Daily State Sentinel, Volume 12, Number 4173, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 March 1864 — Page 2

DAILY SENTINEI

the usiox-ir Mur bk par.5RVr.fj. (jaci TUESDAY MOKN1NO. MARCH 1 The toltlo'h of the lie moc rar) . The Joumil ij exceHinglj anxioua to rake platform for the Dem crcy, anJ, nir it: tercmr i'lirn, it charge " disloyalty" upon the ratmher gcnerullr of that orjrviizition "True IojUt." t t, ' rtntiot minzle with Jilo?altT io the mri organiztlion " Wht is "true loyalty"? In a republican gorernment, can it be riy thin? tlc but fidelity to the Cormifution, it organic liwt We cn ronteire of no other iJ of -true loyalty" but that. Accepting that Jefin ition cf the term as the only ju-t tarvUri ty which the loyalty of the citizen or polititnl oreanfzttioa eaa be juIei, we challenge the Repubtinti orjan to fix the charge ol disloyalty upon thre li liiere to the Democratic party, itxJiviailly or collectively. Fciltj to the prin ciple or policy of a puty fn fowcr H no test of pjtrioti'ni, or loyalty to the government. 1 1 it wan, there are but few of the prom Input member of the UpluMicju. or ao-ctll-! Union" pirty, but may be justly C'mrgeil with "di-loyalt?" to the (oen;menti Tbe policy of the Ht-'mini-trations unler Jack on, Vas P.cEfc. Polk mi IUohaxan were " most bitterly anJ violently denounced by the . IeadiDir members of the rrtv now in power. If to question the wi.-uJom of the measures of an Administration, or to criticii it- nets, cm be re garded a "dL-loyalty" to the" do vern merit, who in the Republican rack is uiltle. of that crime? The war with Mexico was pronounced unjust by the ui.ü who now give direction to public uUYirs, arid this opposition give "aid and comfort" to the Mexican; bui who questioned the right of the op; option then to freely canvass the meaorca of the party in power? Was Chatham "dis loyal" to the Ilrili-li (iovfiiitnciit in denouncing the r with the American Colonic a uuwise anl umiece.-ary ? Yet, at cording to the Hepublicati interpretation of loyalty, Chatham should hare been regarded ai a traitor for -t.mding by ihe right and opposing a policy which he wisely forew w detrimental tu the true interests of lit Government. Then, a now, it required moral courage to titnd by the riht. That creit English ftatcsm-in would have been fl.e to Iiis (ioverumeiit if he hid not boldly am manfully, a-he did, oppose the measures ol the Crown toward the American Colonies, although in relcHi'n. The present Adntiuistratiou is in tensely puti-..tu. Its jolicv is paitis ui not only ill the t-oLduct of the war but in till goverumen tal meiure Can it be expected that those who entertain opposite views ns to the be.-t mein of preserving the Government and pro moting its Weilar, should surrender their con viction nt the bidding of their political oppo bent-.? In that only are the Democracy "dis loyal," and they would hive proved fi!se to principle? and to their own ni.itiho-! if they yield ed their conviction of right and duty in this liourof the nation's peril. Whit the .Jotirnil denomlrate. the "worn out cries of aboliliotii-ui, Negro Kquali'y, State Itights," etc , are now practical issues. The present trouble of the country are the results of fanittc.il abolitionism the attempt to force a sectional policy regardlrs of the rieht and interests of the different sections. But a short time ago the party now in power conceded that the States h id the exclusive control of l ivery wilhiu their limit "that stavery i local, ami cannot cxi-d without local laws." And it only proposed to invoke the help of Congress to prevent it extension into the ter ritorie?. Now abolitionism seek to force a aectional policy upon not only the States in re bellum, but also upon those loyal to the Government. It goes beyond this. The policy is to make the t:eio eua! at lea-t to the white nun ?o far a politie.il riht and privileges are concerned, and m in v advocate amalgamation as the be-t me ins of abolishing1 the dilinction be tweeu the r ices. We only refer to these fact to ?how that what ti e Journal term the worn out cries- of "aho'innnisrn" an. I negro eiu.ility,7 which the Republican party mo e.trncst' ly repudiated hut a .!urt time ago, have become a part of if po'iticil creed, and they are meistire whiclr c uiriot be' regarded a. any less objectionable now hv th'jse who have always opposed them th;sn !;eetofore. Itcooliitlon of the Connecticut Ieinocriilic Mrife t'onveiitlon. The following re the resolution un tnimous ly adopted by the conservative men t f Connecticut; lirsolnd. That the principles! heretofore enun citd by the Demoer icy f tbi Stale, in conventi ni -ernMeil, fait lii'ully discrimiuate between the tepective jxeis of the State Government and th-e conlerre i u;ou the Fe leral (Jovem r.reiit; and we do solemn!) reilliim the same, fonfi lent'y rehin,; upon their .upietnacy for the ml'etj iiiivl pr-;Kritv of the -untiv, and ihe perpetuity of Us in-tituiioi Vof, That as llie Constitution has been the only gui le and light of the Deinocr itie party in ail time past, we now recognize in w r. a in peace, no other standard by whnh to ji;ds;e of me i-ures, and no other guide and light for our political action. Ilcfolml. Th iMt i the grand mis-ion of the Deai'H-racv to restore the country to it former condition the Constitution to it riiitlul supreni toy the equality of the States under it their right of supreme local legislation in their domestic concerns the freedom ot thought the free dom of apeech the freedom of the pie the freedom of popular fußrage re'.igiou freedom the right of private judgment the risrht of persotial liberty, with its necessary concomitant, the writ of habeas coipu. the inviolable rights ot private propertj under State law. ihe independence of the judiciary the ri;ht of trial by jury the right of the civil authority to hold the military in strict subordination rights which have been wantonly violated by the present Ad ministration, and the intelligence ot the people therebv insulted and their ju Jgment outraged le$ttlccJt A the deliberate opinion of this Convention. Ihat the party in power doc not intend to pre-crve the Constitution which we teceirel troiu our fthfrs, and is not conducting the pie-e;.t war lor that purjsse, but for the pur-po-e of rev(duti-n:ni the dometi- institutions f the S njthem S'.aic. atid d ct tMi-hing a new goverutueiit. w'uli de-j-otic p4wer, upon the ruim f tue iK J sl'ii'on ltolrtl, Tlut 'he entire rervctsion by the alxditioii Ilepubiican pirtv of the otvect of the present ir, u deuUiel by Coniire?..- to defend and nu nt u.i t!,B u;reniiry ol t!ie Cor.tituti n and preerve the fni.Mi with all the dignity and right of the several States unimptircd" to a pestilent abolition crusade lir the total destruction of Stte cuaUty. i an infamous waste of the nation' b'o'd and treasure RtBoictd, That tlie grind Kcheae of the present Administration to till the country with national b inking aMciations -to mppLnt the bank of the several Sute. to monopolize the whole paper currency to draw the wUle bank ing capital of the States and the people un.ler the urviion and control of tf e Tieiury De pvrtment and to concent oat e the w hole nx-neved power of tW country in the hand o the I'resi eV"Tli " ' 'lafitig entroachment on the we'd nown wi.d universally acknowledged right of the Stales; more dngerou even than that great r.emy of liberty , a ,rge l.indmg rmv. lltsolttd. That the g,., mismana-ernetit of the ür. and the r.ee.lle- apeiHiaure of ir-e a'iiu f iii...e. m.ke the Ad in nutrition nrAly resH!ible for tt.ouand ot li u.e!eslv r-acr Ii.e.J, and ti e addition of hundred ol md'lion of do! Urs U) lh burdrn of the people; and while it ia niale the interest of the multitmie uf retainer which the Admietrtion has gathered around it to continue the war and the preicrt

