Daily Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1848), 1859-07-26 page 1 |
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m IP 1 1 VOLUME XXIII. COLUMBUS, OHIO. TUESDAY, MORNING, JULY 26, 1859. NUMBER 79. (Ditto hit 0iwiwl. IS Pt'ltt.lSltlD DAILY, TM-WKEKLY Ai:D WEEKLY, BY HENRY D. COOKE cV CO. flic In Mlller't Building, No. Ill Eiwt Towd ttrtet. Termt Invariably in Advance. ailt, By tht Carrier, per week, it'i ett. bi-Wkklt, J JJJ per year. KBMbF DAILY ADVEIITISINO BY TUB 8QUABB, (TF.lt l.INKa "B, I""" na A I One square 1 year, i One aouarc 8 weeki. 3 80 8 no 1 60 1 00 M 60 One One One One One 9 months, 12 nn 6 months, HI ( One " 2 weeki, One 1 week, One " 8daya, One " 2 days, One " 1 day, 8 month, a (to 2 month!, 6 SO 1 month, 4 60 urrrvrv i nuvnTTQIun rer square, oi wto ems mom or ion, wiw , ....v.' Per fbiunre, each week In addition tl D .... U.U n.n..l,a 6.00 - - , 1.. 1 ISl Tmutut, UN" lor 8iuare, six montha " 'er Siiiare, one year ....16.00 Illsplayoa Advertiscmenta uau wore mnu m rAdvertlaeinents leaded and plexrcl In the column of Special Notice, dmbh Ike ordinary mow. All notices required to be published by law, legal rati. If ordered on the Insldo exclusively after the flrat week, 80 per cent, more than the aliove rates; but all aucn will appear In the Tri-Weckly without charge. Bualnesa Cards, not exceeding live llnoe, per year, inside, 12.50 per line; outside 82. Notices of moetlngs, charitable loclctlee, (Ire companies, ''Advertisements not accompanied with written direction! will be Inserted till forbid, and charged accordingly. All Trnwitnt AilrrrliirmiitM must 6 paid in aduance. This rule will not be varied from. ' Under the present system, the advertiser paya ao murk for the apace he occupies, the eliange i being chargeable with the composition only. Thla plan Is now generally i . , aoiiKe'i. BUSINESS DIRECTORY. niuNtc. JOHN 8. PORTER, Teacher of Vocal and Instrumental Music, can be teen at J. C. Woods's Music Store, No. 8 Buckeye Block. my3 J. C. WOODS, Broad street, Columbus, 0., Agent for Chlckarlng k Bona' and Hullet, Davis A Co's Piano Fortes, Mason ft Hamlin's Melodeons, and dealer in Sheet Music and musical merchandise. M'2- SELTZER V WEBSTER, Sole Agents for the sale of Wm. Knalie ft Co' Piano Fortes, and all kinds of Musical Merchandise, No. 13 -t'lHt State Street. J"r,anos tuned by E. Cornellson. apr22 ANTON WAGNER, Bonth Mrect, between Fifth and Sixth, Manufactures and llepairs Violins and Double Bass at the shortest notice, and at the lowest price. Also, manufactures and repairs Bird Cmres. nnio-dtf Watches, Jewelry. FRIEDR. IIALDY, Dpaler in Watches, Clocks and Jewelry, No. 182, corner of High and Walnut sts., Columbus, O. All kinda of Jewelry made to order. Also, Watches and Jewelry carefully repaired. niy8 M. k L. KLEEMAN, Wholesale and Retail Dealers in Watches, Jevelry, Clocks, Ac. Watches, JeWolrv, Ac, carefully repaired and warranted. No. lfiR llliih St., Columbus, Ohio. my4 R. D. DUNBAR, Watch Maker and Engraver, has for sale Watchea, Jewelry, Sertaclee, Thermometers, etc. Agent, also, for Patent Folding Spring Mattress, No. 135 High street, one door soulh of Goodale House. aprtt2 L. LESaiERETJX fc SONS, Manufacturers of Watches, In Fleurler, Switzerland. Im-portera and Dealers in Watches, Jewelry, Tools and Material! tor Watch-Makert. Kesidence Columbus, Ohio. Pf B. G. BAl'MGARD, Jewelerlst, Stencil Cutter, Plater, and Dealer In Fancy Goods, Perfumery, Ac, No. 1X8 Houlh-East High St., be-tween Town and Rich sts., Columbus, Ohio. Watches, Jewelrv, Aorordeons, Melodonns, Ac., carefully repaired. Dry ftoods. JOHN STONE & CO., Wholesaloand Retail leali'ie In Prr nt", Foreign and Domestic, No. 7 Uwynne Block, Columbus, Ohio. John Stone. Thos. Arnold. ' pr2' J. C. CHITTENDEN, Dealer In Dry Goods, Boots, Mines, Hats and Caps. No. 8 Exchange Block, S. Illh St., commons, u. apra D. T. WOODBl'RY & CO., 1 1 , T .. . 1 - I tV .... ..nil r,.lmaatln TlrV fl 11.1 r noiemiie jh-iih.ib iii i-"i-im --. , Groceries, Boots and Shoes, No. 6 Gwyune Block, Town . n . . i .m14 Bireei, t.ouimiios, i" FERSON, STONE fc CO., Wholesale and R"tnll Dealers In Foreign and Domestic nry Goods, No. 1 Gwvnne Block, corner of Third and 'town streets, wiumoin, . " KELTON, BANCROFT di CO. Wholesale Dealers in British. French. German and Amerl Mti Orv floods. Varieties. Boots and Shoes, and Fancy Goods generally, No. 3 Owynne Block, Columbns, Ohio 1" stoneTo'iiarra A, CO., Wholesale and Retail Dealer! In Staple and Fancy Dry Goods, No. 1 Gwynue Block, Town street, Columbus, Ohio. apm JOHN MILLER. Wholesale Dealer in Notions, Fancy Goods, Hosiery, Jew elrv, and promiscuous htationory, liianK docks, so. Ill Town st., Columbus, 0. my2-dw R. II. WARE, Wholesale and Retail Dealer in Ribbons and Flowers, Bon' net! and Millinery Good of every description, No. 08 Knst Town street. myi" Hoots and Shoes. M. & F. FASSIG. Manufacturer! of Bool! and Shoes, in Parsons'! New Ilullding, Southwest corner of High and Town its., ixMumuus, vmio. W. L. MERCER. Successor to J. Mnuldin, Dealer in Lathes', Men's, Misses' and Children's Boots, Shoes and Galtera, No. II) Town street. Columbus, Ohio. spril ltooks, Periodicals. RICHARD KENNEDY. Booksollor, Statlouer, and General Agent for Periodicals, Newspapers, Ac, 17 Slate street, uear the PostofBce,) Columbus, IMilo. aprzi DON'T READ THIS. Randall ft Aston, 1011 Johnson Building; Dooki, Stationery, Wall Paiers, Pictures, Frames, and anything in our line na cneap as the cheapest aprza J. II. RILEY & CO.. Publishers, Bookie Hers and Stationers. Importers and Dealers in Paper Hangings, Borders and Decorations. Frames. Window Cornices ami Shades, Curtain Bands. Printers, Binders, and Lithographers. Railroads, Banks and County Officers supplied on the best terms. iipal Dentistry, W. WILLSHIRE RILEY, D"RN"TTST. T)00MS IN AMB0S' HALL, HIGH STREET. TEETH J V extracted In a scientific manner, and Sets fur- f nUbed that are warranted to please. novlfl e?l9w Attorneys. JAMES M. COMLY, Attorney. Office. Deshler Building, corner nigh and Town streets, Columbus, Ohio. Entrance on Town street, next door to 1" ranklin Hank. Jy! WM. DENNISON fc II. B. CARRINUTON, Attorneys and Counsellors at Law, Columbus, 0. Office, Nos. I and OileoU Building. Special attention given to the Law or ratents and Insurance. apm CHAUNCEY N. OLDS, Attorney and Counselor at Law, Columbus, 0. Office In lk Odeou Building, opposite the State House. apr22 HORACE WILSON, Attorney at Law. Office No. 3. Johnson Building, Colum tins, Ohio. aprl3-d0m 8. W. ANDREWS, Attorney at Law. Office No. 8 Johnson Building, High Street, Columbus, Ohio. nnvWI-rily JAMES 8. AUSTIN. Attorney at Lfw and Notary Public, Columbus, Ohio. At Office of P. B. ft Jus. A. Wilcox, No. 7 South nigh pirect. nov'Z4 ALLEN G. THURMAN, Attorney at Law, Columbus, Ohio. Office on High Street neiwen rrtenuand iiounfl. Te'zo Tin Ware, House Furnishing. ARMSTRONG fc THOMPSON, Manufacturers and Dealers In Copper, Tin, and Shoet Iron Waro, CooKing, Parlor and Box Stoves, Furnaces, Regis, ters, Ventllbitors and Furnishing Goods, No. 17 Town street, Columiius, Ohio. Sgieclal attention paid to Booting, cpuuting, aim joii voi-k generally. aprzB DODDRIDGE A WHITE, General House Furnishing Establishment. Dealers In Hot Air Furnaces, Marblelred Mantles, G rales and Stoves. Store Kix.nl No. 102 High struct, three doors oum oi Town, cntiimnos, unio. apr'la It. FISHER. Corner of Rich and Fourth streets, Dealer In Btovea, Tin, Copiwr, Sheet Iron, and Brilaula Ware. Bird Cages, the finest kind. Particular attention cald to Spouting suu uvvuug, myiu BUSINESS DIRECTORY. Manufacture. TI1K COMIMBUS WOOLEH MANUFACTURING COMPANY Manufacture and Deal In Woolen Good, Plnln nd Fnnoy (Milinorra, DiMwkliiii, Satinets, Jeans, rianneis, man-ki'tn and Stocking Yarn, at Wholesale and Ketail. Cash paid, or Goods eichanged, fur Wool, Mound street, near the head of the Canal, Columbiit, Ohio. A. P. Maaon, Secretary. Dlrartora A. P. Stone, l'rm't.; J. P. Bruck, P. Am bos, L. Ilotler, J. F. BanlH, tprtl THEODORE COMSTOCK. Manufacturer of Lard Oil, Tallow and Btearine Candles, head or Canal, Columbus, Ohio. Will pay cash at all timet fur Lard and Tallow. aprtl SHOEDINGER. BROWN V EBERLY. uriiitiire Manufacturers ami Dealer! In Lumber, Mound street, west of Canal and next door to Woolen Factory. myl7 J. II. HVGHE8. Manufacturer of all kimla of Trunks, Carpet Bags, Valises, Wholesale ami Iletnil, No. 63 corner or I 1Kb and "y Streets, Nell's new Ilullding, Columbus, Ohio. apr29 E. 4. II. F. BOOTH, Manufacturers of Carrinuee of every description, comer of Third and l.av sts.. f :,luniln. Ohio. anr"o Crockery, lilass Hare. J. 91. W. WEST WATER. Importers and Dealers in Crockery, China, Glass Ware, Table Cutlery, Tea Trays, Table Mats, l,ooklug masses, Gas Fixtures, Lamps of all kinds, Fancy Goods, Rllver Plated and nrltannia Ware. Glass Shades, Ac. npr28 Hardware. JAMES 8. ABBOTT, Dealer In all descriptions of Hardware and Cutlery, Nails, Posh, tilass, rlouse-ifnii'iera' materials, raiuis, una, Varnishes, Farming and MschaiJcal tools, Chnin Pumps, Wood and Willow Ware. Hign of the Gilt Paillock, No. 110 Town St.. Columbus, Ohio. apr1l Commission. GENERAL COMMISSION MERCHANT. E. K. Jennings, Commission Merchant and Dealer in Foreign and Domi-atic Liquors, Tobacco, Cigars, Soap, Candles, Cheese, Flour, Salt, Fish, Ac. I am uow ready to receive consignments, for which romittancea will be made on sale. Good references given. Warehouse and Office, No. 10 Exchange Block, Broad St., Columbus, 0. UNTINOTON riTCH, JOHN . SOUTH. FITCH BORTIiK. Produce, Forwarding and Commission Merchants. Hann- racturera of and gents for the sale or Hanging Hock Pig Iron. Dealers In Flour, Salt, Water Lime, Plaster, Fish, Provisions, and Dressed Oak, Ash and Poplar Flooring, 8idelng and Celling, Plantering Lath, and Sawed, ltived, ami Shaved Shingles, Walnut and Cherry Lumlier. Ware Booms, East and West ends ol Scioto Bridge, Broad Street. Ollice 87 West Broad, corner of Scioto street, Columbus, O. slake cah advances on consignments of Property for sale in this or other Markets. At our liatlroad Warehouse, property is forwarded free of Drayage. .Proprietors and Managers of the Columbus, Chillicothe and Portsmouth Passengei Packets forming a Tri-Weekly Packet Line between Columbus, Chillicothe and Portsmouth leaving Columbus every Jrlontlav, Wednesday and fnrtay, from root or Hroan t., at 2 o'clock, P. M. Fare Columbus to Circlerille, 81.00; to Chillicothe, 82.00; to Portsmouth, 84. For passageor freight apply to Fitch ft Bortle, 87 West Broad Street. J nlS ... Itarbers. ERNST REICHERT, Neil House, Columbus, Ohio. Fashionable Hair Dressing and Shaving Saloon, Hot and Cold Hatha at ail timet ready. ap23 HENRY KCEHLER, (Late of Phalon's Establishment, N. Y.,) Proprietor of the xsew xorK rnsnionaoie nnaving, nair uutiing, nnam-poonlng, Curling and Dressing Saloon. First Building North Neil House, up stairs, where satisfaction will be given In all the various branches. apri'i Clothing. T. W. CARPENTER & CO.. . Wholesale and Itctail Dealers in Clothing, 101 Town street. (in Carpenters' Building, opposite tuo liwynne diock,) Columbus, uuto. aprzi M'LEOD D. LEWIS, Merchant Tailor, and Dealer In First Claaa Ready Made Clothing, and a general variety ol Furnishing Uoods, No. 12 Soutli-lligli street, Commons, Ohio. apm P. ROSE, Merchant Tailor, Dealer in Gents' Furnishing Goods, No. 37 South-High street, (In Nell House,) Columbus, Ohio, Bpr-21 dirocers. F. A. SELLS. Wholesale aud Retail Dealer in Urocerles and Produce, Southeast corner or Town and Fourth sts., Columbus, O, Particular attention paid to Consignments of, and orders lor, rrmiuce. myu O. & L. BACKUS. Dealers in Choice Groceries, Fine Cigars, Tobacco, Pure lens, pptces, Kxtru family Flour, vrooa ana "mow ware, turn cages, sc., no. too iiil'Ii St., liast stue, txv . tween Town and Rich sts., Columbus, O. Goods deliv, ered to auy part of the city free of charge. my2 wm. Mcdonald a. co.. Wholesale and Retail Dealers iu Family Groceries of every description, No. UK, High streot, opposite the Johnson umiding, coiumiius, tnuo. apnti A. C. HAKES 6l CO.. Wholesale and Retail Dealers in Grocerlet, Country Pro. duce, xtra Family Flour, Teas, Wines, Liquors, Ac, South west corner of High and Friend Sts., Columbns, O, api-28 Confectionery. H. L. WIATT fc BRO., Confectionery and Grocery, No. 130 E. Town street. Orders tor rurnlshing rarttet promptly attended to. We deal cheap for cash. Give ua a call. m8 C. II, ZIGLER 4b BRO., Ice Cream Saloon.' Dealers in Choice Confectioneries. Corner of High and Chapel streets. Partlei supplied to order. JyH O. II. LATIMER, Mo. 236 South nigh St., between Rich and Friend, Baker, J'ealor In Cakes, Crackors, Breads, F resh Oysters, Fruits, Nuts, and Family Grocerios; also, Candies and choice Confectioneries. Iyl8 Cigars and Tobacco. G. RANGER fc CO., Importers and Dealers In Cigars and Tobacco, No. 77 South High street, opposite the Capitol, Columbus, Ohio. mvio Hanks. BARTLIT A SMITH, Bankers and dealers in Exchange, Coin, and nnenrrent nionev. Collections made on all principal cities In the United Slates. Ambos Building, No. 73 South High street, ; apgt Restaurants. C. A. WAGNER. Dealer in Fruits, Preserves, Wines, Liquors, and Cigars. Alto connected with the above, Is Waguer a llettaurant, No. 21 East Slate Street. apr22 GOODALE HOUSE SALOON. John 0'Hnrra Proprietor. Can supply all customers with anything In the way or Liquors or Eatables. Don t lor-pet the plnce. apr22 Commercial Colleges. McCOY'S Commercial College, Carpenter Building, Columbus, 0. The most thorough and practical luiHiness-man s college in the State, and the only one In this bwality, where, in addition to a complete course In Book-Keeping, Penmanship, Ac, the studies of Mathematics and Engluth Grammar are placed before the student. my!7 Hrugs, Medicines. N. R. 9IARPLE, Wholesale and Retail Dealer In