Daily State Sentinel, Volume 14, Number 4544, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 May 1865 — Page 2

.DULY'.'' SENTINEL.

tflPClJNIOS IT KC?BS rRKSKRYstr. IJacase TUESDATM0UN1MI. MAY ic". The Appllrallon for a Writ f 11beae Corpus for ?lllllgnn. Hot lee and Iloreejr, and wfmt rame of it. A petition for a writof hbo corpus wn pre tented a few days a'.nce In behalf of Milligso, Ifowlei acd II out, to the circuit court of the United Sltlet.tow aluitr in lais cU7- ußdcritasdlht rjoau! of tht app'.kation tot, that a military court bad r.o j3r:iictioo to try tbo iodiviiualj for tie cZtmtA for which they bavt been condense!. No decision was render -J. but joJges certified a divuon of opioioo, which take the application to the supreme court at Wesbicroa, for i!4 determination. By the) law governing the courts of the United Sute. where the two judges d'iBzc on Q' tion of law, the point of d.Mgreeaent i certified . to the inpretce court, whicb acts upon the cue ai oa irreal. It Bomc'.imea harr-eai thai where qutiüooi of t;ret patlie intent arise, the juJpea of the circuit court di.fer fro frma,a order that the cso may be snt to the supreme court at once. ' ' Whether there was, in thecaeof Mi'.lipin aa l his associate, an actnl conflict of opinion between JuJjje Davis, and McDonald, or whether ' a division w. former certified in order to obtain the judgment of the fall ruprerae bench; on the important quetlion of the jurisdiction of militari tribunal over the oflrcse with which the prisoners were charged, we ara not advised, ror ii it impcrUat to know. It i of the first coneo.uence, however, thit the highest court of the ' cation ehll determine this vexed question as -otj as practicable. The action of the circuit court doew Dot, f cour , stay the execution of the prisoners, which has been fixed for Friday nett, and they will b executed in pursuance of the order heretofore made, unleaa the president . i!m!J direct a u.-perision of tho fcnter.ee until the lupreme court ein act upon the petition for the writ of haben corpus. If that court hall decide that the proceedings of tho military commisioD were illel, all g'jod citizen will concede the necessity ef defcrin to in judgment, and tumisg over all prisoners who have teen so tried to the civil efnm; whi!e if the jurisdiction of the military court is sdsUiue J, all oca will concede the legtlity. as well as the justice, of the panishrot pre-crihed for MiUijiir, IJ wies an 1 Hor " aey, and fr others who hive been condemned by similar tourti. Whether the president will suspend the rjccotioti uritil th Btiprcme court rendrrs a drciioo, we live uo mca'is of knowing, but weh-rpe ha xaiy d no. -If it e'.iouUl Hisuir tLojund'ctljuof tbemiilLuy comtuission, gMva tiouLts will be removed from the mind of nnnj g-od and loyal men, and public juswice will not suffer by the del.tr; but if its decision should be adTerse to the military jurisdiction, it will not be a pleasint rellecti : t any of us th.it thce men were jlleirallT executI. nlthouh we our feci that they j'wtljr deserved dc iU .it ihe InnJl of a competent trivuiiil. ' 1 The forrin:; wc copy from 1 he Indlonapo'.is Journal of yesterday, an 1 we are advised thattle sentiment it expresses are t'ioe eutertuine I by the prominent members of th; domiu int party in this city and Hate to ju.-tify the appeal which has been rnide to the President for a tin-pension of the tentence of the military court iu tlia circs of i Mesurs MiLUo.ix, liowixs and lIoassT. The judgment of eminent civilian", regardless of par tisan considerations, is aainit the legality of the tribunal which tried and condemned thosoin dividails. The very fact thtt two federal judges, whoe integrity r.v.d ability cmnot be o,uctijQC d, hare certified a dirUion f opinion .so that the question involved rmy be preicnted to and de termined by f!ic supreme court of the United states, is the btvt evidence that there are very ftrious doubts as t the juj rudictiou of miiiury . cjuut, imperially . in the case, under consideration. Jt cannot for a moment be finppoie 1 that Jn le Davis, the life locg friend and appointee of Mr. Lincoln, woulJ certify tl a division of opinion upan the application made to the Circuit Court of the United States, over which he presides, for a writ fhabcaä corpus, so that the question at isue 4 -esuU bercTfewcd acd dctcrniined upon by the highest judicial tribunal of the nation, if there were not grave doubts in his mind a to tlio lc cal'tv of the proceedings Certainlv it must be the conclu-iou of every jjoo 1 citizen that such an application carnot be refu.-ed by the presideat A The Journal remarks, uo harm, lo injury to the public interests, citi ario from this exercUe of cxerutive 'clemency. It does not tct the condemned free It docs not determine the justice of the decision of the'uili tary court. The u.pcn?ion of the execution does not atVewt tho guilt or it:noccucc of tho ac cused. A very I-trgc p.rtioti of the people enter tain the ooicioD lb-it these men' have been tried . and condernncJ by an illegal tribunal, and, aa The Journal remark?, it will not be a pleasant reflection to an? of us, that these men were ille gally executed " The war is over. The crime charged upon thevcondemned can no longer work evil. Ard the only object iu carrying out the ; tectence bow, is for an example in future time. What influence will such an exaiaple htve, if the ' highest judicial tribunal of the government ihoulJ hereafter determine that these men hive been illegally executed? It that questiou is not determined in this case by that tribuual, it will in tin case of om? rndividcal who ha been con demned by a military commUsiou imilar to that which tried a:id coiJcnn;cd Millioan, Howlks ainl HoÄtT. All tht.c men hive asked is that

