Crawfordsville Weekly Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 1 August 1872 — Page 2
ft*
E O N A
T. H. B. McCAIN and J. T. TALBOT EDITORS AND PROPRIETORS.
f.rnwTordsvHle, Intl..
KKI'L'IIVjICAX NATIONAl. IH'Khl.
(inv thf tno I rUHU'i iwhtlii' fit,
.4»«fWrin profile^ n«'i
\\»K
i'
KKl'DlATlCAX STATE '1ICb KT.
7JUM\S M? KK'OVNh, Kuml.-lph,:,. .. J,ui-*nnnt no.\ I K«»Nll»AS M-.\ l'». «'f K:-.+Y. y,.,- A.-, ,Inn: ... \V- \V. It KM. i-I
y,.
.f'f
for «"i
TlloMA*4 I A«'N, 1 ./'«*i
(ireelev. We leave the public to judge the moral iiualitv of the act committed by the Me-rs. Harper."
After the publication of this denial the New York Timex examined the files of the Tribune anil found the extract in question in the fourth column of the fourth page of the Tribune of May 1. 1
SGI. Nast had only made a mistake in giving the date. Mr. (ireelev was the responsible editor of the 'Tribunr at the time, and we have not seen his authorship of the words denied except in the iragraph quoted from thai paper, which is itself a plain evasion of the truth. (ireelev hassaid a grea many unpleasant tilings alKitit the men wli.su- nowasked lo support him, and we do not wonder that the Review dislikes to see them in print.
ut K\v o! PtMlUHTnt" lion 11i:it lu' I'om'hulv1'* by "llii* siu'i'O^ and final tie party." Tin
intri'ii*in,th Mrw*t purer eticnl incorruptt
tiu\NT ho*'( foilillifli •ted
hint to 'U*' 1\t OIU' t(
ll„
#t( irf
PUKMl'KN I
t»t" UIHH».-
'.'-7
Von VU'K IMiKSll'KNT II i: UV AN
»N tvmwl with hear approval l»y a larur prat*.
S'ii'i.
.1 \M1 A
Wit I'MAN. ol lloiKUii.
•lAStl-.S t'KNN\
•i I .-..i o. ..
ALItKUT P.TI!'»M
li..-
y\
i„l% VMii
l'lLWKLl-. FountainCtrfd'.
b\
RIIBKUT 11. K. f'EtKi'K.
KKl'l'KMC'AN" COl'XTV TICKE1'.
"'-••v F"r .i mi- M. Kt K. »f Hr.'wn. put V.finti nttitiv\
JnSKl'li lil'.KKY, nf Hipli'i. I'll! Ii 1 *M»-I' H. »TT. «f t'nion. (•"ui SV»f.*|ff. |s\\i'M, Kl^K?. "t Vixuiti.
JAMKS !IK.VT«»Xt.!iiM-»l t'nj'ou-...,, «./ 11 \hNJHAl/rKU.'T, Wnliiu!.
I'ij: Si'
.lullV Mi ASKKY. m'' Kriiiiliinu /'... i: .m ull .ll .TH' iMN, III I'ui'iil. y,..- 'mil mi -i '!«'l iH-lri.'t WM. P. HAMI'.V. "f 1'iuiin. lii-u1- 1'Wli.i.lN-, ..f Whjiic.-
FORGERY OR FALSEHOOD. The Crawford-viHc .lot'iiNAi, ot week publishes the following in ittorial columns: "When the rebellions traitors are overwhelmed in tllP field, and are scattered like leaves before an angry wind, it must not be to return to peaceful and contented homes. They must Gud poverty at their homes, and privation in the anxious |)!U
tilled i-
eyes of mothers and the raifs of eliildten. (tit 'h'!/." Mr. ('ireelev has authorized the New York Tribune, to -tale thai lie never wrote those words or any thing like tlieiu. l'nlike -Mr. Grant, Horace (ireelev stands linimpeached ami his woid is uood with everv body. When he disowns the ibove language, then-tore, it i^ lying and complicity iu the crime of forgery to] publish it with his name attached—a
(act of which it is hoped all moral and ley f'hristian editors will take due notice.— Hrrirl". ,!
The paragraph credited to hro'lri/ above was recently published by N a -1 in ]{iir/tir* Weekly and credited to the Tribunc of November i!ti, I81I0. In reply to it. the Tribune, a few ditys aiienyardr-, published the following: .. "We deem it only iipcessnry to -:iy tlmt '"l"1 ^aturd: not a word of iliis pretended extract is of the cainpai found in the Tribune of that date, and no Republicans. riicli words were ever written by Mr.
THE
UNIVERSAL AMNESTY AND ONE TEEM PRINCIPLE In his s|eech at the Court House, on Tuesday evening, Mr. P. S. Kennedy yery clearly showed the absurdity of tiie argument by which Greeley, an advocate of the one term principle, tries in his letter of acceptance to show the in- ,.resi(ltM11
is evidently acting the hypocrite in advocating the one or the other of these irreconcilable propositions.
Jud Casox was a member of the State Legislature from 1800 to 18155, serv- never better. ingas Joint Kepresentativefrom the coun- w-'"enough ties of Boone and Hendricks during the
first two years and afterwards as Joint, enough'afoue.^ 1e"1le
untiring
...
members of that body, and his advice was Bought after and followed more than
giliam, or gambling, or harlotry, with nearly every keeper of a tippling house, is politically Democrat." (ireeley, January 7, 18C8.
Of*, mi j. nji.jij.-Bi..',
Hon, Jasos ^tate
tn« vthcr with his ih'chUM* i* -till a RrpuUiran. ami t*\pro»sm£ tlu* tu'lnl thai m{ Mr riviey i- lilt* tot.il -miction of tin* I'oiin'trati* speech *ul to h:ivo bcH-n inanifctatii»ns «t "1 I Vnm-
1 nr. .lot it.iAi. evervtime tliev
Vv. '',
,1
Jii|tM!.o!."\
II
ol t\ 11" h-
f,,'fiini rinUtiihn' I'* nf.S.lvMlN W. sMl l'H. 'if.Miirmu. I ,-, ,.i r.'r. •'i' i-IIAltl.Ks -i Mi il.l.. "f l«it
J',., Ihu-ih: "!'.hi. I'nurl, .lAVftsll. HI.AfK, .'IM'" "li-I'-.i,' --.'-' I."- 'If, III 1)1.1 iVK I'UTH. ..f T.l.iw m..' Wll.l.MM W1I.I.IAMS. "1 K.'-Wk
(ir.s r.tt.vi. I.i.w \V Ai i..m i: will couimeiice a canvass i.f the State under the auspices Ol' the State Central Committe jaboiit the lir.-t of September. lhe*ieneral bus just returned Iroiii an exten-ive tour in .Mis-ouri. He reports ihe Keipnbiiean- euiitidenl of wrrvinir that
State for tlrant und Wilson. The liepublicans who voted for l!ro\wi for (iovernor are reluming '. the ranks, declaring that the issues of this year are ijuite dill'ervnt from tho-eof 1^70.
