Daily State Sentinel, Volume 12, Number 3996, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 August 1863 — Page 2

DAILV 8EXT1XKL. Tti L'iuT -tr mu$ r be rKtsKUVto !Jr w -rr --------rr --rrr .-r--SATURDAY MOftfUNQ. AUOfaT 1. llht II '. W rrpuhUah oo tli obJ of Hniinl from lh rouri orf an, lh loKitiry dlrtotory of IoJUcapolia. Thai Hit loc!u4e ool; a portion of lU oficara anj ro of lb other oplojte n iht oailiier; dfjrtocDt of Io4Iana. Io dilti-. thr I a(rany f officer In iL mploy f tit - jrJfl tJovmatnl 4 oth r o Itv rulrta th arvtce of orer flft'fo btttvjr! praployt, t aarlj two full rtjlnoonta roQ Tbeu for aaaaaeora and collectors tndtr iht Feiral ttvrou law, fully aa B407 mora are mijJ. To day thtr art I l4t flrt ibo?iDd cm tp ferrict of tb 7Jerwl 0TmDni, oo 4ut? witbla tho Statt, la Mpt oQcUl capacity, and lo Ihia tnaraeratlcm wt do not lochd iht OoTernm ni tpM or Informant Pw pcraf Lava stimat4 Iba ecormoua Coat of rafujug tht Federal fjovarnmaol machiof ? uo-ler lUpubliean or Abolition AtJrcinia-

trttloo. W dmll that lU reeoureM of tbt enantry ar almost uolimit!, but ran any Got mtoeot, no matter bo prel may b iu re onrrm, bo pfOprou for any cri;ailrrab1 li.h of lim, when it ia tho policy ot lb party Id power to fes-d anl fatten I many m poaib!e out of the public treasury? Tb maxim of th oM JefTraoiian Pmocrata reat that tbe ration whlrri la Itait governed i the beat poTeraed. Tbia ia rerer. by the He publicani of the present day, far It eemi to tt tbolr tudy to furnish an office for every rnemher of their party, and they hate well nigh fucceetled la dong a. A nran Indignity to O. P. .n. The Sute of Irrf'una, a loyal and overetn State, through her representative, Ills Ksrelletiejt 0. P. M., haa been fretted with marked di.i reipect. In fact with titter Indifference, by a Federal General who 1 aomtwhat known to the American people under the familiar cognomen of i Ü; S. ' Grant Unconditional Surrender Graxt. Our"noMe" (eoTerrmr. who ia making, according to the rourt journal, "gigantic ef forU to achieve national reputation and fame out of the war, but keeping a rcpecttble dls tance .herefrom at the Mine lime, has an itching to interfere with the dutVa of the generals are in the field, aiid gratuitously to give them advice uooti mattera which they underhtard better than he, or which they should if qualified for the positions lo which they have been asJgned. The people, that la the 4,loyal" people, are inclined to belieTe that Gen. Gbamt underUnd Limself. If eminent surce U any crite rlon of merit, we may safely put it dowu that Gen. GaAMT an able commander. lie haa Kiven the rebellion the severe! blows it has yet received, and he haa not put himself to the trouble, as some fcther great men have done, to puff himielf. He haa been willing to let hi deeds peak for themselves, aa an earnest and pood man should He hia employed no penny .t liner a to trumpet hia fame, for fear tint the country wu!i not know and appreciate hi service'. ' The other day it wa duly announced in the court orjan" that Hm Excellency bd detailed a worthy genileovtn and accomplished odiccr to visit the Indiana battrrie in the lieldnnl fu perviae them generally. The gallant artillerist started with hU roving commission into General Graxt a department, but it appears that Unconditional Surrender was unwilling (o have any portion of his com mind inspected and in-trucked (sod we speak with all respect.) by an interloper, feeling that be wa.- fully competent and able to attend to the military condition of bis department himself. Duly fatimtting the ditingui?hed hervice and intenaedoyalty of His Excellency, O. V. M., Gen. Grant mo4t respectfully declineil to receive the military ambassador an being entirely unnecesaary. If not slightly presumptuous, aud hence the Indiana batteries in the field will fail to know. unlra advisel ly the Republican press, the great ! interest which our "noble" Executive manifest ! ia their welfare, especially if there ia a little capi- j ttl to be mule out of such demonstrations for j himel(. To te aure Gen. Gramt has tuugbt well, but he laa committel an egregiou blun- : der in not ministering to the vanity j and detoagoguery t( our "gigantic" Got ernor, and we do not know wh.it maybe the consequence of this oversilit on Iii prl- It is prob-ible that for this act of disrespect His Excellency may demand the dismissal of Gt-neral ' Giant, and of course the Tieident will yield. 1 for how can the Government r,et alonp witltout , the "gig mtic efforti" of our "noble" Governor? This indignity to the Governor must be promptly ' atoned, or eUe in bi wrath he may do some' rajh thing perhips fall upon his own sword like tbedegr-iiled cfEcial f some AKi-itic despot, but nnlike theru it will be upon the hilt, not the point. ! Hois It la to be Hone. J Ttcre was a "free election" in France a few i yen ago, and the military were directed not to j interfere only to protect "the richu of loyal citiien and the freedom of e!ectiori " Of course Loi is XaroiEo was elecOi Freident when the j militAry aided "the constituted authorities of the' State in support of the laws and of the purity of suffrage." Monday next an election is to take j place in Kentucky for State oflieers. To pre serve the purity of the ballot box. Major Genen! BraNsiDK has placed that Slate under martiallaw to protect the rights of "loysl" citizens. We reproduce the order of Gen. Bi RNiDcasa mat- ! ter of public interest. The plain English acd ! purpose of it is to exclude the votes ; of all persons who will not vote for the Abolition candidates, and the legally appointed judges are to be held responsible for permitting any others to be given. Such voters are to b regarded as "disloyal" and "the military power is ordered to gue it) utmost support" to exclude all stich voters from the polls. This i called protecting the "freedom of election." What mockery. The election in Kentucky oo Monday will be no more free than those of Ytitct, Austria or Utah. Read Gen. BrsNsiDi a the freedom of election: CtytRIL ORPERS-50. ISO. Uz A DQCARTXRS DxTARTMKNT Of THE OniO. ) Cincinnati, O , July 31. 1?03 Wbsseas. The State of Kentucky is invaded by a rebel force wiih the avowed intention of overs winr the Judges of e'ectiois, of in tlmid-iting the loyal voters, keeping them fro a the polls and forcing the election of disloyal candidates at the (lection cn the 3d of f August; aud, whereas, tLe military power of Government is the only force that can defeat tmjt. the S:ate of Kentucky i hereby t under martial law. and all military offiommanded to aid the cou'iitulia authortate in aurport of the laws and of the asdeCced in the late proclarantio.'. v Governor IUdtinnuu. 'nteution of the Comior.ding , vith the proper expression ; 'screliou in the conduct of al in the hands of the e at the polU. j rictly responsible "I be allowed to! 'ry power is or ort. and buaineaa It is for the

