Newspaper Page Text
Agricultural. Management of Swine. olip the following from the 0m i'i r- In the Ohio 'Farvur or Deo. 29, 1806, we wade mention of nice pm which we had , a-stn at various times, passing through this city br express, from. Cyrus McCutly, or TruinbullCo. Mr. McCuilv sends us the following a his practice in the management of these.aniinalat. ... ... , , 1 enn't propose to disonss the good or bad qualities of any particular red but to give my ideal of wbat a hog should be, and not as some advertisers of stook, that their breed is the best In all respect and for every 'purpose. ' ' " ' ' ' , It. selecting pigs from any brted for breeding purposes, greatoare should be taken to choose the best specimen from two dis- -.' tiuet families of the earns breed and by so doing you avoid ta injurious effects of in " apd-in breeding. It is neoessary that these .' directions be closely observed, as swine will degonorate where no attention is paid lo proper crof sing. I always choose those t of good length of body, straight on the back, square build, heavy bams and shoulders, short head and leg, fins hair and small ears, although a large ear generally denote "large growth. The male should be less rather than larger than the famals and more -aompaotin fornv 1 new allow a sow to breed until at least ' one year bid, ks I am satlsfled that allowing , swiue to breed tod voting, n,J cheeks ' her own growth and vigor,, but that of their progeny also. I prefer a boar one year old or older to breed from. I think both con tinue to do better for raising fine, large pigs, , when tbey are removed to a separata depart ment from each other, being eareful not to allow them too much bed, as thoreis danger ' of their lying on their pigs, they are fed by ground fed prepared by pouring boiling water on it and letting it stand twenty-four hours. To this add the lops from the kln.. Feed regularly three times a day until the" pigs" are from two to three weeks old, when I provide a place to whiob-the pigs can have acoess. I then feed them with grouud .oorn and oats 1 prepared as above, with the addition of milk -when convenient; this tbey eat readily and gii in from ope to two pounds per day.. .By this treatment thore is no oheck to their growth when taken from the sow, and I . have no' difficulty in making spring .pigs dress from three to four hundred pounds at ,; usual butchering time. , ; As to diseases, they may generally ce pre .onin.l hv t.rnner care and attention. The he idea with some that anything is good enough . for a hog is an erroneous one ; one; mey snoum i,,mX .d with drv and well ventilated sleeping apartments, witn propor ioou oi ufficient variety. . By being particuiar,in this respect 1 have never troubled with dis taseof odv kind. Sulphur or copperas, givco ja their feed occasionally, will eradi cate almost any ekiiudisease, tfbd copperas and wood ashes is goed for bat is called kidney worm or weakness of the hind parts. ., An occasional dose or sau anucuiuui ,u iheir focd will be attended wun goou reuuim. - 1 should be glad to hear from other breeders of fine hogs through the columns of the Far ' but. and if they have better breeds, via: Chester. Suffolk and Berkshire, or a better clan of breedin e and raising, I will oheer- lolly adopt them. vjybu mbvulw Maxims for Farmers. rr jj tinnnis farmer cimCol f q iiHuv .w. 0 . t! muxima for farmers to practice When sou wake np do npt roll over, bat rail out. it win gve yu ditch nil your Bloughs, break tnern up, J...... ibfiin and sow them with timotLy MH vail Mnr. One baBhel bf clover to two bushels of timotb is enbugh. 51 ike your fence high, tight arid strong "so that it will keep oattle and m3 out. If you havo brush, make your, sofa se cure and keep your hogs from tfio cattle, for if tha corn ia clean they will eat it better than if s nO'. .... Bb iW to get your hands to" ped by seven o'clock,, ihey will riee carlyjy the force of circumstances. . 