Richmond Palladium (Weekly), Volume 37, Number 18, 27 June 1867 — Page 2

I, . ... U.l Jl H-.JI RICHMOND, IND., JUNE 27, 1867. UNION COUNTY TICKET. Far Juda of C'iirnit 4 onrt NIMKOD II." JOHNSON". ; For frae-iitinB; Attorney. for Tr-Mtuer. MAJOR JOHN SIM. For Auditor. s Y L V K ST " n .r o I f N " ( ) N . for lift-order, O N A T i 1 A N W 1 1 1 T ACKK For CoinmiintM r. DANIKL 11. CKAWFOJOK Ike siailion VmAeUa" has lie.u sold f..r 17,0. - One death at l-oiraville, Kr , from cholera n TuesUt night last. T-jere to do doubt a quoTiitn of Congress will be neit Wednesday. Tho I'emocrabc majority for Jwlpe at the late election In t!w Second lirand Iiviion of Illinois, t about fiva thousand. ' The Adinimalration decline granting Ocn. Sickle's request to be relieved of tin command in the Carolina. The Stirratt trial in progressing. The ta 'jh Iieutul Association n io session at InllanaiM.lia Tuesday, and adjourned Tucaiay night. The choWa bai made its appearinc In Rome ami Sicily. - . . Lafayette, KmgtiUUowu, Shelbyville, and TerreJUute. are to hate cannon from the Arsenal at Irdi-a-li.H, hr permission of the Adj. General. The gun remaining are onafe, an 1 no further requisition ran be tilled. I lie Loxicr-Foater Debai cumra-M-irt at ItvliaujpMn on Monday next. There are rly 2V lawyers iti Memphis. Indianap .H hut rio," M by fire 'rues'!'. A movement if. wit foot in Yicksburg, Mi-bis .Hi'jijK, to send a c-hned mil to CnTes. I$y a rebuilt l.iJer explosion in Philadelphia, near liO person were killeX5? On the HI int. the eight lour fvsteni was inaugurattd at S: IVaoctMOo. Up to ThiiMdiy, ft7,48H voters wtre yegi iters'! in Louisisni. A youox luftu uamud Mark May wi drowned in the Scioto Itiver at Citcloville on Monday. II. II. IUil.1. was nominated fur Governor of California, by the Democrats. Thera) lave l- uTi quite a number of cased of cholera in Memphis and its suburbs. Planters in Alabama have been feuding shelled corn t their mule. Thn animals awallow it without mastication, and dm tf indigestion, in great numbers. A Minesota umn realized from hid wheat crop last year moro than twice iu amount paid for his frm the year be ore. The President has appointed Marcus OtlerWrif of Wisconsin,-novc I'nited H' at es Consul f the City of Mexico, to fea Minister resident there in place of L. 1. t'tutipbcll, resigr.cd. Oovcrnwnt is i" posstssiou of a million glIons of vt1'!;y, whicli has or soon will In-come (avrnuictit property by camlain nation. Damages to the amount of two thousand lire hundred dollars have leen recovered from a ' Chicago barber f"r accidentally cutting eft one ', of his customer's ca r. Several County Conveiitioiis in Ohio have? been held by the republican-) in which resoluttons expre-ssiog a desire to have the right oil fiuttoragc extendeJ to the colore I citizens of vhat Sta'e. - i John Antrim of St. Louis., bus fallen heir to -r.e half .f an Iri,h es:al worth $ 18,0f)0,fX". ,1. M. Langstot!, tin- c loreil lawyer and orator o: Oberlin, will mjii slart on a tour South, in connection with Ids ihities as Inspector in the rroeJinen's fluieau. ""-li was warm in l'ittbirh Tuesday, rnomctcr in the shade. Ther ' " The Cable reports the litfom movement i v inaugurated by the Hii'ish (i viTnnint to be w ir ktnw well. T'ha Albany grand jury h, iiuli.-to l General ' VToile for murder in the iirst decree, for killing ' 'Mr. Hiaccck. . . ; At the Sutratt 'rial a witnos testified that J Booth's diary wss cut when he saw it on the . dar of hiii ( liootlrsl death He identified the diary as the sauta which Imd hyn Kfore the ' Jad.dary e-...mittoe. ' The death 'f the lat de'Cetidei.t of Zwinglius, ; the famous s'wiss reformer, is chronicled in the j-wiss pnptfis. Ho died at Dittikon at the age of htxiy, letving behind many relies that had Iwloned to his iihtstrious ancestor j Mr. Lord, who was totbed sixue luoii' its ago, in New York, ofait immense antur.t of Govtiu- , uictit Unds, receivud from an rr.ktiown source, ' Monday, a package containing $i,3t '.. of the : bonis. " This leaves only $9O,O-.0 wvi tU mLssing. j At NVest 1'oint, this y ear. there were sixty- j three graduates, to whom d'plomas were presented by General Grant. Tlus tirst twelve will probably be com missioned as engineers. ' At the Naval A eadamy there were eighty-live graduates. Tho earnii's 1 the Uuiou Pacitio bailroad (Kansas P'rauch"! lor the month of May wero one hundred and seventy-two thousand dollars, including tifty-one thousand dollars for Government expciis. The net profits were seventy one thousand dollars. oam.l .iuia, nation ueen luiriuiy nui on j board tho steamer Virginia, by an officer of the I Sant.i Anha. hating been forcibly put on United Stares in the harbor of Vera Cruz, to bo landed at Havana, was afterward forcibly taken from that vessel in the harbor of Siral, where she had touched in the prosecution of her yoyage,by adctaichment of the libara'.ist ''greasers, who occupy that iviod, under command of Geo , ral Per&za. ; MiiuicHua Is .-aid to give promi.-e oT a great yield of wheat this season. Tne St. TaUl Press states that the crop will be 15 000,000 bushels, sod adds : The area of land put in wheat thi year is much greater than ever before; and even in those- frontier settlements where the scarcity . of seed prevails, four times more land is sown ia heat than last year. A Cleveland dispatch ays : "The u anager ' vf the Ohio Wool-growers Assjciation have determined to ca!l a State Convent vn ofthe friends of a protcftive policy, to lie held at Cleveland on the Uh v( July, to consider the late noinin tion of General Hayes, fer Governor of Ohio, who Ls BnJttstoo-.i a free-trsde man. The Empress CarloUa, wii'e of Maximilian, it appears, is in a condition of hopeless insanity . The French ynamals announce that her medical aUcadaau, aittr lutruig held a ron&ultMioD on , the slate jof thcEnvpress have declared that she j wilt ficTer' recover rr reason. It is also the ; cpirtiod of tlie physicisns that her nervous svstem - lis recieved a hocVr which will soon resuit in her death - - : t V I ': 1 j ng'? !l'rj w Tt' mfiftfiil tS st awu.' t aa . TaaCaoKs. Oar extfh port i ue pruspecis .or a wuduiui Harvest as uo- i sorpassed in any previoas rear. Fruit of all ' . .v . i . kir.ds will be very abundant; corn which a few days since threatened to be a failure, is now coming forward rapidly. The yield will be ex relent, uaiUio n off by an vntitnely frost. In the southern part of the Sute the wheat harvest , wilt be CoiuToenced next week and at the latest dates t ' entirely free from rust, and tbe 1 pmapvet lor a lieavy nop trisnmr more prom ising- iu the UuU Slntes tho wkoat is alreadr I barveted, and we trust soon to hear that all . " lv , v - v usw. au traces of want have diaST,-Ared.-Sooth Bend Pre. Jane 20th.

