Terre-Haute Weekly Express, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 14 August 1872 — Page 2
EPRE
«u
VPllSHAOTE
IND.
rSmlag* in. 14» WW-
fileat republic of THLEBS has nx hundred Communists
N«W Caledonia.
AlX the "flash" newspapers and obperiodicals are opponents of GRANT sod supporters of GKEELEY. 1 rallying cry, "LIBERALS and Bttaocrats1" reminds one of BABXUM'3 ad£r«i to "General Tox THUMB and the )N|at of mankind."
TffE net Republican gain in thirteen counties of Kentucky is 1,300. So far as
1
heard from every county which was contented shows Democratic loss. Where is the Greeley ground-swell?.
THe chaotic opposition elements in Ixmaiana have failed in the effort to fuse. tlra «nd water could mingle more easily than the Pinchbecker's th': Democrats ind the Liberals. There were not enough offices to go around. S aST
WHILE Polliwdg orators are blowing about fancilul civil service reform, the administration has commenced real civil •ervice reform by the adoption of a rule that all appointments in the New York ^raatom hpase shall be made after corn's. MtHiVf examination.
IfiilC. MOBEAU, Democratic candidate log CMmM in the Eighth Congressional Iljitrict two years ago, has published an to the Democracy of the State of who are opposed to GREELEY for President to organize and prepare to delegates to the straight DemocratIflKatioiial Convention which meets at Loniatille next'month.
^AVVHOW CHAHBEBLAIK, owner of the Itunbns Labor Reform Convention, jiya that that body need noT assemble in bedieaoe to the call of AUSTIN M. CfHiThe latter gentleman is dis~tnm* with fears that things will be so
BHipnlited that his distinguished serin behalf of the toilers may not j0tWpltHeven in recommendation sufficient ppn^Mpare a route agency under the next Iwteblatration.
f,
*?-», Tt:
Jw'SPMS Whine for local self-govenment is rebel battle-cry. It is "state soverf" newly dressed. It is an appeal the establishment of the principle trhieh brought on the war. Of course the reSeTifareopposed to centralization. If then had been no strong central power at
Washington, they would be reaping the benefits this day of the success of the Southern Confederacy—they would be cracking their whips over the backB of flye million slaves. gj isWi 'ilAi
f'
?HBKE is much alarm in Austria at discovery of the existence of a society in Russia for the Russification of all
1
Slavonic countries, and the formation of a Slavonic Empire with Russia at its head Among its members, and forming part of the -Executive Committee, the society numbers several of the Imperial family, '•lid other persons in high stations. Its headquarters are at St. Petersburg, Rus aia, but it hab branches in Odessa, Moscow and Warsaw
P^'LAR year the- Republican candidate ipr Delegate in Congress from Montana was elected in consequence of a Democratic bolt, by a majority of 413. In 1009 the Democrats carricd the territory a majority of 860 votes. This year 1^"®' MAOIMTIS, Democrat, is probably elected .-•bjr a small majority. Montana is filled \swith PAP PRICE'S disbanded soldiers and
Kthey vote as they shot. Montana, how "»*ver furnishes the firBt ray of hope for HORACE. That gentleman cries piteous iy from the granite hills oi New Ilampfhire, "I am sick send for MAGINNIS
r^TKXiBOKAPHic advices published else irhera. give news of an attempted revolution in Peru, and of the assassination of Prtddcnt BALTA. The assassin was H1U, and the revolution crushed. PlH has been torn by internal dissen£trioe«, and impoverished by foreign wars, Jj^moat constantly since the acknowledgement of its independence in 1821. A treaty Of peace was made, however, in
Waslwgton with the Spanish authorities lilt year and the country seemed to be prospering under the administration of ^IOSE BALTA, who was elected in 1868, and the story of whoso... assassination is briefly told elsewhere.
the
It a
THE astronomers differ widely about the cocpet which will appear during this 'month. Some think that it may collide with the earth, making a first-rate sensation tor the daily newspapers. Others an of the opinion that there is no danger whatever of this calamity. Among the most comforting, who hold the latter faith, is DONATI, an eminent Italian as'"^tronemor. He says that the comet will, at no time, approach nearer to the earth than owe hundred and ten millions of geographical miles. If his calculations canjffn^epended on, it would be well for
Oo go ahead preparing to sow a This, little globe may last I yet.
A WASHINGTON
special nays that the
Ptebd»»rchives now in the possession of tfct government are revealing the true record of several prominent Northern
Democrats, such as Buckftlew, Hendricks, and Pendleton, during the late civil war. Documents have been found which show that there was collusion between these men and the Confederate government to incite open resistance to the draft law, and to embarrass the United States government as much as possible in raising tioopa to suppress the rebellion. Several letters among the archives speak of exSettatbr "Buckalew as a leader in the movement, and as doing all he could to did
Confederate cause by secretly ml-
vising Democrats in various parts of Pennsylvania to oppose the draft by forcible mean*. A memorandum among the paptts refers to certain letters written by Buckalew, Hendricks, and others, the Confederate authorities, and a search is now being made to riBta letters.
THE India
»lis Sentinel seems dely under vjry unfavora-
termined tol icircumstanc
fIt-put
.(too.
up a rooster
on Saturday to c* over the fact that the Democratic lo3»io N«.rth Carolina mi only little 1«» than 7,000. It Is well never to be disheartened. A blufl old Pennsylvania farmer, smoking contentedly, was interrupted by his' son who ""«ali£ "Father, the big ewe has three kmW^"Th*tis weiV'isaid the farmer, robbing hi? hinds, "She's the finest ewe en the plaee, and her lambs will be worth "But, father/onejrf the "Very good^Tery go** the other two bethe «*»d'" "I'm J1
CABL Scntttignea with The Express thW'*hsiemocratic party is dead."
TES jury of matrofe^ha ving Doctor GREELEY in charge hav^isbe^n soli5ted to bring their war^^JtWret. |JSo answer et. *jf.
MEMBERS of the late Democratic party complain that it is "rather steep" for them to have to pay CARL SCHTBI. $200 tell them that their party is dead!
MB. SCHUBZ went to the Mausoleum to hold a. post -mortem on the late Democratic party. But the corpse got "awful mad" at the first plunge of the dissecting knife! ______________
TH Terre Haute Journal vigorously pokes fun at the Indianapolis Sentinel's silly crow over the Democratic defeat in North Carolina.
A CANVASS of Howard county shows just three Greeley Republicans, and a large number of Democrats who swear they "will never, never, NEVER, NEYER eat crow!"
A SPEECH from the son-in-law of the canal ring, explaining his position on the canal question, would be an interesting variation in the monotany of cam' paign oratory.
TnE New York Nation says of the accession of Mr. BANKS to the. GREELEY cause, that "it is one of those incidents which add to the humor of a campaign already in the" highest degree comic."
THE GREELEY party seem to understand how to capture things.—[Cin. Commercial.
Just so! A party created by and run in the interest of Tammany, ought to "know how to capture things.
RUMOR assigns General BANKS to me position of GREELEY candidate for Govern O- for Massachusetts. JOHN QUINCY ADAMS, who has been the standing candidate of years past, does not take kindly to the Philosopher.
TIIE last hope of the Polliwogs is thus expressed b^ one of'em whg^viggles in Evansville: "If the comet strikes the world, and kills us all, old Grant 'ill git beat then, I guess.'' "TUMID twaddle" is what the London Saturday Review calls SUMNER'S tirade against President GRANT—producing upon the mind of the foreigner "the im pression of an enlarged copy of a school boy's theme, in pompous phrases, interspersed with real and imaginary exam pies from history."
