~~~` ,~,. Lairtlari ! 7 • :o 0 , , am ___ T _ , _ , ._—S LILY P ---- '------- - HOY 4 G . EOReGE tel u 0.,,.n„T1S -) on _ft , notalty. i ii - ti neee'isities,,save; as they•are - embodied in the Constitution no "national life,V.scive has it exists un der the C onstitution; po 1 ' I t' ' lic t'isnot in wi th egis a ton. a __ the Constitutiote---at the eupreme law; but what:the constitution erdiaus or atithari mei that is the Public necessity, that Lithe national - lite, because: it - is the supreme __ ' '01.igatioa: gApplauite. 5 --Hoter korge - Tintatir Crirtis';formee -.--"- • - 'ly 13 - ttch'llr the fuhdamental - character :of of our political system ; and so perfect is it of Bosiiiiti,hut note a resident of New York iiiconiieteney'With itself attdNith the i . . ~ addressed ghe Democratic Union Assoela- rights of all who - are subject to it, that it i emit:sins a machinery by, which the cort imp on th e -33 1 28th ult. .- forraity of_all acts of the government with 5 fe•cipti ch upon the platform aural ap :. :... . • A the principles of the Constitution may . be planes, matt:von being introduced by lir if r .::i. efully - tested, without forende iiist- P. W. Eng , was greeted with three heav ancib. - ./f the seta of:the g,overnmentere spo4 - rows - . couain of as unconstitutional, they :, ....#' 43 /i4. 141 1 t, e 41, & : , May- be ad . . : ...,. „. 1 ; e brought to a judicial test, 'or the MR. rgg,IDENT AND GENTLEMEN OF Tag people may themselyhe pass upon them at DzatoortargiAssociartox : .Nothing but'a th e traloftlib through the instrumental sense orthialicinty whiehevery Man owes to ity Or fipijaent eleWd'as. (Applause.) society, accdrding to the measure of 's Now wh e n we looklato the Constitution ability to eel it, would have induced e of outticattitry-ta discover the full Scope to addralmyt.a in a time like thin. It is of the:obligatioxis: which are embraced in i t time of strange excitements arid strange the imprenna law ;the land, we find that emr=acte. No m ' who does not join.in Alvan, itgrautif 0 eitaittpolitial powertt,and rights pirsupperprirl thAtfmtlieurEfs Gs thii_ , central i ....or . national government, tifiid3 Fietiontinalitptdty rani° e a l e paertal S ta te s lelicarPowers and to escape dOraction and obloquy. Tir.i right/Ltd gm Sta tes't the people. Hence utmost exertio n s are made, to sup; o-Me • Pleliallint the reserved rights of the dinary freed* 'of epeeoh; every device is Stateeer the people ail just as muck coin employed to_Misrepresent, and every effort, preherided within tha duty of our allegi . ieniadeito:n4sunderfitand- the purposes cif mice, just as ranch the rightful objects of those who ae in political power. The our "loyalty" as. the powers and rights vocabulary °Apolitical slang is exhausted vested in.. - the national government. If to find terms f reproach and infamy with the political existence_ created by the Con which to sti se; men -whotrOnicitiveS stituticinis the rational life, called into have in their ' vor all the ordinary pre- beik. 'by he Eirifrieme.law of the land-- stimptioneif 'aility,,and?Whose-erguments aufle would be It bold and reckless so fati and.opinfoneremt leastl.mititled to a re• phistWlie should undertake to find that spectfal heari, g.- , This prdeese, which has national - life anywhere else—then the been going Mk many months, with no. rights whigh the Constitution reserves to fence unexam ed'even among a people the Stites ot the - people are equally corn , whoa° Politi discassionslare never mark:. prehendedin that life, for they are equal. ad by too mtic - temperance, has cnlmi, ly declared to be - parts of the supreme law bated fl"O,nt ti ',: i to, time in outrages tipon of the - land. For this 'reason all idea of i tlite,kighteet Onions and property, and a supremacy of the national rights or may dcueo men. It is no tune when - one powers or interests, ^ when founded on Wiaultl - clitiocia til utter opinions without be, something net embraced in the Cone d , .- IE4 irfipelled 4in-strong sense of duty. tion, is purely visionary. No duty of .But if w e are not prepared to suffer for "loyalty" can ,possibly : ..be predicate of but conviction they -must be very feeble any-claim thatia not tontided in r ue ea try and .we do -fiat, leitalour coati.. prhine law, and our "loyalty" is due to try and ita fehttpus witAtentiugh to en- them. When we knoW what a re the rights counter 811364 /*muds 4liat-may attend and powers reserved to the States or the' an honest effortho save them, our love; the people—and we know that they are must be eold.i.intiMe.d. Stieb l .l am sure, is the whole residue of all possible Political not; our 'Muni; el :My own. - {Applanee ] rights and powers—they are equally the Meaning to utte ' here nothing but words objects of par "loyalty? for the self same I"of truth and sob .iness—the truth as I hold reason, namely,:they are' par of the su • it, in the sobernts that becomes me—l preme law ot the land. (Loud applause.) I aceept.lall'the 1 esiwitiiiibility.' It• public Again : the Constitution not only con armee which nifty justly fall thereon. tains some political powers and rights I propose - to epinik to yon to-night upon granted to the federal government, and a ~a subject which seems to me to be strange- reservation.of all other political powers -ly misapprehende i o by many goOd men, and rights to the States or tha people, but and strangely persrerted by many who are it, ,also embraces rights of person and ' DO4OOll. Wkmesit the-subject of "Lop prppeity guaranteed to every citizen in ally. " The wild itself, at leait in his individual capacity ; and these are 'the sense in whichint leased in those coon- equally made, not by implication but ex- , -.tries from which , a!e have borrowed it, can pressly, parts of the supreme law of the eeareely,beiseid ,to have an appropriate land, and are therefore equally the ob InSlitnialind.itobitti , s'istem. But it is 'a of our "loyalty." All pretense, b w o o tua rd d a to t present e I: goaretaatreathsee maomroanidgu:ses; there fore,pelsbwrigohfisanoyf,ptarheaemitiozuennt a o u r th o o . ri ci t a y im i n , , and we must take kt as we find it, and are the,central government to override these pbracttritiebrite l inirt atid , trae. , sigittifiCation em- our "loyalky , ,' in disregard of' far* Co-or ee..., The and the certain cod- dinate Tarte of -the supreintli m e ri t a per t- equences of accepting and following out version of the very , idea of American loy the doctrines whiclkare now forced ripen alty. (Cheers.) As well might the citi _, , will form . the to' • C. 4 of my dieeouree toy zee claim, because the Constitution - has c m ''Maltf- "" ' ' ' , - . _ r made his personal rights part of the en ltlty:;,..; The true conditi ne of American to preme law, that therefore the loyalty of ,kazaare not to be fohnd in the passionate his neighbor is due to him