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!iUi (Empire. KMPIKF. fOMPAHV, Pallehers. ' 8A.TUKDAV. OCTOUK.K 31., 1H6S. ' DEMOCRATIC STATE CENTRAL COMMITTEE. STATE CENTRAL COMMITTEE ROOTS. COLUMBUS, October 26, 1865. The members of ihe lienv malic tilate mitlee, toi-lodlne. the AlTlwrr member., on le queftted to meet in Cohlm'-U. on liunrtnnt iHi.inii., on Wedn.ed.y, N itmiw II, lcJ. ' JOHN G. THOMPSON, Chairman. GEORGE L. CONVERSE, Secretary. Milroy—Rusecrans—"Nemesis" —Retribution. "The milla of the God grind slow, but grind exceeding fine." Recent events prove that sometime they grind b.ith fait and fine, It in bat a little while since too Le nocracy of Ohio and the Northwest were continually outraged by violent, unfounded and most of fensive assaults from the army in the shape of letters, addresesand resolutions. Among the first and bitterest of their revilers, was General Mn.Bitv, of Indiana. Secure in the post of satrap or petty tyrant over Winchester, under that meaner tyrant yet, General So KMC, be fulmined his curses against the "Copperheada" of his own Stale, in truly "loyal'' etyle, to the wonderipg delight of every skulking Abolitionist who preferred to "fight traitors at home." In n letter dated J-.innary 30, 18G3, this thickikulled but l)-li-cose Brigadier, pitched into the vile and cowardly traitors at borne" after this wipe: "I join with my fellow soldiers of tho Union everywhere, in warning the traitors at home (Copperheads, Butternuts, K, O. C.'a, &c ,) that when we have crushed aimed treason at tho-South, and restored the sovereignty of the Government over these misguided States, (which under dxl we surely will do) wa will upon our return, while our hands are in, also exterminate treason at the North, hy arms, it need be, and seal by the blood of traitors, wherever fnund, the pertnauent peace of our countiy and the perpetuity of tree Govern ment to all future generations." Very brave words these. But unhappilyi in the middle of June following, a one-legged "armed rebel" by the name of Ewki.l, who had to be strapped to his horse in battle, came down luriously upon Milrot, who fled instant ly and ingloriuusly before him, tindiDg his in dividual safety at the expense of his routed and dispersed command, the disgrace of the army, and a terror to neither "armed traitors" nor unarmed "Copperheads." Like another doughty hero, famous in song i tie tied fill! soon, in in nvmih of June, AU'l liade tilts rett Keep figlitiUK. So much lor MiLRoY. Above MiLKor iu command and equal to him in pre-emption, was th- late Major Gene ral William 3. Kosecrai9, familiarly and affectionately known as "Old Rosey." Suc ceeding that brave soldier and true gentle man, Major General I'tkll, in command of the army of the Cumberland, he determined to win the utmost favor of the Administration, first hy treachery to the parly to which he had profassel to helutig, uuJ then by the most servile and degrading sycophancy, lie at once fell in with the entire radical policy of the Administration aud especially signaiixed himself by his bitterness toward all who dif fered from it at home. He may or may uot heve been subject to "epilepsy," but he certainly was violently alHicted, or pretended to be, with the disease of cuprophubia, nnd aspired to be recognized us the chief enemy of the "Copperheads." And he is in fact entitled to the bud eminence of having written the meanest and most cow ardly letter of all from the army, against Democrats. As badly beaten in the first day's fight at I Murfreesboro, as at Chicamanga, bnt enabled at last by reinforcemeuts, to hold the field, he assumed all the arrojance of a Conqueror, aud in a letter dited February ;t, ldG3, and ad. dressed to the Ohio Legislature, he denounced the men of the party which he had deserted, as "slaves aud truitors who deserved the scorn and contempt of all honorable men." From this hour, the flatterers around him, persuaded "Old Roaey" that hs was the "coming man" for the Presidency. His camp at once be- cam a political seminary in which merit was ' measured by tho intensity of one's hatred of! "Copperheads " , Nearly all tho olficers j werjoomp-lied to forswear Democracy. All j in camp was lost, and the lime of ; officers spent in poisoning the minds of' the soldiers against their fathers, brothers, j mother! and sisters at borne, as "traitors and ; butternuts." ... Said Cil S , who resigned in Jure: "It is , a daily tight to see a Major-General or a Brig- adier, surrounded by other officers and a squad of private soldiers, discussing politics, all over j the camp." The chief business of Rosccraju' chief-of itaff, Gen. J. A. Gari-'iild, one of GiDniNus' in Conirresa. was to attend to the Ohio election, and keep a correspondence with the Abolition State Central Committee at Co lumbus. Rosrcravi himself replied insultingly lo me respecuui inquiry 01 iu wemoorauc oiaie Central Committee, as to democratic docu- ments and tickets, that "disloyal" papers and document could not be permitted in his army, be, himself, having previously dufinad what be meant br this, br prohibiting the circula - ' ' J tion of the Columbui Cri, Cincinnati En - gut'rtr, aud Chicago Timet among bis sol diers, and excluding their correspondents from his samps. lie stooped even to apply to Deio- ocratio speaker! and canvassers, the language ' Mr'f iufainou! order against th ladies : was who alone eaved the army from utter annihilation on the bloody field of Chic the amaugo. Such has been the melancholy but deserv discipline ed end of Major General Wjlliaia S. Rosii the trans. Rebel "iconoclasm" has broken down his image too; and none are more ready to hawk at and spit upon the fallen idol, than his late worshipers and especially the priests, 's masters, who set him up, and whom he so abjectly served. Solitary and alone he returns over jhe aame track which his prisoner traveled before him; and now in the hoar of adversity, will have , leUure 10 "member the conversation of Ihe -iJuilfnt of 21th, of May, and the warn auccessora in wordi of him wuom ll6 dressed there in ofNt Orleans, declaring tbat HwfnftiilJ ' "rmittei 10 t lit r Tocntinn with- met. Anil jus! beftire the disastrous faat of Onicaroaitga, some, e'ylit or ten of (,: nhlA -rtl.nela (nnhil limftln ril ftn im. : puJent letter to tli Democratic Stato Cfitra' I n .A .f... ... J.... eh. ...... r-f' VOIIIllli' i-, uiv,, Hv " " . I the Alwliiirn party, on Baldwin, was ((rent difficulty, anil by special eflortani favor, , put through to Chattanooga, with th Abnli-. tinn tirki'H, wliil the Dcmticrntic Rfrcntm Svitii and O'Pown, with Pcmoeralio ticket, were iopped at Nashville. Tlio army of lh Cumberland was, in any event, to Bate the Ohia rU'Ctions; Bud lui pari of the schema, Uoncrn.N was to follow op Hiiauii s "demor-aliz.-d nruiy, (which lie wrote "could not es- oopu from him,") and give him battle a few weeks before the election. A victory was as- sumrd to he a matter of coarse. It ia true that, with the eiccptio i of (len. Thomas' I corps, the political character and Use of the I aruiv had .roatl iniured its militarv discipline i and illiciency. 1 1 could not ba otherwise Upon this point the correspondent of tho Now Voik Jlrrald, wiiting from Chattanooga, a tew days alter tho battle, not, indeed, assign ing the trne reasons, mys: , "One of the causes, and a principal one, of onr defeat, was the lax discipline of the army. The campaign had been long and arduous, and, as i natural, the oflicerri were not as strict in the enforcement of tho severe rules of the army, llress paradea were entirely dis pensed with; regimental drills were had too seldom, aud brigade, division and corp9 man ivnvers not at all. This mistuken kindness to tjie men was followed by tho partial destruc tion of the control and command held by the ollicrri) ovt r.tue tm ii, as if tho hitter had lif t the habit of obeyiug and with volunteers obedience is simply a habit which limy recog nise as necessary to their success, and beside, ia two of tho corps engaged, there did not ex ist that bond of union between the officers and men which is engendered from the per fect confidence of the latter in the former." And he might have added that the efficiency of tho oflieers, including Roskorans himself, was not at all increased by the magnificence of their dress, and the tact that many of them lived sumptuously in splendid residences "ap propriated" from the "disloyal" citizens of that Capua of the South XTurfreesboro. Hut no matter. After Gram's capture of Vicks" burg, Bradi) was obliged to fall back and Men Rosec'rans followed, "driving him like ahaep," capturing any number of prisoner aud utterly demoralizing the rebel urmy. Deserters from