The New York Herald Newspaper, December 13, 1865, Page 9

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SUPPLEMENT TO THE HERALD. _ _° ‘NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1865. ee oriofve eoshd mes oc | sent farewell Lacs tpplauen ee | te feanaon Pls | THE STRONG DIVORCE CASE, Tee ees Bedell there always when I went there; Mre, Edward’ Strong died in Joly, ‘1867; Mamy was born April 5 38665 Ican't give the not do fo to desire ‘The President tothe rebel States, ‘Before can Edith died in January, 1863; she Trom centare, ame cxercie | © THADDEUS STEVENS’ SPEECH. | partcipaioin ine government you must abolish slavery Fespect forbade me personally to and reform your election laws") That is the Testimony of the Family Physician of ae 0 Seeaait Delivered at Lancaster, Pennsylvania, | Mcouutuicn tar by smurning ihe. powers of Con: y C15 Mr, ‘Blovens’ house ip Twenty-second rocky. Dawn and canker-bit, \ September 6, 1865. gress. This thoory will lead to melancholy results. Nor the Strongs, whence Sots cann.p My Nene plo Together at the Sn SUPE IRENE One Se ane. ee een dae te tan oaeed tf toy oe house in East Twenty-first street at the time of Edith’s laa Four years of bloody and expensive war, waged against | States to be counted, Boy's conventions of those States death; Mr. Strong's | manners “were then Kind to hid wife; efter the death “Mr. Strong was very kind and hospitable, as he always was; this: was in the latter part of January, not more than. three or four weeks after the death of Edith; I met them at my father’s house one evening; Mrs. Strong was not. the federal Union could be restored, because he knew ‘hat while any man can lead a horse to the water, no map could make him drink. © DESTRCTION OR SUBVERSION OF THE STATES TO ER presei ad- | the United States by eleven States, under 8 government | may vote for it; but no “»nvention honestly and fairly lied. Their work is now | called the “Confederate States of America,” to which | elected will ever doit, ‘i... frauds will not permanently | HE WIFE AND HER AILMENTS. (~ The | they acknowledged pi al avail. The cause of liverty must rest on a firmer basis, nts in these allied adminktrations allegiance, have overthrown all gov- Gounterfett governments, ike the Virginia, Louisiana, sais . ALLOWED. ‘without injury to the national safety | ernments within those States which could be acknowl- and Arkansas pretences, will be i F exc her hime; bie oonduet ton The theref« ises not the detrwtion, sar and wolfare. is entitled. to hin w merit, and | edged as legitimate by the Union. ‘thé armies of the | ‘“isregarded by the sober sense of the people, by future Well, ond Me. Barong "'T next saw her after her Sees 2 Bal eRe aa aay | Saat coetee Rc | Sematary oq mene | Ses teats, mat agente: | Medical Opinion on the Cause) ftiac"uscewat wf ny oa eer Sea np mas | Rv ck chy i | arr rca ad sc | Say aga bem wo as | of Hoy Debility, | asics thm aint oe, Teason from mere chimeras, conducted jhro u an an i re whic] ; 1. : ale absolute oxistance of he, States eg nen be aunts a hs suai seroma teens, whi THE SOUTH WOULD BR A REPURIAO OF TOIL. and was informed by Mattids that "I could not sea her § that she was very sick, and thought she was going to other country eve encountered was not only wisely pro- the republics the most palpable, of all the, facta with and organised by Mr, Chase, but was the shall be republican in form and principles, and forma | 1¢ the South is ever to be made a safe republic, let hor eat he wee. Vary ick, ae Ne ee eas many | only one Inder the then inces, | “more perfect union”? with the parent government. It | lands be cultivated by the toll of the owners, or the free “ her; I was tot for my mother, and have stumbled over it into treason and rebellion, the fact, have been 1. (Applause.): There ‘has-been | ig desirable that such a course should be pursued as to | labor of intelligent citizen. This must bé done even | Deposition of Mrs. Lucretia Mecksher, Sister | toa ‘ner ‘she vovtne ae to be aloue wits for all legitimate deductions and purposes, nevertheless | since no departre that Plan, nor any relaxation | gsciude from those Ps on te though it drive her nobility into exile. If they go, all Mra, Strong; I asked where Mr. Strong was Tan practical sense at Wass, the Etates. were | im pareuing it, elther. hie immediate, succeesor, Mr. Governments every vestige of human | the better. It will:be hard to persuade the owner of ten of Mrs, Strong, Pee Cerenty 5 aetes wierd Oe te ican Union was. Even while they were | Fesaci or , McCulloch, the present incumbent, | bondage, and render the same forever impossible in this } thousand acres of land, who drives a coach and four, . il went away, and when I came back my mother said’ she- é British crown, they still were embroyo |: (Renewed )_ Intricate hhnenctal questions must | nation, and to take care that no pripciples of self-de- | that he is not degraded by sitting at the same table, or in had-sent , A Mra. Barbier, who was the nurse that genes , free, self-existing and indestructible, | continue to t themselves timo to. time, struction shall.be incor therein, In effecting this | 2° “me pew, with .the embrowned and hard-handed rally nursed me; I went to Whitlock Point in May, 1863; and henceforth and forever’ | uptitwe shall hve turned the outgoing tide of debt, nt , porated) tid farmer who has himself cultivated his own thriving Mrs Strong moved out there with me that summer; through, not the creation byt the combina- | and begun to Frrioneagin ing flow of sur- | it is tobe hoped that no pi of. the constitution | homestead of oue hundred and fifty acres. This eubdi- WHO PROCURED THE ALLEGED ABORTION 2 lived there two and a half years, and left there in-No- Son of tae several free, selt-existing, ubbora States. | plus yovenue. or myeolf 1) can ‘saely leave | wil be infringed, and no of the law of nations | vision of the lands will yield tam bales ef cotton to, one : vember, 1664; ir. Savy ‘ean st my pia IB Angus, ne States are not stakes nm an m cae _ e. Secretary ie ury. ; is made now, who prod wi 2 “ . hand, nor are poe. hauled logetich tase.) Wehave had two Secretaries of War, Mr, | disregarded, “Kepecially “we take care that in re- | and feol himeelf « man, 1803; his wife’ was proseut ; there wana very excited versation at the-time. Q What was that convereation? LEGAL SPARKING, Mr. Cram objected to admitting the answer to that quaies and a long discuasion of an animated character follow Mr, McKeon contended that the answer ought to be allowed ; that it was the most important part of the testi- mony that had yet come uy, and most essential to elieit- ing the truth, By the answer sought to be ex B eron fat 2) Sees. Pe. period s he first was | -buking this anjust'and le’ war the authorities of é ‘THE BLA FAMILY. . asaolans are livng, growing majestic . whose | short; that of has been 3 ir. Cameron I nm its far easier and more beneficial to “exile 70, sella are wilsip. epeemts anf interlaced within [base siteess thaibe was inall things, honest, earncet, Bs i BY nin Vaso" moe 2 erent -. usurpation | ond, bloated and detiant rebel than to expatriate | The Revelations at Whitlock the soil, and whose shade covers the earth. | zealous and patritice Of Mr. Stantun I am to speak in | Which may to impair the y and permanenoy | 4 (900,000 of laborers, natives to the soil and loyal to the Point se.) If at any