Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 5 January 1867 — Page 1

NEW SERIES—VOL, XVIII, NO 19.

BUSINESS CARDS.

__ MEDICAL.'

MRS. M. HOOVE

IF IT tMHcc ami Kisldcnn on Vernon Sired, .W.r!) (typo site tin*

PonI

Olllrc.

I Mi givu exelu.-ive at !i'ii(i..u to ill'.' praetio tfo.lirhl/ and ObsU'trls al»o to 1 tlits i|isey *»t osu-Mi and I hildr he )•»«!I»|n* pat rotiage is respect

I ull.v .«

Mll\

iMnsirian aistl Sun^ois.

DEC.

X.

Jo BmflSSSBSY,

I )cpertiullv tender* hi* services to the ••Ui/.C jh ot IV rawloidsville and vo-im1y. in nil t.ie branches o{ In- prnlc--i'.n. tiuil tlrwitli'iir**, iiit .dam «ln i'l. \\e*t oi

MACHINERY.

\i.*\ir(i!urn vVC

mar- I ue w.ViprdjlOd.

CLAIM AGENCY.

i?xrrit

A*

i-iorx'rv!

Extra Pay! Extra Pension!

(ir'iiitiil In/, .,/ 11

rh'-ltln

I:E n\

K' HO.TI l»TI,V

\\. H. Gii hmay A\l Government Claim Agent,

Ofi,

Itii.,1.- Sh,

tn Lhr

,,/m S

linim.

.,-4h

(.tuainissiooed «»lh«:

Kvt-rv timinissiooed tdhcer b.:b»w the rank oi

i!\p

Ann M. 1-11..

••an

Widow- of di-rased .-"idler entilled to an ircrcase of pen.-ion of cf- per monlhfor caeh child under lb All claims intrusted to m.v rare will attended to.

REAL ESTATE.

:-T\\vt\\

EstitU* \pw\!

.'TpilK un,li'r.-iu'in'il will

5

III

or buv Heal li-tatc.--tn- or 1 own Lot.- lot ,-a'c

1 Any purson liaviim I' will ilu wcil to

Kmi\

thoui with us. iv-

3^ oi

4 nr."Kin

V'arm^, A

'23 Town Lou. 5 Residences 1 lirick Stori 1 Brick Rcsuleu with I'i o*res ground n'laoh-

WKBSTKIi. MA\ A KI.KM.Y

Kiiquiro ui Hi'' Hi-or.UT's Ollir«. (.li-.-.M

WANTED—AGENTS.

Mi5

l..»)00 as-n.ls

cv^rywlirr.

^IMranVKi Stiwtni: i• -liiri. I lin"' tmlir mill u|I|ht toud. ariiiiilcl. Iiv Vlti.N0 Siilury or lareti

C(iiiiiiii-.«ki«s

Pf

i«-

liitics

1 lu

m.ia

in

Ihe

UnilB.l

Stall's

{,K1

lor l.-«s tlinn

uhuli arc I'Ci.i.Y I.ickxm:I ItY IIOWK. ill.l.l.l.li ,V II SUN,

lillOVKK.t

HAKKUlXliKll .t

il..

71iS'/S/ A jio.vril

56 ?in Vvt --1V

ANU II-

Iiru Ai.i. othur clitiav iiiiu-liinos arc isi'Uisi.K-

Ml

si ami thosKi.LKIUir rsicu uro i.iAin.KTO

hsk AND 1

AOKNTS wunti il fur

FSTII1KLV

SBW

AltTICI.HS.JUSl ullt.

Udr.!"" T. tiAKKV. Ciiy Huil.liiisr. liul'KTi.r.t,

GROCERIES.

lMUS estublifhineiu. is now storked with a larue a— 1 *iorlment of plain and fancy (.rttcenes: which will be sdd for cash or prod uce. 1- arniersotlonu«iuiery county call in and examine our stock befori pun hasns elsewhere.

PAPER-WINDOW SHADES.

For llrt'i'i/ ISodif.

ft

tlii? Corner lim.k Stpro.a lurjju lul "f Cu\i. I.i'tter, Coinnuircial Note, Bill and other .-ur? oi^

Also tlio Oiunc sin -ui I.ISKN 1'Aimic. These irtnuls were bought to meet the demand lot ii Kood reliable article, and we have no lo-snat ioni in saving that they will meyt the approbation ol tltc\ ''"I'muitry .Ivulors snppHol un rca.^.lKibU' tcrii.s.

AuglH-M-lf. I- A I (HI I I. .V I o.

the Corner Book Store you will tindjin assortiV meut of those

1

W istMw

Shaped

Groceries—Wholesale.

Gr O O D.8

P. E. SIMPSON'S.

Alan MiinnfiictniTr'n A«i ul fur

POW3DER & MATCHES

JunclG'Giiwotityt

\.Kctined

STEAM PRINTING and Tmware

j&&y&

IStSSlSSlll®

RBYIIEW

ill STOJIV. I NKW HIt

k.iKiii\( r(i\ M'

ii..

MACHINISTS,

Maniilacliircrs 1 urn HielK-is, Powers. Ir:iu S:i\v.= Sivjiir Mill? i-.-:-.. u:ir kettles. Castings. ('. t!ll':s and 1111H I' of I'V-mt-M civ U«.'jSLri"11tnii.

