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[From the Franklin County RazettB.]
ngof tlie Coimcrlpt—*'300,UUUiUore."
BY E. A, H.
r Abraham,
three hundred
with bleeding
TO THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF
CALIFORNIA.
Fellow-CitizeJis—Thc action'of the late Democratic State Convention __ is, as
.We're.comiug, Pathi
thousand more;
We leave our homes and Iii
hearts and sore ;
Siuce poverty has been our crime, we bow to thy
decree;
We are lhe poor who have no wealth to purcase
liberty;
The dearest forma we love on earth shall never
greet us more—
We're coming, FaLher Abraham, three hundred j
thousand more.
We're eotning, Father "Abraham, three hundred j
thousand more.
Against our wills, our dearest rights vouchsafed:;
by sites of yore;
Conscription comes with bloody hands and Christ-1
ians thirst for biood,
Tbe Church demands that ours must flow to swell
the crimson flood,
And on the altars of your zeal the purple tide we
pour—
We're coming, Father Abraham, three hundred
thousand more.
We're coming, Father Abraham, three hundred
thousand more,
To lay our weary limbs to bleach on Rappahannock's shore;
Yuo've gathered in your hectacombs three hundred
thousand braves,
And uow go forth to dig anew three hundred
thousand graves,
Where shrieks of death ring on the air above the
battle's roar-
We're coming, Father Abraham, throe hundred
thousand more.
Executive
iy lime and
entitled to
demand from ui
wbo aspires to i
a candid exposi
iilate lor theii
ive or executi*
our political or;
it ol the policy
republicau Congress, in order to shield from expo-
aud th
cert air
of publi
id pun
elinquents.
the Uuiti
:d Sla;
es,
fro
in the
nl,
was p
roved
lo hav
e beet
-.•Hi-
e of n
in pro
, oi an
msheil
listrat
■.uriiiL*
. aud :
ion, g
■_, a
tin
our
,0S8i
br
i p
tr
•d
ibe to
ureha:
1 prusf
present coinm
which no one (
opinions ofthe cons;
ofthe Federal and St
relative duties. It if
tion, to lay belore yc
deem proper and app
of our State affaire.
iii t
lial c
nsid.!!
, my del
id mat
einpir
Ambassador
Act to suspend in
s lor the prosecution
state of. llhodc 1s-
o:
rn
ti
gniUy of the grave
w
use bis offieal iuflu-
*
%, by the govern-
tr
et the Senator went «
which supports the'o
ie-crime without re- B
rd 'A- coniment. To ''
i exist in the highest *
oud so notorious li
■publican House of «
ed by the prepare of e
malfeasance ill office
vi- the President of f
vice and consent of|6
ii, the court, of the
h
f | it io to permit the immigratio
I race which must evi
1 i. The imi
into our B'ate of a
main a i-i
ost obvious effect
■i«^________________________>l'''lt;'r '"hor iuto
ompetilion with thato! our worthy ind'us-
,; a result which must be deplored by all
rd the material prosperity and moral ad -
it of the laboring population, as one of
st objects of a state's legislation. In the
ny election, I shall use my personal and
fluence, as far as it may be legitimately
to procure the passage of laws todis-
he immigration of all euch personal It
gued U should be, lhe home ot a happy,
ied and patriotic race of white freemen,
federal tases. wbloh om* citizens will t
2d t
ay 1
nil
i the
, I shall,
All these accumulated evidences of alarming na-j
ional degradation should claim the serious consi-
eratio.u of every true citizen of Hie republic, and |
11 who- seek to save their country from eerLiin de-
tructiou. Let us labor ihen for a return to mi- |
ess office
piactica
islatun
■,'for a ^^^
let us solemnly t
e and to all the s;
rd
ishly i
iih
>a to
ol lhe
% th«i
als
News-Dealers and Booksellers,
Read and Remember!!!
3". STRATMAN
Wholesale News-Dealer,
Puck*,ana.Fcwwvdi aU the luii.Y a&3 wkkkly nf.wp.
PAl'BRS, MAGAZINES, ice, to all parts of tlie country
With !;re;it dlSpateh,
1 Sell at. Prices (lint Defy Competition,
iv<nl ai soon as Puhllsaacfi
eiiH'utn With all the cliITcrcnt Put,.
■uu! I'lu-ni.-ili llii;Tfi,.(lrv:ith I.Sisolt.,
1 have unequaled facilities, aad guarantee ^ealers ft(
Send lor inyPilM 1-1*1. ami give mc a trial.
Attention 'va called lo the Ust of AMERICAN ami foi;.
IK.'N PERIODICALS] for wblpb I reiicivo subscript]-jii-i.
I'cnn.iu'-iii -i.,-iaie-,-i,i'-nl.i baving been mads by thn
Ini testates Government for catr.vTng'oT the mnlln trbtn
"it]i,Um
y.vf.vy new Novel
T liave BpflolaS at
ch low
Tlltu
ich i
dis
■ ih
"■nib. ,,_..,
,1) packages, (<>■: trtycb tlii.. eatob,
ch nn enviable rejiutaridn through-
,.,1 for all the San Francisco DalliM
pie
7-the
We1
To i
3 coming, Father Abraham, three hundred
thousand more,
tisly ttie Christian's zeal, a nation's thirst for
gore;
O God of Love ! 0 Prince of Peace! is ther* no
pitying eye,
No voice of peace, from all thy saints, to] pierce
the ieadeo sky?
In vain we've bowed at human shrines, and knelt
at mercy's door—
We're coining, Father Abraham, three huudred
thousand more.
We're coming, Father Abraham, three hundred
. . thousand more;
Thy cal! wo answer with our lives, for we've no
wealth in store ;
Is this your laud of boasted rights, the nation of
. the Iree,
That' puts a value on the soul, a price on liberty ?
While justice pleads, and mercy weeps, and loving
hearts implore—
We're coming, Father Abraham, three hundred
thousand more.
We're coming. Father Abraham, three hnndred
thousand more,
And yet the gloom that shrouds the land is deeper
Abaft before;
Oh, what return shall come to men from all th
deadly -strife?
And what Bhall compensate for all this fearful loss
cf life?
And what shall calm thy troubled breast, when ou
that peaceful shore.
We meet thee, Father Abraham, three huudred
thousand more.
nl Hancock.
Win field Scott Hancock was born in Montgomery county, Pa., February 14tb, 1824, Hevrai
appointed a Cadet in the Military Academy at West
Point in 1840. In hii class was Alfred Pleasantom
who commands tbe cavalry in tho Union army and I
Simon B. Buekner and Daniel M. Frost now of tho
rebelfoices. He graduated June 30th, 1844, was
immediately as-igned to the Sixth infantry as Bre-
yet Secoand Lieutenant, and ordered to duty in tbo
indiau Territory. He was promoted Second Lieutenant June 18th, 1S-16. During the Mexican war
he distinguished himself, gaining a brevet of First
Lieutenant August 20th. 1847, for gallant and mer"
itorious service in the battles of Contreras and Che-
rnbusco, and before leaving Mexico waa appointed
Regimental Quartermaster, wbich place be filled tiil I
1819, wh* be was appointed Adjutant, and stationed iu Missouri till November 7th, 1855. On that
date he was commissioned Captain and Assistant
Quartermaster, and ordered to Florida, where he
remained during the Seminole campaign. He was
after wai dg sent to Kansas, and started on thc expedition to Utah ; but that beiug abandoned, be proceeded to Fort Bridger, and aceompaniod his old
regiment, the Sixth infantry, across tha plains to
Benicia, California. For more than two years he
was stationed, at Los Angeles, Cal., and on the
breaking out of the rebellion was ordered to report at Washington, On the 23d of September,1
1861, be was appointed a Brigadier General of Volunteers, and placed in command of a brigade in
McClellan's army, occupying a position near Vienna.
