Richmond Palladium (Weekly), Volume 38, Number 17, 23 June 1868 — Page 2

RICHMOND,. INO., JUNE 23d, 1868. ? - FOR PRESIDENT, 5 GEN; U.S. GRANTS FOR! VICE PRESIDENT, - SCUUVLER COLFAX. ? REPUBLICAN STATE TICKET,-- .,: .. ... f!!oI GOVBRNOB. . ,.. Col. CONRAD BAKER, of Vandetfcurg. :' l';ruwerwHAT' cornwom. ' ' Cos. YT1LL CUIWnACK.ofDecatnr. V.': Vi.-; aBVBETABY OS" STATH. ? 3 .'!-. Dr. MAX F. A. HOFFMAN of Cass. ,; 4-. ' " - 0 T ArWTOB O STATE. ; ., r. : ; Major J. D.EVAKS, of Hamilton. TMASUKSR OF BTATK. I.'en. NATHAN"KIMBAL"U ofMartin. 1 . - - " "' CLMK or TBI 8UPSBHB COCBT. Capt. THEODORE W. McCOY,of Clarke. ' ' ; CLBBCOF THB StrTBlM OOCBTJ - I ' f ,- Col.7AMES B. BLACK, of Marion., ATTORVST OBKBBAL. ' . J DELANA E. WILLIAMSON of Putnam. BUmiNTBXDBMT OF PUBLIC INSTRUCTION. , BARNABAS C. IIOBBS, of Wayne. - ' . - FOB OOKGBSSS FOURTH DISCBICT, -. ' . , , . (GEO. W. JULIAN. . s - . . . r. ' jvdob 6th judicial district: - j r .". - JOHN F. KIBBY. . ! PBBCrTIKO ATTOBNBT, 6TH DISTBICT: f ", WILLIAM H. JONES. ' - COU NTY TICKET. J o ; tKKPKISKNTATlVX8: " " " ' li John 'I J UndcTwood. William C; Dowcn. - COrNT OomflSSIOHBBS ' Andrus S. Wiggins. . '. BRBKIPPI Jacob S. Ballenger. r , ArPKAIHBK OF REAL ESTATE; ; Jeremiah W. Swnfford. . CORONER:' " " " ! John Ji' Rouer '"' '-- - ic ', WAYNE TOWNSHIP ASSESSOR: ' William Dnlin. REPUBLICAN ; PLATFORM. r, "1. We congrstulate the country on the assured success of the reconstruction' policy of Congress, as evinced by toe adoption, ia a majority of -the States lately in rebellion, of cotstitutions securing equal eiril and political rfpits hr-all; and we' regard it as the duty of the Government ;to sustain those institutions, and to prevent the people of such States from being remitted o a stale of anarchy. : f -; . "2. The guarantee by Congress oi equal suffrage to all loyal men' in the south was demanded by every consideration of public safety, of gratitude and of justice, and must be maintained; while the question of suffrage In all the loyal States p roper lj belongs to the people of those States. , r "3. W'e denounce all forms of repudiation as ' national crimes, a td the national honor requires the payment of the public indebtedness, in the utmost good faith, to all creditors; at home and abraad", not only according to the Utter, but the spirit of the laws ' under which it was contracted. ' . -'-.- "4. It is due to the labor of the nation that taxation should be equalized and reduced as rapidly as our national fakh will permit. ' . ,v ! 5. The national debt, contracted as it has been frr the preservation of the Union for all time to come should be extended over a fair period for redemption; and it is the duty of Congress to reduce the rate of interest thereon, whenever it can honestly be done. "8. That the best policy to diminish our burden of debt is to so improve our credit that capitalists will ' seek to loan us money -t Iswer rates of interest than we now pay and must continue to pay so long as repudiation partial or total, open or covert, is threatened or suspected. 7. The Ooverimieht of the United States should be administered with the strictest economy, and the corruptions which "have been so shamefully nursed and fostered by. Andrew Johnson, caH loudly iar Radical reform. ' "8. We profoundly deplore the untimely and tragic death of Abraham Lincoln, and regret the accession of Andrew Johnson to the presidency, who has acted , treacherously to the people. who elected him and the cause be' was pledged to support; has usurped high legislative and judicial functions; has refused to execute the laws; has used his high office to induce othi er officers to -igaoro-and tiolate the lawsbaa employed his executive powers to render insecure the property, peace, liberty and life of the citizens baa abused