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Oshkosh Courier

   Oshkosh Courier, The (Newspaper) - July 6, 1860, Oshkosh, Wisconsin                               FOUNDRY the ud J B Attorney at taw General Lund and Agent Government Lulls selected and located on favorable CITY Blank Book Manufactory i A side north of High 372 k Window Tor Stone Brick Window Oaf i and Sill FOB WAGON fc Attorneys and lors Commissioners of Deeds for Maine and In Marks New Block Osb- D Ferry street two doors abore Dealer In Hoots Shoes He has a large assortment ot these Goods mostly which Is a article or Ladies Cloth and Kid he would their attention Custom work and done to order How Ma never Of hli skill in patting Telt Or FOB FIREPLACES STEAM ENGINES OX KADI TO CIRCULAR MILLS FOR BRADFORD Attorney and Counsellor sit law Wright's sin BROTHER FOLDS Dealers In Staple and Vani y Dry and Shoes dee New Block west Ferry st Dealer In Books Blank Hooks Wall Papers ftc Block eor Washington and C LiNDE M B Sonth tide of the JUver Block up McCOURT dealer In AND Oidor Threshing Machines CASTINGS MADE TO ft ftc Sew Block WM R Attorney and Law in the County Circuit aud nnd will give attention to collecting deeda wills contracts as a summer's day Call him call him i don't one about tbe name Say he's capable nnd country's good Merer drank a drop of I H know a stone cords or more per day t There lo kneel and pray r Telia us he resembles Sure hu wears a larger boot And cross the T And is tall or by afoot Any He you tell we'll Swallow any kind of mixture But oh 1 we beg and pray Don't lor Sod's sake show his I THe mu TUBE we might drive Great B arid fc contra of America mte States an Repi blic 1 He denied the right rf th Federal ment f to prosecute n of in the tal in securing Ii He instrumen of the law E he 16 of trati wuu limiting fie that ana that Tj he never claim the fl rtW of pence wth ground that the boundaries were nnH the people for the Prod in and Bell Of tHree Mr is for of tho South e can have po hope of it ie not Sketch of Stephen A Douglas H H Attorney at Law Wis of all dons on notice All by nail or promptly attended to T B of J Proprietor Shop Union Chemical Paint and Sold by OK CHICAGO PAINT COMPANY IT to paint In tbe world It so quiet number of emus miy bo In m rew hours It Is and from all durable and ma bo polished as smooth us It will not peel off and cannot Tie blistered by licat It Is beautifully will not turn yellow from veins In OXE will to u TWO pounds of lead paint anil but ONE HALF the money Kor wallu and no other ceil at all with it It Is fur It from the kejr nnd no mixing or grinding gy A HANCOCK Attorney at Law Court Com- In Wright's Block west side street WIs A Attorney and Counselor at IVia on the east side between and Otter at paid In and by A Tina Is new and up in style for tho and and con- to and horn tbe House W G HITCH mid imh plans elevations and spend cations on short notice and moderate O IV also give Ills Patents nnd Drawings lor the No for tlon Justice's House A C Justice of go County will attend to the of di manus tbe of will give attention to letting and Stores ftc Call at No 6 Marks New Block hours from 7 to 1 A M from to 8 F USX OR INIMITABLE HAIR COLORING AND FIND IT TO UK A PERFECT HAIR RESTORATIVE and of th Hair of J Bo you d LAKK Co N Kcb 0 58 W E N 1 Sir Huong your Hair Coloring or nnd bwm much pleased with it I take m you the lowing From ofa fit when about IS years of age niy hair com- turning and so continued to grow until mint being cry and summer I hnd reached my year when 1 wan induced by a friend to two of Hair Coloring by you I torn It according to directions and in a Jew daya was that my Imir from the roots outward was turning back to its original color Jt no continued to crow until it wan as brown anil youthful days ami nm-fntty color SEAMAN it came before duly worn and says that tbc thu Ib day of February of the fence Vt Aug I 1857 I Ibat my having quite grey 1 used Malr Coloring prepared by Sr X of Troy N for lour and my that tune to its original color I fully the article to be claims War Pastor Hap Church I'ittsford M Y March 17 Sir W S T liaro used Coloring for and haru found it to be a It not only restored the color of toy hair it now lite and strength but it wife ofa most obstinate eruption upon the scalp which cite In I bellen it to be the article in lours HOWLAND The aboTe arc but Tew of the many which have been tendered to the tor of Hair Coloring or It used by thousands of people audit never falls to restore the color and growth of the hair This singular effect is not produced as whim dyes arc or It natural of coloring the and thus change The lor produced not a counterfeit but the natural It dors not color the skin anil 11.00 per bottle Sold W E ic CO Troy S T E B COLTON JUSTICE OFTHE PEACE Will give particular nitration to the collection of debts and promptly made Mortgages and Will also attend to tho leaning of Buildings nnd the the payment of Taxes in County ALSO THE TIRE INS COMPANY Cash mid NIAGARA FIRE INS NEW YORK CITY and JKS in cm as bonus us uan be had hi any i Companies AJl AT THIS Jan HOME JO BOARD by or WEEK WAHM AT ANY TIME anil SUPPERS UP ON SHOUT NOTICE Ale I Scotch Ale o n cl o ia F o e CIGARS ON HAND DOUGLAS the Democratic