Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 21, Number 49, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 April 1862 — Page 4

W KKKLY SENTINEL. .-fOSDAY APKIL A Common Duty. A cotemporary remarks: "Tins is a time when all good men should give their personal attention to politics; not the politics that merely looks to the bagging of vote.', but that belter politico which aims at things that beuetit the country, and rises to the plane of statesmanship.

Tlie Pretideat mnd Congress on Slavery. Wendell Phillips, in a speech in Boston last week, thus referred to the sympathies of the President on the slavery question: The President said to a leading Republican of New York, "Why don't yeu hold conventions often, and let me feel the mind of the nation? You ciui not create as much anti-slavery feeling ai we shall need before we get through this war." In the Piesidentiul canvass of lf60 the Republican party, with Mr. Lincoln as its leader, solemnly assured the country that it bad no design to interfere with slavery where it existed. Last July the House adopted the Cbittenkex resolution which expressly declared that the sole object of the war was to restore the supremacy of the Constitution, without impairing the dignity, the rights and the equality of the States. And about a year ajo the same body declared that it was not its purpose or that of the country to interfere with slavery in the States where it existed, and that the Abolitionists of the North were too insignificant in numbers and iulluence to be worthy of consideration. And such it has been represented were the sentiments and purposes of Mr. Lincoln. But a change has taken place. With the approval oi the President a law has been passed abolishing slavery (where it existed) in the District of Columbia a measure tin called for at the present critical juncture of our natioual affairs. The üouse has also approved a resolution to appoint a committee to suggest some plan for the abolitiou of slavery in the States. And now we have Mr. Lincoln reported by a man who was treated with special attention by the leading Republican Congressman a lew weeks ago as saying to a leading Republican politician: "You can not create as much anti slavery feeling as we mm. I need before we get through this war." If this be correct, and we do not believe that Mr. Phillips would wilfully mierepre sent the President, the vaunted conservatism of Mr. Lincoln is about as tangible and reliable as a soap-bubble. In this connection, the action of the House on Tuesday last, on Mr. Cox's resolution, is significant as to the abolition drilt of the Republican party. We reproduce the resolution of Mr. Cox to illustrate the sympathies and purposes of the present Republican Congress, Wim the statement that, on motion of Mr. LovkjoyU was tabled by a vote of sixty five against thirty-one, the Republicans generally voting in the atfirmative: Hesolced, Tnat the Secretary of War inform the House of the following tacts: 1. What lias iieiayed the reply to the resolution of this House calling for information as to the age, sex, condition, tic., of the Atricaus employed in Gen. Wool's Department? 2. What number o! slaves has been brought into the District by army officers, or other agenu of tue C-overuuieut, from the State ol Virginia since the enemy abandoned the possession of 3l.inas.os and their lines on the Potomac? 3. What number of fugitives from Maryland and Virginia are how in the City of Washington, their sex and probable age? 4. What number is now in and has been sent to Frederick, Maryland? 5. How many are now fed and supported bv the money of the United States appropriated by Congress to prosecute the war? (i. by what authority were both old and young, male and female, sent by rail to Philadelphia, at whose expense and the amount of expense, and the purpose lor which they were sent? 7. it he has not the ineana to answer these inquiries, to take the necessary steps to obtain the information. It the Republicans from the President dowu intended to carrv out their recorded pledges iu good faith, what objection could there have been to the adoption of this resolution of inquiry? Honorable men could not and honest men would not object to an investigation of the facts alluded to, and we can only regard the vote of the House as a confession that Republican pledges are not sustained by Republican acts. I iii it in 1 pa t ion. Absorption, or Co 111mingling of Karrs, Tire Boston Post, in discussing these topics, remarks: Touching the amalgamation or peaceful union of opposite races on terms of equality which an earnest I ut uniform philanthropy of the day sees, or fancies it sees, practical as between the masters and slaves of the South, or the whites aud blacks at the North, (if the slaves were treed and sent North for absorption; there are te ichings of history as well as of instincts which cannot be disregarded. Let us recur to some of them. Prkscott, in his brilliant history of Philip II informs us that in the eighth century the warlike Arabs met the whole Gothic army on the banks of the Guadalete, and after the fatal battle in which King Roderick fell, they conquered Spaiu and tue whole peuiusula. But although the Gothic and Moorish races lived together for eight hundred years, they never amalgamated or assimilated, Mid the Arabs were always looked upon as intruders, whom it was the sucred duty of the Spaniards to exterminate or expel. In five centuries the Moors were reduced to the smal. kingdom of Grauada. and it took two centuries more before Ferdinand and Isabella, after a war which ri v .tiled that of Troj, for duration, conquered the last hold of the race. For centuries after it was attempted in vain ci il laws and the Inquisition to absorb the Moor in the Christian. The difference ot religious faith. doubtless, entered largely into this incongruity, but the repulsion of races w;is tle strongest element. The like result followed the conquest of Mex ico by the Spaniards, though with less marked distinction; hut there the result has been either . degeneracy of the mixed ru e or a superior claim on the part of the European race and co rr ponding hatred toward them of the Mexicans. In the intercourse between our New Kngland ancestors and the Indians, repugnance of races resulted not only iu conquest but in the extermination of the inferior race. For two centuries and a hn!f the fatter have receded just as the former advanced in civilization and power. History teaches the same lesson by the opposite results of successful ami healthful amalgamation in conquests and contracts between like Tlias in the eleventh century the Nor conquered the Saxons, and dictated t.-rms to the vanquished of a steirer character than the S irocen had im pose I on the Spaniards, yet in leas than three centuries after the conquest 4f Kngland the two nations hid inqierceptiblv melted into one, so that the Englishman of that day might trace the current that flowed through his veins to both a Norman aud a Sixon origin. B mi tle reason given is ob rum Trie Norman ami the Saxon eie the same bio mI, sprung I torn a common -to. k. and could not permanently be kept a under by the barrier which was at first interposed between the conqueror and the enslaved. Thus if toe slaves ami their masters at the South, or the negro and the white men of the North were of the same race, we might hope, frwoi the examples of the Normans and Saxthat in three centuries the two classes be absorbed into each oilier, but there are vastly greater repulsions between the white man ami the negr, even in New Kngland, in m

