Columbus morning journal. (Columbus, Ohio), 1866-06-22 page 1 |
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" TERMS OF ABVEBTISIWG. . ft.. nrtm Vnlr. aaefc iBWrtfoB 0 lion - " 11 u huIhu. WntinM. Mr Una. aoh liwirUM ... J J Waaa I V llu HoUin. aaotl lnrtiOa 1 Local and Boslnaw HoticM. pw "O. a.cb lua.rt.on..... . 0 80 mrOai Sqnn noren thrw-qo.rt.ra of IM .1 ipajOS IB IM OOIOWH. i ,.-- M.rrlaga NotKm-M ofc.. wbs 4" Haas. Book .nd Jol Printing n.atlj lid pro.tlT .X. .nlad. 1 MORNING JOURNAL Cfflce If. 10 Kant 6tt Btrret. Vtom tbe Atlontio Monthly 'or July.) . THE DEATH OF JftlaAYEftY. BY WIL1.14M CCtLEX BRTAMT. 0 thon great Wrong, that, tlareugfa In slow-pneed iun. Dldit bold tliv roil Mo ui f tiered, and didst wield - Th Jourgf that drove tbo laborer to the field. And tarn a stony gaie on human teats, Thy cruel reign la n' ; . '' Thy bondmen eroucb no more ( ' In Itrror at the insnnceof thine sys; : for be bo mirks the bonndB of gailty cower, Tjobk suSering, hath board the oepttve's ety, And tonched hli ah nek In at the appointed boar. And lot they fell. nd bewhoee Hmb they gelled, Stands In tale native mnnhofd, disenthralled. A ihout of jo fron the redesmrd le tat; ! Ten thousand hamlets .swell ths hymn of thanks; Onr riven roll exnltin, nd their banks . Send op hcssnnas t j th Armament. '-... ri yields wh're the bondmen's toll '.' ' No more shall trench the Bull, 0Haoowtobnililnftwreterdiy; j The meadow-birds sing sweater, nni the Ala Of bee-en wiih m'-re rarelelng oftnrs.n'ay. Welcoming met to liberty like tfaelri. ' ! A glory clot bee tb lend fn, m soa to u a, Tor the groat lend anda.lItiooMtsaref.ee, Wlthla that land wert thou enthroned of late, And they by whom the natlon't laws were made. ' Anl they who Ailed its judgment BeaUoteyod ' : Thy mandate, rigid as the will effete.1 ' Fierce meant thy rliht band, t With gesture of oommnd, 1 Gave faith the word that none might dare gainsay. And grave and revrrand one who loved the not, I'ttrank from thy pres.nce, aud, ia blank dismay, -' Choked down, iiMtloi-ed.-ttao rebellions thought; While meanor cowards, mingling with thy train, Proved from tliQ bosk ol God, thy right to reign. 6 rest as thou wert, and feared from shore to shore, The wrath of heaven o'ertook thee In th) pride, Thou eltt'st a ghastly shadow; by thv side Thy once strong arms baog nerveless erermoro. 1 And they who quailed but row j Before thy lowering brow ' ' Serote thy memory to icorn and Lberae, t Aod scoffat tho pale, powerless thing thou art. And they who rnlcd.lu thin Imperial name, Subdued and standiDgaullenly spaTt, Scowl at tho hands tha; overthrew thy relgb. And shattered at a blew the prisoner's chain. Well was thy doomed deserved ; thou didst not spire Lire's tendereet tits, but cruelly didst part Huiband anl wife, and from tho mother's faoart Didst wrest her children, deaf to shriek and prayer; Thy Inner lair became The haunt of guilty shams; ' ' '' ; ' Tby laab dropped blood ; the mnrdttrer, at tjhy aids, U lowed his rod bands, nor dared the rSugeanoe due. ' , ' i Thou didst low earth with or iraes, and, far and wide A banreitcf uncounted miseries grew, u j Until the measure of thy sins at last Was full, audboa lb avenging bait was oast. Oo now, accurst of Ojd, aod take thy place 1 With hatefal memories of the older timej With many a wasting prat, and nauolesf crime, And bloody war that thinned the human race? With the Black Death, whoio way' Through walling cities lay, Worship of tfolo.h, tyrannies that built ' The Pyramids, and cruel leads that taught To avenge fancied guilt by deeper guilt Detth at the stake to thoio that b Id them not. Iio, the fonl phantoms, silent lu the gloom' Of the down ages, part to yield thee rorm.j i i X see ths letter jeara that boston by Carry thee back into that ehadowy past, Wbore, lu the dusty spaces, void anl vast, The grives of thoso whom thou bast mntdtfed He. TbesIkvcpeo, through whose doer . Thy victims pasi no more, Is there, and there aball the grim block remain At which the slave wnasold : hlle at thy ftet loourges aud engines of restraint andpalnj Moulder and rostby thine eternal ssat. ' Tbsre, 'mi 1 the symbols thai proclaim thy crimes, Swell thuu, a warn lug to the coming timet. Dramatic and Musical. raEP ABED E.Xt'aKSSLI FOE TUB JOCHKAL. i With the hot summer and the approach of dog days, comes the closing of the then, ten.. Hot wepther and things dramatio and operatic are antagonistic. " At thia season bix is alow, and money comes in like angels' visits, and the "dead headV corps re all that give signs of life to the auditorium. It is now that managers mourn their lost, and give way to repining, oast blear eyes on their employees on salary days and drop into the melting mood. It is also the season when Managers are looking out for male and female artists of rare talents, respectability, &c, with whioh to organize oompanies for the ooiolng fall and winter season, and every mail is laden with bushels of ielters from artists of overy tripe, containing short histories of their "stage life," and fulsome puffs of the rare talents they displayed before the) elite ol Podunk, or some other village of equal otorlety. . . ' Barnum is still keeping that venerable old Nig,"Unole Tom," before the Nsw lork publio, hut promisea to givs him a rest, by ubstituting the "Drunkard," which pieoe he has had in preparation for some time. John Brougham is at Winter Garden where he has met with good suocess. The Ravels are at N iblo'f, play ing to the best business in New York. j Mr. Stephen Massett, "James Piper," gave a farewell leoture at Dodworth Hall, on the 18th insL He will sail for Europe on the next steamer. ; Helen Western is at the Broadway, doing the "French Spy," "Pet of Petticoats," and other pieoos of like Ilk. ' Miss Menken, who has been quite ill since her engagement at the Broadway, ia bow recovering. She was, however, unable to fill her engagement at the Boston Theater, whioh was to have commenced on the 11th insL She oommeneee at Qrover'a Theater on the 2Gtb, after whioh ehe will appear at Cineinnati, at Wood's Theater. , Wallaok's Theatsr closed ita spring season on the Oth inst., with "Never to Late to Mend." . - i j . . Mrs. D. P. Bowers has been engaged for the ooming season at the Winter Garden. "Our Mutual Friend" is meeting with fine suooees at the Olympic. The dramatl- aation is by G. F. Rows, Esq , and Is said to be excellently done. The celebrated Bursley Family have taken the new Bowery, and gave their initiatory performance in New York on the 16th Inst. They are a most talented set of artists, and will be all the rage. ' They had formerly leased the Academy of Muaic, but the conflagration at that place compelled them to seek other quarters; consequently the change to the Bowery. j At the Aoademy of Musie, Cleveland, IbusJuess oontinues good. At present there . ia no "stfrr" on the boards, the stock taking their annual benefits. Theseason at this plaoe will olose July 7th, and Ihe fall aea-... will begin early in September, during whioh ttm Manager Ellaler will reorganize , i. ..a. ;:d make some needed .... in the oosir UWe Academy, Lucelle wV."rn th B9,,on dealer doing her great p.'vr of "East LyiiB.," In which she is without KMoesiful rival B. F. Whitman, Beej., commence; lommer. season at the Continental, Boston, on ?b 20lh of August. ; -(t ' The Newark, N.- J, Theater lal been jelosed for the season. , . , j ' ' ' B. T. Lowell has purchaiid the UM ft ... tjjjJ : VOLUME XXVjlI. Vxt Pittaburg Opera Houee, ml i man' a;e it the next aeaaon. Lnoy Ruahton W playing at ma uo.wa Masaum. Maoalliater ii t BingbaaUaa, ' " Charlj Bhay'i Quinouplexala ara at Tole do; they bare recently beon In Miahigan, and found bosincsa in thatSiato worie than bad. . ,..:..( Tha Carter ouava Tronpe afe in wa. " I A person, calling himielf Prof. Simmer-field "the treat Australian world-renowned ana aiaiinguiou.u uiv) and pre-eminent 'amUdaxtroua presuaig-arch Illusionist, humorist, and Dreatidieitatuer," (Jehosephat, what i title 1) .....iw Arnnnad down in Toledi. HiB j , , Midieooe, jhough Battering, amelt a mice. The Professor aaaurcd them that all waa quiet on the Potomao, but they oojloVnot. aee It in that light, ine uooraonper, with an eye. to number one, made a frantic effortlo escape with the uA,"l whioh he was foiled, and foroed to disgorge ihe few shinplssters he had in his Test Docket, and the Professor lit out in aipreme ditguet, hating boi ,fOor:impresaion of Toledo as a show town. He don't Jropose to go there again this season, j Uaizamga and a conoort company biyb two entertainments at, Buffalo, on the 25th and20lh inst. "' ' ' ' ' " 1 Knoi, the Wiisard, ia at Rutland, Vt. ' MacEroys'a Hibernioon ia at Troy. N. Y. Edwin Forrest haa not auooeeded a cre ating muoh excitenuuat in California, hia houses being nightly far from full, probably the effect of his exorbitantly high prices. Miss Emilie Melville ia at Fattereoi, 14. J. The Walnut Street Theater, Philadelphia, will olose its season on the 22d IdbI, haT- tng made a Bontinuona fhd of ten months, being the longest and moat posperous sea- ion ever made in that oily. Elwiul Booth will aloae hu engafemepj aXthe Arch Street Theater during the present week. - ROB BOY. MR nlKUHAM. ror the Colnmbui Horolng Journal " " " CotoMBiis,' t , -June 20; 1866. Slusri. Editors .In your issue of this morning I aee a communication signeil,"J' dated Cambridge, OhiOj in whioh the writer seems apprehensive that something! would be done at the meeting of 'the delegates to the State- convention,, trom tho JCth Congressional Distriot, that might operate against the interest of ; Mr. Bingham. If the writer of that communication, had confined himself to his legitimate business of sulogiiing Mr. Bingham, and speaking of his qualifications as a Congressmen, no per son from the -10th district, perhaps) would have taken any notice of the article, although there are men in the distriot who believe that, with half of Mr. Bingham's opportunities, there are those in the distriot who would be more than toe equal of Mr. Bingham. When, however, this writer seeks to oonvey.ths impression that the opposition to the re-nomination of Mr. Bingham is con fined tp a few aspirants for congressional honors, and aoouses them for circulating untruths to the injury of Mr. Bingham, he makes a reflection upon the leading men or th district that is wholly unwarranted and requires notice. . ( Two years ago nr. iiingnam wnir nominated for the sixth time as a candidate for Congress. There was a very strong feeling in the District at that time against the nnmin.Linn. and ha was nominated by a olose vote after the pledge had been made that he would not be a oanamate again, under any oiroumstanoes. . When J assorts that this pledge was made bylhe Cad iz ttepublteim, ana laoors 10 convey ine impression that Mr. Binghnm had never made suoh a pledge, he attempts to mislead the people, for 1 happen to know that Mr, Bingham made that pledge personally to his nrincinal oomnetitor in that eonventlon, as '.well as ;to others In the District, and that hii nomination at that tmt was ucurcapy mat pleltt, made by his friends before ihe meet ing of tho convention, alter consulting; mm. How far they can reeonoile their present action with their former pledges, we leave them to dotermine; but if they think they oan force the nomination of Mr. Bingham by easting reflections upon' leading men of the Uistriot whose friends think them worthy of being named In connection with the oftioe of Congressmen, and then seoure bis eleotion, which can only be done by the earnest and sealous support of these abused "aspirants," they eertainlypreaume very largely upon tne patriotism oi ine men iney abuse. If the delegates to tbe Convontion in the 16th Distriot shall think )t best to renominate Mr. Bingham, they will do so. They are as well acquainted with him as "J" or Uw numerous writers for the daily and weekly newspapers of the State that aeem to think it nooessary to oontinue sounding his praises, in order to seoure his nomination.- This constant labor in behalf of a (tan who has ten years Congressional experience, and the capacity that the friends of Mr. Bingharn oloim be has, in order to prevent one of these uuknown "aspirants" from .nnnlantins him in the Distriot, seems to me a full acknowledgement that he is not the most popular man In the Distriot. However this may be, it wonld le well for the friends of Mr. Bingham to remember that in tbe event of his nomination it will require the support of every leading man in the Distriot to secure his election, and thev'ourht to do nothing now that may hare a tendency to estrange or drive any of these men away from bis support, A Dm-EOATSi raoM thk 10th Dist. itscAKAwasj cstm,; Oorr.tpond.B08 Voriag Journal. ' I ; - Niw PiHiABgUMiiA, Jane If. Esiroa JouENAi.: The only local quea tion now being agitated by Ihe Union party in thia county is, who shall be our next oan, didate for Gongress from this distriot? We ara aowrepresented by Hon. John A. Bingham, of Harrison,, and u hope that he will bs returned again to the seat he has tilled so ereditably to himself and his eonstitu. enls. Some here seem to think it is now some otbor person's turn to go; as if the office wai to be filled by all our politicians, one after another, In regular order;; but we beg leave to differ with sueh persons, and claim that when we have a man in ihat po sition who haa the ability, determination and purity of purpose poiaessed by Mr. Bingham, we, should Tteep him thore until we oan find a better than be, or oan give him some other position in which be will bs still more useful. At this time w cannot nlace him any higher- and we toot not Lealtato in laying mat we neueve more is not a man in the District who can fill . that seat at this time ably as can the present incumbent. Basidea we do not have any faith in the rotary movement in such affairs, and we thnk it is time that we of the West should be able to as that the Inrluenoe gained and held by the Congressmen of the New England and Southern States, wss obtained by - those States sending men for long terms of years, until they beoamo so thoroughly imbued with a knowledge of Congressional pro ceedings, ana so wen anaersteoa the workings of tbe wires, that our Woater repre sentatives, nearly always new men, were used as tools, ana "lea aDout ty tne nose." Now that we have a "good man and true" In the House, we desire that he should be kept there until he proves himself unworthy, of !!