The Erie observer. (Erie, Pa.) 1859-1895, February 09, 1865, Image 1

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    E?;NY SAVIID IS EQUixt
TO A T'ENNY EARNED.
ESSV SAVED N Eqr.tt
To A rENNV FARSKD •
AtVE, Votlll WASTE PAIPP,II
NAVE YOUR WASTE PAPER
15; TOO VALUABLE TO 13E
tiP3TROY ED. ,
IS TOO VALUABLE TO
DESTROYED.
ruP: pAFEk MAICkli WANTR rr
ry nft MA K.Elt W ANTS ;IT
PhrNTER NEEDS IT
Navin xErt - 8 u'
1)1:: : CAN GET MORE FOR IT
THAN YOU, COULD FOR
RAGS TWO YEARS AGO.
IT CAN GET MORE FOR IT
"THAN YOU COTYLD FOR
,RAGS TWO YEARS AGO.
PAIL)
4, ILL B PAID
AT TJIE OBSERVER OFFICE
Al' riIVhiIIiSERVER OFFICE
INI
TilAl YOU CAN/11141'G
MAT V'(l CAN BRING
; ' ..
- •
. . .
12: •
44
•••• . •
1
VOLUME 35
B USINESEP DIRECTtit.Y.
rir (Supine's+ Card. inaortod la this tadataa at the !
let. Of Fi , * and Belau Dollars per Tear—tionordlag to
loagth.l •
Ert etrrLim.
,Il ATTORXIT AT LAW, litrard, Erie °panty,
co!icetia ne and other business attotgiod to witkr j
om ptneas and dispatch.
W. W
ATMOrus,
•Of
hew,
144,trewki ArrorT Li,. in Wikaker% Of
-114 Pa. aaNg 7'e}
dr KO. PERKINS,
, Darnirr, Rasura Mock, Routh AO* WIWI Nair,
tibiae street. Erie. PK.
Tial P. ENKIGIN,
. Boounu.in and Dealer briStationiry,
l Paper Itaguine., Newrp.pers. &c. Country dealers
Inpplterf. Btor.. valor Brown's tiots4trnsting tits Put.
.prWntf.
L I M Ii .
3. +. CUILDII has taken the Limo lila at
ttie foot of Fr.oeh tirort, urar the PhlhytelphLa depot,
trio city, ano t prepared to forniab Wh:to Lima. la WV
or small q '2101110t., Ot the lomvoat alarkfit
iiirO4-ly
a. a. aracrsa.
P NCR R. d. 3148 IN.
ATrORXIYa A.XD Coral/11015 A•2' LAW.
~ °Mee, Paragon Mork, near North Mist earner-of tbr.
Publia ligaurt, Erie, l's.
J011:11 11. .11111.1. AR, • •
CITT EPOINEIIk, being many TOlars ' Callinti
Sarre or, to prepared to =army or make P)aus Or Napo
to P:rte County, Pa. Ufßce to Common Council Room,
Wrlgkra Block. , ira'64-Iy.
n D. WALKER,
1.1• Iroawastract asm Coldstream,/ thraoaaav,
kne, Pa. Wareboase oa Fob Dook, East Darner of
Stets Street. Also, dealer In Coal, Salt, Fish, Pinar,
Miter, Water Lime, ka. N. D.--Partlealar attention r,
will be Oren to the Recetring and narwarding of Petry.
term Oil .
Crude and Relined, to all parts of the eouetry.
1;
apr=liatt.
I‘. MILO 'SENNETT,
1 4 4
JCHTIOIIOI , THY PLUTI. °MCA is/condi
L
IT th. rWayne Biucat, ?rend.' Su bMiresti Ftitti and
amel6-2.
,QINULAIit I t4
ILictultaa rawroostrg GALLALT,
koppnsweig'f , Mork.. Erie Ps. " hialfeitt
..". ;
; I IILIAPIN di. WI L13U11, 1.
k_ j ATTnarria it Law, Ridirwa.r. Pi=
Praetiae in Mk, McKean, Cameron and JeNnion nomads-.
J. C. CLIAPIS. Dan 3 4 .64-11•3 W. W. WILBUR.
, .
, kc ~ s. lit'LL, norm - I
-Fog.
i MORRI36N 11017.8 E.
1 ,forner of S./00nd =A Starist 131.r0r4.--(H • on squsre east et
lahnr.tie EXe...bling*, Wirns, Ps. . Solpt 79--11.
CirtrllLtlylSEN.
fl •st buliding , A 4 6:, . ' l4 nit°. Meek'
G he. SY. e11.:N1V.1.r40:41.
JURTIVE OF rue l'ascs. °Mee La Quetta
bttildle4 rerner of Pd h eat! State streets.
.I'oooreysuetng done meetly Arta e*llsertiooe made prompt
ly je/r6.1-11.•
M. 1 • 1111.1 .
l• i341.11L Bianca, Bl.asa Boot Maseraorusay,
, r,tory of Balidernerlat'a Block, Er* Pa.
r AI % YKTI'M
I Fremich botwoon ath and 4th atreeta,
th. l'he,adiophia s Env Railroad Npot, Erie, Ps.,
Loma •ihnoroaker, Prnort.t.nr. kslatittire-lateoQl3od3l
- tor atran,,ern awl trarelera IkAni - by tkin tar or
rerk. tiood alshinig attached. apr2s
A. LI EBEL & BROTHRH,
•MsP4llO3/11ILI Terisree sedi
s.K.otii for rlsosr St Knytteo Patent Sow/leg llikeluni.
i.
—Il Sep State 'Stndst, between Stls and nth Ste.
