Plymouth Weekly Democrat, Volume 3, Number 47, Plymouth, Marshall County, 25 December 1862 — Page 1
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"HERE LET THE PRESS THE PEOPLE'S RIGHTS MAINTAIN; UNAWED BY INFLUENCE AND UNBOÜGHT BY GAIN." VOLUME 3 XEW SERIES. PLYMOUTH, INDIANA, THUKSDAY, DECEMBER 25, 18G2. NUMBER 17 WHOLE No. 151.
.It - ' t 5
4 ' r S i
:y.i-'ki'aTCTl.,
justness pivcctory. 1?. 11. Time rl,iiIlo.
P., Fl. W. Ä C. K. li. Time TuM? WINTFR ARRANGEMENT.
D".f kRTCnS OF VKAINJ fSDM M.TMÜÜTU STATION, j
joflu;il.
EA!T V UtD E lND TRAINS. förrc.s a inl Miil 11:1SA.'I.
Nihf Lxnre, ! .u. l i r I V T r Uat b't'v,. .:'-' Uve Stock and Ex. Freight, 11:4 P. M. Local Prei-ht, 12;20P.M. V.'ESTWAnn K.'f.VD TRAINS. Div I.'xpre :in 1 Mail, 7:02 P. M Niuhr Es-rw, :-17 A. M
Local Freichf 4:i. P. M j Tiirmipli Freight 3:."G A. M. J Fast Freight," 3:05 P, M. S.U. EDWARDS, A'-'ont. I
until the last man in tho State should sink to his death in tho crimsoned torrent of the Mississippi on the west. Long continued applause, Bui even it' the South cou'd be subdued
las applause, speaking on the measures of conciliation which ho himself had introduced, sa'.d: "I believe this to be a fair basis of ami
cable adjustment. If you of tho republi
defeat. Subdue her, and what will follow? How will wo hold her, and what will follow. Sub hied to the purposes of this proclamation, and the Slates arc no longer co
equal stars in the republican galaxy. Lut its pale and dishonored satellites, shedding forever throughout tha svsiem a baleful and pestilential light. To hold them .n colonics involves a change in our government. As it was
C. I. & C. 12. II. Time Table. S UM M K RA R It ÄXO E M F. N T. EAaT WARD. Lare La Poitc, daiiv) q.j-, a M Arrive at Plymouth 1030 A. M. WESTWARD. Leave FI V mouth 3:C0 F M. A nitre at Li Porte 1:50 P. M. Tr .diis run hv La Porte time, which is kept at
V.. V.ii!. ewehy store, and is 15 minutes slower t th la P., Pi. W. & C. R. R. lime, i II. K. nUULlNER.Suot. j At lvii -!. !
& C APRON, Aitorne vs. nl Notiri.P!yiiut!i, M r?liall Co., In t., V -ti M i"-ii;i!J aii-1 adjoining connt. RcfEiwto R;!cock & Co.. Phe' .--, D J-?c A; Co..NVw Vork,Cl-TfFarwoIl V Co.,lii-V f'.p ji 'o. Loo .ii St Co., Piiila.. 0Kaette Jk CoPi tib iri, lion. A. L. Osbo.: , Circv.i. JuU1, L-iporr.ln'1. io,-s.j s. ben:oe , Atto:-u.v a-.Lrv aa l II -al E-t ite Agr-nt, Knox, Ku'U. I:.5!. Collection: , Tix pivinj' and i x;nii nation of Titlti, pr.jmpilr at tended to. nl-'
151 H.C. WORK. Ileavilv fallthe rain, Wild are the Weezes to night; But beneath the roof the huur3 as they fl v, Are luppy i.nd calm nnd bright. fiathermjr round our liresiile, Tlmujth it be summer time, We .lit and talk of brothers abroad; . Forgetting the mi-hiiht chime. chot: .:.: Er.ive bnys are tliey, Gone at their country's call; Ami ytt, and yet we cannot forget Tint many brave boys mast fall. Under the homestead roof, Nestled so cozy and warm; While soldiers sleep, with little or naught To hhcltcr them fir m the storm. Rc-ting on grasy ccuehef , Pillovr'd on hllocki damp; Of martial fare, how lit tle we know, 'Till broihei! are in the camp. Thinking no le?3 of thcr.i, Lovirp; our country the more, We sent them ferth'to fiiit for theflavz Their f ithcrs lu fore them bore. Thrush tlie rcat tear drops started, Tlii' was our lKirlii.'' tnist:
Godblesyou,boy?. we'll welcome you home J 1 ell from the death loosened grap of Uk
hen rcoels are tu tüs; uast. i . . . -, . ,
generation 'imt preceocu it, anu in-urrcc
tions and rebellious will become the ro-?- difficulty m the way of an amicable al-
in such a war, our victory would be our can side are not willing to accept this, nor
the proposition of the Senator ftom Kentucky -MrTCrittenden), pray tell t:3 what you are willing to bo?
