Shelby Volunteer, Volume 20, Number 10, Shelbville, Shelby County, 12 November 1863 — Page 1

4 . VOL. XX. -NO. 10, SHELBY VlLLEj IND. NOVEMBER i2, 180& WHOLE WO. 990

l' III'; jS.lt: 1,151' VuLlLNTKEh f4MiHed eeery .TburaUy mnrnint at SiuuJIVIixk, i.ul.iy 0 uttl-, Iii'iiana, I jr RE U HEN SPICE 11.

TERMS: INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE. El! pit 3 U C.':l tV? Xiiif .llittl (f 6 ui'ilit'is, .... a t on I ajt.it tJ4 ext.irtti m ' te yw. .Ti'.lM.-tirji jriU .x.- n.'i 11? a lit -red to. RATES 3? A 3VRTJSING ! Vn :. Ni:n;i-i: ! rr ill ei.H'tit in ;ia.:e c.'fi- , '. t :'. ,n m-. '"' I "fc ! Vr';c j Sat I 1 vr '(I '.VI . TP tw-r in t'ip vx-' 1 i! '' c .lnnin will If c'nr tir Hit. in I rt'ni t tV i'w riu-. A!l trei-io" alvot-t''-jr.t nu t 'e f.M for ln n-1- ' Tyfftl v1'irlnn;nt. 'Tent ' n:tH 'or in vavrp. r r :riti'tn. I.Ttl ilv'-rt: "intit wilt l c!wr?fl f.H.v ni x itiir1 for r'trh i!ipr;:"n. rl r IvrtWlp riA trill charjl r all onitunry

. M ,3 ,..., ! impovei mi lie son ol a larni. i: is. 1 f Announctnz crinli :.it" fir once Rirvajina'i . i ice. jtheielore an advantage to a fiee country '-T.1i-rtrT tiVrst.tr win cxtvrit "tliat p.ditieal part ien' are more. permanent :... of a rJis'"'" -Vr:ciM. nat'ire. I,...i . ' ,r .v. r.l..,.! l

T A irorti.rs Vilt'l nin. 1 t i tVr It'iitimate i j JOB PRINTING! T!i. ppi-i:l ntf.Mrtn bnino mn, snft Alt othr r liripir ai.y i:o.-i-.'l of Job ri iutin. .ioh a Cii'cjtilsii . r51nti!rs'rrtll lciils, . L Xl.mi.lllt- tV.C-j U ' c-xitj 1 1- th'-. fLt tv . tf "T U T 17 If Q IflT5 HTTFirr

WJ'J., I I--,i 'ilost this or thit election.

