Daily Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1848), 1862-07-14 page 1 |
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I VorL. Advertlnemeti. New ORNAMENTAL IRQN WQHK., Wr.wfht C.el ad Wlra. ,tt0H BAJUKCS. OAT.WAT. Si), VBSANDA AND .V, w. DOW OUABDrl. i Vtal.teels, Cradles, .nil Orilx. AlBettieiSBS, lwi',. flower Trainers, . SpVif IW Iknt lllaalralwl Mltlogiut wellae o """I" " - : HOT0H1M8O1 WlOKMHAM. ml Agents for "New York Wlr.-SUIllllf may le-Smo r-p- BARLB'S NEW HOTEL liro.dwey, lew " Terms, $1,50 per Day. TUB ABOVH HOTBU I WW Wll fo7.li. "captl"u of gue.U. Tb. looetloe UUgow-Iral I. very eon.ii.nl hiV-lw- e4 I1"" 'TSK ineut. and easy of eecess from III perls of the city. Tee ..lahed io ueot and lieudMiu. aiennw. "fT"! .bleb a Urge number ... slngl., . nnu.ii.lly well 1 wd wuifl.tod, and. Io tl. .veryltilug klJ that could add lo tb. comfort of the guests, end ran U . Sr.l Ola, not... . A .09. AdHHB dir. Proprietors. Uorstmaaa Bros. & Allien, IMPOETZU AMD MAIIOFA0TOH Of SOCIETY, & CHURCH GOODS No. 8 Maiden Lane, . irw vouk. KARSE PLUMES, HORSE EQUIPMENTS, ia. a. .1 IhiiIi fnr 1 RYLE8 BPOOL BILK, .. ....... ...i... ......i. nrlmfliitBl run. niftd. to orasr. Buttons. Iiladlug, artinuiings .orulshed Io ooutreolors .1 short untie, April 16-d3ui, j GUNS, PISTOLS, &C, &C. I -ONION & WHEELOOK, No. 866 Broadway; N. Y, IMFOBTEM AKD KANUAOTBXBS Of Gu m , a b v o i. v b a a , it I r i. p . Hatols, Barrel, Locks, Mountings Mid Can M.terlal J ot everydaKrlptlui. l-odor Jisaks, J"11" "J I ...... n it . v.,t-,...1nn Can.. Wadding. Dram . J-lMkn, Bowie knives, Dirks, and a full iMortm.nl ol flood. suitable tor Soldiers, Sportmen fc Gunsmith's Use. i Depot for Fire Arms Manufactured BY ALLEN & WHEELOCK. Allen's New Pntont Oartrtdire Uovolvara nd Blfloo, rrl ty jf ilzm, the but uriui in tn. vorio. A.nll4-.m. FIRTH. POND & CO MANUFACTURERS OF MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS, AND PUBLISHERS OT SHEET MUSIC. 64T BROADWAY, NEW YORK. Ilrf.at iuducomenti offored io purcliamra. NEW AND SPIENWIO PIANO FORTES a, low an 20n, for OMh and erary lnitrumnt warranttd. NEW pianos rantodaud tta.mt appllsd to th. pur thM KL0MC0N8 and HABMOMDMS eout.nlly on band. BAND INSTRUMENTS. We both rn.nufactlir.ono imfori ran "," .ud ran Bel! ohlr than any olli.r Hon.. " A full net ot It llra luitruuiontl for 1W), for Util. T?,ou.'li'o!iidnow.O!CBMAlI BItVEB FIirK8,th.t cannot on.Hi or l.lit. J'rlcm. t7 Wl onch.Jn Braryklndof Muiloal Instrument oan be fonnd la our tock . STniNCS! STRINCS! Blly Kood Vlollu trln. are rarity. W. make It a plnto kwp vevy "iipcrior Klrh.Ki, lor g od playori. frire 7.". cwiw per ot. nent ly mnll poelilKO paid. Bejldj the aborr have Italian, Oermau, Jrciicli, and Eogllah Btrinm, Violin, Viaiucello, Double Bara, Ap. Doalere ..f Miialo "'t Kunoy Q K).l, Jmrllen and other, are p if ticularly rqutud to try onr V loliu String.. Sheet illtc find Musical Hooka. OurCatiilo.no of Mnelrl. Tery eitennlTe and popular .ndro pabll.l,lngNKVVli;SlO BVKBT DV. l Ileii.leonrown publication., wo hare all of tho Mullo J.,il,l.l iu lIicuiintry,,doan fuinlsU Foreign Mmlo. Ortice, TKACiiriwor Mnnio, Ukamof Behinauikr, Ilr.ii.Eaiiand NewiAobt, cau Uavi. their order, fully an I nromptly flllml end Io. warded by Sipre.. or Mail. xl, ,ii, on Mualo lent by mall I. only about one rentb'r ea. h pb.oe. This 1. tho cheapiat aud Quickeit ar to forward mn.ll packam. Bend lor our Oatu. lntriieaand (Jir'-iiUia. Hom,Dir tho nam. and nunkj, p0jqp 00,t anrtd.lm ' M7 Broadway, New lork. TIFFANY & CO., No'.. 500 HS Droadwityi New York, and No, TO Roe KlchtleU) Fart., Dealer. In ptaiuonds ami otsior Precious Stoues, ami siauaaru jewfirj. tii: .;nlu or tn tultt. of Marblt ot Btomf, ( .ntonometer, fifth or split itemJ, and Rtpeatinj Wateha; By Frodeham, Pin-Jon, Jurgmun, Cooper, John -.,. Palhefe. J'C. Sterling Siletr Tea and Pinner Sett, ifiacellaneoui Articles, and Pnientation Piecet jron Original Designs; $ '.effield and Ameriejn 1'iatd Ware, V tht most vjll.ihle ntialitt! . Bronzrt A rolieelion larger than any other in the fihmdiliert of Brome, Braekett, Vestibule and Pulnit liohts: Rose Wood, Buhl, Ebony, and Leather Dressing Cjses, Writing Desks; Stores 1'oTcehiin, Fans and objeti dt luxe, of every description. Mannfactnrarl and Importer, of all fcluda of p.tfi),! tllrinhiiriiam Hiid Lliiira Firoamin of every quali ty. Sliar')).'' atid Wnitt.-y ItlcliitidV Kruecb-loadlng HiflS kMatols ly VM, '1 rnntur, Aflimia, Ijhuidcuoui, whwuwi Miultti A Vo4!ijn, Brtcini MnournctnrIiig and Otber, itrlca.ild f.'lldirtl ll'llwllltaT IlinCtlrl. Ilt'l. nwa tls, 9.ibrfi uJ Ciitlnioi , lr all grades and of all ru .Utiea, ly the most a)iroved makers nj Germany. Kng-land ud Viauce, as well of the United States. Ulados tf.-ni the tamons Holingon fnctory," of rare quality aud n f til, iiumouTitcU, always ou liauu. (' npiaux,Oaps ftnl tJitu Ornuaieuta, Sashes, Kpaulets, !hout iiT-trt.pi, AigtiiH-Uea, aud all the details of a nnl-in..i KiiuiiHwi'.liii. t'tttiitlif-ll.x.B. OAntoans. U'gii.iO)jt,tl titumlarils, Natloutil Kuh.kus, UoldouSi SwhIIow ttills, and all. tjlos of Flags, embroidered or point a fmm nrimui doiun. mude to ordor at short notice. K-4necia1 attention puld to tho manufacluro of artiolusof niilury preheauiiion, nworus, ommiuriio, ou., iu hm-hv lonuurcesof the bouse giving it particular advantages In rS.-lt.t.t. TIKli Ahr k 00. are sole agonts and manufatnrcri of the "Koc-kwuii uomutustion union uampunes..-Apiilie-dam. W. L. GILBERT & CO., MiNUrAOTUUKltS UIT SH1FPIMO BRANDS STEAM REFINED CANDY! GUM DROPS, Hools. Oandy, cfso FOR THB PnULlO. Manufactory aud galea Boom., . 01 COURT!. A.HDT ST., NEW VOUK. Branch offlco, 211 OanalSt., Barl.'. Hotel Building. may lfl-lyr i JOHN BLACK, Mnnitracturer And Wtole.ele Dealer In T R U N K S ! 68 READE STHEET, NEW YORK. LADIES' DRESS TRUNKS; , ' CEDAR TRUNKS, FOR PCRSj FINE SOLE LEATHER TRUNKS And all kind, of TRAVELING BAG8. mi?1ft-ama MANHATTAN HOTEL, Btf.TTX.m.A.ir BTIIBBT1 6B00HU D00 IBOM BKOADWAT, Opposite th. Park, N. HUG(Hfl, WMtWIy Proprietor Oanby, Oilpin fc Oo. WHOLESALE DRUGGISTS 4 ND IMPOflTKHSl flf" RNOL1HH. OBH J. MAN and French Drugs, Ohomlctli, Perfumery and Kancy atucios, uye Htuflu, J'aints, Oils, VeroHlios, v iq qcw ui.tov, riu, H. W. 00 . OF MQIIT AMD LOMBARD 8TBBBT8, HALTIMORE. nw28-ri:itn oiconou BiiowanoLD, yJHlr.ioer, and ProTtiltuiStora, 1 .s Ho. M Bail Tows Mnet RiioEiiinaua ex brown, AUnnfrturert and Vialan In furnltnr.. Scrlnr Bla (lhalri, ullrua, LMklnf OlaaaM, A.., No. J homo Aia.ira.i. t DAILY VOUWE XXI ClBflnnatl AdverllielDC V, i 8PEEKB, Westeru Cueuical Wriliug Fluid ind.Blatking , Labpntory. ; if. 61 Wlilnul-St., Clnclanatl, O. COEMICAI. WMTING FLUID, OodtIu. Blvk. Blu, (hnulM, (ma, StuoUIni Ml ' BhoamaJn. oiij ' icxji3ae. . OriginalJapanese Blacking WHEELER ck WILSON'S Sewing sa.a.oTaLihai&m Aw.rdwl ths tint Promlum s th bert FAMILY SEWING MACHINE for thrt moOM.lT.ra.rf, at tk. - . UNITED STATES FAlBj For font auccwltt ;oan, at tn. Obk Btatit.aib; " lor tn unooanrr. roar., .1 Ik. (JmoWKiti MHitAor Office, 77 West Foui-th lt.. ; . PIKE'S OPERA I10UBE, OIKOINH ATI, OHIO. bbt-dl. JIVT MIDIOAL DIBOOTBKT, For tb. ajieedy and pernianeul onr. ol Oonorrhea, Gleet, UretUal Sisohargeg, Seminal Weaknua, Nightly HmUiiona, Inoon-tinenoe, Genital Irritability, Gravel, Btriottire, anil , AfFIOTIONS 01 TBI KIDMBTB AHD BI.ADDKB, which ba. been ued ley ipwanU of OIB IIUMDaBD l'HVSICIAWB, In their private practice, with q tire aucoeai, raperwdlt;! Onbebf, Oopaib., Uapinlea. or rvy compound bUbtru Known. BELL'S BPECLFlC PU-LS An soeedv In Mtlon. otW etTBcHaii a ewe In a few days. snd when a cure It effected it Jm permauetit. Tboy ar proparod from Yeftetable extracts ihut are harntlees on the 'Hem, ana novor linneraie ine pjiumiBcu, or iuiviiorhwvo is breath: andbeluasuRaiMMtataMl.all naussous taste is avoided. No ohsnj of diet i n ttenarv vkiUt ming thmtf or does their action interfnre arlth tusinetts pursuits. Each box oodU.ds ail domn pllli. FBI01 ONI DOIiLAK. and wilt be sent by mall pest -pal d. by any advertised Agent, nreoeiptoi .tie money, doiq sy uriigiHie gt,uurnj. None senalns without my slgjiaturo on tho wrapper. JU tSOANUN CO., ' VVho waIo Agents, Cincinnati. For sain by H. Wilson, 8. JO. Samoels A Oo., and Bob- rts A 8kmnels, Columbus, augSuHMlur ' MJCIilCAtt UAhK NUXa';i., (Bonth-east Corner Ms in and lonrtb Htraets.) OINCIKNjaTZ.OBIO. Kograved In a itytu oorrMpondfns; In exoajllenoa to that Bank Notes, It utl road l Oonoty Bonds, Hills 01 Mix- obanfe, Chocks, DrwfU, csrtt floats of SUdr and D-potdt, Soals, Cards, Ao.t jtu The above oolce is u oOer ha at irvhlou nf O.T.aOKCtf, oetlS-dly OiinMnnati. X m tv J.HOTH 52 B East Fifth Street, CINCINNATI, Gives his Mtire time and,talont to the euro ofd!a tn E -5T S S I VllVi av Msu-.Urn aihI azuerlHOutt of manv years lu Kn- ropo, be cau ask with nwuu-anca the patronage of a gou eruua publio, aud confidoiice In tho snccoMtnl treatment Ol dfi dues OI tail uonetuo oihii. nnu iiiii ireTwt ia time to the oure of PltlVsVTlC DiaKAttKS, he prom-Uos cures in the most obstkmte cwt. Those recently contracted are cured In a very short time. Syphilis In it primary atagos cured In an incredibly short time. Wktn dtwMses oured PKUMANKN'ilV In from one to tbree weeks. Also, attends to tu practice or tno proieesioa geoernlly. Pernons at a dldtmTtro, ulttlctml, will have advice aud medicine sent by sn4tnB description of disease aud their condition. AU cointr,unicatioi,ri and treatment striotly confidential. Dr. R. Ims a TiiOH, which, from Its mechanical adjustment, will give ImmeViate rolfef and nitimutaiv iiraf in HiA tmrta ullnr.tt'd. no it to enable Dr- sons to follow ifcAlrordiiiiit-yaNtocationswithdait hindrance inoonveniottofl, cohhuu or auarens Ult. J, ROTtT, mar8-dwly Wo. IJast Fifth pt. Oina'nnatl. UMBRELLA, PARASOL Walking Cam Manufactory, 167 Main Btrent. Ciuoinunti, Ohio. Miuvhants and Dnalore are tiartlcnlarly Invited to call and examine my stock of Q mbrotliui, Paraiols, aud Wallt- lufr dautii, which i am ooiring a- DLanuiuciuror s ooai, M. THOUI'SON. 107 Main tHrowt, wast sido.botaeea 4th nnd fith. riuclnnali. 0. jvumnrona, I'araeoi ana wniKiug.uaoe maiermis Or Dinned to tht trlo atnwlticwi prices. jans-aiyr NO. fi EAST FOURTH STREET, BOOTH . BIDE, BAST OF MAIN, CP STAIRS, . Oixxoisa.xi.A.tl, H AUDI AOIH It II AMD DI11II I Tnifipes for Radienl Oure, SUPPORTERS AND BHOULDER BRACES, Bnrgieal and Anatomical Mechanician. Inrcntor and Manufacturer of ADtiaratUH for Onrvatnre of Sffiue, Wry Nock, Olub Keet, now Lri'pa, anu oilier ruiaiuni veiwnn- tlea. Splint, for Fracture, nutl tilalocatlone, ntooking. for Vericoee Velna, Kneo O.p. uud Ankloli wade to order. Kepoctal attention paia to tne ropnir oi Aniuoiai uibivw ltelera by perralatlon to l)r W O fttuaiey, Dr O O Black, Dr F Boelker, Ur J r jnoKin., ur , ocuimut, wr. friee, Dr A Beltmao, Imara Private jOisGtx&oet tlecent onne. or utmorrjie or ey bhilia cured In a few day., without 'ohango of diet or hJuilrunce from Uliatuea.. Bocouuery oypiiuia in. lent veellge eradicated wlthont the n, of Moroury. Involuntary of aemen atonned In a short time. Bnfferora from Jmpulency or ltaa ol soinal power, leatored to full rigor n few weoka, Gleet or tlnniirrbi'a of lone; standing, whore all Internal renwdiee have Allied, permanently and speedily onred by anew treatment. ' DR. STEVENS & CO., Cincinnati Lock Hospital NO. T THIBD BT BUT. WAIiHUT AMD VIM Or Box 090 Ulnclonotl, u. jylDDI.KTON, STIlOUUlDan 00., .ITHOORAniERH, MOM VKM COPPER PLATE PRINTERS, West Fourth St., Ctmilaaatl. All kind, of work don. In th. boat atjla and on abort notloe: Fartlenlar attonllon win a. given to oruar. tor WEDDING CARDS, VISITING CARDS, to aw Order, may b. aenlto tt. JounsiJ. Oniow. novlSdly HPOBTANT TO LAOISB. rtm. JnriH B.avav. havtna fhr nowarda of twenty vest. devoted hi. profeMlonal time oxoinaiveiy to in. ireaimeni nf rBHALB D1KK0ULTIK8, and having auoeoeded In taonaanda of cm. In reetorlng tne aroiot. to aonna hMlth, ba. now entire confidence In offering publicly hla 'UltlSAT AftllSHUAr) KISIUBVI," DR. HARVEV Chrono-Thermal Female Pills, whioh have saw rot failed (when th. dlraetlODS bar been atrlctly followed,) In romovfnf dlolcnlttol arlalng Irom ' ' Obstruction, or Stoppage of Nature, or In restoring Ibe ayatera to ruirfeot health, when an Iter. log from tlplnal Alfectlona, Prolaii.ua Uteri, th. Whites, or other weakness or the Uterine Organs. Also, In all eaaes of Dobillty or Norvou. Proatratton, Byaturics, Pal- Jillations, to Ac, which are rnrernnners of more sortons jscavM. naTTaeia Alia ar ptrfielty narmleia en rAe oofl-plfuJion, end may te fake i, A. meif delfoafe emale lawioal Mwta, difSms; at lb. same time they aor Iran a onaan bv strengthening, Invigorating and restoring th. system to a healthy oomlltlon, and by bringing en lh. monthly period wltb regularity, no matter from what cans, the on-itrnotioni may arise. Thoyshnnld, however, not betaken during Ike first three or fuur month, or pregnancy, though safe al any other Urn., as miscarriage would b. tbe rs nit. Iacb box contains 00 Pills. Paioa Oxa Douia, and . when desired Ibey will be eent by mall pre-paid by an, eavertisea Agent, on recnpi tn wi. asensr. Boldb, Drugglatipnrally. ' " B. HOANLAN 00., Wbnlaaele Aganta, CHnalnnatl, For ael by H, arte, Oolamtms. aogaeeodlx Wilson, I, , tunnel and 0. Boh 3rV aWIT. i- l.-,llllk ll: xt'imliiB uii. OHIO COLUMBUS, ... SPEECH - ' ' Of Hob. Jtaa Hntchln, of Ohio, tn tho Ilouae of Bepreaenta-tlvet, In. Beplr o 8. S. Con. . ,., i Mr. Chairman, my eollaague Mr. Co from tbe Columbui dlitriot, on th Oth of Jane, in th. Committee of the Whole, madi amo.tex-traordiaary ipaeoh, intending thereby in dam-... .h. r.i. nniiution of iha Thlrti-Ber.nth Con .rail, Fhone epitaph, after faahion, he took the pain, to write out. The moet oruel eoiianh he eould hare written would hare been T , , ..J.. 11.. .1... kl. an.a.l.