Daily State Sentinel, Volume 10, Number 3703, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 August 1862 — Page 2

fAILY-SKOTl:TKL

. . . Tni,ii?j. v ... Do nocratic Union Stato Ticket fvX trXlTAtT or aTATK, JAMES 3, ATHON. Of Marion County. rox auditor, or itatc, JOSEPH K1STISE. Of Fettutvtn Ojontj. ro Ttri-t or tat, MATTHEW L BRETT, Of Divi Count. rot 4TToaT OFAtHL, 05(JAR B IIORD, Of D-w.itur CLntf . wox tcrt rnexT or m blic ijstei ctio.v, SAMUEL L.UUOO, Ol' Alien CountT. CT" A cmtlcraan wlo 1 ft ijnllivan rentenlaj At 2 I. M. pan that D. W. Vooriiee wa ad-dre-ir)g 10,000 tojde at that hour. It was an immen cmM.ic. Oar informant avs Mr. Vxjujifc- will pet 1,200 majority in that county. Knox Con n I y "Die Dcnorrarr of Knox Lave renominated m lion. W. K. Ni black, their candidate fur KqrccntatiTe in the next Lc;;tlature. No Tcttr feIetion eoold hare been made. Wc ne:l a jlcr.ty of jtit f ucli men to look after the interet of th5 State. Knot and Slavic.. Senatorial II liirlel. Hm. Ja me. I). Williams h the Democratic candidate for State Senator from thin District. Mr. Williams has served in loth branches of the Li la? nre. He is a man of sound nemo, jxeellcnt jal;Tnnt, and strict integrity. It i.1 ncfN m?n, in the present crUU of the country, that arc n'eI;d for legislators. I'lmt Conerrional II l trief Th Democratic Convention which met in Vlrncnne yesterday, renominated the Ilun. Jon! Law a t!ie Democratic candidate for rerrrfntativc in Conjrrws from the Firt District. Tim i tho 1-c-t evidence that Ja lt:c Law ha ably and faithfully represented the cutiment. of hi con.titutn:. TIey fay t bim, in thu indorsdrif bim, that be has b cn a faithful uMic fenrant. Sevrniti District. We Larn from a gentleman who ringed thnjogh Tctrc 1 1. ante at 4 1. M. yesterday, that JoKi'ii A. WmoitT wa nominated by the BcI'ublican Convention at that dare for ConreM. An Mr. WnioiiT lind ireviondy d cHm-d to run against Mr. Voorhkm, wp hi.ci the will "consider hi way" before accepting thi profcre! honored hi I.cublirnn brethren. A few days will decide. Tlir Itrpnlillrnn Conpl nicy tolilvidr I lie Ininii-Tlir Ilitlor of )itntilui. hin in Imliana. Tltere can 1 no loubt but there wa an extensive conjdrary ntnon leading Kcrub!irnn.4 imm -diarely after t!ic Pre idtntial election of 18 GO, to divi.lo tlc Union, the object of whuh wai to fasten upon the Northern S taten, and perpetuate the rule of the parly that had been ueeesfut in that election. TImmj men well knew that the Southern State, a.Mlc from the qnction of slavery, could have no nympathy with the public policy that the mtn who bad ot into power would attempt to fasten upon the Government, and while the State remained in the Union, thee schemes could not If earried out. Ilcnetj will I seen the object whih the leading Kepttbliran oran hal in view, a foon ns the election of Mr. Ltcoi.v wa known, in pro;Hfini that the disa'Hfk'l Statte houM C permitted to secede from the ITninn in penre. In fact, they were invited to po, and they were aurvd by tho pa;era representing the pentimenfc of the ?ucecHful party, that the KepnMican woall tlcr no obstacle to their sliding out of the Union. Thm it will bo e. n that the Secessionist of the Souili had every encourage nvnt from tho leading Kcpublicaii journals, rcj-" rentin the Kepuhlican party, in carrying out their wicked schemes. Dav after dav, week nfter week, and month after month, did thoc pacrH furnish argument to justify the dissatisfied States in withdrawing from the Union. What motive in thm odvcnting n, dissolution of the Union, a reparation of the Slates, iu soon as it wo-s known the Republican party bad lein tncccssful in both thotau an I Na' tonal election.., nid vss for the selfidi anl unpatriotic purpose f securing a pan isan exMürol of tlie Governmnt J We do not barge the mass of tlie Republican party wi h the purpose of dissolving the Union and thanking the tharacter of the Government to jtcrj-einate Rej ubli an mle, but thcctidcmc in incontrovertaMc that ueli wan tlc ol'j-et of unsernt ulous Roj ublican leaders, and wenk every canilil Kepuilinn to enrcfully and .!Ispastona:c!y rcM the facts c hall ircntin prof tiicn of. On the C:h of Xovrmbcr, 1S60, the Presidential election wa held. On the 9th lay of Novem!er, three day afier the election, the New Yoik TnVtne ihn alvocatctl not only tho riht of the seeding States to ret up an independent Government, but the jolicy of permitting them to Io so. It raid: From tho TriJ ure f Nor. 9, 1 J60 If the cotton States shall income sati-ried that they can lo letter out cf the Union than in ir, iir wist oh letting them po in f'acf. The ruht to secede may he a revolutionary one, hut it exists nevertheless Wc must ever resist the right of any State to nmain in the Union and ne'lify or defy tt.e Viw thereof. To withdraw from the Uuiiu is uile another mattcrt and whenever a considerable section of our Union hr.il le diheratt ly resolve' to r out, tre sJm'.l rt.t-st all ctxrrirr mmsurts T.i;nnl to Inj it in. Wc bpc never t live in a repnMi w hereof one section U pinne.1 to another ly Itayonots. TtiC In lianipolis Jtwrnal, iraul!aneusly with the TrUum advocated the am? p.dicy. We qu'te in prKf t!iercof.frora its column: rwn lh hi linajn h J..un.h Nv. 10, 16(V Let the two, or three, or fur States which are li?nt on disunion go ut, an 1 go to ruin. They solicit their ieril. and we nre willing they rhcul l exj-cricncc it virtues. A few dav thcrcaficr when the news came that Georgia, Flori la, Alahama, Missisiprd and Texas wcuUl join South Carolina in secession, it said: rrcra ttc !m?1n3j-e!t Jnrra?, Nr. IS, They know very well that if ihey are deterininctl to 1 ave the Union, Ii ulJiran will cure to kai r thtm .'oy. A Union pre-vrved otdv bv infimidation and force is a mK-Lery, and it Uttr Inlru tuiH rf.rJs. If Sut!i Candina an-1 her a-sMtt iates in folly really want to l ave the Union, they an without a word of objection frt ra any man nouh of Maon and Dixon's line. We do not !clieve in resisting cay sc-esion niuvrment in Üie leu.st. Itoiu Iii IiHtiiiJjH.( Journal, Nov. 15, Hj. There will lc no collision of ho tile force nlt-ft she (S.uth Carolina) makes it, fr the people of the Nrth mV mvrr rai or vvon army to farce any tnt tu ?ijf in thr I'nion. Such an Union would combine all the burthen of Union and all the weakness of disunion. ,,Cerxion" we regard a oat of the question in any case. We call the sjeial attention of the reader to the fallowing, we may say, prophetic, description of the horrors of civil war from the same source -

