Richmond Palladium (Weekly), Volume 37, Number 43, 19 December 1867 — Page 4
BICHSOKP. IND., PEC 9, 867. Debet -Wtawn Morton and Hendricks, h t In the U. S. Senate. v conclcbkd noi rtnsT rvos. the Senate, and I rise not for any desire to crlticiee Ilia course; but simply to have a correct understanding. ;IIe says that he has not by his votes in the Senate gone in fairor of any proposition which has been declared against by the people of Indiana, and not against any proposition which has been declared in favor of by them," as I understand him. ' Mr HBXDKiCKa. "Not-exactiy. r-i Mr. Monow. i: That was substantially it, as I understood the Senator. The people of Indiana in the election of 1864, both the State and Presidential election, declared strongley in favor of the - policy of prosecuting the war and putting down the rebellion by force of arms. Thy declared against the policy of a suspension of hostilities for the purpose of opening negotiations with the Confederate authorities. During that canvass also the question of abolition of slavery 'by amendment of the constitution, of the United States was freely and , fully diseuseed, and the public sentiment
by a majority of thiity thousand was nn-f questionably manifested in favor of that ! . proposition.' In 1866 the constitutional j amendment of that year, known, I bc-.j lieve, aa the fourteenth article, was adi- j rect issue all over our State, and the people of Indiana-declared in favor of it by a majority of some fifteen thousand. The policy in opposition to it was maintained I believe ably jy my colleague in common -with his whole party in that State! I shall. not now refer to the manner in whieh my colleague voted in lb e Senate on these questions; I simply de$ireto state what has been the policy of thet people of Indiana as manifested by overwhelming majorities in 18G4 and 1866. r-.:Uf-"J 5 . Oneword now in reference to the elections that have recently took place, Mr. President. It was yesterday said by the Senator from Connecticut Mr. Dixon in the discussion of another question, that New York, by fifty thousand majority had declared against the ; policy of reconstruction that has been adopted by Congresa... I must be allowed to say that I differ entirely from that Senator in regard to the effect and in regard to that election. It is true that there is a large number of Gepnblicans in the Northern States who are opposed to ne-.l. gro suffrage in their own States. It results from- a prejudice which has not yet been conquered. .They argue in this way, that there is no necessity for negro suffrage inlndiana and in other North' ern States for the protection of the colored race or even for the safety of the country, but events have forced them to the conviction that there is a necessity for it in the Southern Statea ; acd there-' fore many persons who I know are opposed to negro suffrage in Indiana or Ohio, .because they say there is no necessity for it there, are equally strong in favor of it, fot the purpose of sustain ing loyal State government in all the I Southern States. If the question was submitted to the people of New York as to whether the ' negroes of the Sou th should be allowed to vote for the purpose of overcoming the rebel majority down there, I have no doubt they would declare by a majority of more than fifty thbuaaad that, they were in favor of it, 'first, for ; the . protection of the negroes themselves, and secondly for the public safety. ..-..::..'- ? v4 a ..; Now, sir, in regard to the District. There is understood to be a large majority of 'the white people who, if they did net actually take part in the rebellion, at least strongly sympathized with it, and are exceedingly hostile to the policy of -Congress and to conferring any rights on the colored race. If the question was submitted to the people of Kansas j-ot- to the people of Indiana whether , all political power should " be "conferred upon the colored citizens of the 'District . of Columbia, I have : no doubt that each State would decide in fovor of- it by a very large majority. I ;It'may be said that this'is inconsistent. I garnt it, and I regret, under the circumstances, that the fact is so; but still -I ' think no inference can be drawn against the policy of Congress, either in regard to " this District or in regard to the South, from the recent elections. : It -is well known that they turned entirely upon other questions. : : lfr. ; Hbkdbicks. Mr. President," my colleague has referred to the canvass of '1864, in- which he says one of the questions mainly discussed and on which the people -did voteTwas a vigorous prosecution of the war. I do not know what he means by that reference. He refers to no vote of mine in the Senate on that subject. If be means to say that I supported General McClellan, upon the Chicago platform and his letter of acceptance, . he Is right . I did "support him. That was in the canvass at home. I did it with what of energy I possessed ; but why my colleague should refer to that in connection with the observation" .which I -made that the Senator from '"Kansas had -been nnable to point out any case in : which my action in the Senate was in conflict with the expressed opinion r . deoirs of the people of