Palladium

t Kentucky Politics. ;f 4 The Democratic majority in Kentucky is abont llorty-two tliouaanrl " against Miout Jthtrtiieigli't thousand , iu I860. Those. who nre anxious to ititrust the tjOveriioenV oT onr countrj' or of any State fo the aatne party arc referred to KeatacTtyr In" that State, as "in the municipal Goyemtnont of fue city of New

York, Utw bleiug of Detaouraiic acendency are tOHuifcstctl, as they were in the adniiniMration-i of Pierce and Bu chanan, in the repeal of t!ic Miaouri Compromise, tUc .attempt to force slavery ttjn Kansas, the l)te Scott decis ion, and, finally, in the rebellion plotted by Democratic Senators atd a Democratic Cabinet with the imbecile connivance of a Democratic President These arc advantages of Democratic rule still quite fresh in t.!e popular naiad. In Kentucky the Democratic majority means simply a majority of those who sympathized with, the rebellion. It was a Democratic GoveriKir of that State who returned an insulting reply to President Lincoln's summons for troops, and the Democratic ascendency kept the State from ever being truly loyal. Had the Democratic loyalty of Kentucky been that of the whole land, Jell Davis and his friends would huvc overthrown the Government and ruined the country with iu the first six mouths or the rebellion. The fiercest of the unreconstructed rebels in the Southern State hailed the result of the Connecticut election, bccav.ee they thought that it fehowed a-tend.4icy in other States to -join Kentucky, and they knew that when the politics of Kentucky are those of the country the pc4it ical work of the war will be undone as far a possible, and repudiation, compensation for slavery, the invalidity of the emancipation amendment, slid unconditional restoration to Congress, will not be as, dimly distant as they now are. , Kentucky is Democratic. Tt was the only State not openly in rebellion which was thoroughly Democratic throuirh the war ; and there was no State not in insurrection in which secession had atieh sincere sympathy. We do not forget the brave men of Kentucky w ho volunteered for the cause, and who nobly fought at home and abroad, and whose patriotic devotion was all the greater because they were greatly outnumbered. Hut true as they were they did not speak for the State. They were the political niinortty. They arc the minority still. I.ut they arc now coming to see that that might be the majority if all loyal men, black and w hite, were voters. The Democracy, which instinctively hates eoual risrhts i. - i u i course resist such a result. Hut it is this very resistance, this steady hostility to hnnmn rights and consequent national peace and prosperity, which has fully revealed the real character of the reactionary faction which is known as the Democratic party. The dominance of that party makes Kentucky what it is. Those who wish other States to resemble Kentucky will naturally work and pray fer Democratic rule. Harper' Weekly'. ; . .. Quotations of GofJ. . . . , The qnntations of gold. a given iu the mony, articles of the daily papers convey no fixed 13ea to' the oomta-Mi mlad ; the infomjatLm needed by the getror- f i:ty of the people is, whit is a PaPer dollar worth? I e htve been furnished with the following, which I those who care to do so, can cut out for reference : worth Si cents nearly. ' J When gold is quote l vt t.i , a piper delUr is i worth 81 cents. Drti,8iLiA - Wbea gold ia quoted n.2i, a paper dollar a worth I so ceuts. . , j When gold is quo'.ed at l.3&, a pper AMr is worth 77 eer ts. When (told is quoted at $1.5, a paper dollar ij worth "4 cents. Wlien gold is quoted at SI 40, a piper dolUr is worth 71 cents. When gold is qu.vte.l at t.45, n paper t.d.ar is worth 69 cents nearly. Wiii: jjold ii qn jteTat 41.41, a piper 4isil.tr is worth 65 cents nearly. Valley Spirit. To Bkaitut tub Teeth. Dissolve two ounces of borax in three pounds of , .,. . , , , . . . toiling water, and before it is cold add one tcaspoontnl oi spirits of cun.phor, and bottle for use. A tabic spoonful of this mixture mixed with an equal qnanVv of tepid water, and applied daily with a soft brush, preserves and beautifies the teeth, extirpates all tartarous adhesion, arrests decay, induces a healthy action of tho gums, makes the teeth pearly white. There has been a gun cast for the Chilian Government at Fort Pitt Foundry, Tittsburg, weighing 116,000 pounds or fifty-three tons. It is twenty feet and six inches iu length, five feet four inches in diameter of breach, ah I has a bore of twenty inches. .Tnlm Smith, of U-i1u',.'st,r .u n-it . , .. """.-"-, to South Carolina in a buggy, two months ago. has returned by rail and water. A crecsoted sleeper put down on the Suckton and Partington Railway, in England in August. 1841, was taken up March It, 167. after nearly 25 years of service. The grain of the wood, although slightly discolored by the creosote, as fresh and appeareutly as tough as newly aawed timber, and the odor of creosote is .... as strong as if the wood na1 jusi been opperateed upon. , A proposition was made io the Council of Lafayette to increase the pay of Mayor J hn Pettit two hundred dollars. The Council stood five u five, but the Mayor cast a vote in favor nf ir.rrftiTir nia own nav ana tne mpunr wa ra,.i v "

