Daily Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1848), 1861-08-30 page 1 |
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fit jjT r VOLUME XXV (Ohio S'tafc $oimil. No. PUBLISHED BY UCRTT, . ALLEN OIBca in Journal Bo.lldlug, mate (Street. Bates of Advertising. CO., 19, Eatt tuur, " By the Curler, per we-,-lr.-Ur. a i... - SVMttt, - tt 06 per yet labels. 8 O" per year. I SO " TEBMS Of DMtt AOVBBTIblNO BY THE-WCAKE, THirair.vlrlH..T ASiir luvnin (ill alveitlsemouti epree.r ou lu 1"1 P'-") Om. eauar. 1 w?k. Hue " wk "mo 1 month. 'Va 11 month. ft 23 i iki 11 76 3 t Ii Ou fc IH31DB tSkCOHll A l square One Iusertiou.S 5U 1 UU 1 K5 1 O'O 1 75 a uu 4 UU 5 UU a uo 7 ou i. ..... a Motirh. is oo Ou 11 8 mouth., 1 Ml Uj " (I month, 17 5u Oi. "13 month, t'J UU HU 1I11ED PAGEd. 1 iqiareTomottth.,t 00 Th our " tiro " Six " Keveu " ElKllt " Kite " Ten Eleven " Tunlv ICS COLUMN, 1 1'iuare tine mo " lx i nlue n twelve " in uu 14 OU 18 00 18 00 2o on oil ii 1W io uu S8 00 SO 00 19 00 au uo 40 uo 5J uu ,i Three tour " yin " i U'J week, i T a u weeks, . fhiea " -. one mouth, i iv WMiOl, ol'E'JIAL M01 T Insertion, 5 ct. per line. , .. 8 " " " IH . lu ' " ' '1 iqaure one iimnl"., $ 6 CO ucaiNtsi eoiiceb. 1 Uiwrtton 1U et. per Hue. I 1 fJ tor every .! lit loual insertion, S per lm. l.nn.rori. -ior advcit.svin.jnt. lu propottlou. Ad SeV.ryo tw-icua ik,one-b'l the above rate.; once a week, " Ti.iL" M the d?. tUeni.ut look. fresh every tin., it ap. pr.Taud i. believed to bo better tb.u rre- lV, h.l .irwi, th.y r. cbrged tb. cblul. rKt. for tl time tboy WKKK.LY-JI l tr IHM.f-!t Rrst loMltlc, ud ISO outs irar luuare fact. addlllOLiil IllMrtlon. .CJSni. Notice. C0,lei,.n4 Balue Not.ce.,, .nidivh U. iuei " "-" "W"-- tu tl!' Jely Uf 'TnSlgSWMrtng rvl,H'..rterl5 in ed.ant.ly eriV. ur U, We .la..8.; ie. th. Hd,,rtiSem,nl w-jf ctrre'llvl ( U3remen, wlthiu twenty dy aitei tbe Urtaiiparnwul the dwtihemtnt, aud quarterlytbere-nlt-r This rule v lit be eolortud witbout eicejitlou. em- Advei timinents tor leu tlmu i0 end . ibBle unar-Ker, payable "hen I f gliu. ,,,. . Part.i wbo proit-r to dwtii. ly i' j' (' " to-, efk, oi Mutb, vro. Wed uo order m thl.arra .ge-uV cawed. h... luoutl..,) at tb. 'Sulr ra i,,... ? .ic wed tn. (,110'Vlun bcalo ot dl.onl. st.pula ius tlwt Kb- averse bii',, tor .uub .narter of tue year .hall nut fall kort of l amount uauied. . (Oi. e t aumleriy bill of !?5,or upward., S per cent. c. .. i " 75, " " 1 ' .. .. .. .. nm " iiO " " DJ Goods. , It. f Mf CRAl'KES, SHIRT MANUFACTURER, i . No. ll West Fourth Street, 1-rrOBITS HTKKPLK WITH GOLD HAH II. ap.17 dly GREAT CLOSING OUT SALE Xl.I.TNT cJ SON, in. a sorTll iiioii hxkiskt. Am now Closing out at Great Bargain. OOliTJMBtJS : 1SG1. I TO COLUMBUS. OHIO FRIDAY MORN IMG AUGUST 30, NUMBER 60. FRIDAY MORNING, AUGUST 80, 1S31. TKLECRArillB KEWS. Europe will not Interfere iu om , Difficulties. KKISEfi PICKETS DRIVES BACK 1500 ttrd OoperBne Flaln Black 811k at 11.00, ralne (i.iu. yara. LATER FROM MI8S01BI. Ofinn T.r4.Tr.T.iin, Dr. Bd. t s u, Rfebel OiKragea I pou Inloii Men. AwUU ceuuayard. OCnn tard irarellng Brew Good at 12H,lliM AwwVI cenu.yua. . . icnn .r P1,ln nJ 9s"k,! ,fl?l,!,h &. Yard French Crjindie and lawn value UI ceut. 3000 ICfin T,Ji !HierflT!f I,,t Co!orwi Lawn ftt 10 centi, I V V V TnlUC io (Willi m jt. 1500 Tard Plain rrench Barege, at SO eenU rain iju uenw a aiu. ALBO, nioilng oot all l)r.g, Jaconet, Organdie and othei rtole at tee. man ou. uaii r 374 to 6(1 coute, v.hie CU to 75 cent. Brilliant, and L'lllule. mine t '.'"s " price., ParHK.-l.,Klegant Silk an I Lac. manuuaj, nun. mer uree f.iE, iic Cud'r Uarmenta for Ju2) TTnnir Anir 9(1 TVasfiri the Bteamer m 13 Asia od the 18tb. aud reports the arrival oul, of the Great Eastern, Arabia and New York, Cotton declined id, sales of 40,000 bales, aud dosing quiet. Bi eadstuffs si ill declining. Pro visions uull. ' t-uusoi. at jvijawij. reduced to 4.1. Ihe geueral news wholly unimportant. tv ....,nn , ','K A rtiTOi.lftr letter was iiADiunui".,, v recently sent, it is understood, from Ihe offioe of f). Amliinr nf the Treasury for the Poetoflice Department, to proper persons near the resi-deuces of certain mail contiaelors in the States frJl'c'rle..: Uo"ery"blove.; of Ken.uckv, Missouri and Maryland, fur tbe Ladi. and Geul.. o.. c n.irnnae of ascertaiuine whether those contrac- BAIN a BON. ..... . , , t0 tbe u. ........ f..;,i.f,,l an, I Invnl In the Union, and to IU.. 'I u inviu.u. " " j - i guard against an improper use of their faoili- ttefl tor secession purpuyea. iuu-.u ,iuuum .u it ii,. o ltfkjkHu TV rozAMuiorica in all uTns FOR DUEGDE3 furmatlou was received from this inquiry JV'l Cloak, aud Mantle.. Bbepbeid'. Cbeck b. all 1s.oj. velTde.lrablB. Poll de CUevr... elenaut Poplin. LliockedSilki, aud all otber new aud raslilonaoie tty. . .... . . ......... 1 . 1 ., ...........I . it til. i.ttV. lbe Ul nu UJII uesirauio -i.iu. .v ,n Nj. 'it Sooth HllU BICIUBBSOSH DAMASKS, DIAPERS. C. MEDICAL DISCOVERY, For tbe eidv aud permanent cuie ut 3onorrhea, Gle.t, Urethal Uisol.argea, Seminal Weakness, Nisully KuiiGsiouB, lucon-tiueuce, Gouital Irritability, Gravel, Stricture, and AFFKCIIOHfl Of TUB KIUHEKt! AND KLAUDEB, bl b bad ben used by upmrdj of ' OJSK HL'SPMKU PHVSICIAKS, kuowu. HULL'S SPECIFIC 1'ILL ...,.lv la a. tlcu. often -.ffectiun a euro lu a few day.. WWtdo tbelr action lulenerai.iu u...u.. , .acU b" cuntalu Jia uozei. p.m. ,u MjftTuTil'ii ml r-T""'l- advertised Aaent cd IU ' V, ,, iituKnista gcuerally. WhjlMale AgcuW, Claclunati. ..i. l,v H. Wlleon, S. E. Samuel. Co., and Bob :ta t Sin.l, Columbus. aufctidoodly -T."... ....I.. U.W.IMIU l.lNKNH.aad thua lUttt lilt ' " - T l"J-"n.- w uaiiie cl luainn , c.kto inin at4iftute of oe V-tuudneii durability of the 'J llWCttlUr-'U l-i:r.reif-'n'- . . l ill. Mia nuillA ill nii.u ejscn alter c-u "... .uu "'".;----; .... .. Uiu Indicted .like ou tb. Amcri.-.u conwin.. .udtl . abauduu a twinem no )rofttiibl, while pvrchawri cau ba u.po.ei on i. "a, , ' . V rVi-.itie. r.tT-dly A ent..3 Ucade Strw.t. New loik c.n . .Tnu P. A,,ffiiutV!l At. a r.nnvent.i(tn anAAiu", - - held at Wilkesbevre, called under the auspices ... - 1, Li: vA.nlnlii.na WO.-A n,1QU- 0. tne iiepuunc-au puny, vtwiu-..va " - - ed unanimously thanking Hun. ll. S. Dk-kiuson for his masterly plea lor tbe union. Baltimore, Auguat 29. A private letter re ceived in this city says the secessionists arrested Celunel Strothev, Ihe well-known proprietor of the Berkley Springs, and emried him to Iticbmona. LIVER I SI VI GORATU n ... r. a ifnAHIi1.! -.J. i:uuw,- .ii. ...... h.tnwu aud at nsl it, end I. no reaorted tbe diaeas. tor wliicb it is rniiMl tbouHnndti Vho had given up H bopw 90llcl'.ed cortitlcatea iu 'ii-.. doar lui.Kt ijv adi.ptl tJlvid-.il taiil.if. it. ud ti act iteully f1 U,JW- Lc-t Ihe ulcan"i or youi e of Ihe Ml I't' X l'l-' "l I'KK IJOJIJ'XXN'XS, ,n..rci.'rl. CHUONH V.H4Lll. I1AHI1VAI, CIWLKHA, CiX OLE It A T' 4 V 1' U ffl , I U J I. cterully a. an OHVINA 1 1 will ci'.o kick and. cm taatlfy) I" twntU b -oi'iVIj iir. Ie at com- ALL WUO VliSlTABR I1UUUEUOU au-, iproved by all tuat have .0 with connaouco iu m. I.. ,..,,,!. ,1. within the lait taoyear of reii-f, a tbe numerou. lu.y poeewwlou nbow. I... .i.. .......Mrriiiii'iit of the jiwedlu uch quantitle.a. el. . . i...i....ni.i DnMi, von In llie OHA1UK, aUT .1 v.... . i ... ii it, v .., . . - rKHr", JWuMr. fiOVH nioWWMHOLliUA IN-LESCE.JA Vtil'IOB, PS aud may ' need auc y ' jl JW i X. F AfA-W- .. n , ri J.'iJ. S? tlioU' 5 j,inu(,-li"o jr fir Tea- J UXV'XA'i tbelr le.tlu.ocj Kc-pctt t the Memory of Gen. Lyon. mi .r r.oir.,i rv.nn . held a meet- ! o. .do..,nnn in the Methodist Church iu that place, to arrange for the proper reception aua Dunai or tne renin. uo v. m.... Lyoo, who whs killed in the battle of Wilson a Creek, Micsouri, on the 10th inst. Committees were appointed lo procure Die presence of the Hou. Gulunha A. Grow at the funeral, if possible, and to make arrangements for the event. The following resolutions were uau. w ... ....... iv. h.,. h.anl aiih irreat Borrow of the death of Brigadier General Lyon, who fell while bravely leading his troops in ihe late battle in Mi6uuri. Jieeolved, That we deeply deplore Ihe loss our country has sustained in the untimely death of .i aiUnt anil natrintift a soldier aud skillful a commander, whose late achievements were o full of promise fur the future in quelling the foul rebellion. ' Kesolvrd, That as his fellow townsmen, wuue we mourn our lo? s. we rejoice that we have his birth-spot among us to cheer us iu steadfast A i; .. . n,nnlr, anrl UK ITUSt hl3 ffiAve smone us will be the spot where future geuer- ... . , . i l . , : ...1 will, a nn. anons win gainer, auu uu iuou.m - ... J.U. .inin.a rf At. A.. 016 emuiauou oi uih sou uiw n .uvu w. j- , v.. .11 Dnin.m mnA Alhara who have U1UU, XlUUiUUll, l uiuui vuv . .:. iki. a.ai. Hoff.mloi a nf their countrv s flae, and supporters of its government. ! , , l... . .l: s.k k. e,i,- ttftoivea, inat we sympaiunu ..m " who have lost a brother, but whose name the nation honor. rj-..i...j n.j ,i.nn. a.niniintlv nennar lff('.rru, iuri vte 'ircu in wj."