Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 3 November 1860 — Page 2

1

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CRAWFORDSVILLE, IND

Saturday, November 3, 1860.

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A E S O W E N

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I A I O N

LARCKIt THAN ANY I'Al'KR I'L"HMS1IKI IN f'rn trfanl.rlllr Advcrli««!r*. call up nml examine our I-i?t of 1CT**' ««ck I»KH*:«o

For JPrcftidcnr,

STEPHEN A. DOUGLAS, OF ILLINOIS. For .Viec tPrenident,

HEKSCHKI, V. JOHNSON, OF CEORCIA.

Democratic Electoral Ticket FOR THIS STATE AT LARCE. f'Vltrs IJ. DKNIFAM, «f J»Rk»in.

JOHN WAIJKKK.

of

f.aporto.

niSTRICT ELECTOKS.

l«t—| AMES M. SIIANKMN. of Vnnilcrlmr^l:. iM.—TIIOMAS M. HKOVV'N. of Roy.!. M.-.UMfeS S. HKSTKH. of Hr-.wn. th.—I'ANIKIi H. JONKS. of Frnnklin. Stli.—WII.IJAM A. HICKIiK. of Wnynr. fith.—A. H. CONIH'ITT. .W..nriui. 7th.—WIMJAM M. KltANKMN. of Owori. HIII.-WILMAM r. KISK. ..R OOIIO. nth.—It. P. KKKINOKK. ..f Miami. HMli.—Wl 1,1.1AM S. SMITH, of Allnn. Ilth.-ANDKKW JACKSON, of Miulieun.

DDI'ARTl'RK OV TKAIKN OS TI1K I.OI'IriVII.I.K, XKW AUIANY .1 fllK AOO U.K.

GOING NORTH.

frcisTil it Accoiiiiiioil:ttiin Traill.nt a. m. riiicnRo Mail Train, nt 4:2(1 p. in, GOING SOUTH. LnuHvillo Mail Tniin, ut H:l" a. in. Freight A Accummoilaiion Trnin, nt r:40 p. 111.

R. E. ItHVANT, Agi'nt.

GET YOUR TICKETS. Wc shall print ihc cleclion tickets next Monday. Three dollars will be charged each township.— Collect the "spondulix" immediately.

LOOK OI FOR BOUliil T1CKKTK. Wc caution our Democratic friends throughout the county to look out for bogus tiefcefs. Several leading Republicans are already busy distributing bogus tickets headed "National Democratic Ticket," witli tin-, unities of the Brcckinridgc Electors printed on. Road your tickets carefully.

AT TUEIB OI.U TKICICM. The Black Republicans.-ire again nt their old tricks. Having carried the State in October by importing votes, they design perpetrating the same infamous swindle on next Tuesday, and in order to cloak their villainies have raised the old dodge "stop thief." Wc think the game will be blocked this time.

Mr We are glad to see improvements of any kind going on in our town, bccause it is a sure indication of progress and prosperity. The chief attraction just now is the improvement made by our enterprising townsmen, Messrs. Campbell, Galcy & Hartcr. Having purchased the property they occupy, they have put additions to their stores, which enlarges them to just double their former dimensions, running back to a depth of one hundred and twelve feet, with a ceiling fourteen feet high, and finished in a rich, handsome style.

Their dry goods room on entering it, filled as it is with au immense stock of goods, selected with the taste and clcgaucc peculiar to this firm, presents an appearance of splendid inaguiGcciice, uncqualcd by the mcrchaut palaces of New York and the Atlantic cities. At the rear of this room, is an elevation of some four feet above the level of the main floor, covvering a space of 20 by 24 feet, and lightcd by two windows of stained glass, giving an effect of unsurpassed brilliancy.— This is occupied with fancy goods, ribbons, bonnets, flowers, trimmings, laces. &c., for which it is admirably adapted. Beneath this is a basement cellar which is occupied as the grocery department, and tilled with choice family groceries. From this basement you enter the main cellar, which is underneath the whole building, and divided into two parts—one for gcucral storage and the other used in immediate connection with the grocery department. Time and space forbid us to speak in detail of the new and handsomely fitted up clothing room, filled with fashionable clothing for men and boys the large and commodious rooms of tho ltardvvare department, filled with every conccivable style of shelf liardware, and builder's material. At eouic future time we may noticc it again.

have every assarance that Indi

jU^ ana will go for Douglas and Johnson on next Tuesday. Our neighbor of the JourMai will ploase record this prediction.

l9*(^o. to Johnson's if you wish .to purchaso ft ne#' Stove, or tinware. His stock is tha befli.apd obeaje8t in town.

J^ForVtne assortment of groceries go & Bro.