r A Sunday School on wheels is said to be in I ldr, when a honey bee stung her on the j prospects for fruit this season." in that deficiency, s Also Mr. Richards, Treasopcratioa iu ft ex. Tbe man ace is hold it ia a i ball of her ere. She screamed and fell. ! county, never were known to be better, i orer of Harrison copnty, is a defaulter

i v iuiuibucu vi ui, managers ui eo.c iug railways leading out of Ctici, and the scholars car furtnshed by th. managers of or.e of the I are gathered, up along the line of the fed

s, Popular Mistrust of 1867. j f The figure has so often proved itself a numeral of -iH'cuneri that it is no woo. dcr waiinercial enter-prise lis apprehensive of its periodical recurrence. At three regular intervals, in 1?37, 1S1T

and the conntry -was 5-wept by S-' ; nancial panics ; hence the popular mind naturally argues th-t the fatal decade lies somehow within the inJluence of the ; law of panics ; tnd these persona especi ally who have been signed in the flame are cautious how they allow business projects to tempt them into positions whore they would be exposed to disaster. They prefer not do business at all rather than run risks .Merchants buy from hand to mouth ; manufacturers work only to fill orders:capiialist3 invest only where the security is unquestionable. Because the people asceitaiued, last fail j that over expansion was not the highway to prosperity which tLey had iraagincd, but was attended - with positive dangers, they wisely dctci mined to avoid that rock, but ran into the opposite extreme. When Cougrcss so far indorsed the policy of contraction as to authorize the Secretary -of the. Treasury to reduce the voltune of currency four millions per month, the teople cried out in tear of ; the dangers that threatened on that side also. Whichever way they turned, they saw nothing but ditliculticd. So they i i fctiengthened themselves against the an- i ticipated disaster in every way possible, j It is the same superstitious anxiety j that makes the public start with alarm at ; every whisper of a business failure, r.nd throws it into convulsions when some j Iwavy house actually faihs for is not j this the year 1SG7, and has not each de- j cade for forty years been fatal with failures ? So, as month after month lapses quietly, we persistently predict that a revulsion is nevertheless certian to come before the year closes, we exhibit the folly of a seaman refusing to embark on a voyage for fear he may be drowned. We permit all our industries to languish and ovrselves to run in debt through a

puerile foar that if we prosecute business j Kentucky, where they'll see all the anwe shall become bankrupt. I tiquities they want. The Covington and

