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1 AY 1 gh, ry te any mac 2 the follow ine featereae’ The hr ARIS: pent ape paare, Ip fe more stmple and periert whee more etrvagih. @ ith ightness cers hina OY IT—TRY IT—AND YOU WILL USE ‘Be other he tomas le W beiesaie or eis, at ¢/ Sr0i8 seron? streen “_ Sjpeoial Advertisements: Te rd iN ANIMALS 0 adv CAN MOWRE Wik she eve WR IMPROVES Bich, Hmegvecta te ences, Wy, me eer dgher chetrections (sau Talaanet be had of a RUELTY TO a Soe owt ing Corn et Ba with fe. perarity to ibe esa fe Rooms of tae bocseuy, Sit Creer tna VERY ay = eee ea qe ritor has 8 pret rh HAIR DY Wsek @ Brews BRIES DS A ATR we ead of Paies i'd Walk mex of ent nRiesTs Wain Dye te ¥-and dors Be CBarEETS wai pyew atest FIP AX ¢ Baik DIE we ae FIPTY CRNTE per es iran hoes, fer Lanes, eet care fom REMEMBER 47 RANIED 4 ba 1 beep constas Fever Wor em 8 Pieave call eisew bere, as eee Pe mL hich Ts ADIES fev il rer a be eer Hosen « BCHEN. tie V GENTS $—M S1OP AND 1 Ben ‘only CHOLE wb CHOLERINE ry, C above ouinpianir reach of ati, wat usual | fib j HK Sct WEEKLY cna peut inee TPHE YOUTHS TENPERAN: Venjerance be en ‘ Th ont fon How Pape, erpeciall ban. Be ps ‘ed 40 } Ch) dren of a merice ; The twe papers writers as ¥. FL. Curler, ? D fraith, ‘ xe 1 umber wili be Baperinievdente, Teseuers, « Beatle sequenied ( 064 forwardiug SANT, apd bas ne va apy ted wa Mac htmes for cme horwe WLTAM VAN dety Coveciion na the cow fore of the « WS wor PEPsIA ANNIHILAT torether witb | id 1 eineuiasing Raa Ieper F anna \ “ Wolengtiie tO 149 Kadical party, Because Mr. t roup of ame th . t oT i": t } \ » “ Hy ethno \ la party, ‘ wendments to be 1 f f the ¢ Cato Mork kh NEW YORK SUN, Rewanmne woais yieyeds a spicjenaly: 1) Menewrn bas Aeon 8 to duster from them, | Ad t the people One of shoes aie nd ine ut ft. Pwould b A TioNaL Drove Yarns, Oct, 2 me Y ‘. . arts aed (0 tenth a 10RteD Gali nan amendment which {venture to { the | people, (Applause) And ; TH YEAR! y 1) he natant tt « Rech io : defining hia porition,the | ian ju the Mato of New York woull over | connate se Tender ye I Anadion of adverse OLDEST DATLY MORNING PAPER Ant of Raven i" ed at all pointa by bis | give hin consent to if placed in the anime ete: | would id a | basSuge r f thi ket 1 1 thin sie t mo adrmirers,who were not content with | Cumstances. And that 1 the one which y thon ot fo tinder the Conath | cite h i ark fot standing IN SEW YORK CITY pe ‘ st lanathematizing him, but, with cowardly | {itibee a larwe vauear tel tees bi I would hor Le - bP onl! 2,500 Wy swore offered, A —an officer in the United States | the count do ne 1 1 t i ’ rm Pay Newer t IN 4 shone character a meta} me to eo who have been | hint . “ thorn good charaoter and ful fatne | A ve geet | hin, be kept ont.” But ; ae prone ; This tadifferenes on the part o hers i am . aring and diagra he father 1 but det th Nee through toubted ag ti t t the city; w t y of cattle ¢ r w on din 1. am, ‘ atination, Mr. Baecunn | t In: and Pventure to say that | ¢ Of New = wher r en may com 1 the 4 Interesting Cotton Stntistion ena t the w , Atul i af or, a . bs \ a hangs 1660 ' Y 1 A " “ “ f ben Hapnet I ' aIniM, \ r tent Uy wall ab <New # exported « ' t Hau the n pur for wil # oatine . 7 f : ig fh ho Penresene the als in t ‘i eteate vf ‘ wont in some allaitin ne b ' AX DOLLARS reat ; sie Seiten \s 1 t ‘ t A ‘ A ik and ported. the Government, and ee at attempt have the , io tanta I \ tectineratl atl arnt eb t Mth f Orlean Congress hae 4 ee tt ag ih the t : A : ite, ta 4 that the Kies Pi et f South ¢ ‘ } Hitt am rh vnnounoed and declared himself © init U t t busiaen obeuid be : ‘ ‘ x. " dur then pa Out pplause.) Fs i " of 5 b searly if . andy wiley f 1 was detente eit tutional powers! ‘The country demands | par i hours, and the 4 t 4 . wal x led toa recent Wnen—it mands harmony My friends, i Ts) n ‘ ] Rveateg Amuscssents, on ¢ o Isperenvess, in which Hi'ine make a simple suggestion, Do you | opluion se that where a nau ta presented Uy si Ws ANKICAN MUREUM.