Indianapolis Daily Herald, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 May 1866 — Page 2
DAILY HERALD.
HALL & HUTCHINSON, PHOPHIETOHS.
OFFICE —HEHALD B0ELDINQ. 16 1-2 Ku■ t tVaBlilngrton Street<
FRIDAY MORNING^ MAY 25.
Democratic State Ticket. SECRETARY OF STATU, Gen.MAHLON D. M ANSON, of Montgomery. AUDITOR OF STATE, CHRISTIAN G. BADGER, of Clark. TREASURER OF STATE, JAMES B. RYAN, of Marion. ATTORNEY GENERAL, JOHN R. COFFROTH, of Huntington. SUPERINTENDENT OF PUBLIC INSTRUCTION. ROBERT M. CHAPMAN, of Knox.
CON OH ESS ION Ali CONVENTIONS.
The following are tho places and time at which Democratic Congressional conventions for this State arc to be held: First District—'Wednesday, July 25. Third District—North Vernon, June 13. Fourth District—Grcensburg, June 7. Fifth District—Cambridge City, August 7 Seventh District—Greencastle, June 14. Tenth District—Thursday, July 14. Republican Hypocrisy and Villainy• Many of the Republican leaders have exhibited their hypocrisy and villainy during the war to a shocking extent. They went up and down the streets crying, the life of the Government is imperilled, the Constitution is broken, the Union is in danger, men are not loyal to the Government; give your money, give your bodies; we are loyal, we are self sacrificing; we are disinterested patriots; we are God’s elect, and arc, like the Catholic missionanes and sisters, laboring for the pub-, lie good, without any desire of making money. We are loyal patriots, pure men, seeking only the salvation of the people and the Union, and the best Government on earth. This is the .way they cried. The people were affected; they believed these public thieves; they gave their money, their bodies; and what became of the money? Look 4 at those who were the proclaimers of their own remarkable Republican loyalty and patriotism. Will anv one give us a list of those among them who have not plundered the people and Government of immense fortunes, enabling them now to riot in luxury, build costly palaces, own stocks and large farms in their own names, or those of friends? We shouM like to see a list ot the names among these howling patriots of those who have not made themselves rich, or at least, seized mom y enough to make themselves rich, if the money hud not been squandered in riotous living. But this was to be expected. It was natural. These very men, who went thus about howling for the Constitution, law and Union, bad been laboring for thirty years to break up the Union; had never paid a particle of respect to the Constitution; had denounced it as a league with hell, and not to be obeyed, and ridiculed Democrats, as dough faces, because they insisted that it ought to be respected as a proper means of saving the Union. These very men arrested and imprisoned those who differed politically from them, without law, and rioted in a carnival of despotic, lawless rule. In this connection we copy the following from the Times, During the late civil war a large number of the “ Blood hounds of Zion ’’ became Federal chaplains, and are said to have preached the •'gospel” ol carnage, arson and pillage with great ferocity and much truculent zeal and patriotism. When the war ended, that fanatical negrophilist, General Howard, employed a great . number of the disbanded “ blood hounds” as shepherds for his black flocks. Recent developments very clearly prove that these wolves in sheep’s clothing are far more greedy, merciless and rapacious monsters than those famous “ blood bounds” with which Southern planters were supposed to hunt down their slaves before General Howard called to bis assistance the “ blood hounds of Zion.” Three of these sanctimonious and blatant friends of the negro have had their sacerdotal robes tom from their backs by Generals Steedman and Fullerton. These reverend vultures have been preying upon the negroes with a vengeance, •• Chaplain G. O. Glacis ” is charged with stealing “forty blankets which had been sent to Goldsboro for the use of the freedmen,” and is also accused of having “ disposed of a large amount of clothing” for his own use. But the model “ Wood hound of Zion,” the great “ Russian dog Hero” of Howard’s Bureau, is Chaplain Fitz, whose infernal cruelties and robberies of tlie “ freed men,” his associates in crime are endeavoring to conceal. This man wormed himself into the affections and confidence of a colony of emancipated blacks near Newbem, North Carolina, by his terrible denunciations of the rebels and enthusiastic protestations of devotion for the negro. The poor blacks, delighted with his clamorous affection, like .Esop’s frogs, invited the Reverend Stork to come and rule over them. And Fitz “ hearkened unto their call.” and devoured their substance and tortured their persons. He imprisoned them for debt, he tied them up for six hours at time by their thumbs, be pulled down their cabins from over their heads, and reduci J them to the verge of starvation by his fines and depleting system of merciless taxation. He mingled piety, however, with bis villainies, for he “imprisoned little negro children six days for playing on Sunday.” The blanket stealing Glavis and the fiend Fitz have been distinguished for their patriotic “devotion to their country and hatred of treason.” The noble fellows do not appear to recognize larceny, embezzling and torture as crimes, but they are terrible in their virtuous wrath against “ treason.”
Secretary Stanton. Pope said, whatever is, is right. We think Stanton is a disciple of that English poet. We judge so from his serenade speech, as well as from his past course. When, in the winter of 1861, Jeff. Davis and Yancy and Butler and Chase and Greely and Seward and Julian, and the Indianapolis Journal et al., held the doctrine of secession and disunion, Stanton said, whatever is, is right, and I am for disunion, too. When Douglas, after having an interview with Lincoln, and after obtaining his consent to war for the Union, raised the war cry, and it was responded to by the great body of the Northern masses, Stanton said, whatever is, Is right, and I am for war, too; and when it seemed popular to disregard law and justice, and govern by a tyrant’s rod, and practice the fire and sword policy .Stanton sauljWhatever is, is right, and I am for lawlessness, fire and sword, too; and while radicalism was in the ascendant, Stanton said, whatever is, is right, and I am a radical, too. In his serenade speech, reported in yesterday’s Herald, he says, when Congress passed the Freedmen’s Bureau bill I was for that; and when Johnson vetoed it, that was all right,and it is all right now. When the Civil Right's bill was passed, it was all right, and when it was vetoed it was all right, and tvhen it was passed over the veto, it was all right, and it is all right now. If Congress wants to keep the South out of the Union, and can do it, it is all right. If the President wants to get her into the Union it is all right. If Congress wants to change the Constitution, and can do it, it is all right, and if the President don’t want the Constitution changed, and can prevent it, it is all right. Whatever is, and whatever shall be is all right, with only one exception: it would not be right to put the Secretary out of office. The Secretary can be very accommodating in his political opinions; he can become all things to all men, so be that, by so doing, he save some good office, say the Secretaryship, for himself. Sailing of a Steamer. “ Boston, May 23.—The steamer China will sail this afternoon with $1,937,000 in gold.” Every day from one to three millions in specie is leaving for Europe. Our bonds are declining in price, and are coming home, instead of going abroad; and, hence, specie must go out in place of them. The prospect for a cotton crop is not good; the export of that is declining, and specie must go in its place, to pay for the enormous amounts of our unwisely swollen imports. Paperfmoney and prices go up and down; the Secretary of the Treasury goes into the market and trades on the Government gold; traders fail; uncer£ainty attends all business transactions; taxes crush; laborers strike for more wages to enable them to get bread for crying children; daily, steamboats go down, and tires and tornadoes lay cities in ruins; floods overflow the fields; crime stalks; murder, rape, seduction, i-.iicide, are of almost hourly occurrence; fraud and force rule elections; ballot box stuffing becomes one of the fine arts; the loyal Republican party holds sway; happy country; gloriou- prospects; the millenium must be near; four years more of Republican rule will most certainly fetch it as far as the United States, at least. Tliad. Steven*. In referring to Thao's late speech in Congress, wherein he charges his followers with want of courage, the Philadelphia Aye thus notices Thao’s conduct at Harrisburg, when he attempted to hold in their seats Republican members enough to make a majority in the Pennsylvania Legislature, which members he got seated by getting the Secretary of State to accept false election returns instead of the true ones: “ Not a Pennsylvanian on that floor had forgotten the Buckshot war, nor the part which Thaddeus Stevens played in it. Twenty-seven years have rolled away since that memorable era in