Daily State Sentinel, Volume 12, Number 4075, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 November 1863 — Page 2
in THK C5I.X-ir MCST BR f RKSERTKH.-IJacim WEDS E3PAT MOKMNO, NQVKMBER 4. " tiii: iHtT or THE OAV. pereti of rMr-nfllfrd fir fa re fJ.O'XJ Prwple I Iliiffal. .Mandof, Or I. Srt wG3. I ;rxT!y rrt tint Oof. Kr mf rite ! not here to niM to to ?ou. 1 jo, to !m from the Hi of a patriot of Kentucky that Ihr Ungute of thss who loe at.! ti.u to up boM the Cntitutin, ifi inter! to pre-rre the Union. U alike, wtrrr .y men Horn the North, or Ue S-juth. from the Kt or thr West. You wooKl bate fauifi that thU JiurU!ilrl man, who live in a community particularly arTexteil bfther in hich we are ens?!, t.J lo baa atoo.1 up with other abreaat f the tiJr of eceaion, wa in full accord im! a? mpthj with q who mm hereto ni;hl to utter w.rJ hieb we hpe mJ be calculated to pre-er re that Union of ur land which we hate so much at he-t. Cheer In hie absence I will addre you briefly in regard to the jrreat question of lhe day. Our land i- afflicted with a itril war ot proportion unexampled in the history of the wrU. The flame of gre.t coi.fla:raiiun i lapping up thr nhioduf our citizen; i Je-troy in the proper i j ot our citizen; i cirrviii m urniojr, and death it. to our home, and tretetsa the rry fabric of our Union. Under cirrum-tinrM like the-e, my fi ienl. w hen we assemble lojjeth er. we ouht to come up with an hw.et purpose to take that course at the coming election which hall be calculated to advance our country 'a goodto make our nation once a;in what it w few ye im aine the euty and admiration ol thr whole world. Applause Unfortunately, at time like thes-e, when ao much U at stake, and when there ia etery reason why men should be calm, dipiionte, thoughtful and patriotic, we are all too prone to Kite way to p i3ion and prejudice. You hear from aome rju rter only the lan'U ieof drnuDciation, ol abuse; appeals, to Daasion. where there should be argumenta ad drevtsl to our conscience and our conviction of duty. Let in meet the questions we are to du cum to wühl with an anxious purpose to discover where the ntit is, and. Iiivin? succeeded in that, boldly, mtninlly, patriotically, to uuin and mtiuuin it. . Cheer J Now, in thr di.cuion which are Koing on in thi country , there are err tain point upon which all men are agreed. Let u at the outlet ascertain what they are, ho that we may mora clearly understand the nature of the dtaij-recfufm which exist raoii us. All men agree jn tin if thi r i prolonged for a certain period of tinir. tith a continually in creatine debt, that there must "ome a time when it will reach an amount that will overwhelm us with national bankruptcy. Men may not aree as to wh .t that um rny be-one may say two thiu"4iid million, attolher three tliumd mil I on, and ja rhips a more sanguine man still may fix the amount at lour thousand million.; but tbere i no man who does not agree that there is r amount of public indebtedness- which, if fist u pro ened u. must brin ui-mi u the calamity an' !'?rce f ra'inal bankruptcy. There la another fvtnt of a prremcrtt. There la no wan who doe not admit lb it it thi.a war coMtoiue oj tor a certain jiiol, it must overwhelm us with national ruin Then here are two p ..i.t on which, although we may differ :i to ainountor time, we e.eutially arct two evenU thit all admit mut biinjj upon u individual and nation I ruin. AW wsree that we mu-t brm? thi war to a iu-re-nlul iue before we have Iwcn orerwhelmed by the-e national evils. We an e, too, th it lte exigency i ro jrreal ami the htiI mo imminent that we .re bound to put forth every exertimt to rave our country from iho?e talauiit h ch l in our pathway, as goon .is may be W say t, our opponeuts, we are ready with you to put forth every effort of physical power we cou-ecraie ourelve and all th it we have for the tlr.itioti m id irpeUMtion of our country. In all olemity I av it. with a heart full of love for my country ; with a desire to sacrifice anything and ever) thing for it prerrvatioti and it h ippiDe - with all iioienmity 1 ay it. that here at;aiii, as we have heretofore done, do we dedicate our aetrea to thi mmt holy and patriotic work or na Yio litis fair land of ours from ruiu and di Vinte jrrnon. Now in thta we are areetl. Wheie. then, commencr the point ol divergence? W bete do our lootwa) branch off from each othert We j;o farther than they, and ap;ree U) add one further influence againt rebellion that of coticiliation. Ureal cheers We de.ire lo put the North upon a platform upon which all Can Und. ro that we rhall present one uudividtnl an-J unbroken front. We will not only bring all the powers of force atinst the rebellion, but we will do more th in that we will carry disunion into ita rank by eatet.ding to them in this hour when victory hss crowned ua, and when it is preat an. in tnanim u m to do, every inducement that boneot and honorable men can offer to them to return, to the Union. Cheer In thi we d'ffer from our political opponent we do not refue to exert one nincle et-ergy lt th hi they; we propnae to bring to bear those influence which tbe hiiory of the world, your own good judg nictt, every thing, teaches you ieential Co t.ring to a iucceslul termination ant confeat whether belwcn individuals or na'ion. Chcera J We feel that opn thi point, therefore, w e hold higher ground than ia held by tho.-e who stigmatize u u boiog untrue lo our country. Why lo they stig matire us thuT They would hardly make that imputation ngaint the hundreU and thousand who luve pone forth Iroui the Jemocratie ranks t. bitlle fr tlie ti jrf the Union, lireat cheer in it Why then? Iitleetu?e we art willing not only lo suliin our soldier. in the field, to aaentke property and life, but tint we say that, more th in thi. we will aicrihee upon the nltar of our cum try our prMe and p.uion., when pride and paion ttail j the way of aucce.. Cheer J Hut thi is not the ouly point of d.lTerence Who will not concede th it unle-a there i more energy, more kill, more judgment exhibited, than In heretofore nmked the proyres ol this war, we are coming to cert in letructim? A mm mij tlnat along the beautiful riv er that runs by your city, in aaletv, for a tirm?; but if re continue, day alter day. lo tint idly along, ami allows the time to pas by when he can reach the margin in aafety, üe wiil lir.il himelf at last in aisihtof that miiih y cataract whoe name i. I t mou throuithoiit the woiM. and will find him.