'I address the inquiry to republicans
alone for the reason that in the Committee of Thirteen, a fa days ago, every member from tho South, including those from the cotton Stales (Messrs. Toombs and Davis), expressed their readiness to accept the proposition of my venerable friend from Kentucky (Mr. Crittenden) as a fi-
(originally formed it is incapabh of holding! nal settlement of the controversy, if intenjcohnial po-sjsions You must ded and sustained by tho republican raemI govern them as subjugated colonics and j ber?.
"JJ :fn IT Hf I' I 'hLTTJ 1 1 l'l LI Iii Hi i mil , .
eied to it from every section cf the Union, j The Sudden ColSapscorUcVIcKun f ted by the Northern- papers' to necidTud and the t.udriU of W;o hearla go forth U'lml o it 32cnf circumstance- but which t,:,d nw'l: to bind them in the bonds of nffe.tion trora the London Times, Nor. 21 . . m, ' , , ' with each and all the States. But if di, , we to .ay to the mdden U T" " V "f" ruption must come, and some of th. States j ? General MeClellan? Is it heroic ! . l ' 1 .. ti.itr (itism r,r ri;,,.r . . " gt rid of their I'b:ous. Me.anw ,1
..... m . . A A . - . "XT I Ill il l 'I l'l III Mm 1.1
uiui se
hold them by military pewer. History teaches ua the course of nature in a people thus subdued, ivicb generation will
I grow to seize in manhood the sword that
Hence, the sole responsibility of our disagreement, and the only difficulty in the way of an arr.icabla A'Jjus'.meat, is with tho republican party." Mark the language: "The sole responsibility of our disagreement and tho onlv
May the bti!;t winsj of love Guard them wherever they roam; The time has come when brothers must fight. And Haters mut pray at home. Oh! the dread lield of battle! oon tobe strewn with graves! If brothers must f ill, then buiytheia where Our banner in triumph wave.-i
Dn. T. A. 80P.TON', Pr.Tsieijn nn I r-inonn, :fi:ee 11 ?Iiehi4a street, wit "id . n -rr Ilili': Rikery, where he may be euii;tid i:iir;;:T o.Ticv tior.i-s.
J. J ViNM-L.
Delivered in Chicago, December 11, 1062.
j (Th. following is an extract from the .-pceihufMr. Mehiuck, delivered before the You:ig Men's Assoeialion, of Chicago, j We have not room lor tho entire speech, , or should ghidly publish it. We commend
the sub ineJ to the careful attention of
our reader:) "Uut is this proclnmitu-n within th'iniits the l'reidwtit has himself presc rib-
ed to the power he claims? Is it a nieas-
IlomcapathicPhyci in. P irt?eidar.itt ntionpaid ! ure which may best fubdue the cneinv?" to ob!etrl? rr.teti:?, an 1 elrouic? diseases d i .... . , , . , -omen,aiiMie.is.-?orch-!dr.ni.of;ee over C. NX c i;e my to be subdued.' A Palni-r's vre. orr.er Miehian and I.annrte i-i fli. -i-.-w. The r.u Atn, nisi "1
trcet-5, v.k h i-i v 1 1 '-.rin-s-ie 1 a t I i ' ; i .
D.. O. SAiriD. rt.-il liT.? ef J. X-i-: ;n M -l eal College,) res: J-.u?e in ! oTi 'O :: ir ''h ll'n Md'.Hremen, liA.
Dl. A. O. HORTON, $rzeo Dj:ttt. P! tri eat !i, I!. !i;sn.i. WhoTe nr jjirtial J.'tts ol'Teetli inrtod on the mot approval plain. Special attention ni;d to Jhe
fre- .Tv ti-.r. ofr.!ii- ii ifu-.u tei'ti. and frreular-
bulitio:n.-t,
Th-v ate the enemv to tome. wlu i the
'eren.v now.' Tho rebellion. How and to
hat i-i it to 1 o subdued'? It iy to be subdued hy the overthrow d" tho Confederate
government, which is a u urj atiun e?tab
ulr.rly recurring experience of the nation. Tell me, men of Illinois, how long has the American heart cherished its haired of England, begotten in the striK'iJo of the Uevi bition? Wo con. iu? red i i that .;rvat strni'-glo aud achieved o ir independence. Had we failed a:. d been subjected to the ru'o of England, and tint which wo now regard ;.s our greatest "!orv been ot;r ever
JirSTMENT IS WJTII THE UErUBLICAN rAP.-
TY.
paraie irom tue otners, xew iiog. i . . ' . ,s Mt a?i,.l .
landing as a debris Irom the grand 7 .r Wani 01 U or 15 U P? i'dnn- -t WtZT'i r i,l- nf .1 TT.u..n ..id is a ma, occupying the fir.t place in a 14G l" the CL r;:al JJ; t,f
tions
th
other
Til.
made
um it aer euoris in u:ai uirociiou are ue- , 1 - j rtT r- r :. rti f...,.1 ... ,...,..,., ,f. w,ir ... oly ma an,,,,, t!,s0 W whom i I.ieo.n.
