Daily Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1848), 1864-06-15 page 1 |
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Horses! Eorses! VABDEPARTMieKT. CAVALBY BUR1CAU7 WAMtHOTUM, 1). C. Jul t H, llW. SFALVO fcONMALS WJLIi BPS RECEIVED atihfl ftueeutl IK. 'rloct H., MONi AV.Jmm Uih, le, lur iwv thousand II, WW) Cavalry Hones, to be ivftveied t tlm UoveruDiiit 6Wl lei at Gieebo T,, iMpt, nr Washington eliy, within furty (40) 'dj from date Of ixutiract i"id Uurtw ro be Bound In all particulars, well broken, toll In Drtlt, iron fifteen (16) to elxteeea till, banda bub. irom tits (6) to nine (9) years old. In KO-'d condition, and weU adapted In eery way to ' Cnlrf purposes. aheer- p;ii.ceitons will be strictly adhered to j fend rUiJly enforce-l In every particular. ' tlo bid w li br entertained uulees ocoajpanld by eguacauty for iUlaVhml performance. .eh-tiild any I nlird tiia'r ofllcer guarantee , tb piopttml of a bidder who thnold prove to be lr fe-ponHile, bit nam will be n-portod to tb rcr. tnry of War, with a raouaiDwndatlon that ueeb IB-' Mr b- dtaailaMd lh er..-e. I All bidder and guarantor will be held to j the strictest accountability, and every failure to 1 comply with term of contract, or to make the . contract when awarded, will be followed by pro' ; ecuthn to t he full extent of the law. ( Form f bl'i and guaranty can dm bad oa appllce- . tln fc'fble office. 1 6iico-aful hidden will be prepared to enter Into ! Vrlttt n contracts with gd ami e-'flloieot etcttrlty, tm eaieieiy un iue acoptoj ortiiei' 7 br oath of adecUnce most accompany each bid. 1 b nad-reigned re-err Iba rlbt (o rt-jco all blfla dtwrnad iiur. aMtnaiile B da lor one bundrtd (100) Horace ecd upward fin ne emer. iieo. Bide furthoeaurvaiMiber or Boriat required are Invite. V ayment will be promptly made on completion of cvmrKk t t o mar viU bs r tird. Propos . In ma be ecdorael Proposals for Cavalry H-reos," and add rented to LUut.O-li.ne. Jsmee A. Ekin, Ch el Quai termsslsr. Cavalry ilureea, Wuhiitnn, D. 0. Aqv ihM In ormatlon will o promptly given oa application, pereoually c r by letur, to JAUK4 A. BKIN, Lien ten ant-Col one! and thief Qurtrmtr, I avail y Uureaq. Oi Prircbiee Id the open market wi l be emtio, van t Glial to Depot until he ouu tract 1. a war Ird. Pajm tit male in OrtiacatM of ludeblftdntM for eeeu (T) hur e nt hdii, Jell tQ No. 12Q. J! . A kht Cimcino BqmPAsn Ornoi, I Cincinnati, O., June 1, 14. PBOPOBALS AKK INVITED BY TUB UNDER. 81 (IN El', until WEDNESDAY, Jane 1Mb, 180 nt I o'oloca P. M., rarhlehlnK thle Department (by contract) wftbtbe lollvwlug Bookf : Company 0rd r Bwk, v Army Standard, do Cioihlnfi Boki, do do Dtacrluilre liookw, do do Morning Beport Dooka, do Poet Order do do " Poet tttr d(w do Poet Onard Report do do Begimeatal O rlvr do do do DttorlptlYt do-do lnorx do ' Mo 4 do Order ' ' do 'di' 8anplet nfwhiih may be ern at tbe offleaf Clothing and E n1pg lu lhl city. To b deliveied tree oCotiarii, at tha U. 8. Tnipoo-tloo Wsrfhonte, In ibliclty. in -good new packagoo, " with tbe name of the pany furui-blng, the kind and quantity of goodidU.tuctly marked on each articl and package. PartlM offer) us- voode molt dlttlnctl itata In j their biile tite qnan'lt tney propoas to rurnibii. famplee, abeo ubailtUd, moit be marked and anmbered to correspond with tbe proposal; and the Eeriiee thereto ninit goaraoiea tht the goodi shall , In every reepect. eonal to Army Standard, other wiee the pn-poal will not be oonfldeifd A guaranty ligued bf two retponeibla persone, mutt accimpany each bid, guaranteeing that the bidder will supply tbe article! awarded to him under bin proposal. Bide will be opened on Wedneoday, June 16th, 166ft,at3oYlock P. H., at tbia office, and bidden arc requeeted to b present Awards will be made on Thursday, Junr 16th, IB' 4. Bi nds will be required that the contraot will bo laith'nlly fulfilled. Telegianu relating to Frdpotall will not be noticedBlank forms of Proposals, contract! and bonds ma? tie obtained at this office. The right to reject any bid,leemed nnreasonabla lsieeerrrd. By order of Col. Taon&i Swords, A. Q. M 0. C. W. MOULT0N. Je2-td Capteln and A-Q. M. fNo. 127. ABMY CLOTHING AND FQUIPAGE OEflCE ) Cincinnati, Ohio, June 1, 18U4 PROPOSALS AUE INVITED BY THE I'NPKB-filuNKD, until FRIDAY, June 17th, W4t at two o'clock P M., for turniahlng this Department (by contract) with I niform Coats In'antry; ITni otm Coats Artillery ; Foarae Ceps. Ramplee o which nay be aen at the office of Clothing and Euipafo in this city. To I'e dilif ered if w ol charge, at the TJ. 8 Inspection W rehriiMiiubis eft), to gKd new parkaKe, with the name of tbe part furnishing, tbe kind and qnan(iy of goods distinctly marked on each article end vackage. pHttifS offering poods, must distinctly state in their tld4 thequnotlti they propose to lurnisU, the price and time of delirry. fain i las ben submitted, must ha marked and numbered to corrfapund with the proposal, and tha Emits thereto mutt gu at en tee lhat the goods shall e, in evvry respect, eial to Army StanJard, otherwise tir pr poaal war lit nut be considered , . A guaiauty signed by two responsible persons, must acciintpany each bid, guaranteeing that tha bidder will aupply tbt articles awarded to him node' hla propoeal. Bida will be opened on Filday, June 17th, '8f4, at two o'clock P. M , at this office, and bidders are ro-cjuftted tobep-esent. Awards will be made on iaturday. Jure Utb. Bndawfllbe required that the coutiact will bo faiihfnlly fultllM. Telegrams telatlng to Proposals will not be no-tired.Blank 'orms for Proposals, Contracts and Bond! Stay be oh'etrei aMhia office, Tha tight to reject any bid deemed unreasonable la re erted. By order of Ool. Taos. Bw bd', A. Q. M. O. 0. W. MOULTON, JeStd Caotatn and A Q. M. INCOME TAX FOR 1864 TO WHOM IT MAY CONCEItX N OTICB 18 HEREBY GIVEN THAT THE AN- nuAi ataitssment of Income and other National Taxis for the COUNTY OF FRANKLIN, Seventh Collection DlHtrtct of Ohio, has bten computed, and the aa-ewnient Hooka, as rendered by the Asaiatant Aaesaora, will be op -a for theinaieo-tlon ol all pera oa who wlan to examine thtlr list, for tbe space of fifteen days, From and affor the 6th day cf June, 1864, At the Office of the Asl tant Aaaeaior at Cnlumbtie. BfAfu-r the expfratiou of the aaid fliteendays. 1 w It her appea's at the same place relative to any alleged etroneo"s or exreaalve Taluatlon, or eniimera'fnn n.ade by sld A"altant Assessors, on WEDNESDAY, ihe day of June, 18(4. No append will be htard unlets mad Id writing, which shall specify the part-cuUr caue, matter, or tLiDg, lespecilng ablch adenlalon is requested. IhAAO M. BtKIlKfr, Ak saorof 7th Collection District fprlng Valley, .tine 1, 18- Jut nttw JAMKS, KENT, SANTEEal CO. Importers and Jobbers of DH.Y OOOB0, K9 A 841 North Third Street, ebore Baoe, PHILADELPHIA. John 0. James, Isaac Welsh, H. G. sterling, Wtn.C. Kent, George A. Smith, H. D. Welah, Char lea Santee, SamDal White, Jos Tomllnaon, Diar3) mIAbi LiW OFFICE IN CIMI.WATI. ? T. W. BAETLEY, Attorney and Counsellor at Law. Office No. 20 Third Htrcet, between TTaluai and Main SfreeU. CIXCIXATI, Ohio. 7.1mJ Reaping and Mowing Machine?. Ohio Keaper and Mower, MANUriOTUBKB BT j ENGLISH, II ELM I CK $ DIXON Warranted equal In every respect to any machine Mtant. For sale by WJVt. A. GULXj, No 30, A'orlU IIIkIi Mreet Trl-rt2t.w.wSir J. T. WARREN & 00., FOREIGN FRUITS, No. 63 Main Street, OIIVOI1VIM ATI. RAGS! RAGS!! ' E PaTINO Till. HIGHKHT PBIOB TOB delivered Id any quantity at the Toluai-tills. THOMAS NIXON AGO. . EYE AND EAR. EYE AND EAR. IDR. Or. A. KNAPP, 00TJII8T, (TORMKBLT 0? H. T.,) IXOLTJ. Iv.ly trn.t, UImua. of th. Ktm, De.faut ' .nd Ibmiu Artificial Hym witkoviptm, at Kuutb HUh.lruet, Uolnmlju., Ohio: AIM, ai.ll. fail boo. ra tb. (v. .ud K lor u M.U, m.ofponr DAI VOLUME XX VII. RAILROADS. &l JlJSEli AEUAMiEMEiM. LITTLE HIAin AND COLUMBUS AND XENIA RAILROADS, For Clnoinnatt Dayton, Richmond, Indianapolis a Chicago. Without tbun f 0ra to DATTOR o4 BIOH. MOMD, aad only on. tbun of Otp to ST. LOUlD, IMOIANAPOLia 0HI0AOO. On and after Monday, May 23(864r TrslM will ran M tollovit IO0B IBA1NB DAILY FBOM OOLDKBDI, (Bandmj. tpMd.) D1ANAP0LI3 rilOHT tx'pBKafi m 1AI - n., itopplott M Lodood, Ihu. D7tont Morrow, ftnd Lor-Lud, urlTlD. ot Olooloott .t 6:36 B., Blcbowwl e:w ft. B., lnoi.tl.pou. r.tu m. m., uai ongo 86 p. au noom mm OIVOtNNATI, BldHMONU, INDIANAPOLIS 6 CHICAOO TRAIN Un. .!).. m., itoppini .1 .11 .Utloa. on th. L M. I U X. E. B.. conn. In. witb tb tr.io on th. W.ri.tt it OtncfonnU R. B. fnr Hillaborr. Obflllrotli. .ud U.Hettk .r ririog .t OinotDD.U .t 11-2.. m., .t D.yUD, 8:tl .. In ., .topping .1 .11 imiwdi uie W.lrn Rllr..it. .rrirlM t Rich-, to. ft. B., Indi.n.polU 2 06 p. m., Cbloo 136 p. m. TN. B. Tbto train u th. qnloke.1 from Colon bo. to Obloo; tint oacopiod bolng 14 hoar, nod 36 minute., which Uqalohtt than by aaj other Bftllro.. roaM. thud nun. OrROIHHATI, DAYTON, RICHMOND AND IN. PIANAPULie DAY tXPKUSS lrt l II 63 a. m., .topping at JitfferMi.. London, CbnrlMton, Ced.r-Tllle, Xnl.. ttpnng VsllT, Oorwfn, Morrow, Ponth L.b.aon, Footsr'., Lov.l.ad, 0.mp Dennlwu, Mil-ford .od Engiu. Hoqm: .rtirlng .t Cinclnn tl .t 1:16 p. m., Duyton al 3 00 p. m., Blohmond at 6:'0 p. m., laduaapoll. at t:60 p. m., noOkko, too a. Bi. rovftTR fun. MAIL AND ACCOMMODATION baro at 1:36 tm.t .tapping .t .11 .totion. on th. L. M. A 0. A X. . B.. .loot Cl.y.Ylll., Braoch Bill, Mlaml.Till. and Flaiarilla, arrlilng .t OlnclnoaU at 6 05 a. m. 8LEIPIKO nAtW ON NIOBT TRAIWi- FOB CINCINNATI AND INDIANAPOLIS. N. B. For fnrthor Informatloa .pplj at th. Oo-lemon. Union Dnot Tlokt offlo. of HtNltV BR'JOKd, Tlok.t Agont, T. LODGU, Agnnt. V. W.BTBADRB, Oun'l Ticket Ast., Oln 0. B. W. mwin. Snp't, Otn.,0. (lolafttta.. Ma; 28, 18(14. 1B04. HVmm ARRANIiEMEM. TUBE CHANGED. Great Northern & Eastern Route. clevelandTcolumbus rdt) OINOINNATI RAILROAD. rX1a.z0 "Xlx'flxxfli Tmly UdKPT SUH1IAT, FromColnmbu, In connection with Trains on the LITTLB MUMI AND COLO Mil US AND XKMA BAILBOADd. VlUT TKAJJI. BIOBT CXPB1CSS Learea Oolttmbas at S;C0. m. Will atop at Delaware, Ashley, CardlOKton, Olleau, flnllon, and at al) aUtlona north of Oalion, arrivina at Cleveland at 0.U0 a. m.; Dnukirk, 3i3U p. m.i Buf lelo, 6:(lo p. m.i Albany, 4:46 a. m.; New York, lii;30a. m.i Boa ton, S: 0 p. m.i Chicago, fie Ore-t. line, p. m.j Pittsburg, 8:30. p. m.; Pbiladel. pbla, ncottD Tiuin NEW YORK KXPBBS3 Leaves Columbus at V20 a. m. Will stop at Delaware, Cardlogton, Gallon Ureatllne, Shelby, New Louden, Wellington and Grafton; arrlvlug at Cleveland at 8:60 p. m.i Dun kirk, 8:32 p. m.; Buffalo, 9:66 p. m.; Albtny, 8.40 a ; New York 2:46 p. m.; Boston, 4:56 p, m.; Pltubnrg via Crestline at V.W p. m.; Philadelphia, j Chicago via GrqU), at 6:30 a. m. TBItW TKAU. HAIL AND EXPBKS8 Iav-i rVtlnmKrte i t-tln p. m. Will stop at all statlous aontb of Shelby, and at fthlloh. New London, Wellinttton, Oraftoo aud Berea; arriving at Cleveland at 8 5" p. m.i Donklrk B:I6 a. m.; Buffalo, 4: a. m.i Albany, 3:'6 p.m.; New York.fMft p. m i Boston, 11:60 p. m.; PltU bnrg via Crestline , iitO a. m.i Philadelphia, . Chicago, 9:ufl a. m. OOHN ICIlOHti AtDolaware with Springfield Branch for Spring, field and points on that road. At Craatllne with Pittsburg, ft. Wayne and Obi oago Ballroad for Pittsburg, Philadelphia and Baltimore; also, for Chicago. At Shelby with Sandusky, Men-field and Newark Ballroad, for all points on that road. Also, for Tolodo and Cb1ca.ro At Or too, for Toledo and Tilcago. At Ctevelaud witb Lake onuie t....troad br Irle, Dnukirk, Buffalo, New fork and Boston. PATENT 8LKEP.ING OABH ARB BUN OS ALL fcUQHT TBA1NS TO CHICAGO, NfcW UHK AND BOSTON. Bveoo OhteM Ikrotiffc to iVete York awf Bottot nfa Olmetamd; also, to PKibutelphi and Urn York via OwtUin. aiTTJBNIriU. Klght Bxprflsa arrives at Oolomhui at 12:45 a. m. Cincinnati Kxpress arrives at Coluubns at 11 30 a. m. Columbas Aooommodatlon arrives at Colambos at S.6U a. m. Fare as Low aa by any other Route. ' Aik for Twcaetf vis Ormdiiu or OJeinaA b. 8. rLiirr, Snnerlntendent, Cleveland, Ohio. JAUES I'A'ITJCIL-ON. Agent, uoiumins, umo. Ool n ro boa. May 10. IfH 4. To IndiauapoliN Direct without Change of Oars 1364. k i m m is it 1864, AIUtAGKttK.r. Columbus & Indianapolis WiW WV" W--WS7 WT raiijHoaid iisijsrxj. For I'rbatiM, rvrtriiiarllclil. Iyt4u. qua, Kluhmond aiii luuitwaiHiLis. Thronh to Indianapolis WITHOUT OBANOB Of C Al-8, and bo t one change to Iioalsvilw, 6u liouia, and Chicago, On and after Monday. May. 16 1864 Trains win leave uoumuus as lotiowii FIRST TUA1N. I1TDIANAP0LI8 EXPRESH, at 6:00 a. m.t con nectlng direct at Plqua at fl:to for Troy and Dayton;at Blcbmond at 10:46, for Andersen, Loganaport and Chicago; and at Indianapolis at p. m., 'or Louis ullle. Tern Haute. Evanaville. Cairo, tit. Louis. La fayette, Springfield, Qulncy, 8t. Joeoph, Chicago. ana an wesvernana wnriuwu-iwu uoinvs. BICOOND TRAIN, TJBBANA AOCOIIMCDATION, at 0:46 a. m., eon nectlng at Prbana at 11:30, or Bellefontalne, Ken ton, Carey, Flndlay, Titfln, Clyde, and Sandusky. TmitD TRAIN. INDIANAPOLIS EXPRKS, at 11:30 a. m., oon nectitig direct at Ulllord; aoutb lor Hechanlukiburg and Sprlnultnld; and north for Maryaville and Delaware; at Urban a at 1:40 p. m., for Bellefontalne and Hants til In; at Plouaat 3:A u. ra., for Troy, Dayton, Union, Mnolca and Winchester; it Bichmond at B:'ifp. m.t ror Aaaeraon, itoganaitort, reona ana vntCMgo; ana a. inaiauapoiia at e:ix p. m, ior uuv Isville, St. Loots, "hi") and all Western ottles. FOURTH TK&IM. 8:6, with Dayton and Uichigao Railroa! lor Lima, Fort Wyne. Chfcaeo, Tolndo and Detroit, SLm'iNQ GAKS ARE RUIN ON NIGHT TRAINS. This Is the only through route between Columbus and Indianapolis, ana tne ouiy route on wnicb THKOUOll TIUKETScaa beaold. The oars for this Lino start from the depot on tha west side of High steeet, opposite the Cincinnati Depot. On this root there Is no change of ears between Columbus and Indianapolis; and no other rout wlthont changing cars exists. Buy your Ticbuta at the Columbus and Indianapolis Dupot, thereby saving a change of cars at Bicb- Bond. For Tickets and any Information, apply at tbe of flea, OPPOSITE TUB I'NION ItKPOT.COLtW BUS J. HI. LI NT. Oen'lbopa. ?. filTANDLKR, General Ticket Agent, n D mnKlrOW.O-n'l Faaa'ngr AgenU fymmhim. May l"dtf TRUSSES AND BRACES. 