Indiana American, Volume 9, Number 40, Brookville, Franklin County, 21 October 1870 — Page 2
Ifuuiaua .asitfrican.
C. M. BifiGHAM, EJ?i-r. -v "J-rnin, On'nb 21, 1870. Latest Election News. In Indltns the Democrats hare probacy elected thrdr full State ticket by Tnvjorities rangincr. from 100 to 2,000, and l?o gain one Congressman in the 7tL Ditr;t. JiHsre Wilson is elected in this District hv only 4 majority over Gooding. The Indiana dclesntion in the 4 2d Congress will p'and .6 Hr-puhlieans to 5 Deroocr. In the present Congress it is 7 Republicans and 4 Democrats. In the Legislature, Ae Republicans have two m) trity in the Senate and the Democrats five mij'ritv in the Mouse. Ohio gives 15,0)) to 17,000 Republican majority: a Republican giin of 8,000 or 10,000. The Cjng.-essionil delegation remains the saie. Campbell is elected and Cary defeated. The l'enns . lvania Congressional delegation will pr ibably stand, 1( RepublK cans to 8 De ncrats in the next Mouse, insteal of 13 to 6, as at present. The State Legislature will ,bc decidedly Republican in both bsanches. The old Keyto:ie s'ands firm, despite the usual bad lack of the "off year." Iowa, the "Massachusetts of the West, 1, as a mater of course, all riht The Republicans have the usual majority in j i the State, and still send an unbroken del- j egation to Congress. Nebraska sends a Republican to Congress, and elects a decided Republican Legislature. Official Vote in Fourth District. We subjoin the official vote for Congressman in this District, from which it appears that Judge Wilson is elected by a majority of 4 close enough in all concience, but neverthela.s s good as 400 or 4,000. Here are the majorities of the different counties: Geoiinz. Tuyette Knsh t'nioo - Wayne Frank :io .vhelbv Hancock Total Wilson' lua.i-rit y .... 38 .... 307 .... 22l 1518 ...22i7 4 T? ftsuir:iiy Proclarrration. ; Iii addition t. the instructions issued! , . e . - liv th; Vttorn--".- General an 1 Secretaries j i of War and Nvy, in regard to carrying out ; the neutlity proclamation, etc., Secreta--ry Routweil has also issued orders on the subject to the various Collectors of Customs in the country. He informs them it. is theii duty, as officers of the United States, to assist in enforcing upon the rmed vessels of each belligerent a strict -conformance to the orders cf the proclamation. He also instructs Collectors to eep a strict watch on these vessels as to -the time of their arrival, sfay and depar ture, and to ruakc knou all information
ihey obtain to the Tailed States District j Th;g yoarthe JMr whh aU tbfl Attorney in their district, and also ,0 ; embarrassments that weigh down a new keep the Secretary of the TreasuiJ' iu j Administration, all that fearful political formed as to the violation of sny of fhioaiof official patronage, that destroys,
or.lfrii ii lt nrci'j )iliiin. 1 IULi.ou's Maua7INS FOa XovKMCES. We have received t! e November num lier of Halloa's M g i ic, a:i 1 have rea l it with irlerrst, as we n'ways do every month that l?il!ou is issued. It has the best variety of contents of any magazine in the country. Its romances are always well srittea, its s3v stories such as only true-hearted sailors can write, and all the reading is original and of the quality There are 100 pages, 10 of them with illustrated subjects, and ail f r the small sum of 15 cents, or SI, 5) per year Great improvements arc p-jniied for the coming yeur. All periodical depots sell Halloa's. Thoui3 & TV. bit, GdCougress street, Boston, are the publishers. The Supreme Court if the District of Columbia recently decided the case of Baker and others, claimants of the reward o" S2.,010 offered by the corporation o! WaaYiDw;toa C.ty for the arrest of Presi dent L'nuolu's assassins. The Court came to the very sensible conclusion that the capture of these grot criminals was an affair of tba nation, aud that the oCieer oT a municipality had no legal right to appropriate taxes paid by citizens of a corporation to that purpose. tTorney iinifrsl AVcrain is represen j l:u . ... c . " that the Republicans will carry the fctate ! of Georgia, at t'o on-uing election in ! December. The Republicans there are now united and harmonious, having taken a moderate position, like the Republicans of Alabama, conciliating the support of leading white men al-vays rcsideut at the South. Governor lisyes has appointed three delegates from each Congressional district in Ohio to attend the convention whictt meets iu Cincinnati, October '2, lo coneider in reference to the removal of the Capiiol from Washington. It has turned out that the cause of Cox's resignation was a want of support in his reforms. The President's letter accepticg the resigcation dodged these, and therefore he refuses to make pubiic the correspondence . lpn ls j protests against the absorpv tion of It jm . The oteil language in Alsace hereafter will be G.ii.au.
