Columbus morning journal. (Columbus, Ohio), 1866-07-17 page 1 |
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r i f I i. r CiiLT One Sqor, each Insertion -. 7 " Hpecl.l Notices nor Square, each ineas- tioo .T.... ! " Local end Business Notices, xr lini, - ' each insertion t. 0 20 Winil.i-Oii, Mqa.ro, each insertion . i. 1 60 ' Lwl ami BuiiueN. Nolioe, erliu, . each iUBertk.n 0 30 ( Square coven three-quarters ol ad inch "f space In the columns of the Joubmsx. ' Marriage Notices 50 ct., when under five lines. Book and Job Printing neatly and promptly axe-auied. I Morning, journal Office W. 19 Eaot atnte Sir ret THE WAR IN EUROPE. Correspondence of Mi N. Y. Times. An' triaa Vciiiim ol tbe Battle of rns tossaAnsirlau and Italian JLonsjrs-- arlbaldi's Rald-The Austrian Army Mill on ine Defensive. I Vkrona, Monday, June 25, lsbti. Though this letter will doubtloss Tiring you onlj another' version, and that a j late ' one, of what you have already published, yet I believe my situation. "Vituio the A Us trian lines will enable me to give soma additional details of interest. The aoccunt must necessarily be brief, but it is well to bear both the Italian and Austrian history of the affair. J JJAb the Austriant give me ihe particulars, ' inflate battle Was as follows: The baltle-ground was almost the identical field, on whioh Marshal Radetsky, in 1848, gained a signal-vioiory over Jthat noble but unfortunate Itaiian leader, Charles Albert j On the morning of the 23d of June, the Italians crossed two corps over the Miocio, the First .'Carp, under Gen. Durando eotmifuljng ' the left wiug, and tRe Second under (fen. Cialdini, the right, wiih which it is report-ad Hing Victor Emmanuel and Prince Amadio had their headquarters. The ,twq eorpt marohed northward, eonfronting the northern sidn of the famous Quadrilateral, . v -which tre:ehes between Verena and J'e-'' eohiera; A third corps of reserves, under ' "'( Sen. Delia Rocca, was held in readiness, vand tb Austrians contend that it fin illy - crossed the river, and that they had"toenn eounter it in addition. (A the two corps that ( first orossed. The entire foroe of Italian " cavalry was also held in reserve. ! j a; The Anstrian army, consisting of at lsast ' two corps, under the Command of the AVoh-, duke and Field Marshal Albert, lay behind u the Thees about twenty miles northerly from the fortified city of Legnano, and oot-. , ering Verona from the south, with its front - westward, parallel with the line, of the Mineio.; As. the Italians advanced, the cavalry brigade of Gen. Pulz gradually . .'ell. back from, the main body of the jartny, keeping the enemy occupied with desultory ' skirmishing until 2 o'clock in the afjer-. , noon. Tke Austrians think it was the in- " tention of the King to push a small body of v . Piedmontese rapidly up between Verena ., ,.Tand Peschiera, to keep the main .body of the Austrians engaged for a time with a '' "' feint, while Gen. Cialdini marched the prin-v i -cipal army toward, the Po and Mantua, whioh they, thus expected to cut off from ,. support from Verona. If this was his plan, f it was frustrated by the vigorous attack of the Austrians, whioh rendered it necessary for the King to keep his forees together.! " - o About 2 in (he afternoon the "fighting ' , became heavy all along the. line, the Aiis-. ., trians having changed front to at U face to the south. The left wing of the. Italian army had rapidly advanoed azaihat Ptea. chiera, and had eves gained possessionj of,. a a tew or tne extreme outer works. '..At this f ' time the order of the Archduke ws4 given j,to attack in force all along the line. The . - Italian! had occupied a range of hills running from Saliouze to Somma Campagna, , , and were apparently in heavy foree. At the command of the Archduke the whple .army charged upon the Italians, wbo made a stubborn resistance, but were compelled slowly to 'fall back. : Victor Emanuel ap'- ' pears to have thrown- forward7 successively all his troops, including his reserve, hut without avail. At last his center rested ;:' upon 'a nil), forming a strong natural . , position, close by the town of Eutstoxa, whioh was the site of Radetsky's victory in '. 1818. 'Hera the Italians made their last stand about 6 in the afternoon, but were driven off' by a charge from the Austrians," whioh appears to have been made with '"' great bravery.. -At 7 "o'clock the Archduke - had driven the 'King baek to Villafranea, thonsh the Italians desperately oonteated veJ-yAoot ojihe. way.S.Bit the-place was untenable, and was yielded as a matter of j r goarse, ; sinoe it was. commanded by the Heights of Eutsloza. ..Night ended the - conflict, and in the darkness the Italians : 'withdrew and recrosaedu the . MLaoio In ".. safety. The capture of the Heights' jof - i Eutstoia laid open to the Archduke,; had he desired it, an opportunity to have broken through ihe Italian centre, and to halve prosecuted his victory to the right and left among the disorganized troops of the enemy, batvthe lateness of the hour alone appeare (;; i.to have deterred him. : ' .; ) 11 " .According to one-account the beginning of disaster to Ihe Italian lay In thefaol - - that they suffered their left flank to be turn. ... ed by a body of Austrians, who made kn impetuous tally from the town of Peschiera, J opposite 10 wnicn tne Italian leit jay. - it is qnite probable, since the Austrians, at the beginning of the battle, effected a change of - front, whioh would naturally lead to such a flank movement.1 ' ' '''"J-j I At to (he strength ' of the respective ar-' miee, I can probably give a better gusts at that of the Italians than that of the AusUi-J ans. The former had, three cprpt of infan-"" try, betide cavalry, the three together num- bering izi.uw men. n the reserve corps was brought under fire, whioh is probable, as there was time enough, all were preset if not, the Italians brought into the battle "nly 85,000 men'.' . The Austrians assort " . that they had but 80,000 engaged all told, though I am of opinion that 20,000 should lis aided to this figure. . . ! The results are not fnlly develontd. '. though the Austrians claim 2,000 nriaoners , and upward of twenty cannon. - L bear . i,n-i nomerable eitimates of the respeetivo losses, aome even putting; the lasses in killed alone, " on both tides, at 20,000, though &it ia fjar . . too high. The Europeans are different . jrorri the Americans, in that they are Has skillful in guessing, and do not set them- -selves at onoe. upon tbe conclusion of! a battle, to reckon "un its practical result t, This much at least, is tertaiu, that over 6,000 wounded ien hate already arrivbd in this cily and are quartered in the . . churohea and other public Jbuildings. The " beautiful Gothic Church of Anastasia, one of the finest of its style of architecture 'in Earop,"1gether with 'nearly haTt of the forty churches of ytroxta, ar tither wholly or partly filled with .the wounded. The vast old Roman Amphitheater, to tee which was my principal object in coming here, is also full and entirely inaccessible to citi xgns. In the Roman .timet it was. capable r.Cef' holding S5.D00 isonA.O ThagaarlB about it were gruff, and had often to club their muskets aeainBt the multitude of crowd ing and curious Italians; but after walking t about it I found an opening where,! euld look through. into the arena. It and the ranges of stone seats were thickly strewed with men, who lay in the open sunlight without any otlrarcovering than their over-ft eoats. ' Those wh were able had crawled into the great arohwaya in search of shade, and others crowded against . the iron gate, through whose bars the women ana childrh Were telling their cigars, wine and cherries. There appears to be no leelt f tkiritr able women and brothers of mercy who ef - fered themselves as nurses, and were so em tloyed, which, I suppose, is largely account ed for by the fact that many of the wounded were Italian oonscripts. . xne people hate the Austrtans with all the ardor of their v fanatical nature. Many of the -soldiers were - I llightly wounded nd, with theAiaMMct of the universal soldier, were squatted in gronps or singly in, oool placesyamag the - rnins, smoking their long oigaretas and tinging their national airs Hungarian, Pole. Bohemian, Austrian, Tyrol ese, Italian all were In their different uniforms, and sneaking each in their own language or 4i alect. Often I was reminded of, familiar " -scenes' about Nashville, Chattanooga and Atlanta,;.;, ; -..-...'IW .'. I.U'ff Meantime. Garibaldi it making . a. Wil .1. wild acattrin maroh nobody knows -exactly ,,.. .. dujracad in a like "manner. ... . -. ... t --' i i where, throush the Tyrol.- "He will proba hly pass above Lake Garde, and' make" an attempt against the railroad running pp the valley of the- Adige to Bavaria and Vanna. It is unimportant. The Austrian ( hoot at the mention of Garibaldi but they fear him; be is in every Austrian soldier's mouth when they wish - to he men-y, i)ut ,,. they dread him. i Notwithstanding the fre-east attack here, there is 5 movement of troops to the north along the , Tyrol Rail- ' , road to mett him when he debouohee - from ; the mountains. " Me may- be Jtin up C3CDiaJlflBUS iMlfflNG JfflfflNAL: . . ., i .' . , . , I i . . m,-T - i 1 - ,.. vi , ite t '-( " . . ,;. . -t- j , . VOLUME XXIX. ioin theFriissitfhs by way of Munich-i-no, body -here uknows.' uaribaiat 'proDaciv knows what he is about; he did not fall on I . f(4i tier his head. The Aus nan army still remains eerv ,r,? i'r.T.' unit.' where on the defbnsi re, while the Prussians are eTerrunninr - North" Germany like , a multitude of -loousta that. no.. man loan number. In reply to repe&tedL questions, Las AUBiriaiiB cuvrajriii;ii fuo mei 11. la U9 oessarv: that Austria is simply. waUini for the concentration of the contingents of the I smaller German Btates that are her1 allies. I It may be well enough,, but the .Prussians meantime are making a s washing cobble or i it in North Germany, and catching aome of toeBfl nine armivo w iiirjr vuuie ia.' itii-ness the Hanoverian contingent the other day at Eisenach. It may be good strategy for Austria to wai Jar tnese 4itH afiket fait of troop that she. 4t pipVing up a.rduad in the corners of Germany, but L doubt It. . .. . jr. .. j- ' ' ftWfJRft . Retignntiou f W. Itemiaon rOorreepondenca cf the Pliila,Jlphla Preei WASHIHQTOli, p.C., Julys 12, 188). The dislocation of Mr. Johnson's Cabinet, foreshadowed in my letter of the 10th met, has commenced with the proffered re signation of the- Postmaster General! the linn Will tun , nninrana.l--ilfAOaih fThe immediate, cause of; his action ?is belii ved to be the publio coalition ...between the Northern Democrat, Soutben rebels, nd suon Aepuoiioan- poiixicians as preier pab-roo ago. bo principle, j- It deterres -te be said of. Governor Deanison thl haofcyer al lowed his friends to misnnderuaild hislpo union. Although not classed among (the radioais, is is a tinoere nitmbet 'of ithe Republican Union pertTj an believes; its existenoe essential to the - best interest i of ihe country. I At president af the Natic nal Convention whiolj nominated. Ltnooln ind Johnson, he . was rated among the more moderate inen, and eo-operated ' with Ithe : Blaira when they were believed ' tebeiwor; ! thy .of confidence. It was nAwraL, thtre- Ub ear to give any signature to his con-fore,. when President Johnson enunoiated catenation of falsehoods, execrable slanders what was. at first regarded as his hodest and philosophical, profundity, would make purpose to restore the Onion upon the ptin- you "believe that 'Mr.' Hubbell "has dodged oiple that treason and not loyalty should be most' of the test questions of the made odious,. that-'oGeveraor 'Dennibqa wason,!'i,whioh prepares him to hearfrom should have very cordially tusUieed Him, Washington that "Mr. Hubbell, with his and should not have been, among (the 4rst usual illluck, arrived about five minutes tosuspeothim when lie coolly and cruelty too latb to' Vote" on what? That's :the abandoned hla-great' mission. 'No better question."' Not oh' the' Freedmen's Bureau illustration of Governor Dennison's psi- JJilJ, though by m mean and pusillanimous tioA oohldUeTgiyen tlrtn his Speech' to Ithe " Bread-sttdBuUer Brigade," headed j by his own immediate subordinate, the. First Assistant Postmaster General, on the 23d of May. It did not contain a wor J of censure of the President, but was- otf'Mhe obn-Irary a courteous endorsement, it his jso-called polioy. Yet, after going thus far, the Governor look occasion to. state pit relation to the great political orgamxatfon to Which he belongs, in the following lan trudge: ' '"' ' n "Nowy my. friends)' we must not eerlok the fact that if thia differtnee be hot: ad justed, it may lead, and it will lead, ia kH proDaoiiity, to unfortunate results, not only l to the Southern- States, but to an the Co in- anxious to vote for the report of the Cn-tryhdkoay J not add to thei Union pai ty, ference ,Ccmmit,tee that he went "tV Mr. in whose interests I learn yoi&assoeiat on Eliot, Chairman of said Committee, July 2d, has been organized. . I need not tell you or to asoertain when 'the vote would be taken those who. intimately knewv.me, tbaA iaoa In a note from Mr., Eliot, detailing thein-. the.' continued asoendenoy. ol' theUn on terview between them, Mr. E. says that Mr. party that I rely for the peace" and h aj pr- HubbaO expressed a hope that the amended nessofthe oountry. 1 Applanst. 1 Iu,nea ml"migUteaionee accepted ty the ffouie." not tell you it w a thai partym dse-tekld ThiB fact TTwell known to the Rev. Mi' and at the balUt-boxh that saved the nation. French, of the Free'dmen's Bureau, formerly from the assaults of armed rebelfion, Apr, o Delaware, Ohio, Who wat on that day, in plauser t will only addj-it is to that party, company with Mr, Hubbell, on the floor, of founded on the principles of the Baltimore the House. Oa the 3d Mr. Hubbell had no olalformj l leek to establish; indestruoljM V ' VrJrrwredrfo 'rt'tif s 'lnln annld hodton R on the hssie at justice and , constitutional equahty.'the rightsi of all the States, of ckir Oommon country. ; Applause! ' Lei me ie fer one moment to the dinerence between thai President and l Congress. I want to deal frankly, with you ,wheieI say that 1 po not believe these differences are irrecoK, oilable. I do not believe there is ahycaufee" of separation between the President and tne majority in uongross. Applause. J Si ay, if l am' not greatly at tauli, time "and dt- cussiont are bringing thei Prestdtni and Congress rapidly, together on the basis, of a common platform of aotion. Applause.! Certain it is, they are hot as wide apart as at the opening of Congress:" : 911 " I , r.Krom these words it is clear that Goverta or Dennison's resignation was prompted fcy the conviction that, there it tf deliberate attempt to destroy the Union party by means of the powers and patronage of the Nation-1 tzoitiogvsSBiowoT the war-times, and reool-al Government. No one has had better llect his bravtrv in-votinor upon alt "tost opportttiritieg of tinderstandrng the1 eiteht ol tail poaspiraoy than MmstK 'lie baft) In I iactrMeen constrained to witnaae.M not jtel suDmit to, ine most atrooious-prpscripiioiiB I in his bnn department. It is eaBy to oo cSive how a high tprrfted jrenfretiia'd w6uld Lrevqlt from sach 'a system. " It'ir easy (to oonoeive how one, whesa life, hat been, that of honor SjAd of truth, and a lofty cntent of treachery to friends,' and particularly !of 'ymr)nihy with' traltots, would shrink from contact, iwith-1 prMtices ;lit rejemble the worst days of the Spanish ypquiettjoo, and are in some respects a bad improvement pa Italian espionage. . When Governvi Dennieoa saw pure, and consoientfotjs men marked out for slaughter simply because they w'oujld notrjonsent te snrrender their own pledges and priciples, attd adopt-ra'j their steadtra-specf for and blindness to treason itself,, and when ne .saw the.ir places nlled by the merest-political aiiventuretBj0he had bint one " course to a pursue. .will ao be reoollected Uiat Govefhor Dennishn aooompanied Mr.. Reward to New York bn the evening of the 2lnt of February lasf, and1 that, on the following evening he made a speech at the Cooper Institute, mildly supplementary, of the ,qbrord, ; dogmatic and foolishly: prophetic farago of the . Secretary L e L! . oil.:- .l. - ii 0 ? ' J . ui qiau. xiUA-new. uio-jreouib ui uesure not io keep his place in the Cabinet hut jto keep peape in the ranks of tbf U nion party, Hence, when: such a man is oon'sirained, by every consideration of self-rtspectand fofy-' any ta pnaoipie, to oreairaway .from- me Exeoutive, we may readily, imagine, what' it in store ior us in the-coaiing eieotipns, i , Governor Den bison's resignation assunws a weighty significance when we consider lis' effeot upon .thoae. who, ;,iko hini supports V "my polioy;'1' and like' him,' "were resolved H never, under Sfny.oiroiimstanoestofleparSte from the great 'Union Republican party. Ihe moment they see that .Uu. Presidents object is to restore the Democratic organisa tion to power .and-to rehabilitate treason, they will fall baoat into Uae attd tight fee usual with their-natural friends. l.id CiyMUallon atToiuukaio, GoriA j ; The fottewtng oopy oi.AR. .othoiel. lorder needtneeemment: .ti ! ifl L o JlKADg's DspAHjfsjNT or TH $OpTH . jiiacon, ua, JUiy o, iooo. O r Generk Orders, No. Si'" '. 