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DAILY SENTINEL. TjlE UNION -if UVST DC rKESKRVKH. Jjcinii a.VTUniiAY MOKN1NG. APRIL 23 The Cincinnati rommrrrlnl and "Complicity Willi i rriHiin,' 1 b Cincinnati ComraetcUl bit the nail on tr bead occ Id cGtxur.eBtir upon the Gaariiin correspondence, for th ex-Geteral and preient M. C. Muae the rftpoakibilitj cf the fraud by oucMcg frr the authenticity of the forred leu ter aljned hy Dai od Ecklks wbicbhe eauaed w he read in the Hooe aa genuine It mm: 'The Ir.immpoli Sentinel teern in trouble about the letter of intro-iuf lion, purporting to bare reen written r? e Cfi2rmn J. Ü. Da ria anl Jude D. It'Kckle. of Indiana. Ajrin the asi pper ar: TheproSahiJitT about the letter ? that Judge E-kle aod Mr. VttU will not et.ture to deny tht th wrote tbtra. They bear upon th-ir face erUence cot of forgery but of authentic!- ty " Mr Davit doe Jeny moit broadly that he ever wrote och a letter. He pronounce it not only a forgery, but täte a t!it he terer wrote i lettrr to J'.iu C. Batciairoi upon any aubject. Ju !i(e Kciim, we understand, U not at lome, but na ion aa the infaroou charge reachea him, bit denial will be equally emphatic and general. Tbe coorao of the Commercial in thin matter protea it to be maliciou partisan preM. It arraign and condemn! men upon ex parte fidence to advance prty achemea and cratlfy 'ta party prejudice. Gen. GARriiLn, according to the teatimony of the Commercial, adtnita that be had copiea of ihr lettera in hia poaeaaion fur roontha. During all that time he taken r.o atepe to procure the evidence of their authentici ty;, he doea not even inatitute a judicial invca ligation of the matter, nor dot be give thoie jjentlfmert nJ intimation that uch letter are in hi poaaeraion or the opportunity to exculpate themelvea. , Throughout the whole matter Oen. Garfield has acted the partim. Judging the. honor aud integrity of hia political opponent by hia own at.indard and that of hia party frienda, he take it for gmnted that they are equally uoacrnpuloua and dishonest This aeema to be hi rule of action. but the evidence of the fraud does not re upon the denial of Messrs. Davis and KtKLr. We published, ye-terday, the nxat indubitable proof that the letter which purported to have been written by thoae gentlemen were forpeties that they had no thine more to do in writing or preparing them thau the Commercial folkathem pelvea. The Commercial h been swift in ita effort to convict MesAra. Davi.a and EciLta of "eompliciiy with treaaon," and we will now aee whether it will be equally prompt to relieve thoe gentlemen from the unjuat charge against them which it ha been po faat to circulate. The Commercial charges, alo, that Mrm. Parts and EciLts are "sjmptthizers with the robelliob.' in that regard tbj Commercial ahould remember what our Savior aaid upon a certain occinion "He that ia without sin cat the ürat tone." That p iper aided and abetted the rebellion. It was in favor of disunion rather thao civil war. It conceded that eeceion waa only revolutian, and that the rebel State hnd the Käme riht to throw off their allegiance to the Federal Government that the colonies had to declare their independence of the British Government. It al.o contended that the with drawal of the rebel State would prove no dis advantage to the North, if a liberal commercia intercourse waa ecured, and in that event it would be an advantage. The Commercial has proven fa lue to ita own conviction of right and expediency, and why? It could make more money by nein dishonest than honest. And this pirit of avarice, ao forcibly illustrated in the eaae of the Commercial, baa done more to con tinue the war and fasten upon the country the terrible burdens which will follow it, far more, than all other causes combined. Hereafter, whenever the Commercial feel like denouncing ita political opponents for disloyalty, we advice it to first apply the mirror to its own face to first witness ita own ahort comings and deformities, before it charges delinquencies upon iu adversa ries. From tap Terra Hinte Journal. An Abolition SLIe from tlie Hull off Conarre A forgery on lion. John 4. Davitt KxTIembrr of C'ongrea, f roiM this DlatrUt-A Vlllaluoun Out rage. In the published proceedings of the Houre of Representatives on the llith, the following para graph appear: "The Committee rose, when Mr Garfield, of Ohio, proceeded to make good hi? former atr ertit!. ftt producing a It-tier I rum Jude Eck les, of Indiana, which cme into hia piseiou, recommending: a young m m to John C Hrcck euridv'e, ms oeairoi! l entering the service of the South in nome cDaciiv, and recommencing hitn as a faithful man. The writer s-iid th at the ! be.rer of the letter wj formerly connected with the ln.n army, ut became diuiel with if 51 r. (irßeld also produced a imil.r letter from Mr. John i. Divii. rem.ukinff that Mr. Dvio was formerly a member of Congress from ludi ana. and the predeveir of Mr. Voorhecs." We are authorized by Hon. John G I).ivis. to pronounce the letter produced by fiirßeld, pur portiag to have been written bv Mr. D.ivis to Bret-kenridje. a FORGERY"" bve lie from beginning t eni. He authorizes us to further sav that he has never writteu letter to Krcck enridge on that or any other subject Tiie let ter is a. forgery perpetr.tted by the atolition len ders of this district for political purposes a cowardly and villi;ious crime for which they will be held responsible tetore the people. kt t i r. i-ri:.vi. The Indiana Cotton Mill at Cannelton nav& over $4,000 Goverment tax for the month of March. A new Catholic church is Vt be ereed in Lafayette. The building is to be 141 hv r4 feet, built iu the Gothic style, and wbra completed it will be one of the finest church edifices in th:it city. It is expected to be got under nof this ummer. A few months ago a coup'e of meu cil!el upon Dr. Bizgs. resident pT Mitchell. i. this ! roatitt , and desired prirnte interview with hi;n I Dr. Biggs conducted them to a ptivate romn. j when 4o hi surprise they locked the iior. and' one drew pi.-iol and the otaer knife Tl.ey told him that ttey hid a aarrat.t fr his arrest, tor ptsing counterfeit msney. but If he would oav them fl'K) thev would let him off Dr. Bigsgave tbera $3t0 in cj.hand his note lor the balance After krej inc him in the r oom untii train time they Jett. The Dctor ronilrel hi lawjer, and they agreed t. sit nothirg b.ntt it. b'iptug the men would return to culIe-.