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THE DAJ1LY JOURNA , APRIL 2; 1868. Five CettU. The Impeachment Trial. Before the eloseof Gen. Butter's speech, the Courf took a recess of ten minutes. When called to order, Gen. Butler resumed and closed at 3.53 o'clock. Mr. Bingham then, announced that the Man- agers were ready to present the testimony. The official oath of Andrew Johnson, certified by Chief Justice Chase, was offered; also the attestation of F. W. Seward, Acting Secretary of State. The .Commission of Secretary Stanton was also put in, and the action of the Senate upon his nomination certified by its clerk. Next was presented the Message of the Presi- dent, sent to the Senate on the 12th of Decem- ber, 1867. At 4.20 o'clock the Court adjourned till the usual hour on Tuesday. March 31.—The Court met at 12 o'clock. The Chief Justice assumed the chair, and the Sergeant-at-Arms made a proclamation. Mr. •Wilson offered further documentary evi- dence. J. McDonald, Chief Clerk of the Senate, was sworn. He testified to having served notice of non-concurrence of the removal of Secretary Stanton by the Senate^ on the President.- J. W. Jones, Deputy Marshal of the Supreme Court, testified that he had sowed upon General Thomas, on the 21st of February, the summons of the Supreme Court. The resolution of the Senate, asserting that the President had no power to remove Mr. Stanton, was then read. C. E. Creecy testified to the form of appoint- ment used in the Treasury Department prior to March, 186??. Stanberry desired to kaow the object of this testimony. Gen. Butler replied to show that after the passage of the Tenure of Qffice Act, the Presi- dent signed a different form of commissions, to comply with the law. The commission issued to Mr. Cooper, Assist- ant Secretary of the Treasury, on the 20th of November, 1867, was then produced. Burt Van Horn, a member of the House, then gave testimony in relation to the effort of Gen. Thomas to get possession of the War Depart- ment, which took place on the 22d of February, and the conversation which ensued between Stanton and Thomas. I refer particularly to his manage- ment \of the rebel States ftoi '* \ \ IMPEACHMENT OF THE PBESIDENT. SPEECH or Hon.OALVINT.HULB¥RD In the; Souse of Representatives, Feb. 24, 1868, Mr. Hulburd said: Ms. SPEAKER: I desire the'indulgence of the House the few moments allotted me to state with utmost brevity some reasons impelling me to vote as I shall on this occasion. I the more desire this opportunity in that hitherto I have steadily, though quietly, resisted the conclusion now forced upon us and the action consequent thereupon. When the impeachment of the President was first formally broughtbefore the House by the Judiciary Committee I voted against a continu- ance of the prosecution, or a further consid- eration of the subject at that time. This, was done, not that I did not then believe the Pres- ident quite likely more than once had over- stepped the law; not but that I thought in the unprecedented turmoil of the times more than once he had trenched very considerably upon the spirit, if not the very letter of the Consti- tution. I confess, however, I was slow to be- lieve that, deliberately, persistently, he pur- posed such violations. I did not, therefore, feel like imputing criminality for what might but have been an error of judgment of an un- considered inadvertence ; I did not feel like hastily putting on trial—and a most .damaging trial I knew it must me^ however it' technically eventuated—the Chief Magistrate of this nation. Others make light of such a spectacle; others, as was said by the gentleman from Illinois, [Mr. Logan,] may feel that \it is not a solemn occa- sion,\ to arraign as a criminal before all the people of the United State3 the constitutional head of this great representative Government, the only existing Government whose free insti- tutions Have made it