Daily State Sentinel, Volume 10, Number 3759, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 October 1862 — Page 2
DAILY SENTINEL
ATi' ic ha v o Ti:r.u IH The Cnion: It mit! be prrrrrrd onto i;ircncm. Ia Ohl- went ffi.MK) fusion, nd 5ry Congrernn e'erie! m of theme stripe. In leCl the Sute wRt 0,000 Ileubücan. Now the De oocr ctTT tht Sut from ten to Cfteexi 0 0 tbottaaJ, tad eVect two third of the Coopremen. TVtt i resolution in public sentiment mhlcV UMiNhe the Abo!itionlu. The Ar nee J tkoart of the people i Iwt right. . . . IndlaaK lllec(ln Tin? irturrn come in ioIj. The majority for the Ppm-xxAtic Sute Ticket will be from twelve to fifteen tboavinl. Sixty Dem cratic Ilcre-CD-tatire, and ßiietea Democratic Senator, ire electcl. ThU will give mjoritv in both branch es Sren Democratic Congressmen are elected. auid prubublj eight. The imb (CoLrax') District 4 clo. We will publish a lit of the Reyreetitatiei and Senatora election Monday. I'ennaf-lraiila I'.lertlon. The return from lVtnylvauU indicate a Democratic triumph. OuUide of rhilade'phu, 1 ltat j it every county, there are large Democratic gain. It U probtble that ixteen Democratic Congressmen, two third of the Representatives from that State, lure been elected, and that the Democratic Sute ticket has carried by a bandome majority. The lower Houe U prob ably Deiaocr itic. Nine Democratic lief -reenta tivr are elected from Philadelphia, f hi is doing well for a Uepuhlicau Stale. Tlie Seventh Dtatrlct Hjii. D. W. Vucautts, the elwpueut champion of Democratic principles, U re elected to Con pre by twenty-five hundred majority. ThU id indeed a glorious triumph. Kvery effort waa mide bv the Abolitionist to defeat hi:n. The mot pular Kepublican in the District wa the oppo.-ing candidate. Vituperation and abu.-e was he.ipel upon Mr. Vooehem through every agency that his opponent could ue. I5ut the people ukmJ by him. He his more than doubled the majori tv he received two year ai:o. In the election of tl.U vear there ia no more gratifying personal tribute than the re-election of Mr. Vooa uiu, or a prouder party triumph. All over the country hi political and personal friend will re joice at the result. .Ilnlh niaitrlrf The news fron the Ninth Conreional District leave the contest there in doubt. It was conceded at Loaosport, yeterday at noon, that Coirax's chance were rather better than Tvr fie'h and that fifty vote would cover the major ity either way. Let the content terminate a it may, the friend of Mr. Turn have a right to be poud of their youuz and gallant champion. He ha cut down a majority of three thoutand jour hundred to a few dozen vote at mot. Mr. Colfax' abolition record has been signally rebuked by the people of hi District, and we trust that he will be disposed to consider hi ways, and nn Ich in hi. future course. The people have spoken. Will he heed their voice ? ItabUI. The Journal and the Republican pre are rabid over the result of the recent election, aud profe to fear the con;eiuence3. Upon that core the Republicans need give themselves no uneii'uie. The Democracy have always been the Union party, and they will continue to be. They hive always u.tained the Government, and they will continue to do ?o. President Limcoix nnd Governor Morton need have no tear but they will be fully sustained by the Democracy in the legitimate diiclmrge of all the duties ol their pwition. But their ollici.il act will be closely investigated and scrutinized. If fraud., corruption and mi.man igeuicnt have ch traderized the administration of the truU conti Jed to them, they will be exposed. Hut if it ha been honest, pure and wie, tl.ey need have nothing to apprehend. L i the province of a free people to pa upon the conduct of those who represent them, and they propoe to exercise it. For the Daily Stat Svntinel. olltlral lllatorr Xl'MBrR OME. Fellow Citizem: I to day addrc you on political topic, nd I de re to le perimitel to my what 1 be.ieve to be the truth, even though it !hould be unwelcome to your ear. Sli ll I be !Ktt to Jo m)T Will you refute or correct wh it 1 m iy aav by argument and free discussion, rather tht n by violmce, if urn think I imy be in error? Then 1 pioceed. It ha heretofore leen the understanding that the Federal and State Government of the United Slates were Government of tiik noriE. Thee Government were eviTnI!y ereatetl upon tht h)t'thei., and they provided instrument tht e ui'i'ordiiigly, Puch a. heedorn of npeevh and t'ne pre fieel in of the peron, the right of popular asseuddage to consult upon the general v et fare, the light of periodical popul.tr free eiec tiin. whereby tie eople, uinwttl by forte, and unswiudled by fraud, s!u!J be able to designate the peridi'il agent to discharge the governmental duties, and instruct them us to the gene ral line of policy to be pursued; and, it may be added, that without the use, in full freedom, of all thee varied instrumentalities, the M-callel right of the people to govern themselves would be but a cheat, a mockery. According, then, to the organic laws of your Government, and, under the protection of the broad sh'eld of the Constitution of those Gov eminent, we to day consult a to the action of our public servant, and a to the principle! by which they houM be cover net! in terving u. Our action, then, is leiral and loyal, because it is constitutional, and to discharge a duty, in fact, imposed by the Constitution. rellow citizen, your country i in trouble; worse than that; it i. In one eae, engaged in the terrible woik of self-destruction It is. in actual fact, now bleeding at every pore. Why i thi? The Republicans, th t i the most of them, ay it ia because nero slavery exist in a rwrt of the States of this L moii, au i I admit the but In thin general proposition, I agree with the Republicans, and propoe to illustrate my view of it by a brief noik-e of the rise ef our rrpiblic, and the tronblts that threatened it, tritk the tjfurt ta trrt thrvt. Hefoie doing thi. however. I wih to make an observation upon the mistake of a fraction of the Republican in sailing the caue of our inter tial distention. 