Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 5 May 1866 — Page 1
NEW SERIES—VOL. XVII,
BUSINESS CARDS. Real Estate Agency!
^PUE nndersignod will soil or buj Roal Kstato.— Any person having Farms or Town Lots for vale Will do wall to Icare them with us.
For Sale!
4 or 4 Good Farmi, 93 Town Lota. {3 Rwiduncos. 1 Brick Store Room. ft Briek Residency, with 19neroi ground ftUocU•1. WEBSTER, MAY A KKENKY.
Enquiro at the Reoordcr'a Office. (do«93'G5.
DR. J. W. BAIRD,
Physician and Surgeon!
UikTine permanently located in
A W O S I E offers his services to the community. OPFICK-Over tho fiatiohal Bank, and residence on Oollogo street. (marl0'66.)
Sl.SOO
PER YEAR! Wo want ajtent3 everywhere to FOU our
UIPROVBD $20 Snwinc
IPROVBD
$20
Snwinc Machines. Three new kinds.
Under and ntper feed. Warranted five years.— Abovp salary or laree comnliRsions paid. The ONI.Y fafacninos sold in the United States for lens than $40, 1rliich aro I.ICESSED
Wn.sos,
GPI'LLY
HOWE, WIIF.RI.ER A
ROVER
A BAKER,SBY
frbtusit.
INOKH Co., AND
ALL
HACII-
other oheap machines are INFIUNOE-
jfH.vfaand the SELi.ERor USGKaro I.IABI.ETO AHIIEST, H.vt!. AND IMPRISONMENT. Circulars FUER. Address, or call upon Sh-'W
A
Clark, Hiddcforrt, Minn
minn, JM'.tm nn Ut ••Mill1'.
iD A A O I I A iN S or CIP *_/y^ SIX ENTinELY NEW AUTICLKS. just Ollt.
A l«i k*A« A fl A 1i 1? V* ^1).. f!
Vddresa 0. laine.
OAKEY
City Uuildin: Iiiddeford, dee2.T05-2tglirey.
Pension, Bounty, Back Pay,
Commutations of Rations for Soldiers who '. fidve been Prisoners of TFar and Prize Money also, Claims for Horses and
Other Property lost in the Service, and in fact every species of Ciaiins Against the Government Collected Willi Promptness ana Dispatch bi
ff «. JP. BRITTOJY, Attorney,
AXD
BflVERNMENTCLAIM AGENT:1
@S" Office in Washington nail Building, over Simpson's Grocery Store, Cratofordsville.*lS&
Xi
Under ihc present LCLJOS^ 'Soldiers and Soldiers Ileirs are entitled as follows 1st. When a soldier has died from any cause in the ncrvioo of tho United States, gincc the 13th c.f April 1BG1. leaving a widow, she is entitled to a pension ot $8 per month also a bouniy of from $75 to *402, he lidos all arrcarsof pay. •2(1. If tho soldier loft no widow, aw children under 16 year* of 03© aro entitled to tuc pQUSiOQ* baok pay. and bounty. .. 3d. If tho soldier left no widow, child or children, than tfie.father is entitled to tho bounty and back «ay. hirt no ponslon. 4th. if the soldier left no widow, child or father, or if the father has abandoned the support of the family, tho mother is entitled to the back pay and bounty, and. if she was dependent in whole or in part.on hor eon for support, to a pension also* 5th. If tho soldier left none of the above heir*, then the brothers and sisters aro enUtlcd to ^ac. back pay and bounty.
To 'Discharged Soldiers: 1st. When a soldier discharged by reason of the oxiiirn-tion of his term of eervico. ho is entitled to All arrears of pay and the balance of _the bounty •promised to him after deducting tho installments
2*d.' Soldiers discharged for wounds rocoivcd in (.INK
oy
DUTY aro entitled to a nouKTY.
3d. Soldiers discharged by reason of disease contracted in the service, or wounds received, which iiUll disable them, aro ontitled to a TENSION in addition TO TIIB ABOVE.
IO'Bva. late act of Conijross every soldier who thall havo lo«t both hands, or both feet or who •hall havo lost ono hand and ono foot in tho service, •ball be entitled to a pension of $20 per month.
Officers returns to Cbier of Ordnance, burgeon GenorgJ and Quarter-Master General inadc lip, and Certificates ol' Non-Indobtedness, obtained.
Vt*8lUMonsble and 110 Charge In Any Case tinlww Successful. SQf Special attention given also to the eettlement of Decedent*' Estates, and other Legal business. ulyB'63. W. P. BBITTVN.