the history of our State. Stevens was then bent on ruling this commonwealth bv a rump Legislature, as he is now bent on ruling the nation by a rump Congress. He had tools about bun at Harrisburg as pliant as those which now lie ready to his hand at Washington. His bearing was as bold, bis bluster as loud, his vituperation as indecent, then as now. If his followers in those days sometimes ventured to mutiny like Raymond or Bingham in these, like Bingham and Raymond their courage failed to withstand his awful frown and savage rebuke. If bis decree went forth that “ conscience should be thrown to the dogs,” to the dogs conscience went without a moment’s delay. The fact is Stevens was preparing himself for his present work on a smaller stage and with a company of inferior actors, just as a great tragedian gains confi dence and practice on the boards of a country theatre before venturing to try Drury Lane. “ For a time things went as smoothly for him as they have hitherto gone in the present Congress. He was omnipotent. The glance of his eye was feared more than another man’s fist. He was supposed to be as inscn'ibb-1" fear as he was known to be to shame. But siiddenly the storm that Ins lawless acts had invoked, and which, In his blind arrogance, he heeded then as little as he heeds now the gathering wrath of the whole American people, broke upon his head. Harrisburg became a scene of tumult and of threatened war. The indignant masses poured thither from Philadelphia and elsewhere, not with bloody intent, but with a calm, indomitable resolution to interpose their strong right arms between the law and the men who, under the lead of Ste-
A Few Werda with. Colonel Preveot Marshal Dick Thompson. A man ought not to be a hypocrite. TYe do not say that any man is. A man ought to be honest. A man ought to go for some principles of public good, and not act from personal or party hate. All honest men will agree to these propositions. Again, if it is wrong to act with a States’ right Democrat, it is wrong to act with a States’ right Republican; and yet Colonel Thompson knows that the present leaders of the Republican party whom he says he will follow, uamely^JuLiAN, Chase/Wade, Wilson, and all that class, have always held the States’ right secession doctrine in the extremest degrees. We beg to call his attention to the following account of his party leaders. It is taken from the Cincinnati Union, a con-
servative Republican paper:
THE TRUE POSITION OF THE RADICALS STATED
BY CHIEF JUSTICE CHASE.
It is well known in Ohio that Chief Justice Chase was, a few years ago, a thorough and ultra States’ right man, and in favor of the most strict, most rigid, construction of the constitutional powers of the Government. He went beyond the States’ rights Democrats. He denied the constitutional power of Congress to pass n fugitive slave law, claiming that the States only could pass laws for the return of fugitive slaves. He then denounced the doctrine of the consolidationists, as tending directly to despotism, and the inevitable destruction of our Government. But a change has come over the spirit of his dream. \V e have it from a reliable source that a conversation took place at Washington, last fall, between Chief Justice Chase and a citizen of this city, (with whom he was formerly quite intimate, and had agreed very well on the question of States’rights,) to the following effect: The citizen remarked: “Chief Justice, you and I have, in times past, agreed very well as to the true constitutional theory of our federal relations, and the doctrine of'State rights. I am pleased now to find you in a position where yoo-can do more than any other man in the United States to maintain the true doctrine of the Constitution, upon which we have so often
conferred, and agreed in opinion.”
To which the Chief Justice replied: “Sir, we can never get back to that now. The Government has been changed, and we have not the same Government now, which we had when you and I used to discuss the question of State rights. It will not do now to allow the States to regulate the matter of the right of sufflrage. The General Government must
secure to all men the right to vote.”
The citizens rejoined: “How can that be? Our institutions are all founded on the doctrine of delegated power—that all legitimate power emanates from the people, and we have a written Constitution defining the powers of the Government, which has not as yet been changed. Usurpation we hold to be a crime, and that cannot confer a right, or legitimately change the Government. Apd if the Government established by our forefathers has been abolished, the people should be allowed to construct it, upon the principle of the inalienable right of self-government affirmed by the
Declaration of Independence.”
The Chief Justice responded: “That can not be done. The war has had the effect to change the Government. The relations ot the States to the Federal Government are different from what they were. We cannot now allow the Southern States to deprive the negro pop-
ulation of the right of suffrage.”
Thla conversation of Chief Justice Chase discloses the real position now occupied by the radicals and consolidationists in Congress. They are acting upon the idea that the Government has been changed—revolutionized by the war. And they art* attempting to carry out this doctrine by their civil rights measure the Freedmen’s Bureau bill, and their reconstruction measure, whereby they not only assume to exclude States from the right of representation in Congress, bat also to disfranchise them at the presidential election, etc. The doctrine advocated and the position taken by the radicals and consolidationists can be maintained upon no other ground than that the Government has been revolutionized and changed by the war. And this, Stevens, their acknowledged leader in the House of Repre-
sentatives, has boldly announced.
The rad’cals and consolidationists, therefore, seek not only to destroy the Constitution and change the Government, but aUo to repudiate the fundamental principles of popular government, achieved and established by the patriots and sages of the American revolution. The fundamental doctrine that all legitimate civil power must emenate from the people; that public officers can exercise no powers but
Remarks of Secretary McCulloch. We yesterday morning published a brief synopsis of Secretary McCulloch’8 remarks made on the evening of the 23d, in response to serenade tendered to the President and his Cabinet. The following will lie found to be much fuller and more satisfactory. McCulloch disdains to play fast and loose, like Stanton, but speaks out like an honest, fearless man. We believe he is to-day the only man thoroughly in favor of the reconstruction, policy of President Johnson, and he avows his position in an unequivocal manner, that must convince all of his sincerity. Mr. Mc-
Culloch said:
“ Fellow Citizens—My position in reference to the issues which’ are now engaging public attention is not, I apprehend, misunderstood by you. [Cheers.] 1 will say, therefore, as I suppose i must say something, on this occasion, that the general policy of the President in reference to the Southern States and people recently in arms against the Federnment, has commended itself to my deliberate judgement. [Cheers.] And although it has been violently, and in some instances vindictively assailed, I have a conviction that it will be approved by the people when they shall be allowed to pass judgment upon it. I suppose, gentlemen, that none of us expected that at the close of this great war, in which much bad blood had been excited, and more good blood had been shed, we should have bright skies and calm skies. “We anticipated that at the close of this war great questions would come up for settlement, the discussion of which would be likely to agitate this country, to shake it from center to circumference, but we know also that the people had not been wanting in any previous emergency, and we had confidence that they would be" prepared to cope with, and settle satisfactorily any questions that might be pre-
sented. (Applause.)
“ That faith is strong with us now. We have faith in the people, and faith in that good Providence, which, having led this nation throu'fh the Red sea of battle, is not likely to desert it now that the dreadful passage has been accomplished. Andrew Johnson’s policy is straightforward, intelligible and practicable, and if a better policy can be presented, one more in consonance with the principles oi the Government, and better calculated to preserve the supremacy of the Federal authority, while it trenches not on the reserved and legitimate rights of the States, more just, humane and better fitted to bind the people of this great ountry in a common brotherhood, at the Same time it places just condemnation on treason, and vindicates the majority of the law, if such a policy can be presented, there is no man in the United States who will more willingly embrace it than Andy Johnson. (Hearty cheers.) “ But until that better policy be presented he must be false to himself, false to his record, and must, in fact, cease to be Andrew Johnson, if he does not adhere to his policy, and
sink or swim with it. [Cheers.]
