Daily State Sentinel, Volume 12, Number 4231, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 May 1864 — Page 2

DAILY : SENTINEL.

THE UNION -If MC ST BK r"-J SATURDAY aiORMNCJ. MAY 7. rUn(l Mrlt;l-, Il-rt Tbereporiof Colowl Streicht tu lir Excellency 0 P M. upon ti Clay cocntjr disturbance U a lere dscotr.er.t ?n fict iVexidecUy Munchaui enih. It appari that th a!!nt Co'.ocel went three mile at of Brsi.l, a little village in CJyT count? ups a recocnoincce ;n force, and liocueexeiJ through m;crrcop- that wn Ihre bari'lrrl ret hu cnrrate! nrour.l Ith !! sort of we4p')Di, from tooth pick Ut jebai?. Upon hi retnrn from this ter"r:no5.rc ta-t of th town, r. fc;fid another prty numbering rne forty cr btij men iruüarlj arm-! approaching the town on the National roaJ from the wet. AccorJinjr to Colonel Stiight. wme three buadred aid fiftr Oin threatened to icrest and 0 capture Urs til, but only er? mall Dumber er known to tb citizen of Clay county. Siya that paüant officer in Ma report: "TLe Citizen of Clav conntf knew but a mall number of them. Tbfj were mo.tlj on lioretmk. Some were recugnixl who lived twei.t? ve mile away. All refuaed to pive .heir name., or the native of comrades," Ac. Ac. Again, he says: "I will here retrmtk that they were a very hard looking et o( men; cut in educated, gentlemanly aparir. man among them; mini it ia m v op:tiioa that utile. tuuie of their leaders arc a;edilj arre.-ted, we may look a:iy day for Startling tew from Clay county. " The Colonel ordere! out the Home Guards or the Legion, and 'informed the treasonable, arm ed men. that if tbej did not dijperse at once, be would give them an opportunity of testing the aiocerity of their declaration, by giving them battle without delay." Tbat was i; e three hundred whom be had determined to annihilate root and branch. liut the fifty coming iu Irom the ft he regarded with ru're leniency. He gave them the choice to go on to the town or return horn , "whichever they aw fit," and accepting the proposition "they left hurriedly," but whether for the town or home the Colonel saith not. Nobody can rc.id the report of Col. Strmght without corning to the conclusion that either he w,n humbugged, completely aold, or eNe tin1 he wm making an effirt to humbug O. 1'. il. Prohably the I titer, for nobody el- would be deceived by euch tMtch of inconsistencies contradiction and hvfalutiu. nt .TIiicli.' The Journ il. referring to Governor Morton, remark' When he h nothing bi-ttrr to do than ret 'j to the Sentinel, the puhüir will luve no u.-e for him." The Governor' or,;n, to u-e botnclf eiprcv'on, get it foot into it by thit declaration. A week ago lt niht, the CJov ernor mde furioua onlatight upon the Sentinel of an hour's length. He read extract! from it, and then commented upon and replied to them with grett feeÜrur, nl mot vindictively. And it 1 not out of the way to remark here that ft Republican gentleman in the andiene! expressed the opinion that thoe extract were the best points of his peech. It appear th it the Governor had nothing better to do than to reply to the Sentinel, hence, according to his own organ, the public hu no ue for him. This is the predicament in which the Journal places his Excellency. And we nugget to that distinguished functionary that it would he well for him to commit bia cause to an editor with sharpne.-a enough not to make a donkey of his patron. A Great Tlovrnirnt on (lie pttrt of the Women. An association has been formed at Washington called "The Ladies' National Covenant' which haa drafted articles and iusued an addre. The object of the association is to purchase no imported article of apparel during the war. Silk, bonnets, perfumery, lace and all manner of knick knack are to go under the ban. The addre-i cites the Tnjnn women and our revolut'onary rnttron-, d contains thin tine allusion to a fact Innjr, pitent: It i piinful truth, for which we h Jl yet ltru tn blusti, tliAt the importations of thi most ' esnen-ive oods m mufacture 1 in Europ4 have been fr rater rlurins the war than at HiAr time ; in the hUtory of our country. The imputations j 1 it week at the New York custom hou. i alone i amounted to millions f lol.if; ami . II 0"t I fk hich will yet find its ignoble re-orl in! history the streets of Wihiiito:i were h ooked j up with weary midier, ni .nhiog through mud, ' r tin or dusr, down to the Army of the I'ot irn c, ! winch now lies with bated coungc waitirg ;or the cirrtr I of ith. which i a!ni"t tiinine his crimson hiow over u. i The rrefideiit of the Association is Mra. Jas. J Tatlor; Vice Presi lent, Mrs Stephkx A. j Douglas. What do the laJies of Indianapolis ay? Will ther falter in this matter? Wethinkj not. In a few day we expect to record tint the! plorimi ex tnple of the Wi-h:ngton laiies hau bet-n rfdopteii by the ftir and p miotic women of the Hooier Capital. St rt the arti extravagance j association. Set the ball in motion. Cat otT to the very roots all extravagance in dress and It v. j ing. and it will remove a heary drain upon the pure of father and hushanda. Hrnlusi J. dar' Ox Sllfftitlr f.orrd. Mr. RatTrs J. Ctat. one of th Kentucky members of Congres. elected list Augustas a consierratiTe n the same pUtform with Gor. pKAVLtrrc. but wb.) acted m.ivinglv with the Adrainistr ition Jtructies, bhed up when the j army bill elevating negroes to an equility with whites j called np for consideration. Mr. Clat ijot along well enough with the radical brethren o long a their meisures Ii i not tTvt ! hiraclf or his interests, but where thev gurei his i ox why that was quite another matter. Hetr ' Mr. Cist: Mr. Clay aaid the property of hi eons'ituent had been stolen froru tfieir punt stion; no; o.ilv , negroes, but stock and everything ee. The1 negroes, which were valuable, were tike.i i-iro ' the military sen ice, while the um 'es sl ivcs and ' women and children are support. 5 a the ex- t pense ot the government without pirt:c!e of law. Thf government protrctrl its rftVors in stetlin lie-roes; he krew it to be true. ! e hid euffered himself, and to the tru'h of thi he wotdJsweir i:i i court of j'iice He rskl fr noihinc but what the law an I the Constitution Kve him. and whn tl.oe right.s were trampled uaJer foot, be would raie his voice against it Mr. Eliot said he understood the gentleman from. Kentucky to charge that the Government oScer h ol stolen negroes. Did the emieinan sy thi? He had yet to learn that any such Utemet.t rested on the truth. Mr Clay anawerJ I He n.tid thousands ofcontratMiids were dying incamnofall disese ever de-eried or tmss'riel. They were rottirg in filth. Such mortality is the result of your yatern. You care no more fur a negro ihm you do for bor. You are purchasing thee re groej with bounties to ve white men. My patience is worn out. I would rttber be a slaveholder thtn a robter, steal iu.: all over the country. The ysiera iinuursted was worse than the original M'.rn of a.atery. More nioi-ey is re-juiittl to carry i: outihtn it co-ts to clotl.e "the laves at the oulh. 57" Tb Lonl.n CCtnalt) Kree Press sys; Mr. VaUjt.i ghara, of Ohio, u at preent in this city , at lie Trcumaeh house. Man lufl jeutiAl persot.e l ave already called uj-n him, and express thmelvea pstiSed at hit uniform!? courteous and gentlemanly bsjaring