1 hey say the -.uie is to be found in certain diK'trine of John C. Calhi'Uti. It is a sutScient answer to thi pro;viiio: to say that those doctrine of Mr. Calh un, however erroneous tl.ey were,relatei not to cause but remrdie. and, we add, pieventior.. John C Calhoun was a Union man; and he desired orauiza tioa to prerrnt wrongs tint might irritate to disunion; and le insisted that if any Sute in the Union was wronged, oipreed sn that the Union was made to her an injury instead of a b!esini:, such Sute lad a right to withdraw trow the Uli uti in pace In-te.vl of in war; that her rr..Ie of redress w. to (ereile instctd ot to rebel. Hat he did not pretend that j-urh State had a right to do either w ithout cause. His doctrines related to preTeTitioj and remedy, not to the wrong. He tnight and did err iu hU opinion. pethjs. and so way many of us, m to what constitutes a sufficient cause to ju't'ly M-ceviou or revolt. I ad mit I can scarcely couceive one that would te sutScietit. For the proof of hat ! have said of Mr. Calhoun, 1 reler to the sketch of his life ia the .Wit .1 meriea a CyeloprJta , w h ich . tho ug h w ri tten with a Northern bias, su.-taiu me. I ih the young men of the nation would read that l ketch a an atuwer to Rcpublicau lauders. We now prK-eed to very briefly notice tiic OF-THL IkirirLIC. When the convention met that formed our present Constitution, which Connitution is our Ijoiai of Uniou, African slavery existed in a part jf the Sute, the Southern, and had ei-ted in
tbein for ner two htn ire I years. The existence J o( the ir-sti,.uc''n was a ourre of on'e !rruf'e f
in Ii: convet.ti-n. 8 me rncn from t.;e North were o:jv-i ts the ifistnation, an 1 n;y, -er-bap, have wntitri it adishe!. Tho-e from the South were geiirally iu fo f r of the in-titution, or if nt w favor of'it, were forcel by neceily to continue it, and resided it alditijn. Three coure were oj-en: 1. Tbe rioutbern States ewW mnsrimot give up their slave, in deferet.ee to the conscienc and preiud'iT of the North, and thus a union j of all free- Statea could be raade. Thi great ! pecuniary sacrifice they, of course, s free and tri'lepettdent Slalea, would not make. , 2. The convention could then have adjournci, ! formal boanited povertment.bat left each State a feperate independent republic, with the right of maintaining elamy an 1 the slave trade, or r.ot, as it saw fit. 3. Or the Northern State, where slavery did rot exit, could fix the position the slave should occupy, aiad agree to then let the institution alone,' leave it in the peaceable ur.diSturbei pos eion of tho-e who elected to have it, and upon thi basis form a united government. This alternative was adopted, and our present Union was the continence. Upon such faith the South came into the bond. They came ia voluntarily, and asfjual member of the confederation, ubjecl to it. common burden, and enti tied to it common benefits. In the compact of Union, however.it fhould be observed, the North went one s-tep further than agreeing to let slavery alone; they agreed, in conformity to the injunction of the go-pel of the New Testament, to send back to lb.' South her fugitive slaves, and in return Hie South agree to give up the slave trade, which was done. We have now arrived at the point where we have "got a Government." The Constitution i framed and adopted, the Union is compete. The question now has come to be. how shall it be perpetuated? Hiving; got a Government and a Union, how shall we keep them? The answer would seem to be plain, so far as the di-turbing topic of slavery, in connection with Union, i concerned. As the Union was formed by the North agreeing to let slavery alone, it would peem niturally to follow that it would be necessary.to it. pre-ervation that the North actually should, in the progress of the Government, let slavery alone. She" did so for thirty years, and the country prospered. And I here lay down the proposition that, as matter of right, the South, having thua come into the Union, wa entitled to enjoy her domestic institution in the Union unmolested by the citizen of the Northern Slate-. She had a right to demand that tho-e institution. should be let alone, and that she should have peace and fraternity from the North. Rut now to TUE TROUBLES OF THE REPUBLIC AND THE EFFORT. TO SATE IT. In 119. Missouri applied for admission into the Union. She was a slave State; and a her knock ut the door for leave to come in va heard by the sanctimonious puritan of the East, he cried out to her, in pious cant, that .-he could not come in while she was guilty of the sin of holding oegtoe a slave. To this proposition the Southerner objected. He insisted upon letting her come iu. He haid this Union wa formed upon the platform of non intervention by the General Government in the internal alfair of State; that they were all ejual in the eye of the confederation, and that the North was to let slavery alone, except within her own several States, where it might be e?t:ibliidied or alolished a those States severally should see tit. The controversy then arising spread wide till at length it convulsed the nation. It wad carried on in the North by Abolition societies, papers, petitions, &e. It continued to rage upon the general question of slavery, with more or less violence, till 1?5!), hing all the time resisted and held in check by that great Democratic party, now no meanly slandered a di.