Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 7 July 1860 — Page 1

nnl

Ity.

NEW SERIES--VOL. XI, NOrffl.

CHANGE OF TIME.

Louisville, N. Albany & Chicago

RAIL KOAD.

FOR ST. LOUIS. CHTCAHO. DKTROIT. ASD ALL POINTS \VEST AXD NORTHWEST. The Great Western and Xorthxcestern

8HORT LINE ROUTE.

1860. SUMMER ARRANGEMENT. 1860. Three Daily trains to St. Louis and Cincinnati, and Two to Chicago. after Tiwfay, M*j 29, I860, I'aMenger trains will Icarc Xew Albany as follows: ..TiOO A. il. St. Louis and Chicago Express Mail.

Many, cxcopt Sunday) through in day light, to.. reaching St. Louis at eK»p m, and Chicago at 8.-QQ am.

TtSO l\ M., daily, exccpt Sunday.", St Louis and Chicago, Express, reaching St. Loais at 8 JO m.

29:15

I'. M.. Mitclicll Accommodation, daily. BTL'bnino.—Trains leave St. Louis at 7:00 a in, and 6:40p m. connccting closely at Mitohell with trains South, arriving in Louisville at 6:30 a ni. and P:13 in.

ON LY OXE CHANGE OF CARS TO ST. LOUIS, CINCINNATI «r CHICAGO. BAGGAGE.CHECKED THROUGH.

Alt trains conncct cloHcly with all passenger trani3 on the Ohio A Mississippi Railroad, and wait indefinitely fur (. J: M. trains when tlicy are delayed, thereby insuring to passengers rclinWo connections at Mitclicll. to or from St. Louis or Cincinnati.

IJjM'asiSonjjnrs and linggage taken to and from any part of I he city and the cars free of charge. to ill through trains connnct closely at Grecncaatle rith the Torre Haute and Richmond Railroad, \rest for Terro TIauto and St. Louis and castfor Indiannpoii«. At Lafayette with theTolcdoand Western Railway. At M. S. Crossing with tho Michigan Southern Railroad for Toledo and intermediate stations. AIKO. «t Michigan City with the Michigan Central Railroad for Chicago and all points West and Northwest. Also for Detroit and all poinU East.

JO'THROUGH TICKETS and furthomrnformation can be obtained at tho UNION R. R. TICKET OFFICE, No. "10, south-east corner of Main 4 Third streets. Louisville, Ky. irrTrains arc rnn hy I-onisvill*- time. miiylM II- K. RICHER, Hnp't.

MAMMOTH STOCK

-01-

-AND-

Jewelry!

JAMES PATTERSON,

Hand

AVING just returned from New York nnd Philadelphia, would inform tin? citizens* of Montgomery jnirrounding counties. Ihnt h« lias purchased, and nrc being opened, tho most complete stork ol \Vaichc9. Clocks Jewelry. Funi'.v Articloa and Cutlory, ever brought to Cnuvfordsvillc. It consists

pari of

111

"WATCHES!, OOLD and SILVER, Hunting and Open Faced.

For Dwelling*. Stores. Hunks, Churchc* and .M-lioul IIIU*IH. of Sotli Thonms*. .lerome's and Watcrbtir} Clock Company's uianufaelurc.

W E E

Of HlUljlei and pittern Coral. CarbinMe. Mosaic, CHIIIOO, Uold-!lone, and Miiiiatur A .so—locket? ui' all sit'.'s.

'POCKET

Kt'AIKKl) ami warranted. To this branch or the

I ,,

Mny

\h

lillUl

AVORMS.

rpHE

season is nt haw! when these -oonrsi .L hood Wsin 0 luvom ljth tnnililosiunc ami fonmDnl

bntrnjrr

IN OPERATION AS USUAL! \\TOOL Cardin)t. Curdinc and Spinnine. necling, Doubling and Twistinc done up at short notice «nd in a workmanliko manner, at

CUSTOMARY PRICES.

Mlxod AVool worked separate: all Wool sent by Kail Roiul, with directions enclosed, will be promptly done and R. M.

Wreturned.

E would also call your'attention to our I.arge Stock of

*t crefttly reduced price?, to exchange for Wool or ire will paj-the highest market price in Cash for wool delivered at our warehouse.

r-i

BOOKS?

Of nil jduip'j!) nnd size.* M«.»rucj », {\ilf and Uii'.'k-d-Tur^ci.