purple only of protecting, if nrresiary, the rights ol loyal cit.cris, ar d l) fre!om of the ele-t"iti. H; c inirjiii 1 tf id i r General I.awi ticitmii, A A it. 03 11 : H. II I ti.ct.aais A A. A.O. Tteetlna; ff the Miilenal (uiwUlfra I Iii liougtiaa Mti4 llrec klitrldg l)emscrcy ar 1'ollrr lore hadowed The following lenaational Item ap;eart lu tit WiAhlogtoD dlapatvbri to the Iftw York Hertld: The National ComtDHItea f th D uglaa and Itrvckioridiis Dem'xrscy ate to luvt a meeting, I I er At Milwaukee or lsir it, between the l?th aul JKl of text tuoMli, to trnnge a programme for th appfoaclotig l'ievidential rampitcn. Ilia ahevly agrred to b'iry the hatchet, at d t i ( Ute tl e Demotr ilic ar t th- ut.itel utMiii a war platf rm. Copprbsadism U to bs denounced, and r'-solutioni in fsmrnf the Integrity of ihe Ca u b adopted. Tba rwporsiblitv of th recent riots in resistance to the Craft it 10 be placed whfre it rightfully belongs The present Administration a to he iuored.ani oo coaieient whitsvsr is to be made upon it action. The negro question is also to be treated with utter silenei ' The - !ed.rg Dsroocrata who will take part in this movement are convinced that no ucgcjitiun they uiay o(Tei will bare any .weiLt ot influence with the present Administratirn, and they are agreed therefore, lo confine thetuelve to the marking out of a programme of their own by which the two wingt ol the old Democratic p4rtv will be completely united ami a strong bid made for the support of tl Conservative, of other partie throughout the loyal State. This move ment Is of irrest political iniportane. The meeting ia not intended to be public, but a plan of operation a is to be agreed upon which lull settle all iJifTeiences ami bring together upon a war platform all the Democrats of the loy.il Stales. M A I II I I I'.Tl).

