Plymouth Weekly Democrat, Volume 2, Number 48, Plymouth, Marshall County, 26 December 1861 — Page 1
PLYJmO
WEEKLY
DEMOCRAT.
HERE LET THE PRESS THE PEOPLE'S RIGHTS MAINTAIN; UNAWED BY INFLUENCE AND UNBOUGHT BY GAIN."
VOLUME 2 NEW SERIES.
TV- K - Ul iüWa i i !M VJJUl J-! AMA&. ÜJgJLL .IKiajbaJ
A fortunate Kiss. Tho following pretty little tory is narrated by Frederiia Bremer, who vouches for its truthfulness: In '.he University of Upsula, in Sweden, lived a young student, a noble youth, "with a great love for studies, but without the means of pursuing thern. Ho vras poor, and without connexions, living in great poverty, but keeping a cheerful heart, and trying to look at tho future, "whi.'h looked so grimly at him. His good humor and excellent qualities made him beloved by his young comrades. One ttay he was standing with somo of them in the great square of Upsula, prattling away an hour of leisure, when ilw? attention of the young men became ar tested by a young and elegant lady, who, at the elde of an elderlv one, was slowly walking' over the place. It was the only daughter I of the Governor of Upala, living in if, r.'xtv. nd th ladr wiih her was her
j O - erness. Sh was generally known for lierjbcre " charge that we have opposed iroodness and rentleness of character, and j the war that we have advocated secession
looked on with admiration by all the students. As the young men stood gazing at her, as she passed on like a grace- i ful vision, one of them suddenly exclaim- ; ed: Well, it would be worth something to have a kiss from such a mouth1' The poor student, the hero of our story fho looked on that pure, angelic face, exclaimed, as if by inspiration 'Well. I think I could have it! What! cried his friends in a chorus, 'are you crazy? Do you know her?' Not at all'.' he answered; 'but I think she would kiss me now, if asked her. 'What! in this place before all our eves?' In this place, before your eyes.' Freely?' Freelv Well, if she will give you a kiss in that j manner, I will give you a thousand dollars! exclaimed one of the parly. 'And 1 'and 1 exclaimed three or Jour others; for it so happened that several j rich young mea were in the group, and the bets ran high on so improbable an event. The challenge was made and accepted in lesg time than we take to tell it. Our hero (my authority tells not whether he was handsome or plain; I have my peculiar ideas for believing that he was rather plain, but singularly good looking v . 11.,1 ,.iv same time,) immediately walked oil , , , i l . I voung ludv, and aiu. at the to the
t:n f.tr, -. frtnno m tvivv in four The young lady listened attentively, and at his ceasing to speak, she said blushingly, but with great sweetness: If bv so little a thing so tnn' h g"ul can be effected, it wculd be foolish for me to refuse your request;' and publicly in the open 6quare, she kissed him. isext uay me siuuen. ; th- Governor. He kmNm! to see the mmi' who hai dared to t-e. k a kiss from hin danghterin thai way, and whom bhe contented to Li so. He received him with a Bruiinizin' b-w, but. atter an hour i i ...:.k l : r-fnrircatlon was so i vti.ii i.iin roiivuMii'iii, ..- that he ordered hnn t dine at his tabl during his studies at Upsula. Our young fiienl pursued his studies in a manner which soon made him regarded as the most promising atudent in the University. Three years were passed since the day of the first kiss, when he was allowed lo give a second one to the daughter of the Governor, as his intended bride. He became, later, one of the greatest scholars in Sweden, and a3 much respected for his acquirements as Km character. His works will endure while time lasts, among the wrecks of science; and from this happy union sprang a family well known in Sweden, even at the prenl time, and whose wealth and high poiti.n in society are regarded a3 trilles in comparison with its wealth of goodness and love. The Truth. The New York Journal of Commerce, commenting upon the remarkable change of opinion going on in tho North says : No rank secessionist has used more violent language, or struck more severe
' 'J ! of ours in it. Our subscribers, we thouu'it s j rr.ight accept this as a temporary exoediShe looked at lira in astonishment but jut Mtounjins l0 reh:ef even this arrested her steps. tras ref((S.e,i f He proceeded to state his name and j u woulJ be jor Q lfy (Q condition, lis aspirations, and related, I fimJ i,,,,,,, to espre8s txt bitter, burnsimnlj and truly, what had just pasted j n fa.lv?illmini we fee over thj3 last between him and his Comrades. ! iinnra1h.h-il et. Tim losa nf mnnnr.
