rjukt WEEKLY OBSERVER.. tiro Boarz na 7 A ia'p ELoct ‘,. . 34e papp).: —Two DoLLABS MO) Fury CENT' p - r ~,,, if paid in ed ranee ; Tense DOLLAR/ if not the expiration of he sear. Subscribers ,w4l by ranter will be charge I Flyer Clays rndm addition. Ali iscriptiss =mts MUST grltd rootrelly. No paper trill be sent out of ..h....4tate unless paid for is chasm ins•EurNgliENTS.—One Square oeTen Lines OD0.112• artitn r,01; two batertion* $1,15; three hour coo ; one month $2,56 two months $3,60: 4,5015 ix months I7,00;one year $1200: .0 n a klyortoenumtm to proportion. Thine rite* ;oil* atoct!y adhered to; unielts ehauged, by epectOl • cr at the option of the publishers. A rid • sottnas, Strays, Divorees 'and like advertise ; Administrator's Notices 0.4; Load • Mk. t* a Hoe; Yardage Notices 'warn rra ts a piece: obituary Notices (over three lines • _ ta ~trot) (ea rents per line. Original poetry, no• • re too at the request of the editor; one dells/ pe qe Alt sd,ertiEenents will be to:Aimed it. ty,,trea•• of . the person idrertlalog, until ordered o at by WA direction, unless a specified period Is epee for their Iraertion. iii enranwanicAtions should be addressed to lINNJ'IN 'WHITMAN, _ Editor and Proprietor. Busiiiiss Directory. • 7 C. KNOLL, • SCSGZON DCNTILT, State St tear 0112 • tf v«: II f .xatt TTORNIT AT LAT', Girard, Eriefonnti, •, winestians and other wines o And dispatch. WUT:IICArro, - 13 talIT AT LAW, 4rßatb , tmet. Etle. Pa. 7 P PBSCYIt d: 31 It VIN. ATT.RTATA AX CAITATALLORA AT Lill. r3l, , ek, near Korth Writ corner of the r- Fs. i ff 0 riENsErs. \ : Jrwrim , er Tin PRAcry. Office iskona Frro,h Stre.t. Between Fifth wad • 5 -(unit-2. h littTEL % Waterford. Pn.. ROlllllll. PNIPRIRT R. 4 0 ,1 ...,,Irtlorbs • ion', and A., ettil nti , m Over to v . or zu.sta, TrISTMI a/ TITR PIACI, Paragon Block, ra g",, , ,t of Fa•rar Aall, kris, Ps. • -- - ---- , - .... , ,F,,,, st frllVilifiilfEn, I 1 Irr:wort AT LAN, AX9 Jrattem on nun PRATT.. P...i- • .04 , lain ii.rent, enny•iyancer and Collector. .;;-, is, glitiiibi buiiillon., ainthicrat corner of Fi ft h and :N• orr.rti, 6 , i.. P,. .03435 I ic_ 4 lti %TOME, JOIIV ritOSIMBLVIGIII. At the nnl rc k d Gr r,reVillaze ban • n hand • taro !wort ,rt•dorerio. Proehd . ons, Wood and Willow Ware, T..haeeo. serve, .to which he re-, c.lll the •ttontion of the publin 'stinted that orcr en goo-I bargain.; to can b. had to ant part y!Ciry• e...tintr• tnar:lo'6.s-1. (t I"). 13:.NN I: T 9 31‘ 1'11 1 1 7 1111191 AND-4,640% Frp r..t .'r t, mar C. , tegent wnyr-6(,r. 4 C. w. Rge• 21 $i n• r annth f the ia nn S'aotorrso .tart flint MALT! fr. mll del. r unTil 2 P. M. wy.(ll.lrM W. ri..ttl) ar. (1).. wrodreee and retail dealoreill Anthr.eite • .rm:n.,ue ant Illrareburz nail and wood , Genuine Alin Lon, t v fanndriem prepared for howl, U.O. ',re on Land. Yerde-Curter Bth and Mar le and atyrtla and Meer 2 agnate* want of-the ...%n neva, 1 rite, I. v . J. 1 1 11 , 04R11, M. D.. ii,m.ocut) N 10.0.1 %-n and 4 0r4 . n0n f nee 412 , 1 rrel , ” en tin Po epeo..l o e th e 'ark hours from U) t. 12 A . M., 3 to F P. 14., te.l-7 t 8 KM. ars Cm* halt. isyri.re FI)It .111.6. Nvrral rrrr rr of a buainique sites on StAto.l4ll.o. be n ••,• .nth nod 1.13 th treats, nid• am t rd for air on rkry re.ewlable terms, if applied R•Noir! of rg , Velf- 4. (iAI nr.A!TIT. r•nt. 1.111:11 1 . • D1t.41.$ k 11f DST aoODS. GkEkTIRIBP. FlAnte , 4l.re, Roth, Mtn, Muter. tte, emr ,on et anti r0, 7t1 j.. ONT:OrtNE, ti • • •I mini 00 PALI RTA !ILL 1,13 riZbtb n- , t‘to fold Pr.•:eh ntif,firoort aul Cu t.. ,et lEEE r , U ( ki;ILL'S LIVERY STATILE, SMITE At, n..r.rwry en a,r, ten gnat t f any In the city, and vie.e as made (marl tr) Kw!odi.vn. lieatec in Groceries, Prmiseo. Pro•lsin-e, W.t!out and .tnne Ware, Cinea, Liquara, ....0-.-ct,o,.phslti the Yosto,B , e, - mtrils-1 y W 4411.1,, ilzyrierr, olip. In Tinzpo-M. Work nor% Ade-of the Pert. t rin; rr^a '2ll. li n el( I NS° 0 r 1 0 . c 12 . -1 0 .1 R r v. ',climb n Merchant., and Wne'essle dealers In Coal. Irrt- f..r N. 7. & E. end People's Line ef Steamsrs. Puble Dock, PAN - JanrCs ly. ME BEST PIA , dIt£RICA. Si. made by Ft. ORPCKF.R &CO. fll t l.Ml ROIL Them. wriTicm IVIII LLDIN, :11. V., l'airolclui A So GTO) U • "!r.. 2.1 door Firaity's Block. Wirt rut, Bade, Py chr'atian k Ruth'. Storr. SealeePes !irildrlfyitle_atrert &1 bonne South al Ninth. i boors ,Bto 10 A. and 2 ici3 r. r. r•tlirettr. r tuttie J. BLAKELY', I ATTOILIST A? LAW. Ridgway, k C... Pa 9 Will slab praotien W adjoining Counties. wm. MARKS, _- , TAME AZD CLOTIMI CLI•3111. 7 tion Bloek.. shove Dr. Benoett's Office.) Clothee -sie. r.psired and cleaned on short notice. Teems as tanotele u eyl7. - ma/ le W. Bli.toDl3N. arro..xer AT Law. lat end to p•ofeloinnal botinesa in Erie and lioicirg en oriel. Special attention given to collet 'OM .nd totiveyaneea tee. On Priveh Street, firvt door north of Central v ad depot. Erk, PA jiettlimpt U. 11. Y. PICKERING, DENTII. Cidoste of the Penney vent's Collets of Ikatal Sur , Office In the second gory of Stern l • building, Ite the canter of ja e geed gone*, Erie, Pa. 1 1 / 1 2113101 By POIXIMaIf/X. PA Pierer, D D. S., North Savant!' street, Philaded. L Dorihalibut, D. D. S., No. 243. North NI 'th Philadelphia. a oculars. °Lain Mena. 1 'NMI dr. EWING, • Arm" Ann CorIBILLORWIT 17F!CE SPRINfI Sr., opposlta Crittenden Han .'rifle, PA. Collections and all other legal MIA • to coewford Ventura. Erie, Warren mod Torre attandato carefully and promptly. Inotrocse—Wm. A. Galbrodth , Benjamin Whitman ~,0 .q11,P veneer & Marvin, Erie, Pa. -co. T. Lynam. Hoe. EL T. lobioon. W. D. Brown & Clerk. Warren. Pa. VUOLE, fßdwr a• CO., Wholesale dealers In hard wed son coal, ~, Pe Firing disposed of our dock property to the rara.d arm, we neeenarily'retire from the coal ^4e.ri enom ending our successors u smlostitly lent -o•*te conthbmee sod patronage of our old friends SOT?, RINKIN & CO i I TLE S UOALDINtI, . ' Fssllfooable Tailors, Filth street, bet wean Cris, Pa. Cost, m Work. Popidilag sad tturded to promptly. Cleaasng dons to tha . 68 if I) 4 ENtlve 14LE rorrzav, 'Ant CANAL, BLTWEEN SECOND k THIRD STS., "Fuii, Pm/. ,J at tern igned hatiox port:hired the Interest of •11➢ I tooth:ye to C3nduct tto above establish. 11 1 A'SD COUNTY SULITNYING:—JOHN , : „ . 11 Int I ER. bt.roagb tiorktior at Sou th Etia.l* n P , Ptted to r, pet any grade and re. mark corners Ll,ole of out-iota of the city of Ede, or borough of Erie, tad the tract/ throughout the county. •,,'" 4 ...4 hen for many yetue employed u RV oed onlvey or. be begs leave to refer to all we for blither:l men who have timelier re employed rtzijeulkr atiestion given tsmaypLog, planzand f '. ..tteo/. Oil Vans pr/_usred on the /hottest no t, glen; left at the Erie k it'legheov 1111. Mite, tk: r kart.. W. Miller, Turopik• 514 at &el be romp .ly attended to = ELIOT GOODWIN ti: I " I BANKEIS: lag ex. , eite the patronage of the enetomers of the old thd the custom of the public genera!}!, Pr,P01431 /ohs stmost endeavor to give perfect satisfaction. 