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®2jcrial 'Notices, Or. BiscloTr, 'Confidential Physician, ffarmcrly of et. Louis. Mo„> ■can bo consulted ai bis office. ITS South Clark street, «wb«* of Monroe, Chicago, IU.. hair a block from the Pen Office, on all Chronic Diseases, and Diseases of a primer and delicate nature in both sexes. which he treat* with unparalleled eucce.'B. Booms separate, where i adit* and Gentlemen can consult the Doctor with the atrlcteat privacy. Office hour* from • A U. to 8 P.M.; Sunday* 10to 12 A. M. Conrosoicatloa* -oor.fldtnilal, Consultations Tree. Address P. «>• Bo* 154. Enclose two ftamni and get hi* Gnlde to Health. From the Doctor'* long experience lo noip'tal and private practice, he 1* able to perform, and will guar antee, perfect octet for all Chronic Disease* in their cnoM tovrre and complicated stages, in a very short time, without the o*e ofinercnry. . ~ . _ Yonor men suffering from self-abuse are invited t# •call. A perfect cure warranted. Female Irregnlarl vlca attendant on Puberty, Menrirnatlon, or persons having anr obstructions to marriage, should call at once uud* be cured. Beat of city reference* as to übllity and success. JaS-tTBO-tw Human Frnllty, or Pliysiolosl* cal Researches, Should be rtad by everybodv- It treat* oa, and ■fhmvb nor, the evil results arising from early abuse and unhapr> contamination maybe subverted, with a sure method of dispelling the mlsgivlnga many ex peril ncc In entering the marriage eute. Sold bv DB. IJ. A. BAIIBOW, 191 Border street, New York, 2*lloo 25 cent*. Mailed free everywhere, 1 o he had also of H. SCOVIL, To Randolph street, Chicago, 18. deat-ttfrly-ls Beware cl* the Sthcallcd Hair Restorers, ■All made of sulphur and sugar of lead. The firsts* uumt dlencreeable and offensive, and the other a rank poison, which, although harmless in their operation, are not less certain to produce all the evil effects of lend disease. Why use this villainous stuff,when an r.rtlcle, perfectly clean and Instantaneous In Its ef fect, non pronounced harmless by; Dr. Chilton. Is to be cound in iCrtsiadcro’s Bair Dye. When all other uomnounds have failed, this has always proved soo e«v«n:l. , Manufactured by J. CBISTADOBO, 6 Astor Bonse. cw 1 ork. gold everywhere, and applied by all clrdrcsscrs. race, ti, ELM aad sapper box, according to size. d<dtss6s-lro-lB licit* The PBUBIGO LOTIQ, a surecore forltch. DU ttolsMange,ftc., ftc. Baring NO MELCUBY lulu r.f mposltloD, u can be used without any danger. ‘Warranted or no pay. Manufactured by E. T. ft W. T. McFAßLAKD.iAtayette.lnd. For sale byLOBD »t SMITH. Agents, Chicago. in. deIfrSGSS-im Ilnlr Dye! Ilalr »ye!l BACHELOR'S celebrated HAIR DYE is THX BXST :s THE would. The only Haemless, Tbu« and Rnr r Bye known. This splendid Hair Dye 1* Perfect —chanci-R Bed. Busty or Grey Hair fnatantlv.toa QLoesy Black or Natcoal Baowjf.wlihoaUnjaring Uic li air or Staining the Skin, leaving the Hair Soil and Beautiful: imparls fresh ritaUty, res lorinc Us pristine color, and rectifies the HI effects oi end Dyes. The Genuine is signed William A. Bacb ’SLOß. nil others an* uk tc liullallous, and should be avoided. Sold by all Druggists, ftc. Factory.Pl lUr clay street. New York. Ji-SgWt-ly. Files I Files I! Dr. B itfield’s Vegetable Pills Are warranted a certain cure for FISTULA. BLIND &KD BLEEDING PILES. . .. ... .. Wc would caution all who are victims to this dis tressing complaint to avoid the use of external appli cations os thev result only in aggravating the disease. Dr. WITFIELD’S remedy removes the cause of the disease, and effects a prrmament cure. THIS IS NO GUACK MEPICIKF.. These Rile have been tried for the last seven years, uni In no instance have they failed to enre. price cents per box. Bent by mall to any address. 1 J. YOUNG, Sole Proprietor, 481 Broadway,N. T. For sale by BUSS A SHARP, 1M Lake street,, Chl fcapo.UL ‘ ocS-m516-3m. Nineteen Tears Ago Mr. Mathews first prepared xtCE VENETIAN HAIR DYE; since that time it has been used by thousands «nd In no instance has It failed to give perfect sausuic ttTJlE VENETIAN DTE Is the cheapest In the world. Its price i* only Fifty Cents, nnd each bottle contains double the nnantltv ofdvc tn those usually sold for IL THE VENETIAN DYE Is the safest composition o! ttsclan. It Is warranted not to Injure the hair or the eC TI?EVENETIAN with rapidity and cer tainty, the hair requiring no pre;>aratlon whatever. THE VENETIAN DVR produces any shade that may be desired—one that will not lade, crock or wash ont —one that Is as permanent os the hair Itself. Itlm SO cents. Forsalchy all Druggists.^lT^.ar^dmdy by General Agent, 14 Gold street. N. T. Also, Mnnnfar.tnrer of MATHEWS* AUMCA UAIB GLOSS, the l*cst hair dressing in use. Price S5 cents. deirSThSm toth***. Dr. .fames. Formerly of James* Hospital, Custom Boose ctri 1 lL New Orleans, established In ISM, now ofSS TUcodlpb street, Chicago, Illinois, specialist In the treament of Old cuboxic, Mxbcurxjl, blood ajtd Pkik Disxases >xi> Obgakio Wxuarxsa. Cures them without resonlag to Mercury, iodide Potarell, Arsenic or Sarsaparilla. Dr. James uses a KEUTBALirCE. WHICH IS A POSITITB CURB ID OU blood Ulkuiso. Organic Weakness, brought on by riccps, over tnxr.tlon of business, or entailed hered itarily, causing low of memory, nervous and general debllltv.ctcvcurcdbTan infallible method, and tee only cure for tide weakness—eating both time and ex , C ofd* Diseases of the MOST HORRIBLE CLASS, where the blood has become ijoisoned. producing blotches on the face, small watery blisters, pains in the bind mid honest ulcerated throat, nose, limbs and b»dy, scrofula, together with an endless cumber ol tT Drf James Is recommended by the press generally of the South, the medical faculty, and professors of med ical college*, etc. Those afflicted should apply imme diately, and lie cured ol these terrible diseases. Remember Dr. iTaiacs* Office and Parlor* are at Bl Randolph, between Slate and Dc&rbonretrccts. Office ojxm from 9A. M. until 6P. M, Consultations nvlolable. 3a7-ttl3-2wls jQR. JOHN BULL’S COMPOUND CEDBON BITTERS The latest and Host Important Discovery of the 19th Century. No man's n»nt la more Intimately connected with tbe bl*' ory of the Materta Mealca of the U olted SUM*, or more favorably known as a pioneer In medical dv covert l iantbatof Dr. JOHN BULL, ot Louisville, Ky. HU Inimitable preparation cf barsaprtlia. has lone stood ante tea* or the various comuofinds of trai valuable drug. TTI- Compound of WH4 Cherry Has become a Household werd throughout toe West and South, and las Worm Lozenges, In less Uan a y«ar alterv elr i->-ro. nrtlon attained a reputation as spread as tho continent of Nnrtu America. But the cro«lcp cloryoi bit 1J e mnalui to *« attained In hla latest i i»cov«-rv, or rather cotnblr.at< n, for he coos tot rltlm to be* the discoverer of CEDBON. which is t*’e basis of the but-rs tow offered to the public. That fcon-jj- belongs to the cadre inhabitants of Central America, to whom l*s virtues have been known for score than two hundred years. Armed with It the In dian bloc icflaorc to the most deadly malaria: and baiiolfs wittaont tear the most venomous serpents It iu a belief » lU. them that while there !• breath left In the boor the CcTon Is potent to core, no matter wtut the disease may be. While Hr. Bull i< not nrepared to enflorae this ex tr»vm;eni rrrii'Ldo”. le U corertblesa satisfied from a thorough eramteanon of t&e evidence relating to it* virtu’s that as a remedy and preventive for all els em-es ati.-4ng from exposure either to changes of weather an i cllrate or to the miasmatic Infiueaces, tt stands uithontanval. aadjostlr deserves the repu tation n has so long enjoyed In Central America and tho Wes*. iLfflcs. In DXSPEFSU And iu attendant train of ejmptom«.it acts more libs achanultar n r entries. Tiers Is nothing la tbe range of tbe Materia Medic*, mat can lor a moment bear a comparison with It iu till* «.l*esss. A full account of this wonderful plant may be found in the lull ctltiou of tbe U. S. Dispensatory, pages lasinnsts** A aeries of experiment* la which Dr. Bnll has been for years etcacsd. baa Jost been brought toa success- Ail termination. and be Is now enabled to offer to the •public acombiraifon ofCedron witn otberapproved toulre.thc whole preserved lu tbe be?t quality of cop per rlatllle* Bourbon wtiiXy. which he is confident lias no ecoal in the world. He might tnralsh a volume of rmlCcates, but the public Lave long since learned to estimate such things alt,dr true value Tbe *ate«t plan Is for every out to test for himself the virtues ofa new medicine. Give the CEDKON One trial and yon will never use any others. * It 1* not net* vary to publish a long list of diseases 4or which-tbe Cedron Bitters are a specific. in all cieasesof the Stomach, Bowels, Liver or Kid neys; In all affections of the Brain fJenendlnztlDOa De jungemeat ql the m Bowels ; jo Gout- Luenmstism and Keuralgla; iLu in Fever and Ague; .. It it destined to eopcrseoe all other remedies. Knot only cures these diseases, hut it prevents them. A wine glass frill of tbe Bitters taken an h >ur before each meat, w ill obxdate the IU effects of the most un healthy climate.ana screen the person takiagit against disease under the most trying exposure Bold by Bracelets and Grocers generally. __ , g*r- Dr..loilK BULL'S ZMncipal Office, Fifth street, at Wholesale and Retail by 11. SCO YIL. 76 Randolph street. celJ-eTtW-fim tt tb Asals EtJEKfcOR’S EYE m EAR INFIRMARY AKD CLINIC INSTITUTE, For the treatment of diseases of the •ggg, BAB, CATABBB, And sU aflcctions of the Head, Throat, Lungs, Air Passages, and all Chronic Die eases. DEAFNESS AND THE EARS CUBED AT ONE SITTING. Mr. a. r. Tilton, No. 183 Siuth Clark street, Chi cago, was severely afflicted as above, and was entirely xured at one Ur. Everson. Mil Daxtcj. Jatkk, stave manufacturer, of this city, baa been laboring under an attack of Catarrh for more than two years, very severe, affecting the head, throat and nasal passages, breathing was very diffl colt, the parte very sore, and discharging very offen sively ; bed treated with all the ** pattays” In vam, and was finally restored to perfect health In six weeks by Dr. Everson. amaurosis, OR TOTAL BLINDNESS,'CUBED. Pn*ED FoRN*T, seed 88 years, son iot Christian Forney, of romevsville, Woodford conniy, Dt„ was entirely blind 1c both eves, from Amaurosis. and bad been treated by fcvcral eminent ©enlists, who finally f pronouncing his case ixcntaßLS. He then applied o Dr. Everson, who restored him to perfect sight in four weeks. Mr. Forney's certificate can be seen at my office. As to his character for veracity and integrity,! take pleasure in reterring to— Hrs Ezcelukct, a. LINCOLN, President of the United States. Boa*. D. DAVIS, Judge U. 6. Supreme Court. Cob. A. G RIDLEY, Pres't ilcLcanCo. Bank. Uu. JAB. ALLIN, Jck„P. M„ Bloomington, IIL SCROFULOUS OPTHALMIA CURED. Twoertraordlnary cases, one that of a daughter of Bev.Wji. E. McCormack. Methodist preacher, for sncrly of Decomh, lowa, now stationed at Wilton, lows, and the other a son of Wx 8. Foote, of Bur lington, lowa, whose cases had battled for arcara the null of the best occnlUts and physician* In the United fitsiw, and'Vest. Both cases were cared la a few weeks. Dn. Eversoh’s peculiar treatment In these cases precludes the necessity and expense of travel to and remaining here. Bend a statement of the case—this Is enough. Dr. Everson’s reputation and success la the treat ment ol diseases of the skin, kidneys, blood, and all affections of a private nature, whether from conta {lion or vicious habits, Is a sure guarantee to the afflicted. Terms moderate. ~ Dr. Everson Is one of che oldest specialists in the •United 6taics ( hsß had vast experience in the treat ment «f all forms of chronic diseases, both in hospital end private practice, performs all the most delicate operations in eye ana ear surgery. Is a cradoste of three of the b»sl medical colleges lu the country, ex-Prulesaor of Surgery, member of several medical societies, and refers with pleasure to a large Dumber of our most distinguished physicians and professors of medicine and surgery. Address. Dr. W. K. | ; verson. Box 6176, Chicago, HI, Office, 181 South Clark street. Chicago. dclS-sSW-lSt-To-raMs TTIO GAS CONSUMERS.—WouId A • call the attention of the public to my new and •elegant assortment of GAS FIXXURES, Dalis rocelTlng from the tnoel celebrated mwitittc* turtirfl In tbc-Kael which I am row offertnc &i gncb lifI ifi'■«*** n«* will <lefv the competition oiau* other house d the trade. Eetd my Hat of prices. Call audJadjje lor voutxlvp* before pnrcbMinc elsewhere. puiti sUijrlr joint brackets from $U>: to ft^s 3’lalu Double Joint Brackett Xr0m,........ 1.