Daily State Sentinel, Volume 10, Number 3712, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 August 1862 — Page 2
DAILY SENTINEL . LT. . ... . TJOHllAY Al Cil ft r ti
Xr': t Mutt Jiltti., Democratic Union State Ticket. ro irmiTAKT or tat, JAMES 8. ATHOX, Of Marion Count?. ro ii'MTot or TATK, JOSEPH HI ST INK, Of FvuntA.n County. ro TKSHRE& Of 9TAT, MATTHEW L. RKETT. Of Dvle Cotintj. rod attorxict r.tJItAL, OSCAR H HOKD, Or Decatur Cow ntj. rot rriTtri:T or rrsLic i'mth.-ctio, SAMUEL L. RUGO, Of Allen County. c :o ci u i:s i os I, o ti i at i o.i 14 Ditrict JOHN LAW. 2.1 3.1 4th Cth 7th 9th 10th JAMES A. CRAVENS. H. W. HARRINGTON. W.S. HOLM AN. A. II CON DU I TT. D W. VOORIIEES. DAVID TURI'IE. J. K. EDOKRTON. The Double Duif. The Detroit Free Vrr$$ ütj, double duty deToNea upon the people of reinforcing the army, nd of reinforcing Conjrre. CerUinlj the radical republic! in that LkhIj hare Ii ! everything their own war. Their opponent have been too feeble tu even moderate their frenzj. What lave thev dune? II ive thev achieved victory? litre thej tn.ni.iged the war fuccesifull v? Will the people trust them any lunger. Succex h the evidence of capacity in public position. For ay ear and a half thin Congress h ir coiMlurte-1 tlie war. Tens of tho!is.itulj of live! bare been I .t. Hundred of millions of debt have been incurre 1 ; but where is the success? Let us reinforce the army with men who can fight, and Centres with men who c;in administer the affair of Stite with wisdom which will insure ucces. 'I Ii r The telegraph column are filled this morning with highly interesting nnl im-rtant newj. Among other matter." will be found an abstract of the me.-itge of Jirr. Davis to the rebel Conre; a letter from Mr. Lincoln to Horace Orlkley on the i-licy of his administration; acronnla of the righting upon the Rappahannock; the terrible Indian mi-iucie in Miuiie-MiU, and the defeat of (Jen. R. W. Joiixox by Jon MoRuax, near Gallatin. 'H.e telegraphic account of tbe latter affair ui.iWc it appear an act of lemeri ty upon tbe part of the Federal itmmander. With POO cavalry he attacked a largely .superior force, nnmbering. it i-j mi.l. 1,700. The result was the overwhelming defeat of Johnson and the capture of 300 prisoners, including himself. The 21 Indiana ( Rkii.lam'i) was envageil in this affair, ami the names of the killed, wounded and prisoners will he looked for in this State with a great deal of interest. In the next thirty days important events mut occur which will have an important tearing upon the great struggle. It is evident that the rebels arc putting forth every effort to strengthen their cause. TIm President lie f ine Iii lolicy. We publish this morning a letter from Horace G&eflly. to the 1 'resident demanding the employ -rnent ol the mot ultra Abolition measures in the prosecution of the war," regardless of constitutional obligation:?, and in the telegraph columus will be found the President's ainwer thereto. The response of Mr. Lincoln is eminently characteristic of the man. The President's j-osi tion, however, as he defines it, gives lioj-e that he uili not yield to the pressure from the radical members of his party. If he had (imply occupied the ground tint it was his purpose to restore the Union under the Constitution, and to accomplish that end he would uc all the means at his disposal to epeedily erush out the rebellion it would give him a m ral strength that would be irresistible. It is the duty of every conservative citi xen to encourage and su-t.un the President in re listing the radical counsels which environ him. Let him feel that the great body of the people are utterly opposed to the schemes of the Si m n i us, the tiRF.ELrTH. and the PiiiLLirts, and it will strengthen him in adhering to the policy which he and Congress, in July, 1 WG1 , declared should govern the nation in the prosecution of the war. The counsel of Mr. Orf.fliy to the President Comes with ill grace fron a man who has over and over declared that the people of the seceded St atrs had the right to withdraw from the Union whenever, in their judgment, its Government had become oppressive to tliem and their inteiests. Arrival of .tinjor (.rnrral Wright. Major General Wright arrived from the Eist ye-terday inciiiii g, and took looms itt the IJurnet Hou.e. He was immediately calictl uon by the various military olluials of this o-t, i tla whom lie held a long consultation. The boundaries ol his Department have been erroneously give.i by the telegraph. The following m the tenitoryol the t ew Department: Ohio, Indiana, Illinois. Wisconsin. Michigan, and Kentrtck v east of the Tennessee River, including Cumberland (Jap and the troops in tht vicinity. Missouri is not included in the Department ns was htated. The headejuarters are to le in this citv. The following getttlemen compose General Wright's stafl: Surgeon C.eueral. Dr. F. M. Hiester; Chief of Staff and Adjutant Gcrtcr.il. Maj-r H Mc Iean; A-i.Uiit du.. dpt. C. W. I ter; tjiurtermaster do.. Cart. 11. J. (iooUicti. Aide de Camrw. Capt. J. M. Rice, Lieu'.- T. L. llavden and II. W. HuUK.ll.jun. Oilier appoiutmeiiU will be made early the coming week. General WHght Ie!t for Louisville last evening, on a temnorjt v visit to General lhle. and will return early Sunday morning. Oa Mui.duj he wid assume command. and immediately proceed to huhtr. Tie (Jcnernl does not at lach much cie?it to the repotted invasion ol" Kei.tta kv , anl learo the recent thstuibauces the result of raids by guerrilla patties. He will however, at once put the State on such a looting that no further difficulties will take place. General Wricht is a man of middle age, and of a commanding appearance. His conversation i firm, hut pleas ant. We are inclined to regard the General as rautioud. and t.ot apt to act lustily or rashly. When he moves he will know what he is doing. He will cut td.oit red tape, and though kin 1 and humane to hi army, officer and ptivates.he w ili rigidly enforce every order, mal ropore that the army regulations be strictly mileied to. His bne of policy and futuie opeiaiions hive not vet ileielolfd llnQuirer. See llutv Tlif) Come. A month or o ago Gov. Sprague. f Rhle ' Island, issued his flaming call for a colore regt inert of volunteer The tlrenincj I'ost announce that thirty jirt recruit have been eu ' nlll. Why don the hundretls and thousands J of negroes who. we are told, are soiling for a! tight. Hock to Rhinle Inland aul ei!it ujtdcr tbe banner of Gov. Sprague? The Governor of no : other loyal Mate calls upon theni to volunteer. Little Rl ody is the ground um whUh our ed ored brethren can d.spl y the.r patriot ui anl khoulder the Diusket. HiNi'tiCKiCoiMr. The following ticket wa nomitiated ly the I mocratic Convention held in Hrdi ick county on Saturday: Ibrpresetstative, Tilberry Reed. Treasurer, Werltv Parker. I'eoirder, Henry Ii. Marvin. L'otuii.iioiier, Ifnac Pearon.