- tne tallowing, ineerwuat iu.uiu.ou. "Thli ipeeoh waa lialened to with patienoe by ika, Hanu." In luetic to the Home, it ehonld ba atated that during ill dellrery there were but few mabm preeent, and meat of them hie political friende. Th.r ii' on other taei that it may b important to notion in oonneation with ihi. .naaah: that it waa delivered lata Friday evening, and that It wa dlatrlbutad In pamphlet form early lh next morning, nd eonne-.nuently, I nppoee, moat of it muet bar bean in ina before it waa delivered, and Ihia will ao ennnt for "lauihur" oomine in very frequently, jid at nrooer nlaoe It ! lometittiea dimoult to get th laugn in wnen one waui. , ir ai will not alway, eom at a (peakar'i bidding, nf ihia mode of mv.eolleacDa inDPlie thie de. ." r . , . i. ... i. foot, and .bow when the auditor ihould have laugbad, if they did not I will briefly notion om point f tail carefully written out apeeoh. I eannot ooment In follow la style of argumentation, for I oaonot do it without getting into the muddy oiemeni in uj a. i,aw .p. He take to th turbid water, of low riUitul aa naturally aa the polliwog doe Io the dirty water of the ditch. In these riled water he ..io,. without a rival, and 1 unquestionably -iiknut a ruttr in th Thirty-Seventh Conzreae. file arraign tft id tongrei. oeior mo granu in- jueat of the nation, ana ms gra.unoa ot aim otwrge it that th ini.r.it of tb whit man i negleeted for th benefit of tk negroj that Con. (tree, put in peril tb Uonetitutjon and th Union to earry out th Utopian idea of negro evuality. My colleague, tbi, tetaion, ha introduced and apoken oftanar than any member on tbi aide of the Home. Kegro equality setrns to disturb hi meditation by day and bis dream by night, Can it ba ibat h fear the eomned-tion of negro equality. Th biiternea of eouie men towards a rival is measured by their four of that rival. I will not aay this i th case with my oolleague, but a oiroum.tanoe to which I will eoon refer give color to th auapioion. My oolleague takes ipeoial pains and peouliar delight, on all oooasions, to prejudice and .lander oolored men, and to ridioule all men who are disposed to do them simpl justioe. He is quiok lo tako advantago of a prejudioe whioh tbe aooumulated oppressions and wrongs of ages hk've orealed against the Afrioan to crush him still lower in tho eoale of degradation. He ridicules' H (Sorts to better his condition by low appeals to a prejudioe whioh slarery has in-i.n.ifl.d. il it did not create. Hia apeeoh shows him to be in favor of the perpetual slavory of the Afrioan. U is opposed to colonization or liberation of the slaves of rebels, fearing it may anlt in funeral emancipation, lie rears mat unless enslaved and held in the degradation of caste. Afrioan wilt somebow or otner work ' . ... . . HI. .L. themselves into aangerou. oompeimoa wuu iuu Anglo-Saxon. The Justice and lb logio of his position are on a par. The bitterness and the meanneea of his attack upon the oolored raoe will annear in a few oharaoteriatio extraot from his reoent speech, whioh I will denominate, by tho use or one or nis classic expression., iue "oesBpool of iniquity." WTWAklng of the oolored people of Ohio, he said, "as a general thiug they are vicious, indolent and Improvident." Alter quoting irom a epeeon oi oenaiur oner-man, my colleague atid : rr the fUnator conld viait Green. Bow. within the .hadow of thla Capital, tenceforth Ti phet and black Ge henna called, til. typo ol lieu, sua noie tne aquaior, ute-tltutton, taginesa, crime, and degradation titer, bt ginning to foater; II tie could viait tbe alley, in whoa, niiaerublu i...nl. tl,n bl.uk. eun.f emte. he would hardly be reminded of the paradl.e wbich Atllton aang, with lie naiarautniiie flower., laugnier.j 11. uiouuiiuk t.ut.ui ... Bu.u.u fruitig?, Ha amber llvcra rolling otfir elyalan flow, re, it hill, and fauntaina and freab ahaaea,lt drtiama of lu.e.aud ft. adoratloa of God. Alia I h. wonld fled nothing here to remind htm o( that high eetai. In Eden,.av. the fragrance of the apot aud tbe nakedutae ef Ita Inhabitant.. Laugh ter.! "If the ruab of fiee negrota to thla paradlae continue, It would be a blowing it ProTidenco ahould lend Satao her. in the form of a airpint, and an augel to drive the deaceudantaof Adam and Kv. Into the outer world. If it contiuubl, you will have no one nere but uongreaiman I negruca, ana mat will otpunienmeui enougn. i ba'iKu-1 Vi.uHillhava to enact a fua-itiv. law lobllna the white, to their cepitol. Laughter Referring to another oolleague, Mr. Edger-ton, be said: It i. recorded that in hie county a white woman tr Akron eued out a Aoliraicomuftlnr tno writ run. tueroyei, at leuat .here th' re ia color of right,) 10 take a mulatto baby fi-em a lire. Jonel, a negio woman nuuor wncae care It bad been placed by ila while mother, and who had be coma attack d lo the pickaninny. In the comae of the dieooauiou, Mr. Jonca toid the whit, woman that ahe thought, "if ibe white lo.ka were mean enotgh tjhave neAro hablei, thoy ought to he wllliug to let colored people bring tbtm up." Langhter So thejudge deoided. Theae little at awa ahow how to account for the prepond-derance of inulattoe. Notth." Speaking of his new congressional distrlot And the Western Reaerve, be said: Thli new dlatriot, air, ia rich In colored material. A rary piotty moaaio I A aw et fragrant neat I And thla 1. tun Afrlc'a Corel atraud to which my miuionary laboie are to bo directed. Laughter. "Uuo would aitppoae that, ia the weitern Beaorvo, wbero theproreaelou of philanthropy ia .rer arlelDg in prayer, in vpeecb, aud In print, where for years they cultivated no civil uieclpltce which Interfered with their n). tiou. of elavery, there would ba throDga or blaokl. Ia it n t 'rhnu Iron.toitKUed cenana. erjeak I Oolored perauo. In Aehtabula SI Ouyahoga (uleyeland) f.H Lako - 30 ' Hahonlng Ol Portage 7fl Trumbull SO Geauga 7 Loralue (Oberlln) , tin Mullea 6 Summit Total .. 1,8.14 fin thai. In these ten conntica of tho Western Itoao.ve, there are hut a few more Alrlcana than In one coiki ol my dlatrlct I Why tbey MpeclaUy avoid Aahtabul I cannot say. Is It the prodigtl proft avion aud acaut practue ot huuiantlyr Lnuguior jKvir uaa wiuuiuga, wiiua view to proteot property and ke.p up !! price, coaxod them Into C'aLada, where happily bo .is nuw domiciled 7 And there is Gaauga, with notes many negroes as Fultou county has lnuians I What a ootulnontary un rcpneeu- tatlve nuellty IB uure i i lie uiewuer .run. A.u.auuia, ai a himliiir and Trumbull. Mr. liulchinalineaka f.r one bun dred aud aixty-aU nugioea; but frum itia pileoos ado, on. would suppuae tuat lie repreaentea at least as inauy aid-cans aa too klug of Oaho.uvy. Laughter I Aud there is luvstnlllua coiloague irom in. uouuntsi. oar. Asntey whoue rotttad toiiu is resdy to become, like Mob., alt tears by hi grief for tho poor negro, laugntori whoae guehea of ckquoute in ibtlr behalf remiud on. ol the Arab lyrics in prai.o or lh. dark maidens or Abisslula when tney suug: h I the black amber I tho blaok amber I lie putfume, b far, Is awuaer than all els. ou earth or lu alar: th. lotua of Mle, tho roe. of Cash mure. u.y senses entbrall, wnen tuou an not ber..' bnut laughter. Vel, frum the whole eleven oonntltl of bis district be caunut Oouut as many negroes, by balr, aa lire In my own county, "t am notnerticalerlv nroud of looruBntlng a ffreat.-r nnnubor of Alilcaaa tbnu my colleaguM. 1 thick, ao fai as tb. thatterleg goes abuut their inalienable rights aud verlaattug wiougs, 1 am entlrtly unsulteu to rtpreaeut Ibem." Upon the principle by wblon bis political ac tion is oontiolled, my colleague Mr. Cox oan-not understand why it is that a Representative should strive to do an aot of oommon justice or an office of oommon humanity to a olasa of hu man beings who do not happen to be his imme diate oousiituenis. The whole secret of his abuse of the negroes is, that fAey cannot vote. Had they tbe right of suffrage, I have no doubt he would sit up nighis lo ooupoae peans to their praise. ' ' ' My eoiiesgue at in exira session toon occa sion to unjustly reproach th Western Reserve for not raising tie proportion or troops for this war. Btatistlo, from authentio souroes show that Ashtabula county, with a population of 81,814, has sent over fourteen hundred men. Trumbull county, with a population of 30,060, ha sent nearly, If not quite (he tarn number, ami Ibis does not embraoe eom oompaulaa made up, ana now in tne servioe, unaer me reoent call of the Governor, In response to the Government al Waebington. I have not seen the statistics from Mahoulog county, but I believe she has sent a many men in proportion to nor population a lither Trumbull or Ashtabula oountlea. The sums I true of other oounties of the Kesorve. ' Franklin oounty, In whioh my colleague Mr. Cox resides, and in whioh is situated Columbus, the capital of th tJtsto, wi'h population of 0,801, aooordlbg lo a reoent atatemgnt, has only eent between nine hundred and a thousand men. This may be accounted for, In part, from a faot slated In my colleague's snsceb, that Ibere are In his ooumy many mora mulaltoes and negroes than In the counties or th Kesorve, ana wnen tne uovern-ment I willing to receive auoh aid, very likely hie county will furnish her quota, it. My colleague has been some time before th publio a a politician, ana n nas ngurea somewhat In other department of human eulorprlae He ha traveled, and added to the contributions of literature by making a not of hi travel, In other words, he has written a book. There wa wisdom in Job's doalr that hi "adversary baa written book." i quota rrom in uti page of my idvertary' book: . "A Buokeye Abroad, or Wandering In Europe and in the Orient, by Samuel 8. Cox.'! Thla I grandiloquent and tuphonloui. , I mk no oritioism, STATE OHIO.' MONO AY;; MORNtN'i JULY 14. 18(2. nnnn h. honk or Iha uhieol-malter of It. In sentiment it is average, and in literary execu tion It U respectable, ine nn , a lurh of aea-aioknees, bat ihi i said to b .iA An. iha atomaoh. A turn just be for my oollesgn ompoaed hi peeob, mijrht hav n- liersd it or mucu rout manor. ---- Houe nd the oonntry Ike difforence- b",en " A Bucket Abroad" and Buekey nbroaa, i will ask the Clerk to read a ptiug from my oolleague'. book, la whioh h desortur! tne Pope at lervloe, In the HisMne chapel. ' The Clerk read ilie follovlog: "Wh le waiting theenlraiiC of lata llullueaa, lb. mind n fled delfgbl ia eieeaiulug th. -laat Juiigaient or ad-gelo freacoed upon tbe well of Ilia ol .pel.' Kv.ry rarlety of hope, dnbt. denpalr ana tieatltnoe, btam upoi ua from the ttaurea U1.0U the wall. Witblu a e acred l.clc.ore, over which lip-toed rioally can barely at-p. ia a gleen oerpstsd floor and tapoatry baulrga. with an altar aud a Ihroaa. He.ts ara'arraugi d for tho cardinal, who soon btgln to pour in, diessrd lu grtat r.d gewbs and spull-cap, tti.ndtd by .ervonts in purple. After biwsand cniBaea the sorvauts prtceed lo unroll the train, and .eat Ibe cardlnalr. A very hearty array of old Humana they seem, wl'h Ibelr arias ;l i cover, their gaudy balr .klnin. Ihnlr ioftv bruws and inUllhojnt faces iHiapeakiug ..mat livlna. a. will as .tudv and renecllaa- Alcst of 7i..m n.nt .m an inaudible n.aier. - One flee, old, treui bllugty fat gentleman reemid to b. beyond the age of piety, but hie naoillll prayeriuiuvrs aim i'.y". r Hps He lentiuded vie orhaucer's njook, who rslatated a 1 bis terra., trbftibebsdsitncdontorroK.deoree, ' No wonder was he heard It all t);e day.' tnirreilv. buff soldiers, a itb irilt helmets and drawn m. rn.l, In t.j suerd thaduur. 1 thouuhtat gist there waieauCden inaurrec.ljp, knoaiiig that in mat I Mr. of pivrer, as poor Pin bas learned, 1 mere le but ou. rep from teet.'.pitol tolbi Tarpeau Uoik- Jim oo; uieeoolr slrlks tho blab bote., tbe floors beyond open, and 1 Viola,' the v.'cegereut of Gcd appears in his tiara aud elolb ol gold, Around him swarm ministers nf every degree and bade oi color. He kneels the roatle ol red aardf na'a shivers in the baltowe'd air, and af) kneel. Tbu b. ascends to lb. threw., a doe looking, lull-faced man, graceful and dignified in hi. bearing. Power be stern, to wear ai a familiar garment. How gracl.jo.ly. h. extend, lolb. oar dlnals, who severally leave their Hsta, a'twdel tea Isalr .tter.il.uts lo purple, carrying their trains. Tbey, bowing, kid. the baud, nr. aa jf was Informed, Ibe diamond brilliant upm the Pope.'. Hog, if a Ink an of rcvi-renc An Inferior order proatrat. tbeu Belie, aud tlb tb.ir labia at the feet of his uolmsas, upun bch is a cross of silv.r. In tho meantime, seraphic muslo finia the Pope's select choir rtvlBbes Ibe ear, wbll. lb. looena. titil.i. i the nose. Soon there arises In this chamber of theatrical glitter a ,lan, uuque, tinned Afrioan, e'-d utter, tbeseiuion In facile lstinlly with grac'nl mauber. His Cgrk liauda g.atured barmonioualy wl.h tbe rotnnd periods and bis swarthy v.age beamed with a high orier of loUlllgefica. If. was an Absslulan. ' What a commentary was here upoa our Arrel(c.n pre-indlcea! Th. bead of the great Oatbollf) ihnrcb, anr rou.ded by tbe tipcat aclulars of tbe age. tlstenli g to Ihe elociaeno of the de.piBed negro, end thereby illustrating to the world the rcmteGO bond of brotherhood which biuda the buroan race." ' Tbg sermon ef th. Abyaelnian, In beautiful print, wa dlatilbut.d at lh. door, I bring one bum. aa a trophy and aa a aonvenir ofa great truth which Americans are prou. to deny or condemn."Mr. Ilulohlns This Aliysalnian admiration of my colleague, whioh he hit so graphically dearibed, may have suggosted to him the propriety of having his speeoh mostly in type, ready for distribution as soon as delivered. The quotations from my colleague's speeob whioh I havp read show "the Buckeye" at home. Tbe extracts juet real by the Olork show the 'Buckeye abroad." This Buokeye shrub flourishes best in exotic soil. There it grows to re-Bpeotable height, and il foliage is quite beautiful; but at home it grows low and sofubhy, and iw foliage is scabby. I would suggest to my colleague to become not a "wandering Jew," but a wandering "Buckeye abroad," In his osse, "distance lends enohantment lo tbe view." In justioe to my oolleague, I will state that these quotalions from his reoent speech are taken from the "sun-set" side of his politioal life, when he is in "the sers and yellow leaf." A few words in reply to his indictment against this Congress. The events which have occurred up to this time during the life of. the Thirty-Seventh Congress, are the most eventful in our history. Ihe Uovernment, or which tbe t;on-gross is a part, Binoe the 4th of Marob, 1861, tbe day wnion Mr. Lincoln was inaugurated President, bas bad forced upon il perplexiug questions and embarrassing duties to a greater extent than in tho same length of limn during any former period since tho adoption of the r ed- eral Constitution. This t'ongtess, as Ihe leg islative branch pf the Government, has bad lo meet those Questions and discharge those duties, and history will record in I lie main that il has met us responsibilities ana performed its dutios wisely and well. From the persistent opposition of my colleague Mr Cox and those who act with bim politically, tnts vongreas nas rauea to ao some nines wnicn 11 suouiu promptly neve done, ana wha. he most complains of will live on the his toric page ss among its moat noble and benefi-oent acts. This Congross found tbe Government In debt $120 000,000, caused by Iho frauds, stealings, and imbecility of a uemocrallo Administration, which my colleague helped to elec', and which he supported. It found its Navy scattered to distant seas by Ihe orders of that Democratic Administration. It found its munitions of war, arms, and ordnance, and most of its treasure, in Ihe hands of traitors and rebols by the connivance and treachery of the members of the Cabinet of lliat Administration. It found many of tbo Government forts, arBenals, dock-yards, navy-yards, custom-bouses and minis In possession of armed rebels, a large majority of whom were mombers of the parly to which my oolleague belongs. The Government securities were Belling at a aisoount ot sixteen per eent.; public confidence abroad in the integrity and stability of the Government wns gone, and at homo it was materially weakened and well nigh destroyed, and nearly all the Democratic party in the slave Slates, and many of il members in ihe free States, were openly or scoretly conspiring to overthrow the Uovernment and destroy the unity of the nation. A majority of tbe army offioers who were Demoorata had turned traitors and had basely deserted their flag, and were in arms against the Government wbioh had educated them. ; The foregoing is a general and brief slale-ment of the condition of affairs whon theThirty-Seventh CongresB, on the call of the President, on ihe 4th day of July last, was summoned to a disoharge of its duties. So