SATURDAY, APRIL 18, 1881
CHICAGO WILL APPROVE IT*
Sufficient time Ms elapsed since the
poKoyof the Administration was develop
ed toenabla ns, by an examination of our
exchange* from, all quarters of the coun
try, to judge of its effect; and wq|j£figUd;
to say that the response to it is, save here''
and there a fewsemi-Beceaslon growls from
journals like the Chicago Timet, such as
will encourage every friend of law and
order to believe that the firing of the-first
gun will make the people of the v entire
North an unit in support of tbeQov'em
jncnt. as it is. JtjgJit
' herein Chicago, a little gang of Southern
sympathisers are endeavoring to make
head against the true Union men., By an;
intrigue, the ; objectof which is apparent,
they have put a ticket into the field to be
supported at our municipal election,
on Tuesday next, in opposition to the tick
et which will be organized by the
friends of the Administration. - If It is
elected, there will be sent out to-every
4Smp oT the Secesaioiastej the ill news that
Chicago, near the.home of the President,
the principal city of ids State and the ob
ject of his pride, has repudiated him and
his policy, and that the true ’ course for the
traitors is to persevere in their treason, and
bring the free States to bur acceptance of
their disgraceful terms. "With the excep
tion that Chicago furnishes, every North
ern commercial city, including the better
part of New York, is wheeling ; snto line
and patriotically preparing to sustain, by
word and deed, every legal act of the Fed
‘ eral power. The President is daily and
hourly in receipt of words of encourage
ment and hope from those who most earn
estly opposed his election, but who now see
that the only course left for them is to
strengthen his hands in his contest with
the rebels who aim to overthrow all au
thority and establish an oligarchy on the
ruins of the Republic. From Boston, New
York, Philadelphia, Cincinnati, Buffalo,
Cleveland, Milwaukee, we hear but .one
verdict upon the necessity and righteous
ness of the President’s acts, and but one
determination, and that is to stand by him
and the Constitution to the last We are
sure that the men who have hoped to send
to Washington another report of the state
of public sentiment in Chicago, will be
bdrely disappointed on Tuesday next.
Tueir plot, though so ingeniously framed
as to draw a few hundred Republicans into
it, will fall to the ground. Forlhafc sort of
devotion-to the Union for which the Chi
cago Times is distinguished, the people of
Chicago have no stomach. They are f-r
sustaining the Government, and will say
so at the polls, by voting the ticket com*
posed solely of the Government’s friends.
IS MB. BRIAN ELEGIBLEI
To determine this question, it is only
necessary to inquire, first, what are the le
gal qualifications for the office of Mayor,
and second, whether Mr. Biyan answers
the requirements of the statute.
X, The qualifications of candidates for
■ office in Chicago, are set forth in sections
10 and 13 of chapter H of the city charter.
The former section is as follows;
“ All citizens of the United States, qualified to
vote at any election held under this act, shall be
qualified to hold any office created by this act, but
no person shall beclegibletoany office or place un
der this or any other act in relat on to said city, who
is now, or who heretofore may be a defaulter to
said c : ty,'or to the State of Illinois, or any county
thereof,” etc.
The qualifications for holding office being
the same as the qualifications for voting, let
ns inquire what the 13th section prescribes
in that particular. This section is in the
following words:
“ No person shall be entitled to vote at any elec
tion under this act, who is not entitled to vote at
State elections, and hat not been a resident of said
oily at lea c t six months next preceding the election ;
he shall, moreover, be an actual resident of the
Ward in which he votes, for ten days previous to
the election, and if required by any person quali
fied to vote thereat, shall take the following oath
before he is permitted; Provided, that the voter
■hall be deemed a resident of the ward in which
he is accustomed to lodge: .
“‘ls wear (or affirm) that I am of the ag f of twen
ty-one years, that I am a ci.lzen of the United
Status, (or was a resident of this State at the adop
tion of t e Constitution), and Acts been a resident
Of this city six months immediately preceding this
election , and I am now, and have been lor ten days
last past, a rcrident of this ward, and have not
yoted at this elecdon.’ ”
It appears then that no person can be
elected to the office of Mayor, or any other
place in the city government, next Tues
day, who has not been a resident of the
city since the 16th day of October last
The election law of the - last Legislature
providing the term of sixty days to consti
tute the residence of a voter, specially ex
cluded elections held under the charters of
cities and incorporated towns. That act
is as follows; ;
Be it enacted by the people of the State Of Illinois
represented in the General Assembly,
Section 1. That to constitute residence under
the election laws of this State a person shall have
resided In the election precinct or district for the
term of eixiy diye, ana no person shall be entitled
to vote nt any election under the laws of this
State, (exec >tlngundercharters for cities or Incor
fiorated towns) shall have actually and
n good faith resided in the election precinct or
district la w„ich he' offers Us vote, for sixty days
immediately preceding such election, any law of
this Stute-to-the.contrary, notwithstanding.
The question arises whether Mr. Bryan
has been an actual resident of this city since
the 18th day of October last. The Chicago
. Timet, says that Mr. Biyan voted for Lin
*s coin. If go, he voted somewhere on the 6th
day cf-November.- Did he vote in Chi
cago, or in the town of Addison, Dupage
county? Of course he voted where he re
sided. He could ‘not have voted legally
anywhere else. The fact of- his having.
voted -in one place or the other is prima
fade of his residing at that time
In the one place or the other. We ask Mr.
Biyan to tell the people whether he voted,
here or in Dupage county—whether he has
resided in Chicago since the 16th day of
October, or not, Mr. Bryan is an honora
ble man, and his word will be taken by
, everybody as conclusive.
. It is generally supposed in Dupage that
Mi*. Bryan was a resident of the town of
Addison, or Cottage Hill, daring the whole
of last'eummer’and fall. If we mistake
not, he was' solicited 10, be a delegate to
the Republican Congressional Convention,
from Bupage courtly , in the interest of one
of tba candidates, and declined, not be
cause he was not entitled to represent Du- !
page county, but because he preferred not
'to take an active part in the contest. We
° are sure that Mr.' Biyan would not will
ingly become a candidate for the office of
Mayor of Chicago, if he were legally ineli
gible. Whether he can hold the office or,
not,’ even if elected next Tuesday, depends
upon his answer to the question whether
he has resided here since the 16th of
bef.l&O. If he has not, all votes cast for
him are void and of no effect
It maybe connection, whe
ther Mr. R, -M. Bough, who has constituted
himself a sort of Tycoon In municipal af
fairs, is entitled to vote next Tuesday. Has
hs been a resident of Chicago for six
months last past ? Where did he vote on
. the 6th of November ? He was a delegate
to the Decater Convention from: Dupage
County." He was sfiU later ja delegate to
the Joliet Senatorial Convention from Du
page County. Did hie change his residence
between that time mid the day of election
—or before the 16th, otOctober, iB6O ? We
are of- the opinion that he did not,
Amd that lie is jip /more entitled to
vote in this city this Spring, than ..he ,
t ‘ to vote In. Jeff: Dayia’s Confedetacyi
heard a good dealor nonsense in
• our State Conventions, about “Chicago
dictation.” No catchword iahalfeo potent
M the dictate to
J t the country.” ' But here is’ a of the
;: conntryuot only dictating to Chicago in
. her own exclusive election,; but actually
■ . bringing in the' candidates for whom we
■' *re permitted tovotei It appears to be a
’ V °° D * Ol ® an '
, '
erenSba&iCMeMaa.
ji ‘ Ais Jlr. BijaßSbd 2Bt Hijfigtt
rt MEt.'t'Sn >»i : V
sljwJi iu iiv “•■ V' .?-<
residents of Chicago under the provisions
of the charter, and entitled to vote and
hold office under the same? Let ns bare
the truth. Who answers ?
The Apparent Delay of Executive Ac«
tloa*»lnvtffOr«nus
matters in the Cab(nel<ATlit.NoHb*
; ,jra Attlee to aid the Crovernmeut
:.‘,wuh9t*n and Mooey^-Tiittnlßncit
THAT OLD BBOADSWOHD* Commissioners, etc,, etc, *
* - - ;V
> v -•W’.uaraercw, April®. lOL ,
L. It cannot be demed|that within thajast few
I weeks, nbt'bnly low raurmun, trat loudopm
.[plaints*.- at 1 the
&nd dllatoriaesa of
; policy In regard to the • Southern imbroglio,
had become audible In ell parte of the free
States. There were good and true Republicans
In every Northern State could,
not ucderetandthe meantog- of-the'seeming'
listlesenese and inertness- of the Administra
tion they had just helped lift into power.
Tfagre .were loyal men. of.jftU partiPft t -ghose
devotion to the TJnlon made chafe un
>der tee trusttoncpldents, that appeared tobe
L-the only guidance of administrative action.
| They ' had hoped, end prayed sver since
; the • momentous sixth of., November, that'
\ a fearless,- dutiful statesman was tp~be'
iat the helm of the ship -of ‘ State
I after the 4th of March, and hence were sorely
; grieved at their supposeddlfiappolntment.
! But the events of the last few days must have,
■ 1 convinced most skeptical among them,
that their, dissatisfaction and apprehension
were without Just cause. They must have
conveyed the evidence td;them that necessi
tous caution, and not Intentional supineness,
. at the bottom of the seeming “ masterly
inactivity” •of the Government. It had to
learn the extent and character of its resources;
before it could undertake to use them. It had
to purge both the civil and military service of
avowed and secret sympathizers with South
ern treason and rebellion: B efore‘ uhdertak
. lag, above all, to vindicate its duty
to liold and protect the Federal property, and
to uphold the supremacy of the Federal laws,
it had to .surround itself with men that were
riot likely to desert and betray it in the very
moment of need and danger. All this is. now
' done, and hence the real purposes of the Ad
ministration are now being revealed. As to
: thefrcharacter,the developments of every hour
go to show, father and lurther, that the fer
vent wishes of.all patriots are about being
realized, and that'ihe Federal authority will
be asserted and maintained at all hazards.
