Daily State Sentinel, Volume 10, Number 3761, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 October 1862 — Page 2
DAILY SKiWhXKL t i.xidai im Toiir.u ti
riif l'ittau: It nitiat bc pmftTfd Ji rolltiral Arrrl. We t oi.icvi to our IrkudA La tie several cotintc of m wh!f h political arrow -htv yfn tnvfr, if tkfr witl -rrre tj the irn of ü. rift arrc-tt, the circum-itaijcc tt:!i them, anil if rible the charges preferred att-1 tb chrclw of the jnona who fi !. the 15 Uita ?ug hkh the amtti were roJf. A tlatll i: peeled near Waahtnctou Itecogititlons Th New York Trxbuntüt Motvlay edllorüllj t there will ruoo be a battle Dear Winchester, and urge the sending of erery arailiWe man to reinforce McClellas. In the iame article, it aati the Ut Kurorein advices render it morallj ceruin that France and rlnlnnd will recognize the Southern Confe-Ieracj bj the first of January, provided there be no change ia the actuation before that time. Itiey Ile llnrd. The radical prüfe not to uuderi-tarxi theocC4mou of their overwhelming defe-tt iu the election of lat week. They attribute it to everything tut the right cau.-e. In norne cuce they My it was by fraud and in other tbtt it waa owir to the absence of the soldiers. The-e aroloiries are aa idle ai the wind. If frauds were committed it wm urou the part of the party In power and thU will be demonstrated at the proper time. In a precinct not far from this city it can be howr that thirty Democratic rotes were put in the ballot box and only ten were counted out In other localities similar outrages were com muted, a will be proven. An J it can not be successfully denied by any candid Republican who w4 at the polls during the afternoon of tie I'lecliuu ia this township but that hundred of illeiral Itepublicau votes were ?hame!e??ly deposited in the ballot-box Neither did the absence of the soldiers from thi State, the wins of Iudiana who volunteered to J battle for the restoration of the Union and the rutintet.ance. of the Constitution, occu.-iou the recent political triumph. If they had been at home, their vote would have made the victory the more overwhelming. The causes of the liater to the defeated prty are too plain to be misunderstood or misrepresented. It was a verdict ot the people against the ultra radical me.istire which hate been fuiied upon tlie country in violation of the mopt olemti pledges of Congress and the Administration, and a condemnation of the t rands and mal administrations which have characterized the party in power. It is a slander upon the soldiers of Indiana to charge that they would take iue with their fathers and brothers at home upon the questions which were in vol ted and passed upon at the recent election. They are not fighting to destroy the Union and overthrow the Constitution, hence they could not hue voted, if they had had the opportunity, for measures which, if successful, can not fail to reSilt in the destruction of both. And when the soldiers return and ppeik through the ballot box, it will be luund that their vote will be with their brethren at home in condemnation of radicalism, and the fanaticism and rascality which have well nih ruined the Country and destro)ed the gov eminent of the fathers. The radicals pretend not to understand that they have been weighed iu the balance, and found wanting. And their defeat would have been the more complete if thousands had not been artfully led to believe by designing and corruptive politicians that the Government and the administration are indeutical, and that a condemnation of the ultra measures of the latter would be a blow at the former. The election has dispelled this illusion. The verdict tlms so significantly rendered will be approved by the great body of the American people, and theresuit will be the crushing out c I Abolitionism and fanaticism, the consummation of which is the only hop e of restoring the Union and giving renewed vitality to the Constitution. It is not strange that the radicals die hard, when they see that the power for which they have ao' long struggled must soon pns from them. Nejjroe I'ref erred. One or two thousand able bodied black refugees are employed iu the Quartermaster's Department here and upon the defences about Washington at reduced wages. The nmouiit aved on tht'difiVrence between their pay and that of white Utiorers is much more than suthvicnt to sup;ort the live or six hundred colored woiueu and ctiddren in the Government hands. This is derived from otficial peion, who say the contrabands are really asouite of Government profit. So writes the Wahington correspondent of the St. Louis hmoerat. This only gives preference to niggers over white lalwuers, whose wives and children may e-tarve for all that the Abolitionists care, if only the negro women and children are provided for. The next move is to substitute the "colored gentlemeu" iu place of white mechanicst j and so on until the darling idea of the Jacobins, j that the nigger is epuil to the white man, and "more so," is practically operative. Important Deel Ion. Dishoo, ex parte. Habeas corpus before Judge Ter kins, October "20, The petitioner's sou, a minor between the ages of eighteen and twenty one years, enlisted in the regular army without th consent of his lather. The object of the present writ is to obtain his discharge. The discharge U earnestly resisted by Captain Newtuaii, the cAmm.tnd.int of the post of Indianapolis, on the ground that the enliftloieut is binding. Captain Xewman insists upon two propositions as being law: 1. That the Federal Government may require the ervices of minors in the regular army. 