Daily State Sentinel, Volume 14, Number 4559, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 June 1865 — Page 2

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4 I 1' V. v w - . " Friday morning, junk's. tCii: iki:iii:t .t m:;ik M r- ? riiACii:. be editor of the Ciccicnxti Comrsertial, w.ins from Wnbicjton. thus. decea tie poi ti of rreideat Joh on gro üufJrase : r rsfxe beet acquainted with tbe view of the Vftsidect will attach most importance to the lolJe".lnß cliuie of the Amnesty i'roclaaiatioa jut ii-ed: ' rrofi.ifJ. Tnat tpeciil apr-'icatiori may be is vie to the President for pardon by icy per-oa be-tcgicg to tLe excepted claase; and auch clÄency will be l.bcrallj extended a. mav bo I ccaViteat with the fact of the cm and dig of of tbe United State." "here U to doubt that "cleaeccy will be lifrally extended," and '-justice tempered with txf'tj' a the important 'juration ol Lejro eufi'rage join insurgent State, I am aourtd the I'reidict bis been tnxiou!? deliberative, and his m!e up hi mirjd. His conclusion i, that be V-'ft not in$i$t upn firing the freedmen the rieht to'',tt, tithe inJ;peoaable condition of recontaction, and the restoration to the Union, of th State that bare euaei in the rcte!livn, mH "a Republican form ot Government." '4 proclamation "to carry'out and enforce th;oblitioc of the Unite States to tbe peo-pl-fcjf North Carolina," i the programme of ren contraction. Tbat proclamation recognize aa s di Satisfied for elections all who were not tulifiej "2 Aaprencnbcd by the Constitution and Liwa of Sie State of North Carolina, in force im me dU.elj before the ÜOth dj of Maj, A. I). lfcCI, th J date of the ao called ordinance of seceaXhat excludes the neproc from the poila iu th Selection of members ot the Contention which - . It be tilled. And tbe proclamation poa on 9 And the said Convention, when convened, or 5ie Legislature that mit be hereafter aniem blÄ, will preiKrribe tbe qualification of electors, n tbe eligibility of persons to hold oflice under thCConstitution au I Laws of the Sttte, a yoxrtr thr Mop le of the several Statt s composing ike Vtdtrti in ion hate rightfully extrcised from the oriyis'of the (torrrnmrnt to the prestnt time." ihis ground the President m determined to hol at all hszird. That it will be promptly ani bitterly disputed by the "radical" wing of th-Admimtrattsn prty, ia nut a doubtful pro portion. 1 here 14 no doubt but the President will u tintai'Vthe fiewa he exprenod in bis Amnesty and N'vth Carolin i reclamations in regard to git - iothe freedmen the right to vote, and he will be',"ppoed bt tho radicals bitterly upon that Us'.e. Alreidy hate th Abolitionun o( B'Wton de'unrl the action of the President iu the Nrjj Carolina cva m a .nurrender on hi.- part. an-i.they hare declared that they will not he sttiei until all men are placed on terms of political eq'-lity. This question will be one ot the di tidj'S li'1 in coming political cauvtse.rit" elections. The President hai made the iiiiM. Cbnrlei Rumntri Incendlarr Letter -Uhat It Tiionght of It ut Home. From an Artie 1 In tbe BMton Courirr. J V e all know that Charles bumncr is a thiloaoplir and a state-jman; he is c.lrn and deliberate in Jgment, wi.'c in counsel, tfiicicnt in action, prtrtjaod in argumtnt, polished in h"w rhetoric. aa man of ?uch preternatural prescience that , hean Ji far ahead of his age. That id to s ty, his 5' adrirera claim thia for hiin. We bare heard hin-'aaf la Fancuil 11x11 , tint ' ait wlnt you plele, the grandest figure of the time u the ner)." Here U a little of hi- late counsel to the net je of the South, in replies to iiwiuirieit itent to m by them a to the course they should take in rwcorutructiou. llennys; hate no hrtUa-tioi-t in replying Vuit you must insist on all the riyHs and privileges rf a eitiitn. They are yours anu vkorrrr unurrt akts to rob yon of them is a ust'prr and an impostrr." Now President Jota flon roust read Ids doom here. If be conclu'JSes not to let the negro tote forthwith, be is a "forper and an importer." Charles h siid It, r d no mortal power, of course, can deny tbe tftljifulneji of the assertion. 'W we will nj 9uuietbin: Charles Sumner, la tf jnf this to the negroes of the Soutii, at lhisvQncture, has made a reat mistake. He attends, thereby, to forestall the action of the Oornmeut. He teaches the negro that the I'redent of the United Stuten, if he denies the rigl of immediate ?uflrage, is " usurper and an .iipoter." 2io matter what causes, nor bow ron? -ctent they may be, the President may have for Relaying this riht at pre-ent, if he does debit V. he i held out to the negroes of tbe South as tyrant, as a fit companion for JetTersoi Dai'. The.e word, coming as they do from tbe acknowledged Senatorial champion of the negt, tend to sedition among them if their f ull demands are not conceded, lly this counsel, they will;look for immediate enfranchiemcut, they will flamor for it, (the more ambitious among tbetr, ibejr will be le-a auboiutslTe to tbe de mtnj.s of labor to supply the ncce-sanes of life, they:'wi!l look upon tagabondage as the only true ,pe of independence, and by thr demands will iidly comphcate the mo-t ditlicujt problem of reconstruction. Tigere is co n."e of applying epithets to Mr. Sun' tier that he is no ntntesmau is well Mttled in t"e miod of thinking Americans. He has only followed, while he Ins appeared to lead the onwd march of certiiu principles or political econ omy aud morals, which are destined in this cout-rt to supremacy. His manner of couduct iog C'4 bare in the coullict has always been iu Cara.i ttory, never conciliatory. Kven in urging the Adoption of measures whose adoption was ineti:able by the course of eveuts he has brought obloi'ny upon those measure by hi failure to ' temrr hi zeal witbin the liroiu of common ense. The letter, at this time, only illustrates hi alter want ot wisdom i: public alTtirs. lut it so unds the kev note of hs party, l'reident Johfiou will make a break with that patty, by 1 the coarse he tnke npon that question. It he fails to accept the counsel of ilr. Sunnier, they will abandon him, and call hi iu an "impostor and i.surper;" if he accepts that counsel, they will sjsttin him. and measure tbe loyalty of all tuea bv their feiltv to negro suffrage. There is a moral in the declaration of ilr. Si mmr, as given in the foregoing article, which haa a forcible applicability at the' present time. The Iiepublican pre.-s hart) attempted to place cpoa the Democratic party the responsibility of the assascination of Mr. Lincoln, for the reS(.a tUat tbe Opposition prea charged upon him the exercise of artitrary and despotic jwwer. This teaching, they asacrt. iufiamed the mlndi of the ignorant and ptnadiccd, and indneed the comnuasloa of that fearful crime. What will this class of papers ay in reference to the couni ilr. SiM.ita gave to the negroes lately in response to certain en tries made to him, iu which he told them that they raui insist cn all the rbls and ptitilege.s cf a citiica, and whoewr undertook to rob thetn of them " t usurper aid an imrostrr." Mark the langn;ge. The peculiar friend" of Mr. Simmtu unterer vedly declare that the PrtVi dect fn his North Carolina proclamation d es deprive the r.egroe. or freedmen. juntas you riy term thtm. of their rights as ciiirens, hesce.he is sur-ject to the sweepir.g denunciation of Mr. Si mu as Uiug -an u-urper and aa im pui " I rot a declaration of thi kitd. cooiicg fr-'Tn a man occupvipg the high poeitivij ot Sen at-, "r Si mm, calculate! to incite the a.sstvioatioof Le iuuetionary whom he tells the "opf ree 1 cli.." as he de!cr,ite tl.em. is robber. W 4.aurfr, oJ u inpjter J Could more icSam-natory language be ued toinvirc deeds of VtiMe I Atd il any iojury boU befU the Preid;-Lt at the luid of any cf this "up; reused das,'; would Dot Mr. SfSfxia ami hii codj ators . accept ng the logic of the Republican pre, be I re;oi ;6)e for the crime ? ZW The President has inaugurated the jclict ofgiv.ig ldlers clerkship, by aelecting a r ritate if: aa Ohio regiment for deputy ia hi own oCice.