VERMONT gave GBANT a majority of 32,122 in 1868. The Greeleyites make much of the alleged fact that in one county (Franklin), just two hundred and, twenty Republicans have declared for GREELEY and BROWN. Whereupon the Times and Chronicle explains that there arc fourteen counties in the State, and if all the others do as well for GREELEY as Franklin (one of the most populous counties), and the Democrats all stick— which, by the way. fhey arc not doing— GRANT'S majority in the Green Moun tain State will be reduced to a fraction below 30,000, on an aggregate vote less than 60,000.
IF THE statements of GEO. W. JULIAN made against a political rival some years ago, can be believed, one of his most prom nent associates in the "Liberal" business in Indiana, to-day, is "cowardly," inca pablc," "immoral" and "A IIOBSE THIEF." These are the mild terms which Mr. Ju LIAN, in 1866, employed in speaking and writing of a competitor for Congressional nomination, and they have never been rctracted. That competitor is now work ing, lioulder to shoulder, with Mr. Ju LIAN on the "anything-to-beat-GKANT platform. Will Mr. J. withdraw, or re affirm the charges? In the former case, he will be a self-convicted slanderer, the latter, he will create a pronounced unpleasantness in the "Liberal" family. iw
COAL IN ENGLAND, hm
A dispatch from London, published in this issue, says that passenger fare and freight tariffs on English railways have been increased in consequence of the advance of the price of coal. The English newspapers are filled with doleful allusions to the high price of coal, and the last number of Punch received in this country devotes -a column of squibs to the comic side of the suffering and inconvenience caused by the coal famine. There can be no question that the trouble is a serious one. The cost of coal has advanced from fifty-five to seventy-five per cent., according to the quality.
Cheap coal and low wages have given England pre-eminence as a manufacturing nation. In 1866 Mr. GLADSTONE stated in the British Parliament that the consumption of coal in that year had reached forty-eight million tons, and that if the consumption should increase in the same ratio every year, more coal would be used in 1970 than Great Britain would possess within a depth of 4,000 feet. It will be seeh that she cannot much longer hold her commanding position in manufacturing. Heretofore she has furdished more than one-half the iron product of the world America furnished last year but one-seventh. The production of iron in the world has doubled in the past seventeen years. It must double again the next seventeen years if it supplies the demand. A strong writer has said that "the consumption of iron measures the progress of civilization."' The consumption last year in England was 200 pounds in America 150 pounds in the world at large 30 pounds, for every inhabitant. At the present ratio of progress, America will take the lead in six or seven years.
Labor can never be so cheap in the England of the future as in the England of the past. It is impossible for Europe or any other part of the world to produce more iron than is required. The railroad iron statistics of this country are of themselves astonishing. Last year, as official tables show, there were produced and consumed in the United Statos.no less than 1,343,111 tons of railroad iron of this amount 775,733 tons of iron and steel rails wefe made in this country. It will be remembered that the jtil product of the world jpa only 14.0t 0,000 tons last year.
The coal problem effects not only England but America. It will build up and foster our struggling manufactures it will make the block coal field of Indiana the royal seat of the Kingdom of Iron.
BOUTWKLL
came m, theWS^s
:cwe
•*X8
tVie
-Boar
ou
_*r. -rfy-
Wt
announces that he will be
able to reduce the principalof the public debt $12,000,000 this month. -In the name of all the Greeley howlers, where does'" Grant's rascally SecreUrv of the Treasury get the money to enable him to do this? If, as the Democracy »y, the Dents are robbing the treasury, if $250,000 of the people's cash was squandered in the North Carolina election, if all nt's officeholders" are stealing, and •^5-vjmd tariff are lowerfed every n°bUc debtf
p^cuJ8,d,™
IT is a source of profound islonMfli ment to CHAKLES ScxsxjB that the Beblican party exists without him1 He3^ a n^^, aelf^depreciatii»g man, a^e.wo^ take it as a ipenonal insulgilrere GMt on the construction of anew planet without asking Mr. SUMNIB'S advice.
"WHILE Terre Haute is. happy to hear distinguished orators from other localities, it is a source of much satisfaction to know that, the peer of any of them is one of her own citizens. This was apparent, for the hundredth time, to the vast crowd who assembled at the-Wigwam last night to listen to Col. THOMPSON.
I
HEBE is another "straw." A vote wad taken in the "Variderburg coonty Jail, on Monday, which-resulted thus, GREELEY, 9 GBAXT, 0. Carry the news to HOBACE!
THIS is the way BEN BCTLEB puts the case, on the stump in Massachusetts: ^Recollect, when you vote, that a vote for HOBACE GBEELEY is a vote to burn school houses, a vote for murder and the violation of women, a vote to pay for the emancipated slaves, and for the payment of pensions to the rebel soldiers."
MR. SCHURZ, while making his $200 Mausoleum speech, foolishly fancied that he was surrounded by "Liberal" Republicans mainly, and adapted his remarks to them. Many of his best points fell like molten lead on the ears of the most of his auditors, and some of them grumble that the money paid him was "worse than thrown away."
THE associated press agent at Madison, Indiana, doesn't seem to understand his business. Doubtless he is an able writer of Republican editorials, and he is certainly gigantic as a eulogist. But his editorials and eulogies are not wanted among press dispatches. He is not em ployed to send his opinions to the press, and the press don't want 'em. Let him stick to facts, or subside.
SUMNER'S interference in the personal relations of FREDERICK DOUGLASS to the President, has been properly rebuked by Mr. DOUGLASS. He tells the pompous Senator, in effect, though not in explicit terms, that he is unnecessarily troubling himself with an affair that does not concern him, and that he has put an entirely false and unwarranted construction upon what DOUGLASS regards as a trivial incident.
IF DANA, the infamous, is not more industrious and energetic in the manufacture of falsehood and calumny, he will be distanced by his lively competitor, Mr. GREELEY'S Tribune. The latter is improving in this line with a dejgree of rapidity that bids fair to give it the very first place among slandering organs. Tiie Tribune's old age is shamefully defiling the fair record of its earlier and better life. It seems to have thrown overboard all the manliness and honor it ever pos sessed. It resorts to expedients that in any other journal, a few years ago, would have drawn from Mr. GREELEY'S pen the withering retort, You lie, villain
THE Baltimore American is authority for the statement that gentlemen from Maryland acquainted with the signs and tests were greatly surprised on going to North Carolina to find that the "dreadful Union Leagues" that have worried the Democratic mind so badly, had gone out of existence. Gentlemen who had visited nearly all the counties found the Republicans without organization of any kind, and ascertained that there was not a League or Republican club of any description in the wholp State. Evidently then, the stories which Democratic papers have so freeley circulated about oathbound Leagues which dominated the superstitious negroes by means of some awful and irresistable influence, have been made up out of whole cloth, so far at least, as North Carolina is concerned. •,
MEN whose inordinate egotism leads them to believe that they own any considerable number of votes, are banking on fictitious capital. SUMNEB and SCHUBZ are two conspicuous examples of this folly. SUMNEB really fancied that he was the MOSES who was going to lead the colored voters across that "bloody chasm" into the Polliwog camp. But they didn't follow his leading an inch. He made the trip alone, followed only by {he indignant rebuke of the men whose votes he supposed he had in his pocket. Nor has it fared much better with SCHUBZ who thought to speculate on the German Republican vote as his political capital. He pipes long and loud, but his German Republican friends aren't doing any dancing. The power that he used to threaten rind bully ABBAHAM LINCOLN with, proves to have been an illusion. He doesn't own any votes except that of CARL SCHUBZ. And he isn't a thousandth part so terrible a fellow—so greatly to be feared—as a few people used to think him. His power to hurt the party he has betrayed is so limited that no one trembles at it. His power to hurt CABL SCHUBZ is not quite exhausted, but is in a fair way to be used up speedily.