Drugs, Medicinal, Dye Stuns, Combs, Brushes, and Fancy Article! generally. No. lot) South High St., Columbus, O. myi COLUMBUS CITY DRUG STORE. A.J. Sciil'r.i.LKii A Son, Wholesale and Retail Druggists, Drugs, Chemicals, Perfumeries, Patent Medicines, Trusses, Fancy Goods, Paints, Oils, Dye Stuffs, Putty, Brushes, Window Glass, School Books, Wines, Liquors, Ac, No. 277 South High street, between Friend and Mound, Columbus, Ohio. Wholesale Depot for Swedish Leeches. apr28 ROBERTS fc SAMUEL, Dealers In Drugs, Medicines, Chemicals, Liquors for Medl-cal purposes. Paints, Oils, Varni-dies, Dye Stuffs, Window Glass, Perfumery and Fancy Articles, Artists' Colors and Brushes, Water' Colors, Paint and Varnish Brushes, - Trnse, Supporters, etc. 24 North nigh street, (east title) a few doors north of Broad, Columbus, Ohio, anr'i'i Hotels.' NEIL HOUSE. W. Failing, Proprietor. Directly opposite State Tfonso. Columbus, Ohio. apr22 G AILT HOUSE. No. 178 North TTlgh Street, near the Depot, Columbus, 0. Kphraim Boiler, Proprietor. This House has recently been re-furnished and fitted up in the most comfortable no convenient manner. apm-tlly Coal, &.c. R. E. CHAMPION, Denier In Coal, Coke and Wood. Yard and Office, 2113 North High street, near Railroad Depot. Also, No, 112 South Third Street, nearly opposite Steam Fire Engine jioiika. coinmbua, own. no'n A. BARLOW, AGENT, Dealer In Wood and I'oul. A superior quality of double screened Coal, and the best kind of hard aud seaaoned M ood, prepared for Family use. Ollice aud Van) corner of Third and Gay its, apr29 BUSINESS DIRECTORY. Stone Masons. C.J. THOMPSON At CO., Stone Cutters; Mantles Set, and all kinds of Jobbing done to order, on the shortest notice. No. loo Third street, between Town and Slato. References: W, A. Piatt, W. A. Gill. John Miller, L. Humphrey. mv27 Hook Hind In?. M. C. LILLEY, Book-Binder, and Blank Book Manufacturer, High Street, lietween Broad and Gay Streets, Columbus, O, nolfl Hats and Caps. J. E. RUD19ILL, ' Wholesale and Retail Dealer in Hats, Caps and Furs, No. 70 High street, Columbus, Ohio, 4 doors North American Hotel. ' aprtl Miscellaneous. ' OHIO CULTIVATOR, Edited and Publhihed by Sullivan D. Harris, at Columbns, Ohio, for One Dollar per year. ap'23 WORTIIINGTON OMNIBUS LINE. S. L. Paramoro, Proprietor. Leavet Columbus lor Worth-Ingtnn at 4 o'clock, P. M. Loaves Worthington at 9 o'clock, A.M. Headquarters, Buckeye House, apr22 SCHMIDT X HOFFMAN'S Lager Beer Brewery, Cleveland, Ohio. I. Llndenberg, Agent, Columbus, High street, No. 134. my24-d.'lm1 T. W. TALLMADGE, t Beal Estate Agent. Office Amlws' Building, DJIgh street. All kinds of Keul Estate bought and sold on commission. Lands for sale or located in all the Western States. Missouri graduated html, properly located, for tale very cheap, apriil THEODORE COMSTOCK, Dealer In Shingles, Lath and Lumlier of all kinds. A good supply of Flooring and Celling always on hand. Head of the Canal, Columbus, Ohio api-21 WM. L. HEYL. Justice of the Peam and Notary Public, Partont't New Building, corner of Town and High sis., Columbus, Ohio. Will promptly attend to all business intrusted to hit care. my9 C. W. KENT 4c SON, Intelligence Office, No. 3 Southeast corner High and Rich streets. 0. W. Kent will also attend to sales at Auction, Beal Estate,' Furniture, Horses, Buggies and other property that may be consigned to his rare at a moderate per centage. Wants ( Girls to do House Work, 2 Gardeners, 4 men for private families, 2 Boys, 1 small house, or 4 rooms, 1 good Family Horse, 1 second hand Buggy, 1 Pastry Cook, 1 general Cook, 1 Cow and Cal', 1 light Spring Wagon, I Seamstross, 1 Wet Num. Also houses for rent and to rent. .I'i21 - HARDWARE. NEW HARDWARE STORE, At No. HI, Johnson Rlock, HIGH ST. COTiXJ3VrBXJS, O. J. S. ABBOTT & SON A RE NOW OPENING A FULL STOCK j. of HARDWARE in the Johnson Block, to which they Invite the attention of their friends and customers, and all in want of any thiug In the way of Jarduwt. fe28d A Sure Wayto Get Rich! Rria 1 Mind your own Business. RtiL 2 Work hard and " freeie to It." Buli 3 Keep working still harder, and yon '11 succeed. STOVES AND HARDWARE. STOVES AIM D HARDWARE. STOVES AND HARDWARE. STOVES AND HARDWARE. STOVES AND HARDWARE. , STOVES AND HARDWARE. ' Cheap for Cash ! , Cheap for Cash ! Cheap for Cash ! Cheap for Cash cwlR k gC0TT . ST. CLAIR A SCOTT. ST. CLAIR A SCOTT. 271 South High Street, Columbus. apll 8-df w NEW HARDWARE STORE. ' JUST RECEIVED BY "WMs -A.. GILL, No. 30 Worth High St., ONE OF THE LARGEST, AND BEST SELECTED ASSORTMENTS OF EVER OFFERED Iff THIS 01TT. FEMBRACING NEARLY EVERY ARTI-a rle iiniiallv found ill the trude. such as House buildors, furnishings, Brass and Iron Locks, Bolts, Hinges, and Screws, Nails, Spikes, HraUs, Fiiiisinng, caning aim bain Ing Nails, Bell Carriages, Pulls, Cranks sml Springs, Pic turn Nails. Coat. Hat. Wardrobe and Harness Hooks, Win dow Sash, Frencft and American IPisdow Gojm, Glazier's Polnta and Putty, Paints ground in oil and put up In y. lb 1 and 2 lb cans, (very convenient for family use). Alsodry mints In Hulk. Best French Ochre. Oils, Varnishes and Japan Dryers, Asphaltln, Black Japan Varnish Paint and Varnish Brushes, Stencil Brushes, Artists' Tools, Whitewash Heads, Hair, Cloth and Shaving Brushes, Feather Dusters, Counter Brushes, Floor and Shoe Brushes, Block and Hsnd Senilis, Fibre do.. Horse Brushes in gn at variety, and fine quality. Machinists' Tools, Ratchet and Breast Drill Stocks and Drills, Cast Steel Claw and Riveting Hammers, Black Smiths Hand Hammers, Compasses, Trammels, Bevels, Guages, Try Squares, Steel and Iron Squares, Shingling and Lathing Hatchets, Hand, Bench, Broad and Chopping Aos, Carpenters' Slicks, Cast 8tcel Socket Framing, Firmer Morticing and Corner Chisels, Long and Light Faring cntsets in sens or single, u raw-Knives, Carriage Shaves, Hollow and Round Spoke Shaves, Pnoke Trimmers. Shingle Knives, Brirk and Stoni Masons' Trowels. Squares, Lines, Plumbs, Stone Hnmmers, Spirit Levels, Pocket Levels and Glasses, Bench Screws, Wood and Iron, Hand and Bench Vices, Parallel do., Hand anil Foot Adzes, Cross Cut and Circular Saws, Hand, Pannel and Rip Saws, Brass and Steel Back, and Half Back do., Key .1 I. ,1 I 1 tt II. U...... l'..l,l. Unu.a nnA 11 1 1 iioie, I ihioi anil itituiui unii'iic i . wnu ,,. let. Webbs IPruning Saws and Chisels. Horticultural Im lemeiits of every description. Braces and Bitti of all kinds, Cast Steel, Cut and Nnt, Angers, Blued Augers, Cur Builders' Auger Bitts, Cooks Patent Boring Aparatus, Boring .Machines a new and very superior article. Strap Hinges light, Heavy and Extra Heavy, from to 18 Inches long. Hinges and Hooks from 6 to 4(1 Inrhet long. Gate Hooka and Eye. Gain and Shutter Hinge! nnd fastenings, in great variety, Carriage Bolts, Tyre aud Joint Bolts, from Yx Inch to 8 inches, Tree Scrapers, Border-edging Knivi and Shears. Hedge Shears, Pole Pruning Shears, Fruit Gathers, Garden Seed Drills, Shovels and Spades of every description, Polished Steel ami mack, Planters Hoes, C. M. 1 ollslieil, every aescriptlon oi uaroeu i s, j. o., Rakes from 4 to 18 teeth, Potatoo Diggers; Post Hole Toolt In soils or single, Post Hole Angers ami Chisels with Steel Ends, Iron and Poet Rammerx, Tost Hole Soni, Picks, Mattocks, Grubbing Hoes, Pickaxes, Ac, Plain and Polished, warranted Steel Ends and equal to any made. Grind Stones, Berea and Lake Huron, best quality. Grind Stone Hangings plain and with Flanges and Screws, and Friction Boilers Grind Stone Frnmes with Patent Hangings, with stone Ilnng ready for use, (a very superior article, every Farmer.and Mechanic should have ono.) Hoisting Jack Screws, Guns, Single and Double Barrel; some of which are fine Engllh Guns. PIstols.Game Bags. Powder Flasks, Shot Pooches, flags and Bolts, Ely't Cox i, llicKi, ana outer rer-eussion Cans. FISHING TACKLE of every description, among which are llrms Jointed Hods. Miilllnlving and Plain Fishing Reels, Klrbv and Limerick Spring Steel Hooks, all si.cs Sea-Grass, Silk, and Linen Lines, Hooks on Snudei. HOPES AND CORDAGE, nest Manilla Hemp, and .Into Rope, of all tiies from W to 2 inches. Bed Cords, Plow Lines, Clothes Lines, Garden Lines and Reels. Halters ready made, Twines ot all kinds. Best English Blenched Linen Twines, Gilling, Seine, and Net Twinoi, flue Linen and Cotton Colored Twines. Broom Twines, very siiporlor and common do. Wool Twines. Beit quality Shoe Thread, Hemp and Rublier Packing, round and Hat, Rubber. Hose, Conducting, Hvdrant, and Engine. OAK TANNED LEATHER ANDRUBBER BELTING, a good assortment always on hand. Lace, Leather, Belt, Hooks. Punebea and Awls. Iron Wedges and Mania, cis tern and Well Pumps, Well and Pump Chains, Hydraulic Rains. Iron and Wood Well Curias and Pump Tubing, Suction and Forcing Pumps. C. 8. Hay, Straw, Manure and Spading Forks, Square and Round Tine, Sluice Rakoi, Bush and Bill Hooks, House Hand and Door Bells, Silver Plated. Call and Tea Bells. Brass. Conner, Steel and Iron- wire; Brass, Iron and Mineral Caitors of all kinds, Side and Box Coffee Mills, Steelyards, Meat Scale!, Spring Bal-laucet, Ice Scales, and three sizes of Counter Scales of a very superior quality, with polished Brass Bowls and Pans, and Turned Zinc Weights, finely finished and warranted to weigh correct, Bench and Moulding Planes, Sand, Glass, .nil Kmerv minor nnrl cloth. asTra onort. Steel alld Wire, Rat and Mom Traps, Washilaw Oil Stone, and Oonge blips, best quality, Hindustan aud other kinda of Whet-atone and Rubliers. SCYTHES Gait Stoel and Mirror Blade, Corn and Grasi Scythes, Lawn and Bush Scythes, German scythes, sickles, (Ohio nattern. K,.i,lili and German Grass Hooks, Corn Cutlers, Scythe Stone!, Rilles, Ticklers, Brass and Iron r.iirrvmtiilis and Cnrria. a lurim and line assortment of each. CHAINS Log, Rolling, Lock, Traco and Half Trace Breast, coll, well, iiaiteranu tioguuains, u auu tiuu Jack Chain, Cattle-Ties, Ac. FILES AND RASPS A large assortment of every de tcriptlon, warranted Cast Steel, and oi tne oesi quaniy eaenu for cosa. TABLE AND POCKET CUTLERY. I especially In thu atturtinn of all intereated. to mv Stock of Pocket Table Cutlery, and Silver Plated Forks, Table, Desert and Tea Spoone, Butter Knives, Ac, of R0GER8 A BRO S. Manufacture, warranted to be extra noavy, aaociro-riaiea, on irenuinn Albatta. Country Merchant!, Mechanics, and others, are Invited o call and examine my Slock, as I am prepared to ell Wholesale anil lletall. em, a, unoi Columbus, May 6, 18.10. WILLIAM A. (.ILL, ; colum bub, on w, AGRICILTIRAL WAREIIOISE And Seed Store, DEALER IN GENERAL HARDWARE NAILS, GLASS, 8A8H, PUTTY, CORDAGE, Guna, Pitt oil, 'Wood and Willow Ware, Leather and Rubber Belting, Lac Leather, Hose and recking. DoviH TUESDAY MORNING, JULY 20, 1859. Colnmbut Time Tabic. OAlirttLLT 0OKKK0TBD WITH tVrtl CHANOI. Cot.nsiiiut to Cincinnati Leavet. Arrive!, Night Express 2:lfl a. m. 4:10 a. m. No, i express M:a a. m. itwi a. m. No. 2 Express... 2:40 p. m. 12:23 p. m. Mall ... 6:40 p.m. 9:66 p.m. Oomtmsui to Ct.rvr.tAHD Night Passenger Express 4:30 a. m. 1:30 a. m. New York Express 10:20 a. m. :20 a. m. Mall Train 1:00 p. m. :30 p. m, CoLUHnua to Wiikelino i Night Expros 4:26 a. m. 1:3 a. m. Exprett 2:30 p. m. Mall ll:M p. m. 1:30 a. m. Coli'hbus to Pirrsiuaoit, via 8rFUeimi.t, Night Express 4:26 a. m. 1:36 a. m. Exp'ess 12:66 p.m. 8:46 a. m. ColUMnt'! AND INDIANAFOMI Express Hall d-40 a. m. 7:16 p. m. Expres t:4 p. m. 12:20 p. m. Accommodation 6:60 a. m. o.oo p. m. Packet Arrangement!. WML rtRri.r.vir.i.a. eiift.t.frnrifB ana poaTaMMTTIf. ' Leave Columbus Dalh. from foot of Broad itreet, at 1 o'elnrk, p. m. Fare Columbus to Clrcleville, 11.00; to Chillicothe, S2.0O; to Portsmouth, (3.60. For passage apply to Fitch A Bortle, 87 West Broad street. roa tANcASTra ano moan. Leave Columbus on Mondavi and Thursday! of each week, at 6 p. m.. and arrive same day! at 7 a. m. Arrivals and Departures of the Mailt. nrrAimiRM. , Malls for New York fit v. Boston. Albany. Buffalo. Pittsburgh. Philadelphia, Cleveland, Zanesvllla, Wheeling, Washington City, Baltimore, Toledo, Detroit, Dayton, Cincinnati, Indianapolis, St. Louis, Urhana, Spring-Held and Xenla, close daily (Sundays excepted) at 7 p. m. A through mall for New York and Cleveland, closet dally (Sundays excepted) at 11:00 a.m. Malls ror Chicago, Illinois; iiuimque, jowa; unaware, Marlon, Mt. Vernon, Steubenvtlle, Newark, Granville, Worthington, Steubenville and Sandusky Way Mail, close daily (Sundays excepted) at 11:00 a. m. A through Mail for Cincinnati, Springfield and Xenla, closes dally at 4:00 p. m. Cincinnati way Mall closet dally iBunaaya cxoepieu; at 00 p. m. C. C. A 0. way Mail elote! dally (Sundayt excepted) at 11:00 a.m. C O. II. It. way Hail closes daily (Sundays excepted) at 11:00 a. m, Mt. Vernon way Mail closet dally (Sunday! excepted) at 11:00 a.m. East way, over the National Road, close! dally (Sunday! excepted) at 7:00 p. m. Washington C. II. Mail closes on Mondays ana innrs- lavs at 9:00 a. m. ' ' Chill eothe Mull closet dally (Sundays excepted) at 7:00 m. Lancaster Mall closet daily (Sundayt excepted) at 7:00 p. m. ' ' auritaiji. New York, Boston, Pittsburgh and Philadelphia, and al Eastern cities, arrive at 1:30 a. m. Baltimore, Washington City, Zanesville, and Zanetvllls wav, at 2:30 p. m. Cincinnati, Indianapolis, Bt. louis, uayion, to., at :iu a. ra. Cincinnati way at 12:23 pm. April 14, '69. THOMAS MILLER, P. M. Franklin Co. Republican Convention, The voters of Franklin County who are op posed to the administration of James Buchanan, in its pliant and cowardly subserviency to the dictation of slavery; in its base desertion of the rights of naturalized citizens who may fall into the hnndsof European tyranny, and in its profligate and corrupt squandering of the public money upon worthless favorites; and who are opposed to the servility with which its followers, in this free State of Ohio, do whatever dirty work it bids them perform, and the miserable pauizan legislation, and base conspiracies against private character, in the shape of inves tigating committees, with which they afflict the public when in power; are requested to meet at their respective places of holding elections, on Friday, the 2d day of September next, and select delegates to meet in convention in the City Hall, in the city of Columbus, on Saturday, tlu; 3d of September, At 11 o'clock A. M., to noniinnte candidates for the various county offices to be filled at the ensuing October election. Each Township and Ward will be entitled to one vote for each forty voles given to Judge Feck at the last October election, and one additional delegate for each fraction of twenty or over. According to this ratio the following will be the apportionment of delegates: Columbus, 1st Ward 8 Plain 3 Hamilton 4 Mlfllin 3 Washington 3 Madison 7 Blendon 1 Norwich 3 Jefferson 2 Jackson 2 Sharon 4 FrankUn .3 m o 3d 8 " 4th " 8 " 6th 3 Montgomery Township 4 Truro...., 8 Prairie 2 Clinton 2 Pleasant 3 Brown 2 Perry 3 The voters in the townships will meet at four o'clock P. M., and in the Wards in the city of Columbus at eight o clock P. M. GEO. T. 0'HABKA, JOHN J. JANNEY, BOBERT SHIELDS, CHAItI.ESSCAUItITT, wm. McDonald, amasa jones. of Columbus. JAMES K.THOMAS, of Perry township. jAran iti. r i uis, nnaron JOS. HELMIOK, Pleasant " HORTON Hi IWAHD, Prairie " J. H. KEARN, Madison " HENRY UIDEN0UB, Mifflin ". Columbus, June 30, 18.'