4
LOIISVILLE DAILY PRESS. VOL. L fCr LOUISVILLE, KY.. FRIDAY MORNING, MARCH 10, 1866. NO. 273 CALYEKT, CIVLLL & CO PUBLISHERS. -PRESS BUI DAILY UNION PRESS. , per year,f 10 00 t> incnlhs, 5 00 » 3 8 00 1 " 100 to the Carrier— 25c. HOSPITAL DIRECTORY. Medical Department or toe West HKAU-QCAKTKRb <*rtallisru-d by order of the Secre- tory of War). LOUISVILLE. KY. This Department embraces all Kfat«e. North an<l Sooth, whi<h l... w«-t o! th. Allegheny Mountains, including the follow-in* Military taHWW x^ _ . . ... inientoi tho Northwest; Northern Department Departments of Binaouri. Kansas, and thuae composing :U r..:.;.,> Pivi-i.-n <•: :li Mississirpi. . _ .. r, ,. K C W<>.«1. Assistant Snrgron General, United Statu \roiy. in charee. <)hi-l of htaff—Surgeon Joseph R. Brown. E S- A. As-H^ts--As*istatit Surgaou C. O Oral r S. A.; Vasistant Sureeon K. L Town, U. 8. A. Offices- Stiith<a-t corn -r Tu'nl atd Ureas, opposite taa 1V.-1 l»!li< ' ecrsville, Kr. insi^s-iors, D. B. A.— Ll-nt»nant Colom-ls B. H. Utvlid^e. Lours ilumphreyH, and N. S. T. wnehend. Sta- tion—:wht a not ..u iifpectinc dut> ), Lent.Tille. v •! i.l l'"M \ i.l'.s. \ -M::....:. I> L. Matrudcr. K.I > oCie- uortiisiia Main strict, between Kir.t and ^iuM". o;ii-rt. X".rc-on United Stat-* V. lunteen,, Su- t and M- di. :l Dir.i-tur of I nit-d State. Army Ky.,nud Jem.a..nvill-, weei fourth and r iltu. AGRICULTURAL.^ PITKIN, WIARD & CO. SOUTHWESTERN SEED IH MICILTIIL. Warelioiiso, 311 Main St., Louisville, Ky To «'t»H K IMIIMPWirW th- :-%P- r should 1* addrsmed t: Tt. Bnitor of the MM P«M. l«-l*TUIa. *J." Oare aboard bo taken to write on onlj one mae oi a* pip- r ohxI. Ho notice will be taken of Anoiiytc-ma come Whatever w in*- "ded f"r iiisert.on must b-- >..ril. torpni :icatior..b-!t»* We cannot undertake to return row:tul ,ertUe»ent. Id MM Union Preaa. Ten lin~s or leae, *t ceuta. Largor adTtrtiaenieuU In Dallr Pr*na. COMMISSION MERCHANTS. J. C. BODGEES & CO., OfUn i - U. ff* A. taeaSSWl Hospital. (W,n„ r ol Itronk aa.1 Unsadway. In charge of Wm. Clendeuiii, United State* Volunteer*. Ill own U. S. A. RhhiI llaaallal. Tlii'd -•! :. thr. < mil.* lr"in tti»- eitr. In charge of A--..-! •!.! -.r.-.i, It. K. try 1'uit-i Statee Array. < riit. nden V. s. A. fienernl llaapllal. Oorrvr rrftfenth and Broadway. In charge of Surgeon B. B. Taylor, United States Voluuteert. OtB| I •< *. BMMl Honpltal. Sixth -tr.-t. |.-tw<- n Walnut arid Chestnut. In charge r,f -urstou »ran.l«Ur<H.-n.-. luit.-d States Volunteer.. h I'. ««. .». fJrnerul Iloapitnl. 2. nm«ll-P"X Bran-lil. m-asts). Oa the fcV i 7 m A m?hVa Til iB mm. v** mum ** inini. Kocnd: i > U. & A. (•rnrml lloxpltal. <"«rner of Kifteenth an4 Main strt-eU. In . harije ol Mirtreou K. K. I'lu lra. United State Volunteer*. -. « kak U. >. A. OaaaMMBl HoHpitnl. <.,,,„ r of Fifte-nth and Braa.'wwy. Inehargeof Sur- pasa J. H. Brava, United State* V. lunUeri. aumiW V. - A. Ul Mi aJ HoHpilnl. Baal ot RHrtft MbbA In ehiirge of BurK-on Beiy. Met luer. Utit.-d State. \ olunte. r.. Tiaa-fer U. & A. tien.rnl 1 1 <»» |>l I ti I Broadway, mar the Ka<hville Depot. In ch rge of Surge n J. B. ilcLlurg, United SUte« Voluuteera. WI INVITE THE ATTENTION OK PEBS0f>S wishing to purchase Seeds & Implements. To our stick, which is one of the largest which can b< I .:. 1 in the South. We have been engaged iu tin* buaiues* iu Louisville for 12 year*, and we b.'lieve that w. fully un l< 'Htaiid th want* f the F.anter. We are will- inn to m 11 f.eneral Utt§MtU viile, lud. COMMISSION fYlERCH&NTS, PRODUCE. PROVISIONS HITTER, CHEEbE EGOS FKUITS. MtaMM D. Ik A. <;onrrrJ Iloapltal. Oae mile east of the city. In charge of Surgeon M. Uo:d*tuith. l'u;trd Stales Voluutecis. 3m Molt U. . A. <;rt:; rnl llo^pltaL One mil* bbsJ of th? city. In charge of Suigoou II. I'. Stearue, U?ii St ;ti. Volunteers. No. D. A. bvMbbWbJ HoH^ltal. N< ar Bailmad Depot. In charge of Assist .lit Surgeon A. U. l're-,1 .tt, United >t.»t. •« Volm. t<«rs. Grass Seeds. 1,000 Bush. Red Clover Seed; 1,000 Bush. Timothy Seed; 2,000 Bush. Blue Grass Seed; 1,000 Bush. Orchard Grass Seed 1,000 Bush. Red Top Seed; 500 Bush. Millet Seed; 600 Bush. Hungarian Seed; Field Seeds. 1,000 Bush. Spring Barley, Seed; 300 Bush. Spring Wheat, Seed, 500 Bush. Hemp Seed; 500 Bush. Top Onion Sets. Ioj for Garden Strre-t. bM. MMbJ ami Third. L<H IS V1L.LK, KY. Krlrr » » rr m I «« I a tm .1 B SMi : ii. V i- I i Md. M » o*id lit li J du I . .-n>. fcxaiiiuiiiiK I'm.ok. A. H. & W. 0. GARDNER, WHOLESALE GROCERS Geueral Hosjvltsis, New Albany. liiiliaiia. Medical Director ol North, rn Department in charge i.l ra! !! -| Ul "t v - «• A!;..i.>: « hariesS.T.ipler.S..tp.«n, U.6.V. UXoe. Cincinnati, UMa. S.iirf.-.ii T!: r ? U. V., Su^ rintendout ol dospilat*. i;tlne, DePaw Hou e. Hospital Nc. 4, upper comer Ninth and Main; S. J. Al 'saudcr. A A Surgeou U S A in charte. No .'i IV.iendj, Northaest corner Alain and Lufayette. W. A. Cla»p, AA Surg.-r.n U S A in . harge. -t, betwe. u u, per Sixth and Seventh; K We have nsXf In Store a frill stock of KB SEEDS, nhich wu » arrant true to name. Seetls. UAitbt; u i A in c »N >iEI!( HA\TS i st., bet.4lhat.d sth.l door a^ ore Citizen' B'k, LOUISYILLK, KY. ja*' ^m J.fv. r. BILL. WOODRUFF & CO., AND IUCIA1T8, baccc ines, Liquors & Cigars, '.o. 317 Main -t., hct. ihirdand fourth, Ik L.U->VILLE. KT. A A . M.uu -tr. :. I. iw.ei! IV..! I urgeon U S A iu charge Kloitiug IloF.p;tal "Ohio" iColond vac I,.,nth street; J A UHiriaBa, OtwtTAX CHAPLAINS. So.snr.d •Vide.-' mt. W. V harge. laud Slate; A.8.1 lying at tho foot o' A A Surgeou USA lay at* AM. So*. D and * No.'.. K.v. E. J audg,B^T. a.s. rottar. R. I. Pi..d>; sr.;vitw Tn«adey .t S P M. arc. DRY COOD3. JAMES S, No. 628, MAIN KTKEET, Nearly cp;:usite L.ouIsvil!e Hotel, LOUISVILLE, KY. CE —ROBKKT KI."VI». K> ;.. i«admitt.-.la part u, t in our hou.- Iroia tuii, date. The style wiU U*a» janf'dJto' MHI laVMW MITCHELL & ARMSTRONG, n.nd Co Wl Main street, bet. Set onrt ami Third, MIUISVILLE, KT, nMUBH in "act. Baron |ard.Ki.»i:r. Ac Ae -r,?-; J 9 toi ih- «.a ••! Ale. .ho'., cologne Kfti its. Bour: on and Raw Whwkiea. ate.. Ac. J*"' Aim DORN, BARKHOUSE & CO. Wholesale Dealer in Hosiery, Mcersfhauin Pipes, Q loves, Imitation do Shirks linlia Rubber do Drawers, Brier Root do iuspenders, Wood do Handkerchief's, I'oeket-Books, Acck-Ties, Pockct-Miirors, j Scarfs, .lewelry, Coruls, Towels. Brushe?, Soaps, Buttons, Pomades, Threads, Perfumery, Ladies' Belts, Travelling Bags, Belt Buckles, \ lulms, Belt Ribbons, Paper, Velvet Ribbons, Envelopes, Silk, Worsted, and Pencils, Cotton Braid-, Pens, &c: AVERY CAST IRON PLOW which has a •» Mar rapalatial in th- South than «ny P!c v iiianulactiired iu this country. We keep a lull stock ( tlieur and their i xtra |«.i..t-. and csKtines iu store, w we are seUiac at I inauiifiiciurers' prtaaa. a.er- aaats will nnd it to their latarsal to rail and see as. We La\e always iu store a large atock of Hurkeye Reapers and Mowers, Separators, Horse stakes, l a ne Mills and evaporators, I'Juws, Cultivators, Cutting Boxes, Com Shellers, ike., .vc which we are M-lling low for cash. •>*J"Uur Annual Aliininai, <i v.ng a descrii tion olS-t'-'r- and liupleiuentH, Bill be read} lor delivery early in I ruary. PITKIN, WIARD & CO., ialfid*»tf 42C Main Street WmWmlM. By.. GENT- ' * Ml .. .. trsnds of flTlg T.-fc*et- A RaVitd BourU* WLisir; tuo ijr Oaarysi " > y S'^rklii4»«-*«a»ba v, me,. ». *U J. M. DAVIS k CO., Commission Merchants And Wholes Je Dealt- r. in I Mm MQBHl UD UOMESTiC LIQl'GEr uwnmn »vy. GEO. W. WICIB, Cce.coewor tt Mock, IMMMM TOBACCO AGENT Foreign *Sc Domestic NOTIONS Ul I AMI (iOOD.S in C.reat Variety. Wc arc constantly rec-iving Mew Goods adapted k the wants of the trade, which will be sol J low for i COUNT rlY and CITY MKBCIiANTS m OIL WELL MACHINERY. OIL WELL TOOLS & MACHINERY. I -*M MANUKACTUHINC AND KKKP CONSTAST- Portable and Stationery Steam Engines, Ka. nala at., beu Th!r<2 Fauth, LOUIoVILLB. KY. -Agent t-r th- sale of SUi.vlUe. Ky YABNS. TWP.E, SC. OOROB . . utl Tbe Election of Abraham Lin coin. f I," «r.1 i to prov. mr fafth l y my deeds, and brdng fulh > r.,nviu.*d ii w, that the An^riean people w: 1 1 have tL ju'.H-t t it.'eif lor at.oth-r tour yi »r« to the rule of the "tj rant aud n-nrp-T," and that in that eru-nrem y, gold and Dry Goods, Cloaks, Mantillas, Mb Dress Uouda, Bouueta, Hate, Shawle, Domostios. class Dry Good, ryboje irom the highest to the lowest to pi<cb in. h raa waal Bargalai call at No. 42V. south rtdr Market I ^!?^ t !.. , l ourt:, * n<! mUa " trcit». »cd whal|eHmeai A^d ev. rylhin? else nMially kept ii. _ !!.'!- : t,uch ti«urea as will justil) \ hat i »-ay. dtt AND Other Machinery Used in Boring for Oil and Salt. mhl illy JULIUS ItARHAItOlTX, Hydraulic Kt under, and Machine Shop. LOUISVILLE. KY. abkeb: cooper, COMMISSION MERCHANT Butler, Cheese tad **eeieiu Produce, Ka. 314, HMhaj becw^ea TMra a-j.i Foarth ata reatherc, L%rd, Wtlu Beanr;, DrWc sud B««7aa. ' goons in toe «ij t'orapt!* niied. C ASH paid j rrniU, Oi a»a ' rj. i? ^nle^^^ PACKING BOXLS. WATCHES AND JEWELRY. J. J. HIRSCHBUHL, W a toll m aldLor J E W E L L E Pi OIL WELL MACHINERY. 1 N CONMUi'TluN I Rtationery engine WITH OUB STFAMBHAT ANP building, we am p'l pared to hnild POUT lHI.K EXUINlCSandOIL W KKL TOOLS of double rctinetl Material at the shortest notice. Jack Screws, Tobacco Machine!, anl Lay !*CaBaM MUNR0E & HATCH, (Successors to D. Ooodwillie A Go.) BOX MANUFACTORY, No. 233 Main Street, one door above Third, LOUISVILLE, KY. IUTAUY MOM M 8WGBBS, SABBKB, PlS- W'ashingtoii M always on hand. 1> V \ IKS A C.I.. Main and Ninth »t*. PAIBED. K^2ftd f FURNISH! ft C COODS. WM. W. MUUB. ti ^ . uooa. A. GUWDY. WM. W. MORRIS & CO. LOUISVILLE, KY. waoutf ut NOTIONS. ruA.HBiias st., YORK. HOLIDAY PRESENTS loxes, all sizes; Jewelry, of latest styles; Ladies' & Gent's Watches; Silver and Plated Ware; AT J. J. HIESCHBUHL'S JEWELRY STORE, lar. tf No. -l:t:t Main st.. oue door above Third. CAS FITTING. CARR & RYAN, PBACTICAL CLAIRVOYANCE. CLAIRVOYANCE. From Harper - Maga/.in. for March, nrlvliiff Home the t'uws Gut of the clover and blue-ev.d grass. He turned them into th- river-lane; On- after anoth-r he let lie-in pass. Then fastened the meadow bars again. Under the willows, and MM th. hill, He nil lentlv followed their sob-r pace; whistl- for MM* was —a ill. [ shadowed the auuuy lac.-. (Inly a bov! and his father had said He never could let his roaaaaat go; Two Hlrea ly were lying dead, Under the feet of the t ampling foe. But after the ev-ning work was done, And the fn>.„'s w. r- loud in the meadow-swamp. Over his shoulder he slung his gun And .tealthily followed the foot-path I Acrosj the rlov.-r and Ikfaaak th- wlieat. With resolute heart and purp>M- grim, Th..us:li i old wa- th- d. w on his harrying feat. And th- blind bats flitting st.iitl -d him. Thrice since then had the lane* bean whit". And the op hauls swiet wilh a pals hlllllBi, And BOW, when the row - rami- bach at niyht, Tlie feeble father drove them homo. For news had < le to the lonely farm That three were b ing where two had lain; Andtl Id man's tremulous ( arm Could never lean on « son's again. The summer day grew aaal and late, He went for the tows when the work wa. done: But down the lane, as he opened the Kate, He .aw ttMBBB t-oiuiug one l.> .n-. Briudle, Elsmv, Srsi kle and Pess, But who was It loll. .wing eMM baUad? Loosely swung iu the idle air The empty sleeve o! army bin-; And vara and pale, from UH eri«pin? hair, Ixs.ked out a fare that the hither knew. For southern prisons will sometimes rawn. And j laid their dead I ' unto lire again; •s with a. loud; golden glory at last may wane. And the day that comes with a . loud} dawn In I ' The gr-at tears sprang to their meeting Bfaaj For the heart must speak when the hps are dumb. And under the .ileal evening -kies Together they followed the catth home. Keuturky Hanks. ("HAl'TKIl B66, An Ai t lor the benelit of tho Incorporated Hanks of Issue of Kentucky. Sk tion L He it cnactfd by the Gounil A m -nihil/ n/ the (s>mm>muc<iltii uf KmUuekjf, That the authority of all incorporated banks of tin* OonUDOBWamltfa to hMiaa pg n>|.. i\ f their notes or bills to circulate a.s money or currency, shall cease, and lit- suspended for the period of three years from the time this act shall go into ell"e<:t as to each bank. Sh, '1. Any incorporated bank of this Commonwealth may purchase lto4 exoeed- iiijj; one-third of its capital stock at not less ihan its par value, nnd the stock so pur- chased shall be cancelled and deducted trofa its capital stock, and any su<-h li.tnk may also reduce the number or change the loca- tion of its branches. BBC. :i. The Incorporated llanksof Issueoi this ( 'oinmonw eallh are hereby authorized to deduct lrom the BMI of circulation appearing on their bookatO be outstanding, the estimated amount of notes lost and de- stroyed, but the amount so deducted shall not be cut tied to the account of profits, nor from itiiv part <>i ihe basis of dividends, but shall be'ean ied to the fund to cover losses, and there remain uutil the bank is wound up. Sr. u 4. Tliat the Banks ol Is.sue of this Commonwealth during the three vi ais named in section one, may deal in the bonds, securities and evident* of debt of the United States, ..r Of the Statu of Ken- tucky, ai:d may loan money or discount bills'on the pledge of their own slock, not, boererer, exceeding eighty per cent, of its par value. Skc. S. That when money shall be loaned or bills discounted by any bank htMOrpo- rated by this Commonwealth upon pledge of the bonds, s. < -unties, or evidences, of in- debtedness of the United States, or ol the Stale of Kentucky, or of any corporation, or of the stock of any corporation, the bank shall have the power of selling and If— (erring the title of the bonds, stocks, secu- rities and evidence* of indebtedness in such manner aud on such terms as :he parties may »gree in w riting, either at the time of making the pledge OX afterwards. BBC. 