rtt l nln It taa t ! prrtrnrn

an evil s i great thai "the ep&ra'Jon of the tvholc Gififclcrarr int in l-j-n l. nt nation would 1 hannl - li Is if." Kcal: l. m She In r.a:,i;-,i: J.,nrr;j!, 5 ,. 13. !s5.

TiiCrc arc Lil r . n i Icration t'.an tho in tegnty i f the tor.ti:n;nn, at.'i t ey er trr m.o tli-: case wh n we arc called up"-n t !ccr1c npjn com.-elltn g a State to cuMnit to it hv lorcc. .n ft r. i atnl th firsi a t f it litU the whole rase a!ve all question, of form and laws. We aro to decide, tlieu, not "What ü lcal and constirutianalf" l ot " W'i.at it b sff" It wy be Ust to follow the Constitution to the last, an l enforce it at all hazards. Rat it mar abo happen that ihn will not Ik !ost. In the preent ca-e it seem clear to us tliatifthc enforcement of the Constitution -ends to civil war, we shall be J-cttrr OfT to let the Constitution be broken, and jaw bbxls.'.cd. All hi-tory proves that no war is so relentl s and erne! as a war of relatives. And a war between relatives so irriiablc, high spirited and courageous as the Am:iiea:i?, will i-ertainlv b.: Üm most cruel tvtr known. Yalan 1 uever fouzht the FpikIi o rnunlerous as ht; t Jttght the KngliSh when Cromwell cneountcrel l'rineo Ruj-rt. And American never fouIit I.nustimeu with tlie fcrocitr with which they will fight each other when Gen. Scott .shall

encounter Jctf. lavb. Wc ran imagine no evil met, l ut it will rnin both sections if nnwi?el'v equal to an American civil war. The serration met. It is the dictate of hnmarlof the whole confederacy into independent na- it v. and the Jemand of the enlightenment of the

limn woui.i ik; nannies ooioe u. nean HOI endure the thought of it. The main question, therefore, is, not the eonstilnf ionality of secession, bat thebloo! and horror of coercion. Will ecrci()n produce civil war? To our mind it is lcy;nl question. Rut thia is not the only reason why secession, if it is rtholvcd njon, i-hould i;t lC cheeked ly force. If coercion means anytUn?, it mean? to preserve the Union. Of what vulne wi:l an Uiiii,n c that needs links of bayonets and bullcti to boll it together? What 'ettT olf shall we be with South Carolina in the Uiion than out of it, if she is to fester with tlie wo'und inflicted by onr hands, chafe wiih the memory of defeat and degrcdation, nnd tek the first opjortunify of revenge? Is a family licttcr o!r with a mcrnfcr in it who has to lc watched icrpc:ual!y to kc-p him fr m firing the honc? Ve sav no. Common FCnc ami humanitv say no. If any State will go from us, 1 1 it ö. The price of retaining it, if it is to lc jail in blood, is far greater than the worth of it when we have got it. Wc are, therefore, ( 1 arly of the opinion that any attempt to rr si-1 bv force the secession of nny State, or combination of Sta:es, from the Union, would be unwise and talamitou in the la-t degree. It i In-tfcr to r-rcenx lives, and nil of fiien .liness we can with seecling relations, than to prescivc the Constitution at cost of war. Can language mote graphically descrilic the terrible evils of civil war than the foregoing? And history has made every word true. On the 23;h f v mber a ommunicntion ajrt'anl in the Journal fiom Roiiekt Dale Üwlx, upon which that paper remarks: From the Inii oi.tjm lis Jonrnl 'v. 2, ISGl. He (Owen) maintains that though secession i unrotistittiiional, if it lc leliberatcly und unitedly resolved upon by a State, the lictate of Christian kindners, no les than of political wisdom, is to let her go in j-cik c. & mjj ire. Wc deem it sup rlluous to artgue that a y-opuUtr crnment can never lo picservel by force. The act f compulsion changes it to a despotism ro fir as the parties atl'cctcd by itaie concerned. It is no Government tftuirn any longer, and despotism is simply a Govcrrmvut that the governed lon't create. Consequently if 'Vocrcion" piyserves tho body, it surely lestroys ti c life of this great popular Govcrtim nt 'It secures us on Union without unity, an aggregation of States without sympathy. And it does no mote. Whether that is worth preserving at the fearful pi ice of civil war it is hardly worth while lo ar-Hn-? to sen-ihlc men. lVictically, then, coercion costs us a great deal, and gives its nothing. Theoretically, it cost3 ns tili more, for it cost us our consistency. Srtsswn i.t rtvvlt tion . To show still further the design of the Republican leaders, fter the tdection of 18C0, and that they were a unit for disunion, wc quote the following evidence from the Chicago Trihune, the leading Republican organ of the Northwest: from the Chicago Tril-nt e, ffce. 1, IsCO.) Not a few of the Republican journals tf the Jut. ii,r are working th ins Ives up to the belief, which they arc endeavoring to impress upon their rcalcr. that the cedcd State, be they lew or many, will In whipp d bac k int) the U'nion. We caution ail su h that in language of that sort they are nor ndding new fuel to the liame which is already Maying io ticn ely; mul that the pro!abilities itow ure that the n'ultwill prove t!um to lc fal.-e propl ets. No man knows what public policy may demand d the incoming Administration; buttle drift uf opinion snnmto U tint, if finn-ratl ssion in o.tsihfr, tf retiring &'itra trill V rso'.scf to t;nt that this medic ps and bitter controversy may be brought to cn end. If the Union i.s to be lissdved. a bloodless separation is by all m-nns to lc coveted. . notitt u.nnnie thot imitosaiile. They will not only be iermittcd to po, but if necessary they will le assisted to o. Rut the Indianapolis Journal goes still further. It is not only willing to let the seceded States g, but it argues the impossibility of conquering the slave States if they letermine upon reparation. Read: THE FOLLY OK ATTEMPTING ftl'IUL'G ATIOX. i nun tho liiiiituatMIis Joi.ri.al Ic. 7, ls(ie.J Ru: let us ask all who butt all ihese consideration over with their rc oltitc determination to show that this a "etrenggoveinm.!if,"s:nd shall look so to natioiii r.bioad, how will a war strengthen the Government! In the tirst place u war will concentrate ever) slave State ngain-t the Government, l'toit is cu tuin, and may lc as well taken into consideration first as last." If it i. W't' mint then tneasnre ourselves fur n unr nf twciitv millions arainst ten millions, each si de - - ' " s - s ...... V .... u, ... equally brave in arms and military duties, and the I t aunty ihi'i'ns to yo to the land m,d jijul round tie Iiuihia at' t.'ir trn iniilion. How long would the j war last, tMuk vou; len vears? ies, tittv j ll t vears forever for the enmitv Ugot ot:en of it i never would die. The vcrv contact f our peo pic and territories would perjetuate it. Then we would never conquer the ten millions. Consequently our Government, instead of leing proved 'strong," wculd be proved nothing; 1 ut n hliMwtv (it'is.4 n fvmnic:ll itii rJil J t - Itnl " , , - ... if wc saould conquer the ten milh.ms as with I me ueqi 01 siavc 1 isutTectmn wc might 1 though j it night look a utile inconsistent tor n to ue su;h a help after protesting against the U'C of Indian help by the Rritirh during the revolutionary war), 'what havo we done! Mado our Government stronger? Xo, wc have hopelcsrlv split it. A 'caeeabh? separation might so nie time be eaeea!ily bridge-l over, and a reunion cllected. Rut a war bu: ic in blcxnl the lat hope of nvoneiliaticu. Wc conquer the slave States, and they are no more of onr Government or our people than if they had been allowed to leave both. We can't force them tu exerei-c any of the rights of members f the Confe deracy unles they please, and all can do is to coll ct "the revenue at their port. A we collect a!out S4.0C0,OtR) a year in all the jrulf States, and it will -ost Cl.h-0d,tKX) a )car to keep an army down there his enough to prevent the ieoi.le from iroinr