Pc'r'.c! lims. In Mf-r York rtv, wer?, of all places J inji i ! drtstracti-n of S nud Go- t
morrah, radical reform is needed, there is to he a "fusion" between the Republicans and A ati-Tam ma ny De moerats, for the purpose of overthrowing tka Tweed dy uty. This is sensible, tttaely, and practicable. The Republicans are to endorse Ledwith, the Yoang Democracy candidate for Mayor, and run a fusion ticket, to break, down the ptfwcr of Tammany 1111. It is conceded that this coalation is very formidable. Tain many stands akjae, with every other political organization united ia opposition, and ought to be thoroughly beaten. The Dayton Jourualsays: "About three hundred soldiers offered their votes at the Liberty polls on the 11th inst., but were all rejected under instructions, as we are advised, from Jlr. I'allandijh-im, who teas vn the ground, giving the laio to the tidges. The one.leggcd and one-armed veterans sadly turned aside and gave their names as disfranchised men to persons assigned to that duty. While they deported tlieirslves like good soldiers and upright citizens, it was plain that they keenly feit the sting of disfranchisement." Was there ever a grosser outrage at the ballot. bos than the reiectiou of the votes i i of these crippled veterans, by the advice, and under the eye, of a Vailandigham? A correspondent who is apparently well informed as to political matters in Alabama wriics: The Democratic ticket is weak, with a Republican at its head and a revolutionist at its tail, with a mixture between. It is a u osaio cf Union men and Secessionists, and pleases nobody. Our candidates for Congress are, or will be. men of ability aud character. No W hittemores or ??.,tl V cKal) o!of finr sjn.-l npr-
haps five. The Third District is close, j Be Encouraged, but we shall carry it. Now this is our We hope our Republican friends will life and death struggle. If we lose now not charge us with a want of seriousness we lose beyond all recovery. If we lose j when we tell them there is nothing disA!V.ama we lose ali th South, and the i couraging in the result of the election.
the next Presidential election and House of Representatives. But we. shall not lose the State. The Secessionists will make a desperate struggle this fail. Their State
ing, and the ghost of Y iucey presided over and inspirtd it. 1 think we shall elect fifty five to sixty 1, j members of the House. The Senate of 4ss j thirty-three members hold over, and are i all Republicans but one. A Senator is
' Hon. Willard Warner's term expires on ibe 4th of March next. IF be October elections fro right you may count on 10,000 to l.,000 majority, If , ., , ' r , .V If they go wrong weshali be satisfied with ,-, yoO majority. The Cleveland Herald notes the fact ..., K,n ,,.;, ,. :n electing Congressmen for the second half of every Presidential term, Ohio has invariably returned a majority of members opposed to the then existing Administration. The result was similar in the naI tion at large, we believe, until the Ad t " ; ministration of Presi lent Lincoln. Ohio, as all remember, did badly in 1SG2. That stain is now wiped out. The Herald well savs: 1 jUi "ietT UUll'JS ', HI1 JlllU:UII5!taHUil theRei,' ublican has whipped the Demo ! cratic party. The Democracy may say as I . , urn mo uoy ace - ! i: i .1.- i. nt w hi sf 1 1 n in splinn i "it whistled itself. 'na peraaps u is xair to admit that the Dcmt,'"rac.y beat itself Hut so much greater the deiv"'. In the Democratic strongholaJ an' ,ne close ConresMonal districts the a. em0
crats wotked like beavers above grou.. 1 ! ,1aVe watcj,ed the course of battle from his age, shall be free without recomand under ground. Their best stumpers' , - Kerr. ih that tho f.io mi.rl,t. ! non t thU nnr -.i .!, u .1
,1 , . , . . uuiiMu i Hem si; i v Lii iue, iiicir ti'cst liars j ou.lied the very devil, and their meekest j Criah lleeps out-if civ J themselves. Rut j !! to no effect -'-.-( I he Republican party has held its own, with a chance of a gain of one. Honor is not lost to the vanquished when both parties in a fight show toeir gone best mottle Rut even honor is when one party turns tail and refuses to 1 come to the scratch. Democracy is dis- , , ... . ... J gustcJ with itself. Soldiers' Artificial Limbs. Dy a recent act of Congress it is pro-
viJed that soldiers who have suffered am- 1 , , , thoroughly Christianized that at the rueetputation from wounas received in battle,'. " , , . , , ., , . ,, , . . . 'leg of the Amencan lioard ot Lommisbeside being allowed S.o for an artificial . . .... , ,. , , , ,, , . , , ! sioccrs tor t oreign Missions, held last leg or arm, shall be entitled to a new ; , . , , ' , . , , . i week m LrooKlvn, these islands were limb ot the kiud every five years, or in- . r , , . . . ; struct from the list ot missions. In fifty stead thereof a commutation of .. Pay- : , . . .,, , , , . 1 years, their semi centennial jubilee being Hlfnt will h 111 11 f ir rpniii-in awnls mi , J 1 J
vouchers approved by the Surgeon Gener roved by the Surgeon Gencr- , , . - ; mgton. I his enactment is i r ' , i fact that artmcial limbs are; , .. , . i e, though made ot wood, iron, j al at Washi j based on the t not sa durable, thntifh made ot wood. iron. ! !hl.,.v1 ,,! Klllffrnit ;p n-o'l in ' ' ' J ' i - - .i i ; A irginia newspaper recently assettcd 1 3 ! that there were two or three thousand j "Confederate prisoners" confine I oa the Dry Tortugas, who were in a starving con- ! dition. The account, it was alleged, came from one of these prisoners who had es caped, and was bejging his way to his j home in Virginia. Adjutant General Towoseal, in reply to an inquiry in reference to the above story, sa'j-s '-there is not a single Confederate prisoner in the custody of the United States anywhere at this time." The people of Strasbourg are generally ;
uuea wun tne new oruer or mings. ; General Bover) with a flag of truce The French sentiment, if there be any, from Cazaine, had aa interview with Bishas not shown itself offensively since the j who reported thcir conversation to capitulation. There have beeu one or twfl , he Ring of Pru9sU The re3ult of the instances of firing on German soldiers pa- j negolUnon ig not kn3wn. trolling the city from the windows of. , , '' . 1 " houses. The culprits were immediately! On 10th. a bomb tired from Fort Valeapprehended and brought to justice with j rien fell in the bed room of XapbleOn I. -at he aprrobatioa of aM classes of citizens. St. Cloud, destroying the famou9 paliC3.