(J :i I ('tin turn nut fitjitn'r /fit Itoi't shop on :ic

a

m.,m

:1: ol Ki.uuhlc Houm1,

LaFayette. Ind.

$ -a tit

D©i\3E Tv ORDER!

IVi-••i.'lit want-.t anyde

trom l:ib"l t. a mammoth pos?eall at l!o- lie»iew .loli Olliee. jrrAll work done just whei

i-.i lt)

Maiiiifnetuivrs ftlnl Dcalnrs in ail lundi of

IIt ","i "V

IzP

oovr the dillcivnce. under the Aet of C.mu'r l*.'. ]H O. Soldiers enlisted t'«r thr»M- year-di-t :nu'-d after M-irch 'M. or account of di-abiliiy. are entitled to $HHi bouf.ty, enlisted i..r a le-s period bounty.

IX 33.111JLX- O

i-

SSI

rare will prompt] K. H. (i A M«OS\ A V.

Atitfuet-l^-l-M.:!' *1. 1. Iv 1N I'. AI A O.

Claim Agency.

l-Alni iiotiitly \l\\n\ Pay

We unit kinds years.-

r\r\ »*K,t

vkab

I-]xtr i. nsioii!

Ui-'liihil 1,1/ Al ts t!f hit'- to fJist lmnii'il Snlih'i rs. thrir

ONJ-

11 V^rn'-.--.

Mi-

ntn' ('hihli it. "i' Riii'titfs. Collected with Promptness i»d Dispatch by

II l®. IB itlTTfi*Y, Attorney,

AN

ahkest,

MriilsoNMKST. '''re^i!rs

I 111:K. A11.truss.

-pir cull upon Shyw .( ('lark. Hiitdciuril, -l..iii». si tlliirayu. 111.

60VERNMENT CLAIM AGENT. )teff'Ojjii'r in //(.//»« Ilnll I'jiiihlint/. urrr Siiiijiaon

S

/onhlith

GnU 'l iJ S/nrt Ci-in-

\t*n

^oHKriiS-Stslwoy

To liychttrirI Slhcrs:

"liKK BHSOTIBS'Jr^ expiration of hi

NEW GROCERY STORE.

Ry th? 1 ate law hqliailiins licjuntlc?, :tn Additional Bounty of $1U0 is granted to each and every ^oltlier enlisted for three years, and served out his tune. Mho has received or is cutttlcd to revetve no uioje than the $1"^ bounty heretofore allowed law and any ?uoh Soldier who has been disehareed bet

term of line, "f duty

Adtiitionul Bounty ot An Additional Bounty of each sohiier enlisted for two year or is entitled to receive, no nior under previous laws

[Dcc:ri»4tf

A bottnty of $"«Us now allowed to each ami every soldier enlisted for any less period than two years, who has ben honorably discharged on account ol wounds rcecivod in the lincot. duty.

Tn tltf Ht'-h'S of Ih rcuM'J S(tlilit rs .: .j

J*

17'/ Oliicirx: All t-Uii-'Ts tivl.ov llic rank of l!iip.li n"r:«l

who wore in tho service a- such on the •Id of March, ltti5, and who were honorably discharge, or wh resigned, since April i*, Ihm,arc months pay proper.

•j To I'rilsloHWt::

I ^'i'nvaiiil soiiliers,for total ilisai.itity. arecntitli'il to pension of from eisilit. to fifteen, twenty oml twen-ty-live ilolliiM pui' iniijilli. j, lt|«

,,1 To oiitain the Vienetils of these laws, persons ill all cases to tiinkc anew application. Applicants for the A.titilionnl ltounty must Ijrins 1 I orAeml llieir Dijch.'ir^u t'apera and (jet a receipt ter I tho same.

Having for a number of years past- dovotct lnysclf especially I., tho business of cdleetini claims, 1 {eel warranted in saying that I can insure not only 1 prompt attention on the purl of the Government, hut .] an early ajul satisfactory settlement ot'nil just claims intrusted toinycarc.

I'mIteasonalilc and no Cliarxo In Any (n-e I nlcss Kurrexsrul. All letter-s of imiuiry, contanniiK stamp, proinptly answered. l'artics residing at a distance can have blanks and instrucliona sent to them by Ml free of charge, on application to tne.

W. P. IlltlTTO.V, At")

Auk. 11, lw.

Superior nrtic'.i' of Lippcni-ott ,t (^o*.. lloiible .... 'I'.i.i.. r„,i,.rv f,.r liv Carl Steel Axes, w.irran ed. l'"r -.lie by meassnrtinent t'|!|:()'i'HI''lt Uc- 3tf ltUOTHIIU. I* aee.UI I.l.h A l.l.wi

Table Cullcry. j*

^ss*i.

