Daily Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1848), 1859-10-14 page 1 |
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if VOLUME XXIII. COLUMBUS, OHIO. FRIDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 14, 1859. NUMBER 148.- Dki0 9 tat gourunL II rOBLISHKD DAILY, TBI-WKKKLT AND WEEKI-T, BT HENRY D. COOKB - CO. fflce'ln Miller'! BuUillng, No. Ill East Town street. Term Invariably in Advance. Daily, . - ,'ar- By tlie Carrier, per "''i , " ' ct"' . TK.-w.Ktt, - . fS' WKUJIS OF DAltT ADVKIITISINO BY TilliSQUATtB. (THH LINKS OB '' MARK A mUAw Ono snuare 1 year, SIS ou Ono " months, U 0(1 Ono " 8 month, 10 00 Oh A inonthi, 8 00 One square 3 wiwks, Ono ' 3 wooks, 13 M 3 00 1 60 1 00 . 7 60 Ono " 1 week, One "- 8dy, Ono " as.vs, Ono " 1 day. Ono " 2 months, 6 Ml Oiw " 1 month, 60 wkekt.y ADVKIITISINO, kPiT Square, of .WO emi more or Iom, throe weeks ....$t.M r JVr Square, each week in adilitlon 37i PerSqimre, throe months ' Per 8.itaro, "l months " Per Square, one year - .....'ujiu Displayed Advertisements half more than the abort rlAv"rtliioment leaded and placed In the column of Spo-olul Notirm, flVwl.h, tht orrliifir ratn. ... All notices required to he published liy law, lepil rates. , If ordered on the Inside executively after the Unit week, BO ikt cent, more than the alnive rntne; but all such will appear In the Tri-Weekly without charge. IJusino Cnnla, n.it exceeding live lined, per year, lojildo, 12. VI tier lino; outside ti. ... , Notices of meeting, charitable eocletlo, flro companlo, AlveruSwnentc. not nccompunled with written direction will ! lnertod till forbid, and charged accordingly. All Trimnmt AdrertiiiwU miutbtpaid in advance. Till rule will not lie varied from. ' . Under the present system, the dvertlier pnys so much for the space ho occupies, the chiinne ilielng chargeable with the compuiition only. Thl plan,! ow generally adopted. ' BUSINESS DIRECTORY. Dry Goods. JOHN STONE & CO., Wholesale and Retail Uealera in Dry G.wds, Foreign and Domestic, No. 7 Owynne Block, Columbus, Ohio. John Stone. . a Thos. Arnold. lir21 . J. C. CHITTEXOEN. enler In Dry Goods, Boots, Shoes, Hat. and Cup. Exchange Block, 8. High St., Columbus, 0. No. i apr22 ' D. T. WOODBURY CO., Wholesale Dealer in Foreign and Domestic Dry Goods, Groceries, Il.mts and Shoes, No. 6 Gwynne Block, Town If Btr.H-t, Columbus, O. Pr-'g KERSOX, STONE & CO., Hnolesalo and IWnil Doalors In Foreign anil Domestic iirv Goods, No. 1 Gwynne Block, corner of Third and Town streets, Columbus, O. apr.z "iirI.Tni.ll!SCROFT fc CO. Wholesale Dealer In British, French, German and American Dry Goods, Varieties. Boot, and Shoes, and ssncy Goods generally, No. S Gwynne Block, Columbus, Ohio STONE, O'HARRA it, CO., Wholesale and Retail Dealer. In Staple and Fancy Dry Goods, No. 4 Gwynne Block, Town .treet, Columbus, ln. im. " JOHN MH.LER, Wholesale Dealer In Notion., Fancy Goods,, ILMlary, Jew-elrv, and promiscuous Stationery, Blank Books, ftc. Ill Town St., Columbus, 0. ny2-1" R. II. WARE, Wholesale and Rotall Doaler In Ribbon, and Flowers, Bon-t. .! Millinorv Rood, of every descrlpsion, No. t8 Ei"t Town street. mylO Uoots and Shoes. M. , F. PAS8IG. Hannfvtnrcn of Boot and Shoes, in Parson a New Building, Southwest corner of High and Town sts., Columbus, Ohio. fr" W. L. MERCER, t Bticcossor to J. Mauldin, Dealer in Ladies', Men', Mlsws and Children' Boots, Shoe and Gaiters, No.- in Town street. Oolnmbus, Ohio. "P"1 Hooks, Periodicals. RICHARD KENNEDY, Bookseller, Stationer, and General Agent for Periodicals, Newspapers, Ac, 17 Statu treet. Inear tha PosUimce.) Columbus, Ohio. P' , " DON'T UK AD Till ;r..j.M i iui.. i ik, tnhn.nn Hiill.linr: Book.. Stationery, I Wall Taper., Picture., Frames, and anything in our line 1 a cheap as tnecncnposi. "i"-- 1 S-ViTiiil.KV A. CO.. ' Publishers, Booksellers and Stationers. Importers and Denier. In Paper Hangings, Borders and Decorations, v u w;.i c, i.v. an.l gliades. Curtain Bands. Printer's. Binders, and Lithographer. Railroad., Bank and County Officers supplied on the best terms. apit Dentistry. W. WILTSHIRE RILEY, n-RMTTST. T)0OMS IN AMB08' HALL, niGIl STBKKT. TKKTTI IV extracted In a scientific manner, ana sen iur 3 nl'hed that are warranted to please. novltt Attorneys. -T4MF.S M. COAILY. Attorney. Office, Deshler Bulbling, corner High and Town .trcots. Columbus, Ohio. Entrance on Town .troot, next door to Franklin Bank. J- Win. DKNNISON & II. B. CARRINGTON, Attorneys and Counsellor, at Law, Columbus, O. Ollico, Kos. I ami l uaenn uuiioiug. oitwun mii-iiiiuu h- -,. the Law of Patents and Insurance.. mpm lINckV"N.' OLDS. Attnrnev and Counselor at Law, Columlius, 0. Office In Odeon Buibllng, opposite the Stato House. pr22 HORACE WILSON, Attorney at Law. Jilice No. 8. Johnson Building, Colnm bus, Ohio. aprlil-d'im S. W. ANDREWS. Attorney at Law. Olflce No. 3 Johnson Building, High Strict, Columbus, Ohio. novai-illy .TAMES 8. AUSTIN. Attornev at Law and Notary Public, Columbus, Ohio. At Ollico of P. U. A Ja. A. Wilcox, No. 7 South High Street. nov ALLEN U. Till KM AN. Attorney at L.iw, Colnmbus, Ohio. OIBco on High Street between Friend and Mnnnd. ieai S. U. II ANNUM. Attorney at Law, Notary Public, and Commissioner of J'eetls. lienoslllons, c. ior uonoecunu, rei,ii".i,nii and New Yurk, and the Western States and Territoru-s iiin,.llnim Nil n .lnbnson Buililinir. Ilish Street, Co. lumhus, Ohio. Refer, hy permission, to Joseph II. Riley, Columbus, Ohio; Clpporly, Hoover k Co., New York ritv; Chauncey N. Old, Columbiw, 0. Ilalne, Todd & Lytle, Cineinnatl, 0. " Tin Ware, House Furnishing. ARMSTRONG V THOMPSON, Mannfoctureniand Dealer. In Copper, Tin, and Sheet Iron Ware, Cooking, Parlor and Box Stoves, Furnaces, Register., Ventillntor. and Furnishing Hoods, No. 17 Town treet,Columbus, Ohio. Special attention paid to Rooting, Spouting, and Job Work generally apr2S nFISHER, Corner of Rich and Fourth street, Dealet In Stoves, Tin, Copper, Sheet Iron, and Brltnnia Ware. Bird Cages, the finest kind. Particular attention nuid to Spouting and Reeling. mvin Music JOHN 8. PORTER, Teacher of Vocal aud Instrumental Music, can be seen at J. C. Woods'. Music Store, No. II Buekcyo Block. my3 J. C. WOODS, Broad street, Columbus, 0., Agent for Chlckering A Sons' aud II allot, Davis Sc Co' Piano Fortes, Miuon A Hamlin's Melodeons, and dealer In Sheet Musloand musical merchandise. np2;i SELTZER oY WEBSTER. Sole Agent for tho salo of Wm. Knalw A Co'. Piano Fortes, and all kinds of Musical Merchandise, No. IK East Stats Street. Pianos tuned by E. Cornellson. aprg2 Watches, Jewelry. Fill E DR. II A LI) Y, Dealer In Watches, Clocks and Jewelry, No. 1R2, corner of High and walnut st.., Commons, u. All K'nu. nt Jew elry made to order. Also, Watche. and Jewelry cnro fully repaired. ' myfl M. Si. L. KLKEMAN, Wholesale and Retail Dealer, in W atches, Jewelry, Clock, Ac watches, Jewelry, Ac, carelully repaired and warranted. No. ltlfl High at., Columbus, Ohio. my4 R. D. DUNBAR. Watch Maker and Engraver, has for sale Watches, Jewelry, Spectacle, Thormotneters, etc. Agent, also, for Patent Folding Spring Muttres, No. 13S High troot, one door soutn oi uoouulo llouHe. aprz L7LK SO.I' ERE i I x Tson s, Manufacturer of Walclm.. In Fleurler, Swltrerland. Im porters and Denier In Watches, Jewelry, Tool, and Material lor Wutch-Mnkera. Residence Uolumhiit Ohio. apr20 II. !. BAUMUARD, pwelerlst. Stencil Cutter, Plater, and Dealer In Fancy Goods, reriumcry, c, No. inn noum-Kast tiign St., no-twi'on Town and Rich sts., Columlius, Ohio. Watches, Jewelry, Aecordeous. Molodeon. Ac., carefully repaired Stone Masons. C.J. THOMPSON &, CO.. Stone Cutters; Mantles Set, and all kinds of Jobbing done loonier, on the shortest notice. No. 100 Third street Imtween Town and State. Reference: W. A. Piatt, W A. mil, John Miller. I,. Humphrey. my27 Hotels. NEIL HOUSE. . Falling, Proprietor. Dirontly oppn.lt Stat Hons. tUiunbus, Ouln. pr22 BUSINESS DIRECTORY. OotnmlNNlon. GENERAL COMMISSION B1EUCIIANT. E. F. .limning, Commission Morrhant anil Dealer In Korolirn and Doinestle M(itnrs, Tuhacco, Cigars, Soap, Canrik's, Ckeesv, Fluur, Salt, Fish, Ac. I am now ready to receive consliruturuts, r which remittance will be . msdennssl. tiiiml roforenoes given. Warelionm and (Wire, No. Ill K. bnK Bluek, Broad It., Columhin, O, I1UNT1MUTON riTcit. Join) I. noaTi,. FITCH nORTLR, Produce, Forwarding and Commission Merchant.. Ifanu- iHciurer. oi ann gent, lur tne sale oi Hanging hoc Pig Iron, Dealar. in 'lour, Salt, Water Lima, Plaster, Fish, Provisions, aud Dressed Oak, Ash and Poplar Flooring, Sldeiug and Ceiling, Plastorlug Lath, and Sawod, Rived, and Shaved Shingles, Walnut and Cherry Lumber. Ware Rooms, East anil West end. ol Scioto Bridge, Broad Strict. Office S7 West Broad, corner of Scioto street, Columbus, O. Make cash advance, on con .ignmonts of Property for salo In thl. or other Blarket. At our Railroad Warehouse, property I. forwarded fra of Drayago. Proprietor, and Manager, of the Columbus, Chillirothn and Portsmouth Passcngei Packets forming a Trl-Weekly Packet Line between Columbiu, Chillicolbe and Portsmouth leaving Columhu. every Monday, Wednesday and Friday, from foot of Broad St., at 2 o'clock, P. M. Faro Columbus to Clrclovllle.Jl.OO; to Chlllicotha, S2.O0; to Portsmouth, S4. For passage or freight apply to Fitch A Bortle, 87 West Broad Street. Julfi - Karhcrs. ERNST IlEICHERT, Nell House, Columbus, Ohio. Fashionable Hair Dressing and Shaving Saloon.. Hot and Cold Until, at all time roady. - ap2a ' IIEMIV KfKIILF,II, ,. .., (Lata of Phalnn' Kslnhllshinent, N. Y.,l Proprietor of the Aew xork r-ssnionam nrumng, iiair tuiing, mum-poonlng, (lurling and Dressing Saloon. First Building North Nell House, up stnlrs, where satisfaction will be given in all the vnrioifs branches. wptfli Clothing. T. W. CARPENTER . CO.. Wholesnle and Retail Dealer, in Clothing, 101 Town street, (in Oarnenters' Building, opposite the Uwynne Block,) Columbus, Ohio. pr21 M'LEOD D. LEWIS, Merchant Tailor, and Dealer in First Class Ready Made Clothing, and a general vnrletv of r urnishlng Uooiis, No. 12-1 South-High street, Columhu, Ohio. apr21 P. ROSE. Merchant Tailor, Dealer In Gents' Furnishing floods, No. :7 South-High .tract, (in Neil House,) Columbus, Ohio. apr21" Grocers. ' F. A. KHLl.g. Wholesale and Retail Dealer In Omcerle and Produce, Southeast corner of Town and Fourth at., Columbus, 0. Particular attention paid to Consignments of, and order, for, Produce. my8 O. &. T.. flACKVS. Dealer. In Choice Groceries, Fine Cigars, Tobacco, Pure Teas, Spices, Extra Family Hour, wood and Willow Ware, Bird Cages, Ac, No. 1! High St., East side, between Town and Rich "Is.. Columbus, 0. Good, delivered to any part of the city free of charge. mv2 wm. Mcdonald & co., Wholesale and Retail Denier in Family Groceries of cvory description, No. 10ft High street, opposite the Johnson Buibllng, Columbus, Ohio. aprtS" ArcrilANES 4TCO.. Wholesale and Retail Denier in Orocerios, Country Pro- duo. Extra Family Flour, Tess, Wines, Liquors, An. South west corner of High and Friend His., Columbiu, O, aprtK Confectionery. H. L. WI ATT & BRO., Confectionery and Grocery, No. l.'W K. Town street. Ordor. ror turnlsiiing rartins promptly aitenneu 10. wo neai cheap for eash. Give tia a call. rnyft C. II. ZIGLER cto BRO., Ice Cream Saloon. Dealers in Choice Confectioneries. Corner of High and Chapel street.. Pnrtle .upplied to ordor. JyU O. H. LATIMER, No. 236 South High St., between Rich and Friend, Baker, Dealer In Cakes, Crackers, Bread, I rosn oyster., n its, Nut., and Family Groceries; also, Candle, and choice Confectioneries. jvlS Cigars and Tobacco. ti. RANGER . CO.. Impnrtor. and Dealer in Cigar, and Tobacco, No. 77 South lligu .treet, opposite tne uapuoi, unumnus, Ohio. mylfl Hanks. BARTLIT fc SMITH, Banker and denier. In Excliango, Coin, and nnenrrent money. Collections made on all principal cities In tne United State. A-nUn Building, No. 73 South High street. &. Restaurants. C. A. WAGNER. Doaler in Fruits, Preservos, Wiues, Liquors, and Cigar.. Also connected with tho auovo, I. Wagner. Kesianrani, No. 21 East State Street.' aprti riOODALE HOUSE SALOON. John 0'Harra Proprietor. Can supply all customers with anvthini In tho way of Llqnor. or Eatable.. Don't for- gei the place. apr22 Coininerclal Colleges. McCOY'S Commercial College, Carpenter Building, Columbus, 0. The most thorough and practical nusinets-mnn . iouego in tho State, and tho only one in this locality, where, In adilitlon to a complete course in uoo-n,eepiiig, rennmn hip, Ac,, the .tudie. of Mathematic and English Gram' mnr are placed lieforo the student. my!7 Drugs, Medicines. N. B. MARPLE, Wholesale and Retail Denier In Drugs, Medicines, Dye Stufls, Combs, Hniriiea, and Fancy Articlea generally. No. 100 South High st., Columbus, t myc COLUMBUS CITY DRUft STORE. A.J. Sciium.i.f.11 A Son, Wholesale and Retail Druggist., Druirs. Chemicnls. Perfumorios. Patent Medicines, 'Iru ses, Fancy Goods, Paint., Oils, Dye Stud's, Putty, Brushes. Window Glass. School Books, Wines, Liquors Ac, No. 277 South High street, botweon Friend and Mound, Columbus, Ohio. Wholosalo Depot for Swedish Leeches. aprz ROBERTS A SAMUEL, rii.nl. r In Drum. Medicines. Chemicals, Manor for Medl cul nnrnoses. Paint.. Oils. Varnishes, Dyfl Stuffs, Win dow Glass, Perfumery and Fancy Article., Artists' Color. and Brushiw, Water Union, I'aint ana vnrnien urusiie., Trnssos, Supporters, etc. 24 North High .treet, (east side) a few doors north of Broad, Columlius, Ohio, apr22 Coal, &c. R. E. CHAMPION, Dealer In Coal, Coke and Wood. Yard and Office, 23 North High street, near Railroad itepot. Also, no. li South Third Street, nearly opposite Steam Fire Engine House. (Jolumbus, Ohio. no2 A. BARLOW, AGENT, Denier In Wood and Coal. A superior quality of double screened Coal, and the best kind or bard aud seasoned Wood, prepared for Family use. Offlce and Yard corner of Third and Onv ts. npr?0 Manufactures. THE COLUMBUS WOOLEN MANUFACTURING COMPANY Manufacture and Deal In Woolen Goods, Plain and Fancy Cassimeres, Doeskin., Satinet., .lean., Flannels, iilnn-kets and Stocking Yarn, at Wholesale and Retail. Cash paid, or