-elf i . . . . - ..... l I. III ! wit run me awm vortex ot it waier which win overwhelm him in utter destruction. So with our nation, unle- we put forth every exertion not only of material power but of w ise italemanship, of Christi m consideration, of patriotic sacrifice of passjon and prejudice, we too thaP find, ala-! too late, that lh periKl i pat when we cm recue oumelve from the danger that lie in our coure. Cheers 1 l.ai rty is mo.t uue to the country which peonixe to watreihia war lor purposes which are attainable, which are within reach. On the other band that party doe the m l to endanger our future anJ brimr us to ilesirurtion which onrvises new an J greater oUcle to the fuccessful tcr- , ci nation of the war. Now 1 k you to listen for a moment while I state to you the attitude of the two jireat pi rues upon this subject. We y ! on our part that we wac thi war lor ihe pur- j pi.se of restoring the Uioon, for the purpose of uphohhug our Cnktituin, and Ol maintaining , aud deici.oing t!oe pei ml, home, hearthstone ; rihu ol the cilizms which are guarautetnl in thai Constitution These ceruiulf re object j worthy of the approval of a'l gonl men. Tl.ev are m ie easily rechel than the objects sought fr by our opponent a in thi war. ll is easier to briiijj bck theSiUthern 5iate when we say thit if itiey com back tothepeifortnu.ee ol iheir dutie-. they hall also enjoy their rights a.- States, than that is, if we v Hint thev must, wlifii thev return, bj abjtttly to the dictation ol p.t.s-;,.:i at ul infurisiti men. Olivers I't ine c.i!! your attention to tbe hitoi y ot thta war. Wl.u tt began, by the uninunus t .tr of Copgres. repre-ei.tmi: all poties. it 4 aiuly declared j tliat the object ol this contest .n t put down ( reistniice lo the lws, to unit, t in i-jp ilomitiion of tl CuliiuliMi over tt.e wt.o'.e viinrr, and to re-U.re the Union of our f..thrr i .jt time Ihne wis no divisional the North All' wrrc unite! in carry in ou the contest. All cave1 tlie.r conti ibutioii of men and money, arul t-.r a time the voice of party MCmed lobe h!.hM HU a little while alter that we were told that tkie war ' was to be continued lor another jurpo-e that there was cause t r th. ditlicuUy lb it s!vtrv was lh caua m l that lavery must b removwl. ( We prvtestei agahtit this issue. Tirae hit moved ou and utw we bate another issue Not1 con'rot to he tUr wr end with the restoration , of the honor and the supremacy uf the Cotistitu- j tiou.or even with the destruction of slavery tou j have rcnily heard the lelrtKu frwtu the 1 Vice Iiesdent of the United uui and by Sena j tors from the Eteru Site, Lu not only prog j ooslicatc but make the policy of thta aJmn.lra I lloa, that tbii war i logo on until theri.rral'
DAILY
SENTINEL
rovrTnmrtit hss added to it new power over and tew reiatmos to the vat reei..ns of ihr Jj-mh. ,
.which, they ay, o:u-e were States. You have heard the boiiat by one Senator thai not only f'n ul i tie war go on. but that it had ; 'ie on r.ntil the great and iin;ril Stair N York was dragged atlheheei of r..)nw"r Luih ter and aj p!aue Caa we hope for a Eucce?iful termination uf tlii war withio a jerio.i of time that will sav e u from national bankruptcy cd na'K.nsl ruin, if we are to have, day alter day, new and more d.ffkuU is ptcs presented, and if Ja 9 afterd y in it proprewe are to be told that iu ends aid objecu are to le m re and more revolution ry and sutvrriveof all we have been taught to txiiior or hold dear iu our system of government. We propose lo waue this war for a purp upon which the whole North is uid'ed tor a purpo which will draw to our ?andtrd hun lreds and ihouaatid of hearts iu the South that yet beal wth love lor our old banner and our old corxtituiioii. OLeer 1 They propose that we shall cvrry on the war fur purposes that we at the North cannot unananim ;oulv conaenl to; they propose not topuli wu 'revolu'.ion, but to make revolution; they propose to o.1er 11 inducement for rebels to submit to the laws, out they say to us and lo them that eha!l "no longer have guaranty of the Constitution, lor the preservation ol our liber tie hereafter, as they have been preserved befcre. 1 appeal to yr.c il this ii not their attitude Cn the war l brought to a successful conclusion by a party lhat cooly proposes that when every iutrret of tb Siuth eha'l vibrate toward the Un on. we hall .lunge into an nb of controversy and dircnnsion inatea'l of s tying that the Constitution shill then as in times past be our guide Consider, I pray you. erionsly, the propositions that have been laid before the community by our opponent, in reference to this wr. Seifit i not true that they mike this war one for indefinite purpo-e. for objects, thit we cannot attain and ought not to attain-if they do not go farther than paying it is a war for the purpose of restoiing the Union and the Constitution. The? declare boldlr and openly that we are to abandon the traditions and laws of our fathers. To attain their ends, it is necessary to trample upon the Constitution, so that the general government hall be veted with grevter powers than we have ever heretofore been willing to crmfer upon it. They will tell you thai we want a atrong government at Washing ton. Thev av that if we take jurisdiction from loolitie;, Irom town and counties and Mate, and centralize it at Washington, we shall hive a stronger government. I ileny that proposition. Applause uisixt upon it that if tl.ev shou'd succeed in lhat policy, so far from making the government stronger they will make it weaker. I do nut charge that they do not honestly enter tain the conviction that thev express, but I charge, if carried out they will involve thecoun try iu ruin Cheers. The Mieigth of the general government lies not alone in the poer which has been c inferred upon it, but the re straints which the Constitution throws around il It m made strong not only by what the Constitu lion mjs it miydii, but whit the Constitution say it may not do The Constitution foibids Congre fioni tskiug away the riylil to make li interftriii with religion, with the rights of : home, with the riühl of free sfefch, because the 'power of exercising tI.oe rights would blntter it to atom. (Jreat app lause If I might make a very palpable