Decatur Eagle, Volume 7, Number 5, Decatur, Adams County, 5 March 1863 — Page 2
Til LE.Ui LE. SPENDER A 3CHIRMEYER, Pairxitnts. DEO AT UR, INDIANA. THIK'DAV OKMNG.MUt. 5. I St'3 COXSCRIPTION. The con cription bill has passed both hotve* atvl is a law. It is not snrpri-ing —truthing creates stiqnise now. Should Congress put a crown upon the President s head and he cal’ th the army to edabli-h a kingdom, would it s-eate snrpriae? Well it might, or it might not it wot Id be jest ov ing to bow one felt — The President is non ves’od with asmnvh power ») any King of Europe All the resources of the na’ion, all she powers he can ask are at his command and yet no'hing is done Twelve linnlred thtvisanl nv-n took their p!ac?s in the army: and they are not enough. If twelve hundred tho wand can do nothing how many hundred thousand can do something.— Conscript t welve hundred thousand more. Double the national debt. Ta e halt the producers from the country and put them in the army. Pay that army in greenbacks worth ten cents on the dollar, or, not pay the army at all and let their families suffer and starve at home while yon waste the money and substance of the nation on the negro Then yon will conquer the South then yon will unite the North Then yon will maintain the union and the government, and there will be a happy future for the country. Na'ional bankruptcy is fa<t approaching, and the policy is to hurry it along. The army composed of volunteers is dissatisfied. unpaid and disorganizing. This trouble is to be amended by ta ing conscripts in the place of volunteers. How can it fail? Already, in the President's eye. he has his foot on Jeff Da, is' nee*.Ilis dreams for two years of conquering the South have been only dreams. When I are they to be realized? Does he expect| to realize them? If he does not expect to he is moat criminal to take such a course If they do not succeed in rendering wme good to the country in return for the evils heaped upon it, the administration in its iniquity and corruption ought to sink in infarnv.
The Heptibiienn State Ma»> Conveu. tio.i. The "rar, ' affair which ir. R-r übl'c.n rrtimatinn, was 'n turn the w.-rl i ut*s ■>■ < an.- *.ff t s,, r<inv »c*'*r'.;ng :•> pr»»:/ra|»,me. Every efjori had h-itl mail bv R publican -ffirlala and R publican 1-Hil-r* 111 attract a large Crowd. Til railroad* erri-d p<* sender* al halt tare or leia, nr,’’’ free tii'ket* were given to thos* who w-r® unwilling *tthrrwi»e to att--n>l. Word* »t< rent to the partv adherent' throughout the State that • grand d. tn ons'raton was iierrts«arv for i's moral • If cots upon the "inkingtoriun' R ol Repub lican'sm. and that it whs the hn h-p---nf galvan'X'ng it* almost lifeln* body N-ver before was there a more x-ah>u-t ffort made to get up demntrtra'ion to: order In number* the convention was re«p-ctable. There mat have been from I twHv-tn fi'ieen thousand stranger* in attendance. Moat of the found-ri-* and | manrjf inuring eaiablirhrnen’* in thia cits Were closed which b?il>-4 to SWrll the crow I. 0< the stranger* pr- g-nt at less’ nnr-thirl were Democrats et>r*cird by eurioaitv to witness th-- c remonies. A"d ns Hsu*! upon eneb occasions large num her* look advantage rd low lares upon the railroads do their slopping and trail ng It was not so imposing »d> mon stratum, either in number, earnestness nr character »s the Democrat Couvention *f th* S'thnfjulv lari. There was an unusual pageant connected with the conven'ion of yesterday which mu a t have impressed every obt-rver pi passing even's. It was professedly a meeting of citij“n« in their civil capacity, ca'le I together tn take into consideration public aftair*. The cer> moni-s oi' the dai w.-re opened b, a gran I display of artili <-rv and cavalry, and the booming of G ivernment cannon at th* expense ol 'be Government was one ol the main features rd the occasion and helped ’o give it eclat. U Democrat* had employed such auxiliaries under similar circumstances, deep and lou I would have H-publican indigna'ion howled thereat In the better day* of the R-pubhc it was the effort of ail parlies to subordinate ’-he .nil'tarv ♦ n civil au’hnritv. but under the new ord. r nf »ff 'r« a change has taken place and the sword and epaulets are now the ruling paw-r The liher<ie» nf the people and popular institution* cannot l<>ng survive under military rule unless all the experience r>f the past in the decline and fall rd republican government* are at fault — State Sen
A Imn/rv nio en’cred the i>on*e of a nui named Majinrr (liard, ft St Antnine, Canada. nn<l attacked an infant which lay in a cradle. the rent of the family being temporally absent. The piif actually devoured one of the child'• cheek*. and lacerated it* head and body, 80 that ft ean hardily recover. No mnn can a' oid hi* own company — so he had beet make it ats good a* possible.