-.v r . that we should pay our respects to his remains; - : : .. ... V i.3 a liiafel. ana as ilia grave iu iu uo auiuug , - low townsmen, will take the proper measures to signify our appreciation of his worth. ine iouowing rcBoumuu r.o moo ,..Dirv. Hnr,h,nl Tht. ilin Hon. Galusha A. Grow, a fellow townsman of Gen. Lyon, be invited to be present upon the occasion ot jeu. J.yon d ou- rial. A snecial committe Joualhan bkinner, Joseph Uorset, snd the Rev. C. Chamberlain be appointed to make known the reque3t of the people oi rvastioru, auu io rtque.v u.o Vvu.t-... ance Tk;. .crv naluratlvinrpn .nl Ihe VOUI1Z man greatly, and in ihe evening he came into my room, related the circtimsiances, and remaiked that he might enlial, tight the battles of tbe rich, anu oome dbck kuu muj u.i inc.. Would not speak to him. ' U not do i(, tai't he. I U he dd if I won't be a traitor first. I give these Unlance, Mr. Editor, to b!iow that there is a Btroiig Union feeling in Alabama, .. . i : i Iu n me UOt-oeu Ul nreae.uJi, uu'i b.uoc mnu Union fotliug there, it is very reasonable to suppose thut the Union sentiment is much stronger iu North Carolina a Stale that was forced out of the Union than it ia iu Alabama, which wcut out more deliberately. Aud I may here remark lliat if I had bi-eu an Ala-bamiau, I could have gathered around me a ....... :....t. i IT.:..,. l.,.l,,n ii Waranw. And the iuiuiiuuui . . . u .. .vnv i same couM have been dono all over the Slato, . .! tt'l. f Ihn exceptiug oniy a icw uouii.iub. it ncu .... Slate, thi'.re wore twenty counties that had not ttnt a man to the war. while in the great uiajurU ly Ol tne OUHTr cirnuun eua.oc.jr cuot.M were left at home to proieot the women. These twenty counties have Binoe, very probably, furnished men; but they never can enter into the spirit of beceeion. Thoy ara almost non- .1 L.1.1: irpnarl l.mtr uftAr tt.aTeuu.u.uj wuuooc, u the State acceded, that their counties had just as much right to secede from the Slate as tbe Slate had to secede from Iho Government. A company left N an;aw while 1 was mere, .... mn t, n v..t,n mun I.I that. Ci.ni- HUU 1UCIQ .'It ... r. j j " " puny who repeatedly told me they had no desire to tight the Yankees, and this I know to be the language ot tneir nearts; out tury were 'pressed in' by the force uf pullioopinion, which branded every one with cowardice who refused to go. A Southerner may be the biggest oow- asd in (he world, but he can I boar io ue ioiu oi it. One of this company, who was au ultra Secessionist, wrote home to his uiolhor that the .....t. olnnff ll,a linn nf .hair rOlltA In IUcllUlOnd JCUJJ.O BIWUJ ."V ' ' " " " ' " " " ----- - did not appear to care anything about the cause . . 11- .... .nn..l. ,.ra nnt all 01 seceasiou. no aaiu ucu'ivj ni;.w aroused to the great importance of immediate .r . :. I.. A . h.. , action, lie aiso wrote tuui u wu ua iu.. they had to go so far to fight the battles of the THE PEOPLE OF OHIO. The tind. r. i2ncd, deeply sousible of the dangers now hl! "J ' J "nted wtionof ' . ". ,i,n vinorous ana conunucu pruociiucw- . .,:. Governneul, and ot lh .. 0 ' me,.t. to meet and appoint . . ;..:. ,. South while the people themselves appeared so A committee of arrangements,' consisting or . ft w... A,..-r 90 Thn BtalrniP.nt that IT ABIil.UIU.. . ' f, - ' news had been received indicating certain and speedy recognition ui mo iouicucriiie tmuce, la .ir.fniln rl..,i On the contrary, the indications are that all the Europeau Govuniuienn inteud . .ii.li. i A . . .. : i to continue mrecpecitue mucaaue.auu uj" the result of the contest. A .,w.uiBiiirr.r from tie iliiirtia Side, tuts mi...i.,i. uiiitri Hint our LicLct luices advanced to Builev'B Cross Roads ye3ierda,y, aud diove - . . . .. .:i .. i, i . . . ih. uu..aur2i,,n in i k ri ii 1L nine nuu a ut.il. iv i. OXjOOUltSrCS- SAXjE! . , ((iut (ue la,el. liav(, tak(, posaession of COIOlUtiUUIllg CIU1I.CUCO fU bis .u.v...& ..r Cl.ll CuUlilUCUm. Tliera wns n.ueh firiDe during the day, Out ;i..., fi.inl imbiiIir It is reported that I i. iltiB k nf tneflion CftVilll'V was ojauo at what vf I t,.l,o o (tpqprtrtl r.ftnuou. After ...la fnnnila lllltl VlPPIl filTti ftt ii frOIU auuuij iiTfciw v m howitzer", on a neixr ftpproaoii tuey aitscoverea 1L IU US a Blium. lianipl Cemiilc. of the Hd Michigan negt- 1. .1 1 ... I nan iin OU HV I IIH H I'f : 1 11 1 II I U I i mem . w mm iviiic.i cwtF j ..-- RUMMER GOODS! diechmge of a gun iu the hands of a comrade FOR 20 MYS.0NLY1 PRICES GREATLY REDUCED KWAFP CO. 113 South High S!reet. J&d3Jyl8 d2law3ni nUe favor. - mini inn . vfl(J. CtAVGB'AND SWALLOW BOTH TWKTHEB. Pile. On. Pollar iicr Bottle. ALHO SdKFORB'S FAMILY' BLOOD PURIFYING PIUS. a win err r P 7A IBM TSOBTABIS . "w.. Yp 1S HAT CLMAIE. lbe FA M II. F OA-1. Put active Oathartlo, rued in bin practice more The ccn.ttu.tly lucrea.-ho have long uncd the f'on which all eipre.9 in . iar.f-.il me to place tueiu 1'h. Proto.ion well th.rilc act ou rtiferjut The FAMILY t'A-with d'ie reference to I hi. e-juipounded fiom a vaiie-Sitract., which act alike mentor, canal, aud aro cm where a cathartic i. BANUHMKNIU of the HESS, PAItiB I" Tus COSTIVENKUil, PAIli THE WHOL bOKY, fteqnently, ir n"S''"J vcr, LOSS Of AP.rfc- ej,N8ATiu:i of uyho KU6TLESI1NESH, HKA1I-r ii it HEAH. all 1K- v. a M F. B . WOBilfl lu HIHCDMATI8M, a great and many di'W to which . ...iiu In ilii. atlver- PllIC-K 3 JOHN B0NTE & CO., M AKUFAOTVKElla OF Manilla Cotton, Tarred & Hemp Kope, COTTON AND HEMP PACKING Cord. lilacs Twin. Id all their variety: AMD 11 KALE B IB Oakum. Anchor; Slock; Fatent Scin Tuine, 1MAIN STREET, One door ioub apil-dOiu out Clne-lniiatli O. jlnlclN, lU-staiiiuuls. Lhtoh cpmprlefor h. V ii.a- .remand from tboa I I'lLLB, aud he ' ! reuard to their uw.hMln. .... ....Ii .it all. V.11U.U in. .. know that uinoreu. - portion, oltue uo". well eetamuueu ...... .i Vii.-etabte IV l mo fju.- -p-- . ue.dl, uch STOMACH, SLEbPI-BACK AND LUIN8 ANI SOBKNKiiii Ol.KB from .udden cold, whick .nd iu a long a"of Fe. TITS, A I'"'10 f.VKll THB BODY, Vml. cr WEIGHT II) PUHlKlfcHofthe BLOOD flesh i. heir, too jii ,.me..t. DOSE.lto. c'viiicnesaTt. iiousm BOSTON. . . . .a. a a a a., a a rat nj f It tiV I "lNU ccwpletod, With .upetior accc-mniouaHuu. lor Indies and Oen.leu.ou,,, a. opened Jaf. IS . 1 . r ii- Pr.n.rititori to tuabe It worthy tbe ."rrJuofthetraveUngpublle. H . PAil& guv z. n vri i j m i l. i a Z5h III! lX1SSS? Dru.g..U 8enel...y, Sid whole..le by Ihe Manulacturerand Proprietor, (408 Broadway, New Yer. eoid in Colnmtu. by Kobert. ?"'itawwla?p asd O.PeninASon. octae BO-dlywly wp . . m - dcbcvit. ' O V JAM A1C A It ..V. T ,V i ni n'v'iill K 11UOWN. Ohemiat aud j uinur.1..-. - , , fifth atreet. Tlrii2irit. nortneasi coiiii-i w. , i S.51ik,. manulaeturer of Brown'a Kaaence of Jamaim Ologr, which is recog.iixed and preecril.etl l.y faulty, and h. become the .tandard family medlrlunf the I nlted Mate. ml '' nn nr nnnwial Aacellence. . TUW.IWHir" w - F 'i ,' "h7. r in .hort. In all 0?"rZ, t ;e fuucvu.. It i. of cane, i.i iiio.. ...- r ...,. r .niilAiniF liarly e!Hc.cloii; nmaniiij, iu...-" . - NOTICE -To parent thl valnabl. Eeae.oeom bfdng eonut.rwted, a new .teel engraving, executed at a great "at w 1 bTtouBd on tb. outde ot tbe wrapper, In order S I the purchaaer aain.t beina impoeed npon by ''raKlCK BKO.nd for at hi. urug ana ucnuuu '"r'VrrfcLEBIck BROWN, jE'.,'l)r..g and tbema al Store, 8E. curner of Ninth and ijncniu arreia, --..uu....cu.... -.-delphie. Also for .ale by all Mpectable gn..t. to the nile.l !".... - TU I197sof.Tr,VCK'e) RCIKIOL, VVlht, OPES il M0SD.W, (September , at hor room, at tb. Mint, al College, the will be aenieted by All. Crawford. . uglD d 3t B w I w CAPITAL RESTAURANT, (UNDER GOOD ALE liUUSls.) rrtHB dt1ged ha, taken th. cooau ' 1 Qood.le Hou.e, wh.ro will be louud, hereaft. ,,rf " . 40od style, the be.t eatable the market a Nonf but the bt Ale.. Lbiuoi. and Cigar., ke, I ? , ,.. ,i,. n... 1,. M-Dtuiug noom euiire. " .hurt, tne rroprietor - - FEKLF. tauraut my'itdtr ST. LOUIS HOTEL, CHESTNUT STREET, ABOVE TillJiD, ... krl .if l.a J.lt.hilliT HoniM S MTrkTVTanKutreeU-, th, B.i.k.. Vo.t OOlc crcncM.-ur.--.- ,,. .. HOAUU I- lrn. 60 .a,i.nruil tn aunuriian n - nnwaid-. u.r day, and Meal at a Flnt-Ola.. : . . . ... ii. .1 ..i.i lri,.M according to tir.itail.anr. .i'kuiii The o"iy Car take Pawenger from any Station TO or UI'OiB. XL' tne noiei. 6"Eogllh, I rencn, uern.au a-u oiu-" .y.-.-. )7dbul-vp t . i .iiioii.. Jin Aim 20. The Rebels, cn couraged by einggeraied reporta of the battle near opriuguctu, arc uu8irs,....s numbers iu this and surrounding counties anu I ...... ni 1 1 i ii nil LinilM OI OUtTllKCS UUUU cinuu I .hoi., nrnnmlv If ttltV Bl 0 allowed to overrun Lufnyette, Kay and oiher tuch coun ties in this pi.rt ot the buup, as tuey i .1..;.... u.oo aiil kIpb.1 enuueh from ihe Cniun i'n ani.aiui. Hioir ftruiv for months. Iu view of this condition ot mingi, iibbibibucc ... uoc. asked of Gen. Fremont. The tlomo Guards still occupy Hie fortifications nere. ana are wen supplied with arms and provisions, and can probably hold the place; but roinfurcements are ... : . ..Hi;., ani.iii.ll1 in I needed to operate agaiua. ijnu.uo Mftb. ... ravaging the country. Prominent Uniou men are daily threatened with death. Es-tiov. King, of Ray county, has been frequently warned, but his devotion to the Union cause, is unshaken. He and his sons are ic.. v shoulder their iiiurI-cIs. Tnw. 4, n Wm. Lvon Mackenzie, lui.uniu. - - Ex-member of I'urliarueut, died last night in this oily. The deceased was the Upper Canada leader of Ihe rebellion of 1837, which resulted iu his exile to tho cniiea niaicj .u. .v." years, during which lime he was connected with the New York Tribune. Being patduncd iu ISl'J he returned to Canada, and wns elected to Parliament, which positiou he occupied for sev eral years, lie was i mverani.y iu..v.... m.v v..nv Anir 'J!l. For the iutuie no clearances of goods will he allowed for Mala-moraa, in Mexico. The above is by order of the Secretary ot the 'lrcusury. Fob tress Monroe, Aug. 28. We have no tidings from the naval expedition. ' It turns out that the Ofing ou our ting of truce from Crauey Island, some weeks ago, was entirely unauthorized by Gen. Huger. On hearing of the outrage he sent an apology tu Com. btrmghain. Arrival ot tlis Aula. New Yobk, Aug. 2'J. The news by the Asia is very meagre. A letter from the emissary oi l ho I ni Inn butjDIV ABaooiai.uu - suit of bis visit to Egypt. He gives an encouraging prospect of the cotiou productive ana,..itv of Eavnt. The Vice Roy expressed great interest ia the extension but oan do very little. u.:. t i-onta RRf. 4jc : it wa9 re ported the French Government had hiBtructed ?, . . ..n. ii.a cnirance of Cialdine uuy.u uui ni uppuuw ' - into the Papal territory, should the necessity . ot war require it. Latest via Uneenatown. r... a., ir Salea of Cotton veater- jjl r r, niuim, 4. u pc . day (Saturdav,) 8,000 bales, of which 4,UU0 to anaiMi alora and exporters. u.cao...-. London. Aue. lS.Consols closed yesterday at 'J0!((iJ0j for money and account. trie shares 24J(2Ji; Illinois Central 3J. .1 vuiiniiuice ui oiiouiu."' o i.-.i'. .1.. .. .in. I ..ain-nhnra rifll,:.. teauiug iiitu u. me vutiu mv uv.6--- Lyon, to make suitable arrangements for the . . .--:.