there were between the Spaniards and the Moors. And as to the masters and the slaves at the South, in the possibility of living together in equality as freemen, there is no conceivable approach to a like possibility in the relations of Europeans and Saracens as the conquerors and slaves If history is philosophy, teaching by example, these are lessons which the wise aud the common sense men of the day should study and apply to what is before us in the great problem of races to be settled in this country, and which this civil war is forcing upon us, with a vast responsibility for ourselves and for posterity. Will the I nion be Restored! The Louisville Democrat has been manfully fighting Southern secession for a year or more, and it has now turned its guns against that older and more debasing treason, the abolition dor trines of the Republican party. We are glad to see this, for in the metre of the present war, this dangerous faction has been allowed too much quiet, and its leaders have gone on from bad to worse, .ill they have well nigh crushed out all manly sentiment from that political organization. The destructives in Congress, in the adoption of an abolition programme, have greatly strengthened the cause of the rebellion, and loyal men in the free States have either to consent to an utter overthrow of the Constitution and its guarantees, or be classed as "rebel sympathizers," if they oppose the wild despotism of the taction which rules the roast in Congress. We speak pretty confidently tor the patient and manly Democracy of Indiana, and declare that they will oppose, inch bv inch, all measures which have for their

object the overturning of the institutions of the ! slave States. Thev. at least, will be faithful to ! the pledges made by our fathers, and countenance no measures of policy which shall look to the immediate emancipation of the slaves of the South, as a "military necessity," which they regard as a mere pretext for the commission of a great national crime to the free white laborers of the ! Vrtl. Tl.. h.. o . . .-r,-Ur u i.'n revolt nut down, and have contributed three hun- I dred thousand men to aid that object, but they never will become the advocates of a Union in I which the negro and the w hite man shall be joint partners. It was not the Union made at Phila (jelphia in 1787, and if the political traitors of New England desire such a Union, the Democra cy will not consent to be a portio:: of it. Indi ana is specially committed to this great truth that the negro and the white man cm never be

joint partners in the heritage of national freedom 1 praninie. "No black, no white, one law imparandgiorv. Nine years ajro the people of thU tia, overaIl." This philanthropy, in the abstract. State, by a majority of nearly if not Muite one j . nretlilv .hut when reduced to practice

hundred thousand votes, declared a perpetual separation of the races, and tlmt majority and their sous will see that neither Abraham Lincoln nor Congress, nor Wenhkll Phillips and : his confederate Abolitionists shall be able to , change a verdict founded on the highest princiI pies of our Government and the wisest dictates j of self preservation. Indiana has taken her stand against this admixture of negro iiopulation and has placed that prohibition in her Con-titu-tion. If the members of the present mad and crazy Congress think they can destroy and over- 1 turn slavery in the South, perhaps they would . , - 1 have the same power to ronW Indiana to cnanue . . . , , . , her Oll I 111 111 I II . and admit the emancipated ne ; groes upoi: her soil. If so, let the poor fools j trv it. The "bovs" who have, so far, done so nöbly in defense of the Government and the j . , j Lnion. would quickly "crush out the Abolition cohorts who might attempt to change the organic j law of the Hoosier State. Indiana is for the Union as it was, as it is, and as she means to pre serve it "with the dignity and rights of every State unimpaired" co equals in everything, in feriors iu nothing. Those who arc opposed to inch a Uuioii had just as well join the rebels at once, and cease their pretences of love for the Union. They are, in fact, its most deadly foes. The Louisville Democrat has the following just remarks in reganl to the present hypocritical and silly Congress. We think it about time that j the Democrat had opened its eves to the future 1 of the countrv. and if the Journal of tlAt citv i would but opeu its batteries in unison, we might have the proud satisfaction of attending the funeral of Abolitionism in the West before many months: The Abolitionists are doing the worst they can in Congress. We had some hopes of moderation, but recently the radicals seem to have made some headway ami it is n-1 unlikely that thT push all their measures through. That is now the best they can do tor the country. This rebellion would have cost a few hundred millions le.-.- il Congress had learned some sense without experiments so costly, but the people nave tilled Congress with such partisans, and they will have to pay the expense of treasure and blood. The army has done well; it will accomplish its work; but that will not be a restoration of the l nion. v e can as-urc the Aiimimstration and these radicals that the sword wilf noi accomplish the end, however successful our armies may lie. All armed opposition can be put down and will be put down, but still the powers of the Government can be nullified. We may have a dead Union, which, like a poor invalid with one halt paralyzed, will linger out a painful existence. The violent ;iartisaiiship in Congress will keep alive feeling equally violent iu half the countrv, until a chronic antagonism accomplishes by mere inertia what force never can accomplish. This Union must tie harmonious. The Federal Government must have the co-opt ration of States and eople; and a policy must be adopted that will bring that about, otherwise all this blood and treasure is wasted for nothing. We had hoped that this Congress would do what is to be done, and thus shorten the conflict, but they lack the capacity. The people will commit the work to other and more competent hands. The children of Israel did reach the promised land; but even Moses, for his sin, was not per muted to see it. Just as certainly will this Union be restoied, but thejiresent leaders will not see it. I 1iav fi-ivo kOitiw.,1 tut. tiiliir 11.. I .ini.w I inn nineli . ,. , 1 1 It is not in the order ol Irovidence to allow men who have cursed the Constitution aud the Union to be permitted to rejoice at its restoration. Men who have them-elves 'leen rebels against the Constitution nr.d the laws for a quarter of a ; century will not enjoy a triumph over other rebels Wim impunity. Sunnier Greely A Co may rejou-e now . and exult in what, thev think their triumph: out thev .II f.,11 hM 3 Ml far. The Sock ot tins country have a good deal of wisdom, if thev do p. cnizv once in a while. Thev will soon a p Prectal' the difficulty and displace those who I stand iu the way. How I it; General Grant, in his letter to General Beac BKS ABO, declining to permit the relel command er to send men under a flag of truce for the pur , 1 . . - , ., pose o I burviiijT the dead ol the houtneru army, 0 i-vs: "Owing to the warmth of the weather, I deemed it advisable to have all Ike dead of both partiex buried immediately He ivv det.il- were nude for this purose, and it is How aeeom ptKhrd." This letter of Gen. Gha.nt to Be.u keoarh is

.late.1 t ittstMinr. April J, Irl. w, there lal,a, and tht- njeetion would atld Ui his pmust he some error in this, or Men. Ukast was j ajayity in the United States. The logic of

iuiN.sd iijioii hy those he ordered Ui bury the den! of both parlies. The editor of the I si fay ette Journal Mas. P Li-sk, Kq.j writing under date of "Pittsburg, April 13, lrt2," four days later than (Jen. Grant's letter, says: "We passed over the field five days after the fight, and yet there were many bodies unburied. one place, nearly Ivo hundred rtbels were lying in the space of an acre. We saw frequently a single corpse separated from the others, tar out in the thicket, where die wounded rebel had crawled to die." Mr Li'se is a well known citizen of Indiana, a muii of close observation, and not likely to make assertions at random. There must he some error about this, but where the mistake lies, it is difficult to say. Gen. Gbant may hare been deceiv ed by some of his subordinate.