- will otherwise be to our advantage to change. Vf P fo V7 wl" be unitet en thia point, and that we need not mention it ...In. atlll it may be neceasary t revert toll ij,tv , ;,.ir,o imw.,. A1TB1E8.,, 1 ... . . I . ,. FRON DELAWARE. Oorrwpjodene. Moroiog Joareal. ' . . Dsuwxaa, O., Jane 21, 1800, The Annual Commencement Exercises of the Ohio Weeleyan University and IheOhio Wesleyao Female College will take place next week. The University sends forth 22 graduates in the Classical department, and 14 in the Soientilc; the Female College IT Classical and 6 Scientific The prominent features of theooiainenceincnt week, i. ., the reading of essays on the part of the lady graduated, and delivering addresses by the gentlemen oomes off on Wsdnesday and Thursday, the 27lh and 28th inst. The public examination has already be. gan at the University and will end on Mon dav the lulb, The examination at the Female College begins on Friday the 22d, and closes on Tuesiiav the 26th. i30j) Sunday, the 24th, in the morning at 8 o clock, College love-leasl; at 11 o olook A. M. Bishon Thomson delivers the Baoealau- reat sermon; at S o'elock an address before the Alien Missionary Lyoeum, by Rev. Moses Smith, D. D , of the Cincinnati Conference: at 8 P. M , ihe University sermon, by Rev. Chauncy C. Knowlton, former grad uate O. w. v., ot me uocjc niver uonier- onoe. , Monday evening, rublio oxeroiaea of the Clionian Sooiety, 0. W. F. C address be fore the Ohio Methodist Historical society, by Rev. James M.Jameson, of the Ohio Conference. . -f. ; s H Tuesday afternoon, at 4 o clock, address before the Eduonional Convention, by Rev. Uiaboo Clark; at 0 o'clock, V. M , address before the Athenian Sooiety, 0. W. U., by Judge Storer, of Cincinnati. Wednesday. 4 o olook, 1. si., ananal ses sion of the Alumni of the University; at 7J F. M., dedication or the Athenian Hall, at 0. W. F. C; address by Rev. J. M. Reid, D. D. " PEARL. 1 BEMOCBATIO WM KECDKD. Gov, Monro, in Vis speech in Indianap olis, gave an inwrostlng sketoh of the aorvioea of Democratic patriots during the war,' whioh may be useful just new in substantiating the claims put forth by the editors of that piviy upon the ground of their enthusiasm In behalf of aoldiera. The remarks of the Governor, though referring more specifioally k Indiana Demoorals, are intendsd to apply to their party movements generally. It is very illustrative. He said: .,(- - BPIEIT Or Till DEMOIEATIO PARTY, It is beyond doubt that the temper of ihe Demooratio party is not ohanged or im proved since tht .ermination or the war, but on the oontrary it seems to have been greatly embittered by defeat in the field and at the ballot box. . Its sympathy with those lately in arms against tbe uovern-ment ia more boldly avowed than ever, and It becomea argumentative and enthusiastic behalt of tbe right or secession and righteousness of the rebellion. The true spirit of the Damooratio party in Indiana haa leoently received a remarkable illus tration that should oommand tbe serious consideration of the people. Home four or nve weeks since a conven tion was held in the oity of Louisville, com posed in large part of men who had been engaged in the rebel armies. Those men assembled tn convontion, proclaimed themselves memoers of the National Democratic parly, and deolared their unfaltering devotion to Its lime honored principles. They vindicated the righteousnoss of the rebel- ion and declared tnelr stern purpose to maintain at the ballot box the saored prin- Iples for which they had taken up arms. Prominent Indiana Democrats met with them in convention; mingled their tears with those who wept over Southern heroes; uttered glowing eulogies upon the memory of Stonewall Jackson and John Morgan, and indorsed their most ultra and treasonable doctrines; and to show tbe complete identity between this assembly of traitors and the Demooratio party of Indiana, tbe Indinnpo-lia Herald, the organ of the party, in the broadest and most unqualified manner, earn- atlv and eutbusiaetioally endorsed its pro ceodings, resolutions and speeohes. The members of tbe Convention did not disguiae the fact that they were re Bete and northern Democratic leadera. JSslicving Ibattba time for puniBhing treason had gone by, they now make haste to deolare that they are and have been united with them in sympathy, sentiment and purpose; and that they will co operate with them to the bitter end in restoring to loom nnat tiiey oan tneir rignts, and in repairing the damages done to them by the war. And to show that thia malevo lent and treasonable spirit is not conncod to the Demooratio leaders of Indiana, numerous meetings, resolutions, newspapers and declarations, in every part of the United States, may be referred to, and especially the votes and speechos of the Domo-oratio members of Congress. WHAT DIMOCKATIO LEADKRS HAVI DONS, The leaders who are now managing the Democratic party in this State, are the men who at tbe regular session ut tbe Legisla ture in 1BC1, declared that, if an army went from Indiana to asBist in putting down the then approaohing rebellion, it must first pass ovur their dead bodies. They ara tne mon wno in ine uemooratio Convention on the 8th of January, 1802, gave aid and comfort to the rebellion, by resolving that the South had been provoked and driven into the contest by the unconstitutional asd-.wricked aggressions of the people of the North. They are the men who In speeohes and resolutions proclaimed that "Southern de- tea's gave them no joy, and IN or t tier n disasters no sorrow." They are the men who exerted their influence to prevent their Demooratio friends from going into the army, and who, by their inoessant and venomous slanders against the Uovernment, checked the spirit of volunteering, and made drafting a necessity. And when the draft bad thus been forced upon tne oountry, tneir wretched subordinates, inspired by their devilish teacbinga, endeavored in many places, by the force of arms and the murder or enrolling omcers, io prevent, its execu tion. They are the men who corresponded with the rebel leadera In the South, giving them full Information of our condition, and as curing them that a revolution in pnblio opinion was at baud, and that they had but to persevere a lew monins longer, ana tee National Government would fall to pieoos of its own weignt. They are the men who, in the Legislature of 1803. attempted to overturn the mate Qovernmont and establish a legislative revolution, by seising the military power of the State and transferring It into tbe Bands of four State offioors, three of whom were members of ths treasonable society known as the "Bona of Liberty." They are the men who, having failed to overturn the State Government by seizing the military power determined to defeat ita operations and bring abont anarchy, by looking up tne puDiio treasure, ana tnue thus withholding the money nooessary to oarrv on the Government. They are the men who, for the pnrposo of private speculation, and to discredit tbe State before the world, oonsplred to prevent the payment or tne interest on tne nubile debt, by withholding, through a fraudulent lawsuit, the money received from taxes paid for that very purpose. This lawsuit was fraudulently smuggled through the Circuit Court and lodged in the Supreme Court, before the minutes of the eass bad been read and signed by tbe Circuit Judge. or he had been made acquainted with its oharaoter, and was hastily deoided by the Supreme court against tbe oredlt of the state. They are the men who Introduoad and or, ganiied in this State that dangerous and widespread oonspiraey first known as the 'Knights f Ihe Uoldea uirole," and after. ward as the "Sons of Liberty," which had for its purpose the overthrew of the State and National Governments. Not all of them, it is true, belonged formerly to this Infamous order, but such as stood on the outside had knowledge of ita existenoe, purposes and plans, and carefully concealed their knowledge, and stood ready to aooept its work. 'fcTo MooBpUsLftba helliah work of this MORNING: COLUMBUS, OHIO. FRIDAY aananlracT. military officers were appointed military organizationa created, arms and ammunition purchased in immense quantities and smuggled into tue Stale, correspond ence opened witn renei oommanaers, ana military combinations agreed npon, rebel omoera and agents iniroauseo into me capi. tal aud concealed in hotels and boarding houses, and it was deliberately planned and agreed that npon a day fixed, they woo'd suddenly uprise and murder the Execative, seize the arsenal and ita armB and ammunition, and releasing B,000 rebel prisoners iu Camo Morion, put arms into their hands, and with their combined forces effeota mil- iltarv and bloody revolution In the State. This dreadful scheme necessarily involved murder, conflagration, robbery and the com mlsaicn of every orime which makes blast the chronioles of civil war, and yet ita authors and abettors, with the proofs of their guilt piled mountain high, are again Strug, gling for power, and asking tbe people to pnt Into their guilty hands the government and prosperity of the State. Some of these men, who are high in favor and authority in their parly, and are largely entrusted with its management, have heretofore occupied offices of ireat trust and responsibility. in which they proved to be reoreant and oorrupt. ' They are the men who, in tho Legislature of Indiana, bitterly opposed and denounoed every effort to confer the right of suffrage upju soldiers in tne neia wno oouia not oome home to vote. ' ' . Thev are the men who wrote letters to soldiers in the arm, purging them to desert, and assuring ihem of support and protoc- tion if they did. Thev are the men who labored with dev ilish nal to destroy the ability of the Government to oarry on the war by depreciating its financial credit. They assured the people that "greenbacks" would die oa Iheir hands, and warned them solemnly against government bonds, as a wioked device to rob them of their money. 'II Thev are the men who refused to contrib ute to the Sanitary Commission for the relief of sick and wounded soldiers, upon the lying and hypooritioal pretense that the contributions were consumed by the oSoeis of the army. i Thoy are Ihe men who excused themselves from contributing to Ihe relief of soldiers' families at home by the infamoua slander that they were living better than they had ever done, and by foul imputations on the chastity of soldiers' wives. ' Thev are Ihe men who declared in speeohes, resolutions, and by their voles in Congress, that not another man nor another dollar ahould be voted to carry on a cruel war againet thoir Southern brethren.' They are the men who in tbe midst or the laat great campaign of 1804, at the time when Sherman was fighting his way, step by stop, from Chattanooga to Atlanta, aud Grant was forcing Lee bsck into the defenses of Richmond, iu desperate and bloody battles from day to day; when the fate of the nation hung in the balance, and the world watched with breathless interest the gigantio struggle whioh was to settle the queatioa of republican government, as. sembled in convention in Chicago and resolved that the war was a failure; that our cause was unjust, and that we ought to lay down our arms and sue for peace. It was throwing a mountain into the Confederate aoale to make the Union kiok the beam. It was a bold and desperate interference in behalf of the robelliou, at the very crisis of the fight. It was an insult to the loyal armies of the nation so vast, malignant and deadly, that language oin convey no adequate idea of its wickedness. Aud iu future times the historian will record the fact with astonisbmsnt that the Government, at the most oritioal moment of its life, when a few hours, or a few days at the furthest, must determine whether it should live or die, oould permit a large body of its enemies to meet upon its soil in peace and security, aud publish a flagrant manifesto in behalf of the rebellion. Now, I do not mean to say that all the Demooratio leadurs have done all these things, but what I do say is this, that Ihe men who have done these things are combined together, and constitute the real leaders of the Democratic party. The few moderate men of the parly have been stripped of all power aud influence, and are oarried along with it merely for numbers and poll-oy, whllo the living and aggressive element which oontrols it are tbe "oonaol Liberty, and thoss who noted in sympathy and cou-oert with them. They are tbe men who hava perverted the word Demooraoy, from its once honorable meaning, to bs a shield and oover for rebellion, and for every orime that attaohes to a causeless and atrocious oivii war. WHO CALLED Tit IM8KLVKS DEMOCRATS, Every unregenernte rebel, lately in arms against his Government, calls himself a Democrat. , Evory "bounty jumper," every "deserter," every "sneak," who ran away from Ihe draft calls himself a Democrat. Bowles, Milligan, IV a l iter, Liodd, iioraey and Humphreys call themselves Democrats. Every "Son of Liberty" who oonsplred to murder, burn, rob arsenald, nud release rebel prisoners calls himself a Democrat, John Morgan, Sue Mundy, Champ Ferguson, Wirz, Paine and Booth proclaimed themselves Democrats. Every man who labored for the rebellion in the field, who murdered Union prisoners by oruelty and starvation, who conspired to bring about civil war in the loyal States, who invonted dangerous compounds to burn steamboats and Northern cities, who ocnlrived hellish schemes to introduce into Northern oiuee tho wasting peatilauce of yellow fever, oalia himself Democrat. Kvery dishonest con tractor wbo has been convicted of defrauding the