and cowardly blows at the character of the President and his Cabinet, than the very men who three months ago pronounced a disagreement with those officers rank treason. The same remarks apply to private individuals as well as to public newspapers. The most furious denouncers of of the President to-day are men who a few weeks since proposed to hang every one who disagreed with them as to the mode of prosecuting the war .
L.LIAf.U,.JUy.l'J'.WAWWiJi
To the Public. "When a man thinketh he standeth, let him take heed lest ho fall," is a sentiment never more forcibly illustrated than in our own case. Last week we explained to our readers the grounds upon hich The Caucasian was admitted to the mails, and expressed our confidence that no further trouble need be anticipated. This week, however, our business has been again sud denly and most unexpectedly arrested by an order from tho Post-office Department i prohibiting The Caucasian from circula-j ling in the mails. With our paper in type, and the press waiting, we determined this time to proceed to Washington and gain by a personal invalidation the reasons, if possible, for so strange a proreeding. We have the gratification to state that there is no cha.ge that we have violated - ,np term-? of our letter to the Postmaster ! ew lork, or that we have not acte 1 in j
a or laid ourselves liable to av charge of disloyal;-, unles it l? disloyal to oppose negro freedom. Our only, our sole cause of ollending. so far as wo can learn is, that we have advocated the subordination of the veyro to the white man as the normal order of American society, and contended that the relation of the races, as it has come down to us from the founders of our government, is right. This being simply a question of political opinion, we had no suspicion that its advocacy could fall under the ban of the Administration. It is simply the idea or basis of the doctrine that this is a white man's government, as proclaimed by Senator Doußlas, Chief-Justice Taney nd many of the most eminent northern Democrats. The striking down of The Caucasian, therefore, has a deeper significance than any prevt ous act of interference with the press. It is simply a refusal to allow us to defend the decision of the Supreme C jurt of the land. This, too. after we had relied upor the pel mission of the department that The Caucasian should be sent through the mail, and expended a large eum ol of money, which is now all lost, in the attempt to get it started. Finally, rather than have our business broken up, our establishment idle, our hands thrown out of employment just at the beginning of tho winter, we proposed I to publish a paper containing merely the news of the day, and extracts from J other pnrnals that were allowed to circuJ !a!e in the mails, and without onv opinions which we could ill a(fr I, is bad enough, but the ense of ii justier, f wrong, of! cruelty, which must b felt to be approci.ited, is almost unendurable. Our rcadeis may inquire, however, What will you do now? Do you intend to uive in. We answer. XO! 1 he prinripiH tL..lt we are amending for U the j.a, elemMlf f our very Mtou oxienee. It is the doctrine of multi udes of Democrats in the North, and with unbounded confidence, in the grand tru'h that this is a torennnott of white men. and none oth- " tu r i i jor, we shall never forsake it, as 1 onr as there are people enough left who will support it. Th Caucasian will bo continued for the present, at all events, and can be ordered ihraui;h news agents. There is no abjection to our continuance ol the paper, but only that our subscribers shall not have the privilege of receiving their papers by mail. Wo feel sangnine that this puhject will not be allowed to rest here. The matter, we have reason to believe, will soon be brought before Congresa, and we trust that the exclusion of The Caucasian from the mails will bo only temporary. At all events, we ask our subscribers to have patience, ami they may rely that every effort we can use shall be made to remove the difficulties that now surround us. VAN KVKIi:. HORTON & Co., Kditors and Proprietors of Tho Caucasian. J H. Van Kvkic, U. (J. Horton, T. H. Chase. New York. Dec. 7th lCf.l. They are telling a good story in Troy, ai follows: It was rumored that a gentleman, sup posed to be a loyal citizen, had a secession tla'r nyint: irom ins iiousj. ut course there was a tremendous hue and cry rais ed, and an excited party started for the premises. On reaching tho houso it was found to be a lady's bulmoral that had been washed and hung from a back win dow lo dry. The husband avowed his determination to stand by that flag, so long as he lived, and tho 'patriotic' mob
ov-''a lh in the matter. And more.