it were reported as coming in at the rate of one thousand a week, "Old Kosey" himself gave official sanction and cir. oulntion to these absurd reports, uor did he omit to libel his cative State by asserting that "Tenuessce was more loyal than Uhio I" The battle wrs fougbt and Roskuiuns badly beaten, with a loss which will never be disclos. ed till "this cruel war is over," Soon after the fight began on the second day, he left the field, and along with Crittkndfx and MrCooc, found himself safe in Chattanooga, all of Iheru according to the New York JVionne, being sound asleep in that town, While the battle yot raged I Oilier Administration papers go so far as to assert that he the "Old Rosey" who was so valiant and violent against "Copperheadu' "ran away in a panic." Some of them allirin that he drugged himself with opium during ihe fight, while others mata apologeti cally insinuate that he had a fit of epilepsy. All this, eays the New York Tribune, "wa, known to the Government for weeks." And yet it was all concealed till after the Ohio election, in order to keep up the political delusion in the army, and secure the activo political services of two high Catholic functionaries at home. McCooe and Ckittrk nun being of no political account were dis- missed at once. But the moment the election was over Uoseckans is relieved from command, aud the army of the Cumberland turned over temporarily to General- Tdosut, of the old regular army, a Virginian by birth, a man who attended solely to tne discipline and military etfiuiency of his corps, never meddling with politics, but who from the beginning, has been kepi under a oloud, because he was said to he a Democrat, a "copperhead" and even a Knight of the Golden Circle, And yet he it ; little lef authority, threatened with a mob of Ohio soldiers because he had dared to be fearless and bouest in the worst of tunes. Ve profundi) let him now cry aloud, since in 111 a .! u 0 nf Y',m o .,!( 1 1 r. I., f 1 . 1. . ; quid ghriarii. The mills of the Gods have ground last and one ; but they have more work ' J' before them i I I j ja. country yolXetne to town to see bis intended wife, and lor a long time great ; "now falling, he took ocoaaion to tell her that i v.;t r,i.A.u .k... u i it i 1 "' " , ' -TT i T . Y V Well," "I'll keep one of them ' t& Among a recent batch of Confederate prisoners ia one man only twenty-four Tear! of age, whose hair is as whit as snow. II says Jit was Irighl in his first fight which caused it, [Fro the Philadelphia Age.] The Finances of the United States Compared with France. LETTER FROM HON, JAMES W. WALL. BURLINGTON, October 20, 1863. . .Untie, M.T. On-neo aad HilUn. -.ra. i Hood, ivint nie: Ukstli:.: Vou iii: t our imitation to address a ma, meeting of the iJeiuotrary of the city of imiw iurK, to tin he d at the L.oopr Institiito mi WeiliieaiUr amuing next, ia Uiii uiouieut rereive-l, it would jjivo ma (jreat picture to be present, but the irritaled cnhdiuon of my throat, the t-llict of a severe cold recently con tracted at a public meeting, prevents mu. I he recent political results in Ohio and Pennsylvania prove clearly two thing's. First, the lamentable influence oi the corrupting patronage ol an unprincipled, reckless Ad niiniatrntiou: nnd, second, that the cup of niv tional suffering and degradation ia not suffi ciently loll. An Administration exercising powers un known to the Constitution, having at its dis posal all the resources in men and money of the North, has orirariii-d evervwhero in imi- talinii of the Jacobins of Franc during the ,i,.lB,!.l Trr. "Committees of I'ublic Male- ty. 1 hese, by a system of terrorism and aban doned corruption, are striving to accomplish what that reunlutionary organization aimed at. "the protection ot the authors of tho revo lution 1 1 out tlie consequences of their crimes. Wa incline strongly to the belief, however. that they will edect precisely what the first did veiitually a full exi osure of their crimes and their own overwhelming overthrow. Is the language of thneo Union Leagues differ cnt to-day trout their prototype, tho Commit tee of l'ublie Safety of 1 IXVt Listen to the animated denunciatory words of Vorginaud: "1 lie jreat body of onr citizen are so blind ed by the rush of events, or the glaro ot finan cial vpt dilution, that they ore made to con- lound a fanatical policy with a grand national movement iu favor of freedom. Ther repaid the violence of brigands as the efforts of pa triotic minds, and consider robbery itself as indispensable lor public safely. 