Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 25 May 1861 — Page 2

I

..

TAB WEEKLY REVIEW.

CRAWFORDSVILLE, IND.

Saturday, May 25, 1861.

Frlatrd and Pnhlhhr4 rrrry S"fnMiiy Jlonf iiift. lJ E S O W E N

Xm. 10, Rrcro Nliwl.

I A I O N

LARGER THAN ANY F'AL'KK I'UIJUr-HEI) IN CrniTfordxrillc Advertisers. call up and examine our I.ist of :rr«rB8CBIBKH«!eriI

AW APPRAI, FOR JIATEBMI- AIO. We desire every one of our patrons who know themselves indebted to us for subscription, advertising and job work, to make sonic effort to pay us something on their accounts. In these war times it is a difficult matter to carry on business without money, and we trust that this appeal will meet with a deserved attention.

Let Every Patriot Read—Where the Seceeders Expect to goBritish Subjects.

To show the feeling that pervades the South, wc copy the following from that formerly old conservative paper, the .Rich-

fraond

(Va) Whig. In speaking of the attitude of (ireat Iiritain to the two belligerents in this country, it uses the following execrable and1 atrocious language: "We suppose all foreign powers have an exact guage of the Washington Dynasty. They know them to be insolent blackguards, and luckily as impotent as insolent. They will take an immense pleasure in taking the dander out of these upstarts. England, especially, has not forgotten the rows among the Northern cities over the enlistments for the Crimean War. Hut. without the prompting of resentment for past indignities, her interests all lead to sympathize with the South. She has all to gain and nothing to lose by giving the Yankees a deadly blow. The present opportunity is most favorable. She will have the hearty co-operation of the whole South, and knit every Southern heart to her by hooks of steel. There is no mincing words about it but the state of feeling in the Southern States at this time, toward the Yankees and their rump Government at Washington, is such as would impel the people to form any sort of alliance that England might desire—if it would lead to the "crushing out" to the eternal bankruptcy and beggary of Yankee land.— Even the constitutional reign of the amiable and accomplished lady who rules the British Empire, would be a thousand times preferable to that of the vulgar brute and liis blackguard associates at Washington."

We suppose then the Rubicon is passed. Tho Scccdcrs would prefer a thousand times to come under the government of Great Britain than be reunited to the States of tho North. That is their settled, deliberate conviction and determination.— Well, so be it. With the 11

rhig

we say,

there is no use in mincing words about it. They are ready to go tinder the dominion of the British Crown. We are ready to labor with all the power and means which CJoil has given us, to prevent the consummation of such diabolical purpose.— There can hereafter be no middle ground. Everj' man must take sides for or against the Government, of the Union. Secession and Secessionists must, if needs bo, be BWept from the face of tho earth, before they shall be allowed to transfer any St itc of this Union to tho British Crown. If there is a Democrat living in the North who has a lingering hope of bringing these secoedcd States back into the I nion by peaceful means, let him give it up, after reading the above from the Whig. They can only be brought back by the overwhelming powor of the General Government. We have been reluctant to come to such a conclusion, but must now look the matter sternly in the face, cast to the winds all hope of a peaceful solution, and rely altogether on tho sword. It now be our own destruction mcnt and people, or that, of the scccdcrs and Confederate States Government. Wc can not hesitate—nobody but a traitor can hesitate—to cast all, life and property, into the contest. There must be no mawkish sensibility on the subject. The reality of war must now be met and endured in every shape in which it may present itself.

We commend the people of Kentucky nnd Missouri to read the article from the llTtor. It will show them where the Seceders are drifting, and where Kentucky anil Missouri will be expected t. go, if ueccssary, to prevent a reunion. Are you ready for that?—Cincinnati Enquirer.

Till PIWAMIK* or I'M.HIIIOX. The Court Journal ghes an elaborate

Court Ball, and adds that the mere ad-1

justing ot the dress on the night ot the

ball occupied the space of three quarters

and diamonds on thc skirts cannot be accomplished until the dress is on and the

coinplishmcnt of this, Her Majesty stands upon a high stool while the boquets arc being placed upon the skirt, so that they are on a level with the eye cf the haki'lleuse, who under the direction of a head tiring woman, who stands at a distance viewing the reflection of thc labor in a swing glass—gives her orders whero each boquet shall be placcd."

Gen. Pillow has ordered all his rebel troops into an eneampment, near Jackson.

Nearly nine hundred Irishmen

'huve been enrolled as United States volunteers at. St. Louis.

TISXIVKSSBE.

