Shelby Volunteer, Volume 19, Number 15, Shelbville, Shelby County, 18 December 1862 — Page 2

Republican.' Jjiborty.

( About the worst and insane! ca-ws oflm-

THE SHELBY VOLUNTEER! j

Yt f V- ' I rrionfnrntun ler our Republican lettres dt vl Vf ,v j Jf l- TwT t r.itchr 't arrears to be that of Mr.. Hrissmade

.y. IV

J 1 V X

ftHELllVVILL i : . THURSDAY, DECEMBER IS, 18G2

R.SPtCER fcDITORi

a jooplndy burn in theNorth, but inarricdia

New Orleans. Having come to the North on a visit, she was picked up in Wnshinpton, car

nal' to NVw YotV, anH there imprisoned, without the liberty to cotnmuuicate wih bet relative fur fort- day?, in a jiolaJe station, a-

inon thieves and prostitute? jndsuljejctcd

to insulting prepositions by her captor. Xo offense, was alleged or intimated, and the gnly authority for her capture and detention

the wili of a subordinate spy of tho Ad-

n. migration, who made no rejioit of his acts

to the (loverr.ine-t, nor would permit her to

take any measures 1 1 pain her liberty by an appeal to bis superiors.

Resolution! in Cofcjress. , (Proceedings of the Board of County TUd present Congress has already been un- Commissioners, usually prolific in Resolutions, pA bad and The jWnj ccnvene,i at tnc Court House indigent, the former invariably being re- :n Shelbvville. on Monday. Dec. 1st. 1862.

ijeetea WHJue latter adopted e call spe-1 ire9ent : Ukxry JJcck, Jx's J. Ciftis and

cial attention to a scries of resolutions offer

Battle of Fredericksburgh Repulse of the Federal Army Immense Lois m Killed and Wounded. For Rome time the l'Yderal Army has been concentrating opposite Fredericksburgh, on the Uappahanock 1'iver. Last week the town

was shelled and nearly destroyed. The rebels evacuated the place and fell back to their entrenchments in rear of the town, a strong

pukition by nature, and made nearly impregnable by art On Saturday the Army of the Potomac, under Hums-id, crossed the river on Pontoon bridges-and attacked the rebels, supposed to be about two hundred thousand strong, in their entrenchments. The battle was long, fierce and bhiody, involving an immense lo-s of life on our side, but despite the persistent bratery of our troops, the rebels held their position at the close of the battU on Saturday evening. On Sunday and Mon

day both armies remained in statu quo, but on Monday night Hurnside re-crossed the river and took up the bridges repulsed, defeated. The loss on our side is not definitely known, but Franklin's Division alone, which was pitted against Stonewall Jackson, on the left, is reported as having lost six thousand in killed and wounded, and no doubt other Divisions have suffered in like proportion. The rebels were commanded by Lee, Jackson and Longstreet. No definite idea of their loss cm be obtained. This movement against Fredericksburgh was evidently premature, made at the dictation of the imbecile authorities in Washington. We shall get the facts and particulars of the whole affair by and by.

&r,T" Tl ere are a class of people existing

inccr" community, and probably as n timer

ed by Mr. Vnllindighain, which we print on our first'png' andliicTi'Wcre rejected by a

ttrirt jarly vvte. : . , , ! We? propose giving a few specimens, which will tend to show the temper of the present Congress, or rather the majority. On the 4th, Mr. Clark offered the following, which,' being abolition, was adopted:

"KctohcJ by the Senate and lLmseof Hepreventative. That they cordially approve

the policy of the 1 resident ot the ' united States in setting free slaves in the insurrectionary districts, as indicated in his proclamation, dated September '22, ISO:!, ' and recommend to him the employment of that and every other means known to civilized warfare to terminate the present rebellion, and

. ns?ert the siqn cinay of the President of the

1TEWS ITE1IS.

