Daily State Sentinel, Volume 10, Number 3700, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 August 1862 — Page 2
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i4drM tli People. Id compliance iih the rfiuet of the Mas Contention of tht 30th of Jul, the the D anocratic State Central Comailttte liaTeprepareJ tdJreM to the j.eopi'e of lmlian apn the mometitous criU in our public (Tirf the publication of which we commence thi m-miing. It d.cu44 the bn no oocupt inj; the attention of the jrp?e Ui'pfM'on.itely, ami with the single pirre of promoting thf jiuMic welfare. We trut the afpMl to the tober thought of the pejj.le will be re AnJ con-i-Jetf! tr erery citizen. The Iit Week tr Volunteering. Thh Goernmc:t hu deterruinel ufion drafting to r..i the olcRer tint ruj bereetlcl hereafter, therefore the gvatem of volunteering will cloe th:a week. Th; announcement haa inIuced thousand to e:ilit wIi mU not desire to occupj the position of Ixltig forced into the ervice of their conutrj. Up lo the lG'.li itnt., volunteers will be acceirfed, aod we presume the puolicsthn of thi.4 fact will induce all who are able to protnpJj come forward and exhibit their patriotIsm by TolunUril enrolling themselves in the armies, and for the caue of the Union. There la already disposition njanifeted by the volunteers to regard with disfavor, if not with wntempt, the drafted men, or forced foldiera. Tbi ant'pathy will probably spread throughout the whole army, and tuny lend to unpleasant colliaaioua between the two classes. There U no reason why the drafted soldier should not fight as xealou-Iy and elTectively as the volunteer. There art tens of thou.ind of good citizen who are ituated that they do not feel it to b their duty to Toluuleer, but who, when no choice ii left tnem, will .is cheerfully serve their country as tho-e who voluntarily took up arnn. Cert-iinly anch men ahould not be looked upon with distrust or Uifvor. There i a duty to family which men can not lightly throw olT, but when that obligation is relieved, they will prove a) gnlUnt and faithful in whatever lieM of dutj they may be phtreJ, as the most zealou now in , the service of their country. Illlnola all ICIjrht. It is glorious new that conM to u from Springfield, that eij!it hundred companies have already been tendered to the Adjuttnt General under the recent calls of the President. The companies, numbering eighty four men each, give nn aggregate of iitjr-even thu.uxl two hundred men. At tliis rale, there wiil be no necessity tor any draft in thi- State, and it h Mated that the Adjutant General h;is applies to the Government lor authority to accept volunteers for nine uiuntha uider the la.-t call of the .'resident. It wiil be granted, of course. Illinois i indeed u noble State. If all the loyal State should do likewise, xvh U nu exhibition ot National power would it be. -Chicago Timet. That's doing notdy. Indiana, under the recent calls of the President, has already raised about fifteen thousand volunteer, and it is thought that this week nearly as ni ny more will voluntarily enlist in the service of the Government. To prevent the necessity of a draft, we understand that two citizens from the 7th Con re'ional District, deputed for that purpose, offered to rai.e two regiments of volunteers in as fhort a time as it could be done by drafting, but the Governor refused to entertain the projoition. His objection, we believe, were that drafting had been determined upon, and he wa nuxious that a certaiu clags bhould be compelled to shoulder the musket who could not be reached by any other method. A similar proposition was made from the 5th District, which was also rejected for like reasons. We presume the Governor is desirous o( reaching the Quakers :tnd other blatant nuucombaLaut Ab-.Iitior it.-, who are fierce for the vigorous prosecution of the war for the abolition of slatery, provided tbey are not called upon to undergo the hardships and dangers of the field. What We .Munt Rot forget! In the last icech of Doiulas, delivered in the Wigwam at Chicago, he gave utterance to the following sentiments. The men who are now trartrsing the country, appropriating the memory of his great name and influence to advance their selfish purposes, and whom he would have spurned from him if he had lived, are careful to avoid ail reference to the ol jects which he said idiould animate the Government and jeoplc in the prosecution of the war, and the m inner in which it should be conducted. Docolas thus illustrated his patrioliiui and his humanity : War doe exist. It ii a sad thought to every patriot. War civil war must be recognize! as existing in the United St ites. We may no longer cIoe our ees to that solemn fact. This Government must be maintained, the enemies of the country oveithrown. and the more stupendous and overwhelming our preparations, the less bloodshed and the tdiorlcr the struggle. liut, my country men. w e mustreiuemberth.it! there are certain lestnints upon men's actions in I tiruti of war. e must never forget that we are a civilize 1 and Christian people, aud that the war mu.-t be pros-ecu ted lor the purposes and in the mode recognized by Christian nation. There must not be a war wage! against the constitutional rights of any people on earth, nor must it be waged against wSmen and children and inno cent persons. Savages must not be let loce, nor the horrors of indiscriminate destruction encouraged. I say to you, I will never antion pucIi acts of warfare upon the right of other, but I will beeech and implore my countrymen never to lav down their arms until thev recuiruize our constitutional right. fpvciaJ correspondence of the Chicago Tins?. From Washington. Probable Movements of the Armies of McCUUan and I'ope Impracticability of the Ocrrland Route to Richmond The DtmanJs of the Peo ple thai the War shall be for the Restoration of the L'niom Iieyinninj to ft Ittard The Ri;ht of the People to Cr Jicitc the Ads tf their Pull:? Servants .Vr. Lincoln as a Strategist. Washington, Augut o. A report is quite prevalent here to day that orders h-ve been sent to Geiieml McClellaii to evacuate his ptesent position at Harrison's Lauding and retire to Fortress Monroe. Whether true or not, i1k report has no doubt oiiginated in the knowledge of the extremely critical condition of his littUi army & condition known far moie accurately by the enemr than by people here. A month ao I tuted that the position did not affohl a euruble bas e of operations again-t Rich moud, and that fact is now urddy admitted by the AdminUtratku organs. The New York 7ms ol yelrday Ky. litorially : "It will be qoite impcMtible for Mr. C1IIan to advance from it against Richmond, even with a largely augmented force." The reason of this i. that during the month that has elapsed siiae McClelUu arrived there, whi't oar Administration has done nothing of any account to help McCleilan. the rebels on their part have betu working like be.vers. They hae finished the woik on the cordon of forts and lutreuchmrnts which bad been comBienced in po-itiui- m as to cjmpletelv currouml their capital These ft.rts aie said on gHd authority to be twenty -eight in number, and to re- . temble the forts arouad Waslaajeton. If tin's i true. Um defeures of tle reix-1 capit .1 are s troug as those of our own. Wh.le doiug this, they Lire breti electing ttterie all along the Jameti river, in the Potomac river style, ai:d building irouruailed rteamers at Kichmond; hi!e tlcir troops, in great force, now surround McCleilan on alt side. No wonder Mr. Kay mond adds, "Hi poaaion isor.e wh.eavndability tor the purpose for which our army is ou the I'enuiula is Uiire than dubious." üuno dubt a atroog uonvn-tiun of the truth of tne facu that have feixu rie lo the rumots I h ive metitione. From all I can learn, I believe the Administration Lav ilcekted cot to send 1'ope to reinforce
McCfHUn.but rather to send Fope toward Richiii.nd overhi.d. that i, by way of Oainge and (.,r:naoi!. I he nule p.v-.r plin enough