3i,V j , It has been officially reported' to the Com, manding General, that one Pompey O' Ban- non, oonhned at XoombBborc, Wilkinson county, Georgia, upon a .charge of Murder, ws .taken 'frorai legal custody1 bf a mob. and put to death with inhuman atrooity.) b ' The' TfaeoV shown by ihVestigatlon are, that O'Bannon, was the .probable-: aoobtn- plice of WimWrriiow a fugitive,) in ik. mnwaW-k. - vri iAtjzF.S ea;i.'. -.-i murderous violence towards other members oi ine lamny; tnai ne was- taiten irom the . . . . .. ... . . . .... tail at this place, wpoo Warrant, and Ue livered to the Deputy sheriff in tatd couniyt that he wasThetrsel?e"6!Tiy a mob of two pt three hundred persons, at, Toqmjbsboro aid. vioiflityand by theif uiIrrlmot,Vote, was ohaiaed lea tree,. aacfcarftert-bislears bad been cutoff, was torture. to da,tkvpy burn ing. , , These unlawful proceedings show that the civil ""authorities are unable to compel re-srject for even' the fotms -bf Unstioe in laid county, i Therefore, as there, is reason to I ' 1 . 1 . . . , a 11. 1 Deueve tnat upon too. approae-oniou -at' wie J j.;-;.i r rrn,, fci.m.a.i W.a iMn.fa. aX kdt ata.fi W Um-il :j kAkw raMuraia.Mn anlina -.uantaa IB BhAVII ttltAt. Vtmnaaa " . of law will not be exoeeaea in tnit casei , " ' .r W h" By order f Brevet Major General Chae'.P the night nndtr the corners of the wj- - i Tip vlhidtt that servo Anr ae a beO.T. Eaormous ,..., . A. RAMSEY Ni'nINGER. I - r ' ' - ; Assistant AdVt General. i ... i M-DrouyadeiOtaMjats given a gran4 dinner to Queen Emma,jf .Hawajiwhoit,.-. b 0f these horrible creatures and to rtceifsd in Pari with Jnttoyl lMUMe. . u (U)LUMKUS. OHIO. TUE&IJAY MUKIN1JNU, J ULi 17, lbt. ' .N UMBER I. i. HON. JAMES R. EVBBEU. ditok joubnal: in a communication published in jour widely read and popular Republican journaj, of the 10th. inst, 1 find a series ftray. pbarges made against the gentleman .whose, name is the caption hereof. It is .to all good Republioabs a source of regret that some of pur men are squirming and writhing under the pain and diaoomfiture, of. ," spre,-head", thatl ter rihle Dolitical malady which eets into all .;..'; ' lIin, .rtie. . The author . in j 'i ( . - of the, yituperatiye and disgustingly false oammunioat ion . entitled, "The Modern Podger,'- above, referred to, is evidently a Sire -head. , He wants Hubbells, seat in .cn$res9 Qr h faiJed from want of the req4ie...rainB, uipraie, Teraotijr! ur auiuo othor civilized traits, to oommand the patronage and . consideration of the sound Republican who has been sent to Congress by the loyal people of the 8th District. :1 The point attempted to be so gracefully I made by your communicator is that Mr. Hubbell has dodged all the votes this session, land finally hat dodged the vote on the Freed men's Bureau bill lately submitted to the President, and which is understood to have meV the veto fate of the first bill. The fact is, he "who charges James R. Hubbell with Voting against this bill, basely slanders a "sound1 Republtcin,cand falsifies the recorded truth. He did vote for it, and if: it is returned by the President with his ac customed yetoj the taid Hubbell will squarely and unflinchingly , vote for it notwithstanding ..said veto. , Your communicator, who indites ah epistle "for the Ohio Staff Journal,' 6n"'t,The Modern Dodger,' and whose connection "with weak nerves and a mud? 4s made painfully apparent by withholding of any explanation, the reader is left to tVfr that it was the Bureau Bill for wjiioh he came too late to vote. It was only on. the very slight .and immaterial changes In the bill, 'proposed by the Conference committee,I-'appointed to reconcile the differences between. the two Houses; and how came he; to get in .too late for even this ? Had your communicator, who thinks that "the day 'of successful dodging is past," and., the time has oome when men must stand or fall upon their record," consulted the ''record,'', he might have saved to elaborate an expenditure ' of siokly spleen ia the slander of a Representative of ithe ' A f , . it . ; ' r . tt ii.ii loyal people, of Ohio. Mr. Hubbell wat so (visiled th War Department1 on important business for Hon. P. B. Cole, of Maysville, his district, and returned too late to vote. On the motion of Mr. Finok to lay on the table the Conference Committees report, the yeas were 25, nays 102, and not voting 65 Forty-two, qf the. latter were Republicans, amongst them such sound men as Banks, Baxter,' Broomall, R. W. Clark, Dumont, Jenokes, Loan, Martin, McKee, Randall, of fcentuoky, aloan, and . 15. Washburne. ;-The ridiculous charges in the; epistlelof your Munchausen, scribbler, that Mr. Hiib-bell is a pdlrtifcal coward and "has not shown pldek and manliness "in his Congressional career" will have only the effect to arouse a .derisive laugh amongst those , who know ' any thine of bis record Those who remem- her1 him at Speaker of the Ohio House of Representatives during three years of the questions,!' and, coupling with that his rec- brd here, where he Tuu not dodged on the test pronounce the fabrications of Ae Modern Dodger," as mess, leaner than the meai- questions; will of your antbor a batch of meanness, meaner than the mean. est "record mean every word I say. - I in i iiaina I'rem theOrl.l - --; .. .. .in j ''-xechISM: Tlai la'toaayi an Instractloa to be Xearnt of Kvy Child ae soon as Sne :iJBO able to Speak. , Q. What is society? A. A jiiumber ' of persons assembling themselves' together for the purpose of ob- tainra g amosemenr Of various kinds. -What are these-asoambliet tailed? ... A. Parties,,, . , t , ., Q.' Into how many sorts may parties be divided? - w " f 1 i A. Intoi five sorts namely: dinner par ties, musioal parties or concerts, dancing parties orJiaus, .evening parties or drums, and afternoon parties or kettle-drums; besides two par lias in a large house at West minster. . ,. ... . . .. . .., Q. Define a dinner party? ! V A. Drnintt under difficulties. T Q.i:A musvsal pairty er conoert? -f '' -..:A"ii:A assembly where conversation especially flourishes under the enlivening influence of vocal and instrumental noises "Q'SA-bair?-"'" " . " I A; A snrall empty room devoted to the musQalar-exorcise of -jtwiee the numberjit wagoriginally intended to hold. " i. A' place where every one goes for"tp.e sake of seeing .'who is there, end to indulge in a little play I til floandaL - . ti.. What does the prefix "kettle signiryf A. Tt is of Chinese derivation, and re fers to the beverage usually provided at those meetings. ! ' - -. . Q. What are the chief objects of sooiety? , A. To see and been seen; to talk gossip and hear scandal: to make acquaintances and lose friends: to study the fashions; to Bkhiblt the laet acquisition front Paris, ahd to bmtieise the lame in others. ,My dear child, it is very well to know; and be able to repeat all this: but, tell me, what must you do to fityourself for sooiety? A. 1 must learn to be moderate in my ap petite; to be polite, especially to my super riora. In rank; Jo give ail natural feeling, and study to be .unconcerned when my toes are trodden upon. 1 must learn to dance, to sing and to play; to be quiok at repartee and at making conversation with those whom I wish to cultivate. .Q, How may you best succeed in the last named obieot 7 . . ! !u Ai By dilligently "reading the "papers; especially 77i OuZ; by going to all tbe lea re, piqture galleries, jflower . shows, aonjurtrStrsees and cricket matches, and by I - . !rT ' tnwM va mnnnm ' ancet to pieces, : 44 ' wnat snouid ne your nnai ena ana aiin inall thu , ;yA to, he, ,pajle4 ."awfully jolly,", and to hook as large a fish as possible. " So soon as children are eome to a competent age, -and can say tbis Catechism in Eaglish, and with understanding, they shall be further instructed in the truths therein contained, and Shall be brought to the Queen tor presentation j I rl 'I'nu . ... i j jn-,L , A MlLITAnT Lips in South.. America. 'A - , miurr iruui a JtSrazillian officer describes 1 . . i ,. . , r. Some of the beauties of eoldierinit in South America : "AmpniDious creatures abound. h "t WUT lUWO IOUT T . -ai-T 1 . 1 .... . . 1 Baafces. r xvr? momiiiff i unci mvielf ac I nnmnaniArl Itv O. 11 All TP iTMnr-H nf wiBAa -av 1 wwiuuwn.v- , j Wa MlWiCU W n lUgatort , promenade, regularly from, lake I to lake every night,. in a majors tent, the 1 o'ker day, one was killed that measured 31 carried into the nearest lake." i; ri COLUMBUS, OHIO, .TUESDAY MORNING, JULY Antnorshlp ol "F.cce Homo.' l- There are seme books that deseiverirflice from the peculiarity of their reoeplim, as much s from the peculiarity cf their Istyle, and contents. Of these " Ecce Homo" it cer-, tainly one. That can be' no common book which On a well worn subject, without nam or previous fame, without even, the aid. of oensures from Popes, or Bishops, or convocations, hat won its way into seven editions within as many months. That can be no common style whioh has ranked among it reputed authors personges of every grade and section of Eoslish sooiety, and yet' still remains a secret. There is a legend floating about London that the puhsher invited sixteen persons to diner to meet the author of " Ecce Homo," who returned home no fitter than they came. Butj how much more curious a banquet might be given .if all those whom the book has been ascribed, to meet each other! ' .- . '' The company would include the iriosV celebrated of Roman Catholio dievins, the most learned of Roman Catholic -laymen, we know not how many Nonconformist ministers, three essayists and reviewers, an Archoishop of York, innumerable young fellows of colleges, a Republican professor. a female novelist, a leading journalist, an Irish historian, a Scottish poet, a ocotiish duke, a master of Trinity, a dearf of "Westminster, an Attorney General; -a ;peet laureate, a Chancellor of the Exchequer, a: High Church Vice Chancellor, a, law stationer, chemist, an unknown sea captain and the Empror of the renoh. No " Imaginary Conversations," no " Dialogues of the Dead," no feast at Solomon's house. id the New Atlantis, would equal the charto- that surprising entertainment. Matntitt lan's Magaziid. . 1 - '" ' '"t' The Biq Elm or Boston Commok. .The Boston Evening Commercial says : ' The days Of the big elm are numbered.' It is! entirely shorn ftf its beauty, and in a! few yeara it will be no more. The trunk of the tree it hollow, and rot has extended to its branches. In former years the tree hat suffered from the fury of the storms. Lightning has shivered it, and its most magnifi cent branches ' have, one by 'one, leeh lopped. A tender-care for itg 'health Ms been extended towards it for some ysrs. The hollow places have been filled with e$" ment it has been hedged about and; tte roots guarded. The stately branches thai yet remain have been braced up by Iron supporters, and until two days age.it wat still a brave-looking old tree, the pride and Deauty or the Common. But Its propor- 1 llAnd haa. tu.n llnltM-aJ ' TL . :lta.. , J V.WUO lit . .... k. U U branch t-the largest aranch there waa left that inclined toward the west, has fallen, carrying with it two sections of the iron fence that surrounded the tree The appearance of the wood shows that the branoh has. been held in its place; by a very slight breadth of sound wood-" . . ,;r 1 Official Beeoarnltton of a Timely- 8r ; ,s vice. - -y . ..J j .. , Sergeant George F. Robinson, the Mtine soldier who saved. Bepretary Seward's'life by grappling with and forcing back his; assassin, hag written io Seoretary Stanton asking for the knife which Payne used en that of harror. His request has been grinV ed, and the weapon is accompanied, by a letter from' the' Judge Advocate General whioh close as follows : t,- , 'Your conduct. ea the occasion mentioned is now a matter, of history, and none, will hereafter doubt but that, by yourself-pot-session ahd courage in grappling with the assassin, you contributed larrely to- save the life of the Secretary of State, at ithe extreme hazard ot.your own a most meri torious public service nobly rendered, and of which the' weapon ' now committed, to your keeping will he an enduring memento.' "Very respectfully your obedient servaint, - : i i. aula, , "Judge Advocate General 'To Sergeant George F. Robinson," T . The Boston Journal says : "In a farm house near Kennebec there hangs a frame and glass containing a piece.Qf.blue silkjon whioh is a gilt star, Its. history is this : A son of the family was one of the color guard of the Sixteenth Maine regiment at the battle, of Gettysburg, Finding that they were to be captured, and being unwilling that the flag should fall into the hands or the enemy, the guard tore i t lop and concealed the pieces; ' The piece jto which we have alluded was, kept concealed by the young man during; the time he was in rebel prisons, and When he was released he sent it home to his father,' wh6 had- it framed and glazed. , The eon was afterward 5D y-.woundedat Hatoher'a. Run, ad the f?lX Hep the piece o flag as; a of him, and of the tenacity with wnicn he aided in keeping the start from fallinor l n in t hmnrlo of 1 1. a roKola 'J , -, I . - - Tkoubles of Rotalty. The sympathies or tne vtueen nt sngrana must be strangely divided in this contest, ' The husband of her eldest daughter commands ft division of the Prussian army, in whicji near relatives ' of ner late husband occupy prominent posi tions. The husband bf her second daughter hat a -command in the- Austrian army. Prince Teck, just married to- the Princess Mary of Cambridge, .has accepted a com mand in the "Austrian army, and sets cut for the seat of war, with his bride, before the honeymoon is- half-over. There it soaroely a member of any royal family in Europe who is not mixed up in this war.;- A dozen prints of Northern Germany have already lost their crowns and kingdoms borne are exiles in Austria; seme are pris oners in Prussia. JV.. Tt Timet Cor. ! i . ,l rf.' ... . . . I si! A Windfall. Miss Jeannette L. Doag- lass, of1 Ne W'York, has: received a legacy of luu,uuo from a relative in Hoetland Miss Douglass is a native of New York, and was for many years a teacher atNewburgh, where Bhe was very, popular. She aftes- ward opened a school at: Washington; in ourring a considerable indebtednesn ut. he rebellion breaking out,: her patrpns refused to meet thev obuzations. leavine ner in some embarrassment. She was em ployed during the warm onrof the depart ments at Washington, and also at the hospitals fprwounded soldiefeVj,,; , , : ,,: Fight about. a RattlbshaKK Austin Brett, postmaBter at Hartsville, Mass., while out in the fields recently, saw a hawk and a crew engaged indeadly combat highjup in the air. l ihe bawk had something? re semblinrr a whip in itB beak, which! it was compelled to drop in the conflict, and upon going to the place where it leu, Dfir.