'Pay a hand, if he is a poor band, all you promised bim; if he w a . good baud, pay bim a little more, it will en courage him to do Etill better.' Always feed yonr hands as well as yourfelf, for the laboring mon are the bone and sinev of the world, aud ought to bo well treated. . , I am satisfied that getting up early, industry and regular habits are the best medicine over prescribed for health. ' When it crme rainy, bad weather, so that you cannot work out of doors, cut and split your wood. Make your tracks when it rains' hard, cleaning yotit stables, or fixing some thing which you would have to stop the plow for and fix in good weather. Make jour tracks, fixing, your fenoes ot gate that is off its hingesj or weatb-M-boardine vourbarn where tha wind has blown off . the sidiQK, or patching the; roof of your house or barn. Study your iuterecta cjowly, and don't , spend money and time in electing president-, senators and other small officers, and don't talk of hard times when spend ing your time in town wiiittling on store boxes. Take your lime and make your calcu lations; don't do things in a hurry, Dut do them at the right time, and keep your tniodas well as your body employed..,. O.nb " Hundred ANn Thirty-six Yeaes Old. ttAuot Milly'" a colored woman, formerly belonging to' Captain ' James M. Harris,' residing near Rook 'fib Gap, in Neleon county Kentucky, d;ed at the rcuidecce of th'19 gentleman on the 7th instant, in the one Iroudred and thirtv-sixth year -of hr age. She was born iu 1731, in the begiunicg ot the ieigu of George 11,'. She was a 00 temporary of Pope, "Swift and Boling . broke itiough probably she never heard of them. : .'- ., . y: - .'-Sr v Tuk agent for the collection of Sold- ier'a claims fut Qhio,' resident at Colum. ' bus. ia under heavy official bonds. . ' , t ' . o.-' . ,.1:' .!-: Thb Attorney General of Ohio asks for a moretiioeent law to." punish yen-.dafs-bf intoxicating liquors, and recom mends that intemperance be made dis , ualificatiin lo hold any judicial offioe. How a Man Stole a Town. Th story in the January number of 'the. Atlantic Monthly of .the man who stole a meeting-house has suggested to the editor of a New UampeWre- paper tin-reported steaU ing of that portion ol the town of. Alton, in that State, whioh was formerly known as New Durham Gore. The legend ruus thus : On a time, the possessors of the wiideruess now comprising the towns or New Durrani,, Wakefield.'. iMiddleton, (which a' included! Brookfleld,) and that part of -AUon known as New Durham Oore.Jugreed with a certain party to run out and duly bound a certain number of lots,.eaoh 100 by 1C9 rods, and if there was any land left, the party thus run ning out the land should have it. The surveyor's name, we think, was l$ryaatk but whether he or his ' emptopers ' were the wicked party to know not; eufhoe it to say, that iustead of laying the lota out with right orTso.uare angles, as they 'jwere expected to do. the towns were laid out in lots with acute and obtuse angles, like diamonds, and ooo aennentlv eanh contained much, lea '.and than was Intended by theowners, while Iher wicked tricksters got for themselves tno wUfclp of New Durham Gore. To this day tue good Farmers of these towns are not on ly much dieoomnioded by their diamond farms, but the increase iu.fenoing is enor mous. .. . Ths EuRorEAN Crisis. Thj eiok man has had a irelarjae. and ia o'.esrly In . hA m.o M ndnr the "inspiration of Unasian intrieue. tha flames of-rebellion are lighting up all along the borders of the Ottoman JSnfpire, . ootn among tuo Sclavonic and Greek populations. These, together, make a majority in Jiuropesn Turkey. Russia Btands- ready to assist, and to seize her part of the prey. Not iB there any assuranoe that Franoa and Rncrland will interfere to prevent the consummation to which events 80( clearly point. Eogland'was sorely bitten in the Crimean war. and bus nodesirej to re- Deat th eiMriment. Her policy is peaoe at any' price. 