no- minee for the Presidency was born at Bran don Rutland county Vermont April 1813 hand is consequently years of age His native of the of con- eminence and died of when son Stephen was but a little more than two months old with her infant and a daughter only eighteen retired to a farm which inherited conjointly with an unmarried ther i At the age of fifteen her son Stephen who had received a good desired to college but hfs family proving unable to boar the requisite he left the farm determined to earn his own living and engaged himself an apprentice to the trade of cabinet making at which he worked a year and a half partly at bury and partly at Brandon where his health became so impaired by tlie seventy of the bor that he abandoned the occupation gethor He has often since said that the happiest days of his life were passed in the workshop lie the Academy at B i an don as a student and remained there a year His mother about this time v as ed to a Mr Grainger of Ontario county to whose son her daughter had been previously married Young Douglas removed with his mother to and entered as a dent the Academy of that place in which he continued till 1833 He studied Jaw an the office of Messrs at the same time time that he his academical course having finally adopted that as his profession In the spring of 1833 he went to the West in search of an eligible place in which to Cleveland he was detained the whole summer by ness after hia recovery from which he went to Cincinnati Louisville St Louis and sonville III At Jacksonville he found funds reduced to cents and accordingly to Winchester a little town 10 miles distant where he hoped to get employment as a school teacher lie found there a large crowd assembled to attend the sale of the stock of a deceased trader The eer was without a clerk to keep the account of the sale and perceiving that Mr Douglas who stood among the spectators leaked like a man who could write and keep accounts re- quested him to serve in that Mr the Committee AW nut it on its passage when iber of vT He was among the earliest advocates annexation ot Texas and alter the treaty for object had he was one of those who propositions the form of joint resolutions as a substitute for that treaty of tee on Territories in he reported the joint resolution declaring to be one of States of and he sustained the administration of dent Polk in tho hich it adopted for the prosecution of the iv ir with Mexico which was the con of act As chairman of the tee first House'of Rep and in the Senate 10 reported and successfully carried through the bilh to the Mil Oregon i i inconvenient v n ond that the provisions in regard to the be The Unite arc United States change the and 4 the stipulation in regard to tho Indians posed ratification of and wer to procure its rejection upon the ground Among other United States m all to come never to annex colonize or exercise any He declared he did to annex that country at that time but maintained must uw v u uf by liu running the election will be thrown into Mia House ot Representatives und that to elect thut Joe la by t become President A few of reflection will satisfy me tho nny sy candid man that caji f can The Southern States electoral carr New Mexico nnd and also bi for the ad- mission into the Union of tin of Iowa Wisconsin California Minne ota and Oregon So far aa the question of slavery Tcd tbe organization and the admission of new hr early toot the position that not the one side or the other but that the people Territory and State should be allowed to form and their d institui tions to themselves In accordance with he opposed the Wilmot when firat the of in and an amendment to the to enable President Polk to trea y of peace with and afterwards in the when offered as an amendment to the for the organization of the toty if Oregon In August 1848 he oil red an ment to the Oregon the souri compromise line ly westward to the Pacific ocean in the same sense and with same understanding with which it wai originally adopted in 1820 am extended thro in 1845 very in -all the territory north of of nnH muse be kept open aa possessions on the Pacific that come when the United States would be com- piled to occupy Central America and that he would never pledge the of do in the future in to this Continent what its interests and He also declared himself in favor of the acquisition of Island Can be obtained consistently with the laws ofc nations and the honor United On all Judge Douglas hns proved statesman f i ancient and renowned Douglas Was the clans that H f A the eminent On- JLr on the and KM who by Ins by It on Iho Eye and HOUSE For Northern Wisconsin 31 Gooda Bold A Retail at New York J 0 Agent OSHKOSH CITY BAKEBY Confectionery Establishment No C nt the Steamboat would invite tlie Attention of nnd for ill in his line Ue has a new OF the ol turns out iin article us good if not bettor Ens tern mndo ou Ac of all kinds He in and offers retail rect from the manufacturers un assortment of he with or the public that layout nd in hi Trial from who In the o for Salo Subscriber ia now at tho on tho South Of the Rixor to sell or any ol the property term a Ho to two weeks Tor that purpose JOS June Ms be hud application to tlie COLDS tlo 80 H Miss or any affection of