- Brett found that -it wtta' rattiesnake, rour The snake was not dead, when lfe!, but its head was nearly eaten on. A New Trick of. Edrulabs. Some ; of . F i . . . t :. . . the professional ' burglars haye adopted a a new method of obtaining information in ax. j - t i , - .. , - ' i, reeara io uesiraujio ptaoen ior -operauonn. - During business hours, when householders are absent, men call at their residences, and representing themselves to tie internal rev enue officers, make minute inquiries! the servants about their masters' occupations. habits, silver plate,, furniture, &cn. which information is taken advantage of by'burglars.-- Citizens should be on the lookout for suoh tricks as these. . - t t. At a'ladies' fair held in Rochester, N. S- Tecently, the company was started by the ap pearance of a man with only a shirt to cover his nakedness; - lis looked, .wild J.ana ghostlike,, and taking his position in the center of the room, he exclaimed in a. loud tone, "What the h 11 is going on he re, ?" The man was secured after a general pttniq and fainting spell, ahd.' turned' oat to be a merchant tailor, hitherto respectable, who had been on a spree, ana got a touch or ne delirium tremens.' ' ' '" " i f ' Peat promises to be valuable for rises betides fuel, v A patent has been taken out by which picture frames, book backs, card naoer. mouldings ana aecorations lor turni- ' ... l.:!VI! A ture. Drions ior ouiiuing purposes, ironw for stores, dwellings, and all ether articles in which bone, India rubber, and gutta peroha are component partSj Can Do manu iaotureu irom . J,!'.. ta haa -.1 a fc,iw a r -i.v v. orlJ --: - - "l .'. 1 have ive peuuui4 ui wuii iW . wiu. - ' to join Ihe fire department. Personal and Miscellaneous. , Watkins, a negro of Memphi", has had a prize fight with a negress named Harriet-He came out awfully mauled and wat carried away. t, The Portland Argtu gives a list of twenty-nine ships -now building in that State, with the aggregate measurement of 15,155 tons, v Some descendant of Solomon has wisely remarked,-that those who go to law ior damages are sure to get them. j 4 While Michael Cogan, of Lowell, MasST anl his ybutfg daughter were senffling for tHe0 possession !of a '-platel, it exploded, 'fafiilly wounding the young girl. It is somewhat singularly fitting that to the queryjj ,"Is pity love 7" the anagramatio answer is 1 positively . .... j " The City Council of Philadelphia have passed a joint resolution to procure an oil painting of president Linooln to be placed in' independence Hall. i - ;;. , j Extensjve preparations are progressing for thei mule races at the Nashville race track! "'Competitors are" invited from all , parts' of, he West and South. " VIX , '" General Dodge, who will succeed Mr. Kas-son' as Congressman from the Fifth District sA Iowa, is a'nativ'e of Danvers, Mass.; and J.a brother 4o "Gail Hamilton." iWtwart, or New xork is estimated to be worth $50,000,000. This amount, invested in' itp(fti yieldicg six per cent., would net thre. million doliars annually. , A jman could Uve on that, with a. little economy. A gold watch ohain has been made in San Francisoo that weighs two pounds' and a half, and coBt $1,200, all of twenty-carat told.! " L . It t stated that fifteen thousand designs have been presented by ambitious artists tot th decoration ef the auditorium of the new opera house in Paris. - ; Airs. Sylvia Goodwin, a female physician, who hat attended 3,686 birtht in Worcester during the last seventeen years, died in that city reoently, aged 68 years. " . " ;.Col. 8c obeli, the-laBt surviving commis sioned officer of England who took part in the battle of the Nile, has died at his beat, Nanoealverne, near Penzance,, at the age of 88 years.- Cassius M. Clay, U. S. Minister, at St Petersburg, has recently taken out patents in -Russia for. Broad well's breach-loading gun, and at Carlsruhe, in Baden, a company has been formed for the manufacture of the arm. a ; Prof. 8. F. B. Morse tailed for Europe a few dayt ago. Among several important missions whioh he was to fulfill, he was the bearer of a plan for preventing the loss of the Atlantio cable, should it part as be. fore. - -' '.;' It is stated that when General Gregory went to Texas he, visited a lawyer at his office, .and asked him for a copy of the laws of Tsxas. The jawyer, opened a drawer, ook out a la-ge and handsome bowie-knife, and -gave it to the General. ; : , , i . Princeton College hat . conferred the ds. gree of D. D. upon Rev. J. T. Duryea, formerly of Troy. He is about -thirty-two, and -therefore one of the youngest clergymen in the Country who wears that title. As an orator he' has few quale. -1 .. I. It is estimated that the amount of prop erly used up in New York by theft, druhk-ennesss and' ''official plundering, exceeds twenty million dollars per annum, most of which could be saved, were the city in the charge ef honest and oompetent men. , A young lady in England, eighteen years old, saw fit to break off an engagement to marry, when the discarded suitor became angry mmi ilhrealtaed to publish the lady's letterSji The lady appealed to the Matter of the Rolls, and it was deoided that the suitor, hd no right to publish, and an in junction was granted restraining him. j A California Editor, participating in a 'debate as to tbe best method of bulding a certain bridge, objected to a coffer-dam for making the pier. He said he early formed a prejudice against the thing; his uncle onoe had a cow choked with a turnip, and for a long time it was thought she would fffer-dam head off! "Young man, do you believe in a future state?" , "In oourse I doz and what's more, I intend to enter it as soon as Betsey sets her things ready." "Go to, H f11 rt rv m an or f to."' "Go two? if it wasn't for the law againBt bigamy, whip me if I wouldn't go a dozen.;: But who supposed, deacon, that man of your age would give such advice tdt'a nan jnst starting into life' . '. .' : The Lafayette Courier corrects the slate. ment that Gen. Lane is the third member of his family who has attempted suicide. It aavs that ties. Lane had two brothers. Geo. Lane, who is now superintendent of the Mint at Denver City, Colorada, and John F. Lane, who graduated at west. runt, was sent to Florida during the Seminole war. Having passed through an arduous campaign, he in struoted his servant to clean bis sword. The man did so, and submitted it to Col. Lane, who, holding the point of it close to his eye, glanced along its edge. The servant going to the tent at this moment, shortly heard a fall, and entering, found Uol. Lane on the floor, with the sword penetrating his right eye and brain. Whetherhe commuted sui cide, or fell upon the sword by acoident, was never known. The report that Gen. James H. Lane attempted to oommit suioide in Law-re'neaburg, arose frem a difficulty whioh he ia at lhat pUoe with B political opponent. A Naeeow Esoapk. During the shower aa Sunday evening, the lightning struok the house of Mr.-.J.. W. Wallace, in Hudson, and passed through into the barn. In its passage through the house it Struok Mrs. Wal-laoe on her foot, completely tearing open the upper leather of her shoe, butdoing her no injury except sugntiy burning ner foot and one of her fingers.,. She wat titling beside her child, which was in a cradle, at the time the "lightning struck. The only other injury done wat the breaking of six squares of glass " and the killing of three bens. JSashua (At. JI.) (fatette. Statistics reoently published show lhat thirty .millioni of bottles of champagne are annually produoed in Franoe, and are thus apportioned r-Afrloa, 100,000; Spain and Portugal, 200,000; Italy, 400,000; Belg um, GOO,00V Holland, '600,000; Germany, 1,600,- UUO; Kussiar i!,000,0U0; t rance, a.OUO.UUU; England, 6,000,000; India, 6,000,000; North Amenoa, 10,O0O,uoo. I... , , : ... i '. The ladies of Cedar Falls, - Iowa," are indignant over a report that a peddler whe recently "visited that town telling corsets ana httinz them on the bodies ot customers, eto , has sinoe turned out to be a man. dressed in feminine apparel. It is stated that ia oonsequenoe of ill- Health, the tour of Head Center Stephens through the United States ia indefinitely postponed. - Prominent members of - the lvoberts-Bweeney party are taut t be - 0er to, Stephens. L -.V : -r- I !-' J . 1 . . ins napunai ui The habiftial use of onions as an article 1 of fobd Is said to be almost certain protee- . ti0B fi.om eholera eholera, even when in immediate contact with it. , ; 17, m. : ' TELEGRAPHIC. REPORTED FOR THE JOURNAL. FROM WASH I SOTO X. Secretary Seward on Reeoastf netion - lie Iodorees the Philadelphia Con-; venllon. .-,.! WA8HISOIOKt. July 16. The following important letter has just been made public : . i ' Depa&tment OF SrATEf- Washinotoh, July 11, 1866. Sib : Excuse me for expressing surprise that you ask me, whether I approve of the oall of a proposed Union National Conven tion at Philadelphia. After more than five years of disturbances by bivil war I regard a restoration ol the unity, of the country; its most immediate as well as its most vital interest that .restoration will be complete when loyal men are, admitted as representatives of the-loyal people of the eleven States so long i unrepresented in Congress. Nothing but this can complete, it; nothing more remains to be done, and nothing more is necessary. "'Every day's delay ia attended by multiplying and increasing inconveniences, embarrassments and dangers, at home and abroad. 'Congress possesses the power exclusive. , After a session of Seven months Congress still omits to exercise that power; '' ' ' :" '" :' - j ' What can be done to induce Congress to act, this is the qnestion of the day. Whatever is done must be done in accordance with the Constitution and laws., It is in perfect accordance with' the Constitution and laws that' the people of tne United States shall assemble by delegates in Con vention, and that when so assembled they shall address Congress by respeotful peti tion and remonstrance, and that the people in their several States, Districts and Territories shall approve, sanction and unite in such respeotful representations to Congress. No one party could "do this effectually or even seems willing to do it alone. No local or popular organisation could do it effectu ally.. It is the interest of all parties alike, of all the States and of all seotiois-a national interest, the interest of the' whole people. The" Convention indeed may not tnoceed in induoing Congress to act, hut if they Tail the attempt can make matters no worse. It will be a lawful and patriotic attempt made in the right direction n effort to be remembered with pride and satisfaction, whether it succeed or fail xne original union or tne estates was brought about by. movements of the tame character. The citizen who objects to the Convention is bound to propose a better plan of proceeding to effect the desired ena. io , otner plan : is ottered . or even thought of. Those who should oppose it would seem to me to manifest, at best, unconcern if not opposition to all reeonstruo- uod, reorganization and reconciliation between the masses of 'the American people. To admit that . the Convention will fail would fee 'to admit "that the people" of the United States are-, deficient tither an wit- dom or the virue necessary to continue the existence f of thef Republic. , I believe ne Bitch. I.hinov "'' A great olikfcnl1 winter says that gov ernment is a secular religion, and that the people of every, coqntry are divided into two classes, each maintaining a distinct political faith; the one class always fearing tne very worst mat can 'possibly happen, and the othear hopes under every ciroum- stanoe the very best that esc in any event happen. Without . aocepting this theory at absolutely true I think that all men do generally act from a motive1 to guard against public danger, or else from a positive desire to do good; . Both classes may therefore favor the present attempt to restore the unity of the nation. 1 I am, sir, your obedient servant,' i Signed - V M WM. H. SEWARD. To Hon. J. R. DoMTTtB,; , , ; ., ,,. Chairm&n Executive, .Committee. - . , J FROM KE W ' TO ft K: . i ; A Soiap of Moxlean News. , York, July 16. The Herald's Matamoras correspondence. dated 2d, says: General Escobedo is shortly to leave for Monterey, with 4,000 men, his prospects for . reducing the oity being very nattering. - , : The American Division is not filling: up very rast. Gen. Caravaial has demanded the return of the French Financial: Agent in Mexico, from ueneral uetty, commanding the U. a. foroes on the Rio Grande, under the extra dition treaty of the 11th of December, 1861. The Agent crossed the line at the time of the surrender, -, with the eastern house archives in his possession. The matter has been referred,to Washington. The health of Matamoras is good, and no anticipation or an epidemic. 1 Ueneral Mejia and his troops arrived in Tampico just in time to repulse an assault irom tne Aiieerais. No Cbelera io Ine Cily- Three Deaths ManraoKiye. .: - ? No oases of cholera were reported to the Board of Health yesterday in this oity, ! 1 erooKtyn tour cases were reported, three of wmca resulted ' tetany, nine cases in the 12th ward" of that city have resulted fatally in the last ten days.: iThe oonvalesents in the cholera fleet at the lower quarantine have been allowed to oome up to this city, and tbe vessels arriving from foreign parts passed the inspection yesterday and were admitted lo the upper bay. Gen. Sherman in New Torcx. Gen. Sherman was serenaded by the band of the B3d Massachusetts Regiment at Bos ton yesterday. He addressed the assem bled orowd, i giving a resume of the great ueorgia marcn ana tne Atlanta campaign. lie said that ne round tne soldiers of one seotion as good as those of another, and never in the darkest hours of the war did he doubt that the final result would be the tri umph of the Union cause. ; He leaves to day for Hanover, N. H. Liberia Attracting Attention to Her Cvmini-rc1. The Herald's -correspondent from 4he western coast of Africa goes lo show that the itspubiio oi Liberia is attracting the attention of foreign governments more and more, tbe executive authorities having had visits from war vessels and. .conunksioned officers in the service, of Sweden, Russia, and the United States since the commencement of the year. . The commercial opera- tions of England were being extendsd rap idly on the coast, and the commerce of Monrovia was spirited and profitable. New Tertt Excise law. It is understood that the Supreme Court of Kings county, Brooklyn, will to-day give a decision in favor of the constitutionality of the excise law. This will compel sts in foreement in Kings county, while it is dis regarded in this oity, awaiting the action of the Court of Appeals in September. pianos. Harris A Co, . MAMMOTH MusieStore i , jLargest (Stock, i. THIS SIDE OF NEW TORE PRICES VERT LOW I Please give as a call. 36 North High street. Jun28 . -.