, v iho world at large ieiKcts- Yet. vhib he i ihor" ouSllt u u l moaiont great
Having horr.oeous interests with the j is in camP wilh a"a' surrounded by PY tnroughrat the taaka of
Sou;h. idn5 baa never seriouslr felt the ine.'"" mi-tive is put " i '
quality of her power in the Satiate a.; com- i ial hiä !nnj3 1Voru a 1'reaiclent who seems mred wi-h Tew i:,.dand. for th Sntl. ! t0 haV0 IüSt aiI u-tlCtf, ami from a GoV-
I . . . i r ? .... f .,...!.; I ... . . - . i'.i ti t
and VjE,t upon the great qn.stion of lhe ; ".ueiu wn.cu is m.vaig u.iy into con- ! u.. oi n. reaerai tan-iff have hv.vs acted to-elher. But if j tvm' an J iamediatcly this j-owerial Gen- j ",m to have ha l.neiih-r v-ic, n,r the South is to be red.teed U colonial vas-! e:al 9 doWn hU commaud, sinks into a j i -f
,1... tt i i our uieicn. ins. win. n.nwii l.ih,.!,,, r ? i .
Koro haniioubuslv roandcJ lhani a naa a grcal army at I , ... . ... . 1. 7" . - .
ov couIJ ,csiK utior ,! W of nv I . 11 "'''-'!' respects i:o other Wr. "T "'f """"t - IT .1... e i ; Will none Ot t;iem Cmim it ! kc i!'f-:r.ntii
poriUM. I L.,n-continued Apnlauie.l mcmuer oi a parly ., . , "
,.CioU hernial.., f.o -;t. .d W 3 ,,,.ver. Ho is the ;, ' ', " T1. ' ' ",0'
o-ilv '.ii imii,r iln X'r.l. .. f t uoiu tiuö lor in e i j e;tu r e; u r 1 1 le5.. Ai. intends to maintain it as our 'fathers 0,1 i ''a ' 'imu,'.-r oriheru Genera's P . . .. 1 1 a.- . tUla Un?a-V fcrllr'o- is doub h-S.s itnnin u
it, wiih all her vi-or and power.- lu'Jl,'eB,Cs 011110 -m respect; - ,
P, ... . , .. .r,?...s. : , and perhans we mav even h, I. i Ui,;'uu leiun. attu mu; üe Uas.it.-
have bten asking for as ihe to!o ne e-siiy
to victory has now been rr;.::;e 1. Ali th :
Dousr'as sound throughout the land, tha' all may hnow the measure of respon:.-ibil ity for our present disasters, tliat i up-
! on these men, and judge their ability t(
conduct us through our afdioiions by the wantonness with which tliey have involved us in them.
, 1 1 . ,1 II IS II 110 lllnl Wll'-ll llic il Kim: mi ntesent Siir.me would not our mothers,
lead.n'' us in cmldhoud to the uraves ofi 0 ' .
our fathers, r.n 1 pointing from tlui plajo of the repo-o of their bodies to thr.t ( fthe rojrose of lheir souls, 1 sworn us, in the presence of the dead and of heaven, to
redeem the rnstand avenge its wrongs?
lmtii-ns
mation, when the President issues that which it promi-es, this will have bee-tue to the South as the vrnr of tho war of ;lu Ilevolution was to America. May the benctitvnt Providence that has so long watched over and guided this nat'on suspend ihe visitation of its wrath, and ta;h the
Douglas and every other patriot 6aid:
Wc must sustain the government." After a war exists it is no time to discuss the responsibility of its inauguration we mat ie for our (W intry right, or wrong.
applause Uiu'er this r-roel i- Bul wten in t,,? Pr's lho W!ir-
necomea mannest u.at inose to wnom 11s
sabge. and deprived of her pl.ee in thei Pvate tndtvidu'il, a::d with a short &,c. j Army ol the Po om:,,. 1 hc:r prayer, Senate, then the West will begin to calca- Wöh lo h:s rn0"; SOQi awa-v iut0 I fn lT' 1 ,!c:l,n j' ' o add almost into exile. Landed over lo tht m. M.;C!,.i r: h::a b,:r late the justice or the present no ilical ar- 1 ; 1 . 1 i j- 1 o, r , t fl- General MChlhia ob.ys the law. IU. p"mieJ and purely di gmoed. StudU rauemenl. She feels now tha', m this -joim ko. 1U , . , 1.1 , , 1, ., r ... 1 apocarstobo the o-.ly man i:i Arjeri-a 0t,U 4j navo Sne un'J o'--1 ? war, she is dom' a; tho nhtiti'jf, and p-iv- x' J iluulj 1 , . , v . 0 001. ...t;,, ,!. .i,i.,..L ! . T L-.e wnw down. Wallstreei j t:: f..
ii.iuinj t...... ms 1, IUO .111 V .Ol CÜ. II
Let this laniuar j from tho tomb ot i ing all the taxes. Immense Applau-e.!
rieS.
