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. What Horace Greeley Knows about
h V War.
We bare fought and bceu Deateu.
God forgive oar rulers that this is so ;
iut it is true, and cannot be disguised.
Tuc Cabinet recently expressing, m
rhetoric better adapted to a lo?e letter,
a foaroi being drowned in its on
-vv bile our honor on the high seas has
nly been saved by one daring and des
perate negro, and he belonging to the
merchant marine. The sacred soil of
Virginia is crimson and wet with the
blood of thousands of Northern men
needlessly sbed. The great and univer
sal question pervading the public mind
13: Shall this condition ol thin
"3"
f p.nn-
nne?v"
,4lf we are ever to put down ibe re
bellion we snail do it within a fev
months. We have more men and more
means wherewith to attack and over
come the rebel armies than we shall
have a year hence, should the war con
tinue so long. It we beat tbcm, we
shall have guns enough ; if they beat
U9, the same. One way or another, we
shall have peace before the close of
1SG2; and it we cannot whip tbeni
with the arms we now have, we never
shall. And since we need every dollar
we have t can raise for present press
ing use, we protest against spending
one dollar for arms that are not to be
in the hands of our soldiers before the
1st of May, If we should want more
arms after the rebellion is put down, let
'he in be provided for; for the present,
et U3 use every dollar where it will tell
in the present confiiet' Tribune, Jan-
ry 31, 1862.
"Such was the well earucd iauie of
Ktntuckians Colonel Kiuirod Wildfire,
then representative before tue footlights,
being represented as so spoiling, lor a
fight, having been inhumanely deprived
of that luxury for the intermediate space
of ten days, that he would have to 4kiv
cr himself in a salt barrel to keep, that
we have been wondering how many
invading rebels would be required to
show a front in that State for the space
of ten days, have concluded that noth
ing less than one hundred thousand
would answer.
"When John Morgan made his horse
stealing raid across the State last sum
iner, meeting very little resistance, we
explained the matter by considering
that he traveled so fa at always taking
fre9h hor-.es to replace those that from
time to iiuie gn-'-v weary that: the
'hunters i. foresaid could cot overtiike
him. But tiiis famous parade of Kirby
Smith throughout the famous J31ue
Grass' region does not abide that foIu-
tion. Hero
thousand rebe s
wnc tweLty or thirty
who have advanced
through the very heart of the State from
i ennessee to tne banss or tbe Unio,
j .uting the only Union foicc gathered
to detend the Capital ( which contained,
vc believe, just one Kentucky regiment)
and pushing on to threaten Cincinnati
and Louisville -without serious opposi
tion. Perhaps the interruption of the
mails and telegraph Iims "left us in the
dark as to what is 'going on in that
quarter. The facts will doubtless soon
ebine forth in all their glory and shall we
be very glad to hear of the prompt and
enthusiastic rally of the aforesaid hunt
ers to drive rebellion and disunion into
sea." Tribune, September 20, 1862.
"It has pleased Congress to decree
the appointment of a L eutenant-Gene-ral,
and tbe President, with the entire
assent of both Houses, has selected
Ulysses S. Grant for the most responsi
ble position. We had nothing to say,
pro or con, while this matter was in
progress; we neither urged the creation
of a Lieutenant Generalship, nor recom
mended Gen. Grant tor the position.
But now that the work is done, we
must respectfully suggest that the con
luct of the war, under the President, be
committed absolutely to the Lieutenant
General, and that we all Congress,
Cabinet, and t' e Press, Republican?,
Democrats, Conservatives, and Radicals
take hold and strengthen his hands
for the immense responsibility devolved
upon him. Let him not be impeded or
embarrassed in his work cither by
speeches or articles, advice or criticism,
.until we shall have given him a fair
trial. Let him not bo condemned for
one miscarriage, if there shall be one,
but generally trusted and sustained
until he shall have decisively shown
that he can or cannot put down the
Rebellion. Then let us act as the good
of the Nation shall dictate; but, until
then, let in his behalf Stonewall Jack
son's message to his superior: 'Send
uie more meu and fewer orders.'"
Tribune, March 5, 1864. .
