Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 23, Number 10, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 August 1863 — Page 4
WEEKLY SENTINEL.
MONDAY, AUGUST 10. Can't Sse it. Th Journal editor can not see any points In Col. Walkzk'i letter. Ia that regard he la singularly ignorant. lie may be obtuse but the public are not. Son are to blind aa tboae who are unwilling to tee. The Jourral man alludes to mathematical lines. He baa breadth and th ick neu, but no depth. Duily his readers hare h!a shallowness exposed. Like the ostrich, he ticks Lir nose into the ground only to make more apparent his prominent parts. ' Tle Kentucky- Election Never was there a greater mockery upon the freedom of elections than that which occurred in Kentucky on Monday last. It is a disgrace to the nation. - The elections in France and Austria are pure and free expressions ofv sentiment in comparison. We hare stated time and again that we are rapidly approaching a central despotism more oppressive thau the most arbitrary governments of the Old World, and if any of our readers have had any question of it, that doubt will be removed by the recent election in Kentucky. And the outrage bus been committed in the sacred nmea of Union and Liberty! Another year in the same road we have traveled for the past twelve months, will result in the American Government becoming more Ux ridden and despotic than the most grinding despotisms of Europe. We have been hoping from day to day that the blindness and fanaticism of the people would be removed, but we fear the delusion is fatal. "Whom the gods wish to destroy they first make mad," and it seems as though they had intoxicated a Urge portion of the people with their insane teachings. The Public Printing. ' The niggerbeads are in trouble. A slight exposure of the infamous corruptions which have characterized their conduct of public affairs throw them into spasms. If little developements offset them so deeply what will be their condition when the whole truth is told? Tbey will call poo the rocks and mountains to bide them from the indignation of an abuednd betrayed people. A few days ago the Journal objected most strenuously to mixing up personal controversy in the discussion of public sfftirs. It said: . . Let personal invective alone. Legitimate party discussion e cm stand The Journal his issued five numbers 6ince the expression of the foregoing sentiments, and each baa been filled with the vilest personal invecliocs against its political opponents, having no reference to "legitimate party discussion." A few words in regard to the public printing. The editor of the Journal was elected public priuter by deception and corruption. He purchased the influences which elected him by both verbil and written pledges of compensation, and then attempted to swindle the parties thereto out of their reward. This Sclurotx cannot truthfully deny. He is- corrupt without even the honor of dealing fairly with those who aided him in Lis frauds. The Journal baa a great deal to say about the public printer rjsin State paper for which he never paid. Dure Buir It. Sclgsovs deny under oath that while he was public printer he never ued any State paper for bis own benSt, or that no State paper was ued by any employees of the Journal establishment for the benefit of that concern during or subsequent to the period that he held the office of Sute Printer? There is another way of testing the question as to public printers using State paper for private purposes. SctGBOvs has served two years as Sute Printer. Take the two years of his administra- . v. k . : ..a a . 1 tv. ...... . KV!y.k liuu na uuhv fniuici tuu tuu iiu jcai. kuivu preceded it, when we did the public printing, and aee who usl tho most Sute paper to do the same amount of work. Such an investigation will tell story that Sclokotc would not like to see developed. Ti e fact is that Sclgiove followed the custom which preraiU in all establishments where State printing is done all over the Union. TV hen he was elected State Printer we congratulated hiro on bis good luck, and we never bad the infiriitessimal !iulcne9 to nose about his establishment or inquire of his employees about the conduct of his private printing or public printing. Piain and to the Point." On the 25th of June lat, over the signature of J. O. Walk, appeared a letter in the Sentinel defending hU conduct as au officer of the army. In that letter appenred the following in reference to the editor of tho Journal, Beiet R. Set, wroti: I have a few word to say to the editor of the Journal, to whose malicious at-eaulfs the reader is indebted for thin letter. "Conceived" as be waMin sin and brought forth in iniquitv" it is but natural that the eroenatious of his brain should be as illegitimate as the offspring of his body. He is a fit person to edit the organ of a hybrid party his paper represents a party which has no parallel in history for the wickedness of its designs or the terrible consequence of its acts- Let u hope that the editor of the Journal may become regenerate in his latter days, and use the intellect inherited through au irregular process for the diffusion of truth instead of falsehood " We now use the words of the said Sclgeotx as a fitting commentary upon the foregoing, and ask bim to face the music: "The tacts and the inference here are rather unpleasant things to face. We SD-re comment when there is only one thing to be said, and that is whu everybody will say. Tha Journal, in rooting around for party capital, has run its snout arainst a Terr unpleasant snike. It can't back out with credit, or go ahead without breaking its neck. In that predicament we leave it." "The Oarbarltm ef Slaverr" A speech of Hon. Charles Sumner is published ia this city in pimphlet form, in which the distinguished Senator from Massachusetts undertakes te show that slaviry is a very barbarous institution. Indeed, its very title is, "The Barbarism of Slavery." Perhaps it is birbarous. The principal count in tr.e indictment to establish the barbarism is, that the negroes, an inferior race, are compelled to labor under the superintendence, direction and care of a superior race the white men or tne ooutn. j do er mis system they have grown from a handful to four millions, well fel, moderately worked, sleek and shining, happy and contented, dancing eery night and singing to their banjos tbeir joyous, simple melodies, and playing on Sunday without a care for the future. If this be the result of the svsiem, it proves that the negroes have been well taken care of by Chrutiao masters, and never ha veenioved so much happiness under the King of Dahomey. We might add that the majority of the laboring classes of white men who are the subjects of Queen Victoria, Louie Napoleon, the Cur of Bosnia and the other sovereigns or Europe might well envy the condition of theae blacks. If this be barbarous, whit are we to call the civil war that has been iniujurated for an idea, and. instead of in creasing the population, h w cat off a million of the fl wer of tbe beat white races of the earth, las nude homeless vagabonds of vast numbers of the btack race, and has destroyed thousands of million worth of property ? Which of the two system U the roost barbarous that which made the United S:atea prosperous and powerful, aa no other country ever has been before in ao hort a space of time, and which rendered equal - lv bappy the white and the black population, or the new system, which, In order to destroy tbe old, has delated the land with blood, wasted its . ? . V. -s.tfvl tl.ftil rA lbAn KiastV ujrei j e,'-- 1 ....- wv. ' ita prosperity for half century? Which svatem, ' we aok again, is the most barbarous? H. Y. Henrld. Gen. Grant has been a soldier while in the army, bat little else than a soldier certainly no politician, plotting on and seeking by tricks for the Preidency. He has not locked op editors. Shut reporters out of his lines, published proclamations, full of sound and nonsense, excluded newspapers from those lines, forced his soldiers ti vote Republican tickets but simply attended to kit business, and lo! the result.
