Daily State Sentinel, Volume 10, Number 3746, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 October 1862 — Page 2

DAILY 'SENTINEL

rninAi. .onr mim 3 D jti cratis Union State Ticket i:iectifi rnrdr October II rua as-&crAir or .tt, JAüJ:.5 S. ATHON, Of Marion County. ro ACDITO& or itais, JOSEPH IUSTIXaV OfFonoUia County. , " FOE TKZAtlBCK Of STATE, MATTHEW L. BRETT, Of DTies Countt. rOK ATTOSJtT OtXHAt, OSCAR B HORD. Ol Decatur Covuty. - rot EKpotrtR or cnnic coct. MICHAEL C. KERR, Of FioT'l County. rot crcai9TB'tKMT or riiu( i."stcctio, SAMUEL L. RUOO. Of Allen County. i o-c;itr:.Moi al, o.ni:v atio:. 1-t District JOHN LAW.

QI JAMES A. CRAVENS 3-1 HESIIV W.UARHINOTOX. 4th " WILLIAM 8 HOLMAN. 5tU EDMUND JOHNSON. 6th " ALEXANDER Ii CONDUITT. 7th DANIEL W. VOORHEES. frth JOHN PETTIT. 9ih DAVID TL'KPIE. I0ih JOSEPH K. ED(i ERTÖN, uth james p. Mcdowell.

i:mi inclpallsn a nrn rd by n Itepub Ileal). The Newburyport llrrald, a Republican news piper, beliering that the Constitution confer on th (eneral Government no power to alter the dome tic relations of the States, and hoUin;: that an effort on the part of a civilized Government to engenJtr fertile insurrection is contrary to the linage of warfare aa recognized by Christian na tiotn, in a rrie. of ably written editorial, completely refute lhe uoterfuge which the radicals use a reon w Mr. Lincot.x should ignore the law of the lai d and cut tooe from the moorings of the Constitction. The following is No. 3 of the serie, and, as it comes from a man who voted lor the present vacillating and we-ik-tninded .'resident, we conceive it to be meet'that our political oppoDenU should know what a cou serraiive Republici.n thiuks of the emancipation proclamation: Our third objection to a prochm.ition of emancipation m that it would b contrary to the uafce of civilized warftre. It is plainly a prupo.ition t incite domestic insurrection for the iu9creof millions ol people, a portion of them supposed to be loyal, and one halt of them defenceless women and children. We do notquote here the censure helped upon the European who, in foimer d.ijs, moved the Indian to atrocious detxh; but let u. turn to other c;es. Said John Qumcy Adüm.4 in his correspondence rchttin? to British Admiral Cochrine') proclamation referring to l iveain the war of lSl'J: "It i not confoi nmlde to the tdbüshel U44re.of war anion;; civilized nation;" a4in: "The principle i th-tt the ennucip-ition of enemy s suve4 is not amon the acts of legitimate war;" once more: "The right of putting to de ith all prisoners in cold blooo, and without special c ilm miht as well be pretended to be a U of war, or the riht to uoisoned weapons, or to M4.:ii!.te." John Quincy Adims was right. Napoleon refu-eI to nriu the Ru-in er.s atiint their mi ten, though they were of the same race and color, eveu when they came in thouvitds oflVrin their arrice. Kevoluiioni-ts hre reported to such wtirUre, but it would not be tolerated by the civilized nations of this age. But uppose auch a proclamation would ac eotnplih even no muchjb? w hat authority cm it be done v e are contending lor the Contitu tion as it i, .tml under the Constitution. If not, e must be in vioution of it, anI without Sancton of law, in which cttpc JelT Di'i Gorernmetit is jut us legitimate a ohm, and the rt'cl S:rte are the Uniie-i States n much m the Northeru Suies. In subduing retellion of which this is the most inf motu the world ever .