Daily Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1848), 1864-04-12 page 1 |
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PROPOSALS. WajmiMtoit. D. O.. March 85. 1MI. AKALED PBOFOSAL8 will be received at thU I .,;ttMiiui wicifc'itfiAf, Apt a arth, at p. m., I m..1or .00,000 sets o( Infantry AoaouWeuents, eatlbre I ''"W,to'bo delivered la the follow iug quentiiies at tb I wairiuiiod AlMUAif . via: iO,UlUiUit the Mow York An o&, Governor's ao.000 est at the Fraokford Arsenal, Brldetbarf, TH.-'1' W.LiflihaijJiwit Ultsburg, ). two hu at tba Ut, Louis Arsenal, St. LonH. Mo. "'""'"TfawaettiutraniBuUattiH) be made In etrtetooi- loroiltjr with the new paitera set to be seen at Aiiegnauy, new 10m, riaiiKora, frt. .bouts, wa beBprlognuld Armory. They a rata bo abject to . liiiuection at the arsoual wher duUveied. eWo It '"Bui,,,! MMtrlvMl fhp (Km (loTvrnnirnf ' ' Kami, km to b accepted or paid f ,r but aueb as are approved ftpon Inspection.- Tba belts to be of grained Wether, ,1 dU tke steus. to tfe (Mo haal oak tauned. The bonioer ueii win ne inclined tn the set, iMlheries mult be made In at not hh.. 1 one-flftoefttn(l-lo) per week of the whole 1 i Al teoatraflted Tor; th rt ikiTr; to ha mad I J "-UJt daf T May.I 1 J ! jj . a ' - Jk - Failure to make deliveries t a specMed tli ,e-flftae.th(l-l6rper week of the whole ..mbe7 on the h SDeclfled time all! subject the contractor to a forfeiture of the number if r he may tail to dellvera- that tiuie . c The accoutruaionts mut be UoxeVJa the usual mauuer; sue uoxus 10 00 cuartftHl ut co.t, to h termined by the Inspeeto-, Bidders will atau, fxitlinltlv tli r 1 nale, where they -propone t detlrer and i)m nuoibers . of sets they propne (o duliver at eanb plaoe, if fur Ho bids will be considered from iiartles other than regular manutactniers, aad nuchas are known to 1 ' tnis aJepartment to tm rnliy eomiHtut to exemituln I - their owsbp the work propoeml for. Slionld any vmi 'T oinifwi ier accouiretnttix ether than ta eemndfrin hie own ibops; they .will be rejected aitdthecontiact refidre-i null and void. late name ana plane on manured lire of each party obtaiuibg a contract toutth stanipod on fftch pnrt - efearh set ofaccontnmeiits. Bidders will enclose with their bids the written f neknowiedgments or thlr snrcties ovor thetrown r algnatnree.' . : , V 1 K Mach party obtaining evontmet will be obliged to enter Into bouds with approved sureties fur Its leitnnii execation. Upon the award belug mad, sncceasfnl bidders win ne nounea, ana lumlanea with forms of con iraoi auu oouu. Dhe Douartment reserves the rlaht to rnlactanv Proposals will be addrewid to "Brigadier femoral veorge u. uemsay, i;niei 01 urflnantd, Watthlngton, I. C.,'t endorsed JProposa Is for In fun try Acooiu tremeota. UKoliOF, n. KAvHAV. marlHi tdeod Brig. jln., Oiiief 01 Orduauce. Proposals for Forage. id. SKALKD PUUPOHALS AUB 1NV1THD BY THE nuAanitnti fur lapplyhitf the U. 8. iunrter more, Md., Alexandria, and Fort Monroe, Va or either or these places, with Hay, Corn, Oats, nod Straw, ... , Bids wlHirooelwdfortbeilellveryyfC.WNibu-h-, els of eora or eats and 60 tons of bay or straw, and Bidders mnst state at which of tho above named points they propoBw to mako deliveries, and the rales at whloh tfany will make dellverlus tlieroat; the quantity of each article proposed to tie dtlltrtl; the ciuia wun earn aeiivery suaii ln eouiinoticeu, and . When to be com Dieted. . he prive must bo written oat InwonU on the bids. Oorn to be put np in good stout sacks of abont two bnsbelseacb. Oats in like sacks of about three bushels each; the sacks to be furnished without extra charge to the Government; the liny and Straw to be The particular kind or description of oats. corn. bay, or straw, proposed to be delivered must be leiuu in mo proposals. ' All the articles offered anrior tha htrfa hnmli Tlted, will be subject to a rigid innpontlon by the Government Inspector, before being accepted. r- Contracts will bo awarded from time to ttme, to the lowest responsible bidder, ae the Interest ef the uumiuuiom may require, auu payment will lw made when tho niiolu amount contracted tor shall have been delivered and urrepted. ., Ihe bidder will be n-uulrud to accompany his pro- - posai with n gnarauty, nlgu.-d by to responsible -, iwnum, iui, iu vu um wu u aooeitou, bo or thoy will, within ten days tlioruaflor, onwuto the con, tract for the same, with uood and mithcinnt eurHtinM. a n sam oijual to the amount of the eon t ntc t, to d- uver. tne roritgw propoeeil, in eottfrnuity with tho terms of this d vert rsenie tit and In emu the said bidder shall fall to enter Into the cinitrart, they to make gud the dilfcrtmoe btwocn the oitiir i-f nsid Diuuer ano tne next lowest responsible bidder, or ut) peravn to wnom tne couiritvl may lw nwatded Therespouilbilltv of tbegiiarnutiiiHunitt bouimwu , oy uieomoieiofvimcateot a U. a. liistilct Jtidgo or Attorney, uolleetor of tJuHtouie. nr mimr nmnr under the United States UoTernoiout, or responsible .uwwu yatmtu w una omctt. All bidders will be duly uotlQod of the acceptance Of rejection of their pr.ipuHeU. The full name and poatottice a-ldrej of each bidder mm oe legiwy written in tlte iirpoxnl. 2P"B Bnrt be addroBsod to Urigdior Ooneral m u. uum, oiuei iit'iMji wuit nor mauler, waehiTii:-ton, D, 0., and should bo plainly marked "Proposals for Forage," Bonds, lu a sum equal to tho amount of the oon- irao, eigneu oy tue couti actor ami both ofhis guarantors, will be required of the successful bidder or bidders upOBAbrnlrur tin contract. Bhtnk forms of Bills, Giutrauiocs and BoudH, may F('KM Us' PUUPOMALi. (town, uoanty aud btato.)- (Patt.)- T, the snbscrlbtr, do horooy prop(m to turnlnh and . deliver to tba tutted htates, at thn Qiiiirtirmator'B Bepartinetit, At 1 aurelly to the terms of your advertisement, inviting proiiofHlit for Forage, dated Washington Uuput, JJvcemUr H, I8i;l, the following BiiBbeU of Cori, In sai?ks. t per bushel, o ' , 60 pounds. ' ' ' - Bushels of Oeta lo nacks, nt per bushel. "A'i pounds. '-Tons ot Baled Bay, at per ton. of 8,00 : . ponnds. . . Tons of Oalod Straw, at per (on of 2,00 nonuds. Delivery to commence on nr before the day of , .0.. , uu .UUB i-ompieteu on or neiore tne day . of 180-, and pledge myeeir to enter futo n writ leu ood tract with the I'nltol State, with gHd and LifiuTmi wiiriiies, wiinm iiiw Hjiace oi teu titty ti, niter being notlUod that my hid ha been accepted. Vour obedient servant, Brigadier Oenerat D. H. UtK itnn, " ' Chief Bepot QnnrtemiRAter, Washingtou. B. O. . OTJAR4NTY. we, the onrtenigued, readouts of , In the county or , and ftateof , hereby Jointly and einraiiy cuvenant wiiu tite united Mates, and guarantee In conrse the foregoing bid of be accepted, that he or they will, within ten davs utter the uccep-Unceof said bid, execute the con tract for the same. with good and mi (tic lent smeties, In a Hum equal to the amount ef the contract, to furnish th forage Sropoeed in conformity to the terms yf advertisement, ated Dec. 8, 103, Under which tho bid wan made; Hull In case the said shall fail to enttr Into a contract as aforesaid, we guarnnttM to make good the difference between the offer by the said and llie lower reBpunnuie Dldiler.or the person to whom , the contract may be awarded. Given under our hands and seals this day . 180 . ' Witness: ' rhal. 1 hereby certify that, to the best of my kno""'ge nnd belief, the above named guarantor) are good and en (Helen t as sureties, for the amount for which thoy offer to be security. . To be certified by the United States Dim let Attorney, Collector of Customs, or any othoroftlcer under the United States Government or rettpoionbio person known to this office. . AH proposals recelvod under this advertisement will be opened and examined at tliii otllce on Wednesday and Saturday of oh. h week, at VI M. Bidders are respe-tfully invited to ho prcnetit, at the opening of bids If they desire. D. H. BU0KEB, Brigadier Genoral and Quartermaster. deolS-dSn, BEEF! BEEF! OnMoiConniMAnT or hdbsihtfnoi, U. S. A 1 Ooiumii's, O, April 7, 1HH4. QBALID PR0P0SAIS WILL it a1 KEUKIVKD YJ in duplicate) at this Ufflcn. anttl U o'clock A. M,, April 10th, J(W4, from (irnt hand, and irom ettlleus loyal to the Govfrnmeiit of the 1'r.lted otatee, lurine supply ana delivery at Usmp Ciiuse. Uhio, free of all charge, ot snob FRESH Tin b.l bb may be reiulrert by the Commlwtary of ttubslst ence from time to time. 'the Beef to be wll fatted, sound and whtflenome I In alternate fore and hind miarteni or parte thereof, I (necks and shank, exclude.!) to be o.6trover f .nr years of age, each melghliiK at least live hundred I pounds. Said bid, when" accepted, will form the basis of a Wiltten contract, with two good and reepomiUe HiT-in, ui u re ii ob rrqaireuj Wltu bids, . sufficient to fndumDlf the Vnltod States agaiubt lost. Bald contract to take effect on the 1st dar of Mar. Hot, and to continue in fotoo nntil the 1st diyof p-iiwuint, iout, iiujin:(. io ine approval of the (Join mlsmry Qsneral of tiubilaten-e. .; Payuienlsto be made monthly la snch funds as may be supplied by the Treasurer of tho United States. . This advertisement shall be part ani parcel of the contract, and a printed copy of it must lw attached tueeouuia. u. i. U AHK1MJTON, aprVid Oaptaia and 0. 0., U. B. Army. No. U8.J . , Abut Cloth ram nd Eqitipaob Orricn, O'lKPWHATI, O., April ti, 1814. r PBOPOSAtfl ARK INVITED BY TUB UNDKR. BIONKD, until WKDNESfiAY, April 3Uth, 1864, nt 2 o'clock P. If oi furnishing this Department (by contract) with Blankets Woolen,; Army Pfaudard, Camp Kettles. do Color Belts, do Drums-complete, do - uuig Anas, nrst quality only and to neigh from vi to (Al ponnds,) Felling Axe Handles, do ! V enldous, (Cavalry,) do ' J - Kersey, Sky Blue, do Pick Axes, do Pick Axe Habdles, do Bpadei, do Shelter Tents. An Barrples of which may be seen st the Ooffics of vivinuigauu a-H'iipuga iu to is city. , c TO J" delivered ft ee of charge, nt the V. 8. Inspeo-if WcA Wannhnnse. in this sit v, -In n.rk.L with the name of the party furni- hiug, the klud and quantity of goods distinctly marked on each article nod package. Parties offering goods must, In all oases, furnish am pies, marked and numbered to enrreHn.inrt with their proposal, and distinctly state lu their bids the I queuutj in gooqe oey propose ui ruralsh, the price. anil tliM lima nf ilkllwarw ' . A guaranty signed by two retponsble persons. J mnit aceonipany each bid, goaranteoiog that the uiuui -ri" iivicb awaram lo aim Bn der bis nronosal. Bids will be opened on Wednes tar. Anrll onih 1864, at. o'clock P. H., at tbisuOlce, and bidden Awards will be matte on 1 hantdav. A nHt ot.t . Bfnd 'III be required that the ooutract will be faithfully fnlflllud. Telegrams rewtlog to Proposals will not be noticed.Blank fcrms of Proposals may be obtained at this The right to reject any bid deemed unreasonable . AMWe Oaftv tiUsUf Swemnt, A. Q. H. O. ; nnrT-M i . OapUtn nnd A. . U. DAILY I VOLUME XXVI 1. ! PROPOSALS. the I Orrics CoMWMAaT or Scwiimwra, U. 8. A., 1 , Coicm-u. Ohio, April 11th, 18U. J QIALKD MtUPOBA.!! WILD BB BKOBIVVD atthlanfflM. from cltlsens loval to the United State Government, (and from wnum in oatiroT al Wtriateawill be reuUlred oa acceptance of the bid- until 11 o'clock A.M.. April 20th. 1864. for the supply I . a ITery """"""V"' P" " vamp ( vow, Jfio Burr is mom rorx, (new) run weignc; 60 Barrel! Mom Be-f, full Weight; tufio Ponnrie Uami. Inewl In casks: XO.OuO Pounds Hmohad Shoulders, (new) In tlereaa. shanks off clowe to the brisket, 10,iKM) Pounds clear Bacon Bidet, new, In caaka, thorougniy imoKa; 700 Barrels flour, from Prima Winter Wheat, high grade extra; . bsm Pounds Corn Meal, wade from thorooghlj area ana se ecivu euro, in uarrbts, iinaa. 10,i mj Pounds Hard Bread, In barrels, lined; flo.au PonuJs Ueaua. whit, strict iy Prime, anl form lu al7.1t. In tiftrmls. linaiL 7,000 1'uumti Itice; clean and In prime order, In ham Is, lined; .. . 