711 44 X A JAY B.CHILDIt. OA Pled Street, rear the . , Depot 11, r stoint, no. I. GOODIRS. M. S. U. own. St. C. NAM. -- -...wtog ;Wooded their aeteogentnts. arm Mitred to de. a General Backlog, Basting* and " , ,fts Barlow. Itt 7 '''''t 4l Ronde ex d Interest Kota, of ail lines - fteteleatica bought and sold. ' in 31114 F.k. WHISHIL ,Ik CO., =EI IXTRy PRODUCE, GROCERIES, ton, Tau, uctrows, asa:Las. iol4cec" Witlow Ware, Fritihr, Nuts, ekt,* 'Bl4 STASI irracrir. t en da, between 8 th and 9th tits. CAM PA. Ded fo: Colmar, Proclaim. - kitt4l.. ma2t•V W. !EMMY. VOL. 37-N0.,145. AGUA DB MAGNOLIA• A toilet delight -superior to any Cologne—used to bathe the face and person, to render the akin soft and trash, to allay indantroation. to terrain° clothing, for headache, an. It Is manufactured tram the thh ten Nagroolls, and la obtaining a patronage quite nip preeedentad. It tea Grerits with schemes end opera singers. It Le sold by all dealers, at $l.OO in largo bit. ties, and by DEMO BONO 44 CO., New York, whole. sale agents SARATOGA SPRING WATER 1 Sold by all Druggists Walker's Of ant 7 '62 = "les Fo "Basely !^ Solon Shines aaldv "they were there ever, tint+ If hi felt "owley" in the Morning, he tookPlanta on Bitten; if ha felt weary at rota, be took Plaitatlin Clifton; if be lielted appetite, wee weak lancnid or mentally opprered, be took Plan. tattoo Sitters, an I ti.ey never failed to lei him on Hs nine aqua:wand Arm. P w persona want any bensr a th , ;rite bat km some =MT, last read the (Growing : • , • • "I ova much to ton, far I verily.be. tiers Plantation Bitten sired my life.' lic:7 W. Ff. ' 4 7 AM)NER:lfadrld. N. Y. • • .1 hare been •ar eat anfierer trunk Draprode, and had to khan inn preaching. • • The Plantathin Eptters have Giro, me." C 2232 • • • "I ha r d last all appetite—■a•_ao weak sal roars tad I could hardly walk. aad bad a per ect dread ar 'seelery. • - • The Mantattott Rtt— ters hare sat tan all right " • • • rlentationMen hare cored me ore derangement of the Mazer', Led realm, Organ tfiattllstree eit me f r year. They set lite a charm. Q. Q. YOURS, 254 Broettirty, N. - Yo. C. tf DCVO; Tanager of the anion Horne School for Soldiers' Children. save she has. e'en It to !the weak and Invalid ehildrers under her ...Large with the most happy and gratif,tng rasultvv! We hue re ceived over • hundred resale of such car tificatve, hut no • Irertleereect 1 so effee.ve am whet people t ernielves say ors good article. Oar fortune end our rap •tation la at stake. the edgiest quality and Wet charec.ee of these goods .111 be susteinett under and all circumstances. They have already ob. Vaned a sale In every town. village, par eh aria hamlet among tirili nil ciatlonr,. Bate t itators try to come a• near our name and stele u puisible, and because a good article cannot be sold as cheap u a pout one, they and none support 'torn parties who do not care , what . they sell lie cn Tour guard. See !Tar pleats murk ova , the cork. P . A. MI %ICE A co., New York City. SARATOGA SPRING VAT-ER! Sold by all Pro glota OVER:A - AMMON POLLAW4 SAVED. s•Osntlotnent I h‘d A As tro m•n worth $1,200, who took coil !tom a bad hurt in the leg, and was useless for over veer I hrd 'i.eev•r*thing I could bear of without 'hermit, until 11 tried the Ilexie n Musts gLin (meet It soon efts:titl s peruseeht core Ifontr stager, Ala . Jane 17,.'60."....J. f., DOWNING." "t take pleasare in reemaniendiag the Ire:lean Vas tan: Liniment as a valuabla sad la Impetus hie &rite* for Sprain., Soma, Flesstenea or (Salle on Pores.. Oar men have use 1 It for Burns, Bristles Sarre, Rhetiram Vera, he., and all eey it lets Ilte =see. " J. W JEWEIT, Torrmin for American, Well., Fargn'e and Ifarabssee Hamby," , rrh.l ;prat a .1 rufldsu •hter's ankle, Orasioned while skatlog la.t winter, vas entire/ mired Iceone week alter she eemmeneed using yaor celebrated Mustang Lint ment RD SZELEY.', GlOtest r,'Mase , an g. 1,1866. It is `mradmitted 'het that the Mexteso Mustang LlM meat perferms more cures In shorter time, on men and toast, then IMF article ever discovered. Famlllea,lir ery-men, and planters should always ha,' it on band. Quiek and sure It eartalnly Is. All gennins Ls wrapped In steel plate encraiings, be - ring the slaarta a of G. W. Westoroolt.Chentiat, aced the private U. S. Stomp of DMUS 13k1LNE3 & CO., ores the top. An effort hash en made to counterfeit It with a cheap stone piste Istli• Look closely. •nn 65 17 SARATOA SPRING WATER! • Sold ►y all nrugglits • .Itis a moot delightful flair lreutng. - It eradicates rung and dandruff. r It keeps the head cool and Our. "It 'Mars the hair rick soft and glcssy. It pievents the bail tnruingirmy and telling off. It restores balr upon prairie . tartly bald buds. This is what Lyon's Katharion 4111 do. It Is pretty.— it Ls elresp—durable. It Is literally sold by the carload and yet its almost Incredible demand Is deli increasing astir there is hardly a country store that doLre i not keep 'tar a Gamily that does not as. It. 8. TLIOVAS LYON, Chemst. N. Y. SARLTOGL SPAING WLTERI Sold by all Druggirts Who would not be beautiful ? Who uonld not add.to their b auty t What ern that marble purity iird norm appearance we observe upon gm stagy, and in the city belle ? It is no longer a secret. They use Rama Mignon* Betz. Its coat g ioued ani removes Tan, Pimples and roughness ftam atlas and hands, and leaves the complexion smooth, transparent, bloom hag and 'wishing. Unlike many corm:tin, It contains no ms'eriel ininriona to the skin any druggist will order it for you, it not on hand, at 63 cents par bottle. W. C. HAO&N, Troy, W. Y., Chemist, DEIIIB 8AC176.4 & CO., Wholeakle Agent; N.Y.. SARATOGA SPRING WATER! l i i eitostrett's Inimitable Bair Coloring Is not a dye. Al inataltaneons dyetare compered or lunar cattails , as more or less d'stroy the vitality and belay of ilia hate. This is the original hair aelonng. and has Sum growing in error over twenty years. It rotors& gray hair to Its original eolor by gradual absorption, In a cast rernarkable manner. It le also a beautiful Hate oiraulog. Sold In two slzes-14:1 cents and sl—by all dealers. ' C. EIIiIIISTSCILT, Chemist. SARATOGA SPRING WATER! flokfby all &gulf a. • Leaks garner or Frill iIIIAII7/1 Bean.—Tor egartien, Nausea, Heartburn, dirk Ilesdaehe. Cholas Flaiallisof. b *alma a'varalng atlaalant le regalia Its eareral preparation and entire parity makes !la clasp and reliable article for eslinall parpo ea. Bold ereryvbere, at 80 vents per bottle. a-a for *Lyon's" Pare Extnet. Tab no other. SARATOGA SPRING WATER! aPceid•litt. • "Sold by all Ornatiti R . II ff- 0- • A L . GROCERIES I ! GROCERIES!! I The setieedher hoe reoternd his desk of areerrtes from the stead' shoes the Like dtrw. Depot to the room to the brick block oa Stets itmet, eollllt of Fourth, where he will he bsoey to are at. Muds and =dowers sad SD their coder-slot goods His stock Grasszies Is Mtge std wear /sleeted ssJ opted et the Unrest Betas eossistset with the edgiest east hi • roll. invites ell to seed of et le teibtas tits WHNILIMR .aIe elm - fr. SO k !UPI°, • rietor Mamn, Duos re Hors Eril:YcHlit, Aire. ramoor mmy irs. li Prop Leer Bririnties and Malt Warebouau, ErtiN a Pe, and joreatt . . . ERIE MM. 0 A. IIIIAWOOD New York MO JAM riIitIMINTWAY,Rt Louts. N.