The contraband ar pouring into Port

John M'Conxf.ll, Commissioners. A License was granted John. M'Carty to

sell intoxicating li piors in a less quantity than one ojnrt at a time. , 1 It was ordered that the wife of John Mc

Laughlin, a Volunteer in the service of the , 1'. S. be allowed the sum of one dollar and fifty cents a week. The wife of Marmadukc Lindsay, a Volunteer, two dollars and fifty cents a week, and the wife of Jacob Yager, a

Volunteer, one dollar and fifty cents cents a week, all of Addison Township, and that Nathan Goodrich, Trustee of the Township

pay the same. ACCOUNTS ALLOWED.

James Harrison, Prosecuting Atty $10,00 i have seized three or four hundred thousand

ousinthis as any other ot equal population, , Unilcfl -. mer u; eutirc terr5tory anj

Party Papers and Party Support. That it is a duty of political parties to maintain their papers especially their local papers is a fact too apparent to admit of argument- By sustaining a paper we do not mean voluntary donations, a universal practice in some locali

ties, but that it is the duty of each member of the party who is able, and there are but few who are not, to take the papor and pay for it. A good patronage invariably insures a good paper, for there is

nothing more inspiring to an editor than a large and prompt paying list of subscribers he is relieved from pecuniary embarrassment, the aftairs of the establishment moTO along smoothly and without annoyance, giving him time and heart to dcrote the necessary care and attention to the preparation of his editorials and the

tetciion of the necessary extracts. A paper devoted to the exclusive interest of any party has no right to exrect much if any support from politic! opponents it is in tho interest of the men whose opinions it cateers to, and has a right to ask of them a liberal patronage, and it is their duty, if their hearts are in the cause, to extend it promptly and cheerfully.

who, through ignorance or bigotry, are con

stantly denouncing those whoso political opinions do not coincide with their own, as "'secessionists." The probability is that not to exceed one out of a dozen could properly define the term, or fell why the- applied the appelation to tins or that person or paper. They are an unfortunate class of beings, more to be pitied than censured laboring under the strange hallucination that the nro is

their equal or superior, and hhould enjoy co. c-jual social and political rights, a morbid

condition of the mental system induced bv

the reading of abolition papers or listening' to the senseless bloviations of abolition minis-; ters, creating the absurd opinion in weak and uneavenly balance! mind-, that love of

the negro is the sine qui von of patriotism. For the information and enlightenment of these deluded beings, we will say that there are no secessionists c?ctcninthc loyal States the Democratic party has combatted the heresy from the moment of its first inception, and insisted that the maintenance of the Union intact was all essential to our advancement and prosperity as a people. Tho abolition party, with which they are identified, ennrended that the South was a mill stone around the neck of the North, retarding its

progress, fostering relics of the dark ases, J and so long as we continued to fellowship j with them were responsible for the sin of

slaveiy therefore, in order to clear our skrits and wash our hands of the great iniquity, we must devide theUnion ami repudiate the Corstitution in their choice vernacular, the former (the Union) was denominated "a league with hell" and the latter, (the Constitution) '"a coveneant with death." This is a fair and unbiascdstatcment of the rcspectative positions of the two nurties linto tllrt l.rpiilin.r

out of the present war. The abolitionists frightened atthe calamity they had beenjoint

ly responsible with their prototypes South

(the fire eaters) in bringing1 upon the country, for a time feigned devotion to the Union and the Constitution, but no sooner had they succeeded in "jetting an army of loyal men, a

in ijor portion Democrats, into the field, than they re-avowed their treasonable and disun ion heresies, and to day declare, through thcir representative men in oiiicial positions, that the old Union shall never be restored that slavery must be wiped out or the indenend. ence cf theSouthern Confederacy recognized.

The Democrats, now as ever, contend that

i. . . . . .. ... . r nwiiTi

uoyai ly nun J reds, and ttie phiiantnropic ChirU9 Xsvrr. .o k.

abolition- committee snt there to lok after .... a. .! i -

their interests complain ot the scant allowance. madcL.theraby the (JovcrninenX.Ctbc. same rations Ac, as are allowed white soldiers) and call npon their addition fritnds

in the North to hurry up .their donation.