7,(RN) Puiuds Hominy, coarse, made from se lected Whiu CArn. in barrels. Ilnod; 7.000 Pounrls Koasted Uoffee. K10, (not BToand) with sample of Gown, In barr Is, lined; Hon Pounds Tea. Youuje Uyeon, lu itronf boxes or rnmis; So.oijo Pounds flOKar. llKbi brown, la barrels, lined; wo foil oas urusnoa on par, in oarrnis, nneo; 1.100 Uallons Yloar. (Cider or Whisky) in bar- nils: 51.000 Pounds Star Candles, fall weight, suet, In boxes; ti.itOO Pounds Soap, hard, dry, full weight, la ooxhi; 6.000 rounds Salt, fine, (new) in barrels; 4H,imJ Pounds Potato, lu barrels, lined. & uallons Molasses, clean, hoaty body, in barrels. All artU'lxe to be o' the brat anallty. and to he de- IWorHl, free ot nil txum, to the totted Slates, at the bit lulu tfiico Htori-houM, Camp Chase, Ohio, during the mini lb of May. lttti-l. in nth uimntitls ae may h i re iU'rnd from time to time. ms mi unit, wjien axepieii, wui form too oasis 01 a written contract, wiih two iioimI and reaponslhls sureties (naius vt "Urttlw to be glvou) and bonds sufficient to indemnity tho Unltod BtaUM against IOBS. Bids for the whole or any one or morn of theaboye ar teles, rtHelved, but propOMals for diflVront articles must beou diRcrent shcot of puper, nil of which will be tvquirnd lu duplicate, with a copy of this adrer-tUemeiit (a hIIu from ft luwuuaoer) attached to each propcMnl. - slurkud samples, with the "bids," will be required of all tbtialiovo articles, (matts executed) aud sam pics must not b lu paotf parcel, but to neat boius, (of paper or tiu) and nam of article and bidder marked t hereon. No clinrao for packagee allowed; and each mm! haretuarkod on It nlaiiily and distinctly tho name ot tnu s. rue it, tun groHS, tare ana net wcigm; actual tare ix-nig reiiir(Mi in an cases, fioimmin ui'iit no incioitea in ft seaiea enreiope, nareaMiiii to ine iinursltcutHl. and lnuorsed "rro posals for" (nntne the artlole.) Hit) innntB to bn msde In such fund as ma be sap. piled by Itm Treasurer of tho United States. The tight is r Sttrrud to reject any or all proposals If deomi'd by tho undorsisnud fur the interest at tha uovoruuieni. bidders are Invitod to be present at tho opaslng of the bids. U. It. JiAKltlNUTlJH, I nprll-td (JapUln 0. S. HATS, CAPS, AND FURS TXTES'VaT' HAT & CAP STORE. 'pBH SUBSnniBKR IIAH OPENED AN ENTIRE HATS AND CAPS ! Of the yery latest styles, and will koep on hand Every "Variety That the Katern markets afford. Believing In small prouie auu iiu:k saiea, win try to Who may farer as with a call at No. 150 SOUTH-HIGH ST H. PLIMPTON, C'oliimlpim, O Rtati'Nman oopy.l ajr2-lm SIGN OF THE BLACK BEAR! We keep constantly on hand the largest and best selooted stock of HATS, CAPS, FURS, AND MILITARY GOODS Xvttr bronjzlit to Colnmbai. Swordn, S;ihIi'H, Nlioiill-r Slmpm, I'luttolH, Hat Cords, filoltl 1IH'O, Gold oi 1, IliiverNiioliH, 11(h mid ('aiM, Orn a uien Ih, Ac, Ae. Presentation Swords ConNtantly on hand, from 939 to $!HltO. We have also made arrangements to fill any order for the finest qualities of Presentation Swords at much lownr prices than they can be bought else; where. C jl Q fH 11 W W 1 f V yf1 I 1 fY TC I n f I, I ll, I ) 1 1 I A I I S Wf S VA11 U.V1 IJ HAT STORE, New Neil House Block, Columbus, onio. 1 MUSIC. PIkd'a Opura House, Cincinnati, Ohio PHILIP PHILLIPS & CO., . 1TU0LUALI ANB BTA)L DEAMH IH Win, B. Bradbury's Celebrates! Piano Fortes, And Other. CAKIIAHT, NEEDIIAM & CO.'B Melodeons and Harmoniums From onr large, fin and new stock of Pianos, Melo deons aud Harmoniums, we will aU, ox rent with tne privilege of buying, letting the rent pay for the In. trumeut. Please call and examine before purchasing else where, or send for Illustrated Prloe Idet. Pliilip lhilllps A Co., 77 Fourth SireeL Pike'i Opcm House, CINCINNATI, O. JaulR-dSm Aanericau Bank Xiotm Co. SOBTflsUn 00 EH KB OF MAIM ft FOUKTB Bts, ejaxsuBssrsAXa, VHIO, EN0RAT1D IB A 8TTLB OOBBBSPONDrNQ In excellence to that of Bank Botes, Bail Road nnd Oonnty Bonds. Bills of ltnkin rw. I Drafts, Oertlneatse of Deposit, Seals, Cards, A,Tao ine aoove omos under the aoerrUtoAQ' GBO 4 OHIO MILITARY GOODS. Shoulder Straps & Swords! WM BAVM JVBT BtOSirBB TBM HBOIBt AUU B HUT UMLMVTMU gTlUB V' SHOULDER STRAPS A SWORDS w bronjht lo thk ttf. i Saahe, gat Cords, Hats and Gaps, AO all una or muni! oom. SMITH A CONRAD'S HAT STORE w HeH Hoaa. Bolldlnc 00LCMBUS, 0i BOOKS & STATIONERY ARMY OFFICERS! NOTICE. ! TX BAVB A SUPPLY 0 MANIFOLD CO- ' pyinu Books. Inst the article for taklnir Im pressions on the fluid, lu camp, or for keeping copies of ordors nr letters. A pencil or stli-k will answer for a pen, and the remit is an indullihle IniDreaHlon on th naner. IIu no inn, urasb or i:iotn for making copies. Suite- Die tor note or totter paper, uaii and got one. Pocket and Photograph Albums, Auy ilu or prlc. ncwlud, for your ova UM, or for f.mlly or frieoda. New .lock of FINI riOTCBIS .nd THAMES, RANDALL ASTOtf'S, 100 South High Street. FOR SASE. Dr. Wetmore's Locust Grove Farm FOIl SALE. nPHfS BRAUTIFDL OODNTRV PROPEBTV X- situated OQ the Columbna and Wnrllilrtnn Plank Boad. six miles north of Colombo. ejint&diB i 2vi6 acres of the best quality of land, Ifiu acres of wnicn m unaercniuvation, and nil under lencs and available for uaeluraite. 'the Farm Is well watered nnd Is bonnded on one side by theOluutangy Ulvor. It bee a commodious dwelling house with ten rooms, a tenant houae, large uam, varriHv nuuae, corn noose, auu oiner out buildings. There are two orchards on tho rila.ee. I one of whlih is choice grafted fruit. That part of wiornrm ijiug eiwi ui (lie 1'iailK M08Q COUiainiOg u""v iwm,ira, mil wo bwiu Buparaieiv ii oeHirau. Apply to (JHAULKS J. WRTMOItK. marl7-2w,3taw Or PROSPER M. WKTSIUUtO. FRUITS. J. T. WARREN & CO., FOREIGN FRUITS, No. 53 Main Street, GROCERIES. APPLES! APPLES! Choice Fall anJ Winter Apples, Bil 1 11 K HAHKEL VK VllSUEli, Fon Saui bt W. H. KESTIEAUX, not 106 Sooth High Street. Western Reserve AND PINE APPLE CHEESE Fob Sals bt W. H. RESTIEAUX, HOTS loa Booth High Btreel . Boston Crackers! Manufactured by T. D. BOND, Boston. Bass. for Ml. by th. BBU or POUND, bj W. H. KESTIEAUX, no.! KM South llliih street. military goods. ifort. THU ARMY and NAVY. EVANS & HASSALL 7 Military Furnishers 413 AKC1I NTKKKT, anners, Regimental and Company FLAGS, SWORDS, SASHES, BELTS, PASCASTTS, EPAULETTES, HATS, CAPS, CANTEENS, HAVERSACKS, . CAMP KITS, SPURS, niLD OLASSIS, tod arerjlhlnf p.ri.1.1' tb. complete outfit of Army .nd Hmry Oflloai 41 to A liberal ducouot .llomd to tb. tnd.. m.r31-3m 1 OIHTSI Look to your lnUre.t.1 1 .mtu. Mtn.thlDf urgently . ' .o; or Uc ..mplM not nil, by . t V IJ.II ex I by .Terr Mr. oeote, th.t null, tor Two Doll' "" Twmty 1 1, no. 17V A Til Alt HO u' .ou, 3l-wl "".CAM, aiwIOBK' COLUMBUS OHIO. MISCELLANEOUS. WEEKLY Ohio State Journal FOIl 1C64. A FIRST-CLASS I FAMILY NEWSPAPER THE OHIO STATE JOUMAL HAS NOW COMPLETED ITS FIRST HALF CENTURYI ITli. WIIIIT lOITIOH OF TH1 J0UBNAL ll oiral to th. Pnbllo with th. It will oouUI. th. Tlittt ean be obtalued by TELEGRAPH, MAIL, Army Correspondence! ITS OUNTKtWB WILL FOBM TBI Choicest Reading! UB TUB FAMILY CIRCLE! AS WILL 9 FOB The Office, the Shop1 AND THB IT WILL CONTAIN FUIX AND EXACT RHPORTS WEEKLY IARKETS1 tOB THB 081 Of TUB uipiaa thih iuut ADvniD or tbb Corret Market Rates! PRODUCE AND MERCHANDISKI THE POLITICAL COURSE Will b. CoBitao j tnd tarnHtlj tor Tie Union anft the Coistitnty It lend M poHlble .Id ta Support the Government ir m istbuoolb AGAINST HEBELLMl Ad jfon tanf, it win m IndepenV Jent and Untrammeled FA&nd. Unequivocal! Term of tlie Weekly iTenrnal One eon, n one ptf iplMOM ! Fire Tea Twenty Wltk M e5 ctn MPT to tkpttwp pfMok Olnbof STATE TUESDAY .MORNING. APRIL 12. 1864 DAILY OHIO STATE JOURNAL mwrr, alui vo rropriswn. TUESDAY MORNING, AI'RLL 12, 1864. THK SHELBVVILLE MEETING. SPEECH OF GENERAL ROUSSEAU Hit View on tho Slavery Question From the Nashville Union, April fi.l At least 2.500 citizens of Middle And Ml Tennessee nl tended I lie meet in 2 at Hbelbvyillo on Inst Sntttrday, notwithfltaml ing the inclemency of the weather. Eleven conn ties- were represented, but a fair day would have witnessed deleg-ites from nt least fifty. No resolutions were passed, but speeches were made by General KousBeau. (Jot. Johnson, Col. Till man. and others. We make the following extracts from Gen. Rousseau's speech as reported in the Union. Geuerat Roussoau said : I am proud to be here to-day ; proud of you as oitizens of this town and county, always true to the Union and the Constitution ; proud of your noble women, who, de fying the threats of power, cheered and oomforted Union prisoners while enthralled among you, promising them a speedy and happy deliverance; proud of you as citi-hub of Tennessee: and still mure proud ot you as oitizens of the United Hi ales of that ntttiou whoso future glory is inseparably intertwined with its unity. 1 know few of you personalty ; but I claim 3ou all as my friends; I fuel that every Union man is my brother. We may diner on minor points, yet as to whether our uation slmll live or dio we agree; but let us all who have the groat paramount goo ' the salvation, of the nation and the nation's liberties most at heart, grap hands like breth ren, and swear upon our country's altur. that, till tho crisis is past; till our mutual safety is assured, till patriotism triumphs, and treason succombs. we will never al low our minor differences to shucklo our energies iu support of the Government, aud the people's Bovereiguiy. upon which it is based. Four years since, you were a free aud appy people. How different is your con dition! What prompted the desire for a change? W hat oppression, what ty rauny, what great wrongs have you suliered, to prompt the effort to overturn tho govern ment, invitiug all the evils that now alllict you? What interest of yours had suffered? Did you desire wealth f lou bad but to put forth your hands and thoy were hlled. i i ou wero tree as air, you were pros perous and happy. All that a great and glorious Government could give, you possessed to th fullest. Every man's house was his- castle, and none dared cross the threshold without the consent of its- owner; his property was safe: there were then few of the robberies, thefts or murders now so fe in the land; and tuon the male lac Lor was brought to justice. The laws wero supreme; and these laws were but the expression of the will of the people themselves. Then why the rebellion? Tho loyal por tion of the community opposed it; but. ollice, place, and power were iu the hands of the malcontents, and they precipitated the country into a war. Thousands went into the current because they had uot tho moral courage to resist it; tlie Mate has gone out of the Union, said they, and we must go with it. The State out of the Union! Not at all. And who was the Sttue? Was la ham G. Harris aud his followers who held offices, which they obtained by false pretense, the Htate? Tluy wont out; but tho State remains an integral part of the nation, nnd as such it must cumin uo till time shall cease to be. lid you vote Tennessee out of tho Lnion, even were it powaiblo to vole a tSUto out? You gave G0,)00 majority for the old government, the last time you frooly gave an expression of opinion. The final election when an apparent majority was givon for separation, you all know to have been a farce (voices; "that's so.") Jtoys of ten years old were m trohed up, and asked : "iinw will Mr. So and iSo vole?" ("We know that to be true." " Sou are right there; the whole thing was a swindle.' ) Ky such means ahd ft reigu of terror, wero you forced Into an attitudo of hostility to the government by such a process wero thousands of thoughtless young men plunged into the abyss of treason; ana yet mey can this taking the State out of the Union. Ynii are not out of the Uuioiu 1 am ofu n at-ked by secession ista, "Why not let them go, ns they do not wish to live with us." I loll them to go; go whore they will; to the devil if the likoy; but leave the soil behind them; that ie as much our A as theirs. 