Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 17 March 1866 — Page 2
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THE WEEKLY REVIEW W
CR AWFORDSVILLE, IND Saturday, March 17, 1866.
T3+EI Printed and Published every Snturilny iHorn'"X» »»y
A E S O W E N
Washington Street. 2d Story, I^ec's New Brick. TERMS OF SMSCWPTIOX:—$2,00 IX ADVANCE.
I A I O N
LAItCER THAN ANY I'APKR PUBLISHED IN Crnvrforl«rillc Advertisers, cull up mid examine our List of '.O'SlJBSCRmEKSi.ai
Louisville, Xew Albany & Chicago Railroad.
Time Tabic which look effect June 10th, 1SG5. GOINO 'SOUTH. Accommodation 10,50 a. m. Through freight '-M0 p. m. Express S.02 001 so SOITU. Express. 9.23 n.m. Through Freight 9.52 Accommodation £0.11 p. m.
Uood connections made with all other roads. 0. Y. MASTIN, Superintendent. June 24th, lf05.
give (SowUuscv.
As far «s heard from, tlio Democratic net gain in New Hampshire is 8J0.
The Georgia Legislature has passed resolutions indovsiug President Johnson's policv.
Edward Bates of Missouri, is out in an able letter sustaining President Johnson's veto.
The New Hampshire election has gone for the Republicans, as was expected, by about •1,000 majority.
There is a strong opposition in the Senate to the confirmation of Hon. I,. 1 Campbell a,
minister to Mcsico.
Jared Sparks, the historian and ex-presi-dent of Harvard College, died at his residence in Cambridge, Massachusetts, on Wednesday morning.
A young woman named Davis committed Buicide in Perry county, Indiana, recently. She had been deserted by the father of her child hence thejict.
A serious charge is brought against the treasury agent at ClarksviJle, Texas. JIo is accused of confiscating, for liis own use. sev
enteen hundred bales of cotton belonging to private parties/-
Tho Department of the Missouri has" been subdivided, Brigadier General Cooke commands the Department of the Platte, head
quarters at Omaha, Nebraska. Genera! Pope's headquarters remain at Fen Leavenworth.
lu the case of Dr. N'cwland, chargcd with Ihc-raurdcr of Madison Evans, at Bedford, In-
diana, on motion of the defendants counsel, a change of venue to Floyd county lias been
granted, end the trial set for tho 8th of May.
The grent fright which the Fenians recently gave our Canadian neighbors isabating. They
now believe the dreaded St. Patrick's day will pass without their throats being cut from ear
to car.
At the rcccnt election in Peru, tho Democratic candidate for mayor was elcctcd by fif
ty majority. This is a great gain. At the presidential election the Republicans carried
the city by a considerable majority.
A New York dispatch gives a Fenian statement that tho present military excitement in
Canada was originated and sustained through the direct orders of Queen Victoria, who do-
nircs to divert attention from Ireland, and to eccurc an Americau throne for Prince Alfred,
by forcing the adoption of the confederation
projcct. 2: I ."'il
A curious incident occurred the other day
ppjgi5in one of the restaurants of Chicago. A rough i«|?£ but shrewtl looking countryman seated him-
s$5t| self at a table, and having inspected the bill j^Kfiof faro, cftllod for a piece of ''Forney." Tho
waiter, who was a black of more than ordinaig^mry intelligence, disappeared grinning, and re turned in a moment with a slice of cold duck, ft?
HE Ttcpublicnn loadcvs in thla locality fire IOOUIIR very forlorn. Since the breaking up
of
'heir party and the destruction of their
,'r, household furniture, the Bureau, they ble, in tlicir dejection, "patience pittin Ate .... .r t.*n T. .A. .I
Democratic State Convention. Tin Democratic State Convention at Indianapolis, on last Thursday, was the largest delegate convention ever held in the State. The following is the ticket nominated Secretary of State, General M. D. MANSON State Auditor, CmusTIAN BADGER State Treasurer, JAMKS B. RYAN Attorney General, JOHN R. COFKROTH Superintendent of Public Instruction, R. M. CIIAPMAX. The following is a brief synopsis of the platform adopted:
ig on a
yjs monument of grief." Poor devils, they should be furnished with transportation to Africa,
VjUfy where association would be moro congenial.