Zrl., Pe. Clothes made to 6nter in the 10011 style.
-
M. v. °snow: E,
I , I*DDT AND SAL' BraJILL on Eighth
street, I , etweeti State and Fratech. Fine 'teepee aod Car
rtagva to let on reaaenable term.' I•caySB'64.l7.
I iy;)1 1 4..1... M CA
I .Vairc7actrraire.sotetralaSnirio•atlollwrs,
Airricaltno.l Railroad Oats,
1; TT* . kr. 31.1.“.11.1., _a
Viurrair, 02Ecii foßarilv
r:'- Block notti side of tbi, rark. - rrte. Y 6 -
IiDE IS DUSir,
it/D4WAY. VIA. CO Mrs' E. ft eLlesosee,
ropriefor Th,s u, a nee and handsomely lt~ced op
bonne, to the m.det of one of the beset Treating and II sot
j log regions Yennsylvauls. Cohatus , ll , u e Itemtna,Clean
I Beds. a Usod Table and Moderate Tzletes The public
patronage to respectfully s Altited sep'6l.-lye
W!ii. A. CIALBRAITIA.
ATTOILVIrt AT LA W—.olsols,ollfithetienkti
Fart, opflogin• the Coart [tour*, Erie, Is.
g s " GBH 011,D, 51. fr.
Olf•CII of Surffrfil
Cray, efts, Pa. Nov. 4, 151:14--9toos*.
TORN U. OFRORC,
* • DCALhIi IY DRY Goopti, Gitruntanno,
Crockery, Hardwa, Nails, teas; Stead, ?lancer, etn., sar
i 'tor oftlis lb sirast and Putme ictutre,'lriA, Pa_ jal7ll.
WHOLESALE RETAIL
iGROCERY ST'.RE
P. A. BECKER.
WHOLESAE2 A.Nto RETAIL GROCER..
~ort6-East eemser flte Pori 4, Fread Fired,
totriataitnto
IC, uld reet4ettally ea3l tia4 *Wallas ethos mm131E11;197
to hisheie Stook of
GROCERIES AND PROVISIONS, '
It Thick he isdemizoos to RC at the
VBR V I.otVE.ttl. 00A81t111.K Putt,
Fiis ■wartnvnl of
COFFEES,
TEAB,
SYRUPS, •
TOBACCOS,
- FISEI, &C.,
to noteurpanood In lb. thy, ii be twreparod to profs to
1,11 who re him s
Rs able keepoconstiuttly on baud it staportur lot et
PIIRE L lquoits,
for,tbe arboleaa!e trade, to which be dircesc tLe altentlop
at Ow public.
fits lbatii i a, " Q :tick Belts, Stull Prollts and s tell
Egutyslent for the Mosey." • aprll'63Af..
TO CONSIII4PTIVES
THE subscriber will cheerfully sena (free
.of charge) to all whodeeing it. the copy of cSrsici.s
RWIZITT by which he wag cored d that DIU disease Con
gumption.
gallopers with Coweuerrtioir, derma, $m entree of
any lung afiettlop, he elhoarety hove will try this ttmeipe,
well's/abided lithe do so they will botaore thee ealla
with the welt. Thankful for hie own ixomplete •votora
tkm, he ie anxious to place In the hinds atom) suffer.:
the gaming of cure. Thous wishing the recipe with toil
dirweggeng, Egg., will gauge call on or michims
tier. Wit. d• ALLIEN,
do M Jobn Strrot. Kew Vntil
TWENTY YEARS.
DR. P. HALL'S CELEBRATED
COUGH REMEDY!
Teri , well established and portdir mod erne hap boob
extensively tined - -rho g the last twenty yeats in.
caring Throat ant I twig diseases with mwe dreided eta
efeney than any oiler nmitsitibg before the public. Not
a word of reetiummuudiAluu teneeeisary to tl.er fasedillss
wit Us merits. Its utimerous and speedy cures iu put
yeses hare won a de see of confidence In ft. value log
to lie remembered This reined, is safe, piraeaut, 'peed,
end s borough to its urination—is avapted to all ages
and a ustitutloas—end *both Ea kept its every biter
for sm mediate oats when neeintred. It throat suit lima
alleedlons ore treated' with the on rf this Remit!) , In
their earlier siagee, a len tsunilete of loathe will he
eased by Coneamptlon.
HALL'S Cut:nti juntpirr is the remedy litmus
for eurleg the following eatriplasobli
VOLDS, COL'OHS. CROUP to RiTTMCS,
4dr11314 yr PIITIObIe,
IloveskivEsN, uunPuirta-ciicou
!fro -gays, as P.ic• &ma Jaufgerarea Ike Lome:
Retail Prtee-50 Cents i• U Per Hoot,
HALL do WARFEL, flanoiseturere and Pro; nerate.
Stets, Street. aseood dour north of Fereoln street tine.
Ps. For sal./ by Druggists raid desterrthretishont the
eoutitry. '
ti T IL I) N It',. I' IC ti T 1 M 0 N V.
f.',, the riltderstped citttrtii. 4 grin City arid rtltuit •
:inv . . übed Dr. P. HALL'a Cetrbrotted Conlih Remelt sift,
grelt glom., in eunalr ilierares *Elio Throat *ad Lungs.
Lod ULM. plemmuro to rtikotworlsding is uw; io tiv,Odictrci
•A • .104h‘fir aral eNetnat remedy, f.ally ...flu) elf pabll ,
c•Akfl...ebee
Jszlen'Thimpons... 1114 , their litm.loon, 0 ' 41:1101.