• Sold by ill Denglats. Berea & Buuaesß, XIIIIVPICII7IIIIII Or PURE CONFECTIONERY! And dealers in all Idnar PLAIN AND FANCY CANDY 1 !Li WHOLESALE AND RETAIL ORANGES, LEMONS, NUTS, .I;q., &c. WHOLES4E AND RETAIL. YANKEE- NOTtONB„, WHOLESALE TOYS OF ALL KINDS, .1v HOLES A-LE. FINE CIGARS AND TOBACCO ! PRS3II OT,STS,Ref Agents for the EXCELSIOR FIRE WORKS! ALI, GOODS INI OUR LINT BENER & BURGESS, 431 STATE STREET MOSS AND ELISICANDIn The, Cheapest and Most Ploseant COUGf! REMED 113 T_ C 0 II •NTR Yi t ti will do all that is claimed :or it, CM= TI . LEAR TIIE VOICE, I=l THROAT AFFECTIONS, Emna COUGHS AND IRRITATIONS! Ana prove Itself a MILD it PLEASANT EXPECTORANT ! T LYCLICTCBM ONLY BY BENER & BURGESS, I FRile, PA. etill'oSlL SOMETHING NEW AND DPSI!UBLE • A NE W lIARDWARETORE! 8 NO. I= PEACE mmur, • A few do-rs ahoy* the Union Depot, where we dial keep an Land a prime stocker . EARDWAIt . iI And sell et the lowest rinianerativ• prises, • . TOE CABEI ONLY. T-R II 13 ! • A CO. Erie, Jane la, 1.8684za J. 220112XLMIR,JZ. J.l 2113113114L11. j • EIVUENI4I7I3 & VU., KAPU/AOTIIIIIIIII 01 BOOTS' AND SHOBSt PROM:BALD AND RETAIL AT WM:IMM PAM& raring a Wye stock dm own zoanufaes ore on hand, with • complete resortroant of city made work, we can aril cheaper at s holessle or Retail than any other establishment in this city, Daring had•loat a:winces ■e to the grants of elsto. mown shall tats rpaciak,pains is preparing store e snit the= We hare the e...is** right In this dt.. 4o was the, PLITHER PATENT BOOTS & SHOW); forth. benefit of onr eustowArs. and °WY ••• • ti! rem, Meatier say one aa to their atirior comfort imar Mom mad* m the ol44ray. Rh. Plume Boot needs no breaking in: it is as eery tnm tha start as one worn forsome Um. Oar 14*Eii0v11.3*.m 4 fi'll 4:r Will, :Kuhr, our ou'n oupociar attositiou. =LEATHER, LASTS AIW TINEHRGE, For the trade &brays on band to stilt Timdining thanki to co tie friends and 'autumn; lbl lt put patronage, hope by jut and hanotable dealing to merit • .ontinuanc• of the saxes, and cordially Welts all to all and sundae our stock baton purchasing 1114. where. No. CS. Stite St OD* Pa. coar2trellU. GUOVER it: BAKER* TIES?• Pl3lllOll ELASTIC STITCH AND LOCK STITCH SEWING MACHINES ! =1 WEIGEL & ZEIGLER, ED b'&ti Street, Eris, N. JolyEll64/ EMPLOYMENT for both Beim MOM and maned Goldin; whiorn and orphans of own aoldlont, and the ntonoploptd of both ones grorn ltnallY. lll mat reputable and vroetabio employ ment,in _mains no risk, ran proems sookli onolosing a paitrid addresard earroooo for partials.. to JOBN 11. DA BALL jyl2-411 Boa 113 Brooklyn, N, Y. Mtftllolllll 01 TOIVIII.—A pathos= who has .n &brad for years from Nervosa DaMll= tare Deem andel the abets of youthbal will for the make of aslfartair Immasith Mad free to ad who mid It. tb a recipe and &nations for making the straplatemedy by stitch he vaa aired. haborre stshbri to melt by the adrestiseei meekest MI do so by ad - • JOlld m. 0011,_ aemsllll.r. No, IS Chambers 84, /IL T... mu t BRIDAL, latAblßlLit. an Dray of *ants 1 and Instructlon to young Mon—publiabol by „flow sod ansoeLstfoun, d most boo of , ossint wool opal. Adana Dr. J. 1101JOBTON. istrelbty. . littladolgt, do, Ph. wraterionquerux & cwa. • • ?Mesa to bay CHEAP FAXILT- ROCE E. IEB I Ewan. Tow Loral. choodets. Babtea Brms. Can Stank. Farbuh ro rpiem Peat Basky. BIN Plow. Bien, Main Crow' raster, tgli Pow Cnwelood Whoa= Whet amlay, 134inp, Nostard 1 1 4ety Jaz, Mho& Mt Balsisi Slaw. ros ily sioa• CoraVrOat KW, sili kinds of ism Sar dim. Bald= PiekiN, Ouresste. Pigs, aid. is set, neryttdag Dolmen to • Mot Clam Faugly Mom &WOW .4 ERIE, PA., THURSDAY, -SEPTEMBER '6, 1866. Emig CITY IRON . *OPILIS. •, . , LIDDELL, BELDEN' & BLISS, FOUNDERS .tMACHINISTS, STEAM ENGINES AND BOILERS, _ OIL STILLS AND TANKS. D R . 1.V,1 N,O.' I" I r. E 8 , PUNPINCI RIGS, WALKING BEAM IRONS XtLL HEARINGS AND MACHINERY. All Oaf work Is =We from thoiwst materials, sad WAI , £LITIDtobe of lbw BEST STYLE AND 1 1 1-0111KMANSHIP. We ate Dow edam . kris ;to oil Vaeltaery az! Msasteetaring t opply the tnereust di awed tot oar troth. W, J. p LIDDRLI • . I ORD. BELOW, JOHN H. 8L133. 1866. • • IMPORTANT TO isXcUlisioinsTS THE GRAND TM:NEC RAILWAY AND I • - ROYAL MAIL LINE OF STEAMERS! •Ith Unlit COCEIOIOO In Q. United Snag. In/lelk • peat Inducemepts to, the pleasure ' Uareer. • Recursion Trekits from Nimiers Tells to New Tort, Boston. Portland. Mastoge an the White Mountains. ail Toronto, Megaton. Noutnet. Quabee sod other routes. &mane which are some of them st pleasant— travvrehig a region abounding' In beautiful scenery, with a reheating end iirrivoreilag et.weephere. Thews routes by the Lakes, the tit gammas. through the Canada, end the Re• ten end Middle Wain, having obtained such popularity for eutenner and fell travel, it ha become • n hyperemia& Hens to the mansgen online hoes,so much so as to indium them to devote venal attention to the reduction of rata. end inoreetng Matinee for the emoromodetion of tmvelleru, I !chine ere good be MI or by Re. el Mall Line Siam ere. Mamie end Berths mounded between Toronto and tloatreaL ' ANIEMMIN MONEY TAKEN AT PAR Dftwet eimosetiona aro roads !with man linos at all Important points, alai, and wOat. To traveler. from rbl'ade'pb la. Baltimore. Rarriabare. Williamsport. Tites►lUL, sod other Important town" is rensayleania, rim routes ars of may scam Maths P. ar, railmad to Erie. toyr For tielists and all osesiaary information apply FLOWER E.A.BrOCE. • t7le4so!- Wrlibt's Block, Eris, Ps: QUANNOPt a: CO., - 179 ' THE PLACE TO RUT HARDWARE! Wolisviii so meow for Book•SMper. Books. worthless amount, or eolloetlona. sod ens therefor* _ SELL Tramslths viii awl milthhig In OW? line • At Madam & Co., 1393 Pout St.. above Railroad Depot. , The best assortment °Motel* , At Shannon Coh, =I Pesch St Charcoal for Refrigerators and phallus at Shanaon'As CW4ll= Pesch St. IT at & Rogers' erlebrats d rat, Nth/my - at Shannon & C 0.% 13= Peach St Ors G aad Putty at Shannon &C0.t,1313 Peach St. • Celebrated Ucton Aso!. Pelain Dirt going both ways, At Shannon & 1323 Poach St. T ar—pintas North Carolina. at :hennas' k Co.',, Int Peach Bt • S al then Sate' and Bvlthe Stairs 3. at Shannon* 1123 Pasch St. Niir Mlle New Knife and Pock Pollen's roans" at Shaanon * 1= Peach St. Droshea ty—llalr. Rorie. Rase.