Communicated by Col. Walker. A few weeks ago, tbe writer of this article ventured to review a tew of tbe arbitrary acts of some of our rulers. Duty compelled me, shortly afterward, to decline Vo lend my oicial aauctlon to tbe establishment of a sub-agency fot the State in the city of New York. JJy critic i-m of Qctv. Morton' conti uct, and rtfuil to asit in bis schemes to adnihiister the affiir of tbe Stute in a m inner nut cortemplated by law, have called forth, from bim mid his mtiii-il.-, ne.irly twenty newspaper columns of personal abuse iu tbe city of Indianapolis alone. To the srticles published by Morton, in the Journal of the 8th, and by Mullen, in the Sentinel of the 13th ot JqIv,I propose to reply briefly, though without pretending to refer, in detail, to one half the Slanders they contain. The Governor recalls, with peculiar satisfaction, tbe fact that he has been able to cause me some anuoyance. and enjoys recuriug to his refusal to accept my official bond until after it rep resented hree times the amount of property required by law, or, by th bond of my predecessor iu office. The ghost, too, of my old cavalry regiment still hauuta him, and he continues to charge tb it I changed the rolls of the companies, on file in the Adjutant General's office: whereas, in fact, such roils were never so filed at all, but a list of the companies only. I did publicly change that list, for reasons satisfactorily explained at tbe time, by erasing some, which entered the in fantry service, and substituting other companies, which were constantly offering. Yet, His Excel leocy cow effect the belief that the change made in that list, done with his knowledge and eanc tion, was evidence that I bad iio regiment what ever. The atrocity of this insinuation will be appreciated when I say that I can prove, by bun dreds of witnesses, that both Governor Morton and Adjutant General Noble know I bad men enough tendered me to make at least three regiments of the maximum organization. Governor Morton says that, after having "abused" him for his bad faith in declining the cavalry, I came "cringingly and fawningly to the Executive office and sought the position of Colonel of the 35th regiment," and "apologized most abjectly" for my public criticism of his conduct. A more atrocious falsehood, from begining to end, was never uttered. I did not desire, nor ask, nor, directly or indirectly teek the position of Colonel of tle&Kh regiment. I did not apologise to Governor Morton, nor have I, at any timeor in any way, iutimtted to liimtb.it I retracted, or even regretted, a word th it 1 ever tit tered against him. I accepted the command of tbe 35th regiment because the gentlemen interested in the organiz ition doired tue to do so; and, believing my service to be worth as much to the country as the position was worth to ine. I did not feel under obligations to the Governor for the coramisfion he conferred. His Excellency's attorney, Colonel Mullen, charges, through the Sentinel, that I retained for sometime the commission appointing Lieutenant Breetie to the Captaincy of company "E," and that tbe Lieutenant states that he was "swindled" by me "out of his promotion." There is no doubt thtt Lieut. Breene is deliberately slandered in this assertion. Certainly it is that I offered to deliver the commission, without comment, in the presence of nearly all the old offi cers of the S5ili recinient, and that he peremptorily refused to accept it, stating as a reason that he would scorn to become a party to the interference in any way, witti the prospects ot his personal friend, Capt. Hughes. The Governor's menial, referring to me, continues: "He procured a commission for one Noves, a private in the
regiment, mustered Noyes tor pay, and set by, in the Paymaster s office, snd witnessed his bogus Lieutenant draw pav from the Government The question is then a-ked, "What will be thought of Col. Wlker wbe:i I inform the public that this man, Noyen, was reported by Col. W. as a Lieuteuant in a company that had no existence then in the regiment?'' I might ask, were it necessary, what will be thought of Col Mullen when I inform the public, wb tt his acquaintances already know, that be is a most attrocious and unmitigated liar? While the 35th regirmmt was in Tennessee, Mr. Xwye was promoted by Governor Morton to the Second Lieutenancy of company "G,"then non ett intent us, and authorized to recruit men for that company. When about to euter upon this duty, orders from the War Department were issued prohibiting further recruiting for volunteer regiments. In consequence of this, Mr. X. started, at once, to return to Tennessee. On arriving at Louisville, he wait informed that the 35th regiment was in the vicinity of Shilo, and ordered to proceed to that point, by boat, in charge of a squad of soldiers. Arriving at PitUburg Landing, he teported to the officer in command, explained his position, and was decided to be one of the ten Second Ieutenants of the 35th regiment. Having been mustered as a private, it was regarded as unueccssary to re-muster bim as an officer. He was ordered on detached duiy, and did not train return to theiegimeut while I was with it. When Mullen brought company into the corps, known and designated as company "G," it ws a question whether Messrs. Mears und oyes, who held older commissions aa Lieutenants in company "G" than the new officers, were not entitled to positions iu that company. I do Lot now recollect accurately what was my action in the premises. It is certain, however, that I made such etitrie3 upin the rolls as would bring the question before the proper authorities for adjust mcnt. The order placiug Mr. Jfoyes on detached duty, as a Lieutenant, seemed to entitle bim to draw pay without having been previously mustered for that purpose. I did not muster him as a Lieutenant. I did not witness bim draw pay as such, snd was not aware that he did so until after it was done. Yet, I did believe at the time, and still believe, that both Mears and Noyes were and are the legal lieuten auts of company "G," and that they were and ate entitled to pay a6 such from and alter the time at which that company became incorporated mto the 35th regiment. Mullen says Noyes is now a deserter. The fact is that he submitted his cuse to General Noble, who decided that his commission promoted him out of the regiment and into private lite II The Governor asserts that my treatment of Major Balfe was discreditable; that I was opposed to his promotion; that I retained his commission for ten days, aud that I finally compelled him to resign, l nat gentleman a commission as i,icu tenant Colonel, together witb a large package of official papers, overtook the regiment wnile on the march I rem iluntordsville to Nashville. On setti ng down in camp at the latter place, the commission was duly deli-- red. None of its virtues were lost by the temporary delay in the delivery. Balfe knew it was sately deposited witb the regimental papers, and that he could have had it at any time by asking for it. I now regret that he should have been deprived of his toy for even a day. He was permitted by Gen. Negley to resign whilst charges were pending against him. If I was his persecutor, the manly meeting of a trial would have vindicated bim and humiliated roe He preferred to resign to avoid exposure. I did not object and do not now desire to detract from his reputation. I was opposed to bis promotion, particularly, be cause the teciment, witb singular unanimity, were iu favor of the promotion of Capt. Hughe. In coming again to the name of this much abued officer, it is proper that I should notice the repeated intimations that I had