thev khonU le triJ lv a civil court. Thev are civilians, . xn 1 the utTr;i- ch ircl against them is a crime Uiitl Iveivd law. . Thev lived in a itite where the juii?dict;on ol t'ie civil courts were ur.rotrict 1 at the tiruc.nd since the offet:e3 alled saint them wro committed. An ! now tlicro is the additional rei.-oa that the question of rnditiry juriadiotiou should bs detetminei by the cutirt T last rv.rt, r:k1 whose dicisioim bind all, a ublio justice will n.tu;lVr by the delay, nn 1 it will be a rel;f to ti.tf cheers ' who composed t!.e military comniiss'on, for ccr taiuly they will not dt'r tj hive the nnplessaul reflection that they wore the cau.-a of illegal executions. If these n;e i should be executed under thes-e circua.suncea a Ttrv large p.jrt:on of the people will believe it to be an act id' von peanee. ard not of eit'ier just-re or ne..e?j:ty. . . We are happy u notice that the general feeilrK I 'e vail thit the c.ise in q'JtSio.i S'.ioa'd not be fleeted bj pstiiu considerations. 1; in. volve the great ie-ti of ciii! liherty, h: ce it has an Ittiret hielt arwi nbtt: nil tueic pjrtisn questiou. A:.d it phu'.il 1 cot be discussed from such a . t m l point , .t:id we hope it w ill not be. Whether these men :ie executed or not, th pue-t:or involved in their c.if? will be disci:-ed and determined, and the ti(,uiiv) n.av lave an imrortanVe which the i:nthi::k::. do not now rtimite. What It rat xnul upoleou Tti o ufffi t r - wf srs-ret Trlwl. Se.rrt trial, whether mi'.inry or civil, will t.f receive much facr iu this ape fn.ia any rKopc who are recogn'c I as clvil'ed, The funVr

du Etitt L'nii, a French jaurii.l published in New York city, reg ir is the .-ecret miütiry trial the alleged a?;:i ara u-idergng at Washington city, as a blunder, and in its referecce to it brings into the fvreroun J this fact: When P.'che.ru ar, i Moreau wer ;uton trial in ItSJl, altboueh Fouche wished ft,r a e crel Leirisi. thdrt Cv.üu1, N ipj'eo::, it.-'ste,! that it should be public. remrW:r:; th.at otherwise thejjple might thick that the evidence hid Jbeenjn vested t make the con lemnatiori t.irc. The criminals were accus! of the graret crime, an! the proJecditis fhon'd he spread cut in ibe aitfht of all iL wuild. Ckaire$ ardent et were no longer in accord with tta spirit of the age and of the pec pie."

TAX sTIO. V print the anoeieJ co mm orient ion on ac CJctt of the import inre of the tuhject, Ld beciuie we tie oi it Je;rat!e to invite ducuMion oo this theme I5y "an advalorera tax upon real estate" we uu JeiUn J the writer to mean, not etactlv whit the word implv, but rather a direct tax upon the aisesied ralae cl real and personal property such as is annually collected for state and municipal purpjea. We do not believe that It it praeticablc to establish free trade, while the nauon is o largely in dtbt, nor w it probably dailrablc to effect so radical a chxec in thtt pxr! of ent roachioery for IÜBg the tre?.tTry. Hut

the tax ou iucomcs, professions and modes of bainev, we believe might well bs abolished to the cotr.fort and atisfaction of the people: Niw Toaa, April 27. To the Editor of The Journal of Commerce: Sift I wish to a.k your aasiiUtce in laving before the people of this an i the other Urge cities of this cocntrv, especially before the very clas of men who are the readers of your pap-er and ho ara those most thoroughly capable by the natura of their pursuits of understanding the question, the argument in favor of depending fur the entire rtrenue of the national govern mcr.t upon an ad valorem tax upon real estate. lcere arc certain advantages in mis iorm oi taxation over any other, which only need statement tobe acknowledged. It 13 more ccccomic&llj collected. A tax up on imports, upon any merchandise, upon sales. upon documents, (in the shape of stamps) all requiro a larger force of asessors, apprai-crs, ub agents, collectors, ic, Ac, than this, which can easily be levied and collected by the already regulated machinery of states and territories, re quiring: but a plight increase of expense on the partol the local governments, which increase can be reimbursed by a percentage of the tix collected for the national government. It is lcaa repu'sire to the fcelicgs of the peo ple, the present ?rtem or pyptems requiring a man constantly to acknowledge the existence of taxation, although many times iu a very small way, while a tax upon re.il estate would be met with only once in a year, and then be done with. The tax upon real estate id almost the only one. or in fact the ouly ooe, which I now think of wh:ch :s not a d.rect premium oSTered to fraud Income tax, tariff, stamp duties, tax upon sales. all say to men generally, "If you can avoid me it i so much money in vour pocket. These are a few very simple considerations. but much more important are those bearing upon the effect of the tax upon the general welfare of tho country, and upon the equitable division of the tax among all. Adam Smith an J Stuart I Mill both treat of the final disposition of any P. v.. : - . v. 4- - . : i c I wt, luii is, mcj cuurxur iu ftcriiu wuu miaily pays it, but 1 cannot seo but what all taxes upou merchandize, direct or indirect, fintlly act upon the consumption and that therefore the con sumer pay tham. Let us see then what is the e fleet of a tax upon real estate. First, ail real estate used as a place of residence roerelv, must pay its tax as well as the rest, and this tax is, so far as the occupier, whether owner or tenant, is concerned, an additional rent. Thoe who can not afford to pay this additional rent will natu rally Beek for real estate upon .which they wil not be called upon to psy so heavy tin outliv, and, as this process