11 ul they would not be permiUed to break tin this government. It belongs to us, as a people; to ue Worth ana to uioouui; every iooi ti land is Integral part ol llio uatiouul Oo- mains, nnu nut remain so loruvor. Now that vou art ualtu will you answer m and Buy what yo. n wanted uf the govern- obiuinr Wnti any ment that you aid not vour lnlluenoe Hnmliern Mull, in tlio aff.lirB '" ""' ernment lefls lhau it should have be. n' at all. The truth is, anil'it is a niatlor of history, that Southovn politic:aus havo controlled the policy of the nation; held and bestowed Us offices, nnd ruled it us with u rod of iron for the last fifty years, lens very short intervals. They have named lor President Southern men, or "Northern men with Bimih- -onn principles." Devotion to slavory was the only avenue to tne cniet magistracy 01 the country and to ofiicia) positions withiu the giflot an administration, in an tilings they had their way. They novor failed to obtain support from those in pursuit of pub-Ho plunder. Thoy controlled nn interest so consolidated; a propony so gigantic, that whoever was to be bought, reecivvu ins price; and there woro enough iu llie North ready to pander to this overtoworing power, either for ofiioe or money, to secure tho coveted supremacy to the oligarchy. All territory lit lor slavery, auu morn, was act apart to them, by mclcs and bounds, until their arroganoe prompted them to demand all. and Uicso metes and bounds were swept away oy mem, auu an terriiuncn upcueu ito Uie inroads of slavery, when proleo-twn to the institution was demanded at tlte hands of CongreBS. Indeed, it was oraiely hinted that the whole United gtolea was to become slave territory instead of free ; and certainly Ilia demand wnB arrogantly made, for protection, nnder the law, to slave property, in the hands of the nuter, in transit through the free Stales, or while sojourning there, at the will of the owner. A fugitive slave law in its niosl offensive form, was long before demanded and ffiven : aud executed more faithfully than any criminal law in any Southern State. In fact, scarcely nuyiuiug, reasuuu- le or unreasonable, wnicu was aemanuca our "Soul hern brethren, ' was ever wi ni hil i. Even when Southern politicians, in ConiTres8i tirstaraining me iuhi uunar iran the United S.'ates treasury, and then trea sonably left the OI " ' '"H1"" l.liivn. tbV still hnlrl i. 'W uinauuo u. vnci, fnllld tiavenontrnl .il o usBiimtn ui the nation if they would. But 0li'? K!? arn.fl nrAHtieritW lIlinAVAllalAil n.,.. thus holding the power of tho governmc. ia their own hands, they raised the cry of oppression, only because there was a remote possibility mat tney mtgtit ne ousted irom official places. On the falsa pretext thai their interests were in danger trnm ort It em oppression, they raised n hue and cry for their "rights ; tney must have their 'rights. In this, your troubles begun. Whatever this hue and cry a bom shivery and abolitionism may have done elsewhere, we all know what it did in tho bordet- States; we are indebted lo it for whatever of treason we have had within them. Vou know, as well as I do, that Tennesgeo fared, on that aubjeot, as they did. As surely as the sun hines, it alone divided 'lenuesscc and Kentucky; and now wheu it has enabled these miscroints lo bring upon us all the desolation and bloodshed of this war and we modestlv. and not above our breath hit that it slavery it eta DOLween us anu uie government it must go down they assert ihs.t we are merelv setting up a pretext for hrnakinBT down the institution. But that will not in the. least affect the tinul result. We oar nothing for what secessionists anu I traitors may say; we will put down the re- .hellion, but we will abolish slavery in the JOURNAL. hands of the secessionist GinL I bay this, I who am a Southern man, that if I had the power I would strip every secession ist, aud every secession sympathizer of the last slavo he hag, and set him free; I would do it with alacrity, and the doing of it would be a labor of love. I Would take away from them the power ever again to divide the American people, and involve them in a cruel civil war. Now will not some gen tleman please can me an abolitionist? J don't care if you do; but 1 have never been an abolitionist; have never had the least sympathy with political abolitionism. If you please, you may call me a war aboli tionist, for Btirely I would abolish slavery in the hands of those on whom we make war as enemies of the government. For the rights of property of loval men. nitftrers in. eluded, I conted, and will defend them. But the traitors under Jeff. Davis must take care of their niggers if they can. Uut slavnry is hardly worth talking about now. It is "kouo up, and I allude to it as almost a thing of the past; nod as being iuc cause or the war. its ulter uestructton is now but a matter of time: and a short lime at that. With you it is worthless, and would not Drive my ridins horse for anv 000 slaves in your State. We loyal men predicted this course of thinirs at the start and told the traitors they wero the real abolitionists; nud that a war about thoslave would set bun tree; and 1 ask vou. did we tell the truth, or was it a lie? I not only I bought, and now think, the assertion was true, out I am trreatly inclined to make frond what I tlieu said. 1 urn satinned we shall have no peace on the cotttineut. while slave ry exists; und that its existence is utterly ncunmstcnt wiih that ot pur government .Solemnly do I declare this i.s my uudouht- ng conviction. )ott will not wonder then, at what I havo said. I believe wo must nboliut slavery in or der to suppress the rebellion. The traitor leaders buliove this loo; iu proof ot which 1 refer you to tho meHsngo of Gov. Brown, oi ueoi'giu, jniuiiHiieu a lew uays siuco. ite lays iri-eat sheas upon the institution, to ecu, aud clothe, and keep up the rt-bel army; and adviHes the romoval of the slaves out of the reach of tho "abolitionists" lliat they may still serve the rebel causo. Then why shall we not abolish it? Ah! it is un constitutional, say secessionists and copper-. heads. An invasion of constitutional rights. I like that. Constitutional rights to those who repudiate all constitutional obligations, denouncing us us foreigu enemies! if these gentlutneit would havo us respect their rights, as under tho Constitution of tho United States, let them pledge their ullegi ance to it, ami all will be right. But they cannot shield themselves under an institu tion which they scoff at, and spit upon as of .Lincoln s government. After alluding to the enlistment of negro troops, saying that he thought the negro ought to do his share lu this work, General Ilosseau continued, saying : I don't like to fight much by the side of a negro; my prejudices are in the way; in fact, they have been at war with my judgement from the beginning of the rebellion till the present moment. But if necepsary to save tho government, 1 would, without hesitation, take command of a division of negroes, and do the best fighting I could in tho holy cause of nTy country. If at the battle of Perry villo, about four o'clock l. M., or at the battle of Stone river, ut two o'clock iu the day, when the army was at loose ends, and victory ming upon a mere 1 chance, there bad been ten thousand United States black soldiers near, I would have said with alacrity, "go in, Cutiee," und would cheerfully have gone in with them; nnd whilst victory perched upon their standard, I should have never thought the old Hag degraded iu their bauds; nor would any honest man. uencrnl .tack- son considered rather a Southern man born in South Carolina fought with them againat tho British, nt Now Orleans; they behaved well, and he thanked them for it, calling them his "coloredfellow-citizens." And neither heuor they felt themselves degraded by lighting with or against these blacks. All agree that the negro may dig ditches, and build fortifications for while men to light in; that he may cook them food; that ho may "tnte" ammunition for the artillerists, and oven thrudt it into the month of tho cannon, and the like, for (ho purpose of defeating the enemy; yet we cannot bear that he should pull a trigger. l'or myself, I seo no difference in these several methods of engaging in thesj war-like operations; and if you will but prills the whilo man hard enough, he will bo glad of the aid of tho negro, or "any other man." Tho robuls had used him as a soldier long since, could (hey havo trusted him. They will use him yet, iu that capacity, if they can. Already ho has served them in every other way. The idea that we should tight the rebels Willi white men only that we may uot shock their nice sensibilities, by pitting the ucgio against them, is highly ridiculous. They are not so fasti dious, but employ bloodhounds to chase dowu Union men; and savage Indians lo fight, tomahawk nnd scalp our soldiers. They have cruelly thrust this war upon us, and have no right to Bay who shall tight them; and tbo more they don't like it the more 1 du. Laughter. I nm stiro tho best thing for the citizen iu Tennessee and Kentucky, is to put his crirrn into the army when he can; it is the hfBtdiaipPBition ho will ever make of him. ft'itH of the Toijncsseeiins 1 have talked to, i e with me in this, and especially the Beoes9ioni",J fur though Tennessee is n slave State, ,lU knDW t,mt 8lftVR,'y is virtually dead ill , W'll never be valuable again. " Much Is said of radicalism and conservatism; of the party in power and the parly out of power, of const iiutioual Union men and unconditional Union men. For my-self, I have no party. The friends of the Oovernmeut 1 hold to he my friends. Its enemies I will fight wherever I find them, whether they belong to Jeff Davis' army, with weapons iu thsir hands, or tho copperheads and covert traitors of the free Stales, who assail our soldiers becauso they are for the Government, I hold them all alike as enemies. The copperhead a cowardly kuave who has not even tho np.)hgy or prejudice for his treason, 1 deHpiRe as much for'his truckling to the B.avo aristocracy, who spit upou him, and holJ their noses wi.ihi lm berrs to bo permitted to aid them in breaking up the Uovernnteni, as i uo niu hyitoeritieal cant about "constitutional rights,'1 about "tho Constitution as it is, and tho Union as it was;" willing at the same timo that Jeff Davis should destroy both. Tho times have changed the meaning of words. A conservative seems to be one williug to see tho traitors destroy tho constitution; and he is a radical who pledges life, and property, and honor, to the main-ten a nee of bis government. Our duty is to stand by the government at all hazards aud to the last, to save it or lot everything go to destruction with it; to support and strengthen tho hands of au-thoriti?! in this strufftrle for life and liberty. There is safety alone in sucoess. If errors occur and wrongs are committed it. is no more than should bo expected. Such are the inoidoiits of oivil war; and thy are fewer iu our country than were ever known before. Denunciation is do remedy. Let those so loud and so bilter in their denunciation of tho administration, be but half so kind to it ns to Jeff Davis' concern, and would say far less than tney uo. the,, (t, , I then retired amid prolonged The Oenero andlienrty npplnuse. ,11.1,1 , Clov Johnson loiiowet.,- - ' . .1 AAiffnnixtilinii. in question of -lavery n m. -j--- all tnoir ueariiis. i ,. tion, to be culled nt Iho proper i:no, to re- ornizo the State; nd he favored . pro- iwion in tne eoiiiitu"" "" , " . " r iminedintely; but it uibi t 'then iholiehing it grndttnlly. W. n.ut get rid of tho slavery question. NeRroee could onlv bo Tiilunblo to tho community, now, n . ' it- i.