illustration, I would My that the nation is like a well bound cu.k. Suppose a c.ik tdiould take it into its head, rea-on'mg perhaps as wicly 11 thev -ome-timrs do in Washington, th it il it should bur-t its hoops it might become h igshead it might increise its strength mii1 dimension. Wtiv, it it shouM burst it hoojw it woulu not even retu tin lib.rrel. it would be a mere bundle ol staves. Laughter and cheer Now, when our Urn era I (sovernrneut at Wasn'hton shall succeed iu bursting these restraints upon its powrs which are placed there for the purpose of its preserva tion; for the purpose of lending the Government together, a far wll it be from irue that they have atieii.'tlienttl ti e Government that the fact will be that I hey will have brought upon it weakness, dis comfiture, dishonor and disgrace. Let u fee if these view are purely theoretical. List winter I was called upon by a friend of vcrv different opinion from myself for 1 have friend on the other side, notwithstanding so much is said about my "friends" concerning the draft, and he wanted to know if I feared for the rights and ex istence ol the State from its operation. I told him I had no such fears I told him I should not feir lor the State, but that I should tremble for the General Government itself, and I then tried to mike him see that the attempted exercise of such powers on the part ol the Ueneral Govern merit, so far from arming it with greater strength, would piove perilous to it. I begged him to see, and to teil those who sent him to see me, that the strength ol the Government should be based upon the affection of the people. Loud cheers I begged him to tell them th.it it they would make this Government strong and powerful, it was by aifdrenioitg themselves to the affections and re gard ol the whole American people Cheers. Not many moMhs have rolled awxy wince, in re jsiijsc to a call from the Government, the people ol thi countiy sentaix hundred thousand men to fiht the h ittles of the country Why did they go? Was il because they were culled for by the voice of power? It was because thev were sent for to volunteer for the defense of the nation, and they came from school district, village, town, city aud State, until they swelled into the mightiest military air.ty that the world ha ever seen. Well, as :t result of this voluntary action of the public, the Admiuisir ition found itself iu the. control ol a mightly army, and forgetting from whence it derived jta strength that it was the power and strength of the people alone which they held they were bewil lere l with the splendor of their js.sition, und they declared that they would no longer live upon the charity of the'eommunity and send around a contribution box when they wanted men or money, but whenever men were wanted ll.ey would ei d oflicrr to force the people into the rank I warned them of the result of lint experiment. I implored them lor their uwu s.tke.s for the sake of tbe cause in which they hid eneed. not to make the attempt. It I had been intiuet'ced by personal or part? coiisideiaiions 1 should not have said one word when they persisted in the way that was to lead them to discomfit ure and disgnce Hut I told them that if they widd pursue a policy that would appeal to the heart of the people there would be no limit to their strength; but if they should attempt 0 subvert the whole of our Government, and should sui'pose that thev were armed with tower to compel a free people in any coutse. they would not only endanger themselves but endanger the Government. Cheers 1 humiliated myself before tbee men rather than I would see them enter the homes of vour citizen by force Against my mt earnest prayer that this glorious State should be sived In in this ignorninv arid disgrace, and be allowed to send forth her sons cheerfully and fietrly to the battle be d, the measure was adopted. I wis told there was no time to wait tor New York though there was time to wait for New Jerev m l Ohio, and other Stttes I told them ot their services 1 toid I them what was true, that New York wastheonlv Atlantic State tint lnd given more than its pro portion of trooj a under thecillsot the IVesIdent Gieat cheering. 1 implored in vain. The rash e peri meit was m ide. What was the ie-ult? Why, you have seen th t one year ago N w York voluntarily gite l'Jtl.fKKI of her sot s to the ser vice ot ber country ; and yet under the iraft, w ith the whole energy of the Government put forth, with armed tuen paraded through the Slate, with ! threat of leg tl proceedings and m litarv force, I uu have seen Iessthm 10,000 men c rried awv . j mote than half of whom wete in truth voluu-' teer, because they were tniughl with a piu-e j Now, that is the doctrine of conobd ition cairied j into practical effevt. Thuone meHnal by wlrch our Government w.s tn le strong has been tiicd j Is this ftrengih, or we.iki.ess? Is this success' or failure? I imploie tou m lock into tlesc luestioiijt o)Lre!i es. 1 do nut corn pi ii ot hat ii. ay be sai l of myself ; thit I hive teen mis rcpie-enied; that 1 am charged with treason wuhalui 'st all the offenses to be tound in the dialogue ot crime. I btve not cue word lo say inniyowiidefeiise.hu! I do voir; 1 tin thttciti zen of this State who are our politM-! online uts join in the calumnies gvii-t their own Slate, which ha done so uv:ch to susta'ii the Government Cheer Whenever I akel f r justice and I have only asked tor justUe it has al way led immediately to the chire thit there w desire lo embarrass the General Govern n.en! As 1 have said, oura w the only Atlantic Suie whuh, on the first day of Januar v last, had iit to ihe wr uch number that it was ntiiUsi t t -re tit for surplus. That w coljCkl at W asinnjjum. Atid il was couccded, Uo. that Pennsylvania. N'w Jersev, and rverv New Eni Ui.d State Te the bttle Sute of Hh.kle Island. w-r behind Cheers Since the firt dav of January U.t the S t 0f New Y.-rk hv "sent l.v.(M) men out ot its bmits io defend Pennsylvania Loud appUur ; The Seventh Ward Dtmocratic Club here entere! thr hall with an American rtag, and a
barnrr Inscribed "Union, Liberty and the Laws." ! auji'l L'reat cl-eerinif Cner w re a!o -5 reu for 1