TAKIjB) t-VTSsSlBl V! Of all prices, from seventy fivj cent.-, to $! )".- JPocket Ivnivos! TTho most cittuplotctock cvor raw j:i Ujvn. 1 t*m 10 •ci nts up to $3.

CA J^SSS MX!

Kr.-un a MAMMOTH Mt»

SILVER AND PLATED WARE.

T'nro «ilvor7Va :\ml Tali!" Sp i.i ii.r.i. Hutter Knives Snuji l.iiillt TOURS—.I!1 warrantfl »l'

*. Clipi. V'.rk Crmim Mil

:R, JL O IR, S

G-iiuite Wntio lliitolior'* tnul other nliu'df lira ml-. Walking

gif

littli%, tliick mi t'uri. li:iMan. (Julia

WOrf.p inform the ritixiMH «.f r.mnfh:tt I havo swoisootleil in «lt«in" m»'* mm «tf fir• Workinui from rhiljuli-iiMiNi. Mo *n!ni%3 wfll rcct)inmew(t«!«l. All work wi rcceivc my otrn bupvrrtsiuA.

MFTYL'.MH5B. JAMI-S RATTKUSOX.

T* Important to Travelers

AYESTWARD!

TKi-volvor*.

IIAVK just rpcrivod a rr.mplctc a«irtment Clin-. I'i-itoU and Howio Knivo--.

olrcrs of Colt t'ntent. Mny IS.

MOOKFRRS FIRST

r.:rcliii,

IrVorr. Ar. AMI'S PATTl'.KSO.V. May l'J. lStiO. ('r uvtiT-lsvil!''.

€C3^Bk.H*3»-

A MW WATCH MAKER I^T TOW3SVI

Watches, Lockets, Jewelry and grounds wholly unwarrantable, uujiistifia-Lartv and I,

SWEETSER. DAVIS HILLS.

vf«y S,ii«0. n«tf

FOR SALE.'

A

HOUSE AX1) LOT. filuated on Walnut street, near Christian Church. Tho dwelling in a one-vtory. with three rooms: al»o, nnoUc-nouse. stable, wood bom, 4c Site of Lot, 00 by 165 foot, and It well let with ihrubbery. There Is also on the l,ot

Veil and Cistern.

I--

April'7,1060. "38

Musical Boxes, j'blcand indefensible. It nn.y be that iu!tria]

i0iue

Ufacii'm will lie Rivoii. ,!A. l'A 1 IV.KMX i)u]jUVo the Democracy ot the South, as aj

Spectacles, Spectacles.

CI

OI,n. Silver nnd plated Spectacles of the finest pebble BUSSM. just rcej-ive,l, Also, hye

reiiuvly alike ploasant and elTcctual suunn0n courage to resist though it WO fur the evil. Thero is not the least difficulty in cot-

I)U. .JOHN liUI.I.'S Principal Office, Louisville, Keutueky. [May 1'-, lSCO-Cin.

WOOL! WOOL! WOOL!

The Cratefortisvillc

WOOLEI FdCTORY.

Tliis [Machine lias no Equal in -l~:

LigtLtness of Drauglit,

BIR.J/ill/T'l'. STRENGTH, SI.lljPJLi€ITJ'

And PRICE. ^Every Machine Warranted to give entire satisfaction.

Indiana Hamster!

This Machine is constructed with a view to saving labor and grain has Binding attachment and is warranted to cut from 10 to 15 acres per day, only requiring three men to work it.

FISHEH'S

WROUGHT IBON MOWEE!

This Machinc is constructed of wrought Iron, will last for year?, and has no equal as a lv,ower.

S E S IE S 8

WOODBURY'S PATENT PORTABLE HORSE POWER & SEPARATOR.

Moliltt's Patent Horse Power and Separator. Ralson's Patent Horse Power and Separator.

This Machine will thresh more Grain in a given length of time than any other Machine in use. .• ...

J3i3 i!S&.l§L ±a uFSL

ENDLESS CHAIN ONE-HORSE POWER,

Designed to set in vour Barn and thresh when vou choo.-e.

Any of the above Machines can be had Store of v«* -A. 3VL

convention, and thereupon nominated by acclamation. Thus have the wishes of a vast majority of the Democracy of the country been responded to. Jt is true that the delegates fioai several of the

:f

Ko-

.VllunV. S!\nrp JAMI

1aiW.