the envy and the jealousy of the peoples and the potentates of the univer- sal world.. I am not ashamed to confess I con- template such a spectacle and the results with sorrow and solemnity, and great humiliation of soul. Yet to-day, p.enetrated with the convic- tion that it must needs be, I bow in a«quiescence and take my humble place in the procession of this day's momentous proceedings. I do not propose to catalogue the President^ minor malfeasances, short-comings, or over- steppings. I freely admit that the role which circumstances have compelled him to enact has been unprecedented, most diversified, and most difficult. But he will not be tried for mere dere- lictions, party-wise or political ; but for \high crimes and misdemeanors\ positively com- mitted against the laws and Constitution of his country. He Will not be arraigned for his unparalleled and profligate: exercise of the pardoning power in behalf of deserters, rebels, and counterfeit- ers ; he will not be arraigned for removing loyal upright and faithful officials, and appointing in their stead and retaining in office incompetent, flagitious, and corrupt men, obsequiously zeal- ous only to do his bidding; he will not be ar- raigned for surrendering millions of public prop- erty to unshriven and uhrepeniing traitors, without compensation, right, or reason, or cause save bis own autocratic will. Passing over all such patty peccadilocs in his executive career, I might, perhaps, instance as deserving impeach- ment his usurpation and continued exercise of political—perhaps I ought rather to say legisla- tive—functions clearly outside of the executive prerogative. ... . merit of the rebel States from and after the'col lapse of the rebellion. Whether this chiefesi feature of his \policy 111 will be made one of the counts of hig impending indictment I know ..not The people have already passed upon it in accord with the saying of the wise man of old, \in th multitude of counselors there ia safety,\ more than in the heart of one ruler should proclaim Juinself a modem ]lfoseS. , It is true there is nowhere found in the Consti tution a \thus saith,\ directing how States such an exigency should be treated, for th< reason, the trainers of the Constitution nevei seriously contemplated! the probability of suc an emergency. But there had been more tha one judicial deliverance by the Supreme Courl of the United States, [Betting forth clearly that the recognition and supervision of organic; political power for, of, and in the States, belonged to and inhered solely ia the Federal Legislature the Congress of the United States. The eitatio of one example will suffice, and that shall be th famous Rhode Island case, reported infHpward, and the words shall foe those of Chief Justic •Taney: \Moreover the Constitution of the Unitec States, as far as it has provided for an emergency of this kind and authorized the General Govern- ment to interfere in -tile domestic concerns of State, ha3 treated the subject as political in its nature, and placed the power in the hand's of that, .department. The fourth section of the fourth article of the Constitution of the United States provides that \the United States shall guaranty to every State inthelJnioa a republican form' ;of government,\ &c. Under this article of th Constitution it rests with Congress to decidi .