Daily State Sentinel, Volume 12, Number 3981, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 July 1863 — Page 2
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DAILY SENTINEL. Tut usios -tr cr BKriULKvrjy li.raeoe
MONDAY MOUNINO-JFLY 13. Ttt. iNTMUn mt Indie... I7Tr bafbrt bat thr tm ach aafxcit rat In Indian baa bra cauI by ib Mol oa raid. It i not ronfin! la anj locality t to local i tie., but I general 11 over the Sute. All partUart leUn ttl rwejoJ'C kt teeo rfc. penJeU in tht com moo determination expreieev to drive the ioradere from oar toil, or, if poeiU Lie, to capture theta. The of3eere in ;ommanl of th! military department and the civil and military aatWUies of the Sute ire naing eerr effort to ccomplish theee j-cjrpo.ej. And Oen. Wilicox epecialTj haa with jjreat energy and tea! 1 arjcwarin; Ubor diwharged the import ant duties assise! him. ITottOs'a carairr en J the militia of the State are close upon the heela of the raider; the Ohio river la patrol M whh f otboaia, n4 do thine, bot the rapid movement of the Rebel caralry and their ability toem. lato Kentnchy at aoma anaatpected poiot, will j-rerent the capture of Moioa's whole force. Up to laat evening. frTatrOuf lilt houra, CWieral. OaftToro'. wbo wa aIgnei' that duty, bad organ'xed? "over ten . thotmnd men Bay ten regiments of infantry, one battalion and four eomptnie ofcttVrf , and two batteries of artillery, making In all on hundred and twelre cornpiniea. Two brigade! hire left the city, one ander the command of M jor General allacs, and the other onder that ol Col. (atijt. There were three brigade In the city laat niht, with arm stacked and ready at moment's no tir for any nnfeiant thtt mi?h; be required. There were fire regiment stationed in the StUe ITi'ise yard. One rrjiment coojisting of twelre oanpanie and two batter 5 e upon Unieeraity 8qir nnd one near the Soldier's Home At a irignal given yeterlay afternoon all the com panier her, and the member of some of them were scattered all orec the city, and some com. peniee fre at Caonp Certington, in forty five minute were at a pven point revly for service. Sixteen compsoie btve already been raided io the city, numSorinj more than one hundred eich. We understand thit the aemccs of over forty thousand n en hve lre.vly been tendered to the authorities here for the rreaent emergency, and this iloe. not include the Horn (luir U in the border counties who are already in the field. The alacrity and zel with which the citizen.- of Indiana, prang to arms upon the fimt notice rf danger, upon the 6ret in. timatioii that a formidable foe had come within her border, is the bet evidence of the spirit which animate all alike, and the common determination to prevent civil war in our borders. We regret there waa uoi more erstem, or we miht better sit some system, in calling oit the ! force neeeary f'r the emerjrrncT. There ahonM have been om estimate of the forces needed, and then a reo,utition rmde. proportionately, upon the counties of ej acce to the city. 1 his would have prevented confusion, and made the borlerte imped more equal, but the nhrra was eoun led, the call, terhaps went forth indis criminately, and the result waa th tt thouaands left the harrest field regardless of the consequences. The destruction of property from that caue alone will be immense. This could have been avoi.fed to a pre it extent if there had been some system in calling men into the service of the State. There has also been too much publicity in regard to all thit has been goin on. Everything has been bulletined with the utmost freedom. If the Beimels had emissaries here, as some suppose they did, there would h tve been no trouMe whatever in communicating to them all the movements of our troops and the plans for operating agalntt them. And this error ha not been confined to this locality. The movement in other qu irters have been heralded with eiitl freedom and impunity. Lf the IteSel re not as wi?e as ourselves in thee respects it is not for lack of communicativeness on our Dirt. We do not allude to thee matters merely to find fault, hut to illustrate the necessity of coolness and aelf control in the hour of dinger, and of ability and "paeity and prudence in the conduct of public flair?, especially at uch a period as the present. Pence Irepottlon. It appear that Mr. LlCOtü and his official ad viers are thinking about terms of peace. When thoe high in autl o'ty begin to title about peace.it is a premonition that the end of war draweth nisrh. A portion of the Cabinet f.ivor a restoration of the Union upon the old basis, w'iile another will oppoae ant settlement of the Xtional controversy upon any other condition than the abolition of staverv. The heresies of Abolitionism and Sece?ionim ptrcipitite1 civil w.tr upon the country, and they em likely to ont nn the frightful ntef remire and b!od nn'e-'S the iron frei I of the feip!e rruh them be j neath their feet. We. ar frr the Union with slavery ' or without Mlirery, b"l we are ppoed to miking either the perpetnition or the blition of lvery a condition for the rector tion of the Union. We are willing thit that question shall be leT jut as the fnmers of the Ooverr.ment left it, jut ss the Constitution leaves it, to the decision of the people of each of the States. We would not force either slavery or enunciation upon an unailling people. There Is no danger but slavery will ceise when free labor becomes more pjoStable thin slave lbor. S ich is our experience. And the ida very question would h ive made no trouble in the country if it had been kept out of party polities. The war would sooQ end if Abolitionism d d not give it vitality if it did unite the people of the Rebel Sutes in opposition to the Fedenl Government. Shall that fell spirit continue to control the Administration and the character of the war? To day the South could be divided and the North united upon, an issue of the restoration of t'te Union npon the old bais. We are to'd that the Commissioners are in Wellington ne'otiating for the return of Louia'riua to the Union if she cm occupy the same position that he did before the act of secession It is also suted th.it North Carolin wxild come bick upon the s.ams terms. If we are fighting for the suppresssion of the rebellion ami the reatortion ef the Union, why fhou'd not any Sute be received bcW"upou the old biia? C uld the rebellion receive more eruhing tlow than the return of these two Satca u;n auch coixltlioii It has been denirl by the Republican that tbe war is, or bias been, prosecuted for the aholitiou of stavery. Why ;s it then that tlie pirty in power oppose peice and the restoration of the Union uuleas upou the basis of emancipitiou? Can tl.e people be any longer deceived as to the policy aal purpose of the mho unfartuLJlely have control of the Government? arta 1'. SJ. Supreme Con rl and the Cutn lac C'biarrli. Archbishop Hcohks.. io aa adores at the S. John's College. Near York, aruoug other thim;., "Theyocg raea who pa rtki paled in the per frmnce bould feel pruud to be cuabled to raie tker voices on the grounds which Lave been .honored by our glorious Washington, and many other of our granüeuand most glorious countrjHe aa'id that miny other colleges and ia-