I nlike Mr. Grant, ljoiace (ireelev
with every body. 'Tlie brain, the
I'lie Mwtliitf l.u*t Muliirilii.v—Speech ol' Si-iiitl«»r Miirluii—lt«-|itililieaiis in fli-IU-hI of .Spirits.
tl)
UIKS. 'et
I .UJ J«U
UnowN, 'Democratic
Senator from
.1
nek-mi county,
i-in't l».\v he can ri 11 In a-peceli made at Mch.ralast I uo-tlaj he declared Ins unalterable •|«p-nk." I both lo (ireelev and tin* liri-eh\ .-talc in-lift. rcirardini! *. 11• liillfr a- a cunning lv deviled -chcine to -retire the chclnm (irerley lie i|inilf miihc «il (irti numerous vigorous diiiunciatiuiis
oflice. as they in •*t ira/e o! I Hell'
I street to the AYriVi. ably meet the honeacc.— li' '.
-taiiils un.n.peacheil and his word is good „J
/.V heart, the suiil ol the
|»n*i*iit Ui'inciTatie {-ariy tlu» rf-hel ele-1
II. A i:l) Cul l.Kiii .—'J'he annual catalogue of Howard College, at Kokomo. has been received, from which it appears aggregate attendance of both sexes during last year was "J-ss. M. 11. Hopkins, Supi'riuteni.ent of Public In-
l)l(
The next term opens teniber it.
wi« riuiilv Oic n|-cn!llg ill this county by the While it was not intended
et up a grand rally, with all the parwhieh usually attends such meet. was such a- to make the heart of every Republican re-. joice. The very busy season with fariu-
lhp
Httendauce
present than could get within comfort-
able hearing distance of the speaker. Senator Morton arrived on the In o'clock train from Frankfort. He was welcomed to this city by thirteen rounds from Cnpt. O. W. Corey's field piece, and was met at the train by the C'rawfordsville Band and a large number of the citizens, who escorted him to the residence of Col. II. B. Carrington. At 1! o'clock the meeting was culled to Henry S. Lane, who speaker.
Mr. Morton spoke substantial'.- «s follows: ''V This will make seven times I have poken this week and mv voice is nearly
I fear. I wish
an(1
justice of depriving the leaders in the mited State-and you are deeply interrebellion of the privilege of holding of- ested in exercising your privlige aright, fice. In that letter, Mr. Greeley claims u'ii. Grant is Wore you—his acts' are 1 1 1 a a a I that, while such rebels as Davis and .•.'., ,i nfore vou on trial, and I ain willing for Rreckeiiridge are not actually disfran- |, |,t!
chised, yet the people of the South are ought to know what General Grant has actually disfranchised, since they are not' done and what his administration has allowed to elect these men to ,, ., in- ..r an re el on ha re to is re or them in Congress !f they should be the
renresent
,:lr
',op"i
men of their choice. Yet Greeley, in fa- no!") may inquire whether Mr. ireelev voring the one term principle, proposes' or his party have anything better to to disfranchise the whole people bv denv- ofler .' Have thev any better system ol finance: I think not. I hey do not
ing them the privilege of eh-cting President to govern tlieni a second time, if he should be their choice. In other 'orils, it is a terrible injustice to deprive ae people of the South of the privilege o" electing to Congress a man who' fought to destroy the Government, but: than the an eminently proper thing to forbid the!
voters of the whole country to elect the man who was one of the main instru-1
iee President of the
|):lrty-
nm nln
a a to
rt.eiey
1
a n!or
aiijrrv
1 :11 see hmv
No. we don't gel the 1 V'lnoeralic '{"hom -t eaze a .-hort timeauo 'Tl there were neither a new-paper •i a common school in the country, the 1 leniiicratic party would lie far-trouper
party appe
iliaiui wm »»oi s,. ulth tlittt nf nlltll.,' ^i^.-ni rtatft-. \o%v it dilVt r1'111, un-nev of I'rnwt'orilstvillc is k-
ernl (.nunc,in oi.er a n. am. n.
y,
can't give better. (A voice, "tliat'.-
agree nil any measure or system which tjiey are willing to substitute for the present effective one. They can not change ours and they virtually admit it. Well, this admitted, can they carry out the present system, conceived and matured by. us, better than we can Better resent administration of the opjiosition party is made against General upon his familv and his friends. this
ie
whole attack
im willing to test this malter by
mcnts in saving the country. Greeley j-eople of Montgomery county, and you -n!
way it is well for u-to ..'O on to the eon-,
editor- ct mad tverv suniniation ol our•s.'oo'l work. Hut lliey
•a«t their ve- over the have nothinir "Ber bill ]M r-.nal al.iise,
hut by the vile-t vi!ut..ratiou (A a mee
V4,t
1
than it is. Neither elementary in-true* tion nor knowledge ol tran-]'iiinirevi ills i-neeiled to teach the essential articles Ol' the 1 H'lnoeratie cu ed, 'I.ove rum and hate niirjters.' "—Trihuf. t't't •*!'. I Sin.
no sen sav
Now let lite ask if yo'i think it liest to take out (ieneral Cram and put in Horace Crcehy. l'ii-t. let il--ee who (Ireelev is and what lu lias been. 1 know liini pretty well. In some thinjr1 he i- a stroiis man, in some thimrs a very weak one. He ha- been an editor, in -ome re speets a i.'ood one. in others a very poor one. Sixty davsiiiro could have proved 'bv anv Democrat in Montgomery eouiithat Horace (ireeleyV fun Its and weaknesses far exceeded his virtuts. (Applause.) It does look ijiieer that tin I Demo( rats would take for their candi-
iato man whom tlit-y Inive for l.ic lal
twenty years denounced as the meanest man anioiiir their opponents, but such a W a
t()
xnent at tin* .Souiii, with it Northern al- party. 1 *nv the ivho! ol tlie SoutlR'rn It is rebel at the ^ati's forced (ireelev upoti the Demolora'^of the North. hi* rebel' felt that ill Greeley they had a sympathizer, and thev bad no hope of succeeding with any
lie- and -ynipathi/er-. core to-dav.''—Hreelei/, -o.. 1 s71. "I am a decided enemy of that Deniocratie) party, even in itsmo.-t respectable aspects."—11reel-1/, Ayrit, l-i
struction, is theVresident of this institution, and .1. (. Hopkins, formerly of readv to put these men in power if they Wabash College, the Vice J'resideiit on Monday, Sep-
challenge a com pan-on letter to Schurz on civil service reform, with Grain's recommendations on the subject, in his la-t annual message.
l:
of Glee-
Tin: ('A)IIMIIiX.
Uie
are as good as any peo ie in the world. Have you ever had any better times than you now have? Have
tiler times than
merchants, other business men and farm-
11prospects
1 1
lft.»
It is
alone you over safe.
Senator from the same counties. During lake for instance the currency of the single exception they were consumed by lan ever before 1-aIwI nllinnrj till villi U'nmli
this time lie proved himself not only a country. It is better than ever before rebel officers. IJo you wonder at my not faithful representative of the people, but i* "ie best any people ever had, and having a very high opining of Horace also nn untiring and effective worker,
our
During hi, connection will, the &„,« Z.?i?S£VESt5 I
And (liar iu ah *1 u.l»l lv.iU!.. "V* ..#»»«
lias never been impeached.—Review. money is just as good as before. For- voice "None of that "Every one who chooses to live by pu- merly this was not the ca-e. Illinois had
in!i ?i, "!i. ,,r
f!?,,
6
the Southern States had the right to secede. lie was tlie only Republican thai look that ground. A.-Governor of Indiana I had constantly to meet his argil-im-ms. IJo even w-i-ni so l'ar as to offend Dan Yoorlice-, a thing I hardly thought pn-s'itile iu that direction. As my voice is failing I will ask my friend to lead a r-hiirt extract from Mr. Voorhees' speech [Col. Dellart here read from Voorhees' Congress-ional speech his declaration that he could not support Greeley for tlie Presidency beeau-e he (Greeley)
ers kept many away thai oliierwi-e would advocated sece-.-ion in 1 St. 1, a doctrine or read. If the Democratic party were have been here. As it was mere were wdiich he oorheesjdid not believe iu.j called upon to decide between Grant and
1
one that is 011 a solid basis, "i ou may up and a voice, "There's lots of 'em. feel ever lo«t a dollar
tain (!"."