The Poor Whites. The Detroit Free Pres says: "As the Abolitionists begin to talk of the employment of the masters by the slaves, and the representation of constituencies iu Congress by niggers, we suggest that the black people form benevolent associations for the benefit of the white race. The political sufferings of the latter class are beginning to be unendurable. They are utterly unrepresented in Congress, and are now subject to the hypothetical good of the slaves. "For God's sake let somebody do something for white men."

The One Idea. We publish this morning a report of a speech made by Wendell Phillips in Boston upon his return from his Western tour. Mr. Phillips is a man of great ability and he is a consistent Abolitionist. A- he fairly reflects the sentiments and purposes of the Emancipationists, we reproduce his speech to enlighten the public thereupon. Phillips has but one idea, the Abolitionists have but one idea the enfranchisement of the negro and placing him upon a social and political equality with the white citizen. To accomplish that end they make all else subsidiary. Before the war they were in favor of and advocated a separation of nineteen States from the Union to be divorced from slavery, but now they are Unionists, not under the Constitution, but with the hope that the military power may override that instrument, and under the plea of "necessity" by edict abolish slavery wherever it exists. As evidence of this we make a single extract from his speech: Mr- Lincoln, the nation, may abolish slavery; they can not save it. God appealed first to the pulmta Hiey were barred against his messenger; he appealed to ballots they were too slow for his method; heappeals to bullets, and the slaves of the District are the first trophies of his vie tory. So. according to Phillips the Yankee aboli tiouist it was God, not the Southern men, who brought about this war. He says it is God's "ap11 10 lltlllftS to alio I ISM s Iii Ver V . Ill i I. LI PS I I 1 ..iii.-'. ii -. it a his co laborers not only intend that the negro shall be free, but that he shall be the equal of tiie whites. Hear him: He came home with one idea. No Yankee, no Buckeye.no Hoosier, no natives, no foreigners, no black, no while, uo German, no Saxon, in that beautiful future we behold only American citizens, with one law 'mpartial over all; an empire stretching from the Lakes to the Gull, from (he Atlantic to the Pacific; every race, every man, free. That's the one idea. That's the Abolition proj j , - r the poetry vanishes. Are the people of Indiana ready for the negro feast? We think they will sink this Abolition hunibuggery so deep, the first time they gel a chance to strike it, that even the hands of the resurrectionists can not reach it. Comparative lalur of Uhilc and U lurk Labor. One of the marvelous effects of fanaticism though a fact nothing uew in history is the utter bliudnes, it strikes a man with, even as to his ow n race and its value. Thus, a white crazy l'ort Royal correspondent of the New York Tim., ill.if ,.....- rl.ia niiailinn j ifriro 1 i .111- i i.i .i. ,., . , , Mr. W ilson has had a number of negro car fmm illld 8peilks of lheln in terms of great praise. He affirms the aptness of the negro to acquire a knowledge of mechanical iirt: ;,,,d th best blacksmiths on the island. 1 am told that the harbor masler Captain King, lias had thirty black hands employed about the docks, and declares that tiny "re irori any Jifty white labor er a he could pro cure; and he is s.ud to have applied to the Quartermaster for an increase in the negro proportion of the force he employs. Thirty negroes worth fifty white Americans, or Irish, or German laborers! Won't that do? But. if thirty S uth Carolina negroes are worth fifty Americau, Irish or German laborers from the North, or in the North, of course they will -displace the w hite laborers the moment we get them here, as contemplated. Beyond all question, says the New York Heraid, it is intended to disperse throughout the ' . "" negroes as pracucaoie. And the reason is obvious. The support of these contrabands is becoming a heavv expense to the nation, and will increase with their increasing numbers. Il is no function of the Government to enter into the cotton planting business, and the only employment it may legitimately give these peopie is that ot bein. the servants und , ot ,i.e -. .. servile cendition totall in ! compatable with the heaven born intellects and wnaaWflsl love of liberty which, according to Greeley and to Beecher,' they so pre eminently possess. They' muat therefore, be brought North to be . educated to kiss the blaruev sloue of New Eng .1Ild( arul earll lhat thev are made in God's own mAe ,1 have a right "to ..o it. Let tnem come m, ti,en t(J tnese -fieij,, an,i pastures new;" to the climate which, for six . mollths in the vear, will keep their teeth in a continual chatter; to employments, which, if gained, will deprive our white laborers of their bread; to get false opiniops of themselves and of others; to be in their own way and everbody's else in short to be the plague and nuisance of every community where they muster iu force. The Hooner the better. We propose that fifty thousand of these contrabands be brought at once to New York and Boston, and we shall see what will be the result. Let the white coated phi losophers mingle with their beloed ones, and show that the contrast of color is a mere fallacy; let the reverend doctors prove that Ethiopia may successfully change her skin, whether the Lord pleases or not; let ihe whole tribe of silly lecturers, men and women, rush into the throng, take I them by the hand, hug them to their bosoms, and survive the elUuviuin us they may, yet the at tempt will be a dead failure. The presence ot any large number of n?groes in the North is au ittijiossibility. The Northwestern States have already shown their determination to have no piebald jsipiilatioii in their milkt, and here all experience teaches us they cannot increase, multiply or prosper. f'rcliii-hi! en, Clay und Van Huren. 1 " .... There was a "scene" m the mingled lives ! of these three gentlemen, which we have hail some hesitation in putting into print; but unon reflection, we have come to the eonelusj,m tnat t. , aiW4t. f potd morals will be subserved, not damaged, by it. Hcnrv Clav, it is well known, at one period his I. e,-as ever was tco much the custom, especially of the great Southern men of the olden time, indulged m profanity, which was then la gclv interwoven in his social convcrj sat ion. Mr. Frelinghuysen hail a horror of" all profane men. ami ot all profanity; but loved Henry Clay more than a friend, as a dear, fond brother; and Mr. Clay had almost omni potent social influence over him, notwithstanding his profanity. Pending the question of ' tnlin ' 1. It.ir-..,i' . . . 1 , 1 1 i-1 . I ' 1 . . 1 1 1 f iniiitjir .ill 1111 t III L r II II -3 . " ...... L- .......... . w . , :..! v... to England, when nominated by den. Jackson, Mr. Frelinghuvsen resisted Mr. Clay's hostility to th annointmcnt. ail vised the confirrnatiön and at om. time fully made up his c a.-.J lllino 11 VOU ior Ii. 11 was mm "Hii 11 ill twin , he said, and wrong constitutional a-'tion, he reasoned, thus to interfere with ( leneral Jack son in the selection of his minister to Eng i Mr. Frelim'huvsen turned out to be correi t ;