The fact is, tlat so far from being j anxious respecting the future months of j the present year, we should have, much' cause Pjr encouragement if these over- j cautious laggards could only bo. stimu- : lated into reasonable activity. Instead j of our revenue falling olf largely, and I the monthlyextrbit of the Secretary of! tlie Treasury showing i constantly in- ,

creasing addition to the public debt (as ' like Kentucky, which I am far from beit promises to do for a considerable time ng There has been no other place like to come,) wc should be able to meet all sincc Sleepy Hollow, with its legends,

tho reauircments cf the Go eminent through our industrial activity and ec j cumulation. The constant stream of immigration from Europe lends additional ; aid -to otr elforts, while our mires add ' 8100,000,000 in gold annually to our re- ; sources. Tho people can do much if they ; j take courage. 1 But every thing docs not depend upon ; the peopla. The people arc willing to 1 I meet heavy taxation squarely, but they i i do not wish to sco the expenditures of j; the Government "temporarily increase," j ! tight in the face.of their efforts. They can not comprehend wliyv fur instance, ; a year's expenses iu the War Departui.nni,i ,-n.,r.i . I f. to. Till i r tim I v" ' of peace, or why they should be ?2bS,- ; 000,00'.' larger in lSGG than they were iu , IsOO Thev would prefer to have lewer : taxes and less tax collectors. A more ! faithful stewardship is required of those , who manage the people's money and a more judicious financial policy. In- ; dustry alone will accomplish nothing ) more decisive or beneficial than legislaj tion alone, but both together, under pro- ' per economy, might work wonders. j Harper's Weekly. Crops and Weather. A revolution has taken place during ' the past fortnight in the temperature of ! tlirt ttiiinnlinrn Tn ts t To fl l-t t f T n 11 O - " I i the season was unusually cold and back 1 ward, although wheat and oats were doinr well. But since the beginning of June, summer has set in, in good earn-' est. Vegetation has seemed to advance more rapidly than for the same period in many years. Never dTd gras or grain acquire a greater growth in so short a time. Tbe trees, almost leafless ten days ago, are now in full verdure, and the corn, of which the farmers almost despaired in May, now promises a better crop than we have bad in the past five years The last day of May hardly a spear of corn could be seen above the ground ; but now the farmers are busy cultivating among the long green rows, with hardly a missing hill, and at the j present rate of growth it will be dilEcult ; to get through the fields twice before the i ! .n ., i v- , . i M.aio.3 aic iuu i;u;e. e nave lustreturned from Davenport, and everywhere j the growing crops look finely. More j ground has been put into wheat, oats and corn than ever before, and uuless some j dread ami unforeseen calamity befalls ! us, every granary in the State will ran over after the coming harvest. Repub-! lie&n, Cerro Gordo county. Iowa, June j 13th. j Mrs. Rood, of Wayne, near Detroit, j Michigan, cled on the 5th inst. from the effect of a bee stin? Si,e was waikin , e I in the garden; in company with another i . tbnncrh pvppc nossihin mpn. ! I . . i -i i and hoogh every possible means we - A V- 1 j employed, she expired in ten minutes ;

A Picture of Kentucky Conservatism. The traveling correspondent" of the Cincinnati Commerical, V3Ick," gives the following lively-sketch of "Conservatism i ,.:::z : - .

I dou't know of any better cure for Conservatism than a few days' residence in the Hue grass region and a careful nJvc-rntinn tt th rnlitiial situation here i and hereabout. thiasr in the political or soqial atmosphcrc having a direct tendency toward Radicalism, and presenting it to you in all the beauty of its holiness far from it. But there arc two moue 01 couverrv ntnn.ii : in another thev coax them ; ..i i f iv , v, into the realms of bliss, on the direct , ,. , . . , . . T, ;- K ; line of pietv and good works. It is by - . , ",, 4 , the erst of these two modes ot coner , sion that I should propose to cure Con - Just let ' ervrvti-m here iu Kentucky, the weak-kneed brethren come over here j nn d see the 'awful example,' and noth- ! short of a post otliee apiece will keep j ' 1 xngr them in the Conservative rauks ten days I icn,Tt r. I came here on Saturday a tol

..onmreigon .uuwuy sacrifice of life, had uMucd the rebel- r - T. w alw.y, delt to boax In one church they scare sinners into j , Cxir t'hvf M -fttrt-. AtTnAt i wrinoheaven by opening the furnace door of llon ".-eaUuhahea its authority, and , ti bj U e j. Gnr4rtlor of Xc.-Jeraer; ,h. hell and Icttico the brothers and sisters arpHetl the same rule to the South, a cry J Rtn Wi-Utures f Connecticut and S. H.tnp- ' of horror went up from the lips ot" everv s shir-hve u-.KUrvd Mm t:i bospiuhty of their resee lor themselves how high the mercu- . . . .. . . . i .,-ii,,s iu. i!r h nw hi,, t..

erable Conservative person. I shall j UP me same source ; uiuwnentnc leave to-day in order to save mvself from rebel3 tloose tlieir ri, ste sbiP3. SW"P' Radicalism. If I remained twenty four ! 'iaS from the waters almost the last veshours longer. I should go awav hurrah- ! "s?0 of American shipping, it was all iug forThad. Stevens, believing Ben. j riSht- A great hue and cry was raised Butler a saint, and seriously doubting if i 3t Butler, "the beabt," for the al