.9. From the Ashtabula Sentinel. Judge Gholton. Tho Ohio Statrman nnd the papers of that par ty, are very anxious to compel the Kepuhlicans to take the "Rugged Issue," in this election. They insist npon it that Swan was not nomina ted because of his decision and solely because of it. The facts do not sustain this. There were many reasons besides, why he might not, and probably would not have boen nominated. We are very willing, however, to accept the Rugged Issue." And if it will be of any satis faction to the blatesman, we will assure it that whethor the refusal to discharge Bttshncll and Langston worktd the defeat of Judge Swan before the Convention or not, it made his defeat certain before the poople. Enough of Delegates were very free to say that he could not be eiec ted for that very reason. lo come down to the understanding or the Statetman it rendered him unavailable; and the Convention chose to nominate a man who was available. That's the wholo matter in a nut shell. The Republicans tho people of Ohio be hove the Fugitive (slave Act to be unmst, ana "abhorrent to the moral sense of the civilized world." Their Constitution authorizes them to elect their judges and they, like sensible people prefer to elect judges who agree with them on tins subject, i hey surely would not eleot a man De catme he manifested nn independence of their views nnd hit own convictions of nqht and the die tales of humanity; and would therofore proba bly act. against them. Of course they would not re-elect Judge Swan. So far it is true, his d- cision prevented Ins nomination. He pronnoly would not have been nominated because of other reasons, and he ccrlninly could not have been elected because of i hat. This will bo the case of all who concur with him. Slioiit Mistake. Tho Cleveland Democrat gives A report of the welcome of Bushnell at Oberlin which is a pretty fair one. . The editor says that a sympathetic countryman of the crowd took him for Bushnell, and held an umbrella over him and fanned him. This was a very na- tural mistake. The countryman know that Bushnell bad just come out of jail, and the Democrat man always looks that woy. Aihtabula Sentinel. A Big Baby. Liberty township boasts of tho largest bahy in Washington oounty, and Washington county challenges the Stale. Thoohild's name is Isabella Thompson. She will be six years old in September next, is three fret Ion inches high, and considerable over 200 pounds. Her arms between the eldow ond shoulder, measure 17 inches in circumference. Sbo is a womnu in appearance, and as intelligent as ordinary children ofhernge, has a good ear for music, and Is healthy, Where's Barnum? Marietta A'tu-t, ' - ' A Sltht Mlatake. One cool afternoon in the early fall, I Cbes-tor F. I-e Roy, a gentleman, stood on the platform of the Albany depot, watching the procession of passengers just arrived in the Hudson river boat, who defiled past me on their way to the cars. The Boston train, ' by which I had come, waited patiently as steam and fire might, for their leisure, with only occasional and faint snorts of remonstrance at tho delay ; yet still tho joslllng crowd hurried past into the cars, and flitted through them in search of seats; their increasing number at last warned me that I might find it difficult to regain my own, and I followed them. "I beg your pardon, sir." I turned, in obedience to a touch on my arm, and saw a respectable looking negro man before me, who bore tho traveling-bag and shawl, and was, evidently, the attendant of a slender and stylish girl behind him. "Do I speak," ho said, bowine - respectfully, and glancing at the portmanteau I carried, on which my surname was nuitc legible, "do I address sir, Mr. Le Roy?" "That is my name at your service what can I do for you?" "The young lady, Miss Florence Dunard, who was to join you at Albany, at u o clock, this eveningI have charge of her." He turned to the young lady behind him. "This is Mr. Le Roy. Miss." 1 The young lady, whose dark blue eyes had been scanning me, as I could perceive through her blue silk veil, now lifted it with an exquis-itivcly gloved hand, and extended tho other to me, with a charming mixture or frankness ana timidity. "I am very glad to meet you, Mr. Le Roy," said she. "I thought I should know you in a moment, Jenny described you so accurately. How kind it was for you to offer to take charge of me. I hope I shon t trouble you." In the midst of my bewilderment, at thus be' ing addressed by the sweetest voice in the world, I managed to see that I must make a proper re ply, and proceeded lo stammer out what I thought an annroDriate speech, when the servant who had left us for a moment, returned, and I aban doned it unfinished. ' 'Did you see my baggage, Edward? asked his mistress. 'Yes, Miss: it is all on.' 'Then you had better hurry to reach the seven o'clock boat. Good-bye, and tell them you saw me safely off.1 I stood like ono in a dream, while the man handed me two checks for the trunks and endu ed me with the light baggage he had carried; but I was aroused by the young lady's asking me if we had not better secure our seats in the cars', and answered by offering her my arm. In ten minutes we were seated side by side, and trundling out of Albany at a rate that grew fast er and faster. I had now time to reflect, with that lovely foce opposite me, but what was the use. Some strange mistake had undoubtedly happened, and I had evidently been taken for another person of the same name; but how to remedy this now without alarming the innocent young lady in my charge how to find the right man with the right name, among several hundred people and how to transfer her, without an unpleasant scene and explanation, to the care of some ono whose person was no less strange to her than mine. While these thoughts whirled through my head, I happened to encounter those smiling eyes fixed upon me, and their open, unsuspicious gaze, decided me. "1 will not trouulo or distress her, by any knowledge of hor position," I concluded, "but will just do my best to fill the place of the individual she took me for, and conduct her wherever she wished to go, if I can only find where it is!" I turned to her with an affectation of ease, which I was very far from feeling, and said, "it is a long journey." "Do you think so? But it is very pleasant, isn't il? Cousin Jenny enjoyed it so much." "Ahin.lted!" "Why, why, what aqueer man," she said, with a little luugh. "Doesn't she never tell you, as she docs me in all her letters, how happy she is, and that St. Louis is the sweetest place in the world to live in? Dear mel that I Bhould have to tell her husband first. How we shall laugh about it when we get there. So it was St. Louis we were going to, and I was her cousin's husband. I never was so thankful for two pieces of information in my life, "And bow does dear Jenny look? and what is 6he doing? and how is my dear Aunt Bcman? do toll me the news!" "Jenny," said I, mustering courage and words, "is the dearest little wife in the world, you must know, only far too fond of her scamp of a husband. As to her looks, you can't expect mo to say anything, for she always looks lovely to me." "Bravo I" said the pretty girl, with a malicious smile; "but about my dear aunty's rheumat ism?" "Miss, I mean of course, Mrs. Beman, is very well." "Well?" said my fair questioner, regarding me with surprise, "I thought she had not been well for a numbor of years! "I mean well for her," said 1, in some trepi dation; "the air of SU Louis (which I have since learned is of the misty moisty order) has done her a world of good. She is quite a different woman." "1 am very glad," Baid her niece. Sho remained silent for a few moments, and then a gleam of amusement began to dunce in hor bright eyes. "To think," she said, stiddonly turning to mqwith a musical laugh, "that in all this time, you have not once mentioned the baby. I know I gave a violent start and think I turned palo. After I had run the gauntlet of all these questions triumphantly, as I thought, this new danger stared me in the face. How was I ever to describe a baby, who had never noticed one? My courage sank below sero, but in the same proportion the blood rose to my face, and I think my teeth fairly chattered in my head. "Don't bo afraid that I shall not sympathise in your raptures," continued my tormentor, as I almost considered her. "1 am quite prepared to believe anything after Jenny'i letter you Should see now sne cares lor nun. ' "Him! Blessed goodness, then it must be a boyr - "Of course," said I, blushing and stammering, but feeling it imperative to say something, "we considor him the finest fellow in the world; but you might not agree with us, and in order to leave your judgment unbiased, I shall not de scribe him to you." "Ah I but I know just how he looks, for Jenny had no such Bcruples so you may spare your self the trouble or happiness, whatever it is but tell me what you mean to call him?" "We have not decided upon a name," I re plied. , ("Indeed! I thought she intended to give him yours. " The deuce she did?" thought I. "No, one of a name is enough in a family," I answered, The demon of inquisitiveness, that, to my thinkiniA had instigated my companion hereto fore, now censed to possess her, for we talked of various indifferent things, and I had the relief of not being compelled to draw on my imagination at the expense of my conscience, when I gave the particulars of my recent journey from Boston. Yet, I was far from feeling at ease, for every sound or her voice startled me with a dread of fresh questions, necessary, but impossible to be answered, and I felt a guilty flush steaming up my temples, every timo I mot tholookof those beautiful eyes. It was laie when we slopped for supper, and soon after I saw the dark fringes of my fair companion's rye drooplong and often, and began to realize that she oughtflo be asleep. I knew perfectly well that it wns my duty to offer her a resting plnoo on my shoulder, but I hardly had courage enough to ask that innocent face to lay on my arm, which was nnt as she thought it, that of a cousin and a married man. Recollecting, however, that it was my duty to make her comfortable, and that I oould scarcely deceive hor more than I had already done, I proffered the usual oivility, She blushed slightly but thanked me, and accepted it by leaning berbcad lightly against my shoulder, and looking up into my eyes with a smile, a aid, "as you are my cousin." Soon after her eyes closed and she slept sweetly and calmly, as if resting in security and peace. I looked down on the beautiful faoe, slightly paled with fatigue, that rested against me, and felt like a villain. 1 dared not touch her with my arm, although the bounding or the cars jostled her very mnch. I sat remorseless until the sleeper settled the matter by slipping forward aud awakening. She opened her eyes instantly and smiled. "It is no use for me to try to sleep with my bonnet on," she said; "for it is very much in the way for me, and I am sure it troubles you." So she removed it, giving me the pretty little toy, with its graceful ribbonds and flowers, to put on the rack above us. I preferred to hold it, telling her it would be safer with me, and after a few objections, she resigned it, being in truth too sleepy to contest tho point; then tying the blue silk veil over her glossy hair she leaned against my shoulder and slept again. This time when the motion began to shake and annoy her, I stifled the re- fironches of my conscience, and pnssing my arm ightly round her slender waist, drew her head upon my breast, where it lay all night. She slept the sleep df innocence, serene and peace ful, but it is needless to say that I could not close my eyes or ease my conscience. 1 could only gaze down on the beautiful, still face, and imagine how it would content me, if she knew what I was, and how I had deceived her; or dreaming more wildly still, reproduced it in a hundred scenes which I had never before paus ed to imagine, as the face, of my wife. I had never loved, unless the butterfly loves of Sara toga and Newport might be so dignified, and still less had I ever dreamed or thought of mar r.ving, even as a possibility or far off contin gency. Never before, I solomnly aver, had seen the woman whom I wished to make my wife never before bad I so longed to call anything my own, as I did that lovely face lying on my heart. No, it was impossible for me to sleep. In the morning we reached Buffalo, and spent the day at Niagara. If 1 had thought her lovely while sleeping, what was she when the light of feeling and expression played over her face, as she eloquently admired the scene before us, or was even more eloquent still. 