1 Mimluitian ATTV.IJSON. n-T.U.v.

Statcs withdrew from the convention be-:it

drntl'thi?^!* pricMCiin!llf|uoiiiy"t"''\vork! ori'i "-1 «n.t- ceding delegates will be sustained, but wc p0jM1] idol. The question is, not how jtlon'

National Democratic ticket. There

I'mtcc-

1or» txnd tiosnlci. A MLb 1 A 1 I KH. Mny 1-'.

States have been unwillingly drawn by

THE season is nt ham! when these -oonrces of child ^. johT,on«ui'. 'v^oiabu ^or"» the force of a ehunor which'tbey did not

4l

iL 0

come of this crusade, toeemg no other 9lTrvr, way which promises defeat of the popular

will which demauded the nomination of Mr. Douglas, the conspirators have stimulated the South to demand a platform upon which he could not stand. This demand involved the utter supversion of the doctrine regarding the relations of Congress to slaver}- in the Territoiies. The conspirators have failed here the doctrine of "NON-INTERVENTION BT CONGRESS WITH SLAVERY IN THE TERRITORIES" HAS BEEN preserved and Mr. Douglas has been nom

a

PKBMIU!H GRAM DRIMi,Ipi

LITZ'S ONE-HORSE OR ATX DRILL,

ro/i isKEDisa

JX

.STAXD/XC coitx.

±31

JSJGX OF THE "PADLOCK."

jy calling at the AgricuHura

GBEG-G-,

KK kupjHU't of Douglas tlicy will bo guilty of could not convey more wok-onie in- jinjtiaticc and ingratitude such as we find telligencc to tliu Democracy^of .Michigan ,fcw examples of in the history of enlightt!\nsi that tljo Dem,.,orat.ic Aation^l con\on— eoiuniunitios. tion has nuimnated Stephen A. Douglasj nomination is an event for for the Presidency. On the first vote, he[tlic Northern Democracy lias been patieutreceivcd the reijnisito two-thirils ot^ the jy waiting, and it will produce an euthusi-

es 0f

viiti-kstf

a

of the States this action of the se- •recoiled in dismay, have made him the 'lx.}

aiL

extremists and seetionalists and disunion-!

in the South, as there are in the North, and it is these who. under extraordinary!^ circumstances, have been able to seize the ],is Democratic organizations of three or four'an(j I of the States, and to lead a preconcerted

ori nn(j

movement into which delegates from otherJjjUt

to

11

ui.vieldinn- PI I-CK through

tVolu xv

lwuia in uu v. im 1iitiii un,

mcntal

2s*orther, States he can carry, but

nifll)

body, will come up to the support of thc many there arc that he will not carry, ,. V11"®,

rent ant| ]l0w s))0ntaneous

s-

jie will encounter, not hostile mobs,

a

11

boisterously applauding populace.

C'A TILL-: LKOPARD CHAM. IIIM ouldj SL'OTS.

A TMK lK(IPABD

1

tins children to take the medicine.. it prepared appear that all the southern delegations Liucoln for years after his involuntary in tne form of Candy Drop.*, niul will be calon with iiip-A ttava more or less extremists liut' ,, avidity by children Of alUso?. •''If^roysnmle^

tncre clc

L.. exile from Congress, was known as "spot"

States to the Democratic party. •The crusader against Mr. Douglas which has culminated in these secessions has been inexcusable, wicked, devilish. The difficulty about the platform has mostly, ...

Lincolu. The origin of this title of "spot" was a series of resolutions offered by Lincoln in Congress. The Resolutions are as follows: .jt' "WHEREAS, This House is desirous to obtain a full knowledge of the facts which

establish \rnetlier. the particular

8POT on which the blood of our citizens was shed was or was not at that time our own soil therefore,

Resolved, By the House of Representatives, that the President of the United States be respectfully requested to inform this House— 1st. Whether the SPOT on which the blood of our citizens was shed, as in his message declared, was or was not within the territory, of Spain at least after the

treaty of 1819, until the Mexican rcvolu-

inated. No man in the whole Union de-ltlon' serves better treatment at the hands of the' ^hcthcr that SPOT is or is not South than Mr. Douglas for no one has passed through ordeals so fiery as be in the support and defence of her^ constitutional rights. He might at one tinife have almost Utterly traveled from Washington to Chicago by the illumination of his own burning effi^es lighted by the malignant enemis of the South, and no one haa. forgotten the reception which was on one of these occations prepared for him by an anti-slave-ry mob of tholatter city. £f the true men of the South shall net.couie toiho heiirtgr

within the territory which was wrested from Spain, by the revolutionary government of Mexico. 3d. Whether that SPOT is or is not within a settlement of the people, which settlement has existeel ever since long before the Texas revolution, and until its inhabitants fled before the approach of the it S at a

The wheat crop in Michigan is very

good. *55V).*"

,f CMWFOKDSYILLE, MONTGOMERY COUNTY, INDIANA, JULY, J,' 1860.