the pardoning powers; has denounced the Vational Legislature as unconstitutional lias persis tently and corruptly resisted r by every -measure in his power, every proper attempt at the reconstruction . . of the States datelr in .rebellion; has .perverted the itnblie patronage into an engine of wholesale corrupX tioa, and has been justly impeached for high crimes and misdemeanors, and properly pronounced guilty thereof bv the voice of thirtv-five Senators. - - "9. The doctrine of Great Britain and other Euro- ' pean Powers, that because a man is once a subject he , is always so, must be resisted at every hazard by the Lnited States, as a relic of the feudal time, not an- ' 4horized by the law of Nations, and at 'war with our national honor ana independence, naturalised citizens being entitled to be protected in all their' rights 'of -eitizenshio. as tboaah thev were natural bom, and no citizen of the United States, natural or naturalized, "mast be liable to arrest and imprisonment by any foreign power for acts done or words spoken in this country; and if so arrested and imprisoned, it is the duty ot the GoverBeaenilo interfere in his behalf. 10. ui all wno were iaitniui in me inais oi ine late war, thsrowere none entitled to more especial -honor than the brave soldiers and seamen wnoenaur-i.. ed the hardships of campaign and cruise, and imper-;-iled their lives in the service of the country. The bounties and pensions 'provided by 'law for those brave defenders of the nation are obligations never to be forgotten. The widows and orphans ot the gallant dead are the wards of the people, a sacred legacy , lteaueathed to the nation's protecting care "1 1. Foreign immigration, which in the past has ( added so much to the wealth and development of the resources and increase of power to this nation, the asylum of the oppressed of alt nations, s boo id be to "12. This eonven 'all the oppressed people wbo are struggling for their IIUU UOViatCS l9 OJ ill YWllJ w iu a rights." , ... . . ... , - . "ReoltJ, That we highly commend the spirit ot magnanimity and forgiveness, with which men who have aerved tha rebellion, but now frankly and bon--estlv eo-o Derate with us in restoring the peace of the r country, and reconstructing the Southern State governments upon the basis of Impartial justice and equal rights, ace received paoK lato ine communion oi me loyal people, and we favor the removal of the disqnal- - -- i : it. mk. els in ihe same measure asthe spirit of loyalty will " direct, as may be' consistent with the safety o - Inv&l mrnilt." I Criea of Good I eood TV ' . ' "Jifiulted, That we recognize the great principles laid down ia tha immortal Declaration of Independ- .. ence as the tone foundation of democratic, governt: and we hall with e-ladness every effort toward n! making these principles a living reality oa every inch of American soil." r ' To the Bepsiblioans of Wyo County. The time for active work and labor in the Presidential canvass is upon us. Our candidates are in the field. We Jiave lust cause to be proud of thero, and our duty is plain Our I enemies nsver aleen udod their oars, and it be hooves ns to be op and doing. The democracy Hill MM TV IUWII -" , anA we mast be ready to -meet them. And for the purpos Of effecting a more thorough or ganization of our party,1 I respectfully call a meeting of the Benublican County Central Comf ... r a - rait tee, and as many others of the party as feel , Klike attending, on T , "7 MONDAY, the eth day of Joly,' 1&68, ((.;. . - n : n t . ft At the Court Boose in Centreville, at half past 1'. . ,' .'--i -.- -i r. -t 10 o'clock. A.M. to consult together for ihe . good of the party. I do earn estly orge a fufj . attenaaoce. The time is short and there is a great amount of work to be done. " Let every