-t theix:e Oa l?t Stunl4? one of them returnei to collect his tnnney. Dr. Bigc haj hitn rreted, nd he wa recognized iu the sum ot Sl,50'i ui aje.tr at tbe Circuit Court. Atter the trial tne mn showed a warrant for the arrest of Dr. Rig, auticg that he wa a United Suie detective He arrested the Do.-tor and took him to Icduu apoiU. will reler to this occurrence again k.oa we ;ern the result of it. Bedford Appeal. v I sitiale Hank. It is apparent that Chase an.! Companv mem to break down the Si.te lUnks. ,! force thir capaal ansj Circulation ü.to Kedeul securities Dniel We-ter said: "Sir. mice not the ruthle hand th.t hll strike at tne State Banks, t.or mine the toiue that ohali C4Jeiely udrti them nh uecheryof perfidy. a iruit their Jaw ful ex Utence I admit their utility in the circle to which they properly belong." m:u ico.Ti nil: ot; rii. Vieaaf Iii rrticli Ilm prror upon1 Aiiierleitn Af lir-lll Itecoff til tion nt Iii kiiiltil. I JULTlMOkK. Apr l 1C I have had a l'ng interview thia morning with a distinguished literarf gei.tieman who has re sided in Pans ever aince the spring ol 1 SS1 , t.i who. indeed, wi',1 return to that city in a few weeks, twing here at present merely on bulucss. If this gentlemo could be prevailed oa to give to tb world all that bx cme under his own di rect observation relative to the diplomacy of the Southern Confederacy" (as it is railed treie) in Paria, and the attempted diplomacy of Mr Diytoo i u the part ot the U' itel State, and to the gradual development of the plana ol the Km peror Napoleon tu regard to tl United Sutes and to Mexico, it would contitute a pamphlet as entertaining a a novel, but which would be all true, and the facta of which would show in wh tt a disgraceful position we have been placed arooti the family of nations iu consequence of the im becility, obstinacy and fanaticism of the present A'Jrr.iniatraiion Instetdof recognixing the fact, and acting upon it. that diplomacy, and, above all, tbe di. plomacv at the French court, reoiirea the exer cise of the very highest mental ability, tbe mut erdarcel underattnding and the most bnlii ir.t qualities, both ol manners and person, and above all of that experience which cm only be the re suit of Ion acquaintance and familiarity with the practical diplomatists of Europe; the admin istration sen to Paris, and has kept there as our minister and representative tlurii g the whole of the present fearful crisis in our national history, a man who, while be is ao estimable gentleman at home, is destitute of every quality which ought to be considered nece-sary even in the humbleol clerk or ttucbe in hia office at Paris He is entirely ignorant of the very rudiments of the science ot diplomacy, and his lamentable de ficiency in tact and manner, places not hira but the country he represents, eutirely at the mercy of Napoleon and the practiced Kreuch diploma tics. ' arVAMTA;:s vr tnf oi tti at rur. French (oirt If this were all, it would be bad enough. But, on the other hand, the rebel authorities at Rich mond have been wi.se enough to send to Paris, as their representative, a mn who, to gay the least, fills the position of a foreign ambassador with credit to himsel" and with advantage to his country. In spite of the difficulties of his por tion (tor he has not yet been Torm.tlly recog nized,; Mr. Slidell has proved himself to be the equal in diplomatic skill anl Jinnsc ot the Eu ropean diplomatists whom he meets at the French Court. In a social joint of view, too, (and you are aware how much defends upon this in Paris,") the representative of the United States has been continually kept iu the fluide by the elegance, the frequency and the lavish expendi ture of the enteitainmr-nts given by the repre sentative of the Southern States It is in con-equence ol these facts that Mr. I) i) ton, and the Government that he represents, has been deceived and overreached on every side by the Southern embassadors. Eveu before the arrival of Mr Slidell Mu Paris, tho agents of the South there had mJe such representations to the Emperor of the power, resources, ind deter mination of the Souther n people as caused the Emperor to take the initiative in recognizing the "Southern ConS'ederacy" as "a belligerent pow er," which was formally done at Washington by the Minister of France and England. This act prevented our Government from hanging as pi rates the rebel privateersmcn whom we hud cap tured, and whom Mr. Seward hd threatened that he would htng, and compelled us to treat them as prisoners of war. VIEWS Or NAPOLEON ON AMF.KICAN AFKAIRS. The character of the Emperor Napoleon is such as leads him to form his plans, and to ar rive at his determination, with great deliberation, but when once they are formed, nothing can in duce him to change them. But in forming his plans on any subject, he seeks light from every quarter, and' it is in this respect that the presence of Mr. Slidell in Paris has been so beneficial to the South. The course which Napoleon will ultimately pursue toward the South will be tbe course which he believes will be the most advan tageous to him, and that will redound the most to the glory of France. He believes and you will remember that I make these statements on the authority of a gentleman whose relations with the diplomats of the French court are of the moatimimtte nature he believes that the arar of the North against the South will be un successful in a military point ol view, that the South cannot be conquered by the North, that the Soul hern Stateä have abundantly demonstra ted their ability to maintain their independence, and that three years of war have so weakened the North inotso far as men and materials ol wr are concerned, but financially) that he has noth ing to dread from our government, in any event. If the American States bad remained united he would not, from cnsidertions of policy, have acted in the manner he has in regard to Mexico. As it is. hia operations in Mexico, and his designs toward the Unite! States, are both pnrts of his plan of operations in America. This plan has been slowly maturing. But it was formed and decided upon months aco, and the time for its development is now at hand. NAPOLtON WILL SOON RECOGNIZE THE 801'TH As AN INDErtNPENT NATIOX . The Emperor