-loyal, by those w ho have heretofore nude it extreme devotion to the Union a matter of ridicule. Now, what wastliecau.se of all thi. T Why, slavery. Ami the trouble was tb it the Abolitionist would not let it alone. What were Abolition societies formed iu the North for but to make war on slavery iu the South? What were Abolition paper es tab Iished iu the North for? What were Abolition petitions sent .o Congress lor? Why, to make war on slavery in the South. Slavery was the cause of these because it furnished the subject for Abolition meddlesomeness, and the trouble produced in the country was from the tact that the North would not let slavery alone. This U ca-.lv compithended. The apple in the garden ol Kden was the cause of mu because Kve could not let it alone. And I wish here to say that the irritating abuse heaped upon the public men and institutions of the Southern Slates, by Northern Abolition papers and publications, in denouncing them as barbarous, wicked, thieving;, murderous, Ac, in the style of Sumner, and by sending among the slaves of those Stales incendiary documents inciting them to rapine and murder, were outrages upon the Southern people, which the Governments of the Northern State, by the rules of international law, were bound to punish and prevent, a political libels, or be guilty of the charge of bad faith toward those States. This is because the States, by neglecting to punish, ap parently sanction the libel. uii me inai oi i einer, at me uouri oi Kings Hench in England, for a libel on the First Consul of France, the Judge, EUenboruugh, alter meniotiing the conviction of Lord George Gordon for libelling the Queen ot France, and of .lohn Vint lor a libel on the Kmjeror of Russia, says: "In rej-peet to the legal tiled of both these proa editions, I am not aware that it ever was judi dally ijue.-lioiied. And, theieloie, i lay it now n as law, that any publication which tends to tie grade, revile and delatne per - in considerable situ itionsof power and dignity iu foieign countries may te taken to be ami treated as a libel, and particularly where it had a tendency to interrupt the amity and peace between the two countries. If any publication contains a plain and manilc-l inte.'.t and persuasion addressed to others to ns-ia-inate and destroy the persons of Mich magi "ti ates, as the tendency of such h publication is to inleriupt the harmony ul-i.t;i)g between two countries, the libel a..umes a st.U more criminal complexion." l'eltier's Ti i 1, p. I Su.h weie the incendiary publications sent bv the Abolitionist of the North unionist the slave of the South. Hut, fellow -citizens, I hive named the year l?d, and 1 do not w i.-h to go buck, in tracing the origin of our troubles beyond that date. The year 1?50 is a great ejoch in the history of the United Mate. The free and slave States of the Union were then equal in number. It had been the previous policy of the Government to keep them so, because it enabled each section, by mean of a tie Vote in the Senate, to protect itseit from legislative agre ioion the part ot the other. Hut iu ltv'J, Caliiortwa, a free State, pre-ented hcr.-elf lor admission into the Union, witlioul being accompanied by a slave State whereby the numerical equiiity between the sections would be kept up. Aud the South said, before we can vole lor the adruis.-ion of California, and thus place our.-elves ut the mercy ot the North, we must have an understanding. When California is admitted, our actual power to rotecl ourselves is gone, and all we shad have to rtl on will be faith in t.-e Northern Siates tint they will let our institution of slaiery al ore. Let us there:ore, settle all these questions, and have il tltlin.leiy understood how we are to live to gether. '1 he leasonabiene. of the proposition was admitted, and, in the Senate of the United States a Cxiumiitee of Thirteen, coui!osed ot ti e following gentlemen, lepresenting all parties and all section ol the country, was cho-en bv ballot to agtee u;m a hnal settlement of all diliicullies groamg out d the slavery qutsl.on, vu; Clay, of Kentucky, chairman Webster, of Massachusetts. D.ckuisoii. ot New York. hell, ol Tei.nesee. lcrr.e.i, of Geotgia. Cass, ot Michigan. Phelps, of Vermont. Mason, of V.r.iuia. Mangum.of North Carolina. Cooper, ol Pennsylvania. llr;ght, of Indiana. IK. wns.ot Louisiana. King, ol AUhama. Tins coUiui.ttee agreed upon the following prvposiiiun-, and retried them to the Senate, and they were sanctioned, umier the name of the compromise measures, by lth . ouse of Con-:rf--. ami pjaved by Mr. Ftlluiore the then i 'revdeut. I. That California should te admitted into the Union aa a free State. '2. That Teirdorial G overnments rhould be or ganiied for United Sutes Teiritories, without any provision establishing or prohibiting slavery. Thi doctrine was then practically applied in the ca.-e of Uuh ar J New Mexico, and was understood to be settled as the rule for ail future terri-t-irial governments. See Mr Clay's repcrt trom the committee on the propositions. II An elhcient :uitie slave law to give et5cacv to tl.eclau.-e in the Constitution, requiring the return of lugitive slaves toiler sUvehnlditig State
4. That s'avery should r.ot be abolished in the D'stnctof C-'Iur-bU wi'fc'Mit the eon-entof Miry-