Ttae Tlri n rntlltb, nal American Cltitrnfea. T-l:lv Times of Sunday has a well writti diti.rij on the u'je-t tf "Eani and l.er 0ratie.." thejujt tifier of our nrcnij-orary luring excite! by the Ch.et Conitniss'.er ol WxJs aid Foret relu'ir ? to rraht peruoaaion to at. ir.teiiigent bo-ly of London cptritive to mart-h in tr eion to Green lik wild thre to ce:etrte fehak'peare'a tercentppary by platitmjr voutiz oak in honor of trie great dr.imstit. In its xesl In fsvhr of the workiagc.en of other lard, fhe Tißie sys: The o-eratives of Englar.1 are the creator of the wealth of England. Without their indos try she could not pay the interest on frerer.or mousdeb, could not meet the currr.t expenses

of her Government, could not maintain her! present proud oition among the nations. With out the up&ort of their tiong arm, l.er re sources, her prestige, would vmish as the motu ing mist Yet, how are thn- ii.!el tiaNle tnicrs requited fur the services they render? Why, by denting them the rights of citizens aod cf humsn nature, and bv manifetirij;, on every pj--io!e ! on, her distrust of them " While cheerfully indoring all th-.t U there ai l, we trust it he neither ui, neighborly i or unkind, if we rerairid our coteruporary thit there are other lands and other States besides that wherein the Commissioner of England's woods and forest has sway, where operatives, alike the creators of the country's wealth without whose industry the government "could nrjt meet the interest ol' her enormou debt could not miintair her present po-ition among the nations," and that have been the i"Ut'jrct of outrage and of wrong, compared with which that which so excites the Time absolutely piles into otter irsignificance. It is fre-h in the memory of our readers that, within the l-t three lay, two hundred mechanic! in Tenner, who, at a certain stipulated price had agreed to work for the Government, at the end of the time they had concluded to erve, found them-clve seized bv a militarv four, imprisoned, ami finally sent, under a military guard, hundreds of miles itway,nn'l banished beyond the Ohio, to remain during the war, becau-e they did not feel willing to remain longer than their contract time. This w.s done at the instance of M ijor Geoenl Thorn is w ho holds n tnilit iry command In Tennese. AIout the siiue time, ticner il James B Steednnn. of Oiiio, a M ij-T Gener.il. of atiout ot.e month's standing. tent from Chattanooga to Lnuisvi'Ie, a dist tneo of three hundretl mites, under militarv guard, to be exiled in like manner, and for a like offense, near three hundted mechanic nd Railroad employees. Why slept the indignation of the Times over thee w:ini4)n outrides, not only on the rights rf operatives, but upon the rights of man? The refusal of nn Eng'i-h otlicial to allow workingmen to pitss in procession into a patk or to plant a trse in honor of Shake-peare. call forth nnut s'M'hing rebuke, but not one word has tint Abo lilion licet for the greater outrages on the free white American mechanics imprisoned without crim, without tril, sent into exile by a Govern ment i-lh. ii. torn from their fa mil e and treated worse th in Russian lord d ire ie Ru-sphi serf. All the s mpalhy it shares for the toiling mil lions is reerved for those of another land, where, it they are by an upstart, "dres.ed in a little brief authority." retu-C't permission to walk in proce sio:i in a public pntk, yet still they are protected bv law, und where the highest in the land dare no more imprison a man. even though the meanest iu the Sfa'e, without due process, or to send him intooxiV without sentence of I iw br a com petent tribunal, than he dare fire his neighbor's building or commit an ou'rajre on the person ol the ruler of the realm fN. Y News. The .tlexicati I injilrc- A ICrltlah Opinion From the London Times, April 12. J An Empire of Mexico has now been .added to the States ot the world. The new iovei'eign took his departure yesterday for the seit of his government, nnd with his arrival will commence one of the most retnitkable experiments in the hitory of our own times. It would be mere JoHy to disguise the extraordinary in'u.Jents ol this unexampled event. One of the greatest powers of the Old World has occupied, with an armed force, and in spite of resolute opposition, the country and capital of an American State, has transformed its government from a republic to a monarchy, has introduced a prince from one of the reigning house of Europe, and continues its nid to the new oveteign during the intancy of bis rule. Proceedings like these require no slight apology, but we remain as we ever hive been, entirely of opinion that the apology is suf ficifut, and that the conduct of France, while perfectly justifiible in the eyes of Europe, is cal cul ttedto promote the interests of Mexico and to bent-fit the civilized world. The polity of France, therefore, in this matter is justifiable in the eyes of Europe. Extraordinary it certainly m ty be, but such is the case. Never hefore was there such an int-mce of a Sttte proving incapable of self organization, failing into hopeless anirchv, nnd becoming a nuis nice to the commonwealth of nations. Never before was State so maiked nut by common consent 'or annexation or interveution ii incapable of political independence. This was not the judgment of Europe merely; it was the conclusion of the A merican Government, and Mexico wmi'il probably have been before this absorbed in the United States had the union of the States been miintait.ed. The interest of Fiance herelf iu these procediug is a different question, but it rerlet t no cenuie on her to suppose that what she ha done has been but little for her own ! gain A Fret'ch st itesm tn ihscrihed the appio bation of England in this mattt r a "sarcastic:" i but. he wa entirely mistaken We have never ! disgni-el our estimate of the policy of France. ! We have id without utTectatiorf reserve that. ; according to our views of uch mitteis, her birgain wa a bid one. Nobodv could convince! our H'use of CoMni'Uis that the patron ;e of a j transatlantic empite was a gnd return for an ex-1 perditure of millions and the sacrifice of many! live Hut we also that, as such things have j been UMiallv regarded in France, the Mexican i expedition his been not more costly, while it has been lar more productive, than others which h ive been un let taken or ad voc ited. France has actually i-ucceeded in estiblishing a new empire across the Atlantic, and in btingmg a renowned and opulent country within the pale of civilization once more. If the experiment i? permanently successlu! and we do not see why success stionhl te doubted she will hive justlv earned, not only the thanks of the Mexicans, but the grMtitu le of the world. How Aitnnt secretaries Mfc Washington Oorrr spv.u-lence rf N. Y. Commercial. While the Senne was discussing a motion to raise the salary of Assistant Attorney General Coffey from $:i.0i;) to $1.U:H, Mr. "Fesenden alluded t the discrepancy of the salaries nowpaid to Assist tut Secirtsties, ar.d aid tint those who only received J'U'Ot would hesitisöcd with thit if others received t o more, although if a mm wants to keep a couple of horses and a c-iniije. and live in tyle. he rumt live on $.i.'idii honestlv, an 1 some, he understood, did keen their carriages and horses. "Honestly !" inquire 1 Reverdy Johnion, wi;h a dout.tful look. And Mr Fossenden replied, s-ignißcantiy: "I do not kn.w " There nre queer stories about .-me of our oiliciaU. and s.Mne of o!jr fern ile clerks aresadlv sui if by s-and il. I'nri licomlnj Nranilal. A Washington letterst iles thit Gov. Fietpotit, j of Yirini i. h v nt ii got hi letter to President I Lo coin and Corgres printi, ind will to ni irow I. iv s rop o; it before e(h tnend-er. It is an exposition of the curt upti ns of themoitirv authorities at Norlolk and Portsmouth, und is terrJdy severe no General Kotier. Although the gleitest secrecv h is in en observed let trie contents of the tiHik should gt out before the Gov emor wa-. iead for it di-dr.buiion. some zealous fiiend of the (teneral surreptitiously purloined a proof-sheet trom the printing oKice. and on S::.day lsst forwarde! the im to Fortress' Monroe. Tbecreirn of the whole atTiir i that Hutltr has a rerlv all ready to lav betöre Con-?re-s s mu'.t u.eously wi;h the charges Kaller st. II lives f Cliicngo Pot Jr"The following ere ome of the sen'.iraents written down by the voters for McCLELLajt in the late sword contest at the Sanitary Fair in Ne ork: Hi name will stand i.n the pae of history, nnd brighten w.th white lustre a the years recore; but his detainers will only L reaieoibered f'rr their injustice Removed from the lead of the army, he tili commands the leans of the soldier and the peo; I. A soldier and a statesman, he Und vindicated by the evenu ol tirua