believes that the political and commercial a lv intmos hichh-j will derive from an acknowledgement of the independence of the South, and frm an alliance with the "Southern Confederncy ," require him to tke the?e -tep. and be will take them He require the recogni tion of the einnne iu Mexico u ruler Maximilian both by tne North and South The South, through Mr Slidell, promised this readily enough, as part of the price he was to py for her recognition. Bui the eagerness of Mr. Lincoln and Mr Seward in consenting to recognize the est.iblihniiit ol a monarchy in Mexico, on condition ihnt he would remain neutral be tween the North "d South, surprised ai.d rather bewildered the Emperor Napoleon. He had been led to expect th it our government would cike .one attempt, at least, to maintain the Monroe doctrine; and he is amazed to see tint doctrine so tamely given up; tar it is Iiterallr true that Mr. Drto:i, in obedience to instruc tion from Washington, communicate! to the French minister lor loreign alTairs the readiness of our covernment to recognize the Emperor Maximiliian as he hould acend the Mexican throne This action on the part of tfcc Admin istration, however, w ill not change the determin ation of the Emperor. And it is the opinion of my informant that neither will the recent action of the House of Kep.e-entativcg be seized upon bv Napoleon as a pretext for a rupture with the North, because the resolution pieed by that body is so meek and nrld in its tone, and be cui.-e the action of the Uoue doe not, and has do tower to, commit the administration to any Miir.f whatever. A FRENCH R4T ANI NAVT TO CO OPERATE WITH TU C SOfTU Tb? action of Napoleon, when it d.es occur, according to this authority, will take th3 form of j active intervention. I he noutherti resident- in Paris li ecm to know thtt the North is to be invtdedbv two Soulhern armie this summer,! . ar d it is the impression at the French court that that w ill be the time w ben t!;e Emperor will throw ' don the mask which he has hitherto worn, and '-. will onenlv declare hi intentions It is believed , that the lurro.il acknowledgment of the irv.e-; rrdetice of tbe Southern Cor.feder icv" bv t Napo'eon, and the formal reception ot Mr. Sli dell as the accredited envoy ol th t power at the French court, will be immediately followed btr the appearance of a Frercli ticet at Mob:le. and the landing of a French army jt New Orleans 1 he occupation of the h.trb-r ot Cnr!eton and Wilmington by fiee's of French war vessels wid immediately follow, the blockade of thoe ports j w ill be ra:ed, and tbe long ho-inied cotton and ; tobacco of the S.iutb, bought with Frei: h gold, w äl b.'gin to do toward the ports of France un ! der convoy of armed ve-ael All this we may expert to see this summer; and all this results from the tact that the hatred of Mr. L:ncoln and Mr. Sewtrd toward the South, and their determination to subjugate or exterminate the j rvoitnern people, have been stronger motives with thtra tlnn patriotim or love of their whole country lAHOMOTlV; BVILPI.Nu AND EAIL&OAO hlUXlNG aT THE SOITH. I am aware of the getiral unreliability of the tales brought by refugees Irom the South. More than fifty of these "refugees" hre arrived her during the Iat four weeks After taking "the oath." t!,ey are rermittei to rua around loose, ! go where thev pk-a-e ( have -eeu atMil I alf of them, and have conversed with more than a dozen Out of the whole number only two were p-e-el of any information of value, and the-c two I beard of accidentally. I found them bjth (but at diSYrent places) workirg busily at the'r trade. Thev are machinist. Northern men. who were induced to go down to work on the Baltimore an i Ohio railroad before the war. What thev know about the present condition of the Southern railroads, and the rolling stock there, n. is really valuable. I believe it is relia '! and true, because they are welt koowu here as honest and truthful men They sty tr.at the railroads in the South gen erally, are in tolerably fair order fan! certain lv they have been fund to be ao by all of "raiding" parties, from the Potomac to the Mississippi.) and that several i.ew connecting roads have been built during the last two years. The toad from Dnville. in Virginia, to Greens borough, in North Carolina, waa completed a few m ntl.s ago; and the rolling Hock was placed on it a lew weeks before my Informant left Virginia Itailroad iron is now manufac tured at no less than eight different pi tees in the South. TheTre iegar Iron Works at Rich mot.d (which the Abolition newspapers of the North removed to Alabama eome months ago.) has been engaged day and night for two months pt in the rnnufacture of bira of railroad iron for k new railroad in Georgia. The other places where railroad iron is mad are at Charleston, Raleigh, Lynchburg, Dmville, Fayetteville in North Cirol.na, Rome and Atlanta. At M icon, in Georgia, and also at Atlanta, locomotives have been built for more than two jears past. During the last fix months a large number of akilled machinists from Scotland have arrived at these two place, and locomotives are turne! out now more rapidly than heretofore They are at work on nearlv all the Southern roads, and are said to work as well as those for merly brought from the North. Passenger cars and freight cars are r.ow being built at Sivannah, FayetteviUa, Greensborough, and at two other points in Georgia. The cars are sadly deficient iu the painting and gilding and ornamental work that distinguishes the passen ger cars on the northern railrotds. But in point of strength and substantial comfort they are said to be all that could be desired. CONTINtEN ACTIVITY IN EXTORTING COTTON. The export of cotton from the port of Wilming ton continue hriskly to be curried on During the week before my informant left Wilmington, where lie was engaged in repairing nome en gines, four hteainers run out of that port, all with full cargoes of cotton. During the preceding week, two other cargoes had nailed; and not one of the ix had the lea-t diflirtilty in escaping the litire of the blockading siju adron. Large quan tities of cotton are continually arriving at Wilm ington, from the interior, expressed to run the blockade. Daun. The; President nt Itnl tlmore. The "Government" attended the opening of the Sanitary Fair at Baltimore, and made a epeech. He