Shelby Volunteer, Volume 20, Number 27, Shelbville, Shelby County, 10 March 1864 — Page 2

IIlES!lEUyH)IiUXTEEld-

: vr t-tx -v

-V.

- Undeveloped "DcTOlopments

The Aurno of Cormrrrc has a good article vi& this title. AbH:t once a week

. . . mr - i.-r"

... -J. ; ..i.'. - iv

H E 15 "V V ILLT TIIURSDAY, MABCIt 10, 18C4.

Tbebre.leh itttboTankofthfjrtfVf rYTal" nor too wide to he heftlrd H i rtiured

f J that br'eoretnny Chac U about to 'retire frm

V tithe I'ahinet. nnd with bim-cmo nil tl ma in .niiirtiiilr (ifipnw .ia it remark. telp2ram.

l'iTice who hare fivored lus rreten-!orn as ! are serefrom "Washington. fr paragraphs a iv

' rV- he icMor of Old A be --''In several of the in income of the , alwav byver

y f -Af j ''-Kfern States the papers that have epouel j mission cf the military authorities, statins

7 fhn iiicn ( . n . I. , . . .... ..... - . . . V. t- 1 . n n. n ,4 A "

n -- J u vuaau utJ.xi;uiJUk , ii , aiUiiA unit, .liUpuliaui . iLiit&u j;au ty juuyj:.

Ijir.eoln have betn depnved of the Jarpe pov- i tliat "astounding Irauus upon the Oovcrn-

ernment patronage they have heretofore n- j ment have been brought to lightf" and that

i loved. 1 hi and other acts of attempted eo-i the "most startling dvenofnents "may re

j oiciou Wt into the- ran La b&a oniy added i looked for."- -One week the arrest ofaprwaifud to the flame and the fiht become Here! inojot aimcmcerus tho cause cf all this hubj er day by day between the contending iic- J bub : another week it is nn cfUcer in one of I tions the "outs'' and the '.'in?,'.' the one de-j thoMcpartments: a third fefk it is "a private terminal to hold onto.their stuf berths and u-itizen whose character has-been heretofore j the plunder, and their opponents determined t unimpeachable." JJut-in every ca&e the

they shall relinquish in their favor. sv it : frail, are gigantic, "and the developments poes honest men watch the contest with a arr, to be second i.nly to eart;uakes in their

CnClU GEO. K. .IILEEI.A!:;: I" 1 '"-.Power otmn-mepunc.

7 , i'-m- uattccn r:raies ocr uicir iu coiten nf f ,.0.WrWmonf ri M, om Fpvm

made. The facts are not laid before the

r TXe roaarription is to be postponed until jiic'firit of April. " ' !( jug handle election (ill od one

.ide ) ame'.ofT.in .Tecncssea oi tbe.OtU-

Tilt! t

s The administration party mt.n J soice ne delinitirn for "loyalty." Heretofore it has Bicantupport of the "government,' but "Ilonett Old Abe' is now the object niot viulent Assault from a party. T thaeites are indignant nt the attempted

forestall the action rl the ahulition i resiacn- -j,c ..trnv loval" AXli "unconditional .. . ... ri . i I -

tial .coovention by re.-oiution, 0Ji:'iVL.u;an AifclaUcoaraua.roccc&fBl.

and arc striking the ' neir strait irom the shoalder. Tliev at Sack rhif friends as treil

as himself. The Wa? bin-ton correspondent of thoft. Louis Dcuma-al. under.iate of.tfi 13th ijijunt, writes uf the Cabinet,: u . "Two of them at least openly, used the rr-wrr nf the natronace of their depart

ments to proscribe those who'Jare'd todcclarcl . . t M J f

their r-ro prenee lur -Mr. uas.1. t uu uu; ii

them Postmaster (leneral Klair has hi& the bad taste and worse temper t. make a public attack upon his ministerial colleague, iho lachet of whose shoes he is unworthy tt unloose iJut the attempts I allude to dtnii stop here. The lobbies of Albany. and llarrisbur ' hve lelt impellod bv a strong; scn.-c

id' dutJ to declare war on .Mr. Liwe. ine

Indianapolis &. Cincinnati Rsilrosd

TRAINS PASS SHILBY TILLS.