r,n the n, but I am fAt'sfif i it Wiii tove t!ic o t iuipr u i.cable rt'Ute f the two. The d; tnre tnia Wah:nc"n i liO n lei. The army I wuuidinveto inatclt with boil, tlit.ks tijsei, and with its rer unjrotected, since it wou!d r j impsib!e to keep that lung distance guarded, j The place where McCIe'.lan is now it ont tiine teen milea fnrnt Kh .uxkI. We Uli have tUl use of Jame river. How much easier, then, it j would be, instead of vrlthdr iwing McCleilan, to reinforce- Mm by l'.-e' army, and, by ukiug Richmond, practically end the w ar at once by a brilliant corns. The teeret of the whole matter really is, however, that acme timid ou! here belirve the bu-lHrr norie about the:e-ignii f the j re-el aganM. Ws-hingtoii, and hive peru idel . Mr. Lincoln that the capital m leal.y in danger, j Ar.d hence, no matter whit becomes of McC.ei- : hn's army, I'opvand hi force must be kept a. a j erneiii oeiween u uric miu mcicui. miun-.-ville. It is uiI. by the way, that Gen Kwell is fortifying the raiiroad junction at Gord nsville, so as to make it a second Manassas. It geographical jwition is n:u h like that of Manassas, Rapidan river taking the place of Hull Run; while, in a military view, it is a position of mucii greater iuiprUmce. The indication now are, that a turning point in the history of the war has been reached, from which will be dated a new order of thing. The Abolitionists have had full! swing for a while, but they luve mw reached their limit. There are gentlemen now in this city Iroui the border States, from the middle State., and from the West, who are making such representations to the President in regard to the state of feeling all over the country as may well cause tie Adrainis tration to pause in its mud career of m iking slaves of white men in order to free the black. The key-note of this leeling was .-truck by Mr. Senuott in his eloquent speech in the Gordon ca?e in itoston, and by Gov. Wicklifle, of Kentucky, and Senator Carlile, of Virginia, in their speeches in the Indiana Deni'M tatic State Convention a fev days ngo. The people of the country will spend their lat dollar, and pour out tbeir blood like water, to sustain a war for the t i a . 1 - I ...I - Ii... . restoration of the Lnion and the supremacy of the Constitution. Rut, if the war i to be wagl for the emancipation of the negro if innocent women and helpless children are to be made its victim -if savages are to be let loo-e in a word, if the war i lo be waged in such a manner as to make the restoration of the Union im possible, it will have to be .stopped, lur there re not men enough in the North to carry on a w ar for the destruction of the Union. These are the representations that are now heing nnde to the President. The American people are not vet tdave. They sdill retain the right to speak free ly their sentiments. They understand fully the distinction between the Government of the country ami the pcr-oin charged with the administration of that Government. They know that they are the supreme power in the Sute that they are the sovereigns that they are the Government. The members of the Administration are their t-ervants, and their creatures, made what they are by the jeople, and liable to be unmade by the same power. They are responsible to the people, and the people mean to hold the AdminLdia'ion ctrictly accountable lor the destruction of the Union, tf they permit ii to be destroyed. The people will never abandon the tight to criticise the acts ot their public servant. They do not recognize in Mr. Lincoln a military dictator, a some of his flatterers call hini. They will fight for him as long as het-Unds firmly upon the Constitution. Hut the moment he departs from that said instrument, that moment the people will de-ert him. I think Mr. Lincoln comprehends this, aud will frhare his conduct accordingly. Ry his obstinate refusal to dismiss Mr. Stanton, when the whole nation demand it; by retaining him in office, Mr. Lincoln indorses his conduct, and justifies his action in icftisiug to reinforce McCleilan during the Peninsula campaign. In point of fact, w hen the history of tlus war comes to be written, it will be seen tii.tt Mr. Lincoln was far from blameless in the matter. Perfectly weil aware of his iguorance of all military knowledge, he had yet assumed the entire direction of the war hi nisei t. On the 15th of June, McCleilan, who wa then only live miles from Richmond, telegraphed to the President that his left wing was strong enough to make the final assault upon the rebel capital, but that he hid not troops enough on his right, aud to protect hi line of communications, aud begged that troops for that service be sent at once. Embarked at Washington or Ualtimore, they could have reached him !y way of Fortress Monroe in two days. The President replied th it he would send McDowell's troops- to him over land! (But he never sent them either by land or water.) McCleilan telegraphed back that, coming by that route, McDowell could not reach him in time to te of any use; that he (McCleilan) whs ready to attack Richmond now, and would do so if troops could be sent by w ater in lime to guard his rear. To this the President never replied. A week afterwards, however, he wrote to McCleilan that he had just heard from an intelligent contraband that 15,000 rebel troops had b en pent away from Richmond to reinforce Jackson, and that this was equivalent to sending him reinforcements to that amount! Do the annul;, of hi-tory furuish an examole of stupidity equal to that? That is the way Mr. Liucolu con ducted the campaign. rrrshlrnt u Lincoln' Hjicoch nt the Wur ."Meeting in lYuliiiigtoii. At the recent war meeting in Washington Mr. Lincoln said: Fellow citizl.ns: I believe there is no precedent tor my appearing before you on this occasion, (applause but it is also true that there is no precedent tor your being here yourselves; applaure and laughter; and I oflc in justification of myseif and of you, that upon ex animation I have found nothing in the Constitution against it. Renewed applause I, however, have an itupiesiori that theieare voting tentlemen who will entei tainyou better, Voices "No, j no, none can do better Ihm yourself; goon; and better address your understanding than I wiil or could, and thus 1 propose to detain you but a moment longer. Cries "Go on! Tar and feather the rebel!" 1 am very little inclined on any occasion to say anvthing unless I hope to produce some gtod bv it. A voice "You do that, go on." The! only thing 1 think of just now, not likely to be j better said by some one else, is n matter in which we have heard some other persons blamed lor what I did rmstlf. f Voices "What is it? M There has been a vei v w ide spread attempt to . 1 , . I t n,, ,1 1 h ive a quarrel betwetn General HcClellsn and the Secretary of War. Now I occupy a josi:ion j that enables rne to believe at least these two geu- ! tleme 11 are not nenly 90 deep in the quarrel as some presuming to be their friends Cries of j Good. J lien. McCleilan s attitude is such that ioo 1 Gen. McCleilan s attitude is such that ; the very selrhhness of his nature he can not s it w ish to be successful, and I hope he will, and i e Secretary of War is precisely in the same I in but the mind. If the military commander in the field cm not re successful', not only the Secretary of j War. but umelf, for the time being the mister of 1 thetn both, cann.it be out failures. (Lau-hter i a:;d applause I know that General McCleilan ! wishes iobe successful, and I know he does not! wish i; any more than the Secretary of War for him, and both of them together no more than I wis'.i it. f Applause and cries ot "Uood." : S.inetimes we have a dispute about how many men General McCleilan hi? had. and those who would disparage him mv he has had a very large number, wnd those who would disrvir-tae the Seeretary t:" War insist that Gen McCleilan h is bad a very small nomter. t he basis br this is, there is always a wide difference, and ou this occasion, perhaps a wider one, betweeu the grand total oa McCiellan's rolls and the mcu actually tit ftr dutv: and thoce who would diso rare htm. talk t a M j ot the crawl lou! on tut er. and those who would disparage the Secretary of V ar, talk of tho-e at preseutrit for dutv. lien. McClelian has some preseut times asked for things that th Secretary of War d d not give him. General McCIellau is not to bUrce for asking f.r what he wanted and needed, and the Secretary of War i not to blame for not giving when be had none to cive: fapplause. laughter, and cries of "Good, tood!" and I ar - 1 m v w here, s far as I know, the Sec cretary of War has w ithheld no one thing at any time in my j-ow er to ,itehiui. Wild applaue, aud a voice, "Give him enough no!" I hare no accusation against hitu I f.iee he is a brave and able man fanp!atie and 1 stand here, as justice requites me to do, to uke urm tnUe'.f wbit has leen charg edoti the Secretary ot War, as withholding from him. . . I hsvc taJkexl longer thno I exte'tel w do Cries, "No no go on"- aid uow I avail myae;t of tuy privilege ol ayuig no uioxc. War Mlktiu at KruxBtiiaiii. There will le a war meeting, at EJinburgh on WeWUv ,.,i , j. . . . ' next. lien. Kloott and K. J. Kyan, of this city, are announced a amor the speakers.