1 don t think I looked at the cataract as much as I did ather, or thought the one creation more beautiful than the other. She was now quite familiar with me In her innocent way, calling me "cousin Frank," and seeming to take a certain pleasure in my society and protection. It was delightful to be greeted so gladly by her, when I entered thehotel parlor, to have her come from the lonely seat where she had been waiting, not unobserved or unnoticed, to receive me to have her hang on my arm look up into my face tell me all her little adventures alone, (how long it seemed to me) while every word, look and smile seemed doubly dear to me, because I knew the precarious tenure by which I hold my right to them. She busied herself, too, while I was gone out, with our joint baggage, and rumaging all over her trunks to find a box which I had expressed a desire to see. She mended my gloves, sowed the band on my traveling enp, and found my cigar case whenever I had lost it, which was about twenty times a day, while she scolded me for the carelessness which she declared al most equaled her own. Long ago she had given over into my possession her elegant little port-monnaie, "with all the money in it, which sho was sure she would lose, as she could never keep anything," and as she had ordered me to take out all that was wanted for her traveling expenses, 1 opened it with trembling hands when I was alone, and examined us conients, There were, besides all the bank bills with Inch she had probably been furnished for her journey, nnd which, with pious care,she had packed into tho smallest possible compass, as much gold as her pretty toy could carry, a tiny pearl ring too small to lit any hngers but hers which 1 am afraid I kissed a card with her name on it, and a memorandum in a pretty hand "No Olive street, St. Louis," which as I rightly conjectured, was the residence of her cousin Jenny whose husband I was; a very fortunate discovery for me. Indeed, thus far, I had not found the way of the transgressor hard, in external circumstances, at least, and when with her I forgot everything but her grace and beauty, and my firm resolution to be no more to her than her cousin should be; but out df her charmed presence my conscience made me miserable. I am afraid I must sometime have betrayed the conflicts of fooling I had, by my manner; but when I was reserved and ceremonious with her, she always resonted it, and begged me so be-witchingly not to treat her so, and to oallhcr by hor sweet name 'Florence,' that had I dreamed as much as I longed to do, I could not have refused her. But the thought that I was not what she thought me, but an impostor, of whom, after our connection had ceased, and she had discovered the deception practiced upon her, she could think or remember nothing that would not cause unmerited self-reproach and mortification, all innocent and trusting as she was, this reflection, more than any other, I ooufess, and the knowledge of the estimation in which she would forever hold me, nftor my imposition was discovered, agonized me, and I would have given all I possessed to own it (o her and leave her sight at once, though the thought of never seeing her more was drcadtul. Hut thai could not do. At last wo reached St. Louis. Do I Bay "at last?" When the sight of those spires and gables warned me that my brief dream of happiness was over, and that the remorseful reflections I had been staving off so long, were now to commence in earnest, the thought of the coming banishment from Floronce was dreadful to me, and the time seemed to fly on lightning wings as itdrew near. She was all gayety, and wns astonished at my Badpcss and absence of mind when so near home nnd Jenny, and when we entered the carriage that was to convey us to our destination, I bad half a mind to take a cowardly flight rather than encounter the scorn and disappointment of those blue eyes; but I mustered courage and followed her in, giving the address found in the portmonnaie; which fortunately was the right one, to the driver. "Almost home I" said she t urning her bright face towards me we were rattling up the street and my time was short "how can you be bo cold and quiet?" "Because, Miss Florence," I answered, "the time has come in which I must confess to you that I have no more right in the house to which you are hastening than to the name by which you address me, and that my only claim to either, is that of an impostor and deceiver." , She turned her lovely fuoe, wondering and puzzled towards me. Thank Heaven I did not read fear and aver, sion in it. "No right! no claim I" she repeated; "what can you mean , I told her frankly, and fully, the whole truth, nearly ns I bud set it down here, denying nolle ing, and concealing nothing, not even the useless seoret of my love tor her. When the briet reci tal was ended, we both remained silent, but although sho had bidden her faco, I could see that sho trembled violently with shame and ropulsiou. The Bight of her distress was agony to me, and I tried tosny a tew words or apology. "You cannot blame and haie me, Miss Dun ard, more than I hate and blame myself," I said "for the distress I have so unwittingly caused you. Heaven knows that if I accepted the charge of so much innocence ana beauty too lightly, I have heavily atoned since, in having occasioned this Buffering lo you, and my own puuishment is more than 1 oan bear. The coach stopped as I spoke; she turned towards me eagerly, her face bearing traces of tears, and said iu a low voice, "Do not misunderstand me if I was so silent." Tho coachman threw open the door, and Blood walling. I was obliged lo descend and assist her out. I hardly dared to touch that little hand, though it was for the last time, but I watched her graceful figure with lud distress. She was already recognized, for the door wat " thrown open, and a pretty woman followed by fine looking black whiskered gentleman, whom I supposed to be my namesake, rushed down the steps. There were loud exclamations of astonishment and pleasure, a cordial welcome, and some rapid questions to which Florence returned very low and quiet answers, and quickly extricating herself from the confusion, presented me as "Mr. Le Roy, your husband's namesake,-and the gentleman who kindly took charge of me." 1 looked at her face to Bee if she were mocking me, but it was pale and grave. Mrs. Le Roy opened her eyes widely, but wai too well bred to express Burprise,and after introducing me to her husband in the same terms, invited me into the house. - Hardly eonscioui , , of what I did, or of anything except that I was " still in the presence of Florence, from whioh I could not endure to banish myself, I followed them Into a handsome parlor, where sat an old ' lady, whom my conscience told me was the rheu-matio aunt I had cruelly belied. Florence herself presented me to this lady, who was a fixture, and unable to rise from her chair, and, before I could slammer an apology and retire, related, in her own way (how different from mine,) the mistakeby which she had been placed in my care, and the history of our journey, in which il appeared our host, Mr. Le Roy, had been a fellow passen ger. When she had ended, they all crowded about me, warmly expressing thoir thanks for my "kindness and consideration," to my utter bewilderment and surprise, and cordially inviting me to remain with them, and make the acquaintance of my namesake and family. I detached myself from all this unexpected kindness as soon as I could, for 1 fancied I read aversion in the flunhing and paling face and drooping eyes of Florence, and with one last look at her, left the room. A moment after, I felt the touch of a light hand on my arm, and turning, saw, with mute surprise, that she had followed me into the vestibule. "Mr. Le Roy," she said hurriedly, "I cannot let you go away misunderstanding me as I see you do. If I was silent while you so humbly apologized for the noble, generous, and honorable conduct, it was not from anger, believe me, but because I was first too much astonished, afterwards too much moved and grateful to speak. ' I owe you more than I can say, -and should be miserable indeed, if a false shame, which you see has not prevented mytellingyou this, should prevent you from continuing an acquaintance so strangely begun. Trust me, sir, I speak the trulh." I don't know what answer I made, for the re- -' vulsion of feeling was almost too great for words, and the rapture of knowing, as I looked down into that lovely faoe that it was not for the last time, quite took away the little sense I bad remaining. If you want to know how I felt, ask a man , who is going to be hung, how he would feel to be reprieved. Well, how time flics. It certainly doei not teem five years since all this happened, yet cousin Jenny (my cousin Jenny now) so bitterly reproaches us in her last letter, for not visiting her in all that timo, we have again undertaken the journey, but under different auspices, since ; Florence is Florence Dundard nomore, and sleeps upon my arm in the cars no more blushingly, but with the confidence of a wifo of nearly five years standing, and I registered our names on the hotel books, as "Mr. and Mrs. Le Roy," and bless my lucky stars as I read it over. Even while I write, Florence, lovelier than ever, as I think, makes a grand pretense of arranging our baggage at the hotel where we stop, (and which has reminded me by past transactions to write down this story) or comes leaning over me to call me "dear Chester," instead of "dear cousin Frank," as five years before, and to scold me for bciiv; so stupid as to sit and write, in-stetid of talking with her. Was ever a man bo liajjjiy in a "Slight Mistake?" Wool Purchased In Bacyrut th.lt Beaton. We have taken the trouble to ascertain the amount of wool purchased in Bucyrus this season. Me could not arrive at the amount with accuracy, as many growers have control-ed the wool and have not yet weighed and de- , livered it. Four buyers have purchased two, hundred and seventy-five thousand pounds. In addition to these there are several small buyers who have probably purchased twenty-five thousand pounds, making in all three hun--dred thousand pounds. The prices paid will average forty-five cents, about eight cents higher' than last year, which makes the enormous sura' of one hundred and thirty-five thousand dollars distributed among the farmer ' in Crawford county, for wool alone. There is yet considerable to bo delivered which will run the figures up. No other town in this part of the State can make as large a showing. Bucyrut Journal. A Decided Sell. Some wags in California circulated a report, for the benefit of the Mexicans, to the effeot that Horace Greeloy was crossing the plains at the head of a band of filibusters, for the purpose of , invading and conquering Mexico. This report got to the ears of the commander of Mnzatlan, who instantly issued a proclamation, of which the following is a part: "One Horace Greeley, a most diabolical, blood thirsty and unmerciful man worse than the infamous Walker, or even the minions Of Mira- mon a man whose very name struck dread to the hearts of thousands in the United States, so many were his crimes and bo terrible was hi conduct is now at the head of tho most extensive band of fillibusters ever collected, and on his way to Mexico!" Among those who went to the falls the other day, to see Blondin roll the wheelbarrow over the rope, was a Rochester physician who was determined to see all that others saw, and as much more as he could. Upon his return he deolared that the Frenchman not only pushed the barrow across the river on the rope, but that he actually, in returning, took up the rope, as he went along, and wheeled it upou the bank. Some of the bystanders had doubts as to the correctness of the narration, when the narrator expressing an indifferent opinion of their intellects, assured them that taking up the rope in the wheelbarrow was was no great feat, but cutting off the guy with hi jack-knife as be came to them, bothered him some ! Ohio White Sulphur Springs, ra TUB CLEVELAND, COLUMBUS & CINCINNATI RAILROAD, To Lewis' Centre Station. 1)ERS09IS VISITING THE SPRINGS chii leave Columbus at 4 If l A. M , and 1:10 V. M., dully (Mundayt excepted) fur l-enV Centre Station, which ii ulniated aiitmn niilet north of Colunibiw, on the C. 0. A U. K. Knnd, and tlx miltu eiiat nf tlm "prinftii. For the acctimmodation f permm- wl-hlng ti tnend in Sabbath at tbe Spring, the niirht freight leaving Uulunibnt at S:30 P. M , on ba.urday, will leavo paatengart at Ltult' Centre Button. HBTCBNISO. Cincinnati Iitprettwlll itnp for panimirerl going tonth, at Lowm' On to Ktatinn, at 8:00 A. M., on MONDAY HtlKNlNflS ONLY, arriving In Unlumbua at 8:30 A. M. Tha Mnll train will atop dally at 4:6s P. M arriving la Columbus at A:W P, M. Mraan. LEWIS WOOD will hart carrlaget In read I . naai at all ttmna to convey ttaaaenKert between tht oart and Pprlnua. I'aaaengera can r ly upon bring takes to tha fiprlnga promptly nn arrival of trains. Tbacllitenaof Ooliiinhnt will flud thttth motteonva-nl nt way tn gn to the Snrlnira. Ticket! will b told during theaeaann at iweny-flw Kmtt for the round trip Columbus to Lewit' Centre and bark. Kor further information and tickets, Inquire at the tic kat office In tht I), pot. JAM KS PATTlUtSON, Agent. Columbus, June 21. 1W Ju2l.d:im CARPET S . WE Alt E NOW OPENING TUB LARGEST and best assorted stock of American and Kiierllfth Carpet) Kver brought to thla nmrket, bli h will he sold at prlret tndufy competition. Call at STUNK, (J UAKKA CO.,' Owynne Block, and tee. 1 !HB FINK.HT KRENC11 CASSIMKKKS FOR PANTS Mew Merchant Tailoring Eitablitliniwt, Ho. 21 High 81.
