Daily State Sentinel, Volume 13, Number 4404, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 November 1864 — Page 2

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DAILY SENTINEL.

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AT MOR! NOVEMBER 3 Sleeting of the U tie tatCai trml Cava A meat inj of tbe Demoen t Sut Centra; Ccmmi'ba. for cootalutioe, will b hld in this tktj on TbwtdtT, tb 1st dy of December ou Ad invitation M extended to all Democrat throughout the 8tat. who can conveniently at Mod. to mm with them oo tborriUV A fall attendance of the Committee is repeated, ea im ytfUnl tMltrm wiil be presented lor discussion acüoo. The Electoral Vet I Indiana We pebiiea this tnorturg a table showing th vote of ladiaoa at the recent I'raeidetitial elec flea by CufKjreeaioaal District aod counties. a returned to the Secretary of Sute, which makes 0 it official It will be seen that the Seoood Din trict gftwat the malle ggrert vote, 30,068, bile the Fourth cast ooly forty-one more, and the Fifth it in exce but four hundred and twenty lire. The Siith District, the center, fa, the largt vote, vi . 30.Ü7'J This i owing to the heavy vote given in thin city. The Ninth District gate 30 ,M)9, only one hundred and Mr etttf les. The majorities in the Fifth and Sixth District for Limcols are nearly his total ma jonty in the Sute And hi majority in thi9 city i nearly hi majority in thi. District The total tote thie year i 2?). 645; in I960 it wan 372,143. in 1856 it wai 235.431. and io 1952 it was 183,170 Thus it appear that the vote thi year was larger than io 160, notwith tending the large Dumber of men Indiana hau sent to the field and were not at home to rote The resntt of the vote this year, taking the fact ve have named into consideration, show (hat Indiana bu largely .increased in population, not wiibetaiiding the drain upon tier bf laVf wnr log the pant four year. Heceniirncilon Intimation hnve been given oat by the AdMfaaietratiun orgtrH ha? there n a pnrty in the Sooth, especiaJlj iu Georgia, (epreeen'e 1 bi auch men an Alluxdu H. SriPiitNa (i iveruor BaowM, that were id favor of dissolving there it iatioua with the Confederacy, ini returning to lite "Id Tei o A letter from Mr S-ramta, Jef; u2 on, lated No 5'!!. puts an end to ail hot ' of iii . h He eapteee binaclf most emphticaiiv in t rtyu-i In me letter reierred to. he tmi- sues ins um . a a.. m w . a . a u;)n thf otij- oft. .rni on: " 1 be old Union and the old Coii-ti'utiou are loth dead, ded forever, except in so far a- the Goo-diUlftW bafNtO DfeMfVfl br o Tiare for the Union it waa do rc-urreetion by any power rhort ot th it which hr'Mijjht Iwsi i - irom the tomb I nere may be. ni l ooubtleas are, msiiv a the Norta and son it the South who loot for war! to a restoration of the Union and the Con lutioo as it was; but such ideas areas vain and illusory as the dreamy imaginings of the ladall warrior, who, in death, clings to his weapons in food expectation that he will have use (or them beyoud the grave in other Und aud new bunt füg ground - Again he remarks that he regards the charge made against of bim ol U oring reconstruction as an imputation upon his intelligence and integ my, Upon this poiat he thus states his coovic tione : . . a a . a m " i ne issue oi mir war. in mv juugment. wis BuUuirüiiuii or independence. I ao UDderatood i when the Sute of Georgia, seceded, aod it waa with a full cunH'ioujnew of this fact, with all ita refpomibiliues, sacrifice and pt-rN, that I pioxlgod m j nc It theo and there tu stand by her od her trtaoes, whatever tbey might be, in the cour t' she bad adopted." Mr rwaVBsta is in favryl iea$..:.liU.oi it .yh..uu. ii 'c. it lo sr. point one com tntsaioner from each State to initi tie npgotittioDs, tbeir Mi, of coure, as tboM of vtetera or plenipoteltiartea. to be tibmit'ed f.r tbe approval or rejection of each govern mei.i Such are the views of one oi the ablest and purest men of the South, one ol the last to leave the old I'nion, and oho was always regarded as liberal and conservative. If a man of thia cbai.tc.let makes the iaaue of subjug&tiou or in dependence, it ia not to be experted tlSwt even the most liberal terms upon the part of the Administration for reconstruction would be accepted by theConfftlcnte Stitw. And we hive never bad any idea ihat proposition would be made that could Je accepted by the people of the South without involving a degradation to which "ahjagatioo would re preferable upon their part We can then only regird tbe rumors of peace we had a few days ago, and the pe.ce speeches of audi men as Bctlee, as merely thrown on to amuse the people, like tuba to tbe whalea. A Tkrrai. I ii i tJeiphia TrcM i m extreme admin latrition tu It- pr .-r etor. Mr Forxkt, ho !j the mot intimte relations with the power- that bo, nd his paper in Washington, the Ctirouicle. is regarded a reflecting their sentiments. On Thanksgiving mon u g a violent phiilipic appeared in ihe Tre-i against the members of the Catholic church The eHUor. in commenting upon it. 'remarks that the Catholic church i not. and th- x, ;.a.oi: put iq capitals to give it significance, nit jc or aut. t:..l then w in it that ' it plot and cabala may be consigned to the same iia.ed ob ; ecurity ir a hi 'h human irerv t fortrrr trpulehrrrd Are we to draw the pOSMlSM on from J this fiprosoion that when the war v; t ' Uvprv 1 is ended there is to oe a r.ujiiar cru-iOtf aga -t the Catholic church? flalwyalt)- in (lie ortta The ailminiatration t: . 1 -;eake;- nit tae iaaue before tbe ele uon that ooly diskal men would vote at the rOOOM election t-.r CLtrrasj and the Democ r trie nomii ce The resuH if the Presidential clecttoo shoos that one hr.i.nJred aud iliirty thousand rotes a ere a a al . . caai n r jicv lllla.x .ii iu:iai:a. and ali honct vote According to the coutruction placcl upo:. ..vjlty" b the rejirerentatives of the partT in power, there are in In hint ot.c hundrtd nd thirty thousand oi!oy i mr.i "traitors.' as 1 -"e. is ii no., tan one ns.t f w,e rsf :ens f the Statt- aawStsM as-ume iu ; I nounce the other half dishml, oheu the " dia j . , .. , loyal pörW. as the, ,e termed, laaew JwaO as much in:eret in the govanaltiil 3 : in in preservation as their accuser. '. . . avr.4 11 llt:l I aw Mew Aluavuv Ledger says the Roll. v$ Mill building in that city is progrossing finely. ' SVrmaO rat V(sai.,.a I ' m - 1.. . V 14 and w.ll he in ooerauon about ,h i.MU f I he in oper . Fetruary next TiOOOiea BOSSSOaooaO on foot to btiitd a i , e r . 4U M linn oi me i-nio. tou, mg at Jeflero:l.e. aad terminating at Near A v -There .re ooss sisteoo curcbea , Trnere .re ten Aooebe id Terre ll5,1'f ,, u xw 1 vr :- T m,)r r to be erecteu next i so pat. I Dr Kaden, we ar lnloraej, ha purchaeed th id town bll, and presented it to Saint Mich ael a Kman C-:hjiic Church In this cit on Cjnf '