1
hi Huston or
New Yolk as it islifrf. toucan tuisiiifss i\*li 1 .lfpfti.l on it. Ilif tmif f.t mniipv panics io\ir, Inn tlif "-tr piiV.1 «om- of oxpoctod tmublo. l»it it iliil not ci»iih\ oiiii- -aiil thf ImiIiUIi woulil l.iirs:, hut wf ilnl not s.v it. All i- ouii(l ami safe. Tlif »1I i-au.«os of tniancm1 trinihh* ha\o i••i-*—*1 -unl entire caiili lfni-o i- ifstorf*!. Now \\liat we want is not clinneo. lut stuliilitv. Tin'question |iresfutfil to tlic liUMiifw, nrin i- not liow uililt-nlN to return to speiMf |iavment, l'Ut liow to pteer\f tlif -taliilitv of our eurreiiev anil i/niilmiHi/ resume specie pavmeut not 1 ""pasmoil ie effort-but stemlilv anil siirrlv. Tne ail nunit rat ion tlomi tin-, nnil unli llonee (ireelev ami tlie oppo-er of n-n-1 letter
^V(1 niav aduilt all the-e -lfinder-
land -till have the be-t adinini-tration nor since the davs ol n'aslmiL'ton. Admit. I -•iv all tl is abmit military rin.'s, irift-
liprnor
1
other man and -o the Democrats ot the North had to accept liiiu. They could not elect a straight Democrat, so they took one who had always been an ultra Republican, hopine to take oil' a 'slice' from our party. The first thing was to ocrats iret a wedne by which it was hoped to split the Republican party and carry oil' all who were ready to -ell out. Schurz, Trumbull and Kenton were willing to sell out party prinuiplesand all, and they .'ot them. Sow the Democrat- are
can. At tir-t -onie of them were very bitter. Dan Voorhees declared iu his speech in Congress that lie would support ("ireelev, but now he ha in. Taking the'facts in their length and breadth, (ireelev is a candidate forced upon the praty' bythe rebels and why".' Reoause they looked to him for sympathy and knew they could not succeed with a straight Democrat. They expected sympathy, Horace
and what are tiic facts'.' Iu ImK) (ireelev took the ground that
,"ow *l-v '"V
acc Greeley is considered a secessionist al lieai t. They believe that he is and always was one, and the pressure ol the war was all that made him anything else. Tl is is why the South supports hiin. If he is elected he stands.L'oinmitted, by a hundred articles, to Stsc^-sion. lie said that we cou'.d oiler ho resilience to rehellion ai-d wanted us to let the -eceders go in |H«ice. This is the first reason why the rebels down South love (ireelev. lie has never taken back a word. lie
order by Hon. stands, they say, just where lie stood ill introduced the 1 Still. Vou all remember Horace Greeley's letter to Mr. Lincoln. He wanted
spent, 1 fear. 1 wish to present some points for vour consideration which may Lincoln, urging iiim toeoiiiproini.se the be of service to you iu determining how armies in *,he field, the country and to cast your votes in the next election, himself, to buy peace. My friend will Vou will soon be called upon to vote for read one of the propositions contained in that letter: "The I'nion
to
fiv
pay $ 100,(H)0,ooii in -d States stocks to the
per cent. Unitei
Isue slave States, loyal and secession alike,
their slave imputation respectively, by the census of ]8(i0, in compensation for the losses to their loyal citizens by the abolition of slavery. Kach Suite to bo
willing that General entitled to its iiuota upon the ratifiea- I
1
The next reason why the Smthem |eople are willing to use Horace Greeley as a wedge is liecause he showed his sympathy for rebels by going a distance of live hundred miles, from New York to Richmond, vis. sary it wis not called for lv the situa-1 tion of Davis, who at that time could have got any amount of bail. It was an insult to the people of the North it ,, was an insult to the Nation, and was^ rant, ,|
^-sl man to uke Jeff Davis by the hand,
WiV
that of an^^he^enator^^ secure. No one lias ever lost a dollar who would rather vote for the man that dared go with him, or manifested any hey know'that Mr. Greeley's word W oT'thL banks'b^kJ^
1
one.
a
.1.
,or He
looking forward to the Presidency, and these three things—his secession articles
his lctter t0
_Mr Li,,,,,,],,
atK
more 0
manv 0
7 nmnv oi our nohlc HoUhcrrf
il". VCt gu^f»ng in fSotitliern prison pcua. m: it, 1 rai« the bridge
W
iiv»r Knfr» A .. .. P' i.
And it a let well
banking is far superior to Greelev for going on the bond of that
1
:i
tlio bailing
him, tfreeloy h:u uom- ,^n. aim! all this treat elianpe has not l.« ii inaile 111 a twinkling- ureat iiiiish u| men aie not ciisilv converteil. No, l»ut ihev luni iipli'ilfie lioin Horace ireelev wlnuh s.itisiied tlu-m. What is that pielj!i-^f It is in Ins letter, mill tliero he uroiiiiM-s theiM "local s,.l|-jroverninenl without 111terlir nee from the Jireneral (loveinment What does this mean.' 1)ih-s any one il.mlit its snrnilieanre It menu* that the South is to be let alone, the colored man to he delneied up to a vassalaize wnrse tnau slavery. It means that the KuKlux law to lie repealed.
U|at thcv wll
wi(li ]1(- svnl
f( n]i(,
(t
no way to beat down the a lmiin-tr.itum tW( |ve
gw
'*e*
,0
J1"'
lX)ulp
l'J
Mr (treelev within the hi.-t sixty da has quit talkimr about the Ku Klux. lie i-silent on that subject. (Applause.) Ml tlie South asks is to he let alone, and he will yet her revenge. '1 lie rebelhope tor tins, thev look forward eontiilently to it. Tiny have (ireelev* not lie interlered
.!lthizol with them he-
,)is
svm]mt
hv thev think is still
,Mrfr j, himself to seee.-sion
VCll
,.s ,lM,| |,llt ,,r l,0 IJepub-
rtl t0
rh:»t it hikt tin -1'd'i in .is» ^Jirl .Iim»ndnu»nts' to tho constitution ehur/: the .ire all oi .i I"ned man would now be hound in aeter and full of the Ivi-c-t lal-chooils. rt.il to hi.- ,ini|
the loth and
-lji\ erv. 1'om Hendricks—I heir pardon for sayimr rem: 1 oinrht. 1 siippiww. to ,-a Mr. Ileiiilricks, Liul I have due ri-pect tor him and you know I lint everybody call- hint Tihii—well, lie sin-. •We have this dav stilistanlially turn-
UikiiiL', nepoti.-m and all tbe rest, and still the present administration ha* had iki it thatwli.it nn'11 hacks ii|nin the jiast we now
wain is uood L'ni ••ruiinMit. and I that If that is what von want yon have it. l.ook nt mir compare it with otherthe best in the world.