upon. uti tneaiia ju-t li it t!iot h u !rtnke to ' interpret it think protrr to pr claim. 1 hr lour.de ra of our C'Utitry irly lii led the ( errnient into the r.iecutire. tire InUUr siU ileJu!i ciary,and to the Judiciuy alone waa civen the j right and the power to interpret and proclaim the ' ? .v r ? : t tme mesnirgof the Constitution, and many of the troubles which now divide ui have aruen from the fa ft that the et uses whitk ave rise to them hsv never been derided by the Supreme Court, rhich is the highest judiciary power in the land. and the rieht Interpreter of the Constot&nr 7'Ae j Supreme Court rttrmblrt in miy tri th CaA t'e Church. Jhe alone had the rijht Io decide aud make known to her children what her doetriaes mean, the Supreme Court in former ert waa bokel upon, bke the C ilhotic Church, as in fallible. But now everybody Interprets the Constitution as be thinks fitting; it haa become like the LJ.ble in tle bands of tbe Mormons. The venerable Gclus 0. VaarLaxcx. in the core of hi epeech, tliua cooplimenteil the Arclibiahop: There waa one more tiling, one more subject of praise which came to Lis mind, and which be could not piaa orcr. It was the renewed vigor and health of their beloved and highly esteemed ArthbUboe. He waa hapov to ee It, and be hoped it would riKitinae. He had been somewhat of a politician, but had now retired from public life; but he could not help testifying to the greit good our worthy prelate had done for the coon try, not onlr by his efforts and influence abroad, but at home, when churches and pulpits of every kind throughout . the country bad become the theaters for the profession, surety not of peace, good will toward men, be managed fo keep hi children together and preerve them from the general contagion. Dy his silence on manv occasions, and his teachings on others, he had proved himself true to his country, and the country was proud of him, and he personally was proul of him and his libors, and he knew that the whole world esteemed him. Fom the 5f w Tork Daily 5rws, July t. Hpeech f sin I'.Ioquent Irish Oraler at lie Aeittlemjr of Tin!- In JXew York :il) , on the 4tii of Jul) . Mr. Richard O'fiormart waa then introduced aa the concluding speaker, the an lience creetina; him with long nnd continued applause. He spoke in subaUiice as follows: R. oVRMAM ESQ.' ADDR1S Mr I'rrtiJent nnd Fellow Cititent: You have beard to day, first of all the proud voice from the days of old, the voice of your heroic fathers, tell!ng you what wire the litertieH f;x which they fought. an I w hat were the liberties they bequeathed to you. You have he in! the voice of the Governor of the State of New York, c ilm, prudent. lo!d as lvomes the first officer of a sovereign State of four millions of people, and a territory as lare as Great Itritain. Next you heard the Toi of the gentleman who is not, but ought to be Governor of Connecticut. Governor I'aiker did not speak to j ou, but was present, and, in the presence of the-e three gentlemen, thee three B'ates have shaken bands, and here to day vowed that there xliould l-e for them and their people one policy, of Union if po.ib!e, but our liberties at a'lfmoMj. Great .ipp'au- Before the Union was, thee I i herlief were inherent and inalienable. Ther were not given to us by the Union, not graute! to us by any parchment, but (od ave them to every brave and )muet mm upon ttie eirth.andof these principles the Declaration of Independence and Constitution wan irnpl v deel ir atorr. Applue. You heard that every citizen ol the Sute of Ohio had awakened to a pente of the dep injury and wrong done to one of them, Ir. Vallandigham, and the voice of their repre sentative before you, sounding from here, will awaken among them a new sense of conviction tint in any contest for libeity New York will be ready with her assistance Applause It should be to us a new incentive. True, we are in gret danger; the greater, therefore, should be our courage. We have not been thoroughly awake to our d inger. With wh it horror would it fill us to see a boat's crew swept over the fills of Ni sgara, wrangling and quarreling with each other aliout how to esctoe until all chance for escape should be past; but to pee a nation great, though young, bearing on its head the crown of unex am pled prosperity, to see thit nation with its own insane hands tearing Its own bi easts and glorying in the wounds it inflicts, is a sight to make the angels weep. There are verv few re illy disloyal men in the nation, and the didoyal men are not always to be found in the places where we nre mostly told to lok for them. Applause. That man, w ho in an hour of peril like this, prefers the interests of hinielf or his party to the interests of the country, whether he be in the Cabinet, the counting boue or the field, is disloyal; and the man who strives honest It and to the extent of his intelligence, to do his duty as a citizen toward his country and in the discharge of that duty tells publicly what he believes to be the truth, that man. though he be found in Fort Lafayette, is n loral man. Great applause. Now, fellow cil izens, words ought to be ufed in their proper me Illings. D not suppose th t yon are dealing with an insurrection or rebellion the movement at the South is no disorderly erneute of die ffcted citizens. Once it was so; there was very little union in the South, but we made them united, and more shame for us. Applause We here at the North adopted the disgraceful noliev of bringing home war to the doors of unarmed and defensetess citizens. There were many at the South who looked upon the eld Union with love and reverence, and hoped again to see the oldfligof the Union wave over them, but we have made that flag to them an emblem of hivoc and ni