THE LETTER TO SR. DOXIGLA8. WASHINGTON, June 25. SIR: The National Committee of the Democratic party, which met in Charleston on the 23d day of April last, and adjourned to meet at Baltimore on the 18th day of June, has unanimously nominated you as their candidate for President of the United States. We have been delegated to inform you of such nomination and to ask your acceptance of it. The Convention has reasserted the time-honored principles of the party as enunciated at.Cincinnati in 1856, upon which we won the glorious field in that contest, and carried with a single exception every Southern State.— Assailed, as we are, by sectionalism, endangered by Disunionists, and in the midst of a crisis threatening the very perpetuity of our Union, we believe that to you the people turn, and have long since involuntarily turned, as one whose firmness and ability, whose consistent nationality and unvarying recognition of the Constitutional rights of all sections of our common country, can alone lead us in safety to that repose demanded by every true patriot. We tender to you our heartfelt congratulations, and have the 'honor to be j'our fellow-citi-zens, WM. H. LUDLOW, New York

It. P. DICK, North Carolina. J. L. SEWARD, Louisiana. J. L. DAWSON, Pennsylvania. It. C. WICKLIFFE, Louisiana. W. A. GORMAN, Minnesota. J. B. FLOURNOY, Arkansas. A. A. KING, Missouri. BION BRADBURY, Maine.

BOI GLAS' LETTER of ACCEPTANCE. WASHINGTON, June 27.

GENTLEMEN: In accordance with the verble assurance which I gave you when you placed in my hands the authentic evidence of my nomination for the Presidency by the National Convention of the Democratic party, I now send you my formal acceptance.

Upon a careful examination of the platform of principles adopted at .Charleston and reaffirmed at Baltimore, with an additional resolution, which is in perfect harmony with the others, I find it to be a faithful embodiment of the time-honored principles of the Democratic party, as the same were proclaimed and understood by all parties in the Presidential contests of 1848, *52 and '56. Upon looking into tho proceedings of the Convention also, I find that the nomination was made with great unanimity, in the presence and with the concurrence of more than two-thirds of the whole number of delegates, and in exact accordance with the long-established usage of the party. fS|My inflexible purpose not to be a candidate nor accept the nomination under any contingenc}' exccpt as the regular nominee of the National Democratic part}' and in that case only upon condition that the usages as well as thb principles of the party should be strictly adhered to, had been proclaimed for a loug time and become well known to the country.

of the Democratic masses and their faithful representatives, without any agency, interference or procurement on my part, I feel bound in honor and duty to acccpt the nomination.

In taking this step I ain not unmindful of the responsibility it imposes, but with firm reliance upon Divine Providence, I have the faith that the people will comprehend the true nature of the issue involved, and eventually maintain the right. The peace of the country and the perpetuity of the Union have been put in jeapordy, by the attempt to interfere with and to control the domestic afFairs of the people in the Territories, through the agency of the Fedwhieh

1

asm unprecedented, for its depth and strength, in the record of American polities. No man since General Jackson's time has had so firm a hold upon the popular heart as Mr. Douglas. His great |ual-

cra^

statesmanship, his devoted faitht'ul-

tore this result was reached, but up«n:nuss to the principles of the Democratic u-

G°vern,nent. If the power and the duty of Federal interference is to be conceded, to hostile sectional parties must be the inevitable result, the one inflaming the passions and ambition of the North, and the other of the South, and each struggling to use the Federal power and authority for the aggrandizement of it.- own section at the expense of the equal rights of the other, and in derogation of these funda-

principles, the principles of sclt-

hieh most men would have |government, winch wow hrmly established

t'1's

countl

as lC

'^cnV

to ...nerican J^oln-

tion, as the basis of our entire republican

the memorable period of our

of slavery, and the Southern interventionists, though few in number, and without a single Representative in either House of Congress, insisting upon Congressional legislation for the protection of slavery, (in opposition to the wishes of the people, in either case,) it will be rcmem

Clay,

and a

Webster,

ed by

the

country and stability to the Union, essential

fraternity now which permit'the country to be again distracted and precipitated into revolution by a sectional contest between pro-slavery and an-ti-slavery interventionists, where shall wc look for another Clay, another Webster or

OS XT

thing must be met with firmness, impartiality and fidelity if we expecrt to enjoy and transmit unimpaired to our posterity that blessed inheritance which we have received in trust from the patriots and sages of the Revolution.