-"aw we can gons f.ir as the Constitution allows, aud there we mu-t stoo. We know it is bevotnini; couimn in this day for persons to Siiy,"We will exercice certain power. Constitution or no Constitution," but that that i. the doctrine of revolutionist;; of the Robepierres ud Murits. who in ninety d.ija ot admiMitraiton would plunge this people into all the horrors of the French revolution, when no m tu'i life would be &afe and all property would be worthtes. Mr. Lincoln is not of this cl.i, he and his C-ibiuet and the Conres derive their jiower lrui the Constitution, and to that thev nuit ad here or ru'n comes to nil. 11 v tlul iii.inime;.t ANrah.ini Lint-oin is Pieidenl at WiohiiiLlon: beyond aud wii!i..i.t it he i Mmply A. Lincoln, of! h is Sun June- of SoabiiMik It 'hat Constitution pve him the power to em mcipate slaves wiihin the Sute, and ;n 'n-t the will ot the loyal people theieof for the loyal people are the Sitte then he c-m do it; if iiot. then the Sute or the people have retained that light to theiuhelve", and he h is no more j-owcr to del with the matter thn we have with the specie in the vault of the New York bank. Uoloie he pro ; ceeds utile he can ee his authority, which we ' f til tolet him ik the :Sute", vr if the cii-is is so j:reat not to admit of del iv, let him at !ent i do much as did Louis NpoUm, when he would pn Ioii Iiis term of oMice, ty e.il to the people. Let him hear what the border States will civ wuat the creat Noithwet will s;i whtt eerv bt.tte M ot the Hu'.'son river wtili say; aye. and wh it New England een will ay. Rut we have the riuht iu the war power, thev tell us. WirpowerI War power! What is that? Will soraebodv nlease define it? Des ainbotlv j pretend tu ay that becaue the nation may be engaged in war therefore the President is endow ed w ith absolute authority ?tlMt he may any the public good and the national welfare deniant this or that, aud go and do it, of his own will! Why. j the Autocrat of Russia h is no more power, and j Nero in his Moodiest day s never d.ued exercise j to math. Whv. wh it doe this power this wr , power enable the Government to doT to tike jour property and mine, when we are loyal citi j zeust If not. then it can not take the property ct any Southern man w ho may be a loy al citizen. ! Will it justify the intition ol the tenants; about tour house or mine to burn the house over our heads and -ur int.mt childien and defene!es women in them? Then it w.ll i.ot admit of such crimes iu VirginU nd Tenneee. How ptrmce Cist people Uould ever I e i-o carried away Hs to ! be!. ee tlut we have endowed anyone or miy ! numkr of men, when we nny be unirmel an 1 ' peaceful, wihiu well to our countiy, to .-e ze ur property, or pipers, or persons, and to ?end ns to the ditt'gen or the block, without any pro- ' ces of law! This is whit is daiinod by the d vocte of emancipation under the w:ir fniwer. But this is ahm uon.eie; auJ it is tiothli.g but the mvdiiess of the hour ttut teges or tolerates such an ide. W duppoe that this Wiir twer wjuld have existed ju-t the nujeif Mr. Ureck- , intidge had bu elected, as tt does under Mr. Lincoln. Letusee. Suppo-e John C Breckinridge had become President in 101. aud in the excited Uteuf feeling in Masai-huetts there had been ! riots and resistance of law. We will suppose that public mmofj were he'.d, and the Con-li luuoa burned, a:. 1 the Union iio;.oui.ced. a:, i the Preidentthre.t!ei el; and in the mid.tot the ex citct&eut a fugitive w nt.z.el iu tiie city of tjti,be couithoiise put in ch-tins, t!iepex;Ie came ru-hui in wtn arms trum Lynn an i Wor ' cjUt. a ud biood watched. Mr. BrekiniiUe Erst tends trtops to Boston; Wendell riiühps au4 Garrison are enl to Fort Vrreu; the Libe- ' roter fuppre-eo. ard other paj-e of nt slavery entiaieuts rcltisc! the rights cf the na;l. It ' 'o-s on actually to ciil war. and the State of' ilachuielta is put uttder martial law. It is' declared and belieed that this trouble comes ! troru the AItitioii seuliint-nt of the North, and it :a iiee-ry to the peace of the country thatsuch .tütuuents should be ruhed out "the ab- j ohtion f power" "the Punun ohgan hy " mu.-t be exterminated Supjo-e ih it Mr Breckinridge' Cime forward with a provlitnit on aftirtnin that tbe Governmeait could nut e.iil half slave aiid ' half fM, that ynifornitr of entimfnt and con-