Government every dishonest paymaster or disbursing 1 offioer wbo bss been convicted or squandering the publio money at the earning table or in gold gambling operations every officer tn tbe army who was dismissed for coward ice or disloyally, oalls btruseit a Demoorat. kvery wolf lu sboep s olotbing, wbo pro tends to preach the Gospel, but prooiaime the righteousness of man selling and slaveryone who shoots down negroes in the streets, burns negro sohool houBes and meeting bouses, and murders women and ohildren by tho light of their own flaming dwellings, oalls bimsslf a Democrat. Every New York rioter in 1868, who burned up little children in colored UBylurns who robbed, ravished and murdered indiscriminately in Ihe midst of a blazing eity for three days and nights, oalled himself a Democrat. In abort ths Demooratio party may be desoribed as a oommon sewer and loathsome receplaole, into which is emptied every element of treason North and South, and every element of inhumanity and bar barism whioh has dishonored tbe age. And this party, oomposed or tbe men and elements 1 have desoribed, in defianoe of truth and deoency, asserta itself aa the spe cial ohemplon of the Constitution and the Union, whieb but a abort aixteen montha ago it waa in arms to destroy; and proclaims to an astonished world that the only effect of vanquishing armed rebels in ths field, is to return mem to seats in congress, and to restore them to politioal power. Having failed to deatroy the Constitution by force, they aeek to do it by ooustruetion, and assume to have made Ihe remarkable die eovery that rebels who fought to destroy the Constitution were its true friends, and that ths men who shed their blood and gave their suhstanoe to preserve it wore it only ene mies. ' A literary gentleman, whole courtesy In a oerlain matter a pretty woman had re warded with a kiss, was so well pleased with the mode of payment, and so little satisfied with the amount, Ihat, judging by ths following eplgrammatlo reply, he is likely to prove a rather inexorable creditor. We dot)'t blame him: - On. eoln, m delicious, alon. Par nor. than you ow. m.i and rtt, Wbll. yon hav. a mint of yonr own, ' Don't e.k m. to canc.1 lb. debt I A ptoturs In Punch oalled "Rather Cute," represents a man at a lioket office. "Look here" he says, "yoa didn't 1 give me the right change just now I" Clerk. "Too late, sir I You should have spokon when you look your lleketl" Passenger "Should 11 Well, iU of no oonaeqnenoe lo me; but you gave m half sovereign to muoh.'' lilt. .- '. y;"-, MORNING. JUNE Personal and Miscellaneous. ' Eight hours' work; eight hours' play; eight hours' sleep, and eight shillings a day, is the motto of an association of workmen, in Lancashire. Ex. Gov. Wise signs himself "Henry A. Wise, Brigadier-General C. 8. A. K., prisoner of war on parole." Ho ought to add ASS. The mild young Earl Grosvenor is heir to the great estate of the Marquis of Westminster. By and by he will have an inoome of about a thousand ponnds a day. The Ladies May their virtues even ex ceed the magnitude of their skirls, while their faults are still smaller than their bonnets.The following advertisement; appeared in a New York country paper recently Manure Wanted, stable manure. Any person having from fire to fifty loads to dis pose of, will please send word or drop it through ths post offioe. Mr William Page has finished his histori cal painting, of which the subjeot is Admiral Farragut lashed lo the shrouds of the Hart, ford, while she was entering Mobile Bay, August 6, 1804.' It is lo be exhibited for a time for the benefit of the New York Mer cantile Association. The number of lost ohildren found wan dering about New York city the past year was 2,742. Of this number nearly all, with the exor.plion of one-twelfth, were returned to their parents and friends, Ihe remainder being sent to Ward's Island, where they are being reared under the core of the Commiaaloners of Charities. The Philadelphia Preie gives as a speci men of the oharaoter of Ihe "Prison Life of Jefferson Davis," the faot that there are in it seven letters about ordering an overcoat. Wonder If there is any thing In it about thoss other coatt. Pollard, the ex-rebel and editor of the Riohmond Examiner, is in despair because he cannot spell the name of Andrew John-eon with a K. Thad. Slovens, when asked " what ailed him," said "about seventy years, he believed." He subsequently thought his liver waa affected, and, in reply to the suggestion, admitted that his gall was very bitter. The London Poet relates the following of Lord Brougham, who is now about 87 years old: "He is in excellent health, and capable of bodily exertion quite extraordinary at his advanoed age. For instance, he left Cannes In the afterncon after an early dinner, traveled all night and next day, arrived in Pails in ths evening, then after a rapid toilet went to a soiree to meet some of hia Frenoh scientific friends, not retiring to rest until nearly midnight." The Pall Mall Gazette says : "Europe now presents the sublime spectacle of somo hundreds of thousands of men waiting lo learn vrhctbor it is tho pleasure of half a dozon gentlemen existent in various parts of the Continent ihat thoy shall fall to and cut each other's throats," Ohio State Journal, (lllrlPAION OF 1800. Daily, Tri-Weekly and Weekly. NUKE UP YOUR CLUBS ! Tho next eampaign will be one of the most important which the People of Ohio have ever fought against proscription, and error, and wrong. Now If ever, must the fruits of the terrible war which we have suffered be scoured beyond a peradventure. The grave responsibilitiet growing out of the altualicc are felt anc appreciated, by all the People. In order that they may be prepared to aot understandingly, there is a necessity for cheap and rapid means of in forming themselves of the important events transpiring from day today in the political world. It is with tbe design of doing all in our power to tneetthis want ihat we now propose to Issue JL CAMPAIGN EDITION or TUB Daily, Trl-Weekly Weekly Journal at turA rates as shall place ihe't paper Joithin reach of every voter in Ohio. In calling attention to tho Omo State Joubhal as a means for securing the diffusion of early and reliable information, we do not forget that the local papers should be supported vigorously. There is muoh looal information whioh can be obtained onlyjthrough them. Your prosperity depends muoh on Ihe manner in whioh they are supported. They should therefore receive your first attention. It is to the Jocbnal as a oentral paper, working In the interests of the principles of Ihe Union party for the State, that we would call attention. ' The oonduct of the 'paper, politically, is too well known to need any publication of its manner or the principles which have governed it. It will continue as before, without ohange. In addition to the oareful attention to the Political Department of the paper, speoial effort will be made each department being placed in oompetent hands to make the Jourhal a complote compendium of news, a pleasant fire-Bide companion, a faithful market guide, and in short a oomplete summary of events in the political, social, religious, literary, sclentlfio and commercial world. With this end in view, it will contain a full record of ourrent news, market reports, (foreign and domestic,) the latest telegraphic dispatches, politioal intelligence' literary and dramatic gosBip, choice poetry editorials on ourrent topics, the most beau tiful stories and sketohes, oorrespondenco, State and local Intelligence, etc., etc Due attention will also be given to eduoational, art and agricultural matters. - The Daily, Tci-Wiikxy and Wxeklt Onto Stats Joubnal will bo furnished during the oampalgn four months, commencing June 21st, and ending Ootober 20th at the following rates: . DAILY JOUBNAL. BinuL eopy..........MM. Oltib. o' flv. .nd upward......, .: 00 Oa. oopy utra to otnlM ol tan or mor. nt-WHKLY JOUBNAL. IdbI. copy...... m,. Olnli of At. and upward One oopy .atra to olubi of tea or mors. .! BO . i as WIIELI JOOBHAL. Sinzl. eoor ..US el., Olnu. of Ave and upward. .. ..DO eU. On. oopy wttra to olab. of La or mora, Perione forwarding Clubs will please deii uatt which edition of ths CAMPAIGN JOURNAL they desire. Bend for sample copies AddrsM - COMLY, ROBY It SMITH, Publishers and Proprietors Ohio Stats Journal, Colviibos, Ohio. JOURNAL. 22. 1866. TfiLEtittAPIIIC. REPORTED FOR TBE JOURNAL. Afternoon Dispatches. FROM NEW YORK. Keceiitlon of Oeii. Uovey In Urea. New Yokk, June 21. The Herald's Lima correspondent says that Gen. Hovey was given a grand reception by the government on the presentation of his credentials. Ihe Oeneral, in a few words, expressed the cordial feeling entertained by the United Slates toward their younger aad more southern sisters; and Col. Prado, the Provisional Diotator, replied, in high oommendation of the Great Republic and the personal oharacter of its accredited representative at his court. ' I.ale Hews from tbe West Indies. The Herald e Havana correspondent says: The new policy of the new administration is a repressive and restrictive one and very obnoxious to the Cubans, more espeoiaily by oontrast with the former generous treatment of General Dulce. A violent hurricane visited Basam on the Oth. Regla, a town opposite Havana, lost 23 houses by fire on tbe evening of the 18th. Advioes from rjt, Thomas state that about 200 troops had left St. Thomas to join the foreign legion in Mexico.. By the late fire in Mayagues, Porto Rico, over seventy buildings were destroyed. Most of the English and American resi dents were abandoning Hayti on aceount of ihe disorder occasioned by the great fire at Port au Frinoe some weeks ago. President Baex is on his laat legs at St. Domingo. Tbe revolutionists are pressing him so closely that it is supposed he will take lo flight very soon. Martinique had suffered considerably fromdroughtand Gnadaloape had been fear- fully deoimatcd by the cholera. Oatraares Aaaiualau American t'lllaeu The Herald states that Daniel Green, an Amerioan oitizen residing in Mexloo about fifty miles baok of Mazatlan, has filed a statement with the Amerioan Consul at Mazatlan, of certain outrages committed on him bv the Frenoh. He was arrested in Mazatlan en tbe zutb oi April last ana xopt in prison until May 1st, without accuaation or hearing; he waa then ordered to leave Mexico for California, anawnue unaer mis injunction he entered hie protest. Item from Washington Kpeelala The morning papers contain the following speoials from Washington: The receipts on aocount of internal reve nue, for the present year, up to the 19th inat, inclusive, amount to $209,818,4:16, leaving less than $1,000,000 to complete $300,000,000, the estimate made at the Bureau of Internal Revenue. It is now believed that the receipts of the Tiscal year ending with the ootb of this month wal amount to $806,000,000 from taxes for internal revenue alone. The iron olause of tho tariff bill is troubling the Ways and Means committee. Inlorosted partiee are not satisfied with a duty of $10 per Iun, but are urging 120 and even $30. The Judiciary committee, with only two or three members attending, resolved lately to remodel tbe entire judiciary eyBtem ol the oountry, and make one less Associate Justice of the Supremo Court, but this aotion haa oinoe been reconsidered, and next Friday is set apart for a redivision of the matter, when the projaot is likoly to be defeated. The Postoffice Department is instituting suits againBt all postmasters in the insurrectionary Slates who stand indebted to the Government. The bill for the relief of iron olad contrac tors still sleeps in the oommittee of Claims, where it will, no doubt, remain tbe rest or the session. The bounty money aocruing to the officers and men of the following named vessels, viz : Benton, Cairo, Caron-dolet, Louisville, St. Louis, Monarch and Queen of the West, for tbe destruction of tbe enemies vessels at Memphis in Juno, 1802, is now ready for payment in the Fourth Auditor's office. Ordors have been received to pay the prlzs money to those engaged in the fight at Mobile in Angusl, 1801. This will be about two months from the present date. The total amount in value in the matter is $767,09839. The Sievenson-t ullerton commission leit Mobile for Mississippi to-day. They will probably report to the Senate and the fur ther consideration ol tne suojeoi do postponed until Deoember next on the ground that there is no time to consider it this session.The evidence before the Fry-Conkling nvestigatingoommitttee has all been taken. Among the witnesses examined yesterday was Mr. Raymond, who testified that Tbe-dore Allen, whom Mr. Conkling made such a rccoid against, waa a creditable witness. A Virginia Judge Inilictcil. A Times speoial says: Judge Thomas, of Virginia oourL who recently refused to admit the testimony of a negro in a onse where oolored men were not oonoerneu, on the ground that he must be governed by the law of the State and not of tbe United States, was indioted by the U. S. Grand Jury, at the recent session of Judgs Under wood s eourt at niobmond. no steps nave been taken to arrest Judge Thomas under the indictment. Pollllcinl "Screws" Loose. Col. Cooper, the President's Private Sec retary, has gone to New York oity. It is said there sre several screws loose In New York among the federal offioe holders. The High Protective Tnrtir Measures. The high protective tariff men are getting alarmai, lest their various interests will not be fully oared for by the Ways and Moans committee. There are several gentlemen here who have impressed the oommittee very strongly against the expediency of adopting, at this time, ft high protective tariff. The oommittee are also in receipt of letters from prominent men in varioua sec tions of tbe country against suoh a oourse. FKOM GALVESTON. Bontherni Items. Galvbstoh, June 20. Gen. Sheridan and a portion of hia staff arrived yesterday en route from iirazos to New Orleans, lie expressed satisfaction with the quiet state of affairs along the Rio Grande. Gen. Gregory, having finished tbe inspection of the State, left, in oompany with Gen. Sheridan, for New Orleans, en route to Washington. Gen. Kidder, in a new order lo tbe As sistant Commissioner, urges greater exertion to save, and if possible increase, the ootton crop. The r reedmen s oeiebration or emancipa tion, at Houaton, passed off quietly. tlen. rullerlon baa not yet arrived. The Cresoent brings an "extra" of the Rio Grande Courier of the 18th, with de tails of ths oapture, by tho Liberal forcaa under Treamo, of a large merchandize train going from Matamoraa to tbe interior. The train waa oonvoyed by 10 Imperialist companies, numbering 850 men, under Capt, rlappa, Wltn lou uonirr. fuerniiH, mauo up of Confederates, and 16 Mexioans. The Imperialists bad eight pieoea of artillery nd the Mexicans six. The fight lasted one hour, when the train was captured about three leagues from Camargo and Escabedo. The captured Mexican officers, with their oommands, had placed themselves under Tribune. The Liberals numnerca z,uuu, wen armed and eauicrjed. The train consisted of merchandize and and ammunition, of great value. Gen. Alvarez, wounded, passed through Rceyonsa, on Saturday, Ihe 9th. Several officers of his command arrived at Ma to. moras, who confirmed the capture of 400 prisoners of Oliver's oommand; and about 400 othors, with the convoy, were sent to Camargo. Tho convoy was alio taken to Camargo, with direot oruers irom uen. fcs-oanbo not lo allow anything to be teuohed. Rumor says the Mexican Imperial regiment ohanged aides in the fight. Commerce has suffered irreparable loss by the capture of the train. 