. .e.i . -. l . i , .t"
The Outlook Abroad. France still struggles in the throes of national dissolution. Where the centre
of life is, it is hard to say. If Paris is the heart of France, the heart 13 out of the body. If Tours is now the head, there is no nervous system to convey intelligence to the members. France is in a strange state. She gives no sign of life, except that she refuses to die and be dismembered by her conquerer. It is not wise, nor humane, it is madness in France to refuse terms of peace in this national extremity. It is dreadful to think of, that Paris should be bombarded as was Strasbourg. Civilization, ffutnanity, religion, ask that this calamity may be averted. It is vain to expect the German power to stay its hand, when the day of action has come. But the powers of the world ought to speak, and speak now, and in the interests of peace. If ever a nation was thoroughly beajten in war, France is. And the sooner she accepts the situation the better. Italy is united and Rome is its capital. Preparations are now in progress for the entrance of the King into the city, and his formal occupancy of the throne of the Ctesars. The poor oid Pope does not know what to do. One dav we hear he going to Malta. Again, that ha in tends to stick to Rome. Anywhere he is no longer a sovereign. Mis power is gone. The signs of the times arc now indicative of the complete prostration of Papal influence in Europe. Spain, Austria France and Italy, are now freed from th-3 yoke of Popery. Protestantism is working its way into the popular mind in all those countries, and the poor Pope ,has no power to stay the tids. It has demonstrated beyond question that the State of 1 ndiana is Republican by at least ten thousand majority. Juiiminate from ibe returns the effects of local (iuarrels and personal hostilit.es, and it will be found that our party is stronger to-day in Indiana than it, has ever beeu. No man believes that the thousands of Republi , , -If n, 1 v . v i 1 1 v .1 . v . a tt raiiiiilnHil v;aij vuiuia n u j put fWiJCijl i tiiiiaiuii home and refused to vote last Tuesday iu the counties of Wayne, Hendricks, lip-
pecanoe, Decatur, Hamilton, Delaware, palatable to our people generally without and other strong Republican counties, j t0 suppiy the want of saccharine have become Democrats. We can select . ...... r r- .. . . u. - i - u ,i ; matter in the ttuit. Portions ot Missouri, live counties in the State in which the i ' votes of non-voting Republicans would Kansas, and the midland country southswell our majority to five thousand. Re-! westward through New Mexico produce publican apathy and not. Democratic. gains ' considerable quantities of excellent wine, accounts ir the falling off in our vote. ' (i i.t- , j ,t, a: .
