Daily Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1848), 1864-03-12 page 1 |
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DRY GOODS. l c. uopkins 4 co., Cwier Fifth an Vino, OFFER AT Wholesale & Retail, BOO Fxxjozas BLACK SILKS, BOO pzsoxn FRENCH MERINOS All Colon, FIVE THOUSAND WINTER SHAWLS OYE THOUSAND LADIES' CLOAKS,! ' Black and Colend, L. C. Uopkins & Co., Cerier Flflk and Fine, FANCY DRESS . SILKS AT LOW FRICESJ L. G. HOPKINS & GO. OFFER AT THE LARGEST STOCK OF DRESS SILKS!! Ml TIIE CITY. L C. HOPKINS & CO., Corner Fiftk and Vine, OINOINN ATI, octo:fn-dir DRESS GOODS Of all IjTiude; FANCY GOODS TRIMMINGS Of nil TCIimIm ; Embroidery Goods Of till 1 viimIm ; Sh a -w 1 is Of nil JvIimIm; EVERY THING AT HEADLEY, UICIMRDS & CO. 250 and 252 South High Street. COLLEGES. S. E. oorner Fourth and Vine Sta,, OINOINU ATI. O. wtai ljr ROBACK'S BITTERS. QBEINBACKS ABB QOOD, BUT Robaok'B art Better. STOMA CII BTTTKRS Tc0 thutumnd bottln M Id uoe month. 1h miml pojiulM ttouutcli bltUra lu IUM. ROBACK'S BITTERS. Gno for nil dnnini oio tit of thii HtoHiAvb, lutiNUtHw, Llvitr OouipUiut, nil (anural dvblUly. ROBACK'S BITTERS They ihmimiii wonderful tonic prprtfi, giving I tut to tbn itptite ftud I dtijvame org iu. ROBACK'S BITTERS. I IfebHIUM LndJ", and MdVoturv ursoniwlf1 And jn tbm anoxocHflBt toolo. , ROBACK'S BITTERS. A winoglaHful each mm) vitl ramoTe lndlgvatlon mid U Urer dli- ROBACK'S BITTKKN. Tbr are belUr tha all Pille. Ponder. andoth I ROBACK'N BITTERS. Thy eaa be Iftkno without reflard to diet, appetiser thrjr baw uo eqtMl. ROIIK H'N BITTFRH. They are prepared by an old and kllirul phjriclan roia weil-anowa vegeiaiiie rnnwiin. ROBACK'S BITTERS. Wherever knows they have beeome a standard r rally I trenxtDeoing rem no j. ROBACK'S BITTERS. Try one bottle, and yoa will alwava me tbuoi and re - mnitN inuvi tDniuert. ROBACK'S BITTERS. . W. BOBACK, Kola Prprl(or Oompoandftr f Stom.rh BUtitra, Blond PanSer, .lid Blood rilU..nl IMHIIIcr .lid U.iuir.eturvr of Cl.wb. .nd 8wodi.h llmn'ltr.. .lid .11 kind, of tb. floMt dnmt.lie liquor., wlili'h .r. rld whol.Ml. or la y dwin-il f)u.nllly; .1 Ho, ort. Aft, 611 m! 08 Bui tbird rcl, Uloc'lno.ll, O. . Borwl. by Snuibta ul DmIhi Id MeiMola. BAIJLY OHIO STATE VOLUME XXVII. MI3CELLAN EOUS. " WEEKLY " Ohio State Journal, FOR 1864. A FIRST-CLASS I FAMILY NEWSPAPER THE OHIO STATE JOURNAL EAS NOW COMPLETED ITS FIRST HALF CENTURY! I .The WGIKLT EDITION OF THB JOUBNAEi Is offorvd t tho Publto with tb Morance that I It will ooaUln th IIiATBST ism Tbnt cu be obtained by I TELEGRAPH, WATT,, Army Coreespondence! ITS 0OHTCNT8 WILL TOBM TBI Choicest Rcadius! FAMILY CIRCLE! AS WILL AS FOB The Office, the Shop1 AMD TBI cowrou IT WILL CONTAIN FCIX AMI EXACT REPORTS WEEKLY MARKETS I FOB THB DDI Or THB Burma tbkb njllt advised or tni Correct Market Rates! PRODUCE AND MEIlt'DANDISK! THE POLITICAL COURSE Will be Ooutantlr and Xarnntly tot The Onion and the telitntion! It will lend .11 poulbl. Hi to Support the Government IN ITS BTBCOOLB AGAINST REBELLION I All In M doint, It will t litdrpeuden. and Vutrammvled I Firm and Unequivocal! Tertua of tbe Weekly JTournul OrMrp oh rwr .. . it n Thro, coplt. on. 70.T.. Hi. " . 8 . TS0 . IS Ml Twnty .28 I I With Mxtra eopy la the getter ap of eoh Olab o. HOTELS. THE ST. LOUIS HOTEL, Cnesnut SL. between 3d and 4th, IN THU IMMEDIATE VRHNITT Of THI 1 priori ul lUnkiuir fluuaM. .'utom Huum. Pnat Oflloe, tjoniiuoriral Kxvhange and Mm JoblriuK UOQMf. 1 b0 DMil DMIUM4I niHQ'R noato IB too city. dec24-Iy Proprietor. "THE UNION," Arch et, bet" Third and Fourth sts, XlxUa,ciolilii. THOM aB 8. WKIW, 1 BANK B. WKBB, J 1". S. WEBB cJ SONS. retiiiiiiir MANHATTAN HOTEL, Opposite the Park, Murray nfrvet, near Broadway. 3NT33Xr YORK, nrinx prowuetok having HADTniHOtm 1 MOIMOL'H DOWN TOWN HOTEL tiion-UKhly rrpatrl. fftliittl ami mhirolflliud, t now yrnl to urovid hit UiiOMtH with all th comfort of a kmk1 l ml well rutpilatrn Hoiimw. llt auttrjf." are ruaauna-hie, ami he icuarMtiUMM to )! who may rail tiimii bltn Kmd table, comfortable roum, and vr poaatbls tllHIIllOtl. II will In i.InmM to ww ell his old frlendi, Mid to weicmnit uiauy niw unw. Tim hi-u invittil. whou too cotne to tit fHtv. to i-m ' htm a vilt ; mid lu aanurm ya tlmt If you go away aiBMunniMi, 11 Mian DOl im um null 01 nmrt-iHim N. hiuhjiwh, FronrtPtor Western Reserve ANO PINE APPLE CHEESE Wo Balk by w. it. icixhihi x, dots imt Rati alien Sirn AMERICAN HOTEL, Corner High and State Streets. (nPFO.IT. TDK ST.T. BOUH.,) ooijtnucBua, o. WARDEN ft EMERY, Proprietors. NATIONAL HOTEL, NBAIl UNION DHI'liT, COLUMBl'tl, O. If. KKV.OI.IS, lruriv(or. BaKirakn tAkcn to and from tho Demit wltlnmt Ieharutt. Pnumn witthtnK ti tnk any of tht Ninhl Toin, will he inntiitly n.tuii(iti U. iiihi4-Ub BATES HOUSE, ZnaiananoIlM, Ind. J. ! IIOLTOJV, Proprietor. DKFORR TAKIXO TIIK APTFM TAKINOTIIH KILvi Elixir. IMC. HICfGiri'N REJUVENATING ELIXIR Or, Essence of Life! lrpiirrl rrimi lnro Vwfi:tntil Kx- irnriit, tMiiitiiiiiiii iioiiiiiiLt; in jirlout tli 91 !.(.-H-en(4' 1 irTIm ItnlnroiiiiMiiir, Khstr Ih tbt tmiiK of oiod- eru dincuvf nil In tho vtK'!'ih!e kiiiKiloni, bniriK en 1 untlri'lv nt'w end tmtrct ntntlioiJ til curt, lrrtfrptc tlvt nf nil Hit i. Id unit oru-i.ii t e.vt uih. OlTTIilii uiHtlicluw Iim hwu lr ettil by tb most eiul- nvut fiitfUU-Hl limit uf ihtu tlrtv. hiiiI bv thi'in uro- uouiicuil to bu uue ir thu cnaLwt modioli dUcurvrloi HLtrunu bottle win cnr ftuonii ihtiiiiiiy. iWA (i-w iKmiii ciirt's Hysterica iu Idiii'ilee. M"Ouo bittlfittr e la)itetloo of t)i llttnrt. IH" A fiw doHtm rvxione the oraue tf kvuvthHob, HeTKroui mm to tbrm 1mI(Um reetoree the oiaoK- ntwa anil fuU iwtr "t - MTTbrut tMtttlriMruni tru wnrst r nt Ini potency tT A I'hw Umm vurtra tint low vpirlttnl. WiTOnn Ih title rusturce ninotel pownr. O0A fvw itoet-i brhtg tho romi to ibo t hoek. liii "I hie raciticluo n-ntort-tt to qimuIv vliror and ro- buaf hialth tlm hmt dntiillttvi, wiru-diwu and Uo ptlriiig iIovoIub uf m-imiliil plentiiire. UA'Tlin ltmlf) piicrvntud youth, tin ovir-tackoil tnitn of hunlmie, tin rlctini if hrrue tit-ireioii, tho tutllvi'ltml milltrloK frum gnrsl UtrbilUy.ui fniiii WfHko'MH of a hhjU oimm. will ll Itnd Innnu- tlirtin and permiinxfit relief by tbe ueeuf thin Kllslr I or Bwnce ol Life. OD'l'rtce. 1 imt bottle, or three bottle for S6. j and ftirwanled by Hxprtw, oa receipt of mouey, to ! any adiireee. mo oolii or fill nrntrnfttri erurywin-n-. 1K. W. It. MKKWIK CO.. 8nle Proprietor. frbl3 derKlwww H. Kt Liberty t..New Voik. CHEROKEE PUIS SUGAR COATED Female Reguli.or tNTI'or Hit R'innvnl f wlMrn,'lunii, nntl lte liinrMiini KvHiiinriij U rnfi HtH'iirrenre oi me Mont lily PvrliMlH. tWTThpy cure or ohvlute ihoee nutnerone dlwuwe tlmt Hf.rhttf from Irroifularity, by rcuioviug thu lr-rcKt'l'trKy lt.t. ttO'Tlu'.vcQi'eSiippreeeed, UxcMeire aiid Pelnfol MrlltrllKtll)ll. Tlwiy t-ure Orwn Slcknfwv ('hhrwU.) irtVThny euro Mt-rvnnn nnd Hiiiual AftHCtioiin, Iniiue In (hi) liufk, and l.i'(r mrt of ihu biitj, lieviii-wH, fminnfj n eliultt I'XfHiou, PMlpiletlitH or tho llidrt. Lownta o( M)).ritii. Hjlrla, Hkk Htwlnrhf, Uiddtww, etc.. nr. lu a wunl, h iv-lliO'lttg the Irrrifd'arlty. tlmy iniii tliu cuuje aud with it all Ihv i-lttn that priiiK fruiu i. ttt"t,omMiiietl of moiiile roirulablH extract, they contefu tiulliiiin tlclniitrinun to euy t'onetiiutlnii, hiwnTvr duliniiit, thotr hinction ImiIiis; to eilialiHUe etreiiRlh f-r wfukii-'ee. whlih, Wliuo properly uhh, llioy iiuvur I'hII o do. IMrThy may bt Htkfi-lv itrHd at nnr nit, and at env I'.Tii.il.KXrKI'l' IH HINU TIIK KItiHf TltHKK HUNT HH, tluiiriK wlitcd Uih iintiilltn nuture ot their BCtum wmil d lu'nlllhly iHrvK r m Kimncv. ttifr-AII lotlfir. fevkiuu: lnffiriOHtinn or rt.lvict will be iroi.ty, fri-ely hiiiI tlNrii'liy viiMwetvd. tfrt'Kull flirci'tjitHH utromiinny cuch l'"K. Prire f I per Imx, or i bnxm lor fft. ttii'Heut by Hint), free of pohikm, ou receipt of price. lin?old bv all rnu-'-lHll Dnipulft. lK. W. ILMKKWHitt O., fSile I'ri'prirlDie, feht!t-ileodrwwly No. fitl,ilr ty et. New Vf.rk. NEW GOODS J. D. OSBOSN & OO'S, 113 NOlTTtI HlUfl STREET. OIUKS ANII SUA Wl.3, UII.K MSKItlllKM ANII DKi,rrij(n, UOSIKI'.V ANII FOI.OVKS, IldOUrt, HI!AHUS AND NIMH AH, UI.CITIIH. OA Ml MKItKrt AMI VK1TIN08, UKNT'H I.INKN 4 I'AJ'KK llll.l.Alto, HIIIKTH. TIKI" A N II CKAVATH. .nd n nnrlvnl-il .lock of Vulvet, Brniwol., Thn. I'l.Mnil Iiiuroln CriiMllnir. HM.Hi.ltii. VESTERM OFFiCE b& SALESROOM 117 No ii III MU St., ColiitubiiH. rilRlS MKW rAMII.Y MAHINI! MAKRS J. funr dypTntl ttitchm, has the rverMi fl no, fion, le nearly nolneleee, mwh all fahrlca perfectly , doee not an t out of nrder. drone no etilebes, in ure qneled In menhanloal and ornamental Itnlab, aud poMOMee iiiaiiT vaiuaoia imp rut-entente o?er any other Machine In nee. An examination In reapectftilly eollnlted, R8. ii. A. 8. JANNKY, Aownt. 117 8. Uiich 8t. RAH'L BKLLIfl, Oeneral Weetern Aiteut, Indlao pol le. 4mn 1 -di,Hm uw AO r NTS I Look to your laUreetet Call mod ex mine eomrthlnic nrjwntly nondod bv every nur on; or It-it Muil"e eent ritr.n, by ninll, for Twenty Ceut. that retaila for Two Lullare. bv B. L. WOL 0O1T. Mo. 17 UUATUAM SUUAfiC, NKW T0BK,1 li-wy COLUMBUS OHIO. SATURDAY MORNING. MA11CII 12. 1S64. DRUGS, AC. ROBERTS, DRUGGIST, NO. 24 N UTII HIGH STREET Otnia ros TAIL,.lrr alb at wnoi,rAL OK HI pod wll Mlclw stock of - URIION, CHEMICAIJil, PATENT MEDICINES. PERFCWERT, TOILET SOAPS, PAISTS tc OILS, VARIVIMIES. UYE STUFFS, BRUSHES, all kliida, wiarnow oiass, GLASSWARE, Wines Sc Liquorisi run mririOAi. ithwf. Tosethorwllh .rerr .rtfsls Kent In m ffnitcui.i 1'm uk riloro oil of whlcb hit. bMi. Dnrahuml Air Ouk of tb. Importer, and M.nafctarr., Mid will uo wiu v.rj low pnow WliWn4ir attention im to -rrlinrmidwif JIbjr. uctn-dli O. ROBERTS, WH0LBHALB AND BETAIL DBALBB8 HI Drugs, Chemicals, Paints, Oils, Varnishes, Patent Medi cines, Perfumery, Toilet Goods, Wines and Liquors for Medical Purposes. No. 124 North High St., OOXjTJ3VX33TJ, nrf T-d I J o. CONSIGNMENT. On Consignment. 100 tun. Cloriuuatl Kiirnnoo H, B. Vooniiry, Pig Iron H) ' Scioto " ' " 6U " MnillsoD " ' WO " Vinton " Mill., B. riTCH A SON, prM ilcf 7 rut Broail EYE ANO EAR. EYE ros AND EAR. DR. G-. A. KNAPP, UmWT, (FOllMKKLT OT N. Y.() BXOL0- V etvely tiHiiH Ultrimm. or tlie Kvei, IJwitttHu u'l irihorta ArtitiriHl Jfiyce iviAcHf ikiim, Ht 'i'7 Uuiitb iliuh nttttt't, Unlniiitiue, Otiio. AIo. mails bin buok orj the Ky and Kar for m ceute, free oofltpif to any adtlroee. ilW'WIyr BANK NOTE CO. Aiuerlcan I nk iot Co., 80DTHRAT CORKER OF MAIN & FotTBTH 8tB CINCINNATI, OHIO, ENCIUAYVb IN A HTYLK (KiHRKHPONlUNG hi witelleuce to thet of Hank Nitten, Kail Bouil end tjoonty Booile, Billi of KxHhnuKe, (ibecke, DrafU, tlvftilliuitut of Di'iHrMit, HIii, (Jardrj, Ac., Ac. Th hve udiee le under the aupervielou of OKU JON KB. tliuntnaatl iH lwiiUy . MILITARY COODS. Shoulder Straps & Swordsl wn BAVB JUST BBORIVKD TfB LA H 081 AND BEST BELKOTEU STYLES OF SHOULDER STRAPS & SWORDS Svor brought to Ibis oily ALUO, Saflhtw. Eat Cords, fluta aud Caps, AND ALL ItrlPS Or MIMTAUT OOODB. SMITH & CONRAD'S HAT STORE Now Nell Bona. Hnllilliii, 0DLDMBU8, O. n-ilt' FANCY ARTICLES. AKMAa voraa. r&viD ton wo, B. o. Moonr. IHPOBTKKS AMD DBALKRB IB Embroideries, Laces, WEITE GOODS, HOSIERY, Mitts, Gloves, Triinuiiiifrs, etc., NO. 429 MARKET STREET, 418 ComntHroe Street, Pffllil DEXl'lflA'. yl.d MUSIC. A COUlM.KrR MVH ICAI.MItUAHY. Jne Thousand Pieces of Piano Music, For Only Ten lollnra 'VIJE KG L LOW I NO BtKSAUKOF ITNIFOKM I. ef m and etyle.eind form the beat roibi tina of 'liilr' Miinir fur the Pianofurte ever published. TDK MltnK JlH(;i.e., n i-ollectlon or MA Hi M KM, VVAI.T.KS. POLK AH, HCOTTISOtl KS, KKIUWA8, gUAIHUiLltH, DONTKA IrAMt'iCH, KOnt llA.it fllCOKS nml PIANO UtC.MS.SI Vela. TIIK flll'.'W. t: It IjP PKAHLrt, arollirTtioiiuf oholre Voral Pnela Kith Via no Arvompanf nipnta. TIIK KlItVKH I'llOlU. A o.illiHtlun of Hong, Uallada, gnar-retire, rtnete, r., with Piano Amimpanininta. Of'KltATin PKAULH. A collection of tho Voce Iteaiilk-N of the Went "peran, with I'ieiio Afia-tupi menta. All of the above ant, poat paid, for J 10, or xiiiKiy at tne loilowiliK priea; nam, a?j;Hiiiiin, ft'.yfi; Full 'Jilt, a:i. Oliver IHmou A o., PubLhhera, W7 Waahiuiftoo street, B--nton. janlltt Piko'd Opera House, Cincinnati. Ohio i PHILIP PHILLIPS & CO., WHOLESALE AND VKTAIIi UAI.KH IN Will. Bi Bra4lllirV'H Celebrated I Pi a no Fortes, And Other. CARHART, KUKUIIAM & CO.'S Melodeons and Harmoniums From onr hrt,fim and aew atock of Pianos, Melo looni and Harntonluma, we will tU, or rent witb the privilege of buying, letting tho rent, pay for the In-itruntent,Pleaaecall and examine before purchasing else where, or teud for Illnatrated Price List. I'htlip I'liilli.n A Co., 77 Fourth street, Pike's Opera Houho, CINCINNATI, 0. Jnl8-il:im 8WOIIIW, 8 ANII EH, JiKt.TN, IMNTOI.N, CAKHINE8, AMMUNITION. At Wbolenlfc B. K1ITBRDOB 00..