some interested motives iu standing by his fortunes. Not a solitary reason can be adduced to sustain such a charge. I never saw Cpt. Hughes in my lite until the Irish regiment was in coarse of organization. He resided in another Sute, possessed neither influence nor political position, and could not in any way be of benefit to me in the future. Aa an officer, however, be posesed nnjuetion el ability. The men of company "E"' desire bim to command them. Htviug been com mis sioned a captain in the regiment, which admitted of no qualification whatever, I assigned him, as I had a right to do, to the vacant command in that company. The officers and men of the re giment afterwards, with scarcely a disnting voice, urged his appointment to the position of Lieutenant Colonel. I endorsed the recommend ation nude by the officers and pressed it upon the Governor, and, iu doing so, was actuated by no other motive than a desire to satify the brave and true men of the regiment, and promote the interest of the corps which I was proud to com -mind Capt. Hughes had his personal faults. They were weaknesses, however, which not one of the several persons who have been Lieutenant Colonel of the 35th regiment should venture to criticise. I bave defended hid reputation, which bs been unjustly assailed, as I have the repuutiou of Messrs. Mears and Noyes who are not my political friends aa an act of justice, and to put facts on the record, which, when our prefect despotism shall have pained nwsy, will enable those gentlemen to receive Justice under an investigation which will be obtained for them. And now, in notlcine Gov. Morton's lengthy communication to Gen. ilalleck, and the letters of Mullen and Balfe which accompanied that communication, it is necessary only to siy that, had those statements been true, to have prottd them so before a court martial, would have left no room, in future, for questions of veracity to arise, and effected the dejired object in a single day, the accomplishment of which, during my sickneu and without the knowledge of mv Gen erals in the field, cost His Excellency a month ol anxiety and labor. The means adopted by the Governor to create a vacant place for a cringing
sycophanr, ecretly performed, were cowsrdly and disgraceful, and, having been forced to the light, show upon their front the impress of conscious villainy. I will not notice iu detail the state menta made in those communications, but will call the reader's attention to the fact that neither Gov. Morton nor his attorney have attempted to prove that Capt Hughes was not legitimately assigned to duty in the 35th regiment and legally mustered into the service of the United States. Neither have they attempted to prore that I did not possess tbe right to reject the service of offi cers who reported to me for duty under a muster which was palpably false. On thee two points, and on these alone, rests the question of the justice or injustice of my discharge from the service. And here 1 will repeat, wht was snid in my first letter, official orders and the action of those in authoritv to the contrary notwithstanding, that an intelligent army officer cannot be found who will haztrd bis reputation by asserting that, under the circumstances, the assignment of Captain Hughes to a command, his muster into the service, and the refusal to receive Mullen into tbe. regiment, were not clearly within the province of my official duties. Whether I betrayed the confidence of the Irishmen of Indiana, who procured my appointment to the position of Colonel of the Irish regiment, is not for the vagabond who, at the beginning, sought and failed to get that position for himself, to decide. The friendship of Mullen, which he now earnestly professes, for R. J. Ryan, will t;-j apperciated when It is known that he urged me to get the Lieutenant Colonel displaced, and himself substituted, before the regiment left Indianapolis. I will take mv oath that I had no instrumentality in briucing the first Lieutenant Colonel before the Military Board for examination. It can be proved by several officers in high position, among them General Wood, that I was appointed a member of that Board without my consent and in tbe face of rav earnest protest. I am willing to answer before heaven, and to my country, for the truly conscientious and faithful manner in which I discharged mv duties to the Irish regiment. For a long time the corps was not supplied with more than half its compliment of officers, which quadrupled my labors; but I preferred this to making it a common receptacal for such political pensioners as Mullen, whom Governor Morton might be able to purchase for the promotion of his selfish purposes. Because I was disposed to vindicate the rights of the brave men who started out with mein the service, and while tbe regiment, during hazardous marches and the occupincy of dangerous outposts, in which I remained with it, in sickness and in health, was earning a reputation for discipline and usefulness unsurpassed by any other in Tennessee, an immense amount of indignation was aroused against me. Where? Not in the regiment; for no officer ever succeeded in winning more completely the friendship of those under his command thin i had done. The trouble was at home, among persons who hud been discharged for incapacity, and others who desired to obtain positions in the regiment which they were unfit to hold. None know these facts better than Col. Mul'en. Yet, he has the hardihood to state that tbe hr per portion of his old (Gist) regiment deserted when they heard they were to be placed in my command. To show that Col. Mullen wis in the habit of telling prodigious falsehoods about hit regiment, I will publish nn extract from a letter written by him to me, and dated "HxaiMjcaaTEtts 61st Regt ,Ini. Vols., "Mapisox, February 11, 1662. (
"My regiment is now rap'.dly filliog up. I hope to be iu the field iu four weeks, with eight hundred men, well clothed, armed and surprising ly well drilled. This prospect sing clear to officers and men, I must await to see if the prospect will be verified. I have just had tendered a Company by Capt. Robert Kane, late of the 13th Indiana. This will increase my number to five bundred." e e "B. F. Mcllcx, "Col. 61st Regt. Ind. Vols." P.'sj.;ng unnoticed the bombnst contained in the assertion that the four hundred men the gallant Colonel expected to recruit, and p!are in the field, in four weeks would Ve "remarknbly veil drüled") I will ad J the following extract from Mullen's published letter of the 13th inst, which, placed in juxtaposition with the above, must prove refreshing. Referring to his trip to Tennessee, made to propose a consolidation of his regiment with mine, lie says: "I proceeded on my mission had, on my part, a frank and free consultation witb Col. Walker. I informed him I had about two hundred men; thst, if it met his approbation, I would consent to join his regiment, Ao." The time when he "proceeded on his mission," and informed me he had two hundred men, was several luonths subsequent to the 11th of February, when he stated to me, by letter, it effect, that he hadov hundred men, in addition to a company tendered by Captain Kane, which, of coarse, would have made his regiment at that time contain five hundred men. Yet, alter bis stating to me officially that his regiment contained four hundred men. and that lie had an additional company tendered which would swell its number to five hundred, he publicly acknowledges that, several months subsequently, bis regiment Contained but two hundred inert. Wlmt became of the other two, or three hundred? Did they desert although at the time no consolidation with