?ps-ij Crrrfleor of tb Clika Tin. from UavliltiKlon. An .VrtUtinn Concltr at Yahijtfn They vint Martltl Dtclartd rr thr Whole Comntry. WASlMMiTO.t, Auguit li. There is gathering here. jat now, of prominent Northern and Western Alolitionit, wh', for the three dy, have teu rtinitiu (roro the President's houe to the Slate Department, and from the State Department to the Treasury Department, and from the Treasury Department to their rendezvous, shaking their heads wi-ely, and whispering together mysteriously. They are not good at keeping a ferret, and what they hvve in view has already leaked out. They want Mr. Lincoln to declare mtrlial hwover the whole country, and to azurne the functions (though not the name), and exercise all the powers of a miliary dictator. Their satellites and followers b ib ble continually about the advantages of a military dictatorship, an 1 the arguments which one of them ued in my hearing to day were, that thev could never succeed in their eculi.tr (schemes until Mr. Lincoln was fieed from the trammels of mch "turtles" and old fogie.s as no surround and influence him; thi the ieaou why Mr. Lincoln had "nullified" the confiscation bill, refused to receive regiments of negroes, and tried to banih the negroes, is because he fears the effects of the anger of the conservative element in the country if he should act differently; that, if Mr. Lincoln should seize the reins of (tower in his own hands, his inclinations (which they professed to know) would lead him to declare instant emancipation to all the slaves, and to organize them into regiments, Ac. Ac You may rely upon it, the-e bold bad men are plying the President with arguments and inducements to this end. No one here, of course, be lieves that they hive any effect upon him. X. I'aperlrnce of m Cotton Speculator. A shrewd business man with whom we lud an interview, returned a s-hort time ago from an extensive trip through Alabama, Mississippi and other Southern States, where he had purchased a
considerable quantity of cotton. Following the Union army in its progress, he got access totpiite I a number of planters, by whom he w.-u invambly j well treated, upon KAtisfying them as to the real I character of his vi-it. They disavowed having any unmcnuiy leeiing ana were quite ready to entertain proposals for trade, he assuming all responsibility for the safety of his merchandise after it had been purchased. Though considerable d'.fliculty was experier.ee! in getting tian.ioitation North, the venture proved a good one. Our informant gives it as his opinion that comparatively little cotton has been burnt except at those points w here it was most exposed to capture by the Union forces, particularly in the neighborhood of navigable rivers, but that in the principal marts of tlie hi'erior, as at iSelma and other large towns which might be named, cuornious quantitief are stored for safe keeping. He believes that while only about one fourth of the usual quantity of cotton ha: been planted this year, that three times more grain will be raised. The latter, as a general rule, promised thegreate-t abundance and would more than cover the largest demands that could be made for consumption. Southerners: are spoken of as manifesting much sol'citude in regard to the prosjiects of recognition from foreign jowcrs. "Why don't tliey do something" "What is the reason for their delay" were quetions frequently asked. Upon being told that they could expect nothing from abroad that tli3 only friends they had were in the Union the Southern people manifested the utmost impatience, venting themselves in Ianlanguage which to delicate sensibilities might feem profane. The impression derived ie.-jeeting ti e strength of the rebellion was that the entire people were united, and quite reckless as to any personal loss or sacrifice. Our informant advises, .is tlie only hope of suppressing the rebellion, that a million of men should be put in the field. He thinks a genuine Union man scarcely exi-ts in the South. They ate found only so far as the shells from the Federal gunboats can reach. These are the statements communicated in a hasty conversation, and ate to be taken as the opinions of an individual iV. V. Journal of Commerce. ArchbisJiop Hughe on the War. Archbishop 1 1 1 .n t-s delivered a discourse in St. Patrick's Cathedral, in New York, on Sunday, giving his impressions of affairs abroad, intimating that foreign intervention is not probable, and concluding with the following remarks upon the war: There are things that no man can pretend to fathom questions that depend upon f o many additional circumstances for their solution. lut there is one thing and one question tint should be clear to every mind. It is this that if a war ot this kind should be continued many years it is recognized as being allowable lor other nations to combine in their strength and put an end to it. Hotter lor the people themselves to put an end to it wuh as little delay as possible. It is not a scouige that has visited in alone. From the be ginning ol the world wars have been nation against nation and oftentimes the most terrible of all wars which is not a w ar of nation against nation, but of brother against brother. How long is this to go on? If it goes on what is to be the rvsu't of it, as affording a pretext for all the jkiwers of Europe to combine to put an end to it? And, although I would not say that even then they should not be jeiinitted to interleie, when they interfered through benevolence, and, above all, when the sword might be put at rest, I do sayto every man, if they do interfere, and if they interttve successfully if the country and the Government are not maintained bv every sact iiice that is necessiryto maintain them, then your United States will become a Poland then it will become divided then the strife will multiply across every border; every State or every section will claim to be independent, and m ike itself an easy prey for thoe who will turn and appropriate the divisions of the people of this country for their own advantage. Old let it not be so. I know little of what has transpired lure during my absence. I have had scarcely time to look at the papers since I returned, hut. at all event, much his been done, though not much has been realized towards terinin iting this unfortunate war. Volunteers have been appealed to in advance of the draft, as I understand, but for my own part if I had a voice in the councils of the country, I would say let volunteering continue; if the tluee hundred thousand on your list be not enough this week, next week make a draft of three hundred thousand more. It is not cruel, this. This is u mercy; this is humanity. Anything that will put an end to this drenching with blood the whole surface of the country that will be humanity. Then every man on the continent, licit or poor, w iil have to take his share in the contest. Then it will not be left to the Government, whatever Government it will be, to plead with the ;'e and call on them to come forward, and ask mem if they would be drafted No, it is for thcui, the people, to rie and ask the Government to draft iheui; and those vvhowre wealthy ai d can not go them-elves can provide substitutes and bting the thing to a clo.