n.an l implanted in their hearts a heritage of bitter and imperishable hitred Though I shout 1 ptand alone, I will, for the sake of the honor of this nation nranntf nations, raise mv vice in protect agiinstthia disgraceful and uncivilized warfare. Great applause It is no ipolojT to iy that flie Southern soldier hive lone o t in burning our ships; Jet them be re proved tor their wrong, but let us not lay the fl ittering unction to our souls that our sin may be kept hi. Men from the eves ot w.iubiul n.at:ons from my he.rtdo I wish that they mi:ht be. The South is united and their armies are mif'i ng upon us; who knows but their cannon are now hurling deith amo-n? thojie dear to u on the soil of Pennsylvania, and wh it may be the result to the nation? If we continue srill. the people not trusting the Government und the Government not trusting the people, there is nothiug for us but di-t r icetul deteat How are we to become unanimous? The Government his one pirn that all the people in the North .are to concur with the notion ot the Government and its party, or retire to the Dry Tortugas. Ap pliuse and laughter This U well explained by the phrae "unconditional loyalty," which means that you mast not discuss any public question without you discuss it in a tone favorable to the Government and the Republican pirty; indeed, you mut not even stay silent, laughter, but you niu-t come out point black in favor of the Government, whether you like it or not. You must readjust what papers the Government likes; you nust receive just whit telegrams the Gov ernment chooses to concoct; you must get all tour inform ition upon public affairs precie!v as the Government thinks proper to give it to you; you are indeed reqtrred to reduce yourselves to j tne condition ot nine cnnoreu, "open your mouth and shut vour eves, ard see what vou will Ct." Applause and laughter This policy ha been tried before. The English Govern -
young men might receive a pood education, an ! education of pnncipte, fir with ut uch an eluca-! lion ur Constitution is not worth anything. The; Coram .Hon is jut a p ere.f parchment written ,
ment tried it in Ireland, and the resu'.t ou know. claim the teMilt of the battles of the three pre Louis XVI of France tried it. He put as many j ceding diys as : victory, becau-e (Jen Lee had as hs; thought proper, of those who retired from tiefore Getthurg "Rut, idbe, disagreed with him, into the Bitüe, and "before thr e davs more they will pi iy another the people having borne as long aa thev tune In those enticements Gen Lehsc co aid, went up to it aud with their naked hands complied enctly hat he intended, and if the tore the foul thing down, s'one by stone. And Union srmy follow u now, it will be they who here let me retste a little stow whu h h s come to ' w'l' never return to their cipit 1, and not we I my knowledge. Gen Lafayette sent the kev off c,n ,e'l ?, hl ruth: Gen. Lee is not retreit tbe Uisiüe to Gen. Wash-rgton, as an interesting i 'n. "l n" l',v the north side of the P memorial of the overthrow of tyranny in France.! tomac until he has accomplished that for whkh he and it was hung up at Mount Vernon. I am crosed thit stream." cred;bly informed that the key is mising. an! Ij Gen Snnrt had at EmmettSurg 15.000 cavam further informed that an experiment mide 1 'lr.T spier. did condition. They left that place recently at thedead of night, reveals the fctthat: n the course of thedy.on receipt of dispatch the old key of the Uastile exactly tiu Fort L (m Lee They were the last Rebel troop fayette Great applause Chirles the First ?e?n br Eimettburg. or at any poii.t east of ard his Minister, the Karl of StraJT.nl. got up a , thehiseof the South Mountain. I am unable to system of unconditional loyalty, and the people !J no whether Gen. Lee's nrmy ha moved as differed from them in opinion, and the result was far as Hagerstown or not. But this I know, that the Km lost the evo-) the people lost the 'f he de-ircd to do so on Saturday or Sunday he King, beciue thev brrrdej him. Applause could and h done o; for the report thai the an! laughter The Secretary of Sute is re P,,i4 n the South Mountain were held by Union ported lo have boasted to Lord Lyons that touch troop is entirely inaccurate. On the other hand, ing a little bU to bis right band, he could order aU u ihose pae.-es h been held all the time by the arrest of a citizen of Ohio, (and he h is done trong detachments of General Lee's army. It it.) and again of a citizen of New York. "He ' Wn through these passe that the mails" from cannot do it;" cries of "No, no," an 1 no power Richmond to the Rebel army were transported eicept that of the rceideut could set them at tj dy. l.bertv more than the yueeu of England could : - - do. Even with a form of government not re ' VW Forty thousand prisoners taken in two publican, and with II the strong feelings of fortifications are the evidences of Gen. Grant's reverence itmor Englishmen for the lady whoe " forty tuie.
eirtoea have so endeire! her to them both as omni and as Queen, u-h an unwarrant stdeexetcse of piwer wouM te ufticleM to drive bee fim her ttrne The rtrAe of that lat e
bell soun-Ja .rerereranrig to my ear, nd t eil a 1'iQ jfr nvM ru irr, iruo a wirsin wiiii n aall arouse th American pep!e to atrutr'" for their endaj;ere4 1 berues. It uele-s lor tbe t)overn merit to attempt to at.fle di cui' eion mut be had either in publ.cor ii i ii n. Discus in secret, and secret dtcuKn it danreroui, srxi Ieds to con apirary. Let our d.scusiona of national questions be open and public: if anythieg dtstrfaor the American people," H Is their etuven fesrof Fo't Lifaveite. fArplauel Do rot discuss whether re for tbe vigwow prweretum f the war for the t reservation of the Union." I denounce that i.hrae aa deluiot, a snare, a trap, a device of th enerar. I deny that there is any war for the preservation of the Union. We may mbject the South to the condition of Poland; but if we do, we mut make of nursdvrs a Russia. Our talk of Union and Idierty will I aa hollow aa the dispatch. "Order rei.ns ia Vrtw," uttered heu freedom lay in its deith agonies, bleeding, mangled, crushed and hpele-s It is not possible under the free f.rm of onr Govern ment, to hold one half of it in subjection to another. If the South is to fie subdued by tur arms, it is the destrui ti n of t lie repuMican governmentof this country. Applau-e Idonotlike that talk about the vigorous prosecution of the war. I am not sure I know what it means 1 heard