
crees eternal did ree between the W est and 1
the Bast.
Sir, our desti y is , fixed. There , is not
one drop of raj whit+, descending' from
the heavens, an fertilizing oar soil, caul
es it to yield a abundant harvest, but
flows into the Ili sissiiipi, and there; min:
gling with the waters of that mighty river,
finds its wig, at last,- to the Gulf of Mexi-
Co. - Anirwe mulc t and will follow it With
traveland trade , of by treaty but by eighti
freely, peaceably an dnwithout restriction
or tribute, under t e same Government and
deg, to its home ie. the bosom of that Gulf{
.Si,tr we will not remain,rnftero-Separitinq
from the South,; a province or appanage
of the East, to bear her , burdens, and pay
her taxes; nor hemmed, in and isolated its
we are, and withot a sea-coast, could ye
long remain a dis tinct confederacy. Hue
wherever we go, married to the South or
s the Emit, we , bring loth,. three-fonrtlis of
the territories of that-valley to the Rocky
mountains, and it May be to the Pacific
thegrandest and Most magnificent dowry
that bride ever had tp beetow. ;
- Then. sir, New rngland, freed at last
from the dominatio; of her sophisters, mid
1 dreamers and bigots, and restored t the ,
control once more of her former liberal,'
tolerant, and conser tivecivilizatien, will
notstand in the way. f the keunion Of thesm
States upon terms of fair and honorable
adjustment. Audithis great work the
central free and bo r er slave States, too,
will unite heart and and. To the West,
it is
,a necessity, and she demands it. And
let ad ilie'SffiCes now l called Confederate
insiet'epon separatio and independence.
What.did they deman at first? Security
against Abolitionismwithin the Union.—
Protection from "th irrepresaible ma
Riot' and the doming ion of the absolute
numerical majority. A change of public
opinion, and coring!' Tilly of political par
ties in the North and West, so that their
local institutions an domestic peace
should no longer be ;endengered, And,
, I
now, air, after two yeare of persistent and
most gigantic effort on the part of this Ad-
ministration to compel them to submit,
but with utter and signal failure, the peo
ple of the free States are now or are fast
becoming satisfied thst the price of the
Union is the utter suppression of Aboli
tionism or anti-slavery, as a political ele•
ment, and the complete subordination of
the spirit of fanaticismland intermeddling
which gave it birth. In any event. they
are ready now, if I have not greatly mis
read the signs of the inlet, to return to
the old constitutional a. d actual basis of
fifty years ago—thremfifths rule of repre
sentation, speedy return of fugitives from
labor, equal tights in the Territories, no
more slavery agitation apywhere, and tran
sit and temporary sojourn with slaves,
without molestation, lnthe time 41'44
Without 1
all these there could lie neither
P p eace ifor ermanence t a d union
of States ' part slave and partresto free re ."
,With
it, the South, in addition 4o all the other
,
!great and multiplied benefits of union,
`would-be far more sec r e in her slave
;property, her domestic institutions, thin
under a separate government. Sir, let no
"man North or West. tell me that this
would perpetuate Africa; slavery. I know
it. But so does the Constitution. I re
peat, sir, it is the price of the Union.-
4hoever hates negro slivery more than
he loves the Union, musdemand separa
tion at last. I think th t you can never
;abolish slavery by fi ghtin . Certainly you
!never can till yon have fi st destroyed the
!South, and then, in the I nguage, first of
lbfr. Douglas and afteriverds of Mr. Sew.
i i
lard, converted this Government into an
imperial despotism. Anc, sir, whenever
I am forced to a choice between the loss to
1
my own country and race,
i of personal and
political liberty, with all its blessings, and
!the involuntary domestic servitude of the
negro, I shall not hesitate 1 one moment to
(choose the latter alternative. The sole
question to-day is between; the Union with
avery, or final disuniod and, I think,
intercity tied despotism!{ I am for the
'Union. It was good enough for my fath
, hrs. It is good emiugh ' for us and our
k:hildren after us.
{ And, sir, let no man in the South tell
ne.that_ahe has been invaded and that all
he horrors implied in those most terrible
'
f words, civil war ,
have been visited up
n her. I know that, too. 1 But we, also,
bf the North and West, in
very State and
,
iy thousands, who have d red so 'much_
sto question the princip s and policy,
r doubt the honesty, of this Administra
,on merits paitY, have suifered everything
at the worst despotism could inflict, ex
cept only loss of life itself uponthe seed.
fold. Some even have died for the cause
by the hand of the assassin. Aud can we
forget'? Never, never. Time will but
ftburn the meniery of these Wrongs deeper
its our hearts. But shall 'we break up
the Union ? Shall we destroy the Gov-,
hdrnment because usurping!tyrants have
eld possession and perverted it to the
ahost cruel of oppressions? Was it ever
qc. done in any other , country? In Ath
a? Rome? England? Any where?
o sir; let us expel the usurper, and re
, ore u
n t h d e er C t o h n e sti u tu n t i i o o n n ti o n f d o l u a r
i ws fa ,
o th e
e Stat es ,
free a and
nd tthhee 1 i b b r e a r v t e± i e i
i o e f t the
us pen
e; and then, in the country{ of our fath
ttlih fa thers rights
t e old 'flag- . -Lthe symbol { once again
f; the' grand mission !vi
t i a
hheappointed for us among t he nations of
the earth.