10.49 -

..i i- t . j . i . i. i. i'I U'JIV" to neciare war on -ii

... . peculiar degree ol purity, anil patri(tim, ana

between pirates over their iil gotten

::.!:,:: .g-: .7r. .rf ' botoy. National Democratic. 1 i The Abolition Party Sp.it.

IvOHVeiBllOIl. - . Tl,r a l.,nrrer n n f"iu),f h f tli i am u n it i on, in cavalry horses, in beef and U'. rntii-P .al.s-nce of anv tendener to corrup-

At a meeting of the National Democratic ! will be two abolition candidates in the field : brca.d' ,n c?!t?n., 1,onswl' in lt hrnir ronrtnittee.bold at New York, it was imnn-l for President this rear. Tbo radical Ger-t '.T? i1' ?nd1"8 :T""Pty "fmodesof

cheating tha (lovcrnment, are almost daily

About one fifth thensnal nnnib;rof vrs in peace times w.ere cast. The election wa?.i?I colJnJy ofneers. It apeais that Farsou Crownlow is not dn4 after 'all, hot "iaHicen ven- sick.

LTe arrived in CinCinrfnti one nigdrt'hst

week. The Devil w ill therefore have to

wai: a wdiile loTpef for'his due.' rA naval attack, JiS' been made on rri-. ' ,v . 31obne, some say a mere uemonstration to retain there the velel troops and prevent their going to the ascistancerf Polk". It i lmrtofeiJ that one of. the deTal ves

sels iva.s jnnk ar.d ancther ladlv rrnrHf

siiclrv A; itiMi y n ruLtnors Je- : - -Mlti.O M. M. TRAINS fASS S1IELCY VILLI. Frtn KustmJle P.4t . at. For Co!urBtol...t-5S u Fruct Columl u,.... Xlj p. ra. For ltuhvii't,.-S-30 p.m

Eye and Ear Jntiraary4

x. w. rAiiuisii, 3i.n.t Oculist and Auristj, GKXERAL surgeon, Iirfirinarj-on Hjrrin flwl, llCiM luiVlin;, Sntk oC

imonslv voted that the nxt n(tr,nnt rjotnn. ! mans throughout the eountrv arc movinc ac-

eratfc Convention, for" t'ho purpo, of nomi- l titrlr and apparently in earnest to bringout i ftnn0?npJ ln tIie ,nost 4al" papers in due rating candidates fir the Presidency and fen. FVmont. There was. a Jar-e uiectinci irsational style, but these announcements

i.ie cmire nwrno; i.. .un l,..,,,.,, .w. ur , . I ri'ItEAT? 'l f f the lift iM Kw. I!wi1fTrtson. which characterize now. a ever, thosey t'"' Jl0' ain;, u Den UWj'JL timedionored lobbies, render their-sopport fleet withdicv tnt of range. TliCiC i a--tr,KS for anv Presieent.al candidate an intensely i;,,. w,0 wa, .-tc. Ai.f.r

desirable boon

Every thing thatthe lobbies of Albany and

llarribnrs have said acinst Mr. Chase is

.vat'ifing towai

e with a laro

force to niak? ji javid attack has retr.vned

VicaVresidencv of the United States, beheld t Turners Hall in St. Louis-on the lid inst,'api thc Pr"liscs of developments are the. an(l cvervthing the correspondent of the ! to Vicksbur-ll. uhet'hW (Ulcatel and for-

at Chicago,

Illinois, .on. MonJav .Ink-4 at (vhich Lincoln was bitterly denounced as i

' ' '-II - T i - n

1)4.., ) . ; weak, imbecile, and nlway waifin to be toun.nn? swinair Br vote of tlie ' Coram ittee at a meetin-1 pushed instead of takinc the lean. After the I wittees investigate!