Indiana, 1 am not able to perceive. I took myf ground openly in that contest. iThe views that I expressed are in some instances preserved. r ! lie also says that in 1860 in the State of Indiana the constitutional amendment then . proposed were approved by the people. I voted against those constitutional amendments, here in the Senate, but any expression of the people of .Indiana in regard to them had not then been given. ; In the canvass of 1866, while I admit that the proposed consti- ( tutional amendments were largely discussed, I think I may refer to the Seno tor's speech' which was the opening ' speech of the campaign, and by all odds the ablest speech, ii which, while he did discuss that question and the propriety" of the proposed constitutional amendments, I think he will admit that .more ' than three-fourths of the address which ... he made then to the people against the Democracy of the State as unworthy of their confidence, and largely illustrated by that style of literature which was then very powerful, which seemed to -justify the description of Dcuioerats a9 "copperheads" and "traitors i"t but 1 thank God and the judgment of -the country that the time has passed when that sort of appeal finds a power with the people, and I think from , this as It was in the canvass of 1867 the question will be who is in the l ight, and not who can use the most approbrious epithets toward the other, C im
: My colleague thinks that the people vf Indiana are willing that the t peopie of the' District of 'Columbia " should be forced to submit to negro suffrage wheu they are not willing to submit to it themselves, aad he says that in that the people of Indiana are not consistent. I aru not prepared to say that the people of Indiana, upon so grave a question as that," would deliberately place themselves in an inconsistent position. I think if the question could be submitted to tae men of Indiana whether the negroes of the South, under a policy which clothes all the negroes with the light to vote and strips "L a portion of , the white population of that right, so as to give the 6upremey to the negroes, I think if that question could be submitted to the people of Indiana such a policy would be defeated , by a majority unknown in the politics of that State. . I knew that my colleague considered -it an act of inconsistency to force this policy on the Seuth and not to assume it at home, for I had observed his very able speech at Columbus - in the recent canvass- in which he declared to the people of Ohio I can . not give,, his words, nor can I express the idea nearly as well as he expressed it but he substantially declared to the people of Ohio that, supposing, this policy of enfran-r chising the negroes in the South, if they refused to do it in Ohio they would be naked to the scorn and condemnation of the world.' Well, sir, they? saw fit to stand in that immediate attitude, which my- colleague described, by," I think, fifty, thousand majority. , Novr, how can he say that a peopie, t fair, honest, and generous; who would repudiate a policy when, applied to . themselves as , being unworthy of them, unjust to them, unsafe to their institutions, would force that same policy upon , another people, upon the District of Columbia ? This District was no part of the rebellion.1 This District .was always, during the war,? within the lines and within the power of the General Government. Then why can my- colleague say that the votes ;of .Indiana, would repudiate negro suffrage at home and yet would vote for it in the District of Columbia ? I can not believe that they would be inconsistent ; and as I bel iove that at home the people are opposed to this I am -opposed to it for the District of Columbia. If my col-' league and I to-day were In the Legislature 'of Indiana,. how ; would STwe .vote upon the subject?- He was the Govern or of the State for years, and he -delivered his messages, and he never called upon the people of Indiana to amend 'their Constitution -so as to enfranchise "the negro. His party was largely in the majority in the Legislature, and yet they took no substantial steps to amend the Constitution of the State so as to allow thjs that is claimed as a right to the negroes. They, would never venture upon it as a political test atliome, were seeking all the while to axoid it, hoping that there is a sentiment in the people which will induce them to force upon ' another community that which they will not accept for themselves. ' JNow, I submit to Senators, is that right ? If ' it is right to refuse the negroes the franchise in the " State of In-' diana, where there are not many but few compared ' with the eutire white population, is it right to force it upon ?tbe people of ahe District of Columbia where their vote is a much more impor-. tsnt one. the number' being so much larger ? Upon that question my "eol- ! league and I differ. I tdink the people of Indiana , would not, . if the question was aubmitted to them m any' substantial nnd distinct form, vote to force jiiegro suffrage :f upon the people of the District of Columbia, nor do I believe I they had the power to express their views upon the subject that they .would force it upon the Southern States. ; Mr. Mobtok. Mr. President, I have not taken part in this debate for the purrVse of "making any criticisms on my oueague : nor oo i. aeeire new to enter