lLd, Lc , b ;t tint the till then trade therein should be. exi-ting slave Th-e proposition were Tee-l to, California M a dm tted, the South surrendered her power, and Un.k thef iith of the Northern State that she should not be excluded from the common territories and t'iat the institution of slavery hould b let aioo, xcept-t-Lat her luiüvea hould-be retun.eJ. The Congre-s wa tnaged aImot the entire session in maturing and pas-ing this plan oftrompromise and adja-trnent. Great ueo, Ule.-men, and patriot., such a we bate Dot no, participated in the discussion of it. 3Ir. Webster closed bis appeal in its behalf in tbeve words: "Sir, my object is peace. My object i reconciliation. My purpose is, not to mike up a ca-e for the North, or to make up a ca-e for the South. My ot'jex t is not to continue useless and irritating controversies. I am giint agitation. North and Sooth. I am agtinst local ideas North and South, and against all narrow aud local contests. I am in American, and I know no locality in America; that is my country. My heart, my sentiment, my judgment demand of me that I shall pursue such a course as shall promote the good and the harmony and the Union of the whole country. Thi I shall do, Gel willing, to the end of the chapter." Mr. Clay made what is called hi "great speech on the compromise" in advocacy of the plan. He aid, "I believe from the bottom of my soul, that the measure is the reunion of this Union. I believe it is the dawn of peice" "to the remotest extremeties ot thi dirtiacted land. " "I believe that ii deals unjustly by no part of the republic," but "that it saves the honor" and "the interests of all quarters of the country." lie said if it w as del eat ed it would be "a victory won by Abolitionism; the victory of discord and agitatioc over peate and iranqudity. And he asked: "Do you believe, when the nation's Senators and the nation's Representatives, after such a continued struggle a. we have had, shall settle these que lion, it is pos-ible for the most malignant of men longer to disturb the peace and harmony aud quiet of ibis otherwise most prosperous coun try?" Mr. K'inz, of Alabama, in adjourning finally the Senate, said: "Whether the action of Congress will allay the excitement, restore harmony, and bring about a better state of feeling in the country remains to be seen. As an American citizen, devotedly attached to the institutions of my country. I sincerely hope il may; and I trut that the dar.gers with which we have been threatened will serve as u warning to all future Congresses to deal justly by every State, and to respect the constitutional rights of all, if they would insure the permanency of our Union." The editor of the lGth vol. of Benton's Debate iu Congress, appends this note to page ü.: "It is impossible to read the speejhe of this session, and hear, as it were, the last words of the last great men of that wonderful time, without having the feelings profoundly moved by the deep dinner to the Union winch stood before them and the patriotic attempts they made to avert that danger. The brief sech of Mr. Webster i a noble illustration of the feelings of the patriotic sage of that portentous day. They labored 'to save their country, and believed that tbey had done it." And the nation believed so too. The people accepted the compromise, both North and South At the Presidential election next after thj passage of the compromise plan the two great national parties, the Whig and Democratic, nominated their candidate by national conventions repte sen ling all sections of the Union. and both passed resolutions declaring the compromise measures a final settlement of the ditTeienre between the North and South. The resolution of the Whig Convention was in these words: "Eighth. That the series of acts of the 3"2d Congress, the act known a the fugitive slave law included, are received and acquiesced in by the Whig party of the United States as a settlement. in frinciflk am bt'BsTASCE, of the dangerous and exciting question w hich they embrace; and, so far as they are concerned, we will maintain them, nnd insist upon their strict enforcement, until time and experience shall demonstrate the necessity of further legislation to guard against the evasion of the laws on the one hand and the abuse of their powers on the other, not impairing their present etliciency; and we deprecate all further agitation of the question thus settled, a dangerous to our peace, and will discountenance all efforts to continue or renew such agitation, whenever, wherever, or however the attempt may be made; and we will maintain thi system as es scutial to the nationality of the Whig party, and the integrity of the Union." Such was the pledge of faith that the North gave to the South, as to tho "fkixcifles ash substance" of letting slavery alone, and of abstaining from excluding it, by Congressional action, from the common territories. Could the pledge have been made stronger? Well, what followed? On these pledge the Whigs nominated Scott and Graham for President and Vice President, and the Democrats nominated, for the same offices Pierce and King, and these candidates and pledges were indorsed by the people thus: Scott and Graham received 1,3'M),0!) votes, and Pierce and King l.GHI,U(JO, and there wer but 150,000 votes given against the compromise candidates! For whom these votes were cast will appear by and by. Following up the-e pledges in "principle and Mubnttince" Congress proceeded, in ltfä-l, to organize the Territorial Governments of Kansas mid Nebraska, w ithout any provision on the subject of slavery. Why she did so, Mr. Douglas, now no more, but whose veracity, patriotism and judgment every body, at this day, accepts without re.