The corner atone of a tew Eiigli-h Lutheran ehurch was laid in Fort Wayne on Thursday last. It will be a Ivsutiful Goth'c structure, 4 by 100 feet, walla "6 fH high, atirui Minted by a beautiful tapering spire, pointing heavenward, 150 fret high. The wheat crop in this county has been se cured From all we can gather from our worthy firmer, there never has been a belter crop. Corn Is promivu;; a fair yield, rhould we have the necessary rain in the next six weeks -Hunt ingtun Democrat. . A grand mass meeting of the Democracy of Sullivan county will t ike pi ice on I bursilay the tih nl August. Hons J) iV . v oorhees, Jamci C. Itobinson, James C, Allen and David Turpie have been invitel and will be present to address the people A cordial invit ition is extended to all to attend. It will be a grand demonstration. Mr. Joeth Fa ul kroner left here last Wedncg dry with the hardest I'Hikitig set of horses that was ever collecte together. They were broken down horsi's nhandoned in this county bv "hon est" John and his followers, at:d they stole good ones in their place. Washington county lost in the ieif hhothood of I,l() hor?es by the Morgan raid. !nlem Democrat. Say the Washington County Democrat: Corn is sojflVring verv much from drouth in this count v. It is becoming parched und dried up. and unless we get rain soon there will be a general failure in that crop, aud "nary" a cob will we get to gnaw. Several companies of the Legion of Indiana Hre being organized in a.hington county l'u-d them ahead, as we may need them for State defense, and you are not compelled to leave the State. What the Journal means bv "copperhead pa pen" h Democratic papers. The Corrdon Democrat, Cannelton Keporler, Rockport Demo rat, Fiioli Eagle, Salem Democrat, lirownstown L iJion.Owcu County Journal, V ersaillcs Demo crat, and Lawrenceburg Register, all what the Journal terms "copperhead papers," made the apology the Journal mentions. The Journal's venom, rattle snake like, has got into its eyes It cannot either see or tell the truth whe i speak ing about Democrats. New Albany Ledger. Senator Wolik, of Corydon, thus gives an account of his losses: Several stories being in circulation about our losses bv Morgan's raid, we will state that we lost a Ifenry ride, a revolver and a watch, be sides other property taken from our residence, and as nearly s we can ascertain fully $'M)Q in c ih taken trout our pocket book in all about $100 in value. When the money was first taken we were not aware there was that much of jit, but by reference to our book and counting up the amounts we had received for three or four weeks before the robbery, we are now certain our l 'ss in cah was :iot les than the amount stated. Rllkamd The men arrested in Whitley county by t'rovot lnrhil Hiritn IJdiugs, on Friday morning, the 17th ult, and transported to Kendalville, hand-cutled, under strong military guard, and ironi thence to Iiidiaii.-ipo!i-i, hnrebetu discharged for the wantof evidence against them. We can not see any propriety in arresting and discharging men in thU manner. 'I he piinciple is wiong No man ought to be aubjected to the incoi.renienccs and puttering of an arrest without strong and conclusive proof egiinst him; nor should any man be discharged without a trial. The arrests made in Whitley county have been productive pf no pood; they have only, and with perfect june., brought down upon the instigttors thereof the contempt of every honest man If the men had been guilty of any violation of the laws, they deserved punishment, and ought to hive been made an example of; and if, on the other hand, they, were not guilty, whch their discharge proves, their arre.t was an outrage up on them, their lamilies and their neighbors, and they ought to be reimbursed by the Government for the !o of time and money expended. VVe h ive no repevt whatever !'ir the authorities who commit su-h outrage, willingly and knowingly, upon the people, for no other reayn than politi cal animosity. It this be treaon. the cow.tr.lly Abolitionist can pu. it in their pipes and smoke it aiUbiium Columbia City News. Enrollment tor trx Firm District. The following table shows the number of per-ons enrolled in the different counties in the Fifth District: CLASS NO. 1. ITA, i.V. Morel. Tot il RarvMph. Ivjaware llrnry ............. 1'nion Kayttte .... l.TfS ... 1..19S ... 2.05T f S3 . T ... 1,C59 .75 6 49 IPO 1 13 :o3 163 1 ,fii4 1.116 77 1-072 CLASS XO. 2 Rndlpb rv-taware XUT.Tf W arne rnton Fayette ... S15 ... 731 ... 9" ... 1.374 ... 330 ... 441 4. 00 TOTAL. 3,60.1 ... 2.330 . .. S.9G5 ... 4,m ... 1.CM ... 1.50U S3 11 1 1 2 732 919 1.4.H) 331 U2 4,642 Randolph Delaware ...... H-'nry VTsyoe Union 'avua 93 135 3 14 315 14,536 Tai rocrT o.Bet,chx We published, a ' few days ago, Bxechxr's opinion of the people of the "pocket." The abolitionists down there hare been making a great ado over the distinguished negro lion, and he repays their attentions by freely expressing his opinion of them, which is not at all flattering. We suppose Mr. B. judges-tbo 'pocket" from bis knowledge of, his abolition friends there, ami so far as they are concerned he judges corroctly. Col. Baker, cr Cul. Jones, or some other Republican from the "pocket," replies to the slanders of the great liht of the Republican prtr, throngh the Evans ville Journal. We are not all urprised that Bum thinkj the "pocket" a "degraded population" from hut asaociaUuti there The abolition organ of the "pocket" puts it to Bkxcmcr in the following style, and il must not be forgotten tba.1 the -pocket" give ih heaviest Democratic majority in the Sut: . Mr. Beecher has hitherto had a great manv admirers In this part of the State, who luve how n their admiration by (ubscribiui; liberall v for bis paper, thw Inde;uder.t. With what araaieuient and mortification thev will read the

