Indiana State Guard, Volume 1, Number 45, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 October 1860 — Page 2
THE OLD LINE GUARD
A. B. CAKLTON,
WIMIAH CTLLKV
EDITOKS.
TUESDAY, - - - - - - - OCTOBER 30. National Democratic Ticket. FOR rRKSIDBNTj JOHN C. BRECKINRIDGE, OF KENTUCKY.
FOR VICE PRESIDENT, J O SE P1I LAN E, OF OREGON.
ELECTORS FOR THE STATE AT LARGE: James Morrison, of Marion. Delana R. Eckels, of rut nam. DISTRICT ELECTORS. Is District Dr. G. G. Barton, of Daviess county. 2d " Dr. William F. She.rrod, of Orange. 3d " David Slieeks, of Monroe. 4th " Ethelbert C. Hibben, of Rush. 5th " Samuel Orr, of Delaware. 6th " Franklin Hanlin, of Johnson. 7th " James A. Scott, of Putnam. 8th " Col. William M. Jenners, of Tippecanoe. 9th " James Bradley, of Laporte. 10lh " Robert Breckinridge, jr., of Allen. 11th " John R. Colfroih, of Huntington. STATE CENTRAL COMMITTEE. 1st District J.B.Gardner,
2d
3d 4th 5th Gth
7th 8 th . 9th 10 th 11th
Levi Sparks,
Geo. II. Kvle, Dr. B. F. Mullen, : Alex. White, ; John U. Elder, 3 nmes M. Tomlinson, Julius Nicnhti. . James Johnson, James M. Oliver, Thomas Wood, Thomas D. Lemon, G. F. R. Wadlcigh, : Dr. E. B. Thomas. W. II. TALBOTT, Chairman.
ELECTION TICKETS. We call on our fiiends in every county to provide thenis -Ives with plenty of Election Tickets, Do this at once. Don't neglect it, and see that they are furnished at every poll. They will be supplied at this office, and sent to any direction given, postage free, tor 75 cents a thousand. Send your orders, with the money, to ELDER & DARKNESS. fThe money must accompany the order, to secure attention. Circulate tlie Tickets. We insert two columns of tickets in this day's paper, for distribution amongst the fiiends of Breckin" ridge and Lank. They are printed only on one side, so that they may be used at the coming election . by the voters. Each number of the Old Line Guard, from now until the election, will contain fourteen tickets. If every one of our subscribers will exert himself to put these tickets into good hands, so that they will find their way into the ballot boxes, he may do much towards perpetuating the Union, and deserve the thanks of unborn generations who will share its blessings. One vote in the House of Representatives in I80O, when there was a tie between Jefferson and Burr, elected the author of the Declaration of Independence President, and defeated the frst traitor to the Democratic party. The two-thirds vote in the National Democratic convention of 1844 defeated Van Buren, the second traitor, and fourteen tickets circulated by ea. h true Demo rat in every school district may defeat Douglas, the third traitor. The Old Line Guard's Course in Relation to .the State Ticket. The State Sentinel asks Mr. Bright : " Did not your organ in this S;ate, sustained in part by your contributions, announce that it would not vote the Democratic State ticket, without its action being publicly repudiated and rebuked by you'" If Mr. Bright's subscriptions to the Democratic papers give him the right to repudiate or rebuke, publicly or privately, whatever may displease him in their columns, the Sentinel would have had its mouth stopped long since. There would have been no necessity for that gentleman to have given such a severe rebuke to it, as he, did in his card in our paper of Saturday last, when he applied to certain editors certain well-known Saxon epithets.. Where the Guard has received one dollar from Mr. Bright, in the way of subscriptions or otherwise, the Sentinel has received ten. We frankly admit that we did say, as an individual, that we would not vote for the Douglas State ticket; but our columns will furnish abundant proof, that we advised our political fiiends not to vote for the Republican State ticket. We could not sustain the Hendricks State ticket, for the reason that our Central Committee, through a delegation of well-known Breckinridge men, had asked for assurances from the Douglas Committee, that they would not claim its election as a Douglas victory. The Douglas Committee failed to give any satisfaction upon this point. The editor of the 'Sentinel was solicited, as one of the member of