-erve, informs us. In his report on those bill he say, after referring to the unhappy controversy prior to ls-öO, Your committee deem it foitunate lor the peace of the country, and the security of the Union, that the controversy then resulted in the adoption of the comptomise ineasute, which the two creat patriotic parties, with singular unanimity, have atlirmed n a cardinal article of their faith, and proclaimed to the world as a final settlement of the controversy and an end of the agitation. A due respect, therefore, for the avowed opinions of Senator-, as well as a pro j er sense of patriotic duty, enjoins upon your committee the propriety and ne easily of a direct adherence to the principles, and ev en a liberal adoption of the enactments of that adjustment, iu II their territorial bill, so lar as the same are not locally ina plie.dde." We have thus shown by overwhelming proof that, in lj'J, the Uiro'i was reunited, bv solenn compact, upou the let alone, non intei vent'nn policy, which governed at it original formation. And, in that year, fellow citizen, the strength and glory of the republic culmin ited. That year will be marked by the historian as the one in which the United States of America were at their zenith. How-, when and where was taken j the first fatal step in the pith they are now treadin, :? We shall show in our next. Our Army Correspondence from the 1 H ellna. Ark., Oct. 11, l?f'2. Just alter breikfast this morning our boat, tied to the Arkansas shore, where Helena ought to be. but where ihe United States, through her speaking representatives, gunboats, artillery, cav- : a!rv and infantry, now hold undisputed sway Oar Uat officers tried hard to make the land befoie breikfast, but a kind Providence let her i aground about an hour just in sight of town, thus saving u thit extra fifty cents which they i intended to rlnre after entering port, and to gain w hich they delay ed culinary operations one ; hungry hour. A you stand on deck looking landward you , see the tents ot our soldiers stretching along the j shore f'T about three mile, chiedy below the town, and between the levee acd the riv er, though enough dot the adjiceut hills to give one of the ( most suggestive Undscape views that I have ever ; seen Transferred to canvas by the fencil of our Reed or Cox. it would be not oniy intrinsically beautiful but possess a historic interest of unusual importance 1 I w as nt long in hunting up our men. I soon learned that, without consultins me. Gen. Curtis had ordered the tth and lfth infantry and Klius's bittery, with a large number of other trMps, to Pilot Knob, by way of St. Louis. I w ill not reveal military secret by publi-hing the ultimate de-ign vi this move, for that has not; len made known to me; but if the general guesa , ot the camp is anything neir in the riht direction, it is tolerably certain already that somebody ha blundered, for since their embarkation news lrom the enemy indicates that they have heirdof the destination of our troops, and are changing ' the'r plans accordingly, or that the movement on their part which induced Gen. Curtis to rn ike this was a mere te nt, and they are carrying out the r original design. This i the more probible, and unless the new trom Corinth and Kentucky should reach ihen in time to enable them to tno.ii:y their programme, which is doubtle a j art of a grand aggressive scheme, there w ill b lu-ttcr time l.ete thai: I care to take part in hence I shall use due diligence tobe away hefora that l;m" come-
Gen. Denton went to M;souri with bis brigade, i Gen. Hovey i nire!y quartered here in the plen-' d.d miriicn built for Gen. Hmdrcnn, but upon j
which the mechanics j et have a lien le;'iuse he h is not paid for it. I triel to d it to instd on:e ! rp ixrs IN IOw.i KOR THF. (TKliKXT THAU V.T.. gratitude in Gen. Hovey toward (Jen. Hindman, i X com .lu in 'wemir. and we r r..w pr'strifc for building so capacious anJ comfortable abou-e our 'Mn. f-r tb pijiwr.t of Tx in th J.rVrrnt tvunfor hi k.. u .rr?. mr r .T,rrr.t,f he t,.r. ' t: that .Vat. iTn Int-re-t-d in bnUM, hy
-- m - v u iV J I'll ti a ti.a ? wii.4iuvii ii . "ii t . I . . - , ' i ' i i ' - ie.1 lecrwucume arm coninuwon w objections w IulU iudicata sluti-nai tmitj iot l thai.iifu at all. Quarternnter Pol e, of our i . -.t ,i ii.l i.,,v,.. town, who came out wuh the 1 Itn. but nas been promoted to Division Quartermaster, occupies a ; part of the Louse as an office, attended for the ! present by his wife By the way I don't exactlj j seethe desirableness o fuch a promotion unless i the higher a man is in the arroj the less he has 1
to do and the better the rerouiite, for there is ; If! If very little if any difference in the t Faj, only ten llTOCerieS I 1x10061168 ! ! dollars a month, I believe. Not intimating of j course that Captain Pi pe has any eye to perrjui- i ite. j Other Cue house are occupied by other Gene fTijE new ADDITIONS TO MY STOCK OF yP.Oral and their staff, and all tht churches except , 1 CKklKS nak it cmp!fte, coir.rrir.5 vfrbir.g the Episcopal and Catholic are occupied as hos-, tobtflu:id in Wf11 reUle1 ""The convent or nunnery if. in operation rather j C-CCry EtnllillIllCllt. more vieorouslv than formerly, for all other j . r . . , , . , .... ... ... ,- ,1" . , 11 lam prepared to erve my tnnI and the rr.biic (rg. schools have been suspended or abandoned, the j erally. with all nicies reeded for faaiilr use. Particular titters alone remiining true to their mission, attention is civen to the purrha-: rf pro.iure. ivicts There are few resident men or boys over eighteen ,oW ",b, ,owe!it- r. J. Raksakd, in the town, out any ju.ntity of widow's an ! ; tl-13l i 2fo. is South MertdUn street. daughter the widows leing of the gras per- j ; . . . ... . ?? suasion, their husband having left in search of. TOBACCO AND CICARS their righu, w ith rem ote probabilities of return-' - ' ing, especially if tl ey gel their rights, which, ac- .fOIIX A- ZI FI IHM ßr.l