No KCs,r>: at'.ou of the IJnioi PossiMe T’nder the present Abilitlcn War P-’t-ry. The Abo’i ionist.s will not resto-p ’he Un’on ''nde- ’heir pro-’ent war ’-olicv. and canno* if 1 hm-weld The 1 «ios which »hev lire th 'own and ti-e throwing in 'he wav o'si-nh res’orrt'ion I m ill become insuperable if they a-e 'f-r- --’ inirted to remain One of the ba-tiers the ba-t iers thev have set np ’o the re”m o r ’he «o called revolted States to ■ the Union is this: Th«>v ha- e crea’ed a new te-m of re. I hellion or given a new definition to ’he word -rebel.’ At the beginning of the i’> ar and < or some time after a rebel was i ’’nive-s-allv »nd"rstood to he one who resisted by force the exeeu’ion of the Feders' laws, then existing nnd son ah’ ‘n »«- itab'ish wi’hin the jnrisdic'ion oftheT’nited Sta’e« ahotbtr and nn inde' endont Oo' i A man trnght def- nd the f'rms'i‘"' ! r>n and laws of his S’ate and > hi-soma! ins - i’ntiona—all these as thev evi-’ed’>rior to November, 1830. wi‘h-o-’t being con -ida-ed in anv proper o-’e- ; gal sense a disloyalist, much loss a rebel • or traitor. But Abolitionism became a power in I the Administration and changed this de- ' tinilion by Congressional enactment® and Executive proclamations. It declared slavery totally abolished and all the slaves free in the South eastern Atlantic States and in the Gult States including Texas and Arkansas. This abolishment of slavery and this freedom of the slaves are to ■he maintained by the army and navy of i the United States. One of the objects the administration must, in accordance wi’h this jtolicy, have in view in supporting ' armies in the states thus decla-ed free, ' and fleet-” along their coasts and upon their rivers. mast be to maintain the negroes in their freedom against the efforts l of their master® or owners to regain or ; retain them as slaves. Resistance, then. , to the enforcement of this policy of negro I freedom, even if a man has been all his i life as loyal to the Constitution ami laws jof his country as was Geo' ge Washingiron or Andrew Jackson, constitues him n the Abolition sense a’•eb nd a trai-■ cor. Thus, the definition o< rebellion and treason is now changed by these factionistsand mal• to consist simply in oppo- I sition to their negro fret ing policy
It is easy to see how this, like all de-1 p.irtnre* from justice and right under the Constitution has introduced confit-ion ! and perplexity where all before was plain ■ and straightforward. A short time since j a rebel was one who made armed resis-i tanee or aided and abetted such resistance : to a Government, bound under the Con -: sntntion to maintain unimpaired the tight! of all the States—that of holding slaves among th® rest now. this is reversed or sought to be by the aboliiionist. w ho prac- ■ tically declare that he i- a rebel w ho maintain. tha" any citizen, loyal or di loyal, in certain States, has a constitutional right to hold slaves, and pronounce him a trai- ‘ ’o r if he seeks to maintain that right — I Thev demand that the loyal people 'hall unite wi*h them in this crusade against I slavery and slaveholders, and denounce those who hesitate or refuse, as secessionists rebels and trai’ors And whilst the administration is la'nor-' ing to carry out their scheme that. must; inevitably result in the overthrow and de «tr.iction of th? government, they are ma king e-erv effort to suppress freedom of speech and the pres* That is not only contrary to the constitution and the spirit of onr government, but is unwbe and impolitic. It i< a mistake not to trn*t the people of a country like this. That freedom would be the surest way of giving th- triumph to the right principle*, and i their never was anv danger of sedi'ion of or conspiracy gaining anv head way in ; thi* co n*rv. so long a« the people we e fre? to diu-tss their opinions and meet the evil with th? good. The very act of suppression creates always the more vio i leu’ dissent, th? more acrimonious opposition to the power which suppress. It comes to thi’. that the rebellion which the abolitioni’ts a-e clamoring tor crushing out i* a rebellion against their partisan wholesale emancipation policy. Th?v threaten its opponents in the South with the armies and fleets of the United ; States thev threaten to turn the bayonets of onr soldiers in the field against tho e who oppose it in the North. This i« the re- olution they have inaugtra’ed or a-e about inaugurating. It is nni'ing the South against them and against the National Government which thev a-e supposed to con'rol it is sowing the seeds of distrust and dissentinn in the North and among onr soldier* in camp and field. It will, nn'ess sneedilv arrested end in an inevitable dissolution nfthe Union. The abolitionists have committed themselves to a policy from which thev cannot retreat withon* abandoning all their partisan and sectional issues, plans and idea*: i this their leaders hft’-e n< ith?r the magr:.mi»v nor the patrio*i-m to do Hence, the restoration of th® Union under the al'ol'.’iori war policy i« clearly an impossibility. The onlv «afetv for m«: n people i* in r--se dug th® Na'ional Government Tom being con'rolled bv that policy. or the Union cun never, never be restored.— Ft. W. Sen.