Got Set tnuur arid Ge n. McCie.l in Wheuorderl waa retirel Gov. Seymour continred S idJenly there cimeup a midnight cry from Washington for help A proclamation was issued to Onio, renr.sylvania a:id Maryland, eallin for a hundred thousand men to rally immediately to ave the nation' capital. A friend of mine at Washington asked them why they did not call on New York. "Oh." they paid, .'New Yotk ha got a copperhead Governor; he H do nothing." Laughter Hut New York w called on. and ihete-ull was that New York was about the only State that did anything in reinforcing the army already in the field. Laughter and cheer. I do Lot rpeak th s bveue 1 claim ary merit 1 did but mj dutv. When the 1'residetil of the United Sute, the constitutional bead of the govment, called upon me, as he had a right to call upon me under the Constitution, I responded at it became my duty to do. Cheers Now I want lo state, in ju tire to the administration, that while many Kepublican citizen of New York were trail ucii.g our own great State, 1 received a di-patch from the Secretary of ar thanking me for my prompt repone aol begging that I would send on our troop at once m as to lir up i'ennsy Irtttia and other Sutt' to come to the rescue Applause Head the history ot the bttle of Gettvrlojrg--the record of that tour days, fight, where the battle each day surged frm aide lo ride, so that il was not known uuv.il the very last moment which mmv were the vie tor see. how closely we b titled there and then What mm date v that the contribution that New Yoik sent at Mat time did twl strengthen the heart of our army, and did not tutn the tide of battle in fa vor of 1 lie old tiig? Since the first day ot January Ust we have raised more ilwu sixteen thousand volunteers If you will add the number that we pent 111 response to tbe call tor thirty Uiys and thete are time when thirty dis are more thau as many years thete are tims when men are pent into thebHltlebeld at the very moment when their service could not be replacrd by ten years, alter work. It we add the number sent in response to that call, we have ent, since the first of January, more than thirtylour thousand volunteer to the service ot our country more than tluee time many as the coerc.ve action of the government produced murr ihm has been sent by all the other Northern States of thr Union put together, With these facts, with thin gcneroti support thus freely given to our government, you hear charged diy after day tint the administration has been hindered by the State of New Yoik. When it was shown how mmv men had gone from this State, the Republic m papers of this State seemed to take the greatest pleasure in declaring thi was not so. and in stating that we had only sent three thousand volunteers, because by Home ii.lormiliiv they were not mentioned in the books before they wete mustered iu, but while they were preparing to go. Does tin notptove thai injustice 1 being done to this State in the dis ltraeiueiit iu which it i spoken ot? Does it tiui also prove the lesson ot which 1 have ppoken, that the government to be strong, must be foun Jed iu the affections of the people. They tell us that the Constitution may beset aside. Hy what tight do vou worship your God, as your consct ence dictate lly what right do you tand up here in the fare of th s community nnd say, although I stau! nl ne. 10 man hhall stand between me and my M iker a to the mde in which I shall wor ship him? Why, it i written down in the creat charier ot your liberties. It is by that ahme that you have nil the evidence by which that right exists, and all the mean by which that right can bo enforced, lty what right when you go to your homes, however humble they tiny be do you eloe the I itch, saying, "Thi 1 my castle?" It is only by the guarantee of the Constitution. Whit i it that make sacred the relations between you aud your wile, and sister, and Hvel tuther mid mother that sit by your fiieside? We tire told that men who talk of constitutions are traitots to their country. We are told that the Constitution is no writ of protraction against Abriham Lincoln as a General, though all powerful against Abraham Lincoln as a President. I have sustained him freely and fully, trankly and fairly. I did not want him there, but I have in finitely more respect for him as a President than as a General. Cheer These doctrine .re dangerous and revolutionary; they strike at the existence ot the Government; they endanger your national liberties; they threaten" to shatter the very bonds ot sciety itself. The Vice President of Hie United States in a speech within the limits of your own State, said: "There are some men who want the Union as it was and the Cjnstitu lion a il is. Well, ihey can't have them. V e can't have the Constitution as il is? This question is involved in the coming elections. I ask you, when you have by tbe edict of your votes sustained a party that declares itsell opposed to the Constitution, will you have left one third of that fundamental law to pioteci you? 1 dely any man to show whenever we have been untrue to the Constitution or untrue to our past. - 1 defv any man to show that it is not true that we on our prt have been in favor of exerting every material and every moral power and every exertion of statetn Oiship to bring this war to a successful Cotn lusion, and on the other hind that wc have retrained from placing those obstacle in the way of that result which are pi iced there by theiheoiist who propo-e to make it no longer a war lor the Constitution, but a war for the extermination of slavery, and lor the crushing out of the right of the State, lor ISe lessening ot the jurisdiction of ttie Constitution und the widening of that ot the Administration. Chceis These thini;are involved in the election tint is about to take place. As 1 and iu the outset, they concern the country and Ihe couiuiuuilt ; they conretn each nun in his liberty, iu his conduct, in hi home 1 am still f ull ot confidence; I hope in the I in gusge of another for the tune when ihe war shall be passed by and there will be upon the fl ig ot our country every star thai glitter there, mid iu the bounds of our Confederacy a Stale for every star. Cheers J I hope before tinny month shall have rolled away, that all will aree that those men are traitor who wou'd tetr asunder the tilg of our countrv or who would wipe out ft 0111 the Mzuie field a simle st ir tint glitters there, aud thai all men will unite m restoring the Slates to all their origin il splendor, to all their glory, to all their greatne and to all their united