<AVternoan M Hence | Pecolleet tive Hinmense detit of this country, | tion f geot his . 95°00 eurlorttion | nin Congress me uduit the ten | ed faith of the nation to pay the expenses of | let them look inte hlacve and seo if he ix | atill continues of the ust WALLAC ri Rk" The Vast Fos ¢ Prowecuted by the United waiting States simply upon the adoption of | the wart Is it not better fort inorder | themanthey want. [Tremendous t ae hl aie oe ober | to be Prowecuted by the L Teed I fl mabooption of | tee WBC ce ee at ae tune ‘be | Vou bende T+ eats J ter, and wo are bein, (Fi | BP tsbbeetatathnnne tare sow hicins ee | tates pratitniranat je nd PFO) that these excitements about negro sullrage | through the St oe tido wit | at cousiderable conennst $.GARDE + Week Crook out ! * cooded as f ws and reconstruction shoal end ¢ Do youn permit, for t ¢ u | Perisionue Hallet Lreape is WO] Now, th the merit. of being | S@ppose that the world, if it knew thatthese | nothing in my 4 \ M good fine twitoh R GARDEN —Wonterful Dolley Fe n Fe . written I Hain, and juestions were settled, would speedily to be ashame rod | MEH the very beat mock Vendor imine and AULaue by , ATH : takul Mies 8 he tteal | an inereased demand for our nation to face. And wherever 1 go an 1 Peto F110. But tew caly 2 s New Mex i curities | Why, look atity suppose for ple of the State d St or t erent, aud RE VRANCAIS—Madame Kistert, "Eile Jon no oth on fi jal py an) . v aaaatoa | j r Leitizens, with antacontingeney Which L will si Purpose, T xo roaddy tos r any he rok bave contol of 4 m r State ol " Ww the hands of Thaddeus Stevens, and | they have done ft ' _ erior to Galde per Lh, way arn TL, Hackout as , THE POLITICAL CAMP AION. ; i wat Me. Hrownlow was Secretary | city which hae nlve { Sheep and Lamba —Visitore ¢ AVENUE OPERA 1OUSE.—Badworth's syecch of Hon. John 'T, Hotlman at Ro- Gener rn Seerelary Will do the rest, nnd that the State and | PA cathe yarda, cannot have tw nes, ‘ei eauee t chester. Hetty y. aud other Radieul loaders nation will be redeen f t ater in th " a he 1 1 1 the New ¥ 1 edited wh themscives Southern Lovaliata, | 1 \ PR cry ( t ‘ ‘ can ot on sent out by the ale: | ri - tn ret © it Shhince for AML? " ' " l | day fov univers! anilesty with auch av announcement went forth to the |.) ‘One, Tuosday, Oct. 2 6 P. M.— | toc | opted th me 1 \ i iin New And that paper we ay rhledo you believe your securities would | The excitement in the Stock Market contin. | WK their stock at Hadson City and SDAY MOR oer ( i ‘ unt oven \ wit WS ‘ i had | go up in the market, or would they go | ued today, but the extreme cases of yeater. | UY : , a8 thoy land, a | i ‘ baaalt adopted a lon tipon thie t had | down! Suppose the other hand, that | day were not in all mi o eat trouble aud expense of driv 4 To Advertiors. | 7 4 60 againet the editor's wish, f the | these questions were settlad, and the Ame | all cases sue a, Gov: | to the yards, The condition of the marke ortine rant ' 4 " heat alope the aiwee how before their | Other great nati A] higher, Gold closed at 11858 The loan bors Beces i" Nieips ont 5 ane? te ha 0 1 Linte tesion | T t ther Hould inal vn | Kee Your governt nurities bound in the - for extras 85 Y0u§o 09 for ordinaryy ct fpr wollen belt ae the F ' +h ; Hh sateen, then He should Inelas upan | ts Ove Bere tL | market was rather moro actives but there | and @h7u§400 for interior, Lambe, tl erecept t * the tom cul if tt re n the Masi of n Hrage wf) speak of them asa nat ation, for | Was such an abundance of idle capital seek i 1-30 f ye? { i Nell " ve to classity them Wuless | them rome st. A neiple ' ' have ‘to the fact