Columbus morning journal. (Columbus, Ohio), 1865-11-15 page 1 |
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AMERIOAN. REMEDIES' COMLY.ROBY& SMITH. . t ii" r fl Ns 19. aUi.Vl Volume xxviii! COLUMBUS,! OHIO, WEDNESDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER " MOWll AS NUMBER 102 . aMIBTBB AMD FSBhlSaBD ( f Tf RM8 OF 8UW3PBIPTION. Ii ISBUS Of TBI DAILT JOVBlf AL. tagl SubecMxra, 1 Tear, hy Bail IS 00 fltasl. Bqbicrlhei,, 6 months, " H 4 59 ' Stngh flnboorlbero, 8 months, M '...m-4....... B 31 Slnal. BoUcrlberi, 1 month. 0 HO Blugl. Subscribers, par moutb, .dellrered bf OArriar .. .... 0 80 Blo.le Subscribers. ' par woek. d.llT.reJ by Toa;'i'a o'iib.:'ii' i f una or the ii-whilt journal. ' Blnglaaalnrrlbara.liaar. ..................,..... 60 ft i i ii ih v i if Blnsl. llubscrlberl, 1 Booth... B ., , - . - " "!"" o to tbbni or tbb wbbklt soubb-m. I ' finale Babsoriben, par y.ar.. ........t.. ...... I 00 terms of Advertising. I Dill, Oh. Bqo.re, each Insertion . , bueclaJ Notice, par Square, each later- 0 7S tiou .: 11 a . liooal and Basinets notice., par Hue, l wok Insertion 0 20 Wf antr On. Saoeie, each loaertlon 1 fit) .,, jacalaad Business notice., per Una, ' 1 aaoh lniertlon...M 0 to ajar One iqaara cover, tbrea-'qaartere of an loch or apacala taecoiaaroeaf in.o'ooBiut...i., Bf Harris.:. Iforlee, will hereafter laT.rl.bly be onargea o, aente wnen anaer n.e iineo, ana ou onu per iqoire When oooopyiog more epaoa. Funeral of Lord Palmerstoa Wrier.) tie le Ilniied noouea at I tie Grave) -arunarai aes-vlcea. k - The London- JVmrtgives In detail the in cidents and particulars of the burial of I Lord Palmeriton and the attendant cere monies. The plaoe of burial is .thin di I ooribed, : ' i ' j' Where Lord Falmerston lies the rou is thickly sown with illu'lrious seed.. On bis left are Lord Chatham and the two sreat rivals Fltt and Fox ; at his feet, Caa- ' - ning, the leader by whom lie abided so faithfully, and his son, the Viceroy ef India, . whom he supported, through good and evil report, with zeal, firmness, and loyally. nearer the door lies urattan ; . end again, . on the other side, Wilberforce, and a name aa detested as hie own by the enemiea of i aglanu Castlereah. , orer his bead tow- J era lbs monomenrof Lord Chatham, "where," as Lord Maoauly sayt, 11 with eagle eye and , ontatretchsd arm, the great commoner seems to bid England, be of good cheer and hurl -' defiance at her foes," and on the oth( side the statue of Canning seems almost ,to ' turn; to (the new comer as if; to bid him welcome. N oarer still is the monument of Lard Mansfield, the great judge, butenually reat as the." silver-tongued " orator of the ,Xtm of Commons; and hard by, though ' hit ashes dcr not rest here, the statue of Sir r Robert Peel oommsmorales a saroer nof so lengthened, hut hardly leea suocessfulior v - lssadiaunguithed by public services. Lord , i Palmeriton e grave lies immediately at the ' -j foot of the ambitious trophy which has been ' " railed to three of Lord Hodney's naval offi-cers, and in opening it, Is said that- lha ii workmen struct on the virgin earth and brought up a light sand, which must have 7fart tha nvtitinal anil n -T-V !Y atk.a I formed the original soil on which the abbey is bulla, . Tne vault, which goes only seven feet down from the pavement, ie lined with encaustic tiles. ' ,. '-- KOIRIS WITHIN TBI ABBEY. . The nave was set apart for the general publio, and from the great west door lo tlie entranoe of the choir, this part of the building was entirely filled, a narrow alloy only being reserved through which the prooersion passed. Here were ranged up to the choir gates the tonantry and the laborers of the Romsoy estate, firty-eight in number, who had been brought up in a special train yes-: terday morning. All were dressed in the deepest mourning, and among the laborers there were some who could not have numbered fewer years than the generous and considerate friend they have just lost in Poet' Corner, a graat gallery bad been hastily, erected, sarpeted, and draped with black olotb, which occupied the whole of b earth eranaar-, tatej up frnm lh A-w of the aisle almost to the fringe of the tri- forlum. - From this more of the ceremony could be seen than from any other single point, and here were seated the members of r .l .i e n.-i:. i k.j.e ...kUh I both Houses of Parliament, headB of public aepartmenie, euu memuora oi me uiimury and oivil services. Of ail the men who have mads thsmselves a name In publio life few were miesing. All shades of political opinion wers represented, though the great bulk belonged to the party which has long considered Lord Palmerston as its honored ehief, and has given him such firm and enthueiastlo support. . . , ,. , ABRIVAL Or THK PEINC1 OF WALKS. The Prince of Wales, attended by Qeneral ' Knollys, Major Grey, and Lord A. Hervey, arrived soon after 12 o'clock, and alighted at the deanery, whence he was conducted by the dean to his stall, on the right of the dean's stall; and the puke of Cambridge, whs oame shortly afterwarda, was placed to ths left of the sub-dean. One o'olock was fixed for the eommsnoement of the service, but long before that time all the speotators bad taken their places, and the point to which all eyee centered In the interval of lilenoe and expectation wae the north transept. This part was kept perfectly clear, and full in view was the narrow grave which was to receive the mortal remaine of ths dspartsd slatssman. ' ' THE rURIBAL SIBVICI3. j , As the proaession moved slowly along the nave the choir sang the opening asntences of the burial ssrvlos, "I am the Resurrection and the Life," "I know that my Redeemer Llveth," to Sr.' Croft's music. As thsy reached the ohoir the mourners took their seats in the stalls which had been marked out for them, and the coffin, covered with a richly emblasoned pan, wae deposited on treaties at the foot of the altar steps. The pall-bearers alone remained by II, while the Ninetieth Psalm was chanted to Purcell's music; and as thsy stood there, a central (roup, on whioh every eye was fixed, it was mpoesible not lo speculate on the thoughts which must be filling their minds as they discharged this last duty to one who, to most of them, had been for so many years a loyal Colleague, a genial friend and companion and a sagaoious leader, with whom tier had shared so many wsighty responsibilities, and whose name had been In then all a tower of itrength. Earl Russell stood . in his oharactsristic o-ttitnde, with erosaed arms and bent head, which he sever raised; "Mr. Gladstone's- face was paler and more mournful than usual the Lord Chancellor was evidently deeply touched. At the conclusion of the chant, the sub-dean, Lord J. Thynne, read the sublime lessen from the 18th or the 1st Corinthians, and as the body ' we borne to the edge of the grave Mr. Tnrla slaved with wonderful effect the Funeral March of Beethoven.. , j . . TBI SCINI! BTtHI 01AVI, j . where the reet of the eervios was perform ed, was the moat imposing part of the day's - lolemnlly.' As the body left the choir, the procession was reformed, the - dean and ' nlara-v leadlnf. and the whole body of mourners following Into ths transect. The Prince of Wales and the Duke of Cambridge walked on each side or the dean, ana tool their plaoee on a daia whioh had been erected for them by the aids of ths dean'B read-' inavdeik. Oa the eastern sids of the tran sept a platform, draped In blaok cloth, was , . arscted, oa which was arranged the choir, strengthened for the ocsasion by pioked ' voices from 8U Pauls, ths Chapel Royal, and the Temple ohoir. At the foot of the a-rava stood lbs chief mourner, the Rev. Mr. . Hnlllvan. and bv bis side Lord Shaftesbury, ' Lord Cowper, Mr. W. Cowper, the youthful I Lord Jeoelyn, and other oonnections of Lord Palmeraton. The cabinet ministers were ranged on the left, and on the other side were grouped the rest of the moueners in a mass, which, though it numbered ever two hundred persons, looked at from above seemed lost in the vaet proportions of the transept - The beautiful muaio in which Pgrcell and Croft have clothed the solemn ' ssntenoel "Man that is born of woman," -ln ths midst of life," and "Thou knowest. ' . Lord,"' was sung by the ohoir, and as ths . ,i last notes were hushed every head wae bent - forward to oatah a last glimpse of the ooffln aa It elowlv eank into lha vault beneath. V ikon Dean Stanley read in tonep eo clear - anal dietinct. and so sxqulsitely modulated, ' as to be audible in the farthest recesses, the ; 'aledlotory 'prayer, ' Forasmuch as it has ' pleased Almighty God," and as the words, ' Dust to duet, aahee to ashss," ware pro-' nounoad. the ohlef mourner, as a last prs- oious offering.' to the dead, threw Into the grave several diamond ana (old rings, v. y , " - heard a Toio from heaven," was sunt;, and tha dean read the Uoileoi ana to wra Prayer. Ai ha ended i ; ; ! J a violin stobji brake over the Abbey. enveloping the grave anil i ha arum) around It in a denie oioud, hioh .imMi hid them from sight. From out of this thiok darkness the strains of I Uandel'a anthem, "Hie body ia buried In I peace," now sinking into low, soft mourn. fulness, now rising into jubilant exultation a-,.l 1 1 1. Ika InH .!.. IIM 1111 Boated Uirough the lofty aisles, and when tbsy tied away, the service oonoiuneu wim the blessiog. The Frlnoe of Wales and the Duke of Cambridge lingered some moments by the sldeot the grave, and alter tney ten, as the "Dead March in Baul" pealed out, llm rent of the mourners Dressed round to gaze upju the narrow bed in whieh )I)S all that is mortal of the great minister. After ilia rlanarhira of the nrinoiDal nersonasee. all the sneotators in the other parts of the I Abbey were admitted to the ohoir to see the grave, and some noura eiapaau ueiur, iu erowd oleared away, and the Abbey was left in lis usual soutuae ana solemnity, ; October Poetry. A London weekly paper pokes fun, as follows, at current rhymes and rhymesters of autumn The minor posts, like brewers, seem to re serve themselves for a great effort in the month of October. The magaiines of the month teem with unwonted quantitiea of versa, uut unluokirr the parallel dots not hold a-ood all through. - The October brew ofale is the beet in the year. of ale is the best in the year. The brew of r,netrv ia lha verv stalest and washiest.- Bound October ale is pleasant In ths mouth and wholesome in the stomach, and, like wine, maketh glad the heart or man. Jlut the poetry which has oume into the market alooii with the ale produoes just the oppo site set of effects. It is as vinegar to the tcetb and as smoke to the eyes; it is harsh to the ear, and empty and soulless to the understanding. And the most curious thing is dfiat this season It is all the same. Out of the dozen sets or verses wiui which the autumn month is welcomed there is not found one deoent set, no, not one. Can there be such a thing as an Infectious murrain among poets, as there is upon the beasts of the field 1 If so, why does not the same providential rule which prevente a -dieordered cow from giving milk, extend to poets, and prevent them from sivine verse ? Bad verses, beeides. leave us worse off than bad milk. If the cow fails, we may fly to the ass; but when the magailne poets fail, what other asses have we to fly to? The force of nature can no further go, and we are left verseless. No doubt there are some people to whom lamentable failure of tho monthly crop of poetry will be a serions deprivation. Somebody, we presume, must like magaiine poetry, or else it would oease to appear. Or it may be possible that, like sermons, nearly everybody hales the poetry, but usage and tradition, and the wishes of a wiok-headed minority, prevent the abolition of so tedious k fher, ,re p,on9"who find 'the . . ... and unprofitable an ordance. However, we thinnest discourse of the feeblest of curates largely useful for edification, once a week ; and - so, - very likely, there is a similar ' olass- who are equally delighted to surrender their emotions once a month to be atirred to their very dopthB by tho waahiest of poets, and find themselves braced by the process, it is so refreshing, eoelevatinr, to bo led away by the ttiatfio hand of the poet from tho sor did cares and petty turmoil of everyday life, up into the punned regions or tender thought and lofty Imaginings. Of course it is nart of the theory of perfect life, in our time, that a man ought to give his emo tions towards the beautiful a bath or a brush up at given periods. Poetry, as Mr. Tupper might say, ia the wash-leather and briok-dust of the soul. A mind tarnished and blunted by much use is rendered bright and sharp by a turn or two on the poetio knife- board. On this theory it is clear mat poe-irv nai i Krichl or.arta' It is a notorious fallacy to conclude that ths quality of the oauas must resemble that of the edeot. Anything will answer the cleansing pur- pose, provided It is printed eo as to look lllra varan rtnd la written in a anffioianllv like verse, and is written in a sufficiently vague style. I'roteaiRiitlaiza in Italy. A moating in behalf of the cause of Pro testant Evangelism in Italy, wae held at the ohurcb of the Key. Henry Ward Beeoher, in Brooklyn, on Sunday artornoon. The time aeleoted for holding the meeting was unfa vorable, being the hour at which a large proportion of those interested in the cause are engaged in other dutiea, and the meeting, oonseqnently, waa not as large as otherwise it undoubtedly would have been. The principal address was made by the Rev. Prol. A. Tacchella, or Milan, a gentleman of Due address and acquirements, who has devoted many years to arduous and perse vering labors in behalf of Protestantism in his own country. Prof Tacohella commenced his address by remarking that he regretted to see so few persons present, aa the subject which he desired to bring to their notice was one very dear to his heart, and ons In which hs could not believe any member of any Christian denomination was uninterested. He spoks of ths prominent position whioh Italy had so long occupied in the world's history. For centuries the dominant nation of the earth, ruling over half of Europe, and pushing its oonquesta across the intervening waters into Afrioa and Asia. As a military power she had stood nnequal-ed. In soience and in art, the names or her sons vet stood among the brightest on the rolls of fame. Before the languages of Franoe or h-ngland had been organized, she had a literature whose maatar-pieoes were yet used as models in every oivilUed na tion, iiong years or mieruie ana spiritual and physical tyranny had reduced this glorious country from her once proud posi tion, but the spirit of her people was not yet destroyed, xneir conauoi in tne late struggles of 1848 and 1859 proved that they bad yet among them the spirit to become a great nation. The Austrian power had been almost entirely expelled from Italy. The Papal power had been immensely re duced. Twenty years ago toe rope claim ed temporal control over a,uuu,uuu ol people, Now his subjects numbered less than 600,- 000. Even more remarkable than the growth of political liberty in Italy had been the tendency to religious treeuoni. Bixiy prom inent oities had already accepted rroiesi- antiam. In Milan alone, the speaker's own home. 4.000 persons had made profes sion of that faith, and 2,00U of thess, after long and atriot probation: bad buuu acoepted into the choreh. These periods were nearly an oi ine pourer, woraiug alaaaea. The tendenor to a reformed re ligion wae equally strong in outer parts or the Kingdom. Two things were now prominently needed to develop. The first of these was a popular journal in tho inter ests of Protestantism. The Italians are I .A.iiart vtAAnla. and tha nonnlar newana 1 --..