strcugtn l iemeudoua aud long coutiuued cheering Mate Milcide. The New York Express forcibly meets the Abolition doctrine of the obliteruion ol Sta-e line-sand carries out the hie 1 logic ally, iudetd, but to an e xtreiue that would Hardly be palatable to the mo-t rampant Yankee advocate of the exp'liiging process. When the New England Slates are made to see clearly whither their new idea roust leid, if mile practical, we h ill have all Yaukeedom eloquent in defense and advocacy of "the accursed doctrine of State rights," and denouncing a treason ible the ide is they are now so hotly enforcing. It would not be the fiist time that these self-conslitutvd " school m ist era ol the nation" h ive turned sipu arely roun 1 aud buffeted their own teachings. We copy from the Express of Thursday evening: Statx A.tMHf latio.h. Etc From Masstchu setts, we hear with more patience thin Irom else where, thi t ew doctrine ot State suicide St tte at nihil ition because, if any where lo the Union, St tes ought to be stricken out and territorial ized in order to be rc-stated, it is in M i ichuett. I here ouht to be but one State in New Eng j laiKl not five, with ten Senators in Congress tint one State the Smte of New England; be j cause two Senators in all, detnocrttictlly or fe 1 puhhcanally peak mg. New Engl m 1 is entiiled ' to bv its population. All Hhode Is! m l is not as ; popuiou as a put of New York that a man can ' w-lk over in ten minutes. HMice, when we hear that M jor General But ; ler has taken the field in Massachusetts, to' preach State suicide, we are not discomposed. , The Slate League of Massachusetts has elfced, ; it seem, this Gen Butler, and a Mr. Clitflu of , New tou, delegates al large to the Nation il Union , Leigue. which meet at Washington in Drcetu : ber. DeiegaU Irom each Congressional ü.airict : were also choen. j Gen Butler being thu chosen, addressed the j meeting choosing him at length, taking ground 1 with tho-e who lelieved that the seceded States have annihilated themselves 1 States, while the power ol the General Government tili reunin intact over their territorv. He opposed the po , it. on of a member ot the Cabinet, that the rebel Coiniiion w ehhs. by throwing down their anus, should be received into the Union with unimpiired right, with their old local institutions Hi; rexons for dictating terms before allowing the incorporation into the Union of hee heretofore J hostile eclioh. spiiug from consideration, viial lv affecting the interest aud safety of the nation ; If the Coutederate autes are re" admitted, anJj Ihetr Representative take their rat io Con grew
before some radical rhrrr i efT. cel. 1 at J guaranty i-there tht thr Fedrra! nat otnl de't j w 11 n h be repudiate., or m ide to t m I upon t
alternative that the Coniederate deb mut like wUebe piid? Lei this question come before Congress, and all the appliance of corruption would he set in motion to eeure such a deciitMi as would place Ihe Federal and rebel indebtrdne ujon the same footing. Gen Butler contended that the rebel Sutrsmut br rrgaHed as destroy ed, or it would be almost impossible to choose j a not iter t reidei.t, for the reckon that no cn 11 ; d tte likely to te sele-tel would receive such a support in the Nrth as to give him a m Joriiy of the whole Electoral Collrge. cotifitutel of all j the State, both loyal and rel Transfer the question to the Ho., of Representatives, where j eun fommonweilth casts onlv one vote, an t majority or uch votes i required, and the difnruiiv win te crett v intreised. Ihr doIicv ot i safety and justice was to restore the Union in the ' r - South only as fast as the principle of freedom and loyalty are exercised over tbe now rebel domain. Well! Well! Let us begin again de noro thu,t Tb 5ttet of New England 3 n.,w 11 w Yrk 2 IVrinsi Irani 1 2 3 2 a 3 2 (ihia Mirjlandand Delaware In lian. Illinois low 2 4 2 S 2 3 4 t I M incorsiu and ilichigan. i.r Ac. ntate tiuiciori not o tud a crrei. tt we push it into an eti ilizatiun of the States There is no rea-00 wh never, if thi is not a S'ttes ri-jht ao erntnent, for giving New Eolmd, with les jp illation, n six time larger rrprrsntatioii in the United States Senate th in N 1 Y rk; six time is m'.ch power in the m ik'tig of Terntor.e. or in the ratification of nominnion, or the impeachment of a fi evident All thi is wrong 111 a popular Government, and if thi thing i to be dane over again, let us now do the right thing. .tnllmml ItanUa. To th' E lilor of thr Butan Courier: In ab oit one in m il a new Congress will as pemble, and a motitii liter th-s General C urt ot finriftii.'fi SLito uril! m .ui in rha rna inirliilu liall
anvthing be said or .lone, an 1 wha. bv those who bv eu,U,e ""l "'! -'d unmitigated abolitake. or ought to take, an interest in'the scheme lWM !i,u!" rel ,or M,,l,,cl,, 'T,' ? 1,6 ?'"C of Secr-Mrv Chase for cs abl.shing national P""1 liU t the k (f C s. have been banking assik-iations? It is -anredi a subject re l'ub ,s ' lf,ef L-irette Journal of deep concern to the t-cpleof the Unite.! State ! 'ui Couner 1,,e P1 Ju-"'.lo.'g before oMll.iiv..fr -nd it i." . IK .Mh, .1.-1 ö,m,t ascondemneil to be shot, and there is so
earnest and deliberate ciisiieration of that large class of persons whose investment ate chit fly in the stock of banks established under State laws. Eight months have elapsed since the passage of the act; it has been published iu newspapers and in pamphlet for 111, and yet, I venly believe, that not one in ten ot tho-e who ought to have made it a careful study, has done so much a even to red it through up to the present moment. Are the thi ee or lour hundred bank directors in Bos ton all asleep? or, il il so be, that they feel little intcretin the subject on their uwu account, have not the women and children, hoe prortv whose whole property, perhaps has been committed to their iiixnauerueut, a very deep inteie'l in the mattet? And are they not bound, in honor and conscience, to bo able to give those women and children, who ate so little qualified to lake caie of themselves, uu intelligent account of the provisions ol the act and of its proh.ible effect on their means of living? Ate these State institu tions to be crushed under the mighty idol of the Secietary und his financial advisers, aud the women and childien. whose pr-'pettv is now invoted in them, driven into new investment.? or