Of fir 11 Vote ef Its the Proel dowtiwi Election i J or Oeagrte lonni District aad Ccmtitle. rrmer :Tict

u'c Divtoat . . .1391 .1454 .1616 .1817 . 817 :'7i .165 U27 2114 .1441 14441 iv!o:.n 1227 29t, 1297 134 576 92i 1357 ld58 2724 IMS l .;.:. ' Gibeon Knox . . . ar Poooy v aooerhurg sassv . Total.. Majority, 1H91 OOOOnO DtSTOtrT 186 7U9 90 , I7b0 Clark... Craw ford Floyd . . . Harrison . l83 70C 1447 1329 804 1112 5-6 1242 -919 Orange 10510 Perry HM2 Scott 742 Washington 1799 1 oUl 11133 919 Majority. . . Bartholome Browo Jackson Jennings J etTerson .... Lawreuce. . . . Monroe 1 S IS 11-7 1817 27.--1 IJ1 1909 1440 ll7f10673 iue5 Switzerland 855 Total 10673 Majority. roravrn ntsratcr Dearborn 2420 Decatur 1559 Franklin 2316 Ohio 381 K.plej 1750 Hush I&JO 2117 172 1399 592 1826 lfi 99?7 Tot1011)6 M vjority Delaware. . Fayette. . . Henry Randolph. Union. . . . W yi:e . . . Foul . . 119 fifth niamtcT. 583 2405 1318 327 2371 47J14G91 57c6 -905 130 is a 109..2 1793 1337 30 in:. 11)874 9231 lObh 1919 1U53 9119 I960 7L5 1044 9861 12159 -GO KI57 1168 592 1526 -G M ijoritv Heooooa: . Io,'idricks. Johnson.. . Mariou . . . S or i: . . Shelby . . . SiXrn ni-Taicr 1337 832 1713 34' 12K3 2223 Total 10K74 Majority , KVL-.TH lUSTRI'T .1407 .1515 1522 .1236 ..2155 .2059 .. 752 .2167 Clay (Jrerne. Owen Parke Putnam.. . . . Sullivao.. . . Vermillion . Vij?o Total.... Majority 12X1 n 12159 6S4 EIUHTU UlSTRlc r 1651 153 1501 1818 Boone. . . . Carroll . . . Cliotou. . . F'iiinuin. . 2121 1431 1413 1562 fan :m-9 1373 MM 12349 1271 1836 y7 1275 2766 I'M lb31 350 41469 217 2188 940 16518 14291 2227 2244 14- 1 2253 21 Hit 15- T 1992 1642 199 1444? Mun'gomnrT 2260 Tippecanoe 27 7 Ö Warren 761 Total 123 19 Majority NINTH DISTRICT Benton 21 '2 Cas 207 Fulton loya Jasper Lake 461 LaportO 2145 Marshall 159 Miami 1717 Newton 274 Pulaski Porter Starke St .loeuh.. . . White Total 718 . 936 . 247 .1558 SM 14291 Majoritv. Allen DeKalb. . . Elkhart... Kosciusko. Lagrange. . Noble Sttuben . . . W hi' ley ... Total. . . TKXTIl DISTRICT . .49:i . .1472 ..2000 ..MM . . 796 .1550 ... 610 . . 1327 . I44SS 1441 Majority. KM TVN.M PATRIOT 1156 475 1238 1093 139 I6e5 1143 2057 1019 1939 1235 Adam. . . . niackford. Grant Hamilton . . Howard . . . Huntington Jay Madison . . . Tiptou Wbsh . . . Wells ... 185 365 1547 3225 J7-J 1597 1103 1535 731 2461 46 Total 13263 15667 I39ti 2405 .150422 130223 BWS4S . 20199 M ljority Total vote for Liucolu. . . Total vote for McClellau Total vote Majority for Lmcolu .... on raoaoasj lit tu-lrahu When a ounii aarrior i SwImh ... procur tag a one. ne generally obtain one by giving exchange for her a sister or some other female rell,Tol hisown' bulif there should happen to be no eligible damsel tii-iengsced in the tribe t rhea kTwwtong... uheo he h ,L round uZTJncs mpaKot of aoaVtotbaT blacks until he pet, sn opportunity ot aeit'Dg one of their leuhras, whom perhap he has seen and ad nil red when attending a : ihe raod corroboru His anode vt pay mg his addressee is simple and elBcsoiou With blow ot his null nuke .war club he stuus ,b of bi ffecnon drags ber iusoo-"-7 r.ureo spot, yrneneo. as oon as ane recovers tier senses, De bring her e Io bis owe gucvah in triumph. Some Uaa ,wo Jom n an expedition lor the same oorpose, at.d then for ererl davs thev watch the movements of the r .n tbe otasoM skill in concealing their presence, hen they have obuined the knowledge they rairt- tÖ. TitJor dark, windy right'; , hen . quite nked. aod cwrrying or.: y their long ' jg spear. ' gojthrough the bush till reaching tbe imtreo i:e vicinity of the camp fire in front of' which th girls tbey ere in search of are sleeping. ; Slowly and silently, they creep close enough to Qisuhguian tbe ngure oi one ol tbo ieubras; i ' barbed point amoegat her thick . aowiog locu; torcinf tbe spaav siomlj round, I