otf from u. and aTout 85.ihki.000 to maintain a j tight of a people at any time to change a govnavy to collect any revenu at all, it bn.k to us crntnet t whieli i oppressive t them, can not that a money op-ratiin, it foots np badly for n. ; leny that right to t!ioe w ho lelilicrate ly declare A to the seceding Statcswe sav. : ur Government is oppressive. What we claim-

"Let them go out." We can not keep them in ! tili l'iioit, though wc conquer them, and it i ' better have them friends out of the family. man envmus in in i. Discussir.g "The Philosophy of Disunisn, few days after, the Journal says: From tb In-lian Journal, IVcrmber 11, le0.

An alliance ltween the two sections rust ex- j that anybody has the right to judge whether the ist, but never an union. Thi philosophy of Government 1 intolerable but those who prosccesion. then, in onr judgment, justifies ns in j ose to hange it. We would not iermit F.n--advocating the peaceable departure of the Gtilfjlandto judge for us whether her Government States. was t-ppressive to ns. Wc have no rurht to On the 21st Deeemlr, 1?C0, the same pa jcr ! tor Sou h Candina whether our (iovemthus illustrates what it terms the follv of "euer-! U W'1"0 tor- Tlm, we . ne ither strengthen onr Government, or increase cien, and our revenue, or assist our pnKrity, by fighting the apvan tageis of SEPARATION. the seceded Statc.s.and we viedate a right asserted From th. Tn.i.u aj-ot Jiuni.iJ, l ce ni'. f r Ut. lcc. in oiir own Declaration of Independence, we Those who talk so glüdv of "ch r: ion." do ' meanly insist u ion an association that is connot stoti to think of it evil or it titles 'nc.. ' temjtu uly npeiled, and we end in splitting the

If, then, che dissatisfied sections h id not agree to ! remain together, thev should a-ne to part pea se-! able, to arrange such treaties, f.r the coti tinuance of trade between them a exist letween other nation, and divide the national pnijierty and debts fairly. This is not only pnveti'sable, but it i far easier than any other course. And if it is don, the interest of neither section will sutler greatly. Cotton will 1 sold North.' and the grain, meat and good sold South, a

before, irnplv becau-e J'hev can be fold in cadi cf5C to a l-ctter a dvantnVian levrhere. We of tire North will hare onlv oar due .'lure of the