“ It is pretty good evidence, after all, gentlemen, of the correctness of his policy, that Congress, after having been in session nearly six long, weary months, has been unable to present one which they can agree upon as a
substitute. [Chfcers and laughter.]
“ It was once said, I think by John Randolph, that, ot all tinkers, the Constitution tinkers were the most to be despised. [Cheers.] If the old man could rise from his grave, what would be say of the present Congress,in which every third man at least ia a Constitution tin-
ker? [Cheers and laughter.]
“ But they are not wise enough to amend that grand old instrument, the work of their fathers, of the founders of the Republic, the glory of the United States and the admiration
of the world. [Cheers. 1
“ My fellow citizens, there Is but one preparation that has been presented, which stands even the ghost of a chance of acceptance by the people of the North, and that is the proposition basing representation on votes, and whose fault is it that that is not a part of the
Constitution to-day?
“ Why was it not submitted with the amendment abolishing slavery? Whose fault was that? Was it the fault of Andrew Johnson? Fellow citizens, I have only this to say, 1 have desired and hoped for a continuance of this great Union party with which I have ever been identified: hut if its leaders can present nothing 1 letter than the programme of the Committee. 1 am greatly apprehensive that its days will be numbered. I trust, fellow citizens, that this will not lie the case; that it will discard its hostility and its attempt to continue alienation between the two sections of country. and that it will embrace these principles which look to harmonv and to the restoration
If it should do this it will still con-
those delegated and authorized in the written Peace, it it snouiu uo tins n win suu conConstitution; that no change or amendment of tinuetobethe great and controlUng party of
the Constitution can be made without the consent of the people; and that usurpation can never confer rightful civil authority, is utterly disregarded and repudiated in the course taken by the radicals and consolidationists in Con-
No Agreement Between Congress and. tke President. Mr. Shellabarger said: “ Upon the grounds thus briefly described, Congress would take its position, immovably and irrevocably. It would demand such guarantees as these before readmitting the insurgent States to power in the Government. The President, on the other hand, would admit them at once, with no conditions whatever, save only the ability of their representatives individually, to take the test oath; and it appeared from recent developments that even this check he was disposed to remove by reducing the oath to its former character of a mere constitutional oath, such as had always been administered. To this basis of action this Congress would never come, whatever the next might do.” The President holds the States to be in the Union, and entitled to have their representatives admitted at once, so be they will take the rath to support the Constitution, niKl are good men. Congress holds that the Southern States, as States, arc not entitled to representation, even by loyal men, legally elected, and declares they shall not have any representation till after the Constitution has been altered,etc. So that the only practicable way left to restore the Union, is to elect a Union Congress next fall, who, on taking seats, at an extra session called for the purpose, on the fifth of March next, may admit the Southcrn representatives, and restore the Union. In this way, only, docs it appear that the great desire of the President for the restoration of Union harmony and prosperity, can be accomplished. Spanish Despots Imitating United States Republican Despots. “Havana.—We learn that the principal theme of conversation is the suppression of books and newspapers, and all conversation other than relates to work by operatives in cigar and other manufactories. This high banded measure is increasing the discontent among the people, and, together with other tyrannies, is likely to ic ing on a revolt.” Now, suppose the people of Cuba, to resist such lawless tyranny, should organize to defend themselves in the right of talking. Suppose they should say they would exercise the natural right of uttering' a word, and some Carrington should send a squad to seize and throw them into dungeons; suppose, again, that some Carrington, ordered by the provincial Governor, should, without evidence, aud simply to gratify private malice or party hate, proceed to arrest those who had not even been guilty of.opening their mouths, but had remained as silent as though they had been born dumb, as though God had not given them the power and right of speech; suppose, again, that, by the Constitution of Cuba, the right of speech was solemnly guaranteed to every citizen, and it was declared that no officer or power should arrest and punish for tho exercise of the right; and yet the provincial Governor should cause some Carrington, in violation of that solemn provision, to seize, and imprison, and the assailed should defend themselves. What of it? What of it? What should we say of it? Usvo we had tyrants among John Chase, a prominent citizens of Chicopee. Massachusetts, died on the 12th. Ths beUs were tolled and flags hung at half mast in honor of his memory. He was a native of Litchfield, New Hampshire. He superintended the building of the celebrated Holyoke Dam, and many other important works in Western Massachusetts and ether States.
storm meet it? Did he present to the outraged multitude the awful front which struck terror into his followers and inspired them with the notion of his superhuman courage? Did he bare bis breast in tragic fashion and demand that they should “ strike but hear him.” “ Did he, finding that force was threatened, put himself at the head of the force to meet it? We can fancy a nervous radical in Congress who trembles at his nod, rapturously crying out “ yesl yes!” But unhappily for all such confiding creatures, truth says “no! no!” When there was really no danger—when a speech was being made to a listening and respectful audience in the chamber of the Senate, Stevens, whose guilty conscience discerned in the broad, honest faces that lined the hall, the features of a band of assassins, jumped out of the back window of the building and betook himself to flight. He ran through the darkness to a remote corner of the ground and hid in a patch of bushes. Presently hearing the footsteps of two of his friends whs had sought safety in the same way, and fancying that the mob was indeed coming, he cried out, “ Don't kill me—for God's sake don't kill me!,’ To which one of the refugees more impetous than polite, fearing that the noise would insure their capture, responded— “ Hush, you d d fool—it's only me /” This is no fiction—It is not even the truth embellished—it is simple fact, withinjthe knowledge of thousands of citizens of this commonwealth. Many of them have heard the particulars, as we have detailed them, from Stevens’ own lips. “And this is the ruler of the present Congress: This is the man Uiat sways the radical majority with his nod, and awes them with his frown—whose decrees override the Constitution, and the suggestions of whoso malignant heart make the substance of our laws. So far he has prospered in the revolutionary work of his old age, as he did in that of bis middle life, until the stormy scenes of the Buckshot war developed the weakness of his cause and the cowardice of its champion. Let none of his present adherents be deluded by his loud and valiant talk into the belief that he will behave any better now, if a perilous crisis should overtake them, than he did then. “ There were cowards in those days,” he says, with Siberian coolness, in the paragraph which we have quoted, “ as there are cowards in these.” And the biggest coward of those daysls not likely to have experienced a growth of valer with the advance of old age. If a multitude of the American people, large enough to be mistaken for a mob and white enough to be suspected of disloyalty, should present themselves at the door of Congress with a demand that there should be no more delay in restoring this Union, we can fancy the consternation of the radicals when they beheld their terrible champion making his exit through a window like Harlequin through a hoop, and heard from a distant bush the omnipotent voice crying out, as in the old time, “ Don’t kill me—for God’s sake don’t kill me!”
Almost a Suicide.
It is our duty as a journalist to say, that a suicide was committed—almost—in this community, a few days ago, by a newly married man. The particulars, as we get them, are about as follows: The man married a handsome young woman not many months ago, and the woman has been receiving letters, since her promise to “ nourish and cherish,” from another man in Iowa. A few mornings since her husband took two letters Irom the poatofflee, from the Iowa man, directed to his wife, and alter reading the contents he sought his wife, and informed her he was going to kill himself. He immediately purchased a knife, and returned to do the awful deed,—of
gress. If Congress can exercise powers not delegated to it by the Constitution, it is upon the ground that usurpation gives right, a ground which will justify every usurper who has at any period of the worlil cloven down
the liberties of a free people.
