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The Daily Milwaukee News from Milwaukee, Wisconsin • Page 4

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Milwaukee, Wisconsin
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Page:
4
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

nr. of the I hare good reason to question and patrftf answer them in the same MOROAfffc. BUTE DMTBICT, G. L. PARK.

WACILE8BA CO. PUnOCRATlC TICKET. Fom SamW-CHAPUB H.KING, of Wankesha- fom Kukwataam. vjijkoij, or 5 WI R10HARD BAVZB, Lt.bon. W.

of 1W OF 0 R. -WILLIAMS, FOBCLXKE or BBAVBB, of New POK HATHAWAY Of -Oconomowec. FOB FALLOK, tf AkrakM from CAMPAIGN The eloquent arfumente of senator Doolittle and Postmaster General Randall at Music Ball, together with the welcoming address of Hon. J. E.

Arnold, all printed OH oss EHKET, are now nearly ready for delivery at this office, at the rate of $2 00 for for 600. or $1500 for 1,000 copies. These apeeehes thus printed make the cheapest and most effective campaign laent that can be procured. Every eonnly ia the state should be supplied. OEDKRS MOULD PORWAED1D IMKBDIATKIT.

Tke speeches in question have been thoroughly of senator Doolit- tie by the campaign edition will be the onlj complete wport LTOK PAUL. tort Btatet-ne ftadkal Platferm. "We publish in another column tbe radical disunion platform of Wisconsin, as expounded the principal organ of the radical organization in tbe its leading editorial of yesterday. We have good reason for believing that this platform was either, dictated or written by Mr. M.

H. Carpenter of this city, who is about to assume the championship of the disunion party in Wisconsin. It is already a matter of noto- rity in this vicinity that these are substantially the views he entertains, and which he is expected to defend ae the baeie of the radical organization. IT le difficult to meet political heresy monstrously absurd and palpably treasonable in porport, by any attempt at argument. It is unworthy of argument.

If any reflecting man can be deluded into tbe bonesi conviction that throngh the rebellion eleven ftatee were lost to the Union vhat the object of the war was to reduce one half of the Union to a blank waste of conquered territory, inhabited by eight pf people absolutely eub- jogated to federal power, he is incapable of being reasoned with. Every man with the sense ot a man, every reflecting republican must be sickened with diagost at tbe bare assumption an assumption -for which there is no sanction in-oonetitution or laws, or precedent, or expediency, or justice, or even in the greedy ambitkn of the radicale themselves to centralize the entire BovercJgnty of the nation in their own hands. Soldiers of the Union! Here are laarele which the radical party of Wisconsin present you as tbe fole fruit of From a private dispatch Kenosha yesterday, we get the feainfbl telligence of the death of Hanson, United States commissioner and consul general to Liberia, i'fle dfed at Monrovia, probably from disease contracted since bis residence Mr. Hanson was born in England, and at the time of his death waii about forty five years of age. While still a.

young man, he became somewhat notej in his native country, as an eloquent Methodist preacher, and he came to the.Dnifceistates with the of doing good as a clergyman. For some lime he preached in Chioago, Milwaukeeitujd Kenosha, but his health failing him, finally abandoned preaching as a profession although he occupied the pulpit occasionally until within the last eight fr ten years. In the meantime to the office of treasurer of the city of Kenosha, which position he filled for six or seven years successively. Upon the accession of Mr. Lincoln to tbe presidency, he was appointed to represent $be government at place for which he was peculiarly fitted.

On a visit home last year, the office of consul general was added to that of commissioner; his salary was appropriately increased, te returned to his post in the full vigor of story is manufactured fro whole cloth. When Mr. Randall was in this city, Mr. Brown had not been nominated for congress, nor was he at that time expecting the nomination. The Sentinel also disgraces itself by pnbHehing A very ttrong remonstrance wai forward ed tc W.sW*gM>n wbea it wa.

to the taxpayer! of the city that it waa purposed to exchange Mr. Broneon, onTof the J. B. Smith and Brown is reported to have said that never in QoS's world could carry this district in the face of that We have the authority of Mr. Brown himself for saying that he never made the remark attributed to him by The Sentinel.

Like the previous statement, this one is also false. The Sentinel is obviously ambitious just now to win a reputation as a first- class smut-machine. HUwmkM BortbMl, leading editorial September 24. OF BIBZI.UON UPON 8TATX EIGHTS. er theeonttUotion, the states of the American Union pessqU certain These I.