And now, air, if it be the will of all sec
t its to unite, then upon whbt terms?--
-S ,-between the South and most of the
a t S e v r e t :i a s c :
T I
M i th t t , :o B ' 14n
the ° s r dt
onlyhbj e aent
question,
i nall c o th e r s o a v i e d ris m y W e st, — r.
lhoun twenty,five yeare- ago,- Of suffi
t nt magnitude and potency to divide this
. ion; and divide it it will,, be added, or
d each the.Snidryjn blooil_Knotlrreeted.
.1 , has' 'done VOth. Bat settle it on the
o.'ginal basis of the ConstitutiOn, and give
.t. each ~.section the cpeWer to {protest it.
s' f.,withialbeilltiihn;•ailiile rf after4he
te me - lessons of the past twq years, the
'Lion will be stronger than before, and, 1
in i eed, endure for ages. Woe to the man,
North or auth, who to the third or the
fog rth generation, should teach' men disc. 1
rain. •
1
f• . d 'now the way to reunion:, what so:
'I) 3 ,. Behold to-day two sefOtrate gov
er menu in one country, and Without a
na ural- dividing line;- with' two presidents','
an cabinets, and a doable . Con , ress; and
yet eacklinderli constitution' so' exactly
*miler, the_one to the _other, -that a siren:
kir tmildocarce -discern - thetdiffeinnee. -'-,
Wiareverfolly and madness likei fide? Sir,
it not 'in the nature of things that it
sho,uld de-continuelong. I
But why speak of ways or term s of' re
union now? The will is yetwa nting in
both sections. Unioais consen and good
will and fraternal - affection. Wir is force,
hate, revenge. Is the country tired at last
of war?.. Has the experiment been tried
long enough? Hie sufficient blood been
shed, treasure expended, and misery in-
ficted in both' thaNorth and South
What then ? Stop fighting. Make an ari
mistice —nwriormal; treaty. .Withdraw
your army froin the . -seceded States. Rel
duce both armies to a fair end sufliciel
peade establihment. 'Declare absolut
fres trade between - the North and South.l
Buy and sell. -dAgree upon a iiillveiiin4
.Recall your fleets, Break upsonr,blook4
ads. Reduce.gonr, navy., , Rgatpre travel .ll
Open up railroads. Re= establish the releji
graph. Redn*your ex p res s - co mpanie s
Kb more Monittirs and iron-cladai 'but se
your friendly.'„ateruners • and- ,steainshipi
i., A
jgain in motaqn. :Visit the cirth' gild
West. Visit the - South. ExChange nerrs-1
[Tapers. Migrate. i Intermarry. -Let alai
very alone. HOW elections at - the, ap-!
Ipointed times. -Let us choose anew Press
ident in sixty-Joni. An d when the goa;
pet of peace shall have descended'_again',
from heaven into their - • -. hearts, - and;
the gospel of , abolitionism and of:hata
been expelled,
,-i, thew : let
~your clergy!
and the churchestneet again in Chiistian!
ititereourse, Milli - end South. Let thel
secret orders , aritt-volrintruY- association
everywhere reunite as brethren once more.
In short, give teal' thematnraland all , th
artifiCiat mums*. wiltidx drapel us:together,
their fullest sway.- „Let time do his office,
--drying tears, dispeling aorrowarmellinsd
ing passion, and : . , s iug herb and grasal
and tree to grow ig n upon the hundred!
battle-1161(1s of this terrible war.
"But this is recognition." It is not for-1
n i
mai recognition, to. which I will not con-:
sent. Recognition*. now, and attempted!
permanent treaties about boundary, travel,:
land trade, partitionsof-*.Terfiteries, would;
end in a war fief eerandinore disastrous than:
before. Becogniticuriarahaohdadisunion;l
Snot een•the-slave ;a the free;
tates b ut t es ith Delaware an nd d
Maryland;
as part of, the North; gi and Kentucky and',
'Missouri part of the Weal Bat, wherever
the actual line, every evil and mischief 6f
disunion is implied`iaft. And, for similar
remot e
er fir, I woubistiot, at this time, T
Thpress
men haati wh ly o a Cwouldoaventi wn on of the States.
e e
hold eeats in
such a Convention, would, upon both sides,
if both agreed to attend, come together
full of the hate and bitterness inseparable
from a civil war. No; sir, let passion
have time to cool, and reason to resume
its sway. It cost thirty:years of desperate
and most wicked patience and indnatryto
destroy or impair thidenagnificent tem
ple of this Union. LeVus be :content if,
within three years, we:Alban be able to
restore it.
But certainly whattproppse is informal,
practical recognition. 'A/SA-that is precieely
what exists to-day, and InWerristedorore or
less defined, from thafirit= Flags of truce,
exchange of prisoners;'itfid'all your other
observances of the law t: forms and cour
tesies of war, are ae of. recognitida.
Sir, does any man doubt to-day that there
is a Confederate Goverm4ent at Richmond,
and that it is a "belligerre?" F.ven the
Secretary of State haitl - discofered it at
last, although he has' Written ponderous
folios of polished rbetorie tet. prover that
it is not. Will continual ler, then, with
out extended and sabitanfial iniceeSs,
make the Coufedertatelil lint llik.hali .
a Government in factr ;,, :'-':', '-• ''' --
"But it confesseattnEib
,-
as the surgeon , who sets your fractured ,
limb in splints, in order that it may -be
healed, admits that it is broken. But th 3
Government will have failed to "crush out
the rebellion." Sir, it has failed. You
went to• war to prove that we had a Gov
ernment. With what result? To the
people of the loyal States it has in youands, been the EGovernment of King S tork, r
hut to the Confederate States, of Bing
Log. "But the rebellion will have tri
umphed." Better triumph to day than
ten years hence. But I deny it. The re
bellion
will at last be crushed out in the
only way in which it was ever•poasifile.