The framers of our Government ordained a written Constitution as the charter of the liberties of the people, and thereby established the doctrine that usurpation could never give right; and, further, they taught that usurpation was the greatest of all crimes—a crime perpetrated in striking down the sovereignty of the nation, and in desecrating the sacred charter of the people’s rights; and that no punishment was too severe for the usurper. But, wherefore do these consolidationists and radicals assume that the Government has been changed by the war? The war has been ft gucciMW, the rebellion put down, the L nion nrul thr Gon-tltution preserved. Tin* patriots who fought in this war did it to save the Constitution, and the Union of the States based I upon it. The many thousands who fell upon : the battlefield died with the consolation that j they were giving up their lives in the glorl- ; ous’ cause ot protecting the Constitution as ' it was; and the gallant ehampions, who j survived the deadly conflict have congratulated themselves that their sacrifices and heroic struggles had been rewarded with the preservation of the sacred charter of American liberty from change and desecration. But these radicals aud constitutionalists in Congress assume that the war has been a failure for all purposes save that of giving them power; assume that the Government has actually been changed by the war; and they are proceeding, by violent measures of usurpation of power, to carry out and fix ui>on the country an actual change of government, a thing which hundreds oi thousands of patriots have lost their lives to prevent being done. Which is the worst, the rebels who erected the standard of rebellion in the South to secede from the Union, or the radicals or consolidationists in Congress, who are desecrating the charter of American liberty, and attempting, by usurpation, to ettect an actual change of government? This is a question for the peo-
ple to consider.
President Johnson. The Jersey City Standard thinks President Johnson will not be able fully to accomplish his mission during his present term, aud says: “We believe,too, that the Democracy will accept him, even to the abandonment, for the occasion, of their traditionary policy, xoithoul a convention, and without a platform, as the people's candidate for President. Such would be our desire and advice, and such a course would be worthy of the great occasion which demands of the Demecratic party any sacrifice for the preservation of our institutions of government, now so imminently imperilled. The programme is very simple by which cliques and cabals may be set aside and the verdict of the nation fairly obtained. “ It is only necessary for the voters of each congressional district of the whole Union, who approve the policy and conduct of Andrew Johnson, to avoid as far as possible designing caucuses and packed conventions and choose, at the proper time, a suitable and faithful representative as their candidate for Presidential elector; and these may then meet, first in States, and then in general convention to take counsel together for the details of the campaign. There should tie no inside organizations, or secret ‘ rings; ’ but the whole question should be put upon the broad basis of the popular will, thus most fully aud honestly expressed, and then the triumph of the great principles of popular sovereignty, and the restoration of the Union on the basis of the Constitution will be signal—complete—overwhelming! So mote it be.” FROM Mexico.—Our advices are from Vera Cruz on the 8th, and via Havana on the 13th. The notorious guerilla Quantrell had arrived in Vera Cruz and proceeded to the City ol Mexico. On the 24th of April, one thousand of the foreign legion had arrived from Toulon. It is reported that live thousand French troops are to leave during the present month. The John L. Stephens, the American steamer which was seized some time ago by the Liberals, was found to contain contraband of war, for the Imperialists. She had sailed from San Francisco. The gold miners have been unexpectedly successful in the Metaltlaxua country. The same reports continue of desultory and undecisive fighting, forced loans, and heavy taxes.—Veto York Herald. F ederal Losses in the Civil War. The number of white troops enlisted was almost exactly 3,500,000 men; the number of deaths among them, 251,122, or one death out of every ten. The number of colored-troops was 180,000, of whom 29,808 died, or one out of six. Ths death rate of the colored troops was, thsreCDre, nearly double that of the white; but the death rate of disease alone was far worse than this. Out of every eight deaths among the white troops, three died on the field battle, and five from disease. Out of every nine deaths among the blacks, one died on the Arid ot battle and eight from disease.
the country, and cover itself wilh imperishable glory. * if it does not, its days arc numbered, mill’the epitaph that will lie written w ill be: * It knew how to prosecute the w ar with vigor, but it lacked the wisdom to avail itself of the benefits of victory.’” [Applause.]
The Little Girl’s School. “ Little girl, where do you go to school. And when do you go, little girl? Over the grass from dawn to dark, Your feet are in a whirl! You and the cat jump here and there, -You and the robins sing— Rut what do you know in the spelling book? Have you ever learned anything? Thus the little girl answered. Only stopping to cliug To my linger a minute. As a bird on the wingCatches a twig of sumach. And stops to twitter and sing. “ When the daisies’ eyes are a-twinUle With happy tears of dew. When swallows waken in the eaves, And tho lamb bleats to the ewe— When lawns are golden barred, And the kiss of the wind is cool — When morning’s breath blows out the stars, Then do I go to school! My school roof is the dappled sky; And the bells that ring lor me’ there Are all the voices of my morning Afloat in the dewy air. Kind nature is the madaino And the book whereout 1 spell Is dog’s-eared by the brooks and glens Where I know the lesson well.” Thus the little girl answered, In her musical out-door tone, She was up to my pocket, I was a man full grown; But the next time that she goes to school She will not go alone! — ^ » — State Items. * The Evansville Journal complains of the scarcity of brick, and the consequent retardment of the erection of buildings in that city. Ira G. Grover, esq., declines the nomination for State Senator for Decatur county upon the Union ticket, but pledges his support to the nominee of the party. —The prospect for a large yield of apples is very flattering in Jaj- county. Smaller fruit will be liountiful, but peaches, pears, cherries and plums have been killed. —The execution of Sage, the child murderer, takes place at Vernon, Jennings county, today. The execution will be private, as the statue prohibits any public execution. —A convention of Sunday schools, composed of the schools belonging to the Peru district of the MethodLt Episcopal church, will be held at Logansport, commencing on the 29th iqstant. Rev. J. W. Drcfcndorf preaches the opening
sermon.
Another Shooting Match—A shooting match was made up last night between Fred. Erb. of this city, aud John Enrich, of Indianapolis, at thirty’double aud thirty single birds, for five hundred dollars. The match is to come off at Indianapolis within thirty days. The forfeit money has already been put up, we understand. These gentlemen shot a match some two yean ago. in which Erb was declared the winner.—Lu/uyeUe Journal, -id. Highway Robbery.—A man named Richard Bristo, who has been living near Springville, this county, started to Missouri last week, but concluded to visit some friends near Mitchell. Arrived at that town, he walked out about a mile, In the direction of bis friend’s residence, when be was attacked by three men, who knocked him down, ami secured about $500 in greenbacks he had secreted in a belt about his person. No arrests have as yet been made. Mitchell Is fast assuming city airs.—Bedford Independent, i'ld. Fall of a scaffold—Five Men Injured. Last Monday morning about eleven o’clock a scaffold erected on the northwest side of the Forest Mill, by men engaged in shingling the mill, gave way and precipitated five of our citizen* thirty-three feet upon the stones. The accident was occasioned by the breaking of the nails which held the window frame to the joist. The scaffolding was nailed securely to the window frame. Under the circumstances, it is remarkable that all the men were not
killed.—Logansport Pharos, 23d.
—A correspondent of the Decatur Press, a Johnson pa|K*r published at Grcensburg, writes as follows to that paper, from a place called Westport, in Decatur county: ••In circulating among the people we did not find a single Republican Who does not sustain the political course of the Press, a fact best attested by llu ir subscribing tor it almost without exception. Alt sustain President Johnson’s restoration policy, and the veto of the Freedmeii’s Bureau bill; while all we talked w ith sustain Congress in passing the Civil Rights bill over the veto. And when they come up to the convention, on Saturday
week, they will vote that way.”