si.icy ever had anylhin to do with i ! -town sites. ..Tue f3ct is Kentucky is a living ana- j t.hronism. She exists in the nineteenth CCnti:rv throuch some mistake or other, and 1 ears upon her face indisputable ev i idence tlat she was intended for the pre- j Adamite period, or, at anv rate, the an- j te diluvian era of the world's existence, i Every year hundreds of live Americans J cross the ocean and travel through Eu- ! rone to sec the Holv Land and other nn- I 3 IIOIV IjSnu ani.t ouier an- i ey can save much time and j lino- to the unholy land of j a tiquitics. They money bv com T.ovino-tnn railroad, sturtinir from the Ohio Iliver, will take them back toward the dawn of creation at the rate of five hundred years per hour, till, upon reach in" the terminus at this end. they will instinctively rub their eyes and inquire for Adam and his accomplished lady. "But if I keep on in this strain I fc-ar I shall be set down as one who don't went out of existence. j "Strange as it may seem for so ancient j a land as this, they have politics and po- j lilical parties here. But. above all, they I have d d niggers.' The 'd d nigger' ; is the "dory of Kentucky. He exists in i dl his primitive simplicity here Congrcss may legislate him into a citizen ; the civil rights law may attempt to ! change the Ethiop's skin, or the leopard's spot; but here iu Kentucky, he is a 'tl d niggei' still yea, and ever shall be, w orld without end. In Tennessee and therSouth lhe race of d d nig irers is extinct. " It was extinguished l,y "the reconstruction law, and in its j it "1 t t: o n -f ! svtu,, llu,CuUluJ . ...s F . respectable and intelligent colored citi- 1 zens black, it is true, possibly thick J iiPed. nerhans kiuky-headed resem- I l.ling its predecessor in the phyisological j fact that the hollow of its heel makes a i i-. hole in the ground but intelligent and respectable for all that, and worthy a full representation in a conservative convention in Tennessee. Against all such political heresy Kentucky stands firm. No 'respectable colored gentlemen for her. Not all the blandishments of politicians can persuade her that ad d nigger is anything of the kind. She will not sell her birthright the Inestimable privilege of hitting a nigger with a brickbat for any such a mess of pottage as - a few thousand additional votes. The nigger was a nigger tinder the fathers ;! and when Maeaulay's New Zealander ! shall sit upon the suspension bridge to sketch the ruins of the Queen City, he , , .

saail turn nis eyes to tue j.ouin, anci iney ; COIBpetcy a vacuum that has existed in shall rest upon the time honored insti- j all Masonic libraries, and would recoratutions of Kentucky still preserved in i mend it to the Craft in this Grand Juristhe 'wolloping of a nigger.' " " ! d.it;tjon 33 a containing facts histo-

There is one important difference between the Republican party and it? opponents:thc former never defends the rascals who sometimes profess its faith, while the latter selects those whose morals are most infamous as its reoresenta the men. The Republican parly may of course be imposed upon, but there is ho ii,t-mro where it has elected a man to Conoress simr lv and solely because he " . ... was a sRnllui sraruoier acu rrize itortuer. , . - Caors. Our exchanges give cheerful accounts of both the grain and fruit prospects for the present year an abundant yield being anticipated. hue such news is always refreshing to the hopeful, we trust it will effectually stop the whinings of a host of old croakers that infest every commnnity, and who are always prophesying of hard times and worse coming. St. Joseph Mo) Courier. ... - The Kokomo Herald says ? that the T!, 1 ,1, ohorrr- trooa sm S.UC i i J J C-W" -1 " ' J - - litcrslly ladon.

l ; i Confiscation. .. - j I Ju st after the South seceded, and Jeff. Davis was elected President 3f the Cobfederawy. he issued a. Weeprag procla malion confiscating all the moneys owed by Southren men to Northern capitalists