energetic, prompt, thorough wsb tho action of Ihe Thiriy-deventh Congress at the extra session, that it inspired hope and revived confidence through, out the loyal eeolions of tho country. Laws were promptly passed, on Ihe recommendation of the Execuiivo and tho Cabioet, to provide ways and moans lo raise an Army and provide a Navy; and forthwith, in response to those mensure, six hundred tborsaud oitizan soldiers were in the field, armed, equipped, and supplied with all the requisite munitions of war. The seatterd Navy waa oolleoted ob eoon as possible; new and improved vessels of war were buili; tbe Navy was re-organixed, and lis glorious achievements at Halieras, Roanoke, Forls Henry, Douolaoo, I'olafki, Phillips, Jack-on, at ialaud No. 10, at New Orleans, Memphis, and at other plaoes, In oo-operation with the Army, are the grand results. Tho aoiion of Congress was but the echo of the patriolio voice of the people. On the authority of Kw money flowed into Ihe Treasury at the call ot tho Seoretary sufficient to meet all those extraordinary expenses, and to-day Ihe Government eecuiitiea are selling at a premium. So far as tho raising of money, moans, materials, and munitions of war is oouoerncd, the euooss iu Iha same length of time is without a parallel in the his tory of any nnlion. The Uoverumcnt of liug- aud, In 17'JU, uodor lbs namimslration of Air. Pitt, effected a loan, known in history sb the "Loyalty Lean," being raised as I lie voluntary subscription of loyal persona, of 13,000,000. This fact bas been proudly abronioled by Eug- lish writers as a remarkable lnstauoe of tbe patriotism and of Ihe cxliaitstlcto resources ol' the Eogllah people, i'he loyal American oa pi nnate as nuiokly ro.ipondeu to tno amount ol $lfi0,000,000l Napoleon, in the zenith of Lib power, sod in the prtdo of bis military euooesa, and in the height of hia military glory, never raised and put into the field an maiy of nix hundred thousand men as promptly as did Iho President of the United Suites on Ihe authority of the legislation of the Thiity-Soventh Congress.Th naliona of Europo have beheld these re sults wlih wonder and smatumout, and some of Ihjim with chagrin. Uur national eymbol, the American Hug, with no star obBoured nnd no stripe erased, will soon float in triumph over overy rood of Iho Republic, and it will again oommand respeat on every sea and at every nori whore oommeico, enirrprisc, ana civilisa tion have a habitation and a namo. Whatever has been fouud deft alive in tbe li-giilaiiou of tho extra session has. been eorreoted aud is being corrocttd, at the present sesalon, Congress has matured a system of taxation com- monsurale wiin tne nign tiutios wnicn it nas been compelled lo dlaobnrfo. 1 Thla has been a most arduous and difficult task. There are, doubtless, defoois in this system whioh experience will develope and whioh future legislation will correct. The patriotism of the people has been tealol in surrendering the flower of It population for Ihe defense or the Government, aud lb eronklnga of demagogue and traitor, at Ihe tax bill will noi swerve tbem from ihtlr Integrity or frighten them from their patriotism. Tb soldiers must be paid their families must b provided for. This Congress baa had to aot upon embarrassing question, om of them without precedent ia the history of th Goverument. There ha, been oooaaion for honest dlHrno, of opinion among loyal JOURNAL and patriolio men a to th legality and polity of oerlain measarea. Upon many questions eaoh member, in obadieaoe t Ik judgment of th whol, ha been obliged I yield op, to some extent, hi individual opinion.; and iha Individual idea of member of what 1 right and rr.,ar eanasl alwava be earrltd OUt. a la tiischarg of thost high dulief whioh tbi rebellion ha dfTOlved on this Cpofress, Il has freed th capital from lb disgrace aad the CfiBS fjr alaverv i ana loounx upon e.ev.r, Slit, j h Iwm,dlei, sails, of Ihil wicked war against tbe Goternmf nt, 00 lh . mendation of th President, Congr, In a liberal and friendly spirit, bas proposed to aid by pecuniary compensation iiich State as may desire to rid themselv of this terrible Inoubus. As a punishment for orime, a mean of putting down Iha rebellion, Congress 1 proposing to confiscate lh properly of rebel, and io deprive them of ' their slave. Following th teaching, of Jefferson, and tb example of th Congress of 1787; this Congress ba forevtr prohibited slavery in Ihe Territories acquired and io be acnuired. Agaliai thaaa and other birjijfed measures of obvious ponoy ana justice, my eoiiesgu or uu Columbu, district, protest by voice and vote, and beoause Congress entertain them, he hurls at it his biterest denunciation. I am grateful to my constituent ft, tn opportunity to yoje for and advooate sueh measures. Few men in my sge have had, or will have an opportunity to do ao much good in a public way as tb member of the Thirty-Bevenlh Congress. These measures, against which my colleague wags his tongue with snob hatred and bitterness, still be regarded In history as Ilia noblt auto of tbe Thirty-Seventh Congress. They reeognUe the Inalienable right of wan to life, liberty and justice. One oannot fall, In reading my colleague's lirade-agafnst these act, to be reminded nf the burning words of Mark Antony over the dead body oflCifjar"i , . , " Ott lodgment I thou art ffed to brntlab beasts, And nitm have lo" jl ,lr r.aaon," History will be true to justioe, and will not "own such judgment" as my colleague bas pro-nounoed. lie interpoeee against these meaeurea with all his powers of ridioule "th raw-head and bloody bone" of negro equality. Those measure hav no relation to political or social equality, and hay no tendency (6 regulate the one or interferti with the other. Beoause we are willing to do justice to the humblest )n aociety, doe it follow that wear bound io extend to them ihe same sooial and politioal privileges whioh we enjoy? Beoause my colleague is disposed to pay hi bumble washerwoman a just compensation for her labor, shall 1 reproaob him with the inclination to marry her, or to invite her to bis table? Th right of suffrage is a political right, and a State or politioal oommunily may withhold it from a class of persons without an inference with their naturul rights. Il is withheld in most of the Btatea from foreigners till they have resided in the country five years. It may be granted conditionally to, or withheld entirely from colored persona, without injustioe to their natural right. The people of each Slate ar entirely competent to regulate that matter, and most people are competent to control their social relations Should tho gradual emancipation plan bo carried out In the Slates, and should oonfisoation liberate tb slave, of rebels, If my oolleague really fears he shall be brought down or up to a sooial equality with liberated Abyssinians, auch as he saw at Sietine Chapel, or If he fears any tendency to amalgamate with that raoe which he so despise in this country, but which in Rom so charmed him, I will not object to a spooial law for his benegt. . Such a bill would be in order on private bill day, if no objection is mads, and I am sure no one on this aide of the House will be so unkind as to inter, pose an objeotion. My oolleague seems to have but little prejudice against Ihe society of traitors, and from his votes here he would seem desirous of cultivating it. This may be attributed to the fact lhat bis system is so full of prejudice against the negro, thst there 1 no room for justice to traitors. The Bpaoe is limited.A bill passed Iho House, a few days Binoe, entitled, "An act to preaoribe an oath of oflioe." This bill provided iu substance that all United States officers shall take an oath that they have aot voluntarily engaged in this rebellion, or borne arms against the Uniled Slate. Without auch a law, at Ihe close of Ibe war this House might be mainly filled, from th Slate now in rebellion, with traitors, . My oolleague showed by his vote that he was willing, as a member of this body, to sit alongside of traitors, whose hands are red with the blood of his murdered constituents. My colleague, and all his Demoeratio associates, voted against this bill. They do not object lo the society of traitors, but they do oppose acts of common justice and humanity to loyal ooiv ored persons. My oolleague throws out in hie apeeoh the pro-slavery argument that emancipation in the West Iudiea has been a failure Ibis is untrue. Emancipation nowhere has been a failure, politically, morally, or pecuniarily; far the reason that freedom is belter than slavery for all parties oocoorned; and leoauae right ia always productive of good, and wrong IB always productive or evil, ihisia pirtof the economy of Piovidence in the governnientof this world. Emancipation iu the West Indies has been a great success, and as au examp.e we should profit by it. Pro slavery writers and BpeakerB havo seized upon isolated facts andiu igntrauoe of the real condition of the Island before and einoo emancipation, or willfully blind to it, nave usea tnese laots to tbe prejudioe of eman cipation An able writer in the Edinburah Re. view lor April, lX&'J, in an article entitled Ihe 'West ludieB as they were and are,", used the following language: ".Sever was a moro radical revolution made In the for. luneanf a whole neOLl. than whau eiaht hnnilrMH il.nn.. and Bri'.iah oeerovs atoniied! fmm slavar Int., fr.i.,n. .. .uH.un vtu.i. .H.u Hjmi twelve on inenirnt oi July 31. 1K:14, Ihev wore, lu Ihe eva nflhal.w. thin.. chalt 1, lieaatsuf burden, th. mere property of olhi-rs. Wbeii it bad ceasoj time, not only freemen, but nen etandlng on auiun level ai iboee who had turmerljr owned tbem." aouna, iney were, Tor tne Orel The negroes were erery where jubilant when their mrtnrignt or rreedom was ro stored to tbem. net. James ifbiiups, liAptiat mlsaionarj in Jamaica, in describing the state of things iv ueo iiit) BiayuB were reieasea irom Ibeir np. prtjuuuueuip iu aooo, uses me louowing lan 'lU frOIlt Cf ihe BaDtlkt Chmel AM Ihnaa Irlnaanl.. archei de?orald wlib loavei and floworn, and eurrotindtjd by lUpt with inttirlptione. Freedom hai come I' Maf-ry la uo more 1 Ttae chalte ars br.itnn;, atvi-a iv.a i Tim omtiudlium of tbd maltitude wttaaroiisod np to the (i tgh cut pncb. Iboy wantod to greet U tho llage, mao of wb tub b re the nanim of their bviiuf-ictorf, S.u.igs Broughntn, Bllgo,' Ao, Ihe fls wero uufurled, and f r u arl, an hour tbe air raug whh exultant ehunte, In iue mriii Toreiuiiue two thousand chiUiea join, od: 'We're fre I1 'We're free 1' 'Our wlrn and onr chll drtn are fioe 1 " Could emancipation to suoh people be a failure ? The real oondition of the West Indies has baen understood or srosslv misrenreaented. What has been quoted aa a failure of emauoipa- inu is auriDuiaoie io otner causes, and emancipation is nowise responsible for it. Tfaenrin- oipal faot relied upon lo show that the islands , trnre injutod by emancipation is the faot thai in some yonrs Binoe emancipation the exports have been less than before. Tho chief end of man in sooiety is not to raieo produca to export, and this fact is not the best oriterion of tbe prosperity of a countrr. When all things are taken into the account, the iaots on this head are against slavery, as I will hereafter briefly show. The bad company of BiuTery in tne n est lntiies naa well nigh bankrupted and mined them, as it always does anv State or country whore it is tolerated. The pop- uiaiipi) roiurns irom me isianas, maae to tne Uritish Parliament prior to emancipation, showed lhat in eleven islands (the only ones from whion returns were made; "the slaves had de creased in twelve yenri by no leas than 60,21ft namely, from 668,194 to 497,076." Accord ins to the estimate of the Edinburgh Re view, "had similar returns been procured from the other ho von colonies, finoludinff Mmirllina. Antigua, Bur bad oca, and Grenada,) the deoreaee must have been little, u at all, less than 100,-000." What an appalling faot waa this one hundred thousand human beings slauuhtered in twelve years, that a few privilrgod slaveholders might beoorae rich in esporting rum and sugar! A few may be pecuniarily, benefitted by suoh a state ot things, bat everything valuable and Ue siramein society mnet go to decay. This damn tng faot was enough, in the eniimalion of the British public, to destroy slavery. Kmanclpa lion oanio, ana in the next tweire years rrom ten colonies (no rot urns were made from the others) there was an inareaae or 04,U70 oolored persons. This may be set down to the credit of freedom. Increase of population le always regarded as an evifiot.ee of prosperity-In a State or oommunity. Under the demoralising Influences of elarery the West Indies, prior to emancipation, were rapidly going to decay in commerce and in everything lhat conoerus the we-ll-beiotr of en. oietyi In Jamaica, for ten years prior to 1880, the deoreaee In sugar was no less than 201,04'.. hogsheads from the amount prodnoed for ten years prior to 1820, Lord Chandos, in 1830, presented a petition from the West India merchant! and planters, setting forth the extreme distress under whioh tbey labored, and he declared in NUMBEK 10, his speech, in eub.ieeee, that it wa impossible IA ike .... . l,na anaaa, I 1 ... v..r uP again. t sues presaur any ""I"- earn, - iney are rtdu;ed to a stale ia .sin to.y are ooiigea earnestly to solioit relief from parliament." Mr. Bright said, "the distress of tbe Wot India colonial body Is on-parallelled in tb country." A report ,3 the com- moni.wi .wi us iuu vveis ,uute(, a copied In the West udia heporter, contains tbi langosgs t 'There are Ibe strongest concurrent ten tamer and proof tbatunlrss some speeriy aud emclenl aaeaauresof .ur"vi sum 01 a gioat number of the plan-lr, m-a; l-j.,l(,blj, very s on take plan ." This Was nailer the kalovon rule of alaverv. Th planters were overwhelmed with debt; their estate were mortgaged lo English capitalists for large amounts. In 1833, ia Ibe ltl is land or at. Jiuola, e.iaie war mortgaged to tbe amount 01 over .jo.uiai.wu ror asots incurred under that delightful aiat of slavery whioh tuy colleague Mr. Cox is ao solioitou, to perpetuate in Ihi oountry. Mr. Cigelow, fjf tb Sew Vork Evening Post, whose intelligane and integrity will not b questioned, a the rsault of hi oareful observations in visiting the island, aa to lhair condition prior (0 raanpiptioii, ayai , , . "Tbs island cf Jamaica wa, ttly Insolvent; nearly every eslau. was mo; taaid fur mor. than il was worth, ana was li at 1. lot mom lutete than it could peaaibly pay -bankruptcy wav Inevitable. I have given my reaioua (or balloriug thai Ike euanelnaliou act S.d ael eatue but "" 'fVeUU:d a result which era Inevitable II compelled A balance 10 bo Struck liaiwaan the dttht,,, a n.nl creditor., which mealed rather than begat tbe penny Other proof equally Satisfactory might be cumulated on this point, but il is unntoessary. The faot ia established beyond oontrovarsy or doubt that It was slavery whioh, in 1880, was ruining the West Indies- Th ootton State at th commencement of this rebellion were in a similar condition. 