V-.
1
MM "MB temporary bridge of the L. N. & C. R. R., wcr Sugar Creek, north of our city, was again swept away on lust Wednesday afternoon. The delay in crossing will be speedily remedied. Mr. MAS-TEN, tho able and energetic
SuporJatcndcnt of the road, has a largo force employed, and with favorable weather, the bridge will soon be replaced.
WS ^T HE Concerts given by the Plantation Mine'ircls and Brass Band, at McClelland Ilall, on last Wednesday and Thursday evenings, were largely attended. The performance by the different members of the Troupe were highly applauded by the audience. This Band expect to rcceivo their new silver Instruments, in a few days, when they design giving another exhibition.
A REPUBLICAN HAKMONY.—Senator Wado pronounces tho President a "traitor in heart Thad. Stevens donounccB him as a "usurper and tho New York Tribune calls him a "dictator," etc., etc. Yet these maloonteuts talk of political harmony I
HOME VOCAL CO.\CEHT.—Mr. A. C. IIoPKi.vn, who has been teaching a singing class, gives a Concort thin evening, at tlio Christian Church, for the benefit of the Sabbath School. All arc ill Titvd
The first resolution denies the right of seccsssion the second approves the reconstruction principles avowed by President Johnson's annual message solemnly condemns the action of the majority in Congress cordially endorses the veto pledges the President the earnest and disinterested support of the Indiana Democracy in all his conflicts with the fanatical Congressional majority. The third believes the sole power of Congress, over the admission of members, confined to their election returns and qualifications that it has usurped power in excluding representation to eleven States, acknowledged to be in the Union by having a voice counted in favor of the Constitutional amendment that the elected members from the Southern States are constitutionally qualified and should be immediately admitted, raid upon the refusal of Congress it is the primativc duty of the President to defend and uphold the majority of every State now in the Union, and tako cave that the laws lie faithfully executed. The fourth inflexibly opposes prohibitory and protective tarifi. The filtli douUirpg taxation and representation should go together, ana taxed. The demands equalization of bounties. The eighth pledges support regardless of party affiliation to any State or national official, guided by the principles this day avowed.
(Jovennncllt hl)lllls houl(1
...
A |-CYCiitIi tliaiik'- soldiers and
The ninth denounces conferring suffrage upon negroes in the District of Columbia. The tenth opposes the repeal of the Constitutional article prohibiting negroes and mulattoes from settling in this State. The eleventh encourages immigration. The twelth, eight, hours should be a legal day's work. The fifteenth pledges the parly to oppose all prohibitory liquor and Sunday laws. The sixteenth denounces tho expulsion of Voorhccs as a high-handed ouLrage of a profligate and unscrupulous party. asp
AT the concert of the Brass Hand and Plan
tation Minstrels, on Thursday evening. Prof.
M. II. GALKV performed on an instrument, to which he gave a name that wo cannot spell,
and all who heard him. will ncree he made fine music. He said that tho instrument was furnished by L. A. FOOTE & Co., and we know
that they have so many of thorn, that they keep them for sale. They also furnish the
Band with Violin, Banjo and Guitar strings, Violin bridges. Violin and Banjo keys, a large
stock of which can be found at" the '-Corner Book Store," and at low prices. wpwt
RAILHOAD LETTING.—The line of the Cincinnati, Crawfordsvillc and Danville railroad, between this city and Indianapolis, was let to McNair, Claflin & Co., on March 5. They tire to grade, lay track,
build bridges, cte., and place it in running
AT Orleans, Orange county, Indiana, on Saturday hist, a man named Richardson, a wagon maker, committed a rape upon his step daughter, a child twclvo years of age. lie was arrested and is now iu jail at Paoli.