and property owned in the South by men residing in the North. This was consid- ! ered fair bv the Democracv of the North. tempt to cplioct a debt Iroia ona of the chivalrous sons of the South ? For such au outrage l:e must suiter the loss of his property. The Democracy eaid-it was nil iijuk im.Ui w lieu lue uui,iuinnu, hi , ed it as unjust, ungenerous, barbarous, . . - , and without a precedent; aud a never- j - cndmi; source of troulxe. Thus we see : . - w..... ,ueut '" -l capitalists of their property, j r -- oul1"1"'1"1 lu 1 . . r . 1 . . . . . . . n n t!,at wLicb t,10y forfkitea. Again, .la a 1.11! I. . 1 i I . wlln tbc Government established the Hoc-Rade, another cry ot anguish went ' " II . . 1... 1 cge' offense or stenling silver-ware, but the fondness of Seinmes for chronometers was applauded as showing a reGned . taste 5 aiul tnonlhs after the war was over one of lbcse piratical craft was in ; ll!e nortnern seas, destroying or uriving ; f'om those waters everything which sail- ! cd under the stars and stripes. This j wa9 a11 approved by the Democratic par- j ty- Confiscation, piracy, and the destruction of the Union was a legitimate business, but the preservation of the . -- . Union and the punishment or crime, was j considered a gross violation of the consUtulion. Thus we sec the Democratic praty be- j t,ae t,lc apologists lor secession, piracyand the long list of crimes which have j swept over the country since 1800. Deny ; it as they may, they ran never lid them- ; selves of the disgrace of encouraging J piracy, and aiding in the attempt to des- i troy the Union. With such a reccrd as ; this they ask the people to entrust them j with State and National affairs. And ! worse t'tan all, they ask the soldiers to i support their claims, p-ofessing the j warmest friendship for them, when but j a few short months sinre they w ere Liu- ! coin hirelings and robbers. Columbus i Republic. Interesting to Masons. Mrs. Nellis, the widow as well as a I daughter of a Master Mason, is canvass- ' ing for a very important work entitled j "A General History of Free Masonry in ! Europe," which is very highly com- j mended by the best Masonic authorities, as will be seen by the following: ; Gn.!n L.idcb or Inhuni, Sec y's Orrica,l ' Indianapolis. January 2'', 1867. ) Having examined "The General His- I tory of Free Masonry by Emanuel Re-j bold." with some care. I am nrenared to ! , . , -- say that the historical facts embodied therein are wen caicuia'.e.t to nit a va ; cnum 1 nMus. me history that is not to be i . . found in any other work that has come under my notice. Wm. Hackbk, Grand Secretary. I concur in the above. i W. T. Ci-akk. W. M., Canter Lodge, No. 23. J Bio. Austin, from tho Committee on ' Foreign Correspondence, presented the j following report which was concurr- : ed in : Your committee, to whom was referred "A General History of Freemasory in Europe; compiled frou the monu- ! ments erected by, and the documents j I rolnfin rs t li ! e I-V i Ar t ! fmm I. .. .m j - , n Hip nrpIit "timo Tr.nti. ! te!j by Bro. J. F. Brennon' from the j French of Bro. Emanuel Rebold, M. D., i j oi i an, wouia respectiuiiy report mat j ua" Hll"'ai "5l u"?lcI tire and ' concise History, which fills ; ! UVai, g-gl Jilil.l, .lli'U t ikl UllVJIV It. more instructive than anv work on that ; subject which has fallen into our hands. ' 1 M ; The Miami county Republican has the , following account of a 'Dreadful death,' or-cirrin nn thr 13b inst- ! . . . , . .. .! i "Jacoo raimer, woo was the owner ot a .;! on ti rvl.r t-0 mil ir,.,t f ; Mexico, in this connty, went into the : lower part of bis mill amonj the machinery, whilst it was runnms, to drive in a looseneu wenge. lie caned !o a liana ; (H'U v: 1UI an axe which was banded to him.- In a few moments afterwards it was observed by the workmen that something had interfered with tbe machinery, and the speed ofthe mill was theckc. Upon looking for the cause, Mr. Palmer was found a corpse, -cangh in the machinery and terribly mangled " -The deceased was about 50 years of age, ar.d was a worthy citizen, highly esi teemed by all who knew him. j. 1 1 ? - late dispactcbes from Indianapolis, ! say that Mr. Foster, Treasurer of Tip- . ton conuty, Indiana, is a defaulter to the State,' and is unable to ms.ke good the ' In tbp sum of 000. hnt it ia nfr1r.;,Hv- - -w - j 7 " - - waj - a fl asserted that his securities are good.

an immense exix-naanic ot treasure ana i mrnnwr u i tn i re-Kt-at oi i sum au u

ri l l .( i I a ! .-,f i i i i ri uriiuuiiL

-

"A SntSerer," after racing ao oli cow. aroWnd fcia lot balf a niht, Bitnaa bis breech a, iaSicts 9artr a ntcrul d)!un;a of tradd!e on (be reader of Oat Telegram and t'. ISrd, defining the word ' breaeky and "apt." and ccialemmajr the Baemben of CvaWcil as fiturf fxt 'T these boriuea bo deliht to eat 'preen things." We coaimisserate bis su3erint; but would owhWiIv surre t the writer, as well as those likely i.i h influent 1th thsVbrtere ja the