'rtfre, 'gave signal -proofr'"? in tne late Jfiuropeaotruggia.. ;nat sne was in no mood for a general war. With victorious Prussia for an ally, thelTus sian cabinot will not taesitauo pnsh the traditional polioy of the empivHi whioh a few years sinoe, received so sig nal a check before cebaBtopoi. What Constitutes a Majority. nr. ..,.,,!. .otiii in vipv of iho nieairer ,i,sen(ft' whinh was declared ; -- - t...:4.,n,. to nave overnuueu iuo 't "What i two-thirds voto " and now, finding that the bill establishing negro suffrage in "the Territories was deolared passed, although it only received twenty four votes ; and the Nebraska Bill only receiviug twenty-four, and the Colorado wfth only twenty three votes, were also deolared passed 'we are induced to ask, "What constitutes a majority of the Sen ate?" There are twenty-six States repi represented in that body, eaoh having two members, which makes 52 votes,'a Constitutional majority ot wnion wouiu bo twenty-seven votes. But, .possibly, we have no' right to question the acta f ;norlnni masters. NtVMTK v a v i i " - Journals - Hkavt Taxes We notice recently the amount of taxes paid by Mr. Joseph S. "finch, a . heavy whUky distiller of Pittsburg, He returned to the United States Revenue Assessor 262,079 gallons as the amount of his manufactured wbia ky Bubject to taxation, on which he paid 524,258. That is'pretty steep, but not np to what George Davis & Co., of Porte mouthy Ohio, pay. According to the 7ims. of that oitv. Davis & Co', manufac tured and plaoed-in bond, since the 20th J . rtrts l i day of Beptoniber last, a,oJ ganons ZZ hlgb-winfs, wbion, at 94 per gation, will pay a tax of 0931,650, or nearly one million dollars in about one hundred The Fbesch Anticipating War. A Paris correspondent writes to a Lon don journal that a wide-spread opinion prevails in Franca that the new year will Dot pass away without that country be ing involved in,, war. It js8aid that notwithstanding' the International Lx. noaitioo. Prussia will continue to carry out the grand scheme of -oonquest of Count Bismark, of which ine uerman annexations form but a part, and whiob must ult'rmatel j ' compel Napoleon to fight. m If your slaking Tjartncr is eligible, and your foot pretty, d.on't hesitate in asking him to adjust your skate straps evorv ten minutes. He will rather like it. - Said a poor little girl in the Fourth Ward, New York, a sfie? was dying. I am glad I am going to die, because now my brothers and sisters will have enough to eat. ttoulp each ene of the twenty millions of people in the North would destroy a nvo cent currency note cany 11 1 wouw amount to a million (of dojlar in a day . B .' e 1 . toward tbe removal ot Ine JNationai aebi. ,vH;-,-;i.-" ' ' frGEButler says that the Piesi dent "does not (ike to show his hand.' Mr: Pontine adds: '"If he were to show both his hands and all his packets, . '., s . t... 1... 1: . J ana tne msiao 01 uis uai, uie ouua-rvon assailant would see no 6tolen bdoods in them. f9TBE greatest wonder in the State of Iowa is the ''Walled Lake", whteb ia three feet higher than tho earth's sur face, and occupies nineteen hundred acres. It has not jet' been ascertained where the water comes from or where it goes to, yet it always remains fresh and clear. tj . - fia.THE extraordinarj number cf forty divorces werecKraotedatilbe two days' seasioo of tbe New Hampshire Su preme Court fast. week. : JOB-. .Ai:n.M i. if- ! 0 T. . r. r: ) iD'i'iw i .1.' .i'' S : l-A ,.:' .,; I,-, J 'i.'T V n1. '.' f 'A THE ' DEMOCRATIC KlfQUIREIl JOB FltlNTING 0r!:X,;?.,ijin. il r. In Mahn$'$ Building, n 'Main St reef, '.iO Is icplota. with, all the npdern improve ment for the ' meat, cheap, and ..10 1 1 i'Ut I! bapio rxscatign of every ityl f PRINTINa, r. '.I 1 .. ." -PCH Al- HandbitU, .1 . r fnkn1 i' V . t.) Ji ..trIart, :i WW.) V: I I 1 v,i!: . . 0: '. ' V I J-'J ,. Midi. I if! I j ..1 ft- r :.U 'IU. '.I I i' .- r i -Jt o '! Ua,- j'-' m '! ',:'; ,M'.:-:f''l ' , ,l:t. ' . r. sf.1t-. dl n ,?4. !: i'",i90 '. Jl'1- r.-:ii'j: ' i.':t 1' 1 i'li It ! . ",'?,a ns !T 1 i t il".'. 4 I iHil' H I ii.rt ci( yi Jl'l'.' i !'' n:' 1,." : r " n 1 ?ri vn , im;:-..j! x li'lrt T('l i"yJ' n .Mil .HI .'I 'J. i '.'' . . " :'h' 1 1 M.'i ''!'.. r;' . il Jn-At t 1 ,! i''-'' if 1' ' ;i tri:t.l. .u,..i.M ' io il-J-3.. I Jl'i.; iUrVi,-fl:l!.n ,!0fltjA4 V, V4'i..VS';j'A 1 i i!(l.H.-.i:..M.i oj i'tt.-j.'';' -i-i-.-.r t..i. p's- r ii1 nl t-H: . ..! i .r. i'i.a I ..1 , ,:L i . til' i"r-41 ii.u ' ji . i'.;Mi''ii ''"viV ) fw.:',l "i-..i ft ' ' " ... .ti:5 i K'Si'J'l''.' 