made an abolition stomp pteerh. He made Mich a speech is only a Dawson Daw I die demagogue could have pummoued the impu dence to make, and such an one as no man with sufficient common sene and delicacy to under stand the propiieties imoosed by the occasion would have thought of utteiing. Gen. Dix and Mr. Choate, at the opening of the New York Sanitary Fir, found its object a fruitful theme of discourse In appropriate and eloquent terms they described the sufferings of our soldiers, and appealed to the sympathies of their hearers; and the response which the citizens of New York aie making to that appeal is evidence of the policy A4 well as the propriety of discarding par tis ni;ip in the prosecution of charitable enter pr se which should receive cheerful assistance iroin all Mr. Lincoln wa not more oblivion- to or con temptuous of "the fitness ol things" in asking f r a lively negro melody when present to assist in the obsequies at Gettysburg, than in repeating the stale, common places of abolitionism at the opening of the fuir at Baltimore. This much as to the vulgarity and indecency of his exhibition. One point iu his speech, ns having perhaps an indirect relevancy to the object of the fair, is worth consideration. He declare! his intention to retaliate upon the Confederates the mas-acre of the negro troops at Fort Pillow. The method of retaliation has not yetbeen determined. The Confederates concede our tight to employ free blacks as soldiers, and acknowledge their obligation to treat them as prisoners of war, if J they should capture them. 1 hey deny our right, under the laws of war, to proclaim emancipation to their slaves, incite them to insurrection, and arm them against their former masters. The question thus raised has been so frequently dis-cu.-sed, hince our employment of slaves, or those who were slaves, as soldiers, that we shall only say, in this connection, that the southern view is sustained by preceients establi.-hea by this Gov ernment, in negotiations lollowinir both of her wars with Great Britain. Mr. Lincoln, there- : fore, so far from finding a warrant in our historv for incorporating "freedmeu" into our armies, wii positiv el v forbidden by laws of war which we had asserted and enforced, to arm them as a part of our forces. In his Baltimore ppeech he said: "Wl ten the question ol employing colored men as soldiers was left to the government, it rented very much with himself whether he should nuke soldier of them or not. He pondered the matter j carefully, and, when he became convinced that it : was a duty so to employ them, he did not hesi- j t.ate -i do mi. He stood before the American people responsible for the ad responsible before ! the Chri ui in world Ho was responsible for it, j and should stand so in the eye of i he hi-torian. Responsible for it he stoo l before God, and he1 did not shrink troni the decision he had made, for he eieved he was right." He is .-o far responsible as a wpäk, racillatirg I m u. acting against his convictions of right and ; policy, under a ,'pressure"of clamorous partisan ship and fanaticism, may be held accountable lor : his as-ent to measures which he condemns.' Aside Irom the right to proclaim emancip ttion i and arm the negroes, he thu considered the: policy of such action in his interview with P.it- j ten and Dempsey; his indulgence of DawdleNm ' at B iltimore, and rehash of Garn-orosm, fro-: vodes the reproduction of a large portion of th- j am ill amount of common sen-e he Ins prornu! ged within the past three years: , 'What good would a proclamation of emanci-i jaMon from me do, especi Hv as we are now; situated? I do not want to is-ue a document I which all the world will ee must necessarily be ' it operative, like the Pope's bull against the com ! et. And suppose they (the sltves) ; could be induced by a proclamation of freedom ! from me to throw themselves upon us. what shall j we do with them? How can we feet! andcire; for such a multitude? Gen Butler wrote me a '. few day since that he was issuing more rations i to Iaves who have rushed to him than all the whi'e troops under his command. They eat and j that is all." Thia was but a week or two before he issued the prod tmation of September 22 I. 162 Is it not conclusive against the policv ol" its is-ua:.ce? His inaugural a 'dress, is equally conclusive againt I. is authority to issue it. It is more so, i tor he asserts positively, instead of bv quibbling ' interrogatories, that he had "no right" to isso e ' it, and he repeated the declarator , after the w r had commenced, in hia message of duly ..!. lc'bl. Th.s is the m m who now assumes the repon i -hi'.ty. j lo'ting for a re nomination; ths imbe- 1 eile, sell convicted. doub!e-c.ealiug. petty dema io.uj, mtntpultted by Patterns an 1 Dempsevs. by political gamblers and ch trlat.th. wi:h less rains and less honestr thn himself, trimmed, watered and cultured by f unties, and slupirrg imelf to their devices, would appear a Jackson He holds himself accountable lor having, with out authority. nd in on;oitioo - correct policy himself being tle wimess place! ne groes in a pos;tion where he knew ihey would be massacre!; aid U'w he threaten retaliation,! nin u wilt tte re Mailed unon our own white sol i.ers 'Chicago Times. lion Damrt W. Voorheea "Ague." the correspondent of the Gazette, from Washington, in his letter on the Long ex pulsion debate, Mates that among those who doited the vote on the resolution of censure of Mr. Harris, of Maryland. wa Hon. Dat.iel W. VtHrhees of Indiana Mr. Voorhees was neces stti'y absent by sickness at the time, but alter w irds obt ined the consent of the Hou-e to re con! bis vote in the negative Cincinnati En quirer. Libxral Governor R.-amlette. of Kentucky, has induced the War Department to credit Ken tucky on the 1 rift -T.IHXJ troops who havejoir.ed the Confederate army. A recruit to the Confed erates is considered by our liberal War Depart ment equal to a recruit to the Federals Cin cinnsti K'nuiir. 