national Kit to j,.y, and will l ave, a f.iir liarej oi Vac naiiotirvl j'pT-rty. Ilu-mCsS soon into C e Itan;:vd cliar.n 1, and on as : rim;rou-W n ever. It i at ka-t a easv to j toco p un a pfoTrtable rmines w ith the Snih wilh Rnglaiid, if we arc w tiling to take the ame ter t ! it. Rut if we arc not, anil insist on i t e ! it. preserving the Unin by force, we shall destroy all trade, North and South, utterly. Wc, a tlie nrnnin lcr of tho Union, will bo saddled with the whole national debt, and wiih a diminished revenue, and won? than all, with a bd: fifty times a large tokepnp th warw itTi the South. When all i doDC,both section ruined in trade, one full of rc!ellhns slave, the other full of starving workmen, and !oth loaded with war leb;, the Union is jut a .Vry dirijd as . it nv$ bforr the mtr U'jnn. Uor all our expense, bloodshed, illfefdin and ruin, we have sot what! SvthLiy. Think of it, ye cocen ion a ivocatc and profound statesmen, w ho leem force the wisest power of this nineteenth ccnturv! Vou have had your war, and you hare fgot ft cvih for pay, an 1 yon have pot nothing else. Your L'nion i a thou sand time more hojclc-lr dm ici than ever, nt.nnion then can do no harm however ielv i n.ri!t h rfnfnrv. that war '.nll nrvr 1 rr. sorted to to decide a question of humanity. Let uh face disunion calmlv, measure it fullv, and we shall find that, however we may hmcut it, wc need not be frightened at it. It will not be. forgotten, in connection with the foregoing ajgument, that the seceded States fent Commissioners to Washington to arrauirc terms I for a eaccable separation, the division of the na tional bbt and the public property. I from the I:i!i.ina;i Journal, I)ec."t, Isfjo. If South Candina comes to tho Union, asking to le let go, Itülicrately assuring us that she i not as well oft' here a s-he wonld le alone that fts social in with ns U opprcs-ivo to her, and injurious to her "in-tituticns," wc should say C'vent! With a thousand voice, if we ha I tin m. with every fibre of every tongue in the Union, if we couU command if, wc would eav, Consent! If any Stare, or States, desire to leave u. and reprer ent that they nre damaged by connection with n, we say, let them go. In an article reviewing a seeeli of "Senator Sewahd on the Cri.i," l-efotethe New ICngland Association in New York, the same pnpser icmaiks: lFr'in the fwiinnapr JourihI, Iwe. Ü7, lfiOd On the other point he expresses only the views we have advocated fiom the lginning of this disturbance. You can nt rv friendrhin and fraternity, and if the Union i not a friendly one it is nothing. If it i not held together by love for it and tinst in its 1 cncilts, it is i.'o Union, whatever el ?e it may bo. Fight tlie Gulf States to comjud thcra to love us well enough to stay with ud This is the nbsurdiiy at the lx:tom f coerci n. Rut if tliev lo not assail the Government, but come to the other States respectfully leprcrcnring that the Union is opprcssirc to" them, and that they lcrirc to be relicvnl from it, and to form a Government of their own. tho party that makes war in reply to that petition will find itself hopelessly ruinc ! in a very little time. The Journal, in comparing the difterent circumstances betwee n the nullification of South Carolina in 18.12, standing alone, and the sympathy of at least seven thcr States, making common cause with her in ISCO, snvs. jl'roni th liiilnir a; lis Journnl, I' c. It', l.S''O.J The cases are too terribly ili tic rent to admit of an applic ation of the same policy with the same rcsubs. What wa judicious lirmnes, in 132, may be ruinous policy in 18f0. What was a wise assertion of national power in 1832 may become a disastrous and n-clcss ivil w ar in 18C0. Those who urge earnestly the "Jacksonian" pdicy, should show the nation that this is a "Jieksonian" cause. In its issue of January 8, 18Cl,nnd at lilbrcnt periods afterwards, it advocatcl similar views to those wc have quoted. THE JOl'ltNAL CLAIMS THAT THE SECF-SSIOX OF SL"riI CAKOLIXA IHSSOLVES THE UNION. In announcing the fact that South Candina nad passed an act of secession, the Jour.nl takes the position that that act dissolves the Union. Read: 4 (c'le-m tlie lndi.iii.ii"lis Journal, lve. 22, ISCO. South Caiolina has seceded. Weil, we nie ft sevued nation. We arc a divided house. And we arc none the worse lor it. All tho mischief that the nppri l.cnsioii of li-nnion could do, ha been done, and disunion itself can lo nothing if we It not for-e it to. Wc are well rid of South Carolina, if wc nre only wise enough to count it n tiddumc and nothing worse. If other States follow, b t them. If all the South follow., let it. In God'u name, and for humanity's sake, let them go in jcacc. - If South Carolina pretend to be an independent Government, she wist control her own ports, end if we blockade them she mu-t drive us cut. It is absolutely necessary to her national existence as the air is to individual existence. Ry blockading their ports, therefore, we only resort to a trick to bring the first aback from South Carolina, instead of making it ourselves. And that tri- k i unworthy a gieat nation. Jf we nre right we can begin the attack, without reeking pretexts. If wc n:e not light, we aro only showing cwarlii-o a well a ein 1ty in resorting to such a trick. There i--, therefore, no cca;c from a war, if we refuse to admit the independence of South Carolina. THE ItEI CnLICAN rATEI.S CONCEUE THE RICHT Or SECESSION Oi: Itl.VOLLTION. From the Trilu-iif i f Xi vom' er 'JC, ldi If the cotton Sta'cs unite llv and nnWtlv wish to wiibdrvw t enee fullv fiom the lTidon. we thi ik they should and would be allowed to do so. Any nth nipt to comjH 1 tlie 111 bv force to remain wonld be contrary to the principle! enunc iated in the immortal Declaration of Ind ependence, contrary 10 tho fundamental ideas on which hu man lilertv is la-ed I r 111 li e Tr'.l ui p cf I-c. 17. Isitn If it (the Declaration of Independence) histi ficd the. secession from the Rritish Rmoirccf! t!iree millions of colonist in 177C, we do not see why it wonld not justify the secession f five w-nv 11 w-cuici noi nisuiv tue sccesrin mniions of Southerners" from the U viuon of , Fr.m ihe Tribune r.f Febrn ary 23, I'd. Wc have re peatedly said, and we once more in- ! sistthatthe great principle cmlnxlied bvj. rierron m ueclarati n ot American Independence, that! Govemm nts derive their just jowers from the tnsent of the ovcrntd, is round anil just, nnd that if the slave States, the cotton Sta'es or the Gulf States only choose to form an iudej enden nation, they have a tdcar moral rijht to do ro. Whenever it shall be clear that the great body of the Southern pcopl ? have become conclusively alienated from tlie Union, and anxious to cscaj c fiom it, we will do our best to forw anl their view . Irom th li.'J: .T'.ipf.l" Jörn;!, Nov. IS, Isßo. Secession is revolution. We, having estab lished our Government by icvolntion, on the ed a our right we can not deny to thoc who claim it of us, and helped us to a.sert our claim at the outset Frcia tl.c !u-l!:.t'p.r. Juurnal, Ic. 7, 1SC0. The Declaration of Imlejunde nee is our authoiity that any State or nation bdütcratclv resedving that its (iovernment is intolerable, has a right ;o change it. And it no where declares t'overnroent a IittiC more hopcle,Jy than any Ieact-a!de secession could do. frora th In '.ia:i.sj'v!i5 Journal. JiiCi.vy ID, 161 We lielieved and still lclieve, that tlie true provinc e of Government is not more to preserve i.se lf. than to adapt itsilf to the leman.L of tlie governed, and that a w ar to maintain one government over those w ho b lieve that they would 1 U tter otT under another, i unwise, cruel, and in American, ineinsitcnt.