Township be folly, represented. . tl. B. PATNE, Ch Co, Cen. Com.

CHIlflMWASSTNCOIWmESfK

i "Thb Cincinnati Gazette" s Washington correspaden Agate, thu winds tip a graphi pen picture of the visit of the Chinese JBmbassy to the House of RepresetatiTes gn the 9tbinst L ..:L, When at last the Speaker's welcome gavel rapped the House into order again,, and the members of the Embassy were seated in the inner row of seats between the members arid the speaker, there was an opportunity,- which the -galleries-era-braced to the utmostof seeing their appearance and dress. 'All' woref the inserted, washbasin hats, surmounted at apex of the cone with "a button, which marks the' rank of the wearer,1 and' covered with'a flowing tassle'of silk.' The two high mandarins had in addition an ornament of pea cock feathers, floating with' the silk tassle over the back of the haC ; Their shoulders were covered with a" garment somewhat : liko 1 the loose ! sacques now worn ' by ladies! ; Beneath these were the skirts which reached below the knees, underneath these were , silk trowsers, tucked inside of most extraordinary boots shapely enough but made to augment the hight of the wearer by soles over an inch in thickness, vehich were of a pure soft white. One of the madarins wore huge roundeyed spectacles, framed in tortoise shell,' tha gave to his face an expression of almost owl-like wisdom! All carried fans," on " which were' inscribed mottoes from Confucius or parting injunctions from the friends who had presented them as souvenirs. They wore Ihcir hats throughout the ceremonies. Beneath them could be seen heads shaven all around the forehead, till they looked preternaturally and 'painfully clean; and down ' their 'backs hung long plaited queues of" glossy 'black hair, reaching far below the waist! " ' ' ' The two high mandarins wear black mustaches: 'the rest" have perfectly smooth faces, which add to their femi ' nine'appearance." All look Intelligent; and the mandarins, " in particular, have heads that will compare in' volume of brain with " almost ' any,' of our public men. , One of them'' bears a laarfeed re semblance, in the lower part of the face, to Gen. Butler. They' are represented by Mr. Burlingame to be statesmen of experience, of high ability, and of scholarship that would entitle them to take rank with such men as Edward EvareitJ That they are exceedingly ' oh&ervaiit and intelligent is evident enough to' all. Two of "the" Chinese students seak English quite well, and almost without perceptible foreign accent, and write it almost as rapidly as their own tea chests calbalistics. They are both young one of them only twenty two and are just out of the imperial -college at Pekin. They' were greatly interested in the short hand writing of the Globe reporters, which they watched, curiously, while they remained in'the hall after business was resumed.' One ef fhem gave some samples of their own short-hand writing, which appeared to be based on the same general principles." ' ' - ' . ' ' ' ' ' 1 1. EXTRA ALLOWANCE. 9 The New York Tribune, of the lBih inst.j says : '." '"i .,"The House of Repreeentatives yester day, by a vote of 71 Teas to 58 Nays, voted $1,500,000 put of the People's Treasury into the pockets of jcertain 'employes in the Civil Service of the Government" that is, the Clerks, Mes sengers, Doorkeepers, fcc, in the several departments at Washington, and the Printers employed in the National Printery. If the Senate should concur we o-reatlv fear it will the Military " " .officers will insist on being ser-vee as wU na t.hpir Pivil rnmnepra! and Hi at will take Two or Three Millions moreand this -when our .National Debt ex ceeds Twenty-five Hundred Millions, drawing a, greater , aggregate of annual interest than any other, Debt that does ? .j r w seems to have run behindhand no less than Ten Millions during the last month,, and when our specie paying six per cent. bonds are selling some twenty per cent., below par,,. Under such -circumstances, Congress is bored . and buttonholed into fzivins these empolyes twenty rer,cent.' . .. . Rt;nuiate(1 nav. nd the employese, instead of earning their pay at their desks and stands, crowd. the galleries of the House, and .cheer the swindle vociferously.! , . .. , .. ,t .. , W do not. at thia moment, know the . - name of a single member who voted for or against this . monstrous wrong ; bat we cannot withhold, the .avowal of, our conviction that , those who thus voted away, the public money.proved unfaith ful to a grave trust, and ought not to be trusted again. .They must -cherish ideas of right and duty which . would better befit a private station.. , Every one must realize that the thirst for office, now. so general, has become a fruitful source of corruption, and abuse. Our young men (our youngwomen, too, i- I ' S) s . 1 f r . . . 3 . a i aiasii iorsase me ways oi prooucuve ; ... t ; , i Our right arm aches at the . recollection of the infinity f letters we have been fairly browbeaten into writing for these aspirants: Who blames them? Certainly, not we., You, members of Congress and . other , place-givers, are responsible to God and Man for their perversion You plunder productive Labor -to swell the prizes'of office seeking, and thus fill