r4 I ts-n ref.tt-1 witu a Full nn Complete aswrtmrnt r.r Plain an I Fan:y Joh Type, borders, &e., t M.t AviovM .stvi-s. witirh.tntite bmi 1 it t.-c. f . mtrrtont w-rkw..., .ni'.lw it- w.it. ny vartrty ! , iv), unMt'.-1 f-T I.-'!-." 'rt not" .!,?! at ri J.. jilts. tn,;t:t;W. A tri ll U resi.s-tfnM' sr.l it'! t-vi. An M-niilc -t -t-,"iit .if Car. Is. C;p, I.ft.er, ait.t t-l.isM r; tr al iy .n h:t:t I. Irt I'l-l.'llTIT IMP mVl:iriTl' .V K ..i.,... ..... FfllSOCLLAHEOUGi u f v I V.S tJtki'tt tit a IK-eiiM? nn.l.:r tli-? N':tti-t:al UmS--4 1 !.tri Vt.ti n-ortrSi)-'l ,y (V.'u.t.v . I ;e.it ln.i. t uu.1 1 t- til .M t' i tht li:i.-.:n I Is'iv- n-.t.iy at! ht- '',liii r it jMt 't.c vta-vy wii'i ut Iil-p'.v. exec; t a jr.v..t I m n.i U v.t.nt il.y l y tlKiuiilves li-.i' -K t a peitllty o: fcJO. Altrcj ...... S vlHyvillo.Dec. 4, 1 '.2. HOUSE ND SIGN PAINTER. GKUNl'.tl, GLA2IKU AM) l'Al'KR 11AN0KK. Sh v, C rnr KrnUlin an1 II irri.-n IHreetv iec..n.l tl-r. Enlruc lirt -Iff Xrlh of I'dstOiTtoc. Shelby ville, ln.1. . H. CltA'E. A. C. DAWKS. CUASE Sc DAAVESj WllUiaxtC JkSB RlTXTt PtLrX! IK BOOTS STt SHOES, Grlcim's Olocli, r.tir WJSUIXG20X srxrs7 INDIANAPOLIS, IND. Our asnrtmnt of SIvmjv 0 liters, for Women, MiM.tn t CUil lra ii unsurpl in the We . mt ly PROFESSIONAL CARDS. MAUriNM.lUY, THO'S W.WOOLEX. Shel-tincitn. t raukhn, Ind. RAY i WOOLEN, CUtonicijs at Caw, idi.vCaioi.i, ixo. wiLLrraCTiCKis feduual and statecourts. Or, ap tho ithflt of ttfid wit! always lie funa ut thoir r..x. 10 Ac 11 N 4c Xalaott,s3aUiiixt:,toutlnif Cst 0iho. . Nov.0-ly " " vu i iT.i i"Li:r 1.1:11 , Adorn') at Law, Xotary Public, GSXKZALCOr.llTCnyGAGFXT. OSlo ver Fori' ?tor, rer of Mayor' OEc, 511KLHWILI.K, IND. ATT Oil -S b V AT LAW, 3fcpfort!-Wejtcorucr PuMic SUArejOTer ForU' Store, " StltLllYVItLC, IND. Trrorl Mtenti.m eirn tn tlw IWtion "f claims, Jr.elu l.nj 5l Iter oUi.-.n tor u.iuttty .nony aiut i utmons. rao'e M'rAisiN . , , 4. io..im noMwstRt." HTlltL lM) IOXTGOnEKY, A T TOUXS V S ATyLA W. IViU practice la tlte it'a n.l atli Ju ttiUl Circuits, n.t Com.a lMe Courts therett', i1o ta the upivnte nl Feli"rl C url. Siecil ttetiU.tn jitcu t the cx.l lection of cl v. 0 c orer Dr. Uobtns' Drug Sure, sherry Ul.- tnlivt. " - mirm k. ut, UAY DAVIS. act. r. catis, ATTORNEYS AT LAW; Cftln Ry IXouse, Shelsj-rUle. 23 Troatpt attention jiren to the. collection cf e!"Sm. jxnr. hauhio7 ATTORNE Y AT l! A W OaecqrairmtYlsmnirMitth Street. ic.cd iters Intra. flrt t North of t0t Office. . t?fl siiKLnyriiLB int. - ,RCIIAlI). NOURIS, - - ... s. . . . , I . County Surveyor, W AtltbASD UELtt CO. IND. tMftVrirft uktt Aviu i rui t ... . 1 asu .,4, , f... ..,

Vow V.e Xtrc York Wo rid. The Democratic Party. In all countiies which enjoy the ines-

ittmahle blessing of free institutions govjemment by party is the normal mode of c inducting public affairs . Party government has prevailed in England ever 'since the tendencies of the throne to abs ut ism were extinguished bytherevo- ; lu'inn of 1 GS8 ; and it has always been

j --, the method ill this country, cree gveinmehl is government by public opinion ; and it i n!v ;y pirty organization ilt:' public opinion can be so colle. tel and concentrated as to correct or dis-