is repeated to the last, the de mand will finally absorb those parts of a city or it3 surroundings which are the cheapest, or rath er, will have a tendency to eo absorb them. In tho meantime, however, there is a counterbal ancing influence at werk. The articles of consumption upon which a man lives atid for which his daily expenses are incur red, will all, by reason of the removal of taxes upon importation, manufacture and sales, have fallen more or less in cost, and at the fame time his income tax will have been taken off, and be can add to his rent the araouut gained bv the ro duc'iioa of these expenses without spending more in the aggregate than, before. Second, in the case ot property u?ed for productive purposes cither as firms, luines, or places of manufacture while the above process would go on to some ex tent, there would also occur the following: If by any chance the aggregate expenses of the oc cupier proved to be increased by the change in taxation, this increaso would be charged to the articles produced, and the consumers of our bre&datulf and petroleum abroad would help us to piy our taxes. But it seems to me certain that if wo gained in r.o other way, we should gala the difference in the cost of collecting the tax by thus rjstcm, in preference to the present and that, therefore, the aggregate cost of living could not be increased to the farmer or other producer. . One thing ia noticeable. The increased cost of holding real estate would tend to induce the holder to avail of its productive powers to the utmost, while the absence of taxation upon manufactures and tho freedom from the clogs upon general business transactions which the preient reveuue law impo.se would increase the activity of the inhabitants of the laud to the ut mo?t. Government would have every reason to aid in the increase of facilities of communication to the development of the natural resources of the soil, and to take any steps which might lead to the appreciation of the taxable value of the country. It ii easy to see that instead of the present unnatural development of certain branches of manufacture by the operation of the tariff, all production would be quickened and the free natural working of the great laws of trade would point out to us what branches we could carry on to advantage. The effect of a heavy tax upon real estate would be to induce the holders of large farms to part with lach portions as they could cot with their capital make profitable, and thus would be wrought out the 8ub division of holdings, the ac cumulation of which in the hands of a comparativelv few individuals has had such a terrible effect upon the morals of the peasantry and low er clashes generally, in countries where it has prevailed. I have thus hastily thrown together a few ideas and beg that you will give the subject your thought, and tuen appeals as may seem to you desirable in to important a matter to the interests of tho countrv. I bare not the power of lan guage sufficient to sei the matter forth in proper form, and therefore do not ask you to publish anything from my pen, but sincerely trust that you may feel sufficient interest in the subject to present it as it should be. Preferring to remain unknown in the matter myself, Your obedient servant, Arth i a Canoll. :itvicla of .Tlilitarr CoiuuiUaloiik Under sentence. Heside the three persons under scatesce of death at Indianapolis, whose execution, it is un derstood,fs to take place on Friday next, there are two over whoci the same penalty is suspend ed, sentenced by tue military commissions which sat during the winter and spring, in this city, and two other doomed each to five yeans impns oumont. Itoforcthe lamented death of Presi dent Lincoln, it was not in general, thought that the Ifves of either the Indianapolis or the Cin cinnati convicts were in much danger; it be:ng understood that the feelings of the president as well ash's cotiocs of policy, were in favor of leniency. Since then, for come cause or other. in the common esteem, their peril eeems to have increased. 1 hose of Indianapolis have been ordered for ciecutiju. ai.d it ü apprehended that the tarne fate, at no distant dav, hangs over those of Chicago E ther thronet thesternr.ess of his natural dispositionTor under the influence of certain persons by whom he is approached, the new president is beiieved to be less disinclined to extreme mewurcs against the subjects of the mil. tar t rooim ioci thin Lis predecessor. Wc feel cur imiuterce in this matter. We da not tfciieve that cruelty is advisable, either for the suk? cf the country, or for tht of the party iü ;oer. We do rot believe that it is the best course they can pursue to preserve the peace of oeiety. or to perpetutto their own authority. But, if the rule u-nnl in uh c-ea is followed, our urgency m one Jirrcti u will be taken as proof that tho true piicy U in tho other. Republican leaders aui journals will assume that our interest is of the sime chancier with their own, and that we mean nothing but party, when we say ccuutry an J humanity. We may be ac tually damaging the chance of those whose lives we would preserve; and closing the door again: ttcir Lo;e3, which we would willicgly opeu. Still, it. vie are some tacts, which all men alike should bear iu miu i. This uut be a country of Law, or tt will be an anarchy, with despotic iutermifions. Granting that it was once justifiable for govcrnmeut to rise above lit, it must be ad mirted that it is not justifiable for it to remain so. With the expiry o! the occasion for dictatorial powers, should ceae all illegal conditions, social or individual, which are established under it. The rational danger is confrvied to be over. In