n some localities Renublicaus were a:most, if not entirely, justified in pursuit! a course of inaction during the campaign. Ii is too true that some of our leading men have attempted to imitate the bad examples of the Democracy, but they have found that our party is composed of men who have too much principle and selfrespect to be driven to the support of bad men. Hepublicanism, in the popuiar estimation, means justice, houesty aud economy in the administration of National, State and county affairs. If there are men who would use it to cloak their personal ambition, or to practice rascality, it is right that their hypoerii-y should be re buked. In some localities prominent Re publicans have acted too much as if they
were entitled as a matter of right to di-j free; that all children born since Septemrect and control party action. These men b jo h jj b freo oa tha navn,cnt of
must learn, if they are not already taught ' . tnat the mass of our party have no syu .,a,hv with thciu They may vent their i - j spite, against a personal opponent, but they will find it hard to infuse into the minds of the people the spirit of enmity which influences their own conduct. 1 he . cn un tit ii I mi nr' .11 ill in n nil inv ii j - : i,;n i, ... iron . i. - - - - - - - . ' i, n-ill sa.m hp. fuund ti'htiniy in !"PO nk;. or ieft ith no uic neruui. . . . rT tae IvepuDi. -,ricatn irripfs r.T,l;lr. - . -ri va compauy uut u r - , The Saadwlsh liLIt was only a little over one h vcsrs 9.z0 , hat (jart tb ,,A ,. ," - , i n. hgnsn navigator, was killer 0 the ce!ebtu.'teu led and -101-1 i i oiy eaten, in one 01 me cuiei 01 iue canut 1 . . r-.t. I'-i' i-.i ci 1 ' vtich Islands. It is an interesting item of the progress of the age to note in this n.inrni.ilinn t!;it tliar Tcl-ini-a nrp Ti.iwr uc,u 'al ,,iC Vi changed from a barbarian cannibal race to i . , i a Christian nation, with one-fourth of the i . , . , entire population professing to bo govere-I 1 . , ,. t 1..11 i . , .1. ' . i i i 'I 1 t .... .,r il 1 ! i J t t r ! now OS sell supporting cnurcues tuere, 4G of which are in charge of native mia I isters, and last year they raised 30,000 ! fir miinnrT iiiil ntlir nh i ri t a Mo tjr mMonary ana oilier cnaritaoie pur- . ,, - . .i i i poses. So it would seem that toe day is j rapidly approaching when a "nation shall j be born in a day," ; It is tho opinion of many persons that j i the late unprecedented fret-het in the James and Shenandoah Rivers was not j , . il lv A.M. t... . 1 ll - K f .1 . i-auu . (thing like the bursiiag of a water-spout on or about the head-waters, and their sources are not a very great distance apart. The flood came down fn the Shenandoah ia great waves, succeding each, other i "pi'y- , ,
Ardent Spirits vs. Wine. Dr. Holland, of Massachusetts, bears testimony that in a certain canton of Switzland, where wine-drinking was common, the people were drunken, and therefore he demands a prohibitory law, for the purpose of stemming the growing sentiment in favor of the cultivation of the grape and the use of native wines. Against the granting of this demand are opposed common sense and the aggregate of recorded opinion, which are decidedly averse to the conclusions which Dr. Holland has arrived at. Jefferson expressed the belief that "no nation is drunken where wine is cheap; and none is drunken where the dearness of wine substitutes ardent spirits as the common beverage." Professor L. Agassiz, addressing the Massachusetts Agricultural Society, in December, 1G7, said: ''I was born and have lived two-thirds of my life in a grape growing country, and feel deeply interested in the question how the grape shall be grown here successfully. But 1 think it cauuot be grown with perfect success until a prejudice which exists
throughout the whole country is overcome ! 11 13 because 1 know it is a prejudice mat i wouiu speait uyemy auuui u. iucrrowiag countries are the regions where there is no drunkenness. There are countries where the traveler is helped to a glass of wine to warm, and strengthen him; where the clergyman holds it to be an act of charity to give a glass of wine to him who needs comfort. Before I came to this country, 1 had never taken a glass of water over a meal in my life, and, although L am GO, I was never flushed with wine I will not speak of druu ken ness. My mother-gave all her children wine as soou as they were weaned, and 1 have done the same by my children. You in America cannot be thoroughly successful in grapeculture, until you have introduced the use of native wine as a daily beverage into every household, and come to regard it as the most wholesome beverage that can be taken." A clergyman of Michigan who passed two years in France for his health, going jail over it on foot, testifies that in all the wine district he found temperance, but the moment he got into those districts where j tlje grape could not be grown, but where j the people drank beer and brandy distilled I fr0!u the potato and beet, there he found j - ,,ir iil -m, . iliVV.Il I'V .IA.'V-H .1.1 .lllli 11.11. 