'i. That this act shall not go Into ef- fect as to any beak of issue ot this Com- monwealth until at a regular or called meeting of the Stockholders of such bank, the majority in interest of the Stockhold- ers present and voting shall, by resolution, accept the pr iv'siuns of this act as an amendment of their charter. The said resolution of acceptance shall be duly recorded on the nooks of the bank and a copy thereof OOrtifted by the President aud Cashier to the Governor, who shall issue his proclamation that the bank so accept- ing has oneand to be a bank of issue for said period of three \ears named iu section one, and thai, at the end of ninety days thereafter, its notes or bills shall no longer circulate as money or currency, which proclamation shall be published at the ex- pense of the bank for ten days in a news- paper published in l'rankfort (if there be one and in Louisville, and in one newspa- per if such there be) published in the town or city where the principal bank is situat- d. From aud alter tho end of ninety days next ensuing the publication of said proc- lamation the bank notes or bills of such bank, then outstanding, shall no longer circulate as money or currency for theafore- said period of three years, but be placed in all respects on the looting of promissory notes of individuals, and tho bank shall cease for the period of three years to be a bank of issue or circulation, and such bank is prohibitea from issuing any other bank Dates and from reissuing aOefa as have been or shall be redeemed, or from issuing any bill or instrument to circulate as mom v or currency during such period. Sue. 7. That during the three years nam- ed in the first section ol this act, the said banks of issue shall not be restricted as to ih. 'amount of their capital stock which they may invest in bills of exchange, but it is hereby declared that said banks shall charge no greater rate of interest or ex- change than that now allowed by law. Baa 8. This act shall take effect and after its passage. M R8 wooLroar, clairvoyant, southkabt corner Preston and Market etrs-ets insBefJtlwlly an uouncea to the Public that she may ha consulted at the above place for n'l future ev-uts. In cases of marriages trials, el- - 1... ».„.•..•• i.iio. t., .rAfJ^.v the result. STATIONERY, FURNISHING GOODS, SUTLERS' GOODS, AMD BREWERY. ALE AM) BEElt WM. P ADDON & SON, PLUMBERS C.fii. Mrfft., i"ntKvJ:"e, r Kr! ftfc WATKU IM i'KS, Hydrant^ Hose, Sath Tubs. Shower ttaths. Water Closeta, Wash Stands. Force and I jft - Mes I I .end, L.K.1 RT.fi Iron ly attooiW*- XX A IV D XXX. Pale, Amber, Stock and Kilter ALES AND BEER. HPECIAI. ATTENTION TO SHIPMENT;*. CITY BREWERY, SIXTH ST., WBST SIDE, BET. MAIN A WATER, J,OUISVILXE, KY'. marl-ly OZ\ HUD8 NKW OKLKAMS OLARiriKlJ MEW 8D- [Signed] U. Tavt.or, Speaker of the House of 1 Representatives. Richaju) t. Jacob, Speaker of the Senate. Feb. 22, 1865. Thos. B, Brami.ettk, Governor of Kentucky. COMMONW KAI/ril OK K KNT1< K Y, ) Uttice of Secretary of St-tte. j L K. L. Vanwinkle, Secretary of State and Keeper ot the Archieves thereof, do hereby certify that the foregoing copy of an act approved on tho 22d day of February, IStio, is a true and correct copy from the en- rolled bill on liie in this otlice. [a testimony whereof I have hereunto set [aSAU] my hand and affixed my ollicial seal. Done at Frankfort this 2d day of March, A. I). IMS, B. la Vanwinki.k, Secretary of State. By Jas. K. Paok, Assistant Secretary. There is a "magic*' man who calls him- self the "Great Corypkreus of Occult Art," opening the eyes of the Canadians. His agent announces that "his luminous lec- tures have,pnriphrastic ally speaking, placed perishable Peripneumouiacs on the plat- form of health, and his unapproachable Art has convulsed the cheeks of the sourest vinegar faces into paroxysms of cachinatiou and transformed the most irascible and Acetabuliferous anti-Theophilauthropist from the Apphelion to the Perhelion of joy and enjoyment." We are glad to hear it but not any for usif you please. Crusty prefers a music box in the house to a piano. He says it obviates the neces- sity of having a young music-master about; that it only plays when you set it agoing; and that when you want to stop it, you can throw your boot at it, which you couldn't do to your wife. The utterer of this slander should be chained to a lamp post and sub- twent^-four hours to the grinding The Rebel Prisoners on Johnson's Island. A correspondent of the Toledo Blade de- scribes the condition of the rebel prisoners on Johnson's Island : There were at this depot on the 10th of February three thousand prisoners. There have since been forwarded for exehsBge two hundred aud forty-four, aud others w ill continue to follow. They evince quite an interest to go, but it is apparent that they leave rather with a desire aud expectation of returning to their sulferiug families, than a lea to enter agaiu the Southern IPs I km or to espouse its cause. Many w ho cam. arrogant in their opinions aud confident of the ultimate success of the Conied. ra. . now unhesitatingly and openly avow in their opinion the South has exhausted her best energies, and that further contention against the Government is a mere mockery. Many of the— of high rank allirm their in- tention to quit the service at the very first favorable opportunity. Since the prisoners* of war were first sent to this post, April itlh, 1S02, the entire re- ceipts to the loth ii st. w ere seven thousand s"\en hundred and seventy one, of which number only two hundred and ten have died, or two and seven-tenths per cent, of the whole number. If that number two hundred and ten) had died last month out of the number then conlined here, it would have been only seven per cent., eighteen per cent, less than the percentage represent- ed to have died in the same mouths in pris- on at Salisbury, X. (.'. The rations allowed the prisoners lu re have been sixteen ounces of flour or soft bread, or ten ounces of hard bread in lieu thereof, or sixteen ounces of corn meal in lieu of flour or bread; fourteen ounces of salt or fresh beef, or ten ounces of ]>ork or baeoa in lieu thereof; beans or peas, twelve and a half pounds, or eight ounces of rice or hominy lo one hundred ralious; soap, two pounds; vinegar, two quarts; aud salt, two pounds to every one hundred rations; with occasionally some potatoes, onions, or other vegetables. The sick are allowed in addition to the abe*ve» when reeoaasaeadsd by tho surgeou in charge, sugar, colfee, and tea, at the rate of twelve pounds of sugar, live pounds of ground or seven pounds of green coffee, or one pound of lea to the one hundred rations. In addition to the above allowance, a great many of the prisoners have been in the constant receipt of eata- bles from home or friends, which, together with their allowed rations, if properly pre- pared, would Btske haeal ** tit lor the kinir." Some of the prisoners who came from Port Hudson, and who were during the siege compelled tosubsist on rats, have cultivati d such a taste for them that many have un- hesitatingly expressed a decided inclination for them as food, and, as strange a* it may appear to one who has never tasted them, many of the prisoners consider them prefer- able to squirrels, and they eat them with a.s much gusto as tho huntsman does the lus- cious quarters of nice gray squirrels. The Kuiperor Napoleon's Life of Julius ( 'a sar will soon be republished by the Har- pers. The following extract, comparing the Unmans with the English aristocracy, will be read with interest The state of Home at this time greatly resembles that of Kngland before the Iie- torm bill. For many centuries the Fnglish constitution had been vaunt' d as the pal- ladium of liberty, although in Kngland, as in Home, birth aud fortune were the only sources of honors and power. In both coun- tries an aristocracy was mistress of the elections, whether by means of bribery and Intrigne, or by rotten boroughs; and the aristocracv named the patricians in Borne, and in Eufdaad tilled the Parliament w ith members of the nobility, and no man was h citizen unless with a high property qualifi- cation. Nevertheless, although the people had no part iu the direction ot public atf.urs, it was not without reason that in ITS'.) the liberty of Kngland, which stood out in such bold relief from among the silent continent- al BtatOS, was greatly admired. The disin- terested observer will not impure whether the arena in which the great political qaes- lions are discussed be more or less vast, nor whether the actors are more or less numer- ous, he is only struck with the grandeur of the spectacle. We are, therefore, far from blaming the nobility either of Borne or Kngland for having maintained their pre- ponderance as long as they could by all the means which law or custom enabled them 10 use. Power lightly remained in the hands of the patricians as long as they were worthy of it, and it must be admitted that but lor their perseverance iu one line of policy, but for their large views, antl that severe and inflexible virtue which is the distinguished characteristic of an aristocra- cy, the work of Roman civiliz-itiou would not have been awomplished . New Maultestations. At the Cirque Napoleon, two brothers, possessing the lucky patronymic "lion- heur," magnetize each other w ith marvel- lous results. The Mgat OT saHM is, of course, perfect. A gorgeous D'Aubusson carpet is thrown over the raised platform, in the center of which are the usual gilt table and arm chair- The brothers appear, followed by a page, exquisitely costumed a AY- peaee, whose rosy cheeks betray her sex. The elder Bonheur niagneti/.' s the younger. Tho usual blind folding by layers of cot ton and countless silk handkerchiefs next takes place. The somnambulist then reads visit- ing cards in sealed envelopes, deciphers minute figures concealed beneath heaps of paper, and finally tells you the number en- graved on the inner case of your watch, of which you were probably in utter igaor- ance till informed thereof by this somnam- bulist's artistic performances. The elder Bonheur descends from his dais, and you Whisper the name of a well-known charac- ter in his ear; the somuainbulist instantly rises, walks straighway to a blackboard previously arranged by the fair pace, and his eyes undoubtedly bandaged, he sketch- es wilh white chalk a cleverly done outline Of the personage whose name youjiave given to the magnetizer. Victor Kmmaii- uel, Lamartine, Alexandre Dumas succes- sively appeared on the magic board, and were undoubtedly well done. Meycriiecr was Ihe only failure; but it will be remem- bered that his expression was extr. in. i v diflieult to seize at any time. There w as no visible communication between the mag- netizer and the somnambulist. [Paris 0 F FJ_C I AL. aVAWa" OK IU UNITED ST V i l> Passed at the Second gStgesa of the Thn 'i/- Eighth V'niyreaa. [Pi blii No. m.} An Act to prevent officers of the army and navy, and other persons engaged in th militaay and naval service of tho Uatted States, from interfering in elections in the States. lie it aaaetaM tm the Senate ami //..o s. lieprcxciitntt n .* ol the I 'n ited .\tntei of A mer- ica awCbayrcM mtmmbtedjpikmi it shall no. bo lawful for auy military or naval officer of the I'nited States, or other person engag- ed in the civil, military, or naval service ol the Oasted States, to order, bring, keep, or have under his authority or eoaAroi, eaj troops or armed men tit the place where anv general or special election is held in au'v State of the I uited States of America, mi- less it shall Ik? necessary to repel the armed enemies of the I uited States, or to keep the peaoe at the polls. And that it shall not be lawful for any oilicer of the army or aarj of the United States to prescribe or iix, ot attempt to praeailhs or fix, by proclama- tion, order, or otherwise, the qualifications Of voters in auy Stale of the I'nited State- of America, or in an\ manner to interlen with the freedom of "any election iuam State, or w ith the exerciio of the free righi of suifrage in any State of the I'nited State-. Any ollieer of the army or navy of the Ual ted States, or other person engaged in the civil, military, or naval service of the I'm ted States, who vioktt. s this section of thU act, shall, for every sm h otl'ence, be Uabli to indictment ?:s tot a misdemeanor, in ai, court of the I'nited States hariag Jarladie- tiou to hear, try, and determine cases misdemeanor, and on conviction thereo! shall pay a line not exceeding live thous.n..i dollars, and stiller imprisonment in ih penitentiary not less than three mouths, no more than live years, at the discretion ol Ihe court trying the sum"; and any i»erson c Da- vieted as aforesaid shall, moreover, he dis- qualified front holding any ollice of honor, profit, or trust, under the government ol the Halted Slates; l'n.vul,d. That not him. \ herein contained shall tie so construed as ».. prevent any ofacers, soldiers, sailor-, et marines, from exeteiotag the right of suf- frage in any election district to wkeehhi may belong, If other* is,, qualified, ac .. 