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LOUISVILLE JOURNAL QKIiiZI BETWB1M TIIIHD AND rOUBTH. resyTiCK, hsndebsos, osbobhy, flOMHTO k 6. BUbdOPlPTION PRICKS IN ADVANCE I Oii.Lj Jonrn!, delivered la the City, ti); sei.t bv miUi li paid in advance, or $10 if not paid within tbf-tj- months; Country Daily, 5; for any period lew than one your. So cunt a month; W Akly, ti. Evening Bulletin, $; If mailed. $6. CLUB PKICKS-1- N ADVANCEt Weekly Five cnplo or niore, 1 5iJ ervb. ADVEKFISINO-I- N DAILY JOLUNALt I iprarft 1 fhiei or Ibm) firt insertion gl 00 Bach adflitloual insertion. 86 IN WEEKLY JOURNAL quare '0 lineaorletflrttiiiertton 1 00 Each additional insertion. . 86 WF For (ell particular as to term of yearly aaer-Uin- Ac, -- .tt first column on first page. IJKO. I. I'KKNTHk.i PALI. K, SIIIIlAN,i Editor. OMVKK 1,( A. Locul Kdltarand Reporter. TUESDAY, AUGUST 13, 1861 Tuk Sollmn Duty of the U. S. Govern-men- t. The present unhappy war was begun by the South, begun for the take of disunion, and wad accepted and is carried on by the United States for the sake of the Union and not, we hope, in vain. We know from the testimony of numerous Southern men, who dare not speak aloud in their own homes, that there are multitudes of men in the South who are at heart fjr the Union, who in their secret souls arc prnying to the United States for de- liverance almost, as they pray to Heaven for salvation, and who, if ever the power, of the United States shall relieve them from the thraldom that, now crushes their puliiiical lives out ot them, will be tb!e to assert and nviinlu'ii a supnynacy in ih-n- respective States. We haw no; mi earthly d'xibt that there area uiyurity ofSur.es whose toop'e, though now appj,r unanimous for South- ern independence, wmld, if the deadly weight of a relentless despotism were lifted from their minds, hail the restoration of the Union as the ironed prison ;r of a dungeon hails the re- turn of God's blessed sunshine, and would greet with exultation even the little privilege of giving free expression to their opinions. The present positions of several of the South- ern States were never chosen and have never been endorsed by the citizens of those States. Secession ordinances were passed by Legisla tures never elected or authorized to act upon the subject; such Legislatures placed all the military and pecuniary resources of their States at the dispo-a- l of the Southern Government and invited the Confederate ar- mies to an immediate occupation of their territory; and, after doinR all this, they granted to their enslaved and manacled pco pie the empty and miserable mockery of the privilege of deciding whether their States should or should not go into the Southern Confederacy. Of course, where the people would gladly. have shouted "No" by tens ot thousands, scarcely a solitary "No" was heard. The States, transferred by such monstrous and Heaven-defyin- fraud and violence to the Southern Confederacy, are now subject to Us tyrannical laws and requisitions, and their people, who have never been allowed to have a free voice in the fixing of their own destinies, arc looking for freedom to a power outside of the dominion of the deadly tyranny under which they draw their breaths. It would be a fearful thing that the loyal mil- lions in the Confederate States should be per- manently abandoned by the United States to the miserable doom, to which, through no fault of their own, they have been subjected. Our trust, our conviction is, that, if the mighty armies of the Kepublic, defied as they have been to strife, sball plant the standards of the United States at enough-poiut- to guaran- tee perfect freedom of thought and word and deed to the whole South, a large majority ot the people of many if not all of the seceding States will declare their loyalty in a thunder-bur- st of joyous enthusiasm. The pohcy of accepting peace on the condi-t- i n ot recognizing the independence of the Southern Confederacy would bo a terrible one. Nay, it would bo a policy that we but feebly characterize by the word terrible. It would be the death, the everlasting death, of the great arjd glorious jiope that ttow lives in the hearts of tens uf millions upon this conti- nent and hundreds of millions throughout the civilized world. Ic would be the destruction of the mightiest work that the spirit of freedom has ever dons upon the earth What has been the admiration and the wonder of the nations would be their pity and their scorn. Let no one delude himself with the thought or fancy that a Government, a nation, has not a right to defend itself, by all the powers and energies at its command, against disruption and dissolu- tion. To do this is, as a general truth, among a nation's most sacred rights and its highest and most solemn duties. The nation Hint should not recognize and assert the right and the du- ty would be the object of alt mankind's con- tempt. Surely no human being supposes that England or Prance or Spain or Austria or Russia, if a por'ion, even a majority, of a sec- tion of either of those kingdoms or empires should assert the right of erecting their section in'.o au indep ndent realm, would permit the righr thu-- claimed to be practical ly asserted. It is absurd to suppo: that either of them, upon any claim of a portion of their people to the right of would submit to , submit t) be divided into two kingdoms or empires. Sooner would they wage a war of centuries, a war, as they would justly consider it, of national life or death. To 6uhmit to the separation of tlje United States into two independent powers would not only be the most fatal example that we could set for the existing generation of men and to all the generations that are to come after ns, but v ouid render the whole area of the thirty-fiM- - Suites one of the feeblest aDd most wretch- ed portions of the civilized world. All our old glory would be tumid to midnight dark- ness; The two republics or two monarchies, supposing that to be the number into which, our couutry should at first be divided, could never remain for even one year at peace. A thousand causes would render collisions and wan between them inevitable. Neither of the two cou'd have the least security against its own disintegration and dissolution. The U. S . . i s:.cd tue ecfdent uf pcimicung eleven or velvc or fifteen States to go (iff at pleasure, could not restrain other States from doing the same thing. Ech and every State remaining even temporarily in the United States would feel that it had the power to assert and main- tain its right of either seceding into tho South- ern Confederacy or of establishing, together with such other States as it might be able to carry with it, an independent sovereignty, and it would exercise this fancied right whenever for any cause, frivolous or otherwise, it should become dissatisded with the acts of the Gov- ernment of its section.. What is now the Uni- ted States, as distiuguithed from the Con- federate States, would almost certainly, within half a dozen years, consist uf half a dozen petty acd jariiug powers with no common head. The same or even worse would be the condition of the States of the Southern Confederacy, based, as 'hat Confederacy avow- edly is and would be, up:n the assumption, as a fundamental principle of government, that every State or every two or three States must ever be recoguized as having the right to es- tablish an independent government or indepen- dent governments at will. There would be no Government in either section tit to be called one. Our country, that we have been so proud of, would be in a worse condition than vhe miserabla little republics of South America. No pretended sovereignty North or South could .vei obtain from abroad a loan of even the "iost inconsiderable amount, f ir European would seem to euutirt their money to Governments rut vtn claiming to embody iir principle ot The pow- ers which hava not dared to provoke the war- like energies of earth's greatest republic would deride ns in our helplessness, and, by the pfvivecf evea a siijrfe aaa-of-wa- r, compel us to yield obedience to their haughty and tyr- annical dictation. Horribleservile insurrectioi s would break out everywhere in the slavehold-in- g region, making fields and fire-sid- deso- - late. Masses of slaves, first from the slave States nearest to the free States and afterwards from those more remote, would escape, some by stealth and others openly, till the last ves- tige of slavery would disappear. All the pet- ty powers, jealous and hostile, would have to keep standing armies, vast in proportion to the means of supporting them, and the consequent taxes would impoverish the people to the point of hopeless and irretrievable ruin. Hundreds and thousands of desperate men, accustomed to blood and violence, and having no means of honest subsistence for themselves and families, would organize gangs of banditti, such as for years have infested Mexico. But this condi tion of anarchy or y could not last forever or even very long, from the midst of all the confusion and lawlessness and strife, some bold master-spir- it would spring up, and, rallying thousands to his standard, pursue his conquering and devastasting march until the whule of what has been the United States would be made a bloody and relentless despot ism, as drear and rtmorselcss as any one re corded in history. And now the question is whether the United States, through a dread of the inconveniences and even the great sufferings and sacrifices of the war that is upon us, ought to accept this condition of things for the sake uf a brief, a hollow, a nominal peace. To our minds it would be a dreadful crime against God and the human race. It would mark the present generation of the people of this country as tho sniltiest enemies and murderers of freedom in all the history of the world. Our glorious old fathers of '70 bequeathed not more to us than to the generations that are to come hereafter their posterity as well as ours tho great and magnificent inheritance of the Union. Our fathers of later periods received, guarded and transmitted the sacred, the magnificent b:quest to us, to be in turn passed down by us to those for whom, as for ourselves, the patriots who won it by their blood ordained it. And now should we, can we, dare we, in the face of heaven and earth, stop the awful b quest in it descent, shiver it into worthless fragments, destroy that which is not our own but mankind's for this and the coming ages, defraud posterity of the richest blessing ordained for them by the sainted and illustrious dead of a dead century, swindle all the human race of this and all the future time of what myriads of millions have contem plated with gratitude and adoration as the mightiest boon of God to his creatures, and leave our names to creak and blacken ou the gibbet of infamy as the names of men who cursed their race and shall be cursed by it as long as there shall be an atmosphere to bear the sound of a curse upon its bosom! Garibaldi This illustrious General is the greatest warrior in Europe. lie is an enthu siastic worshipper of freedom, and is every where almost idolized by Freedom's devotees, IIU courage and generalship in the terrible battles fought by him at Umie against over whelming odds in battles in which he seemed to have almost the power to make a successful resistance to Destiny itself, gave him a great and brilliant name throughout the civilized world. The more recent prodigies of matchless daring and skill performed by him in revolutionizing Sicily and Naples, expellin the tyranny under which they had so long groaned, and annexing them to the liberal government of Sardinia, have placed him upon the highest pinnacle of earthly renown. Never has his keen sword been drawn except in the cause of liberty, and never has ho delayed fo even a day to sheathe it when the battlo of liberty was won. Since the Sicilian and Neapolitan revolution Garibaldi has lived in honored reiirement watched however by the eyes of myriads, who knew that be would reappear upon the world great theatre whenever the great cause alway so near to his heart, the cause of human free dom, shuuld call him forth. And lo! he re appears. He has off-Te- his services to the United States Government in its present life struggle, and the offer is accepted. The noble Italian comes as a M.ijor General into the armies of the Union. All this should show to our people how the present struggle upon our continent is regarded by the friends of free government in Europe For more than half a century, our Kepublic has been hailed from afar as freedom's peculiar home. Millions, inspired by the same glow ing spirit that heaves in the great heart of Garibaldi, have ever looked to the United States as a country in which they could tin refuge and be free if driven forth from their own less happy lauds. They have considerc our Government as a mighty temple, whose perpetuity was scarcely lets important to Eu rope and to Asia and to the great islands of the sea than to America. And therefore it is that, when this glorious temple is threatened hosts of Germans and Irish rush impetuously to the rescue, and such hearts as that of Gari baldi leap wildly for th; conflict. Let us learn from these things that we should bo guilty of a deep and terrible sin against mankind, if, to secure to ourselves th petty comforts and luxuries of a few days or months or even years of inglorious peace, we were to consent that the great American ic should be dismembered consent that a Government, which has been the hope and the glory of the world, a beautiful and holy star of liberty shining upon tho eyes of the nations, should be riven apart, riven perhaps into fragments, and made the scorn and the derision of men umil at last reconstructed into a fierce and bloody despotism more than those by which the earth is al- ready cursed. Let Garibaldi and all the great worshippers of liberty in the Old Wwrld say whether wo of the United States have a right to abandon our to dissolution without striking in its defence as long as wo have the strength to raise our right arms. The Knights' Alphabet. In f description vesterdav " of the alphabet of the Knights ot the Golden Circle, we said that q was represented by a line slanting backwards, intersecting the rule mark, with a dot before it. We should have said a dot after it. In sayiDg that r was represented by a large and well defined comma, we omitted to add that the head or nucleus of the comma should be open somewhat like the figure 9. So of the inverted comma represent iog s. A period is represented by two horizontal parallel lines or half lines close together. tTR Union troops are mustering in the counties of Kentucky near the Cumberland Gap, it is to defend Kentucky soil from in- vasion and not to invade the soil of Ttnner-Be- e. Whatever the secession organs may say or insinuate to the contrary is beyond all question false. Our secessionists would heart- ily rejoice at an invasion of Tennessee, but the Union men of this State would condemn it as an act of insanity. We learn that Parson Brownlow's pa- per, the Knoxville Whig, has been stopped by order of Gen. Zullieoffcr, commanding the Last and Middle Tennessee forces at that point. We are not told what has become of the brave Brownlow himself. Gen. ZMlicoffcr once had the respect of good men and patriots. They didn't know what was in the depths of his traitor soul. May he die a hempen death! The Editor of the Courier published a fervent prayer on the day of tho election, that the Great Jehovah" would control the result. Tho prayer was answered. Theae are litues that try men's soul. Lou. Courier. The souls of vou disuainja' wero tried cvir a hot iiro oil JPjuddy wtxl;, hO thvs v,' a vv7 r.u&i! vicld tf oil. Judge Catron His Expulsion from Tennessee. Five or 6ix weeks ago, more or less, Judge Catron of Nashville, one of the udges of the Supreme Court of the United States, made a charge to the Grand Jury in St. Louis, in which he gave his views as to hat constitutes treason. The publication of the charge, it was understood, created a good deal of excitement among the disunionists of Tennessee, and the question of the J udge's ex- - ulsion from the State was much agitated. The fact of tho agitation of this question rst became known to us from a card published in the Tennessee pipers by Mr. V . K. btcven-so- n President of the Southern Pacific Kail- - road. Mr. Stevenson's card was an earnest appea in iavor ui uuu ...uB - mitted to remain in Tennessee. He stated that he had had a personal interview with the Judge and conversed freely with him, that he was convinced there was nothing dangerous iu the Judge's principles or intentions, and that he was sure the presence of his Honor could be tolerated safely and should be tolerated by-a- means. The tone of the appeal was not lofty, it was thought ralherhumble, and it was considered as doing very little credit to Judge Catron's spirit upon the supposition that he au thorized the publication or assented to it. The card however did not accomplish its purpose. One day last week, the Vigilance Committee of Nashville waited upon Judge Catron, informed him that he must either re sign bis office of Judge or leave the State, and aked him which he would do. The Judge was not prepared to render an answer. The Committee gave him twenty. four hours to de cide upon his course, letting him understand, that if, at the end of that time, he should neither have resigned nor left Tennessee, they would take his affairs into their own hand- s- meaning that they would eject him by what ever force might be found necessary. Within the twenty-fou- r hours, the old man took his departure from Tennessee, leaving his aged wife behind him, as she was too sick and feeble to be removed. We heard of him in this citv on Friday or Saturday, but did not see him We presume that he is still in this vicinity. We surelv need not comment at length upon this gross and wanton outrage. Judge Ca tron, appointed to the Bench of the Supreme Court by his great friend President Jackson is as venerable in age as in character, being we believe, more than seventy years old. Sure lv the people of Tennessee could have no ap prehension that the residence of this aged ju dicial functionary among them was or could be dangerous to their State. They can have enter tained no fear, that he would or could subvert their liberties or destroy any of their privileges In driving him for,th as an exile, compelling him to leave the venerable partner of his bosom, ill and perhaps dving, thev have done a deed at which the whole respectable portion of the peo pie of the United States will raise the cry of "shame." C3TA11 the secession organs have made the most violent complaints about what they call the unauthorized interference of tho Federal Government with tho all'iirs of the railroads between this city and Nashville and Memphis, They have clamorously insisted that any inter ruption of the trade was an unconstitutional illegal, and d proceeding, which the people should resiet, if necessary, by force of arms. They have proclaimed a hundred times over that the 'money of tho people built the railroads, and that the roads should at all haz ards be kept open by the people's authority an physical strength. Tennessee has loudly threatened, through her organs, what she would do if our people should permit this en of the road to be closed or trade interrupted or limited. She has said, that, in such case, she would send an army here to teach us our du ties at the point of the bayonet. And now seo what Tennessee has done on the road between this city and Memphis. She has cut not only all commercial intercourse but all personal communication short off the Tennessee river. She permits no railroad car to come across or go across the stream She allows no person to pass either way. At the last dates from that point, hundreds travellers from this direction were as:embled on or near the east bank of the river, some them having been there three or four da; and none of them being able to obtain infor motion as to when, if ever, they would be al lowed to proceed. The suspension, temporary or permanent, of business and travel was su posed to be the work of the military authori ties of Tennessee, but even the Vigilance Committee of Clarksville, although telegraph iccom muni cat ion was open to Memphis, was not able, by the most persistent efforts, to obta from that city any answer to depp itches or eveu the slightest recognition of them, Gen Polk nr Gen. Pillow or general somebody el having no d jubt issued instructions that th telegraph should under no circumstances giv so much as a click. Nevertheless our people may rest assured that the Kentucky secessionists, who have clamored so boisterously about the importance and the necessity of keeping the railroads open and free in defiance of authority, w breathe no word of complaint against Tennes see for the despotic and most injurious and oppressive action at the Tennessee river. They are never happier than when they can hear of some fresh Tennessee outrage to submit to. (yThe editor of the Lexington Statesman, Gov. Migofiin's Secretary of State, says, that, to his knowledge, in every instance in which the attention of Gov. Harris of Tennessee has been called to any aggression from that State upon the rights of Kentucky or Ken- tucky citizens, ho made the fullest reparation. Then will the Secretary tell us whether the attention of Guv. Harris has at any time been called to the fact that a Tennessee military ollicer at Camp Trousdale came several miles across the Kentucky line into the town of Franklin, and, without even the pretext of le- gal process, forcibly seized a Kentuckian upon the charge of desertion and bore him back to the camp! If his Tennessee Excellency's at- tention has been called to that case, what was the full reparation made? Floyd ani tlik General Conflagration of thk Glohk. The Dromio of Syracuse, in Shakspcare's Comedy of Errors, was under the impression that a kitchen-wenc- h in Ephesus, who claimed him as her busband, was so greasy and ragged that if the lived until doomsday, she would burn one week after the rest of the globe was consumed. We are con- fident, if John B. Floyd's dishonesty could be converted into grease, and bis tattered charac- ter soaked in it, that it would outlast the con- flagrating competing rags of the Ephesian kitchen-wenc- h of Dromio. f"The editor of tho Nashville Union re- peats the fjolibli story that the Northern array took thirty thousand hand-cutT- s with them to Manassas, and undertakes to clinch his story by stating tb;it a pair of these imple- ments, taken in