WaiBTCTT

Next Tuesday will dccide the fate of the greatest Empire on the globe. It will decide the weal or woe 6f tEmy millions of white inhabitants. The sckles are poised, and in"ttio balance hang life perpetuity or disruption of all the ties that bind a free people together. Elect Lincoln to the Presidency and the "Rubicon will be passed "'WSiT,"" civil war, with all its horrors will be at our doors. Fifteen States have proclaimed that the moment it is known that sectionalism has triumphed they will withdraw from the Union. There is nothing now left the conservative clement of the country but to do their duty on next Tuesday. Let us make one superhuman effort to save from destruction the inheritance bequeathed us by our Revolutionary sires. y- mi

S&"Thc editor of the Journal denies that the Republican party ever opposed the execution of the fugitive slave law.— Of course, the intelligeut portion of the Journalreaders will set him down cither as an ignoramus or a wilful falsifier of the history of his country. Wc arc charitable enough, however, to excuse him on the ground of ignorance, and will presume that he never yet heard of the personal liberty bills that disgrace the statutes of Massachusetts, Vermont, and other Northern States, where Black Republican rule lias prevailed that lie never read of the forcible resistance to the execution of the law by armed bands of fanatical Republicans in Boston, the Mecca of this party, or of the resistance of the Republicans of Wisconsin'to the arrest of Booth by the Federal Government for aiding in the escape of fugitive slaves, and resisting the United .States officers. Wc might go 011 and enumerate hundreds of eases where this party has bid defiance to the Government-. But this is sufficient we wish simply to convict our neighbor of denying what his own readers know to be true.,

IMV XKW 1'OIIK HAS CAKICIKM I ISStt. Recent developments explain how the Republicans managed to get the big majorities in the Empire State in 1856. In counties where this party had exclusive control of the ballot-box, the stuffing process was resorted to. Of all political partics that ever existed in this or any other country 011 God's earth, wc believe the Republican party to be the most infamous and dishonest. Give this party (he reins of the Federal Government for four years mil they would steal every cent of its revenue, impoverish the country and mortgage their souls to the devil.

IK l.iC'K TUIN Tl.tlK.

Judge Ilolloway, the old Nestor of patient men, who has lain, like Lazarus, for years upon the dung-hills of the Democratic and Abolition parties, an humble suppliant for alms, has at la.it the prize almost within his

bony grasp.

Col. Lane (so says

Madam Rumor,) has promised the cx-Sar-gcant-at-Arms the Post Office. We congratulate the Judge 0:1 his success, for aside from his politics he is a elever old gentleman.

6SB""ITon. Thomas A. llcudriuks made one of the strongest and most argumentative speeches ever delivered here, on last Thursday. Notwithstanding the inclemcncy of the weather the Court House was densely crowded. Mr. II. in speaking of his defeat, stated that he was beaten by the treachery of the Breckinridgc men and the importation of votes by the Republican party. In Marion county alone over one thousand illegal votes were polled against him.

£S)""We understand that Joseph Eiisininger is a candidate for the Post Office in ease of Lincoln's election. Mr. E. is a zealous member of the Republican party, a worker, and as such wc acknowledge that he has superior claims. Will his party reward him?

4

t?

WIAA OFl'ICI A I..

The following is the official vote of Indiana 011 Governor: Lnne (KrpuMirnn) Hcmlrick* (Democrat)

Ki'ptibliuun majority...

w«S.::IH l-W.Ki*

ESrThc telegraph brings us fresh ac-1

between Butler, Republican, and Clark, Democrat, in consequence of which there will be another election on the 6th of November. The Democratic candidate is Hon. C. S. Dobbins, and Mr. Butler the Republican. .,.

OONMN'G SEIV.

Mrs. Drury would respectfully inform the Ladies of Crawfordsville, that she will stop for a short time at the Taylor House, No. 2, to teach her new and perfect art of Cutting Dresses, Basques, Coats, Vests, &c Years of practice iu teaching the best rules invented, has enabled her to make hers perfect when others failed. Call and Mrs. D. will show you a rule free of charge you can take a lesson, test it by fitting a lining, ana unless you are satisfied no charge will be made. It can be learn, "ed in two hours, by this rule the full waist can be cut to fit perfectly. Agents 'wanted to teach the art. Fashionable patterns kept on hands.

isrin case Lincolu is elected he will be the President of but seventeen States.

TIIBETBJfT.

