Daily State Sentinel, Volume 12, Number 4058, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 October 1863 — Page 2

Democratic Documents. Atdrrf ih llrroarrnlic Jlmlfr f tha foral AMy to the IVopWi of Iri ana, tttinj forth the k!.ury of tbt U't loa, re why mon h4 not ecmp!:b,l larirC eoutatior.al term. TkU dmnt ta-- a p-rBptlet ftiUnpf, nl iU bcfarsUU'd ta tny nuaotity. VtV 9 1 XA per h no! red. Tha Ctcrlpt ct-pe-cl or Hon. D, W Voorhae..tn tbe Onacrtption fcl'.l.ln th, Hm R.-T-r.alva, Trruorj U.1M3. T I ! on f th tst freche of Ifr. Yoorh, on qntMJon tw nc-e-ny1n- a Urc .bar f pahlVe a'tentlon. and rj dtln n r-Kt!aa -heM bT aeopy. " pamphlet of tight pa. Ptte II per ban4rl.

Tht Lllrlr ! thr Cltl-een Speech f nn. 0. W. Toorfer'i, Mlrtrti in th Ilonta if Repmtnutim, F.brmary 1. 1"3. n tha "Act tolretemntf-' th Prttent and other persona tor mspen'tinR' the writ f haboaj eorp. and act don, la ptxrauanee the reof, la oriat4 In pampble form. and can b obtained at UUoSW. To!ltbe r?t1nrtof Mr.Voorbrto protect the irty of U ci'ticn, arxl boahi he in the lands f every otr In lnlina. It tnakr. a pamphlet f iten pi. Price 11 SO per ht:nW4. rrA!l oHr h-iM direct Iba apecba Utier.t fcjMprn. it lh piUgt will le oncfnttcopy,md bui b prp!4. AMr . F.LDFR, IIABK5F.SS A B15GHAM, Indhnip'jli. DAILY SENTINEL. TlIK IJSIOS - IT MUST RK PxRSKRTC. Jackmm "thÜRSIIAY MOKNING. OCTODER Ts I hr precli of Ir. Hinte. The oration to Mr. Lt!c ax "reat Minifter of Finance," aa the Cincinnati Gaictte term Mr. Chase. w, rather a lim afTiir. Th.it did not am-mut to much. The distinguished gentlemn un luttedlj hid in object in cumin; here ju.t t th, time It I rumored tht he i candidate Pn the Preidencj, and would cheerfully accept nomination for thit position. We underpin 1, Ii, thit Iii- Excellencj, 0. P. M., farora the aspiration of the Financial Secretinr. Put thia and thu toiethfer, nd the urpoe of Mr Chalk's i;it mT he ppreciited. To the excluiion of otner m itter. we gire Terbtitn report of tue "perch of Mr. Chase jea terdy. Tht h4 ij;iiific4iice wor-hy the nttention of the country. He m m of gr?at hilitj, nl hi last effort is chrnctetiz'd with candor and directum. The distinguished geutlemao undoubtedly reflecti tlie views of Mr. LtCOLf nd the Administration, for th it reon hij rcmuki jestenliy u;nn the views and policy of the prty in power will excite general llentin. Mr Chasc makes it apparent that the Administration is thoroughly (litionize, nnd th.it the war is to be prosecuted for the abolition of lery. Th' pirpose involves a chiiige in our politicnl inlitutioi), nd Mr. Chase boldly iruw it. The wr is no longer a contest to re tore the national authority and to maintain the mtionsl intepntj. but to free the negro, no matter at whit cot in men and money, or what disadvantage to both the white arxi black races. Thii is the complexion which the controversy h iMomfi) and that in the iswue which the country must meet. Mr. Chae1$o assumes to interpret the design i of Providence, and like all men who embrsce fan uic il ideas, forces u con truction thereof to suit his peculiar views of public policy. We have only apace this morniog to call at tent ion to the views expressed by the mouthpiece of the Administration, and must defer com men is upon the ideas and the policy he advocates to a future period. I till an Abolition War! Sjme of our Republican friends get offended when they are toll that the war h a degenerated iito go abolition crimde. Yet the whole policy of the Administration points to abolition. Thus Gen ScucNCK. who has been relieved from command in Marjlind in order that he might stump Ohio, Mid in his tirt speech at Divton: I a j tht I de-ir to ee this war go on until t laat 9t$tige of tlatrry im dttlroyd Senator Wadk, at Marietta, Ohio, ou the 21th ult., si1: I will hive no peace with trsitors in nruis; neither will I hsve any pence with itlarery, the nursery of treason. I prefer to tiuht it down now, and have done with it and civil dissensions forever. And again at Cincinnati hia word were: I will fis;ht while I hive hreith in my body. or untd the bonds tall Irom every human teit) in the Uniifd ;vtes, and until there hall be no possibility of the existence of .slavery within our jurisdiction. $chkck and Wapi represent the views of Sl'Mut.wliiim Postmister Genfra 1 15 la ik handles 'j uutnercif'illy in his Rcnkville speech they tepresent tt.e element of whom Thi klow Vtu iu hi !e:ter to the New Yoik Commercial said: I desire to in ike this rrcord: If it cornea to be understood that the view- and policy of the Messrs. Sura;. er, Greele .Wendell Phillips, W.ud 'Beexher, &o , &e , ohtaiu in the conduct of the war, it will result in the destruction of our Government and Union nd triumph of Rebellion and Slavery. A llepublican Colonel Speared by u rlVMir. A correspondent of the Ohio Statesman relate the following incident as having occurred at the Baocca meeting at Marian on the Qrih ult: The meeting cme off. Ilrouh and Sheilabarker put iu their time as speakers iu abusing Sm. Coi. I5dl Gibsoc ex Republican Slate Senator aiU a Colonel in the artm denounced Vallsndiham as a "con victed candidate," and in the most ungrateful manner abused the tuen ho were kit friends in extreme-t need. He offered fir dollar to auj tnii b' would declare him elf to be tor ValUndicham A gallant Democrat Hepped forward and claimed the money. 0 bon wanreJ to know whether the ian was Iov.l, and reveivel an answer in the atSrmitive. He wis a ret um. I ao!der. Oitnon wntxl to know why he w. not down South uow fighting the rebel. The soldier retorted by a.kit) Uibsou a hy hr was Jjot. A tie dolljr greenback was thtn hndtl the aoldier, who uted that he did not purpose :o ktep it, but wuuU i-eud it to Colu tubas and hue U placed to the credit of Gib-:i in the State Treasury aa he (G.b-oi.) h-d helped to abstract therefrom more th.iti halt a müUou ofdoll.tr 1'olliiCMl I'artoni. . The Cairo Xew. ultr Republican joarnal, doa'i aee the good ot o much poUtL-ai person poaer aa is at preeut appliol to its pirn's mtehinerr. In a receut number it thus imploringly aks for less ot it: In looking over the proreedin of Union demoostratious in Ohio, Indian an-4 our own St tie, we see that "the reveretjds" ate so nuxerous that the great war aieetins mizhl eilv u mia taken for Mrlhodtfl contereu r. N tli not, by ! any tue ins. ignore the labors of the cler in be halt' of the rountrt ; wr, in it aim on aiih ml true; friend of the Government, appreciate, an 1, e Uüt, rroj?riy alue ill th tt they cm or miv d, toward .ppMMn the rebellion and ruloriUi ; thu Uoiou: but we humbiv and earnetlv cmte.it ! ' them to "pull at thtMr own oars.M When they lav atd th hol tunctk'ti that rrliin to t . j duties of a luini.irr of the tiosjel und take the atump In sup-rt of auy ptrty, they Invariaklv pt Uw twit iui u," sixi do tnor hrn t ihm ß'joO. There ii a gret ad4ntae iu being & Dem- i tK-rat. After one is torn out he in eaerlv bought bp by the Republic ni jut a a birken ptit.or Ieky kettle, u bought Bp for the take of thw old metal. I