With sincere tlianks_for the kind and agreeable manner in which you have -made known to me the action of the Convention, I have the honor to be very respectfully, your friend and fellow-citizen, [Signed.]

We would not encourage our friends with false hopes And expectations. In ourjudgment nothing is gained in an election cam: paign by partizans claiming more for their candidates than appears plausiblo to the most cool and dispassionate judgment.— Specially is it injurious in a newspaper, whose pretensions to public confidence rest much upon its accuracy and candor, to seek to create impressions which, not being realized, strike a severe blow at its character and prosperity. •In"the election which is coming on we do not intend to allow any partisan feeling to forfeit the reputation we have gained as a correct prophet of future political events. AVe feel a laudable pride in the fact that wc have, so far as the nomination was concerned, not misled our friends, as our predictions were almost entirely verified in the result.— Some of our cotemporaries, like the Com-' mercial and Gazette, thought us insane when we claimed that Douglas would receive the vote of nearly every free State at the Charleston Convention, besides a handsome support from the South', and that in despite of all opposition he would be triumphantly nominated under the twothirds rule. They insisted that he would not get over seventy or eighty votes, at the highest, and that he stood no earthly chance of being the nominee. "\\"e invite our friends and enemies to look over the files of the Enquirer for six months previous to the Baltimore nomination, and they will find that nearly, if not quite every claim we made for Judge Douglas* strength in the different States however extravagant it might then appear to some, was ratified.

The same elements which were nt work to secure Senator Douglas' nomination, and which triumphantly carried that point over the most terrible opposition ever witnessed in this country, arc bound to .secure his election the people. The principle difficulty, in fact, lay with the p.Iitician?, who contested the nomination, and was never with the people. The heaviest part of the work was done when tho politicians were beaten at Baltimore. In all sober earnestness and candor, we have the 'best reasons for believing that Senator Douglas will carry this country as General Franklin Pierce carried it in 185*2. If the indications in the political horizon arc not more grossly deceptive than ever before, Douglas will be elected President, as Franklin

tans who are ealculatnig upon thg votes

18ob and 18oS in the free States, arc

free States enormous

were loaded weii

,.

Jc?f}

now slavery in the Territories. work all the harder for the cause on his expressed by Mr. Line The fair annlication of this just and! account. The persecution which hehas

The Federal Union mnst be preserved Administration, then in the.be^innm,, cf

the Constitution must be maintained inviolate in all its parts every right guaranteed by the Constitution must be protected by law in all cases where legislation is necessary to its enjoyment the judicial authority in the Constitution must be sustained and its decisions implicitly obeyed and faithfully executed the laws must he administered and the constituted authorities upheld, and all unlawful resistance to,these excite in a month

(-ciooati

I

STEPHEN A. DOUGLAS.,

T1IE PROSPECT—DOUCA8 WILtCEBXAIM.V BK- EliEOTED BY THE PEOPLE.

J!

States.

with the!

Y?-

C".:The

tionalism, and had to carry an Ad.mnistra-:

tion whose unpopular.ty was extensive and ^.j, ,je

quei

in full vigor, and upon it we lost tempor-j arily, hundreds of thousands of votes.— Notv we have cut loose from the Disunion-' ists of the South, and arc fighting them as well as their colleagues of the North.

dough-

our noble standard bearer, Stephen A. ...

Douglas. All their sectional amunition|at

-POir10vr -,i political "history, when the" advocates of! has been spoiled—their guns spiked by the Mr. Lincoln was the first man in Illinois and repudiates Lane and JircckcnrnJge.^pf

It will soon be seen how deep is tlie eur-:' '. ., ,. rn,„ .'i i,

tlieenthusiasm^^d0"! intervention upon the subject of turn events took at Balt.moi e. lhejhave^vho proposed to an oi-anizrd bod of

faced—that they were subservient to the the friends ot the lamented Clr.y, m«y be —X. A. Lr'fger. Disunion party of the South. No more gathered from a speech made bv General can they raise the Kansas question against!