time any of these trees shall be | even more exalte( praise. (Applause.) My acquaintance | of the natioma Within théad limitations we hold-it 6 government. This latter scheme was a favorite plan of wd down or upturned by violence, it must be lifted | with him begangmd the hours of deep and overwhelm. | the duty of the government ‘to inflict condi Nut the Blairs, with’ which they had for a while inoculated ‘up again in its proper place, and sustained by kindly | ing solicitude whch filled what may justly be called an in- | ment on the rebel belligerents, and so weaken t i || our late sainted President. But a single experiment made hands until it has renewed its natural stability and erect- | tet uma whieh occurred between the election of Abra- | that they can never es endaoger the Union, andigo ré> | him discard it and his advisers. Since I have mentioned ham Lincoln to te Presidency, in November, 1860, and | form their municipal institutions ag to make thet’répub- | the Blairs, I may say a word more of these persistent Madame Barbier and the Undertaker mess. (Applause. Gofractared thraigh a lesion of one of ws ube, that md | bis’ inauguration amid the daogers of revolution, sicge | lican in spirit as well as in name, : * | apologists’ of the South. For, when the virus of slavery seu be restored lo soundness boforedue constituiional heavh | and assassination in March, 1861, and while Edwin M. WHAT SHOULD RE DOV ‘WITH THE OVE) has once entered the veins of the slavoholder, no subed- On the Stand. sips ie cher ceuaee Oe" teen a tecasee and vigor can be brought back to the whole system. If one | Stanton was an aging member of the waning administra. | We especially insist that the property ofthe: chief | quent effort seems capable of wholly eradicating it, oohtd the aborti¢n on thé person of bis wif; that Re ‘of these limbs offend we have indeed the power—andI | tion of James Bwhanan. From that time through all | rebels should be seized and appropriated to the payment | They are a family of considerable power, some merit, of &e &e &e made this admission in the presence of Mrs. Heckshor ‘will mot cavil about the right—to cut it.off and cast it | the period whiel clapsed until April, 1863, when the | of the national debt, caused by the unjust and wicked | admirable audacity and execrable selfishness. With im- sa ud and his wife. In the deposition of Mrs. Bedell the sub- \ ae from us; but when we should have done that we | siege of the capjtd was raised, and the fearful tragedy of | war which they instigated. How can such punishments | petuous alacrity they seize the White House, and hold ject had been dragged into the case, and it had been have then done just what other nations less wise | the country waa dosed with the assassination of the Chief | be inflicted and such forfeitures produced without doing | possession of it, as in the late administration, until SI han ourselves haw dine, that have submitted unnecenariiy | Magistrate who hid saved it, T hourly eaw and closely ob. | violonce to established principles? ‘Two positions have | hhaken off by the overpowering force of public idigua, Superior Court—Tr! Resnpeiapearyyieed Oe eis ae ee fe ion and given up a@ material portion of their | served, by night and by day, the Secretary of War. I | been suggested: — tion, Their pernicious counsel had well nigh defeated Before Judge Garvin. ustice. then, how could the unfortunate defendant, who- to save themselves from apprehended destruction. } saw him orgamzeand conduct a war of pure repression, Firit—To treat thoso States as never having been out | the re-election of Abraham Lincoln; and if it should pre- The investigation in this noted case progresses with tar been charged with so many dreadful things, ‘De shut. ‘We know the inherent atrength, vitality and vigor of the | greater than any war which mankind had before expe- | Of the Unien becauso the constitution forbids secession, | vail with the present administration, pure and patriotic np taagin wee : that her husband and not herself was: whole American people. We ‘neither passionately tor- | rienced. In all that time I saw no great or serious error | and therefore a fact forbidden by law could not exist. 28 President Johnson is admitted to be, it will render him | Unabated interest. Yesterday the court room was com- | out from Proving guilty of the blood of her child—that he it was who pro» cured the abortion, and that be not only did so, but ac- knowledged it to a third party? tee THE JUDGE APPEALED TO A8 A FATHER. a Another of the counsel for the defence followed in@ long and warm argument in favor of allowing the answer, Ho appealed to the Judge as a man, as a Christian and as afather, not to exclude tho testimony. If, as a judge, there should be a doubt in his mind as to the propriety” of allowing th , as a Christian and @ father let the matter be considered and so determined, Mr. Cram, )ly to both speeches, sald he had some- thing to oiler why the answer should’be excluded, The ‘ment any offending limb nor consent to its being cut off, | committed. I siw, as you have all seen, the greatest Second—To accept the position in which they placed | the most unpopular Executive—save one—that ever oc- | pletely filled with spectators, among whom were three we know that all of our limbs.are capable of | military * resulta schleved—results which the whole | themselves ax severed from the Union—an independent | cupied the Presidential chair. But there is no fear of | indies and Recorder Hoffman, Mayor elect, the latter Deing restored, and all are necessary to the prolongation | world regarded as impossible. There is not one | government de fact? and an alien enemy, to be dealt with | that. He will soon cay, as Mr. Lincoln did, “Your tme Sand ef our national life. (Applause. ) of those bi gs es i. e not more or less di- | according to the laws of war. bas come.” occupying a seat on the bench beside Judge Garvin. WIS. RECONCILIATION BE PERMANENT? rectly due ti the fertile invention, sagacious THE CRIME OF TREASON. ALI. DEPENDS ON CONGRESR. THE FAMILY PHYSICIAN. You will aak whether a reconciliation which follows so | preparation and indomitable perseverance and ener- | The crime of treason can be committed only where the Is this great conquest to be in vain? That will depend | gp, baci asa vated was James D. Trask, who di op Sosely upon pailtary coercion can be relied. upon, Can | gy of the Secntary of War. (Applause) 1 have | person is actually or potentially present. Jotferson Davis | upon the virtue and intelligonce of the next Congress, pyesigeabesi opie J s tas it be sincere? Can it bepermanent? I anawor, do you | s-ver known him o express or even belray a thought in re- | #itting in Richmond, counselling, or advising, or com- | To Congress alone belongs the power of reconstruction—of | posed as follows:—I am a physician; have been one for sdmit separation to be in any case possibie? Does any- | gard to our country which was not divine. What remains | manding an inroad into Pennsylvania, has committed no | giving law to the vanquished, This is expressly decided twenty-two years; Istudied last with Dr, Whittaker, now Body now believe that it ever will hereafter became | to be done, by exhibiting military force, in bringing the | Overt act in this State, and can be tried, if anywhere, ty the Supreme Court of the United states in the Dorr | 4, 4; I was for two yoars professor of obstetrics | posstbler Will you yourselves now or ever consent to | ingurrectionary States out from anarchy into a condition | only in the Richmond district. The doctrine of construc- | case, 7th Howard, 42. The Court say, “Under this art!