Daily State Sentinel, Volume 10, Number 3550, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 February 1862 — Page 2

DA I LT SENTINEL

Ulli ART 15

Thf t'Ji!n It WUtt

be prenrei(

Democratic Union State Ticket ro rctrfAtr fr itate, james s.attion. . Of Marion County. roa avditob or mtatc, JOS EM ZU ST INK, Ol FvuoUio Countj. rc Tatatcmu, or tatk, MATTHEW L DUETT. Of Darie County. ro jirroÄüjtT flttai., OSCAU H. IJÖRD, Of Decatur Countj. FOE llftIXTtDIC5T Of fVBLIC tMTtl'CTIOX, MILTON B. HOPKINS. Of Clinton Coantr.

( Vmm RltMiil I the Rautti. TheofHwr of. the Cnkm fleH !n tri retut trip np th Tenne? rirer rejxM-t that ptrong Union ieriümi( is Hill cxutiug among the people they visited. Tky had vtetjces of thi feeling which they thought were unmi.Ub!e. The St. Loui Republican contains the following report upon the ajljct fron those who were tni;l in tta expedition: ' The officer aar oM men rushed on board the boats ami criedlike children, r-ajirij; that for months they had been j:rarln that a Union fleet might oon viait them. Everything they could do they di 1, and everjtlnn-j they had was freely offered. Never were rictor given more apparently heartfelt orations. For month.,' they Raid, oppression and on trace had curved their home, and thu numerous Union men were obliged to

keen .Heut if they rtlual life. An a voucher for !

their itorie, U;ey were extremely anxious to enter the Union nervlce, and aa many as a hundre! were recHvexl on ' board the three gunboaU to complete their crew. Whole regiment could be easily raises, anl ererywhere the people paid they could bring Tennessee back into the Union if only furnished with guru to defend themselves and be able to vote as they believed. They ald that when the Sece-ioii ordinance was pap-ed armed tKwliea tool nt the b:l!ot boxes and eve rjlhing went just an certain political traitors wished. Every man capable of bearing arms had been oblige! to do so or have all their property conIdeale!. A number of llio.-e joined to tiieVres were from a relef cavalry company, which had thui been pre-el into errice. They are pl.iin, etme-t ar-pewin;; men, and declare that if loyal Tennejueean are protectcl and rrned so us to be able to defend themselves, that Tenneec would in ten months be aain back in the Uti'tn. Savannah, Clifion, Eastport and Florence were among the towns vUited. If thin report of the sentiment of the people of Tennciuee ind Alabama be correct, and we will not question t.ut that it is so, for we sincerely hope that tich is the case, it suggest thoughts

worthy the consideration of every citizen who i

sincerely desire the perpetuity of the Constitution and the Union in the spirit and for the ac complUhment of the objects lor which they were formed. If we uucWrstanti the avowed object of the war, it is to preserve the Constitution and the Union, not to destroy, them and that it Is not waged for the purpose of overthrowing or iuterferiug ?iih the right or institutions of the States, or the citizens thereof. It appears that there is a deciJed Union sentiment among the people of the Southern Slates wherever the Federal force have penetrated and given the people the liberty to excess their true sentiments. Shall this loyalty to the Governmeut be protected, or it) the war to be waged indiscriminately against the loyal and di-loyal citizen? According to the report above quoted we fiud that the Unionists along the towns of the Tenuese river "wer eitteuiely anxious to enter the Union service, and as many as a hundred were received oa the three gun boats to complete their crews." And more than thii, "everywhere the people said they could bring Tennessee back into the Union if only furnished guns to defend themselves, and be able to vote as they picked " Are the men wlw entertain and avow such sentiments to süßer the same punishment as those who arc in open and avowed hostility to the Government? If. the purpose of the war is to "defeud and niaiutain the supremacy of the Constitution and to preserve the Union with all the dignity, equality and rights ol the several States unimpaired," and this is what a Republican Congress declared were the objects we are fighting for, the Union Hntirucnt which our forces developed in their trip up the Tennessee river should be sustained and encouraged. We have

directed attention to this subject to show the Fagacity manifested in the resolutions of the Eighth of January State Contention and their adaptation j U the reMjrted Uiitou entirnent in the .towns along the Tenncsse rher. The sixth resolution savs: "The maintenance of the Union ' upon the principles of the Federal Constitution should be the controlling object of all who profess loyalty to the Government and in our j judgment this purpose can only be accomplished , by the ascendancy ot a Union pnrty in the South- j em States, which shall, by a counter revolution. displace those who control and direct the present j rebellion," And the Unionists of Tennessee pay j they wu do thus "if only furnished guns to de- . fend themselves." This i all they k to bring back their State into the Union. C.ui the Union ' be retnred by subjugnting such a people, by de ; va.stating their country, by depriving them ot their constitutional rights, by confiscating ' their prope-ty and by placing them on terms ! of ei;ui!ity with the releU? Is. it not the wier plicy, to pay nothing of its hon ; esty, to encourage the Union men of the rebel ' States, and is it not the duty of all loyal citueus 1 to do all in thetr power to give ascetidaitcy to a I Union party in the Southern States, which f-h.ill, ; by a counter revolution, displace those who control and direct tle present retellion? This is the policy suggested and advocatexl by the Democratic party tf Indians, by the Democracy of the North, and it is the only policy which will restore the Uuion sentiment necessary to prcsene and perpetute the Constitution and the Union 1 and all the blessings that our institutions have ecurl to us as a jH.le and a natkn. I

