Daily State Sentinel, Volume 10, Number 3740, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 September 1862 — Page 2

ruiiv717r.7r.7.. Thf Union if mult ht prrtfrvcd. JtJtvn

Democratic Union SUto Ticket i:ictln Tnrdf v October It roa aacaaTaar or rtatk, james s. atho.v, Of Marion Countr. . to AtDlTOt Of 1TATC. , -JOSEPH KlSTUtE. Of FouoUin Count j. rOE TftEAftllKfc Or TÄTE. MATTHEW L. BRETT, Of Darea Count j. f0& ATTGAXtT OEJLKAL, OSCAR B UORD, Ol Dfjcntur Cwi.Lt. roa airoETtE or erat covet. MICHAEL C KERR. , Of Fiuvd Coutjtr. to & trtfttxTKxoK.tr or muc i.htiuctio, . . - SAMUEL L. JtUGO, . Ol Ailtti Cuutj. COaiSKSIO AL. XOni.tATlO.IS. lut Diatrict JOHN LAW.

2d " JAMES A CRAVENS. W " HEN UV W. HAKKINliTON. 4th "WILLIAM S. HOLM AN. 5iU . EDMUND JOHNSON. Cih ALEXANDER IS CONDUITT. 7th " DANIEL W. VOORUEES. th ' JOHN I'ETTIT. iltb DAVID TURl'IE lü.h JOSEIMI K. EDiiERTON. i ith " james f. McDowell.

Ilatbe.at C'urpu! Ju'J;e SroKT. In hi corn met it iriei on the Conaliluliou of the United Suite, thu comment upon tlie fViljwin d iu.'Q in that iiisirutneut: (Vol. 2. pp iyi-G-7 ) "Ti.e privilege of the writ of lithei corpus Ulli but te auapenJed, uules when, in ca?e$ of rebellion or iuva-üou, tLe public atlety may lerpire it." Iu onler to tirt!ertaril the meaning of the term luve uel, it will he nieary to luve rt cuurse to the cumuvdi law; lor in no other way can we arrive at a true tlettt.ititm t ihe writ ot' habe.H torpui. At the cirnm'jii Uw there uro Yarioua wrt?., cailei wriH of htucai corpm. Uut the particular one here spoken ot i that pt eat nl celebrate writ, u-el in all ct-ca of illegal coritiuernctit, known bjr the mmcot'the writ of habeua corpu ml suhjitirn Jam (tint vuu have the bo-ljf to suixuit,) ditc.teii t( the persuii ilrf .tilting aether. Miitl demanding him tu pit luce the IkhIj ot the primjner, with the ly and otu-e of hi option an 1 tlwfen'ton, ad faciendum, subjiciendum, tt recipiendum. to tlu. ctubmit to alii receive what-ovt-r tue Judc or court, awarding -ucli writ, h.tll eorviJer in lh.it hth.il!'. It is, therefore, justly eneemed the greit bulwark ot personal ! hLetly; iitce it la the upi ropi.it remedy to aceruiu whether any person n rinhtlullf in con tinement or not, mid the iMueoi' hi confinement, und if no aurficieut ground of detention appears, the party U eiiUtlcU to hin iujuiejute Jischargo. Thu writ 14 in Ml bnthci!tllj cotistrueil; tii n applied to every cucot illegal restraint, whatever it mij for ever, reuruirit upon a min's liberty t.-, in the eye of the law, mi imprisonment, wherever may be the place, or whatever may be the roauner, in which the restraint i efieeteu. Mr. Justice J5Icktine hi remarked with reat lorce, that "to bereave a nun of life, or by violence tu coitbscate his estate without accusetioj or tr'ul, would be so prosr and notorious an act of despotism as mut at once convey the alarnTof tyrmmy throughout the whoTe kingdom. Uut confinement of the person by necrctly hurrying him to jail, where hi utfering are unknown or torgutteu, i a leu public, a lesa utrikitig, uud therefore a inure dingerou engine of aroitrnrjr force." While the justice of the remark mu.t be felt by all. let it be remembered that the right to pas oilU of attainder in the British parliament tili enable that body to exercise the summary and awtul power of taking a man's life, and confiscating hi estate, withvut accusation or trial. The learned com menu tor, however, Iuj tlid over thi aubject with Kurpriing delic.tcy. In Engtand thU I a high prerogative writ, issaing out of the Court of King's Ucnch, not only in term time,, but in vncitiuu, and running into all paru of the kind's dominioiH; for it i said, that the king is entitle!, at nil time, to have an account, why the liberty of nuy of hi subjects i retrained, it u gr.muble, however, u a matter of light, tx writojustiiur, u;jon the application of the subject. In England, however, the benefit ot it wa often el u Jed prior to the reign of Charles the Second; :m 1 especially during the reign ot C!m!ethe Firt. Thee pitiful evasion prive rue to the f.imoa Hibe i Coipus Act of 'M Car. 2, c. "2, which hx lern I'retjurnily eotiidereil us another magna cturta in thai kiügiom; and ha reiucel tlie generiil method ot" jnceeliii. on thee writ. to tlie true standard of law ai.d Iii erty. That statute has been, in ulUnce, incorMrtiel into the jurisprudence ot eery State in the Union; and the riht to it hi been secured in mot, if not in all, of the Slate Constitution-, by a provision aiioiSar to that exi-uinv' in the Constitution ot the United Suies. It i not without reason, therefore, that the common law was deemed ly our ancestor a pirt ot the lnv of the laud, brought with them upon their emigration, o l.ir, . it w'4.s uited to their circumstance; since it atTord the amplest protection lor their right and personal liberty. Congre have vested in the Court of the United State full authority to i-sue thi great writ, in c ites falling piopeilv within the jurisdiction of the National tiovern tnent. It is obvious, that case of a peculiar emergency may arise, which nny justify, nay, eten require, the temporary suspension ot any right to the writ Uut a. it has trep.cnt I y happened in foreign countries, and even in England, that the writ h t.s a pon various pretexts und occasions hen suspended, wheieby persons apprehended uihmi uspicioa have sulTered a long imprisonment, aoruetitne from draign. and sometimes because they were forgotten, the right to su-pend it is ex pressly confined to cases oi rebellion or iuvasiou, where the public futety may require it. A very just and wholesome restmitit, which cut down at a blow a fruittul means of opi re-sitn, capable of being abused in bad times to the w orst of purpose. Hitherto no suspension of tue writ ha len au thorized by Congress since the establishment of the Constitution. It would seem, as the power i given to Congress to suspend the writ of hibeas corpus in cases of rebellion or invasion, that the right to judge, whether exigency has arisen, must exclusively belong to that body. In the celebrated case of Jon Mirrtman of Baltimore, who made application to Chief Justice Tankt, that the writ of habras coryut may issue to Brigadier General (jtoUt.E Cadwalaulk. who was holding nnd detaining hitn, commanding hita 1 . i to produce tlie petitioner before Judge Tam.t for h.m to adjudge the justice of his imprison-1 rocut, the writ was disobeyed. An attachment was issued May 26. lt"l against General Cai valadi for coutempt in refusing to prinluce the body of Jon Mluktkan. according to the command of the writ of babe is corpus. Judge Taxlt said he ordered the attachment, because upon tbe face of the return the detention of the prisoner was unlawful upon two grounds: 1. Tbe Presider.t, under the Constitution and laws of the United Slates, can not suspend the writ of habeas corpus, nor authorize any military officer to do o. . 2. A military clScer has no right to arrest a:.d detain a person, but ul ject to the rule and articles of war, for an of!ene against the law of the United States, except in tr.e aid ot the judicial authority and sulked to it- control; aua i! the. jvarty w arretted by the military, it is the duty o! the officer to deliver him over immediately to tue civil authority, to be dealt with ac ounhiig to lw . (See Amerkaa Annul Cyclo , pvdia, pp. ) The I'roclasuiatlon. The Louisville Journal makes the following comrr.eiita upon the TresAleut's emancipation proilamatian: We hall not top now to discus the character and tendency of this messure. Both are znanitet. The one is as uawarantabie as the other h michietou T!ie measure is wholly un authorized and wholly pernicious. Though it can oot be ei ecu leu u fact. atJ though ii execution probably aid Lever te reriuu!y attempted, its xural influence will be decided and purely