-5 to 1.75 ?s?tore Pentium* from .. ;*J5 io js-W Tv o Lliitu j^OtolZ^O 'i tini- Lil'lil <haudeilere ft am... TourLTlii ClmndrUer* from ■gl* Ll£ut Cbaudcttcn from... U. D. McFAULAJCE, de27-t2SMm U Lualle street. TERN "VARNISH JS KA>'UFACTCEIKG COMPAKT. Office 282 X<alce street, up attain. ttc arc now prepared to cn order* for Coacli, Car, Furniture and Boose Palnl'ra. Varnishesmade from -Uiu beat material In market, and unaarpaMed for Brilliancy, Durability and Color. - Onr prices are as low a§ those of any Eastern man* nfucturer, thereby anting to toe consumer the cost of to give satisfaction, or maybe re turned at our expense- whertMn Uie •■city rrre of charge. JOHS CLOUOa.Prei’t. J.li. Vax Uses. Gcnl Agent. JaS-t770-99t ' CJouttnlsslott JOHN. S.. ROBERTS <fc SON, cJ (J. 6- IL, Ut« of Churchman ft Roberta.) PSODUCE COIUasSION KEBCHABXS, 40 Water afreet. New York. Bxmmrcsa.—Messrs. Jones ft Culbertson, Chi caeo: Thos. H. Brown. Chicago* dol^sTTa-Siii JQAYID STUART <fc CO. AMERICAN Produce Commission Merchants, LIVERPOOL, EXGLAND. Advances made on consignment* to anr address, by WM. AITCIIISON, Jb-I*Booth Water-sl., Chicago. J. ft J. Etuart ft Co* Banker*. Mew York. Stum ft Brother, fidladclphla. • del-rto6-3m Q.RrFFIN BROS., ooamxssioN mebchuits, Mo. 6 Pomeroy Building • xno an r. oumv. Augustus oaims. ocl4-oSo6*ly Copartnrisljip. NO T 1 OK.—The Copartnership heretofore existing l>ctwcen the subscribers, under the firm of WKLLtNG. COFFIN ft CO-, la this, day dissolved by limitation, und the removal of Mr. C.IL WELLING to Mew York. Either partner will tig* U.C Mme of the Hrm}n LEMUEL COFFIN, JOSEPH B. ALTEMUS. Phlladelpbls.December 31,180. CHARLES n WELLING haa cßsoclated with him Mr CHAR&Sb' LOTHBOP. and will continue the Dill-GOOIS COMMISS.OSkuSIKESS.iitIJoiia, 135 Do *” c s SSi3Egri h VS£fio A co: New York, January I,IBW. • . The subscriber* hare formed a Copartnership un der the firm of COFFIN ft ALTEMufi, and will con tinue the KEY GOODS COMMISSION BUSINESS In Philadelphia.* SiuWChmmgeg^ JOSEPH B. ALTEMUS. Philadelphia, January I, IBM. Ja12t9302w DISSOLUTION.-rThe Co-Part nership heretofore existing between the under signed was dissolved on the first davpf January.iSSl, Ijy moLnal con? cut. 6. LIVINGSTON can now be found at 37? State-sL. where be has opened a Ou Fitting and Plumbing establiahmcnL jaS-1761-lw /"lOPARTNEHSUIP. —The Under signed have this formed a copartnership, under the name and etyk ol PETTITT ft SMITH, for the purpose of carrying on a General Commission business. BOBT. W. PKXTITT, Chicago, Dec. 15.1863. Q.L. SMITH. PJETTIXT & SMITH, (Bucceseors to T. M. Tnrlay ft Co^) FOBIfABDDTG & COMMISSION MERCHANTS, El South 'Water street, corner of State, Chicago, s w. mziTT. lde2o-sST&-2m] o.l.siqth. Th E “COPART Is t ERS hip heretofore existing between Adolphus Jaeger, Fcidlnand Jaejcr and Emil Jaeger. under the firm and style of A.JASQEUACO., is dissolved by mu tual consent, Adolphus Jaeger having withdrawn. Ferdinand and Emil Jaccer only are authorized to collect accounts due the oidfirro.,, AhOLPHUS JAEGER, FERDINAND JAEGER, want, JAEGES. _t*’« <sc £!• J Successors to A. Jaeger & Co., Importers and Whole sale Dealers In Crockery, China and Glassware, 103 Lake-St., Chicago, lit jal-t<96-lm in oPARTXERsinp notice. The onderslgned have this ds.y formed a copart nership under the name-and ctyls of WILLIAM R. LOVEjOT'A CO n oj Chicago, foi the transaction of the Wholesale Ciothlne Business, and have taken Chambers Nos. 15 and 11, Lake street. WILLIAM It. LOVEJOT & CO., Boston. BAM’L A. LOVEJOT. > chlenco CHARLES A. MOUSE, f LUICaC . ' _ Chicago. Jan. 1. ISM. lal-t«9Mm Bankhjs anb E.trjjange. ITIRST RATIONAL BANK I? OF CHICAGO. SOUTH-WEST COE. LABE AND CLAES SIS. CAPITAL PAID IX, - - $300,000. • E. E. BRAISTED, Cashier. E. Aixrs, President. no3-pSSS-ly-ls T>AHK OF AFRICA.—Public J-/ Notice Is hereby gives, that all Bills or Circulat ing Notes of the _____ «BANS OP ASIGBICA,b Heretofore Incorporated and dolnzbnsluceslnthe city Of Chicago,under the general banking laws of the State ofDllnolS'tuost be presented forpaymentto the Audi tor of Public Accounts of said' State, at his office. In the city of Springfield, within three years from the date hereof, or the foods deposited for the redemption of said notes will be given op to said bank. . Dated this 20th day ofMay.A-D.1561. GEOIiGE SMITH, President. E. W. Wiixabd. Cashier. Jyo6-g2S.‘-toJe7-84 Sr. gbicct’s jLiuiiucnt. ★ ★ ★ DE. SWEET’S Infallible Liniment. GREAT EXTERNAL RE3TEDT, FOR BHETTMATISM. GOUT, NEURALGIA. LUM BAGO, STIFF NECK AND JOINTS. SPRAINS, BRUISES. CUTS AND WOUNDS. PILES, HEADACHE. AND ALL RHEUMATIC AND NERVOUS DISORDERS. • For all of which It Is a speedy and certain remedy and never falls. This Liniment is prepared'from the recipe of Or. Stephen Sweet, or Connecticut, the famous bone setter, vnd has been used in his practice lor more than twenty years with the most astonishing success. AS AS ALLEVIATOR OF PAIS. It Is unrivalled by any preparation belore the public, or which the most skeptical may be convinced by a single trial. Tula Liniment will cure rapidly and radically, Bhen matlc Disorders of every bind, and In tbonsands of cafes where It has been used It bas never been known to fall. FOB NEtJEALGIA.It win afford Immediate relief In every case, however distressing. It wfll relieve tbe worst cases of HEADACHE In three minutes, and is warranted to do It. TOOTHACHE also will It core instantly. FOB NERVOUS DEBILITY AKD GENERAL LAS SITUDE. crtflnz from imprudence or excess, this Lin iment is a most harpy ana nr falling remedy. Actlnjr directly upon the nervous tissues, ft strenghtbeos and revivifies the system, and restores It to elasticity and ' FOR PILES.—As an external remedy, we claim that It 1b the bxst known, and we cbollcnce tbe world to produce an equal. Every victim of this distressing complaint shoold give It a trial, for It will not fail to afford immediate relief and In a majority of coses will effect a xanicax cure. •QUIKSV A VD SORE THROAT are sometimes ex tremely malignant and dangerous, but timely applica tion of this Liniment will never falPto cure. SPRAINS arc sometime very obstinate, and cnlarco ment of the Joints is liable to occur If neglected. Tbe worst case may be conquered by this Liniment in two Cr ßlsmSls'' CUTB. WOUXDS, SOEES, ULCEUS, BURKS AKD SCALDS, yield readily to the fnl healing properties of He. Sweet’s Isrpaixtßim LiyixzxT, when used according to directions. Also, CHIIXBLAIKS. FROSTED FEET, AKD INSECT BITES AKD STINGS. _ Every Horse Owner Should have this remedy at hand, for Its timely use at the first appearance of Lameness will effectually pre vent those formidable diseases, to which all horses are liable, and which render so many otherwise valuable horse* nearly worthless. , , . • . . ovfcr four hundred voluntary testimonials to tbe Voriflerfal curative properties of this Liniment have of CAUTION. To avoid imposition, observe tbe Signature and Likeness of Dr. Stephen Sweet on every label, and also "Stephen Sweet's Infallible Liniment" blown In the gloss of each bottle, without which none are gen ,UM' EICHABDSOKfcCO. . Sole Proprietors, Norwich. Ct, For salA by LORD A SMITH, General Western Agents^ 23 Lake street, Chicago, fifor tijc firms. JJECEUITS FOR OLD, REGISIEiTrS. Veteran Volunteers, $402 Bounty and Premium. AH other Becrnlu, $302 Bounty and Premium* All able-bodied men between the ages of and I orty-Five Tears, who have heretofore been en listed and have served for not lees then nine months, who shall re-lnlist for’Regiments in the field, wiU ba deemed VETERAN VOLUNTEERS, and as sneb will be entitled to receive one month's pay la advance and abounty ana premium of f4CL To another Recruits for Old Regiments, not Vete rans, one month’s pay in advance and a bounty and premium of *502 will be paid. Each recruit will be allowed to SELECT THE BEOI MEKT which ho prefers to Join, and will be mustered into the Regiment of Lis choice. AH who wish to join any of tbe gallant Regiment now in the field, and to receive the munificent boun ties offered by the Government, can have the prlvl- Icce by cal lint at the Headquarters of Capu WmTjAMES, Provost Marshal of tbe Ist Dls- AM OS*B * COOK, Provost Marshal of the Sd P Cap£ t frG^KV. C £uSTACE, Provost Marshal of the M C?pt. jisd£S WOODRUFF, Provost Marshal of the “as? Provost Marshal of the 5t Cmti\AHEL LOKGWOETH, Provost Marshal of the “ F feB”“T»%IXAKE,ProTC«t M.r?ba]orthcßti D cS£ t ’TOillia rt M. e FKT. Provost Maralul oftto 10thDistrict,at Jacksonville. ... . Capt. MORTIMER O. K£AK, Provost Marsha! 0! tb capu I^OEGE a ABBOTr, Provost Marshal of the “cV?u P&c K? raHiIPS, ProvMt llraM of tt. Utb District, at Cairo. MEN OP ILLINOIS, Ton are again summoned to rall/around, thedear oU Flag. Tour spontaneous and glorious patriotism har hitherto more than epualled every call of your comp try. Imperishable lustre has crowned the anus of the Invincible legions otyour brethren already to the field. No other State has so proud a record. The re bellion Is reeling and staggering beneath the tremen dous blows of the brave and stalwart sons of the Re- E cbllc. A few blows more and Treason dies. The ear meat. Your country again calls. .Sho asks you tc close up the thinned ranks of the battle-scarred he roes, wlio, on a hundred glorious fields have made the name of“illlnolsan" a terror to the foe and the watch* 'word of victory. She greets yon with a liberality wor thy alike of her gralllnde for your past achievements, and her faith In your ability to win yet more enduring renown. Illinoisans 1 to the Held again I by bondre« and thousands and assist In the final effort that ehau bring the Infernal Dragon of Secession to the dart fop ever. 60, living or dying, shall this commonwealth and the Republic bless you. and yonr names ana nemo* ties be immortal} JAMES OAEKS, 1 Lieut. Col. 4tb U. S, Cavalry, OCIS-o2OS-Sm. A. A. Pro. Mar.Gcn.llL RV. MONTAGUE & CO. • N&. 5 WABnntoxoN St„ Vicksburg, rsmmUslon and Forwarding Merchants. 4 The noH liberal advances made on shipments ol merchandise. Refer to W. It. Greene A Co., Chouteau, Harrison A V»llp t Bt. Louis, D. B.StaaU, Chicago. H.O.Gil betVf inelncatl, Northrop A Co., Memphis. d57*1587-40l_ * _* ARCHITECTURE—J.F. Le XI Honlmcr, Architect, from Pnrls.bM Jast arrived In Chicago alter residing In 2»ew Turk city for twelve reiTa,an4U at the disposal of nil persons wishing to honor him with their confidence la architectural mat c*™- I** Itandolph street, Befereneea—Ogden. Fleet J. Y.Sciwmnnn.'W. Gurnee. H/W.Osborn rrr»'dect l.c. n. R. Co.t 000. Healr. deS-rtPS-ewSdn 7.50 to n.03 JUM to 88.93 .20JM to SCuO9 Loans on real estate.— . prepared to negotiate loam “W for . term of J<mr», ot ttt Money la rested as above for residents or non-rat! dents. L. U. OLUSTKD A CO n.U-pBJ-»n Comer like *ni Loumooo. rpHE MUTUAL LIFE INSUR- X AKCECO..ofKewTorIc,F.*. -mnston. PMt* dent. Cadi Assets. February lit, iks, v ___-69.225.110.79, O. CUOHKB3TE, General Agent for Kortbern and CentralDllaoU,Mo.tlOUricau. Chicago. ieu-g93-iy (Eljicaga tUxibnne. Beiponw ortho Colored Soldlors.l ST'ASBA PEAK PBOCTOH. To God be the glory! They cal! Os! we come! How clear rings the bugle, how bold beats the dram! Our “Beady I" rings dear; our hearts bolder beat; The strongest our right arms, the swiAost our feet;— 2fo danger can daunt us; no malice o’erthrow; For country, for honor, rejoicing we go. How watekfol, how. eager we waited for this, 'ln terror lest all were betrayed with a kiss! Yet, weary in cabin or toiling in field, • The sweet hope of Freedom we never would yield; But steadfast we trusted, through sorest delay, That the beam on our night was the dawning of day. 'Tis dawning! 'ds morning! the hills are o*owl God’s angels roll backward the clouds or our CnccrsEPof the rifle, one glimpse of the fray. And chattel and bondman Have vanished for are! Stem men they will find us who venture to feel The shock of our cannon, the thrust of our steel. The bright flag above ns. exultant we hall; Beneath it what rapture the ramparts to scale I or, true to our leaner, o'er mountain, through hol low, It* stars never pelting, with fleet foot to follow, Till, shrill for the battle, the bugle notes blow, And pioudly we plant it in the face of the foe. - And then, when the conflict is done. In the gleam Of the camp-fire at midnight, how gaily we dream. The slave ft the citizen—coveted name That lifts him from loathing, that shields him from shame; Bis cottage tmrariched; and, blithesome as he, His wife by the hearthstone—his bahe on her knee. The cotton grows fair by the sea as of old; The cane yields its sugar; the orange its gold; Light rustle the corn-leaves; the rice-fields are green; And free as the whito man, he smiles at the scene: The dram heats—wo start from our slumbers and pray That the dream of the night find an answering day. To God be the glory! They call ns! we come 1 How welcome the watchword, the harry, the ham! Our hearts arc aflame os our good swords we bare— For Freedom 1 for Freedom! ” soft echoes the air;— The bugle rings cheerily; our banners float high; O comrades, all forward! we'il triumph or die I TUB REGENERATION OF TUE NATION. Speech of JEon. I. N. Arnold, Delivered In Congress, Jan. 0, 1804. Mr. Chairman, In June, 1857, a compara tively unknown man nttered in tho State. Bouse, at Springfield, BL, a sentiment which is already historical. Its philosophy, its pro found sagacity, its prophetic prescience, its unparalleled boldness and honesty, were characteristic of the man, who, then obscure, has become already, to-day, tho foremost character in American history. The sentiment was this: “ A house divided against itself cannot stand. I believe that this Government cannot permanently exist half slave and half free. Ido not expect the Union to be dissolved; Ido not expect the house to fall; bat 1 expect it will cease to dc divided." This, the first emphatic enunciation of the philosophical fact of the antagonism between liberty and slavery, the eternal and “Irre pressible” conflict between them, electrified the country, and made Abraham Lincoln President of the United States. The moment the fact is recognized that lib erty and slavery are antagonistic, and that there can be no peace between them—that our country, all of U, must pass into the dark night of slavery, or all of it emerge into the dear light of freedom-all loyal, patriotic men become at once anti-slavery men, aboli tionists. Such I avow myself here, to-day,and I shall deem it a proud distinction if X can merit the , name by aiding in bringing about the entire.