that a resolution | Which every acre of land and every hour's | ing Lorrowers, that tho rates were atill tas, | 9, 51e—Are in fair domaud at Hall Le j cred, that thine be now, In the excitement pan the ‘yrachso Coovention | labor, how end. hereafter, te pledged until | om Ps eee Lit, | fe Meaey cormfed Weatorn, and ly Ll a 10 pial ‘ ty eReader Ree : i \ s ention . Commercial paper was unchanged, Little | 44 for do light und median ansctintinhins | stnee heal ar jitat poraneedt— anita © whieh placed Governor Fenton in nomina- | that debt in paid. Bat you know, and I fi 2 | 0 Hight and mediams, c proved Policy of Hecon | yyy 4), aioe the A I cnges of the times-namnidst all the tion, that related to this subject which we ow, assuming the Southern States to be re- | We oforing, and good bills passed at Sa6 1-2 Flour and Grain struction | Min - wh Wil ait Hin ' »\ ar x The State Convention did | presented a Congress by loyal ten thaten- | Foreign exchange was firm; bills at 60 days | Pa at New You —_— vgs . IM “ expected that the gment ot men ty 1 or thy | Ure restoration and reunion apeedily accom: | on Lo y | Plew.—The flour mark i I ‘ iy ; i ! es vied to dhe aul mission Tinian ns | plished would above all other things clewa Tondon selling at 1081-40108 58 for bank- | yer, "Bapastne State, $8 35a8 16 R So eas ys : ejudicen. would. ot vl eA Hruticual | the national securitios. [Great applause} |¢ On'Change to-day flour was leas era Katee low Congress, aul ¢ are iva . 1 une bet j mt ane nile the Cone | Now, I have talked enough about this mat: | tive, but prices were without decided Oh and quod wo buvertine Boutly A : ; at an en ap Fs th pane | freA Notce, “iter the Governor) 1 | chango, Wheat dull and unchaoged, Corn | Wratnr tstic: ft martet to Inective ond lows Nee 1 yossion a ; ed such at in there to | have aid that 'the poliey which Tand those | ononed. du sheen Be scans. ar, Auber Beak 4 00 hese s i rn € i helieve it will be kept! The mon that party | With me should adopt should be on. the af | OPE" A dull, afterward became a shade | Oy Wile Wesera ; 6 ‘iot wor 8 Chlcags Stn : : ts of privciple, without | Jag nominated for ofies all-over the coun: | fensiee; Thave no end but to secure Union, | Armer, and closed quict. Oats were one | Spring. . the belief Limite to ant party differences. L pro: | try ar Wry dues who voted against the | SOL eoukl not be on tho defensive Such a |oent better, Pork firmer, Beet ately Phy my Sy OY ean i Pana ‘ ante Paseage of t | introduced Into Cou. | party can assail their adversaries, and that | Lard stead iukee Ot i propiwe ! Lay ahr S VeGn it f onauek convine aneclont any state adapting the | fe what wo peuponc to do, A mean, of course, | Uinungaads Aud whlakey quiet aud um aslovtod : at Ty i Elia we sanrpart two, are | Now ny frig ula. the inane therefore they ete ] hae ane Sengree ‘lone that BALES AT THE 8TOCK EXCHANGE, ian ‘ intry of whieh we are the hamble | tinetly th wat there shail be no assu let hat single measure haw sted Naw Youn. 30pt. % 1846, eter eee ee In thea dinctiasions personalities srireuiilanypetee ahaa Ie 1 lated ton bel meaner e tan at adopted | geop O18. te te em.-108 4:00 WY; Com, B...110% | | North River hate te fat tsasni a $08 80" ; rahegd : . I esa . b anew c ion. peace and unity, until uni- | ring yp to the country? | 49000 U8, 6a '6T * Hiv, | ghirment, and $1 doa$i §) for"local vee, yer AW ibe, r i re + avoided, and there are questions | versal negro suffrage is established, But | Has it done anything to reduce taxation || 80000 U8: 6s, 6-4 Hie, 3 J18% | Buraw, Gue a8) 109 Ibe f . " “a importance that thowe whi | sume of one fries tho country | Has it done anything to ineroase the value | $89 SONY B00 Hiss | “é naif : rad ie une, Citizens of Rochester.a very plain | with tess extreme men—they say, We | Ward reducing