'. -i"i j*'

ill

il 1

fie

Sign

of

SO Cli

V-POT! i~4 -tkS

NOAH S„ OS LI 1^,

I 1 Kli returning thanks for pasl favors. wi-hc In call tin especial attention of ilu public sieneralIv iif !ar«c ami most perfect toek (.{

STO i's:s ami

im»\v

7'f.VBI'Vf J?I£

on hands. Tin- best and ^roal»-.-«t v:iri«'ty ol*

oooiKiiisra-

:i i,r,

4$

'i"ntin'si'//

/ml mini.

inanufat

STOYES,

t:v«*r oflVml in th« C-«vi]!•* msirUot, nml Bi ^s. to uivc sau.-l'a'tii)ii. All anh-k-

it El'a Ui ixO, h'oor/xr a---.. «ln:v: promptly, ^ntl-on fair tonus. (UiA\

Ui-inemh

(irccn sir*'-

"i/'l

paid t'-v..O»p-

pi:r. old Iron. linir-*. Uutter, K^allu-rs, .It

Counti\i/ fE ychaiiln 5-iaiWivr will find it to th*-ir iuLcro.-f. wlu-n in wnnt uf anyIliiim in ••nrlinc. t«» z'w li- rail. Wc will sell i:«iod.-nt \vlirtli'^aln, for cash or approved pn.diteo, atthe iow.c.«t liviiif .figured. Sorh mit lBttns

ENLARGED FACILITIES! SSi'titeti itm of Bixtieusrx!!

Carriage Manufactory, Mur/.'f St.. X'irfit tij t\m,'t Stptm-e.

E:A« ai.n:. »M?.

ilaviuu

t.hf promi rent, and

I

WA.SIIINfi'TON 0|ifoni

etnllv purchased, enlarged and improved •s wo occupy, therby savina expense of a sod facilities for manulactur-

1

FU^JUTURE AND COFFINS

J. T. h-issM'sul &. Co.,

Um«-

adier Ofiicral. who was in tin' -i:i\in' Maii.h .id. l.-iij. ami re :HMl. was mnn-i :-tl out or honorably disuharircd alter that tla n. is entitled tuc.-. T^vsir wlu» received nt»n«' can no\v rer.^ivj, wJio reeeivod thre» month- pay

ert

anv take i«. ti

-THI 1 1, 'rlitl*c 4 hlirrli.

Our Cabinet Ware Booms

COKFIKTS

of all kinds furnished on shurt noiicc,

..•i

11777/

OR

117

TIIOl'T

.1

HEARSE.

Ucpairiuu:, Hlacksmithir.tj. Trimming. Paint-. with neatness and despatch. t:».

Im3o.

-•sortment of I'urmturo ."•t easli lifurrs.

Teh

1 UK^i Ap.

Real Estate Agency.

1

/, ".V

(i

ii IV*

k. m.

tt

1

•l^OUNl^Y!

..

liuv and sell on commission. Houses and eatit Lots, l'arms. Karminu Land in all the Western Staler nnd Territories. I J.f.ansne-jotiated. collections made I,and entered.

Jaxcs paid and Title- examined in all the Western 'll:i\'e for sale ti la rue number of desirable dwelling in tliiscity, sil-*o. a lar?e lnimberof vacant Ltits. at very reasonable terms.

Hitvc also a lar::e number of __rartii: oiinin^cotVn^i'cs for sale, alst« ir»,ut)0 a N.antl. pnrtil^jy improved.

See.,

now allowed to

t, who has received. than S."»0 bi unty

itu

If a soldier, enlisted for three years, as above stated. has died of wounds received, or disease ou--tracted in tU6 line of duty, the Additional Boquty of. $100 allowed to tho widow, minor children or parents of such diseased soldier in the order named.

If a yniiticr. unlisti'il tor any less permit than llirue years, has ilie.t of noiimls n'ocivn.l. or ilisease o,.ntrni'teil ir the line nf duty, tlic A.l-litn.n:il liminty ..f $.71 i.f allnweil tn tlie wi't'iw. iniiiiir eliililren nr parents of sueh ileceascil Solilier in ilio or,ler naineJ.

etititlcil to thre

Widows arc now entitled by law to aiij iiicr-itit I their pension $- per month tor each child undet

CRAWFOKDSVILLE, M0NTC40MEET .COUNTY, INDIANA, JANUARY 5, 1867. 7 -U*6-ijX

Millinery.

MILINEEY STOEE.

\°o. sJ. VommvrciHl iSlocL

Ci\'.i)'J'i fiitjitiiiit.

M. L. Williams,!^

ihv

murki't with a lull ami ci mplHi

nk ot all articles in the Millinery Itnu. ot tin hitot .-lyhami pfttterns. The puMn* generally an nivitod toeall hot ore purelmsing, (nuv-^^f».v.

Medical-

C. SINNARD,

DR.

HOMEOP^THISX! (.Ml't'is his pr-'fosu.nnl ^orvlccrf U» the j'fnplo of ('ra wttadsvlllc amVvu-imty.

Measured by tho proper SUC'KSS1* I 1j TUKATMKN'T-^ihe Huineopathic S.vstui:» doecrves

all the praise vhinh h»"hec^n given it. OSK Kx'.amV.LK—"lu If 10,twelve Hoiat'opathie Physicians in^'inciunnti. tronfed -4in ca«i\- of cholera— r™' v«riw-a-'-'l«llls,a-»l0rti,11,s

551 mivKi'lfil

v_^

v.ssss-: in .vi»rklil:i!lli^e "Ivli- tSill.l ll'H'll i» use. JOSI.IN'S. iNo-:''. I'oniiiii-.i'inl Ul.n-k. Oimt'i'i'iNviUi1 Kinar'riiOi-lt.l

fie

After property is placed tu our hands tor -hould the owner thronah our introduction, or by means of publicity «iven by us. sell the property at the'fixc.l priee. «»r for more or less, the eomnn-ion :t. in all eases, be paid tu u-^

JP/'Ollice over Rrown Drus Store, ernon street. Cra\\f«rdsviiie, lnd

wcll.j^-ltyillc Wm lluil, ..... l/r^i.lont HrstN.i

tional Bank of ('rawfordsvillc Campbell, alkt.r and Couley. Protestors Df liMW. Michtuan I tmcrfttj. Aim Arbor. Mich. b«n» 'Ml-yl.

irOll S A. LE.

l,ot and liuililin^s north yf Center Churuli.twr mi in parcuUto suit purchaser*.