21 of the Austriana esoaped. News from Monterey says that a apeoie train was reported as being at Caraba within ths last six days, whioh attempted to return to Monterey, and fears are entertained that it would be oaptured. NUMBER 293. INSURANCE- STATE 1VI H NT or ins t-oNimioN or vhb SECURITY Life Insurance lauultyio., On lh.flrt titty of May, 1M1, inndf lo h Auditor of Ohio, puraiiMnt to ih biniute ol tbiit 81 ?. NAME AND LOCATION. Th crime if th Company It t!m 8E CUB ITT LIFE IN30RANOK AMD ANNUITY COMPANY, nd ii loon ted 31 Pine itrtoi, Mew York. I. CAPITAL. Th mouotLof lti Oftpltftl Sttxk pftid op ia......... , f 110,000 00 II. ASSETS. Caih of tht Company oa hand, and In tin. bands of Atrentf and other Dnona 60,006 82 1U,000 00 2.15,756 17 Hi 421 70 13,'JttS 73 ThoBondifttid fllocii owned bj .ha Com pany, u. o. o w Duaoi, Tamo DabU otbarwiM McuredtPrealnm Motou eenred by P(illoia...Hm. Dnbtafor frfmlcma Alloltiar Seourtttca H Total Aswta of the Oompuiy ........... : III. LIABILITIES. T otti aifjtitd and not doe Lowes nntid jutted All other o.atma agetuit the Oonpauy... - $19,700 00 fi.OOO tKI 8,701 29 Total LtabllitlM-, (29,491 29 IV. MISCELLANEOUS. ! The great eat atnoant Inwrtd In any one rlk, 110,000. The amount of Its capital or arolna dpoalte4 loftuy other State, aa aecnrlty for loeaea therein None. The Charter, or Aot of Inoorporntion of Hid Oompany, copy filed. STAT I OF NEW TOOK, 1 Copht or New Yom. j Robert L. Omo, President, and Iiaao H. Allen, 6oretrv of the .Seoarttj LI e luinrance and An natty Company, being eeverally affirmed, depoae ana ray, tliat ine foregoing n a lull, true ana ear reot fltetemontof the affaire of the a Id Oompany, and that they are the above described officer! thereof. UOBKUT L. IIAHB, Prcaldent. HAAU H. ALLRd. Becretary. 9nbecrilftd and affirmed before me, thia 29th day Lbtamp.J of May, ltttiS. ornuK or the auditor of statu, i Columbus, 0., Juno 6, 1866. j It la hereby certified that ihe foregoing 1 a correct copy of tbe Staumeut of Condition ot tbe Security Life Insurance and Annu'ty Oompany. of New York, made to and flUd In thii offloe, fur the year 16(16. VVitnem my band and teal officially. I is 4 L.J JaS. H. GODMAN, And. tor of State, CERTIFICATE OF AUTHORITY. (To expire on the Slat day of January, 18C7.) OFFIOE OF THR AUDITOR OF STATS, I NSDa A NOB DlPABTHBNT. CoLOMavs, 0., June 8, ISM. WnnaKia, The Siodutt Lira TwatmAWci n Annuity Com pant, located at New York, In tbe Sute of New York, baa nid in tnil offioe a sworn statemeut of Its conditio!., as required by ihe aot ''Torfgnlaie Insurance Com pan'es not Incorporated by the State of Ohio," passed April 8. 1868 aud amended February 9, 1804 aod the act ' lo ragulate Foreign loinrance Oompanies," peeped April Mb, 1866; ani, whereas, said company haa fnrnlahed the uudera'gned satisfactory evidence that It ia posiefleil of an actual capital of at least ONE IIONDBBO AND II ITT THOUSAND DOLL ABA, Invested as required by said aota : and, wher eat a company uae nieo in line crate a written Instrument under It corporate stal. signed by tbe Prmldsnt and Secrtarr thereof, anthorlzlog any apentor age ttsof said Company tn mis oiaie iiacnnowieoge s rvioe or pruceis, ior ana In bubal f of said Company acordioic to tho hrjus of said ait of April 8, I860. now, inertroie, in pursuance oi tne acta atore sifd I, Jabibs H. Oouhan, Auditor of State tor Ohio, do her by certify that said Bboubitt hire In-iubanob abb Annuity Co., of New York, Is auihorU' ed totraniaet the basinet of Life Insurance in this State until the thirty-first day of January, ti the yoar one tlnneand eight hundred anl sixty-seven. in wiioess wnereoi, a uave aenunto auueorioea my name and earned the ael of my o'-sbal. flee to be afllxed the day and year bjovo written. JAS. H. GODMAN, Auditor of State. J. N. NEWKIRK, Atf.llt, JonlClw rolnmbaa. Ohio. SEWING MACHINES. Sewing 3Xaoliine. Ouly Machine ror Carriage Work. Best Machine ror Shoemaker Work. Rent Machine (or Tailor Work. Singer ManaCACttoff C'o.'h New Star bine BEST FOR FAMILY SEWING. Cell and examine, at H. Colt A 0.'s. 115 Booth High street. W. V. PKNNY, g't. beetles, Hhittlft, Oil, and STorythlnx appertain-loft to B tiger Machine. aprKI cd ly LIFE---HEALTH---STRENGTH LIFE -EEALTH-STREN(jTfl LIFMEAM-OTEMTH THE ttllElT FUEttCII REMEDY. DE. JUAN DKLAMA.RRK'3 Celebrated Hpeeitie Fills. Prepared from a prescription oj Dr. Juan VeU amarre, Chief Pyhtician of the Hospital du Nord ou Lariboisiers Paris. rpBIS INVALUABLE MED1CINK 19 NO 111. 1 position, bnt la nnfallins in tbe onre of Suer matorrhn or Peminal Weakness. Krery species of Genital or Urinary Irratibillty. Involuntary or Nightly Hunlnai Emissions from whatever oame irodtu.ea, or nowever severe, win do spreauy relieved and the organs restored to healthy action. Jterf tk follow ma opinion o.emfHeni French PKm- HCMMS. "Wehavn need lbs SdwIHo Pills nrenared fav Gar. endure A Dapont, No. 214 Rne Lombard, from tbe prescription of Di. Joan Delamarre, In enr private firactlvewithnnlform success; and we believe there i no otber medicine to w?U oalonlatod to onre aK persons suffering Irom Involuntary Vmitilnns or any other weakness of the Pexnal Organs, whether oamed by a aedsntry mode of Nylnir. excess, er abuse. It. A. BKAUKKPABIE, U. D. U. D. UUJAKDiN, W. D JUAN LULU0UR1C, II. D. Farli.lIay6tb.laoU. Beware of Counterfeit. The Genuine Pills ara told bv all the orineinal Druggists throughout the World. Price OneDoltar per Vox, or six Boxes for rive Dollars. Gabamoiub A DoroNT.Bola Proprietors, No. 214 Hue Lombard, Paris. One Dollar enclosed to any authorised Aa-ent. will InBnre a box by return mall, securely sealed from l oMnrvatioo. bix Doxesrornveaojiara. Sole General Agrmta for America, OHCAK G, MON KM, eft CO., 87Gurtlandt8t., N. T. Agents for Oil n tabus nod vicinity. 6. B. bAMUULS andG. B0BBKT8. Jy 17 eom eodaw alt ly PKTJGR TO TANS, 89 Fulton Street, N. Y., Dealer In. Ivory. HAS CONSTANTLY OR HAND A LAUGH stock of Biiii ia.no Balib of every Bliss, Cloth, Ours and TtMMUiNQt, and ever? thing appertaining to the BlMerd business. Marti Mali Uixss, (URaoKS, Keko) Can it and Oabb Baudles, atd Ivoby in geneml. All oidr prompt lv attended to at 89 folton street. Mew York, or at Factory, oor ney 0ydam street and Myrtle Avenue. Brooklyn, new iora. JoolH law flmW Apparatus for Deformities DR. A. O.'FORNBKRG. THR CLUB FOOT MACHINES Ot TB. A. O ro8Rniaot No. ft Kaat Fourth street, are the best now In me. Tee so i of Mr. W, 01 bun a, msnu-faotnrer of lead pipe and sheet lead, on Ninth otreet, a lad eight years r age, fcas breo afflicted with a club fout since chl!dbood, and waa treated for Ave yoars with mttbtnesof different hinds, bntwithont lusoees. Hlx months ago Dr. A. O. Foriberg applied his machine, and with the tot happy, results, onr most distinguished physicians having prononnoo tbe foot as perfectly cured. Call .nd see for yonr. eelvee. The best of Trntttet tor core; also, avsry variety of Bandacee constantly on hind, at Mo. 5 Bait Fourth street, aecond story. fM9 ritfa these! i EYE AND EAR. 4VI. . A. BJAPP, Oosllt. f 5iS('iarlF of N. Y.,) exolnalnly tra.1. TlJ&ru .foow, DI.M.M of th. Kyaa, and In. MrU ArtlfloUl Eyas without pais, that on, at No. ISO Sooth Blgh .tre.1, (oppo.lt th. Good.t. Horn.,) I. Oolamhoi, Ohio. Alto futol.w. or mall. hi. book on th. Er. and Ear, for 40 oauta fro. ol poatalhto U addrua, Uglily TEBM8 OF BUBSeRipTIOX nans op tci ailt Jotwaaia, Siogle flnbterlbira, 1 year, by mall....,,,,,. J9 M Single bBbeeribera, 6 montha, M M.w..... 4 60 H'ogleSnbecrlbere, 3 moathi, M ,,.......,. t i46 S ugleSobecrtbera, 1 month, ..i..lul tu (ileSubaoribera, 1 month, dellTered.H,MHHM 0 W tingle Bnbfcrlberi, per week, dellTerssJ. 0 lo Agents, In clubs, 16 cents per week each oopy. TKJUU Or TUB TKI-WUKLY JOVUIsU. I yfsr.............H 501montlM.M.M.,.js a It months M I 16 1 1 monlb.........HH,H( 0 4 HIM OF Till WBBKLT JOtTtlfalM Single Snbaorlbers, per yMr........M.,....M.w...a 04 CLOTHING. TTCflTTaHK CLOTHING ' STORE ? THK ATTENTION OK THK CITIZENS OW Oo mbus and ele where la Ballad to thm ducements that we are now offering in oar MERCHANT TAILORING MKNT. . DEPART- rVmala!lo.r of Ihe floret and moat nhotce selection of French, Euglltb, and foot, h clotlu and Otisalmsras, caunit be enrpasaed either In New York, feoetoa. r rtnixlelpliia. nr. B. w. BTiHrauM haa as cloaks control of the CITTJTNU DEPARTMENT, Aod wo wonld ala'e that we bare made arrance nients to have the latest aty Ine oo band, tn on week after they bare been reported from Europe. FI RISISHIXG OOODA DEPARTMENT In which can be fnnnd tbe cholneat and Ansst eeloa- tlou In tbe oity. Mr. VY. H. LBNOX, formerly con nectfd with tble SottblUbnttnt, has taken charge of this Department, In our YOCTlI t ('HIEDREX'M CI.OTHIPIU DEPARTMENT There will be found ihe lateit and most attrao tire styles of Fancy Oasatmsres and Lloen Goodn la the West, rauging In prlos and. quality to alt tbe times, and we cordial. y Invito nil to 011 and t xtmlne our stuck. i CI. ARK et NIS WANDER, Ml Month Hlta Strtet. j4 1m H. COXT & CO., Merchant Tailors, No. J05 South High Street ABE NOW RKCKIVINO A LABOB AND KLI-gnt aiork of Spring aod Snmmer Goods, ae Wc'ed exprmnly for this market. COIT CO. are sole agents In Oolambnf forth Celebrated v . . r ... Whioh U uorrafefi ths bmt, ntateit JlUitiff Hhirt ever worn, . meat thtrahU, a mi JanVl-dlyaort jUKA1I,EY fc WEftrY, Importer and JuBuertuf O 1 O T II S Cassimeres, Vestings, Ac WHITE AT., IDSOIt BnADLtY, WKBLEY WF.LTT. apt 27 nodly "Si.- "YoirVc. CONFECTIONS. New Confectionery. F. C STETKNSON, . DBAtlB IM q . . ; , Fluo Co nfaotlouai, MO 1 A WATER, Native and Forvlira Fralta, aud Imported and Domestic Cioabs & Tobiooo. NO. 1 POST OFFICE ARCADE. m9 3m COMMISSION HOUSES LlJE STOCK. AND i PETROLEUM EXCHANGE! I HAVE OPENED A live stoo: PETROLEUM K X U A N K IK TI1KSOU PH-WEflT OOBNESVOlr TBI POST Ofttoe b.lldlog, wli.r. I .ball b. I.mmI Id ii.. gotta!., upon t...LiQaul. tiiu..witii .UjparsoDB who de.irn to .all or mrctafl. Livs stock, Ea JC.UL, 1'atrot.tmi l..i:dsf or Ott Ntork.. muylojll iNUKEW tt'IUSOlV, Jr. BPNTINOTO. NTOII. DWa.O riTO H. Triton Ac Son., . rOBWAUDIXG,' ' CoMu&Muc&'MercMs, COM' M BUS, OHIO. ' ' DEALSM IN . Flour, Grain, Salt, Cement, AND PRODUCE OINIBAUT.'' ' Best qnulliy or Hot and Cold Blast rig I run alwaya on bn Speoial Transfer & Shipping Agents of Tn. 0. 0. 0. B. B., ftntnl Onto and P. 0. 4 0. B. B "ROpmuTois or tub Columbus, CliUlicotlie & Portsmouth Packet Company. And Soloto and Hooking Valley Express FreliEbt Line. Aosnts or Hockino Vallit Saxt Compamt H. FITOH A RON giro Tbroash Ooutr.ots on Produce .od Freight, from .11 point, on tho O.D.1 to th. Euurn ';iila, by RAIL, LAKE, or OAN At. Warehouses, East and West End oj Scioto Bridge, loot of Broad St. ' OrFICF, 87 WEST BROAD STREET. loni'tM lyra JEWELRY. F.A.& L. LESQUEREUX, IMPORTERS AND WHOl.ESALS AND , ABTAU. pSALKBS Ot latches, (Ms anil Jewelry. POCKET CUTLERY TOOLS, MATERIALS NOI'IONS, GOLD, SILVER & STEEL BPECTACLES & FANCY WARES. Our facilities as Importers enabln us tompply tha Jobbing Trade at the most favorable rates of any Establlifainentln the oountry. BirAinma dome with mbatsus and dibpatob. F. A. fc Ii. rENQCERETJX, No. 71 SOUTH HIQH 6T&BIT, JanS'dly aod . . Oolunbiaa), .OblO. HEW RESTAURANT AND ' " SAMPLE ROOMS ED. LANE, - - Proorietor. Dialer in Foreign and Domestlo Wlnea, Llquori, . and Cigari, of the beat quality! at No. 105 South Hiifu Street Near tho Opera Hons Columbns, 0. foulo-dem UNION BLOCK Confectionery & Restaurant No. 90S Month Hlffti NtrMt. PABTIE8 SUPPLKO WITH OONPEtlTIONS, Bon Boo., Uakea, 1c Uraim .nd Vl-ults of llklndaln UoirMaioa. ' ' A SPLENDID RESTAURANT Ta .at.bllahml 1. onoctloa with th. Oonffcotlonary. Oam. Vhb, Or.un ..d th. doltcMiaa .r th. invoa a.rv.d up to ord.r at .11 honra of th. dai .nil .t.dIbk. Alao, . large uaortm.nt of r ' : .fi'-i'-l 1'IItE-U OKKM, IT'., KVV., CTC. W. Inrtt. th. pstronag. of th. oitllSDA of Ooloxi bn. aod too pobllc r.Derall?. jonlitiw , 0. A.KKUl,l,0HA1.8aiMlR8. 7cr.XjKxrixt.'asj PIIOTOURAFH ARB' FINK-ART Q ALL E BY! , Ho. 17 stouth HlttU Ut. 1' WORK PUT UP IN IVKRK STYCEror TBI art. and warranted to gtv.atlUA.ti9m. nt.rl. dli . , , 1 . ; . . 1 . 51 I . At !'! Sill j iiiK. ..tit J' h,
Object Description
Title | Columbus morning journal. (Columbus, Ohio), 1866-06-22 |
Place |
Columbus (Ohio) Franklin County (Ohio) |
Date of Original | 1866-06-22 |
Searchable Date | 1866-06-22 |
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 | 10000000028 |