It is well known that various so-called con
servative Influences have been brought to bear
- ’upon the Administration since the inanima
tion, for the purpose of persuading it; into
. what has been designated as a “ peace-policy”
—that is, to stand either in the. fece of open
auu viiv sdvav* w
Once upon a tlme, whesq theddnee very
. woiiife® mid terrifically
dler General Shields cbj&enged the then
modest lawyer, AmuwfM to
fight ivsisttsl with
ed honor, bleeding like a highly vascular
stump after an amputation, might be scab
bed over, Mr. Lincoln quite unexpectedly
accepted the belligerent proposition of his
adversary, and, being mdeamed;in-tMiise
of the pistol, with which Shields was fa
mTlhgy spught; as Potter of Wisconsin did
twenty years later, to put Idiaseltqna foot
ing of equality with the man of war, by
choosing the weapons with which neither:
could boast any skill. He: named- breqd
swords. •Thc-plaoe of meeting agreed up
on was an uninhabited island in the Mis
sissippi, near Alton. The General and his
party were, as they supposed, early on the
ground \ but Mr. Lincoln was there before
them, and with cost off and broadsword in
hand* was chopping down.ahd clearing off
the noxious weeds and troublesome under
brush with which the spot was overgrown,
to the end that the fight might go fairly
on. This-coolness and the timely interpo
sition of triends put a stop to further pro
ceedings, and peace was restored.
The President of the United States is
now engagedinaundertakingwhich shows
that the basis of his character has not
changed with the lapse of years,! Entrust
ed by his countrymen with duties, the es
ecutionof which is as sacred as the for
mer obligation to defend his personal hon
or, he finds at the very outset of his official
career, that he and the Constitution , and
the laws are challenged by a : rebellious
and defiant party, and that there is no de
cent or safe escapte from the dreadful issue
that they have forced upon the Federal
power. - The, veil, which has hidden his
movements from the public is lifted at last,
and we see, joyfully enough, that during the
whole of the last month, with axe in hand
and shirt-sleeves tucked up, he has been
pwgfi.gp.d in laying low the foul growth’ with;
which the rich corruption of the Buchanan
Administration has filled all the places in
the and .that he Is now ready,
with the fire and courage of true patriot
ism in his eye, to accept the . alternative
which the traitors and rebels have forced
upon him. It is not too late for the wick
ed challenge to be withdrawn. We pray
that it maybe; and that the fraternal re
lations of old may be restored. But if the
issue is forced, and the fight is compelled,
let all traitors stand clear of the terrible
sweep of that broadsword—the power,
wealth, pride, courage, and patriotism of
twenty millions of free people—winch
Abraham Lincoln, the President of the
United States, now wields.
WHAT FOB-NET SATS.
We print an able article from the Phila
delphia Pros, Douglas’ organ.in Pennsyl
vania, in which the duty of all Northern
Democrats who are-not infected with the
secession virus, is set forth. We, dissent
from Mr. Forney’s opinion respecting the
patriotism of Mr. Douglas, but we are glad,
in this connection, that he has expressed
them; because they testify fhe sincerity of
his attachment to the Senator and his
cause. We commend what he says touch
ing the present necessity of supporting the
Government and rebuking the’ traitors, to
our friends, the Douglas men of Chicago.
and the Northwest.
'NEW PUBLICATIONS.
THE RISE OF THE BUTCH REPUBLIC; a
History. By John Lothkop Motley. In three
volumes. New York; Haepsh & Brothers.
Chicago; S. C. Gbiggb & Co., Nos. 39 ana 41
Lake Street.
In the reading of Air. -Motley’s histories,
with ns, the first has been last, but the pleas
ure and the profit have been none the less.
He has given ns in the three noble volumes be
fore ns a graphic and intensely interesting ac
count of one of the most unequal and de=per
ateyet successful, struggles of liberty against
the power and wiles of the tyrant, ever wit
nessed in the history of onr race-—a struggle
which must ever be memorable and glorious
in the annals of human freedom. The actors
in these scenes ate described with so much
clearness and accuracy that they stand out be
fore ns in all their hideous deformity, the min
ions of ghostly superstition and hateful tyran
ny; or clad In the robes of the patriot and
the statesman—the unyielding advocates,
of human liberty and ibe pure,ennobling doc
trines of the Prince of Peace. ;
The magnificent empire of Charles the Fifth
whose iron rule had been leagued with that of
the Pope to suppress and to bury out of sight
the principles of the reformation, had passed
peacefully into the hands of his son, Philip
the Second. William, Prince of Orange, then
a young man of twenty-two, was present at
the abdication, and Charles leaned upon his
shoulder while addressing the princes and the
nobles of the Empire. Worse than madness
would it have appeared for William, whose
estates were in all an insignificant territory
among the ‘morales of Holland, to attempt to
cope with the young Emperor before whose
power all the rest of Europe combined would
bean unequal match. And yet fighting as
they did, for civil and religions liberty, the
Dutch led by William, maintained the desper
ate contest for more than twenty years , tai,
Philip was glad to procure his death by the
hand of an assassin. -
At many periods .during the contest the
stubborn Calvinists seemed to be totally anni
hilated. As an example of the exterminating
warfare that was waged against them, take the
following paragraphs from pages 97-8, voL 2:
The Regent (Margaret, sister of Philip,) is- :
sned a fresh edict on the 24th .of May, (1567) I
to 'refreahthomemOrießof those who might I
have forgotten previous statutes, which were,
however, not' calculated to make men oblivi
ons. By th|a new proclamation all ministers
and teachers were sentenced to the gallows.
All parents or masters whose children or
servants had attended such meetings were>
sentenced to the gallows, while the children
and servants were- only to be beaten
with rods. All people 'who sang hymns !
at the burial of their relations, were sentenced |
to the gallows. Parents who allowed their I
nswly bom children to be baptized by other !
hands than those of the Catholic priest, were
sentenced to the gallows. The same punish
ment was denounced against the persons who
should christen the child, or act as spongers.
Schoolmasters who should teach any error or
false doctrine, I were likewise to be punished
with death., v/Those who Infringed the statutes
against the buying and selling of religious
books and songs, were to receive the same
doom, after the first pffence. All sneers and
insults against priests and ecclesiastic*, were
also made capital crimes. ; * ♦ In all cases,
confiscation of the whole property was added
to tbahanging., u - s -• - t
This edict, says a contemporary historian,,
so increased the fear of those professing the
new-religfonj.thatfrtbey left the country “in
great heaps.' 1 It became necessary, therefore,
to issne a subsequent proclamation forbidding
all persons, whether foreigners or natives, to
leave the landor to take away their property,
and prohibiting all shipmasters, wagoners.
and .other agents of travel from - asdstirrgln”
the flight of such‘ fugitives, all upon pain of
death.
■ Yet will it be’credited that the edict of ;tha
24th of May, the provisions of which have Just
been sketched, actnaßy-cxcited-the wrath of
Philip on account qf iheir clemency /
Re was indignant that heretics had been, suf*
fered to hang who ought to-have been homed,
and that a few narrow l and almost impossible
loopholes bad been left through which-these :
who had offended might effect their escape. *
It Isscareely credible when contemplating
the ‘freedom of religious opinions no w enjoy ed
in nearly.the jrhole civilized world, that such
an edictwas Issued in the most powerful em
pire of Europe, within the last three hundred
years. Sorely theworld has maderapld pro
gress. The prindples which the Dutch fought*
so long and so bravely to establish, have found •
a . wider scope, and, it is hoped, will achieve
e till nobler results on this side of the Atlantic. 1
In tracing thek: development input* own cohu-~
.try, it iscurious to: see how. those of -
,-free opinion‘ that .barsVuplrf-past centuries
among tiie motmtainspCGhersjsbJ, behind the
dikes of Holland, in tho glens of Scotland, or
the oeelnded valleys of England,have united,
in America; ; ■ the murky. residuum •. of old
civil - and. ecclesiastical despotisms that
rendered them'‘turbid,- has sunk out of
sight and the clesiybroad stream of, Christian
civlllzUibh Is here becoming; and
broader, giving life andyigor to that tree of
Ufe,whoseleaveß are for the healing of the.
nations. To Americanß, therefdre, the works
of MotiCThave a peculiar and; an Abiding in
terest, it is true that Irring has consigned
their descendants, (he! parly-Dutch settler*
of .New Xork/to ao vimuiQrtaUty of ridicule, -
bat (some future Motiey wU. win an : honored
?p c be fcthe :) tejm)le ; «ramei'..by-showing how
of .the
and_have-laid the foundations-bf 'American
freedom deep In the inalifnable rights of ■man*
I^o'American Can read the volumes'Of UoOcjp
a mom
-
, v Hi. U- ~z iX ii iA*V “ • - f '*
, -0; -J to/i« i.w
«"r •“ *
ecu wiSHiiiewit liETieb.
preparations on the most extensive scale for
an aggressive war upon the Federal Govern
ment to allow usurpation, violence of atrocity
unprecedented in the annals. of civilization to
stalk with impunity across the land—to sub
mit, like knaves, to the defiance and derision
of the arrant traitors. The advocates of such
a systematic display of Administration weak
ness and cowardice were mostly representa
tives of heavy national interests, Wall street
.magnates, dry-goods millionaires, and other
high priests atthe altar of the imperial dollar,
—“ fat, sleek-headed men that sleep o’nightß, >,:
whose gospel is the stock-list, and whose high
est ambition is to sell so many hundred thous
and dollars worth of wares per annum.
The fact that a prominent, if not the most
prominent,member of the cabinet shared their
views, gave rise to the fear that their propa
ganda right had an effect upon the mind of the
executive. But fortunately there, were earn
est, conscientious men of strong convictions
and a still stronger sense of duty, who lost no
time in counteracting their efforts and disa
busing the President of wrong impressions as
to the real sentiments and expectations of the
mass of the Northern people in reference to
the disunion question. Foremost among
these were Senators Fessenden, Snmner,
Wade, Chandler, Trumbull, Harlan, Doolittle,
Howe and Wilkinson, and Congressmen Frank
P. Blair, Colfax, Gurley, Lovejoy, the Wash
bnmes, Kelly of Pa., and many others. Sen
ator Wade and Frank Blair are especially
frank and outspoken in their intercourse with
the executive. To these exertions of these
representatives,of. the people it is due to a
large extent, that the President possesses that
confidence in the support of the people, with
out which he would hardly pursue his present
line ot rigorous action.
Mach idle talk has been indulged in of late
as to the relations of the President to the va
rious members of the Cabinet and those of the
members to one another. Some leading ones
have been for some time in. the habit of-dis
coursing upon an “ irrepressible conflict” that
is raging in the ministerial council, according
to their pretensions, bat nevertheless doubt
ful authority. , They keep Secretaries
Seward and* Cameron resigning at least
once each day. The truth is, that al
though a diversity of opinion pre
vails among the President's constitutional
advisers os to the best mode of meeting the
Southern question, the divergence of views
have os yet failed to manifest themselves with
anything like virulence, and that simply be-..
cause the Executive, although wont to solicit..
and consult the opinion of his counselors,
neariy always makes np ultimate decisions in
accordance with his own independent convic
tions.
The statement that the President shows any
partiality or preference in his intercourse with
the members of his Cabinet, is as unfounded
as the story of an open rupture between them.