"But no one will he hung at the end of the
war." Neither will there be, though the
war should last half a century, except by
the mob or the hand of arbitrary power.
But really, sir, if there is to be no hanging,
let this Administration, and all who have
-done its bidding everywhere, rejoice and
be exceeding glad.
Ard now, sir, allow me a word upon a
subject of very great interest at this mo
ment, and most important it may be iu its
influence upon the future—foreign media
lion. I speak not of armed and hostile
intervention, which I would resist as long
ti 9 but one man was left to *strike a blow
at the invader. But friendly mediation,
the kindly offer of an impartial power to
stand as a daysman.between the contend-.
ing parties in this most bloody and ex.
hausting strife, ought to lie met in a spirit,
as cordial and ready as that in which it,
is proffered. It would be ch-urlish to re
fuse. Certainly, it is not consistent with
the former dignity of this government to
ask a mediation ; neither, sir, would it be
fit its ancient magnanimity to reject it.
As proposed by the Emperor of France, I
would accept it at once. Now is the aus
picious moment. It i 8 the speediest, easi
est, most graceful mode of suspending
hostilities. Let us Lear no more of the
mediation of cannon and the sword. The
day for all that has gone by. Let us be
statesmen at last. Sir, I give thanks that,
some, at least, amoug,the Republican par
tY seem ready now to lift themselves up to
the height of this great argument, and to
deal with it in the spirit of the, patriots
and public men of other Countries, and o
the better days of
- the United States.
And now, sir, whateier may have been
the motives of England, France and*the
great powers of Europe in withholding
recognition so long from the Confederate .
States, the South and the North are both
indebted to them for a great public ser
vice. The South has proved her ability
to maintain herself by her own strength
and resources, without, foreign aid, moral
or material. And the North and the West
-rate whole country, indeedthese great,
powers have inealculaby served by hoid.
lag back a solemn proclamation to-the
world that the union , of ~these,,States %v at ,
finally and formally .They-lave
left, to us, every motive and every: ebance
for reunion ; and if Oahu been the pur
pose of Englaad,'esliebrallotir rival so
longl , iqterestedimoreithe,nloi CAW ml
diennicd-and theinirintelaitit wetikellinig..**Sf
our great naval and Aoinmercial - power,
and shfrering, too t as h e has,. su ff ered, se
long and severely, because Of , this wan--I
do not hesitate to say that she has per
formed an act of unselfish heroism with.
out example in history.. , Was indeed,
her purpoae? let her answer before rtV
imcartial tribunal of posterity. In any:
eir nt, after the great reaction in
. publi
Sentiment in the - North and iVi3st, to.-he
followed after some time.bya like readier)
in the Senth, foreign recognition now of
the Confederate - :StaWeao - 0 - 11fallfiftle to
delat 6r* prevent - reunion, if, as I firmly
believe, reaction be not only possible, but
inevitable. , •
Ile L have not Spoken of 'foreign
titration. That is quite another question:
I think'it impracticable and fear it as dan
gerous. The very powers—or any other
power—which have hesitated to aid dis
union directly or by force, might, as au
thorized arbiters, most readily pronounce,
for it-at feet. Very grand, indeed, would
be the tribunal before which the great
question of the union of these States and
the final destiny of this ccntinebtAr-a gea
should be determined , and historic thrOagh.
4
all; titnalhestmbiresadors, who should argue
it. Andpif both belligerents, consent, let the'
subjects, : : controversy referred tq
Switzerland: or Russia, or -any other im
Rertial , andr incorruptible pOwer. or Statein
'Nu cope., But at Instwair, the „people..bf
these..severalStates IP.rok at home, meet?
bh,Oierfinal,'arinteis oflthis; great ;quarrel
in,AnerierK•nnii4litopeiople andiStates. of j
Ilte-NOlthweSt- thal - mediatore.,- who shalt
hire the;pru,phet, bet Ween the livihg
And .the.dead,that the plague of , disunion
Loarbei4Yed. ; '
• Sir,thiawar, horrible exit is, has taught
us all some of , the most important an d
utary leisinn&iihieh• ever`ii people learned.
„blot annihilated, •in twenty,
months, l alk the false and pernicious then
rise atidS•tettehinge_of Abolitionism for'
thirty years, and which a mere appeal to
facts and.-argament.could not have un
taughtliti.halfo,gealry..,4p..have learn..
eifthatihe'Stitna not weak,
, tutentiirprisinol , or.corruptedi by slavery,!
luxury, and idleness;; but powerfel,.. ode. ;
neat, warlike, enduring, self-supporting,:
full oft . st d inethamitible in re-'
sonrcetrl Wiihrivix.beenitaught, and now
confess it ;opply, •that_African slavery,.