•what government is the established one in IState,\ * • * * \And its decision i binding on every other department of the Gov- ernment, and could not be questioned, in judiciaLtribunaL\ Further on in thiai opinion the Chief Justice takes occaaion to say s \Unquestionably a military government, estab lished as the permanent government of the State, would not be a republican government, and it would be the duty of Congress to oyerthroir it/ The Constitution salys, in the first section ol its first article: \All legislative powers herein granted shall b vested in a Congress of the United States,\ &c, The fourth section of the-fifth article declares: \The United State's shall guaranty to eyerj State in this Union a republionn form of govern- ment,\ &c. A section of the first article, in enumerating some of the powers td be exercised.by Congress, contains this authorization \The Congress shall have power to make al! laws which shall be necessary and proper foi carrying into execution the foregoing powers, and all other powers vested by this Constitution in the Government of: the United States,\ &c. I think it appears from these clauses of thi CoHStitution, and from Chief Justice Taney'. exposition, that Congress had, beyond question supreme jurisdiction over the insurrectionary States on the collapse of the rebellion; that dis organized and anarcbized by the rebellion and its chaotic collapse ever thereafter, and until properly reconstructed and restored and in ful Federal accord, the sole right of determining when, and how far forth, each rebel State had such \form of government,\ as guarantied by thi Constitution, \rests with Congress\ alone; tha the right of setting aside or \overthrowing\ any other \form of government\ by the Constitution inhered in Congress alone. If, then, a necessity seemed to exist justifying the President in setting up, in the first instance, State governments in the rebel States, that necessity, of course, ceased to exist on the coming together of Congress, whet and to whom the whole subject of the political condition and government of those States of righ should have been referred. No doubt, at first, Mr. Johnson entertained such views and purpose. Such, too, were the declared views of some of his. Cabinet. Had thi President, on the surrender of Lee, convened Congress with all convenient dispatch and devolved upon it the management of the insur- gent States, howeveri matters were treated, his .responsibility would Ihave ceased. Had he even 1 on the assembling of Congress at tfaenextxegular session in December,, turned over to it the whole subject of reorganization and reconstruction, and thenceforth forborne 1 all further personal and official intervention therein and thereabouts save, as required by law, doubtless he would have been held blameless. He chose to take, a different course: He inaugurated his policy of re construction—a policy directly, if not designedly, tending to the reinstating and re-establishing as the controlling, governing element in all the South unpurged, unrepentiing, remorseless, red-handed rebels. I pause not to speculate on his motives; I have no time to set forth the bitter, bloody fruits which have sprung from the loins of this un- toward, misbegottem \policy.'. Suffice it to say robbery, rapine, riot!, unpunished murder,-in.no local or stinted streams, have flowed ' in every section of- southern soil unguarded by \the boy's in blue\ to be,, a loyal freedman or a \TJnicfa white,\ had property to tempt or anunprotected life to lose. The close connection of the Mem- 1 phis and New Orleans riots, with the purposes, if not the expectations, of the-President; shocked the sense of the nation. No wonder he sought to escape the pdium of this complicity. Tn# subterfuges, transparent as mean, availed him' nothing. Exposed and rebuked, and oven warned, he did not desist or slacken in tlie prosecution of his \policy.\ Nay, for augfct: known to the country or to this ;House, he still rigidly, callously, defiantly adheres thereto. In furtherance of it he!has,\beyond all question, exerted to the utmost available extent the influence and the power of the Executive to oppose and to defeat any other method or plan of reconstruction than that embodied in \his policy.