Sin

„lcton

increased wonderfully in popularity within 'said Convention were privately summ.-nod the last four years, Probably more than to appear at the house of Ninian W 1M-four-iifths of the American people are in wards, in the city of Springfield. The: favor of it as the only proper solution of. meeting being organized, Mr. Lincoln cxthe slavery question. Tho Democrats have plained its object to be tho selection of an immense advantage in the personnel of some other man than Henry Clay as the their candidate. 'standard bearer of the whig party in the

bered that it required all the wisdom of a The names of Lincoln, Dell and Ureck-! coming Presidential content. 'J he naaf-

and a Cass, support-j inridge inspire no enthusiasm in the pop-.

0

consservativc and patriotic men ular heart. Their nominations fell coldly Lincoln, and the necessity of immediate of the Whig and Democratic parties of upon the public ear. Only those will vote action urged, on the that day, to devise and carry out a line of I for them who are attached to the principles Whigs did not take iy policy which would restore peace to the they represent. -1 1a a 'PI, ^ri li/% rtfK A1'

•gnbs.'nJ otft

that the only live party in die country the friends, pf Mr. Douglas.' "With such a candidate and with such issues, how ridiculous to malrc comparisons of the election with that year It is much more sensible to look at 1852, exccpt that Lincoln is a weaker candidate than Scott, and Douglas, far stronger than Pierce.

All the Western States and New ork,

Pcnns3"lvania,

New Jersey, Connecticut,

Ehodc Island, California, Oregon and New Hainphshire arc naturally Democratic, and will go that way when vte do not carry the heavy load of the Southern Disunionists. We lost many of those States by thousands of Democrats deserting us on that ground. They ere coming back to us faster than they went from us. In New Hatnphshire,

New Hampshire. '. Connecticut Rhode Island..... New York New Jersey Pennsylvania Ohio Indiana Illinois Michigan 0 Wisconsin 5 Towa 4 Minnesota 4 Missouri

Total

General Taylor was proposed

The' On the other hand, Mr. Douglas has Whig party had fought long enough for

ssential, living principle of that policy, as I hundreds of thousands of personal admir- principle, and should change its motto to tho .y. Mi pplied in the fenislation of 1858, was,"and crs, who consider him the greatest hero, success! Resolutions being adopted by Johnson, and IOW is, non-intervention by Congress with statesmen and patriot living, and they will the meeting in accordance with the i,.-wa l.nne. i,r.J, tlm TorrJtnries. work all tho harder for the cause on his»*xnrcsscd bv Mr. Lincoln, Cha?. Conleft the

sta

la man in the nation. His strcngtn be- j^T

~—j, fore ,the people w~as shown in the Illinoi.-, |eountrv and to his party. another Cass to plot the ship of State over campaign of 1858, when he beat both the

the breakers into a haven of peace and. Opposition that bad .O.OOO mijontj in

safetJ? S.ta.te,

a

..

P^CCe

ng

its career, formidable from the immense

patronage at its disposal. It the most,

wonderful personal triumph ever achieved

in the country-a immature of what is p/c3idene_v ..

going to transpire on a large scale this fall

in the country at large. Within two days

hl0 and mvself immediately

has appealed to the generosity and mag- an( contributed there and elsewhere,: jyOI.jA

nanimity of the American people, and he cvcrytliin^ in his power to rob that is to-day beyond dispute, the most popu-

an

g00,]

man 0

earne(

|jV

a

4

In Ohio the Republican major-

.tatecan be named that Douglas has not ®aS but'thirteen thousand at the last therc-n ev.-n though the cl.mate and soil ho best chance of success, ihose pol.t.-

State can be named that Douglas has the cians of stupid, indeed. As well might you figure {^jOrcTron will' Vote for Douglas.ln'short contury has been to relieve the more Norupon the vo cs of the election in 18JO- revolution peine on in the free then, Mates nf negro slaves and to COMIn 18ob and 18&8 the Democracy ot the

ti hich iH I)0 U)0rc t!iaa vi(

to us hy oId

]tRy I)(jth Ca

th

.iH enti^lv^chappe tl.eir p«-

more we look at the ikdd.'lhc

Qur C01ivk

.t

1

We have cut loose from a condemned

tion, not with the Democrats. No more

on

w}ien

,]iat Stephen A.!