last things heard of these enormous and as-

f . Congressional comtheir invetiL'fttions are

held September 7, 18C0r the numbwr of delegates for each State wm fixed at double the number of its electoral vote. AUGTSTCS DELMONT. Chairman. r'RED. (b PRINCE, Secretary. New -You k. .Tan nary 12, I S64. Tbo Jilissjon of the Democratic Party. Tbj l tdief ia gradually insinuating itself inrothe minds of the people? that the chosen raisstoh of the Democratic parry is to restore

pence and harmony in this our distracted country and restore the Union on a firmer and more lasting basis" than ever. The Democrat party is a life long and defato Union party it has always been for the Union, for upholding th? Constitution and maintaining the laws. audnr;t one word to the contrary can be produced irom any of its publications or speeches of its recognised leaders, excepting of eour.D those in the revolted States, to the contrary. The1 Democracy was for the Unirm: when the party in power was making a ficrVo and relentless crusade against it it xas by. appeals to the sectional passions and prejudices of the people of the North, conpled with the most ultra and infamous doctrines

of disunion, thnt the Kepnblican partv aehievi d its -triumph in 1800. The party w;s purely sectional hated the South and it institution', ami again and again declared its intentirrs to no longer nfiiliate with slave holders its' success was made a pretext for

prototypes m the o'nth to precipitate the sdavo States int. a revolution the Northern i

seetiohalisfs furnished tho fuel and the Southfin scctionailsts applied tin; match which is th most culpable is a question for thefu. ture to settle, but that the present party in powe r can not and does not desire to restore the L'tiionis as apparent asthe sun at noon day its sectional hatreds have beenme irv trnsifird instead of wrtfdifJd by three years of strife and earnnge the immense patron" ne of the government h a tempting bait lor the corrupt and yenaJ, a class by no means pmairlu that party, and one they are by no moans anxious to relinquish. A. stoppage of tiie war .and a restoration of tho Union would dispense M'ith the thousands of fat; contracts and fatofiices that are now held aud enjov ed by the vast hordtiof ioddyite and political sycophant,, and rather than relinquish these they would prefer that the (daughter and car. nagcbhouM be prolonged indefinitely orat least -fo long as the government by credit or taxation can mrs the means to gratify their avarice and cupidity. The'bnly 'rotid,' therefore, to peace, union and prosperity U the .. success of the Democratic party it was under the wise and ju-diei-s rule of this party that the American mtion reached the appex of its greatness and ;;ranlourotid ha.l its ictuwshI been heeded t!;edire and destructive calamity that has beullrn us could-bme ,bterrnTr3lded.' While the preterit oiirrnpt fanatical and imbecile arty remain? in 'power Ave will continue to :uk in -National' greatness, it js only by a change of administration and a coming back to the principles of Vhe fathers' that we can T?zaiXwhnt we have lost and arrest the nation it Us. duwinvard road to anarchy and ruin. ' - .

strictly private: if conrts-mart'al sit, the

evidence before then i hushed up, and if

usual preliminaries and the adoption of r series rf resf!utions denouncing the vas'i lading course of Lincoln and rfeclnrinr: a want

Oi conhdence in Ins ronrace or ability to

2r;innlo with the ereat issue.

resolutions were offered bv a Col. Mess and Ssnepf the persons ' arrested lor enormous

! Democrat has said, docs say, or may say j ced back bv the rebels, or lie ling the

against those lobbies, has been, is, and willJ iVoutun practicable is not deilnitlv known be. true. Dy this wo may judge of Mr. Chae, L. iro.;kin.s an 0(! river raain, ha, and ot the character 'of the "loyal' men who i , . , e -t,i i n.

CHRONIC DISEASES r7ee1I IIxti"2ietecl-

Wirt Tno:f tSiU ajit LESS FAIN lUu U ckuiTIb th TSf'

; i :irul4 rari ty.

S91U

somebody is found uilfr the outside world is left in n'rofound irrnorance as to the devel-

i - i. ' i i i:

the followin"' v ,i'gainst nmi anu ins accomplices.

adopted unanimously as a basis ul the radical organisation : , , L'esnfrcd, That in the person of Mojor General .John CX'reemonl.we.iiod all those qualities which are requisite for the. First

frauds are, after short imprisonments, discharged,, while others are held in durance for an indefinite period, themselves and the public remaining in perfect ignorance of the spe-

cilic charges, it an against them. As the

...,r;ne o a grcar anu powernu nepuoiic. Journai 0f Commerce savs ana we herelv recommend and nominate ' . . , him Ki a tit candidate for the Presidency. ,h to imagine any good reason Tl , rr, . why the sequel ot the arrest, as well as the Ltsoked That a Rreat ' national mass con- avrCSit it,elli ?linilld not lte iven to t,e pbyention of the friends ot general bremont be l c uuless it bo in a dpsire t0 cnncoal thc held nt St. Louis, May 10, b4, for .the. pur- cnonnus r(,bl.erieS which, under the prepose ofcomp etmga thorough - oriranization ent ,(lmmistration, have depleted the nation-

ui me ramcai musses an over toe L.non. Ulpursehy milliohs, or hundreds of millions.