* b. Shoe, Do Whitewash. Stems and Contour Brush,. & Deafen 'at Shannon & Co 130 Path St.. above the Onion HR Depot, tote, Pa. Cr' Soto Agents in North tisstans Peres. for the strehlmtdlan Patent Axles; also Herrings' Piro and Rae giar Proof Safes and Fairbanks Sates. j, 19-tf BOOKS NOR NUN BULLION. CAUGHEY, I.IcCIUIkRY Ls CO., BOOKSELLERS AND STATIONERS, NO. 11 NORTH PARR ROW: Are oar opening the largest and most carefully selected Mott of elegantly bound and beastibutly illustrated B '0 0 K 8.! - liver belied to this market, tanlading standard works, nay Bonilab and An:orient Juvenile Books, Men. Piller peeks, and Chinch Benrleen, La fine styles. Also, YENS STATIONERY ARTICLES„ Writing NAN Taney It* Stands. Law TsMt arid Work Bozes,..Prrtfolki.aterealleOree and slap. Prkkek Card Planes, the most beentlfol *Sunday &hoot Cards In grant variety. Port lloosales. Card Cam, Gold Pon; Propelling Pena; • large variety of - nosey Artialre ln Sortah Plaid, Photograph Jams :grow the best mann bawl.; In the teat styles. Jarred tf CAUGGILT. YoCREARY k CO. MUSIC - STORE. WEIGEL & zEpaLvi, N0.,820 State Street, DIG Petuuylocusta, 11 . 1:1110 LND.XU3IOAL IMITRIMIN OP writs? ' DESCRIPTION. Italbarirran.ll and Gorman Wings of the but qual ity. liola agents for ChM,tiring k floaut. Win. P. lintersolll, Decoke: al Ca.% and Sawn ! Etabm'a Plano Fortes; also, the ealaktatad Treat & LlnalirrCatihmt Organs and Melodeon . Mule And Ellitup ant by mall it.loot parlay. - all orders promptly attooded to. • CAtalogas of Mule seat fns of poitage. SADQUARTSIIB . /TOIL OO CHEAP Ci(YODSI .WHOLIZALIC MID ltrtalL GROCERY AND PROVISION STORE, • , WINE&A. LIQUORS. F. & M. SCHLAUDECHER, . Are now receiving at their old atu4, Amadeus litoc,c Etats stow* * large and superior atom of Crimea* Printable* W.aa. Liquor* Willow, Wooden, sad to e Wara, • /halts. Nut* &a, gm. Together with everythtng found in • ;Hone of this kind. whir& they will ash as cheap as any other estab lishment in this city for Cash or most kinds of country produce. - They hare able on hand one af i tt a Xist and Must Stocks of Tobacco and Began ewer t to pie. to Which they Invite the attention of Ike pp Call and see ea—a aischlealzioami la better than a !OW t ah= nir lom b irtly Cash b Ind real bargains GROCERY HEADQUARTERS: -AMERICAN BLOCK: STATE STREET.- use 116 --69 &Y. 8011LATIDAZZR. ' STOKE • . TOR Lams £ND animus. ♦ variety of Milldam's Plain and raper READY•MADE CLOTHING. Ladles' Heady-Made UndrrClotbLegt A gulag ankste. •Ireratellng Goods All at laid IFIU be kept an band. sad she made to ardor. Oar goods are all msaufastated by oariebrea. litazordng.iltltehlMOrhitlng and Breading &meat tbe shottrat wile*. also.alwo misty or the latest it* Patterns for Ladles' sod Children's Garments. All or demean ho promptly Minded to JOGIAt Iltßattit. aplaiy !nigh at, balms 4th and Alb. DECK & KRILL, DEALERS IN SMOKER'S ARTICLES, . • Palsy Goads and CIGARS, 57 . Rend street, Erie, itaseeet,7 . • FINE MEERSCHAUM and pIIIAB CIGAR TI7III2I,,CLAY.CIUNA IlIVA.P1)14, CIOLS CMS, T0114CL70;8011:21. Mater And LesperTobso:i Ana* Kate& Salo &a., • &i. &e. tutlab. Glenna =II Virginia poking Ask - -CHEWING TOBACCOS 1 ' Our stook le the most owlet, Or* othred fa Oro Nooks; sod ye mefolly Sarno tho ottesstloek at soh* trr m reliant% Ire eau alt them goods to Cu lino &raw than they on obtalir Wm, stonrboot ar Is Mailing, Ire moot to oadersoti bare or Glee wham -; - ' royal-t; CRY AND BOARDING ormuss, • Cosmos Pnanon Juns erinsin. Ram A Johnson. hop:Wm Rood Borns and Canhsros shim on band as modszato piers 01241 r7r!lTrin DRILLING TOOLS, 1866 Dealer' la El Speech of Senator CowanTat Pitts , burgh, Aug. 27th. sir Fatsans atic FELLOW CITIZENS :-I thank you for the heartiness of this re ceptien. You will accept my sincere thanks for it. We have met this even ing for a great and glorious purpose—for the accomplishment of a purpose which -I Suppose must be and will be dearest and nearest to the - American heart—the restor: ation of a great republic; to - Its fornry pristine glory. • (Applause.) tireat Re public, -did I say / • The greatest republic, unquestionably, the world has" ever seen, ancient or modern; ktogdom. empire, aristocracy,democracy,or what not. These United States if-once back to, peace and harmony, and that 1 fraternal affection w bleb fortherly. characterized the various sections of them, would be unquestionably the greatest power teHlsy on the earth, or that ever existed. (Load and continued applause.) , There are two great principles, gentle. men, to *hick I shall Call your !Mention, perfectly familiar , and which are the keys by whieb to unlock all the troublesome questions which now 'Ogre us hi the face. The first great distinguishing characteris tic of , our government, and all govern. ments, is that they grow out of the peo ple. They are the work of the people pro+. I wish you to remember the' be oaus I shall recur to it very frequently in the brief time in which I, expect to ad: dress you. The' other great characteristic of our form of government consists in the 'fact that it is a - government of law. ais.4on tradistinguiehed from arbitrary power.— that is our pride and our boast. Nothing cm be done to the humblest citizen—the very humblest of you—by the mightiest in the land untawfulfy, unless by the taw, (Applause) not even the President of the United States, the commander-in chief of our armies and navies ; not even General t.i4atat,,the General, par excellence, of the country, (applause) can injure, or dare in jure, the: humblest citizen, the weakest woman, or the most delicate child in the country, as against the law. (Tremendous Applause.) 'Ncw,[ in, other countries, all over the world, there are arbitrary powers lodged soniewhere, or in some particular body— parliament, council, or what you may choose to call it. Take. for instance, the English Parliament. The English Parlia ment is; said to be omnipotent, that is, it can pass any late it pleases, and that law binds the realm. There is no such power in this Country. All executive officers, all legislative bodies, are held in by constitu tional and legal provisions which prevent anybody from exercising arbitrary power, and it is m that our liberty consists. It is there Ms to be found, and nowhere efati, and whenever we leave that, and abandon =the law, the declared will of the whole people, as our rule acid guide for action. then our great republic teases to IA and turns itself to that extent into a despotism. (Applause.) Now, 1 piopose to examine very briefly and as pliantly as I can. some of the ques tions whiCh now agitate the people, acd I think I can satisfy you, if you will be kind enough to give rae your attention,, that there really is no di ffi culty -in the ques tions themselves, but that the difficulties are purely imagicary, have no reel exist ence, and are not such, as to make bold and brave men hesitate. There are diffi culties everywhere; there are difficulties in every phase of human life ; but thole difficulties men encounter, and bold men face_them, as bold Men ought, so as to wield them to a bold man's purposes. In this battle of life we.get nothing for no thing. In this great struggle for the main tainance of free government, we must ex. pect difficulties, and the compensation 'we have tor that struggle is liberty, In dependence and Union-. (Great ap plause.) Gentlemen, wo have just emerged from• a great and