-,l rjuriai, was appoiu.eu. Vftlliuidighnm's llonori ate Multiplying. Tim London Timet condescends to notioe his "tumid and grotesque eloquence;" his name figures with tbe names of other trailois in the list of speakers at Kentucky traitor barbecues, and now we observe a camp of Secessionists is named after him. We clip the following from the Louisville Courier of yesterday : moil camp yali,anpigiia;i. lluNOIt TO WUOM Ilo-SOR H DiK-RaIKF We.UB-ER BAtrALLION Daii.b Ariii u Nei-ibauif Bkoom3 anu Brickbat, it. Correspulidengo Louisville Courier. CAMf VALLANDlliliAM, IibAIiillAaTERS, Augugt 22, ltv1. J iWori Louisville C'ourur . Yenerday, under the command of Capt. Will. L. Ciarka. of the "National Blues," the "Lewis Guards, :Capt. J. 11. Lewis) went into camp near this place, 1 1 .i .1.. f.i..iiiai .iPahiIap nf iu9th:fi and I'mioi. unci iin. .... I... ... i-.-i . .. .1 ni,np.aainnvllifl nn- llOeriJ BgU.UHI. Ttiuufi auk "H" ble Yallnndigham, of Ohio. Mr. Vallandignam may regain n yvw, but it is noticeable that no honest man has been praised by the Courier, either iu its correspondence or editorials for some months. Amazon iu Missouri. Late advicesbctoken the fact that in the town of Lebanon, Mo., there is a rare and admuaDie body of Amazons, who don't wear hoops, hav- J . -1 , .....i.,la nf Ail'i'limlilml. Xli op given lip tnat. e.eg'iui rinci o. o..vu..w.. . .- ..nnrifililt anhrp which, until llOU 1UI lUTJ lUU.O , lately, we were simple enough to suppose was V . .1 I I.. . ..nlw.rl n ..n T OT n nt only ior tue uauua ui - iVHp.a . who were prisoners in DunuKueu, uuj afterwards released, on coming past Lebauon, which since has been occupied oy oiate ir.ops, beheld a soene which they will not soon forget. A troop of women bent rode horses in the good old fashioned way, and were going through a series of military manccuverB, and cut and slashed in furious style, with sabres bright and keen. When Ihe two travelers got abreast ( we mean nothing indolicate I oi tne temaie urugouuo, ouo of the latter auouted, "There goes tbeni Dutch." The travelers thought it prudent not to lBgoti the way, nuttl they were muen ironi Ihe furious female warriors. A romBncer would work up this story loan agonizing pitou, by relating how the aruazons wore long botHa with red tops, pistols in their belts, etc., but we - . . . i -... i. ...11 .1..? ....... unit that iu leel nouna Biwayu vo i.u mo ".. .-what we have done on Ibis occasion. If this is I reason, mako tho most of it, as Patrick .Henry eaid. . . lUUIUIll GUI' Other gentlemen of the eame company wrote home that there were twenty thouaand men in V;..i.i. !.liniil ama anil tliiMVPrv fltftlPinent prevented your correspondent frjm active service ; iv.n 1'Anl.il.i.r.tii aiinr All llipflp uml tnnnv IU UK VVI'l.n' " ' ' J - , J mnrn BpnA tn uh.-iar th it there is an uuder-cur- rent, but it is uot now available, nor will it till the South are a conquered people, when it is probable it may be efficient iu carrying into operation the laws of the Union. But I must heartily arrree wilh your corres pondent that we mini; have more men in the field. There ia tou much indifference among all class es in regard to enlisting. There is an idea nrevaiunir mat n. in a lamiiy u. ruur o. uvc vouus men. one should go to war, they, as a lainilv. have done their Bhars. But most truly !. ia iliriarnnf in tha Rnuth. Three and four brothers stand side by side in the same company, and, what is stranger still, were urged and prevailed upon to eo by their mothers and siaters. And now it is very fair to pie ,J.,V inlmla ia in 1)ia fifihl. arhinh can not be far from three hundred thousand men, No demand lor troops was niaue upou j.exus, DeCaUOC Uei UWI. USU .CIPBUIJIJIIOCU UO Ubcu ed, or would be needed, to defend her own soil. for the nomination of v!a!7..f R.0? CT of State, and one member ot tn. a "rU .rouble it.arranging the k'-ffi that the Conven.ion consist of one one additional delegate for each sur- each county fur Supreme Judge at the lal,.'e''J;wori a0 as to secure not less than two plus half of tho ratio, varying this PPor"iher from all. Under this apportionment the delegates from every couuty and an even number rrom an. ul,LK . :il . .:.io.l in rlnlfltratea as follows: several counties win u ou. ..-. . o i.icking' Adam. . Allen A.hlaud Aehtabula Atbcu. ' Auglaize Belmont Brueu Butler Carroll ( 'heuioatgn Clark Clermont ' Clinton Columbiana Cobici.m Crawford Cuyahoga ITark. ll'tnauce . ITelawart Krte Fairfield Fayette Franklin Fultou tiallia Geauga Oreeue Gueruaey Ilanillt'.u Hancock Hardlu HairiHon Ileuiy Ulgblaud Hoiking Uolmei - liuroo Jackson Jefter.ou Knox Lake Lawrence. . 4 .. .. 4 .. B .. 4 .. 4 . ti .. B .. 8 .. 4 .. 4 .. 4 .. .. 4 .. .. .. 6 ..12 ... 6 .. 8 .. 4 .. 4 .. 6 .. 2 ..lu ... 4 ... 4 ... 4 ... 4 ... 4 ...34 . 4 ... 4 ... 4 ... 1 ... a ... 4 ... 4 .... e ... 4 ... 4 ... 6 ... 4 ... 4 Licking L'vau Liirain Luc a Madison ......... Mahoning Marion Medina Meig Mercer Miami Monro. Montgomery .. Morgan Morrow Mn.klnguin.... Noble Ottawa Paulding Perry Pickaway Pike Portage Prebble , Putnam Hlcblaud 11, mm Banduaky S"iotu be.ieca Bhelhy Btiirk Summit Trumbull Tucaraaa... Uulou Vauwert Vlutlon Y arret) Washington .. Wavne William. Wood Wyandott. ... .... 4 .... 4 , a s 4 10 4 t t 4 a a ... 4 ; a a 6 ....... 4 a a 4 4 a 4 8 . 4 . a . 4 . 8 . tj . 8 . 4 . 4 . 4 468 ' " tuo .1 : :v'-""-;;:"".."v:v be beld oa We further BUggest tnat me wt ine uuestion, and the only oue worthy of the consideration of Amein r hat'no lengthened appeal is "SX"! Becur.5 for you tion to it. We feel assured hat a respect for thi'"f "Vesting upon you as the heretofore tbe blessings of free inat tuUaas-a seuse of $JqU to whom you hop. to peaceful J.iXtttaftSi SXewf.h no doubtfu! voice, your unohang. Compared with the interests involved lt P?" 2nd maintains social order is tor-bat littlePimportance. It ihe Government is but little of all that we ever to exist at the mercy of caprice or disappo ntcd mDll,"' 1 gh u it be Baid that we hav. now enjoy that will not in the loss of .'lj our party differences? These par Iiitri' luip Statement of a gonlhcin Itr(ji M ar, Cotton aud Slavei y. The London Times has become the great Pro-Slavery journal of tbe world. So remarkable are the changes wrought by the rebellion in the United States. Not many months since, the Times was no exception to the English Ptess. If any journal among them, feeling in a bad humor, wished lo give the United (states . .. .... i .. "y-... ,t.A iiitnniiiiTiitv wan ever au UUUIVSUIJ ..!., ...v -.v ready, and the "dirk spot of Slavery" received the thrust of the spear. The most reluctant tributes to American progress and power never - . . . . . : 1 1... .nn..;.ni,ii. n. . i 11 f tailed to db accuinpauieu uuubiuvuuui. e.' over the baloful institution of Slavery. It was the plague-spot of tho Republic it was our weakness and our shame. So the Times thought and so it wrote; and the American People were . .1.. 1...1 ... ..p .u. i ; .. forced lo icei tnai iit juuguicui ui m b"h world, as represented so largely by the English Press, was decidedly and paiufully againBt them, because of the toleration of human bondage in one-half of the area of the Amerioan Union. Thi.1 ia all r-hai.i?id now. so far as the London r;,... u ..nin'ernnrt. We do not know how the k.i hn.n nnneerlcil. hut we know the fact. A lfll ll i. jwv-v ---- - - - - . that ttlicrcos its voice, iu former days, was al ways ngainat the institution of Slavery, even i.... ii ociteil bv auirerance. and becauso the A.,.ii.iin 0,,fiiiHBut did not know what to ii Geo. M. Parsons, Franklin county. Win. T. Bascom, J-Samuel Galloway, do. K. P. L. Baber, d Theo. Comstock, aa-3. II. Coulter, "Jo-Henry Milter, do. Tnhn Broueb. uuyanoga cuuu. J. W. Weatnerby, B. O. Griswold, J. P. BiBhop, George Mygatt, C. W. Noble, Melanothou Barnett, J. A. Harris, Ti-:.l TA AfahnninS OOUnty. George Willey, Cuyahoga, oounty. The Pittsburgh Chronicle pufishesre fqllop-itig interesting slateuient of a "Southern . u-gco," as he signshimself: "1 left Warsaw, u little village onihe Tom-hti.linn llivpr. Alabama, on Ihe day orthe bat tle uf Bull Run, 'after a residence there of ten muuiliB. I htid pecuiar facilities for findiug out whether any 'uthlcr current' existed iu that region a region thiru which it would be ditli-otilt lo conceive of Buy more intolerant, more rabid, or more senseless in the secession cause. It was my forluuo to act as -ciem ai tne cuc-iton which was lo clioone men to represent Sumter . il'l.... ... knl miA LulltilV in tne jouvbuiiuu. i" " no candidate, who run ai a Secessionist. He wns eleoted, of course. I saw that day enough io convince any man that nut half of the voters eutered into ihecaut.o with spirit. Mauy wrote ... . .1 .......1...I II n inn mAtt out tickets and votcu ior piuuiiucu. - whose names had not Deeu put up ueiu.u ... people, and others on picking up the secession tickets shook iheir heads saying, 'That is too hut Tor mt,' 'I can't go that," itc. Many were pro. ailed upon by the hot-heads around the table tu vote, and had it not been that tho election officers were so vigilant, an extremely buibii vote would have been cast. After this election 1 knew the ttatut of every voter's mind, that was present that day, on tne great question .... 1 .A ii.a il.inli.tn war B itisue. All who wavereu oi .uc tut.. ....... Union men; and, knowing that 1 was a union man. thev afterwards tail ed very freely in re- i .,.,ai . I'm maav. however, who ga.u iu nvi.cca.iii j .i .1 .i ...... h.A Bmrii iipiiiuin munui . u .uu tUCU .aicicu, imi.v cause of secession. There are some there yet who would gladly go dbck to ...e um uu.ou, which has protected them so long and so well. , , . u .i k.r,n f rarno awav. an old mau . aUUl I LlUIl. "V.ui . .i . of seventy years of age said to me that their leaders were all wrong. He said that the peo-a o ...... hDii fttuiiJini? Nortb for rje oi iue oouiu uj ww o - everything for a loug series of years . and now ii.pAave P,.t North and (rot a President, and are'kicking up about it. H is rebellion and no- . . .. .. il..n....i d.ii a ivpallhtT thing lesB.' Auotuer geuueu.