alone, as the ctions of partia l n leaders, or in the government can claim that loyalty is due o deolamatio ', of the pulpit, the solely, or chiefly, or primanly, or ulti i ritimin, or the p i as. (Cheers.) ' Peo• mately to the fanctiona which it is ap• le who do not like day political opinions pointed to perform. The rights of the batay hurl at me the epithet "disloyal," government, the rights of the States, and , when they have throw n this missile, the rights of individuals, all and equally, fherhatta, not talcs 'aiisteo;toWirii,defin- are compt4thended in the supreme , law of have ing;to me or to ofhire r whitt the tree con- the lank and our loyalty is due that ditioorbf -loyalty grei .." It -is important law, tote whole and to every part-bf it, that this step shoal ib.etaken; for whether and' public officera are in the same sense e are to go on or t cease, in this course and for the same reason bound ; to obey f idle and mimed:: gs :abuse, itoncerns every "jot and tittle" of it. (Great ap 'Us alltorlikiir. whit' .metteitre of- public planed.) 'Efuty may rightful!" ---" fed of us. To These positions are - very plain and know the the helght and, epth of those great tallier truthej_ too familiar, perhaps you theVjitriee . " -- Whieh ' ite I comprehended in will say, to require2to be stated. Bet in term "patriotic "—to feel at once • these days nothing that is true is too fen tt gm ere-seated I our affections and damental to be inculcated. The extrava la e thittnetl'iU our teas n—is to :‘.,get- wig gent language and ideas that are current din ;arid . get undePiltanding,' in the in the months of even sensible people on 1004 6r:earthly p sseasiens. ; (Great this subject of loalt would any ex.- abflitteM) - The t 0 conditions of ceeded all CiaPaeffy of belief in inyother # American loyalty are e be found' in the peridt thamthis.i• St -one were to tinder otitile,,'lsipd 4• - ,in the ; tta-tutmas under take to reduce this language and these thliwd** - EiliVey.in the utiestloWin g from ideas to something like a definite moral .Demstitutions ef ni , country; (tip proposition, it would be found that the p ' eXia ; thapolitica systeat ' which we doctrine is something like this : In a hit etiniterited,from o r fathers; with all time of war, whemthere are great public i 'I eattold relations,:through which we dangers, the rights of the States and of in 'l,lo It 1-- ; ; re' XANlSie.theelear dividing line that sa dividuals must give way'; and if those ti a tee perfect from imperfect obli ga t ions who administer the government are satie (Cheers4.• . • 1 • ' fled that the public necessity requires 1 r i tkeitext of our funtihmental law is the , them to use powers that transcend the ge de,and the sole Ode, in all ethical limits of the Constitution, he who does in Tres into the dates:llf the citizen., To .not acquiesce in their judgment, or who thlieilource all must Dine, rulers and questions their authority to do particular peliple ' alike; to that f amain All mustre- acts is a "disloyal" citizen. (Laughter.) 1 so The vague and ihifting standards This statement of the doctrine is the best theastdfawrr from 'ttri" Posen - dangers to that 1 know haw to make; for I know not wh 't is called the "nati nal life" or which how else to interpret or to apply the de ,, spOngfrottirthe oontlie g judgments of nunciations which we find in the proceed men respecting pizbli n.cesstties; can in s of public meetings, in the columns of determine nothin : g.- ' beep things can party newspapers, and in the common fa `tisiattlitir-fiite.-- We' m 'it - have' a rule, speech and at of very Many persons. foil' o ty is - a Moral duty -, and it must, I need- only point to the utter prohibition ili : reibieetpable - oftlefiniticin: 'A pert- that ..isattemptedto be placed on all 'dis t plE(whEisWAgaiittionall,lifh," exists only cussion of any plan for bringing this by • ' '4f,it WrittenneeeNsity, can ',find' "daeadtul civil war to a close except bi' a: L k:amt . loyalty is an of the :iieclissi• - •, the particular - ethod of fighting ; or to ti fibtlits outer or be nd that wntten • the: ma n ner hi - Which - the terms "traitor" . necpsint , can find . no r le of loyalty in and "secessionist" -are hurled at all who of egfleteieei t #s r - : ich theirs- , con- question the policy and laWfalhass of the' it stitatrtin ri r otiihmineirtdoe s mit cover.— methods pursued by the government in They may find ground of expediency, the prosecution of the war, . For myself, • - in One or another suppo ed necessity for Ido riot profess to have, as yet, a definite • depczpying their constituilon ; but it would idea 'Concerning several of the modes in be,eXtremely absurd to 'y that this ex- which a peace mightsafely besought. But I pedie ncy could be made t e object of their know not what light I have, legally or "lo ' ty." Let us go th nto the form, morally, to say that my neighbor shall not ligittan/ 'ead.--thp sottree,ef _national, eh- discuss such a question, or shall not act tit .-.- , , 1 _.,.. . . t 11 upon it at the , polls, or shall be denounced T eirinetitisilinf4lfAh '"Ueited States as "disloyal' because his opinions on itsel ipresorittairtbeftill itaiiiiiire of our these subjects : differ from mine . It is to loyel (la these words:, i , , me very plain that this whole effort of a Piiis l eotteginOPrkall :( awe of , the dominant party b control opinion by such ueitl4,a-initge- 'il e a', i •b e mad e i n means can, under such institutions as ours, purstapg the4of,and all, ' 'es made, o r lead to bat one of two results—the estab whici liitWillWe.inadd,--tin _thWantborzty figment of a despotism of a very bad of tbii United States, ''''s ' 1 - 4: . :Mia. , ert,„ kind, -- or the overthrow of the political ilti razaktiwitii nig LANit. ,— ..., t.; power of those who resort to such meth 0r ' 4 whirr precise as ell tie etinsiirep ,odo. . Hither the institutio ns of the °bun: h ens , ~ 0-. 984 ru l e e t t - sit Aiv augiie„.,;ft : try will perish or the party which under expr ',,'' ,'ltlkaPat ambiguitythe whole of takes to repress all freedom of discussion oar Al • - • ~, .toward‘ thelmibial govern- will perish. (Cheers.) I hope we shall men . ' t makes a supreme taw ;—a law make up our minds to destroy the party parsAount to, all other h 'man rlaws—an and save the institutions. (Great ap obligitiontlfiritteending ' other polio h e "Oe.Will do ; it.'') -But of this cal o§ligations. It leaves o room what. hereafter. , , ever IdrtNirmtifisicin of ther or a rival Let foie rettiFil fp i , ttisjzew, , doctrine t of t i claimlint to our civil ob dience. That "loyalty," whiehlreqhires us to acquiesce claimant can neither be a arson invested in silence iatheinAgnibilt pr h ies or dinvetked With :office, or an idea of vents Co to what tllid ittiblic' - fiedifssities re- i publi!, necessity, notan im 'ginary nation- quite % ,T en to die extent of overlooking al lir tl ib i gi--Orapa r t fro , the life area-, :great infractions of thetAmetftutionv This ted ' the' . :e tanetitiitld. ' The.,otly - doctrine entirely igikMee theiimposty for poesi e=eliima n t of our o edience is the which-the Constitution • imposeVeettain Lew it oe ",. thi t ti sw id m alls Empeetneogl• -stringent limitations onthe powde'Of the` i othe : d e t m titen ter,dernand ius upon our . n otionalgovernment. ' In order tii eiPlaiir sub ifail'ai4e :6Tinthiecselssui_t i.eme •exe ia la w ded ;r4ixt. T .l t i h o is n :it N J : -klef necessary 5....4. 