A Ffv'tf. Vn’.vsTKF.R—The Altoona ,'Pr 1 T?e<ri*tert*'ll* of a female ju«t mtttmeri to that citv. after a service of eighteen month* in the armv without ha- ing j her sex discovered. She took part in , three battles, and was wounded twice, fir*» non e*he eve and then in the arm, when she disclosed her tsex
War News. Chicago Feb. 27 h. A letter from lie). no nn.i, r< n of the 2» h ’Dst , says! The Y-a>o P-.W •xp dti-'ii is still Irrng here wai'ing The tiav-1 squadron is g'-rno to m- kes start tn <lav t wilt g I «’>rwn the Pass f, ir ji is possill- for it to go, and ilun watt s L ain fn the meantime there IS a large tl-et of tiansporis waiting here os'ei sd.lv tor the aimv; hat thus- are no i indtcsiions that the aimy is inclined to I»mbark ou them ’ • There ha« been no movement from P..rt R..y»l up io the 2(5 li m«’. Gen, Hunt, r has ordere.f all of (fen, Foster's -i-rt'out ol his <|. periment. lor the u-e of .atigU'lge tint! |ig Io create dlS'stb r ion anil niuiinv Heavy fping has he, n head n the Oj.ch.e, an ! it is thought that there has been a combat between the imn clad Passaic amt Adsilta In the Senate yesterday the House am ,r,!m-nt to the conscription bill were nr ler-d printed and the- bill will becali.d :op for passage to-day. In the House, . ihe bill to punish con'ract frauds was , pas-ed; as whs also the bill incr-a-ing tl e ■number of Sf-j r and Brigadier Genera's ■ The report ot the committee ol conference on the wavs anti means bill was pr. s-nlttd J| cnvtled all points Ol dilT. rrnce ixcrpl. I the bank dau-e The H ujse agreed t„ ■he report insisting on the bank clause disagreement and asking nno'her com 'mitler of conference. Chicago Feb. 28'h. The > xnedi'ion through Y z "> Pa-s has (reached Moon L>ke, and troops are now i engaged .in clearing out 'h- channel from >lhe Like to CtrldWtler River The par ti> R thus employed have been annoyed hr I smail parlies of rebels, wi'h one O s which , a battalion ot the 5 h lllinoit. Cavalry i had a skirmish on the 20th inst.. the enemy bring disp< rs-d The canal info i L.ke Providence i* almost completed, j and will, it is thought prove a perfect . SUCCeRf.