1 1 f.e'4.ir-jiM . Receipt. l;taii -It ( '- n it - Itc L 1.1 '.t .T HI i' 'ii .11 - )' in 1 1 i" tf A .9' a AH-ISDS Cff rjtfLAKKfS?" it., &o., to -a -V J Ik plain or faae.v eolsred Inks. F8pS,PECT US ill 5110 oi inn; .t,. EHQU1RER, lvxttdordlnary Jduet-mtnti to Out 1 1 "Agent! IV 1 ,t k rrimiumi 'Amah ling ) Ol-i3 oo i , !!..; U Distributed in April, 1867 ' ' To For List.' of Premium's, and ' PartVcars of Distribution, see the weeaiy r-nquirer , ' and Subscription Ciroulara - ' WE.' this yonr, oflW prije to the nhove amount m iiicentiotolhoseof our patrons who will exert themselves to form clubs If our ii"Pr conlo t t aken in thff household of ll our liBmoornti frieii'lH, Eolith on West, Its inflqence would be po tentl chftnuinjj tho political wpect ol aflnira Th tfreat point lor wliieh all Irienrls of the Union should lahor for ii tun JDinnemumtioo 01 uem'ionuiu 1 rum. If it had had an equal hearing with the errora of our opponent. whonld nYer4nv had , tbe, terrible crisia of the Inst five years. Taniflit by Bad expert eo ofits neceanity, we truat tha Deirtooraho preis ia in Ufiirb to have a larger aplioro. orjuflueaue anc circulation. ' , . . ... What eVilsliav ftil!tt upon the land, owing to tha nolitieal eduation of the miwwoMl . f we would restore the old order of thinff once more, el- feet Natmil.11 Unity onu m gia-iniiura rvwjn auu Preaperlty, we ruuat place, tha Democracy ngain in power. A atixilary to thla end, anu aa ine rrmr ei ftictive agent iu U10 work, wo repeat, . Hie circula tion of tha Uauioui nfifi pr. , tioti of the Bemocmcy that are universally a-'knowl-editcd. Tlu-ouih 4irocripiion nod pernecution nn ... i.j ..iiiiurv i..luiu - diiltlnir itt ouroir- (Milatloii Hi whole btte and ,ditricta. threatened with lot il aupiiresaion, personal imprisonment and lnob violenoe if wo did not cHanne oiir course, we od by the Dcmooirttio ft ig and gavFexpreiorion to ita tenets Twice turned to tne grounu wniim teen months, and amid Jho- Jtreawnt eoiuiliMy dis. Haters eonseuuent upon it, we nave neter ivsi. f.J w ZZZrJr broken a iiromise io pur BUOt'nwals. i n ine minrw, iw, in uio mii,- ai.n At iw.fi t v flf Wll OX tllfi (lloUllS Of adVer' Mil v. we shall bear aloft the Domocratia Banner, aud bo. foillilti to it organization. Will pot the Democ racy of tbe Northwest Ktand by thmn who were true in tle darken!. hors to their political and personal Niterest?. "'id.aill they not .exert themsetvea to in crease our circulation! -' j. ' ' : Aa a buiiic a" family Journal. r .nquirerna no auperior. Each number ntauis aM"int 01 ireiierin iieirJ,' b"' aild moat reliable Inteln- ...i imfc inHtim . Financial and Commor- cijLn' i m ule 11 special feature of -ho Enquire -, rYuipSW.1 markets. " ' ' 1 1'lia Weeklv Ewioirerwill ba mailed to -aubscri' bera at the lollowiug reuueeu rates. BinalecffpY, ort' year.' !l 1 25 With an additional eopy to the Retler up of the tluto. Ten conies, one. yeur. M00O.V tll'P seni ai ur u- r- . ; .i-i,ri i,.tterabv mail. For sum over ler Korsum ovcrten doilHra by mail, draiUor iposfc offloe. money 1 orders should bi procured. Ad Iress . , ,. - FAKAN ' & McLEAN, il 1 . n: 1 ' ' "' r . Clncihnati, Ohio. . Rpeoirnen noplea And subscription circulars con taimnglistof prisma aud all liaoesaary iufdrintion, ent(iaappUcatiou.ii ' . V ;; 1 ' . . 1 Flips )?,EU T, US, ' -of tat 8TATESMAIV OHIO : i- .,1 ,t ' .For ikf.' !. 1 -I r '111 V I A rthioJitiiteHmanwiboontiniw inflexibly Demo. craiic -unalterably devoted to aft advotfnej of the maintenance of tha Constitution, in spirit and in let. ,m, to tha nreaetvation of tile Union, AiJ fro.n this,' the Statetman wlil bestow particular at tentioato ,) ?:i.;:,k , ;. ,t:i ' '.' .,:.v.n't i . Arw, Legiilative anil Congressional ' Reports u'Ciokii Instructive ' tind ' -..v.-:;.. Pleaxing Literature ,' ' And will (pv fiii thfui market reports from the lead Ine Commercial Cmitera of Hi joni)i rv. i ; ; n l.lih of December, Th Weekly Statesman will be so enlaigedaatoKlva two 'and a half addi tional columns 1 f leading, inalter .-weekly. The tvU lowing are the . ' TERM S-CASft IN ADVANCfi. Pally Statesman, jieryeai, '' ,''" ' , ",.. wxmontha, ;. . Trl-Wekly StateRiuan, per year, .; . ii '' ' six months,! ; .t. vjr-; WFEKLVjAIJJSMAN. . One copy, six months, for, , . , -. 