luddenly disappeared,
PLYMOUTH, INDIANA, THUKSDAY,
Habeas Corpus. We make the following extract from the speech of Hon. Geo. H. Pendleton of Ohio, delivered in the Housa of Representatives on the 10th inst., on the memorial of the Baltimore Police- Commissioners. Six months ago, when tho half us corpus act wa3 first suepe tided in the case of of Merriman, who was held on a charge of treason, the public mind was intensely ex cited. Now what is the fact ? Citizens are committed and imprisoned because in the public newspapers they dare ciiticise the acts of the Government. Newspapers have been suspended, ar.d the whole power of the Government despotically exercised without a public murmur. We are tolJ also that when this public dinger shall have passed away the Constit.r.i.'ii will bo restored to i s pnsiine vigor, ai the people will bo alio wed to resume tlieir accustomed liberty. lien was this ever so ? hen were the invaded and restricted rights of a people ever restored to their exact position except by the sword? When was liberty once surrendered ever restored except by blood? For the wilful surrender of their rights no nation ev.ir resumed them only through tho agonies of a revolution, and you cannot make a nation sensible of rights that in time of danger possesses no rights. You can not increase and strengthen virtue and courage ; and patience in a people by teaching them that in times of great public calamity and danger to the State, they must rely for safety not on their own virtue, and courage and constancy, but on the power and good will of their rulers. I'o free nation ought ever to listen for a moment to tho arguments of Stato necessity. Tho history of those people who have been so deceived is wiiiten in the wreck of free institutions. It is marked w.th wrongs, with high hopes destroyed, and noblo aspirators violated and trampled upon. If we look over the pathway of desolation thus exposed to view, wo may easily imagine that wo gee tho spirit of American independence and American freedom hovering over this day tearfully prayitig that it too may not be added to the long list of victims immolated on tho alt r of State necessity. TliU argument of Stat? necessity always proceeds from executive power. It is the voico which issues from tho throne itself, and unless speedily answered, unless answered now, ere lon comes the mandate to surrend ir to military power. An imperial throne rises on the ruins of an overthrown republic; oaths are violated, liberties swept away, rights trampled on, and a nation is prostrated in the dust. This is but a familiar picture which presents the dire effect of a people submitting to tho plea of State necessity. We are further told that in times of great public danger the people ought to sustain the hands of their rulers by confiding in their integrity f motives and disinterestedness r of action. Yes, sir, I would sustain them wiih the public confidence while they adhere to the provisions and principles of the Constilution; but I would paralyze thm sir, with distrust whei.es er they commeneed the work of usuipa i n. . Laconic lUsrrctpoudciicr. The recent troubles between the students of the university of Moscow and the ofiicers of the Ilussian government, give rise to Shis laconic but pointed correspondent j, transmitted by telegraph : OKX. ItJ N AHEFF TO THE EMTLROR. Great disturbance at the university. i'he 6tudents will listen to no one ; neither tc the rector nor to the curator, tor even me. What is to be done?' THE KM I'EKOK TO IONATIEKK. Make every effort to calm the students. Tieat them like a fathor.' ioxatisff's keplv. 'I have obeyed ycur majesty's orders. The students are all in the fortress. THE EMl'KUOIl's REJOINDER. What do you mean? You have committed som9 dreadful blunder.' It is clear that Ignatieffs notion of fatherly treatment' was not in accordance with tho emperor's ideas, but tho unlucky generr.l subsequently made an explanation, seeking to justify himself, after this fashion : I edeavorcd, sire, to execute your orders. I arrested two hundred and eightythree students last Thursday, and many of them were badly wounded. Your lamented father eould scarcely have done more.' The italicised words are certainly to the point. Mynheer, do you know what for we call our boy Hans?' I do not, really wen. i win leu von. ier reason we our bov Hans i it ish his namo.' 'Any man who will maliciously ßot fire loa barn,' said Mr. Slow, 'and burn up twenty cows, ought to be kicked to death bv a Jackass, and Pd hke to do ill' Mr.