OINTMENT
Koliablo
BINFORD
Crawfordsville
'".febli'M.
N E W I
MOFPETr & BOOE,
Jii"* EMPIRE BLOCK, So. i,
CRAWFORDSVILLE, IND
•trcu.-it-j :h j»i» PBALZRB IN FUSE
MM
AND
Painte, OIIB, Dyestuffs, Perfumery, PaDcy Articles Pure Wines and Brandies,
Fht Medibal Purposes.
F»t«rit Medloines, Also, Lamps, Glassware, Letter. Cap. and ^ote Paper, Pons. Pencils, and Ink,
nr
PRESCRIM* TlOSrS rO»refiilly prepared an.d promptly.attended to. W* WWTP^P»»«GEFROIBTB(»,PN^IEINJGSD+
R, I. IcGRlTII 1 Co., MACHINISTS,
Manufacturers of Corn Shellcrs, ITorse Powers, Drag Sawa, Sugar Mills, Sugar Kettles, Castings, Brass Castings and Machinery of every description.
a E a
Can tupi out Repair Work in a few hours. Shop OB Sc Nt.,sontb of Bramble Ilonse, LaFayette, Ind. raarSlwtltyw.'SpSblOJ.
U. K. DUNKEftSON & CO.,
Forwarding and Coramission
M13ROETA.ISrTS,
SPECIAL
RAIL ROAD AND STEAMBOAT AGENTS, AND Proprietors of Mammoth J) harj Boat,
Wew Albany, Indiana.
dcc30.lB6SwcC-m
E. J. BINFORD,
I 1 S AT THE OI.P BTANP OF HEXIIY OTT.
11 est Side of Court House Square, CRAWFORDSVILLE, INDIANA.
Cnwfordsvyie Meat MarkeJ
THE undersigned havhi? purchased tlie mnnt stand formerly owned by S. J. Chill, would
respectfully inlortn tho citizens of (Jrmv-fords'-ille. that they intend keepinR a first-elu: tabli.ihmont, where tho very best quality i.!'
BEEF, VEAL & MUTTON,
A splendid article of Fresh Lard, Sausage Moat, bmoked and i'icklcd Meat?, Ac., can. at all times, be found and at tho lowest cash priccs.
ITPTho highost prices paid for fat cattle. mar3'G0.wtf.
F. I!.
GUTUUIE
Re^peitfully
A IJKOTIIICR.
Physician and Snrcreon.
O
DK. i^7. J7~BOI?SEY
EE-ARD W A. 33
Is
to $20,
Pullers
Drag Saws
variety
of
u.
Immense Quantities.1
D. BARTER, of the firm of Campbell, Galey & Harter, having just returned from making extensive purchases of Foreign and Domestic Hardware, Cutlery, &c., all of which being selected with greatest care and at greatly reduced prices, we feel confident we can offer inducements to purchasers that can not be found elsewhere. Our stock is
FULL AND COMPLETE
in every department, comprising in part, Forks, Spadeg, Shdves and Hoes
of every variety,
Rakes, Mattocks, Traces, Hames, Iron Nails, Glass, Sash, Putty, Oils and Paints of best quality and at lowesi prices.
Tools
of all kinds, Boring Machines, Oil Cloths
for table and floor,
Hand and Cut Saws, Table and Pocket Cutlery,
the largest stock and at the lowest prices in town, also, Spoons and Rogers Plated "Ware,
ways warranted,) also,
(al
One
Plows and Breaking Plows
Horse
froin $14
few first rate
for Supervisors
Road Plows
and others. Also,
the exclusive agents for
Stump
and
Jews Harps,
and
Fish Hooks,
Reapers and Corn PoppersAlso now on hand for the Spring trade the great 2 Horse Illinois Corn Planter and Riding Plows,
-together-with~an endless
Shelf Goods and
House
Trimmings. Having paid
CASH
for jvery dollars worth bought, we propose tQ sell them .on same tern? -and alurays as low as the same can be had"at Lafayette or Indianapolis, or any other Western Seaport,
PUkiM call arid see before, buying else where, no troubU to Sficno or Sell Good*.
Campbell, Galey & Harter.
Nfr. T, 0ciiillW«l BffW, ftf
DEMOCRATIC AT AM, TIMJ& AINJ*-UNDER ALLCl ItOUM'STANCSS. fFftr.