JO, iitr.tatta, .4, J. tr. !Apia. Rickard B e.o
Jetui A. inc.), Tt•hort caftan, t. T. CVO,
JOU' W. li'Lan., 'flaitt..: 14.1,, On.ted tturtrr
John *.S . . ,lan... 1. 1:...0...t0tria, ( . K. 1i...)!.1.,
J.hu R. k..e...t.r..n, ~, r. Y. iJimlorareist, J 4 ,,,, t.rr, '-
John it• ihkonsrt, r. E. Outwit • J W. Cal% ti,
Jutin,ll. Vntran, •tinanth3tlbelituttn, Wm. IT. %Inv,
.1/.in R. grown W. O. tAtoont, - A. nl. Tartntili
.3. L. Foretnr, - Jumpm*i
Donft•t, E. A. Bann.-at,
•
J. W. AWL droj Um t J. riiitnuti,
orrice Smith, Luella A. Wart, H. User, ,
C. Daum% Tholes" into*, J• L Loud,
H. (tem.:a, oT• ek. tiallafeer, - / Robt•M•6;iku
:Risen ILlug. .:11..•• Yr- Ke...er.. ' : 1 1.1a• ti. Maas..
DA.ltri .liinvt ' ft. i'. ttotign, . C. ti. H0w...)!.
0 - R. Vrrichi. • • -..., . Sri', Pr0.,22,1.41.-41.1n
~
E -ARE OFFERING
y y isarkaasorunsat 4i gabbt ' 4:4 1 , COMM'
!rube, CootikifoU Heade. bawl sad Ainiumade Log
n .•
12 ' 11 =` !.f' Pc'elb
TWO DOLLARS AND A-HALF PER YEAR, .IF PAID IN AD ' 41.10:14.
.$3,00 IF NOT PAID UNTIL THE END OF -THE YE/111.
14110 W.
Silently down, gracefully down,
Ovor the forest and over the town,
Robing the earth Di l a pure white gown,
Wafting to wile° ;
Drifting, circling, eddying mud,
COMM the feathery new.
Oenily l it falls, quietly „falls,
Covering butt' sod covering kills,
Building its miniature Cities and walle t
Over the earth below ;
Spreading in sheets, rolling in ball,—
Dancing, frolicsome snow.
Cold and bleak, frozen and bleak, .
Flying about in a merry freak,
Twirling around the mountain peak
Down to the Alley below;
Loelng itself in the rippling creek
Fickle and fleeting snow. '
fiver the ground, the frosen ground, j
The crystal flakes chase each other reined
Forming a valley or buildinga monad,
When the north winds blot, -,
With their icy breath and moaning so und,
litifting the virgin 'now. I
'CHWog to trees, the evergreou tries,
Forming fants•ttic images,
Scattered as the wintry breeze,
Rushing onrarddoth go ;
Losing itself in the Tolling seas,
Fair and fragile' snow.
=I
Sweeping away, melting sway,
When the sun with its golden ray
Into the harbor oreepe to play, •
Where the violets grow ;
Melting, wasting and hiding away,
Prail and beautiful snow.
Ext rac t from the Speeds Delivere.kon the Nit
souri 'Erne:Pulp: tion Bill in the,Uniied Slates
kcenc!lo, February 7th, 1863, by Hon. James
w. Wall, - of. New Jerary.
But, to come back from this diglession,
your loyal soldiers in the field, the (Athena
pt bon3e, are begiau ihg to doubt whether
Congress And the administration . Were
sincere in the ontset with-all their resolu
tions and pledges. They begin to believe
that you are paltering with therniwidou;
ble sense, keeping the word of promise to
the ear, to break it to tiaelr hopes. Yon
tell them icy solemn resolution and set
phrase, th — at this war Li to be waged for
l i
the purpose of maintain 'ng the Constitu
tion within the Union and yet you are
continually proposing 'and. encouraging
and propoAng inessurtiis, here and else
where, that not gnly strike It the integri
ty of the Constitution, but must eventu
ally endanger if nit forever destroy the
Union itself. .
oedrel4ll.
I -You toll your soldiers in the field "that
: they'are fighting for a nationality;" while
i you here, by your insane system of legis
lation, are plotting meaiures to overturn
the Gonstitution,vrithin which the nation
ality alone can exist. One Sonator,during
the progress of this debate, I think the
Senator from Michigan, said, with great
' ferrer of patriotism, "that, tor his ptirt,he
.Rll5l tired of hearing oa this fluor about
' tioktling the Cmstaution. If he could
nave the government, it nalttered not to
' him how many provisions of the Cousti
: tution were violated." Thu Senator evi
-1 (featly belongs to the Sir Bayles Roch
school ot patriots, who said, on one occa•
feion, in the Iriith Psrliament, "that h• - was
..., r••••,. , r ~•.rtilf ~.,, i -t clir , whsle 9•31:1-
Btitli lion if he Could thereby save the re
mainder." Lot ma tell the Senator, that
when he sacrifices the Constitution to save
the govehoment, lie will find little left
worth siiing. . .
We, want here at the North,-now more
especially, loyalty. not to a man or a par.
ty, but to the Coostitution and the laws.