401des:aertd.fraitt a jo ' (1494 :, •.. -. Ei , c i La general reasoning to inerticelet. itlustra brao4l? ' , Titli ; tex — t;_eki 'Whi *I im Com.. .. • The Qiristilatici after 'oenf rri g. car- mead "lifer ftiridehes ' e answer.— ta l e defined political poWerse pit the "Ths ,-: .exattitetionPAt =it --'-' iitAilrie- finiiiraltavernine n t de lar . thil l t i- all'othe r na g ° twig " e q nkiin i 4 *4 10113' laws that Poritice4bWers are reserved to thigtatra 444 4 kilk iWeellArtaTtif lih [t— these or the pep' ple- . , numb it further secures to shall ' the supreme law, ris i ng in au. every citizen inalienable rights of person thori above all other law . N o publi c forever, beyond all possible _control of I 1 I ,q ' .s ~ ~A~_ ! , . .. _ . . . --- -,',..,;:., . . . , ; -...„ .....: -. , :,j r .a ' ; 1 , 7 ,.,, : , - r.: .. .:1,. -) . - . ...:::: f b : ,, : i : 7 1 1 1 ..,„ ..' . . .., . . . . . . ' ' , ^ . - ... : . . . ' At' - . LI , 1 1. 1:' vMPi., :I , i • It 1 , . ( ..9: r' , '-' -I .:•Vi . , 't • 1 - tr e Ar .., >-_,' ' ' :-.. t. , 74.1 Tic t A -, 1: , . .'1...., . - • r , r Li . ; .. . ..... • _ • -;\ lit ri;: E diteir l ' ilk .1 1 iNtiirietbr. - ~;...... :. f,„:.._ _ . . &ra rin.,,r.i. .......... r- , • ,-, . .... :1,1 7 7 , I'AFC 4:3E : • Pr Ha that governMent. Now does any one suppose that this was done wifhont a. purpose? Does any one believe, that it was done for what is vulgarly called bun combe Do you believe that it waa done with mental reservation of the doctrinn. of public necessity standing behind the COn sulfa lion' and ready to 'strike it down from its supreme control over us and our affairs? Let me suggest to you, my fellow-citizeps, that you cannot study the ConatitutioA purposes of the great generation Who made it, without seeing that the very object of alt this careful provision for rights - that were placed 'beyond the reach of the central government was to exclude forever this doctrine of public necessity as aerre measd ore of- that the powers that were con f upon overnment. I use this languageg deliberately. I(Cheers affirm.) that when the Constitution repeated the words of Magna Chute, not as a 'statue. but as a, fixed provision of a fundamental 'law, and declared that "no person shall be deprived of life, liberty, or property without due process of law"—it meant to 'Make a rule for all times and ail circum stances, shutting the doer forever against any supposed public necessity for violating the citizen.* In like manner I affirm that when the Constitution reserved to the States or the people all political power not granted to the federal government it meant to preclude every ground of ne• cessity for the assumption by that govern ment of the powers thus withheld. (Ap • please.) In fact, the idea of a written constitu tion-7-a fixed and supreme law—is -latterly irreconcilable with the theory that the administrators of such a governMent can resort to their own judgment of public necessity, and act contrary to that., au. pronto law, and that good citizenship re qttires the people to acquiesce in that judgment. They who set up such a claim for oar rulers claim for them an entirely irresponsible power. We are reuired, for example, to believe that what are ball ed "arditrary arrests" are necessary, but no one explains to us tie grounds of that necessity. No account is rendered. We are to assume the existence of causes of justification, but no one tells us what those causes are. They may remain forever locked in the bosoms of those who do the acts of which we complain- ° Why Should American citizens, filling high places tf public tinst, act upon such a principle as this? Can anything be more degrading, more injurious to the public conscience of a people, than to form a habit of implicit belief in the existence of necessities which nobody explains, and of which no body is required to give ad account? You may hear a hundred men in a day, speak ing of some particular case of this kind, profess its necessity; and not one man in the whole hundred can tell you what the necessity was. (Laughter and applause.) My friends, these false theories of loy alty—for false I mast deem them—are in rasing into our national character a fatal poison. They are leading those who cher ish them to impute factious and interest. ed motives to all ,pure and manly efforts in defense of the principles of civil liber ty. They who indulge in this dangerous work of deriding the defenders of consti• tutional rights can have but a very inade• quate conception of the convulsions that mug precede the final lose ell:lase rights. They take but a very superficial view of the depth of those feelings which lead men in all free countries to resist every form of mere arbitrary power. 1 hey make no account of the principles im planted in our breasts, and cherished into dictates of nature by gelerations of train ing in the practice of liberty ; those prin ciples on which depends the primary of fice of an opposition in a free government, and by means of which all constitutional rulers are restrained from abuses of pow er. Impatient of those restraints, such persons rush to methods which cannot be employed without undermining the founda tion of liberty ; and for a supposed tern poraVadvantage barter away the strength and the supports, the vigor and the health of the body politic. This has been in all ages the downward course of nations, who have substituted for free institutions and systems of fundamental law a blind and unquestioning faith in public necessities, and have then welcomed some despotic power. Thus did the Roman empire sec i need the republic, and thus we may be preparing ourselves for a like destiny.— Let us be warned time. (Cheers.) I have endeavored to state with due pre cision and fairness one very important part of the conditions of a true loyalty.