- | Seceased; I was for two years p: ude You answor all these questions in the negative. |. of internal ‘and co-operation with the government | tive presence and comstructive treason will never, | hope, | cle of the constitution (the fourth) it rests with Congress | the Long Island College; I reside at Astoria now, and Zs not reconciliation, thn, not only desirable, iat impera- = be ly trasted tohim. I am equally satisfied | pollute our statutes or judicial decisions. Select an im- | to decide what government is the established one in a practice there; I have attended the families of Mr. Peter under oireum- a; ve? Is other the naval administration of Mr. Welles; and yet I | partial jury from Virginia, and it is obvious no convic- | State; for the United States gudrantees to each a repnb- arguinents uttered by both counsel were improper to be ‘canes, Gombe? Certainty. gan, wort mcoope’ thee wm” | amibound to admnowledge that dariag the whole period | tion could ever be had. P¥asibly a jury might be pucked | ieale faon af geteam ant Soe pas each a repn | and Mr. Benjamin; Strong; I attended My, Strong just heard; but it was to be presumed that they wero aceapta- dge, or they would not have bea posed reconciliation, or you must purpose to delay and | of his servico navy has practically enjoyed the ad- | to convict; but that would not be am ‘impartial’ jury. | cuit it is for a majority of Congress to overcome precon- | previous to her conflmement in 1860—I think on the 20th wait until ‘you can’ procare a bettas ‘one. Good creel ministration of two sagacious and effective Chiefs, The | It would be judicial murder, and would rank in infamy | ceived opinions. tleatiogs betare Congress meetin things | of October; she was confined in a room on the third ujres that even simple fractures, much more com- | Secretary of the Navy will himself, Iam sure, approve | with the trial of Lord Russell, except only that the one | wil! be so inaugurated—precipitated—it will be still more E a in Las should be healed, if possible, at the first in- } and thank me for this tribute to his assistant, Captain | Was the murder of an innocent man, the other of a trai- | difficult to correct. If « majority of Cong) story, in the northeast corner of the house; the room listened to, Tuey were merely fuiminations of the: character which had 0 frequently been made by hig learned friend on the other side. He would sion. Would not delay necessarily prolo ¥ department has achieved glory enough to | tor. The same difficulties would exist in attempting for- | wise ugh to declare was eight or nine fect high and about eighteen feet | 2 appeal to the Judge as a man and @ father. To do dre you sure that you om procure , fear eerie. ie pel them. I apprehend helther now nor in | feitures, which can only follow conviction in Scatos pro- patria ramen oun easy and bing Twas with lier ag-therbinth of the-obiig, ana\{2.mout bean insult W the Judgo which he a dion ‘after prot ‘anarchy, without employing force? | any near future any danger of maritime collision or oon- | tected by the constitution, and then it is said only for | tegidimale, and the friends of freedom will lng i brother aibeert SEOs HO PUBIC ADDIE 1 Bi OSS UAE SRA ‘Who will aitvocate the employment of force merély to | flict; but I think the maintenance of naval prepara- | the life of the malefuctor, Congress can pass no “bill of | rule im ‘the councils” of the ‘nation. If restoration | Sid with her two hours; she bad a very “good getting | shel! only. to pass upon tlhe quesiion, | Ole of ine ei Binder and delay, through prolonged anarchy, a rocon- | ton equally advantagoous both ai, orge und gbrued, | MbtaINder a Sa Swoon Prevails the prospect is gloomy, and “now lords } wp,” in the language of the lying-in root. sir, Cram) in this tral, as iho had an ‘agreement with iliation which le feasible and perfectly consistent with | with rigard to questions Which, “wittoes eae precau | "°°S"_ How TO BEGIN RECONMTRUCTION, = | yilimmake now laws.” The Union’ party will bo over- A DIEERTATION ON FEMALE APPECTIONS, {ie jury, and tat tbe tatter was ail settled without ihe ahs constitution? In what part of the constitution iswrit- | tion, might possibly arise. 1 ath content to leave the | What right has any one to direct a convention to be | whelined. The copperhead party has become extinct Mre, Si = he wi ethori neceusivy of a trial at all. If suoh were the fact, that ‘power, sini wap opcinst responsibility of this case with Mr, Welles, {Applause.) held in a sovereign State of this Union to amend its | with secession. But with secession it will revive. Un- a BGcng Wak 8 delicate parson ; abe was not plethiorio | these olve men bad. sltenéy made Up ‘lew anihds, lnterior, or | constitution and prescribe the qualifications of witers? | der ‘restoration’? every rebel State will send rebelg to! At all; subsequent to the conflnement Mrs. Strong was | oui be of little avail for him to proceed further in bis efforia. with the complete attainment of if Counsel for defenco—I did not say so. I said I would ‘ten Bae &% tb Political triumph? What would | We have bad three Secrotaries of the fed @ tumulls of war and the terror in- | gress. Yet where is the warrant in the constitution | control Congress, and will occupy the White House. in fact, to institute a new civil varinee one | Home Departinent—Mr. mith, Mr. Usher and Mr, | The sovereign power of the nation is lodged in Con- | Congress, and they, with their allies in the North, will"] the subject of menorrhagia; the menstrual function be- aged ne nk or which it was Ww Congress and thoad- | ...... vy foreign conspiracies, the operations of the | for such sovercign power, much less the Execative, to | ‘then restoration of laws and ancient constitutions will | C#¢ established rather tooner than usual in healthy ‘ Shaeane have power lsty w guinst ome. Deparment Pre all the ‘while ‘been carted pa, | intormeddie withthe domestic institutions of a State, be sure 10 follow, ope-pubiic debt will be repudiated, or | females; menorrhagia means an extensive Low of blood, Lod endian omg afer ord Mh BY States for whatever cause they seo fil? and without attention or even obtaining observa. | mould its laws and regulate the elective franchise? | the rebel national debt will be added to ours, and the | or excessive menstruation; after the birth of the childT | * Mir. Cran—Very well; wo will sd. President have a right to accept or even inake w It might be sufficient pra'se to say of ite chiefs | It would bo rank, dapgergus and. deplorable usurpation. | people be crushed beneath heavy burdens, ect bi he left her room; the ehild's | Counsel for defence—1 will read what I then said. 2py Dart of the people of the United States only r ie som; wnen.ihe time for. scrutiny has come. those 7 in rectasirwetion, 2 no nfm can ce erecied REBRLS TO PAY THE DEBT, . don’t recollect how soon she POP Court—It is not neceseary to read 1t, their limited power to suppress sedition and insurrection, observed operations #re-found”to have been fablt- | in the Southern Mater of they have never left the Union. Let us forget all parties and build on the broad plat- | name was