The following letter, says the Washington Star, embraces an interesting account of the existing state of affairs in the region of Tennessee from which it was written i'-»

EL'ZABETHTO.X, CARTER COUNTV, East Tennessee, May 13. W. I). Wallach, Editor Washington Star:

The people here arc for the Union and our Government almost to a man. The} arc calm, decided and determined at all hazards to stand up tor the stars and stripes, and resist the acts ot an arbitrary, wicked, cowardly Legislature, that has in 'secret conclave dared to djc'arc us out of the Union, and to transfer us to an aristocratic cotton confederacy, besides assuming to make appropriations that will grind us down for years with taxes. Though this is the day of usurpation and mobs, they have sown the seed that cannot fail to produce in our midst war and counterrevolution. If we can have a fair expression of the popular will at the ballot-box on the 8th of June, we have no fears but that we can defeat them. Our party is for freedom of speech and suffrage, thcir's for suppressing every thing that docs not savor of the heresy of secession and nothing is too mean or mendacious for them to stoop to in carrying out their pur poses. They are ready at all times, where they have the numbers, to mob the man who will stand up and defend, the Union and the Constitution. Where Secessionists are in the ascendency, the polis will be controlled by a mob. The candid men of their party here admit the spirit of the party to be the spirit of the mob. At Joncsboro', on Monday last, several of their party became so disguoted with them for trying to disturb Messrs. Johnson and Nelson while speaking that they abandoned the disunion cause.

Saturday was a stirring day with us here. We raised a pole about eighty feet high, from which the stars and stripes are beautifully waving, (and long may they wave o'er the land of the free aud the home of the brave) and we pledged our property, our lives, our all, to defend them so long as our Government does not make war upon our institutions, but on the contrary defends them. We are for our whole country—notour country South.

The PvNt of the OIVirc-M«ckrra. The Washington correspondent of the New York Tibunc, in noticing the difficulties which the Administration has to encounter in t.hc prosecution of the war, says: "If the Administration could give undivided attention to war, it would be different but this is not permitted. The galleries and corridyrs of the approaches to all the Secretaries are thronged with eager waiters for audiencc. 'Come to Dresden, Talma,' wrote Napoleon to his favorite tragedian, when ho held a high court of crowned heads and titular dignitaries at the Capital of Saxony, 'and you shall play before a pitl'ull of kings.' Come to Washington, censor of the four-llight or the first-floor driiikiuir-saloon, and you shall grumble! in the presence of a pur-

That is a pretty good hint to the officeseekers to keep away from Washington.

Major in the A enezuclan service. He was much esteemed, and will he regretted by all who knew him. Out of the nine hundred men who were on board the Victory at Trafalgar, five only now remain, and Roteley was the last surviving officer,

iC^T The American troubles have had a very depressing effect on the English Liberals, while the Tories aro rejoiced at what they consider the failure of republican institutions. A bill to establish the ballot system in voting, which has been gaining strength in Parliament for many years, was recently defeated by a large majority, and its friends could hardly get a respectful hearing.

TIII

description ot a magnitieent dress in winch I i.oitit the French Empress appeared at the last

vi:iti:it

Till-: Ht.OCKAIM'-MM'TKK FKO.TI

Thc an

by Lord Lyou

canuo

0

ac"

whole toilette be complete, excepting this last touch, upon which, however, according to thc tiring woman's idea, everything depends. For the more convenient ac-

'cxtraet from a letter

,0 ,hc

V[0bi]e,

the Moh

of an hour, as the placing ot tho boqucts j»ossib,v Lvons

H[.itish LWu, al

dated May 8th, and published in

,c Advertiser of Wednesday.—

lnav

the ni]0i in this rpspeot

have insisted

upon and obtained some modification of Austria, and Prussia—and to witness the operations of war, under the Irghest scientific attainments, and on tho most stupendous scale. With a mind capable of grasping and appropriating great results, he is this day among the best educated of our armv officers.

nc

writes thus

Thc best- advice you can give British ships is to get off as r»st as possible withI out serious inconvenience. After thc effective blockade has been commenced, they will be allowed fifteen days to take their departure, but they will not be allowed to carry out any cargo or part of a cargo taken on board after thc effective blockade, I believe they will be liable to confiscation for attempting to go out with a cargo shipped after the commencement of a blockade. But the effective blockade does not begin until the blockading squadron actually appears off the port.

Thc 'President's proclamation is only the declaration of an intention to block* ade.

A steamboat owned in Cairo has

been seized by Gen. Pillow at Memphis.

THE LATWT-THK WWKMIMKICKD. WAsniNGToiCMay 24.

Fifteen thousand troops crossed into

Virginia last night, and are now occupying Arlington !!eights and Alexandria. The regiments composing the New Jersey and Michigan brigades, Ellsworth's Zouaves, and District militia crossed into Virginia.

The pickets having been previously driven in by the advance guard, one of the regiments took the road leading to Fairfax Court House about twenty miles from Washington, while another, the Jersey, stopped at the fork?, a mile from the long bridge, awaiting orders.

An advance into Virginia was also made from another point, namely at the mouth of the Potomac aqueduct at Georgetown.

The 7th New York regiment was among the troops, and after several hours' march occupied a point between the bridge and

Columbia spring, on the line of the Wash-

ngton and Alexandria railroad. Firing was heard occasionally by the driving in of the Virginia pickets.

At 9 o'clock A. M., the New York Zouaves, 7th and 69th New York, and the New Jersey regiments held Alexandria, while Arlington Heights wns occupied by several regiments.