Goods exchanged, for Wool. Mound street, near tho head of tho Canal, Columbiw, Ohio. A.P.Mason, Secretary. Directors A. P. Btono, Prea't.; J. P. Brurk, P. Arnixx, L. Hoater, J. F. Bartllt, apr2l THEODORE COMSTOCK, Manufacturer of Lard Oil, Tallow and Slearina Candle, bend of Canal, Columlius, Ohio. Will pay cash at all time for Lard and Tnllow. apr21 SHOEDINGER. BROWN & EBERLY, Furniture Manufacturers and Dealer in Lumber, Mound street, wot of Canal and next door to Woolen Factory. myl7 J. It. HUGHES. Manufacturer of all kinds of Trunks, Carpet Bags, Vnllses, Wholesale aud Retail, No. M corner of High and Gay Streets, Nell's new Hullillng, columlius, tinio. aprctt e.aTi i77boo"ti T. Manufacturers of Carriage of every description, corner of Third nnd Gay sts., I'uiuuihus, iinio. nprai" Crockery, Glass Ware. J. M. fc W. WEBTWATER, Importers and Dealers in Crockery, China, Glass Ware, Table Cutlorv. Tea Trnv. Table Mats, Looking Glasses, Gas Fixtures, Lamps of all kinds, Fancy Goods, Silver Plated and Britannia w are, mass Biiqacs, so. npren Hardware. JAMES S. ABBOTT, Di aler In all desrrlplions of Hardware anil Cutlery, Nails, Snsh, Glass, House-Builder' Materials, Paints, Oils, Varnishes, Farming and Mechanical tools, Chain Pumps, Wood an 1 Willow Ware, sign or tlie Gilt I'aillocK, no 110 Town st Columbus, Ohio. atirgn Hook lIlutliiiB;. M. C. LILLE V, Bnok-Dlnder, and Blank Book Manufacturer, High Rtreet, between Breed and liny Ntreots, cniumnu. i. nnlH Hats and Caps. J. F.. RUDISILL, Wholesale and Retail Dealer in Hull. Caps snd Furs, No. 70 High street, Columbus, Ullio, doors Korln Ametl can Hotel. , , pr21 BUSINESS DIRECTORY. Iumlier Merchants. THEODORE COMSTOCK, Doaler in Shingle, Lath and Lumber of all kind.. A good supply of Flooring and Celllnp alway. on hand. Head of tha Canal, Columbus, Ohio aprtl ADAMS V FIELD, Lumber Merchants, Dealer In all kind, of Worked Floor-lug, Lumber, Lath and Shingle., corner of Spring and Water Sts., Columbn., Ohio. oct4 Miscellaneous. ' OHIO CULTIVATOR, Edited and Pnhllshed hy Sullivan D. Harris, at Columbus, Ohio, for One Dollar per year. ap23 WORTH fN GTONOMNIBUS LINkT S. L. I'aramore, Proprietor. Leave Columbus tor Worth-Ington at 4 o'clock, P. M. Leave Wortliington at 8 o'clock, A. M. Headquarter., Buckeye Hons. apr22 tTw. TALLMADGE, Real Estats Agent. Ofllco Ambo.' Building, High .treet. All kinds of Real Estate bought and .old on commission. Lands for sale or located in all the Western State. Missouri graduated laml, properly located, for .ale very cheap, apr21 WM. 1.. IIEYL, , Justice of the Toace and Notary Public, Parsons'. New Building, eornorof Town and High.U., Columbus, Ohio. Will promptly attend to all busluea Intrusted to hi. care. my9 C. W. KENT a. SON, Intelligence Olflce, No. 3 Southeast corner High and Rich treet. i C. W. Kent will also attend to sales at Auction, ' Real Estate, Fnmiture, Horses, Buggies and other property that may lie consigned to his care nt a moderate per centago. Want 4 Girls to do House Work, 2 Hardeners, 4 men for private families, 2 Boy., I .mail house, 3 or 4 rooms, 1 good Family Horse, 1 second band Buggy, I Pastry Cook, 1 general Cook, 1 Cow and Calf, 1 light Spring Wagon, 1 Seamstress, 1 Wet Nurse. Also house for rent and to rent. Ju21 HARDWARE. NEW HARDWARE STORE, At No. Ill, Johnson Illock, HIQH ST. COLTTMBTJ-S, - J. S. ABBOTT & SON ARE NOW OPENING A FULL STOCK f of HARDWARE in the Johnon Illock, to which they Invite the attention of their friends and customer, tnd all in want of any thing In tho way of llurdumrt. ' fe2Kd WILLIAM A. GILL, COhVMBVa, OHIO, AGRICILTIIRAL WAREHOUSE And Seed Store, DEALER IS GENERAL HARDVARE, NAILS, GLASS, SASH, PUTTY, CORDAGE, Gun, PUIoIh, Wood and Willow Ware, Leather aud Rubbor Belting, Lace Leather, Hose and Peeking. nov24 NEW HARDWARE STORE. JUST RECEIVED BY "WIVX. -A.. GILL, No. 30 North High St., ONE OF THE LARGEST, AND BEST SELECTED ASSORTMENTS OF EVER OFFERED IN THIS CITY. EMBRACING NEARLY EVERY ARTI-cle usually found in the trade, inch as House builders, furnishings, Bros, and Iron Locks, Bolt, Hinges, and Screws, Nulls, Spikes, Brads, Finishing, Casing and Lathing Nails, Bell Carriages, Pulls, Cranks and Springs, Picture Nails, Coat, Hat, Wardrobe and Harness Hooks, Window Sash, Frenci on-f American Windom (,7i, Glaller'. Points and Putty, Paints ground In oil and put up In y lb I and 2 lb cans, (very convenient Tor family ue). Alsodry paint in Bulk. Best French Ochro, Oils, Varnishes and Japan Drvors, Asphaltln, Black Japnn Varnish Paint and Varnish Brushes, Stencil Brushes, Artists' Tools, Whitewash Heads, Hair, Cloth and Shaving Brushes, Feather Duster, Counter Brushes, Floor and Shi Brashes, Block aud Hand Scrubs, Fibre do., Horse Brushes In great variety, and nnoqnnlltv. Machinists' Tools, Ratchet and Breast Drill Stocks and brills, Cost Steel Claw and Riveting Hammer, Black Smiths Hand Hammers, Oumpasse., Trammels, Bevel, Ouage., Try Squares, Steol nnd Iron Squares, Shingling and Lathing Hatchets, Hand, Bench, Broad and Chopping Axes, Carpenters' Slick., Cast Steel Socket Framing, Firmer Morticing and Corner Chisels, Long and Light Paring Chisels in sett, or single Draw-Knives, Carriage Shaves, Hollow and Round Spoke Shaves, Spoke Trimmers, Shingle Knives, Brick and Stone Masons' Trowel.. Squares, Linos, Plumbs, Stono Hammers, Spirit Levels, Pocket Levels and Olaaws, Bench Screws, Wood nnd Iron, Hand and Bench Vices, Parallel do., Hand and Foot Adze., Cross Cut and Circular Saws, Hand, Pannel and Rip Saws, Bras, and Stool Bark, and Half Back do., Key Hole, Pistol and Round Handle Saws, Webb Saws and Bil-H, Webl Pruning Saw. nnd Chisels, Horticultural Im-lementa of everv description. Brace and Bitt of all kinds, Cast Steel, Cut and Nut, Augers, Blued Angers, Car Builders' Auger Bitts, (looks Patent Boring Aimratus Itnriiur Machines a lie and very .uiierinr ankle. Strap Hinge, light, Heavy and Extra Heavy, from 4 to 18 inrhe long. Hinge ana tlooK. iroinoto w incues long, uaie Honks mid Kves. Gate and Shutter Hinges nnd fasten ings, In great variety, Carriage Bolts, Tyro ami Joint Holt, from Yt Inch to 8 Inches, Treo Scrapers, Border-edging Knives nnd Shears. Hedge Shears, Pole I'rnnlng Shear., Fruit Gathers, Garden Seed Drills, Shovels and Spades of every description, Polished Sleel and Hlack, Planter. Hoe. C. 8. Polished, every description of Garden Tools, C. S., Rakes from to 18 teeth, Potato. Diggers; Post nole Tools in setts or single, Post Hole Auger and Chisels Willi Sloul Ends, Iron and Post Rammers, Pint Hide Spoons, i'leks, Mattock. Grubbing Hoes, Pickaxes, Ac, Plain and Pol ished, warranted Steel End. and equal to any made. Grind Stones, Berea and Lake Hnroii, best quality. Grind Stono Hangings plain aud with mange. anil screws, ana rrtcnon Rollers Grind Sluno Frames with Patent Hangings, with .lone Hung ready for uso, (a very superior article, every Furnior,nnd Mei hanlc should havo one.) Hoisting Jack Screws, Guns, Single nnd Double Barrel; some of which are flue English Gnus. Pistols, Game Bags, Powder Flasks, Shot Pouches, Bags and Bells, Elj'. Cox'., Uiiks.and other Percussion Cups. FISHING TACKLE of every description, among which are Bruis Jointed Rods, Multiplying and Plain Fishing Reels, Klrliy nnd Limerick Spring Steel U sik.,all sixes Sen-Grass, Silk, and Linen Lines, Hooks on Sniidcs. ROPES AND CORDAGE, Best Manilla Hemp, and Jul Rene, of all .ir.es from 14 to 2 incite. Bed Cords, Plow Lines, Clothes Lines, Garden Lines and Reels. Halter, ready made. Twine ot all kinds, Best English Bleached Linen Twines, Gilllng, Selno, and Net Twines, fine Linen and Cotton Colored Twines. Broom Twines, very mtnerior and common do. Wool Twine.. Best quality Shoe Thread, Hemp aud Rubber Packing, round and lint, Rubber Hugo, Conducting, Hydrant, and Engine. OAK. TANNED LEATHER AND niTBBER BELTING, a good assortment always on hand. Lace, Leather, Belt, Hooks, Punclic. and awis. lrun noogesauu unuis, cistern and Well Pumps, Well and Pump Chains, Hydraulic Rnms. Iron and Wood Well Curhs and rump luhlug. Suction and Forcing Pump.. 0. 8. Hay, Straw, Mini lire and Spading Fork, Sqnare and Round Tine, Sluice Bake., Hush and Ulll hooks, liouse liauu anu Moor boiis, ouvor Plated, Call and Tea Bells, Bran, Copper, Steel aud Iron- wire; Bras., Iron and Mineral Castor, of all kinds, Side and Box Coffee Mills, Stoelyards, Meat Scales, Spring lt d lancea, Ice Scales, and throe i.es of Counter Scales of a very superior quality, with polished Britss Bowls and Pan, aud Turned Zinc Weight., finely finished and warranted to weigh correct, Bench and Moulding Planes, Sand, Glnaa, and Emery paper aud cloth, txtra g W, Steel and Wire, Kat and Mouse Traps, vtasnitaw un stone, ann Kongo Slips, best quality, Ilindnatan aud other kind of Wrhet-stone and Rublier. SCYTHES Cast Steel and Mirror Blade, Corn and Grass Scythe, Lawn and Bush Scy tin's, German hey tbes, Sickles, (Ohio pattern,) English and German Grass Hooks, Corn Cutters, Scythe SUmos, Rille., Ticklers, Bras and Iron Currvcombs and Cards, a large and lino assortment of each. CHAINS Log, Rolling, Lock, Trace and Half Trace Breast, Coll, Well, ilnlter aud Dog Chains, Bras, and Iron Jack Chain, oattie-Ties, c. FILES AND RASPS A large assortment of every d. erlption, wnrruntiHl Cast Steel, and of the best quality chenn for CUSA. TABLE AND POCKET CUTLERY. I especially Invito the attention of all interested, to my stock of Pocket and Table Cutlery, and Silver Plated Forks, Table, Desert nnd Tea Spoons, Hotter itntvra, sc., or kiiukkh llltu s. Manufacture, warranted to bo extra heavy, Electro-Plated on genuine Albatta. Country Merchant., Mechanic, and other., are Invited o call and examine my Slock, as I am prepared to ell Wholesale and Retail. WM. A'. GILL Oolnnihus. Muv 6. lK-lo. mvfl At Cost! At Cost! rpHE ENTIRE SUMMER STOCK OF 1 the TOWN STREET SHOE STORE will be closed out at cost In order to make room for FALL AND WINTER GOODS. Ladles' Gaiters worth $1 On selling for Ml cents. Ladies' Gutter, worth tl. 26 selling for 7o cents. Slippers for 30 cents. No. 16 Town Street. ap2nc Jy2fl W. L. MKRCKll. ( TSL x n cv Lnnd.8 ! The Time Is now at Hand ItOn RICHLY PAYING INVESTMENTS X In cholco Kansas 1, and. All the lands not heretofore entered by Millar lit the counties of Lykins, Linn, An derson, Franklin, Douglas, Osage, Shnwuee, Cofl'y, llreck-eurldiie. Wabunsee. Juukson, Brown, Neinuha and Potta wattameare eublect to entry on Warrants alter the 2iith Sentemlier. 1S59. I have nersonnllv examined the largest portion of these lands, and cousider them the best in the Territory. Choice tracts can now be entered near tho tines of Railroads, the construction of which will lie commenced in sixty days from this date. Full descriptions In regard to the surface, soil, water, timber, etc., with spring and streams of clear water, which 1 have personally examined, will b furnished to those for whom I locale. The total expense for locating land warrants, Including my foe and the Land Office fee, Is U4 cent per acre. Parlle wish 'ante wish lory, or toV o. 220 East 1 ctolier Kith. I il.LAND. Ing any information raspectlng the Territory, nav warrants locateo, win can on ine ni no Friend street, Columbus, Ohio, previous to net aniO-dtovtlU1 SAMUEL HuCLKI MERCHANT TAILORS. Great Reduction In Prices of Clothing and Clothing GOODS AT' : ' r . XI. OJS 33' s. HAVING ON HAND A LARGE ASSORT MENTof Goods for Gent's Wear. . and being still anxious to sell, I now offer Goods at cheaper rate than ever. Of Goods of avery grade, and .tyle. adapted to tins prexnt season, I keep a full supply, in connection with my regular Merchant Tailoring Establishment. I have lino assortment of Ready Mode Cluthlug of the beat New York make.. Gentlemen desiring nice Good. and fine work at Cheap rat., will find It to their advantage to give mo a cull, a. I am determined to .ell a. cheap or cheaper than any othor Honao of tho kind in tho city. . Thank, to my Customer and Friends for past favors soliciting a continuance of the same. dec4-dlyo Ju2S P. ROSE. ADAMS STF.WART. S. W. ST1MS0K. Arrival No. 1, for 1859. STEWART & gTIMSON, MERCHANT TAILORS, No. 138 H. High 8t.,'Columhn, OPPOSITE THE GOODALE HOUSE, Havt received fresh snpply of Spring and Summer Goods, COMPRISING CLOTHS, CASSIMERES, Vesting and Shrank Drills, a well as most other articles of men', wear usually kept hy Merchant Tailors. Leaving to othor. the too common practice of blowing and blustering about tho n,ir lil and quahlino their wares, they simply aim to so select their goods, so to employ their skill, and so bestow their care and attention, a to get up aud turn out such garments as they need neither be ashamed to meet, nor in respect to which they need fear public scrutiny. They invite all to call and ex amine their stock. Their charges will lie as low as Is con sistent with good work and moderate profits. Their term. casn. apri C, Breyfoglc, Merchant Tailor, WOULD MOST RESPECTFULLY AN. NOIINCE to the citizen, of Columhu. and vicinity that he ha. opened a new nnd splendid assortment of Spring and Sun.mer Goods, consisting of CLOTHS, FANCY CASSIMERES, VESTINQ3, Ac, all of which I am determined to sell at the present r duced Cash prices. I havo re-engager", myold Cutter, A. B. CHERRIER.W' I. an experienced and skillful Cuttm. I am prepared do the heu vntrk on the moat reasonable terms. Custom Work .elicited. Cutting donn and warranted fit If properly made. C. BREYFOGLE, fin. too uign ni apr20 no27 Opposite United State. Hotel. CAPITAL CITY ARCADE CLOTHING ESTABLISHMENT, No. 83 and 25 High Street, BETWEEN BROAD AND STATE STREETS, Columbus, Ohio. T RESPECTFULLY INFORM MY NU. 1 MEROUS friends and patrons throughout the country, that I am now in receipt of one of the largest and most beautiful stock of Goods I have ever had the pleasure of offering them before, all of which I havebonght for cash, and selected with great care fronr the bast Houses In the East: anil thnne wishing to supply themselves with NEAT ELEGANT AND DURABLE GARMENTS, at extraordinary LOW PRICES, would find it to their ad vantage to give mo a call oerore purcnosing oisewnera. My READY MADE DEPARTMENT is