and it hat! so much influence at the time, that on his (Frelinghuysen's) position, the nomination was turning for days and days. Mr. Clay saw at last the orgin of the difficulty, and he determined to bring over Mr. Frelinghuysen, if possible, to his opinions. Hence, one evening, Mr. Clay came to Mr. Frelinghuysen's boarding house on 7tb street, (Pennsylvania avenue) and in Iii softest, blandest way. ever so irresistible in social life, began to woo and to win the recalcitrant Senator from New Jersey, "who would not go with his arty." "I cannot, I r7 not." said Mr. Frelinghuysen over and over again, giving his reasons, and adding "My judgment, my conscience, is all against iL" MV. ('lay, then wrought up to the highest

pitch of excitement, could not restrain himself", and though loving Mr. Frelinghuysen the more for his good. ; ss and purity, he burst out into the sharpest profanity with denunciations of Mr. F.'s construction ot" his own conscience, and adding on repeatedly " D n your conscience." Mr. Frelinghnysen could not, and would not stand this, but he did not, he could not, in his heart, quarrel with his own Henry Clay, from whom, aforetimes. he had brought tears, when remonstrating with h.m upon his profanity, if not upon his then habits. I will

not stay in the room with y ou. Mr. Clay," he ! said, "if you indulge in this wicked profanity. Mv cars shall not be shocked bv it. When you can talk to me like a gentlemen, or a "Christian, I will return, Mr. Clay, but I will never speak to you till then." Mr. Clay rose, and in his softest, richest, sweetest tones of voice, that were music itself to hear, when he was aroused, replied, "Come back. Frelinghuysen. I am all wrong. Forgive me; forgive me. I will lie guilty uo more, that me. Hear me, and I will not swear any more." The effect was irresistible. Mr. Frelinghuysen came back, audrMr. Clay resumed his aagument and influence; but Mr Clay, in his excitement, in less than ten mini.tes forgot all his pledges, and broke forth in similar strains once more, when just exactly a similar scene took place. The end was, as we all know, finally, lhat the magical, the sympathetic, the wonderful sociiü power which Mr. Clay had, ami by which he governed everybody and everything that came within his fascination, changed even "the judgment and the conscience" of Theodore Frelinghuyse i, and Mr. V. voted, but with

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: : v. . :: :r v:: - Mart 111 fun nun 11 as .IIIH.-.IUI 0 i.iiiiiii. But, nevertheless, Theodore Frelinghuysen exerted the greatest influence over the religious and social mind of Henry Clay. The purity of Mr. F.'s character, and of all his life and habits, illumined even Mr. Clav at last, and among the causes which led him to hold profanity in utter abhorrence, in the latter part of his life, as well as to embrace religion with fervor, we have no doubt was the bright example of his compeer and brilliant fellow Senator, the Christian Orator. of New Jer.-c v. Henry Ward Rerriier on I'aul Horses. Henry Ward Beecher, in a note to Bonner, of the New York ledger, and who owns a -- . c ... c - - - ....... -- - Iiail l'l H'l I lcSl HOI SVS, II1SI ou I SI s II iura1 1 " 1 -l 1 - 11 .11 " -K c sintlv and philosophically on the humanity ol driving a horse at the top ot his speed Is not this a dav tor a ride ? No mud vet. The road is hard and moist. Just the kind for a spin. For I do not want any of your lazv ioxnns: gaits. I am entirely of vour mind that if a horse had had swiftness put in him, it is fair to give him a chance to develop his gifts. Of course there is ? bound. Reason in all things. Even in trotting, it is easier and pleasanter for some horses to go twelve miles an hour, than for others to go three. They were made so. Does it hurt a swallow to 20 swifter than an ox? Why not? Because he was made so. It is easy to do the thing we were made for to do easily, and a good horse was made to go fast. He does it, when wild, of his own accord. He does not lose the relish of speed, even when domesticated. Take a fine fed horse, who in harness looks as if he were a pattern of moderation, a very

deacon of sobrietv,and turn him loose in pw- Pod many ashes in his fire-place, and when ture. Whew, what a change! He takes one ' ht wt ut oul he woul1 llls UP VPIT or two steps slowly, just to be sure vou have earetully, and when he came back he would let go of him, and then with a stpieal lets flv g01'"' t,,e coals aml raake 0,1 a for him" his heels high in the air, till the sun flashes selt- IIe duI ot us; tobacco in any form, from his iwlished shoes, and then otr he goesj IIe never used a profane word or anything faster and fiercer, clear aerossthe lot, until thel I,ke lt-. m vt'r I,a.ve(1 rard- 1 novr saw fence brings him up. And then, his eves a car1 m the honsc at Monticello, and I had flashing, his mane lifted and swelling, his tail particular orders from him to suppress cardup like a king's sceptre, he snorts defiance to Plaving among the negroes, who, you know,

I vou from afar; and with a series of reanngs, 1 rinminir sideways, nawin-rs and olunmnrrs. Makings and whirls he starts again with immense enjovment into another round of runmug. no vou not see tnat it is more man tun? It is vestaey. It is horse-rapture. I never see such a spectacle that I am not ! painfully impressed with the inhumanity of : iirf lerriiifT a horse run. 'Fastness is a virtue. ! Our mistaken moderation is depriving him of it. I drive fast on principle. I do it for the sake of bflOM at one with nature. To drive cl i.wl nlwax-a im to trMt a lmo n if uiV't Will ' 1 1 1 .v wa vwv m aava - a ' he were an ox. You niav be slow if vou think proper. But vour horse should be kept -mm ,1 ill.. up to nature, lie would nave nau out two legs if it was meant that he should go only on a "go to meeting" pace. He has four legs. Of course he ought to do a great deal with them. Now, why do I say these things to you ? Not to convince you of your duty. But I feared, lest taking me out to ride, you would be disiiosed to think that I had scruples and would jog along moderately, as if doing me a favor. Not at all. The wind does not go fast enough to suit me. If I were engineer of a sixty-inile-an-hour express train, I should covet twenty miles an hour more. Let tin horse be well groomed well harnessed. Let the wagon be thoroughly looked to no screw loose, no flaw just ready to betray us. Mount. Iam by your side. The whip is not needed. You let it stand in its place, the graceful hint of authority in reserve which is always wholesome to man and kooM Now get out of town cautiously. No sjieed hen-. This is a place for sobriety, moderation and propriety in driving. But once having shaken off the crowd, I give you a look, ami disappear instantly in a wild excitement, as if all the trees were crazy and had start ed off in a race, as it the fences were chalk fines, as if the earth and skies were commingled, and everything were wildly mixed in a supernatural excitement, neither of the earth nor of the skies. The wind has risen since we started. It did not blow at this rate, surely. These tears are not of sorrow". But really this going like a rocket is new to every sense. Do not laugh if I clutch the scat more firmly. I am not afraid. It is only excitement. You may be used to this bird's business of flying. But don't draw the rein. I am getting calm. See that play of muscle. Splendid uiachinery was put into these horses. Twenty horse IM) wer at least in each. And how they enjov it ! No forcing here. They do it to please , themselves, and thank vou for a chance ! Ivook ot that head! Those ears speak like a tongue ! The eves flash with eagerness and will! Is it three miles? Impossible not more than half a mile! It is