f thean(TvithfborerB'and beggarsfor

clerkship, &c"f who, buffor jou, wonld have. been honest toilers fori the bread earned by Productive; Industry ! atay Heaven openyour eyes to 1ne enormity .tDewronyoijthug penetrate! and may the People cause you to "see stajra'' at the next Election !" We are glad to see that, on Mr. Bingham's motion thiajswindte was reconsidered and laid on the table Ion ithof J 5th-! yeas 68vnmys 64 ; thns, we hope, disposing of the matter forever. It will- sot do for us Republicans to have a plank in our platform declaring for. 'an econtMsical administration,' and, at tlie ansae time have our members of Congress shoving their arms into the Treasury ap to their shoulders and pulling,, out , the people's money, for , extra-allow mces.. There's salvation in sober-second t&c'-t, and we rejoice . that . our Republican members of Congress have taken it- '. . President L'Hommedieu and McLaren, of the C. II. & D. Railroad, addressed the citizens of Saginaw, last F riday concerning the Jackson & Saginaw Railroad extension through Michigan., to Fort Wayne, to connect at thatpoi nt with the road projected to Cincinnati. This is an- Important movement. -A. road1 to open that country to Cincinnati has been quite too long delayed. Thurlow Weed sends Chief Justice Chase into the Presidential ring r "Mr. Chase never had any ? personal popularitjv He lacks magnetism. - Statuesque in Lis poses,' he .is : as cold as marble. liace hiui on a Democratic pKatform, made after the average sentimen t of that party, and, he would be the baldest hypocrite and time-server that evf-r illustrated the annals of , any age or cauntrj', or that ever met deserved defeat. Placed on what used to be his own plat form, his followers would. diminish to Less than a corporal's. , guard. In either , event his future Las 'failure'., written, alt over it." Senator Morton and family will leave Washington for ' this city during this week.' The ' jiealth of the "Senator has been! failing for some wee.ks,' and his physician demands' that he shall leave the capatol and seek rest and recreation, he walks better than when , he left here last fall, but his right 'eye is singularly aiTectcd, and a part of the time he has what is termed 'double visioi i.' After a brief 'visit to his'friends here he will go to St." CatherinegV'Canada, for treatment, and wiH'remam there during; the warm weather find. Jour. June. 212. a: j. vs. a. j. Although the President was a :quitted on the impeachment charg es, th 2 nation still holds him to have been gui lty, and he will : be j udged . in history , i n accor dance with a rule he has Mmaelf prescribed.. In a speech in the Senate of thei United, States, January 31st, 1862, on the expulsion .of Jesse I . Bright, a gentleman with whom he is now in full sympathy, he said : ' ' s.- -: " Is there a Senator her5 who wonld have voted to allow. Aaron Burr to take a seat in the Senate after his acquittal by a court and'jury,?! No, thjre .is not a Senator who, would, have do ne it. Aaron Burr .w9 tried in . court, and he wa9 found not guilty,;., lie was tturned loose; but was the public judgment of this na tion less satisfied of his guilt than if he had not been acquitted ? " " "What is the nation's t judgment, settled :ind : fixed ? That! Aaron Burr was guilty of treason notwithstanding he was acquitted by a court and jury. " The case of John Smith lias air eady been stated to the Senate. A true bill has been found against him for his connection with Burr's treason, but, upon a technicality, the proof not being m ade out according to the .Constitution, s m(j Burr having been tried Erst and acqi titted, the bill against Smith was quasln id, as he was only an accomplice. ' But John Smith was a Senator, and tie came here to this body. 7 He came aga in to take i! his" eat' in ! the Senate of the 7nited " States," and what1 d id the Senate do?-1 They took up m ns cause and investigated it - ? Mr. Adai ns made a report able, full,,-complete , I -may i say he corae nigh exhausting t he whole -subject, ; .The committee report ed a resolution for his expulsion, and h dw. did the vote stand?? It is. true that S Iri Smith was not expelled for the want of some-little formality, in, this body, 1 ;he l . .t i:, m t in It only fl act :ed one vote to put him out by a two thii'ds majorify, according to the requireme nts of the Constitution! What was the judgment of the , nation ? It was ' t hat John Smith .was an accomplice of Burr,' and the benate conuemned and aim ost expelled him, not narrowing itselfdo wn to those rules ana technicalities tua; are resorted to in courts and by, which criminals escape See Speeches of And rew Johnson,. President U. S. Boston : Xittle, Brown, & Co. 1866. Pages 413-17". -'Just as the leaders of the Democratic party - give evidence r of . dropping-, Mr, Chase,, the President espouses his cs.ase He has .been for Hancock, long enough j to bury! him beyond,, the hope ofpplitical resurrection, and ; aumcient time re mains between now and the meeting of the New York Convention to kill off ! t Chase and at' least one other of the aow prominent candidates. Chase's fate is settled Who next ? -find. Jour. 4; I -