--, - - y nlunter. was also equally emphatic and free in expressing his opinion. My uthce was sought r . l ii- tn w hn wished to talk very onen oy uiiiuu - about tbe sad Blate of aUirs,and such was their fidelity to the old Uuion tnai tney wc.c .c , unserved in their expressions tlm. I waB. These men never reporlei any convei(fitiou that took Place. It would have been death to me if they had, and would have brought disgrace on themselves. Ou the Saturday befora 1 left I remarked very carelessly to ouc of the lest educated men in the village., with whom 1 was 'hunting,' hat I tiresnnied there were vjry few wl.u would consent to go buck: 'There are more than you are awaie oi, -am v, a.. n... K.Xi, now. Aaide from revolution our lead ers do not believo in the doctrine of seoesaion. They have espoused it Mr me purpooo u. u.aou-lution and alter that is accomplished, it must and will be discarded. Our statesmen do not reallv think a State has a right to wi'hdraw.'l So thought I from what I had been observing. nolher vounp man, whocasralherapoormau was very haughtily urged by a rich planter to enlist, and not to loaf about town doing nothing .lint;! ilciii w - do wirfi it now that same Times ia wielding i . -" 1 -rmla li uuitiifa ilm itif PRESTON HOUSE, (roHMIKLT MCEKAY,) B. E. HOLT - Pao.iTo North-West Corner of Publio Square, prisioui . IST ovarls. Oliio. CHOICE BRANDS OF CIGARS AND TOBACCO F-jr oale by il. 11. ItkUSTlSAUX, j,19 108 Boath High . Battles. Duaue, in his Military Directory says : Battles have ever been the last resource ot good Generals. A Bituatiou where chance aud accident often battle and overcome the most prudential and most able arrangements and where superiority of numbers by uo means assures suocefs, is such as is never enteied into without a clear necessity for 60 doing. The fighting a battle only because the euemy is near; or from naving no omer iornieu pu. nflnnu in not the way of making wtr. Darius lost his crown and life by it. Harold, of Eng- ... . , i - .i.i . 1 1.... i land, did the same; anu rraucisinei., m. i lost the battle an! his liberty. King Joltu, ot France, fought the battle of Poi-ticrs; though ruin attended hiB enemy if he had not fought. The King of Prussia lost his country and the reputation which Prussia acquired from Freder-.... it k. ilm Vmiiln nf fiena. A ahillful Gen- ICS . 1 , M ' - - , eral will give battle when his army aud situa-Uon cannot be worse, if defeated, than if he does uot fight at all; and when tho advantage may be great and the loss little. Geo. A. Benedict. H. S. Stevens, T.M. Kelley, Merrill Barlow, J. M. Coflenbury, John W. Heisley, John C. Grannie, W. 1). Cushing, A. Stone, Jr., H. B. Uulburt, E. G. Williams, . W. Bingham, M. C. Younglave, C. Hickux, D. K. Tilden, F. T. Backus, William Case, Henry G. Abbey, E. S Flint, do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. John F. J. R. B. Thos. Jas. do. do. E. Car?, Diokman, n..r.m P Snftlilinff. Reuben Hitchcock, C. D. Adams, Aaron Wiloox, L. Smith,, C. Quinn, Beth Marshall, E. S. Pike, I). M. Eddy, H. Steele, Jr., Sol. Schwab, 1). Carroll Gray, Moses S. Harvey, A. N. Baker, S. S. Osborn, A. L. Tinker, B. Bissell nr-.ii:um kfallhewfl. H H. Hunter, raiiueiu coumj. A. McVeigh, do Joseph H.' Riley, Franklin county. w araen, Sparrow, ao. H. Smith, do. inn R Swan. do. John W. Andrews, do. J C. Groom, do-William Hunt, Clark county. do. Lake oounty. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do: do. do. do. do. do. do. do, r.. a i ii'i ... . . G. Volney Dorsey, Miami county nnnnim and energies lo secure the nidc- ...i,..,..o nf ihn l'ro Slavery dislrict of the !T-:...i cilAa lrnnarino' full well that the lead Ijlll.llll I'1"1CC, ....v.-.p, " - ..o nf 1 hp HPPI1 dint? rro-Slavftry (list riot assume. o ilia rnifl uml Bionnd of their movement, that ic.innn siiieei'v is 'the corner-stone of white ..1-ilii.linn. All. 1 the divinelv-appointed means of social perfection. Are we not right, then, ; nrnnlniininir tho London Times the ercat l.n CLlaoPl'V illl. rnl of the world? Let it have llU-umi.'j J - this honor and wear it. We beg our English cotemporanes to give-ns a holping nanu in awarding to the 'Times its well-earned position n. Mm allies of the Kine of Dahomey. nni'iMti, - - . Lei its consider a moment Borne of the possi-bilititSfvjf English dilemma, iu case the Times shall succeed in mBpirinp, wuu un . iu-uiut nnlicv, ihe English-Government. The necessities nf Ennlish commerco require tho procure- 1 p . a . .i e.-i niL.: meut of cotton irom me nouiuern oiuiec. aueir ports are blockaded, nowever, Dy rne unnea rjtaiOS l.lOVCrUUH'111, nin. l.un.u.. u.uo ivuyg- nnize their independence, and riska war with the American Union, in raising the blockade to gel tho essential cotton. It is a tremendous risk fr Eugland. War with the United States would cost me rjugiisi. oumiuiuiui u uu-j a :ii;n.ia nf itnllarA it would cost Enrrlish UTCU luiii.ii"" v. -' a commerce half ao much more iif the depreda- c 4 n.i.ali.vi anil It wnnl 1 Hons OI iiuieiicnu ,i...n.v... u . L-i i:..l. n.milalinlB mnrn thnn wa pur. tn COS! nuKiicu twf. . . i i.. v. iu . i ..11 calculate in loans una ueuie nmi nuuiu ue-uuu- fiscated. Perhaps me cotton picaea up on ooum ... nlantations it is not to be shipped to sea 1 . i r ll . i. : .. 1.. ... 1. .. n . !.. puna nowm r"j j hsps not. This is one of the English dilemmas. But suppose ior argument a Buau i ui.i, uu .i.- j .. ,r nf tlm Knrrliah Onvern men !. we ine ucuiaiii - -r ' 1 abandon the blockade, stop the war, submit to .l.- j..i.ii.itinn nf ni.p l.atinnniit.v. andacknowl- IUD unouu' iw" - - J j edge the independence of the Pro-Slavery Re public, want next: iinginnct una perncu ev i.;wtn nliiainlhA t-pnult and has acknowl e l i ii i ii 5 ... edged, as her justifications, that English supremacy cannot exist without Pro-Slaveiy cotton. Very well. Victoria no longor reignp. Britannia no longer rules. "Cotton is King. ' Bui after a while, King Cotton waxes fat and kicks again. His plantations are enlarged, his customers have become cormorant, and the Men-arch wants more men to grow the staple. Ex . . Ll.- 1.: - L' ; .. IV.I perience nas taugui mm u.a uuwci. ame v..n.-lon is, in reality, a despot, sud he resolves ti lrt. ; i h ihn Kino, nf Da. OpeU cui I cojiiiuucuo " ' " - - - - r. homey and esiaDiian iree traae in -uciu uuua, r u u. ;n ih Knah AVa nhni.1.1 like tn Ite.U CBUgll. IU ww . - - - know how the pro-slavery organ the London Times would meet that resolve of King Cotton. Would it. advise the strengthening of the African Squadron? Aud if so, would not the j-. . . w. ll- t .hln pro-slavery uot on nepuni.u , "' -,:gaoli another bale or tneBtapie to r.ngiauu umi. ..;" j y - - trade" wilh Africa for field hands was ac" i ,' ' quiescedin? And then what would English A laa . spinners do? and what would oecume o. ....p- --o liah commerce and English supremacy? This , Samuel 1 ease, is another English dilemma. Does the pro- George l uni , .!... rn.i t; Mi.p in a futnre? No Thomas vtenn, doubt. Such faith is in the Thirly-nine Articles. And bo it is a future of "rewards and punishments," as the Timet will learn. aY. ! Times. William Garvev. J. W. D. Alexander, J. C. Horton, M. Mitchell, M. H. Jonea, ti. C. Writer, ti i Fleming. Luther Day, Portage county. Horace M. Stokes, Warren county Geo. R. Sage, Jo. r t iin.ilpvv. do: I.UU. V. .'- I o Mp.Hurnev. "O do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. Anderson, mi . Ti.Aa.ih!. AllOU.nn uvuv.ji Geo. r .Dtaymgn, utiirvu';. uu. do. H W. Hevnolds, William Maneur, G. W. Stahl, Isaac Day, R. D. ReeBe, William Brcwn, George W. Hall, John R. Hilliard, J. It. Hubbell, George W. Tru, T. W. Powell, J. Allen, II. C. Coulter, M. B. W. Uarman, H. W. Rhodes, C. Armstrong, James M. Cherry, J. B. Flatt, t A A .wlui'jnn oVo.B. Gardner, Fayette oounty Peter Windle, j. James F. Ely, do- Nelson Rush, ao- Robert M. Briggs, do. James Purcell, . ao-A. W. Sampson, Champaign county. John A.Corwin, do. JoshuaSaxton, do. A. V. Vance, do. J. C. Jones, do. AVm. Patrick, ao- J. B. Armstrong, ao- Johu W. Houx, do. ll'ooi County. Addison smun, do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. Sncdor, L. Harrison, John C. Miller, V. P. HanBoni, John B. Hugens, , Anderson, . Cowen, . Felt, Lee, . Covell. . Frank, . Kevon, C. Wotring, M. 0. Van Horn, M. T. Gardner, Emil Hess, Joseph Root. M. B. Jones, U. W. Little, J. G. Grove, A. Mollvain, B. C. Walters, Charles Dengier, R. Burr, G. H.Waldo, James Eaton, A. A.Welsh, N. W. Little, L Barnes, , Dickinson, J. L. E.P. John Wm. A. C( G. W. C.H. E.C. M. do. do. do. do. do. do. Delaware county, do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. :do. A3. Jw'aU l i""u" ' Thomas Ewing, FairBeld oounty. William Eiry, Montgomery county n Elliott. PnimrtDickev. Kellum, Clarke, Irving, Fishback, J: A. Adams, G. S. Innis, J. H. Stader, Winnie, Curtis, Beach, S. 6perry, Thompson, Byers, Arnold, Barton S. Kyle J. M. R. W. P B. 0. T. Geo. H. B. A. J. S. M J. M. G. B. do. do. Clermont oounty. do. do. do. do. Franklin county, do. Knox oounty. ' do. do. do. do. do. do. Wm. Houston, Julius Blinn, H. C. Laurence, S. 0. Wesicott, P. 8. Blevine, Lewis M. Hunt, J. P. Thompson, George Laskey, N. D. Blinn, E. Graham, N. Brewster, John W. Bailey, W. II. Jones, John Webb. . Huut, H. M. Brown, D. H. Poe, S. Hatch, B. W. Johnson, Henry Thornton, Geo. Strain, Jas. R. Tyler, N. N. Dodge, F. R. Miller, H. E. Teck, J. II. Blinu, Geo. S. McKnight. Stark County. William K- Upham, Leiter. Greenwood, Seraphim Mejers, J. S. Kelley, Bwight Jarvis, Ediwn Jsrvis. Beni. F a G. R John Saxton, J. S. Kuiley, C. N. Oberlin, hi. D. Button, S. Lind, George W'elkcr, Alex. Allen. Kent Jarvis. R' H. Folger. Miami oounty. iu w. - J 1 i. iu cmhaiinh of luBcarawas. R. C. Uurd, Enox countyj J. T. Hobbs, do. C. Cooper, do. Samuel Dbv'is, do. Daniel MoGrady, do. G. A. Jones, d- 8. T. Warden, do. J. C. Devin, do. 6. Blanohard, do. Mahoning County. Francis G. Servis, Jas. M Nash Jas.B.BIocksom, t has. G. Edwards. B. Sibly Hiue, Fairfield County. Alfred M. Veigh, K. Fritter. L.rWton. l.ountu. . i . Haroaugn,. Pren. Mehaa Richard Lanning, M. B. Wood, A. J. VYilkinS, T.J. Roney, Jos. Shook, A. M. Williams, John Mirise. J. 8. McCoy, P. Thompson, A. L. Harris. Col. James Irwine.