1 , 1 Hardly any grape is now grown east of the Mississippi, that yields wine that is : . . . . . becoming the vineyard of the continent. and will doubtless soon produce wines that will rival for lightness and delicacy of flavor the choicest vintages of the Rhine. It is to be hoped that a supply of harm, less, cheap, light wine for our people is i not far distant, for it seems certain that in such a supply lies the solution of the terlibie proble a of oar national tendency to drink to excess. Emancipjiion in Cuba. The decree for the emancipation of slaves in Cuba provides that ail children of tdave mothers hereafter born shall be '.twenty-five dollars; ttKit all saves who - ; J ' !". fcervea ,us panisn government , against iue reoeis snail oe liberated, loyal ! owners only to be indemnified for their 1 tht thoe s!ave3 wfao have reached ; , . , ,, , me ago oi bixty, and an noreatter arriving ' i i cs. .. i -.i . i " - - ' v ... .... i.. i.ii.., u ii i .uav mi i 1 1 v. c? i ".T. " WK" mcaiion. Careful provision is made for the eduj cation of the young by a system of apj prenticuship, and the State is made rej 'Psible for the welfare of the freedaien ' servea it ucretoiore; tnose who re c. 10 reiuru 10 Sirica will nave iue ' . . 'n IV. orpori - - r i i ... Provisiou uiaue ior tne cmancination of slaves v Whcu thj new Cubau Putie3 take ther seats in the Cortes a projeJ1 wiIL be Pre" sented for the gradual emanciplioa ot aH the slaves still held in Cuba. The elections held iu four States last ! Tuesday will not increase the Democratic! delegation ia Congress. It is noticeable. ! however, that apathy and a deceased ha characterized the cam pai n iu ail , ,,, . . . , , States. tins is the ebb ot the poll Tim nurtT i,. n. .i,..,,-;!,., uJe- lc party lu power always ha. experience it. It came ia 'G2, and ne y and a decreased vote i the ' tical as to cit'el 1L It came ia 'G2, and nearly swert In inri i fr im htr m iorimN lnt.i thn whirlpool of rebellion. It threatened us ' . .. . in 'Gb, but the madness and folly of John- j son routed the people to a determined and 1 tnuni pha n t resistance. It has come again - c ll 0, and Indiana has telt Us force. He mj,uke , he sp,rit ()f the gallant Republi-i Can party if it shall be dishearteued by so j slight a reverse. Our party is stronger! to uay man it was tne uay oi tue election.! Local jealousies and personal quarrels will k henceforth ignored, and as the months K. -V Ua - 5e1' f coa3,C:i on' .wo :t:au ue again unite J, anu, unuerour cuot L ' !scn leader, shall march to certain I Journal. victory. The Prussians and French are still conntrating large forces near Orleans pre russiaas occupy the city itself as well as the camp . . . . l. ... i - T. . ii : at Bellair near Meunge. Judge Wilson ran ahr.id of his ticket I in his County, and Gooding ran behind his ticket in his County. that shows the comparative popularity of the two meu. Greenfield Commercial. r -E . The October elections have ended Democratic hopes of seeing a majority in the next Congress.
War News. Special to the New York World. -London, October 17. The sortie under Trochu on Saturday completed tho work of driving the Germans from their invest ing positions South and West of Paris. The French advanced under cover of tremendous cannonades in three columns upon Oherilly, Sevres and Bongiral. The latter was the most serious attack, and resulted in the defeat of the Pomeranians under Von Kirchbach. This compelled the Bavarians to retreat from Baque Aui and Chatillon. A division of General Toun's troops held stubbornly Chevilly
and L'Hay. ' The Germans lost over S, 000 j ing no active part in the campaign, but killed, wounded and prisoners, and large I his entrance into the sttugle at this critsupplies. I ical moment stirred the Democratic heart
TheGarde National of Calais to-day proceeded to Amiens, where a force is or - sanizin to attack the Germans moving north from Soissons. ilrih.l !i r-ia vpafpnl'iv Tpcp'ivp.ii at Bensancon with immense enthusiasm. He clnpil l.-r,TA f,rnf of (lar les Mobile!
and Garles National and Franc-rireurs, was elected over a Union s.Uicr by means Jules Favre; on hearing the Prussian conand made the following speech, which was,f the disfranchisement of the soldiers I ditions of peace through Gen. Burnsids, responded to with extreme ardor by the j who have beu maimed in their country's j thought they were reasonable, and their troops and people: " . service, and that the .disfranchisement, of j rfjeCtitfn ls consequent! y unaccountable. "Soldiers of Free Fra nee! I see in Your i these wounded soldiers was achieved i
gallant battalions the nucleus of the army of the United States of Europe. The
army of licerty and army cr law. lue I to be giving treacherous aid and comfort . . monarchies of the world are eo le.oned, I to the enemy when these soldiers were esclPeJ 'r0:n --ts by tins rather hazarthey are in arms to-day for the last time. giving their lives to their country. Ac- ! dous mode ofoovejanca, and so far we Monarchy in Europe fell at Sedan, and is I cording to Democratic authority Mr. j have not heard of a.iv failures. dying forever before Paris. 1 see among j Campbe II oves his elec'ion to the disfran-j . you not Frenchmen only, but Europeans; chisement of national veteran soldiers. The official returns give William A.