the omiT My, to give guch satisfaction. It was a small boon; but small as it was, the editor of the Sentinel, as the organ of hit Committee, would not give it. That we advised our Breckinridge fi iends not to vote for the Republican State ticket, under any provocation, the following paragraph from the Old Line Guard of the Gth of October, will show : "We insert, in another column, a communication from an old and highly respected Democrat, signed X. Y., in relation to the State ticket. The writer of it was oa the Fair Ground, on the 2Hlh of September, at the time Douglas and Johnson made speeches. He heard the violent and outrageous epithets which the Illinois demagogue and Georgia aristocrat applied to Breckinridge and his friends in Indiana, lie heard the names of "disunion!!," "secessionists," ' bolters," and "traitors," applied to as sound Democrats and as stiong supporters of the Union as ever the sun phone ou. 11-3 saw the leading friends of the Douglas Slate ticket applauding ami cheering at t!ioe vile epithets. His indignation was amused by suh abuse and such conduct on the part of Douglas and Johnson, and their drill sergeants in Indiana. And it is na: lira!, when an honest and sensijve man writes under outraged feelings, to turn upon his detainers in a retalia-to-y spirit Al houih we sympathize with the author of this communication, in the deepest re ewt of our heart although we would go as far as him to hurl back those vile epithets ujion the calumniators wiio uttered thein, to whom they more justly apply although we shall rejoice to see the defeat of every candid ife on the Douglas Sta'c ticket who cheered an I shouted when those villainous woils were used still we cannot go so far as Liui, in voting for the Lincoln S -ate ticket."
How the Breckinridge Men Voted at tho State Election- The Slandor3 of the Douglas Papers Eefuted, The Republican paper at Jeflersonville, upon whose authority the Louisville Democrat, State Sentinel, and other Douglas papers based their charge their infamous charge that Senator Biticirr voted the Republican ticket, has ceased to exist. It has gone down,
Henry S. Lane would be elected Governor," &c, &e. Now, it is an old saying, that any fool can nk questions, but it takes a w ise man to answer them. Jell'erson was once asked by one of his friends, why he did not notice certain insinuations made against him in the licentious press of his day. "Why," replied tha1 great man, " if 1 should take time to notice even the direct charges made against me in the federal prints, he wheels of goernnicnt would stop." So, if Mr. Bright should take timo to replv to all the frivolous
with its base and villainous lie unatoncd for without: insinuations in the Sentinel, ho would not be able the power to correct its slander, or to do justice to the j to meet one-tenth of the engagements which he man whom it, tn his absence, so disgracefully wronged, i has made to address his Democratic friends in vaIt has " gone down to the vile earth from whence itjrious parts of the State; and that, wo suppose, is sprung, unwept, uuhonored, and unsung." the object which the Smtinel desires to accomplish. But the Louisville Democrat and Stale Sentinel tliepviieti theWiW can bring forward any Democrat 6r echoes of the Jeflersonville llepublican, who circulated g00j character, instead of the defunct Republican pa-
The Leader of the Rule and Ruin Faction.
The Memphis (Tenn.) Avalanche of the 24th inst
announces the arrival of Douglas in Tennessee in I
The Prospects of the Canvass.