Slow is very 6evero ßornotimeg.
Q'iJ,JkJllWWV:Ul'IM' LHrtJWaW'3CJiLM'WWilM. J CWWJ
Woman's Veneration. If women have one weakness more marked than men, it is towards veneration. They are born worshipers makers of silver shnnea for some divinity or other, which of course, they always think fell straight down from heaven. The first step towards their falling in love with an ordinary mortal is generally to dress him out with all manner of real or fancied superiority; and having made him up, they worship him. Now a truly great man, a man really grand and noble in heart and intellect, has this advantage with women, that he is an idol ready made to hand; and so that pains Jaking and ingenious sex have less labor in getting him up, and car be ready to worship him on a hrtr notice. Particularily this is the ch-j where a sacred profession and a moral supremacy are added to the intellectual ! Just think of celebrated preachers and divines in all ages. Have they not stood like the image of 'Nebuchadnezzar the kinjr set,' and all womankind, coquetts and flirts not excepted, been ready to fall down and worship, even before the sound of cornet, flute, harp sackbuth, and so forth. Is not the faithful Paula, with her beautiful face, prostrate in reverence, be lore poor, old, lean, haggard, dying St. Jerome, in the most splendid painting of the world, an emblem and a sign of woman's eternal power of, self sacrifice to what she deems noblest in man? Does not old Richard Baxter tell us, with delightful single tenderness, how his wife fell in love with him first, in ppite of hia long pale face; and so she confessed, dear soul, after many years of married life that she had found him less sour and bitter than she expected? The fact is, women are burdened with fealty, faith, reverence, more than they know what to do with; they stand like a hedge of sweet peas thowingout fluttering tendrils everywhere for something high and strong lo climb up by, and when they find it, be it ever so lough in the bark; they catch upon it. And instances are not wantin" of those who have turned away from the flattery of admirers to prostrate themselves at the feet of a genuine hero, who never wooed them, except by noble deeds and the rhetoiic of noble life. Vaiilly Fnlr'w lAsi or L,ecJiirei. Vanity Fair, following tho annual custom of the metropolitan journals, publishes a list of lecturers and the subjects upon which they are prepared to discourse to village lycenms and city associations. Somo of them are as follows : llennett, James Goidon, Washington Heights. Subjects Heraldry . .The Postal System, with the Art of Dlack Mailing ..A Fii; for Plum Gut. Everett, Edward, Hon., Everett House, Uoston. Subject Five thousand Reasons for Writing for It Floyd, John U., on tho Run, Virginia. Subjets The Blunders of Buchanan.. Still so gently o'er me Mealing. .The Forty Thieves. . Wi.e and Otherwise. Gietfley, Horace, Hon. (will be pent from the Tribune office). Subjects The Best Bread Made of New Bran. (A bran new lecture.) . .Tobacco, the Hideous Weed, with some account of Thurlow. Holmes, Oliver W., the Hub of the Universe. Subjects Doctors a Delusion ..The Sovereign of the Supper Table. Holland, J. G., caro of Charles Scrib bier. Subject The Dutch Republic. Leslie, Frank, Esqr., 111. Xews. Subject Swill Milk, a stump speech. Meagher, Thomas, Col., Camp Corcoran Virginia. Subjects Russell and Bustle. . Irish Bulls, or the 69th at Bull Run. Raymond, Henry Jenkins, Times office, London. Sajecl Raymond of Too Loose. Tucker man, H. T., Boston Transcript. Subjects Old Dan Tucker. .Tuckered Out. Wood, Fernando, Fifth Avenue (should bo Fort Warren). Subiects The Art of Altering Accounts .. Raising tho Wind, aad tho Joseph Walker. .The Science of the Ring (assisted by Alderman Tourney, Boole, etc). A Very C.;iuIiaIl r All 'air. Tho following anecdote is taken frcm a book entitled 'Notes of an Army Surgeon' and said to relate to an occurrence durin? o tho seigo of Fort Erio : I remember, one day, in making my hospital rounds, a patient just arrived presented me an amputated torearm, and in doing so, could scarcely refrain from a broad laugh; the titter wao constantly on his faco. 'What is tho matter? this does not strike me as a subject of laughter. 'It is not, doctor; but excuse me, I lost my arm in so funny a way that I still laugh when I look at it. Our first sergeant wanted ahavir.g, and got me to do it, as I am h Corporal. We went together in front of his tent; I had lathered him, took him by tho noso, and was Applying tho razor, and that was the last I aw of his head and my arm. Excuso mo, doctor, for laughing so, but I never saw such a thing beforo.'