the battle, has been left at his trice. If a pair of hand-cuf- fs has been given to the editor, they was no doubt a present from some friend of his who escaped with them from the penitentiary. Amends. Wo mentioned yesterday the name of Mr. II. C. McCorkle as one of the Third Degree Knights of the Golden Circle in this city. We are informed however that that gentleman, after taking that Degree and re- flecting upon the character of its obligations, repudiated the whole affxir, and that be is now Orderly Sergeant in Capt. Lovett's company, the Speed K fles, now at Camp Joe Holt. C3TThc editor of the Lexington Statesman says that those of his triends who disapprove of Kentucky neutrality have expatriated them-stlvc- s. At tbe same time he tellj us that he strongly disapproves of it Iiimielf. Tlitm why dotau't hi utility tuu uivii2j cswiiiiS wf Uis fries-1- f We thank the Chicago Journal, from which we copy the following paragraph, for the glowing compliment paid to our paper, but thcro are other Union papers in the State, and proudly prominent among them the Louisville Democrat, that deserve an abounding share of the glory of the late victory: It is invidious to single out men in an emer gency like this, when every man who works and votes and hgbisf r his country u a hero. liut o cannot but allude to the faithful services the Hon. Joseph Holt, that sterling patriot and good man, and the Louisville Journal have done. Untiring in their expositions of the fallacies of secession, in thuir patriotic appeiils to the pbople, and in their defence of the H ig, they havo earned, and .y receive, the plaudits of a grateful na- - iion. vv hen the history of this monstrous rebel- lion is written, the names of Holt and Prentice ill stand prominent in the lint of patriots who rallied around the rl ig and shine the brighter that they stood up boldly for the right in the midst of enemies unintimidated by threats and nawed by violence. e trust that inanv years of increasing fame await tho on?, and th ttthe other will long continue to wield his flashing worn oi wit ana nuri o:s terrible bolta of indig nant patriotism. We congratulate them upon ine ppienuia victory iney nave been instrumen- tal in achieving. We congratulate the Union men of Kentucky that the baleful banner of reason shall not wave over the crave of Honrv Clay. We congratulate all patriots, everywhere, nat anotner star has been preserved in our con stellation; that its light has not loon quenched in the traihering stnrm, and that gloiious old Kentucky, now, as ever, remains truo, loyal, and steadfast to tho Union. A Voice from tub Tomb. The National In telligencer says that tho subjoined adjuration, ad dressed to his coimtrymen by James ftladi-ton- the Father of the Constitution," has already ap peared in its columns, but is worthy of a repro duction at the present time, when the advice it inculcates comes at once with such mournful and impressive force. The paper is undoubtedly au thentic, being contained among the number of the posthumous writings of Mr. Madron in the pos session of our public-ppirite- fellow countryman, Jas. C. McGuire, Esq Advice to my Counts. A? this advice, if it ever fee the light, will not do so till I am no more, it my be considered, as issuing from the tomb, where truth alone can be re.pectrd, and the happiness of man alone consulted It will he en titled, therefore, to whatever weight can be de rived from good intentions, and from the experi ence of one who has served hic country in various stations through a period of f rty yearp; who e pons .d in hi youth, and adhered through his life, to ihe cause of its liberty; and who has horno a pirt in most of the groat transactions which will con stitute eprchs of its The alnce nearest to my heart and ueepe? in my convictions is, that the Union of the Staffs be cherished and perpetuated. Let the open ene- my to it be regarded as a Pandora wi'h her box opened, and the dis4ruied one as the serpat creeping with his deadly wiles into Paradise. Thk Stkamer Ma.hsachi 'setts. A letter from a correspondent of the Taunton Gazette, written on board tbe steamer Massichusetts, gives a glow ing account of an encounter between tbe Federal blue j ickets and the rebels at Mississippi City: On the Hth of July the Massachusetts was fired at from tho fort, when a large number of shot and shell were thrown from either side. Upon noaring the fort several shot came ftVing through the rigging, when the Federalists discovered that the rebels had a rilied cannon, and as they were only endangering themselves needlenslv, without any chance of hitting the enemy, they got out cf the range of the guns. Ihe object in running into the place was to drive out and ong.iice two transports Hided with rebel soldiers. The cor- respondent ays that that part of the Gulf id tilled with Southern s earners, and that they would not have the least chance if one shot strut k them faiily, as the Massachusetts i so high out of water. The writer, in conclusion, savs, "we will give a good account of ourselves at anv rate, and if the enemy do finally get m they will have to pay dearly for it. No boat ha yot come to aid us, but wo expect one and then we go back to take that fort or get whippad in the at- tempt." The War in Missoijki. The St. Loui3 Dem- ocrat of Saturday says: Ou' verbal advices from the southwest reveal a fearful st ate of things in that region. Wiih the destructive march of tbe rebel invaders, a sys- tem of horse stealing, robbing, and general out- lawry prevails. Numberless atrocities and exces- ses are daily committed by the rebel forces, and those in loague and sympathy with them. It is estimated that s of the horses iu posses- sion of tho rebd troops, who are generally mount- ed, were stolen from the counties of Ja.spor, Bar- ton, Lawrence, and Newton, the scciiou overrun by the invaders. Marauding pirtus are furnish- ed with a commission to "hunt," a mild term used to cover up these predatory attacks. Horses, mules, and wagons are captured wherever found. One of theae commissions, or "furb-Uiih- to hunt," was found on the porson of a lieutenant, from Hickory county. Tho document was signed by Ie Witt C. fluntor. Colonel. A man named Smith, lately moved in from Kansas, w3 known to have captured twenty horses and marched wiih them to hio home in Jasper county for W private use. The community is demoralized by this sys- tem of "horse privateering," tbe lowest wre'ehes in the community taking advantage ( f the an- archy which prevails to pre on tbo property of their neighbors. A man named Linn, of Sarcoxie, has made a successful "hunt," having capturtd, it is report- ed, nearly a hundred horses. Foraying parties levy their contributions on friends and toe alike. Frtquent robberies of stores have been committed. Luye quantities of grain have been taken and all the flouring mill hive been pressed to perform a share in tins "grinding" exactions. This system of plunder is but a small part of the aggravations which stflii-- t the inhabitants of the region indica- ted. Their fears are excitpd by roving hands cf Indians, who it is confidently believed, accompany the rebel horde. The Indians belong to the Cher- okee and Creek tribts, and are mosi ly half breede, with faces of hideous aspect. It is averred on good authority that a Cherokee named Fry, has a commission in hb deer tkin pouch ensuring l,im a raward of .jO for the scalp usually worn by Di. Stemmer, of Jasper county. Tho names ot olh jr loyal citizans are mentioned, whose Fcalps are in good demand, at a paying tigure. 1 he morals of the women seem alio lo suiter from the inhumani- ty of tho times. A benevolent lady, whose name for the h inor of her sex we suppre-ss- , olt'ois a lib-e- premium for human scalps tulticient to mrike aba quilt, llor devotion to Lhe rubel cause ex- ceed in a degree the more mercenary motive of the Cherokee, Fry. We mij;ht add numborless instances to the above, but we forbear for tbe present. The pm. pie are fleeing from these terrible evils that ittilict them at home, and are setktng an asylum among utter strangers. 'Ihe road between Sprintield and Mount Vernon has been tilled with fugitives for sevoral we-k- . We can but hope that the time for their deliverance is near at hand. A letter from Canton, Lewis county, Missouri, dated the b'th inst., says: A messenger despatched from Camp Carnegy to the battle-hel- has ju.M returned, and gives the following information concerning tbe great tight, which was so gallantly fought by our troops: About 8 o'clock Sunday night, a messenger was despatched from Croton, in a hand car, to Keo- kuk, Iowa, and reporred that a large body of rebels wore neen moving, on Sunday, towards Athens, in Clark county, Mo. At the camp, a part of Col Moore's lviiment U. S. II. C., were stationed. The Keokuk KinVs and K oigers were immediately summoned, and after 'J o'clock 1. M., thirty-fiv- e men of each company, armod and equippe-J- , were ready and s arced on a special train to Croton. Soon after daylight, the Keo- kuk men being over in Athens, the attack was begun by tiring of small cannon from the rebels. The Union men immediately sprang for their arms, and to their surprise found the rebels com- ing up in three divisions, evidently intending to surround the town or camp. During the time say an hour and a half, Col. Moore came with five hundred men and begun tiring upon them, completely routing them, ar:d driving them out of Athens, killing forty of the rebels and wounding seventy-five- . In their flight they left sixty-tw- o horses, which were cap- tured by our forces. Hie rebels in that fiht numbered 1,800 men, four pieces of artillery, com manded bv the Rret Martin L. tireen (brother of btatos benator James b. (jreen), Ralph Smith, and others. The Union forcos were com- manded by Col. Moore, numberg 5'0. The Democrat of Saturdiy add . We learn that a party of 300 rebels meditated an attack on Tipton Wednesday niht with a view of dispersing the Home Guards stationed at f that place. Information uf the contemplated at tack; coming to tne latier, iney sent ior reinforce- ments from Calfornia. Obstructions were placed on the railroad track in order to throw the cars oft' and prevent the arrival of reinforcements from Tipton. The Home Guards being in futlicient strength, without waiting for an attack went in search of the secessionists. They ovei hauled them alout four miles north of Tipton, near the Boonville road, and afier firing one round gave them chase. Tbe rebels were too fl"et of limb, and escaped, with the exception of their com- mander, Oapt. Bull, of Saline county, who was captured and brought down to JefTereon City yes- - torday morning. ' Gov. Wright on National At faiks as Spf.n hom Eiikopc. Gov. Josiph A. Wright, the returned Prussian Minister whom Mr. Judd suc- ceeded, made a speech a day or two tince before the New York Chamber of Commerce, which is thus reported: Gov. W riht said t hat, after a n absence of four years from tbe country, he came home with a saddened heart. L is not a time now to find fa,ult with tho3e who are or have been in power, but we must afk ourselves, what is cur present condi- tion? I owe, said he. no allegiance to any par- ticular State, but all my obligations and yours are to the National Government. That is para- mount, and the State is inferior. Ihe speaker said thit we were misrepresented abroad. I he London Times and other foreign pdpars 6ediously misrepresented u?. Ihe press abroad has been rtjbsidi-.ed- . Our in titutions ara attacked from mercenary motives, and by those who are interested in the downfall of this coun- try. "The German heart moves elowly, but it beats warmly for tbe we'fare of the country. While Mr. Wiight was iu B;rlin he received more than five hundred letters rejecting the tituatiou in thiscouutrv, and from Ibuse who were auxiuus tu oine atd tight tbs battles of the Union. lie W4J oolig&U tu pubiUh a iiu .!'-- a Uit he bid la tiiiist iasBrvis vr.b ill Kictf of the Kine took him by the band and said: "(Jod grant that your people may be able to uphold the Bupromacy of the laws. The whole German people respect the Government of America. If we expect the aid and sympathy of the gov- ernments of Kurope, wo must help ourselves. What is our dutv e must require that the flag of our country shall be restored to its posi- - icn in every Stare and the Iaws rofltoren. e ust sacrttice millions before we submit to tho andard of the so callfd Confederacy. We can never he two people. Wemmt beoneor nothinf. We can nover h ive peace on any othor condition. The ppeakT had never behevd that thore wns in any seriou difference in any ptrt of the country with regard to the principles of our government. Men niav 6y that they hive lost everything property and family but so long as the govern- ment is sustained they have lott nothing. All we have to do H t go on till we have est .Imshed the supremacy ot our laws ana me onsiiiu.iuu ui our country. Mr. Wright s reinatki were brit hut pitnoiic, and were warmly epplauded. At he conclusion of the addresF, tho thanks of tho Chamber woro voted to the Fpe;iker, and the members generally ailed themselves of the opportunity of an in troduction to Gov. Wright. From the Kanawha Keoion Uv recent arri vals fromtbe army on the Kanawha, the Cincinnati Commercial laarns that our trocpj arc ciithbuted as follows: Three compinies of tho Twelfth .liniment are at Charleston, under Colonel Lowe; the the remaining seven comnanies of the Twelfth are near Can net ton. thirty tiva iniks from Charleston. The First Kentucky KokuoiiH is in their advance, between the road and the river. rim Kleventh Ilegimont is ere imped along Gau- - ley 1 liver, abtve the bridge recently destroyed by Wise, General ('ox's biing in the rear of the JJeventh Lmiinerit. Cm the, side of the mount .in, tuck from G iu!ty and the the Kanawha liivor, on a tine locaMon, the Sec ond Kemucky have pitched tluir tent., with one cavalry and two artillery cninnuiies. At, Corner ville, thirty mites up the Gauley Uiver, Colonel Ivler is encamped wi'h the .seventh, and th grsater portion of two other regiment?. U.i iruUv morning thu '1 went Reg! ment, Colonel FyfFe, lft Charleston for Parkers- - burg, and the Second Garmm Ktgimnt, Colonel Moor, hm left Point Pleasant, a No for the c:ime place. They are under orders to jjin Gen. liose- - crans. Iiib Jsai'klla mauia. I he mystery con- nected with the su'lden departure of this from Philadelphia baa been entirely dispelled by a communication from Win. P. Thomas, Keq. Collector of the Port: The IsabelK M:iria is nn Enc'i'-- vessel, owne at nresent bv Messrs. Van horn & Wo"d worth shipping nd commission merchant of this port, who purchased htr f.om Thcmas Watson & Sons in February list. Tbe Isabella Maria cieired for Labrador, at the Custom-houe- e on thedth innt., in ballast, having on board 2')D worth of stores, tho n?uat quantity for such a voyage. After claar'ntr, however, shi was chartered by Mesrr. A. K. O iterbridge & Co., to carry tL ur to one of the liritirh Province?. r&raily Prcs &3i rrascilpitoR Store C KNEK Ot K;ult i H S JBir 'KR80N. M, . X'. Proprietor. Ac4 iVni dJiwlanjtf HP18TQUAUTYOFPITT315UKO COAL AT THS i ownt mnrWot price. Alo, IJHitCU BDTi'UM UQAL at maoh lower ratei bv J. N. KRIXOnG, Aer.t. eptll llrtf Naar the corner of Thlra c I', tla. Ilavin? reconptnirtd my Mil), and RfWed itv ntach;uei7 for making FIN K KEMIKKY JEAXS, (wbirh to now brinp worn eo :tnMv'ly in the south Ann Vvert, I nra :iow prepared to fnr- - nlt.h an article of superior cjiiality, which I will wan-Mi- F1CKU FKOU tatKAMK ANI ,Ul)K OF rVA (rood mpptvrtf NKtfKO JKAN3 vd IJN'SFV on hand. jaDiieoilAwly L. KICHKHSoN. LETTERS nKLI FOR POSTAOE AT I.OL'ISVILLB F. 12, B. P., C'nrimftti. O. nOWI.KR, Ja W , Nrwc-fll- Ky. TVare, L. U. L , Mt. Veruuii, . Foils, Shiti , Mapne.Kr. Murraj', Mre't. Srf nhnville, O. Nn uiaii, Ijacy. Warri'ird, Ky. 1'icneit, Mr. YiTKini-- , X '!', O. r, J. W Vatu.-ab- Ky. Itr.dif A t , i;ify. Hmk, Wi-- - Mury C, Calveit, H. A., " JVD S. UuUv (3), " Kmm'tt, M. R., " (inM l ie, Vv hit-- . Cn., Citr. A. (1. l iankfo't. Ky. Munit y, Mi'i Ai.iia. ;it-- ; h'lbinon. Mr. fhooi;rtui?), City; Slu rlt-r- , 1V1I, Si O., Tit, .Ino. (f'oiii'ih sr.), " WilliAiii', (ieo. li , ll Po C. 11., afp'ybig for tbo ar?vo n ill ra'l at Cailv iflr'f Oilie. Wanted Immediately, Kl'.MMK. fIO bi t those wh can AfJOOl) tl l uocd upp! v. Portoti!cc Hox lJi". mil: H Wanted, lltfl TTORffKS, 1: or 16 bnnde birb, no. & -- vlivi the.ii 4 nor moru timii . yara o;d. "f fi J'l X hrowii. blfiok. marei, or bi' color, Rwi T e juare trotter and 1'riJlc k i.5e; A i.so l.M MI'LFS, bwke ti wotr, nM lJa Ih.n IJ . I. .(,.(. li'.-- rl t n;u J to b yeara out. Foitlnnd Kiii'MH, rll dl'.'Swl Trll h ind Main N w Albany h.dnr copy t o w tko a.iJ ciAigr tal olb v.l Tlie "'uij r.'.'prtfnUr rait the attentio i of tlirf p.ibiic To h:n e tilil'phii-cn- i pf pared t oinn aitine all discnp- - i.ioiu ot L vi iKMa a.d I''J in The tbiitMr. time. wiiwltH-tl- rii.1 et.l w rcaao's i to repb n'b tlu-i- eto' Kir the bit. fin e nt iy it to t'ie!r intt-it-- t to cl Rt M cVa old staui, N.". 47l Mdiu street, be.low feu th. alibj:i H. THOMSON. Situation Wanted TY a vonn? Iaty who iiiider"ndrf kind of fancy jnpr rlowi'iv. and ?oli em iiroidrj nod oi" &U a.irrrt alfj uud- t n.!-- ' the busiinHp thir.'ut-'h'y- , a".id wunbi t ke rhai t e ot nn (jhtuhli-hujfn- r. or itid art sbviijau iu a wtte. I'lense iHd rr.- !ili-V'tl- e 'ui-m- r For I)oor-Kcei- of the Senate, E are autborizt d to Mr. .lOtiN W 11LNDKICKS as a caiuid.-it- to tilf Ketltnckv Rfniitw s, itt-- - Three Veara' Recruits Wanted for the Regu'ar Army, Kecrultloc Rend zoub front sir.et, Ind Aur.E.B--mn- fsmmihtkd M.:n, bt-ce- ii the vtft'H of in tiud yeai b. hie wnh d lor th TlU'.tutlitll KrgiUl'.'ilt ul U. ij. Inrantry. By recent acte nf UonrFe tbe term of enliHttunt h'f been reduced to tbre j avis the bounty Lab been made facial th .t for vol;mtji-ii- tbe pay li.it been iucr-;m- two d'jllarr. p;r month, ami provision lias bn n inude to iTomotw d'j. rv iue pi ivntet m coinm'',jioiie(l olbe?r-- . Two Drllaia will be paid to ai.y out! b icfuig an K. emit. l or biith-i- f information or fur euliet aieut, apply at the recruit.uj Kendizvo . H. HFSSKY. Capiaiii li'tb U. S Inr'antrr-- , 13 rl m Kecnnrinc uttire- -. LARGt AND ATTRACTIVE AUCTIOM SALE BY L. KAILV & CO., On Wednesday, Aug. 1-- CCMMKNCIKG AT 1) O'CLOCK A. M , WllEN will b? cold 1" )p;erfP bached O'lnPFtir. 4j ri till ifOrt? t'l friitt.', l.i doeQ J' tpe'id'T.', 300 fvo-- Shoe Lac iv. Canton KJaoneN, li i i.int'i'f, Table-Clo- t Iih, Mum hite S hi 1 1, a lr ue line ot IMci-ry- , Hoop Skirti Notions ot all description.1, nd a large lnt' ot D. cjotic ( od- -. C??"rhia is a p iiue rto"t of Goods nd will be sold without reserve. Ibiyeie will do we.ll to attend eiil. Tprnif"CAFh on delivery. u, &AdN a ;tl 1. jKAl.MAN, Auctiuueer. a':; di Mutual Life Insurance. 'IMIR NEW HUTI Ab I.IKK IX- - 1 SL'KNCK UjMI'ANI, ;,o. jl t'afe it reel, inriireci liveB oa tb luuln i v n'yiy. Net Accumulation !I.S,"0 (KtO, p.nd for tbe benefit of u fmb-r"- , preront and tne wh"le f ly and advuotac. rrs'y invcitid. Ihe buiue crdutted txiluiively for the btntfit of th p rMi" inenred. The Kreath' riek taken on & life yl,(MM. Surplus ditribut-i- l aroop the itember every fifth year, oecember 1. lP4-- i.ttltd m cah or by adili-tio- n to policy. Premiums, may be raid quarterly or where deimd, and amounts not too smtll. Forms ot npi'lint on and paitiph Vts ot th" Cepipauy and it t reports to b bad of iti or at th" cMjlm uf thn tympany, er lorwardtd by m i , it written, fcr, . PIBKCTOKS: Marfhult P. 'Wilder, li. e!l Tappan, Charlei P. t.'uiti-- . Wiilmra 1!. Thoiuas . Ie.ei, ( i irre t (. t ( Iter, ;harle Hti:;b-d- , A. W. Tbait-- r, Francij C. l.owe I Jtruf f. SturK'. W1LLARD FHILUt'fl, Fre.ndcut. "V. W. ModLiWU, M. D.y Loueultic-Physfcia- n. ST. CLOUD HOTEL, COKNt R 3KUONI AND hTSKKTS. JA. eV VAN , LVO-Nf- , Proprfrto ft. 'I'HIS FIcii" b.ivinc been thoroughly retii ted. - now I rvfln to tlii' pnh K. 'hritei n od- rt-- . Hl'Jd-- ONK or two yooci: ra a cf kki intra! charsrMr d (uue ofht-i- neeu a: p ' can ontani boi J a d lodKinr a, a moiieiate pr;u id a litet rU a'e ff.ntilv wh ri they will have all the comt.'i tu And of a (food h. me. Add-e- with naia and 'efpienro. Po No. v'llf P a 'J Awn School Wanted Dy Exjerionced Teach era. A GENTLEMAN (f epVnce wishes t ob- tain a 9i uat;ou. ould pitter a Male Suboc!, but would no' ohnct 1 one c mp el oi both males tut feiLales Two cuiig lediej aeo wib a tciool c.m oofl'J ot eruail boy uni yivU. The tbrea teacheis abovu mDtioe i wruld em-ij- to teach or A.idrs .a bx 2i U uivjlie P. O. alJ diii SADDLE AD HIKMS M1KESIS WANTED. QOOD WAO! KHGUIAR EMFLOYMT. Tl'HNEK 6 SID WAY, 30-- 3 jHOllllfclx St, NKW YORK MILLS SIIKKTINQS: WAMSUTTA AND LONSDALK SHKEHNCS; SEMI'KU IDKM I HLACKSTONU AND HOPE 10; ENGLISH LONGtMX)! II; 4 L'TIOA SHKKTING3; 4, 4, ANIJ ALLUNDAtK BHKBTING8; 4, AND 12 4 ALLKNDALK SPRKADS; 4. IM, AND I'J 4 MAK3KILLK3 QUILTS. MANCHESTER IjlNfJIIAMS; WIHTI5 A MCSKLTO NETTING; HOOP SKtKTijt WlII'li: GUODS AND IIOSIKRV; Just reef ivfd and will he eold low f jr car'h. V- - Illi'CJ rw it iTa ota - It r.1 n mil nr,4lcil llf 1 a Mi.mj vu-ju- o imi nv ".f""""' crt j&b 304 bL, bet. Market and JnfTeraon. XOVXBVZX.X.IB, NEW ALBANYB L CHICAGO HAILKOAP. ' FOR ST.LCITICKIA0 DETROIT 310 CI. Summer Arrangement 1861. 4 N .i.i ator M..n)v, Anr. rj, raaieoger ATauje Vs will leuve New Aluauy ae IoIIuwk dT'). c)iiiit--'ii(- ! f t lirre Hai-- a id Itidin'apo- - , tiii.l Loouecting clo- ly at Lafiyelte for C bicao. IVTlirough from Ne A baby to Chicago in I houra. 7:4fi P. M. hT. LOUIS NIGHT KXPKKSS (Dtily), ri sr'une St. LiOiils at i A. M. and at o A M. Tb:a T.aii ru to to Mit jbell ouly. R.'hir-iing- , &T. LOUIS KXfKESS m lives at N"W Albanv at 4: VJ A. M., ni:ikiiw c o.e connections tim L:. i .cuia aud Cincinnati, n acbi.ig Louisville at 5:if A. M. The CHICAGO MAIL arrives at 7.4" P. M., reaching LjuidYiitu al c:m P. M. Oalv on Chance of Ccs Sf. LouU Cincinnati or LntoaQQ. The tliroiiRh Tnin inka rood coonrctiona North nn.i S nth Hi". Attlf. L;ll AVftf aild Mhiiiu City lor all poiuti fca;t, VVet, and Noitu-- Wr3t. rsr-Ti-- are run by ItnievlIIe time. CITor THROUGH TICKETS and further rpu'v at tlm GKMOKAL. RAILROAD OF FICE. corner oi Third and ilaiu streets. Louisville, Ky. R. E. BICKER, R. 8. PARKER. Aeen. ali dtl RHV. Cr. V7. BHCJiSTT'B INSTI- - ZUIC rCH YOUNG LADIES II. f beein it r.:it ecfion on the Kith ot jt.cm- - " or circular f'f turt h ' partus il era. ap;lr the Prtnriua', Kev. 0. tlK,iir,iT, St. Mat h"w-- , .h - tjii cjuul ', Ky. !'