— Bat I should leave this subje ct in an im • perfect state - If I emitted, on the other hand, to give equal prominence to certain principles of our political system which limit the mode in which States and indi viduals are to exercise their constitution al rights of opposition to the measures of the federal government. I have briefly adverted to this already; bat a more ex tended statement of the principle is ne cessary. I will emanate then that a measure, hair ins all the forms of law, is believed-upon good grounds to be a violation of the con etitutional rights of States and individuals. What is the rule of action under such cir cumstances? There is no difficulty wha,:- ever in finding the answer. By the estab lishment of a - judicial system within the federal Constitution, having ultimate cognizarice of all cases arising under that Constitution, one mode is provided by which both States and individuals can as certain whether their reserved rights are invadedig tkiiii•ftlll arithoriti, This remedoS - at - At ti•• e '-open ; and there is 'no valid reason why a State should ford 'l3'ly assert its constitutional rights any more than that an individual should Ao . the saii6 thing. While a State - re-' mains a member of the Union it is bound to vindicate its constitutional rights and powers in that mode which is consistent with the preservation of that Union ; and it can at any time, under any supposed violation of its rights or the rights of its people, make a case for judicial determin ation. - Forcible resistance is open revo lution ; and nothingbut an intolerable op pression, cutting off all judicial remedy, can make revolution a necessity and a duty (Applause.) Again ; there is another equally good reason, which shows that no popular tu mults and no forcible resistance are either • It is 10 myopinion,a monstrous fallacy tasup. pose thg; t6wserpliso4 alahorilt, ter Rums:Ong the , rivilege, or the writ bfiii&Siei &Opus warrants in definitely the arrest and detention of citizens' T er withontjadieialprooess. jhbkcipliOd,antbo Agan irivetvilithsKariftrraltsons • tion.; Rat at the adoption iftltat-idatidmen — the people came forward and annexed to it the prohibition of Magna Charta,_making that provision part of the supreme-law. The twociauses of the Constitetion most therefore, be ao construed and applied as not to render nugatory thence last adopted. and . so as to friymitopkt,o, pit stringent declsg:aticpw—F, Tien blaft+l . 44- - reeermitlxi Only by such a . sm i lge . of legislative and executive action- es will preservetheoperatiou of both. 11 under-pp-cellar eigottfasiances of .imminent : danger, the actual I 'Mauro lET Made without judicial process the prii- - 1 ,onarshonld immediate be charged witi, an 0 f., , fente bizr tu i l ,knd Ut u rregAiilW th' 6 . l Iwi en itrprisient his I am* fit um the itoprtsenznentfor causes whieh I t oberite to dinners@ it.the Writ, were; so pended. MIS is thstsios _ um* oflegisie-- ;Ida.% my opiniodahat can. e ecometent pia &lithe tarstudarttof the .Coistitution." - T do not ase;h o w it laVelocatiteildlthat intentinual imprisonm ' 'nttifir bh mere exeentive seiz ure, can be authorised bytakingf i r s ay the privi lege ot the habeas **rp m If &Warta not been interposed there might Ave been more ground for this pretendon. for then there would have been no necessity for proems at any tims. legally or morally justifiable while the,bal lot- box remains untouched. ' 'the' peo ple of all States had reason to believe that measures of the federal government . are Subveriiive of the Constitution, it is their right to correct the evil by change Of theirsrulers.• , (Cheer e.) In cases'-of sap-' posed extensive violations of the Consti tution, to which the attention ; of the whole country is called, the remedy'of elections is ordinarily sufficient to reverse, and is in ;Liar system held to reverse, eryonons con , structions of that instrument, 'as well as errors of policy. The popular tribunal may not bei quite so precise in its action as the judicial, but there an be no mis taking the judgment of the people when it is pronounced upon an issneclearly made with an administration which is charged with infringing the Constitution. ((treat applause.) These principles no one, I presume, will be inclined. to dispute. Bat there is thrust in, to intercept their Egiplication to .the present crisis in our affairs, a doctrine which I, for one, distinctly repudiate. That doctrine is,_ in substante, that all questioning of the measures rof the ad ministration should be postponed while we are in a civil war ; that there should be but one party and that all Should rally to an "unconditional support" of the con stituted authorities. This dogma needs examination. If by an unconditional sup port of the constituted authorities it is intended to claim that we must all recog- nize the fact that we are engaged in a civil war, and that we must conduct it, while it lasts, through those authorities, and must bold no irregular ibtercourse with the public enemy, I readily accede to the proposition. But if it, is. meent that we are not to question thb methods which the administration pursues in the prosecution of the war, that we have no rightful control over their measures, or that we are to refrain from demanding a change of their policy—l reject the doc trine without the slightest hesitation. The very issue which you make with the administration of itself refutes that doe• trine. That issue is that their course of action subverts the Constitution ; makes the war an attack upon the focial system of the South; and renders it impossible to succeed in that war without destroying, for the South and fur the North, the whole principle of State sovereignty oh which the Union was necessarily founded as one of its corner -stones. It is in vain to say that the acts of the administration, of which you complain, are military moos urea. In every civil war there . are po litical considerations which must qualify the military notion, or that action can re sult only in disaster. A government that= undertakes to suppress a great revolt of powerful and organized communities, at the s 'me time furnishing the strongest of moral motives for resistance, is iu the same situation as he who fiztita his enemy with one hand and supplies him through the other with the munitions of war. In the present case we have made the conquest one of infinite difficulty, by first declaring that we waged the war solely for the su premacy of the Constitution, and then turning round and making the overthrow of the Constitution a too probable result of our success. ••That's so." Applause.) This result will not be confined to the condition of the revolted States, if the war continues to be profteeuted as it has been for the last six months. Yda can not acquraFe in the metteurei of' theld ministration, involving, as they do, the exercise of many powers that lie wholly outside of the Constitution, without leav ing this country hereafter to be ruled by powers that will rest upon nothing but what the judgment of a party, or a fac tion, or a clique, shall deem to be public necessities. In this aspect of our affairs I cannot avoid a word of earnest appeal to all reflecting men, to consider what fate must attend the securities of proper ty, as well as the rights of persons, if_ we permit the Constitution to be lost. There are five great securities of prop• erty, the continuance of which in the coun try is dependent on the preservation of the Constitution of the United States.