214 TH1ED niSTOK'T 2051 21 1795 1071 1777 1UH5 1210

SO ss of her bair speedily become with it: theo, with uddeo ierk she

from bor alembor, ae 1 at bor eye open, he feel, the shro point of .umber weapon preaolcj: Ofainat bar throot. She neither faiou nor cream, ehe koowo well toot the siisibtest at tempt to aaeape or alarm will cajise her intUr: . death: so, like - - woman, she nake virtue of necessity, and rising silently she follow her captor They lead her away to a considerable distance, tie bar to a tree, aod return 'o en sotre their other victim in like manner. Theo, when tbey have aceosnplibei their destro. they harry off to tbeir own camp, where thev are received with universal appUose. and highly honored for their cWvah-on exploit 0 ally an alarm is given, but even then the wife stealer easily eeate anv.d the contusion to re new their attempt at some future period Cham neri Jourrn ORUIDSLETTERS. Oppottiivn to firnrral Sherman My at he Ejreetrd H'Ao Rranrtqard has been Doin The Rebels think he knote General Sherman' $ Htm Genera! (han't Campaign in Us Ht Utimn U the Present Adranc m tht West. pcial corrspor.dnee of the N'ew York tVorU. Baltimokc, Noremhrr 'JI The following intelligence in regard to Ooo. Sherman's operations may be regarded as au tbentic, and worthy of credence. It come, through Southern sources, from persona srho are perfectly cogtixsnt of the facts which Iber re late Your readers will bear in min 1 that the general impression at the Xorth ha been, that io thi whole affair the 00O federates have been surprised and out witted; and that what OoMtoJ Sherman has done, has been of all thing, jus? what they did not expect that he would do; that they had expected him to move io an entiielr different direction; and that no proviaion has been made, by the rebel leaders, for meeting or frustrating the designs ol General Sherman in this particular direction A moment', rerlectiot: will convince any reasonable person that thiview of the case is necessarily erroneous. If such a view of the case were correct, it would bv tantamount toeajiug that the Confederate mili tary leaders had lost that acumen, and trut faculty ot penetrating the designs ot their ntagon ist, which has so remirkahly ditintrr.ihed them during the war; and that they were, in a word, no longer capable of reasoning correctly. The fact is, on the other hand, as I will show present ly. General Sherman is doing now exactly what General Lee and Jeff. Davis and General Beauregard supposed that he aouM have atteavpted to do two month tgo. He is attempting noth ing now that the rebel k-a-hr- .'id t otexi.ert, i and have not provide for. what roLLowrn THtCAPTl P.K of ATLANTA. j Atlanta was captured on tbo 3d o4 Septem i ber. Uen. Sherman did not eet our on his re ! cent expedition until the 10th of November. , Heie w is an inter vol of two months in the very I season of the year most favorable for military ; operations because the roadl then were good, ; and the Iruit ol the eaith were in th-jt condition that a movable column would have needed j scarcely any supplies at all to be carried with ' them. What SM the rebel leider do with reference to Siiermtn's urmv in that lon intetval? Were they idle? Did the sit g iping at the wonderlul couquerer of AtUnu. and spend the time ' in fruitless conjecture as to wh it Sherman would , do iiext? Let us see j RECBET C0L N IL OF WAR m:i.U AT RICHMOND. Gen. Sherman proclaimeil an armistice of twenty days, and nroal lont Dat - callel . council of war, which asseml.od at Richmond ; about the 10th or 15th of September Thi ' council met and adjourned several times, and it I did not finally break up until the list ol Oeto ber. It was comptised of seven or eight of the ' most distinguished Southern cenerals, although they weie not all present at all ol the aOOOtiogs At some of the meetings aides de camnof some I generals at a great distance, such as lfagroder, ; were preseut, and brought with them the view aud other imnortaut intoimatmn of thee generi als At this council the plans for the fall and winter campaign were matured, aud one of ihe first steps agreed upon was that of placing den. , Beauregard in command of the military diii-ion of the We,t, east of the Misiippi, cumpriMiir; the department of Georgia aud Teutie.ee. 4iMT's nH.AT IN TAKING BK'UMONl GIVES IIEAVREGARD PLENTY OF TIME AT THE WLST The plan ot operatious adopted by this council ! of war w;i not a settled aid definite one. It depended upon contingencies; and it was owing to tili feet that tbey were uoahle to come to titul decifion tomtr, And wlin they Jid finally break up, they were obliged to couse to a con elusion which depended uxi. the movements of ; both OflU dini Sherman, ul (or thee movements they be been Waiting frora that dv to ', this. The danger of Peterwbarg and Richmond ; wa uot yet over. The Maara oas just the one when 4 grand cooihined tttjick on lhir cupital might be expected, tiidiit's army was known to he in lull lorce. auu there wh 00 Oar thi reason , why he should uot made such an attach Besides, it wa ktiowii at Bicbnood by the 12th ot October that the Bth and 19th corps were to be ordered to juin Uraut before Petersburg, nud it w is in order p prevent thai that Early attacked Sheridau on the 19th WHAT TUT RKBFLS THINK OF THE UA1TLE Of OCTOBER 27. Until it was certain that Grant h id abandoned the idea of n grand combined attack on Rich mond, it would not be safe to detach any troops from that quarter, for service in the West; and, that did not oecome ceiuin until alter the 27th of October. Howorer the loyal people of the North mar hve been deceived about the batilr toughtoo that dav near Petersburg and Rich moud, the rebel leaders were not deceived. They knew what preparation General ürtnt unüe for those battles. They were eootiocod tl..tt he intended the battle at Hatcher's Run to be the grand deci-ire battle ot tbe campaign; that he hoped that that battle would give him position ; ou the Lynchburg railroad, from which he could turn the works defending Petersburg, and 'here by capture that citv ; and that thereupon Rieb mond would fall. PK M' REO AED OKOAMZK Ills FORCES, AND I'RKr ARES TO CONFRONT KHERMAX. General Beauregard, during all this time, had not been idle. The two months delay that Sber man was compelled to make at Xiiuuu aas precious time to him. and he improved it to tbe utmost. Spies and s roots brought to him daily iotolligeoca of what was going on in the hostile lines. The recruiting of troops, in all the States in fteauregard's dep-'tment, proceeded vigorously; and akhough Beauregard lay tili and made uo sign, yet he w:ts awaie of all of Gen eal Sherman's movements. hA when Atlanta J- finally burntd and abandoued, and (teneral Sherman set out on his march, General Beaure 3 ird was already on bis trick, knowing lull well the object that he had in view, and with a lull understanding existing be1 ween hims-elt an I Gen Hood. SH CRM ax's aOUia AND DESTIWTIOX KNOWN TO BEAl REGARD. nerman took with him a full set of tools and appliances lor tearing up and detrovinp rail room But as be adranced toward Mtcon, ha did not find so much use lor them as he expected Th ConleUertes had leen betöre h m. They hod not torn up the whole road, but they .uJ ;'.- t-i enough of i: to reo ier it u?e!es a? a railroad, and they had left sooogfa o: i: in o0 jrdcr to detain Sherman everal dsr in com pletingtbe work. Wba means this distraction i their own tai: roads? it meaos Ihat Shermans plaaa wer known to (!n er-.l Beauregard before the former set ou: lor Atlanta; and not only bis destination. but the rery route on which he intended io m e. Impediments were iound ou that route which acre not eipected; and although General Slier moo fertility of resources enabled hioi to overcome tl.eaj. tili, they delated him BEAt RtOARP SEND TROOfS TO MEET SHERMAN AT Macon Io the meantime Beauregard had been playing a BOCOnd game of the evacuation of Corinth Hood has r-v-fiy thotMand men. General Tavlor fit'ieea thousand. Bcaureirard himself ,u..,.i r. j w o io all. and all g . od troop For some lime past botb Beturegard and Hood hare len making a great .how ol force Dear Corinth. Tuscumbia. an J Florence But. ou the l'Jth m slant, it is said Beauregard began to send trwns off bv the railroad, from Connth to Setm n AUhm". It requires but a glance a! the map to seetheobiect of this mjyement From Seim to fcon th. is direct railroad communication. General S er thi nwa i correct, when b arr.ve tber. h will find that he has been expected; he wUl find

fortiflootloot; bo til find General Beauregard's army. 50,000 to 65,000 stronr There will bo a bottle at Macoo; aod tbo result of i' oill datide tbe forti.rr of Sherman's casapalfn