-.l f.nnj lltnl frnn llpo-rnee. free moo. m i- n . . would work better thnn "Inves. He had ,.!,, led his neuron!, nnd now pnid thorn wftges; nnu never u.o. vnluablo to liinn nnd they nover were ao oontonted lo remain in hi ecrvice. Tho (iovernor 8 posiuous eti u tuut.t, applauded by the audience. Ii. w fnllnwed hv Col. Lo Tillnmn, mho made an effective and humoroui speech, wnotnaue.""" .. , 1 ' which kept Ihe audienoe in a roar. I The mcetin 1 ,or ihe Onion. The meeting then adjourned amid cheers NUMBER 234. "AM I FOR PEACE? TE0! Hon. Daniel S. Dickinson, that grand old democrat of New V ,ik, being written to by j , u., ,D ,,Uiry maae or mm ir ne ww iur peace, returned this rinsinc reply Iron J'tatform. V Vnr ih tw- 1.1.L . - Fw uud rings out rrom the csnoon't 1UTOSU, And tbo suasion of shot and shell. Till whwlllon's spirit Is trampled down To ths depths of Its kiodrud htll. ' I" which Biimil IU1I0W MS ItJUidrOD S tramp, Where thn brazen truiuiMtfl hrn Awf, drauk with the rory of storm and strife, ute Diowrea chargers m-lgh. for tbu pcftLe that thall wnah out the Iproiu sUlu vt our slavery foul and nrlrn And Hhal undr tho fettars which creak and clank n theduwu-trod'lun Mack man's limb. I will curse htm as traitor, and false of heart, Who woold shrink trom thvcooMct now. And willstarap it with blistering burning brand, wo un miieoUB, Cain-1 ike brow. Out I out of the way t with your spurious poace ; men would make ns rebellion's slaves ; 'o will rescuo our land from the traitorous grai-p Or cover It ovor with graves. Out t out of the way I with your knavUh schein. ou iromnunft nI trading puck ! Oromrh away Hi the dark like a sneakins; bound, I That itn master had boa ten back. I Vou would bai it-r th fruit of nur fathers' Mood, ' And soil nut thn Stiipes and Star, T pitrchuriH a place with rehnllii.ii' vnlos, Or tac&tv fioni ri'ln-lllod's st urs. ' My the widow's wail, by the loetlior's tears, Hy tho orphaui who cry for bread, Ity our son who fi., wi- will never yh-Id Till rebellion' h .iiI in dead ! l 'I'll V i.xsr i,o.vr HAM. iti:itix rllnkiitsr or the Oreat li-on-elml Rcbol . leu.rMtev. on jiol.ll,.. Tlio groat roliol nitu, off Mubilo, wliioh, cconlin(r to Homlieru accounts, waa to sink our whole Hoot, as boon sunk by a siitiall. From tho Now Urlu.us Era, March 211. Wkst (Iulf SgtMniio.v, March 20. '64. On March I tho h'rnmbrc steaniod up to Dauphine Island, to communicate with the vessels iu tlio bound. Several rohel irun- boats, tho 'J'mneme among theiu, were seen i'iiig near urants I'ass. The day was squally, and at 8 o'cloek i Iho afternoon, Die loukout on hoard Up Jienneurc sung out, "ihe Ttnnesue is sink ing! All Ihe olhcers on deck iiiinii'dinilv looked toward'thc place whers Hie Tcnnn. ict was lying, ami aure enough they saw ner go uown. At the same time signals were seen on board the Ocltiroru, lying iu Ihe Sound, anil said signals interpreted, read: "The rebel ram ImtifBUfp sunk. It appears thatn sauall struck her. und alio being very low in iho walcr. keeled over and went down. Two feet of her smoke-slack can now he seen ubovo Iho wnior, at Ihe snot where Ihe groat, ram once fay ut anchor. luo ltiimessee ran down Irom Mobile when we first began bombarding Fort l'owell, and rcbol deserters Baid she was CMiccttd to sink our whole lleet. She was an exlreiuelv nowerf'ul vos.i.l. her armor plates being six inches iu Ihick- ncss. Sho was very short in the hull. hut. mm n mug, projeoting spear, or lam, which was entirely under water. Her ex eessive weight made her slow and hard lo handle, being too much for her engines; and sho would nul, therefore, have proved a very formidable opponent for our fast cruisers. Oatbr-Waiilinu. Tlio Chicago Tribune of Saturday nays: , , At nn informal meeting of sevoral of our bankers and bunine. men, last, evening, encouraging proof was given that some ac tion may bo looked for nt the meeting of tlio Hoard oi j ratio next week which will kill off the wild oats, nnd make greenbacks the basis of business transactions. Jt must come lo that eventually, nnd heller now whon it leaves Iho wild cat brood Willi life enough lo claw theiuselven out of tho Sialo, than alter some rcvulslnu that shall leave ihein dead and a stench in the hands of holders. Tho people are ready to adopt greenbacks, mid to repudiate the spawn of the rag-mills. Let it he done. The Bostou Traveler bus been reading Ihe Copperhead liewpupurs, and quotes from them us follows : "iVone but Democrats go to tho war. "Soldiers are sent home to vote tho Republican ticket.'' A manufacturing company in Nashua, N. it., nas iiunisiini to tho government, since the beginning of tho war, two million pairs of cotton llannel army drawers. Over four thousand women and girl!., who received one hundred atxl seventy thousand dollars for labor, woro employed in making them. Atlautic & GreatWesiern Railway (i Pit I NO AUKN(JI.MKNT. TAKKS EFFECT K-7Ani I, too-i.iiiuiy, (rtijinlnyii plod.) m:w voitii heavu t-'lnvnltiiid at.... 0:50 A M Arrive flleHdville at li:Ki t H Uirry at a-Mt p m " SrtUmanea at fi;jr p M " how Vork at lit:' r u BRTIDtNINQ. Ltiavo Nw York at fr.W p k Arrive C'ifvelaud al p M MAIN LlNi;, riser Pivtmos. ' Leave Miiailvllle, (Mnll Kastwaid) 1:18 F U Anive Halnianaca, Lei vo " Anliu Moadville (Mnll Westward) at tVui, m at.. U:I7 A M SEt'OHn IHUfilON. Leave Akron, (M-il Knstward) at 8:11 a h Arr. Mealvhle, " at 1:17 v 11 Leave " Mnl Wentwnrd) at a m Arrive Akrou " nt 4:(M) p m TUMID MVIelON. Leave O.tllon, (Kaslward) at, 8:00 a h Arrive Ani'U, at 6r 15 p m Leavo Am phi, (Westward) at li::ift a m Arrive Oaliun at v m Connecting t COUnY with Ihe Oil Creek Railway. Leavo Curry at S:'t0 a n and tV.V) r m Arrive Tituttville al 1 1 :iin " . 11 8: A', r M Leave " at r.:lMI " li!::Wl r m Arrive (kirry at..,.. 7:30 " " r t'ltANUMN IIHA4 1I. Leavo Moadvllle at 7:60 A it and 2:0 r m Arrive yranhliu at t(':;n " " b-.-ib p m Leave " at 7:30 " 6:4ft r M Arrive Meadville at .r0 " " S:ltU r u M tllltMNCJ IIVISIOV. Leave Cleveland at V.5 A H and 3:15 v m Arrive Youngstowu at in::i. " " 7:'H) p m Lcnre at 7.'N " H:O0 p M Arrive Cleveland at 10: 'ZO " " 6;tO p II. F. uWKKTSKIl, flen 1 Kop't. T. IT. (JOODMAN, aimeral Tlokt Agut, levo- an i, tihio. aprti-tf ATTENTION! Avoid tho Draft ! ENLIST IN THE SIXTIETH REGIMENT, Now organising at Camp Chae. lligliOMt Gororimieiit nnl I.o- ?ul JtouulioH pnid. 1 nmnoM to recruit a Oninnwty for the tervlce for tliree years or dnrlnir Die wur. To those who desire tho bonellts of I he t xpet-feiicu of one who ha Ihwu in lie b r view, this n resents a rare ouporliinlly. Now In the lime totoilixt, the dralt Ukes place on the IfUh of April. Irafted men twelve no Unintv. Kecruits etui ho ctedlWd tu auy Ward or Township theydeBlro. It is important that Ward Committees or others ftBsist in bringing up lecruiis, W. h. PATTEnPnN, Late Capt. t.'o. 4,B,M 3d 0. V. I. Otllre N AUG 11 TON HALL BUILLlNO,npitalra apr6-Vw THOMAS J. TOK, Co in m I m Ion Ittcrcuaii AH WatNCT 8tbkkT Cikciknati. Butter, Egg", Cheene, FruiH, and Produee generally. Rnfrr to M. V BiHtveeA Co , rtnelnnatl; J. D. Pen- ' dery, Cincinnati! t'hae. W. Manaltan, Mnrwalk. 0. A'ltlv Hull A Itay, Cincinnati; Mimre. Wllalaoh I ',,. titdi,i.aih Miller Do., i.bliilcothei 1. J An,n, k,i. uhlo Slate Journal, Columlnia, 0. l.riB-unra MEDICAL. TUB aZUAT 'AMERICAN REMEDIES" ' mown ai PREPARATIONS! "HIGHLY CONCENTRATED OOMFODBD FLUID EXTRACT BUCETLT, a Positive & Speoifio Remedy for . msauii or i BUllhER, KIMWKTfl, fiRATlil, AH Till. Mudlctna ! ... - m .nrf.icttM lh. ABSOUBKNTS lolohe.lthj.7tlo.. or which the WATERY tiH t'jT.nrutMia j-..... ' M .11 VSSATVIIdt KSLAkGtHtHTtTZr. duoeO, u well ne p.iii uitl tnfl.mm.tton. aad U mod for JKW, WUUBN, Md VUILDUMi. ' HELMD OLD'S EXTKAOT BUCHU IOB WIAKMUsM ": ArM nit ' m F.xcwhwj, Hnbtla or Diasi. r J ...uii..:roilun,Or .DUU, . ATTENDED WITH THB 0LL0WISO 8TMP3 TOMS: . ' Inillepoeltlon to Xxertfoo. Lne. of Power, Lou. or Mi morjr. lillticull, of farwtblif, k Nerve., . . Trembling, , lli.rror of IlifHMi.. vt.k.ftiinu. IilniDues of Vlai'iu, Paid In IhrBVok. uuirerefti j.ueuiide or tb. rla.hliiR ofth. Bedv. Mi;ciiliirS)toni; Kniitiinon the K.oa. But lt.ii.1., p,i,ld VomUMun Tlti.it .yinMoniM. If .llowitd in n. m. .t.i.1. ...i- ntftliuiutt iii.iii luhljf romo, auu. fellow IMI-OTKMUr, KATUITV, RPILXPTIC FITS, In mi., of which Iho patient m.jr entlr. Who cB ay Hint ihey are uot rroo.uaullj followed hi thow direful iliMtaMte. ... ,. it : IKSAM I V ASD VWNNVMPTIOIIT Many are aware of the cauttu of their Buffering, but nolle will oonfuaa. Tho record, of the Inaaun Aay. uma anil the melancholy death, by Coaaiimptioa. ot-ar .initio witneaa to llie truth of the aauerUou riTnfloN.' tiNt:K afpbc OltOAMfj WSAKNESS. Kttnnfres Ihoalilor medicine lo atn.niffh.ii .nrf In. vibrate tlm a.v.t.u, which MELMitOLWS EX-rtt.WT UVOllV lurarlahly dyee. A trial will oon-vluce the moat akeptlcal. ' K Females, Females, Females, OLD Ott YOUNG, SINOl.R, MAltUlED, OK COM 1 TEHpLaTINU MAKRIAGK,, Tn many amotions peculiar to Females the Eg. tract Durhu in unffjuallM by any other romedy, as in Chlorosis or Kstontion, Irregularity, aluAilness, or npirenBim of the O'Uritt.iuary Kvacuatlous,Ul-t-wraled or uhii i cms utate of the Uterus. Ieuoorrhea, or WhiteB, KteriHty, and fr all complaints incident to tlit sax, whether arising from Indiscretion, Habits of Dhwipiaiou, or In the - . , i , liKCXI.VK OR C'HANCIE OF I.rFE. Sr. SYMPTOMS ABOVE. NO FAMILY SHOULD BE WITHOUT IT. Take no Biilnnm, AUrcury, or Unplnasanl MedlolnM for I'nuh-aBant aud IansuroM Diss. HELMBOLD'S EXTRACT BUCHU cukes , : Seorot Blseasea n all their stanos. at little axneriMw. UttU nr m chuut) lu dit, no iucouvunlurioe, - - - t AX1 NO 1:.V1MSI1RE. It rauses fretiurat disir, and gtwitrength to Urinate, thereby removing obrjtnici..s)sf prsvetitiDS and curliiKiiri:ttin-sof (Tio Uri-tlira, allaying pain and' IntlaiiimKlliiii, o fror)unnt In this class ot dii-hwi. auil .'spelling I'OIXOXOUH, VItiJtA,SED, AUD WOHX OUT MATTKlt. .., , , .. . ' Thousauds upon Thousands WnO ILA VEBEEN THE VICTIMS Ot QUACKS. And who have nut r UkavT Ki.es to be mrxt tm short timo, Imv. fiuuil they wen dfMfvs5, aud that me iosin ii-ts, uy tntt ubeur 'fitwcrnil Ascria-Kenta," b.-en drivd iu tho systvm, to break out la aa HKgravatnd firm, and r"KRUAP3 AFTER MAURI AGE. M USX .t HeLmbold's Extract Buchu For all AfffWtious and IHssasscof THK IIUMRV OJtftAJVf,, Whether exUtlng In MALE 0t VKt&ALK, from wuainyer chiiso origiuanug, mna, W mat tor Of How Lojir MlauUltiKt Discnsos of thoe Organs r&ciulro the aid uf ft Diurstlo. II CI.3IltOU)S EXTRACT BUCHU 18 THE OTtKAT DIUBBTIO, And It Is curtain tn hnvn tw dMirml offpet In allD , aM tor which It It Keoroow-ntlsd. BLOOD 5 BLOOD!! BLOOD I!! Helmbold's Highly Roncentratad Compound Fluid Extract Sarsaparilla. SYFIIILlig. Tnls fa an affection of the Blood, ami attacks th dexualorgiMi. Liuings of the Nose, Bars, Throat, vt iujie, ana oiner mucus ournres, making its an-pearancf tn tho form of Ulrer. He) in bold ' Extract .HanMiiarillu burities the bloid,-and rsmores allscatr yrupliiiDB or tho nkiu, giving to the oomplexinn ft rb-arand healthy color. It bwlng prepared expressly for tliim-lrtMof comiilalnts, Its blood purifying properties are preserved to a greater extent thanauy oth-or proparatiou of rlarrtaparilla. Eelmbold's Hose Wash. An excellent Lotion for Ptieasns of Bvuhillc Na ture, ami ax an Infection la Diseases of the Urinary OrgaiiKt, arising irmn habits of dissipation, and in t i-nnertioD wllli tho Extracts Buchu aud Sarsaparilla, iu och dmeaw a reoouimeudetl. Evidence of the moHt reMpousiblnaud rsUableohar acter will accompiiiiy the medicines. C'ert iflcatCri of Cnres, From el tih t to twenty years standing, with names known toHOIKXCK AXI) FAMR. For medical pMperties of JiUCHU, se Dispsnsft. tory of thn Unilvil rtmtes. h ProreMHir van nuts' valuable works on tba Practice of Puysic. Ht reiiiarasniniie-ny ineiaieceiODratea nr. vu r- iVK, Plill-deiphia. . Hfa reuiinkn made hv Dr. EP1IRAIM Htr nnWRT.T.- a celebrated Phyuician, and Membei of the Royal Cilli K 01 norg'.ons, ireianu, ana pubitsnod tn the TmiiBautlons ut the Kiug anu vjueeu'B Journal. Hue lUoitli o-rinirglcal KevieW, pUbllaued by BEN-7A M IN TBAVSHS, Fellow or the Boyal College of tturgeuns. bee most of the lato tandard works on Uedlolne. Bx tract Buchu tl 0() per bottle, or six for 0 00 arriapaiflla 1 00 " , 6 00 Improv'd llose Wash 60 " '." 8 60 Or htf a 't.iwu f ech for tl'i, which' W?II ho sufficient to cure the most obstinate cases, If direction are adhered to. ; Deliverable to any address, securely packed from observation. lMwilhn symptoms In all communication. Cine- guarauteed. Advice gratis. AFFIDAVIT. Poreonnlly appeareil before me, .n Alderman pf i cltv or I'liiiaai'ipiiia, .nti,t. ingduly .worn, doth aay nia preparation, contain Z ".'"purei,'" .bW ' ll. T. H K L M BOL D. Al.tei rust), Ninth it., above Aftce, Philft. Ivttsisf Information In confidence, II. T. UKLMUOLD, Chemist. PRINsTIPAI. OEPOT9. Helmbold's Ttmvr and Chemical Warehoftst, 5M Broadway, New Vovk; Or, JieiniDoiu a eieuicai 1'vpviB, ivw pvuui Anm street, Phllailelphfa. ,., And nnprlnelpled dealers, who endeavor to dispose) OK TH Kill OWN" and "other" articles on the reputation attained by Helm' who uenu.n rrfran...nn1 it BiXirstj Md by alt DrnggtstBi AUK FOB BKLMnf lint nni the advprtii AVOID IMPOHlTKtJf sahlS-ftileoWtiW
Object Description
Title | Daily Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1848), 1864-04-12 |
Place |
Columbus (Ohio) Franklin County (Ohio) |
Date of Original | 1864-04-12 |
Searchable Date | 1864-04-12 |
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 | 10000000026 |