The high tarriif excused by the debt .Jj McC1:a wanted precedents and pre-
tvi '... l.;-. i::..:.i .1: : 1
.1 . 1 . l- . 1 u vi iwaoui;; 1113 u::ibl,ll 11 1 S 1 .1 1 i 1 1 llilCj
mo couuiry is unricm:"- me manma-.-iurer . w i ' ,t. t i . . , , . ,,yi...a,J. .,.r......., jhi5c:m,p.0re. either was dillicult to find j U,L 10 b "l
o. iUiioo.iLi.uouiic tit iii'j ..uvnrj vi ii. u i.i: I . r.-
woi w sded. i u u. oroner to r
have Leen left dis'outitin exp-C;eu .
Instead, however, of '
mer of Illinois and that continuously
I is. i
growing and increasing c;eü; may make
s'ht by miikary forco t!u process of the
! II nfr. m ,1 .!.- ...1 1 .... . 7 7
this uriuiat and lrnunous poIü:v the per- r ' J
tß A . .
manent hau it of tiie government, iaej . i.r , (1 c . ... . i citizens surely a great njcissitv mir!it have est and the South, upon this jU?stion " - 0.
ueeu puirtaeu 10 prevent ma aeiioii ot a
agree in that great prineipla of political economy that loaves trado unembarrassed
mere State Seerata.-y's letter; and i. t!ie
Iihed ovtr eleven of th'J STales of I hi I Exeomivo a wisdom :u.d moJeralian whib
Uiiijn, whose citiz-MiS fieed from this un
lawful power, aro to bi brought b;vk t
ifv of CiiilJren'i teeth eonetted. I'untrs and j ,, ., , diiilt fc-. thextr.i f. d with or without Chlo.o-!l!le,r ;ii,eo,u:'i:ii the In deral (.overn-
trm. C;iiiijceo:i.:i!ted at hisof.: e at any lime nicnt of the United States, and the Feder-
eic-epton I iy. an 1 1 !;e;:iys.
t '?!'- Hike.- -.
in
west hide, ov-r ,'
il Uni ii re-establishid a it was. The
EDWARDS HDJ3E. Plvia ou'h. lit 1. V. C. Ivlwirdy, Proprietor. IlanUvarc. H. C DICKSON & Co.,
rJtf; States, as mkIk are not the er.emv. i:or " " j ire the whole peop!o of the South the cne--I mv. Geographical divisions of territory
Ciiitiot commit treason, nor an entire peop'e be arr aigned because; they rould not prevent tho rebelliou-s t:surjation of the
!ambi;ious r.nd the disloyal amoii'' ihem.
will May his band from that desperate act. Has Italy forgotten, or did the ever formet and forgive her 8i:b:uation by Austria? Does not the Hungarian, amid the desolation of hid country, sti!l watch on the batiks of tho Danube lor tho coining of the day when ho may stride down the domain of the Casars and restore the violated
prosecution is comnitted, are conducting it, not to the nobta end of an honorable peace and tlu public welfare, but on principles which will prevent psr.ce, dofetil the great end of the public good, destroy the country, and overthrow its constitution, then th. irulv lova! itiz "D moved bv the same patriotic impulses is against the
j irur because hv is for hh country. fLong
continued ::pphue. I ilnr the President will not retire from his purpose, but will, on th first day of January, i-stie hi promised edict. 1 tear the result, becau -e the war, and the whole cutrs j cf th administration i:i its progress, taken in connection with this Executive decree of universal emancipation, is but tho natural
hy legislative enactmants. Lhev would . ... . . i ". ii, iertiesot America are rijhtlv sun:'nded Miiv.nnrf th ifiiirnmaiit nr.fl wax its i thfs t
not by enriching capital at the expense oi labor, but by taxing capital and protecting libor. They would have, as the universal rule of commerce throughout the world 41'UEK TUAPn AND SAlL'Ot's KIGI1TS. ImmeiiBe Applause. Ia a contest o;i these piinciples without her southern ally, the West would exercise a porrer i:i the govcri:menU entirely disproportionate to her txtcnt of area aud her population.
I read from tho la-t decennial con-
sus: SEW KNGLANO STATÜ-5
Area Squire Miles. Porwlation.