terrible war; a war which shook the earth; a war which astounded the - nations of the old world ;,a war which manifested a power and capacity, on the part of our people as that the: nations stood aghast ; a war in which the armed men sprang from the dragon's teeth. This. war grew, tip in the midst of a civilized; .peaceful ptople,.ont of nothing. as it were. In 1661 we had no army, no army, I mean, that would at this day be called - an army —we had no navy that might be called a 'navy ;we had-no treasury—no exchequer which might be supposed able to meet' the demands of a great and sudden emer gency, such as then came upon the pets-, As. It was dotibted' before that whether the whole Union constituted a first-rate power in ,European parlance. That war came on, and was waged between the two sections with' such force, such energy, such _skill. and such k an amount of re- Batten as satisfied thiTkorld that we were not only one first-rate power, but that we .were really two. And, gentlemen, whet ever may ,be said of that war, so far &sit was an effort of military force, so far as it was governed .by military genius, I say the American people' have nothing to be ashamed of it on either aide.. (Great , .- ap plause.') . The war arose on the part of a portion of the people of these United States, and was inaugurated by the general govern ment against them, because they refused obedience to the Constitution rand laws, and the principle upon which it was con ducted on our part—upon the part of the legitimate government—was precisely is the force exercised by your. polietf when they go out upeta the streets to suppress a riot or arrest a felon ; and if we had not the right to.suppressthe rebellion by vir tue of the authority derived fritm the Constitution and laws, ffle had no right to do it at all. (Applause.) That, I suppose, no man will or andieby. Yon and I have no authority over our! fellow-men, except, as we derive it from the law. Pennsylva nia has tip authority in the Union except as she haft it by the law t The Unionitself is the cretatare of law, and the, United States in . .compelling obedience! to the Contain:it on and laws, does so by virtue of the Coutitution and those laws. (Ap plauge.) • : In that 'terrible conflict, State govern manta were crushed,shsttered and broken, and when the general government euc ceeded in eitablishing its supremacy over there, they were:. lying in the t dis turbed, distracted and useless condi tion. The question'arises, how are they to be reconstructed? It was not the Union that was to be reconstructed, (applause,) but State governments that loci been torn to by violence.of war: That is the queslion of reconstruction. Take, if yen please, Louisiana. How is that government to be reconstructed? ;That was' the ques tion which was presented to Mr. ' Lincoln while he was President. 'slow did be re •••:ive it ? Why, geollimen, he decided it in the spirit of your - constitution and in the spirit of your; laws. ' (Great ap plause.) - : If the State government of Pennsylvania were by some sudden accident to be •de atroyed, where would you get another one —who would reconstruct it?• It is only necessary to ask the question to have it answered. The people of Pennsyliania and no.other..(Leng etintinued applause.) IV is their birthright,. descended from heroic ancestors, transmitted ;to them as their proudest inberitaisce. The govern- Went belonipi - to the enple, and if it is destroyed: it Is referred to the people to Make a nevrkone. (Long continued rip planets.) . Mr—Lincoln referred the question of reconstruction to the people—the people of ,the. States; whose , governments had beenoverthrcnik. Was that right; or was it wrong ?• 'right.'). That was his scheme of reconstruction. • But there was a party who set up another scheme of re. * 4' 0 I'-• - - I _II .• • . ' -' - . - , .BSHJRVER .11 ‘ , Construction, who bad a different theory and who proposed a ,different mode ;cof getting the State governments upon their legs again, getting them back into prac tical relationswith the Union. That was the radical party in Congress. They con tended that Congress • 'was- to do it- r not exactly that Congress was to make the Slate governments, but that Congress was to make the States to fluke such State_ governments as' would please them. I suri 7 pose if they bad said that to you. as Penn sylvanians, you wculd .have said: 'lf we are to adopt a government to suit your whims and your tastes, perhaps you bad better make it yourailves." [Laughter and iiiiplause.l That yr mid be perfectly natur al. As Pennsylvanians.. you would bare answered : 'We have the' right to make our own government; you have no right to integers, andnobody has any right to interfere; and you guaranar that we shall -have this right, because the Constitution Pf the 'United -Slates guarantees to th 6 eople of every State a rePublioin form of government.' Now, the Radicals say, 'lf we are to guarantee a repbile= form of government, we must ma that form of government. in order to b ure that it is republican ; end;they justurn it upside l finwn, and reverse what w meant by the framers of the Constitution. . , • - i . By that particular phrase, 'Republican term of government,' the framers of the Ganstitution m: ant to uarantee such form of government as the! people of each State' were pleased to Make for them selves ;- and Mr. Madison says that is a republican form of government. fAp !flames] That is what they meant by it, and.Ahat is common senSe and common reason. , ° At the ulster' of the win% there were different opinions entertained, and; as you Well know, honestly enter fined ; and we May as well come to it-firs as last, as this is a country of free opin i on , [applause] and every man is entitled tp entertain his opinion. Whether that- opinion squares with the majority or notOs a very differ ent thing. Every man is entitled to his opinion; whether it bo popular or unpop ular, and that is the beauty' of our govern- Went. The most mischievous men, who promulgated the inost-misebievous opin ions daring the war, I said bring them to me with • the converts the have made. and Twill pay the highest price for them.f I 'offered to buy . all the converts Vallan digham would make - at the `highest price. Why not ? For they are opinions that our people do not entertain, and to suppose that our peopletannot listen to opinions of all sorts and descriptiooe,-is to decide that it is very dangerous to hive them an opportunity to settle those opinions. [Ap plause.] r .I remember that we have a very foolish set; of- fellows, who imagined that they' vr•;uld exclude newspapera of a certain class from the army. I stood up against it and I raid the soldier hed patricitism, and when he went to the field, you might be mire he was in earnest, and you might give him whatever nevrimaptir you pleased withoot danger of leading-tr im astray.