Ilouso and lot of'2' acres in cast part, of city. 1 ernis easy. A well improved farm, 11W acres never failing opring mile west ol city—terms easy.

House and l.ot. on AVust struct, ncur} College. Price $U5U, Iloiiscnnd lot of 5 acres in south pnrt of ?Uy, 24 rods oil pike road. 4U rods back. I no good fruit tree'. barnSM hv :«». well, ci^Lcrn,cellar, and good out buildings, house stories high, rootus. with wood house undertoof (f same building, gootl selection ot small 'fruit-' "rapes.

the

by

l1

is entitled to the

a 1,0,11

Vrcc .In .lu.tqc S. t-. Mii.\- ...

nnd :i tine collection of ornamen­

tal trees. Price tf l.ooo in payments.

1

Farm of IW acres. *i» acrcs cleared bottom land, go-.tl saw and gri.M mills saw mill cut StHMi tcet per dav. two run of stone-, building 1 glories high, timber enough on promises torun'sawmill 5 years, good orchard, barn.and comfortable house, with good out buildings,good spring, and coal bank onjnrm, cast vi Kockville, Parko county, lud, sonable paynionts,

Farui 11" acref? 1 mile west of Younts^vlllc. in good .repair, good house, barn. Ae. Terms $75 per acre.

Have also for salo Sea acres in I'uirc county, lown, Will cxchani,'.' f..r town properly », a Uo.irishii.R

tw.wn orciiy. COO acres in (.'"try county. Kansus. Kiitcrcd 'i ye ago. Pricc 5?-,"0 per acre.

100

acres in Dickinson county. Iowa ^1 ,P peraci.e. mavWt'o V00 acres in Mi-souri at $1,U0 per acre.

Also a large number of farms in this and adjoining j, States. For particulars apply, I

We-tcrn laud constantly on hand, for sale or e\ I change.

K'arlie* to pnrclui*r IIoiincm mid I,oIm in I hi* City oftlcr lor piirticiilrir* i'tn-0'i'Hi.

till plriiMt1 call til

SAPPKNFll-l.I) A BUOTHKR,

Silver Smith.

Nov .Watch Maker Shop!

The uudersign'd would respectfully annowieci to bia frieuJA,aud the public generally thv.l he lias opened a y\-\:

Watch Ma,ker Shop in the old stand of MeClure.l Fry., wiyt of llieCo House, for rcpftirintr Watches, Clocl^ al.d Jewe!ry: All repairing warranted,

1'. C. 1I1T/.K

I.tltc in lMtterson's Watch MakorSaiip. Cmwfordsvillo Sept. Si, 1SC0.

rrrrrr~ C8110 WI i\'B'OI* A€CO.

1

0

-plendid quality of Virginia Cavendi.-h Chewinjr

,i.. t, r.i\ Tobaccoiju.-! received and for sale by ^.'A Av. rA .. i. i.' #. own" l.KF. A HROTHF.R.

hi

31'

Plow Factory.

On Man, Sh t. 1 fi ir iJootx En ft I'Jt Olihr. '.

I

Cairir.ge Manufactory.

3F» JLM 0 J\7%r JS

MYm.»d,

GO'S.

J. S. MILLER &

bpnng t$'r.

Wagons, &I<i

wonhl re-peetfull.v announce to our friends and

public yeavraliy that weareiinw in a.po-ition to del'v .il compolition in our line in this State as ro-

l'KU'i:. :.l i.ivilc

TVM*:S AND WORKMANSHIP,

invile an i.i-pcetion of our Carria^'s, Hussies. a iinea-^i'Simcni which we keep eou.-tant l.v on Heinu' all practical workmen and empl.»yn,a bvlhc nui.-tskillful.ami usinntlie VI'!S HKMT MAlhUiAL. tuu.ib'-r with our loua aequaint'wiilii.ho wiutb of this soetion of country,-we lot In:-n i^ivinu .-jtti-faction.as wo eoufidentlv nsiaf o-if v.t.rktt'ntl prlee-vfannot be c.velh by ther e.-taldi-bment in Indiana. Old Busies in cxelian^e. All our work nanonted one.

s.MTi:sni:i.!

'OPirrcwnasj.© a. rro.,

Attorneys at Law

AX I

RF-tL ESTA'B'K AWKrV'r.^. A\71M. \TTKND to business in the Circuit ami Common lMea.H Courts, in this and adjoining eountic! Will give prompt attention to^the settlement of Instates, collection of Pensions and Soldiers Claims.

Hhudvomith o.-tablishmPnt will .nill beroiitinand prompt attention Riven to eiikuwu and ::ll kinds of repniriuu.