- C I 1 1 w f a r iare avaroisa an immense influence. The leaders of the Catholio ohuroh, aware of this, wsre attempting to bolster up that waning power by controlling all the public prints. Whether these olaimed to be literary, scientific, or devoted to general information, they were, almost without ex ception, in the interests of Catholloism. Ths cause of Protestanism required such a nonnlar means of reacbing tne pumic ear, Such a Journal had been in existence for a number of years, and bad aohieved a vast amount of good, but, circulating princi pally among the lower slaeees, it has never proved peouniarly successful. Its capital was now oxnauaieu, auv nuuuui ysuuuiaij aid it must oease. The following story is told of Professor Wilson's method of giving hie daughter to Aeimin: "frofeiior Ferrier married a daughter of John Wilson, and edited the Collected edition Ol uib i-iun-m-in i wnrVa. It Is of his brother, Professor Ay toun, who stood in the same rslation to Christopher North,' that a story is told relative to the successful Issue of his oourt- ahln. He took the opportunity of 'declar ing h'e intentions, one morning when North was in hie study, aecompaniid by lha vaunt lady. Aa soon aa be finished his explanation, whoee purport the reader may oonceive, and waa awaiting with some ..Aural anxiety the result, Professor Wilson, saying nothing, took np one of the numer-nna nreeentation volumes lying around. and tearing out a fly leaf, with the inscription 'with ths author's compliments,' pinned it in Me danihtar's dress, and haodid her "I to young Aytcun without a worn. ... ... . o ... . ... . . Hon. Jaeab Collamier. The death of the Hon.. Jaoob Collamir, United States Senator from Vermont, took plaoi at hie residence in Woodstock, on Thursday evening, Nov. 8. Mr. Cellemor was seventy-tnree years oi age at tne time or his death, having been born In Troy, a. Y , in 1792. He belonged to the family of uolismores or oclluate. Maes- but the or. thography of the name was ohangsd In the line or hit immediate ancestors, iiaving reoeived his education at Burlington Col lege, where he was graduated in 1810, he studied law at St. Albans, and became a memoer or thenar in that piaoe in ltJiz.- After a brief military service in defense of the Northern frontier, during the war with ureat unlaw, he devoted himself to ths practice of law, until 1838, when he was elected an associato juitloe ef the Supreme Court of Vermont, havingpreviously (erved ror several dinerent terns as a member or cut Stale Legislature. He continued on the bench until 1842, when he declined a re election. . . In 1848 he was chosen a representative to Congress, which office he filled with rare diligenoe and hdelity till laid, when be declined being a oandidate for the fourth term, un the accession or ueneral Tay lor to the presidency in 1849. he was ap pointed postmaster-general, and ably dis charged tne duties or that post ror about sixteen months, in ibou he was siscted judge of the Supreme Court of Vermont, and wes annually re-eieoiea uuui tne autumn or 1864, when be was chosen to a seat In the United States Senate, which be retained for the remainder of his life. Mr. Collamer was a man of strong and earnest oonvis-tions, of nncommon independence in the formation and expression of his opinions, a sturdy advooate of freedom and human rights, and a devoted lover or the Federal Constitution. In the sooial relations of life, he was a model of integrity, of singularly modest and kindly manners, though immovable in adhering to hie own views of rigni, rrse rrom an guile and artinoe, a man of few words and no pre teniae. Ann 1'or inwnt. Sere;eaat Corbett'a rather a ftfona- ananlao. i Bartholomew Corbett. aged 89. father of Sergeant Corbett, who shot Wilkes Booth, had been conveyed to the Marvlebone (London) Workhouse Infirmary so very ill, and his head so dreadfully swollen from erysipelas, that it was thought he could not possibly survive many hours. For many years past, says a London paper, the old man has lived in a small back room in Chapel street, Edgware road, and for the last seven ysars no one bnt himielf bad entered the place. lie was understood to bs a taxi dermist, and wae considered to be very clever at his business. Nothing having been seen or heard of him for aome days, tha police were called in, and the door broken open, when the room waa found' to be filled with rubbish, and Corbett was seen orouohed in a corner, in a state of de lirium, lie wae removed at onoe to the workhouse. The room, from the floor to the celling, was found to be crammed wUh oases of stuffed birds, books, and papers. The latter were carefully covered and labeled, and many of them appear to be of value. An avenue, three feet high by two feet wide, and formed or elutted birds, So., led to a reoess, not muob larger than ths ints- orof an ordinary siied portmanteau, and this eccentric individual must have slept in the recess for many years. - ; Madera Kallroad TrtevellnaT- 1 The romanoeis "clean gone' out of mod ern traveling. The story of one eld egg- bsped coaoh that hatched out its nine inside; that was more of a dloe-box than an egg, and tumbled people into eaoh other's laps until it 11 played the deuce " with them, and ihey paired off and pledged faith and were one, used to read uico an old bauad. nut tne railway car isa Qauker meeting upon wheels. Ths passengers, absurdly labeled ike express packages, with red, yellow or reen ucxets in inoir nata ait lumnu-ay iiao a uuua oi lettered Bheep waiting to bs salted, contsmplala " water falls, .the organa of love and fight and the napes of sach other's necks. It is solemn and ridiculous, i That sorting cut of the flock; putting the ribbons in one car and the whiskers in another, while it fails lo benefit the ribbons, is a positive damage to tbo whiskers when it is not a positive elandor. Pen men up logelher. and if they do not behave like cattle it will be in spite of the pen. Ladies sprinkled through the oars keep the entire train upon its honor; give it a human and home-like look; refine travel and elevate tbe car from a common sarrier to an eduoator. "To have known a fine woman is a liberal eduoation," ie an old Eng lish utteranoe good enough ror a proverb. But thlB segregating fashion ie barbarous and worthy of the Turks. Chicago Journal. Ilia Eudowmea! al aalloeb Cellcaja- The committee chosen by the National Convention of Unitarian Churches, to raise an endowment of $100,000 for Antiooh College have made a report ooncerning their action thus far. On the 2Vd or October, the subscriptions immediately available amounted to 108,794, and have been inverted in 7-80 bonds for the endowment of the College. The committee feel encouraged In their project of bringing up the fund to $250,000 by three specific assurances from different quarters of an intention to ssnd on full professorships of $20,000 or of $25,-000 at a very early date. Similar aid is also asksd from wealthy Unitarians, whils small contributions, to the aggregate of $70,000, from those less able, will, with as surances already made, complete tne above mentioned endowment, the college buildings, library and apparatus. Among ths subscriptions acknowledged are $20,000 from California for the Starr King professorship at Antioch; $12,884 to ths Amos Carter profejiorship; $9,600 to the Chan-ning professorship, $4,000 to tha Llvermore professorship, and $9,280 from tho First Church in Roxbnry for a professorship not yet named. Subscriptions not yet comple ted amount, as reported, to 920,1011. Slasrnlar Dlaeovery. The Lafayette Cbun'ir relates the follow ing singular discovery and identification of the remains or a aaceaiea soiaien 1 About a year ago a widow lady of an ad Joining county lost a much loved son in the army, and was at oonsioeranie expense in having his rsmains orcugnt noms ror in torment. Some time last month agentel man from Ohio, in ssarching for the re mains of a brother near Chattanooga, dis covered that tbe grave had been opened and the body removtd. By reliable; date, he traced the corpBO to the house or an un dertaker in Nashville, and from thence by express to Lafayette. The mistake was ap parent. Arriving in tnis city last wees, ne found a clue to the attlicted mother, and seeking an Interview, made a statement of the facts and obtained the privilege of opening the grave. The Dody was exhumed and the remains Identified aa those of hie brother by a trepan of the skull, which bad bssn occasioned py a io or a horse before the deceased entered the army, The remains were given up, and the gen tleman presented the widow with a eum euSoient to seoure the remains of her son and remove them to Indiana. latoxleatlas; IJaaaora. More than 100.000,000 gallons of lntoxl- eating liquors are manufactured In the United states aanuauy. un inta mere ibonld be an internal revonue of $200,000,- 000, whereas there le only $26,000,000 naid. thus defrauding the Uovernment 0 S176.000.000. A traffio whioh thus origin ates in ain ana aisnonesiy, cannot neget verv deslrabls results. Here is ins record More than 140,000 drunkards die every year. More than 200,000 hard drinkers in the world. Thus tte vast army or rum vio- tints array thsmselves in frightful altitude before us. One hnndred and forty thou sand every yeart During this war, 700,-000 souls have gone to perdition by rum. Where ie there a parallel ior late r war, with its missiles of death,' is waak In the comparison, ! There appears to bs a gnat falling off in the number of time-keepers this year. Thus tha total imported to August 81, wae only 149,910, as compared wita ziz,sid in 1B04, and 196.287 in 1868 (oorreapondlng peri ods). The number of watches received from abroad in the firet eight months of this ysar was 90,401, against 87,282 in 1864, and 100,984. la IW (.correipciding periods.; TELEGRAPHIC. REPORTED FOR THE JOURNAL , . 1 fflectiim of tbe Iniliaiia Lenislatorit Sick and Wounded Soldier? NUMBER IN HOSPITALS. Gen. Grant In New Yorh ProMe Election of Gov. Holici Rumr'd RasJgnation of Praifon King!. IS. Meeting at Cooper Institute c&yo.. rJbo., ttoo, Pteparatloaa Agnlnai Ine Faalaaa ia .... I. . I I Tobonto, Nov. 14 It has been deoiJid to nlaoe a foroe of volunteers in active set- vice, to check Fenian raids. Two battal ions reoeived orders to hold themselvss in readiness for duty. The guard at ths vrjl- anteer armory has been doubled in oonae-quenoe of information reoeived of Fenian projeots. ' .1 Nbw Yobe, Nov. 14. The Times' Wash ington dispatch says : Daniel Miller, a noted eonfidenee man. haa been banded over to the offioers from Ohio to answsr the oharge of ewindling the First National Bank of Springfield. . . '. I Mr. MoPhereon will not enter the names of those eleoted to Congress by the late rebel States on the roll of the next Honse. dev. Wlnl Properly OoudeeaiMi-siiek anu woaaaeo ia lauveraiuvne pllala. The Tribune's soscial says : Judge Un derwood hasoondemned Qov. Wlss's person al property for confiscation. Hie real estate is not worth tbe formality. 1 The total eick and wounded throughout tho country ie lees than five thousand, eight monthe eince It was over one nunorea tnou- ssnd. i Oen. Augur iesued an order forbidding the whipping of colored men under any law of Virginia within the limits of hie department. ! Negro Soldleia from the District of IVIUUDia. j Oen. Ingraham. late Provost Marshal of .the defenses of the North Potomac, Is being igorously urged for Mai geant-et-Anna or the next House. The white population of tbe District or Columbia ia to the blaok aa four to one. Statistics of the War Department show two blaok soldiers were raised lo one white. The whites furnished 1,750 soldiers, almost entirely by drafting; the blacks over 3,1)00, anu neariv ati uy votuuioeriua. imtw Intr tbe war. It was impossible tor at negro to leave this city 10 go norm -wiinoin passport. j.j--. ;rHlai to Rebel Onioera. A gentlemen of intelligence, who haslust roturned from the South, slates that it is the intention of moat of tho States to ap-oronriate peneions to rebel offioers and sol diers wounded during the rebellion. No lj,uileuuu ID lu 1B rnr Mnumern Union soldiers. 