tittitioc wtrt entiil, und that cmsfqtj:tlj, j tnoJifj the'r political in-titetions without the cerJ by tli power e-te-i in bim aa Comtnnier- , ceity of fighting lor euch change." in Chief, Uvjr houlJ be extended orcr all the Her l m distinct rnonciition of what be has Sutes, ar-4mU nr;; fouo l iu MAJacbue;t4 j "Uaght," Mbe'ieel' buJ "tili mViriUins.' It after a certain dat, without an owner or master, i ' perfect era U.!" meat of ecekn hereby. JeX a'1J ht oM at public auction. Dwe the t-r i D-tvi, in hi f tmou "let alone" doctrine, only ou Ii tht wotjJ rhira th'a to Le ritl.l? Ar J te icl.es. nj ilM;!.-. m.tl lHeve th.it it llie riht

why ot? Je . o I tifit ll'nt wnr rwT aa K0d on one the otli T Ds lite c. lent of an e e. iiu tli iue lhe . ntioe of the c -? His ft the Uo en nnt Jiiit n nvith pwrr to etab Iih : to ar!h la ery T to m ke O'oo ui with rCentuvky ns Kentucky w ith O.iiu? uiii'i'i m Now who does net ee tliat the lac; of this assumed ar pwer would be for each President, if the oc ctUn presented and he could make th? occa- i tion if it did not come otherwise to abolish or ; esUblih slaver? at will; and the institutions of the country would change with each change of the Administration, civil war being the consequence of such eleciioo. How loug would or should auch a GoTerameat endure? If we were called upon for our opinion of the results to be expected from a proclamation of emancipation, we would gite it' (provided the slaves claimed rights and liberties under It) as follows: lit, the destruction of all the hopes of the black race; 2d, the detriiction of all the hopes ot the white race under this Government; 3d, the dostruction of all the hopes of the world from our experiment of republican government. The hope of the black is in gradual elevation throof.h his mater and by the aid of the whiles immediately surrounding him; but if he grew iri-ole:it and committed outrages under a procl i m it on of freedom, it would be followed by de-ith. lhe neroe- would te murdeied iu thousands nnd I. u mire's of thou-ai.ds. In the loyal portion of the country we ahould see every ilave Stife leaving us, and th it would complete the tlis-olution of the Union; and in the fiee Slates would anrinj; up a party hostile to the Government. Thai party would first carry the election against the Administration in the North west, and then carry the State to JeJT Davis. In ill sections of the land would le anarchy ai,d confusion, and out of the ruin of the republic wonld spring milifciry depttiin3 that would war upon each other and drag us through the helU that the European nations have traveled through in the three centuries past. This is the picture as it pre-ents itself to u; if others tee it iu bright and charming colors, it is onlv because men aie dirlerently constituted. AnJ men should have the riht to think ns they pleue, and to tct as they pleise wiihin the Constitution and laws. If emancipation is declared we phall le glad to find ourselves mistaken, otherwise it were better that this generation of men had never been born. Tli Collection off Ike National TaxImportant lntruction to the Collector. The Collectors appointed ui der the recent act of Congiess, to collect the Nath.nal Tax, are making their Hirat.enei.t-, and will soon com cicnce operations. 1 he CommMoner of Revenue at Washington has juot nVued the following important regulations to the Collectors at Philadelphia, which apply equally to Collectors iu this locality: 1. All mechanics, except thoe who merely do repairs, must be registered us manufacturers, and must take out a license a uth if the annual sates amount to $1,0(10. 2 But mechanics and other manufacturers v.ho sell their own manufactures at the place whete thev are produced are not required to take out an additional licence as traders. This does not include rectifiers, who must pay both licen.ea. 3. If manufacturers have nn office, depot, store room, or agency, at a place different from the place wheie the goods are made, or if they sell the manufactures of others, in addition to their own, they must pay a trader 'a aa well a. a manufacturer's license. Thus, a tobacconist who both makes cigars and keep lor sale goods in his line which he has purchased, must take out both licenses. So must n druggist, who also makes patent articles, or medicines, &c , for which he has a piivate lormula or receipt. 4. Persons keeping bar-rooms or saloons, for the sale of liquors, niu?t take cut h liquor deal er's license. If thev also furnish food, thev mut, in addition, take out an eating houe licen.-e; and the sale of cigars, &"C, requites a tobacconist's or retail dealer's licence, besides billiard tables require a pjcial license, anJ bugatelle tables are reckoned as billiards. 