They do not want old worn out clothes, shoes, Ac , as they announce thcir store rooms are already overflowing with such truck, and are looked upon with contempt by the negroes, but substantial new clothes, of good material and respectable in appearance. . Jeff. Davis is reported to have been in

Kn( xville,Tcnn., on the 11th, where he mado

a speech, but what he said is not stated.

The Governor of (Icorgia is reported to

TRAM PAIS SHT.LBTV ILLE.

.!!..

... 0.1 P-- 1 V IK

reoide.''

Ordered to be printed. The "supremacy of the President" in the above will sound stfamre to those who have

heretofore supposed that the people of this country owed allegiance and obedience to the Constitution a similar resolution in the House of Lords in England would read precisely similar, except that the Queen would be substituted for. President On the 1-Jth Mr. Pendleton, of Ohio, offered the following, which, on motion of Thad.

Stevens, of Pa , was laid on the table. The resolution speaks lor itself:

"k'csoitif, That the President of the Uni

ted States be requested to inform the House it,

in his judgment, not inconsistent with the

public interests, w hether in any oath of alle-

fiance or paroie, requirea io oe umen ny any

person now or lately held m custody by the

authorities of the United States, there was inserted a ciausc to the effect that he should

not bring suits for the recovery of damages

for such'impnsonmeiit, or that he should not

oppose, by speech or otherwise, the war meas uves of his Administration."

On the same day Mr. Pendleton offered the

following:

"Mr. Pendleton offered a resolution call

ing upon the Secretary of War to turnish the number of volunteers, from each State of the

7"),U00 for three months; also, the number

under the subsequent calls, designating, the

length of service, Ac. The resolution was tabled."

The abolitionists were a little too "cute' to permit an inquiry of this nature to be mad'.) and the facts go before the country, which would show disastrously for Massachusetts and most of the intensely abolition Eastern Mates, who have furnished but a small per cent of their quota under any of the requi.

sitions, the grand total of the army being

swelled to the requisite standard by the over

plus from the Western and conservative

States, while the citizens of these abolition

States remain at home to shout freedom for

the nigger, grow rich on 'Jovernment con

tracts and huge monopolis created by a high

protective tariff, pushed through Congress

under the dictation of the New Eugland oli

garchy

Luke Griffith, Volunteer llounty 120.K) dollars worth of goods in Augusta, for the N. P. Morse, Physician to poor 17,0 of thc po,(li which are t0 bc raili flir J. J. 1-awler, " WOl. . . . , ' . . . .. . P. II. Washburn. Physician to poor 17,.)0 j n Confed. Script. The seizure is said to ...... . - 1 . ..v I ., it r

a.ix)!haye crea'ed considerable of an excitement

Thc fund in aid of the suffering English

A. M Cain. elections...

Elijah J. ( re ory, support of poor 7,00

... nr 41 p k

.lames .1. Lurtis, county omcer.. w,.w ftn(,rnt;vp ;nvow York, already exceeds

John Cannon, county Assylum ' .(U '

rimothy M'Langhlin, fuel K ,S0 wtw. .

Covlc, county Assvlum 22S,SJ A detachment ol Muarts rebel cavalry

II. Comstock, militia L,!tM made a dash into Dumfries, Va., (between

Frederitksburgh and Washington) on the

12th, where they captured n number of Fed'

it n

ti

the Union must be restored, slavery or no slavery. These "secesh"' screechers will therefore observe they arc only conditional

Unionists, and were it not for the chances ot

location, would be as mean traitors as thc

rebes themselves. .

Abolitionism Can Not Bring Peace

Memphis as it is. A friend and subscriber at Williamsburg. Q., sends us the following portion of a pri. vate letter received by him from a member of the Fifth Ohio Volunteer Cavalry, in hospital, at 'Memphis : Ohio .Statesman.