well stocked with ovory article in my line, vie: FINE OVER, DRESS, FROCK AND BUSINESS COATS, OF BEAVER CLOTH, CASSIMERE, ETC.! PANTS OF FRENCH AND NATIVE CASSIMERES. DOESKINS, ETC.; Also a great variety of SILK VELVET, PLUSH, BILK AND SATIN VESTS of the latest fashions. My Gent' Furnishing Department cannot be surpassed by any In the West, and I well stocked with SILK, WOOLEN AND COTTltN DRAWERS, UNDERSHIRTS, SOCKS, NECK AND POCKET HAND KERCHIEFS, GLOVES, SUSPENDERS, and a very su perior lot of LINEN and COTTOH SHIRTS; also, every article that can be found in a first class Gentlemen's Outfitting Establishment. Having an extensive stock for my customers to select from, I am sura to please them, and the advantage I have gotofpnrchiwing fur cash, I can guarantee to sell at least 20 pkr cknt. below RSTABM.iiRD pricrs Et.sr.wiiRRR; therefore, defy all competition. My motto in conducting my business is, quick sales, small profits, and one price at th CAPITAL CITY ARCADE, Four Doort North of Neil ITousf, (adjoining my new Merchant Tailoring Establishment, No. 21 High Street.) MARCUS CHILDS, dec4-dly Proprietor. New Merchant Tailoring Establishment.niOIl ST., NO. 21, (BETWEEN BROAD A STATE STS.,) (Next Door to Capital City Arcade.) ITAKE PLEASURES IN INFORMING the public that 1 have just opened a new Merchant Tai loring Store (mljolning Capital City Arcade Clothing Store) In which I will keep on hand a large and splendid assortment of Cloths, Cassimeres and Vestings; a also Gents' Furnishing Goods of all kinds, all of which I will sell at very low price. Call and examine my stock, before pur chasing elsewhere. M. CHILDS' New Merchant Tailoring Establishment, No 21 High St, fler4 PUBLIC NOTICES. NOTICE TO THE HOLDERS OF THE REAL Estate Bonds issued hy the Columbus, Plana and Indiana Ituilmad Company : Tlnv,e persons who are the balder, of these Bonds, which united In the agreement authorizing the undersigned, a. Trustees, to purchase the land for their benefit, will take notice that six percent, on the par value ot tne iionds held hy each will lie required to bo paid to the Trustee, by the loth of October noxt, towards defraying exponses and purchase. There will be a meeting of the above named class of bondholders In Columbus, at the office of BAKTLKTT A SMITH, at one o'clock, I . M., Octoher 21st, it. k. mm n il, I S. O. BIIECOITNT, ) Trustees. sep27-dtd A. G. CONOVER, J Convict Labor Tor Hire. CI E A LED PROPOSALS WILL BE RE. O CEIVED at the 0 file of the Ohio Penitentiary until Tuesday, November 13, 1850. At 2 o'clock, P. M., for the Labor of from twenty to fifty convicts in this Institution, for five years, commencing any time from November 1, lttoll, to January 1, ISoO, at the option ot tno iiirectnr. Bidder, to specify the kind of work, tho number of men, the probable amount of shop-room needed, and the price p r day for labor. Successful bidders required to give satisfactory security. Shop room furnished and discipline mamtallicil at ine expense oi mo ntnte. Bids hy persons who are not contractors, will Ikj consid ered for any business nut now carried on In the Prison, and from present contractors, tor any business not In con diet with the laws of the Stato, or with contracts now It existence the Directors reserving the right to select inch bills and business as will best promote the Interests of the Inslituliou. For any further Information address this oflice, Columbus, August 13, lbTiU. C. BREYFOGLE, J. D. MORRIS, L. W. BABBITT, A. C. nAINES, JOHN TAYLOR, suis-rftd EDUCATIONAL. LANGUAGES. T BSSONS IN GERMAN, FRENCH, ENG. I j 1.1M1. but In anil Greek, In private as well as In classes, either at the Professor's Room or nt the pupil's residence, bv H I), iiiiaak. rrotessor or banmiatres. AO'WANTen. Six more gentlemen to loin a Class In German wllh th followlnu gentlemen: J. W. Hamilton M. D., R. J. Patterson, M. I)., W. H. Drury, M. D., Henry Z. Gill, M. V. This Class wilt meet either at Dr. Hamilton's, or at Dr Patterson's olllce, over tho Posloflli-e. For terms, etc., aildrosa one of the ('lass, or the Professor, at the Buckuye House. Iep24 MESUAMES CH EGA HA Y D'HEHVILLY'S Hoarding and Day School, FOR Y0UN0 LADIES, No. 1800 Logan Square, Vine St., I'hllada liTADAlUE CIIEGARAY RESPECTFUL' lVl LY informs her friends snd the public In general, that. Iiidenendentlv of her Boarding and Day School, dl reeted by herrolf and her niece, Madumo Provost, In New York, she intends, In connection with her niece, Madame D' ilervilly, opening In Philadelphia, an Institution, on pro. clsoly tho same plan as the ono alnive mentioned. The Prinrlnul will answer applications, and receive via ltors, on and alter the 121 It of September, aud the School will open on the loth. septl4-d4w. Ten Barrels Alcohol 17 OR SALE AT LOWEST MARKET JL price hy ROBERTS SAMUEL, Druggists, declO-dly No. 21 North High Street. FRIDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 14, 1850. Columbn Time Table. CAlKrVtLY CORRECTED WITH ITIKT CHINOS. Golvmsii to Cisoismn Laavs. ' Arrive. Night Express , ,...2:15 a. m. 4:10 a. m. No. 1 Express M a. m. 10:20 a. m. No. 2 Express 2:40 p. m. 12:M) p. m. Mall.... 6:40 p. m. 9:M) p. m. Columbus to Cusvsi.asd. Night Passenger Express 4:30 a. m. 1:30 a. m. New York Express ..1IK2A a. m. 8:110 a, n. Mail Train , 1:10 p. m. S:.W p. m. Columbus to Wukelino Night Express 4:25 a. m. 1:!)6 a. m. Express 2 -W p. m. Mall 12: M p. m. , :30 a. m. Columbus to PirrssvaoH, via Steubunvilli Night Express.,. 4:21) s. m. 1:W a. m. Express VIM p. m, 8:44 a. m. Columbus to Piqva, and Union Express 8:40 a. m. 7:1(1 p. m. Mall 2:46 p. m.; 10:10 a. m. Packet Arrangement. roa otRuLEvii.i.E, ciiillicoths IN roRTSMotrrn, Leave Columbus from foot of Broad street, at 1 o'clock, p. m., on Mondays, Wednesdays snd Fridays, of each woek. Faro Colnmbus to Circlevills, $1.0O; to Chllllco-the, $2.00; to Portsmouth, f.1.60. For passags apply to , Fitch A Dortkt, 87 West Broad atrsst. Arrivals and Departures of the Mall. ' nr.PARTURU. '' Malls for New York City, Boston, Albany, Buffalo, Pittsburgh. Philadelphia, Cleveland, Zanesvllle, Wheel-ing, Washington City, Baltimore, Toledo, Detroit, Dayton, Cincinnati, Indianapolis, St. Louis, Cr liana, Springfield and Xenla, close daily (Sundays excepted) at 7 p. m. A through mail for New York and Cloveland, close dally (Sundays excepted) at 11:011 a. tn. Mail for Chicago, Illinois; Dubuipie, Iowa; Delaware, Marion, Mt. Vernon, Stenbenville, Newark, Granville, Wortliington, Steubenvllle and Sandusky Way Mull, close dally (Sundays excepted) at 11:00 a. m. A through Mull for Cincinnati, SpringSold and Xenla, closes daily at 4:00 p. m. Cincinnati way Mail closes dally (Sundays excepted) at 4:00 p. m. C. 0. A C. way Mall .loses dally (Sundnys excepted) at 11:00 a.m. C. 0. R. R. way Mall closes dally (Sundays excepted) at 11:00. m. Mt. Vernon way Mall closes dally (Sundays excepted) at 11:00 a.m. East way, over the National Road, close dally (Sundays excepted) at 7:00 p. m. Washington 0. U. Mall close on Mondays and Thursdays at D:00 a. m. Chill roth Hall closes daily (Sunday, excepted) at 7:00 p. in. Lancaster Mall closes daily (Sundays excepted) at 7:00 p. m. ARRIVAL. New York, Boston, Pittsburgh and Philadelphia, and al Eastern cities, arrive at 1:30 a. m. Baltimore, Washington City, Zanesvllle, aad Zanesvllle way, at 2:.'10 p. m. Cincinnati, Indianapolis, St. Louis, Dayton, Ac, at 4:10 a. nt. Cincinnati way at 12:23 p m. April 14, '59. THOMAS MILLER, P. M. History of the Broderlck Assassination Why Broderlck must Die. We havo noticed, that during all the campaign whioh terminated in September in California, a number of articlea, in administration Journals, threatening the contingency which has at last arrived, and in one newspaper an individual was referred to (we cannot gay whether Judge Terry or another person) as having been designated as the executioner of David C. Drod- erick. In this connection it may be well to add that the Mr. Per ley who challenged Mr. Broderick at the beginning of the canvass (which challenge he declined) had been the former law partner of Chier Justice Terry, llie reader will perceive, from tho whole history of the last two years, that, so far as Broderick was concerned, it was a foregone conclusion of the Administration that he should be sacri ficed. Their purpose in this respect, unhappily for them, has not been concealed. The manner in which they attempted to involve Stephen A. Douglas in a personal quarrel at the 11 ederol capital is laminar to all men. IDeir outrages upon independent men in the House, who refused to acquiesce, in their abandoned betrayal of principle, are equally notorious. During all of Mr. Broderick I participation in the movement against the Administration on the Territorial question, his friends felt that his life was in constant jeopardy, and when he left for California he seemed to be impressed with the fact that he never would see them again. David C. Broderick has yielded up his life for a sacred principle. If he bad surrendered to the blandishments of the Administration, be might to-day be living among his numerous friends. It was only because he refused to com promise the truth, and to abandon his solemn pledges, that we are now called upon to mourn his untimely death. Thus has closed a pure, beautiful, and stainless life! Thus has fallen the first great martyr to the political principles of the campaign of 1856! We ask the aroli- traitor to those principles if, in bis old age, and in the sunset of his life, ho can feel that his hands are clear of the heart's blood of David C. Broderick? Forney t Preti, Orioin ov Tug Dukl. The fatal meeting be tween Mr. Broderick and Judge Terry had its origin in a political controversy, dating back to last June. During that month, the stato Con vention of the Lccompton democracy of Califor nia was held in Sacramento. Among the prominent leaders in the body was Judge Terry, who desired a renomination for the Supreme Court; but, having received but bd votes, against 141 cast for W. W. Cope, of Amador county, was de feated in Ins attempt, and contented himself with assuming the part of an active wire-pullor aud speech maker. Toward the close of the session, the convention proceeded to the consideration of a series of resolutions relative to tho course of Mr. Broderick in the United States Senate. Judge Terry rose to speak against the adoption of resolutions which should commend the acts of Mr. Broderick, and improved the occasion to launch out in a bitter diatribe against him. He alluded to Mr. Broderick in terms quite the revei'80 of complimentary, depicted his character in repulsive colors, and animadverted upon his career as a politician. The asperity of the conflict between the rival factions of the democracy gave occasion for this denunciation of Mr. Brodorick. Terry still adhered to the Lecomplon Administration wing of the party. Mr. Broderick, following the bold and able course which he had assumed in the Senate in opposition to the Administration, had become the acknowledged leader of thoanli-Lecompton-Douglas pat ty in California. Torry was unsparing in his denunciations of what ho was pleased to term Mr. Broderick's betrayal of the interests of the domooracy. The convention adjourned, and among the reports of its proceedings which found their way to the press was a sketch of Terry s remarks. On the following Monday morning, June 27, the report of Terry's speech foil under the eye of Mr. Broderick, whilo seated at breakfast in the International Hotel, in San Francisco. In close, proximity to mm sai nir. v. w. rcrley, a warm personal friend of Judge Terry. Mr, Broderick, stung by the attack upon him, began to Bpeak in horsh terms of Terry, remarking, in substance, that be (Uroderick) had stood hv Ter ry and assisted him on an occasion when friends were scarce and much needed; that now he was sorry be interfered in his behalf, for he thought it was not a pily that the Vigilance Committee had not dealt Willi him as they had dealt, with others whom they had taken in hand. Terley quickly interposed -a remonstrance againBt Mr. Broderick's speaking in such terms about an absent friend, and finally the Senator turned upon rerley himself, using some offensive ex. pressions towards him. As there were ladies present, Mr. Terlcy wilhdrew, and scnl a hos tile missive to Mr. Broderick by S. H. Brooks, Lecomplon candidate for Stato Comptroller, and upon the arrival that night, on the Sacramento hoat, or Mr. h. J. (;. Kewen, he was substituted tor Mr. Brooks as the friend of Perley. Mr. Brod riok declined positively to fight Mr. I'erley, ana the result was the publication of nn elabor ato correspondence In the San Franoiaco Daily jyanonai. Mr. Broderiek'i declination of Mr. Perloy's challenge was based upon his privilege as a Senator of the United States, but he conveyed an intimation that, at the close of the pending canvass, he would accent an invitation from Judge Terry himself. The letter of Mr. Broderick, deolining Ter ley s challenge, will now be read with a melan choly interest. It was as follows : Sak Fraxcisoo, Wednesday, June 29, '09. D. W, PiRLcr, Esq. Sir Your challenge of tne z7lh instant was banded to me last evening, by Mr. S. H. Brooks. This morning, between 7 and 8 o'clock, one of the servants at my hotel informed me that two gentlemen were below, who desired to know if I had risen. 