-r, if it cm le done. No doubl the i-aiue e!rrts will be made on the other side and who can blame them? For the sake of humanity ve niu-t re srt to some course of the kind. In (lie mem time, beloved brethren, it is enough tor us to weep for this calamity, to pray God tint ii may be put to an end, to make sacrifice of everything that we hive to su-t.iin the independence, the unity, the peipctuity , the prosperity of the vidy Co eminent we at know Sedge in the wcrld. Hut it Is not nece-iry to lute nur enemies. It is not necessary to be cruel in battle, nor to be cruel utter its termination. It is necessary to le true, to le patriotic, to do fr the country what the country needs. and the blessing of God iil recom-I-n.e those who discharge their duty without falteting.au! wdh oit violating any of the law of God or man If'The (juincy Ihr-iUl sas: "In his great, s: etch at the Couit hou the other night, Mr. Hrowning sai l he stood upon the ime platform 1 with the Piesidotit; that he understood the views' of the Piesidenl upon the great issues of the day, I and that the position of the Pre-ädeut was also ! his povtioi). and the views of the President were! his riew." It follow j. then, that those Abolition Paters which SMiit..r linmnmn m. pail aIo the President. Those who hive assailed him in the pist hve also a-sailed the President. In no other way could Senator Ihowiiing have o strengthened tle President in the popular confident C as by the foregoing announcement. tTrfD. D. Hat.v. Ksq , has been nominate! as the Democratic candidate for Ptosevutor for the Kighth Common Pleas District, consisting of the countie of Johnson, Hoone, Morgan, Monroe and Shelbv.
Frun tb 5w York Tribune Anr. 20. The Abolition uarfarf upon in? President 1 lie nprnlnff of liolilittr A Tiolent and itandaloiM aawnnlt.
TIIK PRAYER OF TWENTY MILLIONS. To Abb Air am Ljncolx, President of United States; Dear Sia: I do not intrude to tell you for you must know already that a great proportion of those who triumphed in your election, and of all w!k deiie the unqualified suppression of the rebellion now desolating our country, are sorely disappointed and deeply pained by the policy you tt em to be pursuing with regard to the slave of rebels. 1 write only to set succinctlv and unmislakably before you what we require, and what we think we have a right to expect, and of what we complain. I. We require of you, as the first servant of the Republic, charged especially and pre eminently with this duty, that you i.xt.ci Tfc the laws. Most emphatically do we demand that such laws as have beeu recently enacted, which therefore may fairly be pie-umed to emlody the prtfent w ill and to be dictated bv the prtteni ueeJs of the Republic, aud which, after due consideiation have j received your personal sanction, shad by you be carried into full effect, and that you publicly and decisively instruct your subordinates that scch laws exi-t, and that they are binding o; all functionaries and citizens, and that they are to be obeyed to the letter. 11. We think you are strangely and disastrously remiss in the discharge of vour olScial and im perative duty with regard to the emancipating! provisions ot the new Confiscation Act. lhose provisions were designed to light slavery with liberty. They prescribe that men loyal to the Union, and williug to shed their blood in her be half, shall no longer beheld, with the nation's content, in bondage to persistent, malignant traitors, who lor twenty years have been plot ting and for sixteen month have been fighting t divide and destroy oar country. Why these traitors should be treited with tenderness by you, to the prejudice of the dearest rights of loyal men, we cannot conceive. III. We think you are unduly influenced by j the counsels, the rcpreentaliuus, the menaces ot certain fossil politicians hailing from the border slave States. Knowing well that the heartily, unconditionally loyal portion of the white citi zens of those States do not expect nor desire that slavery shall be upheld to the prejudice of the Union, for the truth of which we apjteal not only to every Republican residing in those States, but to such eminent loyalists as II. Winter Davis, Parso:i Diownlow, the Union Central Committee of IJaltimore, and to tj.e Nashville Union; we ask you to consider that slavery is everywhere the inciting cause and sustaining baee of treason; the most slaveholding sections of Maryland and Delaware being this day, though under the Union Hag, in full sympathy with the rebellion, while the free labor portions of Tennessee and Texas, though writhing under the blooly heel of treason, are unconquerably loyal to the Union. So e:nphatieally is this the ease, that a most intelligent Union banker of llaltimoie recently avowed his confident belief that a majotity of the present Legislature of Maryland, though elected as and still proteasing to be Unionists;, are at heart desi rous of the triumph of the Jetr. Davis conspiracy; and when a.-ked how they could be won back to loyalty, replied: "Only by the complete abolition o! slavery." It seems to us the most obvi ous truth, that whatever strengthens or fortifies slavery in the border States strengthens also treason, and drives home the wedge intended to divide the Union. H id you from the first refused to recognize in tho.-e States, as here, any other than unconditional loyalty that which stands for the Union, whatever becomes of slavery those but es would have beeu, aud would be, far more helpful and less troublesome to the defenders ol the Union than they have been, or now are. IV. We think timid counsels in such a crisis calculated to prove perilous, and probably disastrous. It i. the duty of a government so wantonly, wickedly assailed by rebellion as ours has been, to oppose force to force in a defiant, dauntless spirit. It can not afford to tempotize with traitors nor with semi-traitors. It must not bribe them to behave themselves, nor make them fair promises in the hope of disarming their causeless hostility. Repiesenting a brave and high-spirited people, it can afford to forfeit anything else better than its ow n self respect, or their admiring confidence. For our Government even to seek, after war has leen made on it, to dispel the affected apprehensions of armed traitors that their eheiished privileges maybe assailed by it, is to invite insult and encourage hopes of its own downfall. The rush to arms of Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, is the true answer at once to tlie rebel raids of John Morgan, und the traitorous sophistries of Rciiah Magol'in. V. We complain hat the Union cause has sufleied, und is now suffering immensely, from mistaken deference to rebel slavery. Had you, sir, in your Inaugural Address, unmistakably given notice that, in case the rebellion already com menccd were persisted in, and your efforts to picserve the Union and enforce the laws should be resisted by armed force, you "w ould reeognize no loyal person as righttuliy held in slavery by a traitor, we believe the rebellion would therein have received a staggering if not fatal blow. At that moment, according to tlie returns of the most recent elections, the Unionists weie a large majority of the voters of the slave States. Hut they were composed in good part of the aged, the feeble, the wealthy, the timid the young, the reckless, the aspiring, the adventurous, had already been largely 1 ureal by the gamblers and negro-traders, the politicians by trade and the conspirators by instinct, into the toils of treason. Had you then proclaimed that rebellion would strike the shackles from the si ivcs of every tr.ii tor, the wealthy and the cautious would have been supplied with a jowerfiiI inducement in re- i main loval. As it was, everv coward in the Soioh j soon became a tinitor ftoru fear; for loyalty was ; perilous, whne treason seemed comp iratively : sale. Hence the boasted unanimity ol the ö outli j a unanimity based on rebel terrorism and the ! fact that immunity and safety were found on that j side, langer and probable death on ours. The rebels from the first have been eaer to contis- j eate, impiisou, scourge, and kiil; we hive fought i wolves with the devices of sheep. The result is ; jut what might have been expected. Tens of thousands ate fighting in tlie icbei r inks to day i who.