N. 15.

fJ'hoj»u

kijow injj liicinsol ves indebted for work

v\\\ pi Mi ye make immediate payment as 1 need the ev to enlarge my bucinees. IVI.17W

4

JOHN A. (iUll KIN.

Tlillinery Store.

\t*w ininiJM'v SIOIT.

J-

6V!RS.

G, W. SANBURN,

WOl'LH ve-pvctfully infttrm the citizens of Craufotdsville ami vicinity that she has established a Millinery Store in »r. ieC!ellatnl buiblm^. doors east of the Post Olaee. where she is now openinj a

lew STOOIv

Latest Styles and Best

(QUALITY

She invites the people to eall ami Uoods aud juducfor themselves.

zmjaciiing and Pressing

rv

done on shcrt notice. Alsopartieular attention Riven to all kinds of silk and velvet work. Ort »3.IWitiif. Mrs. (•. W. SAStH'UN

,'m.1 Machinery.

:ux3

AN l— 1

ma.o:l-j:i2ST shop

rt. -IS-

in this and \1I'l'Ci.of Wcste,n

js ir'

bi id si*i si.

KSLA1AS, LYIjE & €.,

Have ntfW in operation Foundry and Machine

Un ritKNaKt}*—McUonabl »fc Roach, Indiainlpotis siiop in litis place,and would inviteall interested Sini'th'.t Mm'! Ati"i y-\*L'crro Uaiit.-: \Mmi 'In lion. I. N. 1

16 51M'1* ttl All l\5ISU

them acall. They are castings, such

lakint all kinds of

imulil. G-E3-

if every description.

poi^linni IBU, Furnace Fronts, (Irate litirs. Sugtr Kettles, Ovens, Dojr Irons, Mtkinir Patterns for and lu')daiiiiir .Stove Plate1-

v*-' They ire prepared to repair

Tuliulnr Kuileiy. Stcnni Knjruios, Tlirashin _'Machini'S Uea|.ers, .Mowers. Ora.ti Saws, and to make and fit ti]i

Mia-j- Cfstintrs, and l!l:ick-" Miiithiiu of every do- "t sc-ription. All virk doiiehy ilicni is W a a 1 petloriu ti represented.

miles

Term.- in rea-

10 on

STATE ITEMS.

I'oi'k liulitinj: is just now :ill I lie nip :inionr I In: liloi.tl:- oi* Dt'caiur. ^Vdaius comity.

Tlio Kvai^villc

Joiirniil

pretends that

I :i rut toil market, hah been established in that city.

Hev. Francis Taylnr. a well-known l're.-bvterian minister, died at ernon, I Indiana, nn the 10th uf December.

.)cuiiie Starr, or Danbert, the woman who shot and killed Dr. Spnuldinji in .IclVersonville on Christmas day, has been held to bail in the sum of §5(11). Cheap.

A younjr man named Helming took a load of turkeys tn Martinsville la.sl M011day, {jot drunk and fro/.e to dtath on his return home.

Michael Hurley was slunj .-hotted and killed in front of the

l,cr I

Dciiioc.rul

cr

OFFICE WITH TOWNSHIP TRUSTEE,

mill re^idi-iiiu un Miiin ftrvul^iii.tliv liouso form. rly ...•euiiu-il

li»-

K.

.1.liinl'oiil.

(.Iiia.wfiiudsvii.i.k, I.sii.

office, in.

Huntington, Christinas night. A priu-

I,allied Valentine Mills is under arrest

on suspicion of huvinjr done the deed.

The store of Messrs. Hitterseamp

"lf- Baker, at Kreelandsvillc. Indiana, was

rolibed of about five hundred dollars worth of clothing and a small stun ol motiev. This is the second time this store lias been robbed in the last month.

-./• ih,

WOULD respectfully iufurm my old cu-ioiiu-rs and tlie pulihc t^eneraily that lhave un«ak'' the xTN'iees of Sill. .I011N 1'KOWS'. a practical and oxpcrioncetl Plow Manufai'ttirrr. and will kecp'ou hand the very best quality ut

Travis Oiekey, in company with Kabe Wilson, Sr.. Babe Wilson, dr., and A. .1. Montgomery, iiot drunk at Catarnct.Owen comity, last .Monday, and cleaned out a one horse drinkery kept by Hank Burnett. In resisting an arrest, Oickey was shot and killed by a deputy constable named F.phraim Welty.

The coiutnon council of Fort Wayne have purchased a portion ol the site ot the old fort, and .louitin erectiu.u' a monument to tlic uieiuory oi 3r.nl Anthony. A petition is now before the council for an appropriation ol $(,000 Pm that purpose.'

Daniel li. WageScr, \vho.-e taste in hoi -e flesh, with a chrome inability to discriminate between mine and tltitie. led hi in into the Fayette county jail,.sawed a bar with a rusty case knife one night last weeli, and once more breathes the free air of heaven..

Tho body of Miss Cox, the young lady who disappeared from ('orydou a few weeks since, has been found lodged in a tree, down Big Indian Creek, Rome two and a half miles below, almost ill a state of decomposition. It is supposed that she was the destroyer of her own life, while laboring under aberration of the mind. The ,creek was very high when she left home, and it is beliewd she was washed this distance by the swiftcurreut.