It is, however, certain, on the other hand, that
the coincidence of his own views of Southern
matters is greater with those of Messrs., Chase
and Blair than with those of the Premier. -
. One of the most cheering signs of the'times
is the readiness and heartiness: with which the
people of the free States have responded to
the unmistakable symptoms of impending
executive action in connection with the South
ern forts. Verbal, telegraphic and epistolary
appeals have literally been showered upon the
President and the members of the Cabinet
since the ear of the North was first reached by
the supposed, sound of the war trumpet..
‘‘Standfirm;” “Don’t budge an inch“Don’t
yield anything}” “Themasses will back yon;”
etc., etc., is heard from ell sides. The hints
at the possibility of an attempt to reinforce
Fort Sumter evidently moved the heart of all
friends cf the Union with particular force.
Offers to .volunteer in relieving Major Ander
son have been: received from leading men of
all parties, in ell parts of the' country. Tens
of thousands of men would undoubtedly spring
to arms upon the first call for aid -in that glo
rious undertaking..
It is nowcertain that the visits to theTede
ral Capital c»f the Governors of the majority of
the Northern States during the last week, were
made ferihe purpose of consulting with the
Federal Executive as to the re-,
commending to the Legislatures of their re
spective States to "prepare to aid the National
Government in the execution of the laws.. AT
plan of concerted - action was agreed upon,
which is already partially revealed in the
special message of Gov. Curtin, advising .the
appropriation of money foe arming the, State.
This example will doubtlessly be followed in
all the free States. . -
The arrogant tone in which both secession
ists and intendodUnionmeh In Virginia have
lately, attempted to dict&ieapolicy to the Ad
ministration, has excited general disgust
among the Republicans.• The President told
the ’ voluntary CointaUteb, headed by John
Minor Bolts, on Saturday last, that he desired
peace, but would not violate his oath and ab
stain from fulfllliag his constitutional duties,
and the same answer awaits the Committee of
three expected to arrive here today.
The maimer of disposing of. the Southern
Commisalonersby Secretary Seward, confirms'
ali i predicted In a previous letter as to the
fate of their mission.- The': report that there
W&s a wit of armistice between the President,
and Secretary of State and the Cbttdn Am
bassadors, is an infamous by.
some hirelings of thopressat the instance cf
the Commissioners, for the purpose of -prgjn- -
dicingboth the North imd South against, the.
Administration—the former by the recogni
tion of'the revolutionaryahthorities it im
plied, and the Utter by the want of good faith
thatisnowcharged. Thcassertion thatthere,
-waa an understanding not to change, the mill
: lory status on both sides; becomes refreshingly •
impudent in the face of the uninterrupted
preparations for, aggressive war the rebels
nave been making.daring the earlierexistence!
oi' the alleged armistice. - -*
INFAMY OF A SODTHESJf SENATOR—AUpr>
respondeat of paper, from Mont
gomery, says that'a public functionary of the
. r the rebel governtaent declared that u while ho
was a Senator In the Federal Congress at
WashingU)n, lie earnestly dissuaded certain
southern'officers—navy officers—irom throw**
ing op their commissions hithe United Stat<»'
service, hoping .that commands would be as*
signed them,and thus apportion; of the naw
imght be roalnto southern ports.?, * ’
There isno functionary in any government.
of
duct’like this. This fellow, whoever ha was,
i&en sat, with Vsolemn oath m h&moatb to
- support the Constitution bf the Onited Slates,”
andyetcould not only cohßplrerwgh other
gehatbra-to,overthrow that Constitution, but*
could adviseofficereofVthe navy, to the moat
; -.’^hoodmble andthe s moßt infamous i
betrayalottheir trasta; In comparison with ■
• thlrdhe honor ofthlovca. Is Aiv.i
: respectahle. The Kingi
yonlda’t fetttt.ifatt man with onji
.i .UtUi XUi i'tvlS'jJ* -■
,-a.y r’
aai.‘Uel
FOBNET ON CIVIL WIB.
He Exhortr the Pemssylvnnluur tO;
Maud t»y the Government.
Wiaa^dTOK, -April 7,188 i. ■ •
At last a distinct iisue is presented to
the American people-—at lasVa broad line Is
to be drawn between the friends arid the fow
Of the country. The ead may be war, ft# <•
net war inevOdbls at' any rats f If the Got-'
Comment la to perish in any case, af least Ikttt"
-not go down without,am effort to precerrf it
on the part of Its.Teol friends. It fa nofcoaly
that the appeals, of men In my petition'hay A
been in vain, though answered, aaydu will per
ceive, by the last speeqMf C*mgiafl; in:
which he
gress had that the South
had any right to demand It is not only that
these appeals havebeen in vain, as
rto.tiu Houthemrconflplritdre, butth6-ScttiiAt
they have beenmide has givenxew courage
to these Who,
all offers bf donciliatibn asevidbriee Of cow
ardice, have, during such magnMimnns cuvni-..
Testations dr therAdmtalstratida and -the free
States, been increasing their preparatijms*
to destroy the Union, and to ruin hundreds
of thousands of men. While Douglas' gal
. lantiy testifies to the fact that there is no prac
tical canaefor se'cesslon ; —thtt every thingithat
has demanded by the. .Soritit has-been j
- yielded by - the- Republicans, arid approved
by a. Republican'President—Breckinridge, a
-Border-State leader, who professes to favor
' the Unions rejects the counsels ol thepatriotic.
‘S.enator from Illinois, sneers at the wholesome ;
legislation of the loist -Congress, insists' upon 4
■misconstruing President Ldncola’s Inaagriral,
and demands new guarantees if As and his Dis
union confederates are to return to or to re
main In the Union ! And what say the Dls*
unionists of .the Cotton States? While der
nonneing Lincoln and DOugias in the eau; ®
breath—classing them together‘ as alike rile--
loyaV treacherous and hostile— they refuse (6
accept the ultimatum of their own willing candi
date for Resident last year, and declare
forever put of the Union! “We will never'
come back to the Union,” says Howell Cobb; -
“ The idea of a reconstruction is impossible,”
says Davis. “We can have no..connection
with the Tree States,” says: Slidell; and this
chorus of contempt for the 'North and-the
Northwestis fittingly followed bylhe Charles
ton Mercury, which not only repudiates the
free Scutes, ae so many neats of foes, but insults
the Border .States, for daring'to think of rc*-
inainirig in the Union!
Such is the'temper in which the proffers of
peace are scouted by the Disunionista in both
sections of the South. But there is a blacker
page in this record. The Colton States insist',
upon capturing forts and stealing the property
ofthe whole people—and doing this, too, by
force of arms, and following it by military
preparations of the greatest magnitude; and
meanwhile, they demand that the Border
States shall insist that the Federal Govern
ment, so despised and harassed by the Disun
ionists, shall not protect itself from aanihila-.
tion; shall not even enforce the laws made
by tfae .Cotton States themselves, but shall pa
tiently.stand by and see the work of devasta
tion-arid-decay going on, without raising a
hand to savebur unhappy country. In other
words, the Secedere ask,’riay demand, <Aot the
Border States shall hold the Government, white
they are cutting out its heart and mutilating its
limbsl
To is game has been played long enough.
The men who have apologized to:; those who
shoo'd have apologized to them—who have
allowed themselves to be put in the attitude
of offenders by traitors with arms in their
hands—and whose earnest efforts to solve the
national troubles peacefully have all been
laughed at by these traitors—have now a duty
to perform to their country and to their Gov
ernment,
There is not a eympathizerwith Secession In
the free States who le not regarded as an ene
my by the conspirators, unless he breaks up
his home, and goes over to them to aid in the
destruction of the Republic. A Douglas
Democrat is in their eyes worse than an Abo
litionist, and a Republican is put beyond the
pale alike of penitence or of forgiveness. His
regrets are as insolently rejected, as his ap
peals for toleration in his own opinion*.
Where then are the men of the North to go?
What Is the duty of allour people? Clearly
to stand by the Govemmeiii,
President Lincoln audhis Cabinet, having
waited to see if there is any chance or pros
pect of a peaceable adjustment of the strife
that has lost us seven States of the Union, are
now forced to rescue the Government itself
from dissolution. It is not whether we shall
recall the Cotton States, or hold in the Border
States, or maintain the Capital at Washington,
but whether we shall have a vestige of a coun
try? Whether.our civilization is a fraud?
Our prosperity asham ? Our public credit a
counterfeit ? Our liberty a lie ? If Abraham
Lincoln were not pledged to do right io regard
to common interests, the gravity and import-'
auce of the obligations now resting upon him,
and demanding action—instant, resolute and
persevering action—would convert him into a
hero, or, if not fulfilled, cover him with an ig
nominy more lasting even than that which his
settled like an incurable plague upon the char
acter of his immediate predecessor, which has
blasted him living, and will make ■ him Immor
tally infamous, even when death hides his
form from the gaze of men, and removes him
from a nation he has ruined!.
What is the evidence of our .daily senses?
Disunion,, and Repudiation, and Secession,
having become formidable in the South, are
traveling like an epidemic into 'the free States /
The idea that Sou’nern treason may ba extend
fd into tbevfefy States it seeks • to cover with
lasting bankruptcy, is not only accepted, but
advocated, and I have no doubt that even in
Philadelphia, as in New York, secret associa
tions are formed dedicated to the crime of
covering secession with the shadow of great
Dimes, and looking directly to the betrayal of
the North into the hands of Jeff. Davis andhis
followers. The mock philanthropy that ex-us
es the Cotton Bta*es.in their revolt, is in hap
py accordance with the formation pf midnight
associations to make that revolt national. Tho
easy casuistry that d fends r-pudiation and
loobery is appro riately set off.-by that which
tells Pennsy Ivanla how much inor£ happy she
would be if wedded to the States guilty of this
dishonor. Is it not notorious that the Demo
cratic organization of Pennsylvania is at this
day in the hands of men who act in concert,
with those who have defaced our flag, expelled'
onr citizens, and plundered our, treasury, in
the South ? What are the calumnies upon Ml
who ore for the execution of the laws, as they
fall from the Ups of your recentßreckenrldge
leaders, but so many preparations for the uni
versal downfall of onr liberties? 'Even now
the agents of the Southern Confederacy.are. at
work all over the Pree States, and especially
in Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Ohio, Illinois,
and Indiana, to secure a popular vote, directly
or indirectly, justify jjg Become: on, or declaring
the experiment of the Southern Confederacy
worthy of the imitation ofthe people who live
in these States!