fleceptlwn f eeretnry Ctiaeo . Yes et isy. at tln.ut 2 P M , II on. S P. Cnsr.. ''ii ;nit ition. rried in thii city. When the "t un bearin? the .:Mnguihed Ttl-:nan ; be iu s ühf, ci:iii"iis, under the d ievt;-a of Cd. SttiK. of 'he Arsenal, were discharged, j

Tbeu U.e SeinUry nered Icto a baioucht, drawn by two r;an of beautiful frey. and, escorted by in fir. try, artillery, cavalry and muc, r.ro;eded ihro-igh several treets to the Capitol j yard. Here an immense platform was erected, and among the notafde citizens accompanying the ilIutrious visitor we observed Brigsdier Gen eral James Blakc. Esq . General CaHiinotoxJ Major General AnJT WallaC, riding a grey hore, pree:itel to hitu. it is Mid, by a deceased Km of the late President Zachabt Tavuoi.CaLvi Flktcukr. Sr , Hon A. f Po&tl, D OauLasd Koac, auelii IIarcimix. and others tuo teJious to rcention. Numerous flag, not une of them battle-torn, however, were auspended over, round and about the board accomplished carpenter had, under the direction of the Government, erected. The National (Juird'a band were on h id 1 with their ioevitble"Hail to the Chief," which we mut sav iu all candor thev blew rem rkil.lv well through their wind itisirumeiits. Then His Excebency, OOVCRMOR MOBTOl'a SPEECH followed, and we truihtully report, aa follows: Ijtidxtt and G'ntUm'n: In the presence of th? great event whi. h trnp:red veteidav, 1 am iti capable of utterance. The ieople of tour ;r-t States n that day stoke to this country, to Eu rope, and to the world. They irave, also, nr ancf ito the army that it should n t tic d-crted They gave as-urances to the Government, too, that if it shall go on as it bei: in, it will be sus tained. We have shown to all that with the last man, the last drop of blood, and the last dollar, we, the people of the North, ar determined to put down the rebellion. Long ago tin rebellion would hava been crushed were it not t"r the encouragement from those in our own tnid-t. Let us not lorget. in this our day ot triumph, that noble armvol martyrs who are piunni; out their b'ood like water to maintain this Government; let us not forget the President and others of the Cabinet (nam'ng them reriatum.) and last, and finally, let us not forget the distinguished Secretary of Treasurv, Hon Salmon P. Chase. Ladies and gentlemen, he baa administered the affairs of his department with an ability which challenges the admiration of the whole world. I beg leave to pre-ent him to you, your honored guest, whom you welcome to Ind'nna. MR. CHASE'S RPEICH. The honorable gentlemen, sifter this introduction, said: Fr.LLOw CiTizKNi, Ladies ad Oentlkmkx On Friday last 1 was conti-rring wiih our excellent President upon some important matters, and at the c'o-e of our conversation I said to him, "I have a sreat notion to o to Ohio and vote the Union ticket, and it you have nothing in particular for nie to d s the wheel of my department are running quite smoothly ju-t now, and I hive laid away twenty five millions ot doll u s to nay the soldiers on the first ot November 1 believe I will ar" and o 1 went, and on ve.-terday I had the pleasure to contribute my single vote to the immense majority given in Ohio for the Union. And now I want all these young men and boys who stand before me to day, to remember that whenever a great crisis conies, (and all elections are great crises,) the fir-t duty of every citizen is to know he ts right, and thoii vote the ticket. I would not exchange the pleasure and tatis action that 1 ft It in depositing my vote on yesterday, for all the compliments that ever were or evr can be bestowed upon my administration ol the tiu tneial department of the government. Fellow citizens, yesterday, as your excellent Governor, by whoe kind invitatiou I am here to day, has remarked, was a great day in the annals of this nation. There has, perhaps, hardly ever been a greater day in our history, and I think moat certainly no greater will ever come. Yesterday when the sun roe, thousands of hearts were beating with anxiety all over the land some with anxious prayer to God that the cause of the Union niiyht prevail by the voice of the people; others with eager hope that the Ü ig a hieb our armies carry so gallantly in the field might be stricken down by their comrades and fellow citizens at home; rebels in the South look ins; to the action of the eople of the States with eiger interest, hoping that they might find that success, at the ballot-box which they could not secure by their armie in the field. ThC"e hopes, these Mtixieties penetrated the hre.Kts of all the peonle upon the face of the re public. The pun went dowu, nnd the great issue was decided, for the people with an un tniinty I eretofore unparalleled in the history of this nation came up to the ballot box itid paid in tones ol thunder "This republic, which our father founded and secured by their blood, sh II live!" Cheers And. fellow citizens, this republic now trill live. We have iti the progress of our armies achieved successes which make the reductic n of the rebellion sine. The possession of East Tennessee cuirantee to us the center of the rebel Confederai-v: its very heart is in the hands of our troops. General Rorecrans confronts Bragg at the gate ot Eist Tenneste leading into the State ot Georgu. General Burnodc has the interior, nnd it is utterly impossible, and so the rebel Matesmen themselves h ive sid, coritinutllv, that the reoellioti can, under Mich circumt mces, sue ceed. They mut wrest Eit Tennessee from our giap, or it is only a question of time whether the rebellion shall be put dow n or not. S, too, we hold the Mississippi river; that of cour-e di vide the Confederacy in twain, and tht pirtv or that body of people that holds the M'.isij ji mut neceariiy have control of the Mis-issinpi valley. Thus e h ive possession ofthee two! great important pom's. In addition to this we h ive most ot their sejris, nd at this very moment Gdniore, a worthy and gallant son id Ohio, is approaching by sip and mine the ctty of Charleston itselt, and in a lew d ts, perhaps, nut ooner or later anyhow, that rebel city, where treason was nursed mid boru and fed and brought to miturity, mut necessarily fall. Th;i we have things in our own hands to a great extent. Now in the light of thi tact look at the import ance of the great events of yesterday. Suppoe the result hid been otherwise. Suppose that this gentleman who his been sent by the kindnes of the President to the protection of Queen Victor! had been elected Governor of Ohio we would in all probability have had civil war in Ohio Suppoe the fo called pece party hail succeeded iu IVnn ylvania. 1' he result would have been th itsupples would have bee:i withdrawn from your armies in the field, so fr as the induence and acts of ihe G.)r:itr of Peunsvlv .nia cou'd effect th it obiect. Sup;se tht theheirt of Indian had proved unsound. How p.ralTied nd weikened would hive been the arm of the coverument How utterly impossible would it have been for the President to give the soldiers in the fie'd anv encouragement that their w mts would be sup j püed .od their etvice iewrded? Itut now ihe i people have sai l to the. army, "y.'ii sh II hat e j free u-e of every thing you want to crush this re bfliion. mit ci) t oik and tini'h it soon a j posjiisle " Cheers Vou want this rebellion ; to end ti-tcorrow it it can tedone; you want it euded next week if poib!e, but if ua then.! whether it -lull be next week, or next month or j next year, you are determined, by the help of God, ; it must and Aa.'i end. And H e voice of the people, ntttred on tester- J diy, will greatly .aci eierate its ending. If the rebellion eotild be put i!ou a "week ajro iu ; twelve months, then it can now be subdued in I six ou see. then, how appropriately we can ' meet together to day ai d congratulate each ! other and the country that God has put it into the I hearts of the people to sUnd together as one man i for the integrity of tbe republic I You hive hid all objects of the war frequently ' and ably discued before you. nnd I shall not Httempt to go over thetn to ü i . I will simply . ' th it we are ergiced in a stru-le for the integrity of the republic for the very lite of the crest ! et nation ever established upon the globe; a ; s'.tu;le u;s)ii which tleptlids the question of; w better ihe civilirttion wliich our orefiheri I Ujite.1 hll remain to all future generation au rumple to tbe world as in timfi pt-t. Tliisis oot a w.-ir uf coiiijurst. but the tjue-iioii involved in it w whether our dear coutiUT, the country of; our fathet and the heritage of our children, the country that embrace in it all ibal is dear to us. , hill hre or prih WhT.itjsin this mitttr' exactly as it in a family the childreu hould U raked whether their lather ail their mother uld live or die? Th;s is why jour heart are o unanimous utm tbi subject. You, love vour