;beteo4.6f being &source - of weakness to
the South one of her . main elements of
Stri.no4l; and fiencethe i
;‘,Yetary neces-'
"we'fire told; abolishing slavery
in, order to suPpreiis 'the rebellion. We•
,Nave learned, also, Mit the nan-slavehold
log'white men of the Sentli, millions in'
number, are immovably - attached to the
institution, and are its chief support; and
the Abolitionists have out, to their
intleite -- surprifre rgid that - the
slave is not "panting" for treedom," nor
'pining in sitent•but ievengeftil• grief over
'Cruelty and oppression inflicted upon him,
but happy, contented, attached deeply
.to
his master, and unwilling --at least not
&tie - 1. 7 -4o accept the precious boon of
fieedom-'whieh they have proffered him.-
1 appeal to the President for the proof. .I
appeal to the fact that fewer slaves have
escapod r erin from Virginia, in now nearly
two years,. than Arnold and-Cornwallis
carriedsw#4leik months of invasion in
1781. Fltrilly,..sir we hail). learned, and
the . Seuth i loo, what . the. 'bleier . ) , of the
world-aged 4;o,m:dont oWahistory, might
have taught us.j.,that servileiniurrection is
theleast of the dangers 'to will* she is
exposed. AStice,il4 my deliberate. judg
ment, ',Africia Slaver, ae ;an institution
will
,conit? out o', this: &inflict fifty-fold
ArOntrii*r . thati when the `War'began.
,hari learned most
important lestiorte..,and,alireirg them, that
personal towage li.lCA:ftentlity:. common to
sections, arid `that ! " . battle,
the men
of thil*Torth, and eapeCially, of the West,
are their'iioals., 'lfithe'rto there has been
a mutual and, most mischievous Mistake
upon both sides. The 'S'outh overvalued
its own person's' courage, and' undervalued
ours. and we too readily consented; but
at the same time she exaggerated our ag
gregate strength and
,resources, and Ul3-
der - estimated her own - ant; we fell into
the same' error; and h ence.; the original,
and fatal' Mistake or vice Or the military
policy of thki'lorty . , - ; and Which hoe
read braltii.doivu" ttiO",:trWASYSitii,
could` bring
Faiiitilthtoasi*-irt:onterit'IrIll110.01441011
the'fleldnind upon the sea, nod 'crush - but
the South at a Illow: But twehty months,
of terrible warfare have ktitreetedrinany:
'errors, and taught us the wisdom of a
'century. And now, sir, every one of these
lessons will profit us all for ages to come ;
and if we do not but reunite, will bind us
in a closer, firmer, more durable union'
than ever before.
I have'now, Mr. Speaker. finished what
desired to say at this time, upon the
„great question of the reunion of these
,States. I have spoken freely and boldly—
riot wisely, it maybe,, for the present, or
fur myself personally, but most wisely
for the' fritiire and r tor my country. Not
!courting censure,- I-yet,da notehrink from
L it. My own immediate personal interests,
and my chances jaatnowforthe
aerial rewards of ambition, I again Burrell::
;der as hostages to that GREAT lIEREAFT ER,
the echo of whose footsteps.already I hear
along the highway of time. Whoever,
here or elsewhere, believes that war can
restore the Union of these States; whoev•
• would have a war for the abolition of
slavery, or disunion; and he who demands
Southern independence and final separa
tion, let him speak7'for him I' have offett•
ded. Denoted to the Llnion from the be
ginning, f will not desert it now in this the
hear of itkeoretit trial. : •
Sir, lt.wasi the 'Alay-dreani of my boy
ood, the t cherished desire of my heart in otlth,':that l ',l"„!rdight live to see the
tindredtliitnitiversaiy of our national in
-0 openden ettVintd, ilii-cirtirilFor the daY,' e a
Clt in the expanding glories and great
bees of the still United States.
That vision lingers yet before my eyes,,
obscured indeed by the'eltnida'and thick
aarituessi tintPtbe blood oltivil war. But,
sir, if the men ofihis generation are wise
'enough to profit htthe bard experience of
the past two years, and will turn their
hearts now from bloody intents to. the
words mid arts. - epeace, that day will find
;t again the ' United States. And if not
earlier; as I would desire and believe, at,
least upon . that t dpyy let the great work of,
re-union .bet , .consommatedi..that hence-,
for*, 'for Agiej:che' StateS =find the .People
ha 4440 Ill' pj)`'thliV)liieit,i , continent, .
nited-nndef one , Utinstitutton, , and in one
Edon . , and"tbe sante i degfityy,'-ahall eele- ,
belle i t dethei birthdleboth:a Independ- i
*de arid:Oldie Great Restoration.
Sir, - Iliepeat : it, iver'aid in, the midst of
the, very Crisis ofrevolaion. lf, to
day,'We secure-pease and begin the work
of re-union, 'we- shall et 'escape; if not,
Itseet nothickliefore,ps but universal polit
idal -antf,stoctal• revolution ; anarchy,:and
biciodshed, compared with which the Reign;
of Terror in France was a merciful vim
=tion.
---
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• • , ;WIN 11: ItIELI.O4, •
81 Wq4d'etreot.
:Corriiatiwivipi-Asofg:A 'ramp
lame fakir soathid'-trand MiOs for Sale at 250.
moo n 4,150.125, 100,.90; 7.5„613 BO and 25 dollars.
1 JO NH, _ lELLon
d 1 .
.. • -r - '' ' Brined street::
7LODEONS AND HARMONIUMS,.
.t,a,t_itallipativm..NEW SUP.
ffily of Mat.fons n s ost , n) Melodeons
sodigormoninme in elegant rosewood and wal
'Diet eases. Melodeons at $5(); SW $75, $lOO. $125
and'S l so. -Harmoniums: at 60.80.100 125. 200. 250,
300, 350 and 400 dollars. Hos sale)),
JOHN H. BLELLOH,
t 81 Wood street:.
dac2o
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Ann
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ftni't Kb:lodg/ Ne "Ylirk , , %take* . I
British Queen... New,Xork..llavana Netyl.,4ll
Arabia__ ..... .......... 'LitterPool - 'velb - 4;
Auseralakiap...-Now:Xork „Liverpool ..anbaH;
f
Tke , folloWithetaiee. were an aintlelnialiby On i
Brokers yesterday. viz : • ' •
. .