Description
Title | Columbus morning journal. (Columbus, Ohio), 1866-06-22 page 1 |
Place |
Columbus (Ohio) Franklin County (Ohio) |
Searchable Date | 1866-06-22 |
Submitting Institution | Ohio History Connection |
Type | Text |
File Size | 3991.48KB |
Full Text | " TERMS OF ABVEBTISIWG. . ft.. nrtm Vnlr. aaefc iBWrtfoB 0 lion - " 11 u huIhu. WntinM. Mr Una. aoh liwirUM ... J J Waaa I V llu HoUin. aaotl lnrtiOa 1 Local and Boslnaw HoticM. pw "O. a.cb lua.rt.on..... . 0 80 mrOai Sqnn noren thrw-qo.rt.ra of IM .1 ipajOS IB IM OOIOWH. i ,.-- M.rrlaga NotKm-M ofc.. wbs 4" Haas. Book .nd Jol Printing n.atlj lid pro.tlT .X. .nlad. 1 MORNING JOURNAL Cfflce If. 10 Kant 6tt Btrret. Vtom tbe Atlontio Monthly 'or July.) . THE DEATH OF JftlaAYEftY. BY WIL1.14M CCtLEX BRTAMT. 0 thon great Wrong, that, tlareugfa In slow-pneed iun. Dldit bold tliv roil Mo ui f tiered, and didst wield - Th Jourgf that drove tbo laborer to the field. And tarn a stony gaie on human teats, Thy cruel reign la n' ; . '' Thy bondmen eroucb no more ( ' In Itrror at the insnnceof thine sys; : for be bo mirks the bonndB of gailty cower, Tjobk suSering, hath board the oepttve's ety, And tonched hli ah nek In at the appointed boar. And lot they fell. nd bewhoee Hmb they gelled, Stands In tale native mnnhofd, disenthralled. A ihout of jo fron the redesmrd le tat; ! Ten thousand hamlets .swell ths hymn of thanks; Onr riven roll exnltin, nd their banks . Send op hcssnnas t j th Armament. '-... ri yields wh're the bondmen's toll '.' ' No more shall trench the Bull, 0Haoowtobnililnftwreterdiy; j The meadow-birds sing sweater, nni the Ala Of bee-en wiih m'-re rarelelng oftnrs.n'ay. Welcoming met to liberty like tfaelri. ' ! A glory clot bee tb lend fn, m soa to u a, Tor the groat lend anda.lItiooMtsaref.ee, Wlthla that land wert thou enthroned of late, And they by whom the natlon't laws were made. ' Anl they who Ailed its judgment BeaUoteyod ' : Thy mandate, rigid as the will effete.1 ' Fierce meant thy rliht band, t With gesture of oommnd, 1 Gave faith the word that none might dare gainsay. And grave and revrrand one who loved the not, I'ttrank from thy pres.nce, aud, ia blank dismay, -' Choked down, iiMtloi-ed.-ttao rebellions thought; While meanor cowards, mingling with thy train, Proved from tliQ bosk ol God, thy right to reign. 6 rest as thou wert, and feared from shore to shore, The wrath of heaven o'ertook thee In th) pride, Thou eltt'st a ghastly shadow; by thv side Thy once strong arms baog nerveless erermoro. 1 And they who quailed but row j Before thy lowering brow ' ' Serote thy memory to icorn and Lberae, t Aod scoffat tho pale, powerless thing thou art. And they who rnlcd.lu thin Imperial name, Subdued and standiDgaullenly spaTt, Scowl at tho hands tha; overthrew thy relgb. And shattered at a blew the prisoner's chain. Well was thy doomed deserved ; thou didst not spire Lire's tendereet tits, but cruelly didst part Huiband anl wife, and from tho mother's faoart Didst wrest her children, deaf to shriek and prayer; Thy Inner lair became The haunt of guilty shams; ' ' '' ; ' Tby laab dropped blood ; the mnrdttrer, at tjhy aids, U lowed his rod bands, nor dared the rSugeanoe due. ' , ' i Thou didst low earth with or iraes, and, far and wide A banreitcf uncounted miseries grew, u j Until the measure of thy sins at last Was full, audboa lb avenging bait was oast. Oo now, accurst of Ojd, aod take thy place 1 With hatefal memories of the older timej With many a wasting prat, and nauolesf crime, And bloody war that thinned the human race? With the Black Death, whoio way' Through walling cities lay, Worship of tfolo.h, tyrannies that built ' The Pyramids, and cruel leads that taught To avenge fancied guilt by deeper guilt Detth at the stake to thoio that b Id them not. Iio, the fonl phantoms, silent lu the gloom' Of the down ages, part to yield thee rorm.j i i X see ths letter jeara that boston by Carry thee back into that ehadowy past, Wbore, lu the dusty spaces, void anl vast, The grives of thoso whom thou bast mntdtfed He. TbesIkvcpeo, through whose doer . Thy victims pasi no more, Is there, and there aball the grim block remain At which the slave wnasold : hlle at thy ftet loourges aud engines of restraint andpalnj Moulder and rostby thine eternal ssat. ' Tbsre, 'mi 1 the symbols thai proclaim thy crimes, Swell thuu, a warn lug to the coming timet. Dramatic and Musical. raEP ABED E.Xt'aKSSLI FOE TUB JOCHKAL. i With the hot summer and the approach of dog days, comes the closing of the then, ten.. Hot wepther and things dramatio and operatic are antagonistic. " At thia season bix is alow, and money comes in like angels' visits, and the "dead headV corps re all that give signs of life to the auditorium. It is now that managers mourn their lost, and give way to repining, oast blear eyes on their employees on salary days and drop into the melting mood. It is also the season when Managers are looking out for male and female artists of rare talents, respectability, &c, with whioh to organize oompanies for the ooiolng fall and winter season, and every mail is laden with bushels of ielters from artists of overy tripe, containing short histories of their "stage life," and fulsome puffs of the rare talents they displayed before the) elite ol Podunk, or some other village of equal otorlety. . . ' Barnum is still keeping that venerable old Nig,"Unole Tom," before the Nsw lork publio, hut promisea to givs him a rest, by ubstituting the "Drunkard," which pieoe he has had in preparation for some time. John Brougham is at Winter Garden where he has met with good suocess. The Ravels are at N iblo'f, play ing to the best business in New York. j Mr. Stephen Massett, "James Piper," gave a farewell leoture at Dodworth Hall, on the 18th insL He will sail for Europe on the next steamer. ; Helen Western is at the Broadway, doing the "French Spy," "Pet of Petticoats," and other pieoos of like Ilk. ' Miss Menken, who has been quite ill since her engagement at the Broadway, ia bow recovering. She was, however, unable to fill her engagement at the Boston Theater, whioh was to have commenced on the 11th insL She oommeneee at Qrover'a Theater on the 2Gtb, after whioh ehe will appear at Cineinnati, at Wood's Theater. , Wallaok's Theatsr closed ita spring season on the Oth inst., with "Never to Late to Mend." . - i j . . Mrs. D. P. Bowers has been engaged for the ooming season at the Winter Garden. "Our Mutual Friend" is meeting with fine suooees at the Olympic. The dramatl- aation is by G. F. Rows, Esq , and Is said to be excellently done. The celebrated Bursley Family have taken the new Bowery, and gave their initiatory performance in New York on the 16th Inst. They are a most talented set of artists, and will be all the rage. ' They had formerly leased the Academy of Muaic, but the conflagration at that place compelled them to seek other quarters; consequently the change to the Bowery. j At the Aoademy of Musie, Cleveland, IbusJuess oontinues good. At present there . ia no "stfrr" on the boards, the stock taking their annual benefits. Theseason at this plaoe will olose July 7th, and Ihe fall aea-... will begin early in September, during whioh ttm Manager Ellaler will reorganize , i. ..a. ;:d make some needed .... in the oosir UWe Academy, Lucelle wV."rn th B9,,on dealer doing her great p.'vr of "East LyiiB.," In which she is without KMoesiful rival B. F. Whitman, Beej., commence; lommer. season at the Continental, Boston, on ?b 20lh of August. ; -(t ' The Newark, N.- J, Theater lal been jelosed for the season. , . , j ' ' ' B. T. Lowell has purchaiid the UM ft ... tjjjJ : VOLUME XXVjlI. Vxt Pittaburg Opera Houee, ml i man' a;e it the next aeaaon. Lnoy Ruahton W playing at ma uo.wa Masaum. Maoalliater ii t BingbaaUaa, ' " Charlj Bhay'i Quinouplexala ara at Tole do; they bare recently beon In Miahigan, and found bosincsa in thatSiato worie than bad. . ,..:..( Tha Carter ouava Tronpe afe in wa. " I A person, calling himielf Prof. Simmer-field "the treat Australian world-renowned ana aiaiinguiou.u uiv) and pre-eminent 'amUdaxtroua presuaig-arch Illusionist, humorist, and Dreatidieitatuer," (Jehosephat, what i title 1) .....iw Arnnnad down in Toledi. HiB j , , Midieooe, jhough Battering, amelt a mice. The Professor aaaurcd them that all waa quiet on the Potomao, but they oojloVnot. aee It in that light, ine uooraonper, with an eye. to number one, made a frantic effortlo escape with the uA,"l whioh he was foiled, and foroed to disgorge ihe few shinplssters he had in his Test Docket, and the Professor lit out in aipreme ditguet, hating boi ,fOor:impresaion of Toledo as a show town. He don't Jropose to go there again this season, j Uaizamga and a conoort company biyb two entertainments at, Buffalo, on the 25th and20lh inst. "' ' ' ' ' " 1 Knoi, the Wiisard, ia at Rutland, Vt. ' MacEroys'a Hibernioon ia at Troy. N. Y. Edwin Forrest haa not auooeeded a cre ating muoh excitenuuat in California, hia houses being nightly far from full, probably the effect of his exorbitantly high prices. Miss Emilie Melville ia at Fattereoi, 14. J. The Walnut Street Theater, Philadelphia, will olose its season on the 22d IdbI, haT- tng made a Bontinuona fhd of ten months, being the longest and moat posperous sea- ion ever made in that oily. Elwiul Booth will aloae hu engafemepj aXthe Arch Street Theater during the present week. - ROB BOY. MR nlKUHAM. ror the Colnmbui Horolng Journal " " " CotoMBiis,' t , -June 20; 1866. Slusri. Editors .In your issue of this morning I aee a communication signeil,"J' dated Cambridge, OhiOj in whioh the writer seems apprehensive that something! would be done at the meeting of 'the delegates to the State- convention,, trom tho JCth Congressional Distriot, that might operate against the interest of ; Mr. Bingham. If the writer of that communication, had confined himself to his legitimate business of sulogiiing Mr. Bingham, and speaking of his qualifications as a Congressmen, no per son from the -10th district, perhaps) would have taken any notice of the article, although there are men in the distriot who believe that, with half of Mr. Bingham's opportunities, there are those in the distriot who would be more than toe equal of Mr. Bingham. When, however, this writer seeks to oonvey.ths impression that the opposition to the re-nomination of Mr. Bingham is con fined tp a few aspirants for congressional honors, and aoouses them for circulating untruths to the injury of Mr. Bingham, he makes a reflection upon the leading men or th district that is wholly unwarranted and requires notice. . ( Two years ago nr. iiingnam wnir nominated for the sixth time as a candidate for Congress. There was a very strong feeling in the District at that time against the nnmin.Linn. and ha was nominated by a olose vote after the pledge had been made that he would not be a oanamate again, under any oiroumstanoes. . When J assorts that this pledge was made bylhe Cad iz ttepublteim, ana laoors 10 convey ine impression that Mr. Binghnm had never made suoh a pledge, he attempts to mislead the people, for 1 happen to know that Mr, Bingham made that pledge personally to his nrincinal oomnetitor in that eonventlon, as '.well as ;to others In the District, and that hii nomination at that tmt was ucurcapy mat pleltt, made by his friends before ihe meet ing of tho convention, alter consulting; mm. How far they can reeonoile their present action with their former pledges, we leave them to dotermine; but if they think they oan force the nomination of Mr. Bingham by easting reflections upon' leading men of the Uistriot whose friends think them worthy of being named In connection with the oftioe of Congressmen, and then seoure bis eleotion, which can only be done by the earnest and sealous support of these abused "aspirants," they eertainlypreaume very largely upon tne patriotism oi ine men iney abuse. If the delegates to tbe Convontion in the 16th Distriot shall think )t best to renominate Mr. Bingham, they will do so. They are as well acquainted with him as "J" or Uw numerous writers for the daily and weekly newspapers of the State that aeem to think it nooessary to oontinue sounding his praises, in order to seoure his nomination.- This constant labor in behalf of a (tan who has ten years Congressional experience, and the capacity that the friends of Mr. Bingharn oloim be has, in order to prevent one of these uuknown "aspirants" from .nnnlantins him in the Distriot, seems to me a full acknowledgement that he is not the most popular man In the Distriot. However this may be, it wonld le well for the friends of Mr. Bingham to remember that in tbe event of his nomination it will require the support of every leading man in the Distriot to secure his election, and thev'ourht to do nothing now that may hare a tendency to estrange or drive any of these men away from bis support, A Dm-EOATSi raoM thk 10th Dist. itscAKAwasj cstm,; Oorr.tpond.B08 Voriag Journal. ' I ; - Niw PiHiABgUMiiA, Jane If. Esiroa JouENAi.: The only local quea tion now being agitated by Ihe Union party in thia county is, who shall be our next oan, didate for Gongress from this distriot? We ara aowrepresented by Hon. John A. Bingham, of Harrison,, and u hope that he will bs returned again to the seat he has tilled so ereditably to himself and his eonstitu. enls. Some here seem to think it is now some otbor person's turn to go; as if the office wai to be filled by all our politicians, one after another, In regular order;; but we beg leave to differ with sueh persons, and claim that when we have a man in ihat po sition who haa the ability, determination and purity of purpose poiaessed by Mr. Bingham, we, should Tteep him thore until we oan find a better than be, or oan give him some other position in which be will bs still more useful. At this time w cannot nlace him any higher- and we toot not Lealtato in laying mat we neueve more is not a man in the District who can fill . that seat at this time ably as can the present incumbent. Basidea we do not have any faith in the rotary movement in such affairs, and we thnk it is time that we of the West should be able to as that the Inrluenoe gained and held by the Congressmen of the New England and Southern States, wss obtained by - those States sending men for long terms of years, until they beoamo so thoroughly imbued with a knowledge of Congressional pro ceedings, ana so wen anaersteoa the workings of tbe wires, that our Woater repre sentatives, nearly always new men, were used as tools, ana "lea aDout ty tne nose." Now that we have a "good man and true" In the House, we desire that he should be kept there until he proves himself unworthy, of !!