•rovei ninent and and vmi find il
Uta:id in the present and we look torward lo the jrreat l'ut«re. Tin' pa-' i-
s»onr." He look- only on tho liHure, lie will not look upon the pa-t, he would burv bis i.a-t. Thank (iod we need not it. that, we are proud of our past. (Ap-'"' 'Ji'l'""'"111 plrtuse. 1 am told by the Democratic
tH-M-papers that 1 was once a Deinocrat. Well that is true, but I left the party in IS.VI, and it seems lo me that is lonp I long enough auo lor it mit to be thrown up lo n:e now. Thai is eighteen years aio. Two more years and the statute of
liiuiiation will bar the whole matter. Lau :liter.) Hut I did not turu my back on the past ol tl.at party, hut on its future. (Applaud.) When it i'e-
ellllMl llf
wh|lt
j,
ha- suiil than for any otlu can*1. Now li't nn* inquire )mw (iivlfV rann-
^|lR ,miince of the Ionii»cr:itic
God, the opportunity, too, when the world will see that you arc no less Dembecause you have pursued the course you have, and that I am no less a Republican liecause I accept your nomination."
Now 1 will have my friend rend from Horace Greeley's paper a few months ago, and see how he described Democrats lien "I'oint wherever you will to an election di.-trict which you will pronounce never morally rotten—given up hi a great part iven in debauchery and vice, whose voters subsist mainly by keeping policy offices, gauibli-ig houses, grog-shops, and darker dens of infamy—and that district will be found triviug a large niajoVity for tli
Democratic party. Take all of debauchery in the land and vmi will
tind nine-tenths of their master spirit.active participants of that same Democracy."
Now he says you are the same old Democratic party you always were. Not lone ago he said', '"May it be written on my grave that I was never its follower, and lived and died in uotlrng its debtor." I would like to spend all this evening reading Greeley on (he Democrats, hut 1 will let inv friend read again "I saw, the other day, a suggestion that I would probably be the best Democratic candidate to run against Gen. Grant for President. 1 thought thai ibout the most absurd thing I ever heard
wy,ielr
to have this government pay $ 1,000,00(1, po.-e tiieSoutherii Democrats will be willfor the Southern slaves as the price of, ing to pay our soldiers a pension unless peace with traitors. The country was their soldier-are paid They will never bleeding, but Mr. Greeley wanted to go do it, ami I am not sure but that Greeley to meet Thompson and other rebel is in favor of the Southern idea. He agents. He wrote a terrible letter to Mr. said, in a speech iu Memphis, Tennessee, "That he hoped to see the day when the soldiers who fought for the South, under
,lr
tion by its Legislature of this adjustment. wiljiout their sla\es were paid lor ami supports him. The bonds to be at tbe absolute disposal redeemed. Last Summer 1 preserved lii(if the Legislature aforesaid." visited e.-t "oiut I_ met a Soutliern -you to determine.
nond, to go on the bond ol .led Da- 1:lv( .,.
1 his aet of Greeley was not neces-
one
Now I
f,ir noterictv. Greelev was the
1!row,: li 1:
ere starving, but Davis did not lieeci institutioiiu-
their cries. I raised provisions for tiic boys, and had them sent through the lines under a Hag of truce, but with a
•W',at
must call principle would induce ninetenths of them to vote again-t me. Why I inn a decided enemy of that party even in its most respectable aspects."
Now what will be the consequences if the Democrats come into power with Greeley? What would be their first act-...' Bear iu iniiid that the majority of that party is now, and always was, in the Soutn. If the Democrats of the Sitith ruled tliiit party before the war they will do it now. Well, if they get in power in Congress and the question of pensioning oursoldiers coined up, do vou sup-
visited We.-t Point I met man there who said he had au inventory of the slaves he had lost by the war, and that he intended to keep it for his children. He .-.•lid lie hoped that after awhile a •'returning sense of justice" a a a
in a vi no in at a a it up or re el a a us on a a 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 in
cr» ever been more prosperous I feel When I was the Governor of Indiana cated universal amnesty, and had no kin- we do not sell it. Well, all the gold in authorized to say your were
in tion, and Twant it answered. Is there a was in favor of letting the 'wayward sis- H'"K
he was regarded aa one of the iiulest an other country. Ihe business of the soldier in this crowd? If there i* one let ters depart in peace/ and, afterward, wh° Pr°y u|on our moni*y and :ittenii)t'' world requires a paper currency. Webave him holdup his hand. (Many hand* went .1 ...Iin .manipulate
N
now lay up your paper money and fee'l Now I wish every soldier in this cr.Vwd I f.7r p^r'Xot a DeraocreTin^lw Nortli' P8"?
whatl -,,-an
thC
•I"U"
wh !dcsiru t0 He thcn in
man me iiiuu who desire to go. xiu mis iulmi Hi mvor ui hold up his hand. A nayine the South for her slaves, and I be- tured Kichmond. that sort here.") ISot! lieve he is still. He went on Jeff. Davis*: But the Democrf
hers, Hut tbe Democrats have not gone to .much as lifted a finger for his releate. have been allowed to certain railroad
V*rmer?look the money in Oreeley as is sometimes said, but Gree-1 He immediately advocated universal am- companies. As far as I am coneernetl, I pay_ lor their hogs, horses, cattle and ley has come to them. Three millions of, nestv, and opposed the execution of any have had nothing to do with this, but I grain they did not know whether it was men have not goae to one man. It was: Southern man for treason. He had do-1 think these grants are good things, and 11 gooa or not Ihe paper money of in*, easier for M»hommed to go to the moun- nounced in bitterest term* the carpet-1 can prove that they are good thing", by
.d»ii7i» ijpiiW in'
Wtfaia. md flljllfl them the plupijiJiers ol the iiouth. He one ol in, He is »s triitvi a Pemoerat as ever I iah to -ec. a rcceut -pcech al Mobile, tlie puate s-emiues remarked
It is Horace (ireelev who has conn1 to I Ihe Captain ol the Alabama, and not tinCaptain who has pdite to (ireelev."