From tb IUnr!i$ jonrail, rt-nnry 8, It was f-t (iol t Sonth Carolina go ) r.c-nn-e our I) cla-ation of In Iejn knc recos.ni?es the right of a ?opb- to change their G veinment; because if retain? d by force she would tmt !e n raemb r 'f the tJt,ioi-.; !cansc if suhjugatcd -l.e would 1 more tnnl!rnom. lhan if n 1 as. 1; 1"aue, in short, w arronM nr,t-maint.iin the

Lr.Mti, and anytl.iL'g but the Liuon would mt be worth niainlaiciinx at all, THE JOURNAL rROXOFXCEl THE MONTGOMERY eONTITt-TION AK IMfBOVEMFM TPON OCES. From the !n.1u!,.i Jrr., Mtrtb 21, ls1.J We have read it (the Constitution of the slave Confederacy) carefully and mnt confess that, except its special proTi ion in lcge-nl to slavery, it i r.Vui as good a charter of government a conld have l-ecn devised. Probably this excellence is du to the fact that in all im;ortant rcs-pccts i: i a copy of the one the Confederacy ha jut repudiated, thoug!i improve.! in a few point whieh experience hai shown to be imperfeet in ours. Aficr enumerating a number of those amendment the Journal adds: In all the-e particulars tlie Southern Constitution h an improvement on our?. .ANOTHER RKPl'BLICAN OSG4N IN FAVOK OF KLCOGSIZIXO THE f-OCTIIF.US C0 FEDEItACT. rrom tie Ci!cinn-i!i C'lunifreoel. March Isfll. War fjr the suhjustion of the Seccderj would be unwise and deplorable. If there arc two nations here who have been living in an unnatnral Union, they should, for the benefit of one or both, be separated. The sun will shine as brLduly and the rivers run as char the cotton fields will I c as white and the wheat fields as polden when we acknowledge the Son' hern Confederacy. Wc are not in favor of blockading the Southern coast. We are not in favor of retaking by fonc tlie property of the United States now in the fos-ession of the Secede rs. Wc would recognize the cxi-tenccof a Government formed of all tlie seceding States, ami attempt to cultivate amicable relations with it. THE JOURNAL INDORSES THE T0ITIONS WE HAVE QUOTED FROM IT, FOUR 3! ONTH AFTER THE FALL OF SUMTER. From the tfliaiuptilis Journal, .sujurt 21, lGl. If they (the nbe ls) will lay down their arms, and now come to the nation for permission to separate, we shall again say "yes," ron w e have j SEEN NO REASON TO CHANGE THE VIEW'S WE AIVCTEI LAST WINTER. That is the only condition the Journal requires to permit the re 1 eis to dissolve the Union, to divide this great Confederacy of States in twain. If the rcl-cds w ill lay low n their arm and ak permission to separate, the Journal, the organ of the Republican party in Indiana, is pledged to let them go. Is that lovaltv to the Constitution and the Union? Wc ftsk every candid citi.en to read the record of the New Yoik Triluw, the Chicago Tribune. the Cincinnati Commrrcial and the Indiana State Jjimal in favor of lotting all tlie dissatisf.cd Stat's secede or separate from the Union in peace, and set up a Government of their own, and then wc inquire, if tliev t an arrive at anv other conclusion than there was nn cxten-ivc conspiracy among leading Republicans to divide the Union to p rctuate the rule of the Republican party? Mote than this. Thev concede the right of those States to secede, whenever, in their own opinion, the oll Government has become oppressive, or injurious to them. Secession, these representatives of Republican sentiment sav, is lcvolutioii. Our Government, thev fav, i founded upon this doctrine. The Deeclaration of Independence, they claim, gives dissatisfied States the right to dissolve their connection wiih the Gove rnment to which thev owed allegiance, whenever, in the ir judgment, that Governme nt beecnr.es inimical to them. And they not only concede this rijit of revolution, but they go one step farther, and ray that Separation in peace is infinitely picfciahlc to ivil war. Follow out the premises of there Republican organs to a legitimate conclusion, an I what H tho rcsult? Is it ain thing less than "oeieion" on the part of tho Federal Government is despotic, tyrannical, cruel, anti-American, and ruinous to all sections of the country? If thev favor the pro edition of the war, arc they not traitors to their own convHions, and there can be ne meaner treac hery ? Such is the record tf disunion in Indiana and throughout the North. Can any one bmbt that the oft-expicsscd willingness f these leading Republican print to let all dissatisfied S;ate depart iu peace, bad a owcrful influence in strengthening SecesMonism iu the South, and piodneingthe present condilioii .f public nnau? Lp 'ti tho-c pap.T- rc-ts innch of the lespoiisi biiify of the terrible- civil war which is now convulsing the nation, and all the evils that may fidlow. Tliey loved their party more than their country; and were willing that this great Government, freight -d with hpe to the oppressed of all nation, shotiM be. disunited, nn! even destroyed, that a political party might triumph cnel continue in powe r. Stieh i the re-ult of unhallowed ambition. There arc other acts of the Republican bind ers, to which we can not now refer for want of! spe.ee, that perhaps more than the cvielenee wc have produced, onifirms the charge that immcdiatidy after tlie election cf 18C0 a conspiracy existed among them to di--olvc the Uidon, !y driving t!;e Gulf Stac, if no othcis, from it. Special Correspot.il nee ef the Chicago Titties. I roiil V itliiti(;ioii. Viinjrr of a Sejro Innnrrecthtn in Washington j Efrct upon th AVyr of the tracking of IsOt'joy, Sumntr ami GriileyTlie Xegrot ! are agyr'uceJ at thr President' dtcision vet to j h'ire nejjro solilitrsThe ejftet of I'opc't recent j OrJir. Wasiiingtox, August 8. There i rea-on to apprehend serious trouble from the negroes that arc now swarming in this District. Ten. of thousands of these unfortunate Ikings have lecn e-ntieel away from kind m.tstcrs ami comfortable home, and arc now here without any mean of support, except the pittance eloled out to them by the Government. Tiii pittance is entirely inadequate to supply them, any of the comfert3 of life, and barely sufticei to keep them alive. They live, if living it can be called, iu lirt, wretchedness and sejtialor; ! clothed in filthy rag, coveted with vermin, and ! tilling the atmosphere wirh a most intolerable ! stench. The money which the Administrarion I pav. to them to keep them in idlcnes. amounts i iu the aggregate to an cnormou rum tcr dav, 1.1 ! which the white iipic of the country are taxed j to pay. Most of the ncgroc. are a stupid a. i oruiew, niiii not a smgic inea excepr inose relating to work, eating and sleeping. As they have none of the first to do, they devote themselves exclusively to the two latter. Rut there are among them some men who have some legree of intelligence, whose ill-regulated mind and ungovcrnAble passions lead them to desire to : play the part of Toussaint l'Ouvertu e. Thec i m.n have be.cn petted and flattered bv tic leadin: Alolitiouist in Congress, Mho have instil-! l.d into their minds such idea as that all men ! are e iual; that black men in thi country have ! eeiual rights with white men; that this war was f brought alKut by the Abolitionists, the friend f j the black man. in order to literate the colored i people of the South from slaverv;and that, when this wa done, the black man should have the rame political right and the same social privileges as the white man. These houeyc! promises were greedily swallowed by those to whom they were addressed; anel they", in their turn e-ommnnie-ated them, in ruder language and in even more gl,wing odors, to all the blacks in general. It i well known how rapidly and how extensively news of anv kind travel among the n?groe. It wa not long, therefore, lefore the substance of these glitte-ring propects had Wen held Kforc the eves of all tlie slave in the Sta;es of Mirylanl, Virginia. Kentucky, Tennessee, Missouri, North Carolina. Yet of all the slaves in these States, very few comparatively, were moved by them. The most of them, to their honor be it" said, had ne enough