W E liave received so many new goods at the "Corner Book Store," that we cannot pretend to enumerate them, and wo don't know any better way for the community to inform themselves, as to what we liavo, than to call and sec for tliemsclves, which they aro respectfully invited to do, and we have no doubt but that, we can suit all in goods and prices. Wo will take pleasu.ro in waiting upon all who may call, and try and eatisfy them that wo mean what we say. Try it.
ON Monday evening, in New York, a man named Johnlloat shot his wife in the head with a pistol. Supposing he had killed her. lie fled, but being pursued drew a pistol and shot himself, dying in a few minutes. The woman is not dangerously wounded.
The State of Maryland is about to present to Congress a claim for damages incurred by the burning of two bridges, at the battle of Monocacy, by order of Low. Wallace.
TIJK Radicals are going in heavy for wool, but they are vt^j- apt to eonie out -born.
"$*« a
UN.
qiqTHE HI
THEDfe^
*5
paring to swallow his policy, veto messajn
cabinet or by a jrnt:ral slauyhtcr of his present office-holders throii-jhoii! /he country •tee icould ihfii know for a certainty that he hits our contemporary deciders, prnrrd traitor to his party and its principles, and then would be the proper time for Republicans to wage war against, him.
Give up the offices! That, is what is troubling the party of great moral ideas.
the Infamous Holt.
order to receive the ears. According to the terms of the contract, tliev were to and this is something but it does not obcommencc the work on the 10th instant, and complete the same by the 1st of August..
Kohach's Stomach Bitters.
This very exeollent medicine has become widely known as one of the best remedies for Dypepsia and other stomach diseases that has over been offered to the public.—Austin, Ind., Argus.
The wicked, lawless tyrant, who, in his lying Munchausen report, made just before the last presidential election, for an electioneering document, assailed the Su- policy premc Court of this State for deciding what he now admits to be law. acknowledges his crime, and now follows the decision of the late Supreme Court of this State in the GRIKKIN and WILCOX case. He thus concedes the murderous course pursued by CARIUNGTON A Co., and the justice of resistance to their lawlessness,
literate the effects of the cold, damp dungeons upon those innocccnt. men who were lawlessly destroyed by confinement, in them.
Says the Philadelphia ]jrdyr Tlio .Judge Advocate General, Mr. Joseph Holt, has just decided that no authority for tho trial of a civilian by court martial can be found iu any of the artiticles of war, those articles being enacted solely for the government of the armies of the United States, and being applicable only to persons in military service. He considers it strictly legal, however, to try by military courts civilians formerly in the service for crimes committed while in the service. By this decision, tho supremacy of the civil courts, in all cases where citizens arc concerned, is acknowledged, and it would seem that the days of military trials of civilians have passed by.
Hatlier Severe.
The New York Times, in commenting on the disgraceful courso of the Tribune, deals sonic hard, though just hits, which striko all around lu Massachusetts, as in Illinois, in St. Louis as in Washington, sheets which have set themselves up as models of purity, patriotism and principle, arc endeavoring to serve the radical disunionists, and to thwart the efforts of the President by coming and circulating slanders so base that they disgrace even the papers which print them, and falsehoods so flagrant that in the end they must surely return to plague tho inventors.
BUREAU
FREEDMANS
q/\TEO
WK present to our readers this week, an illustration of the Freedman Bureau. This Bureau, as our readers are aware, was smashed into fragments not long since by Presi
dent Johnson, in tho great family quarrel and tight, now going on in the black Republi
can party. The drawers of this piece of Puritan furniture, contain all the principles and loyalty of the party. One drawer, it will be noticed, held the silver spoons stole" by Beast Butler another. labeled miscellaneous, contained luncheon of dead ducks, cod
fish balls. New England ruin, wooden nut megs, dead nigger babies, test oaths, orders for suppressing ainl ilestroving Democratic papers, proclamations suspending Uabeat C'cir-'j® pus, orders for kidnapping and imprisoning men charged with being Democrats, brassfS knucks and awls used by the party, alias. Know Nothinirs. in lM-l
-ii,
knocking down peaceable citizens at the polls, wig and false curls worn by Mrs. Swiss-"®*-no..., vflirunrs and heel and shin scrapings of Fred. Douglas, scholarship in Wu-fr® bash College, cotton stealing ,o„dme»u
S
HE Republicans, findinir they cannot Personal inscription of President Johnbully or control the President, are pre
for stabbinir and®
changing the Constitution and ad
dress of Sumner, Garrison and ade, inciting the assii.-c-...^.President Jo!ni«on The destruction of the Bureau has caused great lamentation in Israel. Cotton placemen, adulterous war preachers, with their spies, pimps and unclean dogs, mourn"' and refuse to be comforted.