- - dla ni Woodlawn Race Course. fiWF.KPSTAKB tUK B l'ALM n, ANY AGE, To- - n'l.' hpt. S'liifirivtiou: au foit.it. To do je djy ot Ansrn-- t, ltl. Two or roor-- to make ante? All S'fiU'oiid piitenug in tin ft;ke nuiet le uwi.ed and must bave made a aeidou m Jt Hereon couu- - iyRv.fi torom off Fall. P.ricii! widhiiiK to euter. address T. K. MILTON. Pec'y. Louisville, An. 12, lrit. dtAupJ- i i. ri DOUBLE BAKKUL SHOT GUNS, mediu-- aid O' line- - 25 d zn powJf r ard Pifto! riafkp; ; b's and Cp-- ; 1 (Job's hitie; Just received and for sale ivvt by A. I!. BKMPLB A SON. JUST OUT: NEW UNION SONG (With CimsrfD, OH, oij THAT BANNEU' Word by Mr. W. F. Worn.. Music by 11 G. S. Wiiii im.k. "01MKS niav he obt&iued from Mr. Whipple, ntYa- - " J fir, , pru u Fnrt rv, t 'T Main strej-t- and all the Mimic S'ores. Oopieieent by mail 11 any addrri oo f nt tne i r.er.t a - Oh GEO. CATIIRALL, Manufacturer and Doalor in Tobacco asicl Cigars, Southeast coroer ol Sieyccnd aid (al!o tun pts.. rillLVDbLPUlA, PA. N. R. An ftj(?or(ment of one million Domestic CiKJira i!iauMtl p n hand ' v (Toimcrb' i" the stove of R. L. Talbi.t & Co ,) Druizit So Apothecary, Southwest corner Markt and Seventh streets LOUIbVILLK, KV. f Harine recently purchved i Dr. John Sar f.y cei:t hi- ct .ck of Fixtures, aud hav.n made birre additi'-'"- then to in tlm ebap ot Lfriixs, tjliemlc If, I'eiTniufirj , laHrf, 'ii.baco, pure l.i .!. r . I um now rTfiard to ti the . tir.tn nf .Ul whr. n:av favor pe with a call. PhysicUiif cnivpdly and accuratuly carupouudtd at all bouio oi' the day or ni.-l't- . Ilavli.K poM my stock l Dnips, Mrdicinef, c, to Mr. Loiih .b (1 ih'jd, i nkM creat pleasure in rocom inniriiMK hiiii t ) ibn n.it'e 'A nv lr:enrie, a- tlu-- will itnd i.m lo ni; an exooru-ne'- Afiuiwa j. Alii 1 JuHN SMtni'.NT, Kcnry Female College, rF, th Tri.tee.s bav tin ot annonnrni u to tne rub'ic that I1 O. L. LnnAUi and t.lr dauizht if have taken chaipe of thin ion. We liitve tn!iiv M'tili b n e in tu an and citcl' nt it ;u iii'i-.'- . r.ii'1 w. rthj-1- o couPdcnt'e of tlie community. Wi: thi''ffnre tor th- m a liberal ptrorni;''. Tne will cooimence Aucuct "Jii I Mil. For bourd, tiiit on, .t v, f .r tiie kc.I'.o.H!: ic year cr session ot tin Tuontbi. -- it Tuitio'' t r day prolan; the tai3:e b.Tfto'.ore charged. No pupil wi'l be received for lend Hum a uiilfp? by rp"ci.il acre Jinent, mil io tor a'ja m;u unietb io: piMtrai;tei iMnfHri. O. M MMHEWS, Tr rfi'it nt of t'ie. It. ard. .1. N WI HH. WM. A. I'KKt'.Y, W. S. TUO. KOUM N, H II rt12 Trusters. Science ill Academy, KHaLBYVlLLB, KY. va- in a mere 'bToiubly I r"fient c uditi'Q tUn at pri'ent. I he tall si n will open on M n , l diul v r or circulars tu;: - lull particuUir;, ps''y to n !' d in M ?. .1. V. TKVTl. P trr pal Tor A&sUtaDt Cteik of the Kouso of ikf 1.' E are sntbriz'id to nunniiiT .(AMI'" 3 A. DAW- - T p IN, oi Hair, a., a cauditlnto fur Aeiar.t t'leik ot the H 'u. e oi atadAte of lhe SSouse of Kepreijefl-tafive- s. W1'" arp "niborir.'-- t . Rnnouii'-- VILT I AM J T AN- - of uarrjird, ae a t t rO'k.t the lljiiri- - . 1 nl)rcJtLtat.ve of the next L' cil tii"e ot K nii'ii- - d" fte"l Assistant Clrk of the House of Rep- resentatives. WTK are autbon. d to JOf N M. TODD. H of vault t'urt, at a fundi for ot thi' lion in Kenriv: tntive- - ot tbe of Ken- - tiii kv, vliii.il uu the hrst Moudar ot bepM ui n. ,xt. jv:tn dAwt WATTS, GIVEN. A CO., CRANK ft VRjWN. Faducah, Ky. Kvausville, Ind. WATTS, CRANE, & CO., Commission Merchants, 45 BUOAD ST., NEW YORK CITY. VK nave f'n,d House In the City of w York T for tlie pule of Tobacco and Weern Produce, and i 6i li.'it a h ir of Western Tntroi ae. prom i;ii our b.dt til i tj for vlu inteii dts of our correspond We have every ciTifitb-nc- in Tohacro selling readily at full P' ic s. in round io;a, t lerel'jre advise uhipmeut to tlie New York luarket Mr Daviu W'ktv. of Watt-- , Given, fc Co , Padi;cah, inivn. Wurly. fa New Oilcan', lor irany yia's familiar it tne Tob icco t ade, will hi pernor ml mention to tl)t tiuei t. Mr. I. A. Crank, oi rane t Brown, E i ill. will tttend directly to tbe W'uiUTu Produce av pitrtme'it. W ATTS, CRANE, A CO. Nw Y"f K, fvn" 1. lHiil aud'f tt, Joseph's College, BAKjaTUWN. KY. STUDIES wilt be resumed in this institution, ae tbe fir't Monday S- - timber. Tcr.M fkr SKt-- 'iN ok Tv.t M'NTtis Matriculation f e 1 : Iard, Tu tion, Washing, c., ;.'; Physi- cian' fe . Owing to Hie diffifilty of collector dthts a the pres- ent time, payment f'r tach halt' seewion will be required invar ab'y iu ndvauc". No idud'-n- will contenuei.tly e admitted unl- - tbe puna of !"1 itt dporit d wiih tbe Tiva-nrt-r- Mid auadr.it onal mm ot tf:tu it th if ta be turu!?t'i'd with clolhiiiij by tbe tneutol the Coill'KB a7dwtm THOS. O'NEIL, President. pi"t n'turned from ('incinnatl, where 1&SZZ 1 have yrocur.d, tlnouKh tte kindnt-i- ot Col. K AMTf.noN, one l;irro ai'd one ?nia!l pied Puoto-mr- u of bknM.lt, in lull uniform, with tbe identical rioak and cap woin by him at Fort Sumpter dnriurz the bonihardiM'-iit- , I am now r ady to furnith his Iriendr? and iioiiiii tb with dupln ttei of each eii'i at my (iallury or at Fiank Madueu'e 15ookato:e, Jial Third itreet. K. KLAL'KKK, Ree Illve Gallerv, Main street, rtnt dlvln Wtween Thin! nd Fourth. For fcrk cf the House of Rcpre- - scutatircs A'K an to announre Mr. W. T. 8AM- f UELrt, of V lizHbtbto' 'ii, as a candidate for Clrk of 1ip UniRf of Rt p itiv" Aslant clerk of tlie lioue of Representatives. R are auliorizel to auoonnre JAMES B. LYNE, oi a candidat ? tor Atfelrftsnt Clet'C o: the next House tf Representative?. jiif'f. WTIEETINnp IO so bales Anchor Sbeetiuge; do un Mill do, Su do II inner do; Received per ittamboat Ida May aud for by JAO. F. HOWARD CD., Apents tor Manutarturer a!2 Mnln. betwee u Third and run th WHOLESALE AND RETAIL OKOCEBV. FLOUR, No. 2: Market atteet, betwe-- 8wnd and Third. Louisville. Ky. al2 WHAKfR P ROOMS J5 dczsu extra Shaker Brooms for Hiile by tnlJI H1BBITT t SON. O'i BBL3 (' A&TOR OIL for eale bv ali WLI.&UN, PEJ'ER, & CO. i"OFFLE S:) ?ick prime Java, Laguayra, and Rio 'odtiv in ctore aud for bale by H1BRITT h ROM. 1,'0''1KN WARE Tub. B ck U, cv0red Cane, T Ci duthu fins, Weh Boards, Bwl?, MBcUrtsr it., ur bait- by all mnpTTT SON STO.NK-WAKEo- f a I kindi! kipt ou bdi'.d od fr ia!l HiKi'iTi1 h 20 WILSON, PETER, & CO. but f LB WAX fr al ' ty l.oobi,1 WI fttl. P- - TV f. C. j. m '6 MASON & CO., MANUFACTURERS OF Wain street, between Third ami Hive now on baod ud lor eale it redust-- iricc, to fuit the limep, a fine asaoit ASH, EIAFI,S, AND roriAH DKtTIHF; 230X8' II . - . ... . ... nn ui um uw ii iiiwiiii'Ciii re. Mia main ot th- hunt. And mo .nr. Al. n jr..W riFEs, ncoijoa, nuatjEa, etc., etc, C ? EVERY INSTRUMENT Drnmsrrpaired. Drum Hoals, Drum Snares, Drum Cord, Drum Strap.-,- , extra Drum Sticks etc furnished to order. Drums mountod with any Coat of Arms desired. AluoicaUiistiumenu repairod. We takr pleasure In offering otir thnnkp to the various IliHUIlf r HI mini - " ...m.ii-.- i riii.-- .i ic" Klrm Ml imit. riiih' Inrne off the plm over tU. hc nnujutiu-turi-- in New York, Cimiuiihri. Hi:d iWwheri 'i h- -, i,H v dmW. dbyo..rii.o - teM, tum.c.I ttnm.ruer.androihvnt i.ulto be tbe UKSf DKl MS ver thi" nmiktt. Call ft1" exiin:ua our atock. 1 1 ce lit mmkd to any order. .1. M it a- - ).. von sale ok item . Tot Rent, f; 7 ... Walnut, between Sixth and S- - rmth IJENR'i PHITLK. Blorant Country Beat far Sale, fTii I'll 1111 llllli; " IIW UI It, li io.iu, vu o ,! Sbclbwille pike, (br-- milci from the,? :", cty, in tlit beet iitdbhorliood iti couu-L- i '.L tv. Tbe imnmreiiieiite are all iiur and of tb ui-- eiibotaotisl kind, ccniriitifi everything oece arv Mr comiort and onvoipuce. wi! n tine fruit, tbru Iwry, a large iprlug, Ac. For pavtifiilam, nvvly to Old a t No. 4H it. Piivato Medical Dispensar Counted on th Jhnrofwm Phmt fa: t. Ct of mil FriTAt - iSi. Tbort mjlce with any d JUVJ4l. eur ot a vrivatr Wurf, wl c tJ-"- tATvas woald eere the t:up'itlon it V- 'Mi tmiorant unacko, tboLiid not fat tT " ad "OR. Cat Puiti -i DiR'A a now s.ud reviMk v edition of oue bundrefl paei. Af LiflOy plates and erurrftvtnrs reprrfiont inn the cealtal oraua of both Fiea In a iiate of health aDd dieewe. Tre?.tin on all prldte dtseares bnciflent to both aexei, aucb as nanoral oervftut ana texuai tonwy npi!.B, r eats new. lrjnot-nea- . ic. ITlso by meJI i r.N tCNtn. Pit. GATKS baa for man yftars devoted hii wh:-- Hne and attention to the trcatu.nt. ei disca,'"---- of r.ture tn'ail tivetr varltd ad eompilraMid Srtvate Hli tuecoaa In thvw long rrniii:? ana t'.'caH ca;e, tach as were fomerly incuraoK It 'iciont to oommand nun to the arrjett-- at wo.ny oi the ftxtenlvo practice which he baa heretofore received. 4nu .ie pl'H!poe to spare iieiiwr miuh iwuit w mu- der hiojflf promiaut in the profefiou oi ou adaption. fhowviw oeuevo tnay nave coainw;v.a uiwwL'Hi'.uiw mAke immediate application, m, by bis reoent discove rlet, be ii enabled to cut short au risrs in a icw om YO'.tko, MiniL-OP- i, and Or.n MfJ. who, by indn't-L- iu olit6ry hattiU or excessive indulf ence of tbeu icsloas, have Skmioai. Wiuanau or an abil-t- f Lu advance of their yoara, may be restored to theii foruiar health and vigor by ruakinf lmmeiiiate appUc Won. . TKb LADITH. Pt. ! went ror H. i,A CKOIS'a FR2NC;i PflFVENlIVR POWPRK4. Br their oe, thosn who. from any eanse, irirh to limit ihe number ot their oftuprint;. c&n do to without danfor to heals-- or constitution, rrioe by mail, ' ana rw & itaxe . AuKsfcrStADAMS CAPRACB F15MALB MONTH. LY PIL1.8A safe and offretoial remedy for Irreilari ties, Obitrnetiona, &c Price by mail, $1 and. on stamp. Oonon.-Th- w pill ihontd not be taken dtuini frcfiaiwv, M theynce fiTe tc produce m(riviftt;. To rrsoiii at a distance who wish to be cure-- at bore we wtll, on receipt of a brief ttateiueot oi tbtir case, senc a list of men quettlons as we would ass on a porwcal and, on receipt of tbe list fitltf out, we w!li forward medicines particularly adwptd to tbe caw, fre frotc damage or ebservitti'jn, to any pai't of thd oyoutrr with full directions for ose. Consnltationt mav Ni he !d frotri f A. H. to P. H. (on Sunday from V to 11 A. M- - at hts office, nort'iead eorn'Trof Third and troe, up stair privab entrance on Third Ky. t"i"ie btisinej wi'l hereafter be cotnet nndor the name and rtyle of Pit. II. G. MllA.YAi A CO.. to whom all orders and Witterc shocild b nddressArt. Dr. (JATS3 can, as ben torors, be consulted personally, flu riEtr boslueu bonrt. on ail doaei on which hit boot trrp.Ji. iST'Secrecy Inviolable. Don't forrs the name ani pUoe, Ail tetters should bo nddrfisse.5 to DR. U. Q. KII JKil CO- enmi mills. C1DKK MILL AND WINK PRK33, KRAUSKR'fl bv a oi the bet "iHttTi-l- . Oi ronetniction, durability, and ' ffectivenes in oinkiug cid:r or wine We wld TnsKi nniiutut of them lat aeap n t farmers in Indiana, Kentucky, and Tuuneee. Wai ranted to work well. Trice t CARTER BUGHANAt. je21 dJawipRAwJm 411 Main Ft.. LquisvUIb. At C. J. KAIBLE'S, 332 Jofforoii stroot. JUST RKGE1VKD FEU EXPKKSE: Gold and Silver Pra'd". s, Sta--"- , and J., i' rd- ?.ll widtnn and iimiiHif; SiU aud N WrtrMed :rimon S.t?lvs, U. 6. and Kv. Stat It itt. n Gold and Silver It nliou, y aud Fnnc.- -: Worsted CordP,Kraid, .v:".-- . aud L ie.", all Crtlo's- Sword Kni't. Fiag ',.V1"A u ........ ...i i. i.i .nn. t nn hnnH And nuide. to ord'-- st h"rt noti.-n- . rrin.ns, Itnt our, Tas-el- Cords, Ac., mad t oider st dhoit notice and on rea- - .jOi abb1 tei i.jjq (kiuiitiy flieicuautB euppntu i ''''-- " Aiild:COU(.t. aplOdly Hartford Fomale Seminary, rTIIK;oi Kli OF IN' Kl'CTION IS TIHiK-OUii- 1 and extensive, embraring tho wlu.de ranee of a ol d aud ornaoiental cdm-aH- In rf iu rfMeand crnve:u.'iife nt ImiUinc and in leae-a- location t in-- t tunoa iseuuilit r"t mpvn wv t' anv in tbe cnuntrv. In tbe i resent disturbed tta'e oi therouutry. this orlern peculiar advant to f oi-- ' parents wishi- it a uiet, pleai.t. anl cire residence for l her daiicbti-r-- . tr ui.th-- r imo-in- t i''U or lor cirr nlnr?. anuly to the Principal, VN". 3. CKUSH) , uftd'f Hertford. Cor n. CHOICE LAIiD. r A TIKB'JES tor Bale lo to c'.ofe by OU aHl J. "MtTH BfE-nt- , Main et. Office Louisville and PZafehvillo Kail-ro- ad Company, LorirtviLLK, An?. 5, liil. TOTICR TO STOCKHOl.hEKS - l he annual meet-i- y inn of the Stoen holder of the LruiiviUe s viile Ka'boad Conipany will te held ou Monday, the 7tb dav of Oc'ober bext, at it ntliceio J MV J 'd'T'priK. ivrt Forest Academy, by IS. II. WcHown, WILL Bl'.lilN ITd NEXT SESSION ON THE V th y of SejJt- - mlr. Tbe ctmi-- e of instruction it thor-ouc- h and compl- te, tuibracin such pract-c- l btuuehes Surve' iup, Ac. Tehms B iaruinu. tuition, wabinir, fuel, Ac, i6i for iDon hK. lnduiKnce in rtgaixl te paj mcuta will be erautt-- when n ed.:d. Kev. Dr. W. W. Hill wBl opn a Female Academy of the highest order on the 13' h uf bptcniber witlriu ba'f a mile The dame teachi i wi.l t'vu iml nn tions in both Academic h, when decired. in Mimt aud t rench. Address me, at O'Uar.uoii's P. O , J.ff. rxo county, al d WATEBW0RKS. PI iamb ing HO. IM TEIED BTKEST, NEAR JEFFERSON Si Water Pipes, Hose, Hydrants, c are prepared to iu trod nee Water rtnea tnr WE Dwellings, Stores, and Faetoriee on reasoiiahb terms. We have a full stock of Bath Tub, Water Ciosot, Shower Bath, Wah Basins, Hydrants, Bo Boxes, Ac Having a long experience in the bnftoefi we iroaranty to five entire satii faction for all work er troabed to ni. ' DGNALY & STEAD EE, fLLMBBKS, GAS AND BTBAM FITTBBJI tnU dlstf Mammoth Cave Hotel, Near Louisville, Nashville, and Memphis Kilroad. This healthy, pleasant, cool, and delightful ummer bavins resent ly undergone a chanve of proprietor, and neen enbired and reiuruifhtd. uww oners superior lndureni-n- to vi.-- i us deeir n to visit the t 3v or seeking tin cxl-es- t and summer rtyirt to be found onlv a few mllei fioni tim railroad, n hre fcood four-bo- r e coautirs are always m leAdiiits-- to convey paweugera to and from the Cave, ax.llrn V. K. OWSLEY. Pmprirtor. Cotton Lands for Negroes. Tbe imden-isncd- as af ent, li4s i''.iJO0 worth of Vi$ Ail:ant?a aud Mifjusippi Ijuio- - which he will ex ".jC chin?? for Negites. Stocks, trouud Rente. City Property, or in a word for altoot-- anything "trade-bl- e ' i improved placs on navigable stream. o.UO'J acres of wild laud in tracts to buit purehanei-fi- . J. B. WHITMAN, art d!2 w3 No. 411 Main rt. ffs. J. W. COOK, "&-0ptici- an from Paris. '222 Long Practical experience and a large assortment of OPTICAL INSTRUMENTS, SPECTACLES, AND GLASSlr-S- . 404 Third at., bet. J Hereon and Green, nedisly LOUISVILLE, K? N. B. Wt-b- e and Clock" r'jrxiirerl ind wTntM Oil, Xjvxxl, Oil, Oil, 3uixxLtja, Oil, Oil! XjmLioa. Oil. COAT. 31L, LUNAK OIL,LAKO OIU AND FLUI1J LAMPS of every style andemb racing all tbelatentim nrnvflnwiti. tefhsr with all th BURNING OlL.9 ai fi BURNING FLCIPof the best quality, for life wholsial tird retail wrv low. We are exclusive aee-it- lot ini city for the sale of the Breckinridge Coal Oil (the best made), and for LnnarOil and Lamps, also for the rale ol rlghufor the Lunar Light. Who would born when a liRbte-iua- l to fcor candloi can be had at qj! of one cao'Uel Lunar nd OU Lampe axf Joi as iie as candles. Will bear in mind that the Is but BtCVP-- MILES from BELL'S TAVERN oi GLASGOW JUNCTION (which is two mllei and t other dpot), and the half nearer than any Excsedlun anything yet dieccvesed for beauty and foi fantastically shaped etalagniites and stalactites, li but ONE AND A HALF MILES from BELL'S TAVERN Visitor har tbe option of vititinf ote or both Claw &t v-- s 54$ fero. Fourth, Dear the National Hotrl COPIPANr AND TOY ERQfflB; moron i:n v uKxn,,tm iiTa, . k.. j . " ' WAURANTKD.sl Milit.nrv nr?nniitinn n Ihrniu'lmnt M.o stafl l,i'.l 1IU.' HP t'l - T'l UK l;trl Thill OUT I II li Ptl ! h Main st., bctuefn Hiiid and Fourth "i isvii i.k, Ky. VVAISTEU Vanted, ITY BONDS AND CITY SCRIP, Ql'IflLKY, LYONS, A CO. Fresbyieriau Female School. rpHK NKXT SKSSiON THIS INSTITUTION A v ill cniinenr' ori t - !Oh of !5t)tenlb under tha pUierintindtMnt) ol frufiB-o- r A. A. OOHDOM, riridwSpl !birnnn of Hurd f Trntc. Soutliwestern Agricultural Works, (Factory comer of Kl?hth and Green streets, (dabvKooni No. SIT Main et., bet. Ud aud Z&yi LOUISVILLE, KT. MANUFACTURERS WHEELFU'S PATENT "WATER DRAWERS, INGEP.SOLTS PATENT HAND-POWE- HAY PRESSES, TELEGRAPH FODDER, HAY, AD STRAW CUTTERS, SATJDFORD'S PATENT STRAW CUTTERS, WESTERN and IMPROVED WESTERN CORN SKELLERS, DARLING'S PATENT RAIL-ROA- D H0RSK POWERS, DARLING'S PATENT SAW TABLES, CIRCULAR SAW MILLS, EUST0n PATENT THEESEEES I CLEANEEJ, OHIO TWO ASD FOUR UUKSI! IKEEHlEl rWt! havo on bind wn P"RTAftl.K FARMKRS' 9TKM KNiilNE-s- suitbl lor 'liirehing, Gi nidinfc, Sa'.riiiu' Sb- binK. 4c . mi n itcd on wnf-- . n. We make a nui'iwde THKKSUKRand cLICANt K alio on wagons, 10 go With ttV'm IJXUiVW & CO., 217 IVIaint. r"ft 2nwdui Aiii?wl AYEK'S me Cure. for iiir tjrF.irrY ouiut or Interntiltrut 'arJh'rrr Ht Ifttl Itutuh f, I' triit'timl glena arhe uv ISItitHt Hndarhr ftttt ltiHun r-- i iutlrrrt fur th irtult rtatm f iHt ttrigriuatluer litiortf IteraMGrrmtnt rau4 by lite PIiWa of 1liairmalic ottnlrim, JVO ONE REMEPY IS LOUI'EP, CALLED FOR BY 11 the n- (Vrfiti s of tne pepte than a sum snd ffe cure for tevi-- and Al'iio. H'.i'b e arc now enabbd to 11 r, with a perfect terrain y that it will eradic'ie the tieH!, and wi' h aM urtiic , f tunded on proof, that no barm ca.uuriie fiin its use in any ijuau tiry. That which pmtrrt from or pr vert tbin difordpr mint be of immense in tbe c tuinunif i' whTe it pr vail i. J'tt'ivi'tii n 'f i hwi i ore, fur the pa- tient epcapoa tlie rim which be mii't run in viojf nt, tiHlefnl d 'j hie '( 'I'KK expein tbe niift'inic pown ot F pvh; ami Auvk f.om tlm n aud the rievelopni'iit if tin ai-- i a?e if taken on lhe fiift anprc-ac- ot its prennnitory i mp toniH. It if not only the beet remedy vr yet di co -- erea far tbic chH of conipl but also the r hpest. l he lar-- (piantity we iirp,ly f ir a riojUr I hnun it y- itliin the reacb oi' very bod y ard in bl'iour where t kvks and & ,v prevai'r, nvrj body dbierld have It and u m it fveelv both 'or cure aud prevention. A rreat mpeviority of th n ren-- 'y ovt-- any other evr d 'St ovfrfu lor tli npeed- aid reittiu cnieof Intennlt-te.i- t; i that it contaiui no 0. iin.iie or tnitieral, it prodneu uo 'I 'lnini or ht r iniu' loop "tfecta up m t he c uditutiou. Tbrwe cur. d by it are left a. hen hv a if tlny had uvver bad lhe diHiH. Fever and Ayue is not nion tbo conttifiiencu ot the poiton. A n r. at va'ie'yoi dtioider arm) tioiii it among b'ch ai"d N(ura'Kt (iout, lleaiachr, Kiudno.-e- . '' i o'livh", Ear-ac- Palp'iation, Painful Affedioa ot the Fp"e-ii- IIvftirij, Pain in the Boweie, t:olie Parattni.-- , and lrai'H-nien- t of tbe Stomach, all of wtii h when or ;:inat'irg in tine put on tlie inter-i- n tt nt tpe, or tmouie pf'i'iodical. Thia 't.nta" ex p. the nom tue blood, aud c Uit"pientiy cuiea th- ni all alike. Preuired by PR J. C. AYV;R A CO,, Lowell, Mats., ai'd tj.ud bv all :ti every w hei e. R A. ROBINSON CO., Whoteop-I- - Acnta, LouIb-vill- e, Ky. al eodtOweowlm in Rockaways and Coaches 1361. Tor Spring, 1361. Bockaway Bneffea, Exleuuiou Top SUde- - at, BhUUng Top No T"p UiufEie, Hpriuf Wanons, And a lorire aportmeiit of Carriage! of every deecrip-tio- u, winch we are nffnn AT PIIH KS TO SI-I- THE TIMES. AlfO an of CAIU!A(;K 'IRIMM1NG8 COmpricinR 8pnup, AJtle.1, ljeatber Band?, Ate, at 'ttHa v I.F.STONE&CO.'S, above the Oa;t House ucria eide. MLITARY EQUIPMENTS. NUtK fi KAP-K- . 'I'JL t'ABF,r"5' EE SVA lib MUIM, DitLsi i:Ks, vr i"N band and made to order. Contracts solicited and promptly filled at tbe lowest prieea. R. E. MILES. Saddle, Harness, and Trunk Maimfuctory, No. all Main street, between Second and Third, sign of the Golden Tlotvp Head. m3B " JOE HOLT RIFLES." $15 perniODtSi iay-$10- 0 Kouuty, TM1K Law allnwine the above amounts to tbe t"i'in 1 Volun eern ha- -p mft-- tbu llou-e.(- .f Itepreentativea with hardiy e di.e;itiiig vou. Tbe-- with tbe Pension Acf wiul B nnty Land law" i :il!ir i "lit to h: ft tbe most iucrediiloua th it our Govhtuhi nt intends doing iis part to lnrtoer tbe luteiet-- cf tnoe who take up arum in iU defence. A f"w more recruits are wanted to till up tbe Joe Holt Rilb'3, an eci llent cunpny in KouMeau'd Bi'iga-J- now on d'ltk- at Camp Joe Ilo;t. Apply inittedirtt-l- y at the corner of Eighth and Main etn ete, or at the aioreeaid canr.i of jyla dtf C. L. THOMASSON, Captain. 5IIL1TAI1Y GOODS Wholesale and Retail. LKAT1IKK, HSU-SKI- AND GILT 1RON7.K bWUKUS: l.l'ALLKTS; BCTTONS; S ASHKS; SAl'DLKS. pWiHtU BELTS: MUIH.KS: 8 WORD KNOTS; fell H'LDKK S0ALKS HaNNKK SfKARS PATlOM' MKl'Al.LIC SliuULULK STRAP?; BULLION KMBROII'1 OO DO; nLT'S ANIi KKAL'S RKVOLVERS. FLAGS AM) BA.m;KS mde to rder. U. S. ARMY KKUULATION II ATS. I am now prepared to sell Swords to the trade lesi than fr.aetevn price-- . Hn Prc4'ntatiou Swords always ou band. Orders promptly ttlbd. h. a. HAraLiiv, jr., !2 We?t Fourt b, two doore wee t of V uie trt et, dltnle CINCINNANI, OHIO. WEBSTER'S GALLERY HAS Always been tbe leading n4 most sncces ful Gallery in the Watt aud It la in rpri t- - ln lo what fectioa they have now thui Beautiful A rt. We were not a- - ware until we thti . (amoua Cil- - lery a few davp since, and saw the walls cmpleU ly covered witn eJrf.-.n- .t and truly arti-ti- c gems of Portraiture, of every sire and t"le. and all seeming so rfifectlF wesav tbftt until theo we had no idea that all the Moe-- Web- - str say in the papen Is really true. But the hatfhu not been told, II" ir-n- i) a no nr.w. r Imptrters of uns&FJstiinjrTackI WHOLESALE AND RBTAU. WO. M Third itreei, near Mala, LoniiviUe, Kr.. we now reetvtng t ot tin and rifj-- i WW. doable and sintlo barrel Unui, Colt's and Atltn Plsto'a, Rifles of every and every article osed by Oopnera snd gporUmeu; nto Ftsblnc Tarkle cl pvervdt-jcrirtl- a'.l of whih they wi'l ell for cosb t to pnntcal cotirnera. Give ns a cfitl, e'l ef yon whe tro In wnt. ter dlwowtf IJO BLOCXCADS! NASHVILLE CHRISTIAN ADVOCATE AND THE CIRCLE will 1hi "alter be seut by Adane Errpress to hie ci'v and m tiled here to throughout Kentucky aad other portions of the Un'ted States. Trie fubcri' ere in tb3 city may, U they pi'tier It, call for their pirer? at the METHODIST BOOK ?MOM-- o.'63 Tblrri street. Call and sebpcriV If yon bare uot done eo. SCHOOL for eale. i 4ft A. TT. RRPFOim Blutual Firo Insurance, IDBILLAED FlliS IJSUBASC3 CO., of Su U,l Capital and euiplue 53.731 lb Tb's Camriiny dii'l'l'-- th!es- - --tf fourths ct her aiucitij dtri-.Ucy-bjidvr- lte.t la tit. u t Losses mULUd by LULlSVILLE M Ma- - s::0 Mid. i'.cs", i