DECEMBER 2G, 1861.
Tlic Xorth Carolina Convention. We feared from the first that the report of the meeting of a State Convention in North Carolina representing fortv-five counties, and the organization of a State government had but little foundatiou in fact. , The intelligence appeared in the N. Y. Tribune, which fact alone rendered it somewhat questionable. The tiuth in regard to the 'Convention is told in fho following letter to the N. Y. Sun: As for the Union Government in North Carolina, I fear it is nothing but a big farce. The resolutions, which you no doubt havo read in the paper3, began with something like this: We, the people of North Carolina,' &c, ifcc. Now, the fact is, the whole of the said people amounted in all to about 120 ignorant Hatteras fishers and voters, the rest being boys, women and children. This grand convention repesenting North Car olina as 'free and independent.' was addressed by a Tiibune reporter (the only one here, I believe,) a Mr. Foster, now an Hon. M. C, and Gov. Taylor. Well, the resolutions were read by tho Governor, and the question of their adoption being put no one at first could be found lo second it. Afterwards the form of a man said, 'I want to do what is right; I don't know what it means, but I will second it.' When the vote was put, 'delegates' looked one r.t the other, not knowing what to do ; but after the resolutions were read over again, tome one managed to gain courage enough to vote, and all followed suit. So the Provisional Government was established. If this is not a 'big thing,' I don't know what is. On the 28ih Mi. Foster was elected to the United States Congress from this District. Z4 VTIiat Jir. Rriglit Says. On Monday last, Mr. Wilkison, of Minnesota, introduced in tho Senate, a resolution expelling Jesse D. Bright from the Senate, on the ground that he had written a letter introducing tho inventor of a new weapon to President Davis. Mr. Bright, on the introduction of the resolution, said: It was not improper to say a word as to the truth of the charges made against him through a licentious press. " It has been charged that he had absented himself from the Senate for fear of such a resolution as just offered. It was not so. Ho had been confined to his room. He had no objection to the resolution. He believed that in a service of seventeen years he had done nothing inconsistent with his duty as American Senator, or citizen, or gentleman. ' He courted an investigation into all his acts, public and private. He asked to have a letter read in answer to the one already read (letter read) to Mr. Fitch, saying that he was opposed to tho abolitionists, but always had been for the pies ervation and integrity of the Union, but was opposed to the coercive policy of the government. In his speech at the Prentice dinner at Washington, Hon. Caleb B. Smith, Secretary of tho Interior, said of the Cochrane Cameron proposition to arm the slaves: 'Putting arms into slaves' hands! If this be attempted to any extent, the whole world will cry out against our inhumanity, our savagery, and the sympathies of all mankind will be turned against us, as they were against the blacks that murdered and drove the French from Ilayti. And, if it be attempted, the soldiers in tho army from Southern Indiana, Southern Illinois, all Maryland, Kentucky, Delaware, Pennsylvania, nearly all, and from New York, south of the Erie canal, with the strong regiments frcm New .lereoy. will, before God, protest being thus put upon an equality with negro soldiers in their ranks. Tho Ashtabula (Ohio) Sentinel, Giddinga' organ, is dreadfully exercised at tho conviction of one Georgo Goidon, President of Iberia College, for running off slaves for which ho has been sentenced to six months imprisonment and a fine of three hundred dollars. It appears that Goidon was indicted for this offence in Buchanan's administration, 'but,' says tho Sentinel, 'he kept out of tho 'way until after tho election of Lincoln, supposing that no prosecution would bo attempted in the midst of our death struggle with slavery. But wo had in the Republican ranks a Marshall mean enough to do the dirty work of Ju Jgo Wilson, and a district attorney who had tie right to enter a nolle and dismiss tho the case at any lime, was ready to do this dirtiost of all jobs. Mr. (Jordon was accordingly brought to suffer tho full vengeance of tho infernal power into whoso hands he had falleu.' Wisdom is a defence that can neither be stormed nor surrounded.