my .regiment was contemnMed? Or did Col. Mullen simply make an official state ment to me. in writing, on the 11th of February, 1P62, which be knew to be false? Either from two to three hundred men did desert "him, before they dreamed of going into the 35th regiment, or else the statement he made to me in writing was utterly untrue. It what he said was true, and two or three hnndred of bis men de serted, without the loir of the35ih regiment before their eves, is it likely that one hundred and thirty four afterwards deserted because they were unwilling to come into my command? When Col. MuMeit arrive! at my camp, with order for consolidation, his regiment consist el of sixtysix mix and thirteen to fifteen commissioned offi cers! He has not forgotten that the sixty-six men he succeeded, after six months recruiting, in getting into the field, "clothed, armed, and rtmirkably veil drilled"! urged me not to receive Aim into the corps. All this is a matter of but little consequence, but it shows plainly thst Col. Mullen lacked the capacity to cet or holds respectable number of men together, that he is an atrocious liar, and, that his 61st regiment was a caricature at best. By this it may be judged too, whether his "teaching and diseiplin:," to which he boastingly refers, has been particularly beneficial to the 35th regiment. He may have been, as he says he was, "a soldier when" the writer of this "was a boy." His tactics gave evidence of origin in the higher genius ol a former generation. The regiment thought so when he commanded them, while m-jving by the flank, to Form platoont forward, march!" Gen. Nel son thought so when, by wy of compliment and aa a tribute to merit, he addressed him as "an old woman on horseback," and kindly directed him to take a position at the rear of the column. The General's Aid de Camp was of the same opinion when he relieved Col. Mullen of his sword, lest Its weight, on so long a march, m'ct fatigue the old hero of some war unfortunately not yet chronicled on the pages of history. The effect, too, of Col. Mullen's eloquence the moral influence which "creates an etprit de corpi that will carry them, bayonet in hand, into the very teeth of the enemy" is terrible to behold. That the regiment appreciates Col. Mullen's powers is pitent in that, nnJer his benign influence, its rinks bvo ber.n depleted, by desertions alone, to altont half their former dimensions. That hi appreciate hi9 own influence is equally manifest in the fact that, under one pretext or nnother, he absents himself continuously from the corps, and devotes his talent, which none are less likelv to underrate than he, to the service of bis master and the Great Black Republican Party of In diana. In an outgush of eloquence he exclaims: "Long after dismissed officers and political demagogues ofthe present age shall have been forgotten, the noble energies, the self-sacrificing spirit and even banded justice of Governor Morton will sparkle upon the pages of our country's historj? Let us add: . T ' Oh, for a forty-parson rwr To chant thy prslse, hypocrisy!" The "even hsnded Justice" which His Excellency possesses is exhibited in his efforts to degrade the soldier to the level of the negro, and in his success in reducing officers to the position of pitiable menials or the subservient tools of political prostitutes. Uns ß. F. Mullen, who calls himself a Democrat, the name of Mohtox engraved upon the collar which he wears? It t humiliating, I confess it, to be compelled, in treating with the Governor, to kick away the hounds who form his body gourd. We should learn, however, hot to be annoyed, as we some times are, by the yelping on our tracks of the dogs with which His Excellency baa lately, at a small price, supplied bis kennel. I must, therefore, teg pardon for having referred, at some length, to one of the vilest of the pack a crea ture who has the hardihood to bo ist that he still wears the badges of his servitude, the representatives of the price his master paid for a willing instrument to do the dirty work of traduction and villainy. ' In these i latter days scoundrelism is at a premium, and the crest ?es of despotism, who "bend
the pliant hinges of the knee that thrift may follow fawning," are constmtly employed. The worst sign ef the times is, that these menials are encouraged to assume that the public mind is so totally debauchtd that their slanders will be re ceived or their perfidy tolerated among the people. That such things can be. and pass bv us without our special wonder, is one of the sad"desl evidences of tbe demoralizing influence f Intestine war. The mysterious agencies of this influence become a contagion, and its mill dews per meate through almost every fibre of tie social fabric The waste of weilth, the destruction of property, the sacrifice of life have each their moral counterpart in the contempt of law, the indulgence of vice, the liscence of the will, which stsnd forth as indices, pointing te the steps down which society must travel in the train of civil dlssention. The demoralization is. of course rt-ost rapid in cases previously much depravedor subjects which, like the mad stone, absorb K-lson only from tbe elements around them. To t ese classes belong the newspapers and leaders of what is known as the Republican partv of this
country. Willfully ignorant of the theory of gorernment, and of the philosophy which underlies the foundation of society, they take counsel of their fears and not of their reason, and ru.-h forward after a single idea, regardless of justice, or of truth, or of law. Maddened by the terrible consequences of their own false doctrines and heresies, and bewildered bv the whirlwind which has ripened from the seeds they have sown, they have become the common enemy ot civilization and mankind, and gloat upon the flow cf blood and human sacrifice as the frog ploats upon the stars or the owl upon the moon. Whoever may chance to interpose an obstacle between these madmen and any of the numerous schemes they may have in view to inaugurate despotism or estaoh-b dis order, or who shall venture to criticise the usur pations of power by those whom the people sup posed, two years ago. they were making tieir servants not their masters becomes at once the subject of detraction, villification snd vitu perative abuse, to an extent which could not be surpassed if Pandemonium itself were let loose upon him. There is methol in this madness Though the poison emanates from fanaticism, it is directed bv the cool will of vicious conrpo-a tors, who expect, bv arousing all the evil passions of their followers, and by driving their opponents to dcpcration, to create such confusion nnd disorder as will seem to justify the inauguration of mirtial law, the subversion of individual and State rights, and the establishment of a militarv despotism. An election is soon to be held in Kentucky, where the party in power for party purposes, desires endorsement, and martial law is proclaimed and the strong nrm of military power invoked to effect that object. An important election will take place in Ohio next fall. If the forced vote of the soldiery, an 1 the counting of thousands who are dead, will defeat the Democracy, no further outraEe will be then attempted; but if these resorts will not override the will of the people, the bavoret will supplant the ballot box, and theciviloffi''eroj theBuckeve State will he selected, through Burnide's rifles, by the Washington despotism. Mock elec tlons, in 1 64, in the Southern States, and the establishment of martial law in Illinois and In diana, as well as Ohio, will result in perpetuating the power of he preent Washington dynasty, and