5. Commission merchants who are al?o ship or commercial brokers are required to take out two liceu-es. G. Grocers selling flour by the barrel or salt by the sack, or any other article in the original package, ate reckoned as wholesale dealers. 7. SianiH mu.-t be attactied to the papers re quiring them at the lime of their execution, und must be obliterated by the person w riting his initials upon them. Telegraphic dispatches must be stamped and etlaced when deliveied to be transmitted. But railroad and telegraph com pa iiies are not requited to stamp their owp dis jaitches over iheirown lines. Ö Arrangements will be made with the collec tor ot this district to supply stamps to parties de filing to purchase $50 worth or over, at the rates of du-count eaUbliidied by the Treasury Depart meat. 9. Notes and bills of exchange drawn for a certain sum, with inteie.-t. will he stamped ac cording to the principal sum. Foreign cuircncy will be e.-timued according to the leal par of ex change; the ound Mci hug, for instance, at the rate tixed lor covet eigns, not at the nominal rate of 4 434. nor at the market rates of exchange, which i- now something above the real par. 111. On and after OcudnT 1st the folio win? in Mruimnls niut be stamped: All agreements, nppraiements, checks, sight drafts, protnm ssO' V notes, inland m.d foreign biüs of exchange, bills lading to foreign frt-. packages, Sic., -er ex jess bonds, ceitilicates ol ptocks, or protit, of i.Vjss'it iu batiks, of damages, and all other cer tificates, ch nler parties, brokers, memorandums, conveyances, mortgages, leases, te.egrapii dispatches, custom-house eutries and manifests, policies of insurance life, marine, and fire, and renewals of .same pts-ae tickets to foreign jtorts. pxiwers of attornev, pn.xies, probate of will, protest, watehouse receipts mal writs or other original process of conur.encing suit. Also, pateut medicines, pctfumeis, and playing card. in reference to public houses and liquor dealers exclusively, it is defined that in a tavern or public hou-e where liquor is sold, licences must be taken for each bus res, the license for the tavern to be according to the rental, and the license for liquor in all cases of retail to be twenty dollars. By retail is understood any quantity under three gallons. To sell above that quantity is wholesale, and the licene is one huüured oollais Restaurants which furnish bed din.;, and which keep liquors, are required to obtain three license. first a tavern license, secondly a license for the liquor bar, ot twenty dol hit s, and thirdly a liietise for the eating bar, costing ten dollar, wheu the re eipts amount to or exceed one thousand dollars per y ear. Liting houses are permitted to keep confeciiouery without an additional lkrnse. Alldeiiers in liquor by retail are required to pay a license of twenty dollars per yeir. The penalty for retu.l or failure to take out license is a fine of three times the amount of duty or tx imposed by the law; one hali" of which goes to the informer. These taxes are, of ourse, in addition to the State and city licenses now imposed, and the accumulation o! expenses will mate ritliy ail Vet the smaller dealers who abound in e ery pari of the city. The prosecution of delinquents is tuade imperative on the Collectors, who hold the name and residence of all de tiers, so that escai-e from the peaahr is nex. to impossible Greeley and Itadicaliam alled. It has been asserted, time and agiin. and proved, by extracts Irom the New York Tribune, that Horace Greeley has always favored the right ol secession. That he should do .-o is perfectly natural, because he indorse Phi!I, Sumner, Chandler, and 11 other radicals. lie has believed that ifce "Constitution is a league with hell and a covenant with death." and he helred to coerce the President inu isfu:pg the late decrees, by calling him a "wet blat.ket" and an "auger that won't bore," and bv ctving circulation to the other Abolition nicknames applied to him. such as "bloodhuund of slavery "tortoise" and "broomstick." Besides, he has perj:.teutly opposed enlistments lor the sane rtasot.. ' He acvuveo tb PrEidti of be.ng- "dloyai," aatU athrmed that three times three hundred thousand c t zens would not "m irth on" to the war until it hou'id be carred ou for em mc.pttliun. In days gone by, too. he pubii.hed iu hi. paper a p-oeui dtmaiiuing that the tig ol the Union should be tiic Wen down, Ac. He has now come out in a letter, in which he re ithrms his secession dogmas, a.d wbuh wc allude to because be is the great god of the Abolition iburch. and reveals it objects more Uddly and intelligently than any of its minor membcis. He .ts iu this letter: "What 1 have taught, aind believ ed, and still naitUir, iithe right of i people to fortoani