Tin:

Kkskkvoiu.—A.

few weeks ago

we mentioned tho fact that certain parties had cut the Splunge Creek lteservoir, and stated that the general supposition was that it had been done by interested per---"-...ii-v Durposes. Yesterday a resident oi that region ... and stated that our remarks did great injustice to those who committed the act, as it was done simply to rid that section of the country oi" what is considered a nuisance, engendering siekness for many miles around its vicinity. This in the other side of the question, and we give it the same publicity accorded to the side objecting the destruction of the reservoir.—

Terr,: Ifniih' ./iiiinml.

A correspondent of the Terre lTautc, Indiana,

1'J.rprtM

said

(,r0Cn JstrCet, ttOar UCpOt

L'xxh I'liiil J, Old hint, (-"I'l* lll.AIK. I

ll' i.i: .t- Co.

Boohs.

MAISTHQOD:

Parties wishing to make quick sales of their propcriy will do well by sending us a description oi their g|oiV liOMf llOW Ki'SlOl ©a. nroocrtv \'c have tmulc arrangements with Rea i»r kstatc Agencies in most of the Western States, nnd 1 .-J11:1 published^, a lew edition of uro prepared to make transfers ntn small expense.

I ne?s. Involuntary ricuiiual Lossm, liupotem-y. McuI tal anil Physical Incapacity. Iiimciliments to JiarI riaee, etc. also. Consumption. Epilepsy, and rits, I induced by self-indulgencc or scjual extravncanec. yiTl'ricc. in a sealed envelope, only 0 cents.

The celebrated author, in thn admiralilc essay, clcnrlv demonstrates, from a thiity yuars suceeSFful nrnctu'C, that tliu nlarmins coiscqilcni'cs ot sclluliiisu may lie radically curi?d whhuiit the dangerous use of internal medicine" or the application id thu knife—pointini!oi.ta mode of ciro at once simple, certain, and etlectual. by means of which every ant ferer no matter what his condition limy be, tiny curehimseir cheaply, privately.and radically. lO' l'his l.ccturo uliould bo mthe hands of every youtii and every man in the laud.

Sent, under seal, in a plain envelope, to any address, postpaid, on receipt of sixcents. or two p.nUagc i-uiuipa. Also, Dr. Culvtrwell Murnasro

urt ymile," price i". ceiits.^. Addrcs^yl.u^uldUHcrs.

12" Bowery, New York. I'oit Oftice llox 4.5W. Oct 'JtiWy

Leather

complains ol the non-

attendance on church of a large proportion of the inhabitants of that place. We suppose the facts which he gives are essentially true of other towns and cities, lie says: "There is in the city of Terre Haute a population of not less than eighteen thousand. The entire oapacity of the churches is not greater than will accommodate three thousand persons, i. about one-sixth of the population. Of this population not. more than fifteen hundred, or oue-twelfth, are found worshipping 0-dtl'from Sabbath to Sabbath not. more than 1,200, or one-fifteenth of tho whole, who arc members of the church. Of the people of Terre llautc, one person in the House of God, on God day, to eleven who are somewhere else or 1,500 persons at church, 1(5,500 who .1.. 1 ..• I !„.l

arc abscut from the house of God.

The White Slaves or Massachusetts. He who spake as never man did before Him—who entered into this world of sin and sorrow to teach an erring aud wicked race a new and glorious religion, whose tenets were love, charity, and a true humanity. in his Sermon on tho Mount

And why beholdest thou the mote that is in thy brother's eye, but eonsiderest not the beam that. iK in thine own cyt?

Or how wilt thou say to thy brother Let me pull the mote out of thine eye and behold a beam in thine own eye? '•Thou hypocrite, first cast out the beem out of* thine own eye and then shalt thou see clearly to cast out the mote out of thy brother's eye.'

These words are not iu Massachusetts

t-.7ivrr,v,.ir. cvibrnira k«,.»r. on Bibles, wo take it, for since the first scitlement of the country, the people of

that 1)CStilcnt

portion of the republic

have done little else than worry their philanthropic heads about motes in the eyes of their brethren, utterly oblivious

of the beams in their owu.

tho face ol the whole globe more curst

with crime, iufidelily, aud social evils, yet its people have had no time to labor for reformation or cure, so busily have tliey been employed with their neighb^'s

business.

Harness heather. I.ea'her. WM. 1*. WATSOV

A:.Alu

i- assortment "I Harness Lca'her just re,.t,ivcd at '•'•-•"v

1'"

For years Massachusetts men and women have bent all their energies to the overthrow and abolition of slavery, while a system of white slavery existed in that

Coniuionwealth of the most horrible can be attributed alone, to. tlid friendly character Head the following in proof, S foulin- and M-abiding .disposition of ,1,0 people. Wheu -tlio phssions of the taken lY,..n the columns ol a journal j.eopl^VoCB fited-«th the revprinted in that State devoted to the m- olutionary spiritfthafc has.Jiift its bloody terests.of working men and women: impression upon the land, tliey comuiit-