to know that they are be iter ofT where they are ; than t! ey coald he at the North, r.nd remain' :d at bom". Rut several thousand, nevertheless, weicc;:nglit f y the alluring bait, and, escaping ' frra th ir masters came hereto Wahingtc-n. Ti.e Iiis: fe-v thou-and that came found bete the negro's par.tdise; uo work and j lenty to at. Rut ?w Iren they iKran to pour in by hnnliedata

j time, when it iKvanv? d:th u:t to feed them and dciCkvUe to make them wo:k, they began to murmur. TLcy f;nd now that in order to gvt their food, they have got to wotk a givat deal harde r than tacy lid at home. This ha produced among them a fc.ling of deep seated 1Lcontent, which the few wily black mtn sjoken of alove have taken advantage- of. The nceat decirion of the President not to employ negroes as soldiers, bnt to use them as laborers, has been seized by there men as a lever, and they have u-ed it with tremendous ethet. At the secret rae"etinz of the leaders e f the blacks harangues have len made ly these men that make the blood run cobl even to hear of. They descrilic in tude but forcible and expressive terms the promise that had h cn made to them by the leaders of the Republican Jarty f deliverance from londage and cf participation in all the rights and privileges of the whites, and the shameful manner in which those promises had been violated. They then spoke of the lVeri dent's decision and read it aloud fnm the New York Tribun newspaper in order to give it greatcv effect. "He i w illing," said these incendiaiies, "to wotk us to eleath; but he will not letu have arms and uniform anil lc chilled a soldiers. Wc arc icood enough to be hi slave, but not piod enough to be his soldiers. He don't want anv 'nigger' soldiers! Niggers! will von stand that?" K'ri s of "No! no! we w ill tight!") "You will fight! Let mc see, when the time come, whether yon will fight!" This language w as actually used at their meeting. If the exe istcncc of this kind of feeling does not lead to bloody result, it will 1 lccauo the negrecs ;f America arc not the same Rings ns the negroes of the West Indies. The apprehensions exprpsp, jn my letter of Jnly 23,alout the ill e Meets to I excctel from the execution of Gen. Pope's order permitting the soldiers to plunder, arc already Wginning to be realized. Nor arc the men much to blame. They invariably quote (Jen. Pope's order, a printdl copy of which, cut from a newspaper, every man oarrie with him, as jutifjing them, ami even enjoining it upon them "to subsist on the enc my." Kvery fatm, every farm-house, every dairy, every smoke-house, every plantation, every dwelling, that comes in their track, i remorselessly plündere! of every jortable article, anei it is fortunate for the owner if his houses and barn are not burned down evcr hi head. A it i, he i left with hi family to starve, and with no clothe except those on tl.c persons of hi family, l.very üonictie am i al, every horse, every 1 ieken and pig, i either killed or driven oft". The country, a left by eur troop, is a elegit. I this tlie way to "restore the Union? Does any ne believe that these people, thu des poilcd of everything will ever again Income w illmg e ition of the Government whose soldiers thu ruin them? I repent ir, the Union can De vor be restoicd unless there practices arc inst nily stopped, nnd restitution made for the damage that ha already been inflicted. What doe Mr. Seward think of such practices? Is this his "humane" way of carrying on the war? Is this hi "conciliatory" methol of "winning b uk our en ing fellow citiens?" Truly, indeed, tlie world i tanding appalled nt the "magnanimity" displayed by the men in power nnderthis Administration. ANNOUNCEMENTS. 