1R. A. O. FOIISBFRG. No. 5 East Four.il St, Dp Stairs, BETWEEN MAIN AND iYOtMOUl STo. Ciiiciiiii.kti, o.. Pays particular attention to applying Trusjh ron II epical Cusb. Shoulder Braors for Ladiaa, Gents and i btldreu; enpp rtra, Umbilical nanrfag and T Bardag's for Jiadh s' ala-t'O 84ckinss aokltte and KoeoCapaof lik and Linti; Inatrument! lir Gurativeof bplna, Club Feet Dow Leg. Weak An kles, Uip Uteaee, and all other Physical De (briflttee area:ciirately Otled. Twenty yea i experience In E a rope apd America. A remaie always ta a-ieaaaaceio wai on iaotea. Addre-Tsoroall yonraeii icuw-sm SILAS N. FIELD, Lumber Merchant! DmIw In all kind, of Worked Floorine, Lumber LATH AND rHIIHOLFJ, W. Corner at Nprina; anil Water ' ar'lMM Oolumbua. O, IiY OH COIUMBUUS RAILROADS. sijuuku inuiiMiKaifcM. iae4.r:ELa,aT. ise-a. OEITTIIAL OHIO & BTBUBBNVIIjIj RAILROADS, OSer tbe'ihortest, Quickest and most reliable rocte a aaj ivuuiiuii nanniODUBu, Dibit MOBE, WASHINGTON CITY, PHI LA-DELPU1A, NEW YOk& A BOoXON. Dfc-eol eoeeif eel ues ere wmd mt BtUmt trtU fas Boot wamere md Ohio m. H., mmd at Wwf mi tite Pmmuytiawia Oswa-ol1 BaOrtttd. TrafM leave Ooiusabaa daily (bundays esrepted) M fellows; NIGHT EX PBEB8 Leaves Oolambaa vie Central Ohio B. B,, 4:10 a. m.i will stop at all stations whet signaled; arriving at Bel leal re at 10:4b a. m.; Baltl-more, fl a. m.; WaeblDgtoa City, 8 a. ai. Elgbt trains dally to Philadelphia and New fork; also connects at Bel leal re for Pittsburg, Harrisburg, Philadelphia and New York. MIGHT KXPBEAa tia 8TE0BEN VILLI Leave Columbas 4:10 a. Steobeovllle 12. lop. m,; arrives at Pltubnrg S:A0 p. m.; leaves Pltthnig4:t6 B. m.; Hartiaburg f :S0 a. m.; Philadelphia T:UU a m.. ew York via Philadelphia lk;0U m,; Baltimore T.U0 a. m.; Wwiuiogton City 9:60 a. m. NEW TOItK EXPBKHS via TET7BBNVILLb Leaves- Oblumbos I:'iO a. m.; arrives at Iteubea- ville 6:00 n. m.t PitUbnm 8:06 n. m.i Hkrriabuia 8:66 a. m.; Philadelphia 10:00 a. m.; New York vie Aiiencowo i:op. m.; vm rmiadeiptjia g:u p, m Baltimore 11 a. m.; Washington City 4:60 p. a liAi SfAraaao uiuvual ouzo b. n. Leaves Oolumbus. 8:00 p. m.; will stop at all sta Uons, and arrive at Bel leal re 10 p. m.j Gralton, S:6f a. m.i neamout, o:nu, lAimneriauo, B:ao; tiarttns burgh, 11:46; Harper's Ferry, 1:03 p. m.; Baltimore MHK WwthiuetonCitv.9:;: PhiladnlDhia. 10:tu. m.. eight trains to New York daily: arrive at Ptttibart 8 m a.m.) Harrisburg 18:46 p. m.; Philadelphia 6: ; aw aora iu:w p. m,; itat.imoro c:wp. m.; waso IngtoB City 8:60 p. m. JNO. W. BUOWlf. General Ticket Asm, tiemral OhloB. B. 8. F. Hi.ULL. General Ticket Agent Steabenvills, K. B. May 18 iBtH. Atlantic & Great Westera Raiiwav- SUPMMBK ABBANOBHENT. TWOTHR iVOE Exurea Trains b'weu CLEVELAND AND M JGW luun. xaurseotiut nay in, iho. NEW YOKK IHItOIOH LI5TE. Leave Cleveland at 9:60 a tt and 9:10 rtr Arrive at L avitt.btirgti.U:) a it 41 10-M r M meaavtueai r m " j:uu a si Corry at 3:'4i F at 2:W a at Ralainanca at 6:18 r U 4:44 A II New York at 10:46 am V:4A r M ajRUBMIIfO. Leave New York at......... 7:u-a M " 6:00tp Arrive Cleveland at 6:00 AM 0:30 p "Sundays excepted. tttl"'dy excepted. MAIM LINE. Eastward Leave Akron, (Mail) at.......... T:4A A Arr, Ueadvllle, Wall) at .V:Mi r u Mr- 8almanca at 8: p h Westward Lave balamanea (Mail) at 6:00 a Arrive meauvuie - a.......iu;ie a u Arrive Akron " at... i-M p m Eastward Loave Gallon, (Accom.) at 8:. a. A.-l. Al . . -A. 1.1 II 1 A.IkA -.lr Attlve Akron " 4:0 p M Westward Leave Akron, (Acsom.) M....10:35 a m Arr. siHOsncia " ...... ;w p Arr. GMllion, " - ti;Oo p M riiAp.Ki.iar branch. Leave Meaihille at 8:0U a n and 3:10 p m Arrive franklin at '0:16 " " 6:25 p m Leave " at 7:.'i0 " 6:30 p u Arrive Headrllle at 9:5t 7:46 P aj MAHONlNti DIVISION. Leave Cleveland at 7:16 A m and 8:60 P Arrive Youngstown at 10:35 ' " 7:20 p Leave " at 6:46 " 1:46 p St Arriva Cleveland at 10:'20 " IOOfi U. W. oWEETbEB, Oen'l Bup't. Meadvllle, Pa. . GOODMAN, General Tleket Agent, Clove-bin mtvIA MEDICAL. Friends and Relatives OF THE Brave Soldiers and Sailors. Holloway's Pills! AND OIIVT3X JEPf T. ALL WHO HAVE FRIENDS AND BELATIVE8 in the Army or Navy should take especial care that tlu-y be amply supplied with these Pills aud Ointment; and where tlie brave cJoldiera and tailors have neglected to provide thninselvee witb them, no better pretwnt can be sent thmn by thulr friends. They have been proved to be the Soldier's nevec-failing ftleud in tho hour of need. COUGHS AND C0LD3 AFFECTING TROOPS Will be speedily relieved and effectually cured by using imae atirniruDie meuicinus, and by paying DroiMir attention to the Directions which are attach ed to each'i'ot or Box. SICK HEADACHES AND WANT OF AP PETITE, INCIDENTAL TO SOLDIERS. Those feelings which so sadden ns usually arise from trouble or annuyamas, obstructed pornp (ration, or eating and driuking whatever is unwholesome, thus disturbing the healthful or I Ion of tbo liver and stomach. These orgnna must be relieved, If yon da sire to be well. The Pills, taken according to ths printed Instructions, will quickly prxluee a healthy action in both liver and stomach, and, aa a natural consequence, a clear head and good appetite. WEAKNESS OR DEBILITY INDUCED BT OVER FATIGUE Will aoon disappear by the ns of these Invalaablo Pills, and tbo foldtor will quickly acquire additional strength. Never let tbo Bowels be either confined or unduly acted upon. It may seem strange that tlotlowny'a Pills should be recommended fur Dysentery aud Klux, many perans supposing that they would lucrcaae trie re iixarion. i nia is a great mistake, for th-ae Hila will correct the liver aud stom ach, and time muove all the acrid liumora from tbe svatem. This medicine will give tone aud vigor to tlie whole org uic system, nowever acrangea, wnue health and strength follow as a matter of course. Nothing will stop the relaxation of the Bowels so sure as this famous medicine. VOLUNTEERS, ATTENTION! INDISCRE- HUNS O YOUTH. Bores, TJloers, Blotcboiand Swellings, can with certainty be radically cured, If the Pills am taken night and morning, and the Ointment bo freely atted as stated in tbe printed instructions. If treated In any othor man nor. they dry up In one part to break out in another. Whereas this Ointment will romnve the humors from the system, and leave the Fat loot a vigorous and healthy man. It will require a little perneverance to oau caee 10 insure a tacting euro. FOR WOUNDS. EITHER OCCASIONED BY THE BAYONET, BAUKK OH THE UUL- LET, 80UES OK DKUISES, To which every Ho Idler and Bailor are liable, there are no medicluvs so sals, sure and convenient as Hol loway's Pills and Ulutmt-nt. lue poor wounded .till AvInifMt dvlnv uffftrar mlirht hnve lite erniinHa dressed Iramfiiiately, if be would only provide him- i self wi'h this matchless Ointment, which should be thrust Into the wound and smeared all around It,' then covered with a niece of linen from bis knaD-i sack, aud compressed witb a handkerchief. Taking, niaht and mornlus. o or B fills, to cool tne system and prevent luftauimatlon. ' Evi ry Soldier's Knapaack and Seamen's Chetl , should be provided witb these valuable Bemedlet. CAaTTIOWf I?one are genolne unless the word . "Qollowat, New Yoaa aho Lohdom," are discernible aa a WtUar mark In everv Inal of the book of dl .' rectlons around each pot or box; the same may be plainly seen by nolWine the boto th IvAt. A hand-' some reward will be given to any one rendering sucb Information as may lead to tbe detection of any .tarty or patties counterfeiting ths medicines or veudiny the same-, knowing them to be spurious. Bold at the manufactory of Professor Hiuo- wav. 80 Blalden Lome. New York, and by all re spectable Orugsistaand Dealers lo Medicine, th rongh-out tbe el vl 11 ted world, In pots and boxes, a 36 con is, u cents, ana at eaou. kATThere Is m considerable saving by taking the larger sites. M. B. Directions for the guidance of oattentaJs every disorder are affixed to each pot and box. tOT Dealer in my well known medicine can have Show Garde, Circular!, &c, tent FREE OF XPENSE, by addressing THOttAS HOLLO WAY, dac3-'0S-eod-ira HO Mnl4l(s liift, If. ICE, ICE. WBinn WAS OBTAIN KD TWO MILKS .bore th. rjtflr. wilt b. fornlabcd In LAhGK or SHALL UUANTIIIK4 si nuonabb prtoM. order. I.ft with Hronka, Httwrn, a k., No. ITS Sooth Hlrh Ht.l McColm HII. t McD.waliu. 124 s..mb High 81.; 0. A. Wag", 17 . St. Wm. T.ylor, Ho. fl Owrnn. Block: Km, Tawn St., .ndWm. Dl. klunn, 64 North UUb Bt.l or .Ith th, Wiionon tbo itncU, wbl, ". i will b. Dromon, .lion. mrl.1-.tm J O. S. M'T.T.KR A: Y. $75 TO S150 PER MONTH. TH LITTLK GIANT 8K WINO MACHINE COM-panr Tant cs .ut In mrh eoaotv, totwllclt ordtni fir thlr now 8 in Machlna, witb riiakh, Kntw-drlraraoft Mtra umiIIpa. Wa will pay a liberal Mlary and eKptjnwt, or larga eomnnMilon. For tartloulaia, taraia, anrl a .tamp and addrm T. 8. PA OK, ToNri, 0., aprA-dltUwS . ' tor tht 0. S. IO STATE OHIO. WEDNESDAY MORNING JUNE DRY GOODS. L C. HOPKINS & CO., Carter FIftb and flue. OFFER XT Wholesale & Betail, ' OOO PIBOB8 BLACK SILKS. boo FXJtaoxiae-FRENCH MERINOS All Colors, FIVE TXIOrSAXD ' ' WINTER SHAWLS 0X1? THOUSAND LADIES' CLOAKS, Blaok mid Colored. L. . Hopkins & Co., Corner Fifth and Tine. FANCY DRESS SILKS ax LOW PRICES. L.C. HOPKINS & CO. OFFER XT THE LARGEST STOCK OF DRESS SILKS!! IS THE CITY. L 0. HOPKINS & CO., Corner Flab and Fine, OINOIKrKTiV.TI, O . octSO-63-dlr CARPETING. CARPETS, Wholesale and Retail. 300 PIECES CARPETING! WITS IMMENSE STOCK 01 Oil Cloths, Mattings, Curtain materials, etc., etc, I ttm now opnrlu( aew uiortmant of tha abon MlMted witb great cr., for the SPRIMQ 1 BADS. JOSEPH C. RINGWALT, 174 and 176 Main St., BctwMit Fourth A Fifth, estt lid. Olxxolnnevtl, OIxlo drugs, &c. O. ROBERTS, DRUGGIST,, NO. 24 SPKTH HltiU STREET Omits FOB ALI AT WH0LKSAL1 OB BI TAIL, a lar,r .ad wall HlMtwl stock of DRTGS, CHEMICALS, ; PATENT MEDICINES, PERFUMERY, TOILET SOAPS,. PAIOTSs OILS, VAIt.VISHES, IiYE STUFFS, KUCSUES, all kiurts, WINDOW GLASS, GLASSWARE, Wines .Sc Liqiioi-s rM SIKIWVAL PUBfONEfl. Together witb rnnrj ftrtiel. Kept In a flrst olan i ' i " oturv u im wdiou d.t m parcBawa tor OmA of th. Importer, .nd aUnnfautonri, and will be Mid at vary low prlota, SHPftrdnUgr uwlo ftna M wwj.aajla, PAyw aW PrmorifiUom wtIA oioia Uahcmn. octi-Oly G5-. ROBERTS, . WD0LESAL1 AND BKTAIL DKALEBS IH Drugs, Chemicals, Paints, Oils, Varnishes, Patent Medicines, Perfumery, Toilet Goods, Wines and Liquors for Medical Purposes. n 124 North High St., IsnMBTTS, O. OTH'K. THE f HAN KLIN BANK OF fubV I Uae Oonntr bains deelron. of rellnqal.hln. lu baDkins amine, hi-reby (Tire" notice of It. re.dl-aew to redeem It. oQUUDdlng note, of clrcul.tton, at taaoffldu Fmnklta alUI,, Poraig. 000017, Oblw, as raqnlnd Jar aie, 41 . oto. InqoyorHon. retmar, I, ISS4. ' DAILY OHIO STATE JOURNAL BtlftVIT, ALU" At CO Propriwtera. WEDNESDAY HORNING, JUNE lb. 1864. Ckarlwaloftv-Ta. Captan mt rAMeaslaa- . ,, . wllte. A corrponJent of the Trituiu f Itm Um following account of the oftptur of So-lioDTillft:"From Cole's Island we hear of aotWe operation.. All the pait winter tbe rebel bare been fortifying their picket line. Immediately oppo.ilo our right poet on Seoe.