The Restoration'hi His Friends and Home' of L. P. Milltgan WM The Fort Wayne Democrat 18, 18G6, says-
Wherl thescHlencc of death, which the brutal mob of shoulder strapped thieves had passed upon him and others, became knownj the Colonel, realised that Justice, Mercy and law had been suspended in the courts of this country, made all his preparations for death. Having made such disposition of his property and business as he was enabled to do, he confided his mortal remains, after his assasination should occur, to the custody of five of his old neighbors and whom he named, with a request to convey them to IIuutington for interment. The names of these friends were G. It. Corlcw, Charles II. Lewis, John Zeigler, John Roach and Samuel F. Day. Tho interposition of the Executive, commuting the sentence of assasination to imprisonment for life in the Ohio Penitentiary, relieved these gentlemen of their sad duty,' and of yesterday it was their privilege to meet their old and yet living friend at Wubush, and accompany him to the home from which on a night in October, 1864, he had, although then an invalid, been kidnapped by a drunken mob.
The ttaiu containing the Colonel and his large party of friends, reached the Station at the time it was due. Here the thousands were waiting: to «xtnT»l to their deeply wvoug and honored fellow-citizen their welcome and such a welcome we never have, and never expect to witnbsft'again Words cannot describe it. Old friends gathered and pressed around him, seeking to grasp a hand where that was practicable and where that effort failed, his arms and even garments were pressed. He was finally borne through the multitude to the western, or front entrance of the I Court House, a few rods distant from the.
5
tendors his services to tho citizens of
Crawfordsvillo and vicinity, in all the branches of his profession. OPrlCI! ami Rctiiilcticc on Main street, we3t of Graham's corner. .1 inn K^C-in.S.
LEE & NEW GROCERY STORE.
npnrs estiiblishmentis now s'oeked with alarge asJL sorltnent of plain and fancy Groceries: which will be sold fo cash or produce. Farmers of Montgomery couuiv call in aud ^'Xllmille our slock before purchnselsewliere. L)e 3'iitt'.
FRES1I ARRIVAL? i*4 «».-»•
'Iwi:+ OF
Station, and passed through to the high front on the eastern entrance, where thousands of faces were eagerly bent upon the tall figure which soon appeared, and loomed far above those by \fhom he was surrounded. When his manly, graceful, but emaciated form, upon whose features it seemed that every "god had set his zeal to give the world assurance of A MAN" became recognized, as it was by all who had met him before and instinctively, by those who had not, they would have made the wclkinring but the hearts of all were too full to give utterance to any voice, either of joy or of sorrow.
For a moment all was hitslied. The cannon—the bands—all the ostentatious agencics which had been previously arranged to give eclat to the occasion, became silent^ The one' thought, that before theitt stood the man, an honored and beloved c-itizcn, who had suffered at the hands of a tyranny such as would have been a reproach to the worst age «nd the lowest civilization of any country, and whose bodily sufferings were traced in the deep lines of his manly and pale features, caused feelings of grief and indignation too deep for expression.
After a brief pause, however. Hon. J. It. Coffroth, in a few well-chosen and terse remarks, formally introduced Col. jlilligith, when the Mayor, Win. C. Koclier, Esq., addressed the Colonel as follows:
Col. Milligan: Iu behalf of your fellow citizens of Huntington, and I may say, in behalf of this large assembly of people, collected together from tho surrounding country, I bid you a welcome once more to your home, to mingle with your family aud these people who have now so long, and so well known you, and who have long since looked upon you as :i man of eminent legal ability, a statesman and one who has ever been true to the Constitution and love of his country.
On the 4th day of October, 1864 while at home surrounded by the family you loved, lying prostrate upon a bed of affliction, at ihc dttVk.'hour of midnight you were ruthlessly dragged away from family and friends and conveyed to a political Bastile, where you was confined for months, without any accusation made against yon.
Charges were then preferred for what? Treason! Treason to what? Treason not against the Government, but that you did not support an Administration whose princinles were not in accordance with the plain and broad teachings of the Constitution'of your country.
Tried by a mock court, principally composed of drunkards—men who were not familiar with the first principles of law, you were condemned to be hanged until you were dead, dead.
Through ihe influence of, friends, your sentence was commuted to imprisonment for life. You were conveyed in irons to the.O.hio. Penitentiary where for a'lo'ng iimo you, without la\v, 6ccnp'ied a Coll dedicated alone to felons.