- feM-4UB 0ltdawkOll DAILY OHIO STATE JOURNAL IIIKTT, AM.KN A ProprtrM.rB. SATURDAY MORNING, MARCH 12, 1ISM. SCHLESWIG-HOLSTEIN i QUESTION. BFDBOn DIIilVKRED AT Meohanics' Hill, Philadelphia, Saturday Evening, March 5, 1804, FREOERICK DITTMANN. Mr. Chairman, Gentlemen, ami Fellow- ciiueoi : WJien, aomo two weeks airo. (wnt a oommuuication to (lie two German papers of this city, tirjjinp; my (jMrnian wuntryvioa to urrange ana Hum a maKa roeetini expressive of our Myinpalliiea Scbleswie-IlolFtf in. J little expected tltm the call would bo resitonded to m hear tily I did not expect that you would comu forth liiiuch numbers s i nee here assem bled this CTening. You remind mo of the words ef our much-honored poet. Fat he ArndL aud you satin fy aie (hat his prayer tor uertnaoy nas not neen in vain : "That Ih that loo, that iniKlily land! Great God look down ami blew that land, And five her noble children ho tils To cherish while exlutuiK'e rolle, And love with li'wrt and aid with ha ml llielriiulvereal lAthortand." Loukinir ut (his vast ftsaciiiblnzp, mv hear beats injovt'ul emotitui. Verily, 1 dm si this in one of the Imppicnt bouts of juy iit'e; for I Hiu A8chlcswij;-llolHteiuoi' mr cradle stood near llio Hboifsof the iSchlfy! I niu sun of thii iiiutipeii'ieiit nnucalltint ieo ule wliick up lo the pruseut duv. tlnouifli nil trials und Adversities, have proved true to tnc ifime ol meir Angiu-OJiixun auot'srom, ana imve not lout tneir uucieut ana pro- vcroiai lOYe oi iiDerty. i kuow wlmt that people has suffered through iMuish despot- mm unu rrussiau treaencry; aim as the itn-furtuuare have guuerally lew friends, thev vol no such ns remain their friuuds iu tlie iltivs of misfortune so imicli (he more. In tbe name of my unhappy countrymen, 1 tuanK you in me luunems ot my tjeriuan heart for your sympathy. Hut my patriotic I joy U mixed with niulancholy feelings. This evening' recalls to iny iiiem'-Vy re miniscence of my early days of the days ot my cniKiiioou, when, together with my pinys nun school mat oh, l was playing tn the lays ol .spring ou the groiMi tuoailowri of my native counlry, while the lark wns warb ling, cousttnlly ascending ami aReendinir until Kite necamo lost, to our Hifr.NL, and all that remained to us was lo listen to her warhliugn which resounded from her ivrial abodes a heavenly hymn of freedom to mortal men below; of I lie culm summer mormugri. when in my morning walks was delighted with the sweel nuaverioes of the nighimgnie ot the days of autumn, when we were gathering the clover blos som, and the dar.doliou, od the rich paturo nciUH, anu the xcene arounu us was enlivened by tlie sweetest notes of tho earmine-breasted songsters from tho neighboring hedseof Imwthorti. In short, 1 am remind ed of tbe days of youth of all tlmt I left nemnd me that was near unit uenr to me in my unlive country. Mr. Uhairmau, this meeting bus been call ed for two purposes the ono is to pive ex pression to our sympathies with hchlrswig- iiotstem, luo ouier to correct. I lie erroneous views taken by the Hchlcswia-Holbteiu , lueHion of our native American loilow- eituens. With a view to scRonmltBh thin. our object, certain resolutions were read and adopted. Permit me, before I proceed any farther, to read them in an English version: WaraiAB. Tb preeent war In Hnhleiwiir. bntb tn lie nriirin aud tiirioee fe not rightly oudemtood by tl.w Aat,l Aiuuitutn priiMi , WllKHKAM It ) ttl (lilLv i.f A irf ftvn ..ltlu..-v Gvrtuati birth arid ilrent.' who are fully com omit to ju ef tho m-rit of tlie ijiit-Btn'it hivitlved In I lint war, toooiT'i't i rii erronennii Ytewe or tiivir native American fellow-ei tlr.eii; llienriie, U It HttvM,l That In the two OuVh tea Sell. oewiir and IJuliiiein Hie Ktitte eovereicnty, uud evi-n the langiiogrj nf t)ieHMiii'(lbuUcniinot hae been arlii-trarily ii)ipriiHiH-il by the lUulfh UovL-roiaiut and thu tirti.jub t'"il fur vt ara pait. 2. That tliie nrMtritry rnlo nan only bi nut to an nd by a tutnl Heparatioa of enid Doctlui frtitn Jfin-iiurk, and bv Hit maturation of tin lr old tinit'-iion- itniil i,4rO yearn ohl conuii'ni fonililoil'in, wbtch ha hem et aiiitlu by the lante, without the an thority of law ami despite the pn.ttatine of tlie inhabitants of aid Piirlitee, In ordur tn meigo them in laotnh moiianrliy. Unit the Loiititiit Tii aly ot IHT.2. nliirh dlant- tfardeil tlm Ntale euvori'lnly vf th-i li:i'hicaand tin ir jld tyiTiinMtulii.il, le null ami void, on the prim-ipio f both iniiuiiiiial and lnt rnatiouul law. ItinoimK-li ua it la nil liiterrrft'uotMMi the part nl the --nlUtl great pitwere of hitrope with llio do men tic etlntre of (he Oi-ruian I'mitt'deration, Mlit'ivot HuJuteiQ tn n nietiibui', itmluf th" two iJiichiHH. mat wu ueruinn AiiHTK'Hiie, therefore f el aud exprt'HBimr waimitit ami titiallorahle nympHthy lor KchlriiT)f.ul(iifin ami their cattle, mid that w-hopetliat nutwithrituuditiic the eo-otilled j;reat I'ow. ere anil the dynaetic intripneri of wnne of tlm Gurmeu priaoeti, tne pn-aetit war will li-ad to tlie ludepeiid- tiucvortbe iuchlee, aud to their deliverance iron. Dauirth t omlage. 0. And (sally. That we are courinned that onr Kutclith-HueakiuiE lellow-rlticenr, eilir.ina of a frit country, will uliare our aynipaihy with an opiueeeod people, it UM'y ronie to unnerNtaitn unit tney unre hureiofore b-en niUled by the Urltith lUvfi. and tlmt the war in H'tilenwin la a fllniKKlH fertilereentab-lirihnu-ut of the liittejierahly unittil Ducbii-aorSchiort-wiu-Kvilhtffn, (I hn oriiiimil ecu t of theAnelo tnx- on,t uud lliuir dcllverauce from luulh oputeluii. These resolutions, geiitleineu, cover the whole of the Hubledwig-llolsloiu qucstUm. All that remains lor nit is to otter snmo ex- plunatory rennrks, and that will be emi nently liecotsiiTy, first, thou, whero is Rchleswig-Holsloin .' When I was iu Washington some two months ago 1 read a leader in the Wr'.IiIut-ton Chronicle, wherein the editor tin'iert''' -k to explain to tho world gotinrully, an1, to the subscribers of thu Virmu'le est0'ialyt the questions involved in theDariiih-Ger-uian (JirricnltioH nK '-he know all about it. Hn started by describing the gcographi cfll position of the Dutohies, aud came to the conclusion that tin Uerniaus, who seemed to Ihvo run stark mud, wanted tocon-niierHchlaHwiiT-llolMifliii. so thev would trcl. possesriion of the Xuydcr ea for a soa-pori. llmmense JiiHghtor.J Anu inure lately 1 noticed an articlo iua paper of this city, which is owned by (ho sime geoileuinu who publishes the Vt asmngtou Vfmmicfe. whorein, among oilier things, it was alleged that tho Dutch v of llolstetu consisted of two a Danish and a German pu t that it was situated, tho Dan isli port ion, soul h of Hohleswig, and thoUornmn portion north of Hanover nmf Mecklnnlurg. Lniiuhler. Tho next thing we shall road no doubt, will be that Hchleswig-llolsteiu forms part of the pouiusula of More a. hchleswig-Uolstein is not in Holland and the Duchies uro not so happy as to count tho Zuyder Hen among their sea-ports. Schkswig-Holstein is siluale uorih of llam-burg and of Hamburg, no doubt the editor to whom I referred has heard at least something. That, cily is a sea-port, has a lively trade, and is located on the river hi be, wlnoli uivnlcs Molstem front Hanover. On the southeast HolKtoin is bouuuYd by Meekleiiburi;: ou the east bv the Itahia: mi t,,e nortl1 ,T Soowig; and on the west by rim Nf.rth Soft Thai linva.an i nl. tl.A Otii-man part of KolMteiu, the Iiauidli part is uitunto in Lonilon, in tho oflioe of llio Thun tkrer, olhcrwiBO Timet, whenoo u miuaU strip nas been traimferreil to Hie oflico of llio rhiladelpliia i'reu. Tlie Ducliy of bolilos- wic i to tbe north or llolatein. anil m bor dered ou tlie north hy the oontiuenul part of LionmarK, on the oaal t,j tlie LHtle lie It ana tho Baltio, on the west by the North Sea. The population of tlie eountry in in Hoi-stein oxolusiTuly Uerniau, in gchleswia; about three-fourths German and one-fourth Duniiili, and numbers from t)00,()0Uto ),000,-mX). The pcoule ere mostly larmnrs. inde pendent freeholders, and without doine in- justioe to any one present, I dare say that tiiere i no oouniry in me worm where there is more wealth and intelligence than tuoro. . But the people are not only Qormans tuoy are or mat Dranoh or ihe greal Uorinan tamiiy oaueu the Anglo-Haion. HobleawiK-Holslein is the oriirinal aoat of Ihe Anirlo. Saxons, and it waa from these two Duchies that Hengrist and Ilorsa went with their followers lo bnnland, eoniiuored Ihiitooun try, and thus beoame the founders of Anglo-Siuon liberty ou tho banks of llio Thames. ami indiroctly of an improved edition of aucient Anglo-Saxon Institutions iu out Amermn Union. Any history tells you JOURNAJL. this, and it Is a fact only unknown to the organ of Norman Tories of England and to such or our American editors an ilerivi whatever little knowledge they have of Eu rope i rum sucn sources as tlie bouuou Timet. The people of tho Ihichieshave aright to independence, not only natural, but a'so legal ana imuiemormi. The Anglo-naxous oi t.oniinental fciirotte were never conuuer- ed; the powerful Charlemagne could butch er four ihouwnd five hundred of them in one day, but he could not subjugate them. No sooner had the Fraukish hordes left for other parts than that people rose again like t riKKinx iruui iierashea. I Now, Mr. Chairman, let us for one moment ro or to history, and see how 8chl-swig-Uo!- eiu came uuuer the government of the King of JJenniaik. This look place iu Ibe hTieeuth oeuiury. The two l'uidiies had then a duke by the name of Adolpbua VIII., and during his reiga, in 1448, the then King of Denmark died, and the royal line became extinct, iu consequence whereof the lMnish Diet met and held an election, which resulted in the election of Adotphus ofScbl-n-wig-Uolstein for King of Denmark. The Danish crown was oliered the Duke, but was declined by hitu, he being old And i ciiiluiess. He, however, recommended to the Danish emissaries his nephew Christian sol of llieod.irift the Fortunate, Dufco ot OMeubiiijjh nit 'I lledwig, of Schloswiir-Hol stein. The Dants then elected this Chris- Man, and he became King of Denmark undei the uame of Chrislitiu I , aud became as such the ancestor of the Oldonburgh-Danish line I Wflve years afterward, in AdolDhus of rVhleswig-llotstein died, and tho Dietot the duchies elected Christian their Duke, but subject to constitutional provisos, among which the following three are the most im ports nu I. I he said Duchies retain for all time to come their own independent State sovcr-eiirtitv.Ii They shall rouiuin inseparably united lurever. 