not Europeans, but men. In your raoKsiCan an honorable man, who claims to nave
niericao volunteers. The soldiery of Washington and Lincolu, the immortal, invincible euemies of despotism in every tbrm, are fighting beside the sons of the Rhine and the Loire. Italians are hastening over the Alps, tiettublicau Spaniards are i hastening off the Pyrenees to Luttie with; you not against Ger.aany, but agitost monarchy. Not against a people misled, ' but against princes who mislead all people. ' j From all parts of Franee thousands of
young braves are hastening to the S j Id ot I Imperial grandeur becomes food tor the action. France yesterday bos in sack ; flames of war. In the midst of the ascencloth to the eurth, looks to-day. clad in ding smoke from kings' palaces they will arms proudly up to heaven. With Fraucelsee wondrous visions of the beautiful torra Europe will rise rejuvenated. You are ' of Liberty, set free from long years of fighting for the freedom of a continent. bondage. Let St Cloud, and Versailles, for the rights of humanity. Onward to I and the Tuileries. and everything else go, tho Vosges." so that tho Republic lives. "Chronicle. Soissons capitulated only after a most j terrible destruction of life aud property.! The Sentinel naively suggests that the Three hundred and fifty houses were laid ! ofHeial returns in the Fourth District,
tin ashes. The Prussians encountered des- ! perate resistance from the National Guard, ! !i .. h t i n.f htiiiil Jn h a n ,1 in rhii srrpft anil
capturing one part of the ci-v house by j the Democrats in Hancock county un-j.- not.on, n, ukc notice tht rr." i;n by house. Tuey were driven bacs : properly threw out two votes that Mould , before John II. HlackH.J?e. a j-.?tice of !. fa.through the burning city four times in I have been counted for Gooding, and that jin-m fur Metto-a Twnhip in s-u.l C-.unty ant succession, bur were constantly 1 e-en-i some errors were eointnitted in Rush : State. by Thomas U.Cni.-r, the i.:.iint:!T. whereforced, and bore the French down by the county. To tho purple-nosed plagiarist, lr ZflltlnS
weight of numbers. N'o quarter was shown, and t lie wounded were bayonetted where they fell. The women hurled missiles from the houses on the heads of the invaders. The sacrifice of life was awful. Graud Duke Meckleuburg wept" at the slaughter, and refusing to order the assault, begged the French commander to capitulate in the name of humanity. The splendid glass works of Gubeiiu, aud the foundries, mil's and refineries were destroyed. The press of Stuttgar It and Munich ridicule the project of a German Empire. The London bankers decline to nego tiate tor paper ou Germany, particularly on Lrhn. A Nile Uion tha Hecsrit ESsotions. Upon the whole, there was quite a large vote and quite as groat a Republican success in Ohio as we could reasonably expect. Indeed, the Republicans have succeeded beyond what they ha t
reason to nope, ilia Uwtober elections ; OII ,h3 vote of 1663 of -Vi'J, al.hough some have made it evideut that there is no Ac- j .j)0 colored voters ,av tince been added. vical for the Democratic parly, and uone ! Judge Wi!s n's u : j..rity in the town- hip can be hoped for in the future by itsjjs 51;-. That lor' Julian in 1SDS wan most sanguine adherouts. The party has at,oat 000. f Richui-jtid P.idieal. uo one priuctpie of any sort, and it has I -., ,.,-- not the cohesive power of public plunder! We are very glad to be able to chronicle because it is not in power. If public j the success of Judge Wilson in the Fourth plunder can be made available for a paity, Indiana District. Go has made a good it is iu tne hands of their oppnents. But j tight, and deserves the sucje.s ho h is this argumeut, which might possibly have j achieved. By ids integrity, his fairness, been used against the Republican patty, and his unquestioned ability, he has won is more than oifsetted by the fact that the j for himself in his district an enviable rep-
ltctiublican administration of ad'airs is rapidly reducing both 'debt and. taxes. Tbis fact is undeniable, and the argument is inevitable that an administration which doos this is worthy of continued support. There is another thing which in the future makes the Democratic party hopeless. The new States aud Territo-
ries as thev grow up are Republican prepared to have the Kcpuuhcao Kansas, Nebraska, Colorado, Ne.v Mexico, ! Par aor"a t!l ascendancy. and others beyond the Mississinu., arel,ru-t t,,ere wlH be no lettU1 d"wn on the - - k I J In.. ii .... ..hi." . I . L. . . : I
Kepubiican. ldaiio and Montan i are uovv Domocraticj but they are composed wholly of mines; when its regular society is formed they too will be ilenubiican. All the great States beyond ibe Missis-j sippi are Republican, and with two ex-J ceptions the Territories also. The Democratic party docs not gaiu there, but is constantly losing; and it will lose as ithas done in Iowa aud Minuesota. The ite, therefore, will remain RepubliFour years ago wc sail the party exist. Snt would bt, ipubiicau for sis years. We now say that it wi:l be Kcpubiioan for sis years longer. l"J Jrig men, therefore, who wish to share 10 fll3 (-nv-ernment, (here is no hove in the uioeraiic party, unions they are contended fewcouuty oilices. C D. M. 'viih The Soldiers' Disfra ichisernent. Can it possibly be true, that the judges of election in Liberty township, Mont gomery county, influenced by threats of Vallandigham, refused tha votes of three hundred and Sfty disable! soldiers, whose domicile is in that township, and whose right to vote tiieue for Congressman, President and Vice President is expressly guaranteed by act of Congress? Can it be trne, as certain public journals have reported, that the Sup.eme Court of Ohio has ever rendered a decision in any manner afTeciing the right of these disabled veterans thus to vote? If so, let us have the document. Let us know who concurred in such an opinion The peoplj are anxious fir information on that subject. Chronicle. .o This is what Greeley terms the "off year," in which the party in power almost invariably meets with, reverses. Our defeat in the State is a serious one because it gives the Legislature to Democrats, but it is no indication that the State is Democratic. Our full vote polled would have given us the State by a handsome majority. Conaersville Times. 1