Your case was brought before the Supreme Court of the Uoited •State -After long »od lahbriouB ar^HndiitB of the epft'rttfiiC ccucrel. of tl$
ORAWFORDSVIIiLS, MONTGOMERY COUNTY, mi)lA.MA, MAY 6, 1886.
of April
On yesterday it having been previously announced that Col. Milligaii, who had
beeU released from his illegal imprisonment on Tuesday last, would return to his home by the Wabash train, which would reach Iluntington from the West at 10:30 A, M. An immense crowd of friends, ladies and gentlemen, from the town and neighbprhpodj assembled to welcome him upou the arrival of the train.
"'trj'V A Rcpu1)lfea'n' court decided that you J^ad been.illegally tried and illegally condemned* and sentenced. ?To-day your fellow citizens at home and all good citizens thoughout the laud look upon youi arrest aud imprisonment
as an outrage upon American liberty a dark spot upon, the pages of American history.
You comc home to-day. honored, beloved. You conie to enjoy the society of friends and neighbors. You come to obey the Constitution and laws, as you have done during your entire life. This large assembly of your felloTr* citizens bear me witness to this fact.
While they look upon you, to-day, their hearts' are filled with emotions of joy that you are oncc more among them enjoying your liberty and the society of family and friends.
They know that your actions and your sentiments in the past, \Vill be a guarantee for the future.- Therefore they houor and trust you. or and trust you.
In their behalf, again I say, thricc welcome, Col. Milligan. To which Colonel Milligan responded:
Mr. Mayor: Friends and Neighbois —and such I know you aro. Did inv sense of propriety call for an extended response to so imposing a reception, I have neither the physical or mental ability to give it —but overcome by the spontaneous enthusiasm of the occasion— the acclamations of gladness that greet me—the tears of joy that flow from the thousands around me, fill my bosom with emotions that have no utterance, and 1 can only thank you for so proud a testimonial. I prize it because it comes from you my neighbors, with whom I have spent the best energies of my life, and from whom I never concealed t-l»o moot soorot a?pi.rajlipn .of my ^Jac.art. I value it the more, because it is not the added pageant of. a giddy multitude tendered to a great name, whose success may have lent dignityTo crime" but It is the untutored expression of your convictions that I have never wronged my country or fellow man—nor did those who clamored ioudest for my oppression, evei- suspect me bf any wrong. I thank you and accept It as an approval of my life as a citizen and neighbor, and a proof that it is not ,'the acts^or words of others that can degrade a man, but that each must stand upon the basis of his own manhood. What revolutions in grovernment of society have intervened since my seclusion I know not, but I am and always nave been opposed to revolutions, believing that seldom if ever have, their fruits equalled- their cost in treasure, blood, and moral retrogatioft: I thank you, friends and
neighbors, for this glowing
tribute of esteem, aud I would be the see" one hop'e of modification more happy recipient if I was sure that through the ordeal which I have just passed my deportment was worthy of so flattering a token.
Your kindness has imposed upon me obligations that I will never be able to discharge, and must remain unrequitted, but to live amoug you and commingle, as heretofore, our efforts for the promotion of the interests of our country and the happiness of our race, is the highest ambition of my heart. My friends I must leavo you. There is one I havo not seen yet, who has wept most for ray misfortunes, but I hope and trust will never have occasion to blush for my name whose claims to iny presence I cannot resist.
Thanking you again, please excilse any further remarks. ,, u,
Tlic Irrepressible Nigger.
Sincc passage of the Civil Rights bill, the African population are beginning to assume entirely too much importance. In almost every exchange we noticc accounts of the manner in which negroes are conducting themselves under their newly acquired civil rights. Tho other day, in New York, a party of five of them walked into a first class restaurant, on Broadway, complacently set themselves down to a table with white people, and gave orders in an imperious tone, appealing to the provisions of the Civil Rights bill to protect them against cjectmcnt. In a town in this State, the other day, a negro walked into a barber's shop, and demanded of a white barber that he should be shaved, and upon refusal the darkey drew a knife, thvbatcning the life of the barber. This is only the begining. The negro will attempt to crowd himself into churches, theatres, and all other places of resort, and if liis conduct is demurred to, will appeal to' his protecting ocgis—the
Civil Rights bill. This game won't win. Congress may make the African an equal of the white man before the law, but it. cannot do so socially, and the darkies must learn that they will not be tolerated except iii'thc condition which nature designed thetn.: When be commences-put-ting on airs, he will have to' be reconstructed, and that, too, in a most summary manner... Public opinion will regu-late-the-dazkey^ and keep him in that inferior station to which he belongs.—Indianapolis Herald.
if
..