TJie SoHtary Hemmtmt Backed hy ki Whol i , State. The unanmious re-election of Goveriior Sprague the other day, wa an event peculiar and unique in the modern -history of the United States Senate. Senators "consider themselves fortunate if they se cure the unanimous support of their own ; party! Gov. Sprague is the solitary representative on the floor of the Senate of the entire delegation of the State, in legislature assembled. ? t? tT ?"!N'o5maiihaT)een more slandered "or misunderstood. ' Because he was rich and young, men took it for granted' that ; he had nothing but. wealth and youth to -recommend him. Yet, in point of fact, he can well afford to compare ' records with any of his associates. 1 Elected by Democratic aid to the Governorship of : Bhode Island, he f was one! of the foremost in proffering aid to the Government to put down r the threatened rebellion "'

and he marched at the head of his men into battle. Surrounded by the West Point and Conservative influence, he was among the first to demand the removal of McClellan. Coming from a Conserv ative State and with a Conservative con stituency. He was one of the first to commit himself to the policy of eman cipation. Long f: before other loyal State Governors had reached the same point at a time, indeed, when eye n John A. Andrew said the arming of ne groes was too Radical a policy for him Gov. bprague was raising and urging upon the acceptance of the Governments neero troops. - At a time when Abraham Lincoln was doubting the policy of suf. fering negroes to vote and urging a re construction bv white, votes wherever one-tenth' of them were found loyah Gov. Sprague was one of the srrall mi nority, that in the Senate insisted that no reconstruction ; could be permanent or beneficial that did not proceed upon the basis of the whole population, black and white. , . ( , This is not exactly the sort of, record one would look for in the . case of young millionaire ; it, is not the sort of record that generally secures the unan. imous approval of both, par ties.-; And especially it is not the sort of record to warrant any doubts as to the sagacity of a man who could see far enough, ahead to espouse these causes at the hour of their greatest unpopularity ; or any doubts as to the political sincerity of the man who chose, again and again, to risk his position on their success. (It has been so common to speak of the, elections in Rhode Island as "con trolled by Sprague's money," that it may be well enough now to add what al the active politicians in the State knowt that no money has been , spent there for years, save in the legitimate ' campaign expensesj printing of tickets, distribu- . tion of documents, etc.; . and that there was less expended, even in this way, at the late canvass which secured Gov, Sprague's re-election to the Senate, than at any previous one since the outbreak of the war., , . . . Gen. Grant and the Old Soldier ' During the y ear 1865 an "old soldier, named Lemuel Owens, was" discharged from the Arsenal in this city, owing to some very abrupt reply tie gave to a selfj appointed committee'who were sounding him upon his politics. As Owens had served twenty-six years in the regular army, and had wound up his term of service on the Peninsula, under McClellan, he would allow no man to question his" right to vote, and boasted, too, that 'he had served in the Fourth Infantry,1 under Grant, when the renowned chieftain was but a Lieutenant. lie told the Committee he would go and sec General Grant himself about the "matter. They jokingly replied : "iw so, old fellow ; he'll ; make it all right." General Grant was temporarily living at Twentieth and Chestnut streets, in this 'city and the vetran soldier trudged up with his story to the General's house. He stepped up, rang the bell, and went into the entry-hall. ' When the servant appeared, and saw an ' old, sun-burned, poorly dressed man;' he very promptly asked: "What do you want ?' 1 " I want to see General Grant, ' was the calm reply. ''r ?Vl '! :' 1 - '. xhe General's engaged ' and cannot be seen. : Have yon got a card ?" r ' Just at this" rnonient a little girl appeared, and old Owens said to her "Sis, 'fun up stairs and tell our pop i an old Fourth Infantry man'wants to see him." ! A' message soon came down for tho old soldier to come inj when he was ushered into the' presence of General Grant."' He shook him" by" the hand, and 9aid "General, don't you know me?" The General replied that he had seen so many people of late that it was hard to remember them all. Owens told him that he had ; served under him and that he had been discharged lfrom' his work, and that he had lost his eldest son from disease in the war, and his family had nothing to depend upon but his labor. 'Grant patiently listened to the old soldier's story, and ' picking up his1 pen, wrote a few limes to the effect that Owens' should have work as long as he wanted it. ' I 'The old man was not long In Teaching his former field of labor; armed with the formidable brderi and when he present-d ' ed it, With the signature Of the Comman-'def-in-Chief attatched.lt created much surprise, and the vetran soldier was graciously acknowledged as entitled, thenceforth, -to a respectable consideration Phil, paper.' ('""" So' "o'i -r-'