the burd pon the peopl ' Ste%0 1K) SE No 4 r ; ‘ ; tion is | i er to the people et New | do not tullow the Radical lewlers in this € te voice, “T Tulsed their ay rage Frio New Edition Now Ready—New Phvsiog= § York inthe contest upon which we have | treane platform of the ve do not agree | Have they suggested anything) If they | $eose 1.00 Wijusdrations, Posepaid, $3. Agente \ t void in e i ‘ entered. Stated in strong langnase, | with them tu that,” Let me tell them they | have not done anything to relieve the conn- | soe Towler & Welle 840 vee for fuinre | HERALD, commenting « i at abel yet with necurucy, iti simply whether | have always followed them, the ouly thing | try how in the aime Of Heaven can they | $9, bans shackle Salts ve Lactate gon the ob ata 1 lias won it thirty mix stars, | being. that the Radical lowlers keep just | €0In6 before the people of the country and | } When You ¢ I thet ‘ t k tela > uch star the representative of an independ: | oof them, aud they — always faak them to indorwe the polioy of Congress } | Ina fection ‘nae Keyyad scene be optsaett t ; an be received to this ina ato | ent State, is to be altered, ar whether it in | ¢ » the mark which these | (Applause. They sat eight months; can | 190 Nous hence : f ' Data aokitat pratt ai Lical leaders of today is to be sie | delude themselves that they are not follow. | benefit! Of course, TE aball not discnss the 118 Tt is usclons w to fight nil maintained in thin country, the | ing those leaders—it is the Radical man who | Freediwen's Bureau bill. What has Con. = the Radienls t y eree, or else t y+ tio t we able result will bo that ten stars ire to | leads, and these middle men are marching | gress done t T pat use for a reply, [A voice, ea : Tienes oC Tunauas, Tha ed that it | atricken from the tug of the countey, for the | straight mp to their requiremonte, ‘Thee | CRaleed thelr eat laughter.) Yen, ¥ Ap Re ' ue t any tate. ‘The Radical lenders | have doue it before-stheyewill do it now; for | after eight months of Tabor the mountain en ty the b 1 yy “ wil 1 iets add A i eny that the States Lately occupied by poo: | they « no middle policy on this ques: | brought forth thia mouse. They gave to t rch Vanama rebellion are States outitled to repre: | tiot tny frievwts, if T should put the | the aobliors from fifty to one bundred dol ; ii I by the \ in the Congress of the country. | If | question to'the people of the Stato to-day, | lars, and to themselvoa about two thousand vi 4 not, ther the teu stars representing | whether they believe that there should be no | dollars, and then { wont where every ‘ : proper place ab the. fi W | reunion till this extreme measure of negro | man wishes they hm gone beforemthey oi Vy With the other stars that are there Wrage was adopted, Ethink that all men | Went home; and now they aro home, it fs s Exposing « Slander Uenry Ward Beeches Vust t in declaring t is their | would agree that the voices against it would | most earnestly desired that they be kept ers Son Vindicnted, that somay be warned? ¥ alo t voanimous The object of th there, But you must recollect that this Tae on awe waar was Hanami Congress made a | Radical speakers ix to hide their issue from | $2,000 back pay goes to form a strong fund | twas to be waged solely to | th op But we hold Congress to the | to re-elect them, [Applause.) And yet | yoo uu National Bkli8 \ ‘ the Union and the States under the ue inl the party of Which. these men are | these men gay the min who does not sng- | 100 Canton Co, tu H When the war was al the leaders and declare it plainly, We leave | tain the Congressional policy is a disloyal. | 68 Del. Hud. ¢. 