- will otherwise be to our advantage to change. Vf P fo V7 wl" be unitet en thia point, and that we need not mention it ...In. atlll it may be neceasary t revert toll ij,tv , ;,.ir,o imw.,. A1TB1E8.,, 1 ... . . I . ,. FRON DELAWARE. Oorrwpjodene. Moroiog Joareal. ' . . Dsuwxaa, O., Jane 21, 1800, The Annual Commencement Exercises of the Ohio Weeleyan University and IheOhio Wesleyao Female College will take place next week. The University sends forth 22 graduates in the Classical department, and 14 in the Soientilc; the Female College IT Classical and 6 Scientific The prominent features of theooiainenceincnt week, i. ., the reading of essays on the part of the lady graduated, and delivering addresses by the gentlemen oomes off on Wsdnesday and Thursday, the 27lh and 28th inst. The public examination has already be. gan at the University and will end on Mon dav the lulb, The examination at the Female College begins on Friday the 22d, and closes on Tuesiiav the 26th. i30j) Sunday, the 24th, in the morning at 8 o clock, College love-leasl; at 11 o olook A. M. Bishon Thomson delivers the Baoealau- reat sermon; at S o'elock an address before the Alien Missionary Lyoeum, by Rev. Moses Smith, D. D , of the Cincinnati Conference: at 8 P. M , ihe University sermon, by Rev. Chauncy C. Knowlton, former grad uate O. w. v., ot me uocjc niver uonier- onoe. , Monday evening, rublio oxeroiaea of the Clionian Sooiety, 0. W. F. C address be fore the Ohio Methodist Historical society, by Rev. James M.Jameson, of the Ohio Conference. . -f. ; s H Tuesday afternoon, at 4 o clock, address before the Eduonional Convention, by Rev. Uiaboo Clark; at 0 o'clock, V. M , address before the Athenian Sooiety, 0. W. U., by Judge Storer, of Cincinnati. Wednesday. 4 o olook, 1. si., ananal ses sion of the Alumni of the University; at 7J F. M., dedication or the Athenian Hall, at 0. W. F. C; address by Rev. J. M. Reid, D. D. " PEARL. 1 BEMOCBATIO WM KECDKD. Gov, Monro, in Vis speech in Indianap olis, gave an inwrostlng sketoh of the aorvioea of Democratic patriots during the war,' whioh may be useful just new in substantiating the claims put forth by the editors of that piviy upon the ground of their enthusiasm In behalf of aoldiera. The remarks of the Governor, though referring more specifioally k Indiana Demoorals, are intendsd to apply to their party movements generally. It is very illustrative. He said: .,(- - BPIEIT Or Till DEMOIEATIO PARTY, It is beyond doubt that the temper of ihe Demooratio party is not ohanged or im proved since tht .ermination or the war, but on the oontrary it seems to have been greatly embittered by defeat in the field and at the ballot box. . Its sympathy with those lately in arms against tbe uovern-ment ia more boldly avowed than ever, and It becomea argumentative and enthusiastic behalt of tbe right or secession and righteousness of the rebellion. The true spirit of the Damooratio party in Indiana haa leoently received a remarkable illus tration that should oommand tbe serious consideration of the people. Home four or nve weeks since a conven tion was held in the oity of Louisville, com posed in large part of men who had been engaged in the rebel armies. Those men assembled tn convontion, proclaimed themselves memoers of the National Democratic parly, and deolared their unfaltering devotion to Its lime honored principles. They vindicated the righteousnoss of the rebel- ion and declared tnelr stern purpose to maintain at the ballot box the saored prin- Iples for which they had taken up arms. Prominent Indiana Democrats met with them in convention; mingled their tears with those who wept over Southern heroes; uttered glowing eulogies upon the memory of Stonewall Jackson and John Morgan, and indorsed their most ultra and treasonable doctrines; and to show tbe complete identity between this assembly of traitors and the Demooratio party of Indiana, tbe Indinnpo-lia Herald, the organ of the party, in the broadest and most unqualified manner, earn- atlv and eutbusiaetioally endorsed its pro ceodings, resolutions and speeohes. The members of tbe Convention did not disguiae the fact that they were re Bete and northern Democratic leadera. JSslicving Ibattba time for puniBhing treason had gone by, they now make haste to deolare that they are and have been united with them in sympathy, sentiment and purpose; and that they will co operate with them to the bitter end in restoring to loom nnat tiiey oan tneir rignts, and in repairing the damages done to them by the war. And to show that thia malevo lent and treasonable spirit is not conncod to the Demooratio leaders of Indiana, numerous meetings, resolutions, newspapers and declarations, in every part of the United States, may be referred to, and especially the votes and speechos of the Domo-oratio members of Congress. WHAT DIMOCKATIO LEADKRS HAVI DONS, The leaders who are now managing the Democratic party in this State, are the men who at tbe regular session ut tbe Legisla ture in 1BC1, declared that, if an army went from Indiana to asBist in putting down the then approaohing rebellion, it must first pass ovur their dead bodies. They ara tne mon wno in ine uemooratio Convention on the 8th of January, 1802, gave aid and comfort to the rebellion, by resolving that the South had been provoked and driven into the contest by the unconstitutional asd-.wricked aggressions of the people of the North. They are the men who In speeohes and resolutions proclaimed that "Southern de- tea's gave them no joy, and IN or t tier n disasters no sorrow." They are the men who exerted their influence to prevent their Demooratio friends from going into the army, and who, by their inoessant and venomous slanders against the Uovernment, checked the spirit of volunteering, and made drafting a necessity. And when the draft bad thus been forced upon tne oountry, tneir wretched subordinates, inspired by their devilish teacbinga, endeavored in many places, by the force of arms and the murder or enrolling omcers, io prevent, its execu tion. They are the men who corresponded with the rebel leadera In the South, giving them full Information of our condition, and as curing them that a revolution in pnblio opinion was at baud, and that they had but to persevere a lew monins longer, ana tee National Government would fall to pieoos of its own weignt. They are the men who, in the Legislature of 1803. attempted to overturn the mate Qovernmont and establish a legislative revolution, by seising the military power of the State and transferring It into tbe Bands of four State offioors, three of whom were members of ths treasonable society known as the "Bona of Liberty." They are the men who, having failed to overturn the State Government by seizing the military power determined to defeat ita operations and bring abont anarchy, by looking up tne puDiio treasure, ana tnue thus withholding the money nooessary to oarrv on the Government. They are the men who, for the pnrposo of private speculation, and to discredit tbe State before the world, oonsplred to prevent the payment or tne interest on tne nubile debt, by withholding, through a fraudulent lawsuit, the money received from taxes paid for that very purpose. This lawsuit was fraudulently smuggled through the Circuit Court and lodged in the Supreme Court, before the minutes of the eass bad been read and signed by tbe Circuit Judge. or he had been made acquainted with its oharaoter, and was hastily deoided by the Supreme court against tbe oredlt of the state. They are the men who Introduoad and or, ganiied in this State that dangerous and widespread oonspiraey first known as the 'Knights f Ihe Uoldea uirole," and after. ward as the "Sons of Liberty," which had for its purpose the overthrew of the State and National Governments. Not all of them, it is true, belonged formerly to this Infamous order, but such as stood on the outside had knowledge of ita existenoe, purposes and plans, and carefully concealed their knowledge, and stood ready to aooept its work. 'fcTo MooBpUsLftba helliah work of this MORNING: COLUMBUS, OHIO. FRIDAY aananlracT. military officers were appointed military organizationa created, arms and ammunition purchased in immense quantities and smuggled into tue Stale, correspond ence opened witn renei oommanaers, ana military combinations agreed npon, rebel omoera and agents iniroauseo into me capi. tal aud concealed in hotels and boarding houses, and it was deliberately planned and agreed that npon a day fixed, they woo'd suddenly uprise and murder the Execative, seize the arsenal and ita armB and ammunition, and releasing B,000 rebel prisoners iu Camo Morion, put arms into their hands, and with their combined forces effeota mil- iltarv and bloody revolution In the State. This dreadful scheme necessarily involved murder, conflagration, robbery and the com mlsaicn of every orime which makes blast the chronioles of civil war, and yet ita authors and abettors, with the proofs of their guilt piled mountain high, are again Strug, gling for power, and asking tbe people to pnt Into their guilty hands the government and prosperity of the State. Some of these men, who are high in favor and authority in their parly, and are largely entrusted with its management, have heretofore occupied offices of ireat trust and responsibility. in which they proved to be reoreant and oorrupt. ' They are the men who, in tho Legislature of Indiana, bitterly opposed and denounoed every effort to confer the right of suffrage upju soldiers in tne neia wno oouia not oome home to vote. ' ' . Thev are the men who wrote letters to soldiers in the arm, purging them to desert, and assuring ihem of support and protoc- tion if they did. Thev are the men who labored with dev ilish nal to destroy the ability of the Government to oarry on the war by depreciating its financial credit. They assured the people that "greenbacks" would die oa Iheir hands, and warned them solemnly against government bonds, as a wioked device to rob them of their money. 'II Thev are the men who refused to contrib ute to the Sanitary Commission for the relief of sick and wounded soldiers, upon the lying and hypooritioal pretense that the contributions were consumed by the oSoeis of the army. i Thoy are Ihe men who excused themselves from contributing to Ihe relief of soldiers' families at home by the infamoua slander that they were living better than they had ever done, and by foul imputations on the chastity of soldiers' wives. ' Thev are Ihe men who declared in speeohes, resolutions, and by their voles in Congress, that not another man nor another dollar ahould be voted to carry on a cruel war againet thoir Southern brethren.' They are the men who in tbe midst or the laat great campaign of 1804, at the time when Sherman was fighting his way, step by stop, from Chattanooga to Atlanta, aud Grant was forcing Lee bsck into the defenses of Richmond, iu desperate and bloody battles from day to day; when the fate of the nation hung in the balance, and the world watched with breathless interest the gigantio struggle whioh was to settle the queatioa of republican government, as. sembled in convention in Chicago and resolved that the war was a failure; that our cause was unjust, and that we ought to lay down our arms and sue for peace. It was throwing a mountain into the Confederate aoale to make the Union kiok the beam. It was a bold and desperate interference in behalf of the robelliou, at the very crisis of the fight. It was an insult to the loyal armies of the nation so vast, malignant and deadly, that language oin convey no adequate idea of its wickedness. Aud iu future times the historian will record the fact with astonisbmsnt that the Government, at the most oritioal moment of its life, when a few hours, or a few days at the furthest, must determine whether it should live or die, oould permit a large body of its enemies to meet upon its soil in peace and security, aud publish a flagrant manifesto in behalf of the rebellion. Now, I do not mean to say that all the Demooratio leadurs have done all these things, but what I do say is this, that Ihe men who have done these things are combined together, and constitute the real leaders of the Democratic party. The few moderate men of the parly have been stripped of all power aud influence, and are oarried along with it merely for numbers and poll-oy, whllo the living and aggressive element which oontrols it are tbe "oonaol Liberty, and thoss who noted in sympathy and cou-oert with them. They are tbe men who hava perverted the word Demooraoy, from its once honorable meaning, to bs a shield and oover for rebellion, and for every orime that attaohes to a causeless and atrocious oivii war. WHO CALLED Tit IM8KLVKS DEMOCRATS, Every unregenernte rebel, lately in arms against his Government, calls himself a Democrat. , Evory "bounty jumper," every "deserter," every "sneak," who ran away from Ihe draft calls himself a Democrat. Bowles, Milligan, IV a l iter, Liodd, iioraey and Humphreys call themselves Democrats. Every "Son of Liberty" who oonsplred to murder, burn, rob arsenald, nud release rebel prisoners calls himself a Democrat, John Morgan, Sue Mundy, Champ Ferguson, Wirz, Paine and Booth proclaimed themselves Democrats. Every man who labored for the rebellion in the field, who murdered Union prisoners by oruelty and starvation, who conspired to bring about civil war in the loyal States, who invonted dangerous compounds to burn steamboats and Northern cities, who ocnlrived hellish schemes to introduce