Daily State Sentinel, Volume 12, Number 4068, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 October 1863 — Page 2

."Vl''M' NI-L. TÜESDAT MOUMNT,. OCTOBKR 27. Ttii! Object f the War. . Mr. Cue, in hu tpwchei during hi recent tU:t to the Wet. nH that the mailt irf.jVa of ihf war w i put .J jwii th.rilcracT of tlie S uth. S ) tUn, rrunlir.fi; la the f fere nr J of tl.e Trei v ury , the lerrJh'e cn;t In which the n liori i ugaetl I merely fr the purpoa of overthrowing on kinl of ritTcy to t;tv e place to n other. , An ritcrcj bij u;vri intellect, cultivation tn l Intelligence comm irjih rect, tot who can pay hoiope to a hod ly aristocracy. n rUtocrvej which Inn nothing bat greenback to commend it? If ifi olject of the war i to fill diwQ on kind of ritocracj to builJ up another, it Sa high lim that the war sh'vj! I ceie, fur the mte of the rople hre no interest whter in fiich controversy or rivalry. Tht gr(4t IkJt of tlie ptfoje sjpy)4el that the vr wm ttne wgel to tnalntain the nati.innl In'ejrriii' and restore tlie nitionil authority oicr reMIim State, hut Mr. Cnr. who rc;re-tcnte-i to be the intellect of tb A'lmiiii-tiAtJan. ina thu iu Durne i to exU-rm'mte Ik jicu of wtltbii Ibe South whom h clifiea under the title of S)ufhem ri-'tocrncr. If an aristocracy la olitia in one section of thecoiintry an! inimical to popular right, will an aristocracy in another section of the country be le-is go? Mr. Crta'tatti the aristocrats of the South lord It overblvck men, but what will the people iin if there m fuhtitutpi in in place an aristocracy that will domineer ovrr white men? The leading rnen of the prt? in power are nnkirt money oot of the war, and thU jutifien the supposition that it ia their parpoe to nrike them?elrw thejroverning clai.a. aubftitoting .a money nri-toercy for whit tlie? terra the UveocMcy. A cotemporary rerairk-t tbt .Mr. Secretary Cua cxpecu to be on of the chiefs, if not the prince of thvt cla, a lie la reported to hve uldenly come in poaseaion of immense wealth, which he ban inrestrl in Europe, preferring foreign ti American securities. Tlie IJlffrrrnrc. Two yetrg ago. jut after tke commencement of thin. "cruel war." Mr. Salmon 1. CiiAst, the greenback Secretary of the Trei.'urv, openly de c'sre-1 ,-the Siutli U not worth fighting for " The Indian tpoli Journal, repreenting the Kepublictn party of Iixüm i. Ml forth the a.lvantiea of sepiratioo. The New York Tribune, and paper of th it el im, declare I th it our (lovernmeTit wm beI upon the rlht of revolution, and th tt any St it hid th? riht to withdraw or eceIe from the Union whenever it people thought tl4t tlie Federal GoTernmcnl wn cp pre-fie to them. These were the entirnenU Towed by the letJeri of the Republican party after th election of Mr. Lincoln and after the commencement of the war. If "the South U not worth fighting for," and if the rebel St ite h ire 'the right to withlriw from the Union, whitju.tificatjon for the immense waste of blood and treasure to coerce St ite to rennin in a Union which the people regard as oppressive to them? Wh it apology for th'n change ol sentiment at so fearful a cot? What exetue can the party in power offer for thin chne of front under such circumstance? I it not the rankest hyrnjcriiy for men to profea to be unoond.tion.l Unionists no, who, two yem ago, declared the Union not worth precrvin;? If the Republicans bid not the control of the government and its immense patron-ice. they would be the same d'.sunionisti now that they were iu !G1-6l. c;Mt t of r.vii. The lo of Ohio and Penn.ylvani.i U, for the moment, a severe tri! to our friends in thoe Sute. That the Peniocnta in ach St:ite rnide a galliot figh'. antl p,ll for their respect ive candidates a cleir mijorityof all the legil oter of the State, is ciU'C for itisfiction. Theopen h imelenes of the Fcderil Adiuinis tratin in trampling on the h'net franchise of elect iin dav, leaves nothing to be accounted for in regard to the defeat. When Secretary Cbae coidd in the very wantonness of his arbitnry power, go to the polls and Tore in Cincinnati, when he had a legal right to vote only in Co'umbiH, it was an open defiance of all Mfeguarm and an avowal ih t fraud should not be inq lired into nor punished. Hut there i a stirer ground of conratul ition thn that the majority t ttie le;l voters in Ohio and I'ennstlvani vote the Democratic ticket. It ma? seem harh to ay it. hut defeat in iv rrb ibl.T be better in tx-tb thoe States thin vi.-tory wtij.l 1 hare been. . It is now a perious (juestion whether j the election of an abolition Ooveinor, in the S ite of New York, would no; been better th in the Uuien vicforr of elerting (overtirr Seymour on a "prosecutiof, of the .ir tiis." ( A badlf ?ct limb his to be br ken : anew before it can be rc-ndem! s-rvi v ible. ; It i a unevou fault to "heal lightlt " the wtuiids ; of a jople. Deep Hounds Hie woie with a mi-' peificial cloüing thn as open sore. lYrh ips it -may be found th t our condition, though ip- j ptrentlf more critical, would htvfvbecn reillyi more hopeful, w'ul Wndwotth, he avowel Abolitiuntst. as ttovernor. th mi wi.h (loviriKir! S'tnour. The iiitluetu t the I liter's election ha been to lull alarm. nd t cherish tlie delu , f!on that this Feieral Administration will permit j the question of their holding on to power after, 1 M5. to be submitted to an honest vole of the por!e. i Had Wadsworth been elected the Democrats; would Lave been forced hack, for their person 1 1 protection, upon org miz ition biso 1 on oi l Peuio crstic principles. Shod.ly andrailrotd men would ' have been thrown to the winds, and -"mew here 1 about three hundred tho'ismd voters might hue1 been enrolled in thi State, by the present time, : Pledged to the old Democratic principle ol States s ligbl. These, with the secret friends of peace, j who are ashamed to avow the possession of so 1 much cmmon sense in this time of delirium, i would, on the di.-tinct is-ue of jeac, h ive had a j far better prospect of carrjing this State at pres ' eat, than the Ummcring a;i 1 uniuH'I!igii!e I coalition that has presented a ticket without at prinoipte, and with the "policy" of rowing one r stiil thi hut!; ii'hr I The Dcmocracv of Ohio have shown that there is enough ol youth and igor in their political growth to meet the coming crisis. Libert v. tobe had. m.!it be contended for. It rotts a people to ; maintain their liberties. When the latter ba c. . for a time, been lost sight of, their regaining must cot the fiercer struggle. The people ot Ohio and ef Pennst Irani i will trust no more to the enthusiasm of mass meef ings agsint the tru t or.' u.i-i of the Leaguers. The Democrat in that. Stte j,, .IH"thev mut' now do in Ne York, enroll, a:.d .rgn'z" md . in-trutt e ich tihcr. bv ili-cu not m the uo.av forum not by wind v plait.tn s,.ee. -lies, ' but indoctrinating ther neighttors. a tew j;"hrred I in one place, in the pfmp'e ritcch"m an.i pr it tic : of free government. Let the Denncncv 1. , around theiu. m iect the mot efliciet t metl.ods they can fcnd. and go to work If th ü . lliev may have occi-Ioi, tolo.k b.(Hl rejoice at the ' deleit of ICil. as having thrown t'.e'nbick on the truer organNm of Uwt elf -.vm-,n,ei,t jn. j atead ol mi4kiily Wsi'ipg for the rtioi to j in ueuratr. ht the po; !e ouIit tuprenre ' and then bid their Cioveruori ratify . Yoik I Fteem in's Journal. i Aji Arr tjcoTATiox Col. Mcdart. id an ir-' tide upon the Ute election, makes tlie following ' apt quotation. Mr. V ll a pion am and the .kt- r-. ; - II i wuutr ieuj'crai:c prty may wen quji tue 4ir.es of ih poet : ' "Out elf-ajt ravin? tour mh.de yragj cutwrL Of ptaptd Ur and of t.-ui buuts aa l n' iru-j..t Vl.rciia, HM.KIlfwU . Tbaa Cr ana a 4me at hi brrl." w - ""a aw-. m m m t n The Rlchm tn.t vVn, y; The pree thitare pruning government Lote muat b tot.peI. and tbt the-e "infernil machiuea" must be taken to pieces, and 0. iju n( trtaaury note atopped