1 ing to tho laws of the State in whicu he shall offer to vote. Sec. And be it further enacted, Thai any officer or petsoa in the milit u v or naval service of the United tflstrt, v. shall order or advise, or who shall direcUj or indirectly, by force, threat, BVaasee, in timation or otherwise, prevent or attempt to prevent any qaaUatod voter of any (Hal of the United Stales of America Iron. brSOtj exercising the right of sutlrage ai anv State of the I'nited States, or whti shall iu like manner comi>el, oi attempt U) compel, any ollieer of an election in auy such State to receive a vote from a pen not legally qualified to vote, or who shall iuqiose or attempt to impose any rul- - ot regulations for coudiuiing such rlecti i. different from those prescril>ed by law, interlere iu any manner with aavofAoei saitl election iu the discharge of ir .intic-, shall for any such often; e be liable to u- dictment as for a misdemeanor, iu anv court of the United States having jutiatlie- tion to hear, try, and determine eases if misdemeanor, and on convietion ih.-n..; shall pay a line of not exceeding live thou- saud dollars, and sutler imprisonment in the penitentiary not exceeding live veers, al the discretion of the court trying the I eat , and any person convicted as eJbresaid shall, moreover, be disqualified from bolt - ing any ollice of honor, profit, or tru-i, under the government of the United Bta -. Approved, February SB, is<;... fie M g aaefet t ey the Senate «;../ //„,/-. gayrMenfafistso/tee United HUH not , ica in Vowire.su ./.%.<#•„< V, .', That aat collector appointed under the eel enti- tled "An act to annex a part of the- st,,,,. New Jersey to the collection district ol S York, aud to appoint an assistant oil. - ,- to reside at Jersey City," approved Febru- ary twentv-one, eighteen hundred atal sixty-three, be, and he hereby i*. BUfta< •• - ized to enroll and license, according to th., laws of trie L niled States, all \essvis as> gai;eil in the casting trade and ti»bcri<-<«, owned in whole or in part by reside mi of the c,,;jnti. s of Hud-on and Bergen, belao State ot New Jersey; and ail sti. Ii enroll- ments aud li< enscs shall be as valid and ef- fectual as it ihe same had been effected in any other port of the United States; and thesaid assistant collector, in theenralla*aaat and licensing of \v»s. N, „hali be subject t<> the laws of the United States, all the paaaMaes and ivaaai posed upon collectors in like < Approved, February fft, BTA' 1st* isiJ,i;..,. .uroi »t Co., Vi., re- Dreams. Lucky Dreams.—To dream of nothing is lucky. To dream that you have written all Mr. Topper's works (and on waking to find you haven't) is very lucky. To dream, eafg to dream, that you've committed a capital crime, is lucky— for you. Unlucky Dreams.To dream that, iu a fearful shipwreck, you have b*»en hurleti upon a sharp rock, and to awake to a sense of your position on the floor, is unlucky. To dream of goblins, villiansof the deep- est dye, assassins, daggers, and such things as utterly destroy your rest, is decidedly un- lucky. To keep on dreaming and awaking five times in a night is unlucky. To dream that you are lighting for your life with wild bears, and to find yourself hitting your wife on the head with a bolster, is unlucky, very unlucky. To dream that you are making a long and powerful address to a jury and to deliver the same oratorically, is unlucky for any one who happens to be iu the same room trying to go to sh?*P ; The Folly of Mankind.A company opeued an otlice in < 'began Alley, during the South Sea mania, to receive subscrip- tions for raising a million, for a purpose to be known after the million was raised. The people floe 1 ed in aud paid live shil- lings on every til y pounds they subscribed. A large sum was thus collected, when an advertisement was published, announcing that the subscribers might have their de- posiLs without anv deduction, as the pro- ject of the directors was merely a trial to see how many fools they could make in one day. [PublicNo. .".7. 1 , An Ai r to increase the efficiency of lie Medical corps of the arm v. lie it enacted by the Senate aud House u- Itt fti e.sentatii'cii of the I 'uited Mmwt America i/i l'.in.//r.<.i aaMBMML That IkS medical di ecior of an army in ti e li al consisting oft wo or more army corps, sad the medical director of a military depart- meiit iu which there are l'nit»d Stat' s gen- eral hospitals containing four thousand boils or upwards, shall h ive the rank, | \ and emoluments of a colonel of cavalry; and the medical director of an army eorpa iu the held, or of a department iu which there are United Stales general h«»p;*. d.-. containing less than four thousand beds, shall have the rank, pay, and ceaotBBSeaai of a lieutenant colon, 1 of cavalry. But this increased rank and pay snail only conuu- ue to medical officers while discharging aaah apeeial duties; and the asatgaaseata from time to time to such duty shall be al least two-thirds of them made "from among the surgeons and assistant surgeons of vol- unteers. Approved, February m\ IMLV [Pcblic— No. :5».] An A»t to create the Kaslern Judicin District of the State of New York. lie it enacted by the Senate and Wmmt a Ileprcientattrcs of the United MafM I America in Cony rcs.s ay.semblcd, Tnat the counties of Kings, Queens, Suffolk at «'. Bichmond, in the State of New York, with the waters thereof, are hereby constituted separate judicial district of ihe tJaitfd States, to l>e sivled the eastern district e. New York. The President of the United States, by and with the advice and con-, o of the Senate, shall appoint a district judge for said district, who shall reside tie and who shall possess the same pow.-r- •::>. perform the same duties within said dis- trict which are now possessed and perform- ed by the district judge of ihe southern dis- trict of New York. The said judge shal also receive the same comj>eusation as is by law provided for the judge of said south- ern district. District aud circuit court - .. the trial of causes shall be held in the city of Brooklyn on the lirst Wednesday ol every month. The courts so to be held ual have the same jurisdiction as is now or m i\ hereafter be vested in other district as circuit courts of the United Btatea, Bach officers shall be appointed for said di.strt. I and court, and in the same manner an : with the same fees and emoluments M ft scribed by law for other districts and curls of the United states. Sv.r. '2. And be it further enacted. That the district court for the said eastern district shall have concurrent jurisdiction with the district court for the southern district ol New York over the waters within the coun- ties of New York, Kings, Queens, and Si.f folk, in the State of New York, and OTee all seizures and matters made or done in such waters; and all writs or other pro. . or orders issued out of either of said courts, or by any judge thereof, shall inn and be executed in anv part of said waters. Ifftar dad it it further enucteJ, That, in case of the inability on account of alakaess of thej dgeol thedistrict court of the I'nit- ed States for the southern district of New York, to hold any court therein, it shall be the duty of the judge of the said eastern district of New York to hold such court and do and perform all the acts and duties of the judge of said southern district withV out any additional compensation; and whenever, from pressure of public busi- ness or other cause, it shall be deemed de- sirable by the judge of said southern dis- trict of New York, that the judge of s.nd eastern district perform the duties of a judge in said southern district, an ordei may be entered to that effect in the records of said district court, and thereupon the judge of said eastern district shall be em- powered to do and perform, without addi- tional compensation, within said southern district of New York, and iu the district court thereof, all the acts and duties of th" district judge thereof. Approved, February ls*>5. [PublicNo. ^9.] An Act supplemental to an act entitled "An act to annex a part of the State ol New .Jersey to the collection district of New York, and to appoint an aseJetanl collector to reside at Jersey City," ap- nrnvpil Kehrn-in- "I lsot JIIUVITU l VUlllill^ -I, 1"S> >, —The —The horse railroads ot Boston 27,(HX),uon passenger* last j r ear. - It is computed that there are in $230,uu0,i no worth of I'nited Stales bonds." —The population of Worcester in l»-> was 21,".tw. Now they estimate it at over ".1,000. —t .old coinage at the Phih;delr.hia mint f..r January, jdsi,!**; silver, tfflffgf cop- per,*^,. Total. $mVmm -The entire popu'atiou of all Ihe States and Territories on the Pacific, lielouging to I ncie Sam, is »>7.>,IJW>. —There are 1,1S1,000 square miles of blank space round the north pole— o:i the maps. —There were 71>,0ulJ sick and wounded in all the military hospitals on the :ilst ol .Jan- uary. Hartford. Conn., has aVfjH dwelling haaaea, 5 IT stores, and a taxable valuation of |^o,403,478. —The Keokuk Constitution Insists over a h 1 slaughtered iu that city that MglhtV and s..ld lor |tSfi " The firm of Uawrei lumber merchants of Ihu pari an income o;rfJMgyHft 'Ihe Knglish colonial possessions have a Imputation of l.VJ,77|,id:i; and a public debt of 1 S2,7U0,.jOtj pounds. —The Michigan Central road earned tin- second week in Februarv, ls«>l, jutt, f ;yn ; iu M . >..7,o!M; aaesaaas, ?.;;»oi. It is estimated that the amended reve- nue act will add £:.o, ooO.ouu to 57i,in^,iHNi to '.he treasury receipts of the eoi.ntry. —The army hospitals in Philadelphia have 18,7 k) t>eds. l„as>t year .Mi.ooo pat awn treated, and the Luuiis-r remaii >u the 'list of December was U, 117. The oldest Journal in the world is pub- li hed in Pekin. It is printed on shk, and has appeared every week for more than a housand years. f he population of Wisconsin cii,. s, a. or ling to the new state census, is as lol- l.ws; Milwaukee, 44,700; Maiiisou, M-7J: Con-du-Lac, »^ts; gksekee, 7.-1-. The 'd "> national banks now authoriz* d have an aggi egate capital of gnw,041,72U Their euneaey amounts to so, of »-hich ?: '.,112,t>o were issued last week. in Sicily there are pi; priu.-vs, is d tikis, 141 marquise*. 2*jm asoari aad l»^iti .mna. No one ever attempted to cunt he number of barons, counts and r lers. 11 The Japanese year is divided kski I.:tuir -onths, the first day of rajOU aBah bekeg i ba; of the new moon. Kvery fourth year as intercilary month comes'in to | i he balance of the It is esiinia'.ed that in the New and in Ihe < >!d World there are tgM Mas«>uic Li s, with a00,<KJ0 active memliersi. The :.:i:nl>er of non-active and those who have withdrawn is nearly 0,#00. The Boston imports ; ir the w< i k ending February loth, were |S£»,49«\ again-. >iss,- 138 faff th«> corresponding week iu fs.;i. The x.uorts, inc uding sp-cie, were >:';i',: ol, g tiust >:'0"»,lv>.". in Is.. |. Th" b ug. raiiv. -.y in :h world is the tiraud Trunk," 1. ;'>!"> .ne management, and ll he adned, earrylag cugo. —The P.ritish 1 i presentation by dies of rail uuiler o.v ;_n more are to road direct to Chi- rliament, as a general 'Kiii^hts. citizens, and ir^ess. s, " h.i< en lured exactly -ix hun- !.-cd vears. I; was summoned Ly Henry kIL, in l Ji->. —The population oi' Laadoa is 1^15,404, !.i\erpool 17fi, of Uaaehestet t«.7.7t^:, ••I Qlasgow 42.1.72 4 ;, of Btrininghani SJ7.H41, .»! Dublin 2M,80», of Leeds 221.0-.S, of fUiin- :..irg 174,iso, aud of Bristol 171.- : The State of Illinois h.ts se i: : ••» needs ;<> Ike fkdd, and c<M>k aaaatj , wkieh ..iclude- Chicago, furnished over twenty of laeea. a total of -.'ii.ib; men. A pvoad ss* onl for the county and the Si.ite. A Fr. ii' Ii working man's :.'.> costs him twoaud a half cent-; his dinner, including half a tattle of wine, ten a*att| nd his supper about one and a quarter ents. --The value of a tract of land on Oil reek, V.taaaga County, Pa., two miles in - width and twenty miles long, is estimated al two bundled and fifty millions ofdol.ars. I our ye. is ago this land was hardly worth live dollars i»er acre. Paris dines a* the rate of two millions of francs per day, k>0,000), including Ht ,C -> ram c',2oi»! for brandy aa l liejaeaa taken at dessert, and s.ooo francs C-J> lor tooth- picks. This would bring the dinner for each inhabitant of Paris to 1 franc, 20 cents, i Is.) per day. The London Morning Star says that while the Kuasian serfs before emancipa- tion were calculated to have consumed about eight- en'shillings' worth of eottoa goods per head, that amount has already risen to one pcund seven shilling per h. ad over the 22,WH>,000 of emancipated p. asan- try. —The Mill Biver Woollen Mi.l-. . S im- i'or.l, Connecticut, manufacture 1,000 yards of t.incy cassimeres, and use from 1,000 to 1,200 poitE'is of wool daily. They did busi- ness last year to the amount of ^.loO.onj, aud expect to "increase it to half a million this year. They employ 100 hands, and the monthly expenses are about 3-k>,e00. There are in Kurope forty-:hrt>e reign- ing sovereigns, not including lh.>».< w h > possess titles only. Of those forty-three, nine belong to the Roman « atholic »"eiigioii, Put one ol that number, Victor Bess is excoiiununicated; thirty-one are u t.m's, one is of the orthodox lireek c one a Mahometan, and the forty-thinl is t!le Pope. Df the twenty-live meailiers ol the Illi- nois Senate, not one is a native of that st.it,.. while live are natives of < >hio, ami two af Indiana. And yet Southern Illinois w. is considerably settled before the wilderness was fr. ken in t»hio. Of the eight \ -.r. members of the llouse. eleven are native that State, aud ten of Ohio. The Knglish House of Peers at pr. sen. consists, oi on- prince, tw.. r < three archbishops, twenty-four dukes, ti> r- tv-one marquises, one hundred and ni; v- eight earls, tbirty-oue viscounts, md hundreii and tilty-eight barons. .\s I •• Bishop of Bath and Wells sits also as 1! of Auckland, the total number of ^ rs i,