its calumny far and wide "still live" not to make
the amende. honoruUe to Mr. Bkigiit, but to profit by the lie which they retailed against him. But whether these Douglas organs correct the calumny or not, it has, to a large extent, done its work it has spread its mischief throughout the length and
breadth of Indiana and Kentucky, and it has, we
per at Jeflersonville, to charge Mr. Bright with the utterance of any sentiment favorable to the election of Henry S. Lane or any other candidate on the Republican State ticket, we feel warranted in saying that he will confront that man, whoever he may be, in the same bold and fearless manner as he has met the
charge of the "liar and slanderer" who lately catered
fear, deceived many an honest and unsuspecting j t0 tm3 Cincinnati iVijinrayand alleged that he voted Democrat, who has seen it in papers heretofore regard- for rne. As to lie Sentinel's question to Mr. Bright
ed as Democratic, and believe it was well founded. It whether "bo did not, directly or indirectly, bet that has gone the rounds of two States, and been echoed Lane would be elected Governor?" we are authorized and re-echoed in the columns of all the little Douglas 1... yr. TWht tri s,v ,t,nt , ,;, ymv. if the
papers which look up to the Louisvilie Democrat and ,&nriW has any proof to sustain its insinuations, we State Sentinel for light and knowledge. There is call upon that paper to produce it, or odierwiso plead hardly time for the refutation of the slander to reach uit. of lyingthrow itself upon the mercy of the the extremities of the two States, and to be read by . l)t.locrati"o party, whom it has attempted to deceive all those Democrats who have been led astray, before ! antl gve ua;i f0I. gooj behavior hereafter, even it it they will have voted at the Presidential election. j should be only leg bail. Falsehood, it has been said, will travel round the world, I -- - ,. , . :
while Truth is putting on its boots ; and such, no doubt, was the impression of the circulators of this calumny when they gave it wings during the absence of Mr.
Bright when he was some eight hundred miles away : from home believing, as they did, that it would pro-: duce its effect upon unwary and unsuspecting Democrats before he would see it in print or have time to pronounce it a slander. j Senator Bright, however, Iot no time on his return home, when a similar charge, which appeared in the Cincinnati Enquirer, another Douglas organ, was called to his attention, to stamp the author of it as a "i'r and slanderer." And he applied the same plain and forcible Saxon epithets to all those " Editors of Douglas newspapers who have reiterated the charge, and; vouched for its truth," He applied these epithets not!
only to the man who, it wassaf, told the Editor of the Enquirer that he "saw his (Mr. Bright's) ticket, that he knew how he voted, and that he voled for Lane, orany oilier Republican candidate on the State Ticket" he applied, we say, these epithets not only to the author of these falsehoods, but to all his accomplices who had a hand in giving it currency. So much for the charge against Mr. Bright. Now.
let us see whether there is any truth m the allegation originated by the Slate Sentinel the day after the State
election, when it charged that Breckinridge men generally had voted for the Republican State ticket, and thus defeated the Hendricks ticket. It based this charge, it will be recollected also, upon Republican authority, giving the Cincinnati Gazette and the Indianapolis Journal as its authors representing, as it did, that the latter paper had admitted its truth, which, tho Journal subsequently said it had only done in a Pickwickian sense. As Republican witnesses were good enough for the Sentinel, before the ballot-boxes were examined, to sustain its charges, we presume it will not be deemed improper for us to introduce a Republican witness to prove its falsity, especially when the testimony which we. submit is sustained by the Jigures of the official canvass, which do not lie. It is well known that the first Congressional District of Indiana is the BitECKiNKiDGE stronghold in the State, Where at least five thousand of the friends of Breckinridge reside. It is well known, al-o, that Mr; Law, the Democratic candidate for Congress in that District, was nominated not long before the election, and that the
Breckinridge men were friendly to his election, as well as to that of Mr. Cunningham, the candidate for State Treasurer on the Hendricks ticket. It will thus be seen that instead of the Breckinridge men voting against Hendricks, that a large number of the Douglas men 7nust have voted not only against Law, the Democratic candidate for Congress, but also against Cunningham, the candidate for Treasurer of -State, on the same ticket with Hendricks, merely because he was suspected of being friendly to Breckinridge. It will thus be seen that the Sentinel has charged against the Breckinridge men the very offense committed by its fiiends proved upon the latter by the official figures! The official canvass from the counties forming the
Democratic National LxOCUtlVe Committee, j standard; lie 'may hoodwink such aspirants as Johnson
. ' . ,, ; Letcher, and Foote; but the masses, who ask nothing
0 . , c . .aand expect nothing from him, even were it possible
From the N. Y. Journal'of Commerce. We have already shown, from the information which' .1..... ii i .irif . ...
