Daily State Sentinel, Volume 12, Number 4076, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 November 1863 — Page 2
DAILY SENTINEL
THK CSION IC MUST BF. PRJIKRVKIi. JaCbw. THURSDAY MOUMNO.SOVr.MBER 5. Volunteering. Ad effort i beir; itade to rain the rpou of troopa required from Indiana under t!e recent tall of tb PrttsJent by rolun leering:. It cannot t qoeailoneJ tut thla ia more desirable mode for funsUhiog men for the miliurj terfice'of the countrj lliao j cotecHptioQ In the one case the Miration I olatiUriJy iMurseJ with a full knowledge rf the burden it impe, while in the other ce man will be force-l into the service tt a rrat MrrifSre und iuiontenienre to trntne1re anJ their fumllien. A preferable i olur.teering ma? be to forrf! le;, no conscientious mn can iDit opn others voluntarily enlisting, unte be first illustrate his precept by a, performance of the dotj he uige upon oth era. There no patriotism, there is no evidence ef loyalty preaented. in urging: others to dLicharpe what may be regarded as pubi-.s obligation, or whitb is .such in fact, intuiting the rik of life or health, and then shrink from the perfrmnre of that duty ourelre. We are unwilling to MJ to other that it ia their duty to sho-jlJer the muket in the serrice of the country in a contest, which our Republican friends init i recite the tery life of tho mtion, and theo ahirk from the dancers, the privations. the toils and the tucrifire of a soldier's life. If war ia the only means of determining the difficulties of the country and preaerving the national Integrity, that aert'ce is due alike from every citizen, whether high or low, rich or poop who is capable of bearing arms. And the men who profess to believe, and give utterance to that belief, that a vigorous proecution of the war ia the only way to cruh out the rebellion and restore peace to the conntry, should be the first to manifest the sincerity of their convic tions by shouldering the muket. They cannot escape the obligation, or avoid the responsibility, by giving a few dollars to encourage volunteer in,whi they stay at home In comfort to reao the advantages whih the live and sacrifices cf Inne who go to the field may secure. Neither do wedeslre th.it widows and orphan shall charge os with having induced hmbmrts and fuhers to engage in a cue, no matter buw holy, while we wero unwilling to aagnme its risks and dangera ourtelve. We tn'wt sincerely hope that the troops required from Iiiditua will be raise! by voluntary enlistments. It should be done. It will require only from fifteen to twenty per c-ent. of those who toted at the recent elections in t'avor of the polier of the Federal Administration, to furnith the three hundred thousand troops called for by the President, and which, it is said by those in authority, will be uflicietit to overthrow the rebel armies in a very brief lime. If the speedy termination of the war is dependent upon raia ng that oumher of men, most certainly the patriot ism o! the party in power should be equal to the emergency.. There should be men enough willing to enlist in such caue, without price, to promptly fill the last levy of the President. and there would be if the loud professions of patriotism which we daily bear came from the heart Instead of the lips. Again we repeat our earnest hope that we shall be able to fill Indiana' qunti by toluntary enlistment". If for no other reason than to Ave the difficulties which a forted levy might occasion, and if mcu cannot be persuaded to enlist from a sense of duty, let tbt moH liberal pecuniary considerations, be offered to induce them to do so. If there is not patriotism enough in the country to meet the calls of the President for troops, money is a power which my accomplish the work. If three hundred tliouut! more folJiers will be sufficient to bring the war to an end in three months, and those in power say it will b3, it would be economy for the Government to appropriate three hundred millions of dollars in bounties to induce that umber of men to recruit within the next sixty dava. The quicker neare is restored the better for lh country and etery interest, public and private. Intflana'a Kol 1 of Honor Ws grre the following touching extract from Dr. STKTZXaos'a work, "Indiana's Roll of Honor.' Oar readers may rest aured that the work will not flag in interest. Evert battle is carefu'Ij delineated in an eleaut at.d graphic manner. The iucident spoken of occurred at the comtneneecueut of the Mrven dav'a battle in front of Richmond: lu th rear of the column, at a turn in the road, behind m uwl pile, lay two blue coats" nppaic.itly steeping. All was now quiet in the woods, the inst-cU were chirping, aud the birJi singing their mormug song Tlie dewy leaves tiutteuM sotlly it: the gtNiile breeze. The pun, wheie It peuetrated the lealy coverts, sparklet! uhmi the gluten"; drop ot water the dew tud lilt upon toe lea er. Ail ntlure was hushed, a it it were m äabttMtb ol quiet So pound- ot pirile; no noise ot tumult. The uilm were quietly sleeping Out lay cloe to the wood ;:!; lue oil.era little turUier off. Quietly uiroacti:og,a Uuiun olliccr gejtly laid his ti md oa the shoulder of one and bade hira wake up; but he could not be waked. His pantaloons were tucked into his socks, h:s ride was clasped in his bauds; his overcoat wan on; be wss lull riggtnl as a futldier, and yet he slept. ?' looping doti tbe oßker looked into bis f-4C. and observed a bullet bole iu his i-;t iuipl lie lepi bia last sleep. 11 went to tbe other sleep cr;aU! be also slecpl the sleep ofde itli (Juietlj as liide codJren. they st joibereJ upon tbe green moss of the woods in front of Richmond. No Irieud will ever kuow where they lie. No happy family cm earth will ever greet their return. A ride, ukeu I mm one of them, bad on the belt, "F. McCullough, company K." Thus do our braves lie uukuown among the swamps of the Cbickabuoiiuy. I3ut the sacrifice will not be iu tatu. 'Ibey need do mouumeut to perpetuate their memory, for their deeds will lite in thd hearts ol a grateful people. Their little fatherles children, now too voung to realize their los, may pruuouuee the simpU aud beautiful eulogy upou tli em, "My father i'ougbt aud died lor hi couutrv. Lookout .Tiotintultt It luiporluncr. The news that (eneral Uuavr has secured Lockout Mountain aud the road to ItridgefK)rt is Bow fully confirmed, and is of the utmost mo-, OJWit Chattanooga ia now .fe, and our aroy I can be suupKed abundantly. The icfajrtar.ee of i IxHkout Mountaixj, which is now cmaioW ours, is thus described in a tixvul copy c! the Atlir.u I (.) Appeal: Lxkocl Mourdsin, which i lunrJnuu pisse. ion. is aa eenlia! U the Fieral comm m der. if be has determined to bold Chattanooga as a bae of further oi-eratious, aa Nashville, Murfreboro or rtrK!gerort, for tbe im pie reason that it command the railroad, contains several important paes, at.d is a standing threat over Chittanooga. Once pose--cJ by the enemy, it relieves tbe.r wagou train,- enables them to protiio;i their army, and gies thera the most valuable n ition for offen t or defease iu the entire rcgii. The poscssion of this mountain atid the road.i it commands a worth a great battle, tut the' fact that it was secured by a small one i another pcoof of the wisdom of Ueneral (taasT's combinations, and i so omen which give promUe of fiual victory in that qusrter VtTll has been deeiJi by the War Depart tatal that, wberw ueu wIk are drafted bold conscientious scruples abom pajUiX the commutation or performing military duty, the provo.t mrshal shll levy upon the good or chattels of aid Individual to the aroouut of 'M). and upon realizing that amount thw drafted man will be re lea4ed. Philadelphia Inquirer.
rlKO.tf CHAT AOOCiA.