. We want a public sentiment,' es to the
genuine, duty of citizerfs ; a stern publio
judgment sit to that class of men who, if
'ruin is before us, are the ruiners, We
want a public indignation as to the men
I who, from the caucuses of the bar room
t
up to the clucusiits of Senates and Cabi
nets, sit in dark a3unoil, "hatching the
cockatrice's egg anti weavicig the spider's
web." The Lour for loyalty to men is put,
the hour for loyalty, with more devotion
than ever, to .the .:.3onstitution and_ Note
great eternal principles ofjustioe:thstare
self•evident to the minds of every
to
man, has come. If we are false to such
principles now amongst ourselves, where`
are we to find the strength to resist Our
foes from without ? Witlulisloyalty to the
Gonstitution and laws ant Ling every act
in our public councils, under the insane
plea of necessity, you have introduced a
foe into the midst of the citadel "more
terrible than an army with banners march
ing to destroy." There are no forces in
the territory in revolt against you this day
more dangerous, and more potent for mis
- chief. than ibis terrible foe that this ad
ministration by iti fanatical policy has
called to-114-field. •
My ear it palneati'tid soul mad. sick by
the iteration and reiteration of the word
"diP/oyar' as applied tol Senators on this
side of the chamber, and the policy they
consider it their duty to sustain. It would
seem es if 'with the other si le, loyalty
meant blind submission and unreasoning
obedience to insane abnormal decrees;
and if thii administration chooses to adopt
a policy for putting down - the rebellion,
no matter how. unconstitutional, how de
trimental to the public safety, how sub
versive or the integrity of ..the sovereignty
of our State governtne.nts,•that we on this
side of the 'chamber are . to give it our
unae ir e nu4 support, or else be branded as
dilloyal_and in Py tn pit thy with treason.
It is high time this thing ceased. No
man has right to arraign
, tuy devotion to
the coattitut l ion of my country. through
which and by whloh the government can
alone exitt.• I consider.sueh a charge ite
equivalentio arraigning my veracity tinder
nath, and' I wits deal with any man who
has the insolence In attempt it, as one who
is me enemy. I am sworn, end have been
many times, to support the Constitution
anti laws of ruv ount ry and I have ever
berg true to the solemn datierraisti obli
gationti such oath 4 int() wit" up- - io every
honorable wan %Viten swerve trons-r heir
0 6 e - r i e riC,e; l e r be 'arraign ad..tod those.
. .
35110 set *kb tut, awl' not .befom' bo. •
lictve:ae4itains (lid' or *lie Steal .oosotie
l z iltioo. lit ri ga a g gs
••••• •7•4 , r •.
-44.A1=1:
,VitiLLV 11
MOE
ERIE, WrItUItSDAY AFIaRNOON;SEB.RUARr9;-1-1365
What Ii Tree Loyalty I
MEM
ESE
the dearest interests of this coantry are
Its laws and. its Constitution'. Against
every attack on these, I trait there will
ever be found among us the firmest spirit
of . resistance, superior to the united ef•
forts of factiod and adibition;" This was'
the language of a patriotic Englishmen,
who appealed in such stirring wards as
these to his countrymen when his liberties
were threatened by the assaults of arbi
trary power. The noble sentiments it
embodies should be the sentiments of
every patriotic) heart, and the met's - and
the party who respond not to them are
traitors to the best interests of a Gammon
eountry.
• • • t •
The Senator from lowa appears to have
great filth in emancipation, and declares
"that be conceives it to be the only path
way through which we are to reach the
end oltthis war,and come out of the earned
tempest of strife inter the cool and blessed
Shades of a kiting, h snoiable peace."
With all due deference to the honorable
Senator, I would say to him, that in the
excess of patriotic seal, he will fled that
it is merely the wish that is father to th e
thought. This is nly one, I would tell
the Senatof, of the 4*l tmpraoti ea b 1 e
shemes that have Nerved to divide the
North and unite the South. 'the govern
ment is not only "proving traitor re its organic
lamer," to use the language of my colleague,
the law of its being, but to the laws of
common, sense, in thus adopting measures
which only serve to intensify and embit
ter the organised and powerful opposition
now in arms, against the North. No nation
that history gives any record of ever car
ried on a civil war upon the principle of
weakening its own cause while it was stri
ving to strengthen that of thine who were
in open revolt against it. There are many
In the community who surmise that these
radical measures have been suggested by.
Wendell Phillips, whose life-long service.
in trying to get nineteen States out of the
Union in time of pesos might fit him for -
the task of separating finally and irrevo
cably our once great and glorious Onion.
The "let-the-Union-slide" policy is still
uppermost in his mind, and as hi was
received on this Door some time since as
though: he was • the nation's benefantor,
who knows but what the Senators on the
other side of this chamber are iommitted
to his policy. If so, bY passing this and
other like bills, they are radically consis
tent with the . fundamental principles of
their faith , and are- ; helping `to advance
the terrible dogma of their prophet, "that
permanently divided Union with slavery
in part, is better than an entire Union
with slavery in the whole." But if their
object be as the Senator says, to put down
this rebellion, all I have to say it, that the
supporters of this administration; in-botb
branohes of Congress, and the executive
head of it,at the other end of the avenue,
are the wildest set of impractioables the
world has ever known. I know, noth log
I can compare them to except thosoeratiy
addlepated designers in the academy Of
Lagado, pictured in Gulliver'e travels.
One projector in this' 4 ;1.6.4 momdesway tend
a place for extracting sunbeams from cu.
cumbers, to let out on the Governor's
gardens in inelenent_seasons—s second, a
plan - for calcining ice - from gunpowder—
another, it plan for manufacturing silk
from cobwebs. In ray humble judgment,
/dr. President, you can, with much more
falicity,extract sunbeams from cucumbers,
calcine from gunpowder, and make silk
out of cobwebs, than you can put down
this rebellion
- by emancipation bills. can•
'location sots, negro brigade bills, anti the
thousand one man schemes-that originate
here, in this modern academy of Lagado.