LOIISVILLE DAILY PRESS.LOIISVILLEDAILY PRESS. VOL.L fCr LOUISVILLE,KY..FRIDAYMORNING,MARCH 10,1866. NO.273 CALYEKT,CIVLLL&CO PUBLISHERS.-PRESSBUI DAILYUNIONPRESS. peryear,f1000 …

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Page 1: LOIISVILLE DAILY PRESS.LOIISVILLEDAILY PRESS. VOL.L fCr LOUISVILLE,KY..FRIDAYMORNING,MARCH 10,1866. NO.273 CALYEKT,CIVLLL&CO PUBLISHERS.-PRESSBUI DAILYUNIONPRESS. peryear,f1000 …

LOIISVILLE DAILY PRESS.VOL. L

fCr

LOUISVILLE, KY.. FRIDAY MORNING, MARCH 10, 1866. NO. 273

CALYEKT, CIVLLL & COPUBLISHERS.-PRESS BUI

DAILY UNION PRESS.

,per year,f10 00

t> incnlhs, 5 00

» 3 8 00

• 1 " 100

to the Carrier— 25c.

HOSPITAL DIRECTORY.

Medical Department or toe West

HKAU-QCAKTKRb <*rtallisru-d by order of the Secre-

tory of War). LOUISVILLE. KY.This Department embraces all Kfat«e. North an<l Sooth,

whi<h l... w«-t o! th. Allegheny Mountains, including the

follow-in* Military taHWW „ x^ _ . .

... inientoi tho Northwest; Northern DepartmentDepartments of Binaouri. Kansas, and thuae composing

:U r..:.;.,> Pivi-i.-n <•: :li Mississirpi.. _ ..

r, ,. K C W<>.«1. Assistant Snrgron General, United

Statu \roiy. in charee. <)hi-l of htaff—Surgeon Joseph

R. Brown. E S- A. As-H^ts--As*istatit Surgaou C. OOral r S. A.; Vasistant Sureeon K. L Town, U. 8. A.

Offices- Stiith<a-t corn -r Tu'nl atd Ureas, opposite taa

1V.-1 l»!li< ' ecrsville, Kr.insi^s-iors, D. B. A.— Ll-nt»nant Colom-ls B. H.

Utvlid^e. Lours ilumphreyH, and N. S. T. wnehend. Sta-

tion—:wht a not ..u iifpectinc dut> ), Lent.Tille.v •! i.l l'"M \ i.l'.s. \ -M::....:. I> L. Matrudcr.

K.I > oCie- uortiisiia Main strict, between Kir.t and

^iuM". o;ii-rt. X".rc-on United Stat-* V. lunteen,, Su-t and M- di. :l Dir.i-tur of I nit-d State. Army

Ky.,nud Jem.a..nvill-,weei fourth and r iltu.

AGRICULTURAL.^

PITKIN, WIARD & CO.

SOUTHWESTERN

SEED IH MICILTIIL.

Warelioiiso,311 Main St., Louisville, Ky

To «'t»H K IMIIMPWirWth- :-%P- r should 1* addrsmed t:

Tt. Bnitor of theMM P«M. l«-l*TUIa. *J."