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bovt pArsgrirh eori'in'rg hi orln'on of their t'rin. pitriitim ar 1 In'elücenre, we hvt no orirm, ritrllti words to p-trtrav. N il tint Mr Hee-ber s opin. Ion of thrrn Dika the lett d fTceme in the wot I I tr disturb' their iostiiniity. but that a d'stit pttished AO'erican diiine, ho claims to Invt Jived in the West and in Indiana, should Ji;lav to the wrl 1 sn Isnrance both ol the people atd of curieot sventa iu the uulheru por tion of the State that wuul I discredit a !ndon cockney. Our e-; le have often smiled over the ludicrous blunders cade by the L;l'b pipers boih as regards the ceocrarhy and biography of our country; but what can we say now when ore of our most distinguished divinea Liunaen ai ridiculously in epeak'u of the southern portion of a State in which he claims to ruve spent stverl vea of his life! Mr. Beecher knows Indiana well, hating lled there," and be sfhrrua thai ihe misenndurt concerning ihe draft "i linuted to a pirt ki own as ihe'Trnket,' Inhabited chiefly by a degraded population derisl from the neRMaring slave Ktatea;anl so Ignorstit that p'd or.e in twenty can read!" A Dum ataterrent or tacts, we think. will fasten the calumuy Mr Beecher Im grmul toualy appüel to our people upon himnetl, and also show that if the rtverenl i:cnlnMn would take more pain to 'nform himself, he would less frequently violate the rmdh rommaiidmetit. e submit, then, the following: The Firat Conjreloi.al Dl'rlct of Indiana, commnl v deaignatnl Ihe I'm ket," is one of thu ery few districts in the Slate in whieli there haa been no reitiDce whatever to ihe enrollment for tie drall which ia yel to be made. There haa lieen no factious opposition to ihe enrollment, wilh ono single solitary excettiou. In which a poor crettiire was under Ihe influence of whUky. We niT be a "dftradrd populitlon, derived froau the lave Htate," but Mr. Beecher seem to have lot pisht of ihe f ict that from the same "degraded jpulation derived from the slave States," the people clr ted iheir present worthv Chief Magistrate the I'rsident of the United St ites Dd Mr Beecher forget the stock from which Mr. Lincoln sprung when he so ardently supported him for Pre-oMen'.? or did lie regard the President as the only good that can come out of Naxareih. "Not one in twenty can read," affirm Mr. Beecher. and he pretend to speak of hia own knowledge A viler slander was never perpetrated Whit is the fact? Kvansville th commereis! metropolis of the "pocket," the only ritr in the State that sustains a thorough sysdem of grade free schools the ve ir round, and in general intelligence our people are the equal of those who slander them. How pitiable to see one, weiring the livery of heaven, engaged in so des ricable a business! Mr. Bceehf r'scomtnunication to the editor of the Newii shows that be was free in the expre sion of opinion about a part of our State of which he kuowjj comparatively nothing. A large jirtionofour population are foreiggersor of foreign extraction. England, herelf. we doubt not, i more largely represented in thi county than in anv other in the State. They are loyal men and sustain the laws. A majority, perhaps, of the resident of anderburg eonntv are ot licrmin descent, and so of several other counties in the "Pocket." Another fact mav be civen: There is more violent opposition to the draft and other meas' ures of the Administration especially the einnn cipation policy in one of the churches of which Mr. Beecher was pastor while living in Indiana, th in in any one or all of the Protetnt Churches of thi city. We do not pt etend to say, however, that this is a case in which "his wutks do follow him." Mr. Beecher seem to have assumed that becue there were disturbance in this State, crow inir out of the draft, they must of ncee?fitv hive occurred in the "Pocket," and this was only another evidence that our people were ignorant and degraded The creat resistance to the draft, embodving in the movement scene of bloodshed the most horrible, occurred within sight of Mr. Beecher's spire, ami within the sound of the Plvmouth Church bell. It was among a people whom he helped to enlighten, and who are not bothered by r "degraded population derived from the neigh boring slave States.'" It was among a people who have become so intelligent throuch the in stru mentality of common schools and Mr. Beech er's oratory, that the "Woods were powerless to intlucnce events." Mr. Beecher had not beard of these riots when he communicated his slander? of Southern Indiana to the News- Had be not better communicate again? The radical abolitionists will act wisely bv keeping their righteous apostles of emancipation at home. Conwav acted the dunce in his corres pondence with Mason, and Henry Ward Beecher seems disposed to do likewise in villifying a sec tion of hi former uative State. If public scnti ment in England is to be put right by such leach era, we are fearful that like the demoniac the hast täte of that people will be worse than the first. Spirit of flie Hebel Pres. There is much loud for reflection in the fol lowing remarkable article from a late Richmond p.iper: From the Richmond Sentinel, July 23. Of all the formal expressions of public opinion which have come to us from the United States, we have noticed but one that Im a kind word for the people of these Confederate States. True, they all claim that we are one people with them; that we belong to the same country and the same government; and, in short, are their brethren. But the dominant party breathes out against us nothing but slaughter and destruction, and denounces us with as much demoniacal fury "As a!l the fends from Hraven that fell, 1UJ ealed ihm l-anner-cry of Hell." They intend to have us again by sheer bruto force. They disdain the very thought of con ceding o much as a civil word to the "rilr Heb els!" They intend to have us, that thev miy crush and destroy us. They scout with liny any compromise short of this Thv are filled with rage at the bare mention of it. The rumor has gone out that Seward thinks the time has come when he mav, with some hoj-e, try upon, us his hypocritical blandishments and his false pretensions never fiber than when he swear never less secure than when he pledges bis sacred w ord of honor. But the very mention that SewnrJ proposes to address us conciliatory words, no m itter how hollow and treicherou, ha thrown his follower into a paroxysm of rage, and they are denouncing him almost as furiously as they denounce us. The meetings of the Democratic or peace pirtv b.ive not gone so fir thi. They denouncethe war as wickedly and inelSciently conducted, and they declare for peace as the lest mean of securing reunion. War they consider as hopeless to effect that object. But they have net. in ;tfiy other instance that we remember, spoken as in tin New Hampshire Democratic Convention, presided over by ex President Pierce, and doubtless animate ! by his sentiments. The New Hampshire IVmocrsts. addressing the citizen of the Confederacy, pledge us that if we will come b ick into the Union, they will do all in their power to gain for us such guarantees as will secure our silety. This pror-t)-ii:ion we believe to be as frankly made as it is courteously expressed. We believe it to be an honest propo si.ion; for Franklin Pierce and Mill tnl Fillmore, and a few oiheis. have pursued a course thit commmd confidence in their sincerity. We credit the simple word ol uoe of them sooner than we would as mvny oaths a could be sworn in a week by the men who prom:el that petce should be preserved at Fort Sumter, and the existing status maintained, at the very time they were sending thither the material of war. We respond, therefore, to the New Hampshire Democrats with courtesy and respect Bit e tell them whit they must know, hm we sav t them that they are powerless to secure for us those guarantees of which they ndmic the neces sity. Less than three years ago. when the late Union was in the very throe of dissolution, the States which now form the Confederacy sought, in the spirit of conservatism and forbearance, to avo'd disruption, with an importunity that now seems to us am iring. We would then have ac cepted terms which our own better judgment told us were inadequate, and to which nothing but the extreme reluctance to dissolve the existing crder of things could have reconciled us. When wa lock back at it cow, it makes us tremble to think th it we oSVre J to take the Crittenden Compro mise. But conciliation on onr part ws met only by contumelv and defiance by the Republican majority. They were warned uf the necessity. and inevitable effect of ihe course they were persuing, bat they treated the warning ith contempt and scurrility. In that decisive hour the Democrat of New Hampshire, however willing, could do us do gd. We had to tako care of ourselves. Falling back.cn our sovereign rights, and calling upon (Jod to vindicate us, we autned a heparate national lite. From that lime the men who willfully destroyed the Union have been aaaailing us with all the enginery of de!ruet;oc Thev hxte