A Policy. The i policy of tho radicals, which has chiefly governed this w ar, has divided the North and united the South, instead of dividing the South aud uniting tho North. If they succeed as well in their pestilent cffoits as they have done up to this time, there is no telling what will turn up; and if. they do net succeed, it will not be for want of trying. They care not for a popular verdict. They didn't dose tho country cnovgh with radicalism; that is the reason of their

want of Miecess, in their estimation. Theiranoe in th( enat0' ,,v expressing a desire I A . I. . .1 . I- (

idea that their need and

the present administration shot, , or words to

that purport He wants to see "the power

of the Government felt by every traitor North and South."' The intimation that there are

traitors ir the North will be peculiarly grati

it-, me Abolition presses arc very

fearful that, through the influence of the Democracy, the seceded Slates mjty lie

induced to return to the Union, and nrc beginning to repeat their old slang phrases of "Lickspittles to the blavc oligarchy," "Union savers," "Trucklers to the slave power," Arc. -Their only motive in prosecuting the war, is not affection or attachment for the Union, but desire to destroy slaveiy. If tlu-y did not suppose that the war would destroy slavery, they would prefer that our armies should bc ordered home, and tho separation of tho slave from thc free States be made tinal and eternal. BasT-The miserable old chatt!r,.To. Wrisht, has lven ventilating his brutality and igno-

" Yours of October 2S was gladly received, and I hope this will find you still crowing over thc results of the recent elections. You say that with a lew more political victories 'we will have freedom of speech, freedom of the press and a .ree country.' Well I I bone so ; but I am of the opinion that peace

will not be made during the present Administration.' While Abolitionism, boiled in fanaticism, thickened with false piety, seasoned with arbitrary power and prescribed bv Wendell Phillips Chase, Wade A Co., with

proclamations to emancipate the slaves and enslave tho whites; while these, I say, are

the order of the dav, 1 look for no honorable

adjustment of our troubles or reconstruction of the Union. Crow on, then, and defcnl

vour rights !

I. E. Green, election

Jeorge C. Thacher, election

Alen Sexton elections Elias Moore "

IT. Wilson "

C. C. Farren, support of poor...

Mrs. ilkinson, militia.

F. W. Focle militia

Samuel Snepp. support of poor-

Arthur Meeie

Eli Jones

Samuel A. Kennedy

1 ho s J. Ireland,

Tho's White, elections....

William F.Car .elections

Joseph A. Kobertson, election Joseph Dcgarmo " .... Win. Braden, Hooks A Stationary. Philip Devering, support of por.. Milton Collin . " " ..

Edward Smith Joseph French Win. P. Dotv

Deloss If. Thompson, militia

Jane Fox, wife of Volunteer . C. Cosby, support of poor. Luinan Jones, support o'"poor. rn t Aft

1 no s vt lute,

James L;e, militia

William llinney, poor William Brown, public buildings.

Beading Monev, support ot poor..

Tho's White,

Hesekiah Smith, militia....

Wm. Law " II. Smith, support of poor Wm. Sheets, books and Stationery

James Manderville, support ef poor.....

Edward ( ooper, elections Geo. Thomas, Geo. Widntr, Geo. Keed. " Keadinir Money, militia..

C. Cosby, " Joseph Cummins, Count for pauper John Morrison, jr., stationery

C. Cosby, support of poor Henry Cook, " " '1 ho's). Ireland, county asylum W. W. Woodyard, support oi poor,...'... Wm. Curtleyoit " ' " W. W. Woodyard, elections

Thomas Busn, botintv , John Brady " Cha's A. Anderson, support of poor..., Lucv Conner " " .... LetParish " " .... Ja's E. Kobertson " " ... Eli Johnson " " ... Henry Huntington " " ... Isaac" Odcll, viewing road A return.... Allen Porter, viewing road Sydney Turner, support of poor lljnry Farley, Volunteer bounty E. G. Cornelius, support of poor Thomas White, militia,

Keubcn Spicer, printing.