pia-v l.i.t ! riders .'1 be most salutary influence of parties i p'-ihaps this restraining agency on men ! he I with power A government might i hanve bands every few years, and sliii be a- ; ns posibb'. if the mMi in power u . r u tutor no restraint in the interval LftwotJi i b" 'et ions. A pa-fn or a . pl'OCoi i.oiT ota . ior a iiinireo r ? . 1 pci U' 1 an 1 ei iMiii o go out at It te: mi-n.-ition, will, Itoiruj t. make tbe mo-t bl his time ;ud sui pass .a permanent ruler in inpa ity ; just as a tenant with a short Ie;ls0 tVA, nJ ,(,pe nf a renewal is sure to 1 - iciito 'i 01 ome ui me men i. 1101:1 they elect. The government cannot be 'conducted by an administration deserted by its own party ; and sis the party has hopes an ! fears which extend into the future, the administration is made amen able to public opinion through the hopes and feais of its partisans. A vigorous an.l vigilant opposition paity exerts a restrainintr intluenei on the partv in power! i bv ooentti., lin it,, fo,.s. nn.'l th s o, - forcing respect, real or pretended, for i !- public opinion. I Hi this view of the subject a view .),,,., 0V(.,.V t;loMi-htful man mu-.t ac I know b'dge to b j ;st i party cannot lie Is'1''1 r" have faded merely because it has If the demon - strations of its sue nirth in lirecedttiL' elections have alaimetl tlw fears of the pai ty opposed to it, and have thus com .;,,, j,s :, tl t ;1 LTOU isl to fhailgO ront to ; save it sell- lroti rum, it has tlierehy rcnjdercd a great and valuable service to the count jy, even though th-i benefit conferIrediu ty receive no formal recognition at jibe b;i 1 1 ot -! i" x . And this is tbe precise seivi e the Denioeratie party has rendered to the country by its vigorous activity iuiing tbe last lilteen months If the Rennbli'-ans ha I al l ied theehvtioiis last Tail, what would have been th.' lair int. rpretaf ion put upon theni? Why. that the country ill bused the hurtil-'ipa :ion pi o. lamat ion which President Lin t.iii hi t then teceiitiv i-sue.t : that it It. I j a ppi oved f tbe arbitiaty aiiels then so lit qiient and so cauele ; and that u was content with the military imbecility at Washington. But no candid man puts such an interpretation on the result of the Ohio election this year, though the Republicans have carried it. The Republicans themselves do not claim, and dare not claim, that anything has been indorsed but the wa? But the Democratic party was revived, and won its great successes last year, on the war pure and Minplc the war conducted as a war on military piinciples, without the sham of universal emancipation, without usurpations of power and without violations of tbe Constitution. War simply to subdue, desttoyahd scatter the rebel armies, leaving the rights ol northern citizens and the property of southern slaveholders just w here the Constitution leaves them this was, has been, and continues to be, the' Democratic platform ; and it is only by dishonestly pretending to stand upon it that the Republicans, under the alias of Union man, have succeeded. The foolish peace principles of Mr. Vallandigham and his immediate followers afforded a plausible pretext for charging ine ueni oci atic party wun op position to the war, and covered the movement by which the Republican par ty changed its ground! The great Detn oeratic successes last year are what com pelled the administration party to mask the emancipation issue, and present, or pretend to present, the naked war is.ue as the sole thing to be decided by the election. We have ext. rte.l from the Republicans this practical acknowledgment that we were rikht, and they wrong, last fall. Imitation, says the pioverb. is jthe sincerest flattery and the enemies of the Democratic party could not have paid it a higher compliment than by this attempt to steal its livery. If the Republican party in Ohio had dared to go before the people as a Bepub lican pai ty, with a candida'e "of Republican nn:wcelents for'coveinor, and presenting the distinctive Republican masuivs tor popular indorsement, it would have been dts 6trously beaten even by Vallandigham. It is absurd to say that the Democratic party has failed when it party has compelled its opponent to (hang its name, disguise its piinciples, and borrow its candidates. By these disguises the abolitionists have temporarily escaped ji i ice in Ohio, like a thief with a new alias i but it will be a short respite. Next year ma ters in that state will wear a very different face. Either the war will have en led before thj presidential election, or it will not. In case it ends. the election cannot le carried on a war iiie, an.l the Rjuublican will be comjucUed boldly to show their colore reapect

i g the final adjustment, which will then be t lie dominant question. If the war does not and, the people will decide that they have had enough of the mismanagement by which' it has been protracted for four long years, and will insist on putting its direction into mora competent hands.

(From the Loulou Ttce S-pt. It5.) 'Anarchy of Passion" ill Amer Tll3 ica We wonder at a free people submitting to outrages on the Ireedom of the suljci, the libeny of the press, and the rights ol property, which woulii liave vaised a rev olntioti' at any time in the history of this jcoumry ; but the truth is the Americans 1 do not think'about the matter, they are p i s fisetl of a wild ma lues for a particu lar o. j -ct, wiietiierattainoUieor loit, nml they yill tbishthemselvesuguMst a:iy ob - stnu uons to reach it. Tiie great work of a lJiesi. cnt ol so. xeilable a people ought t . be Co. lire r t h.'se uneducated an 1 fanat -1 ic impulses; an I to eoii.rol them int.. nn orditiaiy and leas, ,nalle path. Itnt t he i rcsme.ic nimseii is as m.u n posseci a the tcsL He gives no thought to the re-j suits of his poli-y, iie has no plan for com-! promise with tiie tsouth ; he l-lentihes himself witn one of tbe great par. ks of, the Slate, and is carried away with them, ; knows not where. The conscunence is that every nassion '