I SORTS Or PAKtUH.tPIIS. Tbe w York Journl of Commerce has r lifted the price of its da ly Lsue to $15 year. " M an' onhamaLltj to msn Makf countless ttootaods mourn.' Boo Jamea C Rooinon, late Democratic i car.did-te lor (lorcrcor of Illinois, ha been drafted. An Engiih magistrate lately sentenced a you;h to six mouths' im prison met it for stealing su manv walnut The product oforai ge on uany plantatioca in Louisiana will be this eason much in excess of sugar and cuttoc The Chicago Times announces that berc.titer tbe price ol tht I til will be $15 ptr annum, and the weekly $3 Joseph A Hooper, the Democratic candidate in Essex couna. Mass., for the Legislature, is elected through a mistake in printing the ballots of his (ipptneni Tax gatherers nerer were popular persons; but a friend of the Bo-ton Foot calls a New York Collector of Intern tl Revenue an-in come poop. In't it awfti! ? Rotition !" i the ct among the hungry office seekers " No Rotation !" is the stern re sponse of the " in'a," oho are determined to serve their cou:.ry ind draw their salaries, or die in the attemp: A Wasbiogton corespondent perpetratee a joke at Geueral 11 ink;, expense that he ha entirely eclitwe-i Mr Whiting, and become him sell Chief Solicitor ol e Wht Department. It b reported 1 Heenan wants to fight Mace in Canada, and will allow hta $1 500 lor 'v :.-- nom '.' i; - .irs that the rumorof the B. j sic) deterioration were Tour.d'r-'j --A Ncwbiiryport clergyman having received at a recent marriage a fee of fifty dollars, the Borold thinks it wa- cheap enough for the bridegroom, a- he curled away one ot tho OOOl gir! :n town." IJoquets of Dowers, cut with ajick kiilleout oi carrots, turnips arii beets, aretmong the latent novelties. . , ro?e. cut in ligh' t:nted beat, aod a dahlia, cut in a turnip, are mentioned. They qoJckl) wither Among the curiosities at the recent Me ebaauca1 Kair in Sn Kr taaiaoa were a "to;) i od ox. a three legged calf, a three lepged doir, aud the celebrated upright gtme cock, lour ol the mot extraordinary ereatorej in the 5?tstc m BlUstOO a cornea ha noted pe.it 'iian, u;i dertook to walk in St. Stephen, X It . for foot consecutive days and nights, with hot twOOt miu utes rest each day Ueperformcl the few I. larking about tet.ty minute, ibaagh at iat l.e w i delirious. The Fn eh have heilt a new ir.Mt-.-i 1 w steamer at Toulon, hieb thev claim will be so pariof toany'liing vet known in the world. Thi" new engine of war is called De Taureau. Il lie now in tbe water, is round-backed like a tur tie, turns quickly on its axis, is heavily cuir assed, has great speed, ind carries a bi.r gun fore and aft. An officer in : Maine regime:! recently uot a furlough on the groOrtd that he would loe fi.'iy thousand dollars it he d.d not go home It seems that ho was OJBfjeced to a vntig ladv worth that sum, and the attractions of another foUoo were proving disastrous to hi " invest ment." The fair one had wiitteu to him that, if he didn't come home right ROtey, :lie'd matry the other man. The English OOeoie are refined and cultivated, and boast of it Yet at a fair recen'ly held, there was exhibited, publicly, a being m hum in shape, wearing oaly the savage garb around his wait, who deoured rats for John Bull's delight and edification. A dozen vtre brought to him alive; heseized one niter another in his hand, and pl.tcing its he.d between bis teeth, with a sickening crash of ihe skull in stantly killeI it and devoured the whole in a little over a minute. Only three or four tail weie left when he had Snihed IU meal. How forcibly is onf 'f-min ied of the follow ing etfu.M n, from the beait of one of England's noblest poets, when reviewing the blighting and mournful effect of war now visible in so many shapes fu;j .his? thrtwpliout our bleetlin frofrj m " O f"r a li.d. ii. .nut vst wildrms . , Home boundless continuity ot shade. Where rumor of oppression and deceit. Of U"suoceful or successful war. Vigrit never rtacu uie more. My ear U paint-d, My roul in i k, with every day's report Of wrong aud oatragp wuh Mbicb e.trth i mid." FROM THE SOUTH. AHEBUAN ON HIS RETREAT THROUGH GKORi.IA HIS HOC HAS COME IF GEORGIA ACTS PROMPTLY A.VD BRAYR1Y. From the Augusta (Oi.) Constitutionalist of November 19: Our gloomy faces are gradually aaauminc the t ::eerful hue as the real itnatiön lu.r!- n. u -mf-mwrn wxawi'VII VVIUi? VV J, : thoroughly understood. As we write (9 o'clock P. M .Friday) it is fully believed that General ! Sbermau, finding his way north entirely ctofMd j and a boid and defiant army confronting him, has determined upon m ikin it bold retreat to the ' rear, where no irmy of conoquence could impede Uis movement In our judgment it id tbe Anabasis of bherin .n. It id nl lin hl onlr .il.ia K ir,. ... I. , 1 1 certain and -aweuJ Ki . m.,;t LTr". " a obtain bü otnect epeedily, or he is lost, unlee -ww s AAV I m J - V 111' T I a-l . V . : i the whole Sute of t,eorKU are cowards and poltroons. In a state ofwar wo must WM all ex.r fi, ..n wk. L i.. h Jiii i t : .. i j . ujaivucs lie win ie;ne IIIS W OIH O! QeSTUCtl'M) . Sherman ha.- cut loo-e fiom hin base (cor giajis mu-t ee ilut he nuke: no other. Forrest having destroyed hi strei at Johnonville, and cut his communication North, this movement h.ts been lorced upon hitn; and if our local and reserve force can hold him in check, impede his progres. burn and destroy in advance of his columns, loug ere he reaches his objective poiut (the ba.sc he looks to,) his ummunition will be exhiusted, his horses starved, and his army an easy prey to fresh and veteran troops Sherman has many weary miles to march in obtaining his object. It is absurdity to talk about bis m iking a winter campaign with no communication wiih bis government How long will the ammunition he cartie-: last him I He ia retreating, simply retreating. He will de stroy as he goet, but that make it none the less so. This movement ia the modern Annbasi?, and like tbe Greek ;i old, he h is only one object ut heart, and thb a, to reach the sea ; and as Xenophoo's wt;. and long sufferiug teo IbaWfaV and sent up shout after shout, " Tbalatta ! Tnalatu!" so Sheinian will g: tdly cry, T!;c se t ! '1 he -ea ! T A N k : 1. PtlLSJO.V. From the BWMaoawj Whig of Nov. 2"J, we have the follow : r: I be fcrm ii id which the imnresion that Lin-