ADDRESS
r K3I 0J 15 ATIC KTATK CKNTKAL C0M3IITTEC; TO Tili: ITOI'Li: OF ItlHANA, On the Crisis of the Country. Prfiarr4 In I'urtuance of a. Iteaotu llon of Hip Stale JIa Convention ol the rtotti JillT, ISG. We address you in the midt of a cri.-i immicer.t with pril to the institutions of our beloved iiiimtrr. In lio.ti ... m di.'.ir. Lr .licna all i Iuttr jVeli x gs, tid" arpeal cniy to the patriotic; -lmx u ((, our Cf)UI:frTinfI1 'phe Ii;Jtion his? CMOUv, of partv platlornH ami party n;es- 1 nrt tf ruin :in.i i'p.fmr i-n trniirer llVtTII- . meu t1un t jpj a, we juve been taught ; to believe it wa.,ou the aiTevtions and consent ot the peopJe.Letui discard the platform of party , j ; and party tt-elf, except tn jar as tht y ore constxrrwi j vith the preserration of the Union and the Consti- j i tut ion which makes us one nation. It there be a ' ecutitnent in the creed of the Democratic organ- ' iz.tion, enunciated now or beretof.re, wbich; m ike agnin-t the restoration of the Union as it ' vas, and the return of peace, we lay tint .tritt- i m nt and ciecd ui;ii the altar of or beloved' i country, t:l abandon it forever. There is no ; j party platform, whether nude at Baltimore or ; , Chicago, "which is a law with us," and we deem j no man, no Congress, no Executive, a safe court j seller who adheres to the t-ingle idea of a party j in crilous times like thec. We give all tuch : considerations to the winds, and regard them , with abhorrence. They hall have no place in; our affections, and no sympathy in oui hearts. ! Acting upon thee convictions, we repudiate for ; i or.rselve-, and the great mass of the people of Indiana, all and every party feeling, prejudice, or opinion which shall come in conflict with the ; putting down of this rebellion, the return ofj pe.ice. and the complete re-toraiion of the Auier- j ican Union in ali its purity and vigor. S.xty-six years no, Wa&uinotom, in his Farewell Address, i gave to bin country men this adice and solemn; W(UnjIi;r: u coii'temp atjng the rauss which distract our Uniou. it occurs, a a mutter of of . terious concern, that any ground should have : been furnished fur characterizing parties by geo- j graphical discriminations .Northern and Southern Atlantic and Western whence designing' men may en Je ivor to excite a belief that theie is a real üifierence of local interests and vieas. j One of the exj edienis of party to acquire intlu- 1 ence within particular districts, is to miirepiesent j the opinions and aims of other uistricts. You i can not shield yourselves too much against the ; jealousies and heurt-buiuiugs which spring from ; these misrepresentations. 1 hey tend to render uiicn to each other those w ho ought to be bound ' together by fraternal affection." Niel we say j to the people of Indiana that the uuwie disre- I gard of this advice has been the immediate cause j of the present deplorable civil warV The far- , seeing wisdom of the Father of his country was ! never more thoroughly vindicated than in that j portion of his matchless address to his country- j men. He foresaw that the restless spirit of fao- I lion, and the disluibing elements of sectional j strife, would be used to plant discord between the people of the various States. Though that J sainted patriot did not live to witness the wild fanaticism of his countrymen, his immediate sue- j cesors in the Pi evidential chair w ere not w ! happv. The initiation of active agitation on the ! slavery question began as early a lJd2. on the breaking out of the war with Great lhiiain, was continued or revived in lcdl), on the admission of Missoini, and from that period, with slight inter missions, it has been more or less thrust before the country, in some shape, befitting the views of the factions which erasped at it for their advance- j ment to power. We have seen its effects in its j dark progress to its ptesent perilous height. We i have no ueaire to trace the tinny track ol this agitation, and hih content to remind our fellow citizens that prudent men have been always disposed to leaie the question of slavery where the Constitution left it in the hands and in the keeping of those States (old or new) which admitted it us a part of their domestic policy. We assert no right over it. Having re jected slavery for Indiana, as a matter of choice, her people claim no power to force it in or out of her sister States, leaving them to be the judge of what befits their local condition. This has been the doctrine of t e Democratic party it was the doctrine of the Whig party. It was the declared principle of Clay, Cass, Webster, JACKso.v.and that host of wi.-e und conseiva'ive statesmen which retlected dignity and honor upon the American name. To stand by the doctrines of Wash inoto.x and his successors, must be cuusit-t ently Umox mk.v, and avoid those Miaiesof party and those devices of sectional agitation which render us "alien to each other," and thus destroy the Government which make u one people We can use no better and no more forcible language than that employed by the seventh Prei-Merit of the United States, when about leaving the cares of Slate, in a farewell address to his countrymen. It declares the whole duty of x true Ameiic.tn citizen. Gen. Andrew Jackson, in that address, in speaking of this slavery agitation, and its effects upon the Union ot the States, declared: Hut iLe Constitution cannot be maintained, nor the Union preserved, in opposition to public feeling, hy the Hit re e.Tti"n of the coercive power cnl'ded to the -n-eral .ov rnm nt. The foundations ruut le laid in the altWtions of the people; in the oecurity which it gives to life, l.lierty an 1 property in every ijuarter of the country, and in the fraternal attachment-, which tjic citizt'iis of the several .State beur one to another as memlte-a of one po litical family, mutually eoutrihutiuj; to promote the hap- j pines ef eeh othtr. Hence, the citizen vt each Stute j fhouM Mudiuiidy Avoid everything calculated to wound the sensibihtj or offend the just pride of th people ofj other States and they hou!d frow n upon ny proceedings , within their own borders hkely to Uiiturb tue tranquility ; of their political brethren in o:her portion of the lnion. 