BIOHT or LOCAL SELr-OOVIBI- II. JTHl BIOHT TO SHAM in OBXBB- AL OOVIRBMIHT, which 1. The right of representation in cons greas. 2. The right to participate in the choice of president and vice president.

The right to a voice in changing the fundamental law. Canithese lights lost? Tbe eontUta- tion confers upon the general goveranwnt no pofer to abridge them or to impose re- upon their exercise, other INSTALLATION OF THE REV. MR. LET AT J. "VY.

Healey, late of the Hanover street congregati 'ion- manhood, and with the hope of long and useful life in the future! In.every walk of life, Mr. Hanson proved himself an earnest Christian and an able, unselfish, noble, hearted man. Asia friend be was constant, as a public officer untiringly faithful, and as a citiien nobly: frank, candid and sincere. In his death the goverment has lost one ofitstnost creditable representatives abroad, and our state one of its most valuable citiiens. WheoBtla Appointments.

Ephraim Williams, of Washington has been appointed collector for tjie 4th congressional district, vice Babcqck removed. E. A. Calkins, of collector (or the second district, vice fr. W.

Hazleton, removed. Capt. James G. Knight is appointed aesee-i'T in tWd district, tice' Jfcfne- bois, removed. It is also reported that Gen.

Bertram is appointed postmaster at Watertown, vice removed. achievements in the field: A dismembered Union, a mutilated flag and a of dead states 2 of- the dead in battle These are the victories claimed to have been won by the blood of your kindred: The abrogation of self government, the 'annihilation of political the nnffin- of civil authority, and the repeal Of tbe federal constitution in all that por Son of tbe Union south the Potomw Ohio rivers I Citizens of Wisconsin 1 Was ft to taake territories of living states that niwd thousands of men for the war aad submitted joorselves to the fcordenB of a vast state and national debt? ad Union men I Jj thu of Btaiee and their subjection to government of a partiBan Mr. Thaddeus Stevens has already sounded the key-note of the policy of the radicals in the next session of congress. It is to consist in demanding still farther terms from the south before the southern states are admitted to tbe right of representation. They must consent to negro suffrage they must ratify the constitutional amendment the lands of a certain class of their citizens must be confiscated; and, for a term of years, the southern states must be govelfced by congress as al church in this city, was duly installed as pastor of the Tabernacle church, Chi.

cago, Sunday evening last. We condense" the following account of the affiwr from tbe Chicago papers The church edifice, is a beautiful frame ''notare, capable of eomfortahE seatng 1.200 people, and Tfcted at a of was dedicated hst Prof. Fisk, of the Chicago tbeoWieai seminary, filled tbe pulpit until the irKal cf their presrnt pastor, Rev. J. W.

Healev from tbe Hanover street congregational church, Milwaukee, some three months oince The church, organiied but three months ago. already numbers 150 members and has an average attending conBreeatioii or 6uO people There is connected 8 IE churoh also the largest home Sunday school in the city. A council to consider the expediency of mstfl'ation was called Ust Saturday and Rffinnative action having been decided upon' U.t was set apart for the tolemn ceremonies of installation The ceremonies opened with sirging by the cho-r, after which a short prayer WBS moder 8tor of council. 8. P.

Savage, he invoked the blessings of Ooi upon the prospective seruces. Prof. FUk, -of the Chicago theological seminary, preached the sermon It was an eloqaeni, earneet effort, and was likened to wvhaarked attention. He said the position of a pastor taking charge of a new congregation was not an enviable one tbe minister was filled with doubt as to his ability to acceptsbly discharge the new duties many and varied, thus imposed There was but one fixed rule of guidance in such trying let bisects be a simple, full and heartfelt exhibition of God -a divine truth. He thought there was t.o mnch ornate display in the pulpit at tbe present day; tco much strain- inu afwr rounded periods tnd oratorical displgy.

The timplest version of a truth WM "Iso the oUqnent and convincing lor tbe avenue to the heart lies through the understating The great object of the preacher shcnld be to explain the trnih, end not to show his learning Jesus taught in his manoer; he exhibited the truth sod cot himself. Tbe tnrh might not always mike a good period, but it did some much better and far more effective than saved souls. People wanted bread and not those imposed by that instrument itsolf- but ifithfy are lost in any other way the government must recogoiie the fact, and aot accordingly. In our judgment they can be 1. By voluntary surrender, thioueh amendments to the constitution.