ORGANIZE.
No intelligent student of human nature contemns, or underestimates the value of popular "demonstrations" as a feature of political "campaigns." To a proper extent, they are quite "the thing." Exploding powder, rattling drums, tooting horns, glaring torches, flaunting banners, incisive inscriptions, enthusing watchwords, and, above all, public speaking, have their rightful places in a canvass, and he has but little skill footracing effect to cause who does not recognize their power. They kindle enthusiasm they arouse the sleepy, they intensify public feeling and they serve to fix the direction and landing place of that great and often controlling element called "the floating vote." However the reverse of flattering it may be to our system of government, it is not the less true that many an election is carried by this "floating vote." Parties are often so nearly divided that whichever side gets the "driftwood" comes ont ahead at the polls. And as the vote of the man who unthinkingly drifts with what he believes to be the current of public opinion, going with ths party that makes the most noise and diVplay, counts as much for good or evil as the vote of the wisest and best, it is folly to deprecate those features of campaign management which are intended to arouse strong popular feeling.
But while this is important, it is far from being all, or even the most necessary part of the work to be done by the managers of a party desiring and intending to succeed. THOROUGH ORGANISATION IN EVERY rKECTNCT is the first of absolutely indispensable*. Executive committees should have lists containing the name and political status of every voter. The "doubtful," in close precincts will often be found to hold the balance of power. And these "doubtful" can be made certain for the right by such honorable meanaas are at thedisposal of, committees. They can be supplied with reading matter suited to their condition and wants tfcey can be reasoned with. There are other purposes of thorough organisation which .will readily occur to any reflecting mind, thoroughly organised
HARLAN.
—__
AN I &ENSE MBfel
AND A GRAND SPEECH GALLANT KENTUCK1AN.
The crowd at the Wigwam was immense. At half past eight the meeting was to order by N. Filbeck, after which Toute's band furnished soifte music, arid the Glee Club song a song.
Col. Thompson in a very few words introduced the speaker of the evening, Gen. Harlan, who, upon coming forward, was received with cheers. He said:
Ladit* and Fellow CUixni of Indiana: I appear before you to-night under circumstances of extraordinary embarrassment, having been recommended to yon as an orator of uncommon ability, which I biow I cannot sustain.
I am sure that these people are fully awake to the ^risis which is upon us. Upon the result of your verdict next October and November depends the fete of the nation. You have before you in this canvass two candidates representing two distinct parties. Gen. Grant represents the old party of 1856, the same which elected Lincoln which emancipated four millions of slaves the same which was magnanimous enough when the war closed to send the rebels home without punishment, and told them to live in peace (cheers) the. same which has given us a sound basis of currency, and now comes fb you again with Gen. Grant. (Cheers.)
You are asked by the other party to turn your back upon the principles for which you have fought for the last ten years. Upon what reasons? About finance they say but little. They charge Grant with every crime under the sun, but coming as the charges do from disappointed office-seekers, they fall upon the ears of men who do not believe them: [Cheers.] They tell you that, by the election of Greeley and Brown, you will have peace, but with the re-election of Grant the old animosity will hold out. They want reconciliation, With whom Do you need it? You Democrats and Republicans vie with each other in your adherence to principles and candidates, but after the election you can meet with-
out ill feeling* in regard to it. Do the colored people of the South need to be reconciled? No. On the contrary they ask you to protect them. [Cheers.] Do the union men of the South need to be reconciled? No. There is no bloody chasm between them and you. [Cheers,"
Those in the South who raised in arms to strike at the life of the nation, who starved their prisoners and were the cohorts of Davis, these are the men who say that unless you elect men of their stripe they will not be satisfied but will pout and fret.
The Liberals do not propose to remedy any of the so-called evils, but give us Greeley who is in favor of all the obnoxious laws which have been enacted.
There is much lyirg done in this cempaign. [Cheers.] There is a great deal of talk of the debts piled on the people of the South, of the debt of Texas for instance, which they say was $500,000 at the close of the war, and which is now $10,000,000. By inquiry the facts are found to be that Texas has subscribed $10,000,000 to the Pacific Railroads, which instead of being a great debt, will be a source of income to the State" by the immense increase in the value of property in consequence.
The Civil Rights Bill is another of the points which they seek to make against the Republican party. But had the Republican party not passed this law, it would have been recreant to the trust imposed upon it. It provides that any man who may be deprived of the right to protection in any of the State courts, may go into the federal. courts. In Kentucky, in November 1871, a rowdv could have walked into a meeting of five hundred colored men and shot down in cold blood the minister of the gospel, and the Democratic law would have said, there can be no punishment for it because there was no white witness to the act.
Then there is the Ku-Klux bill urged against us. What is it for? Had anyhonest man in the South a right to object tp it? It provides that if there be any band of armed men too strong to be put down by the State government, that the military power may be used to quell it.
The Democrats have a vast deal to say about the suffering of the rebels in the South, but never a word about the Union men of the South. It was nothing to be a Union man on this side of the river, but there it was to give up everything their hearts yearned for a sight of you, but the army of the South stood between. have seep in the South Jj old men and women who feqd tp turn their backs upon the homes of their yonth, but have never yet heard a word of sympathy for them from the Democrats of the North.
Why does Dr. Greeley change? In speaking of Webster, while in Canada, he said that he differed from him in one respect Webster wanted to be President and he did not This accounts for his change. Have you a guarantee that Greeley will protect you? What can he do with his little squad of Liberals •gainst a Democratic House and Senate?
Would the Democrats have taken him if they could 4i*ve elected one of their own members? In January, 1861, he said thatj "If the people of the slave States are in favor o!
people
he said that he the will of the Chief be lad a it of.
July
it going out of the Union,
I am in favor of allowing it, tnd Will do all in my power to help them." Gen. J. A. Dix says ha cannot vote for him no matter how good a Democrat he may be, because he is as unstable as water. [Cheers,] I »pne«! t9 you, are you going to turn your backs upon the who has done so much for hiscountry? ["No! nof] They hope to turn you against this man by slander. I have passed through several campaign.^ but have never heard such villainous a man as that upon General a simple graduate of
have abuse which Grant,
upon
bestowed
West Point, who *t the opening of the war tendered hisserviops as a solaier^ind rose bv his merit from place to place until he'reached the highest position in the gift of the people. He a man who never wrote about himself the man who was sent to Richmond and who took it he is the man who, according to Greeley, never has been teaten and nent will be. [Applause.]
It is a noticeable feet that, at the tune Greeley was efllogwing Grw»t, he was in his abuse of &hui* and Browis whom he accused of epde*voring to divide the Republican party.
Grant never wrote an order or said a temper. Ha almd.rtm.it country
fit
will bat in-
iltunity of
war tile ^wealthiest
natioaflrtrt instead of1 that we ig»$®t a poor "man, with
find--
iwtkiiy lint w^athe saved from his sal-
WJWetfcin writing from England objects to him on the ground that he has accepted invitations to dine ont of the White House, which was never done by a President before this argument is used on the ground that Grant is trying to bmld ujfa moharchy|a strong argumeat
^daolher objection urged against ^im is, that be is too often away from the seat of government. During the sessions of Congress he is compelled to be in the White House and receive visitors at all hours of the day, the majority of whom are seeking office or wishing to complain about being [removed from office. Now who can blame him for thug wishing to spend a short time at the sea shore.