and every ma. In ess surges unchecked over the effin, and the riiibons of the bride I his vditics ? "Uuiou. of conn." What settlement, moved to Ktrike out thoseprotbe vast teiiitoiy ol ibo States. Men are! at bed or board, couchant or levant, uej .lidhe mean bv Union ? -The Cmtitn j codings and insert certain futile word of

let ioo.se by the 1'iesnient rt own exam pie , from all obligations but that ol gaining their ol iect. and thfv leirard neither ins Uce wv bumanity in pursuing it. It pas- " " ,,"M ' " oiumhuu-h peicct cliaiaetcr, the Americans may be best II. . ! I . r ... . Uf-st-'"uca as cieatures t. paskion, .vithout ; lenson, or only that lower muteness of understand i'g which enabls them to adapt tne- means tj their immediate end. We are led to these remark's by two or I luce incidents in the American intelligence Inch we published yesterday. A Sena tor ui the United Sta.es, sp'aking in th peaceful Scale of Maine boast-, that 'there; ate totly-four regiments in New York C b.tl.. ,............ i . ....(' . i I . 1.. .1. !t mul thiM is tit mm? of thvm vh:i I . ...... .1...... I I 1 ..I ii.ii sw.j.n-i sinj.u ,i tnjijiv. tn-att, jut i i ru i - i let through his brain, i ha-u he wonbl It "t a rebel.;" and thi assertion was repealed twice for greater distinctness. Let our readers try to imagine, language i-i.i- ii I..I ikc i his used t.y an Ingiis i statesman of any note in an addie-s io bis c-uisti;-e.cnts, and they may be able to lorni some idea of tbe anarchy of passion whieh po-se-ses the Americans. It .lispfiv a blind and sensele-s ferocity cmaiicipaied from j aii regai.i to law an.) oro.-r i.y what tne;

ii i. i l i i. ...... .... . ,

I'resiiteut considers the necessity ol war. sMich languaije, no doubt, says a great leal more than it means ; but worl react on the heart and head, and it does not want much more such talking as this to tiaustorm the United Slate- into a sort ol Mexico, a mere stage lor lawless violence ind Kcbish ferocity. . The Result of .SxuEnT Uducatiox. Keep your children off the street. By that we mean do not let them make acquantance on the sidewalks. If' they frequent the public schools, yon must es tablish a sort of verbal qua. antine at y.inr tongue once n .lay , to see tt it Iu uot a secretion ol slang upon it. Mrs. Carelul s little son Manfred came running into the pateinal mansion the i other day, shouting to the cook' : '"Now then, old girl, slap up that dinner." "Why, Man ford !" began the astonished mother, "where did you learn such language? who have you been plaving with ?" "Me," said the hopeful. "I generally play w ith Dick Turner, cause he's a bully boy with a glass eye. That's so." The fond mother was about to express some astonishment at the optical misfortune of Dick, when the son continued : "Ma, I'm going to buy a plug! Jem Smith wears one, and I'm as big as he." "A plug!" gasped the mother. "Yes, slice, a plug. I've got the spon dulicks salted down in my box, sure ; iis b mud to come." The tno'.her at this juncture ordered the youngster up stairs, and sent for a man servant to interpiet the slang. A funny scene oecttrre 1 in Salem, Ohio, the other day. A phrenologist was exhibiting his powers in that pleasant little town, and, after his public perform ance was through, and the audience about to go home, a very pompous and portly tn niber of th Republican pa ty insisted vociferously upon having his h'-ad felt. The operator at last consented, and took thenecrroworsliiiinerby the scaln lock on his bald cranium, and beiran manii.nla O " l ting him. ' Colonel," said he, "yon havo a fathead." after further fingering, ! ' 'ine fat head ;" a little more fingering. I fs the fattest head I ever saw;" a leng h sitiation And considerable thrnming on ilw bald pate. "I'll be d d if 1 don't pat believe it's all fat. Cleveland Plaindealer. ' Hemorrhage can be stopped verv quick by taking the leaves or root of the black mnllin. pound them and squeezed through a cloth. Dose, one teaspoonful i t' an adult. Repeat, if ne.esaiy ; but

j 1 have known the wo-st cases of Uecdiug.a-bvp sin.e Fa: her AbiAhaui culled lor

i .tt h aoee coied by oae doec

(From the Wt Cbctur Jfrerwniia.) ATrophecy Fulnlled Sidney Smith Warns usasainst War and Taxes III thn -nar- 1 SQO tlm P... I.V.