'J. That that Goverumnt does now, by law, require, or, at all events, permit their enlistment in that army, without the consent of parents or gu trviiaus. 1 agree to the first proposition. I di.veul from the second. My reason for this disent is that, as I assume, the law of Congress, on the subject, now in force, authorize the euli.-tmtnt ot minors only ty con-ent ot parents, ic. It I am nht iu this as suruptiou. it is admitted that 1 am tight in ho!diu that the enlistment is not bliatory as against the parent, in the case now in heriug. Ami right in the assumption? In lHh-2. and in l?Or acts ol Congress regula ting enlist meuts in the regular arrav were pied. It is undisputed that tho-e acts did uot tertnit the enlistment of tnicota without consent, i.e. But ia 1M4, during the war with Great Britain, to meet the then existing exijiicy, nn act was pael by Congress author. z. rig the enlistment, in the regular army, of minors without the couetit of patents, &c, aod dedarit.g the enlistment binding against all concerned. And theijue-tion is. is this act still in force? It does not appear to have been exprely repealed. Has it leu lepea'ed by ind i cation? I think it has. for the following atuoti other reaons : I. Id 115, after the war with Great Britain w over, ij4 lite emergency requiriui; the increase of the anuy had pised away, Congress enacted a tit w law entitled, "An act fixing the military peace e-tablL-hment of the United State;" and. by that act prov uiel. that, for keeiii.g up the army ui.ier it, ircruittng ?hould t.e Mi the ame utai.ner, and with the ame inn ta tioi." as jrovided by "An act fixing the military tsrate eUblishmtnt," JLc . in lMf.', ic. '2 Story", Law U. 8. p. IÖUJ. It M-tuij to be uudispuled that this I it act is still ill force I thu.k it repeal, by implication, the act of 111, and expie-sly levive the act of 1", &c , on the subjet t ot enti-tments . Mr. Story, in h s rbti iu of the laws of the United States. tteaLs the act of 1-14 as reealed by that of IMS. Uws U. S., p. 1101.
3. In the late el.tion of th "United States Statutes at Large, the act of tst4 is noted as reported by tt.e act of 1-1 5. Vol. 3. p. 04. The army reguli'J jf.s, now n force cn the ubject of etuttrr5s, inquire '.he cfn-ent of parents, ic, ff"ej the enlistment of a minor. (See the lienlattons.) Ä. The JSaperior Court of the city of New York b ve decided that the act ol ltl 1 is repealed. U Am. L He-., p. Ci.
not tund tr the enlistment of in.nor iu the regular army. I liAld tint t' are hil by the act of minors, eighteen years of age and upward, iu volunteering in the motu. It is ordered that the infant soldier iu this case be discharged. S Arrest f llr. Horton. We copy the following from the Fort Wayne Ttme (opposition): A day or two since we were informed that Dr. T. Horton, of Ulutfvon, Wells County, in this State, had been arrested by order of the Trovost Marshal and taken to Indianapolis. Dr. Horton being a prominent citizen, we were induced to make some inquiry into the causes and manner of bis arrest, but failed to obtain anything like a Kiitislactorj account thereof until yen'erday, when we obtained from good and reliable eource the following startling facts: A few dar prior to his arrest, the Doctor attended a meeting in one of the town-hips iu his county, which was addressed by the liepublican candidate for State Senator. At the close of the meeting a recruiting ollicer present nude an effort to obtain volunteers, but failed to obta n any. Dr. Horton commenced addressing the crowd in attendance, and said atrt'iig of.her thing", that the people although entirely loyal and in favor of a vigorous prosecution of the war, were reluctant to volunteer fince the President's emancipation proclamation. He expressed himself as wholly iu favor of a vigorous prosecution of the war for the suppression of the re bellion. Our informant avows that throughout the whole of his speech, the Doctor did not utter a single disloyal sentiment, or anything disrespectful ot the Administration; it is true, says our informant, that he literally skinned the candidate for Senatorial honors, and that is the head and front of his offence. A night or two previous to the election, about the hour of midnight, a per-on rung the bell at the doctor's door, who upon inquiry informed him that some gentleman. wh:)se name we have forgotten, had fallen from his carriage and broken his leg, and was lying at a house a mile or two out ot town in a critical condition. The doctor, not dreaming of any harm intended towards him, hastily dressed himself and started otV with his kidnappers, who after driving a short distance informed him that he was a prisoner. In the name of jnnice, what sort of times hate we fallen iiixm? What has become ot the wise and wholesome laws framed by our fathers for the protection of the innocent and punish anent of the guilty? Has liberty already taken her flight to distant climes, and leit us nothing but the terror and desstism of the days of Danton, Marat and Robes-pier e? We are wholly unable to realize such a state of