'You are froo,' siy they; 'init unless you think Ilka us, we will denounce you as disloyal to the nationality. Yoa are free, but unless you bow baforo the idol that wo worship, we Till deliver yon to the terror ol that nationality you have in sulted.'" Tho French Revolution did, in tho word of 1 10 same noble spirit, "at last, like Saturn, succesHivoly devour all its progeny." So eventually will this wretched Abolition revo lution, originating in the time wild fanati cism about liberty and equality, and display ing in all its policy the same love of despot ism. The "Luwt of Huapecltd Pcrujnt" which gave ultimately such tremendous pow er! to the "Committee of Public Safety," will sunn be proclaimed, if, indeed, it does not al ready exist. Under that infamous luw, no person in France bad any chance of safety but in going the utmost length of revolution ary liny, fhoso who resisted were crushed beneath its bloody wheels. But it is not alone in the despotism of the hour in our civil ailuira that the Abolition Jacobins have become such startling; imita tors of the revolutionists of 1 TIL'S. In our financial policy we are repeating to the letter the history of those times. An inflated paper currency has banh-hed the precious metals from our midst, and every day ia making the rich richer and the poor poorer. During b bights of the paper expansion in the French Revolution, from the immense issue of assig nats, the tendeury to gambling of every sort prodigiously increased. Men who bad the sword of Damocles suspended over their heads sought to profit the most by the nu merous chancel of making money which the rapid rise and fall of assignata, and the boundless profusion of article! of luxury, brought into the market. The Bourne of Paris was crowded with bankers, revolution ists, ci-devant priests, ruined nobles, and adventurers ot every description. Magnifi cent equipages, trhose owntra were ray pick er! six vtontlit before, made their appear ance every alternoon upou the public drives. The trade iu jewelry unJ silks was enormous in its profits. This rapid inerense of wealth produced the most shameless extravagance, and speedily undormincd the public morula. This picture is the reproduced picture of to-day which ev Ty hour in our large cities is pass ing before the ga.ee of their inhabitants. Men now, as then, mistake the fictitious for the real, and in the constant employment of the boar, comparatively high wages, and tempo rary contentment, think thut all tbis apparent prosperity rests upon a linn foundation. The whitened crust, gleaming in the sunshine, thut covers the living fire in the mountain at Sol fatara, is not more treacherous. The slopes of Vesuvius never looked more resplendent in beiiuty thanjust betore the mountains belch ed forth, for the first time, its silvery shower, that sealed up llerenlaneuin in lava for cen turies, and covered Pompeii out of sight in a shawor of hot ashes. As sure as that God reigns, the fate, financially, of revolutionary France must be ours, sooner or later, only with tenfold aggravation. What is that fata ? Blasted by a ruinous system of paper curren cy, and crushed in the grasp of relentless des potism, oiuuufucturing industry was withered and commercial cnpltal annihilated. Depre ciation went on, notwithstanding the conven tion endeavored to arrest it by first declaring thut the assignata of the Government should be considered a legal-tender, and then enact ing punishment of six yesrs iu irons against those who should exchange any quantity of silver or gold lor a greater nominal value of aesignats, or should ask a'larger price for any article of merchandise, if tho price was paid in paper, than if paid in the precious metals. The ouce opulent capitalist, ruined by the sale of the public securities, deprived of their property by fictitious paper, paid by thuir debt ors in a nominal currency, were completely destroyed; while the miserable rintiert, cheat ed out of almost all their income! by the pay ment of their annuities in assignats, wanjered about in niter despair, supporting a miserable ex'itenca by charity or ter minating it by acts of suicide. The poor reoeived their