Tiu rp nn irdirations nf a forward nt bv the Armv nf ih<* Cumber land the roads Being in very hid cnnd«ti»»n Il ii< believed that the will mn’eM ihe further udvancu of the Fed e-r’-iU. G**n Rnsrerans’ fffirial rrpnrt of the hal‘l»- of Mur’reealmrn lh«t th* F< dtral* ♦ ngag»*d nt>mh*r*d • h-*t iln ir h»<« w »s | billed and 7 245 w<Hind*d, — a loiil vi 8.773, or 2) 03 r rent. <»i 11 e entire fore*- ir. artinn. The F»-d**ral lo«s in prisoners w-u n<»t ftiPv made out al the ra’e nt the rrp<»rt, bui it wa* hr’.it v*(i that ii would tall short nt 2 809. The r*b» li* entrng»*d are rgnm H*d tn have f«umbt*r**d 62 49 >. anil their lna< tl Ig’Hg fr«»rn actti»l r*i«irns of thrwr division*, i« set ai |3 56 I. or tn the Fed j rah nearly hr 165 «<» 100 Th** r*-p »rt of a grand r* h») invasion of K ntuckv proves in be a humbug. Thrre are n<» C« rate irnops at Rirhmnnd, Mi S'’ rlingot any point on the K-ntuckv tiv* r.
F-otn an ■ x'minntion of the financial b'll* passed G rgress including the onr agreed upon Thursday. it appears that ; S- r.retarv Chase lias is-nrtl. and ha; authority to i*-u- two thousand one hun ! dre.l *»n<i twenty five million uoliar* tn | [e.pel! In the Senate yesterday. tl.e f/imn iit.ee of conference ol the finance bill made a report, which agreed to. and a n?s committee app dl.ted on the b*nl» tax clause | fl*- committee of conference *-n 'h- bill I limbing the number o< Generals r* | it* favor of 75 Major (»• neral* and 275 Brigadier*, which whs cinritr*-*) in S cre'arv Stanton wa« denounced hv Mr McDougall, and gen. Butler by Mr Davis. In the lUu=" th? enmmi'te? of con [ fen-nce on the hank t*x clause report'd: ll Ihe rommi-tee was unable t<* agree Th? Hou** insi'teil on ita disagreement and asked a new coinmtoee. Tha com : mittee o' con'erene? on the Preaiil.-n'ial indemnification bill mail? a tepert au'h mix ng the President tn suspend th- writ of hshas corpus wlierev* r the pu'dic saletv r qiitr-d and providing discharge hv Court* the oh'h of nllee iance being t >ken. Tlo H-'trse was still in session when our report closed. A rebel c iwil-y force nf about 3.000. which afiemp'ed *>n Thursday to get into the rear o' O n. Hooker’s armv, with the intention nf des'rnyitig a railroad I bridge, was ei c‘Uti'ert d hv a Federal ‘orre and driven across the Rappahannock Hihon Head advices report that heavy tiring whs heard on the Ifi h from the direction of Wilmington Ri er a* it i« *uppns"d that the iron clad Passaic was engaged with a r?be| battery. A steamer supposed Io he the Alabama nr Oreto was in* ff-c'u*llv chased on the 7'h insl bv the U. S. steamer Rhode Island. Fpurt'v-i Lbgal Tender Noth’ —s*. photographed. The parr* r’« stiffer than rhe genuine, and the hill is 1 '< h of an inch longer. Thev have a hhirr® ap piarance. while the siona’nrea show through more plainly than on the good no'*-* jo, r- ; -'"d »rorw !«. p-r’r'U'.of Chasten nper th® I *?r comer 50«. raised from 2* Tn the genuine 57*. the signature nf the R-gi«fer i* on th® left and the Treasurer on the right *nd <>f the hill. Tn the a]'er«d note thev are b*i<l* *>n tha right end. with two strips of lathv work between them. He gives twice who gives in a trice.
I CONSCRIPTION BILL. When the n. nscript'ior bill-hail finally has. passed bo'h houses we will print I', at leng’h. The p- Tiding immendments materially change the measure as it had ■ gJ sed the senate One odi.rns featnre of tho measure j .Hems so have been retained hr the I Hoose an ! no donht it will b- retained , finally I' H 'bat bv which rx mn'mn, from the dra'l may b. - purchased for a Mim of money in amount thrre hundred dollars. The oppression ref tbh» pronsinn IS seen At a glance. The p. or only «r“ cfmr> Ibd tn go to the war; the rich and the mode! ate in means have away of relief opened tn tic m q-1,. laborer whose wag. s furnish a b„ rP .nhsis'ance to hi» family, will be compelled to go, and I'ave hi® family wi-hnnl th. means of subsistence. <?,» of the mechanic who with the .trie’est economy has not be-n abU to acciimoD’e three hundred dollars, and whose fatnilv »* dependent upon htl we.klv saltrr. So with the farmer who is horning ht« corn as fuel h.can<e it is cheaper for that purpose than wood or coal; whose pov , rty ha« denied, him many of th. necessaries of life for months past, "nd who rto,, not know where the mX’ clothiaC for his wife and children will com? frim - These must r»spnrd to the draft They canntrt escape Their doom i« written in the Conscription bill. We would tel) them to prepare for it if they would not say we Were mocking at them. Inasmuch a« no man will go who can purchase • X mp’ion, the dr»'t will fall > X-llKfVe ly upon those whoee povert} makes the purchase of t x’mp'ion imposs ihle No provision of law roul I have been conceived to mor* greatly aggravate the hnrmr« nJ the wnr.