He was in Franklin's division of McDowell's corps,
and accompanied this force to the Peninsula, when
it was detached and sent to McClellan during tbe
siege ol Yorktown. In tbe whole of theoperation on
the Cbickahominy he was conspicuous, and his famous bayonet charge upon the rebels at U illiams-
burg will long be remembered by his friends with
especial pride. Gen, McClellan characterized this
charge in an official report as 'brillant in tbe extreme." He also took a prominent part in the
Maryland campaign, and won new honors at South
Mountain and Antietam Creek. On the fall
Gen, Richardson he was placed at the head of tbat
officer's division of Sumner's corps, late Couch
perfectly expressed, the
judgment which seeks i
heart that desires, alios
the toe/fare of Calif nn
Federal Union, and the preservation of the Con
stitution Willi ali its guarantees oj liberty- These
objects cnn be obtained by one course only—a fatlh-
ful observance of the spirit and letter ol the constitution, »s understood by the lathers who framed
our institution,*, aud interpreted by the Supreme
Court of the United Staten. Even in a period ol
profound tranquility, a deviation by any depart-
f the government from the.sphere .of action
preajribrd for it by the organic law of the land, is
tteuded with dangerous results. But iu a time of
/ar and extraordinary excitemeent, when sectional aiiitnosiiiuis are intensified, when the passions of
the multitude, and the zeal of the dominant parly
are intolerant cf any opposition, the restraints
and limitations imposed by law ou the Federal
government should be sacredly observed. A persistent diaregaid of them by our rulers, if sanctioned by the people, must speedily lend to revolution
and anarchy, teruiiuitiiig in the overthow ol cm-
sti tn tional liberty and thedissoiutiou of the Union,
Duriug the first sixty years of our national exis •
tence no statesman, nor prominent leader of any
political party, dared to palliate, much 1,
tify, an encroachment by the general go
on the rights ofthe States or tlie liberties oi tue
Indeed such was the jealous solicitude ol 1
the fathers on this subject, that at the final sexton
of the lirst Congress oftlie United States the foi—
leiidiiient to ttie Constitution was proposed, and subsequently adopted by the requisite
number of States:
"The powers not delegated to the United. States
by the Constitution, jilir prohibited by it to Ihe
Stales, arc reserved ta the States, respectively, or
to the people.'' Until the advent into power of
the Republican party the foregoing, .amendment
was held not less obligatory than the grantd ol
power to the Federal government, recited iu the
fundamental law.
No State is more loyal or devoted to fhe American Uuiou than Calilornia. She has responded
with alacrity to all demands made on her patriotism, han paid with uncomplaining cheerfulness her
portion ol the onerous taxes levied by the government, and contributed a larger amount to the
Notional Sanitary Fund than auy one of her sister
States.
But while California bas furnished tbe most gratifying evidence of an ardent and unselfish attachment to tbe Uuion, yet her citizens must have
witnessed with apprehension aud abhorrence repeated acts of tyranny, usurpation and corruption
practiced by the Republican Administration and
[Congress at Washington City, and their officials,
(civil and military, throughout the Uuited States,
Ve have seen martial law proclaimed and the writ
■f habeas corpus suspended, the right of trial by
jury denied, ttie sanctity of the mails violated,
contributions levied oil wbole communities by irresponsible military subordinates, imprisonment,
banishment or death inflicted on cilizeiiH accused
of no crime aud tried before tribunals unknown to
the laws, and a system p£ espionage and secret police established which finds a parallel-only in the
annals of Asiatio despotism. Newspapers which
ventured to complain of these outrages have beeu
forcibly suppressed by order of government, or
.refused ali mail facilities, aud meetings of the
j people called to consider and peacefully petition
I lor a redress of grievances have been dispersed at
! the point of the bayonet. Bear in mind ihat these
wrongs have not been perpetrated alone io sections
of the country where rebellion prevailed, but iu
loyal States of the North; not by lawless and irresponsible mobs, but publicly and shamelessly by
the express order of the lulministratiou. *» Again,
the Constitution of tlie United Suites, Article 4,
Sec. 3, enacts that "New States may be admitted
by Congress into this Union, but no new Siate shall
be formed or erected within the jurisdiction of any
other State, or any State be lortned by the junction of two or more States, or parts of States,
without the onn-ant oT flttf TOgislatiire ot the Slates
conccr.'ietl, as well r*.s al felon ;.: .■•■v'" { . d-ts m,;- *
of this plain prohibition of ihe org:iu,c law, tJoti-
g-rfiai", at its last session, parsed au act, which the
President approved, dismembering the Slate of
Virginia and forming within her boundaries a new
State without the consent of the legislature. Tiie
action of the government in relerencn to Virginia
is of peculiar significance to our people, as prupo-
sitious have beeu advocated by leading statesmen
of the republican parly lo dismember California
by creating two new States within bee limit*--; a
measure which would add to the burthens of out
tax-ridden citizens, without corresponding1 beu-
.■isbiUin
*e ol" th
n that corrupt appliances had in-
iL'islutivo action. Again the Leslie sanction of the Governor, has
!„„,. ,., _... Lions anticipating the ordinary revenues of the state for years to come. It require*
*em- no argument, to illustrate the pernicious repi.lt of
■■sent Mich a system. These abuses must be corrected or
the the stale will be involved in hopeless bankruptcy.
basis Whether a party which has inaugurated them can
f honor and duty, to t
ct
Resolved, That the democracy of tho state ol
California are LU 1'iiyor of an unalterable adherence
lo the constitution "ot tbe United States, wilb
all its guarantees of civil liberty unimpaired.
Resolved, That we arc in favor ofthe restoration
and preservation of the whole American Union ;
that we recognize toils fullest extent the right
and duty of the government to resist by every constitutional mode ve hellion or inunrreclion airaiust
ils lawful supremacy : but we recognize Lhat right
solely for the purpose of restoring its constitutional authority, and lor no olher purpose whatever.
Resolved, That it is lhe duty of the state of California, as a meinber q'f the Union, to yield obedience to all constitutional'scis ol Congress and
;he Federal Executive, and tiiat any individual,
of any party, who shall endeavor lo incite insurrection or rebellion within her borders, or disaffection arid'discord among her people, is a traitor
to- her best inUirehts.
Resolved. That the aim and object of the democratic party is to pjfeseve the Federal Union ard
the rights of the several .Stales unimpaired j and
they herehy declare that they do not consider the ad
miuislrative usurpation of extraordinary am! dangerous powers not granted l>y the Con-iituiinn-—
lhe subversion of the civil by Liie military law in
States not iu insaiieulioa or rebellion — ihe arbitrary military arrest, imprisonment, trial and sentence of American citizens in such States where
civil law exists in full force and reign— the suppression ofepeeph and oi the press—the op-m and
avowed disregard of State rights— the tanaiical
attempt I i a a ■■■ the oegro on a social and political equality \.\Ao lhe while race—and the employ-
ntofunusi -I test-oaths—as calculated to preserve or restore ft utfion of tbe several Pfhtea or
perpetuate a government :*deriving.its just pow
ers from the consent of the gi.vei'iii.'d."
Resolved. That we are opposed lo all secret
political organizations and tOi-ie- ies. as dan irt
Lo the liberties of ibe people and destrnettv*
our republican torm of government.
Resolved, That we claim and demanil as in ali CO:
able rights, freedom of (bought; freedom o! speech.
of the press, add further declare that giivernnienl
agents should at all times be held to ti strict accountability to Lhe people, and that all errors of
such agents Bbould be liable to the lull and Iree
discus-don for the purpose of correction by the
ballot-box.
Resolved. That we denounce and unqualifiedly
condemn tiie Eniaiici pation I'VoJani'i tmn oi the
President of the United States as loading to protract indefinitely civil war, incite servile insurrection, aud inevitably eh.se tbe door lot ever to a vest ii rati on of the union of these S^a-ies.
Resolved, That we disapprove of all Con-gres-
Sloctal laws Lending to Bubstilote a paper currency
in California in place of" our owu metallic ciieuUf
ing medium.
Resolved-,- That the spirit and meaning of tbe
Democratic Dial form of tbia State are coinnrisw.l
in the words, "The Constitution as it is and the
Union as il wfla."
There are other euhjeefs of crave public importance, not directly embraced in the above ivi-idu-
ttOOSi Permit me, belore clo-ing this cuininuutea*
tion, to lay before you my views ib pelterente to
them, soliciting that patient and serious oon-ddei*:,-
tioD which it becomes a free people Lo he.-towun ail
questions that may vitally affect their present and
future prosperity.
IVIipo Calilornia became asoferoign member of
lill.K
■aide ii
w-jpaper.MngazI
Order* fcr Bin
ntiUy- at tlielow
'■ .bh- in adv
tn* lleview, will lie fund slur]
, tfuMe, Fancy AHlclea, ki.
iriiukcl. rail's. Su 1i;icmjjlitin-i
s Put).
\>w MilUmy lt<n>1:s Itecclvinl ns rood r
All kiiidr* nr •.-rilUT.U'.Y QpGDS Imported fe orAw,
Svr<W BUM. and Presentation Sword* got up in th,
iest style in thirty day*, -it llfty per eent. less ih_.n S_,n
A-l.lriisr;,
i safely entrusted with thetr reformation, is a
quo-lion which remainn for you to determine.
Fellow-citizens, if ever there was a time in our
history which demanded from tlie people oi Cali
fornia the exercise of enlightened reason and exalted patriotism, lbe present is that period. The ordinary issues of a state canvass aiuk into insignifi
cauce when compared.to the consequences dependent on the result of the approaching September
election. Il will determine by what principles,
under wbat rulers the government of California
shall b-administered for the ensuing four years.