A decimated and indignant people
will demand the immediate retirement
of the present Cabinet from the high
places of power, which for one reason
or another, they have shown themselves
iucompoteut to fill. Give us for the
President capable advisers, who compre
hend the requirements of the crisis, and
arc equal to them and, for the Army,
leaders worty of the rank and file, and
our banner now drooping, will soon
float once more m triumph over the
w nolo land. With the right men to
lead, our people will show themselves
unconquerable." Tribune, 7y2o,1861.
What H. G. Knows about Democ
racy. The utter impotence anct paralysis
Into which the once proud and power
ful Democratic party, has fallen is
evinced in many ways, but in none
more strikingly than in the character
ot its lies and liars. How its orators
aud journals used absolutely to ruin
calumnies on Adams and Clay and
Harrison, and in later days on Seward
and Fremont! none of your little, con
temptible, picayune falsehoods, but
great, fat, black lies, that had venom
and sting in them lies that evinced
originality, audacity, and even genius."
Tribune July 0, 18G0."
"To Lieut. Gen. Grant the Nation's
Joye and gratitude will be fervent and
unmeasured. The Army of the PjCtora
ac hardly knew him a month 'ago; it
knows him now and ever more. Had
he shared the current estimate of its
capacities, his - misconception would
have been natural; but he. knew its
worth instinctively and trusted implic
itly to its valor and devotion. The
j result proves that Le was right, and that
that Armv has at last found its true
leader. Let. us harbor do shadow of
doubt that under his guidance that
Army will promptly and . thoroughly
complete the work to which it has been
called, and to which it has now proved
itself so nobly adapted." Tribune, 1
May 14, 1864.
Tlie election of Grant teeures the as-
cendency of Llbebtt, JUSTICE, and
Pbace. It is the Appomattox of oui
civil conflict. It insures that ours shall
be henceforth a land of equal rights
and equal laws. It makes our recent
history coherent and logical. It de
monstrates that the discomfiture of the
Rebellion was no blunder and no
accident, but the triumph of princi
ple and an added proof that , God
reigns." Tribune, August 15, 1868.
The world will be moved to mirth if
it reads the manifests of the National
Democratic Executive Committee dis
owning the Democratic paternity of the
pamphlet. 'Concession or how the Lost
Cause may be Regained, and the Inde
pendence of the South Secured.' No
body supposed that the National Dem
ocratic Committee had authorized the
issue of the pamphlet; but it i3 Demo
cratic in tone and temper, for all that,
and it speaks the honest sentiments, no
doubt, of thousands of Southern Dem
ocrats, who will, in defiance of repeated
winks and nods of disapproval from
the Managers, persists in talking about
the possibilities of the Lost Cause at the
most unseemly tives. But the sugges
tion that the Radicals have concocted
this precious farrago of nonsense and
treason for electioneering purposes is
quite as ludicrous as the vaunt that the
Democracy is the only party that can
bring about return to honesty and con
stitutional laws. This last phrase is
exquisite tooling." Tribune, September
C, 1871.
"To 'Love rum and hate niggers' ha
so long been the essence of the Demo
cratic faith that the cooler, wiser heads
of the party vainly spend their strength
in efforts to lift it out of the rut in
which they plainly see that it can only
run to perdition. While slavery en
dured, negro bate was an element of
positive strength in our political con
tests, so that the Constitutional Con
ventions of this and Other free States
j were usually carried by the Democrats
on the strength of appeals to the coarser
and baser whites to Let the nigger
know- his place.' " Tribune, April 7,
1871.
" Tho Democratic party ot to-day is
simply the Rebellion seeking to achieve
its essential purposes within and
through the Union. A victory which
does not enable it to put its feet on the
necks of the black race seems to the
bulk qf its adherents not worth having.
Its heart is just where it was when it re
garded Slavery and the Constitution as
two names for one thing. It hates the
Generals who led the Union Armies to
Victory, and rarely misses a chance to
disparage them. It clings to that ex
aggerated notion of State Rights which
makes them the shield of all manner ot
w-ongs and abuses. It takes counsels
of its hates even more than of its aspi
rations and will be satisfied with no tri
umph that docs not result in the ex
pulsion ot all active, earnest Republi
cans from the South. Tribune, March
2U, 1871. t
1
"The great Gorilla of the Democracy
is tilling the air with his demoniacal
howling, and beating his breast like a
tremendous drum, to express his savage
joy over the first full meal he has had
after years of enforced abstinence. Eat
your fill now, Gorilla, lor you will never
have another chance !" Tribune, No
vember 11,1867.