2. By refrainicg from their exercise. For i example, a state may cease to exercise the right of The general gov- erDment cannot in this case compel the pea pie to choose legislatures aod governors and judges, or to make and execute laws: but it must itself govern them, in order to pre- J.U jrn FROM MADISOI. AND FANCIES. Sept.

20. ED. Niws his last to the newspapers, M. H. C.

is no morel unfortunate in his arguments than he iL in the historical examples he brings to illustrate them, Tbe corruptions and usurpations bfitae Roman senate contributed more toward the extinction of the republic tfcan ambition of the Ceejars and it was the usurpations of the British parliament that furnished the example aod paved the way for those of Cromwell. After citing the usurpations of Augustus and Cromwell as illustrations of those to apprehend will be resorted to by cur and of the danger of lodging power in the hands of the few, M. H. C. concludes his historical examples of successful usurpations as follows: "So Napoleon as first COUN snl gradually acquired all po aad sab- verted the liberties cf France." A more unhappy allusion for the be advocates coald not have been mide.

In this connection I subjoin what the histcrian sijs in relation to this subject. Sajs Allison: ''Ic was not Napoieon who destroyed the elements of freedom in France; bt found them extinguished to his band; he needed only The Waupun city has had one there. i thinks the of genuine cholera veal anarchy Having once abandsned the to seize the reigna BO bitted ou the exercise of the right, it will haroly be contended that the people may resume it whenever it may please them to do so. 3 By the of war. In certain southern states abindon- ed their rights in the Union.

They ceased nation by his revolutionary Therenever icai such a pioneer for tyranny ai the national atstmbly Tho italics are mine. Who is now F.iir hoM 7 Iu 3 .1: La is 7- few, or der the c.nstitution. It appears, therefore, that the insurrectionary elates lost all their state rights by abandoning them, and making for tht authority of the general supertede that of the ttatet Enough has been said to show that by the fortunes Of war the southern states passed completely under ihe power of the United States, aad lost all political r.phts It appears, therefore, that the southern states have their political or ttate riyhti both -by aldication and by the fortunes of war, and; the government of tbe United States JJOMMSM the righlt of a tovereign to deal wi'h them as any sovereign may deal with his conquered domestic enemies. Whether they ooght now to be called states or territories, it a quetticn of namet rathtr than ettentialt. What cocc rns us ia to know their actual condition.

To constitute a state of the Union there mtut be territory with definite boundaries, and people with civil rights and certarin political rights. A territorial possession of the United Stales may have definite boundaries, and it may be inhabited by people if it is, they have civil rights, but no political rig hit. Ifjheo, eliminate political rights from the definition Of a State THBHK BKMA1KB 1KB DB7I5ITION OP A TLRWTORif. people may call a state which has no political rights a state or a territory, according as they prefer a sclecisa to a propriety of speech. The Lawrence (Kansas) Tribune of tho 14th says: The advance guard of the grand army of grasshoppers has reached Lawrence.

A few scouts came in on Tuesday to spy out the land. The main body of the host is close upon us. Farmers report them as swarming in untold "the many?" Tbe president proclaims strict adherence to the constitution and the laws, while congress places itself above and beyond the laws. There never was sudh a pioneer" for tyranny in this country as this congress, in whrm M. II.

C. thinks it "lodge power." If the ni- tional and constituent, assemblies of had adhered to law and supported steadily the constitution which had been adopted, Frsnca would have been a free nation day Napoleon would have lived and died a simple officer in the army, and all tbe horrors of the reign of been avoided. No man cf intelligence will deny this. It was a departure from the fixed principles of coosti'utional government that led lo the blocdy re-volution in France, and made the subsequent usurpation of NapoUoa oompan- atively easy. The brutal murders, wholes sile ma-saores, in which the young, theolJ the innocent and guilty were involved in an indistingaiahabie slaughter, illustrate the safety" of lodging 1 power, unrestrained by law, in the hands of the many." GoJ grant that the people of this country may ave wisdom ecough to profit by the dreadful example, aod avciJ the faUl error which deluged France in the b'ood of its pecp'e, and subverted forever the libeities of the nation.

The truth ia, there ii but one place where power can be safely lodged, and where the constitution has located it. Let that sacred inttrumcnt be fai'h- fu ly executed in its letter and spirit let all its limitations, marked they are by territories. The Sentinel is still harping election returns from Vermont. 4 on the When the readers of that paper get sufficiently tired of hearing from we hope The Sentinel will turn its attention awhile to the election returns from Kentucky. A little infoimation from that quarter woold "better late than never," ak afgnk relieve the readers of The Sentinel of toe THE tot apo lion pledge made by yow repre- a aongrew whenth that the war presidential election in New Yok was a Tery close one, McClellan reeetfteg $82,000 votes, and Lincoln repubfican majority of 7,000 vofcBoutrf 700,000 The friends of Mr.