1 he defend are of several kind batter of heavy guns on the bluHT commanding the river, batteries lcneath the blaflf o tl-.e lo land, a floating battery, a sub-msrine battery or tor; do, regular fortifications, with ditch, counterscarp an i terreplein commanding tae rear and more breastworks of exteuded rilled pits. I hate en deavoretl to reduce to asmallicale, to permit tbe printing, the nlacc with its various defense. You mav be able to obtain an 'flea fnmi it whatour p.rmy and Western navy 'will encounter. Utrst, the water batteries. Hatteries which are but liitle elevate) alve the water are ually ihustermcl. There ' are eighteen funs in battery on the low land and bordering the stream. They are placet o d low UimI W prevent ur UU running the town by huppinp the Kentucky shore. If all their guns were on the bluff, we could run the gauntlet, for the blufT is to strep to dmit the depression of the puns sufiicierrtlT to bit a lioal close in shore. ' Second, the floating bittery. There is a floating battery carrjing several guru, at the lower end of the town. The wharf boat has been takeu for tltLs purpose, and trong bul warks erected. It i moored in the stream. Its guns are 12 and 18 poundera. Third, batteries n the bluJT. Ascending the bluff there are several works, the most important of which is an earthwork, polygonal in form, in which are mounted three guu, which throw one hundred and twenty-eight pound rhot. The great gun that burst some months a'toce. which the reikis bad christened Ladv 1'olk, anJ which came tiear killing the silver Laired fighting rebel llishop I'olk. waa in this work. The work is in sue h a form that the moment a Federal gutuVmt rounds the point, tlte monsters will open tleir lipH and hold on to their eloquence a long while. These three guns command the ri vita di'Unce of near ly four miles. South of this battery, running along the edge oftheblnIT, which here retreats from the river, overlooking the town, is a strong work commanding the rear as well ns the front. It Is a large work, ith a ditch outside on the rear. The guns overlooking the town would hftrdly be flble to open fire till the guuboati had passed the other batteries, and were abreast of the town. Still south of. this, beyond the railroad, commanding a long ttretrh of the river, is a battery of four guns. The l-atteries defending the rear contain eight guns overlooking the extensive region of fallen timber and all the approaches from the north aud east. The rifle pit or breast work commences at the edge of the blulfon the north, and continues to the railroad excavation, and along it to the work already described, which overlooks the town. An idea of the extent of the defenses and of the ground enclose", may be obtained when it is considered that the work is more than a mile in length. A submarine battery of torpedo is placed in the ftreini opposite the water battery, just where a gmifott would receive the direct tire of the fourteen gun water batterv and the plunging fire of three mortars on the hfufl. It is proposed to fire it with electricity. Perhaps in this, the plans of the rebels, which have been made with so much care and nicety, may be a failure. The powder may not readily take fire after a long burial beneath the stream, or it may fail from other causes. Com. Foote does not very much fear any trouble from this source. Taken all together there is formidable display of artillery, there are probably eighty or ninety guns, exclusive of field artillery; they are of various calibres many of them areli's. In addition the rebels have a gun!oat which carries tour guns and a small stern wheel steamer which carries one They are not iron clad. A single broadside from the Benton would make them old hulks in a twinkling. A large number of troops are encamped on the bluff. They are supplied with water from a stationary steam engine, located just below the fourteen gun battery. The Commodore knows the locality, and one of these dajs a shell dropped in that direction may put the water-works out of order. Near the railroad 'is a church which is used for a magazine. General Tolk's headquarters are between the bluff and the church.

( Abolition Treason JlnnlfeMiiiir Itself

l'ninaked We have repeatedly and oft told our readers that Abolitionura was treason. Same have not believed it; some few have. . la addition to the many evidences adduced by us from time to time in support of this allegation, we produce an editorial article fiotu the New York Tribune of the 2?th ult., which leaves no reasonable room for doubt on the question involved, so far as the TriAttit Is regarded as an organ of Abolitionism. Here is the article. We ask for it u di? passionate perusal: "Speaking for ourselves, we can honestly say that for that old Union which was kept in existence by southern menances and northern concessions, we have no regrets and no wish for its reconstruction. Who wants any Union which enn only be preserved br systematic wrong and organized political hluuJers? Who wants any Union which is nothing but a heiiliment to lacker Fourth of July oration withal? WIk wants topee repeated in the next quarter of a century, the trials, torments, insults and embarrassments to which we have already been subjected; and es pecially, this continually impending aud always convenient threat of treason, whenever an obnoxious policy is to Imj forced, in the interest of sla very, upon us who wants to tee this restored to its old and magical jotency in lljui. luting tlte -weak, over-perpuadin I the peaceful, seducing the honest and the honorable, making mere heathenish jumble of our Christianity, ami mere temporary ubterfuge tf our laws? Who wauls a Union tobe maintained only at the capricious will of a South Carolina aristocracy a Union which we are bound to respect, but which slaveholders are chartered todisregard at sovereign pleasure? -Union, that the mm owning oligarchy may crawl comfortably along in the lat slime of it indolence and injustice, while we keep watch and ward, with obsequious fidelity over its lazy interests, and submit w ithout a murmur to its whimsicalities of selfishness or