tJ(ft ex

general. The Kansas question was then ^5^ Citi Enn I Tl:-: true j.rineiple is to keep this questioir |out of Federal politics, and to let the peoMWOI.VX THK.tcni!BY 'i'o #i E!%"ist pi® decide it ft.r themselves in their own

The Republicans are appealing to the .fi th( 1riri(^^ItJ

Old Line Henry Clay bigs to come up

Administration, whose sympathies in the to the support of Lincoln, claiming that tv. It is a principle which thousands outPresidential contest are with the Opposi-:

can the Opposition rally the 2sortli on the /such to «rive it thoir snn^rion hy voting Ihrs charge that the Democrats were

Yf HOLE" NUMBER" 943

f"ar be is entitled to t.ie coiist era io,i DciiKicrntie tickot in nri'l Novcm-

itll 0

i(1 f/m Whig, made *"x»

1k

Ca:"iu1 c'111

THE BOI.TKRM' COXVBSTIO!*—A 1IMITS JIANTKB-SPIKIT. Tho'nnnn and gniding spirit of ihc Bpl*-" crS^Convehtion at Baltimore, wajT""MF. Yaifc'ey the'aisfiritf&lst'J T!c wa.i

lor instance, the majority against us, i.s but n^staixictl, and which this Baltimorevbolt-'J four thousand.on the last vote. Docs any

concern

reasonable man believe that there are not ]lc dissolution of the'Union. The Scces-' more than two thousand men in that State, sionists, with Yancey at their head, cama old Democrats, who will now return to us,

to

Electoral Votes. 5

011I3*

1 0

That elects and seven to spare. Of the States named above, Indiana, Illinois, lihode Island, Missouri and is

ritfTi?j?

clement,there. Jle sjiw hi.i hopesotyears agajxnifug.^hapc anil. form. He wu.in.A. copycStjon.cpjnposed of bolters.from tho National -Democracy, nnd of Richmond' CoTrmrtion-^Disunionists. ins-SFBeelrttr his confederates sl"6wed how his heart was rejoiced at the prospect of precipitating tllS* Cotton States into a revolution against tho Fedoral Government. It was well that he was there, and that he took load inits proceedings otherwise^ the- bolting.,-concern would have been without character. Hri.f gave it character—a character_ liko that which the Hartford Convention hasalwaysp

wilLalwniys sustain, far bfcyoml1

u:lltimorc for no go.id purpose. Their

in view of .e events at Baltimore So (object was mischief. They meant to ruinin New York, Ohio and Pennsylvania, wc (|1C p^rty, by getting tho control of it, and shall receive from a similar cause, tens of if, this latter to set up an'indcpentliQusands of accessions. It is known to (ieutorganization outside of the National those who have traveled in the North-west .Democracy. This lattcrffthey have done, that but little is said of any other candi- 'pjic consequences to the party and tho date except Douglas, and there is every indication that he will sweep this section of country like a tornado. In New York, Pennsylvania, Connecticut, llliode Island, and New llamplishire our friends arc sanguine. Appearances indicate that the following States will certainly go for Douglas and Johnson

country must be on their own heads. Tlicy are bolters from the regular organization, with tho taiut of disunionism all over thcui. —Ci?i. Enq. (f

4©*T!ic peace and harmony of the country can never be restored by the election of a sectional candidate to the Presidency.^ Such an event would inovitabiynvidon tho'3» breach that now exists between the two portions of the nation. Abraham Lincoln, is to all intents and purposes a sec'flonnl oi) candidate, pledged if clectod?t,b pursue i»| 7 sectional policy in the administration &f th6 27 government. This all know, or ought to know, and yet wc occasionally find a man l'"»! who intends supporting Lincoln, who is nt- f. 11 Jtcrly opposed to every principle on which he seeks to be elected. Their conduct can

be accounted for in one way. Their resentment against the Democratic party has been so intense that.they consider it a duty to oppose Democratic candidates, without looking very closely to the charac- jr Ler of the party witii which they propose to act. In so doing they neglect a duty which every good citizen owes to his coun- 5? try. In these days of the disruption anl

consin wore Democratic at tho last clcc- breaking up.of ,!d party tics, every voter tion Iowa was about equally balanced, Ishou,(1 carefully seruhmze tue actual state the majority being less than three thous- ]of tlung^ and act accordingly and which the popularity of Douglas will

c^ectlon

sweep like chaff before it. In New York dangerous experiment He is justly ohpart of the Democratic ticket was elected