ritU.TI THE OI7TII. CorrtsxtTir ot lb Xw Tork WorkS. Baltimokk, May 2, lid axr KT or thx cattlee or ntrmt. Il is rejste-i here f-day, thit Washington at the head ot Pamlico Sound in North Carolina, wa evacuated by the Union forces on Thursday of lat wee; that, on the Jth ult., the enemy in strong force appeared before Newbero, invested that t-lace closely on all tide, atd de-matde-1 it surrender. BeaiJea the ironclad gunboat, the reoels at said to have at the taouth of eue River their iron-clad battery for sharpshootera. and three powetful rama. The land forces are said to consist of the moii troops who captured Plymouth, reiuforced by i-omeotber t.riga le that wer at tbt time at Kiuston and Wilmington, the whole under command of Mj r General Picket. They are said to be twelve thousand strong. If this report is true, there can be little doubt that 2t ewbern bai fallen, and that alt our military a tores, munition of war, and artillery, bnh at that place and at Wa-hinzton, ate now in the hands of the rebels. From the information which 1 get from other sources, I am satisfied tbat ibe report is true, or at least that it will be verified by the events that will transpire iu a few day. If the loyal people of the ISutth were deceived by the plausible &sfirance ot General Duller, "that be bad etil a fleet of eui'boais dow u to Albemarle Sound to destroy the rebel ram and retake Plymouth," the rebel authorities were not. They anew that our little torce at Xewberu and Washington, and cur works ut those places, were t their mercy, from the moment that their ironclad vessels and ram, from the head water of the Ito noke Kiver, had glided over and past the flimsy obstructions boe Plymouth. WHfc.N TUX REBEL TROOPS IN NORTU CAR0LI5A 'WILL COM. NoRTU. When Jfewbern is captured the Union forces will no longer have a foothold in North Carolina. The whole of that Stale will then have to be abandoned to the lender mercies of the rebels, as Texas, Florida. Northern Louisiaua and Eastern Tennessee have recently been abandoned; and then the fifteen thousand or twenty thousand rebel troop? now in North Ctroltn i will be transported rapidly to Kichmot d, and will take an important part in Gen. Lee's Northern campaign. The idea that the rebel forces in that State would abandon, it, and would forego the capture of Newbern with its vast stores ol artillery, etc., at a time when that place w;is completely within their power, was an idea worthy ot Dutler But no military officer with any pretensions to common sense could have credulity enough to believe it. IL VKLOfMLX r OF GKX. J Oll TON 8 CAMPAIGN TO WARD THE .NOIO.1I. It is understood at Richmond that Gen. Grant