uesoivei.i. inat a committee ot live trom

are supporting Mr. Lincoln. If but a tithe ol the charges made 'by 'tho Cliaseites and Lincolnites against each other is true, they are the most shnmefulry. corrupt and hypocritical parties which ever plundered a people under a pretense of patriotism. ., ; - ;

JOHN HENDiUCK?Sy Jr.,

Missouri, and one from each State of the Union, be appointed to make the necessary preparations for the National. Convention. Alo a committee of five to place themselves

in direct communication with tlm friends of

the Ladu-al cause all over ;the-Union. ' 1 Fremont may be considered as, already in the field a$ a candidate for thc Presidency, for almost simultaneously with the holding of this Convention the two German papers in St. Louis ran up his name, and their exam

ple has been toilowed bv nearly all the abo

lition German prints in the country.

Certainly the world never saw so much plundering; in a nation as is now going on in this.

" The War Calls. There is seme difference of opinion as to the aggregate of thc calls for troops, but the fact of the calls is correctly set down as fo'-

low9, ear and date being given : April 16th. l'SGl....':. 7.1.000 May 4th, 1S61. ....... 04.748 From duly to December, 1 SGI ...I oOO.OOD July 1st i?G2 .300.000 August 4th 1862...-. r.oo.ono Draft summer of 1S03 '.....300,000 February 1st, 164 5UO.000

Tobil....

This is the aggregate of the calls for men in the army alone, while the naval service foots up as follows, ns shown by the recent report of tiie Secretary of the Navy : Vessels in serviee and building 5S8 Total Tonnage 49S,(M)0 Number of. guns 4,443

Number, of seamen July 1st 34,000 The known cost of all this, it is impossible fully to state, but the. following figures show the loans and liabilities authorized by various acts of Congress :

Loan of 1342 Loan of 1S47...... Loan of 1S4-S...J Texas indemnity loan of I S'jO. Loan on)S....i Loan of 1800 , Loan of 1S61 Treasury notes, March, 1S61... Oregon war loan, 1S61 Another loan of 1 So I Three years treasury notes...., Loan of August, 186 1 Five-Twenty loan

rCP""The 5pHr ?n the 'abolition ' pirtv has epikeithehVaviest guhs'and wet the ammunitiortjf that organization they have heretofore insisted that the. administration was the gse;aa;eiit that he who opposed the former likewise against the latter, and

Rascality Overreaching ItselfThe late abolition Convention, at Indianapolis, like most of the Conventions of that organization, was controlled by political charlitans and wire workers office holders and office hunters shoddy contractors and seekers after shoddy contracts triends of the soldier, anxious to furnish him with shod, dy clothes which the first hard wind would

whip into- rags about him with horse hide shoes with soles pasted instead of pegged on with mouldy iTread and rusty bacon if they "could force these inferior articles onto the person and down the throat of the. private soldier and receive compensation from the government for a first class article, then they would loudly proclaim their loyalty aud friendship for the soldier. Dut we were saying thc Convention was controlled by wire workers and so it was. The moment a temporary organization was effected, some lickspittle of Morton's jumpped upand offered two resolutions, one re-nominating Lt. Gov. Morton for Governor and another instruct

ing the delegation to vote for Lincoln in the i Temporary loan

Hnbimoro f'nnr.ntlnn ,1 omM mrtot W ortificates of indebtedness

confusion the lick-spittle of a Chairman declared them carried, although the confusion was so great that none could distinguish the ayes or nays from the shouts and yells. The Indianapolis Gazette,' an intensely radical abolition Fiieet, but bitterly opposed to the renomination of Lincoln, in com men tins on the fraud perpetrated in thus forcing the resolutions through says :"" . " 'It was a most unfair and shameless trick, an outrage upon all parliamentary rules, up on ail precedent, and- upon decency itself, as well as upon the leelingsand rights ot a large number of delegates who were present L The like, we venture to sy, never was known

before in a respectable .deliberatiye bod jv In addition to the Gazette thc Journal, the other .Republican paper, publisbedjn Indianapolis, speaks of the proceeding. as an "error," and describes it as likelv to have a damaging r!fect upon the Union cause in Indiana. The Germans of Indianapolis have signed a protest againt,lthe fraud," as they

2,039,748

$242,621

Unclaimed dividends...