3,00 3,00 3.00 3.00

4.70 VJ7

10.00

1),00

..344, 1 1

1.0 i,:o 1,0 3M. L.'.o 0,57 15,00 75 5.C.0

v-.oo '.10,00 2,35 11,00 15.00 o,S0 12.05 1 '2.5(1 15. ly 5,s:, 22 21 Lvi

0,0o

IS. 31

1,50 1,50 1,50

..!.

y,:;o 3,70 0.00 2,10

2,f-0 V.io

4 ,v0

14.10 11,50

5,. 0 20 H. 2o,t 0 14,(0 10,70 0,( 0 3S,it 10,00 15,33 2,00

1,00 l.OO . 20,00 los,so , y,83

a

The Next House of Representatives-

Attempt to Defeat thc Will of the People. The editor of thc Xew York Express, Jas. Brook's, who has just been elected to Congress, says : "Thc only peril to the conservative majority in the next Congres is bogus military members from thc slave States, elected in camps by Abolition regiments, to do Abolition duty in Conirress. . The

. i

3,0o 01,20 lo.OO 3,00

4,(Hl

3,00 3,0(J 3,00

20, 4o 44,25

PJ,50

1,50 13,13

Administration managers

may

have-

S-uire L Vanpelt, county oUicer

Elish Curson, support ot poor Boot A Bennett, public buildings Sy lvcstr Guiding, support of poor Tho's Lympus, election..

Nathan Goodrich, Tho's Fleming, E. M Wilson, .la's Millcson,

Peter llershour, county Assylum

Alexander Cory

1). L. Conrey, coffins Ac. for paupers.. S. M.Johnson, elections H. Warner, support of poor

Henry Buck, county officer 42,00 Anthony Groll, county Assylum 15,00 Wm. F. Currell " " 5,s;, E. L. Floyd, militia 14,70 John M'Connell, county otlicer 18,C0

K. M. Wilson, viewing road A return... 2,00 Win. Elliott, viewing road 1.00 Ja's Winterrowd, viewing Joad 1,00 Catharine Hughlett, support of poor.... lo.oo William Davidson, fuel lor Court House 50,20 Davis, Wriiht A Green, Attorneys 12,50 Wm. C. Judd, road " 1,KJ Samuel M Kay, support of poor 17,tKI Henry Doble, "public buildings 5,50

liCanuer lvenneov, mimoi. it,o.j

eondenined !. It is preposterous ! It is iucredible! If it were, it would onlv prove that the people were stupid and incompetent to appreciate. It is idle to

reason with a paitisan fanatic He knows j lying to the rebels South. There is one cv a- yast deal -can't inform him and toj solation,, the days of this old mercinnry and quwition his infallibility only shows one's j offic seking senndrel in . the Senate are foil)-. If you 'lebr.kts.i fanatic, all tLe ! iew' R,,J thc time waJ comc wh he a"a r ,. " - v ".; thote to whom he sxj basely pander, may. worke lor vqu, in hm estimation.. A pop- . j r , j . . .. , ... crave the protection of the Constitution thev Xilar majority, however, is apt to be mas- , ,,. . , - - . now hold in such supreme contempt, ter at last, even of fanatic, and we trust t mmm , il wiU no t present. j The Indianapolis and Cincinnati t c. c K. H., commenced on Monday last bnilIBS SoR6TIPM-CRor OP THE UNITED STATEB j -Correspondents of the Department of Agri-,ain3 an extension of their road from culture conversant with the progress of sor j Lawrencebnrgh to Cincinnati, via way ghum culture iu the country, aod qualified to ( ot Charlotteville, passing; through the judfce accurately of this season's product, es. j canal tunnel at North Bend. They have timate the rggregate quantity of cane syrup ! heretofore run over the Ohio and Missis at 40,000.000 gallons, and the area cultivated i r r 1 u o- . . ... , . fippi track from Lawrencebnrgh' to Cmnt250,00t In 1S59, by the showing of tho' . ... ... . b , en&us, the product wa, less than 8,000,00! clnnftl1' a,ml reslr'ct,ons :posea.upEallont. If this ettimate should prove them, by that road, as we learn, have wet, it U miQcie-nt to supply more than half : been aot ul)' annoying but detrimental, cf tht syrup and taolas demanded in the ' ne.v cxp' to h the new road compleraited States. S ' 'til in'onc year.