has drawn largely upon the Union lorce in the! West, in order that he may have a sutlicientlv j large army in Virginia for his campaign in the East. It is. believed by the rebel leaders that two whole army corps have been withdrawn from Sherman near Chattanooga nnd senteat for that: purnose, and that other points in the West, und j even one point on the Mississippi river, have been ; greatly weakened by the withdrawal of certain I divisions ai d bi igncs, which have been cent to1 the same destination. 1 have no means of! knowing, ami I tate to you frankly that I do not j know, whellur uth movement. have been made or not. I only know that at Richmond they nre undeistood to have leen mide, and the particular corps Mii'i division thus moved, their officers, and the route they took in order to reich Viroii.i i, me -id to be no tecret nt the leoel War D;' ntment. results or forrest's movements. It is said also that, in consequence of these movements, General Sherman baa been so weakened that he will be compelled to postpone his contemplated advance on Atlanta; and the npiuioncd is even exprcs?cd thai he w ill be unable to maintain himself uu keep open his communications at Chattanooga, but will be under the necess'ttv ol filling back to Shelbyville and the line of Duck river, and possibly even to Nashville. The recent campaign ot Gen Forrest in Western Kentucky and Tennessee, and his rapid march ju-t accomplished from Memphis to Holly Springs in Mississippi, nnd thence to Decatur in Northern Alabama, me no doubt the precursors of the grand aggressive rebel movenicut in Ihe West; but it is regarded also at Richmond as an extensive reconuoi.ssance in force. His couriers, whom he sent daily to the rebel capital (for he would not trust to the telegraph,) are naid to have brought the most startling and important intelligence iu regard to the military status in Tennessee and Kentucky, and the state of feeling there among the people. general Johnston's army to move immediatelt. At all events, it is believed by the quid nunc at Richmond that General Johnston i now ready to bet; in the movement which wan aiiadowed forth in my letter of the 14'h ultimo. General Sherman's whole force, including all his detach ments, even those at Huntsville and Decatur, j which nny have been by this time gobbled upby Forrest.) is thought by them to be now, not over -txty thousand men,,w hi'e General Johnston has fully seventy-five thousand troops. Thev believe th-it now is the auspicious moment for them to str.ke the blow which they have been meditating so lote for the repossession of the whole of Tennessee and all of Kentucky west of Lex it:gton. and for the invasion of Indiana and Ohio. The disproportion between their forced and ours I in the West, they say, whh never more marked than now, white the disaffection existing all over j Kentucky, in consequeni e of the forced enlist i tnet.t of negro oldiers from the border States. ; will be equal t them to a reinforcement of 20,- j 100 men and as many horse. Thev thii.k tli.it ! a t I (reu. Grant'. movement oi Richmond must lake' place before the middle of May; that every j available soldier m the V est has been sent to swell his army; and they believe that the gnus which open his cannonade will be thi signal lor Johns.ni to begin his northward march. EFFECT OF THE RED RIVER DISASTER AT RICHMOND. The rebels at Richmond are jubilant over their recent victories, w hich thev reg irl as bright harbingers of the resuit of the whole s. immer campugn. It cannot be denied (and indeed it will soon fie very evident at the Vorth) rhat our de- ! feat on Reil River was it victory, the fruit- of I which they will continue to reap for months to j Come. 1 is said that in connection with this victory, arrangements are on foot bv which the I rehel Generals in the Valley of the Mississippi w ill join their forces, expel all the Union troop from Arkansas ami Missouri, seize iind tortify St Lo lis, occupy Cairo, capture Memphis, and I ike sia-h other measures 3 will entiiely close the navigation ot the Mississippi river. Their chief object and great inducement in doing this will be to ugjin obtain control of the country west of the Mississippi, particularly Southern Arkansas an ! Northern Louisiana, so as to be able to mike the production of those two States, nnd above all the productions 'of Texts, available to the Confederacy. PANIC AT RICHMOND. There is a terrible panic at Richmond, owine to the aptrehensions that are felt there of the cipture of that city by Generals Grant and butler; but it affect the rebels in a different way from the panic which was experienced at H -rris-burg before the battle of Getty-burg. At Richmond, money, uoh as it is, is plenty, and bu-i-pe i very lively. The store are crammed with European good, which arrive vii Wilrning ton. The bdl of fare at the Spottswood Uoi:?e is ijuite 3$ gO'd a that presented on the tables of the hotels in tinny Urge interior lowi.s in the Noithern States The streets .ire thronged with idle piotnenaJers The ladies wear th richest silk dre-es and crinoline ot undiminished proportions At night, the tneaters and concert balls are well filled New plays are brought out; new b-toks are printed and published; even new mag ajire are is-ojed and appeal for a shire of public pitron;e In fit e. if a panic exist at Rir n raond, it effects ate not visible to thenked eve As regards the ironclad vessels and the oh stru.-tims i-i the James River, it will be very e,sT to verity the f i t in reg ml to their exiiercc. Let a fleet of imnclad vessels be sent up the stream to reeot.noiter. If they are not there, whr have we not lone ago ent a naval expedition capture Ricemond? Richmond in this respect is not like Charleston If R choiond can once be rrmckfJ by a L'i.ion fleet, it is at our mercy. But it cannot be so reached It is utterlv inaccessible by water. This fact is known at Washington; and thi s whv a naval force has Lever been sent to take Richmond. D&tiD ISP A Washington correspondent of the Gazette says in hi dispatch of Thursday: AaAlLT on Senator Lanx. of Kansas. It is currently stated tbat Senator Jim Lane wa the other day attacked on the Averue with a cowbide bv w aourg girl whom he had educed.

Tax on Dr. Wbea tbt Tax bill wai before tbt Houje Hon. Jo Law, of this State, sought to have the Ut on beer and other fermented liquors reJuced from $1 to 50 cents a gallon, aod among the many reigns advanced therefor we give the following : He aaid tbat when malt liquors are abandoned as a beverage anion the people, either from the high duty impose! oa their manufacture, or from any o-her cause, spirituous hq jori at once urpy their place, and dissipation, drunkenness nd poverty of tte people are tie inevitable conse quences of such a change What are the uohar py results of this excestive taxation of a harmless and popular beTerage? Why, the substitutioa of whisky and other spirituous liquors. The iticreasaot tax ia Scotland on malt and beer of only about 35 cents a birrel entirely destroyed the manufacture f ale and beer, and spirituous liquors look their pla-c I -DJ own town, where there but lew brewerie in operation two lare distilleries were erected. Both of these distilleries have beeu closed, and we have now eifch'. breweries in operation, some of ibeoi very extensive, upon whom a tax ol $1 per barrel ..ut . . 1 ii Tl, nre r.erlei-tlv willing