country dearly; you love her Institution; you are proud of her tradition try ari'l her re-e:t .lory and are reilou or . er pra;eri.y in the furure Arid y'U not onlv love y ur nmntrr, but ou love m it. kind; tou le-l for ihe welfire of ym.r . race, the hopes ot hn b are to -o ret an exietit wrap;.! up in thi nation. TLe.-e -re your sentiments. Now we at Washington, eich in hi sphere, have reer doing all the time im ply what we could to pite f ffrct to your will. We hive only to rep resei.t the ;eop't. th President in bis sphere, and the other officer of the Administration in their spheres. I (Ij uot pretend to say thtt we hive not. all of us. mde m;stakes. It i next to im ps!t'e, in tt.e very nature of ihing. th t tbe im meti-e michirierv of the government should have bren uiMiornily rrt mai-ed in timeot such danger ia to have in all ca-es securrd the est p iib'e lesti't, h.it tiiis 1 cm sty, lor the President of the Cn'tril State wed a f.r the associated with liim in conducthrg tie ffairs of govern retit, that thev have sinceiely and honestly endeavore! to gie etfecl to the nfoj.te will by restoring the thPMietied lite of Pie republic. Your Governor ha been pleised to refer to rny own ervice. I aincercly wish that I could feel thtt they ere entitleil to anv part of theeulo gim pronounceal upon them; but I must say that all I have done hs ben to ende i vor to iu'erpret the American heirt. and do jus' what the jof mtitof the American mind would detnmd.t my Inn ls. At the outset of this MrugJe, ihegreit leader (or follower, whichever von ple'ise.) of public Ooioii in Eurojie the London Times tid 111 t Mr. Ch i.' would very soon tind himself in mit til to mey, and would co to Kogland to borrow, and then E il md would not let hin hive any. and then we would fee whit would become of our vaunted republic. What would vou liaise had nie to do under these circumstances? on would h ve done precisely what I did. 1 mid: "1 will not go to England tor money, but she ill come to us; and if the Times wan for Mr Cluse to come to England to borrow money, f-be will wait till the green i-le of England i sunk into the depth of the sea." Cheers Thtt is just what you would have id Well, wlnt was nex' to be done? I borrowed all the tfold there was in the country. In this wu I obtained about one hundred and seventy ri v e m llions of dollars iti gold, and it d d not come b.ck quite is fast as it went, and so the banks and capitalists who had furnished the gold began to say to ma."W e cannot supply juu w ith ppecie any longer unless vou will ngree to pay u such prices for it a will enable us to buy in Europe to replace it " This w nuM not do, and the next question they asked nie was, Will outake the paper ot our banks and pay u six per cent, interest on it, and then pay it to the soldiers in the plare of gold? And by and by perhaps something will happen we do not know what." This was the question that met mc. Now, what would vou have had me do? You would have said to" me, "Here am I. Mr Smith, a tanner;" and "her-am I, Mr Jones,: mechanic;" and 'here ;un I, Mr Robinson, a merchant take us instead of stocks, and base the currency of the country on us go to work and mtke'yteen backs.'" I know th it was what you would have advised me to do; and therefore, as my business was only to interpret your will, I went to work and mide "greenbacks," and a good many of them at thit. I bail some hand-orne pictures put upon them, too; and as I like to get pretty near the people, and as the engravers thought me rather food looking. I told them they mi-ht put me on the end of the one dollar bills. Liugh ter Well, at first L'reit many people thought this wns it bold and hizirdous experiment and a good m my of the batiks s iid t was sure to fail; on the other'hand a number of the banks, to their honor be i' recorded, said "nm are riht, go ahead." A good minj disloyal men thought they would be able tobreik us down. Some hmk and some persons relumed to take the currency. Whit was to tie done? You would hive told me in this case to io ex ictly whit I dddo; you would have said it anv hoik is not willing to receive this money it iM t.ke it or net nothing at a.l. So we in nie it n leal ten ter, nor quite so tendir as they desired, but legally so Lmghter So the thing went on, an I alter awhile we agieed that we should issue tionds, an i if the people tie sired to invest in them they could do it and we would pay the interest in gold. Th it m ikei this currency sound. It is pimply the love and gratitude of the people toward their government put into the form ol money. But here another step was necessary. It was necessary to have some means by which the national currency could be perpetuned nnd so we devised and carried out the national b inking system This is a briet account ofwhat we have done It is a very simple thing. It does not require any great wit to work it out. It requires tin an honest purpose to know what is hel and nght to be done; and whenever you seek to do that without le-r or favor you will most always find the right path, nnd then having- lound it, you have only to n-k G id toyive you the courage to cany it out It is common ene and courage, thai is all. It i the coirect interpretation of the popul ir will .-.iid then doing that will. Now 1 h ive uiveM you j'ist about as much of a rejxrt upon the fin ine s I expect to üive to Congies. But betöre 1 sit down let me s-y a word about wlnt sein to ni'j likely to be the is-ue. of this w ir If there ever was nr.y event in the hitorv of this woild which was distinctly m irked by the token of Divine Providence, it is this war. Theie hut grown up an institution in thiscQun'ry which lud served as the basis of au aristocmcv hostile to tiee labor and all those in-tere-ts w hicli vou most chetish. It was an aris tocracv that pressed with equal weight upon the po r white mm of the South and the slave who w i.s diiven like the brute to his daily toil. This uistoeraey hid M-ied upon the national government and "was m iking it just what they pleaded lor th purpo-e of working their w ills Thev were striving to ex'end slavery into all the tree territory of the country, ami to re open the slave trolethat they might make fresh importations of slave from Africa at pleasure They scouted the verv i lea of tree institutions, and had so or g mixed' 'heinselve that they preferred to over throw and ruin the government r ither than submit to htviri the republic governed bv the peod!c. In lGUhey determined thev would govern the republic themselves. L t'C!n was elected President. Thev still had Congress and the Supreme Coutt. but they were not content with this. They wire not willing the r.ower should piss out of their hinds into the hands of the representatives of the people. And so they undertook to break up the republic, in the insane hope that they could nuke a new republic, founded on the slavery of men. They expected th it New York would join them in breaking up the Union they boasted that Indiana was oing to join them, and IMinois ülo. They said that all the Northwestern S'ates would come in rather than have the Mississippi closed. Thus they hoped to be able to lound a mighty s I tie empire, but when they beg in their play by firing on Foit Sumter, this nation flew to arms. Was not God's hand in that? I think it was.

Alter that you all remember how tottiearuig the i President ws. and how torbeaiing evervtodv ! was. I used to be verv impatient ometimes, j and wanted this military thing done, and that military thing doi e. and the rebellion crushed out at once. But omehow or other, in the Prov ideii'-e of God. the thine worked slowly nlonjr, and it was. only when we h d m ide up our minds that slavery wis ,t tee root ot the rebellion, and th tt it must be got out of the way, that any very i distinguished sucre-s lollowed our anus Now, what a mn ark able charge has Uken place. All I ov er the country to-d y I i very is reeog:i;zed 9! the pre t cau-e and prop of the rebellion Jt is! recognized ii such in every rebel Sr ite as mu h j a it is in every tree Slate ot the Union It is so understood ni.it proclaimed by the relief in the South as distinctly a it is by the loy ii men of : the South They dift nctlv underst i.d thai they are fighting for slave empire, and that we ate fighting tor the right of the people to govern themselves No. ee the w- ndettul change tht hive occurred in public opinion upon this subievt. Go with me to Mis-ouri. Three or four rear ago some seventy de'egate from M'ssouri, "with thirtv delegate Irom Kn. repie-enting no less thin hfty seven countie in Missouri, ai.d I know not how mmy in Koisi-, c il'ed on me at mv hou-e in Wash n. 'ton snd eipii ed to me ! their idea. So i e ot them w ere lave! udder mid some were not. but they all agreed th t slav ery was the ciue of the rebellion and the g''t; enemy and the only enem v ot the Ioyl men of the iv'iuth, and they were determined to put an etid to it a peedily .is the votes of the jeople could effect li e work. Who would haredrevmed of th like of rhvt three tetrs .u? Go with me t M ryl t:,i!. !;d ! you will rind precilv ihe t me t te toT tli'tt ,' there that exists in Missouri. Ti.ey begin the war in Miryli:.d, as many other of us did, iu different prl of tlie Country, with i t!ie idet thtt the war coald le? efli-1 cietitly proecutel ail the country preserved, 1 nnd -t the same time sfaverv he t. Hut now ( everilbitig is different. No the uuconditional ' Union men of Mar land array thenwlve- as an I