be Abstract, the greater bare of the people, of

ail parties, we are convinced, believe that the best policy, with a view to our future well being, ts pacification and mutual forgetful nei release from force and return to law. Uy some of ocr republican contemooraries.the example has been presented to the new admiois tration. of Kornau emperors and consuls, who signalized their accession to cilice by act3 of clemency granting pardons to convicted crimi nals. It would be better for a rcw American administration to do this, than to render itself notorious by increased severity.' But the parties of whom we speak are not.in the eye of the law, convkud criminals, and the.r claims are differ ent, acd stand upon higher ground than that of Koman lawyers or peculators. Thev do not at least we do cot in their behalf ask for them pardon, but simply trial; trial by constitutional tribunals, according to legal forms. It is not aking much, to plead that a man who stands in danger of bis life should be tried before he is executed. It will be dlfHcult for one to state wherein law, or government, or society will be imperiled by permitting a jury to pas upon the question of his guilt before the man is sent to the gallows It is not mercy of which we are the advocatri, but justice; that iustice which none can deny without doing themselves greater injury than they can ir.flict upon their victims. Wc have said, in other articles, all wc intend to say upon the legality of the tribunal which passed sentence upon the parties in question. There is this further consideration to which we beg leave to refer. These nun were not only cot found guilty of any crime known to the law, but they were not charged with any. The charge was of a design to commit crime; a design which, even if entertained, was never carried into eie cution. There was cot enly no proof of prepar ation to commit any crime, but no distinct proof as to what particular crime was contemplated. In plain term?, that for which they are cow in peril, is suspicion of some scheme against the government: some ore of several schemes, which were indicated by loose expressions of their own, or instigated by thoae ect as spies upon their con duct. We see the dilemma in which the party in power has placed itsejf, and which almost compels it to co csn earn ate one crime by committing another. The most laborious efforts had been made to cast the country into a proxysm of ter ror, by the intelligence that vast conspiracies had been discovered to overthrow the administration and forcibly revolutionize the government. After enjoying the benefit of this terror, at the presidential election, it becomes incumbent upon the party, for its own sake, to prove somebody guiltv ot something that resembled conspiracy. Of a plot which, according to tales industriously spread, cumbered its thousands, after months of investigation, and hundreds of witnesses, the re suit is four; of a plot which, according to the same veracious testimony, numbered its bun drcds of thousands, the result is three. Military commissions, aided by a multitude of 6pic9, instigators and detectives, with a host of putative criminals, and a whole pecplo for witncs?es, governed by no rules to exclude Beau dal, and with abundant means to encourage ex aggeration, sitting month after month, with their processes running all over the land, and with no limits to their power to arrest, and imprison, and terrify, wtre not able to find excuse for convict ing more than seven prisoners. To let these men go now would seem like a confession that the conspiracy was a thing of pure fabrication that the plot w&9 on the other Ride But will this be escaped by taking the lives of these? The whole world will see that the uumber of victims is too small. If there was a conspiracy, and such a conspiracy, the convicts should be cumbered, not by units or ten, but by hundreds and thousands. The number is greatly too few, or greatly too many. It was not riots that wete charged, but conspiracies conspiracies to that which multitudes of confederates were needed to execute; conspiracies said to have been discovered on the very eve of the ignition of the train which was to carry sudden -uin to the civil institutions of eighteen millions of people. Can this mountain afford to commemorate, in this dreadful way.the fact that after so protracted a period of labor, it brought forth a mouse; or will a mere act of party Vengeance serve o give dignity to that which by every right standard is so insignificant? Cincinnati Inquirer. I It olograph of flic Admliiiatratloii Ircfc We subjoin an editorial from The Nashville Union, which is an admirable photograph of the administration press generally. a here are verv few of them that have any independence whatever. To men in authority they are fawning and truculent in toe extreme. Iu their recent as saulti on General Sherman they were animated by a belief that they wete thereby addressing themselves to tue favor ot 1 resident Johnson When he was not iu a position to dispense pat ronage, they hd hurled at him the most damag ing abuse; butnDw that he holds in his hands tho immense patronage of the government, they arc on the alert to ascertain his slightest wish, and whoever they consider he desires written down, with eagerness thev undertake to write down. In this way they seek to win the regard of the president. At this sort of work they are adepts. For four years, with untiring fidelity. thev have indulged in the villiantion of the dem ocratic party and its members. They are skilled in the work or detraction. ror the accuracv with which The Union has photographed them it is entitled to thanks. Here is The Union's article: Not yet two months ago, nearly all of the newspapers of the north were bitter iu their de nunciations of the prcseut occupant of the presidential chair. They held him up to the public gaze as a man wno naa Drougnt aisgrace upon himseli and upon the country; and called upou him to ciDiate his offense by abdicating the high position to which the people had called him, and retire to the shades of obscurity. They did not stop to inquire into the truth and justice of tfee charges made against Mr. Johuson; but assuming that they were true, assailed him with a coarseness and brutality drscreditable to the enlightened age in which we live He 6tood unmoved in the torrent of caluxnv tint was rained upon him. All the comment he made upon it was the quiet remark "I will outlive these slanders." Little did he then dream how soon tue voice oi tne slanderer would be attuned to notes of eulogy. The powerless vice-president on the lath ot April became president the dis penter of vast patronage. Hut one turn of the kaleidoscope, and how' wonderful the change! The dark clouds of the 4th of March are lifted, disclosing a landscape bright, beautiful and in viting. .Nothing more lovely ever thrilled the hem of the poet or paiutcr, under the soft skies of Italv. The unworthy, greatly abused vicepresident becomes a miracle ef statesmanship I 1. ,1.V. ' - II i . miu ucioisuj, miu iuu peup.e are called upon to love and revere him. The experience of Uen. Sherman has been the same, only, in this cuss, the order of events is reversed. His brilliant generalship, the mighty and crushing blows he dealt the rebellion, won him the highest meed of admiration. Wherever civilization extends he wag regarded and spoken of as one of the fotemost'military ch:efs in the wcrld, a patriot true and tried. The press almost exhausted language in extolliug him. But, in an hour when the divine attribute of forgiveuess overswaye i bi9 mind, he made a mistake and altogether harmless as it proved. The press condemned it. iu terms of detraction aud den mcialioo, eome of them even casting imputations upon his Joyalty. Fireside heroes questioning the patriotism of Gen. Sherman, a man who, to gether with his comrad eand friend Grant, had plucked the nation from the slough of despair, and opened to it the path of peace, overgrown with Uurels and radiant with glorious renown! Oh shame! where is thv blush. The aar is about closed, and Sherman mav not have another opportunity to win a battle over the public enemy. But he will live down the slanders oT the p res, and all other assailants "Truth is omnipotent and public justice certain " We have ect forth these instances of the alternate truculency and subserviency of the press to condemn them, and to express the hope thit in future the knights ot the "crev goose quill will endeavor, in their dealings with our public men, to be fair and jut. A change of this character is necessary to the elevation of the standard of newspaper reputation. 511ttarjr Cvurli. Heine, the German satirist, savs that Freder ick the Great 'invented the Prussian monarchy,' and the popular voice has htthertj credited Mr. V.. M. Stanton with havin; invented the military courts of jutice. The idea is in reality due to another, even still more distinguished military authority, as we i.otice from adiscussien between Th Courier de Etas Cnis and The .New York Kxrres. Certain journals having recently charged Stanton with Ueiivicg the notion of superseding the ordinary courts of the country by special tribunals from the French

LiU de Juiti;, The Courier icJigtiLtly repudiates the imputation, as follows:

"Political assumes la Franc are cot tried ui the dark or bv militarv courts. Thev are tried by an ordinary criminal court, and er joy the same privileges usually granted to other crimi nals. The "ew York Express, commenting uporJ th s d sclaimer, aflrms it, and remarks: "The author of this novelty is, we believe, General Schenck, of Ohio. He invented it has the patent for it and coagreaa adopted it in This change of venue in the case of the assassins from the cognizance of the regular tribunals. amounts, m fact, to a condemnation of ail British and American common law; for the courts of the District of Columbia would most assuredly have meted out full justice under judges of iMr. Lincoln's own appointment. Why Mr. Stanton, and upon what aathoritv under the constitution. should have superseded such able jurists a Judge uiin, oi l ork, Carter, of Uhio, and haley, of Western Virginia, is cerUinly worthy of more particular inquiry, and the country should insist upon an explanation of this high-handed measure Detroit Free Press. .Mtro-G y ccr Inc. This is the came of a new expics've agent, of which mention begins to be made in the foreign papers. It first made iUelf known, as such in ventions usually do, by killing several persons who were experimenting upon it in a laboratory at Stockholm. The original discover, ncthirg daunted, pursued the even tenor of bis inquiries into the new compound, and at last has broughj it to such a perfection that, according to a letter la a recent London paper, it is cow used iu blasting out the railway tunnel under Stockholm. No accident has occurred since its introduction to practical use, and the inventor claims that it can be used with "comparative safety" in min log and other operations. The eubstvece is a liquid, acd is said to have filty times the explosive power of gunpowder. No account of its manufacture or its chemical characteristics is gifcn; probably because the inventor prefers to keep his owu secreta The discovery is an interesting one because every new discovery in the realm of sicence is interesting but it seems hardly deserving of the importance which is as cribed to it by the foreign journals. Gunpowder and guncotton are sufficiently destructive for every purpose of war or peace, and have the merit of being far safer than any of the other nitrous compounds, which give additioutl explosive power, it is true, but at the expense of additional risks. Chloride of nitrogen, iodide of citrogen, nitride of bilrer, and other fulminating powders, are agents of destruction far mere terrible than common gunpowder, but they aie'apt to be decotnposel by the slightest blow or jar, ignition not being necessary to tosch them off, and are therefore full of dsnger to persons handling them even with the utmo.-.t care. Nitroglycerine will probably be found to come under the same head of unstable and uiisafo compounds. Glycerine, the article hieb is wrested to this strange use, ia of itself one of the iuot harmless and useful of tubstauces. It is a transparent, sweetish, odorless syrup; the b.iso or cssentail principle of all animal tats. It his b?3u but i short time known, but is already applied to many uses much more benefices and important than that of supplanting gunpowder. As a vehicle for the administration of disagreable medicines, it is uncquuled. The most odorous drugs seem to lose their taste when dis-olved in glycerine. With ether and naptha it possesees the proper of dissolving gutta percha. Among the newest applications of glycerine, is that of its employment in certain branches of photography. It has already gained a reputation for itself as an ingredient in cosmetics and perfumes. It is made chiefly from the mother liquor of soap factories, and affords a good illustration of the valuable uses which science may derive from substances ordinarily rnected as waste products. ew York Journal of Commerce. Lltevcrdy Johnson and Cicn. Hunter. We have a pretty full report of the remarks of tho Hon. Kevcrdv Johnson before the miliUrv commission encased in trying the alleged accom pliccs of Booth, the assassin, and we can fcc nothing in what he said justifying the obscrva tion of General Hunter about "the humbug chivalry of the south. Mr. Johnson is not identified with that chivalry, and Gen. Hunter's utterance was uncalled for, undignified, and wan tonly insolent. If there is any man in the United States, who assumes to be a military man, who is a greater humbug than Hunter, he has not been heard of; and Keverdy Johnson is a lawver who could afford to tell that court that he was competent to form a professional opinion Cin cinnati Commercial. DIED On the 12th hist , In this city, Captain taias C. Wai. roLr, of consumption, aged 24 yearn. The funer l will take place from the refcidtiicc of his! mother, No. 410 North Illinois street, on Wednesday, the 17th, at 3 o'clotk P. M. Services at St. John'a Church, by Father Becsonles. The friends of the family are invited te attend without farther notice. Death, with his Icy cletche, haa entered another borne and home from it an idolized son, a darling Iro ther. There Is nothing ltft to remind ua of that dear one, but the vacant chair, the cheerless hearth an 1 the aching void which earth never more can fill. The bright est Jewel has been removed from the home c.-4et to te ret in his Father's crown. Oh Dea'.h! why didVt Hon come on raven wing to again drape with padnes the happy home? Why aim thy piercing arrow there? Why pluck the sweetest bud to grace the flower-wre&thea chambers cf the dead? Bryan Walpole Is dead no, not dead, but s'eepir.r, Wet-p not fond ones, he has only gone before. He was a young man of rare talent, yet young a he w, he had found refuge in a Saviortr's love. To use his own words he said: "I have dedicated my body, heart and soul to God, and I believe that he will take me to Heaven." To hit mother who was aa devoted as ever mother could be he would say: "Mother, don't cry; kN. rnr , mother. God will provide for you on earth, and In Heaven he will make an angel of you." lie parsed away as though falling iLto a sweet tlunTber. "Blessed are the dead who die In the Lor J, for th-y rest irom their labors." Deep is the piercing wound which Death's dark haud has given, and long and sorely will it rankle in your breasts. Eat borne on Angel' wings, with Faith steadfast gaze look upward and forward; behold the hour in the dim vita cf time, when ye shall safely anchor your life boats in the harlot of the land Celestial and clap your darling in love's warm embrace, while he welcomes you to the happy throng thit await yeor corning in the Elysiaa home. And now. Bryan, thou loved of miuy hearts, farewell ! No more will the sweet sunshine of your nrilea, er your comforting words of religion gladden our hearts and homes. Eat in the tr'ght laad of the Angel, arouni the Throne cf God, the golJen link now broken mall te united never raore to be tua lered by death's stern, re lentless hand. "Mournfully, mournfully, toll for tho deal; He passed frcn ur side in his machood's pride Ere the glow cf i. - rain-bow hopes had fidd. -V hen Lis sky i . bright with morr!rr liett. Death bore him as.iy to dreamless night; Mournfully toil for the dead. "Hopefully, hopefully, lay him to rest nere the dew-Lrat flowers, in the long tili hoars, Will weep o'er the s 1 on his pulseless breast, Where !ke breeze mt.U ia;h a ft w anders by, Wcere the star-light come from its home on high. Hopefully lay hnn to rett. "Solemnly, solemnly, bow and adore; An Angel of I'ght on a pathway bright, -Cendncted his sonl to the viewle bore. If; daat front the frloom f the stienl tomb, Shall arie again in imm rtal Moom; Solemnly bow and adore." A Fats.vD. THE INDIANAPOLIS I S I ! It A X C E CO n V A Y , Is low DeroiaiienUv oraniied acd ready to iLe Fire Policies. Capital, $200,000. The Su-ckholders cf this Ccnipaij comp rise some of our,mo-.t responsible cltiien. DiitEcroits: S. A. n.K?csra,Sfi . E. J. Tec, Acix.i.a Joaaa, OiJTiaTocsiv, w, H.Tai-aoTT, - . A. L. KoaiBi. A. K. YiT05, TncMA A. äfckju, WtLtxaat licsnasea. iVT..e mt nrvii in the Sir.kimr FudI Baill.Lr. c jrn r of I'ena-jlvarsia street and Virginia ateutte. . " - . - L I. I. .a1. im. I ifrjB paironaza m iu puum. vm.itru. Wai. HKN Dil R&uN.rt evident. kLLi. C Jameso.t, Secretary. nayi-d3aio t

AMUSEMENTS.