Ih ;ij.!e to Jot m aifd nHaiifv tlieir ll.tical insf .'u i"ii" wit out t! e i et eity ol uhtin .rm h ai hui.e. It: in compliance wiih ih s ilctrme thit the iMirein Ste- ail C-iileJe racy sent comm:stioi.er to Mr. Bucninan anJ Mr. Lincoln to arrtre term of separption. r.iA sjtoavoi the "necety of Cjhtm." They were f trenpthenej in this course by the articles in

Greeley's paper in favor of secession. They thought tlat tlie programme of the Abolitionist would prevail, an J that the entire North would consent to the annihilation of "the coveuantwith hell and agreement wiihdeith." Let not the reader think that th's is a chance expression of Horace. He further says, in the same letter "in other word, I believed our revolutionary fathers hid a right, for reasons which were copent and seemed to them conclusive, to terminate their connection wi;h Great Britain, and that the British were wrong in resisting their claim to do so. And the rights which I claim for our fathers and for ourselves I will not deny to others. In other word. I insist that radical as eil as subordinate changes in political institution might and should be eifected withoA war and blood -hed." Observe that he makes the sececding parties the judges of the "cogency" and "conclusiveness" of their "reasons." and that he distinctly affirms every doctrine of the. Secessionists. Of course ihee doctrine are wrong, all xcrtng. They can not be entertained by loy al men. Thev belong only to the radicals and Secessionists to men who bate the Government established by the revolutionary futhers. The question is how far will the people approve of them? How long will they follow the counsels of men who are trying to destrov. m.d not resture the Union? Dtiroit Free I'rett. Corresponiitnct ot the New York Tlmn. A 1'reiicl .Vhcine of Conqtirat In America. Paris, September 12. If reports which come to me from the newspaper oflues be true, the Mexican question is assuming a gravity which requires all the attention of the Governtucut of the United States. The Mexican army is to be carried to e0,lMM) men. instead of 3U!tK); and this army, for which the provision contracts have aire tdy been made, is to le main in th it co in'ry. The Eagineer who has been sent out with au Etat-Major, and material, is rot going; to locate a road liom Vera Cruz to the capital till after he had located a road actoss the Isthmus, frwn the Oulf of Mexico to the Pacific a railroad intended to counteract the Pacific railroad of the Americans. The gravity of these lacts, if they prove to be true, will not e-cape the mind ot any one. I am told that until the last meeting of the Cabinet not moie than 50.000 men wete deemed necessary to cany out thee projects, but that at this meeting a further number ol at Jeast 30,000 men wete decided upon. The papers, indeed, hate just been inadveitently, no doubt, publishing a notice of the immense amount of provisions which have been bought for the Mexican ex;edition. and among other items noticed w as one of "00,000 kilogram mes of buscuit which tells a tory of itself. All this grand scheme of conquest and occupation in the New World, 1 am told, is based on the iei of offering a barrier to the extension of the Anglo Saxon race to the South and over the region which row belongs to the Latin races. It eems impossible that a man of Napoleon's practical tut n of mind could nurse such a Utopia in his breast, and actually attempt to carry it out in the face ot a certainty of a war with the United States; but I am assure!, nevertheless, of its truth, and obliged to admit that all the evidence couoborates its truthfulness. Conilllutlonal Itlghts. A coteruporary, who is-a reat admirer of Lin coin's late proclamation, rises in indignation at the suggestion that lehels have any right to the protection of the Constitution, and writes a ten itle phillipic against all opponents upon that idea of his. Well, it is true that a rebel against the Constitution cuts a ridiculous figurein claiming its protection. He has no right to complain ol a jut punishment, whether it is constitutional or not. But are loyal men absolved from the obligations of the Constitution, and the laws made in pursuance thereof ? Where do they get the right to punish the rebel, except from the Constitution? And have they any rifiht to indict a penalty ex cept in the way provided by law in pursuance of the Constitution? The munter deserves to die; but no one ha a right to inflict the penalty except he be the minister ot the law. He might le sum marilv dispatched, and he would have no right to complain; but he must be indicted, ttied by jury, and sentenced by u judge. If a judge wete to order a munterer to be taken out and hanged, without a trial, he would be himself a murderer; for he must infiict tho penalty according to the Constitution und according to law. We derive the right to put down this rebellion fiom the Copstiiuton nnd from no other source; when we disregard that instrument we have no more sanction lor our act than the rebels. We aie only a mob, nnd due mob is as lawful as another. It may he inconvenient for us to regard con stitutional restraints whilst the rebels do not; so it may be inconvenient for society to go through the forms of law to punish murder; ut it is not on that account anv belter to punish without law. The Constitution gives ample power to put down this rebellion. There is no excuse for violating it. To plead that w c can do it bee itise the rebels have done it, is to confess ourselves on a dead level witti them. What the Constitution piovides is safe and etlicitnt; what it doe not ptovide is I iwless, ami if foil wcd is only rebellion itself in another form. lAtuistillr Dtm From Cincinnati Price Current, Oct. 24. Financial and Commercial Mimmury for the 1'utt Week. The failure of the Army of the Potomac to prevent the retteat of tue rebels out of Maryland ami the restoration of the proverbial quiet on that river; the inoflensive tto itment of tiie rebels in Kentucky, and the seemingly quiet possession they have been permitted to t;ke nnd keep of that S'ate and the Kanawha Valley, have operated depressingly upon the public mind and the faith which was strengthened by theie;orl of the viitorie in Mary laud, has been shaken again m iking the future look as daik as ever. The result of all this is that gold and State and railway securities have been steadily advancing, and gold has reached 24 per cent, pi em. in New York. The proclamation issued by the President, emancipating negroes in rebel States, caused some talk, but ha been regarded by them is-es unlavor ibly. not bccaue of its abstract merits, but oecause of the existing c:rcumtance under which it was issued. Had th Government lull possession of Virginia, including Richmond, nnd ol the Mississippi river, then the President's procl i mation declaring the olavesin the rebellious States fiee. next January or next May, would h ie assumed an importance of gre t m ignitude; but a it is. it is regarded as a thirg of comparatively it:le moment. The Iatproc lamititui suspending the writ of hubrat curpus 'ux the United States, and placing all under martial law. i import tut, beeaue practicable, and is one of serious ini:ort, becaue of its necessity. The money market rem tins easy and the oflerings of aca entable paper '-not equal to the demand, at j(21Ü j a?r ce t. Capital is abundant in all the leauiui marts of the country, nt:d the opportunities for investment, which are regarded sale, ate who.lv inadequate to the demand for them. Exchange has ruled steady and firm; the demand is moderate. The following we:e the quo utions for exchange and coin at the close last evening: Buying Sellins. New York. . ...U disQpax. U' prem. ' Gold VI pteni Silver... .- IS prera. 17 r-rem Demaud Notes. . 17(J 1 b prm. The dely in getting the internal teenue ma-; ; chirerv into operation is causing a good deal of, j romment. M tnuficturers hive ben given to! ; understand that all the product of their factories j . or workshop since the 1st of September i aub- 1 ! ject to t'Xitii D. though no formal notrce has been t Cnen fhtn. Many suppose tli.it these good., will i j i,it nor cau not be taxed, it being; necessary that j : the otSvers to levy and collect the tax should be present to do ,.h".s before anything- beoome ub- ; 1 jeel to taxttion. It is tleir, however, that if; ; rumufaetüred good made during the past month i ! are taxed, the honest m.m will be imposed usm ; j whilst di-hoi.e-t men vill have a decided advan-: tage. The understanding at the clo-e last eveihig ws that the officers and machinery will be j ready to day. , Th. supply of the sump currency in circuit-