conJin to my politics and religion, shouidbeaj traitor's doom. : I am under infinite obligations to Gen Hovev for the use of Iii -plendid char-er, Gun Hoat.'a i,0,ii. , 1 .i . . e liuge black animal erery way the counterpart of . the diminutive creature Gen. Dumont furnished me in Louisville large, j;ood looking, fleet and sure looted, albeit the General amused him-elf i when we came to a good piece of road by chal-len-'inime for a race with his own nersonal horse. For this 1 don't thank him, because certain vague image of broken neck or broken le'. or at leas; bemudied garments, to say nothing of some fellow's throwing it up to me the next time I abused horse racing, held me in check until he got the start of old (rim Boat who utterly relu-ed to go eay unless 1 would let him throw dirt iu the General's face. How it ended I need not say, further than to threaten the General with a fair start next time, especially if the sece.-h are in the rear. After thi ride with Gen. Hovey, which had in troducel me and my business to all the Indiana regiment along the bank, he kindly furnished me cue of his orderlies to go out in front where weie some other regiments with whom I had busine.-s, I still allowing me the use of hi. Gun lloat horse, j Immediately back of town commences, not a se ; rie. but a huddling together of sand ridges.which 1 produce tolerable beach tree, but mere excue for oaks, and miscellaneous underbrush. The! road i for the most prt a deep excavation along the tp of the ridge, worn down by long washing, just the width of a wagon. Away out from town I found the 1st Indiana cavalry aril the 34th infantry doing icket duty. I must tell you more about them and others iu subsequent letter. T. A. G. Weighed In f lie Hulaitre. Weighed in the balance and found wanting, is the verdict of the people of the gieat State of Indiana, Ohio and l'eniisylvania, agaim-t the Administration at Washington. It is n terrible condemnation of imbecility, treachery and usurpation. It i an impatient nnd emphatic demand that j the l .e-ident shall send away the Cabinet Minister who have mi.-led him, emancipate himelf from the wretched influences which suriound him, return to the observance of his own solemn oath to support the Constitution, nnd call into the service of the Government, in its highest places, patriot and state-men. It iJ an impatient und emphatic demand that hereafter the war shall be prosecuted for the re toratiou of the Union, and for no other purpose whatever. It is a proclamation that thereshall be no more arbitrary or illegal arrests, that martial lawshall not prevail in the loyal State where the civil power is unobstructed, that every citizen charged with offense shall have a speedy trial, and that every constitutional ri.irht shall stand intact. It is an indignant protest against !he diaboli tally wicked waste of life and treaure which ha distinguished this war beyond any example in the history of civilized warfare, and a trumpet call that heiicefoi th the war shall be conducted by military men. upon military principles, and to a triumphant military termination. It i, in short, the great voice of three powerful Slates, awaiting the response of Illinois and the other State which will speak in November. Chicago Timet. From the I'liiladfljiliia Evening Journal. Tlie Cauve of Hie Democratic Ileleut. Never did the Democrats more distinguish themselves as a party organization than .yesterday. Never did the individuals of the great National party exhibit more energy and more courage than yesterday. The only Union party in the land ha now made it muk, and the vote which it polled is indicative of its future triumph. We feel satisfied tint Mr. Seward, who i a shield politician, will not regard the temporary abolition triumph it. 11 piillicient gu irant?e for him to sanction any of the extreme measure which have been forced on the lYe-idcnt bv tbe destructive radical. How doe the case -t-nd? The Democrats, w ithout oflice, with scanty funds, owing to the prostration of all branches, of business, brought iibout by the bigot and fanatics, were compelled to b ittle against demagogue who used Government money as liberally and easily a paper money can be manufactured, and jet it now appear that there are more than IIO.UUI) good and true men in 1 'hiladclphia "w ho have not bowed the knee to Haal," and who are ready at all time to peril fortune and life to u-tain the Union, and protect the Constitution again-t the assault.- of its open enemies, and the still more dangerous attacks of it weak headed, fal-e hear ted pretend ed friends. Never will the people forget tlie "leign id' teiror" througl w hich men, w ho ought to be free v titers, have passed dining the list po litical campaign. We hazard nothing in saying that at least five thousand Democrats voted yes tenia v under dure, who, had tliev been mitrammeled by the most despicable espionage w ho, had not their business been de-troved by the civil war, wouM not h ive been tempted to accept patronage Lt the hands ot men they despise, and would h ve vijted, con amore, the w hole Democratic ticket. Wc opine that the Abolitionists and the.r tool will not dare to 'carry a high bead," in view of their rasely purchaed political victory. It i one of those thing which neither warrants pride not insures safety. Let us look at it a moment, and it will be seen that the defeat of the Democratic ticket is the overthrow ol the Abolition party. Take away from the Abolitionists their masked batteries, behind which they fought the true Union men, and will Mr. Lincoln decide what would have been the late of his pretended friends ? The Navy Yard, the Mint, the Cu-torn House, the Fost Office, the Arsenal, how many forced vote did they make for the Abolition party ? Take a glance at the manuf cturers who will become mil i.inaire. furnishing the Government with article for the soldier' wear, if the relellitn coe on for the time General Scott said it would, and calculate the number of vote they; euui"V. Do not forget the many cpitIist who are in-tere-ted in iron and all the other material without which no warfare could be waged. See the multitude of men thev employ, and then let the authorities at Washington, if they please, regard tbe vote cast ye-tirday against the Democratic ticket, a !.u indication of the popular will. If they do. they will build their houe of policy on a sandy foundation. MUSIC. SUPERIOR PIANO FORTES! Chlrkerinz Ss Sons, Steimray -V .von, AT THE Iiidisma 3IiiNi Store, o. t llato llouar. WH LVItU 1 ?TOVFLI
TAXES.