People of Montgomery' County, "Before another weekly issue of our paper reaches y"on, the duty wgft-haye devolved agon you of B^iectaOg a ?ResC4ent. i*f 'the United States. So important an act as you will perform on the 6th of November has never, yet been performed,by the American .people. Heretofore we have had ojir country "ruled by parties, j^hich extended over the whole country. Such parties, however erroneous and maddened by party zeal, could scarcely do more," under our form of government, than misdirect temporarily the policy of the country. Things have now cbangcd, and we are in the midst of a canvass, upon the result of which in all probability, will depend the permanence of the government founded by the men of the revolution. Upwards of three-quar-ters of a century has passed since the first revolution, and xrc arc upon the eve of a second.

The great "'problem which 6ur fathers left for us to solve was this Can a majority of the people be trusted to respect and supportthc constitutionally guaranteed rights of minorities, and to administer the government with a just reference to the interests of others Our fathers early saw that dangers to our peace would probably arise from questions involving equally all sections of the country.' They forsaw that the true danger L13' in sectional animosities, and a tendency to disunion. We were warned early of these dangers, and at every stage of our progress the warning has been repeated from the lips of patriots and the still more potent voice of facts and history. Heretofore wc have listened to these warning voices of the mighty dead," and obeyed the teachings of reason and history. Heaven, too, has blessed us, and wc have grown great and grand and happy. Efforts have again and again been made to force the people from the great policy adopted by their fathers, but in vain. The people have scorned the bribes of passion, and have clung to the principles of their patriot fathers and we repeat, heaven has blessed them."'

But the serpent of evil has been scotched not killed. That blind selfishness and local jealousy, which for a thousand years has deluged Europe with the blood of men of the same religion and' of the same race, was not idle here in the new world. As early as 1820, the hitherto smouldering fires of sectionalism broke out and threatened disaster and ruin to the country Previous to that time, the government formed by the whole country had recognized its obligation to respect the rights of the local governments, and to permit' them to manage their own lo?al affairs.— Manv new States had been admitted into the Union, and in every instance without the question being asked whether they were slave States or free. In 1S20, however, as Mr. Seward tells us, a new and humane impulse moved the people," and the doctrine of 110 more slave States," was iuaugcratcd. The effort was made to dictate to the people of Missouri what institutions they should adopt, and the whole country was in a blaze. Good men justly trembled at the first great outbreak of sectionalism, and drove the monster back to his Boston den. Since that memorable time, we have had periodically to lay this demon of sectionalism. But at length it threatens to overwhelm us and bury the whole country in ruin. The Abolition party, backed by hungry demagogues and famishing office-seekers, and aided by hundreds of thousands of atheistic Fourierites, and infidel Red Republicans, who neither believe in our God, nor respect our Constitution, arc grappling at the power of our government. These incendiary fanatics and calculating politicians have resolved to inaugcratc anew era in Americin history. They have determined to make the States all free or all slave." They have resolved to destroy all distinctions which God has crcated between the races, and to proclaim the jubilee of universal suffrage" and universal equality." They boldly tell the world that they must have the balfot for all men, or the bullet for all men." This monstrous fanaticism would degrade the white man, whose fath-

Crs

counts of the starving condition of the blood'and toil to win their present liberty people of Kansas, but still we hear of uol!Uid civilization, to the evil of the semimove among the Republican leaders to barbarous African slave. Thev have desend them money or bread. Lincoln con- termincd to force the Southern people to tributcd fifty dollars to buy rifles and bill-j

have fought a thousand years through

submit

lets for Kansas, but will he give them fifty drive them into desperation. cents to buy hog and hominy? •, As they have progressed with their .. 7- S ri wicked purpose, we have witnessed the! ®s?*At the late election in Martin eoun-. earlv fruits of their terrible culture—amity there was a tic vote for Representative

to this their odius dictation, or!

ed invasion of peaceful States aud the destruction of uuoffending people, insurrections fomented and planned in almost every Southern State, whole villages burned to the ground, wells poisoned by wholesale, and one universal tendency to disrupt the frame work of society and open up a servile reign of terror."

For some years the Northern people have had no repose, and the Southern people 110 safety- nor peace, by means of this diabolical agitation. But upon the Southern people the blows have fallen severely. Their very lives and the lives of their wives and children have been hourly imperilled by tho course pursued. The hour has come wheu these bad or misguided men have determined to forcc the common government of the country into their service, iu their war upon the institutions of. the South. The Southern people have resisted them with what power they possess but they are a minority, and are powerless to defend themselves inside the the government.., As the possibility of the triumph of this sectional and aggressive

party commences to_.be felt at the South,-

larsr^The conviction that they arc no lon^ef s&'fe "Within the Union is seizing up-.-on even the most'conservative men of the South. The spirit of Disunion grows hourly, and with appalling rapidity, as the prospect of Lincoln's election becomes more possible. The cotton States arc already ripe for revolution, while the bonds of Union are momentarily melting away in the more conservative and border States, under the impending peril of sectional rule.