"iu uuri;nc uaiuij. iii r to pay 50 vent a barrel ot J gallons as & tax. though this is too large; but tbey are unwiiling to pay $1, believing such a tax imposed on this da of manufacture duty bard lo be borne. and whicli in s.jme instauces m 1 lead to the utter abandonment of their business. By the act providing for internal revenue to support the government and pay the interest 00 the natioual debt, psisaed in July of 1SG-J, duty of $1 was laid on each btrrel ot 31 gallons of la ger beer, ale, porter, and other similar fermeuted liquor. Tbia act wa in force from July 1. IsjtiJ, when it was approved. March 3 of lt63. Hy the twelfth section of the act approved March 3, lfGJ. the iluty ot $1 per barrel of 31 gallons of lager beer, ale and porter, was reduced to G'J cent a buirel ot 31 gallons; and at that rale, the taxation h i continued up to the present t;me, when it is now proposed to tax all those who engaged largely in the business of brewing, under the act reducing the tix on beer to GO cents, and who hive made larjre investments in building vats and other improvements, believing the tax would remain as Congress fixed it under the U-t aot. nnd who would not hive invested their capital in this business it they h id beiieved for a sintie moment the tax was to be increased to $1 per birrel. What reliance can these people have in your faith as legislators, if you thus keep continually changing vour laws year after year? Should there not be in all laws affecting the greit interests of manufacturers, some stability, some firm ties?, some purpoe, so that parties may know what to expect when they omtnence otwntions? There were on the 1st f June, IbG'l, 4H) breweries; thete were 1,173, 576 barrels d malt liquor brewed, amounting in value to the sum of $G.343.b70. Wi-cousiri has the largest number of breaeries, 1'2I, making I'd 1.956 btrrels of malt liquors, valued at 7l'2M-5 Ohio with 'J'J breweries makes 4II'2.(I."5 barrels, with a valu a lion of $1.912,419. Illinois with 75 breweries makes Ul?t.l4:i barrels, valued at $1.:(i9.10. Indiana w th 50 breweries make 00,338 barrel, valued at $32.1 lb'; while at the same time she made 8.35,50U gallons of whis-ky. highwines. and alcohol, at a value of $1,951,530 I will venture to as-ert that more rei euue was collected by the act of March 3, lct!3. on malt liquors for the same period, than was colh?oted under the act of July 1. ltG"2. when duty wa $1 per birrel. In IpG.!. dutv on hops w,is repeiled, nnd brewers' licenses increised to thif epence a barrel. In lfc04 duty on malt was fixed at tour shillings five pence per bu?hel. It was reduced from time to tim-j until 1823, when it wa tixed at two shil lings seven pence. In 1U.. at the time of the Russian war, it was raised to four shillings, when the quantity charged with duty immediate ly fell olT5.(IH.(J0( bushels, and in the following year ,0110 ,000 bushels. In lh.Yi Government found it necessary to reduce du'y. -n 1 fixed it at two hillings seven pence per bushcl.and five per cent, on the tax, at which it rem tins. The reult of that reduction has. been a large increase in the consumption, which ha averaged 5,314.351 quarters or 42.51 i.tOO bushels ter annum for the four years Irom ls.r-3 to lt"G"2, inclu sive, producing about 29.0t Ml burcls of beer annually. English malt averages about 44 ;nuin!s to the bushel, and American malt about 34 pounds Allowing one-lulf bushel of English malt to the barrel of 36 gallons, (the quantity used) the English tax is equivalent to G.'J3 cents per birrel of 31 gallon On the continent, in Germany, where immense quantities of malt liquors are brewed, the dutic are much less than in England. In Prussia the tax is about 23 cents a barrel. In ll.aden 21 cents. In Hesse Darmstadt 25 cents. In Rhine, Bav.iriaor Palatinate, the btewers pay a small license to compete with the cheap wine of the country, but no tax is imposed on malt or beer. The laboring classes iu the West, particularly Germans, use beer as a beverage largely, but very few spirituous liquors at nil. The Total valuation of malt liquors brewed in the Western S'ates, according lo the census of 6 ) was $6,343,070, nnd I have no doubt it ha doubled since that time. The amendment was voted down by the Republicans, only Democrats voting in its favor. vim 1 1; iti;.iin. a I Governor Morton axd the Skcond Dts TRI CT We sUfil, a ilav or two ao, that Gov. Mirtuti hud uppoiiitetl tiut one field ofiicer, under the three and two nuttdred t!ioii.-.ind calls, from tliisdi-trirt. notwiilistatitlitt; the district rurtiishrd some eiht huinlre 1 mt-ii tver its quot. We were in enor (overnor Morton lud not cyen iven the Second D n'rict one fiUJ officer for the troops, ehe t.ii-ed. He tnk ntficera lr our men from the Centrnl ar.d Extern part ot the Stste. This injusrice i palpable, and is condemtied by men ot all pirties. Guvcrnor Morton's cavalier treatment of tliis district is. well uiidersooi, and when tue time comes lie will feel with what unanimity the citizens of the district, of all p-o-ties, will condemn him. There nor a district in the state which has done better than thescn l in r ifsini; trps. In every call made fr tnen, the Second District has alwuvs ben the fir-t to fill her quoU. And yet Morton insult ami out j nfs her patriotic citizens by rcruini to appoint j men horn atnoii trem to cumm uiu trie troop raised in our midst This insult is a cross one tlie outrage has no puliation t is. however, in s'tict keejiic with the policy which Governor Morton has ever pursued toward the people of this district. They will not uon forget it. X A. Ledger. Otitruje b)' egro Troop How titmerlriin Citizen of African ! efiit' lleliavt. Correspondence of tbe Richmond Enquirer. ClttKCHVltW, MiPDLKSKX Cot' NTT. Va.J April 6 It is no lone er an uncertainty, hut a mos' shameful reality, more thsti confirmed ten th usand.'old, by black atrocities, which would mar the pajies of I'iuto's inlerti d leisttr, tht we nre dealing with an ehemy utterly io?i to all the entiobliu ni.d high-toueil qualities of the human character. The late nero foray into the lower portion ot this county was distinguished fr the most brutal and outrageous proceeding known to ancient or tn-jdern wufare Sivae of the most abmJor.ed and deraj-'d complexion h:i e Lever yet condescended to practice such inhuman treatment upon the weak and unprotected hs that whih tollowed in the wake of the-e .'e uions It is horrid even to contemplate a brit'- ! aJ of tt.orant and debased rcjrrocs, tire I bv the noxious tHii-ou poured into their ears by perjured cimaiauders. ti:n cl hNe upon a neij:f.tor!iool of I.clplfs.s noii-cora'jatinti! The Im ijrin ition dims and the head reels when the actual tacts tre introduced. Permitted to rotrn through the coun try ut will, they marched from hou-e to houe, piutiderin and destroying eerythin which citue wnhiu their grap. Tb'e ware of every dc-cription, furniture of every quality and can", were dashed ptotniscuou-ly Irom the door ami windows of the dwetimps of the owner, nd destroyed. Ld:e9 prirate apartments were forcibly entered; wardrobes broken open, r .marked, atid the consents torn into shreda luth as were not appropriated to their own persona and jiven to .he wind. House were defaced in every conceivable natu.er, and then reduced to smoking ruins. Horses and mules were carried off. the implements of bu-b-ttitiry destroyed, and provisions of every kind devoured or wasted. "e jroes were either enticed or forced a wy. Xucn bers ot wealthy larmers were left with only a few chil :ren and Red. bDke.i down tuen r.d women. The mul unheard of abue and indinitv were heaped upon the per-on of the unfortunate inhtt) tnu. Tu mtA Ld respecuble ladies were knocked down aixl badly ii.jured; one tor refusing to hold a horse bile uye of tbe demons plunJered her hou-e, the other because rLe did not prepare a meal, whicli tbey had ordered. ilh sufficient dispatch to suit their beas.lj appetites.