- .- COLUMBUS, O. BSIIGIN HOUSE 3Xt. Vernon, O- " rrtHIS HOUSB HAS JCST BKBN THOROUGHLY .1 rencvated and refarnkhed. - Tbe patronage of all true Union Men ia reepectraliy solicited. . , a. D. Bsgam. Proprietor,. " Junl9 3m ' . (Lute of the Lj brand Hons.) LA PIERRE HOUSE, PHILADELPHIA.; - The Subscribers having leased this favorite House, . .. ia Has osen . REFITTED AND REFURNISHED Tn an almnt Manner, and is now prepared with the most preot eppeintments for the reoeption of guests, skir The first position among Ant-class Hotels will be maintained In the future as In the past. junlSm JOacr . , Ba&Ha rABUCI. NUMBER CLOTHING. Ready-Made Clothing ! 50 Per Dent. Cheaper Heretofore. Than t-QREATREVOLUTIONIN PRICES", Goods Approaching- a- Clolel Baals i JOSEPH GTJSJ4ERSBTI3DErJ Meroltaxtt Tailor An! Wholesale and Betail Dealer, la READY-MADE CLOTHING, Cloths, Cassimeres, Tweeds, Vesting! and - uents' rurnisning woods. S and 7 Neil Boose Bnildlnff. TAKES PLKABUBtt IN INfOBMINO Hit OLD caitoraeri and the ffetieral pablio, that h ha nat tetnrsed from the Baetera eltiaa with the larg est and bet eeieotea etccK or neaaT.naae (.locninir. Toroiin and Domeetlo Olotaa, Oaaalanraa, Tweeda. Jeans. Teatinn of all kin-!, atvm and priced, aid Gentlemens1 Fnrninhirg Goods, ever off-red to the gaaeof the pnbllo in the ait? of ColamhM.i Theea 1 It) IUO I goods were purchased dorlnp; tba nattled toodi- nn ot tna w;a maiaea. ana oaai .aaiBeni af oren anU were aoxions to e)I, and 1 can sell them FIFTY PER CENTr CHEAPER Than those who bonfftat a month or six weofcs be- ore. I can sot sell anus 'or lib, wnioh ; tares montns ago oroagnt irom M) lo Wlo I for Sou, wnicn Uea nroagnt irom io to siuu, or at a boot The Same Prices as Before tie-Van Call and see mr soods and d rices, and attsfv voar- elves. To these who have favored me with their patron- age in t a past, 1 am tbankfot, and oan aow assnre tnem tnat 1 oan tell tbem goods at mncn lower ences. The Merchant Tailoring: d nartment Is under the charge of Hr; J. B. FtmuuD, wheae rasiatatioe lor neat nts and vill-mut garments, needs n. comment, a the articles always advertise themselves. P. 8. On the 1st dav of Jnly next I will remove to tne dell House Hniiatng, into tbe dm roosj now occatiied by M axons Chitda, w) ere 1 will bavfeShi- oreasMi Taciuties tor (tie accommoaatlon oi my sn morons friends. A Sne assortment of Children's Clothing constant ly Kept on nana. v apizi bm -- BRADLEY WELTYi .... i Importers and Jobbers o f o 1 V o Cassimeres, VestiugSetU. , NO. WHITE ST., KBSOif Baanuv, WSSLET WILTT. aprfiTeodlv MEDICAL. THE NEW SPfilNa AND SUMMER MEDICINE. FLUID EXTRACT S ARSAPARILLA COMBISED WITH i . ; Iodide oCXti X30l'& ' PBSPAEED FOR ' ' s , a. W. PKTTES, BOSTOS, James R. Nicliols 4c Co., MiSUfAOTUBISa CHEMISTS, j MANUrAOrtJBKRfl F TBE . j ELIXIR PERUVIAN BABE , . with -jr . 1 1 ' ' PROTOXIDE OF IRON, 1 Which has become so favorably known as Tonio and Restorative, By Physicians and invalids In all parts of the country Tsi new preparation, "8aasuAaiixA in oohsiiu- with Tosidi or !," presents one ot the most rompt alterative agsnts, in !a form oapabla of ax- ertlng mil aotion npon the system, and this In mll ante and pleasaat doses. It htoonoeded that the al terative, resolvent, or tonic effects of Iodine) are ex- ortad most deoiielly when assodatad with other al teratives, In combination; and tbe Sarsaparilla I to fulfill perfectly all the favorable requisitions. The first effjot nsaally observed when "SAneat' rABiUA vrra iodide or Lists" Is taken, ' lsi aa increase of appatlts, showing that tt has onic pros' rttes of a marked character.- Ita alterative effects are manliest In Its ready combination with the blood and tissnes. Pae, aroralons women isnd children Improve rapidly-' ander itsnsa, and tha vi tal functions assume a healthy condition. It Is admirably adapted to a large anmber of chronic or acuta affections pe-nlinr to children. It Is suited to them, both by the mildness and efficacy of medicinal eff.ot and tb. pleasant, attrutlv fbrm of the remedy. It may b given for a long $eriod where constitotional lnflaences are desired, and ne repugnance, or dlslnollnation to take the syrup, en countered. In White-Swelling, 'Hip-Joint Disease", and Distortions of thePplne, 11 should ba given per sistently, in moderate doses, until relief Is obtained. In the Spring of tbe Tear, and During the Warm Weather, the accumulation of morbid matters In the systsas. seems to become manifest and very-' troublesome. Lassitude, Headache, Bolls, Ooetivensss, Loss of Ap petite, Patos In ibe Joints, Indigestion, ate., are very common. Nothing ever devised. Is better adap ted to exterminate or drive off these affections than this new combination of SAXHAr-ABiixA with Iodide: or list. No preparation likt it, or wlc approximate! ta it. so . . ' Alterative or Blood Purifier, j hat mmht'ort hem plated within As rtaaof tmiclUt. Indeed, It is an entirely hew and sonttrrino combi nation. In no respeot resembling anything hitherto employed. The opinion of medical men Concerning it, the de scription of its chemical cnarietef, therapeutla val- manner of use, etc., are given ia a c irealar, which can had at the store ot any and all. first- class Drug;r,sts. For Sale in Colnmbns by " . ROBERTS z CO a. e. SAanjEi,, : and all DroKS lata. mayledt' MRS. DOCTRE88 DONOVAN, 811 East Friend St., - I PhysioiaH for Women and Children, - TTAS BOATED IH COLUMBUS. AT THI Bl" I XI QUKST of some of her Mends. . Mre. D. re- speotrally tenders her services to the ladle of Co lumbus and viotn'ty alter a successful practice of 14 years in Jersey Oity, whr her treatment in confinements and all diseases Incidental to abildren have been universally acknowledged. Also, treats Womb Diseases, no matter of bow loag standing or onmotioeted, and would prefer those ohm which nave teceivea meuioei treatment netora. in orssr to conviuoe the sufferer of ber superior skill, ot which she can give the most aaexoepUosuaUeaasilntsiilals ' umo noun irom so a a. at., ana mm to 4 r. at. ' --- yensossu' Ipparatog for Deformities , DR. A. 0.!FORSBER .... fl ! THB CLUB FOOT MACBIHE8 OF DB.. a. O rossBsaa. Ho. 6 Hast Fourth street, aret the best now in use. Tne so i of Mr. W. Oibson. mano- mcturer of lead pipe and sheet lead, on ninth attest, a lad eight years f eg, has bsen stllcteo with a club foot sinoe childhood, and waa treated for (five years with machines ot different kinds, but without success. Six montxs ago Dr. A. 0. Forsbarg Bill ed, bis machine, and with Ibe aioct happy resttltsv, our most distinguisbsd physicians having proneamcd' the foot as perteciiy curea. uau no see ior , Mur selves. The best of Traatsea for cure; also, every variety of Bandages constantly on haodj at East Fourth street, second story." ' j , - . ' 1 V -I P'P t Dr. Stevens & Co- i HA DB VOTED TTTTKEH TIABS IN bN-OINNAT1 to the treatment of Private Dtoewe. They guarantee a cure, without the use of mercury; all of forms of Parvtra Cimm, enpedally thoas ot leng sUadinx. - Loss ol saxuel power restored ! a few weeks, victims or self-abuse and excessive venery. swAering from Soirmatorrhea. BDaadUa (Hir ed. Perrons at a distance treated by adorsssing Di. -STEVENS a 00 , no Walnat St., between Fifth sad euth1oiaoinBau,0. . , sutaeiY ' rm x.uja.s u- SlJBSC'KrPTIOlf J I ' 1 " or tm. nAiLt jocaxAx. , Single Sabteriben, 1 year, by null .r..'......t9 OS Biogla Babacriben, S aaonthi, " ,, to SingJe Babecriban, moatha, . tl lu e xS Single BubKTibera, 1 month, ' 0 SO MngleSnbaoTibara, 1 ateath,. dellTaraa. 0 SO Hingle Snbacrlbera, per week, delivered. 0 To Ag int., in olube, 15 cent, per week aaeh eony. vcaas or tb m-wtmt nouu, 1 nr. t 601 ,! ft 8 raootbi. 1 IS 1 1 month 0 4 - tiui er id waxxtt awlui. Singl. Bnbperibert, per yar...............n......t2 M TOBACCONIST. I-i U 7- (HOuuli am utaii. sxaua C I GABSsnd T O B l O'.O O . ;iJi l J I . tj Aadln SMOKERS' . ARTICI.E8 , IN GENERAL, ! Booth aicVStrfet., I ff (One door North of U. 8. Hotel,) ntartt Sou io 7 ' COLUKBUS, O. r '1' ' II - . - T t It. K. MTJTVTEK, Bnniimir to Arltacli. -Waalaaala aaa Kttail i it J' - . 'Vj'l 1. W I f 1-U D A C C O . Olgan, ataarasana ni Brjar Boot PipeiTTobaoe Hv. Re. us iMth nidi street. jaale lj (Neat door to tfcwGoedaU Boaaa.) TO .a,iu.J.l uT BrX JS.Q S A S O I T 4i4 -illK wit -sra - . f?0 wn inMl V tbe BLASSASOlr KESTOREK and DKE8SINO COKBIITED, IK yaiFK iitNcnt-iv ail otHnna" for bk-bI0auOra Baltalo abets- otixlaalolor-. 1st, jsecaos? it is as neat aa uoloxne In Us apstt-aad as easily applied; i."' C.tTOB it Br.vB tne nair ,troa.IalUnf oat and from tnrnirc trggraj; it troextes the rth ef fhs hair. 3d. keep, tbe soala.clealnd urn. a aateaaoas dis- Hm Dl lOB KAIl. aw Bscaami U ta a beantlfsi kale deasslnx. Btn. Beeavneo.ttvts tfc Chaanears. and warranted to a-lve satisfaction, or ta money will berefonded. - :fi-n-;T The trade supplied at Mannactnrexs' prices by ar.ers. HARRIS SOiK, Acrata, Wholesale Dealers in Fancy Dry taud. Hoeiery, Oloves, Motions, Htatlonery, Perfamirx. dw.. Ac.. 107 nod 109 Bast Town street, ttotsnhasvO. B.-anch factory. Detroit.. Mtchiirtn..: ' Jun29 3m ex. ii. w sium, managar. CLOJHIflC. 1 id'. I- ": ,..,! ' 1I C It Ai RARE .OPPOBTUNITV la herebr tfrre4 Abe Clticiiani&f Cw For SlactV'Bays! STEBBINS.TOWBTE A CO. , .-'i 1:; f i Hi -f U ' ii -.3 JTsit i . -T wnitpB tbwir WhoWl Boomi, J i , . ; ;. -, i .t3jt-v fir No. I Cnn6tliiocIcf : . ' ; -, Bit I Vd will sell at Be tall from their .Bntlr. Stock far ouiy VSTS, at W hoi c a I ie P ft ei -" Wis hAT it Lrge Stock to wleVrt'lronrlt IJnen Dusters, ' 1.1 nra Kacsi. ii 1-1 in -.: lilnen Paota dfc wests.' r x , : .(,-? lac ti Draws Coata, I Blaekt Casstmero Sacks, n 7 . . IsjinoensarKi, Kng-Ush WnlkintrCoats, I - -. - ,:.. - - Matla4atafcajFesta Matched Suits, Boy s' Clothing, 'leaf, than - - 1 , -. li tt.'tlt.- Purpishing- doods! WHITE SHIRTS, " BRACES, FANCY SHIRTS, J,; TIES, SOCKS," GLOVES, v-t v n 1 S . - '-BOSOMS, ;-l .? at o r t , 'BUCK GLOVES AND MITTENS. . .'. - - : -a----- ' B CY TOUR tVI SXE R JSTOCK ' A Wdtd to ihe Wise Is Snffloient. "iI ,H " i '"t Remember the number, corner Town aad Third streets,-bio 1 Gwynne Block. Oolumbus, O. Proposals for PrtotUiis; '.and Orticx or Oosuiauoinaaor Pansmts,"! Colohbus, Ohio, July ?t 188.. f QKALBD PEOP08AL8 WllA M BOlVBD k? at the Office ef the Seojs5rv ( &UM af the iteorunio, until u , .. lM neaday, tbe Slat day :f Asjcnaa, 18 At,12 o'cock M., Ior exacuiing the B(ata feinting for the period ot two years, and for executing the Stat Binding for the period at one year, from and after tbenrst Monday ol novemner ne aaeuing, in accordance with tbe provisions of the ac eat! tied ao act to provide for tb execnaea ano sntei lsion of the Btata Printing and Binding!', passed March 21, 1869, the act supplementary thereto, passed May I, - low, ana we act amenaawry meseui, pmi April 8, 186.- . " ,. H-di. v. WMT" . Full printed sFxamcAmoxs can ba had fl application to the Secretary of Stste. lack proiiofal must be aceompauled' by a Tud. xecated ttt due form by tb niaer with ts- l:st rtwo good and anfuci.nt sureties, e&tluactory xo tb Obmmissio ers of Printing, in the penal sum of tea thousand dollar, coneitMnM for to nuninn per-formanoa. sursuant to law f ao. claesor filu.;. of tne State printing as may be adjudged to' him. and lor the piym.lrt as iiquiaatea aamaxes oy seen bidder to ttia Dtata-oi an eecaasoi cost over we diu or bis of .neb bidder wnicn. tb Btata obliged to pay fer rack, work by, reasa. pf the failure of such bidder to complete Jiiacontxaot j .aid : bend to-be null ant void ff hs) contract shall be awarded to htm. No bat mgcoati,y sael keaol inU be entertained bit Ihe Commissioner! of Printing. a lite bond In ttie p -nal swav- nve tBeoaanaaoi-lars. must, acosmpaii raob ;propcsal jipldlac, stitchiui; or binding. . Copies ot bonds (m "blank) wUI foralsheoVtb bid. ders on application to Iheeecretary of State. In ail "respects the printing and binding shall ba executed, and the kiln thereof" mad. eat, ftssd, aad- ited ai d i aid in contormity witn tno.pxinaa-w. oi thn au-t. "Tn nmvftta for tb. meentlon and eODervls- i ton of the State Printlnaaed MowUisV'asaed March Ztr1860, aad tb amendatory actjx April o, to 'which acta reference is hereby made for todt farther information as may be desired. ; -'!- - l?ropoea!e to be sealed ana endorsed as ise outara of the envelope, -Proposals for Pnblio Printing." or ' Proposal for Blndlns-.v. tneoaae mayo, ana addressed to the 8ecreUry of 8ta'. ' A WM. HaaBX.BSUTCt, Becretary or Btaw. . . ,-MOSa . BBAILIT, ' TJomntioUer of the Treasury. . o i JAKH H.-OODMAJI, -I r, . AuditosItate. .it-. . l-i JfWtd, : H : -, .; , ;. .." , t.i siT INTEUAL REVElttlx.. Seventh Sistxlcto NOTICE FOB APPEA.IS. IN AOOOSDAirOK WITH BlUTrOIT ITH Or Ao to prwvida laUraal Bevsans Is no-port the tovernmenfc and to pay iatarestoa the public debt," notice ia hereby given that.th. anan- al MBBssment -" '- - - , -"- IN FRAKKtIK COUNTT;1 Of Ii comes forlMo Ueaaas fwiaeef. Bad for Carriages, Musical Instrument, Cold Watcsia. Plat of Hilver. o , enumerated is "Schedule A, seotios UOj set Jane SO, W6t, wUI be - -1- Closed on the neweath day or jnnly. AlHeenosM who shall have negleetal e Wiake re- toras aa required by haw wiU b apssmarily SBSissid and penalty added, us xiueaay-us iiu oay va July, I will, at my ' ' " T i . .; OFFICE IK COLOMBCS. - Sabmit the proceedings ef 8hsr Aselssairr Asssssnrs, nd theanauai list takea and . retaroed aa ator- aaid, to the inspection of any and all nenoas mav aoDlvfor that purnoae. and will at the i '1 ' time hear and auermine spneais Mtiaay enormous or xcessiv vlnatleiia, i asmesrieats or anumera loss by the Assessor er Atsisiant Assessors, returned tn the annual tart. -8el(t appeal" are required in writing, and mutt spec'fy the particular cause, matter or thing respecting wmca a aeeuwn isruuesud. IbAAO tt. BaBltBTT, Aeseator cevtnta v?9n Spring TaUez. July, 1896. -:-!rf Pi-nr-t sVtiVi ehsT SjTT DR. O. A. KM AFP, Oenllst, formerly or n. I.,) exclusively-sraai a beafnes. Dlseaaes- el she Eyes, son ta- rta ArtineU Ena WTTBOtTS rADk al orx, at No. 199 South Bigh street, (opposite the Goodate House,) ia Columbus, Ohio. Also fnrnishaa rjaki labia book ontbEy aud Ear, for-SO am t Iras ef postaat.toaMrev.,: T:til taatdlf , .Hi 1 ' a r ' --r - - inaU 4 we 0 i-m hawl '""" ' ' i
Object Description
Title | Columbus morning journal. (Columbus, Ohio), 1866-07-17 |
Place |
Columbus (Ohio) Franklin County (Ohio) |
Date of Original | 1866-07-17 |
Searchable Date | 1866-07-17 |
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 |