DAILY

I

1 J

The L'tiiteU tole and fa bit A Hit of Srcrrt lllvtorf The IW. !":,-e J, :n ,1 rii.U a lc'-'er, cerer before nude pub'i , fr m 4 dm Q ji t Adiro to Iter. D- C:im::...g. i i wtcn is co-:tan-i curio j-, l.t of errn hi.t ry howing the origin of L.a U called the "Uouro Doctrine" It will be cen by this letter that under the mor-t trying cirfum-'tanre and the fcvtrct teu.pt tior.a the American h,rerPtnnX a ted w'nh thra st ifKCie g;ol fait'i towards a friendlr poer Srair .td with t' rriM-t opeti atid frank Co.irtey tord t'. otWr wer, l- eieat the t;me our riva!a f-r tLe psc iu of Cutn. It will be ieeu.tO. th tt the .igrf'" gain-t Eurofnn intervention in American tTtirs, hieb alterwanls took ahape and was formallt ai.nounced as a policy br 5fr Monroe, in one of Ins annual mes-agc whence the name of 'Mr roe Doctrine" h td its origin in 'a nigotii n or proposition made by the Hritu'i f ivcrnment to our own; so that Englishmen m y cl lim the credit of originating the celebrated "Monroe Doctrine." Qt iNCT, Aug. 11, I STL "AVe. William E. Channing. D. D., Ntvport. lihnde Islnml: "Mr Diar Sir I wa in Sertem