*Gad ...... ..... 90.
.*Demand • Notes 45 .4 o"•
New
Baltimore ........I Boston ... .. ...
Cincinnati .... . ...... par Cleve6ndL...., per
Louisville par I St:D1)11113.
. oLho above are the Var
buytrg ?Meal -
PITTSETTIGH-PICObticit.idARICE.T.
' ' OEII4 of THE 11 .-frLY'Pdstc. I"'
~
:..:. •:.: :. :-.. . ....TuesdaY..PebAd...lB4 •ti• :0
:#emarlrisT-Tho wdurberlias.;again,.chAngvi
and we hai'd iiilw'fird winter 'weather.. iiiisinets
seenisdd 'dig iii&roving rift h di' I firker* dinftilid:T4
the leading articles.- BUM riiers l nonfinni , irr finis
navigable order. Flour was a geod des:berm-ail:rid
for: holders insist on awadvance-which does not
suit 'the views otlimYers..L.Praufinieserir..alVer&
ogees the latter wilthitte'toitriway. The stock
in market is not very large. The reeeiptsforofene
time iiimt, has been' rery lithlted: Ofarn-Thfe-sales
have been restricted, for the hest 'of fill 'reasons
there wag brit little t o 'oiperale;witia;.priees -rinds.
upward... o ilS—The, market: Vins.:unsettleciand4s
likely to remainno.. Thereds Scarcely:4wo sellers
that ask the seine rate.l:aroceriesain•firm.ancLin
steady demand: The sales:- however;nartaki ofit
retail .more,thsu, wholesale:cheracteri priee's rend
- upwards. , : • ~. L ..,...,-; •.s : ,: , ..7 , 1.:.10`)
WhialkeY--rSillee, thedeltrabrdinarY adrinhe
in Cincinnati, the advance in the, Easy anit,bern
has beendarge arid general: 'We not e' isaddinf,loo
bblsr:City Rdetified; at , &le' In, brevi'A'nileitniki
werednade yesterday at 62di.: in ;Philadelphitilzr
:ale.: The ,rates are only kood,forthe tim e. Wing)
Flobt.--The Market iest ilow iiiitY'lie ecaiSider;
ed in a very ouriOuf state; thertriseinie very 'Wide
range. of opinion as to the ultimate result Primes
:ore still going up, in fact, buyers -seem ••..wild and
Are baiting betwedit two opinions." - They are: up='
decided whether to 'fell or not. A: mimbir offale2
.eels have changed hands. Sales 4110 bblis.in•Aats:
:the terms are withheld: la: barrels Extra Family,
*id 75@i, -.WV do .$7; we know that sates We're made
.at even higher figures. . • - .. 4 - ....
• Oats are in good demand with sales 0f,600 bus.
at :10C:a5.ie.
. .
Itarloy and Bye are not' enquired 'fi
e..+ unchanged. :•.: . •;• ' • - • :•-• -
,41orir is held.higher
Ntlaterit—Veri, littA
: Britter,-Ifoldirs'ar,
riofi. l 2oo lirs, Prieir l ;2or3d.
i : ifrixi tirel : 2,c,,
' :ifiggesolikotiiiii&Ads
I Apples-,Stslerfiblsti
; Seeds-,DexuarpLini)
do $6 Sig:, there ,is a
;ranges at $2 i'iitir'd at
' -Htscon•--llemand...st
in lots : Plaiktrams. t
6e; S. C. Wants, .934cadoc.
Itay—Sales nfl7 lee
Cincinnati Dr;
In the Dry Goods mar..
only doing with persons bt.yitig for actire.-eon
eumption, but the speculativeinquiry isgood. and,
various kinds of ex - pedient; are restirted to by
those who are endeavoring fu - make putelfaSeit,=
for this Recount, to get bold of the goods: - Hold
ers are on the alert, however' andatenacions.77Ti
They are advised of still fnrther acti - unces: in 'thlr
supply market.. The. best 'llrown.Sheetinggrare
held at -Me: spool Cottons are up to 5110,01114
other goods io like proportion.
!•• Bali lanora_Cattle.llfikrket. -.-: ~ , ,..,4 7,
The offerings at the scales te;day. tunountetlik;
C5O Beeves. Of the receipts 100 were. held over,
125 driven to Washington. and the' balance; {4251
sold to Baltimore butchers .and packers at priata
ranging from :S3 7 to $5 is cwt, only a few,pritna
Beeves eon:unending, the latter figure. The nun-i
-t:et closed dull.
lions—The market was very sparingly supplied,
andprices-ruled fully ',Se higher. Sales of fair to,
prime live flogs at S 6 50@7 'ie era'.
SHEEP—tinder moderate receipts and a fair de,
mand sales ranged from s.!6@fie*Th grosa, an ins
provement Of ,!,.,e It Mon the lower, grades.
_ _
Philtidelphia.brain karket.
The following are the receipts. of Flour and
•..
Grain at ibis port for'ilaa - rqitit - Week : •
Flour
Wheat
Corn
Oats.
RIVER NEW
. ,: ...:'.
Cincinnati.