a person the other day siy that he was in faror of a vigorous ptoaecution of the war, of hanging Northern copperheads, of carrying the war to the homes of the Rfels in fact, aa he coneladed with a dimax of martial feeling, he would rather fuht than eit. I ventured to suggest that the general preference of humanity waa in favor of eating, whereupon he gave tne a savage scow. and deigning no reply, strode away. I asked a bi Stander to what regiment the gallant Captain belonged. Ob. said he, he isn't a Captain; he is not an officer in the array at all; he is aeontractnr. Great langhter and applause.l So ft Is generally; you will find that thone who are most eager fnr the prosecution of the war are those who m ike money by it, and those who talk most about fighting prefer to do the least of it, Smeof you perhaps know that so far as I am concerned I condemn this war, that I denlore it, that I consider it a rckle?s waste of heroic blood. I hive lifted up my voice for peace wheu I thought peace possible, and I bel'eve that fnrn time to lime during the last two years of war an honorah'e peace, an honorable compromise, would have been poa-ible; but now that the war is in its agony, that we nre in the grip and struggle of the figh; now that the enemy i upon the soil of a neighboring State. I siy nothing for peace. When this struggle is over, then will my voice again come out for peice. for compromise, but all I can siv now is, "0'td defori-t the right " The Government of the United States has re n to a great extent unfortunately a Government of party, and the present Administration i particu l.irlyoptn to that accusation. I have rem irked in the policy of the Republic in pirty a tendency, I believe, incongruous with a republican fnrm ol government. This policy is cenfralijition taking away rights from State and individuals, and gathering them adroitly to one center. Now the principle upon which the Amcricun Union is founded ia precisely the reverse of that. The princip'e of the Union is diversity. State sovereignty, S'.ate rights. Centralization is destxitism; State rights is freedom. Applause And when I am :idted to increase the power of the Government of the nation by placing armies in their h-nd, over which they have complete and supreme control, I confess that fear very much thit u:der the pretext of restoring the Union, we :irelie'ping to destroy our liberties Do you .ask whit then is to be done? I say the first thing to be dne is to arm the State of New York to the teeth. Great npplause. Arm it. nnd arm it at 'nee. The coure is sle, and can h irm nobody. The Governor will no his duty, and if he wants money let him pet it by voluntary subscription Let the Sme be armed nnd its soldiers drilled and diseiplinel, a voice. "And commmded by S'Me rights men."J commanded by its command er-in chief, the Governor of the Stite. Then they will be re i ly for their own protection. The State of New York has never proved recreant to its duty, and it will not do so now. A few days ago the Governor op the State of Pennsylvania called for help to resist an invasion, and the (Jot ei nor sent men to help them almost before the Penny Ivaiu iis had a wakened to a reuse of their imminent danger. Appl.ue Let our soldiers be drilled, then, not merely for parade in the ptreetA, but in camps of instruction, nnd let them be prepared a men to defend the rights of our St ite. When th it is done a e will need no longer Provot M irfhals in New Yoik; it w.ll be no longer neee-sarv for gall ant afficers to be fretting their . glorious souls in contentions with old women, nnd acting s policemen, while they nmht be winning fame with their swords in the field There is no blinking the fact that the union of thee States may be destroyed. The events f an hour may procure its final di.s.soluion. I do not believe it myself. I hope that God. who guided i's di-covery and settlement, nnd has thus far prospered . will not desert us in the Imur of our trial, if we will only be true to ourselves. Rut although the Union fall, liberty may be preerveit. .and the State m iy be sovereign yet. Have we not four millions of people, a great territory, hounded on one side bv the vat cean. and on another by the lakes, with harbors, railroads and canals; andean we not lilt this little piece of land high enough above the troubled waters to be a freehold for hummity forever? Applause Do not sup pose that a vat territory is necessiry for free dorn Attica w a.s not larger than this little island on which e stand, yet think how great and gloriou, how rich and strong, was it life, and what it has done for the world. It wasin the midst of despotic nations, rich in territories and population, yet h i outlived them alt. Where now are N in eveh. Carthage anil Tyre? They are gone; their language is forgotten, and almost their place upon the earth. Go to Athena, and there ou will still see the old Acropolis lifting up to the n its diadem of pilhrs, prochiminjj to mnnkind to come there and learn how noble is liberty. What do men mem by a strong government, a dictatorship, an oliparthy? Thee are the wetket forma of government; there is but one that is strong that which ret on the will of its citi zfis. As Athens was of old. let New York be still Let us protect to the I iat the inalienable rihta of citizens; let us stand by ourselves, and (toil will stand by ns. I think we haie nn official at the head of our State that i fit to lead nur Stite and guide it aright; Lord help us if e mis take him, but I, fr one, have confidence in Ho ratio Sevni oir. Applaue Let nsdoourdu ty by him. let us remember thit each State in its inherent sovereignty is independent in itrelf Then we are for the Union s Ion S it rn le supported, but we are for liberty it all events, and in defene of liberty "we pledge onr lire, our fortunes and our aered honor. Great ap plaue J i a im Theltebel View of (lie I. nie flatties tV liatGrii, .M tin rt May . The R iltimre correspondent of the Herald notice the atrivnl there of a gentleman, (a resident of Emmettsburg. Md ,) a ho had been taken irisoner and paroled by the Rebels. This gen tleman say be was pltced "nder cloe surveillance bv Gen. J. K R. Stuart . n Sunday, an 1 informe! that he could pot quit the town Othrno restrictions were placed upon his ae Hons On that day l e had a long conversation with Gen. Smart That rflicer informed him that be had no doubt the Northern newmprs would
Vom Iks 5ew Tr IleraM. Statement off aa Heftiger ffrwtn llebeldwui.