Object Description
Title | Daily Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1848), 1861-08-30 |
Place |
Columbus (Ohio) Franklin County (Ohio) |
Date of Original | 1861-08-30 |
Searchable Date | 1861-08-30 |
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 | 10000000023 |
Description
Title | Daily Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1848), 1861-08-30 page 1 |
Place |
Columbus (Ohio) Franklin County (Ohio) |
Searchable Date | 1861-08-30 |
Submitting Institution | Ohio History Connection |
Type | Text |
File Size | 4823.17KB |
Full Text | fit jjT r VOLUME XXV (Ohio S'tafc $oimil. No. PUBLISHED BY UCRTT, . ALLEN OIBca in Journal Bo.lldlug, mate (Street. Bates of Advertising. CO., 19, Eatt tuur, " By the Curler, per we-,-lr.-Ur. a i... - SVMttt, - tt 06 per yet labels. 8 O" per year. I SO " TEBMS Of DMtt AOVBBTIblNO BY THE-WCAKE, THirair.vlrlH..T ASiir luvnin (ill alveitlsemouti epree.r ou lu 1"1 P'-") Om. eauar. 1 w?k. Hue " wk "mo 1 month. 'Va 11 month. ft 23 i iki 11 76 3 t Ii Ou fc IH31DB tSkCOHll A l square One Iusertiou.S 5U 1 UU 1 K5 1 O'O 1 75 a uu 4 UU 5 UU a uo 7 ou i. ..... a Motirh. is oo Ou 11 8 mouth., 1 Ml Uj " (I month, 17 5u Oi. "13 month, t'J UU HU 1I11ED PAGEd. 1 iqiareTomottth.,t 00 Th our " tiro " Six " Keveu " ElKllt " Kite " Ten Eleven " Tunlv ICS COLUMN, 1 1'iuare tine mo " lx i nlue n twelve " in uu 14 OU 18 00 18 00 2o on oil ii 1W io uu S8 00 SO 00 19 00 au uo 40 uo 5J uu ,i Three tour " yin " i U'J week, i T a u weeks, . fhiea " -. one mouth, i iv WMiOl, ol'E'JIAL M01 T Insertion, 5 ct. per line. , .. 8 " " " IH . lu ' " ' '1 iqaure one iimnl"., $ 6 CO ucaiNtsi eoiiceb. 1 Uiwrtton 1U et. per Hue. I 1 fJ tor every .! lit loual insertion, S per lm. l.nn.rori. -ior advcit.svin.jnt. lu propottlou. Ad SeV.ryo tw-icua ik,one-b'l the above rate.; once a week, " Ti.iL" M the d?. tUeni.ut look. fresh every tin., it ap. pr.Taud i. believed to bo better tb.u rre- lV, h.l .irwi, th.y r. cbrged tb. cblul. rKt. for tl time tboy WKKK.LY-JI l tr IHM.f-!t Rrst loMltlc, ud ISO outs irar luuare fact. addlllOLiil IllMrtlon. .CJSni. Notice. C0,lei,.n4 Balue Not.ce.,, .nidivh U. iuei " "-" "W"-- tu tl!' Jely Uf 'TnSlgSWMrtng rvl,H'..rterl5 in ed.ant.ly eriV. ur U, We .la..8.; ie. th. Hd,,rtiSem,nl w-jf ctrre'llvl ( U3remen, wlthiu twenty dy aitei tbe Urtaiiparnwul the dwtihemtnt, aud quarterlytbere-nlt-r This rule v lit be eolortud witbout eicejitlou. em- Advei timinents tor leu tlmu i0 end . ibBle unar-Ker, payable "hen I f gliu. ,,,. . Part.i wbo proit-r to dwtii. ly i' j' (' " to-, efk, oi Mutb, vro. Wed uo order m thl.arra .ge-uV cawed. h... luoutl..,) at tb. 'Sulr ra i,,... ? .ic wed tn. (,110'Vlun bcalo ot dl.onl. st.pula ius tlwt Kb- averse bii',, tor .uub .narter of tue year .hall nut fall kort of l amount uauied. . (Oi. e t aumleriy bill of !?5,or upward., S per cent. c. .. i " 75, " " 1 ' .. .. .. .. nm " iiO " " DJ Goods. , It. f Mf CRAl'KES, SHIRT MANUFACTURER, i . No. ll West Fourth Street, 1-rrOBITS HTKKPLK WITH GOLD HAH II. ap.17 dly GREAT CLOSING OUT SALE Xl.I.TNT cJ SON, in. a sorTll iiioii hxkiskt. Am now Closing out at Great Bargain. OOliTJMBtJS : 1SG1. I TO COLUMBUS. OHIO FRIDAY MORN IMG AUGUST 30, NUMBER 60. FRIDAY MORNING, AUGUST 80, 1S31. TKLECRArillB KEWS. Europe will not Interfere iu om , Difficulties. KKISEfi PICKETS DRIVES BACK 1500 ttrd OoperBne Flaln Black 811k at 11.00, ralne (i.iu. yara. LATER FROM MI8S01BI. Ofinn T.r4.Tr.T.iin, Dr. Bd. t s u, Rfebel OiKragea I pou Inloii Men. AwUU ceuuayard. OCnn tard irarellng Brew Good at 12H,lliM AwwVI cenu.yua. . . icnn .r P1,ln nJ 9s"k,! ,fl?l,!,h &. Yard French Crjindie and lawn value UI ceut. 3000 ICfin T,Ji !HierflT!f I,,t Co!orwi Lawn ftt 10 centi, I V V V TnlUC io (Willi m jt. 1500 Tard Plain rrench Barege, at SO eenU rain iju uenw a aiu. ALBO, nioilng oot all l)r.g, Jaconet, Organdie and othei rtole at tee. man ou. uaii r 374 to 6(1 coute, v.hie CU to 75 cent. Brilliant, and L'lllule. mine t '.'"s " price., ParHK.-l.,Klegant Silk an I Lac. manuuaj, nun. mer uree f.iE, iic Cud'r Uarmenta for Ju2) TTnnir Anir 9(1 TVasfiri the Bteamer m 13 Asia od the 18tb. aud reports the arrival oul, of the Great Eastern, Arabia and New York, Cotton declined id, sales of 40,000 bales, aud dosing quiet. Bi eadstuffs si ill declining. Pro visions uull. ' t-uusoi. at jvijawij. reduced to 4.1. Ihe geueral news wholly unimportant. tv ....,nn , ','K A rtiTOi.lftr letter was iiADiunui".,, v recently sent, it is understood, from Ihe offioe of f). Amliinr nf the Treasury for the Poetoflice Department, to proper persons near the resi-deuces of certain mail contiaelors in the States frJl'c'rle..: Uo"ery"blove.; of Ken.uckv, Missouri and Maryland, fur tbe Ladi. and Geul.. o.. c n.irnnae of ascertaiuine whether those contrac- BAIN a BON. ..... . , , t0 tbe u. ........ f..;,i.f,,l an, I Invnl In the Union, and to IU.. 'I u inviu.u. " " j - i guard against an improper use of their faoili- ttefl tor secession purpuyea. iuu-.u ,iuuum .u it ii,. o ltfkjkHu TV rozAMuiorica in all uTns FOR DUEGDE3 furmatlou was received from this inquiry JV'l Cloak, aud Mantle.. Bbepbeid'. Cbeck b. all 1s.oj. velTde.lrablB. Poll de CUevr... elenaut Poplin. LliockedSilki, aud all otber new aud raslilonaoie tty. . .... . . ......... 1 . 1 ., ...........I . it til. i.ttV. lbe Ul nu UJII uesirauio -i.iu. .v ,n Nj. 'it Sooth HllU BICIUBBSOSH DAMASKS, DIAPERS. C. MEDICAL DISCOVERY, For tbe eidv aud permanent cuie ut 3onorrhea, Gle.t, Urethal Uisol.argea, Seminal Weakness, Nisully KuiiGsiouB, lucon-tiueuce, Gouital Irritability, Gravel, Stricture, and AFFKCIIOHfl Of TUB KIUHEKt! AND KLAUDEB, bl b bad ben used by upmrdj of ' OJSK HL'SPMKU PHVSICIAKS, kuowu. HULL'S SPECIFIC 1'ILL ...,.lv la a. tlcu. often -.ffectiun a euro lu a few day.. WWtdo tbelr action lulenerai.iu u...u.. , .acU b" cuntalu Jia uozei. p.m. ,u MjftTuTil'ii ml r-T""'l- advertised Aaent cd IU ' V, ,, iituKnista gcuerally. WhjlMale AgcuW, Claclunati. ..i. l,v H. Wlleon, S. E. Samuel. Co., and Bob :ta t Sin.l, Columbus. aufctidoodly -T."... ....I.. U.W.IMIU l.lNKNH.aad thua lUttt lilt ' " - T l"J-"n.- w uaiiie cl luainn , c.kto inin at4iftute of oe V-tuudneii durability of the 'J llWCttlUr-'U l-i:r.reif-'n'- . . l ill. Mia nuillA ill nii.u ejscn alter c-u "... .uu "'".;----; .... .. Uiu Indicted .like ou tb. Amcri.-.u conwin.. .udtl . abauduu a twinem no )rofttiibl, while pvrchawri cau ba u.po.ei on i. "a, , ' . V rVi-.itie. r.tT-dly A ent..3 Ucade Strw.t. New loik c.n . .Tnu P. A,,ffiiutV!l At. a r.nnvent.i(tn anAAiu", - - held at Wilkesbevre, called under the auspices ... - 1, Li: vA.nlnlii.na WO.-A n,1QU- 0. tne iiepuunc-au puny, vtwiu-..va " - - ed unanimously thanking Hun. ll. S. Dk-kiuson for his masterly plea lor tbe union. Baltimore, Auguat 29. A private letter re ceived in this city says the secessionists arrested Celunel Strothev, Ihe well-known proprietor of the Berkley Springs, and emried him to Iticbmona. LIVER I SI VI GORATU n ... r. a ifnAHIi1.! -.J. i:uuw,- .ii. ...... h.tnwu aud at nsl it, end I. no reaorted tbe diaeas. tor wliicb it is rniiMl tbouHnndti Vho had given up H bopw 90llcl'.ed cortitlcatea iu 'ii-.. doar lui.Kt ijv adi.ptl tJlvid-.il taiil.if. it. ud ti act iteully f1 U,JW- Lc-t Ihe ulcan"i or youi e of Ihe Ml I't' X l'l-' "l I'KK IJOJIJ'XXN'XS, ,n..rci.'rl. CHUONH V.H4Lll. I1AHI1VAI, CIWLKHA, CiX OLE It A T' 4 V 1' U ffl , I U J I. cterully a. an OHVINA 1 1 will ci'.o kick and. cm taatlfy) I" twntU b -oi'iVIj iir. Ie at com- ALL WUO VliSlTABR I1UUUEUOU au-, iproved by all tuat have .0 with connaouco iu m. I.. ,..,,,!. ,1. within the lait taoyear of reii-f, a tbe numerou. lu.y poeewwlou nbow. I... .i.. .......Mrriiiii'iit of the jiwedlu uch quantitle.a. el. . . i...i....ni.i DnMi, von In llie OHA1UK, aUT .1 v.... . i ... ii it, v .., . . - rKHr", JWuMr. fiOVH nioWWMHOLliUA IN-LESCE.JA Vtil'IOB, PS aud may ' need auc y ' jl JW i X. F AfA-W- .. n , ri J.'iJ. S? tlioU' 5 j,inu(,-li"o jr fir Tea- J UXV'XA'i tbelr le.tlu.ocj Kc-pctt t the Memory of Gen. Lyon. mi .r r.oir.,i rv.nn . held a meet- ! o. .do..,nnn in the Methodist Church iu that place, to arrange for the proper reception aua Dunai or tne renin. uo v. m.... Lyoo, who whs killed in the battle of Wilson a Creek, Micsouri, on the 10th inst. Committees were appointed lo procure Die presence of the Hou. Gulunha A. Grow at the funeral, if possible, and to make arrangements for the event. The following resolutions were uau. w ... ....... iv. h.,. h.anl aiih irreat Borrow of the death of Brigadier General Lyon, who fell while bravely leading his troops in ihe late battle in Mi6uuri. Jieeolved, That we deeply deplore Ihe loss our country has sustained in the untimely death of .i aiUnt anil natrintift a soldier aud skillful a commander, whose late achievements were o full of promise fur the future in quelling the foul rebellion. ' Kesolvrd, That as his fellow townsmen, wuue we mourn our lo? s. we rejoice that we have his birth-spot among us to cheer us iu steadfast A i; .. . n,nnlr, anrl UK ITUSt hl3 ffiAve smone us will be the spot where future geuer- ... . , . i l . , : ...1 will, a nn. anons win gainer, auu uu iuou.m - ... J.U. .inin.a rf At. A.. 016 emuiauou oi uih sou uiw n .uvu w. j- , v.. .11 Dnin.m mnA Alhara who have U1UU, XlUUiUUll, l uiuui vuv . .:. iki. a.ai. Hoff.mloi a nf their countrv s flae, and supporters of its government. ! , , l... . .l: s.k k. e,i,- ttftoivea, inat we sympaiunu ..m " who have lost a brother, but whose name the nation honor. rj-..i...j n.j ,i.nn. a.niniintlv nennar lff('.rru, iuri vte 'ircu in wj."