emancipation party en the eompenition plan if ll.rv hti pet it. t.iit f . r eaianriration in eitl.cr cn-o. with or without compeatiton Lnk-tgnat th Sitte ot 1)-1. w.iif There th-v have i:omi

nitt.il an emanciptt'.on t'cLet j,,r C iire-, and ewtierever yo-j f.iA t?:t t nd t ot al Ui i 01 men ion find h' jtility to !averj. Take the ce of Mr. Cnas Auderson, a ceutleatn trom inyown State. Ha removed some v ear ago to Texas. He wj a pro Ui err mm. When the war broke out he was for the Union. That they would not allow. If he was not for the destruction of the Union as a mean of protecting lavery, he must po, and they drove him out ot the St'tte and his wife had great difficulty in follow r.jr, him. Take that ei of Andrew Jackson U miUou. He w a member i f il e VtCot f. rcss I '-t ore, t!i 1: wlrca Die'eJel the A lmintsir.tt on ol Imcoln. nn 1 a thorough pro slavery nun, vet he 1 driven trom his home beean. I wa iä,t in fiver of the lie truci:oii of ihe Union as a me.vu ot' prperu niiu slavery. So it was with Aridrew Johnson, ot Tennessee, and with the other loyal n;en of the South who hive been compelled to dy Irotn their bomeg and take refuse in the mjunuin. They all feel that this war i caused by lavery, and that until slavery i destroyed th-re can be no peace. In every one ot the bonier Suites there is an emancipation prty. All this hts been brought about by the providence of 0 1 About this proclamation. The war w is upon us and the President was obliged to strike down whatever Mood in thewav Of the success! til pro sejution of it. Slavery etood iu the way, and the 1'resideut stiu kit down I there a man here to-day alio wants it to live nain? I there one who would have the President shrink from carry ing out that procl-tm itiou? Is there a man who does not wis'i , prosperity to those men who are trying to unhold the caue of the Union in the slave Stite-? Do not your prater go up continuillv? 1 know you wish them success. Now whtt I wish to draw Iron. this, i that this nation, h id to tie born ng lin; that those of Us who never de-ired to touch the institution ot lavery in the slave State, but only to prevent its extension into fiee territory were hot moving Jn the pth of God' provident e and this war came upon us in or :er that this "people mignt be horn over again," and that the whole nation muht be firmly established upon the bais of fiee labor. And why? It is presumption to attempt to pene rate the counsels of Providence, but it 8eu.s to me as ev ident as any proposition in hja. lory tha; this nation h is a great wotk before it, whuh it c-mu it luifil as long it it continues a slave holding union. You all know perfectly well that when popul t'ion h id im re i-ed to such an ex'ent that turnpikes weren cessary, Mc Adam whs born and inventel turnp ke-, that when we needed a steam engine, nnd rail way?, and steambonts, a Fulton nnd a S'evensi n c me upon the stiige ot action, and one mm in England and another in this count ty projected and establi-hed railways. When civil zitiou had till further advanced, and we needed memsby which intelligence could be ir msmitte from ocem to ocean in a seoii'l of tirne.rhe magnetic telegraph was inventel; and now it is no le? nece-saty that there should be a great nation in the world, governing itselt and icspecting the rights of eveiy hum iu being of wlutever shade of complexion he may be, and that nation is bein? born this war is giving birth to th tt 11 ition 11. d it will be continued until we nre prepared for the great duties Providence has assigned us. If we are not preoaied to dav the wr w ill not come to an end to day, but it w 'll end whenever we me prepared for our woi k. Washington believe , as I do. that God was in the Americin Revolution, bringing to bitth this mighty nation, and so he isin this w ir, bringing to a second birth this, same mighty nation. When I c irae to Cincinnati to vote the Union ticket, some one handed me a copy of the Ciu cinn iti Enquirer. Some of you miv have seen it. It is verv me k to day, but it said: "Chase has come to 0 do to vote. The mm that cirrie n hod can kill Chase's vo'e." That, rav fellow citizens, is the crowning glory of our institutions I ,ri M-ci.l m l glut t know that there is a country in which no man, however hi,h it: office, 00 iu . ol we .nn or iiiaiinction, or of talent, c in live a vote whicii c muot he inltnced by the vote 01 th hu lib ts: man in the nt on. Well, whtiis this war producing? It is prodding, in the first place, a determination in the he rts of the people all over the country to p: e puetorany future exigency. The States nie all arming ai d lieing placed on a in üfary