.' TUI civil. BIGLOrs , BILL. ,-. . . _ Senator T r umb u ll on the Veto. . ~ The Senate d r tok up the Presideneit veto • niessago - and Senator Trumbull,of Illinois, i , =do an able tied poworfu speech against it, and in support of the ill. We print below a full report of the riocipal points of this speech: ( Mr. Tramibull said : • Mr. President I fully ithare with the President of tfie United States in the re gret expressed that he is unable to sign the bill to protect all persons in the United States in their' civil rights, and to furnish , the means of, their vindication. I regret it wilily own account, be ause of the diet appointment : because th just expecta tions raised w en the bil was presented to the Ptesident, before its introduction into the Senate, have bee l n disappointed ' 1 . I regret it on the President's account, be , 'consols is caleulated to aienato him from those who eleYated him t power,and who gladly have rdlied ermine his administra tion to sustaid•him in the, principles upon ; which he wasieleeted; ut, above all,sir, I regret it for liberty's sake, to secure posterity o r which to ourselves and this - government wlas founded. .1 2 RIGHTS OP . A CITIZEN t• STATES. • But if thebill is unconstitutional and unjust to the; wbele ;people, I would not have the'Presidentfaign . t. That its pro visions are neither nnjus to the whole,nor any portion ef,the people, nor unconsti- 1 , tutional, I shall endead,or to show by a' candid anddispassionake review of, 1 11 President's various objetions. Ile begins these objectibus with th very first' lines i of pc bill,whieh declar s that all persons born in the United Stats,and not subject, to any foreign power, e cept Indians not! taxed, are citizens of tl c United States. l The bill originally int educed ' , did not' ~ containn and many •ot ers, thatthisl provision. It was believed by myself all na. Live-born, persons, sine the abol ition of slavery,wers citizens of he United States. This was the official op aion of Mr.Batei, the Attorney-General I d Mr. Lincoln's administration—the o inion adopted by 1 his administration, l and acted upon since by all departments of tie executive gov- , ernment,itieludin,g the secretary of'State, who)has issued .passports to 'persons of color, recognising the as citizens. It was the opinion expresr ed by Mr. Marcy, when Seore4ary of Stat , that all persons born in the United States were citizens of . the United (.States ; not referring,of course, to slaves, slavery at that time existing int the countr The President does not object to this deelaration; in the bill Ss unconstitutional fld thins,`,.towever,sa that it does not! purport tor declare or confer tiny other) right of citizenship th n federal citize n_ -ship. It does not , urt z r,rt-, e sa y s , !to giT? thoto set - o ' persons any status at -4-Witlri 'of states, xcept that which .inay result; from their status as citizens of the 'United Stites. he power, he adds, to confer the' right of tate citizenship is just as exclusively with the several states as the,posies tei decla)le:the right of fede ral citizenshikis' with Congress. - WHO MAT 31116 E CITIZENS. • Now ire all know that no State has the authority to make a citizen of the I United States. Tho Constitution of the! United States 'vests with Congress the sole power of naturalization, and it may . make a citizen of a foreigner; but no state capt make a of izen of the United StFteS ofla foreigner.} But, is it true, sir, -flint' when a"person ecomes a citizen of the United States, he is not also a citizen of the state where he may be residing ?I On this point I Will refer to a decision prenoupeed by the Supre.ine Court of the( United St4tes, delivered by Chief Justice ! , Marshall the most eminent jurist who 1 ever satti port the American bench. Inl the casejof Gasse aghitast Ballew,reportedi in the sixth volume i of Peters' Reports, l the ChiOfJustice,in elivering the Opinion of.the Court, .Says "The: defoodent in :•errorislolleged - in he preeddino's to be ,i a c iti z e n of the Uni ed Stales, naturalized in Louilana, and re icing there. This is 1 equivalent to an a l erinent that he is a citizen bf that state. A citizen of the . United !Stateibesitng