The entrance into Alexandria was attended by an event which has cast the deepest gloom over this community. Col. Ellsworth who had hauled down the secession flag from the Marshall House, was soon afterwards shot by a cowardly foe.— His body has been brought to the Washington Navy yard.

Accounts from Alexandria are somewhat conflicting, but there is no doubt of the fact that a man named Jackson, who shot Col. Ellsworth, was instantly put to death. Somo say by both bullet and bayonet.

When the federal troops reached Alexandria the Virginia soldiers fired at them and fled.

Visitors to that city say the scenes were exciting. The federal vessels were in the meantime before Alexandria.

Tt seems to be true that a body of federal troops has advanced to Fairfax Court House to take possession of tho Orange & Alexandria and Mannassas Gap Ilailroad with a view of intercepting the advance of Virginia troops towards Alexandria from .Richmond and other points.

Nearly 3,000 troops arrived at Washington yesterdav.

HAY'S KATII\« SAI.OOS. The proprietor of this excellent restaurant, informs us that on next Monday he will be prepared to furnish his numerous I

|ucttc crowded with Senators, Represcn-! customers with icecream. '1 lie cooking

tit lives tains, Lieutenants, in the vernal bloom of their first (lowering, with the untitled and obscure, in uncounted crowds. Senators and Representatives wish to whisper be 1 ligerant sentiments into the ears of the Cabinet Council—officers in fatigure regalia jostle each other fur marching orders or rations for men. Staid and severe gentlemen, who have telescopic vision fixed on far off posts of diplomatic danger, desire to secure a majority vote in the jury who are to settle 011 their success or defeat. Consular and clerical ambition fills out in long array the train in waiting upon those dispensers of place. All of this noble army wish and must have personal interviews. Valuable time, which belongs to more important calls than the. mere clamor for office, is thrown away in hearing personal arguments for large and less patronage."

Generals, 'ohincls, Majors, (Jap-j at this establishment is unsurpassed, and When' driven forward hv the ir

fully equal to anything of the kind in our llarjje cities. A capital lunch is served up everyday at Id l-'J o'clock in the forenoon and o'clock in the eveninir.

WHAT TJIIJ Titoors LIVK ON.—A correspondent of the New York Herald gives the following as the daily consumption ot eating and drinking by the troops at Washington

The quantity and quality of provisions now daily consumed by the army concentrated here is as follows Tli brls. of pork, alternately with 25,000 pounds of fresh beef: 115 brls. of flour 00 bushels beans '2,000 pounds rice coffee 1.200 pounds sugar 2,400 pounds whisky (525 gallons candles 300 pounds soap 800 pounds: salt .13 bushels.

KNKKA I. ncMiEl.T.AIV.

ice of (renenil ilc(Jicllan, recently ay-

Tin: LAST OF NI:I,SON'S OFFICERS AT tie TRAFALGAR.—The London Sunday Times pointed Mnjor General for the military tli-1

of May 5th reports vision of Ohio, Indiana and Illinois, from salutary influence oil the opinions of others Lieutenant Roteley died at his resi- the Chicago Tribune dence, May Mill, Swansea, oil the -1st, aged seventy-six. Lieutenant liotely was the last surviving officer of the ship Victory of Trafalgar, having fought with Xelson at the memorable engagement at Trafalgar. He was allowed to retire from must fi,]j pjiy about forty years ago, and from Govern- that time lie has enjo3'ed his pension. Oil his retirement lie held the rank of .lJrevet

ces of thc lied Kiver, and was subsequently transferred to Oregon. lie was then appointed on the Crimean commission which enabled him personally to inspect the military systems of all the great Eu.w.^^.ropean powers—England, France, Russia,

His connection with the railroads of the West has given him an accurate knowledge of the topography and resources of the country, which will be of the greatest importance to him in a military point.— With prudence and confidence in his strength, lie will succeed where a bolder and rasher man would fail. Ho will commit no mistakes. Whon he advances, it will be with a strength that no ordinary force can oppose if he recedes ruin and disaster will not follow in his rear.

It is with unfeigned satisfaction wo no- jinguished vvsiter to its publication, and it tice that the President Ins erected the jIS Pu')lis.ied accordingly. Northwest into tt war department., and as-j' HBATLAND, May 6, 18(51 signed General McClellan to the command.! -1° ^tc Editors of the National nielli-

No fitter appointment could be made.— Gcueral McClellan for three years was thc Chief Engineer and the Vice President of the Illinois Central Railroad Company, and as such became known to the most of our leading citizens as a man of great enerrv and capacity. He is now in the full vigor of his powers, both physical and mental. His age is less than forty arid nature has endowed him with a close knit frame which will enable him to endure any amount of fatigue. By the best army officers, McClellan is regarded as anion"1 the ablest of the young men in the profession and a suitable theater only is required, which is now presented, to enable him to exhibit thc highest qualities of a commander. From his past career, his future is full of promise. lie graduated at West Point with thc highest distinction thence he was transferred to Mexico, under General Scott, where for his valor he was twice breveted. After the war lie was associated with Cap-1 they belong tain Marcy in the exploration of the sour-! in a peculiar