4 VA cudered to Grant, that | it to the peaple of the Stato of New. York | ist. We may have been in error, but we Sewing M t ho surrendered to xo | whether they are prepared to take the ex- | have hithertd supposed that Congress were | 10 beg tieh tow m gus they were obedient to | treme growud that © States which were | the repre Le the p onl, and not | 3% shotheambsidhl i ‘ uintry Just so long the Y shall not have representation in | their masters, ohave never heard that Oum'd ry A Hion_of the country. | Congress until their four millonsef ignorant | Congress waa elected with reference to | go Umycee sate it plesey \ \ Vion ¢ 1 the natruction | blacks shall be enabled by authority to | any other issae than tho Union of the | %0 wilkabarre Goal Ieee rreperat om ‘ rea’ Isot they tied ihiee | imatel up to the polls ut every election,-and { States, But they say that the man who re- | 1 Weat (i Kosh Aetir liouse, and’ rage! . ( wnendments to «© Constitue | vote tor every Slate otticer, (Sensation,.) | fasee tog ¢ his assent to their policy is dis. £ —_ < F 1 ' 1 the two important ones being | asi, what isthe next th said by those | loyal: ro such issues discussed when eae THe irpmedr Heth, ates “ ' ni i sbolition of slavery recognition o€ | who are opposed tous on these questions 1] you voted for your Congressmen as the A ay ' 1 elt iucurred by the North and re | They tell us that the South has eruelly re | We have been speaking of and which now be | . rt ” le sof the debt made by the South, | bellud against the government of the coun- | agitate the country! Is it pretended that A Wonderful Cure.—A Gentleman resid 1 eM Was the open and avowed policy of | try. Well, they admit themselves, ‘They | the constitutional amendments were p a Newark eure dst he hea been, wulferer fu 1 \ first t por Congtese that thik amendinent ug jadmit that they must’ suller the pene | sented tothe people then? Certainly not fia fever une reate pean cure nda BEATS AD eed thot } iy the Southorn States they sould | alties, Wut the peualtice wero. those | Aud yot they cal! ua disloyal. ‘They have « Mhator® taper @ Huth bd, Whilasatureae 7 * . . y were before the rebellion—States | which Congress some time ago | curious and novel tost of loyalty, [Gr p ' were repeated lL enjoyment of their rights, The | declared, It was not oue of the penalties | laughter.) Lat us look @ litte further at “The New York Sam presente ali the News thas wud ew until ‘ t. you will recollect, did not sign | that they should be kept out of the Cuion, | the Conventions we bad assembled at Phil of the day in @ more compart form shan any otheg © ball tired at M ecnen t \ for the simple reason that it was | nor that they should not be represented in | Adelphia, I will Ler y of ween one jourpal, and at the low price of Two Vents per copy I ; hi just neasion, ingress, President Lincoln declared that {that it was composed ‘of all shades of - ———~ a ‘ © United 8 Tanest, ‘The Reverend geutteman Mite cuuneae with bie nrociama: | he feared, chat it would be, necessary. to | Past, politcal” pares. it considored sik feo | fer aausiand asstentognre otingr* ole watide sha VO equa f | thus disposes of the mate Jul gave his plan of recoustruction, | bring to bear the power of the General | What was the best way to bring peace Fonoyned. “The flow Mactlse C5080 liseades " t 1 lienontvas N.S 1 | you know that after that the Southern | Government in order to compel these States | 1 the oped va te ber} epocahes, | New York: pr 7 r Pyeng NY» Bopt. | st proceeded toabolish slavery and re- | to send their Representatives to Congress, | It presented ‘ite address and platform w a hae Cocke Gea aa 1, that representa ba, | THe fa , 1 || puduate the debt incurred by the South, It | Our friends aay they are fresh from rebel: | aud then ite members went to their Py aien | sek ehlas Cheat ame ted teen, that hie ned tn auch ay ie Soul | ge aap esllton v icen Well said that these were the two | lion, and it will not do them any harm