Behold the entertainment to which we are
invited; and which the party leaders who dis
located the Democracy at Charleston and Bal
timore are now gloating over as ff it were a
feast of the gods! We are asked to take part
in, or to sanction by law, a Government found
ed upon slavery alone—improvised by an aris
tocracy as haughty as any the world has ever
seen —lorn away from the parent ! tree with ,
murderous hands, as if to kill both trunk and
branch—despised even by the nations that
maybe compelled to trade with it, and only
capable of a:temporary- existence by soroud
ing the whole' land*with'fferrow, and by con
verting the capital of the -country Into a Gol
gotha, “running red and hot with blood.”
In this emergency,! call upon all good mep
and true to take sid-.s with the Government in
tfie perils before it and onr whole people. •If
blood shall flow our hearts will not accuse ns,
and God will forgive us, because, we are con
tending foraUmon and a Government better,
and freer, and happier, than any that has ever
flourished since He created the world.
THE NEFARIOUS PLOT.
Partial Exposure of the Plan to As
sassinate Mr, Ulncolu.
The following from the Albany.iiVrmVM? Jour
tied, Ib, we have no doubt, on authorized state
ment. The .public will wait with anxiety, the,
’remaining diflcV-suroe: -
Some of ,Mr. Lincoln’s friends
that a conspiracy existed to assassinate him on
■ his way to Washington, set on foot an investi
gation of the matter. '.For this purpose they
employed a detective of great experience, who.
wVb engaged at Baltimore in the business some
three prior to Mr. Lincoln’s ejected*,
arrival there, employing both men and Vonifn
to assist him. Shortly alter-coming ;to Balti
more, the detective discovered a combination
-of men banded together under a solemn bath
to assassinate the Resident elect Tne ieadea.
of the conspirators was an Italian refugee, a
. barber, well Known in who assumed
the name of Orslni, as indicative-of the part he'
was to perform. The assistants employed by
■ the-fietectivej who, like himself, were s-tran
gerain Baltimore city, by assuming to be se%
cesslonists from Louisiana and bth'er seceding
States, gained the confidence of some of the
conspirators, and were entrusted with their
plans. It was arranged in case Mr. Lincoln
should pasß,safeJy over the railroad, that the
conspirators should mingle with the crowd
Whicfl might Xoxriage, and by
pretending to [be bis be. enabled toap
-preach Upon a-slguai from
their leader, some of them would shoot at Mr.
[Lincoln with their pistols, and .others Would
throwinto his, carriage hand grenades filled
with denpUtihg powder, similar to those used
in the attempted assassination of the ijmperor
, Louie Napoleon. It wa? intended that in the
confusion which should result from this at
tack, the assailants should escape to a vessel
whlchwas waiting in the harbor to receive
TthetQ, and be carriedto the seceding
Statebf Alabama.' w "
arrival- in Philadelphia
. bh Tliureday, ; the 31st day- of February, the
- detective yidied: .Philadelphia aad submitted
to certein friehds ofthe Presidentelect the is
formation he bad collected as to the conspire*
tore and their, plans.. 'An interview was im- ■
mediatelyarrangedbetween Mr. Llacolnand
the detective. The Interview took place In
Mr. 14ncolhVxoom, fo the Continental Hotel,
• where he waa staying doring hls visit in Phfla
detahia. v--
- • Mr." Lincoln; havingheard the officer's state
ment, informed him lhat. he had promised to
raise the Am: rican flag, on Independence Hall
on-the next morning—the moMmg ot the An~
niversaryof- Washington’s birth-day. andthat
he had accepted the in vitation of the Pennsj 1-
vania-Legislature to bepnbllcly-received hy
• that body in the -afternoon! of the same day;'
.“Both Of these .lald .hey with--
emphasia, VI will;keep t if it coets.xne my life.
ItVhotvever.after lehall havb concluded these
'engagenienhvypn caa take ine in tafety to
. TCaiiiington,.! viU place myself at yonr disr.
pOsal, andaathotfne. yon tomake such arrange
‘ merits as. yda ‘tuay aeem proper fur that par-'
■pose.V-. - > ; ?-■ -r • 1-. i
, ; Oh the 'next day, 7 in the Mr.
~ coin; performed the ceremony, of raisin g-th% c
•American Sag on Independent Halh in PhU-
iccutdSng. tohis pxoinfee, and arrived
at -Hamahoig -cn lie wtemoonof-the same -
day,’where hewas- - formally welcomed by .then
.Pennsylvania. Legislatures f Afcer the rccep
tiohybe retired lohishotel,the Jones Home,
andiwithdrew with a few confidential friends.
; to a piiTafe:hpßxtinent.\“ ‘Here he ; rem&ihed
nntU nearly err, o'clock In' the evening, when
• fa company * Ith ColonelTdaapgpfie quietiy <
. 4«|ered t a and
.•fiscL’d'i'l.rcoxc : t; -•
.a .u MW . *- sii *; 3
a
was driven to the. Penns ylvauia Railroad,
wlterea special tralnfor Philadelphia was wait*
Ing lor SlmnHahecrdaly with his depar*
wires
wen euL*o if it should
b^iße|ao^^Tg^ghi.^^-tey^mmTinlc»ted
The arrived Iri Philadelphia
•at. • o’dwak at sight.
Haw news* :nM; jj£4» fletaatire, .who had
.a qarriage inTnsfltnnti-tTrttT whlahtho party
gartered, 'and were' dxffcps totbedepot of the
rhQftdfilphTa,, Wilmington md BwtifilftW Bail-
> t ~,..- f y* ', -■■■ ~ I —r—= ’■£s.r£~*LtXj'-~-"-y'-'S
./.They dlAriot lUMfc-ihedepotrintffa quarter
past
-ttlar traiaiJjSrbdrir of *ble£u for feting, was
eleven, had been delayed. Tha party then
took berths in tiie sleeping car, and without
change of cars, passed directly through to
nonr, half-past the morning nf flafur
day thoß3drr woronodlagrilse
-Whaj|eyer t hTit joun^®aT J ln an ordinary trav
eling-dreHt •
stateTfdfe, thafc' pribr tb'Mr;'
Lincoln’s arrival in_PhiladelpMa, Gen. -Scott.
JttndSeMforgewaid,^.Washington, had been
independent sources, that im
mlnent danger threatened Mr. Lincoln In case
publicly pass through Baltimore,
and accordingly especial’ messenger, Mr.
■Frederick am of Senator Sew
ardfWas dispatched tor.Philadelphla, to mge 1
Mr. Lincoln to come direct to Washington, m
a quiet. maimer. - The..messenger arrived in
Philadelphia late bri, Thursday nlghh and had
an-interview withthe President, immediately
subsequent to his interview. With the detec
tive. He was informed that Mr. Lincoln would
anive by t£e early train ori Saturday morning,
wd, in accordance with this information, i&.
- Washburns,.Member •of from Tin.
: nois, awaited the aarival of the President elect,
.at the depot in Washington, whence he J was
v taken in a carriage to'his quarters at Willard’s
Hot*i, where Senator Seward, stood ready to
receive hint
- Trie ((elective traveled with Mr. Lincoln,
nnder.the name:nf E. J.‘ Allen, which name
was registered with the President elect’s on
the book atWillard’s Hotel. Being a- well
known individual, he was speedily recognized,
and suspicion naturfdly arose that he had been
instrumental in exposing .the plot which
caused MmLincoln’s hurtled- ionmey. , It was
deemed p¥®leat that he should leave Wash
ington two dajaafter his arrival, although he
had intended to remain and witness the cere
monies of Biaugnration. ; ;
The ftiends:ol Mr. Idncoln do not question
the loyalty and hospitality of the people of
r Maryland, but tbeywere aware thata few dls
>affected, citizens' who svnrpatbiz&d warmly
with, the Secessionists,' were determined to
£rastratfi, at all the Inauguration of
elect, even at the cost of his
life. ", : .
ibe characters and pursuits of the conspira-'
e *"e various. Some of them were im
pelled by a fanatical zeal which they termed
patriots mjgnd they Justified th-dracts by the
- his country of
a tyrant.. One of them was accustomed to re
cite passages put into the mouth of the char
acter of Bratus in Shakspeare’s play of Julius
Caesar.- Others were' stimulated by the offer
of pecuniary reward. These, it was observed,
staid away from their usual places of work
weeks prior to the intended as
sault, although their : circumstances pre
viously had rendered them dependent on their
dally labor for support They wereduring this
time abundantly supplied with money, which
t"«v squandered in bar-room -and disreputable
places.-,;
- Alter-ihe discovery of the plot, a strict
watch was kept by the' agents of detective
over the movements of the conspirators, and
efficient measures were adopted' to' guard
against any attack which they might meditate
upon the President elect until he was installed
m office.
Mr. Lincoln’s family left Harrisburg for Bal
timore, On their way to Washington, in the
special train intended for him; And as, before
starting, a message announcing Mr. Lincoln’s
departure and arrival at Washington had been
telegraphed' to Washington over the wires,
which had been repaired that: morning, the
passage through Baltimore was safely effected.
The remark of Mr. Lincoln, during the cer
fT m ony orraising the flag on Independence
• Hall, on - Friday morning, that he would as
sert his principles in his Inaugural, al
: though ho were to be assassinated on the spot,
had evident reference to the communication
made to .him by the detective on the night
preceding, .
The , names of the conspirators will not at
present : be divulged. But they are in posses
sion of responsible parties, including the Pres
ident , .
The number originally ascertained to be
banced together for the assassination of Mr.
Lincoln, was twenty; but the number of these
who were fully apprised of the details of the
.plot became daily-smaller as the time for exe
cuting it drew near.
. Some of the women employed by the detect •
wc went to serve as waiters, seamstresses,
&e., in the families of the conspirators, and a
record was regularly kept of what was said
and done to further their enterprise. A record
was also kept by the detective of their delibe
rations in secret conclave, but, for sufficient
reasons, it is withheld for the present from
publication. The detective and his agents
regularly contributed money to pay the ex
penses of the conspiracy.
BEAUTIES OF THE SYSTEM.
Domestlc and Military Discipline.