-e original bias and natural leaning would j have led them into ours. : VI. We complain tint the conß-cation act j which you approved hahitiully disiegarded by j your Generals, and lh.it no word of tebuke for! them from y ou has yet reached the pubüe e ir. j Fi cutout's pioclam ition and Hunter's uder favor- j ing emancipation were promptly annulled by you; I while Halleck s No. 'I, forbidding fugitives trom slavery to rebels to come within his lines an or- ' der as uiiiiiiliUry as inhuman, and which receiv e l the henty approbation of every traitor in Auier- 1 ic i with scores of like tetidency, have never, provoked even yo-ir lenionstrance: We complain ' that th officers of your armies h ivo habitually repelled rather than invited the appioach of slaves who would have gladly taken the risks of escaping from their rebel masters to our camps, bringing intelligence often of inestimable value to the Union cause. We complain tint those! who have tlius escaped to us, avowing a willing ness to do for us whatever might be requiied, i hie been brutally and tn t ilv repulse I, and often sin rendered to be scourged, maimed and tortured . bv the ruffian tr iitois who pretend to own them. ' We complain that a larre pit -portion of our regit- 1 I r army otficerst, with tntny of the volunteer,; eviu'u far mote solicitude to uphold slavery than to put down the rebellion. And, finally, we com plain that you, Mr. President, elected as a Me publican, knowing well what an abomination slavei y is, and how emphatically it is the core and e-sence of this ab-nrums rebellion, seem never to interleie with these atrocities, and never give a direction to your milit try subor- ' dinates, which does not appear to h ive been con ceivel in the interest of slaveiy rather than of fieedom. VII. Let me call vour attention tithe teceut tragedy in New Orients, whereof the tacts aie obtained entiitly through to ilavery channels. A consider; ble bhly of resolute, ahie-bidled men, held in slavery by two rebel sugar planters in defiance id" the Confiscation Act which you have approved, lelt lantatinns thirty miles distant and made their way to tlie great mart of the Southwest, which they knew to be in the undU- i puted 'possession of the Union forces. Thev ' made their way safely and quietly tlu-ongh thiity miles of tebel territory, eipect ng to find freedom ! under the protection of our tlag Whether they I had or had not heard of the passage of the Con- j hseation Act, they reaoi.ed logically that we j Could not kill them for deserting the -erv ice of i their lifelong oppressors, w ho had through treason I become our implacable enemies. They came to us for liberty and protection, lor which they weie i willing to render their best service; they met with ' hostility, captivity, and murder. The barking j of the base curs of slavery in this quarter deceives no one not eveu themselves. They say, inJeed. J that the negroes had no tight to appear in New : Oilcans armed (wilh their impliments of daily labor in the cane field) ; but no one doubts that '
they would gladly have laid the-edown if assured that they should be free. Th'y were set uun and m lirned, captured, and killed, bee ue they sought the benefit of that act cf Congress which they may not pecislly have hetrd of, but which was none the less the U w of the land w h i b they had a cletr ri;4 to the benefit of which it was tomrbojy't duty to publish far and wide, in order that so many as possible should be impelled to desist from serving rebels and the rebellion and come over to the side of the Union. They sought their liberty in strict accordance with the law of the land they were hatchet ed or enslave! for so doing by the help of the Union soldiers enlisted to fight against Maveholding treason. It was efimrUJy'$ fault that they were so murdered if others hall hereafter suffer in like manner, in default of explicit and public direction to your Generals that they are to recognize and obey the Confiscation Act, the world will lay theblarueon you. Whether you w ill chose to bear it through future history and at tbe bar of God, I w ill not judge. 1 can only hope. VIII. On the face of this w ide earth, Mr. President, there is not one disinterested, determined, intelligent champion of the Union cause who does not feel that all attempts to put down the rele!lion and at the same time upholds its inciting Cause are preposterous and futile that the rebellion, if crushed out to morrow, would le renewed within a year if slavery were left in full vigor that army officers who remain to this day devoted to slavery can at best be but half w ay loyal to the Union and that every hour of deference to slavery is an hour of added and deepentl peril to the Union. I appeal to the testimony of your Ambassadors in Europe. It is freely at your service, not at mine. Ak them to tell you candidly whether the seeming subscrvency of your policy to the slaveholding, slavery-upholding interests, is not the perplexity, the despair of statesmen of all parties, and be admonished by the general answer. IX. I close as I began with the statement that what nn immense majority of the loyal millions of your countrymen require of you is a frank, declared, unqualified, ungrudging execution ol the laws of tlie land, more especially of the confiscation act. That act gives freedom to the slaves of rebels coming within our lines, or whom those lines may at an times inclose we ask you to ren der it due olwalience by ublicly requiring all your subordinates to recognize and obey it. The rebels are everywhere using the late auti negro tiots in the North as they have long used your officer's treatment of negroes iu the South, to convince the slaves that they have nothing to hope from a Union success that we mean in that case to sell them into a bitterer bondage to defray the cost of the war. Let them impress this as a truth on the gieat mass of their ignorant and credulous bondmen, and the Union will never be restored never. We can not conquer ten millions of eop!e united in solid phalanx against us, powerfully aided by Northern sympathizer, and European allies. We must have scouts, guides, spies, cooks, teamsters, diggers and choppers from the blacks of the South, whether we allow them to light for us or not, or we shall be bafHed and tenelied. As one of the millions who would 'd.idlv have avoided this struggle at any sacrifice b it that of principle and honor, but who now feel '.hat the triumph of the Union is indispensable not only to the existence of our country, but to the well being of mmkind, I entreat you to render a hearty and unequivocal obedience to the law of the land. Yours, Horace GkkLY. New York, Aug. PJ, Ij-GO.