affairs, and would most assuredly not believe it if it came to us through any other source. We have ever advocated a strict adherence to law and order, and deprecated everything in the nature of mob law; and however hard and oppressive a law might be, still it is better to yield obedience to it and t-eek redress through the only channel provided by the Constitution. But the manner and cause of the artest ot Dr. Horton is riot only contrary to all law, but without a paral lei in our history. It can not be possible that the authorities at Washington are aware of the gross abuse of the power practiced by the IVovost Marshals. We have always, and still believe the President a kind-hearted, benevolent man, disposed to inflict injury and oppression upon no one. And we are compelled to believe that in the innocence of his heart he invested these petty and malicious tyrants with the unlimited power they seem to possess. Could he have foreseen that these men would take the authority with which they are clothed to work out their personal animosities, and to gratify a malicious spite he would never have invested them with it; or learning it, will he not hurl them back into the obscurity from which they never should have been taken? For what purpose was it that a squad of dragoons w ere sent to Blutltou on the day of the election, if not to overthrow the people? No one ever pretended that there was any danger of an outbreak among the eople, or that the life and property of any person was in danger. The civil authorities have always been competent and able to enforce the laws and maintain order. Why then these gross and terrible outrages? If Dr. Horton was really guilty of any crime, why was he not charged with it, and arrested iu accordance with the laws in such case made and provided? The courts are open, the civil law is not inoperative; what earthly reason then can be given for this outrage? While w e most earnestly beseech the friends of the injured min to become guilty of no wrong, but to render a strict ami ready obedience to every law, and to preserve the peace and good order of their community, w e advise them at the earliest possible moment to lay before the President all the wrongs and oppres sionsof his officers, and we have no doubt but that he will delight in rendering them ample justice. The President on not help to see that his suspension f the writ of habeas corpus iu the most loyal State of Indiana, is a wanton outrage. Her people have Hoi ked round his st tiul.trd by lumdied of thousands, and upon every b 1 1 tie-held they have pouied out their blood like water, to save his totteiing seit in of üce. 0;i in occasion have they hes'u ited to obey his e-ery call and to render obedience to his every requisition; her courts are open without even a pretuce of insurrection in the State or inability to administer the laws. Why then has he tieatcd them so ungrate fully, inhumanly, suspiciously and unjustly, as to suspeud the writ of speedy and fait trial? The only solution that it is noss'ble to give, is that ho has been prejudiced against our people by vi ked Hnd designing M-oundrels, who sought for an op portutiity to wotk out private malice under pretences of law, w h'.ch they w ere too cow ardly to do on their ow n re-jonsibility. From the St. Louis Republican. Tlie Popular Ilevolution. Halielujah! The wisdom, the judgment, and the patriotism of the people their ability to govern themselves has again been asserted in the result of the recent elections in Indiana, Ohio, and Pennsylrania; and we have a right to shout IlalU'iujah! The people have engaged in a revolution which i to work out their politie.il sitlva lion, and to bring back all the States to a glorious Union brsl iu discarding, us they are now. the faithless seivants who have brought the-e mousirous troubles upon tlie country, and putting in the;r places men w ho will seek ussidiouslv to aid the President in the adoption of such measures as will insure the testoration of peace and the Union of the States. No political revolution has eer been accom plished under equally adverse circumstances, and yet no revolution was ever more thorough and astonishing than that which ws.s achieved by the people of Ohio and Indiana, and in all probability Pennsylvania, on Tuesday list. No army yet tn.trh.iled in the field again-t the rebel hosts could have hoped, iu its most sanguine moments, lor so splendid a vi tory; a victory, toj, achieved w ithout the loss of a single lite without any extraordinary excitement without the expenditure of hundreds of mdlions of uu ney Out simplv by the aid of the ballot-box that mute iusu-umer.t to which we have been referred by Gen. McClel Ian for the settlement of all our political and sectional differences; and to which, it Southern States atid Southern Congiessmen had been true to themselves and the Union, tlie appeal would not have been cYvle iu vain! The votes of the States last Tuesday show it the votes to be given on the 4th of November will confirm it. Revolution commenced under such auspices never go backward! All but four of the fanatic il representatives of radical abolitioni-ru have leen driven into obscurity by the voice of the people of Onio. Such, at least is the look of things now . The vote upon the Sute ticket will h w a mooritv of twento thousand agiint Abolitionism, in a State which give President Lincoln forty tour thous md votes over Douglas. Of all the Valvals now iu Con :res. Ash'ey is the o;dy one left to point the fincer of ss-orn at! Indiana has also done nobly. She has left Dunn and Col fix at home, and elected a m.tjori ty of Democrat- psibly all except thtee to the reit House cf itepre-entatives elected a Legi-lature wmch will make choice of a true Un on ui m a m m w ho w il g;.v e to the C n-ti-tuti. n and the government an ernt and he my uprs.rt and then i I.nched all by giving t.i the S' 'te ticket a mooritv I at b-i-t Ten thousw.d. From Pennsylvania, we are without as full accounts, bit this very fact justifies the belief that