We

congratulate the Northwest that th« conduct of her armies is to be confided to such

a man..

ni BAMUHBEtununu

The brood of savage vices which the Southern treason has spawned upon the astonished age cannot be paralleled in any single passage

of

piracy enactment of the Confederate Congress, which actually offers "blood money" for every loyal American citizen slaughtered Twenty dollars a head is the price to be paid for the lives of all citizens who can be taken and destroyed on board United States ships !—and the paltry addition of five dollars only is offered for prisoners, as if the fiendish blood-thirs-tiness of the boss pirates bad prompted them to make it more profitable to murder all indiscriminately—as it evidently would be—than to be at the pains, expense and risk of securing and bringing them into port as prisoners! "Walk the plank!" will be the inexorable doom of every man,

WiananJ ch id captured by pirates of

the Southern Confederacy. We give the "bloody section," as officially published SEC.10. That a bounty shall be paid by the Confederate States of $20 for each person on board any armed ship or vessel belonging to the United States, at the commencement of any engagement, which shall be burnt, sunk or destroyed by any vessel commissioned as aforesaid, which shall be of equal or inferior force aud a bounty of $25 shall be paid to the owners, officers and crews of the private armed vessels commissioned as aforesaid, for each and every prisoner by them captured and brought into port.

THE "UXIOIV" RIFLED COI.UlTIItlAD. This monstrous pieco of ordnance is rapidly approaching completion and if the anticipations of the constructors arc realized, which seems extremely probable from the success of the "Floyd" gun, it will be one of the most terrible engines of destruction ever constructed. Having the

orly and fit it ibr rifling are completed, .„m

designed and constructed especially for

has two heavy clumbers, cut from one end lo the other, with the same pitch of twist as that of the grooves in the gun. This rod carries at one end a heavy head, ft ed with a cutting tool of the width of the groove, and at the other heavy female screw, the screw passing through the length of the hollow rod, and gearing by coir wheels and a long shaft lo the ordinarv lathe ire.-irinir at the breech of the gun.-

Wo ..111-, fnllmrinrr \t-r.ll mnritorl nn duty. W llcll til0 letter 111C1 (1 eIItII11V hilt VC1V Dollar.-, and I went-five I hoiisand ot that amount is eltjl tllC tollowing well merited no- I f. •. delinquent, of course the taxes will still be higher on ,11 1, .1 I strongly states, and tlllllUUIK iliat tllC Olllll- those that pavpromptlvfor there has

to

ion ot one who has served the country .so

COnspieUOU.sly

and so long, might exert a

tasked and obtained the consent of the dis-

gencer: GKNTLKMEN: in the confusion of the times I have not received your tri-wcekly numbers 9157 and 9158, of April 21 and April 30, I believe. As yours is the only paper of which I preserve a file, 1 should feel greatly obliged if you would send me these numbers.

Several items in the Intelligencer have

awakened my attention to the facility with which military gentlemen relieve themselves from their oaths, and change their allegiance. A military oath has ever been

of tbePftiaXillar,

history, or in the deprav­

ity of any one race or condition of men.

The latest

the

item of infamy is contained in

KINSXAV,Ohio.HayWk,IK#.

J. N. HARMS ACO.—Qjcrrs: I hav« for a ferr month* past nwd Perry DarU' Pain Killer for DYSPEPSIA A LIVER (30MPIAINT, sad I must say it has done better for zho than any other medicine thai I have ever taken

A friend of mine was afflicted with a severe cough, and was permanently cured by iU use. I can recommend it as a ralnable mcdicine to be kept in CTery house. Yours etc. B. B. FELTON.

Sold by 1. D. Manson. What proof more reliable oould bo given in favor of any medicine than tho following letter, received unsolicited, from the Rev. W.B. Jacobs! Read it.

NEWARK, X. J., Juno 6th, 1859.

Messrs.Perry Davis & Son,—Gentlemen:—Allow me unsolicited? to send you a word of commendation for your Pain Killer. I have used it in my family these several years, and found it all it claims to bo. For rheumatism, coughs, colds, burns, cholera tendencies' and difficulties, as well as diseases generally that prevail in families, Iregrrd the Pain Killer as beyond all price, and as efficacious beyond any medicine within my knowledge. We keep it as our chief family medicine. and find its nso in ordinary cases worth more than any doctor. The testimony of others among my acquaintances and friends is equally favorable. Many clergymen have spoken of it in the highest terms as a family mcdicine. Missionaries in repeated instances have said to me in person and in their lottors, that tho Pain Killer was by far tho best medicine used in heathen lands, and they use it for themselves and families and administer it to others around them. Thus much I nm inclined to say, as an act of justice to yourselves, and a-j a benefit lo others. You are at liberty to nso this testimonial, if of any service.

Yours. tc„ REV. W. B. JACOBS. Late Editorfo Christia Chronic le.