The peculiar and disastrous result of all
your fanatical measures here gave riNe to
the cutting sarcasm "that Jefferson Davis
was running two Congresses,one here and
the other at Richmond." It does really
seem to the truly loyal men on this side
of rthe chamber that you come within
the ;reach of this sarcasm still. If you
I wish to aid the rebellion do it: in an open
manner, and not covertly by advocating
and passing measures which, ostensibly
for the Union, are, in reality, to divide
and overthrow it, the very object aimed at
by the Confederates themselves.
The President, in his annual message,
declared "that himself and you of this
Congress should not escape history; that
history would not forget you." I don't
believe it,will, but you will both be in the
condition that Townsend. sneer left Lord .
Thitrlow. Thurlow was an exceedingly
profane man, and oa one occasion in the
British Parliament, in a burst of enthusi
ast:it, exclaimed, "If I forget my sovereign
may God forget me." , "Forget you, my
Lord," exclaimed the witty Charles Town
send, " Oh, no, he will never forget you; As
will set you dameadfirst." Let tho President
and the men-of this Congress be careful
while history does not-forget the:it it may
not eternallycondemn them at the same
tune.: •
( 6 1411 T ete, Ye, &gaiety!. every ptri or
this bill, as I believe. It to thl a p•mleof hill
of abonslnairditTend I know it to be lie
oulierly obnoxious t-1 the present Losis
lature who sent one - here, and who . but
express the universal opinion of the D.
ntoeracy of New
Tax LNAINIVIATION Rats,..--Tornes Efergel
(Methodist) expostulates earnestly against
theipropoied inauguration ball at Wash
ington,
to be given' in the: Patent Mace
building. It says: "While we i.egard it
as aids at Ob such an ottna - iion;
fir the siitioct's ereloiery to pondeseeod to
such levity am to attend and'eanotion a
grand ball, we' shall look upot) it it this i
tulle is a galivant insult both to God and
men. We therefore hope that icxrd sense
and battarjudgment wilt preyail at Wash :
ington, and-thst.;if for no .other retain";
ont'of veepeet to the amatory of those
who have died for the eountrr—out of
Ann - ps — thrfer7those - who stall werp and'
mo wn. foctcjilt of 'deader iegarti for the
Chitatitiri ieritttneastaofthe truest patriots,
in et tbi.lnd, tberew 94 ill• b•
t - 4 4 : 441;i
dallimagaßibabigi m.n. •
•
=;ZZ:=M
RIMINI
~~:~y
_
OBSERVER.
The immileai Clammier.
The-sad troth begins at length to dawn
upon men.-and _Winter Davis expressed
it in the House by the words, "the Amer
loan ohs Is Jbeing broken down."
For this result we are indebted to the
party which Mr. 'Davis has used for
personal puiposes.. No man who quietly
surveys society, and listens to what is said.
or sees what is passing around him, fails
to recognize that the characteristic* of a
citizen of the United States are very dif
ferent from what they were four years
ago.
Then the predominant pension, tamest
the life-blood of every man, was the belief
that he had rights. and whioli he was
Justified in maintaining at the cost of life
to the assailant, and which were above
government and abovesooiety even. The
peculiar difference between him and the
citizen of every other community was an
individuality, of which his system guar
ranteed him the exercise.
The very fact that we allowed the na
tive-born Briton, of his own free will, to
abandon his birth-land, and, adopt oars,
and would have defended hitt choice by a
war of twenty years, wad the strongest
proof we could give of the predominance
of the feeling we allude to, An arbitrary
arrest by government, under any circum
stances, would. have aroused an angry
feeling throughout the land, and no man
would have dared, - who hoped for political
position, to do anything but denounce it.
So changed have we become, that if
leading oopperheads were burned every
Saturday in'Madisort square, Without trial
or charge.soven out of ten Loyal Leaguers,
would justify the aide dais as an irregular
lint proper exercise of military necessity.
The love of liberty,which to our fathers
was worth all the political fabrics ever
created,bas become as obsolete as a silver
quarter. The southern black has the
freedom of choice still. Ile can stay with
his master or be conscripted in the army.
The stranger who visits - Paris or Vienna
sees rio more despotism than be sees in
New York. Everybody seems to be as
truly his own master as in Boston. Well
dressed people swarm the Paris streets,
business thrives, the greets are orderly,
the people polite, the officials affable ;but
he bears of some workman being notified
to leave Paris, because he
, bse, under Si
vinous exhilatetion, said s omething de
rogatory of the Emperor, sod thereupon
the'visitor feels a strange, urtoomfortable
dread ; a cold, Uneasy sense of shame;
a cobscionsness of Dead:Sea fruit ; and he
love, more strongly than ever the laid
where everything was clear and defined
within limits which he knew, tind within
which so long as he kept he was lord of
himself. We have ,bravely changed all
that. We are in the riact condition of
the deg in the fable, wbo, snapping at the
shadow of meat in the water,. lost the
piece he was narryjeg in kis mouth . Ma
ryland lakabolished slavery at the price
of existing-as Poland exists under Russia.
Louisiana has abolished slavery by becom
ing as ttionteigniy as rotten a borough so
any an East India nabob ever carried in
his breeches •pocket. Missouri has abol
ished slavery at the cast of a social exit,-
tence worse than that of Mexico. Zen-.
tucky is under a military rule as absOlute,
and violent•as that of a pacha of Greece.
of the time when our hearts were fired by
the tale of the massacre at Selo.