son by a Radical.
lion. O N A W IN the editor of
speech and all. rather than give up the jtlie Worcester ^Massachusetts) S'/"/ is a jj' 11!''( "'1' offices. They make horrible faces, though member
,,
Congress and heard Presi-
in swallowing the dose, as witness the jdent .J O N S O N S famous twenty-second-of-following from the Chicago Journal: I February speech, lie is an intense liadiWe must still counsel Republicans to |cal, but describes the •••President as fj!-1 'V iroiu the ^South, but patience. moderation, and prudence. Hows Should the President abandon the Republican party, by placing Democrats in his
Ul 10
3
CONFIRMATION. After^ long consulta- land are either too lazy to cultivate it, or tion, the Vppointnicnt of Mr. Benedict, igivc their right aud title for enough rice editor of the Cleveland Herald as post- and molasses to keep them from starvamaster of that city, in place of the editor tion. The poor, ignorant and indolont of tho Leader, (radical), has been con- are as much the slaves of the intelligent finned by the United States Senate, and industrious as thev were of the whites There is now some hope of I ingle before 'Mnspn Linkum mafic them free
Had he a Cabinet as able and
desperate, the dire results which the near futtin: would brinir could hardly bte
Slaves Still. $}
A correspondent, to the Chicago"./^nal, (Ilep.) writing from Charleston, South Carolina, under date of the 28th ult., thus speaks of the negroes on the Sea Islands:
"There is much complaint among the better class of frcedmcn ou the islauds that they are overwhelmed with 'lazy niggers' from the up-country. Despite of military orders, they flock there in great numbers, atu' the mortality is frightful. Many of those who have been allotted
A Warning...
IFrom the Washington National Intelligonoor.] Wo solemnly warn the people. Men in Congress—both artful, able and olo-' quenfc, with loyalty on their lips and freedom as their watchword—are forging chains for the freemen of the North.
The undoubted evidence of a projcct for virtually subverting free government in the United States, under the pretense of perfecting it—a p.-ojeet for stripping all proper franchise of everything but the name, under the pretense of extending it to the negroes—admonishes all of us to hasten to hear whatever may expose the secret motives, and thus frustrate the abominable designs of a tyrauical few who, in the intoxication of power, dare to compass the annihilation of the sovereignty of the people.
There is such a purpose on foot. There is no doubt of it. The scheme is to add to their respective support, at their Northern homes, thesupport of the whole South through the negroes—this is to be effected by treating as disloyal all who withhold their applause. They count upon the sympathies of modern civilization, for all would be done in the great name of freedom, philanthropy, protection and progress. The system once established, no human power could stand before it, until, in the course of ages, it should yield to some popular frenzy like the
French revolution. Such a political monopoly would back its intolerance of party opposition by the military arm, and to prevent all disaffection there, the soldiery would be negroes. The doctrine at the bottom of all this is a
deliberate repudiation by the class of
1
humbug. Said one the other night:
strongest wills must govern, and it is only a question whose arc the strongest."