Maine 31,?CG New Hampshire. fJ,2?Ü Vermont 1912
under the plea of military exigency, surc'y a similar idea might have justified a resolution of General MeClellao not to leave his army !etd;r!e3 whilj i:i tha lace of the enemy. It w is a bj!d exercise of power in Lincoln, one of thosa bold cx.r clscs of power whicli weak men sometime.-
do, but seldom at tha proper tims. T
strike down this nirtc f.e. cwsi a Iip.i 1 i
e , . e , , .. a slight pat;i.' at Ne .. of the Army of the Uepubr.c, was an act I , . .. ,. , - , .... ... ;tra:n from tracinj
oi ior wiiicu m:iu nave nau :mpo;Tani conseuenses, Iiad the; Geueral's ambition
Cc8 unuer lliesiialjw caa; upon it U, Koine coQiiiig di :;ittr. Evua Geiie-al leek's K'iig e'.ter of i:j.Jiel:tie!,l aai .1 A;eClellan de lut. raise th-i spirit.. f Ui: , party to a prop-.:- pi.e!. a;: i p-ph. -J ? ieel reassured cve:i by tie cert .inty that the same War Minister wi. o ! s ! IeClellau "to cross the liver .,t . w , gie battle to t!:e cneni; ." .vi'i reiterate the simj oder to IJ.irü .' .
I How it is that the.-o pe pif are h s- t ,
deilt, C-e:i after tiieir "vie.ioiv a'. Pe: . ; vi lie," than tliey weir after 'hci? lir-. o. second defeat at IJu.1 Kni, we i:ai; . i seek to show. I'u; tiie tac is j.j i :i h: een while t!;e Army i i-. t'-' . cheering McCie.i.ia a i i !' ,
iiode tiiioah the r.-iiks -. ?
Massachusetts.
l-ler in hirlwar. of ev.-rv destri',ticn, also, a'd those that were loyal in overthrow si:t th., she. t ir-:,, and coj.per .rare. ing the themes and the machinations ol
v. :trf , alicio-; ui sti-e.-f.
Try Gootls vS: Ci ro;rbs.
J BROWMLEE, Doaleria drv;:o,l of all Kind, "roc-erics, ware? etc., Miciitg.ui.-'.riet, Plymouth, Ind. c. p üiii," PenTerin D:y fJoodi, (Irjet-ries, etc., south side Li Pr -rreet. T4 J333AUMr DAVIDSON "i'crin Cr'eeries and Pr ivisien?, east side of Michigan street.
, . E,UCK & TOAN, ; :i,ose a llbi,i,)as aIi(J (!i,lOVal men. and the Vc il-r- i:i FF.irdwar of v rv depcpH'li"n, nnd ; r t i i . , rjuiu' ictiir' of Tin, Sh.-et-Iron and Coi r. r- Poi'ncaI nnthoiitv 1:1 which tho-e schemes
i . ... ....
and tiiacliinations had developed, was the
purpose and the object of the Federal government in advancing its armies upon the
j Ian 1 in whicli that political authuiity was
estabii.-l.e I. The measure proposed bv the Executive Jo accompli h this n fcult is a measure to overthrow iho i.istimiious of tha Slates w!iosj loyal citizens are unable to protect themselves agaiust the usurpations impos-
ed upon the:: to confiscate indiserimin-
jatedv lht. property of the loyal and di loyal,
pjj jand vi it the homo of tho oppressor and l)ji!fri:i?i ,:a:ili,oe.. mtniirta.s all kind j vlra merciless butcheries of i i n- -v.. i L Ii. Iiis line. .Michi-au street, Plv J and fiendish masacres. and all tho couutra ir.th, Ind. i . .
les horrors ot a servile w.ir. Om such a measure subdue ihe enerm?
Men of Illinois, on tho first day of danvnrv it ilia Pi ii.Mn nl n.si. ,. !
' 'H IVai'I'.lll, l'JIII IMI.-5IU ll; IUI
act whicli i to give effective operation to this decree, designates tho States to which
IT. a IVdind
Vt.äl lilll .VII VA &l.3 VOUIIU A4 m. VIMiiu 1 1 1 1 . , . . i development ot tho abolition principle. t.kt- r.iffoM flu wniriiTo ooiff raaf -iiim K a'ii
, . i. , , , t. presMn' onward to tha realization of it .,ii .i. nl t il. f..f rf tlio i li.Ljr-.-f il h ii i mill ' i
il.. Itt IHU IV.VII Vf& VIIS viv i?iv o l u I v;u
G. BLAIM ä. Co.
Lra:ts ind eonfeerioner?, west idcof Miel.i":
.-treet, I lyiiueith, Ind.