Demand treasury notes Legal tenders, ' 1 SlVJ..... Legal tenders, lf6.'i.....

Postal and fractional currency... Old Treasury notes outstanding.

Ten-fortv bonds.

1, 46 1,000

2(',000.000 7,622.000 18,41. (ti)ij 512,010 ..... 1,016,0:10 50.000.000 i:j9,67'.t.OOO 320,000 500,01)0,000 104,933,101 156,918,437 114,115 500.000 397.7)7,114 .....104.969.937

50,000.0 KJ ' 118.000

.900,000,000

Squelched Again. Ills aceideney,' O. P.

Morton, Lieutenant Governor of the State oil'

Indiana, as he claims, read a, labored defense of his maladministration of affairs before tho. wire-workers convention that put him in nomination for Governor, and to detract attention from his own misconduct indulged freoly in charges against the Legislature and the lhvmoeratic State officers. Oscar HHonn is out f'hh. quite a lengthy expose of the xen-

tlemans strictures on'the State interest ques-tion-wherein he not only refutes Ids. charges in toto but convicts him of w ilful and mali jious falsehood. IIisa;eidental Excellency is as badly damaged in this controversy as

in that with Auditor Kistine. . The Convention expressed its npprovnl of falsehood and mendacity by ordering a hundred thousand copies of Morton's "piece" to b printed, but the thorough airing it is receiving may.possiblv induce them to suppress the last ninety-five thousand. Another Radical Circular. The following is a copy (translated for us by-a German of this city) of a secret circular in thc German language extensively circulated in this State prior to the abolition State Convention. The object is fully avowed in the document itself, and it is only necessary to add that the leaders of this movement are in the interest of Fremont or Chase for President and bitterly opposed to Lincoln. It may also be proper to here state thatthe circular is put forth under the-immediate auspices of a gentleman w ell known in this

hillip

for

several weeks past as an agent of the radical "outs," personally superintending the radical "mcrehine." His dismissal from one of the departments in Washington for stealing is well known, and of course renders him one of the most desperate among the "outs." .

illy Stock is Complete,; And will be sold Low for Cash,. '

COSSlSTIXa IX FART Of

ias i

Mobile, lie

fays the fortifications about Mobile 0IejJJJt U (jT X UJtvJtt good anil can only be carried bv a large) ' ' , ' r t 1 T KCENT extensive ruirhMrtfoi t, 11 I-

lorce. , lie represents the renoiiK or uis-

tress in 4he Confederacy as without foundation, and the leaders us desperately in

earnest. -

Ups. .Fernando Wood is reported as

verrlovvith pneumonia in "Washing-

ton. --The guerrillas brohe up tho jug hanr'lo election in llirknian county, Tcnn. on the-rth, dehtmying the ballots and boxest;ist4 question,' which was the greatest outrage on the elective franchise,

iihe election. itself with its. odious test oaths

tq support the policy of thc adrnistration of Abe Lincoln, oi- the interference of the guerilla, . .. ,-r-S'svOii iho Vallev Hank of Ilillsboro, N. If., Eastern Bank of Maine, and Xa- '. tional Uank of l'atterson, N. Y. are afloat

COAL. Oil. PAPER OTIOS SirtiAItS - - '. f LAIPS ' IJ.$CCD OIL. WIIITi: LEAD niitD scro L.ARD Oil.

SCHOOL. IIOOKt' E5TELOPES! 1 TOBACCO uur.tiirs FISH OIL, TIRFE.TUE AVI.DOW GLASSSPICES CASTOR OIL.