Tiik . Jlrrt'tira'a Mr.as or IsroMATioi ap JcHiiT to tut UaloM Liars The Waa Lvrit Wa asp Foon Scrrnia Aaiir, Nary asd Dtrotta or the Rkbela at d NA WlLMISOTOt, kc DtAcroar, N. C , June 30, 1F63. refufee from' the South: arrived her last night Irom Neabern. He is a Gerrom by birth, claims to be a citizen of Maryland, and saia be is and has ever leen a Unio mm. He appears quite intelligent, and much couüJcuce is placed in his statements The following Is his account of himself : When the rebellion broke out be was at work at his trade, marble working, at Mobile Eirly in May, Ir-61. he le!t theie, traveling northward till he eiche! Richmond. At Richmond, for som reason unknown to himself, be wa refused r -er mission to cross the ReM lines. In June. Ir6l, ht left Ru hrnotidand went to Wilminston, where he has rem aineJ most of t'ie time until the iflt int , when he left for the Unin lines He has been conscripted three times; but bv claiming to be a foreigner he got ofT the first and second time; but at the last conscription, which took place on the 2hh int , though he had Iniught a ick Germ ni'a certificate of foreign citizenship, who-e name he had as-umed, it would not an swer lie bad to go into the army or to jail. On the SUt, getting thiee hours litertj from hi guanls, who were taking hirn to the jail, he took advantage of it to get, through a friend, a pass, under a new name, to go to Weldon. Secreting himself on board of the cars so as not to be seen by tnoe who would recognize him in Wilmington, he came to Weldon, and then on foot, through woods und swamps, be found his way to Newbern. Making himself kimu to the military authorities there, nd jTofeing; to have a knowledge of how the Anglo Rebel steamers run the blockade into Wilmington, he was sent down here, and is now on loard of th United Suites .te.-imer Suteof Georg in which ves.-el is herefrom New Inlet, coaling s-hip and will go doa n to the blot k nie on her. When we left Wilminston there were seventeen steamers blockade runners liing at the wharves there, five of which aie owned by the Iteliel Government. All of the ste miers had brought in valuable cargoes One I nullit in one hundred pieces of brass field artillery, which be roiiu'ed on the wharf himself, together with the field cariiares, caisons, hirne, ; another came in loaded entirely with towder; another brought, with other mercli mdise, three hundred caes of Enfield rifles Scverd brought cargoes of bacon, which hid its way there from Cincinnati via New- York. Liverpool, Nhiii and Iter mudi. He was told a few days be lot e he left that there was bacon enough iu Wilmington to last an army of one hundred thousand men a year. The wharves ami warehouse; were Q 0f shot, shell, provisions and clothiu1.'. all of English mau ufacture and produce, or purchicdby them tor the Rebels. The male population there is mostly foreign All the natives fit ior militarv duty hid voluntarily gone or had been cotiscii.iied I ito the Rebel armies, except those who buy aud tell to the Rebel Gov rnmeiit. Of the gunboat there he has een but two, one of which was reidv for iea nnd the other was nearly ready. He had heard of two others nuiewhere on the river, but had no other knowledge of them The one that was fka mounted five guns, but was pierced for seven; but s she was so low in the water they did not think it safe to mount but five. lie had measured the length of thi craft when building, .u d paid it was one hundred nnd sixty or seventy five feet iu length. She is a flit lwttom craft, with fides incl ning out t thirty or forty degrees to three feet above the lead line, ami :ncl'ning inboard the same to the top Her sides are of three leet solid oak, plated with two inch iron plates fore und aft, nnd then outside of . that two inch plates up und dawn, in iking tour inches armor. This armor extends thiee feet below the water line. Her ports are net over three feet nlxtve water. She ws all rea. y for sea ext ent coal, and one of the Govern eminent steatnei s -the Cornubia was to leave Wilmington on the i?2d inst. for Bermuda for a cargo for the gunboat. She was paid to draw twelve feet water with coal and stores on board; but he doubted if she drew ten. The railroads in that vicinity were worn out. One train per day in and out, nnd a speed of ten mdes per hour, was nil that could be run on them Three week since, fifteen miles out of Wilmington, a tretle work over a ravine gave way. A train of cars tilled with soldiers wna precipitated into the ravine, and four hundred men were killed outright und m inv wounded. The Cape Fear river is lined with batteries, and l Ley have four schooners loaded with stone to sink in the channel if the iron cUds of which they h ive great fear ittempt to go up; and at a narrow place in the river they have a heavy cable all ready, with buoys attached, which they can stntch acrova the river in :u hour. Abreast of it, on each bi:ik. are heavy b tteries Ti e only defenses of the town are on the river. There are but few troops in the vicinity. The river batteries and cable he has himelf seen, nlso the schooners,. HATS AND CAPS. ISAAC DAVIS, yU Wholesale & Retail Mi DEALER IN Hats, Caps, and Straw Goods, HAS JCST KF.CEIVKD HIS SIJFt,Hq"C3- STOCK T OOOnS, DIRFCT FKOM THK MASUFACTfRF.R ' In tlie Fat. whlrh Ve will 11 low i tbe lowest. Alt ibe litest TTi.rs ka-p at No. 15 Penujjlvania strret, four d . knuiB ft tLf rr-Mt ti.ee, Indianapolis, Ind. aprla-dwSm HARDWARE. IRON, NAILS, -STEEL, &C. rO.TIKKOT, FKY V CO. T-F.Al.KRS 15 IK', NAIL, SfFKb, WOOIwork, uent-'t'irlt. woi-li-nwre, pia-kmfib l:, Thnil-I f-krit. nmg, Mil--ablr Collum U-p, rue-, jjrinK, ikw oiig,c. ac. JIT C avi Th Obl River SIr Company. Ibe JlaiJisvn Spice Hill-. Tbe Maaj-nn Ivrl starch Ccmpany. Col Oil and Ii Je It)MF.K(iT. FI T Jk COM 5 III m Wa.hirglrt rt, 0poi.e lU tatr II u, inyld-dAwlj lDlianpoii, Ind. BOOKS. THE VALLANDIGHAM TRIAL. JUST PTXBLISHZr), Tat Official Report of tha Trial of Hon. C. L. VALLANDIGHAM, CONTAINING ORDF.R NO. 54, ALL THE EVIDENCK. a-raiH-nta of Hon. Oorr K.. Pab, A. F. Perry iHi FUtuem Ba?I. tbe WiMon el Ju J( Laviit,aoJ the Cnhi.( ao4 nifO:t cf the Cvart. F.rery Lawyer fVnntsa Copy. F.rerf Pwlitielnn wants at Copy. r.very Citizen aliould buy nn4 read It. Bowen, Stewart & Co. Jaljt-ttw
GROCERIES.