jMAWl- rr CC mm - ( ruiiitiU exrtnditure of t!.e juMic money, ro ftincre tHrt wid made by those in pjwrr to biing this ui hippv c r di et to a clo-e; and we frtTr v. itb hi b Kepublican authority that, h'fi'd Mi. L i coin be re elected, n l only will "the dignity r. J boner of thec untry suffer." but "the war may continue to Untieh during hi whole adniinitralion, until the public debt shall become a burden too great to be borne." lirf,Unl, That the cu-e of free institution and pell government must never be abandoned, whatever may he the cost of time, treasure and blood; thit w'hile the Constitution of the United State gives power jußictei.t even for the present terrible exigencv, et in it letter and pirit it deprecate conßcttion of property, political exe . cutiou of terpon. territorial organizttion of States, and forcible abolition of .-lavct v.

Rt$itlrrd, Th it the gall n t soldiers who have Mcrifieed the ctjmfortof borne fr the hardship and danger of the fieid, to preserve the in-iilu-tiuns. established by Washington and bi compatriots, ure entitled to the policiton care of the Government; and we pledge to them our be.-t efforts to proiuote their welfare aud secure full justice to thern on all occasions. From Sew York Juarntl of Cmmerc. A Ih ce of Illatory. There is no passage in history which i more deeply iniereting, none on which the pen f th hi-toriin will-dwell with mote eloquence, than that which relate to the condition oi the United States, its army and its capitol. on the last day of August, l-bvl 1 he report of General McCIellan now for the first time collects und makes clear the various incidents which are to fill this im portart pace m our national record. We regret that the Congressional edition, the Ilebellion Record edition, und other cheap edition of the Report, are incomplete and inaccurate, omitting entirely some portion which pre-ent the most interesting and importmt view of the relation of General MoCIellan to the Cahinct, the armv and the country. The editicu published under (Jen McCIellan' authority is accurate. Theomission was doubtless unintentional, fome pages of copy having fallen from a compositor's desk! or been mislaid, in the Government printing düce, and the re-printcr9 who hive followed that edition have produced imperfect copies (ten. McCIellan was not at that time removed from the command of the aimv, but the army wa removed from hi command bv an ingeniou device of the War Den.-irtment He wa treated with conteniDtuo j indifference by (ten. Ililleck When ordered to abandon the iVniu-ul a he was po anxious for an interview with Gen. Il illeck, and a free consultation, that he proceeded from Harrison' liar to the nearest telegraph station, and there finding that the wires were broken under water, he croed Che-apeake Hay. arriving at Cherry Stone Inlet, on the ea.-t shore, about midnight. He immediatel v telegraphed to Wash ington, inf'oi ruing Gen. Haileck that he had come all this distance to consult with him, and request ed him to come to the War Department end of the ire. Gen. Il illeck came, and sent a bne and Mime h it ill humored reply. While Gen Mclleilan was decyptiering tins reply, (it wa in their private cipher,) the operator informed him that Gen. Il illeck had left the Washington office without so much a Maying good night, and that fuilhtr telegraphing was useless! (Jen. McCIellan returned to his armv, brought it wav from the scene of its noble exploits, stood himself, last mm of all, on the de-eiied ground, and left the reninsula w it li the conviction that a great error .11 i was in progress at v asrint:ion At fort Mo-ime he wrote a dispatch to Gen. H alleck, mournfully eloquent, speaking of the service ot hi brave nriuv. and begging II illeck to recognize them He said: f "i'le.ise pay a kind word to ray armv, that I can report to them in genera! orders in regard to their conduct at Votkiown, William-burg, West l'oint, II mover Court House, and on the Chickahominy, as well as in reg ml to the seven days and the recent retreat. N'o one h is ever Maid anything to cheer them, but myself. Say nothing about me. Merely give my men and ofh' ccm credit for what they hive done. It will do you much good and will strengthen you mu-h with them if you issue, a handsome order to them in regard to what they have accomplished. They deserve it." Verily they did deserve it. They were an army of heme. brought home from field of us callaut fighting n the wot Id ever Maw. Hut there was no reply to the request of their General. They received no kind word, no cheer, no thanks. They were hurried home, to be hurled into the jaws of death under a commindar selected to displace the general who had hitherto shared their fortune. McCIellan