Campbell's Victory. We place on record the Democratic account of the means by which Mr. Schenck was defeated, as given in the Enquirer's letter describing the saturnalia over it at Dayton on Tuesday night. It says: "In fact, the city has been a seething caldron of political excitement ever since Saturday, when it first became known that Schenck and his friends would attempt to vote the soldiers in the National Military Asylum. This brought into the fie'd Mr. Vallandigham, by whose intense
efforts and enenry the atrocious scheme nr, .1 . f a t A Hithprt.i h f ti i ii hpflti iakas with the note ot tne clarion, and in ! fused into it some of his own powerful energy and enthusiasm. It was this spirit that achieved the victory over which . we : imur rniniw and mve birth to the grand jollification which vre are now witnessing." TI1114 it is eonfes-Jed that Mr. (Jaranbell ! through the extraordinary energy of Mr. j V-jMandighaui, whom '.lr. Campbell knew been a Soulier ot tne union, aeeeps an' election procured by this robbery of his comrades? G izette. A dispatch sent to Beilin from the Prus sion headq u irters at V ersailles, says the French have hel!ed and wantonly fired the Palace of St Cloui. Very well. Men fighting, as the French people now are, for the right to govern themselves, will j not grieve very much if the last vestige of j which elect Judge Wilson to Congress by i a majority of fourvotes, be so amended (?) i i as to elect, D-iVC (Joodtng. ItclailtiS that; i pilferer, and perjuror who edits the tinel, there would be nothing wrong in forging the election returns so as to change the result. If some Democrat ' wishes to take a short cut to the Penitentiary, let him follow Dinhani's advice. Journal. Docs not Vallandigham, in glorying in CanitihcH's election, glory in his own shame? Valla n .light m has to stand idl because his infamous character mala hi election out of the question. Because oi' this he has made it his misiion to prevent the nomination of ny Democrat who could stand a chance,' that i, any war ' Democrat. Therefore a war Republican ! . , ... - was procured. vjampoo;i s nomiuaiion l lilul(l Hull I U 111 il ilH I U .1 U.ilHIV Ji . u pretends t.) glory; but he glories in being an outcast fr.mi hisp-iriy. GazetteWAYNE TOffXsliU' foe election here passed off very quietly. The total vote was 12o3 at the North poll and 1 03 1 at the South total '-Zy, being a falling off utation, and we have every reason to believe he will uiaiuiiio hioisclf in Cbarcss. Gazette. We hoped that lu.liaisa had had enough of Demjcratic rule, or iniru!e. Probably i by the time he h is recovered from the ! f nec,a oi Uus "swucratio victory, tio wii 1 ! 1 "V l"c i"Pu'-' ' l"eul l ihemselves for the next struggle, aud win a handsome victory. Gazette We congratulate our Republican readers on tha result of the eleetion. K.arlv jn the canvass Republicans feared a very considerable loss in Congressmen, but as the canvass drew to-a close we predicted that the Republican Congress and Administration would be vindicated by the people, and they have been. In the five State-, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Indiana, Iowa and Nebrai-ka we have lost one and perhaps two Congressmen. Lawrcnceburg Pre3's. -Ml An American army officer, who knows Von Mottke, says that there is probably no man in Europe who is so thoroughly a(juainted with the history of the American wa,- and who is so intelligently informed regarding a tce details of our plans, operations, Jl'J campaigns. The devastatiou f France is terrible. It is estimated that the dt:uSe doae tbe three departments overrun by tDe irus sians is 300,000,000. The harveJ was ripe for the sickle, and the grain was given to the fli-ues. Towns have been demolished and private dwellings destroyed. 1 j All through the South the news of the death of General Lea was received with deep sorrow. Business was suspended and the buildings draped in mourning. Meetings were held and resolutions of sorrow passed. The Pension estimates for the next fiscal year call far 821,000,000 a material reduction from the amount appropriated for the current year. The President has issued a proclama. tiou of warning against Fenian filibusters.
The Fourth DisTrict. Ju'lgo Wilson is elected. He has a mijority over Judge Gooding. But that majority is so small, a3 to make it uo pleasant to a Republican to contemplate what the staying away from the polls 0f but another haBd full of our voters would have done. ' We are thankful that Wilson has a majority, even though it can be numbered on the fingers of one hand, but it remiods ns of the Dutchman, who, in telling of his dream of coing to Heaven, said he got through, but it was a "tarn tight squeeze." Connersville Times.