sir, when the. Senator, say 8 thatJLhe timo has come, and he thacka God for it, , when the opprobrious epithets to which ho referred towards the men who have . !" In the rebellion , 1 Mr. IIesdbicks: z No, sir ; I did not say that. 'i 1 ' 'r ' ' Mr. Morton. The Senator did not hear me out, quite. I understood him to say that the time had come when opprobrious epithets toward the men who have been in this rebellion and those who have sympathized with them in the North, as we understand them to have sympathized , '., -r , , - ,- - , Cf Mr. Hendricks. I did not say that, either. - ' ; ?;,: v y-.-.i n Mr. Mobton. -That, ? I - understood to be the idea of the Senator. , r: . - r, Mr. Hesdkicks. No, sir. : . . t Mr. Morton. The Senator said that the time had passed when the epithets which had been applied toward the Democracy of the North if the Senator will accept that statement of it could not be any longer used. I think the Senator will find himself mistaken. I think the popular hatred of this rebellion, and the hatred of those who aided and abet ted it in the North, is just as strong as it ever was ; and the idea that this feeling has passed away and subsided will be found to be a mistake. It may sometimes sleep ; while the people have their minds diverted to some other questions they may turn aside incidentally, and for a lime even act with the other part3' ; but, sir, in ten years from this time that feeling will be stronger than it is to day, and twenty 3'ears hence, in my opinion, it will be overwhelming; and the next generation wili -entertain it far more strongly, than the present.. .mT,.,m.., . . But, Mr. President, that is unimportant to the present purpose. ' The Senator's position may be stated briefly thus : The Senator acted with the .Democratic paitj- of Indiana and the North ; he was and is a prominent and distinguished leader. If. that party was in favor of the prosecution of the war and of putting down the rebellion, and in favor of the adoption of the measures neccessary for that end, ihen the Senator was in favor of that; if . the part- was not, then the Senator was not, becaus he was and is in harmony with his party. ' Mr. President, in regard to the inconsistency of enforcing negro suffrage at the South and not doing it at the North I said 'tnd I said what is a fact, and the Senator's intelligence will accord to the truth of it in a moment that there are men everywhere in the North who are opposed to enfranchising the negroes in tne Aortnern. "states on account ot their prejudices against them on 'the ground of: color, and who say there is no necessity for it in Indiana, there is no necessity for it in New York, there is no necessity for it in Ohio, because there the negroes are protected anyhow in the enjoyment 0f their rights and they say there is no necessity for it there on account of the public safety. w That is the argument they use. ' I do not accordwith it myself; but the same men are just as earnestly in favor now of negro suffrage in the South as any other class of men, because events have proved that it is necessary in order to the establishment of legal and loyal Staic governments down there, not be cause they love the colored men in the South better , than they .love him in In diana or Ohio, but because public events have shown that loyal State governments can cot be established and maintained in the late rebel States without his vote; and perhaps the same feeling prevails in regard to the government of this Dis trict the domestic government created here by charter. It is believed that a very large majority of the white voters are disloyal have either participated actually or sympathized- earnestty with the rebellion ; and for that reason I undertake to say that the majority of filtv thousand who voted against negro suffragc in Ohio would vote for it in the District of Columbia, because they believe that here it is a necessity to the establishment of a' loyal "domestic city governmeut. . BOOK A GENTS WANTED ' To solicit orders for New Illustrated BIBLE DICTIONARY, (complete in onb volume,) Edited by Dr. "Wm. Smith, Classical Examiner of the l Diversity ct Lonclou. " Tbo Dictionary embodies the results of the most recent study, research, and investigation, of about sixty-five of tie most eminent and advanced biblical scholars now living. , Clergvmen "of various denom inations approv it, aad regard it as the best work of its kind in the .i)glish language, and one which ought to be in the hands of every Bible reader in the land. 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Into such an argument. But,