1 Rumored Realauatlun ol Preatoa aUng -Vnrlons Ileinv. 1 Ths Hsrald's Washington diapatch Bays : Ws understand that tho Hon. Preston King has resigned the position ol oollector of the port of New York. Who Ib to take his place le not known. ine mtlBienng out oi ueiBCDineniB 01 tue Veteran Reaerve Corps in ths District of Co lumbia begiiil to-day. 1 Uen. Logan will not accept tne mission to Japan, under any circumstances. W. 0. Coffin, of Indiana, formerly in charge of tho Southwestern Indian Agency, is in Washington, settling tits accounts. Probakle lUeetloa ol Guv. Uoldea. The World's special says: A telegram, received from Gov. Holden, indioates that he is elected by a email majority. A large number of pardon aeekers, wait ing for an audiene with tho President, were to-day notified that he oould not be sssn for two days. j Pramotlea la ine Regnlnr Army. The Herald's special says: Col. Bradley, Quartermaster of Transportation at City Point during it occupancy by our armies, was veslerdav commissioned as Quarter master in the Regular Army, with the rank of Captain. He stands forty-sixth on the list. i Ine Attempt to Palaon Wlra. Oen. Baker admlta an error in the pub lished date of Mrs. Win's attempt to poison her husband, but asssrts that the circumstance transpired substantially as reported. Ho also noticed uen. Moll or tne anair within an honr ol ita occurrence, and bad previously informed CoL Chipham that in bis opinion she would poison him if allowed an opportunity. I General Clraat and I he Mnster-Ont ol veaejaio. A Senator who called upon Oen. Grant a few days ago, remonstrated with him for keeping so many general officers in the service, unemployed. He replied that he had several wssks ago made out a list to bs mustered out, but they were hanging Ire in the War Department or some other place. Beoretsry Seward yesterday completed an important dispatoh to cur Minister to England. - ;- ' " '- ! - - A large number of volunteer naval offi cers are being mustered ont. Forty-three assistant engineers were mustered out In Ootober. 1 There have been no additional cases of oholera on board the Atlanta. Passengers on board complain much of detention, etriot quarantine being enforced oy tne commissioners. ! Gen. Grant, family, and Stan are at the Metropolitan Hotel In this city. 1 AmerleaalllaloB loinmlaalon- Meollua atvooper lastllnio. An enthusiaalio meeting waa held at Cooper Institute last evening, under the auspices of the American Union Commis sion, organized lo aid In ths restoration of the American Union, upon the basis of freedom, industry, eduoation, and Christian morality. : Senator Morgan presided. au draaaee were delivered by Governor Par- eons, of Alabama, Rsv. Dr. Thompson, President of the Commission, Rev. Henry Ward Beeoher, Major ueneral Meade, and Ueneral Fieko. Letters from the oeoretary or War. Gen. Grant, and olhere, expressing their entire sympathy with the objects of the Commission, wsre read. The Worlds epeolal says: Documents accompanying the report of the Secretary of tbe Navy, la print oontain, a full history or the naval operations along the Southern coast, with maps, charts, ate. This document will be one of unusual Interest. Tbe Secretary's report will, be ebcut the ssme length ae last year. The estimates ior tne next ssoal year 01 tha Department amount to i3,uw,uuu. roe annronriations of last year, which were very largo, will be absorbed by tbe olost of ths present nioai yr. 1 be Old Merrlmac. The Herald's Fortress Monroe letter of the 11th eays: The Merrimao ia being rais ed, ana partloae 01 ner maoumery aave already been taken out. Her hull has been raited clear of the bottom and is now sus pended by ohaina. It is reported that Jeff. Davis rsoeatly aid that "Fenlaniam ie a bubble," and of Win, that "the uovernment need not have gone far to hang many worse men." t : j " . Affaire la Bfextro. . Nbw Yobk, Nov. 13 Flies of the cCoial journal, the Msxioan Republic a little newspaper published at the Paso del Norte, have been reoeived here to the 13th of Augus'j They relate a singular coincidence of sin-i gular dsmonstration in Chihuahua on the day appointed for the celebration of the) establishment cf tbe Empire. J A number of the citizens held a funeral oeremony in memory of Hidalgo. The flags; were lowered lo half-mast, and the place wore a general expression or solemnity rather than of festivity. ' The f arblenioo officially announces thai Oaxaoa has;, been occupied by a body of Juarez's troops under Col. Diazra, brothel of Parferico Diairs. Ircaaarr MHra Deposits. ' WAsniNtiTOH, Nov. 14. It appears froi tha U. S, Treasury monthly statement fof uctober that lite amount on aeposii in cot a wae $34,764,000, and the total amount oi deposit wae nearly 100,0OO,OoO all thi com was available, i ne amount on oe posit in ths National banks was nearl; $300,000,000. ' ' " v ladlaaa Lrttlalatnra- Ibpuiupolis, Nov. 13. Ths extra ses sion or the Legislature convened to-aay the House organisation is the same as last session J. 0. Fettitt, Speaker. Tbe Ben ate has not elected its subordinate otfl-cere. - Gov. Morton's message will be da livsrsd to-morrow. , 1 i Caibo. Nov. 13. An Insnsction to-day ten companies of the 8th and loth Begi-mente of the Veteran Reaerve Corps, cora- prieiog tho garrison at thia post, -revealed the fact that all tne prtvatee exoept tnres wish to be mustered out. All the officers exoept one dsBire to remain in the service. Seven hundred and fifty bales of ootton passed for Cincinnati, 4G0 for St. Louis, and 160 lor Cairo. .1 1 : Boston, Nov. 18. A large and influential meeting waB held at noon to-day in the Merchants' Urohange, in favor of the immediate consideration of the Western Pa- oitc Railroad. Hie honor, Mayor tincoln, presided. A spesch was made by' Ex-Qov. Curry, of Orange. I Media, Delaware Co, Pa.,-Nov. 13. There was a large fire at Avendale this morning, by which the Sloathaven Mills and two dwellings were deatroyed. The property was owned by Mrs. Ellen Patter son and Mr. Robert Patterson, of Philadelphia. It ia sapposed to hare been the work of an incendiary. Loss about $500,000. ' BUSINESS CARDS. HAVL S. HENKXE, -A.ttoviiey nt I.avw, .,'., . '0..1!1HBTS, OHIO, WIM. I-RiOTlOE IN TBI BOFBEHI AND Inferior lloarto. eid will oollect claim affelutt tbe Ste-e and federal Quveromeut. OOtce No. 1 udeoa Italiiliug, oppoolte the State Home. . octliTiltt W. H. TILPEM. , 0. W, HOVLtOH. TIIMN & HOUSTON, ATTORNEYS AT UV. . No. J71 a Mala Hired, , j octJSJSm. t'INI'IMNATI. O. x. eiBiaaT. SIR BERT 1,11,1 I. w. 1.1L1 i3cjrjl.-TJ t lacJlovaw j Anil (ilaiik-Book Mauufkuturtirti, Bulla. Hall, llutou lllork, S3. Ulnlt 1 apre eon iv . . . , a. a. wBDrN, John McaAtrir Wnrdf ii, Wihoix & MtHnttoy, Attorneys and Qonn8eUorn at Law, OI.IUlBl.lN, O. . , J IJIjrr.L ATTgNri TO LFi l'ROiriC.-tliinrUI. VV bDsiueee emulated to this, In lb. Si,.r.iije Ooorfe, aiid lu Kreuklin aod ailJiuiuKcouutlae, ORIce No. ! Keel Nlnle fltror.1. Osts Bute. Bl'.KM at' SWAYZE, MERCHANT TAILORS ! AMD Pt'ATiEBS IN HKAFY-MaPB OI.OTIIINa, A Ueula Vurui-hlng Uoodi. Ni. 164 tfoulli Blgli It., 0)poUe U. tS. Uotul. We kft)p a wttll-tolaVOUtl looV of Rootle, both toiotgn aud djtuutlo, GIto m aoall, and we ttlll do tlite good hu'27 tf UK KM A HWAYZB. COAL. HOOKING o o WB ABE NOW READY TO TDRKtHH A BD PKHIiill article of IXooliiltiK Ooal, la any quantity, delivered to any port of the city, or on Ballrtad car. lflk and Vard betweau ha$ and Apr.ngitreel, No. 13(1 JVorlli High atrtet. Order. reipflCtfnllr collolted and promptly Oiled. VAN DBUBEN A DKMltiQ, Jnnaadtl j Hociliing" Coal. AM MOW PB SPARED TO FURNISH A 8D oertor duality Hocking Goal. In any anantltr delivered to any part of the city, or ou railroad can Order left at my -tore. Buckeye Block. MavlOeacWo. (U r. HAIDSM AGENCIES. LAND AGENCY W. F. CUM MINGS fc CO,, Bprlnsfield OIilo, WILL PAY TAX 18 AMD HATE DEEDS BE-COHDFD In anv county of lha Bute. Will proenraTax Deedt, Atitract of Title and Patent! for Land! 'rom tho General Govnrament or t'tate. Bay and aeTl Landi on Uoramln'on. Partlonlar at tentlon given to redeeming and reroyerlng of landi old for taxea, implying Tout or destroyed racoidi and perfecting ae-eenve iiiki. ; Land nnon which lha taxes i re not promptly peld are liable to re eold, and caa be redoamnd, If at an. oniy ai a neaTj eipooia. a toog AxiinriADce, ana ittterei yierr reiinence iu MtmaonrL butt befoie aud diirloK tbe war. will en ab'a ne, we believe, correctly and tie factor Ha, tp l ran mo t any uuuacie connaea io as, eepit ic Police Agency. I BAYS OPENED AN OPkMOB IN ROOM NO. IS, Opera Honse Building, for tbo transaction of aen sral Pollf business. Pnrllrnler attention glvsn to the collection of claims, recovery of stolua proper ty and demotion of thieves. All UOaiUmW lUaiuiiVU IV mis I'Uti-s wiiisjuuiuiur lyattendud to. , All COaUUIUIIIVNIIVUBj B.i iduj vunuuDuiini. WU. BEANY. Lata Ua)or 7th O. V. C, and formerly Detective Po nee, uincinueii. MILLINERY. MRS.M. A. YAH HOUTOH, MILLINER FANCY GOODS, 33 Haaast Town Jtt. FOM fAlh J- WrNTKR, Jaet rerelred. AH order, fllled oa tbo eltorteil eeolS l f"""'- ENGRAVER. WILLIAM RICHES, Designer ad Engraver on Wood Parlralu, View, of HaUdlnga. Harnla - eri, ,. EXIOUTBD IK THK HlOOBBT SttLI or TBI ART Vor Lcdna. NotarlH Ptllillo, Oonutv offlcera. So , exMntcil In th. beet poi.llile meuner. (tnice, 107 tomb Hlahelrtel; Boom No. 10. Tltlrl Star, 1 Johssea Balldlii, Oolttmbtu, Ohio, aort tot Ij AUCTION. AUCTION COMMISSION IT' I S KB MOW FBHPAHID TO BtflllVE OON If ttlUHtHtNTH of all klatliol Mercantile Clootie, iiouaoaota aoruiiare, o., ' ON COMMISSION. 1 aw Liberal advanoea will be made on Consign-Beats.Wa aleo aav oartloular attention tooatside sale of " Mercantile aV Honaeliold Goods Farming Stock, Real j EMiufe, t&c.tfrc. j "; We hare on hand a large itock of li'laxo New CTux'xaltUBTen Which Vfe are oBeilng at very low prices, to which we wouta can me aiwuiion 01 me puuuo. REAL PAKNONH, Auction and Oommleelon Ueretaante, m2Tly No. 104 Sooth Dltib etreet. FOR SALE. 80 ADRESOF LAND ForSale. QITOATJCD ON TBI BILL, TWO MILE8 WKST KJ 01 uoiomum, iunjeaia.Hi7 womu oi woo iBttur arabaMd uoin tnu uadk ior im Aijiam ior in-eci 1m. noon which One bolldluK li ftlwut twins raoted for that. MUtatloa. . i Thia land baa a front or ait roai on sauiTani'i Avanna, and tha eaat and lying high, and haying a Tronta on tha road to fat opened, rnnnlns aoroa from lha National Road to the Harrlabargh Bond. About two-thlrda of It li woodland, and onu-tbtii nnder cultivation. WIU be eold for aah or on pay ment. Apply to ejus. Ull lvnloiJn, mam uainier rranaua nana, uoiamoni, u PUBLIC LANDS. SCRIP FOR SALE, i ' ' OoLuvaoa, Oct. 1, Mats. N ACCORDANCE WITH THE PROVISIONS af an act of tha General Aatamblyof the Btataof Ohio, paiied April 8, 18G6, the vndenlgned Htata officers will receive prrpoeaU for the porchaeaof tbe kana oonp receivea rrom ine jniiea dmin mot the establishment of an Agricultural Col leg In tha State of Ohio. - ley" The Scrip can be heated on any vacant United State lands, tubject to mtry at privat4 tab, $1 26 per acre (mineral landi excluded.) No proposition will be received for lees than one hnndred aud sixty acres. . If mora conveuient, proposals may oa maaa io lha Auditor and Treasurer of any Oonuty, who will transmit the samo to tbe undersigned. JAH. H. GO DM AN, Auditor of Staff. W. liUOPEt., Treasurer of Mate. W. BKNRY aUMH, Seo'y of Htata. sep"" Urn MEDICAL. ni'MPMIVEY'H i nOMuWlTHIl' SPECIFICS, HAVE PROVED, FROM THE MOST AMPLE expert". n anttra sncawe: HI tuple Pron.pl k tttotti ut, aud Reliable. They are tbe only Medicines perlW.tly etUi-twl to ppalr use-so simple that ni 1st skew oauuui be maJe In nslug thns; eo harmless as to bn free from danger, and soelUofeut eM bj alweys reliable. I'hoy have raUed the high-oat oommvbdatlouaTrom all, and will always render satisfaction. Oents, No. 1, (lures Feveri, Congestion, Inflamma- r Mime 2o 41 2, " 'orniM,Worm-lfe?or,Worm Oollo X& ' 3. H C'ry luir-Oollo, or Teething of In fauM 24 4, " IlBrroei of oliildreu or adults 2.r ' 8, " ljvutry .Grilling, UtllonsCullo 8, t'ikul-ra-Mrbuti,blausaa, Vom- itiog fid y( i g!niriii. Colds, Bronchitis . 25 ' 8, ' Nfliirftlfcclis, Tootbaobe, afactrarhe li) a, 11 UffnclMi'UM.SIvk-Ueadaobe, Var- U.u io, " II. ia, " la, " l. " IS, " 16, " l, IB, " 19, " SO, ai, " SU, " 21, ' M, " us, " 27, nynpftiMlfi, Bilious Hloiuacb 26 Niipprmamlor iialafnl P-riotl.... Wtil tea Uxi profueo Priois.. !i5 4'riip, tioiigb, dtdlontt Drsathlng SCO IHisIt HUeuui, Krytlielas, Krup- tlcsDS CA Hli umatlsnit Uheuuatlo Pains .. 2ft Ivr and Ague, On II fever, ; Agues Ml Pile), blind or bleeding 4V Wuhlisnliujr. and sore or weak Eyes 60 4'Histrrb, acuta or chronic, Inttu. ena Ml Wli4oilaiC-oniclil violent OiiUKtis .. M Asthma, oppntaaed Breathing,.... 60 . eStsr liHcbrKej, impaired Hearing 60 Borotulst, eularged Ulands, bwell in e 60 neral . Debility, Pbysj o a I Wraknesa 60 nri.Ny(andeeantytretions,ee.. 60 Mesa-Nlchneaa, siokness ffoiu riding 60 HIlnvyv,Ulat?fsiiUravel........ 60 NttrvoiiH Iseiiiiltr, Hemtnal Ncrvons Deltlity, Eiuisslons, lu- ' 'voluntary Discharges 1,00 More Jllonlb, Mauktr eo Urlutsry JnconsMnBe, wetting btd 60 Put n In! g-rltMla,eveu with Hnasms 60 Knllerluivsial change or life 1.00 F.plle.tsyi tipasms, St. Vitus Danoe 1.00 Dlpliiharln nlcersted flora I 'ihroat 60 FAMILY CASfM. " 29, ai, " 32, " S3, " M, 86 rials, morooo case, and book ,..,. f 10 00 20 large vlels, to morocco, and book 6 00 20 large vials, plain oaaa and book.......... I 6 00 to noxes inos. i to ioj, snawwi w VETERINARY BPEC1FICS. ' sfaahrwanvcaees. 