One of Tlr. I.lncrln l ittle torle. V It. CaartxTia. T.- t the artist, contributes cother article to the Iadefecdert of this week, in continuation of his reminiscences of Mr. Lii on, from hieb we extract the following: 1 may sat with propriety, and I feel that it i due t Mr. Lincoln's memory, to atate that during the entire period of my stay in Wahir.gton, after witacaic hi iatercourte with almot all cla?es of people, indoiicg O jvercor, Senators, Mem bers ol Contres, officers of the army, and familiar friends. I cannot recollect to have ever

beard him relate a circumstance t any one of them all that would have been out of place uttered in a ladies' drawing room. I am aware thai a ddTerent impression pievaili.foundod.it miy b ia pome instances upon facts, bet where there is one fact of the kiul, I am persuaded there are forty falsehoods, at leaat. Albany rate. what I have atted ia roluotary testimony, from a stand point, I submit, entitled to respectful const ieratioa. Among his stories freatest in mied, one which he related to me bortly after its occurrence, belongs to tbe hiatcry of tbe famous interview on board the Kiver Queen at Hampton Uoads, be tween himself and Secretary Seward and the rebel Teace Commisaloners. It was reported at the time that the President told a " little atory " on that occasion, and the inquiry went round the newspapers, Wbat was It V Being in Washington a few days mbsequent to tbe interview with the Commissioners (my previous so journ there having terminated about the 1st of last Augutt I asked Mr. Lincoln one day "if it was truo that be told Stephens, Hunter and Campbell a atory V " Why tea," he replied, manifesting seme surptiie, " but kaa it letked out ? I tu in bopes nothing would be said about it, lest some oter sensitive people should Imagine there was a degree of levity in the intercourse between us." He then went on to relate the circumstance which called it out. You see," aid he, " we had reached and were di.uaing tbe slavery que-tioD. Mr. Stephens said, ubstantially , that the slave, always accustomed to an overseer, and tu work upon compulsion, auddeclv freed, aa ther would be if the South fchould consent to pace cu the biiis of the 1 Emancipation Proclamation,' would precipitate not only them-elves bot the entire Soathern society into irremediable ruin. No work would be done, nothing would be cultivated, and both blatki and white would starve!" Said tbe President, " I waited for Seward to answer that argument, but as he was silent, I at length said: Mr. Stephens, you ought to know a great Je il better about this matter than I, for you have always iired under the slavesys tern. J can only say iu reply to tour statement of the cae, that it reminds me of a man out in Illinois, by the name of Case, who undertook, a few yeirs ago, to raise a large herd of hogs.' It was a great trouble to feed them, and how to get around this was a puzzle to him. At length he hit on the plan of planting an immense field of potatoes, and, when they were sufficiently grown, he turned the whole herd into the field, and let them have lull awing, thus saving not only the labor of feeding the hogs, but alno that of Gigging tbe potatoes! Unarmed witb bis ea gacitj, he stood one day leaning against the lnco counting hia hogs, when a neighbor came alon' Well, well," said he, "Mr. Case, this is all rcry fir.e. Yoor hogs are doing very well juet now, but vou know out here Iu Illinois tbe frost corner early, and the ground freezes a foot deep. Then what are they going to do?" This was a view of the mutter Mr. Case bad not taken into account. I5utchering time for hoga was way ofT in December or January! He scratched his head, and at length stammered, Well, it mfy come pretty hard on their enouta, bat I don't see but that it will be "root hog or die!" He did not tell roe that either of : the "Commissioners" mtde ant reply to this way of "putting things." I is very evident that there was littlo moro argument necessary on one side of the question at least. In this connection we will state another circumtance that occutred at the Hampton Koads Conference, which exhibited the greatjanxieit of Mr. Lixcoln to restore the Union by peaceful agencies and in that harmony which characterLed the better days of the Republic. During the interview Mr. Ui ntir, addressing Mr. Lincolx, remarked: Mr. President then hesitating a moment he couliuued, I will call you euch, and I hope this conference may so result that all the Southern people may toon address you bj that title, we are willing to lay down our arms and return to our aliegiauce to the old Gor ernment, upon the single condition that we shall be guaranteed tbe rights of citizenship. The