• The river here has risen two feet during the past
twenty-four hours. The Lowe!' °hie:, Cumberland
and Tennessee are infine navigable ordend:Witt
no tunnage_, freights ere offered. freel.y,for Pitt
burgh and Nashville; at adraffeed rates. - The fig
ures for Nashvilleare $2 'ft cwt. ' '-- ' "•- • " ,
The Diadem, from Nashville, was ; the only out,
side arrival.
. .
Silver Cloud for Pittsburgh. No. I,for Ma'af'
ison, Orient. for Louisville., end tilendale,-tfur
illemphis, include the departures.
.-The Gjemthile
has a moderate freight; but light natenger..vii.,
ceiptS:
(lett. MoCook and ivere among the passen;;
.tgers on the steamer Gen. Buell to LbuiSvil 7 lif let/-
ertla v. ' - - -: -- • , - -•• ..• ~,
_,_ Wis/earn by a special dispatch from t.ap4 Johni
Kyle, that the Tzetta, ..Melnotte, and. a fleet -0f:24 :
other steamers arrived at Nashville on, Thttiita):,
Morning. Nobody hurte- ' '
Captain F. N... Iteno,,of the house of E. $.7 - Eut7.,
ler & Co., finding the steamboat business dui/ at;
present, is off on a flying visit to ItoeheSter and:
Pittsburgh. '• - - -:- " -
;our voting friend Torrence whilom of theoffice
of the horizon, but inure recently in the Q. M
Department, in Western Virginia, is hi the city
prospecting.
The steamer Eclipse passed Cairo on the 29th.
Liininville- - •, .
1 .•.. 'lke river is about stationary at this:point, with
' 14 feet 1.0 inches water in the canal: lest evening..
The weather is cloudy bind Very cold abil.disagreer,
A Jam tlluiPhitY of xottona was - received at, thia
Poq Yesterday from thp..Cuu;iberlaud. t,
lirthb attempt to drop a bargebiedufecial doiltri .
to this-landing titthelead of the canal. yosterdeT.
.the,craft syrltrigtitronnd intOtheilveralutwas ear--
t ried titfluto, the Kentaelvachizte: , . The Joss of the
harp. seemed to be fries/table for some time, but
titre seemed'
down-tu its assistance
Add-brought it up Safely.• The barite was laden' I
with the finest Pittsburgh coal,'
• alp; the property. 4
of f slur A. L. Siunnons. • i
. . .
New Albany.' , .
. .
, .
The river at this point•again commenced rising
Yeiterday, and nirto noon to-day hintriari about
20 Inches, and is still coming up rapidly. ,
By'a &snit& from Clarksville, we learn that
Cumberland river:is again rising and that henry.
gains have fallen in that vicinity since Saturday,.
. The Terineasee River is quite high; and by last
;reports was still rising. -
e reen river is bank
order,nd it and Barren river
tir in fine navigable to Bowling Green,
There are nu guerrillas on the. streitiu,
,and the
heath are running without gunboat esegrts. .. ---
The Wabash iR s or • high anji coming up, we,
'lcarn , fhat freight's along the ni.e'r are plenty, but
there is no boats to carry them.
St Lomita . :
There are about trielve feet of water hr the ,
slue:met out to Cairo and plenty of, water below.
The Illinois is bank ful . and about stationary.
The Laeon is due from I:ndria do-day: end is the'
Only boat now up that river. , - •
k The trOtier Aftsajasipp't is risingslowlyfrom .11eo
nk dewn,witit sin-feet:in the channel.
-C . lenms whatever from the MMissouri.. ;
TO INVILDERB ABB COSTRaCTORIS
We areiowmanufzeterfilagPerfor 0.03/..0f
LIME
*mif f WI arepropanxi to dolhrboiston
rem% 509 znalrrylcm*...;
Bart - quality of ViiittllX-Pmal•ahnlyti;_ai
hand sauna.
loft DUMERON. STZWAYST & co.
,—,—.,.... .....„.........—.
utori.3 their actoon interfece wittk bristutapm.
Inas. - gal} Irak se:anoint: tin fasetl9lk a 0
, ~ • ,- piticE,olm,DO Pt - . 1. " - 11--.1
1 ' iike.' netiV 'er radici - ent gifeeifilajl ".
: 1... .... 3. -- .. .-1, - 7see k 4l,l E t ' - Ikiirlay„: -.pa a e - ..-.1.1'
u P
thoseur_griaZ6lllW(ates. replailinsimrbrta:t2ra=o.aastt.
t
„ toe
It•-•:tect. , -:13.101K: trAMY-.' diix
1 i•--
un ...,:76 . :1-4,e7„2.
,IVF z
i l4 ttigsti i :. ^: •:adZ441,i41
~.
M.i.
.ii
wiry
.iti"iim...._9llrlp, adserr,r,
reatnierittentoweevie °via, 113iida f; .: ...,
--- ! d't RANNOItiI raZ1L.,,,"4
. Ti e vlieec Books wildly ten ti , lamlo. oh.-
Oarmtion.• bywtailf. trast- pa d.