in any state of the Union s a citizen f that state" This was the only point in the case This is the opiinon of the ighest tribunal in the Country, pronounce by the most eminent man, Who ever sa upon the beadh in ' letnertla. , ;,. Mr-Reverdy Joh give the page Mr4Trumbull—Page 761. But, sir, unless4his authority is to be disregarded, i the 14esident of the United ;States is, mistaken in his law. It is not true that when a man is made a citizen of the United Staten he is not a citizen of every state ' The President next alleges that the righ t :of federal citizenship, thus to be conferred on the several exepted races before men. gonad, is now for the first time proposed to bil?ivon-- by Iw. Now, sir, this is a a l inist 4 ko—not ofthe law, but a tnisapprO r hension of fact-Hand it will appear by references, to which I shall call the mi• tention of the Senate in a ixioment, that the President's:lets are as bad as his law. i t -, ICOLLECTIV NATURALIZATION." 1 , If the sena+ from Maryland (Mr. i - srolitison) wishes to take a note of the :r 'authority, he w i ll find it in Lawrence's Wheaton on In ernational Law, and this riot's statutes o the United States on this ~• ent i tle:it. I reapfrom page MT. • There have been in-the United States several I - by cases of collective naturalization the 1 , ~ annexation of territories,. By the thin article of the First Convention of Airi, 30,, 18,00, with France, for the oessat,Loi •i ' I Louisana, it is provided that the inhabit ante of the cedeti.territeries ..io.be„iucer porated'into the United States should be admitted as soon les possible, according to •the principles of tie federal Constitution, to tbe . ,enjoyrnent et Hie lights, priiileges and iMinunities lof the' citizens of the A, Unitedl States pro Vision to the same effect.is to be found in the sixth articl• of the treaty withSpaiti for the purchase of Florida, and inithe eighth article of the treaty of 184.8 wit h Ali l ook also,by the j annexation of 'T 'ass!, in der a resolution of Congress of 111 arcl4 845, on its ad mission into'the flied On an equal foot. I ing with other stafes..l'COleetive natnrali- zationP says tbelauthority from which I I • quote,l."may also take. place of a class of persons native ofd, the cnuntry," or other wise, irho, without any act on the part of ' the individuals; ray be made citizens. - In the United i States it is incorrect to suppoie that aliens,as oposed to citizens implils foreignCrs; •As 'respects the country, Indirnq are the snbjects of the United States, but they are not therefore citizens nor canlthey become citizens un der the existio4naturaiization laws ; but they can be made citizens by some com pqten act of the gcneral government, by 3 1, treat or otheririse. By these various treats, resolutibus, and acts of Congress it wil hc•obserVed thatlFrenchmen,Span iards,illexicans and. Indians have all been made {citizens of the United States--some of the very clasees 1 f persons spoken of in this bill, and yet the President tells us that this right of federal citizenship—as if there was rid a j thing as federal citizenship as entre- istinguished •from statejoitizenship—is ntfr for the firs time propesed to be given by law. 1' 1 . 4 !' A HEC.AATORY 3 ACT. T I I If,, the Preside t, as i. 9 claimed by I,wany persons, Jail who are native horn are !already, by virtue •of the Constitutitm, 'citizens of the gaited States, the Pssage r li of the pending !bill ca not be necessary to Make them ,su ch. i Vitt; is the President to' learn . now fir the first time that princt. ple tb be found in' the very horn books of the lnw, that an act dI cluing what a law is, is one of the most common acts passed by legislative bodies.? When there is no { ques l tion as to lwhat t e lavi is, for their { greater certainty, it i the most common thing in thing in the world to pass a statute declaring its object. 