all is rieht there. The defeat of Grow, the Ab- j oiition Speaker of the House, is as good an in- j dex as we want of the extent of the revolution in ; that Slate, and c are content to wait for detail. I Meanwhile, all hail to Ohio, Indiana ind Penn- j sylvania they are redeemed from the curse of
A11 'lioni-m. Whatei-e remains? The revolution will go onwarJ with the force of an avalmche. The people are weary and digtited with th it radicaliidio prcTaleat In the present Conrrcs.wtrch would de-troy the Government aooner than give up political power.- - New York next month will Tote more overwhelmingly agtinst thvt radicalism than Ohio baa done. Massachusetts is preparing to follow suit. Michigan will be revolutionized, and the "blood letting" Chandler will share the fate of Sumner iu Massachusetts. New Jersey will be all right, arid our nesr neighbor, Illinois, never out done in anything, will vindicate her reputation by electing a majority of conservative men to the'lIoue. She i already terribly aroused by the attempt to flood her territory with the runaway negroes, whose very presence is offensive to the people, and with whom they do not want to come in contact ia any way. While this good work is being done in those States, Missouri should not be found wanting iu the hour of trial. Daniel Webster Committed. As the years wane the people more fully realize the greatness of Wlbstlr. What Suakspkake was jn literature, Wibstik. was in statesmanship. He was ocean-minded. There is scarcely a phase of our political affairs, even in these extraordinary limes, upon which his speeches do not furnish appropriate comment and wise counsel. Read this: I disdain, altogether the character of an uncommitted man. I am committed, fully com mitted; committed to the full extent of all that I arn, and all that I hope, to the Constitution of the country, to its love and reverence; to its defense and maintenance, iO its warm commendation to everv American heart, and to its vindication and just praise, before all mankind. And I am committed against everything which, in my judgment may w eaken, endanger or destroy it. 1 am committed against the encouragement of local parties and local feelings; I am committed against all; any and every derangement of the powers of the several Department of tlie Government, against any derogation from the constitutional authority of Congress, and especially against all extension of the Executive power: and lam committed against any attempt to rule the free people of this country by the patronage of the Government itself. I am committed, fully and entirely committed, against making the Government the people's master. Official Intermeddling uitn lilcc tlonw. The Washington Republican, organ of the Administration, iu a recent article, acknowledges its fear that Wadsworth may be defeated in New York, and proteges distrust of the followers of Weed and Seward. It says "unless the most earnest exertion be made in General Wadsworth's behalf, the cause of the Union stands more than a fair chance of encountering a heavy blow and great discouragement in his person. Let all the influence of the Government Departments therefore be placed liberally at his disposal. A very plain intimatiou, says the Chicago Timm, from the Government organ that the departments ot the Government are to be used as political machines for the election of Abolitionists. After the exhibitions we have had of frauds and corruption in the Cabinet and Congress, we should be foolish to doubt that the intimation of this newspaper organ will be adopted, not only iu New York but in other States. This placing of the influence of the Government departments liberally at the disposil of the candidates means bribery. It means a general system of bribery to be inaugurated and conducted by Government officials with money belonging to Government, to secure the re-election of a Congress whose record is black with fraud and plunder. But is not this avowal of the Washington organ only in keeping with Stanton's recent order to Jen. Tuttle; which, almost in terms, directed that the negro immigration to Illinois, in defiance of our laws, should be stopped until after the election, that the popular indignation might be mollified, and the people lulled into security, until after their votes w ere obtained for the Administration's candidates? "The ihfluence of the Gov eminent departments." in all their ramifications is, most liberally, being directed to controlling the elections. So great is their concern iu this connection that the President was up nearly all Tuesday night, in the telegraph otüce at Washington, receiving the election news