Painkiller sold by all rcsp'ectablo druggists and medicine deolers. Dr. Scott, the proprietor and editor of the Lebanon Star, is a prominent physician:

Perry Davis' Pain Killer, tho old and well known remedy, whicb has acquired a world wide renown for cure of sudden colds, coughs, etc., weak stomach, general debility, nursing soro mouth, cankered mouth or throat, liver complaint, dyspepsia or indigestion, criunp nnd pain in tho stomach, bowel complaint, painters' bolic, Asiatic cholera, diarrhea and dysentery, has lost none of its good name by repeated trials but continues to occupy a prominent position in every family medicine chest,—Lebanon Star, Dec. Ktlh, ISj'J.

Sold by M. D. Manson.

JO3 The following is an extract from a letter written by the llev. J. S. Homes, pastor of the 1'ierrc-point-Street Baptist Church. Brooklyn, X. Y., to tho "Journal and Messenger," Cincinnati. 0.. and speaks volumes in favor of that world-renowned mcdicinc, Mus. "WINSLOW'S SOOTHING SYRIT FOR Cim.NNKN

same exterior diameter as the Floyd," TKKTHINC:— with !i linrp tlirnn mphp^ smaller its set* ml erti-emcnt our of its. Willi .1 uore uirce mcnes Mllliltr, us pott WINDOW'SanOOTHING

CT of resisting explosive force IS, of course I word ill favor uf a patent, medicine before in our life, ji 1 ,,c ii,„ I but compelled to say to your readers that this \astl} increased, while the sli.ipe or Hie j., n0wofeel

projectile. conical, eives it nearlv, if not! AM. ir CI.AIMS. It is probably one of the most sucJ. ,, ,i ,1 ,. cessrul medicines «f the day, because it is one of the fully as great .weight as that thrown troill host. And those of y.mr readers who have babies the larger bore. The turning, boring anil chipping required to finish the gun exleri-

S SYUIIVn N.nvculumns

A

gearing, a the rod bv

m1

and the latter' operation will be finished !.— OHU-I I.ATION—by a HI TKHUKI:. «lu ha:

before the close of the week. lathe and planer used in Floyd" were also employed for the ion," but the appliances for rifling were

semi-rotary motion is given projections playing in the grooves.— Though extremely simple in construction. the apparatus works with a rapidity and accuracy hardly reckoned upon. The grooves and hinds" tire of about equal width, each about, an inch, and each groove is cut, to its proper depth by live or six 1 A I.K who know themselves delinquent on 1 a in is in a am on IV and steady pressure to the cutter, and P- meni of the- on or beioie tinwhen reversed drawing back the rod rap-' S' iI'Sf (lilt/ o( fiii'gHSC 5

Jly. We shall await impatiently the tcst-

Wc

ting of the patch.

Union "—Pittsburgh JJis-

liV-l'KliKlDliM III*-

I.KlTKIt I'KO.Tt cbnunn. The subjoined letter from Hx-l'residenfc Buchanan was reeieved at the oflicc of the National Intelligencer a few days a^o. A I friend of the JCx-i'resident's, who liajtpened to read the letter, and who feels I much interested the question of honor and

ii1(

Iteelnally

the same iaml diuim-.-j if sight, resulting frmn linishitiir the consul"-_

it,e

the latter. A rod of five or six inches in ^Ma^eli'rto.'Voi.

similar to

diameter, similar to that used in borinir, I

.ai. HOOK VOH CiMTrm.r

.i monc ni-Ui md those ih-n „n 1

shed the blood ot citizens ot his native I of June. W.M. K. WALLACE, sheriff. State in war, yet it is difficult to excuse or -'Iay

Your friend, very respectfullv, JAMES BUCHANAN.

The pulp of potatoes scraped into water cleanses the finest kinds of silks without injury to the fabric or color.

1ST

There are two full nephews of Gen­

eral Scott in the second Miss, regiment, at Lynchburg. \ivr*

1So1-

palliate the next step, which is to go over To THOMAS KI:ERAS'—Sir: You are hereby notified to the enemy and make war upon the time-1

rc uire 1

l*T

»l'flr

."

u'ctvai.

wc never said a

humbug—WK HAVE THIRD IT AND KNOW IT TO nu

can't hotter th:i 11 lay in a supply.

An Art of fir:Uitudr.

got lobe "Oilmen

1

'ii.n p.i.\ up juoiiipiij time

t. the bi111.'

Now the law is as follows ill regard to eo!!cetiii« Delinquent Taxes: The Treasurer can lake any personal property and sell it a! any time an I there is improperly exempt in any way whatever. There i- no one that would as much dislike to take and sell property from any one a- myself, but there is not io.'r cannot be, anytliinir wrong in so doiiur. Those who have not paid, and tail to do so within the next three months, will find the law carried out without respect to persons. So please cull and settle on or before the time specified, and all will be riirht.

W. II. SCIHini.KH.

.May 1. lrtil. Treasurer .M. (J. May 35, lil-jJitli.

Ms!rat/ ice.