1 In a country r xteosive as tLe L nitd States, and in pur- 1 6tiits m varied, the internal regulation of the beveral State mnt frequently differ from one atiothc r in inior- j tant particulars; and thi difference i unavoidably in- ; cr-a.ed by the principles upon which the American col- ' or.b were or!?ina!!y plained; principles which had taken S deep root in their social relations t efore the Revolnüon, j ani iiieremre, or nece.iy, iunueucing iL-i policy c.nce j hey became free and independent isaits. r.ul each Mute ba the unquestionable right to reculate its own internal ! concerns according to its on pleasure; ami while it ies 1 nt interfere w ith the rights of the -nple .f other State., or the rights ef the l"nhn, every State mint be the sole judie of the measures projxr to Mcioe the i!et of its j citizens and i-ioiuote their happincv.; aud all efforts on : the part of the people of other Mn'r to ca-t liuin upon j their institutions, and all neaMire calculated to disturb ' their ritrhts of property, or to put in jeopaidy their peace j and internal tranquility, are in d rect opposition to the j spirit In which tie I'niva was formed, and must (adjuer ' its eafety. Motives of philanthropy in ay be aMffnel for j this unwarrantable interference, and weak men may perhuade themselves, for a niorcetit, that tbev are laboni c ; in the cause of humuiity, and aiocrtiujf tl:e rights of the ; TTlo ,1 VZWK 7 reaW " that nothing but nu. -chief can come from thee improper 1 asautt-t upon the feelings and rights of others, .w j re th t tht nun found luy in thi w rl tf dicoid u'y ' wthy "f y r conjultHce, oW iVtrre yur : t"' 'J'ri"This was the language of a man who loved Iu couytry ;.s tie did ins own life, and who per- j ni! couyiry ;.s ne oiu ins own u;e, and who per- j lM t!,:U li!e for ll'e glory and safety of his na- j ,iv 1 T"y sjken while he tilled the I mo,il exalted office in the gift of hu countrymen,! d jit before the term lor which he hid been Ice ted cxpiicd. These words come to us as! J,utu lne Krve- Their author rer$e, or all! tfl-lt was n-''tal of him. at the Hermitage, in Tennessee, and il the spirit, of tlie gallant dead ! are permituM to look down upon the affairs of! earth, he is to-day contemplating the ruin and desolation which the enemies of our institutions u 'e brought upon his bUved countrw. We adopt Ins language and re-echo his warning to j those who love the Union, and would five it for j : h? r children. We declare before heaven, and 1 hi the hearing of men, that our matchless Con- j dilution and our beloved Uniou (in pite of Seeessionists, Abolitionists, v.d other powers ofj ' - --- - -- There are many things connected with the present course of the Administration which causes perious apprehensions for the satety of our form of Government. The extraor-dmary rowers! claimed for the President And Congress indicate that cur system i.- undergoing a rapid change, ' under the plea ot "uecesjyty and the "war! power" of the Legislative and Executive depart S ment. These pleas are at once insidious and j false, and h ive no warrant in the Constitution, i Since the foundation of civil government?, and j ' "7 ageol the world, these pleas have been . ' put 111 to aid the designing and cr dtv in their ; rursuit of unrestrained dominion. 1 he Consti tution give ample powers to every department, in its proper spheie, to preserve the Government, j to puui.-h tieaäou, aol to vindicate the law. Jt j gives neither the r resident nor Congress author it v to destroy the rights ami libenie of innocent i inen.or take front them any pnperly except by; , due prove ot lw. It finely djes not empower j either 0 them to overturn and destroy the- Coaitttution itself. It woo W be . a paradox-to Ray that the Constitution give a teniorarv otficer. elxtd for Touts) fr.r, any right to Vullity and d: rtMurd it own itrovisions. That would be lf-i..woitS4 uot be abo- j lu:e wicUnJucss. e deny the jtht t any 1 nu,n rMrty, or ashitiou ot men, to destroy the Constitution, or our form of Government, by the
atealthy approaches of depotim, the corrupt ueof Ie-:.-I.tive authority, or the daring u;riing of arme-l rebellion. They are all and each of them inadrn sib!e under a Iree Constitution, and ui.der a system of law -5 wliich rcgtcien the power of the people. In the I tngujge of the eloquent and atritio Jude Thomas, (him-elf a
upfirter in Concre? of tliis Administration; we declare our intention to "labor earnestly for the fuppreion of thi rebellion, ral the restoration of order, unity, and ece. Dut there are two things which we can tiot and will not do. We will t.ot tramoie beneath our feel the Constitution we luve worn. before God, to upport. We will not violate, even against these rebel, the
laws of nation, aa recognized and upheld by ail t recommending its adoption by both Hone. civilized and christian State " The love of the 1 Cons re oj po" this policy, and pa-sesl this American pep!e for the Union is interwoven . resolution, all the Republican member, with two with the high prerogative which the Cotistitu-1 or three exception, voting fir it, and all the bort on confers upon them and their po-teritv. The der States Union members (with one or two ex-
Coustitution is the Union, and without the former the latter would be of no value as a ystem of Government. Whan a man tells vou he is for pre-erving the Union, and in the next act strikes 1 down the Constitution, that man is false to his profession?, and unworthy of your confidence, j Men must be Judged by their acts, ami not by their word. 1 he tale plea that this rebellion can not be put down without ourselves resorting f
to measures of rebellion and outrage against ' President, and the sanction of a Congress elected the Constitution, i an admission which the j as the friends of his Administration. Then, so American people will not make to rebels in urms, j f tr a the President and Congress are involved, because it would argue, indeed, that our Govern- the people are plsdged to pay for all negroes who ment was a failure, which no loyal and true may be em mcipated by Stale authority, and it Union man is disposed to admit. It has no j will stand as a judgment and a mortgage against foundation in truth. The people of this nation j the labor and property of every man till that resIclieve in its $e!f-sustaining jxiwtr, and if nil j olution shall be repealed by a succeeding Conconstitutional guarantees, are pre.-erved, th'S war s'gress, as we trust it will be. A measure of such will end in the utter discamäture of the rebellion. J transcendent itiju-tice and oppression to the white Let there be no tinkering with the "Constitution race of the free States can not long .-t and as the as it is" by quack politician, bigotted partisans, jlwishand verdict of the American people, and Abolition member of Congress, and it will It is presumed that a pledge thus solemnly carry the nation safely through all its peril. Like j given was given after mature consideration. It Judge Thomas, the people "will not believe the j would be unjust to charge the President and Con-