-eion.ille Creek the erected four breast worke -one apparently fioihed with considerable eare, at though futit were to be mounted in it. The; had also filled tbe dykee leading from the left of our line with torpedoes, and in April laat three of our men were wounded by them while making a reconnaissance."On Sunday morning, May 22J, Colonel Von Gils, of the Forty-first New York Tol-unteers, with detachments from various regiments, among them the Fifty-fifih Massachusetts Tolunteers, crossed from tbe left of the line to Battery Island, treading carefully oyer the dyke and taking therefrom some serenteen torpedoes; and, charging' upon the rebel line, drove th.n. r-n th. breastworks, aod pursued them on toward Seoessionviile, capturing ultimately the first line of rifle-pits defending that town. "The Fifty-fifth Massachusetts is said to hare particularly distinguished itself, almost annihilating a rebel regiment. "On the day following a fierce cannonading took place between our gunboats in the Stono and SecessionTille Creek and tbe rebels. Batteries Green and l'umance, at Lighthouse Inlet, also those on Block Island, took SecesBionviile in fiank. "Everything being done to the satisfaction of Brigadier-General Schlmmelfennie:. our forces wore withdrawn. While the enemy suffered greatly forty dead being seen besides the numbers of wounded tbey car ried off we bad only eleven men wounded, two of which have since died." Oea, Hbriurtuii Movementii, A correspondent of tht Chicago Tribune writei under date of June 4 : "Johnston has been aa sadly beaten In strategy as was Pemberton at Vicksburgh, and he knows and feels it, and his army is ehacrined beyond meanure. I have conver sed with prisoners captured at tha battle of Resaca, who are not only conrersant with the sentiments of the army at large, but with Johnston and his chief Lieutenants, and they all concur in admitting that John ston has now no hope, save by long and wearisome pursuits. Hut tins is by no means a flattering prospect. Who will tire and become demoralised first pursuers or pursued ? LEVEL C0UHTRT. From Marietta southward, the country is lerel, or only gently undulating; and there Ib no point at which Joe Johnston could hope to make a stand north of tha Chatta-hooohe Rirer, eight miles from Atlanta, and even there the obances for successful resis tance are slight. The banks of the stream are low and tha waters shallow, and it will be far less difficult for them to flank him thore than at either Dalton, Resaca, Alla-toona, or Marietta; and from each of these places he has been driven in succession and in a demoralised condition. rORtlFICATIONS AT ATLANTA, Thero are some fairly strong earthworks at Atlanta, but what will they signify on a perfectly level plain against the troops who carried the heights of Mission Ridge, Lookout Mountain, and Resacca? Good judges, who have been In Atlanta within a month, state that our artillery wilj battar --most formidable of the fortifioatioas around the city in a single day. I WHAT 9 HE KM AN IS DO IN a. At last accounts Sherman was resting at Marieitn, till the railroad could be built from Kingston. This will doubtless take a week or more, as the rebels destroyed tho bridge over the Etawah, and lore up con siderable track south of tho river. Between Drilton aod Kingston they did but little damage to the road, which crea ted some apprehensions lest ho was leading Hberman on to defeat him in the heart of Georgia. But I confess I never indulged in these fears; I felt assured that the real Becret was that JohnBton was compelled to retreat soiiastily that he had no time to do any great damage. He had not expected a retreat from Resacca, and had made no preparations to destroy the railroad. But, knowing that he could not hold Alia toon a and Marietta, he burned the bridges before him as he retired. WHAT WILL JOHNSTON DO? It is frequently asked, what will Johnston do if he oould stand against Sherman? I confess my inability to enlighten the pub-lio, and every one will have to do his own guessing uutil the mystery iB cleared away by the rebel Commander himself. A Threat Irom Kentucky. Kentucky is indulging in threats, as usual, in Congress, and hinting blindly at a second revolution. When the Senate bill repealing the Fugitive Slave law of lUoO was up, Mr. Mai lory very distinctly said: "Mr. Speaker, if the Fugitive slave law is repealed, and your provost marshals and reeoruitintr officers draft and recruit the slaves of Kontucky; if this policy is continued, what need, think you, will there be to abolish slavery by constitutional amend ment? Sir, I warn yon against tbe course this Congress is pursuing. Already you have crushed out every feeling of love of the Union in the people of the revolted States, and you are besotted if you think tbat acts of oppression and wrong can be perpetrated in the border slave States without producing estrangement and evenenmity there. Kentucky has remained true to her faith pledged to the govern meut, and I warn you not to persevere in inflicting on her insult and outrage. The framers of the Constitution gave us the right to reclaim fugitive slaves. It was oonceded not as a favor, but as a right. No one disputed it; ne one dared to d isputo it. No one disputes it now. The President, and every respectable roemlcr of the Republican party havfl again and again admitted the right. I)o not indicate your contempt of it now, by thti passage of this repealing act, useless as you know it to be." Tbe bill was passed in spits of tho opposition of Kentucky, and during tho present session. Lynch Lair. The following facts sro taken from the "Historical Collections of Virginia, by Henry Howe,'' published in 1845: "Colonel Charles I.;nch, a brother of ths founder of Lynchburg, was an offioer of the Amerioan revolution. His residenoe was on the Staunton, in the southwest part of Campbell county, now the seat of his grandson, Charles Lynch, Erq. At that time the oountry was very thinly settled, and infested by a lawless band of'tories end desperadoes. The neceesilor of the esse involved desperate measures, and Colonel Lynch,-then a leading whig, apprehonded and had them punished without any superfluous legal ceremony. Hence the origin of the phrase 'Lynoh Law.' Ths praotice of lynching continued years after the war, and was applied to many ca-es of mere suspioion of fuilt which oould not be regularly proved, n 1702, says Wirt's Life of Henry, there were many suits on the south side of James river for inflicting Lynch law. At the battle of (Juilford Court House a regiment of riflemen raised in this part of the state, under Colonel Lynob, behaved with much gallantry. The Colonel died soon after the war. Charles Lynch, a Governor of Louisiana, was his son. "His brother John Lynch, tbe original founder of Lynohburg, was a member of tbe denomlnatiou of Friends, and a plain man of strict integrity and great benevolenoe of character. The father of theabove-mentioned John Lynch was an Irish emigrant, and took up land here previous to the revolution."tfiy Among the reoent gifts to the Con-oeotieut Historical 8001 sty is thsgold-scabbard naval sword presented to Admiral Foots by tlie oitiiens of Brooklyn, N. Y. It cost three thousand dollars. JOURNAL. 15, ISB4. lawrenrs M. Kelts, Another of the leaders and originators of th slaveholders' rebellion baa gone to his reward. L. M. Keitt, th companion c( Preston Brooks, in his cowardly assault on Mr. Sumner, was shot a few Jays ago in one of the fights near Richmond "pierced through the lungs by a hireling bullet," to quote tbe grandiloquent phrase of one of th Richmond papers. He was Colonel of ths 1.0th South Carolina Regiment, This Keitt was a fair exam pis of the kind of men produced under a system of slavery. By education and association ho ought to have been a gentleman ; he oame of a wealthy family, was carefully and expensively educated, was graduated with honors from ths South Carolina State University, had traveled abroad; and thus had many opportunities to acquire tbe manners and morals of a gentleman. But he was born amongst slaves, brought up with them, and the influences and temptations to wuicn ne was tnus exposed were powerful I and seductive enough to counterbalance all , tbe training of the schools and of association with freemen. . lie became arrogant, ' oruel, a blusterer; disrespectful of law; cot only his habits but even his manners were corrupted; his scholarship did not chasten bis style of oratory, which was ' bombastic and melodramatic; his inter- ; course with bis equals did not give him the olf ootumanU or the reticence of a gentlemanfor he was loud-voiced, a bully, abounding in threats, and capable, as the share he took in the attack on Senator Sumner showed, of acting tbe part of helper to an assassin. When, at another lime, he rufthed up to Mr. Grow aud demanded, "What right have you to speak?'' being .promptly knocked down for his imperti-' nence, he was for a time quieted as another of the slaveholders, Roger A. Pryor, wns by the manner in which he wus met by ijir. rotter. Keitt was, according to the Richmond bxaminer, "a fit type and model of the l'al- , met to Slate.'' lie was certainly a type of totnisolass; a fair specimen of those arro-'gant masters who, corrupted by the unre- strained license ot the plantation, aBpired 'to rule a nation of freo workingmen as tbey ruled their slaves by a system ot terror wbo carried their plantation manners and morals into public life, and were as lawless at Washington as up upon their estates at borne. Keitt was a nt companion of 1 ancy, ' t loyd, w ifffall and Mason wbo wrote, be fore Virginia seceded, to a fellow Virginian mat if ne intended to vote against secession he must remove from the slate. One after the other the leading spirits of this class rare perishing; and the olass itself of which tbis Keitt was a type, men wbo learn noth ing and forget nothing, as was said of the corrupted nobility of France, presently disappear, and make way for a new and bet- . tersort ot men, defenders of equal and law-. ful liberty. Pott. Private Itaukliip; House In EiiR-land. 1 Tbe Hlatary of Jones, Loyd A Compa- j nyf and Cull Company. An English paper gives the following in. teresting account of two great private bank- .. lug-douses: JOXSS, LOTD A CO. There is much of the romance of history 'in the origin of some of the great private banking-bouses still existing in our days though all more or less threatened with de 'struction by the giant of joint-stock enter prise. The origin, amot g O'.hers, of the house of Jones, Loyd & Cu. was very ouri-ous. Mr. Lewis Loyd, the founder of the ' house, father of the present Lord Oversto'tae, . began his" career as a Welsh dissenting minister in a small ohapel at Manchester, the congregation of which Included Mr. Jones, - M.. .r inaif-iMtuter, uair-manuiacturer. 'in addition to Mr. Jones there was a young Miss Jones, who attended the sermons of ' tho Rev. Mr. Loyd, and, as often happens, 'the maiden found the orations so eloquent 1 lhat she fell in love with the preacher. The t afjfoction was responded to by the minister, ana the two, fearing the purse-proud mer- ' chaut would never consent to the mesalli ance, were privately married. Of course, when the affair became known to Mr. Jones, senior, as it could not fail to do. he was exceedingly angry; but, seeing tbat tilings went on pretly comfortably with his daughter, he became rocon-oiled in tbe end to his reverendson-in-law; but, though fond of attending ser mons, he did not think preaching a good business, and after a while proposed that Mr. Loyd should give up the Welsh dissenting chapel and enter his couniing-house as a partner, under the firm of Joues, Loyd & Co. Air. lioyd consented : and, to extend the business, it was subsequently sgrecd.1 that be slioutd go to Lonuon, and establish a bank under the uame of the Manchester firm; so that Jones, Loyd & Co., of Man chester, might draw bills upon Jones, Loyd & Co., of London, or, as it was facetiously called at the time, 'pig upon bacon.' It soon turned out that Mr. Lewis Lffyd wrs eminently fitted to be a banker, for his clearness of bead, untiring industry and perfect honesty proved the foundation of success for tbe new establishment. After a very long and honorable career Mr. Loyd retired from business, being succeeded as head of the London firm by his son, Mr. Samuel Jones Loyd, who was subsequently created Lord Overstouo. Thus the falling in love of a young Manchester girl with a Welsh dissenting minister whs the cause of tbe establishment or an important bank, besides leading to the oreation of a new peer of tbe realm. COUTTS A CO. MISS WTRDETT C0UTTS. "The great banking house of Coutts & Co. arose undor circumstances uot less strikine; than those connected with the history of Jones, Loyd & Co. The rather of Mr. Coutts w-.s a merchant at Edinburgh who had four sons, the two youngest or whom, James and Thomas, were brought tip in the paternal eounting house. , James, at the age of twenty-nve, eanuaaa London, and first settled in St. MarjPAie as a Scotch tner chant, from which business, however, he subsequent'y retired to become a banker. lie look a bouse in the Strand, tbe same in which the firm still exists; and was joined here, some years after, by his brother IbomaB as a partner tbe business being oarried on under the name of James and Thomas Coutts. James Coutts died early, and Thomas was then left sole proprietor of tbe bank, ms high integrity, joined to a very enterprising spirit, soon gained him many friends, snd made him remarkably successful in his business. A characteristic instance, both of his shrewdness snd enterprise, is given bf Mr. Lawson in his 'History of Hanking.' In the early part of his oareer Mr. Coutts, anxious to secure the eord ial co-operation of the heads of the several banking houses in London, was in the habit of frequently inviting them to dinner. " On one of thoss occasions the manager of a city bank, in relating the news of the day, accidentally remarked tbat a certain nobleman had appliod to his firm for tbe loan of thirty thousand pounds, and bad been refused. Mr. Coutts listened and said nothing; but the moinent his guests had retired, at ten o'clock in the evening, he started off to the house of the nobleman mentioned, and requested tbe honor of an interview with his lordship the next day. On the following morning the nobleman oalled at the bank. Mr. Coutts received bim witb the greatest politeness, and taking thirty-one thousand pound-notes from a drawor, presented them to his lordship 'But what security am I to give you?' I shall be sat isfied with your lordship's note of hand, I was the reply. Joe tuu was instantly given, with ths remark, 'I find I shall only require for the present 10,000; I therefore return you 20,000, with which you will be pleased to open an account in my name.' The generous, or as it may more truly be oalled, exceedingly well-calculated aot of Mr. Coutts was not lost upon the nobleman, who, in addition to paying in within a few months 200,000 to his account, the produce of the sale of an estate, recommended several high personages to patronise the bank In the Strand. Among the clients who did so patroniio It was King George III. "Mr. Coutls had not only many friend', but real admirers