1""Wc are authorii'd to announce .TORN A. I'.i'A I. an ia lcp'-ii'te'tit imc n litit'ii.tl Unioa eaii!itite for Conuiie.n Fleas J.iile fur the Udi liistrict. I'T"" We nre authorized to uniiouiicc JOHN r.lT.WF.It, e,f ..nit Uport, a ciuidMate f.r Ouuty be C 'plrr, Mlllji Tt t tlie llfCiMOIl of tilt" Dl'nOKTUtiC Ci'llventiiii. MARmsp. i;cmIVN W();.i;i (m tlie ntst i,lt., t Aoptc, Ii. I , by tlif l: v. IU nJ I'l l intue r, I.ie iite li.nitt (t. 15. i.elin, At jiit.mt I tlo-fisili re-.iioe-.it Indiana Vdiiiitc-rn, to Mis J.i ( l.iiic Wollcy i.f A livnT.-l. MEDICAL. " PREVENTION IS DETTER THAN CURE. fCKl LADIES OI- OKl.tC TK HEALTH K t M PA I U K I , org I : ;! z.st ; i, or to ! by lioni an irnr.as. t.i bonil isfr.oii .o:y r.-anoi il-je-cl i.iiiablc. t'o c n Ifr-i-oi-'l we. ui-1 !?'. r i r.'serij'tii'H w lucli is pc rtVctH r-!in!.e- rtv.rt afc. tinl nliicSt In Ix-.-n ;rrsvri?el in vnrioi. s j.arls e.f the ol.l rM 'or I lie pa cer t nry. Altlonizh 1 1 is .iruele livery !ie"! .rr! -i i.ijli-, y I 1 1 h.istu'eti put i ; i-i h.iil pint '.l' ii.-S s.il.S very e t'nsi .y mi l tu f '.or!.:t nnt priceid. . r noitlf. the i rolt-riiii. 1 prnpos-s ' fwrnish l!ie re-eipf f r r:l,r.y th" sstioii n vhich e-vTj Ih'I.VC.iii supply leTS'-lI'vitfi a to'rfcct afeuaril, at any lri"ir store ! nr t n';n.- nm of c'-nt '-r venr. A n v j p- yic;;nir imir -'st viiite-n yon it i.-r!ectf iiarmi.-r-i, Sent .., part -Oth.-rhl .... r-Uipt ..f l,l.y a l.irvs-. bur. Dk.J.C. DKVKh'AI'X, V. ft. x, X. ily22-lw'(;l . X v Haven, cjonin cticnt. NOTICE. lv- TO ALL WHOM IT MAY CONCERN. We. the uiieJrrriiird, Le rebj rcti'y erl e!y let lot.uy or trade fr a e Uani note f.T two linn.r l mil fifty i 1Inrr. Rixen 1 y ns to Christian Wrieilt on the '14 of Aujnist, ls I. ati'l pre-, al le six months afte r elate, rai.l oote U in ol-taine'd liy fraud and inireprcseiit.ition, will ii.t he p c't I RANK KI.OIZ, Fh'.'l ZI Mr.K, CAM. H.(s ALFK. an-j'a-.int .1 MIX I N Vbl.Z A(iT. PROPOSALS FOH CANTEENS. ei rioe yi kti uma.-tku s Iiki-ak-m t, L. r". A., 1 i-.-!i ii.;ii'i.i:'t !:.:., An;;. S, i:bFD Pl.( F. .-A1.S tv:il l,- rr. ivc! nt tl.N office nut 1 10 o'd.-rk A. r., Aü:ivt 1.". IsO , r.ir tli 0livery nt the I i- et i:m-1 t Wer lioibf in tl:is Cty, f (lii.tmo) feu li:oiis.i!il Canteen (covered) n-cl Straps, Army r.it:rn. in l ?.e.. tn.e-half .f the ;le!ivr-! in (Il! Ten I'njs rrom l;'.t- of c.r.trut. at,.l the halat.re in fK'li'rn t):o k herenfti-r .um rtn i r seen at thi oitice. Al !r rs Propo.-N ns f..ll..w-: A. Q. M. U. S.JAJ Ju.mM lid., and ondc.irc tlienrPiopc f.il f r Catiteers." ' MERCHANT TAiLOR "fc . nt? . bc tit a- ji Dealer in iirml) -vi;nic rinllmi? und (Jcnu I'nriiis.t intr (inod.t Xo. io: east Washington street. (orrosiTt the ornr hoise,) INDIANAPOLIS, IN D. ap9-dly BRANDY. 'Ma Pure Ohio Catawba Brandy, i J S A.1M.TTELS 5s J" ACOB, proprietors, AD S0LE APPOINTING AGENTS FOR THE UNITED STATES. Depot 45 Columbia St., Cincinnati A. FRANCO, Ir..tiariai.oli. je25-dly A rent f.r Iiiiii::a. Illinois, ami Wj-cotirin. SINCINC BOOKS. Just Ilttlrtiif THE (OIDi: WREATH. rlOXTAINIXTtTwo Hucired ar-d ITty favorite s.ajs anJ Fxercires. Al-o THE NIGHTINGALE, Full of weet Son$ azJ tetodi. July 31. WILLARD Jb STWFLL.