published iu the EdMura IirU. ah tide, under the title oi America" in which he poke flatteringly of the condi tion an I prospctH of the United tntes.'

1 1 .i i. . i .i . i i t ''Wecan inform Jonathan what are the : inevitable coiisp,.!jfn, t. cf being too lond ! ot clotiV. Tax-s iiiion ev"i v article whieh lentets. into ths mouth or covers the Uek. J r is rdaccd itn-ler the foot taxes upon ,evet uliiag that is pleasent to see, hear, j Meil or tasie taxes on everything on ' earth, and the waters umter the'earth on ; Cver thinir that comes lioin al.rolt 1. or is : -,u n at honu taxes on the raw mate-! ;nal taxes on every Iresh v iIivj that is added to it by the i.idustry of man tax - es on tbe sane uhl.-h nmm.M s mmiV no. petite, and the drug that restores him to health on the ermine which decorates the judge, and the rope which hangs the i ci i initial on the poor man's salt, and the j i ii b m.ii.' t.I .... l., ,. mst pay the schoolboy whins his IllUst nay the schonlbrtv whin his

ne iMouiriu, nowevcr, mac ne saw a a:s . i-ut- -j r ... - , , . . williti2 to go to accomplish hie idea of position on the part of our people to ac-' .? . , q. i emilita.y glory, an 1 he took occasion 1 " " oa Qe cur new-facg. to warn us ol t he iuevital)I con.-equences. Je 1 Union men : t'ouidering that this wa written twenty 1 There ra ist be an ntter ezterminttion odd yeais ngo, we may well ak if the' of the bnihtchai-k-m on thi Mi'ouri si le wiiter. i:i view of whit is now tian-pir- of the line. I repeat, that for icif -preer-ing, did not speak almoKt m the language: va'ion, there shll be extermination iii ol prophecy. He paid : the Mist tier of counties on the border o'

ed topthe beardless y.'uth manages his II- nieaut bv the Union a it was, the ! Sl"!lt"' VIltn Mr. CuttenJen lemontaxed horse, with a taxed bridle on a tax- riht to own nigirer. and gK them back!1"114 aJ?aint coc,e he replied with cd road and tbe dying Knglishmati. j when thev run away under the Fugwivej bat profound complacency for which ho pouring his medieine, "which he has paid j Slave Law. " This is a Union man iu the!'" y reikaMe : "Why. Reutlomen. seven percent, into a spoon that In has j border counties of Missouii. j

. . ' . pui.l fciteen per cent., liings himself baekl upon liis chintz lie-i, whi.-li lie bus paii tweiity-t.vo per cent., and expires m the arms of an apothecary, w ho he has paid a license nl a bundled pounds for the pu nege 01 putting 11 1 111 to ilea: 11. Ill" whole property i thn imme liarely laxe.i Irom ttj. to ten iter.-eut. R-m ies the probate. I uir-' lees aiedemande I for bin vin- him in t he chaiiseK ; his virtues aie! I 1 t - t UK. ; .nl Ka jN tM.n jrnthre.l to U lath I . ei s -I O la t a X1''! lloUlitie 'In a Idiiioit to aii ibis, the habit of dealing in large sums will make ibe (Jov-j ein.iieiit avai i i.. us an I pioUise; and the' pi otuse ; aim the sv.stein itself will iul.il! iii v generate- tlie. ba eveimin of spies and inioi mers, and a s. ill in-. ;e pestilent r ce of pditi-al tools! an I letaineis ol the meanest ami most n. lions tiesciiptiou ; while the prodigious patronage whieh the collecting of tlib splendid levettu- will throw into the hands' ihe (i..vernmeut, will mve-t it with to vast an iuduencj. ait.l htdd out sin h menus and temptations to corruption, as all the, virtue and public spirit even of Itepubll cans, will be una tie to resist." A Prophesy -Mr. Cxiasc. rigut, too. uiii i remeuiber when, a few years ago, the name o? Salmon I. Chase was tne synonym fj everything odious ami vile: and when 1

in a priva:e letter, wnttcii Hie oiliiT nti Mit.iM.rt a the in habitants. 1 u-anti

i

-lav. Mr. Valbindi-ham savs : 1 f....t ..r .,,..,,...1 ;.. .1- .J delivered recently at