* abolition of slavery in my suffering country. * And os, when in the palmy days of the Bo man republic, the people dune to fed, by an instinctive conviction, that Carthage must be destroyed that Borne might live, so, to-day. the American people fed that slavery must die that liberty and the Union may live. “ Dch-u da a>t Carthago" became then the mot to of every loyal, patriotic Roman. “ Down with slavery” is becoming the motto of every loyal, patriotic American. As Roman constancy, courage, and persist ence finally triumphed over Carthage, so will American constancy, courage, and determina tion triumph over slavery. * * * The Bon. gentleman then traced the pro gress of liberty since its dawn among the early Saxon&i-its triumph on the fidd of Run nymede, its straggles through the reigns of the Benry’s and Edwards’, its fierce and bloody encounter with the first Charles, until Lord Mansfield dcctrified the Island of Great Britain, and the world, that “ slaves cannot breathe in England.” When, in 1858, Abraham Lincoln' uttered ►the philosophic truth that freedom and sla very could not permanently exist together— that our country would become all five or all slave —be did not anticipate any but a moral conflict. The weapons by which he expected freedom to triumph were the wea pons of truth and free discussion. Free speech, a free press, reason, the ‘schoolmas ter, the sermon, the lecture, the printing press, the telegraph, the ballot: these were the agencies, the weapons, by which the bat tle was to be fought. It was with the ballot, and not with bullets, the victory was expect ed to be won. The victory was won by these Ecaccful agencies in the election of Abraham incoln as President. Slavery, conscious that it could not stand free discussion, that U must be destroyed If free speech and a free fircss were tolerated, appealed from the bal ot-box to the sword, and brought - upon the country this terrible war THE SLAVERY MUST DEC BY THE LAWS OP WAR. Slavery having plunged tbe nation into this war, it Is fit that it should die by the laws of war. Slavery stands before tbe world to-day guilty of all the calamities of our country. Every dollar expended, every suffering en dured, every drop of blood spilled, every wound and every death, on every battle-field and in every hospital, is the price we pay for the existence and toleration of American slavery. Itis to-day a rebel and a traitor; Let ns declare it an outlaw under our Constitution and laws. There has never been a day since our exist ence as a nation when slavery was loyal to the Constitution and the Union. Now an open enemy, striking at tbe heart of the Re public, it bas always been a plotting,stealthy, secret traitor, undermining the Constitu tion, and sapping the foundations of our lib erties. Mr. Arnold rehearsed the ’ indictments against slavery, in which he declared that all hlstoty teaches that ignorance, vice, pauper ism and barbarism arc the natural results ol the dcgredatlon of labor. SLATEBT BECAME MASTER OF OUR OOTERK- Slavciy having in an unfortunate moment been tolerated by tbe framers of our Consti tution, under tbe mistaken belief that It would be bnt a temporary evil, soon aspired to and became the znastcrof tbe Government. Having intrenched itself in the very citadel of political power, conscious of its inherent weakness, it demanded additional territory for its expansion; first Louisiana, then Flor ida, then Texas. These territories, vast enough for an empire, haying been secured, slavery then demanded the repeal of the Mis souri line, that she might carry her curse North as well as South and West. * * * * Up to this period of the struggle- the career of the slaveholders in their lust of domina tion had met with no serions check. Slavery was absolute on the bench of tbe Supreme Court; it dictated in the national councils; it furnished the Presidents, or desig nated the most base, subservient tool it could purchase among its Northern sycophants to occupy the Executive Man sion. It was a ruler in the Halls of Congress. The Army and the Navy, with West Point and the Naval School os its nurseries—the training from which yet lingers—were Its right andjefl hand to cany out its purposes. The national treasure, collected in large pro portion to the North, was expended mainly at the South and to all the pockets of slave holders. The qualifications for your repre senatives abroad were fealty lo slavery. Every new Territory was filled with the min ions of Uiis slave power, and was as regular ly trained up to tbe interests of slavery as the protege* of Jefferson Davis in military life were trained to bis wllL The slaveholder held the parse and the sword; he was the king at the White House, a ruler here in this Hall, a despot in the Sen ate, and everywhere a tyrant* . Such was thc.position of the slaveholder in 1858. • ' SLAVERY nln REVOLUTIONIZED THE -GOV ERNMENT AND DESTROYED THE PRINCI- Meanwhile' slavery had revolutionized the Government. The great principles of Magna Charta and the Decoration of Independence had ceased' to have practical .existence in a large part of the Union. Liberty of speech, freedom of the press, and trial by jury had disappeared in the slave States. Indeed, that portion of the so-called Republic hod ceased to be a government of law, and had become a government of a tyrannic, cruel oligarchy, more odious, despicable, cruel than any on earth. There was no redress for any outrage, however cruel, if perpetrated in behalf ana at the behest of slavery. The vengeance of the slaveholder against the man who spoke or published in behalf of liberty was sharp, speedy, and unrelenting. The bowie-knife and the bludgeon, the baiter, and even the stake, were the Instruments of violence and torture resorted, to by every petty lynch judge who found tiny hold enough to question the divinity of the “peculiar institution.” In the slave States of this Union a freeman had no rights which a slaveholder felt bound to respect In those States the Constitution had disappeared. I say, then, that slavery had established a* revolution, overturned a republican form of government, and estab lished a despotism In its place. « ♦ Let us pause a moment, Mr. Chairman, and contemplate the saddest spectacle.of all this Tv ar Virginia as she is to-day. She was wor •thy of her early pre-eminence. Her early history was brilliant Indeed. Washington, Jefferson, Patrick Henry, Madison and Mar shall. all men of whom any nation might be • prond. There is sometlung grand and ma fistic in the physlcarconformation of the 6ld Commonwealth. With the Alleghenies and the Blue Ridge running through her entire extent, she seems fashioned for the abode of freemen. When wc remember that her great est writer penned the Declaration of Inde pendence and thcOrdinauccof 1787, and that in a contest between her slaveholders' and their slaves the Almighty had no attribute which would take sides with the master; and when wc look upon her to-day, and see to what slavery has reduced the proud old Com monwealth, it is indeed the saddest spectacle of the war. * * * In view, then, of all the curses which sla very has inflicted upon [the‘country, I im peach American slavery before the American people and their Congress, and demand whe ther it shall still live. . 1 charge slavery with treason and with THCESDAY, JAOTAST 14, 1864. WEAPONS OP FREEDOM. MEKT. murder; IchargoU with the murder of every Union soldier who has been saciifioed since the rebels fired upon Fort Sumter; I charge it'with the oseasslnatlon of Ellsworth and Lyon and Baker end McCook, and tbs whole army’of,martyra who hare been perfidiously assassinated by slaveholders since they began the rebellion; I charge it with a conspiracy to undermine *and subvert the liberties and Constitution of my country, to erect a despotism upon its ruins ; 1 charge slavery with the death of all those who have fallen in this war. It has dug the half million of graves for patriots and rebels made by this war: and those who sleep there would, but for this cursed institution, to-day be living In peace and fraternity. ' TOU CAK HATE NO PEACE WHILE SLAVERY EX- ISTS. You can have-no permanent peace while slavery lives. A truce you might have, pos sibly, until it could recover its power; but peace, never. Your contest with it is to. the death. Your Implacable enemy now reels and staggers. Strike the decisive blow. You could not if you would, and you ought not if you could, make terms of compromise with slavery. You have abolished It at this capi tal. Yon Lave forever prohibited it In all your Territories. Your Government has lnnjga#man for participating in the slave trade. You have admitted west Virginia free. Yon have acknowledged the indepen-, deuce of HaytL You have enlisted, and are enlisting, African soldiers; they have carried your banner bravely and triumphantly on many 1 ard-fought fields. You have pledged your faith to them, to the world, and to God, that they shall ho free. You have crowned the dome of your Capitol with Liberty. At your call Missouri is throwing off the incu bus of slavery. Maryland shouts back, through the ballot-box, her joyous answer that she, too, is to be free. Delaware, Tenn essee, Arkansas, Texas, and Louisiana will notlmgci. Your President, In a proclama tion of emancipation, which, while it bos revolutionized the public sentiment and the action of Europe, has secured victory to onr aims, has proclaimed liberty and emancipa tion throughout the territory in rebellion.- HOW SHALL SLAVERT BE EXTERMINATED ? First, I reply, in the border States, by the action ofthe States themselves. This action will be speedy and decisive. Second. In • all the tcrritoiy in rebellion, slavery bas already been. substantially abol ished by the Proclamation of Emancipa tion. Confirm by Congress this proclama tion by Prohibiting its re-establishment, and abolish It in that port of the rebel States not Included in the proclamation. Third. Slavery being thus everywhere abol ished, amend the .Constitution, prohibiting its rc-cstablisbmcnt or existence in every part of tbe United States. Has Congress tbe power to confirm, sanc tion, and carry out the Proclamation of Emancipation, and prohibit slavery in all that portion of the United. States designated therein? WHAT POWER HAS CONGRESS OVER SLAVERY * IN TIME OP WAR? 1 clslm ihat the Government has the power In time of -war, as a war measure, to abol ish slavery wherever and whenever it may benccesseory to secure the success of the war. It is a principle In the interpretation of statutes and constitutions, familiar to law yers, that, to determine their meaning, you may look into and consider their preamble. This is, indeed, usually the key to the instru ment. It states the object sought to bo at tained by the statute; and it would bo strange, if the preamble recites that the Con stitution was ordained to accomplish a cer tain specified purpose, if the powerto accom plish that purpose is not found in the Con stitution. Now, the preamble to ,the Con stitution recites that the people, “ In order to form a more perfect union, establish jus tice, Insure domestic tranquility, provide for the common defense,* promote the general welfare, and secure the blessings of liberty, &c., ordain and establish this Constitution,"*’ &c. For the purpose of seeming these objects a Government was established, clothed with powers adequate, as was supposed, to accom plish these purposes. Now, if a permanent and perfect union between free and slave States Las been demonstrated to ho impossi ble, may not the obstacle to sneb union be removed ? If justice cannot be established while slavery exists, shall not slavery cease ? Has Congress the constitutional power to Insure domestic tranquility? I submit to the candidand thoughtful men of all parties, whether, in the light of the history of the past, the endless controversies and dissen sions, from the Missouri question down to tbe civil war in Kansas, the riots and out rages caused by