1.5.1 y opinion is, and B°o was the! opinio of the Attorney General and of the ; present Secretary of. State, which waslttie I pinion of i‘tr. Lin colols adminislratiou inall its; departments and such I believe it. 3 be the - prevailing oplaion in the United! States : - Bat some dispute this :lhenct,43Fgreater certainty It ii, propesethez• - passl this law. lit is now made arl!'objeOtion to the passage { of of this lei?, reason giv en : by the President why he cannot approve it, that, it is a declaratory aet. THE .OBJECTION` TR T I ET;EVENi STATES , : • ARE TINREH.ERNTE4. ! '`. But if such, is not th e law, says the PreSident,a grave qUeston presents itself Whether, when eleveu of the thirty-six states are unrepreseqted in CongreS, at the present time, its is scnnd poli cy to make our entire coicired poptilation,and all' • other excepted cltes, citizens of the I • United States. Th . •is not a standing i ts not • objection, it yi not urged it seerne,against all bills; for" the P r esident tells us in this message that he ha s' signed some forty bills that have been presented to him.-,--- Why is it mede an { ebjeetion to this bill ? The President states no objections aa•ap plicable{to this ,particulerl bill. It ie a 1 general objection w, 16h l he makes.appli eable to all bills. I.3fit !if there is any-1 thing in it, no bill can pass the Congress of the UnitediStates Until these states are I represented Weill ? sir, whose fault is it (the eleven !state's are net represented.? ! Whose fault is: 4 that twenty-five loyal states,which have stood byt the .Union and Ithe•Constitution,; etre to be deprived of ! their right to legislate? Sir it is not the fault of theitwenty[five.loYal states,and if the reason urged by the President is a good one new, it has been a good one for all time. If the fat of some states having rebelled ageinst O b government is to take from the gi)vern'm ,tit,, the right to legis. !late, why, sir, then the criminal is to take i lekhrantagelof big .riille, and, the innocent are to be Punishei • for the g uilt y. I THEPEAC 31 PROCLAMATION. '.E" THE UNITED Within 'a fewidays the President has lissued a pr j oelaniaNion, not of peace, as the Senator from Nerlada (Mr. Stewart) seems to suppose ; by a l o means. Not a proc [halation that thelrebellion is ovei.i . The ,President ! does not tell us that Teias,oiie of the states in re)ellion, is in a condition to be represeeted here. Sir,if we ;had to wait tor t ai: , elevcn states, must we not wait for Texas ? The same principle would recuire asl• to wait for Texas, and she has nut yet' recognized' her state gov ernmenti And these states which have reorganized havd not yet been recognized as having a repubiican form of government entitling them to representatives. The representatives hey have chosen from i the mostl of tho e states that have under taken tolreorgartize are persons fresh from the rebel Congr6s and from the rebel ar r my, men whO could not be admitted here could not tae the requisite oath to entitle. them to L thair seats. And; are we to waiyand to abstain from all legislation of a general eh ratter, are the loyal peo ple of this cot obecompelled to wait for necessary ,egiSltion,until these states shallbd admittid to representation here-- when they refiiieo to send men here except those whose handsare dripping with the a h d l e o n o t d o e f f t loyal e t in e e l si p r .n f A e d r e e ra t e h y e a v n i d e e h i p g r e e o s i i -- 11 leegrie l t one oflthe Isenators in the rebel l t Cong ress, the loyal p t e o o p e l b e m o e f h ere thi acid uiry F legislate al e she e 1 , eon—will:the Senator ME men who organised the rebelgovernment that carried on al four year's war, as the result of which' this nation has bad to spend four thousand millions of dollars, and as a consequence of whieh, Morelban a (limner of a million of men--patriotie heroes—have laid down their lives upon the battlefield, and in the hospital—are these men to come here to legislate for the loyal people of this country ? • HOW STATEV ATM "BEVRESENTED 'IN CONGRESS. Sir,these states can only be represented through state organizations. The mem• bets of this body can only be elected by state legislatures. Members of the other Muse can only be elected in pursuance otstate laws. Hence, -as preliminary to any representation in either House of Congress, it must be determitied whether there is a state government; whether there is' a state legislature haying author ity to elect senators,and having ahthority to provide laws under