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Peelle her Attorney field in the office of the Clerk of the Wayne Circuit Court, her complaint against said defendant in the above entitled cause, together with the affidavit of a competent person that said defendant is not a resident of the State of Indiana. Sai'i defendant Isaac Dulbagen, therefore is hereby notified of the tiling and pendency of said complaint against him and that, unless he appear and answer or demur thereto, at the calling of the said cause on the second day of the next T-rm of said Court, to be begun and held at the Court House in Centerville, on the first Monday of Fabruary next, said complaint and the matters and things therein contained and alledged, wil be taken as true and the said cause will be heard and determined in his absence. Witness, William W. Dudley. C!erk, and the seal Seal of said Court, at Centerville, this 16th '-, day of November, 1867. . . , WILLIAM W. DUDLEY, Clerk. ! r Nov. 1867. (3w)$4,50. W. A. Peelle, Att'y of Plt'f. 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Kelly, and Charles Degraff, therefore are hereby notified of the filing and pendency of said complaint and after the filing of an affidavit and nndertaking or an attachment against them, and that, unless they appear and answer or demur thereto, at the calling of the -aid cause on the second day of the next Term in Centerville, on the 2d Monday 6f January next, said complaint and the matters and things therein contained and alledged, will be taken as true and the said cause will be heard and determined in their' absence. . . Witness William W. Dudley, Clerk, and the IsbalI Seal of said Court, at Centerville, this 16th "' t day of November, 1867. - - i WILLIAM W. DUDLEY, Clerk. W. A. Peelle, Julian and Julian, Att'y of Plt'f. Not. 1867. ,(3r)$j. -T -:S ,, f GODEY'S LADY'S BOOK Ior 1868. ItTHE CHEAPEST OP LADIES MAGAZINES, BECAUSE IT IS THE BEST! 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ptrcarmtt, aad fcverabl? known, will LknroaRbly relavlaerate broken-down mm low-tpiritd taw, bjr tre(ititMK and rleaunina Um atonacb and Intel It ( a sore VTicllr ot aA die raara Incident to this animal, aneh T (ILOW WATKR, HEAVES, COC&H3, IITKMPKR, FEVERS, roCNOKst . ixi.sa or appe- ; TIT K A V O VITAL . EX ERG Y, ko. Its ua ImprovOT the wlit, tniimin the appetite-gtvee UJSa FEVEK, GLAJiOEAS, a ibocii ana alocty ikiau4 tnuuforaas the miserable skeleton late a fine-tasking To keepers of Cowl this preparation fa invaluable. It increases the quantity and improve the quality oi tne bus. it naa been proven by etoal ezperiaaeat te ineresse the quantity of nulk aad ereani twenty aer cent, and make rite batter ta aad sweet. Ianvtteniac cattle, Ultra them 3a: aa appeoM, weaani Uxtr hide, aad tanvc mneh Itstsr. In all diseases of Seine, such as Cbnghs, the Lanca, liver, Jw., this article . V sets as a speeiftc By patting fron en half n papav to a paper ia a 5 banal efawHl tne f -above diaeaaes will be eradicated i . in. . or entitely prevented. If girm In time, a certain preventive aad care for the Hog Cholera. Prion 85 Cents pjr Paper, or 6 Papers &w tL S. A. FOUTZ & BBO- - a TKiut .'."' " O' wieuBAu owe is Hraiaini niftr. I Do. 113 Franklin fit. Baltimore Hi. . For Sale by DrawgMs and Storekeepers throngk , out the United States. . 1 For sale Wholesale and Retail, at mannfactn rer's prices, br: - J W. PLUMMER, . . v '. . Ricksnond, Ind. P. T. BARNUM'S Elastie Strap and Buckle. TTjlOE FASTS, - YJESTS and UBAWEKS. uli? senders can be dispensed with ! : This little invention is jnst oat, and as it is no bumbag, is meeting with a rapid sale, ft can be applied in a moment to any garment, by any person, causing tt to nt perfectly. , Its elasticity prevents tearing the straps and buckles oft the clothes, and also allows perfect freedom of the body while working or taking exorcise. " For sale by tailors and the trade generally. ' Send 25 cents for strap, circulars, terms to agents and the trade, to the - - BABNUM . 8. A B. CO., SX Broadway, New; York. Agents Wanted in every county. 15fl . ITiiVv ' STOCIT aTewelrxr. TTotionaT Watches, ,r Ear-lungs, rqiockef Breast-Pino, GOLD, SILVER AND PLATED C II AlHS FINGER RINGS, a large assortment of Plate Ware, Castors, Knives,' Forks andi Spoons; Masieal lastraaeats Ac. JUBI An assortment: of Sheet Music, constant on hand. R. B. DICKINSON. No. 41, Main-st., Richmond, Ind Sept. 12 1S67.,.. 28tf . Hare saved more than 60.000 . persons from death. lor they core in a single day, Cholera, Oyrentery, all onnuner Uomplamta, r ever and Ague, and Aauravria. Also, a sore cure for Conch s and Rheum ti m. 411 Drnggists sell them. ? ' r .f " r f ? ' f ukki. suaauK a uu., rropnetonr Springfield, Mass tnM. Vmt nwrmm k lii A Ik. ttrntm ebanges' it from grey to its original color ia throe ..fc i ill II 1 1 1 tk.h.i Fivmi falling im k. Wm - tide for dressing the hair ever found in the market wuianreiy remoreoanarnn ana en re a laiseaseaoi ton .-p(5tstagtaoG3iii Scalp is delightfully perfumed, cores baldness, and will not stain tite akin is a perfect Restorer and Drena sing Combined. - No other preparation for the hair contains restacnio nut uu. oia by all Drnggists. DEM AM, BARNES A Co., Agents, New York ORR4N SKINNER Sc Co., Sole Proprietor, - 15tf Sptingfield. Mana.
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