footing. Y'onr o ' Gavcnor. with th ir wisdom wi pitri otism hkh naveso great y uis:ingui ie 1 him. ins orgm'zed tne In. n m i Legion, ot wham I saw a regiment to-day. I am told there, are t ventv thousand ot thee men organized, mined nd equipped, for the defene of your S'ate VVlo are they? Are they serfs driven to an unwilling service? Not one of them. They are freemen, all; yourown sons n ible young men. who have voluntarily Mine forward to tie driibtl in the military art in order that thev mav be belter able to de.'einl their country and their homes. Suppose run multiply tins force by the number of Stile iu the Union; wh it a formidable forte with which to repel'itivasion nnd uphold the su premicy of ihe l wsJ Look at another thing At the out-et of this war we w re not pro vi led wiih the mem of ie lieving the sufT-iitigs of the arm v in the field. In any oilier coun'n the government would hate had to provide for it. But here we hive a body of men springing at once into existence under the n ime of the S mitary C m mission, going nut into every portion of the field and cttering blessings and benefits to the o d er '.f our army; md all of th s is volunteer work. You could not find u p irallel in any other country. In Engl md, to be sure, you m.-iy find Florence Nightingale. (God bles her.) leaving her home and going, under the patron ige of the government, to care for the sick and wounded so'dier in the hospitals and on the bittle fields of the Crimei; but nowhere will you find a body of men like this, relieving want and disrress all over the country wherever a soli tary -oldier is tobe found. Hete is another striking fei'ureof this war. T ho-e young men who 1:0 to the war are, in my of them, sons of pious pitenis. They go away from the blessing and restraints of home and from the influences of the sanctuary, ard then all at on. e the government goes io work g'ting Clupl tins to go and preach to them, ho are o'ten worse than the soldiers themselves; -md to sup ly the dfe-'ts in the arr m .'eiU'Mits rn id by th govet nrnnf . theie sudlenlv springs up a C'iris'i 111 C 1 n nissi-m It goes aoro id throughout the c mrn an I hospital, t vi.o the sick, to cotn'orl the dying an I to elevate trie moral n 1 restnin pisii)n. Tuis is done in our country, and here alone. This war is setting many poor blacks free. Well, what happens? T!.e government can work only c'umsily in such matters, and to meet this aspect of the cae, here is the great society of fnetni.s of the freed men, and gentlemen of all profe-iona ami creeds, of nil opinions, come together und s; I he-e people must be coed tor and educated ' Eei r where so meöodv is laboring lor the welfare of these poor freed men. This cou'd I". h ive h ape: ei in 1 nv other country I believe 'fiat w hen w e h til h tv e nun eiled in i rtishii g our ihi ret eliicn. m.ü all of lh-re reat agencie- shall have done their wmk, if wid all stand together loving one another and helping one another, ami mightier and stronger th m ever, bound together by common intere-ts, Httd ready for any work that my be allotted us to do among the n ttions of the e .rth. Th' i my faith. I hwe c tiled your attention to t he-e things in order thit von miv see th it wh it we did on yesterday is a great event in the hit rv of the world It pledge you nnd it pledges the country to the accomplishment of these great reu!t, nnd no more can indulge a reisonable doubt of wlnt the result will be I did in t expect to sav II this; but I have been drawn n from po'nt to point until I have nude mote of . 1 speech ihm I inten led I think tou a 1 e rrepii ed to do vour part in 1 hi t real struggle. Allow n.e to ay. I m i.r.atelul foibhi peering. I h tie no language to express the deep gratitude 1 feel to the people for ihe kl'-dnet-s with whirh thev met and with which thev have sustained me. A'.I 1 can do in return is to promise you that, as in ti-e pst I hive attempted to serve the people faithfully, mi tit the future I will give to vou wlutever eiorgy, faculty and labor God ihall enati'.e me to give T BICHASAN MAD. j After Mr. Cuasc hd delivered Irmself, os alve, Hi Kxi'eUei.cv, fiovernor Mouton, csme . forwarvl again and intrdQ el a gentleman namfJ a previotj-v, who f.roceeded to his own inCti'te apparent satisfaction to recite some doggerel, winch he snil he indiridually hid writ himself.) After that the 're'ep'i uM adjo'irt.el ti C'tivet! ( at b P. M , at the I'ttutire M ui.'ü. . ,as.-sBM-i tfTbe llliri! Central riitad picked up four ai.tl a hill million It-t tear. ' jy"A rhih fe'hia sJio-My piper sas: "Tie txit of office Mmt to have absolutely freuzied our Democratic friend.