Constitution is so weak and helpless so nica- ; pable of pelf defense. Nothing, in our judgment, po fhow9 its majesty and strength, pray God, immortal strength! The powers of war arc almost infinite. The resources of this vastcoun try spring to our open hand. All that men have, even their lives, ate at 'he service of. their coun try; and, iu this great conflict, bow nobly and j fieely given! We can and hive raised ar. army 1 ot seven hundred thousand men we can give them the best appliance of war we can cover our bavj and river with a navy we can block ade a coast of three thousand miles we may cut down the last rebel in the field of battle. Such w the poict.r of war! llut when we shall have used ait tl:e-e powers when peace shall have been restored, or when the rebels shall come and lay themta?Ive at our feet, or be taken captive by our arms, theu also will the j-ower ot that Constitution be made manifest then will this Government be shown to be the most jHiwcrful and noblest upon earth, not because the captured rebel is at your Icet, but because he U not. You can not touch a hair of his bead or take Itom him a dollar of his property until you shall have tried and condemned him by the judgment of his peers and by the law of the land. Does this tdiow the weakness of the Constitution, or does it not rather show its transcendent tieiigthi" This is the language ot an eminent lawyer and a good nun from the old Commonwealth of Massachusetts. the friend and companion of Webster, Choate, Winthrop, and that phalanx of true j national statesmen that once graced and rendered immortal the halls of Congies.. They are w ords of encouragement, and are fitly and eloquently spuken. Let the freemen of the Northwest catch them up, and re echo their inspiiing strains in de feiisc of constitutional libeity throughout the land. Tint liberty belongs to us, and we will de feed it. There has alway existed a class of politicians in this country w ho distrusted the powers of the Constitution, both in peace and war. They fear eil.t r ptofeed to fear, that it whs not strong enough to answer ti.e puqwise. of national defense, and hence tliey sought to enlarge the authority and prerogatives of Congress and the l'resideui. Thet-c men, when invested with au thority.and when they were in power, have always found some loyal roadouteüof the Constitution for the accomplishment of their purposes. Character of this description are not all out of public life to day, but control for evil many of the measures of the Administration and of Congress. In the d lys of the elder Adams, and during the reign of Federalism, this class enacted the famous alien aud sedition laws. The brought to her against the freedom of opinion and of the press the whole weight of the Federal Administration, and loyal and patriotic citizens were incarcerated and Gncd ior an examination into the public conduct of the then existing Administration. The triumph of Jetltrson and the Democratic party, in lc0d, put an end to the tyranny of that proscriplive faction, and made sui h experiments ou. the rights of the citizen loo costly for a repetition in the United States. At a later day, however, in ltd2, when out of power, the.-e same men inaugurated opposition to the war with Grtat Rnlain, called together the celebrated Hartford Cuiuentiuti, (that first treasonable assemblage agaiiiAt the Uniou and the Constitution,) 111 which it was resolved that the States represented therein be recommended to adopt measure. agaiu.t tendering military aid to the Administration of President Madison. The six New England Stales were ptesent, by delegates, in that Convention, and it was recommended thai each of there States adopt measures "effectually to protect the citizens of said State Irom the operations and effects of all acts which have brtn or may he passed by the Vongnss of the United States which shall contain proxifious subjecting the militia or other citizens to forcible drafts, conscriptions, or imprtssiucnts, not authorized by the Con btituiion of the United States." This resolution called upon the six States represented in the Hartford Convention to render no aid to the Administration in earning on the war, where their ser vices were icquired outside of their own Sute. It made the General Government jjwerles, and a ser.ed the very doctrines for which the Southern rebels now contend. It struck down the Constitution, and asserted a dogma which would make this Uu'am a rope of sa'nd. It is in keeping, with their other proceedings in later wars. In the war with Mexico, all New KngUnd did not fend as many soldiers to the field as Indiana, nor as many as the little State of Arkansas. She had no heart for a war w ith a foreign foe Her politicians were out of power in lel'J and l4G, and that made the difference. Mr. Madison's Administration, while contending against the colossal empire of Britain, was denied the id of New Knsland, if that aid was required outside of the ! six ultie States which compose that close corporation of manufacturers and traffic kern. She refused ali aud every puticle of "war power," and defied"the laws of Congress for "drafting" her j unwilling citizens into the National army. She; even talked about the Constitution, and setmed to have a vague idea that such ar instrument of j compact between the States had w real existence! ; That is moie than she acknow ledge to day. j The "war power," in 1?;12. had a very innocent and limited meaning, and did not extend a particle ! beyond the confines of a State, and, in some cases, I not beyond the limits of some pel ty town, corpora-' tion or municipality. So tetiactou were these New ! England meu of their rights their State t'xhu ! tiiat several of the incorporated cities of that lo j cality passed onlinances prohibiting thebeatingof drums, the marching of United States soldiers, or the posting of placards calling for volunteers. within certain boundaries of their town. They ' hated the "war power" then, and went to the i' verge of treason in op-position to this Government. They raised a strong, riolent Riid malig nant raary against their country, and at a time, i too, when we were waging what Mr. Clay said i was "our second war for independence." All 1 this is changed now. Those who ruiviveof the! old Ami war Federal party in New England are violent Abolitionists and disnnionists, and, like I all Abolitionist., cUiin for Congress all the "war power" necessary to abolish si very everywhere! Mt of their descendants do the same. Their war power" becomes an engine of wrath, hate. desolation, conn-cation, digmce and vengeance. It rejects courts, disallows juries, repudiates ' witnesses, defies the Constitution, and gives to the ! President, or to tome new made General, or Colonel, or Major, the issues of life and death, and engulphsthe innocent Southern Union m.in and i rebel in the same comrmm ruin. When such doc- I trines are troclaimed bv Congress, it is time for i the teoilefcvervwlice, and without rosoect to I . - 1 past party iso.:iations to rise up -m their might : an l rescue the Uuicn and the Lonsutotion trotn j ine w.cke.1 reoeis or me rou:n. ana trie equally j urcaed Amnion congres. wnicn Oared to tram . . j - 1 1 - 1 , which dared to tram our beloved country, I.. r, T. . "r'utr'1 country. I v e noia ine arrneu revei n aot.orience, and we 1 Lcujui.ceiim.uw 111 owoemreoei against the