uuu riFEs, ncoijoa, nuatjEa, etc., etc, - nyx.uky.edunyx.uky.edu/dips/xt7c599z0z3p/data/0308.pdf · tion of either of those kingdoms or empires should assert the right of erecting

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Page 1: uuu riFEs, ncoijoa, nuatjEa, etc., etc, - nyx.uky.edunyx.uky.edu/dips/xt7c599z0z3p/data/0308.pdf · tion of either of those kingdoms or empires should assert the right of erecting

LOUISVILLE JOURNALQKIiiZI BETWB1M TIIIHD AND rOUBTH.

resyTiCK, hsndebsos, osbobhy,flOMHTO k 6 .

BUbdOPlPTION PRICKS IN ADVANCE IOii.Lj Jonrn!, delivered la the City, ti); sei.t bv

miUi li paid in advance, or $10 if not paid withintbf-tj- months; Country Daily, 5; forany period lew than one your. So cunt a month; W Akly,ti. Evening Bulletin, $; If mailed. $6.

CLUB PKICKS-1- N ADVANCEtWeekly Five cnplo or niore, 1 5iJ ervb.

ADVEKFISINO-I- N DAILY JOLUNALtI iprarft 1 fhiei or Ibm) firt insertion gl 00

Bach adflitloual insertion. 86

IN WEEKLY JOURNALquare '0 lineaorletflrttiiiertton 1 00

Each additional insertion. . 86

WF For (ell particular as to term of yearly aaer-Uin-Ac, --.tt first column on first page.