doubtless do have such bogus members of Congress in contemplation and Texas may be represented with some of them, or Florida, or Virginia, perhaps but, if

H le aueiupica uitis in ruu uie oriuei n i lfi (.;,;. fr n i.mers.

people of their sulVi age and their rights, j jaruara guootj 8Upp0rtot poor

wo be unto t lie managers w iio make sucnjK. G. Mayhew,

revolutionary attempts.

J. J. Smvth, ct unty oRicer

Henry Dble, boarding prisoners.... Henry Doble, county othcer John Wise, support of poor

j. A M. Levinson, support ot poor..

" Fremont's Coaches. Fremont coaches, which he purchased last year at Concord, 2Tevr Hampshire, at an expense

of about nine hundred dollars each, were

sold at auct con, on Wednesday last in St. Louis, bringing two hundred and fifty dollars each. These coaches were purchased by Fremont on Government account for the t.pecial accommodation of his statYand attendants. The loss to the government on each of them is about seven hundred and Hfty dollars, counting the expense of transportation from the place of manufacture.

! Cyrenus Bisdiop, elections

A C. Jivbee

James S-uiith, Joseph Cox J. J. Fowler

u

Catharine Meloy, support of the poor.. 14,:i0 Thomas W. Siuith, public building...'.. 31, S5 Micheal Free, physician to pojr 20,00

ti?" The State of Maineis pretty much a family monopoly tWrv are three Fessendens, all brothers, fn Congress from that State- two Morrelln, also brothers. Maine has bnt eight Keprscntatives in Congress, and five of this uuukUer belong to these two faurilic. , r r

W. V. Talhateru,

Micheal Copple, viewing road

Joeph Dungau " " Jascph E. Cole, viewing road A return Samuel A. Kennedy, Inquest Nathan Goodrich, support of poor Wm. M. TarUh " 44 Elijah Curson 4' u J. J. Fowler, militia Abet House, '

John W. 15.illa.rd, public buildings 2.0U

j Nathan. Goodrich, inilitia l04i t

ernl officers and soldiers, aud destroyed several sutlers wagons. The indications are very strong that a general Dankrnpt law will be passed by the

4 IK) 1 present CongrefS.

Members of Congress have been elected

in the first and second Dihtricts in Louisiana Dut a few over 2'Km votes were cast in

either Distrist, and thev under militarv sur veilance. Such elections are a mere farce, and none but an abolition Congress would permit the men so elected to tfik their seat'.

The rebel pirate "Alabama."' appears to be a slippery "cuss." The Federal frigate San Jacinto. cl used her into the port of Martinique, and supposed she had her certain.

but in the morning the bird had flown, and

was no where to be found. Semmes, ber commander, boasts that he has destroyed

twentv-three American vessels.

The official Democratic majority for

members of Congress in Wisconsin, at th

recent election, was 0,34'.'. In ISfitj the State

gave Lincoln 15,000 majority. A slight fal

ling oflf.

There nrc 050,000 worth of cotton at

Nashville, Tenn., awaiting shipment.