t.vrtfat. So far as its own purpose is c;ncetTiel, It i a m"re brtm fulmen, but it w ill prove ttly to eflcual for the pt;rpo- f tf.e r:iemy. It i a gigantic uurpit':on. ciir-lirvel by the promle of a (jiitfy advent i.e however minute and taint, but on the contrary vrJira:eJ by the me-n-feof great and ui:m:Xt-l evil. Kentucky can not an 1 will not acquiesce In thia meature. Never! As li'.tle will the allow it to h'H htr iVvoti'i:i to tlie Hi-c thus cruelly i.uf-et rilled anew. The G er:!n;en'. our fat!.er framed ia one thing, and a thing atve price; Abraham Lincoln, the temporary occupant of the exc utlTe chair, i another thing, an 1 a thing of comparatively little worth. The one U an indi viduvl, the san is of whose ofHcial existence are running ft. and who, when his oCjcial existence hall end. will be no more or ) than any other

individml. The other is a grand political struc- J lure in which U contained the treasures and er.er I gie ef civilization, und from whoe lotty and shining dme, seen from the shore of all ehme, center the eager hope of mankind. What Abra ham LitM oiu aa Preaideut doe or fail to do may et alt or lower our e-timat.on of himself but not o( the great and benificent Government of which he is but tho tern pornry sei v ant. The temple is not the less saered and precious be.nose the priest lays an unlawful pacr.tice upon the altar. The loyalty of Kentucky is not to be shaken by any md act ol Üie i'resideut. If nece-sary, she will resiat the act, and aid in holding the actor to a jut aiid Uwlul accounubility, but she will never lilt her own hand againal the cloriou labric necuo hf has blindly or t rimiu illy smiuen it. She can 'not be so fale to herself as this. She is in carmble of such guilt and folly. The President ha HxeJ the first ol next January as the time fur his proclamation to go into effect. Before that time tlie North will be callxl upon to elec t ir. embers ot Congress-, und the newCongress will a-emb!e. We believe that tlie proclamation will strike the loy nl people of the North in general with amazement and nbhorence. We know it Wo appeal to ti cm to manliest their lightci u. detestation by returning to Coigre notio U'U the avowel and zealous ad versa ries oi this measure. Let the levocation ot the prclamatioii Le made the overshadowing issue, and let tbe voice of the people at the pdls, lolloael by the voice of their Representative- in Congress, be heard in such tones of icmon-trance and of condemnation, tint the President, arou-c i to a sense of hi. tremendous error, shall not hesitate to withdraw the measure. Tl.o vital intete.-t of the country demand that the proelanntion shall be ievikel, the nooner the tetter, and, until iti revoked, every loyal man shoul J unite in vigorously wotkin lor it levocation. If the Pies ideul by any mens U presid away from the Constitution and his own pledges, he mut be pressed back naiu and held there by the strong arm of tlie peypie. The game of pre.-sure is one that two can play at; and it is no slight lepioach t. the consei va tive men of the coin-try tint heretolorelhey have not taken their lair hhaie in this game as played at tlie nation! capital. The radicals have been allowed o have the game too much to themselves. We hope this icproach will n,w be wiped away. The Iouisville Dmuicrat thus criticises this extraordinary document: The President of the United States has at ow n frequently a determination to re-ist the r&dicali-m of his party, although hi- ell'oits tu resist appeired, In the progress of event", to Le giving way. The proclamitkm of esterdav mortiing shows hat the Aboiitioni-t. hvepies-ed him into tlieir service; not entirely, but virtually. The long o licitisl proclamation he come. It is virtually w hat the radicals de-ire. Although they can still find fault with it, they wili accept it as a hopeful sign of progress. These who desiie tho Union : it was and the Constitution a. it is can now expect litliu aid Irom the President. On what shadow of authority can the President rest this proclamation? Will military necessity cover an act of this sort? If it will, then may not Suite organization be abolished and State lines obliterated by a military proclamation? May not jtolineal rights be conferred on slave by proclamit'on in all the States, free as well as slave? Ma) not Indiana and Illinois be compelled to allow negroes to make their home in tho-e States? May not II provisions of State Constitutions be overriden by a simtle. rroclain-tiion4of the President? Slaves can not be set Ire"! in this Stale unless they are removed from its limits; that is a cunstituiional provision can it be overriden by a proclamation? If a State can not nullify a plain right of the Federal Government, where doe the Federal Government et the power to nullify the riht ot a State? In our opinion the Presideut has as much right to abolish ti e institution ol marriage or the laws of a Slate regulating the re latton of parent and child, as to nullity the right of a State to regulate the relations of the white and black races. This attempt to execute laws, by trampling law equally valid under foot, is absurd. By all true iaterpiet ttion of military ne ccssity, the power die with the necessity---it has no permanent vitality. But none re to lecomnsated nntil they prove their loyalty , and how is that t bo done? Howis a man to give any demonstration of his lovalty. where loyalty is not protected? Cannot the Prot dent reflect that if there are no manifestations of loyally in the seceded States, it is the tsult or misiortune ol the Oovernment itself ? he Gov ernment has not been at.le to protect the loyal sentiment in the seceded St ile-". Individua s theie are under a i ig id, despotic, de Jactu Government; they are forced to silent acquiescence at le ist; Mini often foiced into the rebel army. In vain have ttiev looked to the Government to pro tect them. Thousands have waited and waitea, and given it up in despair; although far better Union men than the Abolition cohorts who have demanded this proclamation. In the name of Eternal Ju-tice, what rieht has a Government to inlict pendties for disloyalty, produced by the imp4rence of the Government itsflt? Let it tirst show its jmwrr lo potect the citizen against the despotism ol th rebellion, and give him a chance to be loyal; and then, punish him if he iem !usdislova.,by Constitutional pen alties, not by arbitrary proclamations against laws and Constitut.ou. When the Gov eminent is able to do this, the rebellion is over, and the military necessity, the only plea for this exercise of unwarrantable power, cet-es. So that there can be rationally no place for it. Special corrtspcnaVnee of the Cticgo Times. From uftinngion. Glorious Termination of the Maryland Campaign --Brilliant Yictvru of Gen. McCUUan Gen. Lee trill note rttire to Centrerille and hold that Position Talk of m nur Expedition to Rickmond How Richmond can Le Taken. Washington, Sept. 22. The campaign in Maryland has terminate!, and the termination is most glorious for the Union arm. The result is owing entirely lo the supeib generalship of Gen. McCiellan, and is the most fitting rebuke that can be admit.i-tered to his vile c liuainiators. The entire rebel force has now Ven diiven to tlie south side of the Potom ic. The soil of Marytand i no longer polluted' by the dirty feet of her unwelcome and self constituted deliverer. Although the battle of S -uth Mouutain, on the 14 h it.st , was indecisive, tlie battles of the Idh and I7ih ; p uticularly that of Wednesday, tlie Watet loo ot the war) were decisive. The whole relei army was defeated iu that battle, and retreated aero- the IVtoruac to Virginia. The cam.uign in MaryGnd is at un en l. Pennsylvania is now jfe. The shopkeepers of Harrisburg may now bring back their goods w hich they sent norih for sate keeping, and the State Treasurer of Pennsylvania may now venture to bring back from Ne York the arch ives of the State and the State treasure. Whatever may have been the motives that caused the invasion of Maryland, there can be no doubt as to one of them. M-ryUiid is es-entially a Southern State. Her pr.Ji;cüons, htr institutions, her people and th"r manner- ami customs, her modes of transacting business, her commercial an! domestic relation, her s-ciil features, are all Southern and riot Northern. There are at this moment -W.fOO of her young men in the rebel army, and scarcely 5.Hi in the Union army. Gear L.e. therefore, expecting to be able torn tintain him-elf in Maryland until he had accom pli-hed the strategic object of the invasion, had reason lo believe, aud did believe, thai the presence of the Confederate army in that State wou'd cau-e such popular demonstration all over Mar viand as would re-uh ia ihe expul-iou Iren its border ot every eUge el Federal authority and in its union with the Souiht-ru Confederacy. Thi- would cetttinly have tem the cae if lien. Lee had deieatel the Union army on the 17th. Bat it was Gen. McCiellan, aud not Gen. Lee, who was VKlorious on that day. General Lee's military operations in Murvlsnd have failed only for the w.nt of troops. If, at the decisive nion.esit on Wedi.esd ty. he bad had 10,000 fresh troops to hurl against Buniside at the bridge of Antietam, the day would have bcn