But not yet aatisfled, the chambers of fair young middens, ia the bloora of youth and beauty, are enterei by the subject of bs.e and aensual p "ion. and indemnities committed wbica are too foul and degrading to record. In the full knowledge of these astounding facts, will our governr-ient sit with folded hands, and make ro attempt at retaliation? I feel well assured that each s-ddier in the Confederate rmv will know very well what proposal to make of thee contraband enemies when they meet them and raay God speed ihe day when we shall meet thetu and give them a taste of Lee's veterans.

DIED. 0a Friday, Xy 6, John II. Gitta, aged 1?. Th de-,l 11 a wti of John Grrer, an old and well known c.t;i-n, wh. departed this life otre time sincef and nephew of Uro- Greer, a rev-.dent of this citj. Your.jr Greer, when he died, wis member of tbe 2lt Indiana heavy trti'.lcry. He served IS mouth in the 3M Indiana Regiment, under Co!o el Streigbt. He will be buried with the bonor of wr, a denil t'jf the Veteran Reserve corpt being the escort. Th ReT. WiUiam W;J.on wll oJEciate at the grave. Tbe funeral w 11 ttke place on Sundaj, May a, at 2 P. M.t from tbe midence of C G. Wil-ou, No. 174 South 31. siippi treet. Iii friends cd tbe Trend of tie family are invited toatter,d. AMUSEMENTS. isi:tkopomta. ham,. STAGE il AKAGER Mr. W. H. RtLET. Saturday Evening, May 7th, 1864. Miss SALLIE ST. CLAIR AND Jlr. CHAS. HI. IS A It It A S LUCRETIA BORGIA. FANCY DANCE... .Miss FANNY MKRRXLL. YOUxG ACTKESS. SC ALK OF FUtCES. Private Befon-ix people Orchestra Seat Ires Circle tid !'arn:ette ti "vts or S3 Catti (a.lry or family Circle. ir7"A" -r'rn i A.i for rtrrtd ir. :r"VBix oilice p-r iriu 10 o'clock A. M. till 1'- M 'T'Doora opeu at 7; o'clock, t.urtain ri-e at 8 precisely. "rT1,"'''rT'l eat retained only till tlie rud of tbe flrM act .11 A SO IM C II A Is la . ran six iKirs o.vf.i Commencing Friday Evening, May 6. ELLINGER & FOOTE'S GREAT MORAL BXBIBITIOX! Tlie ?I(t Allr.'ictivc Atmiscuu'iit Iov Traveling. flKE TWO SMAI.I.FST HUMAN PEfNfi.S IN EX 1STJL ence. Com. HOTK 22 years o d, -;3 incbs hih, and uei;hi S3 rfutnis. l'o is 11 inches btrter tban Tom 'Ih mib. ai d 2 ! lies Khorter and 6 jeais older than Itanium's :!U.is o Nutt. The s world is chall riued n f jO.OOO to prodnre his equal mi ajre, ize, wciifi.t or Mlucation. A tbroiigli scholar in (Wuun and Kngli h. and his versatility of tal nt as a Comedian, Actor and Dancer, are cf tbe highest order. THK FAIRY QUEEN OK TIIK WK.ST. Mster f Com. Ft MITE, in 14 vers o d,2l incbr-s h-gh, und ighs H p unds. The Miial est matured Lady ever known; speaks German and Knirlish: ;n .md dame. Tlie e wonderful l-ill'Utiatis will be aststed bv tbo Femilf Cbaracer Iiancer, Col. Small, (a trifle aller tban Com. l'oote.) the Old Coiiiinmul Vocal t-, W. I). Franklin and J tt". Smith, toget-ier vtrh tlte runst and talt-tited Y:slit and lianist. Miss JI C. Kfiiiiger, and 1'rof.G.H. Brooks, tbe emintrit Blind Piaiiit and Violinist. GRAND MATIN E1 SATUKDVT AITKPvNOON, MAY 7tb, commt-nc.HK at 3 ocl k, for the accimmidatin of 5CtiM.l children; al-o niatince on Tuesday and TLursday afte-nooiiis May 10(h atid 12lh, lor tbe convenience of amjlle and children who are utuMe to attend in the tveninf Ladies to afternoon inatmet 2Ac, Children l.c. I otrs open at 2 ai d 7,' P. M., entert n-.nnient to commence at 3 and P V. M. AdrlJiion 2j and 5; cent. i:lm.m(.i:ic a morr, M. meters ai.d i'topriefirs. C. G. RCSSKLI Business AKent. iny3-J9t NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. . ..... i NOTICE. TO STOCKIIOLOKIIS. rpHK ST0CKII0LDKHS IN THK JCNCT ON RAILI road Conipnt y are herehy rmtiflt'd t meet at the otlice of Mil l l onipany, in C-linervi:ie, Fayt-ttt County, Indiana, on Wedne-day, 3!ay 1", 1804, at loö'chsk A. M., for the jurpi?e of df vi ing way and means to pay off and cancel ihe pre.-enf niortictgf dnbt, and tbe consideration and action tjn such bumeii a the Board of Director pay prfsenr. A general attendance is requested, either in person or by proxy. Hy order of tbe Board. J. il. RtDEXOCR, President. J. Lasen, Secretary. my7-d3t"..t fcUMMR GARDEN. SUMMKR GARDKN WILL BK OPENED OX THE Corner of Alabama & Washington Sts. on the Lvriunc of .Hu)'7Ui. Fine hbad trte nd Lice shrubbery. Tbe very best of refreshment aHvj nn band. nyl-dtf JOHN HUGKLE. WANTED. 1 YOUNrt M XX. WHO IS A GOOD IX if DLF. ENTRY 2. I"1" keeper, and has had at f-a-t five ear experimcc. in a retail fry poods tjc. .None but a tr-t class busines man need pi ly. Inquire at bis otlke. niyT-rtlw FOUND. oixd-a mink skt ok nits, about two wffkj i:.c, on V..t Markt-t street. The owner can haveibeiu r. calhnjr at the Setilitiel OHe ttIid pay ing for this nuti--e. n.j7-d .t FOR SALE. BY WILEY & MARTIN, Heal IXute ItrokerVnnd Auctioneers HOUSE AND LOT ON MASSACHUSETTS AVENUE, -A.T AUCTIOIC:. On Monday, May 16th, 1864, at 2 o'clock P. M., on the Premises. "7T WILL SKI.L A AB0VK, TTE TWO STORY 1 f Frame Huildins. No. 02 Masachiisef Avenue, co"U nrrn; tour large room, wbicb can br easily divi i l into or eii;ht room; a tine ltrpe brick cllir tinder t he whole ho'iM. The front room J now g"d up for a Store, fhe building u new, aod the 1 an excel lent pomt 'or a Croccry Store or Hotel Stand. bv;i, a wile ide-aV in front; il-ot pood well of water. Tbe lot fr nt 4 f.et tn.-re or !- oa tbe art noe, w tb uflücient dr,-h. and ffood Frame Mb!e co It m. Th bole w u rent f nr f .iOO per annum Tims r San Or.e-ba.f cab. arid tbe balance la one year, wi b io'-ereit. iLf T k MAhTiN, cj-dtd ReAi r,tte Broker. EMPLOYMENT. t'-y.S' A MONTH AGKNts wANTF.n TO SELL O "--ttr Machine. yye w,;j e a comrn!tki n on all tnac'iinea old, or employ anta who will work f r tbe abote w.ge. and all xt-.n---a paid. ddre U. B. UEliElNGlUN f CO., r,J-t'lw IUo!t, Mlcb fan. Ir. A. 1. UAlAs) On FR HIS SERVICFS TO THE CITIZENS OF lnüanapoll ar.d -iciaity. 0c. Viricln.a Atcoi No. S3. Kekierc North SwJry trei. No S7. ctUTVdly