which' represents. tires may be elected. Thero was a time certainly, when there was nb such legis lature in any of the eleven states. Thre was a time whey the only kind of gov ernment in any of them was hostile to the United i States, and hail sworn allegi ance to a goivernment hostile to this. Will anybody prptend that while a'state gov ernment was in their hands .it was en titled to representation in either House of Congress ? If not, shall we not inquire whether it has got out of those hands into the hands of loyal men ? Sir, the proposition that no bill is to be passed because certain states are unrep-, resented, when it is their own fault that they are unrepresented, would be utterly destructive of the government. T E BILL DOES:NOT:DISCRIMINATE. But the President tells us that the bill in eect proposes to discriminate against large numbers of intelligent; worth and pNriotic foreigners, and in favor of the Mr. ...T..rumbull:Procsedcd to shoe th!t novo. I the bill on tiie contrary, provided against discriminating or partial legislation, that being its special object. Fle,,added: AN INTERESTING Var.4TION But, Mr. President, perhaps the best answer to this objection, that the i.;gl r ° posesto make citizens of Chinese add gypsies, and this reference to foreigner's, is to be found in. speech delivered in this body by a senator occupyina, I thiok,the scat now occupied across the chamber by my friend from Oregon (Mr. Williams) less than six years ago, in reply, to a veto message sent to this body by Mr. Buchanan the then President of the United States, returning with his objections what was knoWn as •the Homestead bill. On that -occasion the senator to whom I allude said "This ide4 of poor foreigners,somehow or other,appears to haunt the imagination of a great many. lam constrained to say that I look upon this objection to the bill as a mere quibble on the part of the Pres ident, and as being hard pressed for some excuse for withholding his approval of the measure. His allusion to the fur. signers in this connection looks to me wore like ad captandum of the mere politician or demagogue than p grave and sound reason to be offered by the Presi dent of United States) in a veto mes sage. upon so important a imeasure as the Homestead bill." That is the language of Senator Andrew Johnson. [Laughter.] It is perhaps the best answer, though I should hardly have ventured to use such harsh language in reference to the president of the United States, as to accuse-him of quibbling and demagoguin6 , and playing the mere poli tician in sending a v::to message to the Conress of the United States. The President also makes some other allusions of the same character tb this bill.; for in stance, he speaks of the impropriety of marriages between whites and blacks •,1 he then goes on to say : "I j don't say that this bill repeals state laws on the subject of marriages." Well, then,for what pur pose is the suggestion introduced in the veto message? Not • surely as au ad capandion, argument, to excite preju dices, or as the argument of a demagogue and politician? THE PRESIDENT'S VETO AND TILEPRESI • • - DENT'S ACTS. The President: further says : "If it be granted that Congress can repeal all state laws discriminating between the whites and the blacks on the subjects covered by this bill, why it may be asked, may not Congress repeal in the same _way all state laws discriminating between the two races on the subjects of suffrage and office ? If Congress can declare by law who shall hold land who shall testify,who shall have capacity to make a oodtfact in a state, then Congress than also by law de clare who, without regard to race or color shall have the right ;to sit as a juror or as judge, to hold any Office, 'and finally,to vote in every state and territory of the United States." Perhaps the best an swer, Mr. President, I could) give to this would he the answer of Andrew Johnson himself. He undertook to recfrganize state governments in the disloyal states. When he did so, to whom did he extend the right of suffrage ? To the? No, sir. But he extended the right f suffrage to those authorized to vote under the laws of the states before the rebellion When urged to allow the loyal blacks to vote, what was his answer ? That he had no power ; that it was unconstitutiopal.