Tin1 Boston Dtiihi Kiinimi 1 (iiV« for ted excesscsj as Ji^vc^dgpcaJJ ies aiiniSrly-6xcued}i8'mce-the nrnmttoi Nov. :jtl. has an article on 'FaetoryT.irls,' tie:

which shows that while the nianufanturinir corporations -are inakiiis: dividends to stockholders of from 30 to 100 per cent., the girls in the milU are sadly overworked, underfed and underpaid, and at the same time subjected to a rigor of discipline which admits of no relaxation until nature itself gives way.' The average earnings are stated to be 'about one dollar a day.' for which 'most of them toil eleven h.nirs a day,' although some, mills have reduced, or are about to reduce, the time to ten hours. It is only within a few years that it has been reduced from fourteen hours. Tliey pay for board ?2.2." per week, to which in

Lowell the factories add 7(0 cents a week. At such a price it is impossible that the fare .should be decently good. It is barged, also, that the paint and iloor in

the rooms of operatives

ire never only one

clean sheet in two weeks, and two towels ek for thirty-five boarders.' Also,

per 'our gas is not turned on until a t|uarter before six, so that we have but three([uarters of an hour to wash, put up our hair, do our chamber work aud eat breakfast.' Then as to discipline, everything is done by the tap of the bell, ti the morning, 'three taps of the bell are given for starting the engine, and in three minutes after the j'ard gales a.e closed.'

This rule is so rigidly enforced that 'a few weeks ago a young woman, after walking two miles, was shut out because she reached the yard gate three minutes too late and had to walk bat'1-, losing her day. During the day no operative must leavetli ro in which she is employed, not even if the machinery stops, and no talking or reading is allowed. For violating rules forfeiture of wages is the common penalty and 'two weeks notice must be given to leave, or two weeks wages are forfeited. Ol course 'wages are not paid every week as they are earned. This is how the workmen of

Massachusetts are protected by the people who 'scream out for protection to American industry,' and eall 'Any one hard names who dares to oppose them. 'Protection to American industry' means sending to Fngland for your machinery, half starving and tyrannizing over your workmen and women, and declaring dividends of thirty, forty, fifty and a hundred per cent, per annum.

What a comment on the falsehearted

philanthropy of that detestable State The operatives spoken of are

white,

Kuropean Kalhvay TarltT.

it appears from a rejiort prepared for the British Royal Commission on Railways, on a comparison of the faros charged per hundred miles on the railways of tho principal Kliropettri states that the average rates of Great Bi-itiiiu and Ireland for first, second or third class cars, are greater than on either of the eontimcutal lines.

In the first-class carriages traveling is cheapest in Bavaria, where the fare is but S2 25 per hundred miles. This is nearly olie dollar less than the average first-class tariff of tlie eighteen countries mentioned. Other states .that charge below the average, are Prussia, the Rhine, Sweden, Belgium, Wirtemburg, Denmark, Saxony, Switzerland and Portugal while Russia, Norway, Spain,

Austria, Italy, Holland, France and Great Britain, exceed it. In the last named Kingdom the excess nearly equals the average, the rates being 84 (2 perhundred miles.

Traveling in second-class cars is cheapest iu Wirtemberg. being 1:0(5 cents per mile the Hnglish charging nearly four iuics that amount for the same distancet. The average is 2 33 cents—the list of counties exceeding, and those falling short being with few exceptions, the same as of the first-clasj carriages.

The faret the tniru-uiuno '•"'s1' from 75 cents per hundred miles, in Russia, to 82 00 for tho, same distance in the United Kingdom the average is$l 50.

In the report, Prussia, Sweden, Italy, and England arc noted as having express trains, for first and second-class carriages only. Traveliug on these trains is enjoyed titan additional expense of two English shillings over the regular fares. It should be stated concerning those countries where charges are so low, that il tlie roads do not actually belong to the state, the shareholders receive considerable government assistance, in consideration of their being obliged to adopt-si tariff.

4*fcMCM)P!i9 VIJTl»il»'itel«l

ftiif'fll illUilW fliif

WHOLE, ^TIMBER 1269

ton

governments ..on eariii. But

of civil irov.ernmeuts ..on earth.

their plrysWl opjpteiWow

t&th'c

tWc.Govtfru-

nietit having lieen overcome, their heated passions •'u'hdbr the influence' of,: time, having cooled down,(their judgineut iind better natures bontrol their action.

The Southern p6oflb are dot rebellious now they are law-abiding, and none were better acquainted with this.fuct than the Radical leaders. The very faet that man)'of tho'most violent. Radical memhers of Congress were willing to 'n'ceotn--pany this excursion party, proves ooncitisively that they were fully convinced of the peaceable nature oft tljjs^eople of the South. Kven while these same .. •lacobius tire refusing to admit these pcopie to representation while thoy deny .r to their, chosen delegates, Ah® isiniple, courtesy of, voi.aeless places jjpou the y, floor of Coiigro.ss while in their public speeches and through the press they_d«-_ noutiee theni as unrepentant and uuhuiig traitors, thirstijig foi* the blood- of,$ip}on men, yet they trust their lives and the lives of their families onboard of an unprotected railroad train that goes dashing over the mountains and across the desolated plains inhabited by these same people. How are these Radical ilcfamers' ., met by the defamed people of the South?