l he UooDing organ nowieaaoout "fraudulent tickets," but we take notice that the best men in the Democratic party handled those tickets quite lively on elecj Hon day. They were not deceived by . them, either, but used them just bocause J they were printed as they were. GreenI Held vom tiicrcia l . The Journal de St.. Petersburg says Tho uo of billoins by the French has ; Cullen, Republican can li lite for Jul 'e in the Fourth Judicial Circuit, a majority of Sou over John S. Seobey, Democratic Reform candidate in the counties of Fayette, Rush anH Decatur. A 1'aDal bull is expactod soon, dissolving the Eou.ueuiiMl Cj'iocilcn the ground that there is noplace vhere it can ba frelyheld. The ofBcial count in Nebraska gives John Taffe, the Republican candidate for Congress, 1,3'.2 majority. NEW ADVERTISE M E N T3 ill lAl.i Li.l i . STATE OF INDIANA, FRANKLIN COIXTT. Bkf'okt Joa: it. Bia'KMnm, J. P. op Mktamuki Towns-hp. Thomas 'I.OTn-re; at. r. It) i. in B.K'v. ' I 'he ilrten-i int. K-nm !i. Mv, in wwi ra.in.J un 'i3rf:i Win z itd'ofti;) j to law. an I hp-i'uo a p-irtv to sni 1 salt, cAi'tiin-i: thomn of.:i:t T-"). He will o!o tnk nnt'oo that tha Mct'jidist Ob arch situa'e 1 on O'ick freek, Metnm ra tiiwnsbip. Fr'ik-iri C'i.-, fr. l., b i by hor T'-utocs, to-wf.:' rii WirixT, Mi't'in O irrv. ,r:-nas CI r't, (ienrgc Itid'r tt- f-iSn 'A -n r. 8'-j l n iSli vif. ni l u iilol tr.'ri ; mr"r-1 in t-i I i'-f , an -1 ! i I i p irty t'i n i c'l'-.M'n; ih !i a if ?SJ Th : ill fi'irt int :- th -"-pt'i-ir? mti a 1 t -. n;i r lef ire mff, tt my.fTic' ;n tS To urn f M'tx;i -ri, Mctiunora Towr.hip. in s:ii 1 C untv an l Stu'e, on Siitarili' fh I'i'H 1 iv ot" Nos-ii alier, I -wil, ta an set .sail cniTi !'';i:nt. vit'i .-3 my iiutI anil.'i! this li.iy ufOi'tn-t-er, 17'. iosjv ii. nr.ACKi.iDiJs;, j. p.Oft 2'l-3w X;2Ic of ii::i!r,!$lf;!$Ioa'. "Vfi)ta is ii-i-i'ii,- jii t.i.it liie uiirter inif 1 1 h ta been aj.inted A'5m!iii-tr.itr ou th Ktate of Mury V.-ii'.-.i:!!;), ) i-l" -M et :i .':iiir:i , Fr:iiklin I'i'Ur.ty, t n .i i .i ii a , litu'u. iSaid K."t:ite is !i:-po.-eil to bo i-i '.-i-r.t. Oct. 14, 1K7:-I7:t. A LF. BLACK M IXiE. Notice tt Ni):!-;Sc.iiIeat Ijfe.iil3r,!s. S T A T i-i O F I i V X A , f it A XKUN 00 'J 511". In ?hk Ci licri r i.'-n',! r, Dijckubki Teum A. 1. 170 J uliu ;s!i if-T, " vi. I Civil Action. Isabel Thurston, ot al. J i n this 11th iliy of October, A. !. 1ST'), in v.iV cation vi ?ai.t O-ui t, c iinss tiie j.iunitil':', by IbtiivU.y auU Jvi.os, Att-irnej, nui li.es nij omi. (ilaiat herein, au.l Kisu iiti uUi'laiii, iy which it aieurs t'u:it tuo sum) roi.itc-5 to nil Ct-tatf, and tliat .M;i;y O. h lot t ik :tr ana Iunicl cbiul tn..m ure Don rusi io'it itcfon l.uit.-i of the Mate oi 1;diana. tfai.l non resilient iltfeuii.iiits arc therelore oare;y no.iUoJ ui (be jioniucy of ia:s suit, rotjirirjil to i.o asi-1 apjicw be lore tho .Tuvlge of ssiii I'ranklni Circuit Court, on the second day of I'tvo n.-xt (eria thereof, to ha hel i at ttie C ourt liinj'e, in Die town of JirooKViltc, at tbe County t.f i'ranUitu, iu lira c tate of' ia lnni, oa tho urst .MouJar of eeuaiber, A. D. ISiO, thee an i tho re to pi-ai ,ul aus.ver to Paid, complaint of tb-e Kiaioiid'. Wi;no. S smncl S. Karrell, CI irk of sai l Court, ihU ilia u.y of 0ctoler, 1870. 6. . UAf.itELiL, Ciork. Bixki.ky i JnNits, Att'js. Oct. 14, iri-:. Mrs. man's Ladies' S lore in Laurel, In. I., is nor open, for the irail and Winter T:ade,with .1 fail line of French .Miiliuery and t'ajacy Uoodi, at Xha Lovveat C'au Trices, making a for ladies' only equaled in large cities. Among her well selee-ted ttocit are to be found the best Kid Ulovts, Laces, liJiuj;?, Kmhioi lery, and French Anllinery, that cannot be t'ouad in aBJ1 ether store in TEST IT Call on hr before jou purchase. Oct. 14, 1S70 ml. Contains noL Sulphur N'o u?ar of t.ea'
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