Varieties. Fewer persons are killed in a bold advance than in a cowardly rstreat. It is very common for men. when corned, to have a husky voice. A very unpopular officer with some of tho ladies General Housewoik. In the game of life men most frequently play the gnave and womn the deuce. A great poet fays that he mountains stand fixed forever.' We know however, that it is no uncommon thing for them to slope. Be not discouraged; stand uptight, and you will bo sure to have the whole earth at your feet. Have I not, my son, givn you every advantage?' 'Oh, yes, but I couldn't think of taking the advantage of you, father.' No maiden ever unlocked her heart to her lover, but a kiss was the fit si prisoner to fly out.
Some music teacher once wrote that 'the art of playing or. the violin requires' the nicest preemption and the most sensi j bility of any art in the known world.' j Upon which an editor comments in the following manner : 'The art of publishing a newspaper and making it pay, and at the 6ame time have it please everybody, beats fiddling higher than a kite.' Red noses are lighthouses to warn voyagers on the sea of life off the Coast of Malaga, Jamaica, Santa Cruz and Holland. Poets are generally poor; rhymes make but indifferent bladders to support the swimmer on tho eea of life. He is happy whoso circumstances suit his temper, but he is more happy who can ! &uit his temper to his circumstances. A lady at a party in town the other evening was asked what made her cheeks so unusually red, she replied, the chaps. Hook and one of hi friends happened to ccme to a pay-bridge : 'Do you know who built this bridge ?' said the friend to Hook. 'No, but if you go over yon'll be tolle J. A person inquiring at one of our railway stations what lime the '45 tiain would start, was answered, 'At a quarter to eight;' 'God bless mo' exclaimed the inquirer, you arc always changing the time on that line.' In a discussion with a Temperance lecturer, a toper asked 'If water rots your boots, what elleet must it have on the coat of your stomach?' A cute littlo fellow whose father ?ent him to the post-office with a letter, and sent the moey to pay the postage, returned after half an hour's absence, highly delighted, and rushing up to his father, exclaimed: Father, I stcd a lot of men put'ing letters in a little place and when no one was looking, I slipped yours in for nothing and bought some gingerbread for the money.' 'The ugliest trades said Jerold, 'have their moments of pleaure. Now, if I were a grave-digger, or even a hangman, there are some people I could wotk for with a great deal of enjoyment' Col. Mulligan has not a very high opinion of Homo Guards. Ac thinks them like the Wide Bwakes, 'evincible' iu peace 'iuvUible in war. An old sailor, at tho theatre, said he supposed that the dancing girls wore their dresse? half mast as a mark of respect to departed modesty. Tlic Ilanct Venus. For some weeks past the brightness of this planet, in the western ftky, has been a subject of remark among tlrjs3 who have been in the street in cloudless evenings. Its brilliant aspect at this time hat led tome to suppose that the planet has changed from its appearance formet ly, wh -n it held the same position to the 6un. But this apparent increase in lustre is due to the absence of large stars from its path way. The other brilliant planets are now morning stars. Venus attain s its iMeates; brilliancy about three weeks after New Year, after which it will rapidly decrease in splendor until it again becomes a morning star, and the other planets will take tls place in the evening sky. Xc ivspaper subscriptions are infallible tests of men's honesty. They will, sooner or later, discover the man. If he is dishonest, he will cheat the printer some way says he has paid what he has not, de claiea he ha9 the receipt somewhere or sont money, and it was lost in the mail or will take the paper and not pay for it on the ground that ha did not subscribe (or it- or he will move oif, leaving it coming to the office he left. Hundreds of professing Christians aro dishonest in this way. and tho printer's book will tell fearful tales in tho final judgment.