Edith; the menorrhagia was continuous; it Counsel for defence—I will read it from the stenograr end for thet pu only. Whatthen? Must we give leah But this is not all. A thougand, five thousand | But reformation must be effected; the foundation | form of ‘reconstructing’? the government out of the | was on her the last time I saw her, which was in the lat- up thie hope of ‘farther @ levation of classes in the casted years hence, men will inquire when and by whom was | of their institutions—political, municipal and social— | conquered territory converted Into new and freo States ter part of the summer after Edith ied; her menorrhagia Brates wit ous a guarantees for individual liberty | projected and instituted the steam overland connec: | must be broken up and relaid, or all our blood and | and admitted into the Union by the sovereign power of ? . ‘and progress ? nO means. meehing =a path of | tion, which during all the intervening period will be | treasure have been spent in vain. This can only be done | Congreea, with another plank—The property of the | was attributable, in my mind, to her nursing; I think I vied clevation ef manses is what wa have been | seen to haze tpdimpoluply bound the distant osste of the by preing. ond RanG bees. abies cones teen aerres) Tian ebay pay our national debt, and indent! freod- | adviced her to wean the child, but she persistea in season, we have | Pacific to’ res 16 Atl Ocean. ni a en and loyal rere, that under no c.rcumstances 3 Secnteing, stl more ffeciually in’ the prosecntiga of | wll De; Ie wes projected and Tnstitated by the Secretaries | logical and legiimate authority. As conquered territory | will we suffer the uatioual debt to bs repudiated, or the | BUFINE it; after Edith’s birth T attended Mrs, Strong, pher’s notes, which are correct. Mr. Cram—-No, they are not correct; for the stenogras- pher failed to note my exception. ‘The counsel then read from the stenegrapher’s notes: the remark referred to, after which The Court said the evidence was admissible, ere § if the defendant had voluntarily destroyed her child, Hl the war. It isa national mareh, as onward and irrerist- | of the Interior di the administration of Abraham | Congress would have full power to legislate for them ; for | interest scaled below the contract rales; nor permit any | Ala sne was troubled with menorrhagia; the continuance Id show eb juring ; i i y she bad doubts as to ite paternity, le as the late conflict between tree and slave labor was | Lincol use.) We have had two Postmaster | tho Territories are not under the constitution except so | part of the rebel debt to be assumed by the nation.” of the menorrhagia after the weaning of the child was | “Mr. Gram askea that hisexception to this raling shoul® vigorous and irrepressible. (Enthusiastic applause.) | Generals, No more prudent or efficient one than Mont- | far as the express power to govern them is given to Con- YOUNG MEN MUBT DO THR WOUK. wing to the physical condition of the uterus itself; the | be noted. WHAT IMMEDIATE RESTORATION SECURES, Blair bas ever presided in that department. | gress. They would be beld in a territorial condition until Let all who approve of these principles rally with us, | OW'PE phy: : gome 0 ~ Mr. G iT sumed the reading of the depositio Bi nad cam are pursuing haa given (Applause.). In-his successor, Mr. Dennison, we find a | they are fit to form State constitutions, republican in | Lecalt others go with copperheads and rebae, ‘Those } effect of mendrrhagia of the sexnal appetite je not a ttluwtacmean dot tag = roe tr Cpe national advances in this pi , Who, under the improved circum- | act, mot in form only, and ask admission into the Union | willbe the opposing partiés. Young men, this duty de- | specific; it diminishes the petite, ‘but I Would not at- moral end ical elevation, which are now to be made fi stances Sr out ution condition, is giving us 3] ") as newStates, If Congress approve of their coustitu- } yoly, ou ‘God, if only for that, that I A THE ARORTION AND WHO PROCURED Mi? and firmiy fixed. it secures a volnntary abolition’ | pecullan eaves ter eatlatection. iw para screccing | Hank Abd thin they ave dono works moot for repent. | were sill im the prime of ite’ 1 anly tor that, that TY tach much importance to it; wo all know that persons in | A disputo arose as to the aprangenvent for the children @ si by. om tate which was onc: 1% iupui- | tuo Cransportation of mails throughout the late theatre | Sace, they woud ypremeccens pene wee Yesont 7 f#ht through this last, greatest battle of freedom. robust health generally are more disposed to indulgence | during the ensuing winter; F was not present at the out fi secondly, tf must secure and does secure an | of war, and in that way performing an eminent part in | Constitutions are not approved-of they would be sent 5 ist soxual appetite than delicate persons; menorrhngia | *¢t Of the conversation. | (That portion as to arrangement Pectuai adption by the late slave States themselves of the | the reconciliation of the American poople. Watchful of | back, until they had become wise enough #0 to purge The Wheatrical bor : ote pe’ td ngia Y about the children excluded by the Court.) My atet emendment of the federal constitution which declares that | the interests of external as well as of {nternal cominerce, | thcir old laws as to eradicate every deepotic and revolu- Squa le would produce light or heavy mental depression, accord- inade some statement; Ido not know what it ron one Mr. Strong said, “You Ite;’? I said, “Mr. Strong, I thinie neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except for | he has brought into action a new and direct postal lino | tionary principle—unul they shall have learned to | ‘OU AMERICAN COUSIN” INJUNCTION—THE CASE | ing to the temperament of the patient, nie such language comes with very little grace from you re ‘erime, shall ever hereafter exist in any part of the United | with Brazil, and thus has introduced us to more | Venerate the aration of Independence. I do not DISMISSED. Mr. Gerry asked the witness what would be the effect States. (Applause.) The people who havo so steadily | intimate intercourse with the States of South America, | touch on the question oi negro suffrage, If in the Union BUPERIOR COURT. 1 wish you to know now that i, for one, know all;’” adbered to the true path of democratic progress and | A year hence we shall see him extending commercial, | the States have long ago regulated thut, and for the cen- of menorrahagia on a woman subject to attacks of that | Strong said “All? what do you mean?” I gaid, ‘Your iviliaation through all. the. seductions of peace, and itical.and friendly connection to the islands of the | ‘ral government to interfere with it would be mis Before Judge Barbour. kind and exposed to watching over a sick child. instrumentaity, and what took place in your house id Shrough s0 many difficulties and at such fearful ific and the great continents that lie beyond it. | Cbievous impertinence, If they are to be admitted as Dec, 12—Laura Keene vs. J. S. Clark and Wm. Witness—A lady sufteriug from depression of spirits | ‘Twenty-tirst street I know about; I know that you wen’ in war, will for that woman, Mra, Potter; that you procured instra- cost now have new ewed applause.) I wish you all could understand | new States, they must form their own constitution, and | : ‘ conan’, | {aim