in the subversion of all the individual and State rlchts guaranteed by the Constitution It is expected, while the war "drags its slow I length along through years of desolation ana Borrow, mat tne spirit ot tne the people will be so broken, the popular mind so educated, that the establishment of a monarohv in a neighboring republic will not only be resarded with indifference, hut the nborption of all politi Cil power in this Gove nment in a central des potism be hailed as a relief and a b!esinsr. This is the dream of those conspirators who imagine thev havealreadv undermined our social and no litical fabric, and who expect to euide to their own purposes the storm of fanaticism which they themelves have so terriblv and wickedlv in voked. Upon the li.vrfom. prudence end firmneet of the people of the North depend now till thnite cinl rights and hberten vhich are dear to freemen and Vorth an effort to preterce. Let us hope for the bet and be prepared for tbe worst, reroem bering always that "Who wouM be free "Himseir mut arike the Wow." J. C. Walker. Ispiasapolis, August 1st, 1863. Gon.I.oaii at Duqtioin. The telegraph, which 6eerns to be principally maiisged, of late, iu the interest of the Abolition party, yesterday brought us a lengthy abstract of a speech made by Gen. John A. Logan to u so called "Union" meeting at Duquoin. As we believe our columns can be used to better advantage th ui by prints'ug that gentleman's platitudes, our readers will not find the speech in our telegraphic report. We assure them that they lose nothing whatever by a failure to peruse his remarks. We fancy, however, thst the Abolitionists, for whose beticfn the meeiing was gotten np, and w ho sought to make capital by securing u man of Gen. Logan's prominence to address it, made nothing by bis performance. We find iu the report of bis rem irks no denunciations of "copperheads," no declarations that the "Administration is the country," although the quondam "dirty work" Locaii goes a great deal iurther in his support of the Administration than the Democracy can bo induced to accompany or follow him, even although he declares that he can not indorse the President in all respects. Too much "patriotism" seems somewhat he riously to bave impaired Johts oi'ce vigorous intellect, and he is uu ibie tu fee things as he once did. Lie s itibfies the Aboliiionisvs of the most ultra stripe in his soundness ou the negro, and outHerod's Herod by proposing that if the negroes can't whip the rehe's. tho Piesidcut b ill nend el ephauts South to trample them down. We ug. gest th it Gen. Curtis' camels be first employed, if the General will accept our amendment. He repeats the stereotyped illustration, such a favor ite with the Republican press and orators, ol the "house being ou fire;" and demands that every body shall help to extinguish the flimes That is precisely what the Democracy are, and have always been doing, Getier it Logan, as you very well know; but while you and other of our Dem ocratic brethren from Illinois have been down South fighting the fire, we, whom you lelt at home to guard your interests while abent, have discovered that the Administration Uapulyiugthe inc e-.idi i'v torch to the proud temple of liberty in which you and we weieborii.and liaveso long been dneliinir in peace and harmony, and which Is so just ly dear to us. We know General Logan, that they would sacrifice this fair fibiiclo their idolatrous ideas of abjlition; that the principles and pi ins of the niiti-sUvcholders, and not devotion to the Union, is the prime article in theirconlession of faith. We have been at home, General, witb lei sure to watch them; you have trusted us in days gone by. trust us now when we assure you, if you have ever dou'o'el it. that the Democratic party is the s i me devoted, unflinching supporter and friend of the Union and the Constitution that it was when John A- Logan was one of its honored leaders, reviled and vilified without stint by theverr men who now fling their caps in the air in adulation of his newly fledged ideas; and that abolition republicanism is the same hideous monstrosity and loeto the Constitution and the Union to day that it was when the same John A. Logan denounced and opposed it iu tbe canvass of 166 J You called them then a dilution party; they are so still; more daugerou by far now that they have possession of the Federal Administration. A leopard can not change its spots, John, nor the Ethiopian his skin; you have always believed Ab olitioniftj to be the worst enemies of the country, rnd they are no better now .Read the history they have made during the war. General, in the light of your former professions, and you can not avoid the conclusion that they are not waging this war in the interest ol the nation, but in that of the Abolition party. The Deiuocrucj of HU nois can not aid thetn in such schemes. Go South and fight rebels, John, as you have fought them, bravely and well; the Democracy will bid you God speed so long as you war for the Union, and will second all your efforts to restore that sacred tie, ' But if you, too, have fallen be fort tbe ebony idol if you are one of the seven thousand whu' bow to Baal, the Baal of ab dition, we psrt from you regretfully, it ia true, and pointing to your fall from your high prominence as an example to others who might be tempted to do ldtewiae SpriDgfield Register. CSTIt is astonishing how many Democrats there are now In the country. Old Atolittonists of thirty jears .sliding, who hav been fighting the Democratic party and Democratic principles for years, now claim to be Democrats. "I am a Jackon mati," says ao old hoary headed Abolitionist. Tho land is full of such hypocrites; we meet them on every corner. Tbe whole pack of them are Abolition secessionists. Siiuo them as you would the devil! They are doughfaces and demagogues oi the meanest and blackest stripe, many ot whom have often sworn they would never vote the Democratic ticket. Their souls are as black aa the negro lowers they prate about, and they always must see a chance or their mak Ing something at the election, before they vote Jasper Courier. The Democracy of Clay county, will bold a mass meeting at Bowling Green, on Saturday, tht 8th Inst.
ALL SOItTS OF PA RAG HA I'll S.
The Richmond Whig announces the arririval of Pierre Soule at Charleston by steamer from Nassau. Mr. Lincoln is no longer the rail splitter, but the tailor, is busily engaged in making breaches of the Constitution. The Power of Patsxt Gas Swelling a small solicitor to the dimensions of a statesman. The Lafayette Courier, a so called "Union" paper, pnplishes the following, and we therefoie take it for granted it is not contraband: Thx Two Cabisits. As a matter of 'reference, the names of the Cabinet officers of the United States and Confederate States are given below: Federal. EebtL President, v Lincoln. Tavis. Vice President, Hamlin. Stephens. Secretary cf State, Seward. Benjamin. Secretary of War, Stanton. Seddon. Secretary of Treasury, Chase. Xemminer. Secretary of Savy, Welle. Ml!ory. Attorney General. Bates. Watt. Fostmaxter General, Hair. Beagan. What Constitutes a State ? TVTiat constitute a Stater " Not hikD raised battlement or l.bor'd mound. Thick wall or moated rate; 'i t cities proud, with spires and turrets crown'd; Tot bays and broad arm'd ports. Where, ian?hing at 'be storm, rich naries ride; Not starr'd and spangled court, Whrre low-born baseness wafts per furo to pride. Ho! Men, high-minde-l men. With power- as far above dull brutes endned In forest, brake or den. At beasts excel cold rorks and brambles rude; ' Men who their duties know, But know their rights, and