on-iui.uon as ante jruioy 01 ireasou against wouI(1 Dot ,roit aoj interference, either from the ieace of the nation. tj e (ie,ierai Government, or from a -ister Sute. The policy recommended by the Rre-ident to in that deliberate choice of her people. She aoCongierS for a general purcbas? cf tho negro conls tl Moir right to all other communities, slaves of theS'uth. is a measure of an alirmin ! aud declares bcr wiiiiugneM t' live with them in
character, and has startled t.ie country bv the magnitude cf the interest involved in it. It Lt nothing mom nor lese than the propod payment
of thouT.d of milliona from the National Treurrto make free a ror"1! tion alretdv for
bidden dtimi'il bv t!:e Con-t-tution and law of Indima. The I'le-ided and Congre,by reient ! actKn and legislation. prp-e t ecua ary nhl to puch of the rda ve States as sha'l n h'pi schemes of tero eoiancip ation, and the pivment. from theiesources of the u nion, of the value of auch nesroe. Such a pnposition, two years ago, would have been received, from Maine to Georgia, with one universal hi of execration. Not so now. Mr. Lincoln transmitted a message to Congress, (accompanied by a juint reflation.) in March lat, plednnj the people of the free Sutes to this tndicy of nero purchae, and ; eeptren) and Democrat. vo'.in against it. It j was thu made a part of the policy of the AdminI i-tration, :nd stands alot.e as its act and deed. .o memoer 01 c-ongres, ou;:t:e 01 me lieruuncan organization, w;is seduced into the mpport of a incisure o unjust to the fiee Ijlxiing nmi.and so fruitful of grinding taxation to the present and futureMtidu?try of the country. It is a Republican measure, bearing the recommend ition of the cres with haste on a question so momentou. and sti;l more unjust, to accuse them of duplicity toward the slave States which might inaugurate a policy of emancipation. In neither case vo we make accusations. The fact stands revealed to the nation that our rulers have proposed a scheme which must stand or fall bv the verdict of the Ameri a betr; inericau people. We desire to submit facts to tved couuti y. We use t tic word betrayed in 1.0 offensive sense, and lor no purM)-e ot uupatriolic reproach to those who supported the measure w hich w e now condemn, and which no change of political fortune sh:ill induce 115 10 approve. What we mean to siy is this: When the present Congies was elected, not one member returned to either Houe dared to tell the people that such a scheme of taxation was contemplated. What solitary member, when soliciting the vote of his neighbor, ever suggested that he would tax them to pay for four millions of negrosl aves scattered over the Southern States? If Indiana returned such a member, some one knows him. If there was one such bold and darin; candidate, pending the election of lcGil, he must be remembered, for the audacity and tecklessne.-s of his political principles. There was not one- such; and, tor this reason, we say the people of Indiana, and other free States, were betrayed by vote., after the election, which candidates dared ..j.l . j 1. -irM Tii I 1.! j .'Ati.il tl .l 111 .1 fivi lie. A"(t iriivc i'fjui. 11 v.M.- i-tir, im 1 have been betraved, and with au utter disregard for the Constitution which the.-e Republican have sworn to suppo.t. This right to make the citizen. of Indiana pay for emancipated negroes, by the toil and industry of the while m in, was not even inserted in the Chicago Platform a "law" higher than the Constitution itself, in the opinion of some people and which contained, we had supposed, all the political absurdities appertaining to the negro race on this continent. No one dared to broach or advocate a policy soiepugnaut to the settled action of this Government before the election of ItGJ. It has been sprung upon the country in the midst of a teuible civil war, and at a time, loo, when the patriotism and resources of the country are taxed to their utmost capacity of endurance. If it was proper, at any time, (which w c deny,) this is nut the moment to put the resources ot the country to a test so lull of p-eril to the great industrial interests of the nation. What does this resolution of Congress propose? What does it a?k of the States and peo pie? We beg our countrymen to look at the i'lcts, and to do it in the s:irit of candor and eu lightened reflection. We have arrived at a point w here self deception would be fatal, and where seif-delusion would be a crime against ourselves and our posterity. There are in this countiy,dis persed in fourteen Stales, some four millions of negro slaves. There are probably more, but we assume that number as the basis of calculation. These slaves would average, in value, $Tl)d each. Admitting that the Administration could cornpound their value at $40(1 each, as might be agreed upon with the States w hich favor emancipation. This, as a beginning, would involve a National debt of sixteen hundred millions of dollars, äs the first fruit of this "policy" inaugurated by the Republican party. This is a fe iiful sum, but it is not all. Beyond this purchase money, comes other questions and outlays of great magnitude. These negroes, all candid per sons admir, would have to be subsisted for at ! Ieat a year, till some paledomicil should be pro vided lor them. 1 lus would torcc upon theUovernment an outlay of two hundred millions more. Colonization of these negroes would be the next duty of the Administration, for surely Mr. Lincoln and his paity cannot seriously think of bringing these negroes in the free Stales to com pete with the white laboring man and artisan, and. as Mr. Clay once wrote, "thus degrading the white American, German and Irishman to the level of the negro, by bringing the.u into competition with the African." What the poiicy of the Administration may be im regard to the future of the negro, after he is emancipated and paid for by the white man, has not been made public; but it is very certain that the citizens of Inoiiina and