IJKO. I. I'KKNTHk.iPALI. K, SIIIIlAN,i Editor.OMVKK 1,( A. Locul Kdltarand Reporter.

TUESDAY, AUGUST 13, 1861

Tuk Sollmn Duty of the U. S. Govern-men- t.

The present unhappy war was begun by

the South, begun for the take of disunion, and

wad accepted and is carried on by the UnitedStates for the sake of the Union and not, we

hope, in vain. We know from the testimony

of numerous Southern men, who dare notspeak aloud in their own homes, that thereare multitudes of men in the South who are

at heart fjr the Union, who in their secret

souls arc prnying to the United States for de-

liverance almost, as they pray to Heaven for

salvation, and who, if ever the power, of the

United States shall relieve them from the

thraldom that, now crushes their puliiiicallives out ot them, will be tb!e to assert and

nviinlu'ii a supnynacy in ih-n- respective

States. We haw no; mi earthly d'xibt thatthere area uiyurity ofSur.es whose toop'e,though now appj,r unanimous for South-

ern independence, wmld, if the deadly weight

of a relentless despotism were lifted from theirminds, hail the restoration of the Union as

the ironed prison ;r of a dungeon hails the re-

turn of God's blessed sunshine, and would

greet with exultation even the little privilege

of giving free expression to their opinions.

The present positions of several of the South-

ern States were never chosen and have never

been endorsed by the citizens of those States.Secession ordinances were passed by Legislatures never elected or authorized to actupon the subject; such Legislatures placed

all the military and pecuniary resources

of their States at the dispo-a- l of the SouthernGovernment and invited the Confederate ar-

mies to an immediate occupation of theirterritory; and, after doinR all this, they

granted to their enslaved and manacled pco

pie the empty and miserable mockery of theprivilege of deciding whether their States

should or should not go into the SouthernConfederacy. Of course, where the people

would gladly. have shouted "No" by tens ot

thousands, scarcely a solitary "No" was heard.The States, transferred by such monstrous andHeaven-defyin- fraud and violence to the

Southern Confederacy, are now subject to Us

tyrannical laws and requisitions, and theirpeople, who have never been allowed to have a

free voice in the fixing of their own destinies,

arc looking for freedom to a power outside

of the dominion of the deadly tyrannyunder which they draw their breaths. Itwould be a fearful thing that the loyal mil-

lions in the Confederate States should be per-

manently abandoned by the United States tothe miserable doom, to which, through no

fault of their own, they have been subjected.

Our trust, our conviction is, that, if the mightyarmies of the Kepublic, defied as they have

been to strife, sball plant the standards of theUnited States at enough-poiut- to guaran-

tee perfect freedom of thought and word anddeed to the whole South, a large majority ot

the people of many if not all of the seceding

States will declare their loyalty in a thunder-bur- st

of joyous enthusiasm.The pohcy of accepting peace on the condi-t- in ot recognizing the independence of the

Southern Confederacy would bo a terrible one.Nay, it would bo a policy that we but feeblycharacterize by the word terrible. It wouldbe the death, the everlasting death, of thegreat arjd glorious jiope that ttow lives in

the hearts of tens uf millions upon this conti-

nent and hundreds of millions throughout thecivilized world. Ic would be the destruction ofthe mightiest work that the spirit of freedomhas ever dons upon the earth What has beenthe admiration and the wonder of the nationswould be their pity and their scorn. Let noone delude himself with the thought or fancythat a Government, a nation, has not a right todefend itself, by all the powers and energies atits command, against disruption and dissolu-

tion. To do this is, as a general truth, among anation's most sacred rights and its highest andmost solemn duties. The nation Hint shouldnot recognize and assert the right and the du-

ty would be the object of alt mankind's con-

tempt. Surely no human being supposes thatEngland or Prance or Spain or Austria orRussia, if a por'ion, even a majority, of a sec-

tion of either of those kingdoms or empiresshould assert the right of erecting their sectionin'.o au indep ndent realm, would permit therighr thu-- claimed to be practical ly asserted.It is absurd to suppo: that either of them,upon any claim of a portion of their people tothe right of would submit to

, submit t) be divided into twokingdoms or empires. Sooner would they wagea war of centuries, a war, as they would justlyconsider it, of national life or death.

To 6uhmit to the separation of tlje UnitedStates into two independent powers would notonly be the most fatal example that we couldset for the existing generation of men and toall the generations that are to come after ns,but v ouid render the whole area of the thirty-fiM- -

Suites one of the feeblest aDd most wretch-ed portions of the civilized world. All ourold glory would be tumid to midnight dark-ness; The two republics or two monarchies,supposing that to be the number into which,our couutry should at first be divided, couldnever remain for even one year at peace. Athousand causes would render collisions andwan between them inevitable. Neither of thetwo cou'd have the least security against itsown disintegration and dissolution. The U.S

. .i s:.cd tue ecfdent uf pcimicung eleven orvelvc or fifteen States to go (iff at pleasure,

could not restrain other States from doing thesame thing. Ech and every State remainingeven temporarily in the United States wouldfeel that it had the power to assert and main-tain its right of either seceding into tho South-ern Confederacy or of establishing, togetherwith such other States as it might be able tocarry with it, an independent sovereignty, andit would exercise this fancied right wheneverfor any cause, frivolous or otherwise, it shouldbecome dissatisded with the acts of the Gov-ernment of its section.. What is now the Uni-ted States, as distiuguithed from the Con-federate States, would almost certainly,within half a dozen years, consist ufhalf a dozen petty acd jariiug powers with nocommon head. The same or even worse wouldbe the condition of the States of the SouthernConfederacy, based, as 'hat Confederacy avow-edly is and would be, up:n the assumption, asa fundamental principle of government, thatevery State or every two or three States mustever be recoguized as having the right to es-

tablish an independent government or indepen-

dent governments at will. There would be noGovernment in either section tit to be calledone. Our country, that we have been soproud of, would be in a worse condition thanvhe miserabla little republics of South America.No pretended sovereignty North or South could.vei obtain from abroad a loan of even the"iost inconsiderable amount, f ir European

would seem to euutirt their money toGovernments rut vtn claiming to embodyiir principle ot The pow-

ers which hava not dared to provoke the war-

like energies of earth's greatest republic wouldderide ns in our helplessness, and, by the

pfvivecf evea a siijrfe aaa-of-wa- r, compel

us to yield obedience to their haughty and tyr-

annical dictation. Horribleservile insurrectioi s

would break out everywhere in the slavehold-in- g

region, making fields and fire-sid- deso- -

late. Masses of slaves, first from the slave

States nearest to the free States and afterwards

from those more remote, would escape, some

by stealth and others openly, till the last ves-

tige of slavery would disappear. All the pet-

ty powers, jealous and hostile, would have to

keep standing armies, vast in proportion to themeans of supporting them, and the consequent

taxes would impoverish the people to the point

of hopeless and irretrievable ruin. Hundredsand thousands of desperate men, accustomed

to blood and violence, and having no means of

honest subsistence for themselves and families,

would organize gangs of banditti, such as for

years have infested Mexico. But this condi

tion of anarchy or y could not lastforever or even very long, from the midst of

all the confusion and lawlessness and strife,

some bold master-spir- it would spring up, and,

rallying thousands to his standard, pursue his

conquering and devastasting march until the

whule of what has been the United States

would be made a bloody and relentless despot

ism, as drear and rtmorselcss as any one re

corded in history.

And now the question is whether the UnitedStates, through a dread of the inconveniences

and even the great sufferings and sacrifices of

the war that is upon us, ought to accept this

condition of things for the sake uf a brief, a

hollow, a nominal peace. To our minds itwould be a dreadful crime against God and

the human race. It would mark the present

generation of the people of this country as tho

sniltiest enemies and murderers of freedom in

all the history of the world. Our glorious old

fathers of '70 bequeathed not more to us thanto the generations that are to come hereafter

their posterity as well as ours tho greatand magnificent inheritance of the Union.Our fathers of later periods received, guardedand transmitted the sacred, the magnificentb:quest to us, to be in turn passed

down by us to those for whom, as for

ourselves, the patriots who won it by theirblood ordained it. And now should we, can

we, dare we, in the face of heaven and earth,stop the awful b quest in it descent, shiver it

into worthless fragments, destroy that which

is not our own but mankind's for this and the

coming ages, defraud posterity of the richest

blessing ordained for them by the sainted and

illustrious dead of a dead century, swindle all

the human race of this and all the future time

of what myriads of millions have contem

plated with gratitude and adoration as the

mightiest boon of God to his creatures, and

leave our names to creak and blacken ou thegibbet of infamy as the names of men who

cursed their race and shall be cursed by it as

long as there shall be an atmosphere to bear

the sound of a curse upon its bosom!

Garibaldi This illustrious General is thegreatest warrior in Europe. lie is an enthusiastic worshipper of freedom, and is every

where almost idolized by Freedom's devotees,

IIU courage and generalship in the terriblebattles fought by him at Umie against overwhelming odds in battles in which heseemed to have almost the power to make asuccessful resistance to Destiny itself, gave

him a great and brilliant name throughout the

civilized world. The more recent prodigies ofmatchless daring and skill performed by him

in revolutionizing Sicily and Naples, expellinthe tyranny under which they had so long

groaned, and annexing them to the liberal

government of Sardinia, have placed him uponthe highest pinnacle of earthly renown. Never

has his keen sword been drawn except in the

cause of liberty, and never has ho delayed fo

even a day to sheathe it when the battlo ofliberty was won.

Since the Sicilian and Neapolitan revolution

Garibaldi has lived in honored reiirementwatched however by the eyes of myriads, whoknew that be would reappear upon the world

great theatre whenever the great cause alwayso near to his heart, the cause of human freedom, shuuld call him forth. And lo! he reappears. He has off-Te- his services to the

United States Government in its present life

struggle, and the offer is accepted. The noble

Italian comes as a M.ijor General into the

armies of the Union.All this should show to our people how the

present struggle upon our continent is regarded

by the friends of free government in Europe

For more than half a century, our Kepublic

has been hailed from afar as freedom's peculiar

home. Millions, inspired by the same glowing spirit that heaves in the great heart of

Garibaldi, have ever looked to the UnitedStates as a country in which they could tinrefuge and be free if driven forth from theirown less happy lauds. They have considercour Government as a mighty temple, whose

perpetuity was scarcely lets important to Europe and to Asia and to the great islands ofthe sea than to America. And therefore it is

that, when this glorious temple is threatenedhosts of Germans and Irish rush impetuouslyto the rescue, and such hearts as that of Garibaldi leap wildly for th; conflict.

Let us learn from these things that weshould bo guilty of a deep and terrible sinagainst mankind, if, to secure to ourselves thpetty comforts and luxuries of a few days ormonths or even years of inglorious peace, wewere to consent that the great American ic

should be dismembered consent that aGovernment, which has been the hope and theglory of the world, a beautiful and holy star ofliberty shining upon tho eyes of the nations,should be riven apart, riven perhaps into

fragments, and made the scorn andthe derision of men umil at last reconstructedinto a fierce and bloody despotism more

than those by which the earth is al-

ready cursed.Let Garibaldi and all the great worshippers

of liberty in the Old Wwrld say whether wo ofthe United States have a right to abandon our

to dissolution without striking in itsdefence as long as wo have the strength toraise our right arms.

The Knights' Alphabet. Inf description vesterdav

"of the alphabet of the

Knights ot the Golden Circle, we said that q

was represented by a line slanting backwards,intersecting the rule mark, with a dot beforeit. We should have said a dot after it. InsayiDg that r was represented by a large andwell defined comma, we omitted to add thatthe head or nucleus of the comma should beopen somewhat like the figure 9. So of theinverted comma represent iog s. A period isrepresented by two horizontal parallel lines orhalf lines close together.

tTR Union troops are mustering in thecounties of Kentucky near the CumberlandGap, it is to defend Kentucky soil from in-

vasion and not to invade the soil of Ttnner-Be- e.

Whatever the secession organs may sayor insinuate to the contrary is beyond allquestion false. Our secessionists would heart-

ily rejoice at an invasion of Tennessee, butthe Union men of this State would condemnit as an act of insanity.

We learn that Parson Brownlow's pa-

per, the Knoxville Whig, has been stopped byorder of Gen. Zullieoffcr, commanding theLast and Middle Tennessee forces at thatpoint. We are not told what has become ofthe brave Brownlow himself. Gen. ZMlicoffcronce had the respect of good men and patriots.They didn't know what was in the depths ofhis traitor soul. May he die a hempen death!

The Editor of the Courier published afervent prayer on the day of tho election, that

the Great Jehovah" would control the result.Tho prayer was answered.

Theae are litues that try men's soul.Lou. Courier.

The souls of vou disuainja' wero tried cvira hot iiro oil JPjuddy wtxl;, hO thvs v,' a

vv7 r.u&i! vicld tf oil.

Judge Catron His Expulsion fromTennessee. Five or 6ix weeks ago, more orless, Judge Catron of Nashville, one of the

udges of the Supreme Court of the UnitedStates, made a charge to the Grand Jury inSt. Louis, in which he gave his views as to

hat constitutes treason. The publication of

the charge, it was understood, created a good

deal of excitement among the disunionists of

Tennessee, and the question of the J udge's ex- -

ulsion from the State was much agitated.

The fact of tho agitation of this question

rst became known to us from a card published

in the Tennessee pipers by Mr. V . K. btcven-so- n

President of the Southern Pacific Kail- -

road. Mr. Stevenson's card was an earnest

appea in iavor ui uuu ...uB -

mitted to remain in Tennessee. He stated

that he had had a personal interview with theJudge and conversed freely with him, that he

was convinced there was nothing dangerous iu

the Judge's principles or intentions, and thathe was sure the presence of his Honor could

be tolerated safely and should be tolerated by-a-

means. The tone of the appeal was notlofty, it was thought ralherhumble, and it was

considered as doing very little credit to JudgeCatron's spirit upon the supposition that he au

thorized the publication or assented to it.The card however did not accomplish its

purpose. One day last week, the VigilanceCommittee of Nashville waited upon JudgeCatron, informed him that he must either re

sign bis office of Judge or leave the State, andaked him which he would do. The Judgewas not prepared to render an answer. TheCommittee gave him twenty. four hours to de

cide upon his course, letting him understand,that if, at the end of that time, he should

neither have resigned nor left Tennessee, theywould take his affairs into their own hand-s-

meaning that they would eject him by what

ever force might be found necessary. Withinthe twenty-fou- r hours, the old man took his

departure from Tennessee, leaving his aged

wife behind him, as she was too sick and feeble

to be removed. We heard of him in this citv

on Friday or Saturday, but did not see himWe presume that he is still in this vicinity.

We surelv need not comment at length upon

this gross and wanton outrage. Judge Catron, appointed to the Bench of the Supreme

Court by his great friend President Jacksonis as venerable in age as in character, being

we believe, more than seventy years old. Surelv the people of Tennessee could have no ap

prehension that the residence of this aged judicial functionary among them was or could be

dangerous to their State. They can have entertained no fear, that he would or could subvert

their liberties or destroy any of their privileges

In driving him for,th as an exile, compelling him

to leave the venerable partner of his bosom, ill

and perhaps dving, thev have done a deed atwhich the whole respectable portion of the peopie of the United States will raise the cry of

"shame."

C3TA11 the secession organs have made themost violent complaints about what they callthe unauthorized interference of tho FederalGovernment with tho all'iirs of the railroadsbetween this city and Nashville and Memphis,

They have clamorously insisted that any interruption of the trade was an unconstitutionalillegal, and d proceeding, which thepeople should resiet, if necessary, by force ofarms. They have proclaimed a hundred timesover that the 'money of tho people built therailroads, and that the roads should at all haz

ards be kept open by the people's authority anphysical strength. Tennessee has loudly

threatened, through her organs, what shewould do if our people should permit this en

of the road to be closed or trade interrupted orlimited. She has said, that, in such case, shewould send an army here to teach us our duties at the point of the bayonet.

And now seo what Tennessee has done onthe road between this city and Memphis. Shehas cut not only all commercial intercoursebut all personal communication short offthe Tennessee river. She permits no railroadcar to come across or go across the streamShe allows no person to pass either way. Atthe last dates from that point, hundredstravellers from this direction were as:embledon or near the east bank of the river, some

them having been there three or four da;

and none of them being able to obtain infor

motion as to when, if ever, they would be al

lowed to proceed. The suspension, temporaryor permanent, of business and travel was su

posed to be the work of the military authorities of Tennessee, but even the VigilanceCommittee of Clarksville, although telegraphiccom muni cat ion was open to Memphis, was

not able, by the most persistent efforts, to obta

from that city any answer to depp itches or

eveu the slightest recognition of them, Gen

Polk nr Gen. Pillow or general somebody el

having no d jubt issued instructions that th

telegraph should under no circumstances giv

so much as a click.

Nevertheless our people may rest assured

that the Kentucky secessionists, who haveclamored so boisterously about the importanceand the necessity of keeping the railroadsopen and free in defiance of authority, w

breathe no word of complaint against Tennessee for the despotic and most injurious andoppressive action at the Tennessee river. Theyare never happier than when they can hear ofsome fresh Tennessee outrage to submit to.

(yThe editor of the Lexington Statesman,Gov. Migofiin's Secretary of State, says, that,to his knowledge, in every instance in which

the attention of Gov. Harris of Tennessee

has been called to any aggression from thatState upon the rights of Kentucky or Ken-

tucky citizens, ho made the fullest reparation.Then will the Secretary tell us whether theattention of Guv. Harris has at any time beencalled to the fact that a Tennessee militaryollicer at Camp Trousdale came several milesacross the Kentucky line into the town ofFranklin, and, without even the pretext of le-

gal process, forcibly seized a Kentuckian upon

the charge of desertion and bore him back tothe camp! If his Tennessee Excellency's at-

tention has been called to that case, what was

the full reparation made?

Floyd ani tlik General Conflagrationof thk Glohk. The Dromio of Syracuse, in

Shakspcare's Comedy of Errors, was underthe impression that a kitchen-wenc- h in Ephesus,who claimed him as her busband, was so

greasy and ragged that if the lived untildoomsday, she would burn one week after therest of the globe was consumed. We are con-

fident, if John B. Floyd's dishonesty could be

converted into grease, and bis tattered charac-

ter soaked in it, that it would outlast the con-

flagrating competing rags of the Ephesiankitchen-wenc- h of Dromio.

f"The editor of tho Nashville Union re-

peats the fjolibli story that the Northern arraytook thirty thousand hand-cutT- s with them

to Manassas, and undertakes to clinch his

story by stating tb;it a pair of these imple-

ments, taken in the battle, has been left at histrice. If a pair of hand-cuf- fs has been given

to the editor, they was no doubt a present fromsome friend of his who escaped with them fromthe penitentiary.

Amends. Wo mentioned yesterday thename of Mr. II. C. McCorkle as one of theThird Degree Knights of the Golden Circle in

this city. We are informed however that thatgentleman, after taking that Degree and re-

flecting upon the character of its obligations,repudiated the whole affxir, and that be is now

Orderly Sergeant in Capt. Lovett's company,

the Speed K fles, now at Camp Joe Holt.