ber, 12. that the events to which I allied In my jee:h in the House of Representatives of ti e 2ithof Mar, I.IG. took place. It was the time when the Swinish gerninenVof ih e Ct.rtes w i overthrown by the Frcith inva-ion uiider the Dike D'Ang'ulerne Great Rritiin became alarme! Iet under the heiter of the revofntion the island of Cubt should pass, into the po-se-i n of France The French govern meiit fabric ited or was imposed upon by a repott thit the Hritish Cabinet had determined to send a squadron and take possession of the Inland. The people of Havana, divided into parties between tlie Cortes an 1 the King, were terrified by premonitory Bymptoms ot negro insurrection and looking round for a protector. There was a party lor re aorting to Great Uritain, a fartr for adhering to Spiiu, and a pirtr for seeking admiion to the North American Union the last of which was tlie strongest. A prop itiori w.ts then m le br a secret agent frotn them to Mr Monroe to this effect that thev, bv a popul ir movement of the ucceta of which they bid no d mbt, would de dare the island independent of Spain if the go? eminent of the United States would promise them protection and admit them into their Union under a Mate constitution, on the model of those of our Southern States, and with the nndeisiand ing that a the iiopul itiun of the island should in crease they should be at liberty to divide them selves into two States, and have that portion ol representation iu the Congress of the United State. As the inducement to the American gnvet liniert to pledge their protection, they cie asurred tint the alternative would probtblybe the prevalence of the party in the island lor the ccdoniil connection with Greit Uritain, and a re sort to her for pro'ecron. While this ptopo-d tion was under considcTHtioii of Mr. Monroe and his Cabinet, the French Minister at Washington, by a vetb-al, irresponsible communication, not to the Secretary of State, tlie only medium of official intercourse between Foreign Ministers in the got eminent of the United Sutes, but to Mr. UiMwf'ird. the Sc-ietirr of the Treasury, tsev erated t'ut the Fre:ich government had secret tut p .itiv inform -if ion that the British eoverntUPTit hid deliberately detei ruined to take possefin of Cuba. "The r.iHwrr of Mr. Monroe to the proposition from tlie llavani was tint the friendly relations existing between the Uutted States and Spain did not permit them to promise countenance or pro tectiun to apv insurrectional movement agiinst her authority. Their advice to the people of Cub I, was to aohere as long as possible to their allegiance to Spain; tint an attempt of either Great lrit-iin or France to occupy the island would present the proposil from the H ivun i un der a diiTeretit point of vievr, concerning which the President was njt authorized to plele p-os pei lively the acion of(the United States, but that the people of the Havana rniht be assured of the deep interest which, under all the cirnun stances that might occur, the American Government would take in their welfare and their wishes. "It was the opinion of at leit one member ol Mr. Monroe's Administration tint the occupition of the Island of Cuba by (treat Britain fhouht tie rented even at the co?t of a war. Their unanimous opinion was that a very explicit though confidential communicition should be mule tu Mr. Canning, that the United States could not see with indiUereuce the occupation of Cu'oi by any European power other than Sjain, and that rumors had reached the American Government that uch an intention was entertained bv the British Cabinet, which made it necessary to ak an explanation of their views. "Mr. Hush was instructed accordingly; Mr. Canning di.s vowe-1 emphatically all intention on the part of Great Urit iin to take possession of tne Island, but avowed her determination not to sec with indiffeience its occupation either by Frtnco or by the United States; and he told Mr. Uush of the squ id ron dispatched bv LouU XVII I. to the Wet Indies without notifying him of the expealition. and of the schooling he hid ordered the Uritisli Ambassador at Paris to c.ive the French Cabinet Tor that Pin of omission. Mr Canning then projiosed that, bv a mutuil underHt iu ling between the lbitih, French and Atueri cm (rovernmeuts, without any formal treaty or convention, Cuba lou'd be Iclt in the qu;et paHseIon t)f Spain, without interference in the government of the islind. Ttiis was precisely the p-iiijy which Mr Monroe believed to be be?t adapted to the inreie?ts and the duties of the United State. Hi;d he cheei fully assented toil There was po futil.er communication betwcoii b in :iil the French Government on tlie subject. S f ir as France was concerned ihe arrangement was left to be concerted between her and Gieat Iritain. The people of the i-1 and of Cub i sub mined to tlie Government of Ferdinand, rest ored by the Duke d'Ancouleme. and received a Vicer iv and Captain General iu the person of (Jen. Yitts, who had bfen Minister from Soiin to the Unite-! States ore of tlie moat upright and honorable men with whom it has ever been my fortune to hold political relations. He w.is pre, cisely the ruin to tranquiliz? and conciliate the stibiuis-ioii of the people of the island to their' old Government, and lie so t-lTectu illy sccom j p'.ishcd th it the Government of 'he United States i heard nothing further of intrude-! insurrection in ! Cub i during the remainder of Mr. Monroe's Ad ministration and the who;e of mine. "Ali these transactions were at the time pro foundlv secret. l urn, of coure, vour unalterable friend, ".I. q. Adams." Jo. Urlclit a t'ojiprrlirnd. or at J . Wright was at one time a Democratleast ha knew how to talk sound Democratic doc- j trine. Iu his niessio to the Indiana L'::islature, on the 31 t ? Decend.er, ISM), when he j w,s Governor of this State, be wrote: "The Constitution d this great Confederacy w ritten on v ircl; n.i nt, may be rent assunder, it it be not written aUo on t!ie heart .and affewtions ot I t!iijep'e It is written on ours. We ht, were- : jpeel it. we c;ve it our highe-t sanction, alike for ; the sil;e of the sacred principles, guardian of, human liberty, enilatdied in its t rovisions, for the i;nn.i!nhered fdessins we have cnjojtvl under its rule; a:.d iu mt-ruory ;i!-i of that ban J of great ' at'l gcod turn, who co.Mcived anl est .bli-hcd it. This truth shouM he understood by our people. th.it thit L'uion cm not If trtttrvtl 6 force If it could, it vonlJ nut he tmrth irearm.;. ine txmus ami ligiment ttnt bind us together, ne ir.ual and not phf:c tl Our glorious Union is oi.e of consent and n t of force. It i a Ui.-ioo of confidence, of trust, of love and of tree tion. Whtn these are poi e, the Ut.i-n Les all it attract'oca and value.'' r That i r reltv strong for a " Union" le ider of today. Coming from a Demoer it. if?, author would !eca!'e-I a "copj crl.eatl." but Abolitionism t'ruD a multitude of mus these dais. A man

to iv le a -coui.drel. a scoffer at thing hol v. a j niemy. 'iu.1 the tio'ori- c fact that he untavted ri!er of religion, a drunkard, in holt evert- i ' S .uthrm tct el ion Or h.ll we cdl the t!.:ng mean and v;le. but it he is an AboÜtropist j ungrteut n-siin-ption to o..r nist.u re. thai the these th.it. cs amount to nothing Ti e political ! "ß'1 "t itesman" .f Ametica didieiliv .ee a true parons will take him by the hand ard hu him j irit', A " Fundi murdeier of ret ub to their bosom-! rHish'il!e Jaikst.i.inti. " j be-? Whi- l ever way we turn, wbitcver exolan - . . j i.tioii we may seie upn, there i nope which Webster. jdot not how Mr Sew ard und hi hief to be The Boston Pot, in noticing the recent visit ' totally inc ipable apt! ut.wt rthy of reprcentit;g of Mr- Webster lo the tomb of her hu-bnd in i this refiddic either from hl t -dues or cowardM w.-nfidd, s.3: "After ten years ot sepulture ' And et this jutli m tit is the only ecape in the htrbor of the Pilgrim, the doors of the ; 'r l;e eeterer asuriiftion that Mr Seward tomb s ung so! uialj back, and the iid of the ! "ol knowmuly and intentiotiall v fccll the ntihicu wn rtii-ed bv the kind h ind of sur j ttepublic to the tuost horrible despot of the TiU!K bif-J-hip Peltr" Harvey, 1 to Ce;"wM.

, ,, r'ce deeade of jean hi c!eith had left of i ti.O luiltr,yu Ort.iri.! T ...a f...., I il.t il.l .ou OrLrii,t Tt f.io. i l,.r il LOb.e brew wa ul ctrfccl hl hlki fe.4lUl03i!,ud that the contour of that impri.e face w.a pre M.rreJtheaatneaon thed.y when the funenl of ten thousanJ. at whoe he ,d wa, the Presi.lent of the Lulled Ma ea in all hia aupern.l prime, took up it. folema mtrvh from the Igrarv at MarahJiaM to the "Torab by the Great Sea "

FroTti b em Trk Fx; rr.