We can not afford to make any blunders now. We must "gird up our loins" and look our de- tiny full in the lace. - Abolitionism on the one hand and Seceiouism on the other must be met and forever crushed, or we bad as well begin to prepare for a long a il bloody war, ending at last in separation or mona rchical consolidation. While conservatism shall mark and characterize your administration on the war question, and so long at I am satisfied th it you are laboring to save the Union for the sake oif the Union as our fathers made it, I am prepared to sustain your policy; but any change toward radical Abolitionism would blsH,' I lesr, tin last hope of putting down the relellion. --Villi Ü bet wishes of my heart that sou may be instrumental in saving the Union and restoring peace to our glocmr and distressed nation, I have the honor to be Yourobedient servant, J. A. CaavKxa. A Virginia CorrespoaiVnce CharltfrnCfOriVr. Hour Tlct'lellan'w Flan of Campaign Strikes the Confederate. The plan m worthy tbegeuius of a Marlborough or Najwdeon It is lewilderingly stupendous, and I think the Yankees wilt find it so. Let us take soundings and see how, if successful, the plan will operate. Buell is in Kentuckv, with his mighty host, waiting to advance upon Nashville. ZollicoSfer and Crittenden have fallen back to Hast Tennessee. The Virginia and Tennessee Railroad U thus jeopardy. Seizing this, the first part of the prOfnamiae is complete. Iiuell may then turn forces eastward through t Teunessee and Western Virginia, and threaten liichnaoud from the southwest. Meanwhile Iiurnside has possibly locate! himself at Weldon, North Carolina, seized the railroad there, cut ui oil from the South, and threatens Ueauiegard from dial direction. -The moment Beauregard turns to defend himclf from either of thte armrcs, Dank and .McClelUn make their advance from the front; and thus totally isolated and imprisoned, we are expectod to fall an easy prey. Sher man is then to strike hi South Carolina, liutler seize Jackson, Mississippi, and Ilalieck immortalize himself by a descent upon New Orleans via the Father of Waters. Such, I am confident is the fcheme of the demjuration which is. in the language of McClellan, to make "a short and desperate war." Thirty days more will deter mine the crisis. To be succe.vd'ul, the Northern armies have in that time a world of bloodj w ork to perform. If they fail, the war is terminated ex necf$sitate. It is the dying effort of the hydra headed monster, aire idy struglin in the folds of dissolution. Kut will it fail? The Hurnside expedition, the key-note of the cigantic undertaking has been dispersed to the four winds of heaven. Babel-like, confusion is ti it. Looking to the past, may we not predict that Buell will meet with the same fate, Ficavu'te Butler do:, H ille k do., and that while Albei t Sidney Johnson, Van Dorn, Heath, l'rice and Jeff. Thompson interpose a living wall of hearts in the Wet, Huer at Norfolk, Lovell at New Orleans, Lee at l'orl lt. Tal, Tatnall at Savannah,

Magruder on the Peninsula, and Beauregard, j

Smith and Jackson alonir the Potomac, will roll up their solid barriers of fire, and sw eep back the red tide of invasion. Let us pray God that it may be so.

tlie ."Vie reed I In

All nrts of nrngrnpTi.

OFFICIAL.

The New York Sun unk iOhDOQ in one Tjca IrArirt. b. , year., trying to ls a religious anti slavery paper. ?THOLDF.RS OF BONDS OF THE UNIThere appears to be a great itching in Con ' trd ?tte dtrd JU;rot 19, ii, Ält jaysM thrreyssr gres to get hold cd the army it may produce a j frtn date, ar Ynbj notified that pwMon U made for great, itching in tlaj army to get hold of Con- i the parmar.t r tk Coupons of s9i-annl inter t whVk becorndne on the 13tU Instant, rn coin, afresaHy The ermont Supreme Court has decided v thir tenor, by th TreurT of tb Unit! täte at

that sc hool m asters have no ncht to punish their Wtkfcir.frton. w by ithr of the AsMant Trsnrer at

scholars for offences committed out of school and

school hours

the cleryrymen of St. Louis are daily marching up

to Uie capum sjLjpceatid filing., the oath pre scribtsT.

assi,iiT Ifanvone wants more or stronger evidence

than the foregoing that Ablitionists do not j w ant the Union as it existed to be restored then j no pnof can convince them What Abolition- j ista desire is the abolishment of slavery, not the ' restoration of the seceded States to the Union,; not the preservation of our present Constitution, j but the substitution therefor of SewardLm as de-'

velopeil in his higher law doctrines and as mani feste! in his higher law practice.

The Sltautlonand lel ene of Colinn- , lM"t Kruturk) . As this formidably foitifiexl town is to be attacked or invested w ithin a few days by our tmo;, its situation and def.-nses will be a subject of interest to our readers at this time. The correspondent of the Boston Journal , ha ing obt.iir.evl accurate information, writes to that paper from Cairo ns follows: Columbus Is a small town containing in times of Jeace pet!ia;s a thousand or twelve hundred UihubilU.U. It u ituattd on iL atMtilssau alojw of the bluff which here approaches the river, and which, by j resenting a ftdld front ol limestone, hvs deflected the river, uA formed a "point," as it is called. As with nearly all the bluffs.. lUere is at its base a strip of hi Un 1 tetwen it and the river. The bluff does not continue fir. but! retreats, as you tlescend-the treu. ltelow the town is Wolf Island. Opposite the ton the t ittle of Belmont was fought. The b!ud' At it h -1, -et jxtlnt is about seventy five feet high. In the' rear of the town and in rear ot the bluff there were extensive forests a.ad heavy tirler, hich have teen cut down the retels tdIowTng the ex ample of our army at Washington. The railroad extending to Memphis eolcr tlie town blow the ; highest point of the bluff, through an excavation ; la feet deep, thus adding to the natural defense of the hiht part The common highway lead- I ing into the country to the little towns of Mos-) cow, Maj field, Feliciana, is near by. !