\ ,. To this end he has used, nay^prostituted, the executive patronage; and, as far forth as he could, that of the Departments. To this end. he has repeatedly changed, removed, and Ap- pointed military commanders to obtain those.' sufficiently subservient to do his bidding, iei spite right, law,- Congress, Constitution, aid even humanity to the contrary notwithstanding. In view of the law and of the Constitution and of all these his. doings, how strangely sounds His pretense and that of his abettors, that he and they are the sole custodians of order, law, the Constitution, restoration, ' rea^m'ission to Con- gress of the Southern States, &c.j : when it is so well known here and overall the South that he and his have done their utmost to thwart and! delay this much wished consummation. ' ] In this connection listen to what the Mobile Register Bays of General Wager Swayne, ttfat true soldier and noble eon of an honored father/ Commissioner of the Freedmen's Bureau in Ala- bama. Such* mam was in the way: \Swayne was an adroit and unscrupulous pol- itician, and Swayne had so gerrymandered and pipelaidas tomakeithe ratification of the Consti- tion a sure thing. Swayne was, therefore, an obstacle to fair play and justice, and when we wrote to Mr. Johnson that an order to reman , General Swayne to his. regiment would be wort twenty thousand votes against-theponstitution, we wrote an opinion on a fact (hat events hav .justified.'.' _ . .,\ •\•\\\ But such interposition and intervention in be- half of Vpplioy'' to-day, there would.be no- ques tion as to the present status of Alubimibdo; her speedy representation on this floor. Who then, is responsible for her non-representation Surely not .Congress; not .the malignant/ pad cak ? No body on other person, is :but the Ex ecutive himself. Shall; such obstructive pro ceedings, in defiance ofela-w,.of Congress, ofth< Constitution, and'of the sense of the country be permitted to be enacted, unchecked, unrebuked and unpunished? I iriistnot, the, .county hopes not; expects not.!- . , The gentleman from Maryland [Mr. JPhelps' rung the changes v.ery.. freely: arid trippingly up\ on the sanctities and' obligations of the Fresi 'dent's oath of office, but forgot to 'define thi difference between executing and evading th« Slaw, of the distinction; between which'Mr. John- son seems to ihave very corifiiseillnieis 1 . In al his Southern \policy\ he seems, to have soughi ,rather how to .evade than' how to execute tin |law. It is true he opposed, his veto to there -construction acts V but, passed over the veto j are they not as authoritative and obligatory, ai •much entitled to be. respected and executed b; civilian, soldier, judge; and 'President^ as anj : act in the statute book' of the 'Republic, unti! the constitutional reviewrtribunol has declare them unconstitutional ? For this disregard o the obligations of his ' bath, for this his iiegleci , and virtual refusal to execute, the law, becausi i not in the ' line of his pet \policy I' never doubted but that he might rightfully be arraign- • ed and impeached. When the impeachment was ; first brought; before this House the remainder ol ; his term seemed to ipe So short, the disturb ing and paralyzing influence of impeachment si imminent, far leaching-, and eridurin'g—hoping too, almost against hope, that he would foregi and yield his autocratic views to the deliberation and decisions of that department of the Govern ment with whom the . Supreme Court had de- clared the Constitution; had. lodged the right an' the power to say, and direct by law him to do— on a former occasion I voted -yet further t bear and to forbear, and, with otherSj set my self to watch and pray and hope iota.