threatenel sk.iifr-o rcierenc shooU be had b them to y:r-Wt!.trif dv&aemnul o lh fori hraach' h-.ci j..v3;J tqflnift the nerves of A Suflerer.' rejrardmjr tbedae pan sba ent to be jnetrd to eosr-ia-asion tbn U then- oarners, a ad m "Sityjbhi antr toward cur Un-Oiiteis. We should Uke ta boat another dtwnrse frrrn this birt-tail" racer, on tho word "trf ftopoostnc that will be oKicrJ apv'icaMe in dr5ninc the exact meanine it city t!(Hrs ha t m rcicmif the taw l-ir -oreicnr ows t. K. The President. n doubt. lewis the diBronee betaeen his eWtn.nrering tur West."anj bis present Kasit-rn t ir-between the rweptkni uf a political tike U:.ti? Islscd in his rctte: and be was recei ved in the C;:iat of Massachusetts with civic and mitlurv honors, ou the 2 1th great enthusiasm l-re-vaii'l. We nveiveil. two weeks since, the tollowioj letter. p-o-rk--l Eiir o yi, jure 4tb. We do .t know the w riter, but he crves some items that con cerns the public if trn-, and, if false, the publication thereof w ill give the friends of tbo deceased an opportunity of deuiU.New Orlbiss, La., May 24, j " Editor oi .my pubfaAtd m AtrAavoa, ImJ . j "Cleo. Wm; T. Benton, from Richmond, Ind., was i Collector of Internal Revenue, at Xew Orleans, fori at at fiftetn months. When he left Richmond, he in comparatirely poor, as all the people in Kieb-j mou.l know. At his death, be left bis wife one hun- ! dre l and fifty Ihiusan l dollars, in cash, and twothu- j sand barrels of Whiskey, branded "tas paid. IV'vr Song will our country continue to pioape' at this rate ? 44 It is etin!iUJ that Gen. Benton receivei but about one-tenth of the profits of bis preat office. Many mouihs beside his own had to be fi led. Jobs P. Statto!." Statistxs ok tiif. Good Temti-vrs of the Uxirtn S-rarts. We take the following facts from the Secretary's, annual report of the Grand Ide of G,ooJ Templars in session at Detroit : The net increase of the Order is reported at l,5i.O lod-es and 12 00 piembeis. It is expected that a Grand Lodjje will be at once organized in Nehru. Six lodges have been organized in New Jersey since the last session. and ground has been bro! en in Texas ard iru PJa. v.. m(i ' ,uore hl. , pphcat.ion fur a charter for a lougc in as made six months ago, but been done. Tho Iodize at Nahvii!e i-i steadily gaining ground. There are live lodges (all uid tary) in New Mexico numbering -J6 members. .VI HUIKI.-On Tuesd-iy ereniuft laat, by Jas. M. Po.-. Ks-v. Mr. Iltchird 3. Wallace to Miss. Mary F.liii Jones. 'n t!,e sam?, by the same, Mr. Jehn W. Garrett to Mis. Itoxanna Brown ; all of this citr. DIl'l). At Eaton. Ohio, on Thursday morning last, 20th in.it. , Mrs Rosetta Tittle, w ife of Mr. HiKVKV J. Titti-k, of this city, agei 43 rears, Smo. and 9 days. The dece.ise ih'a been unwell for sometime, and was at Katun for medical treatment the physician there decided that lle was beynud the reach of nieJicinie ; but did not apprehend that in ao brief a time, death would eusue. She was ill only about one week, arid although away from her home, received every attention from kind friends and relatives in her last morn IJ9. Her remain- were brought tn.thls citron Friday last, and buried in Maple Grove "Cemetery, East of j the city. She leaves a husband and so. ta mourn the earthly separation of wife and mother, and a borne vi.-ua ii, i i- uc-si'i jor, uiiv iiieir iota is iii vo ner ui Heaven: where" the wicked eeaie from troubling- and t.ie weary arc it rest,' and here a never-endinx reunion is vouchsifed. Cincinnati Markets. Cincinnati, June 2S. KI.Ol'l; firm and in good demand from the city trade, at full prices; family $-2 50yJI3 50, .fancy $Hi''lj. The receipts are triflinjr. WHEAT We have no change to notice in the maifcet, the deman I is but moderate; We quote No. 1 Red at $2 7i. - , ' CORN' Very dull anJ prices unsettled ; at 7S& 80c in bulk ; demand dull. Xo. I offered at "(g.'ief no buyers. OAT. The market is rerr dull, and prices are nominal at 63u87c fur Xo. 1. RYE The receipts bave been .light ; No may be quoted at $1 H 1 20, on arrival, and It 2i from store. BARI.EV Dull and nticbangeJ. Trims new Fa; w as off-'red at $1, for future delivery. WHISKV Dull at 3i(i31c:n bcud. ULT.iC MEETS Dull ; 7e for shoulders and Se for aides aad lie for clear sides. MESS PORK- Firm at f 21, but not offered freely at this. BACUX la moderate demand : 8c. for' shoulders 10c for sides, and for clear rib. BI'TTER-Dullat l.2.l7c. EGGS Dull at !5'l8c. CHEESE Declined to 13314c. GOLD Closed at 137i buying. MONEY Mark-t quiet and easy. IIICTI.IIOD MAUKETS.

Corrected ivcaVly by Tnos. Nestor & Co. Wholesale. Retail. Fl-nr, per bbi $1460 $1530 per loO lbs G 60 6 50 Corn, per bushel S5 . HO Wheat, pr bushel 2 59 2.75 Corn Meal, per c t 2 25- 2 S3 Oats, per busbel 63 "a Butter, per lh 15 ' . IS Epgs, per doi 12!i " J5 Bacon, clear sides I t - . "J5 Hams 13 19 I-rd IS Cbees' 13 18

I.KCTIO V .OTIC K D IRE C TORS. There w ill be an Election, at I-ittle Creek Baptist Meeting House, on the 27th day of July, next, atrdav, July 27th. 87.1 -. At 1 o'clock, 1'. M., to elect Directors for the Economy and Farmlan I Gravel Koad. Economy, Jone 27, iSj7. lte FLORENCE 8 jEVTISfi MACI1I.1EI Makes I'cnr Different Stitches. On One and the Same Machine, ASB SIS TBE REVERSABLE FEED. A J NO OTHER MACHINE Capable of Sewiag ia more than one direction. - . . .. tHrermrm . i. vs-Aamca . t a w w Sfirs light and heavy fabrics with eoaai facility. H r, FBmd, ?atW, Brmid, Qt, - , . wail Sew oa Kirfflt, at tie tame ioae. JZ-iTl: docs not reqaire finer thread on lL nader than the upper side. The Florence needs' only ' to be sea to f-rtrre it tie first of Finer Class hTachines. ,:' j ra-Call at the Agency, Noed Maia Street, opposite tbe Hantir.gton House, at Mrs- Bradbury's MUlinerr -;:or-, acd se a M4chioe in operation. J. X. IIIGIILEV, Agent.