— [Applause.] I was never a raid to trust our people with the truth at all times. If we cannot reason together, end if we ate to be the slaves of prejudiceland passion. and tyranny, and outrage; and terrorism, -we are not a free people: There will..be always, in every communityi, a consider able number o: bad men, bi I say that the virtue-and intelligence o f the Ameri can people was -triumphant jiver all their difficulties, and will . enable them to maintain that government ictwithstancl- Mg. . Mr. Lincoln had faith i n -the people North—faith in th e people South—faith in the people every where—Lbecause the people in the South are •your brothers. with the same history, the same ancestry, the same legends of national 'glory, thc came proud recollection of former battles fought in common, and there is hardly a men here present who will not find one of his own name in the South—they . are the same kind of people we are. 1' . ;fib I but it was said they are such had people, they got up a rebellion—a most terrible rebellion—a bad war—in which thousands and hundreds of- thousands of peopl s were killed Thil, is true. It *as a toil, heaven-daring, wicked irebellion.— but such is the law of -humanity. _Wars have occurred so since old Agamemnon laid siege to Troy. This is inot the first rebellion that has ever beenin the world. There have been thousands everywhere, and of course it was our lot tit have one. It is now our duty to profit bp, the lessons of the past, to show that we now mean to cure and heal the wounds of the body politic,- and get back to our former con dition and be greater,' More powerful and glorious than. before. lemendous applause.] ' It was said by some that-th people of the South who had engaged in the rebel lion, had become so criminal and so far out of a common humanity; that they were not competent to. make, their own State governments. I presumetwe are all sinners, at least I know I am, nd if per chance song of -us 'should he criminal there is a Place of penitence — there- is a place even -upon earth where We are to be forgiven, and we are 'commanded to pray that we may be forgiven as i we forgive others. ' The people who go into rebellion, who are led away by bad and seditious men, should be forgiven when they4how peni tenCe, and, by tile bye, our fathers in the 'Whisky Insurrection' of Western Penn syliania, 'were very nearly getting into .rebellion. I believe that eight thousand *men met at Braddock's Field to inaug urate\ their Obellion but the ec0,p1.3 halt ed, they repented, , ad nobo y thought the people , ' as such, ere guilty, bat toe whole crime , was laid upon a few leaders. But I was going to say that when; people had rebelled, hen they weetWled away as tho people of e South were. - iiito each a 'mar as that , th calamities which s th such a war brings, the unishnient .whi it inflicts, the sorroWs with which it cov rs' the whole land ate theitpunistiments. o to the South to - day-, ',travel over their ruins' cities, over wasted• and desolated fields; winless the number of, widows and orphans, see the graves of their children, and ask if she has not been vanished.— There has never come upon any people in the 11 World inch a terrible - and condign punishments' has come upon that people. TheY are purged, they have paid the pen alty'pand they are chastened with many sorrows. - i I • *it Id - , to "•-. under the am not prepares. to say under the heavy inflictions _they have infrared, they are not wiser than you. I Under these eircumitadeas, Mr. Lincoln feeling that the people had been purged by the ir sufferings, entrusted t 4 them the making of their own State ,governments, end. that was his plan of rec o ns truction:— [Great applause.] As I said before, that was,opposed by precisely the !lame party end same mentwho now oppose President 3ohßson in carrying nut that same plan of reconstruction. • • I You very well remember that the Rad icals, to a man, in Congress. were opposed to Mr. Lincoln: opposed his re•nomtna tion•ii favor of Chute, and they: got up an Executive Committee for the pyrpose• of making Chief Justice Chests President of the United States. They' tried] at times to getup Fremont by way of diversion.— [Laughter.] At Baltimore it was the peo ple Who nominated Mr. Lincoln in oppo sition to the Congressimat clique, and 'when he was canvassing, before the people for re-election, in the very . thick of tht fight, there, was a protestrogned" on the part of a reconstruction committee—not the Onelhat has become so famous, the imulorbil fifteen [laughter]—but there was s reconstruction , committee, at the head, Of which appeared the names of 'Benjamin F.: Wade and.. Henry Winter Davis, and they published that protest to BENJ'N WHITMAN, EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR. I Mr. Linedin's nomination, and they charged him with being a usurper and a tyrant, and they called bim all the names which the yecabulary of such people gen erally furnishes., That is the same party which to defy opposes Mr. Johnson and Ins reccrtistruct t ion of State governments. [Arr. pleuse._. . • .After the deatn of Mr. Lincoln Presi dent Johnson succeeded to him and sue.. ceeded to his policy. He has pursued it precisely from that day to this, (applause) .and I defy any man—and I am not par. titular w..ere you bring-him from—l have met the very bead and front of this—l defy any one to put his finger upon a single departure of President Johnson from that policy all the way through.— '(Applause) I stood by President Lincoln always and at all times. .1 even acquiesced in silence when he was driven from his own grpund in the very beat of the war, and they, did drive him as you know. '(Sensa tion.) I have stood by President Johnson in the mimeo:way, because I believed he was good, and wise; and true, and had the good of the-whole country at heart. (Tre mendous applause.) Now what is the difficulty_? What is the great question which-now agitates the people ? It is whether ten States of this Union, whether the people of ten States, purged by war, made wise by Calamity, tried in the fire of suffering, the people of ten States just as you are, people entitled to the same rights as you_ are, shall be heard upon the floor of Congress where the laws are made which aro to govern them, where the taxes are levied which they have to pay, whether they shall be heard by their Representatives or whether they shall be treated as a conquered peo ple, or whether they Shall be deprived of their rights which I say. belong to every American citizen. (Great applause.) This is the great queition. Aro these States in the Union ? (Cries of 'yes, yes,' from all parte of the house.) They were in the Union, I know; in LAO. They were in the Union, I know, because the - laws are upon the statute book by. which they were made part of the Union. - Have those laws been repealed ? Did the ordinances of secession repeal them ? (No, no !) If the ordinances of secession did not repeal those laws they are in force yet, upon the atattite_book, and' they are as , binding as the will of thirty millions of the American • people can make them.