-.v r . that we should pay our respects to his remains; - : : .. ... V i.3 a liiafel. ana as ilia grave iu iu uo auiuug , - low townsmen, will take the proper measures to signify our appreciation of his worth. ine iouowing rcBoumuu r.o moo ,..Dirv. Hnr,h,nl Tht. ilin Hon. Galusha A. Grow, a fellow townsman of Gen. Lyon, be invited to be present upon the occasion ot jeu. J.yon d ou- rial. A snecial committe Joualhan bkinner, Joseph Uorset, snd the Rev. C. Chamberlain be appointed to make known the reque3t of the people oi rvastioru, auu io rtque.v u.o Vvu.t-... ance Tk;. .crv naluratlvinrpn .nl Ihe VOUI1Z man greatly, and in ihe evening he came into my room, related the circtimsiances, and remaiked that he might enlial, tight the battles of tbe rich, anu oome dbck kuu muj u.i inc.. Would not speak to him. ' U not do i(, tai't he. I U he dd if I won't be a traitor first. I give these Unlance, Mr. Editor, to b!iow that there is a Btroiig Union feeling in Alabama, .. . i : i Iu n me UOt-oeu Ul nreae.uJi, uu'i b.uoc mnu Union fotliug there, it is very reasonable to suppose thut the Union sentiment is much stronger iu North Carolina a Stale that was forced out of the Union than it ia iu Alabama, which wcut out more deliberately. Aud I may here remark lliat if I had bi-eu an Ala-bamiau, I could have gathered around me a ....... :....t. i IT.:..,. l.,.l,,n ii Waranw. And the iuiuiiuuui . . . u .. .vnv i same couM have been dono all over the Slato, . .! tt'l. f Ihn exceptiug oniy a icw uouii.iub. it ncu .... Slate, thi'.re wore twenty counties that had not ttnt a man to the war. while in the great uiajurU ly Ol tne OUHTr cirnuun eua.oc.jr cuot.M were left at home to proieot the women. These twenty counties have Binoe, very probably, furnished men; but they never can enter into the spirit of beceeion. Thoy ara almost non- .1 L.1.1: irpnarl l.mtr uftAr tt.aTeuu.u.uj wuuooc, u the State acceded, that their counties had just as much right to secede from the Slate as tbe Slate had to secede from Iho Government. A company left N an;aw while 1 was mere, .... mn t, n v..t,n mun I.I that. Ci.ni- HUU 1UCIQ .'It ... r. j j " " puny who repeatedly told me they had no desire to tight the Yankees, and this I know to be the language ot tneir nearts; out tury were 'pressed in' by the force uf pullioopinion, which branded every one with cowardice who refused to go. A Southerner may be the biggest oow- asd in (he world, but he can I boar io ue ioiu oi it. One of this company, who was au ultra Secessionist, wrote home to his uiolhor that the .....t. olnnff ll,a linn nf .hair rOlltA In IUcllUlOnd JCUJJ.O BIWUJ ."V ' ' " " " ' " " " ----- - did not appear to care anything about the cause . . 11- .... .nn..l. ,.ra nnt all 01 seceasiou. no aaiu ucu'ivj ni;.w aroused to the great importance of immediate .r . :. I.. A . h.. , action, lie aiso wrote tuui u wu ua iu.. they had to go so far to fight the battles of the THE PEOPLE OF OHIO. The tind. r. i2ncd, deeply sousible of the dangers now hl! "J ' J "nted wtionof ' . ". ,i,n vinorous ana conunucu pruociiucw- . .,:. Governneul, and ot lh .. 0 ' me,.t. to meet and appoint . . ;..:. ,. South while the people themselves appeared so A committee of arrangements,' consisting or . ft w... A,..-r 90 Thn BtalrniP.nt that IT ABIil.UIU.. . ' f, - ' news had been received indicating certain and speedy recognition ui mo iouicucriiie tmuce, la .ir.fniln rl..,i On the contrary, the indications are that all the Europeau Govuniuienn inteud . .ii.li. i A . . .. : i to continue mrecpecitue mucaaue.auu uj" the result of the contest. A .,w.uiBiiirr.r from tie iliiirtia Side, tuts mi...i.,i. uiiitri Hint our LicLct luices advanced to Builev'B Cross Roads ye3ierda,y, aud diove - . . . .. .:i .. i, i . . . ih. uu..aur2i,,n in i k ri ii 1L nine nuu a ut.il. iv i. OXjOOUltSrCS- SAXjE! . , ((iut (ue la,el. liav(, tak(, posaession of COIOlUtiUUIllg CIU1I.CUCO fU bis .u.v...& ..r Cl.ll CuUlilUCUm. Tliera wns n.ueh firiDe during the day, Out ;i..., fi.inl imbiiIir It is reported that I i. iltiB k nf tneflion CftVilll'V was ojauo at what vf I t,.l,o o (tpqprtrtl r.ftnuou. After ...la fnnnila lllltl VlPPIl filTti ftt ii frOIU auuuij iiTfciw v m howitzer", on a neixr ftpproaoii tuey aitscoverea 1L IU US a Blium. lianipl Cemiilc. of the Hd Michigan negt- 1. .1 1 ... I nan iin OU HV I IIH H I'f : 1 11 1 II I U I i mem . w mm iviiic.i cwtF j ..-- RUMMER GOODS! diechmge of a gun iu the hands of a comrade FOR 20 MYS.0NLY1 PRICES GREATLY REDUCED KWAFP CO. 113 South High S!reet. J&d3Jyl8 d2law3ni nUe favor. - mini inn . vfl(J. CtAVGB'AND SWALLOW BOTH TWKTHEB. Pile. On. Pollar iicr Bottle. ALHO SdKFORB'S FAMILY' BLOOD PURIFYING PIUS. a win err r P 7A IBM TSOBTABIS . "w.. Yp 1S HAT CLMAIE. lbe FA M II. F OA-1. Put active Oathartlo, rued in bin practice more The ccn.ttu.tly lucrea.-ho have long uncd the f'on which all eipre.9 in . iar.f-.il me to place tueiu 1'h. Proto.ion well th.rilc act ou rtiferjut The FAMILY t'A-with d'ie reference to I hi. e-juipounded fiom a vaiie-Sitract., which act alike mentor, canal, aud aro cm where a cathartic i. BANUHMKNIU of the HESS, PAItiB I" Tus COSTIVENKUil, PAIli THE WHOL bOKY, fteqnently, ir n"S''"J vcr, LOSS Of AP.rfc- ej,N8ATiu:i of uyho KU6TLESI1NESH, HKA1I-r ii it HEAH. all 1K- v. a M F. B . WOBilfl lu HIHCDMATI8M, a great and many di'W to which . ...iiu In ilii. atlver- PllIC-K 3 JOHN B0NTE & CO., M AKUFAOTVKElla OF Manilla Cotton, Tarred & Hemp Kope, COTTON AND HEMP PACKING Cord. lilacs Twin. Id all their variety: AMD 11 KALE B IB Oakum. Anchor; Slock; Fatent Scin Tuine, 1MAIN STREET, One door ioub apil-dOiu out Clne-lniiatli O. jlnlclN, lU-staiiiuuls. Lhtoh cpmprlefor h. V ii.a- .remand from tboa I I'lLLB, aud he ' ! reuard to their uw.hMln. .... ....Ii .it all. V.11U.U in. .. know that uinoreu. - portion, oltue uo". well eetamuueu ...... .i Vii.-etabte IV l mo fju.- -p-- . ue.dl, uch STOMACH, SLEbPI-BACK AND LUIN8 ANI SOBKNKiiii Ol.KB from .udden cold, whick .nd iu a long a"of Fe. TITS, A I'"'10 f.VKll THB BODY, Vml. cr WEIGHT II) PUHlKlfcHofthe BLOOD flesh i. heir, too jii ,.me..t. DOSE.lto. c'viiicnesaTt. iiousm BOSTON. . . . .a. a a a a., a a rat nj f It tiV I "lNU ccwpletod, With .upetior accc-mniouaHuu. lor Indies and Oen.leu.ou,,, a. opened Jaf. IS . 1 . r ii- Pr.n.rititori to tuabe It worthy tbe ."rrJuofthetraveUngpublle. H . PAil& guv z. n vri i j m i l. i a Z5h III! lX1SSS? Dru.g..U 8enel...y, Sid whole..le by Ihe Manulacturerand Proprietor, (408 Broadway, New Yer. eoid in Colnmtu. by Kobert. ?"'itawwla?p asd O.PeninASon. octae BO-dlywly wp . . m - dcbcvit. ' O V JAM A1C A It ..V. T ,V i ni n'v'iill K 11UOWN. Ohemiat aud j uinur.1..-. - , , fifth atreet. Tlrii2irit. nortneasi coiiii-i w. , i S.51ik,. manulaeturer of Brown'a Kaaence of Jamaim Ologr, which is recog.iixed and preecril.etl l.y faulty, and h. become the .tandard family medlrlunf the I nlted Mate. ml '' nn nr nnnwial Aacellence. . TUW.IWHir" w - F 'i ,' "h7. r in .hort. In all 0?"rZ, t ;e fuucvu.. It i. of cane, i.i iiio.. ...- r ...,. r .niilAiniF liarly e!Hc.cloii; nmaniiij, iu...-" . - NOTICE -To parent thl valnabl. Eeae.oeom bfdng eonut.rwted, a new .teel engraving, executed at a great "at w 1 bTtouBd on tb. outde ot tbe wrapper, In order S I the purchaaer aain.t beina impoeed npon by ''raKlCK BKO.nd for at hi. urug ana ucnuuu '"r'VrrfcLEBIck BROWN, jE'.,'l)r..g and tbema al Store, 8E. curner of Ninth and ijncniu arreia, --..uu....cu.... -.-delphie. Also for .ale by all Mpectable gn..t. to the nile.l !".... - TU I197sof.Tr,VCK'e) RCIKIOL, VVlht, OPES il M0SD.W, (September , at hor room, at tb. Mint, al College, the will be aenieted by All. Crawford. . uglD d 3t B w I w CAPITAL RESTAURANT, (UNDER GOOD ALE liUUSls.) rrtHB dt1ged ha, taken th. cooau ' 1 Qood.le Hou.e, wh.ro will be louud, hereaft. ,,rf " . 40od style, the be.t eatable the market a Nonf but the bt Ale.. Lbiuoi. and Cigar., ke, I ? , ,.. ,i,. n... 1,. M-Dtuiug noom euiire. " .hurt, tne rroprietor - - FEKLF. tauraut my'itdtr ST. LOUIS HOTEL, CHESTNUT STREET, ABOVE TillJiD, ... krl .if l.a J.lt.hilliT HoniM S MTrkTVTanKutreeU-, th, B.i.k.. Vo.t OOlc crcncM.-ur.--.- ,,. .. HOAUU I- lrn. 60 .a,i.nruil tn aunuriian n - nnwaid-. u.r day, and Meal at a Flnt-Ola.. : . . . ... ii. .1 ..i.i lri,.M according to tir.itail.anr. .i'kuiii The o"iy Car take Pawenger from any Station TO or UI'OiB. XL' tne noiei. 6"Eogllh, I rencn, uern.au a-u oiu-" .y.-.-. )7dbul-vp t . i .iiioii.. Jin Aim 20. The Rebels, cn couraged by einggeraied reporta of the battle near opriuguctu, arc uu8irs,....s numbers iu this and surrounding counties anu I ...... ni 1 1 i ii nil LinilM OI OUtTllKCS UUUU cinuu I .hoi., nrnnmlv If ttltV Bl 0 allowed to overrun Lufnyette, Kay and oiher tuch coun ties in this pi.rt ot the buup, as tuey i .1..;.... u.oo aiil kIpb.1 enuueh from ihe Cniun i'n ani.aiui. Hioir ftruiv for months. Iu view of this condition ot mingi, iibbibibucc ... uoc. asked of Gen. Fremont. The tlomo Guards still occupy Hie fortifications nere. ana are wen supplied with arms and provisions, and can probably hold the place; but roinfurcements are ... : . ..Hi;., ani.iii.ll1 in I needed to operate agaiua. ijnu.uo Mftb. ... ravaging the country. Prominent Uniou men are daily threatened with death. Es-tiov. King, of Ray county, has been frequently warned, but his devotion to the Union cause, is unshaken. He and his sons are ic.. v shoulder their iiiurI-cIs. Tnw. 4, n Wm. Lvon Mackenzie, lui.uniu. - - Ex-member of I'urliarueut, died last night in this oily. The deceased was the Upper Canada leader of Ihe rebellion of 1837, which resulted iu his exile to tho cniiea niaicj .u. .v." years, during which lime he was connected with the New York Tribune. Being patduncd iu ISl'J he returned to Canada, and wns elected to Parliament, which positiou he occupied for sev eral years, lie was i mverani.y iu..v.... m.v v..nv Anir 'J!l. For the iutuie no clearances of goods will he allowed for Mala-moraa, in Mexico. The above is by order of the Secretary ot the 'lrcusury. Fob tress Monroe, Aug. 28. We have no tidings from the naval expedition. ' It turns out that the Ofing ou our ting of truce from Crauey Island, some weeks ago, was entirely unauthorized by Gen. Huger. On hearing of the outrage he sent an apology tu Com. btrmghain. Arrival ot tlis Aula. New Yobk, Aug. 2'J. The news by the Asia is very meagre. A letter from the emissary oi l ho I ni Inn butjDIV ABaooiai.uu - suit of bis visit to Egypt. He gives an encouraging prospect of the cotiou productive ana,..itv of Eavnt. The Vice Roy expressed great interest ia the extension but oan do very little. u.:. t i-onta RRf. 4jc : it wa9 re ported the French Government had hiBtructed ?, . . ..n. ii.a cnirance of Cialdine uuy.u uui ni uppuuw ' - into the Papal territory, should the necessity . ot war require it. Latest via Uneenatown. r... a., ir Salea of Cotton veater- jjl r r, niuim, 4. u pc . day (Saturdav,) 8,000 bales, of which 4,UU0 to anaiMi alora and exporters. u.cao...-. London. Aue. lS.Consols closed yesterday at 'J0!((iJ0j for money and account. trie shares 24J(2Ji; Illinois Central 3J. .1 vuiiniiuice ui oiiouiu."' o i.