PAKl*^ up. by O. W*. White, living in township, .Mnntffointrr.v ui unty, Jndian inuro about fifluen hand.* thrcn inches hiirh, withn star and snip in thc forch« rtl, black inane nnd tail, heavy with foal.suppu.»«I to bo i»levon vear*ohI, Said marc wns appraised ut £75 00 by *. Washburn I nnd .lames Stoddard before Jnimvs MrCllire, a.!usticu

f"r

May"-'l, l?lil.—I."iw3.

virtue

(.'lurk of the

held sacred in all ages and in all countries. Besides the solemn sanctions of religion, there is superadded thc highest appeal to i\ M., of said day. at ihe personal honor. Each military officer

the United States, and serve tlicnt honestly and faithfully against ail their enemies und opposcrs whatsoever. They do not swear to support the Constitution of any State. Educated by tho United States, tn the 'Federal Government peculiar sense. llilst I. can imagine The above noticed sale is postponed until Saturday why an officer msrht resign rather than MUri®'iAj "•'.ill'L1' V*'1

elcyt

•To'k.'y

Sheriff's Sale.

BV

nil execution to me directed from the .Montgomery Circuit Court, I will

expose at. public sale, to thc highest bidder, on ftuturdnrj thc 8th dnj- of Jiinc, A. I. 1SG1, between the hours of 10 o'clock, A. M. and I o'clock. door of the Court House of rents and profits for a term rears, of thc following described

swears that lie will hear true allegiance to I real estate, to-wir: Lot number ninety-seven (97) in the original plat of the town of Crawfordsville, Montgomery county, Indiana. And on failure to realize the full amount of judgment, interest and costs. 1 will at the same time and place, expose at public sale the fee-simple of said real estate.

I Taken as thc property of Thomas Keeran at thc suit of Elizabeth Keeran. i. -. AV.M. K. "U'AI.LACK.

th

,h,,"'r: "f

1 1 1 A a I I a 1 a

2"/' hoosenn appraiser for the

T» above described iraci of land, on or before thc 1st day I

honored flag of the country. .Major Beauregard, when he discharged thc first gun against Fort Sumter, lighted a flame which it will require a long time to extinguish. The people of thc North at present arc enthusiastically unanimous. They never were aroused uutil that shot was fired. I I gomery county for license to sell intoiicating liquors

of .Tune A. 1). 1P61,ordefanlt thereof, I shall,accordin to the Statute, in such ease made and provided, proceed to select and choose anappraiserforyou.

May 25. Iffll. WM. K. WALLACE, Sheriff.

Application for License.

N'OTICEterm

id hereby piven that I will apply at the June of the Commissioners Court of Montgomery county for license to sell intoiicatine liquors

often warned Southern gentlemen that this I jj ^^e^^ein^id i^farV^e sfc^n would be the inevitable result. lots number 00 and 92 on W ashin?torI street, the same 1 *i 1 lyin^ and bcim in the town of Crawiordsville, Mont-

I enjoy good health, and as trancjuil a gomery connty. State of Indian^. spirit as the evils impending over my country will permit.

May 11. '61-«w3. IJEXRY CATTICK.

Caution!

"VOTICK i« hereby given that my wifo Mary Kcnnedy havinsr left mv bed and board without any just cause or provocation, I hereby warn all persons from trusting or harboring her on my account as I shall pay no debts

ebts of hor contracting. DAIEL KE.VXEDV.

May 11. '01-43w3.

NOTICE

IS

hereby given, that the books, notes and accounts of the late firm of Manson Powers, have been placed in the hands of John M. Butler, Esq., for collection all persons indebted to the firm will save cost and trouble by settling their aooountg immediately. The books urST BE CLOSED.

Slay 18.1081~'— MAKSON POWERS.

$30,000 STOCK!

THE SEW FIRM OF

M'CLURE FRY,

Would call attention to tho largest and best selected stock of C&J.

DRY-GOODS,

Ever offered to tho citizens of old Montgomery and surrounding country. We do not wish to spend time and money withont doing the community some good and we have but one request to make, and that is to call at tho

Old Stand of F. H. Fry & Co,

And see for yourselves. We do say that we can and WILL sell goods to cash and prompt paying buyers,

ured of nervous debility, loss of memory" SatinettS for 25 CCIltsper Yard, jforcy nrly errors, by I the intnicliiins given in 11 medical work it his duty, in gratitude In the niitlnn and I L• 11 for the bunelil of Consumptive and Nervous sutl'cri-rs I to publish the means used. He will therefore send free, to any address, on receipt of two st:nii|i'

work. (oiUiiining every inlWm.Mtion required. I

I A II II I:I I VI-: a its FOR.Nn This lo certify that 1 have been afllictcd witli I p-iin ill my left a litlio below the knee, for about three years most of this time I hav.: been entirely I unable to labor.anil notwilhstandiii!: I have used nf- I most everything I heard recommended, nothingallorded any relief, except the application of cold water. 'nod tin- but temporarily. A neishhor recommended me lo try Sloan's Ointment.. 1 did so and in about four w-'eks I was able lo walk about as well :i- ever, except some weakness. I .RAMI-:s KIT/.( KI AI,|).