1 i 1 a 1 1 n-tiLims us uiroiuni unierem sources, that it i mnto in terms indicating anytlungel.se than a hearty welcome. : the th(f anti.Linco,n men U m " Jhe sfata His purpose, to sow the seeds of discord and disunion in of New York in the coming election. According to the Demoiratie party of 'that State, and to make Republican estimates, Lincoln has but a poor chance strength there for Bell and the Know-Nothings, as he ? every succeeding prediction put forth by has done in all the Northern States for Lincoln, seems h" UoIm '1,ca"S' j.?.'1"' morc 'bl l,0Pf achieving , , a triumph. Politicians are busy on both sides in to be well understood. It he is not bent upon the . making estimates, and sometimes" they are indiscreet destruction of the party to which he owes all his dis- enough to show the wrong paper to their political optinctions if he was only inclined to promote his own l,0"uils- We have now before us two separate esti-election-whvdoes he not remain at home, and confront PJble ult on the electoral ticket in . r, ., T, ,. , i this State, made, one bv a candid and careful RepubLincoln in his own State ! He set him upas a prophet i;t.an, who is in communication with the ablest and
, at Charleston and Baltimore, when he predicted that most thoroughly informed men of that party, and the This nomination wuldiToTily give him Illinois butotn,,p iU--tive and prominent Democrat, who is
all the other Northern States. His nomination and his sipiatter sovereignty doctrine would, he predicted) bring back to the Democratic party all the free-soilers who had left it in those States. Why, then, does he not labor in his own State, to make his predictions good where" so many free-soilers are to be found ? A
1 prophet, however, is without honor in his own country. I Judging from the remarks in all the Democratic papers j of the South, Douglas is also without honor there. j Since his speech in Norfolk, Virginia in which he ; threatened to stand by Lincoln underall circumstances, and to hang up as high as Hainan every advocate of j Southern rights he is spoken of as "hangman" Douglas. And yet with a face of brass, and a heart over
flowing with treason to the Democratic party, he wends his way Southward, knowing that there is not a State or district :-outh of Mason and Dixon's line, in which the people do not look upon hiin with loathing and disgust. There may be occasionally found a man whom he can delude by promises of office to join his
mittec:
Hon. I. I. Stevens,' of Oregon, Chairman, lion. R. W. Johnson, of Arkansas.
Hon. Jefferson Davis, of Mississippi. Hon. Jesse D. BiuiiiiT, of Indiana, lion. Tnos. B. Florence, of Pennsylvania. Hon. John W. Stevenson, of Kentucky. Hon. Geo. W. IIcghes, of Maryland. Hon. John R. Thomson, of New Jersey. Hon. A. B. Meeic, of Alabama. AvocTcu Schnei.i., Esq., of New York. Isaac II. Wright, of Massachusetts. Abraham Hunter, Esq., of Benton, Missouri. Hon. Jas. G. Barrett, of Washington, D. C. W.M. Flinn, Esq., of Washington, D. C. Walter Lenox, Esq., of Washington, D. C. M. W. Clisky, Washington, D. C, Resident Secretary. G. W. Rtcos, Washington, D. C, Treasurer. All communications should be addressed to Hon. I.I. Stevens, Chairman, Washington, D. C. Rooms of the Committee at No. 28 4 street. Democratic newspapers are requested to place this reference at the head of their editorial columns. New York will go Against Lincoln. BRECKINRIDGE AND LANE FOREVER! Thirty thousand majority in the city of New York for the Union ticket is conceded by the Republicans, and forty thousand is claimed by the Union men. Ten thousand majority in the city of Brooklyn is also conceded by the Republicans, and fifteen thousand is claimed by the Unionists. So it goes in nearly all the counties bordering on the Bay and Hudson River from Sandy Hook to the mouth of the Erie Canal footing up for the Union ticket, oa reaching Albany, a snug majority of at least eighty-five thousand. Now, even Greeley, who is equal to Seward at the game of brag, does not claim over seventy thousand north and west of Albany for the Republican ticket, If, therefore, the estimates of the leading politicians on both sides, who have canvassed all the counties in the State, and whose estimates have come to light, should ap
proach within a reasonable distance of accuracy, the Empire State is bound to give at least fifteen thousand majority for the Union ticket. As New York goes, se goes the L'nion ; and if the Union ticket is successful there, Breckinridge and Lane will be tho next President and Vice President of these LTniled States, as sure as they live to the 4th of March next. The recent elections in Pennsylvania, Ohio, and Indiana, have driven all the Southern States together, and they now form one solid and compact phalanx in favor of Breckinridge and Lane, as the only men who can defeat Lincoln. The accounts of the enthusiasm manifested by all the divisions of the Union party in New York,
first Congressional District has been before the editor j wlli(-'11 Iiave corae to 'ai,(l remind us of the days of of the State Seittine' for some time.' The evidence of i Jackson. No less than forty thousand men marched
the falsity of his charge has been proved by (he figures. Did he, like an honest man, seize the fir.t moment to do justice to the Breckinridge men to make
I the "amende honorable?" Not at all! We did not expect him to blush upon being convicted of fa!sehood, for what would cause him to blush would make j some men leave their country. But we did tuppose ! that he would at least exhonorate the Breckinridge men from the foul charge, when the truth of their entire innocence stared him in the face.