3. Tho ducal crown shall descend lineally io tue in ue issue oi tnrtntian. Christian 1, ntored upmi the government of the Duchies on these comlitious, aud he and hie suc cessors us i hey iirjceuded the throne had to make oath 1 1ml they would numtain an respect the CotiBtit utum. Vou will perceive Iroiu this that Dei. mark never held the Duchies by right of conquest which, bar barous as it is, is recognized by interna tional law but ou (he contrary by the will or tue people, sut)eci. to comlitious contain-ed iu ihe original grunt. The right of Don mark over the Due. lies, therefore, failed as soon us the condition ur tjtialificatton was m nu ena. au4 this relation ot Ihe Duchies to Denmark was recognized or ratbor indi rectly admitted by King Christian VI IL father of tho late Krederiek Vfl., when he tsstic'i to the people of the Duchies Ins "open -ener- in mi wherein he, ny virtue of lis myal prerogative, declared that the law nf desccul should, nn failure of male issue, ie i nc same iu me uiictues as in lien mark proper. W. s not this recognizing what the people ol llio I'tichtee now 'Maimf Aud was t not also a good speoiuien of Dnnish ar rognncQ (lirihtinu VIII, died in 1848. nml hit son and successor, the "republican" i-'reil- ickt refused lo swear to the constitution ol he Dm: Inc. 'line M to I ho commotion ot WW, which ended in the London treaty of 1802. And what followed next? Let me now state to you, iu a few plain words, what have seen with my own eyes, and heard th my own ears, ami what 1 have been informed of by my own relatives, who are still living in tho Duchy of Schtcswig, and lor whose veracity ana reliability 1 vouch. Respectable and educated ladies have been rngged away trom their infants by the rudo hands of a diuukuu Danish soldiery. have beeu whipped with ibn sabres of the ragooiiB, and trighteued with the baronets of tho infantry and ritlomen, and fur no other cauao than that they were suspected loving iiieir oiu cousntution ami their country, rhysicians- have been arrested iluuiit nuy uuUiurily ot law, and taken away from rural dtmricts, where miles around uo other phvsiciuu could be bud. Whether such physician htia patients lying at the point of death was no consideration to the brutal Danes; ho was suspected of loving hla en tm try And her constitution be stowed on him by his forefathers.. Business men had every one of their letters opooed by the post oflioe clerk, and for every word written which could in any shape or way be coiiitrued to menn a Sulilcswig-Hotsteiu sentiment, they were fined uud iuiprisoued. .Men were tried My their own accusers fur high treason, and setuenoe of guilty was pronounced in their caso without any evidence of their guilt. In one case, whereof 1 have the olhotal report in my onioe, a lawyer waa found guilty of treason for a certain article published in a newspaper eigiit years before, hoe a use, as the decision says, "the words used b,y Ihe prisoner were not in themselves tieaionuble, nor were they treasonable accontiug to usual aud natural construction; but that they might he construed so as to ti mount to treason In other cases, when suspicion was raised against a incrcb-tntor a druggist, a Dauish cierK was piaccu in his storo, and the proprietor had to pay him wages, in cousidera- lon ot which tlie clerk had to report all that happened in the cauiblishmcnt to the Danish i'bict of rolice, and, then tho proprietor was fined on all sorts of pretexts until he was completely ruiued. An apothecary of Apeurade was thus robbed ol nil ho possessed, and uespuriug of nil, he lied iu an iuane asylum about three years igo. Our Oeriuan olorgytnen and school ipuehcis wore sent away nud Danes put io tneir piaoes; nut in districts where not oie person understood one word of Danish, none out iu u idi sermons were preached, none ut DauiMli biinus were sung, and tho old pious matron ft ml grey-haired patriots were eveu deprived ol the comlort of ligeon in their hours of grief. Still the people Wailed, waited patieutty for a solution of their troubles by the death of that republican' king, rrederick II., when their connection with Denmark would for-ever bo severed. Frederick died, and a new King tho is- rtue of a HoUtoiu nobleman came forth, and went even one step further than any of ITib predecessors. He gave sanction to a new consiitutinn made by the Unties, which should merge Huhleswig in the kingdom of Denmark, nml separate it noni Holstem; and when Ihe people of the Duchies protested, they wero consoled with tho London trenty to which they had been no party. 1 tlie miku ot AugiistenUurg waived his rights, his waiver does uot allect the rights of the people of the Duchies. An Augus-tenburg did uot make or grant their constitution iliat was framed by the people and ight-t in their gill cannot be granted away by any other person or persons, ami if they are, the contract will bo void for want of proper nud sulhcieut parties. This, I trust, does not renin re liirthcr argument here, whero self-government is claimed as a birthright.And now look at the conduct of that peo ple since Ibe death of Frederick Vll.( dur ing tho lust levy mouths. I ney nave met ny thousands, and although their all is at stake, you see them meet peaoeumy; every si ep Which they tnko for then didivcrauce is well considered, not a single dislurbnuce at their gatherings; only a soh niu nsseryon of their constitutional and iiniural rights; a singing of the p-iweriul Luther Hymn, a hymn ot thauks lu hunven for their nnai ue-livunnce from Denmark, to which they look as a certainty ; for they kuow that they have tho law of nil Europe on their side, and tho sympalhyof real freemen every where. Indeed, their conduct oi iaj inigm nlinost mnko us forget their gallsotry and heroism of 1818; mid whero is there a people that ever did show more of it ? Why, it Inok nn army of Prussians, an army of Aus- t rinnstau nnny of Swedes, au tinny ot norwe- eians, and an army ot Danes. toaiHiirtn mar. little band of heroes, the Schleswig-Uolstein army. Ay, and whci the blue coats and trreen coats had disarmed us, it took more than a year before the Danes even then could exact one oent of taxes from us. (luo word. Mr. Chairman, about the late Frederick VII. He has been much eulog ized hv some American paper they have nraiscd tin what annearod to them hi, vir tues, while they knew nolbiug of bis vices. No doubt they think the same standard of morality docs not apply to kings which applies to other men. i think otherwise. 1 bolievo it a self-evident trtiib, that all men are free and euual; and Ihe reverse a self- evident -be: aud llml king is uot better .than a peasant. Now. then, Frederick VII ifho bad livej) in rcnnsyWauia, would have NUMBER 208. been arrested aud talyn before a ma(islrate and fined erery ,, for ,,,eniieM; be wou d hare eerred a good term in Ihe peui- j ma iuuie.1 coD.piraor aeainsl his lawful wife. Of bis republicanism I "J"" iiiuBimimn. a tew years ifo lie snjuurned at tbe Castle or Clucks-burg, which is located in lhat portion ot rtchleswig which is belireen Ihe Seblev .nil the port uf Flensbure. and which ibis iire- biii uny oenrs me n i l e ol " rue land of tb .liiglo., and a number of old women and M men came and aeked to hare the Ger man language re-introduoed inlo their churches, as iher did not understand Dun nil. rrcderick ordered them awnr. and uireaioneu to nave inem uriren away liy his guard. That ie the republicanism of a uanisn King ! Htill, gentlemen, Denmark proper has a noerai constitution, but what does it help Ibe people of Scbleawig-ilolstein? They are Buttering under a worse despotism lor that, for I hey are siitterinit under that des potism whereof an eminent himorian, Mr, Macaular, apeuks, in nlludinir to the lion of Ireland that it is tbe worst of des potismsthe despotism of race over race. JtaglisU papers sy in pat hi to with Denmark, and that should be one reason for us in America to syiupathik-e with Hchleswiif- llolsteiii, for iu nine out of teu cases tho interest of England is notour interest, but rather tne reverse, anu tho policy of (irent Itritaiu does not kuowliighcr mutives than self-i ntc roe t. But why does England inter est nerseii lor ifeuiuark: First. Because it is necessary to main tain Denmark, in order that tbe system of otiiance or power be not overthrown. Let tue ttsk you what wo have to gain from that system. It has been created for the perpetuation of monarchy and despotism in Ihe old world. But England has still other interests nl stukc. tslie kuows that Deumark proper is too wretched nud too poor to maiuiaiu herself, if the Duchies are separated from her. She also knows that in Copenhagen there IB a stroug tSouudiuaviaii ptrty, which wants a union with Sweden and Norway, aud lhat such a united Suuudiuuvia would have the koy to tho Baltic. Lastly, Eughuid fears that the German Coufederutiuu would soon be u naval Tower, if tbe Dutch ies became dt facto what, they are and always htive been dt jure, a fJcrumu titate. Now let us see to our interest. For that oue passage from tho north fck'ii to the Baltic, the pound which utigut easily be closed hy united Scandinavia we got another pas sage, so that iu time of war it ia highly proba ble thut oue passage would he open to our .Unericsu com me roe. lhat passage is (here, ind vessels ot limited sue have parsed h rough it tor several years already. Jt consists of the Eider, hot ween Schicswig and tlolstctn, aud tbe canal connecting the Eider with the pni t of Kiol. it H little expense i ho river uud canal could be made navigable for the largest oX our merchantmen. r rom u Herman unvy we in A me ran have nothing lo fear; but Eughiud, eveu if she has no ciuso of tear, has cause for jealousy, and that is siithcient to determine her selfish policy. lu conclusion my American men da, let me, in a spirit t-j kindness, remind you of your solt'inn duties ot mankind. A great mission you have to perform. As our l iuon is a model republic, we must do all to avert danger from it, and nevert falter in our ar dent love of freedom. Whenever a people is struggling for constitutional liberty it abould huvu our sympathy. But has such beeu tne case during the last few years? There ia hungering uud Buttering Ireland; she has Beut thousands to our Union armies, and have we had any eucouragcuient lor uoir .there is uenuany, truggliug lor union aud liberty, and she iso had some or her uouicst sons among our Union voluuteers: aud have wo shown sym pathy for bur? Alt the vile slanders uf the lory press ol Eugluud on Uennauy and her oat work ot political reluruiaiiou, are zealously repeated by papers which are nowu lu be the mouth-pieces ol the Aj-lmin- itnitloo. Yen. t'roiu two urticlea iu one number of the Loudon Ttme ihe onerevil-l-.g our holy Union cause, and the other be- lieiug Ihe world as to the real nature of ihe Sclileswig-liolMtein ouch! ion the latter is coined by Ihe Philadelphia J'resnf Shame I rotund js bleeding, iter noblest sous have saeritied (heir lives on the battle-field. or havo been beheaded on the scaffold fur thoir patriotism and Poland, when America had her hour of trial, sent her Pulaskis and Kosciuskos; and now, when the Itus- lan mercenaries ot that embodiment ot despotism, the Czar, caiuo to New Vork, Americans gave them a ball, our ladies led with each other to have a shaking ot bauds with them, and these hands had been steeped deeply in Polish blood. Why, Mr. Chairman, it is