__ Let me enumerate them.. They are as fellows: I. A uniform metallic currency, as the basis and standard of all values. 2. The power to establish a uniform aye• tern of bankruptcies, wihenever the in terests of commerce require it. 3. The inviolability of contracts b y State legislatures. 4. The provision which places property under the protection of the Constitution, as against federal power, so that no man can be deprived of it without legal pro cess. 5. The prohibition which restrains the tederal power of eminent domain, so that private property cannot be taken fur pub lic use without just compensation. Now no rational being can suppose that these guarantees can be exorted anew from that centralized despotism which is 'het too likely to be the only successor that the Constitution of the United States can ever have, I care not what ideas men may form of that "stronger government" which some allow themselves to wish for in the place ot our present system. My reason and my instinctit both teach me that that government will be an uncheck ed and uncontrolled despotism ; and we need not look far for the signs ot its ap proach. (Applause.) Consciously or' unconsciously, there are many at work to' promote its advent ; one of the most po tent of them is the perilous idea that you can safely trifle with a fixed Constitution. We have made such vast strides towards a system scarcely unknown to the federal Constitution, that we can now see the as hire of the only..gewer_ that. will ever re place it. Wben thatpower has folly come the present 'securities of property will have been swept away with the securities of person. Both will disappear with the federal Constitution; and we shall never extort thfin as concessions from the new power, gr.. place them beyond reach if we can exert them. There are no barons on this our American earth to make a new Magna Charge ; our race shall .never see another Runnymede; and we shall never see another Washington,another Madison, another Hamilton, another Jay, another Patrick Efemy, another Samuel Adams.-- Even the States, with their separate consti tutions, their bilis of rights, and their present capacity to protect their people. will fall beneath the unchecked pew .ist" to which the nation will surrender it self when it cuts aloof froth the federal Constitution; end, if they should not, 3siiiiiry intelligent man who has had. much to do with accumulation knows thatyrop erty, deprived of the supports which it derives Worn - the federal constitutional sys tem, can maintain but a feeble and pre cigizins existence. • My friends, it is time that the warfare upon opinion, and thoaght, and speech, should cease. It is time we had ascertain- , ed that our national' difficulties'can never bee'eltred withOsitet.he 'action of the pe o pl e. Iris - time we had exploded the fOacy that patribtisin s 9'nd,party are incompatible in any eokeetalle • oireaniataneeirThi corqtry. , 69 pa, at any rate, let meMite. reject this ilegma as a delusion ; for in `ffeglooth 'di the present, in all the dark uncertainties of the future, I put my hopes: in the great. Democracy of the Union.-- (Great applause.) I now see nothing else to which we can look. I see yon, it is true, occasionally diatraeted by the taunts of your opponents, occasionally: disturbed by the indiscretion of frientle. But I also see you animated by .e patrietiam.which I fully belissie will guide you right, and which, .4 spite of all thatmett may eay-of you, commands my respectund confidence. (ApPlause,) Permit me then, with such freedimi, as may be taken by one who neither has nor }leeks any special place in your organiietion, to offer. you a work of friend's connsel. What you need, ae it seems to me, is to be fully impressed with a belief in your mission and in your capacity to fulfill it. That mission is to save the Constitution of the United States. (Cheers-) By saving it, I mean of course that you are to save it for the whole Cajon, for.the South and the North, for the gast and West, with every right which it protects completely re-established. lean see no otheemode - Ot saving it; for it is to mi' mind apparent j that a war prosecuted against the South for the acquisition ofpowers over 'their doMestic institutions which.the Conati-j tution. expressly withholds fom' the fed- I the era( government can result in nothinbut; establishment of a system under which there can be no local rights of self government left for any section or any State. This it is your mission to pre vent. You cannot prevent it by uniting with those who proffer support of the war without the slightest protest against the unconstitutional policy with which it is prosecuted. In all the late popular proceedings, looking to the establishment of what are styled "Loyal Leagues," (Laughter',) I have not seen one word ot indignant remonstrance against the un constitutional measures of the adminis tration. You cannot expect, and need not look for such remonstrance-from as semblies largely composed of those who are the peculiar political supporters of the administration, and who are more or less responsible for its measures. Public opinion, if it is to make itself heard and felt against-all violations of the Con stitution, must make its utterances through the action and the voice of those who have never failed to protest against the policy that has created for US so much peril_ If that public opinion fails to recognize this necessary channel of expression—if it yields itself to a fatal :apathy or will not see how it can at once save a government and change an administration—the n all will be lost, and there will remein to us only the consolation that we have individ ual) y done oar daty. You are then, permit me to add, to seek' by every constitutional and upright method ,to obtain the control of all the organisms of government. If in the meantime you cannot induce the present executive of the United States to change his policy, then, remembering his position, possess your souls in patience until you can give him a constitutional successor. Let everything be prepared with one fixed and unselfish purpose, namely, to make every sucoessive election reverse the doctrines and dognias and usurpations which you know you should condemn. By this coarse of action, instead of weakening, you will strengthen your government; for yon will make it ap parent to the whole world that the present arbitrary rule is to be succeeded by a period when the Constitution is once more, in all its beneficence and all its power, to be "the supreme law of the land." Fail to do this, and the nation, losing heart and hope,- will - lose-eight; -of: the methods by which a constitutional success can be preserved