better from linn. J. A. Cravenstnlhr I'rcHidetit upon the use of the Smithsnuiaa In ti tute. The Hon. J.A. Cravlns, the Represent itive in

Congress from tlie Seouid District, addieel the ! following letter to the President, objecting to the j use of the Smithsonian Institute for the proinul- ! g itioii oP AUditiou doctrines. TlteNea' Albany . IjfJjrr savs the eutiuicuts of Ir. CkvVKs will ;

meet with the kpnrty endorement of his constituents; WaMUNuroN, D. C , January f, lt(2. To is tlrrcUtuey, Abraham Linevln: IKauSir: Allow me, with all due respect, to

rotet against tin use of tlie Smithsonian Insli- j tution (of wh.ch you are neol' the Regents) for j the purpose of advancing the partisan feutiment of any pli:ical party. I regard the lecture of j Mr. Horace Orcciev, deliveied at the Institute on j the evening of the 3d inst., so far as it relate"! to l the question of slavery, highly. otjectiouable. J i

think the Institution waa r.wtendowcal for the i

purpo-e ol promulgafing the dogm-ts of Alxdi-tioni-irn; and I think the public gxl demands that these sjcüoiiäI k'ctures at the Institute should be immediately discontinued. I have given vuur Administration a cordial support, and my best efforts in its defence, utn the wr ipjestiiin. aith the understanding that v our pdicy was to put dow n this w icked rebellion, to save Üi Constitution and the Union, and to rv-"Stablsti the supremacy of the law, without reference Li the question of slavery, or, iu other words, the object of the war wa to save the Union arid not to free tlie slaves. The deep solicitude I feel for oar bleeding country is the apology I have to offer for thus fieelv addresini von. Let u? not close our eyes to the painful fact, thit if we change the pol'icy of the war, and attvm t through its instrumentality to emancipate tnr- wtimrr rt starr, we s-rrtM fV?eatf tre trrder l tu- States anJ n-nd then into the vortex of revolution. w, to j. fal.e bv all the Western t-oHn freetate. natural cTiannels of trale and commerce are, and forever must be, w ;th tle Soutli.

Contract Fraads and

Cake Every day we have some new development in regard to the frauds upon the Government in contract jobs, and each of these developments urpasses in meanness and criminality Its worse pre decessor. The story of the case of the steamship .Mercedita is the most recent and the worae exposure. It appears from the published correspondence that in June, IMil, James C. Jcwett & Co., the owners of the Mercedita, sent a letter to the Secretary of the Navy describing their vessel, and offering to sell or charter her to the Government at a price to be fixed by the Navy Department itself. The same offer was made by letter directly to the President of the United Slates, and was of course referred by him to the Secretary of the Navy. The Secretary of the Navy, by letter, declined to purchase the vessel, as she was unsuited for an armed ship. Now. before this first offer of Messrs. Jewett & Co., a man named Durrill, representing himself as a Government agent, or us one having influence with the Government, had offered to sell the Mercedita to the Government for her owners; but the offer had been very properly refused, as the transaction savored ol corruption and percentage. After the refusal of the Secretary of tlie Navy to purchase or charter the steamer, Durrill renewed Iiis offer. lie said that he had just returned from Washington and could tell his rejected vessel to the very department that had rejected it. He received periuissiuu to do so. In July Durrill offered to pay $1UU.0(K) Government money for the Mercedita, provided her owners would pay him $5,010 to bribe Government offici ils, in ad dition to his own brokerage More patriotic than shrewd, the owners replied that the vessel f-hould rot first. Altera few hours Burrill again came and said that he had heard from Washington and would pay the $100,000 without any conditions. This offer was accepted. A list of alterations required was then pre seilte bv Burrill, and the 'alterations were made. The next month another list of altera tions, costing $1,000 more, vas presented, and the owners had now no choice but to go ahead or Ioe uli their past outlay. In September the ship was turne over to Burrill as the agent of the Government. A few days after came a re quisitiou from the Secretary of the Navy to pay Burrill $100,000 for the" ship, although his name was not mentioned in the bill of sale, and

although the real owners of the ves.el did not authorize any such interference. The next step , was to get this money from Burrill, and ; then Mr. George O. Morgan came upon the scene, and demauded $2,000 for his share inj the business. What share? He stated that he j had nothing to do with the sale, but that the ; owners could never get their monev unless he

were paid his "commission' first. Well, Morgun was paid, and Messrs. Jewett & Co. received their dues; but the ship vet lies at Wil " lianuburg, not ready for sea, and apparently never designed to be ready. This is the plain, simple story of the honest men who are endeavoring to sell their eteainship to the Government at a fair rice. Seeretary Welles alludes to it, but does not even refute it, in his recent communication to CoiiL'res upon the subject of n.val purc'i is. As f ir as it goes, it seems substantiated and uncontradicted. It needs no comments, and points its own moral plainly enough. We would that this were an isolated ease, but, in fact, it is only one of a thousand. The people are tired of such ojen, birefaced frauds already. When will the Government be enough tired of

them to comiiel tneir perpetrate rs first to dis- t

gorge their ill gotten gains, and then to endure the punishment due to swindlers and thieves? A". Hrrald.