1 told the servant to say to them that I had. The servant returned with a note, purporting to be signed by Mr. Brooks, informing me that Gen. . J. C. Kewen had arrived, and desiring me to address any answer I designed to your challenge, to Gen. Kewen instead of to Mr. Brooks. . This mode of procedure was so unprecedented, that I had no recourse bat to decline the recognition of any note coining, under the circumstances, by the hand of a servant. Subsequently, Mr. Brooks and Gen. Kewen called on me in person. At this interview, the error committed in sending a note by a servant was corrected. Two days have elapsed since the alloged insult was given. If I had been inclined to recognise your right to demand satisfaction, you have placed it out of ay power to do so, by the publicity you have given the matter. Whon affairs of this kind are to be arranged, it is customary to keep them a secret even from intimate friends. While I have refrained from making mention of the affair, I find it to be the subject of newspaper comment and the theme of public conversation. You knew at the time you were searching for a gentleman to bear the challenge that it would not be accepted. I informed you of the fact at the time the alleged insult was offered in the presence of two gentlemen and in language that could not be misinterpreted. Your own sense of propriety should have taught you that tho positions we relatively occupy are so different as to forbid my acceptance of your challenge. It is but a few days since you made out that you were a subject of Great Britain. The giving or acoepting of a challenge could not, therefore, affect your politioal rights, as you are not a citizen of the United States. For many years, and up to the time of my elevation to the position I now occupy, it is well known that I would not have avoided any issue of the character proposed. If compelled to accept a challenge, it would only bo with a gen tleman holding a position equally elevated and responsible, and there arenocitoumstances that would induoe me even to do this, during the pendency of the present canvass. When I authorized the announcement thatl would addresi tho people of California during the campaign, it was suggested that efforts would be made to force me into difficulties, and I determined to lake no notice of attacks from any source, during the canvass. . If I wore to accept your challenge, there Are probably many other gentlemen who would seek similar opportunities for hostile meetings, for the purpose of accomplishing a political object, or to obtain public notoriety. I cannot afford, at the present time, to descend to a violation of the Constitution and tho State lows to subserve either their or your purposes.Your efforts to give publicity to tho fact that it was your intention to send me a challenge, would justify me in giving a copy of this reply to the public Circumstances will determine my course in this regard. Yours, &e, D. C. BRODERICK. C0RBK9P0NDE.NCI BETWEEN BRODERICK AND TERRY. As the recent hostile meeting between Messrs. Broderick and Terry has attracted much public attontion, and has been the subjoct already of many misstatements in the newspapers, it is deemed nocessary to publish the correspondence between those gentlomen, and the terms on which they met. The papers are given in their chronological order. CALHOUN BENIIAM, . THOMAS HAYES. Oakland, Sept. 8, 1859. Hon. D. C. Broderick Sir; Some two months since, at the publio table of the Inter national Hotel, in Ban Francisco, you saw fit to indulge in cortain remarks oonoerning me, which were offensive in their nature. Before I had heard of the oircumstanoe, your note of the 20th of June, addressed to D. W. Perley, in which you declared that you would not respond to any call of a personal character during the politi cal canvass just concluded, had been published, I have, therefore, not been permitted to take aay notice of those remarks, until the expiration of the limit fixed by yourself. I now take the earliest opportunity to require of you a retrac tion of those remarks. This note will be band ed to you by my friend, Calhoun Benham, Esq., who is acquainted with its contents, and will receive your reply. Signed D. 8. TERRY. San Francisco, Sept. 8, 18o9. Hon. D, C. Broderick Sir: Should yon have occasion to communicate with me sooner than the time agreed upon between us, I will be found at the Metropolitan Hotel. I omitted to leave my address this morning. Very respectfully, your obedient sorvant, (Signed) CALHOUN BENHAM. San Francisco, Sept. 8, 1859. Hon. D. S. Terrt. Sir Your note of Sept, 8th reached me through the hands of Calhoun Benham, Esq. The remarks made by me in the conversation referred to, may be the subject of future misrepresentation, and for obvious reas ons I have to desire you to state what the re marks were that you designate in your note as offensive, and of which you rcquiro from me a retraction. . I remain, etc., D. C. BRODERICK. SANFnANCisco, Sept. 9, 1859. Hon. D. C. Broderick Sir: In reply to your note of this date, I have to sny that the offensive remarks to which I alluded in my com munication, yesterday, are as follows: ' I have heretofore considered and spoken ot him (mysolf) as the only honest man on the uprcme Court Bench, but 1 now tuke it all back" that by implication, reflecting on my personal and official integrity. This is tlie substance of your remarks, as re ported to me. The precise terms, however,' in which such an implication was conveyed, are not important to the question; you yourself can best remember the terms in which you spoke of me on the occasion referred to. What I require is the retraction of any words which were used calculated to reflect on my oharaoter as an officer or a gentleman. I remain your obedient servant, (Signed) D.S.TERRY. Friday. Evenimo, Sept. 9, 1859. Hon. D. S. Terry Sir: Yours of this date has been received. The remarks made by me were occasioned by certain offensive allusions of yours concerning me, made in the Convention at Sacramento, and reported In the Union of June 5th. Upon tho . ...... - j . topio alluded to in your noie oi vnis uaie, my langugn so far as my recoueouon serves me, was as follows: "During Judge Terry's incarceration by the Vieilance Committee, 1 paid two hundred dol lars a week to support, a newspaper in his (your) defense. I have also slated neretolore, that considered him (Judge Terry) the only honest man on the Supremo Bench, but 1 take it all back." You are the judge as to whether this language affords good ground lor ottonse. I remain, &c. (Signed) D. C. BRODERICK. San Francisco, Sept. 9, 1859. Hon. v. u. liRonEBicK dir: rjome months ago you used laneuaga concerning me, offensive in its nature. 1 wailed the lapse of a period of time fixed by yourself, beforo 1 asked repara. lion thereof at your hands. You replied, ask. ing a specification of the language used which I regarded as offensive. In another letter I gave you the specification, and roitorated my demand for a retraction. To this last letter you reply, acknowledging the uso of tbo offensive language Imputed to you, and not making the retraction required. This course on your part; leaves me no alternative but to demand the satisfaction usual among gentlemen, which I accordingly do. Mr. Benham will make the necessary arrangements. Your obedient servant, (Signed) D.B.TERRY. Sa Francisco, Sept. , 1859. , Hon. D. S. Tibet Sir; Your note of the above date has been reoeived at one o'clock A. M., Sopt. 10th. In response to the same, I will refere you to my friend, Hon. J. C. McKibbin, who will make the: satisfactory- arrangement llemanded to your 1 1 er, I remain, &c, (Signed) D. 0. BRODERICK. There was also a long document regarding lorms. The distance was fixed at ten paces. The Pari Dlorfae. A most significant edifice, and. one whose outer appearance is singularly in consonance with all the images that arise in the mind at mention of its name, is the Morgue. On the inorning of our visit there lay on those long ' Used but still senseless slabs of stone, four unclaimed bodies. One was that of a little child, with horribly swelled limbs and distorted featuresevidently at the limit of its allotted time, and yet unrecognized by any loving care; another was an old woman, some three soore years and ten, whose worn and weary limbs at last found rest; and the third was a large, powerfully built man of middle age, and with a frame of iron; and the fourth was a young man of singularly handsome face and delicate figure, whose long, dark hair lay thrown back from his pale, serene fac as if he was only sleeping. He had probably been brought in but an hour or two before. It is a sad place to visit, yet there is a world of solemn meaning in the Morgue. That little, square stone building, in the very heart of Paris, has held the key to thousands of fearful tragedies and sad histories, and has been the resting place of many a broken and betrayed-heart, the last scene in many a career of violence and orime. The exposure of the bodies, else so repulsive to the feelings, answers two hdmirable purposes, which redeem it from much of its painfulness. By the recognition of the body, tho friends of the deceased may claim it for burial, and assure themselves of a fulo which otherwise might have forever remained in uncertainty; and by an involuntary emotion 'many a criminal has betrayed his connection with crime that might else have gone "unwhip-ped of justice." So efficaoious has this system nf detection proved, that officers of justice are ul ways present to watch the countenances and manners of all who come to look at tha dead. They become, through praotios, extremely expert at discovering signs of guilt; and many a earful story is told, which the Morgue has been the means of bringing out of darkness into light. t stands on the small island which was once the ) ity of Paris, and is now only the little heart to the vast and active body and limbs of the im-jnense metropolis. The sacred shadow of the ;rand Cathedral of Notre Dame falls like a man-,le over the hideous Morgue, as if to proteot it )n some degree from a too loathsome dread. It Is well to turn away froa the sad spectacle of j'cath to enter within the portals of that grand rid ohurch; and the picture of those wretched ' jorpses fades away; as we lift our eyes up to its I ifty arches, and hear the solemn but hopeful (ones of its mighty organ peal through the vast . '.rca. A Duelist of the Old School. Amongst the deaths in Paris, to be recorder without being deplored, is that of theonoe-re-nowned duelist Choquart, who died in the hack-)iey coach which was conveying him to the Hospital St. Louis. No one knew whence he came,' nor who were his ancestors, but it was general- ' ly supposed that he must have belonged to one of fhe great families of tmigrei who flod at the time . hf the Revolution; for immediately after the Restoration he was admitted amongst the pages ,'f the Tuileries through the protection of the )uche s de Berry. At the Revolution of 1830 lie was in the Gardes du Corps, and at the dis-lersion of that, body took to literature as the pnly resource to obtain a living. Although the greatest duelist of modern times, Choquart confessed himself singularly unfortunate in his I peculations of this nature, for out of thirty duels lie fought during his life he was worsted nine-. itnd-twenty times, and only once succeeded in wounding his adversary. Numerous are the anecdotes, most of them laughable, which are lold of his belligerent humor. One day, being at tho Cafe des Millo Colonnes, be perceived his opposite neighbor busy in the purusal of tho Comtiiutionncl, a paper to which he always most strongly objected. "Monsieur," said he, bending across the table, and speaking in a voice trembling with rage, "When you have ' done with the "Charivari," "It is the Constitu-tionnel, Monsieur," replied the reader, without lgoking up. Choquart pretended not to have heard, and renewed the question, "Monsieur, when you havo done with the Charivari." "But, sapristi, Monsieur, it is the Constitutionnel, I tell you." Again, did Choquart renew the question, until at length he bawled out, unable longer to contain his fury, and tearing the paper from the hand of the astonished stranger, said, "So you make me out a liar. I lay Charivari, and you answer Constitutionnel. If I tell a lie, we )iad better fight the matter out at once." This time, fighting with pistols, Choquart got hit in the knee, from which he suffered a weakness to the day of his death; and although constantly reminded of his imprudenco by this lameness, and having been likewise soused beneath a pump for fifteen successive mornings by a peace ful, sensioie individual, who refused to ngnt, and treated him in this manner every time he presented himself before him to call him out, yet lie has gone to the grave covered with the scars acquired in this kind of warfare. Letter from rarii. The ihlrt Tree. The accounts of travelers have made us well acquainted with the "Bread Tree" and the "Button Tree," but it remained for the indefatigable Humboldt to discover, in the wilds of South America, a tree which produces ready made shirts. We copy his account of this tree: . We saw on the slope of the Cerra Duida, says M. Humboldt, shirt trees fifty feet high. The Indians out off cylindrical pieces two feet in diameter, from which they peel the red and fibrous bark, without making any longitudinal incision. ' The bark affords them a sort of garment, which resembles sacks of a very coarse texture, and without a seam. The upper opening serves for the head, and two lateral holes are cut to admit the arms. The natives wear these shirts of marinia in the rainy season; they have the form of the ponchoi and ruauot of cotton, which are so common in New Grenada, at ' Quito and in Peru. As in these climates the riches snd beneficence of nature are regarded as t he primary cause of the indolence of the inhabitants, the missionaries do not fail to say, in showing the shirts of marinia "In the forests of the Ornonoko garments are found ready made on the trees." A case in which the sum of fifteen cents is involved, was recently brought before the Police in Claremnnt, N. H., and after learned and able arguments on both sides, the case was deoided against the plaintiff. An appeal was taken lo the Supreme Judicial Court. The action wns brought to rcoover the value of braiding nine woodcock skin whip-lashes. It is stated that the King of Sardinia contemplates conferring the Order of the Annuntiata on thnso French marshals who commanded in the late war. This Order is one of the oldest and most distinguished in Europe, and is generally accorded only to princes. There are in all, at present, only thirty four members. It gives the possessor of it the title of "Cousin to the King," and confers upon him the privilege of sitting near his majesty in all official dinners at Court.