"I obseive that Mr. Chase is making suuii border counties burned uvei burn thu '"war Christian " himself merry over my exile ant defeat. every living thing, except at points re j rrora hia r.e;ch at N'ew

eu, mat is an

h.. was one tif I he leaders f a party notkmsri huek thrrtv hv I n.L-

one-tenth part as many as the votes which I received in Ohio, at the late election, an I poor an I hnm'ile enomrli to be content with the cruiir.M which feil from tlu colored people's t.iblatthe Bakor-stieet j 1 f St . , t. .1 cnapei. .uv ti len t,, Air. J imcs Lm.us, remembers also, when he rescued Mr. Chase from the violence of a mob in Dayton, and led him, all trembling, by .lie arm to a piaee of safety. Now Salmon P. Chase is high iu wealth and position, clothed in purple and fine linen, and faring sumptiotisly every day wiiiie lam the subject ol his scobs as an exile. But 1 shall live to see the time when Mr. Chase will be rent in pieces by the whirlwind. wmcn he lias contt unite. l so much to raise; and made the victim ot the very mob before which he now triumphs and exults, as did Belshazzar at his lea-t ; and when "Uncle Abe's pardon" wi.l be of as little value to save him, as one of "Uncle Abe's vulgar jests, t may have to 'watch and wait' for the time, but it ivlll come ; and I shall then be at bono and in honor. Let him and his friends laugh now." XST A young soldier in the army of tbe Potomac writing to a frien I in Boston, mo.lesilv requesied a neelie-book, having lost hi at iettvhuig. The article was fnrn'Ai i lil irtilllAtitiiP ami w-titlii.oil in tlia ; ifohU was a card phoiograph ot Gen. Mcjciellan. in acknowledging the gift the I Koblier writes: "The picture of McOlellani- verv tinelooks very natural ; all !tl.t U tv-tniln.. . th,. smiU Tt .im nv

L.- t, It If i tl.M" 103. Like their ancestoia of two

It hid to go the f"'" j rounds of the legim iment. and from tlieold J members received six hearty cheers." Cent: roti Rheumatism. Bathe tiie'

j parts affocted in water, savs an English !, r?. debtt"a the privilege of voting or I Lner. in which rotator. tVitb their rtina! olhce : and il you demur to such

.n l..rA h u,A .t 1, borne. jat before go'ig to bed. Bv the next morning, the pain will be tnn.-h relieved, if not removed; One application cf this simple remedy has cured the most obstinate rbnniatic pain. 2T The Wi te-Awake have been fast 800,000 voluatecrs.

Jim. Lane, the Infamous. Tbe murderer ad outlaw Lane, who honr the State of Knnai by consenting

to represent her in the Lnittil State. Senatr, recently made a peech at Leaven worth. We copy a few sentence to ibow to what length the inhuman wretch is MiKoun. A vot e ."and the se o id t ier, too.'! Y en ! Jf extermination in the lir.t tier will not sPctirw to Iiishk nrn tection to tbe live and property of her citizen, let th necnnd tier . and tV hird. mid lier after tier, nntil the ubje-t is acc.nip!islu.,l an i the Sta.e secure. A votV "no oatlm of ailinnco !" Oaths cf allrman ! Oieat fi'id ! Wh-u in Missouri, th other day. I took

I especial pains to inqiiiiethe wheieabout j "J"ny- in ti irom me w j ol the most lelialde Union man in the! ,.ab,icn "u11 hacarrie 1 it at any Uoi.ntx - iv n r.,U,tA tn m. Mr Hrt.-iL- jtirae: but Uuion and P-ace in the tai-

living on Gran t riverr I rode Keverall miles to sc this lean ideal of a Union man in the bonier counties of Jiinsouri, and whn I found him I asked him whete j 1... ...o. f...... ..u.. .,.,..! .. YVi.t

tux-'tion us it in an I th: ITnbm it 4 it wan"!"1'' 01.