knowing, dare maintain them. A Grand Mistake. That "the party that can elect a President can crush a rebellion." If the Democrats had not rushed to arms, Lee and Morgan would have taken the North long ago. Patent Facts. Will President Lincoln take into consideration the following well known facts? The loral States contain a population of twentj-one millions, their military and financial tesources are enorraou, while they have a most powerful army. The South haa a population of six millions, has no trade, no resources.no navy. Mr. Lincoln, if he will reason upon these facts, can but conclude that if the rebclion ia not suppressed, it must be the fault of his cabinet, which is Incapable of directing the enormous power of the North. The upper Mississippi is lower than ever before known at this season. Indeed, it is so far reduced, that it takes three or four steamboats to take a single passenger to St. Paul. Soldiers iu active serviceon the 3d of March last, are understood to be exempt from the first and second drafts that is, provided they have been honorably discharged. A Chaxck roa SoMtBOET The New York Tribune declares that twenty fire hundred and more persons have app'-ied as candidates for appointment as officers of negro troops, and deplores the fact that the right kind of men are not applying. It publishes a card froni one of the examining board, which conßrms the Tribune's complaint that "young Abolitionists." that is, the "intelligent and educated ones," are not seeking the field, even as officers. The le'ter nays: "The inieliigent and well educated young Ab o!itioni-u are not doing their duty to the 'Black Brigade.' Instead of otfering themselves aa olH cors by ncores, as trtey ought, thev leave nearly all the positions in field, htaff and line, to be filled by chance comers. Why is this? 1 tiust you will urge them to peiform their plain duty. Some of them may pi en J want of information how to p'oceco. For their benefit I will give you the necessiry directions." The Kentucky Election. The New Albany Ledger make' tho following comments up on the election i.i L uisviile on Monday: Numerous arreU of persons, pointed out by the "spotters" t the ills as rebels, have been made, the parties nrreted being placed in 'he military prison. Files of soldiers are stationed st 11 the polls, aid we saw several pieces of artiüery, with lioues hitched and men at the gnns, ready for action at a moment's notice. At Portland, at 12 o'clock, the vote stood Bramlette 30, Wick'.itl'e 2. The two votes for Wnki.ff'e Ht this poll were cast before the soldiers arrived The WicklifTe men are overawed, and it is probable but few of them will attempt to vote this afternoon. M aetland Coxf KDtttATES It is stated that in the Confederate army there me two Major Geucr-ls an 1 four Brigadier Generals w ho are natives of Maryland. Substitutes continue to take legs to thera selves nn I flVe away whenever they can. The New London Star says: On Saturday evening, two of the substitutes sent down from Norwich the day before, were shot whilst attempting to escape frofn the conscript camp in New Il.uen. One of the men was instantly kilil, mi l the other man was badly wounded. - f' Ä.11 the men and all the money necessary to eupiort tlie Constitution not a dollar to break the Constitution. lion, i ..ie B Clay, who left Kentucky with i!ie rebel last summer, is now at Niagara Fulls, n;i tho Canada side, and is suin to be in the last Klagcs of consumption. Eighteen p tvmnpters wert with Grant's array at last Hccounts, disbursing $ 1 5,fUH ,U00 in green backs. A London letter says the comb is hen ;eforth an obsolete article. In fashionable circhs ther aie rev er' ing to the Iidy Godive etvle of w ear ing the bir that is, letting it flow down over the shoulder. Tht Krll Sign. One of the most ominous eins of the times is the fai-t th t onr military successes bring out in new force the old Abolition notions which have been cherished by i!e.-igt;ing advocates for many tears. Iul which o'hers, professing mre moderate view, und f courageous, though actuated by the sime rciitiuiciit. have not oared to con less To tin so men, victory is not so much the harbinger of peace as nfforJing ground for more exacting deniHiiti in ihe interests of Abolitionism, :is conditions o!" reitirment. Thev would not consent to aeoitU menf with the old Union as a bnsiv We say this in to, p.ntiMii pirii. but rather to convince the uiiWücvitig. Mich ms solace themselves with the tln-u Jit th t all is well, while there mi(-hievoii. demagogues mid lunatics are so earnestly forcing their counsels upon the chief national Executive und his Cabinet for their guidance A few extracts from leading newspapers will show what we mean. The Washington Chronicle, edited by Col. Forney, and ofteu inspired by authority, says in plain words: "The extinction of slavery in the seceded Statf s should be made a condition of their restoration to tbe Union." The Tribune, in nearly the same language, says: "No member (.of the Cabinet) harbors for a moment the idea of reconstructing the Union on a basis of slavery, and no flag of truce basbeen or will be entertained from disheartened rebel leaders which foreshadows an idea in conflict with the emancipation proclamation." And the National Anti-slavery Standard: "It is a gre.it revolution in the midst of which we live. It is not an insurrection to be quelled and punished, and then all things to go ou as be fore. It is a revolution which is to change the institutions of the nation, snd to give it a very different government from what it labored under bo fore it began. For any final arrangement that sliall leave slavery alive, will amount to a surrender at discretion." All these organs, speaking in terms almost identical, and encouraged by these expressions by the achievements of our victorious armies, will carry home to the breasts of many reflecting men the conviction that no effort will be spared to drive the Administration into a straightout anti slavery war. There may yet be in the national capital too much euliyhtened patriotism to prevent such a deplorable consummation. Should such a policy succeed, however, none can foretell the years of war and desolation which are yet before us; none can estimate the blood and treasure to be wasted in this fratricidal atrite. Nor ia it certain that the free North, even to preserve for itself the form of civil government could be held together for the prosecution of such a war. Indeed, the public safety depends ou the overthrow and complete discomfiture of these visionary philosophers who, In the pursuit of Utopian ideas of universal emancipation by force of arms, would spurn the thought of peace and reconstruction till tba negro millennium, so often described from the platforms of anti-slavery societies, is ushered in. Let us pray and labor that wiser counsels may prevail. N. T. Jour, of Com. tZT Vanity Fair tayi tht Pomp ol War is tbt 'irrepressible nigger."
Our Ar rar Correspondence IIsw !