Well, draw up. Let me po off now and Gerstenweig withdrew. The three aides-de-see these brave creatures. What, not enough Lamp all(i motionless, remained silent, yet? No painful puffing, no throbbing of the an(j tj,e Count, with much emotion, said to Banks. They step nervously and champ the tlt.m. q cai, rea,lilv conceive, gentlemen, the

bit, ami lean to your caresses, as it ttiey said, All this we have done to please vou, now just let us go to please ourselves. !" Jeffcrnnn at .Tlonlitello. A new life of Thomas .letl'erson Has been published, the material cf which hM been chiefly derived from Captain Edmund Bacon, for twenty years the chief overseer and business manager of Mr. Jefferson's estate at Monticello. We make the following extracts : HIS MILL. Mr. Jefferson's neighbors were very anxious that he should build a flouring mill. There was a small one there, but a large one w.ts very much needed. While he was President, they thought he had a large salary, and that he "was better able to build one than anylxvlv else. He was always anxious to benefit the community as much as possible, and he undertook it. it cost a great deal of money, and was a verv bad investment. I had the foundation dug, and superintended its erection. I have had quantities of letters from him, giving instructions about that mill. He employed a man named Shoemaker, from the North, who was used to building mills, to assist him in planning and building it. It was built of rock. It was a large building, four stories high, and had four run of stone. The dam was three-fourths of a mile above tlve mill, and a canal was made that distance along the bank of the river, to bring the water to the mill. That dm and canal cost thousands of dollars. Two-third of the way, the canal

was through blue mountain rock not limestone that hail to be blown out. It had to be nine feet wide, to allow the biteauz to pass through to Charlotte ville. It all cost a great deal of money. After the mill was completed, and we had commenced making Hour, there came a big freshet, and swept away the dam. I never felt worse. We had eleven thousand bushels of grain in the mill, and coopers and other hands employed, and I thought we were ruined. But it didn't move him a bit. He never seemed to get tired of

paying out uionev ior ii. rie was alwavs greatly interested in its erection, and in carrving it on. HIS PERSONAL APPEARANCE. Mr. Jefferson was six feet two and a half inches high, well proportioned, and straight as a gun barrel. He was like a fine horse he had no suqilus flesh. He had an iron constitution, and was very strong. He had a machine for measuring strength. There were very few men that I have seen try it, that were as strong in the arms as his son-in-law. Colonel Thomas Mann Randolph; but Mr. Jefferson was stronger than he. He always enjoyed the best of health. I don't think he was ever really sick, until his last sickness. His skin was very clear and pure just like he was in principle. He had blue eyes. His countenance was always mild and pleasant. You never saw it ruffled. No odds what happened, it always maintained the same expression. When I was sometimes very much fretted and disturbed, his countenance was perfectly unmoved. THE MILL-DAM. I remember one case in particular. We liad about eleven thousands bushels of wheat in t'i.- mill nml enntw.ra avid iiriiri-tliinir ulca amtrcshetthe .1... .. alter the dam was hnishcd. It was rainm-: powerfully. I got up early in the morning, j and went up to the dam. While I stood there, I it began to break, and I stood and saw the : freshet sweep it all away. I never felt worse. I dil not know what we should do. I went up to see Mr. Jefferson. He had just come from breakfast. " Well, sir," said he, " have vou heard from the river?" I said, "Yes, sin I have just come from there with very bad news. The mill-Liu is all swept away." "Well, sir," said he. just as calm and quiet as though nothing had happened. we can't make a new dam this summer, but we will get Lewis's fcrrv boat, with our own. and net the hands from all the quarters, and boat in rock . . enough in place ot the dam to answer for the ', T -n j . present and next summer. 1 will send to Baltimore and get ship-bolts, and we will make a dam that the freshet can't wash away." Hfl then went on and explained to me in detail just how he would have the dam built. We repaired the dam as he suggested, and the next summer we made a new dam, that I reckon must be there yet. ins HAHITS. Mr. Jefferson was always an early riser arose at daybreak or liefore. The sun never found him in bed. I used sometimes to think, when I went up there very early in the morning, that I would find him in bed; but there he would be before me, walking on the terrace. He never had a servant make a fire in his room in the morning, or at any other time, when he was at home. He always had a box filled with nice dry wood in his room, and when he wanted fire, he would open it ami put on the wood. He would alwavs have a are generauy nan lo.m ui 11. x never saw any dancing in his house, and it there had been any there during the twenty years I was w,,h "im- 1 sl,ouM certainly have known it. 1 v., eat he wanted to be very choice. his riToim food. When he was coming home from Washington, I generally knew it, and got ready for ,1I,U- a,,a waiu a at the house to give him the k,,.vs- After saying. "How arc all?" and talkI awhile, he would say. hat have you JTOt that IS gOOO? I knew miglltV Well wllilt knew might v I , w suited him. He was especially found of Guinea fowls; and for meat, he preferred good beef, mutton and lambs. Those broad-tailed sheep I told you about made the finest mutton I ever saw. Meriweathcr Lewis's mother made very nice hams, and every year I wed to get a RW from her for his special use. He wa very fond of vegetables and fruit, and raised every variety of them. fuel. A letter from St. Petersburg, in the Progress, of Lyons, gives the following details of the death of General Gcrstenweig, military commander of Warsaw, which, it may be rememliered, took place some months since: " Three of the aides-de-camp of General Count Lambert, the Emperor's Lieutenant in Poland, hearing a loud altercation in the cabinet of the latter, between him and Gerätes weig, entered for the purpose of respectfully intcrjtosing, but the Count, without giving them the time to speak, said: 'Gentlemen, I have just been grossly insulted:' and then turning to the General, added: 'After the word you have just uttered, one of us must be dead to-morrow.' 'That should be so,' replied General Gerstenweig. with the greatest coolness; and the three officers, who had entered on a friendly mission, witnessed the most singular conditions. The laws in Russia interdict and severely punish duelling, antl moreover, in the present state of affairs in Poland, the effect would have been most disastrous, if any dispute was known to have arisen between the two highest persons in the Lrovcrnment of the kingdom. It was. therefore, decided that lots should be drawn by the two adversaries as to which ot theni should put an end to his own existence. That sad formality took place with the greatest coolness for both generals were models of bravery and the lot fell on General Gerstenweig, who. turning to Count Lambert, said, in a firm voice, ' Count, there nrv several matters connected with the service to be arranged, and I have also private papers to put in order; will it suit you it 1 00 not execute the sentence till to-niorrow?' 'It is what 1 should have remiested.' rcnlied Count Lambert. Th le two )wel eoiirteniislv to each other, and ficneral m a fuelinT8 which oppress vou; but the fault of this deplorable event does not lie with me.' And then, striking his forehead with his hand, hiad.le(l: - What a fatality! This will greatly anect the Emperor. I should have preferred that the tomb were opened for myself!' On the following day, (General ier stenweig, standing before a looking-glass, discharged two pistols at his head. The liall of the first went round part of the frontal bone, making, however, a deep incision on the skull. The second was mortal, and the General fell. Two soldi- 'rs. hearing the re)ort. rushed into the room, and found him lying on the floor in great agony. They placed him on his ed, when he soon recovered his senses. He refused all medical assistance, but sent for his aide-de-camp. The report of his suicide soon became current, although every endeavor was used to make it believe that he hail been struck by apoplexy. Count Lambert went to him, ami shaking him by the hand, expressed his regret at what had happened, and retired, bathed in tears. The General lived for fortytwo hours in the greatest suffering, and then expired. He was sensible to the last, begging the officers who were near to him to conceal the cause of his death as long as possible from his wife. 1 As to my son,' (a young man of seventeen, now at St. Petersburg), Met him know that I have not died like a coward, who failed in his duty, or fcafvd the responsibility of his acts, but to obey the prescriptions of military honor. Iet him know all that may honor the mAnory of his father.'"