NUMBER 48 WHOLE Xo. 100
- 1 Some men inheiit weal.h from their ancestors, a thief, if he gets lieh, does it 'on his own hook A French princess beirg told that the poor in Paris ve e dying of starvation, 8 lid 'What a silly people ! before I'd starve I'd eat brown bread and mutton. The 6tory is similar to one told of the late Duke of Cambiilge, Victoria's uncle, during the famine in Irelar.d: "What ! starve,' fai l he 'and pine-apples to he had foi a guinea ($5) apiece '. To Hit' lnelir. I luve been authorized to raise a R!rnAnt to rendezvous at Goshen fur the se: ice of t.'ie UlUcJ St ites duritiL' the war. 1 appeal to you as frion s of t'i Union an 1 our oomnion country to aid me in th iindertakin;. .Most especially I call upon the yoursg men of this district to remember how an 1 by whom the libertle of this jrreat n ition were w on ? n l its g ivcnmunt e.-tablir'icl; at.d I invoke thm by th" memories of he pat to raliv ro'in l her flii an-1 the Yz of j their r'atln-rsin this the dav of h..r tiür.il U:ou aixi distis--;. Tliey sh'juM re tri it a a plorlou1 ri vi lepe-. it i a hiph and solemn h;ty which tru: ulIeianee will d. Weil to hec 1. Fifty u-.-.rs a'o Kci.tuc-y at TVocanoe 6 :ve l the i. if. ut Territory of Indiana from the mercileJ tcnialiavvk of the s.ivape ; ari l the bmie of her s iin now repose U'xm that bloody field. Our Stato since then has grown prosperous aril prit . tiJ Kentucky is no invaded by an or nized army of rebels and parricides, remor. less and cruel as tceir prototypes of ihn wilderness, hea.-ks Indiana to cnme to her rescue th debt is one f honor and must be paid. The soil you tread w is wou by her t rowe-s and valor ; fan you 1 less than protect her ? Let the anver be worthy of your lineage and of )ur cjantrv. "NORMAN EDDY. X. R. Xo companh s of volunteers will be received from the Tenth Congressional Disfr ct urtil notice to that effect. X.EDDY. Tapers ir. this district, p!ease copy. Rations oT Eii:Ii:ifia Troop. The following are the satlons of the Indium troops in active service outside the Stite; also. Regiments in course of formition in the State. 1XF.1VTRV. Gih Regiment Thorn is S. Cri'ten ln. Colon!; advance guard on the L. & Nashville R R., Kentucky. 7ih Regiment Eignerer Dumint, Colonel, Ceiat Mountain, Va. wth Kepruent William P. Benton, Colonel, Glasgow, .Mis-os:rI. 11 tii Regimen: U.A. Milroy, Colonel, Cheat .Mountain. Va. H'M Regiment Mahlon D. Manson, Colonel n.udstown, Ky. 11th Regiment George F. McGinuis, Col -nel, Paducah, Ky. 10th Regiment Col. Linck, Ilvattstown, Mar lanl. 13th Regiment Col. Sullivan Cheat Mountain. Virgiuia. Headquarters for kttcrs for the regiment Iluttonville, Randolph county, Virginia. 14tli Regiment Col. Kimhall Wi stern Virginia. 1. 