countenance of Mr. Lincoln brightened at this proposal, and slapping Mr. Huntir's knee most vigorously with his broad hand, he said empha tically, "Huxtf.r, I will doit."' Mr. Srwaan then tpoke and informed the President that it was out of bis power to mine euch an arrange ment. He called the attention of the President to the Confiscation and other laws of the last Congress, whieh would prevent a reconciliation upon the term proposed by Mr. Htnter. The President, exhibiting a great depression of epirit. replied that they had escaped his memory, and he eeemed to feel sad that peace, which wai almost within reach, cculd not be consummated npon the conditions that he was willing to grant. If the terms of peace and reconciliation had been left discretionary with the President it would bate been accomplished at the Hampton Koads interview, with slavery abolished and a complete reconciliation of the rebellious States. Judge fartter. J. W. Fouskt, Ej(;.,iu h s "occasional" letter to the Philadelphia Press, thus speaks of Judge D. K. Caetieii, before whom J epk Datis wlil be tried for treason: The Chief Justice of the Superior Court is the Hon. David K. Cartter. a Dative of New York, and represented one of the Ohio Congres sional Districts frrmllO to 1153. He has occu pied several positions in bis new State amonc others that ot President Judge of a populous and intelligent district. 11 w also represented our country at t!e South American Court of Bolivia as Resident Minister. He tes'gned and returned to Ohio about thrte years ago. After Congress had reorganized the courts of this district, and legislated out the old judges, President Lincoln, anxious to secure men of ripe experience, capacity, and unchallenged loyalty, appointed Judge Cartter as the head of the new Court, and associated ith him Hon. Abraham Olin. of New York; Hon Ucorge F. Fi-ber, of Delaware, and Mr. Wiley, ot Georgetown. It is before this Court, and probably before Judire Cartter alone, that the great criminal will be tried. It is proposed in certain quarters that Chief Justice Chase should pre.-iJe, but I do not think the idea will be carried out. Those who know Justice C. will rejoice that to this intrepid, unselfish, and thorough state- man, a duty so important has been con b Jed. Originally a member of the Democratic party, from which, like thousands of others, he cut loose the moment he dis covered the pro slavery plans of the leadeis, David K. Cartter is, ia ihe truest sense of the word, qualified by impulse, principle, experience and a knowledge ot men and the history ot his csuntry, to see that justice is not cheated of it dues, and that the greatest conspirator of modern t-mes shall Lot escape the fate he so coolly courted . and so recklessly and insolently defied The Cincinnati Commercial pub'.Uhes in fall the report of tlener il Siiikmav. or rather his testimony before tLe Crnmi tiee on the Conduct of' the War, a-i l h:s correspondence with Secretary Sr.ro und General Grant. It occupies nearly i.;ue columns in that pi; er, but it H good reading throughout. General niuka wntes tigcruulT as Le ngl.ts, ad Le ha pre - serted a vindication, plain. trighto;ward and manly, which ill not tail to couviuce hi coua- ! trjmea of bli integrity, and h:. great ability in both civil and military atftir. t3JIteport were In circulation in Vhicgion on Wednedt of the arrftal of Jm Davis at the Araeual, tt at lett the Navv Yard. The exact facts could not' be acerta!neJ, but if he has rot already been ukra there he doubtless wi!l be within a bhort time. - - W B CUT The reel Gen. Love .tritt has received -?ru..r,ou from President Jounsox to tiiil Washington ou private business. He will be here iu a few da.

Thr Ainiteatf Proclamation Opialone of the Ire. i Frca tie Clnclcat! Connerd1, 'llo.) j j Doubtless this Proclamation will disappoint the expectations of many who ccuaseled leniency and a more coeprehensire acce.'tt. Bat it must be remembered that the Pre! iert does cot siy this pardon hal! r ot be extend-! to the persons excepted from the benefit of a general amnesty. In excluding them from its provision. he means to have it uader.! that their cues, dcmacl special investigation, and thit they hall not be allowed to resume II their rights of proferty and citizenhip, without first atjwpring, in person, for tbeir conduct, and showing cause why the Kxecutive clemency should beexercisei in their behalf. We unJerstand it to be thepurpoe of the President to exercise Ihe pardoning power intested in him, liberally, almost generally, but onlv upon pecisl application, and with a view to promote the be-t interests of the Government, fcure tbe peace, and vindicate the honor of the