* more be nign future. Hardly had we lefs \'these seats alter the July session eretife made' aV further stride, a yet bolder strike, ih', Sus'peliding Mr, Stanton from office. This bold blow at the fear- less end the incorruptible Secretary, to whom, more than any other living man, the country is indebted for being brought triumphantly thro' and out of the great war of, the. rebellion, so startled and angered the people that had Con- gress been lhcri in session, or convened imme- diately thereafter, impeachment would at once have taken place. The general expectation tha the Senate could and would restore the Secreta- ry and thus vindicate the majesty;of the;;law ul timateiy so allayed public exasperation that an othe* flagrant presidential obliqny, or rather outrage, was added to the many others unnb ticed, at least unchallenged, before the appropri ate constitutional tribunal. ' The 'Senate leinstated Mr. Stanton. The President, instead of deferring to the almost unanimous expression of the body constituted by the Constitution his 'advisers, at once set to work to nullify as far forth as he could its ac- tion in this particular, and to evade all laws.per- taining. thereto, by Mtnself ignoring tli<5 Secreta- ry and requiring his subordinates to do tte same. Wa.s-tb.is decent respect to the Senate ? Perhaps a' grave impropriety is Hot'impeaeha- ble.. Buthow about such evasion, jqay, viola- tion, of the law by hira whrr has. sworn to the faithful execution. of> the same ? . Again, no -action was held, no notice was taken of this continuous outrageous executive prpceedure, This long enduring forbearance, this slowness to smite, instead of abating seem- ed to embolden to the commission of other and more flagrant audacities. The next'step was ia another direction; it was no less than a mean attempt to inveigle into violation of law an' honest and unsophisti- cated soldier. Foiled in this endeavor, then followed a dastard effort with -venomoua .-pen to Write him down-; to which was susperadded the. aid of a not overscrupulous, I may say most obsequious-Cabinet. In its great forbearance and unwillingness to proceed to extremities again, Congress allowed to pass unrebuke'd of- fense and-offender. The cup; however^ was surely and,slowly fill: ing.' T.he Stitnton-Thomas \imbroglio' almost immediately followed. . This is of too. recent oc- currence; the. particulars are too .«eH:knowh to the House tpneed*fronj'ine a moment's con- siderate. In this matter an ex. 'posVfac'tb plea has'ibeen put forth in behalf of the President, that;his only object in moving as he did, • was to sj&eure a. speedy and'harmless test in the courts,, of the constitutionality of the' trouble- some'Tenure of Office act. ' This is a.mbstshal- lowpretext, or anoi'very profound ptfecautioiia ry attcr-thought. * ' ' jf.j [cOSCtUD STEW ADVERTISEMENTS. I; ^HAT ;C*W I BO BEST1 /^AN I SUCCEED AS AN ATTORNliY, ARTIJ5T OR \J Author? As a Banker, Bookseller or \BrdSer ? A fCirpenterj. Clerk or Chemlit? .ArPentUtjor Designer! 'An Editor or .Engineer? A Farmer or,» Grocer?; Can I Invent, Lecture or Legislate? -Can I succeed ai a Manufacturer. Merchant or Machinist ? In MuiSc, Nav- igation, Oratory, faimlbg or .Sculpture 1 At afPreaclf er or Physician? A Poet or Policemaiij-' A .Sailor or a Soldier? ATeacher.TrageUiaporWjIter? fim it be foretold, with •oientlflcfcerUlnty,.^hat'I can;do belt.? lari-HRENOLOGICAL EXAMINATIONS, WITH Charts'anil written ...descriptions, of. character, add advice !n:regar;l to the mqit approprjate'occuiuiUons and purjultsin'which .Toucan;b*it succeed. .._, .., . Given dajrand .evening bj.'Wi I.'. JtONElfCOMBi at Room.No. .22; Sejinour House.' j Sotlifaction guaranteed....., » . ., i i y| nlilBil wlUi a sict headache :monthjy- > .«i'.<>'?' cl \•?!!*?. yolpaif'iyrenchJeirialeJ'lllB.— Mwfprove it.iurv and ipeedy cure, gild Mta S ' ' ( )Ottl«26oenU.: Bold by Druggists. • v l' T V^ £f ' ' THE TWO, STOUT BMCKJIODSE^NEAKL'y'OPPO- L sltetn'ePabHaSquareiori'SeV'riJrk Avenue. Alio nehalf : of the n«w frame double dweUing next adjoining. ^^^^^ ^fe 1 Only 25 Cent* tii^ivge Bottlea.