RUG B 11 & JAVCOX WHOLESALE AJID INDIANAPOLIS, IND., Directly oppoaito ITnlott riepot Ftat; t ltz;ibwna Old Staad.. CJQQ nOGSIIKADS N. 0. STOAR. 300 nnDS CR0,X SGAB50 0 BBLS KEn,EDSCGART 53 100 nAIJ C,,ESTS imper,al 100 " " Y0LyG htson--QQ " " OUNI-OWDEtt 100 ' " 0010X0 ' O00 DOXESOrTIIE AB0VE KINDS. 500 BAGS RI 200 BACiS iAV-A 3PESS2. 500 UkLr LV,L!K wnrrEpisu 500 PACKU,KSMACKEREL 4 LL. KINDS OK G COCK KI KH CONSTANTLY ARJ lilVlNG and for at lie l-wet noniMe price. Ur;l ll A: JAVCOX. Junt20-dln MEDICAL. TO THE LADIES OP AMEEICA! MORE VALCABLK THAN GOLK JIOKE VALUAÜLK THAN GOLW .. MORE VALUABLE THAN GOLK MORE VALUABLE THAN GOLD DIL JXO. L. L Y02PS , FRENCH PERIODICAL DROPS. FRENCH PERIODICAL DROPS. FRENCH PERIODICAL DROPS. FKEXCIl PERIODICAL DROPS; FOR FEMALES, FOR FEMALES. FOR FEMALE, Suffering from Trrreuiarity tr Obstruction of tLa Mense from wliatever caufe IT IS SURE TO CURE! IT IS M'KF. TO CUKF.! IT IS iURR TO CURE! IT 13 SURE TO CURE It I tmpo-lbIe to "Joy the bloom of health and Ttvaeityfpirits nul'PMbe M-na are regular a to the time, the quantity jnd qaaMty. iVhcn tbey are obbtructe l, nafore maWe her eff rt to obtain for H acme other at'ef . an unlea these efforts of nature are aMe1. the patient tikually experiences Iondt-ocy. NerrouineaN and finally CONSUMPTION anmrs iu away, and prematurely terminate a miserable life. IT REMOVES ALL IT REMOVES ALL IT REMOVES ALL IT REMOVES ALL obstructions: 0RSTr.UCTI0! OBTi;UCTI0NS! onsTRUCTIONS! IT IS A TERFFCT I r IS A PERFECT IT IS A TEKFECT IT IS A 1'ERTECr REGULATOR! REGULATOR! REGULATOR! regulator: BKATt TS MTND BEAR IN MIND BEAR l. MIND ÜEAÄ IN MIND TT! AT I GUARANTEE ? THAT I GUARANTEE THAT I GRARANTEE THAT I GUARANTEE My DTI0F5 TO CURE Snppre-ion of the Mensea from hafrer cau-, th.urh rar? MiouM be taken that my diict'oTi are rare 'ally adhered to - BUT IHK BKST! BUT TnE EET BUY TTIK BKST! BUY TUE BEST! BUT TTIE SAFEST! ICT THE SAFEST BUT THE SAFEST: EUT THE SAFEST tut ttie .'cntsn FUY THE SUI ESr. EUV tite surest: BUT TOK SUREST! irntcH is ltons drops: TVHICH IS LT0NM DROP WHICH IS LTON'S DROPS.' j 13 LYON'S DROPS ! THEY ACT LIKE A CHARM I By afrerrherinr and lnrigoratina: and restoring the ayatem io a healthy cooditi). It moderates all excctaad removea all obktrjctiooa, and a apeedy cure may be re- I Led on. To Marriod Zjodioei Tbey are peeoliar!y adapted, aa they trlcgon tbe month, ly period w ith ach perfact reg-alarity. ee vnsE in time: bE VfiiE N TIME! be wise en Tnrr: be wia cr time ONE EOTTLE CURES ONE BO TLK CUKES ONE ICTILK CUKES ONE LOTTLE CU KES la almott erery ras. DO NOT BE IMPOSFD UPON. D NOT BK IMFO U UPON, LO NOT BE IMPOSED UPON, tO NOT B IMPOSED UPON. Bat rut thW ont an! aend ft to ymr Dmgrln, and ff ha haa aot aot it make t rm bay It fr too. or It may be obtailed of the General A (tent lor the Un-ied Statt. C. G. CLARK t CO.. WholaI Druggie?, New Hen, G-na. Tor tale by all repooible VratgUts. Price tl per bottle. Wholesale Dea'ers aud the Trade ropr-t ed at the Fro prietor'a prea by IAJU U Al 8.111 T II Chicaf o. SHRE ECKSTEIN 1 CO, CirxinnatL BKOWNINO M 8 LOAN. lndUutapoUa. Jlyl0-dIyeod Whyahoald I buy a bei af BRANDE'S TUSSILAGO THE WONDERFUL GR.1NULXS.
curjDniEo.
Ton aiMl: - 500 ilox. tth& Fruit Jam; i 1,000 OnH Cork, all izo.; j 1,00011. Sealing Wx; j 300 uoz. llrushct, of kd kiwis, tizet xua talc?; - 50 bbk Coal Oil; 10 bblj. Benzine; 20 bbl. Linked 03; ; M j U ,' ' 20 bbls. Lard Oil;- 1 50 bhl. Lubricating Oil; 50bbls.mrtln ' 400 ox. Qninine; " '- ' 50 oz. Suhhate Mo'rpliia; 4 10 Ktles TorTa Japonica; ' 10 cases Mao Liquorice, pore,' for Tox ' baeconistt;";' - ' . 10 cases Stick Liquorice; ' 10 bales Sponges, qualitj rarioas; 600 botes GLvv, all tizes; 500 galls. East India Castor Oil; 8 tuns White Lead, in Oil; 4 bbls. Sp'U. Turpentine; 22 bbls. Varnish; 16 bbls. Alcohol; 472 lb. Gum Shellac; ' 45 bbls. Oil Rre and Wheat Vbiiky; . 