1 One copy, one year, for r- , '' FiTecppie, one year, foe . ) ,. Ten copiea, one year, lor Twenty copies, one year, tut 1 " ' ;" Fifty copies, one year, for I 9 00 . ,460 ftO -2 ii t 100 200 ( ' 17 50 32 0 , 75 00 LAiiuan v, jioiiLL. nan, ' i u - :( ''-Coluinbas, .Ohio.'1 Zvr. - THE LADY'S FRIEWD, i vlu A Beautifui' freroiuai Engraving, and Re- '. . ,y ,'. duecd Pric.es lb .Uliibs 7 " mnv i.ihY'S FRlF.Nn ennounceK tor 18ST tho I followiiiR noveletee: A NewStpry.by frs Heury Wood, author ot' 'East Lynne' -The Channings,' iHow a Woman hsd her W.y,' by" Elisabeth rrea- 1 . - . r 1 , 1... . 1. - la,. n 1 . JA . , COIL nlltnor ni 'fniu ujr mo ouu. ""Ki; tonnff, hy- Amanda' M. 'Douglas,: author of 'In. TrttW fte. 'Iora Caotel,', hy Trunk Lee Heuedict. It mil clv. a' splendid double riaga finely colored Fashion Plated engmved an steel in eveav mimber. Uwilla vo a beautifully xeoutd fancy ateel oJ irravin and a In rue assortment of wood cuts, illust rating fashions, fcaiy work.-leto.v In' every .aumber, Il will ai n popol"1' eve ' Muaio, worth tha cost of the iiiairnz'ne itself, in every ntimber. . It will give x copy of the lleaiitiul Premium Bteel Er.graving-r-On of Life'a Happy Uours'-2 by SO inches, to ev fy sihgie WiOt) subscriber, and to ievory ipersona illlb. .,. (, ; .'-.) . ' ',. V d-.-j,-J m.,.i,:U. Hiliier Plated Tea UetM. hpouosi PUcherr. It oners as premiuma nini a nunuii . owiruig Gold and Silver; WaUihes, Guns, , Kjn, Melodious, Clotliea Wrindere, Appieton's Cvclopodias. 40. ' ... f . ';'i L A-!r 'JKttW.l; l. ..'."01:11 01 ff ,. 1-oopy, (fcd theengraviugji! t copies. S copies, (and one gratisVr i ) ' 8 (!.; 1 unfiles, (and nni and One a gratia) SiO copies (an one gratia) irrntu Si " hn conv each of the J.ady 'S Friend and (the Sotur Ju ITwnins PiatforS4 00. . ... the getter np of aolub will always receive a bOpy bf ine rremium miw, -vm w.aM. lug the Engraving must remiv one oui ar. extra. r t.u Hiiairona of aettina ud . club or premium lists should enclose 16 cents lor sample Magazine, contaiomglha PWWimwo'uw ..- v PBAtUfllJl. rtiiiivowii , : l9,Walpt street, Philadelphia, Pa. oiiio 1 1 I ,1(1 ... :j,iKi.:inrt 1 .1 i i t -a: w.- r&K&ists roaMsnBa. ;oI em ?'n onfcAT "VIIK Lt 1 rail 6'uAd' rMwWutUjLiraiti, - . .., i caMsV-SVngWcopy, onTy S2,0(J, 7ar.-r txtrw cbfy 'ohe 7a'iW' very cia - : in'an.Tiiiifaiitobr (six- months for olub of sU.-;i8pe.imens .-.aad !-PrP'-usesJ' cut fe to persons to .mo.. ,,!i: o"bh.3: ..iJjii.i.. LjijiLiliai 1 Ul 4 ' . , . . . 1 rt BALLOU S MONTHLY MAGAZINE; i-iiS'l't :'. 1 11 1' ' y, rriHTS Dooularand widely circulated Matoslrio- TipSw Sod aa editiod .' u.ald J tha, toma tTi Ftu h number is. brnamented by ouiiiHnua StmSSS .ud i. Jmplet. ttf' tt.lf,.lebrt,Ihga Zri T variety f WS keths, . poema, aau ui.iMio ?.Tf JKTii!S exnresslv for IW columbs. It eowwied 1 by .H tot th:ldapMt.4nal.beiMa ane in .tbe world. TpRrJ0i iirf n ii!iuf 1' 11 Ma yean seven eopie, J0Oi thirteen copies. 115 W, ainje eop'M 15 cect. Address . Sostoa, Mass. Political. PLATFORM —OF THE— DEMOCRACY OF OHIO. ADOPTED IN CONVENTION, AT COLUMBUS, JANUARY 8TH, 1867. .... . . nyof!end either.in despotism or a disruption of , 1 or a rrat nne it 1 , Baolvtd, .Thai. Uie ! Democracy ,'of, ftblo gteadlaatly aJUeara la t he principles of the oartv aa txnouadaJ by the Fathers aiiJ ap proved by experience. Jbutjn nccordance with those priaoipies, ' we declare, that the Federal Government la a'Govc rumen t of lim ited powers ; that li posneasea vo powers but such as ar . expressly, or. by neoess'nry" ' idv plicatioa, delegated to it ia the Fedcrul Cpn atitution; that all other powers are raerved tp. th. States or, the people 'respeoMu'.ly ; that a strict construction of the, Conslitutioa ia inilispensible ,to the preservation of the reserved rights of th .States: aaJ the peo ple, that all grants of powar to govoro meats, whether State or, Federal, ebould be atriotly construed, beoau.se all suoh grants abridge the natural rights of meu that tin preservation, of the.equality andf righta of the States and the rights of the people is necessary to the preserration of t(ie Union that the Federal GovernmSni is unfitted to legislate tot. or . administer! tbe local , corw cerns oi the States ; that it. ..would be ' mon strous that