'th Regiment C d. Wagner Western Virginia. Direct to the 1 Ith an J l.'t!i regiments the s im a to the 13th. 10th Regiment Col. Ilacklcmaa Walil:itcn. D C. 17th Regiment Col. Ilaicall, Cheat Mountain, Va. 1 t-tl. ?citncnt Col. rattison Jefferson City, Mi.ouri. l'.lth Regi.nent Col. Meiclith Kolaraim Iliühts, Wai.ington City. '2lth Regiment Col. D;on Fort Mr.r?e, Vir. 21 t Regiment Col. McMillan Druid Hill, R iltimore, Md. 2il Regiment Col Dvis Jefferson City, Miszir. 23d Regiment Col. Sanderson raducah. Kentucky. 21th Regiment Col. Ilovey Jefferson Ci y, Missouri. 2. "ih Regiment Col. Veatch Jvffcrson Citv, Mis'Hiri. 2Gth Regiment Col Whcatly Jefferson City, Mii-souri. 27th Regimen Cel. Co'grovc Washington City. 2- th Regiment Cavalry, Conrad Rake: Ironton. Mo. 21) th Regiment Col. Miller Louisville and XahviUe R. R., Ky. 3'J.h Regiment Col. !?ion S. Ci Louisville, Ky. 31st Regiment f"..!. Craft Itc-ider-rr,, Ky. 32nd Regim.'-nt Fir-t (Iv rrnau Regiment 4d. Wiliieh Louisville N i-'nilie R. It., Ky. 33id Regiment Col. Co! urn "Camp Dick ioinnson, it. 3Ji!i Uejrimeii! C'. . S:-.-cIe," L.-.i.U Ky. r.th Regiment Irish Col. W.ilkti In Stannpoli, Ind. SGih Regiment Col. Gros. Liüi.m ij-oli?, ready for the field. 37th Regimnit Col. iiJzarJ Liureneeliurg ready f-r t!u lit-!. I. 3- ;h Regiment Col. Seiihtier L. & Xah. R. R. Ky. ll'Jüx Regimen Col. Harrison Lexington Ai Xahvil!e R R, Ky. It'tli Regiment Col. Wilson Lafeyctte, Ind. 41st Regiment Cavalry Col. ISiidglaiul IndianajMtl.s. 42nd Regiment Col. Jones- Green River and Heilders, Ky. 4'rd Regiment Col. George Iv. Steele Torre Il.llltC, III 1. 11th KegimJnt Col. Ilugl R. Reed I'ort Wayne, Ind. 4."ili Regiment Cavalry Col. Scott Carter Wnshington, l C. K.lh Regiment Col. Fitch Lgsnport, Ind. 47th Regiment Col. Si u k lndiaiia;olirf. 4- lh Regiment "!. rMy GOieii, I I. Dili Regiment Jeffersonville Colonel not vet apjMiiitcl .ViUh Regiment Col. Dunham cwnonr, In.l. Mst Regiment Col. t?tn i-h: In- i in.ijoI;s, Ind. .r2nd Regiment Col. Reynolds Rihville, Lid. r.'hd Regiment Indianapolis Colouel not yet appointed. lth Regiment Col. Rev J L Smith Lify ette, Ind. r.th Regiment Seemd German Indianapolis, Colonel to he ,ippointel. f:'th Regiment Railroad Indianapolis, Colonel to he appointed. T7th Reimont Richmond Colonel to be appointed. Toili Regiment TVnecton Colonel to te ap pointed. .V.Hh ReginiCLt Gosport Jesse J. Alexander Col. GlUh Regiment Col. Owen InlUnaptu. CAVALRY AND ARTH I.FRV. Capt. Stcwatt's cavalry company hh Rw'eraii, nO n.cn. Capt. I!r.iUe's cavalry cempany will Ke)iiold ." ". 100 Cant. Kalth'a Artillery Itattery witli l iennt ." 150 Cnnt. hlaus's Artillery Hattert with Fremont 150 Capt Fry erger ' Artillery ItatUry, with Fremont .. 150 Capt Sturm's Artillery Itattery, Ilentleison, 139 Four corrpnnies in Ira llanis's cavalry at Washington, 409