to a better day, and will yield itself to the despair which welcmes despotism, or to the rage which welcomes anarchy. (Applause.) I know the difficulties of your position ; but must not falter; and you mast not ad mit that Lou can fail. High virtues are demanded ofyou. You must live down slander; you must despise obloquy, you must watch your own motives, you must chasten your own spirits, you must —l ---"Strotoh er And press "ith visor on'pry nerve to the salvation of your country. You must win public confidence by your purity, you must challenge public respect by your' intelligence. Above all, and before all, j without one instant's hesitation, without pleading one solitary excuse, you must be true to the principles of civil liberty. You must learn that those principles are no chance production of the "piping times I of peace," but that they are the rules which in all times of tranquility and in all times ot. commotion have been evolved out of the wisdom of ages, to gave us from the mad thirst for arbitrary power that has again and again seized upon highly civilized nations and destroyed the hopes, of mankind. (Great applaase.) Preparing yourselves in this way for the great task that is before you, you will be able to approach the difficult problem of this war with a firm and fearless step.— You will see that this problem presents to you the alternatives of consenting to a dismemberment of the country or of pre senting that dismemberment by a reversal of the popular and govermental action chit% has made it so nearly an accom plished fact. You will soon hear it said, by those who have urged on the war upon this most disastrous policy that it is too late now; that the breach can never be closed; that the South must be permitted to go in peace. Just here, then, precisely here,before all is given up to the control of the extremists North and South, you Must interpose.— You have a right to have other measures and other counsels tried. (Cheers.) You are numerically a majority in at least four of the largest States in the Union. You may rightfully demand that the Constitu tion, with all its guarantees, be tendered to the revolted States';' and you may right: fully do all that can assure the people of the South of its protection, without call ing upon your government to change its mititaryJattitude. (Cheers:) 1 know well enough the insidious answer that is made'to this suggestion; how con fidently - we are told that the. South would reject your offer with Acorn.' Bat I tell you that history has never seen a case of war, foreign or civil, in which a nation oath. absolve itself from the moral res• ponsibility of doing right, by asserting be forehand that it knew its adversary would do wrung The elements of a moral judgment do not exist in advance of such an offer, either in the controversies 01. titans or in the coritidve'rities I Whatever others may think, or say, )or do, you, I trust, will act upon a printiple whigh.l am persuaed sts upon a moral 'foundation that re no sophistry,and no causistry can successful ,ky assail. If, after such en offer, the war must still be carried on, no language can I overstate the advantage that would be • - • -- game in the vigor of its prosecatten.,-•-;--A . And here, gentlemen, I close. One path of duty is clearly opett•jsefore,, Aft I eau, see no other now. Sufficient unto the day . is the. linty tamer', • He- who does that one duty in tV-firm - and tumble faith in the providence of god prepares him self for a clear 'perception of' the next that may arise in the future. . E CI: • R. 4: 1 01314 1 RMIIV ATTORNEY AkkIRSGUNRULCIA) AT LAW. OEN 80. li9 Grant Wreak near the Court House, Pittsburgh. A LL . RUMNESS ENTRUSTED TO xx . hie care will mein prompt attantig= Gl itz !ma w * " and the zoontw promotiv COMBROIAL., .1111111[ATIOL Arbitratkw_colinet, the *phyla ourraile ter .Ftem.44 Wm. 71. 13111:07, agNNEIT: J.NO. b. DILWIATIV : War,tiottEllyi. DAVI! .Ikroo DLEBB. - r i ~ .. Movements of Eurotan t32e'ittairet Aram( amaarda. Europa ........... .80at0n...._. _LiverpooL..:.tpill f 1 Sazonut ...........New Yoik-Flambnrg .-Aprlit: 4 . Creole ................ York-HavanuadigG APIS 1 Bohemian........Portland.....LiverpooL - April! b Etna New York_Liverpool ' April; 4 Alga New York-Liverpool . ' N. American....PoAprill 8 rtrand.....l4verpool ...... :April al Glasgow .New York „ L iverpool . ' APrft.ll. PROM X,13110Pl 4 .1 Victoria.. ..-...Liverpool New York... March i 2 Great Eaat'n...Liverpotil .' .New York.:.Marc)4 Saxonia ......... Southaufn.....New, York....Biareh 11 ( Etna ... ~.... . ... .. . Liverpool ' New York... Mara I llo_kemiaa..--Liverpool......Portland 'March 11 8 'Asia.. ........ ....Liverpool New York... March 4' GlaagOw.. ...... Liverpool ...... New York... March N. A merican-Liverpool ... ... Pertland. March 19 Canada ....... Liverpool Boston Audi 21 ilammonii.2.Boutham'ra.,...New York.-Matedi 251 Afric a.....--Liverpool - Boston ,Match 281 - --- 1 , 11 10211EY ALikimigT. • foottageran DAILY POE THZ-310181N6. Pin't The following are the buying and selling re for Gold, Silver, Are. : Baying Selling SilGold ...... ........... ....... 45 00. ver—. . . . .... ....... ..... 35 00 . .Demand Notes-. 45 . .007 Eastern Exchange. New York Baltimorepar. ..... Philadelphia. " . . ... par 4 ..... Boston • Weaten!' EXElllBllllol4par Lonisville Cleveland St. .......... Cincinnati. - There Is much more imiritin the prifrisfon mar ket. Lard was ingood inquiry, daring the morn Mg. at 10e. and ICP/ie was, in extreme cases,allow ad for eity. After report of the New- York mar- ; ket came to hand, buyers became quite eager for: city at 117Afe, but holders were reserveitand thorn is not much in the market at 10jr z e. . . Bulk shoulders were in gbod request a:t -14@i,4 The latter figure is now freely offered for such as are particularly desirable. Bulk sides were sold to a fair extent at .5%@ , 5X0. The latter figure b now made to cover averages 40 Ths Bulk Rams httie a ready market at ai-io, and 6%9 an Paid for achoico lot. Bacon would sell readily at 53 , 4 '07c for shoulders and sides, if there were any ready. Chicago. Notwitheanding the sudden rise:in the prim) : of gold there was but little excitement on 'Change. Prices in wheat. advanced about one cent as compared withyeaterday. with sales a No 2 spring at $1 08@l 0934 ander No I at sl2o@ 1 4,41 winter recceipts. Corn advanced about 3.4 41:6c, the market opening brisk at 48c but clocigg Quiet. We note sales of mixed corn at 4734,4 M 48, g483. all winter receipts. There was a large demandfor oats on government contracts and tlfe" market advanced from 34 tole per bushed; 58 1 .4,0 was freely offered for large lots, Provisions are firmer but little is doing in them. Mess pork is about the same as yesterday with but a limited market. Lard is better; we quote city kettle red dered at 10'4@l0Y4e. inGHWINES—The market is more active and prices a shade higher. Sales were= bbls at 4034 e; 500 bbls at 41c. - BOSTON AUCTION SALES.