— But he had power to protect them in their v ial rights, and'he did protect them. in their rights. Then, if it be itrne that' protection in civil rights carries with it the right f 1 inffrage i vrhat becomes of the position he assumed irtit'i'lltreiterided rights to the negro all through the south, as I shall presently show, by orders issued by his authority, and yet refused to give them the right of suffrage on the ground that he bad no oonstitutionol power to.do it—that it was a right vested in the states with whioli he could not interfere. But, sir; the"grant of civil rights does not, and never did, in this country, carry with it political rights,oi more properly speaking, political privileges. A man may i be a citizen of this country without the right to vote, or without the right to hold office. * * * i* The right of American citizenship means something. It does not mean in the case of a foreigner that when he is natur alised he is to be left to the mercy of state` legislators. He has a right, when duly natulized, to go• into any state of the Unite d States, and submitting to its laws, reside there, and the United States would protect him in that right. It would protect a tizen of the United States not only in o neof the states of the Ucion,but it will protect him in foreign lands. * * - Equality of right is thebasis of the com monwealth,as is said by Kent himself. In speaking of there rights, he says that the natural rights of individuals maybe said to be included in the right of personal securit.3l, the right of personal liberty,and the right to acquire and enjoy property. These rights have mostly been considered and frequently declared by the people of this country, to be natural,ioherent and inalienable. This government which would go to war to protect its meanest citizen or in habitant in any forei g n land,whose rights were unjustly encro a ched upon, has cer tainly some power to protect its pwn citi zens in their own country. VIE SECOND SECTION or THE CIVIL RIGLITS BILL I pass from the consideration of this first section of tbebill to the is objected to by the President as rfford log discriminating protection to the col ored persons. Mr. Trumbull rcad,the section, and re marked that it was plainly a remedial measure, whose object and 'effect was only to place all men upon the same level, as to certain rights. T OE JIIDOEB---.AN TAUT PRECEDENT Bat ; 1 4 said tbat,urider this provision judges of the ?Puri may be punished,and ministerial officers may be punished, who arc engaged in the exseution of any such statute as this,and t hi,,,j a m,..?de an Objection to the law. I assert that be ministerial officer and the judge, if he sae v;:dou, Bl Y and corruptly'in the execution of at: 1;?- gal law, may and ought to be punished, and it is no novel prevision to put in a statute book. Very soon after theorgani. cation of this government,in the first year of its existence, asjlong ago as 1790, the Congress of the United States provided for punishing men, who, under the color of State laws,violated the laws of the United States. I will read from the 26th section of an act passed in 1790: "In case any person or persons shall sue for or prose cute any such writ or process, such per son or persons, and all attorneys and so licitors prosecuting in such case, and all officers executing any such writ or pro cess and being convicted thereof, shall be deemed violators of the laws of nations and disturbers of the public repose, and shall be imprisoned not exceeding three years or fined $l,OOO, at the discretion of the court." Mr. Trumbull went on to 'show,,by the President's own acts and those of his au thorized and special agents, that they had seen and recognized the dangers and in justice against :which the Civil Rights bill is intended to provide. He showed that this bill only sought to regulate by civil power what the President had,in nu merous instances done and was doing by military arm, raid on his own responsi bility, without authority or right, except that of force'. He showed that the de tails of the bill were copied from the Fu gitive Slave law, whose machinery was