as it came in. Says a Washington correspondent of the St. Louis Democrat: "The President is in the telegraph office at a late hour to night, awaiting dispatches from States that held elections to-dav." The President has no concern about party! Not he! Only went down to crack a few classic jokes with the telegraph operators! Springfield AVyisrr. Address of T. A. It. rlvon to the People of i:ut Tennessicc. In all the speeches which I made to you in the spring and summer of lt6l, as well as iu a printed address to the people of the State, on or about the ytlth of May, ltd, I declared, in substance, that if I had believed it was the object of the North to sut jugate the South and to emancipate our slaves, in violation of the Constitution, 1 would have tone as far as the farthest in advocating resistance to the utmost extent. My attention has jut been called to a proclamation issued by the President of the United Stateson the ihJd of September, ltG2, in which he declares that "on the first dav of Januarv, iu the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred iinu sixty-three, all persons held as slaves within any State, or any designated pait of aS'.afe, the people hereof shall then be in rebellion against the United States, shall be henceforward and forever free, and the Executive Government of tlie United Slates, including the military and naval uuthority, will recognize and maintain tlie freedom of such persons, and will do no act or acts to retre.-s such peisons, or any of them, iu anv efforts thev mav make for their actual free dorn." I need scarcely remind you that one of the evils which I dreaded and predicted as the results of the tlforts which were made to dissolve the Union was that, in the progress of the war, they might open the way for crvile insurrection and overthrow of the institution of slavery. My opinions as to the unconstitutionality and impolicy of .sccessiou remain unchanged; but in ny last npeoi in Congress, and on various other public occasions, 1 h te vindicated and maintained, and still maintain, the right of revolution. On no occasion, however, did I ever assert the doctrine that a violation of the Constitution by one party would authorize or justify similar or other violations by the opposing party. The paramount caues which have controlled or inrlutnced my conduct an I opinions were love for the Union and an unshaken confidence that we had the best Constitution and Government in the world. But, of all the acts of despotism of which the civil war in which we are now engaged h is been the prol.fitf source, there is not one which, in the slightest decree, equals the atrocity and bubtrism of Mr. L:n-oIn's prod am ttion. Atone blow it deprive all the citizens of the slave States, without tii-tinction of the right to hold slaves aright guaranteed by the very Constitution he pretends to uphold. It is true, he makes an intimation that be ill recommend to Congress to provide just compensation to Union masters in the slave Scutes; but what right has he or the Government of the United States to deprive theci of this property without their consent? And what assurance have they that his vague and general intimatiou will be applied to them, or that an Abolition Congress, reeking with the blood of the South, and jubilant in the possesion of usurped power, will adopt his recommendation? We are in the midst of a sea of difficulties. Many act have been done in the South to which we were bitterly opposed as a people, and which we who have adhered to the Union, in spite of perils and dangers, could not justify or palliate. J?ut the Uuuu mrii of Eist Tennessee are not now, and never were, Abol.tionists. The Union men of Kast Tennessee are not ivw, and never have ln'on. committed to the ditctrines of incendiarism and murder to whicii Mr Lincoln's proclamation leads What, then, is the pith of .duty in the trving circumstances which surround us? Is it to belie all our past proles-ion and to sustain Mr. Lincoln'?. Administration, right or wrong? Is it to justify a man whom we had no agency in elevating to power, not only iu abandoning the Constitution d" the Uid'ed Stttes, but in repudiating the Chicago platform, his intuirur.il address and n.e-s.ttes in Congies. in which the ab solute tiht to slavery in the States where it exists was o.-iMtctly and unequivocally conceded? Or i it in view of the manv violations of the
Constitution, and this cr-owning ict of osurpation, to join that side which at present affords the onlr earthly hope of successful reiis'ance' lam aware, my countrymen, that you will find difliculiies in bringing )our mini to the same conclusion at which my own has arrived. Many wanton and unauthorized acts of crueltv and op