A-' gentleman who has traveled through Pennsylvania, Ohio, Indiana, and I1Mnoi^^lgys ,that in .fill wheat, crop ie -a- failur«mn '»'&•
A Witi.Tt-ooo8K CttAPK.—Judgc Ghiy{$
r:nuD
0
.-.ib 10
evJli iTisr?
-RWCJ
Paritanlsmnnd Sunday.
The Puritauiam of Massachusetts, has brolfcn out on the surface liktf th« smallpox, since the wardias ceased to afford tho pious and philanthropic of that region an opportunity to display the divinity that is constantly stirring their ''innards." It is now wOffcing on the Sunday line. Apothecaries must sell no soda-.water on .Sunday. Oysters unci other saloons are forbidden to sell a glas.s of ale on that day. Hotel-keepers arc fined if they let their guests have a glass of wiue. Cigars must not be smoked on the streets. The public library must not be opened. Beer gardens must sell neither lager nor cake. The Boston Post suggests that but one thing is wanted to complete the inventory compel the people to go to meeting three times each Sunday under fear of suffering the penalty .of .some statute for church tenancy or to stay within doors altogether between the Sunday church aerviues or to take out a license to attend only moral exhibitions of an approved theatrical company or to make a pub-
JT::
lie manifest to their losses and gains, their jn,cu' operation. Tho call for the mistakes and their follies every Saturday Convention ,has been-signed by railroad officers in all parts of theJ country, and the chief officers of railroad^'in the
afteruoou, in order to furnish a municipal nude) that will make all healthy business impossible, and elevate hypocrisy to. the rank of standard virtues.
The suggestion of the Post certainly merits the serious consideration of the Puritans. They should put the thing through.fully and completely while about
Even Ills Couutcnance Scarcs Them. The Radicals watch, with deep solicitude, not only the acts and speeches of President Johnson, but also his very looks. The Washington correspondent (who is a member of Congress) of the Worcester (Mass.) Spy heard the President make his speech to the soldiers aud sailors ou the occasion of their recent serenade, and speaks of the "bitter, malignant expression of his face," and of "his baffled, worried look." The"Radical, as he watched the President's countenance, became evidently much concerned.for the future of "the Govornment," as he immediately sounded .the following bugle-note of warning: "So far as one can read from such a facc as that Of Andrevv Johnson, I fail to in his determination to carry- his purpose at all hazards. In place of this it seems to wear an expression of recklessness. It will yet be seen that Andrew Johnson, President Johnson of these United States, will throw himself in dosperation against the national locomotive. He will do something, in the attempt to carry out his views and policy, which will startle the nation as did the signal gun at Simpler."
Mr. Johnson must manage that face of his better hereafter, for the wrath of his countenance is to much for Radical
''Tcs- -U ,,,
COLONEL FORNEY is turning his doublebarreled gun upon Secretary Seward. He says, in connection with the announcement of a third party movement in Pennsylvania: "Mr. Seward's dream is the Presidency. He cxpects when the work of shame has been accomplished, that tho. congenial organizations defeated by our armies in the South and our people at the ballot-boxes in the North, will discard Johuson and take him up as their candidate I There have been hallucinations before, but none so forlorn as this and yet those who know Mr. Seward insist that some such glamour has mystified him." tlf 4% mfW'v"COLORED MEN EXCLUDED
TON
The important question arises, under this state of facts, whether the State of Massachusetts is entitled to fepresentatio'n in Congress, when such: outrageous conduct is tolerated in Boston 9 A
The attention of the mistre'ss of a famr ily was lately called to the fact that a little colored girl was constantly seen lying on the grass-plat, with her face turned up to the sun. UponTfeing'questioned why she assumed that posture, she ahswered:
Why, inissiR always Tays dc tings dn'$c grass what she- wants to make white/ want get white too."
T11 B.Strail^rXif-MifccidnacJLre now open. -The propellor...Montgomery, (ptain Miller, parsed- through on her way 4ip, on the arriving Chicago on .c% ittzi-c\
Whole: TOMSER 1214
-i
Congress' Plan of Rostoratloor— The fcj&mmitfiee" br^Flffeot^iiave at. length ehbemrtfio tbeir programuftE for tii restored Union, and Ivil 1'-probably*"stffc-mit it.to Congress, whosojviews,it^ is supposed to substantially: ie'pTQsenti. -. .The propositions are I.-' No discrimination 1 socially or politically against "niggers or whites. 2. All niggers to ^vote after
July 4, 1876. 8. No representation for niggers until that date., '4. Southern States to be admitted to Congress by-siSb-scribing to these terms, provided their representatives take the telt tath" prtscribed by Congress. The -Co'minittee recommend that thfe Rump Co&gi^&s'.exclude from its balls until JulyjVJ1876, all Southern members and Cabinet officers wlio abandoned their pdsts to tako part iu the rebellion. Tliis infamous plan has been-laid before the President,and it is asserted that, .he disapproves aftmost every section of it.