the local affairs of Ohio should be regulated" by a Federal Congress ia which she has but two Senators, and tbe New Eng land States with but a little greater popula tion, have IncWo, thak le tinientf of. e- eral adniinistrntlon.la to Usuj-p the reserved rights of the States and to tba. people, , and that,, therefore, .t . centralization, of power in its hands is. an' ever impending danger, that such an absorption of power would, .while it .lasted, be destructive of the liber- ties and interests of the people, md would the Union, I hat, a national debt', besides im noverisbiiiJT the people, fosters an- undue in crease of the powers of the Fedrtil Govern ment, that hlgli pi'ptecitive tariffs liavc'a tike itfeotV sacrificing the:!3teresis 01 'inc. many for the emolument of the wand plainly vi otatiue the equity and spirit i! th? Consti tution, that thccolloction and disf;Ui'5enient of enermous revenues' by .(he Federal u? APmnnnf. 'hatfU lYiA'dartta 'lan.hn. imall the gcvermnent, and; that there, jforw eeoiwmy U essential, notonly'te the prosperity, out also to the liberties or the people that mieaualjtaation ;ia.a plain vio lation of, junice, of vr4iia.li po goverpment -can safely be guilty;' that to eaoh Slate be longs th,.,!rielH. to: determine tue qrtiiliflca- iious-ot its eleotors, and atnm.vio impair tUiw right, either .'by oongresionl Iegisla tipo. or consUtHllou'ul nmendment9. Are uu-i wise, and, ,,despotjc, hat'..the ,anjency .of fund im tu aivai ruui iiicuiaay ,fu- luu iun, and that'fharefore cteVn"l.vigilane is the price of liberty; that the' tendency of gov ctuuieut ii to enlarge its. authority by usur pation, and ilierefore government needs to be watched tbat another ofits tendencies is 10 govern lob knuob,' unnecessarily and 'cxa tiouuly interfering ;with the basiness of the people, thai freedom of speeoli fad . of Abe jvreus aro esueatial tQ.the existence of liberjr that no person,, not in the' military or. naval services, or.where the, civil : courts artf'pre veiited by war or ia'-urreotiiiii irom x'rcl-; sing their funotioas, can lawfully be deprived of life, liberty or property , without process of civil law, thai' Ifae court's should always ba opeu for tba redress of grlevan'cSH, i-tbaii no 'ex frotH yacrtrtaw should' i' dver .e'made, that in .IhB.ludguago of, tb Supreme Court,, "the CunsUiu.'.Uku-.of; tha- Uuitel States Ja a; law for iu:rsaud peopla equally in war aud iii poace, and covers with the shield of its protebtiou aH classes 'of men;at all times ' and under all. circumstances. . Mo. dootrina tuyoiviug more.ptrnioious.QpBSequaociiiwas. ever invented by the 1 wit of wau than that, of any of its brovisloDs' can be suapeaJtiu1 1 during aby of the great exigencies of Gor- ernuenta,' sucu a doctriaei leais Uireouy vo anftTchy.,.r! .de&polisni,"" tbat the right of tbe pewplejto peacbly asacuible and consult upon publio. affairs' is inviolable, thai, (be militarry should be held in dud subje'ciion to the civil power, that while the'uiijoYityv as prescribed by . tha .Constitution, Jiave- tbe reght to. govern,, the minority have indefea- sible rigbisand that a-frequsmt'reirurrenje to first principles is essential to tbe safety and welfare et' rfbe Statei and the people. ,.&.;i!8tfeVIhat the.tates wbieH l Uely aifleiupitd to .secede, are, , still States in the Union aud have been're'cog&ized as such by every depaVt lii'enr;jijf the; Ooyerntnent.' By President ' Ltncblft br,'ia the" tnidal of the war, invited them to elect iaetnbera df Con-: greHa. iy president Johnson la various' proclamations ., and official acts. ;Cy, Cou gress, whioh perniitted' Andrew Johbsod to set la the Seuate as a1 Senator from TenneS sec, by his inauguration1 as Vic President and President of the Senate, and by tbe ad mission, of memberif from Viraujia, Tennes see aud Lauisianastp eet, ,in the - House of, n L . .t . - , .1 Otna ' ItnHl Uepresentaiivs,',, ai ter uoe ui naaaad their ordinances ' oi' secesaibn and while the ws't-was' carried on, ' bud which further recogcired them. as- State: in .;MB Onion bj tile ! Congressional Appointment Act providing for their,, 4ue representation in-Congress, by .various tax laws and es- rpecially the Wreot Tax Aol, . by;the resolti- lf,' ' J-l l'l. ll,u.f",.n. lions suomitciug Aiueuuuiouiii v ...v w , stitution for their approval--and by rvarious other acts -and resolutions im.portpg.; tbe same recogaitiau,. , all,, which, wexo .pudsed ed since tbe attempted ; secession , of those Btatea." By ,the ;Juai'o'ary. -of 'the United stdtv' Whir.h' hbMs federal "Courts in1' AU tUai 8lah. 