Object Description
Title | Daily Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1848), 1859-07-26 |
Place |
Columbus (Ohio) Franklin County (Ohio) |
Date of Original | 1859-07-26 |
Searchable Date | 1859-07-26 |
Submitting Institution | Ohio History Connection |
Rights | Online access is provided for research purposes only. For rights and reproduction requests or more information, go to http://www.ohiohistory.org/images/information |
Type | Text |
Format | newspapers |
LCCN | sn84024216 |
Reel Number | 10000000021 |
Description
Title | Daily Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1848), 1859-07-26 page 1 |
Place |
Columbus (Ohio) Franklin County (Ohio) |
Searchable Date | 1859-07-26 |
Submitting Institution | Ohio History Connection |
Type | Text |
File Size | 5095.58KB |
Full Text | m IP 1 1 VOLUME XXIII. COLUMBUS, OHIO. TUESDAY, MORNING, JULY 26, 1859. NUMBER 79. (Ditto hit 0iwiwl. IS Pt'ltt.lSltlD DAILY, TM-WKEKLY Ai:D WEEKLY, BY HENRY D. COOKE cV CO. flic In Mlller't Building, No. Ill Eiwt Towd ttrtet. Termt Invariably in Advance. ailt, By tht Carrier, per week, it'i ett. bi-Wkklt, J JJJ per year. KBMbF DAILY ADVEIITISINO BY TUB 8QUABB, (TF.lt l.INKa "B, I""" na A I One square 1 year, i One aouarc 8 weeki. 3 80 8 no 1 60 1 00 M 60 One One One One One 9 months, 12 nn 6 months, HI ( One " 2 weeki, One 1 week, One " 8daya, One " 2 days, One " 1 day, 8 month, a (to 2 month!, 6 SO 1 month, 4 60 urrrvrv i nuvnTTQIun rer square, oi wto ems mom or ion, wiw , ....v.' Per fbiunre, each week In addition tl D .... U.U n.n..l,a 6.00 - - , 1.. 1 ISl Tmutut, UN" lor 8iuare, six montha " 'er Siiiare, one year ....16.00 Illsplayoa Advertiscmenta uau wore mnu m rAdvertlaeinents leaded and plexrcl In the column of Special Notice, dmbh Ike ordinary mow. All notices required to be published by law, legal rati. If ordered on the Insldo exclusively after the flrat week, 80 per cent, more than the aliove rates; but all aucn will appear In the Tri-Weckly without charge. Bualnesa Cards, not exceeding live llnoe, per year, inside, 12.50 per line; outside 82. Notices of moetlngs, charitable loclctlee, (Ire companies, ''Advertisements not accompanied with written direction! will be Inserted till forbid, and charged accordingly. All Trnwitnt AilrrrliirmiitM must 6 paid in aduance. This rule will not be varied from. ' Under the present system, the advertiser paya ao murk for the apace he occupies, the eliange i being chargeable with the composition only. Thla plan Is now generally i . , aoiiKe'i. BUSINESS DIRECTORY. niuNtc. JOHN 8. PORTER, Teacher of Vocal and Instrumental Music, can be teen at J. C. Woods's Music Store, No. 8 Buckeye Block. my3 J. C. WOODS, Broad street, Columbus, 0., Agent for Chlckarlng k Bona' and Hullet, Davis A Co's Piano Fortes, Mason ft Hamlin's Melodeons, and dealer in Sheet Music and musical merchandise. M'2- SELTZER V WEBSTER, Sole Agents for the sale of Wm. Knalie ft Co' Piano Fortes, and all kinds of Musical Merchandise, No. 13 -t'lHt State Street. J"r,anos tuned by E. Cornellson. apr22 ANTON WAGNER, Bonth Mrect, between Fifth and Sixth, Manufactures and llepairs Violins and Double Bass at the shortest notice, and at the lowest price. Also, manufactures and repairs Bird Cmres. nnio-dtf Watches, Jewelry. FRIEDR. IIALDY, Dpaler in Watches, Clocks and Jewelry, No. 182, corner of High and Walnut sts., Columbus, O. All kinda of Jewelry made to order. Also, Watches and Jewelry carefully repaired. niy8 M. k L. KLEEMAN, Wholesale and Retail Dealers in Watches, Jevelry, Clocks, Ac. Watches, JeWolrv, Ac, carefully repaired and warranted. No. lfiR llliih St., Columbus, Ohio. my4 R. D. DUNBAR, Watch Maker and Engraver, has for sale Watchea, Jewelry, Sertaclee, Thermometers, etc. Agent, also, for Patent Folding Spring Mattress, No. 135 High street, one door soulh of Goodale House. aprtt2 L. LESaiERETJX fc SONS, Manufacturers of Watches, In Fleurler, Switzerland. Im-portera and Dealers in Watches, Jewelry, Tools and Material! tor Watch-Makert. Kesidence Columbus, Ohio. Pf B. G. BAl'MGARD, Jewelerlst, Stencil Cutter, Plater, and Dealer In Fancy Goods, Perfumery, Ac, No. 1X8 Houlh-East High St., be-tween Town and Rich sts., Columbus, Ohio. Watches, Jewelrv, Aorordeons, Melodonns, Ac., carefully repaired. Dry ftoods. JOHN STONE & CO., Wholesaloand Retail leali'ie In Prr nt", Foreign and Domestic, No. 7 Uwynne Block, Columbus, Ohio. John Stone. Thos. Arnold. ' pr2' J. C. CHITTENDEN, Dealer In Dry Goods, Boots, Mines, Hats and Caps. No. 8 Exchange Block, S. Illh St., commons, u. apra D. T. WOODBl'RY & CO., 1 1 , T .. . 1 - I tV .... ..nil r,.lmaatln TlrV fl 11.1 r noiemiie jh-iih.ib iii i-"i-im --. , Groceries, Boots and Shoes, No. 6 Gwyune Block, Town . n . . i .m14 Bireei, t.ouimiios, i" FERSON, STONE fc CO., Wholesale and R"tnll Dealers In Foreign and Domestic nry Goods, No. 1 Gwvnne Block, corner of Third and 'town streets, wiumoin, . " KELTON, BANCROFT di CO. Wholesale Dealers in British. French. German and Amerl Mti Orv floods. Varieties. Boots and Shoes, and Fancy Goods generally, No. 3 Owynne Block, Columbns, Ohio 1" stoneTo'iiarra A, CO., Wholesale and Retail Dealer! In Staple and Fancy Dry Goods, No. 1 Gwynue Block, Town street, Columbus, Ohio. apm JOHN MILLER. Wholesale Dealer in Notions, Fancy Goods, Hosiery, Jew elrv, and promiscuous htationory, liianK docks, so. Ill Town st., Columbus, 0. my2-dw R. II. WARE, Wholesale and Retail Dealer in Ribbons and Flowers, Bon' net! and Millinery Good of every description, No. 08 Knst Town street. myi" Hoots and Shoes. M. & F. FASSIG. Manufacturer! of Bool! and Shoes, in Parsons'! New Ilullding, Southwest corner of High and Town its., ixMumuus, vmio. W. L. MERCER. Successor to J. Mnuldin, Dealer in Lathes', Men's, Misses' and Children's Boots, Shoes and Galtera, No. II) Town street. Columbus, Ohio. spril ltooks, Periodicals. RICHARD KENNEDY. Booksollor, Statlouer, and General Agent for Periodicals, Newspapers, Ac, 17 Slate street, uear the PostofBce,) Columbus, IMilo. aprzi DON'T READ THIS. Randall ft Aston, 1011 Johnson Building; Dooki, Stationery, Wall Paiers, Pictures, Frames, and anything in our line na cneap as the cheapest aprza J. II. RILEY & CO.. Publishers, Bookie Hers and Stationers. Importers and Dealers in Paper Hangings, Borders and Decorations. Frames. Window Cornices ami Shades, Curtain Bands. Printers, Binders, and Lithographers. Railroads, Banks and County Officers supplied on the best terms. iipal Dentistry, W. WILLSHIRE RILEY, D"RN"TTST. T)00MS IN AMB0S' HALL, HIGH STREET. TEETH J V extracted In a scientific manner, and Sets fur- f nUbed that are warranted to please. novlfl e?l9w Attorneys. JAMES M. COMLY, Attorney. Office. Deshler Building, corner nigh and Town streets, Columbus, Ohio. Entrance on Town street, next door to 1" ranklin Hank. Jy! WM. DENNISON fc II. B. CARRINUTON, Attorneys and Counsellors at Law, Columbus, 0. Office, Nos. I and OileoU Building. Special attention given to the Law or ratents and Insurance. apm CHAUNCEY N. OLDS, Attorney and Counselor at Law, Columbus, 0. Office In lk Odeou Building, opposite the State House. apr22 HORACE WILSON, Attorney at Law. Office No. 3. Johnson Building, Colum tins, Ohio. aprl3-d0m 8. W. ANDREWS, Attorney at Law. Office No. 8 Johnson Building, High Street, Columbus, Ohio. nnvWI-rily JAMES 8. AUSTIN. Attorney at Lfw and Notary Public, Columbus, Ohio. At Office of P. B. ft Jus. A. Wilcox, No. 7 South nigh pirect. nov'Z4 ALLEN G. THURMAN, Attorney at Law, Columbus, Ohio. Office on High Street neiwen rrtenuand iiounfl. Te'zo Tin Ware, House Furnishing. ARMSTRONG fc THOMPSON, Manufacturers and Dealers In Copper, Tin, and Shoet Iron Waro, CooKing, Parlor and Box Stoves, Furnaces, Regis, ters, Ventllbitors and Furnishing Goods, No. 17 Town street, Columiius, Ohio. Sgieclal attention paid to Booting, cpuuting, aim joii voi-k generally. aprzB DODDRIDGE A WHITE, General House Furnishing Establishment. Dealers In Hot Air Furnaces, Marblelred Mantles, G rales and Stoves. Store Kix.nl No. 102 High struct, three doors oum oi Town, cntiimnos, unio. apr'la It. FISHER. Corner of Rich and Fourth streets, Dealer In Btovea, Tin, Copiwr, Sheet Iron, and Brilaula Ware. Bird Cages, the finest kind. Particular attention cald to Spouting suu uvvuug, myiu BUSINESS DIRECTORY. Manufacture. TI1K COMIMBUS WOOLEH MANUFACTURING COMPANY Manufacture and Deal In Woolen Good, Plnln nd Fnnoy (Milinorra, DiMwkliiii, Satinets, Jeans, rianneis, man-ki'tn and Stocking Yarn, at Wholesale and Ketail. Cash paid, or Goods eichanged, fur Wool, Mound street, near the head of the Canal, Columbiit, Ohio. A. P. Maaon, Secretary. Dlrartora A. P. Stone, l'rm't.; J. P. Bruck, P. Am bos, L. Ilotler, J. F. BanlH, tprtl THEODORE COMSTOCK. Manufacturer of Lard Oil, Tallow and Btearine Candles, head or Canal, Columbus, Ohio. Will pay cash at all timet fur Lard and Tallow. aprtl SHOEDINGER. BROWN V EBERLY. uriiitiire Manufacturers ami Dealer! In Lumber, Mound street, west of Canal and next door to Woolen Factory. myl7 J. II. HVGHE8. Manufacturer of all kimla of Trunks, Carpet Bags, Valises, Wholesale ami Iletnil, No. 63 corner or I 1Kb and "y Streets, Nell's new Ilullding, Columbus, Ohio. apr29 E. 4. II. F. BOOTH, Manufacturers of Carrinuee of every description, comer of Third and l.av sts.. f :,luniln. Ohio. anr"o Crockery, lilass Hare. J. 91. W. WEST WATER. Importers and Dealers in Crockery, China, Glass Ware, Table Cutlery, Tea Trays, Table Mats, l,ooklug masses, Gas Fixtures, Lamps of all kinds, Fancy Goods, Rllver Plated and nrltannia Ware. Glass Shades, Ac. npr28 Hardware. JAMES 8. ABBOTT, Dealer In all descriptions of Hardware and Cutlery, Nails, Posh, tilass, rlouse-ifnii'iera' materials, raiuis, una, Varnishes, Farming and MschaiJcal tools, Chnin Pumps, Wood and Willow Ware. Hign of the Gilt Paillock, No. 110 Town St.. Columbus, Ohio. apr1l Commission. GENERAL COMMISSION MERCHANT. E. K. Jennings, Commission Merchant and Dealer in Foreign and Domi-atic Liquors, Tobacco, Cigars, Soap, Candles, Cheese, Flour, Salt, Fish, Ac. I am uow ready to receive consignments, for which romittancea will be made on sale. Good references given. Warehouse and Office, No. 10 Exchange Block, Broad St., Columbus, 0. UNTINOTON riTCH, JOHN . SOUTH. FITCH BORTIiK. Produce, Forwarding and Commission Merchants. Hann- racturera of and gents for the sale or Hanging Hock Pig Iron. Dealers In Flour, Salt, Water Lime, Plaster, Fish, Provisions, and Dressed Oak, Ash and Poplar Flooring, 8idelng and Celling, Plantering Lath, and Sawed, ltived, ami Shaved Shingles, Walnut and Cherry Lumlier. Ware Booms, East and West ends ol Scioto Bridge, Broad Street. Ollice 87 West Broad, corner of Scioto street, Columbus, O. slake cah advances on consignments of Property for sale in this or other Markets. At our liatlroad Warehouse, property is forwarded free of Drayage. .Proprietors and Managers of the Columbus, Chillicothe and Portsmouth Passengei Packets forming a Tri-Weekly Packet Line between Columbus, Chillicothe and Portsmouth leaving Columbus every Jrlontlav, Wednesday and fnrtay, from root or Hroan t., at 2 o'clock, P. M. Fare Columbus to Circlerille, 81.00; to Chillicothe, 82.00; to Portsmouth, 84. For passageor freight apply to Fitch ft Bortle, 87 West Broad Street. J nlS ... Itarbers. ERNST REICHERT, Neil House, Columbus, Ohio. Fashionable Hair Dressing and Shaving Saloon, Hot and Cold Hatha at ail timet ready. ap23 HENRY KCEHLER, (Late of Phalon's Establishment, N. Y.,) Proprietor of the xsew xorK rnsnionaoie nnaving, nair uutiing, nnam-poonlng, Curling and Dressing Saloon. First Building North Neil House, up stairs, where satisfaction will be given In all the various branches. apri'i Clothing. T. W. CARPENTER & CO.. . Wholesale and Itctail Dealers in Clothing, 101 Town street. (in Carpenters' Building, opposite tuo liwynne diock,) Columbus, uuto. aprzi M'LEOD D. LEWIS, Merchant Tailor, and Dealer In First Claaa Ready Made Clothing, and a general variety ol Furnishing Uoods, No. 12 Soutli-lligli street, Commons, Ohio. apm P. ROSE, Merchant Tailor, Dealer in Gents' Furnishing Goods, No. 37 South-High street, (In Nell House,) Columbus, Ohio, Bpr-21 dirocers. F. A. SELLS. Wholesale aud Retail Dealer in Urocerles and Produce, Southeast corner or Town and Fourth sts., Columbus, O, Particular attention paid to Consignments of, and orders lor, rrmiuce. myu O. & L. BACKUS. Dealers in Choice Groceries, Fine Cigars, Tobacco, Pure lens, pptces, Kxtru family Flour, vrooa ana "mow ware, turn cages, sc., no. too iiil'Ii St., liast stue, txv . tween Town and Rich sts., Columbus, O. Goods deliv, ered to auy part of the city free of charge. my2 wm. Mcdonald a. co.. Wholesale and Retail Dealers iu Family Groceries of every description, No. UK, High streot, opposite the Johnson umiding, coiumiius, tnuo. apnti A. C. HAKES 6l CO.. Wholesale and Retail Dealers in Grocerlet, Country Pro. duce, xtra Family Flour, Teas, Wines, Liquors, Ac, South west corner of High and Friend Sts., Columbns, O, api-28 Confectionery. H. L. WIATT fc BRO., Confectionery and Grocery, No. 130 E. Town street. Orders tor rurnlshing rarttet promptly attended to. We deal cheap for cash. Give ua a call. m8 C. II, ZIGLER 4b BRO., Ice Cream Saloon.' Dealers in Choice Confectioneries. Corner of High and Chapel streets. Partlei supplied to order. JyH O. II. LATIMER, Mo. 236 South nigh St., between Rich and Friend, Baker, J'ealor In Cakes, Crackors, Breads, F resh Oysters, Fruits, Nuts, and Family Grocerios; also, Candies and choice Confectioneries. Iyl8 Cigars and Tobacco. G. RANGER fc CO., Importers and Dealers In Cigars and Tobacco, No. 77 South High street, opposite the Capitol, Columbus, Ohio. mvio Hanks. BARTLIT A SMITH, Bankers and dealers in Exchange, Coin, and nnenrrent nionev. Collections made on all principal cities In the United Slates. Ambos Building, No. 73 South High street, ; apgt Restaurants. C. A. WAGNER. Dealer in Fruits, Preserves, Wines, Liquors, and Cigars. Alto connected with the above, Is Waguer a llettaurant, No. 21 East Slate Street. apr22 GOODALE HOUSE SALOON. John 0'Hnrra Proprietor. Can supply all customers with