For every slave freed by the new 'Chris
tians of the Seward•Ginooln school; two
men have been killed, one thousand dol. lnn spent, one white man made in turn a
stave, and another white man surrendered
hie former convictions of
,civil—liberty
Wonderful Republican party;msgnitioent
statesmanship! Sangradoes of politics
listen twit " Sick is the patient, weaker
than bebre ; so more bleeding, more bet
water."
Well,3be United States is like the Rake
in Hogaith. The inheritance it succeeded
to was ralignificent ; it could afford to
maintain its bully end its parasite, sad its
fiddler and its tailor, and its jockey. and
its.poet, and its parson, and laugh at the
old careful steward• who looked upon,
money as something not too easily earned,
and not to be too wisely spent. Its re=
sonrces, like his; seemed inexhaustible,
and they the sows visaged inspeadieg thews for
the heir ware careful to tell him there vas
no bottom to his puree. How Merry was
life when credit was to be had end bills
were running up. Does the reader re.
member the end of the Rake, and the
despairing, self-buileting madness of the
last. hours in the lunatic asylum! Three
or four years from this time, the people
of the United States will be cursing thel!
madness es he cursed his, and will be Sit
ting in the ashes poor , as Job, as full-Of
sores, and realizing, with a currency is
worthless as the continental, and a debt
as large as that of England, that no vices
are eo dangerousas Pharisaic virtues,and
that humanitarians out of power arellobee•
pipits and Marste in power.. Horst saint
have been secretly arrested, and Mtgislly
and csuseleasly confined in the. llntfed
El Wee within the hurt four years than were
in the Hostile from the day it was finished
te the day it was stormed. Well May M.
Davis say the iluzerican character is being
broken down..
The following statement of the numeri
cal strength of the rebels wit made in thi
Lonfederate, C3ngraga on the'l4th
•'Mr• roster, of Atabluna:said that he had
made • calculation that: there were enough
of men in the Confederacy between the
aged of eighteen and forty.flve ytars, to
protect this government against any.ene
my for forty years, r to,come: Theis were
seven hundred thousand persons - in the
Confederacy between eighteen Ind forty.
fir! zeiF3
Wet see it stated in.our exeb*ages that,
within the pest eight esettAkm npwerds of
foui htted . red :+papiratsvooldile imi bon
gettuinonof t ie exothiteal pips 9fr,i?r,i• •
Jgg Paler' • - L • 3„1 is
••• Cl
:410 tiso;:i.g.. dal actadA,Li' 4„.g ;11
MEM
These pridistiess Vin. rammed up as
folluirs ;
ffI.iI!PRgMMIE
IW—A -few brief menthe will bring
this roblglion to a edam
1883-41 few kid months will bring
this rebel ion to a dew.
1864—A few brief months will bring
tail rebellion to a close. -
(To be eontinried.)
N. T...Esyros.
To this should be
1. This is the lost draft.
•
9. This is the last draft sure.
3. Thiele positively the last drab.
4. This'is certainly the lest (Ira's. •
(To be es:dinned.] •
Periiiis .jkAs.
er additions:
ber New Orleans. in 1841--The
bee of tbis wicked rebellion is bro
ken..
2. After Part Dane Los. in 1882—The
backbone at this infamous rebellion is
broken in two. • . -
3. After Vicksbung.in 1863—The back
bone of this damnable rebellion is broken
all to pieces.
4 After Atlanta, in 1864—The back
bone of this bell-born rebellion smashed
all to smithereens.
LTo be continued]
rrsiaie Agr Csastitaies.
To theeelet us add :
1860. Toccata% dries the South-out of
the Union.
1861. 30,000 will overran the South in
90 days•
1861. 42.000 will etterninste• the reb.
els.
1861. 200.000 wilt use them up.
1861. 500,000. The beck of the rebel
lion is certainly broken, and this number
will finish it. The rebellion is nearly
closed. We have defeated the Copper
heads 'at the election. if we did cheat a
Ask and supprem their printias presses...
' 1862.' The beak of the rebellion is bro
ken. - -
18611. The rebellion ti asiftly,as as eed.
Before election:
1864. The rebels ere eidiatiabidi
, role
for Lincoln and meld the drag.
" One bentked, thousand .aew ' troops.
pronspay ,fttruisligsdi k all that General
Grant asks %rite ausipeignSilinSt Melt
mond. and to give a finiahlnig blow to the
rebel 'forme yet in the field.".-Bknwon
Dii.:ol4. 2, 1864.
1864. "A defeat of the Octpperheads In
the coming election is of 'mote impor
tance than a victory over the rebels in
areas."—.ll)Pay Alerstiensig.
After Abe election :
"I rant ammo more met' to put dawn
this" accursed reisellfou."—AireAws
oak, Dee. 19th. 1864. L. •
rro bo.oOlitioloc
Anksigi Rdliste•
Paso
• eneilr Itsidigethis
- --- .i.i - .
The last 'address gaited by the Hon.