DRY GOODS.

CLOSIITGr OUT SALES: AT THE Trade Palace! 2G &, 28 WEST WASHINGTON ST., HUME, LORD & CO. W I SUING TO RETIRE FROM BUSINESS NOW oner their large and plend d stock of good. wort a At New York who'eeale prices, and many eood nmch le. feeling under ohlicanon to tbe p.-tdic fr tb very large pat onace we have received, we U e Concluded t alopt thi method .f ciounif out our present 'ck, thereby jtiving tbein tbe advantage of bujing their gi a lw an the Mime cn be bought at net wboWale price In Fa -tern cltie. Tbii i no ticti;us erj-, aud e lil cntinue rtif until the whole kt"ck i clo ed out. We bve now in More the laret and l-tt selected stock ever brought to thi city, consisting of Worth of S ILE S , Compriiing every grade, from the mot costly and 1. .... a : r.. t urauu&UA Moire Antiques, To the cheapest PLAIN SILKS AXD SATINS Which w ill be vaticos. sold regardless of the recent gret adFANCY DRESS GOODS In gnAi variety. Our buyer b in? at tbe head or the market during the uprir.g. ba; m!e extra effort to procar. tbe finest and most fahionMe iu tbe market, comprising all tbe late I?aiis IVoveltics, 3IERRIMAC PRINTS, SPRAGUE'S PRINTS, PACIFIC PRINTS, AMERICAN PRINTS, DUNN ELLS PRINTS, D03IESTICS, FLANNELS, SHEETINGS, HOSIERY, GLOVES, EMBROIDERIES, Cloths and Gassimeres, For Men and Boy, from tbe che spest to the bet th market affords. We are also CLOSING OUT On the ame terms, oar splendid stock of I5I, K SILK CIUCULAKS. BAUCS Ac, Ac-. Comprising all tb recent PARIS AXD LOXDOXSHAPESj Richly trimmed with ici:al uirvicc laci:, iticii i:uai) ;i.iiis. And elegant HUME. LORD & CO. $40,000 00. 540,000 OO, S405000 OO, WORTn OF CARPETS, CARPETS, CARPETS, CONSISTING OF rtlcriullion Carpets A. xiii inkier Carpets, Velvet Carpels. Cody LSruel, Tapestry Bruseli, Tliree-Tly Cirpct. Ingrain and Supers CotUc, Kug and II crap Carpets, Co-nrisinj erery grade, a'l f wki.lt will b sold at New York wuoless.a nre, together wiU a fu.l liaa ot G-l Satin aud Wool Damasks. G-l Embroidered ICeps Lace and Tuiubour Curtain. 110t snFcn.r1sn1.Y0 goods la great rariety. WA TLa PAPER AND Of every Jecriptioa. 7ne In war.t of the above 'e Ql Cad It muck to tbeir advataK to call at an early Ui a4 lay ia supplies for samrner and faX HUME, LORD & CO,, IXDIAXAPOLI. B6-43tn

FOR SALE.