Our Army Crrrpondrnrr( CiisTraso-'ua. Tt . October 21. 1-H3. IltasHs Kdit us: S ucv ti e reni"l of (Jens. McCook and Crittei.d-n frtim their re-j-ctive commands in the Army of the Cumberlan i, m ny other changes hi its oranizition hate speeilily followe-1. Thecommnder.31j r General Itoecrans, under whose gsklance and judicious mm agemeut the army hai acquired so much renown, has also been ordere! away from us; and. although our bew commander is Dot a straoger, jet he is an ofücer with whom we have much to learn The honor, the reputation and the ictorip gained by the Army ol the Cumberland hae given it a prel.ge tlit is interwoven with the de'tinies of thertTlcers and nieu who conira-el it, and wlv conduete! it to the em'nei.t populart v it cau boist; remove the prmcipilof them, anil tbe result must necesarily b a feeble representa tion of that power which carried so much terror to the rebel hosts amj their caue. Tho 2"th and 2lt army corps have figured largelt and performed their parts well and faithfullj in the campaigns of the Army of the West; tbey have maintained aa honorable no-Uion as the chief constituents of that army that never was defeated from the first. Now they are no mor. L'ke many brave men who firmerlt swelled thirrank, they have fallen whilst bravely bulling for their country' rights. The bri gsde of which your readers have heard so much will greet you no more; the new orgxniztlinn ins swallowed them by detail; their pre-tiee has been divided into mny parts and distributed; othu their future operations can only reach Jim from the stranger detachments with which they are now compelled to serve. There is much of ill feeling among officers and men here againt tht unfortunate correspondent of the Herald, Mr. Shanks. Hi report indeed was in very bad taste. Ilunnini; away from the battle held, at he did, unmind ul of the change which might occur at any moment, altering thereby the whole aspect of a Hair. wa an act very discredit;. to any mm. much more to one who was about toxi the elements of popularity or censure of good men to the world. He must evidently hare confined hi observations to the rear of ihe armt altogether, where nothing but confusion and tuinultuou excitement usually prevails. The rear of a retreating army contain the elements of demoralization pcMoin felt or known in the front, even when an enraged enemy presses upon it The supernumerjries. the non combattants although they may all be brave enough, as Shanks no d übt was, not to confess their fears, yet their chief anxieties are to avoid danger, and the first or slightest intimation of it impresses them w ith the necessity to peek rheltcr, which they will intnl1v perform regardless of all systems or rules, thereby adding to the general confusion an irresistible inioul.se sweeping everything before it. Mr. Slunk mut have found himclf in that position in the Army of the Cumberland, which, unaccustomed to retrograde movements, might have been attended with more confusion th'in the emergencies of the case really authorized, and.ns the motly throng of wounded men, teams and teimsters, hose horses, hangers on and negroes were pressing to the rear in an irresi-tible current, he must h ive found resistance hopeless mid allowed himself to be force! into Chattanooga, with little time for correcting hi hasty note tnkcu upon the held in the heat and tumult of buttle How Mr. Shank succeeded in crossing the river on Sunday, theii'hh. is really quite remark able. There wa but one small bridge, and that was jammed all d ty nud night, of Sunday with the wagons o! the army containing supplies and baggage. The bridge, too, was no narrow tint it must have been a dangerous proceeding to walk alongside of a moving wajjon upon it . It must have been there that he wa confirmed in the idea of the lister of our army, as it has since been rejxjrted here that a certain non com missioned oflicer, out of breath, in the hint agonies of despair, communicated to a gaping crowd the dismal intelligence that he heart! (Jen Uosecrun tell the boys that all wss lost and thet should eel across the river as fast as they possibly could. We doubt not but that officer am! the correspondent traveled together, although nothing has been heard of the son of Mar since he passed through Stevenson, miking good time toward ihe North If Mr. Shanks ha not relinquished the service for good, but purpose to return again to the field, let him beadvir-ed by one who has had some experience in war, never again to trust himself in the rear of a fighting army. The front i the only place to arrive at the fact in the case, and it i the only place where an individual of a nerv oil temperament can hojoj to retain hiineutil equilibrium." There can be no shuffling there; no equivocating circumstance will tbere present themselves Irutn which errors tan Hpriug; theie. too, no faUe or inexplicable move can be in ide; and. except tbe curling, grat eful tmiAc, giving ihe air a Mi; fit tulphumu Mint, nil will be a clear a the un at noonday or. to ue ;i mirtial expression, the'som of Auterlitz " Besides, after lie first fire Is over, a reporter would become inspired, filled with an enthusiasm beyond the power of all vther causes of emulation; the pride Mid circumstance ol glorious war would lend a vigor to your genius which, communicated in your reports, would pet all New York in a dazzle of glory. Iut it U needless for me to continue ihi ndvire further, presuming that Mr. Shank will at once adopt the grand idea, and never more permit himself to be enumerated among the stragglers in the rear of an army. The results of the lite geit btttle has not proved a disistrou to our army as w n at first supposed. We quk'tly and very petretbly oocu py Ch alt iriooga, yet whiNt our cunning loo sits upon hi airy perch upon Lookout Mountain, watching us carefully, and from d y to d v giving us an occasional silute to remind us of his august pre-ence. He Ins very kin.lly permitted it to entrench ourselves ellectu tliy, f.r which purpose the fair proportion of his town h is been success fully distorted to our n?e, contributing much to our comfort and security. The hotels, churches, and other public buildings b-re. afforded ample room for hospital purpose, whilst ni my of the finest residerces have ojn:el their luxurious et pat itit s to the accommodation of the dli-ers, and the men luve not been unmindful of tlieir com forts, an I h ive .appropriated brick n well a lumber, and constructed for themselves very comfortable "chetiatigs" from the ilemolihed dwellings of the chivalry. Since the aggravating effect of Shanks do nioralizinz letter hts passed by, the army his subsided into c ilm indiflerenre n to the ei:e:nj and everything else Were it not for the great want of sup; lies fiotn w hich we are row sulTeriiijr. a merrier set of Yankees never