mMenorrhagia after watching over a sick child would pone laces rn or {ree rced, pagree’, General, ‘a8 Ido. Ido not | H0 enabling act could dictate its terms. Congress could | Sta7t-—The controversy in “Our American Cousin’ | necessarily become more despoudent; pregnancy is a out thay a hawe iy reduced to'a verily | know whother he is to be more admired for varied and | Prescribe the qualifications of votors while a ‘Territory, | case again came up before Judge Barbour in the Superior | normal condition; it 1s « period of activity in th the sublime assertion of the ical equality of all men, | accurate learning or for what ecems to be an intuitive | oF When proceeding to call a convention to form a Staie | Court yesterday. Mr. Booth, on the part of the plaintiff, | *¥#tem; an abortion produced by violent 1 which the founders, in their immortal Declaration, laid | faculty of moral philosophy. Only the delicate nervous | Government, Thatis the extent of the power of Con- | hresented the pleadings in the case and made a len cay] Moran ave mousy sfivanced 10 pregaaacy abd y down as the true basis of American Union. (Prolonged | system, which wo all enjoy, but so seldom appreciate, | &ress over the clective franchise, whether in a Territorial | ° . : 6" subject to frequent attacks of menorrhagia is very liable .) It is certain that the plan of reconciliation | seems ‘to me to furnish a parallel for his quick | OF State condition. The President bas not even this or | argument. The main point in Mr. Booth’s argument was | to be followed by serious consequences, leaving the which I have thus largely explained must and will be | sensibilities in the discovery and appreciation of truth. | ®ny other power to meddle in the subject, except by | an effort to have admitted as evidence the record a d producing a very Sdopted, (Applause.) It may, however, be hindered or | (Applause.) Firmer, than most meu in his convictions, advice to Congress—and they on Territories. Cong: of the case, with decree in favor of plain. | {eleterious impression on tho general constitution ; au hastened. How can it be hindered? You are yourselves | and braver in his hopes of the progress of humanity, | tobe sure, has some sort of compulsory power 4 B p abortion by artificial means is liable to the additional aware of the answer when you fasten upon any violent, | he is nevertheless temperate, thoughtful and wise in } fusing the States admiss.on until they shall have uf, as tried in Philadelphia, He argued that ! mechanical injury by the instruments used; I saw Mrs. factions or seditious exhibitions of passion or discontent | the conduct of administration, These are they who | Plied with iis wishes upon this subject. Whethor U the injunction granted in Philadelphia should have a | Strong last at the front of my house in the latter part of 4m any of the Jately rebellious States and argue from it | were or are the counsellors and agents of the | Who have fought our battles should be ail allowed to | contreiiing inflience over @ decision in a New York | the summer following the spring rho bad lost her child; the failure of the plan, You argue justly. Every tur- | President of the United States during the event- | Vote, or only those of a paler hue, I leave to be discussed | court, on tue cause then brought up for trial. at that time sie drove up in # j the horses’ ‘Dulent and factious person in the lately inaurrectio fal period through which we have passod. That | inthe future, when Co: Mr. Edwin James argued on behalf of the defendants, | beads pointed to the west from States is resizting, Bindering and daying the work they have always agreed from the first in deciding the | Bizance of il. There are about 6,000,000 of ireedinen m | He considered that his clients had a perfect right to pro- | Yerk city; Mrs. Strong’s app:a @f restoration to the extent of his ability. But | momentous questions with® which they were engaged is | he South. The number of acres of land is 46,000,000. | duce the play of Our Americwn Cousin where and when | C&ted great debility and nervou cage is precisely the same with ourgelves, | not asserted. A Cabinct which should agree at once on | O! this those who own above 200 each number | they pleased. Tom Taylor was not the sole author of was in the expression of her countenance iments from her, and the directions how they were to used; that you went not only once, but twice; that told you that in nine cases out of ten the mother’s life was endangered as well ag the child's, and I believe that what you hav: would place you {n the Tombs.” Mr, Strong rose very pale and excited, and sald, “What uid 1 do¥ I did it at her prayers!” ‘She said “That ie falre."’ He said “I did it at her prayers."’ He said it in those words, T can sweat it, and Mr, Stron, can too, Mrs. Strong said, “fhat 1 was done because you threatt children away from'me and never living under the same roof with m Mrs, Strong then proceeded to say it was the pri ering up her disgrace and her chil- dren’ from the world; Mr, Strong said, “ Very” well; Tam willing to stand my trial; if you are willing to reo the father of your children disgraced as well as thelr Manifestations of doubt, distrust, crimination, con- | every such question would be no better or safer than one | #bout 70,000 persons, holding in the aggrogate—together | the piece, but had composed it with the assistance of it in my own mind to the lors of her child; T know | mether you are baser than I thought;" that, word for tempt or defiance in the loyal’ States arc equal- | counsellor. Our republican system, and the political | With the States—about 304,000,000 acres, ieaving for ail | another party. ing 8. Bedford, of this city; he isa man of the | word, was the conversation; I raid I thonght it would Jy injurious, and equally tend to delay the work | system of every free country, requires, if not a “muiti- | the others below 200 each about 71,000,600 acres, By Judge Barbour refused to reecive any such matters of | highest character; his works are of the highest authority | haye been more to his credit if he had left it to a bigher @f reconciliation. How, then, shall it be hastened? | tude of counsellors,” at least an aggregation and diverse. | thus forfeiting the estates of the lead.ng rebels the gov- | evidence as were proposed by Mr. Booth, when the latter | 2 obstetrice. power; that I considered him guilty of a doable murder, HOW IT CAN BE BROUGHT AROUT. ness of counsellors. But thisIdo maintain and confi-’| ernment would have 494,000,000 of a besides their | gaygested a non-suit, as the means on which he had : uned—When I last saw Mrs. Strong her de- | not only of the child but of the mother, in his boart; he T reply, virtually, in the language of the President—in | dently proclaim, that every important decision of the ad- | town property, and yet uine-tenths of the people would | based his case were taken away from him. been produced by soiwe | yaid, “She onglit to die;” that somebedy ought (0 dies Me spirit of the constitution and in harmony, not only | ministration has been wise. I maintain with equal | Temain untouched. Divide this land into convenient Mr, James then moved for a dismiseal of the case, menorrhagia is excessive | that he did not consider himself a responsible being ; thug with our politica, but with our religion—“We must | firmness, and declare with still greater pleasure, the | farms. Give, if