anything In the way or Liquors or Eatables. Don t lor-pet the plnce. apr22 Commercial Colleges. McCOY'S Commercial College, Carpenter Building, Columbus, 0. The most thorough and practical luiHiness-man s college in the State, and the only one In this bwality, where, in addition to a complete course In Book-Keeping, Penmanship, Ac, the studies of Mathematics and Engluth Grammar are placed before the student. my!7 Hrugs, Medicines. N. R. 9IARPLE, Wholesale and Retail Dealer In Drugs, Medicinal, Dye Stuns, Combs, Brushes, and Fancy Article! generally. No. lot) South High St., Columbus, O. myi COLUMBUS CITY DRUG STORE. A.J. Sciil'r.i.LKii A Son, Wholesale and Retail Druggists, Drugs, Chemicals, Perfumeries, Patent Medicines, Trusses, Fancy Goods, Paints, Oils, Dye Stuffs, Putty, Brushes, Window Glass, School Books, Wines, Liquors, Ac, No. 277 South High street, between Friend and Mound, Columbus, Ohio. Wholesale Depot for Swedish Leeches. apr28 ROBERTS fc SAMUEL, Dealers In Drugs, Medicines, Chemicals, Liquors for Medl-cal purposes. Paints, Oils, Varni-dies, Dye Stuffs, Window Glass, Perfumery and Fancy Articles, Artists' Colors and Brushes, Water' Colors, Paint and Varnish Brushes, - Trnse, Supporters, etc. 24 North nigh street, (east title) a few doors north of Broad, Columbus, Ohio, anr'i'i Hotels.' NEIL HOUSE. W. Failing, Proprietor. Directly opposite State Tfonso. Columbus, Ohio. apr22 G AILT HOUSE. No. 178 North TTlgh Street, near the Depot, Columbus, 0. Kphraim Boiler, Proprietor. This House has recently been re-furnished and fitted up in the most comfortable no convenient manner. apm-tlly Coal, &.c. R. E. CHAMPION, Denier In Coal, Coke and Wood. Yard and Office, 2113 North High street, near Railroad Depot. Also, No, 112 South Third Street, nearly opposite Steam Fire Engine jioiika. coinmbua, own. no'n A. BARLOW, AGENT, Dealer In Wood and I'oul. A superior quality of double screened Coal, and the best kind of hard aud seaaoned M ood, prepared for Family use. Ollice aud Van) corner of Third and Gay its, apr29 BUSINESS DIRECTORY. Stone Masons. C.J. THOMPSON At CO., Stone Cutters; Mantles Set, and all kinds of Jobbing done to order, on the shortest notice. No. loo Third street, between Town and Slato. References: W, A. Piatt, W. A. Gill. John Miller, L. Humphrey. mv27 Hook Hind In?. M. C. LILLEY, Book-Binder, and Blank Book Manufacturer, High Street, lietween Broad and Gay Streets, Columbus, O, nolfl Hats and Caps. J. E. RUD19ILL, ' Wholesale and Retail Dealer in Hats, Caps and Furs, No. 70 High street, Columbus, Ohio, 4 doors North American Hotel. ' aprtl Miscellaneous. ' OHIO CULTIVATOR, Edited and Publhihed by Sullivan D. Harris, at Columbns, Ohio, for One Dollar per year. ap'23 WORTIIINGTON OMNIBUS LINE. S. L. Paramoro, Proprietor. Leavet Columbus lor Worth-Ingtnn at 4 o'clock, P. M. Loaves Worthington at 9 o'clock, A.M. Headquarters, Buckeye House, apr22 SCHMIDT X HOFFMAN'S Lager Beer Brewery, Cleveland, Ohio. I. Llndenberg, Agent, Columbus, High street, No. 134. my24-d.'lm1 T. W. TALLMADGE, t Beal Estate Agent. Office Amlws' Building, DJIgh street. All kinds of Keul Estate bought and sold on commission. Lands for sale or located in all the Western States. Missouri graduated html, properly located, for tale very cheap, apriil THEODORE COMSTOCK, Dealer In Shingles, Lath and Lumlier of all kinds. A good supply of Flooring and Celling always on hand. Head of the Canal, Columbus, Ohio api-21 WM. L. HEYL. Justice of the Peam and Notary Public, Partont't New Building, corner of Town and High sis., Columbus, Ohio. Will promptly attend to all business intrusted to hit care. my9 C. W. KENT 4c SON, Intelligence Office, No. 3 Southeast corner High and Rich streets. 0. W. Kent will also attend to sales at Auction, Beal Estate,' Furniture, Horses, Buggies and other property that may be consigned to his rare at a moderate per centage. Wants ( Girls to do House Work, 2 Gardeners, 4 men for private families, 2 Boys, 1 small house, or 4 rooms, 1 good Family Horse, 1 second hand Buggy, 1 Pastry Cook, 1 general Cook, 1 Cow and Cal', 1 light Spring Wagon, I Seamstross, 1 Wet Num. Also houses for rent and to rent. .I'i21 - HARDWARE. NEW HARDWARE STORE, At No. HI, Johnson Rlock, HIGH ST. COTiXJ3VrBXJS, O. J. S. ABBOTT & SON A RE NOW OPENING A FULL STOCK j. of HARDWARE in the Johnson Block, to which they Invite the attention of their friends and customers, and all in want of any thiug In the way of Jarduwt. fe28d A Sure Wayto Get Rich! Rria 1 Mind your own Business. RtiL 2 Work hard and " freeie to It." Buli 3 Keep working still harder, and yon '11 succeed. STOVES AND HARDWARE. STOVES AIM D HARDWARE. STOVES AND HARDWARE. STOVES AND HARDWARE. STOVES AND HARDWARE. , STOVES AND HARDWARE. ' Cheap for Cash ! , Cheap for Cash ! Cheap for Cash ! Cheap for Cash cwlR k gC0TT . ST. CLAIR A SCOTT. ST. CLAIR A SCOTT. 271 South High Street, Columbus. apll 8-df w NEW HARDWARE STORE. ' JUST RECEIVED BY "WMs -A.. GILL, No. 30 Worth High St., ONE OF THE LARGEST, AND BEST SELECTED ASSORTMENTS OF EVER OFFERED Iff THIS 01TT. FEMBRACING NEARLY EVERY ARTI-a rle iiniiallv found ill the trude. such as House buildors, furnishings, Brass and Iron Locks, Bolts, Hinges, and Screws, Nails, Spikes, HraUs, Fiiiisinng, caning aim bain Ing Nails, Bell Carriages, Pulls, Cranks sml Springs, Pic turn Nails. Coat. Hat. Wardrobe and Harness Hooks, Win dow Sash, Frencft and American IPisdow Gojm, Glazier's Polnta and Putty, Paints ground in oil and put up In y. lb 1 and 2 lb cans, (very convenient for family use). Alsodry mints In Hulk. Best French Ochre. Oils, Varnishes and Japan Dryers, Asphaltln, Black Japan Varnish Paint and Varnish Brushes, Stencil Brushes, Artists' Tools, Whitewash Heads, Hair, Cloth and Shaving Brushes, Feather Dusters, Counter Brushes, Floor and Shoe Brushes, Block and Hsnd Senilis, Fibre do.. Horse Brushes in gn at variety, and fine quality. Machinists' Tools, Ratchet and Breast Drill Stocks and Drills, Cast Steel Claw and Riveting Hammers, Black Smiths Hand Hammers, Compasses, Trammels, Bevels, Guages, Try Squares, Steel and Iron Squares, Shingling and Lathing Hatchets, Hand, Bench, Broad and Chopping Aos, Carpenters' Slicks, Cast 8tcel Socket Framing, Firmer Morticing and Corner Chisels, Long and Light Faring cntsets in sens or single, u raw-Knives, Carriage Shaves, Hollow and Round Spoke Shaves, Pnoke Trimmers. Shingle Knives, Brirk and Stoni Masons' Trowels. Squares, Lines, Plumbs, Stone Hnmmers, Spirit Levels, Pocket Levels and Glasses, Bench Screws, Wood and Iron, Hand and Bench Vices, Parallel do., Hand anil Foot Adzes, Cross Cut and Circular Saws, Hand, Pannel and Rip Saws, Brass and Steel Back, and Half Back do., Key .1 I. ,1 I 1 tt II. U...... l'..l,l. Unu.a nnA 11 1 1 iioie, I ihioi anil itituiui unii'iic i . wnu ,,. let. Webbs IPruning Saws and Chisels. Horticultural Im lemeiits of every description. Braces and Bitti of all kinds, Cast Steel, Cut and Nnt, Angers, Blued Augers, Cur Builders' Auger Bitts, Cooks Patent Boring Aparatus, Boring .Machines a new and very superior article. Strap Hinges light, Heavy and Extra Heavy, from to 18 Inches long. Hinges and Hooks from 6 to 4(1 Inrhet long. Gate Hooka and Eye. Gain and Shutter Hinge! nnd fastenings, in great variety, Carriage Bolts, Tyre aud Joint Bolts, from Yx Inch to 8 inches, Tree Scrapers, Border-edging Knivi and Shears. Hedge Shears, Pole Pruning Shears, Fruit Gathers, Garden Seed Drills, Shovels and Spades of every description, Polished Steel ami mack, Planters Hoes, C. M. 1 ollslieil, every aescriptlon oi uaroeu i s, j. o., Rakes from 4 to 18 teeth, Potatoo Diggers; Post Hole Toolt In soils or single, Post Hole Angers ami Chisels with Steel Ends, Iron and Poet Rammerx, Tost Hole Soni, Picks, Mattocks, Grubbing Hoes, Pickaxes, Ac, Plain and Polished, warranted Steel Ends and equal to any made. Grind Stones, Berea and Lake Huron, best quality. Grind Stone Hangings plain and with Flanges and Screws, and Friction Boilers Grind Stone Frnmes with Patent Hangings, with stone Ilnng ready for use, (a very superior article, every Farmer.and Mechanic should have ono.) Hoisting Jack Screws, Guns, Single and Double Barrel; some of which are fine Engllh Guns. PIstols.Game Bags. Powder Flasks, Shot Pooches, flags and Bolts, Ely't Cox i, llicKi, ana outer rer-eussion Cans. FISHING TACKLE of every description, among which are llrms Jointed Hods. Miilllnlving and Plain Fishing Reels, Klrbv and Limerick Spring Steel Hooks, all si.cs Sea-Grass, Silk, and Linen Lines, Hooks on Snudei. HOPES AND CORDAGE, nest Manilla Hemp, and .Into Rope, of all tiies from W to 2 inches. Bed Cords, Plow Lines, Clothes Lines, Garden Lines and Reels. Halters ready made, Twines ot all kinds. Best English Blenched Linen Twines, Gilling, Seine, and Net Twinoi, flue Linen and Cotton Colored Twines. Broom Twines, very siiporlor and common do. Wool Twines. Beit quality Shoe Thread, Hemp and Rublier Packing, round and Hat, Rubber. Hose, Conducting, Hvdrant, and Engine. OAK TANNED LEATHER ANDRUBBER BELTING, a good assortment always on hand. Lace, Leather, Belt, Hooks. Punebea and Awls. Iron Wedges and Mania, cis tern and Well Pumps, Well and Pump Chains, Hydraulic Rains. Iron and Wood Well Curias and Pump Tubing, Suction and Forcing Pumps. C. 8. Hay, Straw, Manure and Spading Forks, Square and Round Tine, Sluice Rakoi, Bush and Bill Hooks, House Hand and Door Bells, Silver Plated. Call and Tea Bells. Brass. Conner, Steel and Iron- wire; Brass, Iron and Mineral Caitors of all kinds, Side and Box Coffee Mills, Steelyards, Meat Scale!, Spring Bal-laucet, Ice Scales, and three sizes of Counter Scales of a very superior quality, with polished Brass Bowls and Pans, and Turned Zinc Weights, finely finished and warranted to weigh correct, Bench and Moulding Planes, Sand, Glass, .nil Kmerv minor nnrl cloth. asTra onort. Steel alld Wire, Rat and Mom Traps, Washilaw Oil Stone, and Oonge blips, best quality, Hindustan aud other kinda of Whet-atone and Rubliers. SCYTHES Gait Stoel and Mirror Blade, Corn and Grasi Scythes, Lawn and Bush Scythes, German scythes, sickles, (Ohio nattern. K,.i,lili and German Grass Hooks, Corn Cutlers, Scythe Stone!, Rilles, Ticklers, Brass and Iron r.iirrvmtiilis and Cnrria. a lurim and line assortment of each. CHAINS Log, Rolling, Lock, Traco and Half Trace Breast, coll, well, iiaiteranu tioguuains, u auu tiuu Jack Chain, Cattle-Ties, Ac. FILES AND RASPS A large assortment of every de tcriptlon, warranted Cast Steel, and oi tne oesi quaniy eaenu for cosa. TABLE AND POCKET CUTLERY. I especially In thu atturtinn of all intereated. to mv Stock of Pocket Table Cutlery, and Silver Plated Forks, Table, Desert and Tea Spoone, Butter Knives, Ac, of R0GER8 A BRO S. Manufacture, warranted to be extra noavy, aaociro-riaiea, on irenuinn Albatta. Country Merchant!, Mechanics, and others, are Invited o call and examine my Slock, as I am prepared to ell Wholesale anil lletall. em, a, unoi Columbus, May 6, 18.10. WILLIAM A. (.ILL, ; colum bub, on w, AGRICILTIRAL WAREIIOISE And Seed Store, DEALER IN GENERAL HARDWARE NAILS, GLASS, 8A8H, PUTTY, CORDAGE, Guna, Pitt oil, 'Wood and Willow Ware, Leather and Rubber Belting, Lac Leather, Hose and recking. DoviH TUESDAY MORNING, JULY 20, 1859. Colnmbut Time Tabic. OAlirttLLT 0OKKK0TBD WITH tVrtl CHANOI. Cot.nsiiiut to Cincinnati Leavet. Arrive!, Night Express 2:lfl a. m. 4:10 a. m. No, i express M:a a. m. itwi a. m. No. 2 Express... 2:40 p. m. 12:23 p. m. Mall ... 6:40 p.m. 9:66 p.m. Oomtmsui to Ct.rvr.tAHD Night Passenger Express 4:30 a. m. 1:30 a. m. New York Express 10:20 a. m. :20 a. m. Mall Train 1:00 p. m. :30 p. m, CoLUHnua to Wiikelino i Night Expros 4:26 a. m. 1:3 a. m. Exprett 2:30 p. m. Mall ll:M p. m. 1:30 a. m. Coli'hbus to Pirrsiuaoit, via 8rFUeimi.t, Night Express 4:26 a. m. 1:36 a. m. Exp'ess 12:66 p.m. 8:46 a. m. ColUMnt'! AND INDIANAFOMI Express Hall d-40 a. m. 7:16 p. m. Expres t:4 p. m. 12:20 p. m. Accommodation 6:60 a. m. o.oo p. m. Packet Arrangement!. WML rtRri.r.vir.i.a. eiift.t.frnrifB ana poaTaMMTTIf. ' Leave Columbus Dalh. from foot of Broad itreet, at 1 o'elnrk, p. m. Fare Columbus to Clrcleville, 11.00; to Chillicothe, S2.0O; to Portsmouth, (3.60. For passage apply to Fitch A Bortle, 87 West Broad street. roa tANcASTra ano moan. Leave Columbus on Mondavi and Thursday! of each week, at 6 p. m.. and arrive same day! at 7 a. m. Arrivals and Departures of the Mailt. nrrAimiRM. , Malls for New York fit v. Boston. Albany. Buffalo. Pittsburgh. Philadelphia, Cleveland, Zanesvllla, Wheeling, Washington City, Baltimore, Toledo, Detroit, Dayton, Cincinnati, Indianapolis, St. Louis, Urhana, Spring-Held and Xenla, close daily (Sundays excepted) at 7 p. m. A through mall for New York and Cleveland, closet dally (Sundays excepted) at 11:00 a.m. Malls ror Chicago, Illinois; iiuimque, jowa; unaware, Marlon, Mt. Vernon, Steubenvtlle, Newark, Granville, Worthington, Steubenville and Sandusky Way Mail, close daily (Sundays excepted) at 11:00 a. m. A through Mail for Cincinnati, Springfield and Xenla, closes dally at 4:00 p. m. Cincinnati way Mall closet dally iBunaaya cxoepieu; at 00 p. m. C. C. A 0. way Mail elote! dally (Sundayt excepted) at 11:00 a.m. C O. II. It. way Hail closes daily (Sundays excepted) at 11:00 a. m, Mt. Vernon way Mail closet dally (Sunday! excepted) at 11:00 a.m. East way, over the National Road, close! dally (Sunday! excepted) at 7:00 p. m. Washington C. II. Mail closes on Mondays ana innrs- lavs at 9:00 a. m. ' ' Chill eothe Mull closet dally (Sundays excepted) at 7:00 m. Lancaster Mall closet daily (Sundayt excepted) at 7:00 p. m. ' ' auritaiji. New York, Boston, Pittsburgh and Philadelphia, and al Eastern cities, arrive at 1:30 a. m. Baltimore, Washington City, Zanesville, and Zanetvllls wav, at 2:30 p. m. Cincinnati, Indianapolis, Bt. louis, uayion, to., at :iu a. ra. Cincinnati way at 12:23 pm. April 14, '69. THOMAS MILLER, P. M. Franklin Co. Republican Convention, The voters of Franklin County who are op posed to the administration of James Buchanan, in its pliant and cowardly subserviency to the dictation of slavery; in its base desertion of the rights of naturalized citizens who may fall into the hnndsof European tyranny, and in its profligate and corrupt squandering of the public money upon worthless favorites; and who are opposed to the servility with which its followers, in this free State of Ohio, do whatever dirty work it bids them perform, and the miserable pauizan legislation, and base conspiracies against private character, in the shape of inves tigating committees, with which they afflict the public when in power; are requested to meet at their respective places of holding elections, on Friday, the 2d day of September next, and select delegates to meet in convention in the City Hall, in the city of Columbus, on Saturday, tlu; 3d of September, At 11 o'clock A. M., to noniinnte candidates for the various county offices to be filled at the ensuing October election. Each Township and Ward will be entitled to one vote for each forty voles given to Judge Feck at the last October election, and one additional delegate for each fraction of twenty or over. According to this ratio the following will be the apportionment of delegates: Columbus, 1st Ward 8 Plain 3 Hamilton 4 Mlfllin 3 Washington 3 Madison 7 Blendon 1 Norwich 3 Jefferson 2 Jackson 2 Sharon 4 FrankUn .3 m o 3d 8 " 4th " 8 " 6th 3 Montgomery Township 4 Truro...., 8 Prairie 2 Clinton 2 Pleasant 3 Brown 2 Perry 3 The voters in the townships will meet at four o'clock P. M., and in the Wards in the city of Columbus at eight o clock P. M. GEO. T. 0'HABKA, JOHN J. JANNEY, BOBERT SHIELDS, CHAItI.ESSCAUItITT, wm. McDonald, amasa jones. of Columbus. JAMES K.THOMAS, of Perry township. jAran iti. r i uis, nnaron JOS. HELMIOK, Pleasant " HORTON Hi IWAHD, Prairie " J. H. KEARN, Madison " HENRY UIDEN0UB, Mifflin ". Columbus, June 30, 18.'