into Northern oiuee tho wasting peatilauce of yellow fever, oalia himself Democrat. Kvery dishonest con tractor wbo has been convicted of defrauding the Government every dishonest paymaster or disbursing 1 offioer wbo bss been convicted or squandering the publio money at the earning table or in gold gambling operations every officer tn tbe army who was dismissed for coward ice or disloyally, oalls btruseit a Demoorat. kvery wolf lu sboep s olotbing, wbo pro tends to preach the Gospel, but prooiaime the righteousness of man selling and slaveryone who shoots down negroes in the streets, burns negro sohool houBes and meeting bouses, and murders women and ohildren by tho light of their own flaming dwellings, oalls bimsslf a Democrat. Every New York rioter in 1868, who burned up little children in colored UBylurns who robbed, ravished and murdered indiscriminately in Ihe midst of a blazing eity for three days and nights, oalled himself a Democrat. In abort ths Demooratio party may be desoribed as a oommon sewer and loathsome receplaole, into which is emptied every element of treason North and South, and every element of inhumanity and bar barism whioh has dishonored tbe age. And this party, oomposed or tbe men and elements 1 have desoribed, in defianoe of truth and deoency, asserta itself aa the spe cial ohemplon of the Constitution and the Union, whieb but a abort aixteen montha ago it waa in arms to destroy; and proclaims to an astonished world that the only effect of vanquishing armed rebels in ths field, is to return mem to seats in congress, and to restore them to politioal power. Having failed to deatroy the Constitution by force, they aeek to do it by ooustruetion, and assume to have made Ihe remarkable die eovery that rebels who fought to destroy the Constitution were its true friends, and that ths men who shed their blood and gave their suhstanoe to preserve it wore it only ene mies. ' A literary gentleman, whole courtesy In a oerlain matter a pretty woman had re warded with a kiss, was so well pleased with the mode of payment, and so little satisfied with the amount, Ihat, judging by ths following eplgrammatlo reply, he is likely to prove a rather inexorable creditor. We dot)'t blame him: - On. eoln, m delicious, alon. Par nor. than you ow. m.i and rtt, Wbll. yon hav. a mint of yonr own, ' Don't e.k m. to canc.1 lb. debt I A ptoturs In Punch oalled "Rather Cute," represents a man at a lioket office. "Look here" he says, "yoa didn't 1 give me the right change just now I" Clerk. "Too late, sir I You should have spokon when you look your lleketl" Passenger "Should 11 Well, iU of no oonaeqnenoe lo me; but you gave m half sovereign to muoh.'' lilt. .- '. y;"-, MORNING. JUNE Personal and Miscellaneous. ' Eight hours' work; eight hours' play; eight hours' sleep, and eight shillings a day, is the motto of an association of workmen, in Lancashire. Ex. Gov. Wise signs himself "Henry A. Wise, Brigadier-General C. 8. A. K., prisoner of war on parole." Ho ought to add ASS. The mild young Earl Grosvenor is heir to the great estate of the Marquis of Westminster. By and by he will have an inoome of about a thousand ponnds a day. The Ladies May their virtues even ex ceed the magnitude of their skirls, while their faults are still smaller than their bonnets.The following advertisement; appeared in a New York country paper recently Manure Wanted, stable manure. Any person having from fire to fifty loads to dis pose of, will please send word or drop it through ths post offioe. Mr William Page has finished his histori cal painting, of which the subjeot is Admiral Farragut lashed lo the shrouds of the Hart, ford, while she was entering Mobile Bay, August 6, 1804.' It is lo be exhibited for a time for the benefit of the New York Mer cantile Association. The number of lost ohildren found wan dering about New York city the past year was 2,742. Of this number nearly all, with the exor.plion of one-twelfth, were returned to their parents and friends, Ihe remainder being sent to Ward's Island, where they are being reared under the core of the Commiaaloners of Charities. The Philadelphia Preie gives as a speci men of the oharaoter of Ihe "Prison Life of Jefferson Davis," the faot that there are in it seven letters about ordering an overcoat. Wonder If there is any thing In it about thoss other coatt. Pollard, the ex-rebel and editor of the Riohmond Examiner, is in despair because he cannot spell the name of Andrew John-eon with a K. Thad. Slovens, when asked " what ailed him," said "about seventy years, he believed." He subsequently thought his liver waa affected, and, in reply to the suggestion, admitted that his gall was very bitter. The London Poet relates the following of Lord Brougham, who is now about 87 years old: "He is in excellent health, and capable of bodily exertion quite extraordinary at his advanoed age. For instance, he left Cannes In the afterncon after an early dinner, traveled all night and next day, arrived in Pails in ths evening, then after a rapid toilet went to a soiree to meet some of hia Frenoh scientific friends, not retiring to rest until nearly midnight." The Pall Mall Gazette says : "Europe now presents the sublime spectacle of somo hundreds of thousands of men waiting lo learn vrhctbor it is tho pleasure of half a dozon gentlemen existent in various parts of the Continent ihat thoy shall fall to and cut each other's throats," Ohio State Journal, (lllrlPAION OF 1800. Daily, Tri-Weekly and Weekly. NUKE UP YOUR CLUBS ! Tho next eampaign will be one of the most important which the People of Ohio have ever fought against proscription, and error, and wrong. Now If ever, must the fruits of the terrible war which we have suffered be scoured beyond a peradventure. The grave responsibilitiet growing out of the altualicc are felt anc appreciated, by all the People. In order that they may be prepared to aot understandingly, there is a necessity for cheap and rapid means of in forming themselves of the important events transpiring from day today in the political world. It is with tbe design of doing all in our power to tneetthis want ihat we now propose to Issue JL CAMPAIGN EDITION or TUB Daily, Trl-Weekly Weekly Journal at turA rates as shall place ihe't paper Joithin reach of every voter in Ohio. In calling attention to tho Omo State Joubhal as a means for securing the diffusion of early and reliable information, we do not forget that the local papers should be supported vigorously. There is muoh looal information whioh can be obtained onlyjthrough them. Your prosperity depends muoh on Ihe manner in whioh they are supported. They should therefore receive your first attention. It is to the Jocbnal as a oentral paper, working In the interests of the principles of Ihe Union party for the State, that we would call attention. ' The oonduct of the 'paper, politically, is too well known to need any publication of its manner or the principles which have governed it. It will continue as before, without ohange. In addition to the oareful attention to the Political Department of the paper, speoial effort will be made each department being placed in oompetent hands to make the Jourhal a complote compendium of news, a pleasant fire-Bide companion, a faithful market guide, and in short a oomplete summary of events in the political, social, religious, literary, sclentlfio and commercial world. With this end in view, it will contain a full record of ourrent news, market reports, (foreign and domestic,) the latest telegraphic dispatches, politioal intelligence' literary and dramatic gosBip, choice poetry editorials on ourrent topics, the most beau tiful stories and sketohes, oorrespondenco, State and local Intelligence, etc., etc Due attention will also be given to eduoational, art and agricultural matters. - The Daily, Tci-Wiikxy and Wxeklt Onto Stats Joubnal will bo furnished during the oampalgn four months, commencing June 21st, and ending Ootober 20th at the following rates: . DAILY JOUBNAL. BinuL eopy..........MM. Oltib. o' flv. .nd upward......, .: 00 Oa. oopy utra to otnlM ol tan or mor. nt-WHKLY JOUBNAL. IdbI. copy...... m,. Olnli of At. and upward One oopy .atra to olubi of tea or mors. .! BO . i as WIIELI JOOBHAL. Sinzl. eoor ..US el., Olnu. of Ave and upward. .. ..DO eU. On. oopy wttra to olab. of La or mora, Perione forwarding Clubs will please deii uatt which edition of ths CAMPAIGN JOURNAL they desire. Bend for sample copies AddrsM - COMLY, ROBY It SMITH, Publishers and Proprietors Ohio Stats Journal, Colviibos, Ohio. JOURNAL. 22. 1866. TfiLEtittAPIIIC. REPORTED FOR TBE JOURNAL. Afternoon Dispatches. FROM NEW YORK. Keceiitlon of Oeii. Uovey In Urea. New Yokk, June 21. The Herald's Lima correspondent says that Gen. Hovey was given a grand reception by the government on the presentation of his credentials. Ihe Oeneral, in a few words, expressed the cordial feeling entertained by the United Slates toward their younger aad more southern sisters; and Col. Prado, the Provisional Diotator, replied, in high oommendation of the Great Republic and the personal oharacter of its accredited representative at his court. ' I.ale Hews from tbe West Indies. The Herald e Havana correspondent says: The new policy of the new administration is a repressive and restrictive one and very obnoxious to the Cubans, more espeoiaily by oontrast with the former generous treatment of General Dulce. A violent hurricane visited Basam on the Oth. Regla, a town opposite Havana, lost 23 houses by fire on tbe evening of the 18th. Advioes from rjt, Thomas state that about 200 troops had left St. Thomas to join the foreign legion in Mexico.. By the late fire in Mayagues, Porto Rico, over seventy buildings were destroyed. Most of the English and American resi dents were abandoning Hayti on aceount of ihe disorder occasioned by the great fire at Port au Frinoe some weeks ago. President Baex is on his laat legs at St. Domingo. Tbe revolutionists are pressing him so closely that it is supposed he will take lo flight very soon. Martinique had suffered considerably fromdroughtand Gnadaloape had been fear- fully deoimatcd by the cholera. Oatraares Aaaiualau American t'lllaeu The Herald states that Daniel Green, an Amerioan oitizen residing in Mexloo about fifty miles baok of Mazatlan, has filed a statement with the Amerioan Consul at Mazatlan, of certain outrages committed on him bv the Frenoh. He was arrested in Mazatlan en tbe zutb oi April last ana xopt in prison until May 1st, without accuaation or hearing; he waa then ordered to leave Mexico for California, anawnue unaer mis injunction he entered hie protest. Item from Washington Kpeelala The morning papers contain the following speoials from Washington: The receipts on aocount of internal reve nue, for the present year, up to the 19th inat, inclusive, amount to $209,818,4:16, leaving less than $1,000,000 to complete $300,000,000, the estimate made at the Bureau of Internal Revenue. It is now believed that the receipts of the Tiscal year ending with the ootb of this month wal amount to $806,000,000 from taxes for internal revenue alone. The iron olause of tho tariff bill is troubling the Ways and Means committee. Inlorosted partiee are not satisfied with a duty of $10 per Iun, but are urging 120 and even $30. The Judiciary committee, with only two or three members attending, resolved lately to remodel tbe entire judiciary eyBtem ol the oountry, and make one less Associate Justice of the Supremo Court, but this aotion haa oinoe been reconsidered, and next Friday is set apart for a redivision of the matter, when the projaot is likoly to be defeated. The Postoffice Department is instituting suits againBt all postmasters in the insurrectionary Slates who stand indebted to the Government. The bill for the relief of iron olad contrac tors still sleeps in the oommittee of Claims, where it will, no doubt, remain tbe rest or the session. The bounty money aocruing to the officers and men of the following named vessels, viz : Benton, Cairo, Caron-dolet, Louisville, St. Louis, Monarch and Queen of the West, for tbe destruction of tbe enemies vessels at Memphis in Juno, 1802, is now ready for payment in the Fourth Auditor's office. Ordors have been received to pay the prlzs money to those engaged in the fight at Mobile in Angusl, 1801. This will be about two months from the present date. The total amount in value in the matter is $767,09839. The Sievenson-t ullerton commission leit Mobile for Mississippi to-day. They will probably report to the Senate and the fur ther consideration ol tne suojeoi do postponed until Deoember next on the ground that there is no time to consider it this session.The evidence before the Fry-Conkling nvestigatingoommitttee has all been taken. Among the witnesses examined yesterday was Mr. Raymond, who testified that Tbe-dore Allen, whom Mr. Conkling made such a rccoid against, waa a creditable witness. A Virginia Judge Inilictcil. A Times speoial says: Judge Thomas, of Virginia oourL who recently refused to admit the testimony of a negro in a onse where oolored men were not oonoerneu, on the ground that he must be governed by the law of the State and not of tbe United States, was indioted by the U. S. Grand Jury, at the recent session of Judgs Under wood s eourt at niobmond. no steps nave been taken to arrest Judge Thomas under the indictment. Pollllcinl "Screws" Loose. Col. Cooper, the President's Private Sec retary, has gone to New York oity. It is said there sre several screws loose In New York among the federal offioe holders. The High Protective Tnrtir Measures. The high protective tariff men are getting alarmai, lest their various interests will not be fully oared for by the Ways and Moans committee. There are several gentlemen here who have impressed the oommittee very strongly against the expediency of adopting, at this time, ft high protective tariff. The oommittee are also in receipt of letters from prominent men in varioua sec tions of tbe country against suoh a oourse. FKOM GALVESTON. Bontherni Items. Galvbstoh, June 20. Gen. Sheridan and a portion of hia staff arrived yesterday en route from iirazos to New Orleans, lie expressed satisfaction with the quiet state of affairs along the Rio Grande. Gen. Gregory, having finished tbe inspection of the State, left, in oompany with Gen. Sheridan, for New Orleans, en route to Washington. Gen. Kidder, in a new order lo tbe As sistant Commissioner, urges greater exertion to save, and if possible increase, the ootton crop. The r reedmen s oeiebration or emancipa tion, at Houaton, passed off quietly. tlen. rullerlon baa not yet arrived. The Cresoent brings an "extra" of the Rio Grande Courier of the 18th, with de tails of ths oapture, by tho Liberal forcaa under Treamo, of a large merchandize train going from Matamoraa to tbe interior. The train waa oonvoyed by 10 Imperialist companies, numbering 850 men, under Capt, rlappa, Wltn lou uonirr. fuerniiH, mauo up of Confederates, and 16 Mexioans. The Imperialists bad eight pieoea of artillery nd the Mexicans six. The fight lasted one hour, when the train was captured about three leagues from Camargo and Escabedo. The captured Mexican officers, with their oommands, had placed themselves under Tribune. The Liberals numnerca z,uuu, wen armed and eauicrjed. The train consisted of merchandize and and ammunition, of great value. Gen. Alvarez, wounded, passed through Rceyonsa, on Saturday, Ihe 9th. Several officers of his command arrived at Ma to. moras, who confirmed the capture of 400 prisoners of Oliver's oommand; and about 400 othors, with the convoy, were sent to Camargo. Tho convoy was alio taken to Camargo, with direot oruers irom uen. fcs-oanbo not lo allow anything to be teuohed. Rumor says the Mexican Imperial regiment ohanged aides in the fight. Commerce has suffered irreparable loss by the capture of the train. 