disturbed the dull echoes of this abode of chivalry than we would be, but this unsalable want, with the wet weather we have had, intermingle with our daily enjoy, mei.ts in a manner by no means agreeable. There can he but little d.mbt now thai most it not all of Longstreet's army has been withdrawn. Whether they have gone to Virginia we can not tell. There is yet a large force confronting us, and keeps w.itch over all our movement. Tbev hive been making some singular change withui the ntst few days, which Ins an ominous significance, and a we are allowed to surprise on their operations, a tl ink movement to gain our reir may be re.uoiiab!y suie-ted If the fhouM succeed, with a strong force, in giiüng a position upon the n.'rth side oT the river, above or be'ow us, the evacuation of Co itt itioog i by our force will be inevit tble, and a retreat on Mur:reetxrt the only alternative left u A very s.Tiill ad lit.onal r be! fvrce between here and Sievenson will eilcvt our communication so a to cut olf out sutvlies at.d compfl t to fill bark. That they Jj itt ii. Kid to assail ur I roh l is a l.ict well settled now; they hive allowed the time for the success of audi a dem u;ratiou to pwss ty long iiii'C, and although they occu;y all their trong posdion liot n ten us and Chi k antau., yet they have very cra:t'l.icentt v bJild the pro res:.itt :' i.ur works ui.dcr their niotjntain bit ler s witlsotit inoles'iiot.. and witli singular in ddTereiu-e. mu-'n as if ae wore se ure within tlieir toils, but very generously allowed t gnaw at the rr.ciies which environed us. fur our own aoiu-emctit We look upn any in re den :i-truiii bv the rebel upon cur rear with far nune auxitv lh iu formerly, a th interruption aiready cause! to our supplies h ve been very piin fully Mt here hi evert department, whilst our foraging operation, leretofoie ample to prevent iromelute d.stress. hive, by the roving bands of guertil!, been ret tuily conÜued U a poor aid exhaust sj district; e therefore tnu.! depetitl for forage, and nil kii.do! u;pie... upon Stevenson, to be trarisprtri distance of City-five mile over rouls al mgst i opasble w ith an t thin of a load Tbe recent heavy mm bive greifly aggravated this dithcultt. and now Pck mule are the only roeiu of transp.rution over much of the road." The men are .utTerin fur food, clothing and means ol shelter, wmlt horses and mules -vre actually starring This is something ol the sit uttlou of thing! generally in Chattanooga at this t'o. WlrEN.
From tha !fw Tork Otl Gitrd. J The? Debt, the Tuxes und Ihe lluin. The S-cretary of the Treasury coolly announced, on the lt of July, tht tte nafonal Jet i j only "one thousand out hundred millions," and j tint it inre-iea at the rate of two mi'li n fie li'sn !rel thoaaiid dollars per dv, or ore hundred !
and four thousand dollars per hour. -without any prospect whatever of a cessation to that increase, cr indeed of ant other result th m an increased ratio of growth in the debt. The oJTicial re'.uruj of debt have been as follows for two years : . Increa Itt. Increase. per day. July, lt......l).ls3.2fl January. 1SC2... 2674U.t05 f.,ri7,35c6.'0 fl.XWOO Jat.lsi,-. 5;Wll7l lia.74t 1SMMS0 Jaxuarv. aU.o7.il au.',.!;,"!! l.fc'Ol.M) Jaly,l.b3 1.1TI7 31? N7,11 2.4W.; For the lat an months of lcti2 the increase wa $l,3.'M .IKHI per diy, and the ratio ha 1 ue.rly d ub:ed. Ei'erv sucee.-ive month the increase i greater, lor the reason thit more men and more supplies are needed at constantly rising prices). Those prices, a our reiders have too much re son to know, are raise! by the ue of government piper money, which depreciates iu the double ratio ol the quantity paid out and the decrease iu the stocks of the good$ required by the govern ment The increase of the debt ir the last six months of 1661 wil be $3.0(K.K)U per dy. It is It be borne iu mind that thee figures do notrepleseut the whole expenditure of the government, but simply hat it borrows over and above the proceed of ihe customs and txe. The appro priations, or the amount authorize! to be expend ed for the ß-eal yt-ar 1S-64, is $.W)(t.000.K(i. even if the next Congress, should not add a dollar to the amount. We are now to remember that thee debts are to be paid by the twenty million of people of the Northern State, for the reason that even in the event of the Union being restored the t ommcr cial capital of the South and of the border State has been so thoroughly depilated that they can not piy, even if the whole Southern war debt is repudiited. We nhall not .now allude to the $2.!M),l)iH).0(M) of clom upon the (Jovernmcnt , already being made out, for damages in the border States, but confine oursclve nroplj to the actual existing debt for which paper ha been issued, and irrespective nf $.'iU0,0K),u;nj of debt due contractor and others, not yet adjusted. We have stated that the price of all article purchased by the Government have risen in proportion to the depreciation of the paper, and the average is 40 per cent. Hence, ot iTO I.HO'l.OIKI expended for goods, hhia. supplies, &.c , S'2;'tl, 000,000 ha been extra price caused bv the de predated piper, and which would not have been paid had the monev been regulativ borrowed. Jhus. if $300.0O0,O()0 bad been borrowed at 6 per cent , it would have brought as much supplies as $700,000,000 of paper money, -4 pretty dear way of tiorrowing. The debt stands, then, as follows, Julv 1: Intfrst. Per cent. t43.27S,f)(!0 6 guu.onu.noo 50 Fundi-d dpbt. Paper ..S00.5ÖI.309 .. 319,72 1. &Ö7 Total il.l-f7.s74.3CG S;!43.27ü,Oi'0 22 If the paper money is ever withdrawn, it will be by funding. If this can be done at b' per cent , the interest ou the debt now outst Hiding will be. with sinking funded, $S"!.?9f!.(K0 per nnnum. We will compare this with the debts of England and France: Ter Parr. fbr. ln'ert haJ. France... .$31 OfW.000 $2.?06.0W.Of 0 I1U.(H)0.(VX) f3r. li'i Hritani 29 :i.!4.7H.I 3.1)l7.1M".,y 3 127.1'C. 7d 4 33 U. S 2U,0(aj.0i)0 I,ll7,27t.3i0 8:i,7iW lU0 4 IS Thus the actuil debt now exceeds that ol Fm ce $1 15 per he id. and nearly equals that of (ire it lint do. At the close of the pi t-sent fi-c il year, the debt, if the official estim ites nm not exceeded, will hf $2 OiM'.OOd.OI.O. or $140.000.000. or $7 per head per annum! or $3." per head for tverv lamily of hve per-on It will be borne in mind that the.