-lbr Amu lime d
40 kgellt• Ott tedhapt ClUgle POILOYar , i 71,1
^^,... 81 . 1
Y. BRYAR. 7:1 'Cedar street: r,SoWborv.
earawal amen_ -: .1 , .-..:c. • - -,,' E'Li7 'lt *P.r.i.
i
corner Market'street an. 1 . •••• ~ .. '4,
; 4 t.eg 13r. 1 - ' ' '
Olt by all prussists / . , /.. 11:r.oer *
UR VirAIT ii DIS - Iki ;. . , '''' -
* - .1)r,13 RO WIP SISERDRIA Ir i -c.) - trj , k r•L,ua
fVa i ffeirfige 9 4ffiki b itl e , - :.:-/- b=-
TZAWA' • '8 . 4- ,, :r cri - - "::3 c 7
tin eldsiltsen „ s -
t o
: f•usbft. b. inns" keen dit ; „ . *'-',)
tizeilmyftter t r i -it a, • •
- 40
nlbseloo.l'sitatoeuet gsza
Einreioal
-
n. 5: , 7, ,•-.... .- a. ' , Zeit i"' arm
,!, ', 017#043AnD knt4W, alakVi l
kii . a4 irs lificifeal friend;shime ifot .*
but theare4debeetrellet *.awelketer an
..‘e2 MV i ce& - ITat i l s ofa= ter.
• enteuto the Sulterelp Pf sktlialaw . An:' MAPtt
=the tee of fus remedies eau roam=
. -.• •:- - „.:-• :" ! „ ......1....•c14. n-i• '
D • D 11.: Bit6*Pb 11 . 11 1131YDIIIIS ~
ewe. fell to-corn the worst tor Mis t Veltereni - '-
Impurities and Boroltdoue•Alamat-A„-;
Also all diseased erlstriefftsi aliefela fale:
Wbolott.tuantrerbC.lkelf• la Oa Jorsz„.:, ;:tettur -.:
s.llo7i4Ltill. ancl karat-a:any forms ,of atia„dis• ~
T'ileirov thearie¢ef-whiolithl9 . atteret. Is iettmoic*"
'4114=11-:Tollti44:#lP Drr.4 .o 3l) 2 cdfere t
opetbra %V . _
• ~.1.., -‘ l7 :Id it, " 2 • :I
_-: : ',.? 7. 71 - ...7 •,' ;
pr.,l3rown's tem after the'amnumic trouble
'dna often larthatwolltarfhabit otneetrusa - z
t eon. which the 7ffllng andeweak rr aided -
Innen Attic war ks (I 0 Weir owls destruoldoL./ at •
te mum r ellataLe • reseaatelanewri la Ws mount* •
f flay are saw and maks a speedy reetorjotion*
• • . -. .-0.11)f.)C4
60;412
46,590:1ius
•1• 44,900 4u#
Dr. - Brow/li' rantedletr mover AU 'to Imre' tige;
Asklnfal dieement..Aprw Dav P - '
-'hew i yeserint a:.
cam Ho alsolfoat9 nee. Week Oonuorrhtea ,
,13trlotnreo trrethal Meehan( et. Pentale-lireihnego -••
.Montltly_ SuPpreosionsi Aseasea of tho •Johito; •
%Ada iti-AnoiNervona-Affectionz;Taltutinlthe- •
Itack-andiChtnoys, kritattort 34.41addertio.r,,
Whitt 'l* - ith ftiotoes of
I I,.."*.P.Leatdbint.thesirnantamisi hatitaintittt
2411 w.
C'etesbandhi to g!',o9l,l:ll46witte,s—thfi.er.4:-.:i
4.... - 7Modloizto mat to any addr,wyolafx.Paohla
•atict 'sedan, front ohtofivation: •
sptilowatukkAvatit. Roomy.. •amiThtigu;
trAo ow.t.---3. Pa • nols-daanto, '
--ripo'lloium owarEns.4lo3BrEir4'
. INFALLIME LINZ/4MM FOK , ROUsb." • - .
la autrivall ed by • any, in all.ossos of;Loci.setfr:.
,-arisinix mama 4raina, Bruises , or Wren
effect ismeal and certain. Harness Ar dist "i e ,
( hilt 'Seratchell. Minim - dm.; it will also speedily ...,,
mire Spavim and Rincbone DiSY. Char beirlei .74.
vented and and
in :their- incipient stains 184.1 . ,. e ::
mdinnod
oases are beyond the. noasiblitwoh.ioi'.".l_;
:JUDICIAL cue.. No ease of the hitiVow_wirfre-lar, - . -
'an' desperate or hopeleesimt - it may aulivat,..
'by this Liniment. and Itsfaithf ulapplicatuntwil; , JlCf"f z :
, aliiwYs - remove - the Laineness. and - enable, the
clone to traxrel with, comparative imee.,3-i.i.,.
- Every hone owner should havellibireindlt at
t liand,lorits timely nse at the find smearanotr of ' " • ".
'lmmense; will elibetuarpleireni thoKtirroida; Z_:ii
• diseasec mmnoned;tolvalen rsee &reliable, "::- •- --
,r.arid- tylitch.ritaltmo maw . oinan i des malnablii-:')'?
Arcs nearly ..- $l ll 4 . E. el; ~•-, :. ,1.4 .- . ,
' ` .407:/Y4 r irle a lr- ' , ll .2 - Agents filiWttlintrith ••••• - i 'di: : -
I 4 tintrr r
i.
4 °'‘
31
~,„
.. sr.a 'AORishr k OT,YDE.;
z bat- 4 th isniotd
1111110MATEILS , 'BOUNTIES: PENSIONS'
Ikz! 4101., t. PAY: and other -
CLA INS ASUNST
omit* 'mind st reseenable vstei. A 017 fa"
103 Fourtli street. Pittab._amk j,hd.
CHARLI24O,,TUmNR:,
Mi l itAWk - A.3 I OI I OtOPiDIRIIII*
.1.15. -
lar (1::1-9V:tx.g
- ;
' .'• -
t • ; ,•;!