among tne noDinty, ana was an obieot of attraction to not a few de signing matrons, who would have been too happy to marry their noble bit ponlinlere daughter to ths rich banker. Ihete arlsto-eratle matrimonial speculations were some NUMBER 2S9 what rudely disnelled by the ehoica which Mr. Coutts made ot a wife, in the person of Elisabeth Starkey, a domestic in his brother's service. The nnion was productive, it is said, of great happiness to ths banker, and though children of a servant, bis three daughters married three noblemen namely, the Marquis of Bute, the Earl of Guildford and Sir Franois Burdett. After the death of his first wife, Mr. Coutts gave bis hand to Miss Mellon, an actress. On this second marriage both Mr. and Mrs. Coutls were made the constant subjeots of unworthy ridicule, which, however, had no other effect than that of strengthening the confidence of the husband in his wife. "This confidence wae displayed intra' markable manner in the last will and testament of Mr. Coutls. By tbis will he left tho whole of his fortune, amounting lo above 000,000, to his widow, for her sole use and benefit, and at her absolute disposal, will-out the deduction of a single legacy to any other person. Mrs. Coutts subsequently married the Duke of St. Albans ; but, under her marriage settlement, wisely reserved to herself the whole control of tbe immense fortune left to her by her first husband. On her death she bequethed the vast property to ths favorite grand-daughter of Mr. Coutts, Miss Angela Burdett the estimate and beneftoient lady, founder of so many churcbes and schools, wbo Is now well-known aa Ml.s Angela Burdett Ooutts. MUs A. B. Coutts continues to be the principnl . proprietor of the old bank in the Strand, 1 the business being conducted for her by her ; trustees under the old style of Coutts St C." The Freemasons. CLOSE 01 TBI AN SDiL COHM UNICATIOK OV TUB GRAND LODOE. The New Tork Grand Lodge of Free and Acoepted Masons clossd its annual session yesterday, after installing with solemn ceremomies the following officers for the present year : Orand Master Clinton F. Paige, Bing-hanipton.Vepuig Orand Matter Robert Holmes, new 10m. Grand Senior Warden Stephen H. John son, Schenectady. Grand Junior Warden James Qibson, Sa lem. Orand Treasurer Charles L Church, New lorn. Orand Secretary James M. Austin, New York. Orand Chaplains Reverends Dr. Weston, ocnoonmaxer, uiancnara ana irisn. Grand Pursuivant Johnston Fountain. New York. Orand Tiler Serrall Fish, New York. Orand Lecturer Joseph B, Coffee. Alton, During the session the Finance Committee reported in favor of appropriating $5,000 or tbe funds or tbe Urand Lodge, invested in the five-twenty bonds, to the Hall snd Asylum Fund; also, for giving 600 for the erection of a monument to the memory of the late Grand Chaplain, Salem Tewn, in conjunction with the Grand Royal Arch Chapter; and in favor of giving to Boards of neiier tne following sums: New lork $2,000; Buffalo, $400; Albany, $400; Brooklyn, Western Distriot, $000; Eastern District, $200. This session has throughout been inter- esting to the members. Tho order enters upon a new year with excellent prospects. General Scott at Wewt Point. General Scott is at Cozzens's Hotel, West Point. Since his arrival there he has materially improved in health, and hiB appetite, which was failing him, is quite restored. The General rises early and breakfasts at seven o'clock; ai hour when most of the guests are still in their rooms. At about nine 0 clock be rides un to the Mili. tary Academy, where he spends the morn- ing in the library, occupied, it i. nndor-Btoou, iu uuukiumg ana preparing materials for his " Life," on which he has been engaged tor several years. This work will be a val uable addition to the historical literature of the country. Tbe General returns to the hotel in time to dine at the publio table at three o'clock, and afterwards, if the weather permits, ocoupies his accustomed seat on tbe piazza, where clusters of guests gather around to engage bim in conversation. The uneral is in his Tata year. Popular iKnoranee In England. The London Athenasvm says: "The popular ignorance of this enlight ened age is something astounding. Only the other day a zealous, antiquary, looking tor uryuen s nouss in letter Lane, made some inquiry of the policeman. Dryden,' sir,' said the latter, ' Dryden ? Isne a man a little backward in his rent? Less ex cusable was the conversation of an eminent silversmith to a customer, who, admiring some exquisite piece of silver ohasery, remarked, 1 How thiB would have delighted Cellini 1 ' we 8H 11 do happy to low it to Mr. Cellini, any day he will look in,' was the polite observation in reply. "To ascend in the soale, we may remark that we have heard of a knight who, on having Runnymede pointed out to him, looked very unconscious that a landmark of history was before him, but, on being told that it was tne spot wnere tbe barons foroed King John to sign Magna Cbarta. ex- claimed, 1 Forced his Majesty! did thev? How very improper I' Let us go a step higher still, and take an illustration from that sprig or nobility who, having failed in a competitive examination, was asked by a good natured friend how it happened. 40h I' said the rejected oandidate, Mt was all through a fellow who asked me questions 1 diun t expeot.' What did be examine you in?' 'Oh I history I' answered the young aristocrat. ' Ancient or modern ?' 1 Ancient or modern I' -exclaimed ths youth, with an air of ths most intense disgust, 4 oh, ever so long before either time of William the U onquerer 1' " BfiTA soldisr of the 11th Massachusetts regiment writes horns from the Finley Hospital, in Washington, that during the battle of the Wilderness one bullet hit the look of his gun, a second went through his panta loons, a mini penetrated nis nat, killing the uinu iu uic nut uouiuu uiiu, aau a lOUrta bit him about two inches above the nose. snd gave him, as he says, his hospital fur lough, tois is tne tbira time tbe same man has been wounded during the war twice very severely; and bis son. who has fought by his side always, and never bad even a seraUsh, has always assisted his wounded father to the rear. The old man says: "All the good luok in tbe family has lauen to tne snare 01 my boy, a root that I nm too grateful to Providence to eomplain of." tin? A little hnv In Prlt.nl M.ln. II.. other day got hold of a bunch of matohes, piyeu wiiu mem awnue, ana men set fire to the premises, and several thousand dollars' worth of property destroyed. UrJf Two hundred Norwegian emicrrfnts p8sed through Chicago last week, bound to 11 tsconein and Iowa. 3i ThO divorce Suit of Jmlrre etrein.l Judge in St. Louis is deoided at last. Mrs Judge gets $30,000 alimony. COLLEGES. S. W corner Fourth arid Vine Sta. BOLT & NUT WORKS. AfflBrican Bolt ant Hut Worts. HOLENSHADE, MORRIS 00, stAHWAcnniiss or Ciii-rlnge Tire, Plow, Joint and an KiniiM ol Merrw Bolls, Nuto, Bit-eta, fc Wanner. 08. 170 TO HO SECOND ST., KltB rLCM, , . omoinnati. , . W. S nr.n.n ,. , , wbloafaH)i,D PUU0UII.O, auturw uUTTillo uua,. sprUMa MEDICAL.. ''AMERICAN REMEDIES' j IIOWI AS WE."L10Ta',8 GrXINtjXNXM PREPARATIONS! " BIOBL T CONCENTRATED ooaroDsTD ' FLUID EXTRACT BUCHU A Potitiv & 8peolflo Remedy for BLAADEK, KntMET), GATTTI Alls liiluPtJIcaJL sWElAiajtaa. - This If eticla Urt.nn th povtr f DtavsUosi , ' en. .xclte. tb. ABauRUKltTS Into healthy action, bj which the WA TKH Y OH CALCKBOV8 depoUkxe and all VNHATUXdL SSLAROHMtSTH ere aumd, ee well a, pel. .nd tafla.im.ttoa. aaa la if ok for MMN, WOMtH, aad UUILOHEH. EELMDOLD'S EXTRACT BUCHU FOE WEAKNISSt. AH.fRE Iron Ease ee. Habits ef rHawfe pattern, Early tUeretla.n.or Abnaa, ATTENDED WITH TBI fOLLOWINO ITHF TOMBi Indl.poeltfonro EzercU., Lo. of Power, i.neeuf Memory, I'lm-nllrorBnatbiag, We.k Nerer., Trcaibllog, Horror of Illaeew, ak. uu.ee., blmnee, of VI. on. Pain In ill. Back, Ijn vrraal LeMlludeof tbe riiiehleg of the Body, MHculr s.tem, Krnpilon on Ui. Vice, Hot Huo, Talld Cuoateaeuco. llry.ee. of the Bkla, Thiwe eymptome, If allowed t. yo on, which this med efn. iorariably t.iuofe,, froon lolluw IUPOTENOr, FATUtTT, EPILEPTIC PITS, In one or which lb. B.ti.ot myplr. .Who .ec my ih. they ere not frvquently tollow.4 by tavM "direful diaeMea," I.MHANITr ANDCONKUMPTIOX!-M.ny an .w.r. ot the can, of th.ir eatr.rlnr bat Don. will cona-M. Th. reeorde of the li.eit Alrlum, and th. mel.ocboly deetba by t oosnwo tion, bear .nip!, wl uom to th. truth of tb. mm r tlon THE CONSTITUTION, ONCE ArrECTIO WITl OUUAMO WEAKNESS, Beanira. the .Id of medtcto. to atrenatben an4 ' vlKorate the ay.tem, which HKLitBOLD'B X7T THA VT BVOU V lnr.rl.bly doM. A trial will MK rlooe th. aeoet ak.jftie.1. Females. Females. Females, OLD OB TOUNO. SINGLE, MARRIED, OB OOB tkmpLatino ma am ao e. Tb mny iffM'ton-1 poenllar lo Females) th B tract Buchn It nneqaAlled hy any other nmady,. in Chloroi's or Retention, Irregularity, Paiofulovt or Suppression of the Cutomnry Evacuation, UI cwrated or be hi i runt flat of tl Uterita taacoirfaa, or White, frterllity, and for all complain ta Ineldetit to th mx, whether trialnc from bidlacretioB, UaMM of DlMipatioo. or In tho DECLINE OR CHANGE OW LIFE. I ftTMFTOKI ABOVE. NO FAMILY SHOULD HE WITHOUT IT. Take no Balaam, Merenrr, or Unp.Mnl Mediotaoa ror unpleasant ana unnserontiH HELMBOLD'S EXTRACT BUCflU CURES Soorot Diseases In .11 their atsea, at little eipeje, llttl. or a. Chang, in dial, no lnoonv.nteooe, AND 1VO EXPOSURE. It eaaeefl frequent deetre, and gtvea strength ta Urinate, thereby remoring obatruottona, preventing and curing Strictures of tbe Urethra, allaying pait and Inflammation, ao frequent In this claae ot die eaeea and expelling POIBOHOVB, DIti2AtiEDt ABB WOHS 0 UT MA TTBH. Thousand, apon Thousand! WBO HA VE BEEN THE VICTIMS OF , QUACKS. Mt AVaa Hl UShT plU DUIT t ial tO tfl OUrM ! hort time, hare found they were deceived, and that the "PiMn" hia, by tbe atve of "Powerful Aetiia gen to," b, en dried In the jitam, to break out la aa aggravated form, and f PERHAPS AFTER MARRIAGE. nsxi Helmbold's Extiaot Buclra For all Affections and Diaeaeee of - THE VBIIVARY ORGAXV Whether exieUng In MALE OB r EM ALE, from whatever cause original lag, and no matter Or How Long Standing! Dlaasei or these Organs require the aid of a Dlarette, HELMBOLD'S EXT ACT BUCHU IS TBI GREAT DIURETIC, . And It li certain to have the desired effect Ik all D eaeea for which It It reoonimended, . it BLOOD! BLOOD II BLOOD I II Belmbold'a Highly Oonoent rated Compound Fluid Extract Sarsaparilia. Thli li an affection of the Blood, and attaofca th Sexual Organs. Linings of the Noee, Ear. Throat, Winrtpipe, and other Mucus Surfaces, meklnar Its appearance In the form of Ulcer. Helmbold's. Extraot Sarsaparilia purifies tbe blood, and removes all scaly eruption! of the akin, giving to tbe eomplexlon clear and healthy color. It being prepared expressly br thta class of complaints, tte blood-purifying prop artlae are preserved to a greater extent than any out er preparation of flanapatilla. "o7 Helmbold's Rose Wash. An excellent Lotion for Diaaaaee of a Syphlllo Ha tprs, and as an Injection In biases ea of tbe Urinary Organa, arialng from babiU of diaaipatl a, and lm connection wlih the Extracts Buchn and SarttparlU 1. li. inch diaaaaee as reountme.ded. KvlJtnceof tbe most responsible and nliabtebr ncter will aooompanj the aaedicines. CerUflcates of Cares From eight to twenty yean atari ding, with nwm kuown to 801 K HOB AND FA MS. For medical properties of BOOHC fee Dienmas. tory of tbe United ttiatea. Bee Professor DEWMLff valuable works em the) Practice or P ovale. See reaaaraa made by the late celebrated Dr. PBTB ICK, Philadelphia. Bee remark! made by Dr. BPHRATM MCDOWELL, celebrated Pbyaician, and Uembei of tha Royal College of Sargxona, Ireland, and published Id iba Tranaaotlons of tlie King aud llueen'a Journal. 8te Mediro-Clrarglral Review, publtahsd by BBi. JAMIN Til A VERS, Fellow of the Royal GoUsge of Surgeons. Bee most of tha late atandard works on M edict aa. Extract Buchu fl 00 per bottle, ordxtbrffiOO flarsaparUla 1 00 " " 00 Improv'd Kose Wash 00 I 60 Or half a dosen of each for tit, which will be nd elect to cure tho most obstinate eesea, if UroUoaJ are adhered to. Deliverable to any address, securely packed fro observation. a, a. Describe araptonu In all eo Cures guaranteed. Advice gratia. AFFIDAVIT., rVrenn.lW ej'peered befns. me, aa Aldoraua at tb.clt; of Phll.tlphla, B. T. Hebabold, who, being duljr .wworn, doth ley hla prepantloaa oont.Ua no narooctto, too norenry, or other talnrlone dross, tint .r. porelySeseiahle. H. T. UKLMBOLD. Sworn .nd en bee rt bed Defer. DM,thi. S2ddajef oTombar, ISM. W. r. MIMAHD, Alderman, Ninth ., ..... Em, rule. AddrM. Uttera f . lafonn.tlo la ooweAs.ee, PBIKCIPAI. DErOTfa. H.lmbold'a Drnf and Oheaalsal WarvaMMe, Brmtdwer, New York! Or, U.lmboM'a Medio.) Depot, let Sooth Twalk rtnot, PhllMMphl.. BEWARE OP COUNTERFEITS And unprincipled dealer., who andeanr to dupese "UP THKllt OWN" aad "other" .rtloleaoa ta. rape autton .ttalowl by li.lmbold's Oenola. Prfp.r.ttona, 41 Bjttraot llaoba. " " Seieeperllla, m laapnmd Soa. Weak, told by sll Drnggiat. er.rywhere. AUC tot BILMBOLtrSTAKB KO OTMMM. Oat oet the edvertlMSient, and .end 'or n. AXE) AVOID IMPOSITION AND KXPOSUB n-vO. BOBEUTB A 00., Waolee.1. Amis, S. tt Monh Blsh aireet Ooltuaba. O, was wlU a.sal taatrad. at JaaaafawMrm srleae,
Object Description
Title | Daily Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1848), 1864-06-15 |
Place |
Columbus (Ohio) Franklin County (Ohio) |
Date of Original | 1864-06-15 |
Searchable Date | 1864-06-15 |