—The Union men of Bartholomew county met in convention at Columbus on Saturday, May 19, to nominate candidates for senator, representative, treasurer, sheriff and coroner. The following nominations were made on the first ballot, and unanimously ratified:
For Senator—William W. IL-imi.
For Representative—A. \V. Prather, late Colonel One Hundred aud Twentieth Indiana. For Treasurer—Jolin Ktslar, late first lieu-
tenant Seventh Indiana Battery.
For Sheriff—John A. Crisler, formerly of
Thirty-third Indiana Yoluntrer*.
For Coroner—tleorge E. Irwin, late surgeon
Ninety-third Indiana Volunteers.
—They have a queer way of doing things at Kokomo. Not long since a report was circulated tint a married man of that place was too
marri< J woman. The man
Manuf acturers.
BOOTS AND SHOES. : S.111 T’H SXEXT’E«, 74 Massachusetts Avenue ManDfactarers of BOOTS AND SHOES.
Orders
nearness.
promptly attended to.
inddinnatrh.
Repairing lone with ro<pi3 <33m
FURNITURE.
WII.KE.TS A If ALL, Wholesale Manufacturers of ITPHOIiSTERED goods, Parlor, Library and Office Furniture, Indianapolis. Ware rooms No. 84 East Market street, oppoiite Poatoffic*. Manufactory, oppodta the State House, formerly John Ott’a. Special attenti .*n given to ail ordered work, inch] dim
ORNAMENTAL PLASTER.
J. F. TAYLOR, JR., NO. 80 MASSACHUSETTS AVENUE, DESIGNER & MODELER, Manufacturer fall kinds of PLASTER WORK. Order* from the country or city promptly attended to mch2 d3m
CARPENTER AND BUILDER.
J-A-MES O-AJRIOO, Carpenter and Builder, No. 44 Kentucky Avenue.
Special attention paid to the fitting np of Store?, all kinds of Jobbing dune with dispatch. apr!3 d
and d3m
PROFESSIONAL.
WILLIAM E. MASLOVS PATUCE O. LEAKY, HAXLOVE A LEARY, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA.
Office, over Bee
corner of Waahington and Meridian ttreeta. Hive Store. aprSS 3dm
w. v. auiaa.
A. J. VAWTEB.
nURKS A YAWTER, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, Office, 23 West Washington Street, mchUdSm INDIANAPOLIS, 1ND.
H. T. MOBBISOM.
T. B. PALMKR.
MORRISON & PALMER, Attorneys at Law Frankfort, Clinton 4'ouuty,
__ _ INDIANA. MABTISN.BAT. JOBATHAB W. OOBDCB WALTEBMABCB HAY, GOUDON A MAKCH, ATTORNEYS AT EAW, INDIANAPOLIS, 1ND . Will practice In the Federal and State Court,.
Office, No. IK New * Talbott’a Building, South of Poat Office. noS8-41y
Wholesale Trade. Wholesale Trade.
STATIONERY. ETC.
NHIRTLEFF A HI AC ALLEY, Wholesale Dealers in SCHOOL. BOOKS, Envelopes, Stationery, Blank Book and Paper, Book Publishers and Binders, No. 13 West Maryland Street, mySdSm INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA. ROWE.Y, SXEWARX A CO., ‘ "Wholesale Dealers in School Books, Paper, Envelopes AND STATIONERY, No. 18 West Washington Street, mv9ri.tm 'MD'ANApniJS. TNTITANA.
Tbe New England Republicansffnlng a Little too Steep lor tbe Chicago
Tribune.
Wo copy from that paper: MP.. ALLISON’S MOTION.
Mr. Allison is entitled to the thanks, not only of bis own constituency, but of the whole people, East and West, for his effort* to get the bounty on exported cotton goods stricken out of the tax bill. The vote on his motion was: ayes, 28; noes, 65. As the vote was taken in Committee of the Whole, tbe ayes and noes were not shown. When the bill is reported to the House, wc trust that Mr. Allison will call for a separate vote on this section of the bill, and get the names of members recorded upon it, and let us see who is in favor of taking the people’s money from the Treasury and paying it to cotton manufacturers, to enable them to make profitable trades with Jrhn Chinaman. |
We have carefully perused the dctmle in the ; intimate \\ ith
(Hole on this strange propoMtion. hoping to ; was i member of the Templars, and the find some excuse or palliation for t Mr. Moi- ; fl . lt it -.ojf to examine into
sirte \ •***«* *«—
can be little doubt. We should feel much i n- | mittee t > cull upon the woman in question, for
the purpose of investigating the matter. The woman indignantly refused, as she should have done, to answer the questions put to her by the committee, ami there the matter stopped. This kind of proceeding is certainly something different from the usual manner in
like cases.
GROCERS. COMELY, WILES & CO., WHOLESALE GROCERS 149 South Meridian Street, OFF. KANT END OF EXION DEPOT. LARGEST DEALERS IN TEAM AND TOBACCO. ALSO, AGENTS EOK THE SALE OK CLEVELAND AND NEWARK COAL OILS, AT THE DAILY REFINERS’ PRICES. WE WISH TO CALL ATTENTION OF THE CITY AND COCNTRY MERCHANTS To OCR LARGE AND WELL SELECTED STOCK OF STAPLE AND FANCY GROCERIES: ALSO MANY KINDS OF GOODS NOT USUALLY KEPT IN THE GROCERY SHORES. WHICH WILL BK SOLD AT LOWEST PRICES. . apr'23 d3m
gathered around and prevented tbe efftuion of blood, bat he succeeded In getting sway "from them, and atartml tn a emek “ hard bv.” Wn.
tbem, and started to a creek “ hard by.’ body followed him, and time pa
Ifo-
Rsed. After
some hours he returned, not a mutilated corpse, but a living .man, thinking, perhaps If was “hard to die In such a cause.” It is terrtMe to thiok ef Ms c)e«e irr^lill IT death. Whether-new vows of constancy nave been made or not, we are not posted.-—Yo/to-mo Herald, 23d.
couragfil if C'ongrt>!! .«h<»uld vote u* an annual bounty for piy>li>bing a tun\>pu|K‘r, t-pcciully if the bounty were to bo im reused according to the number of copies we >bould print. Any man or any trade would be encouraged by a similar gratuity. The question is, first, whether there is any moral ri{rht to divert the public funds in this way: and, second, whether it Is good economy to do so. As to the funner, we hold that there is uo room for argument upon it. It is an undisguised public theft. As to the latter, it may. be easily sbowu that the gain arising from tbe bounty goes iu part to the foreign purchaser of tbe goods. Therefore this
moiety is lost to the country.
Granting that a portion of it goes to the home manufacturer, and is therefore, in some sense, saved to the country, though not in the right pockets, the other portion is sheer waste. It is tbe same thing as voting two dollars out of the treasury on condition that the recipient shall bestow one upon his customer in the East or West Indies. Mr. Morrill went so far as to say that without this bounty clause he should be opposed to the cotton tax entirely, which is the same thing as saying that he deems a robbery of four millions of dollars from the treasury for the lieneflt of the cotton manufacturers more to lie desired than the securing of forty millions to the treasury from
the tax.