, - • - ' - -!" , "`-' 4 Fr. •
, -
aitiiiillBls34Fraf424
YMEMMtrMTI
fs3 V gi; 't -
WWI. Verin
• • •
_—. • -
...
.. k _
H
-ELIi'iIPIA,
- - - 14 , r
t..i I. • t r.
Mnlifiltittila ' - .
nations. treat sap -Al2' : '
delicate discirderei •- , -,-... 1. *
..,
•
S . ..
olden; 'to youths ri.,
inUtten. ttiataakiia*bratri-
90 .45ig5=5414190,7 gragote ofiiiiteg ir ,
sleaze% km so= it a area On_ ve.v"iimoraoral,
and fan toonhuninatiowandl acztau+tPlatititlit:
their wiyee. Nanchang sons and d
fernibi xft-gobtif eliould' - banantions to' env
, r 0.....y;,.. itio•sattie AA 1N. 1 4,10k . ( czcept - phlalfahrni>loat 'a luarittYe Pram ,
gee let heicest, tcc theta lationr - 4 0 th o ral
Aa n p Mid . ...DrelululAuTie (pun ' ivt.,... :
i ndsnintineXentvntrAip , mw i ne
se co. ecomPare,o4474 inteiri=l/
lallartand" otecint.• - iniiitaii3 . in" is .. i
lotteal. , llllllo fotblicittlaw arittadm .
- veritif sad ma-liana aro. 444'04: that, th.
"•eltittialtArriVarde - . favivil.
nip . ,Rd. 0f,,,d i
liar.' Wed .-: &Mr And Viipr-b ~
.-44... 4tagglifinfottr,airku,.
I ive oared .
Swim - leatinti 10,1 , - Z
kate=till. On 6 94 1 4PleAtkOing -
p e .
bli of tbn 41'marinaeUmturnedreei:
.. 1 . 1 64 thli azo lt ei ta: leaving -aeen , the •
haw WI/ tt tletwaittbandoal
04 it tt u nlcutpt il _ thp.v -.
iarses tt.4,,, niarkea ' -tt
ii: 44
pver-fet*-yeazai Ho f •*.4, ~...
Menthe heenitia of bats #lO Oki wPila' ^l4-
thelfalied:Eltanikleadritint to say. -t hy
ittioitfair
trialthl444lwwthpaLala4ldt=r Trilwlllittibtater4l
c -Col"ntenliimiaakiltitio:Valtuia-bo4lbirki,iirdleedaol*ll ---, _c
which Co many Anneusitedit. crow • ns*
•,- now he ;allayed. prnyi,ktpittteudßAtin.
I
• tliftiellinilinbilleitiken4icuelie 4 mitr ed
trAti7j*Mti ettlY.•- Vitittal
vantage of over ferry rears4iticiiienee'ine.
ofaservntign,coggequentlirF
.4%l44ga:hip • ,
taltitliatitment orepow ow-44*x
danyistiniftataiiif raiitill..au .
mended by repeatable eitizens, publisuera, '
..P_rietera of hstaa, ke.. °Mee St antithAold
swestAteatDramahati etted;ri PAlgiitcido3iiii
='l7lll-84 z e 3- P 4, P , ,, 1 .*1R .q51. , 7.4 7 01
.
'te:rxii.- '
.I,- • .... .1.i7 IVERMl_lltairnlL I_,-..._
THEWILL .1'• `...1. NpT- llitertE -WilLialF
. iiisilderT6Vaiiiik l'finitlinaliiiintfil.V'titc
ilictedffon-seass„whciikhelanot dilty TO taa4. ftg
hit' Stifferfrnivrlitir eciitildreit" cured. - -IThave
bent p dYl i e tedatith*Tmeloalignanthifi a mut o i,
Errwielaa for yeLtrs-i 4 have called opegyerat of
ottriktfl
r.:4.eatiat-7bytleiMe'litit atraithetitiintobeh
et 4 il
ellt.
,on . 14 csitorIitarn4 ttapr. amp; time
titat A nd`baft t s ikitipitienictliCine, - Whichili ow '•
e vei;:utftli..l9ll4Pmeil, efliertsaVlcan. movrtazvell•
, ttil ever wps. Any .PerannAnshtaCtc„, §ee - -rixti
wilkineWeitil lief "li;F TtrOMA-B,IiIIN.LAPY3.,'
-. .N e fa l dfo ( .s'.F'l'llii.4 41W,.te,a-4L.1.
.
11AUPIERVAXIEratiEriMILIAt ItltAlr*
-ix been afitinkd ifineel•-.Wattv.Ariiemali,.ofaldie-,
iniled ,, Epllntiksi.' (11FM% iiite. II:late
tried..thp beat PhtstS4R, - -in'tAtt) di , A)Ulibl, 414
irltita bat Weverrecelvdd any.betfefit. ..i. .WM
1143641kiirilllilliCatAkrZTMMAPIIP Ufa Yak:4la
have had noAoedle.nr fits Fines then. I therefcro
citieider - anyeelf- - tomjildelV. ettied, , tit:oe i'wthigr'
pio2px.k6tiep 0e5,59.5.40 -
4.15. 0...2 Et...P.lrsteiVivs
P -: -.-.
E.?.W liOI 1
C74-AL"•,- ~
A.- .n in
R S - --
, - E -: = • : . . :..t . ft t. - .w.
-- : e
OR Z c v7 c: -
i
MaTe,osf" D,
'A"`•4"
d oNolducLuAllArneirgi-til-.41'
*NZ",
: -31