Description
Title | Daily Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1848), 1864-04-12 page 1 |
Place |
Columbus (Ohio) Franklin County (Ohio) |
Searchable Date | 1864-04-12 |
Submitting Institution | Ohio History Connection |
Type | Text |
File Size | 3917.87KB |
Full Text | PROPOSALS. WajmiMtoit. D. O.. March 85. 1MI. AKALED PBOFOSAL8 will be received at thU I .,;ttMiiui wicifc'itfiAf, Apt a arth, at p. m., I m..1or .00,000 sets o( Infantry AoaouWeuents, eatlbre I ''"W,to'bo delivered la the follow iug quentiiies at tb I wairiuiiod AlMUAif . via: iO,UlUiUit the Mow York An o&, Governor's ao.000 est at the Fraokford Arsenal, Brldetbarf, TH.-'1' W.LiflihaijJiwit Ultsburg, ). two hu at tba Ut, Louis Arsenal, St. LonH. Mo. "'""'"TfawaettiutraniBuUattiH) be made In etrtetooi- loroiltjr with the new paitera set to be seen at Aiiegnauy, new 10m, riaiiKora, frt. .bouts, wa beBprlognuld Armory. They a rata bo abject to . liiiuection at the arsoual wher duUveied. eWo It '"Bui,,,! MMtrlvMl fhp (Km (loTvrnnirnf ' ' Kami, km to b accepted or paid f ,r but aueb as are approved ftpon Inspection.- Tba belts to be of grained Wether, ,1 dU tke steus. to tfe (Mo haal oak tauned. The bonioer ueii win ne inclined tn the set, iMlheries mult be made In at not hh.. 1 one-flftoefttn(l-lo) per week of the whole 1 i Al teoatraflted Tor; th rt ikiTr; to ha mad I J "-UJt daf T May.I 1 J ! jj . a ' - Jk - Failure to make deliveries t a specMed tli ,e-flftae.th(l-l6rper week of the whole ..mbe7 on the h SDeclfled time all! subject the contractor to a forfeiture of the number if r he may tail to dellvera- that tiuie . c The accoutruaionts mut be UoxeVJa the usual mauuer; sue uoxus 10 00 cuartftHl ut co.t, to h termined by the Inspeeto-, Bidders will atau, fxitlinltlv tli r 1 nale, where they -propone t detlrer and i)m nuoibers . of sets they propne (o duliver at eanb plaoe, if fur Ho bids will be considered from iiartles other than regular manutactniers, aad nuchas are known to 1 ' tnis aJepartment to tm rnliy eomiHtut to exemituln I - their owsbp the work propoeml for. Slionld any vmi 'T oinifwi ier accouiretnttix ether than ta eemndfrin hie own ibops; they .will be rejected aitdthecontiact refidre-i null and void. late name ana plane on manured lire of each party obtaiuibg a contract toutth stanipod on fftch pnrt - efearh set ofaccontnmeiits. Bidders will enclose with their bids the written f neknowiedgments or thlr snrcties ovor thetrown r algnatnree.' . : , V 1 K Mach party obtaining evontmet will be obliged to enter Into bouds with approved sureties fur Its leitnnii execation. Upon the award belug mad, sncceasfnl bidders win ne nounea, ana lumlanea with forms of con iraoi auu oouu. Dhe Douartment reserves the rlaht to rnlactanv Proposals will be addrewid to "Brigadier femoral veorge u. uemsay, i;niei 01 urflnantd, Watthlngton, I. C.,'t endorsed JProposa Is for In fun try Acooiu tremeota. UKoliOF, n. KAvHAV. marlHi tdeod Brig. jln., Oiiief 01 Orduauce. Proposals for Forage. id. SKALKD PUUPOHALS AUB 1NV1THD BY THE nuAanitnti fur lapplyhitf the U. 8. iunrter more, Md., Alexandria, and Fort Monroe, Va or either or these places, with Hay, Corn, Oats, nod Straw, ... , Bids wlHirooelwdfortbeilellveryyfC.WNibu-h-, els of eora or eats and 60 tons of bay or straw, and Bidders mnst state at which of tho above named points they propoBw to mako deliveries, and the rales at whloh tfany will make dellverlus tlieroat; the quantity of each article proposed to tie dtlltrtl; the ciuia wun earn aeiivery suaii ln eouiinoticeu, and . When to be com Dieted. . he prive must bo written oat InwonU on the bids. Oorn to be put np in good stout sacks of abont two bnsbelseacb. Oats in like sacks of about three bushels each; the sacks to be furnished without extra charge to the Government; the liny and Straw to be The particular kind or description of oats. corn. bay, or straw, proposed to be delivered must be leiuu in mo proposals. ' All the articles offered anrior tha htrfa hnmli Tlted, will be subject to a rigid innpontlon by the Government Inspector, before being accepted. r- Contracts will bo awarded from time to ttme, to the lowest responsible bidder, ae the Interest ef the uumiuuiom may require, auu payment will lw made when tho niiolu amount contracted tor shall have been delivered and urrepted. ., Ihe bidder will be n-uulrud to accompany his pro- - posai with n gnarauty, nlgu.-d by to responsible -, iwnum, iui, iu vu um wu u aooeitou, bo or thoy will, within ten days tlioruaflor, onwuto the con, tract for the same, with uood and mithcinnt eurHtinM. a n sam oijual to the amount of the eon t ntc t, to d- uver. tne roritgw propoeeil, in eottfrnuity with tho terms of this d vert rsenie tit and In emu the said bidder shall fall to enter Into the cinitrart, they to make gud the dilfcrtmoe btwocn the oitiir i-f nsid Diuuer ano tne next lowest responsible bidder, or ut) peravn to wnom tne couiritvl may lw nwatded Therespouilbilltv of tbegiiarnutiiiHunitt bouimwu , oy uieomoieiofvimcateot a U. a. liistilct Jtidgo or Attorney, uolleetor of tJuHtouie. nr mimr nmnr under the United States UoTernoiout, or responsible .uwwu yatmtu w una omctt. All bidders will be duly uotlQod of the acceptance Of rejection of their pr.ipuHeU. The full name and poatottice a-ldrej of each bidder mm oe legiwy written in tlte iirpoxnl. 2P"B Bnrt be addroBsod to Urigdior Ooneral m u. uum, oiuei iit'iMji wuit nor mauler, waehiTii:-ton, D, 0., and should bo plainly marked "Proposals for Forage," Bonds, lu a sum equal to tho amount of the oon- irao, eigneu oy tue couti actor ami both ofhis guarantors, will be required of the successful bidder or bidders upOBAbrnlrur tin contract. Bhtnk forms of Bills, Giutrauiocs and BoudH, may F('KM Us' PUUPOMALi. (town, uoanty aud btato.)- (Patt.)- T, the snbscrlbtr, do horooy prop(m to turnlnh and . deliver to tba tutted htates, at thn Qiiiirtirmator'B Bepartinetit, At 1 aurelly to the terms of your advertisement, inviting proiiofHlit for Forage, dated Washington Uuput, JJvcemUr H, I8i;l, the following BiiBbeU of Cori, In sai?ks. t per bushel, o ' , 60 pounds. ' ' ' - Bushels of Oeta lo nacks, nt per bushel. "A'i pounds. '-Tons ot Baled Bay, at per ton. of 8,00 : . ponnds. . . Tons of Oalod Straw, at per (on of 2,00 nonuds. Delivery to commence on nr before the day of , .0.. , uu .UUB i-ompieteu on or neiore tne day . of 180-, and pledge myeeir to enter futo n writ leu ood tract with the I'nltol State, with gHd and LifiuTmi wiiriiies, wiinm iiiw Hjiace oi teu titty ti, niter being notlUod that my hid ha been accepted. Vour obedient servant, Brigadier Oenerat D. H. UtK itnn, " ' Chief Bepot QnnrtemiRAter, Washingtou. B. O. . OTJAR4NTY. we, the onrtenigued, readouts of , In the county or , and ftateof , hereby Jointly and einraiiy cuvenant wiiu tite united Mates, and guarantee In conrse the foregoing bid of be accepted, that he or they will, within ten davs utter the uccep-Unceof said bid, execute the con tract for the same. with good and mi (tic lent smeties, In a Hum equal to the amount ef the contract, to furnish th forage Sropoeed in conformity to the terms yf advertisement, ated Dec. 8, 103, Under which tho bid wan made; Hull In case the said shall fail to enttr Into a contract as aforesaid, we guarnnttM to make good the difference between the offer by the said and llie lower reBpunnuie Dldiler.or the person to whom , the contract may be awarded. Given under our hands and seals this day . 180 . ' Witness: ' rhal. 1 hereby certify that, to the best of my kno""'ge nnd belief, the above named guarantor) are good and en (Helen t as sureties, for the amount for which thoy offer to be security. . To be certified by the United States Dim let Attorney, Collector of Customs, or any othoroftlcer under the United States Government or rettpoionbio person known to this office. . AH proposals recelvod under this advertisement will be opened and examined at tliii otllce on Wednesday and Saturday of oh. h week, at VI M. Bidders are respe-tfully invited to ho prcnetit, at the opening of bids If they desire. D. H. BU0KEB, Brigadier Genoral and Quartermaster. deolS-dSn, BEEF! BEEF! OnMoiConniMAnT or hdbsihtfnoi, U. S. A 1 Ooiumii's, O, April 7, 1HH4. QBALID PR0P0SAIS WILL it a1 KEUKIVKD YJ in duplicate) at this Ufflcn. anttl U o'clock A. M,, April 10th, J(W4, from (irnt hand, and irom ettlleus loyal to the Govfrnmeiit of the 1'r.lted otatee, lurine supply ana delivery at Usmp Ciiuse. Uhio, free of all charge, ot snob FRESH Tin b.l bb may be reiulrert by the Commlwtary of ttubslst ence from time to time. 'the Beef to be wll fatted, sound and whtflenome I In alternate fore and hind miarteni or parte thereof, I (necks and shank, exclude.!) to be o.6trover f .nr years of age, each melghliiK at least live hundred I pounds. Said bid, when" accepted, will form the basis of a Wiltten contract, with two good and reepomiUe HiT-in, ui u re ii ob rrqaireuj Wltu bids, . sufficient to fndumDlf the Vnltod States agaiubt lost. Bald contract to take effect on the 1st dar of Mar. Hot, and to continue in fotoo nntil the 1st diyof p-iiwuint, iout, iiujin:(. io ine approval of the (Join mlsmry Qsneral of tiubilaten-e. .; Payuienlsto be made monthly la snch funds as may be supplied by the Treasurer of tho United States. . This advertisement shall be part ani parcel of the contract, and a printed copy of it must lw attached tueeouuia. u. i. U AHK1MJTON, aprVid Oaptaia and 0. 0., U. B. Army. No. U8.J . , Abut Cloth ram nd Eqitipaob Orricn, O'lKPWHATI, O., April ti, 1814. r PBOPOSAtfl ARK INVITED BY TUB UNDKR. BIONKD, until WKDNESfiAY, April 3Uth, 1864, nt 2 o'clock P. If oi furnishing this Department (by contract) with Blankets Woolen,; Army Pfaudard, Camp Kettles. do Color Belts, do Drums-complete, do - uuig Anas, nrst quality only and to neigh from vi to (Al ponnds,) Felling Axe Handles, do ! V enldous, (Cavalry,) do ' J - Kersey, Sky Blue, do Pick Axes, do Pick Axe Habdles, do Bpadei, do Shelter Tents. An Barrples of which may be seen st the Ooffics of vivinuigauu a-H'iipuga iu to is city. , c TO J" delivered ft ee of charge, nt the V. 8. Inspeo-if WcA Wannhnnse. in this sit v, -In n.rk.L with the name of the party furni- hiug, the klud and quantity of goods distinctly marked on each article nod package. Parties offering goods must, In all oases, furnish am pies, marked and numbered to enrreHn.inrt with their proposal, and distinctly state lu their bids the I queuutj in gooqe oey propose ui ruralsh, the price. anil tliM lima nf ilkllwarw ' . A guaranty signed by two retponsble persons. J mnit aceonipany each bid, goaranteoiog that the uiuui -ri" iivicb awaram lo aim Bn der bis nronosal. Bids will be opened on Wednes tar. Anrll onih 1864, at. o'clock P. H., at tbisuOlce, and bidden Awards will be matte on 1 hantdav. A nHt ot.t . Bfnd 'III be required that the ooutract will be faithfully fnlflllud. Telegrams rewtlog to Proposals will not be noticed.Blank fcrms of Proposals may be obtained at this The right to reject any bid deemed unreasonable . AMWe Oaftv tiUsUf Swemnt, A. Q. H. O. ; nnrT-M i . OapUtn nnd A. . U. DAILY I VOLUME XXVI 1. ! PROPOSALS. the I Orrics CoMWMAaT or Scwiimwra, U. 8. A., 1 , Coicm-u. Ohio, April 11th, 18U. J QIALKD MtUPOBA.!! WILD BB BKOBIVVD atthlanfflM. from cltlsens loval to the United State Government, (and from wnum in oatiroT al Wtriateawill be reuUlred oa acceptance of the bid- until 11 o'clock A.M.. April 20th. 1864. for the supply I . a ITery """"""V"' P" " vamp ( vow, Jfio Burr is mom rorx, (new) run weignc; 60 Barrel! Mom Be-f, full Weight; tufio Ponnrie Uami. Inewl In casks: XO.OuO Pounds Hmohad Shoulders, (new) In tlereaa. shanks off clowe to the brisket, 10,iKM) Pounds clear Bacon Bidet, new, In caaka, thorougniy imoKa; 700 Barrels flour, from Prima Winter Wheat, high grade extra; . bsm Pounds Corn Meal, wade from thorooghlj area ana se ecivu euro, in uarrbts, iinaa. 10,i mj Pounds Hard Bread, In barrels, lined; flo.au PonuJs Ueaua. whit, strict iy Prime, anl form lu al7.1t. In tiftrmls. linaiL 7,000 1'uumti Itice; clean and In prime order, In ham Is, lined; .. . 