A son-indaw of the notorious and infa

mous Jim I.ane, of Kansas, has been arres

ted by (Jen. Vatigben, of Missouri, for making an incursion into that State from Kansas, at the head of a band of jayhawkers. and stealing negroes. lie has been sent tSt. Louis for trial. It is reported that Old Abe has written a letter to Gov. Seymour, of New York, urging him. to drop attention to party interests and concern himself somewhat for the inter

est of thc nation. If this rejort is true, Old Abe will be apt to get one of the worst epis 'olary skinnings a poor dunce ever under

went. It is a remarkable fact that New England has at last reached the loni: sought goal, and now dictates the policy of the Govern m ?nt ahd takes the lions share of thc contracts

Thc Chairman of every Comuiitteo but three, in the Senate, arc from New England, and the Committee in the House are about equally monopolized. For the benefit of l'uritani-

cal, penny grasping and negro-loving New

England, a prohibitory Tarifl'is imposed up

on thc country.

The effect a of thc recent elections are

being felt. Thc Postmaster General has rescinded all orders denying the use of the mails to certain Democratic papers. The N. Y. Journal of Commerce states that a contract has been awarded an extensive clothing house in that city for fifty thousand suits of clothes, for contrabands '"free

Americans of African descent'' as Old Abe styles them. This is the way the money goes.

Thc Washington Pcpnblican charges that thc attempt to capture the worthless

town of llichinond is a scheme of semi-seces

sionists. Well, that is good what next ? Western Virginia has been admitted in

to the Union as a State by Congress the vote

on admission was t-trictly a partizan one,'

every ubolitionists voting for and every Union luan ngain?t. A grosser outrage nor a more palable violation of the rlain provisions of the Constitution was ever perpetrated. Thc President has sent to the Senate thc name of Caleb 1J. Smith, at present Secretary of thc Interior, for cbiiCrmation as Judge of the District Court of thc United States for Indiana. Thc army appropriation bill was reported from the Committee of Ways and Means in the House on Tuesday. It appropriates

$731,000,000 for the year ending Jui.e, lbol Gen. Grant has issued an order, abolishing military law in Kentucky, and restoring the administration of the law tolh civil authorities.

LETTER "A" FAIDL

, with u. m mrnrr irmnvEn. Is lL BEST aod CUEAr?T umlSOJT IACTf i

all Sewing Maehmr. Thi Nacaii acw anjbic.H

th rnnnins of a tuck in Tarletaa to Um Making cf 0CT. -cnat anything from. Tiki r lfrraw Cl ih5oa iu - Oahte r ti"itw TiB'if, and H w raad a lU work toprrfection. It can tell,ho,tiUfUMT,. quilt, and ha caparilf f-r a f rtrat Tnrt f ffWMtat work. Thi inrt ! ily MwS, Ikalraa It 11, ra.tna4 , -and fTrth,ht i wi'.l ' bc'.tar, Uua arylVtU-.

eWn. The L-:wA raaniy Mtg auchia aaj h.l in a preat raHrty 01 caliit catn. Tha FolJ.ct C. wh.rh i van !omi. f o po)otar. U, a tunamataplirar-' orw tliat can M4d int. abux or eaMswhlebvvhrap-" tl, uiet a lwantlful. utntial. and fv tt t work to rrt npin. TIk canri an vt avery !ica!natl 4e- -tif-a plain a th wnnd prrtr in iu oUrt ( rot, pr aa alaboraly finUil a art can mke Uktb.

Send for a eupy f ' im Ckb OatarrraI. .TI. M.MiKU St CX-,-4iS, Krna4ay,V. Tjry IndUnapoli OXct, Xo. 30MJ Felk Hall. uk' lngt.i ftrot-Majl-Iy.. ' J0IIX IIEXDKIUK'S, Jn., ; drug store:

RECF.NT Tt.-nire nrciata for Cah, arn ica bm lvty tn t!ie pnMic, thai My Stock is Complete, Anil will bc sold Low for Cash CONSISTING IS TAUT OF CO A I, OIL, JiCnOOL, BOORSi

PAPCIt OTIOXS UJIPH i.nsr.r.D oil. WI1ITK LI'.AD iiikd si:ro

r.TLorcs TonAno tnrsiins r stw oiiv ... window clam iici: castou oh.