to} homes to receive the congratulations 0 BN Wit’ fa | faper.aud’ sold for the Lonest price of Two Cong alow shall not « i es re pet Sou which every citizen of the North | keep them out a little longer, Tsay, if you | those they came to represe t and to lay the Ki 40.0040 TIN hai Ss i * seth Od to , t Niuth should agree, because by common | have the power to keep thems out you have | issues before the pec There was another re i, Boca, ic a ett be & Wilson Leck mitoh 1 fiaing the nun pre: | ane ieee Taner Wail A t slavery had Been admitted to be | the power to Grn them out. trot better | Couvention there, which is called 4 Conven: Hato oT". ind Baiton Hole Machine, Gus Toad . t ( : ‘ * lis Wl tie cause of the war, and everybody knew | to let in representatives, and if they prove | tion of Northern and Southern Loyal Oe ie SS HOT — went tit Fourth, that the publio a rhe ant . He Confederate debt must be rept: | faithless ald dislesal then to turd thom | We know enough of the Northern loy HOD BALM EWM gS | Laalies, yom will nd a tine Awortment of . Wited And, then, what bad the people of out! [Applause.) Look over the countries | of the Southern loyalists I have to day thi OG PEL, TS | boots aud choos for fall » Ot WH Howery, corps es that the rebel debe | ; Naif tocapect! Tey had a | of the world aud wo if you know of any | that they showed their loyalty and love of ap 201", of Houston at ee Kinportaia ie the place 648 ‘ ated, The 1 sect i A Sexpect that the purpose and object | land where an opposing host has become | Union by asking to be kept out of tho | 100 Treq 7 8-10. 6 100 Merle 8c | Natents se ss an t aay ea M I tiie was wad waged wes necom [inne suisinive after doteus. then here ape Apulaiae,)” Now, lgeitlewmen of | Iareda atari, he | | Miming Since tn July, Mart Haley ; Lee ' \ (hat the authority of the cen) Dit wo not feat guerilla warfare? ‘There | Rochester, Faak you who it strikes you are | 14006 Tena és ae ad ons. blaal . aibich Lo tunintained-—that the Union was | has not been a guerilla band in the whole | the men most loyal to the Constitution | Yao Obie & hates cy ie bosom shirt, cloh ‘sap ant shoes, uadershind f rt that there had come about} South. since Lee surrendered to Grant, | of the couutry and tho Government—the | 90000 ée....+.es0: B i hick tees Od beets i leh, blac va : bit Ry ¥ 4 a 9 ait full‘ biahete, reddiay Color. "Any jpincie to \ i \ Shieh, on the previous Ath of duly, every | There has not been an outbreak; there has | men who assembled at Philadelphia to oso 4 win'be highly 4 by to'oron r 1 NY Mddeclated to be the end tnostde- | never been in the history of the world @ | nite the States, or the men who assembled | RN? go ig brother du-iaw, MATTHEW LAK, 410 raat 1 hed—perfect peace and harmony, | case of such entire and Complete subinis: | to keep them assunder the men who as | . 8 ¥. oe “t { ° restoration of all Stites. (Applause) | sion aa on the part of these Southern peo | sembled to secure the people in their rights, | 1 MS 48 Sem Wee on ' hat was theavowed purpose for whieh | ple to the General Government, ‘They are | or t n who assembled for the sole pure | SB Geen HRM Be owas ie le Karger Jewel 16 : vas waged—that was the end | now wait juply to resume their rela | pose of preventing the reanion of those | $00 weet Cain Te 600 Toil yous afflcved frieude to try ti Tt" hi Conaress had declared; that was | tion to the Govermuent agatust which they | States; who are entidied to be called the | 100 Basten WP... 325 Guo laeeuee ee ‘ y se etined by Grantt that was the | tebelled. In there auything to be gained by | loys T mea of the country ; the men who say | 100 Maefposn i..." $1 toy, | “Darno’s Catarrh Snuf—Tho only Snul A \ ) oat hich depended. the prosperity | this policy of the Radicals? Look, ou the | there shall be thirty-six’ stare, each repre | {ho woven, Ko..119 600 | worth soutting dt Hira Southand North. Vhatgreat|eoutrary, and eee the power which | senting aState—or that there shall betwen: | fag di Ty boo ” se - i Drought about, Th they issu It is ower by | tysix! (Applaase.) Now, my. fri n| 60 ree ath | The Lady’e Vriend for October. 