Soldiers of the Union! is this what you
Ho tovrililr ill n,i.,in-i /I 1 if I 1 1 tniu tocurc the worst eases of DyspcpMa a teaspoonv-
e^'iCft. 11(1 withal most gro and refugee elections have yet been
yudtctivcly cool. A tlmrougly-paced carried on. It is obvious that the fact I
demagogue, his inconsequential Ionic, his'makes no practical difference. But it is I excellent romody foranydiieaso ofthoBtomaeh or egotism, hit. repetitions, his thorough be- I very necessary to the scheme that the for- bowels. lief in himself, and hi^ pojiuhnit.y, tre till mality should hereafter be regularly gone elements of strength when he faces such through with, and that there should bo a ^assemblages as were arrayed about him ineaiiiTof coercin iyesterday. Andrew Johnson jman how able. I never realized till yesjterday. All results are involved in his
the Executive to en-
is an able force the requisite proscription from time to tituc. Hence the "revolutionary bills, gotten up under pretense of meeting tho obvious occasion for some provisional aud temporary regulative machinery whereby
named "w. stand on the verge ofito conserve the freedom of the negro unficice stiife, to meet which tliu country should gather its strength and gird up its loins, his man is no weak Buchanan, and he mean* to crush Congress or bo crushed. "Mr. Johnson is a man of stalwart mold, Just above middle stature, he is so broad shouldered, firm-set and deepchested as almost, to seem below it. Ho has a large head. It is a compact home for his fiery will and brain. His face is marked strong oval outline, powerful undcr-jaw well-defined but rather sharp chin a wide, straight mouth, full, flexible lips skin coai.se in texture but firm, complexion swarthy, hair coarse black, streaked with gray, a uose small at the root, but full and large at the nostrils, which expand and lift as he speaks, broad, roomy forehead, beetling bushy eyebrows, beneath which arc a pair of the coldest hazel gray eyes 1 ever saw iu a human head. These arc the outlines of Andrew Johnson. '•His voice is clear, harsh, powerful and penetrating. "When he seems speaking with most excitement, ho is evidently the coolest man in tho world. I watched him with the awakened interest of one who felt the magnitude of the crisis the speaking was creating, and am convinced that all lie said was weighed and measured, and meant to bring about ccrtain results." .C." St.fo+y
til the normal relations of Society and the Slates to the Federal Government shall have had time to settle but containing. in elaborate ambiguities and novel aud alarming provisions, a virtual repeal of the Constitution of the United States. Without amendments which cut off' these odious features, the people have in his record a sufficient assurance that the President will not approve such bills. Will they force this revolutionary legislation? That answer depends on the people. The appropriation bills arc yet to act on. The financial legislation, so urgently necessary, fns scarcely been begun. A hundred forms in which the cooperation of Congress is necessary to the Executive are a in the control of the former. The ii.inic.nsc sta! of the North in the commercial r'xl financial legislation of 'his session is totally ncglcctcd.
The North, sailing under the public debt aud unsettled revenue system, is practically without representation iu Congress. Southern negroes arc seemingly the only constituency.
Wo have said we solemnly warn the people. We tell them a crisis is coming which can be forcfendcd by their simply taking heed and lifting their mightyvoice of command in support of the Union.
Let meetings",' therefore, be held all over the North and West, with an indignant disregard of party and party names, to shout iuto the ears of recrcaut Representatives aud proclaim to the world their sense of the inestimable sanctity of civil supremacy, their devotion to the grand old Union for which they have suffered so much, and their readiness to sustain the Chief Magistrate iu firmly and faithfully fulfilling the lofty trust to which the people have sworn him. against the infernal plot of a revolutionary cabal.
The Rhode Island Legislature has passed a bill prohibiting the exclusion of children from any public school on account of color or race. The law goes into effect on the loth of May next.
THE Radicals don't like the Presidents speech. The speech gives some evidence that tlio President doesn't like them
The Troy Whig, a Republican concern, thus predicts the fate of its party Pennsylvania, already divided in her Union congressional vote, the Keystone of the Republican arch, will fall from her high political state, as the fabric crumbles! New-York, that swarmed with copperheads and traitors even during the war, with her congressional counsels now divided, will also pass from the control not only of the Radical, but of the Conservative Union men of the State. Connecticut will follow suit. Itwillboapolitical miraclc eveiiTf'li'ef p'tA'ty Status'is not changed at the ensuing April election. Thus, one
!by»
I'.-n.schcs., like the thirty-t\rants youngest dauelitW of Mra. MAUY BELL. Athens, and keen tin a perpetual nnnoritv .... ,.