Southern Item. We find the following items in an exrhtnge from a New 0ls curre-:undent, undet date

of Set :emler 30; Mall ry. Secretary of the Cnfelcrate Naw, dec! ire! i:i Ri.-hinind rerttitly that, as he was! new and bad been the m st unpo. ular mn In the Con federacy, so would he be, after the 15-h of this month, the most popular; that he had not wited time and money in building wooden vessels, but hid lavished bis energies and the money at his command upon the construction of the most powerful vessels the world has ever pro duced And I tell yon, and. mirk well, I know what I am aying. this i true in every respect a , regards w h tt h is been dot e, and may prove true j to a much more 01 trou extent than would be, his ex; e-ted great populaiity . ! And Til iulorm vou of another f vet. tsrhip ol ( till ere iter importance. Beyond a dou'it. S'e j phen.s, Vi'-e President of the reoel Government . was or e of three landed from the pirate Florida , on the coast of Ireland When he was refused i permission to viit Washington on tint mission j we all remember of, the Confederate Governmerd became desperate Tno-e members of the C-bi-net, and they were a majority, who were reidy for reconstruction, went over body and soul to the French schemes of Davi, and Ste; hen w sent out to propose terms with France, which, if j acce; tel. will astound the whole civilized world, j TI1P1P 14 1111 iniicitinn llliii ihont this. I - sure you It I unfortuti itely but too true. Post mister General Rltir but fairly states the case in the following extract from his, speech at Rockville: Iti manifest that the President mu-t steer his course against strong conflicting tides oftwo 1 evolutionary movi ment.-. That of the tinllifier to destroy the Union and set up a S lUtheni Confed eracy, ati-l th t of the u't' a abobtionists. which ha set in difr.hcnie the Smth. on the pretext of m iking sure the em mcip ition of slave. It is not improbable that the latter, though ainrng at a different re-ull, will be found in the end CO -orienting with the conp:rxtors of the South and the.r foieigu allie. They miv prefer to part with the South to partnership and equality under the constitution. AMUSEMENTS. n ivvnovo ijta. ii all. STAGE MANAGKI: 1 ...Mr. W. U. RILEY. ' Thursday Evening, October 15, Last r.iihl but two of Miss Sallio Saint Clair. Tlif Great Drama f t ti e: it i i n t: u .1 .1 n . To-ni'-rrow, Fridiy. Oct 16, farewell testimonial to ."MISS sr. V L. A I It . SC ALK OF PRICES. Dre-Cir Ie and ParouiO'e r0 Crnt. 1h Cents. 25 C- nts. 25 n b. M Cnt. U 00 L i(!y an 1 lienrknian K h ad Piin I Lid. O m 1 1 r y All Keserve.t Sears Private Bois "PTt-ii o 1W o in r cii 10 o'clfvck A. M. tili 12 M. "r'Dors open .at 7 o'cl'ck, Jur ain ri-es at pre NOTICE. STREET IMPKOVEJIENT NOTICE. OrncK or City Ct rm.J Indianapolis, October 13. Ia63. "YfOTICF. IS TTERERY G1VFN OF THK PKNI'ENCY X of the '.llovviritf Ordinance for street improverueiiis. to vvir: An ordinance t' prvi ' for furnish n and rrcting lamp to-ts, I.itjis aii.l tlxtur-s. nn Illinois street, between tli north side of North street and the north si Ie of St. Clair Mreet. Attest: CYRUS 8. BUTTEKFIKLD, octl5 )2t City Clerk. DRY COODS. ZQ o o H W P! b 0 b 0 H ffi H CD 0 m Ci3 O I 4 M 'A D H Z2 w o w CO o W 0 0 0 x x CO o U2 CO o 02 f-1 CO t-H p CO o o 1; CROCERS. W. R. HOGSHIRE & CO., Wholesale and Retail GEOCEES, coMiiKsniniRRcnrns, io. . ut U'uliinglon Mrceli Indl- , nnajiollv, indiunu I'EALRUS IN COFFEES, SUGARS. MOLASSES, SYRUPS. RICE, TEA, XAILS, GLASS. WOODEN WARE, SOAPS. CANDLES. STARCH. RESIN. TAR, TOBACCO, MACKEREL. WHITE-FISH. CORDAGE. TWINE. COTTON YARNS. RATTING. DYE-STUFFS, ic. rTTxrticclxr attefdor. givea to tte Üülr g of orten. ertl5-dlm Vf. TL. HOOF HIRE CO. FOUND. Pockot Book Found. lOUND. 0X THURSluY. OCT0BRR 8. ON THK J Ihre soteb Ksul a Pocket ftook eoniao4i mum coli- r '.'1 not.-, tuen the owner ra bav ty caliu. at the st Nichola. lo.n,oppute tue Bat Ii. I oetl-tit

GROCERIES.