In same district n< the West, when the Ihw shall have been eX-Ctlited A Conti •- grs'inn might ns well have swept ov-r the lund, consuming every thing in its wav Bu' i’ is !'•’» «nd tn 'he i x'»nf that it i« cons’i'u'ional law it will be i x cuted »n-l trust be ribs-red. The Hwfiji responsibility must ho east where !•< VGtAA «’iid it h-long"d — upon the smm-ss-v • spirt of northern odolition The DanvitL (K- ) R view ’or Dre m her contains an article covering In, y three pages on 'N gro Slav- rv and Civil War ’ In this article Dr. Breckinridge proitst agn-n«l the proclamation policy nt the governm -nf. declaring it iinc-mstim 'ions!, uncalled for inexpedient and dangerous.
Hearts—Little red thingt that men and women play with for money. Sheriff’s Sale. Fndrirk Administrator <»f th'* I Estate of Jacob Bvb**rs!ine } Circuit Court nf v«. | A<lam« Coun’y, Christian S'.wer.J State of Indian’* BY virtue of an execution to nv* directed and deliveied hv the rhrk "rhe Ad ims circuit court of the State of Indir.nn, f will f*xp'»«e t<> ante nt puMie aue’inn ’it the court h<»uM* door in »he count? f Ad in the State of liidi'oi'i beTwoen the hour.** <>f 0 o’clock a in and I ■•'clock p. in on Saturday, March 14. 1863. the rents and profith for a term of vear< not exceedintf weveu of the following described real estate to wit: In Lot*, numh-r one (1) an I two (fj) in the town of Bun*i Vi*ta, in said county of Adam* and S’ate of Indiana Ab*o, the no” h half of ihe north west quarter nf si-ction sixteen z lfi). township twenty six '26) north, of range thirteen (I 3) east. contain iiitf eighty (K ») acres, in said county of Adam* ami State of Indiana And on failure to realit** then from the full amount of the execution 1 will at the same time and place, at publi»* auction as aforesaid, ex pose to sale the fee simple of said describe I real estate, »>r so much thereof a* will satisfy said execution. El* cuter! a« the prnp*»rtv nf Christi in Sower at the suit of Frederick Engler, administrator of the e*t-‘t* « f Jaco* R**ber«tine. decraM?d. Tins, 16th day of February H 3 JACOB SrULTS, Feb. 19. 1863. Sheriff.