Description
Title | Columbus morning journal. (Columbus, Ohio), 1866-07-17 page 1 |
Place |
Columbus (Ohio) Franklin County (Ohio) |
Searchable Date | 1866-07-17 |
Submitting Institution | Ohio History Connection |
Type | Text |
File Size | 5916.96KB |
Full Text | r i f I i. r CiiLT One Sqor, each Insertion -. 7 " Hpecl.l Notices nor Square, each ineas- tioo .T.... ! " Local end Business Notices, xr lini, - ' each insertion t. 0 20 Winil.i-Oii, Mqa.ro, each insertion . i. 1 60 ' Lwl ami BuiiueN. Nolioe, erliu, . each iUBertk.n 0 30 ( Square coven three-quarters ol ad inch "f space In the columns of the Joubmsx. ' Marriage Notices 50 ct., when under five lines. Book and Job Printing neatly and promptly axe-auied. I Morning, journal Office W. 19 Eaot atnte Sir ret THE WAR IN EUROPE. Correspondence of Mi N. Y. Times. An' triaa Vciiiim ol tbe Battle of rns tossaAnsirlau and Italian JLonsjrs-- arlbaldi's Rald-The Austrian Army Mill on ine Defensive. I Vkrona, Monday, June 25, lsbti. Though this letter will doubtloss Tiring you onlj another' version, and that a j late ' one, of what you have already published, yet I believe my situation. "Vituio the A Us trian lines will enable me to give soma additional details of interest. The aoccunt must necessarily be brief, but it is well to bear both the Italian and Austrian history of the affair. J JJAb the Austriant give me ihe particulars, ' inflate battle Was as follows: The baltle-ground was almost the identical field, on whioh Marshal Radetsky, in 1848, gained a signal-vioiory over Jthat noble but unfortunate Itaiian leader, Charles Albert j On the morning of the 23d of June, the Italians crossed two corps over the Miocio, the First .'Carp, under Gen. Durando eotmifuljng ' the left wiug, and tRe Second under (fen. Cialdini, the right, wiih which it is report-ad Hing Victor Emmanuel and Prince Amadio had their headquarters. The ,twq eorpt marohed northward, eonfronting the northern sidn of the famous Quadrilateral, . v -which tre:ehes between Verena and J'e-'' eohiera; A third corps of reserves, under ' "'( Sen. Delia Rocca, was held in readiness, vand tb Austrians contend that it fin illy - crossed the river, and that they had"toenn eounter it in addition. (A the two corps that ( first orossed. The entire foroe of Italian " cavalry was also held in reserve. ! j a; The Anstrian army, consisting of at lsast ' two corps, under the Command of the AVoh-, duke and Field Marshal Albert, lay behind u the Thees about twenty miles northerly from the fortified city of Legnano, and oot-. , ering Verona from the south, with its front - westward, parallel with the line, of the Mineio.; As. the Italians advanced, the cavalry brigade of Gen. Pulz gradually . .'ell. back from, the main body of the jartny, keeping the enemy occupied with desultory ' skirmishing until 2 o'clock in the afjer-. , noon. Tke Austrians think it was the in- " tention of the King to push a small body of v . Piedmontese rapidly up between Verena ., ,.Tand Peschiera, to keep the main .body of the Austrians engaged for a time with a '' "' feint, while Gen. Cialdini marched the prin-v i -cipal army toward, the Po and Mantua, whioh they, thus expected to cut off from ,. support from Verona. If this was his plan, f it was frustrated by the vigorous attack of the Austrians, whioh rendered it necessary for the King to keep his forees together.! " - o About 2 in (he afternoon the "fighting ' , became heavy all along the. line, the Aiis-. ., trians having changed front to at U face to the south. The left wing of the. Italian army had rapidly advanoed azaihat Ptea. chiera, and had eves gained possessionj of,. a a tew or tne extreme outer works. '..At this f ' time the order of the Archduke ws4 given j,to attack in force all along the line. The . - Italian! had occupied a range of hills running from Saliouze to Somma Campagna, , , and were apparently in heavy foree. At the command of the Archduke the whple .army charged upon the Italians, wbo made a stubborn resistance, but were compelled slowly to 'fall back. : Victor Emanuel ap'- ' pears to have thrown- forward7 successively all his troops, including his reserve, hut without avail. At last his center rested ;:' upon 'a nil), forming a strong natural . , position, close by the town of Eutstoxa, whioh was the site of Radetsky's victory in '. 1818. 'Hera the Italians made their last stand about 6 in the afternoon, but were driven off' by a charge from the Austrians," whioh appears to have been made with '"' great bravery.. -At 7 "o'clock the Archduke - had driven the 'King baek to Villafranea, thonsh the Italians desperately oonteated veJ-yAoot ojihe. way.S.Bit the-place was untenable, and was yielded as a matter of j r goarse, ; sinoe it was. commanded by the Heights of Eutsloza. ..Night ended the - conflict, and in the darkness the Italians : 'withdrew and recrosaedu the . MLaoio In ".. safety. The capture of the Heights' jof - i Eutstoia laid open to the Archduke,; had he desired it, an opportunity to have broken through ihe Italian centre, and to halve prosecuted his victory to the right and left among the disorganized troops of the enemy, batvthe lateness of the hour alone appeare (;; i.to have deterred him. : ' .; ) 11 " .According to one-account the beginning of disaster to Ihe Italian lay In thefaol - - that they suffered their left flank to be turn. ... ed by a body of Austrians, who made kn impetuous tally from the town of Peschiera, J opposite 10 wnicn tne Italian leit jay. - it is qnite probable, since the Austrians, at the beginning of the battle, effected a change of - front, whioh would naturally lead to such a flank movement.1 ' ' '''"J-j I At to (he strength ' of the respective ar-' miee, I can probably give a better gusts at that of the Italians than that of the AusUi-J ans. The former had, three cprpt of infan-"" try, betide cavalry, the three together num- bering izi.uw men. n the reserve corps was brought under fire, whioh is probable, as there was time enough, all were preset if not, the Italians brought into the battle "nly 85,000 men'.' . The Austrians assort " . that they had but 80,000 engaged all told, though I am of opinion that 20,000 should lis aided to this figure. . . ! The results are not fnlly develontd. '. though the Austrians claim 2,000 nriaoners , and upward of twenty cannon. - L bear . i,n-i nomerable eitimates of the respeetivo losses, aome even putting; the lasses in killed alone, " on both tides, at 20,000, though &it ia fjar . . too high. The Europeans are different . jrorri the Americans, in that they are Has skillful in guessing, and do not set them- -selves at onoe. upon tbe conclusion of! a battle, to reckon "un its practical result t, This much at least, is tertaiu, that over 6,000 wounded ien hate already arrivbd in this cily and are quartered in the . . churohea and other public Jbuildings. The " beautiful Gothic Church of Anastasia, one of the finest of its style of architecture 'in Earop,"1gether with 'nearly haTt of the forty churches of ytroxta, ar tither wholly or partly filled with .the wounded. The vast old Roman Amphitheater, to tee which was my principal object in coming here, is also full and entirely inaccessible to citi xgns. In the Roman .timet it was. capable r.Cef' holding S5.D00 isonA.O ThagaarlB about it were gruff, and had often to club their muskets aeainBt the multitude of crowd ing and curious Italians; but after walking t about it I found an opening where,! euld look through. into the arena. It and the ranges of stone seats were thickly strewed with men, who lay in the open sunlight without any otlrarcovering than their over-ft eoats. ' Those wh were able had crawled into the great arohwaya in search of shade, and others crowded against . the iron gate, through whose bars the women ana childrh Were telling their cigars, wine and cherries. There appears to be no leelt f tkiritr able women and brothers of mercy who ef - fered themselves as nurses, and were so em tloyed, which, I suppose, is largely account ed for by the fact that many of the wounded were Italian oonscripts. . xne people hate the Austrtans with all the ardor of their v fanatical nature. Many of the -soldiers were - I llightly wounded nd, with theAiaMMct of the universal soldier, were squatted in gronps or singly in, oool placesyamag the - rnins, smoking their long oigaretas and tinging their national airs Hungarian, Pole. Bohemian, Austrian, Tyrol ese, Italian all were In their different uniforms, and sneaking each in their own language or 4i alect. Often I was reminded of, familiar " -scenes' about Nashville, Chattanooga and Atlanta,;.;, ; -..-...'IW .'. I.U'ff Meantime. Garibaldi it making . a. Wil .1. wild acattrin maroh nobody knows -exactly ,,.. .. dujracad in a like "manner. ... . -. ... t --' i i where, throush the Tyrol.- "He will proba hly pass above Lake Garde, and' make" an attempt against the railroad running pp the valley of the- Adige to Bavaria and Vanna. It is unimportant. The Austrian ( hoot at the mention of Garibaldi but they fear him; be is in every Austrian soldier's mouth when they wish - to he men-y, i)ut ,,. they dread him. i Notwithstanding the fre-east attack here, there is 5 movement of troops to the north along the , Tyrol Rail- ' , road to mett him when he debouohee - from ; the mountains. " Me may- be Jtin up C3CDiaJlflBUS iMlfflNG JfflfflNAL: . . ., i .' . , . , I i . . m,-T - i 1 - ,.. vi , ite t '-( " . . ,;. . -t- j , . VOLUME XXIX. ioin theFriissitfhs by way of Munich-i-no, body -here uknows.' uaribaiat 'proDaciv knows what he is about; he did not fall on I . f(4i tier his head. The Aus nan army still remains eerv ,r,? i'r.T.' unit.' where on the defbnsi re, while the Prussians are eTerrunninr - North" Germany like , a multitude of -loousta that. no.. man loan number. In reply to repe&tedL questions, Las AUBiriaiiB cuvrajriii;ii fuo mei 11. la U9 oessarv: that Austria is simply. waUini for the concentration of the contingents of the I smaller German Btates that are her1 allies. I It may be well enough,, but the .Prussians meantime are making a s washing cobble or i it in North Germany, and catching aome of toeBfl nine armivo w iiirjr vuuie ia.' itii-ness the Hanoverian contingent the other day at Eisenach. It may be good strategy for Austria to wai Jar tnese 4itH afiket fait of troop that she. 4t pipVing up a.rduad in the corners of Germany, but L doubt It. . .. . jr. .. j- ' ' ftWfJRft . Retignntiou f W. Itemiaon rOorreepondenca cf the Pliila,Jlphla Preei WASHIHQTOli, p.C., Julys 12, 188). The dislocation of Mr. Johnson's Cabinet, foreshadowed in my letter of the 10th met, has commenced with the proffered re signation of the- Postmaster General! the linn Will tun , nninrana.l--ilfAOaih fThe immediate, cause of; his action ?is belii ved to be the publio coalition ...between the Northern Democrat, Soutben rebels, nd suon Aepuoiioan- poiixicians as preier pab-roo ago. bo principle, j- It deterres -te be said of. Governor Deanison thl haofcyer al lowed his friends to misnnderuaild hislpo union. Although not classed among (the radioais, is is a tinoere nitmbet 'of ithe Republican Union pertTj an believes; its existenoe essential to the - best interest i of ihe country. I At president af the Natic nal Convention whiolj nominated. Ltnooln ind Johnson, he . was rated among the more moderate inen, and eo-operated ' with Ithe : Blaira when they were believed ' tebeiwor; ! thy .of confidence. It was nAwraL, thtre- Ub ear to give any signature to his con-fore,. when President Johnson enunoiated catenation of falsehoods, execrable slanders what was. at first regarded as his hodest and philosophical, profundity, would make purpose to restore the Onion upon the ptin- you "believe that 'Mr.' Hubbell "has dodged oiple that treason and not loyalty should be most' of the test questions of the made odious,. that-'oGeveraor 'Dennibqa wason,!'i,whioh prepares him to hearfrom should have very cordially tusUieed Him, Washington that "Mr. Hubbell, with his and should not have been, among (the 4rst usual illluck, arrived about five minutes tosuspeothim when lie coolly and cruelty too latb to' Vote" on what? That's :the abandoned hla-great' mission. 'No better question."' Not oh' the' Freedmen's Bureau illustration of Governor Dennison's psi- JJilJ, though by m mean and pusillanimous tioA oohldUeTgiyen tlrtn his Speech' to Ithe " Bread-sttdBuUer Brigade," headed j by his own immediate subordinate, the. First Assistant Postmaster General, on the 23d of May. It did not contain a wor J of censure of the President, but was- otf'Mhe obn-Irary a courteous endorsement, it his jso-called polioy. Yet, after going thus far, the Governor look occasion to. state pit relation to the great political orgamxatfon to Which he belongs, in the following lan trudge: ' '"' ' n "Nowy my. friends)' we must not eerlok the fact that if thia differtnee be hot: ad justed, it may lead, and it will lead, ia kH proDaoiiity, to unfortunate results, not only l to the Southern- States, but to an the Co in- anxious to vote for the report of the Cn-tryhdkoay J not add to thei Union pai ty, ference ,Ccmmit,tee that he went "tV Mr. in whose interests I learn yoi&assoeiat on Eliot, Chairman of said Committee, July 2d, has been organized. . I need not tell you or to asoertain when 'the vote would be taken those who. intimately knewv.me, tbaA iaoa In a note from Mr., Eliot, detailing thein-. the.' continued asoendenoy. ol' theUn on terview between them, Mr. E. says that Mr. party that I rely for the peace" and h aj pr- HubbaO expressed a hope that the amended nessofthe oountry. 1 Applanst. 