through the streets of New York, on Tuesday night last, in one body, forming a procession six miles in length. We have seen many a procession in New York city, in by-gone times ; but this one goes a little ahead of all others. When the great commercial emporium of the country is thus aroused in behalf of the Union exercising, as it always does, a commanding influence upon the State, there can be no such thin" as a failure for the L'nion ticket. Democratic Hoosiers! Here is a noble example set you by the People
j But, instead of coining out in a frank and candid of all parties in New York, who have broken loose ! manner, and admitting that he had done wrong to Mr : from the restraints of political managers and drill j Bright and the Bueckinridge men generally, the sergeants. Here is a glorious example set you by the I Sentinel of yesterday again skulk behind the back o' : People, who have risen in their majesty, and cast the j the Louisville Democrat and reiterates the following! little petty office-seeking trimmers and wire-workers i base insinuation not daring to make another direct aside. Democratic Hoosiers I Will you consent to be charge against the Senator, who is now al home. bound hand and foot by the miserable and wretched 'Now, what does he (Mr. Bright) deny? That a cabal of office-seekers in Indianapolis, who has rejected : man saw him and knew how he voled; or, that he vo-: every overture made by the Breckinridge Committee jt 'd for any Republican candidate ? Couldn't Mr. : of lndiana for Ullioil ? Will vou not, like the masses f Bright say, it it were true, that he did not vote fori , , r ',
any Republican? Why couldn't he just say how he 01 Acw 01K-11Kf "'eenicn, Knowing your rights
go wnn me irue menus 01 union, ior me saKe 01 the
tor I11111 .to succeed, cannot be bamboozled. Even Alexander II. Stevens, a gentleman possessing a higher reputation for splendid eloquence than common sense, has discovered, at last, that there is no hope of his get. ting the vote of a single State in the Union, and abandoned him! STEPHEN A. DOUGLAS. This leader of the desperate "rule or ruin" faction which bears his name a taction powerless in the North to combat with Republicanism, and fruitful in the South of nothing but the most pernicious disorganization, entered Tennessee yesterday. He conies in
to the Slate the wreck of a once great and proud Democratic statesman, then the idol of his own party, and the stalwart antagonist of its manifold assailants. He comes now with the inscription of "revenge upon his banners" to strike the party of which he was once the honored favorite, merely because that party choose not to follow lii 111 in his inglorious fall from the high standard of principle which it has alwavs occuoied.