FOR SALE.

Japrr County Land. Pari M'rairic. Part Timbtr! T II VK A SMALL PIKCK OF LAND IX JASPKR County, being 40 eres, part Umber and pan prairie, (uot swamp land,) that 1 will sell at five dollar an acre It is the north-west quarter of toe south-east quarter of rection 19, in town-hip 32. north of range 5. west, in Jasper county, Indiana If any one bould want Hat tbe above price, they can address meat Indianapolis. mcb24-w JOHN K. KLDER. SCHOOL BOOKS. OF SCHOOL BOOKS, PAPER, &C.,& IUl IN SMALL OR LARGE QUANTITIES, At BOWES, STEWART CO'S, feM0-6m Is Wi st Washington rtn el LECAL. STATT--. OK INDIANA, MARION OOUNTT, SS: In tbe Court of Common Pleas of Marion connty, in tbe State of Indiana, June Term, A. P. 162 Warren Welch r. Mary A. Welch. Be it known. That on thi 2Tith dar of March, in the year 162, the above named pluintiff by hi attorney filed in the office of the Clerk of Court of Common Plea, hiscoinplaint uainst aid defendant, iu the alxiveeutitlrd cause, and on the 14th April, 1SC2, an affidavit of a disinterested person, that said defendant, Mary A. Welch, is not u resident of the Stan- of Indiana. Said defendant is, therefore, hereby notified of the filing and pendency of said complaint against her, and unless she appear and answ er or demur thereto, at the calling ol said cause, on the second day of the nextterm of Mid Court, to be begun and held at the Court-house, in the city of Indianapolis, on tbe first Monday iu June next, said complaint and the matters and things therein contained and alleged, will be heard and determined in her absence. Wm. WALLACE, Clerk. Rash Ham., Attorneys for Plaintiff. aprlU-w3w STATE OK INDIANA, MARION COUNTY, SS In the ! Common Pleas Court of Marion County, in Mm State of Indiana. June Term, A. P. 162. tieorge M. Traver vs. Mary E. Traver. Re il known that on this 11th day of April, in the 3-ear 162, the above named plaint'n by bis attorneys filed in the office of the Clerk of the Common Pleas Court of Marion County complaint against said defendant in the above entitled caue, together with .111 affidavit of a competent person, that siid defendant, Mary E. Traver, is uot a resident of tbe State of Indiana. Said defendant is therefore hereby notified of the filing and jiendency of said complaint against her, and that unless she appear and answer or demur thereto at the calling of said cause on the secoud day of the mxt term of said Court, to be begun and held at the Court House, in the city of Indianapolis, on the first Monday iu June next, said complaint, and the matters and things therein contained aud alleged, will be heard and drti-rmined in her absence. WILLIAM WALLACE, Clerk. Mi IHinai.ii Roachk, Attorneys fur Plaintiff. aplJ-dlAw3w ADMINISTRATOR S NOTICE.. TMlTU'E is hereby given ;hat the undersigned has been X w appointed Administrator of the estate of Samuel RoJebaugh. late of Marion county, deceased. Said estate is supposed to be solvent. SIMON K1.IN(;KXSMITH, ap!4-w4w Administrator, with the will annexed. NOTICE OF SALE. mTOTICS is hereby given that I will sell at public aucyk tion. on Tuesday, tlie 2nih day of May next, at the residence of Samuel Kodehaugh, late of Marion county, deceased. all his personal property not disKsed of by the will, consisting of cattle, one horse; sheep, wheat in the granery, corn in the crib, slock hogs, an interest iu a reaper, bee stands, iron kettle, tanning utensils, and various other articles ttvo tedious to mention. The sale will commence at 10 o'clock A. M. and continue from day to day until all is sold. A credit of nine month will be given on all sums over three dollars, the purchaser giving his note with approved security, waiving valuation and appraisement laws. SIMON KI.INiiK.Xs.MITU, a!4-w4w Administrator, with the will annexed. ADMINISTRATOR'S SALE. COifMJftlSSIOJTMtmWM tLUM Of THE UNPERSIC.NEP COMMISSIONER APPOINTED by the Marion Circuit Court in the cage of Enoch P. Hanna r. Jacob lliday and others, in said court, for partition, will, as such Commissioner, sell to the highest bidder, over the two-thirds valuation thereof, the following real estate, situate in Marion county, Indiana, that is to say, the east half of the south-east quarter of section (7) twenty-seven, township seventeen (17) range live (5) east, containing iu) acres, more or less. Also, the following described real estate situate in Hancock county, Indiana, being the southwest quarter of the southwest quarter of section twenty-six. (26) in township seventeen, (17) north of range five (5) east. Also, the northwest quarter ol tbe southwest quarter of section twenty-six, (26) iu township seventeen (17) north of range five (5) east. Also, the north half of the east Iftlf of the south-west quarter of section twenty-six (26.) township seventeen (17.) rangi' (5) east, containing in all one hundred and twenty acres, bo the same more or le-s, which, with said Marion county land aforesaid, will be sold by the undersigned in pursuance with the directions of the order of sale, on THURSDAY. 22d PAY OF MAY, 1S62. Sale will lie made on the premises aforesaid described, as situated in Marion county, Indiana. Said sale will be made at not less than the two-thirds valuation thereof. The sale will be between the hours of ten o'clock A. M. and six o'clock P. M. Tbe terms of sale will be one-third cash iu hand, tbe balance in one aud two years, tbe purchasers giving notes with approved security, without any relief from valuation and appraisement laws, and bearing interest from date. aj.rll4-w6w ANDREW K. COttY, Commissioner. ELECTION NOTICE. ATA MEETING OF THE DIRECTORS OF THE DTDtanapolis and Kail Creek Gravel Road Company, on tiie 29tb of March, 162. it was ordered that tbe annual meeting of the Stockholders be held at School House No. 8, in Center towuship, on the 17th of May, 1n62, at 9 o'clock A. M., to elect five Director for the ensuing year. Sealed proposals will lie received until that time for putting the gravel required for repairs upon tbe road, by the cubic yard, for the next six months. Separate bids will be required for section one, being the snutb mile, and tbe residue of said road, which constitutes section two. ap21-w4w POWELL HOWLAND, Sec'y. HOTELS. ' .-sä, e ' . It . . ...j.;, HKS: tt rrrrtrrt ffr TrttitttttSearhr Union Depot, Indianapolis.Indinna. 71. H AKTII, - - - Proprietor A First Class House in all respects. Fare only One 1X4ar per day. Juti5-dly rAflUM HOUSE, NO. 29 NORTH ALABAMA ST.. IJIRKCTI.T OPPOSITE THK KAST KNDOF K AST MARKKT-HOI'SK, HAS Wn newlv painted, papered, and otherwise repnired anil Improved, ami furnished entire with new furniture, and I am now prepaied to accommodate Boarders or Traveler at very l" rale: ami I hoe my old friends will Rive me a rrll at my new quarter. 1 have a good new hous and a number of Kood rooms. Tlie house it close to the County and United States Court-houses and I'ostnffice. iMv lioar.l- rs wanted. 8. BARUOUR, Prop'r feb6-dlwA-wJm MEDICAL. f sunlit Coid, or gfate jDIi teat . which might be checked with a simple remodv. i f neglected, often terminates ccriciicl y. Few are aware of the importance f stopping a ßctigh. or gfliqltt ßalA. vn iis first stage ; that wruch in the Ircginrüng would yield to a mild remedy, if not attended to, soon attacks the lungs. were first irUrodiuxd eleven years agz lt has been proved that they are tht best article before the public fi r jQcjLLftlha., .s, jS.tarn lt.itis , J&stAmrL, rf-alcLtth., the Hac: Cough in aLAUmLtLan., and numerous affections of the 3itc.a.t, giving immediate relief. Public Speaker JP Sinpcrx will find them effectual for clearing and strengthening the voice Bold by all ruggists and (7 ?"- irt JAedicine, at 5 cents fer c.t. E - S a. a i i

MEDICAL.