COMMISSION MERCHANTS. C. K, S, Matthews, G K X E II A li COMMISSION

IStr FORWARDING MERCHANT, rc V i re- 5r oo V R u i I (I i n SO. 12 1 rPLT.TH 5 T . w F.ST flDK, Itetvvcen ?Inin Mrrrt nnd the Ilitrr LOUISVlfiLK, KY. -CrjU CniirimDt arv rrpcctfuUy solicit.", anS iranieiiia sa with pr unr t rtums jruara-.tfd. jn.H DRY GOODS. 0 0 Ö 21 91 P s - 7. pi c t . sW ft Hi Hi im SI s a - X SJ w I". n S M . C A r. H 'si v. EH 9 ' 5! im NOTICE. TO A I. Ii WIEO.VI IT n.X COM'C.tl. fHERFUT t-ivr ootü-c that I am the owner f tin- Patent for 11 S. Wsl'ii' itV I T'.vhio'mi in llxtiritii; Iilt fer tLe S'?-f-of Itrliar.a; at,l tht all pe rst.r.s rrijklit jr. vrtii! !?:;. u-in aeiT M-l.i-- opcratiuir "ii the principle ( f the "Vj:o:e r 1 .npi e .'to. 'i,'" Ss s. t furih in tlie sai.l Piite nt, d Off S-p:t-lfr 2. 1 r in tlo re-isoir--of ihr m. e! ifif re-spet t i 1 Murch l.'I, W; . an I Ftbrei.iry r. 1;1, nr.le- tv tt, wrtiin antlie-rile ei i.i ! S Wii,'i'lier, are ::i!rii;cii g ujii my iii;li'v. aii'l ' ill l-e ln-M lial le- ft-r el eru ie's or proci;ttl .n-t'..ri ei e J.ov. V. M. '. AI.W Ahl. f!io aol ri'sittniri at I.eTo Uo'i-., lo Ilia n- Ii. I rub July."!, hCl. ont-llr.i CHOCOLATE. ::l'tllihl in i?K(l. 'RAKER'S FiiF.MttM ClMX'tM.ATF.. tTRK 1'RKfi PMt'r I l'ir'a, I'.r ooa, Fr cli, Iloi.ie-opatliic anil aioll.i 'in'.l4i-. m arrniite'il e 'jii' in etuti y ami flavor to tlie Pari Cfoc.!ates; liavp OMt iln le-t f ov r tlin-e-qciariT f century, oet m pri.or:ecit l y all ealio bav enrf t;sevl tln-m to In M.ix-ri.T to any tli r;. .ManeifaoOin l l-v W. Il iWt r A Co., at tli'ir Mill ', iu Isrcl;ter, M.i-a , anel fur t;i'r at their Dri eli 1 j.-t No. '217 Fulton stree t. New York I'ity, aii.l ly t.r e-er niul Ih-nler generally thre.oe'lu.nt the I'i d. A i-lre li. i.. piKI ( K, jedn-rl.lTi 21" F ili'-n tu. t, Ne w York. MEDICAL. 1 1 S K I'iiU are tin rcMill ii imuc-Ii t.llly aiot caref M experience i'i all varieties r.f Fe wate ee.riplaint.-, ', ii. I In -s a; if I rrnfiil r!l . t , .r. I i.ii.lwL.rha- ! or White., Itiflnnnu ilioii of the Me Wer, Ki.lney ami Wotiih, ami hiss of Nervous Energy, etc. Their use I nl.e.ve all praise. Are entire ly fo-e fri.m any M-r.-nrirl or Mineral pe.lson, are pei rely veireirt'l.-. an l are fri-e from d.rnrrr; can Ie use:! with per'e'et n f ty. Ar.i'OHC the imitiy I h"il-aiils th liave ijel them In all p.rts ef the riii.;i no. .. tpeak ill of them, for all like tlienv Mairi.-ef laohcx in certain 'itu.itiuii- shotiM n.t use them. F-T reasons s.(. il reeti t)s mi eaeh tmx. Irlce(in tllar lr i:x. Tili' n:- -etit ill a ll'ill, flat h'X, Ir Jie free, to 5t parts e;' the t'rvle.l st.ite- njei ih. receipt .f i!i price, j Prepare e! a:.i sel.J I y t J IC. KWINli. ISo. IS Virginia Avenue. my7-e'.Vwly Itoliana oli-, lieliaiia. ml SI iff it Coltl, cjuoJl tJCrut s cues .h or gfatc 7Iitcttl which nirjht he chewed with a cimplc rcmeiv, T. r.s K-a tu. M tut V if neglected, often terrniratcc ccricudv. Fe-uf are aware cf the imfcH-moe ef dapping a ciiql er f Lin lit ßcliL in lis Jfirct ctage ; thxt vj.xizh in the beg-inning- wcidd yicli to a mild remedy, if net atiendei to, soon attacks the lung's. werejirsi introduce! eleven years afjo. It has been proved that they are the hect article lefcre the puUh fcr fcaiq.lL8., fields, Janculia, jL&luna., $01(111, the Hooking Coicfjh in ai&umillcitr, and rsjirxrcus cjfezticrjs cf the jDlitcaU giving immediate relief. Public Speakers V Singers will fnd them effectual for clearing and ctrcngtherdnfj the voice Bold by aU, Druggists an! (Dealers la r s. V r m tua inj.leicine, at 25 cents jper Lex. PIANO-FORTES. ALL WHO WISH TO GET ELEGANT r--i' -"s i.osciHi r.nio, super., rt'-i.e an fi oh 5 I IT are invitr.i 10 Mteiiiie the l'iju., ,f Cha -s rs:.. ii, i i .,..i;irii.re, on rxilJ.'t nil at Mr. Sufftni' Mu-i: !;eei . i;i the .Etna MuMiuR. Re mi op-n fre.tn 7 A. XI. tJI 9'; P. XI. j-''-n J. WILLIAM sriFFRX. DRY

ÄDb-0AC1Eic'.sä

IXsT

Spring and Summer Dry Goods TTo. 5 Bast "Washington St., TO MAKE I100M FOR KAKKY FALL STOCK, THK FOLLOWING GOODS WILL BE SOLD AT REDUCED I'KICES: LAWNS. LACK SHAWLS. J A CO N ETS. LACK M A X T LKS. OKGANDIES. SILK MANTLES. PLAIN B Ali EG ES, SUMMER SHAWLS, FIGURED BAREGES. PARASOLS. I'AREGE ROUES. SUN U Mit BELLAS, CH ALLIES. EMBROIDERIES, MOZAMBIQUE. COLLARS. TISSUES. HOSIERY, GRENADINES. - GLOYES. LAYELLAS, MITTS. NUBIAS, FANS, ke. Particular attention ii called to laincu C-'ooiI-s., ami TIin' mid Roy9 Wear.

M. H. GOOD,

DRY GOODS.

i (3 CT ?

nMvwwMiMiMav - t"rrTy" ' - , Jtv - .fe . i t. i ) m i P- n ,

g-'..i:- .1 s ; 4.l M - V ' jt ' K- ' ' .rpSiri- jS--;: vT:1 'i !. ri - ;v

v - - i t ,n tu 1 1- - j

- r ' - i . - .' 4-s . '

t -... ' s. .

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REDUCTION

Proprietor.