Charles Mason. Chairman orAbe National
Democratic Committee; resielant in Wash
ington, very ably •disociasesfthe question
or pesoe through subjogOpe. Among
other historinal examples4e alludes to
the long wars, between Enetand and Scot
land,' detnonitesting that - T' i no people can
beAubjugated by forte of'. arms. Time
c ii
watt began by Edward tti:' First of Eng
land in the thirteenth . :' tery and lasted •
until, the two. ocitustrilia: Imams united
under - JamesVie Sixth'," r Scotland. The
ilifeitheiiii'giars MO - indred and fifty
Taira hai- -- Maia.;:ilutt;(nnion constantly
growing stios ? ".. waisti-Canicricii of war
gd
and mutual - injury I seemed . to have
rendered wholly ini ' ibli. On the other
hand,-14)4 htlrldhiltt IMS. aver since
Stroogbosi's intbll4o.;: i 4. itilOn !Anted
bemuse trigland, hotly/corded her by
Amos. hotted ,of Iliad test. Had • she in
FaelioMent b representation at all impre.
pertimi 'to her population, its. 'Scotland
bas t withO kmail,Wslation. as - Scotland
has; with-. focal Issielature to providii'for
her durheetio- Wm.. and
_the Infamous
tythe system abolished, she too would be
prosperous and haPpy. , p
._ 4
Those teaohin of _the histo Of the
past are manned by, the lessons of our
own imperious!. The Stain of Missouri.
once reduced - to quiet, : and bold .in con
strained 10,64 by military power,lsagain
rising to rebellion, sod meet be conquered
anew. The ems* inay be Mid of a great
portion of Lonisiaie,, Texas. Arkansas, as
well's, minci of States on this side of
the Xiiiiseippi.- - . -
Mere conquest never ertiugisishes as.
Hand antipathies ; %nit gives Illthi edge
And Vent*. Themild intimacy's-of pease
and itinduitei effects iiiiia omddliever be
attained by violence, in the production
and preservation of nailonal unity. .., They
Accomplish their porpoises, not by resist
ing the power to separate, but by remov
ing the wish and the motive for s.olng so.
Is the lemon SO belost upon U 3 ? • .
The following is from a epee& of Mr.
Senator Saulsbury. of .Delaware. who Bari
he has it' bum a letter from a distin
guished gentleman in New Orleans to a
personal - rod pilitioeffriend of the Pros'.
dent in Washington:, "A ,few ,days ar 'I
was shown an fetid report to she atilinw7
head of this department.- General ilanks,
eahibtting the ghastly return of eighty
thousand slaves having perished since tlie
Federal onettpatioo of the ;mai* moiety
of this oomnionwealtb.. lila; is opal to'
ArlY Per - 4 0 21 1-at . o AM,l l ,ffe - 1 0 4nrn :
tipti-of thnisetiosotiawastrYlsOired in
•
Abed Otto funuirwCol 104 ram- *at
01117110Z01 of Paris, taros !math Xirb4
units 4 a !ow dap s*Pe to resist the ;ire&
arniedloloa, The special Provost Mar.
0..1 mid glerif of the county arrested
two of these men who lived alone in the
woos* and were; taking them shine the
Teed in weittigit when they were met by
twenty-dint utect armed with. rise, who
demanded tba priai. mars. The Sheriff had
no alternative but ;o surrAnder them and
be did so. but 00 .lowing three volleys
were arad-as them, fortuatitely without
s oftest.. - . .
Xr. Opclike : Proariwis It ik•m4. PI give
to' some publics charity the entire su.li he
should , receive' as iiskiages Is hi. weer
libel snit against -
doubt he boa done It ere this. SuOti
nevoles es is item's , bqiiitfiti. Likl•
iiiitleitan in thelov7. wisitt:u 614..
to DAKode. —415••74 , k
• • •
'•••
Co. -- ;r4C;:.1'!0:1
1 1 1
- • 2. • • :
MN
EN
NUMBER- 87.
/LOGSas PrgilMao&
Glam. Parrizsox.--Gen. Patterson has
at last published his history of the famous "
Inftimitergemps_ It is alkelalrrel.
defame of his operationa; siad=a - lab
attempeto pro's `that; the battle of Bnil
Run was lost ihrOuitl-.1414 fan> of Pa.—.
Gen. Patterson produces
ai letter from President Linooln, who
writes, itto see that you could
have done elyt that you did dP.
"your , yarOur.
orders; iou i Ti l rciur am sato
Med ur oonano7lll, l Thomas,
who was mllen:PattersenielLommand at
that time,.slso Npproves his e*tuot..
Haan of Pirreanso.—Pittsburg has en•
dared many hard rubs, but an anecdote
leasing,
little three year. !wider, about leayin
her home on a visit to tho smoky city, is
it little ahead of anything yet. At . the
close of her prayers the night before:her
departure, she said in the utmost simplio-
Itj
: "Now, good-bye, l'in going to
Pittsburg in the morning, to be gone two
weeks." .
It is doubtful if auy place in the world
oan rival - 144w York in enterprise..
_The
ether day a poor omnibus horse fell by the
way, and died opposite the Astor H9nae.
and before the animal had °eased kicking
an enterprising bill-Poster h&1 him cov
ered with "Cash paid for old rags at 19
Ann street."
In township of Waltece, in Canada,
a farmer named Scott was frightened ont
of his wits the other night by what he
thought wai a Fenian about to enter his
window. He fired his gun, and mit
morning found that he had killed his best
oow.
Mr. Prentice, of the Louisville Jntrud,
atter spending tive week's in Richmond.
Domes to the conclusion that the gtonfed
erate leaders are quite in earnest in their
purpoee to !aet.ri,l or slavery, if they can
secure their inde'pindence:
In Detroit, recently, a man and wife
were disputing when the woman, to lig- 's
graves her huaband, seized a favorite 'dog
belonging to him, and threw it out or the .
window. In retaliation, he seized their
baby and threw it - after the dog.
The negroea of mr hington propose to
get up a testimonial to Butler, expressive
of thefr sympathy" for hire i• his removal.
By all cleans let the nigger* have a chance
to praise Butler, if there are no white
men wao will. - -
The Irsdependrist exclaims with unction,
"God bless Abraham Lincoln Hu ano
ther warehouse job been given out '4--
4ring/41i Boubtiean.