The C use of -r. Ilrlght. In our poor judgment, the Senateof the United States has done a very unwie thing iu expelling Mr. Bricht. A. measure of this sort should only be carried through ujon the nost unquestionable ground, and w ith the general assent. The re ioous which did not toatisly the fourteen memiers who constituted the minority will prove as little satisfactory to very large numbers of men in the country. The results of the measures are not likely in the end to be happy. It will be observed, that of the fourteen in tlie minority half were troni tree States, and that among tlie majori tj were three Senators from seceded State .and thus with v ery questionable rights to places in the Senate themselves. We do not know Mr. Bright, but he has conducted himself through the proceedings w ith both spirit and dignity. We regret that we can not sty as much for some of the Union Senator. Mr. Hams, of New York, h is done him-elf very great honor by the firmness and ability with which he has presented his litieral, just and compiehensive views. The expulsion was needless of a Senator, who had Taken his place, declared himself devoted to the Union and the Constitution and merely differed in a matter of policy with political opponents. We do not reinemler that the British Parliament ever thought of expelling Fox, or Pitts, or others, alio to..k much stronger ground agiu-t the Administration, when the American provinces were iu revolt from the UrttiL Crown. In fact. tle measure is one which will have a recoil. Vindictive measure always lead to this. Mr. Davis intimated to Mr. Sumner that his turn might come, than which nothiug is more likely. And we observe that Mr. Harris spoke of the speeches of the Massachusetts Senator as more tecornirig a prosecuting attorney thau a Senator. They seemed to him, he remarked, "like heaping a blow uon a fallen foe." But this is Mr. Sumner's way. When etil his tum come Dostun Courier. J5TTbeownerof a mill in Monson, Mass., employed in miking at my cloth, is said to bv clearing $iO) a day.

w York, Ikxton, or rhila.tlph!a. , .AU such CteUDoua. tiUi"r with, schedules showing the

ir oraplianee w ith Geaenil Ilalleck's orddr ntmtxr smI i amount of ewh Cupn th mgtrm1

um of each parr-l, tnut be presented for nrnibtlon

4 Süd vcxitÜua i. iLrta . foil hiuüxit U UU

j parms-nt. S. P. CHASE,

In nine months, oat of an expenditure of f't12-ilw2t ' , $rmry of th Treasury.

$200.fHK)f0OOt it is estimated that the contractors ' , , ,

have dishonestly pocketed about $.V,HIO,000 of the national funds. -Mrs. Timothy Bradlee, of Trumbull county, Ohio, recently gave birth to eight children tliree boys and five girls all livins. Poor Mr. Bradlee

hvs the sympathy of the community and bears up ! r ALED ntorosALS as well as could be expected; Mrs. B. bearing h Indiana Ar-nat

better.

CONTRACTS,

Yotict to Contractors.

Omca or the Ism AasasaL.! Indianapolis, Indiana. I

: will he recrived at the effee of

unfit February 15th. for

staking aiU fnmishlnjr the United State (iovernment fth tea thousand (la.ixK)) Tin Canisters for .ix-pon?!

A Cincinnati letter to the New York Tribune ; run; nd th ame quantity for twelve-pound pun. To ' tie made f xs tin, and in all respects bke sauplea tl MJ9: i funithed tid.ler. "A merchant of this citv. who has recently! I'posaU will t opened at t o'clock P. V. m the lith , , . : w . . Innaut. The niKierMa-ned reserve the ncht of reiecfcna: mingle. in official circles at aning ton. states ; ftIir or .jt bids tbal may te made Tor the aJ ove work; alo that the I resident reads no revrspaper much but j 0f inz contracts to one or more of the lowest tefn-

iMe bMilers, and of etilrcin or diminUhjnff the nirmher I . r 4 : v. . . k. v.. 1. ru V ik.

the Louisville Journal

Sumner voted for Bright' expulsion

would be willing for Bright to be Senator long ; enoueh to return the compliment, if his vote : would efl'ect H.Ijouuxillr Drmncrat. j Henry Ward Beecher, having a salary of! $7,.r0( per annum, has remitted $1 .f00 of "the j amount on account of the indebtedness of the j

Plymouth Church Society, which is $60,000. So says the Hcanytiixt.

puMic service.

fHbl-d4t

11. STURM.

Capt. Commaiulln Arsenal.

3

A U tter from Washington says: "We have a host of grumblers here, mainly compose"! of those who a year since used to declare that the South would never take up armsiu

earnest, and they are now endeavoring to precipi

MEDICAL. 1 Slight Cotd.

cr gfcite. jEJlfLCUlt, mm which might be checlxd a

with a simple remedy,

if neglected, cfi.cn terminates seriously. Few are axLxxre cf the importance cf stopping- a Maiicdi. er Litt I it

es, noping in tneir ncaris mat our . 'Irl Tn

arms will again te unsuccessful, and eraancipa-; ,

tion musit become a " military necessity."

taie nosiiiiues. nonin'' in tneir nearts mat our . f?ij v: . .;k

in

CI

CTlie Washington Star, in an article which is ev idently publishetl by authority, says that "the end and aim of all Gen. McCleilax's military combinations is the restoration of the Union just as it existed before the rebellion began."

Ä

MARRIED.