If you look over files of old papers during other administrations you will find that Presidents and their cabinets have been absent much longer. These charges originate with B. Grata Brown, who leaves his State to make campaign speeches to advance* his own election while the Missouri Ku-Klux are murdering union men in his State. [Applause.]
While Congress was in session Senator Schurs left Washington to preside at the fSnninnati Convention, and Blair has done the same thing.
The Democrats say Grant takes things. Well that Ls so he took Donelson with 30,000 men he took Vicksburg with the same number and made Us a fourth of
present of it he took the Wilderness, Petersburg, and last he took Appomattox. [Applause.] When leaving the army the citizens of New York presented him with a hundred thousand dollars with which to purchase a residence, as they did for Gen. Sherman and Gen. McClellan.
They say he has -appointed his kin to office he*ha8 appointed some seven of them, and has kept in his old father, about eighty years of age, and I would suggest that he would be little better than a brute to turn him out without just cause, when he was appointed by another administration.
During his administration there have been paid Three Hundred and thirtythree Millions of Dollars of the National debt we have at the head of the Treasury department a man good and wise.
Now we have no internal revenue tax only on tobacco and whisky. The debt must be paid which was caused by a Democratic war. The Democratic mode was to levy the taxes equally, but according to our mode the farmer and laboring man are not called upon to contribute to paying off the debt, as the taxes are levied upon the luxuries and
not
In 1860 you Were told by the South that if you elected Lincoln they would tear the nation to pieces they tried it, but we are yet a nation. In 1868 they told us that if we elected Grant and placed him at the head of the nation they would still be unrecon ciled, and now you here in the North are told by these same men that if you dare stand by voir arms and elect Grant, they will still be unreconciled.
I am willing to be reconciled, but I protest against this declaring that there is a bloody chasm and that they would not be reconciled until we turn our backs upon the past. [CheersJ
The objections to the Republican party may be attributed to five causes the reconstruction measures, the Ku-Klux bill, the civil rights bill, the election law, that we have heaped on the South a band of thieving carpet baggers. These carpet baggers are of various kinds some of them are thieving carpet baggers there are some of them to oe found in every always greatest
the necessaries of life.
Louisiana,
who robbed the state of a million and a half of dollars who, when he found the Republicans would not have him, turned Liberal, and helped nominate Greeley at Cincinnati. (Cheers.) There is another sort of carpet baggers who believe they are born to rule. Wade Hampton said that the colored people must leave the South, that the whites must rule by divine right. Greeley made allowance for carpet baggers by saying that we are governed by carpet baggers just over from Cork, Limerick, and Germany, Vho have no education. The New York Tribune now says that the men of the South are patriots. How is the Republican party responsible for carpet baggers? It is not. It is the fault of the South. These men who are now for Greeley, are those who declared they would not go to the polls with the negroes, and bjr so doing they allowed them to fall into the hands of designing men who preverted the ends of government to their own use.
THE canal ring is not of metal material. Greenbacks, and plenty of them, will answer its purpose.—[Journal.
YEBY true. And in this connection it will interest all classes of tax-payers to re&d the following extract from a speech delivered by Hon. JASON B. BROWN, Democratic Senator from Jackson county, at Medora on the 30th ult. Alluding to the proposed amendment prohibiting the State from resuming possession of the canal, or in any way interfering with the settlement of that question under .the Butler billrSenator BBOAVN said:
Before that amendment can become part of the Constitution it must be passed by the next General Assembly, and then be ratified by the people at the polls. Is it not strange, in view of the fact that this question has been before the people of this State for years, that it was one of the most important subjects of legislation before the last General Assembly, that this amendment is now pending for adoption by the next General Assembly and the people, that the Republican party has declared in favor of it I say, in view of all these facts, is it not strange, indeed, that the Greeley party in convention at Indianapolis failed to make one single expression upon this subject For some reason or other it entirely escaped the attention of the convention. It certainly is a "live issue of the day," and" the fact that it is ignored by the Greeley convention is certainly singular if not significant. I shall labOr for the adoption of this amendment to the end that the people of this State may be safely secured from any possibility of being made to pay over eighteen millions of dollars they do not owe. Taking the two platforms of this State into consideration, the Republican platform is the better of the two.
Perhaps the great prominence of the canal ring in the personnel, of both wings of the Greeley combination may explain the significant silence to which Mr. BROWN alludes.
THE Mephistopholean character of C!ARL SCHUBZ is illustrated in the following paragraph from the Richmond Enquirer .(GREELEY organ) of the 7th inst.
In 1865 General Grant was sent South by President Johnston to report upon the condition of this seotion. He carried back word that there was a "universal acquiescence in the authority of the General Government." This report was sent to Congress by President Johnson in his annual message. Senator Sumner declared it an effort to "whitewash" the Southern people, and demanded the reading of a report directly the opposi made by Carl Schur?, to proye that the people of the South were still rebellious, and did not acquiesce in the authority of the Federal Government. This was the beginning of the reconstruction measures of Congress, from the terrible effects of which we are still suffering,
rrr^
HEBE is good and timely advjee from the pen of Mr. GBEELEY. Although written four years ago, it is not the less applicable to the present condition of political affairs: "Between this day and the first of September we should have a Grant club organized in every township and ward, with a working committee for each election district. This club should have enrolled on its list of members every voter who is openly for GRANT, and should at once consider how and whence accessions may be made to the number. It should not expect to hold more than one meeting for public addresses while it should hold one each week for adding to its numbers and to provide for casting its highest possible vote, "Reader, is there such a club in your township? If not, resolve that another week shall not pass till you have one?"
THOUGH the great robber Tweed has 1 been stripp^i to thp plpn apd picked to the bone, he yet spreads consternation all around. ISach of the political parties in New York is terrified at the. prospect of his joining it. The report that he was about to join the Grant party alarmed them in such away thjit they made haste to deny it with all the noise possible. The Greeleyites won't have him on any account, if they can help it. Each side tries to save itself by circulating a rumor, every now and then, that he is on the other side. Both parties know how terribly he will damage the party which he joins. Each party feels that it could not posBiblv endure his friendship. Alas!
Poor Tweed! Last year he was dictator of Tammany and "Boss" of New York. Now his smile is ruin.—[Cin. Commercial.
THE rapidity with which Japan, once started in the race of civilization, has moved forward, is among the most interesting phenomena of our day. Each post brings some fresh example of this, and makes us wonder at the striking difference, in this regard, between Japan and her neighbor China. We now learn that the Japanese Government has established a patent law, that women are granted equal rights with men in visiting t.mplw, &C. that all indecent pictures or other exhibitions are henceforth prohibited—from all we have heard a wondrous stride in adv(M»ce—that gas is to be laid down at once in Yokohama, that a fine suspension bridge is in progress at Yeddo, and that the lately burnt district of *h»t city is to be rebuilt with streets ninety feet wide.—£N. Y.Tiines.
EVEN if the New York Times did say that General Kilpatrick traveled with a harlot while holding a ministerial position under the government, it was only to prove that he was a good Democrat. For have we not Mr. Greeley's assurance that every man who lives by harlotry is
Democrat? It is very illogical in a tru-
THOMPSON.
INDIANA'S GREAT ORATOR SFKAKS.