mt ai w ..t . a I aoribers sends us the following notice, which was poated in his neighborhood not long since : 'Mr. JTames Mf Cune has taken up a stray cow White; and black with a round hole in her rite ear and ' a loose piese of skin hanging to her neck one mil east of Burton.' " :: i f l f ! 1 wa i. K-j h On the 21st inst.,at the residence of the bride's father, bv- Ker, .Winchester, Mr. Samuel Stule, of Rosa-Clare, 111. to Miss Marion l. Uiller.'ofAbing ton,' Wayne Co., Ind. At the residence of the bride's father, by Rev. J .Weeks, Mr.Ittiry HigWey toMiasSasan Bulla ia pntufn monOjinu At the residence of Dr. 'O. P. Baer, June 14th' by Rev. G. Nelson SmithJ of Urbana, O., Mr. Albert H. Shedd, oTWaltbam, MassV to Clara E. Baer, of this city. " . - r - . Ir ; : . .-t --Jj On Thnrsdsy evening last, by James M. Poe, Esq. Mr. Henry Thomas and Miss Elizabeth Brazelton, (colored); all of thia city. n ,.-. " DIED. On the 16th inst , of Spinal Fever, John nie Al., son of Thornton P. and Clara, W. Cain, aged 1 year and 8 months. f .,, .,. , , . , State of Indiana ,; Wayne County, 88.' Thomas Benton and T Ueorre W. Benton, , V vs.. ... , 'Jesse Thompson. Iln the Wayne Circuit Court Anpust Term A.D. 1868. Attachment No. 2138. BE IT KNOWN, That, on the 28 day of May 1868, the above named Plaintiff, by James Perry, Attorney, filed in the office of the Clerk of the Wayne Circuit Court their complaint against said defendant in the above entitled cause, together with the affidavit of a competent person that said defendant Jesse Thompson, is not a resident of the State of Indiana. Said Defendant Jesse Thomson, therefore, Is hereby notified of the filinr and pendency of said complaint against him, and that unless he appear and answer or demur thereto, at the calling of said cause, on the Second day of the next Term of said Court, to be begun and held at the Court House in Centreville, on the First Monday of August next, said complaint and the matters and things therein contained and alleged, will be taken as true, and the said cause will be heard and determined in his absence. ( .l Witness, The Clerk ; and the Seal of said -JsEALV Court, at Centreville, this 22d day of June, .1 ) 1868. - WM. W. DUDLEY, Clerk. James Perry, Att'r of pl'ffV - " 17-3w . .... . .. , : pft5 ICE COLD SODA WATER, -IfROMATTHEWS PORCELAIN" APPARATUS, AT 1 29 M A IN ST RE E T , SIGN OP THE GOLDEN MORTAR. ir-.izo'j LL THE POPULAR PROPRIETARY MEDu ICISES OF THE DAY - , AT PLUMMER' & HARROLD'S 129 ovxnsr street, SIGN OF THE GOLDEN MORTAR. i ' FINE ASSORTMENT OF POCKET BOOKS L AND MONEY WALLETS . ,; AT PLTJMMER & HARROLD'S : Jtij. In c iyJ' 'S ;,ij ; O : , V- .' .-.': '' K. ; ; o::? SIGN OF THE 4 GOLDEN MO RT A R. HE NEW PERFUME "FLA DeMAYO AT PLUMMER & HARROLD'S DRUG STORE, 129 MAIN STREET, SIGN OF THE, GOLDEN MORTAR. '113 I (. .. FOR 1 FAMILY GROCERIES A O GO TO, 0HABLES W. BURKHARDT'S - i r.5--: i'j.iX OPPOSITJB .f;,.,.-. ; i, Engine House No. 3 on North Pearl Street, WHERE he keeps constantly on band all kinds of ' ':....,.;:!. "HiV.. ;. Family Groceries, Provisions, Wrapping Paper and Paper Bags at Wholesale and retail;' Ciffars and Tobaccos of all kinds, of the best qualities, Wooden Ware, Confectioneries and Notions, all of which he will sell cheap for cash. Just received a new stock of .fj i:J ,-c. ,ri,f:c., -, ,.', -.' i ;FIRE WORKS- f For the Fourth of July use. ; Cash paid for Rags and all kinds of Country produce. With thanks for past farors we solicit a eontinnence ! and increase of custom. i CHARLES W. BURKHARDT. June 16, 1868J 16-tf. J BOOK AGENTS WANTED, FOR HOWLAND'S LIFE OF OENERAlt GRANT, AS A SOLDIER AND A STATESMAN.- An accurate History of bis Military and Civil Career., One large octavo Vol. of 650 pages, finely illustrated. Agents will ind this the Book to . sell at the present time. The largest commission given. We employ no General Agents, nd offer extra inducements to canvassers. Agents will see the advantage of dealing directly with the publishers. For circulars and terms, addreaa: J. B. BURR A CO., Publishers, - , ' " , ' " " Hartford, Connecticut. ApraiS.lsM; 4 ,1 Mf.-8,M P. A Co, $1.40.