C3TThc editor of the Lexington Statesmansays that those of his triends who disapprove of

Kentucky neutrality have expatriated them-stlvc- s.

At tbe same time he tellj us that hestrongly disapproves of it Iiimielf. Tlitm whydotau't hi utility tuu uivii2j cswiiiiS wf Uisfries-1-

f We thank the Chicago Journal, from

which we copy the following paragraph, for

the glowing compliment paid to our paper, butthcro are other Union papers in the State, andproudly prominent among them the Louisville

Democrat, that deserve an abounding share ofthe glory of the late victory:

It is invidious to single out men in an emergency like this, when every man who works andvotes and hgbisf r his country u a hero. liut

o cannot but allude to the faithful servicesthe Hon. Joseph Holt, that sterling patriot andgood man, and the Louisville Journal have done.Untiring in their expositions of the fallacies ofsecession, in thuir patriotic appeiils to the pbople,and in their defence of the H ig, they havo earned,and .y receive, the plaudits of a grateful na- -iion. vv hen the history of this monstrous rebel-lion is written, the names of Holt and Prentice

ill stand prominent in the lint of patriots whorallied around the rl ig and shine the brighterthat they stood up boldly for the right in themidst of enemies unintimidated by threats and

nawed by violence. e trust that inanv yearsof increasing fame await tho on?, and th tttheother will long continue to wield his flashing

worn oi wit ana nuri o:s terrible bolta of indignant patriotism. We congratulate them uponine ppienuia victory iney nave been instrumen-tal in achieving. We congratulate the Unionmen of Kentucky that the baleful banner ofreason shall not wave over the crave of Honrv

Clay. We congratulate all patriots, everywhere,nat anotner star has been preserved in our con

stellation; that its light has not loon quenchedin the traihering stnrm, and that gloiious oldKentucky, now, as ever, remains truo, loyal, andsteadfast to tho Union.

A Voice from tub Tomb. The National Intelligencer says that tho subjoined adjuration, ad

dressed to his coimtrymen by James ftladi-ton- theFather of the Constitution," has already ap

peared in its columns, but is worthy of a reproduction at the present time, when the advice itinculcates comes at once with such mournful andimpressive force. The paper is undoubtedly authentic, being contained among the number of theposthumous writings of Mr. Madron in the pos

session of our public-ppirite- fellow countryman,Jas. C. McGuire, Esq

Advice to my Counts. A? this advice, if itever fee the light, will not do so till I am nomore, it my be considered, as issuing from thetomb, where truth alone can be re.pectrd, and thehappiness of man alone consulted It will he entitled, therefore, to whatever weight can be derived from good intentions, and from the experience of one who has served hic country in variousstations through a period of f rty yearp; who epons .d in hi youth, and adhered through his life, toihe cause of its liberty; and who has horno a pirtin most of the groat transactions which will constitute eprchs of its

The alnce nearest to my heart and ueepe?in my convictions is, that the Union of the Staffsbe cherished and perpetuated. Let the open ene-

my to it be regarded as a Pandora wi'h her boxopened, and the dis4ruied one as the serpatcreeping with his deadly wiles into Paradise.

Thk Stkamer Ma.hsachi 'setts. A letter from

a correspondent of the Taunton Gazette, writtenon board tbe steamer Massichusetts, gives a glow

ing account of an encounter between tbe Federalblue j ickets and the rebels at Mississippi City:

On the Hth of July the Massachusetts was firedat from tho fort, when a large number of shotand shell were thrown from either side. Uponnoaring the fort several shot came ftVing throughthe rigging, when the Federalists discovered thatthe rebels had a rilied cannon, and as they wereonly endangering themselves needlenslv, withoutany chance of hitting the enemy, they got out cfthe range of the guns. Ihe object in runninginto the place was to drive out and ong.iice twotransports Hided with rebel soldiers. The cor-

respondent ays that that part of the Gulf id

tilled with Southern s earners, and that theywould not have the least chance if one shot strut kthem faiily, as the Massachusetts i so high outof water. The writer, in conclusion, savs, "wewill give a good account of ourselves at anv rate,and if the enemy do finally get m they will haveto pay dearly for it. No boat ha yot come to aidus, but wo expect one and then we goback to take that fort or get whippad in the at-

tempt."

The War in Missoijki. The St. Loui3 Dem-

ocrat of Saturday says:Ou' verbal advices from the southwest reveal a

fearful st ate of things in that region. Wiih thedestructive march of tbe rebel invaders, a sys-tem of horse stealing, robbing, and general out-

lawry prevails. Numberless atrocities and exces-ses are daily committed by the rebel forces, andthose in loague and sympathy with them. It isestimated that s of the horses iu posses-sion of tho rebd troops, who are generally mount-ed, were stolen from the counties of Ja.spor, Bar-ton, Lawrence, and Newton, the scciiou overrunby the invaders. Marauding pirtus are furnish-ed with a commission to "hunt," a mild termused to cover up these predatory attacks. Horses,mules, and wagons are captured wherever found.One of theae commissions, or "furb-Uiih- to hunt,"was found on the porson of a lieutenant, fromHickory county. Tho document was signed byIe Witt C. fluntor. Colonel. A man namedSmith, lately moved in from Kansas, w3 knownto have captured twenty horses and marched wiihthem to hio home in Jasper county for W privateuse. The community is demoralized by this sys-tem of "horse privateering," tbe lowest wre'ehesin the community taking advantage ( f the an-archy which prevails to pre on tbo property oftheir neighbors.

A man named Linn, of Sarcoxie, has made asuccessful "hunt," having capturtd, it is report-ed, nearly a hundred horses. Foraying partieslevy their contributions on friends and toe alike.Frtquent robberies of stores have been committed.Luye quantities of grain have been taken and allthe flouring mill hive been pressed to perform ashare in tins "grinding" exactions. This systemof plunder is but a small part of the aggravationswhich stflii-- t the inhabitants of the region indica-ted. Their fears are excitpd by roving hands cfIndians, who it is confidently believed, accompanythe rebel horde. The Indians belong to the Cher-okee and Creek tribts, and are mosi ly half breede,with faces of hideous aspect. It is averred ongood authority that a Cherokee named Fry, has acommission in hb deer tkin pouch ensuring l,im araward of .jO for the scalp usually worn by Di.Stemmer, of Jasper county. Tho names ot olh jrloyal citizans are mentioned, whose Fcalps are ingood demand, at a paying tigure. 1 he morals ofthe women seem alio lo suiter from the inhumani-ty of tho times. A benevolent lady, whose namefor the h inor of her sex we suppre-ss- , olt'ois a lib-e-

premium for human scalps tulticient to mrikeaba quilt, llor devotion to Lhe rubel cause ex-ceed in a degree the more mercenary motive ofthe Cherokee, Fry.

We mij;ht add numborless instances to theabove, but we forbear for tbe present. The pm.pie are fleeing from these terrible evils that ittilictthem at home, and are setktng an asylum amongutter strangers. 'Ihe road between Sprintieldand Mount Vernon has been tilled with fugitivesfor sevoral we-k- . We can but hope that thetime for their deliverance is near at hand.

A letter from Canton, Lewis county, Missouri,dated the b'th inst., says:

A messenger despatched from Camp Carnegyto the battle-hel- has ju.M returned, and givesthe following information concerning tbe greattight, which was so gallantly fought by ourtroops:

About 8 o'clock Sunday night, a messenger wasdespatched from Croton, in a hand car, to Keo-

kuk, Iowa, and reporred that a large body ofrebels wore neen moving, on Sunday, towardsAthens, in Clark county, Mo. At the camp, apart of Col Moore's lviiment U. S. II. C., werestationed. The Keokuk KinVs and K oigers wereimmediately summoned, and after 'J o'clock 1.M., thirty-fiv- e men of each company, armod andequippe-J- , were ready and s arced on a specialtrain to Croton. Soon after daylight, the Keo-

kuk men being over in Athens, the attack wasbegun by tiring of small cannon from the rebels.The Union men immediately sprang for theirarms, and to their surprise found the rebels com-ing up in three divisions, evidently intending tosurround the town or camp.

During the time say an hour and a half, Col.Moore came with five hundred men and beguntiring upon them, completely routing them, ar:ddriving them out of Athens, killing forty of therebels and wounding seventy-five- . In theirflight they left sixty-tw- o horses, which were cap-

tured by our forces. Hie rebels in that fihtnumbered 1,800 men, four pieces of artillery, commanded bv the Rret Martin L. tireen (brother of

btatos benator James b. (jreen), RalphSmith, and others. The Union forcos were com-

manded by Col. Moore, numberg 5'0.The Democrat of Saturdiy add .

We learn that a party of 300 rebels meditatedan attack on Tipton Wednesday niht with aview of dispersing the Home Guards stationed at

f that place. Information uf the contemplated attack; coming to tne latier, iney sent ior reinforce-ments from Calfornia. Obstructions were placedon the railroad track in order to throw the carsoft' and prevent the arrival of reinforcements fromTipton. The Home Guards being in futlicientstrength, without waiting for an attack went insearch of the secessionists. They ovei hauledthem alout four miles north of Tipton, near theBoonville road, and afier firing one round gavethem chase. Tbe rebels were too fl"et of limb,and escaped, with the exception of their com-

mander, Oapt. Bull, of Saline county, who wascaptured and brought down to JefTereon City yes- -

torday morning. '

Gov. Wright on National At faiks as Spf.n

hom Eiikopc. Gov. Josiph A. Wright, the

returned Prussian Minister whom Mr. Judd suc-

ceeded, made a speech a day or two tince before

the New York Chamber of Commerce, which is

thus reported:Gov. W riht said t hat, after a n absence of four

years from tbe country, he came home with asaddened heart. L is not a time now to find fa,ult

with tho3e who are or have been in power, but wemust afk ourselves, what is cur present condi-

tion? I owe, said he. no allegiance to any par-

ticular State, but all my obligations and yoursare to the National Government. That is para-

mount, and the State is inferior.Ihe speaker said thit we were misrepresented

abroad. I he London Times and other foreignpdpars 6ediously misrepresented u?. Ihe pressabroad has been rtjbsidi-.ed- . Our in titutions araattacked from mercenary motives, and by thosewho are interested in the downfall of this coun-try.

"The German heart moves elowly, but it beatswarmly for tbe we'fare of the country. WhileMr. Wiight was iu B;rlin he received more thanfive hundred letters rejecting the tituatiou inthiscouutrv, and from Ibuse who were auxiuustu oine atd tight tbs battles of the Union. lieW4J oolig&U tu pubiUh a iiu .!'-- a Uit he bid

la tiiiist iasBrvis vr.b ill Kictf of

the Kine took him by the band and said: "(Jodgrant that your people may be able to uphold theBupromacy of the laws. The whole Germanpeople respect the Government of America.

If we expect the aid and sympathy of the gov-

ernments of Kurope, wo must help ourselves.What is our dutv e must require that theflag of our country shall be restored to its posi- -

icn in every Stare and the Iaws rofltoren. e

ust sacrttice millions before we submit to thoandard of the so callfd Confederacy. We can

never he two people. Wemmt beoneor nothinf.We can nover h ive peace on any othor condition.

The ppeakT had never behevd that thore wns in

any seriou difference in any ptrt of the countrywith regard to the principles of our government.Men niav 6y that they hive lost everythingproperty and family but so long as the govern-

ment is sustained they have lott nothing. All we

have to do H t go on till we have est .Imshed thesupremacy ot our laws ana me onsiiiu.iuu uiour country.

Mr. Wright s reinatki were brit hut pitnoiic,and were warmly epplauded. At he conclusionof the addresF, tho thanks of tho Chamber worovoted to the Fpe;iker, and the members generally

ailed themselves of the opportunity of an introduction to Gov. Wright.

From the Kanawha Keoion Uv recent arri

vals fromtbe army on the Kanawha, the CincinnatiCommercial laarns that our trocpj arc ciithbutedas follows:

Three compinies of tho Twelfth .linimentare at Charleston, under Colonel Lowe; thethe remaining seven comnanies of the Twelfthare near Can net ton. thirty tiva iniks fromCharleston. The First Kentucky KokuoiiH is intheir advance, between the road and the river.rim Kleventh Ilegimont is ere imped along Gau- -

ley 1 liver, abtve the bridge recently destroyedby Wise, General ('ox's biing inthe rear of the JJeventh Lmiinerit. Cm the,side of the mount .in, tuck from G iu!ty and thethe Kanawha liivor, on a tine locaMon, the Second Kemucky have pitched tluir tent., with onecavalry and two artillery cninnuiies. At, Cornerville, thirty mites up the Gauley Uiver, ColonelIvler is encamped wi'h the .seventh, and thgrsater portion of two other regiment?.

U.i iruUv morning thu '1 went Reg!ment, Colonel FyfFe, lft Charleston for Parkers- -burg, and the Second Garmm Ktgimnt, ColonelMoor, hm left Point Pleasant, a No for the c:imeplace. They are under orders to jjin Gen. liose- -crans.

Iiib Jsai'klla mauia. I he mystery con-

nected with the su'lden departure of thisfrom Philadelphia baa been entirely dispelled bya communication from Win. P. Thomas, Keq.

Collector of the Port:The IsabelK M:iria is nn Enc'i'-- vessel, owne

at nresent bv Messrs. Van horn & Wo"d worthshipping nd commission merchant of this port,who purchased htr f.om Thcmas Watson & Sonsin February list. Tbe Isabella Maria cieired forLabrador, at the Custom-houe- e on thedth innt.,in ballast, having on board 2')D worth of stores,tho n?uat quantity for such a voyage. Afterclaar'ntr, however, shi was chartered by Mesrr.A. K. O iterbridge & Co., to carry tL ur to one ofthe liritirh Province?.

r&raily Prcs &3i rrascilpitoR Store

C KNEK Ot K;ult i H S JBir 'KR80N.

M, . X'. Proprietor. Ac4iVni dJiwlanjtf

HP18TQUAUTYOFPITT315UKO COAL AT THSi ownt mnrWot price. Alo, IJHitCU BDTi'UMUQAL at maoh lower ratei bv

J. N. KRIXOnG, Aer.t.eptll llrtf Naar the corner of Thlra c I', tla.

Ilavin? reconptnirtd my Mil),and RfWed itv ntach;uei7 formaking

FIN KKEMIKKY JEAXS,(wbirh to now brinp worn eo:tnMv'ly in the south AnnVvert, I nra :iow prepared to fnr- -

nlt.h an article of superior cjiiality, which I will wan-Mi-

F1CKU FKOU tatKAMK ANI ,Ul)K OF

rVA (rood mpptvrtf NKtfKO JKAN3 vd IJN'SFVon hand. jaDiieoilAwly L. KICHKHSoN.

LETTERSnKLI FOR POSTAOE AT I.OL'ISVILLB F.

12,

B. P., C'nrimftti. O.nOWI.KR, Ja W , Nrwc-fll- Ky.TVare, L. U. L , Mt. Veruuii, .

Foils, Shiti , Mapne.Kr.Murraj', Mre't. Srf nhnville, O.Nn uiaii, Ijacy. Warri'ird, Ky.1'icneit, Mr. YiTKini-- , X '!', O.

r, J. W Vatu.-ab- Ky.Itr.dif A t , i;ify.Hmk, Wi-- - Mury C,Calveit, H. A., "JVD S. UuUv (3), "Kmm'tt, M. R., "(inM l ie, Vv hit-- . Cn., Citr.

A. (1. l iankfo't. Ky.Munit y, Mi'i Ai.iia. ;it-- ;

h'lbinon. Mr. fhooi;rtui?), City;Slu rlt-r-, 1V1I, Si O.,Tit, .Ino. (f'oiii'ih sr.), "WilliAiii', (ieo. li , ll

Po C. 11.,afp'ybig for tbo ar?vo n ill ra'l at Cailv

iflr'f Oilie.

Wanted Immediately,Kl'.MMK. fIO bi t those wh canAfJOOl) tl l uocd upp! v.

Portoti!cc Hox lJi". mil: H

Wanted,lltfl TTORffKS, 1: or 16 bnnde birb, no.

& -- vlivi the.ii 4 nor moru timii . yara o;d. "f fi

J'l X hrowii. blfiok. marei, or bi' color, Rwi Te juare trotter and 1'riJlc k i.5e;

A i.sol.M MI'LFS, bwke ti wotr, nMlJa Ih.n IJ . I. .(,.(. li'.-- rl t n;u Jto b yeara out.

Foitlnnd Kiii'MH,rll dl'.'Swl Trll h ind Main

N w Albany h.dnr copy t o w tko a.iJ ciAigr talolb v.l

Tlie "'uij r.'.'prtfnUr rait theattentio i of tlirf p.ibiic To h:n e tilil'phii-cn-

i pf pared t oinn aitine all discnp- -

i.ioiu ot L vi iKMa a.d I''J in ThetbiitMr. time. wiiwltH-tl- rii.1 et.l w rcaao's i

to repb n'b tlu-i- eto' Kir the bit. fin e nt iyit to t'ie!r intt-it-- t to cl Rt M cVa old staui, N.".47l Mdiu street, be.low feu th.

alibj:i H. THOMSON.

Situation WantedTY a vonn? Iaty who iiiider"ndrf kind of fancy

jnpr rlowi'iv. and ?oli em iiroidrj nodoi" &U a.irrrt alfj uud- t n.!-- ' the

busiinHp thir.'ut-'h'y- , a".id wunbi t ke rhai t e otnn (jhtuhli-hujfn- r. or itid art sbviijau iu a wtte.I'lense iHd rr.- !ili-V'tl- e 'ui-m- r

For I)oor-Kcei- of the Senate,E are autborizt d to Mr. .lOtiNW 11LNDKICKS as a caiuid.-it-

to tilf Ketltnckv Rfniitw s, itt-- -

Three Veara' Recruits Wanted forthe Regu'ar Army,

Kecrultloc Rend zoub front sir.et, Ind

Aur.E.B--mn- fsmmihtkdM.:n, bt-ce- ii the vtft'H of intiud yeai b. hie wnh d lor thTlU'.tutlitll KrgiUl'.'ilt ul U. ij.

Inrantry.By recent acte nf UonrFe tbe term of enliHttunt h'f

been reduced to tbre j avis the bounty Lab been madefacial th .t for vol;mtji-ii- tbe pay li.it been iucr-;m-

two d'jllarr. p;r month, ami provision lias bn n inude toiTomotw d'j. rv iue pi ivntet m coinm'',jioiie(l olbe?r-- .

Two Drllaia will be paid to ai.y out! b icfuig anK. emit.

l or biith-i- f information or fur euliet aieut, apply atthe recruit.uj Kendizvo .

H. HFSSKY.Capiaiii li'tb U. S Inr'antrr-- ,

13 rl m Kecnnrinc uttire- -.

