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BichmondFaUadium. - i i i . - -1 " SATURDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1872, rui.t i ttrr m m iiiiiw Lisji.eai FOB PRBSIDEKT Ulysses S. Grant, . Of Illinois. . ; t OU VICK-PBE81DENT Wilson, Of Massachusetts. BEPUBLIOAN TICKET, Tor Governor, THOMAS M. BROWNE, - i Of Randolph Lieutenant Governor, LEON IDAS SEXTON, VOf Rush. ' ' - Congressmen at Largo. ' OODLOVE S.-0UT0, Of Tippecanoe, ' WILLIAM WILLIAMS, ' 'Of Ivowiusko. ' x : '.' Secretary of State, fion. W W. CURRY, ' ' Of Vigo. ' ' r Auditor of State, -' JAMES A. WILD MAN, ' 'Of -Howard, Trersnter of State, JOHN D. GLOVER, Of Lawrence, Reporter o f Supreme Court, Col. JAMES B BLACK, vOf Marion, Clerk of Supreme Court, CHARLES SCOLL, " 'Of CUtIc, Superinteiidtnt of Public Instruction, BENJAMIN W. SMITH, Of Marion. ' Attorney General, JAMES P. DENNY, Of Knox. "Congress 4th District. Hon. JERRY M. WILSON, fudge 8th Com. Pleas Dis, JOHN F. KIBBY, Judge of Criminal Court. HENBY C. FOX, Prercoting Att'y, C P -JOHN L. RUPE, Pro. Att'y 13th Dist D. W. COMSTOCK, . Pro. Att'y Criminal Court, THOMAS J. STUDY 'Senator. " OTIIN1EL BEESON, , Representatives. .LEWIS C. WALKER, WILLIAM BAXTER, Treasurer, " JOSEPH G. LEMON. - Sheriff, 5VM II. STUDY, 'Real Estate Appraiser, R W. ANDERSON, ' ! , Commissioners, WM. BROOKS, JONATHAN BALDWIN 'CORNELIUS THQRNBURG, Coroner, -. JOHN J. RONEY, . Surveyor, ROBERT A. HOWARD, Township Trustee, SAMSON BOON. , Townsbip Assessor, WILLIAM DUL1N, -"That thosfi who straggled and ifbsMrht far secession erenerallv be lieve they were right in -odoiwe;, I eaa not doubt - Thy propose to renew the fight, but aot HTltt gan nan saber. iTiey expect U regala, as -Democrats, through elec tloas, the power they lost as rebels throafkvwar." Extract from Horace Greeley Letter, plated lUetrphi, Jane 8, mu "Fcllow-cltrzens: I demand that tbere shall be open, free discussion before the Southern people. If, after. an honest, untcrriHed, uncon strained vote, they prove that.tho people of the South By they want Dis anion, I will consent to it.1' H. Greeley at Pittsburg, Septem ber 10, 1872. 'And nw to-day, if the nation was to be inryirtlud, and there were jast two modes ot savins it. to trust to the naaces of a civil war or to the chances of a free vote of the Southern people,! would very greatly prefer to take the latter chance miner man me former' Horace Greeley at Pitts burg, September 19. - eeee ii. i Republicans, vote early, and .see that all Republicans entitled to a vote shall vote. Before the Liberal Repub'ican votes, on Tuesday next, for Tom Hendricks and the Democratic tioket, in the interest of Horace Greeley and "reconciliation," let him answer this question : "Is the killing of six colored men in Georgia, at the last election, be cause they wanted to vote the Re publican ticket, typical of the new era of reconciliation?'' - Georgia, gave Seymour, in '68, 44,608 majority. The major ity Is now stated at 25,000. Cel. J. II. WARWICK. la consequence of being called home by iiikuMi in hia familv. Hon. J. V. Fornev, did not eo me as advertised; but the Central Committee sent Col. Warwick, of New York, Iia &ddraued a larse audience at Lyceum xx.ll an Mondav nicht last. Uis was a speech full ot Ufa and abounded with keen thrusts, at the mongrel candidates of the democracy and their unteoible. false positions before the -.tr. &nd hia utterances were received by his audience with loud cheers of approval throagbont hia speech. He met the charge -t iJUm. ainiaat th aolored voters by -vJ-. tk.t aiava laws nunuhed by croel eoarcng.sil atlempU mi. la to teach them. wThave no room for further notice, of the anawww a . W A Col's eyeejieat ana wuung ruur. Ssnatos Monro --.The old war Govern or of Indiana, at Valparaiso, Ind.j oa the 20th, thus paid his' respects to Horace Ores ley: . , r - i i ' " ri; eaasurr at vickibuso. I want to notice another speech which Mr. Greeley mads at Day ton, in which ha said; MI take up the Dayton Journal of this morning, and find myself there credited with faying at Viokaburg last year, that I hoped the time would come when the soldiers that fought with Lee and Johnson would occupy as proud a position io the s hearts of the American people as the soidiers who fought with.Qrant and 8berman. Wo snoh wotds Ter escaped my lips; no such thought aa that ever entered my heart.' ; . Be denies be ever made any scch speech, but I ask you to read bis speech at Louis villa last Saturday, and yon will And that sentiment running all through ft. t Mow, I will read yoa the speesh be made at Vicksburg, as represented by himself; when he got back to New Totk, on the 12th of June, he found the papers hammering away at himaboat that speech, and eo he rose to explain at the Lincoln Club Rooms, and Lere is what be said : 'It has been re ported very recently that, at Vicksburg, mgialy addressing a Scat hern audience; snd trying to awaken in them something ' or the sentiment of nationality and ipatriotism which 'burns u the true American bosom, that I said 'I treated the time would come when we f the North would honor Lee and Stonewall Jackson. I did not say that. What I did say was this; "That I hoped the time would come when Americans North, aa -well as Americans 8outh would feet a just pride in the soldierly achievements aad mili tary character of Lee and Stonewall Jack son. Jast as I treated the jaU Cofederates would learn to fesl a patriotio pride in the .achievements of Grant and Sherman. I said that or something very like it; bat pes s'bty you are not willing to goos far as thai . Very well, there is ne harry. Take j oortiase. I can wait; yes, 'I can wait. . " Now if you can psreoive any gnat diffid ence in the two speeches yon can see more than Itaa. eatiLR's avaaiMDia to uniLinii. I now want to read you an extract from hia letter of acceptance, in which be wrote out the platform which . secured bis nomination, He said: AU the political franchises which have eea lest ibrengh that oonvulaioa shoald and must bo prompt ly restored and re-established, so that there abatl be henceforth no precsribed class aad no disfranchiaed caste within our Union, whose long-estsaeged people shall remit) and fra fernise upon the broad basis of miversal suflrsge. " There must be he says, oblivion, that the Government n dealing with the people mast mske no distinction on account of rebels, hat all must be treated alike, whether they were on the one side or the other. You eannot carry out that plank f the platform without pensioning the rebel soldiers, and the same principle will apply In regard to the payment of losses. If yon pay loyal men you must pay disloyal alsc, or there would be a pro scribed class. But I read on 'What, aubject to our constitutional obliga tion to maintain the equal rights of all otfi zsns, onr policy shoald aim at toeel self-government, snd not at centrsliaaUoe; -that 4hs civil authority ehoald be supreme ever . the military, that the writ of habaa eorpu ahould be jealonaly upheld as the safeguard of personal freedom; that the individual cifi aen ahould enjoy the largest --liberty- coeeist ant with public order; and that tbere ahall be no Federal subversion of the internal polity of the aeveral States aad municipalities, but that each ahill be left free to enforce the rights and well being of its inhabitants by suoh mescsas-the judgement of- Uc pee- pie shall prescribe.' Here Horace Oreeley maintains and holda the doctrine ef State rights, chat there must be no interference with the affairs of any State, but that each State muat be left Me govern nait dispose of its own people as they may prescribe. That means that the Kuklux law ahall be nullified, that the laws made by Congress for the protection -of the helples people of the South shall be nulifidd and all protection withdrawn. That is w,iat the Kuklux ask. They want to be lot alone. Let the arm of the national Government be with drawn, and theyiwould take posession of evory Southern Stats in ninety days: They have got arma, they have the trained officer a aed soldiers ef the rebel armies, .they have most of the property, moat of the education and most of the political experience; and if our Government stands neutral these men would reduce the colored people to a condi tion of bondage bnt little better than slavery, and drive every .whits Republican into exile. Horace Greeley has given a pMzetha if be i is elected this may be done. New yoa en derrtand how completely he Las' surrendered himself to the Kuklux or the South, aad bow ericked was hie apostasy. -Grant's Sreacaia. Besides tlieepeecfcs that Grant sade at Eorts Henry aediDoneld-i 4M,.Viekabrg and Apoeaats,that-7hieUcn -thwaite will aot publish In hia Herald, there 'a another he abeuld publish, aa a lasting ad .monition to the Kn-Klux down South, and their Conledeiate Democratic-Liberal aSlie -North who Are in favor ef Horace Greeley, it is thia! "I am la favor of securing a pure, ontrammcled ballot, where every man bm titlbd to cast a vote mat do ao juit omcb at each election, with ou titer of molestation or proscription on account ot his political faith, nativity or color . Aa Honest Admission. The New York Tribune of September 10th, commenting on (be Msine election, nukes the following honest admission: "The rest-it on the wholemast be coneddes to be farorab-e o the Administration hopes. Very .good for a beginning! We ought not to expect too great a concession at onoe from Greeley's organ, "favorable to the . peoples hopesS woull be better than the above, but we stall not ol ject to the lsngusge, considering tbst me namtnisicaiion am ane people mean about the same thing. Greeley has ' become politically, about aa weak as the "tidalwave"' he started uf on. lfy Vorember the philoso pher will be lostbeueath the rave, end the wave itself wtlbe bst in the great ocean of loyalty. .faen 1 "' Recollect, when either of the Julians, or their relatives, charge Grant with being a drunkard, tell them that their family organ pronounced thetcharge a "malicious fabrica tion." The Grant its majority in Maine increases as the returns approach -fullness. Some twenty towns are yet to hear from, and th majority already reaches .16,300, from which it appears that the definite effect of Greeley ism in the State of Maine ia a reaction equiva lent to 6,000 rotes. And yet some three-percent, philosophers profess to think that Dr. Greeley stands some chance f being the next Preaidentl Chicago Times. The suspicion of Mr. Greeley's inclination to pay the rebels for their slaves in case of his election, seems to be gaining gionnd. The Saretoglan says that a gentleman in Saratoga ban received letter from bis brother in Lonisisna urging him to go for Greeley, oa the ground that if hs is elected he (the Southerner) will get paid for the slaves be lost by the war. One or two other in stall oee of the earns kind have come to the -."wtedge of tbat paper. Yoang Men Should Vote Right. Mb. ; Editor : With your per mission allow me to say a word in relation to 'the young men of old Wayne, who are about to cast their first ballot for those who are seek ing your surage: Perhaps there has never ..been a time in the political history of this country, when it is more important for young men just beginning to take part in political affairs, to look well before you decide to cast your votes- That vote may and proba bly will influence all your remain, ing days. It will give color to acts, placing your associations where they must remain through life. Therefore. I would Bay young men start right Choose the side of truth and progress and of the good of the country. It is not to be inferred from this that I am an aspirant to place or office, or that there is ocy prospect of a de featof the re-election of Grant. The signs of the times plairly in dicate that that is a fixed fact. Bat as one who has trod the paths of youth never feels solicitous that our young men who are soon to take the place -ei tbeir fathers should look carefully about you, and see who the party of progress is, and see who leads that party, ana men act accordingly, if you are undecided, go to work at once and decide, from the evidence be fore you and the country. Tten each one-'of you constitute your self a committee -of one to help your comrades to decide. No mat ter how humble may you be in your estimation, you will have weight and -influence among those with whom you associate. Stir up the lake warm aad acdiiTerent to provoke -them to a co version from their error?,- In supporting by their first votes Recvtlrtcks and Ciav-ns, Greeley aad Brown. For iheeVladium. MtEditob: If tke Republican patty al Philadelphia meant to quiet the advocate of Women's Suffrage with the "mere shadow," as the friends oi Greeley denomin ate the "14th tJarifc," they have missed it. greatly, -and unwittingly to themselves, "they feave builded better than they -knew." But this doss-not look at all l&ely, when we see by the: Eastern papers of last week,. that -some of tke same men who endorse that "mere shadow," united with thtPEepnbUcan women' in large, mass convections in New Yoik and -Cos ton, dwing the past week. iTbe.jneeting a Boston was presided over by Kev. James Free man Clark, SEfu-aiHressiiil by Mrs. Harper, a colored woman, Mrs, ' Livermorc, Lucy Sicoe, and Julia Ward Howe. '.Letters were receiv ed from Harriet, ljeeher Stowe, j Hon. Ceore V. Uetr, Lydia Maria Child, George XV. Curtis and olheri of equal influence ii the reform and .political moretau&i. At ti e meeting in Rochester, N. Y., the .Mayer,cf the city presided, snd more than 3000 persons were pres ent. The principal speakers were Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Matilda Josyln Gage and Rev. Olympa Brown. The Tress-of -'both States speaks of these meetings in the highest terms. Think-vou, tliat Massachu setts, whose -Stale Conveatlon hag alri-ady endorsed womaa suffrage, or that Hon. Henry Wiikea in his avowal of the, right of tfee political equality cf wcc.eu, published in yoar last paper, mcaKt?!i:Er8 play ? -ot 6o;:lhey &re not tfce men to tri3e with principles they fc-oid dear themselves. No matter wh&t may have been the.fntsatian of the in section of "the splinter," as we de nominate it, in the Setiublican platform.- It is accepted as fact by the woeeaof theotmtry, and they are coming from afi parties, to rally around the prkrcipic, and cs reform takes no backward teps, ! yoa wight as well talk of recuain- icg tbeblaok slave of tbeeouth, as to prevent the .women, white and black, from availing thesaselres of the advantages growing oat of the movement . Philadelphia. R.chmono, Iku. M- Kaiceley' talk about bs South ern people being allowed "a free And lair opportunity -to vote on the secession question, is ail bosb, Tuey tK vote as "freely and fair- iy" as their State government and public sentiment would let them. And if the President had interfered to protect the .Unionists in voting aeainst -secession, the very act would have begun the civil war! There was, and can be, in sucu cases, no alternative 3n one of his New Hampshire speeches in August last at Man. Chester, we think Mr. Greeley gave some personal reminiscences and added that he would not toucq on politics ; it .might do, be said, for a Vice Presidential candidate to traverse the country and make political speeches, but it would be indecent for a candidate tor ine creat office of President to do such a thinur. Horace has changed his mind since then, but the people are stilj of hat opinion. Csntbb v ills Ind.OcJL 2d, 1872. ? Mb. Editor. 1 have seen in the papers a remark made by Geo. W. Julian in a speech at Indianapolis on last Monday evening, in re lation to Senator Morton, which not being contradicted by the Dem ocratic press 1 mast presame is true. He is reported to have said ' that he only wondered why . God Almighty did not paralyzo the upper portion of Morton' s body, when be made certain remarks, as he had paralized the lower por tions. Now, Mr. Editor, democrat as I am, and consequently not much of an admirer of Morton, such a vulgar and heartless remark as the one quoted, unless repudiat ed by the party of which Julian is now the exponent, cannot receive my support. I do not stand alone in this feeling as I have heard my neighbor democrats declare themselves in a similar way. Julian we all know is a renegade, and it only surprises me that the demo cratic party should permit him to injure it as be certainly is doine. A Democrat.-., The above communication is from one who has always voted an unscratched democratic ticket, and, as a party man, . has always used every honorable means in his power to promote its success; but such low flung utterances from the black and malignant heart of Geo. W. Julian, disgusted him com pletely, as it should every honest man. Ihc capital-stock of Julian, has always been the lowest and vilest personal abuse he could pos elbly invent and utter, and in this ' presidential campaign, started by the opponents ot the administra tion, with the slogan of ' anything to beat Grant 1" he finds tke con genial element of filth in which to wallow to his heart's content. - THE CRIMINAL JUDGESHIP. Bye recent deciaion of the Sapreme Court, the term of the present incumbent of this of fice, the Hon. Geo. Holland, expirsa with, the coming October election. This seems to hare been overlooked, (or rather was not known) at ihe nominating election last April, benee the duty of filling the racancy for this office on the regular Republican ticket, do vol red upon the County Central Committee, (which ia composed of the chairman of each of the Township Committees of the county. When the racancy on the ticket became kuown, but a few days ago, there was a meet ing of this committee, called by its chairman, which met in this city on Saturday last, there being preaent twelve members, who proceed ed to nominate a candidate for this offios which resulted in the nomination, by an unanimous rote, of Captain Henry C. Fox, Capt. Fox ia a aound Republican, and one of the -ablest attorneys of the county. At the breaking out ol the late Rebellion he was one of the first who enlisted in the service, and while io the army he was a faith! ul and true soldier, participating ia numerous battles, among which was that of Pittsburg Landing. Soon after that battle was fought Capt. Fox was compelled to resign bis position on ac count of a losr of health. When he rcUrned io bis home to resume the practice of his profession. In 1864 he was elected Distric; I'rOeecuting A ttorney for the Sixth Judicial District, and was re-elected to that office for the second time, after which he became .the law partner of the late Kimrod If. Jobnsoa, and is at present of the firm of Peele fc Fox. Capt. Fox is a self-made man, left an orphan boy, with no means of support; yet by his cuergy and perseverance he now stands amongst the ablest members of his profession, snd if elected to that office will fill the same with distinction. RiCHMoyn. From Liberty. We received a lengthy commu nication, yesterday from Liberty; but too late for an insertion in our paper this week, giving an account of a political meeting held there on the 2d of Oct.. which was ad dressed by Co'. J. A. Bridgland, Capt. Lee Yaryan and J. L. Rupe Esq. The Col. paid his respects particularly to Tuos. A. Hendricks who has been dafeated so often heretoiore for Governor, as to have acquired the title of the "great de feated." He showed his war record o be wholly against the war the draft, and in favor of a divided country, when be could have giv en valuable aid. That he bad used his influence in favor of '-civil ser vice reform" by having defaulter C. M. Hull released from a flne of 810,000 and one year's imprison ment in the penitentiary', for his rascality and had him appointed to an important post in the New York Custom Honse. The Perry Fuller appointment, as Collector at New Orleanp, is another instance of his reform in selecting scoun drels to fill offices. After he was detected, and imprisoned for steal ing Hendricks volunteered as his council, and went to New Orleans to defend him but Fuller escaped he penality of the law by com mitting suicide ! Such is the dem ocratic champion to bo run against honest and faithful Tom Browne who has always proved to be trne mtn where ever he has been nlaced. The Col. ahowed that everv investigation into the char ges of corruption made by the foes of the administration, had vindi cated the honesty and uprightness of Gen. Grant, and bis officers. Capt. Lee Yaryan, and J. L. Budo followed in a few well timed remarks, regarding the duty of everv Republican to "work- work until the close of the Polls to defeat those hypocritical poll tieiana of the Greeley strioe, and much good was done the Bepnbli can cause by tnese speasers. THE RECORD OP THOS. A. i .r, D RICKS. HEN- , It is said thai ths Liberal Republicans of Indiana will east their rotes lor Thomas A. Hendricks for Governor. We doubt this. For ysars they have opposed thia man, who at almost every important election baa come he- fore them with his speeious reasoning, plead ing for place. They have withstood his flat tery, rebuked bis insincerity, and condemned hit iniquities He has gone among the people of Indiana only to be encountered with bis vicious, record, and has asked them for their suffrages only to ba met with defeat. Are his snorts to be successful now T Are even Liberal Republicans so lost to themselves as to lend him snpnort T We can see how some of the old, enthusiastic admirers of! Greeley might be led to stand by him, eveu while leading them out of the party and over to the enemy, but how they can reconcile it with their consciences to rote for Hendricks surpasses our comprehension. Upon every issue he has been against them. Upon every question, when their most cherished principles have been at stake, he has fought them bitter ly anl without meroy. Can the man who has turned bis back upon humanity and been dif to the call of his country now command their confidence and snpporiT He voted to make the possession of proper ty a condition of suffrage. - He voted against requiring lawyera and othera practicing before the conrts and de partments in Washington to take oath of loy alty to toe Government. - He voted to 'strike out the fifth section of tbs Enrollment Act, providing that in the case of tbs death of a soldier his back bounty shoald be paid toiiis widow or children. ' He voted ia like manner to atrika oat the seventh section, which provided for the proper punishment of desertion. He voted fcr the resolution of Mr. Davis, of Kentucky, which aought to embarrass the Government. by providing for new enrollments, and forbidding the draft until unnecessary and dilatory forms had beep complied With. He voted against the proposition of Senator Wilson to make the children of colored sol diers free. - t He voted for the resolutions of Hr. Powell providing that no slav should bo emancipated (no matter if his master waa fighting in the rebel army) unless the owner waa paid hia full value by the United States. He voted against the acts for the recon struction of the rebel States, and in favor of giving these States representation without evidence of returning loyalty, aud withcut being recognised. Be voted against the repeal of the Fugitive Slave Lav, that dark stain upon our legisla tion, which no law, custom or excuse csn palliate. On the 10th of January, 1887, there was introduced in the Senate the follow ine bill : "That from and after the paaaage of this aot there ahall be no denial of the elective irancnise in any or the Territories on account oi race, color or previous condition of aervi tude." On this proposition Mr. Hendricks voted no. On the 13th of June, 1866. the joint rcso ntion waa brought up in the Senate, propos ing ths following amendments ta the consti tution : "SacnoM 1. All nersoca born OF nalnr.l ised in the United States, and aubfeci m th jurisdiction thereof, are citizens ot'the United states ana or the State . where thev reside. Ho biate ahall deprive any person of wty or property wiiaout aue process vi ww, uur ueuv u any person witnm Its ju risdiction the equal protection of the laws." Republicans of Indiana! Read this inst. numaneaod beneficent provision, and then remember that Thomaa A. Hendricka voted against it. Section 4 provides that "the validity of the public debt authorize 1 by law, including debts incurred for payment of pauiaui and bomliet for Mrvieet ia wrprewing iuturrtetioit and rebellion. (AaU not b qutitioned" Soldiers of Indiana 1 Upon this propoai tion of a Republican Congress Thomaa A Hendricks voted no. The Same section provides that "neither the United States nor any State Wl anume or pay anydtbtor obligation inenrrtd in aid of in lurrtctioH or rebellion againtt &o Vuittd State$ or an ymclaim forth lot or emancipation of any elate, but all eueh debte, obliagtioue. and elaime thaU beheld illegal and totd." Let every voter of Indiana, remember that on this proposition, as upon the rest, Hen" dricks voted no. His record on the Fifteenth 'Amendment is the same. Nor is this all. He waa in full sympathy with the Sons of Liberty in Indiana, and was their chosen spokesman on numberless occa sions. At a "Hendricks festival," held at Shelbvville on the 7th of February, 1863, the meeting passed resolutions "registering" their 'unalterable opposition to the paaaage of viy conscription or drafting act whereby the men or onr country ehall bo taken from their quiet homes to fight for the freedom of the negro." The Brown County Convention of January 1, 1D03, resolved on a "cessation of hostili ties" to ths end tbat the seceded States might be restored with "all their original rights and privileges," snd closed by nominating Thomas A. Hendricks for United States San ator. The Allen County Convention called the draft "the most damnable of all the out rages" perpetrated on the people. Switzer. land County resolved that she would not furnish another scan or another dollar, bnt would "resist all such acts of tyranny and usurpation." And so we might go on, quot ing, resolutions of Indiana Democrats, de nouncing the war in one breath, Snd nomin ating Hendt icka in the other, until columns were filled. Let no Republican forgrt the re cord or stultify himself by casting a vote for thia enemy of hia life-long principles. Grant and the Business Men. Business men have a dislike for radical cbargea. They aie, as a class practical io tteir character, and believe in letting well enough alone. They are satisfied with the condition of affairs, the state of our national finances, the prosperity that greets them on every band, and before they agree to a change, some weighty and convincing reason must be given. 'ine Ureeleyites are unable to give a single good reason, benee the unanimity ahown by too buainesa men throughout the country in the aupport of General Grant The nation wants rest a settled policy such as it has enjoyed during the paat three years Under Grant we are sure to secure it. The political situation of South Caroline is described by a correspondent as follows; nl do not believe there are two hundred black men in the State who will vote for Mr. Gree ley, hot we late reoeis are tor him to a man. South Carolina will give 25,000 majority for President Grant." ' Dsath of Gabrbtt Da vis. The Hon. Garrett Davis, U. S. sen ator from Kentucky, died at h s esidenee in Paris Ky., on last Sunday morning, after an illness of four weeks duration, His diseae was a gangrenous affection of the lungs. He was 72 years of age. " Low 1st. The Ceotreville Chronicle eays "Isaae H. Julian, is the meanest of the Juliansr XoffCed. The "Peace Policy ! Working ic: cessfnlly Indians Yoloatsrily Re tnrning Capture Stock. ' The following extract from ihe "Third Anual - Report of the As sociated Executive Committee of Friends." iast issued, is very en couraging to the f Heads of the Indian. The tribes to- which it refers were a few years' ago among the most uncompromising- of the warriors of the plains. It will - bo remembered by those who ; were present at Medicine Lodge Creek Conference how . much the gooa i-teutions or the Cheyennes were doubted, by. both . Indiana and whites, - and what an imposing array they presented to view when they at last consented to come in. Their splendid appearance, num bers, and apparent discipline'left no doubt on the minds of , those who witnessed that specticle tbat they could, if they would be : very troublesome,, The testimony of the Friends is therefore, very grat ifying, viz; , : i ' 'The Cheyennes and Arrapohoes numbering 3,550, and located on the North Fork of the Canadian, immediately ; west of the, 98th meridian, have continued to main tain the peaceable and friendly attitude noted in our last report. Very. Btrong -efforts hsve been made by the Eiowas to induce them to join in depredations . the present summer, but hitherto with out success. On the contrary, when on one occasion the Kiowas stampeded 122 mules and horses from the military, the Cheyennes demanded of theoi one-fourth of the plunder because the act - was comm itted on their reservation. The Eiowas complied with the de mand, and forthwith the Cheyen nes voluntarily returned the ani mals to the officers in command at Camp Supply, the nearest military post". . Mr. George W. Dodge, United States Indian Agout, writing from Salt Lake City, says, in a letter dated the 6iu inst., that "the re ports relative to the depredations of Indians in Utah Territory have been much exaggerated." OVER THE HILL AND FAR AWAY Dusty, Disheartened and Thoroughly Disgusted Poor Old Julian forms a Hollow Square and departs from Anderson. We saw a sight last Friday, that filled oar heart with sadness. Hon. Georgj W. J ulian, it will, be remembered, spoke in this city on Thursday night, ia the inter est of Democrats and Liberal?. ". la thi, article we do not design to speak of his speech. During his stay here, we believe he was the guest of N. C. McCulloagh. At least he stopped with Mr. McCulIough, n Friday. At half past- three Friday afternoon, upon stepping to our office door, at a time when the -heat vm si most unbearable, we saw O. W. Julian trudging up Anderson street, on his way t j the depot, carrying on one arm a heavy discs cioaK ana in the other a valine and walking cace. Haying both hands engaged with his cloak and valise, he could not assist himself with the cane He was alone, and when passing our office we really thought that he would fall. Hs has been an invalid for some time past, and is very infirm. Me trud ged on up the hill, on his way to the depot, and as far as we could see, was unattended, alone, and "and none so poor as to do him reverence." Such treatment to any gentleman who comes to Anderson to speak, on the part of his paity friends is simply shameful, and there is no excuse. Mr. AlcCullough has a fine carriage and two buggies, and it was a duty he owed Mr. Julian, as well as to his party, to take hira to th dopot on that terribly hot afternoon. To have sent him in the public 'bus would only have entailed an expense of twenty five cents, which the Democratic Com mittee would have pid no doubt. For the credit of the city, and the name it bears for hospitality abroad, we hope Republicans wilt hereafter take Demo cratic speakers to the depot, rather than have them walk. v . . We memorialize this way : Had Mr. J ulian come to Anderson, to speak for the great party with which be has spent a life-time, he would have come with an ovation and gone away with an ovation. He came to address the men he has maligned for over a quarter of a century. He does not love them ; nor they him. They care nothing for him, but rather rejoice in his humiliation. So far as he serves their purpose, well and good ; when that is Jane, he may look out for himself, and trudge through the streets of Anderson, tottering with infirmities, for all they really care for him. From the Anderson Herald. Here are a few stubborn tacts that are more potent than reams of rhetoric : The public debt has been redaced over $347, 000,000 during President Grant's admin istration, and in the meantime the taxa tion of the country has been reduced ' more than $80,000,000 annually. Exclu sive of the expenditures growing out of the war, the expenses of the government last year were $73,554,110, ' against $63,025,788 in 1860. Then the popula tion wag 31,000,000 against 38,000,000 now, giving $1,95 per capita in 1860, against $1,70 last year. The cost of col lecting Custom-house duties in 1860 was $6,25 on every $100, against $3,11 at the present time. The New York D ay-Book, which haa here tofore supported Greeley and Brow n,re noun ces tbat ticket and comes out for O'Conor snd Adams. Kvansville has a rolling mill company, lost' incorporated, with a capital of 180,OGO. ; A Keokuk girl wanted to get rid of a tire some lover, and she promised to marry him when Greeley was elected. William Penn's bouse in Philadelphi a ia now a drinking saloon of the lowest class. It is said that 75,000,000 worth of fuel i burned yearly in the United States, and tbat $100,000,000 worth of lumber ia used in build ing and ia mannfaetnrea. ;; " A Mrs. Hutchius, a lady nearly 80 years of age, died in Maine, recently, wbo had been confined to her bed twenly-aix yeara, and for twenty yeara had uttered only the word "no A story is told of a Davenport boy who two years sgo was given ten cents which be In vested in matches, and sold at retail, and re invested the proceeds in trade, snd to-da is worth $1,150, all made in legitimate trade from thai ten cents. t Tbomss P. Uerndon, the Greeley candidate for Governor of Alabama, was a member of the secession convention of that State, and introduced a measure in that convention to deprive all foreigners of the rights of citisen ahipin Alabama.' We never fight, my wife and I, : As other couples do j ' . ' : Our little matrimonial sky ' ; Is of the brightest blue. 1 " ' She never beards me in my den (My study I should say) ; She vows I am the beat of men, . But then she has her way I - . A clergyman ereated quite a merriment the other day on one of oar steamboats going over to lay a new eampmeeting resort Ly the inquiry: "What proof is there that King David and bia aon Solomon were tailoraT" No one in the crowd could answer, and the humorous divine quoted the familiar passage 'And Solomon mended the breeches which David, his father, had made." I once knew an industrious boy whose nruu were pwor vat uuue. ao ana m 1 I . 1 . TT J wart on his nose and a sore foot; bnt nothing daunted, he worked with determination and will, backed by perseverance and fjenergy, and noblv fought bia way along, surmounting every obstacle . Mark the result. Last week 1 met him for the first time in ten years, and that little boy wbo began life only ten abort years ago without a cent hasn't earned a cent yet. Monthly Visitor. Josh Billings says: "When I wss a little boy and wore naked feet, and was often times just agoing to step on a striped snaik, but it alwaya cured me ov atrawberrya. If striped snaik got into a 10 akre lot - before I did, I alwus '.konsidered that all the atraw berrya in tbat lot belonged tew the - snaik." William Irvin, an old man eighty years of ago, living near lerre Haute, was ordered by bis sop-in-law, Andrew . 4. i Miller, on the 23th. The old man'a offense was reprov ing his son for wantonly spilling a barrel of cider. Miller did it with hia little ax. At the approaching fair in" Oak land, California, one of the highest premiums is to lw given to the young lady who cooks the best dinner. The judges are to board round during the fair, the dinners are to oe substantially the , same, and all except the butter must be cooked and served by the young lady beiself . . Gold bonds Wedding rings, COIiV NEW ADVERTISEMENTS Be Deceived, but for coughs, colds, sore throat, horseneas and bronchial difficulties,use only WELLS' CABB0LIC TABLETS, Worthless imitation are on tha mr. ket, but the only scientific preparation of vviwrnc aciu i or iiung aiseases is wnen chemically combined with other well known remedies, as in these Tablets, and all partiea are cautioned againat usijg any other. in all cases of irritation of the mucous membrane these Tablets should be freely used, their cleansing and healing properties are astonishing. Be warned, never to neglect a cold, it ia easily cored in its incipient state, when it be comes cnronie tne cure ia evreiulinslv tiffi. cult, use Wella'Carbolic Tablets as a specific Price 25 Cts. Der Boa. JOHN O. KEl.T.nor 18 Halt St ., N. V., Sole Agent for the C. S, Send for Circular. e-W M made from 50c. Cali and examine P JL W Or 12 8mna ssnt f vvSkdtei rra fwx . k 1 1 for 50e. that retail quick for $10. R.L. WOL- vwi i, ioi,unatham Square, a. T. 304 FREE TO A proapectna of the Peoples Standard Bible, 550 illustra AGENTS tions, will be sent free to all book agents. Send name and address to ZE1GLEU A McCCRDY, 139 Bscs 6 aS Y C it O ,11 A N CYorS OH L tt l.'UAKitllN(." How either box may Ufcinnto and train the love and aSectioi a of any person thev choose instantly. This simple mental acquirment all can possess, free, by mail, for 25c. together with a mar riage guide, Egyptian Oracle, Dreams, Hints t Ladu, 4c. A queer, exciting lo.ik. 100,000 sold. Address T. WILLIAM A CO.. Publishers, Philadelphia. 304 AN ELEGANTLY BffiiNU CAN VASSING BOOK for the best and cheapest Family Bible ever published, wi!l be sent free of charge to any book agent. It contains nearly SoO fine Scriptuie illustrations, and agents are meet ing with unprecedented saccees. Address, stating experience, etc., and we will show you what our agents are doine, NATIONAL PUBLISHING CO. Chicago, fit.; Cincinnati, Ohio, or St. Louis, Mo. 304 fTST ANTED Experienced Book Airenta ft and Canvasser, in al! Darts of tha IT. S. to aell The Memoir of Roger lirooke Taney, umei justice oi tne supreme Court or the U. S, No bock heretofore published in this country, throws so mnch light upon our Con stitutional and Political History. It ia a work of extraordinary interest and of permanent value to l lie ttitorian,tbe Lawyer, the States man, the Politician, and every class of intelli gent readers. aarSold by Snbacription onlr Exclusive Territory eiven. JBTKOt terms, for this and other popular Works, address at once, MCBPHEY A CO.. Publishers. Baltimore. 304 DUTY OFF TEAS! Extra Inducements For Clubs! Send For New Club Circnlarl Which contains full explanations of Pre miums, Ac. The Way to Obtain our Goods 1 Persons living st a diatanee front New York can club together, and get them at the same Srice aa we aell them at car warehouses in ew York. In order to get up a club, let each person wishing to join say how much Tea be Wanta, and select the kind aad price from our Price List, aa published in our cir culars. Write the natns, kinds and amounts plainly on a list, and when the club is com. plete send it to ns by mail, and we will put each party's goods in asperate packages, and mark the name upon them, with the cost, so there need be no confusion in distribution each party getting exactly what he orders, and no more. The funds to pay for gools, ordered can be sent by drafts oa New York Post Office money orders, or by express. Or we will, if desired, send the goods by Ex press, to " collect on delivery." h . The Great American Tea Company 31 & S3 VEESY STREET, P. O. Box 5643 New York City. X)EATIIOrPETE3CABTTTnifiaT Bev. Peter Cartwright died at hia home in Pleasant Plains Sang amon county, Illinois, on Wednes day the 29lh Instant. The name of Peter Cartwright is familiar as household - words, and the an nouncement of his death will carry into a thousand Indian a homes as much pain as the demise of a near and dear relative. ; lie woe man of notable character and rare abili ty,' As a pioneer Methodist preach er he made a deep and lasting Im pression on the times in which be lived and bo has left no , man. of that church or profession who is so universally, known or belov ed in the West lie was born in Amherst county, Virginia, Sept, 1. 1785 and was therefore 87 years and 24 days old. lie was eon verted 1801, and the next year was made an exhorter in the Meth odist church. He wot licensed to preach in 1804, ordained deacon in 1806, elder in 1808. He woe married on August' 18, 1808, ; to Miss Francis Galas, who is , now left his widow. He was made ore- siding elder in 1812. In 1824, he removed to Illinois and began to preach in tho Illinois conference. In 1826 he presiding elder of the Illinois distriet, which office be held for fifty years consecutively. Last February . he was attacked with a partial paralysis, and later in the spring he suffered a severe stroke. . His iron constitution al though enfeebled by age, was un impaired by intemperance or ex cess, and he rallied in spite of the predictions of his physicians. At the last meeting of the Illinois Conference, just closed at Dacatur, he was reported as still in full fel lowship, sustaining a .tfpernataral relation. On Tuesday last he bc gan to sink, and on Wednesday he quietly passed away. The complete life of Peter Cart wright would embrace almost the entire history of the great church of whioh he was " a soldier and chief. ' He joined it in 1801, be fore most of the gray haired mem bers of the present day were born, and When the church itself was a feeble and straggling sect."-. He lived to sec it the largest and most wealthy . church organization in " this country with unlimited power of expression and usefulness. He was born during the Presidency of Washington, and the spin of his life reached from the very begin ing of our national history. He was the cotetuporary : of Wesley Aebury, and their noble compeers, and he l'ved to give fatherly coun cil and advice to Morris, Simpson, Ames aud the later pillars of the church. He received his ordina tion from Bishop Ashbury who was himself ordained by Wesley and he drew the inspiration of his ministry from those pnre wells of pious zeal where the early fathers drank and were atrcngthened. Hi long life was a continued battle for tue right, and no' one who be lieves in a hereafter can doubt that Peter Cartwright rests from his labors and enjoys the rewards of a good and faithful servant. After lifes fitful fever he sleeps well. "Let the toast be, dear woman, as the man said to his wife, when he wanted it all himself. HAND STAMPS" all varieties. Circu lars free. Agents Wanted. W. H. H. Davis A Co., M'frs. 7 Nassau St. N. Y. S04 ' It is not a Dhvsic which mav eiva temoo- rary relief to the anfferer for the first few doses, but which, from continued use brings Piles and kindred diseases to aid in weaken ing the invalid, nor is it a doctoral liquor, which, under the popular name or "Bitters' ia ao extinsitely palmed off on the public ar sovereign remedies, but it is a most power ful Tonic and alterative, pronounced so by the leading medical authorities of London and Paris, and baa been long used by the reg ular physicians of other countries with woi derlul remedial lesults. Dr. Wells's Extract of retaius all the medicinal irtuea peculiar to the plant and must be taken aa a permanent curative agent. Is there want of action ia yonr Liv er & Spleen ! Unless relived at once, the blood becomes impure !y deleterious secre tions, producing scrofulous or skin disea eso Blotches, Felons, Pus tales, Csnker, Pimples, Ac., Ac. Take Jurnbeba to cleanse, purify acd re store the vitiated blood to healthy action. ilave yon a Dyspeptic Stomach ! Unless digestion is promply aided the system is debilitated with loss of vital tores, poverty of the Wood, Dropsical Tendency, Genet al Weakness or Lassitude. Take tt to assist DifesliOn without reaction, it will impart youthful vigor to the weary suf ferer. . . Have yon weakness of the Intes tines ! Yon are in danger of Chronic Diar rhoea or Ihe dreadiul Inflamation of the Bow els. Take it to allay irritation ana wara on -sn-, dency to inflammations. - $ Hare you weakess of tke Uterine or Urinary Organs ! " Yon most prewar instant relief or yon are liable to suffering worse ttian death. Take it to atrengtben organic weakness or lire becomes a burden. Finally- it should be frequently taken to keep the system in perfect health or you are otherwise in great danger of aaalanal. salsa i : ma tie or eon t pious disease. JOHN Q. KELLOGG, 18 Rait 9b, N. T. Bole Agent for the United States Price $1 per Bottle. Send for Circular. 304