Feb. I!». 186)
Sheriff’s Sale. Thompson Prairi**.') Ditching A'.MK'iatioii, ’ Court nf Common vh. Pica*of \<Uni counJn**l Click. ) ty, Indiana. BY VIRTUE of an * , xcrntimi to mo Hirer ted and bv the Clerk of the Court of Common Pleas nf Adam* Court v. In® diftiia. I will »*xpo«p to sale at public auction, I at the C‘»nrt H'»u»e door in «aid Countv b- 1 twepn the hours of ten o’clock a. m. and four o’cl«>ck n ni on Saturday. March 21, 1865 The rents and profits for a term of vear« not <>x**erdi ? wv*m of the following described Real Estate t« wi : The we*it half n r th** Month eaM quarter nf •*or»i.»n thirtv mix (36), tow )«hip twenty six f2*i) north, o* rinxe fourteen (J 11 et*t. ron’nin ineei«»htv (33) qrre«. in the county of Adams and Htate of Tn 3ian-i Alto, the past hilf nf <b** «o’ith w»«t quarter nt «pp»inn thi*-tv-«ix ( ?6) township *ntvnix <’‘6’' V.»” f h of R my«» f vim»«n f E»«t. contaiuing (rt-J) .<crra more or leaa, in wai I e'mn'v. an-I itp of T»i li-mt An I on f »ihi” • t« ’•■••d'E • he amount of thn Execution. I will it th® time and place nt puh|jr nncd >n nx-*na<» n the 're simple of said described R . a ] Esfte. Executed tbn pr.»pnrtv nf To I Click at the suit of‘he Thamp<nn Prairie Ditching Asriwtinn Thia. Ifi.-h day of Fetr*?** ,w . Jacob stults: 1 Feb. 19,1863. Bh , r , ff
DRY GOODS! DRY ®I NEW YORK STORE, FO R T WAY NE , IND Establis'isl two veirs ago. on the go ahead i rineiplt of silling a large amount of goods on small profc This house by the uniform «vsfem of huyiny st.d selling goads CHEAP. h>. r-p ttation never be-are attained bv anv firm tn Northern Indtana. Alw.vs . n.nd imv'tifl-ent stock, ptrchase.l at forced and vetton ssles. by eur N.w dork p Wt(!ill| willin'* to sell good® at a small advance on east i “ Every article in the DRY GJODS hue can always be foand here from llw ■ Loweat Price to the Finest Quality, The mtismsof D-eatur, and surron.. ling country, sre invited to call. We S uir lh!w , '“Xm-JoTwy' .S-rW-.1. McDOUGAI 4 tl
FOTT IV It in V.iVtBTbTli«W. CITIZEN’S BA V K. j d y err max. n>nkrr Ce’hona Otmasite the tye’la* Haase. F3VT WAYN", INDIANA. IpNotes and Drifts discounted. Exchange for sal-. Six P-r cent, it.tere-t allowed on time deposits. Gold and Silver bought. n3Svfi. ii\i\ sTnm BXCHIU.L J LESWAN, • • • Prop-irtor. ftKS’r, W■«» as Ciftm Ft. W y’e. In L. Good itions at RtasonaUr rate t Stage office for Bluffion. Decatur, St M in Kendalville,Sturgis and Auburn. n3B’6 MEYIur&BRO.. Whole de Retail Dealers in Drugs and Medicines, Paint*. Oils French and American Window Ove Mfifih, Rr»Khe*.S'»ice«. Liquors and Wm-s Co il Oii «».d c»d oil Linp < to ./.tl 3 j Columbia 3‘r. et, Fort Wavnr, lu t i>t«i t. ** 3Svu. B Wholesale Dealer in HARDWARE AND STOVES. And Waii'ifnc’nrer of TIN,SHEET IRON AND COPPERWARE AT T di GRANITE STORE. No. 73, Columbia Street. v4-n24. FORT WAYKE. IND Tl E irEWToTsET I EKXRNI3 &SON. - - - Prop’s Barr St.eel. V»ptwcen dr Main FORT WAYNE IND Thu House h:n been entirely Refurnished a>,d R .fitte I in g.e. 1 style, aud every atomtion will *>e pitl io the c vnfort of guests Board ers accommodated by the Dav or Week MAYER HOUSE. C .rnor of Wayne and Calhoun Sts.. maT WAYNE, INDIANA. H C P3Z. • • - Proprietor General Stage Ossie. v5n2U