to mo as if I had lo see yet these uuworihy daughters of this great Ke-publto rub their hands like Lady Maobeili, exclaiming, in the words of .Hhakspcurc: "There's theBuioll of the blood still; all the per funics of Arabia will not sweeten this little hand. At that Bussn-American ball iu New Vork there was tine music and waltzing. Did not some oue hear the cries of agony of tho broken-hearted Poles, who, that very hour, were in Ihe immeasurabl: wilds of llussia, on their way lo tbe deserts of sibm ia, as Charlemagne heard llio trumpet of Itoland fiom the far distant strait ot itoucesvulles. It bus been said of late slavery is dead. I tell you it is not, until it is radically wiped out. As long as you leave oue pair of slaves within the limits of our Union or her territories, slavery is not dead, Just tho same it is with a monarchy. A Jtepub- lic. be it as powerful as it may. is not se cure as long as 1 hero is oue monarchy ou earth, aud a monarchy is not sale fo long as llicro is ono Republic. One of the shrewdest men of the Nioeteeth Century understands this well; aud therefore to save himself and his dynasty, he murders oun Republic after tho other French, Italian, Mexican, and would tho American, if he could see a chance of success. If monarchy then wants war with the Re public, let ihe Kcpublic fight it; let it fight monarchy within the limits of inter national taw. Monarchy claims n right of interference in the internal aftairs of for eign Slates, whou it considers its own nafety endangored ; that same right of inturlerenoe wc claim; and we can do no belter service to struggling freemen in Kurope, and to mankind generally, than by maintaining the Monroe doctrine iu all its bearings, aud to the fullest extent. Europe must be helped in Washington; n vigorous prosecution of tlie war; radiuul measures lo bring this Htb llion to a olote; theu rally round the Hag once again, and out with all Austrian or French nxm-pors trom .Mexico. Wur salety is endangered by a monarchy on our borders; wo have nothing to foar from the contest; our Uuiou volunteers uio invincible for all Km one. and Napoleon, scut homo from Mexico, will soon ho at. tho end of his career; his downfall will be a signal for I ho regeneration of Lurope. Irltmcriil 4il run Tit Keveititou In Italil- nior. HK-clrtl ill)4ti'h to 111"' tliruiiicle by Peoplx'H 1 1 up. H.iunoiiti, March 6. Lieutenant-General Grant arrived hero ot noon lo-day in the Northern Central cars, having left 1 1 urns- burg this morning. lie was met at Ihe depot by a considerable number of citizens and soldiers, though' very few were aware of bis coming. Pour or five officers of his stuff accompanied bim. Tho oflicers of the railroad and George Hmall, Esq., one of tho directors, afforded ttie uiHiinguifii-'d nero and his ntan tbe most courteous faoihties at the depot nud elsewhere. Tho General was plainly clad, and seemed anxious to avoid show or paruda. There wero many, however, on seeing him, went up to shake bauds, and gavo vent to their feelings by enthusiastic shouts nf welcome. The Oeueral said, beyond all things, he was determined to avoid political demonstrations; hia business wan with war, while it existed, and his duty was to crush the spirit of treason and save the nation from destruction. When these thiugs were accompli shed, as he hoped and believed they surely would he, then it would be time enough for those whoso tastes are toward partisanship to hidulgo themselves. 1 he General and hia staff proceeded to Barnum's Hotel, where they partook of refreshments. They depnrted soon after in tbe .enrliest train for Washington. They wero chthusiaatically greeted at all poiutHftnd places whero Ibey became known, but there appcired upon the part of tho General a studied determination to evade publio diiplay, UratMantettemlUritul In W ashlar-Um.From tht Vhiladvlyhia Evtuiu TeUi;rt ) Lieuieuant-Qeoeral U. S. Grant arrived here to-night, at at 7 P. M. He drove in a hack to W ilia r d a, am! wrote on the register ihe following: 'U. 8. Uruul and son, John Rawlins, CoL Conxslock, Nashville.Tennessee.-' He proceeded to hit room, threw of his overcoat, and passed down to the dining room, accompanied by his boy. a lad about twelve years of age. He had been sealed but a very few minutes when be was dis covered by Mr. Coffey, Aesistaut Attorney (jeiierni, who passed tho word around the tables, and about the same time Hon. J. K Mnrvhead, of Pittsburg, who eat at the next table, recognized him, und rising, anounced iu a loud voice that "we huve amonir us the hero of Vicksburg." Some oue proposed three cheers, aud all rose to iheir feet und made the dining-room fairly ring with loud cheer after cheer, and fur several minutes :he euthusluam knew no bounds, General Grant quiet y bowing to bis right and left, aud military officers and civilians erowding around him. anxious to take by tbe hand tbe Western hero. When he could get an opportunity he finished his tinner, auu on leaving the room the crowd hat tilled the lobby cheered as Lt emerged and passed to his room. He took a carriage. and drove to General HaT'ok i about tigLt About a fiuarter to ten o clock fo-nigH Lieutcuant-Geoertl Gruui accompanied by several military friend" visited the Wliitr House, the President at the time w:-s hwdin ins punlio reception. lie i':-i.:'- in unannounced, and was evidently emban :t-ud. The President being made a wire of hiu pics-euee, appro iched and shook li'm by .he baud. Tho meeting waa muttmlly cordial. Tho Secret nry of State accompanied the General to tbe east room, and ou entering it theeutire crowded assembly gave him re-pa ed cheers, and there was a general rush to shako bim by the baud. No leceplion could have beeu more cordial. The Secretary of War waa sent lor, and witb other prominent officials, Boon after reached the White House. Arrangements were made to serenade Gen. Grant, but he did not return to bin hoiel at hulf-pist twelve o'clock, and the compliment was posipoued. In the City Councils last night resolutions were unanimously passed, tendering to Gen. Grant a cordial welcome, and the freedom and hospitalities of tbe city. The resolutions are to be suitably engrossed, ami presented to the General by a committee composed of the Mayor and two mem- l.an ..IT uu..l. tiwn .... I. ,.f 1 ('oiMrlitHil it open. Special iiriatch to the Chicugu Times, j "Cini-i.viuti, March 5, lWi-l. "A great interest is felt in tho radical German convention to nominate Fremont, which is to meet in Cleveland on the 10th of May. From that Convention important remits are anticipated, as tuts radical Ger man element constitutes so large a propor tion of ihe Republican parly." This dispatch is sent by a disciple of the frail or Vallandigbaiu, a drunken attache of the Cincinnati tinquinr. fll-'f con iso the secession readers of the Kirc-in-the-rear coticeru would be hugely delighted if the "radical Germans " should do bo abttrd a thing as to noiu;nate a can didate for President in the Cleveland Convention. All the Copperheads may roll the anticipated action of Ihe Geimaus like a sweet morsel under their tongues, but it will turn to ashes in their mouths. The Germans are not going to play the part of fiat s paws for Ihe Coppet heods. Should a tew mad men go to the eitreme of nomina ting candidates, their ticket will nlt poll five thousand votes in the United Sulci. I'hc Republican Germans as a body will give tho nomiuees of the Baliiium-c Cynveu- lion a cordial nud united support. The Copperheads may as well put thut iu their pipes aud BOioke it. Clucagu Tribune. tiUKArEXni'EMKVI'lM MAUVUNO, Tlireuleiietl He he I Until. Kruui tlm Haltluioro Auiurlran, Bltirrh 8,f Wn learn lhat thero has he en for the past t wo days considerable rxciteiueut in Frederick and Wnnhiiigton countiofl, giuwinir out of rebel movements on the Virginia side of the iVtruiuc, which arc supposed to be premonitory of a cavalry raid through the upper counties of Maryland. Tho farmers uro said io be sending their cattle fo places of sit fely nud a geueral removal of vtvun.b taken oliiL'C. The military authorities tni in.vnw ' are ou the alert, nud every preparation is being made for any emergency that may arise. We doubt, however, whether il is more than a mere rumor, such as are constantly alloutaloug the border. PR ONlE.CTUS OK TIIK Daily, Tri-Weekly and Weekly OHIO STATE JOURNAL FOR TIIK YEAH lHft, The wonderful events that are now transpiring in this country, upon which the eyes of the world are fixed, render a Gon Newspaper a necessity in ev. ry intelligent Family. Thankful for tlie increasing patronage that has attended their efforts to make the Ohio Static Journal a Fihnj- Class Fa milt Newspaper, the P"blJBl.er- nre prompted to continued ev-Vrta in the lirci-uon r.f progress and improvement. His their aim to malto -, 3orv -at. a complete compendium of new, a chaste and pleasant fl re-side companion, a faithful in ark it guide, a fearless aud truthful exponent nt political matters, a juinotual chronicler of Lboislative aud Congressional proceedings; and, iu short, a weekly summary of events in the political, social, religious, scientific and commercial world. With this end in view, it will contaip a full summary of current news, Congressioua Reports, Legislative Proceedings, Market Reports, (Foreign and Domestic), tbe Latest Telegraphic Dispatchos, Political Intelligence, Literary Gossip, Choice Poetry, original aud selected Editorials on ourreut. Topics, Stories, Sketches, &o. Due attention will also ho given to Agri cultural and Edncatioual Rlfnirs. Tub Nkws Department will embftico the latest Foreign and Domestic Intelligence, received by mail and telegraph, carefully col late 1, down to the hour of going to press. The War for the Union will be faith fully chronicled; each important event down he latest moment being presented, with full details of Battles, aud of Military and Naval movements. Tub Ohio State Journal, now, as here tofore, will heartily sustain tlie Administration in its efforts to put down the ex Siting frairicidal rebellion against tbo best and tbe freest government on railb. In doing this it may ho called upon at times to 'peak plainly; but it will always srcik upon conviction of duty, and never as an adulator of men in high places; and it will not hesitate to strip the guise from traitors and sympathizers with rebellion, who cloak their (reasonable sentiments under tbe hypocrit ical cry for a peace that ia to bo obtained ouly by compromise wiilt rebels in arms. TeruiN ol the Dully Journal. Sinfc'!i' tin later I bm, 1 year $7 00 niiinl Miiwcniwr, a innnthH a nv IMtt-;li" Sut)r.oi itn;rn, 3 munttm 1 76 hliili-SnUorilnj'B. 1 month 0 00 Tuncci'nlrt in ciumt or io and upward, ii cent pr wiH'k tMtch cony. To icut iu cluh of 30 and upward, 10 eeuts per k oacu copy. Term of Ihe Trl-Wekly Jonrnnl. Pinelt fhitvritrflra, 1 year H lit AO Ninni Niil'Hrriln'rn, Amontha 1 7ft Siutfte HnlMr.rilv.irri, 3 mm t thu M. 0 90 Bl,llSulMicriiJir, 1 month H 0 30 Term ol lh WHkIy JnaraaL iii1e tnbrcribttr, per year f2 00 Fmir ub-u-ritrtTi, twr year, tut to uu aihlraM, 7 W T..n si.itM!ribra. twr vttar. and nni to tho trotter- iiip i'1 tin cluh, Mint Ut onu atltlrens 15 00 Twmiiy Subscriber, Mr yu-ar, mnl oh- to tha gutter-UP Ol me cium. fi-m it) uno iu"" mv w PnltliMlii'i-ri nml rrnrfleirs. Thrall tV Uenliinn, BRUG&ISTS AID CHEMISTS, 119 SOUTH HIGH STREET snUilawSm
Object Description
Title | Daily Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1848), 1864-03-12 |
Place |
Columbus (Ohio) Franklin County (Ohio) |
Date of Original | 1864-03-12 |
Searchable Date | 1864-03-12 |
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 | 10000000026 |