- - mmm av . " o ' trv I I I 11111 i I 11 L&l C coin rwe;eMion would be the aiual lor the To give warrrinfc of the divUion one of the whole outl.ejn Confederacy to ground arm a: d Speak er 'a at ten dan la pulls an electric knob, lobtaut without conditions has ukeu ot the Van which sets the faint little ' ti-.timbulation " gokce lancy, is o:,e of the strongest phenomena it ' ing all over the houe. and theu Irom diuinc hae cvet ocen our fortune to hear off. Tbe idea room, library. lobbies, committee rooms and

wis ur-1 uromuuaieu o ucn pap1 'be ilerla ana 1 r uu. e. io MllM voles tor Lincoln, aoditwnsM) fl.t'ering lo Yinkeeiiora that it spread like a contagion. The fathers of it did Biawiailly hHee one word of if. but tbey have repeated it oilen that tbey hive themselve- become con vet t hveu Seward seems to have been carried away by the delusion; aaaHtll Hlialll that the Van ke army are to a ret ex'ent -t II victims of it. tor their de-erters and th rri-ooer- we tike from them, a!! express tbeir surprie at seeing Ui a much bent on re- r ,ce as ever How they could hoc allowed themvei to be so cheated is strange IVrhaps they are quite as tired of the war as we ate. and th the dUipoaition ot men, at II time, to heHeve hst thev ih fo be true, yield ihtir credence, without examination or crtUv-tam That a tew, ua. even a large

body, bo I be tiius decer. - itural. That the elf deception should become universal is -Ihe aitonishme part of tbe story. Sew-ird e- te' vre other t ci hi creJulity. He thinks we will not only knock under, but will

give up tbe prioc!pi rebel, tbe ringleaders io inn unnatural war. at the defease of our i..su-r .iiiuw vt wvrvaiu pv'iwciao iuc army

of Northern Vlrfinla, for example, poralteed by th tremendous rroancement that Abe Lincoln is re-elected, are expected to delivor up. bound baud foot, tbot gloriou chief srho ha so of .en led -heoj IO victory, that he may endure the extreme of Yankee vengeance Aod to whom is ' ex :ed to deliver him? To that flosflad. baaeJuadoed, disfraced. Army of tbe Potomac! which it has msdc rue so often, that it has be-' enme almost disgraceful to flog it to. that horde of assassins, thiere nd house burners, for which Botany Bay would be far too good a home of re fae. l I hieb deeerves nothing on earth but the gaV.ows That "eld flag," the Yankee but uro aud gridiron, which has witnessed moredi grace than all the banner united that erer flowed above tbe head of armies. It to witness, at iat, thia humiliating of the Confederate army In OLe of Scott's novels, the "fortunes of M gel," we believe, a ruined apprentice is adrised by an old beldame to "take to the road," that is. to torn bifhway robber. The youth is iudignsnt enough at the base proposition, but bi wrath knows no bounds when he is told that his captain ia to be a cer tain cowardly brave, whom be baa himself cu.i geled in the presence of fire hundred people. So with the brave army of Northern Virginia The proposition daaU is bad enough, and well calculated to excite their indignation But the men in whose favor they are to commit this act of treachery! The beaten and disgraced, manv times beateu and many limes disgraced Army of the Potomac Kurier seems to be not less firmly convince! of the p iralyzing effect which Lincoln's election was destined to hare upon the Confederacy than Sfward. Butler is a thief in his heart. Thefirst idea that comes aeros his mind in connection wit'i this anticipated surrender Is the rich spoil it will ff;rd He is for givtOf the confederate a chance, a nominal one, just enough to fcave api e: an. c- He i- lor nomiog i day, not a long dav, to allow time