united Mate. It, therefore, by no means follows, that exclusion from the general amnesty mean exclusion from all pardon. Ity mskir.g special caes of the classes of offenders named as excepted, the President re-erte tbe opportunity to discriminate against those who were the instigators of tbe rebellion without protocatioo, and thoe who were carried with the revolution, which they fet in motion from wicked and ambitious motives only. Frota the Chicago Tl-ne (Dftn.)i We think tbe general sentiment of tbe country would have sustained the Pi evident had he concluded to puni?h merely individuals iastetd of classes. To this it must come at last. Tbe provision in the Proclamation concerning srecial application by persons of the exempted classes, promising euch liberal clemency as may be consistent with the facts of the case and the peace and dignity of the Gotcrnment, detoltes upon him the duty of examining those applications and discriminating between the individuals of those classes. All that is gained, therefore, is a special confession from such peraODS that they hire been guilty of treason, for no intelligent person doubts that the President will fulfill the spirit of the promise. His appointment of Gen. Thomas to the Department ol Virginia, of Oea. Sherman to that of the Mississippi, and of W. W. Holden as Military Goternor of North Carolina, are sufficient proofs that be wishes not only to make selections qualified for the respectite duties to which they are Resigned, but is desirous of consulting tLo fediugs of the Southern people in each appointment? It must be remembered that the apparently h trsh features of the Proclama tiou are entirely chanced by the laU provision. This in fact ia the Proclamation. Amnesty is extended without solicitation on their put to the clashes not excepted, who take the oth prescribed. It will bo extended to those who ask for it among the excludad clasps except whom? That Is the question. The answer of the President . "None whose punishment i not demanded bt the peace and dignity of the United States." Jeff Duvi in Irons Opinion of the i'rett. lFrum tie X. Y. Commercial AJvt-itUer, (Rt-p.)l We discredit the story altogether, as unworthy of the Government an 1 a blot upon our civil; tiou From the X. Y. UetslJ, (Ua4ksl.),( If true, the act is certainly without the sanction of the President, and will not be tolerated by him. There is no need of any such mode of securing the rebel chief. All accounts show that he cannot escape from the capement which has been prepared for hU confinement. No good and strong Government does an unnecessary act. This, if true, bad as Jeff Davis ia, would come under that head. J From tie 5. Y. Times, (Rep.) The story, in tbe shape in which it appears, is either an emanation from some rehelsympa thizcr, intended to create a feeling of commiseration for Davis, or it has been concocted to supply the lack of truthful intelligence on the subject of that individual's incarceration. FrMU the Sew York Evening iwt, (Republican.) Of course the story s a lie the Utunting intention of vorne penny-a llncr who had got into a bad habit of depending upon bin imagination fer facts. The IJnitcd States gentlemen who hate charge of him are gentlemen, and incapable of brutality to f ards a helpless prisoner. Such conduct has been practiced by Davis and other rebel leaders, but not by United States officers. jFrwm the Nw Yok TYorM, (Democrat.) If Davis has been put in irons, it can only be justified a3 a needful precautions against his escape. Such a pretence would be false on its face. What is the strength of nc unarmed man against the garrison of the fort, eveu if the prisoner were not immured in a great cell? Cau he gnaw through heavy iron bars with his teeth? Can he dig through massive stone walls with his finger? What then are the iron, for? If tbe story is not the foolish fiction whieh we deem it they are meant for a humiliating indignity, and for nothing else. It would be the judgment of tbe civilized world, that such an exhibition of vindictive spite belittled the character of the Government. l'rcaeuta to Iresident An Incident In ta rrevtou Administration. The recent firm but courteous act of Pieident Johnson, ia declining tbe present of a valuable carriage and a pair of horse? from his admirers In New York, meets with hearty and universal admiration among the people. Tbe only persons who will not unhesitatingly ap prove the course of the President are those whose estimate of his political and moral honesty is so low as to lead them to seek for faver or contracts through tbe most debasing instrumentalities. In tbia connection, a cotemporary recall an incident of a similar nature which occurred during the administration of John Tyler. It seems that during the disgraceful scramble for office on the accession of Mr. Harrison to the Presidency, which resulted iu his death, one of the lucky inditiduals, who obtained a lucrative office in IJaltimore, thought it prudent, as he wished to re taiu his place, to "grease the p.lm"ofthe new dispenser of patronage. Accordingly, a 6plendid piano was purchased, regardless ol price, and, for great surprise, was surreptitiously conveyed into the Executive Mansion while the President was still in the arms of Morpheus. The President, naturally enough, on t-eeing the new ornameut in his private parlor, made inquiries as to how it came there. Ou learning the fact, he ordered the piano to be reboxed and shipped to the donor, and the text mail conveyed an official document, couched in the tailsmanic words, "Your services are no longer required." A Ileecher on Temperance. Frv. ni the Sracu-e Courier. We gee it stated that at a recent temperance meeting held iu Eimira, Ket. T. K. Beecher, well knowu as a preacher and a brother of Henry Ward, took position in favor of the u?e of ale and wines as a prophylactic for intemperance. He said that he had so taught from his pulpit, and that he should do it cain; that he advised Messrs. Uriggs i Bovier to rebuild their brewery in the interest of the temperance cause; that he had a barrel of good ale in his cellar; but there was scarcely a saloon in Elmira where a glass of good ale could be procured, as he had tried almost every one, and that if we formed a temperance organization on the baii of total abstinence we should act contrary to science, and so contrary to God, and should consequently fail. I'retbtrnt Jotinaon to Abolitit Tim. lury Comintttloni. It is said that President Johnsen has declared positively thai tbe Military Commission now in session, shall be the last under bis Administration. If this declaration is correct, Mr. Johnson is awakening to the fact that the people view with a jealous eye the assumption of power by military commissions, and that they are demanding a speedy return to the plain form of Government established by onr fathers. Ihe President in abolishing Military Commis-ioLS. and substituting triil by jury, in refusing, sjfr, to yield to the nre.-ure of the howling radicals upon the question of negro suffrage iu snubbing the centietnen who adtocate the new fangled doctrine of consolidation fives cheer ing evidence that be has not forgotten tbe record he made when acting lith the Democratic party. It may be amoDg the events of the future and who cau tell wbat tbe future his in store that the Den ocracy may yet be called upon to defend Andrew Johnson from tbe per.ee utiou of the same gang who hate been micocstrcing the motives and malignirjg the patriotism of William T. Sherman. Theaigna indicate clearly that Andrew Johnson will be u an attitude of bes tility to the ticwa and plans of Charles Sumner and bis associate, and they will commence in the next Congress a bitter warfare npon him if they do not succeed in moulding him to tbeir purposes Cleveland Plain Dealer.