10 rials f 10 00 8fnBlevlsls,with directions M 1 00 atdrTheM Bomedies. bv tbe case or tingle box. are sent to any part of tba country, by Hell or Express free nl cnarge, on receipt oi ine price, anum HUMPH BEYS' BPEOIFIO 1 HOMSOPATUiO MEDICINE COUP ANY, Office and Depot. No. 663, Broadway, New York Da- HtrnHDar is eonsuitea aatiy at nis oince, porsonally or by letter, as above, for all forms of dis- Sap amltiViv R. E. 8 AMTJKL9. BOHDELEB A CO.. O.HOBtBTS, and B. JOriCB A SON, OolumbQS.O. aagin i SEWING MACHINES. THE FLORENCE Sewing" Machine, MRU. B. A. I. JANNBT, AORNT, HE (CPS ooDBtaatlf on baotl aa elegant uiortn.utof lorence Sewing Machines I 'h. ,er, bait for faallr in. lb. uoel attraotlre ud popnl.r uaolilo. lo tbe matkel. j MM Itmraaltle raed, - Makes ITaar Iklirweat Hlllchee, la Alnioat Molaeleas, t la Kaalljr Hsttt la Ordar,' Work, l.tKhtlr, au4 Never Hklpe Hlltehea. Uom the hetrleet or Bare! work wltb eqaal faollllT. and wary aaobla. warraatod lo baall Ibal la olaltu-ad for It. I.OBkNCK NKWINO Bl ATHIM K S'O., Oeo'l Western A(.aoy, M West Foartk St., Uuelnoall.Uklo. ALSO Finkle & I.Ton Sewing Haehiutu lieke, the nao etllob and dnee tbe saaa teen of work. Tbe regulation or Ibis Mubloe I. eo well otabllsbed la lull viclaltjr, that II aeeda no minor eomneat. llnpertor Bieonin, till, nieatH, Tore,,, ,n, sii BMtMnary artloto. lor keeplBB la order and repair uieo, bigitiy a.aiii.r ImcU. Slllch NnwInK Hacblne, UBS. B. A. B. JANNBT, ,.n, ' IsTalOat UI Broad elre.t,Uoloubaa, Jr. X X JVC 3Vt M Xs , WholeiaHandBotall DMler'la . 1 t PLANBRft KEISEH, BINOEH'S IMPROV. ED BLOA1), KLKPTIC, W11KELER & WILSON, ANU WILCOX A UlBUtj' SEWINO MldHIJIEN Aleo, B4 BNtm'fl BEI.F BBWBB, l, ,i knd, of Bewlnl Hachloee, Frlnalpal UBn Mo. 4, Opera Bottee, Oolantbns, O. STAneaUwablld. UpaO aod lo 'aaC.''i . .W?; HARDWARE. J. M. STUART & CO., Mo. 16 Sonlh niKb at.. Uantttaotoren and Wboleeale and Betall Daelen IB Tin, Copper, ABO SHEET -IRON WARE 1 roBwoks j Ol all kind! Bioontod with ,' CToMtXaosaa tan X31anxatol t 8, a Oo. keep eonslantl on hand a larg. eatort awnl of QRATE", AND WHITE MARBLI AND - MARBLE1ZED 8LATE, AND j IRON MANTLES, . j Cooking & Heating Stoves LAWSON'S BOX-AIR FUENA0K8, ABB ' ' ' j Lotze's English Range. Also, all kind! of House Fu rnlah ing Goods PUMPS, JAPAN-WARR, KTC th. llotad " AltiliiaATOK " Utwl Oook Blon, and tb.Jnetly oelebraUd "S TEWARIf Uook aud Heeitna stove alwavi oa haaoa deoUeodlr I CIGARS. HKNBT UlNKEt, No. 9S7 Sonln Hltrb Mtrcei, Colniabae, Mannractorer and Dealer la OONHEOTIOXJT AND OHIO SBSD OZOAI18. A lerge lot oonsUntlron hnnd t ths towsst mar kt prlcss nnglft sod MEDICAL. LIF-"MLTff-"-STBEN&TH TBE GRE1T FBESff H REMEflY. D B. JUAN DEL AM ARRK'3 eltlratel Spelilc Pillv, Prepared from a preemption of Dr.Juan DtU amarre, Cftt lynvctan oj the Hospital du Hard ou Lariboisttre rivHlS lNVAlallAnLV MEOU INI IB NO IM A noplilou. Lnt is nnUllina In tlie euro of 8pr mntorrbto or Hsmlunl WenkooM. Kitty spsolss of UfitltftI or tirluBrjr iiratMstnif, inroiuaiary or Niariiilv SflUlBkl Amissions front wlintstTsr onats proiiaciiu. or nowevur seTare, win v pmuiij to-hv0d nut) the orgHus rustotMl to bsnliUy nollou. Aaf tU following opfa.mu nfwiitsnt Freuok 'Ph- iiomw. . , I WsliHft ui& tits Piwiflo Pills nrsnsrod by Osr nnclsrA Uunont. No. UU Bus t.on)lnrJ. frvmUis umcriniltin oi ur. jusn iniMirre. inmr pn prsctlcs with anirorm snccftss, nnil wo bslUvs tbsr ll no otbtr medicine lo wsll cnlcnUVod to cure nil uanons suffttafE from InToluutArv Emissions or nny oiuer witKU'H ui ih r.ut v KaUB wiwiun csuimI by ft ssdenttTy ninde of U-tnR. siow. or blue. I. a. dibukm'auii, mi. v, U. U. UUJ&UU.N, V. U JUAN LA LKUtJHftA. M.D. Pails. Afnyotb, 1863. f , , Bewttre oi' )onulerIIW- Tbs (isnnlna Pills r sold bv all llm nridclDsl DriiKgltUi tliroughout tbs World. Prist On Dolimr pT box, or Dtx uoisa ior rive Uaiiiars. 4 UAHAnnuitK A Dufont, Sols Proprietors, No. Kit Kno Lombard, Paris. Ons Dollar (tnolosed to any autbotUed Aicsnl. will Insnraabox by return inail, scnrly senlsd (torn sit oMarvaiion. nix nuvesiornvsoouars. Bow Usnstnl Agnts lor Anisrloa, VNt AK . MOMKM, aSWO.. il7O0urtlandtHl.. n. V. Jy 17 ton tod aw alt ly C0NHUMPTION.-WIN('HK8TtR'rJ Gl&NUlMdt BVPOPliOHPIIITCHflbs oalr re.M.un,a. u u. Or. CbnrcbfU'ff remsdr hava attaliwd a raoulatfon u ano uHitj ui euiiautnpuuu. --uupaniiisMl in ine mm nalsof nsdlclna." Asa nsrroas lonlo. th H vdo. nbospbites am inpsrior to anytblua bsratofors buuwu, win 10 mr EastMui naumaii ueuiiiiy, warn 01 straugth, Ottsh aud appetlU, dyiipepBla, nenralgta. paraiybis. curonm Diournmi, Mtnnia, soronila, it Is tbsuos stttoaclous treatment kuown. , A (air trial is a oriatn curs, tuircniar rrs.) Pkiois: In T 01. and IH on. boHlaa. 11 and sob; etuiallor 3 largs tot ties tor S, byasyia Hold by all respeotai'' drnggtats, atad ft tba so lnral dspot, wuo.esalsnniTreiail, by J WinUHESTKll. feblt ly sodAw WJobn straat, M.T. Tj YON'S PeriodicalDrops THE OB CAT rlHALK BEHEDT TOM IRREdJULARITIESs nrvHiaa dbopb abb a boibntiiiually 1 comoonnded fluid nreDaratlon. and tMttar thn any Pills. Powdsrs, or Host rams. Bring liquid, tbulr action ts direct and positive, rsnderlng Cnam a rltsbls, spsody and csrtaln spsclflc fjr tbs tnrs of all obstraollons and snnprMslons of natnro. Tksir popularity Is Indicated by ths fact thai oyer 100,000 ootiiM ar aanaM7 oia ana coniumra ny lbs ladies of tha Dnitid Statu, sTsry ons of whom speak. ID .H ruugo). aniuil Ul pBHIN OI Ulir gTWI DlSr Its. ThtiY ara rapidly taklns tho nlaca of ar nth, sr Kmai namauy, aau are oonsiaBrca ny all wno know ansbt ot them, aa tbs anrest. safest, mnd moat is uiutt ie preparation in tns world for tbe cursor al nmaieocnipiamis, ine minorai or ail obetruMlons o nature, and the Promotion of healtta. rearaiarttv ind strength. Czplictt dlrsctlons stating when thsy nay bo need, and explaining when and whT the ahnnld not. nor C3Uld not be Uied Without Dradnelnar ffntM miiT roiaoa aronna racn twit a. with tha writ. an signature of Joan L. Ltoh, withoat which nous are gennine. rrspaiea ny nr. juni" as. iiiun, jws i;npst st.( New Uavsn, Oona., who can be oonsnltsd either ner scnally, or by mall, (enclosing stamp ) oonosrntng ail firivensj umaac, i w its t er ayDeaauaH. j ooiu ny vruggiM every -Ji..re. rrice gi ov. 4). O. OLARK A OO.. Q-n'l Agsnts tor D. fl. and Canada, fl. K. tttHniLaeOsoTAg't, Uoluubus. ep9 sod ly ROBACK'S bittesr ft BBENBAOKB AMfi QtMin, llu r 1 I ' ' Robacks are Better, r.u Ikouund IwiUh eolil lu oue tnunlli. TOa moM popular etoutaoU ltUre I. BOBAOK'S UUTKIIB. U.od tor all denng aMintaea, int. I.Hi.i,, kltrarttoatpluul -rJ .,! deblllly, ' UOIIACK'U IlWTERa Thwy POM.. wondHfnl Mule proiurlleo, glrln. Ion. lo tne appMlu aul - vhi. orgoua. H0HACKBJJI1TR8. Ostllltated UdlM, aud sdentary psrsoua will Oud in thein an eioelleni tonie. HOBACK'S UITTKBB. A wlaegtasaful before achmsalwill rsnaoys InJIgestlon aud allllrsrdU Thsy art better nan all Pills, Powders, and otha nauseous, disagreeable oonpoauds. HOHACK'N B1TTRBM. Iwsf eaa be taken wttbonl regard to dial. Ai aa appetiasr they bave uo enal, UOHACb ITXt:UN. Thsy ire prepared by an old and skillful physicist nom well-known rage tab Is ratnedles, Waerersr kuown thay have become a standard Isailly strsuatlmulug remedy. ROKAOH'N mrrF.BM. ' Try aa. Initio, d yoa will always an tin aad eo&imend IhMS to olhera. KOBACK'8 ItlYTERS. fl. W. KODAdU , Mala Proprlatar od Blood rtlle, and IHeUller aud MannBotarar oi ttau.be and Hwollih Uiaudlei, and all hlntt. of Ih. Boest doniMtle Hgoora, whioh ere .ols wbobHal or a eoy dealrul on.nlllyi al Mo., M, SB, eo and as Bait Third el Oloclnoatl, U. for eel. by ,ru(iel. and Dealer, la BfaaMraa eiywaer,. jean is Blew iYltili'SU'sVciVwa X Ul.lA.B01a, ' . : ' . ,i a-BUM-Trxxsrie PBEPABATIOIV MlQBLt OONCtHTRA TMD i OOBirUDBaV ' I I . -.1 . . FLDUjEXTRAOTBDOHO, a Potftlva a 8peoiflo Remedy for Dl-allDKB, BIUNETa, eBAVKI. aan Tbte Bladlcln, Inoreeif. tbe nowar of Dtnitlo od ,ioileeBe ABBUBUINTB Into health, aolloa i-y which Ibe W'ATKkYOU 04LCKB0UB deposition ud aii vnnATukjL aHLiuuMuantem r, luoad, ae well e D.ln aud tunammatlon, and ll Boot lor UEN, WOUKH.mvUILDtlMll. I :c M fllLMDOLD'3 KXTRAOT BfJOHU .MB WBAKMtttSBtl ' aarUlBSj rrom kioeeaee, Mablta or Dlaal. iluu, tcurljr InUletirelluu, ar Almen, I attihdbo with thb roLbuwiNa btmi : -: ' ' XOMSI ;. . I . t t. ladlsposltlon to Iierolw, torn of Power, Los. of Memory, Blmontty ol Broathloi, aMkaenw, :. Treaibllo, , Horror of Dleeaw, Wakefuluan, IHmnes. of Vision. r.ln In in. Baek, (Jnlr.rsal LsMimde of the flashing of the llodv, Hoeoal.r Byetom, Bntpllon on the Bar, Bot Hands, ; f.iid UoanUnaaw, Drynos.orib.tlkln, ' ' ThMoijmptomi, Hallowed lo go on, wnKo thia Bodloln.ln,.rlably ranoras, soou follow 1UPOTBKOT, ATDIT, BflLBPTIO 1TH, la on. of which th. n.tlanl bh ,im. wkA... ay that the; an not fleqaenll, followed by ihH dlraful JImua. ' T ' INSANITY AFincONHDsIPTIOBll Many are awar. of lha oanao of ihelr enH.,t bnt none will oonlMa, Ibe racordo of the lniaus Aeylom, and tha mel.noholy deathe by Contain, wa, Hai wiimb W H, ,t UkU.Ul IU. HMr tlon. THI OOHSTITDflOH, OSUM ATTKOliD WITS -. QmQANtQ RButatitifo'S, Bagnfrat thaald of aedfofaa to streosthen and la. fi(.r.M Ih. ir.tem, which HMLMBOtD'B BX-TkA OTB VOBB Inrarlahl, doM. . A trial will ooa- , lose th, mock skeptical. Fma!, F$ml$t, , Ftmaltt, CP OB rODNO, BINDLB. af ABBIfell, OB OB TIMI'LATINO MABHIAUX. In many aBMtlona paoctllar to BenaU. th.ni. Iraot Bacba Is nnoqoalled by any other remedy, as In Ohloroeu or Betentlon, Imgnlsrlty, P.tnralnec , it Boppmeton of tho Uiiitoni.ry BTacnatlons, Ul eerated or hchirrons state of lb Tftrue, Lenoonhea, r W blue, rjtorlllly, and lor all oonipl.lnw luelden lo th. aes, whether arising from Indiscretion, Habta ol PlaSlpatloa, or la lb. OltlUht OaB SIHANHR Or IJIVK. aa. arnproiu aaoa. SO fAWtV bhould ns WITHOUT it aka no Balsam. Usroory, Unp lest ant Ueicln lor Unpleasant and Dangtktons uusases, Maes. ' BUUHU UKIiMBOLD'3 EXTRACT CURES ' Secret Dlsoasoa In all their itaaM. al tittle ,ap.aM, Itttl. oii'na ahauga In diet, uu luconveuUuo,, AND MO EXiVONIIBjU. It oanses fretinant desire, and (Was strength ia Urinate, therebv temofluB obslruc lions, nrevsntlna and oarlaxtttrlcturttsor tbs Urethra, allaying pats and In flaw mat Ion, eo A-eqoent In tbls olass ut die eeeee, and uplllajf POlOVtiOVO DiaMAaUD, A Urn Thonsands upon Tbousantli " WHO HA VMBMEM THIS VI C VI Met OM And who have paid Butt Tans tobs oared In a bort time, bare found they were deceived, aud that ha 'Potsou" has, by tbe use of "Powerful Astrtu tenta." been dried In the mtsm. ho bisak ont lu aa aggravated firtns, and . fiiRHAPB A FT EH MARHIAOl xjmm Belmbold's Extract Buchn ' for all A Bsc t Ions aLd Dlisasss of ' THE CBINARX ORGAIi.lt tfbsther siliting la HAliB Oft VBMALI, from . wbaltwer oauas originating, and no matter Of How Mtug NlAndiiiffl iMasasH of tbsas Organs require tha aid of a Pinrstio. HELKatOLD'S BITICT BUCIIO IS THB 0B1T DIOBtTIO, and H M oartala to ban th. daflred .Beet la all P asM for waloh U a raooiaueuded. BLOOD I B1.001K BLOOD II! Helmbold'a Highly Oonoeatrated Oomponnd Fluid Extract Sarsaparilla. STPaiisis. This la an aBsoUen'r tba Blood, and atU'ks tbs aaxnal Organs. Linings of ths Nose, Bars, Thioat, Windpipe, and other M none Warfares, making 1 ts ap pearaaoe la the form of Dicers, Belmbold'a 1 street Barseparilte pniifles the blood, and removes all other at nations of the akin, giving to (hs oompleiloa a olear and healthy color. It being prepared express) f tor thts class ot eompiainis, ih Diooo-pnn tying prop ertles are prosorvod to a greater extent than any ot b sr preparatioa oi awi-wiwutBai x Helmbold's osd Wash. an vfttlleni Itotlon for Diseasas of a BvnhtlM Na- rnre, and as aa injection In Diseases ot the Urinary Organs, arising nom habits of dissipation, and lo Connection wiiu u uiikm ouvun nun eeiyeiii" la, In such diseases as recomtnendod. Bvtdeooeot ths must responsible and reliable onir aoter will accompany the medlolnse. ' Crltttoatea of Cnra from eight to tvsnty veaqi standlag, with aauss known io mOlMtOM AND r.AM. for msdloal properties of BUOR0, MalMspetua lory of the United tltates. fee Professor DUWMIW valnabls works oa the Practice of Physio. Bee remarks made by the late oelebra ted Dr. tPiftt tOK, Philadelphia. Haa. remarks madeby Dr. BPIfBan IM Me DO WJ,L. a oelebrated Physlolaa, aad atembet of the Boyal College of Burgeons, Ireland, and published In tba Transactions oi nv ning ana wneen s tioumii. tie neaioO'Uirurgicai ueview. puuiuuen uy omn-JAM IN THA VUU6, tolXon ot the Boyal Oof lege of surgeon. - nee most Ol tne lave njnuira wvrae pa Amouioiae, Bxtract Buchn. ........fl 00 per bottle, or six for IA 00 " Barsaparllla 1 00 6 00 fmprev'd Itoae Wash 00 " BM Hr half a dosen of eaoh tor 111. which wtl! besum atenttooore the moat obstinate oases, If dlreotloa aie aauerea to. Deliverable to any add rem, securely peeked rrom observe t luii. DMorlbe symptoms In all eommnnltiatloM, Uoim guaranteed. Advlosgralli. AFFIDAVIT. F.nonally appMnd be tor. ne, .a Ald.ru.a el Ih. ottyof rhllad.lphla, n. T, Uelmbold, wbo, bolus d.ly .worn, doth ay bl. preparallone oonl.la no uarooetlo, ao Meronry, or other lalorloos dtoa,, bat are purely yagauhle. a. T. elKLIIBOI.I). Bworu aud .obsortbed before Me, Ihle day .1 Noteubor, 11M. w. r. aiBUABU, Alderman, Kioto ., abor. Boss W.sb. AddTMS Utters foi Infbnn.tlou to . a. T. MLaniiui, Ob.alst. II PBINIPAI, III POT Halabold'a Draa aad Ohaaloal W.r.boas.. ts Broadwey, New Vurkj Or. Helmbold'a Medleal VOPOV, tMta Tenia tlra.1, rblladalpbla. BSWARKOI OOUNTBRFXITB And enprinolplad dealers, who endeavor todhutoai -orldBlKOWK" aad ''olber" arllou on Ik.Titv .tattoo atulo by Uelmbold'l Qnnla, rraparallona, " " , Bllraot Buha, " " BaraaptriUa. " " IsspnvMi Boa. W&l. fold bf all Drealala anrjwaan. At 10 HBLHBOLlrt-rAtaKO OTB BR. Ool ont th. ad,.rtls.B.at, and wind for II AVOID IMHBJITIOM AMUaXPOBUBB. a II. BOBBKTBA UO., WboloMl, Asuts, Mo. M North Ulah street Itohtnboe O.. who will nppl y th, trad, at MeaaBMinrMe' trices. aov7 cteweow
Object Description
Title | Columbus morning journal. (Columbus, Ohio), 1865-11-15 |
Place |
Columbus (Ohio) Franklin County (Ohio) |
Date of Original | 1865-11-15 |
Searchable Date | 1865-11-15 |
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 | sn84028628 |