-e aie the lowe-t actud figures, without taking into account thie.itencd foreign wars, or possible new disasters to the army. Thi immense debt is now in process of crei tion. The (Joverniuent is pay big out p iper lhat is yet in good credit for lalmr and properly. The people are giving their good for th? paper, and investing it in bonds. Who is to pay that piper and bond-? The labor of the country precisely Ihe people who are now in the grisp ot the Pro vost Mirshal, toru from their employments nnd families to go, and destroy and devastate the propet tr and means of industry whirh were once the source of national wealth. It is not the projerty of the country that will bear the burden; it i the farmer ut d laborer The present into! erable vexatious income and interest tax yield verv little in proportion to whit was expected from it: and it ever the debt is paid at all, it must be qotdrupled; at.d whit mean will there be ot paving 7 It will be Uitlicull to show that there will be any. Ilt-loie the r the 8.000,000 of the t-eople in the Southern and Norder States bought of the North, in round numbers, $700.000,000 per hii num in food, cloilnni;, m tnuta'-tures, &c. Tbey paid for tliesc in e('iil value of cotton tobacco, im val store. &c The iudnrsty of the south produced equivalents for the industry f the north, and miitual interchange produced national prosperity. With the war thai cetsed. The trade was cut off Neii her side could tnske its accustomed sales and purchases, und ou the first our fade wa paralyzed, tttalually the expenditures of the government h ive grown up to $1)00,000,000 per ritiiimn. thus affording a substitute for the Southern trade. The government, how ever, does not pay it only promi-es to pay. It does not give cotton, , lor the goods; it gives pieces of paper. These, it ia aald, an-wer the purpose ot money, atid pass from hind to hand. They do so, no doubr but the real wealth of the country is thereby consumed. The wool, the clothes, the food, the ironware of the country, are consumed by the government, and the owners hol. I paper iu return, lor which they can find no use, and they loud it buk to the government, which therewith buvs mote goinl-i at higher prices A a loiij s this proces lasts, 1 ,000,000 in uniform go on to destroy. 'I he time must come when the process mii-t cease; 1 .000.000 men wilt be turned out of employ. The government expenditure willccac War business will be at no end. The blood drenched fields and de.sola'e home ot the South will offer no trade The crip;le I troops, the idle manufactures, the impoverished farmers atid de titute laborers will be called upon to piy $2,000,1)00 0110 h,.d by a few New Etiglmd States that have driven on the war for their own b"nerit. It will te borne in mind that the six New En lam! States, wilh their twelve Senators, have been the oligarchy which has diiveu on thi war. Thus: Population. Six Xw nnxlaM States 3.l3.1.2s3.... 12 Senators. Six Middle and We siern äiates.13,370.7.14.... 12 Senator. The government of the country, under our system, it i well known, exist in the congressional committees which govern in each de nartuient. These committees are controlled as follows: Of Chairman. Charles Sumnrr. ... v .Ma Frpi:n Iiltkns. llnrr Wi!on Ma Miiitan Affdrs. J. V. lisle N. H val Affairs. W. Ifudfu. ........ Mame ... inancra. Clark N H Claims. Fo-tcr Conn lVniou. Thus the New KngNnd Senators govern the finance, the navy, the array and the foreign relations Under llicir government the debt is roiled up ,2 5;UI,O00 per day, and men are drsgied Irom their families to fd nrmies whose mission is to desolate the bC't customer of the North. While the Wet is groaning with distress under this ext enditure of blot! and tre ure, how d-es New Knglind fire the home of the oligarchs w ho in c ilriv ing on the juggernaut ot blood and rapine? Lei the Iii i ll ieirt ol the Massacbu set'.s hmk commission 'cr lwb.'ltepJv: Seldom, if ever, has the b'isiuesa of Mas. chujctts been more active or profit b'e than darinif the p-t veir The war has brought int) activity miiir ruechmical emrl ynents, ir which there is little icci:on in tiroe of petce. The nec essity f tr itisw.r:inir great j bodies of triKps Irom point to p'iit along our I seaboard, and of furnishing them subsistence, his I cvlfed into the service of the (t verntnenl a v.t fleet of transports, for the hire of which oi.ers have receive! rates of com;anstion giettlv ex I
celling the ordinart orofitsof commerce. Kerv team vessel, capable of i.avigaiiug even the ocean or harbor and rivers, b- been thus employed, and msny more, previously regsrdeil as worn oat and no lotger sea worthy, htve been fiinisily repaired and made to pvj through a htty and corrupt inspection, have gone out laden iih valudi'e property, or invladde lives, to be wrecked or re-ci;ed. as the rh n:-es of the weither or asski.lfui fim u ..iiip mLbt determine. The ship yards, both pubhc nd private, hve !een worke! to their utmost capacity in the construction of iron clad pun boats nd other vessels of w ir; while inschine shops, roll ing niil'a and fojiidericf have leen equally busy in building tbeir engine, rolling their armor plates and casting their guns. The wants of the army have come in to make
good the lo of the Southern market, for shoes, and the Goteri.met.t ! as hten a :i''T 1 and rure, if not a redy ptvuifier. Libr ha en iu grest demamt; w ag h ive ri-en, and the trade i gain in a high state of prosperity. Wealth has fl ed into the Stite in no stintel neasure, despite of war and he ivy txe In every dorri ment if Nlr.r, the OoTernraent hs been directly or indirectly the chief employer and pay mister. Vast contract have been undertaken and executed, with the use of no other credit than such as is base! on Government vouchers and certificates of indebtedness. Thus the $2 .50CJ.U0J per dsy that the Gavenircent borrows is poured into the lap of Massschu setts and the other New England Sutca. hole gt nerations of Western' farmers must toil hope lesly to pny tiiat money. ;nre tbere is no posi biiifv nf p iv ing the principal. Year after veir. $140.000 HO", mostly erncl by the West mi and Middle Sutea to partner New England weillh. '1 he interest on ihe debt in ten vear w iil nmotint to 1.43U,OOO.OIÄI, hkh innst U earned hv the many to pay the few. The aversce amount of farm produce exported from the tinned Slates, was. in ten years to 1-62. $6J.el4.379 This represents the surplus agricultural productions of the Northern and We-tern States. Under the existing debt, more than double that whole amount of surplus will be required to pay the in terest of the public debt, held mostly by roonied autocrats, ere ited by the extratagance and corruptions of the war expenditure. Vert little of the debt is held by the agricultural sections, but it i those section which must toil year by year and hand over to the Cistern cections the vast sum we have mentioned. A verv little reflection on the part of an intelligent man will convince him how utterly impossible it will tie for our iiirtitution to exist under the double ii.flu ence of that debt, aud the intolerable burden of tribute imposed by the larirTon producers for the benefit ol Eastern capital. The operation of ti e two in a few veir will produce two classes pa u ner and money aristocrats. The amount of the present debt is as follows in Indiana and Illinois, compared with New England:
111. and Ind. United States debt 9l71.e8.lU State debts W.Iiil.'.Ol N. Frifr. $ 171,3'J-101 13.KXV0U Tulal 8 197,3 9.402 Population 3,C2.:gH) Pruducdons prr annum. tlOu.ncu iho AssesiM-d property; 2l,luO,3l0 18MÖ2,U 1 3.136,2-3 494.075 loa 63.801,917 The burden of the debt upon the two States of Indiana and Illinois, winch have about the same population as the New England States, id $GJ per head; iu New Ei-gland $61 per bead. '1 'lie sum of the dtbts tie ul t equils the whole of the assessed personal property under the census of the two Western States, and is less than per cent, of that of the New England States. I he annual pioduttiou of the latter, protect d by tariff, is $165 per head In Inuitna and Illinois it is $33 per he id. The goods ra ide in New England i.re sold to the West, and are charged with all the taxes pun on them to the Government, and with the protective tariff tax Thus the whole of the outlay extorted Irom Western consumers comes b u k to New England laden with the interests of debts held nnd paid by West ern farmers. This state of things is perpetrated by the fact that Indiana nnd Illinois, with the same population as the six New England States, hive four vote in the Senate, while the latter have twelve. It is obvious to the most obtuse that such a state of affairs cannot be perpetu a ted because, under it, the impoverishment of the agricultural State will be complete nnd exhaustive. There is but one mode in which the tcrri hie ruin evoked by thi wnr can be all lyed It i by an entire alndition of ihe customs, du'ies and an assessment of the debt urx'ti the propeity of the country. Thi Utter is not constitutional, once all taxes mut be levied according to population. The alternative is entire repudia lion. An Eloquent Srnllnienb Goveriior Sktmolr, of New York, in a late speech at Syracuse, in that State, very eloquently said: For what are governments constituted? Not in order lint they mo gain wide spread donun ion, not tint they in iy Htt tin great national power, not that thev may achieve splendid tri umplis. It i (or purose more sirred than all these The greatest mid highest objects of good government are that eich man shall be in the enjoy men l of hi personal liberty; each limc shall be sacred Irom inti umou; ech conscience shall be free to worrbip God according to its own die tates; each mind shall be tree to exercise its on God given 1 unctions. Cheers 1 he proudest government th it exists upon the face of the earth is that of Great ßntain, und its proudest stateman, when he would tell of Britain' crowning glory, did not speak of its wide rpte id dominions, upon which the sun never sets, did not say, as he might have done, tlmt the teal of its morniiiv; drum tnatle :t continuous strain of jjjumc round the world. He did not speak of m irtial achieve me'its, of glorious battle deed and of epleudio naval conflict; but he aid, with smrellin breast and kindliiiiT eye, thai the poorest mm ol Oreat Ih itain in bis cottage mi.: hi bid dtü nice to all the forces of the crown. It might he frail; it roof might shake; the wind mibt blow thiough it; storm might enter it; the rain might enter, but the King ot England could not enter it. All his powers liid.not dare to cross the threshold of that ruined tenement. Great cheering 1 see be fore me person in different conditions of lile some rich, some poor. You will go to houses unlike in many respects; one mat be embellished by all that art can bestow or u lavish expenditure of wealth can procure; the other only precious by the love that meets you there by nil the eher idied relation-hips of life. What is it that makes the American home glorious beyond the castles of other portions ot the world? It h is been this thai when you have let down the lock iu'o iishichet nnd h ive drawn yourself by the fireside; have assembled around you those whom you love, you could look about you and say, "This is my castle; no mart can enter here unhidden." Enthusiastic cheering It was constitutional tight tliat m ide our home gloiiou. until you wete called upon bv men in power to say that thi Constitution which pro tected you might be trampled -pon under the plea ol military necessity, where war did not even exist, in ihia great St.te ol ours. Criea ot "5! "me, sh itne.' Wha is this Constitution of which men speak so idly? Study it, and find what it mean Von men of (ter.ii.iny, you ol Jielind.you of England, or any other European coumrv, you know wha a written Constitution me ms. though we may hive lorotten its value, who hid it written down us a deed iveu to us more precious than the deeds of our homes, for il involves tbe deeds of our homes, atid they are nothing without the Constitution, which says that your property shall not be torn away Irom you without compensation aud w ithout process ol law. Cheers It was a deed that made your home valuihle and sacred to you. It said that no man rhouM seze vour person except by due proce-s ot I .w ; it g ive you the li-ht to woiship vourliodiu such wy as you pleased; it said thai you should not be irnj-ri-oned w ithoiil the protection afforded to the innocent thus imprisoned, by the habeas corpus. You will find that the Cous.ittuion attaches itself to every thing that vou value in life. Soldiers Vol Inj Inder Dil f irtiltie. The Iluffvlo Courier says the following letter was received by a gentleman in that city (Bu:Ttlo) from a ie!.ii on, now .an invalid iu one of the Kentucky hospitals: ' October 26. lrC3. "There w h one mm in one of the Louisville bo-j. it als who voied a ValUud'ghatn ticket, bat hi gets well paid for It lie was arrested ami court-martialed, by which lie was sentenced to lie in the icuard-hue for twenty one days He ii taken out eveiy in rning ami made to stand ou n b irtel two hours, with a card on his bick, read in- thus: From Gd tLon ctnet, hut to the Devil sh i!t ihjiu return ' Desädes this, be Ins to aw wood ten hour each dy for twenty" e diys Alter his time is cut at Lu:sville, th he will be -ent to Chaiunoogi for heavier punishment." The Courier ndJs editorially ; " We htve it moreover trorn an eye witnes, that in the camps on ihe Totomic. when an Ohio soldier w sjf objected of totin tor Vallandifham, he was instantly menaced with the 'ball and chvi'i,' shootinjj, hanging. Sic. The few vote cast for the Ooi Praocrstic ticket in ihe army et e either tun b iy ialkö, or wer permitted by ti e authorities imply to mail. tain a funt snow of vo i'iou in t:ie electiou. Tbj sime informant azures us thai he saw, before tbe iVooylvanit election day, numerous Turloubs given lo Pennsylvania soldiers, each of which was wiade out with tbe proviso, to tote the Union ticket wrilteu thereon " t , The soldier rotujg Uv works, it will be seen, mot admirably.