LARGt AND ATTRACTIVE

AUCTIOM SALEBY L. KAILV & CO.,

On Wednesday, Aug. 1--

CCMMKNCIKG AT 1) O'CLOCK A. M ,

WllEN will b? cold 1" )p;erfP bached O'lnPFtir. 4jri till ifOrt? t'l friitt.', l.i doeQ J' tpe'id'T.',

300 fvo-- Shoe Lac iv. Canton KJaoneN, li i i.int'i'f,Table-Clo- t Iih, Mum hite S hi 1 1, a lr ue line ot IMci-ry- ,

Hoop Skirti Notions ot all description.1, nd a largelnt' ot D. cjotic ( od- -.

C??"rhia is a p iiue rto"t of Goods nd will be soldwithout reserve. Ibiyeie will do we.ll to attend eiil.

Tprnif"CAFh on delivery. u, &AdN a ;tl1. jKAl.MAN, Auctiuueer. a':; di

Mutual Life Insurance.'IMIR NEW HUTI Ab I.IKK IX- -1 SL'KNCK UjMI'ANI, ;,o. jl t'afe it reel,

inriireci liveB oa tb luuln i v n'yiy.Net Accumulation !I.S,"0 (KtO, p.nd

for tbe benefit of u fmb-r"- , preront andtne wh"le f ly and advuotac. rrs'y invcitid.

Ihe buiue crdutted txiluiively for the btntfit ofth p rMi" inenred.

The Kreath' riek taken on & life yl,(MM.Surplus ditribut-i- l aroop the itember every fifth

year, oecember 1. lP4-- i.ttltd m cah or by adili-tio- n

to policy.Premiums, may be raid quarterly or

where deimd, and amounts not too smtll.Forms ot npi'lint on and paitiph Vts ot th" Cepipauy

and it t reports to b bad of iti or at th" cMjlm ufthn tympany, er lorwardtd by m i , it written, fcr,

.

PIBKCTOKS:Marfhult P. 'Wilder, li. e!l Tappan,Charlei P. t.'uiti-- . Wiilmra 1!.

Thoiuas . Ie.ei, ( i irre t (. t ( Iter,;harle Hti:;b-d- , A. W. Tbait-- r,

Francij C. l.owe I Jtruf f. SturK'.W1LLARD FHILUt'fl, Fre.ndcut.

"V. W. ModLiWU, M. D.y Loueultic-Physfcia- n.

ST. CLOUD HOTEL,COKNt R 3KUONI AND hTSKKTS.

JA. eV VAN , LVO-Nf- , Proprfrto ft.

'I'HIS FIcii" b.ivinc been thoroughly retii ted. - nowI rvfln to tlii' pnh K. 'hritei n od- rt-- . Hl'Jd--

ONK or two yooci: ra a cf kki intra! charsrMr d(uue ofht-i- neeu a: p ' can ontani boi J

a d lodKinr a, a moiieiate pr;u id a litet rU a'eff.ntilv wh ri they will have all the comt.'i tu And

of a (food h. me. Add-e- with naia and'efpienro. Po No. v'llf P a 'J Awn

School Wanted Dy Exjerionced Teachera.

A GENTLEMAN (f epVnce wishes t ob-

tain a 9i uat;ou. ould pitter a MaleSuboc!, but would no' ohnct 1 one c mp el oi bothmales tut feiLales Two cuiig lediej aeo wib atciool c.m oofl'J ot eruail boy uni yivU. The tbreateacheis abovu mDtioe i wruld em-ij- to teach

or A.idrs .a bx 2i U uivjlie P. O.alJ diii

SADDLE AD HIKMS M1KESIS

WANTED.QOOD WAO! KHGUIAR EMFLOYMT.

Tl'HNEK 6 SID WAY,

30-- 3

jHOllllfclx St,NKW YORK MILLS SIIKKTINQS:WAMSUTTA AND LONSDALK SHKEHNCS;SEMI'KU IDKM I

HLACKSTONU AND HOPE 10;ENGLISH LONGtMX)! II;

4 L'TIOA SHKKTING3;4, 4, ANIJ ALLUNDAtK BHKBTING8;4, AND 12 4 ALLKNDALK SPRKADS;4. IM, AND I'J 4 MAK3KILLK3 QUILTS.

MANCHESTER IjlNfJIIAMS;WIHTI5 A MCSKLTO NETTING;

HOOP SKtKTijtWlII'li: GUODS AND IIOSIKRV;

Just reef ivfd and will he eold low f jr car'h.V- - Illi'CJ rw it iTa ota - It r.1 n mil nr,4lcil llf 1a Mi.mj vu-ju- o imi nv ".f""""'crt

j&b 304 bL, bet. Market and JnfTeraon.

XOVXBVZX.X.IB, NEW ALBANYB L

CHICAGO HAILKOAP.

'FOR ST.LCITICKIA0 DETROIT

310 CI. Summer Arrangement 1861.

4 N .i.i ator M..n)v, Anr. rj, raaieoger ATaujeVs will leuve New Aluauy ae IoIIuwk

dT'). c)iiiit--'ii(- ! f t lirre Hai-- a id Itidin'apo- -

, tiii.l Loouecting clo- ly at Lafiyelte for C bicao.IVTlirough from Ne A baby to Chicago in I houra.7:4fi P. M. hT. LOUIS NIGHT KXPKKSS (Dtily),

ri sr'une St. LiOiils at i A. M. and at oA M. Tb:a T.aii ru to to Mit jbell ouly.

R.'hir-iing- , &T. LOUIS KXfKESS m lives at N"WAlbanv at 4: VJ A. M., ni:ikiiw c o.e connections timL:. i .cuia aud Cincinnati, n acbi.ig Louisville at 5:ifA. M.

The CHICAGO MAIL arrives at 7.4" P. M., reachingLjuidYiitu al c:m P. M.

Oalv on Chance of Ccs Sf. LouU Cincinnati orLntoaQQ.

The tliroiiRh Tnin inka rood coonrctiona Northnn.i S nth Hi". Attlf. L;ll AVftf aildMhiiiu City lor all poiuti fca;t, VVet, and Noitu--

Wr3t.rsr-Ti-- are run by ItnievlIIe time.CITor THROUGH TICKETS and further

rpu'v at tlm GKMOKAL. RAILROAD OFFICE. corner oi Third and ilaiu streets.Louisville, Ky.

R. E. BICKER,R. 8. PARKER. Aeen. ali dtl

RHV. Cr. V7. BHCJiSTT'B INSTI- -ZUIC rCH YOUNG LADIESII. f beein it r.:it ecfion on the Kith ot jt.cm- -

" or circular f'f turt h ' partus il era. ap;lrthe Prtnriua', Kev. 0. tlK,iir,iT, St. Mat h"w-- , .h -

tjii cjuul ', Ky. !'-- dla ni

Woodlawn Race Course.

fiWF.KPSTAKB tUK B l'ALM n, ANY AGE,To- - n'l.' hpt. S'liifirivtiou: au foit.it.

To do je djy ot Ansrn-- t, ltl. Two or roor-- to makeante? All S'fiU'oiid piitenug in tin ft;ke nuiet leuwi.ed and must bave made a aeidou m Jt Hereon couu- -

iyRv.fi torom off Fall.P.ricii! widhiiiK to euter. address

T. K. MILTON. Pec'y.Louisville, An. 12, lrit. dtAupJ-

i i.ri DOUBLE BAKKUL SHOT GUNS, mediu-- aidO' line- -

25 d zn powJf r ard Pifto! riafkp;; b's and Cp-- ;

1 (Job's hitie;Just received and for sale ivvt by

A. I!. BKMPLB A SON.

JUST OUT:

NEW UNION SONG(With CimsrfD,

OH, oij THAT BANNEU'Word by Mr. W. F. Worn..Music by 11 G. S. Wiiii im.k.

"01MKS niav he obt&iued from Mr. Whipple, ntYa- -" J fir, , pru u Fnrt rv, t 'T Main strej-t- and all theMimic S'ores. Oopieieent by mail 1 1 any addrri oo

f nt tne i r.er.t a - Oh

GEO. CATIIRALL,Manufacturer and Doalor in

Tobacco asicl Cigars,Southeast coroer ol Sieyccnd aid (al!o tun pts..

rillLVDbLPUlA, PA.

N. R. An ftj(?or(ment of one million Domestic CiKJirai!iauMtl p n hand ' v

(Toimcrb' i" the stove of R. L. Talbi.t & Co ,)

Druizit So Apothecary,Southwest corner Markt and Seventh streets

LOUIbVILLK, KV.

f Harine recently purchved i Dr. John Sarf.y cei:t hi- ct .ck of Fixtures, aud hav.n made

birre additi'-'"- then to in tlm ebap ot Lfriixs,tjliemlc If, I'eiTniufirj , laHrf, 'ii.baco, pure

l.i .!. r . I um now rTfiard to ti the. tir.tn nf .Ul whr. n:av favor pe with a call. PhysicUiif

cnivpdly and accuratuly carupouudtd atall bouio oi' the day or ni.-l't-

.

Ilavli.K poM my stock l Dnips, Mrdicinef, c, toMr. Loiih .b (1 ih'jd, i nkM creat pleasure in rocominniriiMK hiiii t ) ibn n.it'e 'A n v lr:enrie, a- tlu--

will itnd i.m lo ni; an exooru-ne'- Afiuiwaj. Alii 1 JuHN SMtni'.NT,

Kcnry Female College,rF, th Tri.tee.s bav tin ot annonnrniu to tne rub'ic that I1 O. L. LnnAUi and t.lr

dauizht if have taken chaipe of thin ion. Weliitve tn!iiv M'tili b n e in t u an and citcl' ntit ;u iii'i-.'- . r.ii'1 w. rthj-1- o couPdcnt'e of tlie community.Wi: thi''ffnre tor th- m a liberal ptrorni;''. Tne

will cooimence Aucuct "Jii I Mil. For bourd,tiiit on, .t v, f .r tiie kc.I'.o.H!: ic year cr session ot tinTuontbi. -- it Tuitio'' t r day prolan; the tai3:eb.Tfto'.ore charged. No pupil wi'l be received for lendHum a uiilfp? by rp"ci.il acre Jinent, mil io

tor a'ja m;u unietb io: piMtrai;tei iMnfHri.O. M MMHEWS,

Tr rfi'it nt of t'ie. It. ard..1. N WI HH.WM. A. I'KKt'.Y,W. S.TUO. KOUM N,

H II rt12 Trusters.

Science ill Academy,KHaLBYVlLLB, KY.

va- in a mere 'bToiublyI r"fient c uditi'Q tUn at pri'ent. I he tall

si n will open on M n , l diul v r or circularstu;: - lull particuUir;, ps''y to

n !' d in M ?. .1. V. TKVTl. P trr pal

Tor A&sUtaDt Cteik of the Kouso ofikf

1.' E are sntbriz'id to nunniiiT .(AMI'" 3 A. DAW- -

T p IN, oi Hair, a., a cauditlnto fur Aeiar.t t'leikot the H 'u. e oi atadAte

of lhe SSouse of Kepreijefl-tafive- s.

W1'" arp "niborir.'-- t . Rnnouii'-- VILT I AM J T AN- -

of uarrjird, ae a t t rO'k.tthe lljiiri- - . 1 nl)rcJtLtat.ve of the next L' cil tii"e otK nii'ii- - d" fte"l

Assistant Clrk of the House of Rep-resentatives.

WTK are autbon. d to JOf N M. TODD.H of vault t'urt, at a fundi for ot

thi' lion in Kenriv: tntive- - ot tbe of Ken- -

tiii kv, vliii.il uu the hrst Moudar ot bepM uin. ,xt. jv:tn dAwt

WATTS, GIVEN. A CO., CRANK ft VRjWN.Faducah, Ky. Kvausville, Ind.

WATTS, CRANE, & CO.,

Commission Merchants,45 BUOAD ST., NEW YORK CITY.

VK nave f'n,d House In the City of w YorkT for tlie pule of Tobacco and Weern Produce, and

i 6i li.'it a h ir of Western Tntroi ae. promi;ii our b.dt til i tj for vlu inteii dts of our correspond

We have every ciTifitb-nc- in Tohacro selling readilyat full P' ic s. in round io;a, t lerel'jre advise uhipmeutto tlie New York luarket

Mr Daviu W'ktv. of Watt-- , Given, fc Co , Padi;cah,inivn. Wurly. fa New Oilcan', lor irany yia's

familiar it tne Tob icco t ade, will hi pernor ml

mention to tl)t tiuei t. Mr. I. A. Crank, oi

rane t Brown, E i ill. will tttend directly to tbeW'uiUTu Produce av pitrtme'it.

W ATTS, CRANE, A CO.Nw Y"f K, fvn" 1. lHiil aud'f

tt, Joseph's College,BAKjaTUWN. KY.

STUDIES wilt be resumed in this institution, aetbe fir't Monday S- - timber.

Tcr.M fkr SKt-- 'iN ok Tv.t M'NTtis Matriculationf e 1 : Iard, Tu tion, Washing, c., ;.'; Physi-cian' f e .

Owing to Hie diffifilty of collector dthts a the pres-ent time, payment f'r tach halt' seewion will be requiredinvar ab'y iu ndvauc". No idud'-n- will contenuei.tlye admitted unl- - tbe puna of !"1 itt dporit d wiih

tbe Tiva-nrt-r- Mid auadr.it onal mm ot tf:tu it thif ta be turu!?t'i'd with clolhiiiij by tbe tneutol the

Coill'KBa7dwtm THOS. O'NEIL, President.

pi"t n'turned from ('incinnatl, where1&SZZ 1 have yrocur.d, tlnouKh tte kindnt-i- ot Col.K AMTf.noN, one l;irro ai'd one ?nia!l pied Puoto-mr- u

of bknM.lt, in lull uniform, with tbe identicalrioak and cap woin by him at Fort Sumpter dnriurz thebonihardiM'-iit- , I am now r ady to furnith his Iriendr?and iioiiiii tb with dupln ttei of each eii'i at my (ialluryor at Fiank Madueu'e 15ookato:e, Jial Third itreet.

K. KLAL'KKK,Ree Illve Gallerv, Main street,

rtnt dlvln Wtween Thin! nd Fourth.

For fcrk cf the House of Rcpre- -

scutatircsA'K an to announre Mr. W. T. 8AM-

f UELrt, of V lizHbtbto' 'ii, as a candidate for Clrkof 1ip UniRf of Rt p itiv"

Aslant clerk of tlie lioue ofRepresentatives.

R are auliorizel to auoonnre JAMES B. LYNE,oi a candidat ? tor Atfelrftsnt Clet'C

o: the next House tf Representative?. jiif'f.

WTIEETINnpIO so bales Anchor Sbeetiuge;

do un Mill do,Su do II inner do;

Received per ittamboat Ida May aud for byJAO. F. HOWARD CD.,

Apents tor Manutarturera!2 Mnln. betwee u Third and run th

WHOLESALE AND RETAIL OKOCEBV. FLOUR,No. 2: Market atteet, betwe--

8wnd and Third. Louisville. Ky. al2

WHAKfR P ROOMS J5 dczsu extra Shaker Broomsfor Hiile by tnlJI H1BBITT t SON.

O'i BBL3 (' A&TOR OIL for eale bvali WLI.&UN, PEJ'ER, & CO.

i"OFFLE S:) ?ick prime Java, Laguayra, and Rio'odtiv in ctore aud for bale by

H1BRITT h ROM.

1,'0''1KN WARE Tub. B ck U, cv0red Cane,T Ci duthu fins, Weh Boards,

Bwl?, MBcUrtsr it., ur bait- byall mnpTTT SON

STO.NK-WAKEo- f a I kindi! kipt ou bdi'.d od fria!l HiKi'iTi1 h

20 WILSON, PETER, & CO.

but f LB WAX fr al ' tyl.oobi,1 WI fttl. P- - TV f. C.

j.m'6

MASON & CO.,MANUFACTURERS OF

Wain street, between Third ami

Hive now on baod ud lor eale it redust-- iricc, to fuit the limep, a fine asaoit

ASH, EIAFI,S, AND roriAH DKtTIHF;230X8'

II . - . ... . ...nn ui um uw ii iiiwiiii'Ciii re. Mia main ot th- hunt. And mo.nr. Al. n jr..W

riFEs, ncoijoa, nuatjEa, etc., etc,C ? EVERY INSTRUMENT

Drnmsrrpaired. Drum Hoals, Drum Snares, Drum Cord, Drum Strap.-,- , extra Drum Sticks etcfurnished to order. Drums mountod with any Coat of Arms desired. AluoicaUiistiumenurepairod.

We takr pleasure In offering otir thnnkp to the variousIliHUIlf r HI mini - " ...m.ii-.- i riii.-- .i ic" Klrm Mlimit. riiih' Inrne off the plm over tU. hc nnujutiu-turi-- in New York, Cimiuiihri. Hi:d iWwheri 'i h- -, i,H vdmW. dbyo..rii.o - teM, tum.c.I ttnm.ruer.androihvnt i.ulto be tbe UKSf DKl MS ver thi"nmiktt. Call ft1" exiin:ua our atock. 1 1 ce lit mmkd to any order. .1. M it a-- )..

von sale ok item .

Tot Rent,f; 7 ... Walnut, between Sixth and S- - rmth

IJENR'i PHITLK.

Blorant Country Beat far Sale,fTii I'll 1111 llllli; " IIW UI It, li io.iu, vu o

,! Sbclbwille pike, (br-- milci from the,?:", cty, in tlit beet iitdbhorliood iti couu-L- i'.L tv. Tbe imnmreiiieiite are all iiur and of

tb ui-- eiibotaotisl kind, ccniriitifi everything oecearv Mr comiort and onvoipuce. wi! n tine fruit, tbru

Iwry, a large iprlug, Ac. For pavtifiilam, nvvly to

Old a t No. 4H it.

Piivato Medical DispensarCounted on th Jhnrofwm Phmt

fa: t. Ct of mil FriTAt- iSi. Tbort mjlce with any dJUVJ4l. eur ot a vrivatr Wurf, wl c

tJ-"- tATvas woald eere the t:up'itlon itV- 'Mi tmiorant unacko, tboLiid not fat

tT " ad "OR. Cat Puiti-i DiR'A a now s.ud reviMk

v edition of oue bundrefl paei.

Af LiflOy plates and erurrftvtnrs reprrfiontinn the cealtal oraua of both

Fiea In a iiate of health aDd dieewe. Tre?.tin on allprldte dtseares bnciflent to both aexei, aucb as nanoraloervftut ana texuai tonwy npi!.B,

r eats new. lrjnot-nea- . ic. ITlso by meJI i r.N tCNtn.Pit. GATKS baa for man yftars devoted hii wh:--

Hne and attention to the trcatu.nt. ei disca,'"---- of

r.ture tn'ail tivetr varltd ad eompilraMidSrtvate Hli tuecoaa In thvw long rrniii:? ana t'.'caHca;e, tach as were fomerly incuraoK It

'iciont to oommand nun to the arrjett-- at wo.ny oithe ftxtenlvo practice which he baa heretofore received.4nu .ie pl'H!poe to spare iieiiwr miuh iwuit w mu-der hiojflf promiaut in the profefiou oi ou adaption.

fhowviw oeuevo tnay nave coainw;v.a uiwwL'Hi'.uiwmAke immediate application, m, by bis reoent discoverlet, be ii enabled to cut short au risrs in a icw om

YO'.tko, MiniL-OP- i, and Or.n MfJ. who, by indn't-L-

iu olit6ry hattiU or excessive indulfence of tbeuicsloas, have Skmioai. Wiuanau or an abil-t-

f Lu advance of their yoara, may be restored to theiiforuiar health and vigor by ruakinf lmmeiiiate appUcWon. .