lost to u. our army would have been annihilated and General Le wo'iid luve reTvr;H In M try Gnd. 1 do M't m ike t!i-s t te-nci? at nodom. I know wliat 1 ?ay i tr.ic; and the hi-tory ft the battle trhtti it ton.e to be wiittfn, will it to fe o. .How manv troops do yo-i supf e Gi eral Lea h-d in Miv!an l IrogetJ er? l.V),.

U n? PKJ.IK)!)? He hid, to fight tlie bittlenf! Ai.t'etam.just ß:ty -ix tho-j..m cmbat .i.r-; nt a nm mtf I kie" tliat fact pItivtly ; ai".d thi includl the troops tint had fought at H irpr' Ferry snd e-ai-tiiMfl tint plc 'bu the loth. The divisions of Jackson, Wnlker, ar:d A. P. Hill, left Harj-er's Ferry on Monday afternoon, Crosse! the Potomac on one pontoon bridge, got iiito position and rested oa Tuesday, aa J w ere leidr to fi'ht and did ßsrht at Atd'etira on Wedl 1 f .i . : T nt nrsunT, jiurrucr, lite iiuucri muiuuuuiuu w the Confederates cave out during the afternoon of the 17th. and they fired out of their riScd cannon piece of railrod iron iH)ut eighteen incl e long. Score of the-e misaiics were fouad on the field on tue lr-th. It i now ascertained that the reinforcements which have been moving up from Richmond toward Maryland during the lat two week did not move by railroad any further north than Warrenton Junction. Near JLina?as Junction there I a s;ace where the track has been torn up for five mile. There is no equipment or rolling stock on the Manassa Gap Railroid, and none on the railroad between Harper 'a Ferry aud Winchester. Thee two railroads, therefore, are use!e-s to the Confederate, so far as the moving of troops are concerned. The reinforcement., it is now ascertained, m ircbed from Warrenton to Winchester, and are now marching from Winchester to Martin-burg. It is aid they amount to 25, WO men. What complexion the campaign will now assume doe not yet appear. If any large portion of General Lee's reinforcements have reached h!rnk he raty cross iuto Maty land again, and re sume the offensive. But if he ha entirely abandoned the idea of eaniptigt:in iu the State, he will no doubt movedown from II irner's Ferrv to Leesburz, and. leaving a strong rear guard there, proceed with his main body lo Fairfax and Centieville Tli.il po-iiion be can, mid no doubt w ill, bold nil winter, if . e de. nothing more. It need tint be expected th a he will detach any portir n of his army 'or the immediate pioiectioii of Richmond. That tisk is in other hands. Some of the Ei'ern jouruils will begin to clamor now f.r .mother ndvnyce on Richmond. Richmond tniy be t iken now, in the m i!:tier deviseii by General McClelGn months ago, namely: ly a fleet of iron clad esels and niort ir boats sailing up ihe James liter, aial by a column of 20().l)0d troojis transported to the Whit House and to Voiktown, und thence to mtrch through the Peninsula. Richmond can he liken iu that way, and iu no other way It cannot be taken by a column of troops marching overland by way of Manassas and Culpepper. It i talked here today freely of sending all the troop now heie on that very old wild goose chase, leaving the forts here to be garrisoned by the new recruits. Such an expediti in, if it starts this week, might get as far as the north b auk of the R tpr ah mimck. But by that time General Lee's wliole army would be on Arlington Heights. It will not do any longer to despise and ut.dei rate the enemy we have to fight. Men who live lor four days at a stietch on irreen corn and green apple, who Ght such a battle as that ol Antietim with u raging diarrh.Tt, who have had no whole shoes for mouths, whose hat are without either crowns or brims, whose ollicers ride with bare feet and with their spur. tied on w ith tw ine strings and w ho do all this not merely chceriutly, but with enthusiasm are not exactly the men to he desuised. How had to think that such heroic devotion and self-abnegation are not enlisted in a better cause! X. .tiaftkucliukrf t Politics. A remarkable incident has taken place in Mas sachu-etts oolitic. A number of the most distinguished citizens ofthat Slate lime tcsolv'ed on political action for the country independent of party. They have issued an address to the people, full of patriotic sentiment, inviting joint action of all ineu for the common good. They say : We may difler on all such questions now is rot the time to discuss nnd foment such difficulties. All Democrats all Republicans all men of other parties all good men who are willing to ay dowu their lives and offer up their means to sustain the Constitution and laws under which they luve lived and prospered, can unite on the one platform, of sacrificing everything to sustiin the country, the Constitution and the laws, and put down the rebellion It is a platform broad enough for every man to stand noon it presents a work grand enough to call out all we have of power, all we have of energy, and all we have of mind it is holy enough to satisfy the aspirations of all good men. We must be united, as one body animated by one soul, or we cannot sue ceed. The war has languished other m Itters, other issues, have been too much attended to, in stead of giving all to the war. Politicians, n'ot patriots, are striving to divide us striving to save tlie party not the country. So far, twenty millions of true and loyal men have been foiled at au awlul cost of lile and treasiiie, by live million of traitors, fighting against their mother who ha ra'ned and protected them to their present strength '1 his must not be it will not !e, il the people unite us one nun, to prosecute and put ifi end to t' e war, tolerating no other issues, till that great end is accomplished. They proceed in their nddiess to invite the co operation of all the lovers of their couutiy. We give the conclusion of the address and the signature.-: In order, therefore, that the loyal men in Massachusetts may ij the mot effeetu il manner sus tain und sup;rt the Government, the Consiitu tioti and the laws, and aid the chosen and constitute! head of the nation, the Pie-ident, in Ms patriotic and self sacrificing labor, to save the country and put down rebellion, we ask the people of this Commonwealth, irrespective of nil party, to meet nt some future time to be agreed upon, to nominate candidates for State officers at the coining election, and take counsel together for the common weal. Joel Parke, Cambridge, J 0. Abi.oti, I Otoli, Daniel S. Jvicii irdson, Low ell. TheodoieH Saeerzer, Lowell, S W. Sfu-kney. Lowell, Jas. M Keith, Roxbury, Win. D Xoi iheiid. Sab in. Homer Untied. Bton, G A S oneibv, Boston. Henry G. Gray. Marblehe.nl, j W. B May. Roxbury, J ' Nathaniel S;lslee. S lern, ! Fied 0 Prince, Winchester, j Linus Child. Boston, j L. S tltonstall. New ton, , A. Cum , Newburvport, i G S Hi"l!ard, Boston, ! H. G Parker, Cambridge, ; Oliver Stevens, E B Biglow, Wm. D Swan, Dorchester, P. H. Seir Boston, B. Poole. Ton-Meld, j El im C. Baker, Medlord, j A. W. Stetson, Boston. Tili Address U accompanied in the Boston paper by a call fi r a Convention at Faneuil Hall I on tlie 7th of October. The call is signed bv - j several thousand citizens. We trust the good work may go ou in Massachusetts. Tlie lropect of the War. Kroni the Lcrxlou T;m-s, Sept. 9. From the speculations, however, we may turn with tar less uncertainty to the broad propects ot the war. To u. and, indeed, to all European ooser vers, it appear a manitet im;ajsibility that the North should succeed in its purjioseot subjugating the Souiti. The case eem to he iu a nutshed. Tbe Federals, after learning the true nature of the work before them by a terrible re verse, commenced the real business of the war with 7W,(MU men. With all this enormous force they hue, as a nutter of fact, tailed to produce any material imi ression on their enemy, or to achieve a sinuie step of importance toward the object of the w ar. On the contrary , tlieir grand army, alter an unsuccessful and .n.doriou expe duion against Richmond, htsbeen recalled in bs.ie for tlie protection ot Wasiiuigtou, wh.le the j border counties are less note than they were six I mouths ao. The simple question, tLcti, is. whether the new army no ordered can be ex re.tedto accomplish what a mote powerful JKud better army h S already f tiled in accomplishing, and w hether the South, welordiuto solid strength byayeir'a uccesstul war, will prove an easier piey thau it wa found at nrst. Tu these que lion we cm see but one rtply. I he Federals m y gain what they have never gained yet a giel battle; ana we are told, indeed, tr the much time, tht an engagement of th tl derisive kind is now imminent; but we can not imagine bow the reult would luve any conciu-ive etlevt

on the war. If Richmond had been captured, evci that rrq;et would not b ty- t-eeri epiivalet to th conque-t of Virginia, where i Virgitiia is but oi e of a dzn S:.it-s ed! er mve'era'.ely fio-tjle or so divide i:i sentiment it to be teri !!e only by mi.'it ry t-ccupition. The Confederate have succeIe" in driving the Federal from Richmond, an I they are now engaged, in