wage! merely in paper cur rency, iu Irighllully depreciated that they were unable to purchase the liecsssaries of life, and so perished by thousands of Rlarva- tion, or took lo the highway lor a livelihood When that sumo cup poor France drained to the last dregs shall be full for us, and our people have tasted of the terrible bitterness that lies at the bottom, ' they way possibly awakin from the blind stupor that no seems to numb every faculty, or from the crs.y dut liriuin that causes them tn look upon the uisd Abolition policy now ruling the hour as the Only salvation tor the country. Th promises of the mad men to whom they have listened in regard to the war's speedy termination hav proved eminently aud disgracefully fals the predictions of those who have conscien tiously opposed it, in their accurate fulfillment, seem lo have been animated by the spirit, of .iwpuesy. it woul'J really seem a I if that heaviest of judgments Heaven denounces against a people, ';tbat they should be made to trust in a lie," has fallen upon this nation. Th financial charlatan, Chas, In a recent ipeech in Cincinnati, predicted one again the speedy crushing out of the rebellion, when he knows that it is no nearer fulfillment tbau his paper promises to pay are near re demption. The eyes of th people are, how ever, gradually being unsealed. They see but faintly yet, "only man as treei walking." Ihe time, however, must come, when they shall seo clearly how they have been duped; and when that hour comes, 1-t these Abolition fanatici beware. The revolution they hav raised will then, "lik Saturn, commence to devour its own progeny." I JAS. W. WALL. The Fate of a "War Democrat," The Riajorily against Gen. Tuttle,!in Iowa will.it is said, be 20,000. The later" returns only serve to swell the majority for Col. Stone, the Abolition candidate. The Colonel is a "brick," and deserves his success, i JIj pro claimed from the stump that he had "rather eat with a nigger, live with a nigger, sleep with a nigger" than wilh a whit man unless th white man were an Abolitionist.! He is entitled to an election under the present or der of things; and no one need feel any sur prise that his opponent, who went strongly for the war and the men who conduct it, should have been worse beaten than any Democrat of the season The truth is, Gen. Tuttle, who was lorced upon the Democracy of Iowa as a "War Democrat," ander which paradoxical term lie was to get the votes of a majority of the "soldiers" as well as thousands of the Ad niiiiiMralioii'party, found it a losing business to try to compete with the Abolitionists at their own trade when they had nlready got the "run of ihe business." Oilier things being equal, that party will generally vote for one of their own men rather than a so-called Democrat who bids for their votes. We do not know that (Jen Tuttle did this; we are bound to believe bitn an honorable man, and he is known to be a bravo soldier. He may, for ought we know, be utterly opposed to gnch a course; but hia rosition certainly an unfortunate one. lis "war" principles did not save bim, any more than a "war candidate would have saved the . Connecticut election lo the Democracy last spring, if they had done what the IVew York 'lYibune (after the election) said they should have done in order to carry the Stute namely, put up a less thoroughly anti-war candidate than Gov. Seymour. The infamous conduct of the Administration party here in removing Irom the Bench, for a purely partiaan purpose, two such able jurist! and nnobjeolionuole men cs ' Judge Seymour and Judge Waldo, quito conclusively disproves the claim that with what are culled "moderute men'' on the war question for their candidates the Democracy would secure any considerable portion of the Republican rotn. If the spotless integrity and deservedly high character of two such men as Judge Waldo and Juttge Seymour could not avail to save them (loin the relentless partisan proscription of abolitionism, nor tho Bench from being transformed into a partisan tribtlnal, whal could be expected of any man, in any posi tion ? Least of all could there be a reason able hope of electing a Democrat in Iowa merely un (ha strength tit his "war" princi ples. Such a position hurls, not lidos him. even with his own parly. And as for abolition ism, tl tights no more fiercely a Vallandigham in Ohio than