1 hav no doubt that their indebtedness lo tho commercial State accelerated th rebellion, and added fuel to the flame whioh slavery had kindl.d. This Indebtedness probably wa not less than two hundred and fjfiy or three hundred millions. This w.s quite a motive power to a revolution whioh would wipe it out by repudiating it. Southern rebel conventions and Legislature wars quiok to confiscate thi indebtedness to loyal paopls; but my ooneague tar. uox 1 is as quioa to oppose he oonfisoation of rebel property for the bene fit of her loyal men, fearing it will Irritate those dear traitors whose company he Is q desirous of keeping. He imittttea sorce generals, in tbs field, who ar mor energetio in protecting rebel property than in suppressing the rebellion. . 1 .- . It ia perfeoily natural, yes, Inevitable, Ibat such a shange in tht BQOtal and politioal condition of a people.as rrom slavery lofreedotn.Bhould produce temporary oonfusion and inconvenience. This will apply to business or politioal affairs. It takes lima for sooiety to adapt itatlf to the now ooadition of things, It does not, therefore, fol low that tn (bang I not a wise one and should not have been uiado. The former slaveholders tried to avoid, by all means In their power, "the dreadful necessity of treating with reaped, and alluring by wages, those whom not long before they oould order to ba put down and flogged for th least indolence." "Very many of tk planter also gave their negroes notice to xuit their cottage and grounds, under the idea that by suoh a threat they would foroe them to work for leu wage. Th result was. to make th negroes shift elsewhere." An able ariiole in th February number (1853) of th Westminster Review asssrts that too diminution or labor waa th dircot and immediate consequence of the mismanagement of the planters." Other causes not direotly at tributable to slavory or freedom contributed to bring about in Ihe West Indies that "dreadful orash in 1847, whioh has lino resounded through the world," and the main oause of the falling off of export wa th fall of tbe prioe of sugar. In 1840 sugar sold for 48, per owl ; in 1848 it Bold for only 2:1s. 5d. Sugar in the eight years, ending with 184C, averaged 87s. 8d per cwi, ana in in eight following years it averaged only 24s. 6d. per owt. In Ihe first eight years the amount produced was 20,000,-000 ewt- In tbo second eight years it had increased to.24,500,000 owl. The sugar planters reatnea lor their sugar. $10,000,009 lee than they would have realized at the old prices. Sugar being the principal article of export, suoh a falling off would, of oourae, cause great commercial embarrassment; but pro-slavery writers and orators have oharned Ihia emberaes- mcnt to the account of emancipation. The evidence from reliable sources i overwhelming, mat tne n est inaia aaiauas, unaer rree labor, are rapidly recovering from the insolvsnoy wbich slavery had oaused. Wealth is increasing, orime diminishing, and the material and sooial oondition of tbe people rapidly improving. I might multiply evidence upon these poinlB to almost any extent. I quote a few statement from colonial report mad to Par liament, a quoted in th April number. 18G9. of th Elinburg Rtview: . "BarradoM Tn ten years '.between IMS .net lar.a. in. crra-eof augar exported Iail7,2t0hogih-ala ' Thereport fur isoi, siatee, -mere na. ueon mure eugtrebipped froai this ivlsud this y arlhan lu ar,y one year since it has been peopieu, anu it ia a rennraaui) tact Met tber. will be mure loburera' mgar mad, Ihia year than prevlootly. DV laborers' Sllgar la rnetUt that raised IV Iha nnernnann tbelr own patchesof around, and aeut to tbe proprietor's mill fur uiuaufacture.' The report for.lSSa anooutices vss.ltiCreaae tn trade ao lar Ihe success of cultivation by free labor is unquestionable.' Iteport fur 1858: 'A greil locieaveln the value .f the exiHut.' 'The large prupurunu u, ,nin,.,in, .,j ,, lauoriog o:.... lur- uivhes striking evidences of their industry.' impurlanl change for the better,' lu Ihe condition of the people; which hetnsicty atlrlbutta to Improved education' 'iho rupiiity wllh which these lilands areadvanc. lug tv indicated by tbe lact that the exports and liupurte '.nnnnniiif. iii.a .., ion uuvtrunr rannria. a h ana luurntnnu iu via ,ni, iiwu. a.u. . taa, KiUi.,Ut, t.tVS, Bi 78.1 Or.tiaelo. Returns In ISf.l aud J832 show an Increase of tranu, anionuiing 10 ee,.i, ti-.s,ao S3 ) lUport uf 18S8: 'Oonti ntnlent appeal, to p -rvado all rlavsei uf the cununuoity.' A proprietary hudy, ol eunalderabl', mas. niiude aud Importance, baa already men from the labor ing cubv.- 'Binte 01 tne ntiancr-s moat sat utaenvry ' A greatly extended aurrac 1. covered by sugar cultivation.' A considerable increaie is noted lain, export, or sugar. mm. .nil nvm Nnma ri.nt.rk. nn l,n wan. nt i.k .. allutiu. itepoi is tor 1808: oatialoclorv evidence 'tiatlalaclorv evidence li snort. a, iy inn leveniie reiurni, u increase or trade and d, by tbe revenue returna, ef Increase of trade and mercantile buvlueta, connq(iont upon the revival of agricultural tloDIlty., (There bad been a duuraulnn In connqnunre of a giut fli ia tbe prioe of euekr ia 181T . xTnin.t--(i.-ikriut v lur iojo; -ibb llOMuy DiRIUieuaUCe of prt tluctit.n la full of promlee ai to the fiitsre.' Report lor 'iiiu esporM muw a ooueiaeranio lacreai..' Vorv courilderablo iucrca e In revenue, and an eouialli marke! fDiproVinunt; in tbe omcuut of imports.' Ia tbo report tor 1B38, the Oovarnor apsaha of tbe growl Dg Inde pendouoeof tbe Uborera. manitotttd iu tbe email paicht-e oi CHuns, aua nine wooasu uuti aoro auu mure Uotdug the plalue aiotiud.1 ifUwfMa-e.in itw, ini uoveroor roporte tnt the t,ll in tbu urice of utrr, In 1817 and 18l8iowiUK to the iBDpal of tbo tariff) waa 'ao iiidd -u aud euormoue aa to have al most annihilated tbe eulogy at that oriHU.' But be g-wi on to etato tliat Hhj revenue Ii now flourishing, pDpuU. uuu Bug.uui!ug, uuuuiiiu feprtaoiug, crime uiujiuun iuir. aud trade iorruiirar ' MantMrraU In Inbli, the Governor renorte 'increisecf connueece, entorpniH, ana i mi miry i ne itnprovoa and uuiuovliisT etilo ot tno commuultv Ja allowud on at: liauda.' 'No island In thode io exhibits a more deciilve tcuueocy to aovui ana uiuini reneteratlon and Improve, nient. I'he rural population are qulot. eoiiteuted and or. dorly.' "Att uofort rjriH57: 'Tiio roads appear ai ir the creator part of the Do ou I at ion had utw clotheJ tlinm. selvei; aud In the harbor, so often deserted, 1 uow count wn eutpsot ooni.uuraie burdeu.' 'Tuere appears now to ueatwura an liiauiiriouri sptni oi improvument.' bt. A'itf. Ketort for I860. 'A laraer ountitv of iu gar ie prodnoed nowthan iu the tlranor slave!,' (though on a siuaiier area. j jKtpori tor ioj:, rne agricultural pioepects of tbe lands are most encouraging. Itsfl-iaa-uidl couditlun oonllnues satisfactory; so do theeoucatioLal returns. Attcudanr-e lu sobLtls Is steadily Inert as Inc. Crime Is sieadily dimintshin;. Jn outyoiir, from 1860 to to 180T, trade luctuieorj tlun.VAi, i,oi4 o4i w,) "St Lucia. HtJitort for 16S3: 'At no period uf bar his tory has tunre tweu a grt atr bread th of land under aul-Uvatton thau at tbs pfesmit moaiaut.' Between the frnr yars ending law, and the four icnra ending 1800, the IIIDIUMB ui iiHi rv I'urimi wan iiu.uta iuuuu. sSI. VMCmt. In 1M57, tbe Governor ut scribes 'a real I souad and bealthy state of the colony apparent, and a cnenring aua prjminiug proipooi mr uv imure. ue de. scribes the rising vllUges, tho growiug uumber of fiee holders and leaseholdeis, and the steely nrtigrmuilvi. in onase to tbu value of Imports. In one year, from lSAO to 1857, imporlsand fXports tnoreaa-d flftG.ttiia, (1758 88tl 88;) and he)rcdly attilbutes It to iucrttased etiltlvailon aud prtwperity.' in ie.te, ne imioruoa sue colony as 'In a must satis IV torv state.' 'Airri cultural otierailone laraelv extended.1 'Aoticlpitijna of contlouoi progress and pros perity tuny nvnieu.- IWmfO.-a-llie Bceooin nnu imnn iinmai 10 IS 18 and lS!..i;ouien imprnTtm nnauvwi ynini waa artoptvd lu a 'marked IniDrovement in the revenue rotnrue.' ThHUn, iH.iii. eiih rmiiii. 01 wniuu wu m iriiurE in iooh intiniinsin ernor dcscrlb e the labor ia as 'wstl-bolaved and Indus trlnna.' lottola. This lilatif, under slavery, exported I6,6ft0 nnnureti wtiiiius. 01 auajna. ai.v., rAHirta none at all But the rhan.ro H aiioiiy an ari.antaae It ! n.. mat kably well adapted for raising stock. " The 1 eople, WllU IBW MW!IIIUii "iu vwuoiai ui UBIMV, WniGQ I Bey OU- poeofto gnat advantage. ' The laborers appear fully WillBiniiv in mi nnvnuira.vn iiuiuiiiuii i iitpir Rniltlmn and tlieiaiter mania si a groat asiireto leaont by tbe oi nririniniiiaa nireiva iiicm. ' JViiifdnd Is highly ltnrlshlng. Tn 18B2, the crop was the Unrest ever ehliioed from the Inland; and It hut hrni. extending since. Ibe whole trade greatly Incnaied since Hlitvety. J ne repuit ir .rj. ait.aHvi oi maraea improve' m,.t In tlin cnltl?t1 n of the hllkSr OStatei. Einnrt .. wir4r rost. from an average of 310,707 eat undtr slavery, (0 H ,V OWvi. IU Itra vit-H jvnaai VU1I"K ' Do these oihoial statements show that etnan oi nation waa a failure? On the contrary, the show, boyond cavil or doubt, that in the West Indies it has been a glorious suoores, I will quote from a speech made In the House of Commons Dy Dir. u. uuxton in 1H5i 1 1 Because labor le free and trade Is free the Wmi t d'es are now rising to a pitch of wealth and bapiilDiMs unknown before, Itwoiili be tmp aslble forma to lay bttfore tbe House the Immense mass of evidence which de-moDstraiaa that fact, lan assured of tt by mercantile men; 1 Had It strongly let forth lu the reports from Ibe Governors of tbo Islands, and In the st at la ties fnrnlshed by the Bard of Tiede. In the four years between 1863 and 18A7. then his been an tnoraaee In the mix rta Imports i f the West Indies and Qnlana of 4,iVKi,w0 (2l,03,W0.) O jUHlilerlug what mere sp.oVa these Islands 0.1K on ma map oi .ni-rira, it u aaiimiaoiug inai tneir ttade to and fro, In the yar 1857, should aotnally aaount i to lOlU36,ooo. (1)11,011,070.) It U altogether absurd tf eui.p a. ef a fa Iballh.v.re 1..1Z i" . Wi? V i". rtdonce. 1 have briefly referred to (ha .e . ration in the West India to refut. ihe Intl. motion. f my colleague, nj bfoaua. th people of tbi oountrv. In r . th. fact of JtoyJ is every day being made ur. .n.i ' psrent. Th saldi.ro in ih. .m ... .T, ' ...., .t , , . . ... 1 u is mor dearly than th oilisen at home w. . xpeot permanent pesoe if tbe tutus of slavery to remain th tame a before the war. N n, unless his wish is father lo th thought, sin entertain anw mh.a nnl.t.. v . ' yond the control uf the Preident,' of th Cabi-oet, and of Congress, are irresistibly forcing lh ballon to that nnlnU. env.- '..; " k. n 7 , r'-. " uureuon rnr uli Zl'T 10 '. whether it will lead ihi, opinion or be led by it. "Uod ie just, and His justioe will not sleep forever." My col' "ague and those like him need ni . ' stay th eurrent of event by pronouncing ' ihe Africa "ignorant idle, ami .f.,in.,. 1.. ' tclligent and Just men know that the aurest way 'fl V .ill. Vn kit, anna . t. -. I a . - ....... -1 ..wut ma, .guuranoo ana a--relation is lo lake from him that ln.rl r .....T... siou whioh orushes oat all motlva fur improve- meut and honest men will not upon It. Ii ia not ",lnj'' that men who ar in favor of keep, ng African in ignorance and alaverv .hnnlrl oppoe all effort for their moral and intellect ual instruction. History will prononnoe all nob men tyrants and onnreeanra lr v....i . 'anly is bermiitsd lo narrv ant what .nni.rt. a he ha commenoedlo wit, th breaking up school established and sustained bv nhilan. thropio persona for tb nomas of ed uautinff colored children, he will be regarded as infamous In history as a Jeffreys 0 a Haynau, - 1 auvise my colleague .nr. cox J to look well hi own opitepb. That he mav ac himself ib bislory will regard him, unless be mends hia way, I suggest the following: Her. lira lb Buokeye at heme. - . . ' The evil thai ie.it do lives aftaar Ikoati . ETke trood la o,t lntiria.1 w,tu .1,. In ........a l In can of this Buckeye, wonid lhat this niaxlui sala-hl aa reversed; If uot, little, would be f,.niui here out bout: u. expire, wiia tsia Ibirly Bavnsitb :engres'l H. died of N.gro-pbobi., babbllug agaitiat the Nioirt. Bis ability Sited hire f r a higbor mission, bat bis un went down In . eofomf iiuee!." h'qnittest Is pica 'OR WARD! FORWARD ALL PERSONS IN NEED OF - - ' J . BOOTScUBHOSlB, 00 TO THB ' ' , 1 . RENOWNED CHEAP STORE DUNFORD & CO. 276 SOUTH HIGH STREET, , OolxxxtxtoxXaS, O. ; Aad those Splendid Kid - Heeled Hoots for , Til-is Vnlqua Franc h morocco bouta...l 00 Tbossj Beanliruily Finished Hiwcd do..l 99 Those Ladle's Issoe-Heeicd Gaiters so Those e's Oxford Ties.......,.,,, , Those Bpiendld Calf Tlea, Hn oo . Those French Calf Boots.., ...... ,.. u no And other ' arranted Ar es, too nnmoroni to mention AT FABULOUSLY LOW PBICK9. B. P. DUNFORD & CO., - Proprietors. may2fi NEW STYLES OF HATS J. U. SMITH'S HAT STORE! KToil House. MONITOR, BTJRNBIDE, ' ' DUPONT, ZEPHIH, COMMODORE FOOTE, , OUNCE, BROWNLOW. And a Largs Slock of Military Gt-ooctis. l ! . : .. .' i , ,.! just receivisu AND FOR SALE AT LOW PRICES. j. ii. sniTiifajr Je25-3ra New Spring and Summer tiundH ! C. EBERLY & CO. 264 SOVTH HIGH STREET ARB DAIL.V KtCCRIVINO ALL, THB Hew strles of SPmINII Arn KITH .1 B-.ll l,i.icKa auODtf, ranging lu price frern te (UI cents a yard; " " uummwr rnAwu - atie nioeii pneo.. Ladle.', atlases' and Children'. HOOP aHIUlU, or th. let .tile, and ijualillea, at Iheluweat prlcea. Ladiea'. Oent.. and r.hilileatita HiiHf . v .na nr.iivra of allqaalitlee, atjle. end urlcee. naaies-, man's anil Uhlldreu's SI10FH, cheap. Ladles' Oi.LLA.llH. CiLLAIts and .HTVirH n.iT.v.ana and bLKB , Kb, la wtt; lu great variety . a I al nil prjUea. Mew.tylea of Llithi and Faucy .Sal.llvlli.rl, rialu and Vaiicy OiSHMUKIill' Tn j UOTI'OKAIIkS, of all styles and quslltlos, In abundance, at the lowest peslllo price.. Sl.u'a Boja' and Chlldion's BliMMBB IIATB.of th. latest styles, voiych.ap. inland Uoenta ayaid. Brown and Bleached 8HrKTINL'9 and S.tTUTlNcn. at troat 8 to 10 cents per yard. -IN FACT- Evrything in tht DRf GOODS LINE, will b Sold at Oreatly Keduceil Prieca, to Suit the Times. i ; ' I ALSO At the asms place, can he found a good selection of GOOD FAMILY GROCERIES, which wll. be sold at the lowest pusslbl. figure.. Butter, Ksgs, and and all kinds ot i,roduse taken In ex. change for Groceries, at llarkel prices. Wo pay Ilia highest n-aiket price for Wheat, Itye, Corn Oats and Deeds, al S4 South High atr.ot and txo. 7 Hast rriend street. Jela o. KTIKItLT A 00. " SAVE, YOUR MONEY I pHlfl VDKRIIQNCD HAVIMVI PVR V ehased tb. right o( th. stale ol Oblo for Making . and Sailing WOODEN GAVE TROUGHS, CONDUCTORS ad X3zi.ata.x9a- fxx:bu3. , lint from Bolld Wood, aud Boated on th. Inside wllh a , water-proof composition, am prepared tn fnrulah at SHOBT NOTICE ; 1 Orders for any slse from IK lo e Inches wide, In large or mall lots, .hipped lo any part of the dlate, with In. tructlon. lor applying them to old or n.w huilillngs, front heir .xt.nslve establishments, Oornar of Spring; and Water Streets, over OHLEN CO'S. SAW FACTORY, R, B.LUVKJOr ato, . , ., Volunbns, f, artl-datawSmAw. , ,
Object Description
Title | Daily Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1848), 1862-07-14 |
Place |
Columbus (Ohio) Franklin County (Ohio) |
Date of Original | 1862-07-14 |
Searchable Date | 1862-07-14 |
Submitting Institution | Ohio History Connection |
Rights | Online access is provided for research purposes only. For rights and reproduction requests or more information, go to http://www.ohiohistory.org/images/information |