The tlonrbon Clnestln An Old Story H rircd Testimony I Her. Ir. Vln tunAt a meeting of the Brooklyn (N. Y ) Historical Soc.ety hM on Thursdiy evening, the KT. Dr Vinton pre-entcd. w iUi interesting del id, some tery valuable matter relating to a subject which a ffw yesrs since proved of striking interest lie fate ol the lot Duphin of France in which connection the late Ret. Eleaier Williams who died about three yesrs since, and who ws thought to be the veritable Louis XVII, was brought prominently before the public. Dr. Vinton prefaced his remarks by saving that
he had noticed in the hall of ihe Societr a por-1 irsiu wnicn oore me inscription in quotations, "Ret. Eleazer Williams, the lost Dauphin, Louis XVII." He had been thu prompted to I iy be loie the Society some facts which have for several vear bet-n in hs possession, bait wb'ch, owing lo their pecu-nr nature, he had been lestrained from tn kinr public. Dr Vinton bei! in hi Iiand two dtguerre tyres w hich he. in the course ol his rematk. ire seule! to the Society. Oneof these ws a picture from lile of tbe Rev. E'ezer Williams, and tlie other a portrait of an old Indian half breed, "Ske nondoah O'Brien." Mr. William ha! been an intimate acquaint ante of Dr. Vinton, and, the latter rema ked. while accompanied by him they visited the residence of Jlrs. Commodore Perry at Newport, some year ago. Thet were one day engaged in viewing a taiuable work ot French iwrtraits, engMving. etc , one of which struck the gze of Mr. Williams wilh a peculiar force he apuered much startie! and actutlly trembled wiih fear. He soon explained, in fact, "That face has been the subject ot my dreams for years dreams of tetror." The picture which produced tins s;tigu Ur effect was that of Simon Giraud, into w hose custody, history inform us, the young dauph'n was placed to be put to death. Documents substantiating ihe leniat kable circumstance named are numbered with those presented to the Society last ev euing. Dr. Vinton then related another remarkable circumstance, lending to prove the identity of Mr William Said he: While iu ibis city several years since, the Ret. Eleaxer Williams was invite! by myself to take part in the services of my church (CJrace Church.) No announcement of hi purpose to be present was made, iu order to avoid any degree of sensa tion attendant upon his name, and the circum stance under which it had been made public at that time. Mr. Williams, attired iu the service robes, assumed hi appropriate position at the dcfk, and the services proceeded without evident recognition by the audience After chuich, however, Dr. Vinton was approached by a gentleman who related a remarkable cir iinisiiitHe which had tken place It seem that a member of the family of the Duke of Wurtem'iurg, who as traveling in this country incog at that lime (Icj-'I), chanced to be at the church on the occasion in question, and when Mr Williams entered from the fide room and w.lkrd to the desk, he, viewing the clergyman with u fixed gaze, exc! aimed with emphasis: "Why, who is that? Certainly lhat is a JJourbou face V or a rein u k of similar meaning. Thecircum-t inces w ere then discussed between a lew individuals, among whom were Dr. Vinton and the loreign traveler, when, tor reasons which will at an early day be publicly announced by Dr. Vinton, an agreement was made to confine the facts to themselves. The death of Mr William, however, his, as Dr. Vinton said last evening, dissolved whatever compromise ho had entered upon touching the nubject. Another circuiiHt nice epially import mt, :is constituting one of a series, tending to prove the identity of the Rev. Mr. Willi tms ns the veiita b e long lost IJuutboii, was iclatcd to Dr Vinton An old Indian half-breed, aged, at the time o! mention, some ninety five years, who for years had been n wanderer through the country, for a time gaining a livelihood by b isket m iking was in thQ city of Philadelphia several years since, when a gentleman acquainted wilh Mr. Widia ins, who also wa journins in that city, mentioned the 1 itter fact to the Indian, and asked him if he hid any knowledge of such a person, who h id long resided with the Indians. The Indianwhose name wag Sketnmdoah O'Brien, lit once recognized the nun by description, und w.i immediately intrdnced to Mr. Will.ii ms. The 11 Indian at r-nce recojrnixed him. although the latter did not recall Skenandoah to mind. Skenaiidofih, whose knowled;cof Frem-h v good, testified that he recollected that Mr. William, when a child, was hrnucht fronj France br two Fienchmen, and that he was about seven years of a-je at that time. Mr Vinton clo-l his rcmsiks with the ex-pres-ion of his conviction that the Rev E'e'zer William was in reality the lost Dauphin Louis XVII. On molten of Mr Snooner. the tlm-nk of the Societv were extended to Rev. Dr. Vinton for the valuable matter furnished, adding an nrcent reqttent that he would prepare a narrative, setting for?h the facts in detail for publication. Dr Vinton sisn'fi! hi a'-ceptanre of such invitation, provided the gentVman mentioned as a member nf the family of the Duke of Wurtemburg gives his consent. The Election of President. We are often aske! if it will be necessary in the election öf Pre-ident nett ye.ir for the sue cesstul candidate to receive a majority of all the electoral vote of the old Union, including the receded State, or whether a majority of the pelector.il votes tictmlly cast is ulScient. The constitu'ional provision is as follows: "The per m hiving the greifest numherof (electoral) votes for President, shall be the Prea iden, if suh nnmhrbe a mai-iritv of the who! cumber v( rlector. .i;.;o:ntcd." . It seemi that t'e Constitution does not require, a General Pctler supposes, a "mijnrity of the whole electoral edl e.." Support of tlie Admlnlat rntlon . Put no arM1e c ul l blind the people to the pU'n fact that tbere i u!d be n hoa! upport of the war which lid not involve an hottest mpport f the authorities which pru.-ecuted tbe war." War is a plain fact." Whether we were wron; originally, i- i. bmger a pie?lion ; whether we might luve ivii.iJt'l it with honor a:ul profit ; whftliFr we wer iwi:i.lel into it, or firivrn into it. :tf fiijet-ts l-r the historian, not for the citi let! for ihe luiutc. not lor the ptenent But the conduct of the war, the tiieorv; on which it i to le proseru'eil, the inem hv which it ts to be aapporteti ll the-e me subjects of common iniciest, and upon which every mm U not only entitle.! to h ive an opinion, b'lt bound to htve ne. . He cannot, as the cit'zen of a rent cm moiiwealth, to do his duty to that com moo wealth by shutting his e.e- and his ears. K he thinks that either in the manner of conducting the war or in the oije-t ulterior or anterior to the war ihe Admini-antion is ia error, lie ought lo S4T so at d vote to compel a change. If he ehouM t in th minority, lie has elti! don hi duty. We he-ir men riving 4,I arn ooiied to the whole policy of the Administration: I consider its view. hii.Uici.il, ioliücal au i Mcil, all wron; when the w.ir i over I will vote againt all thc;c piror; buj I tear thst in nit Mipportiug; it I miy we aken the Clause of the tTidon, and of the two evil I choo.-e ihe lent." Thi. is retsoiiiug verv honorable to the heart, but verv vui;e?tive of eikne-s in the Iteid. The Adiuini-traiiou U in for a certain term; it has a poiic.v lotailr irrespective of war; it will wee the wr jiit as vigurotiely whetlier thai policy approve! or condernneal We think it grievously mistaken in its interpretation ol the Constitution, aud a such unfit f.ir power. But Im did the wg lag after the Democratic vie toric ol lat teir? How much would it nz if rverv State iti the Union had cone Democratic hi year? Is the Administration a pack of children, which will throw up the tntereta of the country in a hurl because the reople will not let it hve it own way about the nero aud the rights of w.. tie men? TLe Question before the country at the Iste elections w is not upon the war at the South at all, but upon the war for the Constitution and ihe liberty of the citizen at the North We h.ve not a particle of doubt that the Times will be juit as a-hatnei of hsvin; pro pounded a theory of" government imIJT to that whch Charles lo.t bis head and James his kingdom to rs?ablih, as a leidirg citr editor was ol iro.rfing to heJ one hundred thousand trader? t romj et the return of the deposits . lleiiwhile -let the peuple remember what Ilepu'ilicaii triumphs mean. They mean war upoi the inlitotioni of oue portrun of the Unite; Stite, and war upou the rett JouDdsiious ol ivil liberty all over. They mean a national bink system, which the people wet up Jackau la. put down. They roeu the federalist theory o. government, which the people set op Jefferson to' pat down-r-lXe Tork World.