AllIllTIt :i V AltltIMN Tl I ION IL. Important Drclilmi In tlie 5uprr me Court of .Nrxv fork. The ce'ebrated ca-e of Georce W. Jones, late Senator from Iowa, v Wm. H Seward, was decided this morning by Ju.-tice Clerke, of the Sapreme Court : "It was an action for da rntge for alleged false inipri nuiej t. The !eleii.l pphel for an order of tins cnrt to fem e the acumi proceed itig therein to the pext Clt( U'l 'u'Tl d the Unite I Stte, i Ih Ik- ii in od i.t if S uiheru Diauict of t!i'S'feoi Na Yoi k . "The delend od stat'i! in his petition for tlo trdr th it thf action w i brought for .-eis allege! to hive ben none by him as Secietary of Stite for the Unite! States of America, under authori tr derivetl br him from the Iies:deiit of the Unite! S'ates, in ctnsing the rlaoitifT to be arretted and imprisoned, or for some other wrong alleged to have been done to the plaint iff under such authority during the present rebellion, an 1 that it therefore come within the actof Conaress of March 3d. lGl, relating to the writ of habeas eorpu. bv which a ca?c miy be removed to another C'rt "The question to b determ'nel being w he'her the 1'ie-i.ietit of the Unieil S'ates during rebedioti can rrest any pei-on not sti'ject to military law. witboiat the process of pome court, this wis a question that would ari-e under tl.t Cotistitut ion ol tlie Li 'teu sj-tes. "It cannot of cor-re be pretended by the mot ardent advocate of this high Pre-idential prerogative that the Constitution coi fers it in set terms There i nothing in that instrumert that can be tortured into the conferring of such power unon the President in his civil capacitv; and this it appears to me, plainly dNposx of the quest'on, for it would le a-?crting the preate.-t contradiction und the strangest anamcly to say that absolute and unlimited power equal to any exercised bv Czir or Sultan, can be implied bv a Consiitution which givt no prwer to any department that is not Fpecißcdlj set forth, except simply the consequent right to employ ail legal means necessary to the execution of the power. "If there is anything bevond all controversy in the constitutional history of the n ition, it is that the purpose of the Constitution and the pro vi flops which it contains, were, for a considerable time before its adoption, thoroughly discussed by the people and their delegates in convention, and anv man prole. ipg to confer unlimited power on any department of life Government, on any pie text, would not hive bee i deeme I sane." After releri ing to the constitutional history of Uni'eo States and Englaud, the learned Judge rem rk: "Could it be supposed that the frimers of the Confitntion intended any uch power :s tint claimed in the pre-ent case, either expressed or initilicd? If thev intended a dieta'or-h'p to exist under mi ernergecet, they would not, leiveit to the Cn el Executive to as-nme it when he m-iv in his ili-ct eiion declare nece-sitv requii1! it. tnir would have provided that this neceii v should be decliied by Congress, und lint the Legislative power alone thould i-clect the person who should exfrci-c it. That the Presilent can assume such power is an extravagant assumption which cannot be entertained bv anv court. Jmi such inquiry c hi arise under the Contitution of the United Stales. It doe not reach the prouoriiou or 8tafuie of a que-tion. "Mr. Lincoln nJ a military commander can pos-es no greater p wer than if he were tot President. Suppose the Constitution ve-te I the comnntid in chief of the urmv and invv lo some person other than th PresidtMi', could this function try subvert the Constitution and Liws under the tile-t ot rnilitai v necessity? Sure'v not." The learned Judge thus eonc'iide: "The power for which tlie defendant contends i ph'iidv not iic-cs.ary lor tl:e sifcty of the nation, and is not conferred bv the Constif ution When that safety shall be endangered within the inime!iae theater of inui rection or war, tlie Co mm imler-in chief nnd his .subordinate- are judges of the occasion: but beyond tint the or din try course of proceeding in the Courts of jus tice w ill be suli"ient to punish any persons who furnish inform ition, afford aid to an enemy, or betny their countrv. In case of emergency, caued by invasion or insurrection, the powers expresh iriven by the Constitution and t e acts of Congress to repel the one and suppress the o.her are nm-!e and effective It require no exercise of an extraordinary power over the Mered rights of personal liberty to accomplish this. It is m inifest th at it is beiond all controversy that those ri.-hts. in w ar or in peace, during invasion or domestic violence, even during the hideous rebellion which now confronts us, exist in the cases which 1 have stated, and are in violahle "The President, therefore, whether in his civil or military enpacitv as Commander-in chief, has no such power as that claimed for him "The ground upon which the application is made Ins no foundation in riuht It cannot be entertained as a question in anv State or in the United States Courts. The only question in this motion woithr of consideration, mid which can be entertained, does not arise under the Constitution of tlie United States, but is clearly within the jurisdiction of this Court. The motion is denied with costs." Scriou Charge Ag'iintcivard. Tlu list number of the Boston Pioneer has the lollowing remai kable article: A FACT. From a reliable source the mrt reliible which cm be desirfd we learn a fict wh'ch stands without parallel in the history of repub'ican government and representation, mid w hit rentiers it difficult to decide what we ought to he more surprised hi: that it waaut all postdb'e. or that it has not yet become public. Thoe who hive preserved the least under-tand-n;; of the interest. of tHs republic, antl the Iet sympathy for the nnintcn wceof its honor, have tce;i justly not merely fin prised, but outraged at a policv which, be-ides allowing the rrch enemi cfall le public iri-m to rmt his loot on Mexican soil without ottering a word of remonstrance, did moreover aid him in his enterprise, by allowing him to take his war n.ateri a! from the ports of the North American republic, viele the shipment of arms was refuse! to Mexico Even this was ju-t!y characterized not merely as a humiliation, ! but as aim i treason to the countrv. But what tiameslnll be given to an act which puts the knite info the hands of the murderer of two re public. fo that lie may uiunier the third one. and Foon aller Ihe fourth? The fact of which we spe ik is this; Mr Sewnrd. at the time when the j Fi euch invasion was in progress, delivered to the i Fi euch Minister, Mercier, from the archieves of Wi!iinton. all the plans and maps from th" campaign id General Scott, in order thereby to facilitate the assassination of the Mexican republic In a country like Mexico such pirns and maps hive q-iite a different vtlr.e from what they poses in an open, cultivated and topotr iphic 1 'y known tetiitorv. Thev have the vilue of t tletüv we.jon; but even were they worth!es, their -unci tb-r would fie n act of low dishonor, ivfi e'-? v n I inf.imv, which no government '-u'd comma without becorc.it'g the object of universil conte i t t Ftr -m exiraordmary ct it re must exist an ex'rtoroinary motive. White in it be? Did Mr Scwird, bv a ervility which wa ir.tcn lo 1 to :oe it re hibilitv bv throwing aw iv all lairor and elfinterest, to turn ;isi,:e. at the extene.f an unfor tun it e t " o tit tr ii ' state the in .t si. n w trh hi.-!i a r)wnfid i.eibboiing despot -ccmed to thrc t n this republic? In tint c te, he w . rof meiclv the b'ii.t:et. lint al-o the nioT cw ar Iv of .ttj ltcsnun who h te ever been eptru'e 1 woh the re; rc-eiit ition i fa niub'ic Oi did he thick to rhxrui the threatt-i inc enrniv itoo a trap, in hih he might c. nijlsh hi ruin? Thi would onh t-e thir kab e, if an in:p i-s ible b'd; ne-s hid mole him curiook the power of ihe T render ainatine services as accomplice ..r . I, ...,. I ..r . v :.. k:, . "in- i iiiii ii'i oi p-n"i!ii if fiii'urr oi in Hitempt to detroy a friendly ne shboring state, and Ilten to ki- he lii i of ihe blottir butcher of P.d md. b or ier to protect ourselves from tht first mentioned crimitnl such is ihe role which the successors of Wjshingion and Franklin and Monroe p'ay in the face of tLe world, in representing thi republic in 16.1. Poor republic!

Shall Xr Iliivrnn r.isht VrurO Unr! I the Union worth an e-ght )Cir-''il Excpt for iwuti ttiott, th s is an t i e intetrog ibn ;

for it U cert iu th- r ctttnot i it euio e-r on ita present gigantic sra'e wuhoul in -uiLng the i COtn.tif in hopelevs bankroptcT. The war bs ahead v laste! two year and six months, and in tint time we have accumulated a n itional debt amounting to about i'J.ftOO.OO'l.ÜOO. Each er of the war tnn( cost more than the year next rreceedir., for the constantly incrcas- j ing intl ition of tin currency will caue a corre-r-oj'id r iro-reise in the cot of miiitiry a'ipp'ie. , With the s tne i umber of men in the h!d it is j -r h ib'e tint, liking otie year with unother, at ' leat th'rtr r er cent, will t e antiu dir added to f the cost of ursoriiny the war. A imple cac'.u- 1 I ition will show the imro-ibility of the war con tinuii'g eight jMM without bankrupting the ntin. It in iv f tirly be d.tubted whether it can continue five jears from its commencement, or double ita present duration, without prostrating the ere lit of the Government. ' As un ofT-et to thi. we maybe told that the rebel government, being ?o much wei"keneJ in resource-, is certain to break down financially much sooner thn ours. This is rerv true; but the rebel war debt will never be paid, and the accumulation of a treat debt is a very different thing where it is to be wiped out with a sponge Irom a debt nu pirt of which is to be repuduted. Wliitever may fie the result of the war, the United Sfate. as a long -th1ihed government bound in honor to piy its debt., or at least the interest on idem, will rem on. -It i absurd to nr.ue this question as it the United States wpie running a financial race against the rtbels We are not to judge of our debt by cnipoison with a debt thit will never be pii I, but by our ability to pay the intfre-t on it. It is clear tint a war even for'the Union cannot be indefinitely tlonged, and conequ intly that an a'lrnini-tr ition which spen'is much and accomplishes little, will, if continued in power, bankrupt the nation and fail to reslore the Union at lat. "The Union at any cost!" is a well sounding cry till you come to ex iminc it. Do we want the Union at the expense of national honor? Oiuht we to purchase the Union by national b mkruptcy ? We ate shocked 'by such questions; we lecoil from the alternative thev present. But if the thought of either pot of the abernitive is iutol erable, what oh all weMy of an Adm nistraiion that is so maioigiiig the war as to threaten wis with the accumulated honors of both? If ihe wr continues to be inmatiaged as it Ins been that is to fay, if the Republican prty continues in jiower another four years wc .hall luve a nation bankrupted and dishonored, without the compensation of a Union restored. "But th war h is rn nie cnn-iderahleprngiess." If you look only at the credit side of ymir balance rheef, and shut your eies to the debil side, you m iy easily fancy yourself rich. It in iy be satisfactory to Inve an omelet on lour bieiktast table, but if you hive paid enough for the omelet to buy a hou-e ami lot, you luve really verv little show for our money. In proportion to the number of mon called into sen ice and the anioutii of debt accumulated, the Administration have accomplished very little. "Washington is safe" and so is Richmond. "Vick-hurg is ours but a cry comes Irom nil the esietn cities that the Mississippi is no more open to emmetee thin when Vicksburg was in pos-e e on of the enemy "The Army of the Cumbeil.tnd is in Chattanooga" but it was driven there de'et'ed, vnd stands threoi, the defensive The Administration Ins called successively lor Tö.t'OO men; for .riUUtb(l!) men to tut the war early by a single ovrrnoweiing effort; for obO.ÜO'l men to pave Washington and repel the invading rebels; for .'iHd.DMll men again to .-erve nine months and end the w ir within that time beyond i er adven tute; tor ob", men sidl again to replace the nine month men who were mustered out. with Washington i'guiu menaced and the North again invaded; -m l now the President cilis lr still anoihtr odd.tJOU men, to be allowed for, he tells us op a future draft! Unless the war m ikes a nmrer ip:d prngress in proooi tion to the c-dos il se ile of our cxt.endi teres our rt'souices will give out before the teb els give up We slnll h tve lost the knife and have flung the handle after it Oar only eeuritr again-t losing pot only the Union but the etioi. mousexf endituiesofbhx.il and treasuie we Hie miking to recover If. is in the election of a new administration which will prn-etite the war with mote skill mid mces, not requiting the country to piy a pound lor a ten penny loaf, nor taxing the poor man's roniiorls to enrich a "shoddy" aristocracy. New-Yoi k World. Lord Ilrniigliam's Opinion .litierlcn The following is a report of Lord Brougham's address before the Social Science Congress at Edinburgh, on the 7th inst., so far as iclates lo the civil war in America. Magnifying itself beyond all measure, and de spi-ing the ret of mankind, bunded and intoxicated with self satisfaction, persuaded that their very ctimes are proof's of gieitness.and believing that they are both admired and envied, the Americans have not only been content with the destruction of half a million, but vain of the sl.inhter. Their object being to retain a great name among nation lor their extent of territory, thev exulted in the wholesale hloodhed by w hich it mus be accomplished, because others were unable to in ike ftich a sacrifice. The struggle for above tvo yeirs. which loosened all the binds that held so;ie'y together, anil give to millions the means of showing their capacity, has produced no geniu, civil or militari; while tin sunm'ssioti to every caprice of tnaunvhis been ui.i ci - il and luiniii il, and neve intei runt ed bv a single act of iesitnce to ihe mo-t Ida grant infractions of peruiia! freedom The mi-chiefs of mob supremacy b ve been constant! y felt, fur the calamity of rational am! respect ib!e m.ti keeping aloof from ihe minasement ot affiir.- his resulted iu the tyrannv of the mult'tu le. To this tyrant, tlie nominal ruUts h ue never withheld their snbmi-ion; jnd the pres. Catering for the appetites of the populace, and pandering to theii painiis. Ins jietsiste I iu every mi-representation which miht mot iiui-e the truth as to passing event.-, ex ag-erathig euli success, ex?enu iting eich dw'eat, ofieti describing failure as u-torv; wdide the multitude, if the tru'li bi eh tT.i-e rc ichc 1 t'ieai, weieone ! ty sunk in ilespiir, itiothcr el ite i to :u. c t i-v, altno-t at the p'eastire id' their ruier and th-ir guides X' r wtre the falsehoihls tluis prupojatel coditieil to the events of the war; they extended to all things to the tnetsure ol the government and the :ic's of fore'gn nations. The public feeling mu-t not be thwarted ; the people desired to bear whatever gratitieil their vanity or raised their spirit. ;-nd in this de lusioti iQU-t they live as Ion;, as the war lusts and tlie rule i iu the hand of the m i The truth they wdl t eier Lear, beciu-e they de.ite t- hear whit is pe ising and not what i. true But it wou'ti it a grett nii-fike to charge on t heir false gui'J.s tie f illies i,n.t the crime wheh thev chwi.e iu with and da their best to perpetuate Th people are determined in their course. Far from teelig shame at the cruel sect, es which ni'lein 'g's n iv, which Christian time? have seen i i .!' itpnl a pec'acle ft wh'ch the w it i'e w ; t id t in 1 aghast, almost to im'iedihili ti lu v actudlv glory in it as a proof of their higher n if ute. bcü' ve themselves to he the envi as t!,e fltwerof mn kind, and fancy that their pr-iw cs wmii ilium; h o er the m -t poivetful S'-iti-s of Europe. In uch allusiotis their i h'el may r.ol ttractically join, f.ut the ;e.-p'e ate. la no-1 d tu'tt, a prey to them, and w ill continue i to tlie end. "Ilf.ar tbr ji-t law. thjn lemeiit of th nkif. Tl.f that date truth shall W t ie !upes of lies: A': liftboy w U b" chrat d t thi ! i-t, Ife-la-i.-:. strong a h 11 ha 1 Liad l.im fict." Cow: er Progress of Krror. Ti e feeling toward Enr:! r.d which previils ttiong tne A mei i .ii pfo; le, ih iuh ui-itig Jrt:m the exec-s ot nation il vanili and its kin ::c riiw, is -t-t t ii:;!y in pirt the lemainder ot the old qu .nel th t Itsi t. the -v at:. . n. e arc hi'e t :i lot i.i-piscl Xei'litr feeling is at ail reciprocal, hut among our kn.sOt'k it previils i:udegre almost atnoun'oig to tnenti! alien ition. It can binili be act o inte-l for without i ecurrit g t- the ancient lud-eol the Auiericin w..i,uj ilii'n--trates tl.e tutitine-s d the view taketr bv those who have m it considered the great subject of colonial polity, that we must so ton rn our sentiment as to prepire for a saturation on frendly tet m, always asumittir th it fooner or later their irrowtli will bring but their indetendtnee. Jim Lane The New York Hrld hold the watchman's lan'tTu up to Jim Line's face in a rnnt.er which reveal the feature of a great a demagogue antl reckles a partisan a the wi.kelnessofthetin.es Ins produced II is a b ol. datierous. unscrupulous man, and where he heirs sav evil only will lollow. ve hope ihe President will resist his imporlunitie-i to rem'tte (ieneril Schotiehl, ami to endiarras Governor (tumble, and thueby fare Missouri and KmPas from the hojriblt tceries he would fee en acte!. Boston Pwft.

A TlioiMiind Dollars f or n rents fna. In b- rrcrr.t ' r r r h at C"lurpbu Mr Secte tarv Cb i-e g ive the people to uT.de,0'nd. a re por-ed tir b Cincinnati orsn. the UtHetic. lhi this war is to be pro e ute! on I t theory ad anceI by Ch irlcs Sumner the wiping out of State Constitution and State limits at the Sutb "if in doing it we had to come to the ol 1 revolutionary standard and a thoutand doUara for a Irrokfatt!" At the rale at which food and fuel are advancing we shall not have to wait long f r )lr. Cbves cosUy breikfaitta. Everr poor man w h.i at pressen! ptice U looking forwsrd to ihe ways and mri of h's living during the com;nz wimer wol iHnubt lebsb the prospects which the regnl itor antl msnufcturer of our currency has in tore for him But "hat cares Mr. Chie about tt cot of a breakfast so long as he baa an army o' engrivers. antl printers, and prees running br te.m.thi command, and turning out greenbacks? Roche ter Union. Z-fj 'ln b9 recent speech at St. Louis the notorious Jim Lane s iid tint he b ol never taken Any property Irorn Missouri ins w hich helia l not turne! over to the (nven. merit. A correspontlent of the Union think bis i a mistake, mi l ask what Lat e did with $ 13,000 in gold which

he took from a widow ladr at O-ceola, there beipj no record of its having ever been "turned over." The Democrats p nled one thnusind more votes than thv ever polled in Allegheny count. Pa . mid the Republicans got over seven thousand m jority. No frauds, only miracles this. Th receipts of money paid hy drafted men now amount to nine millions, which it is expee'ed will be increased by one or two millions more. The whole of t hi gum is to be appropriate ! to recruiting under the new call of the Preideut. A woman In Washington went to sleep on Siturday wrapped up in a tent cloth, there being a dead bodv near her timilarly wrapped up. The undertaker's, men took her up by mistake, ami would havedmried her if she had not entered an empouic pro'iftt aiininst it. AMUSEMENTS. UttTKOPULi Tl HA Ii Ii. STAUF. MANAGER... Mr. W. H. RILEY. Tuesday Evening, Oct. 27th, 1863. SF.CONt) VVKKK OF Miss MARY PROVOST. h ja-, si s Lnd' of Lj'oiih. 0VEU1UKK ORCHESTRA SC ALF. OF PRICES I)reCir le and Parinn-t'e ro rnts. 75 Onts. 25 0. tits. Z ' en s. Ml C. nt. f no bt'lvati'i iiitlHri.iti Each a 1 'i'.itt)d Lad Iisll.-ry. ....... . All i-fpservea Sea's. ............ Privat P.oxt s ' Prt i o fi-e o i-n ro'ii 10 o'clock A. M. till I J M. """rMi.ior opt-n nt 7 o'clock, Cur:ain ri-e at "i ?4' prccise'y. LECTURE. Younj Mt n's Library Association. An Origin:-! I'ocki, i:Iiir A. Ioe, Tlie ltaven. COLLEGE HALL, This Evening, Oct. 27, Ilrfnrc tlie Voting Mrn'a l.ibrurr At siicia tion. W.THOMXS tVH.L KKAD AN ORIG1VALPOFM ' . en'tthd MHKjvTAKOK F. tPO-E.' ffr wh ch he will uive n crmin of I 'Ok, the tWt, with w1min.he waa intimate, and hi poni of " 1 II E hAVF.N." Keiiil'ncr to commence at half a'terven ocba7k. Tiruets 2 cent. to be Lad at tLe door. vc'7 .lit CRCCERIES. Ruger 8c Jay cox, Wholesale Dealers in AND XjJTOiUOjFiIS Opposite t'ltian Mfcpnt J?rff; Fi rzuiuxin.ws l,d ma.mj, INDIANAPOLIS, IND. .LAKE SALT. II I U 5: It A: .1 A COX, I O NTS F"lt THE SALT COMPANY OFON05DAI oa, .ew lutit, ttii LAKE SVLT At Lake pricei with freight added, ch. Ruger 8c Jaycos, MANUFACTURERS OF Fine Cut Chewing and Smoking TOBACCOS TUR TRADE SCPPUEDOXliOSTUBEBALTEHMS. ocUtß-diw

el A fi 71

II?

Mir II Si !f"

U Jib W U

MEDICAL.

How to Keep in Good Health,. asi What is the Cause of Disease. fllllF. rRIMAKTCAt'SK OF EVERT IIKASF. THAT S a-h i hnr til impuritr f f th bU.J. ThM --t lcfm irrpnr fr.-m many ci'ii' Impure a r t chan of rhr, un b-I lA,"l H nturf if im cj il, r.r. i ... t- .n d,T ;r"t,"ri'r rf il, t 'tx!. 'tixnm.

i.u a: w. Ue.aa te.c .fii-rtl bt.ushi-.'ejr j .p .,nfl OS 1 1 CSt Valhil1(,f Oil St. .,1. ... h.v dm, tvp... r....-ii!t . .f t .W.UÜ mU J ILM 1rt?(HUslWU OH

b-dt.-te ia 'be m.nth, foul tongue. Ii er c-mr Um , j.Mtit fti ilip ack nl l-. ! c.t p;a-ti:e, lp e tiitbl. cl?c. crump, pain and llLmr.'( tb- chet.li"',i burn. ft'u a-d rhua.ati in, v.ing an.1 j,ur. itur, chill and feier tnre or 1-arc 'tnpar ilrsj thre. anJ a !. truin of troublesome and dangerou a!T ct;.n, a 1 ! which niav t pTwente'1 ant ctirrd by tak-nra f-w Jtf IK STKICKlTlND'' Vr 0KTARI.K U'KIFTING AMI IULIOl'S 1'ILIS. Tby ill purify the bl .l antl put tu itiucb. b.w-l! and lirrr in a bral-by ctwi'tition. Tbry are j arfculafly f-o tal l- fr chrt-tiic and n-rvua dee. Every fartvlj tni erry oller ! u!J leep mpidv ff Itirf Pill, a rnmy i a otviled bv their u. Thry are a ux'.'A and fe medi. in", and can ba taken at ar,jtiin w ithout tl-n?er of taking cold. Sold I y ail Drueff'! or r.t to any prt on reelot of 2i rent und a famped enebp. ai!dre-d Ir. STKlCKL A N Ü, 6 Ka.-t Fourth street, t iiiciimati, ULio. C0ÖGH NO MORE. Try St rick I a n !N ?Iellilluotis Couh !Sal:iui, Thin i ae be.t and ciait rezredr far CvUrb, Ctld, tIonreRe, Abma, a'inpiinf iVmirh atd Ct.tioinpttn. Kierjl ody ln hatrhd thn eo-llent HiNaru ei.lfiH.daMicady rrrtinitnf"l it. Wr. Xnchell, Kirr treet.Ci -cinnfiti haya he h l-eru a t?rft;l ulTreT with ctuzh for m -tn v j ear. o Ijad ns tot to te aM t wlk up tara. She wvk ötir ixittle of t )ia Bali-am, and lia len tetter ever nince, atnl aivie all b' hva. C.ucb Coid and AMb;ta to try tld valuable C"ali II Nam. Fifty cent per bottle. oll by all f'U!tiits, and matmfaciured at 6 Ea-t Fourth trei.Cincitiiiti. oc 22-dA1y P I L A. Sure Cure. H 1j 3ES A Certain Remedy. F EVERYBODY IS IiK.Iü Ci KFD OFTUIS DISTUESSJ ING iiife by the ue of DH. STRICKLAND'S PILE REMEDY. . Urad what a sufferer fay: Mr. J. V. Hazard, 1C9 Second lrtt. t'lixiiiitaii, ii'a s he has bec-n drea'ttul muffen T wi ill P.It'S f. r a It nL' time. He had trl'-d m-arly everything, and culJ obtain iio rflief. He led about one "f- urth .-f a p"t r Dr. Str cltlan d'a Ilk Liniment, and il ma te a com pl" e cure. He advie all who are s iflerinir o trv lb reined . s-"old iy all ilruRM. Fl Fl Y CKXTÄ PF. 1 OT. Manufactured ai ro. 6 F.at 1-oartb utretrt, Cincinnati. A-k for STR!C:LAND'S PILE REMEDY. Sent 'o any part of tbe States on receipt of $1. oc 22-dAtAly STATIONERY. FIRST CLASS ARTICLES OF ALL DESCKIPTIOyS or St ationery! For Bark", Express and Railroad OClcea, Private OOcea, Ac, Ac, at Bowen, Stewart & Co's. ck:,24-'2w EXECUTOR'S SALE. Executor's Sale of Real Estate. BYVIUTrF. OF TI1K PROVISIONS OF THE LAST will and testament of Jonas HuHmn. late of Marion county, deceased. I will, on tbe 2Hh day of tictob r, l.iii3, "fed at. private s-le, for not less ibin tbe appris' l value, th" f.id-.witisr ral estate of said deceased, situate in said enntj-. t' wii: 'I he i'U'h h 4 If of bectioti tbirly-six (fi). in township seventeen (IT), rai ' three (.It, mi 1 on the north side of Whi'e river, c.ni.inin2 furty (40) acres. Al-o, ther.trth-wet quarter t-f the nortb-west qusrter of .sertioii twenty tbrce (2.l in. townsl 1p eveiiteen (17) ntrth of rnne three (.1) east, containing f.nty (4'0 acred. Ott iliird of the purchase money to be paid in band, one third in one year ami tbe bilance In two year af er date of sale, tlie purcha er to srive note, secured by mortgage on ibe pi-f mii't. for ihe deferri d pnjnnt Pervnudesirinir t buy will apply to tne undersigned at Lis resid-i;ce i car Mi!lerv II In sa d rountj. nt-ont six mites from ihe ci y of Induaapolj, on tbe 'otlt--ville road. If sjrd I unl are not sold on paid day, they will be held for ta'e thereaf er until iold. octiT.fiioi nvvin m;r. Fxecntor. MILLINERS. HISS J. DOYLE jry AS RKMOVF.D HEKPRIS Mil I.TNEKT F.STB8 LIVHMKS f to No. sa South Mino! etreet, next door o tbe Orient 1 l!oue. Sbe tin just returue.i from the Eai-t with a full and complete assortment of the mo.t fhionable style of liotinoK. ICiMiniis. ri'otirh I'lowfis I'luiiioH, Iri(t;il WrtNitli And U potwl u.s'ia Iy foend in a first ela Tituse. Hivti..; t.roiisht frnm ibe Kaf-t anejrieneed Il'eacher and I reer. Ms Dovle will p iy particular attention to4 all or.',er o' calls In that line. Mi D re'urns her t'mnns for pt favors ail ..!icits a continuance of the me. oclT-il Iy MEDICAL. mi Tin: i: il i tiii: in d. PRACTICAL ACCOUCUER. .VV . . Hit--1& LVI! IN THfc ' 4 TTHK AMFKIC N IHSI'KNS tKY WK TKF.AT Bl t a n- mtbi-!. ar.d with ta hi'tet ren!t. 'toLtiu I 'V-ri, ( ilii.rf tif the womn, Cf erratum liter- "'., . A rrk i, 'white,) C ' r-y ai:d all her dU ea-u to w tiicb the Amtn.tn t'tn ilr j o p-culinl.. liable. Snl t .ree du!la a and receive by eipre rT.e the N-:jr s ftni'ile .syrt'vye.. Tbi lritrcrriei.t hul. be o-ed bv every W1.EUI1 iu tbe lai.d. fr tie purjxe of cl tt,i;n't,c"rrn,t, A.' dc. Kent free on rece pt of 'tarn;., a cryr f our la-a-e Lettn lo Married l. w on eakb. cf. " The Iujt's ctlf-rtttt t'tm.xlt J'iUt, freh from th Iii-jei arr. are rfry g---' in simple diseases, IrreUnt'e-, rf-c. Itkc tl. -rit by mail. At ite .ra-r i'-.n ''n"rv we a!-o treat, tr if Aowr tnrt Hr-jt a-id with r.e-.er failing succe. Ymrruil, or wlnt the quacks call ;fir tU or --ret dis-: t'yj-Aüi ia -II iu uf a, (luDOThea, Oleet. etrictore Hydrocele. Circorele, Variele, Cairio-le. jrwiai rbe. Seminal Weakness, ocurnal F.miitti. Sexual Ibil ty, Im-porrx-v, ar.d effVct cf pelf-atn. Tbe ,r trete l of in a "private letter," which me send free on receipt o stamp. 'heoperrrxe of tb? Sarreon In darr of tt!Je partmeni ! om of the bet Hospital in Knrcpe and in '" Yor City, nat.le bin to treat patients acietiUAcalIy axel reur tbta -eelily. rbtrIirin" attiiiunce can corasnnjeat hylttter a'd be treated at their horaea. ta urgent catea aerxl or 1 inl retT a icine. Con ti I tat ion fret 01 cynInti.il. Iiooni Jfo. 14 S Eat Wa-binirtoB S;reet. ludiatiipotis. 1. t. Ii..- 1564. a. r tlT-wllLlaw

VA'f'fw!.--. un.

th oxnrkFii.r.aANci.iiR BRANDFS TUSSI LÄG0 ta Pleaaartt I tb Tate -aidr err foe It

DRY COODft.

FOREIGN DRY tjrOODS, AMKKIVAIY IIUV OOIJ AT Hume, Lord & Co's., PLKNDin .TtX'K OF KftT AXI ILFGAXI Fa. j lue Gvlut cptuit f t lb Trade Palace. Plain Black Silks, Rich Plaid Silks, Rich Fancy Silks, Rept. Silks, Plain Silks and Satins O'trpirKk of S lk Is rerj large and will t louti'l complete in evpry rc-pct. Lusters, bl'k and col. Black "Gro Grain," Plain Poul dc Soie, Rich 3Ioiro Antiques, French Repps, Drape de Luccas, Rob Rov Plaids, Black Bombazines, French Merinoes, Figured Delaines, Flannels, all kinds and colors. Cloths & Cassimeres, Embroideries, Balmoral Skirts, Hosiery, all kinds, a' Fall Cloaks & Shawls Small Plaid Shawls, For Children. NEW GOODS HUME, LORD & CO., aogtH. HOTELS. PLANTEES' HOTEL, ACTON YOUNG, Proprietor, (FOiiMMlLY OF N.VSIIVlL' E. TKXSKJSKE ) (). T. KENDALL Clerk, U'e of Jilfm, Ind., Sixth St., between Main and Market, Tjiouiisvillo, ICy. IFUSOX8 WISHING lü ü ) TO NASUVILLR OR ouihw.lISnd it to their fi.terePt to t-p at tli llo'el. octg'.-d Ir DRY GOODS. D2 o o W w A b 0 b 0 H 03 b to at CD a s 0 etu Ca3 o y 3 e-3 CO o O 1 O 4J 1 tu O 3 O Eh o LO. CQ J e-H CQ O o w b CROCERiES. New York Grocery, SO. 17 EAST WASHINGTON STDOOL5 TEST OTT GLENNS BLOCK. awaaMaaaaass C. E. JUDSOIY, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER

Fine Teas, Flour, ic. Cash for WT&aat and ater pr4ae. a-rtl-41y