Here, you ve, thev supported (irecle on the tround that lie would pay toi their slaves and sati-lv then war debt. Thev think he agrees with them, or tlu-y would not support him any more than they would support Seiiatoi-^.aiie, lieie, or invsell. The errors ol partie aiise Iroin liavmi bad leadeis. 1 In.- nio\i •ill-lit if the inoi-t shauielul in all hi-loi v. Horace (ireelev is to-dav the worst enemy the Uepuhhean jmitv ever had. and he is the wort enemy the Ireedinen fici had. Some ol the leaders of this movement iiihv (iel hi(.'h otliees, hut ihe olliccthe "ift ol Horace tireeley, it hi--lioiild be elected, have been proiui-ed six times over already. |ApplaiiK-. 1 have looked at the reasons why
Dciiiocrat- supiMirl (ireelev. I.et lis now lind their oh|eclunis to (u'll. tiiant. Nineteen twentieth.-ol what thev charire ai:aiiil linn, is ilownn^hl lal.-i'hooil. Ihe lir.st tlmm thev talk about is nepot-, ism. Why. I saw in a Democratic paper that (ien. (irantliad appointed live hundred ot his kinsfolk to ollice. ile niu-l have a lar- hmiilv llau^literi. Ihe. truth is, he has appointed jtial st.\eti— not si veii hundred, nor seventy but |U-t -evi'ii ol ills kinsmen, bv hloml and iiutri iaj e, to olhee. Xow, there aie iiboul -ixtv t.hou-and appointment:- within his rjiift, and out of all thest! lie gives -even to hi- relatives! \\'ell, otiirht he to "turn hi- back on" his re!ati\es lor fear that Mime deuia|.'oiriie woiinl accuse him
m-H
w1
Mis.-ouri coinpromi^ I left
F.xpeiience and logic are steadly making great change* ii. this country. T'hi-iiU c.hanges do not come suddenly or unawares, and three millions of men are not convened so easily. No, we have the .«ccrct in tlie pledge ol Greeley and the bolting of Dooiittle, Sehurz, Truinbull and other -ore heads. Not long airo Mr. Dooiittle stood up before Horace (ireelev and said his piece when on the committe to inform him of his nomination by tbe Italtimore convention. Greeley made a speech to that committee I in which he said "The time will come, and I tru-t in
Lee and Johnston, would hold as high which appeared the familiar words, po-itions as those of (irant and Slier- "(irant never has been defeated, ami he man." Can you doubt that he .vouhl be never will be."] willing to iietision rebel soldiers ell, Horace (fteeley savs Grant never was will these Southern Democrats be willing beaten, and that he never will be, and I
i-
v°te
to be apoortioned pro rata, according to "iilc-s theirs is also paid. Ihe nunc .Vow I want to ask the Democrats ol up. \S'e must carry the State by honmust be itisnue who would for one 1110- tIicounty how* thev can vote for lloriiicnt believe that these men who lost -ice (Ireelev and preserve their self retheir slaves, and large amounts in (Jon-1 sped. Dan Voorhees said in his-peech, federate bonds, would vote to pension you could not vote for Greeley and
Kvery ut
soldier- ami to pay our war debt, preserve, your self respect, but now |)an
rn 1 lemocrat
aml t||(y
At a Greeley ratification meeting at, speaking hard of me, and condenined Nashville, on the 20th, ex-Governor my course in his paper. He has eon-1
,J(lt think much of Greelev. 'oved the South, bailed Jell'. Davis, advo-. the Treasury, and wants to know why
our noble soldiers were Ian- folks. He diil not care what Greeley the Treasury does not belong to us. Some
tens. Thev the past against the South of it is dejiosited thereby other parties. audits institutions. It was enough for We have from $40,000,000 to 45(50,000,000 him tn know that now he was in favor of in the Treasury. It is held there to use restoring her to her pristine rights, (tree-1 to prevent the gold gamblers from ruinley, it elected, would pay the losses of I ing the country. Vou all remember how the South, and set her people in the high Jim Fisk and Jay (iould and others came road to wealth and happiness." to grief once. It was called "Black Fri-
Hiir«e
His pnor old lather was
!UH
in*1
made postmaster at Covington, Ky., by I'lesident .loll.'.soil, and when (ien. rant was elected he retained him there. Would you have thought more of (ien. tlrant il lie had turned his old father out 1 am sure vmi would not. (Ien. Grant is a
stands by hi- friends,
knew how be coiil-1 have conciliated Sumner. Trumbull and Schurz, many times, but he would not desert his friends. He stood bv the country. Mr. Schurz. iu his speech at St. I.oiiis, savs (ien. Grant is a stupid mai:. that lie ha- no ideju. 1 tils reminds me of Mr. I.incoln'.whiskv joke "you all remember it. It Sas reported that Grant was drunk at whitoh (a voice. "Il was at l'ilt.-hurg
Landing''). Very well Mr. Lincoln said he would like to have -nine of that kind of whisky to give to some of the less successful Generals [laughter|. If Grant i» stupid, some of hi- -tupidity might help .-oine of his les- -ueces-ful
ralIt
himself? in what battle, at what place fJcn. haiu lias not been a jrreat talker, ho has not said much, but he lias said more jrooil things than Sunnier ever ha. There not a person iu this crowd that can repeat a single sentence that Sumner ever uttered while you all remember how Oram "moved on the enemy" and "fought it out on that line'' [applause]. Yes, lie "lijfhi* it out on that line if it takes all Summer.4' (ten. Urant commenced life as a tanner. lie h.td been a
honorably. He was Lieutenant in the Mexican war, served faithfully but of eour-e rose to no great distinction. lie came home and went out oil a farm and hauled wood for a living. One man says he saw Grant come into town, iu tlm-e days, riding on a load of wood and smoking a pipe. 1 think it very likely that was a cob pipe [laughter]. The world, knows all the rest of (irant's history, and it is fixed in the hearts of our people.
Mr. Wilson, vour candidate for Viee President, commenced life low—the son of a shoemaker—and was bound out to learn that trade. He is a plain, honest man. No man stands higher as Senators Lane, here, well knows. Neither Grant tior Wilson has tin least particle of ari tocracy. Wilson has long been one of the foremost men iu our Congress, and to prove that Grant cannot he beaten I will get my friend to read what Horace Greeley savs about it (Col. lie Hart here read the editorial article from the New Vork Tribune, iu
for the payment of our war debt in |so of that opinion. [Applause.| been festering, but they are all healed
I say that if .Mr. (ireelev is elected it will create a money pi.nic. lie knows nothing abi.iu our financial matters. He says that "the way to resume specie I payment is to resume." He would simply stick up it notice on the door of our
Treasury, stating that specie payment isj resumed. Well, let this be done, and then let every man who now owes $100' or £1 (Mill or more be culled upon to pay in specie. Who can tell the result.
think Greeley favors the notion they will -upport him. Well, Greeley did favor il in Slil, when he wanted us to pay four hundred million dollars for those slaves, and he has never taken back word. But let us hear these Southern specie payment, and Mr. (Ireelev made it uHm Democrats speak for themselves. personal matter, wrote me a letter
!l
About three years ago I made a speech
in the Senate on the gradual return
»|antly been urging immediate restimp-
At the same meeting ex-Congressman day." The way it is done is this: We Goliiday said take say $10,000,000 of gold from the
Jua'lcy hlni.-elf. ^l filontj will'
1
I L'.ul ii I "I believe the policy ol urani in:-' hall ,| the unoccuiued binds i,,r moderate d|s-
on itlier litilu ol a pro|celed rail-
tanc wav, in aid ol thai railway con-tun-| lion and equipment, is, tlnniizh liabh to ahnse, essentially judicious. Il the whole region between the Mi-shimi •uid the "sierra Nevada could be yiulironcd bv four cast and we-t and three north a id -ouih railroads, al a co-t of hall the public land- situate, lying and between, therein,' the hall remaining un:irnutcd would not he merely worih lai more, but would fnriush twice as many homesteads as the whole did or would without the railroads.
So you see Mr. (ireelev is not onlv in favor ol these laud grants about which the Democrats have made so much nm-e, hut he is actually in favor of givm-i away halt ot our public lands.
Now let me ask if our platform habeen accepted by the Democrats in good faith Do thev intend to carry out that platform and our amendments to the ('oii-titution Whv, one ot their duel objections lo us has been thai the treedmen's voles put lis in power. W ill ihe results of the war be sate the hand- ol such men .' I tell von no and 1 -a\ that Horace (ireelev is the wor-t Judas et modern times, lie iIioul-Iu he held Republican votes like schurz thought he li id the German-, but he was mistaken.
We will stand by our party, we will go with it I he pathway of the other parly ^trewn with the bones of our best men. Mild is red with the blood ot llio-e who fought mir battles. So bug as we stain! by our parly we are -tiling. If we betray it we shall fall.