came to Alexandria. What wa. hi position mid relation to the army? He himself did mit know. The process ol depriving hini of hi command was coing forward. Tope's Army of Virginia absorbed the Army of the Potomac. For sereu days, that noble army disappears from history. It hid no existence. McClclftn wa. left nt Alexandria, still the coin minding general of the Army of the Potomac, but there i. an eloquence which every heart must leel in his simple narrative of what remained to him of hi once magnificent command. Less th in one hundred men, many of these invalids mid wouinJpil men, were the sole representative of the Army of the Potomac! So grand is the contra., which this narrative afford between the day. which preceded and those which followed the 1 ist of August, that it m.iy by some be suspected a. intentional that the narrative i omitted from the incomplete edition of the Kepnt. Uut we prefer to regard it as accidetit.il, especially i'i view of other and numerous errors which cccnr in the Ma me eddions The secret history of political mincuvering at Washington, at this time, would, if m ole public. explain the whole responsibility lor the dis istrou I campaign of Pope. The blood of our thousand lost on the fatal plains of M masse i charge ible directly on the iudigue of Washington pjliii ciati of the rad:cal paity. who only desired to remove McCIellan from the public view, becati.-e they fe;ied that the splendor ol bis genius, the devotion of his army, the nobleness of hi char ter. mihl bihii: him before the neople a a tit mm I i teitl the whole nation tluough w r to peace and union under the Constitution, rorj ...... ...-t ..j;..-.., ..,7 ,..,rsririuson mousanu oi yonn. nv e poure 1 out on: r-..ob,-.. K.tiU Ij i .. i ..r i.:. i . . . . " . ii Holts'" oiiin nrio.s. n'i sonic u iiii.t scciei history tnav be recovered Iroui a clo-e ex muni tion of the dispatches and unlets issued at W ishHi -ton between th 2Jth Aiilmi-U ml l he Ü I Se temher, IstrJ rivedavs brief time, but tilled - r - - - with greit events. The politicians h id succeed ed McCIellan was debased and disgraced. He asks H illock for specific order. as to w hat he is to do at Alexandria H illock rt plies, giving general orders and finding fault. "Ammunition, and particularly for artillery, must be immediate ly sent forward to Centreville, for General Pope, j It mu-t be done with all possible dispatch." teie- ! graph Haileck, atl:l." o'clock on the 30th. 1 vri", ,. o.m ..i .! .r r : 7 h: :i iiv v t w. - a ni tinri f . j it m van inj 1 I to uireci my orunance omcer to load all wagons scut to him." Halltvk tinl fault that Franklin wa not sooner sent forward McCleÜan replies that Franklin hid no transportation and finally mirclied without wagons, and of course without ammunition or subsistence. ' Then McCIellan sends a dispitch, which will be memorable in all future times: T cannot express to y.u the pain and tnortiä- j cation I have expeiienccd to day iu listening to ; the distant sound of the firing of my men. A j I can be of no further use here. I respectfully ask , that, if there is a probtbilitv of the conflict being j renewed to-morrow, I nny be permitted to yo to the scene of battle with my still, merely to he with my own men, if nothing more; they will . ti o ht none the worse for mv being with them If; it i l ot deemed best to intru.ct tne with the cotn j maud even of mv own a, my. I simpl v ak to be their fate on the field of battle permitted to share INeise reply to this to night V . .1. ".. .1 I . . ... . .1. . I-.. I . .,os.r-M ,,v inn.- ,..K,u .nine ii.v.e cit y i - rxiiK.ri. r,ery rn uneni iney expece-! ine iiiiuiiip tucriii f sil.llf- litt, I4ir vn fcltc army a f.te w hirh all the wise-t soldiers were . ri j 0. r.fw!lliii 1 n ... ... I . . toA .1 a .... ..r l a ' hoiking to with the most solemn apprehensions. J Iut no answer came. Not even the common ' courtesy of a reply was given, till the next day i came Jtillcck's cold dispatch: ! "I cannot anwer w ithout seeing the President, j Hen Pope i iu command, by bis orders, of the i department ." It was too much trouble for an v' one in Gen d.eck . ottue to send to the President the niirht belore. or even that morning, and bay : "Ihe fate of the nation lungs in the bilmce; McCIellan ak leave to j;o to the field a a volunteer ; may be so?' j Hut ihe inults wete not jet ended. The same I day, the 31. of August. Gen. Haileck telegraph ! McCIellan: "A many a possible of the new regiment hould be prepared to take the field. Perhaps fome moie should be pent to the vicinity of Chain Bridge" McCIellan replies that it i General Casey's province to attend to the new regiment. t.d Gen. IWrnard't to order other to Chain Bridge. "PJy