Throat in TROCHES COUGHS Dr O T to K H CHAPIX Tork m Ohio tn fnm 8 J P ANO.ESOI tonis and Irritation at HERRING'S Patent Fire and Proof Platform Counter Scales CONSTANTLY on haml tuul for sale at Vy bj L 11 COTTRILL Agent k CAMERON'S Livery Sale Exchange STABLES St cor opp Buggies tec kept readiness at alt of iho required kept by the day week or month at erate charges Ic T A ar t at 93 rn Cathartic LUMBER WHOLESALE AND RETAIL Paine's Mill Algoma H Pinner prepared and seasoned to Most kinds or Pine iofi ait for or JV In the of ni togs nOt tat v X I PAWE i Ji wort Douglas consented and acted as clerk during the three clays of the salo receiving for bis services six dollars With this capital in he promptly opened a school and ob- 40 pupils he three months at a quarter devoting his evenings to the study of some law books which he had borrowed in Jacksonville and on Saturday practising in petty cases before the Justice of Peace of the In March he opened an office and began practice in the higher courts for which after examination he had obtained license from the Judges of the Supreme Court Ho remarkably successful at the bar as may be inferred from the fact that within a year from his admission while not yet twenty-two ot age he was elected by the legislature Attorney General of the State This office he resigned in Dec in consequence of haiing been elected to the legislature by the Democracy of Morgan county He took his seat in of Representatives the youngest member of that body In 1837 he was appointed by Van Boron ister of the land office at Springfield 111 a Jost which he resigned in In Nov 837 Air Douglas received the Democratic nomination for Congress although he was under twenty-five years of age and ineligible He hawever attained the requisite age before the day of election which was on the first Monday in August His Congressional district was then the populous one in ithe United States and the canvass was conducted with extraordinary zeal and energy Upward of votes were cast and the red to be elected by a majority of five A number of ballots sufficient to have changed the result rejected by the canvassers because the Mr Douglas was spelled After this defeat which under tlie circum- stances was claimed by his friends as a ry Mr Douglas devoted himself exclusively to his profession until 1840 vi hen he entered into the famous Presidential campaign of that year with so much ardor that he traversed in all directions for seven months and sed more than 200 political gatherings To his exertions was ascribed the adherence of Illinois at that election to the Democratic party In December 1840 Mr Douglas was appointed Secretary of State of Illinois In Feb he was elected the Legislature a Judge of the Supreme Court of the State which office he resigned in 1843 to accept tho Democratic nomination Congress which was urged upon him against his known wishes on the ground that he was the only Democrat who could After a rited canvass Mr Douglas was chosen bv 400 majority He was re-elected in 1844 by a majority of and again in 1846 by nearly majority He did not however take his seat under the last election having in the mean time been chosen to tbe Senate of the United States for sis years from the of March 1847 In the Hoos of Representatives Mr las was prominent among those who in the Oregon controversy with Great Britain that our title to the whole of Oregon up to latitude 54 40 minutes clear and unquestionable He declared that now or hereafter up one Oregon either to Great Britain or any other He advocated thn policy of giving notice to the joint occupation of establishing territorial gor eminent Oregon of putting t fl oil minutes and by its existence sonth of that line This ment was Senate by a decided majority receiving tbe Support of every ern together with several hern Senators but was defeated in of tives The of the cy of Congressional prohibition of all tho Territories and the in the House of proposition to the Missouri to the Pacific tlie sectio ml agitation of which was temporal ily quieted by the legislation known as the co of Mr Douglas supported these with zeal and and on his re- turn to his homo in finding himself assailed with great defended the whole series in a speech to tbo people Oct 24 1850 which is regarded his as one of tlie ablest he has ever made In this speech he defended the princ pies an which the Compromise Acts of 1350 were founded and upon which he subsequently defended the Kansas Nebraska in these These measures are predicated on th great mental principle that every people ought to possess right of framing and regulating their own internal concerns am domestic in- in their These things are all confided by the Constitution to each State to decide for itself I know of no reason why the same principle should not be extended to the Territories Judge Douglas the ment of 92 votes as the Demoer candidate for the tire National tion nt Baltimore in 1852 when he 39 years of age At the Cong ion of he reported from the tee on Territories the celebrated bid to the Territories of Kansas a id Nebraska paused into n No touch a a Douglas's man he do to nome by the And of him whoever bu who undertakes pete for the OUR GALLANT DOUGLAS OF TBE is tlie man whom the people honor -A Change of For many years burden of the democratic side our national political conflicts has democracy of the North In all the fierce con- tests connected with the subject of slavery we of the Northern democracy have stood in the thickest part of the fight and brunt of the onslaught and defended at many sacrifices the constitutional rights of our Southern brethren By our to their interests as involved in the political interests of the day we have lost the power aid of our State been torn under the harrow of We have met these reverses manfully nnd bravely in a contest the gravest discouragements arid involving self de- nying persistent and exhausting labors We of the northern democracy believe that standing shoulder to shoulder with southern we were upholding the Constitution and battling for rights secured to them by that instrument So long as our only demanded what the con- northern democrats were prepared to encounter every peril and resist every temptation in their defence and to common cause with them We were ready to face eien the cartoon's for them perfect equality of- us both nt person and property in every part of the jurisdiction ot the Union But in an evil hour our Southern brethren have refused to be content with mere equality They have made impracticable Douglass ill carry posing Breckenridge and Lane contest him except South Carolina and Kentucky Of Static Bell will carry ing the vote of Mississippi nnd South Hove and Lane the slightest chance vote at the No man will hp enough to that they can carry n Northern State The electoral vote ot the Union supposing no choice be made bj the people will be i- between the four candidates The Con- choice by the House of to the persons having the highest numbers not exceeding three on the of persons voted for by the electoral leges Breckenridge being fourth litt consequently cannot go before the Douse If no person be elected Vice President by the choice will upon the jate but that body is confined to a selection candidates who may have re- the greater number of electoral votes will of exclude Lane and limit the choice to or Johnson In Hon Henry when passed our city on his way to Washington request of n Methodist minister from the northern states who Mta greatest him He wan quite fid spoke of his death ns a few He stated and ding conviction that the union of the was in peril could hnie Induced him in state of to leave the quiet home Bad go back to the Swat the seat of so niany oT liis and great The opinion WM n pressed by one or both of ns that the danger was greatly overestimated and bo hut if it ever came to the test it would there mere nery fcw be mad enough to rush into n the north or south shook I ft a tha genius and of tbo American ile both in and the south and I Thorn spirit rising up in both sections of n will bring about n once of tfic union of them not n two but in half little ics 01 as the cnse be It as replied that on former lie north and the had been arrayed gainst other in bitter hostility but rial the hostility hud away and the parties to more than their former taid IIP that of modern cannot be controlled and Thu churches of the country in their great annual drew the bonds of and The passage of this caused grent ment in the free of the Omon and Judge Douglas as its author and vehemently denounced and in many places was hanged nnd burned in effigy The whole controversy turned on the ion repealing the Missouri compromise Judge las maintained to be the principle of by with slavery i a flit States and Territories After repealing the Missouri i the de- clared it to be the true intent and meaning of the act not legislate sla into any State or Territory nor to it from but the people the cof perfectly free to form and regulate their in way t only to the Constitution of the United er diversity of opinion may in regard to the of this principle of its application to the Territories it must be admitted that Judge Douglas has proved faithful to it under'.iH ci at which the manhood and self of the North revolts They demand that the al assume the special pation of watching their in are willing that property shall stand upon the same footing receive pre- the same protection surrounded mall respects by tha same guarantees as our own but not willing to assume the overseers upon Congress the invidious of protecting and enacting while excluding nR other property in the Territories from its guardianship and while no other property demands its interposition Our Southern brethren have asked the of the nation to too far and they have deliberately in national convention assembled refused to take that step for this refusal a portion of the ultra men of the South have from the al disorganizing in opposition to tbe regular nominees Of course ment to an unreasonable wiir sible then can or Lane be elected by the people nor can either be ted to n choice hy the House or Senile The whole game then is to run Lane for the purpose of electing That being the possible result to be it to presume that that is the only end Mr has in view of the South are not dolts as Mr Breckenridge seems to suppose They see as plainly as can be that they have to choose Between Lincoln the advocate of negro and of a forced emancipation of the slaves in the Sonth and