Oare aboard bo taken to write on onlj one mae oi a*

pip- r ohxI.

Ho notice will be taken of Anoiiytc-ma come

Whatever w in*- "ded f"r iiisert.on must b--

>..ril. torpni :icatior..b-!t»*

We cannot undertake to return row:tul

,ertUe»ent. IdMM Union Preaa.

Ten lin~s or leae, *t ceuta. Largor adTtrtiaenieuU

In Dallr Pr*na.

COMMISSION MERCHANTS.J. C. BODGEES & CO.,

OfUn i - U. ff* A. taeaSSWl Hospital.

(W,n„ r ol Itronk aa.1 Unsadway. In charge of Wm.Clendeuiii, United State* Volunteer*.

Ill own U. S. A. RhhiI llaaallal.

Tlii'd -•! :. thr. < mil.* lr"in tti»- eitr. In charge of

A--..-! •!.! -.r.-.i, It. K. try 1'uit-i Statee Array.

< riit. nden V. s. A. fienernl llaapllal.

Oorrvr rrftfenth and Broadway. In charge of Surgeon

B. B. Taylor, United States Voluuteert.

OtB| I • •< *. BMMl Honpltal.

Sixth -tr.-t. |.-tw<- n Walnut arid Chestnut. In charge

r,f -urstou »ran.l«Ur<H.-n.-. luit.-d States Volunteer..

h I'. ««. .». fJrnerul Iloapitnl.

2. nm«ll-P"X Bran-lil. m-asts). Oa the

fcVi7mAm?hVaTiliBmm.v** mum** inini.

Kocnd: i > U. & A. (•rnrml lloxpltal.

<"«rner of Kifteenth an4 Main strt-eU. In . harije ol

Mirtreou K. K. I'lu lra. United State Volunteer*.

-. « kak U. >. A. OaaaMMBl HoHpitnl.

<.,,,„ r of Fifte-nth and Braa.'wwy. Inehargeof Sur-

pasa J. H. Brava, United State* V. lunUeri.

aumiW V. - A. UlMiaJ HoHpilnl.

Baal ot RHrtft MbbA In ehiirge of BurK-on Beiy.

Met luer. Utit.-d State. \ olunte. r..

Tiaa-fer U. & A. tien.rnl 1 1 <»» |>l I ti I

.

Broadway, mar the Ka<hville Depot. In ch rge of

Surge n J. B. ilcLlurg, United SUte« Voluuteera.

WI INVITE THE ATTENTION OK PEBS0f>Swishing to purchase

Seeds & Implements.To our stick, which is one of the largest which can b<

I .:. 1 in the South. We have been engaged iu tin*

buaiues* iu Louisville for 12 year*, and we b.'lieve that w.

fully un l< 'Htaiid th • want* i f the F.anter. We are will-

inn to m 11

f.eneral Utt§MtU i» viile, lud.

COMMISSION fYlERCH&NTS,

PRODUCE. PROVISIONS HITTER, CHEEbE EGOSFKUITS.

MtaMM D. Ik A. <;onrrrJ Iloapltal.

Oae mile east of the city. In charge of Surgeon M.Uo:d*tuith. l'u;trd Stales Voluutecis.

3m Molt U. . A. <;rt:; rnl llo^pltaLOne mil* bbsJ of th? city. In charge of Suigoou II. I'.

Stearue, U?ii St ;ti. Volunteers.

No. !« D. A. bvMbbWbJ HoH^ltal.N< ar Bailmad Depot. In charge of Assist .lit Surgeon

A. U. l're-,1 .tt, United >t.»t. •« Volm.t<«rs.

Grass Seeds.1,000 Bush. Red Clover Seed;

1,000 Bush. Timothy Seed;

2,000 Bush. Blue Grass Seed;

1,000 Bush. Orchard Grass Seed

1,000 Bush. Red Top Seed;

500 Bush. Millet Seed;

600 Bush. Hungarian Seed;

Field Seeds.1,000 Bush. Spring Barley,

Seed;

300 Bush. Spring Wheat,

Seed,

500 Bush. Hemp Seed;

500 Bush. Top Onion Sets.

Ioj

for

GardenStrre-t. bM. MMbJ ami Third.

L<H IS V1L.LK, KY.Krlrr » » |» r r m I « « I a tm

.1 B SMi : ii. V i- • I i Md.M » o*id

lit li J . du I . .-n>. fcxaiiiuiiiiK

I'm.ok.

A. H. & W. 0. GARDNER,

WHOLESALE GROCERS

Geueral Hosjvltsis, New Albany. liiiliaiia.

Medical Director ol North, rn Department in charge i.l

• ra! !! -| Ul • "tv

- «• A!;..i.>:« hariesS.T.ipler.S..tp.«n, U.6.V. UXoe. Cincinnati,

UMa.S.iirf.-.ii T!: r ? U. V., Su^ rintendout ol

dospilat*. i;tlne, DePaw Hou e.

Hospital Nc. 4, upper comer Ninth and Main; S. J. Al'saudcr. A A Surgeou U S A in charte.No .'i . IV.iendj, Northaest corner Alain and Lufayette.

W. A. Cla»p, A A Surg.-r.n U S A in . harge.-t, betwe. u u, per Sixth and Seventh; K

We have nsXf In Store a frill stock of KBSEEDS, nhich wu » arrant true to name.

Seetls.UAitbt;

u i A in c

»N >iEI!( HA\TS

i st., bet.4lhat.d sth.l door a^ ore Citizen' B'k,

LOUISYILLK, KY.ja*' ^m

J.fv. r. BILL.

WOODRUFF & CO.,

AND

IUCIA1T8,baccc

ines, Liquors & Cigars,'.o. 317 Main -t., hct. ihirdand fourth,

Ik L.U->VILLE. KT.

A A. M.uu -tr. :. I. iw.ei! IV..! I

urgeon U S A iu chargeKloitiug IloF.p;tal "Ohio" iColondvac I,.,nth street; J A UHiriaBa,

OtwtTAX CHAPLAINS.So.snr.d •Vide.-' mt. W. V

harge.laud Slate; A.8.1

lying at tho foot o'

A A Surgeou USA

lay at* AM.So*. D and *

No.'.. K.v. E. Jaudg,B^T. a.s. rottar.

R. I. Pi..d>; sr.;vitw Tn«adey .t S P M. arc.

DRY COOD3.

JAMES S,

No. 628, MAIN KTKEET,Nearly cp;:usite L.ouIsvil!e Hotel,

LOUISVILLE, KY.

CE —ROBKKT KI."VI». K> ;.. i«admitt.-.la part

u, t in our hou.- Iroia tuii, date. The style wiU U*a»

janf'dJto' MHI laVMW

MITCHELL & ARMSTRONG,n.nd Co

Wl Main street, bet. Set onrt ami Third,

MIUISVILLE, KT,nMUBH in "act. Baron |ard.Ki.»i:r. Ac Ae -r,?-;

J 9 toi ih- «.a ••! Ale. .ho'., cologne Kfti its. Bour: on and

Raw Whwkiea. ate.. Ac. J*"' Aim

DORN, BARKHOUSE & CO.

Wholesale Dealer inHosiery, Mcersfhauin Pipes,

Q loves, Imitation do

Shirks linlia Rubber do

Drawers, Brier Root do

iuspenders, Wood do

Handkerchief's, I'oeket-Books,

Acck-Ties, Pockct-Miirors,

j

Scarfs, .lewelry,

Coruls, Towels.

Brushe?, Soaps,

Buttons, Pomades,Threads, Perfumery,

Ladies' Belts, Travelling Bags,

Belt Buckles, \ lulms,

Belt Ribbons, Paper,

Velvet Ribbons, Envelopes,

Silk, Worsted, and Pencils,

Cotton Braid-, Pens, &c:

AVERY CAST IRON PLOWwhich has a •» Mar rapalatial in th- South than «ny P!c viiianulactiired iu this country. We keep a lull stock (

tlieur and their i xtra |«.i..t-. and csKtines iu store, wwe are seUiac at I inauiifiiciurers' prtaaa. a.er-aaats will nnd it to their latarsal to rail and see as.We La\e always iu store a large atock of

Hurkeye Reapers and Mowers,

Separators, Horse stakes,

l a ne Mills and evaporators,

I'Juws, Cultivators,

Cutting Boxes,

Com Shellers, ike., .vc

which we are M-lling low for cash.•>*J"Uur Annual Aliininai, <i v.ng a descrii tion olS-t'-'r-

and liupleiuentH, Bill be read} lor delivery early in I

ruary.

PITKIN, WIARD & CO.,ialfid*»tf

42C Main Street

,

WmWmlM. By..

GENT- ' * Ml .. .. trsnds of flTlg T.-fc*et-A RaVitd BourU* WLisir; tuo ijr Oaarysi " > yS'^rklii4»«-*«a»ba v, me,. ». *U

J. M. DAVIS k CO.,

Commission MerchantsAnd WholesJe Dealt- r. in

I Mm MQBHl UD UOMESTiC LIQl'GEr

uwnmn »vy.

GEO. W. WICIB,Cce.coewor tt Mock, IMMMM

TOBACCO AGENT

Foreign *Sc Domestic

NOTIONS Ul I AMI (iOOD.S

in C.reat Variety.

Wc arc constantly rec-iving Mew Goods adapted kthe wants of the trade, which will be solJ low for i

COUNTrlY and CITY MKBCIiANTS m

OIL WELL MACHINERY.

OIL WELL

TOOLS & MACHINERY.

I-*M MANUKACTUHINC AND KKKP CONSTAST-

Portable and Stationery Steam

Engines,

Ka. nala at., beu Th!r<2 Fauth,

LOUIoVILLB. KY.-Agent t-r th- sale of SUi.vlUe. Ky

YABNS. TWP.E, SC.OOROB. . utl

Tbe Election of Abraham Lincoin.

f I," «r.1 i to prov. mr fafth l y my deeds, and brdng fulh> r.,nviu.*d ii w, that the An^riean people w: 1 1 have tLju'.H-t t it.'eif lor at.oth-r tour yi »r« to the rule of the "tj •

rant aud n-nrp-T," and that in that eru-nrem y, gold and

Dry Goods, Cloaks, Mantillas,

Mb Dress Uouda, Bouueta, Hate, Shawle,

Domostios.class Dry Good,ryboje irom the

;highest to the lowest to pi<cb in.h raa waal Bargalai call at No. 42V. south rtdr Market

I ^!?^t!..,lourt:, * n<! mUa "trcit». »cd whal|eHmeai

A^d ev. rylhin? else nMially kept ii. _!!.'!- : t,uch ti«urea as will justil)

\ hat i »-ay.

! dtt

AND

Other Machinery Used in Boring

for Oil and Salt.

mhl illy

JULIUS ItARHAItOlTX,Hydraulic Kt under, and Machine Shop.

LOUISVILLE. KY.

abkeb: cooper,COMMISSION MERCHANTButler, Cheese tad **eeieiu Produce,

Ka. 314, HMhaj becw^ea TMra a-j.i Foarth ata

reatherc, L%rd, Wtlu Beanr;, DrWcsud B««7aa.' goons in toe «ij t'orapt!* niied.

C ASH paidj rrniU, Oia»a ' rj. i?^nle^^^

PACKING BOXLS.

WATCHES AND JEWELRY.

J. J. HIRSCHBUHL,W a tollm aldLor

J E W E L L E Pi

,

OIL WELLMACHINERY.1 N CONMUi'TluNI Rtationery engine

WITH OUB STFAMBHAT ANPI building, we am p'l pared to hnild

POUT lHI.K EXUINlCSandOIL W KKL TOOLS of doublerctinetl Material at the shortest notice. Jack Screws,Tobacco Machine!, anl Lay !*CaBaM

MUNR0E & HATCH,(Successors to D. Ooodwillie A Go.)