One of the largest audiences assembled in this city during the campaign greeted Col R. W. Thompson at the
WlgWam
last
evening. This was coitaplimeritary to that gentleman i^tht BigE®t, iS the meeting had been scarcely advertised at all, and as much enthusiasm had been expended upon the meetings on the previous evening. '^5
The first Ward Grant Escort paraded the streets before the meeting. At a little past eight o'clock the assemblage wa called to order in the Wigwam, andCapt. Jno. B. Hager was chosen to preside. The following is a synopsis of Col. Thompson's speech: j**' ,•
T,tr»rra AND FELLOW-CITIZEXS :—The right of the ballot in this country is one of the most important privileges belonging to the American citizen however unimportant it may seem in itself it casts a great influence on the fate of our country. Citizens should not allow themselves to be influenced by passion, but by judgment: I exercise my judgment and allow ivery man to do the same. I have participated in ten campaigns in this state, extending over a term of nearly forty years, and I can look at matters calmly by this time.
During' all my life I have encountered the Democratic party in a compact mass, and during all the time of its existence it has told us in language, the integrity of which I believe to have been sincere, that when the country suffered it did so in the absence of Democracy now. is exists no longer, and expects to obtain possession of the government through a combination. I propose to examine how this state of things has been brought about, and see where we are now drifting. I am not disposed to fight the war over again. I would like to accommodate the Democracy and forget the past, but I know of no way in which it can be done however 1 will try and forget it for a little while.
We will imminence at the close of the war, which ended in favor of the union. At the close of the war we made the rebels take oath that they, would support the constitution of the United States, and President Johnson said if they refused to do this, they would be held in subjugation by military power. The great question was, how should the citizens be made to conform with the law There were four millions of negroes to whom the government had to extend protection. In dealing with a citizen the government cannot withdraw its protection without doing him wrong, no matter who, or what, or where. It is the duty of the government to extend to him protection of life and liberty. The negroes were free and had rights which the government was bound to protect. Were their late masters inclined to inflict any injury upon them? Does any man doubt that the legislatures of the Southern States would have passed laws reducing 4hcm back to slavery or something else in the same shape? Why they commenced making laws which formed an apprenticeship which was only slavery under another name. Thus it developed upon the Republican party to protect them by declaring such acts void. The Democratic party and the rebel element at the South have always declared these laws so passed by Congress to be unconstitutional and void. The present leaders of the Liberal party have helped to pass all these laws, but the Republican party needs no apology for doing all this it is'uivissailable, and its adversaries dare not assail it, but declare in order to give respectability to their party that they are all right and promise to stand by them (applause).
We had a quarrel with Andrew Johnson in which the Democratic party played the same game as it did between the Whig party and Tyler when he vetoed the banking bill, when the Democrats thanked him for saving the constitution and led him to believe he was their choice for the Presidency but atthesame time laid him so flat that now we scarcely know that such a man ever lived they did the same with Johnson, during whose administration they tried to get up an office holder's party in 1866, and among those who tried so to organize and defeat the Republican party were Doolittle and Hendricks. They had their convention. Who did they admit? They wanted it to be a Union convention, and declared that none but Union men should come into it. After their circular was sent out, Doolittle left his seat in the Senate and went home to make a speech to his people in favor of that convention, in which he said that if Greeley should say as he did in 1860, that he would allow the South to secede if it so desired, he could not enter the convention.
Greeley in 1860, by his publication in the Tribune, Was a secessionist. God grant he may have changed his opinions, out the Tribune says it never does this!
That Greeley was a secessionist no one will deny. He went further he not only advocated the right of the South to secede, but after Jeff Davis had been elected President of the Southern Confederacy, he urged thp people and the government to allow them to leave the Union.
Did Greeley ever take that back No. The people of the South maintain that the government is not supreme except in national matters, and that they have right to leave the Union when they please.
Greeley is not the candidate of the Northern Democracy he is emphatically the candidate of the South. Why? Because he is the only man who advocated the right of secession. If elected would they go out of the Union? I do not know but we will not trust them, because they might do it.
The Union is perpetual and I am the enemy of any and every man who seeks to break it up. [Applause.] This could be done if Greeley was elected and means what he has said. Northern Democracy did not want him it was a bitter pill, and one which they objected to taking till fhe very moment when it was done. And why should they want him They had abused each other for a quarter of a centurv and more in every manner. Do they love each other now It is like the story of a man and his wife who were married and lived together only a few days, until they separated he then wrote her a letter stating that he knew she had false hair, teeth and other defects to numerous to mention, when he married her, but that he loved her still, and if she would come back and behave herself he would take her crippled as she was now the Democratic party is like this man and 3je willing to take Greeley crippled as he is. After the election they will go back to their first hatred, they never had any love, and curse him more than ever.
The party of 1866 was a fizzle because the Democratic party was not poor enough to be sola out then, but they have been willing to make the sale ever since. They tried it in 1868. It has been said that their principles can be made to order by the 4th of uly. The leaders sit together in broad day and deliberate how they may swindle the people they want to win and that is all. They are like a gang of sharpers as seen in New York setting a trap to catch an innocent greenhorn from the country.
Schurz and other leaders of the Liberals have said that the rebels should not Be trusted until thoroughly repentant, and have called all movements of the Democrats to be to deliver the country 2 the South.
I would like to see this chasm bridged his nearly so now there are only some seventy or a hundred disfranchised in the Sooth now and they can all vote, but cannot hold office because they cannot take the oath required by law. I am willing' to have them come in when they can show the proper reconciliation, but so long as they continue their abuse of our nation and curse us as infernal Yankees, I want them to keep out. (Applause,)
The Cincinnati Convention is said to be a movement of the people. How? Did anybody send delegates to it? No. It was a self-constituted body of men.
There is a great deal of talk about carpet baggers. I do not like them, but all carpet baggers are not rascals, nor are all rascals carpet baggers. I have a list of seventy-six delegates from Louisiana to the Cincinnati Convention, of whom fifty-six woe appointed by that prince of rascals and carpet basger?, Governor Warmouth, and afl of Whom axe officeunderhim.
holders
•iaority »fto my ctahlt pwpiitBn
OidMfBmti Gbn«C HtCida, a«d
||||g|g
th, when detected ia their vilthemselves on the adaainis-
tration for protection, and finding it not, have tuned to Greeley. Thereifta cry for refer aajwe hr ways been wanting it What do mean by it? They first said they wi the revalue collected by a fewtt nn of.olllcers. The President to do with this the number i§ by law, and he appoints them hi accordance with this law.
All this means that We shall cOme tO a free trade platform. The lateness of the hour at which the speech was lsislied piewte asece «r» tended synopsis. The speech provoked repeated outbursts of applause.
ALL day yesterday a frantic mother traversed the streets and alleys of the city, seeking for her little child, who for twenty-four hours had, been lost. Many kind-hearted people joined her in the: search, but up to this writing no ttidings of his whereabouts have been received, and his heart-broken parents still mourn their little one. He is described as an innocent, curly haired fellow scarce four years of age. When he wandered away from home he had on a checked apron, red stockings and a torn straw hat. When last seen he was marching in the Greeley procession and Tom. Harper was furnishing him with a torch.
THE following transfers of real estate have been made since last report: THE wedding business has been very dull of late. A leaned writer says that the number of marriages vary in England in ptoportion to the value of corn. Cheap corn makes^numerous weddings. The maize crop promises to be immense hereabouts, and Mr. Hollinger expects .to do an extensive license business after cornshucking^^
AUGUST'14.—Pope Pius VI. born 1717. John I., of Portugal!, died 1433. Pope Pius II. died 1464. Thomas Sheridan died 1788. George Combe, phrenologist, died 1858. Christian, King of Norway, compelled to abdicate by the Swedes,1861, Encke's comet. observed from Naval Observatory, Washington, 1868. Advance of the German armies on Mctz, 1870.