TKb LADITH. Pt. ! went ror H. i,ACKOIS'a FR2NC;i PflFVENlIVR POWPRK4. Brtheir oe, thosn who. from any eanse, irirh to limitihe number ot their oftuprint;. c&n do to without danforto heals-- or constitution, rrioe by mail, ' ana rw& itaxe .

AuKsfcrStADAMS CAPRACB F15MALB MONTH.LY PIL1.8A safe and offretoial remedy for Irreilarities, Obitrnetiona, &c Price by mail, $1 and. on

stamp.Oonon.-Th- w pill ihontd not be taken dtuini

frcfiaiwv, M theynce fiTe tc produce m(riviftt;.To rrsoiii at a distance who wish to be cure-- at bore

we wtll, on receipt of a brief ttateiueot oi tbtir case, senca list of men quettlons as we would ass on a porwcal

and, on receipt of tbe list fitltf out, we w!liforward medicines particularly adwptd to tbe caw, frefrotc damage or ebservitti'jn, to any pai't of thd oyoutrrwith full directions for ose.

Consnltationt mav Ni he !d frotri f A. H. to P. H.(on Sunday from V to 11 A. M- - at hts office, nort'ieadeorn'Trof Third and troe, up stair privabentrance on Third Ky.

t"i"ie btisinej wi'l hereafter be cotnetnndor the name and rtyle of Pit. II. G. MllA.YAi A CO..to whom all orders and Witterc shocild b nddressArt. Dr.(JATS3 can, as ben torors, be consulted personally, flu

riEtr boslueu bonrt. on ail doaei on which hit boottrrp.Ji.

iST'Secrecy Inviolable. Don't forrs the name anipUoe, Ail tetters should bo nddrfisse.5 to

DR. U. Q. KII JKil CO-

enmi mills.C1DKK MILL AND WINK PRK33,

KRAUSKR'fl bv a oi the bet "iHttTi-l- .

Oi ronetniction, durability, and ' ffectivenes inoinkiug cid:r or wine We wld TnsKinniiutut of them lat aeap n t farmers in Indiana,Kentucky, and Tuuneee. Wai ranted to work well.

Trice tCARTER BUGHANAt.

je21 dJawipRAwJm 411 Main Ft.. LquisvUIb.

At C. J. KAIBLE'S,332 Jofforoii stroot.

JUST RKGE1VKD FEU EXPKKSE:

Gold and Silver Pra'd". s, Sta--"- , andJ., i' rd- ?.ll widtnn and iimiiHif; SiU aud

N WrtrMed :rimon S.t?lvs, U. 6. and Kv.Stat It itt. n Gold and Silver It nliou,

y aud Fnnc.- -: Worsted CordP,Kraid,.v:".--. aud L ie.", all Crtlo's- Sword Kni't. Fiag

',.V1"A u ........ ...i i. i.i .nn. t nn hnnH And nuide.

to ord'-- st h"rt noti.-n-.rrin.ns, Itnt our, Tas-el- Cords, Ac.,

mad t oider st dhoit notice and on rea- -

.jOi abb1 teii.jjq (kiuiitiy flieicuautB euppntu i ''''-- "

Aiild:COU(.t. aplOdly

Hartford Fomale Seminary,rTIIK;oi Kli OF IN' Kl'CTION IS TIHiK-OUii-

1 and extensive, embraring tho wlu.de ranee of aol d aud ornaoiental cdm-aH- In rf

iu rfMeand crnve:u.'iife nt ImiUinc and in leae-a-

location t in-- t tunoa iseuuilit r"t mpvn wv t'anv in tbe cnuntrv. In tbe i resent disturbed tta'e oi

therouutry. this orlern peculiar advantto f oi-- ' parents wishi- it a uiet, pleai.t. anl cireresidence for l her daiicbti-r-- . tr ui.th-- r imo-in- t i''Uor lor cirr nlnr?. anuly to the Principal, VN". 3. CKUSH) ,

uftd'fHertford. Cor n.

CHOICE LAIiD.r A TIKB'JES tor Bale lo to c'.ofe byOU aHl J. "MtTH BfE-nt- , Main et.

Office Louisville and PZafehvillo Kail-ro- ad

Company,LorirtviLLK, An?. 5, liil.

TOTICR TO STOCKHOl.hEKS - l he annual meet-i- y

inn of the Stoen holder of the LruiiviUe sviile Ka'boad Conipany will te held ou Monday, the7tb dav of Oc'ober bext, at it ntliceio

J M V J 'd'T'priK. ivrt

Forest Academy, by IS. II. WcHown,WILL Bl'.lilN ITd NEXT SESSION ON THE V th

y of SejJt- - mlr. Tbe ctmi-- e of instruction it thor-ouc- h

and compl- te, tuibracin such pract-c- l btuuehesSurve' iup, Ac.

Tehms B iaruinu. tuition, wabinir, fuel, Ac, i6ifor iDon hK. lnduiKnce in rtgaixl te paj mcuta willbe erautt-- when n ed.:d.

Kev. Dr. W. W. Hill wBl opn a Female Academy ofthe highest order on the 13' h uf bptcniber witlriu ba'fa mile The dame teachi i wi.l t'vu iml nn tions inboth Academic h, when decired. in Mimt aud t rench.

Address me, at O'Uar.uoii's P. O , J.ff. rxo county,al d

WATEBW0RKS.

PI iamb ingHO. IM TEIED BTKEST, NEAR JEFFERSON Si

Water Pipes, Hose, Hydrants, care prepared to iu trod nee Water rtnea tnrWEDwellings, Stores, and Faetoriee on reasoiiahb

terms. We have a full stock of Bath Tub, WaterCiosot, Shower Bath, Wah Basins, Hydrants, BoBoxes, Ac Having a long experience in the bnftoefiwe iroaranty to five entire satii faction for all work ertroabed to ni.

' DGNALY & STEAD EE,fLLMBBKS, GAS AND BTBAM FITTBBJI

tnU dlstf

Mammoth Cave Hotel,Near Louisville, Nashville, and Memphis Kilroad.

This healthy, pleasant, cool, and delightfulummer bavins resent ly undergone a

chanve of proprietor, and neen enbired andreiuruifhtd. uww oners superior lndureni-n-

to vi.-- i us deeir n to visit the t 3v or seeking tin cxl-es- tand summer rtyirt to be found onlv a few

mllei fioni tim railroad, n hre fcood four-bo- r e coautirsare always m leAdiiits-- to convey paweugera to andfrom the Cave,

ax.llrn V. K. OWSLEY. Pmprirtor.

Cotton Lands for Negroes.Tbe imden-isncd- as af ent, li4s i''.iJO0 worth of

Vi$ Ail:ant?a aud Mifjusippi Ijuio- - which he will ex".jC chin?? for Negites. Stocks, trouud Rente. City

Property, or in a word for altoot-- anything "trade-bl- e

' i improved placs on navigable stream. o.UO'J

acres of wild laud in tracts to buit purehanei-fi- .

J. B. WHITMAN,art d!2 w3 No. 411 Main rt.

ffs. J. W. COOK,"&-0ptici- an from Paris. '222

Long Practical experience and a large assortment ofOPTICAL INSTRUMENTS, SPECTACLES,

AND GLASSlr-S-.

404 Third at., bet. J Hereon and Green,nedisly LOUISVILLE, K?N. B. Wt-b- e and Clock" r'jrxiirerl ind wTntM

Oil, Xjvxxl, Oil,Oil, 3uixxLtja, Oil,Oil! XjmLioa. Oil.COAT. 31L, LUNAK OIL,LAKO OIU AND FLUI1JLAMPS of every style andemb racing all tbelatentimnrnvflnwiti. tefhsr with all th BURNING OlL.9 ai fi

BURNING FLCIPof the best quality, for life wholsialtird retail wrv low. We are exclusive aee-it- lot inicity for the sale of the Breckinridge Coal Oil (the bestmade), and for LnnarOil and Lamps, also for the rale ol

rlghufor the Lunar Light. Who would bornwhen a liRbte-iua- l to fcor candloi can be had at qj!

of one cao'Uel Lunar nd OU Lampe axf Joias iie as candles.

Will bear in mind that the

Is but BtCVP-- MILES from BELL'S TAVERN oi

GLASGOW JUNCTION (which is two mllei and tother dpot), and thehalf nearer than any

Excsedlun anything yet dieccvesed for beauty and foi

fantastically shaped etalagniites and stalactites, li but

ONE AND A HALF MILES from BELL'S TAVERN

Visitor har tbe option of vititinf oteor both Claw &t v-- s 54$ fero.

Fourth, Dear the National Hotrl

COPIPANr AND TOY ERQfflB;moron i:n v uKxn,,tm iiTa, . k.. j ." '

WAURANTKD.sl

Milit.nrv nr?nniitinn n Ihrniu'lmnt M.o stafll,i'.l 1IU.' HP t'l - T'l UK l;trl Thill OUT I II li Ptl ! h

Main st., bctuefn Hiiid and Fourth"i isvii i.k, Ky.

VVAISTEUVanted,

ITY BONDS AND CITY SCRIP,Ql'IflLKY, LYONS, A CO.

Fresbyieriau Female School.rpHK NKXT SKSSiON THIS INSTITUTIONA v ill cniinenr' ori t - !Oh of !5t)tenlb under tha

pUierintindtMnt) ol frufiB-o- r

A. A. OOHDOM,riridwSpl !birnnn of Hurd f Trntc.

SoutliwesternAgricultural Works,

(Factory comer of Kl?hth and Green streets,(dabvKooni No. SIT Main et., bet. Ud aud Z&yi

LOUISVILLE, KT.

MANUFACTURERSWHEELFU'S PATENT "WATER DRAWERS,INGEP.SOLTS PATENT HAND-POWE- HAY

PRESSES,TELEGRAPH FODDER, HAY, AD STRAW

CUTTERS,SATJDFORD'S PATENT STRAW CUTTERS,WESTERN and IMPROVED WESTERN CORN

SKELLERS,DARLING'S PATENT RAIL-ROA- D H0RSK

POWERS,DARLING'S PATENT SAW TABLES,CIRCULAR SAW MILLS,

EUST0n PATENT THEESEEES I CLEANEEJ,

OHIO TWO ASD FOUR UUKSI! IKEEHlElrWt! havo on bind wn P"RTAftl.K FARMKRS'

9TKM KNiilNE-s- suitbl lor 'liirehing, Gi nidinfc,Sa'.riiiu' Sb- binK. 4c . mi n itcd on wnf-- . n. We makea nui'iwde THKKSUKRand cLICANt K alio on wagons,10 go With ttV'm

IJXUiVW & CO., 217 IVIaint.r"ft 2nwdui Aiii?wl

AYEK'Sme Cure.

for iiir tjrF.irrY ouiut or

Interntiltrut 'arJh'rrr HtIfttl Itutuh f, I' triit'timl glenaarhe uv ISItitHt Hndarhr ftttt ltiHunr-- i iutlrrrt fur th irtult rtatm f iHtttrigriuatluer litiortf IteraMGrrmtnt rau4by lite PIiWa of 1liairmalic ottnlrim,

JVO ONE REMEPY IS LOUI'EP, CALLED FOR BY1 1 the n- (Vrfiti s of tne pepte than a sumsnd ffe cure for tevi-- and Al'iio. H'.i'b e arc nowenabbd to 11 r, with a perfect terrain y that it willeradic'ie the tieH!, and wi' h aM urtiic , f tunded onproof, that no barm ca.uuriie fiin its use in any ijuautiry.

That which pmtrrt from or pr vert tbin difordprmint be of immense in tbe c tuinunif i' whTeit pr vail i. J'tt'ivi'tii n 'f i hwi i ore, fur the pa-

tient epcapoa tlie rim which be mii't run in viojf nt,tiHlefnl d 'j hie '( 'I'KK expein

tbe niift'inic pown ot F pvh; ami Auvk f.om tlm n

aud the rievelopni'iit if tin ai-- i a?e iftaken on lhe fiift anprc-ac- ot its prennnitory i mptoniH. It if not only the beet remedy vr yet di co --

erea far tbic chH of conipl but also the r hpest.l he lar-- (piantity we iirp,ly f ir a riojUr I hnun ity- itliin the reacb oi' very bod y ard in bl'iourwhere t kvks and & ,v prevai'r, nvrj body dbierld haveIt and u m it fveelv both 'or cure aud prevention. Arreat mpeviority of th n ren-- 'y ovt-- any other evrd 'St ovfrfu lor tli npeed- aid reittiu cnieof Intennlt-te.i- t;

i that it contaiui no 0. iin.iie or tnitieral,it prodneu uo 'I 'lnini or ht r iniu' loop "tfecta

up m t he c uditutiou. Tbrwe cur. d by it areleft a. hen hv a if tlny had uvver bad lhe diHiH.

Fever and Ayue is not nion tbo conttifiiencu ot thepoiton. A n r. at va'ie'yoi dtioider arm)

tioiii it among b'ch ai"d N(ura'Kt(iout, lleaiachr, Kiudno.-e-. '' i o'livh", Ear-ac-

Palp'iation, Painful Affedioaot the Fp"e-ii- IIvftirij, Pain in the Boweie, t:olieParattni.-- , and lrai'H-nien- t of tbe Stomach, all ofwtii h when or ;:inat'irg in tine put on tlie inter-i- n

tt nt tpe, or tmouie pf'i'iodical. Thia 't.nta" exp. the nom tue blood, aud c Uit"pientiy cuieath- ni all alike.

Preuired by PR J. C. AYV;R A CO,, Lowell, Mats.,ai'd tj.ud bv all :ti every w hei e.

R A. ROBINSON CO., Whoteop-I- - Acnta, LouIb-vill- e,

Ky. al eodtOweowlm

in

Rockaways and Coaches1361. Tor Spring, 1361.

Bockaway Bneffea,Exleuuiou Top SUde- - at,

BhUUng TopNo T"p UiufEie,

Hpriuf Wanons,And a lorire aportmeiit of Carriage! of every deecrip-tio-u,

winch we are nffnnAT PIIH KS TO SI-I- THE TIMES.

AlfO an of CAIU!A(;K 'IRIMM1NG8COmpricinR 8pnup, AJtle.1, ljeatber Band?, Ate, at

'ttHa v I.F.STONE&CO.'S,

above the Oa;t Houseucria eide.

MLITARY EQUIPMENTS.NUtKfi KAP-K- . 'I'JLt'ABF,r"5' EE

SVA lib MUIM,DitLsi i:Ks, vr

i"N band and made to order. Contracts solicited andpromptly filled at tbe lowest prieea.

R. E. MILES.Saddle, Harness, and Trunk Maimfuctory, No. all

Main street, between Second and Third, sign of theGolden Tlotvp Head. m3B

" JOE HOLT RIFLES."$15 perniODtSi iay-$10- 0 Kouuty,TM1K Law allnwine the above amounts to tbe t"i'in1 Volun eern ha- - p mft-- tbu llou-e.(- .f Itepreentativea

with hardiy e di.e;itiiig vou. Tbe-- with tbe PensionAcf wiul B nnty Land law" i :il!ir i "lit to h: ft tbemost iucrediiloua th it our Govhtuhi nt intends doingiis part to lnrtoer tbe luteiet-- cf tnoe who take uparum in iU defence.

A f"w more recruits are wanted to till up tbe Joe HoltRilb'3, an eci llent cunpny in KouMeau'd Bi'iga-J- nowon d'ltk- at Camp Joe Ilo;t.

Apply inittedirtt-l- y at the corner of Eighth and Mainetn ete, or at the aioreeaid canr.i of

jyla dtf C. L. THOMASSON, Captain.

5IIL1TAI1Y GOODSWholesale and Retail.

LKAT1IKK, HSU-SKI- AND GILT1RON7.K bWUKUS:l.l'ALLKTS; BCTTONS;S ASHKS; SAl'DLKS.pWiHtU BELTS: MUIH.KS:8 WORD KNOTS;fell H'LDKK S0ALKS HaNNKK SfKARSPATlOM' MKl'Al.LIC SliuULULK STRAP?;BULLION KMBROII'1 OO DO;

nLT'S ANIi KKAL'S RKVOLVERS.FLAGS AM) BA.m;KS mde to rder.U. S. ARMY KKUULATION II ATS.

I am now prepared to sell Swords to the trade lesithan fr.aetevn price-- . Hn Prc4'ntatiou Swords alwaysou band. Orders promptly ttlbd.

h. a. HAraLiiv, jr.,!2 We?t Fourt b, two doore wee t of V uie trt et,

dltnle CINCINNANI, OHIO.

WEBSTER'S GALLERY HASAlways been tbe leading n4most sncces ful Gallery in theWatt aud It la in rpri t-- lnlo what fectioa they have now

thui Beautiful A rt. Wewere not a- - ware until we thti .(amoua Cil- - lery a few davp since, and

saw the walls cmpleU ly covered witneJrf.-.n- .t and truly arti-ti- c gems of

Portraiture, of every sire andt"le. and all seeming so rfifectlF

wesav tbftt until theowe had no idea that all the

Moe-- Web- - str say inthe papen Is reallytrue. But thehatfhu not

been told,

II" ir-n-i) a no nr.w. r

Imptrters of uns&FJstiinjrTackIWHOLESALE AND RBTAU.

WO. M Third itreei, near Mala, LoniiviUe, Kr..

we now reetvtng t ot tin and rifj-- iWW.doable and sintlo barrel Unui, Colt's and AtltnPlsto'a, Rifles of every and every articleosed by Oopnera snd gporUmeu; nto Ftsblnc Tarkle clpvervdt-jcrirtl- a'.l of whih they wi'l ell for cosb tto pnntcal cotirnera. Give ns a cfitl, e'l ef yon whetro In wnt. ter dlwowtf

IJO BLOCXCADS!NASHVILLE CHRISTIAN ADVOCATE ANDTHE CIRCLE will 1hi "alter be seut by Adane

Errpress to hie ci'v and m tiled here tothroughout Kentucky aad other portions of the Un'tedStates. Trie fubcri' ere in tb3 city may, U they pi'tierIt, call for their pirer? at the

METHODIST BOOK ?MOM--o.'63 Tblrri street.

Call and sebpcriV If yon bare uot done eo.SCHOOL for eale.i 4ft A. TT. RRPFOim

Blutual Firo Insurance,IDBILLAED FlliS IJSUBASC3 CO., of Su U,l

Capital and euiplue 53.731 lb

Tb's Camriiny dii'l'l'-- th!es- -

--tf fourths ct her aiucitijdtri-.Ucy-bjidvr- lte.t la tit. u t

Losses mULUd by LULlSVILLE M Ma- - s::0Mid. i'.cs",

i