will they heutTcrcd to live, and to fumih in lu tute, a they Inte Jone heretofore, not only a sout d curienry for ihe people, and a safe and reasonably profitable investment lor the dock holders, but suh-t tilth! aid, in piessii emergen cies, for the support oT the credit of tue Govern ineut itsell? Surely these are questions ol im porta nee enough to atmet attention. Thalia the preent purpose ol the Secretary of the Treasury, and ot the Comptroller of the cur rency, to driveout of existence all State buiks I cannot doubt. Indeed, the- i official make no secret of such intentions. ri he Comptroller, rn hi late visit to this city, as I am Intoimed, openly and frankly avowed such to be their tsd cy. and presed upon the IVesident of banks, with whom he had 'asked a confeienee. whether the instinc t of self preservation should not induce them to wind up their Slate institution, and organize at once under the United Suite law I know, too, that in one case the Comptiolb-r has declined to furnish bills to a round and good State batik, on a pledge ol such stocks as the act requires, 011 the ground that it wa not hi p licy to encourage such a coure on the part of S'.te institutions Indeed! What law Ins constituted either the Comptroller or the Secretary a judge of wh tt i expedient iu this mv.tei ? In a communication published in your paper some weeks since, I point eil out another instance iu which the Comptioller had undertaken, in his supposed supreinecy of powrr, to overrule a c ear provi-ion of the law, by imposing a common name, with a numeral prefixed, whilst the . w itself gives to the associate the right to assume (sec 6) the tnme by which their association shall he known. S iu th's niattrr of furninshing hill of circu Uiion 10 State banks, the act (sec 62) expressly, and in the e'earest langu ige. piovides. thai "any bink orbuikitiv association authorize"! bv State law may transfer and deliver U th Trcasni er of the United State Fuch boi'ds and upon making such transfer tid deli ery, such b ink or h inking nsoci ition sh ill be entitled to rece ve Irom the Comptroller of the currency notes as herein provided," kc. Hy what anth -ritv I ask again, doe this offi cer appointed to execute a law o.' C uigre-s, pies .me to nullify such o it provisions a fie is pleased to consider expedient? The law is detective enough, in all conscience, a any one wi'l readily discover who will tike the troo'i'e to resd it, and uiu-t receive many import .nt amendments befoieit can go into succc.-f'.d operation; tut still, where has the Comptroller obtained the au th'.rity to alter, or. if he is pieced to th nk so, amend the .aw at his own sovereign pleasure. Congress hiving specially re-erved that ri - lit to it-e!l alone? this city and ot of it.. h,t there U something lor themtocon-iderandtodoinrH.t.ontoihissub jret It the scheme i a go.ni one i it-elf. let it ! bemadeasneolv r, feet as possible. 1, amend-1 mints are retpoie-l let those who. from their ,a. ! Htion and experience. ,n,v be su;.p.,ed to underst.nd the subjVt. ,vm,t them out an t ende. vor to j have them adopted. A tlie liwnow stands, Ii ruifiinv i , l'iril, lF nil fill V IM "I iflllfa do not hesitate to sav that it hold out tl0uf!i-i cient inducements for our Stale institutions to j organize under it The stockholders had mach . . . : ItSiflavr III t lllilltmAllf ll.l'lt.f fl.A uaB..aii.frt iia.i. in it.iii iiv. nit r -1 a 1 1 1 n 1 l im !.e,r stock e.ch lor h.m-el.) , Lmted Sute t.o i ls. an i hold them in their own h .s-esion, thin to join in any association under the law a it liow stands, with any en-et tation of realizing a l-re income from the investment. In the lormer j eise, they will be sure of a cettain income, if the 1 Government hes not fail to piy the intei-st; inj the litter, they cannot, according to my best j judgment, hope to receive more I think they j will receive less, and that bv no means sure -NQftRI-.. The London correstondeiit of the Iielf ist (Ire land; News Letter sit: A tradesman in riccadillv 111s male an as- i toundiiig discovery As a benelac tor of man j kind, the result of hi researches entities hi rn to j tike rmk with Copernicus, Galileo, Hun er. i .. - ,.... the t..iilo-..pher wli have surroundml ticr ew!on. v itt, Stepliensoii, üitn. or miv or all n itre wi'h a hunbnsof plrj . I htriitmuislied person In met the wants of the He h a discovered a crinoline which wnl not tret into v I centric or unbecoming angle whenla.lin go into innnil.usses or (ress tlirou.h crowds. The article in question is called the 'Oudiiia or wave-! jur n, and the inventor thus describe iu wonderful does awav with the unightlv results of the ordinary hoops; and s- perfect are the wave like band lhat a lady may ascend a sttei stair, lean agiinst a table, throw here!f into an arm chair, pus to her tall at the opera, or occupy a fourth set in a carriage, without inronvetiiei.ee to erself or others, or proioking the rude rem uks ot observers, besides removing or modifying in an important degree all those peculiarities tending to destroy the mode-y of Loglish women; and. lat!v, it ailow the dres to fill into graceful folds. To be able to modify in a pecutar degre all these tculiar tendencies to destroy the mod esty of English women i itself a mtgnificeot ach'-everneni, fir which ibe inventor deserves a statue in Trafalgar Square and a xnouumeut in Sv)ho Baztar , La Gaji M wiamr L G ange, the Span ish cantatrice, recently hd b 4X) bouquets, and 100 dove and canary birds thrown to her during two Performance.
The Lafayette Courier says in reference t encouraging volunteering: Col Miller has railed a special meeting of the Hoard of County Commissionrrs, to convrne on Wednesday of this week, to rorider a proposä tion submitted by the Central Committee, ubstantially as follow?: To pay an extra bounty of $5fl to each recruit necessary to fill the quota of the county, arul ali to appropriate $10 per mouth to the fsmilv of each volunteer.