Type | Text |
Format | newspapers |
LCCN | sn84024216 |
Reel Number | 10000000024 |
Description
Title | Daily Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1848), 1862-07-14 page 1 |
Place |
Columbus (Ohio) Franklin County (Ohio) |
Searchable Date | 1862-07-14 |
Submitting Institution | Ohio History Connection |
Type | Text |
File Size | 4212.83KB |
Full Text | I VorL. Advertlnemeti. New ORNAMENTAL IRQN WQHK., Wr.wfht C.el ad Wlra. ,tt0H BAJUKCS. OAT.WAT. Si), VBSANDA AND .V, w. DOW OUABDrl. i Vtal.teels, Cradles, .nil Orilx. AlBettieiSBS, lwi',. flower Trainers, . SpVif IW Iknt lllaalralwl Mltlogiut wellae o """I" " - : HOT0H1M8O1 WlOKMHAM. ml Agents for "New York Wlr.-SUIllllf may le-Smo r-p- BARLB'S NEW HOTEL liro.dwey, lew " Terms, $1,50 per Day. TUB ABOVH HOTBU I WW Wll fo7.li. "captl"u of gue.U. Tb. looetloe UUgow-Iral I. very eon.ii.nl hiV-lw- e4 I1"" 'TSK ineut. and easy of eecess from III perls of the city. Tee ..lahed io ueot and lieudMiu. aiennw. "fT"! .bleb a Urge number ... slngl., . nnu.ii.lly well 1 wd wuifl.tod, and. Io tl. .veryltilug klJ that could add lo tb. comfort of the guests, end ran U . Sr.l Ola, not... . A .09. AdHHB dir. Proprietors. Uorstmaaa Bros. & Allien, IMPOETZU AMD MAIIOFA0TOH Of SOCIETY, & CHURCH GOODS No. 8 Maiden Lane, . irw vouk. KARSE PLUMES, HORSE EQUIPMENTS, ia. a. .1 IhiiIi fnr 1 RYLE8 BPOOL BILK, .. ....... ...i... ......i. nrlmfliitBl run. niftd. to orasr. Buttons. Iiladlug, artinuiings .orulshed Io ooutreolors .1 short untie, April 16-d3ui, j GUNS, PISTOLS, &C, &C. I -ONION & WHEELOOK, No. 866 Broadway; N. Y, IMFOBTEM AKD KANUAOTBXBS Of Gu m , a b v o i. v b a a , it I r i. p . Hatols, Barrel, Locks, Mountings Mid Can M.terlal J ot everydaKrlptlui. l-odor Jisaks, J"11" "J I ...... n it . v.,t-,...1nn Can.. Wadding. Dram . J-lMkn, Bowie knives, Dirks, and a full iMortm.nl ol flood. suitable tor Soldiers, Sportmen fc Gunsmith's Use. i Depot for Fire Arms Manufactured BY ALLEN & WHEELOCK. Allen's New Pntont Oartrtdire Uovolvara nd Blfloo, rrl ty jf ilzm, the but uriui in tn. vorio. A.nll4-.m. FIRTH. POND & CO MANUFACTURERS OF MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS, AND PUBLISHERS OT SHEET MUSIC. 64T BROADWAY, NEW YORK. Ilrf.at iuducomenti offored io purcliamra. NEW AND SPIENWIO PIANO FORTES a, low an 20n, for OMh and erary lnitrumnt warranttd. NEW pianos rantodaud tta.mt appllsd to th. pur thM KL0MC0N8 and HABMOMDMS eout.nlly on band. BAND INSTRUMENTS. We both rn.nufactlir.ono imfori ran "," .ud ran Bel! ohlr than any olli.r Hon.. " A full net ot It llra luitruuiontl for 1W), for Util. T?,ou.'li'o!iidnow.O!CBMAlI BItVEB FIirK8,th.t cannot on.Hi or l.lit. J'rlcm. t7 Wl onch.Jn Braryklndof Muiloal Instrument oan be fonnd la our tock . STniNCS! STRINCS! Blly Kood Vlollu trln. are rarity. W. make It a plnto kwp vevy "iipcrior Klrh.Ki, lor g od playori. frire 7.". cwiw per ot. nent ly mnll poelilKO paid. Bejldj the aborr have Italian, Oermau, Jrciicli, and Eogllah Btrinm, Violin, Viaiucello, Double Bara, Ap. Doalere ..f Miialo "'t Kunoy Q K).l, Jmrllen and other, are p if ticularly rqutud to try onr V loliu String.. Sheet illtc find Musical Hooka. OurCatiilo.no of Mnelrl. Tery eitennlTe and popular .ndro pabll.l,lngNKVVli;SlO BVKBT DV. l Ileii.leonrown publication., wo hare all of tho Mullo J.,il,l.l iu lIicuiintry,,doan fuinlsU Foreign Mmlo. Ortice, TKACiiriwor Mnnio, Ukamof Behinauikr, Ilr.ii.Eaiiand NewiAobt, cau Uavi. their order, fully an I nromptly flllml end Io. warded by Sipre.. or Mail. xl, ,ii, on Mualo lent by mall I. only about one rentb'r ea. h pb.oe. This 1. tho cheapiat aud Quickeit ar to forward mn.ll packam. Bend lor our Oatu. lntriieaand (Jir'-iiUia. Hom,Dir tho nam. and nunkj, p0jqp 00,t anrtd.lm ' M7 Broadway, New lork. TIFFANY & CO., No'.. 500 HS Droadwityi New York, and No, TO Roe KlchtleU) Fart., Dealer. In ptaiuonds ami otsior Precious Stoues, ami siauaaru jewfirj. tii: .;nlu or tn tultt. of Marblt ot Btomf, ( .ntonometer, fifth or split itemJ, and Rtpeatinj Wateha; By Frodeham, Pin-Jon, Jurgmun, Cooper, John -.,. Palhefe. J'C. Sterling Siletr Tea and Pinner Sett, ifiacellaneoui Articles, and Pnientation Piecet jron Original Designs; $ '.effield and Ameriejn 1'iatd Ware, V tht most vjll.ihle ntialitt! . Bronzrt A rolieelion larger than any other in the fihmdiliert of Brome, Braekett, Vestibule and Pulnit liohts: Rose Wood, Buhl, Ebony, and Leather Dressing Cjses, Writing Desks; Stores 1'oTcehiin, Fans and objeti dt luxe, of every description. Mannfactnrarl and Importer, of all fcluda of p.tfi),! tllrinhiiriiam Hiid Lliiira Firoamin of every quali ty. Sliar')).'' atid Wnitt.-y ItlcliitidV Kruecb-loadlng HiflS kMatols ly VM, '1 rnntur, Aflimia, Ijhuidcuoui, whwuwi Miultti A Vo4!ijn, Brtcini MnournctnrIiig and Otber, itrlca.ild f.'lldirtl ll'llwllltaT IlinCtlrl. Ilt'l. nwa tls, 9.ibrfi uJ Ciitlnioi , lr all grades and of all ru .Utiea, ly the most a)iroved makers nj Germany. Kng-land ud Viauce, as well of the United States. Ulados tf.-ni the tamons Holingon fnctory," of rare quality aud n f til, iiumouTitcU, always ou liauu. (' npiaux,Oaps ftnl tJitu Ornuaieuta, Sashes, Kpaulets, !hout iiT-trt.pi, AigtiiH-Uea, aud all the details of a nnl-in..i KiiuiiHwi'.liii. t'tttiitlif-ll.x.B. OAntoans. U'gii.iO)jt,tl titumlarils, Natloutil Kuh.kus, UoldouSi SwhIIow ttills, and all. tjlos of Flags, embroidered or point a fmm nrimui doiun. mude to ordor at short notice. K-4necia1 attention puld to tho manufacluro of artiolusof niilury preheauiiion, nworus, ommiuriio, ou., iu hm-hv lonuurcesof the bouse giving it particular advantages In rS.-lt.t.t. TIKli Ahr k 00. are sole agonts and manufatnrcri of the "Koc-kwuii uomutustion union uampunes..-Apiilie-dam. W. L. GILBERT & CO., MiNUrAOTUUKltS UIT SH1FPIMO BRANDS STEAM REFINED CANDY! GUM DROPS, Hools. Oandy, cfso FOR THB PnULlO. Manufactory aud galea Boom., . 01 COURT!. A.HDT ST., NEW VOUK. Branch offlco, 211 OanalSt., Barl.'. Hotel Building. may lfl-lyr i JOHN BLACK, Mnnitracturer And Wtole.ele Dealer In T R U N K S ! 68 READE STHEET, NEW YORK. LADIES' DRESS TRUNKS; , ' CEDAR TRUNKS, FOR PCRSj FINE SOLE LEATHER TRUNKS And all kind, of TRAVELING BAG8. mi?1ft-ama MANHATTAN HOTEL, Btf.TTX.m.A.ir BTIIBBT1 6B00HU D00 IBOM BKOADWAT, Opposite th. Park, N. HUG(Hfl, WMtWIy Proprietor Oanby, Oilpin fc Oo. WHOLESALE DRUGGISTS 4 ND IMPOflTKHSl flf" RNOL1HH. OBH J. MAN and French Drugs, Ohomlctli, Perfumery and Kancy atucios, uye Htuflu, J'aints, Oils, VeroHlios, v iq qcw ui.tov, riu, H. W. 00 . OF MQIIT AMD LOMBARD 8TBBBT8, HALTIMORE. nw28-ri:itn oiconou BiiowanoLD, yJHlr.ioer, and ProTtiltuiStora, 1 .s Ho. M Bail Tows Mnet RiioEiiinaua ex brown, AUnnfrturert and Vialan In furnltnr.. Scrlnr Bla (lhalri, ullrua, LMklnf OlaaaM, A.., No. J homo Aia.ira.i. t DAILY VOUWE XXI ClBflnnatl AdverllielDC V, i 8PEEKB, Westeru Cueuical Wriliug Fluid ind.Blatking , Labpntory. ; if. 61 Wlilnul-St., Clnclanatl, O. COEMICAI. WMTING FLUID, OodtIu. Blvk. Blu, (hnulM, (ma, StuoUIni Ml ' BhoamaJn. oiij ' icxji3ae. . OriginalJapanese Blacking WHEELER ck WILSON'S Sewing sa.a.oTaLihai&m Aw.rdwl ths tint Promlum s th bert FAMILY SEWING MACHINE for thrt moOM.lT.ra.rf, at tk. - . UNITED STATES FAlBj For font auccwltt ;oan, at tn. Obk Btatit.aib; " lor tn unooanrr. roar., .1 Ik. (JmoWKiti MHitAor Office, 77 West Foui-th lt.. ; . PIKE'S OPERA I10UBE, OIKOINH ATI, OHIO. bbt-dl. JIVT MIDIOAL DIBOOTBKT, For tb. ajieedy and pernianeul onr. ol Oonorrhea, Gleet, UretUal Sisohargeg, Seminal Weaknua, Nightly HmUiiona, Inoon-tinenoe, Genital Irritability, Gravel, Btriottire, anil , AfFIOTIONS 01 TBI KIDMBTB AHD BI.ADDKB, which ba. been ued ley ipwanU of OIB IIUMDaBD l'HVSICIAWB, In their private practice, with q tire aucoeai, raperwdlt;! Onbebf, Oopaib., Uapinlea. or rvy compound bUbtru Known. BELL'S BPECLFlC PU-LS An soeedv In Mtlon. otW etTBcHaii a ewe In a few days. snd when a cure It effected it Jm permauetit. Tboy ar proparod from Yeftetable extracts ihut are harntlees on the 'Hem, ana novor linneraie ine pjiumiBcu, or iuiviiorhwvo is breath: andbeluasuRaiMMtataMl.all naussous taste is avoided. No ohsnj of diet i n ttenarv vkiUt ming thmtf or does their action interfnre arlth tusinetts pursuits. Each box oodU.ds ail domn pllli. FBI01 ONI DOIiLAK. and wilt be sent by mall pest -pal d. by any advertised Agent, nreoeiptoi .tie money, doiq sy uriigiHie gt,uurnj. None senalns without my slgjiaturo on tho wrapper. JU tSOANUN CO., ' VVho waIo Agents, Cincinnati. For sain by H. Wilson, 8. JO. Samoels A Oo., and Bob- rts A 8kmnels, Columbus, augSuHMlur ' MJCIilCAtt UAhK NUXa';i., (Bonth-east Corner Ms in and lonrtb Htraets.) OINCIKNjaTZ.OBIO. Kograved In a itytu oorrMpondfns; In exoajllenoa to that Bank Notes, It utl road l Oonoty Bonds, Hills 01 Mix- obanfe, Chocks, DrwfU, csrtt floats of SUdr and D-potdt, Soals, Cards, Ao.t jtu The above oolce is u oOer ha at irvhlou nf O.T.aOKCtf, oetlS-dly OiinMnnati. X m tv J.HOTH 52 B East Fifth Street, CINCINNATI, Gives his Mtire time and,talont to the euro ofd!a tn E -5T S S I VllVi av Msu-.Urn aihI azuerlHOutt of manv years lu Kn- ropo, be cau ask with nwuu-anca the patronage of a gou eruua publio, aud confidoiice In tho snccoMtnl treatment Ol dfi dues OI tail uonetuo oihii. nnu iiiii ireTwt ia time to the oure of PltlVsVTlC DiaKAttKS, he prom-Uos cures in the most obstkmte cwt. Those recently contracted are cured In a very short time. Syphilis In it primary atagos cured In an incredibly short time. Wktn dtwMses oured PKUMANKN'ilV In from one to tbree weeks. Also, attends to tu practice or tno proieesioa geoernlly. Pernons at a dldtmTtro, ulttlctml, will have advice aud medicine sent by sn4tnB description of disease aud their condition. AU cointr,unicatioi,ri and treatment striotly confidential. Dr. R. Ims a TiiOH, which, from Its mechanical adjustment, will give ImmeViate rolfef and nitimutaiv iiraf in HiA tmrta ullnr.tt'd. no it to enable Dr- sons to follow ifcAlrordiiiiit-yaNtocationswithdait hindrance inoonveniottofl, cohhuu or auarens Ult. J, ROTtT, mar8-dwly Wo. IJast Fifth pt. Oina'nnatl. UMBRELLA, PARASOL Walking Cam Manufactory, 167 Main Btrent. Ciuoinunti, Ohio. Miuvhants and Dnalore are tiartlcnlarly Invited to call and examine my stock of Q mbrotliui, Paraiols, aud Wallt- lufr dautii, which i am ooiring a- DLanuiuciuror s ooai, M. THOUI'SON. 107 Main tHrowt, wast sido.botaeea 4th nnd fith. riuclnnali. 0. jvumnrona, I'araeoi ana wniKiug.uaoe maiermis Or Dinned to tht trlo atnwlticwi prices. jans-aiyr NO. fi EAST FOURTH STREET, BOOTH . BIDE, BAST OF MAIN, CP STAIRS, . Oixxoisa.xi.A.tl, H AUDI AOIH It II AMD DI11II I Tnifipes for Radienl Oure, SUPPORTERS AND BHOULDER BRACES, Bnrgieal and Anatomical Mechanician. Inrcntor and Manufacturer of ADtiaratUH for Onrvatnre of Sffiue, Wry Nock, Olub Keet, now Lri'pa, anu oilier ruiaiuni veiwnn- tlea. Splint, for Fracture, nutl tilalocatlone, ntooking. for Vericoee Velna, Kneo O.p. uud Ankloli wade to order. Kepoctal attention paia to tne ropnir oi Aniuoiai uibivw ltelera by perralatlon to l)r W O fttuaiey, Dr O O Black, Dr F Boelker, Ur J r jnoKin., ur , ocuimut, wr. friee, Dr A Beltmao, Imara Private jOisGtx&oet tlecent onne. or utmorrjie or ey bhilia cured In a few day., without 'ohango of diet or hJuilrunce from Uliatuea.. Bocouuery oypiiuia in. lent veellge eradicated wlthont the n, of Moroury. Involuntary of aemen atonned In a short time. Bnfferora from Jmpulency or ltaa ol soinal power, leatored to full rigor n few weoka, Gleet or tlnniirrbi'a of lone; standing, whore all Internal renwdiee have Allied, permanently and speedily onred by anew treatment. ' DR. STEVENS & CO., Cincinnati Lock Hospital NO. T THIBD BT BUT. WAIiHUT AMD VIM Or Box 090 Ulnclonotl, u. jylDDI.KTON, STIlOUUlDan 00., .ITHOORAniERH, MOM VKM COPPER PLATE PRINTERS, West Fourth St., Ctmilaaatl. All kind, of work don. In th. boat atjla and on abort notloe: Fartlenlar attonllon win a. given to oruar. tor WEDDING CARDS, VISITING CARDS, to aw Order, may b. aenlto tt. JounsiJ. Oniow. novlSdly HPOBTANT TO LAOISB. rtm. JnriH B.avav. havtna fhr nowarda of twenty vest. devoted hi. profeMlonal time oxoinaiveiy to in. ireaimeni nf rBHALB D1KK0ULTIK8, and having auoeoeded In taonaanda of cm. In reetorlng tne aroiot. to aonna hMlth, ba. now entire confidence In offering publicly hla 'UltlSAT AftllSHUAr) KISIUBVI," DR. HARVEV Chrono-Thermal Female Pills, whioh have saw rot failed (when th. dlraetlODS bar been atrlctly followed,) In romovfnf dlolcnlttol arlalng Irom ' ' Obstruction, or Stoppage of Nature, or In restoring Ibe ayatera to ruirfeot health, when an Iter. log from tlplnal Alfectlona, Prolaii.ua Uteri, th. Whites, or other weakness or the Uterine Organs. Also, In all eaaes of Dobillty or Norvou. Proatratton, Byaturics, Pal- Jillations, to Ac, which are rnrernnners of more sortons jscavM. naTTaeia Alia ar ptrfielty narmleia en rAe oofl-plfuJion, end may te fake i, A. meif delfoafe emale lawioal Mwta, difSms; at lb. same time they aor Iran a onaan bv strengthening, Invigorating and restoring th. system to a healthy oomlltlon, and by bringing en lh. monthly period wltb regularity, no matter from what cans, the on-itrnotioni may arise. Thoyshnnld, however, not betaken during Ike first three or fuur month, or pregnancy, though safe al any other Urn., as miscarriage would b. tbe rs nit. Iacb box contains 00 Pills. Paioa Oxa Douia, and . when desired Ibey will be eent by mall pre-paid by an, eavertisea Agent, on recnpi tn wi. asensr. Boldb, Drugglatipnrally. ' " B. HOANLAN 00., Wbnlaaele Aganta, CHnalnnatl, For ael by H, arte, Oolamtms. aogaeeodlx Wilson, I, , tunnel and 0. Boh 3rV aWIT. i- l.-,llllk ll: xt'imliiB uii. OHIO COLUMBUS, ... SPEECH - ' ' Of Hob. Jtaa Hntchln, of Ohio, tn tho Ilouae of Bepreaenta-tlvet, In. Beplr o 8. S. Con. . ,., i Mr. Chairman, my eollaague Mr. Co from tbe Columbui dlitriot, on th Oth of Jane, in th. Committee of the Whole, madi amo.tex-traordiaary ipaeoh, intending thereby in dam-... .h. r.i. nniiution of iha Thlrti-Ber.nth Con .rail, Fhone epitaph, after faahion, he took the pain, to write out. The moet oruel eoiianh he eould hare written would hare been T , , ..J.. 11.. .1... kl. an.a.l.