1 H never been brought about, There ine 1 (At Tew, win of Hed 8 | Opleber author of aki thorteien COneat Maten stil unrepreswited inthe |act’ of Congress to deny — represen | fow words more, and T xball have tuished | 43 Hay 8 Hag per thecountey. And who hat kept | tation to Stites—T say States. If they ave | what 1 have to say, ‘These issuce are not | yo go. Hes fe i ‘ ( i Upon What pretence has itbeen | not States, why does Congrese submit to | tritting istics, as you well know y ine | 190 Mid. as 8, BP. To 1 fast Flat thea other suggested ainend: | them amendments to the Constitution! If) volve the very peace of the country, aud ite oren BOaRD, her uabrat ‘ \ to the Constitution must tirat beadopt- | they are not anything but conquered prov: | welfare. They s directly at the very ah tine Fashions ang, lady's weit, ouch op | h ‘ f Aint they? _Lapproach them | iices—as Thad, Stevens sayt—why ak then | foundation of the Government itself, be 10 o'C 00m, A. M Banaue € mexou ot Tulle wud Laced ! at ‘ sail er approach with the | fo ratify Constiutianal amendments? By | eauso the que ie whether @ political | 190000 &M CLP Lil, Central a. 4.196% 3. q thats, Feiszon Henned, Laud I the K ne ‘of ther importat hecause L | their wets the Radicals admit that they arc | maior uy rpetuate ite bower ie ‘aii of bias lathe Queen of Sgnmine ) 1 he single argument which is pre: | States, and chim the power to keep out | by excluding representatives by amend y pr i ‘Horners The Mog Gb snalteeh ee t justion demands that slavery hay codent ix established, where may it net} can be done, the time will come Rusk for the Spoils 1 ann alld have inereasal representation in| # political majority of Congress may atany | another will attempt the sane thing. But t Io sof the country, and they ask | thie exclude f entation those whe | what is a poper coustitution worth which ub : he fant of ("people ipon what paieiple | representa uiuorityf Who can tell who | does not tvst in the hearte of the yeople ! Ie b hie yw 1 vu claim that the Southern States | may be in the: p al majority ten years | it worth the parehment upon which it is | 3 iat lito ftp eevoater repbareutation in Cone} te comet Tt anay be New Eugland, with | written? You may draw ito strong that it | 9 Tinea dial ae Wn they hash before they hal re | her protective turift; it imay Wy the great | may seem as if it could no be broken ; yet | fo s yw \ tis a question Which. isan | West; itmay be even the South, You and | no bation can be founded upon a paper con. | ev Simeena i | u ‘ Br vist desta an varnoat caus | Ekuow that politival parties rae aval dap J atitution. It must find its foundations in the | 8 sider i pivot « ' | i] ) Tt should be discussed fairly, | pear aga times very suddenty. t | hearts and judgments of the people, and the | goo where. A ORS Broads f « | Wan Devsur [purpose in a fow words to state ay | some diy change take placé in TES | verg wowont the fundamental ‘aw of the | 300 - i Abseiasit Un ( f Li the tieat, place we deny Cat Cone | politienl majority in Congress, Let it be a | land is tampered with, for partisan or party | £2 solltonrn al College, ns 263 F . i ul Wa N, Bed bub. § he right to violate its plighted | change when @ A attempt | purposes, that woweut the country ts ih |B sop be rlgat piace for you “ 1 ni (eiermine that there shall be auoh | ( keep them, | danger, aud it behoves every couseryative | Io oweiwng oF “ pes art oT alt ennear records of this « ix proposed, and compol a vote | Suppose for a gland | man to rally to the rescu ence this a | $00 ge be, ; i hat Worst Tiewtoaaut Heury Tt Beech coustitutional aimendment t No | should atten high tariff | national canvass, when you see the grea , By Hier who bad Lost the Une of ; ” | ia easel Halted Artillery (son of Tyr and wasert the esietenee af | mioacuroar nod the great Weet should com- | ueas of the questions before you. We may | 8 wep sdca his crutches hy Leluce the a ay Lead Uouteiean mu ees q reept founded upon the exereise | bine with ether sections to tucn b pre- | call this @ national election, ax much 40, ul- | 4@ eaells heneeet Ys they rw ke a pack of | Born in Lndiaue Bika toate in iry will. ‘They do pot claim iton | sentatives out of What right | most, as it we were engaged in the election | Bm yonder of the age. \ va Sha TORO Fike Che ee Tey cory, hey way wo have the | not be the result ople of this | of a President, It isa natioyal election, — x ABE List : Jai; brevetted Captain for reer coute ity and we will do it, Now | country were to ratify these claims that a | because members of Congress are to be Dyapepites shonld mos fail (o try @ be . ry wile ur, Me icant 4 the tiost! place, that even if Con: | political majority have a right to exclude | elected, aud au exceutive ofeer of the Eu. af Di Smitha Dy epepala “Aum illator ik ie aus ughit the an) we 1 Phat ' : \ the right to require the adoption | represcatatives of States} Buch w eourae | pire State who is eithor committed to this 06K, P.M Beas i rte emae! Devoe <8 Hens « . Sadat, Witlawal ugh pes rh \ ; ri Agia wetAlwont we UhB ¢ on upon | would be subversive of the very foundations | Congressional polley, or one who is oppose: r a fap ht ae A « Southern Representatives should | of our Government, Every man kuows that | o it Tam opposed to radical and intoler ? 7) 7) ieee es of “ ie SUP Ae ted, then it inthe duty of Cousrema | it ia fraught with great danger, and the legislation everywhere, either in the DRAMAS. rt In view of ie aie a " eu! that proposed amoudmont singly | trae atatesinan docs hot consider the present te of the country or the Ta gishatur RNAN—Ov Oct. Int, Marr, daughter of Ter. ef " ff b H vera © Wo the people of the United States | moment merely, but looks forward to the State. (Great applause.) F do not oa Sp Ake 6 amu th ; ' ‘ i \. And I ventare to say, upon the | great future, aud to the changes whieh must | believe that either Congress or the Lauiala. Eiice! wip cade ploce from heriate s ' mt fer Of conversation with representa | come with approaching time, (Applause,) | ture the right to put their feet upon rm ehday efcesaovis, Oat. tion to make 1 t at no ch ‘ e {the South, that wroueas it would | Ah, my friends, the sohition of this question | the necks of ortion of the people, and @ aud ‘tneade of the pala cir judgment, to bop this apon | ie simply this; and at those who represent | deny to them te enjoyment of any of thelr | pecifully levied w attend, i . iild, although unwillinglyseven | the party now in power in Cougeess desire | righty, aockal political (Applause) RPI On ' " {hat hmorder that the question might | tereceive thea States again, the siple so: | It is the business of Congress and hn 9)!0 ft Pak i k BD. Hadad the agitation cease, Disthi: | lution of the whole question is, that having | the Legislature to secure the rights aN. Ww dei on Pouraday stern Spa Avs \ 1 ion of the Se havedeclared that | ablished slaveryehaving repndiated the | of all ple and their full eyjoyment te i . TOvite e m nations A esitis conviction. But this | Confederate debt—if they will send te Cou. | under proper When Cobgres 4 1 Monday, Oor. 1 " s have not done that, On | eres loyal men who ean take th la » done that fw} +8 J they require that | man in Congress, whether h doanything be iy “ fence t v k Pr has | Souch € lina, Pe aor Mas: h ‘ the se