tax-'tiou us it is an I tha Uni.m as it wk."-i"w

: . I propose, then, that on th Sth the peopit ol Kansas meet at 1 .-tola, lea.ly with their wiitn if replevin, to go into Mis som i to 1 oi fiver I bir liioi.eilv. 1 jI ibi'iit enn v w idPsn.p i.l der-si.?ion to evrv

house ami bain, to every li-dd of coin.lr- Wade, with whom I aerv-d in the eveiyhogand hed of sto k. which, if ' Committee of Thirtem. seemed to be-

not oestroved. will be Used bv tho who! aie i.rei.aied to inuidfr ns. "i take tbe ground beie of vengeance for blood, and devastation for safety

The Constitution as it was i played pur'e. an it nowappia of inaunratn its technical deHn:li n is the rest'or- " war ofexteimiiiation againet Uve-

atioii of slavery, and 1 am nady to ace' any lvuisa- man shot d wu who iHVorg' any t lie Union as it va 1 am in favor ot . i he Union as it will be ii fiv to all. If t,u want a man who will vote as a Sen itor for dosing lb- war while the shackles icmain upon slaves, select borne other i L ne. have childicii. and if I, am not batllv hurt my family may be lar-1 uer 1 liave a lei u'.aiion for imlustrv. ml 1 don't. Drooote to lus It bv anv a. .ion ot mine. Tiieio is but one plain wav, then, to neeriie iicart ' u lnn rtici i illns inist n n!-rh.l boi diood it must bo deva-tated, for guer-i rUlas c:n't exist wiihout the Minoathv serve.t by themilnarv autbonties. I ask that if vou a.loi.t the lesoltition ofTeie.i.! you be to eiaiel to maintain tiie -rounti assumed. hd remove I he border oi MisIn(. Von wi vote lor a res.dut on mumling the lemoval of S Jiofield con-; ...uMilt-.. S, h..fi..bi an,! ih.. ..,.;..ti..n,.i r a radical, live man to the coniuiaiul of v department.

'vision which this vexed question cf slavery jCrgT A company of Puritans, in the ear- hi ever occasioned in this country. It hae Iv htstoiv of 'New" England, once met to- i b-en the fountain and father of all oar troug'eatheran l resolved that the "earth and h'hJ "mptinic to hold to gether e ree- .. I., ti.,- i j ... i . .i : .. j io:iciled two opr)icz prmciplea, which will its lullncss belongel to the snmis, ami1 . Jru it . 3 , . r .t ;n-t harmonize nor agree. Tha onW bape of gave pom t .. their assertion by the further ; the .Uw u over the ruln. of the guvernaieCt icsolutiou that ihey were "the saints." j a,l(i 0f the American Church. The diasolo1 be subsequent doings of thtie t.xinu arejt o i of the Union i the abolition of slavery.' familiar to every one. They made a Bed j In the same peech thia amiable brother of like that of Procrute-. on which thev i Mr. Harriet Ueecher Stowe aaid that s

stutched every body who came into their teiritory. The pillory, tbe whipping po-t and tbe ducking pond were necessary adjuncts in every village to the tchool and the meeting hotiae." and were liocrally employed in propagating Puritan piiuciples. In cas where these arguments tailed of conviction, the stake and the fagot silenced forever the rash liereli,: who prefered worshipping God accor ding to the dictates of Ins own consiem

ami the tcachiugs o! the Go-pel, latlierjthc ,1oor, aa the cook had gone out and than according to the will of th "elder" j taken lhe kev wj,h her. He nituaelf h I and the dictates to the wi'l of the blue c in at the window. The Print di 1

laws. It was supposed that thin clas of people w as exinguisl.ed in A merit a, and tut the religou end pditlcal intolerance bad per.shed with them : but ihe same l,,g,u- -haracterue.l by precisely the fa" a,'1 professing tho bame infalI Ability, have appeared and are dominant bundled years ago, they proclaim Mv 'doxy is orthedoxy eveiy other is hetrod- ; oxy." If you are not of my politics, you traitor and a coppc, head, ami ought - ltreaiiuent, and inaiat that as a citizen ot of . K"01 J'"n le. fi.1. Cn'H Capt. Day, of Harrishnrg, ha manied a ii Field of Pittsburg, ifice chaa -e for a fa. oily dispute ; f r vhile he nav claim that h wm th field. he rnav jur-t a Uuly touUuJ, tlut ko gaucd Jba Idty.