Description
Title | Daily Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1848), 1864-03-12 page 1 |
Place |
Columbus (Ohio) Franklin County (Ohio) |
Searchable Date | 1864-03-12 |
Submitting Institution | Ohio History Connection |
Type | Text |
File Size | 4025.53KB |
Full Text | DRY GOODS. l c. uopkins 4 co., Cwier Fifth an Vino, OFFER AT Wholesale & Retail, BOO Fxxjozas BLACK SILKS, BOO pzsoxn FRENCH MERINOS All Colon, FIVE THOUSAND WINTER SHAWLS OYE THOUSAND LADIES' CLOAKS,! ' Black and Colend, L. C. Uopkins & Co., Cerier Flflk and Fine, FANCY DRESS . SILKS AT LOW FRICESJ L. G. HOPKINS & GO. OFFER AT THE LARGEST STOCK OF DRESS SILKS!! Ml TIIE CITY. L C. HOPKINS & CO., Corner Fiftk and Vine, OINOINN ATI, octo:fn-dir DRESS GOODS Of all IjTiude; FANCY GOODS TRIMMINGS Of nil TCIimIm ; Embroidery Goods Of till 1 viimIm ; Sh a -w 1 is Of nil JvIimIm; EVERY THING AT HEADLEY, UICIMRDS & CO. 250 and 252 South High Street. COLLEGES. S. E. oorner Fourth and Vine Sta,, OINOINU ATI. O. wtai ljr ROBACK'S BITTERS. QBEINBACKS ABB QOOD, BUT Robaok'B art Better. STOMA CII BTTTKRS Tc0 thutumnd bottln M Id uoe month. 1h miml pojiulM ttouutcli bltUra lu IUM. ROBACK'S BITTERS. Gno for nil dnnini oio tit of thii HtoHiAvb, lutiNUtHw, Llvitr OouipUiut, nil (anural dvblUly. ROBACK'S BITTERS They ihmimiii wonderful tonic prprtfi, giving I tut to tbn itptite ftud I dtijvame org iu. ROBACK'S BITTERS. I IfebHIUM LndJ", and MdVoturv ursoniwlf1 And jn tbm anoxocHflBt toolo. , ROBACK'S BITTERS. A winoglaHful each mm) vitl ramoTe lndlgvatlon mid U Urer dli- ROBACK'S BITTKKN. Tbr are belUr tha all Pille. Ponder. andoth I ROBACK'N BITTERS. Thy eaa be Iftkno without reflard to diet, appetiser thrjr baw uo eqtMl. ROIIK H'N BITTFRH. They are prepared by an old and kllirul phjriclan roia weil-anowa vegeiaiiie rnnwiin. ROBACK'S BITTERS. Wherever knows they have beeome a standard r rally I trenxtDeoing rem no j. ROBACK'S BITTERS. Try one bottle, and yoa will alwava me tbuoi and re - mnitN inuvi tDniuert. ROBACK'S BITTERS. . W. BOBACK, Kola Prprl(or Oompoandftr f Stom.rh BUtitra, Blond PanSer, .lid Blood rilU..nl IMHIIIcr .lid U.iuir.eturvr of Cl.wb. .nd 8wodi.h llmn'ltr.. .lid .11 kind, of tb. floMt dnmt.lie liquor., wlili'h .r. rld whol.Ml. or la y dwin-il f)u.nllly; .1 Ho, ort. Aft, 611 m! 08 Bui tbird rcl, Uloc'lno.ll, O. . Borwl. by Snuibta ul DmIhi Id MeiMola. BAIJLY OHIO STATE VOLUME XXVII. MI3CELLAN EOUS. " WEEKLY " Ohio State Journal, FOR 1864. A FIRST-CLASS I FAMILY NEWSPAPER THE OHIO STATE JOURNAL EAS NOW COMPLETED ITS FIRST HALF CENTURY! I .The WGIKLT EDITION OF THB JOUBNAEi Is offorvd t tho Publto with tb Morance that I It will ooaUln th IIiATBST ism Tbnt cu be obtained by I TELEGRAPH, WATT,, Army Coreespondence! ITS 0OHTCNT8 WILL TOBM TBI Choicest Rcadius! FAMILY CIRCLE! AS WILL AS FOB The Office, the Shop1 AMD TBI cowrou IT WILL CONTAIN FCIX AMI EXACT REPORTS WEEKLY MARKETS I FOB THB DDI Or THB Burma tbkb njllt advised or tni Correct Market Rates! PRODUCE AND MEIlt'DANDISK! THE POLITICAL COURSE Will be Ooutantlr and Xarnntly tot The Onion and the telitntion! It will lend .11 poulbl. Hi to Support the Government IN ITS BTBCOOLB AGAINST REBELLION I All In M doint, It will t litdrpeuden. and Vutrammvled I Firm and Unequivocal! Tertua of tbe Weekly JTournul OrMrp oh rwr .. . it n Thro, coplt. on. 70.T.. Hi. " . 8 . TS0 . IS Ml Twnty .28 I I With Mxtra eopy la the getter ap of eoh Olab o. HOTELS. THE ST. LOUIS HOTEL, Cnesnut SL. between 3d and 4th, IN THU IMMEDIATE VRHNITT Of THI 1 priori ul lUnkiuir fluuaM. .'utom Huum. Pnat Oflloe, tjoniiuoriral Kxvhange and Mm JoblriuK UOQMf. 1 b0 DMil DMIUM4I niHQ'R noato IB too city. dec24-Iy Proprietor. "THE UNION," Arch et, bet" Third and Fourth sts, XlxUa,ciolilii. THOM aB 8. WKIW, 1 BANK B. WKBB, J 1". S. WEBB cJ SONS. retiiiiiiir MANHATTAN HOTEL, Opposite the Park, Murray nfrvet, near Broadway. 3NT33Xr YORK, nrinx prowuetok having HADTniHOtm 1 MOIMOL'H DOWN TOWN HOTEL tiion-UKhly rrpatrl. fftliittl ami mhirolflliud, t now yrnl to urovid hit UiiOMtH with all th comfort of a kmk1 l ml well rutpilatrn Hoiimw. llt auttrjf." are ruaauna-hie, ami he icuarMtiUMM to )! who may rail tiimii bltn Kmd table, comfortable roum, and vr poaatbls tllHIIllOtl. II will In i.InmM to ww ell his old frlendi, Mid to weicmnit uiauy niw unw. Tim hi-u invittil. whou too cotne to tit fHtv. to i-m ' htm a vilt ; mid lu aanurm ya tlmt If you go away aiBMunniMi, 11 Mian DOl im um null 01 nmrt-iHim N. hiuhjiwh, FronrtPtor Western Reserve ANO PINE APPLE CHEESE Wo Balk by w. it. icixhihi x, dots imt Rati alien Sirn AMERICAN HOTEL, Corner High and State Streets. (nPFO.IT. TDK ST.T. BOUH.,) ooijtnucBua, o. WARDEN ft EMERY, Proprietors. NATIONAL HOTEL, NBAIl UNION DHI'liT, COLUMBl'tl, O. If. KKV.OI.IS, lruriv(or. BaKirakn tAkcn to and from tho Demit wltlnmt Ieharutt. Pnumn witthtnK ti tnk any of tht Ninhl Toin, will he inntiitly n.tuii(iti U. iiihi4-Ub BATES HOUSE, ZnaiananoIlM, Ind. J. ! IIOLTOJV, Proprietor. DKFORR TAKIXO TIIK APTFM TAKINOTIIH KILvi Elixir. IMC. HICfGiri'N REJUVENATING ELIXIR Or, Essence of Life! lrpiirrl rrimi lnro Vwfi:tntil Kx- irnriit, tMiiitiiiiiiii iioiiiiiiLt; in jirlout tli 91 !.(.-H-en(4' 1 irTIm ItnlnroiiiiMiiir, Khstr Ih tbt tmiiK of oiod- eru dincuvf nil In tho vtK'!'ih!e kiiiKiloni, bniriK en 1 untlri'lv nt'w end tmtrct ntntlioiJ til curt, lrrtfrptc tlvt nf nil Hit i. Id unit oru-i.ii t e.vt uih. OlTTIilii uiHtlicluw Iim hwu lr ettil by tb most eiul- nvut fiitfUU-Hl limit uf ihtu tlrtv. hiiiI bv thi'in uro- uouiicuil to bu uue ir thu cnaLwt modioli dUcurvrloi HLtrunu bottle win cnr ftuonii ihtiiiiiiy. iWA (i-w iKmiii ciirt's Hysterica iu Idiii'ilee. M"Ouo bittlfittr e la)itetloo of t)i llttnrt. IH" A fiw doHtm rvxione the oraue tf kvuvthHob, HeTKroui mm to tbrm 1mI(Um reetoree the oiaoK- ntwa anil fuU iwtr "t - MTTbrut tMtttlriMruni tru wnrst r nt Ini potency tT A I'hw Umm vurtra tint low vpirlttnl. WiTOnn Ih title rusturce ninotel pownr. O0A fvw itoet-i brhtg tho romi to ibo t hoek. liii "I hie raciticluo n-ntort-tt to qimuIv vliror and ro- buaf hialth tlm hmt dntiillttvi, wiru-diwu and Uo ptlriiig iIovoIub uf m-imiliil plentiiire. UA'Tlin ltmlf) piicrvntud youth, tin ovir-tackoil tnitn of hunlmie, tin rlctini if hrrue tit-ireioii, tho tutllvi'ltml milltrloK frum gnrsl UtrbilUy.ui fniiii WfHko'MH of a hhjU oimm. will ll Itnd Innnu- tlirtin and permiinxfit relief by tbe ueeuf thin Kllslr I or Bwnce ol Life. OD'l'rtce. 1 imt bottle, or three bottle for S6. j and ftirwanled by Hxprtw, oa receipt of mouey, to ! any adiireee. mo oolii or fill nrntrnfttri erurywin-n-. 1K. W. It. MKKWIK CO.. 8nle Proprietor. frbl3 derKlwww H. Kt Liberty t..New Voik. CHEROKEE PUIS SUGAR COATED Female Reguli.or tNTI'or Hit R'innvnl f wlMrn,'lunii, nntl lte liinrMiini KvHiiinriij U rnfi HtH'iirrenre oi me Mont lily PvrliMlH. tWTThpy cure or ohvlute ihoee nutnerone dlwuwe tlmt Hf.rhttf from Irroifularity, by rcuioviug thu lr-rcKt'l'trKy lt.t. ttO'Tlu'.vcQi'eSiippreeeed, UxcMeire aiid Pelnfol MrlltrllKtll)ll. Tlwiy t-ure Orwn Slcknfwv ('hhrwU.) irtVThny euro Mt-rvnnn nnd Hiiiual AftHCtioiin, Iniiue In (hi) liufk, and l.i'(r mrt of ihu biitj, lieviii-wH, fminnfj n eliultt I'XfHiou, PMlpiletlitH or tho llidrt. Lownta o( M)).ritii. Hjlrla, Hkk Htwlnrhf, Uiddtww, etc.. nr. lu a wunl, h iv-lliO'lttg the Irrrifd'arlty. tlmy iniii tliu cuuje aud with it all Ihv i-lttn that priiiK fruiu i. ttt"t,omMiiietl of moiiile roirulablH extract, they contefu tiulliiiin tlclniitrinun to euy t'onetiiutlnii, hiwnTvr duliniiit, thotr hinction ImiIiis; to eilialiHUe etreiiRlh f-r wfukii-'ee. whlih, Wliuo properly uhh, llioy iiuvur I'hII o do. IMrThy may bt Htkfi-lv itrHd at nnr nit, and at env I'.Tii.il.KXrKI'l' IH HINU TIIK KItiHf TltHKK HUNT HH, tluiiriK wlitcd Uih iintiilltn nuture ot their BCtum wmil d lu'nlllhly iHrvK r m Kimncv. ttifr-AII lotlfir. fevkiuu: lnffiriOHtinn or rt.lvict will be iroi.ty, fri-ely hiiiI tlNrii'liy viiMwetvd. tfrt'Kull flirci'tjitHH utromiinny cuch l'"K. Prire f I per Imx, or i bnxm lor fft. ttii'Heut by Hint), free of pohikm, ou receipt of price. lin?old bv all rnu-'-lHll Dnipulft. lK. W. ILMKKWHitt O., fSile I'ri'prirlDie, feht!t-ileodrwwly No. fitl,ilr ty et. New Vf.rk. NEW GOODS J. D. OSBOSN & OO'S, 113 NOlTTtI HlUfl STREET. OIUKS ANII SUA Wl.3, UII.K MSKItlllKM ANII DKi,rrij(n, UOSIKI'.V ANII FOI.OVKS, IldOUrt, HI!AHUS AND NIMH AH, UI.CITIIH. OA Ml MKItKrt AMI VK1TIN08, UKNT'H I.INKN 4 I'AJ'KK llll.l.Alto, HIIIKTH. TIKI" A N II CKAVATH. .nd n nnrlvnl-il .lock of Vulvet, Brniwol., Thn. I'l.Mnil Iiiuroln CriiMllnir. HM.Hi.ltii. VESTERM OFFiCE b& SALESROOM 117 No ii III MU St., ColiitubiiH. rilRlS MKW rAMII.Y MAHINI! MAKRS J. funr dypTntl ttitchm, has the rverMi fl no, fion, le nearly nolneleee, mwh all fahrlca perfectly , doee not an t out of nrder. drone no etilebes, in ure qneled In menhanloal and ornamental Itnlab, aud poMOMee iiiaiiT vaiuaoia imp rut-entente o?er any other Machine In nee. An examination In reapectftilly eollnlted, R8. ii. A. 8. JANNKY, Aownt. 117 8. Uiich 8t. RAH'L BKLLIfl, Oeneral Weetern Aiteut, Indlao pol le. 4mn 1 -di,Hm uw AO r NTS I Look to your laUreetet Call mod ex mine eomrthlnic nrjwntly nondod bv every nur on; or It-it Muil"e eent ritr.n, by ninll, for Twenty Ceut. that retaila for Two Lullare. bv B. L. WOL 0O1T. Mo. 17 UUATUAM SUUAfiC, NKW T0BK,1 li-wy COLUMBUS OHIO. SATURDAY MORNING. MA11CII 12. 1S64. DRUGS, AC. ROBERTS, DRUGGIST, NO. 24 N UTII HIGH STREET Otnia ros TAIL,.lrr alb at wnoi,rAL OK HI pod wll Mlclw stock of - URIION, CHEMICAIJil, PATENT MEDICINES. PERFCWERT, TOILET SOAPS, PAISTS tc OILS, VARIVIMIES. UYE STUFFS, BRUSHES, all kliida, wiarnow oiass, GLASSWARE, Wines Sc Liquorisi run mririOAi. ithwf. Tosethorwllh .rerr .rtfsls Kent In m ffnitcui.i 1'm uk riloro oil of whlcb hit. bMi. Dnrahuml Air Ouk of tb. Importer, and M.nafctarr., Mid will uo wiu v.rj low pnow WliWn4ir attention im to -rrlinrmidwif JIbjr. uctn-dli O. ROBERTS, WH0LBHALB AND BETAIL DBALBB8 HI Drugs, Chemicals, Paints, Oils, Varnishes, Patent Medi cines, Perfumery, Toilet Goods, Wines and Liquors for Medical Purposes. No. 124 North High St., OOXjTJ3VX33TJ, nrf T-d I J o. CONSIGNMENT. On Consignment. 100 tun. Cloriuuatl Kiirnnoo H, B. Vooniiry, Pig Iron H) ' Scioto " ' " 6U " MnillsoD " ' WO " Vinton " Mill., B. riTCH A SON, prM ilcf 7 rut Broail EYE ANO EAR. EYE ros AND EAR. DR. G-. A. KNAPP, UmWT, (FOllMKKLT OT N. Y.