METROPOLIT TIlEME.i Corner f Witfongton end Tenntiift Slrerti. Banarer Jlr. W. II.Kller. Tuesday Evening, May 16th, 1865. Mrs. W. E. LESCHTON. YANKEE LOCKE. PODIJAH B. PEASLEY, HIS X MARK. The Fool of flic rainlly. STAGE "STRUCK, Paicca or ADHiatno. rarqaett acd all reserved cats 75c. Dre.i Circle Wc; Private Boxes, for aix prons, f 5 CO; Orchestra au, T5 cents; OaHery and Fatally Circle, 5 cents; Children In trail, 15. CHANGS OF TIME: Door open at 7, 'a o'clock precisely. Overture commences at 8 o'clock precisely. PARTICULAR U0T1CK. Tbe Horoa Cart lajre tb Theater ertry evening at ta close of ta perfornaac.' Feopl llr'cx at a distance can rely en this. T -rV 13 IV .V CLE. FOiZ TWO VI Gil TS O.YLY! rduesday andThnriday F.venlnc: yiur 11 tlx a net lStl. ARLINGTON KELLY & LEON'S AND BURLESQUE OPERA TROUPE, FROM THEIR ACADKMT OF ilUSIC, CHICAGO, The Largest and most Perfect Troupe la America. No bra btad in front of the hall, ad the entertainment i given Inside. ADMISSION 50 Cents. Children ander Ten Tears of Age 25 Cents. I7Drt0rs Pen at 7 U to commence at 8 o'cteck. mjl5-dtt MA S O WlC HALL THURSDAY and FRIDAY EVENINGS, MAY . ISth and 19lh. DE KATOW. WIULI. MAI STRAKOSH has the he nor to announce to the citizen of Indianapolis that while In Europe he sueceeded in making arrangements for a brief concert tour !th the WONDERFCL RU88IAS VIOLONCELLIST, M'll. HELENE D55 KATOW. And the renowned TIANO FORTE VIRTUOSO and COMPOSKR, Mr. JAMES M. WEIILI, Who wiil give Two Grand Concerts as above. Both there Artists have met with unprecedented suecess in New York, Boston, I'hiladelphia and other citief, where they have given over One Hundred Concert during their short stay in the United states. Mad. HENRIETTE BEHRENS, The Young and Popular American Trioia Doan, will aUt on the occasion. Musical Director atd Conductor S. BEHRENS. JftayTbese will positively be the ouly Concerts in Indianapolis by these Musical Celebrities, as they shortly return to Europe. AdmLüion, including Reserved Seat, $1. Tickets and Seats may be f ecured for the Concerts on Wednesday morning, at V a.m., at A. M. Be 8 bam & Co's Music Store. Orders frurn the country for Reserved Seats will be promptly attended to. JffChlcliering's Grand fano will be cued on the occasion. Doors open at 7; tocommence at 8 o'clock. myl3-dbt INDIANA STATE MUSEUM. 79 EuM Washington Street MADAME M. A. ENGLISH PROPRIETRESS. Open for the reception of visitors from S o'clock A. M. until 10 o'clock P. M. The collections embrace over Three Millions of Curiosities! Of the most amusing and instructive character, gathered from all parts of the Globe. ADMISSION SO Cents. MADAME M. a. ENGLISH, apr5-dtf Proprietress. AUCTION SALE. GREAT AUCTION SALE OF STATE nOIjSE DECORATIONS! Thursday, May 18th, 1865. rpHK DZCOKATIONS OF TUR STATrf HOUSE I used on the occasion of the ceremonies in honor o our late President, Abraham Lincoln, will be sold at rnMic sale on Thursday, May 18th, at 10 o'clock' Among the articles offered, will be a large number of Dress Pattern, consisting or Merrinos, Delaine. Lustres, ere. Also Muslins and Cotton Goods in abundance. Likewise a number of National and Military Portraits, including tne La r ffc Fine Oil Palnilng- of President Lincoln By Miss Underbill, of this city. Terms of sals Cah. my-23-d3t A. L. HUNT, Auctioneer. REAL ESTATE SALE. BY WILEY & MARTIN, ICral F.tate lirokera Sc Auctioneer. VALUABLE AT ATTCTIOjST. On Monday, Slay 22d, 1865, At 2 o'clojk P. II , on the I'rcmUes. lYTOKTU OF THE CITY, OS TIIK K1ST SIDE OF X the Michigan Koid, nttr the ground, bf cnonw ml,Ij CEMETEitr. These grounds are situated a short distance north of the city, and lie between the Michigan State Road and the YVeetf.eld or Broad Ripple Gravel Road, immediately opposite the residence of John Armstrong. Esq., and are a sub-iivUion of a part of the well known Martin Williams' place, into lots, coUaiaing from 3 to 4 acres each, as shown on the plat and poster. Lot No. 3 has gool improvement, consisting of a Cottar Houe of ? rooms, frame bam, and a fine yousg orchard, and picket fence around the ame. Lou 13, 14. 15, IC, J7, IS, i'J and 20, are timber lot", a fine growth of forest trees upon the same, and are excellent lots for pasturage. The remaining lots are in fiel !s, and are the finest tdtes for country residences in the vicinity of the city. The grounds are h!?h and healthy. A full view c f th ciiy Can bo had from almost any part of the same. Crown Hill, nearly adjoining, Is kncwD to all as beinr the highest elevation for miles around the city, and the Cemetery, of which it forma a part, as to teaaty and design. caxot be e v celle i by aay public grounds In the Eastern c!t;o. TERMS OF SALE: One-Cfth Caj.h: one-Bfth In ix Tninth: nn-ffrS 'n twelve months; one-fifth in e ghteen month; one -fifth in twenty-feur months, with interest. For further particulars inquire of WILEY aV sTslsTlsV, maytCdülld Real Estate Broker. HOTELS. MACY HOUSE, Corner Markot & Illinois Sts INDIANAPOLIS, Ir. E. PENTECOST, Proprietor. I. TAKE FLEASURX IN ANNOUNCING TO MT f rr .t . n4 rTim.rnl. nilMr. that I Am r ,. . ufeliihed la tU'n hsif-e. which l have refar&!shd and cow ttrtwn open lor your reception. I take the ennortunitv of thanking mv ibiht rmar j r w v v j w. friends fur their patronage during the two yearswhuel was conducting the Ur.ei.lal House, and wiil at all tixr.es he glad to see them at my new stasd. aiya-ötr k. J'JlNTSCOST.

SUBURBAN

PROFIT!