.HcClellaii I.iLelv (o be sent SouthweM. The New Yoik Sun of the 2Ul says the indications aie, that JlcCIellan's army is partially under the command of Gen. Ihu nside, and the for mer be provide.! with a command of greater im- i portant e in the Southwest. S5;n.-e the departure ! of HaSIeck from that point the Federal interests i hav e been committed to no wide-spreading supervision, such as they had receive. 1 at Iiis hands, and no one has been deemed sufficiently experi eoced, tried and mature to receive the same power, save and except MrClelian. It is not im probable, there! ore, that McCIellan and the tlow er of his army may hereafter be constituted an army of the Mississippi, or form the basis ol some extended military ojrations in the Gull States. Ci ii. J'rtss. What is Senator Si mner Doing? On the adjournment of Congiess, mostof the Senator particularly those of Democratic and conservative antecedents devoted themselves at once to sti engtheiiiwg our armie- tiv lVi.olin tt.ui;i. and organizing new legimcnts. Hut where is tlie tecord of Chailcs Sumner in this re-pec t if It is conceded that pertinacious, unwi-e, and ill timed Congiession.il "efforts in behalf of the negro," contributed to the influence of rebel leaders, and stimulated voluntary and other enlistments into the rebel armies thus rendering nece-sary additional iiotliern troops to cope with them. What is he now doing towards furnishing and encouraging loyal troops? The people would be glad to know. Is he one of the "hosts" Greeley prates nbout, whose devotion to the negro won't sanction fighting for the Union except "on conditions." Alliamj Aryus. LATFST FROM TIIK 1'niKI.S IX IvKNTlTKY. We are reliably informed that a dispatch was received iu Covington from an Assistant Cii.tt tcrtr.as ter at S morset, Ivy., that there are now near that place a fotce of twelve thousand rebels under General Iluckncr. It is thought, that a de tcrmined effort will be made to push through Kentucky to the Ohio River. Cin i'rfi.. (Its. Hitler nt New Orleans has at last provoked the most virtuous indignation of abolition ism, lie has, in his own language, "interfered to prevent an insurrection for liberty by slaves of planters up the Mississippi;" which interpreted, j means that (Jen. Hurler recently inteijHi-ed j against a servile insurrection, witlun ti:s jurisdiction, of which women and ehildten would have been he victims. A D TAT? TI.sr'S.A' ,t.-lr(rt;tti at t ik t v or if ft time, ttnl rh red niit ftfrt the fj-j iniiim j ii Ml. f t or the rime jfi-tff-f, irt'i tfflijf'. the r.jnl.ir rith ftrtht hi nit- nj to the t ivit t X it re nnl( rut out . j MEDICAL. PREVENTION IS BETTER THAN CURE. I fglO LADIES OFoni.lCATK II EALTII OÜ IMPAIRED 1 . orj4tdtitio?i, or to those by whom an increns of family is from a.iy reason objectionable, the i iidersined wocl! otf.-r a rescription w&ich is perfectly reliable and afe, i'.ud which hs been prescribed in various jartsof theOld Vvrblfur thpa-tctit'irr. Althousrh this urticle l very -heap and iniple, yrt it has been put up in half 1 pint oottle and sold very extensively at the exhorbitaut 1 priee of per bottle, the undersigned propose o furnidi th- recipe for ? 1 , by the posesion of which every j lady can supply herselfwith a perfect safeguard, at any drui store for the triflinir sum of 25 cents per year. Any physician -.r druiM willtellyou it ir perfectly haruil.s, thousands . f teslimoniab can be procured of it eltxacy. ; Sent to any part cftiie world on receipt öf f l.byaldres. I Da. J.C. DKVKliAL'X. j V.O. box, No. 2303, New Have n.Counecticut. liy2J-ii'61 I i ESTRAY. VyoTICK Strayed from the siibnber, living at No. l"-", North Eist street, on the ereniuc of th .2d of Aiizut, lo-t.. an iron pray horse wjih dark les, niH' and tail, slo-d a'l rouil w ith old shoe, about I."', bands hinh, even year old, trot and pad' under t hi saddle arid drives k.n i:y in 1; imtsi, A liberal reward will be jjiven f'.T li. r'ii;ii lo me or for any information rohceruimr liiswLer. a'i..ut. Information mar Le left at Wood. & Foudray'a livery Ma! 1 Indianapolis. aUK'2M3t D. ti. CALK. NOTICE. TOTICE ALL IEK.SGN ENROLLED, tK 1 iy i enro.led, - alle bV.ied men for tL purM id be in-.: liratted from the county of Marion. State of Indiana, b-r strvi.e in the arniv, under the crdrr of th" iTesH-r.t of the United States dated A :?u-t 4th, W, who may have claim to exemption from swell military sen ic, an" hereby notified to per-.nally be and aj.ir at tlie State House In the c:ty of Iik1Ut:.ip Ii, .: Mo:.,Ly, the lt day of Sep'eruWr, 1Ä"2, bef..re th ui;ders:ned lVmmisiner for aid n an. ty, and hi I-p itie, wo. will sit a a board t hear ami determine the cues of persons claiming to 1 exinj t ron n-ihtary duty. A Surtou w ill be aj po-uteU, whu4 ''.utyilwiil be to brrein. ikJ examine petw-n c!aimi:ig exemption on the srouinl of di-abil.tv, atvl to certifv the same in w rituie. " J. J.'n TDKN, Commissioner f r Miri' :i county, Ir.d;ju. Irt-lianapol;., In.b, Auri-t IC:h.lj2. " aufT2-Vl4t WANTED. " WOOD WANTED. CJEAT.n rROIttSAL wnl W rwlv-l at the Institut-f'-r the I'.ln.d uutil the 3-1 of Sepfemt-r l:ct, f..r j lunuL!!i; 2.ai o.rt veaonet k.h.i.iu i derhitftbe n.outlis of S pteuo ir ar. l LVtoU r. a ir2-ItJ d--!iv'r..t
WHOLESALE CROCERS.