JUL-X1.LJ JLt-,JL.ja III I

i S '-. n T A ,; Alum, . Sal So?d, Baking Soda. . ," s v? T-, - . " ' " 4.... AV S.'. - -fc-t Ooppera. ,1 Chloride of Lime. Bird Seed &o. At PLUM M BITS DRUG STORE. Sperm, Linseed. - .' Nut. :'J Fish, Nests root snd ' Coal Oils. Ac, Ac. J. W. PLUMMBn'S, S. VV. Corner Main and Peari Streets. FLAVORING EXTRACTS, FLAVOKrNO OILS, ! i Flavoring Essences, -AT TBI DRUG STORE or J. W. PLUWWERS, SotMuwest Corner Main A Pearl State of Indiana, Wayne County. SS - : v - ........ K : - In the Wayne 1 Circuit Caart Aupuat J DaSIEf. WAONEtt rs. - lonu, a. - Attachment !fJM. n. . r. lOCT . r IlEXRr B. WAOXER. i h k MM K IT Kf

miniL

13670TTeabov oaiued I'laJntiff.by M, Wilson, V

-t WTS-JJUtorner, men i" im w ..... w - w

Wavne Circuit Court bia complaint ajramri aaia aeI fendant in the above entitled cause, together With the ' aftldavit of a comiieteut person that aaid defendant. Henry B. Wsguer is not a resident of the State of Indiana. Said defendant, Henry B. Warner, theiefore, is hereby notified of the filing and pendency of aaid complaint against him, snd t. at, unless bo appear and answer or demur tnereto, at. toe cauinr oi in sail) eanee oa the second day uf the next Term of aaid Court to be begun and held at rhe Court House in Centreville, on the tirt Monday of Auiuit DCXt, aaid complaint and the matters and things therein contained and atledged, will be taken as trie t and the aaiJ cause will be beard atxt determined in bis absence. s Witness W. W. DnSley, Clerk and tbe SEAI.f Seal of said Cuurt, at Centreville, tbis . ' 6th day of Jane 1M7. ' - . WILLIAM W. DUDLEY, Clerk. J one 1 , 1 ) 7. 4 w :pf-t.o. Particular Notice. WIAVINO sold out mr Lumber Ysrd Ml Samuel Henler.aud esDectinaT to be abeent from the City about three months, I bare anthorised the Henley Brothers to receive and receipt for all Rents, Notes and Book Accounts due ire, until ay return, and those knowing themselves indebted are hereby urged to make prompt pay meat to them, and oblige, MORDECA1 I'AfRY. Richmond, oth M-. 20th, 17, . U-3w. New Slouc 8liop. fipnE undersizr.cd.bas commenced tha barisna'ss of H Stone-Cutting, on the S. E. Corner of Market and Whashington-sts., ( John 1'etterson's old stand,) and is prepared to furnish cnetnmers, vritb either Line Sinf or Free-Stone Window dtps; lay ion birae-Stoae Slepa. Sillak. and String Courses, at fair prices for Cash.He will, also, snake to order Tomb Stones sac .Tlounmcnts, of the best of Italiaa orAasericai Marblc,as msy deeired. He solicits patronage, and insores satisfaction. CHARLES HAUERKERN. Richmond, April 25, 1S57. . 8ai. JIAIIDWAUE ! HAIlDWAUE! t litilE -ler;gwd havo recolred their Spring 1 Stock of Bt ILUKftS HARDWARE mj otutr goods in their Liue. . Carriage Trimmiagx, ' --..-! . . Floor Oil Cloth, - U'indow Ciiass, Oil, White Lea4aD4ra.tr, . IxrntBjer stsmI Rnbhse BelitasgT .VI Ui x Cat, Circular, Panel eV Teanon Sawa, Farm 13 ells. -. . Labelia Mail, . Rocherter Cooper Tool, ' 1"T Atei, Ac, fcr.,ae. W (eel tksnkfal fcv past faror. a 3d so'icit a boo. tinuiaer, and promise to try and give satisfaction. T. bkNTON ASO ; No. 43 Mala St , Kicbamn. Ind. V;.Jr p T- 11arnum s : Blastic Strap an i Buckle, FOR - PASTS, VE8T3 and DRAWERS. Saspecders can be dispessed with t This KtUe invenlioa ia jnst not, and as it ta nobsmbog, is meeting with a rapid Ml. It caw be apnlieo in a moment to any garment, by any peraoo, cauaicar it 6t perfectly. - , . Iu ebuticTtr prerente tearrnr atrmn. mmA w. j klea ofl tbe eiotbaa, aod also aUowa perfect freedoV af j Ue body while worktwg or ukiagesereiae. J i for sale by tail wad trad a-cn-atl i 23 cents for strap, circulars, tersoa to agents and tha trade, to tbe BAHKCM E. S. B. CO., ' j KpnU Wanted tJZUj I . - , V .' ' House and Iot For Sale. A5EW.BCn,T COTTAKE noiHE, of six Kooma and a Summer Kitchen, and all na. . camr? Ont-Bandings, and Lot coataimwalnri , I and -a -Quarter acres, at Eaton, Ohio, one sqnarw Korth j foT "W 00 rnJ- Enqnim rf 73 Mth'lM '