AM. OUT? r PAIIAOIT.rm

The Philadclphians call the tew three ceut pieces "shid csie." Jpu has amt a aample of Laf eiae to Washington for inspection. There are tr.KK) schools in IlnSa; ten years ago there was not one Ball piayirts on f the 'meadows is u popu'ar Sunday amusement at Hirtford. Some ol the abeep at tbe Canandaigua show were valued at $3,000 each New Ycrk expects to have clean streets soon. She is to expend $o00.OKJ for that purpose Tbe salary of a New York Common Councilman Is $2,H). but his pickings " are illimitable. Hondreds of officers and soldiers of our armv are goinr into bu? ines in towns along the railroad raduting from Memphis. TLe Empress Eugenie is said to make a charming Regent. Her demeanor in council is quiet and dignified. A cow at Cmfield, Ohio, lately produced a glossy black calf covered with wool half an iuch length. The wod is growing finely; so is the calf. A committee of ladies is being formed in Paris, by Madame Labonlsye, to manufacture and export clothes for the "liberated slaves of the United states.' Renan, the French skeptic, thinks he has found works of art and record in Egypt which makes the human race much older than the Mosaic records represent. A movement ia on foot at Boston to form a State Veterans' Union, composed of all the returned soldiers who hate belonged to Maäschusetts regiments. So many thieves have come to St. Louis from other places that sixty extra policemen have been appointed and put on duty. A large pro portion are from Chicago, It ha3 been claimed that Mr. Lincoln was a Free Mason. But a letter from Mr. B. B. French, aa euiimut diguitary in the order, answers the question in the negative. The Boston Courier says: "A friend showed us this morning a handful of gold and silver coin which he has carried in his pocket ever sine? be 15-61. He thinks they will soon good again." It is gill that the engineer who drove the special train iu which the Emperor of Russia traveled from Cologne to Paris, is a Polish refugee. Wc wonder that the Czir reiched his des tinatioti gafelj. The Emperor Maximilian has voted himself a salary of two million dollars a year out of the Mexican treasury. For the ruler of a nation that has not been noted for its plethoric puree, this may be considered a good thing. An old grave was opined a few days lnct at tbe Isloof Snoala, otf thecoastof New Hampshire, and from the contents of a bottle in which was a striD of parchment, it was found to contain the body of one of the attendants of John Smith. who was the first dijcoTercr !of the teflon i-i 1G03. R ' A met hoi has been discovered in Helgium to obtain a photographic groundwotk for oil paintings. Fine c mm, or silk, such as is employed fcr small and delicate works, is used. Simply cover the surface with a- preparation of collodion and chloride of silver, and expose it and fix it in theordinary manner, jut a in the oase of paper. It U said that the only joke Gen Sherman ever perpetrated if we except the one in his lau letter to Hallcck was upon entering the capital of North Carolina. Turning to a regiment of veteran who were marching by the State House, he called out: "Don't vou think this is a good place to bing Rahiqh 'round the flag, boys?" William W. Holden, appointed by the President to be military Governor of North Carolina, is a native of that State. He has been for manv years editor of the U deigh Register, the old Democratic organ. He supported Douglas fur President in lbM, btttled against secession from the beginning of that movement, and 'during the war has preserved his integrity to the Union, amid much persecution. Prentice speaks in tbe list number of the Louisville Journal, of Mr. Stephens in terms of very high commendation. He has," eayg be at the close of bis sketch, " from the first done the Confederate cause a great deal more harm than good. We heard rebel leade-s say unreservedlr in Richmond, Ian December, when Jeff. Davis' health was very bad. that if he shonld Hi .1. sination would be resotted to as a means of pie venting Stephens from becoming President. And now, shall Stephens be hartdily dealt mith by the Federal authorities that hold bira captive?" Tho St. Louis Democrat gays clerta coloted soldiers were hung at Yicksburg on Friday. Their crime was this: Thev nie? together in camp near the railroad bridge, lour miles east of Vicksburg, MU.v, on the evening of Arril3d and then visited the plantation of J. R.Cook five miles from the bridge. Th wounded Mr. Cock, and ebct his wife so that he soon alter cied. Mr. Gladätoie, the chancellor of the exchequer of England, in his late financial report, calculates that the regular yearly allowance of malt liquor to each adult male in that country is six hundred quarts nearly two quarts a day. Two hundred millions of dollars a year are expended for what Mr. Gladstone terms the "national drink:" and he adds, with a sort of in. ing satisfaction, that there are no signs ot the taeie for it giving out. "Cakes and ale." it would seem, is the source from whih our English neighbors pay their national debt. President Johnson, in his proclamation for the reorganization of North Carolina, blocks the motement of the radical abolitionists to impose negro suffrage npon tho Southern States by Congressional action. He proclaims that "the Convention, (to amend tho Constitution,) or the Legislature that shall thereafter assemble, will prescribe the qualifications of electors and the eligibility of persons to hold office under the Constitution and laws a power the people of the several States composing the Federal Union hate rightfully exercised from the origin of the Government to the Dresent time." President .Thn. son' Constitutional Democracy is asserting itself, to the tery great discomfort o"l i:s enemies. Ma. Hax nam an, President of the Indiana Sanitary Commission, acknowledges the receipt from Tippecanoe county, betweetn February and March 26, lt'Gö, the total cum of $o,b'JS U4, as a contribution to that fund. Mr. II. says in his letter of acknowledgement: It so occurs, in the order of c rovidence. that Tippecanoe county was the last to which we were compellei t make a general appeal for our brave defen J. . Her response waa worthy tbe people of Ti;,ecanoe! I csn only say to you, and all your 'people, we most heartily thank you, and pray foi your individual happiues and prosperity. Significance e Pia National Flag In a late numbcrof the Lutheran and Missionary, edited by Dr Krauth, we find tiiis beautiful iiea: "Our couatry's faith has learned a new interpretation of her sULdard. Tbe tr kite typifies the purity ot purpose which belongs to her true ruler; the re J points to the crimson tide in which life flows forth a willing offering; the Hue reminds her ot a home in Heaven, to which the good are gathered. The stars in her banner tell of light tn darknes", and sbe shall leirn to range them in a new and beiutiful order, as the Constellation of the Cross." Tiiiel has been a good deal ti J about an inscription, scratched with a diamond ou a pane of glass in the McHenrt Houe, Meadville, Pennsylvania, to this effect: " Abraham Lincoln departed tbi life August 13, lsG4, by tbe effect o: poison. it ws attributed to liooth, who was in the oil region at the time. A few days ao, however, a genileiasn, stopping at the Mc Henry Houe, aedfecinj the glas?, nude a .utement, which, if true, clears up all mystery regarding it. You will remember that on tbe 13thorl4:hof August of last year, a report came over tbe wires of an attempt to poigon the President, and a report came to Meadville that the attempt had been successful. This gentleman states that on that day he and a fritcd occupied rvom No. and his friend. after hearing the report, scratched the words npon tbe glass, supposing them to be true "Cincinnati Commercial.

Pence. .rta ta 5ew TorV Tribut..