n. m. sncBu & co., HEAL BSTIIB AG ß NTS, AND NOTARIES PUDLIC, No. 201-2 North Illinois Street, A Hou, Lot. Statte, Av, la Hetrher ddltioo $ no A Hau and Lot on St.Cl it treet 00 A Hou and Lot oa Indiana arena l.Otf) A Houx avA l-ot oa Wet street l.tOO A Hoa and Lot n tit.Cla atreeul. .". . . . . . A Housa and Lot to nerthwe part f tha elty. . . l.2aj A Houae and Lot on M cbian treet. l.tW A Houie and Lot la hlacklord'a adiitioa. 110 A Houm aixl Lot in Fletcber'a ad tluoa. . IJi-'M A IIoue and Lot on Vicbigan treet. ..U.Ii.'.J 1,400 A Hou an Lot to Nd lb lennev-ee treet lOl A Hoa and Lot In PtackforJ'a awld:Un...I.'.."" x'oo A Hcue ani lxt in Kletcrier'a addition J, 1,4"0 A Hoa and Lt on St. Ltiir s'reet A Houe and Lot in I lackf rd't add.t oa 1,kSj A HoU aod Lot la Hetrafer'a wdditiwn. ......... l.x A Hjue and Lot on North t'eet S.OuU A lioue and Lot on Weal s'reet i.wjo A fioute aod Lot Maacbu-tta ivtDj. K iiouand lot on Virginia arrnue 2,U9 A Hou-e aud Lot on Liberty treet 2.6 0 A Houe aul Lot on Mia ifpl reet. A Hou-e aod L-.t oa M a-cbu-tU avenue 2 900 A IIuue aijd Lot on New Vtrk stn et 3.HK) A Hwute and Lot uo I!l:oiitreet 3,114) A Houe and I ot on Xerl ian treet S..V-0 A Hook and Lot on Minoi treet 4.000 A Hou-e tnd Lot on Trnnfs.ee treet 4.U00 A Hou- and lot on Vii-ippl street .. 4 O"0 A H"Us ami Lot on Ubio irret 4 no A Houe and L. on liltnoi. atreet 4,500 A House and Lot cn Kecn jlvauii street 1.0 0 A lioue aud Luton lUino: tret. 7, S House and Lo a on rVnn-j Warna treet, rack., t laj A Houe and Iai onTet ne-ee treet t.t0 A Hüiue aud Lot Cj IU;noU street l.HO A Itnuw aod Lot on Marjlai1 treet U.W'O A House and Lot on Mi!ipj.l treet 15.0UO A Hou-t and Lot cn I.liaoi s:net tO.OdO A ltoue and lxt on P-nrieIvani treet. 3u,t0O Huildi: g UK-near tbe city l5u !diD Lots ueir the city joo KdiM'rg Lot io tbe ct?y joo huiidifg Lu in thecV.y joo Ha.ldm Lo. in the c::y 400 Building Lot l;i the dy Joj bu.ldins lota in tbe c tj 10 HuiM-.Lg Lou in the city 0Q Pu. Mmg lot-In the city to) Duitdinx Lot in tLe city " 900 building Ijt in the c ty l.M AI , good Lot in all p rt -f th c:ty trom fit to f 5 OUO in price, for a!e che.p for ca-b, .r -n t-rrp--tnl lea-o t budders; al mail an 1 large farm- one 10 Sve mi- from tb- city, from 0 to H) acre, at cl eap rau a and eay terms. ,im BOOTS AND. SHOES. IIEXDRURS, EINUMS & CO., "WIioloHiilo Doalcm IS BOOTS AND SHOES, .o. 10 South Meridian St., SCUM'LL'S BLOCK.) R' FKCTFII.LY call the attenin of City amf to 'heir large aorttnrnt ef pr ig Trade, embtaciif all He hb.ll take t!raMr n Ountrv le'ctaniii rwx'ts id !:(e, for t vtlei of fftd tow worn. howing nur cw!. and wi'l endeartr lo luake it to tte ir terri.: if Me rcLants pet.rrally to rail and eamine oar stock. JKtra Sn-of all IiikS. marts ? : XI ivz rs Iii V V ORE ROOT AND MI OK STORE n AS II 4 A REPUTATION X)R SELLIXG M ORK at Lieber prk-ea than ome other establish m-ct iu tue city. The pre-ent proprietär would inform the ho. ! buying public tbat they are determined to sell j LOir a the FAIirrST, ! ft nd the very beot branl of BOOTS aod HUOrS la tb ' market. I We buy excluslvelr for cab and consrauently caa 11 at vt ry l w niMrg.n. "Lare sales and small pr .flu" U our motte. Sbcp work contanily oti band. C. II. 7IAYO A CO. pr9-dlm GROCERIES. INDIANA. OQ0 Ill-dft. 'I. O. uSnr. jQQIIbli. Hf-flnrd do. Foe sa by TUKL A IIATrilER, apr21-dlm LAPATETTK IND. .11 rKi:iii;i,. OQQ llbl. Mackerel. 300 IlHir Rbu io JOg Qr. UbU. do. 300 ,u,u For sale by CAUL V llATCIIElt, prtl-dlm LAFATKTTK, IND. TOUK A D LA KD. 00 l,bu" ,ork' For kale fron More by CAUL A IIATCIILIt, apr.M-dlm f.AF,TETTF-. IND FOR SALE. rpiMT l)T OK GROUND AIUOININO ON Till I north of the bWk of btJilclrir- built by Kir!and ir Fltz?il;bn, on koutn Meridiao ktt eet. nar tb Imd I pot, J"0 frft front by 210 fet def. will I oM In 25 !or:i0f.-et f.t, or tte whole cf It in one W. This i a suitat le locality for wi.Uingto p'irrb.ne l-u-ma. pro r y. a the ti'!f-air )n!ivra 01 th. c'w will b c ticri tra'ed on thi re-t arid 'be property rn be bought or rearly ot.e-fourth t'.ie price .f Wa-bit-gion trt pM-perty- Il ba r-n 5 m nitrated. tj actual ules, th-t there Lave t-ren ac many fvela toid ty b"U-e ou thi street, a, any fj Wahinrt' treet. aixl, in our brancUoftb. Iiuiii4ka. 1 tU. Len ia bu beta, more . tobacco at wb-le-ale than ary three bouses on Washington street, Th ls lity cf thia rrond, for a wholesale btiüine, ta. a jrrea er alranrsfe rn tbe saetnir of draye than any oilier location Ui the cit, art od can b delivered on tLe oaveraent by all tbe railroads. Tats advantage will save ta-f the rrct cf a swre-room oa Wah 11 JTton street. For Terra, enquire of - T. KflLkNTJ, Or, J. B. RTAN, eoroer olMaryltad aJXt JterMiaa sts. a- r!3-1lra DESIRABLE TAVERN STAND 10 it sali:. ' TOFFFR FOR 5 kl.V VT IT'rTFL STAND KXOWTf AS mV a Itnt'SK. " arul lo Air A in th. . .a ! i.n.inrtr i t i;rtif aotle. Iriin. T . .1. full Lot, MaHs Walton Saeda. Ice House, two fo4 Well, thre Ci. en: in bort, every co vertier tea rable In a Ii"tL It la K'jwd raun.nr o rtler tbroaik'mt. and it bomes wa. nver better or more per.Jtable thaa row. ErJ"ym(r a lare Wal eum and a vinual mooop, olv of tLe trr)it ro-trta of Greene th. TJotiM offers rare indacenieLt. t bnyem. and the kanda a a et .r.-e ir ba n- maa car.aoC faJ to proro a roltakl lDvetnT.t. silnr health and fjtn;ly aSict on art tkt tola lteeBtive to my olt'lr.g the property U 1 a. It U b fid. at a t arjrJn airl on favrab1 terma. One-third otily ol the furrba money rlN retired ta hsiiithe balance in to qul paymeiu cf one and two year eab. If not Md befor. 5aturdar. the 1'b day of Mayf the Hou-e ',;; on that day be o'ered at public aoc'Ju ta th h phet buider. For further particular addre-a tbe prfeWtor J. F. JOS., sprM-deowtlll a'.e Orsx-w-tle, Iul. kilby n:uc.iso. Brnr A?tDr.LLSGoi.iLTER.rrccxs, bonds, fncurrest Money, and Degotiates Uan. Money Adtctd m Ptr$9l Preptrtw. OEc hours from 7 A. X. to I P. a. Cffico oftedoor north of Indian spots Dally Evept; Ga mil, tip tairt, Jd door, left kaod. -oj5-dltt

iL