U. S. LOAN.

U.S.7-80L0AS The tale of tie first seri of t30",ooo,o:x) of lbs ?-s" Loan was ccmpleted on the 3l t of Mr.h,lC5. Tie tale of the second series of Thre Hundred Millions, payable three years from the 15th day of Jane, liCi, was tegnn cn the 1st of April. l g tf-'4 tf thirty Jayr, orer out Iutilrti JfMiont cf "! A.ir t.ZJ lavtng this day lets than Two Bandred Millions to he dlspse4 cf. Tfct ieterest is payable semiannually in rarrency on the 15th of December and Uih of Jtra by Coupons attached to each r.t, whkh ars readily cashed anywhere. It aasoants t One cent per day on a $.10 note. Two cent SlOO Ten 9500 20 $1000 1.00 $5000 More aud More Desirable. Tfco Rebel ion 1 suppressed, and the Government has already adopted measures to reduce expenditures as rapidly a possible to a peace footing, tbu withdrawing from market as borrower and purchaser. This iathe Oä'LV LOA I 71 AUK CT now offered by the Government, and Constitutes the Great Popular Loan of the People. . The Seven-Thirty Notes are. convertlh'.e on their maturity, at the option cf the holder, Into U. S. 5-20 SIX PER CENT. t.OLU KHAftlXf. ISOLDS. Which are always worth a premium. Free from Taxation. The T-30 Notes cannot te taxed by Towns, Cities, Counties or States, and the Interest is not tated unless onassrplus of the owner's income exceeding six bun dred dollars a year. This fact increases thsir value from one to three per cent, per annum, arcordlcg to the rate levied on ether property. Subscribe Quickly. Less than 9 200,00",COO of the loan authorized by the last Congress are now on the market. This amount, at the rate at which it is being absorbed, will all be sub scribed for within two months, when the notes will un doubtedly command a premium, a has aa'formly been the case on closing the tuhcript!ons to other leans It note ittvit pro?ni?'e that no conthttraWe amount In order that citizen In every town and section of tho country may be afforded facilities for taking the lan. the National I'.atikr, State Banks and Pr'vate Bankers throughout the country have generally arreed to r. cive subscription at par. Subscribers will select thlr own agents, is whom they have confidence, and who only are to be it sponsible for the delivery of the notes for which they receive orders. jirsr Cooke, Sab riptlon Agent, Philadelphia. Subscriptions will be received by the FIRST NATIONAL BANK, CITIZENS' NATIONAL BANK, INDIANAPOLIS NATIONAL BANK. J-OURTII NATIONAL BANK, INDIANA NATIONAL BANK and MERCHANTS' NATIONAL BANK. INDIANAPOLIS, IU. myl6-daiw3m-21p hoc EMIGRANT COMPANY. AMERICAN EMIGRANT CO., o m ; Chamber of Commerce. Indianapolis. CHARTERED FOR THE PURPOSE OF PROCURING AND ASSISTING EMIGRANTS FROM FOREIGN COUNTRIES TO SETTLE IN THE STATES. Authorized Capital, la Id up Capital, - - gl, 000,000 510,000. The object of thin company is to import laborer, especially skilled laborers from Great Britain. Germany. ueijnum, r ranee, rwnzeriana, Norway arm bweuen, for the Uanulacturers, Kauroad Companies, and other em ployers of labor in Amrca. 1 accomplish this it has established extensive agencies through these countrea, and undertakes to hire men in thtir native homes and safely to transfer them to their employers here. A sys tern so complete has been put in operation here that me chanics, miners, (including workers in iron and steel of every class) weavt-r, and agricultural, railroad and other laborers, can now be procured without much delay, in any numbers, and at reasonable cost. The Company comprises, among ther, the following gentlemen: A.G. Hammond, PreMdent o the Kxchance Bank, Hartford, Conn.; Hon. Francis Gillette, ate U. S. Senator Irom Conn : F. Chamberlin, II. K. Welch, and and John Hooker, Hartford; Henry Stanly of New Britain, Conn.; A. W. North. S. P. Lyman, and John Williams, New York; Daniel T. Harris. Prest. Conn. River Railroad, Springfield, Mass ; K. B. Gillett, Presideut of Hampden Bank, WestOeld, Mass.; Chas. Uulburt late of J. 11. Beebe & Co. Boston; F. C. D. McKay, and Jamea C. Sa very of Des Moines. The Company la enabled by special permission to refer to the followirg gentleman: Hon. 8. P. Chase. Chief Justice Snpreme Court U.S.. Washington, D. C; Hon. Gideon Welles, Secretary of the Navy; Gov. Buckingham, Cona.; Chief Justice llinmin, Conn.; Henry A. Perk ins Prest. Hartford Bank; Thomas Belknap Prest. State Bank, Hartford; Bank of New York ew York; Theodore Tilton, Independent, New York; Samuel Bolles, Editor Spricgfield Republican: Prof Caswell Providence, K. I.; Russell A Erwin M'fg Co. N. T. Hon. R. A. Chapman, Judge Supreme Court, Ma.; Rev. II. VY. Baecher, Brooklyn K. Y.; Henry C. Carey. Phila : Hon. Samuel B. Haggles N. Y ; Hon. Jas. Dixon U.S. Senator Conn.; Hon. Geo. Asbraun Mass.; Hon. Charles Sumner, U.S. Senator Mass.; Hon. Henry Wilson U. S. Senator Mass.; Rx-Gov. JSprague, U. S. Senator R. I.; Hon. I. 8. 1-ester U. S. senator Conn.; Morris Ketch urn, Esq. N. Y.; Gov. Stone Iowa; Hon. Jas. Harlan U. S. Sen ator Iowa; Hon. Horace Everett, Council ElufTs, Iowa; Gov. Oliver P. Morton. Indiarapr.lis. J. iiaii aicii, Agent, m8-d3m For the State of Indiana. WINES. LIQUORS. &C. WINE HOUSE! LOUIS LVIVGJr, 2J South Alerid inn Street, (SENTINEL BUILDING.) IMPORTER OF RHINE AND CHAMPAGNE WINES; Otard and Cogniac Brandies; Holland Gin; Jamaica hum red Cordials. Also dealer in Catawba Wines, Still and Sparkling, cf the tnot approved brands; Bourbcn WhUky; Peach Drandy; Catawba Brandy; Stock Ale: Porter and Beer, and Eitters of various kinds. These articles are all offered for sale by the bottle or larger quantities. Only UKlne Wiie for ml on draught. IMPORTED CIGARS and TObACCO. f the choicest brards, will te kept constantly on hand. j; j-'Havlng Ltted cp a reat etaMishmen and offering for tale ouly pure articles and of the best ouaiitv. the subscriber hopes to receive, a he solicits, a liberal are or tne patrocage oi me punuc mri7-dtr LOUIS LANG. FOUNDRIES. IIOOS1ER STATE FOUNDRY AND STOVE WORKS. COX, M)UDt PECK. Manuiaeturer and Wholesale Dealer lo stoves, :ioLLotr-nnE9xc 4 LL OUR rroVES ARK Of THK LATEST AN 2. nft improved patterns. Our other work wiil embrace Iron Fronts, Colamna, Railway, Mill and Bouse Castings, Ac., Ac. Orders by mail or otherwUe solicited, and prompt attention given. Oer pnees wl be fcund as low aa any. OCce, Sales-room and Foundry 1&3 South De ware street, two square directly east of the Uoioa Depot. OCttJ NOTICE. j JTBATI D front the subscriber, a large COW, white in and tucxspec.ea;w.u irea fn Jone; 7 years old. JOHN MODE. myl6-dlw No. 19 School street. "

MEDICAL.