7,(RN) Puiuds Hominy, coarse, made from se lected Whiu CArn. in barrels. Ilnod; 7.000 Pounrls Koasted Uoffee. K10, (not BToand) with sample of Gown, In barr Is, lined; Hon Pounds Tea. Youuje Uyeon, lu itronf boxes or rnmis; So.oijo Pounds flOKar. llKbi brown, la barrels, lined; wo foil oas urusnoa on par, in oarrnis, nneo; 1.100 Uallons Yloar. (Cider or Whisky) in bar- nils: 51.000 Pounds Star Candles, fall weight, suet, In boxes; ti.itOO Pounds Soap, hard, dry, full weight, la ooxhi; 6.000 rounds Salt, fine, (new) in barrels; 4H,imJ Pounds Potato, lu barrels, lined. & uallons Molasses, clean, hoaty body, in barrels. All artU'lxe to be o' the brat anallty. and to he de- IWorHl, free ot nil txum, to the totted Slates, at the bit lulu tfiico Htori-houM, Camp Chase, Ohio, during the mini lb of May. lttti-l. in nth uimntitls ae may h i re iU'rnd from time to time. ms mi unit, wjien axepieii, wui form too oasis 01 a written contract, wiih two iioimI and reaponslhls sureties (naius vt "Urttlw to be glvou) and bonds sufficient to indemnity tho Unltod BtaUM against IOBS. Bids for the whole or any one or morn of theaboye ar teles, rtHelved, but propOMals for diflVront articles must beou diRcrent shcot of puper, nil of which will be tvquirnd lu duplicate, with a copy of this adrer-tUemeiit (a hIIu from ft luwuuaoer) attached to each propcMnl. - slurkud samples, with the "bids," will be required of all tbtialiovo articles, (matts executed) aud sam pics must not b lu paotf parcel, but to neat boius, (of paper or tiu) and nam of article and bidder marked t hereon. No clinrao for packagee allowed; and each mm! haretuarkod on It nlaiiily and distinctly tho name ot tnu s. rue it, tun groHS, tare ana net wcigm; actual tare ix-nig reiiir(Mi in an cases, fioimmin ui'iit no incioitea in ft seaiea enreiope, nareaMiiii to ine iinursltcutHl. and lnuorsed "rro posals for" (nntne the artlole.) Hit) innntB to bn msde In such fund as ma be sap. piled by Itm Treasurer of tho United States. The tight is r Sttrrud to reject any or all proposals If deomi'd by tho undorsisnud fur the interest at tha uovoruuieni. bidders are Invitod to be present at tho opaslng of the bids. U. It. JiAKltlNUTlJH, I nprll-td (JapUln 0. S. HATS, CAPS, AND FURS TXTES'VaT' HAT & CAP STORE. 'pBH SUBSnniBKR IIAH OPENED AN ENTIRE HATS AND CAPS ! Of the yery latest styles, and will koep on hand Every "Variety That the Katern markets afford. Believing In small prouie auu iiu:k saiea, win try to Who may farer as with a call at No. 150 SOUTH-HIGH ST H. PLIMPTON, C'oliimlpim, O Rtati'Nman oopy.l ajr2-lm SIGN OF THE BLACK BEAR! We keep constantly on hand the largest and best selooted stock of HATS, CAPS, FURS, AND MILITARY GOODS Xvttr bronjzlit to Colnmbai. Swordn, S;ihIi'H, Nlioiill-r Slmpm, I'luttolH, Hat Cords, filoltl 1IH'O, Gold oi 1, IliiverNiioliH, 11(h mid ('aiM, Orn a uien Ih, Ac, Ae. Presentation Swords ConNtantly on hand, from 939 to $!HltO. We have also made arrangements to fill any order for the finest qualities of Presentation Swords at much lownr prices than they can be bought else; where. C jl Q fH 11 W W 1 f V yf1 I 1 fY TC I n f I, I ll, I ) 1 1 I A I I S Wf S VA11 U.V1 IJ HAT STORE, New Neil House Block, Columbus, onio. 1 MUSIC. PIkd'a Opura House, Cincinnati, Ohio PHILIP PHILLIPS & CO., . 1TU0LUALI ANB BTA)L DEAMH IH Win, B. Bradbury's Celebrates! Piano Fortes, And Other. CAKIIAHT, NEEDIIAM & CO.'B Melodeons and Harmoniums From onr large, fin and new stock of Pianos, Melo deons aud Harmoniums, we will aU, ox rent with tne privilege of buying, letting the rent pay for the In. trumeut. Please call and examine before purchasing else where, or send for Illustrated Prloe Idet. Pliilip lhilllps A Co., 77 Fourth SireeL Pike'i Opcm House, CINCINNATI, O. JaulR-dSm Aanericau Bank Xiotm Co. SOBTflsUn 00 EH KB OF MAIM ft FOUKTB Bts, ejaxsuBssrsAXa, VHIO, EN0RAT1D IB A 8TTLB OOBBBSPONDrNQ In excellence to that of Bank Botes, Bail Road nnd Oonnty Bonds. Bills of ltnkin rw. I Drafts, Oertlneatse of Deposit, Seals, Cards, A,Tao ine aoove omos under the aoerrUtoAQ' GBO 4 OHIO MILITARY GOODS. Shoulder Straps & Swords! WM BAVM JVBT BtOSirBB TBM HBOIBt AUU B HUT UMLMVTMU gTlUB V' SHOULDER STRAPS A SWORDS w bronjht lo thk ttf. i Saahe, gat Cords, Hats and Gaps, AO all una or muni! oom. SMITH A CONRAD'S HAT STORE w HeH Hoaa. Bolldlnc 00LCMBUS, 0i BOOKS & STATIONERY ARMY OFFICERS! NOTICE. ! TX BAVB A SUPPLY 0 MANIFOLD CO- ' pyinu Books. Inst the article for taklnir Im pressions on the fluid, lu camp, or for keeping copies of ordors nr letters. A pencil or stli-k will answer for a pen, and the remit is an indullihle IniDreaHlon on th naner. IIu no inn, urasb or i:iotn for making copies. Suite- Die tor note or totter paper, uaii and got one. Pocket and Photograph Albums, Auy ilu or prlc. ncwlud, for your ova UM, or for f.mlly or frieoda. New .lock of FINI riOTCBIS .nd THAMES, RANDALL ASTOtf'S, 100 South High Street. FOR SASE. Dr. Wetmore's Locust Grove Farm FOIl SALE. nPHfS BRAUTIFDL OODNTRV PROPEBTV X- situated OQ the Columbna and Wnrllilrtnn Plank Boad. six miles north of Colombo. ejint&diB i 2vi6 acres of the best quality of land, Ifiu acres of wnicn m unaercniuvation, and nil under lencs and available for uaeluraite. 'the Farm Is well watered nnd Is bonnded on one side by theOluutangy Ulvor. It bee a commodious dwelling house with ten rooms, a tenant houae, large uam, varriHv nuuae, corn noose, auu oiner out buildings. There are two orchards on tho rila.ee. I one of whlih is choice grafted fruit. That part of wiornrm ijiug eiwi ui (lie 1'iailK M08Q COUiainiOg u""v iwm,ira, mil wo bwiu Buparaieiv ii oeHirau. Apply to (JHAULKS J. WRTMOItK. marl7-2w,3taw Or PROSPER M. WKTSIUUtO. FRUITS. J. T. WARREN & CO., FOREIGN FRUITS, No. 53 Main Street, GROCERIES. APPLES! APPLES! Choice Fall anJ Winter Apples, Bil 1 11 K HAHKEL VK VllSUEli, Fon Saui bt W. H. KESTIEAUX, not 106 Sooth High Street. Western Reserve AND PINE APPLE CHEESE Fob Sals bt W. H. RESTIEAUX, HOTS loa Booth High Btreel . Boston Crackers! Manufactured by T. D. BOND, Boston. Bass. for Ml. by th. BBU or POUND, bj W. H. KESTIEAUX, no.! KM South llliih street. military goods. ifort. THU ARMY and NAVY. EVANS & HASSALL 7 Military Furnishers 413 AKC1I NTKKKT, anners, Regimental and Company FLAGS, SWORDS, SASHES, BELTS, PASCASTTS, EPAULETTES, HATS, CAPS, CANTEENS, HAVERSACKS, . CAMP KITS, SPURS, niLD OLASSIS, tod arerjlhlnf p.ri.1.1' tb. complete outfit of Army .nd Hmry Oflloai 41 to A liberal ducouot .llomd to tb. tnd.. m.r31-3m 1 OIHTSI Look to your lnUre.t.1 1 .mtu. Mtn.thlDf urgently . ' .o; or Uc ..mplM not nil, by . t V IJ.II ex I by .Terr Mr. oeote, th.t null, tor Two Doll' "" Twmty 1 1, no. 17V A Til Alt HO u' .ou, 3l-wl "".CAM, aiwIOBK' COLUMBUS OHIO. MISCELLANEOUS. WEEKLY Ohio State Journal FOIl 1C64. A FIRST-CLASS I FAMILY NEWSPAPER THE OHIO STATE JOUMAL HAS NOW COMPLETED ITS FIRST HALF CENTURYI ITli. WIIIIT lOITIOH OF TH1 J0UBNAL ll oiral to th. Pnbllo with th. It will oouUI. th. Tlittt ean be obtalued by TELEGRAPH, MAIL, Army Correspondence! ITS OUNTKtWB WILL FOBM TBI Choicest Reading! UB TUB FAMILY CIRCLE! AS WILL 9 FOB The Office, the Shop1 AND THB IT WILL CONTAIN FUIX AND EXACT RHPORTS WEEKLY IARKETS1 tOB THB 081 Of TUB uipiaa thih iuut ADvniD or tbb Corret Market Rates! PRODUCE AND MERCHANDISKI THE POLITICAL COURSE Will b. CoBitao j tnd tarnHtlj tor Tie Union anft the Coistitnty It lend M poHlble .Id ta Support the Government ir m istbuoolb AGAINST HEBELLMl Ad jfon tanf, it win m IndepenV Jent and Untrammeled FA&nd. Unequivocal! Term of tlie Weekly iTenrnal One eon, n one ptf iplMOM ! Fire Tea Twenty Wltk M e5 ctn MPT to tkpttwp pfMok Olnbof STATE TUESDAY .MORNING. APRIL 12. 1864 DAILY OHIO STATE JOURNAL mwrr, alui vo rropriswn. TUESDAY MORNING, AI'RLL 12, 1864. THK SHELBVVILLE MEETING. SPEECH OF GENERAL ROUSSEAU Hit View on tho Slavery Question From the Nashville Union, April fi.l At least 2.500 citizens of Middle And Ml Tennessee nl tended I lie meet in 2 at Hbelbvyillo on Inst Sntttrday, notwithfltaml ing the inclemency of the weather. Eleven conn ties- were represented, but a fair day would have witnessed deleg-ites from nt least fifty. No resolutions were passed, but speeches were made by General KousBeau. (Jot. Johnson, Col. Till man. and others. We make the following extracts from Gen. Rousseau's speech as reported in the Union. Geuerat Roussoau said : I am proud to be here to-day ; proud of you as oitizens of this town and county, always true to the Union and the Constitution ; proud of your noble women, who, de fying the threats of power, cheered and oomforted Union prisoners while enthralled among you, promising them a speedy and happy deliverance; proud of you as citi-hub of Tennessee: and still mure proud ot you as oitizens of the United Hi ales of that ntttiou whoso future glory is inseparably intertwined with its unity. 1 know few of you personalty ; but I claim 3ou all as my friends; I fuel that every Union man is my brother. We may diner on minor points, yet as to whether our uation slmll live or dio we agree; but let us all who have the groat paramount goo ' the salvation, of the nation and the nation's liberties most at heart, grap hands like breth ren, and swear upon our country's altur. that, till tho crisis is past; till our mutual safety is assured, till patriotism triumphs, and treason succombs. we will never al low our minor differences to shucklo our energies iu support of the Government, aud the people's Bovereiguiy. upon which it is based. Four years since, you were a free aud appy people. How different is your con dition! What prompted the desire for a change? W hat oppression, what ty rauny, what great wrongs have you suliered, to prompt the effort to overturn tho govern ment, invitiug all the evils that now alllict you? What interest of yours had suffered? Did you desire wealth f lou bad but to put forth your hands and thoy were hlled. i i ou wero tree as air, you were pros perous and happy. All that a great and glorious Government could give, you possessed to th fullest. Every man's house was his- castle, and none dared cross the threshold without the consent of its- owner; his property was safe: there were then few of the robberies, thefts or murders now so fe in the land; and tuon the male lac Lor was brought to justice. The laws wero supreme; and these laws were but the expression of the will of the people themselves. Then why the rebellion? Tho loyal por tion of the community opposed it; but. ollice, place, and power were iu the hands of the malcontents, and they precipitated the country into a war. Thousands went into the current because they had uot tho moral courage to resist it; tlie Mate has gone out of the Union, said they, and we must go with it. The State out of the Union! Not at all. And who was the Sttue? Was la ham G. Harris aud his followers who held offices, which they obtained by false pretense, the Htate? Tluy wont out; but tho State remains an integral part of the nation, nnd as such it must cumin uo till time shall cease to be. lid you vote Tennessee out of tho Lnion, even were it powaiblo to vole a tSUto out? You gave G0,)00 majority for the old government, the last time you frooly gave an expression of opinion. The final election when an apparent majority was givon for separation, you all know to have been a farce (voices; "that's so.") Jtoys of ten years old were m trohed up, and asked : "iinw will Mr. So and iSo vole?" ("We know that to be true." " Sou are right there; the whole thing was a swindle.' ) Ky such means ahd ft reigu of terror, wero you forced Into an attitudo of hostility to the government by such a process wero thousands of thoughtless young men plunged into the abyss of treason; ana yet mey can this taking the State out of the Union. Ynii are not out of the Uuioiu 1 am ofu n at-ked by secession ista, "Why not let them go, ns they do not wish to live with us." I loll them to go; go whore they will; to the devil if the likoy; but leave the soil behind them; that ie as much our A as theirs. 