Earl & Hatcher, IV II O li K Si A i. s: GROCERS, LAFAVETTE, IXDI1X.1. OHO iniS. Xew Orlin S -parjust rocrivc! from VF J Mfinj.his, anl for .1- l.y KARL A HATCHER. JQQ bbbS Kt fhio.l Sugar fV.r wie by KARL & II UCIIER. ()0 IJAr,s Cuir'r: H0 Hasrs Java Off.-.-; 0 Hales .Mocha LVfTVr; For sal by F.AÜL & IIATCHKR. T O II X C, J -Q bOXKS 5 bump; 10U r....os 10 Lump; 75 boxes S Lump; 100 p.oxps bright lbs; T.0 Tl'jxes dark lbs; TAX) Ca.Mi.-s 4' 11?; 50 Ki q:s ix Twbt; The alcove a.--rrni-nt of Tobacco is now the l.irpost to be found in the West, and will be smM bt tow- the current rates. HAUL 1 HATCHER. AGENTS WANTED. VOlt .IIHIIN S. C. AltllOTT S HiMory oflho Civil War in America To bo beautifully :'lut rated wita sti;i:l km; ravings Of I-an.l aid Naval Iittle Seen, Portrait f prominent actr.-, Ac, Ac. Mr. Abbott is the well known jiutaor of the "biff of Napoleon," Ac. bxperienced Agents will litul iu this a book that will M'll I lie JieojlK r.,.il L. Kor Territory, inirtirdiat' application inu-t be made by mail to the I'ublitdicr, or personally over the Journal Oilier. I.KDYAbO lUbb, aui;4-w:tni Indianapolis, Ind. PROPOSALS. Scaled Proposals. Ql AKT?.:! VSTKn' OKrAKTMKNT, U. S. A., Iiiili.inaiolis, Ind., Atigu-t 20, lNi'J. j I SF.At.KI rU.OTllSAl.S will be received at this .Kico until ten o'clock A. M., on Thursday, Auiru.-t 2Sth, i:G- for '."(( Cuvn I ry Horse aiitl .()() Artillery I!ore, All to be delivered at the tioveriimeiit Stables, in Indian-apoli--. Indiar.a. IViiverie of (!.-va!ry Horses to be as follows: fx within ten (10) days from date of contract. r.(;u " twenty (2) 00 " thirty"pi) " " TOO lorty (40) " " " Said horses to bf sound in alt p.irt'rtiliirs, rot le than six () nor more than eich', (s) jears old; from 15 to 16 band IijkIi; dark colors, (no iireys;) pood square trotters; ; bridle i.-e, and of size suflii ient for cavalry purpose. j Specific-it ions of Artillery Horse. J (I.) lt!6 Ul.ee! Ifarsrs in pair, bays, browns or blacks. Iß hands hiirh or upwards, Mror.sc and : active, fioni 6 to y vears old. ei:t irely sound, well broken and squ ire i rotters in harne-s. (2.) 2-V2 'lorn in pair, bavs, browns or blacks. 15 ban 1 bili or upwards, strong, quick and active, entirely soiiiid, from Ä to ! .enrs old, ' well broken and squ ire trotters in harness. i i (3.) 122 lb r-es, iu pair', bys, browns or blacks, ; entirely otind. frin 5 to y year old, M7e suitable for xchances in the two f.M named hor.M-s, well broken aud-r-quarc trotter in har- i Jie.s. Faeli lir, to wei'h not le.-s than ' eleven hundred (1100) pound. i Deliveries r-f artillerv horses to be as follow: 40 h r-es of the first naun d.j e first named. v -,.r.,nd 14 l'o Ilorsp, third " ) Si) 44 30 Within seven days from dale of ctt:!ra t. The sam iiuiiitier (b.) of san. e I'la.-s,', re-p'ctiely, within f-ur- ; teen (14) d;Msfroni date of coutrrct, and the residue (200) ' within twfiity () day from date of contract. So bid will l.e entertained unlesn acconipaüied by a ! RU.irai'ty f.r its taithf.ii performance Form o bid and fruaraiity cu t? Imd on applir iiion at ' thi office. No bid w ill be elitert.-ined for les than lOO hordes I Proposals will be endorsed, 4T.oj.o-al b-r Cavalry Horses" and "Proposals br Artillery Hor.-e.." Art other information will be promptly given on application tothe undersigned, jK-r-onaüv or bv letter. JAMES A. I. KIN, auK22-dtJ A. Q. M. U. S A. MEDICAL. TO THE PUBLIC. Ä1Y WIFE, K0SANNA LliOWX, LEIN AH LICTF.D I f 1 w ith chronic disease for some tinie, a:xl feeing na advertisement of one Dr. S. W. Howard A Ivdy, who made perioli( ai viit to (ireenfa-ld, I called upon the m ile !ocr.r, aud after some conversation with him, I em- . ployed him to take my wife's case under treatment, fully , U-lievin,: at the time, from what wa-s said during our ' conversation, that he was Dr. K. How.ir-1 A Son, of Indianapolis. ihece'M.rared Cancer lector, (of wh .ni I had ften heard,) who i brother to I-. N. P. Howarl, of tireenfit-id. and who is now treatiiii; J-.-rdii I-icv, of Jarkson to"ML:p, for a cancer with an alino-t certaiMy of surce.ss, -o rafO'l ba l.e improved under tiio science ani wivlorii of his treatment. The Lv'U Ir. Howard treats! my w ifr bra considerable leiiifth of time without irivm? Ler ary relief, or belief. liinj hrrin any njantn-r whatever. If there wan any change she was woise Uu he w as dicharced than when he undertook to treat her. HcPevicir ttat he i no physician, but a oH:nary mechanic, asj-uir.injf the practice of medicine to deceive the jn-ople and luaLc money out of their creduli'v. I publish this to the world, and warn all who are afflicted, that the said "Ir. S. Vi. Howard it IJidy, Clairvoyant an 1 Cancer Phvk-ian.s." are hnmbor ar.l inpotcr. JAt'olt. I'.I'.UWX. Hancock eountr, Indiana, July, 1-2. auK20-dllw3m MERCHANT TAILOR. MERCHANT TAILOR, Dealer in Urndy-TInde Clotlunc and; iiemi' i urnnnine iiooot Xo. 1C5 EAST WASUlXCiTOX STREET, (orrosiiTE the coir hooe.) INDIANAPOLIS, IND. ap9-dly
COLD AND SILVER.