-.i'. .1.. .. .in. I ..ain-nhnra rifll,:.. teauiug iiitu u. me vutiu mv uv.6--- Lyon, to make suitable arrangements for the . . .--:.-,l rjuriai, was appoiu.eu. Vftlliuidighnm's llonori ate Multiplying. Tim London Timet condescends to notioe his "tumid and grotesque eloquence;" his name figures with tbe names of other trailois in the list of speakers at Kentucky traitor barbecues, and now we observe a camp of Secessionists is named after him. We clip the following from the Louisville Courier of yesterday : moil camp yali,anpigiia;i. lluNOIt TO WUOM Ilo-SOR H DiK-RaIKF We.UB-ER BAtrALLION Daii.b Ariii u Nei-ibauif Bkoom3 anu Brickbat, it. Correspulidengo Louisville Courier. CAMf VALLANDlliliAM, IibAIiillAaTERS, Augugt 22, ltv1. J iWori Louisville C'ourur . Yenerday, under the command of Capt. Will. L. Ciarka. of the "National Blues," the "Lewis Guards, :Capt. J. 11. Lewis) went into camp near this place, 1 1 .i .1.. f.i..iiiai .iPahiIap nf iu9th:fi and I'mioi. unci iin. .... I... ... i-.-i . .. .1 ni,np.aainnvllifl nn- llOeriJ BgU.UHI. Ttiuufi auk "H" ble Yallnndigham, of Ohio. Mr. Vallandignam may regain n yvw, but it is noticeable that no honest man has been praised by the Courier, either iu its correspondence or editorials for some months. Amazon iu Missouri. Late advicesbctoken the fact that in the town of Lebanon, Mo., there is a rare and admuaDie body of Amazons, who don't wear hoops, hav- J . -1 , .....i.,la nf Ail'i'limlilml. Xli op given lip tnat. e.eg'iui rinci o. o..vu..w.. . .- ..nnrifililt anhrp which, until llOU 1UI lUTJ lUU.O , lately, we were simple enough to suppose was V . .1 I I.. . ..nlw.rl n ..n T OT n nt only ior tue uauua ui - iVHp.a . who were prisoners in DunuKueu, uuj afterwards released, on coming past Lebauon, which since has been occupied oy oiate ir.ops, beheld a soene which they will not soon forget. A troop of women bent rode horses in the good old fashioned way, and were going through a series of military manccuverB, and cut and slashed in furious style, with sabres bright and keen. When Ihe two travelers got abreast ( we mean nothing indolicate I oi tne temaie urugouuo, ouo of the latter auouted, "There goes tbeni Dutch." The travelers thought it prudent not to lBgoti the way, nuttl they were muen ironi Ihe furious female warriors. A romBncer would work up this story loan agonizing pitou, by relating how the aruazons wore long botHa with red tops, pistols in their belts, etc., but we - . . . i -... i. ...11 .1..? ....... unit that iu leel nouna Biwayu vo i.u mo ".. .-what we have done on Ibis occasion. If this is I reason, mako tho most of it, as Patrick .Henry eaid. . . lUUIUIll GUI' Other gentlemen of the eame company wrote home that there were twenty thouaand men in V;..i.i. !.liniil ama anil tliiMVPrv fltftlPinent prevented your correspondent frjm active service ; iv.n 1'Anl.il.i.r.tii aiinr All llipflp uml tnnnv IU UK VVI'l.n' " ' ' J - , J mnrn BpnA tn uh.-iar th it there is an uuder-cur- rent, but it is uot now available, nor will it till the South are a conquered people, when it is probable it may be efficient iu carrying into operation the laws of the Union. But I must heartily arrree wilh your corres pondent that we mini; have more men in the field. There ia tou much indifference among all class es in regard to enlisting. There is an idea nrevaiunir mat n. in a lamiiy u. ruur o. uvc vouus men. one should go to war, they, as a lainilv. have done their Bhars. But most truly !. ia iliriarnnf in tha Rnuth. Three and four brothers stand side by side in the same company, and, what is stranger still, were urged and prevailed upon to eo by their mothers and siaters. And now it is very fair to pie ,J.,V inlmla ia in 1)ia fifihl. arhinh can not be far from three hundred thousand men, No demand lor troops was niaue upou j.exus, DeCaUOC Uei UWI. USU .CIPBUIJIJIIOCU UO Ubcu ed, or would be needed, to defend her own soil. for the nomination of v!a!7..f R.0? CT of State, and one member ot tn. a "rU .rouble it.arranging the k'-ffi that the Conven.ion consist of one one additional delegate for each sur- each county fur Supreme Judge at the lal,.'e''J;wori a0 as to secure not less than two plus half of tho ratio, varying this PPor"iher from all. Under this apportionment the delegates from every couuty and an even number rrom an. ul,LK . :il . .:.io.l in rlnlfltratea as follows: several counties win u ou. ..-. . o i.icking' Adam. . Allen A.hlaud Aehtabula Atbcu. ' Auglaize Belmont Brueu Butler Carroll ( 'heuioatgn Clark Clermont ' Clinton Columbiana Cobici.m Crawford Cuyahoga ITark. ll'tnauce . ITelawart Krte Fairfield Fayette Franklin Fultou tiallia Geauga Oreeue Gueruaey Ilanillt'.u Hancock Hardlu HairiHon Ileuiy Ulgblaud Hoiking Uolmei - liuroo Jackson Jefter.ou Knox Lake Lawrence. . 4 .. .. 4 .. B .. 4 .. 4 . ti .. B .. 8 .. 4 .. 4 .. 4 .. .. 4 .. .. .. 6 ..12 ... 6 .. 8 .. 4 .. 4 .. 6 .. 2 ..lu ... 4 ... 4 ... 4 ... 4 ... 4 ...34 . 4 ... 4 ... 4 ... 1 ... a ... 4 ... 4 .... e ... 4 ... 4 ... 6 ... 4 ... 4 Licking L'vau Liirain Luc a Madison ......... Mahoning Marion Medina Meig Mercer Miami Monro. Montgomery .. Morgan Morrow Mn.klnguin.... Noble Ottawa Paulding Perry Pickaway Pike Portage Prebble , Putnam Hlcblaud 11, mm Banduaky S"iotu be.ieca Bhelhy Btiirk Summit Trumbull Tucaraaa... Uulou Vauwert Vlutlon Y arret) Washington .. Wavne William. Wood Wyandott. ... .... 4 .... 4 , a s 4 10 4 t t 4 a a ... 4 ; a a 6 ....... 4 a a 4 4 a 4 8 . 4 . a . 4 . 8 . tj . 8 . 4 . 4 . 4 468 ' " tuo .1 : :v'-""-;;:"".."v:v be beld oa We further BUggest tnat me wt ine uuestion, and the only oue worthy of the consideration of Amein r hat'no lengthened appeal is "SX"! Becur.5 for you tion to it. We feel assured hat a respect for thi'"f "Vesting upon you as the heretofore tbe blessings of free inat tuUaas-a seuse of $JqU to whom you hop. to peaceful J.iXtttaftSi SXewf.h no doubtfu! voice, your unohang. Compared with the interests involved lt P?" 2nd maintains social order is tor-bat littlePimportance. It ihe Government is but little of all that we ever to exist at the mercy of caprice or disappo ntcd mDll,"' 1 gh u it be Baid that we hav. now enjoy that will not in the loss of .'lj our party differences? These par Iiitri' luip Statement of a gonlhcin Itr(ji M ar, Cotton aud Slavei y. The London Times has become the great Pro-Slavery journal of tbe world. So remarkable are the changes wrought by the rebellion in the United States. Not many months since, the Times was no exception to the English Ptess. If any journal among them, feeling in a bad humor, wished lo give the United (states . .. .... i .. "y-... ,t.A iiitnniiiiTiitv wan ever au UUUIVSUIJ ..!., ...v -.v ready, and the "dirk spot of Slavery" received the thrust of the spear. The most reluctant tributes to American progress and power never - . . . . . : 1 1... .nn..;.ni,ii. n. . i 11 f tailed to db accuinpauieu uuubiuvuuui. e.' over the baloful institution of Slavery. It was the plague-spot of tho Republic it was our weakness and our shame. So the Times thought and so it wrote; and the American People were . .1.. 1...1 ... ..p .u. i ; .. forced lo icei tnai iit juuguicui ui m b"h world, as represented so largely by the English Press, was decidedly and paiufully againBt them, because of the toleration of human bondage in one-half of the area of the Amerioan Union. Thi.1 ia all r-hai.i?id now. so far as the London r;,... u ..nin'ernnrt. We do not know how the k.i hn.n nnneerlcil. hut we know the fact. A lfll ll i. jwv-v ---- - - - - . that ttlicrcos its voice, iu former days, was al ways ngainat the institution of Slavery, even i.... ii ociteil bv auirerance. and becauso the A.,.ii.iin 0,,fiiiHBut did not know what to ii Geo. M. Parsons, Franklin county. Win. T. Bascom, J-Samuel Galloway, do. K. P. L. Baber, d Theo. Comstock, aa-3. II. Coulter, "Jo-Henry Milter, do. Tnhn Broueb. uuyanoga cuuu. J. W. Weatnerby, B. O. Griswold, J. P. BiBhop, George Mygatt, C. W. Noble, Melanothou Barnett, J. A. Harris, Ti-:.l TA AfahnninS OOUnty. George Willey, Cuyahoga, oounty. The Pittsburgh Chronicle pufishesre fqllop-itig interesting slateuient of a "Southern . u-gco," as he signshimself: "1 left Warsaw, u little village onihe Tom-hti.linn llivpr. Alabama, on Ihe day orthe bat tle uf Bull Run, 'after a residence there of ten muuiliB. I htid pecuiar facilities for findiug out whether any 'uthlcr current' existed iu that region a region thiru which it would be ditli-otilt lo conceive of Buy more intolerant, more rabid, or more senseless in the secession cause. It was my forluuo to act as -ciem ai tne cuc-iton which was lo clioone men to represent Sumter . il'l.... ... knl miA LulltilV in tne jouvbuiiuu. i" " no candidate, who run ai a Secessionist. He wns eleoted, of course. I saw that day enough io convince any man that nut half of the voters eutered into ihecaut.o with spirit. Mauy wrote ... . .1 .......1...I II n inn mAtt out tickets and votcu ior piuuiiucu. - whose names had not Deeu put up ueiu.u ... people, and others on picking up the secession tickets shook iheir heads saying, 'That is too hut Tor mt,' 'I can't go that," itc. Many were pro. ailed upon by the hot-heads around the table tu vote, and had it not been that tho election officers were so vigilant, an extremely buibii vote would have been cast. After this election 1 knew the ttatut of every voter's mind, that was present that day, on tne great question .... 1 .A ii.a il.inli.tn war B itisue. All who wavereu oi .uc tut.. ....... Union men; and, knowing that 1 was a union man. thev afterwards tail ed very freely in re- i .,.,ai . I'm maav. however, who ga.u iu nvi.cca.iii j .i .1 .i ...... h.A Bmrii iipiiiuin munui . u .uu tUCU .aicicu, imi.v cause of secession. There are some there yet who would gladly go dbck to ...e um uu.ou, which has protected them so long and so well. , , . u .i k.r,n f rarno awav. an old mau . aUUl I LlUIl. "V.ui . .i . of seventy years of age said to me that their leaders were all wrong. He said that the peo-a o ...... hDii fttuiiJini? Nortb for rje oi iue oouiu uj ww o - everything for a loug series of years . and now ii.pAave P,.t North and (rot a President, and are'kicking up about it. H is rebellion and no- . . .. .. il..n....i d.ii a ivpallhtT thing lesB.' Auotuer geuueu.