There was no pretense that the tax on the raw cotton would place American manufacturers in any worse position as to foreign markets than English, or French, or German manufacturers. They all stand up the same level without the bounty. Hence the bounty is a sheer gratuity to a particular branch of business. It is but just to Mr. Morrill, however, to say that he avowed his willingness to apply the same rule to all other manufacturers, and even suggested that the time was not far distant when poor Mr. Ames would need a similar bounty on the shovels he exports to Australia! Mr. Ames is reputed to be the wealthiest man in Massachusetts, and it is a pity he can not have his little bounty now. 3llr. Morrill’s system ot finance is'in danger of bei oiniiig topheavy. There is uo warrant in the Constitution for an appropriation of the public moneys to enable private individuals to undersell Mr. Bull or Mr. Crapaud, in Rio or Canton. We believe that a suit could be successfully maintained by any cotton grower or factor who should refuse to pay the tax, upon the ground that the fifth section of the bill is a violation of the Constitution. The .right to tax proceeds from the necessity of having an organized Government, and the means to support it, and the Constitution declares that all taxes shall be equal. There is no necessity for our selling cheap shirts to the Chinese, nor is that tax an equal one which is levied upon the manufacturer for the home market and remitted to the manufacturer for the foreign
market.
making hi» young wife a widow. Friends ' A dispatch from Cincinnati says: ■* ' • ‘ ‘ Twenty-six soldiers of the regular army
have been committed to the Penitentiary, for desertion and insnbnrdination. Their terms of confinement vary from eleven months to
fifteen years.
M. Emile Olivier, having applied in Paris.
Senatorial Discourtesy. On Tuesday the President’s veto message was allowed to lie on the table of the Senate for several hours without being read; and, as if to make the matter more conspicuously disrespectful, Mr. Fessenden, who has the general bearing and fairness of a gentleman and Senator, moved that tbe Senate go into executive session. Upon this, Mr. Me Donga 1 truly said: “When a message comes to this body from tbe President of the United States, without regard to the individual, but out of respect to his high office, it is, as a matter of courtesy, the duty of the Senate on the first opportunity to hear what he may have to say, why he did not indorse the proceedings of the two Houses of Congress. That is the courtesy that has always been observed. He held this to be a vindictive assault on the President. Mr. Fessenden disclaimed the imputed discourtesy toward the President, but persevered in his motion to go into executive session, and the motion was carried, though Mr. McDougal further characterised it as an undignified proceeding. How unlike the era of real senatorial dignity and decorum 1 In the hottest party times, when President Jackson put in his vetoes frequently, the elevated statesmen of that period, who opposed his views,.never descended from the dignified pedestal upon which each one of them stood, in order to manifest contempt for his opinions. There is one thing certain: Nut a man of those who -wore guilty of thu indecorum can anfWcr by fact or argument the clear, con- ““ cue
MEDICAL.
fii sa CoiLkii*.—J. ADAMS A LIEN, M D., L. L. U., Proreasor of Fr.uciples and Practice of Medicine In ku*h Medical College, and editor of the Chicago Medical Journal, writes as follows: Dr. Swain’s Ronrbon BUUrs are a vast improvement
npro
on the heterogenous mixture in vile half dislilled whisky or worse nno, generally palmed upon the bibulous or Invalid public. Tbe manufacturer exhibits a praiseworthy confidence in the character of the mens mm he employs by giving publicity to tbe formula Most of ibe Hitters in the market are but adroit combinations to disguise the physical properties of the worst possible Alcoholic Tinctures of Fusil Oil.
lUy* Fearful retribution Is sure to follow those who al-
low their Lire
will no*, take the earliest opportunity to correct any
mportant parts < '
ire t
er, Kidneys and Bladder to be diseased and
c tbe earliest
complaint affecting such important pai system. Hwain’a Morning Beverage isi cheerfully recommend in such cues.
Use Swan’s Hair Balm.
>rta of the human a remedy that we
Aasiv.—Da. Q. R. WHlINEf, Surgeon of the Fourth Regiment United States Regular Cavalry, writes as follows: At an antl-tdlltou* preparation, Dr. Swain’s Bourbon Bltlers are no doubt the best in use, ami could it be regulaily dispensed In the army, would prove a powerful safeguard against tbe effee s of privation,expoaure, fatigue, bad water and unwholesome diet. They are the most palatable preparation of the kind I have eve tasted. The odor of rip? ol) Bourbou, mingled with aroma of spices, rendering it di hclous alike to the s< of smell au 1 tas’e.
ver tbe
JUF A friend recootly camplaiued to u.s that he \ suffering from a severe pain In the back acrois tbe 1 neys and inflammation in tbe urinary organs, we reel
~ ~ air
ct 1
id restoring the system to
neys and tntlammation in the urinary organs, we recommended the nse of Dr. Swain’s Morning Beverage, and he informs us that the i ffect was all that he could wish;
giving him ear y relief am'
healthy tone.
Use Swain’s Hair Balm.
Mkcical.—From Dit. J. It. CROWELL:
Dr. Swain:
Bourbon B tiers are
vise those who
vous
Knowing the ingredients of which yonr omposed, 1 can with confidence ad-
from general debility, ner-
hoi
> compos
those who are snfftring prostration, dyspepsia, from acute forms of dist
or who may be convales-sea-e, to try them and they
cing I
will receive decided benefit. Use Swain’s Hair Balm. Hj 3 Valuable information to those suffering from disease of the Kidneys, Bladder and Weakness, so coin-
viscera of the Pelvis to its normal condition. Use Swain’s Hair Balm.
DB. W. T. MoCLBLLANJ, of Pennsylvania, says: I have prescribed Dr. Swain’s Bourbon Bitters as a tonic in low forms of fever, and have found it better than any other diffusable stimulant. Use Swain’s Hair Balm.
Tee prevalence ot diseases of the Kidand Urinary Organs is vastly greater
than generally supposed, and yet a simple remedy U at hand, one which slightly increases the action of the Kid-
ney*, removes all obstructions, and tone organs—Swain.’* Morning Beverage produces tnal
Alarming
ney’s, Bladder
i generally
to the it effect.
Use Swain's Hair Balm. mv19 deo’Hw
notice.
To Excavators and Stone Masons,
’**• Bl °A»DB«W WALLACE, - MBSI.HO«KMOS,TT#w«.ofSU».
DISSOLUTION. Dissolution of Partnership.
fFMIE copartnership heretofore existing between the F under? gned D this day dissolved by mutual consent Tbe wholesale Drug business will, in future, be carried on at tbe old stand. No. 14 South Meridian street, by H. Daily, J. t. Setiour and Wili am Hasson, who will psy all indedudneas, and settle all accounts of the Isle firm. H. DAILY, A. KK1FKK. !ndi«n«pslls. Ma , IS, 1363. N. P. RUSH.
fKlHE nnders’gned have purchased the Interest of A. F Ketfer and N. P. Kush, In tbe above business, end f -rmed a enperfhersbip under the style and name of DAILY, 8ENUUR A CO., and would respectfully solicit a continuance of the liberal patronage extended to the old firm. H. DAILY, J. F. 8KSOUR, myD dim WM. HASSON.
* RAILROADS^ Thf Great Oniral Air Line Route •=»- FROM Indiuaupolii* to Daltimore, Wash. Inffton, Philadelphia, NT. York, And all Kasteru Cities, via the Indianapolis and Cincinnati, MARIETTA AND CINCINNATI, AND BALTIMORE AND OHIO RAILROADS Two Through Express Trains Dally, Suud ay* excepted,
f|YH B M ARIRTT A AND CINCINNATI &AI LROADnow JL having ajoint occupancy of the new and rplendid Passenger Depot of the Indlanapolii and Cincinnati Railroad Co., at Cincinnati, Passengers will avoid the great annoyance, trouble and expense of Omnibus Transfer across the City. Trains leave Indianapolis as follows: &30 a. m., Day Rxpress, for Baltimore and Washington direct; 7:13 r. at., Baltimore and Washington Express. NEW AND ELEGANT STATE ROOM SLEEPING COACHES BY THIS TRAIN, running through WITHOUT CHANGE PROM INDIANAPOLIS TO PARKERSBURG. The MOST DIRECT ROUTE. TIME AS QUICK, FARR AS LOW as bv other Railway lines. Through tickets end any Information desired can he had upon application at the Ticket Office in the Delon Depot. F. B. LORD, mcb39 dtf General Ticket Agent, 1. * C. R. R.