More than ihat : it will exercise an important influence on the public opinion of the eai-teru sutes
and possibly on the destinies of the nation. Your
*y isolation from the tumultous paHfiions, and
scenes of sanguinary violence, prevalent in other
sections of the Union, will bestow dignity and
power on any jndgm-mtyou may render. Decide.
theu,whelher you will adhere toa party. Ihe leaders
of which rath lew I y trample upon the most sacred
guarantees of liberty, or wheiher you will support
the national democracy in their efforts to arrest the
progress of a despotism wbicb tb res tens to subveit
every vestige of freedom that, yet remains In the
American confederacy, Decide as far as your
votes c.iti determine the question, whether tlie in-
terneeiue war which (bio] a ten our unhappy country sliall be waged for the ppecervuticvn of thai
constitution, and the restoration of that Union
which your lathers ordained; or whether it shall
be coitductedin a spirit of fanaticism, which nhlum
am! rejects alike the dictates of humanity and (he
usages of civiiiz.id nations, with im other objeCU
than tlie einauci|iatii>n nl four millions of ni-gro
slaves of the south, and the est ah, ish ment cl a con
soli dated military despotism in tlie n,,rih. Whatever may be your ileoision, my fervent prayer i:
tbal heriven Bril| vouchsafe to our beloved cmiiUry
asp'eedy deliverance from her present, troubles,
and tr, Cdifornia anti her PJBfcef communities 00
the Pacific the continuance of peace, prosjierity
anil liberty.
John- G. Downey.
July 13lh, ISG3.
,7. STRATIVIAN,
New, Aneut, Ban Kra:
MINING CLAIMS
FOit SALE_0R TRADE.
1432 fe"t in some of the best Ledges in El Dorado
Canon.
2KM feet in the Original Discovery Location*! at
RocK Springs and Silver Hill, five claim* \n
which are Incorporated, and the work of opeo-
ing them is in progrwa. Also,
-100 feet in the Sau Franoi«co District, in the best
I.edL'eS. —
rpIIK above vnluiible ground will be POLI) or
JL TRADED at a great nieniiee, if effected noon.
A list Of Hie el-aims Can lie seen al 1 his Office,
and all putioulara ascertained. Xone but pi-inci-
pale need apply. jy*2ftn-l
ST'iI;
hat fe
) .-; ^i<;
S V M M O S S .
.Ti'iii'.NIA. ('on uty of I.OH Angelef. flavin j
D-i >-:■',! til'; rnrilieiL-.-il of .Inui-' 11. I._.B(l»r,
- - riHtactorilv therefrom, Hint * good
,-ii-Miii belinif (.f tli" pin.Intnl. Ft-idi-
JiLiii-t th« n,-!",*i:'!:ril'. It'-erv paftOQ, iivi
!:.nt l,:is departed from tbe State of C»li-
■:__lu,:j .if ilu; i-laiiiiltrsattornfjiltli or-
fEfME'i. fimrME
Cor. Sansome and Halleck Streets
(OPPOSITE TffE AMERICAN THEATRE,')
SAN PKANC1SOO.
JL _THE.CNiJERSlGNEi. re«pcctfuJly infot
: f-xica^idXKii r
Hug Public, bj* well
. Uml he liix \-v 1 the
■i'i oeritrally Ivcttted Hotblj
A riKST-CLASS HOUSE,
At: itaroderate Prices*
Tu
itha
r 111,
■,„■,.,
ite-iiirnlcling; anil Be-fttrnl6T»lmg,
e EXCHANGE, un-i rt will hot compa,re fiivorablj with
,; first claie hotels of the city.
WE ii \vi-; >!'!,i:Nidn
SUITS OF ApAUTlttENXS
aiiio t li i-:„-,' number at Dm r-hi^l,; swats
Ii. i„ iii,. purpose of the Proprietor to make the r.
cii.w;:*; ■,,-,,■ ,.,. ih- vw-i ■-■■.u...n:;}.\<: -.u,.\ home-lil
h«eft in the Stile, anfl make the
Pi-ices to Suit Use Times.
T XI ^5 t3V^ DS 31a ^3
fortitt, e
die .-niri'il ■f.-i, i.ml b)- publication, bv pqMitUng theiutn-
non-s. with i rtifieJcopv lijircof, once a. «tel( ror thr,,
mini!,. 1 . ■ ■ ;.., .-'•■■:■■'.■.-, Ptak, a newtpaper publiihedin
l>ee Angele* County. And it appearing tbat tfie doinleil
md iiMii.l re-lit-iiee of ilie defendant i- In Ua Ang*-l(i
Bounty, nan that hie mddreM wtdic in ,■.,]■: conntj vn
L.is .'\:i:4'.|,...s citjj it. In furthur ordered tl»»t tbe mm-
moan ftnd oerl ifiefl copy ,,f tl.e complaint be deno ilted in
ibr pent offloe aMrem-ied to defpniliu.t at unid city.
Tiiun d,i ire at cbambOTi tUi« •-■'.:■:. -v.:. of ttstf, 1863.
STATE OF CALIFORNIA, County of LpJ Ancelen;
I. John \V, Shore Clerk oft>»e [Ustrliil Court of fhe Tint
Imliciid District. I.'-'s Aiiceli!-" C"unty. Slate nf CaHtbrOlft,
l.i hereby certify tbat 'Ire nboxe and foregoing ji » full,
true, iu ii ■ 1 cbrreci copy of the brlglnal order ai :':■■'. uni
ippears on liie in iny office.
,—'—, WimeKflniy hand with the seal o( our nid
( "1 Court affixed, rr* Lou Ang*le«, the 25th day'of
i ],. B. - Uu. A. P., IW3.
{ j .'mix W SHORE, Cln-k.
By JeswH I1l*Bkr, Jr., J)eputj,
STATEOF CALTFORXIA, Cpuntj of Loi Angelm. In ti,-
District Court ol ti," First Judicial DU trict. I»r«l
Fleicliman and ,Iu!iu- Pichel as Kleir-hman ■'■ Stehel r..
Jh-nri- Ualloii. .-*.,■! iu:i lin.ii.::lil in ■■'•■■'■ i *:■-■:-1 t.'.jurl of
the First .tu.lii-.i.-.l Hi-li*^; "f Iir- :•■:.:<: ■■>', ritif'.rina, in
and Tor the laid county of Lor Angeles and tU com-
plaint Blied In Mai I county of Loi Angelea, in the office of
md Dietriof Curt.
'iii,. i'.."*:.:.. oftbe Btate of CaSfcnfofa rsta\*\ rrtWint: To
Heavy Dalton, dofandant. '''■■■- ■■■ beicbj reqmiw to
-nr in an :i,'li,*ii irii.ri S-'-- ava.::,-- yu\l OS tlie above
ed plaintiff* In tho [ffKtrict Court ol :■■,- Flrdt judicial
riot n( theState ofChlifhriria, In And for the County
of I,", Aa:--) .-.. rui.l lo a iv ■.■■■-,■ :',.- ,-,,in :*ln in t lit-l tii-rein.
fa copy ■■; -.;■;:;.:.: jcsomj r, ai- ■ ;;,:■■ mi imom . I ■« '■ tiii;; "-a
days, (exclu.iveof the day of ■■:■*.:,-... the v-^k-
you olthia summons—if served within this tlouaty;
if aervad oat ol thfi connty, I il fcitliiB thii J,aJrti*l
i.i;-*,;-:..-l. ::,■,■:■.:■: ,':..:■■•■, ■.. :< ■■.-:;■-:■ oui of i»M
DSntrict. then within rojty ,;:.:*■■—■•:■ Ju Igment bjdefwU
*.vi;i betaken agatuat yo'u according to the prayer of »»iii
'i'i,,v**ri'l iction ■ ': ■ :-■**■ (!J :: T. '■■- y tt/SOt Df ••''-•.I til*. »UB1
of i-,',;;:,n,( -JT-lui-i. for <!!■. ,-v- _■■■,..;.. -.■..-....-.. i..:,-\ ;-..•: ,jb-,li-
diie delivered by plainrtffa to yon at youi Inatanc* and
'.*■', i ii'.-.-t. it mi f,,r iiri.:r-i*-.i a nil co it of »uit — for further Information reference ir* made to \'v ccmtylafaf.
Ami you :n-.- li'.u-ijy noiiii.v. :\:.,\ if yuri fr.il to appftr
tndanHver thesaid complaint hi above required, tU»
laid plaintiffs ■'ill take Judgment aeatoHt you, app^y to
the ('ou;*; for the relief prayed For In complaint.
Given undermv hand and th* ea! bl the Dlatrfet Cou-:
—■— of thi-l.fr-,1 Judicial Biatrial of it;-* Slate or
<'.lil\.rsi*::i. ii, „ir.i lor li.,- Pi,i,l O.untr of Ul
-, rAv/r\r-. l'.\tt V\u ,':,v t.i Sr:..::.},.-v A D. 1853,
( J JOITN v,\ P1IOHK, Cktk.
*—,—' Hy .to-: rti Htnon Jr.", ttefatf.
ii,
Uh .w
Finally, tbe Prenident of the United StateB* by
hia emiinoipatJiin prooiamiitinn, att^uapteB to interfere with an institution exclusivnly nader tlie
.control of the individual s mi en, nnd han tim*' erected an almoat impa*"sibie barrier to the reconstruction of tbe Union. By hia plan of "eompeiUaMd
[emoncipatiou" the Preside tit, and his puriy jjropos'i
I to tax the laboring while man in order tn porchU
the freedom
In tho recent battle r.ear Gettysburg, lie wai
s shot 1 or in competition with that oi the white citizen?
thfough tbe groin, and died from the effects of the of,tbe °or'ilntl!uts tased:f ,We ca,in10t fiftlt.er 0».r"
° b ' selves that California, tf her people acquiesce in,
wound. aarj hy their votes at the ensuing election approve
j these outrages, will escape from the thraldein which
uil tbe rtj-liir- am! pnviujgts enjuffed bv iu,y oi tim
original thir teen statea. By virtue ol that sovereignty she is entitled to all the mineral wealth
within her boundaries. Such is the opinion ol sue
ceesive legislatures that hov$ expressed, through
various enactmeut.-, their viir.v^on IbeBubject. and
saoh has been tiie solemn adjudication of tho 'Supreme Court of the stale. Thufi Wr the state 1ms
guarded tbis right with the most jealous cure.
She holds it in trust fnr the bent-lit of hei citizeus,
leaving them perfectly free to work and develop
tbe mines as their owu judgments mny fl rotate, exacting Do tribute from pt^tiea in possession, and
a",.1!,, :i .j ::i Ih,; local ln\vs tmule by U.m: miii,-n*
themselvea for the management ami government ol
their respective districts. Any interference with
tlie mines, then, by the federal government, eould
result only in iinmii igaied evil. JI would impair;,
il not destroy all milling titles now existing, anil
check all jut tire develop an; ota qf i.iiis the chief
»ouree of 0Uf wealth and prosperity, virtually
; striking atthe very foundations.of our ei-tublisli-
tingior the
ad
An enthusiaslic believer was relating lo a sceptic
some spiritual works. Among olher things, he said
that on a certain occasion the spirit of hia wife, who
had been dead several years, returned to him, and
seating herself upon hii knee, put'her arms around
him and kissed him, as much to ids gratification as
she used to do when living. "You do not mean to
eay," remarked tho skeptic, "that the spirit of your
wife really embraced and kissed you ?;' "No, no'
exactly that," replied tha believer, "but her spirit
took possession of the body of a female medium,
and through her embraced and kissed me."
Rather a Serious Sort ov Joke.—The Boston
Post tells of a practical joke lately played off in that
city upon two of the students of Harvard College
Thoy were attending a ladies' fair in Uoxbury when
"just for the joke of the thing," some of their pleas
antly ingenious friends playfully pointed them out
to the police as pick-pockets. The result was, they
ivere avoided in the fair as thieves, and then they
were arrested and put in jail all night, and ultimately forced to sign a paper promising not to prosecute tho policeman before they were allowed to
depart. The entire faculty of Harvard law school
have addressed a paper to the Mayor o( Ruxbury
vindicating the students character, and requesting a
protest agaiust the outrage inflicted upou them.
xists in many ofour sister states of the Atlanti
Onr duty as American citizens, regard for our freedom, and tbe sacred obligation incumbent on us to
bequeath to our children the free institutions under which we have so far eminently prospered, ad-
monish ns to register at tbe polls our earnest protest against these tyranicalaud most unwarrantable
usurpations of power.
Within the last two years more than two thousand millions of dollars liave been expended, and
upwards of two hundred thousand of our citizen
soldiers have perished on the battlefield.-, or In
military hospitals. It is no extravagant assertion
that more than half of this treasure and of these
invaluable lives have been sacrificed through the
imbecility and corruption of the ad m i 11131 rati on at
Washington, and its subordinate officers. Reports
ofi
subject from ?aj
ly occurred, foi
part of the prei
ed t
■that parti
zans of the government were rewarded with
tracts for army aud naval supplies which resulting
in vast fortunes for contractors, have defrauded
the public treasury, and entitled calamity and
dishonor cn the national arms. It is a significant
fact, illustrative of tbe imbecility which has characterized the action of the federal government,
that six chieftains have successively commanded
the great army of tho Potomac in a period less
lhan twenty-four months, and that while repeated
misfortunes have befallen the Union forces, only
one of these chieftains bas been subjected to the
ordeal of the court. Indeed informatioi
ry movements has been Btndiously suppressed, and
truth itself when published has been proscribed a
'.reason. To such an extent has corruption pre
vailed ia the ranks of the administration, that ■
ent of this policy.
There is another nil
all classes of onr citizens, and
t.he laboring white population
cent events in the Atlantic et
migration to onr shores of a h
negro race. The .destructive 1
palicy of tbe admini.-f.rat.ion h
vitude many thousands ol tin
in tbe border and other southi-
low our armies from their old
states. Therethey are not 5
and consequently will uule
sures are adopted, seek an an
While duty enjoinw us to act v
those of African descent whoa
borderB, sound judgment tea<
irsued by the state on this sub
- care, um.ler all circumstance*.,
lers iu the sole and undisputed
claims, undisturbed by miy
■ taxation bv the' federal gOP-
ueed ta be thus explicit on this
3 indication?which haverecent-
idowing.a disposition on tbe
■cted to the Cliief
ire mysell lo employ
itulioti and the laws
leiiaece and enforce-
.lOfJN XV. SAUalSMT, Proprietor.
MEAD & VAN TASSELL,
UA.TTE3HS „
Montgomery street, corner C0111-
mcrciiil, Situ i'lusieisco.
To Our Friends and the Public
Ci-erte rally.
{ffl-AVlxr; purchased the enrtlM Intawt of Ua**™:
.3^1. Fisli.'r fc.'n.. iii this city, *?e shall mi the l-lilST
DAY" OF MAT ass-time the management of tha
II A T i: M I* O Ji I V M
Bo long coiehictM by I hut Arm.
Mi*. W.M. 11. >il_...f). for -Ji.- h.-i botch ra*« Balemin
With Mc-vr:-. F. ,';<''>.. i-'vp.'c:'. fully BOUjtJtS B c'litiiuiri ui:>r
91"the pi ■■-<,! *. ■ ■!, ngand lib»rally twtowed upm*- itm
"hi !-,(■■■-. entire confidence fu our ability to suit
HaTin§ pei-fm:ti;'l arrangement
(ceipt by iivrn-y gteameT o( full
Preneli and Amnltn
>r--;r Our^tock no^on hand in
'nil, ,■ >:n m in,1 and judge ofthe
the title of LEADERS OF FASHION
KIBAT) 6i VAX TASSEXti.
MoDt-goinery Btreet, eirnei CMmmertli
AT
1*1
ites indieate an i
r'/.v Dumber of
^ry^ICE TO CXIIIDXX0R.5.
state ol HffiNRV It. MVLKS, De-;e*istd.
OTICE is hereby given, hy (he undersigned
Administrator of Uie above named estate, to
creditors of, and all per-ons having eh-iinis
,in»t Baid deceased, to exhibit the same wilh the
ewsary vouchers, v/ithin ten mntilhn from tlie
iliorUiun of this notice, to the uii(lerHi|_;neil, at
pUpa of residence, iu Han Gabriel township,
. Angeles county.
B. D. WILSON,
Adra
Los Angeles, June 2»lh. 1863.
iit-.ii
aiHiie to the c
ar* kept
s i; ?i moxs.
STATE OF CALTPORNIA, CcontV of t.o« Aagcl-M. IIiviBg
read and .-■■:! ;:■:-,. i th- affl< avlt of Jaftiei B.Landrt,
and it appeariut; tber#rrum --,ti* UMrlly, thai » K'""t
r;:,ir- of action L-«iittK on beb» 1] ol lhe I'laintiff. Joattb«»
;:. Scott, again*t the Defeudant, Henry Dalton, apd that
nuid Defendaui hr.- departed trom th* SUte of California, "ii KpplicaLM 1: ,,1 ih,- plaint I ff'n Attorney, ltl« orf«-
6-J, that se ■■■;-.■ •*:' -■■■.'■AnrA.:-. u: l.hu- .-.>■.; V-- ,,,;,,:,• hr
publication, by [lublishing the nuromoni. witb » «rtlfiwl .
copy of thia order, b«te a ■■-■-•■',: 111 three munthi In tin
Lor AogelotsSTABi ., oewapaper published in Lai Anfrfe*
county. An*; it ni>;*"ru*iiiL- that the dom toil and Daiai
residence ol the defen^anl i* in Uw Angeiea countj, »o*d
thathisaddrens "■lith* in r-ri.i ,m :v v,n- !.„■- Ansel"'
city, it is farther oi-dered that the nummmiii ana cerlt-
Had copy of the rotnpUini ba *-,■]"■■ i'.,**,i in th- Poet WBc»,
addressed to defendanl a1 »aW oltji
llr.im nt Ev.mih--:-.,, Mi,*,* ■_■■■:•■■.!, U03.
\\. G. DRYDES, CouptyJndg«j
8TATKOT CALntORVIM Caaatj ot Lau AnMlw;
l.JohnW. Shore..Clerk of the Diatriet Court, of th**
Firsl Judicial DUtrict, l.„- A.r-,-1,*- county, Stale oi California, ,h, berebv cortifv thn; tbeahove and roregomg I"
a full, true Knd corrfel copy of the original order a"* »•_
same -appeari on iii,* In my offloe.
,—C, ffitneea iny hand, with the sen! nf "<<t laid
( "I f.Vn.n nilix,.,!, ut hn.s An-v]ty-, the 26lhd*Tof
J h. S. y M:iv, 1863.
I ) JOHN W, BHORE, Clert.
Bj Joeui! Hi:i,m:, Jr. Deputy.
STATE OP CALIFORNIA, Counly of Ion Angele*. In *<
Rietrlpt Courl of tin* Fii*..! Ju.ik-inl [ilMtvh-t. Jonathan
It. Sivli. v.v Henry Daltou. Action brought io ll"
District Court ofthe t'ijrst Judicial His; rict of the SUte
bf Califdmla, In and hu* tlie said County of 1m Ang«e".
and ihe coraplalit lii,;d in urld Bounty of to* Augelen,
in Ih,.. (,l!icf Ofthe Clerk of aaid .Oi strict Court.
The People of tfr,eStRia of ruticriiiii -semi ureetinz: To
lenry Dalton, defendant. You arc herehy roquire-t tp
ppearlp an aoiion brought against you by the i'1'""
tamed Maintiff, in the lii-.trict Court of the FitrtJ'ndielM
■ i.Mrirf .,rthi> Stattt of Culironii.t. i„ a„,l f„r the-'M-J
and I- answpr the eooipjalot filt^
,_L ,.„_,„„ >,.,,. noE*,)
) ofthe-toy of senrice,) ^f"f
sujttWone—1* s«*fed irithift
iu) Of ilirs ediiutv, but ivillu"
in twenty daya; or, if Wfl
rithin forty ,1hv.i—er juilfi'"1
gafnst you, according to l"*
ding, and soliciting of di«r<
viul rot further InfOtBaTW" .
plftlnt, null for intcre.it *n*
Bancroft's KEap ofthe Pacific States,
T^MBR.V^NCJ-CALIFORNIA, Or
a, Utal
eh li.hu
, Bri
s-h Ooluir.
ze, 52*i6i inches. Spate, 24 mllea to the inch.
BlegaBtly engraved nn Copper, and colored in
Counties.
This great work ia fold only by fitibscription.
n energetic anr] reliable caiiVBser ir wanted for
v-"toward I Lob Angele*. Apply to
ithin our S. HELLMAN,
3 iznpo- ju*4*6m General Ageut for thia County.
Ami vou are hereby notified, that if vou F.iil tn app«*
and anewer tha snid eoraplAlnt as ahove reqinw*t
the said plfi.int.iir will lake judgment aBaiiist you, apP'J
to thc Court for the relief prayed for in complaint.
Civou mnhir luv linn.I inul ih,*: sc.il of the Dim firt '■"l,r.L
,--■—, orthe i-n-ht. Ji.ilinuMlist.rift of Hii^t-'ite of W1!'
( "I forniii. in ;u„l for the r^aid County of I-o« AhK'1'
■I L.S. Ub, this6thdayofKovember, A.D, 189S,
{ j JOM.V W. SI10KK, Clerk.
*-*v^ By JoAPB Heie-ui, Jr., DopotT-
Pacific Glass Works.—The San Francieco gl">*»
works recently made 211,000 wine bottUs for e firn»
in California and 24,000 potla bottles for 0 Waflbo«
firm. Tbey are doing a very large business.
Ha5 Augeles Star:
rtj'ltOAT HORSIKOi
Spring Street, Lo
rDnr.f-siiiii) Kv
At tba STAR BUILDING
An<;:eleK,
BY Iff. II A M I L X O _%.
TERMS:
SubHcripllous. per annum, in advance. .$5 00
For Six Mon tim. 3 00
Tor Three Months 'I 00
, Single Number 0 12i
JtdverlUements inserted at Two Dollars per,--quare
often lines, for the lirst insertion; and One
Dollar per square for each subsequent insertion.
A. liberal deduction made to yearly Advertisers,
San Fraiiclatio AeeuCV.
miy authorized agent
n San Fraocisco.
;, Nortfiwent corner of
streets. Government
irouiptly attended to.
Wr.C. A.OilVMti is th
for the La-s Anhhm-;* Sta
- All orders left at his of
Washington and Sonwi
mil-iinff, (up stairs) will b
II OTELS,
been
BELLA UrnOU HOTEL,
-LOS ANGELES,
JOHX KINfi & UK?. 3*Y HAMftEKL
TIIE SUBSCRIBERS having leased the abov
named Hotel, wi-di to assure tli eir friend
and the travelling public that they will erJ -
in keep the lielin Union what it has alway
TIIE BEST HOTEL
IN SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA.
* etn be liccominndaied with Urge, airy
■ nits of rooms, well Inrni.shed.
.. Tlie BiUa of Tare
ih&U bo lufenor to none in the State.
Al4 tt^eiStages
to and from Los Angeles arrive at'atul depart from
thiajlotel.
Tlift Birt1 ami T5i!!iai<l Saloons
■ Vail r**ceii'e the moat avici at ten tic wl
p»tron*4 fh.iil lind tiir'.t ttlts lion.Se will
ea -»■ a lirfit clasn Hut") oiiL'ht to be.
Lob An;re!e,«, May IU, 1862,
J
rooi
sasnuss
<2kris.
DR. J. C.WELSH,
PHYSICIAN AND 'S'lTRGEON,
ogicc, ciry drug store,
Main street, Loe Angele?.
Office hours, 9 to 1*2,, u ; rind 2 to ft. p.m.
August 1, 1859.
S. a A. LAZARD,
IMPORTEBS.
And Wholesale and Retail Dealers in
Frond*, EngUsIi and Anierican
Dry Goods.
Corner of Melius Row,Los Angeles. 1 62
PHINEAS BANNING,
FORWARDING niirt COMMISSION
AGENT,
New San Pedro and Los Angeles.
NOTARY PUBLIC,
tl, J. II. Gitciif.i.l. Esq., Temple's Block.
, El>K>,.sll, unci SpanisH T,nnslntedj
Colleefloiis Kl.irte, &c.
»„d thc
Cnrried
WM. M. 15UFFUM.
O. THACIIKR &, CO,)
RetAll Dealer In
WINES AID LIQUORS,
Syrups, Bitters, Cordials,
ASS, EOS.2HS, A.HB CieiLRS,
Main street, Los Angeles, Cal.
UNITED STATES HOTEL.
^ai^irx Street,
Los Angeles.
Tun SUBSCRIBER having leased ibe
»l)(iveeHtiibiishtne:il. begs leave lo ia-
ronothe piiiilictbut he hu refitted arid
, 'iiriHMlinJ it tliroiisltont. and that it
will ZE c-imlneti.-il in lire v-rv 6*-firt style. The
table will b- sihcriiliy Bo-gplied witb everytbiiig
tba market affords, and every care will b« taken
ta inaka lbe UNITED .STATES BO'RBIi'a tsom.
fortabla bot'iw ior boarders.
AlUbhwl^oHieHutel,-ia dBILLlARB ROOM
and MA.lt, wiiei/c the beat ol liqitor-s ttod cigara
Term* moderate, lo fuU the times.
Miner-- oinoiir^ Irom or to tlie miiios of IIol
coinb*^, I'.jto.-i, .Moliiwo or Snu Gabriel, will lim
■ tbin k c-iti'.'eiiteni. place to meet their iri end?, or ti
obtain ii-'iirnhie information.
A P^KSRYU also attached to the Hotel.
LOUTS MINSMEE.
Lpa AnjrelRP. November SUi. l$E?..— if
GEO. W. CHjSPtH & CO.,
Lswct* sialcoi" Plaza, jrt^nir Clay st.,
SAiV FKAWelSCO.
IjrtlPl.OYMKiVT OFFICE A*XD
GENERAL AGENCY.
kinds of help for
ng Companies, Mills,
Also, have a Real Estate Agcuc
business in that line.
ies, Shops
, and attend to
leb'Zi
Dtatrlct Court ol tlie First JudiclM Otw
Of the *tat« of Cullloriiiii, lu and lor the
iiy Of IjOS All-iitturS,
3. B. QBEEft.Ta. THOMAS P. GRE'
roughl in the Di;
'""""inpl
OLD <; II u M s.
ui* alig>: <:..\.v.r.
Ib it you, Jack ? Old boy, 18 it really yru ?
I shouldn't have knowu you- but that I was told
You rniulit be expected—prtiy how do yon do ?
But wbat under lieaveu, bas made you mo old?
Your hair! wby. you're only a little gray fuzz !
And your beard's whito—but tbat can be beautifully dyed ;
And your Ijegfl aren't hut just half as long as they
was ;
And then, stars und garters! your vest ia io wide !
Is thin your hand ? Lord, how I envied you that
ln tbe time of our courting—ho soft and so small,
And now it jb callous itmide, and tan fat—
Well, you beat tbe very old deuse, that ii all.
Turn round!—let me look at yon! isn't it odd,
How «lt»titfe in a few years a f«llowTa chum
j-tow* !
Your ejfl ii shrank up like » benn in a pod,
And"wbat are those liuii branching out from
your dobb !
Your back has goos up and your shoulders gone
the plou-eb *;
neei about town,
(rom Adam, I vow.
And mil the old rosea are undi
Wby. Jack, if we'd happened to
I wouldti't bave know
but,
You've had trouble, have you? I'm soi
John,
All tronbie sits light at yotir tixe of life.
How's Billy, my namesake? You don't say be11
gone
To tbe war, John, and that you've buried youi
wife?
Poor Katharine!—?o i
I thought fhe wouh
What is it you lell tin
O no, Jnck, she wai
l has left you —ab me I
ive to be filty or mora.
She was Glty-three!
t bo much by a score!
Well, there's little Katy — waa that her name. John?
She'll rule yi-nr household ,oue of these days
■Tta* baby!
With a Ja
years old !—aod
I and gone ?
iKaty four-
Then I give it up!
By ten or iwelve i
. you're younger lhan I
and to thiuk you:ve come
A »ober old graybeord, jost ready to die !
I don't understand how it is—do you, Jack ?
I've got all my faculties yet, sound add bright.
Slight failure my eyes are beginning to bint.
But. still, wiih mv Fpectacles on, and a liyht
Twist them and the page, I cau read any prin
My hearing i"
Perhaps, tha
Mv breath giv.
But nothing
dull.
nd my lee la more spare,
it waa when I beat you at ball ;
out, too, if I go up astair—
orth mentioning, nothing at all !
little,
LlneMgc of tho Jjoyiil Lcayiteri*.
It is ataiftttag as well as iultirestiiig to recall the
names by wl.5 ih the opposition ol the Democratic
party have been known since the Revolution-
Most, though not all, thedifferent parties that have
attempted the overthrow oi Democracy since the
formation of nor government are named iu the
following list, for, like the color, platforms and
pretension* of the persons comprising them, thyy
are innumerable. They were ;
Id 1775, Loyalists, or Loyal to King George or
Tories.
In 1776, Loyal Tories.
In 1780, Nova Scotia Cow-Boys and Tories,
In 1786, Convention Monarchists.
In 1789, Black Cockaderi.
Iu 1808, Anti-Jefler«an Improvement Men.
Iu 1811, British Bank Men.
In 1812, Peace and Submission Men.
In 1813, Blue Lights,
la 1814, Hartford Conventiomsti.
In 1816. Washington Society .Mon.
In 1818, No Party Men.
In IS19, Federals.
In 1820, Federal Republicans.
In 1826. National Republicans.
In 1828, Anti-Masons.
In 1831, Anti Masouie Men.
In 1836, Coiiservniives.
In 1837. Independent Democratic Whigs.
In 1838, Protectionists.
In 1839, Log Cabin—Hard Cider Democratic
Republicans.
In 1843, Native American Whigs,
In 1844, Coon Party, or Anti-Annexation
Whig,.
In 1845. Tbe Whig Party.
Iu 1846, Mexican War Whig Parly.
In 18-17, Anti-Mexican War Parly.
In 1848, Ron eh and Ready Party.
In 18*i0, Clay V.'hig Party.
In 1852, Scott Whigs.
In 1854, Know-Nothiugs.
In 1855, Native American!.
In 1856, Frernonlers,or Abolitionists aud Know
Nothing!..
In 1S57. Black R-publicang.
In 1859, .Opposition and people's party.
In I860,. Wide-Awake Cap aud Cape Party.
In 1862, NO PARTY.
In 1863, Loyalists, or Loyal to King Lincoln, or
Tories to lbe Constitution.
f the Stilt(i of (.
,- of bos Angeles j :n
■.-ut'Los An-i-ics, ii
e of the Ck-i-k of •
ud greeting
TIIOMA:
My hair is jnrt tnrnintr a
And lately I've just put on a brooder-brimmed
hat
Than I wore at your wedding, but yon will acree
Old fellow, that I look all tbe better for lhat.
I'm -incietit
And my
For all tin
i lit
heumalic.
n't quite oo a st
■ tmn,
igbt line, the
I don't thiuk I've changed much, do
Aud I don't feel a day older. Jack, oot a day.
Ou
Dickson, deWolf i Go
OFFER FOR SALE
WHISKIES:
CE-VTUI1Y—JACOIt V.V.V HOtttl'S,
FIOVT-.rcU—W.ll. Et. DALY'S.
"XX:" fixe: old rvss.
«.Ui\" V1'".KV OLD AM) CHOICE.
TALLEV-W.II, ll, O.vr-Y'S-I.V CASES.
—ALSO,—
IVxX. II. DALY'S dj-OB HOUSE G1X.
TUB above WII 13KU53 are all copper distilled,
from the choicest (-elected Rye, mul are nevei
■offered in the market wilhin three yearn niter their
dNlilUtion. The stock new** on hand is I
Froai Four in E$£?ht Tears 0!il. I
Thene brnndw of Whisky Imve been favorably i
known in l'aiifonii>* during the hi.-t six yearn, nnd I
lha constantly ioCreoSiog deinand lor thi'in nttestt- -
to tbeir excellence and un ilr.innity of quality.
They are commended 10 the trade ad amoog the
purest imporled into this market.
For Bala bj- »li tUe principal Deatera tit tbia
DICKSOX, DEWOiF&CO,
U'b'Ai, Sole AKrntp, Snn PVancfrfCn.
paper.
CLARK'S
INDELSeiE__PEI4ClLSt
THE CHEAPEST AND BEST
ARTICLE
Por Marking Xaimen.
Kor rrnle by tl,e Kross, at
305 iHftiif^o,Mei'y street, lnoorm So.
•Z. Sau Francisco.
cb2_ W. HOLT.
E.. GlAB.B.ES'Il,
WHEELWRIGHT AND CARPENTER,
AVINfi LOCATED IS BL MONTE
II
LOCATED
.inlileii to keep
in his line at short n
■ratea. Orders reepe
nd at the
solicited.
AND
wood
Is of work
st current
Dntt-48
FOR
San Luis Obispo, Santa Barbara,
San Pedro and San Diego.
X and alter the first of April, and uutil further
tice, the steamship
0
Z^Sl SEN
CO_\JI.«.\I, POETRY.
d, David Baker, Esq., Bays a Portland
io bus produced fume ol the best
,,..-.., ..... ....lien by a Maine bard, pleased at a
little incident that happened in his family, (the
first occurrence of the kind,) givt-s vent to hit
leelin-jja in tbe following imaginative piece :
My Child's Origin.
One niirbt. ns old Saint Peter ritept,
He led the door of Heaven i\jar,
Wben through a little angel crept,
And came down wiih a tailing star.
One summer, an the blessed beama
Of morn approached, my blnnhinp bride
Awakened from eome pleasing dream«
Aud lound that angel by her side.
God grant but tbia—I n«). do more :
That when be leavea tbi* world of sin,
He'll wing bis way to that bright tdiore,
And find tbat door ot Heaven again.
Wherenp-su, noma fellow of the-practical sort,
aod without any imagination, aod not possessing
the " divine »fflatus," attempts to destroy the little
illusion of David, us foi lown :
Saint Pcltr's Itf-ply.
Full eighteen hundred years or mora
I've kept my door securely tiled,
There was no little angel strayed.
Nor ban beeu missing aU the while.
I did not sleep ns yon supposed,
Nor left the door of Heaven ajar,
Nor hnsa "little angel" loft
And gotm dowu with a falling atar.
Go, ask that "blushing bride" and see
If sha won't frankly owu and any,
That when she lound that an ire 1 babe,
She found it by the good old way.
God grant hut this—I ask no more :
That should your number still enlarge,
That you will not do as before,
Aud lay it to old Peter's charge.
IVlln
. Democratic Rt;
wm mndc t<
TOR,
nth on thc Southern
rAug. Stoarmer
GUHBMITH,
Los Angeles Street.
SHOT GUNS, RIFLES & PISTOLS.
In Gun Materials and Sporting
Implements.
Also, CAPS, l'OWnilK, *c. &c.
SHOT GUNS ANO RIFLES RESTOCKED.
Orders from the country promptly attended to.
AU work doue in a workmanlike manner, and
liar an teed.
TERMS. CASH. - fe2S
fill Make two trips p,
Coast, leaving Broadway Wharf,
On the 3d and 18th of each Month
AT 'J O'CLOCK:. A. SI.
Jg$~ Bills of Lading will be furnished by (he
Purser on board.
For freight or passage appl
offiee of Si J. Hensley, corner
son streets.
dec9 S. J. IIKNSLEY, President.
i board, or at tin
Front and Jack-
Adjutant General Thomas issued an order ou
the 3d lust., disbanding the 128th Illinois Regiment
as au organization, and consolidating tbe remaining men—Mated at about 160—intoa detachment
under Lieuleoants Luram ond Cooper, for transfer
into some oiher Illinois regiment, to be designated
by General Grant. Tbe order acta forth that the
128ih Regiment, ''baring in the short period of
five months been reduced from SG0 to 1U0 meu, aod
there having been an utter want of discipline iu it>
the foliowiug officers aredit,missed from the service
of the Uuited States, to take effect oa the ith inst,'
&C., &c.
The 128th was raised in Williamson Co., and was
one of lhe finest hodte1 of men ever mustered iuto
service from this State. It bad tbe minforiuue to
be.a democratic regiment, however, aud, as a cou-
■e^neuce, received frum tbe free-nigg*rr authorities
during its stay at Camp Butler aud afterwards
every neglect aud iudiguity iu their powar to beo
tow. Penned up at Camp Butler, and esp
the aeveie-st weather of the winter almost *,
fire, leas thau halt-clothed, and furnished
most miserable applog-y tor provisions
gained alarming headway among them.
ing almost the total annihilation ot the regiment.
Over two hundred of ita men died iu less than
three mouths,—a'mortality unprecedented in the
history oftbe western army, and well calculated to
arouse the moat serious fears of its members. To
the men in its ranks there seemed but one hope Of
avoiding probable death and certain linget
sease,—aud that t lay in escape Irom lbeir exposures. JJo other regimeut ever in camp at Springfield suffered one fourth tha mortality ol the 128th,
and none were composed ol mgre healthy and vis;*
orous men.
Had the 128th received tbe proper treatment at
the hands ol the authorities, it would bave been
oue of the most eftV-ciive orgauizatims in the West.
But prompt obedience to orders, and a laithfu1
discharge of duty, are no longer regarded as evid
■suets of "loyal" tobliers. A continued bellowing
for the fredotn ot uiggers, and an unceasing abuse
of democrats, are the only path to official fitT«r.—
Jonesboro (III.) Gazette.
Tlie Scitutl/ie Amtri-csm—Our Sew Volume*
Eighteen years ago the Kcientifio American was
commenced under the belief that such a publication
was desirable and would be beneficial to our mechanics and artisans. Since then twenty-two volume* of it have been issued, and this number ie the
first of the twenty-third, or the ninth volume of tba
new series. It was commenced under many advene
circumstances, hut it has beeu successful beyond
anticipation, and bus advanced from a weekly journal of four pages to one cf sixteen. In a very enlarged sense it has been educational in !uinfluence.
The notices descriptions and illustrations of nevr
inventions and descoveriei which have been presented through its columns have stimulated the
inventive genius of our country, resulting in an
increase of improvements in mechanism aud manufactures without a parallel in history.
Although ihe past two years have been checkered with pcenes of violence, excitement and change,
the circulation of the Scientific American has continued large, and the last volume has never been
surpassed for beauty and amplitude of illustrations.
We commence this volume with the continued de
termination to keep our readers fully advised of a\\
thut is occurring in science, invention and the
practical arts. Critical discussions, timely suggestions, useful receipts aod notices of discoveries at
home and abroad, will be furnished as usual, and
every effort will be made to render our new volume
supperior, if possible, to any ol its predecessors.
The publication of such a journal involves a
great expense, and demands severe labor, extended
information and careful research ; therefore, to
enable us to conduct it, wc require the generous
support ofa large number of subscribers. Hitherto thin haa been given with a heartiness which haa
rendered our labors and efforts pleasaut and encouraging. We rely upon our readers for a continuance of their patronage, and an exercise of their
influence among friends to extend its circulation.
No iuvenlor, mechanic or manufacturer can keep
pace with the improvements ot the day uuless he
consults ils columns. The subscription for it haB
been usually held by ita readers to be among their
moet profitable and satisfactory investments.
TERMS.
To mail subscribers :—Three Dollara a Year or
one Dollar for six months. One Dollar »nd Fifty
Cents pay for one complete volume of 416 pages ;
Iwo volumes complete one year. A new volume
commenced ou the fourth of July, 1863.
MUSN & CO., Publishers,
37 lJurk Row, New York.
ied to
ittuut
with the
is, disease
threaten-
all who
1 be deemed
dulcet tones,
that by some
garter and leels so uncom
have the kindness to give
ageism, at
k sits rnus-
dls him, in most
tap'
, as it v
CULTIVAlHHtES DE VI.YAS!
Modo de Cultivar las Vinas, Hacer
y Modo de Tratar los Vinos.
CON NOTAS sobre AgricuMura y llotlicultnra
' preparadaa por A. O. HARASZTI1Y, Co-
inisionado nombrado por ]a Legislature para iu-
formar sobre U mejoria y el modo mas propio de
cultivar las vinas. Con uumerosas ilustracinoes.
Un tomo grande 420 paginaa, se puede remilir sin
costo ningiino por $5 50,
JVata. El libro ;l"
tnas que por lo qii'
jK-S** Ordeuets par
jir a ./'. .
A. ROMAN y CA.
Libreros, comerciantes, y publicists?.
-417 v 419 Calle Montgomery, San Fraucisco. ■, "".,--,- >
marzoUm3. [—and horn soil qm trial ypense
, acriba raebcionado vale mucbo
ne seofrece a! publico.
i conseguirlo se ueben as din-
Tlic Cat-eat Trick In shopping
In Paris, one day not long sines, says the correspondent of The London Spectator, an alluring,
though modest bniki"*-., fashionably attired lady
sweeps in full crinoline into a rich
dinner time, when a solitary young
ing behind.the counter. Sin
smiting and blushing all the -while,
unlucky accident she baa lost ber
bio •* would he not
a Uny little bit of
ould never do to appear on the boulevards with her stocking hanging down over her
bai m or alt.. The gallant youth oflers her, of course,
his finest silk braid, instals her into bis mercantile
throne, and modestly looks away whi'e tbe fair
creature is busy with her lo'ltt. At last she leaves, but not without rewarding the obliging adolescent with her sweetest, most provoking BDJvtV
He fondly follows her with his eyes from his shop
door, admiring her boots and ber stockings, and
never suspecting, alas I that bia pretty tape bas
been made use of for tying a costly piece of silk
to an ample and strong crinoline. Another time
look at the t-mtieiug [fatter
Cause lor Arrtsl.
When the new system of nr res ting a
"aid and comfort to the enemy*' shal
plete working order, the following wi
sufficient cause for arrest:
Wearing pins made from copper cents hav-ing
tbe word "Liberty" thereon.
Wearing butternut colored clothing.
Heading Democratic papers iu publie or private.
Patronizing Democratic tradesmen.
Refusing to believe all Ulegraphic reports-
Quoting from the Constitution;, of the United
Stales.
Expressing a hope that Ihe Union may be restor.
ed whether slavery be abolished or not.
People will be on their guard, aud if they wish
to hurrah for the Union and constitntiou, must pattern after the roosters who crow belore daylight-
—La Ciosse Democrat.
How a Klni-. FteJU In Batile
There can be nothing more puzzling than tha
analysis ol one's feelings ou a battle-field. You
cannot describe ihem satisfactorily to yourself or
others. To march steadily up to the mouths of a
hundred cuuoou while they pour out fire and smoke
aud shot and shell iu a storm that mows the meo
like grass is horrible beyond description-—appalling. It is absurd to say a man can do it without
fear. During Ilancock'scharge at Fredericksburg,
for a long distance, the slope was swept by such a
hurricane of death that we thought every step
would be our last, and I am willing to say, for
one, that I was pretty badly scared. Whatever
may be said about "getting used to it," old soldiers secretly dread a baitle equally with new ones.
But the most difficult thing to stand up under ia
the suspense while waiting, as we waited in Fredericksburg, drawn up in Hue of battle on the edge
of tha HAd watching the columns file past us and
disappear in a cloud of smoke, where horseB and
men and colors go dowu in confusion, where all
sounds are lost in the screaming of shells, the
cracking ol musketry, the thunder o( artillery,
and knowing that our turn comes next, expecting
each moment the word "lorwatdJ? It brings a
strange kind of relief when -'forward" comes.—
You move mechauically with tbe rest. Once fairly
in for it, your sensibilities are strangely blunted ;
you care comparatively uothing about the sight
that shocked you al first ; men torn to pieces by
canuon shot hecome a matter of courss. At such
a time there comes a latent suftenance from within
us, or above us, which no mau anticipates who has
not beeu iu such a place before, and which most
meu pass through life wilhout knowing anything
about, What is it?- Where does it come from?
Newspapers not to nta Denied the Mails.—Mr-
Postmaster General Blair, in a late conversation
with an Abolition ex-Member of Congress, was
importuned by the latter to deny the privileges of
tbe United Stales mails to certain journals tbat ac.
cord uot witb the geutlemau'a political creed. The
Postmaster General promtty and emphatically replied : "No, sir ; that was tried once, at theurgeut
solicitations ot some of our injudicious friend, j
the result has been the re-establishment of the
treasonable sheets with increased notoriety. So
long as I am at the head of thia Department, no
newspaper wiil be excluded from tbe mails."
Californ
will cast a sharper
A Correspondent ofthe New York World
that on ths bank of levee, opposite Vicksburg, he
walked two miles ou tho new made graves ol Fed.
oral soldiers,over two thousand ot whom died of
disease, and were buried there during tho short
period of high winter, when no other dry ground
could be found even for a grave.
Mrs. Orpheus C. Kerr Idah Isaacs Menken Heenau Newell has arrived at Sau Francisco, She will
soou appear at Maguire'e.
CuAMfAGNK.—The euccess of the
experiment of manulacturing champagne in California is now au established fact, aud the production ol lhat generous beverage iu our State hero-
alter will undoubtedly he so great as to enable U9
lo drive the poisonous European simulated brands
from the American market ; lay 'Jersey lightning'
ou tbe shelf, and compete successfully with the
manufacturers of the most celebrated European
brands for the trade of the world. About 15,000
bottles have already been put up at the Haraztby
Vineyard at Sonoma this Beason, and about C00
bottles per diem nre uow being turned out, Tbis
wine will commence ripeniug tit for market in October. Oue thousand dozen of this wine has already
been ordered by a French house iu New Yoik, to
be shipped next month via Cape Horn, Thirty
thousand gallons of still wines of the same growth
will be shipped by the same vessel. Tbe vintage
in both the northern and southern grape producing
districts of Calilornia will be larger lhan ever before, more vines coming into bearing, and the crops
in all the viuyyards. so far as we can learn, being
more than an average one. The drouth whicb so
injuriously affected all tbe other crops in Los Angeles and Sau Bernardino counties n|>pear; lo have
had little or no deleterious effect ou the grapea,—
£. F. Call.
-"««*,
T
Object Description
| Rating | |
| Title | Los Angeles Star, vol. 13, no. 16, August 22, 1863 |
| Type of Title | newspaper |
| Description | The English weekly newspaper, Los Angeles Star includes headings: [p.1]: [col.3] "Old chums by Alice Cary", "Conjugal poetry", "The latest trick in shopping", [col.4] "Lineage of the Loyal Leaguers", "What a Democratic Regiment was made to suffer", "Cause for arrest", [col.5] "The Scientific American -- Our new volume", "How a man feels in battle", "Newspapers not to be denied the mails", "California champagne"; [p.2]: [col.1] "Democratic State ticket", "County nominations", "The Democracy triumphant", "General Hancock", "Ladies festival", [col.2] "Correspondence", "Statistics of San Bernardino County", [col.3] "Revolutionary attempt to overthrow the government and establish a military despotism", [col.4] "Mining intelligence", "Progress of tobacco culture in California"; [p.3]: [col.1] "Election proclamation", [col.2] Proclama de eleccion", "Laws to regulate elections", [col.3] "Leyes pare regulizar las elecciones"; [p.4]: [col.2] "To the people of the State of California". |
| Subject (lcsh) | Los Angeles (Calif.) -- Newspapers |
| Geographic Subject (City or Populated Place) | Los Angeles |
| Geographic Subject (County) | Los Angeles |
| Geographic Subject (State) | California |
| Geographic Subject (Country) | USA |
| Coverage date | circa 1863-08-16/1863-08-28 |
| Editor | Hamilton, H. |
| Printer | Hamilton, H. |
| Publisher (of the Original Version) | Hamilton, H. |
| Publisher (of the Digital Version) | University of Southern California. Libraries |
| Date created | 1863-08-22 |
| Type | texts |
| Format (aat) | newspapers |
| Format (Extent) | [4] p. |
| Language | English |
| Identifying Number | Los Angeles Star, vol. 13, no. 16, August 22, 1863 |
| Legacy Record ID | lastar-m341 |
| Part of Collection | Los Angeles Star Collection, 1851-1864 |
| Rights | Henry E. Huntington Library and Art Gallery |
| Access Conditions | University of Southern California owns digital rights only. For personal, educational or research use contact: Special Collections, Doheny Memorial Library, Libraries, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA 90089-0189; specol@usc.edu; phone (213) 821-2366; fax (213) 740-2343. Contact rights owner at repository e-mail (or phone (626) 405-2178 or fax (626) 449-5720) for access to physical images. For permission to publish or republish material in any form -- print or electronic -- contact the Rights owner. |
| Repository Name | The Henry E. Huntington Library and Art Gallery |
| Repository Address | 1511 Oxford Road, San Marino, CA 91108 |
| Repository Email | ajutzi@huntington.org |
| Filename | STAR_944; STAR_945; STAR_947 |
Description
| Title | Page 1 |
| Full text |
[From the Franklin County RazettB.] ngof tlie Coimcrlpt—*'300,UUUiUore." BY E. A, H. r Abraham, three hundred with bleeding TO THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA. Fellow-CitizeJis—Thc action'of the late Democratic State Convention __ is, as .We're.comiug, Pathi thousand more; We leave our homes and Iii hearts and sore ; Siuce poverty has been our crime, we bow to thy decree; We are lhe poor who have no wealth to purcase liberty; The dearest forma we love on earth shall never greet us more— We're coming, FaLher Abraham, three hundred j thousand more. We're eotning, Father "Abraham, three hundred j thousand more. Against our wills, our dearest rights vouchsafed:; by sites of yore; Conscription comes with bloody hands and Christ-1 ians thirst for biood, Tbe Church demands that ours must flow to swell the crimson flood, And on the altars of your zeal the purple tide we pour— We're coming, Father Abraham, three hundred thousand more. We're coming, Father Abraham, three hundred thousand more, To lay our weary limbs to bleach on Rappahannock's shore; Yuo've gathered in your hectacombs three hundred thousand braves, And uow go forth to dig anew three hundred thousand graves, Where shrieks of death ring on the air above the battle's roar- We're coming, Father Abraham, throe hundred thousand more. Executive iy lime and entitled to demand from ui wbo aspires to i a candid exposi iilate lor theii ive or executi* our political or; it ol the policy republicau Congress, in order to shield from expo- aud th cert air of publi id pun elinquents. the Uuiti :d Sla; es, fro in the nl, was p roved lo hav e beet -.•Hi- e of n in pro , oi an msheil listrat ■.uriiiL* . aud : ion, g ■_, a tin our ,0S8i br i p tr •d ibe to ureha: 1 prusf present coinm which no one ( opinions ofthe cons; ofthe Federal and St relative duties. It if tion, to lay belore yc deem proper and app of our State affaire. iii t lial c nsid.!! , my del id mat einpir Ambassador Act to suspend in s lor the prosecution state of. llhodc 1s- o: rn ti gniUy of the grave w use bis offieal iuflu- * %, by the govern- tr et the Senator went « which supports the'o ie-crime without re- B rd 'A- coniment. To '' i exist in the highest * oud so notorious li ■publican House of « ed by the prepare of e malfeasance ill office vi- the President of f vice and consent of 6 ii, the court, of the h f it io to permit the immigratio I race which must evi 1 i. The imi into our B'ate of a main a i-i ost obvious effect ■i«^________________________>l'''lt;'r '"hor iuto ompetilion with thato! our worthy ind'us- ,; a result which must be deplored by all rd the material prosperity and moral ad - it of the laboring population, as one of st objects of a state's legislation. In the ny election, I shall use my personal and fluence, as far as it may be legitimately to procure the passage of laws todis- he immigration of all euch personal It gued U should be, lhe home ot a happy, ied and patriotic race of white freemen, federal tases. wbloh om* citizens will t 2d t ay 1 nil i the , I shall, All these accumulated evidences of alarming na-j ional degradation should claim the serious consi- eratio.u of every true citizen of Hie republic, and 11 who- seek to save their country from eerLiin de- tructiou. Let us labor ihen for a return to mi- ess office piactica islatun ■,'for a ^^^ let us solemnly t e and to all the s; rd ishly i iih >a to ol lhe % th«i als News-Dealers and Booksellers, Read and Remember!!! 3". STRATMAN Wholesale News-Dealer, Puck*,ana.Fcwwvdi aU the luii.Y a&3 wkkkly nf.wp. PAl'BRS, MAGAZINES, ice, to all parts of tlie country With !;re;it dlSpateh, 1 Sell at. Prices (lint Defy Competition, iv |
| Archival file | lastar_Volume31/STAR_944-0.tiff |
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