MK1KF.I. Si I'LL On Thur-.lay evening, the 13:h int..

vj trie

Mtllie K. Null, formerly

We wh our gallant ant Keniat younx frieml nil happi- ' nes with the beautiful and acconipli-hed lady helis. wen. ( May their days le days jleaantiiess and all th-lrpattis j be jx-ace. May a kind Providence bless tbem as He j

Messed Jacob and Iah of old. As the poet ays doubtless this moruing, 10 say they: "Though fools spurn Hymen's gentle power We t ho improve Lis froldeu hour, liy sweet ejMriiM-e knowThat marriage, rightly understood, (lives t j the tender and the good A paradise below." To Philip and his fair bride, we say most heartily: May their bower he ever green, Their ky be ever clear, o sorrow In their sonpa, Or w int r fn their vear."

the berrirjxirirr ivcuZd vield to

mild remedy, if net attended to, soon r

attcvyes trie lungs. ftciuiJLa. f&tcJijddcLL&tcxhts. urrefrst introduced eleven years a -3. It has teen proved that they are the hest article before the public fcr

fCJU.Clf LS., pCltlS, J.rCJlCJLltLS,

Tuna, ftfaiatflL, the Hacking i in, fJcLL&umittzrL, and

Kev. p. Tuidaii, Mr. Charles '. Meikei to Miss 'numerous aifeciicno cf the IDhtcal K. Null, formerly cfCinciniiuti. ' . . M . . x

Public Speakers tf Singers Hr'iU find them effectual fcr clearing and strengthening the voice. old by all (Druggists and (Tccders in J&dicine, at 5 cents per box.

3

What is Life Without Health 1

JSinc?iiil rSi t iiro.

7(7 ADVERTISERS. All alrrrtiiumenf Men for j a jrifitd time, and ordure! out htj'oi e the rjrtimiion i of the time '"(V, tcil be eharrd the re-jular ratn j for the titne t" the time they are ordered out. MEDICAL.

A Cold is annoyir g. A Cough i troublesome. Hoarseness prevents hpeech. re Throat are painfal. BRANDE'S TUSSILAGO Is pleaant to take, and nii effects a core. S5 cents a box, at all the Drag Stores.

PREVENTION IS BETTER THAN CURE.

IJRAXDE'S lMJAXDE'S Iil'ANDK'S BHANDE'S

fBO LADIES OFDFLICATF. HKALTII OR IMPAIRED 1 organization, or to those by whom an increase of family is from any reaon objectionable, the undersigned would offer a prescription which is perfectly reliable and safe, and which ha been precriled in various parts of the Old World for the past century. Although this article Is very cheap and simple, yet it has been put up in half pint bottle and sold very extensively at the exhorbit.-uit price of 5 per bottle, the undersigned propose to furnish the recipe for $1, by the poi.ses.sion of which every lady can upply herself with a perfect saf-guard, at any drug store for the trifling sum of 25 cents per year. Any physician or druggist w ill tell yon it is perfectly harmless, thousands of testimonials can be procured of its etticacy. 8eut to any part of the world on receipt of l,bv addressing. Dh. J.C. DKVKkAL'X, P.O. Box, No. 2:U3, New Haven, Connecticut. nlyl2-d.w'l

HOTELS. 0 .

XV K ST i: It X EI OT fi? Ii , 7 ON.!), 1, 13 13, 17 COlltThlM) ST., NEAR BROADWAY, NEW T0HK CITY.

This old established and favorite resort of the business community has been recently refitted, and is complete in everything that can minister to the comforts f its patrons. Ladies aud families are s ecially and carefully provided for. It is centrally located in the business pa t of the city, and is contiguous to the principal lines of steamboats, cars, omnlbiws, ferries, Ac. In consequence f the pressure caused by the rebellion prices have been reduced to One Dollar and Fifty Cents PER The tabl i amply supplied with all the luxuries of the season, and Is equal to that of any other hotel in the country. Ample accommodation are offered for upward of 400 guests. 8sQt I not believe runners, hnrkmeu, and others, who may say ''the Western Hotel is full." D. D. WINCHKSTEK, Proprietor. - Tiioh. I. Wm-Hr.sTtca. feMS-dlm

TUSSlLACiO O RES COCGIIS. TirsSILAC.O CURES COLDS. TUSSILAGO CFRES HOARSENESS. TTSSILAGO CURKS SOKE TIIItOAT.

oui: x nuAnrK tisilauo. wonii;i:fil granules. Oh! where can I find them. To the Irug Store go quick, I w ill speedily try them; I have a bud Cough, Aud 1 wish to be eure To have the best remedy That w ill very soon cure. jry 25 cents per box, at all the Drug Stores. oin: 10 vnnrun 1, (.ham i,i;s. Cough and Colds w ill go aw ay, Sometimes in a single day, If to the Ihrug Stcre you will go And get suppiied with Tussilago; You can use U fre-ly as you please, It never fail to give you ease. Thoee Granules w onderful are, I'm sure, For thy speedily effect a lasting cure, efcjy 25 cents per box, at all Drug Stores.

FOR SALE.

!'or Salt, or to Exchange

FOR CITY l'liOrEUTY,

553 Acres, the Gallaudet Farm,

Situated eight miles from Indianapolis,

ify Tun

W ROAD, with the station

INDIANAPOIJS AND CINCINNATI RAIL-

tiallaudet in its center;

every a-re fenced, nearly nil the rail new or recently

reset; ,T)t) acres in cultivation, K0 acres underdrained, four good orchards, eight w ells of w ater, two gfod barns and a new one 115 feet long nearly completed, a family reid-nce worth $4.0OO, the tenant houses, a saw-mill worih f?,00, a store and stre-houe. This highly fertile farm, unequaled in situation by any in the State, only 20 minutes by railroad from I:liaiiao!ii, four passemrer trains stopping .it the farm station each day, with a State road running through its center, is now ottered for ca'e at a great

! bargain. It can be divided ijit six or eight farms if deI sired. For terms apply to the ow ner. J S. BROWN. ! C-tlaudet, January 4, lCl.

MILITARY C00DS.

WANTED.