Illinois have no room for him in their respective States, and that colonization would be forced upon the Government, as ei ue cessity This would compel a further expenditure of four hundred millions more, or one hundred dollars per head lor e tch tierro We say noi.lt in: of the expei'dituie wliich the "policy" would inaugurate by the employment of hordes of olticials in the new department of negro ernigration. I heir name would be legion, and their expenditures ippalling. In the three items of purchase, subsistence and removal, we have to record the stujendoii.s National indebtedness of 1 TWO THOUSAND TWO Hl'NDHXP MILLIONS OF DOL la its, added to ihe v;it public debt already contracted for the present civil war! The war debt of the Nation to day is over a thousand millions ol dollars; and, should it be continued another year, we may safely put it down at double that sum. This, surely, is all that the people should be called 111011 to bear. It w ill tax the.r euer gies to meet it, and give them full scope fur the exercise of their patriotic virtue. Re this war debt more or less, however, we hare entire conti dence that it will be fully met. The people of Indiana, alway faithful to the Constitution aud the Union, in peace and in war. would scorn to desert this Government, or refuse to pay their share of its burthens. In c ery war iu which the Nation has been engaged, Indiana has been pre eminent in her devution to the Government, and she will not: falter now. She has today vastly more than her quota iu the armies of the Republic, and she is luinishing more troops for the conflict. Indiana make no condition? in her devotion to the Union, but devotes her son and her energies to it3 restoration. Rut there she will stop. She desire to hate neither part nor lot in the "policy' which devotes her labor arid wealth to the purchase of negro slaves, or the interference of the Government in matters which must postpone, if i hall not utterly pre vent, the re?tora;ion of the glorious Union which our fathers made. We refuse all participation in ithts scheme of negro emancipation, to be follow- ; ed bv the taxation of the white man for the pay ment of an ignoble debt like that. We reject it for ourselves we reject it for our children we tre:ect it for posteri y we reject it forever. We deny that the President has any constitutional power to recommend, or thit Congress has the right to pledge us or our children to the payment j of a tax which toe Constitution never contenrpla-1 ted as being within the "owcrs"o! the General j Government to impose. t-i .1 ,r nf tl .l.r. t.. 1 11 iirurt rr lhct 1 rxt 1 v "- ' - uvuir p .t t 1 .1. .. ;..,r min.;rv,t;..,. ;.. t their : tVlcx M,1(J duty, and act upon that convict id,;na will cheerfully acouie?cein that decl conviction. ; decision. That outinn belons to themselves alone, howa aai mwi r ever. ;ud the Democracy of Indian are entirely ever. .u(j the Democracy of Indian are entirely -nr.,.- . ther have ever been, that that rlioiri wiju;. as ther ha hh,lU tH? ti,eir own. As a eovereijrn Sute, Indi aua has selected her own institution, and he ! peace and conconi, either as slave or as free Slate. Jnuiana cuizen nave not participated in any foray on t lae property, or violated the laws
of Congress in regard to it. Ther have been faithful to th Cntitntion nd th Union, which exists under and by it. They are re-ohed to re main so. and t olcrve the covenants which Washington dcc'red "m ke us one j-e-p'e " Act ng Ihm f lithf ullj t all the'r 1 ivehold ng ister States, they respectfully but firmly d clare, thai any tax for the purpose of buying slaves by the General Government would be paid with great reluctance. The whole scheme is distasteful to them. Its inauguration in the mlt of a bloody civil war. and when its acceptance or rejection by the slave States is raadt the pretext for a threat, render the theme one of unmistakable evil at the present time It has been throt upon the country, we feel rnind to declare, to ap(s?ae the fell spirit of an abolition fiction iu Congress, who constantly clamor for new raids against the Constitution ami the L'nion. Like the leaders of the infamous rebe'.l.on at the South, these Northern traitor are tited or the Union as it was made by our father. They want new guarantees for freedom" to the nero, as their co r ebels at the Souti wih it f-r slavery Roth the-e factions aim at the overthrow of the Government, and bth must be pmt down and trampled in the dust, if American Nationality is to survive the present struggle. We declare unyiehling opjsiitioti ti both. Let c ich of the-e extremes be satisfied with the Constitution and its sacred guarantee, and jsue wiil restore to us the blessings of the Union. We oppose Secession as a the it arid a delusion we oppose the purchase and emancipation of tin r:e;ne as an outrage and a lax upn the manly toil of the white nun cf Indiana, and rjeot every approach which the Administration is making to render powerful this abolition sentiment in the free States. in every asjveot in which this question can be viewed, it is one of unmitigated mischief. We trust the people of this country, lu aie yet free to pass judgment upon the acts of their servants, will visit the r condeii n tion ujn the unworthy Representatives and Senators who hae pledged the property and h!or of themselves and their chilJren for this tdack debt of two thousand mil lions of dollar, both without their con-cut. with-' out notice, and in utter defiance of their wiil. A . more highhiiided assumption of wer was, never attempted in a country pHsein even the ! semblance of freedom. The Rritish Parliament, with its hereditary Lords and elective Common, did not dare to pay for the slaves in her West In- ; dies till after yens of patient discussion and pp ular debate before the j e -pie of England. For twenty yens it was discused at the hus-tinp. in Parliament, and in t;ie prc. Statesmen stke, essayists wrote, and poet rhyme! to a ou clu-ioii. Tic reit interests invoiced hd a hearing at tin bar of public opinion, anil even a des pet c King and mini-try did 1101 dire to pledge the English je pl. to pay for negioes witiiout their consent. Rut rur Senati r 'Ii 1 Kepae-entative exerci-c! no such ni de-ty. Un der the Lsh of an infuriate f u tion nt the North, these. Northw c.-tei n Reputtticui Coni:re--snien bent their back to the load pepared for themselves and their constituents. Two thousand millions of dollar was added in an hour lo the burthen of the people, and the only condition was, " Will theSouth sell their slates?" If so, the white freeman of Indiana i pledged to pay fjr them in the coin wh'c't come from the sweat and toil of I ibor! That is wh.t Congress decides for the people of the free State. Rut there is one appeal left from that act of faithle-s Representatives. That appeal is to th' ballot '"J. Let the cry of the Nation, in reference to that reso- . lution be "Repeal! Rirr At.!" ! fcoXfLl'SlOX TO MOHEOW. I