—Sugar-258 hhds 7 bbls New Orleans $ 9711 65.. Molasses -488 bbl, New Orleans, 360373.6 e. Flonr-250 bbl, St. Louts. $8 30. cash. RIVER NEWS, Cincinnati. ' The river Is falling, with over thirty feet in - the channel, and ten feet over the Falls, The Lower Ohio, Cumberland and Tennessee are in fair boat ing. order. - Freight s are offering freely for ail Points, with no tonnage or permits to ship-teeny of tho southern States. -- Ther..itoftiotte ; ftWto - Fittshimi r tiAtilles" from Memphis, were the only arrivals : craulasibr the daily packets ......... .The Sultana, for Wheeling State Dank, ler gailiSon ; Igo, Impe rial, J, D. Ford, and R. C. M. Lovell, for the Cum-. berland. and Glendale for Memphis, comprise the departures .................. _The Sultana was full of freight and naasengers (It the Cumberland River Packets were fully 1aden..........wing to re fusal, on the part of the authorities, to grant per mits for the shipment of freight, the Glendale,af ter discharging tier cargo of cotton, raised steam and darted off for Metuphis, comparatively light, relying entirely on way passenger business and a fair return trip to-meet the expenses of so fine a craft ............... The little steamer R. M. C. Lorell was pur ch ase d by Davis &Co, of this city, on Tuesday, for Tfi,ooo ..... ..... ...... The Jacob Strader left for the south last nigh t ' in The service of the Government, 1 Nashville. - • Tb river having risen above the wood-work under 6i:railroad bridge, hesitated there for a. time, and before this paragraph is read, will show a decided downward tendency. The weather has been !lake cold, the past two days, arid threatening rain, snow or something else. Of one thing we are certain, we have not been bleescui with the sun's genial rays for some- time, except for abort periods. PITTSBURGH PROPUOR MARKET OPTICS OP ;MC DAILY POST. Saturday, April 4th; 1863. 1 Remark Saturday, The market at present being extremely inactive, leave us but little to write about. The weather continues changeable, not very much likespring. Ourrivers are' in fine or for steamboating, but no boats to transact bu *Masi with. The market continues as unsettled as ever; East, Weet and everywhere. Cincinnati —The late advance haa.put.a cheetto Operations in dour, and sales could not be effeeted unless at a decline; the market remains very quiet. New York—Flour market heavy; sales of 12,000 bbls at decline; no figures given. Oils—The marketseems to have taken a new stand during the Pest ..two' days, and a fair amount has ehangekhaadairPri..- cee were rower; 'shill account ofealef;will4 be found - belciso: tateSt 11-orn brew York:41)01AI —The receipts amounted to 1700 bbls ; the market; was unusually quiet; email sales were reported ofj Refined Brand, .30@334z Free, 33938.1. Crude Is I quoted at Male. We note a sale of 500 bbls at ale per gal, _Bacon aintinues in aotive demand ,for home We and export. In fact, Pittsburgh cu red meat was never in better request. Purchas era for Government have bought heavily. The stock infirst hands is rapidly' disappearing. Grain continues in fair demand; the limited amount of receipts prevents large transactions: all wagen - , loads that arrive, find ready purchasers at full. rates. Flour sellers manifest more disposition to operate, whilst buyers took hold sparingly; prices have not yet come down, .to their:views; thesalew however, were 'larger than the previous day.— There is very little coming in which tends to stiff en the market. Fish—The markerwes flue since thejadvanee in beef; parties are Paying more at tention to Fish.' The new crop is beginning to ar rive. Butter is scarce, and prices are high ; a good article sells readily on arrival. theese--Th demand nevorwas better than at this time; there Is alargaanionat (imaging hands. The stock in first hands col/Glides ample for all ordinary par 4. poses.' -• 01le—Th e demanct during the past two days has improved. the sales show a slight decline in prices. We note as follows: Refined; sales repor ted at the Oil Exchange were 100 bbls Free.32cts Cash. Eenzole i sales of 87 bbls 22c cash. txadei sales WO bbLs in bbls. 13c cash; 450 bbls in bulk 7er f cash; 400 bbls in bbis Lie cash; 400 bblado in bulk, I 7c,• 4 11 0 bbls do Sc. FlosurThe demand was slightly The sales were not large, vizr.so bbls Extra. Petal= 25@750: 65 bb.lt do of choice 0150 i -160 bl Extra $ 6 256 40•'60 ' bbls Extra Family Vf• 23: b as bbls Extra $62506 3Ch. 100 bbls.en private terms. Malt —ln steady demand: tales of 200 bushels ftomfirst hands $l5O A bush. ittoons..—lhe demand is imiProving Wes 0 75 atit at $20237 doz. •• • • may.Pricesrule ;. sales 18 loads at $2062.2 $1 ton; the receiPts for .some days were light. tsOX,--lifirket:steady: sales of 300 hip's No. 1 at $1 7001 751 bbl. Macon - market *M t demand activei 'sales of 20.000 Ms abouldersatemtades Wale; Plam Hams ?r e i n 83*; 3 .500Thi Cala= 10s OMO Ts shoulders*: Hem gxmccoxi Ms aides 731a8c. rellerlifarkotlirm. sales of 40 bbls' $1 • bush d.parate.—sfarketsbtadi: aaleiloo b Anes $1 5 0 @lSer:Peanbes. aides 150bith • pti ? Green:dol.—Firm, gaol bis Meas ;icig:t o th e trade; salesl2hhchfOrleans sugar 121 4013 o; 10 do P. Rico Molasses. sales 31 this Orleans 556 . coffee; sales 22 sacks Rio at'Sialic. Batter—The market is very unsettled. too much so to give Are anything eco like correct price* prime $3 00 per barrel bntuag scarce; sales 50 bbls . Will. • w—Prices in Cinchma tl have a,aln ab eam:led; we note sales hero at 4841.4t.c. ...... Dar Dar par FORM PACKING. maerznienasiii - 7,. .a. nrßßowrilignac i m, . ~....... And stritawax, umoe, Norse •- . , dmithfield /teat Mam& a:> •-, _ ..: ''.reansylearsa„ , ;• 1 -....... Dr-BROWN is as ola dilate . ~ , .... of Pittebursh, andhas been In ; ',, -P "s Praetioefortikelasttwenty-fide '. 4 -, - rare. arm hasinees has llogL - _ em : uln edmettlyttPrivate aid • 'IT 7 - . . - -` CEIDINNL4 kilTiklhltaxii s. In neect of eimedkal friamdi ihl.l4.pot ha r find out the aims plate of relief, . MO a*OtOr ig a f resulassradnate.alidlibr ~.:.:Zi,'Ad treit meat of a certain dam of le a sure tear- anted to the sallerera'of lih T e ttoetkeet r 116! b 7 the mato: . his rem an following - 1 id advitie. il• _ • D31.311.044WE1 IdINEDIII9 - - , _- veiseleartg., tbs want. item of Irepsreal - • tierand Sazoihons Affections.— ~,„,, saws enTeMeut emitter, twat whit Duff. a form of tette . . paprisatns eniai :OW% - -forms 01 - rkin‘ite- . Isrrinkla r r i l ergurso bl git h eat? t 43 a l* ' ''' ' hopes e/ tim i t6 m a .datvaave:, ~ , _ r -bro Dr. DrOwnlrrau y udias for the slanrsii tcl6l/ ' ! psht de often b fhat solitary we Madams! inaditlVen. *bleu Doer:mg:lnd weak d'nde:t Mies et re way to, Oa tlgrir ,own deseniodra_j ar r. the. on-wrellable leniemas =Add 1 the cour.try, _. , sa are sete,,ead , mikma 4Epestr restoratlot - sr health, •r ^ -...