() BXOL0- V etvely tiHiiH Ultrimm. or tlie Kvei, IJwitttHu u'l irihorta ArtitiriHl Jfiyce iviAcHf ikiim, Ht 'i'7 Uuiitb iliuh nttttt't, Unlniiitiue, Otiio. AIo. mails bin buok orj the Ky and Kar for m ceute, free oofltpif to any adtlroee. ilW'WIyr BANK NOTE CO. Aiuerlcan I nk iot Co., 80DTHRAT CORKER OF MAIN & FotTBTH 8tB CINCINNATI, OHIO, ENCIUAYVb IN A HTYLK (KiHRKHPONlUNG hi witelleuce to thet of Hank Nitten, Kail Bouil end tjoonty Booile, Billi of KxHhnuKe, (ibecke, DrafU, tlvftilliuitut of Di'iHrMit, HIii, (Jardrj, Ac., Ac. Th hve udiee le under the aupervielou of OKU JON KB. tliuntnaatl iH lwiiUy . MILITARY COODS. Shoulder Straps & Swordsl wn BAVB JUST BBORIVKD TfB LA H 081 AND BEST BELKOTEU STYLES OF SHOULDER STRAPS & SWORDS Svor brought to Ibis oily ALUO, Saflhtw. Eat Cords, fluta aud Caps, AND ALL ItrlPS Or MIMTAUT OOODB. SMITH & CONRAD'S HAT STORE Now Nell Bona. Hnllilliii, 0DLDMBU8, O. n-ilt' FANCY ARTICLES. AKMAa voraa. r&viD ton wo, B. o. Moonr. IHPOBTKKS AMD DBALKRB IB Embroideries, Laces, WEITE GOODS, HOSIERY, Mitts, Gloves, Triinuiiiifrs, etc., NO. 429 MARKET STREET, 418 ComntHroe Street, Pffllil DEXl'lflA'. yl.d MUSIC. A COUlM.KrR MVH ICAI.MItUAHY. Jne Thousand Pieces of Piano Music, For Only Ten lollnra 'VIJE KG L LOW I NO BtKSAUKOF ITNIFOKM I. ef m and etyle.eind form the beat roibi tina of 'liilr' Miinir fur the Pianofurte ever published. TDK MltnK JlH(;i.e., n i-ollectlon or MA Hi M KM, VVAI.T.KS. POLK AH, HCOTTISOtl KS, KKIUWA8, gUAIHUiLltH, DONTKA IrAMt'iCH, KOnt llA.it fllCOKS nml PIANO UtC.MS.SI Vela. TIIK flll'.'W. t: It IjP PKAHLrt, arollirTtioiiuf oholre Voral Pnela Kith Via no Arvompanf nipnta. TIIK KlItVKH I'llOlU. A o.illiHtlun of Hong, Uallada, gnar-retire, rtnete, r., with Piano Amimpanininta. Of'KltATin PKAULH. A collection of tho Voce Iteaiilk-N of the Went "peran, with I'ieiio Afia-tupi menta. All of the above ant, poat paid, for J 10, or xiiiKiy at tne loilowiliK priea; nam, a?j;Hiiiiin, ft'.yfi; Full 'Jilt, a:i. Oliver IHmou A o., PubLhhera, W7 Waahiuiftoo street, B--nton. janlltt Piko'd Opera House, Cincinnati. Ohio i PHILIP PHILLIPS & CO., WHOLESALE AND VKTAIIi UAI.KH IN Will. Bi Bra4lllirV'H Celebrated I Pi a no Fortes, And Other. CARHART, KUKUIIAM & CO.'S Melodeons and Harmoniums From onr hrt,fim and aew atock of Pianos, Melo looni and Harntonluma, we will tU, or rent witb the privilege of buying, letting tho rent, pay for the In-itruntent,Pleaaecall and examine before purchasing else where, or teud for Illnatrated Price List. I'htlip I'liilli.n A Co., 77 Fourth street, Pike's Opera Houho, CINCINNATI, 0. Jnl8-il:im 8WOIIIW, 8 ANII EH, JiKt.TN, IMNTOI.N, CAKHINE8, AMMUNITION. At Wbolenlfc B. K1ITBRDOB 00..- feM-4UB 0ltdawkOll DAILY OHIO STATE JOURNAL IIIKTT, AM.KN A ProprtrM.rB. SATURDAY MORNING, MARCH 12, 1ISM. SCHLESWIG-HOLSTEIN i QUESTION. BFDBOn DIIilVKRED AT Meohanics' Hill, Philadelphia, Saturday Evening, March 5, 1804, FREOERICK DITTMANN. Mr. Chairman, Gentlemen, ami Fellow- ciiueoi : WJien, aomo two weeks airo. (wnt a oommuuication to (lie two German papers of this city, tirjjinp; my (jMrnian wuntryvioa to urrange ana Hum a maKa roeetini expressive of our Myinpalliiea Scbleswie-IlolFtf in. J little expected tltm the call would bo resitonded to m hear tily I did not expect that you would comu forth liiiuch numbers s i nee here assem bled this CTening. You remind mo of the words ef our much-honored poet. Fat he ArndL aud you satin fy aie (hat his prayer tor uertnaoy nas not neen in vain : "That Ih that loo, that iniKlily land! Great God look down ami blew that land, And five her noble children ho tils To cherish while exlutuiK'e rolle, And love with li'wrt and aid with ha ml llielriiulvereal lAthortand." Loukinir ut (his vast ftsaciiiblnzp, mv hear beats injovt'ul emotitui. Verily, 1 dm si this in one of the Imppicnt bouts of juy iit'e; for I Hiu A8chlcswij;-llolHteiuoi' mr cradle stood near llio Hboifsof the iSchlfy! I niu sun of thii iiiutipeii'ieiit nnucalltint ieo ule wliick up lo the pruseut duv. tlnouifli nil trials und Adversities, have proved true to tnc ifime ol meir Angiu-OJiixun auot'srom, ana imve not lout tneir uucieut ana pro- vcroiai lOYe oi iiDerty. i kuow wlmt that people has suffered through iMuish despot- mm unu rrussiau treaencry; aim as the itn-furtuuare have guuerally lew friends, thev vol no such ns remain their friuuds iu tlie iltivs of misfortune so imicli (he more. In tbe name of my unhappy countrymen, 1 tuanK you in me luunems ot my tjeriuan heart for your sympathy. Hut my patriotic I joy U mixed with niulancholy feelings. This evening' recalls to iny iiiem'-Vy re miniscence of my early days of the days ot my cniKiiioou, when, together with my pinys nun school mat oh, l was playing tn the lays ol .spring ou the groiMi tuoailowri of my native counlry, while the lark wns warb ling, cousttnlly ascending ami aReendinir until Kite necamo lost, to our Hifr.NL, and all that remained to us was lo listen to her warhliugn which resounded from her ivrial abodes a heavenly hymn of freedom to mortal men below; of I lie culm summer mormugri. when in my morning walks was delighted with the sweel nuaverioes of the nighimgnie ot the days of autumn, when we were gathering the clover blos som, and the dar.doliou, od the rich paturo nciUH, anu the xcene arounu us was enlivened by tlie sweetest notes of tho earmine-breasted songsters from tho neighboring hedseof Imwthorti. In short, 1 am remind ed of tbe days of youth of all tlmt I left nemnd me that was near unit uenr to me in my unlive country. Mr. Uhairmau, this meeting bus been call ed for two purposes the ono is to pive ex pression to our sympathies with hchlrswig- iiotstem, luo ouier to correct. I lie erroneous views taken by the Hchlcswia-Holbteiu , lueHion of our native American loilow- eituens. With a view to scRonmltBh thin. our object, certain resolutions were read and adopted. Permit me, before I proceed any farther, to read them in an English version: WaraiAB. Tb preeent war In Hnhleiwiir. bntb tn lie nriirin aud tiirioee fe not rightly oudemtood by tl.w Aat,l Aiuuitutn priiMi , WllKHKAM It ) ttl (lilLv i.f A irf ftvn ..ltlu..-v Gvrtuati birth arid ilrent.' who are fully com omit to ju ef tho m-rit of tlie ijiit-Btn'it hivitlved In I lint war, toooiT'i't i rii erronennii Ytewe or tiivir native American fellow-ei tlr.eii; llienriie, U It HttvM,l That In the two OuVh tea Sell. oewiir and IJuliiiein Hie Ktitte eovereicnty, uud evi-n the langiiogrj nf t)ieHMiii'(lbuUcniinot hae been arlii-trarily ii)ipriiHiH-il by the lUulfh UovL-roiaiut and thu tirti.jub t'"il fur vt ara pait. 2. That tliie nrMtritry rnlo nan only bi nut to an nd by a tutnl Heparatioa of enid Doctlui frtitn Jfin-iiurk, and bv Hit maturation of tin lr old tinit'-iion- itniil i,4rO yearn ohl conuii'ni fonililoil'in, wbtch ha hem et aiiitlu by the lante, without the an thority of law ami despite the pn.ttatine of tlie inhabitants of aid Piirlitee, In ordur tn meigo them in laotnh moiianrliy. Unit the Loiititiit Tii aly ot IHT.2. nliirh dlant- tfardeil tlm Ntale euvori'lnly vf th-i li:i'hicaand tin ir jld tyiTiinMtulii.il, le null ami void, on the prim-ipio f both iniiuiiiiial and lnt rnatiouul law. ItinoimK-li ua it la nil liiterrrft'uotMMi the part nl the --nlUtl great pitwere of hitrope with llio do men tic etlntre of (he Oi-ruian I'mitt'deration, Mlit'ivot HuJuteiQ tn n nietiibui', itmluf th" two iJiichiHH. mat wu ueruinn AiiHTK'Hiie, therefore f el aud exprt'HBimr waimitit ami titiallorahle nympHthy lor KchlriiT)f.ul(iifin ami their cattle, mid that w-hopetliat nutwithrituuditiic the eo-otilled j;reat I'ow. ere anil the dynaetic intripneri of wnne of tlm Gurmeu priaoeti, tne pn-aetit war will li-ad to tlie ludepeiid- tiucvortbe iuchlee, aud to their deliverance iron. Dauirth t omlage. 0. And (sally. That we are courinned that onr Kutclith-HueakiuiE lellow-rlticenr, eilir.ina of a frit country, will uliare our aynipaihy with an opiueeeod people, it UM'y ronie to unnerNtaitn unit tney unre hureiofore b-en niUled by the Urltith lUvfi. and tlmt the war in H'tilenwin la a fllniKKlH fertilereentab-lirihnu-ut of the liittejierahly unittil Ducbii-aorSchiort-wiu-Kvilhtffn, (I hn oriiiimil ecu t of theAnelo tnx- on,t uud lliuir dcllverauce from luulh oputeluii. These resolutions, geiitleineu, cover the whole of the Hubledwig-llolsloiu qucstUm. All that remains lor nit is to otter snmo ex- plunatory rennrks, and that will be emi nently liecotsiiTy, first, thou, whero is Rchleswig-Holsloin .' When I was iu Washington some two months ago 1 read a leader in the Wr'.IiIut-ton Chronicle, wherein the editor tin'iert''' -k to explain to tho world gotinrully, an1, to the subscribers of thu Virmu'le est0'ialyt the questions involved in theDariiih-Ger-uian (JirricnltioH nK '-he know all about it. Hn started by describing the gcographi cfll position of the Dutohies, aud came to the conclusion that tin Uerniaus, who seemed to Ihvo run stark mud, wanted tocon-niierHchlaHwiiT-llolMifliii. so thev would trcl. possesriion of the Xuydcr ea for a soa-pori. llmmense JiiHghtor.J Anu inure lately 1 noticed an articlo iua paper of this city, which is owned by (ho sime geoileuinu who publishes the Vt asmngtou Vfmmicfe. whorein, among oilier things, it was alleged that tho Dutch v of llolstetu consisted of two a Danish and a German pu t that it was situated, tho Dan isli port ion, soul h of Hohleswig, and thoUornmn portion north of Hanover nmf Mecklnnlurg. Lniiuhler. Tho next thing we shall road no doubt, will be that Hchleswig-llolsteiu forms part of the pouiusula of More a. hchleswig-Uolstein is not in Holland and the Duchies uro not so happy as to count tho Zuyder Hen among their sea-ports. Schkswig-Holstein is siluale uorih of llam-burg and of Hamburg, no doubt the editor to whom I referred has heard at least something. That, cily is a sea-port, has a lively trade, and is located on the river hi be, wlnoli uivnlcs Molstem front Hanover. On the southeast HolKtoin is bouuuYd by Meekleiiburi;: ou the east bv the Itahia: mi t,,e nortl1 ,T Soowig; and on the west by rim Nf.rth Soft Thai linva.an i nl. tl.A Otii-man part of KolMteiu, the Iiauidli part is uitunto in Lonilon, in tho oflioe of llio Thun tkrer, olhcrwiBO Timet, whenoo u miuaU strip nas been traimferreil to Hie oflico of llio rhiladelpliia i'reu. Tlie Ducliy of bolilos- wic i to tbe north or llolatein. anil m bor dered ou tlie north hy the oontiuenul part of LionmarK, on the oaal t,j tlie LHtle lie It ana tho Baltio, on the west by the North Sea. The population of tlie eountry in in Hoi-stein oxolusiTuly Uerniau, in gchleswia; about three-fourths German and one-fourth Duniiili, and numbers from t)00,()0Uto ),000,-mX). The pcoule ere mostly larmnrs. inde pendent freeholders, and without doine in- justioe to any one present, I dare say that tiiere i no oouniry in me worm where there is more wealth and intelligence than tuoro. . But the people are not only Qormans tuoy are or mat Dranoh or ihe greal Uorinan tamiiy oaueu the Anglo-Haion. HobleawiK-Holslein is the oriirinal aoat of Ihe Anirlo. Saxons, and it waa from these two Duchies that Hengrist and Ilorsa went with their followers lo bnnland, eoniiuored Ihiitooun try, and thus beoame the founders of Anglo-Siuon liberty ou tho banks of llio Thames. ami indiroctly of an improved edition of aucient Anglo-Saxon Institutions iu out Amermn Union. Any history tells you JOURNAJL. this, and it Is a fact only unknown to the organ of Norman Tories of England and to such or our American editors an ilerivi whatever little knowledge they have of Eu rope i rum sucn sources as tlie bouuou Timet. The people of tho Ihichieshave aright to independence, not only natural, but a'so legal ana imuiemormi. The Anglo-naxous oi t.oniinental fciirotte were never conuuer- ed; the powerful Charlemagne could butch er four ihouwnd five hundred of them in one day, but he could not subjugate them. No sooner had the Fraukish hordes left for other parts than that people rose again like t riKKinx iruui iierashea. I Now, Mr. Chairman, let us for one moment ro or to history, and see how 8chl-swig-Uo!- eiu came uuuer the government of the King of JJenniaik. This look place iu Ibe hTieeuth oeuiury. The two l'uidiies had then a duke by the name of Adolpbua VIII., and during his reiga, in 1448, the then King of Denmark died, and the royal line became extinct, iu consequence whereof the lMnish Diet met and held an election, which resulted in the election of Adotphus ofScbl-n-wig-Uolstein for King of Denmark. The Danish crown was oliered the Duke, but was declined by hitu, he being old And i ciiiluiess. He, however, recommended to the Danish emissaries his nephew Christian sol of llieod.irift the Fortunate, Dufco ot OMeubiiijjh nit 'I lledwig, of Schloswiir-Hol stein. The Dants then elected this Chris- Man, and he became King of Denmark undei the uame of Chrislitiu I , aud became as such the ancestor of the Oldonburgh-Danish line I Wflve years afterward, in AdolDhus of rVhleswig-llotstein died, and tho Dietot the duchies elected Christian their Duke, but subject to constitutional provisos, among which the following three are the most im ports nu I. I he said Duchies retain for all time to come their own independent State sovcr-eiirtitv.Ii They shall rouiuin inseparably united lurever. 