T. A. LEMON. Dcilor i:i dran-, inlieincs. nmlmN
n- T . . ...... - , luiiüii . i . .
mm? aziiK-s pipers, ete., north. side L.noi ti? ' hall applt, there is not a man uilhin
...lit. . )
dt.-uet, P.'vrnonth, lud.
Vn thinnlfcr.
OKNM HCEMKER, :i!-r-r. v t-h-S clo-ksand joWt.lry,rirn)outh
j those States who will nut fly to arms.
! Mothers will 'ive tin their children In ihn
n I battle, and ihe cold blood of worn cut .n'o fired by thii inot accursed measure, will flow again with the restle-s ardor of youth, ati l the legions of the rebellion will ad-
Ilas Ireland embraced the Englidi fetter with obsequious love? Tell me, exiled eons of the Evergreen Idan 1," why leap your hearts at the prospect of unfurli.ig the banner of your adopted home against the power that rct3 upon tho homo you have left? Long contiuod app'ause. Wo cannot reverse tho decrees of God, nor change the natures he has i:r.planted in tho breasts of men.
It ia because the course of the adminis
tration will destroy the government that 1 denounce it; it is because tho war n to be perverted from its legitimate purposes to our national destruction that I oppose it. Thus perverted it will become a war, not to save the Union, but a war to break up ihe Union. To destroy the Union and overthrow the constitution has been tho object and design of tho abolitionists, from the first organization of that treasonable combination. Secession was not the necessary consequence of Mr. Lincoln's election; but his election did make it necesairy to guard, by proper additional guarantees, the rights of the Souib ngint tho aggressive principles oPhis abolition ettpporters, which he himself had condensed in &uch a meaning and significant expression.
I never recognized tho right of secession,
1'nt.uitly on h:u, 1 clock-, wan ing
?,.--. ist iu.-ir rbii. ti'iirer riiiü. locket, etc
BMuVr,ssil!lc!,M' etC'' rvi,ii'rl in thc ,H'S j van-e n Power yu c1""1 subdue except hind now denounce the atompt on tho part
.l my cosioi your own and your countr s -
J J;iil?rinr. MICH eL GlNZ, r?H-?r -iid hiir dres-ser, (UV.t .side Michigan tre. f o;-.-r I 1 1 1 rr-oiii storr) Plymouth. ,Ind. Kv.T-. thoij- in r !, a! v-bi:sitiC5Sattended to by
C. rWSLWSZn t CRO'S, I iuri;Mir. rol cirriaes etc. Black vu iui;u, j. lintin ,:nd rainin done to order
, . N. B. KLINGER, I et , i lynvMiih, Ind. 071.
n971y
'X
T. Mcdonald. !t il esute t-ent and notary public, office In - hirbrare Ptore, Plymouth, I,l. .... deedi, mort-iges, bonds, and aree meiits, e.ls !and. eiaminestitlesand furnishes , itHtr.ict.4 or the name, pay taxc. ind re deems Iju4 eold tor tuvn
ruin. With tho objects announced in this
proclamation as the avovcd purposes of the war, the South cannot b-j. subdued, and olight not lo be publtied. ApH!aue. 1
Tho.e m?n of tho South are blood of our b'ood and bone of our bone; and I appeal to you, men of Illinois, to judge them by yourselves, and to auswet what they will dj by determining what you would do under the same circumstances, if in thoir places? Were the Federal government, or any other power, to advance- its armis upon this State, to d serrate our homes, destroy
our rights, and loosen upon us . a hord of
.savages to revi I in tho indiscriminate marsacre of our dec repid men, and our mothers, daughters and wives, we would meet hi power with defiance at; the eastern border bum every blade of giass upon our praries-rmak every iutfa soldier's Eepulcher. and fight desperately to tho end
of the slave States as unjust, unconstitu-
lional, treasonable, and sacril'geous; but I tated in the Presidential campaign lhat I was s;iiified that any attempt to incorporate tho policy of the radical portion of tho republican party into the policy oi the Federal government would certainly pro
duce most disastrous le.-ults. Tho only cohesive, principle of tho iai ty was animosity loan institution existing in States where that paity was without an organization, and with which the Federal, government had nothing to do.