for til parts of the Confedei icv to be heard from, bat ttom, bat a cay r-ix. week off lie i- erti-ifut that the time is too short. and that the Mirrendct cannot be made effectual within that period. Then, if it be not made, comes the piunderiufr. AIJ tbe lands and goods of all the people of the Confederacy are to be taken from them and he diri ied am.-Uf- the Yankees. What an ! opened to the avarice of that michtv race! We aooil hear of Yankee proprietorowning whole cou:itte. or Yankee merchants and bankers outdoing Rothschild and the U-tr ine. Not a shadow of doubt seems to disturb thk beatific vision. Sawi:ev lieunott, however, thinks Butler too hasty. Wit, say this arbiter of the late of tbe nation, until weheur Irom Sber man. Weft until Sherman hat. astonished the univtrse and the rest of the Yankee nasio-i . Thfu it will be time NMfh to hold out t-e sword and the olive br.mcdi. Then we will be in time to how "our Sooaöoro brethren" that, though e lute them, we lore their property. I ni:i 1 delusion-i as :aese the Yankees have teen lel from the beginning of the war 1 Im v bive lost them a tniiiion of lives and four thouoaud m.llions of dehr. They have lost them the largest trade in the otld. and driven their aoaao mariiie fiom the ocean. But tbey cling to i still, with all the tenacity of a first and ooly lore Perfaopi :hey oil) In out in a little time what c tieft President Lincoln's proclama ttoti boa had in the South. A Mietet, of Ihr KnylUh I'nrliaincn The Dining Knom. The London Court .Journal, in its sketches of l'-i-ii i ment . describes the dining-room "tor mem ban only." We quote: Considered apart from the associations which give it prestige and res pc --lability, the members' dining-room offers no attraction to men used to tbf splendid aci-omtnodaliou of the West-end clubs It is low pitched it is so dark it is so narrow that the waiters aJaOOOl tumble ovei each other when there is ft foil hotite and a rush out at about 7 r. II The worst of it is th.it th- re is often a lament ible want ol anythiut eatable at took a crisis, and all tue efforts ol kitclu n. committee, contractors, chefs de cuisine, and wai ters lai! them to meet the demand of two hundred and three hundred huugry meu. uod tn OOi living, ard tntokrwut ot bad co.kiug, bad ptoviii)n?, and bau wnitera. The fact is, that except at SO extravagant outlay, no arrangemetit cau possibly secure satitftctury csteriog utider the eiialkg system Members preter, 10 a rule, to dine witli tbeir oiubs, whete eveiythiug i ot the best, and din log is the mam institution. So they hardly ever patronize the house fare uioe-s obliged to do so. Hence the cook never knows how much to provide. Sometimes ohoio be has laid in a Urge rtoea the debate goes off and the members go off too, while his fish, fieb and flowl are lelt Ofl hand. At other times an important questiou ii -c- ail of a MidiJen. ntiu the cook, as they say, in "e tien out of house and hume ' he can't up pi v the unlorpen dem.ud. i. j down lb broad flight of steps which formj the members' timing room, aud you will come out upon the ground iioor, opposite what is called the "kitchen.'' This, however, is a traditioual name which deeotodl to oi from the days of Bel limmv. heu underdone atealc and firat-rAte pott oioo nourished a tace of manly legislators. Passihg through a little aute room, where you light upon "George" and dirty glasses, you en ter a lour:, mirrow, but uot uocoraforuofe room, with .some dozen or so ol amll tables, where "straiiyers" may sit. eat, and be thankiul Like thawroOB overhead, it ii ill-lighted; but, a? a: g???1. " V ? "? rnce at i:ener;il rule, all .1 -t r.. r""" rr :-''gnieu--ueieci inseparable from (ioihic urchiteci ure, a? Lord Paltnerstoii will tell us Everything i staid and decorous. A waiter bringe to you ihe carte. You hare, however, your c-hoice of oup, fi-h or join's, made di.bes and aaatff. You can fail back ou chop and steaks or coid meit. There is the usual club regulations by which you may pay so much "to Iba table" and get thereby frauked by unlimited bread- Potatoes ud table beer You et KenerI T":'"???!? a" aT . ...I i . . j - . " l V L r Wl" SlSwliiTi ITSTtSi J5 ot Dutch Ulms and a floor laid with encau Uic tile- in sumraeriiiDe a delightful cool retreat, and mach re-orted to Mem ers have a larger smoking room, fitted up in much the same way, so that the smoke miyn'i find au uneven poroua surface to linger in or cliug to; and here Mr. Bright del if hta to hang over his chilbonque or slitroot, and expatiate the while; and knots of smoking men are formed, whose discusbioi.s on the affairs of the nation enJ here, if not else where, literally in smoke In the summer vou see them saunter irom the smoking room on to the terrace, and there woo the cooling, but hitherto not odotous, river breeze. While lounging carelessly and drcamingly over yoar meerschaum in the smoking room, v ti hear a sudden " tin tin tin" a weak sort ot compromise between a bell and a gorg which continues resounding overhead s though somebody was being called who didn't choose to answer the summons It is the division bell, if bell that cm be called which bell like tone bath none. When a divi-ion is called a three minute jflass is turned on the table beiore Mr Sfieaket, where i: stands looking like an euorm ius eggboiler. V hile the snd is running out memberare allowed that time to enter and take part in tbe division, if they 'eel so disposed, but when the sand i5 ctda is:td the peiker cries " order," in an imperative tone, and Lord Charles ffaeniill or Captain Gosett, who hs been waiting tbe signal, ciaps the door wi'h a bang, and lock on' anv M P ihn mirn.iihiiiin.iai;. ii.. smokmK-room how member, tike to ther heels aud arrive in u.ff rent Vag t brealhloea at tho Cho1 The race i- -rnetime muing enough, where a gen man wbo is fat and scant ot breath Sod hunseii in remote part ot the house alien th lii, r. .- mmd in ....aa. I not to aaia in division C i. i.ruencte now-a-,J i , keep a -L .rp lookout upon their repreeenta ti.ei, ;nd some even draw up a registernf at tendance at divisions It is e.v therefore to pj mn the agonized looks and the hurried gait oi the member who. not being in good training, ; oonff the lobbies, and mount the stairs o.ilv just in time fo ee the door inexorably shut iu bis face. FOR SALE. 'k i.V.. UNLT FOR A FgW DATS, A8 TR lot mot be cloaeJ oat SM Barrel Apfjle 100 ' lickiea. SS Soerkrout. 2S CMer The above wi:i b to d cheap. Apptj tbrae doors V" J sarp' moo S ora, wlnTO lot30-12.

AMU9CMKNT9. MBTR0P0LIT1N TREITRE. Corwer of Woshitiffn mwi Tennessee Strttts nnnnttr Ir. tt . h. Rllof. Wedneday Evening, November 30th. Mr. GDWIM AO AM 4.