~Hotb- er Bailey's Quieting Syrup Tor children* which greatly asiiata the chilli through the months of teething, allays all p&ln, reduces lnBumiriatlon, correcta acidity of the. tomachy arid heVer falls to. regulate the. bowell. Sold by all'Dtdggl»t»; Bold.by J, O. Sprague. '--•-'• AOENTS WANTXD. . , INTRpDUOE ODR Mf BODBLE THRBAD JL |20 'Sewing Machine. Local and Traveling A>ents Wante'd, Mile or female. For Oommli'iioh or Stiiry to Agent*, with full particulars and sample of work, ad- Ireu Granite 1 giving Machine Co., Detroit, 1 We'll, (apld6t*wlt) H. Clemons to VLEM02T3 <£ BBDJSQT.0.S). Wholesale and Jtel.ill dealer in t t ' . 1 l»lAi\0 FORTES Eitey's Cottage O.gans . With tbeir wonderful VOX UIM1NA TREMOLO Al»o-thelr Patent 8UB-BA8K PIANOS FBOMi & So»m, ' , ' ' Steiuway & Sons, Hallet, Davis & Co., J; W-.'^oae & Co., The Bradbury Piauo, Geo. IW. Guild ic Co. Sunbam & Sons, Xtaven Oc Bacon. Halnes Bros, B^All kindi of.Muiical' Merchandioe for sale at the lowest Boston and New fork Price:. Ogaensburgh. April 1. 1868. (diw) o, H. OLEMONS. 1868. Spring 1868 OP Spring Goods, JDBl! RECEIVED BY HASTINGS & WARNEE SUCCESSORS TO The Largest and Choicest Selection at Spring Goods ever opened, in this City, which' we offer at the LOWEST CASH PRICK. .J?~It is to the. interest of Buyers to examine oiir Stock before pui-chashig 'elsewhere. DRESS (JOODS, Silk tBrnpresa Cloths, Trench Poplliis.Iriali Pqpligs, PrincK Merlnoi, Alpacas, Wlri- sey«. Wool Pelaihes.'Plaid Poplins, M. Delaines. . > ' • ... , • 1' ••'• AU widths; BROWN SHEETINGS j COT- 'TON YARN AND OABPBTf WINDOW SHADES, a. large A very large assortment of Brown and Bleached Table Dama»k,< t>y the.ytrd.— Linen Table Cloth*;! Hnck, Damaak'and ', Fringed Towels:'- Llnehi Napkins. Linen ' Sheeting!. Pillow Case Linens. CLOTHS AND CASSIMERES ..jfv •;r«: Coniltttagof English. Brussels, Tapestry, Three^Ply,'ExtraSapier, Siipe'rSne,Wool, ;, Dutch, and Hemp. Also Printed Drug- ,' \ 'gets;all widths. COCOA MATTINGS. | WHE8E 6o6i)8 BE SOZA EVKBTCAsiBBrTER-Shonid'cAit.\ . - ••;' ' ' FOR f; , _ T HE SOUTH HA1¥ 6$ i.OT <MJ THE WEST SIDt of Caroline Street, between Ford, and Green, Og-. densburg. This lot is 66 feet front, running one half theidepth of' the Block,' about 166 feet. To; a person wishing toereot adwelling near the buslnesl portion of the city, no more desirable location can be found. (mh2Tdlw) II. T. BACON. NOW IS THE TIME TO CSV A. BABGAIN IN Carriages •I- .\ , •-: '^.- \ t ;;•_ ; ;; -^.K ••••• . -.,„-, . iThe. subscriber calUattention to EigJtock of CarMages andsBuggieg, all tit ,tfie liaUst S^laJ: and . . :r.:: RIANt FA< XI KED BY W* Now Ready for Deiiyery. SECOND GROWTH I can f'uiruisli. a better article and Cheaper than ' any Importer or A-g^ont, and warrant satisfaction. MANUFACTOKY, OOJR. 'TSAdBBLZA & WASHINGTON$T8.,, OGJ)ENSBTtM&, N.Y. ' - A. CALLAGHAN. SPRING STYLES FOR 1868, FRESH ARRIVALS! NEW GOODS! &D A^ilBQIl's No, 6 Eagle Block, Ford Street, Ogdcnsbiirgh,N.¥, •JUST B E C E I V E JD, 8,000 Yards Prints and other Cottons! Look out soon, for th e Openin 0* MILLINERY and DRY GOODS ITreisli Grirpxind PXASTEB Constantly on hand at the '' * •: OGDESSBOEGH PLA8TBU HILLL, Al*6 Fre«h Oroaud WATER LIME, : ' For sale in quantities to suit purchaser!. . • . H, 7». NOBTHBDP. Ogdenaliurg, Jan. 81,1868. [feldiwto] T HE C0PARTNER8HII' HERETOFORE EXISTING between the undersigned under the name of dem- ons & Rcdington, Is by mutual content, this' day dissolv- ed. AU accounts of the firm will be settled by C. H demons. ,. •!-,.. C. H. CLEMONS, J. G. 0. REDINGT0N. Ogaensburg, March 81,1868. The MusleBusiness will be continued at the old stand No. 2 Xudjon \Biiilc Building, t>y (mhSiaiw*w2w) •\ 0. H. CCBMONS. - SPECIAL NOTICE. ... ... ... T OTS WILL BE SOLI) 'AT REDUCED PRICES If A-J Applied for soon. No lots to leaser March 81,1863., , . GEORGE PARISH. SPECIAL NOTICE. ' • The occupation of my land, or the removal of earth or other material therefrom li'.positively forbidden. March 81, 1S68. ' ' GEORGE PARISH. (mh8ia*wlm) 1 i VILLAGE; OKDIIVANCE. T HE ^OARD'OF TRtrSTEBS OP THE VILLAGE OP Ogdensburgh, by virtue of the power vested in them by the Charter of said; village, do