Iffrs. WHtfSLO.W, An Experienced Nur? and Ff na! FaysicJan to tho attrition of anstksr, hr SOOTHING SYRUP, FOR CHILDREN TEETHING, Walch gr,t!y facilitates the process of Uetblng, by cftening tbejrom, reducing all Inflammation, will allay ALL PAIN and spasmodic action, and la SURE TO REGULATEtheBOWELS Dereud apon it, mothers. It will girt rest toyocrevti and Relief and Health to Your Infant. W have pet np and sold this article for over 50 years, nd CAN SAT IN CONFILENCR AND TRUTH of it what we have never been able to say of any ether medicine NEVER HAS IT FA1LKD IN A SINGLK INSTANCE TO EFFECT A CURE, when timely used. Nsver did wo know an Instacce of dissatisfaction hy any one who used it. On the contrary, all are delighted with Its operations, and speak In terms of commendation of ita metrical effects and medical virtues. Wt speak in this matter "WHAT WK DO KNOW." after 30 yeara experience, AND PLEDGE OUR REPUTATION OR THZ FULFILMENT OF WUATWK UKKK DKCLAKD. In Almost every instance where the Infant la sobering from pain and exhaustion, relief will be found In fifteen er twenty minutes after the syrap Is administered. Full directions for using will accompany each bottle. None genuine unless the fac-slmile cf CURTIS A FIRKIN'S. New York, is on tho outside wrapper. Sold by Druggista Urocghcit tho world. Price only 35 Cents a Bottle. The Florence Nightingale of the Nursery. The following Is an extract from a letter written by the Rev. E. Z. Weiser, to the German Rerormedesaenger, at Chambershnrg, Pa.: A BENEFACTRESS. There Is a woman In the public eye whoa name had all alot? been associated, in our mind, with the Tan kee," 4 yuack." andHumbug." But it is so no longer, and we desire to wrest her name from all such suspicions associations in all other minds. Whatever notions we may have cf womanly delicacy and propriety, we will all admit that woman alone Is tho Norse the good Nur He Ut Ncrse. Whether we shall have Female Physicians t not, i a quetin which must be dedded by time and principle, and not a matter of taste. Pride, prejudice, caprice and custom may aa well behave themselves, for if there is really a want, there will also be a supply; if there be a calling," there will be eeoming. Nature and hainan society are always self -supplying, and though Art and Fashion may hinder, they cannot prevent. Mrs. Winslow does not wish to treat you gentlemen Nordoes she prescribe a regimen for your wivew; bit she modestly appears as a messenger of health and happlnesa to your infanta in the cradle. la there anything improper in that? A Horse of "30 years" experience can boldly say what is or is not good for a babe, and ought to be listened to. God treed her on ber humble and happy mission. She ia tho most successful physician and mcmi effectual benefactress our little ones ever enjytd her doting parenta not excepted. Jost open the door for hr,and Mrs. Winslow will prove the AmerIran Florence Nightingale of the Nursery. Of thia wo are so sure, that we will teach eur Susy" to aay A Blessing on Mrs. Winslow" for helping berte survive and escape the griping, colicking and teething elg. Wo conUna evory war at forth ia tae proapoctua. It performs precisely what It professei to perform, every part of It nothing less Away with your Cordial," "Parogoric," Drops' "Laudanum," and'erery other Narcotic," by which the babe is drugged into stupidity, and rendered dull and idiotic for life. We hate never seen Mrs. TCinsIow-know her only through the preparation of ber "Soothing Syrup for Children Teething." If we had the power we would make her, as she Is, a physical savior o the infant race. Itct, Health and Comfort to .Mother and Child. ,1 j ' MRS. Tf I38L0 Wi SOOTHING SYRUP for cLildreu teething, softe na the cams, redacee Inflam a3t, al. lays aa pain, and cores wind ccollc Perfectly safe ia all cases. Wo would say to every mother who bas a Buffering child, do not let your prejudice, nor the nre!n. dices of others, stand between yon and your suffering child and the rel ef that will be eure yes, absolutely sure to follow the use of this medicine If timely used. DONT FAIL TO PROCTTRST VRf. WIVITIVI SOOTHING SYKUP, for children teething. It haa been used for 30 years with never failing safety and success by millions of mothers for their children. It correct acidity cf the stomach, relieves wind cholic.regalates the bowel, and gives rest, health and comfort to mother and child. oSlce No. 4! Day street, New Tork. DO NOT LET TOUR PREJUDICE STAND EETWEEN your suffering child anl the relief that will be absolutely sure to follow the use of MRS. WINSLOW'S hOOTHIMi SYRL r. It corrects aciditv of the stomach, relieves ind cholic, regulates the bowels, softens the gams. gives rest to the mother and health to tha child The followirg is an extract from a letter written by tho Rev. J. 8. Holme, pastor f the Pierrepoat Street Baptist Church, kroeklya, N. to the Joirtal and Meseager, Cincinnati. O, and speaks volumes ta favor of that world -renowned mdicioe. MM.WI58L0W8 SOOTHING TRUP, FOR CHILDREN TEETHING: "We see an advertisemert tn your columns of MRS. WI5SI3WS SOOTHING STRI P. Now, we never said aworif In favor cf a patent medicine before la our life, bat we feel compelled to say to vour reaaers that this Is no humbug we have tried it, and know it to tv. all Iclaims. It is probably one of the most successful medicines of the day, because it la one of the best. And those of your reader whe have baMee can't do better than lay tn a supply." EOIAL CAUTION. The great popularity cf Mr. Window's Sathtag Syrup, for children teething, has Induced enprinc pal persona to put up articles to ho used for the eai I er pse. In advertising which they have not only ctpied our advertisements and a et ices from the press, tat kav copied certificate an 4 Utters frosa clergymen and others, aCxlng other aamee te ear genuine) cL2cete. Beware or ail Uaitatoru. ,anr:cjaaAweau-U