WATCHES.
Direction** for the Itiffht Ntanose.
mentor a Watch.
1st. While In the pocket, care ihoold be taken to keep the watch with the pendant ring upwards so that It
may be as nearly as possible upright.
3d. In winding, hold the watch steadily in one hand, while winding It with the other, and carefully avoid giv-
ing it a quick,circular motion.
3d. When out of
faewnp ) back mpare
most reliable character, and regulate it by no ether.
the pocket, the watch should be laid
le ring ot the pendant be!
ider the back so as to give It a alight IncUna 4th Compare the watch by a standard clock of the
au. »» uc
with the facwu
and
Ing turned
6th. A good watch should never be trusted to an infe-
rior workman,|to remedy even a trifling defect, a* no after skill can fully repair the Iplury it ia liable to snstaln In
the hands of a careless and Incompetent workman.
GEO. TJ IV T ,
No. 79 Exuit Market Street,
Dealer in
Fine Watches and Jewelry. XN1NR Watches and ChronomeUrs repaired in tbe [* most careful and workmanlike manner, and regulated by the finest Regn later in the city. JLr’ Sign Big Watch—standard time—Rdcn Block. febas d3m
TERRA COTTA.
J. N. GLOVER’S
INDIAN APOEIN
Terra Cotta Works, Corner Louisiana and Mississippi Streets,
(Two squares west of Union Depot.)
FT AS on hand, or manufactures to order all kind, if
| JL Terra Cotta Work, such as
Door and Window Caps, Brackets, ModilUona, Acrotaries, Consol*, Panel Ornament*, Friese Enrichments, Capitak ia all the order* at Architecture, Flower Vases, Chimney Tope, etc. B- B. AU designs furnished will he strictly * promptly executed. , ; mvAaka
PRY COOPS. ETC. riAXK LANDERS. W. O. TARKINGTON. O* B. PATTISON. LANDERS, TARKINGTON & PATTISON, JOBBERS OF Dry Goods and Notions, No. 58 South Meridian street, Schnull’s Block, Indianapolis, I ml. my8 d3m OUVKBTODSEY. *. g. BYHA* *. S. COK.NEUC3 TOUSEY, DYRAM A TO., JOBBERS Or Dry Goods and Notions, No. 2 Alvord’s Block, Booth Meridian street, Indianapolis, Ind. my9 d3m MURPHY, KE.nVeRY .V 4 0., Wholesale Dealers in Foreign and Domestic Dry Goods, AJVU NOTIONS, No. 42 and 44 East Washington street, my#d3m INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA.
CONFECTIONERY.
D ACittETX A CO., Manufacturers of CONFECTIONERY, And Wholesale Dealers in TEAS, FIRE WORKS, FRUITS, NUTS, ETC., ETC., 32 South Meridian street, Indianapolis, Indiana. my9 d3m
OIL.
I. P.1VAJI5. O. T. EVANS. W. B. EVANS. J. B EVANS I. P. EVA.YS A CO., Maunfactnrers of LI]VSEEr> OIL, 124 South Delaware Street, Indianapolis, Indiana, will pay the highest market price for FXZ-A.X: SEEX>. my 14 d3m ,
JAS. S. SLAUGUTKll LEWIS JORDAN. JAN. S. SLAUGHTER ic CO., Refiners’ Agents for PETROLEUM, CARBON & MACHINE OILS. Ao. 4 Uouislana Street, fet»22 d3m INDIANAPOLIS, IND.
Pv NOS.
WlUI.ARnr A STOWEUX., DEALERS IN PIANO FORTES,ORGANS -A-INTID MELOlDEOlSrS. Grant Pian le. Square Pianos, Upright Pianos, Cottage Pianos, Wholesale and Retail. my3 d3m No. 4 Bates House Block, Indianapolis.
QUEENSWARE.
BOOTS AND SHOES.
He. 197 South Meridian Nfreet. KYATO, MAYO Jfc CO., WHOLESALE BOOTS AND SHOES, Indiana poll*, Indiana. mylO d3m V E.HXNDkICK*. WW. EDMUNDS. W. O.STOS*. T. B. STON*. HEADRICKS, EDMI YDN A 4 0., Wholesale Dealers in BOOTS AND SHOES, No. 66 South Meridian street, S.hnuH’. Block, Indianopolbt, Ind. my9 d3m
WHOLESALE CIUEENSWARE CIIIMA AND GLASSIVARE, E. A. WOODBRIDGE, 16 A Vest Washington Street, my 14 d3m INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA. h r. vvjcsr. geo. h. west. John i. morris. IF. WEST <Sc CO., Importers and Who’esale Dealers in C'liina, Glass, Quecnsware, Cutlery, And Plated Goods, 87 Hast Washington St., Indianapolis, Ind. fe!'V4 d3m
W. I. HASKIT.
DRUGGISTS.
E. B. M ARTINDALK.
J. M. MOORE.
» HARDWARE, ETC. a. s. Doassr. jts. r. layuan. DORSEY* A I.AYMAV Importers o' and Dealers in Hardware, Cutlery, Etc., 414 Float Wawliingrton Street, my!4 d3m INDIANAPOLIS, IND. ISAAC ROLL. THOUAS V. K1JIEI r. JOHN 8 A!KVAN. ROLL, KIMBLE & AIKMAN, Wholesale Dealer> In Foreign & Domestic Hardware Aisrr> CXJXLEK.Y, 123 South Meridian Street, my 10 d3m INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA.
W. I. 11 AMU IT A CO., Wholesale Druggists, No. 11 \Vc-t Washington Street. mj'9 43m INDIANAPOLIS. KKOWAIW^U Iv .SI.OAY, WHOLESALE DRUGGISTS. No. 22 West Washington Street, lnclinnai>olis, Indiana. At new ttonc front building. Nos. 7 and 9 East Washington street, between Gl^im*? Block and Meridian street, after Aprillst. mylOdSm
MILLINERY GOODS.
STILES, FAHXLEV & Mcl REA, Wholesale Deoiers in HATS, CAPS, MILLLNERY, Straw and F'ancy Good*, No. 131 South Meridian Street. mchSSdtf INDIANAPOLIS. INDIANA.
BOOKS.
CLOCKS, EJC. s. c. , Importers, Wholesale and Retail Dealers in CLOCKS, REGULATORS, And Looking Glasses, ; Eden’s Block, No. 7!> East Market Street, mylOdSm INDIANAPOLIS. IND.
Gtbl*
Mel
«. WKRDftX.
E. T. SIM WALT.
Y BXBCU.
0FF1CI
WEKDF.Y A SI MWAI/F, BOOKSELLERS A\D STATIONERS, And dealers in Wall Paper, Window Shades, etc., No, 26 East Washington St., Indianapolis.
Opposite Glenns’ Block.
Headquarters for Medical Books and Gold Pena.