Iwi'.I pay the hlrhet pre for Amrn ' ! I enl ?,!- ver, also for L'uite-d Star l'min. Xtr., oM itie. KILLT r.l.CM'N, Fxciur.t'? T-roVer. OCW X". lt F.aot Wahirsrten treet, tip-.. 2d d vor to riht tan 1. au16-lit DRY COOPS, NOTIONS, &C. AVchli, Keiiiioily A: Co., II WHOLESALE DEALERS IX FObFIGN AND 11 f mestc Iy t Notion, a-vl tJent' Furnihinc i.ood.. CM Tot OtW p.oild.ne. au;IC d3ni Meridian street, bi bar.ap. 1., lint. tMMISsTONMERCHAIMf C. L. S. Matthews. fiKXKR AL COMMISSIOA AP FORWARDING MERCHANT, Lnr;rr rirc-l'roof Hui Illing NO. 12 FOURTH ST., WEST Sil E, Hcttvcrn 7Iain Mrrrt and the Ulver LOUISVILLE. KV. KlOJu Conicr.r.ieut are rejnrtful'y solicited, and Immediate ale w:th prompt retu'n cnaranteed. Janl3 DRY COODS. 0 Q 0 0 Ö 3! H Fl R I -r. s ft jz II - - b - S p - i: u ! f s a
' -z 2 r , T -s i ' 1 0 7 ' J!Z " a - 7 4 -r ". Z y z, . ' 5 ' m s. i M " z z O T m
t-1 Hi ü X H I M 0 v 5 ?! CHOCOLATE. i:tt(tlislirt in list). I BAKER'S PREMIFM C 1 1 (X "( LATE. IT" R E PREPARED Cocoa, broma, l'rei.ih. Homeopathic and Vanilla Chocolate, warranted eqti.il in ijujii y and flavor to the Paris Chocolates; have st.l the test of over three- ! quarters of a century, and are ror.o.inced by all who' have once used t!i( in to !e Miji rior to any other?. Manufactured by AV. 15.iker A Co., at th ir MilD, In Dor- 1 hoter. Ma. , and for tale al their P-rai ch Depot No.! 21" 1 ultou street, New York City, and by (inters and J Dealers ueiicra'.Iy tl.r uizhout the Union. i A.idres, 11. L. PIEJ:CE, ! jel0-d3ni 217 F ilton streit, Niw York, i ! MUSICAL. HAPPINESS OR MISERY? THAT IS Tili: (il'KSTIOX. flllE proprietor- of the "PARISIAN CA LIN ET OF S WONDt.Rs, ANATOMY, and MEDICINE." have ib-lermiued, rrpran'.le-s of expi n-e. to i-u., free, (for the benefit of i;!b riiijr bumii'i:) KOFR of the r most iustnetive anl iutetesiin lr ure on Marriaui ainl its Disi'ijiiticitioit.., Ncrv.iis I i . J I i t y , Pi-etniiure l'line id Manhood, bidii. si ii, Wetness or Iit'presrioii, ftv f Energy and Vital Powers, ti;.- iro.it Social Evil, and tlios,' Maladies which n-Ml fr-i:i o.iiliIul f 'll.es, 1".fesves of Maturity, or Itrnor.-inci-ot l'liv -iol py and Nature's Law- These invaljable Lecture liavo been the me.in of enlihtenini; and h.ivini? thousamls, and w bo forwar-led free on thenveipt of four stvnps, bv addressinp SECRt-TAIiY Pakisi n CaeiM-.r or Akaiiv am Mhucink, 5fi3 liroadwiiy, New York. j-23-lly c rv a o s: : t i a i . YOCNi; MEN WHO n.WK IJCKED llioiis l es by certain secret loiiut.s, w hi h Lnfit tl.em for biisirn-ss, j ba.-ure or tbe duties of married life; al'ci, m:ldle-5ced a'id old men. who. Iroin the follies of youth or o:1ot cnuse, fel a debility in advance of their years, 1 1 fore pbicin theniselvfh under the treatment of aj.y o-ie, should ! rt read "THE SECRET r I'd END." Married bidieswi I 1-nrti somethit g of imp rtattce by perusitic ''Tuie S,:cu t Fairst. " Sent to any addie., in a sealed envelope, on rcctipt f Ten Cents. DR. STUART I CO. can be consulted on all disease of a private orcorli.knü.il nature, from A. M. lo I P M., (Se.jidays fr m 9 to 11 A. M.,) at tlu ir ofbee, N. 13 East Tliird street, up-stnir. betw t-.oi M.nn and Sycamore, op. po-iie ibe llenrie House. Adiress Dit.t'HAS. A. STI'AtIT A CO., mch'21-d.t wly-is-'C2 Cinciiinati. Ohio 1 Slislit forf, cr gfafic jSffitctit, with a simile rcrrdi, W at M u if neglected, often, termin-aics czriciu:ly. Fe-jj are auxire cf the imj-criirxts cf stopping a ßaiQli. cr flLait faltl in, ita jirct stage ; ihzi xvmch in, the bcrinninrj would yield to a mild remedy, if net attended to, z.kt. attacks the lungs. were Jirct introduced eleven, years arjo. It has been proved that they are the best article before the public for JLs.fjLma.t ftfcilcLttfi, the Haoanrr Cough in ßcji&urniilcn, end numerous affections cf the j5flLCfit giving immediate relief, l'iiölic Speaker SC Singer Will find them effectual for clearing and oirenrrtherdnp- the voice K tut mS field ly all Druggists and (X in J.ledioin:t at 5 cents j.cr h.r. f Vrj Important to the Jlarrial! AND THOSE Ci INTKMI'LATINli M ALIil.U.E ! TBlIE r.ii'h rsjiTiii d will M-nd free by mail the sure 5 means ,,f preventine conception. No druirs or medicine, hit a lath n(iiM:r. A circular w ith particulars will be Mil to any addrea.by ii tlosiiu; me two 3 cent st.imp. A 1 ook containing all the ktiow lede reft rred to, aui t several private receipt, with rtarr. will te tent to any name or anldrcss you may wish, by iucbssibg me one dollar. Medk ine, .1 French Till, wi!l F .ert f-.r on dollar per box. Ii i very tsure io its e!T- t A!dress I-ck P.ox No. 220, Indianapolis. jvHbi'Cm A. R I1.ILC1ILT.