The Springfield (Mass.) Republican has been
mousing around among its exchanges with
much good effect that it Is enabled to give its
readers the following, which is excelent in its
way: ■
The; society recently got up by several ven
erable doctors of divinity to promote “nation
al unity,” by convincing all-the people that
slaveryis a divine institution, might produce
a very effective tract by collecting the current
history‘'of-the operations of slavery from the
Southern papers.- The facts nakedly presented
do notfgive.a jvery pleasant impression, but
Dr. Winslow,could readily dress them up with
comment* and scriptural quotations, so as to
give the right cue to the reader. For instance,
'taking some'-of the latest items jrom the
South
On the 20th of March, on the plantation of
patriarch Bjrae, near Commerce, Mississippi,
his oversea-,, while smoking in front of the
negro c&biis, was suddenly assaulted from be
hind by f<?Rr negroes, two of them he fortu
nately succeeded in-killing with his kni-'e, but
was overpowered and choked to death by the
others, the surviving negroes fled to the.
woods* anlalarie number 6T men and dogs
stagedinpprsuit of them. Comment: It is
oneoftce'infeafclties of the patriarchal insti
tution ihal it is very difficult to impress its
logical and beautiful theory upon its benefi
ciaries, who incline to thpcon<?rete rather than
the abstract view, and allow their tmregener
ate natures to rue in rebellion against the of-.
flcials who administer the divine institution.
This case mould suggest to Christian masters
he necessity 'of employing -proper religious
instructors to;:impress upon their slaves the
lessons of ioplilty and obedience that abound
In-theScrUturcfc-- ; J
:Again :-F. Malloiy.Sntherland of Dinwiddle
county, VBginia, was severely beaten by one
of bis slave on the 27th nit.; The perpetrator
ot the outage was caught and lodged in jail,
and will ; b 4 tried, .unless the excited poptuace
inflict Bumnary vengeance. Comment : There
was- evideiitly in this case, a mental cobfueiou
' in the , mind of the servant, who seems
to -have alsumed that if bis master might
whip him I when angry, that'he : might mso
whip his. has ter in the same circumstances.
If he lid been Christianly ihstrncted
he would-have known that the fixed
divine arrmgEment is that the master oholl id
all csseaJii'thS: shipper >&nd the slave in all
cases the f hipped, and ..that to rebel against
this dirioQordet is to rebel against the ordi
nance or Cfed, and so incur damnation., It is
to be Ibpeamatlhe Christian people of Din
widdi* county will ndt hang or burn the offend
er wiUoutallowiDgbim : benefif of:clorgy in
his lai moments of probation.-Tfie sani'e re
marks apply tp the .case” of the slate of W. q.
Mooit of Sumter county, Term',, who lately in
a flt .tf passion dangerously wounded his mas
ter ani hiiled. a Mr. Saunters.' wh>; came to
the racue of .tfeemastcr.;
~ Jac|b- ; -fatten, of Southwestern Missouri
lately whipped one of his negro women to
death, for watch he lias beenane=ted ond held
fortoaL . Proper leniency .will doubtless.be
. eseifiaed W the pony t, as it is difficult always
to' fix the* umits Of moderate' correcUon, and
Mr. fatten should be presumed tohqve whip
; pedMs woman servant, just as he worked her,
forier own good. ;-• : ■ *
Alreecoiored man named Sib Konkin was i
hung a little and wlipped a great deal,near
Netvoenr, N. C., for striking a white man who
hsi struck him.' Just as he at his last
gisphe was let down, and Is likely to survive
the operation. This is on exceptional case.
Sib lemg tree, but os he belongs to the race
on uUom the original curse oOJoah rests, his
intercourse with the ruling race should be
regelated by the same rules as if he were in 1
the condition where he ought to be. i
Stirling McCarty of BaLast Point, Florida, !
boasts 6it'*‘a boy” who has earned him SIOI7
theSst year, or nearly a thousand-dollars net ;
■prbtii ’over all 'expenses. 'Comment: .We
have already proved that the holding and
working of . slaves is an act of great and self
denying beievolence on the part of the slave
boloera..-This .case is a striking illustration
of thegalqqf godliness,-mid shows that faith*
fulTnSstosinsy hdpC' for earthly as well as
heavenly Twfsrda )f :th6y “ take the onerous
care of ttei slavesln return for their ser
-TlC6B.*?ir. i'?. • -.v* • ‘ .
Haifa dteen more such caiesV manipulated
i with th&pChos and piety for whlchDr. Wins
low is nothl, would make up a very impres
sive tract. |
The .Key York, TrSnuie takes up another
branch of tie same subject, and shows what
kind of solders the -institution makes.. Says,
thatjournaj
-Our, Oedgla correspondent, In his letter
thls published, gives an.account of a
recent and review oftxoopsat Macon,-
In lhat Ulate'aad presents a picture-of the va
rious of view as a
disffitemui' spectator. We have' recently
of conversing with a man
who left, <Mtles&lojf' about - a fortnight . ago,
armyof South Cwo
state of -internal af- -
"teire State, corroborated by
the • Of every honest'aud woll-ln-'
1 fotmed.inaL g wathat thia r - g" army'
haswifldifl $ the te&dfl J bf a vtry Troublesome-,
haivest. ■■■
.■ JW e hear.io.muehbf the noblealacdty shown
intheSontl with regard to
we shall bejnterested in knowing how.aomek
( offhte
whom aHnjjWt betel-made, a German
by at Charles- t
the year by a Re- |
Committee of some jjgriLand inform- |
ain fcoompany
He had seen enough of the way in which they j
to know that J
refdsalpr r&tctanse would cause hia ruin; so'"
-he “vofemt eeteE’ I j^QiLais<«ty’-Couatenacce ?
and n heaiflaqt, light- -He was promised
‘ This the
hot ewhsider the debt a_good one, ffis
-
.With hta nfthif
irneeesniy
m i '-2 irroTiwa cl 02TK6.Y/'
their commands, as a general rule* but after a
little while onr German was sent with his com*
pany to Port Moultrie.
Tney remained there, however, only two
of more value than their services f
were withdrawn from this fortress, they went
to Oolnailfei and there staid for about four
fllfo of compare*'
tlve lsg|Kse forijhe m«v*ad pjtaiantlyfiiax
foslfe lbr the:Smte.v The syitka an Which'
th&branch of her
BUndiseannrwaa aQowed each
man inandld'
by quartering himaelf3n|flie house of any pri
vate citizen whom induce to take
him In. The force was nominally assembled
every morning for Bht the
exercise at that hour wu"nu3hly limited to
the taking of trinks. Then the men separated,
rand s pent the day-whefeVef they Uked,and as
the most of them preferred to lonnge in the
Taverns, or near wherever' liquor was to be
- found, they congregated In cheerful numbers
.these, popular resorts*. As a conse%
"queries, they became regularly drunk,' and
r th««forena-bPutaLas-their bad natures com
pellM Ihem to b’e. Being drunk, they-must 4
nave some recreation, and their lavontepas-
Titie was to nait-an Abolitionist—that is, any
Northern man. -V-V ; :
one or two lUnstratioos of the sportive na
tures of these 1 high-spirited soldiers ; One
< man, for some time a resident I of ‘Providence,
in Rhode Island,-but who had been engaged
for a year or. two in the -furniture business at
Columbia, was drawn into' 'some verbal quar
rel in the bar-room of the hotel with an officer
of volunteers, which had its origin as follows:
The officer asked him to drink; he declin ed j
the.officertheriirianlted him; with gross lan
guage, calling him a Yankee; to this the mim
replied that he was a Yankee, and that he
wished he was once more.- among Yankees.
Thereupon the officer drew his knife and in
flicted on him a severe wound, at the., same
t-me knocking him down. At once the crowd
called out the. d—d Northerner should be
kiUed, ahd they directly rushed upon him and
began kicking him in the face amid great glee;
the man soon became senseless; he was then
carried to some hole, where in a short time be
died, while the men returned ,to their drink.
It must be borne in riiind thatlhis rabble was
composed in part of the soldiers of the anriy
of South Carolina. Another instance .-was
similar, except that the victim there 'was
merely flogged, shaven ,as to half his head,
tarred and feathered, and* sent adrift on the
-river ina boat, without oars or rudder.. Some
of these some noble soldiers, one day desiring
sport, seized a small Italian boy who. sold
oranges, threw his fruit Into the streets,'then,
beat him umnercifblty, and went laughing, to
their grog. Such were some of the playful
freaks of the gallant defenders of Southern
rights! -
Happy Effects of a Conciliatory Policy.
Upon the Tezasit
The Houston (Texas) Patriot, one of the
moat rabid of the secession sheets, contains a
long article in its issue of April sth, under the
head:
THE “ CHXTAT.KT” SAB TBIUMPIIEn A2TD tttc
NOETH “EATS DIET.”
The Patriot says;
Once we thought the North, with Lincoln
to lead, would fight: we thought that, though
fanatical, the Republicans were not cowardly
dogs; we thought they would at least attempt
to make good their proud and scornful boasts
against the “barbarians” South. But as day
alter day, they " back down,” first to the
“military;necessity,” of giving up Sumter:
then, to give up Pickens, in -fact, from every
place except Tortugasand Key West, the only
place Northern Wide Awakes cannot be
needed to conquer the-“rebe’swe see no
prospect of a fight and can only rejoice over
the spectacle, of the tables being turned and
the Yankees, “ eating dirt.”
Such is nowt e state of affairs, Lincoln
has proved utterly unworthy of ruling • the
Republicans forget all in the basest scramble
for office; their scheme has failed and at pre
sent they are powerless. They have teen forced
to “eat dirt” and bow again to the dominant
Southern race , and their shrieks of rage are the
only sounds heard from the Forth. Through the
press; from the workshop , from the starving
masses; from the merchants ruined; from every
trade and conus the cry give up the
forts; let us u eat dirt ” let us again bow to the
superior race South ; let us live.
The cowardly “eighteen ml’liocs ” North,
told ns we should not leave the Union We did
it openly and boldly, and they humbly ac
knowledge our Government “ as a necessity ”
They shouted the praises of the “ stars and
stripes ” and dared the “ chivalrv ” “ to touch
the sacred emblem.” We have tom it down;
we have placed in its stead the flag of the Con
federate States; we have dared them to “ co
erce” os, and resent the insult; we have In
vited their vaunted numbers to the field, but
the only cry that comes from the craven dogs is
“ military necessity;” “give up the forts with
draw the troops let us “ eat dirt and live ” It
is sickening to think of ever having lived in the
same government with such a people, but let us re
joice at our and look Southward. The
game North is beneaih-contempt, while Mexi
co invites ns, by invasion of Texas, to re-enact
onr former achievements.
A Bomb-Shell In the Vlr K inla Convea-
UOO|
[Extract from Correspondence N. T. Times.]