Freemen of the North will you stand by and see this great wrong perpetrated upon the' citizens of the United States Will you suffer one half of the people of this land to be driven into revolution, by mad negro-worship and sectional bate Will you suffer the Union of our fathers to perish by your injustice and foil}* Freemen, wc appeal to you, by all that honorable men hold dear, not to perpetrate this great wrong!

Democrats,wc need scarccly appeal to. you to do your duty and your whole duty to your country. The right to contest for equal justicc to all, to defend the Constitution and maintain the Union, is your inheritance and birthright. You have so often fought the battle of justicc and equal-

L-,

j$r. Dfoiglas In oneijef hisJa£fspee«ies gives the exact pojgits of ag^mernt betwc^ulb^ Black Republicans

the people' ofUfes Slave States ^Begiaito look for safety ir?tfcjjiflselves and^^wtfJ&fc 4TJhe Union. Thej^fcel that tmffr ^rsonal safetyVtbeir property and their honor are are rapidly organiting and' arming,1or^tpe |ooln.V.hekiyd, ^'and/the' Secessionists-'of tforst, at the expense of millions of dol- 4^ gouth under Mr. Breckinridge. ngrc^

The gallant Douglas, who has so often led 'J'lic Republicans arc trying to elect the van of your battle leads you now In ja President for the North. this huur of trial, Democrats will not The Bolters arc trying to clcct a Presicount the costs or calculate the results.— dout, for the South. As long as they fight for the Lnion and 'J'lic National Democracy arc trying to with Douglas, they feel that they are safe. 1 elect a President for the whole Union.— Democrats your country is in danger A'ote therefore for Douglas and the Union. Let not the sun go down 011 the 6th of No-

becn made to rave it. 1polled

-1

South. hiiC he is fighting the I 111011 "i ,1,1

TROUBLE AMONG

he has gone to meet his villificrs facc to

face.

RIFLE CANNON

ron THE

with these improved cannon. Seven bat- 'they are enrolling men all ovcr the terics of these engines of destruction ar-1 State, and the regular volunteers drill rived at Richmond, Ya„ 011 last Monday. 1 daily. The four batteries of rifled cannon, 1 1 twenty pieces, lately ordered by Colonel 5®"" Because Northern Democratic pa- 1S111 th, will arrive in Richmond next week, pers tell their readers that there is great tW!th ^vc thousand revolving pistols and ,,

down, and other similar facts-because they

do tins, they are charged, not with telling

bad placo unless. they repented o» their

1

misdeeds.?s®

31

5 v»TIS1 Jrim.KKCOJII.X Wcntworth the Republic Chicago, and editor of the that jdace, thus hails the election coin We see the day of jubilee coming, when millions of enfranchised slaves shall rend the heavens with their shouts all this under the forms of the Con

OT

in principle. They agreed

... twenty-live hundred carbines. Eight bun

cxcitcnient at the bout 1 in consequence ot 1 11 1 "1

1

and

IOWever, what shall be done wit.i

franchised slaves, after the great act shall

Smith, and other Republican orators complain that they are not allowed to make speeches in Kentucky. There was a time when Col. Lane and Mr. Smith would have

been listened to with admiration by a Ken-

uuiowm.

and

9

1

the Jftorth

and the Secessionists of the South: "The

re all at stake in this contest. They Republicans o£ tho Jjjforth under $Ir.:Linrapidly organiting ah31 arming,for^e ooln.t. he kiyd, *'and. the' SecessioniAs-'of

5firslt',

that-it is

the duty tf Ctrtigr.esi'fp interferc.and control the slavery question. They1 agree, secpnd that whenever Congress decides that question, it must determine it against the wishes of the people interested in it'. And they agree, third, in ridiculing, denouncing and repudiating the whole doctrine of popular sovereignty and non-inter-vention. Agreeing thus far, they differ only as to which way Congress shall exercise this power. The Republicans desire to have Congress exercise the power in all cases against the South and in favor of the North, and the Southern fire-eaters desire it to cxercisc the power always against the North and in favor of the. South." d*

A few years ago the Republican newspapers and speakers were everywhere calling upon their adherents to send money to Kansas to buy Sharpc's rifles and revolvers with which to fight the Ruffians. The. people of Kansas are'mowreported to be 111 a starving condition on account of the loss of crops—to be suffering for the necessaries of life. But where now arc the Ilcnry Ward Bocchers, the Sumncrs, the Grecleys, the Lanes, thcLincolns, who subscribed money to buy rifles and bullets?

ity against the mad isms of the hour, that Nowhere now do we hear of their raising vou will move by a common instiuct upon their voices or opening their purses for the foe. Your step has been solongguid- suffering Kansas." edbythe music of the Constitution and

1

:T .,1 t&sf Many years a£ro, 'JI WOOU lusher the Union, that vour measured tread will

1

answer to the first summons ot your coun-

..

c.