3. Tho ducal crown shall descend lineally io tue in ue issue oi tnrtntian. Christian 1, ntored upmi the government of the Duchies on these comlitious, aud he and hie suc cessors us i hey iirjceuded the throne had to make oath 1 1ml they would numtain an respect the CotiBtit utum. Vou will perceive Iroiu this that Dei. mark never held the Duchies by right of conquest which, bar barous as it is, is recognized by interna tional law but ou (he contrary by the will or tue people, sut)eci. to comlitious contain-ed iu ihe original grunt. The right of Don mark over the Due. lies, therefore, failed as soon us the condition ur tjtialificatton was m nu ena. au4 this relation ot Ihe Duchies to Denmark was recognized or ratbor indi rectly admitted by King Christian VI IL father of tho late Krederiek Vfl., when he tsstic'i to the people of the Duchies Ins "open -ener- in mi wherein he, ny virtue of lis myal prerogative, declared that the law nf desccul should, nn failure of male issue, ie i nc same iu me uiictues as in lien mark proper. W. s not this recognizing what the people ol llio I'tichtee now 'Maimf Aud was t not also a good speoiuien of Dnnish ar rognncQ (lirihtinu VIII, died in 1848. nml hit son and successor, the "republican" i-'reil- ickt refused lo swear to the constitution ol he Dm: Inc. 'line M to I ho commotion ot WW, which ended in the London treaty of 1802. And what followed next? Let me now state to you, iu a few plain words, what have seen with my own eyes, and heard th my own ears, ami what 1 have been informed of by my own relatives, who are still living in tho Duchy of Schtcswig, and lor whose veracity ana reliability 1 vouch. Respectable and educated ladies have been rngged away trom their infants by the rudo hands of a diuukuu Danish soldiery. have beeu whipped with ibn sabres of the ragooiiB, and trighteued with the baronets of tho infantry and ritlomen, and fur no other cauao than that they were suspected loving iiieir oiu cousntution ami their country, rhysicians- have been arrested iluuiit nuy uuUiurily ot law, and taken away from rural dtmricts, where miles around uo other phvsiciuu could be bud. Whether such physician htia patients lying at the point of death was no consideration to the brutal Danes; ho was suspected of loving hla en tm try And her constitution be stowed on him by his forefathers.. Business men had every one of their letters opooed by the post oflioe clerk, and for every word written which could in any shape or way be coiiitrued to menn a Sulilcswig-Hotsteiu sentiment, they were fined uud iuiprisoued. .Men were tried My their own accusers fur high treason, and setuenoe of guilty was pronounced in their caso without any evidence of their guilt. In one case, whereof 1 have the olhotal report in my onioe, a lawyer waa found guilty of treason for a certain article published in a newspaper eigiit years before, hoe a use, as the decision says, "the words used b,y Ihe prisoner were not in themselves tieaionuble, nor were they treasonable accontiug to usual aud natural construction; but that they might he construed so as to ti mount to treason In other cases, when suspicion was raised against a incrcb-tntor a druggist, a Dauish cierK was piaccu in his storo, and the proprietor had to pay him wages, in cousidera- lon ot which tlie clerk had to report all that happened in the cauiblishmcnt to the Danish i'bict of rolice, and, then tho proprietor was fined on all sorts of pretexts until he was completely ruiued. An apothecary of Apeurade was thus robbed ol nil ho possessed, and uespuriug of nil, he lied iu an iuane asylum about three years igo. Our Oeriuan olorgytnen and school ipuehcis wore sent away nud Danes put io tneir piaoes; nut in districts where not oie person understood one word of Danish, none out iu u idi sermons were preached, none ut DauiMli biinus were sung, and tho old pious matron ft ml grey-haired patriots were eveu deprived ol the comlort of ligeon in their hours of grief. Still the people Wailed, waited patieutty for a solution of their troubles by the death of that republican' king, rrederick II., when their connection with Denmark would for-ever bo severed. Frederick died, and a new King tho is- rtue of a HoUtoiu nobleman came forth, and went even one step further than any of ITib predecessors. He gave sanction to a new consiitutinn made by the Unties, which should merge Huhleswig in the kingdom of Denmark, nml separate it noni Holstem; and when Ihe people of the Duchies protested, they wero consoled with tho London trenty to which they had been no party. 1 tlie miku ot AugiistenUurg waived his rights, his waiver does uot allect the rights of the people of the Duchies. An Augus-tenburg did uot make or grant their constitution iliat was framed by the people and ight-t in their gill cannot be granted away by any other person or persons, ami if they are, the contract will bo void for want of proper nud sulhcieut parties. This, I trust, does not renin re liirthcr argument here, whero self-government is claimed as a birthright.And now look at the conduct of that peo ple since Ibe death of Frederick Vll.( dur ing tho lust levy mouths. I ney nave met ny thousands, and although their all is at stake, you see them meet peaoeumy; every si ep Which they tnko for then didivcrauce is well considered, not a single dislurbnuce at their gatherings; only a soh niu nsseryon of their constitutional and iiniural rights; a singing of the p-iweriul Luther Hymn, a hymn ot thauks lu hunven for their nnai ue-livunnce from Denmark, to which they look as a certainty ; for they kuow that they have tho law of nil Europe on their side, and tho sympalhyof real freemen every where. Indeed, their conduct oi iaj inigm nlinost mnko us forget their gallsotry and heroism of 1818; mid whero is there a people that ever did show more of it ? Why, it Inok nn army of Prussians, an army of Aus- t rinnstau nnny of Swedes, au tinny ot norwe- eians, and an army ot Danes. toaiHiirtn mar. little band of heroes, the Schleswig-Uolstein army. Ay, and whci the blue coats and trreen coats had disarmed us, it took more than a year before the Danes even then could exact one oent of taxes from us. (luo word. Mr. Chairman, about the late Frederick VII. He has been much eulog ized hv some American paper they have nraiscd tin what annearod to them hi, vir tues, while they knew nolbiug of bis vices. No doubt they think the same standard of morality docs not apply to kings which applies to other men. i think otherwise. 1 bolievo it a self-evident trtiib, that all men are free and euual; and Ihe reverse a self- evident -be: aud llml king is uot better .than a peasant. Now. then, Frederick VII ifho bad livej) in rcnnsyWauia, would have NUMBER 208. been arrested aud talyn before a ma(islrate and fined erery ,, for ,,,eniieM; be wou d hare eerred a good term in Ihe peui- j ma iuuie.1 coD.piraor aeainsl his lawful wife. Of bis republicanism I "J"" iiiuBimimn. a tew years ifo lie snjuurned at tbe Castle or Clucks-burg, which is located in lhat portion ot rtchleswig which is belireen Ihe Seblev .nil the port uf Flensbure. and which ibis iire- biii uny oenrs me n i l e ol " rue land of tb .liiglo., and a number of old women and M men came and aeked to hare the Ger man language re-introduoed inlo their churches, as iher did not understand Dun nil. rrcderick ordered them awnr. and uireaioneu to nave inem uriren away liy his guard. That ie the republicanism of a uanisn King ! Htill, gentlemen, Denmark proper has a noerai constitution, but what does it help Ibe people of Scbleawig-ilolstein? They are Buttering under a worse despotism lor that, for I hey are siitterinit under that des potism whereof an eminent himorian, Mr, Macaular, apeuks, in nlludinir to the lion of Ireland that it is tbe worst of des potismsthe despotism of race over race. JtaglisU papers sy in pat hi to with Denmark, and that should be one reason for us in America to syiupathik-e with Hchleswiif- llolsteiii, for iu nine out of teu cases tho interest of England is notour interest, but rather tne reverse, anu tho policy of (irent Itritaiu does not kuowliighcr mutives than self-i ntc roe t. But why does England inter est nerseii lor ifeuiuark: First. Because it is necessary to main tain Denmark, in order that tbe system of otiiance or power be not overthrown. Let tue ttsk you what wo have to gain from that system. It has been created for the perpetuation of monarchy and despotism in Ihe old world. But England has still other interests nl stukc. tslie kuows that Deumark proper is too wretched nud too poor to maiuiaiu herself, if the Duchies are separated from her. She also knows that in Copenhagen there IB a stroug tSouudiuaviaii ptrty, which wants a union with Sweden and Norway, aud lhat such a united Suuudiuuvia would have the koy to tho Baltic. Lastly, Eughuid fears that the German Coufederutiuu would soon be u naval Tower, if tbe Dutch ies became dt facto what, they are and always htive been dt jure, a fJcrumu titate. Now let us see to our interest. For that oue passage from tho north fck'ii to the Baltic, the pound which utigut easily be closed hy united Scandinavia we got another pas sage, so that iu time of war it ia highly proba ble thut oue passage would he open to our .Unericsu com me roe. lhat passage is (here, ind vessels ot limited sue have parsed h rough it tor several years already. Jt consists of the Eider, hot ween Schicswig and tlolstctn, aud tbe canal connecting the Eider with the pni t of Kiol. it H little expense i ho river uud canal could be made navigable for the largest oX our merchantmen. r rom u Herman unvy we in A me ran have nothing lo fear; but Eughiud, eveu if she has no ciuso of tear, has cause for jealousy, and that is siithcient to determine her selfish policy. lu conclusion my American men da, let me, in a spirit t-j kindness, remind you of your solt'inn duties ot mankind. A great mission you have to perform. As our l iuon is a model republic, we must do all to avert danger from it, and nevert falter in our ar dent love of freedom. Whenever a people is struggling for constitutional liberty it abould huvu our sympathy. But has such beeu tne case during the last few years? There ia hungering uud Buttering Ireland; she has Beut thousands to our Union armies, and have we had any eucouragcuient lor uoir .there is uenuany, truggliug lor union aud liberty, and she iso had some or her uouicst sons among our Union voluuteers: aud have wo shown sym pathy for bur? Alt the vile slanders uf the lory press ol Eugluud on Uennauy and her oat work ot political reluruiaiiou, are zealously repeated by papers which are nowu lu be the mouth-pieces ol the Aj-lmin- itnitloo. Yen. t'roiu two urticlea iu one number of the Loudon Ttme ihe onerevil-l-.g our holy Union cause, and the other be- lieiug Ihe world as to the real nature of ihe Sclileswig-liolMtein ouch! ion the latter is coined by Ihe Philadelphia J'resnf Shame I rotund js bleeding, iter noblest sous have saeritied (heir lives on the battle-field. or havo been beheaded on the scaffold fur thoir patriotism and Poland, when America had her hour of trial, sent her Pulaskis and Kosciuskos; and now, when the Itus- lan mercenaries ot that embodiment ot despotism, the Czar, caiuo to New Vork, Americans