you please, forty acres to cach adult | which was granted. tnenstruation; the menorrhagia came on four or five | Providence did nothing for him. trust each other.” (Applause.) Can we not trust each | opinion that no cmuncil of gwernment ever existed’ in a | male freedinan. Suppoee there are 1,000,000 of ther, months after Edith’s birth; Isaw Mrs. >trong occasion- 4, Mr, Cram here commenced the reading of the cross-ex ether? Once we were fsiends. We have since been | revolutionary pericd in any nation which was either more | That would require 40,000,000 of acres, which deducted Superior Court, ally in 1861, only a few times after her confinement, and | amination of Mre. Hecksher. The principal points wer@ enemies, We are friends again. (Renewed applause.) | harmonious or more in volo each other, to their chief and | from 394,000,000, leaves 354,000,000 of acres tor sale, THE DRAFT RIOTS. then only to attend upon her children; im 1861 I saw her | as foliows:—- + = om ee But, whether in friendship or in eumity, im peace or | to their country. (Appl .) Had this council been at | Divide it into suitable farms, and sell it to the highest Ribak: Sakae tiaras not over #ix in the early part of 1862 1 may During Mr. Strong's visits to Whitlock Point he oceu- ‘m war, we are and can be nothing else ‘to each other | any time less harmonious or less loyal I should then | bidders, 1 think it, including town property, would ‘a whee have seen hi don't know where she then | pied a separate apartment from his wife; my first infor- than brethren. (Loud applause.) A few evenings ago | have feared the downfall of the republic. Happily, I | @veTage at least $10 per acre. That would produce Dec, 12.—John A. Pry vs. The Mayor ent Corpo- | lived; certain diseases are apt to produce mental |. mation about the dilticulties was gathered from see! hundred Southern men, who recently had been more | need not enter the field to assign honors to our military | $3,540,000,000. Let that be applicd as follows, to wit:— ration, déc., of the City of New York.—The jury in this depression more than others; there was. nothing in | Mr Strong at tue dinner table at my father’s house, which Le behaved in such a remarkable mauncr as E thought. ; my first question was to my mother,. whom I asked what was the matter that my fathor or less influential and leading revoluti wal chiefs. Their achievements, while they bh 1, Invest $00,000,000 in six per cent government ’ : th.s disease (menorrhagia) to. prevent sexua) intercouree ; Rouse at Washington, Ther neve fxn gcse Deter gens stated the admiration and won the affectionate praitake bonds, and cid the interest semi-annually to the peu- | case rendered ® decision for the plaintiff, granting him | Mr, Strong was attentive to his wife during her confine @xrnest in thoir assurances of acquicscence and recon- | of all our countrymen, have already become a grand | Sons of those who havo become entitled by this villau- | eleven hundred and fifty dollars damages. The action | ment; his manner was nffectionate and kind; I have at- . . ous war, was brought for destruction of property by the July draft | tended Mr. Norris’ family and m’mbers of the Stey allowed Mr. Strong to behave #0 strange! own telligent Ehgiisninen” fects Wn ia at) S14 Og aca ATE pd AFraIne. 2. Appropriate $200,000,000 to pay the damage done to | rioters. * ee ane x, family; the room in which Mra Strong gave birth to | table; my mother sa'd, “Do not ask me, 1 a Re know ime. I introduced tho late revels to the 1 omit to speak of foreign nations and of the proceod- | Hoya! meu, North and Bouth, by the rebellion, ; : ve | Edith was not ap unhealthy one; it was not as eligible @ | anything about it;” this was in March, 1863, ef sympathiging England, and I enid to tho: ings of the government in regard to them for two reasons: | 3 Pay the residue, being $2,040,000,000, toward the | THE CASE OF THE NATIONAL FIRE INSURANCE | room as some other rooms; in the cabinet of curiosities ere followed & number of questions and answers re ately tech SF you thought that the Sout pro- | first, because the discussion of such questions is fora | Payment of the national debe, re: there was nothing calcuiated to injuro the health of the | Inting to the habits of Mr. and Mrs. Strong as to sleeping, ferred British rule to citizenshtp in the Un! season necessarily conducted without tmmediate pub- ‘THE NATIONAL DEBT, Goodridge and Others ot. The National Fire Insurance | people sleeping there. the witness’ connection with the criminal proseeution ‘While the Englishmen individually disclai licity; the other is. reason I neod not assign. Never. | Our war debt is estimated at from three to four billions | Company. —The jury in this case did not agree, and were | , Be-direct—I can't say what month Mrs. Strong called | and a number of other matters already in the possession. ties promptly 8 OW theless, I may say in general terms this: Wo havo | of dollars. In my judgment, when all is funded and | Givcharged, » on me in 1862; at the time Mr. Strong’s wife was in Iabor | of the public or of no particular Interest, ‘was not merely a delusion, but an absu: claims‘; foreign nations for injuries to the United | the pensions capitalized, it will reach more than four *%; 1 don’t recoliect any particular acts of attention paid to The usual recess was here taken. ‘They now knew that even during the excitement of the | States and her citizens, and other nations have presentid | billions. ACTION FOR DAMAGES AGAINST THE ENICKERBOCK- | her by him. - On the re-assembling of the court counsel for the de- ‘war, the American citizen, whether North clams sgainet this government for alleged injuries to | The interest at six percent. only (now much ER STAGE COMPANY. 4 RWIBLE JURYMAR, fence begged leave to suspend the reading of the depori~ really preferred his own countrymen of eve them or their subjects. Although these claims aro chiefly | _ more). sores ssesess +. $240,000,000 | wargaret Tinkie vt. The Knickerbocker Stage Company.— | _ Mf. Gerry—Do you think javelins, daggers and mum. | tion in order to permit the taking of the evidence of to any other people in the world. Some of you fear | of a personal and pecuniary nature, yet the discussion | The ordinary expenses of our government mies are fit things to have in the view of a pregnant wo- | Madame Barbicr, who was somewhat Indispose and. Shad the Previtsnt may ‘be 00 lentent to thee Souk. | Of them’ involves principlce essettial: to the inde. | _ are. e Plaintiff sues for damages to the sum of five thousand | man? (One of the jurymen here laughed heartily.) desirous of leaving the court as soon aa possible, No ob- ern leaders who plunged the country inlo the and doliars, under the following circumstances, as related by cage ichiog) not prescribe such articles in such | jection was made, and her evidence was given, as below. ties of civil war. Except those of you who have been plaintiff:—On the 21st of January, 1863, plaintiff entered 4 Mr. Gerry—Would it not have an injurious effect upon TESTIMONY OF MADAME BARBIER. ee eet ignite on 700,000 | @ conveyance belonging to the Knickerbocker Stage Com- | the child? in) Pi Mathilda Barbier de; ‘an follows:—I am a Indien” ‘an fe has? we not forget where he can forgi by | pany, at the corner of Perry and Bleecker streets, and Witncae—It might have such an effect. Durse; am Bote mid a Sasiene ladies during