and because it would not exalt him to its highest position and adopt the heresy he has fostered to his bosom. Taught that the Den. ocracy is not contracted by the mere "pent up Utica" of a single man, and that it can live without a Douglas as well as it did without a Van Buren and the other traitors who rebelled against its inscrutable laws of organization and principle, he comes to wriggle out his fast ebbing political existence in an inglorious eflbrt to still further divide, by his personal exei tious, the Democracy of the South, in order to insiiie the success of John Bell. Yes, in order to gratify the malignant spirit which wranklcs in his bosom against his old party and its honored standard-bearers, he now proposes to traverse the South to aid in giving the slaveholding States to the ancient enemies of the Jackson Democracy. The indelicacy of his position is more to be pitied
than assailed. He conies to an excited and sensitive South at a time when her wisest counsels are directed to avert a crisis upon which the country trembles, for no other purpose than 1o add fuel to the flames which now threaten to envelop us. Our material interests are assailed, and the melancholy spectacle of a people rent by internal strifes presents itself as a feeble barrier to our enemies. Judge Douglas can have no
just appreciation of our domestic difficulties at this
tune, fie has no right to partake of our counsels, or to share in our despondency, lie comes from the North, the manufactory 'of our troubles, and with indelicate and ruthless hand interposes his own power to disturb all efforts at union amongst us. Wielding
over his blind and deluded followers a tyranny which infatuates, and at the same time controls them, he is here to order thein lo continue the work of disorganization they have so well begun. The inherent virtue of the Democracy will, however, triumph, and time will picture it onward in its high career, whilst Judge Douglas and his party, in sackcloth and ashes, will indulge in the retribution ofthcir dee) treason against its organization, and their unholy efforts to insure its defeat. He, himself, will be left, like the gigantic Torso in ancient statuary, with but the mutilated trunk to give evidence of what he was in the former days of his grandeur and greatness. Memphis Avalanche. 'Won't Attack Lincoln, but will Attack '. ; . Breckinridge. The Douglas organ in Detroit relates the following incident of Mr. Douglas' speaking at Kalamazoo: " Some one asked him about Lincoln's position on the question, and especially in reference to his vote on the bounty lands tor the soldiers in the Mexican war. This Mr. Douglas declined to answer, saying that he did not come there to attack Mr. Lincoln." Mr. Douglas will not attack Mr. Lincoln, in his speeches, yet he has and will continue to attack Mr. Bkeckinridge, and to pour out the vials of his wrath against the President of the United States. He can slate falsehoods with impunity against Mr. Breckinkidoe, but he dares not even tell the truth about the candidate of the Black Republicans. "A fellow feeling" tor Lincoln makes the little squatter "wondrous
kind" toward the candidate of "irrepressible conflict" Abolitionism.
probably, better acquainted with the condition of ( Western New York than almost any other person, and whose figures for the Eastern counties are based upon the opinions of discreet supporters of the Union
ticket. As these estimates were made entirely independent of each other, without consultation, and with 110 expectation that they would ever be made public, there is a remarkable agreement between them the figures for several of the counties being precisely alike in both tables. Another fact will not fail to strike the reader forcibly. It is the evidence of candor, and a desire to avoid extravagant estimates, evinced in giving, in repeated instances, a larger vote to the opposing party, than is claimed by its friends. It will be seen that both of these estimates are of a character to render the contest in New York doubtful. Both, it is true, give the Slate to the Union ticket one by a very small and the other by a very moderate majority, when we consider the magnitude of the aggregate vote but as each was intended to concede all that could be deemed probable against its own side, it is quite possible that both are near approximations. One fact we wish the anti-Lincoln men of the State to bear constantly in mind, viz., that they can succeed if they will put forth proper effort. If they fail, it
will be for lack of jailh and work, hut these be put forth in proper measure, and victory is certain. But there is no time to lose. Only a few days remain in which to accomplish a vast amount of work. The Lincoln men are lavish of eflbrt and money, and no exertion will be spared to bring out the last vote for their candidates. A corresponding eflbrt must be put forth for the Union ticket, if success is to be attained. There is another fact which we would impress upon every anti-Lincoln man in the State and country. It is, that he must do something personally and individually for the cause. Every man can help, bestowing time or money, or bodi, to complete the canvass of every election district, and bring out the voters. This done, and we are safe, It must be done, and that without delay. - ' The following are the estimates to which we have referred. They speak for themselves :
REPUBLICAN
Allegany. Broome. ..... Chatauqua. . . Cattaraugus. . . Cortland. . ... Cayuga. ...... Chenango. Columbia. . Chemung. . . , . Delaware Essex, . . , ...-'.-, Fulton Genesee . . . .. . . Herkimer. ... . Jefferson. . . . . Lewis. ...... . Livingston.. Madison ...... Monroe. ...... Niagara. ......