1 Extract from aneitranrdlnarr perch of a Itepubliran United Mate Sena tor from .Missouri The (.lonmr I'raaprrt of the War admlllrd-ltif Terrl bie t'ontrqutncri of a 1 ontimi ance? of the War. Senator Hr.Pta-ox. of MUsocri, one of the most moderate of the Republican leaders, deliv ered a rf-evh the other day Irs hit place in the Senate, in which he said: There are but two aides to the question. The one ia the Union without slavery, the other is the im mediate and unconditional acknowledgment of the Southern Confederacy. a a Therefore let the elements of opposition at once cemtine so that the friends of the Union may determine upon the best course to fecure 1 peace. If those elenenta are too strorc to be j ubdued except at the extense ol our own liberties ! and the lost ol every goo! for which th gov ernment was established, the sooner we know the fact and act upon it the better. - If it become evident that the frienda of alaverv j are atrong enough in this country to resiM all efforts to subdue them. I hall act uon it. I am I not prepared to ruin the countrv in a vain effort ! to do what cannot be done. Shall this war go on forever? Ia the common cry of "thelast man and the last doll tr" poetry, patriotism, orbiag gadocia? Should the war go on until the public debt equals the entire arenlth of the country? Should the whole capital of the people be forced into Federal hecurili, f,d these fecoritles made the basis of an irredeemable paper circulation? Should it go on until misery broods over the whole land; until civil authorities shall become impotent, and all rights of person and property stand at the mercy of military power? Should it go on until the members of the Sen ate and House of Representatives shall owe their places here to the bayonet instead of the ballot box; until they become as contemptible as tho Bdmp Parliament that so long enacted the mili tary usurpation to the overthrow of the Knglish Constitution, to be finally expelled from place by the fniwer thev had so baselv erved? Should it go on until corruption and fraud, the necessary j concomitants ot civil war, shall have crept into high places and put on the gart ot patriotism; until ofheers become so numerous that official patronage may quarter one half of the people upon the other half, and give them the means of perpetuating their own power? Should it con tinue until, exhausted, the i) tticn would w elcome the coining of a Cromwell or a Bonaparte: until Provost Marshals with military police e hall be ftationed at every village in the Northern States displacing the civil authority, issuing orders for governing people heretofore supposed to be able to govern themselves, teaching how God shall be worshipped, prescribing new and strange of fenses, and punishing them bv court martial? Should it continue until financial ruin brings misery, and misery runs into anarchy, when no hope but despotism is left? Mr. President, a lew years more of civil war and the outline of this, picture will he r-een. It cannot be otherwise. It is the necessary tesult of a long civil strife. Peace parties will pring up; the war party will denounce them m traitors; the publication of newspapers will be suppre-Mid, and freedom of speech denied; mobs will retaliate; the blunders as well as the corruptions of the war pirty will tend to strengthen the corruptions of the peace party; the period being one of violence, each party appeals to violence, the one to hold, the other to obtain power; tbe ballot-box becomes a mockery, a cheat, instead of proclaiming the voiceof it tree people it speiks ihe subdued lin guale of base subserviency or the Imld tone of military despotism. Such is history. We are not exempt from the frailties that wove this web of history for others. Party pride, blinded vanity, may think so. These have driven many nations from the euj yment of liberty to the profoundest depths of tyranny. To prevent this state of things we are all interested, one party uo more than another, lor when it comes, all parties w ill sulTer alike. When the Unman legions hail subdued Car thage, the enemies of. Hannibal, who in party blindness had compassed his deleat, shared the same fate with hi.s friends Party revenge may be satisfied when political enemies come to grief, but this is no compensation lor a ruined country. When anarchy comes we are overwhelmed alike. The Girondist and Jacobin followed each other in rapid succession to the guillotine. The Hoy alist nd the Republican the Presbyterian tid the Leveler suffered alike when party divisions sacrificed the blessings of the revolution, estab lished a despotism lor England more loathsome than Charles had ever proposed. In this moment of danger let all parties aban don ihe prtjudices of the past, and icsolve to fol low the dictates of right. Whatever establishes justice tends to restore the Union. Whatever perpetuates wrong will continue to disturb our peace. Let us unite to restore the Union, and if it be practicable let us abandon the war. Mr. Piesident, the party in power should re member the past. The responsibility of the present occasion is momentous. Will they be able to save the Union, and if so, will they save anything else that is de.irable? These are plain questions and they ought to be discussed in all can-:or. I Inve never doubted that the rebellion could be crushed if the proper course of policv were pursued. But I have always leared that when tne Southern leaders, who hd so long domineered over the minority, left these h tils, the political pendulum would sw-p too l.r to the other side. Kvery wiong had been previously committed in the defence of slavery. It was but reasouaole that thereafter some wrongs might be commuted in the name of anti-slavery. In the days of Louis XV. the French people bad been oppressed iu the name of the Church When oppiessioii had been thrown off. they not only sought and worshiped the ashes m' Voltaire, but mocked the emblems of the true religion. I once betöre stated, aud I now repeat the opinion, that if the peopie ot the eceded States were ail united as men are united when inspired by a just cause, when urged on bv convictions ot duty to eif. to country, and to God. thev never could be conquered. History furnishes "no ex ample o: such a tiling, and 1 saw no .pecial rea sou why the general current ot experience should be broken in this case. I thought, however, thev could be conquered, because I did not believe thev wtie united. Mr. Presidtnt, we have expended tro thousand niiilions of tretsnre; daily expend three mil lion m.'re. The daily destruction of rmpertv well n:-h equ iN the daily expenditure, thereoy de. rea-in .ur means of payment in the same ratio in which th burdens ol indebtedness ate