Tae Crittenden Co a pro xira Inter estinj Diseloccro. Ex-Senator Bigler, of Pennaylrania, in a late ipeech at New Uope. Cmli County, in that State, in giving an later fbiing hi-tory of tbe Crittenden Comprorniae, in Concrete in 1S62, by the Aboli

tion re ember, when its acceptance wonld have kept in every State in the Unic but Sonth Carolina, aare : When the utrtigi-le waa at ita bight in Georgia, between K lrt Tcomba for ecesnion and A. H. Stephens againt if. h& ! th-K tnen in the Cixcmittee o! Thir teen, who ate now . blatnelenn in their own estimation, xiv"a R" their To tea, or even thn-e of them. Stephen would haee lefeeted Toomba, and ae.-epiun wool) have been prostrate I. I hrar-1 Mr. Toombs say to Mr. D.rrg!aa that the re u!t in O-otgi wk staked ou th action of tlie Committee oi thirteen. If it ac epteil th- Critten len proiMiniti'in, Ste phen wou!e defeat him ; if not, he won! i carr-v 1,10 8,te oal l-r furt7 thou.ani anc againut the Chicag j n at form were 8tirc to be fosnd wanting. "Mr. Seward, in that committee, in a pirit of Krcm and tiduule, because Seven that much had been d ine toward

own- "eaiterwam ma iui in open

tne troumen you are no aiarmea auoui will not last ninety dv. "Why, gentleui'm, thia class of men were M deteitninel against an r compro ' eweie Menra. Wigfall and 1 vet. on. ' ,,,e ii"tre?scti ana indignant at the lighte.t in licit ioiM of u-ltlem -lit. About th aatue time in wa that Mr. (irtdy wa encouraging the 'wayward sifter io le, art in peace for the vole r.v fr I ""PP"" 0110 &nJ tnt tli overihrow ofslaveiy and not the rerat:ou i.t f the Union in nw the teal jd'l t of the Greeley rhM! of fanatic. 1 lie men who. tor tun meanest patty tnnU ''' yro "P ine l"n tamer tnua as"pnt lo 14 f'r compromie. ahoul I rewive theetemal nialehctiona ot every rieul oi liberty throughout the globe. J3 eecber's Christianity. Some one aenda to the London Ticct & f.Iluwing: Toth '7oro'i London Timu : 1 have rel your excellent comaente en ine it'iurcn tn tuo iu. sieurjr iim imwri, tatiow. In order to tha inconkutancy u the following axtracu llareu, Connecticut, in 1S56. are fur nahed: "The DeoDle will not hae wtr. nrr inaoc 'ate tt revolution, even to relieve Kanaae, J-itil thry have firat tried what they can do ;V'oti." - lf.lD peacefol remedy ahould .i i.wit..Jrmi..k;.k...k.K.. ter way to riee in arm and throw offa goe!n.tnnt w.r ih.m that ol.dd Kn-'Ganta: or endure it another lour yeara, and then vote again. "The Conatitution it the cante of every diSaarpe'g ri'Je waa a "truly moral agency." Y'our obedient servant, O. Mcli. BcEcnnr. is lectuini in England, a&i is, of course, hard on rebels. X3T" An amusing instance is mentioned of the aimjdicity of Finnish manner. Prince Gonchakoff visited the civil Governor of llalsingfora. On his aervant'a ringing, the Governor came to the wine . dow and lament etl that he could not orea the same. o - It is paid that IVmt. Mr. Barnes, in a late dicoure. gave it as the reault of forty year observation in the pastoral ffi. e, that "he had not met with a single inmance of ick-bel repentance, which. upon the recovery of the individual, turn ed out to le genuine. What a commentary upon human nature ! Legal Tesdcki When Secretary Chare ceased t iasne lgal tender notes, there were 034.900. 000 of nufinuhed note in hands of the engravers, in various stage of completion. Several weka ince, he gave orders to have them nniahed as e-r!y a pwibi. and they are dadly now bing sent to the 'renrj Depatmnt at Washington, to be registered and paid out tatii Guvt'rnsieai'e crsd