the War Department order I have no rijrht to

give tneni orders." Here w or.e of thoe very common N atr niton com: Iication under tna present ra in igement. "I hive not seen the or ler," leplie; Ht!eck. It wa the last insult of the War Depigment, that order, devised ia the m me pirit which a few weeks later dictated the order end'.rg the victor of South Mountain and A r.tietrm to report at Trenton. The order was decisive. "Geu. McClel'.au commands that por tion of the Army of the Potomac that his rot been cnt forward to (ten Popes com mind. How they mu't bare chuckled at the War Department over the keen wit of thi order. It w issued on the afternoon of Augut 3Uh. and af ter the receipt from Gen McClell in of his dispatch of 1 10 P. M , 6y in: "I have no h.irp hooters except the guar! around mv camp. 1 have sent t4T every man but those, and will now end them wih the train as you direct. I i I a!o send my only rem lining snuadron of eavalrv with General Surnner. I can do no more. You now have everv man of the Armv ot the Potomac who is within ray reach " Certainly it wa aharp satire, rery keen and bitirg wit, which dictated, after that last sentence, the w ords of the order: "General McClallau commands that portion of the Army of the Potomic that has not been sent forward"! Hut the morning of t!m3lst brought to Washington feome startling intelligence. Haileck bad been for four diys buy reducing McClellan'a position. neIernj and even insulting him The President and Secretary of War had yielded to the radical politicians who were hounding the voung general; and on the evening ofthe3Uih, when the v ar ucpirlmenl issuea its or.ier. Washington rtdicalism wa jubilant, and all be lieved tint there wa truth in Pore s dispatches. and thit he was sweeping the rebel army with the besom of destruction. McCIellan wasdow n.and a creat victorv won bv Pope. Men who were in Washington that night will remember the tri umph of the radical faction But the next day a change came over the spirit of the radical dream Haileck telegraph McCIellan that he had not seen the order, and he evidently begins to think that possibly they have been a little too fast in W ahmgton. 1 he news from Pope is not rose colored to day. McCIellan begin to loom up again to day in the minds of the managers "You will retain command of everything in this vicinity not temporarily belonging to Pope's army In the field I beg of you to assist me in this crisis with your ability and experience. I Hin etitiielv tired out." S says'Gen. Halluk at 1:7 P.M. on the31st Well he might be tired. The experiment had failed. The whole rim of abandoning the I e ninsuuir campaign and disgracing McCIellan was proving a disastrous failure. The "ability and experience" of McCIellan was now worth think ing of once more. At half past eleven that night McCIellan tele era i l.s Haileck that Pope i defeated, the roa iüied with wagon and stragglers coming toward Alexandria, that Pope's right is entirely exposed I and that he fear the gravest consequences He adds "Tospcik frankly and the occasion requires it there appears to be a total absence of brains, ' and I fear the totil destruction of the armv." "I hall be up all night," says McClell m from Alexuidrii. "I shall be up all niht," ) Haileck from Washington. It wis a fearlul ! night The morning brought truth from Pope's armv and wisdom to the heads in Washington. McCIelliu is sent tor All day dis isiious intelligence conies in. McCIellan is ordered to take command of the defence of Washington, but his orders are limited. They do not yet d ire to face the indignation of rhe radical p tliiui ms. w ho would have vvn Washington ile-troyed rather thiii McCIellan restored. Hut the morning of the 1 leaves them in doubt no longer. The hope of the nation hangs on ihe mm they had disgraced and ridiculed on ihe.'l'hh. The Presideat and General Hillock seek McCIellan at his house atid "commit everything" to hi hands, dueling him logo out and meet the returning armv. The crossing of the Potomac tint day by Mc- j C!ell;:n is a scene for long remembrance. The shouts that went over the hills, the exultation of men who hid legarded themselves s doom ed, but who now welcomed orders. wilom. ten ius, " ability and experience," all which they had proved and known thi Ins been described and recorded. How the general took the shattered army .restore 1 it moral? , led it into Mary1 ind, and in fourteen days won the victories of South Mountain and Antietam; how Haileck complained of his slow much t S mth Mountain, and radical everywhere growled sullenly over the salvation of the capital by McCIellan this is already history. Fr"tn th mchrp"ni Examiner, Feb. IT. The Itcbel Military .situation. The action of the army iu re enlisting has given a new impuNe to the war. It quiets the uneasy distrust which had pervaded tlse people at home, and Mittu e the enemy's confi lent predictions of speedy and eiv subjugation. The Southern home ;iopu!ation m iv hav e been gloomy and despondent before, but brighter auspice have now diwncd upon the cause. The corruption, selhshness and greed which bad begun to hold high sway in the land, m:y have sliHken the faith of many; but the army's action Ins inspired new trust in the race to which we belong. This people are not yet ready for the cunqutror's voke, ami are soill endowed with the patience of privation, the persevering resolution, and the stern and haucht v courage which ttnfit them for subjugation. The army ha revived the public! self respect, cheered the popular heart, put backsliders to shame, and opened a new eh pier iu the j history of the war j W"l in iv the Northern President rroclaim at j ,t "for it is more than probibie that the ! South will be stronger in the campaign of 1?-61 than it has been in any previous year of the war. j The feeble leconnoissancj on the 11 ipidan has ! disproved the current assertion at the North that ! Lee' nrmv was reduced to a skeleton by deser-j lion and fur loughs: ami Meade's own retirement J from hi. advanced posidoi is an acknowledgment I I ot tlir iirieriir frfii th of hi :n!vir:irv Wh.u the patriotic act-o,, of the armv In re- I ieve-1 the Confederacy of .-innre leus on for the ,,;.,,.,,,; ,ua , ,,,,., J f-l'lltl'lillllt'ift-lk LIIL I 111 111 I 1 A Hill.'' I 1 1 I . 1 1 I I I I I of fet b'eness The gene-raliv ex peeled invasion of North Carolin from the aw.ud, has not been I vim i ..nii t iv I if rir rvrri'til In fli or rv i- it i . , , J has been deferred for want of troops I JJutier s uiposuii: advance from the Peninsula upon Ilichujotid has dwindled into a pe"ty attempt to help a few ptisoner run away The land attack upon Charleston was repulsed by a single biignde; and the renowned siege of that "doomed" city, ab ut which the wi-rld was made stand on tiptoe for a p linful length of time, has developed into the most stupendous abortion of modern time. Beaufort Island, which was to hive been the ! f - 1 -..quest that would abs'ob a full fourth part of the Confed 1 eracy, h i degenerated into a net of petty pecj ulaiors, penniless adventurers and demoralized , negroes. That military colony, instead of being J the pride, is the opprobium of the invaders. ! Florida, though abandoned b the Confeleraj cy, still asserts herself Hgninsl the Yankees, by j occasional feat of courage and adventure, w hich utterly disprove the pretense of subjugation. Kven Trans Alleghany-Virginia, where the presence of Confederate troops was ? uprcd to hive become an obselete idei, hi just witness! some important oierations one Conlelerate exfeb'tion Inving penetrated iu the neighborhood of Cumberland, made important captures, and br. ken a chief line of railroad; another having advanced to the very banks of the Ohio river and captured on it waters a government vessel, having on board the General comiumding the Dop.,rirnenl or the K , Lon-s'reet his virtually inawha. Further west, eiptured Knoxville, but refu-es to real ze his prize on account of the pestilence w hich infest it. nd In turned Cum i he,HJ(; Jap, whose fall h i become a mere ques tiou of time. If Middle Tennessee is tili under the onemv's dominion. West Tenneeeand North j Mississippi are for the mo.-t part reclaimed to the Confederate allegiance by u army under Forrest recruited from the region itself. In Aikirxa. Con fed er ate hope are revived by a successful affiir of arm on the Mississippi mid and a promising advance on Little Kock Iu West Louisi ma the invader is losing instead ..r i. i t - i . .. i.- -....r .4 . . i- ... : ion:strii i o ine sroom, niiu n mauc n nuptession upon the conur.try. Nowhere doe the enemy exhibit auy vitality, or i be making any progress, exeept in Central Mississippi; and pro bably he will fend, when he shall reach the real ground of battle, that his advance ha been imprudent, if not rah and ruinous. The affair of the Confederacy not only wear a hopeful, but a cheerful aspect. J3y Lincoln ha received the itnlorsemer.t of the Plug Cglies ia the Baltimore City Council. JtfT" A pitent tafety pocket ha been inverted gint pickpockets.

statu irris.