J ANTED WET XUKSK A good Wet Nurse want

ed immeJiately. Aiply at this oflice

fel14-dst

I . 5) I X HUBES I : It O L T F I T

rir AAA r? -

THE Uf.OERHILL BLOCK FOR SALE AT REDUCED PRICES. Desirable Building Lots fronting vt Pennsylvania, ivlawar- a-d Michigan at ,

. paiiitisii's

V OF SKJCARE NO. 4. AS PER VLKT, . , . , NORTH STREET.

PIANOS.

Superior Piano Forte.

rilHK PEST. INCLrDlNOCHICKKRINOSONS,BiS1 TON: STEIN WAY SONS. New York; William Knafee k. ts., H.il:iuir, may be found at The Indiana Music Store,

WILLARD 1 iTJWELL.

X. B. liauos to Rent. febl4

GROCERS.

FOR CVVALRY OFFICERS, srACKfNTOSlI TALMAS, dark' bine, Imftation of itl cloth, suitahle for officers. Long Top and Short Bols; Caps with Caj)s, lUdintf LeduiliN tiaunllet and dove, Officers' Fiu Co t, Havelocks, Air-Reds, I'illowg and Cushion; Drinkin Cups; Folding Cots and Red, Rubber Smoking Fipes, Clonks and Capes, F.lastir Filters, tz-ther w ith a large assortment cf other article suitable for camp purpose. STJTTIaECRS Are respectfntly Inrtted t j give us a call. AH poHls sold at manufacturers prices. it. HIT V MM ECK CO Y, VSm RIT.RER DE IOT, No. 49 Wet Fourth St., one door wet from Walnut, dec27-d2m Cmcinnati, Ohio. " NOTICE.

m su

r

81

i'Sl.l...i

mawm I VJ G 14 ' 'S I'JS-lZi

Qt Aar:aKAvrr(irMttAi.'s DrrarraKNT.

IkoiAS.. oil Tar.as,

83

AVliolt-Mitila; Groccrn. Corner UMihinrtn and Delaware Streets lndianapsli, IfATlVI) THE LARUFSr STt?K OF tiltOCKRICS I JL ra this city, wub such facflittea as to enable tivto seh as low as any house in the West, we invite dealers to examine oar c'""t ainl pnet-s before purchasing elsewhere. Just received on cns:gi.roer.t. 4s Half brU. new White Hsh. 11-1 Mackerel. 30 Rars new iVanuts. t- an I f r a at vrr low fiarn i-tr-lt v.. U. SCHSCLL.

IVotiee to Imliaiia Troops.

1 1 ! rKXT. r.as, 5 .

Indianapolis, January 30, li. 1 ) ffHE UNDERSIGNED USES THIS MEDICM OF AP- ; 1 prising the Indiana troops that there yet remains in j his liepartment a large Mock of Rlankets. Comforts. Wool- j en Shirts, lrawrs Sokv, lUiu tis and (ilove, the dona- i tions of citizens from all parts of the State, for rtitriru- j tion to such of our soldiers as need theru. Letters Lave teen addresei to many of the Colonels anl Rertmental Quartermasters inritinr them to order supplies of these j good. Some have done .0, but a ore have tailed to reply. , lYesuminc that this notice may reach some wLota letters ; hive ret reccheil. the reqne-t is hereby made that wherever 7oi! .f th arsie teertjtion ar nee.let, the i Colonel or Quartermaster of such regiment will inimediately apply for the same, atatitig the quantity of each ! ort nee-lel, and to what p-urU they t-boald be sect. Tbey j will in all cases, while the supply lat, be promptly for- I warded at th? expene of the State. J. H. VAJKN, febl-12w Quartermater General. ;

W W H H-t S3 CO w P4.

!. left. -c rvw, 10 50 per fatt?tOO.

pel iaalUaUiO - AiJLS2-X.-

Z $.45 per ft I,SOO.

t r '

J. II. OSGOOD. Sol4fr fa,?,.

. . . '

SOLD FOR tlC.OOO

' nDTiJKircALir

1

i.ls--

' ; . . Iti it-et. ; " $37 -V) lrr lotltfK. - t35 pcrfoof I, too.

2, 1 Fr fsMt t(M). x. $35pT foot-tttfOO. e. 35 per foat l.lfX).

rerfostt,t(MI. .

TT" r T

3T .V ner tool 1.500.

-ic " -m . " - mm B m m

V

a 1

INStlTlTL.

o

am ' 2

No I

T

rc t Or

U 1 ie "4 n

s i - OY

:3m 3

Kf 3

ON

MICHIGAN STREET. . rilHE TRtCK OF THE A ROVE TROPERTY ONUIC1IIC.AN AND iKIA.WA RE TKFLTS II AS I F.EN RKI'tTLD J from $45 per foot to fUper foni. On ainsylYani4 fix tsV V $4A er fm-t. , ,,- . lb i the cheapest and most desirable vacant property in the rtty, by 33 per eetit, north oi .h:n'i, ltween Illinois. Delaware ani North streets, which U the center 4 ItKliaaap4i. rarUe wi-hlug moe than 40 feet can have a part of the west lK. TKKMS One-fourth cash, balance In 1, land 3 years, with annual Interest. For further informationell at t:y r.ltice over Talhott'a Jewelry Store... U. rARKlMI. Indianapolis, Indiana, February 1, 1 "i J f e b 1 -dftra

AMUSEMENTS.

DRY GOODS.