REALLY these are queer times in politics. As an illustration, take this fact: On Monday evening the son of one of the most enthusiastic marchers in the Greeley procession, was doing his duty like a little man in the Republican procession, while his grandfather, a venerable and respected Bourbon, stood on the sidewalk and sneered at both of them.
MB. VOORHEES hasn't much to say about those "sincere and life-long principles" that he pledged himself to "stand by" and solemnly asserted that if he didn't "stand by them" he "should be a dishonest man, unworthy of hiB own respect or the respect of anybody else."
A HORSE belonging to £ugene Bruning ran away with an empty buggy on Main street about six o'clock yesterday afternoon, but as he was not a fast horse and Bruning is pretty rapid, and as the horse had not more than two squares the start, Bruning caught him.
JOHN 8. BEACH has bad luck in reference to boilers. He was part owner of the Telegraph Mills when a boiler exploded, a year or two ago, and he is one of the proprietors of Hudnut & Co's hominy mill, where the steam proved too mucli for boiler iron yesterday.
MR. VOORHEES is furnishing to his constituents an ocular demonstration of the truth of his assertion that "No honest and intelligent Democrat can support either Grant or Greeley without first abandoning his principles."
MR. SCHURZ expressed himself much dissatisfied with the aspect of political affairs in Terre Haute. If Judge Stallo's piano had been at hand, he would have given vent to his feelings in "The Heart Bowed Down."
THE following prices for grain rule in this market: Corn, mixed, 30 cents white, 35 to 38 cents. Oats, 20 cents. Wheat, Mediterranean, $1,20 Alabama, $1.25 white, $1.30, Receipts of wh«sat liberal. 'W
EDWARD PEYTON yesterday filed complaint that John Meyer,.propria# of a saloon, had beaten him over the h$ad with an ax-helve. Edward had a bloody head to show in proof of his charge.
Miss MARY CAIXEXDER, formerly of this city, more recently proprietor of an extensive millinery store in Chicago, came near being drowned while bathing at Cape May a week or two ago.
POLLIWOG county candidates do not yet pronounce in favor of Greeley in stentorian tones. Their voices are very still and small when they chirp for Chappaqua.
ED. FAIRBANKS is taking a lively interest in politics at Greencastle.. He is the agent of the Louisville & Chicago B. R., and disclaims any desire ever to be candidate for other ofllce.
MAJOR COATS, of Philadelphia, having extensive mining interest in this vicinity, has taken up his residence in Terre Haute. He has rented Joseph Walmsley's house on Fifth street.
A LARGE number of cars are now loaded daily with water melons. Dealers are paying five cents a piece for them. A car will hold about fifteen hundred mel-
THE north portion of the city, lying between the two railroads, is fast getting to be a busy part of town. It is a great shipping point lor all the railroads.
THERE are only Beventy-five Smith's in the new City Direotory. The Joneses foot up twenty-five Johnsons, nineteen. The Browns number twenty-eight.
ONE week from to-day the enlarged Weekly Express will be issued. It will contain more reading matter than any other newspaper in the State.
THE people in the neighborhood of York, Illinois, are hurrying up subscriptions and right of way for the Terre Haute & Southwestern Railway.
GENERAL HARLAN said he found the political cauldron boiling more violently in this cify than in any other place that he had visted.
MR. VOORHEES is describing to his Lawrence county constituents how the Democratic party "committed a disgraceful suicide at Baltimore."
Aw old Bourbon from near Cloverland, in response to an inquiry yesterday, if there were many Greeley men in that bailiwick, responded, "Not a d—d one!"
MR. SAGE will soon build a large addition to the rear of his tiore, in which he will-fit op a fine dining hall.
THE Democracy of this county will be ably represented in the Louisville an if Greeley Democratic Convention.
JOHN C. KESTEBleft last night foi^ cago and Detroit. He will endea to get op a water-melon corner in/^i of those cities. id highly fk town-
W*. GINCREASE, an respected citizen of Hone ship, died yesterday.
THE Folliw try the drop game pnVUcaas again.
aodTofPoor
ot be likely to Haute Be-
calling for her.
Refine Liqoon, doctorad. naod, «a «»tN3wdto
plan
the taste, c*n«rd •1Tooic»," Appetisers, Restorer*," ftc-that had the tipjJeron to drunkmuuam aM rain, bat are a tneJitdnMf made tea ths native roots and herbs
fron all Alcoholic Stimulants. They *re the Great Blood Purifier and a Life-gmoR Principle, a Vtf fcet Renevator and Invigorator of the ijifttMO, car» rrins off all pobooota matter and reflonng the Uaod «o a healthy condition, conching it, r-freshtnj and invigorating both mind and bodv. They are easy of administration, prompt in their action, certain their results, safe and reliable mall forms
*5eP«nea cam fake"fer Bitten ao|
cording to directions, and remain long unwell, pn^ Tided their bones are not destroyed by mineral poison or other means, and the vital eigahs wasted
beyond the poiut of repair, pjrsttcpala or iWdtgeitlon. Headache, Pam in the Shoulders, Coughs, Tightness of the Chest, Disamess, Son* Eructations of the Stomach, Bad Taste in the Moah,^"Bilious Attacks, Palpitation of the Heart, Inflammation of the Lungs, Pain in the regions of the Kidneys, and a hundred other painful symptoms, are ihe n&prings of Dyspepsia.
ID
these complaints it has no equal, and
one bottle will prove abetter guafitatee of its merits than a kngthy advertisement. For hnaleCamplatata, in yoong or old, married or single, at the dawn of womanhood, or the turn of life, these Tonic Bitters display so decided an influence that a marked improvement is toon perceptible.
Par laflauastory aad Chnale •henaatbm and Gout. Dyspepsia or Indicestion. Bilious, Remittent and Intermittent Fevers Diseases of the Hood, Liver, Kidneys and Bladder, these Bitters hare been most wtccessful. Sudi Diseases are caused by Vitiated Blood, which is
Srgans.
meralty jtroduced by detangeaent of the Digestive
They at* a Gentle Purjatlve as wen a Tonic, possessing also the peculiir merit of acting as a powerful agent in relieving Congestion or Inflammation of the Liver and Visceral Organs, and in Bilious Diseases.
Far Skin IMaeaaea^Ernptions, Tetter,_Saltples. Rheum, Blotches, Spots, Pimples, Pustules, Boils, Carbuncles, Ring-worms, Scald-Head, Sore Eyes Erysipelas, Itch, Scurfs, Discolorations of the Skin, Humors and Diseases of the Skin, of whatever name or nature, are literallydug up and carricd out of the system in a short time by the use of these Bitters. One bottle in snch caws will convince the most incredulous of their curative effects.
Cleanse the Vitiated Blood whenever^V you find its impurities bursting through the skin in
Pimt-
1
Pimples, Eruptions, or Sores cleanse it when yof find it obstructed and sluggish in the veins: cleanse it when it is foul: vour feelragfVil! tell you when. Keep the blood pure, and the health of the system will follow.
Gratefal thonsnnds proclaim VINBCAK
BITTEKS
Mechanical Diseases. Persons engaged in Paints and Minerals, such as Plumbers, Typesetters, Gold-beaters, and Miners, as they advance in life, will be subject to paralysis of the Bowels. To guard against this take a dose of
VINEGAR BITTERS
The properties of DR. WAI.KKR'S V(NB GAR BITTERS are Aperient. Diaphoretic and Carminative, Nutritious, Laxative, Diuretic, Sedative, Counter-Irritapt, Sudorific, Alterative, and AntiBilious.