TbeSvfwd of Indiana. O S was inreariort t Blootuingiou last week. The deliberations of tlie äf nod wh(ch wa4 compPej of r0me cf the .,,.. rl,erl J,T,I'V Tf the Wp1' wer" :,er.otr,J exc,u" J .v.,, t,v.. . Jaa Dtuvrar. The Clark County Democrat says: "Our jail was oened on Thursday last, how and bv whom no one knows, and three ! prisoners, Caldwlli, Calloway and Stekrit, j tcsik their leave. T-o others, Willst and WA- . Tlt dp"nd going. H ' The CoxEsato!f or Relbxx Stout. The Delphi Times thus comments upon the con f es on of Rixbkx Stoit, who was a resident of Cirroll: In obedience to an order from Gen. Burns-de. Il-ubeti Sw.ut was hol on the 23d inst , tor the ' ammg 01 001. uuniuan. 1 ue jouruai puoiifiies ; long article iu this week's issue, purpciting to ; be a confession made by Stout, while awaiting ; bis eicitioii. We don't believe Stout ever nnüe ! ttriy uvh confession Ifhedid, ati was inducctl to desert by members oi tbe Knights of the Go'den Citcle, he omitted one very important oiut m his confession, which to a sensible man, ; Condemns the whole lie should by all means have exposed to the country the leader of the order aud the locality in which the "treasonable meetings weie held. No! the tacts are, tbe whole ub-iauce of ihe "confession" is a base and wicked lie with the exception of thit portion which rel tie to the killing of Huffman, and thai was gathered from the testimony taken before the court in which the case was tried writmuch similaritv iu the langtnge aud sentiment expre-ed in tlie confession and that formerly published in thee journals tint we are of opinion that Stout's conies-ion was written either in Lafayette or ludiatiapolis Stout, we ate intoi med, was an uneducate man and not pos.ered of more than an ordinary degree of intelligence. Now any one reading the "confession" in the Journal will at ot:ce sec that it is shaped and worded more like a political paper tlnn the confession ot a penitent man, knowing tbil his days were numbered. Thete ia nothing, now a days, too low and con tempt ible tor Aholilion politicians to be guilty of doin They wiil 1 el 1 nn unmitigated lie. 'and tue the devil himself and sweir to it. They will commit nud at the ballot Ikix, and swear it is a military necessity whieh Compels them to do so. Thev will denounce their neighbors as traitors and enemies to our soldiers, and come ami lieg those traitor for sanitary stores, (aud they always get them.) and turn right aiound to the soldiers mid tell them that they are indebted to the -'Union men" for luxuries fcnlthem, when nt least one half of iho.-c luxuries are given by "copperhead " Some of their merchants won't support a "coppeiheol" Di-m cratic paper, but will nre "traitors." "coppeineads" and "butternuts" to buy of their goods, and alter receiving their money, turn round without the least hesitation, s.y they :trc "d d rnppet heads." and that "all such men ought to be hung." This is abolition consistency und honesty. Ai.L. ttOtlTSOF I H Af;lCAIIIS. A Good Naml A new tenor is engaged to app-ar in Puiladtlphia, with the promising name ot II. Her. ScLrniR A sulphur field of sixty acres, with a Oeposit of from on to three feet in thickness. Ina been discovered in Nevada Territory. That field must be near . A Qciar. A dry goods clerk, of a medical turn of mind, wishes to ktiow if young ladies with a mini for "shopping," bur no puticular pie diiectiou for buving. may not pioperly be considered co u titer irri ta n t ? At a banquet to the English nnd French admit al ntid ladies iu New York a few days since, one feature of the entertainment wa the bills ol f'aie, which wre little silken tin:, English, French and American, made double and attactted to litde mihogany starTY Th bill was piiuted in carmine ou the inside surface. Nkw IIami-suiek AMD TH k Draft New Hampshire is iu a had state. The Governor de mind Irom the Administration live regiment Irom abroad, to enforce the draft. The Sccreta r ti War reluses to gram t he request, ami the Governor refuses to proceed without tbem What an united and happy peoole we are getting to bt! Thk Swabms raojt Massachcsktts It h stated in tlie Nation il Intelligencer that the w h de number of soldiers obi lim-d under Ihe late dr ift iu Ma-s n hu-etts was 1 .030. all of whom were sent to swell the Army of the Tutorinc. Whit an enormous swell the swarms fiom Mas eachn-etts must h ive produced 1 S ime young men talk about luck. Good luck U to yet up at six o'clock in the morning; good luck, it you hat e only a shilling a week, is bi live usti eleven pence and save a penny; good luck is to fulfill the coram indments, and to ;o un'o other people as we wish them lo d unto us. To get on in the world tiny must avoid temptations, and li tve faith in God. A Hi-att Ji'dgmkxt A judgment h is been reitdeied in ! P.-tii. l Court ol San Joseconntv, j C lilornn, ag in.-t Daniel C Vance and K. N. j M. Culh.t e, for the immense sum of $l6'i,blMJ. l It ill 'I K . - k 1 . fir- ' ' 7 .! mi . 7 10 T. V"-' '! $I,3WI P? J ""'.T' J hl ! M . rr T'1 P"""1 " th V" n lnl 'nlZ " fl. r' VluS' IVT ff "T , l'' , "''T l4V' h;1;,1,;'';! Jmeni stand -I MARRIED. It.'-'J-l v K. J Ua ' 1 RYAN 1)11.1. tntt i.ritv V.-.. , l -r 4. K L D I 1 n r . r. a. ,,, T. r,.,a in,.,., of .his citj. . . . j Ä1Y1 U STrVTENTS , Ul I HMViHA I V II VI, 3,. S AGR MANAGER Mi. W. Et. RILET. Wednesday Evening, Nov. 4, 1863. . 1" ronsequence of tbe non-arrival ot j ""VI" "!VT "xV" j V-F Als X OVETUKF. .ORCHESTRA. tlroun nid Smiths. sCAt.K t)F rni' Es. ci, aM Parquefe . i.irn intkman ro rvnt-. "S Oiai. 23 Ont. 2 n a. Ml C.lta. ; V.-U a l-'jtitul La!y i AU Kssrrel St i Priv.tr Bov. ... . 14 t "PR-.v o:nc o:-n ron 10 o'chnrk A. M. till i il. JTpsjttJ een e-l Two tVaya la advanr. r?rors opn at 7 clk, Cnriaio r rf-ss at 7' preefseiy. II 0IC II A 1.1. 0 GREAT RAVEL TROUPE. FIVE NIGHTS ONLY. Twttlny. UV'r'y. Tkur$fff, Frld mmd S'ltnrtitf Err.imjn and Wrdnetdmy mmd Saturday .i?rraoo. Xt nembfr 3i, 4A. Stk, Ctk end Itk. MRS. JANE EMQI.ISH:, With berentirr Great French Company, will appear tram L. A V It A K K K X C New Tork, and Tromont Thoatro, Doston, THOVI'E ST. DE XX IS. Tlie only- ('iupHWr r cite klnsl In Itoe i tri-l. . TVmrs open t ?. rrfruancea cotaaincet at I n'rhxk. I 0JFK CTTHXK MILL. cl-sJ.
COUNTY
r5.:s .F'oaHL isgs
JCottca I hereby jiren that I an now ready ta rwN t- ar-eral Tvxom or looa for Marlon County.