9 415 'o00 h"eality-no less a personage than I'hilli ,00S 341 j lvheinhard. who has been in Indianadolis fo

TO THE GERMANS OF Tnn STATE OF INDIANA. Our brave soMiershave fulfilled th"eir obligation. Every citizen and person should make it likewise to be his duty to keep on a parallel in political matters with our onward pressing army in the lieid. E;ich victory on our side should give him renewed energy tovy irds opposingjtho political enemy., He dare not and shall not look on idly, while thousands of our brave and patriotic men are suf

ficed, .that corrupt political intriguers and .. i . . . . . , -. .. j -.,

Total..

Interestbearing treasury notes.. 500.U,000 ijuggiers attempt to take from us thad which

was bought .vtith such an enormos price. The coining State Convention of-the 2'Jnd and 23d of February is of great importance

towards representing the I nion Administra

ting in regard, to tlie

...$2,774,1912,8

Evert T)og has his Day. It is the pnvi lege of neutral nations to make all they can out of those at war, financially as well as' making them the subject of sport and redieule. A London correspondent of a New York paper writes : '"The" American question is in all the amusements of the season, and in othercountries, 1 hear, besides. England. The grand baUet.,most popular all last season, both at her Majesty's Theatre, and on the Continent, was 'White and Ulack', which is simply Uncle Tom's Cabin.' Fancy the agonized Eliza piroutting on -the ice across the Ohio, or Uncle Tom flogged to death in ajgrand tour deforce. Meyerbeer's new opera. 'Africaine', is, 1 im ngine. on the same 'subject Hut 1 have not encountered anything richer than the hits at

II,,,,, r; i i- - ! America in one pi ine UBB.-""8Uua5 I

mentther culy' were "truly loyal " who , V- I mimes-that at Astley s. The scene oPen- . . . - - "u f ournals. wine-i nnr-.no tUiY- "u u-; . . ri,.,o:.i, ;n

' . ' -f -v.i iu lunik aiii.j; jpg SilOWS ITVO &U(.'J. . viiv.ipjiuri in f

tratioo and swallowed ,ts military an t civd Convention, and sharnlr assail th Indian-i ;,n 'A R Lincoln A: Co. hard waremen and

apoiis journals for criticising it And so the general dealers.' On the next is M. Davis & matter goes. ' - . j Co. , eotton brokers.' 1 On the former doors and windows are notices, informing a41 interA rnr.TiNF.NT Qt ESTioN. The ew York ested that paper was wanttd, and just be-

Journalc.f Commerce. nr..:..- ..r.t,. I neath that greenbacks might be Had in any

- .nd cul l 1 7".icn " 0'1, ll" U4 -f .MK Iicib-. ffiXr:.-. .nitb. J mtcm. enw?: '."."teat",D J " "'ol'tion rirols for th, door.' On the fhop cf J. T).

term it, and. prominent men throughout the

t Statp b:ivp t-.i

consequently, according to their logic, a U "r Y , , , "" other hand, we observe that the Terre

"""vi, i in,i:i ui?.o;ii m ine govern-'

' .i : ... . . ... . i

1 i , . . j iiiu ai'l'Viir ID mink

1 iui.-uhj VI lilC iUIUlllUV j

acts without a why or wherefore, and insisted tiiaf OlyL Abe was tho chosen of the-most Ilifh,Land&houLi rule or another term at 1 ast iUioat ejositioq., l?ut presto, a ehange

has came those who were once the most ar

dent friends of th dmm4stTatrn

hardly eVTrf -ords or epithet

with wn?rh to 5tiimatise Democrats, are now. the most hostile1 tJ ' Old Abe,' and openly threaten that'ifiv i again put in porrHiation a third candidate bay be looked for. Several of (be'smfi Lirteoln. papers have eren

jrone so far as to dec In re that thc election of

a Democratic lsilcnt would be rreferald to the re-election of Lincoln an indication .

Presidency most aptly inquires

Fmal,-V' oaht Mr. Lincoln use the sa-e measure, or ,uppressil The copperheai rena of Mr. Chase and tien.Ercmont, that he has used to ,ppreS oa,er poBent of his adminTstratna ? Would he not he ner-

leri'j jum ne raimpn,. and rffictW them and. if not, -whTnntr

There, was also a large placard.

same with that next

fc Co., the most'

! prominent placard is, 'No connection with . . I i ia1

tr.o concern neuuwr. in iiiewiuuuw is k

9tcA Our )nnt urn to.l. 1 Tr 'I-.. -

. w .vuutrruui'ii. mis , .. r 4 i- i. .

of rcturninc reao,a orurrism cOQtcrston A. Hespeich for a copy of McCWUans tek-i a our Americn future in th. two

to coppcrhcaiism. j port .and otherralaatle public docufficnti. J;rge heads and tails of the Kilkenny cat.".

n'-'u auu me samo time in

stand occupied by the Union party towards the condemned institution of slavery, 'flic political welfare of this country in the future1

will be decided in this year. 'I he Union party must take its stand of im placable hostility towards tlie system of slave

ry. Under no-relations or conditions can or must the rebeJi'iDus States be allowed to come back into the Union with the institution of slavery. U e (terrains in particular, must make it

our principal duty ti se to it that 'slavery wiM be Rbolished throughout the whole Unit ed States. ,; . , If this is not done, the infallible consequences will be, that the South combined with the Copperheads of the Xorth will be enabled to reestablish their former rights and

power ana it this should take place, it would bring on a worse state of affairs and a' more horrible war than what the present lias been. In regard to" what ' we have said, we now ask all the German radicals of the State of Indiana to irive this matrer their earnest attention, and like the German radicals yf Indianapolis to form in to CIub, to unite with each other and join an organization, so that -e may be enabled with our combined strength at the coming convention to make the born Americans respect and esteem us in

our point ot view.

In a short time Mr. Forster. heretofore at CiVanSville, will stumo the Stilt and inform

lame Confederate flag, on which is printed, (the Germars of Indiana in cenpral n to th

Two nuns wanted immediately.' Another jgrrat importance of the present time and is', 'A few .'iorse8,.sheer women, children and : how them the advantages of a United omothe.r csttle for sale.' Then comes on the jraerce.- -fbght.' Davis and our worthy President are; Pj authority of the German Organization characteristically dressed, and the fight goes at Indiananolis. '

Ion until they both get into a box: which box CHARLES POST. Treat

the iiariequin Birin-s ana oiumoia aances

ClIARLES IIbNXINGN. Sec'y.

Fk. Steix, Corresponding Sec'y. ........ Box Xo. 275. Inmaxafous, January the ISth, 1S64 y

in large quantities. They are well executed n!id calcnlated to deceive. The la.st fpieigu arrival brings a rumor, on the authority of the London Horning Host, that confidential negotia tions are progressing between France and England for tho recognition of the South

ern' Confederacy,' and Fiance proposes, if England refuses to join her, to act alone. Tho J'ost puts the report alloat as - mere gossip with some foundation of probability. , A'spirited debate lias taken place in thcrjri.ijsh House. pfCoinnions on the siezure by the government of the Laird rams, intended for the Confederates. Mr. Seymour Fitzgerald denounced the Goyernrneatin jbitter language, declaring the act in contravention of law, ar.d while lief would deplore a war with America he would prefer it rather than the law

of England should be infringed in consequence of threats of foreign Embassadors, The Attorney General defended thc Government, and claimed that it had acted

from accuse of justice and not of nation, lie was followed by severai members who denounced the. course of the Government and .charged , it ,wi;ii pusillanity. The vote on sustaining the action of the ministers of the government stood 153 to 148, five for the Government. . .... . . 'Jie rebels Aie reported as having a more formidable iron clad tnonstor than he celeb ated Mcrrimac in the harbor of Mobile, with which they intend attacking our llect'ribw bombarding the forts at the entrance of. thc harbo-r. A' destructive fire oceured in Sedalia Mo., on the 1st, destroying about 100,000 worth of property and several lives, lodgers in the Missouri Hotel, who weie nnablo to cwape, among them the .wife and child of the proprietor. Rev. T. Si ai r King, died in Sah

Francisco bh the 4th inst of uiptheria, after a very briel illness. A deputation of negroes from Lou is iina waited upon cur august President on the 4th, to reqnest that the negroes of tha State who. were free prior to the rebellion should be allowed to vote. His jokership replied that if he should be convinced that it was necessary that the

negro should vote in order to cruh the rebellion, ho would not hesitate, and added further, that he faw no reason why intelligent black men 6houM cot rote. Look out for a proclamation giving negroes the right of cuflYage. The election in New Hainshire came

off on the 8th:

abolition bnVby a greatly reduced major-ity-they expected 20,000 and got about 4,000.'' -v-m " : ;:' The people pf New York ,votcd for an amendment to the Constitution allowing the fold fats in the field to vote, on hi 8th. Tlie' indications aro that tbe ameadajeat is carried by large majority.

Patent 3Xodioino AXD A VAUIETT OF OTHER GOODJ.

rh

Ti'csci'iptions

QtfjVVT V WITH O It E A CARE.

nTrfin'r th-plser North sitie Public Sqnarc, two4or West of theoli ttanl. Iy, tfW.

CLOCK, WATCH,

JEWELRY. STORE. the SifVofthcniG nmu fiomi SIDE PrBLICSQ VA RE, 8HELDYVILLE, IND C. J. .1IOURISOX RE-TKCTFl'LLT rnoiincm to the citixrn f Sh.lVy cuiity tlit Iik lia.iilJ-t'liy Store at the -uui.l, uli icli juri'.jsc Vv u ci'iuti.tljr vtt Lardafmll .-iMirtinnt -t phmIkIii hi lii.e. rnnirisinir frery ttjle aatf erndefil Watch-, Clickt anl Jflry, all of which will ba .I'I .-is che-i. a-tli- muir artirlr can lol Uii.ed in Cincia-r-nti or IikIihuhj-uIs. hh.I r try article sold y me Warraate1 to jiruve as rec.jfunieti.Iexl. CLOCKS, WATCHES & JEWELBY IIJEJP.IIRJEJ in a itUf:ictory uiaimt-r or r.o chirpe. J! )-'I:iiwciU t the J'UiC, awutli kxJt Tublic Eqaare, alfa of tlie His W at' h. l am to GcsT row, tiie nix er TAYLOR'S PATENT DOOR BELL, a li.-w and ecncniical invention. Calla4 awe it. CHEAP FURNITURE ! C O X It El & II AXD, fSucccusors to J ah. won it Ccrrej;.)

Ajnin the Orand Krtr.j of the rotoaac ii rjortHai aw alvaiH-irc.k.nt not c wi'.n us in tiie f riceaaf wur Lrgt k. Incomparable Mocl tf Furniture & Chairs, V:ch will actually j11 at a re!action of from 10 totS I-er -nt- on ffmieJ pri . the troth of which will be really aj'j.arer.t t a'.l ho will take the trnoMe tocall and examtre f r fi. iiiivei. TL ftnek ifa;i in CTery departneat, aetu istin? f Plain and Upholstered Work, AM nsinufactarol fron. lie bettc materUl a4 by ezerl. encet workdtL. - ncnrArs, ktaxdi, niNIXG AXI) CEXTT1E TATIT.F.

OJice, Kiteten, Cane and Flog Bottomtd

and Upholstered UUAIIiS, Rocking- Cliaiis,

la eadieM variety, of the vnriouj atylea, an4 atallprlew. Undertaking".

Ac -ncrtni tb ?f if a tvr.nr ' be Fifk'aIrooBunl Cae, wairanted air water

iaetery ttyU r.tvio ce. M e hare a ejlend.d UZillt to atteoU funerals, cfiarjin; for the team only. Salea IUcms lul side Hrrin 8t-,S rUioJ PaUM f I1ELBT VILLE, IND. yoT.t?, IMS. Spermatorrhoea Iktn be Cured, DR. RVXD'S SPEdflC tiif.Vwrmrttirr!, Aw. in.tl MV.U n,t4. Jmf-oUmey. Ln of i'trr, m jwdu'j an-Z rf'ftu lUy. 1 1 efirru are truly aaal. trial of th fpecnic wUlcocnrce tx meet uept-eat or T, merlu. Pr.oe $ 1 a box, mM y all reepeeuMe Brojr". oraeot pot-tai4 toacj fcidrtaa. fey J. KKOXKK, 4j3

CWMoit Itrtet, mnjumrm, w. ciroeuan

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