Richmond, April 8. —So far, on Friday, had
the Convention progressed in. finishing their
work, when, Saturday morning, the sth,
they were startled by the rumor of sudden
aud warlike movements at Washington
Every letter and every dispatch breathed
alarm; and every messenger from Northward
spread panic among the people. You of the
J»orth have m adequate Idea how terribly
deep and absorbing is the question of civil
war in the South. You should not wonder
therefore, that the Virginia Convention lelt
compelled to take up the subject for imme
diate consideration. Wm. Ballard Preston
one of the most conservative men of the State*
proposed resolutions protesting against mens*
ures calculated to produce collision, and pro
posing to send three Commissioners to Wash
ington, to ask respectfully, of the President,
ah explanation of the alarming movements.
Amendments were offered, and debate ensued'
hut.it was thought that Mr, Preston’s propo
sition would succeed almost unanimously
Just then, however, the Convention was
astonished to hear Jackson, of Wood couniy
one of the most distinguished
tivesof Western Virginia, gehup and declare
that if it was the jrurpo* of the Convention to
take Virginia out oj the Union 03 the pretext of
coercion ■ applied (0 seceding States, he teas ready
ta raise the banner qf revolt and secede with his
or as many as wouid Join him, from the
State qf Virginia? Had a phaxaa shell ex*
plodea in the Convention it coWd hardly have
created more consternation. The commotion
was quieted by adjournment, for this rare Con
vention—l say it to.its honors—river allows
action 10 be taken under impulse aud excite
ment. The whole city, however, has been in a
ferment since Jackson’s speech. It opens a
new and threatening phase of secession. The
lobbies of the hotels are .filled with anxious
and excited citizens, who debate the crisis
with more intensity of feeling than ever.
Jackson is supposed to be in a meagre mi
nority in the Convention... And many doubt
whether he represents correctly any consider
able portion of Western Vimma. But yet.
all feel that with only a few determined, un
conditional Unionists, yirginia be placed
in a sad atitudo—that, of crushing as rebels
some of her oyp children, in the thankless
and hated act ot sustaining South Carolina in
her most selfish and reckless rebellion t
• It can hardly fail that this new gevelepment
of Yirginia’sentiment and determination ad
ded to the thjieateplng news from Wasting,
top, will greatly complicate the political ex
citements prevailing at Richmond? The seces
sionists are in exstacks of new-found hope
The great body 01 Unionists here condemn
Jackson’s demonstration. The secessionists
foresee a division of Union party and its
loss of control. <me Wow atrnckiu the South,
no matter on what side, will glye them Vir
ginia, and then all the slave States.
Such is their belief, and they are in exata
cies, as I have said. The Union men are deep
ly concerned and almost despairing of theße-
■Webb’s plan.
Gen. Webb of the New York Courier and
JSnquitvr , for many years an officer of the U,
S. Army, is bringing bis military; knowledge
into use. He recommends the following pro
gramme as one that in bis "dealings with se
eesfiion, the President might profitably pur
sue; -
First —Throw into the Southern part of Tex
as by sea, the disposable army force and some
five thousand volunteers in addition.
- Second —Call upon the Northwestern States,
forthwith, to furnish fifty thousand volunteers,
to assemble without delay at the United States
Arsenal at Baton Rouge, first concentrating at
Cairo fc at the junction of the Mississippi and
Ohio rivers. -
: -Call upon Pezmsylvar la, New York,'
and the Eastern States, for fifty.thousand vol
unteers to assemble' without unnecessary
‘ delay at Washington, in the District of Colom-,
hia. - - ' ;
ffrurtt-rOommence a march with this latter
army to .the Southwest, leaving of course, a
strong force at the seat of Government; and
at the same time direct the army of the West
assembled at Baton Rouge, to form a junction
with it sX Montgomery or aty other point that
may be deemed advisable, leaving a,sufficient
force to protect the United Stefas Arsenals in
the country through which the armies .may
pass; aud of course, taking the necessary
measures to protect'the friends of the Union
against any Traitors who may be found in re
bellion against the Government in that quar
ter.
Now, it appears to us, that .such a pro
gramme, in volving if necessary, the calling
out doable the number of volunteers suggest
ed, would very soon put an end to this dis
graceful-rebellion- . , t .
The So utli aad Its Fonlsn Relations.
; We were not mistaken ineapposlng that the
new Southern Heptarchy, resting", on negro
slavery as its corner-stone, would beartilyweJ
come the threatened seiznre of Sfc'iDomlngo
by Spain. TheCharieston-'JTwrury tims ex
; presses its, sentiments, on this point;
things, Spain takes possession
..ofHaytL Let Tier taJcett.- lx her patera be wise.
;ly,na«i,ahß will bring, the negro again to TUsnalu
. ; ral condition of jgarxrY. She, will make him use.
-foi foliini߻ir t &nd useful loitheworfd.* In contact
With the white mab.he, may; again be-lifled op to
, that degree dsilihatlon ms nature will enable
-him to attain. U a der the .control, of the white -
‘iQaiijhe mayagain possess, a earreed-intoraHty, a
- -eoereetf dfimacion, a.«o*ro«d knowledge of: true'
• reUglon; and thmy happier tribute to
rucccM
r.ln^-entojwye. 11 . -
i/- The Mereubft Idea of religion Mid morality/
i-TjVB feaf, ; is sbtaewhittpecullar; If certainly is a
ij v new doctrinelhat they can J be q ‘c6eyced’*-'Bnt
| whatthc Meriury morale nrdrt-
Hredrahd' a reigious negro.l* one who la a
Chriatbnlty;:lfc enibrace* mid includes them
both, in theeecaaion creed. Thetslavecod©-'
tbe
T ;SitarHthe sbVecartdtß-agsembly--ft£ saints.
-W^ey^prtmiij^taiaakednTeaofnegroea.
‘I osroH
*■» .uvir.T ,;r L f oT.
• ; coil&slt ran-K'o
Items from irajMnttou^Speclil
patcl&es*
EELLIGnSIEST CONGRESSMES.
Roger A- Pryor hai raised a
unteers in Virginia ana tendered tbriiiro Jell.
Daria to-day. Jobn F. Fotter of WS&nulii,
PiyoFn.old antagonist, i 1« in tMs cilj. and la
equfitrt*ady to stand by tUa-govanunent.
TheaaawroongtMtnriwa signsofTtroln-
S J Etrai. oisstos ana a. smasii, -ooktes
s'. ykxst. *
The prbbabllitieftliro that an extra Bcaafnu of
irlll eoon.be called. The National
TnU>tuer of to-day urges that an Immediate
call of a National Convention, by means of an
extra session of Congress, is plan that
can be successful tn settling the difficulties
which are dividing the country.
- mtßsia'ox '
There is no truth in the report that thirty
days will elapse before the new treasury notes
will be ready for delivery. On inquiry at the
-proper quarters, it la ascertained that theplatcsi
are nearly ready, and the notes'will be xssugd
Withinthbtimn allowed ttypljce ?
.the coin—say in eight Or ten days'aftfer the*
■opening of thwbid* > •
THE 6nAD£42ITB POE TBS SPOILS.
' George Aflbmnu,'President of the Chicago
Convention, together with Edward Everett, is
here urgiug the President to retain Fletcher
Webster as Surveyor of the port of Boston.-
2T.T. World, im! ‘
THE POLICT OP THE ADMUHSTHATION.
It is the opinion of the best end most expe
rienced officers of the Government, that no
former Administration, in thirty years, has so
quietly and efficiently matured and directed
its policy as- that now ih power. The quid
nuncs, are much exercised that such important
movements-should be conducted with such
little publicity, and they excluded from infor
mation which was almost sold, under Mrußu
chanan. New rules have been introduced 'in"
the departments, which forbid loungers
gossipers from interrupting the pubKc busi
ness; or prying into matters with which, they
have no proper-concern.—K Tribune, &A.
THE CAXTFOBKTA APPOINTMENTS.
The appointment of Dr. Wm. Babe to the
United States Maratukhip for the Northern
District of California, created quite a sensation
to day among the Californians. Dr. Babe was
one of those who most earnestly protested
against Senator ' Baker’s influence' in the
distribution of the California patronage.
His consequent defeat for Postmaster
of San Francisco has resulted in his
elevation to a much better position.
He ia one of the hardest-working and
most deserving Republicans on the Pacific
Coast. CoL Baker takes his appointment in
high dudgeon, and left-town this afternoon in
disgust. All the California appointments of
any consequence have been made now, except
those of Surveyor of the Port of San Francisco,
Naval Officer, Navy Agency and Surveyor-Gen*
eraL — A. T. Times, Bih. ■
Voice of Pennsylvania.
The indications now are that the So'rth wiil
come np to the anpport of the Government,
with a degree of unanimity that will confonnd
the traitors who are engaged in the attempt to
break up this Government We have r seen
nothing of late so well calculated to confirm
this opinion as the following extract from one
of the most conservative papers in Pennsyl
vania—the Philadelphia Forth American—the
organ of conservative merchants of that city.
The editor in discussing the conduct and posi
tion of Virginia says :
We are heartily sick and weary of an this
humbug. Oar government mast have an ac
tive existence and decisive Cover. Virginia
mast acknowledge it unconditionally the lame
aa Pennsylvania or Ohio, or she must pack np
her duds and go after the conspirators at
Montgomery, wno despise while they seek to
use her. We have all respected the Old Do
minion greatly. It Was the home and la the
grave of Washington. The great-.st and the
best of all onr statesmen have been produced
by the grand old commonwealth. We feel
that she ought to he with us, and reman for
ever attached to the government founded by
her sons. But if she is determined to he per
verse, and to be forever provoking ns with
her petulances, we shall not be sorry to be
well rid of her. Ultimatums will be of no
more use than the fifth wheel would be to a
coach, and if the secession eaders adopt any
such, it will only be a specious de dee to lead
the State more surely out of the Union There
seems to be some strange delusion resting
upon the newspapers in the border alavS
Spates. They suppose that the government at
Washington is rn advance of the people In its
movements, when the truth is that the whole
Northits thoroughly aroused and clamorous
for action. We cannot be half as much dis
graced by any failure of what we aitempr-as
we have been already by the manner IB which
we have permitted the national sovereignty tS
be insulted and defied. e ci a uty to
Printing the iTlbnne on Stereotype
Plates.
. [From the N*-w York Tribune 1
The pages of the Tribune are at .a fc printed
from stereotype plates. Tnsa is the case with
ali our editions, Daily, Semi-Weekly and
Weekly. The process, which is the invention
of Mr. Charles Craske of this citv, is a'peen
liar one, differing greatly from ordinary stereo
typing. The molds from which the plates
are cast, are made, not with plaster: as is
usually the case, but are of papier-m icu£ An
entire page is,cafit in one.plate, in which re
spect the process dlfitra from that employed
by some of the great daily newspapers of
London, where each column is ettrotyped
separately. Oar plates are also* cast in c\hn
dncal form, to suit Hoe’s lightning presses
which is another Important variation from
ordinary stereotylng.