their turn, in tin eatming Washington. They j may pwi;!v take il, they mty js-bly ex-j perietn e a severe defeit in the atteirpt, but the I restoratan ol the Union will rem in, in either! event, a remote a conclusion as before. j THK TIMtS CAXXOT tSDt&STAS D VS. rromtbTi ms, pt. ?lh. Nothing less than the shock of some startling national calamit immh likf! to rtue Nw York, at least, tö a sense of peril. Its compla-1 ,. . . ' . ! centy is redy surprt-mg. It considers ti e -it- i uation Ot all iir in irginia," of which ihe Governmetit dares Hot aav a word, a "imrroviii'!" While tit rntr of tK" ..oi ,rn f .r,fi,.ii i .n ! VV nue me r...r ot the Southern Cinn-U tail al-mo-1 be heard from the Capitol at . asn.ngton, ' and it is at le ist probable th at the loss of battle Still undecided Ol iy drive tlie Presideiit and hi Minister from th o furtive, there i nnitP , ers ,rutn tugitive. there is -uite a buoyant tot:e III the COintnerCIil and hnatuul Circle Ol .ew 1 ork. Ou w hat this cheerlul- , v. -v. v V V I I tl9 J j'Vit.tl I t,. SSVX.'lVVtSWj is dark enough to warrant any degree of gloom j and despondency; and it i only by re-olutely re- j ' fusing to look at it thntthia hchter mood is poi- j b!e. Wall.atreet turns it. eyes front the Rappa- j bannock, where a retreating Federal army is; fig tiling doubtfully to defend Wa-bington. and j e iys nothing about the jnissible disaster that a Il ir c irt Una P 4 JiwDr a-. 9 1 rbi a I hu rvroaF-ffi ft lew nours tnav piecipilate. -Wh at i mo-t pressing the financial circle throw out of its Calculations. It passe over the ; inci easing strength and audacity of the guerrilla j bands iu the We-t as insignificant, though they : are taking town alter town, and capturing prison- ' ers iu numbers large enough to raise a skirmish j into a battle, and battle iuto a victory. These raids, that indicate thespiiitof Ihe population of i the We.-i s' decidedly, are set down iu financial ' circles as uninipoiui.t temporary succese." Iu fact, evert thing Is unim;ortaut except the iulure achievements of the armies that are not vet raised, and. even if rai-ed lorthwiih. can not tor 1 manv week, be or-'anied While ihe temain of! the first levies that were to restore ihe Union are bCiUg force! back, iu all the wreck and rtliti of ' dele it. m tlie fioniier from which thev marched as inv aders, the financial circle ignore all that 1 has happened and rest their new speculations on j what wdl be done by the armies of the future, j "No doubt is now entertained that a seiieof: Uniou victories will soon commence," the will I regain I eunessce and Missouri, dispers tlie Con- j federate force "that has so long disputed the ad- j vance of the Union uiuiy in Virginia," and will also- effect the "siieedv capture of Richmond On these predictions the commercial world of New Voik is encouraging It. seit into a greater ! dispo-ition to make speculative ventutes." A Convention of (Governor. The Missouri Republican says: There is to be a Convention of Stale Govern ors at Altoona, Pennsylvania, on the :Miiiinst. A call for stich au as-einbl ige has been i.ucd by Governor Cm tin utid one or two others, and invitations lnve Ween sent out to the Executives of the dillercnt loyal Stales. We can perceive no necessity for a meeting of the Governors of the loyal States at A.toona or any other place. They hue plenty to do at home, and can not attend too closel y to tlieir own business. Thev would have no more auihoiity in a convention than as many Justices of the Peace, and they must be very cautious in their assumptions. If theie is any one thing that could more quickly arouse the passions of ihe people ol the Noilh than any ther thing, it would be the appearance of the working of the secession poison among our politicians. We w ill have none of thai deadly non-eiise. If the General Govei timent is unequal to the perform tnceof its luuctions in a manner agreeable to the people, a squad of Governors can not help the matter. The idea of a call for the assemblage of the State Executives is an unhealthy one. It did not originate in a sound head. It will not be approved by sound men. There is no occasion, no excuse, for extra Constitutional Congres-e4. Shall we, iu making war for our nationality, embrace the delusive and fatal doctrine of Provincial Sovereignty, that we look up arms to crnh ? Shall we now enter into the ways of the revolntion'sts, and hunt up South Carolina piecedents? Shall we have now a miserable imitation of the Congress of Southern Governors, called by the lunatic and traitor Wisp, in lrG? Have we not sen enough of the logical results of South Carolina teu-n-ings? Is Gortnior Cu'tin envious of the fame of Henry A. VYise? If the Governors are very badly oil' for want of "a noliiV' that is lo say, if they w ant the w ar to lit made more "v igorously" let them increase their exertions in preparing troops tor the field lei them enJeavor to improve on the selection of ollicers and we think they will hive but little time hanging heavily on their hands. But whatever they may think, we do not be Iieve thev could be engaged in business more likely to mike them infamous or ridiculous than that of meeting at Altoona to draw up a whereas and resolution, which would hive about as much effect upon the President a it ought to have that is to say, as much a a township or ward meeting or a small conference of ministers of the Gospel. It will be a mai k of good sense in a Governor not to be at Altoona on the 2 Ith inst. Tlie i'roclumulton Tho New York World thus con eludes its comments upon the proclamation of Mr. Lincoln: This new proclamation really amounts to little. The President proclaims, in substance, that on the lt of next January ne will still issiieauollier prociui;ii!oii putting in force themain piovision ot the confiscation act. It is unbecoming the dignity of a great Government to make such menaces as to what it w ill hereafter do in a territory, of which a powerful armed foe disputes the jurisdiction. If on the 1-tof next January the war is substantially ended, there would be some reason iu giving the insurgents their election between submission and civil lenalties, but they will laugh such offers to scorn. So long as they can confront us with gre it armies thai part of ihe proclamation which relates to slaves coming within our lines is pailicularly weak. The lawis the same as it w is several mouths ago. If a proclamation on this point is necessary, why was it so long delay et!?' Its issue at this late day looks like a concession to radical clamor. The New York Time$, ano'her Republican print, in its comments uj-oa the proclamation says : It will have an induenco on the labor of thf: North and West. It will, to a certain extent, bring the Hack labor of the Soutk in comptfition tcith the uhilr labor on thr txtennre grain fwms of the Wtst, unless the exist ng stringent laws of some of the We-tern States, confining die negro to his present geographical position, are adopte i iu all the other lice States. Tlif l'reidrnt'- Froclamution. iir. Lincoln has yielded to the radical pressure and issue! a proclamation. Iii-, on the whole, a curious document. We have no in lin itiori todav to discuss its wisdom or the probabdities of . - ... ... . . . . ..- . ! the effect :t wui produce in re'.-eidom. e nave only anticipations of evil from it. ;nd we regard it, as will an immense majority of the people of the North, with profound regret. It will be observed that the Tre-ident poslpones the day for his proclamation of freedom to take etiect, until the first day of January next. He! apt ears to regard it iu the light of a threat rather j than a weapon of war, and it wuuld -tern that he ! anticipates some effect on the minds of the rebelbous men of the South from connecting with j the threat a proposal to free slaves on the com- ; pensation principle which he suggested to the! last Congress. Tint it will have such effect no j one who apprebiates the slate of the rebels can have much hope. The only result which an ad- i berence to the principles of this proclamation can j lead to, is the continuation of the w ar, in a dark j future, in which the end is beyond our vision. i A. Y. Jour, of Com. j Antietam. The small river or creek, so fre- j fjuently ailuue.1 to iu the dispatches as the scene ! of the recent conflicts in Mar la ml. caliel An- j tietam ('Totiouticed An tee tain ) It ti. es on the j line of Fr nklin od Ad m ci'untie-, I'et.niyl-I v.mia, and falls into the Potomac between Mar- ! tibsburg and Harper's Ferry. i ltM?iul Notice. j lO ADVERTISER. Ali-utfrtitemenu tJ.Unfrr .1 t fired time, and ordered out tef -re tAe t j ir.Uion oftkttitKn$j0, ied, e-illbe iharjtd the rejultrratni i fv-tK9tm9 ttt tt tKe tittKtj ar4rdedt.