The same old flag that has so often

try.

unfaltering devotion, to victory or defeat.

predicted that the epitaph which in future

1

ages would be inscribed upon our political

1

tablet would read as follows Here lies

led you to victory, waves over you—torn,, ... ... \.„ •. •. 1 -a people who, striving to give liberty to „..t still flying. \ou will follow it with 1

11

1 1 1 the negro, lost their own freedom.

0

a (o

1

,IC"_

... .T 1 1 it- 1 One thousand illegal votes were vember, until the last human effort, has

1

THE Winn

AWAKES.—

0

•. in Marion countv bv the Republi-

1

»st

lt' *-.

1 m. cans on the day of the Mate election.

C@f" Douglas men your gallant leader is to-day fighting the battle of the Union I '^Those who have Ihc carc of children among the" fire'-cattrs of the extreme watch too closely the mdicatio.^s ol

4i r„ 1 worms in the intestines. '1 hey arc often

neglected from the natural repugnance that

battle, do you not neglect 10 light hi* 1 battle mothers feel to force nauseous drugs down 11T11 their children's throats. This difficulty is

effectually removed by the use of Dr.

The colored Wide-Awakes of Boston liav- Jo/ui Bu'Ts Vegetable TI~urm JJeslrot/er. ing been assigned a place in the rear of [t is as pleasant as candy, and far more cfthe procession on Monday evening, refused (icacious than any sickcning drug in the to inarch. They were assigned a place in apothecary's shop.— Iiich»" the centre as a compromise. 1 **V,.

,MI -i uKrAUATio.vs ron AH IN TIKI

Lincoln's friends claim that he isj—M ILITAIIY

0,1 ,hc

''"'"'nent

SOUTH.—Near-' "i

c,

E

greatly misrepresented at the. South.— ton correspondent of the Now York HerWell, Lincoln is a good speaker, and why \alrl says: didn't he go to the South and correct these "Intelligence flows in 011 a 1 sides ot misrepresentations? Douglas has been fearful excitement in the Southern Slates grossly misrepresented sit"the South, and

SOUTH

XTFEMKNT.—The Washing-

prospect of the election

•'J'"cowhich

The insubordination of th

negroes, is rapidly 011 the increase. fans the flame. A gentleman, who arrived

from

MI O inmutc-mcn and eonniiUtccs ol sarotv arc ly every Southern State is arming herself iJir„.inizing

the South to-day, states that

a]I ovcr tho iSmlth. In

1 dred barrels 01 powder have alreadv gone

the probability of Lincoln's election—that |0I1 'j'here is 110 exaggeration in all this the Governors of South Carolina, Missis- I Govcrnoj Letcher declares openly that its sippi, and Arkansas have called their Leg- object is to sustain any sovereign State islaturcs together—that stocks arc going 1 ^ainrit

1'edc,7l1

skm

«n

Ljncoli

.s

cntcrtained

untruths, but with trying to get up an days several of the Southern States will alarm and panic. With just as much rea-jbavc dissolved their connection with the son might the faithful minister of the gos. Government. ,c, pel be accuscd Oi fn'ing to get up an r.\Mi'ORMA for »oi ,, ,, i) 1 itli* A Washihgton dispatch to the New York alarm and panic bccause he told siu-

0

., -i .1 Times (Republican) sa\s: ners thev were 111 danger ot going to the

1

,• Vi-

papcr

direct from

casern manufacturer!, consis ing ,couj^ (]0

which

cash.

flfi^Every vote given for Breckinridge is half a vote for Lincoln.'

compacted together." "Ihc inhabitants of the tree States are 1 1

He don't tell us,. 1 'of the belief that the South intends to wait

CEN

"'F

ORAN

have been accomplished by Lincoln's clcc-. This is a great mistake. The Southern tion. masses, almost to a man, regard the simple election of Lincoln as an "overt act," and

Messrs. licnry S. Lane, Caleb B.