10 doz. Oll London Dock Gin; 40 doz. London Tortcr; 40 doz. Scotch Ale; Cy STDWAKT V MOIIGAIV, WHOLESALE rRI OfllsTM, Jy4 1 Jf- 4 Eal Waahingtna Street. FOR SALE. A STOCK OF GOODS FOIt SALE. V. stock or rtooD. cxsiiixrt or dry ooodä. Gr irerje-, IIa, Cap. IWta and he, Hardware, Qu. tnm are, Nt.'lon, Ar., lo a tfcriving f.lag. near Indianapeli, and ia a Rol farmirtf ccaiitr' An on Silin; t' locale in a b:mmI nJ lueratlTe hai. n- can do a by calling at my ot&rt. No 3 Wt iib Inatoi. tr. et. ' J.COB hLI;bJDGX. jii2dew CLAIM AGENCY. SOLDIERS' CM1t.li f ClVCl. McKERNANS, PIERCE & CO., icnoi np aokkt roa m COLLECTION OF SOLDIER'S CLAIMS, ,""E7ILL COLLVCT OrTICFRS' AND SOLDIRRS renainna. Bounties Back Pay, l'ay for Kitra Tuty. knd ray f -r Hor- l-t white tn tne ervce, c, a- d will cU ct Claii'iK at Wa-hmrtoti City. . ()n'K No 39 Wrat W .chinnton. i-treet, (nit door eaat of PlmT House,) Indianapolis. Ind. lion 1004, en cWe a Manp. Msjor Walker and I). S McKeman have an office in Nahlle. Tenneee. J. II McKFKJf AN, I winslow . riEUCK, D. S. McKE R.MAN, Mii.J D. WALKER. Le 2d lod. Cavalry. RaararKra ior. Morton, Adjt Ocu. Noble, flen Love, Jud(e IVrk'tn, Iol anapoli.. 1uw30-dtf GROCERIES. PR mi: GU OCEKIE, nuiiTs, vkgi:tables. &C, FUK SALt LT No. 9 West Washington St RARREIS N O. SCGtR. AND TWEVTT FTVE O V3 b-1? t'rirae Rjo CorTee, in t-tore and for al? low hy .AWTEK WILUAUS, No. 9 Wet WahiriKton atreet. t)Wh BOXES KKNT CEI-EBKATED EAST INDIA f f Cfflee, the beat I. round Codee In n-e. Call aid cxamiae it at SAWlKi k WILLIAMS, Nu 9 Weat atinrto atreeL 50 K1TSN0S. 1 AND 2 kACKF.KEL, EZPRKSSLY lr family ne, juai arri irg at SAtVTHt 1 TflLLI A MS, No. 9 Wet WabiOf(toa at. A LARGE A.SORTMENT OF FXTRA FINK TEAS jJ-JL. i ouug Hyaei, Imperial. Gunpowder and Black aciccua wiiu great cart-, ui lor uilc low at SAWTKK WILLI IMS'. No. 9 Wt. t Wa.bingloa I. OA lWi POUNDS ARN MS EXTRA BOIL D evF.alvFvV and Browne-i Itye Cofee. tlr bet in like. Call aud (et fcouie. ivt u iu -m;! pacXagea tt mi. i toe traue. sahh.h a wiuhms, ' No. Wet Wa-shinfton at. A LS' A LARGE STOCK. OF EVERT VARIETT OF t Staple and Fancy Jrc. lie.-. Tob co, Ciar, Wodeu and Wiil.w Mare, Wlnt- Fi-h, itacrel. Sl. moii. Trout. Canned Fruiia, Jellied, I'.ckles Spiced Oya-ten-, Ac, Ac. Groceric old cheaper han any houae la the city at SaWYKK WILLIAMS', june30 No. 9 Wet Wai-binrton t. MEDICAL. Nil Tin; i:vii. irv xiu; i;li PRACTICAL ACCOUCHER. s7) A TTHE AMFRICAN DLPr.NSART VYF TRF.AT'Rl a r-w method, and with h bjni rennlt, Ci;-u Ct rl, (rl!lnr of the wrnb.; tJiitrfertttUnr fir er tiA Lwk rrh :whtte.) U intny and all other du eaee to which the Aiuriam f'ruiU ao p-calianl. liaMe. nd Hrre do la -. inl reve by exp'e- ene er the loctoT Jttrutlt .fiiffftA. Thi ink:mn er.t abuk. be ned bv evry wrnun in ibe land, for tte prpoe of l-trtUn'u.ermftrf, Aea'h, d. Het free vn receipt ofMamp. aroj.y r.f our Priic Lrttei to Harried Ldea on health, tc. The Doctor'a cUtrU1 f'emnU ii7l4, freh from ihe rn-pe .ary. are trygti in timple diaease, irrrul tritie.., f c. Price 1 1, a-nt bv mail. At te Arrurienn TiHnry we al e treat. tc(tht vriury, aud ab wrrt failing ucce-a. VeruruiL, it what th1 quack cIl prit U or errt M -.; up4ili4 In n iteaiajr, Oooerrhea, Gleet. Mriclure. Hydrocele. C'rcocele, Varkwj. Cr-oo. ?rmt.rhea. SemrnaJ WcakneM. Nonnrnal Km!-k-n. Sfinal TVtntr, Im. potency, aod eftrcta of elf-.ho. The etv are tr-u.lc.fina-pritleter,,,wb!ch e aend free oo recrpt of rtimp. he epr-Bce of the ar-eoo a charge ef thiade partnvxt i torn of the bet HoapitaU In Forope and In New Trk Cy, nable him te treat patieata eciestlficeL lj an-1 retre tbm ap1ilj. rho-eliTtpc atadiiunca cao commircfcate by letter ard ht treated at their hrt. Ia orgeat caaea aeod $i 9 II and r-ctrre me Mne. fJonjilratfoi fr arvt cf4tlnt. Roera Ne. Ea WahlBgtoa S reel, lixUaaaolia. f. o. Ba i9 tly.wMt.la DRUCCISTS. PUBIalC MOTICE. TO.nL4.n0?l ACOX, Drunuu. .la, IS Eaat Wal.liiKin Utreel, Hare beeu appointed afeata for the aal ,f DW1NDE! X7aill4AOO THI WONDERFUL GRANrLCS.fArtLeeureefCemaa. CoWa. aVre Throat, BroocbitU. Wkrxii(('rrH Atta(1 w th EvmU and TowU, akd Iiaea of the Uua aWdla -re biee.Uela., ft) Cta..and f I each. alMAwl
FOUrJDntEOe
TIIK IIOOSICU STATE F01 NDRV AND STOVE WORKS. HAVI0 COMPLETtD OC FOTr?.Y. W t AM itcw prepared to rece're and aifarto"y cete nil -a fa terra aad ftJtr arre)y. j TWe an partner '.ta JaM reiunwU (row th Ea, where ke ha procured the toamt de Irtb'e end perfect pettere ! efc and parier to tceerlorrodBfedlrtthemarBt. Wee-pe rtal'.y Surfte the arteottea af whateeala etee deeWre t tbl hrabcfe ef icr baafneaa. with a reaeat that they wtU fie- ui a call. Our other werk wjl eealrae e 'rma and rdamnt. (bhh e derlre to ra a proaainet feature iu oar maacfactare.) railna aad ani'.l etiir, aevar lnl!Jand ketDea, he -wwrk. ewli ee eertilate, dwa-.eillardheiioware.ln fart ererrth Ulf pee 1d in an tron ftnindry. We rewpecif jlly otW-1t eoeiare, , aiH only prmnUe what we eaa well and prwwp Pr' foTBi. Otr.ee ami Kdrr, IM aoarth Delaware Hrret, ajoaa tne; Indianapolis and C.nviünat anal ladiena Centre FrelftM Itrpta, I d (a a apelialDd.au. , ayl. : oX,LOnai rKOC. DRY GOODS. Ü1 T ft O O HI UI pq Li o -3 O Eh - 02 no Ui o w i 0- . Z a o b 0 H ra ri CQ W 09 Q o 3 ....3 -jura a-fce 15 .