il does a Seymour in New York. Indeed, th latter gentleman has been quite as bitterly and nniusllv assailed bv these Jacobins aa ever Vallandigham was. It shows luat it is a great mistake for Democrats to imagine that they can placate the howling fiend, abolitionism, or gain even a dearly purchased ephemeral success, br cutting nn distinctive "war" men for their candidates. The Democracy have ever etood on principle, and they can least afford now, of all times, to make any concessions to their opponents, which only have the effect to diminish their own vantage ground and make their defeat ut an tunes more complete, iliey can allord to bide their time. They have the nroud con sciousness of having alwaii been ihe friends of the Union and the upholder! of the Con stitution now, in this midnight tempest of Abolition tyranny and centralization, as in the days before tho outbreak of the war, when they were sneered at as "Union !avera" by those who at present arrogate h) themselves all the "loyalty" and all the friendship for the union, is it tor tne Liemoorate to try to com pete with iheir sectional opponents in bids for tho voles of such a party f To do so would be to abandon not only the hone, but the means, of restoring the Union' Hartford tunes, A French Fleet to be Sent to the Gulf. A Washington letter to the Philadelphia Ledger says: I learn from high authority that the petition of the i ronch residents of New Orleans to the Emperor, praying that a suitable fleet may be sent for their protection in the event of any sudden trouble, has been promptly und favor ably resOOntled to. and itlAt inmn hnlt' Hn-sen vessel-of-war will soon be wilhin easy call of tne rrenen uonsui in that city. It was charged by some'.hat the above peti tion was a mere plot to bring a heavy French naval force into the Gulf, and thus add to the ennncea of that still greater plot for the em- oronmeni oi tne two powers In annuity. From what 1 can learn, however, I am in dined to believe this charge to bo unfounded, as I have s;en mvsell letters from lome ol the first French citizens in New Orleans upon this very subject, wherein, not a thought of any auticulty with the United States was men tioned or iven vaguely hinted at. Stoop Low. Maine Rnd California votod for the administration, and forthwith the writ ol babuaa corpus was suspended throughout the United States. Ohio and Pennsylvania have Toted for the administration and wo predict the event will be lollowed by another turn in the Washing ton screw. . It becomes the people to bow their necka ami stoop low. rrovost marshals are glue fully preparing their haud culfs for new vio tims. Milwaukee Netet. tar A correspondent of a London paper writes: i liavn infil rAinrnai! fVim flA-ma af.ai month s knocking about. ) had glorious weath er, and saw all the liltla kimN mi Ki-aiilf.ri There is a good uueedole of one of them. H wauieu ins army lusmicteii in IU use ot the Armstrong gnu, so b got one, but was obliged o asa leave oi iue next King iu nave tne tar get put up in his kingdom, hia own not beinir big enough for the Armstrong range I Gulf. Groceries, &c. New Grocery Store. THU rtn Urftisziifxi1 won'U rn(f(inlly in own 4he ciUri-Mior bftU-aul Aurroitodiut( couuuy thni h 111 GiM (1 A. FAMILY GROCERY Od Pir-t ntfrt. of the Si? yni Hotfl, where It il pivpur.ij to fur mitt . Groceries of the Best (tuality, Runlwnr , fiiiwiirn, nnd nil nrlj u.-u-My kept in a flrrH cinsn Family t.rorrf , oil tit ift ht raWinMe iprtn. I'.etuM.'itU .111.1 tsinmntt my 'o.-k ll.re pur. uhAMiug tHcwlu'r j. . Iit.tr " AIASf(V)NWAY. E. (return. M. U'llaiKM. EDWARD O'BRlfC If A BKOTIIKU, WHOLCOALC GROCERS JaIsD IMMlTtll Of : i Brandies, V . Otni. Ciffnr, in! Irish ml H cote It Whuky, . . ' im nittki ff ' ' ' Doineitlc Wine ami Liquors. ' AIM, '-;' - . AgfntA forSate of Pure Boerbon Wh!l.y, No. ftul BroonJ sUeft, imytoD, Ohio,, . BKt j Imve mot rt'we(!illy to jv'iiimnt thftir Riin Utmmrm unci trt cornmwutf Kner:illy, thut they Iiktq etiLtireii inio pnr(nor-4hi, uti lnr Hi numn nnd ftyteoi K. O BK1KN A hiVJ 1 1J K, H, lor the ptirpune of uarrytii on the whole t' uroccrv, hUDrv C4irir Ami totwfo huftltuHti in Dayton, ohift, the late HLand of K.O'Hr en, No. 3 H booui ntrert, llrtTiug ample meani ( enable iHt pun-hnae gontU from the tH'ni hounff In New York, Hulttniore anil Philivlelphuh, nuil hnvinghtul