.9. From the Ashtabula Sentinel. Judge Gholton. Tho Ohio Statrman nnd the papers of that par ty, are very anxious to compel the Kepuhlicans to take the "Rugged Issue," in this election. They insist npon it that Swan was not nomina ted because of his decision and solely because of it. The facts do not sustain this. There were many reasons besides, why he might not, and probably would not have boen nominated. We are very willing, however, to accept the Rugged Issue." And if it will be of any satis faction to the blatesman, we will assure it that whethor the refusal to discharge Bttshncll and Langston worktd the defeat of Judge Swan before the Convention or not, it made his defeat certain before the poople. Enough of Delegates were very free to say that he could not be eiec ted for that very reason. lo come down to the understanding or the Statetman it rendered him unavailable; and the Convention chose to nominate a man who was available. That's the wholo matter in a nut shell. The Republicans tho people of Ohio be hove the Fugitive (slave Act to be unmst, ana "abhorrent to the moral sense of the civilized world." Their Constitution authorizes them to elect their judges and they, like sensible people prefer to elect judges who agree with them on tins subject, i hey surely would not eleot a man De catme he manifested nn independence of their views nnd hit own convictions of nqht and the die tales of humanity; and would therofore proba bly act. against them. Of course they would not re-elect Judge Swan. So far it is true, his d- cision prevented Ins nomination. He pronnoly would not have been nominated because of other reasons, and he ccrlninly could not have been elected because of i hat. This will bo the case of all who concur with him. Slioiit Mistake. Tho Cleveland Democrat gives A report of the welcome of Bushnell at Oberlin which is a pretty fair one. . The editor says that a sympathetic countryman of the crowd took him for Bushnell, and held an umbrella over him and fanned him. This was a very na- tural mistake. The countryman know that Bushnell bad just come out of jail, and the Democrat man always looks that woy. Aihtabula Sentinel. A Big Baby. Liberty township boasts of tho largest bahy in Washington oounty, and Washington county challenges the Stale. Thoohild's name is Isabella Thompson. She will be six years old in September next, is three fret Ion inches high, and considerable over 200 pounds. Her arms between the eldow ond shoulder, measure 17 inches in circumference. Sbo is a womnu in appearance, and as intelligent as ordinary children ofhernge, has a good ear for music, and Is healthy, Where's Barnum? Marietta A'tu-t, ' - ' A Sltht Mlatake. One cool afternoon in the early fall, I Cbes-tor F. I-e Roy, a gentleman, stood on the platform of the Albany depot, watching the procession of passengers just arrived in the Hudson river boat, who defiled past me on their way to the cars. The Boston train, ' by which I had come, waited patiently as steam and fire might, for their leisure, with only occasional and faint snorts of remonstrance at tho delay ; yet still tho joslllng crowd hurried past into the cars, and flitted through them in search of seats; their increasing number at last warned me that I might find it difficult to regain my own, and I followed them. "I beg your pardon, sir." I turned, in obedience to a touch on my arm, and saw a respectable looking negro man before me, who bore tho traveling-bag and shawl, and was, evidently, the attendant of a slender and stylish girl behind him. "Do I speak," ho said, bowine - respectfully, and glancing at the portmanteau I carried, on which my surname was nuitc legible, "do I address sir, Mr. Le Roy?" "That is my name at your service what can I do for you?" "The young lady, Miss Florence Dunard, who was to join you at Albany, at u o clock, this eveningI have charge of her." He turned to the young lady behind him. "This is Mr. Le Roy. Miss." 1 The young lady, whose dark blue eyes had been scanning me, as I could perceive through her blue silk veil, now lifted it with an exquis-itivcly gloved hand, and extended tho other to me, with a charming mixture or frankness ana timidity. "I am very glad to meet you, Mr. Le Roy," said she. "I thought I should know you in a moment, Jenny described you so accurately. How kind it was for you to offer to take charge of me. I hope I shon t trouble you." In the midst of my bewilderment, at thus be' ing addressed by the sweetest voice in the world, I managed to see that I must make a proper re ply, and proceeded lo stammer out what I thought an annroDriate speech, when the servant who had left us for a moment, returned, and I aban doned it unfinished. ' 'Did you see my baggage, Edward? asked his mistress. 'Yes, Miss: it is all on.' 'Then you had better hurry to reach the seven o'clock boat. Good-bye, and tell them you saw me safely off.1 I stood like ono in a dream, while the man handed me two checks for the trunks and endu ed me with the light baggage he had carried; but I was aroused by the young lady's asking me if we had not better secure our seats in the cars', and answered by offering her my arm. In ten minutes we were seated side by side, and trundling out of Albany at a rate that grew fast er and faster. I had now time to reflect, with that lovely foce opposite me, but what was the use. Some strange mistake had undoubtedly happened, and I had evidently been taken for another person of the same name; but how to remedy this now without alarming the innocent young lady in my charge how to find the right man with the right name, among several hundred people and how to transfer her, without an unpleasant scene and explanation, to the care of some ono whose person was no less strange to her than mine. While these thoughts whirled through my head, I happened to encounter those smiling eyes fixed upon me, and their open, unsuspicious gaze, decided me. "1 will not trouulo or distress her, by any knowledge of hor position," I concluded, "but will just do my best to fill the place of the individual she took me for, and conduct her wherever she wished to go, if I can only find where it is!" I turned to her with an affectation of ease, which I was very far from feeling, and said, "it is a long journey." "Do you think so? But it is very pleasant, isn't il? Cousin Jenny enjoyed it so much." "Ahin.lted!" "Why, why, what aqueer man," she said, with a little luugh. "Doesn't she never tell you, as she docs me in all her letters, how happy she is, and that St. Louis is the sweetest place in the world to live in? Dear mel that I Bhould have to tell her husband first. How we shall laugh about it when we get there. So it was St. Louis we were going to, and I was her cousin's husband. I never was so thankful for two pieces of information in my life, "And bow does dear Jenny look? and what is 6he doing? and how is my dear Aunt Bcman? do toll me the news!" "Jenny," said I, mustering courage and words, "is the dearest little wife in the world, you must know, only far too fond of her scamp of a husband. As to her looks, you can't expect mo to say anything, for she always looks lovely to me." "Bravo I" said the pretty girl, with a malicious smile; "but about my dear aunty's rheumat ism?" "Miss, I mean of course, Mrs. Beman, is very well." "Well?" said my fair questioner, regarding me with surprise, "I thought she had not been well for a numbor of years! "I mean well for her," said 1, in some trepi dation; "the air of SU Louis (which I have since learned is of the misty moisty order) has done her a world of good. She is quite a different woman." "1 am very glad," Baid her niece. Sho remained silent for a few moments, and then a gleam of amusement began to dunce in hor bright eyes. "To think," she said, stiddonly turning to mqwith a musical laugh, "that in all this time, you have not once mentioned the baby. I know I gave a violent start and think I turned palo. After I had run the gauntlet of all these questions triumphantly, as I thought, this new danger stared me in the face. How was I ever to describe a baby, who had never noticed one? My courage sank below sero, but in the same proportion the blood rose to my face, and I think my teeth fairly chattered in my head. "Don't bo afraid that I shall not sympathise in your raptures," continued my tormentor, as I almost considered her. "1 am quite prepared to believe anything after Jenny'i letter you Should see now sne cares lor nun. ' "Him! Blessed goodness, then it must be a boyr - "Of course," said I, blushing and stammering, but feeling it imperative to say something, "we considor him the finest fellow in the world; but you might not agree with us, and in order to leave your judgment unbiased, I shall not de scribe him to you." "Ah I but I know just how he looks, for Jenny had no such Bcruples so you may spare your self the trouble or happiness, whatever it is but tell me what you mean to call him?" "We have not decided upon a name," I re plied. , ("Indeed! I thought she intended to give him yours. " The deuce she did?" thought I. "No, one of a name is enough in a family," I answered, The demon of inquisitiveness, that, to my thinkiniA had instigated my companion hereto fore, now censed to possess her, for we talked of various indifferent things, and I had the relief of not being compelled to draw on my imagination at the expense of my conscience, when I gave the particulars of my recent journey from Boston. Yet, I was far from feeling at ease, for every sound or her voice startled me with a dread of fresh questions, necessary, but impossible to be answered, and I felt a guilty flush steaming up my temples, every timo I mot tholookof those beautiful eyes. It was laie when we slopped for supper, and soon after I saw the dark fringes of my fair companion's rye drooplong and often, and began to realize that she oughtflo be asleep. I knew perfectly well that it wns my duty to offer her a resting plnoo on my shoulder, but I hardly had courage enough to ask that innocent face to lay on my arm, which was nnt as she thought it, that of a cousin and a married man. Recollecting, however, that it was my duty to make her comfortable, and that I oould scarcely deceive hor more than I had already done, I proffered the usual oivility, She blushed slightly but thanked me, and accepted it by leaning berbcad lightly against my shoulder, and looking up into my eyes with a smile, a aid, "as you are my cousin." Soon after her eyes closed and she slept sweetly and calmly, as if resting in security and peace. I looked down on the beautiful faoe, slightly paled with fatigue, that rested against me, and felt like a villain. 1 dared not touch her with my arm, although the bounding or the cars jostled her very mnch. I sat remorseless until the sleeper settled the matter by slipping forward aud awakening. She opened her eyes instantly and smiled. "It is no use for me to try to sleep with my bonnet on," she said; "for it is very much in the way for me, and I am sure it troubles you." So she removed it, giving me the pretty little toy, with its graceful ribbonds and flowers, to put on the rack above us. I preferred to hold it, telling her it would be safer with me, and after a few objections, she resigned it, being in truth too sleepy to contest tho point; then tying the blue silk veil over her glossy hair she leaned against my shoulder and slept again. This time when the motion began to shake and annoy her, I stifled the re- fironches of my conscience, and pnssing my arm ightly round her slender waist, drew her head upon my breast, where it lay all night. She slept the sleep df innocence, serene and peace ful, but it is needless to say that I could not close my eyes or ease my conscience. 1 could only gaze down on the beautiful, still face, and imagine how it would content me, if she knew what I was, and how I had deceived her; or dreaming more wildly still, reproduced it in a hundred scenes which I had never before paus ed to imagine, as the face, of my wife. I had never loved, unless the butterfly loves of Sara toga and Newport might be so dignified, and still less had I ever dreamed or thought of mar r.ving, even as a possibility or far off contin gency. Never before, I solomnly aver, had seen the woman whom I wished to make my wife never before bad I so longed to call anything my own, as I did that lovely face lying on my heart. No, it was impossible for me to sleep. In the morning we reached Buffalo, and spent the day at Niagara. If 1 had thought her lovely while sleeping, what was she when the light of feeling and expression played over her face, as she eloquently admired the scene before us, or was even more eloquent still. 