AMUSEMENTS.
JI I'TIIOPOLI TA. HALL sTxcr. MASnr.R... vi. w. h. kilkt. Thursday EvcaiciTNov. 5th, 18G3. 5ecrnJ ai peraoce cf JACK CADE. OVERTURE 0RCTIE5TRA. Ilrettni and Smllh'w. SC A LR, OF PRICES. Pre Clr-te and Parquet'e '0 Citi. liy mid i;itl-Tiiaii.... "i Cnts. Kat w-l'iiTin! L1t .... 5.S-ni. Gi'l-ry ia ' en s. All KwtH jiev's .... M nts. lr:vte rf " rVx 1W o -n T'n 10 oc!fck A. M. tili 1- il. resells sera el Two Ihiya in sdvin e. ,pnsor opn at 7 o'cbk, Oiraln ries at Vn' cbety. MASOMC HAM,. GREAT RAVEL TROUPE. FIVE NICHTS ONLY. TurfJiif. Wfd-rfiiiif, Thurs'fty. Frida and Sitnr.'iy Errninqt and V'drlif and Saturday AftrrnnA$, ynrtmbrr 2d, Ith. Uk, Cth and 7Ä MRS. J.VISTE ENGLISH-, With hr-TttireGrat Freeh Cnpatiy, will appear from la A V 11 A 14 K C i: 8 Xfw York, and Trcmont Thoatro, Boston. TROUPE ST. DEXyiS. Tlie only font puny of Hie kind In Ihe U orltl. rViors open at ?. Performance comronK-r al SaVIork. )r?.sEK tiTH'R HILLS. 'ci3o-dd. NOTICE. AlTHRRE.tS, OCU FAKMS I1AVK BERN FNTKRED by huntf rs brinjrinjr borse, waeous, bujries and dors tayuiR rfown our fencts anl rutiin cur fde, there y ejoin? our cropc and pasture Unrfs; Liotinji ia every JirecMon, en-Ian gerinn tbe live if our families, and Injurlnir our t-cl; Therefore, w e tbe underpinned, citireii. of Marion county. baT letermin t to prole t oursrl v a a au -wch evil, and to thi end will prccnte any pervin r perS' tii foui d bunt jn;r upon our ercloe1 pi-unit, ami we, the underiifiied. aure lo ai1 each oibr In prruiiiiir ai t hunters and tp'Ttnien; and alltherxpen e-Incurred ei'ber by th Istidbolder täni'iuir this rt-Mluti!i or by their airerts emrdnyed to follow up and aertaio name and t Nee of r t-i.lence .f id Luiiter, ball be mutually paid by the and?rigoed. Samu-! IIe;zer. Teter Meoermltb, Ivi i Janieoi. J-jeph LencVe, lb mas lank ford, 5mue H.n-er, James Mbnii, Jams Ih-lzell, Calvin F1-tber, Sr., Noh pjrr, Jess Leche, JacoN M. Wolfe, Jowyh Ifod, .. T. Kleicher. Charit i ainier, Tol.la Merrm!th, J..bn n'Co-iner, Huph Tl'omp-on, Freleric Itaitiier, I 'avid W. firown, iTiirraru Fleicber, Oliver irargent. John Kabh, nov5 dlt NOTIONS. TOYS. &C. TO DEALERS IN NOTIONS, TOYS, TpEtncy Goods, See. AS MY ST'VK IS NOW COMPLETE IN F.VFItT particular for the rornlnj; Hldaj I with to call the attention of d-'slem in the a!ov Rood. Haring bought und t vry favorsble circumtarHe, and undr Man liiiir ibe wants f b. trade ibnroiirrhly y lntir ex per ence, it will ii loth Intewt cf buyer to emin my warerootns where they will flml the arret variety of goo tever l-rooirht together nncier ot m.f, at auch prices as will afford a good profit Respectfully. CIIAUl KS MvTKH, no5-dw2m Jfo ?9 West Washington street. FOR SALE. It)- (. FOOTF, Auctioneer. Washington Streot Property at Auction. T " iu? ?f.i.l at rru'.i: auction, to tite Finn B. est Dinner. n iy. the 9ih of .N'orrmWr. ls3. i lOo'rlork A. Jiy itiili rrnt. on hain mi feel or ground iront fV;oii W.shin t.n mrvet, ioinit-diatrly we-t of auJ near thi Sti'e H.iu e. beinahe watend of Lot No. U (6). in4ir No. firtynwn 14, In th citv of I ml I .uaooliK, ibe jTTie bring divided into HVE LUT, eali fit bein 2U fe?inind rear, by 65 fW t Jf-p. Teh at One tlitd dowiTiZja, balarvr in one and two year-, with interest. JUtl.N 8. Sl'ANN, n v5 did He FMate Aj( t. Ton SALE, (-y MO!fIVT SEXT; AIVTKX D CLOCK A. 31, at a r vn resioe ce or .imhitt w n jrn, ou the JIi hixn ..il u . :l . . l . .i . . .... n. of many article of nursery prodoct, inclu1iiir Delg WrH j. ' , iiurr i"ir n-? n oi ne civ. iiif re w in tie a ite 'k-Mt m-i i.ana Ki.pe irirp, t ear arm rnerrv ree, Ua ton Hlirkhrry, Ra.j)frrjrand Strawberry Vln , 4c. All treeaajid riru for a'l were planted by Mr A l.li.n r rrat neartng. Any t!T6.rina'ton in igrd to tbeta w II be riren by apptjimr to Mr. wum. or to Mr. rinsr Cbl-lett,?!! the grou iid of the Crwn tOi Cet rT Term.! cab y ura. HOUSE FURNISHINC VCEGTLE &HJETZ6EE'S HOUSE FURNISHING EMPOBID STO. 83 EAST WASHINGTON