gave them a ball, our ladies led with each other to have a shaking ot bauds with them, and these hands had been steeped deeply in Polish blood. Why, Mr. Chairman, it is to mo as if I had lo see yet these uuworihy daughters of this great Ke-publto rub their hands like Lady Maobeili, exclaiming, in the words of .Hhakspcurc: "There's theBuioll of the blood still; all the per funics of Arabia will not sweeten this little hand. At that Bussn-American ball iu New Vork there was tine music and waltzing. Did not some oue hear the cries of agony of tho broken-hearted Poles, who, that very hour, were in Ihe immeasurabl: wilds of llussia, on their way lo tbe deserts of sibm ia, as Charlemagne heard llio trumpet of Itoland fiom the far distant strait ot itoucesvulles. It bus been said of late slavery is dead. I tell you it is not, until it is radically wiped out. As long as you leave oue pair of slaves within the limits of our Union or her territories, slavery is not dead, Just tho same it is with a monarchy. A Jtepub- lic. be it as powerful as it may. is not se cure as long as 1 hero is oue monarchy ou earth, aud a monarchy is not sale fo long as llicro is ono Republic. One of the shrewdest men of the Nioeteeth Century understands this well; aud therefore to save himself and his dynasty, he murders oun Republic after tho other French, Italian, Mexican, and would tho American, if he could see a chance of success. If monarchy then wants war with the Re public, let ihe Kcpublic fight it; let it fight monarchy within the limits of inter national taw. Monarchy claims n right of interference in the internal aftairs of for eign Slates, whou it considers its own nafety endangored ; that same right of inturlerenoe wc claim; and we can do no belter service to struggling freemen in Kurope, and to mankind generally, than by maintaining the Monroe doctrine iu all its bearings, aud to the fullest extent. Europe must be helped in Washington; n vigorous prosecution of tlie war; radiuul measures lo bring this Htb llion to a olote; theu rally round the Hag once again, and out with all Austrian or French nxm-pors trom .Mexico. Wur salety is endangered by a monarchy on our borders; wo have nothing to foar from the contest; our Uuiou volunteers uio invincible for all Km one. and Napoleon, scut homo from Mexico, will soon ho at. tho end of his career; his downfall will be a signal for I ho regeneration of Lurope. Irltmcriil 4il run Tit Keveititou In Italil- nior. HK-clrtl ill)4ti'h to 111"' tliruiiicle by Peoplx'H 1 1 up. H.iunoiiti, March 6. Lieutenant-General Grant arrived hero ot noon lo-day in the Northern Central cars, having left 1 1 urns- burg this morning. lie was met at Ihe depot by a considerable number of citizens and soldiers, though' very few were aware of bis coming. Pour or five officers of his stuff accompanied bim. Tho oflicers of the railroad and George Hmall, Esq., one of tho directors, afforded ttie uiHiinguifii-'d nero and his ntan tbe most courteous faoihties at the depot nud elsewhere. Tho General was plainly clad, and seemed anxious to avoid show or paruda. There wero many, however, on seeing him, went up to shake bauds, and gavo vent to their feelings by enthusiastic shouts nf welcome. The Oeueral said, beyond all things, he was determined to avoid political demonstrations; hia business wan with war, while it existed, and his duty was to crush the spirit of treason and save the nation from destruction. When these thiugs were accompli shed, as he hoped and believed they surely would he, then it would be time enough for those whoso tastes are toward partisanship to hidulgo themselves. 1 he General and hia staff proceeded to Barnum's Hotel, where they partook of refreshments. They depnrted soon after in tbe .enrliest train for Washington. They wero chthusiaatically greeted at all poiutHftnd places whero Ibey became known, but there appcired upon the part of tho General a studied determination to evade publio diiplay, UratMantettemlUritul In W ashlar-Um.From tht Vhiladvlyhia Evtuiu TeUi;rt ) Lieuieuant-Qeoeral U. S. Grant arrived here to-night, at at 7 P. M. He drove in a hack to W ilia r d a, am! wrote on the register ihe following: 'U. 8. Uruul and son, John Rawlins, CoL Conxslock, Nashville.Tennessee.-' He proceeded to hit room, threw of his overcoat, and passed down to the dining room, accompanied by his boy. a lad about twelve years of age. He had been sealed but a very few minutes when be was dis covered by Mr. Coffey, Aesistaut Attorney (jeiierni, who passed tho word around the tables, and about the same time Hon. J. K Mnrvhead, of Pittsburg, who eat at the next table, recognized him, und rising, anounced iu a loud voice that "we huve amonir us the hero of Vicksburg." Some oue proposed three cheers, aud all rose to iheir feet und made the dining-room fairly ring with loud cheer after cheer, and fur several minutes :he euthusluam knew no bounds, General Grant quiet y bowing to bis right and left, aud military officers and civilians erowding around him. anxious to take by tbe hand tbe Western hero. When he could get an opportunity he finished his tinner, auu on leaving the room the crowd hat tilled the lobby cheered as Lt emerged and passed to his room. He took a carriage. and drove to General HaT'ok i about tigLt About a fiuarter to ten o clock fo-nigH Lieutcuant-Geoertl Gruui accompanied by several military friend" visited the Wliitr House, the President at the time w:-s hwdin ins punlio reception. lie i':-i.:'- in unannounced, and was evidently emban :t-ud. The President being made a wire of hiu pics-euee, appro iched and shook li'm by .he baud. Tho meeting waa muttmlly cordial. Tho Secret nry of State accompanied the General to tbe east room, and ou entering it theeutire crowded assembly gave him re-pa ed cheers, and there was a general rush to shako bim by the baud. No leceplion could have beeu more cordial. The Secretary of War waa sent lor, and witb other prominent officials, Boon after reached the White House. Arrangements were made to serenade Gen. Grant, but he did not return to bin hoiel at hulf-pist twelve o'clock, and the compliment was posipoued. In the City Councils last night resolutions were unanimously passed, tendering to Gen. Grant a cordial welcome, and the freedom and hospitalities of tbe city. The resolutions are to be suitably engrossed, ami presented to the General by a committee composed of the Mayor and two mem- l.an ..IT uu..l. tiwn .... I. ,.f 1 ('oiMrlitHil it open. Special iiriatch to the Chicugu Times, j "Cini-i.viuti, March 5, lWi-l. "A great interest is felt in tho radical German convention to nominate Fremont, which is to meet in Cleveland on the 10th of May. From that Convention important remits are anticipated, as tuts radical Ger man element constitutes so large a propor tion of ihe Republican parly." This dispatch is sent by a disciple of the frail or Vallandigbaiu, a drunken attache of the Cincinnati tinquinr. fll-'f con iso the secession readers of the Kirc-in-the-rear coticeru would be hugely delighted if the "radical Germans " should do bo abttrd a thing as to noiu;nate a can didate for President in the Cleveland Convention. All the Copperheads may roll the anticipated action of Ihe Geimaus like a sweet morsel under their tongues, but it will turn to ashes in their mouths. The Germans are not going to play the part of fiat s paws for Ihe Coppet heods. Should a tew mad men go to the eitreme of nomina ting candidates, their ticket will nlt poll five thousand votes in the United Sulci. I'hc Republican Germans as a body will give tho nomiuees of the Baliiium-c Cynveu- lion a cordial nud united support. The Copperheads may as well put thut iu their pipes aud BOioke it. Clucagu Tribune. tiUKArEXni'EMKVI'lM MAUVUNO, Tlireuleiietl He he I Until. Kruui tlm Haltluioro Auiurlran, Bltirrh 8,f Wn learn lhat thero has he en for the past t wo days considerable rxciteiueut in Frederick and Wnnhiiigton countiofl, giuwinir out of rebel movements on the Virginia side of the iVtruiuc, which arc supposed to be premonitory of a cavalry raid through the upper counties of Maryland. Tho farmers uro said io be sending their cattle fo places of sit fely nud a geueral removal of vtvun.b taken oliiL'C. The military authorities tni in.vnw ' are ou the alert, nud every preparation is being made for any emergency that may arise. We doubt, however, whether il is more than a mere rumor, such as are constantly alloutaloug the border. PR ONlE.CTUS OK TIIK Daily, Tri-Weekly and Weekly OHIO STATE JOURNAL FOR TIIK YEAH lHft, The wonderful events that are now transpiring in this country, upon which the eyes of the world are fixed, render a Gon Newspaper a necessity in ev. ry intelligent Family. Thankful for tlie increasing patronage that has attended their efforts to make the Ohio Static Journal a Fihnj- Class Fa milt Newspaper, the P"blJBl.er- nre prompted to continued ev-Vrta in the lirci-uon r.f progress and improvement. His their aim to malto -, 3orv -at. a complete compendium of new, a chaste and pleasant fl re-side companion, a faithful in ark it guide, a fearless aud truthful exponent nt political matters, a juinotual chronicler of Lboislative aud Congressional proceedings; and, iu short, a weekly summary of events in the political, social, religious, scientific and commercial world. With this end in view, it will contaip a full summary of current news, Congressioua Reports, Legislative Proceedings, Market Reports, (Foreign and Domestic), tbe Latest Telegraphic Dispatchos, Political Intelligence, Literary Gossip, Choice Poetry, original aud selected Editorials on ourreut. Topics, Stories, Sketches, &o. Due attention will also ho given to Agri cultural and Edncatioual Rlfnirs. Tub Nkws Department will embftico the latest Foreign and Domestic Intelligence, received by mail and telegraph, carefully col late 1, down to the hour of going to press. The War for the Union will be faith fully chronicled; each important event down he latest moment being presented, with full details of Battles, aud of Military and Naval movements. Tub Ohio State Journal, now, as here tofore, will heartily sustain tlie Administration in its efforts to put down the ex Siting frairicidal rebellion against tbo best and tbe freest government on railb. In doing this it may ho called upon at times to 'peak plainly; but it will always srcik upon conviction of duty, and never as an adulator of men in high places; and it will not hesitate to strip the guise from traitors and sympathizers with rebellion, who cloak their (reasonable sentiments under tbe hypocrit ical cry for a peace that ia to bo obtained ouly by compromise wiilt rebels in arms. TeruiN ol the Dully Journal. Sinfc'!i' tin later I bm, 1 year $7 00 niiinl Miiwcniwr, a innnthH a nv IMtt-;li" Sut)r.oi itn;rn, 3 munttm 1 76 hliili-SnUorilnj'B. 1 month 0 00 Tuncci'nlrt in ciumt or io and upward, ii cent pr wiH'k tMtch cony. To icut iu cluh of 30 and upward, 10 eeuts per k oacu copy. Term of Ihe Trl-Wekly Jonrnnl. Pinelt fhitvritrflra, 1 year H lit AO Ninni Niil'Hrriln'rn, Amontha 1 7ft Siutfte HnlMr.rilv.irri, 3 mm t thu M. 0 90 Bl,llSulMicriiJir, 1 month H 0 30 Term ol lh WHkIy JnaraaL iii1e tnbrcribttr, per year f2 00 Fmir ub-u-ritrtTi, twr year, tut to uu aihlraM, 7 W T..n si.itM!ribra. twr vttar. and nni to tho trotter- iiip i'1 tin cluh, Mint Ut onu atltlrens 15 00 Twmiiy Subscriber, Mr yu-ar, mnl oh- to tha gutter-UP Ol me cium. fi-m it) uno iu"" mv w PnltliMlii'i-ri nml rrnrfleirs. Thrall tV Uenliinn, BRUG&ISTS AID CHEMISTS, 119 SOUTH HIGH STREET snUilawSm |
Format | newspapers |
LCCN | sn84024216 |
Reel Number | 10000000026 |
File Name | 0257 |