al

rinred toward u a malignit? which hia seldom beeft pirallflel in huro-wi hJs'nry.' If it were hi ihelr power they would turn the tnOU'ita1!! and pour the eas upon us. They wool I ruvri; us with C"i.t.rn ng I iva. T hey woul 1 ais.k us Ith Iht einhqmke and overwhelm us a lib ti.ea.otlu. They devote us, as fe aa they can, to the dej lalion of frean 1 sword. Do the New Hampshire Dsmocrati suipoie bvr one momt t that we eoul t so much aa think of reunion with such a people? Kthtr tell one lo be wfdded to a Corps! Rüther join ban Ja wilh a fiend from the pit. We exhsuated conciliation before w separated. Thenceforth thee waa not room for io much ai i thought of reunion. We had buried our dead out of our siht.and the mourners had become comforted. Snce that t;me our false allies have been our vindictive foe We have ten thousand atrocities to re niemher against them The blood of many thousand of mart) ra i between ihern and u. A thousand feeü ,g of horror repel the bare idea of a renewal of association. I.et not th Dainornu of New Hampshire, or such aa think with them, deem ua bitter in these.

temarks. Let ihe nj put the imelves inourpUrei. Tl... L.. I. ill!. L 1. . They know how villiinously w have been Ireal ed. They know that to have submitted to Lin coin's iv rnny w.iatuhave taken ihe yoke for etrr. Wo should have been considered a consenting slave, and even our unavailing fitend would h.ve deiicrted n. Since that time the only greeting of kind word which ha come to lis I'mm the North, the New Hanimhire turn haie sent. All, or beuly all be-ide, haa been conflagration, sword, demoniac denunciation, and brutal menace ai.d destruction. Could a dead love be ext'Cc'ed to revive again In such a fire? Let not Ihe New Hampshire men pre us. We are i;l ad that they have teen tit lo mihifcst a hu man feeling. e respond to them in that. But between the United Slates and the Confederate! Si tics the best lhat the future can bring is amicable reUtion. This cruel war may stop if Ihe North so wills it. And whin ihoe in ihe United States who are disponed pi deal fairly with us shall again rule, we may in time beiu to bury the many bitter memories which now add energy to our resent merit, and may make with them treaties which shall be mutu illy advantageous Pci hips here alter good will in y be reviled w i-siri . But Union never let it be mentioned! Never, never. It is iinpo-sible Let the Democrats at the North content themselves with securing the next lesi tlnn. Iet them frankly extend to us the hand of peace and propose thai the feuds and the bit ter ties of the piesetitbc buried, and lhat the two republic be pod neighbors nnd j;ood friend It Is either this, or the kill, burn, destroy, consume, annihilate of the fanatics. There is no middle course. For ourselves, we shall stand for our liberties and independence so long aa they are denied. And Cod will grant us a safe deliverance. The Cincinnati Cli timber nf Com merer ami the Oat la of Allegiance. The Chamber of Commerce of Cincinnati a few d ivs ago expelled thirty-three of its member for neglec ting or refusing to take the oath of allegiance which a tmjority of that body had re solved to administer to its members. Among the number expelled was H. C. Loan. Eeo , President of the Cincinnati and Indianapolis railroad. Mr. Lord publishes the following manly and sensible card giving his reasons fur refusing to take the oath.i The several newspapers of this city have pub lished the resolutions of the Chamber of Commerce of Cincinnati, passed nt a meeting held on Monday evening, expelling from that body myself and others, lor refusing or neglecting to take the oath of allegiance, as required by a former resolution of the Chamber. 1 dcuie to make the following answer to this act of the 'Association: 1. I never was a member of the Cham bcr of Commerce, and the records ol the Chamber do not bhow that I was ever elected a member. 2. The Indianapolis and Cincinnati railroad company was, and I believe still is, a member of the Chamber. 3. I was notified to take the oath ai tcquired by the resolution referred to, and upon st.ilin that 1 was not a member, was informed that I was expected to take ihe oath in behalf, and as ihe representative of the company, of whom 1 am President. 4 I declined, upon mature rf (lection, to take a "representative oath." The Indianapolis and Cincinnati railroad company is a loyal corporation, and each one of the five hundred stockholders who own it m ly be loyal, but it is not for me to attest their loyalty, nor was I elected for nny such purpose, nor would 1 commit so treat a wronj; ns to swear to the loyalty of those w ho do not intrust either their consciences or their poiiti cal opinions to my rutody. 5. I have taken the oath of allcginn;e when administered by a high judicial ollicer, actii g within the scope nt his authority, as was my ; duty. I am prepared to take it again, and ai-j ways, tvl enev er il shall become my duty to take ; it, upon the requisition of a magistrate acting I under the law, or of a military Dflicer whose au- j tl.oiitT in ay, for the time being, legally inrest ; him with the power of a judicial officer. j I nm opposed to nil oaths exacted by an indi ! vidu tl or an association possessing no legal or' judicial power lo exact them, buch extra judicial oaths were pronounced by the fathers of the ; English and our own common law to be idle, j contrary to public policy and the public good, and not to be encouraged. j Said the late Judge McLean, of trte Supreme ! Court ol the United Suites: "An extra judicial I oath lays no foundation for a prosecution for per- j jury. Indeed, the policy Of tnultipljing oaths is j questioned by persons ot the most enlarged expe body ef men may take it by compulsion man a oath less than his money? Very respectfully, II. C. Lord. Abb SORTS Of 1AICAGICAIIIS. Troops are being ent from Washington to the North 'to hurry up the conscription." The irrape crop of Ohio is said to promise moie finely the present year than ever before. The leading journals in Louisville have all commenced the issue ol papers every day, inciuu.ii ojii'i.). on tue pica iiiJi tue ueuaauu 01 t the w ir makes it necessary. So true is it, that the tendencies of war are demoralizing. Of.n. SrrAHT. The peeple of Manche-ter, England, a-.-ert that the rebel cavalry officer. General Stuart, is no other than Lord Vine Tempest. The son of the Prince de Joinviüe, graduated '2 at the United States Naval Academy at Newport An Ormr. The Emperor of Ruia has ordere! the Buik of R is.-'n to again diminish the price of po!d, o that at the end of ihe yer it shall be at par. A number of nfnVers have recently been dismVeJ from the Fed era I array for 'disloyalty," "di'Ioyal conduct." "utterance ot disloyal eentiroents." "treasonable language," "wiiting nnd publishing disloyal letters." ic. The Galena (111.) Advertiser settles the rexed question as to General Grant's political stilus. While iu the army" be never voted, but after he settled in Galena he declared him-elf a Democrat, and voted in lfcGO for Stepheu A. Douglas lor President. Resioxatiox. Rev. Dr Lord has resigned his position as President of Dartmouth College. His successor has not aa yet been appointed. There are now thirteen Major Generals without commands, viz: McClellan. Fremont, llutler,' Hooker, Hunter, Buell, McDowell, Franklin, McClerland, Curtis, CadwalUder, MorriÜ and Milroy. Gen. Franklin, a Washington dispatch reports, has been ordered to New 1 Orleans, to report to Gen. B.inks. MiatniTH P. Gentrt. Hon. M. P. Gentry, late member of the Confederate Conpres from Tennes.ee. aurreodcred himself roivyitarily to the Federal cotnmandeT at Shelbyrillethe otberday. Mr. Gentry wa Whig politician of considerable note, a member of Congress during Polk's administration, and was the Know Nothing candidate for Governor io 155 against Andrew Jackson, by whom he was defeated. Tnw Invalid Coars. The Invalid Corps is rapidly reachinc it prescribed dimensions. Twenty companies of the 1st battalion htve already been urgauized, and also seven compauies of the 2d battalion. Recruits are patbered at 5:. loi.!, Waabington, Michigan, Cocxectieut