-Joke ox thk Majok. It i stated that the Major of one of our Iudiin regiment, while recently going the "gr-nd rounds," suddenly came upon a squid of men in federal uniform, who, tating they were Confederates, declared the officer tobe their prioner. He was duly re lievei of about thirty dollars in money, a gold watch. Ac , and paroled The next day he lem ed that his captors were members of his own regiment. Lafayette Courier. Srpercn or Hox. J. F. McDowVu The Washington correspondent of the New York Journal of Commerce thu report the maiden speech of Mr. McDowxll. the representation from the 11th Congressionol District : The miiden sneech before the House of Mr. McDowell, of Indiana, was delivered yesterday afterti'ou, and i the theme of many hearty couiplimenta. He reviewed, in every pointed terms, the exercise, by the dominint party, of arbitrary power, and then asked, Where are the grand results that were to compensate the nation for yieldiug to these powers?" He touched upon the wrongs which Keutucky and the other loyal border States bad endured, and were now enduring from the policy of the Administration. In glowing terms he defended the Democratic party. earnestly recommended aconcilialry course on the pirt of the dominant pirty in putting down the rebellion, and very distinctly prophe cied a decision, ut the ballot-box, iu November next, which would astonish the country. He maintained that we can only have peace and prosperity again by returning to the landmarks of the fathers, and that such a return would certainly be made by the Democratic and conservative masses of the Union. The whole of the speech was eloquent in thought and manner, and his concluding words were as follows : "I regard the Constitution as the only instrumentality to save the Union. Iiis only by adherence to it that we can bring back the Union. I believe it is the high and holy mission of the conservative people of this country, overthrowing radicalism at the North und forever burying gcccssioiiism at the South, to re-tore this Union once more on the venerated foundations reared by our fathers. While life endures we will struggle for that, and we will bequeath to our children that undvin; legacy. "Sir. I have said all that I h id intended to 8iy. I have spoken of the war freely and without reserve. I have spoken of it ns I think becomes the representative of a constituency which loves liberty ai d intend, at all hazards, to maintain it I speik in behalf of a people who will resist any act of oppression or arbitrary power, who are determined to have t free and untrammelled ballot, let the consequences to them be what thev may. 1 speak in behalf of a people who are determined to live a free people, or polish in the glorious effort." Pi7 A Washington correspondent write as follows: Frequent and loud complaints ire being made by the r ink and file of ihe army stationed around the metropolis to the effect that their ollicers are continually unking dem m. is upon them for services w hieb ue not authorized by the usages of the army. Within the lass month a number of ball roorn have been erected for these upstart officers, and many of them deport themselves as if the chief end of their military existence wa to have a uood time by dancing and carousing. Whether the lumber thu illegitimately employed has been t-.kn from the Government supply, we know not. but this method of putting dow n the rebellion is certainly novel These nre not the times to 1 e surprised at anything, but if the Government shall sanction the foolish nd illegal doing of the officers aforesaid, they will be neglerting their duty. GROCERIES. no iv i; T .T O II 3V . NEW FAMILY GPOCERY, Wholesale and Retail, No. 181 West Washington Street. l.L KINDS OV GROKKIKS (WITH THE EXCEItion or liiju ir) ktpt c nt '.ntlv on hanl, pu.c and fre-l , al No. lsl Wet WahiriKron street, rrixluce of all s- r t'ougtit and s ll. Flour, CoiTv.ts, Tea, and all art ciea fin f.itnily use always on band, l.iv t" fuIscr h'-rs a rail J. 1 KNOX CO. marcM-dA w2ni MEDICAL. DR. JOHN BULL'S COMPOUND I Tilling Ii IT THUS The Latest and Most Important Discovery of the 19th Century. O M NS NAME IS MOKE INTlM ITELY COXnecteJ with the htorv of the Materia Medici of the 1 L ir. ted Mates, or nor favorably known st'.eoio eer of medical ii.euvery, than rhut f lr JOHN Kl'I.I., of Louivil!e, Ky. Ui ir.iuitable preparation of farsapirllia, hai lon od at the head of the various comjwiiids of that Taiuatde drujr H i ConiK'Uiid IN ctoral f Wild Cherry has be onie a household word throughout the West and South, a -d his Worm l.oztnire, iu Ies thn a year after theii introduction, a taiiie! a reputation a wide spread as Ihe continent of North Aüieri a. Hut the crowirrg jrlory of hi life reinj'tis to be artaii ed in hi latest di-civery, or rather combination, for he does not claim to have been the dicoverer of CKDIiON, which i the basis of the bitter now offe'ed to the nuMic. That honor belong to iht? i.ative iiih vbitant? of Central America, to whom its virtues have been known for more than two hundred years. Armed with i:,the Indian bid defiance to the most dead!) malaria, and handles without f'.ir thi- most venomous serjient. It i a belief with th rn that whih there is a breath left i i the b dy Ihe Ci dron is po'eiit to cure, nt matter wtia tlie-iiease maybe. While Lr. Iiull is not prepa el t endorse t is e.xtrarapant pretermit u, he is i.evcrtht J' sati-ried from n th"rouh exurn:;iat:ou ,f th' ev.öe: ce r la'itip; to its vir Urs, tbt, a a reindy ai.d preventive for II Ii- arising from ; oi;re i j h r to charge 4 of we ailnr and t htiute, or to the miamaric b fl ierce, it st ind without a rival arid jnttv iles-rve) th- reputation il h to-iir enjoyed in Central A mere and the West Indies. In DYSPEPSIA And it attendant train uf sympsom-", it nc more tike a charm than a medicine. There I iiofhtfg In the wbo!e ranee of maeeria medica that can lor a niouitnt U-ar a comparison with it in 'hi dieae. A full a count of this wond- rful plant niav le fumi l in the l Ith edition i f the 17. S. Di'letisatory, psges 15.S7 aid 15sS. A sr r e of experiment., In which Dr P. ill has bi-en for year- niad, his jut b 11 brousht to a suc essful termination, ard b i nowmabled to orfer to the public a C'.vmbinii- of Cednn with other approved ionics, the whob peerved in th" lest qu i J of copper-distilled L inrbon Whisky, wh cb he i cMitident La no equal ia the world. He in;ht furriih a v. lume of c-Ttiftc.ites, but the public have Ion? since learned to stin ate mrh thinj;s at their tn e v. l iv. The nfVst plan is Tor every ooe to test for hi!ur!f the virtues T anew mejirine. tiive the a Bllt -psa One tri il and you will never u-e any oth r. It Is not n-"esary to publish a Io-ir lit of the diseases for which ihe Cdrii bitter are a tecific. Iu all dis a-e , f the Moiitiiclit llotrl lAver or Kidneyv; In all atfeetion of the Itrililt ! jiend I MCT up nerani;rnirtil of the .Momaclt or Hiitvrls In laoiii, ICIiriituntlmiand .ruralslt; And in r ever unit f(ue It i destined to upers de all other remedies. It not only cures all these dk-eve.t but it prevent them. A wine-el ss full f the Bitters taken 111 hour before each meal wll obv a e the ill effect of the mst rnI.ealtey climate, atr.1 K-reen the eron taking It against dieae under the most trvit.f xposure. flfÖTUr Ji)HS HULL'i Principal Oilice, Hreet, Iu'sville, Ky. Sold w holesale and Retail by J. F. M:Ol IC. Druist, U"et Waaliingtoii Street. ravri.bl-d6rn INDUNAIDt.IS. PARTNERSHIP. Copartnership 4otiiH m7E HAVE A8SCCUTED MR. WM. F.LMUXDS f w ith tu In the V hle.le I'.oot aod Shoe Buities, and hereafter the firm narr. will be Hendricks, Edmund V Co. V. K. UKNL'KICKS V C. Ii.diaLtpol,-, Fb. 23. 164. fl29 r.3t REMOVAL. DC K JB f XL. Uj . "17'F. RK5PKCrrULLTGlTK 5UTICK OF-'UR REtsu street, to .. 3) "on ih .Tlcrldinn Street, 5chnuT New- Ei.tk, and invite Merchant to au ea.mir.atioa of our bk of iVavvr, Cimere, Fur and Wtol Hat, with Caps of all ty'.e. for men and Kvy, which w. fcJt r to ihe trade at price a low a can be fuund in any e ther Western Jobbing Hat IIooe. tur t s. k are selected at the het rcanuf ctories Kat aol are of atylia ui'irg the trade of aujr local'ty In Mnw Good w. bar. at all time a ffood aaaort tse&t. t ÜNAUDS0N A CA RR, 24 So th Mcrid.aBHrt, ScfcauU'a w XUocJc. feblS-dVw