DIED.

r.t'SUI n Tlc-ljy, SeptfriVrr 2.. Citr'i. rlj tt !! ot y. I'. liu-rb, ac-l clurti n outt d tarnij. tLr t Jt. Th fLneral will tik yUce from tbe rf .d-ru cf Mr. Rusch, Nf-rib 2Cew Jrrry cirrft. ?bl ftn xn at three c! n.k. Tts frit-r.-l tl cqua r.tinceof the family art tin pr! to att'tul w itbeut fur'b-r ntVe MEDICAL. PREVENTION IS BETTER THAN CURE. f 10 LADIES OFDEL1CATF. HEALTH ORtMPAIRED ralil?rUtiüU'tr M?bT ZVl ZTi famiW f from any reason oMsctlonable, tbe t ttueriyiea wuuWoffrra rescription whicb ia perfectly r-lUMe and aafr.and wUicb a bra prcrlted In Tanou part of tbnU! I Wor'.Jfortbepotcsntury. lthous:btManicl 1 very cheap and dmplf, yol It has been put up in ball pih,iiMlrll';i,d-oW Vy Vaten-ivelj at theeaherbitaat price. d 5 prrbottle. tbe unJertpned propo-et furaisbtbercipefor Si, by thepoenlon of wbicb every tJjcanupply herwltwitb a perfect saiefruarU, at auy rua torefor tbe'riHin m of 3Scentper jear. Any phrk-Unt,r iruelM willtellyon It isperfectlvharnles., tbou.ini. of teatimcnlals can be procured of itetr.c.-Y. Senr tuauy part otthe woriuon receipt uf I.bya-Iarea. tigDa. J.C. ÜKVKRALX. aly22-da'l PROPOSALS. SEALED PROPOSALS. QCAUTKRMATF.RS DEPARTMENT IkKiASAt-vus, id. Sept. 24ih lstiJ. S SEAt.l!ll .'SOPOSU.S WILL bY. RKCE1VKD AT THIS '.Iice until It) o'clock, A. M., Monday, tbe6lb day of October, ls6i, lor 200 Ton llalrd llny3f()t)( l!uliol 04tl.,(ui t.ulk.) ö )00 liur Corn, (in bulk.) To be delivered at tbe United States Forage Houe, In Iiiitiannpoli, Iml aua. a be ilay t e jixkJ clenr Timothy hard pressed each tale not to weixh I-s than iuo ihiuikI, Mie tu well fttl.nl. ch an oats, and sound merchant. able, corn w ill lx rceiveu. I In. Iii tnl lllriffirh t ri liM dpli VfTClt ill ttll M 01 tin TS. nne.tliird f ' ) m tweirv t lt dav. anf balance in tbirrv days tn-m d.dc of contract " ' 0 hncb lä'l iuut f. accouipanieil by suClcient guarantee fur it fji'titul xTrTllil-ce. Form of bid and jruarai.tee ran be bnd at this oflke No Ml will be entertain d tr !- ibau t'dty tonol bay, l,00i t.ub ls of com and ,ih)0 I'lbtl of m M-pPM-dld JAMKS A. F.K1N. A.Q. M C. S.A. WANTED. j 1.11VK bun-Ire' (ViO) Cavalry HorM, to be delivered 1' witbiri six (t) days at the Government StatW in tbi city, lor wbn aa .be lngbrt prxe fn cash will be pai b- d:i cttAS- w 1I VLL ""W stable. .-. --- . w . wr-r, paid. Citv Tr.AhrEK Omer. Sept. 17, lsß"JT()T!CK U hereby Riven that tbe ei y taxe for the l jer ls8-re ii"w due, atul ihe duplicate placed in my baud tor collection. IVr-ou Indebted to the city hr tax will il-a-e call and rttle tin nmo slS-cttw JDS. K. ENGLISH, City Treas. PROPOSALS. Scaled Proposals. QCARTKRMASTFK'S HF.PAKTMF.NT U. S. A. iMllANAI-OLIS, I.M)., Si'pt. g'l, lS,C2. ) SEALFb PROPOSALS will be received at tin Office until 10 o'clock A. -M., on Wednesday, Oct. 1si,1s.o2, icr 2030 Cavalry ISorwe nnd IvOOO Artillery Hores. All to be d livered at tbe Government Stab!;?, in Indianapolis, Iridiitna I liv rie of Cavalry Horses to be as follow: öto within ten (10) day. from date of contract. i",00 " twenty (2 ) fan) " thirty (i) " öoO " f-.rty (4U) " " Said llrs- to be sound in all particulars, not les than six nr more than einbr () .veara old; from 15 lo l banils hiK'b; dark colors, (no greys); :m1, square trotters; bridl wise, and of size uUclent for Cavaliy purposes. spr.ciriCATtoss or AitTit.t.r rt Hoasrs. (1) "2.V2 Wheel Horses, in imir, bays, brown, or blacks, 16 hands liigb or upwards, p-nfe ril active, from 6 t 9 je.,rs old, entirely sound, well br ken, and Mpiare tn-tters in barness. (2) fsi IbTses, in pairs, b ys brown, or Macks, 15J,' ban h bir'a or upwards, sirunp-, rjuick, arnl active. entii ely sound, fr m . t 0 )ear old, well broken, and square trottTsiu hlle.. (3) 114 llor-es,in pairs, bv s, bnw n. or black, entirely sound, from 5 tu 9 years old, tdzm suitable for -- rliangcs m the two tirt nme I Horses, well broken, and "spjre trotters in barr.e. Karh Horse to weizb ti t less thnn eleven hundred (l.l'Ki) pounJj. Deliveries of Artillery t orsen to be as follow: SO Horses of tbe rir-t named ICO " second " 000 Hordes, CO " " third " J Within fifteen (15) day from da?e of contract. Tlie name number (::0ii) i s.ime cla-es. repertively, within twenty-rive ( 2.") days from d.u of ."ii:racf, ar.dtlie residue (4f'0) wftbin birty-f.ve (X5) days from date f cot. trvct. No bii will be entertained, utile accompanied by a guaranty for its fiith'ul performance. Form d"tddand guaranty can le a i on appl cation to this Office. No b;d will be etitertAined for Ies than 100 Horses. I i-"posal wid be Indorsed '"I'roposils fr Cavalry Ho e" apd'M'roposals for Artillery llor-es," Any other information will be promptly given, on application to the undersigned p?r"r!l!v or bv letter. JAMKS A. EK'N. s24-dti A. Q. M. U. S. A. MUSIC. THE BEST PIANO FORTES. LARGE AND FINE STOCK AT Wll.LAkU I STOWELL'S. C f I 1 I, il I B V G'L ES9 DruuiN and XilT. Am-E ASSORTMENT AT septi WILLAHD STOW ELL'S. FOR THE WAR. COLT'S PATTEHN SELF - ACTING REVOLVERS NAVY AND BELT REVOLVERS, A full supply- New Pattern. Svords at Cost Prices, pKiwie, Pocket, ar.d Table Kjiie; Fruit Can; Nail; Bc'üiig iiop, and IIa. Iii: g Hrd ware. At No. 21 Ut Wa-bington SL j23 J. U. VAJFX.