Douglas They will understand fully that every vote given for Breckenridge is a lote directly for coln and it be no insult to their to suppose them capable of ting such a tolly as to vote for- electing the Republican nominee We are to have at the North tbe old ite contest over again Mr Buchanan's of- fice of to espouse tbe disunion Breekenridge nnd Lane In Pennsylvania New York Ohio New New Jersey and the there will be one Democratic ticket mid be Douglas and Johnson Tbe publicans in will have to encounter a force and a power did not stand in their pathway in 1856 Lincoln will not receive as high a vote as Fremout obtained and that was only 114 His election is out of tbe question Douglas will mer thern electoral votes not counting uther or Oregon He will then have to ob- tain votes from the South of these Missouri will give him 9 Arkansas 4 iana 6 Georgia 10 Alabama 11 More Ilian enough But these Southern we have named will not be all he will obtain lie can safety count on eighty electoral him a large tor any un- expected loss at thu North The issue before the people at the North us the South is Union or Disunion At of been lent asunder and they are acting aa dividers rather tlian to Said Gentlemen you are of yon ministers of the gospel and I tell that this sundering ot the religions ties which have hitherto bound our together I consider tbe greatest source ol danger to oat country If our religious men cannot live gether in expected politicians very of whom to governed by the principles of love J If all the churches on tlie subject of slavery there will be left to bind onr people together but commerce paid he is n very powerful bond f admit but when the people of these become thoroughly alienated from each other and get passions aroused they are not apt to stop and consider what is est It is against the interest of both tie in contest to igo to but constantly Uo it notwithstanding the fact It is the interest of men tiy fight duels but they often when they know ruin both to themselves and lies stores UK in full in said he men Mill fight if they consider their rights upon if you show them that to themselves and will be the probable result Besides in times of high excitement the violent men of tides get the control of matters and moderate men arc tin own in the and their counsels go unheeded that the statesman had hU strength in talking wa rose to as we supposed for tbc last hands of upon earth us nud ITc tho you the Lincoln proclaims bis purposes to by forcing the slave States to set their negroes free and become free States in other words Ke declines that tho Union must be all or all slave and unions the South consent to let the General ment in the of ultimate extinction tbe Union must States must quit the South and and Lane declare that protect slavery where in of the people or the Union must be dissolved Lincoln and represent the disunion Sentiment North and South and if either be elected disunion most inevitably J follow jDouglas wars upon For ten be and defended it assailed or violated In in the National Deir Con- at Cincinnati he received on the ballot 121 votes as a candidate for the Presidency In tho al session of he denounced and with en- ergy and ability the Lecompton Constitution upon the distinct ground that it wag not the act and deed of the people of Karsas and did not embody their will Before the ment of that session of Congress he returned home to vindicate Jus action the people of Illinois in one of the must I ing nnd well contested political canvasses known in the United Stales He bad alike to encounter tbe determined hostility of tlie Federal Ad- ministration and all its patrons ge and the powerful opposition of the party But he succeeded in carrying the i lection of a sufficient number of State and to secure his return to the U S Senate for six years by 54 vote for him to 46 for his opponent During he whole of that contest ha c the doctrine of in the same sense in he bad previously proclaimed it in Congress in a debate in the Feb he avowed and defended same trine when assailed severer of the ablest Senators of the Democratic party Judge Douglas has been in promoting the local own tbe West during bii career To him more thai to a 17 other in- dividual 9 ibr T ho cent grant ot lands which secure 1 s traction of the Illinois Central and contributed so Of meet with substantially no encouragement among the Democrats of They will nearly of the nominees of regular National Convention and find themselves standing on a platform which will enable them now hereafter to fight a battle and win their to have power and home i The venue of tlie conflict is changed The struggle for self preservation and at home under the pressure of current issues has transferred from the to the South The entire justice and ableness of the National of will command val and support men at rally upon it and will enough to do to take care of are likely in due of the trials which the Northern De- have for many years encountered In no States in the Union will a fiercer conflict in Douglas and son and in those ex- treme Southern Louisiana and Georgia They will be sustained by of tbe ablest men of those ed stump and press and are very likely to triumph And in all the Southern States the platform and