I mt i T.txiis. j . , t i ,,i sTi-Iii n tL number f.f 'hHr lard, can. f r miad I have th-ir Te without th trouble n-mily Mci.irnt n Wh jnrni 4 Tv hr nn-r ITt. Tarpa:d. n l r-.h mpti .ns na'l I-, in Wicin, Jtinnrsiiia, j.ar.as, .-firi.i jn.KMin, ana oiaer westrrl w..t. ' u M Y nV-r Keal Edat Ajrnt, InJ;ar.x'.i-. Ind. octl7-dlvr-2w CROCERIES. " WHOLESALK IjKALER TX VIRt'.IMA CAVENDISH. NATURAL LEAF AND Axf .tnT'I"b,'fV , ,v , , , Manufacturer of Clgan for the million, and Corarxlgiot, Merchant. Have In store a larpe and well selected tock of To tccwbich I will lllow forcah, SO. 3 PALMER HOUSE, IiidiaoapoH. M IO-d6m CROCERIES. 0,000 Worth of For .-ale by Earl 8l Hatcher, ol3-d2m Lafayette, Indiana. 1,000 bags Prime RIO COFFEE For sale by Earl 8c Hatcher, ol3-rf2m Lafayette, Indiana. S XT Or 800 BKI s ar' 100 ,1I,I)S Xew r,,aus Sutfar ' 200 11RLS CruL,Ml anJ rowW? Sugar; For sale by Earl & Hatcher, ol3-'.2m Lafayette, Indiana. MEDICAL. WMUi COLLIDE OF OHIO, SESSION OF 1882-3. 'I VIE KKOULAK COUUSK OF INSTRUCTION IN TIIK JIcIimI Ci.Ue'-e .f Ohio will .p-n on MONDAY, tli" IIa day of Nvnuher. anl continue fur month. IreI miliary laa-turr will be leli vered during t!ie month of October, embracing chiefly eliuics at the Hospital and College Di-jMisary. L. M. LVWSON, M. I)., Prufesnr of the Institutes and I'ractice of Medicine. OK. C. F. LA CK MAN, M. I.. Irfe.sr of Surgery ami Clmicul Surgery. VT. YV. DAWSON", M. n.. Profes-nr of Anatniny a?:d Physiology. M. 15. WKKillT, M. I , Professor of Obstetric and Diseases of Women and Children. JVM KS GUAM AM. M.I). rrofeor of Materia Med-ca and Therapeutics. XKLSOX SAYLF.K. A. M., L. L. B., Professor of Chemistry. J. H. HCCKNKK. M. D., Demonstrator of Anatomy. Tickets of the ProfosjT.s, earn .$10 00 . 5 00 . 5 00 . 5 00 Matr.culation Ticket Iiisst-ctit; Ti k-t Ho-.ifal Ticket Grwiiintion fee . . Stu lent have th. privilege of taking any numbe r tickets ld' h may suit thr pures. The D-.-see ting AO I llosp.tal Tnkets are optional. Poarliiig can Oe oltain-! at '1 M to 3 00 dollars. Sni'i iiis on arriving in the rity will he aided in procuring hoard. ng hou-e hy applying at the Colleji on the noiith side of Sixth Mre-t, llwu-n Vine ai.l Itaee st reets. Further iiiformatioii may be obtained ly ai!!ressing the Ik an, Cincinnati, Ohio. 1 M. LVWSOX, M. D., Dean, octS-dRuVwlt E. Cori.tr Sixth and hace street. DRY COODS. Xfl s . f T t in C3 s 4 Eh 4 Hi i 3 -S K-f Ü M II rr sJ eM PAPER. PAPER HOUSE. LETTER PAP"GR, C-AJP PAPER, NOTE PAPER, WRAPPING PAPER., MAJSTILLA PAPER, Printing Paper, V WHOLESALE AND RETAIL AT ttO If 'I:.!, STM2HtilT Sc CO'S.
$3
DRY COODS.
(il
&4 n w H O H Pi 1-9 o 0 n . 4 j. -i J M L LI -. W BARBERS. .I'JL'FJ i.i mi i: :n s u 01. SS HlC RA FT HAS ol'KNKI) A IIAKKKR SHOP IN Ihe jiew blin k of John I'. New, in doom eotith of the IVtoflire, on the hecoijlJliMer Kootn No. H and 9, w here he w ill he plea il tos e nil Lis old customer. Is in full Mast w ith six chair. octlO-dly COFFEE. 144 RUBIA MILLS 144 Ut r.UF.KNF. STUF.KT, NF.W T0KK CITY. O V K I J . M la A T C F F I i F , Put up In tin f.'i! Pourxl paper, 4S in a box, and in hulk. Our prices range from 8 to HO reut. We put up the follow-in kin-is: JAVA, .HAIIACAIHO, M I. IIIO, UIO mill M PldtlOH ( Of I 1:1:. We believe oiirCiffee to be bt'ttr than any ground CotTee tiiw in ue. AH inlers a'Mrei to u or to our Act-nt, Messrs. Pi. ace t Yot Chamber street, corner Washinjitn street, New York Ci:y, and Messr. 1'oi.i.Aiin & DiAr, lv9 A 111 outh Watr street, Chicago, Illiiiiii, will receive prompt uttcntion. ort.s-13m TAlli:it A: 1'I.ACII. MEDICAL. IVri important to the ltarried! AND THOSE CO XTF.M PLATING MAKIIIAGK! flIlK umJ-rsiune(t will M-od free hy mail the ure X means of preventini? co:ocj)tiin. No drugs or medi cine, hi t a i..vrr öiscov tav. A cirrular w ith particular! will be M'tit i' at:y allres- by inclosing rue two 3 cent Manips. A boo!; r'Hitainiriir all the knowledge, rrferre! to, ami several private receipts, with n.ATt.R, will he sent to any oanie or a Mres you may w ish, by inclosing me on dollar. Medicine, a French Pill, will be sent for one dollar pr box. It is very sure iu its efl.