slavery,- culminating In this terrible rebellion and bloody war, whether domestic tranquility Is attainable while slave ry exists? If not, may not this domestic tranquility bo insured by removing the dis turbing cause? Ifilndecd, there is no med icine for this evil, If this vicious clement may not bo removed, then the founders of the Government established the Constitution to insure tranquility without the power to ac complish the object * Fourth. Among the enumerated objects of the Constitution was to provide for the pub lic define. Assuming the iaet that slavery is a source of weakness and danger to us, and wonld afford aid and strength to a for eign or domestic enemy, con wc provide for the common defense by removing the dan ger? If a city charter vested in Ihc corpo rate body the power to provide for the com mon defense, and a magazine of powder should be established in a populous district, would any lawyer doubt the power of the corporation to cause its removal ? If a dan gerous and contagious disease should spring up, would the power to cause its removal be questioned? If a pestilence-breeding nui sance existed, could it be removed and its cause be prohibited ? Again, the Constitution was ordained to promote the general welfare, audio secure to us and to our posterity the blessings of lib erty. Suppose experience has demonstrated . that we cannot have prosperity, northe bless ings of liberty, without extirpating slavery. Suppose the census tables demonstrate that slavery is the great obstacle to onr progress; that free labor will produce double that of slave labor.; that with free labor yon will have national prosperity, wealth, every ele ment of greatness; that with freedom yon will have education, arts, science, civiliza tion, religion; while with slavery you have Ignorance, brutality, vice, barbarism;' can wc, under a Constitution formed with the avowed object of promoting the'general wel fare, promote it byaholishlug slavery? Sup pose it to be demonstrated that liberty and slavery arc incompatible, and that unless yon destroy slavery, slavery will destroy freedom and republican government, can yon secure the blessings of liberty to yourselves and your posterity by destroying slavery ? M. Arnold here discussed the power of the Government over that portion of the Union where the rebellion exists, and quoted from the Constitution that “Congress shall have power to provide for the common defence and the general welfare, 1 ’ dec. The President- Is an officer 6f the United States, the Com mondcr-in-Chicf of its armies, and it is his duty to suppress rebellion, repel invasion, and maintain the Constitution everywhere in the Union, and carry oat the guarantee to each State of a republican form of govern ment; and ibis he is to do, when necessary, by force, by warj subject to the laws of war; and Congress has foil power to moke all laws necessary and proper to carry out, and into full execution, these war of the Gov ment, including the well-established BELLIGERENT HI GUT OF EMANCIPATING SLATES. If elavery'is the corner-stone of the rebell ion, cannot that corner-stone bo constitution ally knocked out ? If slavery is the cause of tbe war, giving strength to our enemies; if it feeds and clothes iheir armies, and keeps them In the held, and enables them to keep up their power; and if the Prcsidenf or Con gress, or both acting together, by freeing them, can deprive the rebels of this power, and bring their freed slaves to out side, and thus provide for the common defense, and thus restore the Union and a republican go.v eminent to the loyal men of the rebel States, is not the right to do this clear and indispa table ? If wc have not this right, then is the Government without the means of self-prcscr* vation. Constitution provides that “the Uni ted States shall guaranty to every State in this Union a republican* form of govern ment.” Congress has the power to do every thing neccsssry|to moke good that guarantee. If the emancipation of staves in the rebel States will tend to the establishment of a republican form of government in the States in rebellion, who can deny the power to emancipate ? The government, so called, ex isting <iefacto % in the States in rebellion, is in antagonism to the republican government the Constitution requires the nation to guarantee It is the right and the duty of the Govern ment to destroy that usurped and rebellious de facto government, and establish a republi can government in its place. In accomplish ing Oils, If slavery stands in the way, may it notbe removed out of the way? * * * I ask gentlemen this question. J eft Davis has made war upon onr country, attempted to set np upon onr soil a rebellious govern ment, attacked onr capital, and now holds a portion of these States under a despotic tyr anny. In making war upon him to snbdne him, to re-establish our authority, and fnllfil the guarantee of a republican form of gov ernment, can. onr Government do all that cue nation can do when at w at with another under the rules of war ? Surely this will not be denied. This brings us to the inquiry whether the emancipation of the. slaves of the enemy Is or is not a recognized mode of carrying on modern warfare. Let ns see. The end we are seeking to accomplish is to crush the rebellion. The abolition of slavery lends directly to the accomplishment of that end, and os effectually as to subdue the rebel armies in the field. "\Vithout their slaves the rebel armies could not long exist. Emanci pation not only; deprives the rebels'of the means of supporting their armies, bnt it is the most efficient means of bringing the force and power of four millions of people to our side.* «Now, the end -wc arc seeking, to-wit, the deetmetion of the rebel power, “being' legiti mate,* and “ within the s*cope of the Consti- € lotion,” to use the language of Chief Justice Marshall;all means* which arc appropriate and plainly adapted to tho end, and which arc not prohibited by the Constitution, are lawful. (4 "Wheaton’s Rep.,42Ll I assert, without fear of contradiction, that tho eman cipation of the slaves-of an enemy is a well recognized belligerent right, and would not be questioned by any well-informed person if wc were at war with Spain, Brazil, or any other nation holding slaves. Eas not onr Government the same belligerent rights iigalnst the lufamona traitor Davis as it would have against a recognized nation ? The rteht to (marcipate slaves has been so generally recognized as a belligerent right, that it will rctrcclj be questioned. This power was cx erdsed by Great Britain in tho revolutionary wer, end in the whrof 1813; and tho right to exercise it was admitted by General .Wash-; ington,-acd Mr. Jefferson, and not contro verted by any. ~ Mr. uefferson says Virginia lost. thirty thousand slaves under Cornwallis, and if the slaves bad been .token “to give' them., free dom it would have been right.” : • ' The statement- and argument of John Quincy Adams on this subject has never been successfully answered • “I l*y this down os the law of notions. I say that military authority tokos, lor the time, the place of all "municipal' institutions, end. slavery among the rest;-and that, under that state-of things, so far horn Us being true that the States where slavery exists have the exclusive manage ment of the subject, uot ouly the President of the United States, but the Commander of the Army, has power to order the universal emancipation of the slaves. 1 ' • • * . • ’ • “ From the instant that the slavcholdlng Statsa be come the theatre of a war, civil, servile, or foreign, ticm that Instant the war powers of Congress ex tend to interference with the institution cf slavery, In every way in whichit can be interfered with, trom a claim ol indemnity for slaves taken or destroyed, to the ce&lon of States burdened with slavery to aforelgnyower.” * • • • “Itisawar power, I aay It is a war power; and when onr country is actually in war, .whether It bo a war of invasion or a war of insurrection, Congress has power to carry on the war, and must carry it on According to the laws of war: and by the laws of war an invaded country bas all its laws sadmunidpal institutions swept by Ibe board, and martial power takes the place of them. When two hostile armies are set in martial arrtv, the commanders of both armies have power to emancipate all the slaves in the invaded territory. 11 * The great error In the public mind on this subject arises from applying the provisions designed to protect citizens In times of peace to traitors in time of war. The provision that no person shall be de prived of life without duo process of law docs not make it illegal or unconstitutional to kill rebels on tbe field of battle. Neither do the provisions in regard to the security of property, or claim to service, moke it uncon stitutional, under the wax power, to deprive rebels of their slaves. As against tbe right to military service, Is the claim of a master to the service of a slave better or more sacred than that of a master to the service of an apprentice, or of a fothcr to the service ofhis child?- TbcGoverhment can take my son and your apprentice; can It not take your slave ? In case of a foreign war, could not the Government conscript ev ery able-bodied slave ? Can It not do the same !n a domestic war against traitors ? Then It seems clear to demonstration that the Government may emancipate slaves. The power, then, being clear, In the name of liberty ana of justice and humanity, let it bo exercised. Proclaim.“ liberty throughout the land to all the inhabitants thereof ,r Let us build upon this rock, and the gates of hell shall not prevail against ns. I cannot close without offering my tribute o'fhomage to timt great man who bas given to the Institution of slavery the bordestblows it has ever received. Let. Abraham Lincoln finish the great work ho has began. The great objects of his life are to crush the rebellion and eradicate slavery. His am bition is to live on the page of history as the restorer of the Union, the emancipator of his country. For these great ends he has labor ed ond’tollcd through difficulties and obsta cles fully known only to himself and to God. The year that has just closed will live as the year of the proclamation of emancipa tion. This act the President declared was sincerely believed to be an act of justice, warranted by the Constitution upon military necessity; and ho invoked for it the consider ate judgmant of mankind and the gracious favor of Almighty God. It will mark an era in modem civilization as dearly os the Dc doiation of Independence, or. the ac quisition of Magna Charto. By history it will be regarded as a great act of humanity and justice. As a matter of State policy, Us wisdom has already been vindicated. This, proclamation, by present ing onr national struggle as a clearly defined contest between liberty and slavery, changed the altitude of Europe towards ns.. Under its influence and the victories achieved under Us auspices, all fear of foreign intervention has disappeared. Since the day of its issue no more Floridas have sailed from British waters. England’s broad arrow arrests tbe rebel, rams being fitted out in her har bors. Lonis Napoleon, following, the exam ple of Great Britain, arrests the rebel gun boats in the waters of France, Lord Lyons now arises with alacrity to warn Mr. Seward of a rebel plot in Canada. "With liberty and union thus written by the President’s own hand upon our national ban ner, we have had Gettysburg, Port Hudson, Vicksburg, Knoxvillle and Chattanooga. * * * * * ° I ask the ardent and impatient friends of freedom to put Implicit faith Ingraham Lincoln. Remember he lives for the restora tion of the Union and the abolition of slav ery. If you deem him slow, or If yon think he has made mistakes, remember now often time has vindicated his wisdom. * * ♦ The mosses of the people everywhere trust and love him. They know his hands arc clean .and his breast Is pfire. The people know that the devil has no bribe big cnongb, no temptation of gold, or place, or power, which can seduce the honest heart of Abra ham Lincoln. They know that while he Is President there is no. danger of a coup d'etat. Let him exercise whatever extraordinary powers the public safety may require, the people instinctively feci that their liberties and laws are safe in his bonds. They sleep soundly, with no disturbing apprehensions, while he holds the nine. Impetuous, eager, impatient men call him slow, over cautious, wanting In energy. Bctfiembcr tbe times in which we live; remember the danger of reck less energy, of unscrupulous wiiland'paftsion. Yon have a Chief Magistrate of dean hands andpnrebcart; sagacious, firm, upright,and true. Somewhat rude ana rough, It maybe, hut under this rough exterior yon have the real and true hero. If he is a diamond ini the rough, he is nevertheless real, with no false glitter or garnish pretension. Ton have in him a man of that sobriety, of that self-com mand, of that freedom from passion; of that justice and truth, of that soundness of judge ment and perfect rectitude of intention, that has bad, in all these attributes, uo parallel, since the days of Washington. Taking the.last five eventful years, and Mr. Lincolnlias exerted a groatc* influence upon the popular heart and in forming public opin ion than any other man. If slavery now reels and staggers in Its last struggles, it is from the blows it lias received at bis bands. Ills speeches and writings, plain, homely, and unpolished at- they sometimes are, have be come the household words of the people, and crystalizcd into the overwhelming public sentiment which demands the extinction of slavery. • He is a radical—a radical from conviction, not from passion,, or hatred, or revenge. In all great radical changes, in running round sharp curves. Is it not better to pnt on the brakes sometimes, rather than to run off the track and smash up the train ? ' ■ There arc always men who arc loud, bois terous, furious, intolerant, proscriptive and cruel, whose hearts arc filled with hatred and malice, and who, to eradicate one evil, are willing to tear up the good which it has taken ages to secure. Such was not the.ex utopic set by the greatest ' reformer and most radical teacher who ever appeared on earth— the Son of God. Mr. Lincoln’s whole theory as a reformer is to do . the greatest possible amount*of good with the least possible cviL -Were he more violent, more carelessly de structive, did he use more violent words, he might be perhaps more the popular idol, but less the statesman and the Christian. .This great statesman, this simple,; unpretending man, J believe to bo the instrument raised up by God to t cork out the regeneration of the na tion by the death of American stjvery. England ahdtlie Hebei Privateers. LETTER FROM PROFESSOR F.