11 ul they would not be permiUed to break tin this government. It belongs to us, as a people; to ue Worth ana to uioouui; every iooi ti land is Integral part ol llio uatiouul Oo- mains, nnu nut remain so loruvor. Now that vou art ualtu will you answer m and Buy what yo. n wanted uf the govern- obiuinr Wnti any ment that you aid not vour lnlluenoe Hnmliern Mull, in tlio aff.lirB '" ""' ernment lefls lhau it should have be. n' at all. The truth is, anil'it is a niatlor of history, that Southovn politic:aus havo controlled the policy of the nation; held and bestowed Us offices, nnd ruled it us with u rod of iron for the last fifty years, lens very short intervals. They have named lor President Southern men, or "Northern men with Bimih- -onn principles." Devotion to slavory was the only avenue to tne cniet magistracy 01 the country and to ofiicia) positions withiu the giflot an administration, in an tilings they had their way. They novor failed to obtain support from those in pursuit of pub-Ho plunder. Thoy controlled nn interest so consolidated; a propony so gigantic, that whoever was to be bought, reecivvu ins price; and there woro enough iu llie North ready to pander to this overtoworing power, either for ofiioe or money, to secure tho coveted supremacy to the oligarchy. All territory lit lor slavery, auu morn, was act apart to them, by mclcs and bounds, until their arroganoe prompted them to demand all. and Uicso metes and bounds were swept away oy mem, auu an terriiuncn upcueu ito Uie inroads of slavery, when proleo-twn to the institution was demanded at tlte hands of CongreBS. Indeed, it was oraiely hinted that the whole United gtolea was to become slave territory instead of free ; and certainly Ilia demand wnB arrogantly made, for protection, nnder the law, to slave property, in the hands of the nuter, in transit through the free Stales, or while sojourning there, at the will of the owner. A fugitive slave law in its niosl offensive form, was long before demanded and ffiven : aud executed more faithfully than any criminal law in any Southern State. In fact, scarcely nuyiuiug, reasuuu- le or unreasonable, wnicu was aemanuca our "Soul hern brethren, ' was ever wi ni hil i. Even when Southern politicians, in ConiTres8i tirstaraining me iuhi uunar iran the United S.'ates treasury, and then trea sonably left the OI " ' '"H1"" l.liivn. tbV still hnlrl i. 'W uinauuo u. vnci, fnllld tiavenontrnl .il o usBiimtn ui the nation if they would. But 0li'? K!? arn.fl nrAHtieritW lIlinAVAllalAil n.,.. thus holding the power of tho governmc. ia their own hands, they raised the cry of oppression, only because there was a remote possibility mat tney mtgtit ne ousted irom official places. On the falsa pretext thai their interests were in danger trnm ort It em oppression, they raised n hue and cry for their "rights ; tney must have their 'rights. In this, your troubles begun. Whatever this hue and cry a bom shivery and abolitionism may have done elsewhere, we all know what it did in tho bordet- States; we are indebted lo it for whatever of treason we have had within them. Vou know, as well as I do, that Tennesgeo fared, on that aubjeot, as they did. As surely as the sun hines, it alone divided 'lenuesscc and Kentucky; and now wheu it has enabled these miscroints lo bring upon us all the desolation and bloodshed of this war and we modestlv. and not above our breath hit that it slavery it eta DOLween us anu uie government it must go down they assert ihs.t we are merelv setting up a pretext for hrnakinBT down the institution. But that will not in the. least affect the tinul result. We oar nothing for what secessionists anu I traitors may say; we will put down the re- .hellion, but we will abolish slavery in the JOURNAL. hands of the secessionist GinL I bay this, I who am a Southern man, that if I had the power I would strip every secession ist, aud every secession sympathizer of the last slavo he hag, and set him free; I would do it with alacrity, and the doing of it would be a labor of love. I Would take away from them the power ever again to divide the American people, and involve them in a cruel civil war. Now will not some gen tleman please can me an abolitionist? J don't care if you do; but 1 have never been an abolitionist; have never had the least sympathy with political abolitionism. If you please, you may call me a war aboli tionist, for Btirely I would abolish slavery in the hands of those on whom we make war as enemies of the government. For the rights of property of loval men. nitftrers in. eluded, I conted, and will defend them. But the traitors under Jeff. Davis must take care of their niggers if they can. Uut slavnry is hardly worth talking about now. It is "kouo up, and I allude to it as almost a thing of the past; nod as being iuc cause or the war. its ulter uestructton is now but a matter of time: and a short lime at that. With you it is worthless, and would not Drive my ridins horse for anv 000 slaves in your State. We loyal men predicted this course of thinirs at the start and told the traitors they wero the real abolitionists; nud that a war about thoslave would set bun tree; and 1 ask vou. did we tell the truth, or was it a lie? I not only I bought, and now think, the assertion was true, out I am trreatly inclined to make frond what I tlieu said. 1 urn satinned we shall have no peace on the cotttineut. while slave ry exists; und that its existence is utterly ncunmstcnt wiih that ot pur government .Solemnly do I declare this i.s my uudouht- ng conviction. )ott will not wonder then, at what I havo said. I believe wo must nboliut slavery in or der to suppress the rebellion. The traitor leaders buliove this loo; iu proof ot which 1 refer you to tho meHsngo of Gov. Brown, oi ueoi'giu, jniuiiHiieu a lew uays siuco. ite lays iri-eat sheas upon the institution, to ecu, aud clothe, and keep up the rt-bel army; and adviHes the romoval of the slaves out of the reach of tho "abolitionists" lliat they may still serve the rebel causo. Then why shall we not abolish it? Ah! it is un constitutional, say secessionists and copper-. heads. An invasion of constitutional rights. I like that. Constitutional rights to those who repudiate all constitutional obligations, denouncing us us foreigu enemies! if these gentlutneit would havo us respect their rights, as under tho Constitution of tho United States, let them pledge their ullegi ance to it, ami all will be right. But they cannot shield themselves under an institu tion which they scoff at, and spit upon as of .Lincoln s government. After alluding to the enlistment of negro troops, saying that he thought the negro ought to do his share lu this work, General Ilosseau continued, saying : I don't like to fight much by the side of a negro; my prejudices are in the way; in fact, they have been at war with my judgement from the beginning of the rebellion till the present moment. But if necepsary to save tho government, 1 would, without hesitation, take command of a division of negroes, and do the best fighting I could in tho holy cause of nTy country. If at the battle of Perry villo, about four o'clock l. M., or at the battle of Stone river, ut two o'clock iu the day, when the army was at loose ends, and victory ming upon a mere 1 chance, there bad been ten thousand United States black soldiers near, I would have said with alacrity, "go in, Cutiee," und would cheerfully have gone in with them; nnd whilst victory perched upon their standard, I should have never thought the old Hag degraded iu their bauds; nor would any honest man. uencrnl .tack- son considered rather a Southern man born in South Carolina fought with them againat tho British, nt Now Orleans; they behaved well, and he thanked them for it, calling them his "coloredfellow-citizens." And neither heuor they felt themselves degraded by lighting with or against these blacks. All agree that the negro may dig ditches, and build fortifications for while men to light in; that he may cook them food; that ho may "tnte" ammunition for the artillerists, and oven thrudt it into the month of tho cannon, and the like, for (ho purpose of defeating the enemy; yet we cannot bear that he should pull a trigger. l'or myself, I seo no difference in these several methods of engaging in thesj war-like operations; and if you will but prills the whilo man hard enough, he will bo glad of the aid of tho negro, or "any other man." Tho robuls had used him as a soldier long since, could (hey havo trusted him. They will use him yet, iu that capacity, if they can. Already ho has served them in every other way. The idea that we should tight the rebels Willi white men only that we may uot shock their nice sensibilities, by pitting the ucgio against them, is highly ridiculous. They are not so fasti dious, but employ bloodhounds to chase dowu Union men; and savage Indians lo fight, tomahawk nnd scalp our soldiers. They have cruelly thrust this war upon us, and have no right to Bay who shall tight them; and tbo more they don't like it the more 1 du. Laughter. I nm stiro tho best thing for the citizen iu Tennessee and Kentucky, is to put his crirrn into the army when he can; it is the hfBtdiaipPBition ho will ever make of him. ft'itH of the Toijncsseeiins 1 have talked to, i e with me in this, and especially the Beoes9ioni",J fur though Tennessee is n slave State, ,lU knDW t,mt 8lftVR,'y is virtually dead ill , W'll never be valuable again. " Much Is said of radicalism and conservatism; of the party in power and the parly out of power, of const iiutioual Union men and unconditional Union men. For my-self, I have no party. The friends of the Oovernmeut 1 hold to he my friends. Its enemies I will fight wherever I find them, whether they belong to Jeff Davis' army, with weapons iu thsir hands, or tho copperheads and covert traitors of the free Stales, who assail our soldiers becauso they are for the Government, I hold them all alike as enemies. The copperhead a cowardly kuave who has not even tho np.)hgy or prejudice for his treason, 1 deHpiRe as much for'his truckling to the B.avo aristocracy, who spit upou him, and holJ their noses wi.ihi lm berrs to bo permitted to aid them in breaking up the Uovernnteni, as i uo niu hyitoeritieal cant about "constitutional rights,'1 about "tho Constitution as it is, and tho Union as it was;" willing at the same timo that Jeff Davis should destroy both. Tho times have changed the meaning of words. A conservative seems to be one williug to see tho traitors destroy tho constitution; and he is a radical who pledges life, and property, and honor, to the main-ten a nee of bis government. Our duty is to stand by the government at all hazards aud to the last, to save it or lot everything go to destruction with it; to support and strengthen tho hands of au-thoriti?! in this strufftrle for life and liberty. There is safety alone in sucoess. If errors occur and wrongs are committed it. is no more than should bo expected. Such are the inoidoiits of oivil war; and thy are fewer iu our country than were ever known before. Denunciation is do remedy. Let those so loud and so bilter in their denunciation of tho administration, be but half so kind to it ns to Jeff Davis' concern, and would say far less than tney uo. the,, (t, , I then retired amid prolonged The Oenero andlienrty npplnuse. ,11.1,1 , Clov Johnson loiiowet.,- - ' . .1 AAiffnnixtilinii. in question of -lavery n m. -j--- all tnoir ueariiis. i ,. tion, to be culled nt Iho proper i:no, to re- ornizo the State; nd he favored . pro- iwion in tne eoiiiitu"" "" , " . " r iminedintely; but it uibi t 'then iholiehing it grndttnlly. W. n.ut get rid of tho slavery question. NeRroee could onlv bo Tiilunblo to tho community, now, n . ' it- i.