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ha w . a, am . . 1 Will be issued weekly.0 ' 46 by 33 r -ri:-, . , r a;.: Vr i .c'.U i'il.fl V.-lfi'

More Readinfj . Matter than Any f Papex Published in s.q : Li-Hi -ij-.Ku-i . i'-'XTnitod aStatsIY'' 0?": scv':J 'i1itiC

i 1i

16 PAGES OF READIEG MATTER.

r. This . . ;..': , T, i ij vs.'-; . i . . , . ... i-U'tr t- i -flna-.A to .

TTIie (Cbeapest IPaper in tbje Woirfld;

V 1 f : ' ,!!:." ; ORIG v. DECIMAL 1 S YSTEM -'t .il:

Giving to erery TETTf H S4.00 Sabscriber, who sensls the mosiev 4ireet f thi office THREE Dollars in 8ILTER, to ererr HVNDBETK M.OO Subscriber FIFTEEH Dollars in GOLD: and to every THOUSANDTH 14.00 Subscriber ONE HUNDRED

Dollars ia GOLD.

.. We are induced to do this from the fact that hundreda of our Subscribers live where a Club would be out of the question., .M j vjL s i v I a-W -i n jgQr No Subscriber who sends less than ; 84.09, or . fails to send that sum iirkct to our Office (by Postal Order, by Draft, by Check, orj by Express), will be entitled to the benefits of xhe Decimal System, fi p If t,t" rr. ?. l,,,f, t,.:.!'T( This is the only Paper in the Uuited, States having the Decimal System of Premiums.- ,;.--.. -i r ; Vj n . V:-' V V ' $3 00 in Silver to every TENTH Subscriber, U, S. standard weight. f, t 15 OO in Gold to every HUNDREDTH Subscriber, ; ' !!,, i i ; 100 00 in Gold to every THOUSANDTH Subscriber, , ' " ! ' ' - - - All letters will be opened in the order in which they come, and the Premiums f will be awarded in accordance therewith. ..L,-t , . , , . J ? i Premiums sent by Express at our risk. " Write your ! name; town, county, ,and State in.full., , - - ,e : '0v4 'A il J'- ' - j .All Checks and Bank. Drafts payable to the order of y 1 ' ll-ru

r- t . - Express packages to this- Office, 432 , Address letters .