- tne tallowing, ineerwuat iu.uiu.ou. "Thli ipeeoh waa lialened to with patienoe by ika, Hanu." In luetic to the Home, it ehonld ba atated that during ill dellrery there were but few mabm preeent, and meat of them hie political friende. Th.r ii' on other taei that it may b important to notion in oonneation with ihi. .naaah: that it waa delivered lata Friday evening, and that It wa dlatrlbutad In pamphlet form early lh next morning, nd eonne-.nuently, I nppoee, moat of it muet bar bean in ina before it waa delivered, and Ihia will ao ennnt for "lauihur" oomine in very frequently, jid at nrooer nlaoe It ! lometittiea dimoult to get th laugn in wnen one waui. , ir ai will not alway, eom at a (peakar'i bidding, nf ihia mode of mv.eolleacDa inDPlie thie de. ." r . , . i. ... i. foot, and .bow when the auditor ihould have laugbad, if they did not I will briefly notion om point f tail carefully written out apeeoh. I eannot ooment In follow la style of argumentation, for I oaonot do it without getting into the muddy oiemeni in uj a. i,aw .p. He take to th turbid water, of low riUitul aa naturally aa the polliwog doe Io the dirty water of the ditch. In these riled water he ..io,. without a rival, and 1 unquestionably -iiknut a ruttr in th Thirty-Seventh Conzreae. file arraign tft id tongrei. oeior mo granu in- jueat of the nation, ana ms gra.unoa ot aim otwrge it that th ini.r.it of tb whit man i negleeted for th benefit of tk negroj that Con. (tree, put in peril tb Uonetitutjon and th Union to earry out th Utopian idea of negro evuality. My colleague, tbi, tetaion, ha introduced and apoken oftanar than any member on tbi aide of the Home. Kegro equality setrns to disturb hi meditation by day and bis dream by night, Can it ba ibat h fear the eomned-tion of negro equality. Th biiternea of eouie men towards a rival is measured by their four of that rival. I will not aay this i th case with my oolleague, but a oiroum.tanoe to which I will eoon refer give color to th auapioion. My oolleague takes ipeoial pains and peouliar delight, on all oooasions, to prejudice and .lander oolored men, and to ridioule all men who are disposed to do them simpl justioe. He is quiok lo tako advantago of a prejudioe whioh tbe aooumulated oppressions and wrongs of ages hk've orealed against the Afrioan to crush him still lower in tho eoale of degradation. He ridicules' H (Sorts to better his condition by low appeals to a prejudioe whioh slarery has in-i.n.ifl.d. il it did not create. Hia apeeoh shows him to be in favor of the perpetual slavory of the Afrioan. U is opposed to colonization or liberation of the slaves of rebels, fearing it may anlt in funeral emancipation, lie rears mat unless enslaved and held in the degradation of caste. Afrioan wilt somebow or otner work ' . ... . . HI. .L. themselves into aangerou. oompeimoa wuu iuu Anglo-Saxon. The Justice and lb logio of his position are on a par. The bitterness and the meanneea of his attack upon the oolored raoe will annear in a few oharaoteriatio extraot from his reoent speech, whioh I will denominate, by tho use or one or nis classic expression., iue "oesBpool of iniquity." WTWAklng of the oolored people of Ohio, he said, "as a general thiug they are vicious, indolent and Improvident." Alter quoting irom a epeeon oi oenaiur oner-man, my colleague atid : rr the fUnator conld viait Green. Bow. within the .hadow of thla Capital, tenceforth Ti phet and black Ge henna called, til. typo ol lieu, sua noie tne aquaior, ute-tltutton, taginesa, crime, and degradation titer, bt ginning to foater; II tie could viait tbe alley, in whoa, niiaerublu i...nl. tl,n bl.uk. eun.f emte. he would hardly be reminded of the paradl.e wbich Atllton aang, with lie naiarautniiie flower., laugnier.j 11. uiouuiiuk t.ut.ui ... Bu.u.u fruitig?, Ha amber llvcra rolling otfir elyalan flow, re, it hill, and fauntaina and freab ahaaea,lt drtiama of lu.e.aud ft. adoratloa of God. Alia I h. wonld fled nothing here to remind htm o( that high eetai. In Eden,.av. the fragrance of the apot aud tbe nakedutae ef Ita Inhabitant.. Laugh ter.! "If the ruab of fiee negrota to thla paradlae continue, It would be a blowing it ProTidenco ahould lend Satao her. in the form of a airpint, and an augel to drive the deaceudantaof Adam and Kv. Into the outer world. If it contiuubl, you will have no one nere but uongreaiman I negruca, ana mat will otpunienmeui enougn. i ba'iKu-1 Vi.uHillhava to enact a fua-itiv. law lobllna the white, to their cepitol. Laughter Referring to another oolleague, Mr. Edger-ton, be said: It i. recorded that in hie county a white woman tr Akron eued out a Aoliraicomuftlnr tno writ run. tueroyei, at leuat .here th' re ia color of right,) 10 take a mulatto baby fi-em a lire. Jonel, a negio woman nuuor wncae care It bad been placed by ila while mother, and who had be coma attack d lo the pickaninny. In the comae of the dieooauiou, Mr. Jonca toid the whit, woman that ahe thought, "if ibe white lo.ka were mean enotgh tjhave neAro hablei, thoy ought to he wllliug to let colored people bring tbtm up." Langhter So thejudge deoided. Theae little at awa ahow how to account for the prepond-derance of inulattoe. Notth." Speaking of his new congressional distrlot And the Western Reaerve, be said: Thli new dlatriot, air, ia rich In colored material. A rary piotty moaaio I A aw et fragrant neat I And thla 1. tun Afrlc'a Corel atraud to which my miuionary laboie are to bo directed. Laughter. "Uuo would aitppoae that, ia the weitern Beaorvo, wbero theproreaelou of philanthropy ia .rer arlelDg in prayer, in vpeecb, aud In print, where for years they cultivated no civil uieclpltce which Interfered with their n). tiou. of elavery, there would ba throDga or blaokl. Ia it n t 'rhnu Iron.toitKUed cenana. erjeak I Oolored perauo. In Aehtabula SI Ouyahoga (uleyeland) f.H Lako - 30 ' Hahonlng Ol Portage 7fl Trumbull SO Geauga 7 Loralue (Oberlln) , tin Mullea 6 Summit Total .. 1,8.14 fin thai. In these ten conntica of tho Western Itoao.ve, there are hut a few more Alrlcana than In one coiki ol my dlatrlct I Why tbey MpeclaUy avoid Aahtabul I cannot say. Is It the prodigtl proft avion aud acaut practue ot huuiantlyr Lnuguior jKvir uaa wiuuiuga, wiiua view to proteot property and ke.p up !! price, coaxod them Into C'aLada, where happily bo .is nuw domiciled 7 And there is Gaauga, with notes many negroes as Fultou county has lnuians I What a ootulnontary un rcpneeu- tatlve nuellty IB uure i i lie uiewuer .run. A.u.auuia, ai a himliiir and Trumbull. Mr. liulchinalineaka f.r one bun dred aud aixty-aU nugioea; but frum itia pileoos ado, on. would suppuae tuat lie repreaentea at least as inauy aid-cans aa too klug of Oaho.uvy. Laughter I Aud there is luvstnlllua coiloague irom in. uouuntsi. oar. Asntey whoue rotttad toiiu is resdy to become, like Mob., alt tears by hi grief for tho poor negro, laugntori whoae guehea of ckquoute in ibtlr behalf remiud on. ol the Arab lyrics in prai.o or lh. dark maidens or Abisslula when tney suug: h I the black amber I tho blaok amber I lie putfume, b far, Is awuaer than all els. ou earth or lu alar: th. lotua of Mle, tho roe. of Cash mure. u.y senses entbrall, wnen tuou an not ber..' bnut laughter. Vel, frum the whole eleven oonntltl of bis district be caunut Oouut as many negroes, by balr, aa lire In my own county, "t am notnerticalerlv nroud of looruBntlng a ffreat.-r nnnubor of Alilcaaa tbnu my colleaguM. 1 thick, ao fai as tb. thatterleg goes abuut their inalienable rights aud verlaattug wiougs, 1 am entlrtly unsulteu to rtpreaeut Ibem." Upon the principle by wblon bis political ac tion is oontiolled, my colleague Mr. Cox oan-not understand why it is that a Representative should strive to do an aot of oommon justice or an office of oommon humanity to a olasa of hu man beings who do not happen to be his imme diate oousiituenis. The whole secret of his abuse of the negroes is, that fAey cannot vote. Had they tbe right of suffrage, I have no doubt he would sit up nighis lo ooupoae peans to their praise. ' ' ' My eoiiesgue at in exira session toon occa sion to unjustly reproach th Western Reserve for not raising tie proportion or troops for this war. Btatistlo, from authentio souroes show that Ashtabula county, with a population of 81,814, has sent over fourteen hundred men. Trumbull county, with a population of 30,060, ha sent nearly, If not quite (he tarn number, ami Ibis does not embraoe eom oompaulaa made up, ana now in tne servioe, unaer me reoent call of the Governor, In response to the Government al Waebington. I have not seen the statistics from Mahoulog county, but I believe she has sent a many men in proportion to nor population a lither Trumbull or Ashtabula oountlea. The sums I true of other oounties of the Kesorve. ' Franklin oounty, In whioh my colleague Mr. Cox resides, and in whioh is situated Columbus, the capital of th tJtsto, wi'h population of 0,801, aooordlbg lo a reoent atatemgnt, has only eent between nine hundred and a thousand men. This may be accounted for, In part, from a faot slated In my colleague's snsceb, that Ibere are In his ooumy many mora mulaltoes and negroes than In the counties or th Kesorve, ana wnen tne uovern-ment I willing to receive auoh aid, very likely hie county will furnish her quota, it. My colleague has been some time before th publio a a politician, ana n nas ngurea somewhat In other department of human eulorprlae He ha traveled, and added to the contributions of literature by making a not of hi travel, In other words, he has written a book. There wa wisdom in Job's doalr that hi "adversary baa written book." i quota rrom in uti page of my idvertary' book: . "A Buokeye Abroad, or Wandering In Europe and in the Orient, by Samuel 8. Cox.'! Thla I grandiloquent and tuphonloui. , I mk no oritioism, STATE OHIO.' MONO AY;; MORNtN'i JULY 14. 18(2. nnnn h. honk or Iha uhieol-malter of It. In sentiment it is average, and in literary execu tion It U respectable, ine nn , a lurh of aea-aioknees, bat ihi i said to b .iA An. iha atomaoh. A turn just be for my oollesgn ompoaed hi peeob, mijrht hav n- liersd it or mucu rout manor. ---- Houe nd the oonntry Ike difforence- b",en " A Bucket Abroad" and Buekey nbroaa, i will ask the Clerk to read a ptiug from my oolleague'. book, la whioh h desortur! tne Pope at lervloe, In the HisMne chapel. ' The Clerk read ilie follovlog: "Wh le waiting theenlraiiC of lata llullueaa, lb. mind n fled delfgbl ia eieeaiulug th. -laat Juiigaient or ad-gelo freacoed upon tbe well of Ilia ol .pel.' Kv.ry rarlety of hope, dnbt. denpalr ana tieatltnoe, btam upoi ua from the ttaurea U1.0U the wall. Witblu a e acred l.clc.ore, over which lip-toed rioally can barely at-p. ia a gleen oerpstsd floor and tapoatry baulrga. with an altar aud a Ihroaa. He.ts ara'arraugi d for tho cardinal, who soon btgln to pour in, diessrd lu grtat r.d gewbs and spull-cap, tti.ndtd by .ervonts in purple. After biwsand cniBaea the sorvauts prtceed lo unroll the train, and .eat Ibe cardlnalr. A very hearty array of old Humana they seem, wl'h Ibelr arias ;l i cover, their gaudy balr .klnin. Ihnlr ioftv bruws and inUllhojnt faces iHiapeakiug ..mat livlna. a. will as .tudv and renecllaa- Alcst of 7i..m n.nt .m an inaudible n.aier. - One flee, old, treui bllugty fat gentleman reemid to b. beyond the age of piety, but hie naoillll prayeriuiuvrs aim i'.y". r Hps He lentiuded vie orhaucer's njook, who rslatated a 1 bis terra., trbftibebsdsitncdontorroK.deoree, ' No wonder was he heard It all t);e day.' tnirreilv. buff soldiers, a itb irilt helmets and drawn m. rn.l, In t.j suerd thaduur. 1 thouuhtat gist there waieauCden inaurrec.ljp, knoaiiig that in mat I Mr. of pivrer, as poor Pin bas learned, 1 mere le but ou. rep from teet.'.pitol tolbi Tarpeau Uoik- Jim oo; uieeoolr slrlks tho blab bote., tbe floors beyond open, and 1 Viola,' the v.'cegereut of Gcd appears in his tiara aud elolb ol gold, Around him swarm ministers nf every degree and bade oi color. He kneels the roatle ol red aardf na'a shivers in the baltowe'd air, and af) kneel. Tbu b. ascends to lb. threw., a doe looking, lull-faced man, graceful and dignified in hi. bearing. Power be stern, to wear ai a familiar garment. How gracl.jo.ly. h. extend, lolb. oar dlnals, who severally leave their Hsta, a'twdel tea Isalr .tter.il.uts lo purple, carrying their trains. Tbey, bowing, kid. the baud, nr. aa jf was Informed, Ibe diamond brilliant upm the Pope.'. Hog, if a Ink an of rcvi-renc An Inferior order proatrat. tbeu Belie, aud tlb tb.ir labia at the feet of his uolmsas, upun bch is a cross of silv.r. In tho meantime, seraphic muslo finia the Pope's select choir rtvlBbes Ibe ear, wbll. lb. looena. titil.i. i the nose. Soon there arises In this chamber of theatrical glitter a ,lan, uuque, tinned Afrioan, e'-d utter, tbeseiuion In facile lstinlly with grac'nl mauber. His Cgrk liauda g.atured barmonioualy wl.h tbe rotnnd periods and bis swarthy v.age beamed with a high orier of loUlllgefica. If. was an Absslulan. ' What a commentary was here upoa our Arrel(c.n pre-indlcea! Th. bead of the great Oatbollf) ihnrcb, anr rou.ded by tbe tipcat aclulars of tbe age. tlstenli g to Ihe elociaeno of the de.piBed negro, end thereby illustrating to the world the rcmteGO bond of brotherhood which biuda the buroan race." ' Tbg sermon ef th. Abyaelnian, In beautiful print, wa dlatilbut.d at lh. door, I bring one bum. aa a trophy and aa a aonvenir ofa great truth which Americans are prou. to deny or condemn."Mr. Ilulohlns This Aliysalnian admiration of my colleague, whioh he hit so graphically dearibed, may have suggosted to him the propriety of having his speeoh mostly in type, ready for distribution as soon as delivered. The quotations from my colleague's speeob whioh I havp read show "the Buckeye" at home. Tbe extracts juet real by the Olork show the 'Buckeye abroad." This Buokeye shrub flourishes best in exotic soil. There it grows to re-Bpeotable height, and il foliage is quite beautiful; but at home it grows low and sofubhy, and iw foliage is scabby. I would suggest to my colleague to become not a "wandering Jew," but a wandering "Buckeye abroad," In his osse, "distance lends enohantment lo tbe view." In justioe to my oolleague, I will state that these quotalions from his reoent speech are taken from the "sun-set" side of his politioal life, when he is in "the sers and yellow leaf." A few words in reply to his indictment against this Congress. The events which have occurred up to this time during the life of. the Thirty-Seventh Congress, are the most eventful in our history. Ihe Uovernment, or which tbe t;on-gross is a part, Binoe the 4th of Marob, 1861, tbe day wnion Mr. Lincoln was inaugurated President, bas bad forced upon il perplexiug questions and embarrassing duties to a greater extent than in tho same length of limn during any former period since tho adoption of the r ed- eral Constitution. This t'ongtess, as Ihe leg islative branch pf the Government, has bad lo meet those Questions and discharge those duties, and history will record in I lie main that il has met us responsibilities ana performed its dutios wisely and well. From the persistent opposition of my colleague Mr Cox and those who act with bim politically, tnts vongreas nas rauea to ao some nines wnicn 11 suouiu promptly neve done, ana wha. he most complains of will live on the his toric page ss among its moat noble and benefi-oent acts. This Congross found tbe Government In debt $120 000,000, caused by Iho frauds, stealings, and imbecility of a uemocrallo Administration, which my colleague helped to elec', and which he supported. It found its Navy scattered to distant seas by Ihe orders of that Democratic Administration. It found its munitions of war, arms, and ordnance, and most of its treasure, in Ihe hands of traitors and rebols by the connivance and treachery of the members of the Cabinet of lliat Administration. It found many of tbo Government forts, arBenals, dock-yards, navy-yards, custom-bouses and minis In possession of armed rebels, a large majority of whom were mombers of the parly to which my oolleague belongs. The Government securities were Belling at a aisoount ot sixteen per eent.; public confidence abroad in the integrity and stability of the Government wns gone, and at homo it was materially weakened and well nigh destroyed, and nearly all the Democratic party in the slave Slates, and many of il members in ihe free States, were openly or scoretly conspiring to overthrow the Uovernment and destroy the unity of the nation. A majority of tbe army offioers who were Demoorata had turned traitors and had basely deserted their flag, and