*W. NEWMAN. To the Editor of tbo Loudon Star: Sm: 'We arc already engaged in two formi dable wars—ln New Zealand and Japan. We are not clear of a third in China. We look on with alarm at the violent proceedings in Germany against Denmark, not knowing now we may be implicated in that quarter. Mean while—apparently through fear, and through nothing else—we allow Russia to violate the treaty of ISSC, and to set np; a war fleet in the Black Sea, capturing our,merchant ships if they attempt to trade wiiir the Circassians. Isay, it is apparently through fear;-for no one who considers onr recent Asiatic wars, or the zeal with which the Ministry sprang to arms in the matter of the ’Trent, will easily impute it to humanity that Lords Pal merston and Russell wink at the breach of treaty involved in the Russian blockade. 1 With such an atmosphere of war around ns, I cannot believe that tfcis or any English Ministry would covet American enmity, not to say American war. It Is .true, at the cri sis of Northern weakness they breathed. Hemes and scoffed at arbitration, even after learning officially that President Lincoln had not authorized the act of Capt.-Wilkes, and was open to friendly representations. Yet, before the disunion, no English Ministry was ever brave in a matter for which bravery was far more urgently needed. I refer tothesys tcmatlc outrages -committed at Charleston, Mobile, and all the principal ports of the Southern States, against our colored seameu —outrages which, if codunittcd in Bnrmoh or Japan, would have been promptly replied to by a high-handed war. -. Against President Lincoln’s Government we committed, as I believe, a sin of princi ple when the Queen was advised to recogize as bcllgcrcnts on the ocean those who were not beligereuts on the ocean; those whose war was wholly a land war, not touching us; whom, moreover, we know to he not insur-: gents in a good cause,' but traitors in the worst of causes. TiVhen England declared herself neutral be tween a righteous Government and a power seeking to exist for the sole sake of propa gating slavery, and thereby gaye to the latter gratuitously an enormous advantage and great moral encouragement, our very best friends in the North became violently indignant. But badly as. they regard ns to have behaved in that matter, they forget onr first offence in com parison with the second—that our neutrality hod been unfaithful, and U unfaithful to this' day. Only yesterday I read in the columns of the 'Biar of two more American ships burnt by the “English” pirate Alabama. Why is It not seized in the first English port which it dares to enter? By all these events we arc laying up evil and quarrel for the fu ture. „ It is astonishing how few Englishmen are aware that Englandris liable to repay every shilling of damage done to the American commerce] by these. violences. Wo- our selves first advanced the law . and; practi cally applied it against America. In 1703, President 'Washington, on the representation of the English ambassador, did what he could to prevent the fitting out of privateers to aid France, and not only restored British vessels which bad beet captured, bat pro claimed that .“the Government of the United States held itself responsible to indemnify British owners for such captures.’* This stood upon the general moral rights of na tions, there being then no foreign cnlistnlcat act in the United States. ' Bnt in ITO4, immediately after the applica tlen of the British Government, Congress passed such a law as satisfied ns; ana the. President, with the concurrence of Ihd Senate mode a treaty with England, of which one clause secured indemnity to British owners for vessels captured by ships fitted out In the United States. And all damages were faith fully repaid to us. With such an expedient, ' • it-Is morally Impossible for any American government to fall to exact repayment for all' ic violences committed by tim ships fitted - out In England, even If some ot them have ' contrived to steal into a confederate port.' A soro-point, of quarrel most remain,which, s even If It does not reach the point of war, will. visit us with weakness, with alarm, and with enormous expense. "What Is the Asiatic policy of England ? Apparently war In Japan—>war In New Zealand. Vhat la her European policy? To talk for'justice, but take no one practical step for justice. Why not? Because, in ad dition to.faer African troubles, r she has an out' standing quarrel for her wrongs to American commerce. What, then, is the domestic pol icy of England ? Not reform, not retrench ment, not judicious expenditure on Internal Improvement; that la Impossible. As we now go on we must have cver-lu creasing armaments. Suppose that we owe three millions sterling to President Lincoln's citizens for property destroyed. How much cheaper to pay that at once than to allow the bill to double itself, and then pay eight or ten millions a year in European ignominy while watching .against possible American war, until less honorable ministers pay the debt of nature, and some fresher mind rise to the head of aflbirs—a Lord Stanley ora Mr. Gladstone—who will pay the American Mil. and tell ns to think ourselves well rid of it. . At the next elections many win raise a cry of “Peace and retrenchment.” ...Let none delude'themselves with the idea of solid pence* or fruitful war. or useful if inglorious retrenchment, nnlcss we apeedily retrace our steps, and overthrow the evil precedents not yet finally, sanctioned—declare that the Con federates arc not ocean belligerents, that the ships built and fitted out in England against the North are English pirates, that they must be seized wherever they can be caught,' and all their damages,repaid. ‘ And to thisa crim inal prosecution oi their’ builders, and we shall retain the good will of our best friends —the freemen of America, After that we shall have strength to spare in aid of Europe an justice. F. W. Newman. TheSlandcr on SUmH osmer. Wc printed a few days ago a note from Mr. Gibson, the famous English sculptor, refuting the calumny of some English scribbler who asserted that Miss Hoamer was not the au thor of the fine statue of Zenobia recently exhibited by her in England.. Mr. Story, the well-known American sculptor, sends the following note to a London journal on the same subject: . - Rome, November, 1533. *3.My attention has just been called to a pass age in the last number of the Art Journal , in which'the writer, speaking of the statue of Zenobia. exhibited by Miss Hosmcr at the International Exhibition of 18G3,.Asserts that though “ said to be by Miss'Hosmcr, it is, in reality? the work of an Italian artist in her studio.” This Injurious statement, which is copied from a newspaper called T/ie Queen, is so direct an accusation of a want of honor and even common honesty on the part of Miss Hosmer, that it cannot be allowed to re main nncontradlcted. Those who know this amiable lady and accomplished artist, will, treat it with the contempt it deserves; but as the public, to whom she is known only by reputation, may be thereby injuriously influ enced towards her, it becomes the duty of those who know this statement to be utterly untrue to say so publicly. I therefore avail myself of your columns to nail this base coin to the counter, so that it may circulate no more. I wish to say publicly that I know this as sertion to* bo utterly devoid of troth. The “Zenobia” was the product of Miss Hos mcris own mind and her own hands, and to her alone the wide praise which it has so de servedly received justly belongs. The only possible foundation forsuch a statement may he found in the fact that Miss Hosmcr. ac cording to the common practice of sculptors, employed a person to assist her In a the first manual labor of putting up the irons and clr k f from her original sketch; hut this work, which required-hut a short time, once per formed, tbe statue passed. Into the hands of Miss Hosmcr, by whom solely it was carried forward and completed. Signor Nucci was the person .thus employed by her (as he Is by several other sculptors), . and is “the Italion artist” referred to in the Art Jonmal as the author of Miss Eosmcr’s 1 Zenobia.’. Bnt as he is an honest man, he is greatly indignant with this statement, which reflects upon him also as an accom plice In an asserted imposture, and exposes him to tho possible suspicion of having au thorized a statement which is entirely false, and which he is Incapable of having origi nated. Here, in Borne, this attack has been re ceived by the artists with a common chorus of reprobation; and Miss Hosmer, who, os I understand, has taken legal steps to clear her self from tins accusation of Imposture, will find it easy to prove, from the months of many witnes&e6.who were In a position per sonally to know tbe facts, the ntter falsity of the statement originally published in the Queen , and then quoted and adopted by the Art Journal." "W. w Story. Anticipation of tbe Telegraph. To the N. Y, Evening Post: ' A lady recently pointed out to me a curious passage in the two hundred and forty-first number of the Spectator, dated in 1711, which is a remarkable foreshadowing of the electric telegraph. I transcribe It as it may amuse as well os surprise many of your readers. ~ Strada, in .one of bis Prolusions (written about two hundred and forty years ago), gives an account of a chimerical correspond ence between two friends, by the help of a certain loadstone, which had such virtue in it, that if it touched two several needles, when one of the needles so touched began to : move, the other, though at never so great a distance, moved nt the same time and in the samemanner. He tells us that two friends, being each of them .possessed of one of these needles, made a kind of dial plate, inscribing It. foar. and twenty letters in the same manner as the hoars or tbo dayurc marked upon the ordinary dial plate. They then fixed one of these needles on each' of these plates in such a manner that it could move round without impediment so as to touch any of the four and twenty letters. Upon separating from one another' Into distant countries,' they agreed to withdraw themselves punctually into their closets at a certain the day, and to converse with one another by means of this their invention. Accordingly, when they were some hundred miles asunder, each of them shut himself up in- his closet at (he time appointed, and immediately cast his ey upon bis dial-plate. If he hud a mind to write anything to his friend, he directed his needle to every letter that formed the words which be had occasion for, making a little pause at the end of evciy word or sentence, to avoid confusion. The friend in the mean * while saw his own sympathetic needle mov ing abont of itself to every letter which that of his correspondent pointed at. By this means they talked together across a whole continent, and conveyed their thoughts to one another inan Instant, over cities or moun tain?, seas or deserts." Horrible Harder In Missouri. - [From tbc Missouri Democrat, Jon. B.] Cape Girardeau, Jan. 1,166 L A horrible and most cruel murder was per* pcirated at 12 o’clock on the night of the37th nit., at the residence of DamcT Crltze, near Balias, in Bollinger county. Mo. The house was attacked by eleven rubs, who demanded possession and threatened to bum It if refused. At the place were Mr. James Stevens and