What H. G. Knows about Seecs-
sion.
" Wuit 1 demand is proof that the
Southern people really desire separation
from the Free States. Wheneuer assured
tlutt such is their settled wish, I SHALL
JOYFULLY CO-OPERATE WITH
THEM. TO SECURE THE END THEY
SEEK. Thus far, I have had evidence
of nothing but a purpose to bully and
coerce the North Many of the Seces
sion emissaries to the Border Slave States
tell the people they address that they
do not really mean to dissolve the
Union, but only to secure what they
term their rights in the Union. Now,
as nearly all the people of the Slave
States either are, or have to seem to be,
in favor of this, the present menacing
front of Secession proves nothing to the
purpose. Maryland and Virginia have
had no idea of breaking up the Union ;
but they would both dearly like to bully
the North into a compromise. Their
Secession demonstrations prove just this,
and nothing more," Tribune, January
21, 1861.
"We utterly deny, repudiate, and
condemn the pretended Right of Seces
sion. No such right is known to our
Federal Constitution, nor,in fact, to any
civilized framework Of government.
No such right was reserved,. or supposed
to be reserved, when the States ratified
or adopted the Federal Constitution.
We do not believe that a mere majority
ot a community may, in disregard of all
existing forms, upset an existing gov
ernment and put one of their choice in
its plaice. We do not believe the whole
population we will say of Nantucket
or Staten Island have a right,1 moved
by a prospect of unlimited gains by
smuggling to the main land, to break
oft from the Union and annex their
island to Great Britain or e?t up for
themselves. 'We do not believe a nation
is, like a mob or mass-meeting, to b
dispersed by a thunder-shower or
steam fire-engine playing upon if
Tribune, June 3, 1862. . . -
" Tbe advocates of Disunion, we mean
those who do not cautiously hint, but
who do obstreperously halloo howl their
nonsense, which 1 is not respectable
enough to be called treasonons, are usu
ally half witted" Members of! Congress
and quarter witted .Editors. Itia veiy
easy fori some i newspaper man, who,
when he bought his 'types, did not buy
Murray's grammar, and who considers
Webster's spelling bookto be a vile in
cendiary publication, to stab the Consti
tution dissolve the Union, and anbiliate
New York and Boston, make an occi
dental London ot Charleston, buildup
an imperial miracle of a State, which
shall cast the ancients into oblivion and
drive all other moderns to despair.
Wrath whisky and tobacco are wonder
fully rapid architects, onlytheir fabrics
are base'ess, and when they fade away
they leave not a wreck, bnt'only a head
ache behind." -Tribune, July 21, 1850.
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i CATa liKfi, INFLUENZA
HEADACH'- , TOOTHACHE, i A'
NE L'iiALGlA, RIlEUMATIfiM
COLD CiilLLrf, AGUE CHILLS. '
The application ol the Ready Rclil(
to the part or parts where the pain or diffi
culty exists will afford ease and comfort
Twenty drops in half a tumbler of water
will iu a few moments cure Crami
Spasms, Sour Stomach, Heartburn, Sick
ih.u-j.icui, iiaimeu, lysenterv. Col.,.
Wind
iu
the Bowels, and all Internal
Pains
Travelers should uiwifys
carry a bot
Relirf vL-iti.
ue o; Jtuuivny7 iteuUy
sickness or pains from change of water
It is
better than French Brandy or Bittern
timulant.
as a st.
VTR AJV1) AL'fc.
Fever and Ague cured for. fifty cenu
There is not a remedial agent fn this world
that will cure Fever and Ague, and al
other Malarious, Bilious, Sca-lt, Typhoid
Yellow, and other Fevers (aided bv kAn'
HEALTH 1EEAU1Y!!
STRONG AND PURE RICH 131 uob
INCKEAoE OF FL EcJR A NI WEIGIiTi
CLEAKfeKlN AND BEAUflFUL COM
I'LEXLv L iiEI To ALL
ik. m a. n ut a - s
yAESAPAiilLLIAN RESOLVENT
HAS
OLjAiis; cOC2UiCK, SO KAFIu'aJJU;
THE CHANGES THE BODY UNDEK
GOES, UNDER THE INFLUENCE OF
THIS TKULi WONDEKFUL MEDI
CINE, THAT
id WtiSflit is Si'in nil l U
THE V R EAT- ii LUO I V URiFI IAI .