AMUSEMENTS,

TI KT ISO IMI M TA 51 A Ii Ii. STAGE Jf AXAGER Mr. W. II. KILKT. Tuesday Evening, March 1st, 1864. itoMAxci: or a POOE YOUNG MAN! ALT. Tili: STAil COJirA.YW SCA LP! OF ritlCES. Prlmte Bxe, Ter ix people fi 00 Orchrtra 5u 75 Cent lT'i Circlf nd Parqiiette '. iU Cents Gallery or Family Circle 15 Cent ITjA'o taring cA-irrj or rrtrril nit. rrBx op-u irom 10 o'chick A. U. till 12 M !i"r'I'r open at 7 o'clock. Curtain rie at S pre-;ftx. rKeirTed wats reta!oel only tll ibe end of th first act. PROFESSIONAL. cV IV IV UAL TOUH. IIa Arrived ttnet Will Itenmln One UeeW Only-. Prorcor De IUt, (Of Albany, X. Y) The Celebrated Hair Restorer, CI AN UK Ci iNSULTKD BY IKTII LADIES AND GENTLEMEX afflicted with Italilness, Thin Hair, Falling off of Ihe Same, liivravrdsralp and I'remattire Illaiichinff of the Hair, At Lis Parlor in the BATES HOUSE. 4'aa mi xtloi& Horns tR Co.vst ltvtion For Gentlemen, from V A M. to 1 V. M., and 7 to 9 I. M. Ladies, from till 3 1. M. fb25-llw MARSHAL'S NOTICES. (No. 74..) United States MarshaPs Notice. UMTEDSTATES OFA.lIKIIIC.t, VISm TKICTOF INPIANA, SS: Wiikkkas, A lilel of information has teen filed in ttie District Court of the United States, w itliin and for the Eighth Circuit and District of Indiana, ih the 11th day of February, lsC4,ly John Hanna, Kmj., Attorney of the United Vtate f-r tue Ditrict of Indiana, aaint the following derilel prop, rty ami effects of John Ziner and i'hillip I-:ite!ii-gho!: Seven fermcutatiiifi; tubes, forty Ldirrlt of wli fVy, on w-deti ktill, onecopi er still, one doubter and fixings, one boiler, one engine and tixiiigs, live stands of beer, about two barrels of copper diilled wbi'ky. rectifying tubes and apparatus and the whlky therein, eized at the ni l Iiis-. tict for a violation of an 'An Act to provide internal revenue lo Mlpport ihe Goveriiinont and to jny interest o:i the pulilic det.t," aprroved July lt, l"fi2, and praying rro:es acaius" R.ii'l goods, and thaf the isaiiie may be condemned as forfeited to the United States. Now, therefore, in pursuance of the Monition under the seal of the said Court 'O me directed and delivered, 1 do hereby jrle public notice to all persons claiming said po.Ml-, of any part thereof, or in any manner interested threi :, rhat thy be and appear before the ;iid, the District Court of the United Mate., to be held at the city of Indianapolis, in and for the District of Indiana, on the 1st Tuesday of May next, nt 10 o'clock of the forenoon of thatdiy, aod then mid thereto in:er;o.e their clainm and make theii '..negation- in that Iwliiilf D. Ü. liDSE, U. S. Marshal, I5y I. S. Hiuiclow, Deputy, AttestWatt J. Smith, Clerk. febl7-dUt (NO. 749.) United States Marshal's Notice. ÜNITKD STATUS OF AMKK1CA, DISTRICT OF INDIANA, SS: Wiikkkas, A libel of information has been filed in the District Court of the United State within and for the Seventh Circuit and District of Indiana, on the 15th day of February, lsßi, by John Haiiua, Ksq., Attorney ol the United States, fur the District of Indiana, against one hundred and forty-rive hales of ctton, marked, atid all persons lawful y interveniir for their interest there in, seized for a vioftth n of th" law- of the Un ted states, and he regulation of the Secretary of the lr- aury now in )'iri:ance hereto, anl pravinp pioce. acaiul sai ffomls, and that the same may he condemned An I sold as lorfeifcd to the United States. Pbw, therefore, iu pursuance of the Monition under the seal f said Court to me directed and de i red,I 1o hereby Rive putdic rotice to ab per-ons r'aimin? -aid itoimI, or any pari thereot, or in any m inner inte-ested therein, that ttiy be a'ld appear before the sad, the Dis-trn-t Court of ih' United Sta es to le held at the citv of Iti1iiiipolis, ii. end f.-r the Iistrict of Inüaoa. on llie lt Turxl.iy of Jl.iyt'ext.at 11 o'c'ocfcof thefirenvin ofthat day, then and there to hiterpie tiieir cUinis and make their al!f fratioi s in that bi half. I. ii. K'bSK. U. S. Marshal, l'.y I. S. IIiokiow, lieputy. Attest: Warr J. Smith, Clerk. Ml?-dl4t PAPER. PAPKK FOR THK SPRING TRADE wurn; iaii:k, virrric; imi'iiu, U IM)iV iai'i:k. WALL TAPJIU. Ho.v.Mir no iit ns, i:.VLLori:s At CiiK'iiin-.ili Whol's:iIc a'rlcs: at BOWEN, STEWART & CO'3, 18 West Washington Street. feh-.-diw U. S. TAXES. UNITED STATES INTERNAL REVENUE. Annual Taxes for 1864, TUR attention of lx- syers is hereby cal'ed to the p-ovisi n of ihe Unitfd Stntes Fxci-e Law relative to the assessment of annual t.e. By the sixth i-eni n of the act of July 1, 1S6C, it is made theduty of all persons, partner-hi s, Urn asocia'ions, or corporations, Bi.v le lible to any annual duty, license, or tax, ft r Injure the Jiitt JlmaLiy of Jf tyin euch ynr, M ma'e a list or return to the .s-bi.-taijt As.-essor of the Di-trict where located of the amount of annual income, the art cle or i b i.ts charir-d with a ap-X'iit tax, an! the ousinesa or occupa'itn liable tc pay any li ense. Every person who sha'l fail to make mch return by the day sj-c:Med w ill be I able to te a-sesM-d by the Assessor a. cordiriR to the best information wl.:h be cau obtain; and in such ca.e the Aseor Is required to add fifty p r centum tothe amount of the items T ucb lir. Every person who sha I deliver to an Ae-sor any fa'.e of fra idul-nt list or statrmer.r, wi'h ir trLt to evade the raluat.oti or enumeration t' quired by law, is subject to a fine o;" five hundred dollar; a'.d bi noch ca the list will le made out by the Assessor or Assistant .Vsiw-ss-or. ai d from the valuation ar.d tbuiut ration to made there can be no appeal. Paymenr of the annual taxes, ectpt those for licenses, will i.ot be demanded until the 30 h Jay of Jun-. The appropr ate blanks on which to me return, and all ne s8ary information, will l fi;rnihed by J djn B. tumph. Assistant AM'or for the First D v'sion, to w horn the returns shou'd e deliv. red on "r bef-re the firt Monday in May, at hi oflice, Ui ew h TalOotta Block, near the iW VZxt. W. A. ERADSHUV, C. t. Assessor, 6 h District. InMnarv1:. Eeb. ?4 lfc64. eb24d.wlm CLOAKS. CLOAKS! CLOAKS! Selling Off at 5 Per Cent. BpIow Cost, Fan sgx WEEKS, VOT FOR AN rXTF.NSIVE ALTEttATlOX OF i pr mi-es, but we want Ca-h tc go Eat t buy ur Spring Stock before the great demat d in the Eastern Market for S;vrnp Good. We defy cornpeiiuon ia price. Plea call and examir.a oar tock. BURROWS & EDWARDS, WHDl ESALE AXD EETA1L CLOAK HOUSE! No. 18 South Illinois Street, IXÜIA5AP0LX, 1.1 Id AX A. JtBll