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), 1864-06-15 page 1 |
Place |
Columbus (Ohio) Franklin County (Ohio) |
Searchable Date | 1864-06-15 |
Submitting Institution | Ohio History Connection |
Type | Text |
File Size | 4030.83KB |
Full Text | Horses! Eorses! VABDEPARTMieKT. CAVALBY BUR1CAU7 WAMtHOTUM, 1). C. Jul t H, llW. SFALVO fcONMALS WJLIi BPS RECEIVED atihfl ftueeutl IK. 'rloct H., MONi AV.Jmm Uih, le, lur iwv thousand II, WW) Cavalry Hones, to be ivftveied t tlm UoveruDiiit 6Wl lei at Gieebo T,, iMpt, nr Washington eliy, within furty (40) 'dj from date Of ixutiract i"id Uurtw ro be Bound In all particulars, well broken, toll In Drtlt, iron fifteen (16) to elxteeea till, banda bub. irom tits (6) to nine (9) years old. In KO-'d condition, and weU adapted In eery way to ' Cnlrf purposes. aheer- p;ii.ceitons will be strictly adhered to j fend rUiJly enforce-l In every particular. ' tlo bid w li br entertained uulees ocoajpanld by eguacauty for iUlaVhml performance. .eh-tiild any I nlird tiia'r ofllcer guarantee , tb piopttml of a bidder who thnold prove to be lr fe-ponHile, bit nam will be n-portod to tb rcr. tnry of War, with a raouaiDwndatlon that ueeb IB-' Mr b- dtaailaMd lh er..-e. I All bidder and guarantor will be held to j the strictest accountability, and every failure to 1 comply with term of contract, or to make the . contract when awarded, will be followed by pro' ; ecuthn to t he full extent of the law. ( Form f bl'i and guaranty can dm bad oa appllce- . tln fc'fble office. 1 6iico-aful hidden will be prepared to enter Into ! Vrlttt n contracts with gd ami e-'flloieot etcttrlty, tm eaieieiy un iue acoptoj ortiiei' 7 br oath of adecUnce most accompany each bid. 1 b nad-reigned re-err Iba rlbt (o rt-jco all blfla dtwrnad iiur. aMtnaiile B da lor one bundrtd (100) Horace ecd upward fin ne emer. iieo. Bide furthoeaurvaiMiber or Boriat required are Invite. V ayment will be promptly made on completion of cvmrKk t t o mar viU bs r tird. Propos . In ma be ecdorael Proposals for Cavalry H-reos," and add rented to LUut.O-li.ne. Jsmee A. Ekin, Ch el Quai termsslsr. Cavalry ilureea, Wuhiitnn, D. 0. Aqv ihM In ormatlon will o promptly given oa application, pereoually c r by letur, to JAUK4 A. BKIN, Lien ten ant-Col one! and thief Qurtrmtr, I avail y Uureaq. Oi Prircbiee Id the open market wi l be emtio, van t Glial to Depot until he ouu tract 1. a war Ird. Pajm tit male in OrtiacatM of ludeblftdntM for eeeu (T) hur e nt hdii, Jell tQ No. 12Q. J! . A kht Cimcino BqmPAsn Ornoi, I Cincinnati, O., June 1, 14. PBOPOBALS AKK INVITED BY TUB UNDER. 81 (IN El', until WEDNESDAY, Jane 1Mb, 180 nt I o'oloca P. M., rarhlehlnK thle Department (by contract) wftbtbe lollvwlug Bookf : Company 0rd r Bwk, v Army Standard, do Cioihlnfi Boki, do do Dtacrluilre liookw, do do Morning Beport Dooka, do Poet Order do do " Poet tttr d(w do Poet Onard Report do do Begimeatal O rlvr do do do DttorlptlYt do-do lnorx do ' Mo 4 do Order ' ' do 'di' 8anplet nfwhiih may be ern at tbe offleaf Clothing and E n1pg lu lhl city. To b deliveied tree oCotiarii, at tha U. 8. Tnipoo-tloo Wsrfhonte, In ibliclty. in -good new packagoo, " with tbe name of the pany furui-blng, the kind and quantity of goodidU.tuctly marked on each articl and package. PartlM offer) us- voode molt dlttlnctl itata In j their biile tite qnan'lt tney propoas to rurnibii. famplee, abeo ubailtUd, moit be marked and anmbered to correspond with tbe proposal; and the Eeriiee thereto ninit goaraoiea tht the goodi shall , In every reepect. eonal to Army Standard, other wiee the pn-poal will not be oonfldeifd A guaranty ligued bf two retponeibla persone, mutt accimpany each bid, guaranteeing that the bidder will supply tbe article! awarded to him under bin proposal. Bide will be opened on Wedneoday, June 16th, 166ft,at3oYlock P. H., at tbia office, and bidden arc requeeted to b present Awards will be made on Thursday, Junr 16th, IB' 4. Bi nds will be required that the contraot will bo laith'nlly fulfilled. Telegianu relating to Frdpotall will not be noticedBlank forms of Proposals, contract! and bonds ma? tie obtained at this office. The right to reject any bid,leemed nnreasonabla lsieeerrrd. By order of Col. Taon&i Swords, A. Q. M 0. C. W. MOULT0N. Je2-td Capteln and A-Q. M. fNo. 127. ABMY CLOTHING AND FQUIPAGE OEflCE ) Cincinnati, Ohio, June 1, 18U4 PROPOSALS AUE INVITED BY THE I'NPKB-filuNKD, until FRIDAY, June 17th, W4t at two o'clock P M., for turniahlng this Department (by contract) with I niform Coats In'antry; ITni otm Coats Artillery ; Foarae Ceps. Ramplee o which nay be aen at the office of Clothing and Euipafo in this city. To I'e dilif ered if w ol charge, at the TJ. 8 Inspection W rehriiMiiubis eft), to gKd new parkaKe, with the name of tbe part furnishing, tbe kind and qnan(iy of goods distinctly marked on each article end vackage. pHttifS offering poods, must distinctly state in their tld4 thequnotlti they propose to lurnisU, the price and time of delirry. fain i las ben submitted, must ha marked and numbered to corrfapund with the proposal, and tha Emits thereto mutt gu at en tee lhat the goods shall e, in evvry respect, eial to Army StanJard, otherwise tir pr poaal war lit nut be considered , . A guaiauty signed by two responsible persons, must acciintpany each bid, guaranteeing that tha bidder will aupply tbt articles awarded to him node' hla propoeal. Bida will be opened on Filday, June 17th, '8f4, at two o'clock P. M , at this office, and bidders are ro-cjuftted tobep-esent. Awards will be made on iaturday. Jure Utb. Bndawfllbe required that the coutiact will bo faiihfnlly fultllM. Telegrams telatlng to Proposals will not be no-tired.Blank 'orms for Proposals, Contracts and Bond! Stay be oh'etrei aMhia office, Tha tight to reject any bid deemed unreasonable la re erted. By order of Ool. Taos. Bw bd', A. Q. M. O. 0. W. MOULTON, JeStd Caotatn and A Q. M. INCOME TAX FOR 1864 TO WHOM IT MAY CONCEItX N OTICB 18 HEREBY GIVEN THAT THE AN- nuAi ataitssment of Income and other National Taxis for the COUNTY OF FRANKLIN, Seventh Collection DlHtrtct of Ohio, has bten computed, and the aa-ewnient Hooka, as rendered by the Asaiatant Aaesaora, will be op -a for theinaieo-tlon ol all pera oa who wlan to examine thtlr list, for tbe space of fifteen days, From and affor the 6th day cf June, 1864, At the Office of the Asl tant Aaaeaior at Cnlumbtie. BfAfu-r the expfratiou of the aaid fliteendays. 1 w It her appea's at the same place relative to any alleged etroneo"s or exreaalve Taluatlon, or eniimera'fnn n.ade by sld A"altant Assessors, on WEDNESDAY, ihe day of June, 18(4. No append will be htard unlets mad Id writing, which shall specify the part-cuUr caue, matter, or tLiDg, lespecilng ablch adenlalon is requested. IhAAO M. BtKIlKfr, Ak saorof 7th Collection District fprlng Valley, .tine 1, 18- Jut nttw JAMKS, KENT, SANTEEal CO. Importers and Jobbers of DH.Y OOOB0, K9 A 841 North Third Street, ebore Baoe, PHILADELPHIA. John 0. James, Isaac Welsh, H. G. sterling, Wtn.C. Kent, George A. Smith, H. D. Welah, Char lea Santee, SamDal White, Jos Tomllnaon, Diar3) mIAbi LiW OFFICE IN CIMI.WATI. ? T. W. BAETLEY, Attorney and Counsellor at Law. Office No. 20 Third Htrcet, between TTaluai and Main SfreeU. CIXCIXATI, Ohio. 7.1mJ Reaping and Mowing Machine?. Ohio Keaper and Mower, MANUriOTUBKB BT j ENGLISH, II ELM I CK $ DIXON Warranted equal In every respect to any machine Mtant. For sale by WJVt. A. GULXj, No 30, A'orlU IIIkIi Mreet Trl-rt2t.w.wSir J. T. WARREN & 00., FOREIGN FRUITS, No. 63 Main Street, OIIVOI1VIM ATI. RAGS! RAGS!! ' E PaTINO Till. HIGHKHT PBIOB TOB delivered Id any quantity at the Toluai-tills. THOMAS NIXON AGO. . EYE AND EAR. EYE AND EAR. IDR. Or. A. KNAPP, 00TJII8T, (TORMKBLT 0? H. T.,) IXOLTJ. Iv.ly trn.t, UImua. of th. Ktm, De.faut ' .nd Ibmiu Artificial Hym witkoviptm, at Kuutb HUh.lruet, Uolnmlju., Ohio: AIM, ai.ll. fail boo. ra tb. (v. .ud K lor u M.U, m.ofponr DAI VOLUME XX VII. RAILROADS. &l JlJSEli AEUAMiEMEiM. LITTLE HIAin AND COLUMBUS AND XENIA RAILROADS, For Clnoinnatt Dayton, Richmond, Indianapolis a Chicago. Without tbun f 0ra to DATTOR o4 BIOH. MOMD, aad only on. tbun of Otp to ST. LOUlD, IMOIANAPOLia 0HI0AOO. On and after Monday, May 23(864r TrslM will ran M tollovit IO0B IBA1NB DAILY FBOM OOLDKBDI, (Bandmj. tpMd.) D1ANAP0LI3 rilOHT tx'pBKafi m 1AI - n., itopplott M Lodood, Ihu. D7tont Morrow, ftnd Lor-Lud, urlTlD. ot Olooloott .t 6:36 B., Blcbowwl e:w ft. B., lnoi.tl.pou. r.tu m. m., uai ongo 86 p. au noom mm OIVOtNNATI, BldHMONU, INDIANAPOLIS 6 CHICAOO TRAIN Un. .!).. m., itoppini .1 .11 .Utloa. on th. L M. I U X. E. B.. conn. In. witb tb tr.io on th. W.ri.tt it OtncfonnU R. B. fnr Hillaborr. Obflllrotli. .ud U.Hettk .r ririog .t OinotDD.U .t 11-2.. m., .t D.yUD, 8:tl .. In ., .topping .1 .11 imiwdi uie W.lrn Rllr..it. .rrirlM t Rich-, to. ft. B., Indi.n.polU 2 06 p. m., Cbloo 136 p. m. TN. B. Tbto train u th. qnloke.1 from Colon bo. to Obloo; tint oacopiod bolng 14 hoar, nod 36 minute., which Uqalohtt than by aaj other Bftllro.. roaM. thud nun. OrROIHHATI, DAYTON, RICHMOND AND IN. PIANAPULie DAY tXPKUSS lrt l II 63 a. m., .topping at JitfferMi.. London, CbnrlMton, Ced.r-Tllle, Xnl.. ttpnng VsllT, Oorwfn, Morrow, Ponth L.b.aon, Footsr'., Lov.l.ad, 0.mp Dennlwu, Mil-ford .od Engiu. Hoqm: .rtirlng .t Cinclnn tl .t 1:16 p. m., Duyton al 3 00 p. m., Blohmond at 6:'0 p. m., laduaapoll. at t:60 p. m., noOkko, too a. Bi. rovftTR fun. MAIL AND ACCOMMODATION baro at 1:36 tm.t .tapping .t .11 .totion. on th. L. M. A 0. A X. . B.. .loot Cl.y.Ylll., Braoch Bill, Mlaml.Till. and Flaiarilla, arrlilng .t OlnclnoaU at 6 05 a. m. 8LEIPIKO nAtW ON NIOBT TRAIWi- FOB CINCINNATI AND INDIANAPOLIS. N. B. For fnrthor Informatloa .pplj at th. Oo-lemon. Union Dnot Tlokt offlo. of HtNltV BR'JOKd, Tlok.t Agont, T. LODGU, Agnnt. V. W.BTBADRB, Oun'l Ticket Ast., Oln 0. B. W. mwin. Snp't, Otn.,0. (lolafttta.. Ma; 28, 18(14. 1B04. HVmm ARRANIiEMEM. TUBE CHANGED. Great Northern & Eastern Route. clevelandTcolumbus rdt) OINOINNATI RAILROAD. rX1a.z0 "Xlx'flxxfli Tmly UdKPT SUH1IAT, FromColnmbu, In connection with Trains on the LITTLB MUMI AND COLO Mil US AND XKMA BAILBOADd. VlUT TKAJJI. BIOBT CXPB1CSS Learea Oolttmbas at S;C0. m. Will atop at Delaware, Ashley, CardlOKton, Olleau, flnllon, and at al) aUtlona north of Oalion, arrivina at Cleveland at 0.U0 a. m.; Dnukirk, 3i3U p. m.i Buf lelo, 6:(lo p. m.i Albany, 4:46 a. m.; New York, lii;30a. m.i Boa ton, S: 0 p. m.i Chicago, fie Ore-t. line, p. m.j Pittsburg, 8:30. p. m.; Pbiladel. pbla, ncottD Tiuin NEW YORK KXPBBS3 Leaves Columbus at V20 a. m. Will stop at Delaware, Cardlogton, Gallon Ureatllne, Shelby, New Louden, Wellington and Grafton; arrlvlug at Cleveland at 8:60 p. m.i Dun kirk, 8:32 p. m.; Buffalo, 9:66 p. m.; Albtny, 8.40 a ; New York 2:46 p. m.; Boston, 4:56 p, m.; Pltubnrg via Crestline at V.W p. m.; Philadelphia, j Chicago via GrqU), at 6:30 a. m. TBItW TKAU. HAIL AND EXPBKS8 Iav-i rVtlnmKrte i t-tln p. m. Will stop at all statlous aontb of Shelby, and at fthlloh. New London, Wellinttton, Oraftoo aud Berea; arriving at Cleveland at 8 5" p. m.i Donklrk B:I6 a. m.; Buffalo, 4: a. m.i Albany, 3:'6 p.m.; New York.fMft p. m i Boston, 11:60 p. m.; PltU bnrg via Crestline , iitO a. m.i Philadelphia, . Chicago, 9:ufl a. m. OOHN ICIlOHti AtDolaware with Springfield Branch for Spring, field and points on that road. At Craatllne with Pittsburg, ft. Wayne and Obi oago Ballroad for Pittsburg, Philadelphia and Baltimore; also, for Chicago. At Shelby with Sandusky, Men-field and Newark Ballroad, for all points on that road. Also, for Tolodo and Cb1ca.ro At Or too, for Toledo and Tilcago. At Ctevelaud witb Lake onuie t....troad br Irle, Dnukirk, Buffalo, New fork and Boston. PATENT 8LKEP.ING OABH ARB BUN OS ALL fcUQHT TBA1NS TO CHICAGO, NfcW UHK AND BOSTON. Bveoo OhteM Ikrotiffc to iVete York awf Bottot nfa Olmetamd; also, to PKibutelphi and Urn York via OwtUin. aiTTJBNIriU. Klght Bxprflsa arrives at Oolomhui at 12:45 a. m. Cincinnati Kxpress arrives at Coluubns at 11 30 a. m. Columbas Aooommodatlon arrives at Colambos at S.6U a. m. Fare as Low aa by any other Route. ' Aik for Twcaetf vis Ormdiiu or OJeinaA b. 8. rLiirr, Snnerlntendent, Cleveland, Ohio. JAUES I'A'ITJCIL-ON. Agent, uoiumins, umo. Ool n ro boa. May 10. IfH 4. To IndiauapoliN Direct without Change of Oars 1364. k i m m is it 1864, AIUtAGKttK.r. Columbus & Indianapolis WiW WV" W--WS7 WT raiijHoaid iisijsrxj. For I'rbatiM, rvrtriiiarllclil. Iyt4u. qua, Kluhmond aiii luuitwaiHiLis. Thronh to Indianapolis WITHOUT OBANOB Of C Al-8, and bo t one change to Iioalsvilw, 6u liouia, and Chicago, On and after Monday. May. 16 1864 Trains win leave uoumuus as lotiowii FIRST TUA1N. I1TDIANAP0LI8 EXPRESH, at 6:00 a. m.t con nectlng direct at Plqua at fl:to for Troy and Dayton;at Blcbmond at 10:46, for Andersen, Loganaport and Chicago; and at Indianapolis at p. m., 'or Louis ullle. Tern Haute. Evanaville. Cairo, tit. Louis. La fayette, Springfield, Qulncy, 8t. Joeoph, Chicago. ana an wesvernana wnriuwu-iwu uoinvs. BICOOND TRAIN, TJBBANA AOCOIIMCDATION, at 0:46 a. m., eon nectlng at Prbana at 11:30, or Bellefontalne, Ken ton, Carey, Flndlay, Titfln, Clyde, and Sandusky. TmitD TRAIN. INDIANAPOLIS EXPRKS, at 11:30 a. m., oon nectitig direct at Ulllord; aoutb lor Hechanlukiburg and Sprlnultnld; and north for Maryaville and Delaware; at Urban a at 1:40 p. m., for Bellefontalne and Hants til In; at Plouaat 3:A u. ra., for Troy, Dayton, Union, Mnolca and Winchester; it Bichmond at B:'ifp. m.t ror Aaaeraon, itoganaitort, reona ana vntCMgo; ana a. inaiauapoiia at e:ix p. m, ior uuv Isville, St. Loots, "hi") and all Western ottles. FOURTH TK&IM. 8:6, with Dayton and Uichigao Railroa! lor Lima, Fort Wyne. Chfcaeo, Tolndo and Detroit, SLm'iNQ GAKS ARE RUIN ON NIGHT TRAINS. This Is the only through route between Columbus and Indianapolis, ana tne ouiy route on wnicb THKOUOll TIUKETScaa beaold. The oars for this Lino start from the depot on tha west side of High steeet, opposite the Cincinnati Depot. On this root there Is no change of ears between Columbus and Indianapolis; and no other rout wlthont changing cars exists. Buy your Ticbuta at the Columbus and Indianapolis Dupot, thereby saving a change of cars at Bicb- Bond. For Tickets and any Information, apply at tbe of flea, OPPOSITE TUB I'NION ItKPOT.COLtW BUS J. HI. LI NT. Oen'lbopa. ?. filTANDLKR, General Ticket Agent, n D mnKlrOW.O-n'l Faaa'ngr AgenU fymmhim. May l"dtf TRUSSES AND BRACES. 