AND A VARIETY OF OTHER iHHi.

Xi-oci-iptionis ITT OP WITH R E A T CARE.

ft

CftiH-m'-r tH ilv-NrU ti.ie Pol lie ?-irr, t dra Weft ll?l 1 t.tti.l. !.

Thc Season Opened!

On jitH ftrr tWn tit.ttil thm

' i)a i 1 v l v K x t u-ess,

a m.T or

HaUby's celcbnited Baltimore Wliuhm ill l ly Uie Cau, lUlf-c.m or aerrH aj to Or.lr. at tlie

CHAMPION

SALOON

r.ASTEK.v nAsr.nr.vr hay iiorsr. Aiu'.'J-'.MH!. J!INMTARTT.rrpyritr.

CHEAP FURfllTURE ! O REY A: U Alt D,: (Suowirf to Jaiuuauu it Cvurcy.)

tc,,". IT 4u 1S.UU

5,5o 4M)

4,U0

A rain tV Crnrni Army -f tV Potnnuw I rvre'la aHnat a.ai: iii.".t nt nt aita us in Uie prices of cur Largs Jc IuCTmi'araiir flock of Furniture & Chairs, Which will a'-ttially M at a rrlnrtin -f fr.tn 10 tn S3 jor trfcU rm ftmrj pri b? troth of wlri-h will il!y aiiarlit tn all wliowill tV t1 triaVtfstll and rxamifw?f..r t:"inwlvp4. Thc itoJi is full iu every d-partmut, consisting ''t

Plain' and Upholstered Work, AH nianufsctnre.1 froBj tha hcatot tcitrrval and j eiperi-

encvd virkuieti. HI IirAlS, T.I!IW, DIMXG AND CENTKE TABLES,

1.U0

5.W 50.03 1,50 11,50

10,00

Thacher, West end liar House, is jnst i receipt of a lare stock of fresh family Groceries, and candies, nuts and toys for the Hollidar, w hich will gladden thc hearts of thq little cuei.

The steamer Late Citj was Lurned hy guerrillas at Concorda in Arkansas, oo Monday. The next day the Federal steamer De Sto turned tie town. The inhabitants, mostly wo&yn and children, protested thy nut only h&d no hand in the LurolB!; of the st.-aner, but doae what they eoald to prevent it

A special to the X. Y. Tribune says the army paymasters are a.lle to procure only aVout 5SOO,0"0 per day fur soldiers wages

froca the Treasurer, while the demand is near

$4,OU0,Ci0O, attrihutab'e to tba want of increated printing facilities Sot the manufaQ- . . e .. ...l.

jiurc til grctn um.c. .

Office, Kitchrn, Cane and floo Bottomed and UjdtMtered CILUIiJS, H-oclciiipf CIiirir, Looking GUtsses &c la enJlest rariety, of the Tarioui ;j le. aaj at all prioes- . TJucloi'tsiIiiiig-. Wehva Fik"tIraBtinal fa, warrant! airaa tizht. i A Wud Cihlia )way oq imxi or Biad touplrr in eery tyl nw iu ae. W Ue rlrnlid HKAKK t,j atl-Kd I'ui.rral. eliarjrins f.r tlw team only. Sale Kuo&aEiMt ri Harrion Pt.,S-nthof ToLUc SiBar SUKLUV VILLK, l.NK. Not. 27, BOOTS & SHOES Men, Women & Childr n A LAIKiE STOCK. AX snrm side tcbuc yQrARr. sntLnTTiixe. MY ac'nrtroer.tfrjreisr rxtrj rr'e ac-I ftyle" TiaTaan.l custom work. aa4 aill l M at the lowest lo.

Mt !ntte.tlmhnrianMaiaeT, isaaon m n. factura lt.a- uaiitW w riSTOM AVOIIK. AND niTPAinLXi . Dvae n qMc m Anrtcttaa.. . ; OiameaM anil will nn yn ih wmh if rr miw