the ICebel Fuiullles Lire! Cmp or 23th Ixdiawa VotrxTEtas ) Tcllaboma, Txjjt., July 29, 16b3. J Messes Editors: The Question as to how the rebel families live. whU all the able bodied men and negroes are employed in the armv. mtv be explained partly by the folloring incidents, which came within my observation a dav or two ago. while out among the country people on a foraging expelition. It Is customary here, as well as othet places, for squads of armed men to go outside of the pickets in search of food and other necessaries for the army. Having some curiosity to see the people and learn for myself bow this operation was performed, and how they endured these involuntary contributions to our nrmv, 1 embraced several opportunities of the kind and pawl outside ou' line, where I learned the state of feeling amone the few remaining inhabitants of th prt of Tennessee upon the war. I was much surprised at the large amount of corn growing, considering the small numSrr of men capable of producing it. The wheat and oats, though in small quantities, were generally harvested, tome of it Unding in shocks upon the ground, and a small proportion stacked in the fields. These evidences of care and labor naturally led to the inquiry, who did it? for at none of the houes were found any persons but women and children, or old.decreptd men, none of whom to me appeared capable of out door labor, to the extent of the many evidences around me. On inquiry I louinl that the girls plowed the ground Mid the more lecble part of the household did the p anting and hoeing. A widow woman, not much over thitty years of age. (whose hus band hd been in the rebel army and was killed at the battle of Shiloh,) with tl.e ass stance of a bov of fourteen vears of age, had put in fifteen acre of corn. While she was at work plaiitin2 or hoeinc her corn, her little children played or slept in the fence corners; but very much of the time she carried her leist one iipon her back, until exhausted, when she would I iy it upon the grass or leavei in some convenient place, while she completed tier artiuous task. She is intelli gent, of slight and delic tie foi m, h iving none of the visible qualities of mtiscilar strenth or endu ranee attributed to her by the luxuriant results of her patient toil about her. Another lamilv, consisting of a voting married woman, with two small children, and a girl of sixteen years, were surrounded with so manv evi dences of neatness and thrift, that I was fully convinced that white men and i.egroes rout have performed the labor upon the premises; but imaeine my surprise w hen she informed me that the girl and herself had put in ten acres of con and worked it all themselves! And what will the young ladies North say when they learn that this delicate young creature, during the romantic period of "sweet sixteen," plowed all the cround herself I In her modest acknowledgment to me, of having 'xrforniod the labor, a gentle blush suffused her cheeks, while she declared that stern necci-ity enabled her to perform a duty of which she previously had but little idea of being capable. Another case was a married lady of about forty years of age. without children. Her husband was still in the rebel army. She was a cripple, and required the constant aid of a crutch. She was a fearless, high minded lady .with no assistance but three negro cirls, w jih whom she was working forty acres ol corn. She had h id some assistance from the soldiers of Braug'a army during the spring, who put her corn in the ground. Our army had takeu her cows, horses and bogs, and all her old corn, and verv recently the soldiers had carried off her chickens, with every narticle of garden truck, leaving her entirely to the public charities for the support of herself aud her three negro girls. The last of her chickens and garden truck had been taken by two negroes, servants of our officers. This last act, she maintained, was the moM insupportable of any other, as she jould endure insult or injury from her equals and persons of her own color, but to be robbed of her last hope of sustenance by impudent negroes, waa to her most intolerable. This act compelled her. she remarked, to vow unending hostility against the power that tolerated such fiendish proceedings. She had written to her husoand and given bim an account of the treatment she had received. Arid won't he fight harder when he learns all tb:? Yes, continued she, I sincerely desired him to never faulter, but to fight bravely to the last gasp, and the earnest prayers of a wronged ami injured woman should be offered daily to the bitter en-. Against this wholesale and indiscriminate plunder very stringent orders are opposed, but :t is impossible to prevent iu occurrence in too many instances In consequence of it, our army is now feeding several families between this place and Winchester, whilst no doubt there are others who have not yet made known their distress to the proper authorities. The foiczoing c ihcj present sn example of the determined fortitude of thee people w ith whom I have conversed They are not dejected in proportion with tho heavy cal imitiej suffered. Although oppressed :rievouty, they are buoyant with hope. Cat down, tbey are not subdued. If tiskcd why they don't surrender and place themselves under the protection of our Government, they say that all hut their few remaining lives h;i already been sacrificed; tint our army baa bnrut their houses, fences aud timber, de s'-royed their praiu and crops, carried oil every articlt of personal property and subsistence, that nothing is left them but their aged parents, their women and children, many of whom are hotiselesa wanderers upon the public charities ol a country filled with the;r enemies. To surrender would be but to choose between a prison and death They say they have no ns-urance of protection fiotn us. that those who sought it last summer were painfully disappointed by the retreat of our army. Thus are the people or thi part of Tennessee like the sea weeds upon the reels, bearing the shocks of the rolling billow as they ebb and flow. Wixdkx. The citizens of Rochester, Indiana, held a meeting last .Monday iiiht to take into consideration the propriety of forming a mutual aid socie'y, to relieve those persons from military duty who may be conscripted in that count v. This we deem a good move, and should he followed by other counties. If a man is exempted from draft because of bis wealth, a poor man has the a tme ritflit to exemption on the filet of poverty. Neither should have been exempt, but since Congrts and the Administration have drawn a line of distinction between the rich and the poor, we think it just and proper that our citizens adopt the proper method of placing the pooi man ou an equality with the more fortunate class of citizens that are able to pay $300 aud scarcely mU it EXECUTOR'S SALE. Executor's Sale of Personal Property. fllHK UXDERMGXKD W'LL, OX FP.IDAT, THE 2Stn day or Anmt, 181.1, at the Hoate of John Koontt, in Hrmit XiCl-. la Marion Countv. sell to tbe hiebest bidder nil the person il property belonging to Mary Boffmau, decetar-d. faid property consists of on Mare, one Hore, two Itcd.-trads ana PedJlnc and other bouxebold furnture hei-idt-s such aa bere tn-ntioned. On all ums over ihres dollars a eredit of six months will be Siren, iht purchaser giving not w th security approved. . JACOB HUBERTS, Executor, c. au:3-w3w STOLEN. Two Mares Stolen STOLEX FROM THK SUBSCRIBER, OX THURSDAY ntüht, July 2S, from Fort VVtjne, Ind ana, two Marva. One U a Black Mire. 9 or 10 year old, besry inane and tail, 13 or IS band bigh, no wbite on ber. Tbe otlicr is a BUck Mare, & or S year old, 14 or IS band high, light man and tail. Tbe mares bave been accus towed to work together. I will pay a liberal reward to any prn who will return tbe mares or who will girt Information that wtli lead to the r recovery. Ad J re t- tne st Fort Wayne, Ind. Ju!31-d3Uw2t O. K1KD. WANTED. A SMALL FARM WANTED. TnvisH to puBcnisa a small fajui of thirti, Fort or Fifty Acres with pr.uv rood ImsrOTrm.nLk. and should like to b it convenient to a station on some Railroad leading from Indianapolis. Any one Lav. lue su-h a place for sie w 11 please addrs me at Indi napolis, aivlog full description, with owt r.h nrie junewwaw j. n. txii.BSb. EXECUTOR'S NOTICE. "T0TICR IS HtCRKHY GIVEN THAT THE CXDFR1 S'GXED ha brefi DD0(ntr4 Executrix cf the lat will snd testament of Mania Hug-, late of tbe Ctunty of Mri, in tbe Mate of Ittara, deceased, and that the said estate is snpposed to be solvent. CHRISTINA HUG, Executrix. Indianapolis, Jal y 28, 1S63. ancS-wSw THE UXDFRSIGXKD, HAVING TAKES OCT LET. TERS ot Executorship, with a copy of th will an nexed, on the aetata of Xanr Huffman, deceased, late of Vari 'n County, -his Is to not'fy all person hsring cl.imt agaltut uld estate to preteat tbe ame, duly iuthentlca'od, fr psyramt, and aii-perso sioolng therotelres f be indebted to Mid eUt w.ll call aud make Immediate payment. Tbe ette is appo-ed to be sol rent. JACOB K0M.KXS, Executor, c aniw3w