ANNOUNCEMENTS. . J II IT U' illM IIHH.TTI Ml JIIMIIMIMO; tMll.l - . - .1 : 1 . innv a BKAb as an independent wncon-litional L'niou candidate for C'onnnon I'leits Ju tac f. r the 12th lii-trift. j 2?" We are authorized to annourice JOHN : I'.KKWKK, ot Sutl;pirt, n candidate for Otunty Ke- . cordcr, hut'ject to the decision ol lU Democratic CotivenUoii. MEDICAL. PREVEfNTION IS BETTER THAN CURE. r i(.uir.r ir i;p.i.iu. i r. 11r.Ai.111 uiii nr.iiiir.i' i JL organization, or to those by whom n increase of j family is from uiy rJison oljctioiia'.lo. the i-n1rrigned I would offi a ;rescri4)tion w inch Is perfectly rMiaKc und , safe, and which bar tcen pr;cTiht d in variotK parts f theold Worhtfortricioistcentiiry. Although tl jssrticl ; mm r m ...it., niriti .?".! r- nr. I I Til nn Ml fl I ITiCIt Is vrry cheap and simple, yt t it h"! tteen put up in half 1 pint totMe.s and iild very xtensively at the exuorlntant price ot ih pr bottle, tbe undcr-iitied projsen'o fur-ni-b the recipe for Sj 1 , ly the poscK.du ol which every lady can supply her-clf with a perfect afVguard, at ar.y drug storp for the tnfünsr sum of 25centperyear. Xny physician or lriiKurit will tell you It i perfectly harm lep, tbonsanrt-tof ietimnlaU can he procured of it et'.ica.-y. Sent to ;oiy p.irl ot the world on receipt of l,ly ad '.res. mg. rn. j.c. ni:vi;KAi x, P.O. Itox, No. 1.153, New- l!aven,(!niieriirut. uly22-dAw61 SEAMLESS BACS. 5,000 augll-d.'U skmm:?s I' a gs TO ai:i:ive. 10:: Sale tiv U KM'., KKNXFDY k CO., In the old l'.st Ofiice Huildiiij-. HOTELS. LAHR HOUSE. flHIS New and Spacious Iloti l is now opn to the pub1 lie Tlie Proprietor ha ppared neither ja in nor exjiense in the completion of this Hotel, which, in MPoT CLASS AI'IVINTJIKSTS, and it i-rfect ad.iptatit.n to the wants of the TUAVK1JNO PCHUC, w:il compare favoratily with any House in the country, Fat or West. All of the latent and moot approved of tbe Modern Conveniences ha e been adopted, and from liuhen t-j attic no hing essentially useful or ornamental has l-cen oniittcl. Mr. GrotT, late of the Olirer Hou-e, Toledo, will amm the general Miperintendence f the House, arid thoe ho have eijoyed tbe honie-hkc hospitalirjen of tbe 01i r, need riot he assured that he cr.n teen IIoK 1. Prices in accordance with tlie time. This houe is loca'ed on the corner of Yilxh and Main stre-ts, in close -proximity to the principal part f the city. The paenire trains of the Chi -ago, ln.!iuiiaj'o!j and Cincinnati and IuWvi!!c Ilailroads stop !n front of this hoiwe; also, within a bort distance of the Wata-h Valley Depot. JOHN LA 11 K, Proprietor. auj;ll-d2t Lafaette, tr.d. i MEDICAL. C O a F fl D K 1 T I A la . OUNT. MF.N WHO HAVE IN ' JUUKIl thetnselve by certain i-ecret bat.it, which nnft them for huinei i til jdea.curw or the fintics of married hfe; alMi, middle-aged and oM men, who. Iroin the tollie of youth or othe r cause, feel debility in advance cf their year, before placing them-flve ut. aer me treatment ci any one, should nrftread 1 "TH K SKCTtKT FKIKND." ' Married l3dsw1 I learn ometbing cf Irnportai.ce hj perning "Tut Sr.rniT FarKur.' , Sent to any addre, in a veiled envelope, on receipt f Ten Cent. j UK. STURT CO. can be consulted on ail !iseae- of a private or confhtei.rial nature, from H A. M. tc 9 P M., (Sunday. fr.ro 9 to 11 A. M.,) at their office, '. 13 Fat Third treet, up-6tairs, between Mam and Sycamore, oppoMte the Hrnrie uonse. Ad ireK. DU. CHAS. A. STUAltT k CO., mch2t-dAwly..e2 Cincinnati. Ohio. DRY
r- .
GREAT REDUCTION
Spring and Summer Dry Goods ITo, 5 East Washington St., TO MAKE ROOM FOU EARLY FALL STOCK. THE FOLLOWING GOODS WILL BE SOLD AT REDUCED TRICES;
LAWNS. JACONETS. ORGANDIES. PLAIN RA REGES. FIGURED DA REGES,
PA REGE ROBES. CHALLIES. MOZAMBIQUE, TISSUES, GRENADINES, LAVELLA.S, " NUBIAS, rartlculr attention is called to
Linen faioodM. and .T3cn' ami Doy' .Wear
M. H. GOOD,
DRY C00P3. 1
Q iv 0 : A i; ; to 0 ) s fl ,i Mg c )i ( ' f 1 Lrx r : r IV . X )i n ,
'L,rr- ' :
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BAKERY. J. It. NIC KI M. rtORACK r.BKOTT. NICXUM & PARROTT'S (tavi.'Kir,Ui t,- a. A t. MKTZUKK.) UM A ST I : AK IM It IS 5 Y Ann co irECTJOiSsnEiri'sr, No. 11 NORTH PENNSYLVANIA STKEKT (IVtween tM 1 KiTeovs Ifa'l anl l'. rt t!?!ce.) Manufacturer of ail LimK of C'rackri. Cake, lwea l and Tie, U h.e-he ant Kelail. UJY. m.vn.r.icttire atid f;efp a conctant npjlr of th f low ing artK.1 .: CUACKEhS It.nter r'rcker, Ilc-Nic Crscler. Ss!a Cracker, riral.ani Cracker. Cracknell p.iuit, Wtr CtacVer. SU'r Cramers, Wine Crackers. MtMi Craik er. C re itm Cr.eker. t.nir rt'raeker, etc. CKf:S f all kioii. I'laru and Oiii.(iH-ti!rL M! kinds .f Maeir'"" rod T rt-. Jelly, l aiicy, (ih??er and Mi?r Cake. Ac , A-c. Wetldiri und i'urilr fiirntwlircl art wtiorl onrr. ?(i,CANMr.S OF A 1.1. KINIK. giT5j,;roers for large qnautl'-.e- Ulleit at w rale. Order-, pr n:;!!y tiüei, an I dcliTered in theiity fret? -jf chu'e. v21-l2:n DRY GOODS. Lynch Sc Keane, 33 WLSr WASHINGTON STP.EET, ji - av: m rta," i i OTHER LARCK INVOICES OF SUMMER 1KY GOODS, l.nIie Irri Gooih, evrr Itiltt In tlie Ilno, and etvrt Ürwl(;ii. rACI. and Silk Mai.tilla. new tyte Sa'iue-. sinwla 4 and t loaW-, pr Me I CAJH-oe?, Pnra.N end M.!i I'm1 reila. H' op Ski t, Ho-;ery Ac; In-h e? Knd.f o der;es. White Iii..!, f.incn and Cambrte M. Uerehi, f. Illcaelied and Ilrowti Sbe ins-, Ci-jvr, ci..!i. :. a mc--, l!e.--t American bratie"., iri.pi Nr a j ard up; it EST MUV;i.SSIi i'iti.VTS, Only a yari; WIUli:sm 7L.fgJI'J CIPTirf C-4 wide, 0 lj ctc a yard: iiA im-:t m . ety gcl,3 pa'.r2.'ic. TRY RALLOU'S FKIINCH YOKE MIIRT3, ordy tote h l at I.yr.rb A Keare TUT liKST FkKNCH COKTS ANl WAISTS. CHOTH, CASSiY.ERE,AND PANTS STUFF For men' and bor' wear; S raw tjood. Hat, Cp. and I lats ever ihrt. to I fwrd in a lrr core. Mock complete; lcb? atreciM a 'ct;'t.!i in New lork; will t e ol i 'Zo per if KU l low form r pri-- forca-w. HOOP SKIRTSTliOOP SKIRTS! Ravin? mite arraa"n-.e-,t with two rf tl.e Unrest !!'op k.rt Ianafcfne in tb F.at, we r pr"paiei to 0Ü1 r 'hem, wholesale i,.1 re-ail, at New York prjr-. CaM atti examine the tock; no trouble to h'-w T".U. O.ty one price. K'rm-mber icn of tbe pjr Utmf skrrt. JeU-dly COODS. LACE SHAWLS, LACE MANTLES, SILK MANTLES. SUMMER SHAWLS,PARASOLS. SUN UMBRELLAS. EMBROIDKRils, COLLARS, HOSIERY. GLOVES, 3HTTSr - : i c I FANS, kc.
Proprio tor.