cp up a perpetual majority
in all the branches of the Government, by proscribing all opposition as disloyal, and inlbreing the discrimination with a negro army. Once fairly established, only a successful revolution could overthrow it. But to imitate it involves certeps. and. we anxiously pc, an insuperable obstacle. B.ut this dopeml- upon the people. ||P
In the first place, no action is to be laken on the claims of individual members
or the fir^t time, I stood near and the rights of negroes and refusrees of the looked closely on the man. In the course South arc alleged to be tho principal bu- I of tin eventful life I have seen many men jsiness of the session. Therefore this
that whole section is excluded simply by A. V.", KMMOV, Sec'Y. non-action. This is to continue. But! Nt.ir.-h IO, IHOS.
ot v. illtul power aud force, but never be- Congress may be said to profess to com- use Coi.'s Cougli l!al=aia tocurc it. It will do it every fore have 1 looked on one bo thoroughly promise a loyal representation from the!timeembodying the evil spirit of revolution. South, or indeed to be little else than a It is alio important that our readers should It will not rln fn AT.- T.^l......... ».. .1 .i .i I know that Coe.s Dypopsia Cure is reliable, and eor-
unaeiiate AJr. .Johnson. legislature for the houth. though no lie-:. ,.
"one, 4lie States that
made up that noble cohort that marshaled otir hosts to victory and led our country to glory will pass to the side of the opposition and that grand Union party which saved the cause of free govern- i. nient to mankind, will fade "Like tho baselossfabric of a dream,-
Ami leave uot a wreck behind The Union party will be a myth—an inanimate thing laid away in the inausoleum of the past—and its rare accomplishments will be all of the living that reKxiies to us. The Union leaders who are invoking this storm will go down be & fore its fury, and the places that knew them once will kuow them no more forever. This is the entertainment to which the passionate zealots—the wranglers about, details—the strioklers for minntiiU' —invite us. They ask the Union party to dig its political grave! Is there any genuine loyal man—whose ^eart was ever" inspired by devotiou to Liberty and" ,'
Union—who wants to sit at such a grim
r(..)S,?
usurpers in question of the dogma of the! wit.it i,„ in
so, room for the lunatic
.1 1 here is no doubt but that the (Win/?
sovereignty ot the people, and their na-j hitual 'ami contemptuous declaration in ^correct touching the disbandmcnt and private conversation that self govern-| destruction of its party, but it need have, nient is a failure, and popular suffrage a
no
l,J
frars of the Union. That will bo,
he L:UXH|
or
jj,.
ic
Union Democracy.
Married!
At
IBIIL'ht for? \,\\* «•*, ).\ cruuity, Ky., bv Kev .Mr. KNH.IIT, of. Shcl'J he nencrnl plan", as we have Said, of ivviH. Kv„ nt il clock, A. M., Monday,, this high-handed faction, is to enthrone l'-». lSoii, Captain C11ABL1K It. KKL-- ... OGCt. of Ins city, to Miss fit SI I-.BLLI ,.
u,,. i.-idos re«idei«ee. Simpsonville, Shcl-"
The happy couple will please nccept.- tllo thanks of this'office for the feast of dclicn-
cies accompanying the above notice. A long and happy life to you and yours, Cn.vF.i.ii:!
SPECIAL NOTICES.
Agricultural Meeting."
The members of the Montgomery Cnunty ARricnltnrnl Society are lieroby notified to meet *t the Court House in Crawfordsville, on Saturday, April Tth at 2 t'clock. 1'. M.. for the purpose of eleetins officers and Directors for said Society the ensuing jroariS
JOHN W. BL.Vlit, I'rca't. i-j
KEI' your feet dry, wear Rood shoes, kocj, them well stuffed with oil, and well mended, and then if
you arc unfortunate enough to tjot a Cough or Cold.
rrv
fllUlUyof it
to
will enabio themosteoufirmdyspeptic
anythinclie chooses without trouble, It is an
Take Notice.