New York are confident that he receive the whole McClellan with the vote of 1 5,000 conservative German republicans. OHANCB FOE Appleton Crescent says that indicafiens of beara are quite abundant in Otftag4inie Deer, scarce thti wicked of the innooente winter when the mow WM ioed or eeven yeaw abundant. About doten have be ed witftun a fojitnigbl. £3 varieties, were more although to be admired woald fade, but bread sustained us. A'ter the sermon a prayer offered bv the Bey.

Mr Savage, in whch he invoked the divine blessing on the aew pajtor and Lis congregation. The charge to the paitor devolve! cpcn the Rev B. The reverend speaker thai be fell sore that no injunctions, however solemn, were needed He could only indulge in tw words of hope end cheer. Here was a fine churoh a numerous exngrega-ion, and the Celd was Urge for Ubor. He-knew the peo- p.e love their pastor, and as love begets love, he trtdcted ihsi the frnits of tbeir united efforts woold te apparent After the of the ch.rge, tbe Bev.

J. W. McLean welcomed the niitor into the fellowship of the chorea lf fl minis'ry of this chy were glad to Welcome him one of ir numbf and promised their ao ive cosoporation in tit ende'i to promulgate the teachipgi of the Sa- bill ions Ih the western part of the county; disti honestly obeerved, all 1-9 aod the entire country, on to the settire I olDl '8 atiat8 enforced, and its guarantees sun, is covered with these active destroy. fulfilled and the 8Ules wil1 be secure in era. Their voracity is terrible; they set- their ''R 11 3 tbe nation strong in its cnity, i tie upon a field or garden, and in a few hours nothing but unsightly stalks remain to indicate that the hand of man had attempted to raise sustenance for himself VUI from the fields devastated by these winded President is ende.vorin, gaia power for himself, is a fabrication so gross that I am Tb fl B.

and the jecple happy and unmolested in their freedom. It is there president Johneon jroposesto let all power this makes the issue hn and the radical Congress. The charge that the ifted with r. The Sheboygan Journal says that potatoes are rotting very bad ly everywhere in that vicinity. A man named Smith was robbed of the sum of $450 in the town of Greenbush a few days since.

He is reputed to be insane. Last Monday evening fifteen boys were arrested in Fond du Lac for breaking windows out of one of the school houses in the city. A number of them were fined and sent to jail. The Sentinel says returns from Vermont which show a democratic gun are a lie." Tery come trjm The New York Tribune. Lpon my soul, a lie." Only one Tuc Northwestern Cross closed on Frid nounced a success.

Tammany Flail is bo tvl i r.y The uea'h-i from ehoVni in during the past number-; i The total amount cf notes now" in circulation The London papers are p' obituary of the kingdom of 1 Brcwnlow is foul; but nesnee tourists and The president sent to the town sufferers. The modern terfeit money. Advice to radicals. Medei very poor diction. General Lee has been member of a Richmond They are dying at tha day of famine in India.

A cheesemonger in London has bee- pretending to be Tennyson, whom he resembles, and giving kcks of his hair to tbe ladies. About midnight on Thursday ght considerable snow foil at Louisville, i the weather is very cold and wet. Ths Fairbankses an so popular the merchants because look carefully after their The election in Montana on th7 inst. is reported to hav-; in a democratic victory by a msjorirv of It is that a Fenian f.rce on the Vermont lor province, and there citetnent. The Chicago 48 endir nigh: oases.

ro of rute of OOUL- honorary tall ci.ub. 4th cf cho'era at 1' fop the Sunday dftecn their paitor, to Hndson Tie dozology was then rung by the entire after which bfndiction he Paet Uoh conclo CHOIX AKD SUPERIOR be Hudson fWie.) Star has been banded a note from A. L. -Livingston, land commissioner of tbe St. Croix and Superior company, lB a fi that tbe companyVbonds have been in Jorsedand guaranteed by the Farmers' Loan and Trust company of New York for $100,000, which will build and equip mileeof road He has aleo just fnm Cam chief that iron for 20 mJIes also with the Foi River Improvement company, were in that city last Saturday, looking after the interests of t' company.