pression have been perpetrated among you w hich j inte.td of changing your opinion have onlv ieen calculated to aggravate and intenify a Wroie princip'e of end-irance. Many of these acts have been committed In remote places, without (he knowledge or approbatian of the authorities at Richmond, or of those who hive hel l the su preme command in Eat Tennessee, and under such circumstance that you have felt it dangerous to complvia. Gradually and slowlv thee outrages have at lu-t become known, and in the very recent proclamation issued by Major General Jones, you have the assurance that yoot complaints w ill be heard and the most energetic measures adopted to remedy the evils to whica tou have been subjected. Let not, then, a sense of private and present wrongs blind you against the enormities already perpetrated and still more seriously contemplated by Mr. Lincoln's Administration. If a majority of the Republican party have been sinners in their professions of a determination to respect the rights of slavery In the States, and if the licht of freedom i not utterly extinguished in the North, may we not hope that & spirit ot resistance w ill be aroused iu that section, which; combined wi'h the efforts of the South, will hurl Mr. Lincoln from power, and even yet restore peace and harmony to our distracted and divided couutry? But if, through fear or any other cause, Mr. Lincoln's infamous proclamation is sustained, then we have no Union, no Constitution to struggle for, no ruiiMiifieent and unbroken heritage to maintain, no tice to expect save such as with the blessing of Providence we may conquer. The armies which have been sent near you to tantalize you w ith hope have been withdrawn, and with cool audacity Mr Lincoln virtually tells you that you have no rights. No alternative remains but to choose the destiny which an arrogant and unprincipled Administration forces upon us. It is almost unnecessary to declare to you that I adhered to the Union amidst good report and ev il report, suffering and danger, while it w as in my power to support it, and that, w hen my efforts were paralyzed and my voice silenced by cau-es beyond my control. I have cherished the hope that all might yet be well; but "the last link is broken" that bound me to a Government for which my ancestors fought, and, whatever may be the courj-e of others, I shall feel if. ray duty to encourage the most persevering and determined resistance ag.iinst the tyrants and usurpers of the Federal Administration, who have blasted our hopes and are cruelly seeking to destroy the last vestige of freedom among us. If you would save yourselves from a spc.ies of carnage unexampled in the history of North America, but unequivocally invited in M. Lincoln's proclamation, let every man who is able to fight buckle on his armor, and, without aw aiting the slow and tedious process of conscription, at once volunteer in the struggle against him. The race is not al ways to the swift nor the strong, and it can not, in the nature of things, be possible that a just God will prosper the efforts of a man or a Government which has hypocritically pretended to wage war in behalf of the Constitution, but now throws off the mask and sets it utterly at defiance. No despot in Europe would dare to exercise the pow er which Mr. Lincoln, in less than two brief years, tas boldly usurped. He has suspended the writ of habeas corpus in regard to all persons who have been or may be imprisoned by military authority, and thus destroyed th? right e.-scntial to the liberty of the citizen, aright which the m.iiled borons of England w rete 1 by force from King John, and inserted in the great charter of British freedom; aright which it cot centuries of contest to engraft upon the British constitution; a right for w hich our fathers sternly struggled, and which is incorporated in every American constitution. He has called armies into the field without authority, according to his own acknowledgment, and has become a military dictator. He now claims the prerogative to abolish slavery without our consent; and, if he can thus take our negroes, w hy may he not take our lands, nnd everythiag else we possess, and reduce us to a state of vassalage to which no parallel can be found, save iu the history of the Middle Age. Thom. A. R. Nllson. Knoxville, October 3, lfcL A Cireat IVIifttake Abroad The Fact In relation to the Ilon.C I,. Vallandi liam We find the following paragraph in the New York World, which, in speaking of the Ohio election, says: "There has certainly been no loss, and probably a gain in the Democratic delegation to Congress Jrom the State. Vallandigham is defeated by his personal unpopularity and secession sym pathies; any other Democratic candidate would have carried his district." The World is bully posted, and does great injustice to Mr. Vallandigham. That gentleman has been sustained, and received a large majority in the Congressional District which he now represents in the House of Representatives. His constituents approve of his course, and indorse him thoroughly. They know well that the charge that he has any secession sympathy is a base lie. For the benefit of the World we'gije the vote in Mr. Vallandigham'. district two years ago as a contrast with the present vote. In 1?G:) the vote stood: Vallandigham. Craighead. Butler 1,15 .... Preble Montgoinei 157 1,031 131 It will be een tint Mr. Vallandiglnm hul 134 rn ij'irity in his district two yc.trs ago. The vote in the district now (lC'Gi) un-ls as follows: VallaniÜL'h.im. Schenck. Butler Ii75 . . . Montgomery 45'1 Preble ." 690 Mr. Vallandigham' majority ha been inrreieJ over GOO in two years. List yer the majority lor the Abolitiomt in Mr. Vallamlipham's district, which he his now carried by 735, was over 1,500. Mr. Vllandigham has been ejected trom Congress by a coii.