-cts AMres Lock l'.ox No. 22o, Indianapolis. J.vl9-.:cm A. It POLCH KT. HAPPINESS OR MISERY? THAT IS THK QUESTION. r fHK proprietor of the "PARISIAN CABIN KT Or I W0NDF.IJ", ANATOMY, an-1 MKDICINK," have determined, retrardie's of ej-n--e, to issue, free, (for the henetit ot -ntl.-rinir humtnitj) FOUR of the r most in. struct ive and intere.iiiig le ctures on Marriage arid it Di-qualiJlcatioTis, Nervous Ifc-hihty, Premature iVcline of Manhood, Indirection, Wea'snes or If predion, I of Knercy and Vital Powers, the Great Social Fvils, and those Maladies which reult from youthful foilie, Kxresses of Maturity, or Ignorance of Physiology and Nature Law These Invaluable L-cture have heen the mean of enlijhtenmj and raving thousand, and will be forwaried f r--.n the receipt of four tampi, by addressing SF.CRKT ItY Paeikiax CAii.vrr or Aiatoxt ap MrMcisr, M3 P.roadway, New York. Jr23-!ly MERCHANT TAILOR. w - MT . MM 'WJ a.HERCIIAiüT TAILOR. Dealer in Itemly-tlnde Cloilnnc and Gents' rtirntliing Goodit N'o. 105 EAST WASHINGTON" STREET. (OPPOSITE THE COtET UOfhE,) INDIANAPOLIS, IND. p9-dly PATENTS. PATBNTS BTAINKD FOR N V VV INVKNTI0NS OF EYF.RY 7 decripti'n. Fee contir.geEt oa Bucra. No patent no pay. Send for Circular, g.vir.g terra, directions, 4c. Addresn AMOS HK0ADNAX, novlH-dly Patent Attorney. Washington. D. C. PIANO-FORTES. PI A JNTO O JR. T E S Pw. ALL WHO WISH TO G r Hosew pod piano-, eperior j "tfOl irf i"v'';t'1 to xarrj-ue 4 M J M. Stieff, t f P.a!timore, v ALL WHO WISH TO GET ELEGANT or tone ami Tl' lth 1 1 itiot of Cbts r,iV .e athiV.ili.M at Mr. Samern Mln: K-ora.s, in the !ti.a Building. Room tpcu from 7 A. U. UU , p. Ü. JP-lj J. WILLIAM SUFTERX WANTED. LlalOQ Caralrjr HorsfCSj 800 Artillery Horses, AT THE GOVERNMENT STABLES, INDIANAPOLIS, INIX, Fr which the Lljrtert irk will b paid by 15-1 FOtbP.AT HALL.
0
DRY C00D3.
iA IT'LL LINK OF FALL i WINTER DRY GOODS AT Lynch i Keane! TUESK rX)WI VTERK nOlGHT AT ALCTIO.! AM KILL BE SOLD Delow the Present Standard Prices! HKMEMItKR, 33 WEST WASIIIXGTOX ST., Next Iry G1j stre to tbe Talraer Hio. LYNCH vV IC 1Z -V IS" 12 v Jel3e2-dly rBOPklKTOBS. CROCERIES. MOKE NEW GROCERIES! Ruger k Caldvell, WHOLESALE GROCERS ANI COMMISSION MKÜCIIAXTS, io. 08 V,:i WnMhitilou St. Fire Ik Ktt of (Mi t e.'iwV il.iU, JnJi' tinuj4U, 4(na. JLTTF.R,Chee!et anl Pried Deef; 0QQ IIOCSII FA US New Orleana Sugar, QQ HOGSHEAD Hand Snjrtr; (AA PACKAGF.5, Heninp, Colftht Ilalibot, and 4UU Mackerel; 50 0 BARRELS iu-ßn'd Su&r JJQQ BAKBELS8irup and Mola; -QQ BAGS FJo Coffee; QQQ BAGS Java Coffee; QQQ BACJS UoaMed Coffee; ltt CHERTS and Half CLeMa Imrrrial.Otinpov fXJXl ar, Toung Hvon, Hyson 8k iL, and Oolong Teah; VI-! PICE, CaMa. CI ove. Cinnamon, and a t:eneraJ artnient of SWa tiitaMe for r tail trade; COItDAGE.Cljrarn, Fruit. Liquor; all kind of Nuta, kice. Soap, To'acc. and VVooden Ware, beil a general asortm-nt of t,rocerie(k, in tore and fur ale by Itrfir.ll Jc CALDWIILL, 6 Fast WanLlniton meet. MERCHANTS visiting the Ptat Fair would do well to call nd f xamiije th above rfxJ at LUG EU k CALDWELL. en F.l W.hiofton at. jel362-dAwly OYSTERS. 9 CEX.EBR-A.TEX FRESH CAN BALTIMORE OYSTERS. k RE now Jn market, received daHy by Adam' Ei pre. at tbe Iepot, No. 3, North lilinoi tret,opte the Ptea Houe. O. W. Hawe, Airent, wi I attend to all order and fur nih eppüa In the Jtate of Indiana. Ialer and rotiuner, ld and new patrona, remember yonr IntereM I nr. DKPtjT So. 3 North Illinoi treet, opposite the Ptea Hous. ausll-dw3tn G. W. HAWES, Sole Agent. FOR THE WAR. COLT'S PATTERN SELF - ACTIXG REVOLVERS ! NAVY AND BELT REVOLVERS, A full inpply 5w Pattern. bwords at Cost Prices, Pie, Pocket, and Table Knives Fniit Car; Xaili; Belucg Rop, atid EalMir.g Hardware. At No. 21 Wet WaLü.fton SL J. H. TAJXX. ATTORNEYS. TMoMAa a. Rcar-aicu. ........ ...... oaraa a. ujasw
ni:i)i:ic & uono, ATTORNET5rS-ATLii?Wf 4 Or rt X'ui 6u(V2iO. i!a