Oneida. ....... Onondaga Ontario. ...... Otsego , Oswego. ...... Orleans. , . . . , St. Lawrence . . Saratoga Schenectady. . . Steuben. Tioga. . . . . Tompkins. , ... Washington . . . Wayne. .... .. Wyoming. . . . . Yates. . . . .' . . . . Schuyler.
COUNTIES.
Claimed by Rep. Majority. 3,500 1,800 ......3.000 3,000 1.200 . . . . . .3,000 . . . . . .t.ftOO 200 . . ... 40U 300 ......1,200 .. ... 300 . ., ...1,500 .'..'. . .2,500 . .... .2,800 ......1,000 ......1,200 ... . .3,800 . .. .. .2,000 . . 700 ..'.'. . .3,000 4,500 . . 500 . . 400 ...... 3,000 . ... . .1,000 . . . . . .0,000 J,00 . . 100 .. ...1,500 ." ' ...... 500 ....... 500: .....1,500 3.000 1,500 . .1,200 ...... 400.
Conceded by Dem. Majority. 3,000 1,800 3,000 2,500 1,200 3,000 1,000
500 100 1,500 2,500 1,800 500 1,200 8,000 2,000 500 3,000 4,000 500 1,000 2,000 1,000 6,000 500 : 2,000 300 1,200 1,500 2,000 1,000: 1,000 200
.''.:": 4,000 . DEMOCRATIC UNION COUNTIES. Conceded by Rep. : Majority. Albany. ... . .. .. .. ... . .1,500 Erie ............ . 500 Franklin. ...... . ...... . ... 200 ; Greene. 800 Hamilton. .... .. . .... . 200 Kings. ........... .... ........ 10,000 New York :, . . ..... ...... .37,000 Orange .... ...... 1,000 Putnam . ....... .... 700 Queens. ..................... . 1,500 Rensselaer .... 2,0(10 Richmond. . . .1,200 Rockland 1,000 Schoharie 1 ,500 Seneca ... ... 300 Siillblk..... 500 Sullivan ... ... 1,800 Ulster 1,800 Westchester 2,500
56,300 Claimed by Dem. Majority. '"'2,060 1,000 300 ,-'. 700 200 10,000 40,000 1,000 1,200 1,500 2,000 1.200 1,000 1,500 400 1.500 1,500 1,200 2,500
Union, and assist in the defeat of Lincoln and all the enemies of our glorioiy Confederacy V The time is near at fiand. New York leads the column. New York, which commenced the great political Revolution in 1800, which placed Thomas Jef-
voicd name the men he voted for? A direct denial
was eav; it is not given. Did Mr. Bright follow the
' advice he gave the evening before the election, or was '. that for others lo follow? iMuisville Democrat. j What Mr. Bright did deny in his card, which we i published in our last Saturday's paper, follows:
I of the Enquirer that -he saw my ticket," that he knows ! tvnon at thc 1,("ad tof t,ie Government-New York, 1 how I voted, and that I voted for Mr. Lane, or any ; which led in the great contest of 1828, which placed I o'her Republican candidate on the Siate Ticket, is a Andrew Jackson in jiower, now leads off in another ! liar ami slanderer: and I apply the same epithet to atmc n behalf of thc Union. Her mighty strength, certain t hiols of Douglas newspapers who have re- , . Ti 1 -n . iterated this charge and vouched for its truth." whcnexerted.caiinot be resisted. Iloos.ers! will you not Here Mr. Bright plainlv, and unequivocallv, and' j0m in with NeW York and tbe Vt, Hie generpointcdlv savs that the gentleman of veracity" who 0U!' t,ie ""leHKMiled South, whose policy has extended declared that he (Mr. Bright) voted for Mr. Lane, or t,,u 1,mlts of the Unlon fl0m the 0!,, River to ,1,e i an v other Republican candidate on the State ticket, is Pac,fic occaa ? Lct 'our tcl.word be-,
Breckinridge and Lane Medals Good Stock. On yesterday, says the Houmas, La., Ceres, a mer
chant informed us that he sold before breakfast, medals having the pictures of BitECKiXKiDGE-and Lane, Bell and Everett, and Douglas and Johnson as follows, to-wit:
. . . . 75 medals. ....': 8 do .. . . 1 do
The medals had only liecn received a few hours before.