DRY COODS. GREAT REDUCTION
Spring- and Summer Dry Goods IXTo. 5 Bast Washington St., TO MAKE ROOM FOR EARLY FALL STOCK. THE FOLLOWING (JOODS WILL UB SOLD AT REDUCED PRICES:
LAWNS. JACONETS. ORtiANDIES. PLAIN EARKfiES, FIGURED RAREOES, I'ARE(iE ROUES. CH ALLIES. M0ZAM15ICJUE, TISSITKS. GRENADINES LAVELLAS, NURIAS.
rarticuUr attention U callcl to Linen C-ootf, .mil .llrnN .ind Bovm' Wear. M. H. GOOD, Proprietor."
DRY GOODS.
' ; I c I I ' - - I Fr'1 . 1 - 5" ' " t !
1
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KPtUtaMaa m ... v -S r-i-. DAKEftY. i. n. xif Kt'M. Hoftvcr iwi:noTT. NICKUM & PAPwROIT'S (M I ri s,soi. To A. i 3. VETöl U.) f?; BOX .vri'M.M S5AZ5:UY ASI cjo3i:crT'ioisnRrt"sr, No. II NOKTlf I'KXNSVIA'AXIA STKEET (1- twe. ti !d i iilos' Hall and IVtllT.if.) M.inufactur.-rs if all ki':d- of Crsn vir-, ;Ve, I '.read ami Pie?, V i: '. !il.s and R' tai!. UJY- in.i'iufncture arid ke-p a con. tan! supply of tLe f. bw iii- nrl: I -: CRACKERS l'.'itfer Cracker, Pir-Nic Cr.n-kir.., SoJai Cr.ickers, lira! am Crackc-.-. Cracknel! IU ui, H ut.r Crackejs-Sii-rr Cracker', VVjne ("rarkern, r.rs;..n (V;ukrs, Cre,.i:i Crai ker., tri r ( 'rnr -ki rs, 1 to. CXKF.S of .-.J! Hi: '., p;.i;,, ai d Orn urn id-l. All kiodsof Mai dtoons , iid Tai s, Je'ly, Fancy, Oinffe iuid Mi znr Cakes, Ac , Ac. IVcd tli 112. ami farilr f urnUitcl o slun t "Sotkco. yrr,CND!FS l IF AIL KIND.. r,üy0rJ. r. f.ir hv' -:. it : s 1.1 I at low ratet. PWOnler promptly r.Si!, nntl delivered in the fre t.f oh r?o. jyJX'i'.i DRY COODS. "Lynch Si Keane, 33 WES I WASIHNtiTOS STREET, OTIIKK LAlun: INVOICES OK SUilMKIl IM.' GOODS, Ladies' Ilrevt boodv, rrery t tiin; in llc Mnr, a tut curnt Iri'lt;ii.. E" ACE. aihl Silk M -T.iiM is, r...w ctj le S.i.if s ;,-. 1 a i " :' l'r t :i'-i Ca.ic'ir, rar.-.-.l, ...t t mbn ill- Sb-.p .sv.j i- j',,. , rv jrt i,;,.. t . i . ,, cr;e. Hhni. in.!., . uf u'i.u Cambric Han !, r- ! f. i.o jcne! TM r.row it !,- Hi:-s, l.b.ve, N'..' -Iis. t?. oT-:i! R:rÄ Ist An.eiican br.:!.'., m s0 3 j ,fl u j,. 0:i'.y lS'tc a yard; C-4 w ide, oi ly kk a yard: Batav hh: k;. a . very SpisriV. try i.Ai.i.ou s n:i;xcn yoki: shirts, only lot- bad at Lynch 4 Keane' TUT LEST FRENCH CORSETS AND YAlST.v CHOTH, CASSIWErIJaKD PANTS STUFF For n:en' and boys w-ar; S rw Ii,,., aHj 11. t evirjth.m lo l,. flMtlMi i:, Lt (,,1, .s'...r. St.-k ci.;j i. te; b u.Lt tncei.t a'.ctior. fiiNewYork" w ill U- hol t 20 r cent, b I .w for r prictfof t b ' UnflD QHnTOl tinno cttn-rnt iwui sjfunio. nuur vMnioi Ilavitj? mude arran.-e,,,.., ith two of th- larrl lb- p S- ,rt M.nufrM,r,e, :i t-, t.t, w. ar rr..;i,rM, lo oi . r ihm., w li.eule and re a.l, ,t NVw , rk Call a-il examine the t.ck; uo tr.Hibli, u. kLow g',. Only one pric.. Kn.eu,l r fijru of tbe 'VkirU Jel3 C2-dly LACE SHAWLS. LACE MANTLES. SILK MANTLES. SUMMER SHAWLS, PARASOLS. SUN UM UK ELLAS, EMI.UOIDERIES, COLLARS. HOSIERY. (iLOVKS, MITTS, FANS. ic.
nuawrii "j'Ta"aaai