Reel Number | 10000000027 |
Description
Title | Columbus morning journal. (Columbus, Ohio), 1865-11-15 page 1 |
Place |
Columbus (Ohio) Franklin County (Ohio) |
Searchable Date | 1865-11-15 |
Submitting Institution | Ohio History Connection |
Type | Text |
File Size | 3933.01KB |
Full Text | AMERIOAN. REMEDIES' COMLY.ROBY& SMITH. . t ii" r fl Ns 19. aUi.Vl Volume xxviii! COLUMBUS,! OHIO, WEDNESDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER " MOWll AS NUMBER 102 . aMIBTBB AMD FSBhlSaBD ( f Tf RM8 OF 8UW3PBIPTION. Ii ISBUS Of TBI DAILT JOVBlf AL. tagl SubecMxra, 1 Tear, hy Bail IS 00 fltasl. Bqbicrlhei,, 6 months, " H 4 59 ' Stngh flnboorlbero, 8 months, M '...m-4....... B 31 Slnal. BoUcrlberi, 1 month. 0 HO Blugl. Subscribers, par moutb, .dellrered bf OArriar .. .... 0 80 Blo.le Subscribers. ' par woek. d.llT.reJ by Toa;'i'a o'iib.:'ii' i f una or the ii-whilt journal. ' Blnglaaalnrrlbara.liaar. ..................,..... 60 ft i i ii ih v i if Blnsl. llubscrlberl, 1 Booth... B ., , - . - " "!"" o to tbbni or tbb wbbklt soubb-m. I ' finale Babsoriben, par y.ar.. ........t.. ...... I 00 terms of Advertising. I Dill, Oh. Bqo.re, each Insertion . , bueclaJ Notice, par Square, each later- 0 7S tiou .: 11 a . liooal and Basinets notice., par Hue, l wok Insertion 0 20 Wf antr On. Saoeie, each loaertlon 1 fit) .,, jacalaad Business notice., per Una, ' 1 aaoh lniertlon...M 0 to ajar One iqaara cover, tbrea-'qaartere of an loch or apacala taecoiaaroeaf in.o'ooBiut...i., Bf Harris.:. Iforlee, will hereafter laT.rl.bly be onargea o, aente wnen anaer n.e iineo, ana ou onu per iqoire When oooopyiog more epaoa. Funeral of Lord Palmerstoa Wrier.) tie le Ilniied noouea at I tie Grave) -arunarai aes-vlcea. k - The London- JVmrtgives In detail the in cidents and particulars of the burial of I Lord Palmeriton and the attendant cere monies. The plaoe of burial is .thin di I ooribed, : ' i ' j' Where Lord Falmerston lies the rou is thickly sown with illu'lrious seed.. On bis left are Lord Chatham and the two sreat rivals Fltt and Fox ; at his feet, Caa- ' - ning, the leader by whom lie abided so faithfully, and his son, the Viceroy ef India, . whom he supported, through good and evil report, with zeal, firmness, and loyally. nearer the door lies urattan ; . end again, . on the other side, Wilberforce, and a name aa detested as hie own by the enemiea of i aglanu Castlereah. , orer his bead tow- J era lbs monomenrof Lord Chatham, "where," as Lord Maoauly sayt, 11 with eagle eye and , ontatretchsd arm, the great commoner seems to bid England, be of good cheer and hurl -' defiance at her foes," and on the oth( side the statue of Canning seems almost ,to ' turn; to (the new comer as if; to bid him welcome. N oarer still is the monument of Lard Mansfield, the great judge, butenually reat as the." silver-tongued " orator of the ,Xtm of Commons; and hard by, though ' hit ashes dcr not rest here, the statue of Sir r Robert Peel oommsmorales a saroer nof so lengthened, hut hardly leea suocessfulior v - lssadiaunguithed by public services. Lord , i Palmeriton e grave lies immediately at the ' -j foot of the ambitious trophy which has been ' " railed to three of Lord Hodney's naval offi-cers, and in opening it, Is said that- lha ii workmen struct on the virgin earth and brought up a light sand, which must have 7fart tha nvtitinal anil n -T-V !Y atk.a I formed the original soil on which the abbey is bulla, . Tne vault, which goes only seven feet down from the pavement, ie lined with encaustic tiles. ' ,. '-- KOIRIS WITHIN TBI ABBEY. . The nave was set apart for the general publio, and from the great west door lo tlie entranoe of the choir, this part of the building was entirely filled, a narrow alloy only being reserved through which the prooersion passed. Here were ranged up to the choir gates the tonantry and the laborers of the Romsoy estate, firty-eight in number, who had been brought up in a special train yes-: terday morning. All were dressed in the deepest mourning, and among the laborers there were some who could not have numbered fewer years than the generous and considerate friend they have just lost in Poet' Corner, a graat gallery bad been hastily, erected, sarpeted, and draped with black olotb, which occupied the whole of b earth eranaar-, tatej up frnm lh A-w of the aisle almost to the fringe of the tri- forlum. - From this more of the ceremony could be seen than from any other single point, and here were seated the members of r .l .i e n.-i:. i k.j.e ...kUh I both Houses of Parliament, headB of public aepartmenie, euu memuora oi me uiimury and oivil services. Of ail the men who have mads thsmselves a name In publio life few were miesing. All shades of political opinion wers represented, though the great bulk belonged to the party which has long considered Lord Palmerston as its honored ehief, and has given him such firm and enthueiastlo support. . . , ,. , ABRIVAL Or THK PEINC1 OF WALKS. The Prince of Wales, attended by Qeneral ' Knollys, Major Grey, and Lord A. Hervey, arrived soon after 12 o'clock, and alighted at the deanery, whence he was conducted by the dean to his stall, on the right of the dean's stall; and the puke of Cambridge, whs oame shortly afterwarda, was placed to ths left of the sub-dean. One o'olock was fixed for the eommsnoement of the service, but long before that time all the speotators bad taken their places, and the point to which all eyee centered In the interval of lilenoe and expectation wae the north transept. This part was kept perfectly clear, and full in view was the narrow grave which was to receive the mortal remaine of ths dspartsd slatssman. ' ' THE rURIBAL SIBVICI3. j , As the proaession moved slowly along the nave the choir sang the opening asntences of the burial ssrvlos, "I am the Resurrection and the Life," "I know that my Redeemer Llveth," to Sr.' Croft's music. As thsy reached the ohoir the mourners took their seats in the stalls which had been marked out for them, and the coffin, covered with a richly emblasoned pan, wae deposited on treaties at the foot of the altar steps. The pall-bearers alone remained by II, while the Ninetieth Psalm was chanted to Purcell's music; and as thsy stood there, a central (roup, on whioh every eye was fixed, it was mpoesible not lo speculate on the thoughts which must be filling their minds as they discharged this last duty to one who, to most of them, had been for so many years a loyal Colleague, a genial friend and companion and a sagaoious leader, with whom tier had shared so many wsighty responsibilities, and whose name had been In then all a tower of itrength. Earl Russell stood . in his oharactsristic o-ttitnde, with erosaed arms and bent head, which he sever raised; "Mr. Gladstone's- face was paler and more mournful than usual the Lord Chancellor was evidently deeply touched. At the conclusion of the chant, the sub-dean, Lord J. Thynne, read the sublime lessen from the 18th or the 1st Corinthians, and as the body ' we borne to the edge of the grave Mr. Tnrla slaved with wonderful effect the Funeral March of Beethoven.. , j . . TBI SCINI! BTtHI 01AVI, j . where the reet of the eervios was perform ed, was the moat imposing part of the day's - lolemnlly.' As the body left the choir, the procession was reformed, the - dean and ' nlara-v leadlnf. and the whole body of mourners following Into ths transect. The Prince of Wales and the Duke of Cambridge walked on each side or the dean, ana tool their plaoee on a daia whioh had been erected for them by the aids of ths dean'B read-' inavdeik. Oa the eastern sids of the tran sept a platform, draped In blaok cloth, was , . arscted, oa which was arranged the choir, strengthened for the ocsasion by pioked ' voices from 8U Pauls, ths Chapel Royal, and the Temple ohoir. At the foot of the a-rava stood lbs chief mourner, the Rev. Mr. . Hnlllvan. and bv bis side Lord Shaftesbury, ' Lord Cowper, Mr. W. Cowper, the youthful I Lord Jeoelyn, and other oonnections of Lord Palmeraton. The cabinet ministers were ranged on the left, and on the other side were grouped the rest of the moueners in a mass, which, though it numbered ever two hundred persons, looked at from above seemed lost in the vaet proportions of the transept - The beautiful muaio in which Pgrcell and Croft have clothed the solemn ' ssntenoel "Man that is born of woman," -ln ths midst of life," and "Thou knowest. ' . Lord,"' was sung by the ohoir, and as ths . ,i last notes were hushed every head wae bent - forward to oatah a last glimpse of the ooffln aa It elowlv eank into lha vault beneath. V ikon Dean Stanley read in tonep eo clear - anal dietinct. and so sxqulsitely modulated, ' as to be audible in the farthest recesses, the ; 'aledlotory 'prayer, ' Forasmuch as it has ' pleased Almighty God," and as the words, ' Dust to duet, aahee to ashss," ware pro-' nounoad. the ohlef mourner, as a last prs- oious offering.' to the dead, threw Into the grave several diamond ana (old rings, v. y , " - heard a Toio from heaven," was sunt;, and tha dean read the Uoileoi ana to wra Prayer. Ai ha ended i ; ; ! J a violin stobji brake over the Abbey. enveloping the grave anil i ha arum) around It in a denie oioud, hioh .imMi hid them from sight. From out of this thiok darkness the strains of I Uandel'a anthem, "Hie body ia buried In I peace," now sinking into low, soft mourn. fulness, now rising into jubilant exultation a-,.l 1 1 1. Ika InH .!.. IIM 1111 Boated Uirough the lofty aisles, and when tbsy tied away, the service oonoiuneu wim the blessiog. The Frlnoe of Wales and the Duke of Cambridge lingered some moments by the sldeot the grave, and alter tney ten, as the "Dead March in Baul" pealed out, llm rent of the mourners Dressed round to gaze upju the narrow bed in whieh )I)S all that is mortal of the great minister. After ilia rlanarhira of the nrinoiDal nersonasee. all the sneotators in the other parts of the I Abbey were admitted to the ohoir to see the grave, and some noura eiapaau ueiur, iu erowd oleared away, and the Abbey was left in lis usual soutuae ana solemnity, ; October Poetry. A London weekly paper pokes fun, as follows, at current rhymes and rhymesters of autumn The minor posts, like brewers, seem to re serve themselves for a great effort in the month of October. The magaiines of the month teem with unwonted quantitiea of versa, uut unluokirr the parallel dots not hold a-ood all through. - The October brew ofale is the beet in the year. of ale is the best in the year. The brew of r,netrv ia lha verv stalest and washiest.- Bound October ale is pleasant In ths mouth and wholesome in the stomach, and, like wine, maketh glad the heart or man. Jlut the poetry which has oume into the market alooii with the ale produoes just the oppo site set of effects. It is as vinegar to the tcetb and as smoke to the eyes; it is harsh to the ear, and empty and soulless to the understanding. And the most curious thing is dfiat this season It is all the same. Out of the dozen sets or verses wiui which the autumn month is welcomed there is not found one deoent set, no, not one. Can there be such a thing as an Infectious murrain among poets, as there is upon the beasts of the field 1 If so, why does not the same providential rule which prevente a -dieordered cow from giving milk, extend to poets, and prevent them from sivine verse ? Bad verses, beeides. leave us worse off than bad milk. If the cow fails, we may fly to the ass; but when the magailne poets fail, what other asses have we to fly to? The force of nature can no further go, and we are left verseless. No doubt there are some people to whom lamentable failure of tho monthly crop of poetry will be a serions deprivation. Somebody, we presume, must like magaiine poetry, or else it would oease to appear. Or it may be possible that, like sermons, nearly everybody hales the poetry, but usage and tradition, and the wishes of a wiok-headed minority, prevent the abolition of so tedious k fher, ,re p,on9"who find 'the . . ... and unprofitable an ordance. However, we thinnest discourse of the feeblest of curates largely useful for edification, once a week ; and - so, - very likely, there is a similar ' olass- who are equally delighted to surrender their emotions once a month to be atirred to their very dopthB by tho waahiest of poets, and find themselves braced by the process, it is so refreshing, eoelevatinr, to bo led away by the ttiatfio hand of the poet from tho sor did cares and petty turmoil of everyday life, up into the punned regions or tender thought and lofty Imaginings. Of course it is nart of the theory of perfect life, in our time, that a man ought to give his emo tions towards the beautiful a bath or a brush up at given periods. Poetry, as Mr. Tupper might say, ia the wash-leather and briok-dust of the soul. A mind tarnished and blunted by much use is rendered bright and sharp by a turn or two on the poetio knife- board. On this theory it is clear mat poe-irv nai i Krichl or.arta' It is a notorious fallacy to conclude that ths quality of the oauas must resemble that of the edeot. Anything will answer the cleansing pur- pose, provided It is printed eo as to look lllra varan rtnd la written in a anffioianllv like verse, and is written in a sufficiently vague style. I'roteaiRiitlaiza in Italy. A moating in behalf of the cause of Pro testant Evangelism in Italy, wae held at the ohurcb of the Key. Henry Ward Beeoher, in Brooklyn, on Sunday artornoon. The time aeleoted for holding the meeting was unfa vorable, being the hour at which a large proportion of those interested in the cause are engaged in other dutiea, and the meeting, oonseqnently, waa not as large as otherwise it undoubtedly would have been. The principal address was made by the Rev. Prol. A. Tacchella, or Milan, a gentleman of Due address and acquirements, who has devoted many years to arduous and perse vering labors in behalf of Protestantism in his own country. Prof Tacohella commenced his address by remarking that he regretted to see so few persons present, aa the subject which he desired to bring to their notice was one very dear to his heart, and ons In which hs could not believe any member of any Christian denomination was uninterested. He spoks of ths prominent position whioh Italy had so long occupied in the world's history. For centuries the dominant nation of the earth, ruling over half of Europe, and pushing its oonquesta across the intervening waters into Afrioa and Asia. As a military power she had stood nnequal-ed. In soience and in art, the names or her sons vet stood among the brightest on the rolls of fame. Before the languages of Franoe or h-ngland had been organized, she had a literature whose maatar-pieoes were yet used as models in every oivilUed na tion, iiong years or mieruie ana spiritual and physical tyranny had reduced this glorious country from her once proud posi tion, but the spirit of her people was not yet destroyed, xneir conauoi in tne late struggles of 1848 and 1859 proved that they bad yet among them the spirit to become a great nation. The Austrian power had been almost entirely expelled from Italy. The Papal power had been immensely re duced. Twenty years ago toe rope claim ed temporal control over a,uuu,uuu ol people, Now his subjects numbered less than 600,- 000. Even more remarkable than the growth of political liberty in Italy had been the tendency to religious treeuoni. Bixiy prom inent oities had already accepted rroiesi- antiam. In Milan alone, the speaker's own home. 4.000 persons had made profes sion of that faith, and 2,00U of thess, after long and atriot probation: bad buuu acoepted into the choreh. These periods were nearly an oi ine pourer, woraiug alaaaea. The tendenor to a reformed re ligion wae equally strong in outer parts or the Kingdom. Two things were now prominently needed to develop. The first of these was a popular journal in tho inter ests of Protestantism. The Italians are I .A.iiart vtAAnla. and tha nonnlar newana 1 --..