Object Description
Title | Daily Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1848), 1859-10-14 |
Place |
Columbus (Ohio) Franklin County (Ohio) |
Date of Original | 1859-10-14 |
Searchable Date | 1859-10-14 |
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), 1859-10-14 page 1 |
Place |
Columbus (Ohio) Franklin County (Ohio) |
Searchable Date | 1859-10-14 |
Submitting Institution | Ohio History Connection |
Type | Text |
File Size | 5195.69KB |
Full Text | if VOLUME XXIII. COLUMBUS, OHIO. FRIDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 14, 1859. NUMBER 148.- Dki0 9 tat gourunL II rOBLISHKD DAILY, TBI-WKKKLT AND WEEKI-T, BT HENRY D. COOKB - CO. fflce'ln Miller'! BuUillng, No. Ill East Town street. Term Invariably in Advance. Daily, . - ,'ar- By tlie Carrier, per "''i , " ' ct"' . TK.-w.Ktt, - . fS' WKUJIS OF DAltT ADVKIITISINO BY TilliSQUATtB. (THH LINKS OB '' MARK A mUAw Ono snuare 1 year, SIS ou Ono " months, U 0(1 Ono " 8 month, 10 00 Oh A inonthi, 8 00 One square 3 wiwks, Ono ' 3 wooks, 13 M 3 00 1 60 1 00 . 7 60 Ono " 1 week, One "- 8dy, Ono " as.vs, Ono " 1 day. Ono " 2 months, 6 Ml Oiw " 1 month, 60 wkekt.y ADVKIITISINO, kPiT Square, of .WO emi more or Iom, throe weeks ....$t.M r JVr Square, each week in adilitlon 37i PerSqimre, throe months ' Per 8.itaro, "l months " Per Square, one year - .....'ujiu Displayed Advertisements half more than the abort rlAv"rtliioment leaded and placed In the column of Spo-olul Notirm, flVwl.h, tht orrliifir ratn. ... All notices required to he published liy law, lepil rates. , If ordered on the Inside executively after the Unit week, BO ikt cent, more than the alnive rntne; but all such will appear In the Tri-Weekly without charge. IJusino Cnnla, n.it exceeding live lined, per year, lojildo, 12. VI tier lino; outside ti. ... , Notices of meeting, charitable eocletlo, flro companlo, AlveruSwnentc. not nccompunled with written direction will ! lnertod till forbid, and charged accordingly. All Trimnmt AdrertiiiwU miutbtpaid in advance. Till rule will not lie varied from. ' . Under the present system, the dvertlier pnys so much for the space ho occupies, the chiinne ilielng chargeable with the compuiition only. Thl plan,! ow generally adopted. ' BUSINESS DIRECTORY. Dry Goods. JOHN STONE & CO., Wholesale and Retail Uealera in Dry G.wds, Foreign and Domestic, No. 7 Owynne Block, Columbus, Ohio. John Stone. . a Thos. Arnold. lir21 . J. C. CHITTEXOEN. enler In Dry Goods, Boots, Shoes, Hat. and Cup. Exchange Block, 8. High St., Columbus, 0. No. i apr22 ' D. T. WOODBURY CO., Wholesale Dealer in Foreign and Domestic Dry Goods, Groceries, Il.mts and Shoes, No. 6 Gwynne Block, Town If Btr.H-t, Columbus, O. Pr-'g KERSOX, STONE & CO., Hnolesalo and IWnil Doalors In Foreign anil Domestic iirv Goods, No. 1 Gwynne Block, corner of Third and Town streets, Columbus, O. apr.z "iirI.Tni.ll!SCROFT fc CO. Wholesale Dealer In British, French, German and American Dry Goods, Varieties. Boot, and Shoes, and ssncy Goods generally, No. S Gwynne Block, Columbus, Ohio STONE, O'HARRA it, CO., Wholesale and Retail Dealer. In Staple and Fancy Dry Goods, No. 4 Gwynne Block, Town .treet, Columbus, ln. im. " JOHN MH.LER, Wholesale Dealer In Notion., Fancy Goods,, ILMlary, Jew-elrv, and promiscuous Stationery, Blank Books, ftc. Ill Town St., Columbus, 0. ny2-1" R. II. WARE, Wholesale and Rotall Doaler In Ribbon, and Flowers, Bon-t. .! Millinorv Rood, of every descrlpsion, No. t8 Ei"t Town street. mylO Uoots and Shoes. M. , F. PAS8IG. Hannfvtnrcn of Boot and Shoes, in Parson a New Building, Southwest corner of High and Town sts., Columbus, Ohio. fr" W. L. MERCER, t Bticcossor to J. Mauldin, Dealer in Ladies', Men', Mlsws and Children' Boots, Shoe and Gaiters, No.- in Town street. Oolnmbus, Ohio. "P"1 Hooks, Periodicals. RICHARD KENNEDY, Bookseller, Stationer, and General Agent for Periodicals, Newspapers, Ac, 17 Statu treet. Inear tha PosUimce.) Columbus, Ohio. P' , " DON'T UK AD Till ;r..j.M i iui.. i ik, tnhn.nn Hiill.linr: Book.. Stationery, I Wall Taper., Picture., Frames, and anything in our line 1 a cheap as tnecncnposi. "i"-- 1 S-ViTiiil.KV A. CO.. ' Publishers, Booksellers and Stationers. Importers and Denier. In Paper Hangings, Borders and Decorations, v u w;.i c, i.v. an.l gliades. Curtain Bands. Printer's. Binders, and Lithographer. Railroad., Bank and County Officers supplied on the best terms. apit Dentistry. W. WILTSHIRE RILEY, n-RMTTST. T)0OMS IN AMB08' HALL, niGIl STBKKT. TKKTTI IV extracted In a scientific manner, ana sen iur 3 nl'hed that are warranted to please. novltt Attorneys. -T4MF.S M. COAILY. Attorney. Office, Deshler Bulbling, corner High and Town .trcots. Columbus, Ohio. Entrance on Town .troot, next door to Franklin Bank. J- Win. DKNNISON & II. B. CARRINGTON, Attorneys and Counsellor, at Law, Columbus, O. Ollico, Kos. I ami l uaenn uuiioiug. oitwun mii-iiiiuu h- -,. the Law of Patents and Insurance.. mpm lINckV"N.' OLDS. Attnrnev and Counselor at Law, Columlius, 0. Office In Odeon Buibllng, opposite the Stato House. pr22 HORACE WILSON, Attorney at Law. Jilice No. 8. Johnson Building, Colnm bus, Ohio. aprlil-d'im S. W. ANDREWS. Attorney at Law. Olflce No. 3 Johnson Building, High Strict, Columbus, Ohio. novai-illy .TAMES 8. AUSTIN. Attornev at Law and Notary Public, Columbus, Ohio. At Ollico of P. U. A Ja. A. Wilcox, No. 7 South High Street. nov ALLEN U. Till KM AN. Attorney at L.iw, Colnmbus, Ohio. OIBco on High Street between Friend and Mnnnd. ieai S. U. II ANNUM. Attorney at Law, Notary Public, and Commissioner of J'eetls. lienoslllons, c. ior uonoecunu, rei,ii".i,nii and New Yurk, and the Western States and Territoru-s iiin,.llnim Nil n .lnbnson Buililinir. Ilish Street, Co. lumhus, Ohio. Refer, hy permission, to Joseph II. Riley, Columbus, Ohio; Clpporly, Hoover k Co., New York ritv; Chauncey N. Old, Columbiw, 0. Ilalne, Todd & Lytle, Cineinnatl, 0. " Tin Ware, House Furnishing. ARMSTRONG V THOMPSON, Mannfoctureniand Dealer. In Copper, Tin, and Sheet Iron Ware, Cooking, Parlor and Box Stoves, Furnaces, Register., Ventillntor. and Furnishing Hoods, No. 17 Town treet,Columbus, Ohio. Special attention paid to Rooting, Spouting, and Job Work generally apr2S nFISHER, Corner of Rich and Fourth street, Dealet In Stoves, Tin, Copper, Sheet Iron, and Brltnnia Ware. Bird Cages, the finest kind. Particular attention nuid to Spouting and Reeling. mvin Music JOHN 8. PORTER, Teacher of Vocal aud Instrumental Music, can be seen at J. C. Woods'. Music Store, No. II Buekcyo Block. my3 J. C. WOODS, Broad street, Columbus, 0., Agent for Chlckering A Sons' aud II allot, Davis Sc Co' Piano Fortes, Miuon A Hamlin's Melodeons, and dealer In Sheet Musloand musical merchandise. np2;i SELTZER oY WEBSTER. Sole Agent for tho salo of Wm. Knalw A Co'. Piano Fortes, and all kinds of Musical Merchandise, No. IK East Stats Street. Pianos tuned by E. Cornellson. aprg2 Watches, Jewelry. Fill E DR. II A LI) Y, Dealer In Watches, Clocks and Jewelry, No. 1R2, corner of High and walnut st.., Commons, u. All K'nu. nt Jew elry made to order. Also, Watche. and Jewelry cnro fully repaired. ' myfl M. Si. L. KLKEMAN, Wholesale and Retail Dealer, in W atches, Jewelry, Clock, Ac watches, Jewelry, Ac, carelully repaired and warranted. No. ltlfl High at., Columbus, Ohio. my4 R. D. DUNBAR. Watch Maker and Engraver, has for sale Watches, Jewelry, Spectacle, Thormotneters, etc. Agent, also, for Patent Folding Spring Muttres, No. 13S High troot, one door soutn oi uoouulo llouHe. aprz L7LK SO.I' ERE i I x Tson s, Manufacturer of Walclm.. In Fleurler, Swltrerland. Im porters and Denier In Watches, Jewelry, Tool, and Material lor Wutch-Mnkera. Residence Uolumhiit Ohio. apr20 II. !. BAUMUARD, pwelerlst. Stencil Cutter, Plater, and Dealer In Fancy Goods, reriumcry, c, No. inn noum-Kast tiign St., no-twi'on Town and Rich sts., Columlius, Ohio. Watches, Jewelry, Aecordeous. Molodeon. Ac., carefully repaired Stone Masons. C.J. THOMPSON &, CO.. Stone Cutters; Mantles Set, and all kinds of Jobbing done loonier, on the shortest notice. No. 100 Third street Imtween Town and State. Reference: W. A. Piatt, W A. mil, John Miller. I,. Humphrey. my27 Hotels. NEIL HOUSE. . Falling, Proprietor. Dirontly oppn.lt Stat Hons. tUiunbus, Ouln. pr22 BUSINESS DIRECTORY. OotnmlNNlon. GENERAL COMMISSION B1EUCIIANT. E. F. .limning, Commission Morrhant anil Dealer In Korolirn and Doinestle M(itnrs, Tuhacco, Cigars, Soap, Canrik's, Ckeesv, Fluur, Salt, Fish, Ac. I am now ready to receive consliruturuts, r which remittance will be . msdennssl. tiiiml roforenoes given. Warelionm and (Wire, No. Ill K. bnK Bluek, Broad It., Columhin, O, I1UNT1MUTON riTcit. Join) I. noaTi,. FITCH nORTLR, Produce, Forwarding and Commission Merchant.. Ifanu- iHciurer. oi ann gent, lur tne sale oi Hanging hoc Pig Iron, Dealar. in 'lour, Salt, Water Lima, Plaster, Fish, Provisions, aud Dressed Oak, Ash and Poplar Flooring, Sldeiug and Ceiling, Plastorlug Lath, and Sawod, Rived, and Shaved Shingles, Walnut and Cherry Lumber. Ware Rooms, East anil West end. ol Scioto Bridge, Broad Strict. Office S7 West Broad, corner of Scioto street, Columbus, O. Make cash advance, on con .ignmonts of Property for salo In thl. or other Blarket. At our Railroad Warehouse, property I. forwarded fra of Drayago. Proprietor, and Manager, of the Columbus, Chillirothn and Portsmouth Passcngei Packets forming a Trl-Weekly Packet Line between Columbiu, Chillicolbe and Portsmouth leaving Columhu. every Monday, Wednesday and Friday, from foot of Broad St., at 2 o'clock, P. M. Faro Columbus to Clrclovllle.Jl.OO; to Chlllicotha, S2.O0; to Portsmouth, S4. For passage or freight apply to Fitch A Bortle, 87 West Broad Street. Julfi - Karhcrs. ERNST IlEICHERT, Nell House, Columbus, Ohio. Fashionable Hair Dressing and Shaving Saloon.. Hot and Cold Until, at all time roady. - ap2a ' IIEMIV KfKIILF,II, ,. .., (Lata of Phalnn' Kslnhllshinent, N. Y.,l Proprietor of the Aew xork r-ssnionam nrumng, iiair tuiing, mum-poonlng, (lurling and Dressing Saloon. First Building North Nell House, up stnlrs, where satisfaction will be given in all the vnrioifs branches. wptfli Clothing. T. W. CARPENTER . CO.. Wholesnle and Retail Dealer, in Clothing, 101 Town street, (in Oarnenters' Building, opposite the Uwynne Block,) Columbus, Ohio. pr21 M'LEOD D. LEWIS, Merchant Tailor, and Dealer in First Class Ready Made Clothing, and a general vnrletv of r urnishlng Uooiis, No. 12-1 South-High street, Columhu, Ohio. apr21 P. ROSE. Merchant Tailor, Dealer In Gents' Furnishing floods, No. :7 South-High .tract, (in Neil House,) Columbus, Ohio. apr21" Grocers. ' F. A. KHLl.g. Wholesale and Retail Dealer In Omcerle and Produce, Southeast corner of Town and Fourth at., Columbus, 0. Particular attention paid to Consignments of, and order, for, Produce. my8 O. &. T.. flACKVS. Dealer. In Choice Groceries, Fine Cigars, Tobacco, Pure Teas, Spices, Extra Family Hour, wood and Willow Ware, Bird Cages, Ac, No. 1! High St., East side, between Town and Rich "Is.. Columbus, 0. Good, delivered to any part of the city free of charge. mv2 wm. Mcdonald & co., Wholesale and Retail Denier in Family Groceries of cvory description, No. 10ft High street, opposite the Johnson Buibllng, Columbus, Ohio. aprtS" ArcrilANES 4TCO.. Wholesale and Retail Denier in Orocerios, Country Pro- duo. Extra Family Flour, Tess, Wines, Liquors, An. South west corner of High and Friend His., Columbiu, O, aprtK Confectionery. H. L. WI ATT & BRO., Confectionery and Grocery, No. l.'W K. Town street. Ordor. ror turnlsiiing rartins promptly aitenneu 10. wo neai cheap for eash. Give tia a call. rnyft C. II. ZIGLER cto BRO., Ice Cream Saloon. Dealers in Choice Confectioneries. Corner of High and Chapel street.. Pnrtle .upplied to ordor. JyU O. H. LATIMER, No. 236 South High St., between Rich and Friend, Baker, Dealer In Cakes, Crackers, Bread, I rosn oyster., n its, Nut., and Family Groceries; also, Candle, and choice Confectioneries. jvlS Cigars and Tobacco. ti. RANGER . CO.. Impnrtor. and Dealer in Cigar, and Tobacco, No. 77 South lligu .treet, opposite tne uapuoi, unumnus, Ohio. mylfl Hanks. BARTLIT fc SMITH, Banker and denier. In Excliango, Coin, and nnenrrent money. Collections made on all principal cities In tne United State. A-nUn Building, No. 73 South High street. &. Restaurants. C. A. WAGNER. Doaler in Fruits, Preservos, Wiues, Liquors, and Cigar.. Also connected with tho auovo, I. Wagner. Kesianrani, No. 21 East State Street.' aprti riOODALE HOUSE SALOON. John 0'Harra Proprietor. Can supply all customers with anvthini In tho way of Llqnor. or Eatable.. Don't for- gei the place. apr22 Coininerclal Colleges. McCOY'S Commercial College, Carpenter Building, Columbus, 0. The most thorough and practical nusinets-mnn . iouego in tho State, and tho only one in this locality, where, In adilitlon to a complete course in uoo-n,eepiiig, rennmn hip, Ac,, the .tudie. of Mathematic and English Gram' mnr are placed lieforo the student. my!7 Drugs, Medicines. N. B. MARPLE, Wholesale and Retail Denier In Drugs, Medicines, Dye Stufls, Combs, Hniriiea, and Fancy Articlea generally. No. 100 South High st., Columbus, t myc COLUMBUS CITY DRUft STORE. A.J. Sciium.i.f.11 A Son, Wholesale and Retail Druggist., Druirs. Chemicnls. Perfumorios. Patent Medicines, 'Iru ses, Fancy Goods, Paint., Oils, Dye Stud's, Putty, Brushes. Window Glass. School Books, Wines, Liquors Ac, No. 277 South High street, botweon Friend and Mound, Columbus, Ohio. Wholosalo Depot for Swedish Leeches. aprz ROBERTS A SAMUEL, rii.nl. r In Drum. Medicines. Chemicals, Manor for Medl cul nnrnoses. Paint.. Oils. Varnishes, Dyfl Stuffs, Win dow Glass, Perfumery and Fancy Article., Artists' Color. and Brushiw, Water Union, I'aint ana vnrnien urusiie., Trnssos, Supporters, etc. 24 North High .treet, (east side) a few doors north of Broad, Columlius, Ohio, apr22 Coal, &c. R. E. CHAMPION, Dealer In Coal, Coke and Wood. Yard and Office, 23 North High street, near Railroad itepot. Also, no. li South Third Street, nearly opposite Steam Fire Engine House. (Jolumbus, Ohio. no2 A. BARLOW, AGENT, Denier In Wood and Coal. A superior quality of double screened Coal, and the best kind or bard aud seasoned Wood, prepared for Family use. Offlce and Yard corner of Third and Onv ts. npr?0 