Now. who is Horace Grecley. and what does In- believe'.' Ill -lo he was a l-'onr-! rierite. Well, what did Funnier beliive'.1 What is the doctrine'.' Well, the Foiirrierites live iu what they call a! "phalanx,'' and own no property except tho clothes thev wear. They have everything in common and have a directory over them. Greeley held this doctrine from 1S-I0 to IR'i.'i. For some time he was a Grahamite—that is, a ureat chainpion of brown bread. You do not want this kind of innn for President, yon want la true man, a solid man. and not one I who ride- hobbyhorses. (Jen. Grant lias held the reins of Government steadily' and truly, am) you as business men can not afford to exchange him for a rickety,! I eroi hety old man like Horace Greeley.
Now, how about 'his military man. Let us glance at his management of our: Indian affairs. He is a thoii'.'htfiil, reading man. He had read of William Venn in Pennsylvania, and he determined to follow his plans. He gave the charge of: our Indian affairs into the hands of a number of religious societies. The or (Quakers, the Lutheran
rivaU [u}»|lauej. lint I tell you ilmi (ien. (Jrant Ims one of the liiHM niimlsj in the country. He has a great memory, M,.|l,o,li-ts, the Prcsbvterians. and even He ne\er forgets anything or anybody. 1 it«s. were seiit to talk with the Il he has seen yuu onee lie will know von llvn„,w make treaties witli tliein.
anvwhere. If a man tell-two stories to (i rant, he is caught a.s sure as he does it. I like him becau-e lie i» a i|iiiet, unostentatious, careful man, I like him because he can win but lies, beenu-e in ha- given lu a ood adinini.-l ration, because, as Gieeleysays, "he cannot lie beaten.'' I would like sueh a man even if he were a fool i"a|)|ilau-e |.
I will say just here to the Democrats ut Montgomery countv, that von have •, ,i „:.,i,. ii "i -1 is lentlv ami uietlv. been sola out liy your leaders, and your I
party is dissolved. Vou can now come to us without being turn-coats, li ymi do come, come by the .straight gate, and we will receive you kindly. The time is coinu when vour lender)- have absolved
loosened you from your party ties
1
the haunts anil you can do as .vou please •. ,.lrclllI olUc-ti« But, return to Mr Schu.Z: lie ,'aith,ul
went into the war as a Colonel, Gran
went in as a Captain. c,
can,,' out lwl1I^.ovt.rwl „1 in anv wav,
the leneral-in-thief ol our victorious ... armies. Where did Schur/. distingui-h
bl,t ,l 1,:
election we
As to whether lan has own self respect I leave
1
I
»c,ruii\ey, at the outset of the war, I Treasury, and put it on the market and T_T AVING permanently located in
cr,,s1'
out ,ho
«..:.i.,i.iA
went single-Iianded-and alone to mectjb our finances, our commissioners in Canada, to treat remember that after Gould
h,ld
•:*». to nine cents iu one day. This wua done
favor ol !^.v tbe man who took Vicksburg and cap-
gunblew and men 4", ,/:. TKWi"r',"v'1"''
You will
Fisk & Coin-
I**" lofeat«l, gofd went down
Democrats object to Grant on
a N a account of the large land grants that
m.-rcilesslv nneoveiei
and punished. More faithless officeholders liuvo been exposed and punished under the present administration than for twenty years prior to its commencement. That parly is pure which punishes itS| guilty members. It is so in politics, in the churches, among Masons, Odd Fel-,
lows, and all other societies. Such action may make some persons feel bitter, but it purifies the partv. Our party ha- fullowed this principle closely. We have hud some corrupt men, any party will
,ii- ii ,i have such, but we have punished tl.ein cadet at est Point and graduated there. .1
i.i.. 11 .i I severely, lake the ease ol llodge, the pavmaster who was found guiltv of eiu-
iiez/ling, and sent to the penitentiary for ten years. There was the Tammany Ring. It had stolen $150,000,000, and it was flushed. But let me tell you just here that this same Tammany Ring was among the first to support Horace (Ireelev. At Baltimore they hung out the
Tammany supports Greeley." The Democrats hope to earrv thiSlate, but they can not do it. It is Republican without a colored vote. We must carry Indiana, and to do this we must be faithful to rur party, iu lSli I we carried this State by -10,000. Gov.
Baker had only about 1.000, and this was on account of fraud in the elections. Ill was what Horace (ireelev calls "off year," and every kind of fraud and corruption was practiced. We have now about 10,000 colored voters, and upon every consideration they must sustain the administration and the party that] have given them all the high privileges! they possess. We mu-t sustain Grant, we must elect our Stale ticket. Grant: carried the State by about in,000 111:1-, joritv, and in my opinion he will have ,-ij larger majority this Fall. In the last had some old sores that had
"I' orable means, by standing by the party. Let me exhort you to do this. Vour interests are at stake, and your enemies will do all they can. I thank you for vour kind attention.
MARRIED.
win ri:iii:.wi- vm nt im Tinu. •J*-. l7 at \ouni-vilh\ hv I'.-w I». I'. Mr W. Wh.teh. el ti- XI \lll
FOR SALE.
l^oi- Sale
ALAKGF
1
DMY COODS.
N|trlmr and Siiiiniicr
1 1
^•r ii II:
N I I W O S O I
Indianapolis.
"W«- :i llo\\ ollei'lnu lor llH' iispeiM
I mi
Inru'csl aiol iiio*I rjir-hill'
H«*leetel sloeU ol
S a S
j)in (ionns
openel 111 I lie
lolloNvlny |(I viiiilnp'M ov«*r
i\ it nlliri' slort' ill I l»
Tlie Largest Slock.
ii' I'or 1 i* inoiH'
PKTTIS. DICKSON &
jNew "N'oi'U Siore,
Indianapolis.
EDUCATIONAL.
a 1 I
I'VliK Annual SessUm of the ^lontuinn1 crs •'oiitiiv 'iNMchi-r*.' 1utiiutc ill l-c lu l-l I ut th»» Noriiiit! S-h»oi liuthlim? in ri:iwr«uilfMM»'. I coillUlciic:!!^ All^ll-'l "'t 1" o'clock,
A ., n»'l con? n,n :n«! for !i v»-"i i\ ICO It A liiMnii iiou- iu t!*» coiiiin^Vi
1
The result is we have no Indian wars
now. Gen. Grant has solved this Indian liroblem. a thing neither Madison nor .lell'erson eould do: a thing that Washington and .lackson had failed to do. He does it, too, by peaceful means. And what is the effect We have -aved lives by it, saved trouble by it, and made money by it. 1'his honest, simple-mind-ed man brousht about this great change
My friends, my voice is growing weal and I must draw this tall to a close. The pre dencS of the people, and it deserves to have it. It has abolished $H'UiO(l,UiJ°
nt administration ha- the conli-
of taxes, it has lessened the public debt
S3
-,Mj0i)
ofjt
,m(1
sav0ll $
oo OOO.OOO per
of
rU er.-. held,
ornl tl(m
,U1S
ll()l
••ii Uy A I loiil ioli ii" :l»l I'l
will
W a
1
,. ,, .•
AND CO.MMODIOI'S
|u i\.»ie re.^i'li'iici' of leu room*, eon\oni« eiitlv h-c.lteil (U (lie hll-i||0.«r ptll't of the ritV. hoi in hir^o, hemitifnl. finely situateil. ani coy. ere.| with oriiiilnental ati'l fruit lree« of the lillet a vmiety. ?*t:ihh'. «iut-hoii«'e«i ami ith»*r «*n»-
Miiem. (H11 {1 I e, l'lice, ill en»v |i:ivliKlTTHN A hlirNI-'K,
(Jiclei*
WILL
Ueal l'.Mtate Ai"«'l»l-.