-piraey againt him upon t!iepirt of the Abolition Legislature. Th-tt todv added on to hi district the county of Warren, which has iilway been one of tlie stro:ii:et Abolition coniitie-i in the 5tate, giving from 1,!200 to 1,50 majority uuVilv aaitit tlie Democrats. This a done expressly to defeat 31r. Vallandigham. 1 hey knew he would be re elected, if it was not done. lie would have been re-elected as it wns, if there had leeu a Ltir vote in Warren County. Democrats in many parts of that count, were not permitted to vote, and hundred of men, we have reison to Relieve, were brought into the county t votetiie A' t ti j:i ticket. Htd it not been for this. Mr. Vallandigham would have beeu le elected. Cincinnuti Enquirer. Spoeix.il IVotiee. lit AD VERT HERS. All dtrtinimU takti for a tjircif-'r't ti, it'i or-ltrfi out Itf retht exjiiXion I the time to'wW, u Ul It chiir-jtd Hut regular r jtnt fort ie np to tAt lim try art ordered out. j FOR RENT. IUK PFNT. A Lou.M? n the coner cf Tenne an I " 5i. CUir street. Cuttin;ng four room, kitcbn and KuodcelU . fPASX 4 LOVE. ctl2-12t STOLEN. BA.1T HORSE STOLEN". rKUil TUF. SUBSCRIBER, IS GREEN 3 To nLir, Morgan coui ty, Indian, on the nuht cf tu 2th pirmrT, a By Hore, three year old, I6.1, t a !..! Lürli, iLe it ft fret abuiU hilf U:te, a wLite ruar on tLe kit bX)f, the right eje white and Lis U:i not full len'U lie as sni tl t be taka by a ct-npie of deer: rs ha. i-roiMy beru taken to L1jio:s. A literal rerd ill be t;iven fur the return of the Lt, or n-r lhf-nuauoti tLjt vr.il iea J t Lis recovery. Ad Ire- rr.e at Waverlr, Jtorga . coun'r, I..d;rn. tn di.'t " A.NUrTl- W J IVI. MEDICAL. Br. ED. EL Carter PHYMCI AN AND SlKr.fcON. o FFTCE, Nona Illinois ttret, Vffd S - r. lieidef.ee 79 North lllinoi street, Ibdiari. Ii, lad. .ctJl-dSin
I.Ü15 1,"!?1
1 4J5 CÜ0 735
AMUSEMENTS.
METROPOLIAN HALL. WEDNESDAY EVENING, OCT. 23.1rC2. Tbird night cf the five act romantic Ira tran-la'fd frm the Grmn. cHM THE CRICKET. With Mi MtktuX MCM:THT. Mr. fKUX A. VI5CKM, Hr. W. . K1LKY. Mr. . L. KKLLEK, and tLe ebt.re Comp: la th cast. The Theater ba been entirely rerxr-att, new pcenery FRTCF.S OF ADMISSION. Dre Circle ar.d Paretic tte 50 cent. Lady and C,t ml m-n .. .T5 " " " Lach additional ladjr 25 " Gal fry 25 " Private Boxe $4 00 No single at 1d in Private Txe. Cüocr9opnat7o'clo:k. Performance commences at7,. oct20 FURS! FURS!! I HAVE JÜST UF.CF.tVF.n MY- FIRST INVOICF. OK LADIF.S'&nd MlSSLS' FUKS a Urce and j.lendiJ assortment at very low prices. Call amiexamine them, ISAAC DAVIS, oct20-Jlw No. 13 Pennsylvania treet. SEWING MACHINES. THE FLOIIE.YCE Sewing Machine, MAKES FOUR DISTINCT STITCHES N one and the sane machine, and has the reversible feet; also, o rami I y Knitting JIachinc, FOR KMTTTXG SOCKS AND STOCKINGS, And all kinds of fancy work. SALES-ROOM, o. 17 Pennsylvania street, at Lothrcp & Wn:ht' Lathe Auction Store. Wm. 11. SHAKP, Acent, oct2fl-dlm Indianapolis, Ind. PAPER. LETTER FJJPSR, CTP PAPER, WBAPPING PAPEPl, 2v A.ÜSTXT iT i A. PAPER, Printing I'.ipt r, Xr. WHOLESALE AND RETAIL AT oir;.r, stm:uikt v ctrs oct JO-düw MUSIC. 4 i SUPERIOR PIANO FORTES! Cliiciitring' ft sons, steimcay V Sons, AT THE Indiana 3Iu.ii? Store, IMo. i Hute IlotiKe ner.29 WII.LARD & S10WELL. LIVERY STABLS. Exchange Stables, ." I 1 1 i it o i h Street, Opposite Kates Hou.se, Indianapolis, Ind. au?5-dly GROCERIES. 30,000 Werth of TOBACCO For .-ale by Sari k Hatcher, o!3-I2m Lafayette, Indiana. 1 9 O O O Baps Prime RIO COFFEE For f ale by Earl 8c Hatcher, 13-J2ra Lfjrtt, Iii'liana. 3 TLT Cp .A. 2 300 BKLS Sug,r: 100 iIHrS yw Orkans urar; 200 BItLS Cnull'"d at'1 Powdered Suffar; For a!e by Earl & Hatcher, ol3-d2:a Lafaye tte, Indiana. MERCHANT TAILOR. . W . BC J JIEKCIIAXT TAILOR. j Dealer in Kea1 j - tlade riothin? and j Genu' Furnishing Goodi ' No. 105 EAST WASHINGTON STREET, i (Ofl'ChlTt THE C'ltRT HOLSt,) j ! INDIANAPOLIS. INI). j j ap9-dly CROCERIES. II. & II., 25 Ural WatliinKton St., HAVF. RECF.IVKD TUF.IK FALL AND W1NTF.U uj-plie. of Fam.Iy (irocerie, which they offer to (Le trad- at the le-i cah pritti. Particular attention S invited to our large tock f Sujjar. Teas Ci'üee, isicar-cured Haina, Dried Beef, Mackerel. H ur. Corn Meal, buckwheat. l-al'.iMore Oy ltr Fish, Ac. and fruit. and vegetable in in, all of which U olferered at the cLeae.t rate fur centime article. -pt:-!3ni lUHiSHUCE IICSTEH.
'S
r
LV
DRY GOODS.
pH 5 GO In Q H w o 0 0 Ö Pd tti r 12 ( r-5 MEDICAL. IVri Important to the Siarriutl AND THOSE CONTEMPLATING MARKIARE! rjlHE unlTinHd will send fr-e by nia;l the nure mans ot reveiitii!i concfjifion. No dniics or medicines, bit a latk PiMToVkv. A nixular with jurticular will be tent tu ny a-iilre.