were in arms against the Government wbioh had educated them. ; The foregoing is a general and brief slale-ment of the condition of affairs whon theThirty-Seventh CongresB, on the call of the President, on ihe 4th day of July last, was summoned to a disoharge of its duties. So energetic, prompt, thorough wsb tho action of Ihe Thiriy-deventh Congress at the extra session, that it inspired hope and revived confidence through, out the loyal eeolions of tho country. Laws were promptly passed, on Ihe recommendation of the Execuiivo and tho Cabioet, to provide ways and moans lo raise an Army and provide a Navy; and forthwith, in response to those mensure, six hundred tborsaud oitizan soldiers were in the field, armed, equipped, and supplied with all the requisite munitions of war. The seatterd Navy waa oolleoted ob eoon as possible; new and improved vessels of war were buili; tbe Navy was re-organixed, and lis glorious achievements at Halieras, Roanoke, Forls Henry, Douolaoo, I'olafki, Phillips, Jack-on, at ialaud No. 10, at New Orleans, Memphis, and at other plaoes, In oo-operation with the Army, are the grand results. Tho aoiion of Congress was but the echo of the patriolio voice of the people. On the authority of Kw money flowed into Ihe Treasury at the call ot tho Seoretary sufficient to meet all those extraordinary expenses, and to-day Ihe Government eecuiitiea are selling at a premium. So far as tho raising of money, moans, materials, and munitions of war is oouoerncd, the euooss iu Iha same length of time is without a parallel in the his tory of any nnlion. The Uoverumcnt of liug- aud, In 17'JU, uodor lbs namimslration of Air. Pitt, effected a loan, known in history sb the "Loyalty Lean," being raised as I lie voluntary subscription of loyal persona, of 13,000,000. This fact bas been proudly abronioled by Eug- lish writers as a remarkable lnstauoe of tbe patriotism and of Ihe cxliaitstlcto resources ol' the Eogllah people, i'he loyal American oa pi nnate as nuiokly ro.ipondeu to tno amount ol $lfi0,000,000l Napoleon, in the zenith of Lib power, sod in the prtdo of bis military euooesa, and in the height of hia military glory, never raised and put into the field an maiy of nix hundred thousand men as promptly as did Iho President of the United Suites on Ihe authority of the legislation of the Thiity-Soventh Congress.Th naliona of Europo have beheld these re sults wlih wonder and smatumout, and some of Ihjim with chagrin. Uur national eymbol, the American Hug, with no star obBoured nnd no stripe erased, will soon float in triumph over overy rood of Iho Republic, and it will again oommand respeat on every sea and at every nori whore oommeico, enirrprisc, ana civilisa tion have a habitation and a namo. Whatever has been fouud deft alive in tbe li-giilaiiou of tho extra session has. been eorreoted aud is being corrocttd, at the present sesalon, Congress has matured a system of taxation com- monsurale wiin tne nign tiutios wnicn it nas been compelled lo dlaobnrfo. 1 Thla has been a most arduous and difficult task. There are, doubtless, defoois in this system whioh experience will develope and whioh future legislation will correct. The patriotism of the people has been tealol in surrendering the flower of It population for Ihe defense or the Government, aud lb eronklnga of demagogue and traitor, at Ihe tax bill will noi swerve tbem from ihtlr Integrity or frighten them from their patriotism. Tb soldiers must be paid their families must b provided for. This Congress baa had to aot upon embarrassing question, om of them without precedent ia the history of th Goverument. There ha, been oooaaion for honest dlHrno, of opinion among loyal JOURNAL and patriolio men a to th legality and polity of oerlain measarea. Upon many questions eaoh member, in obadieaoe t Ik judgment of th whol, ha been obliged I yield op, to some extent, hi individual opinion.; and iha Individual idea of member of what 1 right and rr.,ar eanasl alwava be earrltd OUt. a la tiischarg of thost high dulief whioh tbi rebellion ha dfTOlved on this Cpofress, Il has freed th capital from lb disgrace aad the CfiBS fjr alaverv i ana loounx upon e.ev.r, Slit, j h Iwm,dlei, sails, of Ihil wicked war against tbe Goternmf nt, 00 lh . mendation of th President, Congr, In a liberal and friendly spirit, bas proposed to aid by pecuniary compensation iiich State as may desire to rid themselv of this terrible Inoubus. As a punishment for orime, a mean of putting down Iha rebellion, Congress 1 proposing to confiscate lh properly of rebel, and io deprive them of ' their slave. Following th teaching, of Jefferson, and tb example of th Congress of 1787; this Congress ba forevtr prohibited slavery in Ihe Territories acquired and io be acnuired. Agaliai thaaa and other birjijfed measures of obvious ponoy ana justice, my eoiiesgu or uu Columbu, district, protest by voice and vote, and beoause Congress entertain them, he hurls at it his biterest denunciation. I am grateful to my constituent ft, tn opportunity to yoje for and advooate sueh measures. Few men in my sge have had, or will have an opportunity to do ao much good in a public way as tb member of the Thirty-Bevenlh Congress. These measures, against which my colleague wags his tongue with snob hatred and bitterness, still be regarded In history as Ilia noblt auto of tbe Thirty-Seventh Congress. They reeognUe the Inalienable right of wan to life, liberty and justice. One oannot fall, In reading my colleague's lirade-agafnst these act, to be reminded nf the burning words of Mark Antony over the dead body oflCifjar"i , . , " Ott lodgment I thou art ffed to brntlab beasts, And nitm have lo" jl ,lr r.aaon," History will be true to justioe, and will not "own such judgment" as my colleague bas pro-nounoed. lie interpoeee against these meaeurea with all his powers of ridioule "th raw-head and bloody bone" of negro equality. Those measure hav no relation to political or social equality, and hay no tendency (6 regulate the one or interferti with the other. Beoause we are willing to do justice to the humblest )n aociety, doe it follow that wear bound io extend to them ihe same sooial and politioal privileges whioh we enjoy? Beoause my colleague is disposed to pay hi bumble washerwoman a just compensation for her labor, shall 1 reproaob him with the inclination to marry her, or to invite her to bis table? Th right of suffrage is a political right, and a State or politioal oommunily may withhold it from a class of persons without an inference with their naturul rights. Il is withheld in most of the Btatea from foreigners till they have resided in the country five years. It may be granted conditionally to, or withheld entirely from colored persona, without injustioe to their natural right. The people of each Slate ar entirely competent to regulate that matter, and most people are competent to control their social relations Should tho gradual emancipation plan bo carried out In the Slates, and should oonfisoation liberate tb slave, of rebels, If my oolleague really fears he shall be brought down or up to a sooial equality with liberated Abyssinians, auch as he saw at Sietine Chapel, or If he fears any tendency to amalgamate with that raoe which he so despise in this country, but which in Rom so charmed him, I will not object to a spooial law for his benegt. . Such a bill would be in order on private bill day, if no objection is mads, and I am sure no one on this aide of the House will be so unkind as to inter, pose an objeotion. My oolleague seems to have but little prejudice against Ihe society of traitors, and from his votes here he would seem desirous of cultivating it. This may be attributed to the fact lhat bis system is so full of prejudice against the negro, thst there 1 no room for justice to traitors. The Bpaoe is limited.A bill passed Iho House, a few days Binoe, entitled, "An act to preaoribe an oath of oflioe." This bill provided iu substance that all United States officers shall take an oath that they have aot voluntarily engaged in this rebellion, or borne arms against the Uniled Slate. Without auch a law, at Ihe close of Ibe war this House might be mainly filled, from th Slate now in rebellion, with traitors, . My oolleague showed by his vote that he was willing, as a member of this body, to sit alongside of traitors, whose hands are red with the blood of his murdered constituents. My colleague, and all his Demoeratio associates, voted against this bill. They do not object lo the society of traitors, but they do oppose acts of common justice and humanity to loyal ooiv ored persons. My oolleague throws out in hie apeeoh the pro-slavery argument that emancipation in the West Iudiea has been a failure Ibis is untrue. Emancipation nowhere has been a failure, politically, morally, or pecuniarily; far the reason that freedom is belter than slavery for all parties oocoorned; and leoauae right ia always productive of good, and wrong IB always productive or evil, ihisia pirtof the economy of Piovidence in the governnientof this world. Emancipation iu the West Indies has been a great success, and as au examp.e we should profit by it. Pro slavery writers and BpeakerB havo seized upon isolated facts andiu igntrauoe of the real condition of the Island before and einoo emancipation, or willfully blind to it, nave usea tnese laots to tbe prejudioe of eman cipation An able writer in the Edinburah Re. view lor April, lX&'J, in an article entitled Ihe 'West ludieB as they were and are,", used the following language: ".Sever was a moro radical revolution made In the for. luneanf a whole neOLl. than whau eiaht hnnilrMH il.nn.. and Bri'.iah oeerovs atoniied! fmm slavar Int., fr.i.,n. .. .uH.un vtu.i. .H.u Hjmi twelve on inenirnt oi July 31. 1K:14, Ihev wore, lu Ihe eva nflhal.w. thin.. chalt 1, lieaatsuf burden, th. mere property of olhi-rs. Wbeii it bad ceasoj time, not only freemen, but nen etandlng on auiun level ai iboee who had turmerljr owned tbem." aouna, iney were, Tor tne Orel The negroes were erery where jubilant when their mrtnrignt or rreedom was ro stored to tbem. net. James ifbiiups, liAptiat mlsaionarj in Jamaica, in describing the state of things iv ueo iiit) BiayuB were reieasea irom Ibeir np. prtjuuuueuip iu aooo, uses me louowing lan 'lU frOIlt Cf ihe BaDtlkt Chmel AM Ihnaa Irlnaanl.. archei de?orald wlib loavei and floworn, and eurrotindtjd by lUpt with inttirlptione. Freedom hai come I' Maf-ry la uo more 1 Ttae chalte ars br.itnn;, atvi-a iv.a i Tim omtiudlium of tbd maltitude wttaaroiisod np to the (i tgh cut pncb. Iboy wantod to greet U tho llage, mao of wb tub b re the nanim of their bviiuf-ictorf, S.u.igs Broughntn, Bllgo,' Ao, Ihe fls wero uufurled, and f r u arl, an hour tbe air raug whh exultant ehunte, In iue mriii Toreiuiiue two thousand chiUiea join, od: 'We're fre I1 'We're free 1' 'Our wlrn and onr chll drtn are fioe 1 " Could emancipation to suoh people be a failure ? The real oondition of the West Indies has baen understood or srosslv misrenreaented. What has been quoted aa a failure of emauoipa- inu is auriDuiaoie io otner causes, and emancipation is nowise responsible for it. Tfaenrin- oipal faot relied upon lo show that the islands , trnre injutod by emancipation is the faot thai in some yonrs Binoe emancipation the exports have been less than before. Tho chief end of man in sooiety is not to raieo produca to export, and this fact is not the best oriterion of tbe prosperity of a countrr. When all things are taken into the account, the iaots on this head are against slavery, as I will hereafter briefly show. The bad company of BiuTery in tne n est lntiies naa well nigh bankrupted and mined them, as it always does anv State or country whore it is tolerated. The pop- uiaiipi) roiurns irom me isianas, maae to tne Uritish Parliament prior to emancipation, showed lhat in eleven islands (the only ones from whion returns were made; "the slaves had de creased in twelve yenri by no leas than 60,21ft namely, from 668,194 to 497,076." Accord ins to the estimate of the Edinburgh Re view, "had similar returns been procured from the other ho von colonies, finoludinff Mmirllina. Antigua, Bur bad oca, and Grenada,) the deoreaee must have been little, u at all, less than 100,-000." What an appalling faot waa this one hundred thousand human beings slauuhtered in twelve years, that a few privilrgod slaveholders might beoorae rich in esporting rum and sugar! A few may be pecuniarily, benefitted by suoh a state ot things, bat everything valuable and Ue siramein society mnet go to decay. This damn tng faot was enough, in the eniimalion of the British public, to destroy slavery. Kmanclpa lion oanio, ana in the next tweire years rrom ten colonies (no rot urns were made from the others) there was an inareaae or 04,U70 oolored persons. This may be set down to the credit of freedom. Increase of population le always regarded as an evifiot.ee of prosperity-In a State or oommunity. Under the demoralising Influences of elarery the West Indies, prior to emancipation, were rapidly going to decay in commerce and in everything lhat conoerus the we-ll-beiotr of en. oietyi In Jamaica, for ten years prior to 1880, the deoreaee In sugar was no less than 201,04'.. hogsheads from the amount prodnoed for ten years prior to 1820, Lord Chandos, in 1830, presented a petition from the West India merchant! and planters, setting forth the extreme distress under whioh tbey labored, and he declared in NUMBEK 10, his speech, in eub.ieeee, that it wa impossible IA ike .... . l,na anaaa, I 1 ... v..r uP again. t sues presaur any ""I"- earn, - iney are rtdu;ed to a stale ia .sin to.y are ooiigea earnestly to solioit relief from parliament." Mr. Bright said, "the distress of tbe Wot India colonial body Is on-parallelled in tb country." A report ,3 the com- moni.wi .wi us iuu vveis ,uute(, a copied In the West udia heporter, contains tbi langosgs t 'There are Ibe strongest concurrent ten tamer and proof tbatunlrss some speeriy aud emclenl aaeaauresof .ur"vi sum 01 a gioat number of the plan-lr, m-a; l-j.,l(,blj, very s on take plan ." This Was nailer the kalovon rule of alaverv. Th planters were overwhelmed with debt; their estate were mortgaged lo English capitalists for large amounts. In 1833, ia Ibe ltl is land or at. Jiuola, e.iaie war mortgaged to tbe amount 01 over .jo.uiai.wu ror asots incurred under that delightful aiat of slavery whioh tuy colleague Mr. Cox is ao solioitou, to perpetuate in Ihi oountry. Mr. Cigelow, fjf tb Sew Vork Evening Post, whose intelligane and integrity will not b questioned, a the rsault of hi oareful observations in visiting the island, aa to lhair condition prior (0 raanpiptioii, ayai , , . "Tbs island cf Jamaica wa, ttly Insolvent; nearly every eslau. was mo; taaid fur mor. than il was worth, ana was li at 1. lot mom lutete than it could peaaibly pay -bankruptcy wav Inevitable. I have given my reaioua (or balloriug thai Ike euanelnaliou act S.d ael eatue but "" 'fVeUU:d a result which era Inevitable II compelled A balance 10 bo Struck liaiwaan the dttht,,, a n.nl creditor., which mealed rather than begat tbe penny Other proof equally Satisfactory might be cumulated on this point, but il is unntoessary. The faot ia established beyond oontrovarsy or doubt that It was slavery whioh, in 1880, was ruining the West Indies- Th ootton State at th commencement of this rebellion were in a similar condition. 