Scrofula, or King's Evil Is a constitutional di!eae, a corruption of the blood, by which this fluid becomes vitiated, meak and poor. Being in the circulation, it pervades the whole body, and may bur?t out in disease on any part of it. No organ is tree from its attacks, in. r is there one which it may not destroy. The scrof ulous taint is variously caused bv mercurial disea-e, iuw living, disordered or unheallhv food, impure air, filth und filthy habits, the dti-rw-sinf vices, and, above all, by" the venereal infection. Whatever be its origin , it is hereditary in the constitution, descending "from parents to children unto the third and fourth generation ;' indeed it seems to be the rod of Him w bo aaya: "1 will visit the iniquities of the fathers upon their children." Its effects commence by deposition from the blood of corrupt or ulcerous matter, which, in the lungs, liver and internal organs, is termed tu bcreles; in the glands, swellings; and on the furface, eruptions or sore. This foul corruption, which "renders in the blood, depresses the euer pies ol" life, so that scrofulous constitutions not only suffer from scrofulous complaints, but thev have far less power to withstand the attacks of other diseases; consequently vast numbers perish by disorders which, although not scrofulous in their nature, are still rendered fatal by this taint in the system. Most of the consumption which decimates the human family has its origin directly in this scrofulous contamination; and mint destructive diseases of the liver, kidneys, brain, and indeed, of all the organs, arise from or are aggravated by the same cause. One quarter of all our people aie scrofulous, their persons are invaded by this lurking infection, and their health is undermined by it. To cleanse it from the system we must renovate the blood by an alterative medicine, and invigorate it by healthy food and exercise. Such a mediciue we supply in A.TTER'S Compound Bit met of Sarsajwrilla. The most effectual remedy which the medical skill of our time-can devise for this everywhere previiilinfr fatal malady. It is combined from the most active remcdials that have been discovered for the expurgation of the foul disorder from the blood, and the rescue of the system frojn its destructive consequences. Hence it should be em employed for the cure of not only Scrofula, but also those other affections which arise from il, such ns Eruptive and Skin Diseases, St. Anthony's Fire. Rose, Erysipelas, I'imples, Pustules. Blotch -es. Wains and" Iloils, Tumors, Tetter and Salt Rheum, Scald Head, Ringworm. Rheumatism, Syphilitic and Mecurial Diseases. Dropsy, Dyspepsia, Debility, and, indeed, all Complaints arising from Vitiated or Impure Blood. The popular belief in "impurity ot the blood" founded in truth, for Scrofula is a degeneration of the blood. The particular purpose and virtue of this Sarsaiiarilla i to purify ami regenerate this vital fluid, without which sound health is impos sible iu contaminated constitutions. AYER'S A g u e Cure, FOR THE SPKKDY CURB OF. Intermittent fever or Fever and A n . It tum tu I cier, hill f ever, Dumb Ague, i'eriodiral Headache, or Kil lions Headache, and Killious 1 1 era, indeed for the wholerla of di- .. originating in fliliarv derangement, caused by the H alar in of .TIiauiatic C ount rie. We are enabled here to offer the community a remedy which, while it cures the above complaints with certainty, is -till perfectly harmless in any quantity. Such a remedy is invaluable in districts a here the-e afflicting disorders prevail. This "Cure" expels the mis ismatic uoison of Fever and Ague from the system, and prevents the development of the disease, if taken on the first approach of its premonitory symptoms. It is not only the best remedy ever yet discovered for this class of complaints, but also the cheajiest. The large quantity we supply for a dollar brings it within the reach ot everybody; and in billions districts, where Fever and Ague prevails, everybody should have it and use it freely both for cure and protection. A great superiority of this remedy over any other ever discovered for the speedy and certain cure of Intermittents, is that it contains no (Jtiinii.e or mineral, consequently it produces no quinism or other injurious effects whatever ujion the constitution. Those cured by it arc left as healthy as if they had never had the disease. Fever and Ague is not alone the consequence ' of the miasmatic poison. A great variety of dis orders arise from its irritation, amontr which are