iTev York Grocery, SO. 17 EAST TASIT.SGT0N ST..I I-00E5 tTFSTOF GLF.XNS' EUXTK. YHDLESAIE AND RETAIL DEALER JXJLTXTSr GROCERIES, Fine Teas, Flour, &c, &c. Cah f.ir Wheat and other prrvdnce. octl3-dly SHIRTS, &C. Gents' Furnishing Goods! Shirts, Collars, NECK TIES. UNDER SHIRTS, And nf: a writs And Ladies' and Gents1 Furnishing Goods, at 30 WRs T VMIIXiTO TIfc.E'r. aprin.'63 dr 1 GJ-reat Western clock sioi si:, TSTABMSHKI) IN la40 l.Y THE I'KFSENT I'KO 1i Pti-TOIL a No 2.'9 Maine Siren, Ci cinnati, U., wh re d-ali r will always fiii'i a full stuck of the cele-t-rate-l Seth I li'imas work, lncl'it!in Cal-nlrs, Kfgulators. Weight an t Sriii ClfcW n-l Titnepiecen. Also, all kinds of common cheap work fr-.rn all other manu'ar-turi-r-. Ail k nd of I l-rk Mati-rial and i iimrntns K..IJ to the trade at the lowest Western prices leal.r ar res j-et fully iny ited to call or send orderi to No. 229 Main street, where the will n-reixe prompt attention. t. liLAKtiLtK. septat-'Kl-d'y BOOKS. IS SLAVERY SINFUL? Ik-infr partial discussion of the proposition Ä I, ml f : C 1 I S S I .V F V Ij , T ET WE K.N OV1IJ BUTLER, OF INDIANAPOLIS, I and Jer. mith. of Wim heater, and beta een Tbomas Wiley, Ute tastor of the Christian CLurcli I Union Cty, lud . ai.it Jer. Smnb. ol lue e-er. Ii-d , w th an Iwrv duction, episode and conclusion of the di.-cussion. By Hon. Jcr. Smith. Tbe abovo book, yi-i puhli-bed, i on thut all hould read. It "ill he smt by us ly exn'fss ' r otherwige, on orders accompanied ev the cab, at the following rates: 11 Copies for f 13 00 25 44 25 IK) 50 44 8 Ml 1U0 92 00 The trade will b furnished at trade ra'e by it. ii nonu fc co., oci9-dlwfw3m In-iiauajoliit, Ind. MILLINERS. MISS J. DOYLE n AS REMOVED HFUPtniS M1IHNERT EST AB LIHMKNr to N... 39 South IHinoia street, next door 'o the Oriental Houe. She lias Jut reuirn-'l from the F.aft with a full and co nj'kte asbortmert of the most fsbk-iiatle Myles of Itomiels. ICiIIoiis. 1'i'viirli I'lowttv riiuiiL's ZJridal Wifuths Aft all komN nsiia ly fonod in a Trst class House. Hiving brought from the K:it aneien.tice'l B;erlier ami i'reser. N'Ks Dovlewill p i particular attention to all öfters or calls In th.it laie. Mi D. returti her timnks for put favor arid aolirit a eofitiniianci' t.f thnie. octT-dlj' LAW BOOKS. DAVIS' INDIANA DIGEST. VD'Gvsr OF THK DECISIONS OF THE 8UPHEME Court i f the State i f Indian i, comprising; tlie caseTrp,.rti in the eiaht volumes ct l.lackfurd aui ih tl't t'ixteti vo!ane$ if Indi na Itepor'; Wjether wjih I he hevt-ed Statut- ot the tte, as embodied in th" ediiinn of Gavin V Hord. I5y Edwin A. t'avi-, L. L B. J t ,. 8vo. ?8 ihi. The first edition of this valuaHI wora wa completely ehausiei in ! than ih tee m iith fr 'tn the time of pubI cat:oii. A new editi .n, printed on flu white papi-r, is no- rely. Thin one of the mt eomplte and ix-st arranged digests eer publi, im1, at:d has rectivedthe hiirhftit commendation of the legal profeskion. Ihe Hon. M. M. Hxr say.4 Tüe lhst Ii a rare in i tlan and -x tJtion a- It la usetul to tb profession. This i t o abridenietit of the He port hut a Riiiuiiie direit cf them." Tue Hon. Davi.. .Mcl'i'.n says: "It i no small c'Ht.men 1 it on of the werk that it i a D'jrest nol only ir all ur Jsupiem' Court