-.l f.nnj lltnl frnn llpo-rnee. free moo. m i- n . . would work better thnn "Inves. He had ,.!,, led his neuron!, nnd now pnid thorn wftges; nnu never u.o. vnluablo to liinn nnd they nover were ao oontonted lo remain in hi ecrvice. Tho (iovernor 8 posiuous eti u tuut.t, applauded by the audience. Ii. w fnllnwed hv Col. Lo Tillnmn, mho made an effective and humoroui speech, wnotnaue.""" .. , 1 ' which kept Ihe audienoe in a roar. I The mcetin 1 ,or ihe Onion. The meeting then adjourned amid cheers NUMBER 234. "AM I FOR PEACE? TE0! Hon. Daniel S. Dickinson, that grand old democrat of New V ,ik, being written to by j , u., ,D ,,Uiry maae or mm ir ne ww iur peace, returned this rinsinc reply Iron J'tatform. V Vnr ih tw- 1.1.L . - Fw uud rings out rrom the csnoon't 1UTOSU, And tbo suasion of shot and shell. Till whwlllon's spirit Is trampled down To ths depths of Its kiodrud htll. ' I" which Biimil IU1I0W MS ItJUidrOD S tramp, Where thn brazen truiuiMtfl hrn Awf, drauk with the rory of storm and strife, ute Diowrea chargers m-lgh. for tbu pcftLe that thall wnah out the Iproiu sUlu vt our slavery foul and nrlrn And Hhal undr tho fettars which creak and clank n theduwu-trod'lun Mack man's limb. I will curse htm as traitor, and false of heart, Who woold shrink trom thvcooMct now. And willstarap it with blistering burning brand, wo un miieoUB, Cain-1 ike brow. Out I out of the way t with your spurious poace ; men would make ns rebellion's slaves ; 'o will rescuo our land from the traitorous grai-p Or cover It ovor with graves. Out t out of the way I with your knavUh schein. ou iromnunft nI trading puck ! Oromrh away Hi the dark like a sneakins; bound, I That itn master had boa ten back. I Vou would bai it-r th fruit of nur fathers' Mood, ' And soil nut thn Stiipes and Star, T pitrchuriH a place with rehnllii.ii' vnlos, Or tac&tv fioni ri'ln-lllod's st urs. ' My the widow's wail, by the loetlior's tears, Hy tho orphaui who cry for bread, Ity our son who fi., wi- will never yh-Id Till rebellion' h .iiI in dead ! l 'I'll V i.xsr i,o.vr HAM. iti:itix rllnkiitsr or the Oreat li-on-elml Rcbol . leu.rMtev. on jiol.ll,.. Tlio groat roliol nitu, off Mubilo, wliioh, cconlin(r to Homlieru accounts, waa to sink our whole Hoot, as boon sunk by a siitiall. From tho Now Urlu.us Era, March 211. Wkst (Iulf SgtMniio.v, March 20. '64. On March I tho h'rnmbrc steaniod up to Dauphine Island, to communicate with the vessels iu tlio bound. Several rohel irun- boats, tho 'J'mneme among theiu, were seen i'iiig near urants I'ass. The day was squally, and at 8 o'cloek i Iho afternoon, Die loukout on hoard Up Jienneurc sung out, "ihe Ttnnesue is sink ing! All Ihe olhcers on deck iiiinii'dinilv looked toward'thc place whers Hie Tcnnn. ict was lying, ami aure enough they saw ner go uown. At the same time signals were seen on board the Ocltiroru, lying iu Ihe Sound, anil said signals interpreted, read: "The rebel ram ImtifBUfp sunk. It appears thatn sauall struck her. und alio being very low in iho walcr. keeled over and went down. Two feet of her smoke-slack can now he seen ubovo Iho wnior, at Ihe snot where Ihe groat, ram once fay ut anchor. luo ltiimessee ran down Irom Mobile when we first began bombarding Fort l'owell, and rcbol deserters Baid she was CMiccttd to sink our whole lleet. She was an exlreiuelv nowerf'ul vos.i.l. her armor plates being six inches iu Ihick- ncss. Sho was very short in the hull. hut. mm n mug, projeoting spear, or lam, which was entirely under water. Her ex eessive weight made her slow and hard lo handle, being too much for her engines; and sho would nul, therefore, have proved a very formidable opponent for our fast cruisers. Oatbr-Waiilinu. Tlio Chicago Tribune of Saturday nays: , , At nn informal meeting of sevoral of our bankers and bunine. men, last, evening, encouraging proof was given that some ac tion may bo looked for nt the meeting of tlio Hoard oi j ratio next week which will kill off the wild oats, nnd make greenbacks the basis of business transactions. Jt must come lo that eventually, nnd heller now whon it leaves Iho wild cat brood Willi life enough lo claw theiuselven out of tho Sialo, than alter some rcvulslnu that shall leave ihein dead and a stench in the hands of holders. Tho people are ready to adopt greenbacks, mid to repudiate the spawn of the rag-mills. Let it he done. The Bostou Traveler bus been reading Ihe Copperhead liewpupurs, and quotes from them us follows : "iVone but Democrats go to tho war. "Soldiers are sent home to vote tho Republican ticket.'' A manufacturing company in Nashua, N. it., nas iiunisiini to tho government, since the beginning of tho war, two million pairs of cotton llannel army drawers. Over four thousand women and girl!., who received one hundred atxl seventy thousand dollars for labor, woro employed in making them. Atlautic & GreatWesiern Railway (i Pit I NO AUKN(JI.MKNT. TAKKS EFFECT K-7Ani I, too-i.iiiuiy, (rtijinlnyii plod.) m:w voitii heavu t-'lnvnltiiid at.... 0:50 A M Arrive flleHdville at li:Ki t H Uirry at a-Mt p m " SrtUmanea at fi;jr p M " how Vork at lit:' r u BRTIDtNINQ. Ltiavo Nw York at fr.W p k Arrive C'ifvelaud al p M MAIN LlNi;, riser Pivtmos. ' Leave Miiailvllle, (Mnll Kastwaid) 1:18 F U Anive Halnianaca, Lei vo " Anliu Moadville (Mnll Westward) at tVui, m at.. U:I7 A M SEt'OHn IHUfilON. Leave Akron, (M-il Knstward) at 8:11 a h Arr. Mealvhle, " at 1:17 v 11 Leave " Mnl Wentwnrd) at a m Arrive Akrou " nt 4:(M) p m TUMID MVIelON. Leave O.tllon, (Kaslward) at, 8:00 a h Arrive Ani'U, at 6r 15 p m Leavo Am phi, (Westward) at li::ift a m Arrive Oaliun at v m Connecting t COUnY with Ihe Oil Creek Railway. Leavo Curry at S:'t0 a n and tV.V) r m Arrive Tituttville al 1 1 :iin " . 11 8: A', r M Leave " at r.:lMI " li!::Wl r m Arrive (kirry at..,.. 7:30 " " r t'ltANUMN IIHA4 1I. Leavo Moadvllle at 7:60 A it and 2:0 r m Arrive yranhliu at t(':;n " " b-.-ib p m Leave " at 7:30 " 6:4ft r M Arrive Meadville at .r0 " " S:ltU r u M tllltMNCJ IIVISIOV. Leave Cleveland at V.5 A H and 3:15 v m Arrive Youngstowu at in::i. " " 7:'H) p m Lcnre at 7.'N " H:O0 p M Arrive Cleveland at 10: 'ZO " " 6;tO p II. F. uWKKTSKIl, flen 1 Kop't. T. IT. (JOODMAN, aimeral Tlokt Agut, levo- an i, tihio. aprti-tf ATTENTION! Avoid tho Draft ! ENLIST IN THE SIXTIETH REGIMENT, Now organising at Camp Chae. lligliOMt Gororimieiit nnl I.o- ?ul JtouulioH pnid. 1 nmnoM to recruit a Oninnwty for the tervlce for tliree years or dnrlnir Die wur. To those who desire tho bonellts of I he t xpet-feiicu of one who ha Ihwu in lie b r view, this n resents a rare ouporliinlly. Now In the lime totoilixt, the dralt Ukes place on the IfUh of April. Irafted men twelve no Unintv. Kecruits etui ho ctedlWd tu auy Ward or Township theydeBlro. It is important that Ward Committees or others ftBsist in bringing up lecruiis, W. h. PATTEnPnN, Late Capt. t.'o. 4,B,M 3d 0. V. I. Otllre N AUG 11 TON HALL BUILLlNO,npitalra apr6-Vw THOMAS J. TOK, Co in m I m Ion Ittcrcuaii AH WatNCT 8tbkkT Cikciknati. Butter, Egg", Cheene, FruiH, and Produee generally. Rnfrr to M. V BiHtveeA Co , rtnelnnatl; J. D. Pen- ' dery, Cincinnati! t'hae. W. Manaltan, Mnrwalk. 0. A'ltlv Hull A Itay, Cincinnati; Mimre. Wllalaoh I ',,. titdi,i.aih Miller Do., i.bliilcothei 1. J An,n, k,i. uhlo Slate Journal, Columlnia, 0. l.riB-unra MEDICAL. TUB aZUAT 'AMERICAN REMEDIES" ' mown ai PREPARATIONS! "HIGHLY CONCENTRATED OOMFODBD FLUID EXTRACT BUCETLT, a Positive & Speoifio Remedy for . msauii or i BUllhER, KIMWKTfl, fiRATlil, AH Till. Mudlctna ! ... - m .nrf.icttM lh. ABSOUBKNTS lolohe.lthj.7tlo.. or which the WATERY tiH t'jT.nrutMia j-..... ' M .11 VSSATVIIdt KSLAkGtHtHTtTZr. duoeO, u well ne p.iii uitl tnfl.mm.tton. aad U mod for JKW, WUUBN, Md VUILDUMi. ' HELMD OLD'S EXTKAOT BUCHU IOB WIAKMUsM ": ArM nit ' m F.xcwhwj, Hnbtla or Diasi. r J ...uii..:roilun,Or .DUU, . ATTENDED WITH THB 0LL0WISO 8TMP3 TOMS: . ' Inillepoeltlon to Xxertfoo. Lne. of Power, Lou. or Mi morjr. lillticull, of farwtblif, k Nerve., . . Trembling, , lli.rror of IlifHMi.. vt.k.ftiinu. IilniDues of Vlai'iu, Paid In IhrBVok. uuirerefti j.ueuiide or tb. rla.hliiR ofth. Bedv. Mi;ciiliirS)toni; Kniitiinon the K.oa. But lt.ii.1., p,i,ld VomUMun Tlti.it .yinMoniM. If .llowitd in n. m. .t.i.1. ...i- ntftliuiutt iii.iii luhljf romo, auu. fellow IMI-OTKMUr, KATUITV, RPILXPTIC FITS, In mi., of which Iho patient m.jr entlr. Who cB ay Hint ihey are uot rroo.uaullj followed hi thow direful iliMtaMte. ... ,. it : IKSAM I V ASD VWNNVMPTIOIIT Many are aware of the cauttu of their Buffering, but nolle will oonfuaa. Tho record, of the Inaaun Aay. uma anil the melancholy death, by Coaaiimptioa. ot-ar .initio witneaa to llie truth of the aauerUou riTnfloN.' tiNt:K afpbc OltOAMfj WSAKNESS. Kttnnfres Ihoalilor medicine lo atn.niffh.ii .nrf In. vibrate tlm a.v.t.u, which MELMitOLWS EX-rtt.WT UVOllV lurarlahly dyee. A trial will oon-vluce the moat akeptlcal. ' K Females, Females, Females, OLD Ott YOUNG, SINOl.R, MAltUlED, OK COM 1 TEHpLaTINU MAKRIAGK,, Tn many amotions peculiar to Females the Eg. tract Durhu in unffjuallM by any other romedy, as in Chlorosis or Kstontion, Irregularity, aluAilness, or npirenBim of the O'Uritt.iuary Kvacuatlous,Ul-t-wraled or uhii i cms utate of the Uterus. Ieuoorrhea, or WhiteB, KteriHty, and fr all complaints incident to tlit sax, whether arising from Indiscretion, Habits of Dhwipiaiou, or In the - . , i , liKCXI.VK OR C'HANCIE OF I.rFE. Sr. SYMPTOMS ABOVE. NO FAMILY SHOULD BE WITHOUT IT. Take no Biilnnm, AUrcury, or Unplnasanl MedlolnM for I'nuh-aBant aud IansuroM Diss. HELMBOLD'S EXTRACT BUCHU cukes , : Seorot Blseasea n all their stanos. at little axneriMw. UttU nr m chuut) lu dit, no iucouvunlurioe, - - - t AX1 NO 1:.V1MSI1RE. It rauses fretiurat disir, and gtwitrength to Urinate, thereby removing obrjtnici..s)sf prsvetitiDS and curliiKiiri:ttin-sof (Tio Uri-tlira, allaying pain and' IntlaiiimKlliiii, o fror)unnt In this class ot dii-hwi. auil .'spelling I'OIXOXOUH, VItiJtA,SED, AUD WOHX OUT MATTKlt. .., , , .. . ' Thousauds upon Thousands WnO ILA VEBEEN THE VICTIMS Ot QUACKS. And who have nut r UkavT Ki.es to be mrxt tm short timo, Imv. fiuuil they wen dfMfvs5, aud that me iosin ii-ts, uy tntt ubeur 'fitwcrnil Ascria-Kenta," b.-en drivd iu tho systvm, to break out la aa HKgravatnd firm, and r"KRUAP3 AFTER MAURI AGE. M USX .t HeLmbold's Extract Buchu For all AfffWtious and IHssasscof THK IIUMRV OJtftAJVf,, Whether exUtlng In MALE 0t VKt&ALK, from wuainyer chiiso origiuanug, mna, W mat tor Of How Lojir MlauUltiKt Discnsos of thoe Organs r&ciulro the aid uf ft Diurstlo. II CI.3IltOU)S EXTRACT BUCHU 18 THE OTtKAT DIUBBTIO, And It Is curtain tn hnvn tw dMirml offpet In allD , aM tor which It It Keoroow-ntlsd. BLOOD 5 BLOOD!! BLOOD I!! Helmbold's Highly Roncentratad Compound Fluid Extract Sarsaparilla. SYFIIILlig. Tnls fa an affection of the Blood, ami attacks th dexualorgiMi. Liuings of the Nose, Bars, Throat, vt iujie, ana oiner mucus ournres, making its an-pearancf tn tho form of Ulrer. He) in bold ' Extract .HanMiiarillu burities the bloid,-and rsmores allscatr yrupliiiDB or tho nkiu, giving to the oomplexinn ft rb-arand healthy color. It bwlng prepared expressly for tliim-lrtMof comiilalnts, Its blood purifying properties are preserved to a greater extent thanauy oth-or proparatiou of rlarrtaparilla. Eelmbold's Hose Wash. An excellent Lotion for Ptieasns of Bvuhillc Na ture, ami ax an Infection la Diseases of the Urinary OrgaiiKt, arising irmn habits of dissipation, and in t i-nnertioD wllli tho Extracts Buchu aud Sarsaparilla, iu och dmeaw a reoouimeudetl. Evidence of the moHt reMpousiblnaud rsUableohar acter will accompiiiiy the medicines. C'ert iflcatCri of Cnres, From el tih t to twenty years standing, with names known toHOIKXCK AXI) FAMR. For medical pMperties of JiUCHU, se Dispsnsft. tory of thn Unilvil rtmtes. h ProreMHir van nuts' valuable works on tba Practice of Puysic. Ht reiiiarasniniie-ny ineiaieceiODratea nr. vu r- iVK, Plill-deiphia. . Hfa reuiinkn made hv Dr. EP1IRAIM Htr nnWRT.T.- a celebrated Phyuician, and Membei of the Royal Cilli K 01 norg'.ons, ireianu, ana pubitsnod tn the TmiiBautlons ut the Kiug anu vjueeu'B Journal. Hue lUoitli o-rinirglcal KevieW, pUbllaued by BEN-7A M IN TBAVSHS, Fellow or the Boyal College of tturgeuns. bee most of the lato tandard works on Uedlolne. Bx tract Buchu tl 0() per bottle, or six for 0 00 arriapaiflla 1 00 " , 6 00 Improv'd llose Wash 60 " '." 8 60 Or htf a 't.iwu f ech for tl'i, which' W?II ho sufficient to cure the most obstinate cases, If direction are adhered to. ; Deliverable to any address, securely packed from observation. lMwilhn symptoms In all communication. Cine- guarauteed. Advice gratis. AFFIDAVIT. Poreonnlly appeareil before me, .n Alderman pf i cltv or I'liiiaai'ipiiia, .nti,t. ingduly .worn, doth aay nia preparation, contain Z ".'"purei,'" .bW ' ll. T. H K L M BOL D. Al.tei rust), Ninth it., above Aftce, Philft. Ivttsisf Information In confidence, II. T. UKLMUOLD, Chemist. PRINsTIPAI. OEPOT9. Helmbold's Ttmvr and Chemical Warehoftst, 5M Broadway, New Vovk; Or, JieiniDoiu a eieuicai 1'vpviB, ivw pvuui Anm street, Phllailelphfa. ,., And nnprlnelpled dealers, who endeavor to dispose) OK TH Kill OWN" and "other" articles on the reputation attained by Helm' who uenu.n rrfran...nn1 it BiXirstj Md by alt DrnggtstBi AUK FOB BKLMnf lint nni the advprtii AVOID IMPOHlTKtJf sahlS-ftileoWtiW |
Format | newspapers |
LCCN | sn84024216 |
Reel Number | 10000000026 |
File Name | 0362 |