Neuralgia, Rheumatism, Gout, Headache. Blindness, Toothache, Earache, Catarrh, Asthma. Palpitation, Painful Affection of the Spleen, Hystetics, Pain in the Bowels. Colic, Paralysis and Derangement of the Stomach, all of which, when originating in this cause, put on the intermittent type, or become periodical. This "Cure" expels the poison from the blood, and consequently cures them all alike. It is an invaluable protection to immigrants and persons travelling or temporarily residing in the malarious districts. If taken occasionally or daily while exposed to the infection, that will be excreted from the system, and can not accumulate in sufficient quantity to ripen into disease. Hence it is even more valuable for protection than cure, and few will ever suffer fiom Intermittents if they avail themselves of the pro -ectiou this remedy affords. Prepared by OK. J.C. ATI H A CO., I oi i Ii. .Vlltsk. AH our remedies are for sale by Kü HE KT BROWNING, Indianapols. A I.I.K N & CO. Cincinnati. prt.V wly Howard . Issoc iation. Phila.. IOR THK RF.I.IEF OF THK SICK AND WSTRESSKD. afflicted with Virulent and Chronic Diseases, and especially diseases of the Sexual Orcans Mi .licsl Advice (riven gratis hy the Actinir Snrfceoa. Valuable Reports on Spermatorrhea or Seminal Weakness, and other Iliseases of the Sexual Organs, and on the new remedies emplojeil in the Di-pens.it v, sent in sealed letter envelopes, free -ifchante. Address DR. J. SKI I.LIN HOUoliTON, Howard Association, No. 2 South Ninth st., feblfl-wly 62 Philadelphia, Pa. 'i ll s: cos irMOsandrpi:tiiF x i: of as INI i.t n. PUBLISHED FOR THK BENEFIT AND AS A W ARNIM; ai. l a caution to yonnir men who ufier In ra Nervou Debility, Premature iH-cay, 4c; supply nur at tlie same time the means of self-cure. By one who Las cured himelf after Sein put to jrreat expense through medical composition and quackery. By encloainj: a postpaid addressed envelope, sinele copies mav he had of the auth-r. NATHANIEL MAY! AIR. Esq., mch22-wly C2 Bedford Km? Co.. X. T. MEDICAL BOOKS. &C. GALE N ; HEAD DISPENSARY, IIAUTI.Kt.D BY THK LEGISLATURE OF KENTUCKY rOR Til K TREATMENT OF ALL THE DISEASES OF THK URINARY AND GENITAL ORGANS. A Medical Report, mB a Mf mm mm I I aj mr . PRICE ONLY TEN CKNTS. Containing Thhly Fine Plate ami Knarannjnof tM ON A NEW METHOD OF treatiiitf Venerial Dieae. itirludi' lt Sypbili in all its stages; Gonorrhea. Gleet, Stricture, Vancocile, and Hydrocele, Diseases af tle Kidneys, Bladder Ac, without mercury! containing a raluable treatise on that wtde-apread malady of youth. Seminal Weakness, fcoctumal t mission. Sexual Debility, lmt-itency, Ac, tbe secret infirmities of youth and maturity arisiua from the baneful habit of self-abase. To which is added observations on Female Diseases, and other luterestlna: matter of Ihr almost importance to tbe msrried ani those eont.-mplatins; maniac-, who entertain doybtaof their physical at iitjr U enter that slate. Sent to any address in a sealed wrapper, on receipt of ten cats or four stamp. We devote our entire time and attention to the treatment of the various private diseases treated of in our priate report. Our Dispensary is the only Institutbm of the kind in America which ha iseen e tahiished by a apecial charter, ana thi fact should (rive it a preference over the various quacks of doubtful character to be found in all arge cities. . liiiforl:tnt to FcmnI-! One department of our Dispensary i specially di voted to tlie treatment of the Disease of Females, snch as Luchorrbea, or Wnh," Irreirolar, Painful and Suppress Menstruation, Nnus and General Debillt . Disease- of he Womb, Barrenness, Ac. Consultation ami examinations free of charge. Also, forsale DK. DKWEES S REGULATOR PILLS ror Female Olstniclions, lrreirularlties 4c. Married ladiea hi certain situations should not use them, a they would cause miscarriage. Price f 1 per box and may be sent by mail DR. GALEN'S PREVENTIVE An invaluable article for tbowwtshiBK to limit the number of their offspring, or the barren who de4re children; warranted not t injure the health, and will last for a lifetime-em to any address under seal, on receipt of the price !mmBO DOLLARS. PATIENTS AT A DICTA NCE By nding a brief at.t,ment of their symptom, will receive a Blank Chan cwtitajning a Mm f questions, our terms for the courae of treatment he. Medidnea seut to any part of the country to enre any case at Iiotue. ire,- u m uaugi oi vunosiiy. AH transactions private antl r inlhUiHlil the name and naaalwr. Direct al letters to GALKK'8 HKAD DUSPKN8AKY, LUIsvwKj. oct!6-dAw