tion Is quite tmxll, and morelneonreniencels fe!t in thia city because of the want of small change thai! at any previous time. Post age stamps were being circulated very generally, but public attention ting called to'the fact of this being unlawful, this method of relief had to be ab m lur ed. The weather continue dry and vegetation is thoroughly parched op Ti e coin cn-p in thi S ite an 1 Keotn.-ky an 1 a portion of Indi inn i short iuMv o..et!i:rlof

what it j noo'seil in July. beifnl remcly. The ' failure of the oat crop, together with the detruc- ( tion of the gn;, compelled I irtr.ers t feed their stock with corn, which ' has creatly reduce! the stock now on hand in the 'State named. This has made farmers more firm regarding the pric of hogs and place a higher e-timate on the value of them than had been thought of. It has alo engendered a disposition to speculate in old mess poik, and the indication are that some movement will soon take place in this Ii ie. The scarcity and present and prospective high price of cooperage has something to do in this matter. There is no doubt that there is a larce supply of hogs in the West, atid high prices will cut short a foreign demand which is the chief one that can be looked for. With the exception of one made some time ago at $3 50, no contracts have been made for hogs, and 8 the case now bind none can be made, there being; fully one dollar a hundrsd difference between the parties t eceary to make them. Feeder think $2 about tne figuie, aud pickers Business has been moderately active; and in the grocery and dry goods market?, a good trade has existed all the'wrek. In grain and flour the business has been but moderate, and in provisions there has been very little done. Flour has been iu f.tir local an i export demand at the prices current for name three weeks. Wheat has been a shade firmer, the supply being light. Corn, o its and barley have fluctuated a good deal, according to the supply, from day to day. There lias been a fair demand fo.r whisky, and holders put ud the price lc in con-equence of the rise in New York. About 4,rM)0 brts were exported during lhe week. The di-tillers aire work ing to some exte..t, and suppose that what they make will not be subject to taxation, indeed, as tne month passed on t tie v became m ire confident on this point, and we presume a great deal, if not all, tints made, haa been removed from the distillers, and so with other manufactured goods. Butter nnd cheese sue still in light supply and very firm. 1 he supply ot beef cattle r.i Monday's market was large, chiefly owing to an in flux from Kentucky , the farmers ia that State w ithin our line, and no doubt in ths rebel lines, being very anxious to get their cattle to tu n ket ou this side, preferring this to exchanging them for the lithographical scrip of the rebels. The supply run up to n thousand head, and prices run down fully öi'e per cental, and the market closed dull, piitne cattle being a drug at $2 50 gross Hogs nnd sheep have not changed essentially in value since last week lu provisions, the market has been weaker First class brands mess potk could be sold at $9, but pales of iriegular and mixed lots ot country would not bring over $3 o'h Tlie demand for shoulders fell oil, and smoked sold at 4,lX and were dull at this rate nt the close, though a large lot was advertised for in Louisville yesterday . but we presume the bidders had supplied ihem-elves before they put in their b;ds. Bulk meat has not been Inquired for. Shoulders can be bought at 3c And sides at 5c. Smoked sides sold at 5lc packed, but are held in many cases at Gc; theie is however little or no demand for them. Clear sides are not ake I for; they can be bought at b'lj'e. The Government using shoulders and hams in preference to sides tili? season has caused much disappointment. Common hams, including summer cuted, are worth t' 0c and sugar cured IH.; to 12c. Theie Int. been a belter demand for laid, but prices are 1 wer; I.2')0 package sold at P1. It lias advanced to 10c in New Yotk. Butchers' . lard is still iu pressing demand at Tc, buyers furnishing cooperage. The advance in gold and sterling exchange produced quite a stir in foreign goods, and si irar and coflee aie higher; the advance in coffee is Jc; in raw sugar c, mid in t dined sugar iv and quite a large business was done Mola.--es is also firmer. Flaxseed is up to $1 25, and in good demane. No clovereed in market worth naming. The military rule lias been so relaxed now thnt it intei fetes with business but slightly. At 2 I'. M.on Saturday all business i to beupended, and every man fubject to military duty is bound to drill from that till 5 P. M., when businc-s may iigain be resumed. Coal, owin to the very low stae of water in the river, advanced to 2Wc per busiiel. The slock now bete is about two million bushels; but it is f-ta'ed that evtn wilh a good state of water the supply will be hott and the price h'gh, owing; to the large number of miner in the army. It is probable that coal w ill not be as cheap as it h is been the past two yeais for some lime to come. Itev. .Hr. Xleechrr ICeftiae to Take t-ie Itouniy. To the Editor of the Brooklyn Eagle: This morning while traveling in Fulton street, on my way to New York, I met a ceutlern in who 1 was afterwards informed wns Rev. Henry Ward Beecher. I asked hirn if he was desirous of enlisting now, and if he would enroll himself under the banner which 1 held n my hand (the Stars and Stripes). I stated I was Recruiting Sergeant for Corcoran'. Irish Legion, and w anted a few moie abie bodied men like himelf. He replied, "No; you ought to know, sir, 1 do not vvnt to enlist. You ate a scoundrel for asking me to do so!" thereby insulting the tliglbore, and discountenancing enlistments. Now, Mr. Editor, is not this language of Mr. Beecher both unborn mini' a nie.ieher of the GiKiel a udl :i an American cit'zeu? And is it not entirely in I Consistent with the views of every pitriot, which this gentleman his alwavs prolesed to be? I i consider-it to be the duty of the Government to have Bev. Mr. Beecher eh sei v watched, as his conduct to day appears very suspicions. R. V FlTGf-R ALI, 1st Serg't 5th Reg't Corcoran Legion. The exact languige ued by Governor1 Andrew to the Secretary of War, when he aked that the war should be conducted upon emancipation principles, was, that in that case "the road would swarm with the multitudes that New England would pour out to obey the call." On the other hand, we see the statement in a city ! contemporary that "since the President's em ui cipation proclamation wn published whether owing to that or some oilier caue, is mi known recruiting has almost entirely ceased. Even Ward 11 has contributed no men duiing the last thiee days." The latter Ward is inh ibited largely by our adopted fellow citizens. Boston Cour. jTI" brief notice ot Gen. .TeRerson C. D tvis, the Indiana State Sentintl lalls? into an error in asseilint: that voung l.tvi receive! his education t West Point. Captain T. W. Gibson, of thi city, with whom Mr. D-ivi -ervetl a? a private in Mexico, procur ed his appointment to a cadethipat West Point, but the appointment was sub seijuently withdrawn, Hnd he was appointed to a il Lieutenancy in the regulr army w ithout graduating Mt the military Vcho.d. lie served with distinction under Gen. Ander-on at Fort dumber and win hi-elevation ton brigadier Get. eiaUhip at Pea Ridge Ismitcille Jour. ANNOUNCEMENTS. 3r We are authorized to announce JOHN j A. BCALat aa independent Ccconiifional Union candi j date rr Common Ilea Jadge for tbe Twelfth District. HORSES LOST. LOT FKOM A PASTCKE NEAR CAMP MORTON, ; rn the 3oth eptetaber, a NJRHKL, about 12 years i oi,well and stri'r.iily furm-d; a B VY, aSout S years old, larce a-d well friued; a R()A, white lace aud feet, abuut 11 ye.rs old. of but little value to any other ptr.u. A 1 beral reward wul be gneü f ir their rturti, tr , eitiier cf them. W. H. MoiUilsoN, &J d3 At AlforJ, M.U-, Z Co's. HATS AND CAPS. m m. 4j ji t ill open ilonlu)a October tills A new and ip'.enOid stock of BffawtM CiafSM, At No. 15 Pennsylvania street, betwern ÜJd-Fr.w H.l and the l'.:.rhce. -12 ATTORNEYS. TtR.W.S A. HEM KICKS (Kll . ÜOiU. iii:iu. KS V 1IOKD, o4 liff.ee .Etr.a Bail lir e. 13 ra NOTICE. 13 UXfc; rük 3LE-l3(iaireof ep&-d7w McKERNAN k. Fl EEC i-.

SPECIAL NOTICES.