'snd eHpeftitfil b the Buprtna ftauui isphich entertains inrisdiftiou of,A6S coming-ffWB hem,:i wbtca it,outa,Bo. uu . . . CT rT l. . Kai n wer.ney,1(tnot iJha!Plea.Tb thus n the Union, thtv Bland In 41 equal footing With thojr sister 'Stafes-States W br.eQaal'' ikht'6-a"thltixnbkO0WH. tO the Constitution'! Tfiat by the express terms of tbeCdnstUutioaieaoh, f tatewieM.ieQ io due broportioa of Rep- 're8entat4viaja'the'Cpngre8S,"ud:to-y6td.; all' eiec'iiouS of President 'ml'.Vio4', Treat Uent. TBal thongn tnese- riguis am ouj"v th laiarruntidn tv I ft 'statb "ioK dirif ware 4tiniahed. or in time of ;.Beaoe,. ,bf ornuoh etca e suspanqaa, ;W.Hpoty piaiuiimtMU" of tber constitution, Tb.aT tbe. assent 01 inree-iotinus ui.au urew", -resented (a Conireas oi noll is csseAtial' the -validity b oT Constitntioda amendmeni. 1'bM Congress, Has as , ower ae ncpnvp t State; of .its reserved tights anddnoe ,it a, erritorjalroonfli exclusion 65. .the reptesentatioo rrom frnVrtiiiiM Pth"osa '- r j .. .1 .T, t. th neA 'PresidenliatieleclWo',1 threatened t.wi-iiV,ilA'rIi rii4 denUtW .tractive not merely of r-lghtsaorthoso gtatt,"t'ias()of. theilght of everjWtber JUate i therUwoavi.Jhat ,those.measurts r Ti.T fi iL. .rntiti,. their rdlii; 'abr Iri'eetabHah end' perpkVuate a tyranaieai rtooi iutfi'v,t - jojltyoflhe American people. . That t lton. , jnav tnereipre. iau aottedCwgeW'oriJllWajud,.. iba ttrerf,'th' p-roposed States 'fr kit tirsrrihrpwflaf! tKL8tat aovernmsort8;aina .reducyftn.oft)thpse3tat(es to, the ooucjiapn.of t-(-;ir,rio. ar '.. fiflir-h andeverv one of tlieui ff-,PfW,-rf- ? rTi-Tl?rr:-;i7nX.i.X tlon.-eirtuatiT overmraw w wa AVrJ. nhrtdateddrfsDitiSm'dnjS people,cabndt,'willuiut a 1os of their libsr- result, ana we, mcrerore, ru me iope tnai the "warning will be heeded, and tbe danger lo our'rnsiittitlons' be-peaoaably eveted, do aoleionly iraia .the. advosates . of the -plaa, that, it will not Lp "submitted lo, 3. Kesolvtd', T h a. t Congress is not an om niplent lawmaking power. That tne, Constitution- proviJe ' thal.no bill shall be. eouie a law without the approval of the Pres. ideet, unless it bo' passed by' two-thirds of each House of Congress, That one of the objiota af the present so-oal!el. Congress in excluding ten Slates from representation ia to pass bills bV ' a ' two-thirds "vote'1 which, were all the States represented, could not so pass, and thus to , virtually ..abolish., the constitutional provision aforesaid. That if (his precedent ba acquiesced In, there wilt be nothing 'to' prevent a bars majority of Congress, at any lime. in tbe.fnture, from puUifying. tbe r constitutional, veto of , tba President and usurping uncontrolled - legis lative' power,' by an exclusion of the inlfaMrtty from their aeat.- Tbat tha exolusionof even a single State might give the oontrol, and a pretext for suoh an exclusion wou'd ba wan t ing to an unscrupulous anil levoltltionary party. ' ' " ' '. i'rt-f ;.! 4. JSesolvcd, lhal the people, and espenially those, of the: agricultural .States, haye suf fered too long th e exaotiona of high proteo tive tariffs, and, as the representatives' of an agricultural and .laboring population we demand thtt their substance! shall no longer ba extorted from ,them in order to fill the pockets' of Eastern monopolist.'' ' lf- ' 'j 5.9MlMf,''That unequal taxation is cofl trar torihS,,first pr,lnoiples. of .Justice ant sound policv. and w,oall upon, our Gov ernments, Federal and' Stnjes, to use all neaossn ry CODBlltutlouBl means t vvmady tbisevtl.'