--, - - y nlunter. was also equally emphatic and free in expressing his opinion. My uthce was sought r . l ii- tn w hn wished to talk very onen oy uiiiuu - about tbe sad Blate of aUirs,and such was their fidelity to the old Uuion tnai tney wc.c .c , unserved in their expressions tlm. I waB. These men never reporlei any convei(fitiou that took Place. It would have been death to me if they had, and would have brought disgrace on themselves. Ou the Saturday befora 1 left I remarked very carelessly to ouc of the lest educated men in the village., with whom 1 was 'hunting,' hat I tiresnnied there were vjry few wl.u would consent to go buck: 'There are more than you are awaie oi, -am v, a.. n... K.Xi, now. Aaide from revolution our lead ers do not believo in the doctrine of seoesaion. They have espoused it Mr me purpooo u. u.aou-lution and alter that is accomplished, it must and will be discarded. Our statesmen do not reallv think a State has a right to wi'hdraw.'l So thought I from what I had been observing. nolher vounp man, whocasralherapoormau was very haughtily urged by a rich planter to enlist, and not to loaf about town doing nothing .lint;! ilciii w - do wirfi it now that same Times ia wielding i . -" 1 -rmla li uuitiifa ilm itif PRESTON HOUSE, (roHMIKLT MCEKAY,) B. E. HOLT - Pao.iTo North-West Corner of Publio Square, prisioui . IST ovarls. Oliio. CHOICE BRANDS OF CIGARS AND TOBACCO F-jr oale by il. 11. ItkUSTlSAUX, j,19 108 Boath High . Battles. Duaue, in his Military Directory says : Battles have ever been the last resource ot good Generals. A Bituatiou where chance aud accident often battle and overcome the most prudential and most able arrangements and where superiority of numbers by uo means assures suocefs, is such as is never enteied into without a clear necessity for 60 doing. The fighting a battle only because the euemy is near; or from naving no omer iornieu pu. nflnnu in not the way of making wtr. Darius lost his crown and life by it. Harold, of Eng- ... . , i - .i.i . 1 1.... i land, did the same; anu rraucisinei., m. i lost the battle an! his liberty. King Joltu, ot France, fought the battle of Poi-ticrs; though ruin attended hiB enemy if he had not fought. The King of Prussia lost his country and the reputation which Prussia acquired from Freder-.... it k. ilm Vmiiln nf fiena. A ahillful Gen- ICS . 1 , M ' - - , eral will give battle when his army aud situa-Uon cannot be worse, if defeated, than if he does uot fight at all; and when tho advantage may be great and the loss little. Geo. A. Benedict. H. S. Stevens, T.M. Kelley, Merrill Barlow, J. M. Coflenbury, John W. Heisley, John C. Grannie, W. 1). Cushing, A. Stone, Jr., H. B. Uulburt, E. G. Williams, . W. Bingham, M. C. Younglave, C. Hickux, D. K. Tilden, F. T. Backus, William Case, Henry G. Abbey, E. S Flint, do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. John F. J. R. B. Thos. Jas. do. do. E. Car?, Diokman, n..r.m P Snftlilinff. Reuben Hitchcock, C. D. Adams, Aaron Wiloox, L. Smith,, C. Quinn, Beth Marshall, E. S. Pike, I). M. Eddy, H. Steele, Jr., Sol. Schwab, 1). Carroll Gray, Moses S. Harvey, A. N. Baker, S. S. Osborn, A. L. Tinker, B. Bissell nr-.ii:um kfallhewfl. H H. Hunter, raiiueiu coumj. A. McVeigh, do Joseph H.' Riley, Franklin county. w araen, Sparrow, ao. H. Smith, do. inn R Swan. do. John W. Andrews, do. J C. Groom, do-William Hunt, Clark county. do. Lake oounty. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do: do. do. do. do. do. do. do, r.. a i ii'i ... . . G. Volney Dorsey, Miami county nnnnim and energies lo secure the nidc- ...i,..,..o nf ihn l'ro Slavery dislrict of the !T-:...i cilAa lrnnarino' full well that the lead Ijlll.llll I'1"1CC, ....v.-.p, " - ..o nf 1 hp HPPI1 dint? rro-Slavftry (list riot assume. o ilia rnifl uml Bionnd of their movement, that ic.innn siiieei'v is 'the corner-stone of white ..1-ilii.linn. All. 1 the divinelv-appointed means of social perfection. Are we not right, then, ; nrnnlniininir tho London Times the ercat l.n CLlaoPl'V illl. rnl of the world? Let it have llU-umi.'j J - this honor and wear it. We beg our English cotemporanes to give-ns a holping nanu in awarding to the 'Times its well-earned position n. Mm allies of the Kine of Dahomey. nni'iMti, - - . Lei its consider a moment Borne of the possi-bilititSfvjf English dilemma, iu case the Times shall succeed in mBpirinp, wuu un . iu-uiut nnlicv, ihe English-Government. The necessities nf Ennlish commerco require tho procure- 1 p . a . .i e.-i niL.: meut of cotton irom me nouiuern oiuiec. aueir ports are blockaded, nowever, Dy rne unnea rjtaiOS l.lOVCrUUH'111, nin. l.un.u.. u.uo ivuyg- nnize their independence, and riska war with the American Union, in raising the blockade to gel tho essential cotton. It is a tremendous risk fr Eugland. War with the United States would cost me rjugiisi. oumiuiuiui u uu-j a :ii;n.ia nf itnllarA it would cost Enrrlish UTCU luiii.ii"" v. -' a commerce half ao much more iif the depreda- c 4 n.i.ali.vi anil It wnnl 1 Hons OI iiuieiicnu ,i...n.v... u . L-i i:..l. n.milalinlB mnrn thnn wa pur. tn COS! nuKiicu twf. . . i i.. v. iu . i ..11 calculate in loans una ueuie nmi nuuiu ue-uuu- fiscated. Perhaps me cotton picaea up on ooum ... nlantations it is not to be shipped to sea 1 . i r ll . i. : .. 1.. ... 1. .. n . !.. puna nowm r"j j hsps not. This is one of the English dilemmas. But suppose ior argument a Buau i ui.i, uu .i.- j .. ,r nf tlm Knrrliah Onvern men !. we ine ucuiaiii - -r ' 1 abandon the blockade, stop the war, submit to .l.- j..i.ii.itinn nf ni.p l.atinnniit.v. andacknowl- IUD unouu' iw" - - J j edge the independence of the Pro-Slavery Re public, want next: iinginnct una perncu ev i.;wtn nliiainlhA t-pnult and has acknowl e l i ii i ii 5 ... edged, as her justifications, that English supremacy cannot exist without Pro-Slaveiy cotton. Very well. Victoria no longor reignp. Britannia no longer rules. "Cotton is King. ' Bui after a while, King Cotton waxes fat and kicks again. His plantations are enlarged, his customers have become cormorant, and the Men-arch wants more men to grow the staple. Ex . . Ll.- 1.: - L' ; .. IV.I perience nas taugui mm u.a uuwci. ame v..n.-lon is, in reality, a despot, sud he resolves ti lrt. ; i h ihn Kino, nf Da. OpeU cui I cojiiiuucuo " ' " - - - - r. homey and esiaDiian iree traae in -uciu uuua, r u u. ;n ih Knah AVa nhni.1.1 like tn Ite.U CBUgll. IU ww . - - - know how the pro-slavery organ the London Times would meet that resolve of King Cotton. Would it. advise the strengthening of the African Squadron? Aud if so, would not the j-. . . w. ll- t .hln pro-slavery uot on nepuni.u , "' -,:gaoli another bale or tneBtapie to r.ngiauu umi. ..;" j y - - trade" wilh Africa for field hands was ac" i ,' ' quiescedin? And then what would English A laa . spinners do? and what would oecume o. ....p- --o liah commerce and English supremacy? This , Samuel 1 ease, is another English dilemma. Does the pro- George l uni , .!... rn.i t; Mi.p in a futnre? No Thomas vtenn, doubt. Such faith is in the Thirly-nine Articles. And bo it is a future of "rewards and punishments," as the Timet will learn. aY. ! Times. William Garvev. J. W. D. Alexander, J. C. Horton, M. Mitchell, M. H. Jonea, ti. C. Writer, ti i Fleming. Luther Day, Portage county. Horace M. Stokes, Warren county Geo. R. Sage, Jo. r t iin.ilpvv. do: I.UU. V. .'- I o Mp.Hurnev. "O do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. Anderson, mi . Ti.Aa.ih!. AllOU.nn uvuv.ji Geo. r .Dtaymgn, utiirvu';. uu. do. H W. Hevnolds, William Maneur, G. W. Stahl, Isaac Day, R. D. ReeBe, William Brcwn, George W. Hall, John R. Hilliard, J. It. Hubbell, George W. Tru, T. W. Powell, J. Allen, II. C. Coulter, M. B. W. Uarman, H. W. Rhodes, C. Armstrong, James M. Cherry, J. B. Flatt, t A A .wlui'jnn oVo.B. Gardner, Fayette oounty Peter Windle, j. James F. Ely, do- Nelson Rush, ao- Robert M. Briggs, do. James Purcell, . ao-A. W. Sampson, Champaign county. John A.Corwin, do. JoshuaSaxton, do. A. V. Vance, do. J. C. Jones, do. AVm. Patrick, ao- J. B. Armstrong, ao- Johu W. Houx, do. ll'ooi County. Addison smun, do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. Sncdor, L. Harrison, John C. Miller, V. P. HanBoni, John B. Hugens, , Anderson, . Cowen, . Felt, Lee, . Covell. . Frank, . Kevon, C. Wotring, M. 0. Van Horn, M. T. Gardner, Emil Hess, Joseph Root. M. B. Jones, U. W. Little, J. G. Grove, A. Mollvain, B. C. Walters, Charles Dengier, R. Burr, G. H.Waldo, James Eaton, A. A.Welsh, N. W. Little, L Barnes, , Dickinson, J. L. E.P. John Wm. A. C( G. W. C.H. E.C. M. do. do. do. do. do. do. Delaware county, do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. do. :do. A3. Jw'aU l i""u" ' Thomas Ewing, FairBeld oounty. William Eiry, Montgomery county n Elliott. PnimrtDickev. Kellum, Clarke, Irving, Fishback, J: A. Adams, G. S. Innis, J. H. Stader, Winnie, Curtis, Beach, S. 6perry, Thompson, Byers, Arnold, Barton S. Kyle J. M. R. W. P B. 0. T. Geo. H. B. A. J. S. M J. M. G. B. do. do. Clermont oounty. do. do. do. do. Franklin county, do. Knox oounty. ' do. do. do. do. do. do. Wm. Houston, Julius Blinn, H. C. Laurence, S. 0. Wesicott, P. 8. Blevine, Lewis M. Hunt, J. P. Thompson, George Laskey, N. D. Blinn, E. Graham, N. Brewster, John W. Bailey, W. II. Jones, John Webb. . Huut, H. M. Brown, D. H. Poe, S. Hatch, B. W. Johnson, Henry Thornton, Geo. Strain, Jas. R. Tyler, N. N. Dodge, F. R. Miller, H. E. Teck, J. II. Blinu, Geo. S. McKnight. Stark County. William K- Upham, Leiter. Greenwood, Seraphim Mejers, J. S. Kelley, Bwight Jarvis, Ediwn Jsrvis. Beni. F a G. R John Saxton, J. S. Kuiley, C. N. Oberlin, hi. D. Button, S. Lind, George W'elkcr, Alex. Allen. Kent Jarvis. R' H. Folger. Miami oounty. iu w. - J 1 i. iu cmhaiinh of luBcarawas. R. C. Uurd, Enox countyj J. T. Hobbs, do. C. Cooper, do. Samuel Dbv'is, do. Daniel MoGrady, do. G. A. Jones, d- 8. T. Warden, do. J. C. Devin, do. 6. Blanohard, do. Mahoning County. Francis G. Servis, Jas. M Nash Jas.B.BIocksom, t has. G. Edwards. B. Sibly Hiue, Fairfield County. Alfred M. Veigh, K. Fritter. L.rWton. l.ountu. . i . Haroaugn,. Pren. Mehaa Richard Lanning, M. B. Wood, A. J. VYilkinS, T.J. Roney, Jos. Shook, A. M. Williams, John Mirise. J. 8. McCoy, P. Thompson, A. L. Harris. Col. James Irwine. |
Format | newspapers |
LCCN | sn84024216 |
Reel Number | 10000000023 |
File Name | 0786 |