their Are yt aware that his terms of amnesty lo offenders are, taxation! Our presont heavy taxos will in ordinary | when at the corner of Broadway and Broome etrect she | 4 J’#yinan—-Would you consider the room a proper | Confinement; I attended Mrs. Strong, but not previous to more rigorous than those which were offered "Swoon yeara, produce but little more than half thatsum. Can y one for @ lady? — 1862; it was in first ; Mre. Stephene Tsnooin? Have ever esas ths Selene Plow more our people bear double their present taxation? He who | Madea movement to get out. A gentleman nger ‘The witness, after some pause, answered:—I would | #ent Mr. Strong after me; Ur. Strong said he expected. firmly maintained than it hasbeen by him in the exerc ise ‘unnecessarily causes it will be accursed from generation | pulled the atrap, when the stage stopped. The then | have considered it a suitable one for a lady; a sudden | bis wife had miscarried ; this was about eight o'clock im ‘ Of diccriminating ole (Applause.) Some of you to generation. It is fashionable to belittle our public | moved to leave the stage, ax she relates, and while | disagreeable impression, induced by seeing strange ob- | the yy went away about ten o'clock in the even- geem to have alghily alscarbed by professions or debt, lest the people should alarmed, and politi- | having one hand on the door aad the other on the han- fects, — cause injurious effects; cases have been ing to Mr. Strong's house; I found Mra, Stevons there; \ : @emonstrations of favor toward the President made by endeared th,us by their adoption of cal ‘abould suffer. I have never found it wise to | dle, with one foot on the last step, the driver started. | known where the impression of such’ objects have been | Mrs. Strong was in the room with her mother; sho was ‘ parties who heretofore opposed his administration, Vappieust’) Mae influence of ours was im. | deceive the people. They can always be trusted with the | Her clothes were caught in door and she foll to the | transmitted to the fatus; the child may be marked in nal a chair, dressed; she wont to bed soon aiter I 1 rf Rorwell an thaoWe nis predecessne, (Laughter.) And you | paired, as ought to have been apprehended the | truth. a will not be affected, for they cannot | ground on her hands and being drag; several | some manner, but it would be more likely to effect the | Was there. ask, May not try President yet ‘unfaithful to us? | American Dee when they fell into the distractions of | be deceiv: Confide in the ‘and you will avoid | yards. From the effects of this she has the use oo he of the mother than the child afterwards; THE ALLEGED ABORTION AND ITs FRUIT. j wer "1 wlb orice if Thad in 1861, | civil war. With the return of it is coming back to | repudiation. Deceive them, Yead them into false | of one of her arms, and has since that time been affected | I saw no mark in this case on the finger of the child; i Labor was on her all day; itcommenced, I think, be- by ALS of cmanded that ‘sacri: ‘ever. Tamétwrethat | measures, and you may produce it, with hemorrhage of the —y and general debility’ | don’t recollect any mark om the child. tween two and three ‘o'elock the morning; Dr. Watsor er hs a hogs = eg ‘has not been lost right of by the Presi | We pity the poor Englishman, whose national debt and | Case still on. Mr. Stratton Plainuf, and Mosers, Cross-examined—I can’t remember whether I told Mr, | came soon after I went in; he went away 14 me t- whatever of p £ institutions, Xa HS bi Mabood. "The "se Britain is just abo: Cf sae se oa pre Se cauecas SOUTER, by a Pk he hs tn ore, chil Ly ut as ‘La’ é (ppiauee, Ch rmsd tay Segara Me Eoartaeconke rauch as ours (4,000, 000,000), four billion. But in ect ted States Circuit Court. Mr. Cram—Is it usual to talk with husbands on such 0 delivery; she was delivered by the doctor, wh it forbade, jusion nent, vindicated, renewed reinvigorated, as ; it Dears ree per cent interest. UNTE: ‘EY. hand. 10 I me; cou! we ‘Union with opponents a ites Pace ot of plause. T shall see ‘hls or enpeatal arront year, the Chancellor of the Exchequer tells ba ‘jana dae Shi at eee ir. Gerry . It would be iageniale we pee {t was not a nine months child; it wee notafall grow Fesonciliation which the government has found it neces- oewed out on the American continent, I shall then us, the interest was $11,806,900. Ours, when all shall jadge Shipman. to the court and the jury that a married man would not | child; it had the form of a child; I should think it w gary to pursue. Duty requ! ‘absolute and uncompro- for the signs of its successful working throughout the | be funded, will be nearly ‘double. The pian we have pro- The United States vs. Francisco Bunogar.—The defend- | know of such a disease in his vife if it existed, months old; do not remember the sex; the doct ¢ mising deity to the su Of ‘those policies, who- | other continenta. (Applanse,) Tt i Sour I think Area ts camapatameeen of our debt. The | ant is an Italian, and was put upon his trial charged with et NV any be tiga iy some told mo to put it away, snd J Po ht Ge alyroom, + a goever wi or » “ rloset, i alive wi ‘i , neteoever party, they spy. De... (Ap- | the atmiaaaratiogs of Abeanaan Tineots ted Anétew EDU MEEES SUM re having a large amount of United States counterfeit notes | "Mr. Gerry—I think the gentieman has bad more expe- | handed to me; I saw Mr. Strong onee in the room dur JOBNSON’S FIDELITY, ‘with now spirit and the caree jle I hear it said everywhere that slay ie dead, I | in his possession. From the evidence it appeared that | rience than I have bad. pA Kamer pe Hey h directed to. cabled sare who nillee 1c, No thoughtful isan hae pre: the prisoner and another party also under arrest, hired a | _Ré-direct—I don’t recollect treating Edith for « mark, however slow, te to- ord ts traci wf coer Dorm, Benen very, and | vended that, Lincoln's proclamation, co noble in wnt: | ca No, 6 Goerok sree, from whence We of | of that I removed a mark by caustic. living with a lady; do not remember the dat eh the ality ment, liberated a birth, but think itwas in March; the child ty Toned applause) Pro” | from ite operation. all those within our lines. No slave | money, were observed to be carried away by parties trom | anthony &. Scholdt, the famliy phyticiee of the Heck. | 2° navel string thet T remember: It was nc % those poll “hen EARLY RESTORATION Dat vor 17a | within any part of the rebel States in our possension, or | time to time. The defendant was also repeatedly seen to | shers, was next called, and testified as to the confinement | *!! discolored; it was @ kind of reddish bi more ~*' ie necessary to the nt of magnificent CELEBRATION FIXED. in Tennessee, but only those beyond our limits and be- the house with packages which seemed to the of Mrs. H. on the 29d’ of last November, and that she is | ‘280 Fed; Iwas @ week there altogether this { nda. (Loud applause. y should he now abandon | And now, my dear friends and neighbors, after this | yond our power, were deciared free, So General Smith | leave Ae ae m- | pot able in consequence to leave the houpe, Mra, Strong told me to bury it in ; the ‘hove policies, and desert time-honored and favored su Jeasant interview we part once more—you to continuo, | Conquered Canada by a proclamation! The President did | forming parties as rolls of ._ As no person slept Mr. Lyman Bonnell testified to an effort