1 hav no doubt that their indebtedness lo tho commercial State accelerated th rebellion, and added fuel to the flame whioh slavery had kindl.d. This Indebtedness probably wa not less than two hundred and fjfiy or three hundred millions. This w.s quite a motive power to a revolution whioh would wipe it out by repudiating it. Southern rebel conventions and Legislature wars quiok to confiscate thi indebtedness to loyal paopls; but my ooneague tar. uox 1 is as quioa to oppose he oonfisoation of rebel property for the bene fit of her loyal men, fearing it will Irritate those dear traitors whose company he Is q desirous of keeping. He imittttea sorce generals, in tbs field, who ar mor energetio in protecting rebel property than in suppressing the rebellion. . 1 .- . It ia perfeoily natural, yes, Inevitable, Ibat such a shange in tht BQOtal and politioal condition of a people.as rrom slavery lofreedotn.Bhould produce temporary oonfusion and inconvenience. This will apply to business or politioal affairs. It takes lima for sooiety to adapt itatlf to the now ooadition of things, It does not, therefore, fol low that tn (bang I not a wise one and should not have been uiado. The former slaveholders tried to avoid, by all means In their power, "the dreadful necessity of treating with reaped, and alluring by wages, those whom not long before they oould order to ba put down and flogged for th least indolence." "Very many of tk planter also gave their negroes notice to xuit their cottage and grounds, under the idea that by suoh a threat they would foroe them to work for leu wage. Th result was. to make th negroes shift elsewhere." An able ariiole in th February number (1853) of th Westminster Review asssrts that too diminution or labor waa th dircot and immediate consequence of the mismanagement of the planters." Other causes not direotly at tributable to slavory or freedom contributed to bring about in Ihe West Indies that "dreadful orash in 1847, whioh has lino resounded through the world," and the main oause of the falling off of export wa th fall of tbe prioe of sugar. In 1840 sugar sold for 48, per owl ; in 1848 it Bold for only 2:1s. 5d. Sugar in the eight years, ending with 184C, averaged 87s. 8d per cwi, ana in in eight following years it averaged only 24s. 6d. per owt. In Ihe first eight years the amount produced was 20,000,-000 ewt- In tbo second eight years it had increased to.24,500,000 owl. The sugar planters reatnea lor their sugar. $10,000,009 lee than they would have realized at the old prices. Sugar being the principal article of export, suoh a falling off would, of oourae, cause great commercial embarrassment; but pro-slavery writers and orators have oharned Ihia emberaes- mcnt to the account of emancipation. The evidence from reliable sources i overwhelming, mat tne n est inaia aaiauas, unaer rree labor, are rapidly recovering from the insolvsnoy wbich slavery had oaused. Wealth is increasing, orime diminishing, and the material and sooial oondition of tbe people rapidly improving. I might multiply evidence upon these poinlB to almost any extent. I quote a few statement from colonial report mad to Par liament, a quoted in th April number. 18G9. of th Elinburg Rtview: . "BarradoM Tn ten years '.between IMS .net lar.a. in. crra-eof augar exported Iail7,2t0hogih-ala ' Thereport fur isoi, siatee, -mere na. ueon mure eugtrebipped froai this ivlsud this y arlhan lu ar,y one year since it has been peopieu, anu it ia a rennraaui) tact Met tber. will be mure loburera' mgar mad, Ihia year than prevlootly. DV laborers' Sllgar la rnetUt that raised IV Iha nnernnann tbelr own patchesof around, and aeut to tbe proprietor's mill fur uiuaufacture.' The report for.lSSa anooutices vss.ltiCreaae tn trade ao lar Ihe success of cultivation by free labor is unquestionable.' Iteport fur 1858: 'A greil locieaveln the value .f the exiHut.' 'The large prupurunu u, ,nin,.,in, .,j ,, lauoriog o:.... lur- uivhes striking evidences of their industry.' impurlanl change for the better,' lu Ihe condition of the people; which hetnsicty atlrlbutta to Improved education' 'iho rupiiity wllh which these lilands areadvanc. lug tv indicated by tbe lact that the exports and liupurte '.nnnnniiif. iii.a .., ion uuvtrunr rannria. a h ana luurntnnu iu via ,ni, iiwu. a.u. . taa, KiUi.,Ut, t.tVS, Bi 78.1 Or.tiaelo. Returns In ISf.l aud J832 show an Increase of tranu, anionuiing 10 ee,.i, ti-.s,ao S3 ) lUport uf 18S8: 'Oonti ntnlent appeal, to p -rvado all rlavsei uf the cununuoity.' A proprietary hudy, ol eunalderabl', mas. niiude aud Importance, baa already men from the labor ing cubv.- 'Binte 01 tne ntiancr-s moat sat utaenvry ' A greatly extended aurrac 1. covered by sugar cultivation.' A considerable increaie is noted lain, export, or sugar. mm. .nil nvm Nnma ri.nt.rk. nn l,n wan. nt i.k .. allutiu. itepoi is tor 1808: oatialoclorv evidence 'tiatlalaclorv evidence li snort. a, iy inn leveniie reiurni, u increase or trade and d, by tbe revenue returna, ef Increase of trade and mercantile buvlueta, connq(iont upon the revival of agricultural tloDIlty., (There bad been a duuraulnn In connqnunre of a giut fli ia tbe prioe of euekr ia 181T . xTnin.t--(i.-ikriut v lur iojo; -ibb llOMuy DiRIUieuaUCe of prt tluctit.n la full of promlee ai to the fiitsre.' Report lor 'iiiu esporM muw a ooueiaeranio lacreai..' Vorv courilderablo iucrca e In revenue, and an eouialli marke! fDiproVinunt; in tbe omcuut of imports.' Ia tbo report tor 1B38, the Oovarnor apsaha of tbe growl Dg Inde pendouoeof tbe Uborera. manitotttd iu tbe email paicht-e oi CHuns, aua nine wooasu uuti aoro auu mure Uotdug the plalue aiotiud.1 ifUwfMa-e.in itw, ini uoveroor roporte tnt the t,ll in tbu urice of utrr, In 1817 and 18l8iowiUK to the iBDpal of tbo tariff) waa 'ao iiidd -u aud euormoue aa to have al most annihilated tbe eulogy at that oriHU.' But be g-wi on to etato tliat Hhj revenue Ii now flourishing, pDpuU. uuu Bug.uui!ug, uuuuiiiu feprtaoiug, crime uiujiuun iuir. aud trade iorruiirar ' MantMrraU In Inbli, the Governor renorte 'increisecf connueece, entorpniH, ana i mi miry i ne itnprovoa and uuiuovliisT etilo ot tno commuultv Ja allowud on at: liauda.' 'No island In thode io exhibits a more deciilve tcuueocy to aovui ana uiuini reneteratlon and Improve, nient. I'he rural population are qulot. eoiiteuted and or. dorly.' "Att uofort rjriH57: 'Tiio roads appear ai ir the creator part of the Do ou I at ion had utw clotheJ tlinm. selvei; aud In the harbor, so often deserted, 1 uow count wn eutpsot ooni.uuraie burdeu.' 'Tuere appears now to ueatwura an liiauiiriouri sptni oi improvument.' bt. A'itf. Ketort for I860. 'A laraer ountitv of iu gar ie prodnoed nowthan iu the tlranor slave!,' (though on a siuaiier area. j jKtpori tor ioj:, rne agricultural pioepects of tbe lands are most encouraging. Itsfl-iaa-uidl couditlun oonllnues satisfactory; so do theeoucatioLal returns. Attcudanr-e lu sobLtls Is steadily Inert as Inc. Crime Is sieadily dimintshin;. Jn outyoiir, from 1860 to to 180T, trade luctuieorj tlun.VAi, i,oi4 o4i w,) "St Lucia. HtJitort for 16S3: 'At no period uf bar his tory has tunre tweu a grt atr bread th of land under aul-Uvatton thau at tbs pfesmit moaiaut.' Between the frnr yars ending law, and the four icnra ending 1800, the IIIDIUMB ui iiHi rv I'urimi wan iiu.uta iuuuu. sSI. VMCmt. In 1M57, tbe Governor ut scribes 'a real I souad and bealthy state of the colony apparent, and a cnenring aua prjminiug proipooi mr uv imure. ue de. scribes the rising vllUges, tho growiug uumber of fiee holders and leaseholdeis, and the steely nrtigrmuilvi. in onase to tbu value of Imports. In one year, from lSAO to 1857, imporlsand fXports tnoreaa-d flftG.ttiia, (1758 88tl 88;) and he)rcdly attilbutes It to iucrttased etiltlvailon aud prtwperity.' in ie.te, ne imioruoa sue colony as 'In a must satis IV torv state.' 'Airri cultural otierailone laraelv extended.1 'Aoticlpitijna of contlouoi progress and pros perity tuny nvnieu.- IWmfO.-a-llie Bceooin nnu imnn iinmai 10 IS 18 and lS!..i;ouien imprnTtm nnauvwi ynini waa artoptvd lu a 'marked IniDrovement in the revenue rotnrue.' ThHUn, iH.iii. eiih rmiiii. 01 wniuu wu m iriiurE in iooh intiniinsin ernor dcscrlb e the labor ia as 'wstl-bolaved and Indus trlnna.' lottola. This lilatif, under slavery, exported I6,6ft0 nnnureti wtiiiius. 01 auajna. ai.v., rAHirta none at all But the rhan.ro H aiioiiy an ari.antaae It ! n.. mat kably well adapted for raising stock. " The 1 eople, WllU IBW MW!IIIUii "iu vwuoiai ui UBIMV, WniGQ I Bey OU- poeofto gnat advantage. ' The laborers appear fully WillBiniiv in mi nnvnuira.vn iiuiuiiiuii i iitpir Rniltlmn and tlieiaiter mania si a groat asiireto leaont by tbe oi nririniniiiaa nireiva iiicm. ' JViiifdnd Is highly ltnrlshlng. Tn 18B2, the crop was the Unrest ever ehliioed from the Inland; and It hut hrni. extending since. Ibe whole trade greatly Incnaied since Hlitvety. J ne repuit ir .rj. ait.aHvi oi maraea improve' m,.t In tlin cnltl?t1 n of the hllkSr OStatei. Einnrt .. wir4r rost. from an average of 310,707 eat undtr slavery, (0 H ,V OWvi. IU Itra vit-H jvnaai VU1I"K ' Do these oihoial statements show that etnan oi nation waa a failure? On the contrary, the show, boyond cavil or doubt, that in the West Indies it has been a glorious suoores, I will quote from a speech made In the House of Commons Dy Dir. u. uuxton in 1H5i 1 1 Because labor le free and trade Is free the Wmi t d'es are now rising to a pitch of wealth and bapiilDiMs unknown before, Itwoiili be tmp aslble forma to lay bttfore tbe House the Immense mass of evidence which de-moDstraiaa that fact, lan assured of tt by mercantile men; 1 Had It strongly let forth lu the reports from Ibe Governors of tbo Islands, and In the st at la ties fnrnlshed by the Bard of Tiede. In the four years between 1863 and 18A7. then his been an tnoraaee In the mix rta Imports i f the West Indies and Qnlana of 4,iVKi,w0 (2l,03,W0.) O jUHlilerlug what mere sp.oVa these Islands 0.1K on ma map oi .ni-rira, it u aaiimiaoiug inai tneir ttade to and fro, In the yar 1857, should aotnally aaount i to lOlU36,ooo. (1)11,011,070.) It U altogether absurd tf eui.p a. ef a fa Iballh.v.re 1..1Z i" . Wi? V i". rtdonce. 1 have briefly referred to (ha .e . ration in the West India to refut. ihe Intl. motion. f my colleague, nj bfoaua. th people of tbi oountrv. In r . th. fact of JtoyJ is every day being made ur. .n.i ' psrent. Th saldi.ro in ih. .m ... .T, ' ...., .t , , . . ... 1 u is mor dearly than th oilisen at home w. . xpeot permanent pesoe if tbe tutus of slavery to remain th tame a before the war. N n, unless his wish is father lo th thought, sin entertain anw mh.a nnl.t.. v . ' yond the control uf the Preident,' of th Cabi-oet, and of Congress, are irresistibly forcing lh ballon to that nnlnU. env.- '..; " k. n 7 , r'-. " uureuon rnr uli Zl'T 10 '. whether it will lead ihi, opinion or be led by it. "Uod ie just, and His justioe will not sleep forever." My col' "ague and those like him need ni . ' stay th eurrent of event by pronouncing ' ihe Africa "ignorant idle, ami .f.,in.,. 1.. ' tclligent and Just men know that the aurest way 'fl V .ill. Vn kit, anna . t. -. I a . - ....... -1 ..wut ma, .guuranoo ana a--relation is lo lake from him that ln.rl r .....T... siou whioh orushes oat all motlva fur improve- meut and honest men will not upon It. Ii ia not ",lnj'' that men who ar in favor of keep, ng African in ignorance and alaverv .hnnlrl oppoe all effort for their moral and intellect ual instruction. History will prononnoe all nob men tyrants and onnreeanra lr v....i . 'anly is bermiitsd lo narrv ant what .nni.rt. a he ha commenoedlo wit, th breaking up school established and sustained bv nhilan. thropio persona for tb nomas of ed uautinff colored children, he will be regarded as infamous In history as a Jeffreys 0 a Haynau, - 1 auvise my colleague .nr. cox J to look well hi own opitepb. That he mav ac himself ib bislory will regard him, unless be mends hia way, I suggest the following: Her. lira lb Buokeye at heme. - . . ' The evil thai ie.it do lives aftaar Ikoati . ETke trood la o,t lntiria.1 w,tu .1,. In ........a l In can of this Buckeye, wonid lhat this niaxlui sala-hl aa reversed; If uot, little, would be f,.niui here out bout: u. expire, wiia tsia Ibirly Bavnsitb :engres'l H. died of N.gro-pbobi., babbllug agaitiat the Nioirt. Bis ability Sited hire f r a higbor mission, bat bis un went down In . eofomf iiuee!." h'qnittest Is pica 'OR WARD! FORWARD ALL PERSONS IN NEED OF - - ' J . BOOTScUBHOSlB, 00 TO THB ' ' , 1 . RENOWNED CHEAP STORE DUNFORD & CO. 276 SOUTH HIGH STREET, , OolxxxtxtoxXaS, O. ; Aad those Splendid Kid - Heeled Hoots for , Til-is Vnlqua Franc h morocco bouta...l 00 Tbossj Beanliruily Finished Hiwcd do..l 99 Those Ladle's Issoe-Heeicd Gaiters so Those e's Oxford Ties.......,.,,, , Those Bpiendld Calf Tlea, Hn oo . Those French Calf Boots.., ...... ,.. u no And other ' arranted Ar es, too nnmoroni to mention AT FABULOUSLY LOW PBICK9. B. P. DUNFORD & CO., - Proprietors. may2fi NEW STYLES OF HATS J. U. SMITH'S HAT STORE! KToil House. MONITOR, BTJRNBIDE, ' ' DUPONT, ZEPHIH, COMMODORE FOOTE, , OUNCE, BROWNLOW. And a Largs Slock of Military Gt-ooctis. l ! . : .. .' i , ,.! just receivisu AND FOR SALE AT LOW PRICES. j. ii. sniTiifajr Je25-3ra New Spring and Summer tiundH ! C. EBERLY & CO. 264 SOVTH HIGH STREET ARB DAIL.V KtCCRIVINO ALL, THB Hew strles of SPmINII Arn KITH .1 B-.ll l,i.icKa auODtf, ranging lu price frern te (UI cents a yard; " " uummwr rnAwu - atie nioeii pneo.. Ladle.', atlases' and Children'. HOOP aHIUlU, or th. let .tile, and ijualillea, at Iheluweat prlcea. Ladiea'. Oent.. and r.hilileatita HiiHf . v .na nr.iivra of allqaalitlee, atjle. end urlcee. naaies-, man's anil Uhlldreu's SI10FH, cheap. Ladles' Oi.LLA.llH. CiLLAIts and .HTVirH n.iT.v.ana and bLKB , Kb, la wtt; lu great variety . a I al nil prjUea. Mew.tylea of Llithi and Faucy .Sal.llvlli.rl, rialu and Vaiicy OiSHMUKIill' Tn j UOTI'OKAIIkS, of all styles and quslltlos, In abundance, at the lowest peslllo price.. Sl.u'a Boja' and Chlldion's BliMMBB IIATB.of th. latest styles, voiych.ap. inland Uoenta ayaid. Brown and Bleached 8HrKTINL'9 and S.tTUTlNcn. at troat 8 to 10 cents per yard. -IN FACT- Evrything in tht DRf GOODS LINE, will b Sold at Oreatly Keduceil Prieca, to Suit the Times. i ; ' I ALSO At the asms place, can he found a good selection of GOOD FAMILY GROCERIES, which wll. be sold at the lowest pusslbl. figure.. Butter, Ksgs, and and all kinds ot i,roduse taken In ex. change for Groceries, at llarkel prices. Wo pay Ilia highest n-aiket price for Wheat, Itye, Corn Oats and Deeds, al S4 South High atr.ot and txo. 7 Hast rriend street. Jela o. KTIKItLT A 00. " SAVE, YOUR MONEY I pHlfl VDKRIIQNCD HAVIMVI PVR V ehased tb. right o( th. stale ol Oblo for Making . and Sailing WOODEN GAVE TROUGHS, CONDUCTORS ad X3zi.ata.x9a- fxx:bu3. , lint from Bolld Wood, aud Boated on th. Inside wllh a , water-proof composition, am prepared tn fnrulah at SHOBT NOTICE ; 1 Orders for any slse from IK lo e Inches wide, In large or mall lots, .hipped lo any part of the dlate, with In. tructlon. lor applying them to old or n.w huilillngs, front heir .xt.nslve establishments, Oornar of Spring; and Water Streets, over OHLEN CO'S. SAW FACTORY, R, B.LUVKJOr ato, . , ., Volunbns, f, artl-datawSmAw. , , |
Format | newspapers |
LCCN | sn84024216 |
Reel Number | 10000000024 |
File Name | 0680 |