Mil wailkee, ,lul.vlf-.v.l. See Hoon's advertisement in anottier e.i-1 nmn. I

:n~ O

II

Delinquent Tax Payers.

i,

as by so doing they wiil save cost. The law makes it,

1

the duty of the County Treasurer to collect i11 Tuxes a in on is to ii a to I When a Treasurerfails tocollccl all Taxes, or collects fr..in one portion of the people and not from the othor, he fails to discharge his duly, for the law makes I all men c|ii:illy able lo pay. The man that has only

One Hundred Dollars' worth of properly has but] about ono dollar of Taxes to pay. and the man wilh One Thousand Dollars' worth ot property lias about I ten dollars to pay: so you can see at one* that all men are cipially able to pay, and all men have the I same privileges under the law alike, and should all pay their equal portion of Taxes and when the Tresisiirer fails to collect of one portion of the pet pie and collects from the other, lie suffers the paying portion to bu imposed upon. From this fact, if the amount if Taxes in this County is One Hundred Tliuii-and

E E E S

THAN" ANY OTHER HOUSE IN

CKAWFOHDSVIMjE!

And our reason is, that we bought our goods at a tinio when they were

15 Per Cent. Below

Any thing heretofore known: since which time goods have greatly advanced in tho East. Von can buy your good

BLEACHED MUSLINS

At G^'. 8 and 10 cents, worth 10, 12 and 14 cents last Fall. We ask but 10 cents for best l'rint made and and arc selling

ootl I T*ri111s

At 5, fi, 7, H, 3 and 10 cents—worth 8, 10 and 14 cents.

O O N W E E S

At 12. It. 1" and 20 Wc are selling goo

•nt.-, good goods for boys' wear.

•NUMO goods last Fall

worth 60 to "5 cents.

THE NICEST CHALLIS,

otb .d the market at, i»! to cents per yard,

it Me. JBages,

At P'j' cents same last Fall was worth 15 and lOcents.

LANCASTER GINGHAMS,

At 11 cents same last Fall 1-1 cents.

J-A Jh- W 1ST S

At 11, 12. 15 an* i.T» ivn?.- wurth 15,20,£?."» »nd 10 cents.

SKELETON SKIKTS.

•III I looped Skeleton ."

ts, at-. i. cents!"

And all sixes, down a- i\v

A full ass-jrimCiit of I.adi "IlOKS. for less moiii-y ih:

Tax

Men's Calf Boots,

At$3..»5 to SI ids are worth ?l to $i.

K( ad}'-l«dc Cloifiiiig,

l-'or ^i and Hoys.

S I M.M.I

A

Beys.' and Youths' Boots.

y-.' Hootsnth-' Urn.I

SI

Meiii' Ovford Tie-, Calf and (loat SI,00 to ?1

PARASOLS.

Ladie.- if you want a nie buy ai £1, -.null as you h-ue

Shawls!

silk Parasol comu and paid ?2 .i0 for.

Shawls!

Ail wool Slimd". with borders, at $1 25 to SO.

LADIKS' COLLARS.

Ladies' Ilmbiuidcrcd .Ju'-or.e! Collar-' al 23 to SI 30.

SHIRT FRONTS,

At t'J t" !."» crnf.-". iw»rt!i 30 to GO cent*.

A lull a*ri'#rtmcnt of

Bonnets and Ribbons,

A full Hssortm-nt of Misses and children's

HATS AND FLATS.

ALL WK ASK OK Vol" LS TO

COME

Sheriff of Montgomery Co.

May 1?. 'CI-I-.'wl. prs. fee $3 50.

Showing ^onil-i jy l,ut little trouble !io\r-a-d:iys!

COME AND SEE THE MAMMOTH

h\

A largo and complete stock of

A fall stock of

Groceries,

Queens ware,

Glassware, &c., &c.

O I E

Wo take all kinds of PRODUCE at tho highest prices. MCCLCRE & FRY. Crawfordsville. May 11, *61—ISyl.

A

fine lot of GILT MOLDING and FRENCH LITHOGRAPHS. on hand and for sale at the Old Corner." by JOHN LEE.

CrawfordsTille, Ind.

W*. S. FRY OMBUR NCVTMIIRF CBAW* VOBMrntK.

A company hare jut mired here from SsBth -from New Albany, and their motive* an kao*» to butfew but we undented they w&nt tk*«ttmtioa of all. Let this news go forth on the hill top*, ud in tho valleyr. Let it bo spread abroad thronchost the extent of this vast country. Let tho farmttlMr* his plow in tho farrow—the ntechanio hfs toola oa tho work-bonch—the doctor his nostrums lis til* rillbags—the lawyer his books on tho dusty iMvw— tho maiden tho yarn on tho spinning-whccl-ao* on* and all, far and noar. old and young, g&y and nd. rich and poor, Jow and Gentile, aaint and sinner —la short, let the entire population make one grand rash for tho New Store. If yon havecash prep&ro to afcell out now. "There is a tido in tho affairs of men, which taken at the flood, leads on to fortune." That tido is now at hand! The ball is opencdl

S. MOORE£ Co.. have jast arrived from Xew Albany with a largo stock of Dry Goods, Boots,Shoes.Hftt*. Clothing, io., which they are soiling at wholesale Mid rotail—and "what a falling off is there my countrymen!" Nothing has occurred here sinoo the flood, ia business affairs, which compares with the astonishing reduction in prices at S. Moons Co.'s!