• The page to be stereotyped being prepared
it is covered with a sheet of a pecniur kind
of soft paper, in last hat U tie more tenacious
■thanpaper pulp. Tuia sheet is delicately but
firmly beaten with a hair brush to indent the
type thoroughly into the paper. While yet
wet and soit, other similar sheets are laid,
upon it, and the indention with the brash is
repeated. This process Is continued until the
layers of this paper are sufficient to make a
strong card-board upon the page, thoroughly
compacted together and ludtnicd to a proper
depth with the type of the page. Passed over
a steam-table, this indented card board is
rapidly dried. Taken out, it is easily removed
from the type, and is ready lor the last process
which is the reception of hotfltud type-metal’
poured into the Indent* ions made by every
letter, word,.sentence ana paragraph of the,
page.
MJat is grined by this new process in New
York Jonmrilsm? Not to consider onr
enormous Weekly and Semi-Weekly circula
te 11 ?. the printing of some 55,000 copies o£ the
MiUy Tribune at lightning speed in the small
hours of the morning, wnen oar readers are
Bound asleep, is destructive wear and tear
upon even copper-faced type. Millions of
snperflcial Inches ol paper are rapidly gronnd
over the letters, and do muehmore than polish
them, as our type-founder's bills conclusively
show. To Air. Crake’s process of stereotyp
lug, wo are indebted for an economy that en
ables ua not only to save the wear and tear
hitherto inseparable from the mechanical ac
tion of Hie modern power-press, but also to
present our.sheet, daily and weekly printed
as it were with new type, and thus as legible
and convenient to thy eye of the reader
throughout the year as ‘t formerly was for the
few days only, uutii the freshness and distinct
ncs? Of tele types had been worn away,
_Besides all this, we are now able to our
Weekly to many of its subscribers twelve
hours earlier than was possible when ic was
printed on movable letter*.
Previous to Mr. Craske’s invention, stereo
type plates never exceeded the quarto size •
afr larger than that, requiring to be cast in two
or more pieces, and tnen'soldered together.
They can now be oast to the largest newspaper
westebi? hutiees.
Incehdiabish.—' We learn from the Three
-Rivers (Mich.) Jit yorter, that the new steam
aaW' mill of Shipman & Flanders, in Cass conn*
ty, was burned a second time to the ground
on Saturday last. It was only completed about
four weeks since. The mill cost about $5,000.
It was undoubtedly the work of an incen
diary.
Vest Destructive Fire at Grajtd Trav
erse.—The.HmiJd, of the29thnlt., states that
on the previous Friday, about 2% p. m.,the
Court House was discovered to be on dre. As
It was situated some distance from the businef s
part of the town, the fire had made such rapid
progress before any one reached it that all at
tempts to save the building were hopeless,
and in less than half an hour from the time
- the fire was discovered it was a ma?s of ruin.
AH the papers In the county offices were con
‘ ruined, together with the furniture, and aeon
siderable sum of money belonging to Mr.
Bostirick the jailor. The loss to the county
Is'about |2,000,
Severe Storm —Fayette county, was last
; week. visited by a destructive storm, which
swept across the entire country, and caused
great damage. Daniel H. White of Waterloo
township, ; 'was the principal sufferer. All the
fencing around his larm of ICO acres was
blown down, and scattered in all directions.
A fine sugar camp on the same form was en
tirely destroyed. Mr. White estimates his
loss at $3,000.: On' another farm, owned by
Mr. Henry Walker,-; fifteen acres of fine tim
ber was blown down, some of the trees beitg
torn up by the roota, and. others were twisted
off and sent whirling through the air. A
bridge across White water .was also destroyed.
The entire extent of the damage has not been
ascertained.— (tad ) Courier.
PRO M APCT I O N.—
100 Pieces Bieh Plain Silks,
Id all Colors
200 PIECES PLAIN BLACKSUKS,
AllVldfla.
ISO Pcs. Biack Pignred Silks. '
Ora Fire EondredPieces -.
RICH UYOMS DRESS SILKS,
- In all thenoTelatyleraid choice colorings.- ‘ .
- Extraordinary Bargiins in Siiks
OP ETABT UESCEtPnON. ’ -
DO HOT BIT? ELSEWHERE AT ABTY P2ICE,
.
; Dlnminaied Mbs^ablque%
M MOt AMBIQUES, forLkdiea^nife,
- IJAOMIEAtEQPOPiJSSt • J -
- PBEHcgaitKS;'
HABKOS AS'QLAB,
«*e choieett Xfcew floods fit tm-r
limitedTarletjr. Tea latest pgr rnoreltlea in
cum-yxq ijit; Atabtke and Shaeia coy la atoni^
- lira*, m.koss * co.j
- MWaBSBMig m ted its *■«>« meet..;
»BOPEIi®JS,,S’EEAMBOA'ES.,
A GREAT RUSH IS MADE AT
IB the PcrtodleaHtore* te obttfa • eofT •» **
~ m At
AMERICAN UNION.
oopY«m<i re ad. tb.oerb.r~n.irsg
*■ &OMWIMAI. STORY
“ l *S - JS’i'm.a. ■
ItASK;
A. Tale of N«w York.
;
at.t. BTOBIE3 COMPLETE IN OKS, JTtTMSDL
~~ SIISIE COI'IES A HAIF DIME.
■Er~8oldtr«!lK«y»i:««lga. : spltett
■s'DARNUM’S GREAT VARIETY
J-K ' ' ' . BTQBE, .
7 •'X : ‘ • 'j xj . .
. J il»8-J....takoSt»sot S'l;
B IMUIBEO’S^
Direct ImportolOfasdWholesale Dealers ia '
TOYS AND FANCY GOODS,
33ix~ci OAgoH,
ALLIES AND MARBLES,
Vtz Toth *“***% CUlirta’a Glgijsd Cat*,
• - 'jS SEEAT TAEIETT.
Yankee Notions, &c.
J3S.„ LAKE STREET.. 188
# B. WOOD & CO.,
;158 and 155 CAKE STREET,
Have Just reeslTsd a large and choice assortment of
FRENCH PRINTS, JACONETS,
Percales,
sew Styles French aid. fegttab
Which they offer at tho rory lowest prices.
fbU-etS-Sm
'PfOGSE FURNISHING GOODS.
We have a large and complete stock oi
Bleached Shirting Sheens, and? lb
low Case Cottons,
LrtrarN - STTPiTr.Tiyrg-s,
DAMASKS AND TOWBLIN6S, MABSEILLIIS
QUILTS. AND HOUSE FURNISHING
GOODS ftfcVRRA T,f-Y_
Which we are aelllsg at the lowotpricea.'
island 155Xake Street.
W. B. WOOD A COW
JJAL MORAL SKIRTS.
We have ta stock a fine aaeortment of
BALMORAL SKIRTS.
(Full Lzxqth ajtd Width)
Iq medium nd fine qualities, which we offer at rmt..
ly reduced prices.. Abo, superior quality Hoop skirts.
w.B. ffOuD & i-Q„ 1534 lit take ttreat.
'J' o TRAVELERS.—
DUESSING CASES,
TBAVEIrING FLASKS,
DBDTKIN6 CUPS,
traveling bags.
Soap, Sponge and Brush Cases,
POCKET 3IIBBOBS,
ALSO, A large and fine assortment of Fine Telia
Goods of the very bent make. J. H. BEED A COt.
- • Apothecaries U4 and Ui Lake street.
«;q.et TH E BEST”
fiuswch:
eoryiff & ijv'ji .
An article whlcli la unsurpassed by anythin* of «
Mnd now In use; it Cows tree, docs not become thick*
and will make
Three Perfect Tramten,
38* . 3MC XT IT BOST ,
14=0 Lake Street,
Wher* may also bo touKl a great rarlety of other
INKS AMD WHITING FLUIDS.
noraa-iy •
1861. Spring Trade. 1861.
We have this Spring the largest stock ever hrou*htto
COOLEY, FARWELL & CO.,
this market, boaght cheaper, aad wfll ha sold cheaper,
42, 44 AND , 46
Our Mr. Cooley resides la New York, aad gives his
. Wabaah Avenue,
whole time to purcoaslng goods, which, wife onr ex
dry &o o i* s
tensive soles, gives ns advantages in offering go*#da
JOBBSHS.
cheap, feat wm COMMAND fee attention cf the best
traue.
Wousted.
Patterns, Canrass and Chenille,
: CROCHET, BRAIDS AND COTTON,
Knitting Cotton of all Kinds,
SHETLAND WOOL,
▲ flue assortment ef
URBaSBISi
SUTTO.M « BURKITT,
U Lasalle itreet 4
apl-e®p-2m ' '
STREET.
COTTON HOSIERY,
For Ladies, Hisses and Children*
CENTS’ COTTON HALF HOSE,
Out assortment U complete and prices low.
SUTTON & BUBKITT,
apteOO-tai Opposite Hogmatca’s 'n*nv l
The great fire in
JOLWAUSSB.
$300,M0 Saved in Herrings Safes.
~ , _ MlLwArxra, Jaj »iggn
Mil Lansing BoNNNtx, Aguat for Herring's Safes.
Milwaukee City Offices,were two of Herring** Safest
one large one In the City Clerk's Office, located la the
fourth story, and a smaller one, lathe benool Comml*.
•loner's room. In third story.
We are happy to say, notwithstanding the Safes ftH
so great s distance, ana were subjected to such as in.
• fitrty aad the other sixty houro
that the hooka and papers were m a firegrate state of
“rI
f^S^SUSSS&tSSStiSSss.
-Fm^i®bOF" th? 7 *” whAt 11107 0141111 to
BtUed offi oa9k tt ® plstas on Uu other ware
TRAKdS HIHPSCHaiAjrgL
jmBON wraBTBB, Acaiw “* w
aty Clerk.
JOHATHAK FORD,
, - Superintendent of Schools.
'Hotlom’j P»t«nt Champion Safe*," though m
tested Kew Fan to ure tbdr contents.
Only Depotla tb» Wttt eua state ttroet.
. HEKSThQ * CO»
• WtMp>. 4ft State Street
FIRST CLASS DRUG FIX-
J- X -- TUBES FOB SALE.
300 AMOEIED BOTTLES GOLD LABEL,
250BSAWEBS CEEBBYFBOJneOU) r.Atryr,
Connten vlth Sarblo
Prescription Stand Complete
SiclTtn*, Cornice Work, Etc*,
Counter Seales, Oil Cao^
Soda Foonlala with Charier. 8 Iron Fountains,
Glass Llaedaad Silver Draft Stand.