The fame paper learns that the steamer Union last week picked up tha body of a man found floating in tbe bay. It was conveyed to Oconto, where at an inquest held, it was id. mined as that of Maurice Quinnihan. here to take charge B. Phelps; been appointed one tbe editor of one of tho Appleton papers has been shown a sampje of pressed peat from the works now in operation Mayville, in this The piece was about equal in bulk to a cube of 4 inobeajon the edge-very dark in ma Je jb dense by the pressure-as to weigh aim as mnch aa a lump of coal of the eame size.

The process it had been through had destroyed all tbe stringiness which it has when first dug from the bog, and had made it graing instead. The Columbus (Wis.) Transcript gives the following list of the business places pf that town, which all dc good trade: Fifteen dry gcpd and gr.ccry stores, four hardware, four furniture, three drug two jewelry five twot and shore st'ores, two th.ee mlllirery two da- gaerrean two dentists OU lawyers, three pTiynicittug, five and tsi- lor 8) 0 haratss, one marble six btackamitji aU wagon shnps, two liveries Markets, aod about eight lager beer and whUky shops. A letter from Sbawneetown, in Illinois, (ays that the number of radioafs in that daily diminishing, and is at ready reduced to a fen speculators and one crtry man. fjld greater power than any preci- dectever dreamed cf possessing Had he Jesirsd power, hr re was a splei di opportu- ty obtain it, and that too under the forms law; tut he spuroed the tribe with contempt, atid by that act alcne earcej tha pntitads cf the people. Now when a min of M.

II. conceded ability ia compelled to resort to such mani feet perversions at the issue, as appears from the letter from which I qoote, it the utter weakness of the cause he supports. No man should attempt to sustain radicalism by argument, for all reason is against that cause, all the lessons of against it, common sense is against it, the constitution and the "American theory" are it. Passion and prejudice the only foundation pillars upon which the radical edifice can itand for a moment. Tbe advocates of that most delecUbls theory should ntter no language but that of make no appeals except to the revengeful passions of the people; for that is the nvort way ia their estimation to restore peace, bring bock harmony to a distracted land, and stimulate that friendly feeling among the people of different and thus bind the Unkn together with hooks of steel 1 Oive to tbe radicola fn'l sway and they would fill tbe iacd the sp'r't that ruled the boicra of tie Er-t-lo Ca'i.

wto.i he slew his brother, en 1 co this foundation they propose to Icild a L'aion. Tae generally received opinion the infer nal regions ia that harmony does net prevail there, aod it would be the highfs: concord to that which would dwrll in a Union erected by radicalism. Interoal revenue receipto for the past week were The duae of has 3 old big neath estates to a successful sun-ar m-r chant for £150,000 It is stated that ail applications for the soldiers' extra bounty heretcfore forwarded to are to be returned for amendment, that they may accord with the rules prescribed by the'war department. Mr. J.

S. Keller, cf Pennsylvania, who went to South Can.iL.a at the request of a company intending to buy land for agricultural gives j. favorable report of the t'ertui-y of soil an 1 of the dispsoition cfthe inhabitant toward emigrants. He gays he tin Is the peop'fe kind hearfed and affiSX aforj- ing a hearty welcome to ail who come to settle among them. The Rev.

Mr. BrownJow talks boldJv. but his heels were not ercep; lie for dust when he thought Lonsflreet is approaching Kooxviile. His "eereUry, Fletcher, who has been at the north, t'ok the oath cf allegiance to Jeff. Davis and applied to the rebei authorities to raise and organize a rebel regiment.

-They tell a tough dog out in Chicago. A dog t'jlJowed his master across the plains to California. Being lonely, hjs sighed for the borne of his puppybood. lie was missed by his master one evening, and in a few weeks thereafter, haying crossed tbe plains alone, ha walked into his former master's yard foot-sore and weary. MURDER IN DODGE Cou.NTr The Beaver Dam Argus reporta the death, probably by murder on tee part of husband, of the wife of Nicholas Knorr, residing about two miles west of Beaver Dam, An inquest waa held, which reeuit- ed in the arrest of the husband and a SOD, named Georgo Knorr.

A lady in Laf.iyett^ I Q) we ar.n her vSanday dinner pnt beans in a pot to bake. In a hurry to to ohurch she inadvertently put her hymnbook in the pol and wrapped a piece of pork in her handkerchief and took to church with her. Her mortifioafloo was intense upoo discovering her mistake during service; so was her husband's at tbe singularly pioos oompoaition of his repast. ia.

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Years Available:
1855-1881