Farm for Sale.
OFFICII for sale my farm of 87 acres, pitmiliMl on the "J'liofntou ii ro nl 'I'VjiinleH lioin (.'rawforil-ville. 'J'he htrm lias L'oml in prov.Mnonts. I'or j»ai tieul.us iiepliie of me at
1
U'lrliiicnni.
I'llll .r. ltlKKITII.
T.
STAIR WORK.
Iniportant to Carpenters
and Contractors!
1
i'",l"ir,,'i 'lo
STAIK WOItlv
On tlio tno!*t iinprovo'l :uil worktnanliUe nnuitu-r. All onlors from (ho ootintry promptly jitU-inJe.l to, with juicoH to suit tli* ti'ino!. jtmo'jorn.'i II. KL.1.IS.
PHYSICIANS.
Jl. Ii. HANK. yt. I).
Dr.V(»Ti:s
I|»
t«, n|. I lai-oii.
inii iii»l .M»«* K\» 111ii |c- on I' Hy or" Kin :, \|.*«tt v'lc"(i* Mi-- I'or.noliUc :ml IM .iohn^on. vi'iiih*' l.-ciutf. l'ro: li. \Vil«•'•( Shiitli. ,' nl»|«'rt:
i.f.
t.
Til., .tiiiUiodS he'll li- W.Uil- :tu-l -Nf-
KID_'. ?li- :oi«l Ir. tlohiisoii,
the r.vcuiiiu i•!*•', I'o.i. llojiUiti- iiii« :i.hMit of I'l ,U Ill 1 IU-I low.
IVhluy I'.v I'rof.-s-ot- ll-i{! in«. Kiiik. UmivIi Ali-oii. \|"i --s l'oimo|iU- m-l |»i -lohn^Gii. I.«t ui«» in li' S.-hool l.iu hy Al. W. Mi hiici.An«»i 1 lir :it l.'iw, ot' t)n City. I'lviuiiiii: So«,*l..| lieruioh.
Tin1 l* i»*iiliv «»l W.«h.ivh »'»»|l«'u«". Ilvi'il/.. ol
W tU'Ia.cl. I'ii'l. lloi.h- Mii-I I'i-.i', V:.u lor. un- ul-
so
cNJ'ivli' I
to In-
Kv.-i Toii'-lu-r of lh»' coimiy will «-\}m .-i«'i| l- iiti iiil ih-• ••.m.iv -i-Mon o: hi* I us tit ic. mi-I the M«»i'\|l:OUcxl nl.-t'iiH' of :iiiV i»li»', rtl lio-
ihv i-'t h'-nilly. Aiu| |«ro\i.-ions will ho iiiu'li* loj' hotii'.l :it rcii-oii:ihl.« rnlc-. Tmi--fco« will mm- tlifit all tin* -«-|iooK iu tlu'ir to\Uijjlnjt- :tr'oolo.-joil •lunii^' th»- ln*tiiuto
j.
DRY 00008.
a
our «mi to im* r*»
iiikI I lie ii 11 it«» rn 11 lit'
piG STOCK' 1 t»I N 11 ...a- :iI C-Oiritl'.IJ. A M.MtTKIf
1 MMKNSK 1 o| iO'|«
W
oiler our enslomers Iu-
liirilst illc. Intl. MILL.
.-MM re.-,,, o,».-..^
Wi'iliicsdity, St'iilcmlicr 11, 1-S?*2.
TIm* :?n tu lli ikc (lit? 1 tli *ll 1 '«it i's* otjunl W' anv in this cuiiitiy. T!i«A.«*ucl 01111 l*|ai'l affoi.N thorough m! |iii D-i l-i'li tin* regular coiir-o. Tho "M «»ll 11 a» I S'-liU'-IIhIi Couisr 111 I :!.• iif. -oj 1.1 ym.^ -I'hH-t Kiiiili.-h hraiii-in's not in lu.icl in tin: othor oi»iiiof, siit }i as :irithnwtn\ :tl^«-hv t, rrij-liv, |1i\ i*.lotry, hot,!:•! .-cpim:,
Soul Ii 1 1 it 11 h.-int» thnroinjhh nlnillt.
'€ll«»n-«k
Tho
ill iiiisl (l ill ait'I tin* mil la iv drill with •inlet rith*-' fitim^h am|h' for ph\i«-a cUltUVf. *!"hi•»«: lailro.nh through tin* town. l"orcjttiiloi»u«'s vrinl it) tho 1'ro-nliMit or'-, 'c
A I.ttX. THOMSON'. Ti oa-iir.-r .'
(Jleiuliilo rcnialo Collcsre.
I*9
M.KS noi Ui oi' ('iiiciniiat i, ., on Cmcimii11, Han ill on, A I ».t\ Ion a Hit Atlantic a I ileal UV-tcrn, a to! lnii iha|«'| .It met ion H:tilroal Tin- hiiii-t«M-iitli follfuniu-yoar of thi will ktmuti aiol i'-tahli.-hc-l In-iituiion will hc^in Scpi. 17, jt ii'j.cal- to it p«-t -ticcc- it inliiiir.'thlf hi'^i tion, :itil the rci oiitiiM-iiil'ition of those who huofs it hi^t, i»s ith miaranlfO to the pul li'- jor tin- fu Hire. For catalogm-:-aii'l inforiiiallcii. fuMtv.--
Hi:v. I.. I. POTTKU,
jnly2*'« I I'l'O.-.t, (»h'lll ile, l»,
CIDLR MILLS,
::i lliiven's American I
L'i Vo In- ureiitest J|'"'l 11*' with the lea«t lahor. I'riee lio greater than (leMiaii'h'il for Other ilU laiiuinjc to he lir-l rl'»«v. If in nee«| oi'imiuII il will i\ you to wnle ns before |iir -ha-iin^ -my other tf,:»ti the Atnerio in. ttft Se lliilt i!ii |ilo is on it.
.1 sis. I j. I lii v«n «V 1 ».,
N». .*i(| I»1 (1 HI !—i
nuuhvl 'i ii ii nn I Olilo.
OILS*
AVest Ya. Luhriciitinu: Oil.
Kiii^ine Oil-
Whale Oil,
•A'
hi* ontuo wttontioji tn the pnu'tioo
of Me'lhlitie, ChIIs nttendod Jilfillt or ii»V. Uttleo and r^Hidonoo on Wnliiuf, l^iwoou JMIco »trcei titol Walmih ft^enno,
Castor Oil,
Lard Oil,
OM'Oht pi'U'OK 111 It! 11-
Tlio
julylstf
REAL ESTATE ACENT.
A.
JoiiiiiNon,
J^KAI^IC^TATK A'»KNT nntl Attorney :it I^riw KohI property of nil kind* hou^ht an'd hold on
*oimniH*iO!iv
Kent* eollei t.d.
T«m*h
jmid, Ni»t«.
"f all kuidH, nnd (Mthveyarienig nt
rml bn.Him Iflidod to tloo ovc IndiRiin.
I to promptlv and ror No. u. l'minre
nlod oori'eotlv.** OfHloek, t'niwfonlxvillo.