1R. A. O. FOIISBFRG. No. 5 East Four.il St, Dp Stairs, BETWEEN MAIN AND iYOtMOUl STo. Ciiiciiiii.kti, o.. Pays particular attention to applying Trusjh ron II epical Cusb. Shoulder Braors for Ladiaa, Gents and i btldreu; enpp rtra, Umbilical nanrfag and T Bardag's for Jiadh s' ala-t'O 84ckinss aokltte and KoeoCapaof lik and Linti; Inatrument! lir Gurativeof bplna, Club Feet Dow Leg. Weak An kles, Uip Uteaee, and all other Physical De (briflttee area:ciirately Otled. Twenty yea i experience In E a rope apd America. A remaie always ta a-ieaaaaceio wai on iaotea. Addre-Tsoroall yonraeii icuw-sm SILAS N. FIELD, Lumber Merchant! DmIw In all kind, of Worked Floorine, Lumber LATH AND rHIIHOLFJ, W. Corner at Nprina; anil Water ' ar'lMM Oolumbua. O, IiY OH COIUMBUUS RAILROADS. sijuuku inuiiMiKaifcM. iae4.r:ELa,aT. ise-a. OEITTIIAL OHIO & BTBUBBNVIIjIj RAILROADS, OSer tbe'ihortest, Quickest and most reliable rocte a aaj ivuuiiuii nanniODUBu, Dibit MOBE, WASHINGTON CITY, PHI LA-DELPU1A, NEW YOk& A BOoXON. Dfc-eol eoeeif eel ues ere wmd mt BtUmt trtU fas Boot wamere md Ohio m. H., mmd at Wwf mi tite Pmmuytiawia Oswa-ol1 BaOrtttd. TrafM leave Ooiusabaa daily (bundays esrepted) M fellows; NIGHT EX PBEB8 Leaves Oolambaa vie Central Ohio B. B,, 4:10 a. m.i will stop at all stations whet signaled; arriving at Bel leal re at 10:4b a. m.; Baltl-more, fl a. m.; WaeblDgtoa City, 8 a. ai. Elgbt trains dally to Philadelphia and New fork; also connects at Bel leal re for Pittsburg, Harrisburg, Philadelphia and New York. MIGHT KXPBEAa tia 8TE0BEN VILLI Leave Columbas 4:10 a. Steobeovllle 12. lop. m,; arrives at Pltubnrg S:A0 p. m.; leaves Pltthnig4:t6 B. m.; Hartiaburg f :S0 a. m.; Philadelphia T:UU a m.. ew York via Philadelphia lk;0U m,; Baltimore T.U0 a. m.; Wwiuiogton City 9:60 a. m. NEW TOItK EXPBKHS via TET7BBNVILLb Leaves- Oblumbos I:'iO a. m.; arrives at Iteubea- ville 6:00 n. m.t PitUbnm 8:06 n. m.i Hkrriabuia 8:66 a. m.; Philadelphia 10:00 a. m.; New York vie Aiiencowo i:op. m.; vm rmiadeiptjia g:u p, m Baltimore 11 a. m.; Washington City 4:60 p. a liAi SfAraaao uiuvual ouzo b. n. Leaves Oolumbus. 8:00 p. m.; will stop at all sta Uons, and arrive at Bel leal re 10 p. m.j Gralton, S:6f a. m.i neamout, o:nu, lAimneriauo, B:ao; tiarttns burgh, 11:46; Harper's Ferry, 1:03 p. m.; Baltimore MHK WwthiuetonCitv.9:;: PhiladnlDhia. 10:tu. m.. eight trains to New York daily: arrive at Ptttibart 8 m a.m.) Harrisburg 18:46 p. m.; Philadelphia 6: ; aw aora iu:w p. m,; itat.imoro c:wp. m.; waso IngtoB City 8:60 p. m. JNO. W. BUOWlf. General Ticket Asm, tiemral OhloB. B. 8. F. Hi.ULL. General Ticket Agent Steabenvills, K. B. May 18 iBtH. Atlantic & Great Westera Raiiwav- SUPMMBK ABBANOBHENT. TWOTHR iVOE Exurea Trains b'weu CLEVELAND AND M JGW luun. xaurseotiut nay in, iho. NEW YOKK IHItOIOH LI5TE. Leave Cleveland at 9:60 a tt and 9:10 rtr Arrive at L avitt.btirgti.U:) a it 41 10-M r M meaavtueai r m " j:uu a si Corry at 3:'4i F at 2:W a at Ralainanca at 6:18 r U 4:44 A II New York at 10:46 am V:4A r M ajRUBMIIfO. Leave New York at......... 7:u-a M " 6:00tp Arrive Cleveland at 6:00 AM 0:30 p "Sundays excepted. tttl"'dy excepted. MAIM LINE. Eastward Leave Akron, (Mail) at.......... T:4A A Arr, Ueadvllle, Wall) at .V:Mi r u Mr- 8almanca at 8: p h Westward Lave balamanea (Mail) at 6:00 a Arrive meauvuie - a.......iu;ie a u Arrive Akron " at... i-M p m Eastward Loave Gallon, (Accom.) at 8:. a. A.-l. Al . . -A. 1.1 II 1 A.IkA -.lr Attlve Akron " 4:0 p M Westward Leave Akron, (Acsom.) M....10:35 a m Arr. siHOsncia " ...... ;w p Arr. GMllion, " - ti;Oo p M riiAp.Ki.iar branch. Leave Meaihille at 8:0U a n and 3:10 p m Arrive franklin at '0:16 " " 6:25 p m Leave " at 7:.'i0 " 6:30 p u Arrive Headrllle at 9:5t 7:46 P aj MAHONlNti DIVISION. Leave Cleveland at 7:16 A m and 8:60 P Arrive Youngstown at 10:35 ' " 7:20 p Leave " at 6:46 " 1:46 p St Arriva Cleveland at 10:'20 " IOOfi U. W. oWEETbEB, Oen'l Bup't. Meadvllle, Pa. . GOODMAN, General Tleket Agent, Clove-bin mtvIA MEDICAL. Friends and Relatives OF THE Brave Soldiers and Sailors. Holloway's Pills! AND OIIVT3X JEPf T. ALL WHO HAVE FRIENDS AND BELATIVE8 in the Army or Navy should take especial care that tlu-y be amply supplied with these Pills aud Ointment; and where tlie brave cJoldiera and tailors have neglected to provide thninselvee witb them, no better pretwnt can be sent thmn by thulr friends. They have been proved to be the Soldier's nevec-failing ftleud in tho hour of need. COUGHS AND C0LD3 AFFECTING TROOPS Will be speedily relieved and effectually cured by using imae atirniruDie meuicinus, and by paying DroiMir attention to the Directions which are attach ed to each'i'ot or Box. SICK HEADACHES AND WANT OF AP PETITE, INCIDENTAL TO SOLDIERS. Those feelings which so sadden ns usually arise from trouble or annuyamas, obstructed pornp (ration, or eating and driuking whatever is unwholesome, thus disturbing the healthful or I Ion of tbo liver and stomach. These orgnna must be relieved, If yon da sire to be well. The Pills, taken according to ths printed Instructions, will quickly prxluee a healthy action in both liver and stomach, and, aa a natural consequence, a clear head and good appetite. WEAKNESS OR DEBILITY INDUCED BT OVER FATIGUE Will aoon disappear by the ns of these Invalaablo Pills, and tbo foldtor will quickly acquire additional strength. Never let tbo Bowels be either confined or unduly acted upon. It may seem strange that tlotlowny'a Pills should be recommended fur Dysentery aud Klux, many perans supposing that they would lucrcaae trie re iixarion. i nia is a great mistake, for th-ae Hila will correct the liver aud stom ach, and time muove all the acrid liumora from tbe svatem. This medicine will give tone aud vigor to tlie whole org uic system, nowever acrangea, wnue health and strength follow as a matter of course. Nothing will stop the relaxation of the Bowels so sure as this famous medicine. VOLUNTEERS, ATTENTION! INDISCRE- HUNS O YOUTH. Bores, TJloers, Blotcboiand Swellings, can with certainty be radically cured, If the Pills am taken night and morning, and the Ointment bo freely atted as stated in tbe printed instructions. If treated In any othor man nor. they dry up In one part to break out in another. Whereas this Ointment will romnve the humors from the system, and leave the Fat loot a vigorous and healthy man. It will require a little perneverance to oau caee 10 insure a tacting euro. FOR WOUNDS. EITHER OCCASIONED BY THE BAYONET, BAUKK OH THE UUL- LET, 80UES OK DKUISES, To which every Ho Idler and Bailor are liable, there are no medicluvs so sals, sure and convenient as Hol loway's Pills and Ulutmt-nt. lue poor wounded .till AvInifMt dvlnv uffftrar mlirht hnve lite erniinHa dressed Iramfiiiately, if be would only provide him- i self wi'h this matchless Ointment, which should be thrust Into the wound and smeared all around It,' then covered with a niece of linen from bis knaD-i sack, aud compressed witb a handkerchief. Taking, niaht and mornlus. o or B fills, to cool tne system and prevent luftauimatlon. ' Evi ry Soldier's Knapaack and Seamen's Chetl , should be provided witb these valuable Bemedlet. CAaTTIOWf I?one are genolne unless the word . "Qollowat, New Yoaa aho Lohdom," are discernible aa a WtUar mark In everv Inal of the book of dl .' rectlons around each pot or box; the same may be plainly seen by nolWine the boto th IvAt. A hand-' some reward will be given to any one rendering sucb Information as may lead to tbe detection of any .tarty or patties counterfeiting ths medicines or veudiny the same-, knowing them to be spurious. Bold at the manufactory of Professor Hiuo- wav. 80 Blalden Lome. New York, and by all re spectable Orugsistaand Dealers lo Medicine, th rongh-out tbe el vl 11 ted world, In pots and boxes, a 36 con is, u cents, ana at eaou. kATThere Is m considerable saving by taking the larger sites. M. B. Directions for the guidance of oattentaJs every disorder are affixed to each pot and box. tOT Dealer in my well known medicine can have Show Garde, Circular!, &c, tent FREE OF XPENSE, by addressing THOttAS HOLLO WAY, dac3-'0S-eod-ira HO Mnl4l(s liift, If. ICE, ICE. WBinn WAS OBTAIN KD TWO MILKS .bore th. rjtflr. wilt b. fornlabcd In LAhGK or SHALL UUANTIIIK4 si nuonabb prtoM. order. I.ft with Hronka, Httwrn, a k., No. ITS Sooth Hlrh Ht.l McColm HII. t McD.waliu. 124 s..mb High 81.; 0. A. Wag", 17 . St. Wm. T.ylor, Ho. fl Owrnn. Block: Km, Tawn St., .ndWm. Dl. klunn, 64 North UUb Bt.l or .Ith th, Wiionon tbo itncU, wbl, ". i will b. Dromon, .lion. mrl.1-.tm J O. S. M'T.T.KR A: Y. $75 TO S150 PER MONTH. TH LITTLK GIANT 8K WINO MACHINE COM-panr Tant cs .ut In mrh eoaotv, totwllclt ordtni fir thlr now 8 in Machlna, witb riiakh, Kntw-drlraraoft Mtra umiIIpa. Wa will pay a liberal Mlary and eKptjnwt, or larga eomnnMilon. For tartloulaia, taraia, anrl a .tamp and addrm T. 8. PA OK, ToNri, 0., aprA-dltUwS . ' tor tht 0. S. IO STATE OHIO. WEDNESDAY MORNING JUNE DRY GOODS. L C. HOPKINS & CO., Carter FIftb and flue. OFFER XT Wholesale & Betail, ' OOO PIBOB8 BLACK SILKS. boo FXJtaoxiae-FRENCH MERINOS All Colors, FIVE TXIOrSAXD ' ' WINTER SHAWLS 0X1? THOUSAND LADIES' CLOAKS, Blaok mid Colored. L. . Hopkins & Co., Corner Fifth and Tine. FANCY DRESS SILKS ax LOW PRICES. L.C. HOPKINS & CO. OFFER XT THE LARGEST STOCK OF DRESS SILKS!! IS THE CITY. L 0. HOPKINS & CO., Corner Flab and Fine, OINOIKrKTiV.TI, O . octSO-63-dlr CARPETING. CARPETS, Wholesale and Retail. 300 PIECES CARPETING! WITS IMMENSE STOCK 01 Oil Cloths, Mattings, Curtain materials, etc., etc, I ttm now opnrlu( aew uiortmant of tha abon MlMted witb great cr., for the SPRIMQ 1 BADS. JOSEPH C. RINGWALT, 174 and 176 Main St., BctwMit Fourth A Fifth, estt lid. Olxxolnnevtl, OIxlo drugs, &c. O. ROBERTS, DRUGGIST,, NO. 24 SPKTH HltiU STREET Omits FOB ALI AT WH0LKSAL1 OB BI TAIL, a lar,r .ad wall HlMtwl stock of DRTGS, CHEMICALS, ; PATENT MEDICINES, PERFUMERY, TOILET SOAPS,. PAIOTSs OILS, VAIt.VISHES, IiYE STUFFS, KUCSUES, all kiurts, WINDOW GLASS, GLASSWARE, Wines .Sc Liqiioi-s rM SIKIWVAL PUBfONEfl. Together witb rnnrj ftrtiel. Kept In a flrst olan i ' i " oturv u im wdiou d.t m parcBawa tor OmA of th. Importer, .nd aUnnfautonri, and will be Mid at vary low prlota, SHPftrdnUgr uwlo ftna M wwj.aajla, PAyw aW PrmorifiUom wtIA oioia Uahcmn. octi-Oly G5-. ROBERTS, . WD0LESAL1 AND BKTAIL DKALEBS IH Drugs, Chemicals, Paints, Oils, Varnishes, Patent Medicines, Perfumery, Toilet Goods, Wines and Liquors for Medical Purposes. n 124 North High St., IsnMBTTS, O. OTH'K. THE f HAN KLIN BANK OF fubV I Uae Oonntr bains deelron. of rellnqal.hln. lu baDkins amine, hi-reby (Tire" notice of It. re.dl-aew to redeem It. oQUUDdlng note, of clrcul.tton, at taaoffldu Fmnklta alUI,, Poraig. 000017, Oblw, as raqnlnd Jar aie, 41 . oto. InqoyorHon. retmar, I, ISS4. ' DAILY OHIO STATE JOURNAL BtlftVIT, ALU" At CO Propriwtera. WEDNESDAY HORNING, JUNE lb. 1864. Ckarlwaloftv-Ta. Captan mt rAMeaslaa- . ,, . wllte. A corrponJent of the Trituiu f Itm Um following account of the oftptur of So-lioDTillft:"From Cole's Island we hear of aotWe operation.. All the pait winter tbe rebel bare been fortifying their picket line. Immediately oppo.ilo our right poet on Seoe.