" v-j-Tie Uw wjnY- tt t te ahaH b ra1i In bankrtt'-'-rtT orariir4 uiler tbe bankiug law. f ibis The Taxes for the Yenr Towyjnips. Centre T-lp, innate tbe citv ot ludiaD-rni. per tl. Crtitr T.wn-t ip, P.41, insitle tha tit f limpoV cmtide " po! 44 " Fra' klin " r-r flOt - P 1 Terry pr IK ftV Pike - pertlU).... " i'.ll W-fchington" nr tlw Poll Warne " r-rtbto P. It Warren pr 11W . Lawrence prr tltX) l'-.ll Drratur " per tl"0 Poll lntiftn-r..tl,rVtob-r ta. -t9 ttwAwSar MEDICAL. How to Keep in Gocd Health, AKT What is the Cause of Disease. r1HK PRIMARY CAUK OF P.VKKY IMSKASK THAY 1 fl'yh Ik hrir t'ts fmpurit rf th blood. Tlie bl-d beenn lmjur fP'tn many causes. Impure air or chanire of wetlj-r, un-bolrja-me I.wmI nt expure ar amn tlie principal cu es f impurity of lh blow1. 'i be ijmptmns are wM.f ness, htla he. eofiie4 ihn bis. eyes 1ull and heav , droirsinss. mtttip-tiM of tbe wU, brdt-Kie in ihr muth, fuut tongue. II vr crpla.n', pins in the hack and lg. los of appetite, fleep es nlshtH, colic, cramp. iKHia:i4tii(htrieKsi.f the chest.heart. burn. frn a d rbt-uoiati in, puking and par.iiic, chill and fevers trior r less accmpaninr thrse. and a lonn train 6f troiiblesome an 1 danperous ff-'ctions, a 1 r.f which mat te prevrnlea ant curvd hr tk'ii a frw d-r of lir. STRICK LVNIi'a VMil-TAKLK lUKtYINO AN'TI FillJOtTS PIUX They will purify tbe blcxid and put tbe itnmacb. h weis and liver in a teal Lv cotvfition. They are i articula'ly sutati- for chronic and dtvoiii deas. Krery family and every sold er should lep a mpplv f these Pi'N, a manyfeasr are obviated by their use. They are a mHd and sfe medi tn, and can be taken at any titne wittumt dsnjeer of takini; cold. Sold by ail Dniirjriit or et)t to any p.rt on recHst of 25 rents and a stamped envelop, addressed Ir. STRICKLAND, 6 Ka-t Fourth etreet, Cincinnati, Ohio. C0ÜÖH NO MORE. Try Strick I a aid's Mellifluous Co u pit Hal mi m, Thiii U the bet and rheape.t reined v for Cvuzhs, Colds, Hoarseness, AiMltma, Wi.oor.in Coiuh and Consumption. Everytody wbobaauied this excellent lUIsam entbuhiaMicaily recommend it. Sire. Mitchell, r.rr street, Ctncinnati. says she h been a tearful sufferer with cough for rnnny years, so bad a riot to Is? able tn walk up stairs. She look one bottle of ihia Kalsatn, and ha b-n better ever since, and ailrfses ell wbo bve Coughs Colds ed Athma to try tbis valuable Cah nNm. Fifty cents per bottle. Sold by all IVujtzUu, and ro-nutacurd at 6 Kat Fourth streel, Cincinnati. oc t. d.wly P E ! E5 A Sure Cure. A Certain Remedy. rTS Vr"RTBODY IS BKITG CURKD OFTIIIS DISTRF.SSJ 1NG dfxa.se by tbe Use of OR. STRICKLAND'S PILE REMEDY. Read what a sufferer says: Mr. J. P. Hatrd,lC9 econd street. Cincinnati, siv be ha been a drradtul suffer r wiih lile f..r a louir time. He bad tried nearly everything, int could obtain no relief. He .se atmut one f..urrh . f a pt ot In. Mr ckland's Pile Liniment, and it made a complete cure, lie advises all wbo are suffering o try th rented . told by all drusjrst. FIFIT CKNTS PER POT. tanuractured al ro. 6 East Fourth street, Cincinnati Ask for STRICKLAND'S PILE REMEDY. Sent o any part of the State, on receipt of tl. octt-dAwly DRY COODS. CG w O M PI w CQ o o M o I"! 4 0) 0 0 H W W p; b ts 0 b 0 H I b ffl H to M Hi l Ü 4M H H CQ o O CO o W 7' . r. m 0 0 0 a ö n co Pm o CO m Eh eZs o CQ in ZD o o CO i 0 CQ 5 SH PQ CO O O W MILLINERS. MISS J. DOYLE f TASRr.VIYF.D HFRPtRIS MHX5ERT 11STAR I 1 USIIMKr ta 9rt.S5n lilino,. a,re.t 1 door 'o tbe Oriental House. She baa Ju.t relumed from tbe Lal rit a ruIt and coxipkte a-saortmeDt of the mot fahionable style of Honnef. Itibbous, French Flowers rimnr. Jlrlclal Wrraths And all fo.-l nna ly fond in a Brt claw Horj.e Havin bro-Jrht from tbe f. aaeprletce.t B'aarber aa4 erea-er. Mm DovUj will p,- pnteuUr entloa to all order or cai la tbathue. Mial. retarn. ber tba for pt fa von An-J solicit-1 a eorvliuuance of Ike ante
et? -4 ly
TAXES.
or wHer coin, or ! il". uoUs tf s4rent specia paytaj Mate, er tu Trtvrj ye. ... a, 1803 nrc a follows, viz: 4 c a c " & 1 5 ! i i c -a M 4 ft 39 ' r r i SP A 1 I c A. I 6 - Z i : 1 : fa H m m ! v OT T3 T5 ?0 19 50 SO It fai 10 51 10 tn 10 50 10 5! 10 5 10 50 10 50
10 t t I 1 ! .. J 1 . 1 .. 1 2 I 1 .!! -w 1 " 0 30 j I .. , 1 15 .. i t5 JS ! .. 1 5 1 J to ' i ; a I - i IS r . ' v .. ! i .. ' .. f t5 ' .. 1 75 10 t t ' 1 5 1 3 ' IS M 10 j t0 '..!! .. 15 3 .. S3 ....; .. 1 50 10 M i 3 : 15 7 .. 2s ;.-;..!..: l to 10 to .. j S 5 ' 15 5 .. 15 .... j .. ' .. 1 M 10 tti ....It, 15 77 .. tS i j .. 1 60 10 to ! 1 J 3 ! 15 n .. .5 .. .. 15 .. 1-5 io to i s ft ! io is st .. .5 t . ..I .. .. I 60
75 I t0 i 73 SU 75 iti 75 20 75 y 75 GEORGE F. LIEYER, TRFASURFR OF MAKIOS CWSTV, FURS. hi nr. i iiim & rn. West Washington Street, ARF. RFCKIV1X0 BT FXPRFS HAII.Y ACCrJMOXi to their already lary and eitrn-i-e atsortaient nt FURS, American Sable, The cheapest and tars-e-t kiurk lathe State, com prla'fnit i: CajK-. FURS, French Sable J A f i:l line, and selected with touch care for tbU mar FÜRS, Water ülink, Something new and baidoic. FURS, Imitation of Mink Very fine, and would deceivajb beat Judjrea. FURS, Siberian Squirrel, The cheapest a lady can buy. FURS, White Coney, For Misaet and Children, in freat variety and very low pricee. FURS, Muffs', In all grades and qualities. Furs, Cuffs; All trades. Call and examlnr our stuck before par. chatting elsewhere. HUME, LORD & CO. Silk Velvet Cloaks. Nw stjloa, and very ba-staoruo. Cloth Cloaks. from tbe best bouses In tbe cotitry,n4 n arnnte, French Bever Cloaks. New and haadsoate des'gn. CHEAP CLOTH CLOAKS, Iu areat variety and very cheap. Missi s' and Chlldn n's Cloaks. CIHCULAH CLOAKS. Newdesia-n of In and Square. AH th latest and mo.t sr?rored style, received wrekty direct rrotn Kiew Tors hy Kxpresa. fiarmeut mad to order la any style, at hört notice, at tb ' ' TJRAJDB PXfCE. SHAWLS. ccwlUUgS T'4 b'D,10,ne Stock of nd gj-sre. Trench ftqunre aliaujs, Ktrlprd PuMy Mlinvlt llroclir Itordrrrd xhawli, TlilbetMiaivI, TrnvrllnffM,nHl for Ladle. Sc Cents. sTi,rs and children' shaicls. tLfSTiSr-" PTl'rU'Go4 V,u. -"J q-ickSale.,U HUME, LORD & CO., HOTELS. PLANTERS' HOTEL, ACTON YOUNG, Proprietor. (FOKMKULT OF SAHIVIU E, TKSÜEJSEE.) Ü. P. KKSUALL. Clerk, Late of len, tod. Sixth St., between Main and Market.' T a . rn-. 4 1 t -wr- ' 1KRSOX WI6HI.NU TO OJ TO SfASHI'ILLK OB ouihw,Ujid it to tbeir Interest to stopatthia CROCERiHS. Nev York Grocery, xo. n east wAfmyoTos ST.,) ttmtof c. e. ,n nso, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER l.a family CrROCER3, Fine Teas, Hour, ic., sic, Cab f-r Wbeat atid olberprodTie. octlS dly GROCERS. w. a. r-coar a. r. iiu NEW FIR 2C. A liKOS la IV. r.rmrv Trt. Urn m r..t .. iuaton street, la tbe lander Block. t-dUn.u
j-um raii.at m siiqiUMIi