Morchants in Montgomery and adjoining countiea, we will sell to you at wholesale, as low as any hooM west of the mountains.

Farmers, wo want your produce wc will take it at the best prices in exchange for goods. Trust is dead wo think that credit killed him and be it understood, that wc sell no goods withont cash or produce. KENTUCKY MONEY TAK15N AT PAR. "FIopc told a flattering talc," but never droamed of tho prices at which MOORE Co. aro now offering goods. Some men lovo to roam, but they aook no farther hearing of tho prices at tho NEW STORE!-i,?. "Lot tho farmer praise his grounds, and tho huntsman praise his hounds," but MOOKE Co.'s goods praiso themselves.

Cotno out, COMK ot T. COME OUT! Wooall you to behold the absolute slaughtering of goods at the new store!

Ladies, we most respectfully invito you to "promenade all," for tho Now Store, and wo will convinea yoiiof tho great saving you canmako by purchasing goods there Wc can absolutely adorn you like nnto tho Lillics of tho Valley, for a fivo dollar bill.

Those goods were purchased in Now York and Philadelphia when goods were at tho lowest prices, and we have no hesitation in saying that they will bo sold from ten to twenty percent, under the «saat: price.

To enumerate all of our different articles will not^ be necessary, for wo havo an assortment that will suit both city and country, and all wo ask of you, ladies and gcntlcmou, is to call and exumino our stook boon makeany further purchases. We can always bo found on Washington street, under McCIolIand's llall, only five steps from tho wholesale and retail grocery house of Blair Cumberland, whoro, at the two houses ?cu can dispose of all your produce, and in return for it will be given you all things necessary.

Please call immediately at the Now Store on Washington street Crawfordsville, lnd.,Mny 18,1P81.

HOWAltD ASSOCIATION.

A Benevolent Institution established Sjiccral htulownmc.it, for the Relief of the Sick and Distressed, afflicted with

Virulent and Epidemic Diseases, and especially for the Cure of JHseases of the Sexual Organs.

MEDICAL

ADVICE given gratis. Iy the Acting

Surgi.-ou. to all who apply by letter, with •description of their condition, (aire, occupation. h»bits of life, Ac..) and in cases of extreme poverty. Medicines furbished free of elmrse.

VALUABLE Hld'OHTS on Spermatorrhea, nnd other li«ases of the Sexual Organs.nnd on tho NEW HK.MKJillvS employed in the l)ipei,-.ii y. ,-enf to the alllicted in sealed letter envelopes, free of charge.— Two or three Stamps for noslngi* will be acceptable.

Address DR. .1. SKILLIN IIIH'tiMTON, Acting Ninth ?•'.

Misses', nnd childrenx' liny other House in the 1, Howard Association, No. i! South

Street, i'liiidiipliin,1 ISy ord.

of

CMiiosi

II ATS,

For men and boys of lute Hoy? Leghorn nil si/.e

styles, at :tUto 50 cents, it from 20 to 35 cents.

the Directors,

el rth If! KZIIA D. IlKAItTWJiLL. I'msidontT

(!KO. KA IRC III LI). Secretary. Dec. 15, IcijO—ly.

STOVE'STORE, i\o. Commmi si Block.

NEW-' STOCK!!

The largest irif ly of

COOKING STOVES,

Ever in Crawfordsville.

Tin, Jiipan, Brass, Copper & Rrittania

w, wc

WORK IN OUR LINE, SUCH

Y\ OLLDre.-pectfuIly inform tb fordsville and vicinity tha opened aNew

AS

TIN ROOFING-,

(»uttcriii£ Sheet Iron,

Copper and Zinc,

Promptly attended to and thankfully received.

Old Copper, Lead, Brass, Pewter, Iron, Paper Rags, and Farmers Produce

TAKEN IN EXCHANGE. CIIILION JOHNSON.

Sept. 5-tf.

New Boot & Shoe

AND SEE! ESTABLISHMENT!

_____

J. C. Hartung, Proprietor.

Citizen* of Crawiat ho has recently

BOOT & SHOE

.v. /.vr #•.

toh

r,

On Main Street, immediately West of Graham Brothers' Store,

1 where ho will manufacture and keep constantly on 1 hand a fine assortment of

Ready Made Work,

—CONSISTING OK—

BOOTS & SHOES!

mado in tL/."s neatest and most durable mazuktr. Especial attention paid to

IIK3\VI:ui:N~G-.

Prices modor&te. Everybody i] respectfully invited tocive him a call. Deo. 31,1839,-tf J. C. HARTUKG.