THE LOAN OF A LOVER. PARTlCt'l.AK 5UTICE.-Tbr Hor Cars leave the Tbaur ei r-v riala at tbe c. e of th-- performance l'eopl living at a M.rr can rely on thi. fkMcsvr Atuu-Mus Drc-. Larcia and i'xuii ur. 4' cents rivtr beie. for tax pK m, 5 a, 7S ecwtt; Qnllcr atxf FuraMy & CaiHren in ansa, aij; 'l rrvl t ! I r oprn at a qoar.rr to 7 o'clock comno'DCoa at ? ' o'clock ptvctaely. r. 1 . ifunaancc NEWCOMB'S MIVSTRELS! 0 ' OK twm i.nrOM. Saturday and Monday Dec. 3d fi 5th, iy0Qata4MUUT a11.IaS( -TWO B.iXDi IX .W WN Tbl tnpendort' orvaiiisa:. let 4 by tLr Pioneer of Minrrty, u It auam-uted for 14 and 165Doors opa at to T. Commence at 4 to o'clock AtlmiNiion. 50 Oat. ' 56- V CI.AKKK. Viruaawaawai MwaHBwwowaBHaBwaMaBaanwMw RAILROADS. Columbus & Indianapolis Central Rail Way. 1HÜ4. winter 1885, w av; rs AND AFTKR MONDAY. NOV. th TKAINS will run an follows, 8un1iy xrept: Leave InJianapoliDay K wi l'.;m at . ... Niht P.xprrt (via Piqaa) at Cincinnati Kxprsss. Traius arriw: ...7 3't P. M v Ii P. V Man p. m. I li P. M Day F.xpre.". ( via Piqua) at .... Columbus Accommodation (via Piqua at Nipht Kxprcvü via Dayton) at l2i A.M. Ihrct connection made at Columb, for all Fa-ti-m Cities. The Day Kxpras and Cincinnati Kxprrsa train co.connect dir at Richmond fur Hamilton and ClawkawM, rriTiDK in Cincinnati at 12.40 a. M. ant Mf P. M. Throujrh Sie pint; Cars on Xi,tht traint. . M. bUNT, Sn7ts,,tFMfit. F. Cbaküi , G-.-Beral Ticket Apent hut.W dtf LOST. OST A Mfinoratiiium It.(. Slfu tbe l'yl nonse ma Aam r..tprf inr,:.', nn tr niurnmjt of tb TJVü, containing ome account orb'Tae at.d mulek ani otLr accoants, of no vaiur nM to th owr.e. The Under will be hbcral'y rewarde.1 by leaviac it at Deliell ft Livery Stable, ..r iMJ Xorth Illinois trert. J. J. OOOPVJL tio30 dD MEDICAL. No. 24 1-2 E. Washington St. AT TDK AMKRICAN DISPJ.X3AK TKKAl R a new method, and with tho ppttal re-tdts all ca-e of Diseaos Kni rondltiort pcnliar to ffmalet Prolaruus 1 tri, fallm of the Wii1lJ KrvpCPSM of th Mtia, Chlorosis, or Gren Hicknea charac terirf-d ' v yeilowiab, dirty jrreeu pior of the surface; KmauMo I MeKsium, r aboect Mentruatioti; Amenorrhea, or He- j tention of the Mnse; Dystnenarrbea, a painful and dif?cult flow of thfMui-e-: Mnorrhajria. or profue Mei -' Mruatioc: RucborrL-a. or rxcesatve and altered err- . tion of the xnucu" arenerally wbitc, or unnv coloresh and tra!ipareat. Kadr. I hare o:vn yuu a class vi disea-i- tut' tf mrt with iii Females ol all ages, wbetix-r married or unget., wbetiicr marnt-U or uiit would havtbattbere 4-a-t peculiar to our sex turitin, and Lactation, of mnrned; and In married rmu' would are many oth r lornis of dinet .1 ---- f I r. ... . I.irtu which space will ii.'t adnnt an elucidation. I omit it for the council chamber, dditiK ln! enr more rl - a-e r . LXlof"drurnr ! ,r!iK '' '' V " :-',h! Mösl I niort:ttil to Voting ln. ftarfnl lanauae a:,l silent workineof vine terrihle di. O-t 1 11 V . I 1 - J . . . ae, andermininfc the constitution, memory and rca..n: ourr; mi? ittem to a premature äeatti. K'-rlect while reason hold war, nd avail yourself of thr MfftoM fat Ir Pendery, whose treatment di.-ipate the lihteat Mtt ami eure.-, tlie most harr&sinir weakne, r-r other raus f seriou- difflcnlty or perpetual aanoyaooo. V BN BttK 41. MSBRtBI At tbf" American bi-penvary wr also tret, withoi t HUCVa. wi with never failing uccess. Venereal, or what th.quacks call private cr aerrvt disease- spbylis in all it- staRes, Gonorrtnea. Gleet. Stricture, spermat(rrhra, Seunnal Wctktifss, Soeturna! Fmlssiooi, Sexual Ii -biiity. tnipotency, and Kffe t 4 fadf lWM The last six treated in a -Privat- 1 .t : e: ,'" w hich will be sent frr r , n rrceipt of stamp. My treatment I deem it unnecessary to enlarge npou. Tue remarkable and sf undimeurf rf.irm-TJ thro:(b the agency of tbe MKDICATK1) VAPOK KATHS, anrl the medical application ofELECTRo-MAi.NFTISM. Fy th alternate ue ef these two medical agents we get a thre- -fo d effect By elimination, morbid matter in forced out of the cystcm, ami by the absorbants, medicine is imrnediately brought in contact with disease. By tbe app lea tion ot F.I.KCTKO-M AtiNKTISM. nervous enervation la restored, and power added to the macular syMeni. 1 will guarantee a cure ef And aire all InflaHialory diseases. For further information ca.! and judge for yourself. J If ' I challenge the public lo bring me a cam 1 cai.ii. t cure, if brought before tte .olden thread i broken TTTOfflce hours from 8 A. V. to f4 P. M. P 0. Bt nov3n'C4-.ilyeod FOR SALE. DELZELL ,IOKH. Ileal I slate Broken, H:t!CK COTTAGK on North Noble Mre-t. with xw, Iota liana, house tw and well bu.lt, f r in naymei tsrunnint. thrttifrh two yearx. A Lot on Dougherty street, oornerin on an aJafafag Ii An Improved"! ari.1 at a 1 w price, near Far;, 111., for trade lor (irotierty in Indianapolis or Marion county . Vacant Lou, Dwellings ri.1 lanus of all kiixb fur aal on jroodurtns DKLZXLL a JONFs, Real Estate Br.k-r-. r.ov2-dt N ST Eat Washington street PRINTINC. tkC. CHA-. W. HALL. HALL A c. r. bitch: .v. 111 Ti IIIS. rLAl5 AND ORNVMKNTAL STEAM BOOK AND JOB PRINTERS, I siieroty per and Honk binder, No. 161-2 East Washington Seet. INDIANAPOLIS, IND:a '. . I.-. V--.f rrrry Rescripts. ... i .a :- -. .rW. uovaj.rl-Jn. NOTICE. M T I C E. TKRA8CKT DEPART MF NT, Ornrt m CoantoLita or tri OlHfiatl ! Wa-hisctos, Sorember llt, M4 I U7HKKEA.S. by tatUfactory erideoce presented to th- Uiider cted. It ban been mad to appear that "Ihr It ! ar.ip' .Sat.caal Bank." in the Cuy ! I rttl . anap Ua ia ta county of Man n, and Stat A Ii. liana. La oaen o nj trgmxei unrr and accord. ng to the re ouireniems of the act of Cooayear. vontUd an 'An Act !., lwvMa a Nation! Currencytscurd by a p'.edga of L s l-.nls, and to proMtlf for th circulation ana re den.ption Sar apptfe-.ec Jane 3. 1-S. .n has 7. ! pNa with ail tLe provi.i., of aaid art re.,uir to rprt witn ao tue provisi., or said art rwqnlr to hr cD!'H wttii ri"- n.v;.r:Tt; ium f.uTi s ft bank uneer taw act; N .a. torf-e. I, lUmoel T. Howard. DepotyCmp t roller f th Currency, rlo berr by certify that Tho Iu- ' dunapolU Nat oaal Baak," in the Cty of Ir.liar.ai In the County of Manoti, State of Indiana, it author' I ;ed to comateace the bs,..i ol üankia aaslcr lh act :.mony whereof, wita. any hand and teal of ' 'l. , thlt twenty-Srst d.y of November. I.. j 8AMI HL T HOWARU. i DTty CapuoUa of thw Currency nfS.f..l! WANTED. BOARDERS WANu.D, OCR or F vt Oeatlemen can got Day Boardina- by applvtaa No IS VCt Ohio treet F

MRICjIN MSPB1V8ALHV.