ordain as follows: Tiiat Section 15, of Chapter IV, of the village ordlriancea be and they are hereby amended so'as to read as follows: § 15. No person shall place or erect any building within the-limits hereinafter mentioned, unless the walls thereof are made, and.the roof covered with some substance other than wood,, under tie penalty, of fifty dollars, and the -further penalty of twenty-five dollars for everyweek the same shall remain after conviction for the first offence, to wit: On Ford street, or within oneTiuridred feet of either side thereof, from Caroline street to the Oswegatchie River; on Water street, or within one hundred feet of either side thereof,' from Ford street to the northerly side of Catharine street; and on Isabella street, or within ilxty;-feet of either side thereof; between Water, street .south end) and Washington street; on State .street and within one hundred feet of either side thereof, from Washington street to Knox street; and that part of said village, on the westerly side of. the Oswegatchie River, and bounded by the mill-pond and main aqueduct, and stralghtllnes continued from along the westerly bounds of eald'pond, and the easterly 'bounds- of said main aqueduct, to the Oswegatchie river. But this, ordinance shall not prohibit the -erection' : of any building, not exceeding ten feet square, nor a building for a shed for storing wood, not exceeding' twenty feet long, thirteen 'eet wide,'and thirteen,feet high. . • By order of the,B.oard, 0. S.\MASTIN Dated OgdensbnTgh.March21,1868. (mh21d&w2w) Hlslily Intcreatlng New«.—Motlicr* take.notice., Mother Bailey's Quieting Syrup- for child- en, 'targe bottles only »5 cento; Bold by Bfnggists. ' Sold by J, 0. Spragne, Ogdensburgh. DR. 1 g. I. TOBIAS' VtiffiMdNIC UfE • for the cure of • Incipient Consumption, Coughs, Colds, Croup, Asth- ma, tlveriCompiaints, Dyspepsia, aniGeneralDebUltjr. For Beveral years 3t have' been-urgea' by kind friends, Tho:hayeusedand'beenbenefitted,-by my lite-Syrup,, tqgut itu'pforgeneral'sSle; but few' know the-large expense, now that'the' country Is flooded with • Patent Mediclnei, which attend the same. Sot years I was re- luctarifto do so, as ihe capitalrequired would 1 be large, ind I did not wish to cnrtall the operations of my Vene- l'an Liniment business. But, thanks • to the generous lUbllc, who have appreciated my Venetian Liniment, I ii\ nGw'ab'le to d6:sowlthput detriment to my large bus- iness in that medicine. -The foundation of my success I attribute to attending to the manufacture of every dropmyselfand shall do the same thing In regard to my Pulmonlc Hfe Syrupi.: The Ingr»dlentii;are perfectly harmless: but act anon the lungs and liver, with astonish- ing'efiect. Price 15 cent*. Depot N». «S CorUandt St. New Tortj.neari near Jer«ey City ?erryi Sold. 6jr the ?rugglstkana Storekeepers: _ . i (mhlOdtwlm) FOR SAIK OR TiHE fAKM ©IT THB IilSBON EOAD 4Jfi M1LB3 L' fromOgdensburg,containing 181 acrei,-lately,peen-, pied6y»6bt. Wilson: Also dneoDsameroad2Jsf mile*. 'romOgdeniburg.conUtninrSO krei, Utely occppled >y A.Btlggsl For particulars apply to u'i ^ (mhl8d*wlm) B. J. 0W0HT0N. SPECIAL NOTICES. \Consumption Is as certainly cured as In- termlttenttent Fever, and as certainly pre- vented as Small Pox.\-^BeTi Cku. B. King, M. D., U. D., etc. KING'S iPrejparecl iproscripfifcloii. Made from the prescription of Bev. CHAS. E. KINO, M. D. LX. D.j Ac, for the prevenUon.aiid.cure of COJSU.MFT1OI For the Radical cure of, Asthma, Bronchitis, Catarrh,and all-affections of the Lungs, Throat and Air Passages; for General and Special Derangements of the Nervous Sys- tem ;• for Disorders of the Blood ; and for all functional : Dlidrclen of the Stomach and Bowels. ' The Prepared Brescriptibu increases, the str.ehgth.axid deepens the color of the-pale blood. It snhdueB the Fe- ver and Chills and diminishes the expectoration. It checks the riightfsweats always in froni s^ven to four? . teen days. The appetite Is Invigorated and the patient rapidly.gidns flesh.; the^cpugH and-. difficult breathias srespeedily ielieved-;\the sleep Ijecomes calm and re- freshing ; the evacuation regular and uniform. AU the general symptoms of Consumption, ABthms^.