1 Iu,nea ml"migUteaionee accepted ty the ffouie." not tell you it w a thai partym dse-tekld ThiB fact TTwell known to the Rev. Mi' and at the balUt-boxh that saved the nation. French, of the Free'dmen's Bureau, formerly from the assaults of armed rebelfion, Apr, o Delaware, Ohio, Who wat on that day, in plauser t will only addj-it is to that party, company with Mr, Hubbell, on the floor, of founded on the principles of the Baltimore the House. Oa the 3d Mr. Hubbell had no olalformj l leek to establish; indestruoljM V ' VrJrrwredrfo 'rt'tif s 'lnln annld hodton R on the hssie at justice and , constitutional equahty.'the rightsi of all the States, of ckir Oommon country. ; Applause! ' Lei me ie fer one moment to the dinerence between thai President and l Congress. I want to deal frankly, with you ,wheieI say that 1 po not believe these differences are irrecoK, oilable. I do not believe there is ahycaufee" of separation between the President and tne majority in uongross. Applause. J Si ay, if l am' not greatly at tauli, time "and dt- cussiont are bringing thei Prestdtni and Congress rapidly, together on the basis, of a common platform of aotion. Applause.! Certain it is, they are hot as wide apart as at the opening of Congress:" : 911 " I , r.Krom these words it is clear that Goverta or Dennison's resignation was prompted fcy the conviction that, there it tf deliberate attempt to destroy the Union party by means of the powers and patronage of the Nation-1 tzoitiogvsSBiowoT the war-times, and reool-al Government. No one has had better llect his bravtrv in-votinor upon alt "tost opportttiritieg of tinderstandrng the1 eiteht ol tail poaspiraoy than MmstK 'lie baft) In I iactrMeen constrained to witnaae.M not jtel suDmit to, ine most atrooious-prpscripiioiiB I in his bnn department. It is eaBy to oo cSive how a high tprrfted jrenfretiia'd w6uld Lrevqlt from sach 'a system. " It'ir easy (to oonoeive how one, whesa life, hat been, that of honor SjAd of truth, and a lofty cntent of treachery to friends,' and particularly !of 'ymr)nihy with' traltots, would shrink from contact, iwith-1 prMtices ;lit rejemble the worst days of the Spanish ypquiettjoo, and are in some respects a bad improvement pa Italian espionage. . When Governvi Dennieoa saw pure, and consoientfotjs men marked out for slaughter simply because they w'oujld notrjonsent te snrrender their own pledges and priciples, attd adopt-ra'j their steadtra-specf for and blindness to treason itself,, and when ne .saw the.ir places nlled by the merest-political aiiventuretBj0he had bint one " course to a pursue. .will ao be reoollected Uiat Govefhor Dennishn aooompanied Mr.. Reward to New York bn the evening of the 2lnt of February lasf, and1 that, on the following evening he made a speech at the Cooper Institute, mildly supplementary, of the ,qbrord, ; dogmatic and foolishly: prophetic farago of the . Secretary L e L! . oil.:- .l. - ii 0 ? ' J . ui qiau. xiUA-new. uio-jreouib ui uesure not io keep his place in the Cabinet hut jto keep peape in the ranks of tbf U nion party, Hence, when: such a man is oon'sirained, by every consideration of self-rtspectand fofy-' any ta pnaoipie, to oreairaway .from- me Exeoutive, we may readily, imagine, what' it in store ior us in the-coaiing eieotipns, i , Governor Den bison's resignation assunws a weighty significance when we consider lis' effeot upon .thoae. who, ;,iko hini supports V "my polioy;'1' and like' him,' "were resolved H never, under Sfny.oiroiimstanoestofleparSte from the great 'Union Republican party. Ihe moment they see that .Uu. Presidents object is to restore the Democratic organisa tion to power .and-to rehabilitate treason, they will fall baoat into Uae attd tight fee usual with their-natural friends. l.id CiyMUallon atToiuukaio, GoriA j ; The fottewtng oopy oi.AR. .othoiel. lorder needtneeemment: .ti ! ifl L o JlKADg's DspAHjfsjNT or TH $OpTH . jiiacon, ua, JUiy o, iooo. O r Generk Orders, No. Si'" '. 3i,V j , It has been officially reported' to the Com, manding General, that one Pompey O' Ban- non, oonhned at XoombBborc, Wilkinson county, Georgia, upon a .charge of Murder, ws .taken 'frorai legal custody1 bf a mob. and put to death with inhuman atrooity.) b ' The' TfaeoV shown by ihVestigatlon are, that O'Bannon, was the .probable-: aoobtn- plice of WimWrriiow a fugitive,) in ik. mnwaW-k. - vri iAtjzF.S ea;i.'. -.-i murderous violence towards other members oi ine lamny; tnai ne was- taiten irom the . . . . .. ... . . . .... tail at this place, wpoo Warrant, and Ue livered to the Deputy sheriff in tatd couniyt that he wasThetrsel?e"6!Tiy a mob of two pt three hundred persons, at, Toqmjbsboro aid. vioiflityand by theif uiIrrlmot,Vote, was ohaiaed lea tree,. aacfcarftert-bislears bad been cutoff, was torture. to da,tkvpy burn ing. , , These unlawful proceedings show that the civil ""authorities are unable to compel re-srject for even' the fotms -bf Unstioe in laid county, i Therefore, as there, is reason to I ' 1 . 1 . . . , a 11. 1 Deueve tnat upon too. approae-oniou -at' wie J j.;-;.i r rrn,, fci.m.a.i W.a iMn.fa. aX kdt ata.fi W Um-il :j kAkw raMuraia.Mn anlina -.uantaa IB BhAVII ttltAt. Vtmnaaa " . of law will not be exoeeaea in tnit casei , " ' .r W h" By order f Brevet Major General Chae'.P the night nndtr the corners of the wj- - i Tip vlhidtt that servo Anr ae a beO.T. Eaormous ,..., . A. RAMSEY Ni'nINGER. I - r ' ' - ; Assistant AdVt General. i ... i M-DrouyadeiOtaMjats given a gran4 dinner to Queen Emma,jf .Hawajiwhoit,.-. b 0f these horrible creatures and to rtceifsd in Pari with Jnttoyl lMUMe. . u (U)LUMKUS. OHIO. TUE&IJAY MUKIN1JNU, J ULi 17, lbt. ' .N UMBER I. i. HON. JAMES R. EVBBEU. ditok joubnal: in a communication published in jour widely read and popular Republican journaj, of the 10th. inst, 1 find a series ftray. pbarges made against the gentleman .whose, name is the caption hereof. It is .to all good Republioabs a source of regret that some of pur men are squirming and writhing under the pain and diaoomfiture, of. ," spre,-head", thatl ter rihle Dolitical malady which eets into all .;..'; ' lIin, .rtie. . The author . in j 'i ( . - of the, yituperatiye and disgustingly false oammunioat ion . entitled, "The Modern Podger,'- above, referred to, is evidently a Sire -head. , He wants Hubbells, seat in .cn$res9 Qr h faiJed from want of the req4ie...rainB, uipraie, Teraotijr! ur auiuo othor civilized traits, to oommand the patronage and . consideration of the sound Republican who has been sent to Congress by the loyal people of the 8th District. :1 The point attempted to be so gracefully I made by your communicator is that Mr. Hubbell has dodged all the votes this session, land finally hat dodged the vote on the Freed men's Bureau bill lately submitted to the President, and which is understood to have meV the veto fate of the first bill. The fact is, he "who charges James R. Hubbell with Voting against this bill, basely slanders a "sound1 Republtcin,cand falsifies the recorded truth. He did vote for it, and if: it is returned by the President with his ac customed yetoj the taid Hubbell will squarely and unflinchingly , vote for it notwithstanding ..said veto. , Your communicator, who indites ah epistle "for the Ohio Staff Journal,' 6n"'t,The Modern Dodger,' and whose connection "with weak nerves and a mud? 4s made painfully apparent by withholding of any explanation, the reader is left to tVfr that it was the Bureau Bill for wjiioh he came too late to vote. It was only on. the very slight .and immaterial changes In the bill, 'proposed by the Conference committee,I-'appointed to reconcile the differences between. the two Houses; and how came he; to get in .too late for even this ? Had your communicator, who thinks that "the day 'of successful dodging is past," and., the time has oome when men must stand or fall upon their record," consulted the ''record,'', he might have saved to elaborate an expenditure ' of siokly spleen ia the slander of a Representative of ithe ' A f , . it . ; ' r . tt ii.ii loyal people, of Ohio. Mr. Hubbell wat so (visiled th War Department1 on important business for Hon. P. B. Cole, of Maysville, his district, and returned too late to vote. On the motion of Mr. Finok to lay on the table the Conference Committees report, the yeas were 25, nays 102, and not voting 65 Forty-two, qf the. latter were Republicans, amongst them such sound men as Banks, Baxter,' Broomall, R. W. Clark, Dumont, Jenokes, Loan, Martin, McKee, Randall, of fcentuoky, aloan, and . 15. Washburne. ;-The ridiculous charges in the; epistlelof your Munchausen, scribbler, that Mr. Hiib-bell is a pdlrtifcal coward and "has not shown pldek and manliness "in his Congressional career" will have only the effect to arouse a .derisive laugh amongst those , who know ' any thine of bis record Those who remem- her1 him at Speaker of the Ohio House of Representatives during three years of the questions,!' and, coupling with that his rec- brd here, where he Tuu not dodged on the test pronounce the fabrications of Ae Modern Dodger," as mess, leaner than the meai- questions; will of your antbor a batch of meanness, meaner than the mean. est "record mean every word I say. - I in i iiaina I'rem theOrl.l - --; .. .. .in j ''-xechISM: Tlai la'toaayi an Instractloa to be Xearnt of Kvy Child ae soon as Sne :iJBO able to Speak. , Q. What is society? A. A jiiumber ' of persons assembling themselves' together for the purpose of ob- tainra g amosemenr Of various kinds. -What are these-asoambliet tailed? ... A. Parties,,, . , t , ., Q.' Into how many sorts may parties be divided? - w " f 1 i A. Intoi five sorts namely: dinner par ties, musioal parties or concerts, dancing parties orJiaus, .evening parties or drums, and afternoon parties or kettle-drums; besides two par lias in a large house at West minster. . ,. ... . . .. . .., Q. Define a dinner party? ! V A. Drnintt under difficulties. T Q.i:A musvsal pairty er conoert? -f '' -..:A"ii:A assembly where conversation especially flourishes under the enlivening influence of vocal and instrumental noises "Q'SA-bair?-"'" " . " I A; A snrall empty room devoted to the musQalar-exorcise of -jtwiee the numberjit wagoriginally intended to hold. " i. A' place where every one goes for"tp.e sake of seeing .'who is there, end to indulge in a little play I til floandaL - . ti.. What does the prefix "kettle signiryf A. Tt is of Chinese derivation, and re fers to the beverage usually provided at those meetings. ! ' - -. . Q. What are the chief objects of sooiety? , A. To see and been seen; to talk gossip and hear scandal: to make acquaintances and lose friends: to study the fashions; to Bkhiblt the laet acquisition front Paris, ahd to bmtieise the lame in others. ,My dear child, it is very well to know; and be able to repeat all this: but, tell me, what must you do to fityourself for sooiety? A. 1 must learn to be moderate in my ap petite; to be polite, especially to my super riora. In rank; Jo give ail natural feeling, and study to be .unconcerned when my toes are trodden upon. 1 must learn to dance, to sing and to play; to be quiok at repartee and at making conversation with those whom I wish to cultivate. .Q, How may you best succeed in the last named obieot 7 . . ! !u Ai By dilligently "reading the "papers; especially 77i OuZ; by going to all tbe lea re, piqture galleries, jflower . shows, aonjurtrStrsees and cricket matches, and by I - . !rT ' tnwM va mnnnm ' ancet to pieces, : 44 ' wnat snouid ne your nnai ena ana aiin inall thu , ;yA to, he, ,pajle4 ."awfully jolly,", and to hook as large a fish as possible. " So soon as children are eome to a competent age, -and can say tbis Catechism in Eaglish, and with understanding, they shall be further instructed in the truths therein contained, and Shall be brought to the Queen tor presentation j I rl 'I'nu . ... i j jn-,L , A MlLITAnT Lips in South.. America. 'A - , miurr iruui a JtSrazillian officer describes 1 . . i ,. . , r. Some of the beauties of eoldierinit in South America : "AmpniDious creatures abound. h "t WUT lUWO IOUT T . -ai-T 1 . 1 .... . . 1 Baafces. r xvr? momiiiff i unci mvielf ac I nnmnaniArl Itv O. 11 All TP iTMnr-H nf wiBAa -av 1 wwiuuwn.v- , j Wa MlWiCU W n lUgatort , promenade, regularly from, lake I to lake every night,. in a majors tent, the 1 o'ker day, one was killed that measured 31 carried into the nearest lake." i; ri COLUMBUS, OHIO, .TUESDAY MORNING, JULY Antnorshlp ol "F.cce Homo.' l- There are seme books that deseiverirflice from the peculiarity of their reoeplim, as much s from the peculiarity cf their Istyle, and contents. Of these " Ecce Homo" it cer-, tainly one. That can be' no common book which On a well worn subject, without nam or previous fame, without even, the aid. of oensures from Popes, or Bishops, or convocations, hat won its way into seven editions within as many months. That can be no common style whioh has ranked among it reputed authors personges of every grade and section of Eoslish sooiety, and yet' still remains a secret. There is a legend floating about London that the puhsher invited sixteen persons to diner to meet the author of " Ecce Homo," who returned home no fitter than they came. Butj how much more curious a banquet might be given .if all those whom the book has been ascribed, to meet each other! ' .- . '' The company would include the iriosV celebrated of Roman Catholio dievins, the most learned of Roman Catholic -laymen, we know not how many Nonconformist ministers, three essayists and reviewers, an Archoishop of York, innumerable young fellows of colleges, a Republican professor. a female novelist, a leading journalist, an Irish historian, a Scottish poet, a ocotiish duke, a master of Trinity, a dearf of "Westminster, an Attorney General; -a ;peet laureate, a Chancellor of the Exchequer, a: High Church Vice Chancellor, a, law stationer, chemist, an unknown sea captain and the Empror of the renoh. No " Imaginary Conversations," no " Dialogues of the Dead," no feast at Solomon's house. id the New Atlantis, would equal the charto- that surprising entertainment. Matntitt lan's Magaziid. . 1 - '" ' '"t' The Biq Elm or Boston Commok. .The Boston Evening Commercial says : ' The days Of the big elm are numbered.' It is! entirely shorn ftf its beauty, and in a! few yeara it will be no more. The trunk of the tree it hollow, and rot has extended to its branches. In former years the tree hat suffered from the fury of the storms. Lightning has shivered it, and its most magnifi cent branches ' have, one by 'one, leeh lopped. A tender-care for itg 'health Ms been extended towards it for some ysrs. The hollow places have been filled with e$" ment it has been hedged about and; tte roots guarded. The stately branches thai yet remain have been braced up by Iron supporters, and until two days age.it wat still a brave-looking old tree, the pride and Deauty or the Common. But Its propor- 1 llAnd haa. tu.n llnltM-aJ ' TL . :lta.. , J V.WUO lit . .... k. U U branch t-the largest aranch there waa left that inclined toward the west, has fallen, carrying with it two sections of the iron fence that surrounded the tree The appearance of the wood shows that the branoh has. been held in its place; by a very slight breadth of sound wood-" . . ,;r 1 Official Beeoarnltton of a Timely- 8r ; ,s vice. - -y . ..J j .. , Sergeant George F. Robinson, the Mtine soldier who saved. Bepretary Seward's'life by grappling with and forcing back his; assassin, hag written io Seoretary Stanton asking for the knife which Payne used en that of harror. His request has been grinV ed, and the weapon is accompanied, by a letter from' the' Judge Advocate General whioh close as follows : t,- , 'Your conduct. ea the occasion mentioned is now a matter, of history, and none, will hereafter doubt but that, by yourself-pot-session ahd courage in grappling with the assassin, you contributed larrely to- save the life of the Secretary of State, at ithe extreme hazard ot.your own a most meri torious public service nobly rendered, and of which the' weapon ' now committed, to your keeping will he an enduring memento.' "Very respectfully your obedient servaint, - : i i. aula, , "Judge Advocate General 'To Sergeant George F. Robinson," T . The Boston Journal says : "In a farm house near Kennebec there hangs a frame and glass containing a piece.Qf.blue silkjon whioh is a gilt star, Its. history is this : A son of the family was one of the color guard of the Sixteenth Maine regiment at the battle, of Gettysburg, Finding that they were to be captured, and being unwilling that the flag should fall into the hands or the enemy, the guard tore i t lop and concealed the pieces; ' The piece jto which we have alluded was, kept concealed by the young man during; the time he was in rebel prisons, and When he was released he sent it home to his father,' wh6 had- it framed and glazed. , The eon was afterward 5D y-.woundedat Hatoher'a. Run, ad the f?lX Hep the piece o flag as; a of him, and of the tenacity with wnicn he aided in keeping the start from fallinor l n in t hmnrlo of 1 1. a roKola 'J , -, I . - - Tkoubles of Rotalty. The sympathies or tne vtueen nt sngrana must be strangely divided in this contest, ' The husband of her eldest daughter commands ft division of the Prussian army, in whicji near relatives ' of ner late husband occupy prominent posi tions. The husband bf her second daughter hat a -command in the- Austrian army. Prince Teck, just married to- the Princess Mary of Cambridge, .has accepted a com mand in the "Austrian army, and sets cut for the seat of war, with his bride, before the honeymoon is- half-over. There it soaroely a member of any royal family in Europe who is not mixed up in this war.;- A dozen prints of Northern Germany have already lost their crowns and kingdoms borne are exiles in Austria; seme are pris oners in Prussia. JV.. Tt Timet Cor. ! i . ,l rf.' ... . . . I si! A Windfall. Miss Jeannette L. Doag- lass, of1 Ne W'York, has: received a legacy of luu,uuo from a relative in Hoetland Miss Douglass is a native of New York, and was for many years a teacher atNewburgh, where Bhe was very, popular. She aftes- ward opened a school at: Washington; in ourring a considerable indebtednesn ut. he rebellion breaking out,: her patrpns refused to meet thev obuzations. leavine ner in some embarrassment. She was em ployed during the warm onrof the depart ments at Washington, and also at the hospitals fprwounded soldiefeVj,,; , , : ,,: Fight about. a RattlbshaKK Austin Brett, postmaBter at Hartsville, Mass., while out in the fields recently, saw a hawk and a crew engaged indeadly combat highjup in the air. l ihe bawk had something? re semblinrr a whip in itB beak, which! it was compelled to drop in the conflict, and upon going to the place where it leu, Dfir.