FOR SALE OR RENT.

SAULT STE. MARIE, CANADA WEST.! fIV F.K f OLD OR LET-A ru t del htful reMece. I tuate on the bankof the beautiful Rirer M. Mary, and nearly oppoit 'Tb Saat." In Mohican. Tba Hoviae U bailt to the comfortab e English ryle, and contain, on the croon 1 Boor, a pciou d;n:rg ro m, t part r and three bed-rosnn, with an excellent X tchen and other coovenienees aitas:hd. TL rPr Prt co ita of five bed-rH.m, commanding mvt exterrire views. A capUal cellar i nndemeath th house; and rtabl nr. a wool hed. amok tioo. and ether fal ntVaildir.gsare on the fTeir.lcs. The whole haT been ere.'ted w. thin the lat ttree jear. Ther are alo between 'O and 0 acre of tn-adow an-t patcr land, beantifady ornatnente with evergreen, mapk and other trees, included iu the pre tri. Price, U n.M. fi.fw; f2,0 to be paid down, and th. remain tg f3,Ho in annual Instalmert of fl,tXJ each, wt h interest at 6 perrer t per annum. If let, the rent will be fXi0 pr anaom, payabla quarterly. The prera'sf re aituate on the nrrth bauk of the beautiful 'Ed picturMjue r.rer St. Mary, and in the healthiest part of Upper Canada, The cenery is rao-t lovely and romantic Speckled trout and ot erchoice 5sh alund In the rirer a;d neighboring stream, and Kood shooting may also be had The property Is r-alty one of the most dolightful at:d valuable in North An.erica. Rer. rences may te made to J -de Prince. Sanlt Ste. Marie, O. W., or to Cut. K Nert I-arktaw. Cincinnati, . crJ.W. Ihwld, Esq., Indianapo lis, Indiana, or O. W. Alexander. Esq , St. Louis, Mo., V. S. Sai lt M.Mai,C. W , Jan. 2id, 1-64. feb23 dlOt NOTICE. Indianapolis Chamber of Commerce. f fill E -CHAMBER OF COM KKCK" WILL BE I. opened daily for busire, on and after Monday, Fetmary 15th, lv4 (Sun lays excepred) at 2 o'clock P. M. 'Ohansre hour from 2 o'clock to 4 o'clock P. M. fehlT dim J. BAKN'AKD. Secretary. BOOTSÄNÖ shoes. NEW WHOLESALE BOOT & SHOE HOUSE A.C.DAWES, WM. 2f. EVANS, JAS.T.McMILLlN. DAWES, EVANS & M'MILLIX, Wholesale Dealers in 71 West Washington Street, I.MI IXAPOLIS IM., 4 HE NOW KKCF.rVlNG FLOM THK DEST MANULvuuTr i.icturTf in i:e c-iii!irv, ana navr in Morr, lum 200 Cae of Men' an 1 I'.n a' Calf and Kip Boots. lOil 44 44 Itrosan and I'I w Th.s. !()( 4 Calf. IVitKcJ and J-xe Balmoral. ion 44 oror.i and -cotciiTira. 3(K " of WoW Caf, Crat and Calf Tepged Booianl Balm rN. ()( Cfes cf AVoni. n's t?oat, Kid and Morocco Mk. Welt lkiots and li.ilnirals. 21 Ca0! IVutiM'u'n i.nrir' Chk (Jailor. 5t)( 44 f MiseMDiI!ro'N r.o,.'.nd Yonrba' Shoa of all ki;idt hiz- , viirif'ies aud Ptjles auitablc for Imliana and lllinuiitra i Having ma1e ur purchases befrf the la' a.Iranc, ' w iVi I aurt in Maying we can oiler superior in-iure-mPtii.4' t' any Houf in tbe Wf .t. i We cordia Ijr invite jou to -xaminc our tock before Rirki"i; nurctias. Iq4 Prompt attention paid to order. Extra Mae alway on h nd. DAWES, EVANS Jt McMILLlN. feMT I DRY GOODS. tr, 1 R If) H a. 2 CD W t Hi Hl I i o u m P H i Q D 0 A H PI 02 4 32 Th Til IM (J p a a i 0 HARDWARE. NEW IRON STORE. I'onuitoY, i iiy & co., No. 24 South Meridian Street, IMIIAAI'OI.IN, I.MHA.tA, H contantlj n band IKOX, STEKL, SAILS, A5VILS, P.KLLOW?, VICES, AXLF5, SP Kl S S, IK ) LTH. VIA LLK A ItLK C ASTISG S . . SUM, WASHCItSIIORSK R0K5, HOUSK SHOE NAILS, WHKKL, HUBS, ShJXES.FCLIKS H AI-TS, BL'riÜY AND WAGUS W)WS, CHAINS, PIW IU!fIW,C, AC. -A. KJV XM IV M The Ohio River ialt Company. T Mdion IVarl Starcb Company. l.rjToT "'Il eMail article in theirline at tbIowt market price.. IttMEROT. FRT a CO. ftM? REMOVALS. It 1Z 31 O V A. 1 . UJY. HVK. REMOVED FROM SOS. TJ AND 77 We.t Wahittoa ireel W th o-w aud eonftnudious room, . 4? ulh tfertdlan Kirecl, In Sctiiulfa Block, where w offer to the trade a full and wede ected k of Mtpla and Fancy Dry üood, Notion. c, iufikler.t la quantity a4 tartety to check the entire memorandum of acy buyer, aud at prices unu'. ,aed la the Wet. ilf rcaanU wiil find it to their adeactac to examine our atock and price before puTcbir;R' eWwbere. fet-4lm CROaSlJLSD k FKE.