- C I 1 1 w f a r iare avaroisa an immense influence. The leaders of the Catholio ohuroh, aware of this, wsre attempting to bolster up that waning power by controlling all the public prints. Whether these olaimed to be literary, scientific, or devoted to general information, they were, almost without ex ception, in the interests of Catholloism. Ths cause of Protestanism required such a nonnlar means of reacbing tne pumic ear, Such a Journal had been in existence for a number of years, and bad aohieved a vast amount of good, but, circulating princi pally among the lower slaeees, it has never proved peouniarly successful. Its capital was now oxnauaieu, auv nuuuui ysuuuiaij aid it must oease. The following story is told of Professor Wilson's method of giving hie daughter to Aeimin: "frofeiior Ferrier married a daughter of John Wilson, and edited the Collected edition Ol uib i-iun-m-in i wnrVa. It Is of his brother, Professor Ay toun, who stood in the same rslation to Christopher North,' that a story is told relative to the successful Issue of his oourt- ahln. He took the opportunity of 'declar ing h'e intentions, one morning when North was in hie study, aecompaniid by lha vaunt lady. Aa soon aa be finished his explanation, whoee purport the reader may oonceive, and waa awaiting with some ..Aural anxiety the result, Professor Wilson, saying nothing, took np one of the numer-nna nreeentation volumes lying around. and tearing out a fly leaf, with the inscription 'with ths author's compliments,' pinned it in Me danihtar's dress, and haodid her "I to young Aytcun without a worn. ... ... . o ... . ... . . Hon. Jaeab Collamier. The death of the Hon.. Jaoob Collamir, United States Senator from Vermont, took plaoi at hie residence in Woodstock, on Thursday evening, Nov. 8. Mr. Cellemor was seventy-tnree years oi age at tne time or his death, having been born In Troy, a. Y , in 1792. He belonged to the family of uolismores or oclluate. Maes- but the or. thography of the name was ohangsd In the line or hit immediate ancestors, iiaving reoeived his education at Burlington Col lege, where he was graduated in 1810, he studied law at St. Albans, and became a memoer or thenar in that piaoe in ltJiz.- After a brief military service in defense of the Northern frontier, during the war with ureat unlaw, he devoted himself to ths practice of law, until 1838, when he was elected an associato juitloe ef the Supreme Court of Vermont, havingpreviously (erved ror several dinerent terns as a member or cut Stale Legislature. He continued on the bench until 1842, when he declined a re election. . . In 1848 he was chosen a representative to Congress, which office he filled with rare diligenoe and hdelity till laid, when be declined being a oandidate for the fourth term, un the accession or ueneral Tay lor to the presidency in 1849. he was ap pointed postmaster-general, and ably dis charged tne duties or that post ror about sixteen months, in ibou he was siscted judge of the Supreme Court of Vermont, and wes annually re-eieoiea uuui tne autumn or 1864, when be was chosen to a seat In the United States Senate, which be retained for the remainder of his life. Mr. Collamer was a man of strong and earnest oonvis-tions, of nncommon independence in the formation and expression of his opinions, a sturdy advooate of freedom and human rights, and a devoted lover or the Federal Constitution. In the sooial relations of life, he was a model of integrity, of singularly modest and kindly manners, though immovable in adhering to hie own views of rigni, rrse rrom an guile and artinoe, a man of few words and no pre teniae. Ann 1'or inwnt. Sere;eaat Corbett'a rather a ftfona- ananlao. i Bartholomew Corbett. aged 89. father of Sergeant Corbett, who shot Wilkes Booth, had been conveyed to the Marvlebone (London) Workhouse Infirmary so very ill, and his head so dreadfully swollen from erysipelas, that it was thought he could not possibly survive many hours. For many years past, says a London paper, the old man has lived in a small back room in Chapel street, Edgware road, and for the last seven ysars no one bnt himielf bad entered the place. lie was understood to bs a taxi dermist, and wae considered to be very clever at his business. Nothing having been seen or heard of him for aome days, tha police were called in, and the door broken open, when the room waa found' to be filled with rubbish, and Corbett was seen orouohed in a corner, in a state of de lirium, lie wae removed at onoe to the workhouse. The room, from the floor to the celling, was found to be crammed wUh oases of stuffed birds, books, and papers. The latter were carefully covered and labeled, and many of them appear to be of value. An avenue, three feet high by two feet wide, and formed or elutted birds, So., led to a reoess, not muob larger than ths ints- orof an ordinary siied portmanteau, and this eccentric individual must have slept in the recess for many years. - ; Madera Kallroad TrtevellnaT- 1 The romanoeis "clean gone' out of mod ern traveling. The story of one eld egg- bsped coaoh that hatched out its nine inside; that was more of a dloe-box than an egg, and tumbled people into eaoh other's laps until it 11 played the deuce " with them, and ihey paired off and pledged faith and were one, used to read uico an old bauad. nut tne railway car isa Qauker meeting upon wheels. Ths passengers, absurdly labeled ike express packages, with red, yellow or reen ucxets in inoir nata ait lumnu-ay iiao a uuua oi lettered Bheep waiting to bs salted, contsmplala " water falls, .the organa of love and fight and the napes of sach other's necks. It is solemn and ridiculous, i That sorting cut of the flock; putting the ribbons in one car and the whiskers in another, while it fails lo benefit the ribbons, is a positive damage to tbo whiskers when it is not a positive elandor. Pen men up logelher. and if they do not behave like cattle it will be in spite of the pen. Ladies sprinkled through the oars keep the entire train upon its honor; give it a human and home-like look; refine travel and elevate tbe car from a common sarrier to an eduoator. "To have known a fine woman is a liberal eduoation," ie an old Eng lish utteranoe good enough ror a proverb. But thlB segregating fashion ie barbarous and worthy of the Turks. Chicago Journal. Ilia Eudowmea! al aalloeb Cellcaja- The committee chosen by the National Convention of Unitarian Churches, to raise an endowment of $100,000 for Antiooh College have made a report ooncerning their action thus far. On the 2Vd or October, the subscriptions immediately available amounted to 108,794, and have been inverted in 7-80 bonds for the endowment of the College. The committee feel encouraged In their project of bringing up the fund to $250,000 by three specific assurances from different quarters of an intention to ssnd on full professorships of $20,000 or of $25,-000 at a very early date. Similar aid is also asksd from wealthy Unitarians, whils small contributions, to the aggregate of $70,000, from those less able, will, with as surances already made, complete tne above mentioned endowment, the college buildings, library and apparatus. Among ths subscriptions acknowledged are $20,000 from California for the Starr King professorship at Antioch; $12,884 to ths Amos Carter profejiorship; $9,600 to the Chan-ning professorship, $4,000 to tha Llvermore professorship, and $9,280 from tho First Church in Roxbnry for a professorship not yet named. Subscriptions not yet comple ted amount, as reported, to 920,1011. Slasrnlar Dlaeovery. The Lafayette Cbun'ir relates the follow ing singular discovery and identification of the remains or a aaceaiea soiaien 1 About a year ago a widow lady of an ad Joining county lost a much loved son in the army, and was at oonsioeranie expense in having his rsmains orcugnt noms ror in torment. Some time last month agentel man from Ohio, in ssarching for the re mains of a brother near Chattanooga, dis covered that tbe grave had been opened and the body removtd. By reliable; date, he traced the corpBO to the house or an un dertaker in Nashville, and from thence by express to Lafayette. The mistake was ap parent. Arriving in tnis city last wees, ne found a clue to the attlicted mother, and seeking an Interview, made a statement of the facts and obtained the privilege of opening the grave. The Dody was exhumed and the remains Identified aa those of hie brother by a trepan of the skull, which bad bssn occasioned py a io or a horse before the deceased entered the army, The remains were given up, and the gen tleman presented the widow with a eum euSoient to seoure the remains of her son and remove them to Indiana. latoxleatlas; IJaaaora. More than 100.000,000 gallons of lntoxl- eating liquors are manufactured In the United states aanuauy. un inta mere ibonld be an internal revonue of $200,000,- 000, whereas there le only $26,000,000 naid. thus defrauding the Uovernment 0 S176.000.000. A traffio whioh thus origin ates in ain ana aisnonesiy, cannot neget verv deslrabls results. Here is ins record More than 140,000 drunkards die every year. More than 200,000 hard drinkers in the world. Thus tte vast army or rum vio- tints array thsmselves in frightful altitude before us. One hnndred and forty thou sand every yeart During this war, 700,-000 souls have gone to perdition by rum. Where ie there a parallel ior late r war, with its missiles of death,' is waak In the comparison, ! There appears to bs a gnat falling off in the number of time-keepers this year. Thus tha total imported to August 81, wae only 149,910, as compared wita ziz,sid in 1B04, and 196.287 in 1868 (oorreapondlng peri ods). The number of watches received from abroad in the firet eight months of this ysar was 90,401, against 87,282 in 1864, and 100,984. la IW (.correipciding periods.; TELEGRAPHIC. REPORTED FOR THE JOURNAL , . 1 fflectiim of tbe Iniliaiia Lenislatorit Sick and Wounded Soldier? NUMBER IN HOSPITALS. Gen. Grant In New Yorh ProMe Election of Gov. Holici Rumr'd RasJgnation of Praifon King!. IS. Meeting at Cooper Institute c&yo.. rJbo., ttoo, Pteparatloaa Agnlnai Ine Faalaaa ia .... I. . I I Tobonto, Nov. 14 It has been deoiJid to nlaoe a foroe of volunteers in active set- vice, to check Fenian raids. Two battal ions reoeived orders to hold themselvss in readiness for duty. The guard at ths vrjl- anteer armory has been doubled in oonae-quenoe of information reoeived of Fenian projeots. ' .1 Nbw Yobe, Nov. 14. The Times' Wash ington dispatch says : Daniel Miller, a noted eonfidenee man. haa been banded over to the offioers from Ohio to answsr the oharge of ewindling the First National Bank of Springfield. . . '. I Mr. MoPhereon will not enter the names of those eleoted to Congress by the late rebel States on the roll of the next Honse. dev. Wlnl Properly OoudeeaiMi-siiek anu woaaaeo ia lauveraiuvne pllala. The Tribune's soscial says : Judge Un derwood hasoondemned Qov. Wlss's person al property for confiscation. Hie real estate is not worth tbe formality. 1 The total eick and wounded throughout tho country ie lees than five thousand, eight monthe eince It was over one nunorea tnou- ssnd. i Oen. Augur iesued an order forbidding the whipping of colored men under any law of Virginia within the limits of hie department. ! Negro Soldleia from the District of IVIUUDia. j Oen. Ingraham. late Provost Marshal of .the defenses of the North Potomac, Is being igorously urged for Mai geant-et-Anna or the next House. The white population of tbe District or Columbia ia to the blaok aa four to one. Statistics of the War Department show two blaok soldiers were raised lo one white. The whites furnished 1,750 soldiers, almost entirely by drafting; the blacks over 3,1)00, anu neariv ati uy votuuioeriua. imtw Intr tbe war. It was impossible tor at negro to leave this city 10 go norm -wiinoin passport. j.j--. ;rHlai to Rebel Onioera. A gentlemen of intelligence, who haslust roturned from the South, slates that it is the intention of moat of tho States to ap-oronriate peneions to rebel offioers and sol diers wounded during the rebellion. No lj,uileuuu ID lu 1B rnr Mnumern Union soldiers. 