increased. The border States have been ravage I, desoht ed. and now their population is flying to th.e. wilderness Territories of the West to esctpe tbecuisej. of what we call American civiliz tion. They Keek peace, in orler that when all ele hns been lost the future rewards of labor may be preserved for the cmfort and upport ol the;r families To the holy purpose of restoring the Union we hae j;iven a million of lives, and a half million brave soldiers now stand reaiv to add their blood to the sanguine lake that know no filling Rebellion is roidronticg us yet. Is it weaker than it d Public opinion avs yes Take ihe newspaper press of onr country and add up for your-elve. the reported desertions of rebel troops for the last two year, and it equals theorigmil militia strenih of the South. The same authority tells us that the rebel armies are in a state of !tarrtion. and in the same column reports the destruction of commissary stores on tbe outskirts of rebeidom sulfi.-ient to subsist their arm es lor three month-. We are told by the repoitsol chief engineers and major penerals iu cuUiUiaod that Jon have been levelled by our aitil'ery, have btcoaie a m4 of shapwle ruins and unavailable lor defence The-e forts, for six month thereafter, have held iiecurity Con federate garrison, and tfiey yet frown deltnce at our iroa-clad navies. For three years the armies of the rellion h e defied our power. In April, 1?61. the Ex ecutive and his adviser thought that 73,l00 men could urpret the outbreak in three months. In July, 161, the Congress supposed trial 500.000 men would soon complete the work. With an army of mauy hundred of thousands now in the field, the sme authorities regard it necessary to add seven hundred thousand more to our present. Who is the man that think the rebellion weaker to day than it was one, two, or three yeirs ago? h it etsy to sty wethiut it weaker? Indeed, it tnsy not te o strong; but our actions Kive no eviience that such ia our opinion. It deceiving others be excusable, it i carcely so to deceive ourselves. --t'naarorthr ."le ruber." Mr. Long baa not -uffered from the Colfax raid. On the contrary, he now stands in a higher position than he rould have po,bj reached Lad not the radical club sought to destroy freedom in his person Their vote that Mr. Lorg is an "un worthy member" is the merest larce. But Mr. Colfax ha lost very much of the respect of the country which he formerly had, and has hurt himself and party mot seriously bv, for once, exposing their it tolerant and tyrannical proclivi ties, while the Democratic members are now the acknowledged defenders of American liberty. The exposure of radical character which haa been made will do good. Of course thee men think all who differ from them "unworthy mem bers " We hall probably hereafter he an "unworthy member" resolution mmeied to every radical bill for the purpose of characterizes all who oppose it. It will be a new dodge in legis lation to tack on to every party meisnre a "Re aolved, that every one who opposes this plan is an unworthy member." This is the Cdfx radi cal plan for governing America. X. Y. Journal of Commerce. The rrrniont Convention nt Cleve-lund-The Hnd leal t.rndrr In a ret. The Xew York New Nation of Saturday con tains an important announcement to the effect that the trieuda of General Fremont are to hold a convention in Cleveland on the 21st of May. Itcalls upon all men of minds like its own to hold township conventions, 4c, thereby "telling the centlemeu that the friends of Fremont are big enough to take care of themselves, and that they intend cloosing for themselves." The New Nation advises every one "at once to give up the idea ol taking part in the Baltimore Conven tion." The Cleveland Leader, having committed itself to the fortunes of Abraham the First, pitches into this Fremont movement right and let t. It don't telish the idea of a Fremont Convention in Cleveland at all. But the word has gone forth; the Fremont men are determined, and it can't be belted. The Leader, while confessing its hearty sympathy with the ul'rt radicals, scolds aud trets, and even call the Fremouters "extremists," and says their movement is predicated upon the baseless assumption that "the slavery question could receive a more immediate aud radical solu tion than it is now receiving from Abraham Lin coln." The Leader vents it spleen at General Fremont, who, it charges, "is lending himself to the woik of disorganizition " The battle waxes hot, an 1 we may look out for some interesting rights between the Fremont ers and Lincolnites, w hen they get fairly at work, proscribing each other, and twitting one another with being dis orgairzcrs, secessionists and traitors. Ohio Statesman. General Griit' Cuiiipalc" Agninat ICich niomb The Washington correspondent of the New York Kxpress states that the army with which Gen Gr.mt w ill operate against Richmond will number nearly il not quite 4tll,()()() able bodied, well disciplined sold ers, a large majority veter an4 of two or three years. One hundred thou hh nd men in the Shenandoah Valley, will pre vent a Hmk movement by Gen Lee's force. The remainder ot the army will march up the Peninsula, a strong fleet of gunboats on the Ja nie river accompanying the expedition iu shoit Gen. McClellau's plan will be adopted by Gen. Grant. The army will move during the early n.irt of I Mav not betöre. It is the wish of Ocn. Grant 1 to give Gen MeCkllan a prominent position, but the administration have iii'i-.ted u;on over luling his wishes, and promise him a carte blanche iu everything else, provided be will not insist upon this point (Jen. Fremont will be tendered a command of negro troops This i, to be considered a matter of policy by the Piesident, who is disposed to show his generosity toward the leader of the rad icals Cdiciiinati Eoquirer. AMUSEMENTS. UMI.