Manufactures. THE COLUMBUS WOOLEN MANUFACTURING COMPANY Manufacture and Deal In Woolen Goods, Plain and Fancy Cassimeres, Doeskin., Satinet., .lean., Flannels, iilnn-kets and Stocking Yarn, at Wholesale and Retail. Cash paid, or Goods exchanged, for Wool. Mound street, near tho head of tho Canal, Columbiw, Ohio. A.P.Mason, Secretary. Directors A. P. Btono, Prea't.; J. P. Brurk, P. Arnixx, L. Hoater, J. F. Bartllt, apr2l THEODORE COMSTOCK, Manufacturer of Lard Oil, Tallow and Slearina Candle, bend of Canal, Columlius, Ohio. Will pay cash at all time for Lard and Tnllow. apr21 SHOEDINGER. BROWN & EBERLY, Furniture Manufacturers and Dealer in Lumber, Mound street, wot of Canal and next door to Woolen Factory. myl7 J. It. HUGHES. Manufacturer of all kinds of Trunks, Carpet Bags, Vnllses, Wholesale aud Retail, No. M corner of High and Gay Streets, Nell's new Hullillng, columlius, tinio. aprctt e.aTi i77boo"ti T. Manufacturers of Carriage of every description, corner of Third nnd Gay sts., I'uiuuihus, iinio. nprai" Crockery, Glass Ware. J. M. fc W. WEBTWATER, Importers and Dealers in Crockery, China, Glass Ware, Table Cutlorv. Tea Trnv. Table Mats, Looking Glasses, Gas Fixtures, Lamps of all kinds, Fancy Goods, Silver Plated and Britannia w are, mass Biiqacs, so. npren Hardware. JAMES S. ABBOTT, Di aler In all desrrlplions of Hardware anil Cutlery, Nails, Snsh, Glass, House-Builder' Materials, Paints, Oils, Varnishes, Farming and Mechanical tools, Chain Pumps, Wood an 1 Willow Ware, sign or tlie Gilt I'aillocK, no 110 Town st Columbus, Ohio. atirgn Hook lIlutliiiB;. M. C. LILLE V, Bnok-Dlnder, and Blank Book Manufacturer, High Rtreet, between Breed and liny Ntreots, cniumnu. i. nnlH Hats and Caps. J. F.. RUDISILL, Wholesale and Retail Dealer in Hull. Caps snd Furs, No. 70 High street, Columbus, Ullio, doors Korln Ametl can Hotel. , , pr21 BUSINESS DIRECTORY. Iumlier Merchants. THEODORE COMSTOCK, Doaler in Shingle, Lath and Lumber of all kind.. A good supply of Flooring and Celllnp alway. on hand. Head of tha Canal, Columbus, Ohio aprtl ADAMS V FIELD, Lumber Merchants, Dealer In all kind, of Worked Floor-lug, Lumber, Lath and Shingle., corner of Spring and Water Sts., Columbn., Ohio. oct4 Miscellaneous. ' OHIO CULTIVATOR, Edited and Pnhllshed hy Sullivan D. Harris, at Columbus, Ohio, for One Dollar per year. ap23 WORTH fN GTONOMNIBUS LINkT S. L. I'aramore, Proprietor. Leave Columbus tor Worth-Ington at 4 o'clock, P. M. Leave Wortliington at 8 o'clock, A. M. Headquarter., Buckeye Hons. apr22 tTw. TALLMADGE, Real Estats Agent. Ofllco Ambo.' Building, High .treet. All kinds of Real Estate bought and .old on commission. Lands for sale or located in all the Western State. Missouri graduated laml, properly located, for .ale very cheap, apr21 WM. 1.. IIEYL, , Justice of the Toace and Notary Public, Parsons'. New Building, eornorof Town and High.U., Columbus, Ohio. Will promptly attend to all busluea Intrusted to hi. care. my9 C. W. KENT a. SON, Intelligence Olflce, No. 3 Southeast corner High and Rich treet. i C. W. Kent will also attend to sales at Auction, ' Real Estate, Fnmiture, Horses, Buggies and other property that may lie consigned to his care nt a moderate per centago. Want 4 Girls to do House Work, 2 Hardeners, 4 men for private families, 2 Boy., I .mail house, 3 or 4 rooms, 1 good Family Horse, 1 second band Buggy, I Pastry Cook, 1 general Cook, 1 Cow and Calf, 1 light Spring Wagon, 1 Seamstress, 1 Wet Nurse. Also house for rent and to rent. Ju21 HARDWARE. NEW HARDWARE STORE, At No. Ill, Johnson Illock, HIQH ST. COLTTMBTJ-S, - J. S. ABBOTT & SON ARE NOW OPENING A FULL STOCK f of HARDWARE in the Johnon Illock, to which they Invite the attention of their friends and customer, tnd all in want of any thing In tho way of llurdumrt. ' fe2Kd WILLIAM A. GILL, COhVMBVa, OHIO, AGRICILTIIRAL WAREHOUSE And Seed Store, DEALER IS GENERAL HARDVARE, NAILS, GLASS, SASH, PUTTY, CORDAGE, Gun, PUIoIh, Wood and Willow Ware, Leather aud Rubbor Belting, Lace Leather, Hose and Peeking. nov24 NEW HARDWARE STORE. JUST RECEIVED BY "WIVX. -A.. GILL, No. 30 North High St., ONE OF THE LARGEST, AND BEST SELECTED ASSORTMENTS OF EVER OFFERED IN THIS CITY. EMBRACING NEARLY EVERY ARTI-cle usually found in the trade, inch as House builders, furnishings, Bros, and Iron Locks, Bolt, Hinges, and Screws, Nulls, Spikes, Brads, Finishing, Casing and Lathing Nails, Bell Carriages, Pulls, Cranks and Springs, Picture Nails, Coat, Hat, Wardrobe and Harness Hooks, Window Sash, Frenci on-f American Windom (,7i, Glaller'. Points and Putty, Paints ground In oil and put up In y lb I and 2 lb cans, (very convenient Tor family ue). Alsodry paint in Bulk. Best French Ochro, Oils, Varnishes and Japan Drvors, Asphaltln, Black Japnn Varnish Paint and Varnish Brushes, Stencil Brushes, Artists' Tools, Whitewash Heads, Hair, Cloth and Shaving Brushes, Feather Duster, Counter Brushes, Floor and Shi Brashes, Block aud Hand Scrubs, Fibre do., Horse Brushes In great variety, and nnoqnnlltv. Machinists' Tools, Ratchet and Breast Drill Stocks and brills, Cost Steel Claw and Riveting Hammer, Black Smiths Hand Hammers, Oumpasse., Trammels, Bevel, Ouage., Try Squares, Steol nnd Iron Squares, Shingling and Lathing Hatchets, Hand, Bench, Broad and Chopping Axes, Carpenters' Slick., Cast Steel Socket Framing, Firmer Morticing and Corner Chisels, Long and Light Paring Chisels in sett, or single Draw-Knives, Carriage Shaves, Hollow and Round Spoke Shaves, Spoke Trimmers, Shingle Knives, Brick and Stone Masons' Trowel.. Squares, Linos, Plumbs, Stono Hammers, Spirit Levels, Pocket Levels and Olaaws, Bench Screws, Wood nnd Iron, Hand and Bench Vices, Parallel do., Hand and Foot Adze., Cross Cut and Circular Saws, Hand, Pannel and Rip Saws, Bras, and Stool Bark, and Half Back do., Key Hole, Pistol and Round Handle Saws, Webb Saws and Bil-H, Webl Pruning Saw. nnd Chisels, Horticultural Im-lementa of everv description. Brace and Bitt of all kinds, Cast Steel, Cut and Nut, Augers, Blued Angers, Car Builders' Auger Bitts, (looks Patent Boring Aimratus Itnriiur Machines a lie and very .uiierinr ankle. Strap Hinge, light, Heavy and Extra Heavy, from 4 to 18 inrhe long. Hinge ana tlooK. iroinoto w incues long, uaie Honks mid Kves. Gate and Shutter Hinges nnd fasten ings, In great variety, Carriage Bolts, Tyro ami Joint Holt, from Yt Inch to 8 Inches, Treo Scrapers, Border-edging Knives nnd Shears. Hedge Shears, Pole I'rnnlng Shear., Fruit Gathers, Garden Seed Drills, Shovels and Spades of every description, Polished Sleel and Hlack, Planter. Hoe. C. 8. Polished, every description of Garden Tools, C. S., Rakes from to 18 teeth, Potato. Diggers; Post nole Tools in setts or single, Post Hole Auger and Chisels Willi Sloul Ends, Iron and Post Rammers, Pint Hide Spoons, i'leks, Mattock. Grubbing Hoes, Pickaxes, Ac, Plain and Pol ished, warranted Steel End. and equal to any made. Grind Stones, Berea and Lake Hnroii, best quality. Grind Stono Hangings plain aud with mange. anil screws, ana rrtcnon Rollers Grind Sluno Frames with Patent Hangings, with .lone Hung ready for uso, (a very superior article, every Furnior,nnd Mei hanlc should havo one.) Hoisting Jack Screws, Guns, Single nnd Double Barrel; some of which are flue English Gnus. Pistols, Game Bags, Powder Flasks, Shot Pouches, Bags and Bells, Elj'. Cox'., Uiiks.and other Percussion Cups. FISHING TACKLE of every description, among which are Bruis Jointed Rods, Multiplying and Plain Fishing Reels, Klrliy nnd Limerick Spring Steel U sik.,all sixes Sen-Grass, Silk, and Linen Lines, Hooks on Sniidcs. ROPES AND CORDAGE, Best Manilla Hemp, and Jul Rene, of all .ir.es from 14 to 2 incite. Bed Cords, Plow Lines, Clothes Lines, Garden Lines and Reels. Halter, ready made. Twine ot all kinds, Best English Bleached Linen Twines, Gilllng, Selno, and Net Twines, fine Linen and Cotton Colored Twines. Broom Twines, very mtnerior and common do. Wool Twine.. Best quality Shoe Thread, Hemp aud Rubber Packing, round and lint, Rubber Hugo, Conducting, Hydrant, and Engine. OAK. TANNED LEATHER AND niTBBER BELTING, a good assortment always on hand. Lace, Leather, Belt, Hooks, Punclic. and awis. lrun noogesauu unuis, cistern and Well Pumps, Well and Pump Chains, Hydraulic Rnms. Iron and Wood Well Curhs and rump luhlug. Suction and Forcing Pump.. 0. 8. Hay, Straw, Mini lire and Spading Fork, Sqnare and Round Tine, Sluice Bake., Hush and Ulll hooks, liouse liauu anu Moor boiis, ouvor Plated, Call and Tea Bells, Bran, Copper, Steel aud Iron- wire; Bras., Iron and Mineral Castor, of all kinds, Side and Box Coffee Mills, Stoelyards, Meat Scales, Spring lt d lancea, Ice Scales, and throe i.es of Counter Scales of a very superior quality, with polished Britss Bowls and Pan, aud Turned Zinc Weight., finely finished and warranted to weigh correct, Bench and Moulding Planes, Sand, Glnaa, and Emery paper aud cloth, txtra g W, Steel and Wire, Kat and Mouse Traps, vtasnitaw un stone, ann Kongo Slips, best quality, Ilindnatan aud other kind of Wrhet-stone and Rublier. SCYTHES Cast Steel and Mirror Blade, Corn and Grass Scythe, Lawn and Bush Scy tin's, German hey tbes, Sickles, (Ohio pattern,) English and German Grass Hooks, Corn Cutters, Scythe SUmos, Rille., Ticklers, Bras and Iron Currvcombs and Cards, a large and lino assortment of each. CHAINS Log, Rolling, Lock, Trace and Half Trace Breast, Coll, Well, ilnlter aud Dog Chains, Bras, and Iron Jack Chain, oattie-Ties, c. FILES AND RASPS A large assortment of every d. erlption, wnrruntiHl Cast Steel, and of the best quality chenn for CUSA. TABLE AND POCKET CUTLERY. I especially Invito the attention of all interested, to my stock of Pocket and Table Cutlery, and Silver Plated Forks, Table, Desert nnd Tea Spoons, Hotter itntvra, sc., or kiiukkh llltu s. Manufacture, warranted to bo extra heavy, Electro-Plated on genuine Albatta. Country Merchant., Mechanic, and other., are Invited o call and examine my Slock, as I am prepared to ell Wholesale and Retail. WM. A'. GILL Oolnnihus. Muv 6. lK-lo. mvfl At Cost! At Cost! rpHE ENTIRE SUMMER STOCK OF 1 the TOWN STREET SHOE STORE will be closed out at cost In order to make room for FALL AND WINTER GOODS. Ladles' Gaiters worth $1 On selling for Ml cents. Ladies' Gutter, worth tl. 26 selling for 7o cents. Slippers for 30 cents. No. 16 Town Street. ap2nc Jy2fl W. L. MKRCKll. ( TSL x n cv Lnnd.8 ! The Time Is now at Hand ItOn RICHLY PAYING INVESTMENTS X In cholco Kansas 1, and. All the lands not heretofore entered by Millar lit the counties of Lykins, Linn, An derson, Franklin, Douglas, Osage, Shnwuee, Cofl'y, llreck-eurldiie. Wabunsee. Juukson, Brown, Neinuha and Potta wattameare eublect to entry on Warrants alter the 2iith Sentemlier. 1S59. I have nersonnllv examined the largest portion of these lands, and cousider them the best in the Territory. Choice tracts can now be entered near tho tines of Railroads, the construction of which will lie commenced in sixty days from this date. Full descriptions In regard to the surface, soil, water, timber, etc., with spring and streams of clear water, which 1 have personally examined, will b furnished to those for whom I locale. The total expense for locating land warrants, Including my foe and the Land Office fee, Is U4 cent per acre. Parlle wish 'ante wish lory, or toV o. 220 East 1 ctolier Kith. I il.LAND. Ing any information raspectlng the Territory, nav warrants locateo, win can on ine ni no Friend street, Columbus, Ohio, previous to net aniO-dtovtlU1 SAMUEL HuCLKI MERCHANT TAILORS. Great Reduction In Prices of Clothing and Clothing GOODS AT' : ' r . XI. OJS 33' s. HAVING ON HAND A LARGE ASSORT MENTof Goods for Gent's Wear. . and being still anxious to sell, I now offer Goods at cheaper rate than ever. Of Goods of avery grade, and .tyle. adapted to tins prexnt season, I keep a full supply, in connection with my regular Merchant Tailoring Establishment. I have lino assortment of Ready Mode Cluthlug of the beat New York make.. Gentlemen desiring nice Good. and fine work at Cheap rat., will find It to their advantage to give mo a cull, a. I am determined to .ell a. cheap or cheaper than any othor Honao of tho kind in tho city. . Thank, to my Customer and Friends for past favors soliciting a continuance of the same. dec4-dlyo Ju2S P. ROSE. ADAMS STF.WART. S. W. ST1MS0K. Arrival No. 1, for 1859. STEWART & gTIMSON, MERCHANT TAILORS, No. 138 H. High 8t.,'Columhn, OPPOSITE THE GOODALE HOUSE, Havt received fresh snpply of Spring and Summer Goods, COMPRISING CLOTHS, CASSIMERES, Vesting and Shrank Drills, a well as most other articles of men', wear usually kept hy Merchant Tailors. Leaving to othor. the too common practice of blowing and blustering about tho n,ir lil and quahlino their wares, they simply aim to so select their goods, so to employ their skill, and so bestow their care and attention, a to get up aud turn out such garments as they need neither be ashamed to meet, nor in respect to which they need fear public scrutiny. They invite all to call and ex amine their stock. Their charges will lie as low as Is con sistent with good work and moderate profits. Their term. casn. apri C, Breyfoglc, Merchant Tailor, WOULD MOST RESPECTFULLY AN. NOIINCE to the citizen, of Columhu. and vicinity that he ha. opened a new nnd splendid assortment of Spring and Sun.mer Goods, consisting of CLOTHS, FANCY CASSIMERES, VESTINQ3, Ac, all of which I am determined to sell at the present r duced Cash prices. I havo re-engager", myold Cutter, A. B. CHERRIER.W' I. an experienced and skillful Cuttm. I am prepared do the heu vntrk on the moat reasonable terms. Custom Work .elicited. Cutting donn and warranted fit If properly made. C. BREYFOGLE, fin. too uign ni apr20 no27 Opposite United State. Hotel. CAPITAL CITY ARCADE CLOTHING ESTABLISHMENT, No. 83 and 25 High Street, BETWEEN BROAD AND STATE STREETS, Columbus, Ohio. T RESPECTFULLY INFORM MY NU. 1 MEROUS friends and patrons throughout the country, that I am now in receipt of one of the largest and most beautiful stock of Goods I have ever had the pleasure of offering them before, all of which I havebonght for cash, and selected with great care fronr the bast Houses In the East: anil thnne wishing to supply themselves with NEAT ELEGANT AND DURABLE GARMENTS, at extraordinary