--, , t !..^. :._ r RHAtilltA.T2'.-.ONr"- ‘ Dr. Ilropa's reeled:es nevor. fill It taut tall , salami ditakot r-r .t vt•:t ait Yr -- -Lr..yll warrant a mud! . he at,r ^, i= Vila.. .0.',..-4,-..;. :Teaderrhwe J Striotaie, the. h•,..; Dir,c. Dr_wat. s •=. . Monthly 5111111.V1071 Di.....,,14.4 1.,1 , 3 Wca.kn tt. Lilt Jalyll,l, Fiat*ls ity Auc Vars - v.z., 0 x:.:43. t ., flima Ir. 'be It a 3 )4 ititliird.' frt . t.i`lCll •1 ' .t.. i -..-1:3. ! ' V. , atthi,: rxilk Al , .14.3,12;witt An.kiillrl4 unity.... . • ' •:',... - r .. EiPa,t , arArt - t* t; PR rittr-k - ' , 1.: r t . 1;14 ,r, , ,11f rt .,,:• i .&. P , '.. - .. ?..... , x..,71: :, ,--,:":"Xiii•-.1i.? 1-157121, ed. ' .1. 2 Li` Ile ev:rt-t7 2./I.P i '11..^.Z" Fr...':-.1:, ~ ,,, i,, . and doe a.: z. ire -Ln cbt. s r_l 2 4o== : . ; - o.llc. ail' Private uctins, Ila. - 61) anlitb.h o w, ............... I_________ trao•. , teat- , ---11. 7a, •Jery.../....wr WM. 1 0 .ABER ft - 00 §TEAM ENGINE BURDENS aEraiL QIACRIrtIST3 A4D t 1111. ER MAIIKEIG New the Pena. R. R. Pea . !5.„4?,.a._ petrol PITTEL -z t:ri•J'il.•.„, • airAIMPAcTV/113 AIX 41131118 of/ -4.viL Stesin ECtuannbur from-thre e to one liond,..and - horoe powq. and .eulted for GM Blast Vanueesanototieec) NQ ~.1 Give participle attention to theof llatinee and maehinerf.-101- Ede. null end. An• Awed/0141day and ei . l udareavrinille: • i neve-also cm hand.t *bed hnkready for' 'leke-1-• :d9 vmeet ateltortnotleoi Z yule : lead pollee arm; msc, .1 33 'noir- out abnot Iron se erateln, '-iirrouglgron 'nottinit: 'unions on,g-t's in every vaileiw., and, &Mae tae in • eof yi r oolen ManbluinTlin _it hno-qudn. Our prioeTare low,a,....sejnory inanoleotar •el of tne beat otuzlitp I paterials, and motlteif in all cane to live indlunefoion. I ' Ort4ro from all Davin of the ocular, none! "edand sroinott! put . , , . , . fektd,lfw - :DAUB: --* 0 -- 7A:pf‘i LL, M1,R. 41611 ar . .4 AV * Sto.isseiqithsamms srAtst. IL E itsirst JUST RECEIVED s Iran and Iran Waded atock Spring Goods , „„.iip t i nz or , ClStbsi - CaliMetoll, Vestiap, &U. ALSO—A tarsi dock - 0f ' . • , FURNISHENG iiOODl3; [Tu:tutting Paper Collar a. Recirs6i. end even' thing tuntally kept by first does Furettst fur trlct Ordere promptly execute d. 101605-12 BELO FRESH EGOS JIO reeedyed sad braids by a. seal Co atria l ofs= ,- fIiDTOuTIERSPUBT4O;4'n Staihuntis A zzoirml .* • - 51.1.5 , e Jam I thalimonint az 461$1gf.' . , • ‘ I Y - Modeetwiell &wail- as - '''' . _ fel trot iti . . .. 0 - ~, , , .. ., , 2 - Abut,: 14•71. ~, ......., tgattainomeson all in-- :-., - - '- - . -- r - -- adentito tonal othotly- " , - s C.l 44 I 1 .,.. II ' ad a 1 t at i t ees 44:11relffii3.111 sof th150,.....mui tants modern-wv.resowity illockes.n . nd think, Ili' Vecet, aix.,Teayr issmons and 'fir cont nation sold- 'ocryotinri:Omons their wi-Y.,onsitth:ng_t_ons and aunsaters. _Thair l'fi-ViY2lingaittsniLttitra.:4 tovkirpfeffl FlSDrZept pnplifhwest alum:alye avast' =lacts - shight-bh lost o' theuresicittli Ihlsely - ft ' l and , presamytwzgl;; - bani; sad ln iinnOrga; Sprang ti zunseroonss fad tflta , coicusarsa sanialy - , , in semi* ay., to nomari and — ecntetyls. ae.3417,-atiAt; tett= this tolint liaHy es met nunibroto "rfonrNsii, gleFliami lma udita:.the tor som4 st.ters rts.d'vf . prononsly oe le neitO end of '4 . .la leazatme. have heed rector - th and vlsor-by DB. BRAN TVL, , batiore=rafter eltk zucea I still g. anxiety.. Ingreffinllbli. &o. fipmmator hea or nocturnal 'aionsisisozusire qompletoiyonral rttuidarirfttime of thrte hu taw remedies. ti Ailtie own . fia7 NA ikomrour,dB • rom;B4eilatZaalkinmkgry. Itatlng-seer ths Eallncy,oftse ,U*!olaasahaMos ed it and ixabstith 116 vwtable Female dh... moue treatedwlth markettsh od over'forty "nett (410Vslenee ta thee! tin xneoltitatgegat tift:.ollV Werld - at! the U tau leads himto saY--b4.,h1.1 VAlth.a Adz Ma' Waist haPpiness ' WM' atab. Ms= avon.ol4 nor•rcifx co m e sangeal me n mous. but come and be my: erring and halo :itric . ithbaTa tt p f , A .:, o itint ? _ __lell= " .4542rattirfOnterla time -gnu p °hal duty tt t sattnett hYproctryilet now fiElireli=l.4dviser,whiali acacia * isflietin! fault apply" , Rasing the ad ovg=4., ever fo yistruen= MI WW I tiv ettunt• ge ( Wbusu, - ..and.. , faZ crobialtbdirriu oroniesf o n. se well aszcoom sanded by sepecbgne sitt , si. , pablissers. ppra priotore of hotels, &e. -.talcs- Sti Bmithne/d street.mear_DisonOnd sh'o*.t. va'zoommunt• cations from eV. peres of the nion WAR; skr limded Cs. l'A-L-4 -ii • 3 f:.wis -sh Poet . -C' , 44. CERTIFICATES, ; 1, 1-, rinrix• nr mg Ylb e trlitOßE ' 4 11320/ .11. . Ittaled.for a person that aisi -hum sunhat- _ efficted-foil lie il t ,not,dißy ?eye of sicin/MlA7with t a c 4 ? ; nP ry talVant iniansas hiy e - ry Risrsipeiae for sobaiSs.' I have called =several of our regular Physicians. hnt aR withonto any ben, silt. , .I.' Called On Ddotor Bralastibp. some that Peet Id him taitess_isie media :Ma f-which. 'bow eVer.ls wit colnposed of barbs I a now as well a s .Lsver-Was.- - -disly person' AM 'hi We in , ' ." will pleauscallg, :.: - _TROMB Parr -Refine hi Kr 'tuy*:s - .Dinin - ond El ear ' ,. '-' .1 Atiiiii#4- !MX tlaT lit* VE i time, -a...two • eel wagve*, Malt ofa 'slut -f We aaked pitow. A . /ailing Bits.- /Thank. t riulthesopowelant In the Old - Cot ntat'and - this. but name-Weed, err :rineat• L- 9 1 ' adfised to' call roc .ur. "Bran trn Instyear,an have hafkha s le tasinusthen; 4,, theirefifi , cons_ tier raiselY nto ettl./7 efurtd nenani snmongustry -zr d-2 ist - Chir - __,- INFO* IfANasALO 41MIrrimilekitirGf FOR of twenty Mr" devoted hie Tro- f elaelniively to the treatment of Await, /4110411*;andiunintszededia thou- phds f)f cases in restoring the 0,4 to songd }malt has now hoard esmildenne in Welty pab I‘Prroat Az O ar io.aikEttned,lo . z .. . , ... DILI/LiityleWSL`' -- : • • . CRONO4RERMAL - FEMALE PILLS I , Whlah We, win' yet ihMed (when the dn', , , thaw &nehmen strieUrfollowed)ln tie- • ' meths d igienithle Flifing !rem ~. II :. t-: O ct ~botrtotion oft p e oftopfg Nature. ,i . earth when , . _ 1 -IVrens*--- ---- / 415,rresor. Babitathior,.owk.l-As.: ivin' , rinii , e torerntmers of m oreseriondisessa. , , . ..Tisll-Ses AliaaPeperfealy karmrae on Via cow." - mietawlasd may be takes by, he. , most dilicatsf.. ~. the casting ditafren ; at the ~same time - they act; kicci a .chann. by strength . inv tat 't% and te etering the astern tea son'' Emit be.: minim 60 PM. Paula pint,Por.zaz and wheirdestlrEd wilr he '_seat It mail pre•paid lur ato - actvertisedlinieveces . ptisf tho =ones J. BRYAN. Roeheitei Di• Lt tteliorti 4hYput . Soli by Dnusdistomi4a. , I ' .-' , JosEEP - ) Corneilliiket atteet god manitteaWati;'“ a ulalTdowill L_ . _ Agent forPittibarz' lzou •Ir. -nue, ozzmai :;~ , :1 „ .l
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers