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VOLUME XXVI. MOUNT VERNON, OHIO : NOVEMBER 22, 1 862. NUMBER 32. S&PTHDAY ty gtrnmatK jJ5aimtr ll rnuiut evzbt satcbsav xoRxure r - I fakpeb; flw Is Woodward Block, Sd Storj. TX&M S,-rTo Dalian ner unim. navaMa in A tum; wit&ia six months; $3.00 afUr the xpl- he 9ctti0ftatic banner KDITED-BT L. HARPER. Th,o Popular Vote of Wisconsin. There is no longer any doubt that Wiscon- ia ! Democratic on the popular vote. Tbe aggregate majorities for Brown. Eldrdge and Wheeler will not fall short of 10,000, while the aggregate majorities for Hanchett, Cobb and Sloan will scarcely exceed 4,000 giving ua a round Democratic majority of 6,000. This is a Pemocraiie gain since last year of over 14,-000, and a gain sinee 1860 of over 20,000 ! - Had a Democrat been nominated for Congress in tbe sixth district, the gain would have been till larger.-It is well enough as it is. We claim a high places in the Democratic pyramid for Wisconsin. Ths Legislature is still in doubt. Soldier IteJoldngr at the Bet nit of the fiorthern Election. mulish Ciu. Her, frpm a soldier of the 57th Regiment, was handed us by a friend, to whom it was address ed. The letter speaks for itself. Read it. Bully for the 57th 1 Here's my g&. old bor, and 25,-000 cheers a year for the ga!lan Democracy ef the North. Ever true to the flag, the Uaion, the Constitution, the Laws, and-the honor and glory of the country, they have don nobly at the recent elections.. The troops from Iowa, Illinois and Indiana, had quite a rood natured time of it voting, but Ohio troops had to be disfranchised, while nigger were at home voting! Give mv conrratulations to the boys, all of them ; and believe uie, when I say to you bully for you I and bully for Cox ! 1 and bully for the Democratic ticket !! I Ever vours. ; Military Cnriosities, It seems Gen. Bragg has been called to answer why he retreated from Kentncky, by the Confederate Government, and Gen. Buell has been ordered to answer a drum bead court why he did not hag Gen. Bragg. The Confederates thought ii.waa.y easy things for Bragg to stay and whip Buell, and the Federal Abolitionists abuse Buell for not only failing to whip Bragg, but to bag him and his whole army. The on was about as easy to do as the other, we should judge. The Case of Mrs. Brinsmade. This is one of the numerous cases that have occurred oflate. which anneal trumnet toncued to the hearts of freemen. The press of-all parties is loudly calling upon the Government to investigate and puniah the offense against law, decency and manhood. But the . Tst jmbsv 1 Cr wma mm sava It is not necessary for the Administration to , waste precious time with an oflenee of this kind, of which the laws of New York have I " . T . 1 ..... simple cognisance, it is nere mat the investigation should take place, and the State authorities, the Grand Jury of the county, and in wwn oi uyer ana .terminer or the sessions, should administer justice. 1 tbe police Commissioners do not choose to take the matter in nand, the Governor of the State is well appealed to for the instant examination of the official who rests under this terrible exposure. Bat that examination can have rela- lion oniy to me mrtner tenure or his office, The outraged community demand a vindica tion of the city and State from the load of sham that will justly repose on us unless the .matter is thorough Iv sifted, and punishment VJCICU Ul H IVUUU uuc Release of Political Prisoners. W learn from the Indianapolis Sentinel, that' two more of the political prisoners who were confined in the Government. Bastile, in that city, for weeks, have been released on account of the insufficiency of the charges against them. Dr. Tbiadoxs Hobtom and Hon. R. D Slates, as par patriots and as true friends of the Constitution and the Union as can be found anywhere, are th men thus released. They were arrested at th instance of political foes, who had some dirty political animosity to gratify: thsy are permitted to come forth now from their confinement, after an imprisonment whieh is neither justified nor explained. The minions of Abolitionism are heaping up wrath Against th day of wrath. The ZTtxt House of BroreaeTitatiTei Attempt to Defeat the Will of the Peo ple.- -. : Th editor of the New York Express, Jas. Bbooks, who has just been elected to Congress, says: ' -. "Th only peril to th conservative majority tn th next ConmH i boras militarv mem. bers from th slav 8utes, elected in camps by Abolition regiments, to Jo Abolition dutv in Congress. In Administration managers may have doubtless do hav such boras mem. bers of Congress in contemplation and Texas u npnacana wun some or them, or F londa, or Virginia, perhsps but, if it b at tempted tons to rob th Northern people of their suffrage and their right, wo he unto th managers who" max inch . revolutionary at- IfiOpU.- . ... . - ..;- . ' . . Worts tlxat Shonli' be 7ritten in Let- - ten of Gold All; Ore? th. Land. . There, can bo tncT indirtdual liberty Where every citisen,.. i , aioi subject to th lew, and where he is 'subject ' to anght sis thin the Jaw. ' - - :. ; ' Ifc Mcw that wbaUrtr wise5 provisions eonsUtotion tnav nontalnr nnM-t. If the pbTr:of dwUrinj martisl Uw b l.ft , w w jrLxiairaicx7pixc ims state cf seize, sitariv c:e.r.s'th hcTniAn rtv. d5S count cf feV, cf titjlztei ofwj tn. The Cause of the Indian Wax in ZXinne sota. "Honest" Old Abraham's Swindling Aboli tion Indian Agents Defrauded the Indian of their Annuitieeby exchanging Gold and Silver for "Green Backs," and pocketing the Ex change I , : . . i A correspondent of the Chicago Journal (an Abolition paper) has the following on the cause of the Indian war in the Northwest : " The Southern rebellion has just about as much to do with tbe Indian war as the mud at the State Fair erounds at Chicago, last fall, had to do with the price of putty in Boston. - r oai, you asK, "men is in cause ( i will answer in as few words as possible: dishonesty the most barefaced and unmitrated dishonesty, on the part of the Indian Agents in ine iransacuon or ineir ousiness anairs. This. I know, is a sweepin? charge, but 1 will prove it to the most doubting Thomas in Chris- lenaom. xou may oe aware mai ine oioux Indians, as well as the other Northwestern tribes, have a treaty with th Government by which th "Great Father" Samuel agrees to pay them, on the first of June of each year, certain sums of money, called "annuities;" and further, the Great Father Samuel agrees to pay these annuities in silver and gold. The Great Father, Uncle SaroweT, has always sent some of his white childrett wiUsthe spondulicks Eromptly to the usosrf places of payment to eep nis faith with his red children. Indeed be did so this year. The Indian Agents re ceived their gold and silver during the first week in June, while there was not th least nrosDect of an outbreak. But just then "leiral tenders" went down and eold went up, and the delectable Agents, with an eye to the main chance, conceived the happy thought of selling tbe "yellow boys" and red skins both at the same time. 1 he gold was bartered on Tor "green backs," with which they sought to make the payments. But the dodge didn't work with the aboriginea. They knew the difference between white 4d yellow, and big little, and between light iihxi heavy: but as between "demand" and " legal tender," "safety fund" and " wild cat," 'they were as ignorant as female tropicanians are of the arts of fashionable dress-making. They had some ideas of the uses of metals, but to them all paper was alike, and only fit for gun wads. Of course they refused to be paid in anything else than that which was properly their due. The Agents argued with them, explained to them, and finally threatened them, but 'twas of no use, Johnny Indian's optics were closed, and he could not discern the locality. The Indian's hunting season was coming on, the prairies would soon be teemed with hieon and buffalo; the woods would soon be filled with bear, deer and dog, and the streams with animals of finer fin ; but of what use were all these to him? He had not the means with which to trap the one, or the amis or ammunition with which to kill the ether. He could buy nothing of the traders without money, and he could get no money from th Agents. Starvation stared him in the face, ana, as a last resort, he seized upon the Indian's only mode of redress, revenge. The first few minor thefts and robberies were grabbled up by the guilty Agents, and made excuses to still further defer the payments. Exaggerated reports of the outrage were forwarded to the authorities, and protection sought from Government. Startiingstories of "rebel emmissaries being at work" were heralded all over the North ; but not one word was uttered about the attempt to palm ofT "green backs," and the final result was a terrible Indian war, in which over one hundred settlers upon the frontiers were killed, property to the amount of at least five millions of dollars destroyed, and the State set back at least five yeare in its prosperity : and the war has onlv put an expense on the Gen eral Government of over three millions of dollars, besides drawing away from active service in more important fields at least ten regiment of unparoled troops. Horrible Co ndition of Richmond. The Richmond Examiner says no one can deny the truthfulness or the following by a correspondent of the Memphis Appeal:- Richmond has already suffered an increase in ine numrers ot her cancerous classes that is quite alarming. Thieves, burgulars, pick pockets, highwaymen, nymph du pave and the respectable gamblers swarm alone the streets. The dexterity with which the laws are evaaea is quite equal to the most accom plished tricks of the swell mobs of London, and the baduads of Paris. Whisky and bran dy are brought into town in large quantities every day and sold at fifty cents a drink in spue of General Winder and his detectives. Sometimes the contraband article is brought in by the quarter cask, ingeniously concealed in a crd or wood, and sometimes in bladders hid tinder the amplitudinous petticoat of a French or German woman, whose husband keeps a fruit store or eating saloon on Brond street. uarroting and street robbing are of constant occurrence, and scarcely occasions remark. As if to add to the ease and imponi- i ? . ty with which crime can be committed, ' the superintendent of the city gas works again cut short the supply or gas, and the street lamps are no longer lighted." The Jueamtner also savs: There are at present in this city several thousand idle and dissolute - ruffians refugee from ' Northern cities, deserts rs from the army, and professional thieves. Being too lazy and vicious to adopt any honest calling for a livelihood, they are compelled to swindle or steal. That they are briskly plying their selected vocations, our police reports for the past month hav abundantly manifested. Ine courts city. State and Confederate are engaged from one week's end to another in the trial of burgulars, highwaymen, forgers and counterfeiters. The city jail,' the penitntiary"and th different "castles" about town are crowded to repletion. Ina few weeka more, nnless some provision is made by tb Common Council for their accommodation, prisoners will have to be turned loose for the want of a place of con-confinement. ,i Is the Bepuhlican Party an Abolition Can any one doubt U after reading th fol lowing proceedings which,' took: "place at "the Republican headquarters in New York, on the sight of the Section : ; V lfr. Snahaa atatsd thai ink ratavna Avtm iaesschnstts indicated that on sentinel upon: the watch-tower of liberty will . be left ' at hie pcet-Charles Sumner, fproarious ap plans. A -- .-i'-f. Ir i taken IVbm Oe'SKoe'aiuIie copied fntwthi OismsW'gtteA party tbStiHtJlSeaOTj-of thi-otl fewfe.' The Warning of History Extracts from Alison and Gibbon. American citizens can not too seriously re flect upon the nature of present events, or too industriously study past history in connection with them. The Democratic fathers hare impressed upon the people the necessity of constant jealousy and watchfulness in the protection of American liberty. Such caution can do no harm to the cause of the people; it may do vast good. We quote a paragraph from Alison's History of Europe, vol. ii, p. 74. After giving a graphic account of the daxxling objects placed before the people at the Place Carousal," elsewhere, to distract them, from other objects, the historian remarks: These measures were all steps, and not important ones, to the re-establishment of moo-arcbial authority, but they were the prelude, only, to more important changes. In December 1780, an arral'...was published, . which, on the preamble " that a part of th journals printed at Paris are instruments in the hands of the enemies of the republic, that it is the the duty of the Government to watch over its security" decreed : That the Minister of Police should not suffer to be printed, during the continuance of the war, any journals but the following: " Then followed a list of thirteen journals thus invested with the monopoly of Paris; and from it were only excluded, "those exclusively devoted to science, the arts, literature, commerce, or advertisements." It was also decreed, by .a seper- ate article that: "any journal among those retained, which inserted anything contrary to the sovereignty of the people, should be imme diately suppressed. This clause, inserted to blind the people to the real tendency of the measure, received in the sequel, as was foreseen at the time, the most liberal: interpreta tion and was applied, contrary to its obious meaning, to sanction the extinction of all journals contrary to th Consular Government. thus early commenced the system ot Napoleon for the coercion of the press, a system which received during the remainder of his reign such ample development, and which Maadme de Staef justly remarked, converted that great engine generally considered as the the palladium of liberty, into the most powerful instrument xf bondage, perpetually exhibiting a series of false and delusive, pictures to the h mman mind and excluding all others from the view. ":- : The Habeas Corpus in Hew Jersey. The Newark Evening Journal, the leading Democratic organ in New Jersey, uses pretty strong language in announcing the result of the late election in that State. It says: " The functions of the Provost Marshal for New Jersey have been suspended by the vote of the soveraijm . people snd woa-a-yswH, Cncle Abraham will hear tb thunder at the White House, and make a note of the fact tbat the Jersey Blues are aroused in defense of their own rights and liberties. The habeas corpus has been re-enacted in this State, and will not again be suspended. Mark that. The iron doors of Fort Lafayette will never again swing on their hinges to admit a free New Jersey man without lorm of trial. Joel Parker will see to this. No more suspension of newspapers, no threats against free speech, no reign of terror in a peaceful State. That has played out. The right of the people to criticise the acts of the National Administration has been gloriously asserted, and hereafter no paltry tyrant may rise to dictate thoughts and words to the citizen, and to curb his honest expressions within the range of uovernment expediency. How Long will the War Last ! The' Richmond Whig has an editorial in which it speculates at length upon the prob able duration of the war, and concludes as fol lows: . ". " War cannot last always; and where neither party has the power to subjugate the other, it requires only the constancy that becomes a good cause and a brave race to wear out the party in the wrong. -Financial prostration or pnysicai exnaustion win end the struggle in due time.- And this, if no accidental cause should bring it to a speedier termination. Of such accidental, or, we might better say, in- j .t i .i.-.. ,i - uiuciiii,tauBc, lucre u a cuance in me possioie withdrawal of the North western States after a while. Thev do not profit by the war as do the New Jbngland states; they are not urged on by the demon of fanaticism as are the New England States. They have nothing to fear from the return of their soldiers, as nave the New England States. Reason and interest may. therefore, lead them to dissolve the unholy and unnatural alliance and withdraw from the bloody and bootless crusade. This would give us peace. The intervention of the great powers of Europe is another circumstance to which we may look with reasonable hope. ; Some time or other, if the war continues, it will come. It way b long deferred. But we hay faith the faith of just deduction from immovable facts that it will come. And when it comes it will be potential, all the more for the delay. " From all points of view, our duty is clear. It is to bear resolutely up against all trials; to husband up our resources; to bring every energy to bear; to give all that we have, if needed, and all that we are, to the cause; to make it the burden of our prayers and the business of of our Jives, never doubting that success, final and glorious success, will be awarded us when it seems will to the Great Ruler of Nations." United States Circuit Court The Court was occupied yesterday afternoon in hearing the case of Nioholas Jeroleman a-gainst John Hood, action for damages. All the parties resided in Marion, Ohio, were highly respectable, and members of the Presbyterian Church.- Jeroleman entered the airmy as Captain in an Ohio volunteer reiriment. and sent his wife to Newark, New Jersey, to remain during his absence, Hood, who was a business man at If ari.in. and Ktam Ran at nr. commenced a correspondence with- Mrs. Jr wiHHka, uu yu uta irqaeot oaautrBa viaua w New York naad In wiait hr at Kmil. wliar h seduced her. Suit was brought y thI- juiju. ifiuwuni id .mi IIFCUU VOUTV suia. mi jury gave a verdict for the . plamtifC damage iHoob ls'one of the Abolition Sanalore la th present Ohio LegisUtarev winch beginats next ecMwn on tne 1st Monday of January, TW Wiw'M'S'vBiTwa TT'm, irt man alactet to';the Legislature as a Democrat, whonders orlaaf WhCr RepqUlcaa Abortionist tat .Unt-fed States Senator, dserwiotLin but the fccalToldand baltey. OU'Cter? will,:fttT liish the rcre aod two then- 'TC3 buudred From th SUrk Cea y Peaioarat, Nov. 12. HETTJUH 07 ,ltJ PEIS0HEES"1 A nautyTTeleon) Greet Xlaern I THE JITJ3IC ANlPfiOCESSION ACCOM PANY THEU HOME. 5 ; - - On Thursday last, information was received that Messrs. McGregorlknd Reitzell were released from arrest, and-vWould reach Canton by the Friday forenooottrsin going east. The hews soon spread aitKlad town, and their friends determined to gjve them a hearty and cordial welcome. Accordingly about 10 o'clock, a. x., on Friday a large crowd of the Democracy assembled al the Canton railway station to await the arriyal of the train "from the West. . The Louisville and Plain town ship bands were on heap to discourse martial music. ." The train was over any hour late, and did not arrive till 12 o'cloek. When the train halted, a rush was made to see if those, lately prisoners, were on board They soon made their appearance. ' when shout after shout and grarp after grasp welcomed their arrival home. They were ruthlessly forced away herr four weeks previous, at the point of the bayonot, to gratify the malignity ajf political animosity ; and now, the warm hearts of honest citizens, of women and men, welcomed back these vic tims of abolition persecution. A lengthy procession was soon formed, Ma jor John E. Dunbar actiag as Marshal, and preceded by the Music, marched up town. Lawrence Alexander took charge of Mr. McGregor, and L. Schaefer. Esa. took charge of Mr. Reitzell. who marched .immediately be niua ine music, as tu procession passed, the dwellings of Democratic ekizens gave signs of rejoicing by the smiling OF happy faces and the waving of handkerchiefs. Ou arriving at the " Stark County Democrat" office, the large crowd gave three loud and hearty cheers as a welcome to tueir returned friends. The procession then, moved down Eatt Tus carawas street to Cherry, and down Cherry street to the residence , of Mr. Reiuell. Mr. R. thanked his friends for, this manifestation of regard, and declared that his faith in Democratic principles was more unyielding aud unswerving, if possible,, than ever before. i he crowd then accompanied Mr. McGregor to his residence on Walnut street. Mr. Mc Gregor .expressed his acknowledgments for this reception by bis Democratic friends, and said, language failed hirnin conveying the grateful feelings of his heart.. Mr. McGregor contrasted At scene exhibited on Sundav: the 12th of October, with that-ofto-day. jtleaw miles and joy oo sottfvc- - . f vegfiaaeiMws.fe saWthe n Stark county had gone largely Pniocratic, af- torded great comfort ana consolation to the prisoners,, and satisfied them that their friends had not forgotten them. Mr. Reitzell and him self returned without having cringed the knee to power, or tainted with dishonor their prin ciples. They could get no trial ; did not know on what charges Uiey were arrested, or who the accuser was. They were offered their liberty on taking the oatli of allegiance to tbe the United states and the Constitution and laws. By the oath tbey were now bound to stand by the Constitution as it is and the Uni on as it was, and the laws of the land, as they a a ar . nad ever done. He hoped for the day when peace and prosperity would return to our country, and the majesty of the law would supercede the power of the bayonet. Mr. McGregor's brief remarks were frequently interrupted witbt applause. Lou is iJchsafer, Ej. being called for, expressed h is joy at the return of our favored friends, and said that one day's longer notice would have brought together a mass meeting such as Canton had not seen for years. Mr. S. alludel to the malignity of those Abolitionists in Canton, professing piety, who procured the arrest of Messrs. Reitzell and McGregor, saying he had reason to believe these worthies wished quite anumber more attended to in tbe same way. The late elections, however, had taken the starch out of them, and they were much more meek and whining. - The crowd dispersed with three cheers for the safe return of the political prisoners. Orleans Princes on Gen. HcClellan. ; " Malakoff," the Paris correspondent of tbe New York Times, writes a follows : The Orleans Princes have at length published in the Revue des Deaux Monde, and over the signature of "Trognon," their history of the campaign on the Potomac. . The work is about one hundred ordinary octavo pages in length, and comprises the history of events from Mar. to Julyfrom the commencement of the mover ment on Manasses by McClellan to the battle of Malvern Hill. The work is written in tbe grand historical style, in which every word and every sentence appears studied in form and irrefutable in fact, aud it will stand as one of the best written chapters of historical events extant, The refutation of what his enemies call "McCiellan'a blunderer" is so complete ami overwhelming as to give the youngCommander-in-Chief a rank of military history far above that assigned him even by his moat ardent admirers. New: and unpublished facts and- documents are referred to jn his history, which will change tbe prejudice of most people against McClellan into admiration, and many circumstances heretofore an enigma to the readers of newspaper are explained. The moat ofMcClellan'f General are also elevated by this history to the first rank of military chieftains, and they her receive for the first .time, perhaps, and at the hand of this high auiboritv, the credit which is their due. The history also abound in healthy criticism en the various defects in the organization of the American army; it eulogizes the American soldier; it eulogizes the military ability of th leaders of th Southern army; it shows that the causes and the of the war are to be found in Slavery, and it terminates with as overwhelming argument in favor of tb TJnioo and against, the poesibility of two federations Dei the American soil. iUasurs are being taken to have tbi important history' published here in pamphlet , form, and the same ought to be done at New York. It wUl be found in thl$th of Octoberamber of the Kevuw. '- , ' Hot &0. ';:z:l&'n J The Journal in ite article ofyesterday roorn-Wjg, U'regard te the- recent attempt of the people ta take i Crowe from the jalf aseerte thatbeBrowa) gatre himself vp. to the o3-cers of iha Uw after h had aasasaiaated lit, BolliaeyeT. j.6te.la.'SMvibc'Afier hi had comnitted the deed he west immediiidy to h!sstore, 'aad; wss there tszr 1 and "arrest : J From tie Cbiesgo Times. Administration Terrorism. ; Those of our readers who do not permit a letter from St. Louis to escape them which we printed the other day, will comprehend why four Republicans are chosen to Congress from Missouri. The elections, for the most part, were solemn mockeries. The Federal military authority being supreme in the State, the terrorism of th Administration surpass that by which Louis Napoleon was "elected" Emperor of France. We append an example of this terrorism, in addition to the relations of it by our St. Louis correspondent. I appears that in each county in Missouri are certain Federal military officers known as Assessors. In Marion County, across the river from Adams County, in this State, these military Assessors issued a hand-bill, upon tbe threshold of the election, addressed to , the people, in which they said: ' ; "The sub-committee of Assessment for Marion County has been appointed by General Merrill, and th work of levying and collecting will immediately commence. ' " Parties whose loyalty has been in the least suspected heretofore will now find it very difficult to escape assessment, unless they can show a record unquestionably and unequivocally for the Government sustaining in all its measures for putting down the rebellion. To vote for men opposed to the policy of the Government is a disloyal act. .Every such voter places himself on the disloyal list, and ; becomes a proper subject for taxation under the following orders: You, then, who would escape taxation must vote right .on Tuesday I A word to the wise is sufficient." If the Administration did not go to like extremities in Illinois, New York, and the other States which held their elections last week, it was because they did not dare to do so. Neither Illinois nor New York was exempt from terrorism, however, and Delaware suffered from it quite as severely as Missouri. See an exposure, in another column, of its operations in Delaware. It is the border slave States which ar especially selected as the fields of this terrorism, because their people are more helpless than. thoe of States whose constitutions and laws have some remaining force. What a history will be the history of the administration of Abraham Lincoln. Vascillation of the Administration. The Government has pursued a very uncertain course towards its Generals. - Gen. Fremont was appointed to a very important command in Mieeourii After a time he was rein oved as unfit for the place. A few months passed, and be was appointed to a highly responsible position in Virginia. He failed, and was again removed for apparent want of military qualifications. And now there is a talk of his being placed at the head of another army. : .- Xext there's 4en.iinell,. -tie, after bis tin pr'IJ,'e4 Wa rch frc m Tennessee tp Louis viJle, for his removal, because h-wa iot tboaght to be active .enough. Before sunset of the day of his removal, an order came for his restoration or retention. Soon he drove Gen. Bragg and a rebel army of seventy-five thousand men out of our State, aud then he was forthwith removed again. . Lastly, there's General McClellan. After more than a year's service at the head of the Army of the Potomac, he was removed, or required to give place to Pope. After a very brief period, he is removed again. This apparent vascillation fh regard to the leadership of our armies is at least uu fortunate. It tends strongly to weaken public confidence; We hope to have as yttle of it hereafter as possible. Louisville Journal. : V Poor Old Massachusetts. The Massachusetts Republicans are pretty good at figures. Captain Sleeper who was the only Democrat supposed to be elected from that State to Congress, has just been counted out, and Mr. Rice, the present member, declared re-elected. We are afraid Sleeper has been caught" napping as his majority was about four hundred ; any way the Republicans monopolize the arithmetical talent of the State, as this instance proves. So the old Bay State will present an unbroken Abolition front in the coming as it does in the present Congress.; Well it is in the eternal fitness of things that it should be ' so. A community that almost went frantic and broke out into open revolt when a negro was deprived of his liberty under the operations of the laws, yet permitted innocent white men, guilty of ho crime, to be imprisoned in defiance of all law without even a sign of disapprobation, is very properly represented in Congress by an unbro-broken phalanx of Abolitionists. Happy will it be for Massachusetts if history hasrno sterner rebuke for her conduct in this trying crisis of the nation than she has bestowed on the Government for desecrating her noble harbor to th use of tyranny. There is not even a memory of the fragrance of the revolutionary tea in the waves that now wash the stones of Fort Warren. JV. Y. World. Eemoval of General HcClellan. The removal of General McClellan is made by the radical journals the occasion of a combined assault on him, which is expected to produce a great effect on the people. It will fail, as every radical scheme fails in the end, and this especially because of the weakness of the artillery directed against him. It is stated that be disobeyed orders, which no one believes or will believe till he has been beard ; and a no formal com plaint is laid against him, it may be cansidered a radical slander, unfounded in fact. It is also stated tbat be ought to have relieved Harper's Ferrv by marching faster in Maryland. The; iJea is imply ridiculous," and on seeking its origin, we find a paragraph sandwiched in at the close of the report of an investigating commission casting this slur on McClellan. The paragraph is evidently an afterthought no part of the original report and has been put tn, in a rudely disconnected style, to have effect on some one. The whole world has been ringing with the miracle of that swift and splendid Mary Iaad campaign. It was the most rapid and snceeesiur campaign (considering the worn out and demoralized army to the command of which McClellan was nd-denly called) which history relates. . This accusation would be laughed at, if it were not too serious a busines fir laughter. Waf I ; TB i Senate i Chamber at Washington i readv for the earrjetins ai desks of members. The Eepreeentatnrea Hall ia beii ecrubbed ontErehsnpt Faper.- f ' , ": y .,. . : Yesv - it' being seruhbcl'Ost." and the political veroia of Abolitionia recedea from its tnarble balls, Tbep?eplB haven takew Bp the broom and the mop,ed Qhio, Jadiana and PennsyUaala "scrnbbed ouV'some. twen- ? treasury nit on tas tnciuctober.: : jiew crk, Uw Jers?y,'.IlIIncJ3, et1rerfoTmed Bcsje'-rratt a tl lh cf I rvember, One Singular Feature of the State ElectionsThe Hew England Emigration. James Brooks, Esq., in his late speech at the great Democratic Jubilee in the City of New York, over th result of the recent elections, said : ' "But curious are the lines of political demarcation in this campaign of 1862. Wherever the New England columns of emigration have traveled, mainly, solitary and alone, from Massachusetts or elsewhere along the northern counties of Ohio, Indiana, Illinois and Wisconsin, there have been the columns of Republi can majorities, but wherever have been the columns of the other emigration, in Southern New York, throughout all New Jersey, in Southern Pennsylvania. iti Southern Ohio, In diana and Illinois, there have been immense Democratic majorities. (Applause) Far be it from me to speak irreverently of New England. It is 'my own, my native land but I wieh she would follow the example of that Illustrious Yankee, lien franklin, and attend to her own business and let other people a-lone." (Applause.) An Interview with SlideU. W. C. J ewett, late of Colorado Territory, writes from Paris under date Oct. 24th, as fol lows: V- I will add that I have had an interview with Mr. Dayton, the American Minister, and with Mr. SlideU. I wished to ascertain from the latter person his opinion in regard to a friend ly arbitration of our differences by some Euro peon power. He said : " The South will not yield her independence to either the North by Compromise, or to .urope. . . I replied, you will force European interference, the North consenting and the South not. You will lose the sympathy of foreign governments and with it all hopes of independence. An arbitration may secure it, with the sacrifice of slavery. Another Important Expedition. S'e learn, says the Herald, that Major Gen-David Hunter has been appointed to the command of an important military expeditiou now being prepared for operations against the rebels. Its destination is, of course, a secret. It is understood that it is to be purely of a military and naval character, Gen. Hunter having promised to let politics alon and issue no more abolition proclamations, unless specially authorized to do so bv the President, which authority. is to be countersigned by Secretary Stanton and General Halleck.. With this promise the expedition is likely to be a suc cessful one. because Gen. Hunter is a good and brave soldier and knows how to fight. fTThe editor of the Louisville Journal ought to be ashamed of himself. ' Hear him : ".Beware, --O ye rebel women 1 least the fierce fire in yoor bosoms eta'in a blaze the ecttos; tin the same charming region."- : EDITORIAL BREVITIES. gg?D. A. Maboxxt, editor of tbe Dubuqne Herald, has just been released from- prison at Washington. IGen. McClxkxand still makes his head quarters t Springfield 111. JrMr. Slidkll had an interview with Napoleon on the 28th ult. . t&A- PxcssiAJC journal makes grave com; plaint of the action of Gen. Butler in-New Or leans toward Prussian property and Prussian subjects, : ggJT'All the new regiments in Illinois, Iowa, Wisconsin and Minnesota have been ordered to move, and some of them are already on their way to the scene of active operations. t&m The London Times says that Mrs. Phil lips, an English subject, had become insane in New Orleans in consequence of Gen. Butler's treatment. fgThe Postmaster General has given or ders for the redemption of postage stamps which have been used as currency. Jt&Butternut bonnets, we see it stated, are "all the rage" among the ladies of Indiana tThe people of Mississippi are said to be running their negroes intothelnterior, leaving only such property as they cannot carry away. Those having friends in the army under Gen. Rosecrans, will be pleased to learn that a daily military mail will go forward hereafter from Louisville to Nashville. UgyThe rebels are said to be fortifying Jack son, Miss., large reinforcements being brought theie from Arkansas. It is believed their en tire army will fall back to that poiut before giving battle The Homes Coanty Fanmer states that L. R. CxiTCHrixLn. Attorney-General elect, on Monday last, resigned the office of Prosecu ting Attorney for that county. C. F. Vorhees was appointed to 611 the vacancy. ' f-Rebel officers, who arrived at Washington on Friday, as prisoners, state that Lea has been removed from the command of the rebel army, and that Joe Johnson has been placed in' his stead. . . tOne of the many rumors of the day is. that Secretary Chase will leave the Treasury for a seat in the TJ. S. Senate. t&- A contract for 90,000 bushels of shelled com was on Friday awarded by Col. Backer, to Mr. Louis Stow, of Baltimore, at ninety cents, being the lowest bid. Information at Baltimore says Jeff. Davis reviewcl Lee's army at Winchester ten days ago. They were all newly uniformed. They then retreated to Gordonsville. . ' SSTA London letter of the 24th ult says, by Christmas there will be 780,000 paupers to feed ins Lancashire. ; X-. General Buell, the papers say, wa removed from his command because the late elections went Democratic, and did not sustain the President' negro proclamation. : . Counterfeit Treasury notes, $50 and SlOTa, raid fhm l'c and 2a, made their appearance in New York, on the 8th Inst. - Xeep a sharp look ont fbrthem.' ! s - i QrKSTHas llonesl Old Abe" heard from (he Saekr State t" If so, wUl he please tell the people if there Is "nobody htrif) m ir F iZj. Tniiskey of the cemtaonest sort Is aeil- ir, todays the ureneda Appeal; near II oily Ern-!, iliaw at - forty- dollars a -rllo. HcClellan and Burnside. The St. Louis Republican asks: What, indeed. Kav tbe radirala reallv ac complished by the removal ot . McClellan ? x remont or bigei has not yet succeeded to bis place. A successor has been appointed who is on record as an indorser of McCiellan'a milita ry genius, and who is fully identified with the brave soldiers of the Army of the Potomac in their admiration of that officer's qualities as a commander. In what Tespect, therefoie, can Burnside differ from McClellan so as to win the praises of thelatter's foes? Ii McCiellan'a style of generalship is the one admired by Burn side, what can Burnide do but endeavor to follow McClellan T TTr were satisfied with his successor. The radicals that have spokea on the subject, though they rejoice at "Little Mac's disgrace," are remarkably silent Ott the subject of Burnside. We predict that ere' long they will be maneuvering for another change. There is Joy in Old Joshua's Household.The Ashtabula Sentinel, Joshua R. Gib-diko's organ, thus profanely, hot to say blasphemously, exults over the removal of Gen. McClellan: - . Laus Deo I Praise be to God. Another great victory has been won, and the nightmare of the nation shaken tff. We may now-hope for triumph, and a salvation of the country. Daylight breaks ahead. The President has removed McClellan, and promises to stick by the proclamation. . Extensive Defalcation in the New York Custom House. ; Nsw York., Nov. 13. An extensive de cation in the Custom House has been discov-ered. Sixteen clerks in the liquidating department have been suspended. The amount is variously stated at from $150,000 to a quarter ' of a million of dollars. I t has been don by : means of wrong entries, and subsequently the'; books of record were destroyed to prevent th discovery. . . The government cracker bakery, corner of Jlorrfs and West streets, was burnt this mora- - mg. Loss f 13,000. . Hew Cause of Arrest. The New York Evening Post of the 12lh says two Government Commission Brokers have been arrested by order of the .War Department and sent to Fort Lafayette, for buy ' mg up claims against the Government at a usurious discount. That is a new cause of t arrest. What of those gold brokers who will . not give a dollar in gold unless they get therefor one dollar and thirty-five cents in Government green or yellow-backs? Are they in . the same category with those who will not part with their money for claims against tb Government, except at what may be deemed by some Government officer a usnnone dis ; count I-rOcsvj ffffj - - Change of Opinion. Eighteen months of Republican rule ha-satisfied the people that the way to maintains the Governman.t is the return of the Demo cratic party to power. he Democracy owe their great victories to converts from Republicanism, to voters for. Mr. Lincoln in 1860, who had utterly misappre v bended the purposes of tbe Republican party v and its capacity to govern' the country. This great revolution in public sentiment hae but just commenced. It is but the turning of the tide which will sweep out of power the last vestige of Abolitionism. -Ctiacf Plata Iah To What are they Loyal I To what ar Alolitionists loyal? To th Constitution ? They have suspended it! To th Union? They boldly proclaim tbat they are not for the Union as it was, but for "a Union as it ought to be." To the Statesf They propose to blot out State lines I To the Government? They ignore the laws of Congress, and scorn the decisions of the Supreme Court I To the President? They pro-. pose to depose him if he does not obey them Milwaukee ew. - A Good Beginning. One of the Boston Abolititionists has been drafted. This makes a good commencement of Greeley's army. The Portland Argus savs i " Bully for 900, 000. The number now will stand 800,8993; who rush forth to emanoipat, according t tbe proclamation." ; " 1 A jubilant Democrat met a disconeo late Republican the morning after election. Well," said the former. w hav mad clean sweep this time. We hav carried every thing." . Republican, who Tiad been read ing an extra Eagle, acquiesced, and profanely replied, " Yes, d n tbe thing, we have but the Custom-house, tbe Navy-yard and Fori Lafayette." Aye," said the Democrat, "and the latter yon may keep till doomsday; Your Beechers and Garrisons may howl and bias pheme. - but no Democratic Administration will ever need a Bastile." Exit Republican in disgust. .Brooly Eagle, A wretched editor who h isn't a wifs toiake care of him, went the other night to a ladies fair. He says he saw there. an erticlt'V which he ' fain would call his own, but it was not for sale. He declares that since that night he has been rapturously wretch d."-As th article was bound in hope, th reader is left to infer that it was either a girl or a kej of whisky. -; y ... gSJ The radical presee have denounced ea , man, not even the President with greater v. hemenee than they hav Fernando Wood, ' Ex-Mayor of New York. In a speech just ' , before th election be said "last spring I wa offered and leading Republican ocered to put it into writing that if I would desert they would make me next Governor of New York Comment is unnecessary. Boto Past. . X Trillio. Is used as if it were a poesf bl number. But few persons give it a thought' '. a to the magnitude or numbers it express. " ComDeae computing the seconds Sac the ereatioa of the first man and it will be- fotrod that there has not enough urn yet elapssd to make a trillion. To mag that somber it will . recraire thirty one thousand six hundred' and eighty-seven years, thirty-two days, cue CZT, a . . . J . . . " KJrty-ix minutes, ana forty second - - Watx 1 now introduced ialo 8sn Trends- oa through an aqueduct exUrr -r I-Sj. asvmic ess jaayen w w V Throngh this Cum, which Is , t . thirty Inches la it dlmetj&iozvc uonaa, a oistance oi some lairrj-: at the 'rata? of Ihrea mu-,zz day.
Object Description
| Title | Mt. Vernon Democratic banner (Mount Vernon, Ohio : 1853), 1862-11-22 |
| Place | Mount Vernon (Ohio) |
| Date of Original | 1862-11-22 |
| Source | LCCN: sn86079142, Mt. Vernon Democratic banner (Mount Vernon, Ohio : 1853), 1862-11-22, Vol. 26, No. 32 |
| Format | newspapers; microfilm |
| Submitting Institution | Knox County Public Library |
| Type | Text |
| Digitization Information | 300dpi, 8-bit Grayscale, Model: NextScan Phoenix Upgrade, Software: iArchives, Inc., 3.240 |
Description
| Title | page 1 |
| Source | Reel number: 00000000004 |
| Format | newspaper |
| Extent | 7879.55KB |
| Submitting Institution | Knox County Public Library |
| Type | Text |
| File Name | 0206 |
| File Size | 7879.55KB |
| Full Text | VOLUME XXVI. MOUNT VERNON, OHIO : NOVEMBER 22, 1 862. NUMBER 32. S&PTHDAY ty gtrnmatK jJ5aimtr ll rnuiut evzbt satcbsav xoRxure r - I fakpeb; flw Is Woodward Block, Sd Storj. TX&M S,-rTo Dalian ner unim. navaMa in A tum; wit&ia six months; $3.00 afUr the xpl- he 9ctti0ftatic banner KDITED-BT L. HARPER. Th,o Popular Vote of Wisconsin. There is no longer any doubt that Wiscon- ia ! Democratic on the popular vote. Tbe aggregate majorities for Brown. Eldrdge and Wheeler will not fall short of 10,000, while the aggregate majorities for Hanchett, Cobb and Sloan will scarcely exceed 4,000 giving ua a round Democratic majority of 6,000. This is a Pemocraiie gain since last year of over 14,-000, and a gain sinee 1860 of over 20,000 ! - Had a Democrat been nominated for Congress in tbe sixth district, the gain would have been till larger.-It is well enough as it is. We claim a high places in the Democratic pyramid for Wisconsin. Ths Legislature is still in doubt. Soldier IteJoldngr at the Bet nit of the fiorthern Election. mulish Ciu. Her, frpm a soldier of the 57th Regiment, was handed us by a friend, to whom it was address ed. The letter speaks for itself. Read it. Bully for the 57th 1 Here's my g&. old bor, and 25,-000 cheers a year for the ga!lan Democracy ef the North. Ever true to the flag, the Uaion, the Constitution, the Laws, and-the honor and glory of the country, they have don nobly at the recent elections.. The troops from Iowa, Illinois and Indiana, had quite a rood natured time of it voting, but Ohio troops had to be disfranchised, while nigger were at home voting! Give mv conrratulations to the boys, all of them ; and believe uie, when I say to you bully for you I and bully for Cox ! 1 and bully for the Democratic ticket !! I Ever vours. ; Military Cnriosities, It seems Gen. Bragg has been called to answer why he retreated from Kentncky, by the Confederate Government, and Gen. Buell has been ordered to answer a drum bead court why he did not hag Gen. Bragg. The Confederates thought ii.waa.y easy things for Bragg to stay and whip Buell, and the Federal Abolitionists abuse Buell for not only failing to whip Bragg, but to bag him and his whole army. The on was about as easy to do as the other, we should judge. The Case of Mrs. Brinsmade. This is one of the numerous cases that have occurred oflate. which anneal trumnet toncued to the hearts of freemen. The press of-all parties is loudly calling upon the Government to investigate and puniah the offense against law, decency and manhood. But the . Tst jmbsv 1 Cr wma mm sava It is not necessary for the Administration to , waste precious time with an oflenee of this kind, of which the laws of New York have I " . T . 1 ..... simple cognisance, it is nere mat the investigation should take place, and the State authorities, the Grand Jury of the county, and in wwn oi uyer ana .terminer or the sessions, should administer justice. 1 tbe police Commissioners do not choose to take the matter in nand, the Governor of the State is well appealed to for the instant examination of the official who rests under this terrible exposure. Bat that examination can have rela- lion oniy to me mrtner tenure or his office, The outraged community demand a vindica tion of the city and State from the load of sham that will justly repose on us unless the .matter is thorough Iv sifted, and punishment VJCICU Ul H IVUUU uuc Release of Political Prisoners. W learn from the Indianapolis Sentinel, that' two more of the political prisoners who were confined in the Government. Bastile, in that city, for weeks, have been released on account of the insufficiency of the charges against them. Dr. Tbiadoxs Hobtom and Hon. R. D Slates, as par patriots and as true friends of the Constitution and the Union as can be found anywhere, are th men thus released. They were arrested at th instance of political foes, who had some dirty political animosity to gratify: thsy are permitted to come forth now from their confinement, after an imprisonment whieh is neither justified nor explained. The minions of Abolitionism are heaping up wrath Against th day of wrath. The ZTtxt House of BroreaeTitatiTei Attempt to Defeat the Will of the Peo ple.- -. : Th editor of the New York Express, Jas. Bbooks, who has just been elected to Congress, says: ' -. "Th only peril to th conservative majority tn th next ConmH i boras militarv mem. bers from th slav 8utes, elected in camps by Abolition regiments, to Jo Abolition dutv in Congress. In Administration managers may have doubtless do hav such boras mem. bers of Congress in contemplation and Texas u npnacana wun some or them, or F londa, or Virginia, perhsps but, if it b at tempted tons to rob th Northern people of their suffrage and their right, wo he unto th managers who" max inch . revolutionary at- IfiOpU.- . ... . - ..;- . ' . . Worts tlxat Shonli' be 7ritten in Let- - ten of Gold All; Ore? th. Land. . There, can bo tncT indirtdual liberty Where every citisen,.. i , aioi subject to th lew, and where he is 'subject ' to anght sis thin the Jaw. ' - - :. ; ' Ifc Mcw that wbaUrtr wise5 provisions eonsUtotion tnav nontalnr nnM-t. If the pbTr:of dwUrinj martisl Uw b l.ft , w w jrLxiairaicx7pixc ims state cf seize, sitariv c:e.r.s'th hcTniAn rtv. d5S count cf feV, cf titjlztei ofwj tn. The Cause of the Indian Wax in ZXinne sota. "Honest" Old Abraham's Swindling Aboli tion Indian Agents Defrauded the Indian of their Annuitieeby exchanging Gold and Silver for "Green Backs" and pocketing the Ex change I , : . . i A correspondent of the Chicago Journal (an Abolition paper) has the following on the cause of the Indian war in the Northwest : " The Southern rebellion has just about as much to do with tbe Indian war as the mud at the State Fair erounds at Chicago, last fall, had to do with the price of putty in Boston. - r oai, you asK, "men is in cause ( i will answer in as few words as possible: dishonesty the most barefaced and unmitrated dishonesty, on the part of the Indian Agents in ine iransacuon or ineir ousiness anairs. This. I know, is a sweepin? charge, but 1 will prove it to the most doubting Thomas in Chris- lenaom. xou may oe aware mai ine oioux Indians, as well as the other Northwestern tribes, have a treaty with th Government by which th "Great Father" Samuel agrees to pay them, on the first of June of each year, certain sums of money, called "annuities;" and further, the Great Father Samuel agrees to pay these annuities in silver and gold. The Great Father, Uncle SaroweT, has always sent some of his white childrett wiUsthe spondulicks Eromptly to the usosrf places of payment to eep nis faith with his red children. Indeed be did so this year. The Indian Agents re ceived their gold and silver during the first week in June, while there was not th least nrosDect of an outbreak. But just then "leiral tenders" went down and eold went up, and the delectable Agents, with an eye to the main chance, conceived the happy thought of selling tbe "yellow boys" and red skins both at the same time. 1 he gold was bartered on Tor "green backs" with which they sought to make the payments. But the dodge didn't work with the aboriginea. They knew the difference between white 4d yellow, and big little, and between light iihxi heavy: but as between "demand" and " legal tender" "safety fund" and " wild cat" 'they were as ignorant as female tropicanians are of the arts of fashionable dress-making. They had some ideas of the uses of metals, but to them all paper was alike, and only fit for gun wads. Of course they refused to be paid in anything else than that which was properly their due. The Agents argued with them, explained to them, and finally threatened them, but 'twas of no use, Johnny Indian's optics were closed, and he could not discern the locality. The Indian's hunting season was coming on, the prairies would soon be teemed with hieon and buffalo; the woods would soon be filled with bear, deer and dog, and the streams with animals of finer fin ; but of what use were all these to him? He had not the means with which to trap the one, or the amis or ammunition with which to kill the ether. He could buy nothing of the traders without money, and he could get no money from th Agents. Starvation stared him in the face, ana, as a last resort, he seized upon the Indian's only mode of redress, revenge. The first few minor thefts and robberies were grabbled up by the guilty Agents, and made excuses to still further defer the payments. Exaggerated reports of the outrage were forwarded to the authorities, and protection sought from Government. Startiingstories of "rebel emmissaries being at work" were heralded all over the North ; but not one word was uttered about the attempt to palm ofT "green backs" and the final result was a terrible Indian war, in which over one hundred settlers upon the frontiers were killed, property to the amount of at least five millions of dollars destroyed, and the State set back at least five yeare in its prosperity : and the war has onlv put an expense on the Gen eral Government of over three millions of dollars, besides drawing away from active service in more important fields at least ten regiment of unparoled troops. Horrible Co ndition of Richmond. The Richmond Examiner says no one can deny the truthfulness or the following by a correspondent of the Memphis Appeal:- Richmond has already suffered an increase in ine numrers ot her cancerous classes that is quite alarming. Thieves, burgulars, pick pockets, highwaymen, nymph du pave and the respectable gamblers swarm alone the streets. The dexterity with which the laws are evaaea is quite equal to the most accom plished tricks of the swell mobs of London, and the baduads of Paris. Whisky and bran dy are brought into town in large quantities every day and sold at fifty cents a drink in spue of General Winder and his detectives. Sometimes the contraband article is brought in by the quarter cask, ingeniously concealed in a crd or wood, and sometimes in bladders hid tinder the amplitudinous petticoat of a French or German woman, whose husband keeps a fruit store or eating saloon on Brond street. uarroting and street robbing are of constant occurrence, and scarcely occasions remark. As if to add to the ease and imponi- i ? . ty with which crime can be committed, ' the superintendent of the city gas works again cut short the supply or gas, and the street lamps are no longer lighted." The Jueamtner also savs: There are at present in this city several thousand idle and dissolute - ruffians refugee from ' Northern cities, deserts rs from the army, and professional thieves. Being too lazy and vicious to adopt any honest calling for a livelihood, they are compelled to swindle or steal. That they are briskly plying their selected vocations, our police reports for the past month hav abundantly manifested. Ine courts city. State and Confederate are engaged from one week's end to another in the trial of burgulars, highwaymen, forgers and counterfeiters. The city jail,' the penitntiary"and th different "castles" about town are crowded to repletion. Ina few weeka more, nnless some provision is made by tb Common Council for their accommodation, prisoners will have to be turned loose for the want of a place of con-confinement. ,i Is the Bepuhlican Party an Abolition Can any one doubt U after reading th fol lowing proceedings which,' took: "place at "the Republican headquarters in New York, on the sight of the Section : ; V lfr. Snahaa atatsd thai ink ratavna Avtm iaesschnstts indicated that on sentinel upon: the watch-tower of liberty will . be left ' at hie pcet-Charles Sumner, fproarious ap plans. A -- .-i'-f. Ir i taken IVbm Oe'SKoe'aiuIie copied fntwthi OismsW'gtteA party tbStiHtJlSeaOTj-of thi-otl fewfe.' The Warning of History Extracts from Alison and Gibbon. American citizens can not too seriously re flect upon the nature of present events, or too industriously study past history in connection with them. The Democratic fathers hare impressed upon the people the necessity of constant jealousy and watchfulness in the protection of American liberty. Such caution can do no harm to the cause of the people; it may do vast good. We quote a paragraph from Alison's History of Europe, vol. ii, p. 74. After giving a graphic account of the daxxling objects placed before the people at the Place Carousal" elsewhere, to distract them, from other objects, the historian remarks: These measures were all steps, and not important ones, to the re-establishment of moo-arcbial authority, but they were the prelude, only, to more important changes. In December 1780, an arral'...was published, . which, on the preamble " that a part of th journals printed at Paris are instruments in the hands of the enemies of the republic, that it is the the duty of the Government to watch over its security" decreed : That the Minister of Police should not suffer to be printed, during the continuance of the war, any journals but the following: " Then followed a list of thirteen journals thus invested with the monopoly of Paris; and from it were only excluded, "those exclusively devoted to science, the arts, literature, commerce, or advertisements." It was also decreed, by .a seper- ate article that: "any journal among those retained, which inserted anything contrary to the sovereignty of the people, should be imme diately suppressed. This clause, inserted to blind the people to the real tendency of the measure, received in the sequel, as was foreseen at the time, the most liberal: interpreta tion and was applied, contrary to its obious meaning, to sanction the extinction of all journals contrary to th Consular Government. thus early commenced the system ot Napoleon for the coercion of the press, a system which received during the remainder of his reign such ample development, and which Maadme de Staef justly remarked, converted that great engine generally considered as the the palladium of liberty, into the most powerful instrument xf bondage, perpetually exhibiting a series of false and delusive, pictures to the h mman mind and excluding all others from the view. ":- : The Habeas Corpus in Hew Jersey. The Newark Evening Journal, the leading Democratic organ in New Jersey, uses pretty strong language in announcing the result of the late election in that State. It says: " The functions of the Provost Marshal for New Jersey have been suspended by the vote of the soveraijm . people snd woa-a-yswH, Cncle Abraham will hear tb thunder at the White House, and make a note of the fact tbat the Jersey Blues are aroused in defense of their own rights and liberties. The habeas corpus has been re-enacted in this State, and will not again be suspended. Mark that. The iron doors of Fort Lafayette will never again swing on their hinges to admit a free New Jersey man without lorm of trial. Joel Parker will see to this. No more suspension of newspapers, no threats against free speech, no reign of terror in a peaceful State. That has played out. The right of the people to criticise the acts of the National Administration has been gloriously asserted, and hereafter no paltry tyrant may rise to dictate thoughts and words to the citizen, and to curb his honest expressions within the range of uovernment expediency. How Long will the War Last ! The' Richmond Whig has an editorial in which it speculates at length upon the prob able duration of the war, and concludes as fol lows: . ". " War cannot last always; and where neither party has the power to subjugate the other, it requires only the constancy that becomes a good cause and a brave race to wear out the party in the wrong. -Financial prostration or pnysicai exnaustion win end the struggle in due time.- And this, if no accidental cause should bring it to a speedier termination. Of such accidental, or, we might better say, in- j .t i .i.-.. ,i - uiuciiii,tauBc, lucre u a cuance in me possioie withdrawal of the North western States after a while. Thev do not profit by the war as do the New Jbngland states; they are not urged on by the demon of fanaticism as are the New England States. They have nothing to fear from the return of their soldiers, as nave the New England States. Reason and interest may. therefore, lead them to dissolve the unholy and unnatural alliance and withdraw from the bloody and bootless crusade. This would give us peace. The intervention of the great powers of Europe is another circumstance to which we may look with reasonable hope. ; Some time or other, if the war continues, it will come. It way b long deferred. But we hay faith the faith of just deduction from immovable facts that it will come. And when it comes it will be potential, all the more for the delay. " From all points of view, our duty is clear. It is to bear resolutely up against all trials; to husband up our resources; to bring every energy to bear; to give all that we have, if needed, and all that we are, to the cause; to make it the burden of our prayers and the business of of our Jives, never doubting that success, final and glorious success, will be awarded us when it seems will to the Great Ruler of Nations." United States Circuit Court The Court was occupied yesterday afternoon in hearing the case of Nioholas Jeroleman a-gainst John Hood, action for damages. All the parties resided in Marion, Ohio, were highly respectable, and members of the Presbyterian Church.- Jeroleman entered the airmy as Captain in an Ohio volunteer reiriment. and sent his wife to Newark, New Jersey, to remain during his absence, Hood, who was a business man at If ari.in. and Ktam Ran at nr. commenced a correspondence with- Mrs. Jr wiHHka, uu yu uta irqaeot oaautrBa viaua w New York naad In wiait hr at Kmil. wliar h seduced her. Suit was brought y thI- juiju. ifiuwuni id .mi IIFCUU VOUTV suia. mi jury gave a verdict for the . plamtifC damage iHoob ls'one of the Abolition Sanalore la th present Ohio LegisUtarev winch beginats next ecMwn on tne 1st Monday of January, TW Wiw'M'S'vBiTwa TT'm, irt man alactet to';the Legislature as a Democrat, whonders orlaaf WhCr RepqUlcaa Abortionist tat .Unt-fed States Senator, dserwiotLin but the fccalToldand baltey. OU'Cter? will,:fttT liish the rcre aod two then- 'TC3 buudred From th SUrk Cea y Peaioarat, Nov. 12. HETTJUH 07 ,ltJ PEIS0HEES"1 A nautyTTeleon) Greet Xlaern I THE JITJ3IC ANlPfiOCESSION ACCOM PANY THEU HOME. 5 ; - - On Thursday last, information was received that Messrs. McGregorlknd Reitzell were released from arrest, and-vWould reach Canton by the Friday forenooottrsin going east. The hews soon spread aitKlad town, and their friends determined to gjve them a hearty and cordial welcome. Accordingly about 10 o'clock, a. x., on Friday a large crowd of the Democracy assembled al the Canton railway station to await the arriyal of the train "from the West. . The Louisville and Plain town ship bands were on heap to discourse martial music. ." The train was over any hour late, and did not arrive till 12 o'cloek. When the train halted, a rush was made to see if those, lately prisoners, were on board They soon made their appearance. ' when shout after shout and grarp after grasp welcomed their arrival home. They were ruthlessly forced away herr four weeks previous, at the point of the bayonot, to gratify the malignity ajf political animosity ; and now, the warm hearts of honest citizens, of women and men, welcomed back these vic tims of abolition persecution. A lengthy procession was soon formed, Ma jor John E. Dunbar actiag as Marshal, and preceded by the Music, marched up town. Lawrence Alexander took charge of Mr. McGregor, and L. Schaefer. Esa. took charge of Mr. Reitzell. who marched .immediately be niua ine music, as tu procession passed, the dwellings of Democratic ekizens gave signs of rejoicing by the smiling OF happy faces and the waving of handkerchiefs. Ou arriving at the " Stark County Democrat" office, the large crowd gave three loud and hearty cheers as a welcome to tueir returned friends. The procession then, moved down Eatt Tus carawas street to Cherry, and down Cherry street to the residence , of Mr. Reiuell. Mr. R. thanked his friends for, this manifestation of regard, and declared that his faith in Democratic principles was more unyielding aud unswerving, if possible,, than ever before. i he crowd then accompanied Mr. McGregor to his residence on Walnut street. Mr. Mc Gregor .expressed his acknowledgments for this reception by bis Democratic friends, and said, language failed hirnin conveying the grateful feelings of his heart.. Mr. McGregor contrasted At scene exhibited on Sundav: the 12th of October, with that-ofto-day. jtleaw miles and joy oo sottfvc- - . f vegfiaaeiMws.fe saWthe n Stark county had gone largely Pniocratic, af- torded great comfort ana consolation to the prisoners,, and satisfied them that their friends had not forgotten them. Mr. Reitzell and him self returned without having cringed the knee to power, or tainted with dishonor their prin ciples. They could get no trial ; did not know on what charges Uiey were arrested, or who the accuser was. They were offered their liberty on taking the oatli of allegiance to tbe the United states and the Constitution and laws. By the oath tbey were now bound to stand by the Constitution as it is and the Uni on as it was, and the laws of the land, as they a a ar . nad ever done. He hoped for the day when peace and prosperity would return to our country, and the majesty of the law would supercede the power of the bayonet. Mr. McGregor's brief remarks were frequently interrupted witbt applause. Lou is iJchsafer, Ej. being called for, expressed h is joy at the return of our favored friends, and said that one day's longer notice would have brought together a mass meeting such as Canton had not seen for years. Mr. S. alludel to the malignity of those Abolitionists in Canton, professing piety, who procured the arrest of Messrs. Reitzell and McGregor, saying he had reason to believe these worthies wished quite anumber more attended to in tbe same way. The late elections, however, had taken the starch out of them, and they were much more meek and whining. - The crowd dispersed with three cheers for the safe return of the political prisoners. Orleans Princes on Gen. HcClellan. ; " Malakoff" the Paris correspondent of tbe New York Times, writes a follows : The Orleans Princes have at length published in the Revue des Deaux Monde, and over the signature of "Trognon" their history of the campaign on the Potomac. . The work is about one hundred ordinary octavo pages in length, and comprises the history of events from Mar. to Julyfrom the commencement of the mover ment on Manasses by McClellan to the battle of Malvern Hill. The work is written in tbe grand historical style, in which every word and every sentence appears studied in form and irrefutable in fact, aud it will stand as one of the best written chapters of historical events extant, The refutation of what his enemies call "McCiellan'a blunderer" is so complete ami overwhelming as to give the youngCommander-in-Chief a rank of military history far above that assigned him even by his moat ardent admirers. New: and unpublished facts and- documents are referred to jn his history, which will change tbe prejudice of most people against McClellan into admiration, and many circumstances heretofore an enigma to the readers of newspaper are explained. The moat ofMcClellan'f General are also elevated by this history to the first rank of military chieftains, and they her receive for the first .time, perhaps, and at the hand of this high auiboritv, the credit which is their due. The history also abound in healthy criticism en the various defects in the organization of the American army; it eulogizes the American soldier; it eulogizes the military ability of th leaders of th Southern army; it shows that the causes and the of the war are to be found in Slavery, and it terminates with as overwhelming argument in favor of tb TJnioo and against, the poesibility of two federations Dei the American soil. iUasurs are being taken to have tbi important history' published here in pamphlet , form, and the same ought to be done at New York. It wUl be found in thl$th of Octoberamber of the Kevuw. '- , ' Hot &0. ';:z:l&'n J The Journal in ite article ofyesterday roorn-Wjg, U'regard te the- recent attempt of the people ta take i Crowe from the jalf aseerte thatbeBrowa) gatre himself vp. to the o3-cers of iha Uw after h had aasasaiaated lit, BolliaeyeT. j.6te.la.'SMvibc'Afier hi had comnitted the deed he west immediiidy to h!sstore, 'aad; wss there tszr 1 and "arrest : J From tie Cbiesgo Times. Administration Terrorism. ; Those of our readers who do not permit a letter from St. Louis to escape them which we printed the other day, will comprehend why four Republicans are chosen to Congress from Missouri. The elections, for the most part, were solemn mockeries. The Federal military authority being supreme in the State, the terrorism of th Administration surpass that by which Louis Napoleon was "elected" Emperor of France. We append an example of this terrorism, in addition to the relations of it by our St. Louis correspondent. I appears that in each county in Missouri are certain Federal military officers known as Assessors. In Marion County, across the river from Adams County, in this State, these military Assessors issued a hand-bill, upon tbe threshold of the election, addressed to , the people, in which they said: ' ; "The sub-committee of Assessment for Marion County has been appointed by General Merrill, and th work of levying and collecting will immediately commence. ' " Parties whose loyalty has been in the least suspected heretofore will now find it very difficult to escape assessment, unless they can show a record unquestionably and unequivocally for the Government sustaining in all its measures for putting down the rebellion. To vote for men opposed to the policy of the Government is a disloyal act. .Every such voter places himself on the disloyal list, and ; becomes a proper subject for taxation under the following orders: You, then, who would escape taxation must vote right .on Tuesday I A word to the wise is sufficient." If the Administration did not go to like extremities in Illinois, New York, and the other States which held their elections last week, it was because they did not dare to do so. Neither Illinois nor New York was exempt from terrorism, however, and Delaware suffered from it quite as severely as Missouri. See an exposure, in another column, of its operations in Delaware. It is the border slave States which ar especially selected as the fields of this terrorism, because their people are more helpless than. thoe of States whose constitutions and laws have some remaining force. What a history will be the history of the administration of Abraham Lincoln. Vascillation of the Administration. The Government has pursued a very uncertain course towards its Generals. - Gen. Fremont was appointed to a very important command in Mieeourii After a time he was rein oved as unfit for the place. A few months passed, and be was appointed to a highly responsible position in Virginia. He failed, and was again removed for apparent want of military qualifications. And now there is a talk of his being placed at the head of another army. : .- Xext there's 4en.iinell,. -tie, after bis tin pr'IJ,'e4 Wa rch frc m Tennessee tp Louis viJle, for his removal, because h-wa iot tboaght to be active .enough. Before sunset of the day of his removal, an order came for his restoration or retention. Soon he drove Gen. Bragg and a rebel army of seventy-five thousand men out of our State, aud then he was forthwith removed again. . Lastly, there's General McClellan. After more than a year's service at the head of the Army of the Potomac, he was removed, or required to give place to Pope. After a very brief period, he is removed again. This apparent vascillation fh regard to the leadership of our armies is at least uu fortunate. It tends strongly to weaken public confidence; We hope to have as yttle of it hereafter as possible. Louisville Journal. : V Poor Old Massachusetts. The Massachusetts Republicans are pretty good at figures. Captain Sleeper who was the only Democrat supposed to be elected from that State to Congress, has just been counted out, and Mr. Rice, the present member, declared re-elected. We are afraid Sleeper has been caught" napping as his majority was about four hundred ; any way the Republicans monopolize the arithmetical talent of the State, as this instance proves. So the old Bay State will present an unbroken Abolition front in the coming as it does in the present Congress.; Well it is in the eternal fitness of things that it should be ' so. A community that almost went frantic and broke out into open revolt when a negro was deprived of his liberty under the operations of the laws, yet permitted innocent white men, guilty of ho crime, to be imprisoned in defiance of all law without even a sign of disapprobation, is very properly represented in Congress by an unbro-broken phalanx of Abolitionists. Happy will it be for Massachusetts if history hasrno sterner rebuke for her conduct in this trying crisis of the nation than she has bestowed on the Government for desecrating her noble harbor to th use of tyranny. There is not even a memory of the fragrance of the revolutionary tea in the waves that now wash the stones of Fort Warren. JV. Y. World. Eemoval of General HcClellan. The removal of General McClellan is made by the radical journals the occasion of a combined assault on him, which is expected to produce a great effect on the people. It will fail, as every radical scheme fails in the end, and this especially because of the weakness of the artillery directed against him. It is stated that be disobeyed orders, which no one believes or will believe till he has been beard ; and a no formal com plaint is laid against him, it may be cansidered a radical slander, unfounded in fact. It is also stated tbat be ought to have relieved Harper's Ferrv by marching faster in Maryland. The; iJea is imply ridiculous" and on seeking its origin, we find a paragraph sandwiched in at the close of the report of an investigating commission casting this slur on McClellan. The paragraph is evidently an afterthought no part of the original report and has been put tn, in a rudely disconnected style, to have effect on some one. The whole world has been ringing with the miracle of that swift and splendid Mary Iaad campaign. It was the most rapid and snceeesiur campaign (considering the worn out and demoralized army to the command of which McClellan was nd-denly called) which history relates. . This accusation would be laughed at, if it were not too serious a busines fir laughter. Waf I ; TB i Senate i Chamber at Washington i readv for the earrjetins ai desks of members. The Eepreeentatnrea Hall ia beii ecrubbed ontErehsnpt Faper.