always held to be constitutional ; that the seventh and eighth sections objected to by the President, were taken literally from old statutes, which had never before been object 4 to ; and, this done, he re viewed the course of the President, and showed that on almost every 'Occasion he had acted in the spirit of the very bill which he now vetoes. THE PREEIDENTS GELATION TO THE BILL Mr. Trumbnli made the following ex traordinary statement : Congress in the passage of the bill under coosideration, sought no controversy with the President. So far from it, the bill was proposed ;with a view to carry out what men supposed to be the views of the, President,and was submitted to - hfu3 before its introduction into the Senate. I am about to relate private declarations of the" President,but it is right that the American people should know that the controversy which exists between him and Congres in reference to this measure is of his own seeking. ' Soon after Congress met it became ap , parent that there was a cliffereueo of opinion between the President and some. members of Congress in regard to Ithe coo• dition of the rebellious states and the rights to be secured to freedmen. The President in his annual, message ' had denied the constitutional power of the general ov-, ernment to extend the l eleotive franc, ' so negroes, but he was equally deal his` aiseitititi Of:the: rigbt 'of every 'malt to life,liberthand the pursuit of happiness: I This•was hia hinging° . "But, while I have no doubt that now after die close of the war, it is not competent for the ,general government to extend the elective frau= chise in the . several `states, it is eqnally clear that good faith requires the eeclirity of the -freedmen - in-theiii liberty and their property." • Feeling the importance of harmontons action between the' different , departmenta of the government, and an anxious desire to sustain the 'President for whom I I liad always entertained, the highest respect, I , had frequent interviews with him , during the early part. of the !session. -1 1 7ithont mentioning anything said by him, I may with Perfect propriety_ say that acting from Considerations which I have stated, and believing that the passage of a law by Cdngress, securing , equality in civil ) rights when denied by state authoritiesl to freedmen and all other inhabitants ofl the United Statesiwonld •do intieh to re- Nei° anxiety in the North, to induce the southern states to secure' these ,rights by their own action, and thereby tco remove many of the `obstacles-to, an early recon structiun, I prepared the bill substantially as it.new returns with the Presiden't ob jections. After the bill was introduced and printed, a copy was furbished him, and at a subsefinent period, when it was reported that he was hesitating about signing the _Freedmen's Bureau bill he was infornied•of the conditten of the . Civil Rights bill then pending,in the bouse,and a hope was expressed that if be bad any objections to any of its provisions, he would wake them known to its friends, that they might be remedied if ,not de structive to the measure _; that there was believed to be no disposition on the part of Cong ress , and certainly bone on my part tohave bills presented to him which he could not approve. He never indicated to me, nor so far as Iknow, to any of its friends, the least objection •to any of Ithe provisions of the ! bill 'till after its pass'age. i• After reciting various actsiof the Pres ident in the Southrii States, Dir. Trum- bull said : • , J , Is it Congress, by [the' Ipassing of this bill, or the Preside6t] . who without laws is arrogating to hiLself far greater pow ; ers by virtue of his War pellet. f He told us in his annual message thati the war was over, and whether over' or not, no in. cidental powers ,are vested by the Consti tution in the President either as President or commander-in-chief of the army. The instrument gives Congress power to make all laws, necessary and, proper for carrying into execution 11 powers vested by the Constitution in the government of the United States, br in any department or officer thereof. The President is required i n eerying out his powers to act in obe dience to law, the ver,y