LOW PRICES, would find it to their ad vantage to give mo a call oerore purcnosing oisewnera. My READY MADE DEPARTMENT is well stocked with ovory article in my line, vie: FINE OVER, DRESS, FROCK AND BUSINESS COATS, OF BEAVER CLOTH, CASSIMERE, ETC.! PANTS OF FRENCH AND NATIVE CASSIMERES. DOESKINS, ETC.; Also a great variety of SILK VELVET, PLUSH, BILK AND SATIN VESTS of the latest fashions. My Gent' Furnishing Department cannot be surpassed by any In the West, and I well stocked with SILK, WOOLEN AND COTTltN DRAWERS, UNDERSHIRTS, SOCKS, NECK AND POCKET HAND KERCHIEFS, GLOVES, SUSPENDERS, and a very su perior lot of LINEN and COTTOH SHIRTS; also, every article that can be found in a first class Gentlemen's Outfitting Establishment. Having an extensive stock for my customers to select from, I am sura to please them, and the advantage I have gotofpnrchiwing fur cash, I can guarantee to sell at least 20 pkr cknt. below RSTABM.iiRD pricrs Et.sr.wiiRRR; therefore, defy all competition. My motto in conducting my business is, quick sales, small profits, and one price at th CAPITAL CITY ARCADE, Four Doort North of Neil ITousf, (adjoining my new Merchant Tailoring Establishment, No. 21 High Street.) MARCUS CHILDS, dec4-dly Proprietor. New Merchant Tailoring Establishment.niOIl ST., NO. 21, (BETWEEN BROAD A STATE STS.,) (Next Door to Capital City Arcade.) ITAKE PLEASURES IN INFORMING the public that 1 have just opened a new Merchant Tai loring Store (mljolning Capital City Arcade Clothing Store) In which I will keep on hand a large and splendid assortment of Cloths, Cassimeres and Vestings; a also Gents' Furnishing Goods of all kinds, all of which I will sell at very low price. Call and examine my stock, before pur chasing elsewhere. M. CHILDS' New Merchant Tailoring Establishment, No 21 High St, fler4 PUBLIC NOTICES. NOTICE TO THE HOLDERS OF THE REAL Estate Bonds issued hy the Columbus, Plana and Indiana Ituilmad Company : Tlnv,e persons who are the balder, of these Bonds, which united In the agreement authorizing the undersigned, a. Trustees, to purchase the land for their benefit, will take notice that six percent, on the par value ot tne iionds held hy each will lie required to bo paid to the Trustee, by the loth of October noxt, towards defraying exponses and purchase. There will be a meeting of the above named class of bondholders In Columbus, at the office of BAKTLKTT A SMITH, at one o'clock, I . M., Octoher 21st, it. k. mm n il, I S. O. BIIECOITNT, ) Trustees. sep27-dtd A. G. CONOVER, J Convict Labor Tor Hire. CI E A LED PROPOSALS WILL BE RE. O CEIVED at the 0 file of the Ohio Penitentiary until Tuesday, November 13, 1850. At 2 o'clock, P. M., for the Labor of from twenty to fifty convicts in this Institution, for five years, commencing any time from November 1, lttoll, to January 1, ISoO, at the option ot tno iiirectnr. Bidder, to specify the kind of work, tho number of men, the probable amount of shop-room needed, and the price p r day for labor. Successful bidders required to give satisfactory security. Shop room furnished and discipline mamtallicil at ine expense oi mo ntnte. Bids hy persons who are not contractors, will Ikj consid ered for any business nut now carried on In the Prison, and from present contractors, tor any business not In con diet with the laws of the Stato, or with contracts now It existence the Directors reserving the right to select inch bills and business as will best promote the Interests of the Inslituliou. For any further Information address this oflice, Columbus, August 13, lbTiU. C. BREYFOGLE, J. D. MORRIS, L. W. BABBITT, A. C. nAINES, JOHN TAYLOR, suis-rftd EDUCATIONAL. LANGUAGES. T BSSONS IN GERMAN, FRENCH, ENG. I j 1.1M1. but In anil Greek, In private as well as In classes, either at the Professor's Room or nt the pupil's residence, bv H I), iiiiaak. rrotessor or banmiatres. AO'WANTen. Six more gentlemen to loin a Class In German wllh th followlnu gentlemen: J. W. Hamilton M. D., R. J. Patterson, M. I)., W. H. Drury, M. D., Henry Z. Gill, M. V. This Class wilt meet either at Dr. Hamilton's, or at Dr Patterson's olllce, over tho Posloflli-e. For terms, etc., aildrosa one of the ('lass, or the Professor, at the Buckuye House. Iep24 MESUAMES CH EGA HA Y D'HEHVILLY'S Hoarding and Day School, FOR Y0UN0 LADIES, No. 1800 Logan Square, Vine St., I'hllada liTADAlUE CIIEGARAY RESPECTFUL' lVl LY informs her friends snd the public In general, that. Iiidenendentlv of her Boarding and Day School, dl reeted by herrolf and her niece, Madumo Provost, In New York, she intends, In connection with her niece, Madame D' ilervilly, opening In Philadelphia, an Institution, on pro. clsoly tho same plan as the ono alnive mentioned. The Prinrlnul will answer applications, and receive via ltors, on and alter the 121 It of September, aud the School will open on the loth. septl4-d4w. Ten Barrels Alcohol 17 OR SALE AT LOWEST MARKET JL price hy ROBERTS SAMUEL, Druggists, declO-dly No. 21 North High Street. FRIDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 14, 1850. Columbn Time Table. CAlKrVtLY CORRECTED WITH ITIKT CHINOS. Golvmsii to Cisoismn Laavs. ' Arrive. Night Express , ,...2:15 a. m. 4:10 a. m. No. 1 Express M a. m. 10:20 a. m. No. 2 Express 2:40 p. m. 12:M) p. m. Mall.... 6:40 p. m. 9:M) p. m. Columbus to Cusvsi.asd. Night Passenger Express 4:30 a. m. 1:30 a. m. New York Express ..1IK2A a. m. 8:110 a, n. Mail Train , 1:10 p. m. S:.W p. m. Columbus to Wukelino Night Express 4:25 a. m. 1:!)6 a. m. Express 2 -W p. m. Mall 12: M p. m. , :30 a. m. Columbus to PirrssvaoH, via Steubunvilli Night Express.,. 4:21) s. m. 1:W a. m. Express VIM p. m, 8:44 a. m. Columbus to Piqva, and Union Express 8:40 a. m. 7:1(1 p. m. Mall 2:46 p. m.; 10:10 a. m. Packet Arrangement. roa otRuLEvii.i.E, ciiillicoths IN roRTSMotrrn, Leave Columbus from foot of Broad street, at 1 o'clock, p. m., on Mondays, Wednesdays snd Fridays, of each woek. Faro Colnmbus to Circlevills, $1.0O; to Chllllco-the, $2.00; to Portsmouth, f.1.60. For passags apply to , Fitch A Dortkt, 87 West Broad atrsst. Arrivals and Departures of the Mall. ' nr.PARTURU. '' Malls for New York City, Boston, Albany, Buffalo, Pittsburgh. Philadelphia, Cleveland, Zanesvllle, Wheel-ing, Washington City, Baltimore, Toledo, Detroit, Dayton, Cincinnati, Indianapolis, St. Louis, Cr liana, Springfield and Xenla, close daily (Sundays excepted) at 7 p. m. A through mail for New York and Cloveland, close dally (Sundays excepted) at 11:011 a. tn. Mail for Chicago, Illinois; Dubuipie, Iowa; Delaware, Marion, Mt. Vernon, Stenbenville, Newark, Granville, Wortliington, Steubenvllle and Sandusky Way Mull, close dally (Sundays excepted) at 11:00 a. m. A through Mull for Cincinnati, SpringSold and Xenla, closes daily at 4:00 p. m. Cincinnati way Mail closes dally (Sundays excepted) at 4:00 p. m. C. 0. A C. way Mall .loses dally (Sundnys excepted) at 11:00 a.m. C. 0. R. R. way Mall closes dally (Sundays excepted) at 11:00. m. Mt. Vernon way Mall closes dally (Sundays excepted) at 11:00 a.m. East way, over the National Road, close dally (Sundays excepted) at 7:00 p. m. Washington 0. U. Mall close on Mondays and Thursdays at D:00 a. m. Chill roth Hall closes daily (Sunday, excepted) at 7:00 p. in. Lancaster Mall closes daily (Sundays excepted) at 7:00 p. m. ARRIVAL. New York, Boston, Pittsburgh and Philadelphia, and al Eastern cities, arrive at 1:30 a. m. Baltimore, Washington City, Zanesvllle, aad Zanesvllle way, at 2:.'10 p. m. Cincinnati, Indianapolis, St. Louis, Dayton, Ac, at 4:10 a. nt. Cincinnati way at 12:23 p m. April 14, '59. THOMAS MILLER, P. M. History of the Broderlck Assassination Why Broderlck must Die. We havo noticed, that during all the campaign whioh terminated in September in California, a number of articlea, in administration Journals, threatening the contingency which has at last arrived, and in one newspaper an individual was referred to (we cannot gay whether Judge Terry or another person) as having been designated as the executioner of David C. Drod- erick. In this connection it may be well to add that the Mr. Per ley who challenged Mr. Broderick at the beginning of the canvass (which challenge he declined) had been the former law partner of Chier Justice Terry, llie reader will perceive, from tho whole history of the last two years, that, so far as Broderick was concerned, it was a foregone conclusion of the Administration that he should be sacri ficed. Their purpose in this respect, unhappily for them, has not been concealed. The manner in which they attempted to involve Stephen A. Douglas in a personal quarrel at the 11 ederol capital is laminar to all men. IDeir outrages upon independent men in the House, who refused to acquiesce, in their abandoned betrayal of principle, are equally notorious. During all of Mr. Broderick I participation in the movement against the Administration on the Territorial question, his friends felt that his life was in constant jeopardy, and when he left for California he seemed to be impressed with the fact that he never would see them again. David C. Broderick has yielded up his life for a sacred principle. If he bad surrendered to the blandishments of the Administration, be might to-day be living among his numerous friends. It was only because he refused to com promise the truth, and to abandon his solemn pledges, that we are now called upon to mourn his untimely death. Thus has closed a pure, beautiful, and stainless life! Thus has fallen the first great martyr to the political principles of the campaign of 1856! We ask the aroli- traitor to those principles if, in bis old age, and in the sunset of his life, ho can feel that his hands are clear of the heart's blood of David C. Broderick? Forney t Preti, Orioin ov Tug Dukl. The fatal meeting be tween Mr. Broderick and Judge Terry had its origin in a political controversy, dating back to last June. During that month, the stato Con vention of the Lccompton democracy of Califor nia was held in Sacramento. Among the prominent leaders in the body was Judge Terry, who desired a renomination for the Supreme Court; but, having received but bd votes, against 141 cast for W. W. Cope, of Amador county, was de feated in Ins attempt, and contented himself with assuming the part of an active wire-pullor aud speech maker. Toward the close of the session, the convention proceeded to the consideration of a series of resolutions relative to tho course of Mr. Broderick in the United States Senate. Judge Terry rose to speak against the adoption of resolutions which should commend the acts of Mr. Broderick, and improved the occasion to launch out in a bitter diatribe against him. He alluded to Mr. Broderick in terms quite the revei'80 of complimentary, depicted his character in repulsive colors, and animadverted upon his career as a politician. The asperity of the conflict between the rival factions of the democracy gave occasion for this denunciation of Mr. Brodorick. Terry still adhered to the Lecomplon Administration wing of the party. Mr. Broderick, following the bold and able course which he had assumed in the Senate in opposition to the Administration, had become the acknowledged leader of thoanli-Lecompton-Douglas pat ty in California. Torry was unsparing in his denunciations of what ho was pleased to term Mr. Broderick's betrayal of the interests of the domooracy. The convention adjourned, and among the reports of its proceedings which found their way to the press was a sketch of Terry s remarks. On the following Monday morning, June 27, the report of Terry's speech foil under the eye of Mr. Broderick, whilo seated at breakfast in the International Hotel, in San Francisco. In close, proximity to mm sai nir. v. w. rcrley, a warm personal friend of Judge Terry. Mr, Broderick, stung by the attack upon him, began to Bpeak in horsh terms of Terry, remarking, in substance, that be (Uroderick) had stood hv Ter ry and assisted him on an occasion when friends were scarce and much needed; that now he was sorry be interfered in his behalf, for he thought it was not a pily that the Vigilance Committee had not dealt Willi him as they had dealt, with others whom they had taken in hand. Terley quickly interposed -a remonstrance againBt Mr. Broderick's speaking in such terms about an absent friend, and finally the Senator turned upon rerley himself, using some offensive ex. pressions towards him. As there were ladies present, Mr. Terlcy wilhdrew, and scnl a hos tile missive to Mr. Broderick by S. H. Brooks, Lecomplon candidate for Stato Comptroller, and upon the arrival that night, on the Sacramento hoat, or Mr. h. J. (;. Kewen, he was substituted tor Mr. Brooks as the friend of Perley. Mr. Brod riok declined positively to fight Mr. I'erley, ana the result was the publication of nn elabor ato correspondence In the San Franoiaco Daily jyanonai. Mr. Broderiek'i declination of Mr. Perloy's challenge was based upon his privilege as a Senator of the United States, but he conveyed an intimation that, at the close of the pending canvass, he would accent an invitation from Judge Terry himself. The letter of Mr. Broderick, deolining Ter ley s challenge, will now be read with a melan choly interest. It was as follows : Sak Fraxcisoo, Wednesday, June 29, '09. D. W, PiRLcr, Esq. Sir Your challenge of tne z7lh instant was banded to me last evening, by Mr. S. H. Brooks. This morning, between 7 and 8 o'clock, one of the servants at my hotel informed me that two gentlemen were below, who desired to know if I had risen. 