-. (Great applause.) I told you that our pride and our boast was that this was a government of laws, that it was our security, that it did not depend on the will of one man or any set of men. •It does not depend on the will of the Executive whether such things shall be or' hall not be ; it (ices not de pend on Congress, but it depends upon the law, the established law. Then if those States were- in the Union by the law, and if that law tuts not been repeal ed, and cannot be repealed except by the American people, then they are yet in the .Union by the law. (Great applause.) They are there by your law, and the man who, in spite of your law, says they are not there,insults you to your face. (Applause.) Then those States are in the Union by the law, the people are bound by the law, - submit to the law, and are entitled to the law. (A voice—'we'll keep them by the law.') Yes, we will keep them by the law. (Tremendous applause.) ' But. we are asked, are we to have no punishment. upon those' rebels—not the people—for I believe nobody asks that the people should be punished except the Radicals—but a great many good men, a great many good meaning men, ask, are these rebels, the leading rebels, the great spirits who created this war originally, not to be punished? I spy certainly, if you please. There is no doubt about it, gentlemen ; they are in the clutches of 'the law, and if the law imposes any pen alty, they will have to suffer it. A man might just, as well ask, can the thief and the felon about Pittsburgh be punished? You answer, certainly; they are in the hands of the law. And so it is with those , wh o have been in rebellion. - You have all these people now under the law.; they are within your grasp, and if any punishment is to he inflicted it must be inflicted by this law and -under the law. You and I have no right to pun ish offences. If you saw a man commit murder upon the streets, yon - would not undertake to punish it, and if you did, so far from being justified, Voir would- be guilty under the law, and if you under took to punish him capitally, you would be guilty of murder. And why ? Because you take into your hands that-which the American people have plecect in the hands of others. You try him ;n is way which they do not authorize, and you in- snit them in undertaking to execute- it I in such a way. That is the situation of the rebel States. It has been said that the President.ought to punish these peo ple. Why, gentlemen, the President has nothing in the world to do with it. The President is the Chief Executive of the nation—he is not a common prosecutor— he is not even a District Attorney. Gov. Curtin, the Chief Executive of Pennsylve. nia,does not come here to protecute crim inals, doe, he ? Did you ever see him on that errand? . (No, no.) It belongs to the people to punish offences. It belongs to the humblest man as, well as the highest. The humblest man, if he knows that crime has been committed, has a right to give informatiOn, to take out a warrant, and place the criminal in the hands'of justice. And the Judge—the highest as wellies the lowest.-is bound to respect the law - and deal out punishment upon the offender. Gentlemen. who want the rebels pucished—gentlemen who insist that they aie not punished-enough, and I that they ought to be punished further, —such gentlemen are themselves to be blamed. Why do they not get warrants ?- Why do theY not put, these iseople in the hands of the law for. punishment? You never hear one of these bsbbling fellows who cry out for punishment, instituting punishment for the offencea or which they . proclaim so much horror. I took oceAsion to tell them in the Senate of the --United States, if you want to punish the guilty people, the guilty iustigatcre of this rebellion, say who you want to punish ; say hcw many; it it fle ten, fifty, five hun .-Ired or five thousand. You shall have theni all, only 1 beg of you all do not bab ble about the I'resident, that be doei not become a common prosecutor, a thing un heard of in the history of the country, and indicative of ignorance of the laws on the part of those who make-such an asser tion; a thing that ought to be known by every school boy. • As I said before, the great question was whether these States should be represen ted in the Congress of - the United States by their t epresentatives, properly elected, returned and qualified. • This is the ques tion, I told you before that this is a goy, erionent oflaw, and whenever a question arises, if the law settles .it, theAnestion itself should be settled. I neverfiad the slightest difficulty. I never hesitated when two Senators came to the door of the Senate from Alabama or Mississippi 'or Tennessee. I, read the Constitution, and that sacred instrument declared that each State aluicild have two Senator'. There was an end to it. What right bad I to set myself against that , Instrument which I had sworn to support. and which I was fighting to save? [Applause.] It was not for me to say in the face of that great paramount law of thirty millions of my countrymen, that is wrong ; they ought not to have two Senators. What presump tion that would be ! So in the other House it was also fixed. The Constitution de. °larva that ' each State shall be entitled to reprettentation according: to its popula tion,mad it provided that a census should be taken in order to lee how many people . each State hie, an# after that census is returned—Ofter the decade has gone by— Con_gresa apportions among States their representation, anion the very beginnin g of - the war, on La 4th Of March._lB62, the Congress of thtfUnited States did ap portion under that census to all the States in the Uisian=all that were Statesatthat time;-and told the eleyenStates then in rebellion that they gave fifty-eight mem bers and !het was the law., It theism voted for by your representative 'from Al legheny county and there was no ditision upon it. Was that binding or was it not binding? Was it the lair of the American people, or was it not their law? If it was their will it was sacred and binding upon every' member of that House, and espe cially open those who voted . for it. If it was net, the law of the American peoples it ivae a farce and this is, no govenntneat at all: .