1 don t think I looked at the cataract as much as I did ather, or thought the one creation more beautiful than the other. She was now quite familiar with me In her innocent way, calling me "cousin Frank," and seeming to take a certain pleasure in my society and protection. It was delightful to be greeted so gladly by her, when I entered thehotel parlor, to have her come from the lonely seat where she had been waiting, not unobserved or unnoticed, to receive me to have her hang on my arm look up into my face tell me all her little adventures alone, (how long it seemed to me) while every word, look and smile seemed doubly dear to me, because I knew the precarious tenure by which I hold my right to them. She busied herself, too, while I was gone out, with our joint baggage, and rumaging all over her trunks to find a box which I had expressed a desire to see. She mended my gloves, sowed the band on my traveling enp, and found my cigar case whenever I had lost it, which was about twenty times a day, while she scolded me for the carelessness which she declared al most equaled her own. Long ago she had given over into my possession her elegant little port-monnaie, "with all the money in it, which sho was sure she would lose, as she could never keep anything," and as she had ordered me to take out all that was wanted for her traveling expenses, 1 opened it with trembling hands when I was alone, and examined us conients, There were, besides all the bank bills with Inch she had probably been furnished for her journey, nnd which, with pious care,she had packed into tho smallest possible compass, as much gold as her pretty toy could carry, a tiny pearl ring too small to lit any hngers but hers which 1 am afraid I kissed a card with her name on it, and a memorandum in a pretty hand "No Olive street, St. Louis," which as I rightly conjectured, was the residence of her cousin Jenny whose husband I was; a very fortunate discovery for me. Indeed, thus far, I had not found the way of the transgressor hard, in external circumstances, at least, and when with her I forgot everything but her grace and beauty, and my firm resolution to be no more to her than her cousin should be; but out df her charmed presence my conscience made me miserable. I am afraid I must sometime have betrayed the conflicts of fooling I had, by my manner; but when I was reserved and ceremonious with her, she always resonted it, and begged me so be-witchingly not to treat her so, and to oallhcr by hor sweet name 'Florence,' that had I dreamed as much as I longed to do, I could not have refused her. But the thought that I was not what she thought me, but an impostor, of whom, after our connection had ceased, and she had discovered the deception practiced upon her, she could think or remember nothing that would not cause unmerited self-reproach and mortification, all innocent and trusting as she was, this reflection, more than any other, I ooufess, and the knowledge of the estimation in which she would forever hold me, nftor my imposition was discovered, agonized me, and I would have given all I possessed to own it (o her and leave her sight at once, though the thought of never seeing her more was drcadtul. Hut thai could not do. At last wo reached St. Louis. Do I Bay "at last?" When the sight of those spires and gables warned me that my brief dream of happiness was over, and that the remorseful reflections I had been staving off so long, were now to commence in earnest, the thought of the coming banishment from Floronce was dreadful to me, and the time seemed to fly on lightning wings as itdrew near. She was all gayety, and wns astonished at my Badpcss and absence of mind when so near home nnd Jenny, and when we entered the carriage that was to convey us to our destination, I bad half a mind to take a cowardly flight rather than encounter the scorn and disappointment of those blue eyes; but I mustered courage and followed her in, giving the address found in the portmonnaie; which fortunately was the right one, to the driver. "Almost home I" said she t urning her bright face towards me we were rattling up the street and my time was short "how can you be bo cold and quiet?" "Because, Miss Florence," I answered, "the time has come in which I must confess to you that I have no more right in the house to which you are hastening than to the name by which you address me, and that my only claim to either, is that of an impostor and deceiver." , She turned her lovely fuoe, wondering and puzzled towards me. Thank Heaven I did not read fear and aver, sion in it. "No right! no claim I" she repeated; "what can you mean , I told her frankly, and fully, the whole truth, nearly ns I bud set it down here, denying nolle ing, and concealing nothing, not even the useless seoret of my love tor her. When the briet reci tal was ended, we both remained silent, but although sho had bidden her faco, I could see that sho trembled violently with shame and ropulsiou. The Bight of her distress was agony to me, and I tried tosny a tew words or apology. "You cannot blame and haie me, Miss Dun ard, more than I hate and blame myself," I said "for the distress I have so unwittingly caused you. Heaven knows that if I accepted the charge of so much innocence ana beauty too lightly, I have heavily atoned since, in having occasioned this Buffering lo you, and my own puuishment is more than 1 oan bear. The coach stopped as I spoke; she turned towards me eagerly, her face bearing traces of tears, and said iu a low voice, "Do not misunderstand me if I was so silent." Tho coachman threw open the door, and Blood walling. I was obliged lo descend and assist her out. I hardly dared to touch that little hand, though it was for the last time, but I watched her graceful figure with lud distress. She was already recognized, for the door wat " thrown open, and a pretty woman followed by fine looking black whiskered gentleman, whom I supposed to be my namesake, rushed down the steps. There were loud exclamations of astonishment and pleasure, a cordial welcome, and some rapid questions to which Florence returned very low and quiet answers, and quickly extricating herself from the confusion, presented me as "Mr. Le Roy, your husband's namesake,-and the gentleman who kindly took charge of me." 1 looked at her face to Bee if she were mocking me, but it was pale and grave. Mrs. Le Roy opened her eyes widely, but wai too well bred to express Burprise,and after introducing me to her husband in the same terms, invited me into the house. - Hardly eonscioui , , of what I did, or of anything except that I was " still in the presence of Florence, from whioh I could not endure to banish myself, I followed them Into a handsome parlor, where sat an old ' lady, whom my conscience told me was the rheu-matio aunt I had cruelly belied. Florence herself presented me to this lady, who was a fixture, and unable to rise from her chair, and, before I could slammer an apology and retire, related, in her own way (how different from mine,) the mistakeby which she had been placed in my care, and the history of our journey, in which il appeared our host, Mr. Le Roy, had been a fellow passen ger. When she had ended, they all crowded about me, warmly expressing thoir thanks for my "kindness and consideration," to my utter bewilderment and surprise, and cordially inviting me to remain with them, and make the acquaintance of my namesake and family. I detached myself from all this unexpected kindness as soon as I could, for 1 fancied I read aversion in the flunhing and paling face and drooping eyes of Florence, and with one last look at her, left the room. A moment after, I felt the touch of a light hand on my arm, and turning, saw, with mute surprise, that she had followed me into the vestibule. "Mr. Le Roy," she said hurriedly, "I cannot let you go away misunderstanding me as I see you do. If I was silent while you so humbly apologized for the noble, generous, and honorable conduct, it was not from anger, believe me, but because I was first too much astonished, afterwards too much moved and grateful to speak. ' I owe you more than I can say, -and should be miserable indeed, if a false shame, which you see has not prevented mytellingyou this, should prevent you from continuing an acquaintance so strangely begun. Trust me, sir, I speak the trulh." I don't know what answer I made, for the re- -' vulsion of feeling was almost too great for words, and the rapture of knowing, as I looked down into that lovely faoe that it was not for the last time, quite took away the little sense I bad remaining. If you want to know how I felt, ask a man , who is going to be hung, how he would feel to be reprieved. Well, how time flics. It certainly doei not teem five years since all this happened, yet cousin Jenny (my cousin Jenny now) so bitterly reproaches us in her last letter, for not visiting her in all that timo, we have again undertaken the journey, but under different auspices, since ; Florence is Florence Dundard nomore, and sleeps upon my arm in the cars no more blushingly, but with the confidence of a wifo of nearly five years standing, and I registered our names on the hotel books, as "Mr. and Mrs. Le Roy," and bless my lucky stars as I read it over. Even while I write, Florence, lovelier than ever, as I think, makes a grand pretense of arranging our baggage at the hotel where we stop, (and which has reminded me by past transactions to write down this story) or comes leaning over me to call me "dear Chester," instead of "dear cousin Frank," as five years before, and to scold me for bciiv; so stupid as to sit and write, in-stetid of talking with her. Was ever a man bo liajjjiy in a "Slight Mistake?" Wool Purchased In Bacyrut th.lt Beaton. We have taken the trouble to ascertain the amount of wool purchased in Bucyrus this season. Me could not arrive at the amount with accuracy, as many growers have control-ed the wool and have not yet weighed and de- , livered it. Four buyers have purchased two, hundred and seventy-five thousand pounds. In addition to these there are several small buyers who have probably purchased twenty-five thousand pounds, making in all three hun--dred thousand pounds. The prices paid will average forty-five cents, about eight cents higher' than last year, which makes the enormous sura' of one hundred and thirty-five thousand dollars distributed among the farmer ' in Crawford county, for wool alone. There is yet considerable to bo delivered which will run the figures up. No other town in this part of the State can make as large a showing. Bucyrut Journal. A Decided Sell. Some wags in California circulated a report, for the benefit of the Mexicans, to the effeot that Horace Greeloy was crossing the plains at the head of a band of filibusters, for the purpose of , invading and conquering Mexico. This report got to the ears of the commander of Mnzatlan, who instantly issued a proclamation, of which the following is a part: "One Horace Greeley, a most diabolical, blood thirsty and unmerciful man worse than the infamous Walker, or even the minions Of Mira- mon a man whose very name struck dread to the hearts of thousands in the United States, so many were his crimes and bo terrible was hi conduct is now at the head of tho most extensive band of fillibusters ever collected, and on his way to Mexico!" Among those who went to the falls the other day, to see Blondin roll the wheelbarrow over the rope, was a Rochester physician who was determined to see all that others saw, and as much more as he could. Upon his return he deolared that the Frenchman not only pushed the barrow across the river on the rope, but that he actually, in returning, took up the rope, as he went along, and wheeled it upou the bank. Some of the bystanders had doubts as to the correctness of the narration, when the narrator expressing an indifferent opinion of their intellects, assured them that taking up the rope in the wheelbarrow was was no great feat, but cutting off the guy with hi jack-knife as be came to them, bothered him some ! Ohio White Sulphur Springs, ra TUB CLEVELAND, COLUMBUS & CINCINNATI RAILROAD, To Lewis' Centre Station. 1)ERS09IS VISITING THE SPRINGS chii leave Columbus at 4 If l A. M , and 1:10 V. M., dully (Mundayt excepted) fur l-enV Centre Station, which ii ulniated aiitmn niilet north of Colunibiw, on the C. 0. A U. K. Knnd, and tlx miltu eiiat nf tlm "prinftii. For the acctimmodation f permm- wl-hlng ti tnend in Sabbath at tbe Spring, the niirht freight leaving Uulunibnt at S:30 P. M , on ba.urday, will leavo paatengart at Ltult' Centre Button. HBTCBNISO. Cincinnati Iitprettwlll itnp for panimirerl going tonth, at Lowm' On to Ktatinn, at 8:00 A. M., on MONDAY HtlKNlNflS ONLY, arriving In Unlumbua at 8:30 A. M. Tha Mnll train will atop dally at 4:6s P. M arriving la Columbus at A:W P, M. Mraan. LEWIS WOOD will hart carrlaget In read I . naai at all ttmna to convey ttaaaenKert between tht oart and Pprlnua. I'aaaengera can r ly upon bring takes to tha fiprlnga promptly nn arrival of trains. Tbacllitenaof Ooliiinhnt will flud thttth motteonva-nl nt way tn gn to the Snrlnira. Ticket! will b told during theaeaann at iweny-flw Kmtt for the round trip Columbus to Lewit' Centre and bark. Kor further information and tickets, Inquire at the tic kat office In tht I), pot. JAM KS PATTlUtSON, Agent. Columbus, June 21. 1W Ju2l.d:im CARPET S . WE Alt E NOW OPENING TUB LARGEST and best assorted stock of American and Kiierllfth Carpet) Kver brought to thla nmrket, bli h will he sold at prlret tndufy competition. Call at STUNK, (J UAKKA CO.,' Owynne Block, and tee. 1 !HB FINK.HT KRENC11 CASSIMKKKS FOR PANTS Mew Merchant Tailoring Eitablitliniwt, Ho. 21 High 81. |
Format | newspapers |
LCCN | sn84024216 |
Reel Number | 10000000021 |
File Name | 0723 |