SUTTH & DWTBB,
9* Lake street, opposite Tremont Honaa,
X wo thousand gallons
p ®»®_ JUICE OF FHI»
tr * d 'j “4TOnMrt pep.
SDPERIOK TONIC PROPERTIES,
fbTor “«** wtimatteMedl.
JUST RECEIVED-A large and
**IKESCa I®LLSV ,<m^ 1 ! !n * ot *
r MQZAMBIQUKB*
Embroidered Mohalra, Vatentlaa, to
TNSTTRE TOUR FURS FROM
•miwagßonou. isectipU rtreiiaDd char^w
wm-ir ‘ J - Ju smith * co..
r. -Hatter* and Furriers,
pEGTOPS AND BASKETS—
**• -S<®Bhtnbr m^Jobbfag^Trade sa wan as my
: Great Variety Store,
_ *- ' ■ . ; 111 RiSPOUgSTREET.
T?IRD GAGES.—A fine asiortmeat
A-r Jaatreeelredat
- u •Feageot’i Great Variety Store,
t- ‘ ": c mbasdolph.street.•
]\/fARBLES. —Five Casks Marbles,
JLUL. Chine Aillas, Ac, wholesale and retail, at
Feogeotis CnatVariety store,
; ; t • • m BASPOLPH 8TW»»t;
jH ABS.—Ediir F. PtogtoL Mann*
Actorer end Jobber of CblMi»W e»j.
’ 111 BA.NDOLPH STnmRT.
'J'HE KENOSHA WATER CUBE
, : KENOSHA, WBCOTOJ.
5,000 HTOES WANTED,
-“'T 1. L. CHtoKSTSsemi.nL*
lO’iq pilT JCids iioii r-J iL::a3
.£« £ uald
Silver in cases.
TOBSALSBT
rTrom the Commercial, Cincinnati, OMbJ
» ItSerJni humanity can now be relieved.
A* ecddentavoi bappea, «?«a inwall regulated
ftmlUn*. U Is vary desirable to bara senna cheap sad
©oarenlea* i nj ibr repairing Furniture, Toys, Crook*
«T7, fttL
Veeti an eiuh.emergencies, and nskoueboid can tp
tort to be without it it-la always ready, and op to
theaddttng point
V. R—A Bmb accompaalaa eacb Battle.
PRICE. 25 CENTS.
Address
; Aieartala Tupclnoiplad. penoza ara aistmpt&g *»
ptlnoff oatliaßTajwp«cttogaaoßa, fa.^^ M
PBSfABKD QLHB, I woo>a cttatloa ail; penoiu to
rtnmSaabe&ropapcfcastatandaoathat the tuimaao
aasaarter
ImttMtta r>mn. ® vton m iwtwHßi
enMrwa. ■
Nervous Headache
<&&■*
Headache
these PDlatha periodic attacks olffsa.
awx HxADAoaa may be prsreawa us 1 1
' £kaaat tha eanucencsmoat of "n attack Immediate
obtained.
They seldom Ihll Id rtmortasthsNACEsa and H*a>
to which ftaalea are so snhiect.
- - fftsj aoVgeatiY apoa the bowela—rmovlas Cot-
CTUUIt -
'' Jor Literary Mea. Students. Delicate Females, acd
all peraocao.* sedentary hablta, they are valuable m a
Laxative; Improving tbs Airsrrra, giving tony acd
Tisox to tie digestive organs, aa* restoring the na
tnral elasticity and strength of the whole #js:ea.
' Tbs CEPHALIC ITLLSars the result otlcag lares,
tigatioa and carrfoEy oocdoeted bavins
Peenta use many yeare, daring which time uey have
pirated and relieved a vast amount of pain and
suffering from Headache, whether originating la the
xkxtous system or from a deranged etaw oi the
STOMACH.
They are entirely vegetable Is their competition, iad
maybe taken stall times with perlect safety without
Tnalring any change Of dlot, A3T> TSX ABSX3ECS OF AXT
t^t«.a...i-ar-e TASTY CXXDHSS ST SAETT TO AZ>Mn>ia>
vn Tm TO GHtU>2XY.
BEWARE *f WDSTEBFEITS!
The genatia have five- aigsacores of SSN3T 0.
BPADDISG os each Bov.
Sold by Druggists and til other Dealers & Ysdlotsea.
A Box will be «ent by man, prepaid, cm receipt of
tha
raicE, as os^rrs.
an ordari ihoald be addressed to
EBNHT O. SPALDING.
U (Mu Stmt, New York.
The B'oUovWivia Shidoraamanl o
CEPHALIC PILLS
wm eoavlaoo an wua suffer crosi
HEADACHE,
THAT A
SPEEDY AND SURE CURB
IS WITHIN THEIR KRACH.
&3 Ureas Testimonials were cnsolMted by
BP AIDING, they afford unauest’O-abls
proof of the efficacy of this truly
Kaantide disoovery.
lUeoKnix*, Conm, Feb, :th, inn.
Kb. SPALDiiro,
8 m:—l have tri*d your Cephalic Pills, aaJ I jsxm
tubm so wbll that 1 wait you to s*ad me tiro co11»m
worth more.
Part of these are for the neighbor*, to xcborn I ?4tj
a tww out of the first box l got tr m you.
Send tee Pills by mail, aaij oblige
Your cbeJlent srrrar.t.
JAM-r.S S r.N'NTS.'T.
Ejlt23fozu>, Pa* Feb. 6th, IS£L
Us. SPXUDCfO.
Sts;—l wish you to ie~a me one more bo* ot your
Cephalic Pill*. I hats bbcxttx© a 032 at ssal op
SZ3TBFIT 7 BOX TBBU
Your* respectfully,
MAHT AN-S STOINHOTT33.
Spares Casss, Tinatin;:ton Co, Pi, >
January L-tn. ISBL f
H. C. Spaldtso,
Saw You will rleaao send me two boxes ot voar
Cephalic PUD. So d them LumeiJlatelv.
Kcspecuuily join
JNO. 13 . .0.0..3.
P. S.— l hats rsan errs box op tocs Pills, and
TOTS THZ3C aZCZLLSNT.
BXLLC VBUXO2T, Ohio, Jm, 1-ta. 1351.
Haver C. Spaluino E-q .
Pleas* find Inclosed twenty-dvr cents, tor walch send
maanother box ol yonr L.‘cp' allc Pl!s T.at as*
tbtlt th* Bxer Fiixs I mn kvxb teied.
Direct .VSToVtu o*. jL.
Bello Vemon. Wjaaiiot uoC:.ty 0.
Bsvkblt. Macs., Dec. altt, aS-
3T C. PPALsrsa. Ewj.
I wish for som- rlrcnUrsor large -how c.iU, tofrr'aj
your Cephalic Pills mi re riartlcularly before jiy cn*
tomen. If you have anything oi ihu Ali.d pleaesead
to me.
One of my customers who Is object to
Headache. (qsqbllt la-ting two da'-sj w*e cuaso -ZT
UT ATTACK I3T UOCB BT TOtTB PlI-LS iVtUC- I
tent here. UespecUuUy vouns.
W. WILL.A3,
SsTSOLDastras, Franklin County, uni a. >
January vta, uril. >
Hi fcnrr C Epaldess,
3fo. *3 Cedar street, w, T.
nkn oaed find twenty-avo cent*, rs.' fbr
vlufch aead box of 'Cephadc PilU. gi-nd to aJdr&M
of I lev. VTm, C. Filler, UejooldabaKr. Fraallia Ccaa*
ty. (foi*
Y<»ra Pnxa wosi tm jl oiuem-cttm Esa>
ACKf 1U 408T IS STARTS 8.
Truly yourt
C. FILLZB.
TracLAjm, Mick, January Uth, IS*.
i~y» spald&'o.
Bia:—Not h >nt? tinea I sent to you for a box of Csp
‘tello Pills for the cure of tlio Nervous Headache and
vosUveneea, and received trie tame, aid tout a.u* so
«OOD AS IFTUST THAT I INDUCED TO SEND FOB
hob n.
Plea** aead bp return man. Direct to
A. U. WFISBLEH,
Ifiieilanti, aCoh.
[Fri IB the Xsambutr, Norfolk, Vi.]
Cephalic Flits sccompUah the object for which they
▼•remade, vl u Coro of Scadaeha ta all Its tons*.
[Prow the Examiner, Norfolk, Vs.]
They have b«M|n tested It more teas a thousand
eases, -with satin* success.
(From thto O emocrat, "t, Cloud, Mian.]
If you are, or Ikaw been troubled with the headaefta,
send for a box. ( Lepi lailc FUlaj so that jou may have
them In caas of ivnaktack.
[From the Advdltlser, Providence, TC I.]
..The Cephalic Pills an# ,'aid to be a remnrkdbly effec*
nro remedy tor tlveheaiu cue. aodoue of tuctctv (•eit
tor that very fttq-teat con -plaint which hm ever hisa
discovered.
[From the WerWra E. E- Gaxette, Chicago, in.]
endorse >!r. Bpi Idiag; and hli annrallel
[From the Kanawha. Valley Star, Kanawha, Va]
We an sure Bat per toss suffering with the head*
ochs, who try them, wii I sOcls to them.
IFretnthe Southern petti Finder, STew Orleans, I*.]
,-FJt them! too that are afflicted, and we are ear®
ad.V«d tc the already auircr.
22* "?* has received fcsnqflathat no oilier aicdi
da* can prodace.
CTroa the St. Itoals Democrat]
for a “ * rUcJj (Capi J.c --U ■)
[?rom the Gasetta. Davenport, lews.
m,t connect bia nam. *. . ta
arSels he did not xsow to possess real m%r.c.
[From the Advactlser, Providence, B. IJ
* nt U “"“t th. no*
CTrom the Dally Sows, ITewport, R. L J
Cephalic Fills ire taking the place of all Made,
(From the Commercial Bulletin. Boston. ]
Bald to he very efficacious for the
XW“ A Binges bote# of SPALDDTG’S PBZPAgED
•M7E, Trlfl uti ten time* Its coat acaaally.
BPALDDTG’S PREPARED GLUE I
SPALDXXG’3 PREPARED GLUE I
SPALDING’S PREPARED GLUE 1
BATS TBS PI2CS3;
SOOSOMT!!
tr “A Stitch ct Tnos axTss 2fm."
SPALDISBT3 PBXPA2SD SIXTH
■USSTUL m XVSBT HOFSB.*
HEJTRY C. SPAUOTO,
So. 4S Cedar Street, New r«*.
CATJTAQKv
waPALDrsQ’a fbcpaesd mm.
DISPATCH 1