ö?25o 4 vOr:5as 52 ATTORNEYS. Attorney at Law NO. TKJir:KANTT: TfALL, " mchl9-tk3 dl liKÜaoapoli. Indiana. ATTOnriEYe JOSEPH A. LEWIS,' ATTOUNf.T AT LAW, OrFlCK ON SrXOND FLOUK HCLBtRD'S BIXKTK, Comer Waaliinftett and Meridian Street, entrance from MerMÜau Mreet,) lidiaaano'i, Iid. lie will fa th tully aud promptly aticiMl ( eu legal ba-meaa cmrualed to tim. Kapecial attention girch to cnllectiou. lie re ferr io tl'C buiuee rdrn of Indiauapo.ja seoeraJIy. tnvJI-dfim MEDICAL. Ilr. Ii ti (I I ii m Specific, rea Tea eras or Gononhrea, Gleets, Whites Strictures cortirijAixT oi nn: iic;ak or tiL.LÜATIO. rilllKtforjorrbrea, rr cfamj ealled Clp,$ a die I ni-tn rnalftdv mni U im 11 W ....i ... -... any eiptana1i; tt "t eayy te be pel, but tt I tl!Timli te get clear of It Ii a companion that few admire; H per rkdea alleta.vK nf uwia, w 1. y, . l v . J uwtm it. V irnillf, riu an1 ptr, both married an na;t. A 'then a; b aoirwal.le aome in itself, ao ditrraini ajid enetiine fatal, it la a diat-ae. th trealttent of wMrh, hm ueoerally l-e worr than the dme.M- ltelf. Tle common faliionaMe treatiu'-nt U Urn to depr're you ef all balneal-; I be eomcMcocr of tarrfiort iMlng on bread and tea, water rruel. tr aome k4u ilmu vsu mi., , i i im cupped or Cached, corubmed wtth'nama tncmedjcitiea) ittii p. n rnmni, ana warm fomeata'toQa. Kreryfew dar. the mrdtn afe chaneed; and after aonre aaontltb'trratnient in thi way. which the patient beer with ere at fortitude ic r fr i r....u. i. cbarired,rdlDArjreahtniwlf.wrth aa irritable treten. - .i'.w ruiarKcueui oi me nru.traterlaoda er a dlMai-eel ihe eck U tb blad irr. Thipeitic. which acta like m. rhri wti V r A.-m on t oe dicaKe,andnauite pJeaaapttoUke. awd which baecured thouKanda in w Y,k I't.ii ..4... i-; x u . i. ; more rxl many of the Sontberw ritrr; ) rtm an4 effectual remedy.that make, a rapid arKJj)ennaDfBt Ctirt, wilLouirrfiid to dict.drihk or exercue, except wreat. Una. jummna: or Tr-ira.t4trs. lh rtaway ia neqnalrd br a-ythtnaryer diaewverrd for th- ewre M the di4a. it iat-xtracted from oar own plait,an4 hwr. feet it aafe. a A ta our It i.U i , .t enry. eo tUit )cm raa np ywrelt te ait klndaef " -""""I iae cancer I rota the eeddn. And if yuu are rarcfal wrapptn? an yo0r pte.o Will have Ud tatc or tn. ll Cr..n t. ... ' J oTrivi rrorn (ei- Iniecmnpany, r being detected br nearr-ft fnrnd. Tili ia no nuacL lue Mein Vin . - n . . ...... .... Kumj iiKiTirt iga aaed with immerse aucceM by a regular phyaidan. and eonfi lentlY roctniuiKled to the unfortneate. ""na ...u.w..m. treouinewftbout tie !-tiatareof tie nrobHetor. W. F. TiairLU. .. a .v. .r .... . t - . ... .1 uoj. All I. riuKemenU of trad. ra,rkawill be pro.ee ut-d with th Ii t vnkCfl rirr.r nftV. 1.. w. f. D IT! DS0N. 8ol rtoprle tor . u ' ncitiat, Ohte. eld b, Druci.ugeerally. u2dld6ttU HAT8, CAPS, CtC. 1803. ISOD. DATS, CAM, & STRAW G00D3, Udramil At DoxAieDibaV II, cAnn. . . - WOT-LD RF5PKCTTULLT TNVrT THF. ATT. tmn of Country Jfcrth.eU te their new and ,'tJ. did eck ef WooL C.ere. .r. tVZtZ' la-.araf he tarieW - - 1 a Be. . fine lot ef Ladle'. Mih and ChtMMU m-T. W-th Tain. II. f. W.W-. ri j. - .V "'J'v-m. rmbren...n4F,;a., ,, of which h.e, 7 1th f. rl rrfenrrr, U tbe tr.tta the Cri Trad, and w,n bo a4d excla.r m wWliT,!!! aa they ca be bought in any Waat era market. Call all " w w- wwit03rC4it5r MEDICAL. C O PI D E NT I A Ii' TOnrn ME5Wno hat rw. Jtred theml by certaia eeqit LahiU, wLkh aaflt the a fur baatoeaa, plaer ee thedaUeaof aoemed IUm irom the ro.Iia of youth or other caaaee, feel a debfltty In adraoc of their j ari.be'ort pUein themaelTei ander the treatm at of ony ote, ahoold flrat read THit SkCEJTr FBltD. . . - Mamed ladiea will Learn eotnethisa: of isrtAmee hy praaiD(r-TbAexrrtFrwf r j. St:t 1 kjk v iMmi, I.J 1 ' - - - DK. STUART A CO. oa be ceaWud aa all Alee ea of a prlrete or cotif.de Mia 1 cat are. froat A. M. te I F. If AdUre.a I.B.I'M 4 STUAVCACO mrh21-dAwIyia-Boateei. ata. PROFEGCIOrJALa Dr. JOHIX IL DUIILAP, OF FEM HIS PfcniTSSlONAL tKITICXt TO CtUaer.a 4 ladlanapwUs aft4 vciaJty. vBice is Mouware nue-a, KewtaeAyAi
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