(UOLMAA II ALI,. STAGE MANAGER Mr. W. II. RILEY. Saturday Evening, April 22d, 1864. THE BATTLE OF BULL RUN, 'I -UK THE Sacking" of Fairfax Court House To commence with rm? jl Ma mz m . TOODLKS Mr. CHANFRAU. M3ALK OF PKICES. Private Boxes. f,,rix people It 00 Orchestra S tu "5 Cent lr? Orel and I'arquotte 50 Cent Ga.lery or Faia ly Circle 25 Cents ',jy' jrfri vh'ir-j fur rerrret witt. '' r'Box otlic? op-ii rout lo o'clock A. M. till I2M. Jrflor opeu at 7, o'clock. Curtain ries at 8 precisely. ! -"K-ervel seel retained only till tbe end of the tfr. net. IST ER : Q K PHILANDER DOESTICKS. P. B. (Mortimer Thompon,) will pronounce his Humorous Oration cn EEC!" lulfL AT ill A . SO I C 11AI,L.. Tuesday Evening, April 26th, 1864. JJjToor on-n at 7; commence at 8 o'clock. AilniUion 5( Cent. apr23-l3t NOTICE. STREET IMPROVEMENT NOTICE. ! Omca or City Cikrk. j In iiiipoIi. ii,d., April Jl, 1jG4. i JOTICK IS HKUHI1Y (iSVKN OF THK PF.N'PENCY l of the tollowins Ordinance for treet improve . Dient, to wii: j An ordinance provide for tie g-n iinz and grtr ; elirK of TenneM-e Mreei, and cradinij and pavinir tbe I Md'-waUn with !rick, and curbii.g th outer edge of the I fidewaU wit'.i white oak plm', between the north fide of Market i-treet and the intersect. on o Indiana Avenue. I Attest; CYKUS S. BCTTKKFIKLD, j aprt3-dlt City Clerk, i S S W I X D L E R . I WISH TO CAUTION THK PUBLIC AGAIXST ONE i If. If. lIcnfVG1L, ! havifitr hen Colonel of the 2d Tenn.--ee Cavalry Retf - ( iner.t. He ha tndld me out of qu'te a um of riottey, a-1 l afn inronued, ha ben wiu liing the publ.c. in ; anou ways, whenever an cpf oriunity ..J!er-d, ar:d no doubt will roitinue hi schein-, tl.er" fore, I publish him that others, in future, may not become hi vinim. LAY I ON JON Ks. Corn?any E, 2S:h Kentucky Recmiect. ' Indianapolis, A pnl??, t34. pr23-dlt " i ELECTION OF DIRECTORS. Ivbiaaaeoua asi Mam so Rj t. roxrAirr, ilatisos, Id., April IS, 1;64. rpHE ANNUAL F.LFCTMN OF N'NE DtRFCTOß.S OF X this Company will be held at tbe r.ffioe f the .on pauy in the City of Jiadixm, on tie .b Weucesdaj (2j;h) of May next. The polls will open at 10 o'clock A. IL, and cW at 12 M. By onler. c. TH0S. POLLOCK, Secretary. apr23 dim FOR RENT VOT FOR 1 StLOO.V, STORE KOOM NO. 15 NORTH ILLINOIS y lpdIt to J. G. EKOON. No. I.'s Illinois trtft, up tairs,C'ppcaiie. ar-rtt-."'f BROKER. HONEY ADVANCED ON WATCHES. DUX05D3. JEWELRY, PL.1TF.. Dry Gol and otbi rocal property, orboobt and aoli at :sro. i&h NORTH ILLINOIS STKEKT. NukWUOb'J BLOCK (UP 8TAIBJ.) srfM-lly CROCERIES. OQQ llhd. 'i. O. Mipr QQllblt. Itrtlned do. For ale by V II AT4 IIi:U. pril-dltn LAFAYETTf IND. n cKERi:ii. QQQ llbl. .tlarkere?!. Half Ilbla. to. ;3oi) ",m For a by i:ltl. V H ATCH Ell, prll-dlm LAFaTKTTK, INI). FOICK AE LAUI), -QQ llbl. Pork. )00 llb L,ard' Kor alt fmm More by IM HL s IIATC III JC, aprtl dlm I.AFAYKTTK, IND. I I" F9? SALE. VALUABLE BUILDING LOTS. T OFFKIt FOU SA I.K MY VALUARLK ITlI.tIXö 1 Ulis n North l'eiitian a wirret, teteeti Ver mont an 1 Michii''in ireft, le:nir Lt number !" and IS intquare utnb-r 17. frottiiiig 6T,1, iee on IVntic) Ivai ia fctr ei , and 19" feet deep. This I the het and nn desirable tr-M'rice property now offered in tlif city, and h m'e advat tace than any othr vacant l"t fr fale. The ground is hlU above tbe grade: t up-m th only bou id red ctr-et nonh of Wa(liitiiftn, has a 15 feet alb-y on the north hide betwen it and the re-deuce f lion. J. K Mclnald and a 3 Net alley in the rear: h plenty of Rood, healthy K.vetRree . and lieci !U'u tree inside a' d out side. It li. a in the center of the "Fifth u enu" of In diatiapoli, ner Ui lveritv square, and U surrounded ly the reiiidence i,f .ur most repenal!e and ubstan-il Citizen An ojtjiortuiiity for l.t nininjf o ite:ratle and valuable a lo'ati n Is rarely ofb-red it will won b sold. lhe-e . of are ad out S34' e-t front bv JH3 feet deep, and will le t.oId to mo par.ie, if d-ired, who will pu'ehaxe totether. 1 hin property was e.ol.1 four jt-ars -Ince for 3,fi, and the price now asked for jl .-low that of any for aale iu the city, its location and advantages consider' d. PRICE $6,750; $3.000 CASH. Upon the deferred payment. the purchaser can doubt less be accommodated. Tili rropcii is finally Worth AND WILL STEVES DKTULCZATE . ONE DOLLAR ITS rUESENT PKICE, while property Income local ties in this city may fro down one-half its present estimated value, within tne enuin:r five year. For further information: Apply to A. I. VS (lull, at hi Hardware htore, ap21-r?t 64 Eat Washjui-ton utret. MEDICAL. O II IS X VEGETABLE CARMINATIVE. IT IIAS LFEN I'KOVED PETÜND ALL QUESTION, that I'T. (irant'a Veeetahle Carminative t the most pleasar.t, fafe and reliable rnjeiiy that has ever been discovered, for Camp I tiarrhea, Cholera Morbu, Woody Flux at d all tho-e ilisorders depending upon a deranged Mate of tbe bow els. " 0: e or two dost will relieve uwasine. and priping in the Moiuach and bowels, and one bottle will check the most obstinate case of 'bror.ic Diarrhea. It ia pleasant to the taste, and beiwsr prepared from purely harmless roots and herbs is peculiarity adapted to fam ly ue and among children. On- the wrapper of each bottle will be louud my fac imile, without which none i. frontline. The pr e- U Fifty Cents per bottle. Manufactured only at my l.afraforr, Fulton street, New York. JOHN B.ViRAST, M. I). J. F. SKNOUK, lOrorcfsf, No. & Kate Huim Block, Im. dianiijli, Indiana, A lioWale Agent for the West, to w hom all orders should be addresed. apr?l-d.1ni NOTICE. BY VIRTUE OF AN ORDER OF THE MARION CIR cuit Court, in the case oft;. W. Maxrleld vs. C. S. linlds.n. et al., I dl, on Monday, the 2d dty of May, lv6t. at the Cou't llousp door, in Indianapo'i, Indiana, at 10 o'cIock . M., sell to the highest bidder, fir rah in Jiand. t"e i:ote, accounts and books of the late firm of DonaidhoD, i!ali U V Trine. THS. II. BOWLES, Kfceiver. ! April 20, !;. aprtl-dlnd RESTAURANT. HEZEKIAH'S RESTAURANT, No. 13 Illinois Street. Game in Sraton. Fish, ()y1rr, I'ure Yints, Liquors and Ciyirs. f 1 1 11 E UNDERSIGNED HA KK.CXXTLY REFITTED Saloon and Restaurant, on 1 and red -corated hi orlh Illinois street, oppi ou. He entures to ay te tbe Bate House, through- :ni ii I s now nie oi tue n.ost the kind in the city. Sot o: Iy he t est ol liquor?, hut th Re- el-gant estabü-bment- of i h s bar fui r lied with tv.rant is m rvH bt the mo-t arc.jn:pli-led coois, and sh, Küu.e, oyster, Ac can be every thit g :n set sot I ordered atall h"Ur. That kul fr past lihera I pa'ronaze be would resjet of the name. HrZKKIAH. H North l.l.noiü Street. lullv solicit a conunuance aprJOdtf ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE, yOTtCK IS HF.RFJ.T GIVEN THAT THE UNDER Ms' d ha bi-en appoi .t d Administrator, wi'h tha will annexed, of the estat-of MifK Hunter, deceased, la'e of Manoj County, Indiana. Th