candidates of the regular National De- a vigorous and determined aa will triumphantly the charge of -Tri- deed the platform of is the UK 19 only one opon national party can Che a party upon the platform of Congressional protection of slavery is absurd and will never find currency outside most ultra and slave States js Lei friends of National De- a party which shall gather in its embrace men of all the en- circle with its tlie Union raise on high banner struggled successfully to resist the disunion policy at the North ond hns fought the same policy at the South To both factions he bids bold defiance and promises that the General administered by him that forever put the unholy at- tempts by both extremes Cpon there can but one result In two- months time the people end of the aey to the be up in their might and will have declared their utter condemnation of both Lincoln and twin ics of that fell would destroy the last hope of constitutional is left to American Onion v l Philadelphia thus the course pursued by this leader of his party The Whole tenor of the recent of Mr Senate exhibits a studied to aut torture every fact and circumstance that can ba made to the anil he and toilsome to present these in the most insulting calculated to not from their manifest unfairness and want of truth but from the despicable malignant and re- characterizes tlie whole Tne of his high and fight braWly in its when thi campaign they will find its now and a- sound tion and his solemn oath as a Senator of the United States have no obstacle to work of misrepresentation Awhile uttor disregard for truth and tlie ab- all the ordinary instincts of scum to have left him wholly free to every prejudicial fact and to tlie coloring of every circumstance be made by any artifice or sophistry to hibit the Southern people and Southern in an unenviable light He has not only adopted Helper ill all his but gone further Mtd io every haa chosen tbe of the extremes t to view everything to the i i hardly know from the tSe Republican organs happy Lincoln's defeat arc like ho got bis 4 persimmon and whether t P C ers will only keep the churches from running Into and I think the can control the masses ho j is the task nnd if you do not perform it we will not bo tible to do our part That I consider tbo greatest source of danger to our Mr To defend with the pen the tongue or tbe sword tbe nation of one's nativity or tion is a duty thut good citizens willingly ex- ecute and in the of which they find their noblest gratification To sustain her honor and promote her prosperity in times of peace is a which invites froni every citizen earnest effort but when war has loosed its dogs opposing arms sweeping down our brethren by hundreds on the battle field bis must bo a craven soul in- that can tho slaughter Perhaps no three men ever ed un so Jeep and lasting in tbo ter connection the President of the Chicago Convention its for President and Tea of the special of tbe action and choice of that body The three were in Congress when the with was ing on There had been battles fought and there had been shouts of and groans of death tho arms of tKe enemy had swept oar soldiery from the earth like chaff before the wind at such a moment when every of should prompted evidences of sympathy in the Congress of the United States the trio above named turned their on the nation of their birth and be- came the of their country's foe MUN denounced the war with the basest terness Lincoln sympathised with Mexico and declared tho conflict unconstitutional nod unjust and to cap the climax of in- and treason invited the Mexicans to welcome our bloody hands to hospitable graves I It is natural that the thus allied and ready to sacrifice their nation's name who had spoken and in denunciation war in which the country wag engaged who hail thai given aid and comfort to the enemy were published and rend in Mexico to prove that there was a- Mexican party in States and opposed their votes and their voices the bestowal of bounty to men who had battled in the country's say it is natural that they should continue a partnership commenced in shame stand side by side in antagonism to the domestic pence ple and of the compromises nnd principles upon Union rests Wo have no desire to divorce the parties thus joined together bat we public to is paraded before them as a National man nnd pictured AS a fnend of his while tho on and while the three thousand were by the cannon and the of the foe anj falling by the poison and Abraham Lincoln was in the Congress of the taking sides with the enemy embarrassing the operations of our encouraging the Mexicans to continued find desperate efforts to put advice into practical at our that Mr Breckinridge is a most accommodating gentleman He 1856 for the Vice Presidency on tba Cincinnati and was elected and he ii now mounted upon other platform smd utterly repudiates which bore him into office fonr years it A Suck it not democracy The democracy as their late National Convention Cincinnati Platform Hnd Doughs OD it It is true that Mr Breckinridge is mounted on another platform repudiates that which bore him If yon are mM four but that is dp ytt whistling it's a decided L it is from M   

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