JUSTIN B URET, llenlwr in wiwiiK?, awns. Man SILVER-PLATED WARE. Ac . I NION BLOCK. FORT WIYEf. IMO All kinds <»t Repairing dona to order, -Min warranted. v*n39 s i gToFtTe! \ b l o c k . O. P. M"6“RG AN .Vo. 81 ColnnMn Street, FORT WAYNE Ind a..;: w aw Hardware & Stoves -ANOMannfact’irsr of Tin A Sheet Iron1-.. TKW ,<L ■* WT7 • no 15 irsTUNDERHILL, -DE*L>.R INMarble Monuments; HEM) STOVES, MANTLkS, 0 A B I N E T - S I. A B S. As., i e FORT WAYNE. IND Wo-k-lonc to order on the ahortest notice and in the neatest manner. v»nT». J. C WILBOV. Agent. Auatiax r »t-w >a nrivu.ptt sis x A F StSMON & BRO , Wholesale and Retail Dealers in Bnks, Stationary, Toys? And Fancy Good*. Tilhonn Str—t. h..ar* Pn C-d’unhi* ind M»tn FIR ? W \ rvn ■Zn S-h-vd 'ti As. G. rrntn an I Latin Wnll aTt Window Paner. Gvdtmo Gl*a**>*. Picture Fnmaa. Engravins* •fee. Tlr.lt-n'inn nf tt,„ r„ji v ; n . v.**>-1 ’fn.t -*r „ orV iw dtrorttv h- onrsolre*. -rhM, „ n ,J.j„ A , )r r ,„_ .nmnrs _ • ••"’"■ e*■)n3? . VV r ’Gn wanted it tl,i. n <jj r , 1 > before the th. r.U. h«-wn. oU. i
UNION Fl LE C OMPANf C.SCHMIDT&Ci -M*Nt r*CTVKXS < rFH.ES. HASPS. MILL-PICKI, STONECUTTERS’ TOOLSic. Re>Culliug t>ld Files, Ac , done to tilt and Warranted equal toutw All kinds of Rasps and Files madr toothAlso Wholesale and Retail Dealers ill Fw| and Domestic Hardware, Fine Sari slid l« Nails.(liars.Paint, de , At ration Pritri. UNION BLOCK, oppo.itt-Miite Bank FORT WAYNE. INO .All Orders fr -tn th- Country attendedto HENRY SHAIIP Mauulaeturi-r. W holesale and Hein dealer IN Far, Silk, Pauana. Woal aod P«la In! Hats, Caps, Fursjt A general Stock of Mi ns’ A Boys' ni.i ’ No. VI, < 01.1 MBIA STHEE'I. FORT WAYNE, IND. Thehighest Cash prices paid for Wool, Sin) p-lts and all kinds of Furs v—U. JOSEPH CLARK TULOaiXt; 1 FERSKHIIW w«w«. Calhoun Street, Fort Wayne. KEEPS constantly on l.nnd » ndi-l splendid Stock of Ci-OTnu Cwm VysTt'OS. Ac . »f ’ll varieties, and latwtdu which will be Msns to Niascm it k|* <t,l r —Good Fits guaranteed. Gents’ Furnishing Goods An excellent assortment far sslcjuv S-.i c . L. HILL, i Piano Forte?, Melod® W K » General Vf-isic Merchandise: also, k"?” 1 ’" -towk of A wing machines, from Uio f.i( turer> in th** mnntrv Pilno’* fro’n in from $l. r » tn S winz Marhitu’-t from tn W* \*o. 5.1, C.dhouu St., 0| pofitc th* Fort Wmv*’*.
Large tall & Winter bten OF REA’'.Y MADE «Z 2 ■■ * THIE V K <t- BRO.. FOBT WATKE. IXD. faihiosablr tatio* 1 -i)X *LS«« IN-Ready-Made Clothing • • ■ s ft' i ' • -•Have m.w on hutid a l» r l’<'" I made MH. A Winter Clotlmif > ; Shirt*, o' nil kinds, Trunks. »' ll 1 ' rn, thine Monnin* t» » Ami' l ' n ”' Store Wr h*v " n •>»’’•* ’ ,! ’ r - r I ill Wool Ct»»*imi. rs. Sa ". f,„ 1 ussortmtnlnf vertin' ’ Kurft" l pi tinett.end J.utns. .'i'her mnde (||i , ; tbevnrd. Ourelotbi«e "> ,; rme n ■ Fa*tern slop fthopwork end , ” | I ted ft* repr-en'-d C».h •>« ’f x i Call s’ N? 7' Corn.- C..n s<reet near Krudas w kstir r r ine our Ftork. stm m win FORT WAYNE, INDIA"' 100,000 POUNDS «00 l ' Wanted! 1 At the nbore E-ti 1 bs'ueut, for »)• f pay the highest rate* in zW M ■* • Too’tr Customer* mid » 1 ••thor* WOOL TO MANPFA r TTT®E 0B ’’ - wec.-tnoff.-raLtITGER and BETTER " ment of Good* of our OWN hi* Spring than anv previous *e” v ’•n the CUSTOM DFPAKTJ*EA» , CARDING.SPINNING and , ,", girffi 1 * . with experienced La id* end f / * pf | o «|i , we hope tn rne-at patronage hrre'nc HIRO SOI? *ND I< " jUken in exchange •^’”^ r i )Sl LT « j May 92. 18« t. I