BOX MANUFACTORY,

No. 233 Main Street, one door above Third,

LOUISVILLE, KY.IUTAUY MOM M 8WGBBS, SABBKB, PlS-

W'ashingtoii

M always on hand.1> V \ IKS A C.I..

Main and Ninth »t*.

PAIBED.K^2ftd f

FURNISH! ft C COODS.WM. W. MUUB. ti ^ . uooa. A. GUWDY.

WM. W. MORRIS & CO.

LOUISVILLE, KY.waoutf ut

NOTIONS.

ruA.HBiias st.,

YORK.

HOLIDAY PRESENTS

!

loxes, all sizes;

Jewelry, of latest styles;

Ladies' & Gent's Watches;

Silver and Plated Ware;AT

J. J. HIESCHBUHL'SJEWELRY STORE,

lar. tf No. -l:t:t Main st.. oue door above Third.

CAS FITTING.

CARR & RYAN,PBACTICAL

CLAIRVOYANCE.

CLAIRVOYANCE.

From Harper - Maga/.in. for March,

nrlvliiff Home the t'uws

Gut of the clover and blue-ev.d grass.He turned them into th- river-lane;

On- after anoth-r he let lie-in pass.

Then fastened the meadow bars again.

Under the willows, and MM th. hill,

He nil lentlv followed their sob-r pace;• whistl- for MM* was —a ill.

[ shadowed the auuuy lac.-.

(Inly a bov! and his father had saidHe never could let his roaaaaat go;

Two Hlrea ly were lying dead,Under the feet of the t

: ampling foe.

But after the ev-ning work was done,And the fn>.„'s w. r- loud in the meadow-swamp.

Over his shoulder he slung his gunAnd .tealthily followed the foot-path I

Acrosj the rlov.-r and Ikfaaak th- wlieat.With resolute heart and purp>M- grim,

Th..us:li i old wa- th- d. w on his harrying feat.And th- blind bats flitting st.iitl -d him.

Thrice since then had the lane* bean whit".And the op hauls swiet wilh apals hlllllBi,

And BOW, when the row - rami- bach at niyht,Tlie feeble father drove them homo.

For news had < le to the lonely farmThat three were b ing where two had lain;

Andtl Id man's tremulous ( armCould never lean on « son's again.

The summer day grew aaal and late,He went for the tows when the work wa. done:

But down the lane, as he opened the Kate,He .aw ttMBBB t-oiuiug one l.> .n-.

Briudle, Elsmv, Srsi kle and Pess,

But who was It loll. .wing eMM baUad?

Loosely swung iu the idle airThe empty sleeve o! army bin-;

And vara and pale, from UH eri«pin? hair,Ixs.ked out a fare that the hither knew.

For southern prisons will sometimes rawn.And j laid their dead I

'unto lire again;

•s with a. loud;golden glory at last may wane.

And the day that comes with a . loud} dawnIn I

'

The gr-at tears sprang to their meeting BfaajFor the heart must speak when the hps are dumb.

And under the .ileal evening -kiesTogether they followed the catth home.

Keuturky Hanks.

("HAl'TKIl B66,

An Ai t lor the benelit of tho IncorporatedHanks of Issue of Kentucky.Sk tion L He it cnactfd by the Gounil

A m -nihil/ n/ the (s>mm>muc<iltii uf KmUuekjf,That the authority of all incorporated banksof tin* OonUDOBWamltfa to hMiaa pg n>|.. i\ f

their notes or bills to circulate a.s money orcurrency, shall cease, and lit- suspended for

the period of three years from the time this

act shall go into ell"e<:t as to each bank.Sh, '1. Any incorporated bank of this

Commonwealth may purchase lto4 exoeed-iiijj; one-third of its capital stock at not less

ihan its par value, nnd the stock so pur-chased shall be cancelled and deducted trofa

its capital stock, and any su<-h li.tnk mayalso reduce the number or change the loca-

tion of its branches.BBC. :i. The Incorporated llanksof Issueoi

this ( 'oinmonw eallh are hereby authorizedto deduct lrom the —BMI of circulationappearing on their bookatO be outstanding,the estimated amount of notes lost and de-stroyed, but the amount so deducted shall

not be cut tied to the account of profits, norfrom itiiv part <>i ihe basis of dividends, butshall be'ean ied to the fund to cover losses,

and there remain uutil the bank is woundup.

Sr.

i

u 4. Tliat the Banks ol Is.sue ofthis Commonwealth during the threevi ais named in section one, may deal in

the bonds, securities and evident* of debtof the United States, ..r Of the Statu of Ken-tucky, ai:d may loan money or discountbills'on the pledge of their own slock, not,

boererer, exceeding eighty per cent, of its

par value.Skc. S. That when money shall be loaned

or bills discounted by any bank htMOrpo-rated by this Commonwealth upon pledgeof the bonds, s. < -unties, or evidences, of in-

debtedness of the United States, or ol theStale of Kentucky, or of any corporation, orof the stock of any corporation, the bankshall have the power of selling and If—(erring the title of the bonds, stocks, secu-

rities and evidence* of indebtedness in suchmanner aud on such terms as :he parties

may »gree in w riting, either at the time ofmaking the pledge OX afterwards.

BBC. 'i. That this act shall not go Into ef-

fect as to any beak of issue ot this Com-monwealth until at a regular or called

meeting of the Stockholders of such bank,the majority in interest of the Stockhold-ers present and voting shall, by resolution,

accept the pr iv'siuns of this act as anamendment of their charter. The said

resolution of acceptance shall be dulyrecorded on the nooks of the bank and acopy thereof OOrtifted by the President audCashier to the Governor, who shall issuehis proclamation that the bank so accept-

ing has oneand to be a bank of issue for

said period of three \ears named iu sectionone, and thai, at the end of ninety daysthereafter, its notes or bills shall no longercirculate as money or currency, whichproclamation shall be published at the ex-

pense of the bank for ten days in a news-paper published in l'rankfort (if there beone and in Louisville, and in one newspa-per |

if such there be) published in the townor city where the principal bank is situat-

d. From aud alter tho end of ninety daysnext ensuing the publication of said proc-lamation the bank notes or bills of suchbank, then outstanding, shall no longercirculate as money or currency for theafore-said period of three years, but be placed in

all respects on the looting of promissorynotes of individuals, and tho bank shall

cease for the period of three years to be abank of issue or circulation, and such bankis prohibitea from issuing any other bankDates and from reissuing aOefa as have beenor shall be redeemed, or from issuing anybill or instrument to circulate as mom v orcurrency during such period.Sue. 7. That during the three years nam-

ed in the first section ol this act, the saidbanks of issue shall not be restricted as to

ih. 'amount of their capital stock whichthey may invest in bills of exchange, butit is hereby declared that said banks shall

charge no greater rate of interest or ex-change than that now allowed bylaw.Baa 8. This act shall take effect

and after its passage.

M R8 wooLroar, clairvoyant, southkabtcorner Preston and Market etrs-ets insBefJtlwlly an

uouncea to the Public that she may ha consulted at theabove place for n'l future ev-uts. In cases of marriagestrials, el- - 1... ».„.•..•• i.iio. t., .rAfJ^.v the result.

STATIONERY,FURNISHING GOODS,SUTLERS' GOODS,

AMD

BREWERY.

ALE AM) BEElt

WM. PADDON & SON,

PLUMBERSC.fii. Mrfft., i"ntKvJ:"e,

r

Kr!ftfc

WATKU IM i'KS, Hydrant^ Hose, Sath Tubs. Showerttaths. Water Closeta, Wash Stands. Force and I jft

- Mes I I .end, L.K.1 RT.fi Iron

ly attooiW*-

XX A IV D XXX.Pale, Amber, Stock and Kilter

ALES AND BEER.HPECIAI. ATTENTION TO SHIPMENT;*.

CITY BREWERY,SIXTH ST., WBST SIDE, BET. MAIN A WATER,

J,OUISVILXE, KY'.marl-ly

OZ\ HUD8 NKW OKLKAMS OLARiriKlJ MEW 8D-

[Signed] U. Tavt.or,Speaker of the House of 1 Representatives.

Richaju) t. Jacob,Speaker of the Senate.

Feb. 22, 1865.

Thos. B, Brami.ettk,Governor of Kentucky.

COMMONW KAI/ril OK K KNT1< K Y, )

Uttice of Secretary of St-tte. j

L K. L. Vanwinkle, Secretary of Stateand Keeper ot the Archieves thereof, dohereby certify that the foregoing copy of anact approved on tho 22d day of February,IStio, is a true and correct copy from the en-rolled bill on liie in this otlice.

[a testimony whereof I have hereunto set

[aSAU] my hand and affixed my ollicial

seal.

Done at Frankfort this 2d day of March,A. I). IMS, B. la Vanwinki.k,

Secretary of State.By Jas. K. Paok,

Assistant Secretary.

There is a "magic*' man who calls him-self the "Great Corypkreus of Occult Art,"opening the eyes of the Canadians. Hisagent announces that "his luminous lec-

tures have,pnriphrastically speaking, placedperishable Peripneumouiacs on the plat-form of health, and his unapproachable Arthas convulsed the cheeks of the sourestvinegar faces into paroxysms of cachinatiouand transformed the most irascible andAcetabuliferous anti-Theophilauthropistfrom the Apphelion to the Perhelion of joyand enjoyment." We are glad to hear it

but not any for us—if you please.

Crusty prefers a music box in the houseto a piano. He says it obviates the neces-

sity of having a young music-master about;that it only plays when you set it agoing;

and that when you want to stop it, you canthrow your boot at it, which you couldn't

do to your wife. The utterer of this slandershould be chained to a lamp post and sub-

twent^-four hours to the grinding

The Rebel Prisoners on Johnson's Island.

A correspondent of the Toledo Blade de-

scribes the condition of the rebel prisoners

on Johnson's Island :

There were at this depot on the 10th ofFebruary three thousand prisoners. Therehave since been forwarded for exehsBgetwo hundred aud forty-four, aud others w ill

continue to follow. They evince quite aninterest to go, but it is apparent that theyleave rather with a desire aud expectationof returning to their sulferiug families, thana lea to enter agaiu the Southern IPs Ikmor to espouse its cause. Many w ho cam.arrogant in their opinions aud confident ofthe ultimate success of the Conied. ra. .

.

now unhesitatingly and openly avow intheir opinion the South has exhausted herbest energies, and that further contentionagainst the Government is a mere mockery.Many of the— of high rank allirm their in-tention to quit the service at the very firstfavorable opportunity.Since the prisoners*of war were first sent

to this post, April itlh, 1S02, the entire re-ceipts to the loth ii st. w ere seven thousands"\en hundred and seventy one, of whichnumber only two hundred and ten havedied, or two and seven-tenths per cent, ofthe whole number. If that number twohundred and ten) had died last month outof the number then conlined here, it wouldhave been only seven per cent., eighteenper cent, less than the percentage represent-ed to have died in the same mouths in pris-on at Salisbury, X. (.'.

The rations allowed the prisoners lu rehave been sixteen ounces of flour or softbread, or ten ounces of hard bread in lieuthereof, or sixteen ounces of corn meal inlieu of flour or bread; fourteen ounces ofsalt or fresh beef, or ten ounces of ]>ork orbaeoa in lieu thereof; beans or peas, twelveand a half pounds, or eight ounces of riceor hominy lo one hundred ralious; soap,two pounds; vinegar, two quarts; aud salt,two pounds to every one hundred rations;with occasionally some potatoes, onions, orother vegetables. The sick are allowed inaddition to the abe*ve» when reeoaasaeadsdby tho surgeou in charge, sugar, colfee, andtea, at the rate of twelve pounds of sugar,live pounds of ground or seven pounds ofgreen coffee, or one pound of lea to the onehundred rations. In addition to the aboveallowance, a great many of the prisonershave been in the constant receipt of eata-bles from home or friends, which, togetherwith their allowed rations, if properly pre-pared, would Btske haeal * * tit lor the kinir."Some of the prisoners who came from PortHudson, and who were during the siegecompelled tosubsist on rats, have cultivati dsuch a taste for them that many have un-hesitatingly expressed a decided inclinationfor them as food, and, as strange a* it mayappear to one who has never tasted them,many of the prisoners consider them prefer-able to squirrels, and they eat them with a.s

much gusto as tho huntsman does the lus-cious quarters of nice gray squirrels.