- Brett found that -it wtta' rattiesnake, rour The snake was not dead, when lfe!, but its head was nearly eaten on. A New Trick of. Edrulabs. Some ; of . F i . . . t :. . . the professional ' burglars haye adopted a a new method of obtaining information in ax. j - t i , - .. , - ' i, reeara io uesiraujio ptaoen ior -operauonn. - During business hours, when householders are absent, men call at their residences, and representing themselves to tie internal rev enue officers, make minute inquiries! the servants about their masters' occupations. habits, silver plate,, furniture, &cn. which information is taken advantage of by'burglars.-- Citizens should be on the lookout for suoh tricks as these. . - t t. At a'ladies' fair held in Rochester, N. S- Tecently, the company was started by the ap pearance of a man with only a shirt to cover his nakedness; - lis looked, .wild J.ana ghostlike,, and taking his position in the center of the room, he exclaimed in a. loud tone, "What the h 11 is going on he re, ?" The man was secured after a general pttniq and fainting spell, ahd.' turned' oat to be a merchant tailor, hitherto respectable, who had been on a spree, ana got a touch or ne delirium tremens.' ' ' '" " i f ' Peat promises to be valuable for rises betides fuel, v A patent has been taken out by which picture frames, book backs, card naoer. mouldings ana aecorations lor turni- ' ... l.:!VI! A ture. Drions ior ouiiuing purposes, ironw for stores, dwellings, and all ether articles in which bone, India rubber, and gutta peroha are component partSj Can Do manu iaotureu irom . J,!'.. ta haa -.1 a fc,iw a r -i.v v. orlJ --: - - "l .'. 1 have ive peuuui4 ui wuii iW . wiu. - ' to join Ihe fire department. Personal and Miscellaneous. , Watkins, a negro of Memphi", has had a prize fight with a negress named Harriet-He came out awfully mauled and wat carried away. t, The Portland Argtu gives a list of twenty-nine ships -now building in that State, with the aggregate measurement of 15,155 tons, v Some descendant of Solomon has wisely remarked,-that those who go to law ior damages are sure to get them. j 4 While Michael Cogan, of Lowell, MasST anl his ybutfg daughter were senffling for tHe0 possession !of a '-platel, it exploded, 'fafiilly wounding the young girl. It is somewhat singularly fitting that to the queryjj ,"Is pity love 7" the anagramatio answer is 1 positively . .... j " The City Council of Philadelphia have passed a joint resolution to procure an oil painting of president Linooln to be placed in' independence Hall. i - ;;. , j Extensjve preparations are progressing for thei mule races at the Nashville race track! "'Competitors are" invited from all , parts' of, he West and South. " VIX , '" General Dodge, who will succeed Mr. Kas-son' as Congressman from the Fifth District sA Iowa, is a'nativ'e of Danvers, Mass.; and J.a brother 4o "Gail Hamilton." iWtwart, or New xork is estimated to be worth $50,000,000. This amount, invested in' itp(fti yieldicg six per cent., would net thre. million doliars annually. , A jman could Uve on that, with a. little economy. A gold watch ohain has been made in San Francisoo that weighs two pounds' and a half, and coBt $1,200, all of twenty-carat told.! " L . It t stated that fifteen thousand designs have been presented by ambitious artists tot th decoration ef the auditorium of the new opera house in Paris. - ; Airs. Sylvia Goodwin, a female physician, who hat attended 3,686 birtht in Worcester during the last seventeen years, died in that city reoently, aged 68 years. " . " ;.Col. 8c obeli, the-laBt surviving commis sioned officer of England who took part in the battle of the Nile, has died at his beat, Nanoealverne, near Penzance,, at the age of 88 years.- Cassius M. Clay, U. S. Minister, at St Petersburg, has recently taken out patents in -Russia for. Broad well's breach-loading gun, and at Carlsruhe, in Baden, a company has been formed for the manufacture of the arm. a ; Prof. 8. F. B. Morse tailed for Europe a few dayt ago. Among several important missions whioh he was to fulfill, he was the bearer of a plan for preventing the loss of the Atlantio cable, should it part as be. fore. - -' '.;' It is stated that when General Gregory went to Texas he, visited a lawyer at his office, .and asked him for a copy of the laws of Tsxas. The jawyer, opened a drawer, ook out a la-ge and handsome bowie-knife, and -gave it to the General. ; : , , i . Princeton College hat . conferred the ds. gree of D. D. upon Rev. J. T. Duryea, formerly of Troy. He is about -thirty-two, and -therefore one of the youngest clergymen in the Country who wears that title. As an orator he' has few quale. -1 .. I. It is estimated that the amount of prop erly used up in New York by theft, druhk-ennesss and' ''official plundering, exceeds twenty million dollars per annum, most of which could be saved, were the city in the charge ef honest and oompetent men. , A young lady in England, eighteen years old, saw fit to break off an engagement to marry, when the discarded suitor became angry mmi ilhrealtaed to publish the lady's letterSji The lady appealed to the Matter of the Rolls, and it was deoided that the suitor, hd no right to publish, and an in junction was granted restraining him. j A California Editor, participating in a 'debate as to tbe best method of bulding a certain bridge, objected to a coffer-dam for making the pier. He said he early formed a prejudice against the thing; his uncle onoe had a cow choked with a turnip, and for a long time it was thought she would fffer-dam head off! "Young man, do you believe in a future state?" , "In oourse I doz and what's more, I intend to enter it as soon as Betsey sets her things ready." "Go to, H f11 rt rv m an or f to."' "Go two? if it wasn't for the law againBt bigamy, whip me if I wouldn't go a dozen.;: But who supposed, deacon, that man of your age would give such advice tdt'a nan jnst starting into life' . '. .' : The Lafayette Courier corrects the slate. ment that Gen. Lane is the third member of his family who has attempted suicide. It aavs that ties. Lane had two brothers. Geo. Lane, who is now superintendent of the Mint at Denver City, Colorada, and John F. Lane, who graduated at west. runt, was sent to Florida during the Seminole war. Having passed through an arduous campaign, he in struoted his servant to clean bis sword. The man did so, and submitted it to Col. Lane, who, holding the point of it close to his eye, glanced along its edge. The servant going to the tent at this moment, shortly heard a fall, and entering, found Uol. Lane on the floor, with the sword penetrating his right eye and brain. Whetherhe commuted sui cide, or fell upon the sword by acoident, was never known. The report that Gen. James H. Lane attempted to oommit suioide in Law-re'neaburg, arose frem a difficulty whioh he ia at lhat pUoe with B political opponent. A Naeeow Esoapk. During the shower aa Sunday evening, the lightning struok the house of Mr.-.J.. W. Wallace, in Hudson, and passed through into the barn. In its passage through the house it Struok Mrs. Wal-laoe on her foot, completely tearing open the upper leather of her shoe, butdoing her no injury except sugntiy burning ner foot and one of her fingers.,. She wat titling beside her child, which was in a cradle, at the time the "lightning struck. The only other injury done wat the breaking of six squares of glass " and the killing of three bens. JSashua (At. JI.) (fatette. Statistics reoently published show lhat thirty .millioni of bottles of champagne are annually produoed in Franoe, and are thus apportioned r-Afrloa, 100,000; Spain and Portugal, 200,000; Italy, 400,000; Belg um, GOO,00V Holland, '600,000; Germany, 1,600,- UUO; Kussiar i!,000,0U0; t rance, a.OUO.UUU; England, 6,000,000; India, 6,000,000; North Amenoa, 10,O0O,uoo. I... , , : ... i '. The ladies of Cedar Falls, - Iowa," are indignant over a report that a peddler whe recently "visited that town telling corsets ana httinz them on the bodies ot customers, eto , has sinoe turned out to be a man. dressed in feminine apparel. It is stated that ia oonsequenoe of ill- Health, the tour of Head Center Stephens through the United States ia indefinitely postponed. - Prominent members of - the lvoberts-Bweeney party are taut t be - 0er to, Stephens. L -.V : -r- I !-' J . 1 . . ins napunai ui The habiftial use of onions as an article 1 of fobd Is said to be almost certain protee- . ti0B fi.om eholera eholera, even when in immediate contact with it. , ; 17, m. : ' TELEGRAPHIC. REPORTED FOR THE JOURNAL. FROM WASH I SOTO X. Secretary Seward on Reeoastf netion - lie Iodorees the Philadelphia Con-; venllon. .-,.! WA8HISOIOKt. July 16. The following important letter has just been made public : . i ' Depa&tment OF SrATEf- Washinotoh, July 11, 1866. Sib : Excuse me for expressing surprise that you ask me, whether I approve of the oall of a proposed Union National Conven tion at Philadelphia. After more than five years of disturbances by bivil war I regard a restoration ol the unity, of the country; its most immediate as well as its most vital interest that .restoration will be complete when loyal men are, admitted as representatives of the-loyal people of the eleven States so long i unrepresented in Congress. Nothing but this can complete, it; nothing more remains to be done, and nothing more is necessary. "'Every day's delay ia attended by multiplying and increasing inconveniences, embarrassments and dangers, at home and abroad. 'Congress possesses the power exclusive. , After a session of Seven months Congress still omits to exercise that power; '' ' ' :" '" :' - j ' What can be done to induce Congress to act, this is the qnestion of the day. Whatever is done must be done in accordance with the Constitution and laws., It is in perfect accordance with' the Constitution and laws that' the people of tne United States shall assemble by delegates in Con vention, and that when so assembled they shall address Congress by respeotful peti tion and remonstrance, and that the people in their several States, Districts and Territories shall approve, sanction and unite in such respeotful representations to Congress. No one party could "do this effectually or even seems willing to do it alone. No local or popular organisation could do it effectu ally.. It is the interest of all parties alike, of all the States and of all seotiois-a national interest, the interest of the' whole people. The" Convention indeed may not tnoceed in induoing Congress to act, hut if they Tail the attempt can make matters no worse. It will be a lawful and patriotic attempt made in the right direction n effort to be remembered with pride and satisfaction, whether it succeed or fail xne original union or tne estates was brought about by. movements of the tame character. The citizen who objects to the Convention is bound to propose a better plan of proceeding to effect the desired ena. io , otner plan : is ottered . or even thought of. Those who should oppose it would seem to me to manifest, at best, unconcern if not opposition to all reeonstruo- uod, reorganization and reconciliation between the masses of 'the American people. To admit that . the Convention will fail would fee 'to admit "that the people" of the United States are-, deficient tither an wit- dom or the virue necessary to continue the existence f of thef Republic. , I believe ne Bitch. I.hinov "'' A great olikfcnl1 winter says that gov ernment is a secular religion, and that the people of every, coqntry are divided into two classes, each maintaining a distinct political faith; the one class always fearing tne very worst mat can 'possibly happen, and the othear hopes under every ciroum- stanoe the very best that esc in any event happen. Without . aocepting this theory at absolutely true I think that all men do generally act from a motive1 to guard against public danger, or else from a positive desire to do good; . Both classes may therefore favor the present attempt to restore the unity of the nation. 1 I am, sir, your obedient servant,' i Signed - V M WM. H. SEWARD. To Hon. J. R. DoMTTtB,; , , ; ., ,,. Chairm&n Executive, .Committee. - . , J FROM KE W ' TO ft K: . i ; A Soiap of Moxlean News. , York, July 16. The Herald's Matamoras correspondence. dated 2d, says: General Escobedo is shortly to leave for Monterey, with 4,000 men, his prospects for . reducing the oity being very nattering. - , : The American Division is not filling: up very rast. Gen. Caravaial has demanded the return of the French Financial: Agent in Mexico, from ueneral uetty, commanding the U. a. foroes on the Rio Grande, under the extra dition treaty of the 11th of December, 1861. The Agent crossed the line at the time of the surrender, -, with the eastern house archives in his possession. The matter has been referred,to Washington. The health of Matamoras is good, and no anticipation or an epidemic. 1 Ueneral Mejia and his troops arrived in Tampico just in time to repulse an assault irom tne Aiieerais. No Cbelera io Ine Cily- Three Deaths ManraoKiye. .: - ? No oases of cholera were reported to the Board of Health yesterday in this oity, ! 