to subpana | Si, ‘no such thing,” he would see to and! ¢ rters merely because the dawning success of our hope with unabated success and pleasure, your accus: | Hot protend to abrogate the slave laws of any of the | in the room, and as the actions of gaverise to | yrs Hecksber on Saturday, but that he was duable to | ©, Be, Undertaker (Mr. Wilson, an undertaker compelled former opponents to approve and accept | tomed Greente ‘and social pursuits; I to return to the | States, ‘Restoration,’ therefore, will leave the ‘Union | suspicion, information was lodged w the police, and | goo hor. ° pointed out to the witness in court); Ido not rec them? (Renewed applause.) Patriotism and loyalty | capital, there to watch wait and work on a little | as it was—a hideous idea, 1 am aware that a very able | stops taken to siftthe matter. John R. Anderson, an | "yp Gerry then offered to wad in evidence this man as the one; it was born at two or three o'e equally, however, require that fidelity in this case shail longer, But we shall meet again. We came together | and patriotic gentleman, and learned historian, Mr. Ban- | officer of the Thirteenth precinct, visited the prisoner's the morning, and I ga to the undertaker about ‘ be mutnal, Be ye faithful, therefore, on your part, and | to-day to celebrate the end of civil war. We will come | croft, has attempted to plaee their freedom on different | place on the 27th of October, and arrested him there; | THR DEPOSITION OF MHS. LUCRETIA MECKSHER, | o'clock; it was a perfect child; didn’t look at ite athough the 'y 1 afer is wnnecesary and tm. together again under next October's sum to rejoice in the res- | grounds. He says, what is undoul ly true, that the | seized a box on that occasion which he now identified in | taken de bene ease, shi being in ® condition to ap- | do not know that it had eyes: It bad features ; fron perfiuow, ye 1 will guarantee “hdaty on his tration Wf pence harmony and seen Oren the land. pr clamation of freedom did not asiave. But he | court. Seized also a bag and bundle which he found in | pear personally in cou: io objection having been | Tcould see it was perfect; the undertaker told part (kenowed cheering.) Those wlio hitherto op- | Until that time'l refrain from what would @ pleasant | hberates them on feudal principles, Under the feudal} the oom, and fou some $113,000 in coun- | made, the counsel proceeded to read it. The substanco | look at it again before hi tit in the box; it hw Poved the President, but now profess to support him, | task—the forecasting of the material progress of the | system, when a king conquered his enemy, he led | terfoit Ramen | of the United ‘Statea. There | of the deposition was as follbws and arms; it was a bor, Row remember; Mr. ‘elthor aro sincere or insincere. Time must prove which | country, the normal increase of the population by birth | out his’ lands and conquered subjeots among his chief | wore several packages of money, each containing $1,000, am the wife of Mr. Hchard Hocksher; [ reside at | was not present when 1’ gave ft to the undertake fe the fact, It they are sincere, who that haa a loyal | and immigration, and its diffusion over the now obliter- | retainers; the lands and sorts were held on condition of | Prisoner said whon questioned that the box containing | No. 86 Ninth atreot, in this ¢ity; 1 am the sister of him only once, as bofore related ; ho came three yy, heart must not rejoice in their late though not too long | ated line of Mason and Dixon to the Gulf of Mexico, | fealty and rendering military service when required, If | the money was owned by him; to Captain Steers he said | defendant; 1 know Mr. Petr R. Strc he ig my ben. | days after; he Bat One sole ah kway. . delayed conversion? If they aro insincere, are we | and over and across the Roc ky Mountains along the bor- | the subordinate chief rebelled, he broke (he condition on | the money was ht to hit ther-in-law; I knew him fet way Shy vit ined to 1862 1 had been & i either less sagacious, of have we less ability now than | der of Mexico to the Pacific Ocean, I say now only th which he held them, and the lands and sorfs became for | come ina coach, and sometimes in ‘the fall, t eighteen months before Cross canes \— 0 A, ie oe be \ heretofore to counteract treachery to the national | Go on, fellow citt: increase and multiply as you have | feited to the lord jount, But it did not free the | that bar it was named John Lee recollect Mrs, Strong’s marriage on the 18th May some ten by ty rears; bad wae with Mrs. He ‘cause? Perhaps you fear the integrity of the man. | herotefore done. Extend channels of internal commerce | serfs. Thoy, with the _ae, were bestowed on other | being in the habit of Sa counterfeit money, | they were married, by the Rev. Mr. Bedell, and I was a u pan, before; ized child; did m 1 confess, with a full sense of my accountability, | as the development of agricultural, foreign and national | favorites, ‘But the analog iia in another important | not in the neighborhood of operations, but across oe cay tnaeomnels ‘there were present at the ceremo- | some three times; i rnc ume tm : Ghat among all the public men whom I have met, resources require. Improve your harbors, consolidate | Tos) The American slaveholder does not hold, by | town. ny the ilies on both sides, and a large concourse of | much attention to It; Jy A Jory 4 ‘with whom I have bee the Union now while you oan, without unconstitutionally | v oft any grant from any lord paramount—least of John Smith, the of the building, No, 6 | friends; it took place at No. 63 Bleecker street, her | fore putt 16 away 5 wae oo ea clad Gn Boe ‘this or other centralizing the government, and henceforth you with all by @ grant from the general government, Slavery | Goerck said that, suspected the prisoner aa father's house; 1 had met Mr. Edward Strong once be- rence to this matter; Ay 4 Trother of Mre. more Sree PAD & tribute of respect and confidence, thai security | exists by no Jaw of the Union, but simply by local lawe— | boing —_ in counterfeiting, he gave the information | fore previous to the marriag»; after their marriage they | quired into the Lg | ame efter Ge oe tion than Andrew Johnwon; at and that consideration abroad which the mari- | by the laws of the States. Kobellion the national | to the police which led to his arrest, Went to Philadelphia and then to Waverley ; ‘Strong, | John Anetin Btovens,, do not recollect that Mr. aeomay sae ts time Powers of the world have of when their candor | authority is @ breach of no condition of weir tender, It ‘This closed the case, and the j the mother; Mr. and Mra. Kdward Strong, Mr. and Mra. | me before the G tbe A eam ee" was ily needed, only reluctantly and partially con- | Were more analagous to gay tl.at rebellion against a State 08 ‘and Mr, Benjamin Strong, wrote down my statement; MP. : Shall I now (Appian) May our Heavenly Father bless | under whore laws they held might work a forfeiture. rey ® little alter the marriage; ol fat to the house j ti ‘@inistration—the heade mre your families and friends, and have you all in | Bat pepo dog ‘neither government would per the different times I called there the same meagan ; %q MP they are called apt the rolling monthe shal! bring § have apy such Om whom would the lord pare. sone wore there; subsequent to 1868 1 met Alexander . ad

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