decision. I ich bsve be n published, but ulo of all the modern statuteuow iu fArce. EDWIN A. DAVIS, ATTORNEY AT LAW, AND U. S. COMMISSIONER, Office No. 3 Tulbolt ANew llulldlns I'ennh lvnn;t St.. next door Snulli of I'otof f ice. INDI AN Al'OLlS, INDIANA. pthTlCULXK ATTENTION O VEN To CIVIL AND I Criminal Business in tu United State Court at Indianapolis. octö"R.1-lly REALESTATE ACENCY. rtlcKernan k Pierce, Ri: .L ESTATE ICEXCV First Door East of Palmer House (UP STAIKS.) iMTE HIVE FOP. 5 ALE H0UES AND IJYT lN f t!p? C ty of In 1 aiiap Ii, and r .rmi and Farm-In-; Land in thi Mate, and tell oar than ean purcht-t IseelKrt. frb2t dAwljr INSURANCE. Farmers end Merchants Insurance Company, Of Qulncy, Illinois. Capital, July, 1863, $300,000 00, Ad4 RapMIj Ivrfi'ir, Srcurrd br '" n Itrnl fta.t Casta 'altie nrer l000,OtM). ISPECt L ATTENT OXntVEN TOTHKIXSCRATCCK J v( lK-t ciil Li ll.UK f arm I'.uU.hi their cohtrn4-. Irrljf-n L t k, ifaii.t La ör diaiia't tjr 1" or iJtt:iilii. All lu "iiw 1 bf" tl Cenipjr kt'p Wen pTf-nj4i al and pud U bei re ru turty, to tb e. ti e at sfjc.i.-nof the uJt rer.,l.icb I-licy cf promplnw ill l. oou.Uiurd. W. '. UJNfc, rre.ident. W. R. Va Faaat, .Secretary. aepua'CJ-i-ly

J SHIRT?!

DRY COODS.

FOREIGN DRY GOODS, a, i XriMtlVAX DRY GOOD I Eime, Lord & Co's., I 26 Ind 2S Host Wh-nston St. e VltNDII) STOCK OF NEW jtXU KLIOAM )Jn.cy Dre.a Good J out cpenüijr at the j . j Trade Palace. Plkiin Black Sijks, R?ch Plaid Silks, Rich Fancy Sillks, R3pt Silks, Piain Silks andlSatins Oi. stock of Silk la rer? lare tnd will I t''Hin.l complete in every respect. Lusters, bl'k and col. Black "Gro Grjiin,'1 VUun Poul de Soie, Rich Moire Antiques, French Repps,? Drape de Luccas, Rob Roy Plaids, Black Boinblizines, French Merinoes, Figured Delaines, ifce. Flannels, all khidsand colors, Cloths & Cassimeres, Embroideries, ! Balmoral Skirts, Hosiery, all kinds, a Fall Cloaks & Shawls Small Plaid Shawls, Fur Children. NEW GOODS ABRIVING JjJuLT. PIECES OP CARPETS, just BFcnvKD at tJV: Trade iPaKace, 26 and 28 West Washington St. 3Iedalion Carpets, Supiirt) Pattern, in rich hih cl-r, II ixe Axminster Vel Carp't Urisiirpipsci in fjle. elegance .il durability. Velvet Carpets. New and elegant b'tIcs, in lightgdark a.n4 rneBody Brussels (j'arp'ts Tapestry Brussels do. f 4r n m lit I I -e K stTi ,t- vvev . m Tlirtte Ply Carots, V a i 'i C . i 1 I ii in j. i ! srr jiani. Extra Superfini' Car pets, One hur.dre.1 plere, from $1 2i4per yard. Ingraim Carpets, Common WooLdo., From 75 cents pf r tnnl. f Cottage Carpecs, Rug Carpets, j Ilenij) Carpets, Xew SI)!h, from cents ry; TtH. Nrt naitii sp v rwnii fia r--n Aff-hH ia fa,m nifch our cutoaif r mith the !4reyntid ciml t. ned pUx.k of Carpeta erer oflered thia rorket, and the will be ld at price dtving com petition. Wool nnd Satiu Damask!;, a Kxtra qualitie und all color. Lice, Tambour 6l Swiss ; Embroid1 end Curtains, Curtains Trimmings, Dyldcrs and lassrls, Gilt Ermine, in great Variety, Oil Cloths, all widths. Oil Cloth and Ve lvet Ris, Manilla and Cocoa Miting, Cuff and Green Holland; Wall Paper, New St)le4 Receive! Dailj. j Together with complete aartiBot of hoise nmmd goods. HUUE, LORD & CO., MHl-iltB

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