STREET, OPPOSITE TIIC COURT H0C5K, nüfA.UOLI(, It DI At A. flU: ABOVE ESTABU-SM MENTIS ICOVf OTTJf AXO f offeri fj nie at low rate, a Sarg aeortment, equal la any 14 the Wet, of Moves, ilollow and Tin-Ware, Jiipri'liiietl-Warc. oal Oil I,:ut and Fixtures, And a General Asorfint f HOUSE! FURNISHING GOODS. i Manufacturer of Tin, Copper and Mieet Iron Ware. We arttbe only Agents fyr tbe Ctj cf tbe Cood Samaritan Cooking, iDTllE ml k ys Tif.n: ttr.on s to je THE GOObj.UMAimx, for ith chwi ttve th. ei. elu ! a?en-y'. im oTer4 t all who are ta want of a HKT CUAö (XX)K'2G SlnV', w;nh tbe u?iroat coi.fl-d-Dc tliat t will not lil to plea- lis nut careful Lou.selueitr. It i a lapttd for '1 or rol. lilt OaJU .SAUAklTAM käs Uk-B iteCr! prrniiun at ih Eleveotb aaaaal Indiana 8ta: Faar, crxt all otter Cooking Mntrt. TUK KKV5MI5K PAkLtiR STOVE, for wood, with dottle t( p and t-, h more ihm - loul I- the rat:atln( urface t ikj o Uer St ova of iu !. and tll I a row oot tuore Leat i'h one-Laif tbe wl Tnl tov bavina; lwentet-d, w uke j leaura Id preeriti'C It t ibe puh He a tie Lrt.ai d m .t ccwuitakJ Pari r SIotc lo iLe ma-ket. I Afrenu for Indiana p.J1 for Ilaller k Yoana'a old ttabibhed COOKING RANOES1 Wttb one, two er ort Orer fi&nt, a&4 Extra Cireoal hr ller Attacf mer t. e would a m call the attention of tbe putlio to r Urge atoca ef mart al ted Iron Jllautlen ami Gratt. Als kir Mar.tlr of arrtrtwr pa ty. Oor tock of Hat kaca, llartieaj . al. Va-e, Au c HirUe too real e.t rft h"t pren Ea-tem Mar..rrta-. - AH klnia or UrnMiMnlal I run U orki can be pr.re4 t brows ra at ft:aierw pveee. Oar tock k i b- er raiefaliy aetorted, and irwt all article are trrutd frrm tb larrr t I.at-m 'actriea d.reec Wa sra iberrLr enatJe4 t t- xntt ia prwea and quality of gvS wiih any ivw ta tbe Weal. AoxVotlj VtKUlLK A METZilEJL
STOVE
Funo.
LORD & CO., 50 and Ü8 West Washington Street, r.r. kfckitixo by tints dailt aocf.ssioxs to ibrtr alreajy Urrr and exten! e aoruet taf FURS, American Sable, The rhea.t and la'ge-i tock ia tba ftlaU, atnprtaliar , aad Caj--.. FURS, French Sable, A r-iil line, and "elected wüh aaach cara for tbfc aar FURS, Water Mink, Something new and binJotre. FURS, Imitation of Llink Very f.oe, and would deceive, iL tet Jodrea. FURS, Siberian Squirrel, The cheapest a lady can buy. FURS, White Coney, For Misses acl CUIJren, in fttat varletj and very low prices. FURS. Muffs, lu all grade a od qual.tiea. Furs, Cuffs; All rrades. Call and examin ear tvk befora ptircha.n.g vlrwrbere. HUME, LORD & CO. Silk Velvet Cloaks. New at) lei, and very haiulaome. Cioth Cloaks. from the bet boaea In the countrj, and all warranted French Bever Cloaks. 'ew and baadtome de;(iP. CHEAP CLOTH CLOAKS, In great i-arietj and rjr rbe.ip. Misses' and Cliildrcn's Cloaks. CmCULUt CLOAKS. New denigtia of Lnnr. and 8oar. All tbo latest and wo-t ap"red tyl rrceivfd wrkly direct frota New York by Espre. fJarmctit tnada to order la an atjU, at abort notice, at tbe TRADE PALACH. SHAWLS. A very large and handsome Stock of Long and Square, compiling rrcncfa Square shnwla, Striped I'nlalr Klinwla, Il roc tie llordered haarla Thibet Miarl, Trnrrllnc Slin U for Ladles Al Gents. miiisscsand Children's Shaicls. yStnaIl iYüflt, Good Value, and quick Sale, la tbo motto. HUME, LORD & CO., I.ni AN AI'OLI. aoli. HOTELS. PLANTEES' HOTEL, ACTON YOUNO, Proprietor. (rORMF.ULY OF XASI!VILE, TKX5ESSF.E.) U. P. KENDALXnCterk, Lalo of Salem, lod Sixth St., between Main and Uarkct, XjouIsvIUo, ICy. FEKSONS .VI8IIING TO (id TO y.SHVILLI 01 soma will end it to tbeir inUrett to atop at thU Hotel. actaa-dljr DRY C000S. w b 0 b 0 H K to H m Q o & b
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o Hi Ü 3 wa t CnOCERiES. New York Grocery, 50. 17 7-A ST WA8UIGTOS ST..I DOOLS WKSTOT t.LtKNS' ELOCK. - C. E. JtlDSO, WHOLESALE AHO FIETAIL . DEALEFl PAMILT OltOC23RJnS3, ? Fine Teas, Floar, lc, Lc Cab far Wbaal aad otaer rda. oU-4Xi '
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