Wm. Critzc—the latter a brother of Banicl Crltze—and Mr. Frasier, who is the Sheriff of Bollinger county. They were three very g66«i And active Union men, and with the landlord made four. „On opening the door the rchs commenced firing into the house, without regard to whom they might hit Sheriff Frasier was wounded in the hip and foil to the floor, where ho remained till the fight was over; bpt Tvilikm Crltze and James' Stevens de fended themselves and the house with bra very. They took their stands, Critzc at one cod of the house and Stevens at the other, and fired with accuracy and rapidity at the fee, till both were tilled. Stevens fell with three balls in his breast and two stabs in the side, and Critzc with a ball in his loins and another In his body. The rebels could not boast, for they were six to one. One of their party had his thigh broken, another was wounded in the shoul der, and a thirdwds shot In the arm after the fight. They made Banicl Critzc take a light and show .the dead and tell thelrnamcs. m Crltze was not yet dead, but they roughly stripped him, took other clothing, and leu. Two better Union men never lived than the deceased. In their massacre the Unionists have suffered an Irreparable loss. Gold Found In the. take Superior Keglon, [From the Detroit Tribune, Jan. 7.] . -There is apparently no limits either in ex tent or variety* to the rich resources of Mich igan. No similar extent of country upon the habitable globe is equally rich in natnral wealth, ana certainly no other region offers such tempting inducements for the invest ment of capital to properly'develop its re sources. She Is rich in iron, copper, coal, gypsum and salt, to which silver has recently been added, and it is now ascertained that rich deposits of gold lie imbedded in her vir gin soil, os will be seen by the following ex tract from tbc Philadelphia ZEning -of Jap.3: “In connection with this' silver lead region, there has transpired in this city a circumstance which it is not pretended will, if believed, abate the excitement now pre vailing therein. A-sample of iron pyrites, sold by its owner- to have been taken front a quartz lode in the silver-lead region in Mich igan, by analysis of Bußois & 'Williams, Analytical Chemists, of this city, woj found to be wonderfully rich in gold—the value for the ton of rock being above the average of that of the ore of Colorado.”- The specimen above referred to was delivered to Messrs. Du Bois A Williams b& Capt. John Spalding, of the steamer Northern Light, one of tbe pioneers of silver-lead' enterprise, and came from section 10, town 49, range 38 west, be longing to the Marquette Silver Mining Com pany oi this city. A New 'Winter Sport. Among the sports on tbe ice at St. Louis, the Danocratol that city gives the following; * Some enterprising: genius had placed a.live duck in. a box, leaving about six inches of Us head and neck out, and this box was placed in a hole cut in the ice, the upper por tion, showing the duck’s head, being exposed to view. He bad a stick about twc'feet long,* and charged ten cents for tho privilege of throwing the stick at 'the duck’s head—the lucky Individual who struck and kiUed the duck to have tho fowl os the reward of hls : skill Many persons, struck with the novelty of this trick, and not doubting that they could knock the dnek’s head off in three throws, Invested their money and hundreds gathered around to witness the sport. Now the deck Is one of tho most artfol dodgers 1 extant, and ho saved his life several hundred ‘times by the quickness with '.which he drew in his head at the approach of the murderous' ' stick. The proprietor of : this 'lnstitution pocketed about thirty dollars in a few hoars, and when wo left the stick was.-still whirling and the duck was saving his neck with a certainty that gave promise of a long and: .eventfullife, . .... ; .. ..... ■ fEUgceUanetm.g. SEW STATE MAP OF ILLINOIS. , „ ■. Mendel’s Hew Township and Sectional Map of Illinois. Compiles from United State* and actual wotwots, shewing all Roads. Railroads, Elvers, Canals, Greets and Village* la the Stale, aad having the narne ol each township distinctly bxorxvbd thbsvox. The M*p contains on the margin correct Flats or tao principal cities, a v*la»ble Geological Diagram or the State, and a Terr accurate and comprehensive Railway Map ofthe united States. Also, car*ftuly prepared tables ol statistic*, Inclusive of the now State Census. . The Man will be ornamented with views of promi nent public buildings, an elegantly engraved border and a beautiful lltue picture of the City of Chicago, all engraved express-y tor tbU work. • . The Map will oe Ixs feel in alze, handsomely Color ed in Townshli s, and mounted with cloth backs, roll ers and moulding*ln the beat and most durable man ner. . Tbe publisher and manufacturer of this map has been forthe last tea or twelve years enraged In the map publishing and lithograph!nr business at Chi cago, and during that time has mapped nearly every county In Illinois, thereby accumulating a very large amount of the most valuable material for the produce tlon of a State Map, which together with his extea five facilities for manuiacture has enabled him to. produce one ofthe most beautiful, comprehensive and correct mapsever published is tub Status, and WK FZBL AB*UBXD THAT TUB PEOPLE OF ILLINOIS WILL BX 80R£ BILLING TO PAT FIVE DOLLARS FOB A GOODASD MAP OF HOMS BASCFaCTUBS TEAK A LARGER PRICE FOR an inferior article produced abroad. This map will be sold to subscrib ers only at the very.low price of l3j»per copy. GOOD CANVASSERS WASTED For every county In the State, to whom will be offer ed the most liberal terms. Address EDW. MENDEL, 163 Lake street, Chicago. CAUTION! The Public aro herebyJwarned that Cm*. R. Ab sold, or Abnold and Atwood, are nolonger Agents formyNewTownshlp aad Sectional Map of Illinois, aor la any way authorized or employed by me. All parties wbo bare been in their employ as Canraasers, and also anbacrlbersto the map. would do well to communicate with me Immedlatelv. EDW. MENDEL. •deS7-tBlMm 163 Lake street. Chicago. R n'o IBS’. CHEMICAL WHITING FLUID —AND— Machine Copying; Ink. MESSRS. 3?, Sc J. ARNOLD, CHEMISTS, Ac., * ' 135 Aldersgate Street, Loodei, Dcemlttheirduty to caution tbe American Public agtdnst a spurious Imitation of the Articles—offered for Sale, Purchased, and Sold by parties la the U. S. Several of these Bottles have been transmitted from New York to Messrs. P. & J. Abxold, the LABELS on which Bottles they have submitted to the inspection or Messrs. Whiting 6 Co., of London, the Printers of -the Genuine Labels, who declare, without hesitation, that they are FORGERIES.' With a view to check this disreputable practice, 'Messrs. P. A J. Arnold have given peremptory orders to their Manufacturers ofßotttcs to have. In future, every Bottle Stamped and Indented with iheirNames, «P. & J. ARNOLD, London,” With a view of protecting themselves, and of secur ing to the Purchasers and Consumers In America the Genuine Article. Since the above precantlon was adopted byllcaar*. Arnold, by havluif their Names stamped on tbe Bot ties at the time of tbelr Mannfacinro. tbe following Advertisement appears In tbe Boston and other papers! To Janie Dealers and Bottle Collectors In Philadel phia, Baltimore and Washington.—Wanted,—Stone Ink Bottles. Quarts. Pints, and Half Pints, which have held Arnolds* Inks, or Bottles of the same make with any other Label on. W Cents per dozen for Quarts. M M ** ** Pints. 25 “ •*. ** Half-Pints. Will be paid by the Subscriber who will pay Freight to New York. “Signed—S. 8. Stafford, No. 10 Cedar street. New York." Messrs. P. A J. Askold leave It with tbe American Public to draw their own Inference from this Adver tisement* persuaded they will be more cautions in observing they are not Imposed on by the substitu tion of a spurious for a Gentotb Article. Tbe Genuine can be had of W. A C. K. HERRICK Stationers, 73 John street, our Agents for tbe U. S. deli-etCMw-Tii-sxATU-ls gTORASE. CHICAGO DOCK COMPANY. Incorporated 1863—Capital Stock, $200,000. This Company have nearly completed (a portion now ready tor business) a Fire Proof Warehouse, &o feet by 572 feet, four stories ana cellar, situatedonihe sooth branch of Chicago Hirer, corner of West Tay lor and Beach streets; will, as soon as tbe weather admits, lay a track which will connect it with all rail roads entering the city- . , . At present they are prepared to receive the follow leg descriptions of property on Storage, and Issue Negotiable Warehouse Receipts Therefor, At the following rates, until otherwise published: Lard, per tletce S eta and eta. Beef and Pork, per tori 7 cts and SM eta. . Floor,perbrl Sets and 2K eta. Hlghwmcf.pcrbrl WctaandS cts. Wool, per bale 10 eta and 5 cts. Broom Coro, bMe 0f250 1b5...10 cU and 5 cts. Tbe higher rates sre for the first month, or any part tbereo*. The lower rates are tor any subsequent month or part thereof. The cost of Government stamp will charged on all Warehouse Receipt* Iscned for less than 200 packages. We are also pre pared to advance railroad charges and drayage. nr Office. 81 and 88 South Water cor. State streets ’ GEO. WATSON, President. P. L. Tor. Secretary. Chicago, Jan. 6,ISW. . js6jt69C-15t-TT&B Is TO SHIPPERS OF TALLOW, LAED, BACON, POBK, BEEF, . AND • General Western Produce. The undersigned, pay Pabticulab Attention to tbe sale of tbe above articled, and Conalgnmcnta sent to them trill be • PBOSIFTLT DISPOSED OF AND QUICK BEXUHNS MADE, On very advantageous terms. We Issue a WEEKLY PRICE CURRENT of tbe above articles, which we mall gbatis to those sending their address to KNIGHT * SONS, de£o-t2£Mm 32 Water Street, N. V. City, 1863. Fall Trade. 1863. BAWSOUf A BARTLETT, Manufacturers and Wholesale Dealers In BOOTS AND SMOES 30 Lake street, Chicago, 111. We are now ofierier to the trade one of the largest and BEST SELECTED stocks ever brought to this determined to make our BUSINESS CASH ONLY, we will agree to sell our goods As Low as can be Bought In this Or any other market. Eastern bills freely dn pllcated. We make ft SPECIALTY of EXTRA StZED goods, a large assortment of wblcb we now bare oh 1 Blwsoa * B IUTIETT. Bdl-mQC-Sm ■ T AIIE MAUD’S RHEUMATISM, Gout and Neuralgia SPECIFIC. J. E. BEES & CO., Wholesale Druggists, NO. 146 LAKE STBEEJ, Agents for Chicago. FOR SALE BY DRUGGISTS GENERALLY. Price *LOO per Bottle. 0c59-0975-Sm J H. REED & CO., IMPORTERS AND JOBBERS OF DRUGS AND CHEMICALS 146 Lake St. 9 Chicago, 111. ALSO, DEAL LARGELY IK Faints, Oils, Window Glass, Glass ware, Burning Oils, Kerosene, Soapmalcers* Stock, Manu facturers) Goods, Ac., Which we offer at prices favorable to Western Mer chants and Manufacturers. J. H. Bus, 174 Pearl street, N. T. ? H. A. UTTT.T.nrr, Chicago. J selS-mTOWm OF Leasing Abandoned Plantations. By direction of the Secretary of the Treasury, and In purs nance of the order of the Secretary of war, X have assumed the supervision of leasing abandoned lands, tenements and bouses In Insurrectionary States within the First Agency, which embraces Tennessee, Arkansas, and so mneb of Louisiana, Mis sissippi dud Alabamans ts within the lines of the army operating from the North. 1 shall go down the Mississippi at once, to make the necessary arrangements for leasing plantations and providing them with the libor of freedznen. Information as to terms, &c„ will be published as soon as possible. In the mean -time, persons desir ous sf leasing plantations for the coming year, may feel assured that every elft rt will be made to Insure protection to those working snob lands, and to allow profits commensurate to the enterprise. Tenons wit b small means disposed to devote their personal labor with those employed by them, will be particularly encouraged, .... It Is estimated by those who have examined the subject, that the capital required for working one hundred scree trill be about $3,000 and the net profits about $lO CCO, at present prices of the staples. Agricultural implements and all other articles used n cultlvatl: g the plantations, must be furnished by the lessees . , , , , The freedznen wQI be forwarded to places con venient for employment, and It is supposed that as many as sre wanted can be found ready to labor. A gents will be immediately appointed, authorized, to lease to those who apply at Goodrich’s Landing, Vicksburg. Natchez, ana such other places as may be . convenient to persons Interested. _ Dated at Cincinnati, December SOth. 1863. WM.P. MEILEN, Supervising Special Agent, |aS-t6St-*t First Agency Treasury Department. TJEPARTMENT OF A6RICTJL- U TUBE, Wasuctgtox.D.C- Dec,ls,lS6S. To the Growers and Manufacturers of Flax and Hemp: The CommtMlonere appointed by this Deportment, corslstlccofHon. J. K. Morehena, of PermivlvarUa, WlUlatn l! Bailey, of Rhode lalaad, and John A. Wcrder of Ohio, to consider the following appropria tion made by the last Congress,viz: . . “for Investigations to test the practicability ol coltlvating and preparing flax and hemp as a snhstl tnte for cotton, twenty thousand dollars. Haying met. and alter several days’investigation, believing that a farther and mller notice of their in vn-tlgsuons might cyodoco valuable results, ad journed to meetaeain on Wednesday, tbe £Uh day of Fehrnarynaxt. at 12 o’clock M. ... .. They reque** all interested In tho distribution of this appropriation, or anxious to develop the subject for tbe public good, to send to this Department, on or before that day, samples of tie hemp anc flax la tho different stages of preparation; of tbe fibres and ftbrlca prepared by them, accompanied by state meets ot the various pioceeses used, and the cost of production In each case; also, descriptions of the kinds and cost of machinery used, where made, «c., together with any and all Information that may be useful to the Commission. . . This Information U necessary befbre an intelligent distribution of the appropriation canine mat dcS-tTu-Sm Commissioner. Notice to cotton DEALERS. OFFICE OF SUPERVISING SPECIAL AGENT, ) FSBSTAaSSCT foment watt, December Mth, ISffJ. \ By consent ot General Grant and Army Corps Dis trict Commanders in bia department, and in pursu ance ot instructions ftom the Secretary of the Trea sury, authority will he given to all proper persona to purchase the products of States in insurrection, at all places in this agency within tbe lines of National n Ap pScj^n P for°imch authorities can he made to any Assistant Special Agent m the First Agency, or at this office. • • . Parties receiving authorities win be required to give bond, with two sufficient-sureties, conditioned for their observance of .all regulations,- rules and military-orden.