e-tale is olvnt. JAMES S. ATHON, aprl9-d3:w3t Admit i-trat or. WOOD. STOVK WOOD. u 7K WILL FURNISH SToVE WiX'D IN ANY part cf the ci'r In lot of nne cord or mora at 6 cent ir loot, and less atroi iifs at 7 cents per f jet. Or der lft at the ofjee of McKEKNAN A P1EKCK will b fron ptly t.Te.1. r delivered al the wo.tt yard, on oit it Nu 12t. in the south-west part of the c;ty, at3l4' cent, per f Ät. aprll NOTICE. Omca- Isnana t Illisou Cr.stmL R. It. Co., Ixmasaroua, April 1, ISCi. i rpHE REGULAR ANNUAL MEr.TIN i OF THE X Stoekholder of the Ii.diaa and lllinoia Central ailar Crnpa f.T tba election f Il rerior of .aid Company, t a-rve f r the etisutntr year. wjt b held at ice office of tbe Corr.pLy, In tbe City of Indianapolis, Indiana, on the first Wedvemiay (4U daj) of May, 1aC4, at 1 o'clock P. M. By order of tht Board of Director. Aiteat: L. K. KLUOTT. secrttary. aptS-dlm A CARD. DRS. DUZ AN & PARR. jro io. mnatjti iEjmu INDIANAPOLIS, IND- prl5-d3m MEANS TO SECURE GOOD HOMES. "X7E ARE OFFERING hUPKRfOR rNTrEjxEJI7g WW a Pron wuh a little ready meai.a to secure bom-a. We will eil Lots Entirely on Time and erect con-fortable da el.iL, buüt by g workmen and in good atyle, cn the payment t t bai'f a. much a. ihe improvement tftibr remainder to b rai4 B eay paywienta not ttoch mora t haa a fair on the prmie. Hav log Ma in nearly ali part cf the citr we cau accommodate all wishir g to cur a home- and' har icr a larre anioum of lumber on band, and' workmen ! ready employed, wa caa reel buiidiu oa bort notice M'alERNAN A PIEKCK. p9-4lt Real Etate Aa.r-U. ' FOR SALE. DESIRABLE TAVERN STAND FOH .SAL 13. I OFFER FOR S Kl.T. MT H "TFL STAND KNOWN AS tb -JONF.S HOUSE." aM l at In tU woir.g and K-rwir.Cty of C,rer cat!e. InMsr.a Th H..a t al wivt ent rel ryw ttfrty-f "if rnw with t fc'il Ixt, Stable., Wa fce,J. Ic xj. to 1 w eii. tbrr. Ci. rc. ta hört, ery conesienc detsra b'Vn .U",'L It 1 in ( ul raat.in mr tar'nicb't. arl iu btiinea , n,T.r h.,r of or. profitable thaa now. Enjoyirg a Urgm local eoMon and a virtual nv.p olr of th tr.n.ient catom of Ore.nct!, tb H u oferi rare inducement, t . bjyer. and la th baoda f an t rr ic buaa naa rann Uil U pro a rUabl lnatment. r Kailinf be altb and family aSict:on ar tha lacta tire to my o'e'lnf the prony f.. It will b nld at at arri.n act oa favorable terma. 0e.th:rd only of th purtha m'mej fc. ,a hand; tbe balatc In two rqoal paymenu of o and tw yeaneath. If nut dd before 5atrdar, tbe 1th day of Var tka Houe will on tLat day t o?errd at public a actio to tba b'chet bMder. For further particular! aJ lresa th proprttor J. F. JoN LS, aprlö-deow till aal (raerKaüet lad. CLOAKS. CLOAK HOUSE! lira pen In the Weit. Cloaks, Jlandllas and ShaTrls, For 1?U'4. BURROWS & EDWARDS, WnOlKSALK AND RETAIL 22 South Illinois Street, DRY COODS. &C, &C. SPRING GOODS FOR XII IS LsIIEH, ivi:.s aV ;o.5 No. 1 South Meridian Street, (OLD IDST OFFICE RPILD15,) IN CONNFCTION WITH THF.ITt CIAK KOCSC i 1 o;en, un Jaonday, AptU IS, a apleodld Mock o! STRAW AND MILLINERY GOODS, The cheapest ever brotijjbt to this city. ladie would do i well to call In-fore purchasing eUewbere, at tbe rovl ! ha tx-rn elerle! bjr an eieueoc-d buyer, ia tbe ' Eastern market, and will be mjI1 at a ruall advance fur , cash. i aSsJT A first clas Trimmer wanted no other need ap pl. IVENS A CO j No. 1 South Meridian Street, Deitto Amertrao P- ' presa Office. aprlO-dtf U. S. BONDS. HARRISON'S BANK 4 UmORIZFD AGENT FOR RUBfsC RIPTION TO TJ. t S. I-40 DonJ. Interest 5 percent, in Gold, from date of mb.scriptlon. apr-d?0t A DESIRABLE RESIDENCE AXJCrX'IOTSr. TO. M SOUTH TENNESSEE STREET, BEING A 1 large Tw o atory House, containing aix rooms, w.th I hali. double-ar.ri, dining room, four ted rma in iec . ond nory; kiteben, umn.er kitchen, trllar, well, eiMe rn, ! ataide. an l all tbe mjdetn convenieren. There are ala I well -selected fruit tree, consisting of at pl, pear, eberry tree, and other vanetiea; grapea, and other amail frniu. . ill be old on tbe premises, on Saturday, April 23, 1864, at 2 oV clock P. M. TFRM.S-One-tbJrd ca-h; balanca In cue and two year. luqnire of McKEKNAN A PIKKCE, e-r j WALKER, M'KhBXAN A GOt DSBERRT. ; Real tut ate Agent, No. West Waahingtonnrert, iDdianapoiia. I Tw. Fkatufkotox, Auctioneer, t ap9-dtd GROCERIES. Groceries, Sic, tkc. OTfl BA(5S CHICK. RIO COFFEE, 13 LIGHT 9ß9ßJ Unen hag. BAOS JAVA COFEEE. XH5 HO'SnEU' X-- nd ISLAND SCO AM. 4 'SO BnfA kEn!,EDSrGAlL 401) Br;Ls 'oMoLAS'K$ -JajJ KBLS. 8YLUPS. HALF IWAA. AND KEGS SYRUPS. IT "5 HALrC,IESTS AyiCADDIESTEA. fJQ KEGS ENGLISH SODA. 2.000K,r"XAUA Ol!! Ill PACKAGES MAf'KKKEL, WHtTK FISH r,UUU Tl;UL. $"0 000 worthtobaccoa:cdcigaes- Da'n HBLS. "O K."WIHSKT. .jq bbls. old rüUE BouRiWN. And all kind rf P.RANDIKS and WlYrtr. . Eastern I'rice br A. V II. SCII MILL. WHOLESALE GR' CEUS, NcllIlUlL'aH CV UlocU, apr9-dly INDUNAI-OUS, IND. "REAPERS ÄND MOWERST" THE BUCKEYE REAPER AND mo WER Irr. TT H A TWO WHEELED MACHINE THE wheels nponrj the tram are both drtrlej wDeel., and dnTe the kmrea toretber, or Inder od ently. r 2d. There are no cojr 'n tba dr-Hnjr wbeel. 31. When not cu. tins, no co ia In motion; tbrefore, In tria-potting. there n nn w ear. 4th. The kn vea r.eer wrk when tbe Machir la ba-ket: i a eay btckrt a. an empty cart. 5i a. The cotirr 6ar ia attached lo th fraae by a d ub!e binge joint. a-d allowa as ilepen'ler.t action either etxi of tbe bar rtatnf itßout affecün tba oiber. 6tb. Tbecsuerbar I eauly raised to pau btrae. ttona by meant ol tbe Ier, whick ta aiwaya nmürr. tba control of tba operator. " .. 7th. N B. the cutter Ur U hi froet of th drtriisf wbe-l. and aat ta rear, tLua enabhrif tha driver to ara tbapraton of the carter wuhoat mterlenna wnb bia dnvu.r. and avoeli,,, tboao tirefaj accideata which bare frequently occurr. d wtea tba teat I directly over or to frvntnf tncattrr bar. ' 80). Tie cu'ur bar U folded acroaa tbe frano for 5Kb. The wheel or cutter bar iwat tb frama prerenu i ieJn V Chnf4 fTOm P' Mower. iM rale?' TL plUor "PPort iar tba raal cr ichtoeTh "ppocU1 lrom u ''t f Iba 13th Tb raker baa a cwtnfortabla Mutü Mt tf U a. .t LviMtg! 7ia rakrr U harm aaL Uth. It to,k Ihm FiavT raa.n an a Jtowtr aldaa forTl MCMUe' " tun 16tb. U will mater thre b mod red pau I iah ter than any other Kower orRraper vmnm "fr Oi tu yoar ordera early, aa w, cannot ebtala any xÄualT l Ü" ,ÄPR0TID CXXTE, unier tt