1 told the servant to say to them that I had. The servant returned with a note, purporting to be signed by Mr. Brooks, informing me that Gen. . J. C. Kewen had arrived, and desiring me to address any answer I designed to your challenge, to Gen. Kewen instead of to Mr. Brooks. . This mode of procedure was so unprecedented, that I had no recourse bat to decline the recognition of any note coining, under the circumstances, by the hand of a servant. Subsequently, Mr. Brooks and Gen. Kewen called on me in person. At this interview, the error committed in sending a note by a servant was corrected. Two days have elapsed since the alloged insult was given. If I had been inclined to recognise your right to demand satisfaction, you have placed it out of ay power to do so, by the publicity you have given the matter. Whon affairs of this kind are to be arranged, it is customary to keep them a secret even from intimate friends. While I have refrained from making mention of the affair, I find it to be the subject of newspaper comment and the theme of public conversation. You knew at the time you were searching for a gentleman to bear the challenge that it would not be accepted. I informed you of the fact at the time the alleged insult was offered in the presence of two gentlemen and in language that could not be misinterpreted. Your own sense of propriety should have taught you that tho positions we relatively occupy are so different as to forbid my acceptance of your challenge. It is but a few days since you made out that you were a subject of Great Britain. The giving or acoepting of a challenge could not, therefore, affect your politioal rights, as you are not a citizen of the United States. For many years, and up to the time of my elevation to the position I now occupy, it is well known that I would not have avoided any issue of the character proposed. If compelled to accept a challenge, it would only bo with a gen tleman holding a position equally elevated and responsible, and there arenocitoumstances that would induoe me even to do this, during the pendency of the present canvass. When I authorized the announcement thatl would addresi tho people of California during the campaign, it was suggested that efforts would be made to force me into difficulties, and I determined to lake no notice of attacks from any source, during the canvass. . If I wore to accept your challenge, there Are probably many other gentlemen who would seek similar opportunities for hostile meetings, for the purpose of accomplishing a political object, or to obtain public notoriety. I cannot afford, at the present time, to descend to a violation of the Constitution and tho State lows to subserve either their or your purposes.Your efforts to give publicity to tho fact that it was your intention to send me a challenge, would justify me in giving a copy of this reply to the public Circumstances will determine my course in this regard. Yours, &e, D. C. BRODERICK. C0RBK9P0NDE.NCI BETWEEN BRODERICK AND TERRY. As the recent hostile meeting between Messrs. Broderick and Terry has attracted much public attontion, and has been the subjoct already of many misstatements in the newspapers, it is deemed nocessary to publish the correspondence between those gentlomen, and the terms on which they met. The papers are given in their chronological order. CALHOUN BENIIAM, . THOMAS HAYES. Oakland, Sept. 8, 1859. Hon. D. C. Broderick Sir; Some two months since, at the publio table of the Inter national Hotel, in Ban Francisco, you saw fit to indulge in cortain remarks oonoerning me, which were offensive in their nature. Before I had heard of the oircumstanoe, your note of the 20th of June, addressed to D. W. Perley, in which you declared that you would not respond to any call of a personal character during the politi cal canvass just concluded, had been published, I have, therefore, not been permitted to take aay notice of those remarks, until the expiration of the limit fixed by yourself. I now take the earliest opportunity to require of you a retrac tion of those remarks. This note will be band ed to you by my friend, Calhoun Benham, Esq., who is acquainted with its contents, and will receive your reply. Signed D. 8. TERRY. San Francisco, Sept. 8, 18o9. Hon. D, C. Broderick Sir: Should yon have occasion to communicate with me sooner than the time agreed upon between us, I will be found at the Metropolitan Hotel. I omitted to leave my address this morning. Very respectfully, your obedient sorvant, (Signed) CALHOUN BENHAM. San Francisco, Sept. 8, 1859. Hon. D. S. Terrt. Sir Your note of Sept, 8th reached me through the hands of Calhoun Benham, Esq. The remarks made by me in the conversation referred to, may be the subject of future misrepresentation, and for obvious reas ons I have to desire you to state what the re marks were that you designate in your note as offensive, and of which you rcquiro from me a retraction. . I remain, etc., D. C. BRODERICK. SANFnANCisco, Sept. 9, 1859. Hon. D. C. Broderick Sir: In reply to your note of this date, I have to sny that the offensive remarks to which I alluded in my com munication, yesterday, are as follows: ' I have heretofore considered and spoken ot him (mysolf) as the only honest man on the uprcme Court Bench, but 1 now tuke it all back" that by implication, reflecting on my personal and official integrity. This is tlie substance of your remarks, as re ported to me. The precise terms, however,' in which such an implication was conveyed, are not important to the question; you yourself can best remember the terms in which you spoke of me on the occasion referred to. What I require is the retraction of any words which were used calculated to reflect on my oharaoter as an officer or a gentleman. I remain your obedient servant, (Signed) D.S.TERRY. Friday. Evenimo, Sept. 9, 1859. Hon. D. S. Terry Sir: Yours of this date has been received. The remarks made by me were occasioned by certain offensive allusions of yours concerning me, made in the Convention at Sacramento, and reported In the Union of June 5th. Upon tho . ...... - j . topio alluded to in your noie oi vnis uaie, my langugn so far as my recoueouon serves me, was as follows: "During Judge Terry's incarceration by the Vieilance Committee, 1 paid two hundred dol lars a week to support, a newspaper in his (your) defense. I have also slated neretolore, that considered him (Judge Terry) the only honest man on the Supremo Bench, but 1 take it all back." You are the judge as to whether this language affords good ground lor ottonse. I remain, &c. (Signed) D. C. BRODERICK. San Francisco, Sept. 9, 1859. Hon. v. u. liRonEBicK dir: rjome months ago you used laneuaga concerning me, offensive in its nature. 1 wailed the lapse of a period of time fixed by yourself, beforo 1 asked repara. lion thereof at your hands. You replied, ask. ing a specification of the language used which I regarded as offensive. In another letter I gave you the specification, and roitorated my demand for a retraction. To this last letter you reply, acknowledging the uso of tbo offensive language Imputed to you, and not making the retraction required. This course on your part; leaves me no alternative but to demand the satisfaction usual among gentlemen, which I accordingly do. Mr. Benham will make the necessary arrangements. Your obedient servant, (Signed) D.B.TERRY. Sa Francisco, Sept. , 1859. , Hon. D. S. Tibet Sir; Your note of the above date has been reoeived at one o'clock A. M., Sopt. 10th. In response to the same, I will refere you to my friend, Hon. J. C. McKibbin, who will make the: satisfactory- arrangement llemanded to your 1 1 er, I remain, &c, (Signed) D. 0. BRODERICK. There was also a long document regarding lorms. The distance was fixed at ten paces. The Pari Dlorfae. A most significant edifice, and. one whose outer appearance is singularly in consonance with all the images that arise in the mind at mention of its name, is the Morgue. On the inorning of our visit there lay on those long ' Used but still senseless slabs of stone, four unclaimed bodies. One was that of a little child, with horribly swelled limbs and distorted featuresevidently at the limit of its allotted time, and yet unrecognized by any loving care; another was an old woman, some three soore years and ten, whose worn and weary limbs at last found rest; and the third was a large, powerfully built man of middle age, and with a frame of iron; and the fourth was a young man of singularly handsome face and delicate figure, whose long, dark hair lay thrown back from his pale, serene fac as if he was only sleeping. He had probably been brought in but an hour or two before. It is a sad place to visit, yet there is a world of solemn meaning in the Morgue. That little, square stone building, in the very heart of Paris, has held the key to thousands of fearful tragedies and sad histories, and has been the resting place of many a broken and betrayed-heart, the last scene in many a career of violence and orime. The exposure of the bodies, else so repulsive to the feelings, answers two hdmirable purposes, which redeem it from much of its painfulness. By the recognition of the body, tho friends of the deceased may claim it for burial, and assure themselves of a fulo which otherwise might have forever remained in uncertainty; and by an involuntary emotion 'many a criminal has betrayed his connection with crime that might else have gone "unwhip-ped of justice." So efficaoious has this system nf detection proved, that officers of justice are ul ways present to watch the countenances and manners of all who come to look at tha dead. They become, through praotios, extremely expert at discovering signs of guilt; and many a earful story is told, which the Morgue has been the means of bringing out of darkness into light. t stands on the small island which was once the ) ity of Paris, and is now only the little heart to the vast and active body and limbs of the im-jnense metropolis. The sacred shadow of the ;rand Cathedral of Notre Dame falls like a man-,le over the hideous Morgue, as if to proteot it )n some degree from a too loathsome dread. It Is well to turn away froa the sad spectacle of j'cath to enter within the portals of that grand rid ohurch; and the picture of those wretched ' jorpses fades away; as we lift our eyes up to its I ifty arches, and hear the solemn but hopeful (ones of its mighty organ peal through the vast . '.rca. A Duelist of the Old School. Amongst the deaths in Paris, to be recorder without being deplored, is that of theonoe-re-nowned duelist Choquart, who died in the hack-)iey coach which was conveying him to the Hospital St. Louis. No one knew whence he came,' nor who were his ancestors, but it was general- ' ly supposed that he must have belonged to one of fhe great families of tmigrei who flod at the time . hf the Revolution; for immediately after the Restoration he was admitted amongst the pages ,'f the Tuileries through the protection of the )uche s de Berry. At the Revolution of 1830 lie was in the Gardes du Corps, and at the dis-lersion of that, body took to literature as the pnly resource to obtain a living. Although the greatest duelist of modern times, Choquart confessed himself singularly unfortunate in his I peculations of this nature, for out of thirty duels lie fought during his life he was worsted nine-. itnd-twenty times, and only once succeeded in wounding his adversary. Numerous are the anecdotes, most of them laughable, which are lold of his belligerent humor. One day, being at tho Cafe des Millo Colonnes, be perceived his opposite neighbor busy in the purusal of tho Comtiiutionncl, a paper to which he always most strongly objected. "Monsieur," said he, bending across the table, and speaking in a voice trembling with rage, "When you have ' done with the "Charivari," "It is the Constitu-tionnel, Monsieur," replied the reader, without lgoking up. Choquart pretended not to have heard, and renewed the question, "Monsieur, when you havo done with the Charivari." "But, sapristi, Monsieur, it is the Constitutionnel, I tell you." Again, did Choquart renew the question, until at length he bawled out, unable longer to contain his fury, and tearing the paper from the hand of the astonished stranger, said, "So you make me out a liar. I lay Charivari, and you answer Constitutionnel. If I tell a lie, we )iad better fight the matter out at once." This time, fighting with pistols, Choquart got hit in the knee, from which he suffered a weakness to the day of his death; and although constantly reminded of his imprudenco by this lameness, and having been likewise soused beneath a pump for fifteen successive mornings by a peace ful, sensioie individual, who refused to ngnt, and treated him in this manner every time he presented himself before him to call him out, yet lie has gone to the grave covered with the scars acquired in this kind of warfare. Letter from rarii. The ihlrt Tree. The accounts of travelers have made us well acquainted with the "Bread Tree" and the "Button Tree," but it remained for the indefatigable Humboldt to discover, in the wilds of South America, a tree which produces ready made shirts. We copy his account of this tree: . We saw on the slope of the Cerra Duida, says M. Humboldt, shirt trees fifty feet high. The Indians out off cylindrical pieces two feet in diameter, from which they peel the red and fibrous bark, without making any longitudinal incision. ' The bark affords them a sort of garment, which resembles sacks of a very coarse texture, and without a seam. The upper opening serves for the head, and two lateral holes are cut to admit the arms. The natives wear these shirts of marinia in the rainy season; they have the form of the ponchoi and ruauot of cotton, which are so common in New Grenada, at ' Quito and in Peru. As in these climates the riches snd beneficence of nature are regarded as t he primary cause of the indolence of the inhabitants, the missionaries do not fail to say, in showing the shirts of marinia "In the forests of the Ornonoko garments are found ready made on the trees." A case in which the sum of fifteen cents is involved, was recently brought before the Police in Claremnnt, N. H., and after learned and able arguments on both sides, the case was deoided against the plaintiff. An appeal was taken lo the Supreme Judicial Court. The action wns brought to rcoover the value of braiding nine woodcock skin whip-lashes. It is stated that the King of Sardinia contemplates conferring the Order of the Annuntiata on thnso French marshals who commanded in the late war. This Order is one of the oldest and most distinguished in Europe, and is generally accorded only to princes. There are in all, at present, only thirty four members. It gives the possessor of it the title of "Cousin to the King," and confers upon him the privilege of sitting near his majesty in all official dinners at Court. |
Format | newspapers |
LCCN | sn84024216 |
Reel Number | 10000000021 |
File Name | 1007 |