1 believed that the election of Mr. Lincoln would create extended alarm throcdi-
out the South, which, it not allayed in lime would result in fceccssion, rebellion, and revolution. So thought tho democratic party.. Hut were these results necessary? Could cot the alarm have been relieved by measures honorable to all parties? aud if it could, why was it not done? On the 3 1 of.J;mnrv. lCI. Mr. Dou?.
one idea. This administration could have averted the war, and did not. Why? It preferred the integrity of its party to the salvation of the country. Theie are many good and conservative men in that party who are beginning to realize this truth, and I hey helped to magnify the grand triumph o! the Union and the Constitution at the 1 te elections in the creat central and western Slates. 'D.tt how?" say the people "sfeal! we
save the constitution and restore tho Union?" Filled with patriotic ardor they ak that they may act. I answer by peace 2)eace peacä Applaus. A peace not upon the basis of a separation, but up.ni the basis of the Union as it was. Iiiinu nse'Applausc.J Uut how shall peace be realized? By a national convex i i n of the people. Long continued Applause. L -t the people meet in national convention, and tl.crc
in tho same spirit ot forbearance and wisdom and patriotism in which our fathers framed this government, deliberate upon the disasters which now afflict it; and I fed a deep and earnest conviction that, under tho providence of Almighty God, our country wiM be saved and the Union of the States restored. (Applause.) The true enemy to this Union is now, as it ever has been from tho beginning, not slavery, but abolitionism. Abolitionism ha- from the beginning denounced the Union; it refused to avert the war; it Las
made the executive violato the cleat and .unequivocal pledges under which it enlisted the ruot gallant soldiery that ever went to tho field; it has prosecuted this war not to enforce the laws, but to violate
law not to maintain the constitution, but to overthrow it not to restore tho Union, but to make, its restoration impossible, nnd its dissolution a permanent fact not lo uphold the government, but to destroy slavery. This fell Fpirit of nr schief must die that the nation may live. (Long continued
Applause.) But if those men whoso public conduct it directs, still press forward to leahze their de.-igns of de-lroying the Un ion, it would be well that they tamper the ardor of their Z"al, by a provident consul; eration of the results that will folluw. Tki v'r-at vrcsl u roa'te p of people gath-
Rhode Island l.tJC'J Connecticut 4,G71
1,231,063
171.(1 4GJ.151
Ü5.0D2 3,137,301 NOIlIIIWESTEN STATE. .Irra Square Milts. Population.
l,:5),yjl 7W.112 775,s73 G74.918 172,02:2
Ohio .VJ.6G1 Illinois r5,4:)5 Indiana 3-VÜt) Michigan Wisconsin 53,'J2t Iowa 50,1114 Minnesota 95,274
b.en oijual to his opportunity. If General McClellan ha I refused ob jdien -e, there
02,276 i ls oreH' reason to believe that the aro, y
L'CG.OTi would have ttoad bv him, and that a larae 3 1 ., 1 1 G j party of the Democrats would have ap
plauded him. To savj the Constitution by firco from the forcible violations by
j the President, would have been a lair par
ty cry. But McClellan has preferred to play the part of the model constitutional Democrat; he yields obedience even to
2,23t,jy j rr LmCOtj lhat he raav 6how his zeal lor I 'II -TO '
i,ii,.jj , i .... . i
uiu vvjusiiiui i'.ii, uiiu, iui u siiiouiereu complaint of '-doubt and coldness" iu some quarters, he turns aside from thc possible dictatoishipto till his Xew Jersey farm. Mr. Van Buen proposes to run McClellan for next President; and, to a mnn who has made himself renowned for slow and cerlaic tactics, perhaps this is a bei-ter chance than tha: olfercd by the opportunity of bringing into immediate action tho army and the Democratic party. A bold
i patriotic man might have been dazzled by
u-ivp
3t'5,533 7,774,218 Xew England with twelve Senators has has an area of G5,0V2 square miles and a population of three million, one hundred aud thirty heven thousand, three hundred and oce souls. The northwestern St.i!fs wi'.li futirtpn
Senators, have an area of :J35,533 sTnrc 1 lhc B,or-V f imPeM bJ tha du:'of darmiles and a population of TaC-.r.5 1 vory tliin-. la order to pat an cra tj ' 1,1...... .. . .eil., i ... i
souls. Ohio and Illnois having together an area
of 0o,3G'J square miles nearly one third
larger man atl xew jnglan-.l and a pop ulatioti of 4.5 J 1.325 soulsnearly onefourth larger than tho population of all New England, have four Senators, or only one-third of ihe repre&cutation of Xew E.iglaud. Tho West would maintain tho Union as our fathers made it, and by the same com promises; and unembarrassed by any sentiment of abstract rights, but inlluenced by sound judgment, acting upon rights established by law, and dealing with systems
and conditions, not as she would have made them in the first instance, but as ßhe finds them existing now, will preset ve the Union. Ar.d we shall yet bo! eld in the front of the great procession of nations the banner of the Republic, with its honor untarnished, its ßlory undiminished, aud resplendent with the effulgence of all its stars. J Long continued Apphute and cheering. From llic IVoident lo Seymour. The 6pecial Washington dispatches to
tho Cincinnati Gazette say: The President has written a letter to
Horatio Seymour, urging him to drop attention to party interests and to concern himself somwhat for tho interest of the nation; dwelling on tho suffeiing of the West from ihe closing of the Mississippi river, and expressing the hope they wiii b; able
lo al'eviate that suffering somewhat, by preventing railroad monopolies and reducing tho pi esent enormous tariffon freight. A deemed by ihose who ought to knoir the letter appears to bo a somewhat curious document.