FXTBZalO NOTICE. TOTlL,lM A: (, llrnffffiat, o. IH Cavt Wnalilnrton Street Hare been arpomtMl a-nta for tbt Mile of n it t n t v s i i, a , TUM W'OXUKKKCU HK.!SLLt"S, f-r th cur rf Courts Cfl. $o- Tbrt, BriM-hm. Wheninc, rritatjun i( tb UtTi?a ar.d Ton-U. and D!t?A- of tie Lttsr. J M ta Urge boxe, 25 et., SI c:..nd ft etch. Dladlwlv KT TO THE NERVOUS OF ROTH SKIF.S. A KetirM Orsyraan tavlr.fr beta restored to be Ith tn a fer dajs, after rnanj jear of rrat nulTertcj-, I w-iKir.g to asit other by endir. (.free) on tbe receipt of a pt-paid directed cEreloye, a copy of the prescription ned. Direct to 4 Kev. JOHN 3d. DAGXALL, Je9-d&w4m 138 Fulton trtet, Brooklyn, X. T. CAUTION. The market! full of imitations, represented tobe tb ttxnm BROWX SBKONXUlALTKOCIIES,"b:cbre In motcae productive of positive injury. Many dealer will recommend Inferior preparation ar.d lower priceJ article, aflo Vug more prof.tto themselves Ak fortad OBTAIN onl BROWN'S BRONCHIAL TROCHES," which by loii esperienc bave provl tbir value, havh g received tie M!ct!n of pliykin f-etierally, and teftlmotiial from emineDt men throucbout the country. BROWN'S BUONCMIAL T1I0C11F.S. wben allowed to diKlve lowly in the mouth, have a direct influence to theaSected pait: the rJatie and oothiog effect to tbe mueu liulng of the windpipe Into tbe RrobchiiallarIuU monary irritaitun tnd Kie relief in CouKb, ColJ, and the rartouaThroatalTectionsto which public (eaker and inRer.tr liable. febll-dl y62 S3T SINGER k CO. 'S LETTER "A" FAMILY SEWING MACHINE, with all the recent Improvement, Is the REST and CUE A TEST and MOST BE ALT! FUL of all ewinjr machine. Thi machine will ew any tLin? , from tbe running of a tack In tarletan to the making ot an overcoat anyt tiin jr from pilot or beaver cloth down t the softest pauze rr cosaTiier tisMie, and I ever ready to da its work to perfection. It can fell, hem, bind, gather, tuck, quilt, and bat capacity for a great variety of oriiain. iital work. This in not the oiiiy machine that can fe)!, hem, bint, and so forth, but it will do ao better than any other machine. The Letter A Family Sewing Machine may be had In a great variety of cabinet casta. Tbe Folding Caxe, which is now beeoioiig no popular, U, a its name implies, one that can be'fulded into a box or case, which, when opened, makes a beautiful, ubstantial, and pacious table for the w ork to res-t upon. The case are of every imaginable design plain as the wood grew in its native forest, or a elaborately flni-hed a art can makethem. I. M. SINGER CO., No. 4."8 Broad wav. New York. ftaJT-Indianapolis Oöice No. 3 Odd-Fellows' Hail, Washington street. apl.s-dly GROCERIES. MORE NEW GROCERIES! Ruger k Caldwell, WHOLESALE GROCERS -ANDCOMMISSION MERCHANTS, iYo. G8 Eaiwt WaMhiiisrtoii t. Hre Doort Eit of Oil 7uV Hiillr Indt' gLTTF.R, Cheese, and Dried Beef; 0QQ IIOGSHKADS New ürlean Sugar, 0QQ HOGSHEADS Mand Sugar, I A A TACKAGFS, Herring, Codfish, Halibut, and -dtUU Mackerel; 500 BAURELS iirüwd Sußar aQ BARRF.LS Sirup and ilolassee; A A BAGS Bio Coffee; 2QQ BAGS Java Coffee; 0QQ BAGS Roasted Coffee; OA A CIIESTS and 1UU Chet Imperial, Gorpow. rUvf der. Young Hyson, Hyson Skin, and Oblong Teas VLSPICE, raia, Cove. Cinnamon, and a erueral aortmetit of Spiee suiuble fur retail trade; COKIUGE, Cigars, Fniits. L'quors; all kind- f Nut. I:ice, Soaps, To''arco, and wooden Ware, besides a g-neral a-ortment of uroceries, ia store and f.-r sale ty 11LT.CII JL CALOW LLL, CS East Washington street. MEF:CIHNTSvisiT5i!gtbe Stae Fair would do well to call ai.d examine the above cmk!s at RUG EU 4 CALDWELL, J13'62-diwly ftS East Washington st. PATENTS. PATENTS O BTAINF.D FOR NEW INVENTIONS OF EVEhT i description. Fee. contmgeci cn iucrr. u pio pay. Send for CirciiUr, givu.g terms, filrecUons, i .rif nr. nat &. Adire AilOS KKUAl.AA, i nATl-dly Patent AttAmey. Wa.binrtoE.D. C. j I LIVERY STABLE. ! LI Y C K Y STABLE,! "JO. 10 F.at Pearl street, ba'.f a square roith of Wahinton trt'et. btt.rfn Mriiia and Pennsylvania j trreu, in rear of Gleen Block, Indianandi. ap5-dtf . HTLKISUN. Proprietor ; O- W. JOHNSTOlSr, i Livery and Sale Stables; n)5. 11 AND 13 WEST PEARLSTREET, j inoLaiAruiaA.iDiaa. tf Horn, Eiigrles, Carru and Saddle Harsei , alwaysia readiness. Cbsrfea moderau. decS-tf i

AMUSEMENTS.