Claimed by both. Dutchess. . . . ... . . , Clinton. .. ... ...... Montgomery. . . . , . Warren
66,000 Rep. . .. .500 . . . .300 . . . .200 . ..500
70,700 D. Union. 500 . 200 400 200
1,500 RECAPITULATION". Estimate by Lincoln man. 37 Counties not claimed by Union men give Lincoln ... .64,000 4 Counties (also claimed by Union men)....,.... .. 1,5001 9 Counties conceded to Union ticket
1.300
-65,500 66,000
Breckinridge and Lane. Bell and Everett Douglas and Johnson ...... .
Majority against Lincoln, by Lincoln man's estimate. 500 Democratic Estimate, 1 Counties not claimed for Lincoln. .70,700 4 " also ' " " ..1,30072,000 3 7 " conceded " " . . 56,300
"No pentrup Utica contracts our powers; The whole boundless continent is out's."
a liar and slanderer." What more could any man say stronger tlian this, in contradiction of such a cliarge 1 i tl'Kal mnrs. nnv T'.ilitnr liavinn a t, v Cn
, . . j .iC r'-- Tl'e organs here, and the little organs thvought his reputation, or anv respect for the intel hgence of , .1 , . -u r 1 . 1 1 I ' 1 - out lhe rnnnfrv mailA a tomlAf fiis alir.iit Kn.'hf
C3 Keep it before the people that the Douglasiu nd llepublican in the Oregon Legislature have fused to elect E. D. Biker, an Exeter Hall Abo'kionist, to to the S.-natj of th United States.
Ins realers nat more, we ask, could any Alitor re-, voting for the Black Republicans. Bright says he did ijuire, before he proceeded to prove hiscliarge, if it wot not vote for one single candidate of that party not tn hit power lodosvt Instead, however, of producin" one : am w far not ol"-' ot t!ie papers in the interest the shadow of prorf, he proceeds to ask Mr. Bright I f ei,.,,cr.B -'! r Douglas has had the manliness to do , , . ' .... , . " Inm justice 111 the premises. Aot one lias had the iimiilx rof questions, whether he did not, Ufore the manline.-s to correct the false and slanderous report election, say l.i or thi1 whether he did not "hi tliat ' to which it gave currency. Louinille Courier.
j From Missouri. The St. Louis Bu'letin says it has seen a letter from
Col. S. B. Churchill to a gentleman in that city, "in j which he gives the most glowing accounts of what the ! Breckinridge men are doing in the Northwest. Ha says that they ' have had a perfect Demo.-ratic revival'
throughout that section; that 'great changes are taking place;' that our friends are in the finest spirits, and confident of success; and that 'the people are ; fully aroused and enthusiastic,' and 'intend to give! Breckinridge and Lane a decisire majority.' 'I! tell you,' says he, 1 things look well up here.'" Haud to Suit Scene is a News Depot. Customer What sort of fjH-rs do you sell here? Boy (with eager expectation) O, we keep all sorts. Call for wha'ever you like. Cut'omer (coolh) I'll take one containing some late Bell victoiip, if yon phase. Boil (cre-'ttallcn.) Tlieif you've got me!
Majority against Lincoln, by Dem. estimate. . .15,700 Mass Meetingat Madison. Messrs. Editors: A Mass Convention of DemocratsfViendlytoBRF.cKixninGEand LaxeUIo be held here on Nov. 3d, (Saturday next.) We have Ksted Doctor Mullen for a speech, who told mo he would come here some time before the election. Where is he? If you know, send him the enclosed. Get word -to him someway, so that we may not be disappointed. Yours, &c., M. G. BRIGHT.
The Oregon Fusion. We are glad to be able to say that we know several Douglas lH-mocrats in this citv, who have been so thoroughly disgusted by the shameless fusion which has taken place in Oregon between the Douglasite and Black R pnb!icans, and which resulted in the election of Col. E. D. Baker, Black Republican, and Nesmith. Douglasite. 'to the United States Senate, that they have determined to vote for Breckinridge. So goes on the good work. .V. Ijoui Brdltiin.