DRY GOODS. Pj cs S 1 H - rj 2

rrfi

BOOKS, &C.

INDIANA 1VIWLI-X.LE B'M)K AND' Pinrir iinrcr a .it liii ii. ix "7V. In rite attention to ar larce si-rl: of .Vbo-.l 1 IV-H.V a: l I'i-er. e:-ct-d f..r tii-wanU of tbe trad tbrousbout t- We-tern Statei i We leep Cvmtii.tly cn fcar.d lari;e tjian'te cf School B'. Itf-r arxi Cp Taper, Commer ial Note l iper, T. r.i et Board, Wrapping I'a-er, 8lte and tVtxnla, Lead Tencii, Steel Pens. W.U p-per, Wm w Taper, Plat k Po.ka; Ta- R v.ka, Tu.k Memorandcma, Portemonassa, Tenbol iers. ltk, Ac. le. We witt forrtih poy?s at Onelnnati pHr. We will gii-e. cash or trade for rag. Order filled promptly. IJowtMt, Sto -v ii r t Ac Co. :t-.i2w DRY COODS. Inl P H R O H P t-3 3 0 Ä 0 H WHOLESALE GROCERS. ISP Sari 8c Hatcher, AV II O I- V. S A I. K GROCERS, it i a jt i l a i a a aa 11.1 Z)fl( HH1. New OHean S (rar just received from fßj il ui bis and for ale by EAIfL A HATCIIFR. rQQ BRLS Refined Sarae fur sale by EARL & HATCHER. 500 HAGS r.ic Coffee; ino Hapx Java C.flTe; 10 DaJe Mocha Coflee; For sale bv EARL 4 HATCHER. TOBACCO. 150 B0Ii:s 4 Lcnip: 100 Eoxe 10 Lump; 75 Coxes 8 Laaip; 100 Dcxea triglt lbi; 50 Boxen dark lbs LOO Caddies lb?; 0 K5 Six Twtt; The above aor?raent of Tobaeeo i tow the larpet to b found in tbe Weit, and will be toll below tit mrrett ratet. EARL A HATCHER. PATENTS. P A T E IT T S OBTAINED FOR XEW l5VE5T10yS OF EVT.RT decnpUo. Fes coot Id gebt oa Mcrt-aa. S patent oo pay. StiJ for Circular, civiue, terma, directions, Ac. Addreia AiloS KKOAl'NAX, navU-dlj ' Patent Attoraey, W aiAftCB.D. C.

HI h

14

rs-. - . j II

LAFAYETTE

STATE FAIR.