JTOCK I- itli'l Milt 'loth. :it «v n.\HTi:ir
OTTINCHAM I Ui' I'mtrflH. I'l AMI'HKI.l
N
\RASGL
1
The (ircatcst \aricly.
The Lowest' Prices.
\N xidh :i I tin* l\ 11 1 I |ri lh»»y 11
1
1 1
\c\: criiTMNs Low. UAUThUi':-
OOl. (»R Wi (OLi-.NS Will liu\ «n' U\-Mf11i:i.l. .v llAKW.lt.
nut Su !•-, Sew l\it1.'is.
!M
CAMi'nni.i. ,v ii.Mi i'Kitf
nl.LV VAKDKN^, hi .til iln- latft iir \mimu:u. a- HAirrrn,
VcKS GF PRINTS, 'I'Id' Stvles onl,"' r.\Mi'itri.l. a nAirn.u.
MM I'.NSI". STOCK 1 !••***, nn«t -Ii cAMi'ur.ix A M\ici I:K
ATISTF. AND SICILIKNNK 'lulli-» lor I.miIh-' Miiiui.' a.mi'i»t:i .v hai:ri:i!
INGHAMS, TICKS A STRIPF.S, At lll.l I'ii. i-. I'A.MIM'-Kl.l. A HAll'l I'.ll
^JARPF.T WARPS ami HiUis, '. i'AMI'BKIX A HA!! li.
ll-KH.
O In all l!u« N«-w Siyli"« Hit»l I
L\Mi::
jiic-i nl :nt! i'l in Ih»* cm
I'xiiiiie.mion oi :i|'p'for Liomm' f.U S iO!lilUV. I 1'ioj. llojikins. Suj'*s iht*Mi'li'iit of I'tihlit* lu--tr:i'-t!on, ilf-u'c- lo iit'-ii with iIm» Tfi'ii'liiiii Tni^t••«•*•. '1'i ti-4-H of ni«lcit if', utxilConnty ^'otlllni--lotM•»•-^ on Thnr-'l'iv. AH ih«» 'I'rn-. tci'M anil lyoiiitr.f- mi*«•:11 ui'!-ily I'l'tjiii-fU'-l to ».!• j.M^.'Ul. ijUi'**l:»'11- of llllt l«*-l :ilt( i^t I iu.|'oM ,n.'f r' lsriv Jo schools v. ill ho «licM-t»t|.
•I 1
1R
THO.ni'SOX. Mi.iit'/ojio'i'V county.
i:.\
in 11' 'i
rv.:
CAMI'RKI.L A II.UM ku.
ILK DRh l'ATT FliN.S, |.«IW (WMPBIXL A ha: TKU
1 LAIN AND STR1PF.D CRKTnN.-. I At I'i'lll-. Ill I'A.MI'HKI.I. ,v II il'. 11.1.
KIDtl
I'v PioiV»««.»r^ lCimr. Smith.
Merit •ili'l Al-'olt. 1 »oUiio!i: nii'l I 'I .lollll--on. I'vcnai 1'lo- utii'iiiu Kutci Prof. Al oil. lt\ l'r •iir-i I!it»-. Al-'oli.
GLOVKS
Ai liriiu: :l. i" .1 iili Iiiuli '.'ru-i-l -ituri'-" amimsku. a hviinn
ADIFS'
IHhi:,
"went*, woihi -ft:
n«».-i:
nr !.'• i,eiii', Morth «'»'nts,
1.AI-1KS' II'HI'
4-4
a U'lci-uts. »iili '»M»t -. KI'UKM. AH KTKH.
'A Ul'KTS, I 111- :i :i f!. r\MI»hKI.L .v IIAKTKIi
:l N'Tl'.D 1!RI:SSKLS C.\ RPF.TS -l-l
t^TRAW
-.t'AMI'llHI.I. A 1111: I CH
II1NKSH MA'ITINGS. at ::71,.« «*nt^. wmih nit'AMPI.r.i.i.«v nAu 11.1-
LL Got SOLI DoWN W on the Mm*- I'rilM* *:i-ll I'l.ili. ('AM I'liKI.L llAin i'K.
A
'LANNFLS. .1 KAN'S, PiLANKF/l'S. i--t :ni«l WooW'ti Vai'iito o\"cli:«i»ui for Woi »|,.
CAM I'liKLh A JIAKTKK.
OOL WANTKD. i-A.MPUKl.l, A 1111:1 t:i:
-IA(0I{ M. TR0UTMAN.
I'ropriefor.
Hoalor in Wheat, Flour.
2 Meal, Feed, &c.,
I'jiriiK-rs. I.ooli II»-r-! If
yon wiiiil store .vour
wheat l'or Hour or
4'x'llallu:,
|iii( il in ?l'tropolis ills.
Or if .yon niiuf .your risl
ground go to .1f!'tro|«ilis
.Mills.
J..H. TltOITJMS.
SAW MILL.
1 0 0 0 0 S a W a
AT TilK
0,1
SJYW MITIL
To Pnirh.ise or
SAW ON" SHABES. Wo mil iitiv lo^^, inihor iu I la? woods, or l^.C delivered nt "intimty on eitrn-r of the railromN
forwhi«*li we will puy tin* hiuho-t prio-in ca-h.. We :il«o hny hl.o'U wiilnnt, jif»jhir nnd n-li him-
hef. We have now in opomtion
ItC'Suwliit Miilcliiti? mill Niirlariiitf. .'Uid xtlieit worl l»oth from llio oitv :ind eoiuitry. Wc are now prepared t«*fiii'ni"}i on sh^rt i»««(
lliirn and II oiinp INtll^riiH
C'»iii|il4'l«k.
Also, Keiiein^r, l"eu-««' P'»t-
Piekel-. Speeinl til lent irta von t» the hnihlin.U
"frmicy Iron IMcki't I-Vimm* «!n-h -t-4
no more :uid i- luuidfomor »ud more dnt »hl^ thai) wood pielieN. Mill noltll side nf Collide I'ttt'fl, He:il* ill*' Jiilii't ion. -iv
H. E A W.C^LOCKHAKT.
NURSERY.
Trees! Flowers! Bull)^
Seeds! l(eil| I'liinls!
Nursery Stock! Fruit & Flower
IM,.V'l'I0W!
Address. F. K. I»II«:.M\.
lHooininiilon N rs ry
ILLINOIS.
A« re»: !»1hI yo ir l'i i»irenlioii-'.
Apple, HHNi 1 vr., S'JOi'-jyr., -tvr,, SI'1 •I Catnloirups, 'jn cents.
c\i
U'tlui
SEALED PROPOSALS.
Ntilice to Coiiti'iictors.
"VT0'1'ICIC is hereby given that sen! hid** will he leeeivcd at the ortioc of
-a led
til"'
Clerk if thi'city of CrawfonNville. Indiitna. ThurMlny, AukusI 1, |H7*J, nt o'clock, noun. t« the erection of un engine house nnd city pri^"1' rdin{ tn the plan* and f.pecifiotition* niwhed hyt'ol. II. P. Carriii^inn iii4M-iflcMtionH may he hooh nt the arrinyton. center hiiihiui'', Wu.... The ronncii refierve» the right to reject any
Said plan-
Wuhanh
hoi
I'd to tho le*t mtr»rc.Mt oftli
not dccine Hy order o? the Crftwford«ville.
(.'oinuion ('unncil nf the T. City CU*riJ
of