thing which he refuses to do. 1 i I Finally, Mr. Tru',D.bull said 1 But, sir, from out of the Month ;of Senator' Andrew Johnson I will prove 1 that President Andrew JOhosott has violated the spirit of the Constitution, if not. the letter, in vetoing Orli bill. it will be remembered that the bill passed i both Houses of Congress by nrre than a two thirds majority', the Vote in the Sen ate being, yeas 33 to nays 12 ; in the Roue, yeas Ill; Days 38. I will read from the remarks of !Senator Andrew Johnson on 'the veto \ of that Homestead bill by Mr. Buchanan ; I ' • "The President of the 'United States presumel3—yes, sir, I say , presumes—to dictate to the' tnerican people and to the two Houses of Congress, in violation of the spirit, if not the letter, of the Consti tution, that this measnreshall not become a law. Why do I say this ? I ask, is there any difference in the spirit of the Constitution, whethe l r a measure is sanc tioned by a two-thirds vote before its passage or afterward ? , When a measure has ben vetoed by the President, .the COnstitution requires that it shall be re considered and passedbya two!thirds vote in order to become a law. But here, in the teeth of the Executive, there was a two thirds vote in favor of this bill. The vote Was thirty-six to trio, in this body. ' The two houses have said that this meas. I are is constitutional and right. In the.', other House, reflecting the popular senti ment of the nation, the vote was 112 to sl—ten more than the twe.thirds majority vrhiei the Constitution' requirei ; and when'there is a two-thirds vote for a measure, I say it is against the• spirit of the Constitution for the E;eentive , to say, "No, you shall not hatet, is measure ; I will take all the chances of restoring it." Apply the language to the facts con nected with thist bill, and then say who has violated the spirit of the Constitution. , 1 AT I. H. J. J OLMSTED'S , , STORE can alictrys be found the best o 6boking, Box and Parlor STONES Also, TIN and SHEET-IRON WARE, POTS, KETTLES, SPIDERS; SfIOTCHI BOWLS, FRYING-PANS, SAP-PANS; and CAULD RONS.. Also,l Agricultural Implements. suah as PL OWS, SCRA.PERS, CULTIVA TORS,L CO N-SHELLERS, HORSE-RAKES, DOG-POW RS,. Sce; L-, • - ' IS WO ll‹. I 1 is well made and' the material good. Good and substantial EAVES-TROUGHS put np in any part of the Cohnty—Terms easy. Ready Pay of all kinds, including- Cas, seldom refused. - , Stbre on ?[sift Street opposite : the Old Court House, Coudersport. ! Aug. 1, 1863.-50 P. A. Stebbins & 'Co. - ARE A.CIENTS for the sale of WHEELER WILSON'S SE WiNO MACHINES for Potter County .use ded IPNESS gOLLECF. Noitli east Comd Tenth And Ches*Lt Street, Pl-11.E,ADELPHIA. TheThe.mnet - etentadt enh & thoroughly appointed Bud, nests dr Commercial College to the country. The only ondin thd city possessing a Legislative Charter, and the onljolie in the United §tates Imagr lied to confer Degrees'elmerit. Ciplotnas asvanh.d to graduates in the Comtffit lal Coarse Under its tor• porate seal by authority aviw. :Conducted by gentlemen of liberal education and extensive experience in busineM, and - Wording ant quailed advantages for the thorough theoretical and practical education of yOung rn' wforthe various du. ties and employments of busmelinife. 4:40 1 THEORY AND PRACTICr.'COMBINED • by a system of ACTUAL BUSINESS TRiOtING original and pre-eminently practical, grin?"-the dent in the shortest time a complete ineighelitto the routine, details, =stoma and forms of busineg in general.- as conducted in the best-regulated corMit<- cial and ilnancial establishments. . . THEORETICAL BOOK-KEEPING Upon a new plan. with en original exposition of the s c ience o f a mounts, arranged and p ub L i 'bed.bY the proprletorof this Institution exctusively forlis own' nee,saving one-half the ordinary labor of the student, an giving him a complete knowledge of the prank e of the best acconntants. THE COMMERCIAL COURSE IMIEII3 Book-keeping, Commercial Arithmetic, Pm mans*, Business Correspondence, Com mercial Lary, Lectures on Business ' Affizirs, Commercial Customs, Forms, and Actual _Vital suss Practice. SPECIAL BRANCHES.! Algebra and the Higher lliathematies, Phono graphy, Ornamental Penman4hip, the