They do not tear up the rails of the roads over which they arc to pass, nor-*! destroy the bridges neither do they bushwhack tho train. No, they do noti even look sulTbn as tliey pass, but, on the contrary, they have given them a cordial, welcome to their villages and cities. No Indianapolis arms its mob to molost or make them afraid. Not a single State

Executive flees the State to avoid meeting them. The most prominent aud violent rebels join in the welcome, and bid them (rod-speed, wish them a happy sojourn and a safe return.

Yet these men who are willing to trust their lives and the lives of their wives and little ones to the protection of these people, wlo have treated them so generously and kindly, arc unwilling that thoy should have even the smallest voiec in the affairs of government.

I's?. Loyal Liuvlessness In Missouri.-,.. »s-.'r-v There is no State from the Atlantic to the Pacific, nor from the Canada border to the gulf, in which are more lawlessness less respect for individual life and property and a greater disregard for the amenities and proprieties of civilized. life, than in Missouri. Murders, robberies, house and barn burning, horse-thiev-ing, and other outrages, are of daily and nightly ocourreu'-.o. And they are almost without n'ti exception perpetrated by socalled loyalists. .Those who were in tho 0,,,,^'lorate servioe, and those whose sympathies wore- supposed to be with the South in its struggle iW

and

at home—were they in Carolina, and black, all the male and female descendants ot the Puritanical witch-burners would be so many howling dervishes iu-".j-.-iinst the sins ot their

ji.ci'k''

bors. The next time Milliner opens his scrap book of lies, some one should remind him of the white factory slaves of Massachusetts, and silence hiscrsven lips with a statement of facts right front the civilization of the Old Bay State! ®®8S§

8e liratli

„ov_

eminent and inucpcutlouco, -uro uofc the only victims to this loyal luwleBsuess. Union men, who labored for the Pcdern] cause and gave it their warm support,,.but who arc unwilling to go the whole leugLh of the Radicals in relation to reconstruction and the negroes, come iu for their ^harc of loyal violence and outrage, as if they had been rebels or rebel spmpathizcrs.

The latest exhibition of this manifestation of loywlisw was in Lafayette County where the'-inilitia—so-called—-under the comnutnd of the notorious Major Montgomery, murdered citizens,' plundered

low

What It Proves.

The Coii'Tcssioual cxenrsioni»ts, who a.-o now iu^New Orleans, have traveled from the Federal Capitol to the Crcseeut

iv l)m1ll fivon

netting their garments

lion, without even getting their garments scorched. Their quiet and uninterrupted trip from one cud of the land of treason to the othor, contradicts the statements often repeated by the partisan press of the North, that the lifo of a

Northern man is not safo iu the South. This excursion party is not armed

ft Ti.a.IT

:11''

houses, and destroyed -presses. At ltichtnond was a paper cailod tlio Frcnan,

*».«.••

the ofliee of which, on Sunday night., was entered by a squad of militia, acting uti- -...j der the orders of Montgomery, and the presses and type destroyed aud its proprietor arrested aud carried off a prisoner |jj tlnd afterward lodged in jail. While in lJl( jajl, the proprietor was compelled by these loyal freebooters, with pistols point-

1

oil at his head, to sign a card acknowledging that' he was to blame, and that the troops hud served him and his oflice right.' At the same time, United States officials had to flee and hide themselves to save their lives. j-

So outrageous were the acts of these loyal thieves and murderers that Uuion citizens of St. Louis wero compelled''toget. up a memorial to the President on the i-Jti! subject, with, the. request that he^voul.d send it to Congress, aud invite to it the ^, serious attention of that body.' 'Union papers liero and thcro over the State

yl

were also compelled, by tho atrooitios of in these State troops, to denounce the,.eon-

them "into VfiVc^nl.te^'A"ere"fe"l^M •*. them to rendezvous. None of-the authorities there had asked him lor assistance,. .• nor was there any prcteuse that the.fjourts,,

could not execute tlioir write. It was.an ^. act of tlifr Governor simply and solely to1 to givo to desperadoes ain opportunity'to1 plmidor and murder, and striko terrorin-.)--i-,'i to the bodies, of ,the: .Coiumuuities iyhere ,,

J(,(j

he sent them. The acts of .these loyalj illU militia were as lawiess as any that have been pcrpeirated in the South since the close of the war, yet wo venture to say »a«'4 that they will not for moment disturb imqij the:serenity of Congress,?norjprovoke ofi, ).r,, that Radical body an inquiry. ,h, 0

Tub Growth-iov Texas.— To 8hoW,li,J"'1 the rapidity with wtiicli-tfoxas is settling!1'

houses as

any town

cap-u-

pie, neither is it protected by a milj.tary escort hence the pcrf'cct security wit which it has passed through the ..outli

10

we quote from one of our cxehan'ges the'"' following dcs'cription of Shdrm&n

a to'wn.'!'

judging from its iittme, wbioli hosi evi-.i! dently sprung up since the

war: ••_ :5

Sherman Can boast of as good

a

sjte as j,--.

any town in Northern Texas/. JUs Bitjiat- ",:• cd nenr the 'center'of Grayson'County -. ,«| and' in the richest portion of-tho State. H'j It contains

-as n«ny, or.anore,.'Jwiwss.|

icjiej

of its size in the State,

!|51|g-

ten dry goods houses, one large church one hotel, one bearding house, one res-1 taurant,'three groceries .four blai^tumth fci shoes, four wood shops, and tho finest brick buildings in Northern lexas.