1 Rumored Realauatlun ol Preatoa aUng -Vnrlons Ileinv. 1 Ths Hsrald's Washington diapatch Bays : Ws understand that tho Hon. Preston King has resigned the position ol oollector of the port of New York. Who Ib to take his place le not known. ine mtlBienng out oi ueiBCDineniB 01 tue Veteran Reaerve Corps in ths District of Co lumbia begiiil to-day. 1 Uen. Logan will not accept tne mission to Japan, under any circumstances. W. 0. Coffin, of Indiana, formerly in charge of tho Southwestern Indian Agency, is in Washington, settling tits accounts. Probakle lUeetloa ol Guv. Uoldea. The World's special says: A telegram, received from Gov. Holden, indioates that he is elected by a email majority. A large number of pardon aeekers, wait ing for an audiene with tho President, were to-day notified that he oould not be sssn for two days. j Pramotlea la ine Regnlnr Army. The Herald's special says: Col. Bradley, Quartermaster of Transportation at City Point during it occupancy by our armies, was veslerdav commissioned as Quarter master in the Regular Army, with the rank of Captain. He stands forty-sixth on the list. i Ine Attempt to Palaon Wlra. Oen. Baker admlta an error in the pub lished date of Mrs. Win's attempt to poison her husband, but asssrts that the circumstance transpired substantially as reported. Ho also noticed uen. Moll or tne anair within an honr ol ita occurrence, and bad previously informed CoL Chipham that in bis opinion she would poison him if allowed an opportunity. I General Clraat and I he Mnster-Ont ol veaejaio. A Senator who called upon Oen. Grant a few days ago, remonstrated with him for keeping so many general officers in the service, unemployed. He replied that he had several wssks ago made out a list to bs mustered out, but they were hanging Ire in the War Department or some other place. Beoretsry Seward yesterday completed an important dispatoh to cur Minister to England. - ;- ' " '- ! - - A large number of volunteer naval offi cers are being mustered ont. Forty-three assistant engineers were mustered out In Ootober. 1 There have been no additional cases of oholera on board the Atlanta. Passengers on board complain much of detention, etriot quarantine being enforced oy tne commissioners. ! Gen. Grant, family, and Stan are at the Metropolitan Hotel In this city. 1 AmerleaalllaloB loinmlaalon- Meollua atvooper lastllnio. An enthusiaalio meeting waa held at Cooper Institute last evening, under the auspices of the American Union Commis sion, organized lo aid In ths restoration of the American Union, upon the basis of freedom, industry, eduoation, and Christian morality. : Senator Morgan presided. au draaaee were delivered by Governor Par- eons, of Alabama, Rsv. Dr. Thompson, President of the Commission, Rev. Henry Ward Beeoher, Major ueneral Meade, and Ueneral Fieko. Letters from the oeoretary or War. Gen. Grant, and olhere, expressing their entire sympathy with the objects of the Commission, wsre read. The Worlds epeolal says: Documents accompanying the report of the Secretary of tbe Navy, la print oontain, a full history or the naval operations along the Southern coast, with maps, charts, ate. This document will be one of unusual Interest. Tbe Secretary's report will, be ebcut the ssme length ae last year. The estimates ior tne next ssoal year 01 tha Department amount to i3,uw,uuu. roe annronriations of last year, which were very largo, will be absorbed by tbe olost of ths present nioai yr. 1 be Old Merrlmac. The Herald's Fortress Monroe letter of the 11th eays: The Merrimao ia being rais ed, ana partloae 01 ner maoumery aave already been taken out. Her hull has been raited clear of the bottom and is now sus pended by ohaina. It is reported that Jeff. Davis rsoeatly aid that "Fenlaniam ie a bubble," and of Win, that "the uovernment need not have gone far to hang many worse men." t : j " . Affaire la Bfextro. . Nbw Yobk, Nov. 13 Flies of the cCoial journal, the Msxioan Republic a little newspaper published at the Paso del Norte, have been reoeived here to the 13th of Augus'j They relate a singular coincidence of sin-i gular dsmonstration in Chihuahua on the day appointed for the celebration of the) establishment cf tbe Empire. J A number of the citizens held a funeral oeremony in memory of Hidalgo. The flags; were lowered lo half-mast, and the place wore a general expression or solemnity rather than of festivity. ' The f arblenioo officially announces thai Oaxaoa has;, been occupied by a body of Juarez's troops under Col. Diazra, brothel of Parferico Diairs. Ircaaarr MHra Deposits. ' WAsniNtiTOH, Nov. 14. It appears froi tha U. S, Treasury monthly statement fof uctober that lite amount on aeposii in cot a wae $34,764,000, and the total amount oi deposit wae nearly 100,0OO,OoO all thi com was available, i ne amount on oe posit in ths National banks was nearl; $300,000,000. ' ' " v ladlaaa Lrttlalatnra- Ibpuiupolis, Nov. 13. Ths extra ses sion or the Legislature convened to-aay the House organisation is the same as last session J. 0. Fettitt, Speaker. Tbe Ben ate has not elected its subordinate otfl-cere. - Gov. Morton's message will be da livsrsd to-morrow. , 1 i Caibo. Nov. 13. An Insnsction to-day ten companies of the 8th and loth Begi-mente of the Veteran Reaerve Corps, cora- prieiog tho garrison at thia post, -revealed the fact that all tne prtvatee exoept tnres wish to be mustered out. All the officers exoept one dsBire to remain in the service. Seven hundred and fifty bales of ootton passed for Cincinnati, 4G0 for St. Louis, and 160 lor Cairo. .1 1 : Boston, Nov. 18. A large and influential meeting waB held at noon to-day in the Merchants' Urohange, in favor of the immediate consideration of the Western Pa- oitc Railroad. Hie honor, Mayor tincoln, presided. A spesch was made by' Ex-Qov. Curry, of Orange. I Media, Delaware Co, Pa.,-Nov. 13. There was a large fire at Avendale this morning, by which the Sloathaven Mills and two dwellings were deatroyed. The property was owned by Mrs. Ellen Patter son and Mr. Robert Patterson, of Philadelphia. It ia sapposed to hare been the work of an incendiary. Loss about $500,000. ' BUSINESS CARDS. HAVL S. HENKXE, -A.ttoviiey nt I.avw, .,'., . '0..1!1HBTS, OHIO, WIM. I-RiOTlOE IN TBI BOFBEHI AND Inferior lloarto. eid will oollect claim affelutt tbe Ste-e and federal Quveromeut. OOtce No. 1 udeoa Italiiliug, oppoolte the State Home. . octliTiltt W. H. TILPEM. , 0. W, HOVLtOH. TIIMN & HOUSTON, ATTORNEYS AT UV. . No. J71 a Mala Hired, , j octJSJSm. t'INI'IMNATI. O. x. eiBiaaT. SIR BERT 1,11,1 I. w. 1.1L1 i3cjrjl.-TJ t lacJlovaw j Anil (ilaiik-Book Mauufkuturtirti, Bulla. Hall, llutou lllork, S3. Ulnlt 1 apre eon iv . . . , a. a. wBDrN, John McaAtrir Wnrdf ii, Wihoix & MtHnttoy, Attorneys and Qonn8eUorn at Law, OI.IUlBl.lN, O. . , J IJIjrr.L ATTgNri TO LFi l'ROiriC.-tliinrUI. VV bDsiueee emulated to this, In lb. Si,.r.iije Ooorfe, aiid lu Kreuklin aod ailJiuiuKcouutlae, ORIce No. ! Keel Nlnle fltror.1. Osts Bute. Bl'.KM at' SWAYZE, MERCHANT TAILORS ! AMD Pt'ATiEBS IN HKAFY-MaPB OI.OTIIINa, A Ueula Vurui-hlng Uoodi. Ni. 164 tfoulli Blgli It., 0)poUe U. tS. Uotul. We kft)p a wttll-tolaVOUtl looV of Rootle, both toiotgn aud djtuutlo, GIto m aoall, and we ttlll do tlite good hu'27 tf UK KM A HWAYZB. COAL. HOOKING o o WB ABE NOW READY TO TDRKtHH A BD PKHIiill article of IXooliiltiK Ooal, la any quantity, delivered to any port of the city, or on Ballrtad car. lflk and Vard betweau ha$ and Apr.ngitreel, No. 13(1 JVorlli High atrtet. Order. reipflCtfnllr collolted and promptly Oiled. VAN DBUBEN A DKMltiQ, Jnnaadtl j Hociliing" Coal. AM MOW PB SPARED TO FURNISH A 8D oertor duality Hocking Goal. In any anantltr delivered to any part of the city, or ou railroad can Order left at my -tore. Buckeye Block. MavlOeacWo. (U r. HAIDSM AGENCIES. LAND AGENCY W. F. CUM MINGS fc CO,, Bprlnsfield OIilo, WILL PAY TAX 18 AMD HATE DEEDS BE-COHDFD In anv county of lha Bute. Will proenraTax Deedt, Atitract of Title and Patent! for Land! 'rom tho General Govnrament or t'tate. Bay and aeTl Landi on Uoramln'on. Partlonlar at tentlon given to redeeming and reroyerlng of landi old for taxea, implying Tout or destroyed racoidi and perfecting ae-eenve iiiki. ; Land nnon which lha taxes i re not promptly peld are liable to re eold, and caa be redoamnd, If at an. oniy ai a neaTj eipooia. a toog AxiinriADce, ana ittterei yierr reiinence iu MtmaonrL butt befoie aud diirloK tbe war. will en ab'a ne, we believe, correctly and tie factor Ha, tp l ran mo t any uuuacie connaea io as, eepit ic Police Agency. I BAYS OPENED AN OPkMOB IN ROOM NO. IS, Opera Honse Building, for tbo transaction of aen sral Pollf business. Pnrllrnler attention glvsn to the collection of claims, recovery of stolua proper ty and demotion of thieves. All UOaiUmW lUaiuiiVU IV mis I'Uti-s wiiisjuuiuiur lyattendud to. , All COaUUIUIIIVNIIVUBj B.i iduj vunuuDuiini. WU. BEANY. Lata Ua)or 7th O. V. C, and formerly Detective Po nee, uincinueii. MILLINERY. MRS.M. A. YAH HOUTOH, MILLINER FANCY GOODS, 33 Haaast Town Jtt. FOM fAlh J- WrNTKR, Jaet rerelred. AH order, fllled oa tbo eltorteil eeolS l f"""'- ENGRAVER. WILLIAM RICHES, Designer ad Engraver on Wood Parlralu, View, of HaUdlnga. Harnla - eri, ,. EXIOUTBD IK THK HlOOBBT SttLI or TBI ART Vor Lcdna. NotarlH Ptllillo, Oonutv offlcera. So , exMntcil In th. beet poi.llile meuner. (tnice, 107 tomb Hlahelrtel; Boom No. 10. Tltlrl Star, 1 Johssea Balldlii, Oolttmbtu, Ohio, aort tot Ij AUCTION. AUCTION COMMISSION IT' I S KB MOW FBHPAHID TO BtflllVE OON If ttlUHtHtNTH of all klatliol Mercantile Clootie, iiouaoaota aoruiiare, o., ' ON COMMISSION. 1 aw Liberal advanoea will be made on Consign-Beats.Wa aleo aav oartloular attention tooatside sale of " Mercantile aV Honaeliold Goods Farming Stock, Real j EMiufe, t&c.tfrc. j "; We hare on hand a large itock of li'laxo New CTux'xaltUBTen Which Vfe are oBeilng at very low prices, to which we wouta can me aiwuiion 01 me puuuo. REAL PAKNONH, Auction and Oommleelon Ueretaante, m2Tly No. 104 Sooth Dltib etreet. FOR SALE. 80 ADRESOF LAND ForSale. QITOATJCD ON TBI BILL, TWO MILE8 WKST KJ 01 uoiomum, iunjeaia.Hi7 womu oi woo iBttur arabaMd uoin tnu uadk ior im Aijiam ior in-eci 1m. noon which One bolldluK li ftlwut twins raoted for that. MUtatloa. . i Thia land baa a front or ait roai on sauiTani'i Avanna, and tha eaat and lying high, and haying a Tronta on tha road to fat opened, rnnnlns aoroa from lha National Road to the Harrlabargh Bond. About two-thlrda of It li woodland, and onu-tbtii nnder cultivation. WIU be eold for aah or on pay ment. Apply to ejus. Ull lvnloiJn, mam uainier rranaua nana, uoiamoni, u PUBLIC LANDS. SCRIP FOR SALE, i ' ' OoLuvaoa, Oct. 1, Mats. N ACCORDANCE WITH THE PROVISIONS af an act of tha General Aatamblyof the Btataof Ohio, paiied April 8, 18G6, the vndenlgned Htata officers will receive prrpoeaU for the porchaeaof tbe kana oonp receivea rrom ine jniiea dmin mot the establishment of an Agricultural Col leg In tha State of Ohio. - ley" The Scrip can be heated on any vacant United State lands, tubject to mtry at privat4 tab, $1 26 per acre (mineral landi excluded.) No proposition will be received for lees than one hnndred aud sixty acres. . If mora conveuient, proposals may oa maaa io lha Auditor and Treasurer of any Oonuty, who will transmit the samo to tbe undersigned. JAH. H. GO DM AN, Auditor of Staff. W. liUOPEt., Treasurer of Mate. W. BKNRY aUMH, Seo'y of Htata. sep"" Urn MEDICAL. ni'MPMIVEY'H i nOMuWlTHIl' SPECIFICS, HAVE PROVED, FROM THE MOST AMPLE expert". n anttra sncawe: HI tuple Pron.pl k tttotti ut, aud Reliable. They are tbe only Medicines perlW.tly etUi-twl to ppalr use-so simple that ni 1st skew oauuui be maJe In nslug thns; eo harmless as to bn free from danger, and soelUofeut eM bj alweys reliable. I'hoy have raUed the high-oat oommvbdatlouaTrom all, and will always render satisfaction. Oents, No. 1, (lures Feveri, Congestion, Inflamma- r Mime 2o 41 2, " 'orniM,Worm-lfe?or,Worm Oollo X& ' 3. H C'ry luir-Oollo, or Teething of In fauM 24 4, " IlBrroei of oliildreu or adults 2.r ' 8, " ljvutry .Grilling, UtllonsCullo 8, t'ikul-ra-Mrbuti,blausaa, Vom- itiog fid y( i g!niriii. Colds, Bronchitis . 25 ' 8, ' Nfliirftlfcclis, Tootbaobe, afactrarhe li) a, 11 UffnclMi'UM.SIvk-Ueadaobe, Var- U.u io, " II. ia, " la, " l. " IS, " 16, " l, IB, " 19, " SO, ai, " SU, " 21, ' M, " us, " 27, nynpftiMlfi, Bilious Hloiuacb 26 Niipprmamlor iialafnl P-riotl.... Wtil tea Uxi profueo Priois.. !i5 4'riip, tioiigb, dtdlontt Drsathlng SCO IHisIt HUeuui, Krytlielas, Krup- tlcsDS CA Hli umatlsnit Uheuuatlo Pains .. 2ft Ivr and Ague, On II fever, ; Agues Ml Pile), blind or bleeding 4V Wuhlisnliujr. and sore or weak Eyes 60 4'Histrrb, acuta or chronic, Inttu. ena Ml Wli4oilaiC-oniclil violent OiiUKtis .. M Asthma, oppntaaed Breathing,.... 60 . eStsr liHcbrKej, impaired Hearing 60 Borotulst, eularged Ulands, bwell in e 60 neral . Debility, Pbysj o a I Wraknesa 60 nri.Ny(andeeantytretions,ee.. 60 Mesa-Nlchneaa, siokness ffoiu riding 60 HIlnvyv,Ulat?fsiiUravel........ 60 NttrvoiiH Iseiiiiltr, Hemtnal Ncrvons Deltlity, Eiuisslons, lu- ' 'voluntary Discharges 1,00 More Jllonlb, Mauktr eo Urlutsry JnconsMnBe, wetting btd 60 Put n In! g-rltMla,eveu with Hnasms 60 Knllerluivsial change or life 1.00 F.plle.tsyi tipasms, St. Vitus Danoe 1.00 Dlpliiharln nlcersted flora I 'ihroat 60 FAMILY CASfM. " 29, ai, " 32, " S3, " M, 86 rials, morooo case, and book ,..,. f 10 00 20 large vlels, to morocco, and book 6 00 20 large vials, plain oaaa and book.......... I 6 00 to noxes inos. i to ioj, snawwi w VETERINARY BPEC1FICS. ' sfaahrwanvcaees. 