'I ynr. vaivf or nrr. bkonzk sr srr.vrR Me. 1.1 .r-red In tJ e r nl-.ra !;t n-t barn- n fa!'y or, 1-r-tfH d. It I de mej ire-4ry to g ve tb folI ipg n'-Mrt-: f r?ira JJ-.-.U'i e b f V XI S.ier " 25. t0 Tbe wf!l larre. pare w atal ad wI! x'e-l. t!,dm In tteir orret tL "h.ra t -a" con.tneadation cTerr d by tbe Frate V artl fu'.V wed by cab rntalnm. Alt pfrnt bavir? fo k. incbire-y t other prodaeta are earnestly reii-e-Trd t a tec-r.ieeab!bitor. r.NTKT nn. rf exh'S'ttnf i re-pjired to pay or-e 1!Tr irvrr Wra fee b-ret.f.f , l"jt trn per rt rt. wol be ebrc-d t n tt: auout of tab pritr'.un corrpetrd fr X. H. IVI. See-e'ary. K-p;l Indiannr-d -, Indiana. MEDICAL. C O N V I s : a t a A Is TOlN't MFN WHO It IVK INJfKr II tb-niwlre. I y certain ei ret bMt. brh onf.t tbetn for bu C0 ra-'-- r t!.e iui- cf ti arneaiif; 3irP al-o. mib!!e-aed ivl men, waa. lrm the JoU of y..utb or tbrr ci ifS feel a debiiity tn a1tat;ce of t.r vear, her pl.ctn tlem-elves fader tbe trra'ai.ot elf any otw, -buuld frt read "THE si.CHKT Kill END." Married Id i 1 b-urr -m-tbiti(t of lmp'rtaiic peru-liot " Fhb SraaT Fairso.' Sera t- ai.y atfJre, in a e!-.! en-!oie, cn reefj taf Ten C nt. I)lt. srUlIlT CO.ea-i le eon4i!ted a all di-raea of a irivaie r.r ronfldentfat n-ture. frt-m a .M.t.ai M.. sni'lay f r tn 9 t 11 A. M .) at the r er.ee, Xo. 1J F.at TUlnl tr-rt, ai-tlr, t-etwe-o Mtn atid Sycamore, opposite the ileurte Hon. Aatrt-. i:i C1IA. A. STVaKT A CO., mcb2 1 -dA wly-s.Vj C:tc'ncatl. Oblo. f Slight Cold, cr if aft JD J hfc.nl, nii a cirr.plc rxrr.cJy, if necrleciel, cflcn iermzr-iic3 cericitcly. Fcjj are auure cf th: imr-cr'r.ce cf zicppirrp a ßcjifjft. cr Jllntit ßcld in. its Jlrci cUirp ; vmic In the hrj".Kni'-.rp icculd yield I'j a mild renvciv, if net attended to, soal attacks the Lurups. f.auuL& QtcjtxJiial fZJfcxlitx ivere ßrzt introduced eleven bears cifji. It has Uen proved thai they ire th het article lefzre the pidlis fcr fionalm, cils, sf.9cnriiiiit, jl&lhma, fiatatfli, the Hxzkir.rp Ccurph in sfJcLttstirTitiir.n, ad numerxiuj ajfeciicns cf the exit t ivinp immediate relief. J'ltblic Speaker Siitperu Wil f.nd them effectual fcr cU-irir.g and strcnrrthenir.p the voice field l-j all (Dnifprpi-ic ar.i (lirs in, j. Medicine, at 5 cents jr L:.-r. a aa mm MEDICAL BOOKS. &C. GALEN'S HEAD DISPENSARY, cn a .rri:iti:r BY THF. I.KOISI.ATl'fc'- OF KKXTI'CKY ftlK THR TKKAIMI'.NT OK ALL 1 UK USK.'sr. Up THK U1USA1.Y AND ÜEMTAL OUJANy. PU1CK. ONLY TEN CENTS. A .lli'ilicil If-'porl, C.ntihtnj Ihirlu Fine I'lite nnn fnyrarhigmnf th AfiiVoyn " it ri I'hyi"l"jf t " flrvn.it in ,1 titte '' n ami Jiie e. ON A NEW METHOD OF Irratin? Vetiertal Iiser, irvrlali k Sypbilin in all it etar; rJotiorriea. ritrrt. Sirkture, Var1Clle, aJd Hvi1-!e, i-eas- 4 tbe Kidtiey. Ula.Mer Ac, ithut m rciirv! citit ainuia: a valv " 1 uatue treati-eon that il-pread nylAW i tnala.lv of y.Hiib. Seminal WraSti tVl,i's ' 1 N"ctuml KmU-ion. Sexual -v tl'l' ' ' J lability. I""' v?v J cret tt.tirmtti ItTiimteuTT, Ac. tlie ermitie.of yiiitb an-1 ma turity ntiic from tbe baneful babit ui m-Ii-ius To bi b ',s a'Mrd .ber ati..n on Female Iiiseas. and other iuteres'inp matter of tbe utmost importance to tbe marrid ao4 lboe cttit,mp!atjii(j marnair-, wboetitertadi d.ubtof Ibeir physical al lify to et:ter tbat stf.te. .etit to atiy a. birr iu a -ea!