[Great applause.) That disposes of • the question of admission into the Con gress of the. United States. I was delighted. to hear yens. _worthy Chairman explain it as well as it could be explained; but there was no danger in carrying out this constitutional law. You hear all .these empty beaded people say, bring back the rebels into power, bring back the men of the &nth who tried to destroy this government, and the country is gone. I would like to know what the war was for if it was not for this very - thing. [Laughter and applause.] Was it not for that very thing that we sacrificed three or four hundred thousanctmen; and expended six or eight or ten thousand millions of dollars ? If it was not for that; we should not have made _the war. Gen tlemen, it is -a very high compliment to our soldiers that they were not afraid to meet these eleven States in the field in open fight. They did meet them and over come them, but the Congress of. the Uni ted Slates was afraid to meet them in its ;halls. [Great laughter and applanee.l We ;have 183 members in Congress, end they ;were afraid to meet 58. [Cries of , egood, good.."] Rome must have lost her breed of noble lords, I should think._ [Ap plause.] We have fifty Senators in the Senate of she United States, and they were afraid of 22. And, gentlemen, if this Republican party had the smallest pallet commone sense or political sagacity, last fall. whew they went to Congress, they would have laid down a platform such as the platform of the -Philadelphia conven tion..[Great applause.] I remember once, on going Up to Cumberland, I_met an old Whig named John Fenton. The majority in his district was largely against him,and I raid to him, How do you expect to get elected—what platform do you stand upon ? He said, '-'I stand upon the Con stitution and. laws." [Laughter ] Now, if . Congress had ad'orted the Philadelphia plattorro,or had they said they stoodopon the Constitution and the laws, more than one half of those S,outherio Senators would have been right ready to kiln hands' with the Republican party, and they would have bean united with me.- I thought I' was as good a Republican as they could make. I ]did think I could understand the old article. At, I understood the old article, it as simply that slavery should not go intb the territories. Was not that • tire whole of it? . [Yeig, yes.] In old time s . there were three echools about that thing. The Republicans say Congress is supreme over the territories. and if Congress says, by law, that slavery should not go into the territories, then we say that slavery shall not go. If Congress says it shall, we submit. Mr. Douglas said, No. that is not the best way; let the people of the territories themselves decide. That was called squatter sovereignty doctrine.— Then there was' another doctrine which said neither the people of the territories nor Congress have any right to decide this question—the territories are-common property—common- to all the people, and they have a, Fight to take 'their property into the territories. whether that proper ty consists in men or horses, or what not. That was the Southern . view. As a Re publican, I was in favor of the first blowy, and that was Republidanism then. That question did not exist after Mr: Lincoln took his seat. - When we organized a ter ritory and provided by law for its organi zation, it was not questioned., There was no division, not a particle., So fay as that was concerned, Republicanism had achieved its victory—Republicanism had done its work—and Republicanism had ceased to be as a party principle. awes then balled upon to meet other and great er issues. Last fall, if a fair and reason able platform, standing upon the Consti tution and the laws as they were written had been made by the Republican party, then, if there was one, it would have been— accepted by more than half of the people of the Southern States, because these old issues had gassed away ; Republicanism and squatter .sovereignty and. the Dred Scott decision had been swept away in the whirlwind of war and become dead issues of the past. Then, I. tell you, gentlemen, there was no dode at that time in admitting the American people wholly and fully to their rights as before. There war not only no danger,. but-there was not the millionth part of the' danger that we are likely to encounter:by , the course putsued.hy the dominant party, in keeping those people from their - reprealentatibn. What is that danger t Have yeieu thought calmly of the importance of being represented in the Legislature of the country that-makes the laws that govern you ? How 'would you like to have your representatives from the city of Pittsburgh, from the county of Al legheny, turned out ? How would you like to be represented 'by letter writers, people who walk around amongst you and take down all your vices, all the various kinds of crime that are committed, and communicate them ,all to Congress, and have somebody get up and read those let ters day after day as the condition of things in Pittsburgh ; and what would you go into Congres s say it that was done in the Senate of the . United States, and I was not there to give the lie to it upon the spot, which 1 would do, of course . [Great applause.] Why, gentlemen, the blood of your revolution sry fathers would turn to - milk in your veins if you submitted to that. You could not look up to Heaven, where their spirits now look down upon you, and feel your selves worthy of them, if you submitted to be governed without representation. The meanest felon in your court has a right to be heard. •No Judge in the city of Pittsburgh to day dare-deny it to the meanest criminal in, the dock. The right to counsel , tet be heard, is a sacred right everywhere, and yet that right has been denied the Southern people. They have not been allowed to othera ateal s nd they hand,cif alone h w e e could h condition ave t a e i p l . parcel r ce f Ye t, th l o e i f r o people the who are exceedingly anxious that a very disturbed state of things should continue, and exceedingly anxious that they should not be displaced, because they have offices out of which •tliey are making fortunes, stealing 'government and individual cot ton, and everything else; and they write letters up to Congressf, and sometimes they wodld have dozen a day. In one case I knew a man who wrote some Of them, and lam satisfied- that you would not elect him a night watchman in the city of Pittsburg. (Laughter.) A man of no character, but a man who went about like, thedogs cf Lazarus, licking at sores,. and sent his effusions-to the floors of Con gress, so as tontake a stench in the noses of the Northern people.* That is the way the South was represented. . We .maintained this government—we enforced this Constitution and these laws because we were right, God is right, and • when you are right Re ht,45: sour side- Apd you succeeded; but you deprive these ' people of representation ; yew treat them as conquered people— and there you are wrong, and you cannot succeed in hold ing them any longer than you have the' physical force to do it. , I--a,. -- - Now, the Southern people feel all this. They do not feel resentment. They be lieve that the Northern people, when' they understand them, will be as just as they were brave—that they will be as generous in the civil administration of the government, as they were valiant field.of battle. (Great applaus e, They t e the want to be your fellowesountrym . They want to keipartners in this grea public. .They want to enjoy the blessings of this great :Union. And they want to hand down to their children the blessings it was intended to _perpetuate-as yo do. (Tre mendous applause.) They Ittow the value of the Union to you and ;to them, and