- f ' , ": y .,. . : Yesv - it' being seruhbcl'Ost." and the political veroia of Abolitionia recedea from its tnarble balls, Tbep?eplB haven takew Bp the broom and the mop,ed Qhio, Jadiana and PennsyUaala "scrnbbed ouV'some. twen- ? treasury nit on tas tnciuctober.: : jiew crk, Uw Jers?y,'.IlIIncJ3, et1rerfoTmed Bcsje'-rratt a tl lh cf I rvember, One Singular Feature of the State ElectionsThe Hew England Emigration. James Brooks, Esq., in his late speech at the great Democratic Jubilee in the City of New York, over th result of the recent elections, said : ' "But curious are the lines of political demarcation in this campaign of 1862. Wherever the New England columns of emigration have traveled, mainly, solitary and alone, from Massachusetts or elsewhere along the northern counties of Ohio, Indiana, Illinois and Wisconsin, there have been the columns of Republi can majorities, but wherever have been the columns of the other emigration, in Southern New York, throughout all New Jersey, in Southern Pennsylvania. iti Southern Ohio, In diana and Illinois, there have been immense Democratic majorities. (Applause) Far be it from me to speak irreverently of New England. It is 'my own, my native land but I wieh she would follow the example of that Illustrious Yankee, lien franklin, and attend to her own business and let other people a-lone." (Applause.) An Interview with SlideU. W. C. J ewett, late of Colorado Territory, writes from Paris under date Oct. 24th, as fol lows: V- I will add that I have had an interview with Mr. Dayton, the American Minister, and with Mr. SlideU. I wished to ascertain from the latter person his opinion in regard to a friend ly arbitration of our differences by some Euro peon power. He said : " The South will not yield her independence to either the North by Compromise, or to .urope. . . I replied, you will force European interference, the North consenting and the South not. You will lose the sympathy of foreign governments and with it all hopes of independence. An arbitration may secure it, with the sacrifice of slavery. Another Important Expedition. S'e learn, says the Herald, that Major Gen-David Hunter has been appointed to the command of an important military expeditiou now being prepared for operations against the rebels. Its destination is, of course, a secret. It is understood that it is to be purely of a military and naval character, Gen. Hunter having promised to let politics alon and issue no more abolition proclamations, unless specially authorized to do so bv the President, which authority. is to be countersigned by Secretary Stanton and General Halleck.. With this promise the expedition is likely to be a suc cessful one. because Gen. Hunter is a good and brave soldier and knows how to fight. fTThe editor of the Louisville Journal ought to be ashamed of himself. ' Hear him : ".Beware, --O ye rebel women 1 least the fierce fire in yoor bosoms eta'in a blaze the ecttos; tin the same charming region."- : EDITORIAL BREVITIES. gg?D. A. Maboxxt, editor of tbe Dubuqne Herald, has just been released from- prison at Washington. IGen. McClxkxand still makes his head quarters t Springfield 111. JrMr. Slidkll had an interview with Napoleon on the 28th ult. . t&A- PxcssiAJC journal makes grave com; plaint of the action of Gen. Butler in-New Or leans toward Prussian property and Prussian subjects, : ggJT'All the new regiments in Illinois, Iowa, Wisconsin and Minnesota have been ordered to move, and some of them are already on their way to the scene of active operations. t&m The London Times says that Mrs. Phil lips, an English subject, had become insane in New Orleans in consequence of Gen. Butler's treatment. fgThe Postmaster General has given or ders for the redemption of postage stamps which have been used as currency. Jt&Butternut bonnets, we see it stated, are "all the rage" among the ladies of Indiana tThe people of Mississippi are said to be running their negroes intothelnterior, leaving only such property as they cannot carry away. Those having friends in the army under Gen. Rosecrans, will be pleased to learn that a daily military mail will go forward hereafter from Louisville to Nashville. UgyThe rebels are said to be fortifying Jack son, Miss., large reinforcements being brought theie from Arkansas. It is believed their en tire army will fall back to that poiut before giving battle The Homes Coanty Fanmer states that L. R. CxiTCHrixLn. Attorney-General elect, on Monday last, resigned the office of Prosecu ting Attorney for that county. C. F. Vorhees was appointed to 611 the vacancy. ' f-Rebel officers, who arrived at Washington on Friday, as prisoners, state that Lea has been removed from the command of the rebel army, and that Joe Johnson has been placed in' his stead. . . tOne of the many rumors of the day is. that Secretary Chase will leave the Treasury for a seat in the TJ. S. Senate. t&- A contract for 90,000 bushels of shelled com was on Friday awarded by Col. Backer, to Mr. Louis Stow, of Baltimore, at ninety cents, being the lowest bid. Information at Baltimore says Jeff. Davis reviewcl Lee's army at Winchester ten days ago. They were all newly uniformed. They then retreated to Gordonsville. . ' SSTA London letter of the 24th ult says, by Christmas there will be 780,000 paupers to feed ins Lancashire. ; X-. General Buell, the papers say, wa removed from his command because the late elections went Democratic, and did not sustain the President' negro proclamation. : . Counterfeit Treasury notes, $50 and SlOTa, raid fhm l'c and 2a, made their appearance in New York, on the 8th Inst. - Xeep a sharp look ont fbrthem.' ! s - i QrKSTHas llonesl Old Abe" heard from (he Saekr State t" If so, wUl he please tell the people if there Is "nobody htrif) m ir F iZj. Tniiskey of the cemtaonest sort Is aeil- ir, todays the ureneda Appeal; near II oily Ern-!, iliaw at - forty- dollars a -rllo. HcClellan and Burnside. The St. Louis Republican asks: What, indeed. Kav tbe radirala reallv ac complished by the removal ot . McClellan ? x remont or bigei has not yet succeeded to bis place. A successor has been appointed who is on record as an indorser of McCiellan'a milita ry genius, and who is fully identified with the brave soldiers of the Army of the Potomac in their admiration of that officer's qualities as a commander. In what Tespect, therefoie, can Burnside differ from McClellan so as to win the praises of thelatter's foes? Ii McCiellan'a style of generalship is the one admired by Burn side, what can Burnide do but endeavor to follow McClellan T TTr were satisfied with his successor. The radicals that have spokea on the subject, though they rejoice at "Little Mac's disgrace" are remarkably silent Ott the subject of Burnside. We predict that ere' long they will be maneuvering for another change. There is Joy in Old Joshua's Household.The Ashtabula Sentinel, Joshua R. Gib-diko's organ, thus profanely, hot to say blasphemously, exults over the removal of Gen. McClellan: - . Laus Deo I Praise be to God. Another great victory has been won, and the nightmare of the nation shaken tff. We may now-hope for triumph, and a salvation of the country. Daylight breaks ahead. The President has removed McClellan, and promises to stick by the proclamation. . Extensive Defalcation in the New York Custom House. ; Nsw York., Nov. 13. An extensive de cation in the Custom House has been discov-ered. Sixteen clerks in the liquidating department have been suspended. The amount is variously stated at from $150,000 to a quarter ' of a million of dollars. I t has been don by : means of wrong entries, and subsequently the'; books of record were destroyed to prevent th discovery. . . The government cracker bakery, corner of Jlorrfs and West streets, was burnt this mora- - mg. Loss f 13,000. . Hew Cause of Arrest. The New York Evening Post of the 12lh says two Government Commission Brokers have been arrested by order of the .War Department and sent to Fort Lafayette, for buy ' mg up claims against the Government at a usurious discount. That is a new cause of t arrest. What of those gold brokers who will . not give a dollar in gold unless they get therefor one dollar and thirty-five cents in Government green or yellow-backs? Are they in . the same category with those who will not part with their money for claims against tb Government, except at what may be deemed by some Government officer a usnnone dis ; count I-rOcsvj ffffj - - Change of Opinion. Eighteen months of Republican rule ha-satisfied the people that the way to maintains the Governman.t is the return of the Demo cratic party to power. he Democracy owe their great victories to converts from Republicanism, to voters for. Mr. Lincoln in 1860, who had utterly misappre v bended the purposes of tbe Republican party v and its capacity to govern' the country. This great revolution in public sentiment hae but just commenced. It is but the turning of the tide which will sweep out of power the last vestige of Abolitionism. -Ctiacf Plata Iah To What are they Loyal I To what ar Alolitionists loyal? To th Constitution ? They have suspended it! To th Union? They boldly proclaim tbat they are not for the Union as it was, but for "a Union as it ought to be." To the Statesf They propose to blot out State lines I To the Government? They ignore the laws of Congress, and scorn the decisions of the Supreme Court I To the President? They pro-. pose to depose him if he does not obey them Milwaukee ew. - A Good Beginning. One of the Boston Abolititionists has been drafted. This makes a good commencement of Greeley's army. The Portland Argus savs i " Bully for 900, 000. The number now will stand 800,8993; who rush forth to emanoipat, according t tbe proclamation." ; " 1 A jubilant Democrat met a disconeo late Republican the morning after election. Well" said the former. w hav mad clean sweep this time. We hav carried every thing." . Republican, who Tiad been read ing an extra Eagle, acquiesced, and profanely replied, " Yes, d n tbe thing, we have but the Custom-house, tbe Navy-yard and Fori Lafayette." Aye" said the Democrat, "and the latter yon may keep till doomsday; Your Beechers and Garrisons may howl and bias pheme. - but no Democratic Administration will ever need a Bastile." Exit Republican in disgust. .Brooly Eagle, A wretched editor who h isn't a wifs toiake care of him, went the other night to a ladies fair. He says he saw there. an erticlt'V which he ' fain would call his own, but it was not for sale. He declares that since that night he has been rapturously wretch d."-As th article was bound in hope, th reader is left to infer that it was either a girl or a kej of whisky. -; y ... gSJ The radical presee have denounced ea , man, not even the President with greater v. hemenee than they hav Fernando Wood, ' Ex-Mayor of New York. In a speech just ' , before th election be said "last spring I wa offered and leading Republican ocered to put it into writing that if I would desert they would make me next Governor of New York Comment is unnecessary. Boto Past. . X Trillio. Is used as if it were a poesf bl number. But few persons give it a thought' '. a to the magnitude or numbers it express. " ComDeae computing the seconds Sac the ereatioa of the first man and it will be- fotrod that there has not enough urn yet elapssd to make a trillion. To mag that somber it will . recraire thirty one thousand six hundred' and eighty-seven years, thirty-two days, cue CZT, a . . . J . . . " KJrty-ix minutes, ana forty second - - Watx 1 now introduced ialo 8sn Trends- oa through an aqueduct exUrr -r I-Sj. asvmic ess jaayen w w V Throngh this Cum, which Is , t . thirty Inches la it dlmetj&iozvc uonaa, a oistance oi some lairrj-: at the 'rata? of Ihrea mu-,zz day. |