-eion.ille Creek the erected four breast worke -one apparently fioihed with considerable eare, at though futit were to be mounted in it. The; had also filled tbe dykee leading from the left of our line with torpedoes, and in April laat three of our men were wounded by them while making a reconnaissance."On Sunday morning, May 22J, Colonel Von Gils, of the Forty-first New York Tol-unteers, with detachments from various regiments, among them the Fifty-fifih Massachusetts Tolunteers, crossed from tbe left of the line to Battery Island, treading carefully oyer the dyke and taking therefrom some serenteen torpedoes; and, charging' upon the rebel line, drove th.n. r-n th. breastworks, aod pursued them on toward Seoessionviile, capturing ultimately the first line of rifle-pits defending that town. "The Fifty-fifth Massachusetts is said to hare particularly distinguished itself, almost annihilating a rebel regiment. "On the day following a fierce cannonading took place between our gunboats in the Stono and SecessionTille Creek and tbe rebels. Batteries Green and l'umance, at Lighthouse Inlet, also those on Block Island, took SecesBionviile in fiank. "Everything being done to the satisfaction of Brigadier-General Schlmmelfennie:. our forces wore withdrawn. While the enemy suffered greatly forty dead being seen besides the numbers of wounded tbey car ried off we bad only eleven men wounded, two of which have since died." Oea, Hbriurtuii Movementii, A correspondent of tht Chicago Tribune writei under date of June 4 : "Johnston has been aa sadly beaten In strategy as was Pemberton at Vicksburgh, and he knows and feels it, and his army is ehacrined beyond meanure. I have conver sed with prisoners captured at tha battle of Resaca, who are not only conrersant with the sentiments of the army at large, but with Johnston and his chief Lieutenants, and they all concur in admitting that John ston has now no hope, save by long and wearisome pursuits. Hut tins is by no means a flattering prospect. Who will tire and become demoralised first pursuers or pursued ? LEVEL C0UHTRT. From Marietta southward, the country is lerel, or only gently undulating; and there Ib no point at which Joe Johnston could hope to make a stand north of tha Chatta-hooohe Rirer, eight miles from Atlanta, and even there the obances for successful resis tance are slight. The banks of the stream are low and tha waters shallow, and it will be far less difficult for them to flank him thore than at either Dalton, Resaca, Alla-toona, or Marietta; and from each of these places he has been driven in succession and in a demoralised condition. rORtlFICATIONS AT ATLANTA, Thero are some fairly strong earthworks at Atlanta, but what will they signify on a perfectly level plain against the troops who carried the heights of Mission Ridge, Lookout Mountain, and Resacca? Good judges, who have been In Atlanta within a month, state that our artillery wilj battar --most formidable of the fortifioatioas around the city in a single day. I WHAT 9 HE KM AN IS DO IN a. At last accounts Sherman was resting at Marieitn, till the railroad could be built from Kingston. This will doubtless take a week or more, as the rebels destroyed tho bridge over the Etawah, and lore up con siderable track south of tho river. Between Drilton aod Kingston they did but little damage to the road, which crea ted some apprehensions lest ho was leading Hberman on to defeat him in the heart of Georgia. But I confess I never indulged in these fears; I felt assured that the real Becret was that JohnBton was compelled to retreat soiiastily that he had no time to do any great damage. He had not expected a retreat from Resacca, and had made no preparations to destroy the railroad. But, knowing that he could not hold Alia toon a and Marietta, he burned the bridges before him as he retired. WHAT WILL JOHNSTON DO? It is frequently asked, what will Johnston do if he oould stand against Sherman? I confess my inability to enlighten the pub-lio, and every one will have to do his own guessing uutil the mystery iB cleared away by the rebel Commander himself. A Threat Irom Kentucky. Kentucky is indulging in threats, as usual, in Congress, and hinting blindly at a second revolution. When the Senate bill repealing the Fugitive Slave law of lUoO was up, Mr. Mai lory very distinctly said: "Mr. Speaker, if the Fugitive slave law is repealed, and your provost marshals and reeoruitintr officers draft and recruit the slaves of Kontucky; if this policy is continued, what need, think you, will there be to abolish slavery by constitutional amend ment? Sir, I warn yon against tbe course this Congress is pursuing. Already you have crushed out every feeling of love of the Union in the people of the revolted States, and you are besotted if you think tbat acts of oppression and wrong can be perpetrated in the border slave States without producing estrangement and evenenmity there. Kentucky has remained true to her faith pledged to the govern meut, and I warn you not to persevere in inflicting on her insult and outrage. The framers of the Constitution gave us the right to reclaim fugitive slaves. It was oonceded not as a favor, but as a right. No one disputed it; ne one dared to d isputo it. No one disputes it now. The President, and every respectable roemlcr of the Republican party havfl again and again admitted the right. I)o not indicate your contempt of it now, by thti passage of this repealing act, useless as you know it to be." Tbe bill was passed in spits of tho opposition of Kentucky, and during tho present session. Lynch Lair. The following facts sro taken from the "Historical Collections of Virginia, by Henry Howe,'' published in 1845: "Colonel Charles I.;nch, a brother of ths founder of Lynchburg, was an offioer of the Amerioan revolution. His residenoe was on the Staunton, in the southwest part of Campbell county, now the seat of his grandson, Charles Lynch, Erq. At that time the oountry was very thinly settled, and infested by a lawless band of'tories end desperadoes. The neceesilor of the esse involved desperate measures, and Colonel Lynch,-then a leading whig, apprehonded and had them punished without any superfluous legal ceremony. Hence the origin of the phrase 'Lynoh Law.' Ths praotice of lynching continued years after the war, and was applied to many ca-es of mere suspioion of fuilt which oould not be regularly proved, n 1702, says Wirt's Life of Henry, there were many suits on the south side of James river for inflicting Lynch law. At the battle of (Juilford Court House a regiment of riflemen raised in this part of the state, under Colonel Lynob, behaved with much gallantry. The Colonel died soon after the war. Charles Lynch, a Governor of Louisiana, was his son. "His brother John Lynch, tbe original founder of Lynohburg, was a member of tbe denomlnatiou of Friends, and a plain man of strict integrity and great benevolenoe of character. The father of theabove-mentioned John Lynch was an Irish emigrant, and took up land here previous to the revolution."tfiy Among the reoent gifts to the Con-oeotieut Historical 8001 sty is thsgold-scabbard naval sword presented to Admiral Foots by tlie oitiiens of Brooklyn, N. Y. It cost three thousand dollars. JOURNAL. 15, ISB4. lawrenrs M. Kelts, Another of the leaders and originators of th slaveholders' rebellion baa gone to his reward. L. M. Keitt, th companion c( Preston Brooks, in his cowardly assault on Mr. Sumner, was shot a few Jays ago in one of the fights near Richmond "pierced through the lungs by a hireling bullet," to quote tbe grandiloquent phrase of one of th Richmond papers. He was Colonel of ths 1.0th South Carolina Regiment, This Keitt was a fair exam pis of the kind of men produced under a system of slavery. By education and association ho ought to have been a gentleman ; he oame of a wealthy family, was carefully and expensively educated, was graduated with honors from ths South Carolina State University, had traveled abroad; and thus had many opportunities to acquire tbe manners and morals of a gentleman. But he was born amongst slaves, brought up with them, and the influences and temptations to wuicn ne was tnus exposed were powerful I and seductive enough to counterbalance all , tbe training of the schools and of association with freemen. . lie became arrogant, ' oruel, a blusterer; disrespectful of law; cot only his habits but even his manners were corrupted; his scholarship did not chasten bis style of oratory, which was ' bombastic and melodramatic; his inter- ; course with bis equals did not give him the olf ootumanU or the reticence of a gentlemanfor he was loud-voiced, a bully, abounding in threats, and capable, as the share he took in the attack on Senator Sumner showed, of acting tbe part of helper to an assassin. When, at another lime, he rufthed up to Mr. Grow aud demanded, "What right have you to speak?'' being .promptly knocked down for his imperti-' nence, he was for a time quieted as another of the slaveholders, Roger A. Pryor, wns by the manner in which he wus met by ijir. rotter. Keitt was, according to the Richmond bxaminer, "a fit type and model of the l'al- , met to Slate.'' lie was certainly a type of totnisolass; a fair specimen of those arro-'gant masters who, corrupted by the unre- strained license ot the plantation, aBpired 'to rule a nation of freo workingmen as tbey ruled their slaves by a system ot terror wbo carried their plantation manners and morals into public life, and were as lawless at Washington as up upon their estates at borne. Keitt was a nt companion of 1 ancy, ' t loyd, w ifffall and Mason wbo wrote, be fore Virginia seceded, to a fellow Virginian mat if ne intended to vote against secession he must remove from the slate. One after the other the leading spirits of this class rare perishing; and the olass itself of which tbis Keitt was a type, men wbo learn noth ing and forget nothing, as was said of the corrupted nobility of France, presently disappear, and make way for a new and bet- . tersort ot men, defenders of equal and law-. ful liberty. Pott. Private Itaukliip; House In EiiR-land. 1 Tbe Hlatary of Jones, Loyd A Compa- j nyf and Cull Company. An English paper gives the following in. teresting account of two great private bank- .. lug-douses: JOXSS, LOTD A CO. There is much of the romance of history 'in the origin of some of the great private banking-bouses still existing in our days though all more or less threatened with de 'struction by the giant of joint-stock enter prise. The origin, amot g O'.hers, of the house of Jones, Loyd & Cu. was very ouri-ous. Mr. Lewis Loyd, the founder of the ' house, father of the present Lord Oversto'tae, . began his" career as a Welsh dissenting minister in a small ohapel at Manchester, the congregation of which Included Mr. Jones, - M.. .r inaif-iMtuter, uair-manuiacturer. 'in addition to Mr. Jones there was a young Miss Jones, who attended the sermons of ' tho Rev. Mr. Loyd, and, as often happens, 'the maiden found the orations so eloquent 1 lhat she fell in love with the preacher. The t afjfoction was responded to by the minister, ana the two, fearing the purse-proud mer- ' chaut would never consent to the mesalli ance, were privately married. Of course, when the affair became known to Mr. Jones, senior, as it could not fail to do. he was exceedingly angry; but, seeing tbat tilings went on pretly comfortably with his daughter, he became rocon-oiled in tbe end to his reverendson-in-law; but, though fond of attending ser mons, he did not think preaching a good business, and after a while proposed that Mr. Loyd should give up the Welsh dissenting chapel and enter his couniing-house as a partner, under the firm of Joues, Loyd & Co. Air. lioyd consented : and, to extend the business, it was subsequently sgrecd.1 that be slioutd go to Lonuon, and establish a bank under the uame of the Manchester firm; so that Jones, Loyd & Co., of Man chester, might draw bills upon Jones, Loyd & Co., of London, or, as it was facetiously called at the time, 'pig upon bacon.' It soon turned out that Mr. Lewis Lffyd wrs eminently fitted to be a banker, for his clearness of bead, untiring industry and perfect honesty proved the foundation of success for tbe new establishment. After a very long and honorable career Mr. Loyd retired from business, being succeeded as head of the London firm by his son, Mr. Samuel Jones Loyd, who was subsequently created Lord Overstouo. Thus the falling in love of a young Manchester girl with a Welsh dissenting minister whs the cause of tbe establishment or an important bank, besides leading to the oreation of a new peer of tbe realm. COUTTS A CO. MISS WTRDETT C0UTTS. "The great banking house of Coutts & Co. arose undor circumstances uot less strikine; than those connected with the history of Jones, Loyd & Co. The rather of Mr. Coutts w-.s a merchant at Edinburgh who had four sons, the two youngest or whom, James and Thomas, were brought tip in the paternal eounting house. , James, at the age of twenty-nve, eanuaaa London, and first settled in St. MarjPAie as a Scotch tner chant, from which business, however, he subsequent'y retired to become a banker. lie look a bouse in the Strand, tbe same in which the firm still exists; and was joined here, some years after, by his brother IbomaB as a partner tbe business being oarried on under the name of James and Thomas Coutts. James Coutts died early, and Thomas was then left sole proprietor of tbe bank, ms high integrity, joined to a very enterprising spirit, soon gained him many friends, snd made him remarkably successful in his business. A characteristic instance, both of his shrewdness snd enterprise, is given bf Mr. Lawson in his 'History of Hanking.' In the early part of his oareer Mr. Coutts, anxious to secure the eord ial co-operation of the heads of the several banking houses in London, was in the habit of frequently inviting them to dinner. " On one of thoss occasions the manager of a city bank, in relating the news of the day, accidentally remarked tbat a certain nobleman had appliod to his firm for tbe loan of thirty thousand pounds, and bad been refused. Mr. Coutts listened and said nothing; but the moinent his guests had retired, at ten o'clock in the evening, he started off to the house of the nobleman mentioned, and requested tbe honor of an interview with his lordship the next day. On the following morning the nobleman oalled at the bank. Mr. Coutts received bim witb the greatest politeness, and taking thirty-one thousand pound-notes from a drawor, presented them to his lordship 'But what security am I to give you?' I shall be sat isfied with your lordship's note of hand, I was the reply. Joe tuu was instantly given, with ths remark, 'I find I shall only require for the present 10,000; I therefore return you 20,000, with which you will be pleased to open an account in my name.' The generous, or as it may more truly be oalled, exceedingly well-calculated aot of Mr. Coutts was not lost upon the nobleman, who, in addition to paying in within a few months 200,000 to his account, the produce of the sale of an estate, recommended several high personages to patronise the bank In the