J-0.1 ea , ctio-fT lo H'r. New 7ork City. ,To Curotmkx. Any Clergyman sending 89 00 will receive ,three copies of thr Paper for one year.1 - Any Clergy man, sending 81200 will receive, four :copies for one year.v :t v - . nuiH-o na.. sc it ',.- f ::..-

... . , .. , L TERMS Single Copies, ; IlOlJiVlU'tk'j iliJ i'isT" .-r( a.Tra -

r.r;4i4FiveCopie8.,.tJ. ,,.,,.$18 00 . ' 1 f ;-.-n, ?Ten Copies.,.,,. !.....;... 35 00 r , , T, . . . , . -, Fifteeii Copies.:: .. .t .V..'. 47-60 (yith extra copy" tS getter up of dnb. ! ' -Twenty Copies::;.iV!t 60.00 (with eJcttsK copy to getter up of club.) 'i " Jva -:-! -j c-li Jncf ; o ai ,vjir ilioY wsK al -jtliule.&q i .l ifal efw aooltefl ct'J ?t'.ijai sr eh f vAtel lo e!:iJ e!,l r-!"? ri jtt--:ao-f: -.!. jf-w vi..0--T .sciAddress . McMUBDT, - 0 . -r - -i nan? v i r:w

tt i-va V9i J-'-s ! .l.' -

'38 TO inj'JO ft -2d? rfJlJ- ; fttoob wsl ,Ji-Sj if'J :tf f LI k ,'? J 9-No-ffsVljaae fotW to Advertising limited to two faftt. .RaHt -fl 00 jftrlmt.

For sale by all News Otslertv atuan ?tr'u 6 ii'j.u"! eiii 1 si

I rvr-

' f'K?tli.MifiiJt .ttmhliuH H name or a ; 1 Lxx DAY OJf JUNE. 1868. " f-'vU !, T'i.'ii. :t - trr-it tcii:i ;.'() ,; 4,-.t f 1:t : . :.- t Foreign Column of fi ! -u :'';n it,. ' w-fvj a or Abroad. V 1 -i j -.;J .-:.! ,-i;Oi' -T0 7 Hi iJ.l;' V.J ."U'O ' 191 ti na sa tfti -j-'.iA , i i-,. T-fcra , v . .' --Oil .a .trail inches will be the size, thus giving t . ' ' " makes it T. H :i ' irf r Sift "i r -r. ! I T & lizxR i iv 0.1 ar. 3 x.wi s.t . ,ion'w:.5 a .Bull .11 tofiiA la all p it roie lfr - ff tnOiOA hac .BXJf Bl'S'? .' - ;. ' : INAL' v'3i,Sfi '" 1 rttCFilv-T,' vbnA i QF ,s PREMIUMS, f u ; ? ro JO 'Ji.u . . - .1. Broome Street, Ner rXork City.. , , j ittliz-i uU t.t IiOJoafic;

X3. MeMUROT, "P.J O:' Box 5903;

Tea Cents. Per Year, SAOO. , - 'ifra'i''U lelUl; Ju :;i.!) ji;v ."t r- - ui .. ' IT. J. iJU v. sn Avamviaj s. . , . fit". . .- r . . ? . . . i - -sbi? dId Vt---.,i iwcn'ifi a t'c-rtf