.TIKTROPOIilTA UXlsWs. Lady and Gentleman to Dress Circle T5 ceu. Each additional Iuidy. 2" do. Gentlemen Dress Circle and l'arquctte iO SATUKDAY EVENING, FEB. 15, C2. GREAT HILL FWK SATURDAY.

Thii evening th beautiful and gorgeous fairy extrava-' gama entitled THE INVISIBLE PRIXCE; PreTious to which the grand Melodrama Jlariierite or Iliiruiicly; 1 OR, LA TDURDaNESLE.

.lltSS .T.lfO.l' JMCtHTME

Monday the universal favorite C. W. COULDOCK. QJT" Dor open at 7. commence at",1. WINCHELL, The itccr. Qua intamt tluizzical,

"X7ILL give a series of entertainments, consisting of entire new piece, at College Hall, on THURSDAY, FRIDAY, AND SATURDAY EVENINGS, FÜR. 13, 14, AND 15, 1S62. B. Admittance 25 cents; Children under 11 yearn 15 cents. loors ojen at 5:45. febli-Ut

DRY GOODS.

oi

9! 0

z ofi'A

a

I t ; k

a

ft v ft ii

M H M n

e

X

So

I ;

o o

u P4

m V n

'a a. Ä rH

2 id

r-, H s.

50

HS

i i ;

a?, 0

r.

s o

pi

O r.

Ü0

2 m

i m a t

I

I 9

a o

r . X rjs e r S) 1

HOTELS.

50. NORTH ALABAMA ST., MRF.CTLT OPPOflTE THE EAST END OF EAST MARKET-HOUSE, TTAS been new It painted, papered, and otherwise re-

11. paired atd iniprovtd, and furnished entire wiUi new furniture, and I am now prepated to accommoIate ' Boarders or Trarelers at Tery low rates; and I hop my old friewi will give me a call at my new quarters, J have a good new hon and a number of rood rooms. The house it close to the County and United Statei 0nrt-hoe and l'otoffce. Im board rs wanted. S. BAREOCIL iToo'r I fehi-dlwlwim I

eVrTORNEYS. RKNJAMt.V HAIili'SOX. I WIIJJAM lHSIIHvTir

Late of V:;ace ii 11 irrison. J Ite of Connt r 4 FisLback.

HARRISON fis FISHBACK,

OFFICE.NO. C2 EAST WASHINGTON- ST.. (Over Munsot, 1 Johnston' Stove Svjm,) 1m isafous, iMAa.

rillfK UNDER SfGVTP H WING' ASSOCIATED B theTi.Ive together in the prartW of the law, will at'end to all leyftJ hn,iT.. enlr-j-te-1 to lhir cur in th Mst ii1r"MMl(,.!r(. RKNJVNIN l!MtKtS) WILLIAM P. nsitKACK. Deeember II, l-ll. Ih-nry M.Sroft. N'.ary I'iT.r, will take knowb dgments of d-e,L, ic. at the ilwt. offir. Oe12-drim PHYSICIANS. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, INDIAN AI-OUS, IND. li rin-ltaer-,nal, corner of Tashiirtaq treet and Kentucky avenue. tin ll-lk wra omMs rs'o. r. ,v jOUTU MERIDIAN. STUEKT.

NOTICE,

MEDICAL.

NERVOUS I K PI I JTT, 0 K rK KM A TO R RlfT. A ,

is positively im arable by any meana Mit lbe

dria-.i. Before cmrurm(t muj tre.uaeei

learu bow the wnter actually cured hiiuwlf.

and uhequently hundreds of other. EnrtW a jo4-.l.t aperscrited envelope t. fwx 17Ä, CharUtwn, Ma-.. fel-lft-dAwiw

DENTISTS.

i

1

P. G. C. HUNT,

OFFICE AND RESIDENCE, 32 1 EAST .MARKET STREET, INDIANAI-OLIS IND.

Z3T A NEW VEAIt CALL. A KNODLE

. - L SON wo:d re.pectftUly re.nst ail tfcfe irleb;el t COnniriTilOM nmru A riTC th'ntoeall at their tlace cf ha.iron E4itVid.inr ZJZl "I ,.r- C "CM ANT0 -tree,, iorth .M.. opposite Gle,u K-.k. and settle the;,

cvmm... wm-4 isU-iM4 tL n.wrf of iLej would not !ha fm&yir- eaji wponliew rwtrv:i for hoM favorin the past they re extremely bl ed. It ..! five A. K:iod!e i Son h.?.a!te pleasure to M-rve all wh Bi.y call r tten Tb Uie fsi are. Jr !tf

FOR SALE. Mlottseltolfi Fur$itittre for Sate. V FAMILY hrcafcing cp LoUseieepirif will dispose of their Horhold Kurui.nre cheap, at private nale.

at a Jow price. Empirre at ICo. 89 Wot New Tork street, tietw.en Miiippl aud Tenne tre.t. febI2-dlw

C. L. S. IIattlievs, GENERAL COMMISSION FORWARDING MERCHANT, Lar'c Firc-ProorRiiiI(liiivr NO. 124 FXiUirTU STM WEST FIDE, r Detween .tluln nireet and the illvrr. LOUISVILLE. KV. CooifRnwnuare revrsrtrully imlicitest, and ttnrue.Ji.te s)e. with prompt retnrns arantaeL janlS

PIANOS. T 1 Ä. ivT O J? O RTES' . 'r' tr-

JV. HAVE ON HIND A NUVBEIi OF flltA

W W Ctas. Inariw-.whk h we w.Il iwll at ot tor c.U

II

WILLI Akt TOWF LL.

Nu. 4 Lata 11 ue