nence. Make anything common, of this nature,; E1& a d firi' laul,-i'n -II It '17? f 'i V and the solemnity which it would otherwise im-j HSiJaILS ft J 11 II " 'i W part is measurably lost " lRr4lJvSf- il l$Af R It is a man's privilege to giTe his money: Jill il 33g5F 0f "U away. It becomes his duty to contribute of his iMl --b'-'Tll j money when required bv the 1 aw; but n man or ! i Hd:tS-r?4 J ifr1 I'fi

S uth Carolina and Furlrea Monroe, and will all ojn h brought Into the organisation. At lest 2J'HI in Ii b ie aliesdr enlisted; some of them are performing gtuM duty at Ihe War Depart tuent ao i at ((!er pl ue A Chili or Jirr Davis Tl 0hkok (Wi ) Northwoicrn rerzatka a curious circum stance relative to Jefferaon Dav'n: "We have been Informed cn trnilworthj authority that there la a child of Jetferson Davis, the President of the so called Southern Confederacy, being educated among the Stoekbiidge Indians, at their settlement in Shawnee coun'v. Dvvii, it is well know u. was stationed al Fort Winncbigo some yeirs sen. and thete formed the acquaintance of the mother of ihe child, a Menomonee eqoaw." , Mr. Stanton wa rerwvted as sayinr, a year ago. when the rail .r .aKI,UK) men by draft waa i'sucd, lhat the call would be enforced, whether the men were needed or not, na a means of demonntratiug the power ol the Government. Not a few think h r now leting In the same spirit which he then exhibited, and that but for a deire to eihihit the nowcr of the oiachineiy which he