HK

tucky audience. But that was when they ... .Alabama, and other Southern States, in were Whigs,

OHf« CARRlSl ii^ rtiE Tli^official xeturnstpf the OhiORfliection disd^eUhe fa^ ihat ^he. Blacki&publ icaifioajotity. 8^94. ^^rourteen -th^msaudTUfgwIs tvcf-6'ftllow^ilo vote under the decision of Judge Brinberhoff.— Leaving out this negrq vpte, yp-bave a majority of nearly six (hoasapU /Thns itl/c startling, the humiliating fact appears.that Ohio "SlovertflgtT "SiVtc" o^h^ UnTon, is under'^icgrtS' "nile\' 'Td s'nJlir a 'disgractf would the'Republican party reduce the whole country. This thing'is 00 shameful, too sickening, too revolting to.cobtemplate. The following paragraph is from the Clevcland^Plain Dcalep: ,.

Full blooded negroes Vdt'cd in several of the Wards yesterday. At the second ward negroes as black as coal peddled

give.

but to whom he is he lived in Russia.

coercion. Letters from

(Georgia say all parties are united for scees-

elcction. No doubt is

here that in less than sixty

," "Tr

"A letter received to-day from lion,

.. i. revcrdy Johnson, re]presents Hie J. icsi

lential canvass in California as very excited, and gives the State to Douglas by 10,-

an Mavor of'^"'^ majority. General Denver had can-j jirr

vasftcd the entire State, making

I

speeches

»'fr the Little Giant. Mr. Johnson

.c ion return about the firsi^of an.1.11 \.

10

wnij

which has been making a vigorous 1 "are °tl,i 1,L"

,. -. tUl ionis'ts°i 1, a^alc'article say's:" ^ervative a man of the new rap is in "Mai, Physical, Aption, and with the States of the Lnion kept, 11

as

"ot-Crt act" before taking decisive

-StCpS|

jn t]ic event of Lincoln's election,

it is the solemn determination of the eight Cotton States to secedc immediately on his elcction."

SHALLTHE STATE

ARMED —A

letter

from an intelligent gentleman in one of the

Nortl,ern

counties says that in view of the

preparations

of South Carolina, Virginia,

before they became the provrtling munitions of war, many Rcpub-

followers of Ilale, Julian, and Sumner, Hcans thereabout are openly in favor of Who have changed—Lane and Smith or I the approaching Legislature making an apthe Kentuckians

ipropriation for purchasing arms for Indi-

HI !ana- can not see any necessity for HPLESioiD Fi'BMlTiiHK. such a coursc, and hope nothing of the Ross & White have just received a heavy kind is seriously contemplated. It would stock of splendid Furniture,

very heavy additional taxation

1- which the people are illy able to bear, and

no

reaus, Stands, Tables, Sofas, Lounges and creasing the angry feeling which already Chairs, all of

Ledger.

1

good, but much evil, by in-

will be sold cheap for exists North and South. The people of Indiana will never consent to be taxed to purchase arms to be placed at the disposal of the Wide Awake clubs.—iVwi Albany

tickets. Negroes liircd carriages and car- tbexwhol^ donfmuoity. The Signaried white men to the polls. Ncgroe^ were everywhere. The refrain coinmcncing,

Shecp'aTiwiitVtoo Upoil for nocroM."

is an absurdity. Here on the Westcrri'Rescrve roast'beef is hardly good enough for them. They sit at the first table, and white men are forced to lap up the crumbs at the second. That's the stjjlc herp.— That's what ails us. Wc have met the Africans, and we are theirs."

J@~ In Jackson's time the motto of bis organ was, "The world is governed too much."

It

was an

excellent

motto,

and

enunciated a truth which is as applicable now ns it was thirty years ngd. The less government attempts to control natural events and the operations of the great laws of trade, climate, and productions the. better. Hence tho fewer attempts the government makes to "protect" manufacturers at the expense of the masses of the people the less government has to do with internal improvements the fewer attempts it makes to provide "free farms," free town lots, or free anything else for particular individuals at the ufiwished for expense of the whole the less it

legisr

latcs 011 slavery—for or against, to prohibit or protect—the better for all. The great evil of tho governments of the old world is that they undertake to do too much—to dictate what the people shall believe 011 the subject of religion to declare by fixing a high or low rate of 'duty, what they shall cat and drink to sa\' by applying a censorship io the press what they shall or shall not read, and in a thousand other ways hampering the personal liberty of the citizen, and attempting by government edicts to change things from their natural course. The tendency 0! .hings in the United States is in the same direction, but it is plainly in violation the old Democratic Jackson maxim, The world is governed too much."