*tßa for the payment of all Govern ment fees and taxes. . w. P. MBLLBH, Special Agent Treasury Department CCo ©puttattors PROPOSALS FOR- FRESH Otticiot CoxaasaAXT or StiuitijOi S4 SlTff-it, CatCtOO. ILL*. JiA.4U.J9BJ. Scaled Frq»o«*ls (la duplicate) will be received by the nnderalgned until a o’clock p. m. on Thursday, the 14th instant, :96i. for supplying fresh bread to the treopeand prisoners*; the isUowtag named pUcp* Chlcage.lUlncls. ; Reck island, Illinois. Quincy, Dhaolfl, And st all Camps, Poets, Depots, sad Hospitals la Ua vicinity of the above named places. The contract will commence Junary 50th 1884. or as soon thereafter as the undersigned mar direct and he m force for thscc month* or such sbortsr nenod as llm Corrmissary General mar direct. The Bread mast be of the tint quality and delivered each day la such quantities aa maybe required for the «<e of the trocps.e* the Commissary may direct. Proposals must be accompanied bj a guarantee as follows: . . . M We, the undersigned, herebyguarsatce In case the foregoing bid of—— be accepted It shallbedqlv fulfilled according to Us true pirport and conditio**, a!«o that a written contract shall be executed with bonds in the sum of $104900, (Name of Guarantors) a To this must be attached a certificate signed hr the IT. S. District Judge or U. S. District Attorney In form asfnllows: . “ 1 hereby ccrhly that the above named are known to me as men of property and are good .and cnfliclent guarantors.” ... ' The Bread must be baked In loaves of twenlv-two onc.ee* each, full weight, and bebaked from good Hoar. Samples of Breadjdlstlnctly labelled must be deliver* cdwltb tbeproposals, and referred to therein. Also, samples of flour from which the Bread Is to be baked most be delivered In neat boxes of card board or tin, felly labelled, and not In paper parcels. All bidden most give their names In full, and also state their - places of residence and business. Each bid most have a printed copy of this advertisement attached to It. Psvments to bo made In snch funds as maybe famish ed by the United States. The undersigned reserves the right to reject any or all bids. Bidden most be present at the opening of the bids. • 7^ Separate bids Trill be received for each of the above named places, or one bid may Include all of them. Proposals most bo In duplicate, enclosed la an en velope addressed to the. undersigned, and endorsed M Proposals lor Frcab Bread.” if. P. SMALL. jan&ggMlt. Lt. Colonel and C. 5. PROPOSALS. Omci CojQtißsxaT oy ScßStsTmrc*,) St Diver street. Chicago, til.. Jan. IS, 1561. J SEALED PROPOSALS (in duplicate) will be re* ceived by tbo undersigned until 12 o’clock U. on Tnesdaythe 19th instant, for sapnlTlncfor the use of the United States Army, SUBSISTENCE STORES, to be delivered In Chicago as follows, viz: 500 barrels New Prime Mess Pork. SGV barrels New Mess pork. 75,000 pounds first quality Smoked Shoulders—shank cut o fife lose to the brisket. 25.CC0 pounds Prime Rio Coffee. Bidders will state In the proposals when the Pork was packed. The above to be delivered in three equal install* meats. on the 35th and SOth of January and on the 10th day of-February, ISM. No bids will 6c received (unless from parties known to the undersigned) without a guarantee from two re sponsible parties for the faithful fulfillment of the contract liawarded. The Pork and fcbonlders to be Inspected by author ized inspectors selected by the undersigned. The cost, of the packages to be Included In tbe price of the article, and each package to be marked . wlih tbe contents aad tbe same of the persou furnish* Ice tbe articles and tbe date of purchase, t Proposals for different articles most be on separate sheets of paper—each bid most have a printed copy of this advertisement pasted on its bead. All tbe above stores to be delivered free of drayage at tbe Commissary Storehouse In the City of Chicago, 24 River street, brat snch place In tbe City of Chi cago as may be required by the undersigned. Proposers who are not able to deliver their stores at the dates mentioned above, may state tbe time when they can deliver them. . . , 1 Separate proposals in duplicate most be made for each article enumerated, and bidders may propose for the whole eronv part of each. Samples of the Coffee mast be delivered with the proposals, and referred to therein. Samples muse bo In neat boxes of card board or tin, IWIy labelled and not In paper parcels , , . Return of weights, signed byan authorized public weigher, must be.fbrnlshed whenever required. The undersigned reserves the right to reject any or all bids offered. , _ , , „ . , Proposals to he endorsed 44 Proposals for Subsis tence Stores,” and directed to tbe noaeralgueoj t jalß-u46-7t Lt Colonel & C. S. ZRMT MEDICAL PURVEY OB'S OFFICE, „ T , LouisTitx*. Ky» Jan. 1.1364. Proposals will t>e received at this office up to 13 M. on the 15th Instant, for furnishing the following named articles of Medical andHospltal Supplies, viz: Flax Seed, lbs. 400. In 6 and 12» canisters; Flax Seed, ground, fis 32P0, in S and ISQ> canisters t Mas tsrdiground. fts22(o,ln6andl2» canisters; Whisky, bottles 96C0, S3 fluid ounce in dozen boxes; Whisky, gallons ICCO. In U, J< and K barrels.*; Ale. bbls 25; Ale, K Ibis SO; Mattresses, hair, to fold in two equal parts. No. 2S00: Mattresses. shack. No. 6WO; PHowa.4mlr, No. IS.CCO; Basins, tin. small for dressers. No.2000; Basins, wash band, >O. 1500: Brooms, No. 50C0; Brushes, scrubbing. No. 1300 j Buckets. wooden. No.* 1CC0; Conolcstlcks, tin. No. ITCO* Caldrons.withtin* covers, 20 gallons. No. 90: Chairs, No. 2700; Close Stools, with tin chambers. No. 875; Tunnels, tin. nint. No. SCO; Graters, nntnieg and large, No. 500; Hatchets, N0.225; Hones.No.lCO; Lanterns.glass.No.SM; Lit ters,, band, No. 600; Pots, chamber deir. No. ISOO; Kangss. with fixtures complete as required; Sadirons, N0.450; Slates.No. 100; Spittoons, No. 1500; Stove*, cooking, with fixtures complete as required; Tables, bedside. No. SU00; Vials, assorted, (ti. 6-ounce; 12 4-ounce; 3.2-ounce; 3,1-onnce) doz.Sßoo. ** mSdozea and V In B dozen packages; Woodsaws, No. 100; Bowls, delf, No. 11 CCOi Dippers, tin. pint size. No. 375-Dubes, assorted sizes,No.2ooo; Flesh Forks, No. 50; Nettles, tea. 1r0n,N0.300 ; Knives and Forks, of each. No. 8300; Knives sad Forks, carving, of each, N0.420; Knives,bread. No. 107; Mags, delf, NO. 10,000; Pans, frying,No.lCO; Pons,sauce, No S2O: Pans,tin. No.« 0: Pitchers, delf.Wgah.No. 1500;Plates.delf; No.lS.tw; Pots, coffee, fin. No. 650; Pots, mustard. No.sCo.Pots, pepper, tin. No. 700; Pots, tea,delf. No. 4CO; Salt Ctllara, No. 1600: Spoons, table. No. IC.CfO: Spoons, tea. No. 10,000 ; Steels. No. 50 i Trays, butters, No. 200; Tumblers, glass. No. 8000; Buckets, chamber* with covers. No. ICO; Cratches, pairs, 100; Cups, tin, No.IO.OCU: Moos, No. 1000; Plates, tin. No. 75C0; Washboards, No. 500; Boxes, pocking, cleated, assorted sizes,No.soo, ssrtqnlred. Sam pits of each articles proposed to be furnished to accomrany the bids, and the quantities and time within which they can be delivered at thlsdepoc most be specified. Each article where practicable, otherwise the peck nge to be markedU.o* A.Hosp’lDept., and design**' ted by the name of the “ k^s£fi& &RnDEß( Jiß*l7s9*6t Sorg. U. S. A. Medical Purveyor. Proposals fob forage. ' Cmxr Qvabtskkastkb's Omcz, j WAsntxoTpirDsror, Decern her 3,1363, i SEALED PROPOSALS are Invite i by the under, ■lesea for supplying the U. 8. Quartermasters De* partment. at Washington D. C„ Baltimore. Md. Alexandria, and Fort Monroe Va. or either of these places, with H«r, Coin, Oats and Straw. Bids will be receive! for the delivery of 5,000 bushels of corn or oats anc 50 tons of bay orstraw, or upwards, Bldcm most state at which of the above named points they propose to make deliveries, and the rates at which they will make deUverlea thereat, theqnon. Ity of each article proposed to be delivered, the Urns when isld cellvertts shaUhe conmencfid, and when to be completed. . . Tbepnco must be written out in words ou the bids. ' Corntoreputuplncooi stout sacks ot about two bokbels each. Oats in lice sacks, of anontthiee bushels each The sacks to be fttrn shed without extra charge to the Government, The hay and straw to be securely pt lea. Tie par lenlar kind or description of o&ts, corn, bay, or straw, proposed to be deUvered must be state! u AiT e sme’ es offered nnaeruio mj, herein *nvUo<L wUi be sublect to a rfrii Inspection by the Govern* mentlnspectorbeforelelngaccepted. .. . ... ContracitwiUbe awareefrom time to tlmetotba lowest responsible bldcer, as tbelnterest of the Gov* •rsment may require and payment will be made when the whole amount contracted for shall have been de* liverea ana accepted. Tbe blaeer wlu be required to accompany bis pro* pcsal with a guaranty, signed by two responsible per sons. that in case bis bla la accept*) he or toey will, within ten days thereafter, execute the contract fox tbe same, with gooo-and raffieientsnretlcsin a sum equal to the amount of tbe coatrmrt, t-> deUver the forage proposed In conformity with the urms of this adverliemexit; sad in case the said bidder should fan to enter ifito tbe cont*act, they to make good tre dif ference between th- offer of said bidder and the next lowest responsible bidder, orthc person to whom the contract may be awarded. The mspocslbilltv of the gnara* , tors must be shown by the official certificate of a U. S. District Attorney Collector of Customs or any other officer coder the t:m ed Statea Government, or responsible person known to this office. . . . . , v AH bidders will be duly notified of the acceptance oi releciJoß of their proposal*. . Tie fall tame and P. O address of each bidder must te legibly wrltti-nln the proposal, .. „ PVorosat: must be aadre-seu to Brigadier Genera) T>. 11. Knctcr. Chief Depot Quartermaster. Washlaa tosj).C.anu should be plolrlymarked“Proposals for Forare.” Bocfs. In a sum equal to the amount ofthe contract BltECdLy tbe contractor and beta t Is guarantors, will be required ofthe tuccesstul bidder or bidders upon guarantees, and bonds, may be Obtained on apoUcstlon at this office. FORM OF PROPOSAL. CTowa, County, and I.the subscriber,do hereby fnrsfahanfl deliver to the United at tha Quartermaster's Department at , agreeably to the terms of jour Vt a.»hlngtoa Depot, December S, 1863, the follow ing tri!cls.vu:; ... n . * i bushels of Corn, la sacks, at—per bushel of R pounds. ■— bmhelsof Oai9,lnsackP,at—perbushelofS pooncs, * toss ofloJod Hay. at—per ton of 3,000 pounds. —-—tons of baled btr aw, at—-per ton ofiocopotinds Delivery to commeoceon or nefbre the——day 0f——,136 , and to be completed on or befbre the day of- ■ . 