ItfWn yoarH' expf-ner? in th trade, we holti otil the hftut in-liieemetiU to our oUicufinnerHHtH. -U othum whom) be kmj enough to iim'hftni from u. M "'hltlKN, Jnte of the firm of o'Rrien A Poo, Toledo, Ohio, will diiTtrto tiii tune and nitt-mintt lo Eieaeu MiO'.fiHh') inny onina to huy ut thin well nown Home, nod K. 011 ft I KM, will (rent (he vum itmiiUy h-tliir, il v'hie, th n ever iM'lore. Moth ol us ft-e very urrttfful Ut pnl (livors, and eirno'tly o. licit h Hhiire ol your fuiuro v,tritiiKo. , Aiir.Mawiin J B GU-tB Ult'i' CO.. , ' Whnlortiile (lealfrH In- " FORK.IGN AND DOMHS'nq ' GROCERIES & LIQUORS NOii. 7ft AHbTH HKFFKUHON STKKET, OPPOSITE MAKIiKr HOUoK. .... . au.tfc.jly Grocery and Provision Store. ANTHONY W()HI(, ' , No. IB MAHKKf STREKJ 1 . ,' V HAH Aood supply of all kinds of the bent Family oroomnea "d Provimuna. euoh nrt i flour: oat tnwil; corn meal; dried frtntu; hAiiiH; dried ba0 flh; Cimlm Her cheese; Holland hernna; tea; toU-ei sugar; nNpi e; nioven; toUinco; Hnun, At'. Al-"o, queeOHwar-; yellow ware; willow ba-4kUt, ami, In fact, every article n'oded by torrid, e. aulttd;tm NEW" GROCEliY ' 1 ' AND ' 1 PROVISION STORE. MU. 197 FIFTH STBKF.T, IlIOKKY'S BLOCK. STOCK NKVV AND , FHESH. COUNTRY produce taken in ftzt-tiaDe ibrOrooerins or CASH. .,, . j, . . , oCJ(lllll.Hi,inv jiiin iiinivr.lv, Aguni, By the Way, Have You, Heard xne jitews i J. A. MINICK. KA8 roeeiveti hie? new Sprinif Htock, larjfe, well-xe-tected and of the best quality. Urn. A. called and gotone dollar's worth of 11 TWICLVK OBN f 8U0AR, AT IIINKJ&'R.1 Theniceat kind ,7 Mr. B.got one ibllar'n worth of the nif out ktud rOUKTEBN OKNT BUQAH, AT MiNlClt'ii . Mra. O. sot one tiotlar' worth of Uia choifierit mini- ily of , ; . H1XTKEN CKNT HUG AH, AC MINIOK'H. Mr. B. nays that he Rot the boat qiiajity of green ' RIU UOKKEK AT J. A. MIHIOK'B, That he ever drank, aud Mra. U, aa he got the fin eat of ORSIN TIA AT J. A. MINICK'H. While erery body ealht kIh ome of that excellent KXOKLSIOR BYRIU', AT J. A. MlNlUK.' , Mr. M. em he pttrfhaed a half barrel of -.. v-. 'I , WHITE Vltill AT J. A MINSK'S, Decidedly the te4t he ever uoI ; white the supply o tsO. 1 MACKKKCIj, AT J. A. MINICK'3, Both lor viae and aualitv. uaattot be uxrellud in thin or any oOior market. He invitee all to call at his esh'.bh.ihment and in. peot hie etock of CHO10B ItRIKP FRUIT. . COKKEBa AND TKAH, " . HUGAR i)V Al.f, KINDH, And the 1 Artier-1 and beet variet of Orvweri to bo tn tlie city. Ill l&rKeutaMithmontifi ou its Corner of Market nd Jfferien Mt. Restaurants, &c. j UNION riALOOK B.ckel's Bulldlus;, No, 74 Jeirrson st. '"' hl::l4'": (ili'lil;,, ,1- kMh ,1s TWO JSKVT IIILMiltl) TAHLI Of the be.t mako, no rttaly (Vr litn. WINJC.-), Motions, ALK, LKR I1EKR AND IATAHI.K8, AOiHIKIUsa TO OKIiKU. ALSO: kX( KLIiK.M ; FUKS1L OVSTKHS. Outomors are reiiiiertriillyiuvite't. , aiiat VK.r.1. I.ANliK. Cooper House Saloon. (aa en-eel, oiio.Ue the market llou.e, J. V. NAIJRHTH. .'. ' THIS HHtooliliit!ieniiiitlntlieilty. (lyrni. quail, wild duck, TeaiMni, anil alt Um.U of ganie and ttnh in thir aeaMim. Meal. l nil li,,ur.. ' The bar ih .unfilled with tluttliit,taiid nio.t eholi-e minora, i ne lai.t oranils ot tig-ir. and lobiwvoa al wuya ou hand. i Uymr by ttie en and half rari: " '" ' selHiWm - JOll.f UKKC1NAUKL Yrt'ULD renaeotAilly Infcrni ln milneroin frlenda VI ana cii.iuinorHlliul lie nan uiin-luiHed the Eating Saloon aijd Ilestaurant formerly owned hy Mr. V. Fnen, noutheiirtt rnrtinr of fifth aud ljutllow, where he will le tvble at all tiuuie tu aumiiy iiihui wuri too imou ina iimrtietM allord. oVtiTBHH served up m th bet maauer, and on avia.f. Uf I ' i.. V"ii-- ';t.4' ;v Restaurants, &c. Paper Hangings, &c. CAMAKlif M AM'FACIl Kl.VtJ to M IMS y, MA MUKaCTUREIMs AMI IlEAI.F.RS IN " , ' PAPER 'HANGINGS - '! Il .. ' ' AMI -" " ' I 'l.l',;-:.' ; VVI N DO W S HADES, t7, Weet K.urlli nmt, Clnelnuetl - OtJB stock or Po(.r lliuiKinB., Ourtain renera.and Trunnpurcnt Wnutow hlmili-n llm urJ,.n mr otlerert lowcslinl'iiyiiiii. In our remit ili-iwiineiit we htive, in mliliiion In onr lur" etoi-k ol ;.,U , ,i lleoomive 1'nuorii, all Mm,. BEST THAT T!IK i Kastern or European Markets AlTord. The nnral.l .tlAnllnb Ar rd.,i... . , ..' , iiiiwiiuini; 10 ornfl- m-ot tlinr iliewniK rooine, lu,t,.ir, lii,iric, hull.. iil.I .tiiliiig rooms in cnllml to thi-pe tiemilifiil (looil. wliti-li we are i, (Turing al Invr prii'p.. All Kinds Of Store, unit other Shade.. Made to Order. ftAMARfJfJ MANtlFArTtTTttUn CdMPANV, n ., 7 Weet fourth iraet, Otwnnmti, hm. H. II Bum.... . ni,ii v Millinery. TO MILLIAEES & MEKCIIAm DEVOl' fe CO.. 3 A 84 PJCAUL ST., WIlOLKMALki ' I . .... , , , . . Millinery tioadi Cloak Ab Piiawls. Hi Mr (war at Vm ion yy nownreiraredtoorterfor yoiirinsp ction, rhildren'sHtraw, iiir,pluh and felt HATS AND BONNETS, RIRRDVil rinnrnu vpi.ni.no Laces,IIead Presses KcIHngs &e 1 " Tuollidina; erery deioriptioo of MIlLIJIEBy O O O S. rt.,-..lttil-.. . , . vui im inuBB ior HianuiHciiiring Cloaks.Sacoues.Mantilas imiTHifMwait,rie, arenm h thnt wei-an Biinnlv IllHlll IMMriAllUa Umi m.: ..... .1 'I itook f hi eirtewiit-re. our FA Xi Zj B Tl aw l r tiompriHeall the n deities in both foreign and domen- Our buyer ikjiu! eonnUntlyfn iTow York, we Mill offer nit HrMtita it, ahf I in. .1 l,,....,.,! . . . . (.'aii ' "r"- "i"' i irn;tn iur "A cnll, before purchnfing elwewhore, will rexult to your aovtvnlHxo. i.epecuuny, a J PRVOU A GO,, eU .lnnd 85 Pearl Htreet, Oi ti.-intisti. Business Directory. OHIO STATE (JAlErrEEIl -,i ,11.. i'i' . .'. ..(, , AND ., , , BUSINESS DIRECTORY FOH 1S03 AND 1B(M, (ONTAININQ namee of hiiAneHH men throiiirhont J thoHtateol Uhio, and eumplel nhipoiiitf ducc iM.rih tu evry town, city and yiIIhkb In (he riuie of Ohio. HuhM-ription price ff.1 Ml. AdvertiH.iiu.nli til;n nt loa- rtn.- AddreNe IIhwam A Ki'dlinl.l. imh. ATtApuhit, nr ti. Meiidiuhrtll, L'lurtiinaU. oui'i'il'Jw Pensions. Attorney and Counselor at Law AND SOMCITOU FOH CLAIMS, WASHINGTON CITY, I). 0., Will tive prompt attention to apiIia(ionH for AKKEARA OK PAY, Bf t'NTIKS. FENblONS, Anil nil other Claims before the Ix: cm tire Depart iiiMitN and in the Uourl nf ClnimN, Ktrto. Huum, II. M. Hn-e; M. H. I.iifha-r; m. H. WilkinwiO. VnittdFifltf Henidor: J. H hliu-k: k. M. Stuni.in, Hinr-tAiy of Wr; Wi limn Kello, K hnyh-r t'olfitx, P. It. Fr-nke, Mi-mberH of (JonronH; Colomd U. W. Kw.n, of Indiana, nnd other. 1 ue uii.if rttjoeo (CMriiH to miorm per on Iirvihk ilorjAndrt eifAnirt tee Uoveiament of tlie ( niifd mm.- that he itt pi-partd Ut proHM-nte th. ir I'laniir. wilh iironipineNA aii't on rfAHoiniOle terniH. Hltt yrw" u-mI kii(mlcili(B ol all the dtiiuln of Ihe unlit try h r i-e of Ihe Unlu d Hiatcti, xivcM hitn grnt IMIdieii lor lh t-peedy adjiif-tiiu-n' und eolk-ction of every deitcriptiou of juihUry ulimn. All nerene wtio aiUeivd the militnrv RrvicA after Maivh 1, Uul, aud are disabled by Houuda or dihCKHe Ait tiiitJllffi to -r iiHiona. Wi.lnwtt of HuIJicru who are killed, or die Irpfo a nr fler t-hfir dmonaru, lruft wtriindt taceived, or din oHne ooiuruutid wlnua iu Hei vice, are entitled to pen ftiona. Il no a ulow. theu the chlidreu. nnJr aJxteen vcarM of Ae, rf entitled w p-nion t. " It no w id.iw uor I'lul'livn, tljtn (heinolher.if wholly or in purtd'entii'itliili dciji'f vfd Jor mipporl If no mother, then ih MiftcrH of det'eHNf'd, und-r nixteiii year of ae. if wholly er in pari depi iidt- ut on deeeawed fur support. ( Koun 1 i nr. ' -1 A (I eulirtted ne who erve two yean are entitled to hottiHY, - - . All wh ere diHoheixril, by rent-on of wouiula re f.eivMj ih battle, are ent.iled to bounty. HoiititieH und arrrarrt of imy due deeaHod eolilur4 art- paid aa fullo1: rirrit, Iphie widow; vecund, il uu H he died unmarried: firnt,' to fathf-r; epond, it no fther. to m other; third, it io father nor mother, thm lo bin krtthert ad alotera. A rrt arn of tty fznt n ij Ihe hflra. slUKTHK 1. M. CAUTY. JOIIW H.HTOI'I'ELMAN, n.t Dayton, Montgom ery county. Ohm. ia my authorixftd AHPtKMalf. Aui-li- oahmi prnp nred aud forrdd by hi no, will ntfive ua.inn.1 Ktluatltiin. . . I ...1 .itt Pensions. Hotels. UNITED STATES HOTEL BEACH UTREK'P. BOSTON. (Uireolly oppoatte thohoaton aud Wort-eater Ktulrond THE uotlerwiineil. who haa Uen connected with the Aiueri'-nn House, in Ihia oily, .or wvr tune ye aim, :fi leocdtNie wellkowii and roimlar Hotel for u lei m of yeura, and ple.lu' hhn elf hi Iuh Irifiida and the ptiklie lo tie hia llii.ol ellnrta to m-lain tpt rep ipalion of Ihe IliM t FA hi A I kH JluTKJaa a prat elaHa hoitae Ihe pui.jiit may rly upon bud no:, id thikj Uotte,atl ijte applnuH.-ea uiid L-oiilbrlH pf a jUttl- UlAMH llultil. Pne, aa tteretufoie. Two Dollars pardaf. iH:4diui HANK M. KA'IT.