EST" The reception of Douglas at Memphis was one of the grandest affairs of the kind ever witnessed in the Southvrest. It

was midnight when he arrived, but there

were between twenty and thirty thousand people out to welcome him, who rent the

air with shouts and huzzas for the glorious louder of the Democracy. 31 a

equality doctrine

113'

of the

business houses and private dwellings were brilliantly illuminated.-

given their "consent'' to his election,! I would hang him for his crimes, in deli-? .s obnoxious as though lance of the personal liberty bill of Mus-| saehnsctls. [Applause]

It appears that irgmia has finally made

mintl

Cj-nl

the KOt'Tii fl-11,!. 01 WAIT. I City, charged with a credit of half a mil-

The Atlanta (Georgia) Confederacy, oi dollars, and with orders to purch-

to defend herself in the .ip- 'be best journals, and at

crisis of our national affairs, lie attention. It sceni.-

,\0rthcn arms. The Adjutant-Geii-1 revival of the ghost an

of that chivalric State is now in this ]j0t jx j,u]j]islJ(.rs and

ec^OF 90W&H c|^riE il»KET. his &0rre8jjbndent

is

the St. .of Oc-

LblicS|..saylr^nnder,

tober 21 Since the news of the

late

elections

reaphJd/the. SouSi,f trcrrl^rankh ^ade Has become stagnant. "The Missounans negroeshtorthc Scnrtl|(rtinat^et aee^agdead xhey can not sell at any price.— Credit offered bj" tho tradesmen, however Ion" it may be, li'fio inducement to tboso who have heretofore bc_ju purchascj^g^, In tlfcf ati? o^'^,=rpIantfer^ wo«W on time, but 11 dvK in anticipat^bil of. ^Lincoln eiection^ they woti't bny at all'*- ^Foncy "sharps" shake their heads at every note that is offered. Universal distrust Jcr-

turcs of all Main-street, can not now ^induce a money-loancr to shell out. Everybody is for himself, and devil tako the hindmost," is.-the universal cry.

"CAPITAL OW.VLSE I.AHOR." Those that icork for me must vote icith mc, and those -that' icill not icith vtc can not work for inc."

That was wrilten on one of the office' doors of one of the iron furnaces in the district-now represented by the Hon. Carey "A. Trimble, Republican, and who was reelected by just such coercion of the laboring men in Lawrence and Gallia Counties •asitlic abov^ indicates. j^Vrillf the Cdmmeraal toll us how near that comes to cap-, ital owning-laboi-?—Cin.JS?if[. 1 I

CAIt'f- HCIIl'K/.

The Republicans of Milwaukio gave a public reception and ovation to tHiff iiotor-' ions character, 011 his return to that city— which is his home—from a stumping and jilectioncering tour. They intended it as a'coinpliiucnt'to his political principles, which he thus enunciates: "You niustadmit negroes and Chinamen, snake-eating Digger Indians and ^ccgcc cannibals to civil and political equality with yourselves, or else your 'Declaration of Independence is a diplomatic dodge—amain Yankee trick! A WOODRN ^UTMEC'.'"

V.VM'KV KHFl^ES to A\NWKB IJTLINTIOSS IM.OI'ISVIM.I!. At the late Yancey demonstration Tn Louisville, Colonel Duncan propounded to him the following interrogatoridfe, which were handed to him by the Chairman of tho meeting. Governor Ma. .: ."Ru ]. What remedy does Mr. Yancey propose to save the Union, if Mr. Lincoln is" elcctcd Hoes 31 r. Yancey advocate secession, and will ho sustain any'State? which attempts to secede Or does Mr, Yancey advocate revolution iu.itead of secession .Mr. Yancey refused to answer liicso^' questions.

What a contrast does this refusal of this chiva'rie son of the South," as his, admirers delight to call him, afford to Judge Douglas, who, every where, and upmall occasions, altln.ni^h a tMiHlid.ile tor'

Jre lv

j,

0 lnii

,i

lt

incuts derive their just 1 i»„, ,wi„i.| !himself fnuif tTie pnnishmvnf of his crinie.-i,. •oiiscnt of the governed. Jsut, it .Lincoln in, 1-11 ...-, 1 1

a.M 4.

|'JC

all re •'ful interrogatories .ut to"

him. I a a a Judge Mouglas, in his mphls speech, I said

I do'not believe in allowing 111 MI to shield

a®?* Tho Declaration of Independence, themselves from punishment of crime brwhieli the Republican leaders arc so fond of quoting when they think it can be tortured into an endorsement of their negro says that "all governpowers from th

iMalive cnacliii 'iit of thrirSiate. If the Abolitionist! Massa-f

eh u.set Is choose to violate the Fugitive-'.., slave Law, and resist the United St:itef»p Marshal, ami to mnnfe? t^fe ftwncr of it*... slave, I am nv*. £r -.!l!w7iiig fvTr.i t'c .'f/ield|

beinrid a personal liberty bill passed by

elcctcd, he will aspire to govern the ji^cachusetis. j" Good," "Hurrah forV people of fifteen States, no portion of whom I)