b-indlc, nn-hMi ago a nohcy would hue been .1.. - J ii ... . . u. . .1 adopted which would have secured' "more than soldier enough for all trictieal ue. cxcuRsiqris. i: xciksio s ....TD TIIK.... OHIO WHITE SI U'lll It SPUINGS! MW. iiUKAT CENTRAL RAILWAY WILL ISSUE Kicurlun Tickets ti r-rit Valley, on Its Hue, fr White Su'prnir sprltu, durliu the nrearnt eaon. Tickets for the rwunJ trip ant rwxl for thlrtv rlay ran he had at I ha Cmpauv' ol!Ue, crur of Virginia avenue aiil IMaware treu. F-AJRE 97 CO. Tickets Cood for all Tralno. The 5.5n A. M. Kxp'f. Train arrives at Plrftnt Vl ley at 1 40 P M , where tftwi1be walling to convey exciirlotM to the Fprtnr. dittauc er nine rnile No cIiauk of car or trains. Train top for dl'iiitr at ina-a. H ?. t :ki.t, unri sun t F. Cm iROKR, General Ticket AeU. Jul3l-dtf STOLEN. Two Mares Stolen STOl.FN ROM Til F. SU USCH WER, ON THURSDAY uikIiI, July 2S. from hurt VVayne, Iritliaua, two Mr-n. One U a Itlack Müre. S or lOye r rid, bravy mai e and taJ. IS -r 1 hands hlRh, no white on her. The other I a ttl ck Mare, S or 6 years oll, 1 or 15 hand bign, lieht mane and tau. loe inarca nave breo accua tomed to work 'K thcr. I will nav a lit r al reward to any person who win re tti'n tbe mare or who will rive Information that wil lead to th r reeoverv. Addreta o at Fort Wavne, lnd Julj31-d.1twCt ' O. H1KI). $25 KEWAKD. STOLEN t'IbM MY PASTURF, ON THK NIGHT OF fh- 2Stb InM , a lare Hay llorne. 5 or 6 year nM, i v"bant 2 or 3 inches hlh, reki and pace well under thcsai'dle. His mane bem quite rrey, bis tan Is Inter iered widi jrrey hair at its not He has a mall Kar in the bark part of each Lind leg about the centar of tbe berk joint. One white hind font. One of hi bind bfs 1 p!.t, and I think there i a fmtW white pit In bis forehead. Twenty-Five Dollar reward wiil be piven for his recovery. Jl. w. smtLUS. Sej niour, Indiana. July 3d, 163. ijbSI-dtw J"En QVJ ARTERS M ifd. j. STATEcj INDIAN r II II a Has no conn'u" with oy other ktablisb ment of th- NHi.n- nm - i' or out of IndianapolU W. & H. GLEN. Proprietors. PIANOS. STEINWAY PIANOS AT REDUCED ff 1inE JISTLT ClLERfcATRT) FIAK0!, vTHTCH X br ruotrod over rtorty Mawala. InrliMlinir th ! Great Prize al the London World's aar tor ifceir ujxrior i GUal.tir , ard wllch art fed j tie greatest Hniu ia ! tee wwld, och as Liszt. Thaloenr, GotUchaJk, atter. Jrll arxl others, ia preference to any tbcr make, I offer i for aale at reduced prices. j ' Kvery jwuwarra&ie4 five years.! ' ? ' J . ;J I CaU aad tcfire iorcbar i elehert. I J. U. KAP1C, iftat, i J dy-illia . f ut WaWtftt.B itrf t.

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FoncALC. TrjnsicjjRLOsLOT lots rrH UAKDkM AM) KMIpr NCF. 75 K H IHR CTTT Of LXUXaIUI. . ' 1 roiC NILi: AT AL'CTION t ,ä swawawawaaiM Tho following Plat will ehowtto Lots, thoir Si:?, and their Location NORTHEAST QR., SEC. FIVE, TOWN. FIFTEEN, RANGE FOUR.

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E 40 B 00 Oil la a. H H I - eil! ID Arras Is N wi 4SI Arras. H ! i s ? Aerta. J J rHs s j Af.es. ? a ! s IS 4y, Arr. r H s I 4t Acres. H I S 4i Acres. I 00 Chain. I

law CHa.. lOMOiaJD.. V I J4Area. 1 14 Arret. 5 I IV4 Actts. 1' Am: I a ' 1 TnrrrII 19 3V Acres. i icra. 13 20 i'4 Acre. Jv, Aeisa. . 12 Jt Atre. S' Acres" it ?i Acre. ' Acres. tO f 3 ft.1' Arres. & Arre. n ?t 6'i A ere. RV4 Arte. 1" f.0 t'h1ri, lOOfhtlr Bwwl.

GARPF - V. m Ilalbard Rriek Tard AID SUBURBAN i The abore Lots are laid otit rrom the N. K. Qr. or e. between th National Kuai and the North Koad, Jut Ka t in the neighborhood f the hef garden in the vicinity of sale will fake place on tbe (round dfrribed, Jmt north of DAT, AUGUST 17, at I o'il.-ck P. M.

TbK.M Une-rourth ca-u in band, balance in three equal annual payment, witb Interest and wortxfre to ecura rferrrd payment. For further particular' apply to K ATIIKRMON, Aucib-neer, July ?3-dtd Or to MrKKRNAN 1 PIEK:-:, Keal Klatc ApeiiU. Indianan!'.