- by iTirloMiijr tue two 3 cent Mar.ips. A book containing ail the knowlfd referred to, und ieveral private receipts, with rL.vTr, w ill beent to any name or address you nay w ih, by induing vat on dollar. Meliciiie, a French Pill, will be ent for one dollar per box. ItHverybureiniLstlTict Address LK-k Ilox No. 220, Indianapolis. j19-.16tn A. K FOICHET. HAPPINESS OR MISERY? THAT IS THE QUESTION. flHF. pn.pri.tors of the "I'AP.ISIAN CAIUNKT OF L WINDFUS, ANATOMY, and MEDICINE," have determined, r p;ird!es of exp n"e, to issue, free, (for the benefit of iifl'frinj? humanity) FOUR of ther niot inftrcrtive and jtiteretinfr Ic'uren on Marriace and itn DiMjUAiiflcatioiis Xervou iH-bilify, Premature Decline of Manhood, I:idi)?'tioo, Weaknei.it or Iejiresion, I of Knerty and Viul Power, the Great SH-ial Evils, and those Maladies which reult from youthful follies, F.xceses of Maturity, or Ignorance of Phyiol py and Nature's Law Th-se invaluable Lectures have been the niiMiis of rili?htcu:n and bavins liousand., and w ill te forwjr fre on the receipt of four ftaaips, by add refine SF.CltKTUY Parum a k CARiKr.T or Akatomy axn Mkdicixr, 563 llroadway, New Yirk. jr23-dly .i sag tu cotdy or fcJc jDlitcai, which wight he checked iviih a simple remedy, if neglected, often, terminates sericucly. Few are aware cf the importance cf stopping a ßciLßfi. er HqlI ßclcL in, its first stage ; that wrdch in the beginning would yieli to a mild remedy, if net attended to, socrt attacks the lungs. Were first introduced eleven years ago. It has been proved that they are the best article before the jajZUi for fL&tnnLCL, jQalcufi-tTL, the Hacking Cough in cjz&um fitlan. , and numerous affections cf the JhaaJ giving immediate relief. Public Speakers tc Singers Will find them, effectual for clearing and strengthening the voice Bold by all (Druggists and (Dealers inJSedicine, at 25 cents xr box. C O :V F I I E iV T I A Ij YOUNG MEN WHO HAVE IXü JUKKD themi-elvPs by certain ecret LaMt, which unfit then for busir., I leisure or the duUea of married life; alo. middle-aged and old men. who. Irom the follies of youth or other caun, feel a debility in advance efthir years, before placing themselvea under the treatment of any one, nbould firM r-ad 'THE SFCKET FKIF.ND." Married Iadiej i learn omethinj; of itnporttnea prusinR "Thk Stori t Frikxd." Ni-nt to any a.iiress, in a .ealed envelop, on receipt f Ten Cent. DIC. STCAKT A CO. can te consulted on all dieasee of a private or confidential nature, from H A. U. tc 9 P il., (Sundaya from 9 to 11 A. il.,) at their offce, No. 13 Ea.t Tbrrd street, ip-'iTairs, b"teen Main and Sycamore, oopoki'e tbe Henrie House. Adir. DR.CHA8. A. STCA RT it CO., tnchll-d4wly-iii.'62 Cinder atObio. T .V II IS A. IV T ' S EFFERVESCENT SELTZER APERIENT. Thia valuable and popular Med;cin bai un'vertally received the nv-M f.voritle revrmimndationa of tht Medical I'rofe.sion and tbe l'utlic a the mot rrrimrr axd aoukkablk It may be ned with the best effect in B.liou and Febrile Diea-e, Cöstivet., 5ick Headache, Xauxa. Lov of AppeLte, ladi.-t uon. Acidity cf the Stomach, Torpidity of ti;e Uvrr, Gout, ULeumatic Aflecti.nn. Oravel. Pila, And all Coii.-U;ut where a gentle and CwAivg Aperient or Pur7ative i required. It Is particularly adapted to the want of Traveler by Sea and Land, lu-idenu in Hot Cliraat, per. of Seil '-alary HabitA, invalids ard 0valexnt; CapUina cf Vessels and Pia :itra will tiid it a aiualle kidition to their Medicine CLrt. It is in the form of a Powder, carefully put op la bottle to keep iu ar.y cl.mate, and merely requires water poured npu It to produce a delightful effervescent bver ajre. Numerous testinoniaN from professional and other ire ntle men of the LUhest standing throu.-hut the countrj.and its steadi y inereaninr popularity for a e riet of year, str- r.itly triarantee lt eSicarr and valuable character, and commend tt to the favor alle bucke of an Intel-.it-Et public Manufactured only by TAL&ANT k CO., No. 27 S Greenwich street, cmer of Yarren a: reel, Jfew Toik; and Ut sale by Iru(ttlt generally. Ij'lJ
o
a
I)
DRY COODS.
; .i Fin um: er rill .v n iyrtR DRY GOODS Lynch c Kieane's! THESE GX)IS WERK IIOIIfwIIT AT ATCTIOM AXD TT ILL BE SOLD Below the Present Standard Prices! LEMEMHER, 33 WEST WASHINGTON ST., Net Iry Gooxls More to the Talmer Ilae. LYNC II IC VI .V X 1Z , Jel3'62-dly rROPKlETOrs. CROCERIES. MORE NEW GROCEHIES! Ruger & Caldwell, WHOLESALE (JROCERS AND COMMISSION MKHC1IAXTS, xo.08 Kat WaHliintoii .St. ire W &vt of (kll t&rS U.M Indlnn'tli, Jnili-ttut. UTTER, Cheeae, and Dried Beef; 200 200 nOGSHEADS New Orleans 5usar; HOT.SHEADS Uland Sojrar; lW PACKAGES, Herring, Codftsh, Halibut, and 4UU Mackerel; -QQ BARKELS Refined Supar, QQ BARRELS Sirup and Molasses; QQ BAGS Java Coffee; OQQ BAtiS Roasted Coffee; ;)fk CHESTS ar.d Half Chehta Imterlal.Gnnpow. tYJVj der. Young !!yon. Hyson Skin, and Oolong Teas; VLSPICE, Cah-ia, Cloves, Cinnamon, and a reneral asM.rtmetit of apices uitable for retail trade; C0rnA;F.,Ci?rs. I raits L'fuor; all kind c-f Nut, Hice, Soar. To'-hto, cd Woiden Ware, tetde general afsorttnnit of Grocerie, in store and for sale by nrc.ru jc rAi,Dvi:M 68 East vTashinjrton street. MERCHANTS Turing the State Fair would do well to call and t xamiae the aWe ror! at kl'GKK CAMiWrLl, Jel3'62-dAwly H East vVabtrftoti st. OYSTERS. .71 A IV IV fc CoN CELEBRATED FRESH CAN BALTIMORE OYSTERS. RE now in market, received daily by Adams' El cress, at the Depot. 5. 2, North Illino. street, op posite the Etes Hou. G. W. Hawea. A?nt. wi I attend to II rtera and rur-nu-b supplies in the Mate of Indiana. reaJ-r arid contumer, okl and new patrons, remember your interest i ocr. DEPOT No. 3 North Illinois street, opposite tht Bat Houe. aug.l-dAw3m G. W. IIA WER, foU Agent. FOR THE WAR. COLT'S PATTERN SELF - ACTING REVOLVERS ! NAVV AND BELT REVOLVERS, k fall supply 5ew Patern. Swords at Cost Prices. F.owle. Pocket, acd Table Knives: Fruit Cu: 5ail; Belting Hope, and Building Hardware. At No. Jl West Waehington u Je23 J. IL VAJEX. ATTOnrJEYO. Taoaia a. mtry.t oacaa b. stoa. iii:ii:h & uord, ft-Txoitxrsrs-a.t -law, 4 OSW -Etna Ealldg. 43m