DR LIGHTHILL Of 34 St. MaiYs Place New York, AetrW cf "A Pofir Trtntux a Dttfnem ' Lrttert Cmtnrrh . ' drr . se WILL JfJtKK Bl SECOND VISIT

V POMS Tuesday, December 6th, Jn WILL r T TH t HOtfSE, OK Will, From D o mh r 4(h (ill Saturday. Dffonibfr loth. iarlaivp, Where iie ran be conaeltetl on DEAFNESS, CATARRH, DIM ll.KUES FROM IHK KIR, Noise in the Head, and all the rarioi Diaeeea of the EAR, THROAT AND AIR PASSAGES. W v II ' Bl.'tll'lflt.-.. aft . i lnc-i uniii i tiu.i, s fuiMiiar Work. ot. 1 f II Denfue. n t nd freretition. has tea.hed tbe .ith Edition, aud may be ob tainei o Carltnn, 413 Broadway, r an re utiiili1 Itookae Ier throughout the roaoirv Ti i hi o uia I of Krmarkable; Cure. AmoLt the uumeioun tetimonia!a in bi no seeaioo, Dr Liguilull ha eelected a lev ooJV oi tho-e Irtirn panie- oi etllihhed fxmttjn and weil known throughout the country. Frtn the Ho. Journal (X. . Jaa 4u, li. In erery buametK r prote-on. indeed in eery department of science or kill, there i alway M itcknowleped lieadonie one who Stauda out m bold relief among ht. fellow.-, aa a eort of leader In the stud? and treatment of deaf neat and catarrh, as special disease. Dr. Lighthil!. .! iMa city, oceupiew the pout tion abore described He lus devoted yeitr of labor to thtt pperaiity. and ix now reaping the reward ol his industry. The editorial column of tbe Tribune of a recent ila'e bear witne-s to the Doctor' succean in thia department oi medicine We quote Hie nXra ipb: "Ccat of a Dkaf Mi tk Lout Loeweuatein. a lad lourteeu car ol age, bom in (iermaay, came to tin- cit when he waa about two NM old. Soon alter bia arrival here he wan taken sick and !ot his bearing. Bt degree he became VI deif ind then dumb Kor nearly ten rears he w.i a uit.tc. in i'.l i . ::( i the loule-i voice, o: to articulate a wotd. About one ear ago be w.h placeti by his parent- in tbe bands ot Dr Lighthill, who has go I ar succeeded in restoring to lorn his lost owera oi hearing B4 ucierance, thai be cm converge with thote who peak to him iistiucilv airi deliliKalelj. During the nasi four or five months he has leen under tbe tuition ol Mr Uentiecke. and haK made considerable proi.rc-, ia writing atI .tiithuietic " Having been supplied w ith tbe lad's we further investigated the matter nut dw-tn. that, prtfMJM 10 raiting Of) !)r Liehthill, ., , ' . . . . ,!,e VOUtb s rvc Considered bopelc-. .... : lurther .n esiijatdl the mttr . wa for two ear an inmate of the Deaf and Dumb Alum The Rer John Xott D D l'rofe-or io Uuiou College; SUienectad. in a paWaka1 letier, leader bi gratitude io Dr. iitnui, tor treating succeeaiuli? but cae ot toxin.- 1 ' A . Jl'ra.l I 1 r I " - J . VWdl, I 1 UlP bUtt ormMl Jx00 Albü7- ' ße-lo having been cured of catarrh Dr Lirhthill - otiitf- i mooials aud tributes to hi talent from somr ol our wealthior and trn-t t-r. min nl and respert?j citiaens, which aoay be aet i on application It would be difficult to ipael in ant but terms of praise of bit treattii i.-. ui the face of these many proofs and facta testifying to bis euccewe. I Ki: OF CATARRH. Irom Rev. Fred. S. Jeu ell,'Prefea or ot tlii- Staate rmal Kekaal Alban, M. Dr LiohthUl: Dkab 3ik Under dait of March 1 eent ou a carelni statement of my ca-e. 11 former treatment, my iailure to obtain relief in that direction, my resort to vour treatment aod ita beneficial result I have been from tl.e winter of the rear IrM, -dbject to viülf ut f riütlical attack of Caurrb, marked hy atrou febrile ymptom. violent inflamniHtiiii. ol trie liainir roembranea of tbe caviUt "f l"e head, H cotcpanied in tbe first auger oy a watery discharge Irom the no, aubacqoer' iy becoming acrid and yellow, and toward!, close of the attack, purulent and bloody. Tbaao attacks produced a most dittresain specie of headache, occurring periodically each day lor period varviag from one to three week, sometimes bo violent as to incapacitate me for buai nes and at times confine me to my bed. At 'imcS the attendant i nfla m mm irr ...,11 . .1 , 7 . " wu to the lth. producing toothache; or to the throat. occa;oi.iiig iioir-e;. - 'tialjose of voice; and twice within tho last few yars it b ao affected the left eye a to confine me lor weeks a darkened room. I had tried medicines and applications of rari ous kinds, snuffs and other catarrhal reparation of some haif a doaen kind; applicatKms to the bead of camphor, finger, and hot ionienta tions of different kinds, ud iu connection with tbe the usual emetics or catbaruca employed t-. induce counter action. But none of these had produced any permanent improvement, and iu the !ea insian e u. wh.cn temporal relic' waa afforded it was at the eapen ef so much atreogtu a to leave me greatly ei hauste 1 Tnder theo circumstaucea I waa leu, though with retetawc. -pi- bede.to make a trial of your ireatrneat I found it aoon beyonJ even my hopes reaching tbe disease as It had never fiern rear be.1 Imli.K 'tymptom-to an extent hieb I bad emoted imfKieible .-vi me time I gave vou mv lormer . crt.bcate, hile I did uot leal asaurad of com pie? cure, 1 had obtained a material rti.cl which nearly repaid me for my trial of vour treatment, ; end which satisfied me that that" treatment was' a effective as it waa simple aod phtloopfc cal a aubsttntial escape from myoid attacks of catarrh lor the ut.rjrerexiented period of nearly half a rear, and tbal in spite of severe occurrence of ...i.-.- atmh w.,uld have foi meri rendered ucb in attack inevitable, wai, to tnc proof of in id -f t oem It ia row tin mno'h cure I t:' iu th it Bta-emet i, und. wbi'.e it is uLpieas- ' snt to me to Dpear t-. r..r taotly. nd in this 2 . -e. t-ef.ire the public, it uremi to s a aaatier -tmp'.e jii-ii..e to toawaalf, nd to tboee wbo m,,T be tmW I was, to ,dd thai ! am not odIt as fullv satisfied a- o ?he u'ditv and HHca .. ,.vi r rm. - . ' u i 7 mM l"l,n? t jUrrh ' '!I mbr.th ago; but I am now of the belief that it there ia auch a thin a a cuiad,r -brot in cnttrrh. in my ca-e a -uhtantia1 cure has been effected Yours, repectlully. FaaDcaicK S Jiwaij.. Albany. N Y . September I, 164 Kainrkblf a rm Rev urr of DrafycHM. Joee-..h M C'arhe, Rector of Sraariftt, Feb. JO. leta. in one ear ever am" I st James uhurch I have beew de' college, some twenty year ago Bv the kill of Dr L gbtbil! its bearing was entire! v restored, o that now I bear ltke with both ear r.d n u that I can ae my voice with much more eve and coaafort Lb an before mmtm m ata

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