The Kuiperor Napoleon's Life of Julius( 'a sar will soon be republished by the Har-pers. The following extract, comparing the

Unmans with the English aristocracy, will

be read with interest

:

The state of Home at this time greatlyresembles that of Kngland before the Iie-

torm bill. For many centuries the Fnglishconstitution had been vaunt' d as the pal-ladium of liberty, although in Kngland, asin Home, birth aud fortune were the onlysources of honors and power. In both coun-tries an aristocracy was mistress of theelections, whether by means of bribery andIntrigne, or by rotten boroughs; and thearistocracv named the patricians in Borne,and in Eufdaad tilled the Parliament w ith

members of the nobility, and no man was hcitizen unless with a high property qualifi-

cation. Nevertheless, although the peoplehad no part iu the direction ot public atf.urs,

it was not without reason that in ITS'.) theliberty of Kngland, which stood out in suchbold relief from among the silent continent-al BtatOS, was greatly admired. The disin-terested observer will not impure whetherthe arena in which the great political qaes-lions are discussed be more or less vast, norwhether the actors are more or less numer-ous, he is only struck with the grandeur ofthe spectacle. We are, therefore, far fromblaming the nobility either of Borne orKngland for having maintained their pre-ponderance as long as they could by all themeans which law or custom enabled them10 use. Power lightly remained in thehands of the patricians as long as they wereworthy of it, and it must be admitted thatbut lor their perseverance iu one line ofpolicy, but for their large views, antl thatsevere and inflexible virtue which is thedistinguished characteristic of an aristocra-

cy, the work of Roman civiliz-itiou wouldnot have been awomplished .

New Maultestations.

At the Cirque Napoleon, two brothers,possessing the lucky patronymic "lion-

heur," magnetize each other w ith marvel-lous results. The Mgat OT saHM is, of course,perfect. A gorgeous D'Aubusson carpet is

thrown over the raised platform, in thecenter of which are the usual gilt table andarm chair- The brothers appear, followedby a page, exquisitely costumed a AY-

peaee, whose rosy cheeks betray her sex.

The elder Bonheur niagneti/.' s the younger.Tho usual blind folding by layers of cot ton

and countless silk handkerchiefs next takesplace. The somnambulist then reads visit-

ing cards in sealed envelopes, deciphersminute figures concealed beneath heaps of

paper, and finally tells you the number en-

graved on the inner case of your watch, of

which you were probably in utter igaor-

ance till informed thereof by this somnam-bulist's artistic performances. The elder

Bonheur descends from his dais, and youWhisper the name of a well-known charac-ter in his ear; the somuainbulist instantly

rises, walks straighway to a blackboardpreviously arranged by the fair pace, andhis eyes undoubtedly bandaged, he sketch-

es wilh white chalk a cleverly done outline

Of the personage whose name youjiavegiven to the magnetizer. Victor Kmmaii-uel, Lamartine, Alexandre Dumas succes-

sively appeared on the magic board, andwere undoubtedly well done. Meycriiecrwas Ihe only failure; but it will be remem-bered that his expression was extr. in. i v

diflieult to seize at any time. There w as novisible communication between the mag-netizer and the somnambulist.—[Paris

0 F FJ_C I AL.aVAWa" OK IU UNITED ST V i l>

Passed at the Second gStgesa of the Thn 'i/-

Eighth V'niyreaa.

[Pi blii —No. m.}An Act to prevent officers of the army andnavy, and other persons engaged in th •

militaay and naval service of tho UattedStates, from interfering in elections in theStates.lie it aaaetaM tm the Senate ami //..o s.

lieprcxciitntt n .* ol the I 'n ited .\tntei ofA mer-ica awCbayrcM mtmmbtedjpikmi it shall no.bo lawful for auy military or naval officerof the I'nited States, or other person engag-ed in the civil, military, or naval service olthe Oasted States, to order, bring, keep, orhave under his authority or eoaAroi, eajtroops or armed men tit the place where anvgeneral or special election is held in au'vState of the I uited States of America, mi-less it shall Ik? necessary to repel the armedenemies of the I uited States, or to keep thepeaoe at the polls. And that it shall not belawful for any oilicer of the army or aarjof the United States to prescribe or iix, otattempt to praeailhs or fix, by proclama-tion, order, or otherwise, the qualificationsOf voters in auy Stale of the I'nited State-of America, or in an\ manner to interlenwith the freedom of "any election iuamState, or w ith the exerciio of the free righiof suifrage in any State of the I'nited State-.Any ollieer of the army or navy of the Ualted States, or other person engaged in thecivil, military, or naval service of the I'mted States, who vioktt. s this section of thUact, shall, for every sm h otl'ence, be Uablito indictment ?:s tot a misdemeanor, in ai,

.

court of the I'nited States hariagJarladie-tiou to hear, try, and determine cases .

misdemeanor, and on conviction thereo!shall pay a line not exceeding live thous.n..idollars, and stiller imprisonment in ihpenitentiary not less than three mouths, nomore than live years, at the discretion ol Ihecourt trying the sum"; and any i»erson c Da-vieted as aforesaid shall, moreover, he dis-qualified front holding any ollice ofhonor, i

profit, or trust, under the government olthe Halted Slates; l'n.vul,d. That not him.

\

herein contained shall tie so construed as »..I

prevent any ofacers, soldiers, sailor-, etmarines, from exeteiotag the right of suf-frage in any election district to wkeehhimay belong, If other* is,, qualified, ac .. 1

ing to tho laws of the State in whicu heshall offer to vote.

Sec. And be it further enacted, Thaiany officer or petsoa in the milit u v ornaval service of the United tflstrt, v.shall order or advise, or who shall direcUjor indirectly, by force, threat, BVaasee, intimation or otherwise, prevent or attemptto prevent any qaaUatod voter of any (Halof the United Stales of America Iron.brSOtj exercising the right of sutlrage aianv State of the I'nited States, or whtishall iu like manner comi>el, oi attempt U)compel, any ollieer of an election in auysuch State to receive a vote from a pennot legally qualified to vote, or who shalliuqiose or attempt to impose any rul- - otregulations for coudiuiing such rlecti i.

different from those prescril>ed by law, •

interlere iu any manner with aavofAoeisaitl election iu the discharge of ir .intic-,

shall for any such often; e be liable to u-dictment as for a misdemeanor, iu anvcourt of the United States having jutiatlie-tion to hear, try, and determine eases ifmisdemeanor, and on convietion ih.-n..;shall pay a line of not exceeding live thou-saud dollars, and sutler imprisonment inthe penitentiary not exceeding live veers, althe discretion of the court trying the Ieat ,

and any person convicted as eJbresaidshall, moreover, be disqualified from bolt -

ing any ollice of honor, profit, or tru-i,under the government of the United Bta • -.

Approved, February SB, is<;...

fie M gaaefett ey the Senate «;../ //„,/-.gayrMenfafistso/tee UnitedHUH not ,

ica in Vowire.su ./.%.<#•„< V, .', That •

aat collector appointed under the eel enti-tled "An act to annex a part of the- st,,,,.

New Jersey to the collection district ol SYork, aud to appoint an assistant oil. -

.,-

to reside at Jersey City," approved Febru-ary twentv-one, eighteen hundred atalsixty-three, be, and he hereby i*. BUfta< •• -

ized to enroll and license, according to th.,laws of trie L niled States, all \essvis as>gai;eil in the casting trade and ti»bcri<-<«,

owned in whole or in part by residemi ofthe c,,;jnti. s of Hud-on and Bergen, belaoState ot New Jersey; and ail sti. Ii enroll-ments aud li< enscs shall be as valid and ef-fectual as it ihe same had been effected inany other port of the United States; andthesaid assistant collector, in theenralla*aaatand licensing of \v»s. N, „hali be subject t<>

the laws of the United States,:

all the paaaMaes and ivaaaiposed upon collectors in like <

Approved, February fft,

BTA'

1st* isiJ,i;..,.

.uroi

»t Co.,Vi., re-

Dreams.Lucky Dreams.—To dream of nothing is

lucky.To dream that you have written all Mr.

Topper's works (and on waking to find youhaven't) is very lucky.To dream, eafg to dream, that you've

committed a capital crime, is lucky—for

you.Unlucky Dreams.—To dream that, iu a

fearful shipwreck, you have b*»en hurleti

upon a sharp rock, and to awake to a senseof your position on the floor, is unlucky.To dream of goblins, villiansof the deep-

est dye, assassins, daggers, and such things

as utterly destroy your rest, is decidedly un-lucky.To keep on dreaming and awaking five

times in a night is unlucky.To dream that you are lighting for your

life with wild bears, and to find yourselfhitting your wife on the head with a bolster,

is unlucky, very unlucky.To dream that you are making a long and

powerful address to a jury and to deliverthe same oratorically, is unlucky for anyone who happens to be iu the same roomtrying togo to sh?*P

;

The Folly of Mankind.—A companyopeued an otlice in < 'began Alley, duringthe South Sea mania, to receive subscrip-tions for raising a million, for a purpose tobe known after the million was raised.The people floe 1 ed in aud paid live shil-

lings on every til y pounds they subscribed.A large sum was thus collected, when anadvertisement was published, announcingthat the subscribers might have their de-

posiLs without anv deduction, as the pro-

ject of the directors was merely a trial to

see how many fools they could make in oneday.

[Public—No. .".7. 1

,

An Ai r to increase the efficiency of lie

Medical corps of the arm v.

lie it enacted by the Senate aud House u-

Itt fti e.sentatii'cii of the I 'uited Mmwt •

America i/i l'.in.//r.<.i aaMBMML That IkSmedical di ecior of an army in ti e li al

consisting oft wo or more army corps, sadthe medical director of a military depart-meiit iu which there are l'nit»d Stat' s gen-eral hospitals containing four thousandboils or upwards, shall h ive the rank,

|\

and emoluments of a colonel of cavalry;and the medical director of an army eorpaiu the held, or of a department iu whichthere are United Stales general h«»p;*. d.-.

containing less than four thousand beds,shall have the rank, pay, and ceaotBBSeaaiof a lieutenant colon, 1 of cavalry. But thisincreased rank and pay snail only conuu-ue to medical officers while dischargingaaah apeeial duties; and the asatgaaseatafrom time to time to such duty shall be al

least two-thirds of them made "from amongthe surgeons and assistant surgeons of vol-unteers.Approved, February m\ IMLV

[Pcblic—No. :5».]

An A»t to create the Kaslern JudicinDistrict of the State of New York.

lie it enacted by the Senate and Wmmt aIleprcientattrcs of the United MafM I

America in Cony rcs.s ay.semblcd, Tnat thecounties of Kings, Queens, Suffolk at «'.

Bichmond, in the State of New York, withthe waters thereof, are hereby constitutedseparate judicial district of ihe tJaitfdStates, to l>e sivled the eastern district e.

New York. The President of the UnitedStates, by and with the advice and con-, o

of the Senate, shall appoint a district judgefor said district, who shall reside tie

and who shall possess the same pow.-r- •::>.

perform the same duties within said dis-

trict which are now possessed and perform-ed by the district judge of ihe southern dis-

trict of New York. The said judge shalalso receive the same comj>eusation as is

by law provided for the judge of said south-ern district. District aud circuit court - . ..

the trial of causes shall be held in the city

of Brooklyn on the lirst Wednesday ol

every month. The courts so to be held ualhave the same jurisdiction as is now or m i\

hereafter be vested in other district as •

circuit courts of the United Btatea, Bachofficers shall be appointed for said di.strt. I

and court, and in the same manner an :

with the same fees and emoluments M ft

scribed by law for other districts and curlsof the United states.