RAILROAD CONVENTION.—ONLTLIE^TH' of July next, a geiieral "Co"nvenEiiTn'orair the Railroad PresiHSnls, Oflrifef'Engineers, and General Superintendents in' the United States, is to bo held in'Philadelphia, for an iuterchange of views in regard to railroad construction,- manago
British Provinces have'" b'een'i&vifed to' attend.and participate in'the!deliberations. THE dismantling of all the fofta amund Washington ^as Jsbi5pl«fcd on last Mouday the 1st, the different garrisons having by former orders bQen directed to vacate all 'earthwork's' in and around the District.'
THE Spanish fleet bombarded thq city of Valparaiso, tfhili," on the Slst of March, and propeHy to th'e antoUnt of 820,000,000 belonging to British -andAmerican residents destroyed. Officious inte.rmedling .by the British and Americans to prevent the' bombardment by the interference of their squadrons only irritated the Spanish commander and,hastened the affair. When the time .came for action both the British and American Admirals backed out. The bombardment was legitimate warfare as practised by all civilized christian nations,'and one in which neutrals had no right to interfere.
WONDER if the Sons of. liberty, of which Morton is said to have been a-mem-ber, didu't apply their "moxa" degree to' that gentleman. Most of tho honored secrcct societies are said to apply warm irons to their new. members, and many are supposed to be badly burned, .before they get out of the "scra.$o"i—Evan-svillc Courier. 1 ami
A CONSTANTINOPLE paper says that twtf antiquarians, in making excavations in Syria, have discovered a Jewish habitation entire, tho construction of which dates two centuries previotrs to the Ghristia.n era. Its rooms are furnished aftor the Egyptian style, and these gentlemen found in them tho five books of -Moses, the Psalms of David, and another book containing Hebrew poetry, completely unknown. .(at
Gov. Morton went to France to got liis back-bone scraped down but the French physicians could'nt find it. Wo have heard that he needed the little he was supposed to possess, in trying momeuts. If the Governor had not been so prodigal with his "commissions" perhaps his back-bone wouldn't now need repairing.—Eisansville Courier.
iMi,
PROM
BOS
THEATERS.—The theatrical managers in Boston have combined to keep colored men out of the places of amusement, notwithstanding the recent law on the subject. As only a nominal fine is imposed for breaking the law, and their licenses arc not affected by the exclusion, they think they can successfully resist the law."
a
'n
John Davis, an overseer in a factory at Taunton, Massachusetts, has befe'n fined for flogging a female operative, twelve years old, with a pcice of bolting doubled." One of the girl's eyes was seriously in-f^ jurcd.—Exchange.
From all accounts there is much inord need of a Frecdman's Bureau to look after the interests of the poor white operatives in ttie factories of New England, than there .is of such an institution in the South. Ilaviug set the precedent' of such Bureau, the other States will'probaibly give it, by and by, an ext.eh'sion into New England. The radical machine will yet return to.plagtie the inventors»':i *g
THE 26th was set apart in nearly every city and village of thj? South f{)r the decoration o.f the graves of the confederate dead with 'flowers.,' The. graves of the 'fed'eriil dcad wcrciwt neglected. They, tob received a Mention :.ind -restoration, in respeot to the loving .ones,., at a dista.no6,:who may onn-.,dfy -cpine. to reclaim ,tbe,ir dead.—Macfin (ffa.) Teh' 9r«Ph-' "7
THE contract-for 'building-. th£, IJniod and Logansport Railrqat^ hj. early day.. Three thousand^ tons of* iron have be'en p^'rehasidy hfei'rijg eninfgh to lay the track tb Hartford city in Bha6k•ford:C«hity. -t tr ^ii- .'. ioa I
Fears of the cholera has a depressing effect upon Wall Stre'erspeculationV. :i ,"' 1 taiji ii '""i'
Tja-B.-Mercar f^malj! ^p.edit^on has afPKred^VSnn Pr.»(nfiK0C^iJVjtj^^
w|8| tit wsiSW
§fl88S§!
ti®Sgi
UM.