136 , and pledge myself to ea ter Into s written contract with the Uni-red States, with good and approved securities, within the space often cajs after peine notified that my bid ass been accepted. Tour obeclent servant. Brigadier General D. H. Rtckhh, ~~ Chief Depot Qoaßermaster. Washington. D. C. GUARANTY- • We, the ondenlguea, residents of —, In the County ot ,andSts»e of—— .hereby Jointly and severallv, covenant vltb the UtlUd States, and guar antee In cs»e the fbregolnc Ml of ■■— be accei-ted, that be or they will, within tea-dsyiafter the accept ance of said bid, execute the contract for tbn same with good and sufficleutsarctles, in a snm equal to the amount of the contract, to larnlso the forage proposed in conformity to the terms of advert; seaent dated De cember 8.1353. under which ibebld was male, and. In esse the cold —— shall fun to enter Into a contract ai aloreeald, we guarantee to make good the dfference between the offer by ►aid—— and the next lovestresponsibleblcder or the pcisoatowhomthe contract may be awarded. . . Witness. i Given under our hands ohd seals « ,W |Seall [Seal.] . I hereby certify that, to the best of my knowledge and belief, the above named guarantors are good and sufficient as sureties for the amount for which they offer to be security. To he certified by the United States District Attor ney. Collector of Customs, or any other officer undo • the United fetates Government, or responsible person known to this office "All proposals received under this advertisement will be opened and examined sc this offlce'On WED- N E6DAY and SATURDAY of each week, at 13 H. Bidders are respectfully Invltt d to be present, at the opttiDg ot bid*- n <«t aonxe. H _ BI7CKEB> dell-tSSI-flm Brigadier General and Quartermaster. Proposals forfreshbeef .Ofticz Comcbsaet ot STTBairrascr, ) 34 Elver street, > Chicago, lu*. Jan. 4ib, 1661. ) Sealed Proposals (ladapllciite) will be received by the undersigned until 12 o’clock M. on Thursday, the llth Instant, ISO, for supplying fresh Beer to the Trocps and Prisoner* at Ins following namettplacea: Chicago, 111. . • - • Springfield, 111. l&ck Island, 111. And afaU%mp*B, Poets, Depots and Hospitals In the vicinity of the above named places. The contract will commence Janaary 30th.lSCi.or as soon thereafter as the undersigned may direct, and be In force for six months, or sneb shorter period as the Commissary General may direct. , .. The Beef most be of the first quality, and be deliver* ed In equal portions of fore ana bind quarter* (necks and shanks excluded) In such quantities as may be re quired for the use of the Troops, and on such days as the comxnlfsary may direct. Proposals must be accompanied by a guarantee, aa We* the undersigned,hereby guanmlee.ta case the foregoing bid of' be accepted. It shall bedolr ful filled according to its true purport and conditions; also, that a written contract shall be executed with bonds In the snm of 120,000. (Names of guarantors.) • To this must be attached a certificate signed by the U.B. District Judge cr 17. S. District Attorney, la formas follows: .. .. t • i •* 1 hereby certify that the above named ■ ■ are jrao=nto moaamenof property, and are good and sufficient guarantors.” , , . „ , . All bidders must give their names In fan. also state their place of residence and business. Each bid moat have a printed copy of this advertisement attached to be made in such funds as may be fOr uished by the United States. The undersigned re- Berreuiho right to reject say or all bids. Bidden will be required to he present at the open* bids will he received for each of the above named places, or eae hid may include all of them. Proposals must be iw dutlioats, enclosed In an en velope. addressed to the undersigned, and endorsed •‘Proposals for Fresh Beef.” if. P. SMALL, jTS-tsn-llt lieutenant Colonel and C.9. JJOGS, HOGS, HOGS! The undersigned would Inform their customers ana all persons shipping to this market, that they hare increased facilities thin season for handling LITE DRESSED HOGS I We will give oar personal attention to all sales, anc will guarantee tho HIGHEST PRICES AND PROMPT RETD HNS. BATES. STONE A CO„ n02£t536-2n» 213 South Water street. I DBISONFARMERS’MUTUAL /\ INSURANCE COMPAKV.—Notice !» hereby £tTf n that the Annual Election of the Officers of the Addlscu Forman’ Mutual Insurance Companvwin be held at tho office of the Mid Company, in Addlsoa, on the second Saturday of January. A. t>. 1331, being the ninth day thoreot Bv order of Directors. dcSSUSI-tV HKNETD. FISCOAK,SQC , y. Citmßtituliou ffiKater CeKSTITITIOiX WATER. The Great Remedy for the CONSTITUTION! ASD TEE OXLT KSOWS KHiISDT FOB Diabetes, and Diseases of the Kidneys and Bladder. Constitution Water Has been pronounced by tbe Medical Faoultyv -aad tbe Public, to be the moot wonderful remedy for the permanent cure of all diseases of tbe Stomach, Liver, Kidneys, Bladder and Womb, that has ever been It Is not a Medical water. It is from experience that Constitution Water has emanated, and we noir say let no man doubt when a single bottle has been known to cure dteeawa which the beat medical talent In this country has failed to relieve. A remedy posseaslnjTthe virtues of Constitution Water cannot be classed under 44 quack” preparations as It is now used by tbe most scientific practitioners la this city. It is only second close physicians that cry down popular remedies, while the better skilled make use of every means to accomplish a cure; and the success of the physician increases as his knowledge of different remedies enables him to produce a cure, while others rail in the attempt. Science is satisfied with the truth. Give Constitution Water a fair trial—wo mean you who are under some specialist’s care from year to year, and we particularly allude to ladles who are constantly resorting to local treatment and all sorts of local applications for diseases, with as much chance of success as there would be from local applications to the throat for diseases of the brain. We have always been careful to use language In our circular that could not shock themost delicate organi zation, bat wo receive so many communications from persona for which Constitution Water Is adapted, and of whose disease no mention baa been made, that wa have come to tbe conclusion that If tbe remedy Is ca pable of producing a core, no matter what the disease may be, it should be made known. Tbe medicine Is ut up tor the public, aad there should be uo czcep fg 1 would say. Constitution Watar la not like a gild ed‘p 11, made to salt the eye and taste; It is a medi cine In every sense of-tbe term, placed in tbe hands of the people for their relief, and ll taken according to the directions, it will in every case produce a radical core. We would say that the directions in regard to diet, etc., relate only to the disease under which they occur. DIABETES Is a disease of the Stomach and Liver, actingftbrough the Kidneys, and Is, without doubt, the most obstinate disease, except Consumption, that affects the human constitution. We have no space for discussing causes, but will state that the effect of the disease la the con version of the starchy principle (or vegetable portion of the food) into sugar, which stimulates the kidneys to an excessive secretion of water. Many persona «ffer from this disease who are ignorant of it; tnaC uTtbey pass large quantities daring the day, and are obliged to get ap {torn one to fifteen or twenty times during the night. ‘No notice U taken of it nmll their attention Is called to the large discharge of water, and often when U Is so far advanced as to be beyond the control of ordinary remedies. Another sympton is the great thirst which, when the disease Is lolly estab limbed. Is intolerable—tno patient drinks constantly, without being satisfied; also dryness of the month, cracking of the Ups. a sweet breath, in the more ad vanced cases, and finally loss of appetite, emaciation, and the patient gradually sinks from exhaustion. CONSTITUTION WATER Is without doubtthe only’known remedy for Dtißxrsa and we have os much confidence that It is a specific aa we have that opium will produce sleep, and truthfully saythatlthaa cured every casein which it has been used. Stone in the Bladder, Calcnlos, Gravel, Brick Bust Deposit, and Mncons or Milky Discharges alter Urinating. Disease occurring from one and the same cause will bo entirely cured by the Constitution Water,!!taken for any length of time. * In Djsnenorrboa, or Painful XenstronUoa, and Menorrhagia, or Profuse Honing. Both diseases arising from a fealty secretion of tha menstrual fluid—ln the one ease being too little, and accompanied by a severe pain, and the other a too pro rose secretion, which wul he speedily cored by the Constitution water. ‘ • That disease known as FALLING OF THE WOMB, which Is the result of a relaxation of the ligaments of that organ, end is known by a sense of heaviness and (hogging pains In the hack and sides, and at times rc f/tmeanfed by sharp lancinating or shooting pains through uiepuu), irtau»»u v—... i« w>wn»«Jbg tha medicine. . . „ . • . There Is another class of symptoms arising from IRRITATION OF THE WOMB, which physicians call Nervousness, which word covers np ranch Ignorance, and In nine cases out of ten. the doctor does not really know whether the symptoms are the disease, or Urn disease the symptoms. We can only enumerate them here. I speak more particularly of Cold Feet, Palpita tion of too Heart, impaired Memory, Wakefulness, Flashes of Beat, Languor, Lassitude, and Dimness oj Vision. suppressed memsxruatiob; Which in the unmarried female is a constant recur ring disease, and through neglect the seeds of more, crave and dangerous maladies arc the result; and as month after month passes without an effort being made to assist nature, the suppression becomes chron ic. the patient gradually loses her appetite, the bowels are constipated, night sweats come os, and Cossmo- Txos finally ends her career. * Irritation of thelloek of the Bladder, Intiana- nation, tit the Kliaejs, Catarrh of the Bladder, Sttaagaary and Horning, or Painful Urinating. » For these diseases it is truly a sovereign remedy, and too much cannot be sald.m its praise. 'A single dose baa been known to relieve the most urgent symp- Are yon troubled with that distressing pain In the small of the back and through the hips? A teaspoan fnl a day of Constitution Water will relieve yon like magic. PHYSICIANS Have tong since given op the use of buehn, cube be, and Juniper in the treatment of these diseases, and only use them for thawanfeof abetter remedy. CONSTITUTION WATER Has proved itself equal to the task that has devolved upon It. DIEBKTICS . Irritate and drench the kidneys, and by constant use soon lead to chronic degeneration and confirmed dis ease. Read! Rea'S !■! Read!!! DaxTrx.au. Ru, Junes, i». Ds, We. H. Qkxoo—Dear Sir; In February, 1861,1 was afflicted with sugar diabetes, and for five mouths I passed more than two gallons of water In twenty four hours. I was obliged to get np as often as ten or twelve times during the night, and In five months I lost about fifty pounds In weight. Daring the month of July, 1861,1 procured two bottles of Constitution Water, and In two days after using- It I experienced relief, and after taking two bottles 1 was entirely cured—soon after regaining my osualgood health. Yours truly, J.Y.L.D* Wrrr. Bostox Comas, N. Dec, 27,1561. Wx. H. Ggszo A COj Gents : I freely give you liberty to make use of the following certificate of the value of Constitution Water, which I can recommend in the highest man. ner. My wife, who was attacked with pain In the shoul ders, whole length of the back, and In her limbs, with Palpitation of the Heart, attended with Falling of the Womb, Bysmonorrhea, and Irritation of the Bladder, I called a physician, who attended her about three months, when be left her worse than he found her. t then employed one of the best physicians I could find, who attended her for about nine months, and white she was under bla care she did not sailer quite aa much pain. He finally gave hemp, and said “her case waa incurable. For,** said he, “she has such a com bination of complaints that medicine given, for one operates againstsomeotherofherdlfllcolncx," About this time she commenced- the nso of Constitution Water, and to our utter astonishment almost the first dose seemed to have the dcalrcd effect, and she kopt on Improving rapidly under its treatment, and now superintends entirely her domestic affairs.- She has not taken any of the Consiltnllon Water for about four weeks, and we are happy to say that Ik has pro duced a permanent cure. Wu. H. Tax Bnsscnoco. WiAimnustXLD, Coon., March 2,13G3. Db.W;H.Qbxgg Dear Sir: Having seen your advertisement of Con stitution Water, recommended for Inflammation of the Kidneys and Irritation of the Bladilar, having suf fered for the past three years, and tried the skill oi a number of physicians inth only a temporary relic:, I waa Induced to try your medicine, r procured one bottle of your agents at Hartford, Messrs. Dee, Slwm * Co., and when X bad used half of It, to my surprise t found a great change In my health. .1 have used t-vo bottle* of it, and am where I never expected to be in my life; well,and In good spirits. I cannot exprrsa my gratitude for It; T feel that it la all and more i.-m you recommend it to be. May the blessing of (»*! ever attendyou in your labors of love. ’ Yours,truly, Lbomabo S.Biostow. THESE ASE FACTS ESOliaK. We present the Constitution Water to the pubho with the conviction that It has no equal In roilovtng the class of diseases for which it has been -found ao eminently successful for curing; and we trust that we shall be rewarded for our efforts in placing a> valua ble a remedy in a form to meet the reqatromunts of patient and physician. POE g*T.-R BY ALL DEGGGISTS. PRICE. 81.00. ¥M. H. GBIG(t & CO., Rropristors Morgan & Allen, General Aganta. No. 40 CHIT Street, New Torfc.