in the present rush to ruin; but so tar a
the world know General MjCicÜan he was
mav neveilh'.-l -s-
For the first time we s m u.-' ;f.c;e k- :. a party which is not a war party i.. the Xorth. For the first iim !-o sec that the war patty is r.vhci qui: uv i choplalleu. Upon the whole, there! Tv, te c la-.!, tidings tend to sho. that t!i. w.t fc...-r i.a little suhsiditvj, aud ih i ih im- is Uoa: hing when leasou may b- ln-a:d L must bt retnatko 1, h weVer. '. ht even General McClellan does ti-a le.;Vt ? s old companions wi'.honl a wo:d f.i tlcU" ? ..ii- Ii i
ion "e snail iiei oe t-c-ir-r.i :e? :i- .- up porting the Coiibtitu'iou of. u: c u in and the uatiouahty of his pe ph " If ;e In a d sliact war party in tho X ith t!i-.e not yet a distinct peace pant. Ta i he next 6tej to arrive at. S m of the Amr -cans evidently look wistfully to L rd Lyons, who is just airivcd at anhing!. n; but it ii clear that what M Civ'd in dar s
not say, and Seymour dares not sy, wouid not be prudently said by fouignis. If i; be true, as tl.J Southerners boast, lhat they are massing their forces rn ihe Kappahanno, k to fight the groa'est batde i f the war, the fortune if bueh a battle may chatige ail things; hut ir default :' s . e fuel of thi kind, ihe fiieseen s lo bv t-ini
likely lo see things in a diligent U.p.t. i'g. and perhaps McC.ellau .,,;iy be .-tr ,.f
While matters aro going 60 well for him and his party there is no need of any great coup. Ko doubt General McClellan has confidence in Lee and Jackson ii we have not in General Burnside, and he naturally thinks that operations, which he did i:ot bjliove tobewiso to attempt himself, could not be successfully carried out by tho General who ha superseded him. A great defeat in Virginia would bring back McClellan with augmented power and repu
tation, and would finish up the present dj
crying Government. Such may be the!
calculations of the obedient General w ho
formed the Army of the Potomac, and if
such be the thoughts lhat svayed him, they seem to bo shared by a groat many others. Duiingthe few days which have intervened between his di-missal and our last advices, rumojs of defeats have Leen already rife in Xew York. These are probably only tho whisperings of a General apprehension. The new commander must, of course, do something. If McClellan was super
seded because he refused to advance, Burn-
side must have been appointed because he
was ready to advance. Lvery day during
which it can be said, as the news ot this morning says, that "the Confederate pickets still show themselves on the Virginia side of the Potomac," is a day of reproach to Mr. Lincoln and his new General Burnsido must go ou and fight, and tho rumots iu Kew York tell what is there expected to be the result. These rumors are acocmpanied by "'a slight panic in the stock market," which is naturally attribu-
f.Miiou aud forgot. en hefol-e? th" ücXt Pie-i-
deuti.il election com--s o.f.
Milwaukee k Prunus nr (V.c ':r. VATort. Thi buddng on .Ii pj . h ; L
of, the river is now c-mph-ied, xe- p ;. exterior wall ofbtiok. It i d:e i- s. and mod complete t lev itor e d L i e Mich gin, ar.d attests a'.ike do -ir. - rp e of ihe U. B. Co. and tia imm-ie- hi: -s of the upper Mississippi that ii ;i;ti:; r to this toad. Tho bui'diii i bv 105 i . ! 111-1
on a wan oi Soli. i mas. Mir ' is 80 feet high above low w a has a capacity of 2dO.Ü(H) b.-! built in the tuot p-id e( a - manner, furnished wth i!i b-! :o i approved maehitnry for ctai eiht of FaitbaiiLo' t u-i. ii Scales, wliieh for st ! m i fi'- i anything wc have before -vi-n. In ii.-
Company have shown their ;:mi tion and judgment, by s. uri; pets the ceitainiy (h;. !i v i
KKCT WEIGHT - a et ) iie I i t tion ith ihose who h.n-' oi . or l0 6eild to Cl.ltket. Mi'ol'l.i,-!;
d:-c .
1'ltlLVUfc.LPHlA, D ( The Washington lal 1. ; m poiniing out ihe niUmarngvu. i. to the pontoon bridge- a. ' s. . Acquia Cieek Ibiilroad, ard inve.litation bv C.iiiiev to . n
is to blame for ihe delav tha has i o- u abortive the plans of Burn-iwcV i on.m.tiid . nkhmotid is row oc up ed by uUls.
i
I f (