Our cröaotry is a-ia t peace we trust for a j te nt2rr We shall begin at once ta repair and reccnstiuct,to reopen dismantled railroads, to , rtbnild burned cities, and to replace tbe fences . which have been swept from many thousands of , square miles by the passige of contending armI irs. From this hour forth, each dav will witness aa increase of our national wealth, a'cd the census (Of 1370 will show a decided gain, both in population and property, over that of 15G0, though i half a million lives and four thousand millions' ! worth of property have been devoured bv oar civil war. Put to this end it ia eential that there h do t looking backward no cursing of feuds co I cherishing of hatreds born of our great contest. ; Let the law and its ministers do their proper : work; but let no "man be nonularl nrrwM-.Kd stigmatized or ostracised, in any section for the part he has borne in our bygone strudele. If! l niomsts are to be mobbed or otherwise hunted out in strongholds of rebel feeling, or if those who have been rebels are to be thus buffeted by Union neighborhoods, we shall have no true peace, co revival of prorritT, but general bitterness and social anarchy. All good men must unite in frowning down every attempt to perpetuate in peace the antipathies inseparable from war. At bet. we shall have a season of embarrassment. Many, in defiance of all warnings, have contracted debts under the inflated currency which the great reduction of nominal values renders thua unable to pay, so tbeir property must be sold and they left bankrupt lor life. Many who would gladly labor and produce, find themselves destitute of seed, of animals, of tbe means of paying for labor, and so unable te make a crop tbia year, or do more in any way than jut keep soul aud body together. Our public burdens are large, and mut in such limes press hotvily on the Bourses of production Our people, while pennile9, are ragged also, aud io want of nearly every comfort; hence, goeds sell faster.tban they cau be paid for, and importations are excessive, draining us of coin at the rate of millions per week, when we ought not to spare a dollar. Labor has been receiving high nominal wages, and does not readily accept lower, even when they buy more than did those of last year. It is quite probable that many furnaces, forges and factories, must flop for a season, because they cannot be run at current rates without ruinous loss. On the whole, wo bhall do well if we close this tear without famine or general collap?e, prepared to open 1&6G with such arrangements and adjustment as will insure decided efficiency in every department of our national industry. To this end must all eyes be directed ao sooti as it is settled that we are cot to supplement regular warfare bv neighborhood feud, with rightly assassinations and robberies. : " Peace hiug officially declared, we look to our new Presided for tbe earliest possible restoration of tLe privilege of Habeas Corpus aud for tbe abrogation of military rule wherever the danger of forcible resistance to civil authority has ceased. Let the military be still ameuable to militrv iri . tubals, but let civilims be civilly treated and enabled to lac their accusers before an impartial (jury. Let uo excuse be giveu disaffection to iSHSpcctor iaction to avert that public dancer j ws but a pretext nnd arbirary power the real object, t he danger was real; the assumption of power wis essential to th Nation' life; but from that moment wherein the necesitv ceases the exercise ol power becomes usurpation and tends to create putlic periU inn tend of averting them. Let us have the reign of Uw restored at the ear-lici-t moment; if there be but one State wherein it ia now safe to return to the good old ways, give us back tbe privilege of Habeas Corpus in that State, and in each of the residue w soon aa may be thereafter. We entreat the President and his official counselor not to let one day pas without considering the question "May we not eafely extend further the natural predominance of civil over military law and rule?" until the last square mile ot our country reposes ngain securely under the protection of thetime houored. afeuards of individual and National Freedom. c AMUSCNTS. ilBTROPOLTO TBBlTRft Corner of WcXilan und Ttnnjsstr Streets. Malinger. lr. w. II. Idler. Fridaj Evening, June 2d, 1865. THE -STAR COMPANY OF NEW YORK ! Paioca or Admission. Parqactte and 11 reserved eeat75c. Drew Circle 50c; Private Boxe, for six persons, 5 00; Orchestra 8eu, 75 cents; Gallery and Family Circle, 25 cents; Children in arms, 15. CHANGS OF TIME : Docrü open at?,- o'clock precisely. Overture commences at S o'clock preciselv. PARTICULAR NOTICE. The Horse Car leTe tbe Theater every evening at tbe close of the performance. People livinj at a distance can rely on this. INDIANA STATE MUSEUM. 79 East Washington Street MADAME M.A. ENGLISH PROPRIETRESS. Open for the reception of visitors from o'clock A. M. nntillO o'clock P. Ji. The collections embrace over Three Millions of Curiosities! Of tbe most amusing aod iatmctive character, gathered from all part of the Globe. ADMISSION SOCenra. MADsAXK X. A. ENGLISH, apr5-dtf .. Proprietress. NOTICE. STREET IMPROVEMENT NOTICE. OrtM-x or Citt Cliik. Indianapolis, Ind., Jan lit, 1365. I J0T1CE IS nEREBY GIVEN OF THE PENDENCY or the following entitled Ordinance fer ttreet improvement?, to-wit: An Ordinance to provide for th grading anl fravelic of Illinois etreet and tidewalk, beiween IfcCarty ai.d nay street. ALSO. An OriiUALice to provide for the gTadi&g &nd (rrav-l.ng of East street aad sidewalks, between St. Clair and Cherry street. ALSO, An Ordlaance to provide for tke grading and graveling o, w aDAsö street aoJ aidewaics, between Noble and tau street. Ey direction of the Coinmoo Council. CYRUS S. LUTTERFIELD, City Clerk. JaeS-dlt WANTED. W- T T A MONTH ! AGENTS WANTED EVERYÖJ emJ where to In trod nee the improved Shaw & Clara $2o raauly Sewing Machine, the only low price maker, Wheeler Wil-oa, ilowe, Singer & Co., asi Bachelder. All other macainea uow sold for 1- than forty doilar each are infringement, and the aeller and uer are l.able to oe and imprisonment. Salary and expses, or larjra commission aliawed. lilistrated circular snt free. address SHAW A CLAÄK. mydl?3m Edltfrd, Itaine. P ROF ES SI O NAL. OFFICK 50. 2(1 WtST WASHiyOTOS STRKirr. kVi deitce No. t!T North LU&o; etrvet, IaiianaDU. A. Ü. SELMA, PHYSICIAN AXD SURGEON rncv. no. io tibuinia atxnitx. kLSlDENCK. S 1 1 BOSTH ALABAMA IT. Drs. TODD & PABR, PDYS1C1AXS AXD SURGEONS. Office No. 31 Yirginia Avenue. rear ?3-d3mos

STREETS

AMÜSEMENTS. HIP PO OLYMPIAD.