TO THE LADIES OF
AMERICA! X0TL2 TALUAILETITAX G0I.TS MURE VALUABLE TU AX GOLD! DR. JNO. L. LYONS FUENXII PERIODICAL DROPS. FRENCH PERIODICAL DROPS.FOR FEMALES, FOU FEMALES, Suffering from Irregularity or Obotruc'.ion of the Menses from whatever cause. IT IS SURE TO CUR Et IT 13 SURE TO CUREI It I Impossible to cjoy the bloom health and vivadty of spirits uu!c.- the Menses are rrguVr a to tho tne, the quantity and quality. When they are ohrtmeted, nature makes her effort to obtain for it some o:ber out tt, an 1, antes these efforts of nature are a-i-tf d, the pat ent usually experiences Depond-ncy, 2?errouroeM and finally COXsUMPTIUX ai-ume tu sway, acd prematurely tcrminste.amiseraMe life. IT REMOVES ALL OBSTRUCTIONS! IT REMOVES ALL OBSTRUCTIONS! IT IS A FEKFECT P.F.fiULATOPi IT IS A 1'EKFtCTLEGULATGit! BEAR IX MIXD BEAR IX MIXD THAT I GUARANTEE THAT I GUARANTEE Jfy DKOrS TO CURE Suppression or the ete from whatever cause, though care chonld be ta.u that xoy directions are carefuilj adhered to. BUT THE BEST! BUT THE BEST1 BUT THE SAFEST! BUI THE SAFEST! BUT THE SUREST! EC! THE SUKEST! WHICH IS L OX'S PROFS! WHICH IS LTOS'S DROrSl TIIEY ACT LIKE A CHARM By strengthening and Invigorating and restoring the system to a healthy condition. It moderates all exces and removes all obstructions, and a rpeedy cure may be relied on. TO iiAiiicinn LADIES They are peculiarly adapted, as they bring on the month ly period Ith auch perfect n cularity. EE WISE IX TIME! BE WISE IX TIME! ONE F.01TLE CURKS ONE BOT I LE CUKES In aWwt every case. DO NOT BE IMPOSED UPONDO NUT ßfc UiPÜiEÜ UFOX But cut this out and si nd it to your Drogist, and If he has not cut i. make h m buy it for you, or it may be obtained ot the General Agf lit tor tee I'nited State, C. ft. CLARK A CO., Wholesale f rue;ist. New Haven. Ciin. Foraalo by all r-sputi-iblo Druggist.-. I'rice tl per bnt'le. Wholesale Dealer and the Trade supplied at the IToprietor' prxe by 1,011 O A. S.M I T II, Chlcpo. SCIRE ECKSTEIN it CO., Cincinnati; BP.OWMG t SLOAN. Indianap- Iih. July 13-wlyeew SCALES. ü 3L JtOX JTS m. 2f JL 9 PATENT PLATFORM SCALES i K. F. FA1RBAXK L- H3v,??J ?s : 5 CO., St. Johnsbury rmotit. For sale at Manufacturers 'prltff by - BVTyp W.P.3ALLUP. Agent, ?4WestWashlngtorstM anannt . fndisna. anll-wl v GUARDIAN'S SALE. J ii a rl iuii's Sale of Kcal Estates. TV-oner, is herfbt given that the c-tef-i ShiNED. as Guard an of tbe prnn and e-tate cf Sarp.iret Vanbtaricum, minor hrir cf John Vanblarkurn, deceased, wi l sell at public 1 the nn lirided one half of the followinK describt Tremtse, to-wit: r2ini ir.? at the north M comer of section 11. in township 15, n )r:h of ranre S, ea-t; thru running tact 4 eain and one and a half linke; thence snnth I5cbain to the Terre Haute Railroad; tbence rt 4 chains u on and a half link to tbe octicn litte; thenct oir.b to the place ot beginning, cntaiuing 6 acres sitnatru in Marion count-, S:at of Indiana. Said ,al will take plare on the 22d day of Angusi. 1S5S. -n the premlws, befe tbe hours of 12 Ji. ana 4 P. M. Tbe premife willly jold to the bebest bidder et not less than two thiiditbt appraised vslue spos tbe followit) term- One-third of tbe pnrrhae m"ney to be paid cath in hand, one-third in U and one-third in IS months from day of sale. rr tbe deterred payments notes are to he given bearing interest wi h sood ireurity. payable without any relief from valuation r appraiseneDt la. PERCT HOSURtKJK. Julv27-w3w Gusrdan. LECAL. STATE OF INDIANA, MARION COUNTT, SS In th Court of Common flea of Marlon County, in tb State of Indiana, ctobT Term, A. D. 1663. Jacob Hilliim vi lane Wil iair.n. Ka It known that on the .Vhh day of July, fnth year 1S81, the above named plaint. IT, by bi attorney filrd ia tbe office of the Clerk of the Co' rt of Coiumoa Plea hi complaint ailnsi uiu defendant in th above eniitlci cntisc, together with an affidavit of a competent person, thai iihI defeudant, Jane Wiiliaros, 1 not Ti.ident vf the State of Indiana. Said defendant la therefore, hereby notified of th filing and pendency of a:d complaint agtjD-t ber, and trat unlem she appear aud aiuwer or iVnjnr thereto, at th oulling ol said cansr on the aecond day of tbe next term of said Court, to he begun and belj at the Court House, la tbe city of Indianapolis, on the Crt Hon 'ay in October net, said complaint, and the n,atter and things therein contained and alleged, will he heard and determined ia her absence. WILLIAM WALLACE, Clerk. Hy W. C. Saioea. Deputy. afcDnsst.D it Roache. Attorneys for Plaintiff. aupS-wSw 1TATE OF IXDIAXA, MARIOX COUXTT, SS: In tho 3 Criurtof Common Pleas of Marion County, la the Sute of Indiana, October Term, A. D. 1863. JoUsh Lud low vs. Elizabeth K. Ludlow. Be It known. That on ill 20th day of July ia the year ISC3, the a bor named plaintiff by hi attorney filed In tbe office of the Clerk of the Common Pleas Court of Marion County hU cumplaint against said defendant, la the above entitled cause, together with an a davit of a competent peton, that sa:d defendant. I lizabeta K. L'idlow, u not a resident of th State of Indiana. Said defendant therefore, hereby notified of tbe filing and pendency of said complaint acaicrt ber, and that utiles she appear and answer or demur thereto, at the calling of said cause on the second day of the next term of said Court, to be begnn and held at the Court House. In the city of Indianapolis, on the first Eon day In October next, said complaint, and the matter and thing therein contained and alleged, will be beard and determined In her absence. WSl. WALLACE, Clerk. Rap k Hall, Attorneys for Plaintiff. JoIt?7-wSw LICENSE. Notice of Application fr f,lccnae - VT0T1CEIS HEREBT OIVEX THAT I WILL APPLY 1 to the Board of Oromh-aloners of Marion county, Indiana, at their next term, commencing n tu first Monday In September, l$r3, for a license to eil "Intoxicating liquor iu a less qnantitv than a quart at a time,' with the privilege of allowing tbe same to b drank on my premise, for on year My place of t aslnes and the premise whereon aid liquors ere to be sold and drank are located at No. M F.at South street, in Indianapolis In (-'-tit re towtulup, m Marin Count, Indiana. WILUAM WIL&CX. upS-wIw FOR SALE. n -m. JB& sr V GRIST AND SAW MILL WITH TWEXTT-PITX acre of land attached, six miles west ef Indianapo lis. Th Mill will he sold entire, or tbe mach i Der j sprstely. Inquire of FROTCSSUTH, Real Estate Agent, opposite two t euowi' UklU JulylS-Smw WANTED. ffß A .no Til! We want axente at t0 Mill month, expense paid, to eil onr tteHatt. ing I'tncih, Orient d Evrneri,xA IS other new, useful and curious articles. IS circulars, free. myll-wSm SHAW CLARK, B.ddetord, He. Clfl? A TIOWTII! Iw.nttohlreAreateloev ,3 I ry county at $75 a month, expense nasi l . II mr nw. CBtlD Famllv Sawtn u.-v. . ' ttyU-w3a Addre, 8.MAW50X,Atfr4a?e.
. P HEBiXK'l """l CATTLE, Air: COAL, 1 -,V-Vi2i V-V GRAIN, te?Vt?r& WAREHOUSE, 'ft-f RAILROAD, pMlfe'M'N COUXTER Jr4$M7V & i E. 4 F. FA1RBAXK