-BroncHtis *o., disappear with areally astonishing rapioity. \ -The Prescription should be used in every disease, by whatever name known, in which there is exhibited any derangement \of the nervous or blood systems. It is un- equalled in female disorders*, scanty or Suppressed M Whli enses, WhlteSjio. . The Prepared-Prescription is both, the .best antf most economical medicine, that can.'be taken.. * The average dose 1» two teaspoonsful, taken once a day. Thepatlent neveriequires, tinder any ctcumstanceSi'ta u8e\C6ugh Mixtures\ forthe Cough; \Expectorants\ for.the expec- toration; \Tonics' 1 for the Appetitite m the Weakness; Iron for the Blood; Anodynes f»r the nervous Irritation, Acids for the Night Sweats; or Whistey 9> r Cod. Liver . Oil for the wasting. Its Specific Action is upon the Con- ttltutional'Conditlon, and through this condltloa upon the whole series of Symptoms. STATEMENT FROM PATIENTS, *C. College Hill,Cincinnati:—I was in the last stages of Consumption. In ten daya after taking the Prescription my Chills, Night Sweats, .Fever ic, decreased and final- ly altogether disappeared; A mere Skeleton before, now well stored with flesh. My restoration ia a marrel to ail who know me.;—Mrs. 0. L. Wright. Yonr Prescription saved my daughter's life and. baa probably saved me hundreds of dollars.^Eev. B. Humph- reys, Kemsen.N. T. '-\'•\ • We bless God for the benefit we have received frc<* your Prepared Prescriptldni^Kev; P. Peregrin*, Bloss- burgK, Penn. • . , Every one to whom I have recommended It has bene- fitted much by Its use;—Rev.C.D^ Jones, Racine, Wls. The Prepared Prescription Is put up In a$l bottle,.and Is sold in Ogdensburgh by J. C. Spragtte, and B. 0: Lam- phear and by Druggists generally., or. orders may be ad- dressed to the Sole Proprietors, OSCAR G> MOSES * Co. 27 Cortlandt Street, New York. . Consultation, free; A circular,, containing testimonials of many cases succeas- fully treated j will be sent free, bymall, l to -ail who .-.will write for it Mt*Odt»i |3iT~The best medicine in the porld Is Dr. Langley's EooiandHerbBltters—long atrled and sUndard remedy for Liver'Complalnts, Billious diseasBs, Humors of the Blood and Skin, Jaundice and Dyspepsia,. Indigestion, CoBtivefiess, Headache, and all diseases.arlslDg from Dis- ordered Stomaehi torpia Idver, or Impure Blood; They cleanse the system, purify and newcreate the blood, re store, the appetite, build up and strengthen the whole fiqay; GEO. el GOODWINf * COi, Bosioni , SoMty aUIJrriggists: - ' (mhl7cHw6m) PTSAVE the Children.-MulUtudes,of them suffer, linger, and die, because of Pin Worms. The only effect- ual remedy for these most troublesome and dangerous of all worms In children or adults, Is foundih Dr. Gould's Pin-Worm Syrup. Purely vegetable, safe and certain;— A valuable cathartic, and beneficial to He»lth.. GBO. C. QlOODItntfic CO.,Boston,andiU'DrnggiBft:i •• '''•'\'* ' '\ ' : ftM ' BATOHELOarS HAIE DTK.\; .. •• Z r ,'•\' This splendid Hair Bye is the best in the world! The only true and perfect Dye. Harmless. Rell»ble,IniUn- taneous; , NodUappointment*. No ridiculous tlhtl.— Natural Black or. Brown. Bsmedies the' Ul effects of bad dyes, •ihvig'orates.the Hair,'leaving It soft and^ beauti- ful: Tlie«enuini is signed 1 WUMamJ A. Batcfielbr.- ''AU others are mere imitations, and should be avoided: Sold by all druggists and perfumers. Factory 81 Barclay St.. N«wtoft ••••->- (aetdikwly)\' . HOWARD AgSOOIATION Report*, for young 5 men Youth and. Early Manhood,.which create Impediment to Marriage, wltb sure oieans of relief. Sent in sealed .let- ter envelopes, free pf Charge. , Addres3, Dr. J, BEItlBS