The Aperient, and mild Laxative properties of DR. WALKER'S VINEGAR HITTERS are the best safe-guard in all cases of eruptions and malignant fevers, their balsamic, healing, and soothing properties protect the humors of the fauces. Their Sedative properties allay pain in the nervous system, stomach, and bowels, either from inflammation, wind, coiic, cramps, etc Their Counter-irritant influence extends llirouglioiit the system. Their Anti-Bilious properties stimulate the liver, in the secretion of bile, and its discharges through the biliary ducts, and *ro superior to all remedial agents, for the cure of liilious fever. Fever and Ague, etc
Fortify the body ngalnit Maea*« by purifying all its fluids illi YINPGAK BITTRRS. NO epidemic can take hold of a system thus forearmed.
IM reel Ions.—Tako pf (ha Bitters on going to bed at night from S half to one and one-half nine, glassfull. Eat good nourishing food, such as beefsteak, mutton chop, venison, roast beef, nnd vegetables, and take out-door exercise. They are composed of purely vegetable ingredients, aad contain no spirit. J. WALKER, Prop'r.
R. II. KeMKAliD CO.,
Druggist* and Gen. Agta., San fnnetop. CaL. and cor. ot Washington and Qharlton Sts., New York. SOLD BV ALL DRUGGISTS & DEALERS
ABASH COLLEGE, ~T"
CEAWFORDSTTLLE, IND.
The Next Term Opens September lltfi.
1
The Classical and
SCIENTIFIC COURSES
A a
There is also a very Sne
PREPARATORY DKl'AltTMEMT.
•-.!*
Also a
Mercantile and English Course.
SOUTH HALL
'J J*. Is being carefully rebuilt.
4
CKNTKB OOLLEGK Is finished, and tho v.':4
•i GYMNASIUM
Is ready for use.
4
Send for catalogues to the President, or A THOSSOK, Treasurer.
1JNTON STEAM BAKERY.
FRANK HEIN1G & BKO..
Manufacturers of all kinds of&
Crackers, Cakes, Bread,
AND CANDY.
Dealers in
Foreign! and Domestic Fruits, Fancy t0 Staple Groveries, LAFAYETTE STREE1,
Locksmith, Bellhanger,
AND
Locks and Trunks repaired, keys fitted, iron safes opened and repaired, speaking tabes pat up, Jte,
Bell Bitares and key* of all kinds kept on hand and Bade to order.
H. MORE,
Practical Piano Maker
Timer Aiid Bapainr of Knairal Instruments.
Orden left at Janes X. Criaher's Jewelry Store opposite the Court house will receive prompt attention. •AJPostoOee address 1.013. Partie*wishing to SM me. eall at South atnth street, between OafcMd folsoa.
THUS-
WALKER'S
once or twice a week, as a Pre
ventive. Ulliona, Remittent, and Intermittent Fevers, which are so prevalent in the valleys of our great rivers throughout die United States, especially those of tlie Mississippi, Ohio, Missouri, Illinois, Tennessee. Cumberland, Arkansas, Red, Colorado, Brazos, Rio Grande, Pearl, Alabama, Mobile. Savannah, Koanoke, James and many others, with their vast tributaries, throughout our entire country duriugtlie Summer and Autumn, and remarkably so during seasons of unusual heat and dryness, are inv.iri.ibly accompanied by extensive derangements of the stomach and liver, and other abdominal viscera, 1 their treatment, a purgative, exerting a powerful influence upon these various Jpns, is essentially necessarv. There is no cathartic for the purpose equal to DR. J. WALKER'S VINKGAR HITTERS, as they will speedily remove the dark-colorcd viscid matter with Which the bowels are loaded, at the same time stimulating the secretions of the liver, and generally restoring the healthy functions of the dipestive organs.
Scrofula, or Klng'a Evil, White Swellings Ulcers, Erysipelas, Swelled Neck, Goiter, Scrofulous Inflammations, Indolent Inflammations, Mercurial A (lections, Old Sores, Eruptions of the Skin, Sore Eyes, etc., etc. In tliese, as in all other constitutional Diseases, WALKKR'S VINBGAR^BIT, TERS have shown their great curative powers in the most obstinate and intrac'able cases.
Dr. Walker'* California Vinegar Bitters act on all these cases in a similar manner. By purifying the Blood they remove the cause, and by resolving away tli* effects of the inflammation (the tubercular deposits) the affected parts receive health, and a permanent cure is effected.
NEW \ORR MAJ
By Telegraph.] NsVfoofc??F COTTON—Steady and in good den land 21J4c. "FLOUR—Scarcely so firm Re«tirtJ barrels superfine $6 006650 coniinoflil I700@7 3& good- to choiceST sJf wheat Western 88 2539 50 Ohio 9 a, St. Louis !7 73@n 00. Rye floor firrii in fair demand $4'25@5 10. Corn mes changed. It
GRAIN—^Wheat, Dull and easier. R( 9,000 onshels prime Northwest spring)
tl
6534
new
amber Michigan J1 82 No
waukee
afloat $167@167%: new red Ohio
winter red western 82@190 white Sr 200 Rye, barley and malt quiet anr changed, Corn, firmer: rcccipts 118^ bushels western mixed 63£(l«4.
heavy:
era
Rom, Whiskey, Proof
Sptntt
oi
California, tree
lAY—Unchanged TURPENTINE—Qui WHISKY
Oaf
receipts 22,000 bushels western
46c Ohio 48(&2C. GROCERIES—Eggs, Quiet and weak West^
18#19c. Coffee, steady Rio IWW-.iO. AN PRO\ 73. Beef and cut meats unchaniL steady: long clear 7%e lard firm, A, steam 8)4a9 kettle 9% Batter, dui 1C@1SC Cheese, qniot.and unchangl
lWIac
DRPEXTINK—Quiet 50Kc Lower 92^i@93c.
1
CINCINNATI MARK'
By Telegraph.] CIXCISSATI, COTTON—Sarket
steady, with
Memnnd,20c. FLOUR—Thill, six! prices. havo\ oH$7 25®750: new $700.
WHEAT—Market steady with demand: fordry $K35§14o: lampiull\ 135, Corn, market steady with a layderSt mand 46c. Rye. quiet a»Aii»ehinarei in every respect old 73@74c, nojr 68870. Oatsj ket steady, with a moderufe demand, fl 34p3S new quiet- 25§25}£c. Barley dull prices are nominal.
GROCERIES—Unchanged and steady. market steady, witbr a moderate d"tnnndl @12%c. Butter, demand gtSod. and mitt-lki firm for choice other grades dnll, Chee?! demand fair and market firm,,
OILS—In fair demand and ifneh.tnscite PROVISIONS—Pork',-Hull and pricMnn inal, $13 00. Lard, demand light but holdc] firm 8^S%@9e. Balk- meats, (fcpmncLg'wil full prices, o^c generally held atflK&iHol sales clear rib at 8)^0, clear 8?ic. Bacon, de| mand good at fnlt prtfees "sales of shoulder? 7Kc clcar rib wanted at SJie held at 9^,1* jobbing sales of clear at 9Kjrw held at9?ne,l to come out of smoke. Hams, sug&rflttira^K' firm at 15K16e. 7/" IB1
HOGS—Demand fair aad jti.irk^firni, $4 WdESKY—Dull, and prices are nominal 90 -v
CHICAGO MARKET.