21 of the Austriana esoaped. News from Monterey says that a apeoie train was reported as being at Caraba within ths last six days, whioh attempted to return to Monterey, and fears are entertained that it would be oaptured. NUMBER 293. INSURANCE- STATE 1VI H NT or ins t-oNimioN or vhb SECURITY Life Insurance lauultyio., On lh.flrt titty of May, 1M1, inndf lo h Auditor of Ohio, puraiiMnt to ih biniute ol tbiit 81 ?. NAME AND LOCATION. Th crime if th Company It t!m 8E CUB ITT LIFE IN30RANOK AMD ANNUITY COMPANY, nd ii loon ted 31 Pine itrtoi, Mew York. I. CAPITAL. Th mouotLof lti Oftpltftl Sttxk pftid op ia......... , f 110,000 00 II. ASSETS. Caih of tht Company oa hand, and In tin. bands of Atrentf and other Dnona 60,006 82 1U,000 00 2.15,756 17 Hi 421 70 13,'JttS 73 ThoBondifttid fllocii owned bj .ha Com pany, u. o. o w Duaoi, Tamo DabU otbarwiM McuredtPrealnm Motou eenred by P(illoia...Hm. Dnbtafor frfmlcma Alloltiar Seourtttca H Total Aswta of the Oompuiy ........... : III. LIABILITIES. T otti aifjtitd and not doe Lowes nntid jutted All other o.atma agetuit the Oonpauy... - $19,700 00 fi.OOO tKI 8,701 29 Total LtabllitlM-, (29,491 29 IV. MISCELLANEOUS. ! The great eat atnoant Inwrtd In any one rlk, 110,000. The amount of Its capital or arolna dpoalte4 loftuy other State, aa aecnrlty for loeaea therein None. The Charter, or Aot of Inoorporntion of Hid Oompany, copy filed. STAT I OF NEW TOOK, 1 Copht or New Yom. j Robert L. Omo, President, and Iiaao H. Allen, 6oretrv of the .Seoarttj LI e luinrance and An natty Company, being eeverally affirmed, depoae ana ray, tliat ine foregoing n a lull, true ana ear reot fltetemontof the affaire of the a Id Oompany, and that they are the above described officer! thereof. UOBKUT L. IIAHB, Prcaldent. HAAU H. ALLRd. Becretary. 9nbecrilftd and affirmed before me, thia 29th day Lbtamp.J of May, ltttiS. ornuK or the auditor of statu, i Columbus, 0., Juno 6, 1866. j It la hereby certified that ihe foregoing 1 a correct copy of tbe Staumeut of Condition ot tbe Security Life Insurance and Annu'ty Oompany. of New York, made to and flUd In thii offloe, fur the year 16(16. VVitnem my band and teal officially. I is 4 L.J JaS. H. GODMAN, And. tor of State, CERTIFICATE OF AUTHORITY. (To expire on the Slat day of January, 18C7.) OFFIOE OF THR AUDITOR OF STATS, I NSDa A NOB DlPABTHBNT. CoLOMavs, 0., June 8, ISM. WnnaKia, The Siodutt Lira TwatmAWci n Annuity Com pant, located at New York, In tbe Sute of New York, baa nid in tnil offioe a sworn statemeut of Its conditio!., as required by ihe aot ''Torfgnlaie Insurance Com pan'es not Incorporated by the State of Ohio," passed April 8. 1868 aud amended February 9, 1804 aod the act ' lo ragulate Foreign loinrance Oompanies," peeped April Mb, 1866; ani, whereas, said company haa fnrnlahed the uudera'gned satisfactory evidence that It ia posiefleil of an actual capital of at least ONE IIONDBBO AND II ITT THOUSAND DOLL ABA, Invested as required by said aota : and, wher eat a company uae nieo in line crate a written Instrument under It corporate stal. signed by tbe Prmldsnt and Secrtarr thereof, anthorlzlog any apentor age ttsof said Company tn mis oiaie iiacnnowieoge s rvioe or pruceis, ior ana In bubal f of said Company acordioic to tho hrjus of said ait of April 8, I860. now, inertroie, in pursuance oi tne acta atore sifd I, Jabibs H. Oouhan, Auditor of State tor Ohio, do her by certify that said Bboubitt hire In-iubanob abb Annuity Co., of New York, Is auihorU' ed totraniaet the basinet of Life Insurance in this State until the thirty-first day of January, ti the yoar one tlnneand eight hundred anl sixty-seven. in wiioess wnereoi, a uave aenunto auueorioea my name and earned the ael of my o'-sbal. flee to be afllxed the day and year bjovo written. JAS. H. GODMAN, Auditor of State. J. N. NEWKIRK, Atf.llt, JonlClw rolnmbaa. Ohio. SEWING MACHINES. Sewing 3Xaoliine. Ouly Machine ror Carriage Work. Best Machine ror Shoemaker Work. Rent Machine (or Tailor Work. Singer ManaCACttoff C'o.'h New Star bine BEST FOR FAMILY SEWING. Cell and examine, at H. Colt A 0.'s. 115 Booth High street. W. V. PKNNY, g't. beetles, Hhittlft, Oil, and STorythlnx appertain-loft to B tiger Machine. aprKI cd ly LIFE---HEALTH---STRENGTH LIFE -EEALTH-STREN(jTfl LIFMEAM-OTEMTH THE ttllElT FUEttCII REMEDY. DE. JUAN DKLAMA.RRK'3 Celebrated Hpeeitie Fills. Prepared from a prescription oj Dr. Juan VeU amarre, Chief Pyhtician of the Hospital du Nord ou Lariboisiers Paris. rpBIS INVALUABLE MED1CINK 19 NO 111. 1 position, bnt la nnfallins in tbe onre of Suer matorrhn or Peminal Weakness. Krery species of Genital or Urinary Irratibillty. Involuntary or Nightly Hunlnai Emissions from whatever oame irodtu.ea, or nowever severe, win do spreauy relieved and the organs restored to healthy action. Jterf tk follow ma opinion o.emfHeni French PKm- HCMMS. "Wehavn need lbs SdwIHo Pills nrenared fav Gar. endure A Dapont, No. 214 Rne Lombard, from tbe prescription of Di. Joan Delamarre, In enr private firactlvewithnnlform success; and we believe there i no otber medicine to w?U oalonlatod to onre aK persons suffering Irom Involuntary Vmitilnns or any other weakness of the Pexnal Organs, whether oamed by a aedsntry mode of Nylnir. excess, er abuse. It. A. BKAUKKPABIE, U. D. U. D. UUJAKDiN, W. D JUAN LULU0UR1C, II. D. Farli.lIay6tb.laoU. Beware of Counterfeit. The Genuine Pills ara told bv all the orineinal Druggists throughout the World. Price OneDoltar per Vox, or six Boxes for rive Dollars. Gabamoiub A DoroNT.Bola Proprietors, No. 214 Hue Lombard, Paris. One Dollar enclosed to any authorised Aa-ent. will InBnre a box by return mall, securely sealed from l oMnrvatioo. bix Doxesrornveaojiara. Sole General Agrmta for America, OHCAK G, MON KM, eft CO., 87Gurtlandt8t., N. T. Agents for Oil n tabus nod vicinity. 6. B. bAMUULS andG. B0BBKT8. Jy 17 eom eodaw alt ly PKTJGR TO TANS, 89 Fulton Street, N. Y., Dealer In. Ivory. HAS CONSTANTLY OR HAND A LAUGH stock of Biiii ia.no Balib of every Bliss, Cloth, Ours and TtMMUiNQt, and ever? thing appertaining to the BlMerd business. Marti Mali Uixss, (URaoKS, Keko) Can it and Oabb Baudles, atd Ivoby in geneml. All oidr prompt lv attended to at 89 folton street. Mew York, or at Factory, oor ney 0ydam street and Myrtle Avenue. Brooklyn, new iora. JoolH law flmW Apparatus for Deformities DR. A. O.'FORNBKRG. THR CLUB FOOT MACHINES Ot TB. A. O ro8Rniaot No. ft Kaat Fourth street, are the best now In me. Tee so i of Mr. W, 01 bun a, msnu-faotnrer of lead pipe and sheet lead, on Ninth otreet, a lad eight years r age, fcas breo afflicted with a club fout since chl!dbood, and waa treated for Ave yoars with mttbtnesof different hinds, bntwithont lusoees. Hlx months ago Dr. A. O. Foriberg applied his machine, and with the tot happy, results, onr most distinguished physicians having prononnoo tbe foot as perfectly cured. Call .nd see for yonr. eelvee. The best of Trntttet tor core; also, avsry variety of Bandacee constantly on hind, at Mo. 5 Bait Fourth street, aecond story. fM9 ritfa these! i EYE AND EAR. 4VI. . A. BJAPP, Oosllt. f 5iS('iarlF of N. Y.,) exolnalnly tra.1. TlJ&ru .foow, DI.M.M of th. Kyaa, and In. MrU ArtlfloUl Eyas without pais, that on, at No. ISO Sooth Blgh .tre.1, (oppo.lt th. Good.t. Horn.,) I. Oolamhoi, Ohio. Alto futol.w. or mall. hi. book on th. Er. and Ear, for 40 oauta fro. ol poatalhto U addrua, Uglily TEBM8 OF BUBSeRipTIOX nans op tci ailt Jotwaaia, Siogle flnbterlbira, 1 year, by mall....,,,,,. J9 M Single bBbeeribera, 6 montha, M M.w..... 4 60 H'ogleSnbecrlbere, 3 moathi, M ,,.......,. t i46 S ugleSobecrtbera, 1 month, ..i..lul tu (ileSubaoribera, 1 month, dellTered.H,MHHM 0 W tingle Bnbfcrlberi, per week, dellTerssJ. 0 lo Agents, In clubs, 16 cents per week each oopy. TKJUU Or TUB TKI-WUKLY JOVUIsU. I yfsr.............H 501montlM.M.M.,.js a It months M I 16 1 1 monlb.........HH,H( 0 4 HIM OF Till WBBKLT JOtTtlfalM Single Snbaorlbers, per yMr........M.,....M.w...a 04 CLOTHING. TTCflTTaHK CLOTHING ' STORE ? THK ATTENTION OK THK CITIZENS OW Oo mbus and ele where la Ballad to thm ducements that we are now offering in oar MERCHANT TAILORING MKNT. . DEPART- rVmala!lo.r of Ihe floret and moat nhotce selection of French, Euglltb, and foot, h clotlu and Otisalmsras, caunit be enrpasaed either In New York, feoetoa. r rtnixlelpliia. nr. B. w. BTiHrauM haa as cloaks control of the CITTJTNU DEPARTMENT, Aod wo wonld ala'e that we bare made arrance nients to have the latest aty Ine oo band, tn on week after they bare been reported from Europe. FI RISISHIXG OOODA DEPARTMENT In which can be fnnnd tbe cholneat and Ansst eeloa- tlou In tbe oity. Mr. VY. H. LBNOX, formerly con nectfd with tble SottblUbnttnt, has taken charge of this Department, In our YOCTlI t ('HIEDREX'M CI.OTHIPIU DEPARTMENT There will be found ihe lateit and most attrao tire styles of Fancy Oasatmsres and Lloen Goodn la the West, rauging In prlos and. quality to alt tbe times, and we cordial. y Invito nil to 011 and t xtmlne our stuck. i CI. ARK et NIS WANDER, Ml Month Hlta Strtet. j4 1m H. COXT & CO., Merchant Tailors, No. J05 South High Street ABE NOW RKCKIVINO A LABOB AND KLI-gnt aiork of Spring aod Snmmer Goods, ae Wc'ed exprmnly for this market. COIT CO. are sole agents In Oolambnf forth Celebrated v . . r ... Whioh U uorrafefi ths bmt, ntateit JlUitiff Hhirt ever worn, . meat thtrahU, a mi JanVl-dlyaort jUKA1I,EY fc WEftrY, Importer and JuBuertuf O 1 O T II S Cassimeres, Vestings, Ac WHITE AT., IDSOIt BnADLtY, WKBLEY WF.LTT. apt 27 nodly "Si.- "YoirVc. CONFECTIONS. New Confectionery. F. C STETKNSON, . DBAtlB IM q . . ; , Fluo Co nfaotlouai, MO 1 A WATER, Native and Forvlira Fralta, aud Imported and Domestic Cioabs & Tobiooo. NO. 1 POST OFFICE ARCADE. m9 3m COMMISSION HOUSES LlJE STOCK. AND i PETROLEUM EXCHANGE! I HAVE OPENED A live stoo: PETROLEUM K X U A N K IK TI1KSOU PH-WEflT OOBNESVOlr TBI POST Ofttoe b.lldlog, wli.r. I .ball b. I.mmI Id ii.. gotta!., upon t...LiQaul. tiiu..witii .UjparsoDB who de.irn to .all or mrctafl. Livs stock, Ea JC.UL, 1'atrot.tmi l..i:dsf or Ott Ntork.. muylojll iNUKEW tt'IUSOlV, Jr. BPNTINOTO. NTOII. DWa.O riTO H. Triton Ac Son., . rOBWAUDIXG,' ' CoMu&Muc&'MercMs, COM' M BUS, OHIO. ' ' DEALSM IN . Flour, Grain, Salt, Cement, AND PRODUCE OINIBAUT.'' ' Best qnulliy or Hot and Cold Blast rig I run alwaya on bn Speoial Transfer & Shipping Agents of Tn. 0. 0. 0. B. B., ftntnl Onto and P. 0. 4 0. B. B "ROpmuTois or tub Columbus, CliUlicotlie & Portsmouth Packet Company. And Soloto and Hooking Valley Express FreliEbt Line. Aosnts or Hockino Vallit Saxt Compamt H. FITOH A RON giro Tbroash Ooutr.ots on Produce .od Freight, from .11 point, on tho O.D.1 to th. Euurn ';iila, by RAIL, LAKE, or OAN At. Warehouses, East and West End oj Scioto Bridge, loot of Broad St. ' OrFICF, 87 WEST BROAD STREET. loni'tM lyra JEWELRY. F.A.& L. LESQUEREUX, IMPORTERS AND WHOl.ESALS AND , ABTAU. pSALKBS Ot latches, (Ms anil Jewelry. POCKET CUTLERY TOOLS, MATERIALS NOI'IONS, GOLD, SILVER & STEEL BPECTACLES & FANCY WARES. Our facilities as Importers enabln us tompply tha Jobbing Trade at the most favorable rates of any Establlifainentln the oountry. BirAinma dome with mbatsus and dibpatob. F. A. fc Ii. rENQCERETJX, No. 71 SOUTH HIQH 6T&BIT, JanS'dly aod . . Oolunbiaa), .OblO. HEW RESTAURANT AND ' " SAMPLE ROOMS ED. LANE, - - Proorietor. Dialer in Foreign and Domestlo Wlnea, Llquori, . and Cigari, of the beat quality! at No. 105 South Hiifu Street Near tho Opera Hons Columbns, 0. foulo-dem UNION BLOCK Confectionery & Restaurant No. 90S Month Hlffti NtrMt. PABTIE8 SUPPLKO WITH OONPEtlTIONS, Bon Boo., Uakea, 1c Uraim .nd Vl-ults of llklndaln UoirMaioa. ' ' A SPLENDID RESTAURANT Ta .at.bllahml 1. onoctloa with th. Oonffcotlonary. Oam. Vhb, Or.un ..d th. doltcMiaa .r th. invoa a.rv.d up to ord.r at .11 honra of th. dai .nil .t.dIbk. Alao, . large uaortm.nt of r ' : .fi'-i'-l 1'IItE-U OKKM, IT'., KVV., CTC. W. Inrtt. th. pstronag. of th. oitllSDA of Ooloxi bn. aod too pobllc r.Derall?. jonlitiw , 0. A.KKUl,l,0HA1.8aiMlR8. 7cr.XjKxrixt.'asj PIIOTOURAFH ARB' FINK-ART Q ALL E BY! , Ho. 17 stouth HlttU Ut. 1' WORK PUT UP IN IVKRK STYCEror TBI art. and warranted to gtv.atlUA.ti9m. nt.rl. dli . , , 1 . ; . . 1 . 51 I . At !'! Sill j iiiK. ..tit J' h, |
Format | newspapers |
LCCN | sn84028628 |
Reel Number | 10000000028 |
File Name | 0610 |