10 rials f 10 00 8fnBlevlsls,with directions M 1 00 atdrTheM Bomedies. bv tbe case or tingle box. are sent to any part of tba country, by Hell or Express free nl cnarge, on receipt oi ine price, anum HUMPH BEYS' BPEOIFIO 1 HOMSOPATUiO MEDICINE COUP ANY, Office and Depot. No. 663, Broadway, New York Da- HtrnHDar is eonsuitea aatiy at nis oince, porsonally or by letter, as above, for all forms of dis- Sap amltiViv R. E. 8 AMTJKL9. BOHDELEB A CO.. O.HOBtBTS, and B. JOriCB A SON, OolumbQS.O. aagin i SEWING MACHINES. THE FLORENCE Sewing" Machine, MRU. B. A. I. JANNBT, AORNT, HE (CPS ooDBtaatlf on baotl aa elegant uiortn.utof lorence Sewing Machines I 'h. ,er, bait for faallr in. lb. uoel attraotlre ud popnl.r uaolilo. lo tbe matkel. j MM Itmraaltle raed, - Makes ITaar Iklirweat Hlllchee, la Alnioat Molaeleas, t la Kaalljr Hsttt la Ordar,' Work, l.tKhtlr, au4 Never Hklpe Hlltehea. Uom the hetrleet or Bare! work wltb eqaal faollllT. and wary aaobla. warraatod lo baall Ibal la olaltu-ad for It. I.OBkNCK NKWINO Bl ATHIM K S'O., Oeo'l Western A(.aoy, M West Foartk St., Uuelnoall.Uklo. ALSO Finkle & I.Ton Sewing Haehiutu lieke, the nao etllob and dnee tbe saaa teen of work. Tbe regulation or Ibis Mubloe I. eo well otabllsbed la lull viclaltjr, that II aeeda no minor eomneat. llnpertor Bieonin, till, nieatH, Tore,,, ,n, sii BMtMnary artloto. lor keeplBB la order and repair uieo, bigitiy a.aiii.r ImcU. Slllch NnwInK Hacblne, UBS. B. A. B. JANNBT, ,.n, ' IsTalOat UI Broad elre.t,Uoloubaa, Jr. X X JVC 3Vt M Xs , WholeiaHandBotall DMler'la . 1 t PLANBRft KEISEH, BINOEH'S IMPROV. ED BLOA1), KLKPTIC, W11KELER & WILSON, ANU WILCOX A UlBUtj' SEWINO MldHIJIEN Aleo, B4 BNtm'fl BEI.F BBWBB, l, ,i knd, of Bewlnl Hachloee, Frlnalpal UBn Mo. 4, Opera Bottee, Oolantbns, O. STAneaUwablld. UpaO aod lo 'aaC.''i . .W?; HARDWARE. J. M. STUART & CO., Mo. 16 Sonlh niKb at.. Uantttaotoren and Wboleeale and Betall Daelen IB Tin, Copper, ABO SHEET -IRON WARE 1 roBwoks j Ol all kind! Bioontod with ,' CToMtXaosaa tan X31anxatol t 8, a Oo. keep eonslantl on hand a larg. eatort awnl of QRATE", AND WHITE MARBLI AND - MARBLE1ZED 8LATE, AND j IRON MANTLES, . j Cooking & Heating Stoves LAWSON'S BOX-AIR FUENA0K8, ABB ' ' ' j Lotze's English Range. Also, all kind! of House Fu rnlah ing Goods PUMPS, JAPAN-WARR, KTC th. llotad " AltiliiaATOK " Utwl Oook Blon, and tb.Jnetly oelebraUd "S TEWARIf Uook aud Heeitna stove alwavi oa haaoa deoUeodlr I CIGARS. HKNBT UlNKEt, No. 9S7 Sonln Hltrb Mtrcei, Colniabae, Mannractorer and Dealer la OONHEOTIOXJT AND OHIO SBSD OZOAI18. A lerge lot oonsUntlron hnnd t ths towsst mar kt prlcss nnglft sod MEDICAL. LIF-"MLTff-"-STBEN&TH TBE GRE1T FBESff H REMEflY. D B. JUAN DEL AM ARRK'3 eltlratel Spelilc Pillv, Prepared from a preemption of Dr.Juan DtU amarre, Cftt lynvctan oj the Hospital du Hard ou Lariboisttre rivHlS lNVAlallAnLV MEOU INI IB NO IM A noplilou. Lnt is nnUllina In tlie euro of 8pr mntorrbto or Hsmlunl WenkooM. Kitty spsolss of UfitltftI or tirluBrjr iiratMstnif, inroiuaiary or Niariiilv SflUlBkl Amissions front wlintstTsr onats proiiaciiu. or nowevur seTare, win v pmuiij to-hv0d nut) the orgHus rustotMl to bsnliUy nollou. Aaf tU following opfa.mu nfwiitsnt Freuok 'Ph- iiomw. . , I WsliHft ui& tits Piwiflo Pills nrsnsrod by Osr nnclsrA Uunont. No. UU Bus t.on)lnrJ. frvmUis umcriniltin oi ur. jusn iniMirre. inmr pn prsctlcs with anirorm snccftss, nnil wo bslUvs tbsr ll no otbtr medicine lo wsll cnlcnUVod to cure nil uanons suffttafE from InToluutArv Emissions or nny oiuer witKU'H ui ih r.ut v KaUB wiwiun csuimI by ft ssdenttTy ninde of U-tnR. siow. or blue. I. a. dibukm'auii, mi. v, U. U. UUJ&UU.N, V. U JUAN LA LKUtJHftA. M.D. Pails. Afnyotb, 1863. f , , Bewttre oi' )onulerIIW- Tbs (isnnlna Pills r sold bv all llm nridclDsl DriiKgltUi tliroughout tbs World. Prist On Dolimr pT box, or Dtx uoisa ior rive Uaiiiars. 4 UAHAnnuitK A Dufont, Sols Proprietors, No. Kit Kno Lombard, Paris. Ons Dollar (tnolosed to any autbotUed Aicsnl. will Insnraabox by return inail, scnrly senlsd (torn sit oMarvaiion. nix nuvesiornvsoouars. Bow Usnstnl Agnts lor Anisrloa, VNt AK . MOMKM, aSWO.. il7O0urtlandtHl.. n. V. Jy 17 ton tod aw alt ly C0NHUMPTION.-WIN('HK8TtR'rJ Gl&NUlMdt BVPOPliOHPIIITCHflbs oalr re.M.un,a. u u. Or. CbnrcbfU'ff remsdr hava attaliwd a raoulatfon u ano uHitj ui euiiautnpuuu. --uupaniiisMl in ine mm nalsof nsdlclna." Asa nsrroas lonlo. th H vdo. nbospbites am inpsrior to anytblua bsratofors buuwu, win 10 mr EastMui naumaii ueuiiiiy, warn 01 straugth, Ottsh aud appetlU, dyiipepBla, nenralgta. paraiybis. curonm Diournmi, Mtnnia, soronila, it Is tbsuos stttoaclous treatment kuown. , A (air trial is a oriatn curs, tuircniar rrs.) Pkiois: In T 01. and IH on. boHlaa. 11 and sob; etuiallor 3 largs tot ties tor S, byasyia Hold by all respeotai'' drnggtats, atad ft tba so lnral dspot, wuo.esalsnniTreiail, by J WinUHESTKll. feblt ly sodAw WJobn straat, M.T. Tj YON'S PeriodicalDrops THE OB CAT rlHALK BEHEDT TOM IRREdJULARITIESs nrvHiaa dbopb abb a boibntiiiually 1 comoonnded fluid nreDaratlon. and tMttar thn any Pills. Powdsrs, or Host rams. Bring liquid, tbulr action ts direct and positive, rsnderlng Cnam a rltsbls, spsody and csrtaln spsclflc fjr tbs tnrs of all obstraollons and snnprMslons of natnro. Tksir popularity Is Indicated by ths fact thai oyer 100,000 ootiiM ar aanaM7 oia ana coniumra ny lbs ladies of tha Dnitid Statu, sTsry ons of whom speak. ID .H ruugo). aniuil Ul pBHIN OI Ulir gTWI DlSr Its. ThtiY ara rapidly taklns tho nlaca of ar nth, sr Kmai namauy, aau are oonsiaBrca ny all wno know ansbt ot them, aa tbs anrest. safest, mnd moat is uiutt ie preparation in tns world for tbe cursor al nmaieocnipiamis, ine minorai or ail obetruMlons o nature, and the Promotion of healtta. rearaiarttv ind strength. Czplictt dlrsctlons stating when thsy nay bo need, and explaining when and whT the ahnnld not. nor C3Uld not be Uied Without Dradnelnar ffntM miiT roiaoa aronna racn twit a. with tha writ. an signature of Joan L. Ltoh, withoat which nous are gennine. rrspaiea ny nr. juni" as. iiiun, jws i;npst st.( New Uavsn, Oona., who can be oonsnltsd either ner scnally, or by mall, (enclosing stamp ) oonosrntng ail firivensj umaac, i w its t er ayDeaauaH. j ooiu ny vruggiM every -Ji..re. rrice gi ov. 4). O. OLARK A OO.. Q-n'l Agsnts tor D. fl. and Canada, fl. K. tttHniLaeOsoTAg't, Uoluubus. ep9 sod ly ROBACK'S bittesr ft BBENBAOKB AMfi QtMin, llu r 1 I ' ' Robacks are Better, r.u Ikouund IwiUh eolil lu oue tnunlli. TOa moM popular etoutaoU ltUre I. BOBAOK'S UUTKIIB. U.od tor all denng aMintaea, int. I.Hi.i,, kltrarttoatpluul -rJ .,! deblllly, ' UOIIACK'U IlWTERa Thwy POM.. wondHfnl Mule proiurlleo, glrln. Ion. lo tne appMlu aul - vhi. orgoua. H0HACKBJJI1TR8. Ostllltated UdlM, aud sdentary psrsoua will Oud in thein an eioelleni tonie. HOBACK'S UITTKBB. A wlaegtasaful before achmsalwill rsnaoys InJIgestlon aud allllrsrdU Thsy art better nan all Pills, Powders, and otha nauseous, disagreeable oonpoauds. HOHACK'N B1TTRBM. Iwsf eaa be taken wttbonl regard to dial. Ai aa appetiasr they bave uo enal, UOHACb ITXt:UN. Thsy ire prepared by an old and skillful physicist nom well-known rage tab Is ratnedles, Waerersr kuown thay have become a standard Isailly strsuatlmulug remedy. ROKAOH'N mrrF.BM. ' Try aa. Initio, d yoa will always an tin aad eo&imend IhMS to olhera. KOBACK'8 ItlYTERS. fl. W. KODAdU , Mala Proprlatar od Blood rtlle, and IHeUller aud MannBotarar oi ttau.be and Hwollih Uiaudlei, and all hlntt. of Ih. Boest doniMtle Hgoora, whioh ere .ols wbobHal or a eoy dealrul on.nlllyi al Mo., M, SB, eo and as Bait Third el Oloclnoatl, U. for eel. by ,ru(iel. and Dealer, la BfaaMraa eiywaer,. jean is Blew iYltili'SU'sVciVwa X Ul.lA.B01a, ' . : ' . ,i a-BUM-Trxxsrie PBEPABATIOIV MlQBLt OONCtHTRA TMD i OOBirUDBaV ' I I . -.1 . . FLDUjEXTRAOTBDOHO, a Potftlva a 8peoiflo Remedy for Dl-allDKB, BIUNETa, eBAVKI. aan Tbte Bladlcln, Inoreeif. tbe nowar of Dtnitlo od ,ioileeBe ABBUBUINTB Into health, aolloa i-y which Ibe W'ATKkYOU 04LCKB0UB deposition ud aii vnnATukjL aHLiuuMuantem r, luoad, ae well e D.ln aud tunammatlon, and ll Boot lor UEN, WOUKH.mvUILDtlMll. I :c M fllLMDOLD'3 KXTRAOT BfJOHU .MB WBAKMtttSBtl ' aarUlBSj rrom kioeeaee, Mablta or Dlaal. iluu, tcurljr InUletirelluu, ar Almen, I attihdbo with thb roLbuwiNa btmi : -: ' ' XOMSI ;. . I . t t. ladlsposltlon to Iierolw, torn of Power, Los. of Memory, Blmontty ol Broathloi, aMkaenw, :. Treaibllo, , Horror of Dleeaw, Wakefuluan, IHmnes. of Vision. r.ln In in. Baek, (Jnlr.rsal LsMimde of the flashing of the llodv, Hoeoal.r Byetom, Bntpllon on the Bar, Bot Hands, ; f.iid UoanUnaaw, Drynos.orib.tlkln, ' ' ThMoijmptomi, Hallowed lo go on, wnKo thia Bodloln.ln,.rlably ranoras, soou follow 1UPOTBKOT, ATDIT, BflLBPTIO 1TH, la on. of which th. n.tlanl bh ,im. wkA... ay that the; an not fleqaenll, followed by ihH dlraful JImua. ' T ' INSANITY AFincONHDsIPTIOBll Many are awar. of lha oanao of ihelr enH.,t bnt none will oonlMa, Ibe racordo of the lniaus Aeylom, and tha mel.noholy deathe by Contain, wa, Hai wiimb W H, ,t UkU.Ul IU. HMr tlon. THI OOHSTITDflOH, OSUM ATTKOliD WITS -. QmQANtQ RButatitifo'S, Bagnfrat thaald of aedfofaa to streosthen and la. fi(.r.M Ih. ir.tem, which HMLMBOtD'B BX-TkA OTB VOBB Inrarlahl, doM. . A trial will ooa- , lose th, mock skeptical. Fma!, F$ml$t, , Ftmaltt, CP OB rODNO, BINDLB. af ABBIfell, OB OB TIMI'LATINO MABHIAUX. In many aBMtlona paoctllar to BenaU. th.ni. Iraot Bacba Is nnoqoalled by any other remedy, as In Ohloroeu or Betentlon, Imgnlsrlty, P.tnralnec , it Boppmeton of tho Uiiitoni.ry BTacnatlons, Ul eerated or hchirrons state of lb Tftrue, Lenoonhea, r W blue, rjtorlllly, and lor all oonipl.lnw luelden lo th. aes, whether arising from Indiscretion, Habta ol PlaSlpatloa, or la lb. OltlUht OaB SIHANHR Or IJIVK. aa. arnproiu aaoa. SO fAWtV bhould ns WITHOUT it aka no Balsam. Usroory, Unp lest ant Ueicln lor Unpleasant and Dangtktons uusases, Maes. ' BUUHU UKIiMBOLD'3 EXTRACT CURES ' Secret Dlsoasoa In all their itaaM. al tittle ,ap.aM, Itttl. oii'na ahauga In diet, uu luconveuUuo,, AND MO EXiVONIIBjU. It oanses fretinant desire, and (Was strength ia Urinate, therebv temofluB obslruc lions, nrevsntlna and oarlaxtttrlcturttsor tbs Urethra, allaying pats and In flaw mat Ion, eo A-eqoent In tbls olass ut die eeeee, and uplllajf POlOVtiOVO DiaMAaUD, A Urn Thonsands upon Tbousantli " WHO HA VMBMEM THIS VI C VI Met OM And who have paid Butt Tans tobs oared In a bort time, bare found they were deceived, aud that ha 'Potsou" has, by tbe use of "Powerful Astrtu tenta." been dried In the mtsm. ho bisak ont lu aa aggravated firtns, and . fiiRHAPB A FT EH MARHIAOl xjmm Belmbold's Extract Buchn ' for all A Bsc t Ions aLd Dlisasss of ' THE CBINARX ORGAIi.lt tfbsther siliting la HAliB Oft VBMALI, from . wbaltwer oauas originating, and no matter Of How Mtug NlAndiiiffl iMasasH of tbsas Organs require tha aid of a Pinrstio. HELKatOLD'S BITICT BUCIIO IS THB 0B1T DIOBtTIO, and H M oartala to ban th. daflred .Beet la all P asM for waloh U a raooiaueuded. BLOOD I B1.001K BLOOD II! Helmbold'a Highly Oonoeatrated Oomponnd Fluid Extract Sarsaparilla. STPaiisis. This la an aBsoUen'r tba Blood, and atU'ks tbs aaxnal Organs. Linings of ths Nose, Bars, Thioat, Windpipe, and other M none Warfares, making 1 ts ap pearaaoe la the form of Dicers, Belmbold'a 1 street Barseparilte pniifles the blood, and removes all other at nations of the akin, giving to (hs oompleiloa a olear and healthy color. It being prepared express) f tor thts class ot eompiainis, ih Diooo-pnn tying prop ertles are prosorvod to a greater extent than any ot b sr preparatioa oi awi-wiwutBai x Helmbold's osd Wash. an vfttlleni Itotlon for Diseasas of a BvnhtlM Na- rnre, and as aa injection In Diseases ot the Urinary Organs, arising nom habits of dissipation, and lo Connection wiiu u uiikm ouvun nun eeiyeiii" la, In such diseases as recomtnendod. Bvtdeooeot ths must responsible and reliable onir aoter will accompany the medlolnse. ' Crltttoatea of Cnra from eight to tvsnty veaqi standlag, with aauss known io mOlMtOM AND r.AM. for msdloal properties of BUOR0, MalMspetua lory of the United tltates. fee Professor DUWMIW valnabls works oa the Practice of Physio. Bee remarks made by the late oelebra ted Dr. tPiftt tOK, Philadelphia. Haa. remarks madeby Dr. BPIfBan IM Me DO WJ,L. a oelebrated Physlolaa, aad atembet of the Boyal College of Burgeons, Ireland, and published In tba Transactions oi nv ning ana wneen s tioumii. tie neaioO'Uirurgicai ueview. puuiuuen uy omn-JAM IN THA VUU6, tolXon ot the Boyal Oof lege of surgeon. - nee most Ol tne lave njnuira wvrae pa Amouioiae, Bxtract Buchn. ........fl 00 per bottle, or six for IA 00 " Barsaparllla 1 00 6 00 fmprev'd Itoae Wash 00 " BM Hr half a dosen of eaoh tor 111. which wtl! besum atenttooore the moat obstinate oases, If dlreotloa aie aauerea to. Deliverable to any add rem, securely peeked rrom observe t luii. DMorlbe symptoms In all eommnnltiatloM, Uoim guaranteed. Advlosgralli. AFFIDAVIT. F.nonally appMnd be tor. ne, .a Ald.ru.a el Ih. ottyof rhllad.lphla, n. T, Uelmbold, wbo, bolus d.ly .worn, doth ay bl. preparallone oonl.la no uarooetlo, ao Meronry, or other lalorloos dtoa,, bat are purely yagauhle. a. T. elKLIIBOI.I). Bworu aud .obsortbed before Me, Ihle day .1 Noteubor, 11M. w. r. aiBUABU, Alderman, Kioto ., abor. Boss W.sb. AddTMS Utters foi Infbnn.tlou to . a. T. MLaniiui, Ob.alst. II PBINIPAI, III POT Halabold'a Draa aad Ohaaloal W.r.boas.. ts Broadwey, New Vurkj Or. Helmbold'a Medleal VOPOV, tMta Tenia tlra.1, rblladalpbla. BSWARKOI OOUNTBRFXITB And enprinolplad dealers, who endeavor todhutoai -orldBlKOWK" aad ''olber" arllou on Ik.Titv .tattoo atulo by Uelmbold'l Qnnla, rraparallona, " " , Bllraot Buha, " " BaraaptriUa. " " IsspnvMi Boa. W&l. fold bf all Drealala anrjwaan. At 10 HBLHBOLlrt-rAtaKO OTB BR. Ool ont th. ad,.rtls.B.at, and wind for II AVOID IMHBJITIOM AMUaXPOBUBB. a II. BOBBKTBA UO., WboloMl, Asuts, Mo. M North Ulah street Itohtnboe O.. who will nppl y th, trad, at MeaaBMinrMe' trices. aov7 cteweow |
Format | newspapers |
LCCN | sn84028628 |
Reel Number | 10000000027 |
File Name | 1122 |