. ,ti t :;; .:.iU.s- -Ci'i . . C, Retoh'd, That the Radical, majority ia the so-culled Congress have proved I hern Selves to be in favor bf Nejrro Suffrage by foro!n(1t upon the people of the. Diatciot of Columbia agiint JliQirf almost unanimous wish solemnly expfeisel at thev pols. by torcing it upon 'oil the 'territories In Viola tioa of tbe Ccastitution,'ftdi-,by their varl- ' ous deyioes tocoercb the people of the South ' to adopt it. That we are opposed to Ne?ro uffrngei believing that it would be ' produc tive of evil to both 'Whites and blacki and tond'. to produca a disastrous conflict of races. - 7, Reiolved, That for all their efforts to; tiplio hi the Conslifu'tion,"" r e tender te tha President and to-, the majority-of. the judges of. the Supreree Xpurt of, the Cnited States, our hearty thanks. ,t , , ., 8. Seiolved, .That we are in favor of a Democratic Convention of! delegates from all the Sutea, to tx held nt 'euob lime and placa aaimvy liereaftflr be agreed upon..,,. And (hat the Siiu, Central Committee' be authoriaed to co ncur ftb etbcf ' proper committees In iixiii'g tlia time and place. Tbav we prefer Louisviile, Kentucky, as the place. : ..U- 0. lUtolocd, That. th. Democratic news papers af Ohio deserve an earnest-and - lib' eral support, and that an early and thorough, organiialionof the party is indespensibls. . 1 0. A. R. rThe Ohio'ego trUun la deeply and einoerely dirgustsdwith' the Uranl Armv of the ltepublid, and in Ita fisjuo of tho 16ih ays of that institution: , The orginizatibn Isoowd as the Grand Arpjy of the Eepdblio,' s'cems "to have been feervcited from' its 6rlginal and avowed object, whidh is that of a benev nlont and - patrio'tio order; to ' tr Becfei political orauliatioo.' aoorec socieuea organized to seoure publio offices, are) contrary to the1 genius of our, institutions. They rarely hold to(jflt-he more than two or throb yearn.--i Publia opinion keeps up . oonatant . attritioo ainst them, tho members get to quarreling amocg them selves, and finally they fall trpiece and are heard of no uiore., This will be tha case with the Grand Amy of tbe Re- publio. if its main purpose eontinuea t bo political." "" " ' '" 'We learn that notice or contest' was Bervbd'bn Oenenl Q W. Morgn, by hU defcatd Competitor; Columbus Delano, t , , ARAOlCAlfxehaDge says ther9,,will be stirring in Conprees when Jeoerel Butler gets thereT'.' No. dqub' of it ha has. the, spoons to do if.v ..:i . , -1 T.MI4yWrWltil''"'WaSgBBt tWWHMIIUi . Vlnltrn VuuBiy I'robale Court of the "of ViutoS County, Ohio, oa "Sanuarj2;i8eT-Sw .' '. -Probata Judge.- -.TnTICE David Forerriau, Administrator N Fstata of Itobert Welch, decease.!, haa filed hii t , aaiYiA Ml III IWU'r .1 u ... kk. tf n UlO OIU w : o a a -i ,tui aa me ropeny v.v.rv. r"i hl "!? T'o-uTu h iubfiW-; ' - JOHN Ji BhooKEY Lj- , , fhomaa t. Carmm. aiH i.ayr u,"""li.illio!0,,afc)tudvouvua J(M -w MWa,. . atiiff. faittfOktoVVWi County, . i '- ' - I 0raer of ftj. y0. i.' , - (ieiroe it. "-. j . j. . ..1. PHed'io,rtno,?rt of Cof non Fle-s of V.n lie cornlnal,,lu, v, V 1 a towwoitrrtvi na toBimiiiw"""" imintv I will oftvrat imbiicsale, at the door of h rffifoUHe'Tn th 'l'on of MoArthar.ia Vmton oauwy,,Ojiio,. o.a ; i,tii . .)' 1 v' u U ft 't4ne)iay, 'tpth.day 0 february,4P .317, . , '' ... 'said' riayV the following" de ;cr;beVprmTeS, s.tui,te in the' County, of VlUloa, KSa -eru, th"e eouth-we.t at.itj'".'' heh,rioferof lt of stlo'n K Mbt .tmev..a. , hio. r.u. of ter ot imbii. "V..,, a.,,,th to' theStata raTtSNrt'h- road'torhTEait ind Wcthnfe , on the 'Horth .ad of j.aid hnlf.quarterMlieucot f f -w -j V"?&XZ dnCr.MHalaVo7 half auurtcr,,, 1. ,,. . ,.-;,,. of theKat half ol in cuuin-uiviv vv"' Section Kast The rollowinfdnseAbect real (estate, situate, in Sec. toa E ilUe?, Township .Ten. of Kauge Seventeen, 'Wis. sSrlw?ft ?u!r' . c; thence . '-""w & HAiilh Tu 2W chains,-iuni-e n. , " '-''"-V"' South io. lS'chainaw the beginning place, contain- f In, Mtl.llSl nitres. .1 . .i r - . 11 15 n-. 1 fuirti fi trwnca - wen i: iM'iniw Appraised atone thousand . ve hundred . , 'lt. .o-)i and must briniawo-thlrds &( that torn. I t - . ,.rrno m jii 1 11 HJ , Hherifl Viotoa.gouOty, 0 B. D. Shivil, Att'f 'for Wumtitf.' n'o .'no Vinton County i'lobat Court. i'? eBo?0 Ce,iMfr,i:aanidhiacpuqtsraoier ZZZZn .ad ,linul settlement, fbr . Benjamm A.. Happen ona, uiiwi' m iuecuoi;m - JH' Marthi, and John. i-ff:aaruuio Jaauary M, 18S?-3w Prot-ate Jiwja.. Haruer and tllat the asam-wi ' ' lik.Mii lliroi tv.u, 4,li Kl' n