CARPET!

PIECES OP CARPETS, JUST EFCFIVZD AT THI Cradle Palace, 26 and 23 West Washington St. Medalion Carpets, Supurb rattero?, in rich hib color, all lire Axminstcr Vel. Carp't Unurp-!?evl in f t je, elciTDC D1 vlurability. Velvet Carpets, Xe w ml elertnt sttle?, in light, drk ml medimn color. Body Brussels Carp'ts Tapestry Brussels do Enlih arivl Amcric m Mmufacture, New Tattems, in high olor. rerj fine. Three Ply Carpets, From $1 3j per jard. Extra Superfine Carpets, One hundred pieces, from 1 25 per yard. Ingrain. Carpets, Coinnion Wool do-, From 75 cents per yard. Cottage Carpets, Rug Carpets, Hemp Carpets, cw rMTie?, irom j cents per rara. No piiti or expetie hta been spired to furnish our customers with the larpet anlmost Taped 8tock of Citrpets ever offered in thi market, and they will be sold at prices defying competition. VOL. M X m Wool and Satin Damasks, Kxtrn qualities and all color. Lice, Tambour k Swiss Cmbroid ercd Curtains, Curtains Trimmings, Holders and Tassels, Gilt F'rminc, in groat varirlj, Cloths, all widths. Oil Cloth and Whet Hugs, M itiill i uA Tnrn'i M itlfnrr dJlIUIla IIIU iOCOl JJdUing,. Itlf fF 1 Ilf (ünMn Holland. 1 1IT. I) . . V Ci. I f . t. Wall PaiMT, MV Si ICS, K(C( 1V Daily. Together with a complete assortment of HOUSE FURNISHING (iOOÜÜ. HUME, LORD & CO., I'M IM AX AIM) I, IM. aujrls. WINES, LIQUORS, &C. HAHN & ROSE, No. 11 South Meridian Street, STATE SEXTIXIX UUILDIXG, WHOLESALE DEALERS IX, Foreign and Domestic T J LI0Ü0 C I G- A R S, TOBACCO, &C. We call particular attention to oor fitie araortment of (enuine imparled EiQuons ciams AUoour Lariro tockof OLD BOURBON WHISKY AND TOBACCO, AH boebt bef.re the rle, which enables at to eel! a tbe very lowest price. We fciT.te Ial-ra to eiamlno or lock before purchairg elsewhere. . r V it. rfgiK Jan6-t4m ASTROLOCY. 5 ASTROLOGY! 5 GO AMISERTHE XATTKtL GIFTED A5TR0LOllV.K, Prufeor LI 05AMOCS. He U tbe eeDtk aon -f ibe a Tenth e-B. Bun wrth a natural ar ft, he e int futurity with auch eiorttvea that it la really aMoijiahir.. He i the Imna de At roller of the Nineteenth Cent ry. With the a4 of a mr;ie plaaa and tbe card, of the eminent lrt Sorrereaa, Madamo Lenormar.d, he can tell eeeryth. a that U atill wrapt ia oMirion. He will tll tboie wb ermlt htm who they will marry, the ember of cbiidrew tbey will bae, and the lei jrth of their tlTe for a few day. Only romo aod eonalt th Atr.4ett. at No. Kentucky Arena, firu bouv below tL hank. WrMtu wikbma: toeonaU tho Profe.aor by letter cara do by ratio- ihctr ece, e pkawa, d tbe aoooth they were tV-rn In, tiKlmlr s the leo of f 1, and p wUft tamp. Ad4rer- x 142 luitiaaapolia. Wice of ctnultaMon $1 fetCS-dlm. WANTED. AGENTS WANTED. f llTANTKr. AC.RNT FROJC TO flM HE W HMh. Tbe United iMatea ewtn MorbtMCoaa. pany want an act ire A rent (mal or female) ta ery County to solicit order, for Iber rw fit aiacblne, wita irauae. orrew driver and extra td, or fie larga cotnmWalon. For particular, terma, lc, enclose a tawp and aldr.. CUAkLJt w Eh be , Oevoland. Ohio, Geueral Artt (ortta United Bute.

WINES

1 s,