1 erooKtyn tour cases were reported, three of wmca resulted ' tetany, nine cases in the 12th ward" of that city have resulted fatally in the last ten days.: iThe oonvalesents in the cholera fleet at the lower quarantine have been allowed to oome up to this city, and tbe vessels arriving from foreign parts passed the inspection yesterday and were admitted lo the upper bay. Gen. Sherman in New Torcx. Gen. Sherman was serenaded by the band of the B3d Massachusetts Regiment at Bos ton yesterday. He addressed the assem bled orowd, i giving a resume of the great ueorgia marcn ana tne Atlanta campaign. lie said that ne round tne soldiers of one seotion as good as those of another, and never in the darkest hours of the war did he doubt that the final result would be the tri umph of the Union cause. ; He leaves to day for Hanover, N. H. Liberia Attracting Attention to Her Cvmini-rc1. The Herald's -correspondent from 4he western coast of Africa goes lo show that the itspubiio oi Liberia is attracting the attention of foreign governments more and more, tbe executive authorities having had visits from war vessels and. .conunksioned officers in the service, of Sweden, Russia, and the United States since the commencement of the year. . The commercial opera- tions of England were being extendsd rap idly on the coast, and the commerce of Monrovia was spirited and profitable. New Tertt Excise law. It is understood that the Supreme Court of Kings county, Brooklyn, will to-day give a decision in favor of the constitutionality of the excise law. This will compel sts in foreement in Kings county, while it is dis regarded in this oity, awaiting the action of the Court of Appeals in September. pianos. Harris A Co, . MAMMOTH MusieStore i , jLargest (Stock, i. THIS SIDE OF NEW TORE PRICES VERT LOW I Please give as a call. 36 North High street. Jun28 . -.- .- COLUMBUS, O. BSIIGIN HOUSE 3Xt. Vernon, O- " rrtHIS HOUSB HAS JCST BKBN THOROUGHLY .1 rencvated and refarnkhed. - Tbe patronage of all true Union Men ia reepectraliy solicited. . , a. D. Bsgam. Proprietor,. " Junl9 3m ' . (Lute of the Lj brand Hons.) LA PIERRE HOUSE, PHILADELPHIA.; - The Subscribers having leased this favorite House, . .. ia Has osen . REFITTED AND REFURNISHED Tn an almnt Manner, and is now prepared with the most preot eppeintments for the reoeption of guests, skir The first position among Ant-class Hotels will be maintained In the future as In the past. junlSm JOacr . , Ba&Ha rABUCI. NUMBER CLOTHING. Ready-Made Clothing ! 50 Per Dent. Cheaper Heretofore. Than t-QREATREVOLUTIONIN PRICES", Goods Approaching- a- Clolel Baals i JOSEPH GTJSJ4ERSBTI3DErJ Meroltaxtt Tailor An! Wholesale and Betail Dealer, la READY-MADE CLOTHING, Cloths, Cassimeres, Tweeds, Vesting! and - uents' rurnisning woods. S and 7 Neil Boose Bnildlnff. TAKES PLKABUBtt IN INfOBMINO Hit OLD caitoraeri and the ffetieral pablio, that h ha nat tetnrsed from the Baetera eltiaa with the larg est and bet eeieotea etccK or neaaT.naae (.locninir. Toroiin and Domeetlo Olotaa, Oaaalanraa, Tweeda. Jeans. Teatinn of all kin-!, atvm and priced, aid Gentlemens1 Fnrninhirg Goods, ever off-red to the gaaeof the pnbllo in the ait? of ColamhM.i Theea 1 It) IUO I goods were purchased dorlnp; tba nattled toodi- nn ot tna w;a maiaea. ana oaai .aaiBeni af oren anU were aoxions to e)I, and 1 can sell them FIFTY PER CENTr CHEAPER Than those who bonfftat a month or six weofcs be- ore. I can sot sell anus 'or lib, wnioh ; tares montns ago oroagnt irom M) lo Wlo I for Sou, wnicn Uea nroagnt irom io to siuu, or at a boot The Same Prices as Before tie-Van Call and see mr soods and d rices, and attsfv voar- elves. To these who have favored me with their patron- age in t a past, 1 am tbankfot, and oan aow assnre tnem tnat 1 oan tell tbem goods at mncn lower ences. The Merchant Tailoring: d nartment Is under the charge of Hr; J. B. FtmuuD, wheae rasiatatioe lor neat nts and vill-mut garments, needs n. comment, a the articles always advertise themselves. P. 8. On the 1st dav of Jnly next I will remove to tne dell House Hniiatng, into tbe dm roosj now occatiied by M axons Chitda, w) ere 1 will bavfeShi- oreasMi Taciuties tor (tie accommoaatlon oi my sn morons friends. A Sne assortment of Children's Clothing constant ly Kept on nana. v apizi bm -- BRADLEY WELTYi .... i Importers and Jobbers o f o 1 V o Cassimeres, VestiugSetU. , NO. WHITE ST., KBSOif Baanuv, WSSLET WILTT. aprfiTeodlv MEDICAL. THE NEW SPfilNa AND SUMMER MEDICINE. FLUID EXTRACT S ARSAPARILLA COMBISED WITH i . ; Iodide oCXti X30l'& ' PBSPAEED FOR ' ' s , a. W. PKTTES, BOSTOS, James R. Nicliols 4c Co., MiSUfAOTUBISa CHEMISTS, j MANUrAOrtJBKRfl F TBE . j ELIXIR PERUVIAN BABE , . with -jr . 1 1 ' ' PROTOXIDE OF IRON, 1 Which has become so favorably known as Tonio and Restorative, By Physicians and invalids In all parts of the country Tsi new preparation, "8aasuAaiixA in oohsiiu- with Tosidi or !," presents one ot the most rompt alterative agsnts, in !a form oapabla of ax- ertlng mil aotion npon the system, and this In mll ante and pleasaat doses. It htoonoeded that the al terative, resolvent, or tonic effects of Iodine) are ex- ortad most deoiielly when assodatad with other al teratives, In combination; and tbe Sarsaparilla I to fulfill perfectly all the favorable requisitions. The first effjot nsaally observed when "SAneat' rABiUA vrra iodide or Lists" Is taken, ' lsi aa increase of appatlts, showing that tt has onic pros' rttes of a marked character.- Ita alterative effects are manliest In Its ready combination with the blood and tissnes. Pae, aroralons women isnd children Improve rapidly-' ander itsnsa, and tha vi tal functions assume a healthy condition. It Is admirably adapted to a large anmber of chronic or acuta affections pe-nlinr to children. It Is suited to them, both by the mildness and efficacy of medicinal eff.ot and tb. pleasant, attrutlv fbrm of the remedy. It may b given for a long $eriod where constitotional lnflaences are desired, and ne repugnance, or dlslnollnation to take the syrup, en countered. In White-Swelling, 'Hip-Joint Disease", and Distortions of thePplne, 11 should ba given per sistently, in moderate doses, until relief Is obtained. In the Spring of tbe Tear, and During the Warm Weather, the accumulation of morbid matters In the systsas. seems to become manifest and very-' troublesome. Lassitude, Headache, Bolls, Ooetivensss, Loss of Ap petite, Patos In ibe Joints, Indigestion, ate., are very common. Nothing ever devised. Is better adap ted to exterminate or drive off these affections than this new combination of SAXHAr-ABiixA with Iodide: or list. No preparation likt it, or wlc approximate! ta it. so . . ' Alterative or Blood Purifier, j hat mmht'ort hem plated within As rtaaof tmiclUt. Indeed, It is an entirely hew and sonttrrino combi nation. In no respeot resembling anything hitherto employed. The opinion of medical men Concerning it, the de scription of its chemical cnarietef, therapeutla val- manner of use, etc., are given ia a c irealar, which can had at the store ot any and all. first- class Drug;r,sts. For Sale in Colnmbns by " . ROBERTS z CO a. e. SAanjEi,, : and all DroKS lata. mayledt' MRS. DOCTRE88 DONOVAN, 811 East Friend St., - I PhysioiaH for Women and Children, - TTAS BOATED IH COLUMBUS. AT THI Bl" I XI QUKST of some of her Mends. . Mre. D. re- speotrally tenders her services to the ladle of Co lumbus and viotn'ty alter a successful practice of 14 years in Jersey Oity, whr her treatment in confinements and all diseases Incidental to abildren have been universally acknowledged. Also, treats Womb Diseases, no matter of bow loag standing or onmotioeted, and would prefer those ohm which nave teceivea meuioei treatment netora. in orssr to conviuoe the sufferer of ber superior skill, ot which she can give the most aaexoepUosuaUeaasilntsiilals ' umo noun irom so a a. at., ana mm to 4 r. at. ' --- yensossu' Ipparatog for Deformities , DR. A. 0.!FORSBER .... fl ! THB CLUB FOOT MACBIHE8 OF DB.. a. O rossBsaa. Ho. 6 Hast Fourth street, aret the best now in use. Tne so i of Mr. W. Oibson. mano- mcturer of lead pipe and sheet lead, on ninth attest, a lad eight years f eg, has bsen stllcteo with a club foot sinoe childhood, and waa treated for (five years with machines ot different kinds, but without success. Six montxs ago Dr. A. 0. Forsbarg Bill ed, bis machine, and with Ibe aioct happy resttltsv, our most distinguisbsd physicians having proneamcd' the foot as perteciiy curea. uau no see ior , Mur selves. The best of Traatsea for cure; also, every variety of Bandages constantly on haodj at East Fourth street, second story." ' j , - . ' 1 V -I P'P t Dr. Stevens & Co- i HA DB VOTED TTTTKEH TIABS IN bN-OINNAT1 to the treatment of Private Dtoewe. They guarantee a cure, without the use of mercury; all of forms of Parvtra Cimm, enpedally thoas ot leng sUadinx. - Loss ol saxuel power restored ! a few weeks, victims or self-abuse and excessive venery. swAering from Soirmatorrhea. BDaadUa (Hir ed. Perrons at a distance treated by adorsssing Di. -STEVENS a 00 , no Walnat St., between Fifth sad euth1oiaoinBau,0. . , sutaeiY ' rm x.uja.s u- SlJBSC'KrPTIOlf J I ' 1 " or tm. nAiLt jocaxAx. , Single Sabteriben, 1 year, by null .r..'......t9 OS Biogla Babacriben, S aaonthi, " ,, to SingJe Babecriban, moatha, . tl lu e xS Single BubKTibera, 1 month, ' 0 SO MngleSnbaoTibara, 1 ateath,. dellTaraa. 0 SO Hingle Snbacrlbera, per week, delivered. 0 To Ag int., in olube, 15 cent, per week aaeh eony. vcaas or tb m-wtmt nouu, 1 nr. t 601 ,! ft 8 raootbi. 1 IS 1 1 month 0 4 - tiui er id waxxtt awlui. Singl. Bnbperibert, per yar...............n......t2 M TOBACCONIST. I-i U 7- (HOuuli am utaii. sxaua C I GABSsnd T O B l O'.O O . ;iJi l J I . tj Aadln SMOKERS' . ARTICI.E8 , IN GENERAL, ! Booth aicVStrfet., I ff (One door North of U. 8. Hotel,) ntartt Sou io 7 ' COLUKBUS, O. r '1' ' II - . - T t It. K. MTJTVTEK, Bnniimir to Arltacli. -Waalaaala aaa Kttail i it J' - . 'Vj'l 1. W I f 1-U D A C C O . Olgan, ataarasana ni Brjar Boot PipeiTTobaoe Hv. Re. us iMth nidi street. jaale lj (Neat door to tfcwGoedaU Boaaa.) TO .a,iu.J.l uT BrX JS.Q S A S O I T 4i4 -illK wit -sra - . f?0 wn inMl V tbe BLASSASOlr KESTOREK and DKE8SINO COKBIITED, IK yaiFK iitNcnt-iv ail otHnna" for bk-bI0auOra Baltalo abets- otixlaalolor-. 1st, jsecaos? it is as neat aa uoloxne In Us apstt-aad as easily applied; i."' C.tTOB it Br.vB tne nair ,troa.IalUnf oat and from tnrnirc trggraj; it troextes the rth ef fhs hair. 3d. keep, tbe soala.clealnd urn. a aateaaoas dis- Hm Dl lOB KAIl. aw Bscaami U ta a beantlfsi kale deasslnx. Btn. Beeavneo.ttvts tfc Chaanears. and warranted to a-lve satisfaction, or ta money will berefonded. - :fi-n-;T The trade supplied at Mannactnrexs' prices by ar.ers. HARRIS SOiK, Acrata, Wholesale Dealers in Fancy Dry taud. Hoeiery, Oloves, Motions, Htatlonery, Perfamirx. dw.. Ac.. 107 nod 109 Bast Town street, ttotsnhasvO. B.-anch factory. Detroit.. Mtchiirtn..: ' Jun29 3m ex. ii. w sium, managar. CLOJHIflC. 1 id'. I- ": ,..,! ' 1I C It Ai RARE .OPPOBTUNITV la herebr tfrre4 Abe Clticiiani&f Cw For SlactV'Bays! STEBBINS.TOWBTE A CO. , .-'i 1:; f i Hi -f U ' ii -.3 JTsit i . -T wnitpB tbwir WhoWl Boomi, J i , . ; ;. -, i .t3jt-v fir No. I Cnn6tliiocIcf : . ' ; -, Bit I Vd will sell at Be tall from their .Bntlr. Stock far ouiy VSTS, at W hoi c a I ie P ft ei -" Wis hAT it Lrge Stock to wleVrt'lronrlt IJnen Dusters, ' 1.1 nra Kacsi. ii 1-1 in -.: lilnen Paota dfc wests.' r x , : .(,-? lac ti Draws Coata, I Blaekt Casstmero Sacks, n 7 . . IsjinoensarKi, Kng-Ush WnlkintrCoats, I - -. - ,:.. - - Matla4atafcajFesta Matched Suits, Boy s' Clothing, 'leaf, than - - 1 , -. li tt.'tlt.- Purpishing- doods! WHITE SHIRTS, " BRACES, FANCY SHIRTS, J,; TIES, SOCKS," GLOVES, v-t v n 1 S . - '-BOSOMS, ;-l .? at o r t , 'BUCK GLOVES AND MITTENS. . .'. - - : -a----- ' B CY TOUR tVI SXE R JSTOCK ' A Wdtd to ihe Wise Is Snffloient. "iI ,H " i '"t Remember the number, corner Town aad Third streets,-bio 1 Gwynne Block. Oolumbus, O. Proposals for PrtotUiis; '.and Orticx or Oosuiauoinaaor Pansmts,"! Colohbus, Ohio, July ?t 188.. f QKALBD PEOP08AL8 WllA M BOlVBD k? at the Office ef the Seojs5rv ( &UM af the iteorunio, until u , .. lM neaday, tbe Slat day :f Asjcnaa, 18 At,12 o'cock M., Ior exacuiing the B(ata feinting for the period ot two years, and for executing the Stat Binding for the period at one year, from and after tbenrst Monday ol novemner ne aaeuing, in accordance with tbe provisions of the ac eat! tied ao act to provide for tb execnaea ano sntei lsion of the Btata Printing and Binding!', passed March 21, 1869, the act supplementary thereto, passed May I, - low, ana we act amenaawry meseui, pmi April 8, 186.- . " ,. H-di. v. WMT" . Full printed sFxamcAmoxs can ba had fl application to the Secretary of Stste. lack proiiofal must be aceompauled' by a Tud. xecated ttt due form by tb niaer with ts- l:st rtwo good and anfuci.nt sureties, e&tluactory xo tb Obmmissio ers of Printing, in the penal sum of tea thousand dollar, coneitMnM for to nuninn per-formanoa. sursuant to law f ao. claesor filu.;. of tne State printing as may be adjudged to' him. and lor the piym.lrt as iiquiaatea aamaxes oy seen bidder to ttia Dtata-oi an eecaasoi cost over we diu or bis of .neb bidder wnicn. tb Btata obliged to pay fer rack, work by, reasa. pf the failure of such bidder to complete Jiiacontxaot j .aid : bend to-be null ant void ff hs) contract shall be awarded to htm. No bat mgcoati,y sael keaol inU be entertained bit Ihe Commissioner! of Printing. a lite bond In ttie p -nal swav- nve tBeoaanaaoi-lars. must, acosmpaii raob ;propcsal jipldlac, stitchiui; or binding. . Copies ot bonds (m "blank) wUI foralsheoVtb bid. ders on application to Iheeecretary of State. In ail "respects the printing and binding shall ba executed, and the kiln thereof" mad. eat, ftssd, aad- ited ai d i aid in contormity witn tno.pxinaa-w. oi thn au-t. "Tn nmvftta for tb. meentlon and eODervls- i ton of the State Printlnaaed MowUisV'asaed March Ztr1860, aad tb amendatory actjx April o, to 'which acta reference is hereby made for todt farther information as may be desired. ; -'!- - l?ropoea!e to be sealed ana endorsed as ise outara of the envelope, -Proposals for Pnblio Printing." or ' Proposal for Blndlns-.v. tneoaae mayo, ana addressed to the 8ecreUry of 8ta'. ' A WM. HaaBX.BSUTCt, Becretary or Btaw. . . ,-MOSa . BBAILIT, ' TJomntioUer of the Treasury. . o i JAKH H.-OODMAJI, -I r, . AuditosItate. .it-. . l-i JfWtd, : H : -, .; , ;. .." , t.i siT INTEUAL REVElttlx.. Seventh Sistxlcto NOTICE FOB APPEA.IS. IN AOOOSDAirOK WITH BlUTrOIT ITH Or Ao to prwvida laUraal Bevsans Is no-port the tovernmenfc and to pay iatarestoa the public debt," notice ia hereby given that.th. anan- al MBBssment -" '- - - , -"- IN FRAKKtIK COUNTT;1 Of Ii comes forlMo Ueaaas fwiaeef. Bad for Carriages, Musical Instrument, Cold Watcsia. Plat of Hilver. o , enumerated is "Schedule A, seotios UOj set Jane SO, W6t, wUI be - -1- Closed on the neweath day or jnnly. AlHeenosM who shall have negleetal e Wiake re- toras aa required by haw wiU b apssmarily SBSissid and penalty added, us xiueaay-us iiu oay va July, I will, at my ' ' " T i . .; OFFICE IK COLOMBCS. - Sabmit the proceedings ef 8hsr Aselssairr Asssssnrs, nd theanauai list takea and . retaroed aa ator- aaid, to the inspection of any and all nenoas mav aoDlvfor that purnoae. and will at the i '1 ' time hear and auermine spneais Mtiaay enormous or xcessiv vlnatleiia, i asmesrieats or anumera loss by the Assessor er Atsisiant Assessors, returned tn the annual tart. -8el(t appeal" are required in writing, and mutt spec'fy the particular cause, matter or thing respecting wmca a aeeuwn isruuesud. IbAAO tt. BaBltBTT, Aeseator cevtnta v?9n Spring TaUez. July, 1896. -:-!rf Pi-nr-t sVtiVi ehsT SjTT DR. O. A. KM AFP, Oenllst, formerly or n. I.,) exclusively-sraai a beafnes. Dlseaaes- el she Eyes, son ta- rta ArtineU Ena WTTBOtTS rADk al orx, at No. 199 South Bigh street, (opposite the Goodate House,) ia Columbus, Ohio. Also fnrnishaa rjaki labia book ontbEy aud Ear, for-SO am t Iras ef postaat.toaMrev.,: T:til taatdlf , .Hi 1 ' a r ' --r - - inaU 4 we 0 i-m hawl '""" ' ' i |
Format | newspapers |
Reel Number | 01123581346 |
File Name | 0059 |