By Telegraph.] CHICAGO, August IS. FLOUR—Market steady with a moderate demand sales of extraflpring Chicago atj -jtVhoafeexcited and price? hijrhor? cd ana irregular
GRAINbut unsettled ana irregular: demand mostly
'flrom shorts Jfo 2 spring Chicag»$l 60 qjuli or ^August nosed {it September sold at 5126K and closed aflra Xo :i spring Chicago
I
fl
the most wonderful Invigorant that ever
sustained the sinking system. Pla, Tape, and ether Worms, lurking in the system of so many thousands, are effectually destroyed and removed. Says a distinguished physiologist There is scarcely an individual upon the lace of the earth whose body is exempt from the presence of wornu. It is not upon the healthy elements of the body that worms exist, but upon the diseased humors and slimy deposits that breed these living monsters of disease. No systein mf Medicine, no vermifuges, no anthelmintics, will free the system from worms like these Bitters.
30(91 86 rejected $115 seller all the year 11794 No 2 red winter SI 57. Corn, in demand and active, and prices advanced: No 2 *l%{H3e cash or August September yellow 428H2%c: rejected. 3SX$39%c: high mixed afloat 42V£e No 1 and 355c. Barley Unll and grices are nominal fall No 2 quotable
PROVISIONS—Quiet and unchanged in evcry respect. Mess pork held at SU. with $13% bid, cash or August. Lanlstcady wthtcrSJ-je summer 8@8W. Bulk jHts dull and prices are nominal o@G4, oinBR for special averribs Sbfc.
.'b
SIM
.. Jtacon, marKct steady,
ajfes short ribs noderat
with a moderate demand
iKY-j^an
dy|o sales.
WHISKY
90c.
and pates a shndo lower.
NEW YORK MONEY MARKET. By Telegraph.] NKW YORK, August ]:!.'] MONEY—Easy: 2@3 per cent,
FOREIGN EXCHANGE opened firm at $108T£. but aftcrnooiL'^uotations settled dov 11 to SlOSJii. The occasion bf this change in tho tono of tho market was the appearance of so mo borrowed bills on the street, as well as an increased'supply of sterling, drawn by some of. tho minor firms. Ahothor reason for heaviness of sterling was a pressure of exchange on Amsterdam, which is quoted below par and is very difficult to sell.
GOLD—Tho markot was steady during this morning atH5%@n.5$, but became weaker in the afternoon anil declined to $U4%@114?4 in the gold room. Tho weakness of exchange on Amsterdam was urged as a reason for the dc~* clino.
LOANS wore 1@2 per cent, for carrying. CLEARING:?—,000,000. I TREASURY DISBURSEMENTS—lUooo. S STA'TE BONDS—Generally quiet Missouri heavy and offered'atJMe.
GOVERNMENTS—Bonds dnll and steady. STOCKS—Stronger at the opening Western' Union advanced t&72%< which causod a sympathetic rialin the balance o^tthe. list* rang-
1.7T.it after
ing from por cent., but afterwards Western Union fell off to "l?vi and the general market lost its early imiirovemcnt. In tho afternoon*Wcstern UniOllV^ied to 72%, and later ranged between 72 and Tho balance of tho market again sympathised with the course of the Western Union, and aiP vanced to per cent in tho upward movement. Tho most prominent stocks weru_ Northwest, Pacific Mail. Union Pacific, Roe™ Island and C. C. and I. 0. Tho lato dealings showed a general reaction of from to cent, from tho highest imint of the day, with an unsettled market Canton, this afternoon,, broke down to 91 and Afterwards rallied to 9:S There was somagatoRc sold out u^ier rulo The Adams Express Company has declared it dividend of $2 per share, payable on tho 3d of September
NETJJF YORK DRY GOODS MARKET. By Telegraph] Nsw YORK, August 13. There is abetter demand for bleached goods? and prints, resulting frotu a reduction ot prices on these fabrics, which has stimulated buyers to lay in their stocks in anticipation of future wants Other cotton fabrics continuo slow of sale, with no important changes Cloths and cassimeres aro in fair request where prices favor buyers a little, bnt there is no speculative movement, and the aggregate sales are small for this season of tho year Domestic shawls are selling fairly from firstjhands at opening prices
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS
Stenbenville, Ohi», Female Seminary. This widely-known school affords thorough Christian education, at a cost of little more than $5 a week: one-fourth off Jo? clergvmf n. .* The 87th session (20 weeks) opens September' 11th. The address of all former pupils is requested a grand re-union at the close of tho nest year. Send for particulars to Rev. CHAKLK8 C. BKATTT, I). D., LL, 1)., Sup't, or Rev. A. M. RKID, Ph. D., Principal,
Agents Wanted for Chamlierlln's tireat Campaign Book,
Tho Stmtrarlo of '7» A Novelty in Political and Popular Liters'ture a graphic history of the Republican and Demooratio Parties a racy sketch of the socalled Liberal Republican Party an insido view of the Cincinnati Convention. The minor tickets or sido shows of the campaign. Tho finest Illustrated Book Published. A Book wanted by every American citifcen. To secure territory at once, send J1 for outfit. UNIOM PuBi.isniHO Co., 1B5 Twenty-second street, Chicago, III.
Piresidential
core, it is prepared exp Piles, and nothing else. gists. Price SI 00.
1
Between the two Railroads, I
TERRE HlCTKt ISO,*
JjTRED. GEIGEK,
-J-
STEWCILCV TER
HOSTH reran STHEET,
1
Basement BOOM, Cotk'i Bnilding, TEBBB BAVTE, JSD.
It is prepared expressly to core tho —.i Sola by all Drug-
FEYER AND AGUE.
Fellows' Compound Syrup of Hypophoshltes, so celebrated in nervous ana other deilitating .diseases, is now being used with complete success, coring Chill Fever after the
Si failure of well known remedies, tjninine. ie. One dose containing two scruples of soda and
rhubarb (equal parts mixed), in a wine glass full (if cold water, sbontd preoodo the ase of the Syrup. FLI.LKB & PLLLKE, Chicago.
The Chemistry of Divine Providence has never produced a mineral water which combines in snch perfection the qualities of antibilioustonjcSand cathartic modicinc, as that of the Scltser Spa the Tarrant's Effervescent seltaer Aperient is the artificial equivalent of that great natural rqmedy.
Sold by all Druggists.
A New Book Free,
important questions. Address, with stamp In pay postage, Mrs. 11. METZOKB, llanaver, Pu.
AGHbTS—Wantid—Agents
:X
Campaign.
....'I .. Caps, Capes and Torclics. Send for Illustrated Circular and Price List
CrssiNOHAJl HILL, Manufacturers, 204 Church St., Phila.
Campaign Badges!
Thirty new nnd beautiful designs. Oct a Prieo List of T. C. RIOIARPS A CO., Manufacturers, 47 Hurray St., N. V.
Brilliant Colors and Best Black in Six Cord Threads.
S. & P.
1
COATS'
E S
SIX-CORD IN ALL NUMBEHS.
From Xo -S TA 100 Isclutire,,
ron
Hand and Machine Sewing
KEWAJ1D.
iFor any cose of Tilind, Bleedtngr: [itching or Lice rated Piles thai lr.. RING'S PIUS R&MRDY fails to
make inero
moaey at work for us than at anything else, itasiness light and permanent. Particulars free. G. STISSOX Sc CO., fine Art FuUi*kert Portland. Maine.
QENTS' AND LADIES' WEAR
CLEANED and COLORED
And Gents' wesr repaired.nea-ly.ar
H. F. Seiner's Djt House,