Every drop oi the fi:'r.pariliian Kesoi
vtnt communic-atcs Ihrt.uhthe . Blood
oi the bife.oin nc Vi-,r of Ufo; for it re
pairs tho wast s i the hotly with new aud
; !'ULC . uiatt:"ai. fccioiida, Syphilis, Con
gumption Gland ujardte, biccrsin the
.'J.UUIU, IlJUJOl-b. i0()('K n th
Glands and other pai ls ot the syrtem, 8ore
r,ycs, -btrumorous .iieharices from the
and tuc worst luriub oi Skin diseases,
.rijptiOi3S, W JSoj cs, Scald JKad, King,
vvonu. MiitRii-feum, Erysipelas. Acne
Chemistry, and u fw Hkm1
U6e will prove to any person .using it lor
either oi these forms of disease its potent
power to cure them. 1
-If the paiitnt, d.tiJj. hvcomir reduced
lj the UhMen and decoiupotiitioii that it
eoa.iuu ti.j progressing, sueceeds in arrest
in thtsc wiistes, and repairs the same with
new material made from healthy blood
aud this the Sarsaptfrilliau will and docs
secure a cure is certain ; for when once
this leineuy. commences its work ofpuri
ncatiou, and succeeds in diminishing the
lossol wastes, its repairs will be rfpid,
and every day the patient will feel himself
growing better ad stronger, the food .di
gesting better, appetite improving, and
llesL and weight increasing. ;
Not only does the Surapariilian Kesol-'
vent excel all known remedial agents in
.he cure otijhronie. Scrofulous, Constitu
Uoual, aua Skiii diseases ; but it is the only
positive cure for , .
Kidney and Bladder Complaints,
Urinary, and Womb diseases, Gravel, Dia
betes, Dropsy, Stoppage of Water, In-
Ui;"l-U enue, nnui's oisease, Al
buminuna, and in all cases where there an
are
.jncK-uust depoeiis, or the water is thick,
cloudy, raixed with M-,!(nB h
white oA an egg, or threads like white silk,
or there is a morbid, dark, bilious appear
ance, and white bone-dust deposits, and
when there is a i.-ricking, burning sensa'
Uon when passing water, and pain in the
Small of the Back and along the Loins.
BR. FAS)WAY'S
PERFECT PUR8ATIVE PILIS
perfectly taeteles.6 , elegantly coated witn'
sweet gum, purge, regulate, purify, cleans
I ... i'oir worms iu the Flesh, Tumors, ;
t.ancers iu ihy jVoab, and ail weakening
u;,d iaih:i-idiscnargfcs, Night Sweats, Um
oi opertii and all wastes of the life printip,o
arc witum the curative range ot this vod
der of Modern ChernUtrv ..i ..
mieugiuen. iKaaa's fills, lor tne
cure of all disorders of the Stomach, Liver, .
bowels, Kidneys, Bladder, Nervous Di
eases, Headache, Constipation, Costive
ness, Indigestion, Dypepaia, Biliousness,
Bilious Fever, Inflammation of the Bowela.
Files, and all derangementsof the Internal
Viscera. Warranted to effect a positive
cure. Fnrely Vegetable, containing nO
mercury, minerals, or deleterous drugs. .
2"Observc the foliowmg symptomJt
resulting from Disorders of the Digestive
Organs:
Constipation, Inward Piles, rnllness
of the Blood in the Head, Acidity of the
Stomach, Nausea, Heartburn, Disgust ol
Jood, Fulhicis or Weight in the 8tomacbi
Sour Eructations, Sinking or Fluttering
atthePitof the Stomach.'
A few doses of RAD WAY'S PILLS will
free the system from all the above named
disorders. Price S3 cents per 'Box. Sold
by Druggists. ,
READ "FALSE AND TRUE." fiend
one letter-stamp to RAD WAY A CO., No.
i W arren Street; corner of Church Street,
Aew lork. Informations worth thouaandi
will be sent you.
June 29 iso-U