? k

WILLIAM MAN AOKK. FOR tWO DAYS ONLY, FKIDAT AND SATURDAY. JUNK 2d 3d, North Jf the Terre liaute Depot. The .iloai Complete .Tloderii rravclliif :xlt!bitlon In America, TIfE Tf T S VP Ell It O VTFtT. FINEST jSTUD OF HORSES! THE Ci:T EDUCATED 71 HEES. Bvondttoy other F.itabUihnient, tbe MOST jRILLIAN? STARS. Tlio Grjeat Cavalcatl o s Will enter town i grand procession, preceded t'T the gorgeou ZD OL.PXII 1ST CHARIOT, The mofct mag iGceut fpecitnen of art and elaborate workiuansbip v paraded before tbe public, nnt irr:i forty nons es SpleodiJIj capfr.aoned, and driirn and controlled by 3InJoii IIcMii-y Doi'tlt, The Cltatcpioa 1 hip, and p&rade to tie place of eibibition amid tbe aartial aaui operatic strain cf the incomprMe SIV-KR CORNET BAND, led by f TWO ;UND PERFORMANCES, KaeU iigh, cviBuieBcinu at Two iid St aalfast Seven o'clock, P. M. In 1 1-Grand ki Etensive Cwjibiumtion, c(uceuu.itd In v aat tbe Proprietor claims to be THE SHOW OF THE AGE, Timers- Is no spaca 'r a brief announce sheet to specify all th'Artlsts. Tbe following UNEXAMPLED ARRAY OF STARS. Will convey an di of tbe great and uaeuall 2 wb The Prima Donki of Equestriennes, eqnaa'y renowned for her claical al darin; act of Kquitatito, is now the bright particular I ar of this colossal Exhibition. Tae press throughout f country have recorded the supremacy ef this daihii ; Queen of the CLrans, who, in both Hemisphere!, knowlrjgsd unapproachable. To swatnp rretentiouLppo;IUon, the Management, in good faith, offer a chal 6ngt of $10,00, and waiving ber undisputed rcputati ;i as the ouU takwanl female rider of the world, we'e prepared, to post the ruoaey, tbe result to be deteriAied by competent jadges, or a miscel laneous, audience, A the wwuid-b competitor" eboos'. .AUGUSTES. i The Qa en i.f the ! cae, introducing tbe highly trUne, thorough-bred .facing horse " JOHNSTKK, and the magnifirft American home "HI AMI CHIEF," a iiperb specimen of blood aod inteltigesr in Arecne Exercise, or Sckool f Ladies; also, in the ParMan ?iercies en the Floatia Wire. jjtTXTE ETVLilVEA. The Fairy of the Araa, and Trpaicboran Artist. Her tlas-iic poses c? horseback, aad her wonderful eqaipoW. are equally poetic incomparable. and MR. JÖHN LOWLOW, Tke Wit, Jester, If morist and CLOWN par excellence. A merry o3hot of Bornas, a fellow of inSntte Jest," and a genuine, oriial specimen of tbe Shakfpearean be Bo. s MR. t. M. GIBBS. His motley associate and QUAINT - COMPEER. AND QUIZZICAL THE CELEBRATED SIG. CASTILLO, THE GRKAT GWFj: F.QUILIEEL3T AND MAITEK LU f CItQUE. - MR. CEORCE SARGENT. The celebrated Hi rior.ic Rider, representing Nautical, Uytholcgical and Olnpiaa cenes, proneunced the most Snibhed aija gracefufscei; Rider in the World. TEE LAZELlY BSOTHEBS, The Motiey DelineaUj of the Grecian and Roman Schools of High Art, tlemplified in their beaatiful classic Clynpian MeUng. c S. 23. BALDWIN, ARRACIAN MASTFR OF THK EGTPTIAN SCIENCE, ILLUSIONIST AND I'RISTIDIGITATEÜR S.ytRAOKDINAlRS. F. YOODS, i. VARUE, MASTER WILLIE, Acrobats, üuir.a.-.t-.Hiid Anjpl.iiheatricsl Professdca of l.ilf-aite ecoie. THE STUD of HORSE S j Has been cheb .lb uo le.- care, and In bid od. beauty, aDi talnirjg, cau defy rivalry. t The Trick Heeses & Educated Mu les Are marvel of ekine sajxeity, falsifying th AdAgft of "tubbom ,m a mule," eoraplstly bewild specuiori?h LBma'ike intellect and ctprrLea facile power. In esiry particntar, th B.-pputra cn Jutlj claim tbe t',- of the HIPW-ARZNIC HO oM th ible piad DEL jUiM DON as a etry mule its, this OF TIIK AGE. TLirrir.anl c,ak and emlAnimals are the eel'aied eucaterf Rpanih u CARLOS, tbe prodivof the 13th centary, spotted tev aw, and nperioMo a'.l her, in klood, eyxsa and intelligence, JorJs the wonden of tk fm:lT. the orlr'nal ,k mm r AT umv svss mtwivf MAa.i.v W m fm, u 4 nrhesitatisgly proocOicel the W trained maie kn snrsrrvt ft v s A . k f r. ;wui MR. WILLIAM LAI? e WILL 15TEODLCI iS S .IG ACV0U3 A5D TALZX1 XV TRICK HOESF.e LKUCEIUKLCS " AND ''iLLIMANTJC." CHILDREN IjXDER TEN. Si CT.

I N I 1 1 V IS' A P O LIB

MEDICAL.