METR0P0LJT1X HALL. GRAND COMBINATION OF TALENT! Jfi MsHon MiKsrthy. Vr. Febx K. Virnt. Mr. W. n. lWld'n. tbe dairr P.'pe Walker, aud Mr. Harry GUUrt, the ce.rl rird Patminsl.t. miDlT EVENING, OCT0BFR 5. The perfnaarce will e. tnsier.ee with the exrerect Comedy f TIIK FOUU 8ISTKRS, In which X't- Msri(n llatarthy appears la fourchar acter, w;tb s c. To b followed by darir.c performance on tht tight rope by Mr. W. II IkjNALDSuN. After wbH-h tbe Operetta entitled In which M;s Marion Macardiy and Mr.Fel.x A. Vincent both appear. To conclude with the Serto-Coniic rautomitne of Poh&o, the Inteitisrent ,lpr. Poneo (the Ape) ...W. II. Donaldson Albino Harry Gilbert Pares: or Amhwü-Iress Circle W cents; Gallery 15 een: private l'oxe f 5. Ioors pen at T o'clock. Commence at T1.'. 3 DRY COODS. Inl EH w W o Ph ill f"3 TJ1 WHOLESALE CROCERS. Earl & Hatcher, V II O I. r. S A Ii F, GROCERS, i .a m. . )f( nnriS. New Orleans S-rrJut received from Memphis, and for sale by EARL A BATCHER. 500 BBLS Reined Surae far sale by EARL k nATCnER. 500 BAßS mo cofr IPO Bays Jara Colfee; 10 Bale Mocha Cofe; For tale by EARL 4 HATCTIER. TOBACCO. jQ HOIKS 5 Lump; 100 10 Lump; 73 rJie 8 Locip; 100 lioxr t-tight 11; Z6 lies es dark lb: SCO Cadd.cs 4 lbs; 50 Ke? Six Twit; The above asor.nietit t.f Tut-aoco U Bow the larjest to b fouikd ia th WtkX, and will b mid below Iba current rate. CA&L L BATC1LEK.

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A FILL LIXE OF FALL & WINTER DRY GOODS at Lynch & THESE GOODS WERE noVGIlT AT AL'CTlilV! ASP TflLL BE FOLD i Below the Present Standard Prices! EEUEMXER, 33 WEST WASHINGTON ST., Next Dry Goods store t the Palmer Douse. LYNCH & KEANE, JelJ'tt-dly rROPKlETOKS. CROCERS. V .11. in I. K X & S O S , WHOLESALE GROCERS, 70 AND 72 VINE MRK.FT, I.TTWEEN SECOND AND PEARL STREETS, ClwatrABaawawtfl. ff AVE A LtRGK AM W EM. SF LEITF.D STUCK I 1 of t;rocenr of ail kinds, bought exclusively for ca.h, to w btcb wc Invite the atwnUout'I doe cash burer. aufW-Uliu INSURANCE. nmvi ivriTnivpn rniinivir iTili I likMiIiliUri lUslllaliU ir ii Ait runt i), . Csipital Enlarged Jan'y 1, 1860. CAPITA I I -oOO.OOO OO XKT St KI'I.US, (after deducting all labilities) 3 II 142 30 iETNA BUILDING, INDIANAPOLIS. Erected 1359 Owned bylheCOa 7SPE IAL A .TF.NT10NGIVT.NTOTHE IN5CRANCK "j ot tann propirtj, dwellinsr-andout-buildina-s. In I sures such building or contents in a vtry favorable man ner, for three or five years. Losses Fqillfnbljr Adjtiatrd nnd IromplIjr I'uld In Caali. Alo,ln-ures störe, warebnnses. buildinc, or content and pervMial property cnerallj, in town tr country, at rates a low as ronsMent with hazards taken, and inland Insuranceacainst tb priU t navigation. W. HENDKIO!f,Arent, Indiaiiapol:, lrxl.ana. 4pp!icafioncan be made to JOHN ROSS, w ho la fully autijorlid to transact all t.UMurw cnT--rl wttb the ARency. ,'au l. Cl-dly WM. IlKNLF.kSON. PROPOSALS. ' Si: LED PROPOSALS. QUARTERMASTER'S DEPARTMENT.) IsuiASsrou, I.D.. S-pt. 2'h lil. ) SEALED pnopu.S LS WILL RE RFCEIVI D AT TIIIS ofSce until 10 o'clock. A. 31.. Moni sr. the 6th dar of October, Istii, lor ?0() Ton Haled Ilisr 3O00 Hüchel Oats, (,n lulk.) ösOOO liar Corn, (iahlk.) To be delivered at the L'cited 5tats Forage Hoa, It Iii:.aap4..'., i:.J si.. The Hay to be s,hA tlear Timothy hard prePed each bale not to weif h tbao 3o0 r.uDs. None ba wrll bded. cl an oa;i, and soand n-ret antat le corn wi!I b r-ceivea. One-third (,',) of ecii to be delirerrd In ten (10) dsya, fn-tbird (ii) in twmiy i't) days, and balance lu thirty (3n) da.vs tr-.m dite ol contract. hach bid mut be arc'!Bpai,M by eufJdent gnaratt fr lt faithful perfortnat.c. Form of bid and fuarantee can be bad at th ff.ee. No bid will be entertained for le. than fifty tons of hay, 1.CMH hul.ls of COTTI artd 1,1100 tD-bU of Oat. sepu-d:d JAMES A. EK1N, A. Q. M U. b. A. DRY COODS. CO i i I t. 9 m n n n tl n ".s i Hi a o a 15 e I b-1 g 1 3 SS 2 Em 5 FOR THE WAR. COLT'S PATTERN SELF-ACTLNG KEVOLYEUS! XAVV AND BELT REVOLVERS, A full cap ply Sew Pattern. Swords at Cost Prices, Bowie. Picket, and Table Kniees; Fruit Caas; Na.ls; Belunc Kepe, aa4 &uiV!ir t; Hard war. At Sa. 21 West Watliagton SL JetS J. IL TAJIK.

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