Art of IDetecliug Counterfeit Honey, Engineering, Surveying, Zravigatiltn and Telegraphing. TELEGRAPHING. Te arrangements for Telegraphing are far in ad vance of anything of the kind ever offered to tho pub lie. A regular Telegraph Line is connected with the Institution with twenty branch offices in various parts of the sty, where, pmbliclusiness is transacted, and in which students*of this Institution are permitted to practice. No regnlnr office prartiee con be had in any other school of instruction In the country, without which no one can obtain a position as ;a practical op. orator.: Young men arc cautioned against the decep. tine reprelentations of those who, without any such facilities, pretend to teach Telegraphing. PATRONAGE. Tbls Instant= is now enjoying. thelirgest palm age ever bestowed upon any commercial schoo4 In the State. Over five hundred slatterns - were In attend. once first year, and over seven hundred during the past year. The best class of eindents may Imre. nobly be found here, and all Its associations ore flat class. LOCATION AND ACCOMMODATIONS. The Institution is located in the moat central part of the city, and ita accoremocations, for extent, ele ganco and convenience, are unsurpaseed. All the rooms have been fitted up in the vere best style with Business Offices or Counting louses, Telegraph Offices, Stationery Store, and a regular DANK OF •DEPOSIT AND ISSUE supplied with finely-eniraved lithozraphic note" used no it circulating medium in . the Deportnumt Actual Business. TO YOWLS RIES who desire the very beet facilities for a Practical Education for Business, we guarantee a come or instruction no where else to be equalled, 'while the reputation and standing of the .Institation among business men make ita endorsement the hest pataport to BUCCOPS and advancement. Sll contemplatimt entering any Commercial College, are invited to send for nn ILLUSTRATED CIRCULAR & CATALOGUE containing complete interior view's of the College, end fall partizuhrs of the course. of inatraelico terms, &e. L. FAIRBANKS, A.M., Praidn►). T. E. MERCHANT, Supt. of Od FouTZ s orso and Catty Powtim. TER HEAVE COUGHS, DI TEMPER, F VERS, FOUNI/1 LOSS OF All TITE AND VIT. ENERGY, /cc.. use improves wind, Mery the appetite-•gi a smooth glossy skin—t transforms t miserable Mob horse. To keepers of Cows this preparation islinyalnalga the au"" ' '' ad i• ^roves Ithe walk, milk. It Ms proven by sr ' In aU diseases of Swine, such as Coughs, Marl% the Lungs, Liver,. Ikc., this article ..‘ A , -It. , •r• - •,.. acts 215 a specifier. • • ,:, . . 4 4( By platting 'from one-half a paper --- . - -to a paper In a .._,_ ii.. barrel of swill - the --_,_-_- 1..„, .._-_-_--- aboye'diseases 47 ' ----, will be eradicated "----"..-..-_--, .------ „.____=-__ or entirely prevented. If given in time, a creel preventive and 'care for the EfOd Cholera. Price 25 Cents per Paper, or 5 Paper, for $1 O PREPA./1311) BY * ..,/ S. A.. vourrz. & 13 - xto.,* ,- 1 AT TH:ETEI • WHOLESALE DHEO AN IGTHE BEM No. 118 Fr anklin ank li n St., Baltitnore; Id, For Sale by Druggists and Storekeepers Ozone/ lout tho United States. .-- r-- Sold by P, A. ,STEBBINS & CO.,Couderl ort, Pa._ LOI3 can't belieTe - vbat One BARGA SS are to be bad at 01,31STED'9. • Dr A FRENCH's . . CELEBRATED TONIC BITTERS RE becoming- the most, poplar %IWO in circnlation for the ewe of LIVER. COMPLAINT, DTSPEPTA TAUS' DICE, DEBISITY OF THE NEP,VOCS SYSTEM, and WEAKNESS of the STOEACH and DIGESTIVE ORGANS. It is also gaininr , a great repntatiou is th'? CURE of DIPTHERIA. Principal Office, Coudersport, Potter Co., DI OATS :WANTED CIE • Eilelest Coat Prtoei '4lll bo paid tor a A eand 13nehels of Oran, dellvered nt the Bto:‘ the einclerstued to Milittort, COlff" .4 DilltporS Aev. lth 184 , n ce Rhinar. I rsovl4nilapd This preparation, gag asai brocably stnwrs, will Sher- Inghly reitreigerater rote:l-down ad ,w-spirited Corset, e . strengthening. id cleansing the ,osis.ch and iaki- Ines. It Is s she IF( fr .entive of 111 db. cues incident is _ tcrease the Bean• of milk and twenty Per and nuke the ter fir= VA . In fattening , it giree them )petite,lootett hide'. la ..rm
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers