Valley of the Shadow
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Stonewall Jackson

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The Veto Vetoed!

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Full Text of Article

The United States Senate, on Friday last, passed the Civil Rights bill over the veto of President Johnson by 33 yeas to 15 nays; three more than the constitutional majority. It had passed the Senate originally on the 2d of February by 33 to 12, and on the 13th of March it passed the House by 111 to 38; but the President, in accordance with his league with copperheads and traitors to force rebels into our national legislature and protect treason from all penalties for its bloody record of crime, vetoed the bill and vainly hoped to corrupt or intimidate a sufficient number of Senators to defeat its passage. Such was the history of the Freedmen's Bureau bill, but Congress has at last resolved to discharge its duty regardless of the treachery and power of the Executive, and the natural rights with which a just Creator has endowed all mankind, will in the great Republic of the world be conferred by statute in defiance of the objection of the President. But once before in the history of this government has a law been enacted over a veto, and that was an unimportant one passed notwithstanding the objections of John Tyler, whose name has been measurably redeemed from infamy by the perfidy of Andrew Johnson.

The following is the vote by which the bill was passed over the veto on Friday:
YEAS.
Anthony,
Brown,
Chandler,
Clark,
Conness,
Cragin,
Creswell,
Edmonds,
Fessenden,
Foster,
Grimes,
Harris,
Henderson,
Howard,
Howe,
Kirkwood,
Lane of Ind.,
Morgan,
Morrill,
Nye,
Poland,
Pomeroy,
Ramsey,
Sherman,
Sprague,
Stewart,
Sumner,
Trumbull,
Wade,
Willey,
Williams,
Wilson,
Yates--33.

NAYS.
Buckalew,
Cowan,
Davis,
Doolittle,
Guthrie,
Hendricks,
Johnson,
Lane of Kansas,
M'Dougall,
Nesmith,
Norton,
Riddle,
Saulsbury,
Van Winkle,
Wright--15.

The yeas are all Republicans, and the nays all Democrats but Doolittle, Lane, Nesmith, Norton, and Van Winkle. We class Mr. Cowan with the Democrats--as he has on all issues identified himself with that organization.

We congratulate the friends of Justice and Freedom in all sections of the Republic on this triumph of right over deliberate, perfidious Wrong. It proclaims that caste, condition and color shall work no distinction in the enjoyments of the natural, inalienable rights of Man, and henceforth there will be no foot of American soil whereon the humblest citizen cannot demand and enforce in his own behalf and in behalf of his household, equal and exact justice before the law. It confers no political or conventual rights. These are wisely and properly left to the States; but it stamps all men, of every condition and color, as citizens of the Republic they are compelled to join in defending, and gives notice to the world with all the commanding ceremony of law, that the humble and opulent are here equal in the enjoyment of life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. A faithless President may interfere and aid the violent prejudices of treason to defeat its enforcement in some degree for a time; but it is a step from which no nation can recede, and the unwilling and discomfited President will see Right ever strengthen as his treachery and much abused power draw daily toward the close of their brief limitation.

At the time of this writing we have no word of the passage of the bill in the House, but we hazard little in assuring that it will there have the requisite two-thirds and probably twenty to spare. We feel warranted, therefore, in assuring our readers that the Civil Right's bill will be the law of the land before the close of the present week. Thus in the fullness of time, does justice achieve its triumphs however clouded to gloom or beset by treachery.

Since the above was in type a telegraphic dispatch gives us the cheering intelligence that the House of Representatives took up the bill on Monday, and passed it over the veto by 122 yeas to 41 nays--forty more than the required number. The bill is therefore a law, the objections of Andrew Johnson and copperheads and rebels generally to the contrary notwithstanding. Freedom takes no step backward!

A Gentle Admonition

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County Superintendent

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Proclamation by the President

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Local Items--Court Proceedings

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Local Items--Annual Meeting

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Local Items--Another Stable Burned

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Local Items--Borough Appointments

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Local Items--House Burned Near Upton

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Local Items

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Married

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Married

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Married

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Married

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Married

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Died

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