Mrs. WDSrSLOW, aa Kiperienred 5ars and FeaaaU fayiiclaa to tbe attention cf BMtatra, ar SOOTHING SYRUP, FOR CHILDREN TEETHING, Wlich (treat!? facilitates tbe proeeaa f taetktaf. hj aofteolTiK tfat trzxam, redactcg all rnCamtnatJon, will allay ALL FAI5 and apaiaodte action, atd la SUfiETO REGULATE theBOWELS Depeatop!. It, mother. It will glva ret toyovrla arwl Relief and Health (o Your Infants. rTe have put p aad aold thla ertk-Ufor over 30 year, anJ CAN SAT IM CO MIL E.N C AND TKCTH of It what we have rever been able to aay of any other medicine NEVER HAS IT FA1LXD IN A RINGLX 1NSTAKCK TO EFFECT A CURF., when timely tied. Ntver did we know an lnstat.ee of dissatisfaction bj any cm who ased it. On the contrary, all are delighted witb it operation, and speak In terms of commendation of Its magical effects and medical virtues. We ipeak In th!i matter "WHAT WR DO KNOW, after 30 yeara stpenenrf, ANU PLEIXSK OCK KEFUTATIOH WR TBK fTLKlLUK5T OK WUATWK UKR DICLAKD. In almost every Inntanca whera the infant ia suffering fron pairi and exhantlon, relief rill V found ia C(leo r twt,ij minutes after tba symp is admiaiatered. Full directions for Ohicg will accompany eac'a bvttl. Noti genuine unless the faa-aimlla of CLkTtS A PIKX1N8, New Tors:, la u tba outside wrapper. Sold by DrcRtisti tbrocgtoit the world. Price only 35 Cents a Dolllr. The Florence Nightingale of the Nursery. The followlnjr i an extract from a letter writteu b the Rev. E. Z. Weiser, to tba German Reformed 2asMKr, at Cbambersharg, Ta.: A BENEFACTRESS. Tbera is wozuaa in tbe public eya whose nanaa had all alonf been associated, in our mild, with tla "Tanlea," ' Quack, " and-llunibnit." list it is so & longer, and w desire to wret her came fratn all such saf pkrioos sviaoclationa in all other minds. Whatever notions we may hara of womanly delicacy and propriety, we will all admit that woman aloua ia tho Nurso the aoo4 N.rs tbe beat Nnrse. Whether we shall hara Female ftysician or not, is a question hieb must be decided by time And principle, and not a matter of taste. Pride, prejudice, caprice and -nOm may aa well behave themselves for if there is really a want, there will also b a snpply; if there be a Mcallinff,M there will be a coming. Nature and baman society are always aelf-snpplyinf , and though Art and Fashion may hinder, they cannot prevent. Urs. WinJow does not wUh to treat yon fremtlemet' Nordsee ate prewcrib a regimen for yonr wives; bit he asdestly appears as a taesanfrer of health and happinesa to yonr infant in th cradle. Ia ther anything lmprvper in that? A Nurse of "M years." experience can a old It aay what ia or la not (ood for a bab, aod ought to b luttened to. God speed her on br humble and kappy mission. JBbe lathe most rocceasfnl physician and moai effectual benefactress our lit'Je ones ever enjoyed her doting parents not excepted. Jatt epea the deorfor hsr,andMri. Winslow will prove the Amertran Florence Nightingale of th Naraery. Of thla we jsre ao sure, that we will teach enr 3usy to aay A EslnT on Mra. Winslow" for helping her te survive andescap th griping, colicaicg and teething lege. We oatafinn every word act forth ia th prepctas. It lerforwia precisely what it professes to perform, every part of It nothing less Away with yar Cordial" Tarojronc," Drops," 'Laudanum," and every o'.aes' '-Narootic," by which the babe is drugged into stepsday, nd reasiered dull and idiotic for lifsv.--We fcAve oerer teen Kra. Winslow -know her nly tbroarh the preparation f her "toothing f yran for Children Teething." If w had the power w would make ber, as ah I, a physical aarlor to Iba laXaatrac. llcnltli and Comfort to laotherand Child. MRS. WIN8LOWS SOOTHING 8TEUP fer children teething, softens th gums, redncea Inflammation, alia; a all pain, and cures wind eboile Perfectly eafe la all cases. We would aay to every mother who baa a aa fferitr child, do not let year prejudice, nor th pre'udices of others, stand between you and your suffering c) tild and th rel ef that will be tare yea, absolutely r ire to folio sr the ose of this medicine if timely csd. I0N'T FAIL TO TEOCritE MUS. WINSLOWS SOOTHING STRUr, for children teething. It has b d for 30 yeare with never failing eatety and success by Millions of mother for tbeir children. It corrects acidity of the stomach, relieves wind cholic, regulates tbe bowels, and gives rest, health and comfort to metbe M child. OSc N-.45 Day etret,3w Trk. TX) NOT LKT TOUR PREJTDICI STAND BETWEEN yonr suSerlng child and the relief that will be Absoluta ly sure to follow th use cf MRS. WINILOW'S 500TIIING STRUP. It corrects Acidity of th stomach, relieves wind cholic, regulates tte bowel, of:eni the gtsm, gives rest to the mother and beahh t tbeehlld The following Is an extract frscr a letter written tf the Pv. J. . Holme, pastor of tk IVrrvnofit Street Baptist Church, Brooklyn. N. T - th Jonmai and Mesejer, Cincinnati. O., and speU volumes in favor of that world -reo owned medicine-. XKX. WISFLOW'. SOOT 11 IN O STRUP, FOR CH1LDRR3 TEETHING: "We see sn advertisement tu year ceusaas cf MKS. SitXJTHINQ STRCV. 5w,w Mver sa4 a won in favor of a patent medicia beVr n tt.r life, bat we feel compelled to ay to vtmr rvadera ttat th s Is no hmmbnr w ha trie1 U, mzS ksow It to be ail tt claims, it is probably one or the x swocessfat toodieines of th day, bee a as it la on cf tk best. And those of yocr readers who hav bW eaa't d better Uss Ujr Is s sipplx." CAUTION. Tk great popularity cf Vr. Win slew's tootkiac Syrup, fer children teething, has indue VtrprlncJpal persons to pot rj articles to t used for tl asm par-poe,-ia advonsssss; which they ha BvstBJy copied owr Adrertlaesaeii aAd nica froaa tbn pre, bat have copied ccnl&catee and letter frtm clergjmeB axd others, affixing otker aames u i gnln crtt&CAtc. tVswssr f all imitator. BsAXT-iteArCus-t