>4dq 4 <13
GROCERIES. K.B. AlvorJ. J. C. Alvord. Berg. Applegate. E. It. AI.YORD A CO., Wholesale Dealers in Groceries and Liquors, No. 1 Alvord’s Block, Cor. Meridian and Georgia Streets, INDIANAPOLIS, IND. my9 dSm
a a. BLuorr. j. b. btsb. t. ». rya*. ELLIOTT, RYAY A CO., Wholesale Dealers in GROCERIES AND LIQUORS, Special attention given to Teas and Tobacco. Vo. 48, corner Meridian and Maryland Sts , Indianapolis. my8 d3m
J. A. CEOSSLAMD.
norai.ass *Aona*. s. c. ha.vya.
J ■. CALDWELL. ClkOSKLAND, MAGUIRE dc CO., WHOLESALE GROCERS, Corner Meridian and Maryland Streets, INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA. my8 d3m A. Jones. II. Clay. E. P. Jones. J.W. Jones. A. .JOrVES & CO., (Successor to Jones, Vinnedge A Joces,) WHOLESALE GROCERS, If os. 7 and 8 Bates House Building, my# d3m I5DI UNAPOL18, IND.
J. W. HOLLAND.
r. OSTERMKYKE.
HOLLAND, OSTERMEYER & CO., WhoJesale Grocers, AND COMMISSION MF.RCH.VNTS, 76 East Washington Street. mylOdSm INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA. J. >. BAWtU. L. W. BASSXLUAN. SAWYER A IIASSELMA.Y, WHOLESALE GROCERS, No. 40 South Meridian Street, my* d3m INDIANAPOLIS, IND.
ENGINES. ETC.
ORIOY THOKYLI.Y, Manufacturer of Steam Engines, Sugar Mills, Cider Mills, Saw Arbors, and all kinds of Machinery. Repairing done promptly. Machine Shop No. 28 Louisiana street, half square East of Union Depot. Indianapolis. myb d3m
COMMISSION.
JOH.Y T. HE WEES E A 4 0., GENERAL COMMISSION MERCHANTS Amd Healers in Produce, 43 South Delaware Street, mv9 dSm INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA.
«. 4m . HOLHAiY, Produce Commission Merchant No. • Bates Bouse Building, Washington Street, Indianapolis, Ind. Consignments of all kinds. Produce and Provisions solicited. my* d3m
CHARLES 6LAJE1ER. Commission Merchant, Dealer In Plour, Groin, Hay, and Produce generally, and manufacturer of Corn Meal, Ne. 146 South Pennsylvania St., Indianapolis, Ind Particular attention given to the sale and purchase of Flour, Grain an 1 Produce. my 15 d3m
SASH, BLINDS, ETC. IMLAILIOIV Sash, Blind and Door Factory, IHACHETT 4c FTTL.TONT, Agents, Bek Illinois and Tennessee Streets, Booth of Osgood * Smith’s Last Factory, near the Bolling Mill, MANUFACTURERS OF SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, WINDOW FRAMES, ETC., And general Job Werk, Stair Building, etc. YAT® employ none bnt the beat workmen, and use V W nothin* but the best material. W.tk done as low as at any placo In the city where It Is done well. Orders latt with Dr. Boyd will be promptly attended apr21 dam
WINES.
LOUIS LAAG, No. 99 Sontk Meridian Street, WI1VE HOUSE,
Store.
•_ MUSIC.
-V. ]U. A 4JO..
Wholesale Music Dealers,
Bates House C’onier, Indianapolis.
Pianos from Steinway A S>n-», Knabe A Co., and
Agents for Esiey A Co.’s Cottage Organs and ude-un^. fef-’t d3m J. A. Itl lTliKFlIlLlk A CO.
Wholesale
MUSIC 1>UA.LERS, 75 East Market Street, HSIIDI^.JNr-A.POLIS. Keep constantly on hand a large assortment of Pianos, Orgatis, Violins, K.utes, Aecordcons, Strings, etc., and iblisbers ofShect Mu>ic and Mnsic Books. utyUld3tn
HATS, CAPS^ETC, TALUOTT, UUTkAKO A CO, Wholesale Dealers in Hats, Caps, Furs, Gloves, AND STRAW GOODS, No. 36 South Meridian Street. my7 d3m INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA H. BAMBERGER, Wholesale and Retail Dealer in Hats, Caps, Furs & Straw Goods No. 16 East Washington Street, mcl)5 d3m IHDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA.
C S. I>ONALDSO.V. J. H. ALVEY. IMKYALDStYY A ALVEY, Jobbers of Hats, Caps, Furs, Straw Goods, I’mbrcllas and Paraaola, No. 64 South Meridian Sl.,3chnall’g Block,Indianapolis, my8 d3m *
NOTIONS.
CB.YBUS MAYEtt. WILLIAM HAVEtSXB. C1LYKI.ES hayer a CO., Wholesale Dealers in Toys, Notions and Fancy Cioods. No. 29 West Washington Street, mylO d3m INDIANAPOLIS, IND.
FURNITURE.
Cabinet Makers’ Cuion, , Manufacturers and dealers In al! kinds of IFTTIR.lSriTTTIR.IE, No. 121 East Washington Street, Jan 17 dCm INDIANAPOLIS, 1MD.
FANCY COOPS. C. O. (Successor to M. J. Thomas & Co.,) Wholesale Dealer inMILLINERY AND STRAW GOODS, SILKS, LACES VALVE! S, ETC. Wo. C. West Washington Street. Second door from Bee Hive, Indianapolis, Indians. apr23 3m
jn?ON, STEEL, ETC. IV. J. lioi.l.H>AY A CO., Dealers in Iron, Steel, Springs, Axles, Nuts, Bolts, Blacksmiths’ Tools, Hubs, Felloes, Spokss, Carriage Trimmings, etc., etc., No. 59 South Meridian Street, mylOdUm 1ND1ANAP0US, INDIANA.
LIQUORS.
JOHN PSABODY.
c. m. orraniLuc.
jrOH^ PEABODY A CO., Importers and Wholesale Dealers in Sparkling Catawba and Champagne W I3STES. Also, manufacturers of improved Soda or Mineral Water, No. 27 West Pearl street, Indianapolis. Uj-’Orders from the country promptly attended to. feb!4 d3m
J. C. UKIYKHEYEK, Importer and Wholesale Dealer in Foreign and Domestic Liquors, Pure Bourbon, Old Monongahela, and Bye Whisky, pure Gin and Brandies, Ho. 83 West IVusliinKton Street, my 14 d3m Uuder Metropolitan Uall, Indianapoll-
MILLINERY.
Hit*. E. L. Kichiuond A Co., FASHIONABLE Millinery, Cloak «asd Dress Making, No. 8 N. Pennsylvania St., opposite Odd Fellows’ Dal INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA. aprSS d3m.
MACHINERY. K. T. SINKER. DANIXL YANDE8. WILLIAM ALLIEN WESTERN MACHINE WORKS. SI3STIEEK, <Sc CO., MAXCFACfL'KERS AND DKALCRSIM ALL KINDS or PORTABLE AND STATION AKV STEAM ENGINES
A.3SrX> BOILERS,
Circular Saw Mills, Mill Gearing, Sheet Iron Work,
Governors, Steam Ganges aud Whistles, Iron Piping, Stevens’ Celebrated Steam
Patent <
ton nping, aievens- Aiewor.ie..
Piston Packing, and all kinds of Brass,
Engine and Boiler Fittings.
CAST1ACSS HL41>E TO OHHEK. SILTING, FIRE ERICK AND FIRE CLAY for sale.
fMiuiti tuctorr, t
125 South Pennsylvania St.,
INDIANAP4»l.ia» IND.