de SUNDRIES. FOR SALE: 500 doz. Glass Fruit Jars; 1,000 Gross Corks, all sizes; 1,000 lbs. Sealing Wax; 300 doz. Brushes, of all kinds, wzes and ftvles; 50 bols. Coal Oil; 10 bbls. Benzine; 20 bbls. Linseed Oil; 20 bbls. Lard Oil; 50 bbls. Lubricating Oil; 50 bbls. Whiting; 500 oz. Quinine; 50 oz. Sulphate Morphia; 10 bales Terra Japonica; 10 cases Mass Liquorice, pure, for Tobacconists; 10 cases Stick Liquorice; 10 bales Sponges, quality various; 800 boxes Glas., all sizes; 500 galls. East Inlia Caslor Oil; 8 tuns White Lead, in Oil; 4 bbls. Sp'ts. Turpentine; 22 bbls. Varnish; 16 bbls. Alcohol; 472 lbs. Gum Shellac; 45 bbls. OM Kye and Wheat Whisky; 10 doz. Olii London Dock Gin; 40 doz. London Porter; 10 doz. Scotch Ale; By CT I? W A KT V iUOUCSA!, TV HOLES ALK DRUGGIST!, Jy4 No. 4i Kat Washington Street. CROCERIES. v it i .Ti 1: (aiocEiu ii -N, FRUITS. VEGETABLES, &G., FOR SALE BV No. 9 West Washington St. 50 by Tt A CR ELS X.O. SrGAR. AM TvTKSTY-fTVK bag lri rne Kio Coffie, in tore arni f-r ale luw AWYLU WILLIAMS, 'o. 9 Wet WafblnKton trrrt. iyC BOXES KKNT'SCLL:BKATKII EAST INDIA raall Coffoe, tbe bM Ground Coffee in u.e. l.'all ai.d examine it at SAVVVt k WILLIAMS', No y Vi ett W jiabinrtoa street KITSX0. 1 AND 2 3.ACKEREL, FXPRES5LV OU l jr fatailjr ue, Jusi arrivlrj at SAWTrK A WILLIAMS', No. 9 We ht Washftrton it. VLARGK ASSORTMENT OK EXTRA FINE TEAS Younn llyon. Imperial, (innowder and Black m if ctrd itb great rare, and for axle low at 8.1HTF.K WILLIAMS', No. 9 Wet W anhingt on t. 20.000 r, POUNDS ARNOLD'S EXTRA BOIL- D itid Brcwiied Kye Cofle, tbe bet In uc. call aua get itLe. nil uj id int.l pactagea to mit tbe trade. .SAWYER k WILLIAMS, No. 9 Wet Washington at. VI() A LAKGR J5TlX:iC OF EVERT VARIETY OF j Uj-ie and Fa"vy Grorvne, Tohjcco, Clai, ! Wr.-ieu and Willow Ware, White FHb, Mackerel. 9al j Hion. lrout, CaniMfd Fruits, Jellied, I'icklea, Spieed fly- I ter, Ac , GrK'-rle kM cheaper than any hotis ia the city at SAWYFR WILLIAMS', J jreJtt No. 9 We.t WakhintOB at. ATTORNEYS. CHI. W. STAGG, Attorney at. Law NO. f TEMlTRANr- , tnchl-'3-Mr MILLI MISS J 1TAS nRMANENT,T 1 LIS. hooaia ever No. WatiBgton itmt Mix Doyle la tends keeping on, wbera at ail rimea nav br Donncts, ISibbon. er, riumes, Kr Ad-1 all Rooda axualy fotad in : llartnx braucht from lU Ka and lrer( iitaa Injle will f all orders or call in taat Iu. Hi D. returua bar tbaAkt a cbtionaor oi tbe aaoae. LOST

IasT, JILT , A WHIT j eeterDcG; bd a bandar ioea a It. A liber.! reward i BM at 1) Weat Wablaf tasa jj?;ds

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40 10 Striata. I CS -res. 31 a,l Area. 8 lJt u 30 11)Arrt4. 9 10 MS m ft 30 Arret S l4J U 2(1 1.74 Acrs. 3 10.4V. wi 2 A IU Acre. 3 IttMCaaioa. NS KESIDaNCES. 5, in Town. IS, Kara; 4 F.at, Ijing eat or tbe cltv, and of Vawter'a and MrI)OKrhl.ntk yard and immediately the city. The land i very tirh and ebcbly MtuaU d. Tbe National Itoad, and near Hubbard's brick Jard, on MÜS DrtY GOODS.

I ?!.', Acre. J 7 II J0 4IS' Ji m " I it S n Arft, s J lu 4: 4 nawBaswssBSMBBWSBWBBBWHBaaasBWBBBBBaHsaaaawaai

$ - I . H 1 i. y JLX-b a, -nio 0 w i 0 i--2ct: .n;

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vi - o W C W af . - a, .z " J J' H 0) a a 0 b mm 9 mm, m , b; j XT. c 2 J 1 X MEDICAL.. Ilr. IjIicIIiiiii'h Specific, roBTar craitor Gonorrhoea, Gleets, Whites Strictares Ar COJIPLAim'ur Till: IICiA" or OKI IIJtATIO. f J1IIE Gouorrhora, rr CfTETuon'y railed Clp, I. a die JL fUrtin lualadr, and ia too wtli krown to requlro auy tsplanatiffi; it U eay to ht Ct, but it I diKcult to (jet clear rf It is a conj; r,ioo tiat ffw adm!re; It pervadea a'lc!aM-a tf oc-e'y b'ti. ale and ft male, rich and poor, both marri'-d mr.4 .'tirV. A'tVoafk MirotiU. aorae rn itself, , di-tTfi? aad fKtinie fatal, U U a dlea--e. tbe treat-mrtji rf h x"h, ha irenerally tea worsethaathe öieae Helf. TL cofirooo r. taioaabU treatrt,eot ia frt to deprive vi ot ail boat ,; tha CTne a course of uarvati iirin en bread a od tea, water proel. or lomr bind of lep; jon nuMtheitb bled, cupped or liacbed. combined wilii nasaea'Juy rnediclteat Irjectiona. I'-iion. ointment, acd warm foment atlona. K very few day th dietnea ara rLanced; aa4 aftar onx :nontha treatment ia thi wj,hich Ui patient bear. witb freat fortitude tor fear ol cxpore;h it dia eharyad. ordiM-barce.himlf. with aa irritabV oretr, a iweiled tetic, an enlargeme nt of tba prottrte ftanda or aditeateof the reck of the bladder. TbU-SpeciCc, which acta lik a Charta. wULafew doci on tho dieake., andUaulte plea.atittoUk, f ed wtjch aactirltbouaida lo New Tork. rtnadalp'U, BaJtl. ort and nary of tbe Routban cltlea.1 acrtaJa arj eectBtl remedy, tb.t make a rapid andpermatensrora, rreard to diet.e--k or eierciae.etcept wreatlrf . Tbia rtrardj la a for tb caarv of tho "t, od I per " ruro vier

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