-d rapier, on rclpt titer cent or fonr taraj. devot our entire time and attention t tbe treat, mei.t of rl,e various private rf'.r trea'e.l of in our private irport. Our l-;v njry i rbe on! t lu-thutuat of tbe Uiuil iu America wblth h i'-n e taMbed l y a -eclal charter, anJ th: fact -b'"iM ptve jt a .,rreret e o r Ihe vai H i.. ijuai ks of doubtful rbaracter to be found in all rpe c!ieii. Ij.itmrf.mf to Tcinalr.! One o partniit.t of oir rM-niirT I psra!5y d-vot4 to tlie f p-afno'tit i f rb trise.i of 'Fetna'f , -u.-b a laichoTTbea. or "ln:e," Irrrulur, Pairul and Surpie Menstruation. r.u- nrid ierieral I'liiit j , Iio-hm-i of be Womb, ll.trreiirn-.ss, Ac. Consult at i.a;s aid eatnlruitiDa fre of cbarse. AU., f..rt.!e liii. Id.WKLS'. kKHl'LATt l Psl.lt ror fTuale On true: lour., IrrevuUritie Ac. Married ladie iu certaui Mtuatioti üu-.j.d r.ol u-e tbeta, a. tiey would caue miscarriape. Price lp-roox aud ma b -ent b 1114 - IdL GALEN'S PREVENTIVE An fuvalua le article fr tb". wii-bifiir to limit tb tiUmV.er of tbHr nriiifr. or tbe bfcrreij wb doMre cbildreti; warrai.led not to l'jure tbe beuftli, and last for a lift-time, u to any ad treaa tllnlrrt-eal. on rec i;ir of tbe price IWtl M iLt.AhS. PATH'. NTS AT A MSTANCE By M-ridlr.rr a brief tae. no-lit of rbelr symptom, will receive a Blank Chart rtnta niu;r, a Ut f iUetionr, our terms for the cure oftreatmctit Ac. Meiicnie m-oi to any part of the country to cure any cae at bom, free from danger or curiosity. All transact ion private atid cotiiidetiiial. Remembef tbe name anl numler. IiTfct all etfr-to riALKN'S HEAD DISPENSAiM, octl5-dA- luit.!'.e Kr. DRY COODS. Lynch 8c Keane, S3 WEST WASHINGTON STf'EET, 'tLV M-HC 2V JtT at OTHEk LAUGE INVOICES OK SUMMER DUY GOODS, I.adira' I)rra f;nod evervllilnj In tlac Line, and . eat Oral grit. FACE and Silk MaMilla, rew tyle Saauea, hawli j and Cloak , Jr nte.l Calico--, Pra I arxi sun I'tti. breilas. Hoop SWf t, Do-iery Ac; lnh Linert. Emt.ro.4eriea. Wbite Good, l.fi.en ar.d Camrte lUixiaercLkfe, Bleicbed and Brow n Sbee'itu', Glove, Niona. a at It American brand, rem Sc a yard tip; ut:sT twisrtsiz nu.vTs, Ot.ty lJ3,c a yard; LtniEs cLo.tm.ra cloth, 6-4 wide, only C9c a yard: at.m. afff very f"!, 3 alr 2öc TRY BALL0U S FRENCH YOKE SHIRTS, otily to 1 bad at Lywb A Keana'a TBT BEST FLENCH CORSETS AND WAISTS. CHOTH, CASSIWERTaND PANTS STUFF Fcr men! ar.i bov' wear; $ raw Good, Hat, Caps tarl F.aU ev-rT'hio to t fouod la a Dry Good a 9tore. Stock cmpiete; bocrbt at re-eit a etiorj tn New Tork; wdl be toid 20 per cent, b low f.naer price- for ca.b. HOOP SKIRTSTIOOP SKIRTS! HaV.r. male arrangement with two of tie larreat Hoop skirt Manufac-oriea ia tb East. a arc prepared t o?r tb'tn. wboleale and re ad, at New York price. Call aud eiatrdne tbe tork; fco trout. le to aow pood a. Otily oi,e price. Reiaeniber ai-jrn of tL Pir Hoep Skirt. Jei3-4Iy ACENTS WANTED. rou joii s. c. AimoTTK Hbtor) of Ihr Civil War in America To ba beautifully S'lu.trated with STEEL KNOHAVINOS Of Laad and Naral Battle Scene, Portrait of rrnaioeat , actor. Ac, Ac Mr. AbU'tt la tbe well known aut&or of j tbe Lif of Napoleon," Ac. ' Experiene! 4trentaill find ia tbia a book that will ett Tn re('X'e want tt. For Territory. liumeJiate application nmt made ty nail to tb- ilat Ageuu. AMlLk 4 IX). aai-w.niM LudUtapiis lbA.

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