:iiul

cheers. On the cicrary,

,1 would not make war upon the sover-

[!•(. in tin- Wiifhinutt .11 Siiiii-.-J eign State: but I would indite tho crimin-j OICKAT ."TIII.I'I'AITV I'KiiiMKATiovx ':11 jn M^smicliusfMin the United Si:it«»s". (turts, and jmin.'-li tlcifi tlni^ Im i.iw

Never since the Revolution has there |''heers.| Nor am I in favov vt procl.nnibcen such excitement, if all accounts be '"g 'be doctrine that men in out 7 .iio^ true, as pervade the Old Dominion. The Utiia may rob the United States

State is being put 011 a thorough war-foot- plunder the custom house, and thc.11 .mk i: 1. ing. Four batteries of rifled cannon (twen- themselves from punishment, upon the ty pieces) are announced to arrive at the plea that a majority in the L''gis .dure capital in a few days, accompanied by some

1

(jein„

~rt.

1

Virginia has resolved to call a meeting ot

that we can approximate closcly to the pop-1 jn

Wc have over eight' millions 'of people in the seven North-western States, a number equal to the white population of the fifteen slave States. More than one-quar-ter of the population of the United States is now in the North-west. Its population is nearly equal to New York, Pennsylvania ajid New England combined Westward the star of empire takes its way

Governor Letcher to this extraordinary ji:iritioii:il, aiid Spiritual, with illustrations |.

•1j-rom

1

Southern Governors at Richmond, very "It will comprise chapters on these now shortly, for the purpose of concerting meas-1 fashionable topics—spirits and spiritualisures, defensive and offensive, to be taken

in the now imminent event of Mr., Lin-1 in the now coin's election.

OF Tin-: .oiirii.wi:.r.

p}1Cijojjiena."

ii

ulation of the North-west, It will stand I pursuing force, vented his rage during a about as follow--' fit of madness, to which these animals are 2.5,.-o.o.«!sometimes subject. The bru.te first atInaianal.. ........ .. tacked a Highlander, and trampled him to VVi^oniin i:::::::1 I death. He then charged a baker's carj '-5 Mi' -.viunit 1 1 .i.i. .AL.,1 nt. i.A Minnesota fr.030,

iohigan— the frightened bullocks 'ruf-hed from tile inncsiVta I road, and tumbled cart and all iutoa ditch. The elephant did not hurt the bullocks, but ate up two hundred loaves in aboutT five minutes. After this feat he made ai luxurious desert in a sugar cane field, and liquored up to the extent of twenty or thirty gallons at a muddy tank. In three weeks' time (during which he wandered at fe large) this disagreeable fit passed off, and the driver who bad followed him. about, iretook possession.

fi

tlS(ip

J, it, ns-'

11,ail

am.

South Caiolina authoriz them to ste.t .r

thousands of improved arms. Ninety com- 1 Applause. I do not believe the right tpanics of volunteer cavalry.and some three steal was one- ot the ieser\':d n, hundred of infantry and artillery are tuii-

1

lits under laughter.)

'he Constitution, ((.heer.i and

formed and drilled* It is not an extrava- favor of enforcing the huv.-. o| tlio-^-g.int estimate to say that \'irginia has thirty ''d as they stniid or may htiin1! per cent, more volunteer force equipped Statute-bonk". hecis] and ready for dut-v than the entire army ,' .- ,, "T," ms establishment of the Federal (Jovernment. I': f^-iSobcrt Dale Own, "I-ootfal!, oil Ycrilv.it looks as though the purposes of the JJouiulary of Another World,'1 which the aiffeey disruptionsts were about to be was received here with no symptoms of cxattemptcd. -i traordiuary excitement, Las just been re-fK-i.im tie.'Ni-w Yuri Tim"--, n-iptil.liruti.l ., '. 1 in E a a is a -j''

ttractmg great pub-lik.-ly to lead to a .. and sjiirit literature ofessional writers

iliv rno„„|,,

i„ the general dull--

(0 iI ft(.Iv

,nlagc

0f

V1

demonstration does not appear. It is, (j,,. ii tural and supernatural," to be however rumored that the

uh]ished

any 5

"fa.-hionable" cxcid-ment. The first fruits

by Mr. Jl. Balliere in October.

KEAKS OF AN I.KI'H .VNT.—The August number of Blackwood, iu a paper upon the

p„r,suit

he census arc now so nearly complete jn,]j

of one of the principal rebel chiefs "V

ineidently alludes to the manner

iI1

elephont, belonging to the

... Vote for Douglas.