Strand. Among the clients who did so patroniio It was King George III. "Mr. Coutls had not only many friend', but real admirers among tne noDinty, ana was an obieot of attraction to not a few de signing matrons, who would have been too happy to marry their noble bit ponlinlere daughter to ths rich banker. Ihete arlsto-eratle matrimonial speculations were some NUMBER 2S9 what rudely disnelled by the ehoica which Mr. Coutts made ot a wife, in the person of Elisabeth Starkey, a domestic in his brother's service. The nnion was productive, it is said, of great happiness to ths banker, and though children of a servant, bis three daughters married three noblemen namely, the Marquis of Bute, the Earl of Guildford and Sir Franois Burdett. After the death of his first wife, Mr. Coutts gave bis hand to Miss Mellon, an actress. On this second marriage both Mr. and Mrs. Coutls were made the constant subjeots of unworthy ridicule, which, however, had no other effect than that of strengthening the confidence of the husband in his wife. "This confidence wae displayed intra' markable manner in the last will and testament of Mr. Coutls. By tbis will he left tho whole of his fortune, amounting lo above 000,000, to his widow, for her sole use and benefit, and at her absolute disposal, will-out the deduction of a single legacy to any other person. Mrs. Coutts subsequently married the Duke of St. Albans ; but, under her marriage settlement, wisely reserved to herself the whole control of tbe immense fortune left to her by her first husband. On her death she bequethed the vast property to ths favorite grand-daughter of Mr. Coutts, Miss Angela Burdett the estimate and beneftoient lady, founder of so many churcbes and schools, wbo Is now well-known aa Ml.s Angela Burdett Ooutts. MUs A. B. Coutts continues to be the principnl . proprietor of the old bank in the Strand, 1 the business being conducted for her by her ; trustees under the old style of Coutts St C." The Freemasons. CLOSE 01 TBI AN SDiL COHM UNICATIOK OV TUB GRAND LODOE. The New Tork Grand Lodge of Free and Acoepted Masons clossd its annual session yesterday, after installing with solemn ceremomies the following officers for the present year : Orand Master Clinton F. Paige, Bing-hanipton.Vepuig Orand Matter Robert Holmes, new 10m. Grand Senior Warden Stephen H. John son, Schenectady. Grand Junior Warden James Qibson, Sa lem. Orand Treasurer Charles L Church, New lorn. Orand Secretary James M. Austin, New York. Orand Chaplains Reverends Dr. Weston, ocnoonmaxer, uiancnara ana irisn. Grand Pursuivant Johnston Fountain. New York. Orand Tiler Serrall Fish, New York. Orand Lecturer Joseph B, Coffee. Alton, During the session the Finance Committee reported in favor of appropriating $5,000 or tbe funds or tbe Urand Lodge, invested in the five-twenty bonds, to the Hall snd Asylum Fund; also, for giving 600 for the erection of a monument to the memory of the late Grand Chaplain, Salem Tewn, in conjunction with the Grand Royal Arch Chapter; and in favor of giving to Boards of neiier tne following sums: New lork $2,000; Buffalo, $400; Albany, $400; Brooklyn, Western Distriot, $000; Eastern District, $200. This session has throughout been inter- esting to the members. Tho order enters upon a new year with excellent prospects. General Scott at Wewt Point. General Scott is at Cozzens's Hotel, West Point. Since his arrival there he has materially improved in health, and hiB appetite, which was failing him, is quite restored. The General rises early and breakfasts at seven o'clock; ai hour when most of the guests are still in their rooms. At about nine 0 clock be rides un to the Mili. tary Academy, where he spends the morn- ing in the library, occupied, it i. nndor-Btoou, iu uuukiumg ana preparing materials for his " Life," on which he has been engaged tor several years. This work will be a val uable addition to the historical literature of the country. Tbe General returns to the hotel in time to dine at the publio table at three o'clock, and afterwards, if the weather permits, ocoupies his accustomed seat on tbe piazza, where clusters of guests gather around to engage bim in conversation. The uneral is in his Tata year. Popular iKnoranee In England. The London Athenasvm says: "The popular ignorance of this enlight ened age is something astounding. Only the other day a zealous, antiquary, looking tor uryuen s nouss in letter Lane, made some inquiry of the policeman. Dryden,' sir,' said the latter, ' Dryden ? Isne a man a little backward in his rent? Less ex cusable was the conversation of an eminent silversmith to a customer, who, admiring some exquisite piece of silver ohasery, remarked, 1 How thiB would have delighted Cellini 1 ' we 8H 11 do happy to low it to Mr. Cellini, any day he will look in,' was the polite observation in reply. "To ascend in the soale, we may remark that we have heard of a knight who, on having Runnymede pointed out to him, looked very unconscious that a landmark of history was before him, but, on being told that it was tne spot wnere tbe barons foroed King John to sign Magna Cbarta. ex- claimed, 1 Forced his Majesty! did thev? How very improper I' Let us go a step higher still, and take an illustration from that sprig or nobility who, having failed in a competitive examination, was asked by a good natured friend how it happened. 40h I' said the rejected oandidate, Mt was all through a fellow who asked me questions 1 diun t expeot.' What did be examine you in?' 'Oh I history I' answered the young aristocrat. ' Ancient or modern ?' 1 Ancient or modern I' -exclaimed ths youth, with an air of ths most intense disgust, 4 oh, ever so long before either time of William the U onquerer 1' " BfiTA soldisr of the 11th Massachusetts regiment writes horns from the Finley Hospital, in Washington, that during the battle of the Wilderness one bullet hit the look of his gun, a second went through his panta loons, a mini penetrated nis nat, killing the uinu iu uic nut uouiuu uiiu, aau a lOUrta bit him about two inches above the nose. snd gave him, as he says, his hospital fur lough, tois is tne tbira time tbe same man has been wounded during the war twice very severely; and bis son. who has fought by his side always, and never bad even a seraUsh, has always assisted his wounded father to the rear. The old man says: "All the good luok in tbe family has lauen to tne snare 01 my boy, a root that I nm too grateful to Providence to eomplain of." tin? A little hnv In Prlt.nl M.ln. II.. other day got hold of a bunch of matohes, piyeu wiiu mem awnue, ana men set fire to the premises, and several thousand dollars' worth of property destroyed. UrJf Two hundred Norwegian emicrrfnts p8sed through Chicago last week, bound to 11 tsconein and Iowa. 3i ThO divorce Suit of Jmlrre etrein.l Judge in St. Louis is deoided at last. Mrs Judge gets $30,000 alimony. COLLEGES. S. W corner Fourth arid Vine Sta. BOLT & NUT WORKS. AfflBrican Bolt ant Hut Worts. HOLENSHADE, MORRIS 00, stAHWAcnniiss or Ciii-rlnge Tire, Plow, Joint and an KiniiM ol Merrw Bolls, Nuto, Bit-eta, fc Wanner. 08. 170 TO HO SECOND ST., KltB rLCM, , . omoinnati. , . W. S nr.n.n ,. , , wbloafaH)i,D PUU0UII.O, auturw uUTTillo uua,. sprUMa MEDICAL.. ''AMERICAN REMEDIES' j IIOWI AS WE."L10Ta',8 GrXINtjXNXM PREPARATIONS! " BIOBL T CONCENTRATED ooaroDsTD ' FLUID EXTRACT BUCHU A Potitiv & 8peolflo Remedy for BLAADEK, KntMET), GATTTI Alls liiluPtJIcaJL sWElAiajtaa. - This If eticla Urt.nn th povtr f DtavsUosi , ' en. .xclte. tb. ABauRUKltTS Into healthy action, bj which the WA TKH Y OH CALCKBOV8 depoUkxe and all VNHATUXdL SSLAROHMtSTH ere aumd, ee well a, pel. .nd tafla.im.ttoa. aaa la if ok for MMN, WOMtH, aad UUILOHEH. EELMDOLD'S EXTRACT BUCHU FOE WEAKNISSt. AH.fRE Iron Ease ee. Habits ef rHawfe pattern, Early tUeretla.n.or Abnaa, ATTENDED WITH TBI fOLLOWINO ITHF TOMBi Indl.poeltfonro EzercU., Lo. of Power, i.neeuf Memory, I'lm-nllrorBnatbiag, We.k Nerer., Trcaibllog, Horror of Illaeew, ak. uu.ee., blmnee, of VI. on. Pain In ill. Back, Ijn vrraal LeMlludeof tbe riiiehleg of the Body, MHculr s.tem, Krnpilon on Ui. Vice, Hot Huo, Talld Cuoateaeuco. llry.ee. of the Bkla, Thiwe eymptome, If allowed t. yo on, which this med efn. iorariably t.iuofe,, froon lolluw IUPOTENOr, FATUtTT, EPILEPTIC PITS, In one or which lb. B.ti.ot myplr. .Who .ec my ih. they ere not frvquently tollow.4 by tavM "direful diaeMea," I.MHANITr ANDCONKUMPTIOX!-M.ny an .w.r. ot the can, of th.ir eatr.rlnr bat Don. will cona-M. Th. reeorde of the li.eit Alrlum, and th. mel.ocboly deetba by t oosnwo tion, bear .nip!, wl uom to th. truth of tb. mm r tlon THE CONSTITUTION, ONCE ArrECTIO WITl OUUAMO WEAKNESS, Beanira. the .Id of medtcto. to atrenatben an4 ' vlKorate the ay.tem, which HKLitBOLD'B X7T THA VT BVOU V lnr.rl.bly doM. A trial will MK rlooe th. aeoet ak.jftie.1. Females. Females. Females, OLD OB TOUNO. SINGLE, MARRIED, OB OOB tkmpLatino ma am ao e. Tb mny iffM'ton-1 poenllar lo Females) th B tract Buchn It nneqaAlled hy any other nmady,. in Chloroi's or Retention, Irregularity, Paiofulovt or Suppression of the Cutomnry Evacuation, UI cwrated or be hi i runt flat of tl Uterita taacoirfaa, or White, frterllity, and for all complain ta Ineldetit to th mx, whether trialnc from bidlacretioB, UaMM of DlMipatioo. or In tho DECLINE OR CHANGE OW LIFE. I ftTMFTOKI ABOVE. NO FAMILY SHOULD HE WITHOUT IT. Take no Balaam, Merenrr, or Unp.Mnl Mediotaoa ror unpleasant ana unnserontiH HELMBOLD'S EXTRACT BUCflU CURES Soorot Diseases In .11 their atsea, at little eipeje, llttl. or a. Chang, in dial, no lnoonv.nteooe, AND 1VO EXPOSURE. It eaaeefl frequent deetre, and gtvea strength ta Urinate, thereby remoring obatruottona, preventing and curing Strictures of tbe Urethra, allaying pait and Inflammation, ao frequent In this claae ot die eaeea and expelling POIBOHOVB, DIti2AtiEDt ABB WOHS 0 UT MA TTBH. Thousand, apon Thousand! WBO HA VE BEEN THE VICTIMS OF , QUACKS. Mt AVaa Hl UShT plU DUIT t ial tO tfl OUrM ! hort time, hare found they were deceived, and that the "PiMn" hia, by tbe atve of "Powerful Aetiia gen to," b, en dried In the jitam, to break out la aa aggravated form, and f PERHAPS AFTER MARRIAGE. nsxi Helmbold's Extiaot Buclra For all Affections and Diaeaeee of - THE VBIIVARY ORGAXV Whether exieUng In MALE OB r EM ALE, from whatever cause original lag, and no matter Or How Long Standing! Dlaasei or these Organs require the aid of a Dlarette, HELMBOLD'S EXT ACT BUCHU IS TBI GREAT DIURETIC, . And It li certain to have the desired effect Ik all D eaeea for which It It reoonimended, . it BLOOD! BLOOD II BLOOD I II Belmbold'a Highly Oonoent rated Compound Fluid Extract Sarsaparilia. Thli li an affection of the Blood, and attaofca th Sexual Organs. Linings of the Noee, Ear. Throat, Winrtpipe, and other Mucus Surfaces, meklnar Its appearance In the form of Ulcer. Helmbold's. Extraot Sarsaparilia purifies tbe blood, and removes all scaly eruption! of the akin, giving to tbe eomplexlon clear and healthy color. It being prepared expressly br thta class of complaints, tte blood-purifying prop artlae are preserved to a greater extent than any out er preparation of flanapatilla. "o7 Helmbold's Rose Wash. An excellent Lotion for Diaaaaee of a Syphlllo Ha tprs, and as an Injection In biases ea of tbe Urinary Organa, arialng from babiU of diaaipatl a, and lm connection wlih the Extracts Buchn and SarttparlU 1. li. inch diaaaaee as reountme.ded. KvlJtnceof tbe most responsible and nliabtebr ncter will aooompanj the aaedicines. CerUflcates of Cares From eight to twenty yean atari ding, with nwm kuown to 801 K HOB AND FA MS. For medical properties of BOOHC fee Dienmas. tory of tbe United ttiatea. Bee Professor DEWMLff valuable works em the) Practice or P ovale. See reaaaraa made by the late celebrated Dr. PBTB ICK, Philadelphia. Bee remark! made by Dr. BPHRATM MCDOWELL, celebrated Pbyaician, and Uembei of tha Royal College of Sargxona, Ireland, and published Id iba Tranaaotlons of tlie King aud llueen'a Journal. 8te Mediro-Clrarglral Review, publtahsd by BBi. JAMIN Til A VERS, Fellow of the Royal GoUsge of Surgeons. Bee most of tha late atandard works on M edict aa. Extract Buchu fl 00 per bottle, ordxtbrffiOO flarsaparUla 1 00 " " 00 Improv'd Kose Wash 00 I 60 Or half a dosen of each for tit, which will be nd elect to cure tho most obstinate eesea, if UroUoaJ are adhered to. Deliverable to any address, securely packed fro observation. a, a. Describe araptonu In all eo Cures guaranteed. Advice gratia. AFFIDAVIT., rVrenn.lW ej'peered befns. me, aa Aldoraua at tb.clt; of Phll.tlphla, B. T. Hebabold, who, being duljr .wworn, doth ley hla prepantloaa oont.Ua no narooctto, too norenry, or other talnrlone dross, tint .r. porelySeseiahle. H. T. UKLMBOLD. Sworn .nd en bee rt bed Defer. DM,thi. S2ddajef oTombar, ISM. W. r. MIMAHD, Alderman, Ninth ., ..... Em, rule. AddrM. Uttera f . lafonn.tlo la ooweAs.ee, PBIKCIPAI. DErOTfa. H.lmbold'a Drnf and Oheaalsal WarvaMMe, Brmtdwer, New York! Or, U.lmboM'a Medio.) Depot, let Sooth Twalk rtnot, PhllMMphl.. BEWARE OP COUNTERFEITS And unprincipled dealer., who andeanr to dupese "UP THKllt OWN" aad "other" .rtloleaoa ta. rape autton .ttalowl by li.lmbold's Oenola. Prfp.r.ttona, 41 Bjttraot llaoba. " " Seieeperllla, m laapnmd Soa. Weak, told by sll Drnggiat. er.rywhere. AUC tot BILMBOLtrSTAKB KO OTMMM. Oat oet the edvertlMSient, and .end 'or n. AXE) AVOID IMPOSITION AND KXPOSUB n-vO. BOBEUTB A 00., Waolee.1. Amis, S. tt Monh Blsh aireet Ooltuaba. O, was wlU a.sal taatrad. at JaaaafawMrm srleae, |
Format | newspapers |
LCCN | sn84024216 |
Reel Number | 10000000026 |
File Name | 0582 |