A negro, 109 years old, died recently In
Baltimore. He lived a long while in the
'gelling chain', o'" ai.avory."
LADTIV Fuss' All the latest styles at
CHARLES ttiAKI ORD & SONS, Continental
Hotel. 'Phila. jinstf
Lstitts' Fatty.—Lsteet styles at CHARLES
OAKFORD & SUNS, Coutineatal Hotel,
PhDs. - tf
Fuss.—.lll the lablet styles at
011.11I.LES OAKFOILD t SONS, Continental
Hotel. PhDs if
GElT'Lcares's Mrs.—All the latest styles
at CHARLES OAKFORD & SONS, Conti
nental Hotel, Phila. ' tf
LADIES' AMD CRILDIUSSI'S lIATS.-.-14teSt
styles al, CHARLES- OAKFORD & SONS,
Continental ilutel, Phiht. tf
GENTLEDIEN'S ITATS —Tile largest assort,
wen: at CHARLES OAKFORD & SONS, Con
tinental Howl, Phila. tf
LADIES' FUTL '.---PllrChaSerS may rely upon
getting the be Furs at CHARLES Oia—
FORD Sc SONS, Continental Hotel,
LAMBS' &NV CHILDILEN . 3 11/aB.—Purcliiker
an may rely 'upon getting tha best at
CHARLES 0 tgFORD & SONS, Continental
Hotel. Philadelphia • tf
Errresrarsiso Liar.—Deaters desiring
to purchase Confecitioneries,(Plain or Faney,) .
Foreign Fruits and Nuts, Yankee •Notions,
Toys - and Smell Were, will find it to their ad
vantage to send their orders to Bener & Bra;
gees, Erie, Pa. This firm is well known to
all who have transacted business in Erie"-se
one .of the most enterprising, reliable and
oaristitsg in the city. They, are entering
laigely upon the . wholesale .trade, and will
. supply dealers at the lowest. market prioes.
These gentlemen are also proprietors and
manufacturers of the celebrated blocs and -
Elm Candy, which has become wo popular
,Istelyas a remedy for Coughs, Colds, Hoarse.
nest, &e. This preparation is all that it is
repretented to be, ae s brief trial will con
vince any one. It should be kept. on hand in
"eery Store in the country. jaal2 Ira
ACISYTII 701 C THE Oassaven.L.-We have 8111. ,
leeted the following persona as agentcfor the
Osenovet in their respeo!ive localities. They
am authorized to ootlect bills for auboorip
advertioing and job wcrk due t nia offtoo,
sod reeeipt for the same. Parties whn 'know
themselves indebted to the office will much
.us by an;litic upon these gentlemen
and waking immediate payment:
Fairview, , Amos Stone. .
Capt. D W. IlutchinsOn.
J. C Canffesan. -
C. E. Lincoln.
Girard,
Lockport,
Albion,
Waterford,- - of C. White.
Corry, ' Amyl Rez . o . th.
Nnsth Lot, B. A Tabor.
Townsville, Capt. G. J. Whitney.
ATTINTION WIT/ CILANCr. TO. MAiX
)(oast.—Very'few_persor. - i arc 'ware, tkit
a recent invention, uewppapors and.seraps of
piinted paper, can be convertett iota , material
for priating upon again. Tlis higu' price of
paper baa made an active demand for old
newispapers, hooks. pamphlets and - straps of
paper fur this purpote, and it is a gerly
bought up by parties; connected with ihe p '-
per mills. By collecting and sorinkfall the
material of thie kind about their hones. and
selling is, many a faintly can put 4 `nionsy in
;bar purees," which would otherwiwe be lost.
The highest. price,-at cash, will lia s paid for it
at - Lila office.
Tan Ittnos.—The °old . 'and iittkingsablia
weather tette 'terribly on than who 'hair weak
end dineated langs. 'Many ars sageriog at
title titniriiitii - effen!ions of . the • itbzoat and
tUgs l llinaiddlis Neese:lie! lveryCom
dibll ,
Those whet itri+ predispose.'
to` - 'Coitis, 'Coughs, Bronchitis do, should;
avoid the night The-e aro to.hity preps-,.
rations rboommeniled for di-reirs, but
tbere is not s daunt but the: 'or lltrlckls.nd's•
Melliflootte Cotigh BelAe.o is the b. , /et remedy.:
We bays know r I. to etis..l eures,in th • worst,
eases of C.itigt (1(.1(1., untijiis,
ani_prltoary et.-ea C u usumptfon
Bmeow -
apt, Perie,i4r4.s, Arrelre of Pay.
. Calf br Witit,ww;
~t 4 T./ r”e who hate IfOrd 1 , . 'h
V' -Vier of ,!14 t ON, '44:110.•; t) . ) Soldier-
And "Learuen Woillrig
averi of .i 1.044.: .• • 1-•••t•••1
P rt. Lie• 11.1.4 11j/it:try .r
01.1711 44,n1 eetee in t.be Cotninot
- 'l•.oi l iWrittlit i l tor 4 , o , .raer State
an i Fifth pia fu air! Duriteh t, I
re,.. Pa _ • , - t.,
call; on band
iarlte s ..) 6c .ielicactect k A 4 lii ! 9kti._ of Mpproved
f4rAvt. Oileft) Jaagment
104 faloWukuu tiocen. Autotiftruk 8651,cenrs and
R047,09et5; no, in rineral Mew Tim
lu ingliratstis,se exttaies 301 tut, ,
is Aviv . tpit, ofkr,
•
41".1 .42". •
MIZE
IIiMM2
EMI
146 "
.`Mi