Having rctircjl'rom tho dry-goods trade, and wishing to close up our business, wo respectfully .request nil our old patrons, who are indebted to us by cithor note or liook account, to call and make Hottlemcnl immediately. We mean what wo say. and say nlitU we moan so come aloiuj, Tho book? and accounts will bo found for a season at the old stand. mar3'GG3te. WM. ALLLN A. BRO.
Lyoii's Periodical Drops!
THE GREAT FEMALE REMEDY FOR IRREGULARITIES.
Theso Dropi aro a scientifically compound fluid preparation, and bolter than any I'ills, Powders or Nostrums. Beint liquid, their action is direct and positive, rondering tlioni a reliable, speedy and ccrtain specific tor the euro of all obstructions and suppressions of nature. Tlicir popularity is indicated by the fact that over 100,000 bottles arc annually sold nndconsumed by the ladies of tho United Status, every one of whom speak in the strongest torms of praise of their great merits, They nre rapidly taking the placo of every other Female Remedy, and aroconsidered by all who know aught of them, as tho surest, 6afcst, and most infallible preporation In th» world, for tho euro of all fomalo complaints, tho removal or all nbstruol ions of noturo, and tho pronto-1 tion of health, regularity and strength. Explicit directions slating when tlioy may bo used.and explaining when and why they should not, nor could notba used without producing cffcots contrary to nature's choscn laws, will bo found'carefully folded around, it it at 1 O N LYON, without which nono are gonuino.
Prepared by Dr. JOHN L. LvON, 195 Cbapol Street. New Haven, Conn., who can bo consulted either personally, or by mail, (enclosing stump.) concorning all privato diseases and feinalo wcaknoMai. tsb-
Price $1,30 por bottle. Sold by Druggists cvorywhore'
Its general introduction into tho army will nam the lives of thousands of our soldiers. OUISVILLE, I VY., June 3, 1S63.
We, the undersigned, havo seen tho good effocts produced by tho uso of Ur. .John Bull's CJcdron Bitter's in ensos of general debility and prostration of the system, and beliove itsgonoral uso would prevent disease and relievo much suffering. Among our soldiers, particulnrly would this bo tho oaso, ospccially those who arc exposed to miasmatic influences in the Southern olimate.
Major Philip Speed, Collector Internal Rcvenuo 3d District, Kentucky. Chnrlos 1J. Cotton, Collector of tho Port of .Louisville, Kentucky.
Col. H. Dout. Provost Marshal of Kv. Itov. D. P. Henderson, Secretary Sanitary Com-" mission,
Harney, l!ughos& Co., l'ublishors Democrat. Oen. P. Duron. Proprietor Louisville Anzeiger. Hughes A 1'iirkhili. Wholesale Dry Goods dealers, Main Street, Louisville. Ky.
Davis. (.JreenA Co.. Wholesale dealers. Main stroct Louisville.
Hart it iMnpothcr, Lithographer, corner Market nnd Third streets. Louisville, Kv.
Julias Winter. Clothing Morchant. corner Third cc Mnrket streets, Louisville. Ky.
Captain S. F. Ilildreth, of steamer Maj. Andem.n, Major L. T. Thruston. Paymaster United States Army,
C. it. Mctcnlf, National Hotel, Louisville. Col. Jos»c Bayless,4th Ky. Cavalry. (Icorgo I). Prentice, Louisville Journal. Sold Wholesale anil Retail by U.J. HINFOItl), Washington Stroet. Crawfordsvillc. Iud. Who also sell Bull's S.irispurilla Hull's Worm Destroyer Smith's Tonic Syrup. Ksiuouiber. K. J. Wnford't Drus Storo. inur-1"
tP VA\ 18
1
C. (i. CLAKC 4 CO
lanSTyGCsn. Gen'l Agontsfor U. S.and Canada*.
Let those who liavo doubted tho virtues of Bull'* Cedron Bitters, if nny suoh there be, read tlic'followingcertificates from gentlemen well known in this community,nnd doubt no more.
If
aft