1\°,:W,UH

last fall, and the same combination which ^y'10 believe that the people of the two Chose it is now for Douglas and Johnson, scot.ons should stand on an rqual footing The Republicans arc disgusted in New the Icrr.tor.cs of the tnion. Black York by the sacrifice of Seward, and bv llqmblican.sm acts upon the suppositibn the rascality and corruption of their State

U,at

Legislature". We look for a rousing major- ^I'^le ot deciding the qucst.on of slavery ilv in the Empire State. In Connecticut'themselves and would therefore have wc were only beaten four hundred votes Congress to intervene to proh.b.t that m-

would be

,to

l,e,°l'lc:,of

the

^«uth

and to

the people of the 1 emtones arc not

should be such as to make negro labor an

.DeiH0CriU3 who will ".disable necessity lor thc.r dcve op.

iifonii meut? 'I he tendency of tlnngs for ha 1 a

tliei 111

litical character at the coming election.- dnmtte, soil and productions render their

stronger

t»'o.-:c .Mates where th«

^.r profitable. his has been done un-

('cr

tlie

,,rf!sillcnt

of t!

operation nt natura, laws, and not

,0 las a result of Congres.Monal enactments.

TJ. A v. iscvcralrouiniunitics. It is only by this ,. .. course that peace can be secured. This I:

:u,vocatcd

iI|[|

that statesman was living, he was his, side of the Democratic party believe to bo .*

nnd SOI! ll flTcu,,.

by Mr. Douglas

(i,e niass of the Democratic par-

1 low cerreet, and we shall confidently nxpect all

,r r01

.-0 1 .* Kvery I)t- noerafie paper in tne Mate of

's""' Xew York supports Douglas and .J hn?on, and Jircckcnridgc.ii

ICverv Demorratie paper in Indiana sup-po'-ts Douglas and Johnson, and repudiates the disunion candidates, Lane an 1 Breck-

,'nri

by

Mr.

round lor

that :f the th'ir can-

JUrae, the Democrats would! That th" I

1

the honors he had so rich-

long life of

Mr

devotion

'Ljncoln

to. his

CVCQ

*(,nt

so f:ir

cn

te try

me from taking a seat in the

il Phildelphia Convention, and urged me to -ve

t0 1)r

then

-bci

a ritize

of

and

I

after his nomination, more meetings were There is li\m0 near (.harL~

W

held and more enthusiasm displayed than a negrcss ^b^Y^^of'Thc dialing-".Ult Uupgyi

thj friends of Lincoln had een' able to have lost whatever eense she may have ar«tfa In a mnntli It is a coiDmonjremark

4cncc

had.. ... .. ...

Democratic paper in Wisconsin a

pport.s Douglas and Jcliuson, and repudiates tlie disur-ion ticket. Kverv IJemocratic prijier in Illinois that did not support Lincoln in j*')*, now supnorts Douglas and Johnson, and repudiates the di-union ticket ot Lane and Dreekenridge.

In Mi ::ouri four-fifths of the 1 emocratic papers support Houglas and Johnson, and repudiate tlie disunion ticket. r-

In Michigan every Democratic paper supports nights and Johnson. Ohio every I'cinocratic paper, e.tefpt. the Danite paper at Cleveland, owned hy 'j

Marshal, supports Douglas and repudiates Creckcm idge and &

lhf

.,n

of New Jersoy

jn ois., because Zabriskie

-j*

.msaonti.

Mr. Claiborne, one ot the delegatcr froiu Missouri to the Baltimore Convention, claims that Douglas will gf^t twenty-five

.. thousand majority in that .State. The it..^

llrpubliran, of yesterday, says "The friends of Douglas and Johnson should at once go to work to perfect an organization which shall secure to tiioni. rou.-iug majorities in all tlie .States oi the Valley of the Mississippi. About ourtf: own State, we have no question. *ar.

a ]ar£rcr mn

twclrc

j0rity than ha-, befcu

/..briskie—/n- Deinocratic candidate f.r flm

a!11

wc

as for Ilenry Clay, for :."-v •-s^-radamtr-i£inilie 'Zulavsky Kossutlt

iH do it."-

JM

(jiedon Friday nK)rning

in

Wl

at her r,sidem-c:

Brooklyn, aged 42 years. Mad ,me Zu-|

lavskv w^s a filter «.f* Louis Kossuth, andf

('., lavsky was a si*

ian cxih1

i-ountry the m'ein-

4, tiO