Sv.r. '2. And be it further enacted. That the

district court for the said eastern district

shall have concurrent jurisdiction with the

district court for the southern district ol

New York over the waters within the coun-ties of New York, Kings, Queens, and Si.f

folk, in the State of New York, and OTeeall seizures and matters made or done in

such waters; and all writs or other pro. .

or orders issued out of either of said courts,

or by any judge thereof, shall inn and beexecuted in anv part of said waters.

Ifftar dad it it further enucteJ, That, in

case of the inability on account of alakaessof thej dgeol thedistrict court of the I'nit-

ed States for the southern district of NewYork, to hold any court therein, it shall bethe duty of the judge of the said easterndistrict of New York to hold such courtand do and perform all the acts and dutiesof the judge of said southern district withVout any additional compensation; andwhenever, from pressure of public busi-

ness or other cause, it shall be deemed de-sirable by the judge of said southern dis-

trict of New York, that the judge of s.nd

eastern district perform the duties of a

judge in said southern district, an ordeimay be entered to that effect in the records

of said district court, and thereupon the

judge of said eastern district shall be em-powered to do and perform, without addi-

tional compensation, within said southerndistrict of New York, and iu the district

court thereof, all the acts and duties of th"district judge thereof.

Approved, February ls*>5.

[Public—No. ^9.]

An Act supplemental to an act entitled"An act to annex a part of the State ol

New .Jersey to the collection district ofNew York, and to appoint an aseJetanlcollector to reside at Jersey City," ap-nrnvpil Kehrn-in- "I lsotJIIUVITU l VUlllill^ -I, 1"S> >,

—The

—The horse railroads ot Boston27,(HX),uon passenger* last j

rear.

- It is computed that there are in$230,uu0,ino worth of I'nited Stales bonds."

—The population of Worcester in l»->was 21,".tw. Now they estimate it at over".1,000.

—t .old coinage at the Phih;delr.hia mintf..r January, jdsi,!**; silver, tfflffgf cop-per,*^,. Total. $mVmm-The entire popu'atiou of all Ihe States

and Territories on the Pacific, lielouging toI ncie Sam, is »>7.>,IJW>.

—There are 1,1S1,000 square miles ofblank space round the north pole— o:i themaps.

—There were 71>,0ulJ sick and wounded inall the military hospitals on the :ilst ol .Jan-uary.

— Hartford. Conn., has aVfjH dwellinghaaaea, 5 IT stores, and a taxable valuationof |^o,403,478.

—The Keokuk Constitution Insists over ah 1 slaughtered iu that city thatMglhtV and s..ld lor |tSfi

"

—The firm of Uawreilumber merchants of Ihupari an income o;rfJMgyHft—'Ihe Knglish colonial possessions have a

Imputation of l.VJ,77|,id:i; and a public debtof 1 S2,7U0,.jOtj pounds.

—The Michigan Central road earned tin-second week in Februarv, ls«>l, jutt, f ;yn ; iuM .

>..7,o!M; aaesaaas, ?.;;»oi.

—It is estimated that the amended reve-nue act will add £:.o,ooO.ouu to 57i,in^,iHNi to'.he treasury receipts of the eoi.ntry.

—The army hospitals in Philadelphiahave 18,7 k) t>eds. l„as>t year .Mi.ooo patawn treated, and the Luuiis-r remaii>u the 'list of December was U, 117.

—The oldest Journal in the world is pub-li hed in Pekin. It is printed on shk, andhas appeared every week for more than ahousand years.

— fhe population of Wisconsin cii,. s, a.

-

• or ling to the new state census, is as lol-l.ws; Milwaukee, 44,700; Maiiisou, M-7J:Con-du-Lac, »^ts; gksekee, 7.-1-.

— The 'd "> national banks now authoriz* dhave an aggiegate capital of gnw,041,72UTheir euneaey amounts to • so, of»-hich ?:'.,112,t>o were issued last week.

in Sicily there are pi; priu.-vs, is d tikis,141 marquise*. 2*jm asoari aad l»^iti.mna. No one ever attempted to cunthe number of barons, counts and r

lers.

1 1 TheJapanese year is divided kski I.:tuir-onths, the first day of rajOU aBah bekeg

i ba; of the new moon. Kvery fourth yearas intercilary month comes'in to

|

i he balance of the

— It is esiinia'.ed that in the New and inIhe < >!d World there are tgM Mas«>uic

Li s, with a00,<KJ0 active memliersi. The:.:i:nl>er of non-active and those who havewithdrawn is nearly 0,#00.

— The Boston imports ; ir the w< i k endingFebruary loth, were |S£»,49«\ again-. >iss,-

138 faff th«> corresponding week iu fs.;i. The• x.uorts, inc uding sp-cie, were >:';i',: ol,

g tiust >:'0"»,lv>.". in Is.. |.

Th" b ug. raiiv. -.y in :h world is the• tiraud Trunk," 1. ;'>!">

.ne management, andllhe adned, earrylag

cugo.

—The P.ritish 1

i presentation by

dies of rail uuilero.v ;_n more are to

road direct to Chi-

rliament, as a general'Kiii^hts. citizens, and

• ir^ess. s, " h.i< en lured exactly -ix hun-!.-cd vears. I; was summoned Ly HenrykIL, in l Ji->.

—The population oi' Laadoa is 1^15,404,!.i\erpool 17fi, of Uaaehestet t«.7.7t^:,

••I Qlasgow 42.1.724

;, of Btrininghani SJ7.H41,.»! Dublin 2M,80», of Leeds 221.0-.S, of fUiin-:..irg 174,iso, aud of Bristol 171.- :

—The State of Illinois h.ts se i: :••»

needs ;<> Ike fkdd, and c<M>k aaaatj , wkieh..iclude- Chicago, furnished over twenty oflaeea. a total of -.'ii.ib; men. A pvoad ss*• onl for the county and the Si.ite.

—A Fr. ii' Ii working man's :.'.>

costs him twoaud a half cent-; his dinner,including half a tattle of wine, ten a*att|nd his supper about one and a quarter

• ents.

--The value of a tract of land on Oil• reek, V.taaaga County, Pa., two miles in -

width and twenty miles long, is estimatedal two bundled and fifty millions ofdol.ars.

I our ye. is ago this land was hardly worthlive dollars i»er acre.

— Paris dines a* the rate of two millionsof francs per day, k>0,000), including Ht ,C ->

ram c',2oi»! for brandy aa l liejaeaa takenat dessert, and s.ooo francs C-J> lor tooth-picks. This would bring the dinner foreach inhabitant of Paris to 1 franc, 20 cents,i Is.) per day.

—The London Morning Star says thatwhile the Kuasian serfs before emancipa-tion were calculated to have consumedabout eight- en'shillings' worth of eottoagoods per head, that amount has alreadyrisen to one pcund seven shilling per h. adover the 22,WH>,000 of emancipated p. asan-try.

—The Mill Biver Woollen Mi.l-. . S im-i'or.l, Connecticut, manufacture 1,000 yardsof t.incy cassimeres, and use from 1,000 to1,200 poitE'is of wool daily. They did busi-ness last year to the amount of ^.loO.onj, audexpect to"increase it to half a million this

year. They employ 100 hands, and themonthly expenses are about 3-k>,e00.

—There are in Kurope forty-:hrt>e reign-ing sovereigns, not including lh.>».< w h >

possess titles only. Of those forty-three,

nine belong to the Roman « atholic »"eiigioii,

Put one ol that number, Victor Bessis excoiiununicated; thirty-one are ut.m's, one is of the orthodox lireek c .

one a Mahometan, and the forty-thinl is

t!le Pope.

Df the twenty-live meailiers ol the Illi-

nois Senate, not one is a native of that st.it,..

while live are natives of < >hio, ami two afIndiana. And yet Southern Illinois w. is

considerably settled before the wildernesswas fr. ken in t»hio. Of the eight \ -.r. •

members of the llouse. eleven are nativethat State, aud ten of Ohio.

—The Knglish House of Peers at pr. sen.consists, oi on- prince, tw.. r . <

three archbishops, twenty-four dukes, ti> r-

tv-one marquises, one hundred and ni; v-

eight earls, tbirty-oue viscounts, mdhundreii and tilty-eight barons. .\s I

••

Bishop of Bath and Wells sits also as 1!

of Auckland, the total number of ^ rs i,

Page 2: LOIISVILLE DAILY PRESS.LOIISVILLEDAILY PRESS. VOL.L fCr LOUISVILLE,KY..FRIDAYMORNING,MARCH 10,1866. NO.273 CALYEKT,CIVLLL&CO PUBLISHERS.-PRESSBUI DAILYUNIONPRESS. peryear,f1000 …

THE DAILY PRESS

OFFICE PRESS BUILDING,NO, 826

JEFFERSON STREET

News of the Day.MM! Summary.

A confusion ol tonkin s like that which

fell npon the builders of Halxl has tallen

on the traitors at Richmond, ao they no

longer understand one another. In their

furious ravin*, th«-v i*dl some iMMWand wholesale truth-. Hi! bow they yelp,

and foam at the mouth, these "owd andcowardly, miserable wretches u tto brought the

on the country."

Lee's army is rapidly moving on Washing-ton. A hundred and t\\ entydeserters cameover on Wednesday; and the number re-

«vived in the last four weeks is seventeenhundred :tud sixty-six.

Oeu. I^ongstreel has the unexampled im-pudence to propose sin exchange ol desert-

ers. This would be a remarkable pro|>osal

from an alien enemy; coming from trait-

ors, it verges on sublimity.

»ien. I*ayno is acquitted of all chargesBflBBBal MM : aiid tlie rebel sympaliii/^rswho BBBlajBtad his trial n«ve transferred theease to the court of Judge Lynch.

gpa Ni-w.nii, at K. y West, h;is organ-an expedition again»t St. Marks, Flu.

- blcx-kude runners do not get intotJal-

so readiiy as formerly.

News summary.Senator James lii-.rlan, of Mt. Pleasant,

Iowa, was yi steid iy onlirmed by the Sen-iile as Secretary of the Interior, lie is forty-

live years old, and a native of Illinois. Helias served with distinction two terms in theSenate. He was chairman of the commit-tee on public lauds.

The Senate aNo confirmed Freemant'larkt, of New York, to be Controller, vii*-

McCullx Li, promoted.

TheS« iiate have s. 1 BBVJ 1 as their chaplainfor ttse .;;•,!: < ongiess, tiie Kev. l>r. <>ray, oi

Washington, lie is a liajiiist.

The credentials of the Senators from Ai-kaus.ts, Louisiana and Virginia, are laidover till next winter. Ix-t them have pa-tienc ,

they will never live BBBJ enough tosee their Stales reduced to the condition ofprovinces.

The Senate will l>e heartily applaudedfor omitting from their uuHillIt8— theuamesof Saulsbury, of Delaware, and Mo-I >"ii^al, of t'ahloroi i. It is t) be ho|>edthat thi- s:<-j. ;s indic-itiv.- ot a determina-tion to prop -rly maintain the dignity ofthe .1st ie^';-i.it;\e bixlj in the World.

Trains :;:v again runuing between Phila-delphia and Haltimore.

JuduebOM of the United Stales I»is.

irict Lour. ..f Massachusetts, has resigned-

The steamer Imperial was sunk a; Nash-ville on the Sth.

The well-known i.a: ki r, Watis Sherman,di.-il on tin- lio.h tilt. ;.t Madeira.Sniora has lu en ecdc.i to France by a

|

secret treaty, not to be made public till

Mexi< : ply pacified by French ^rnis.We h«M ear. *a t <k< n towi ite it with un-fadingink. My Lirdtiwyuu goeato Franceto urrange for tne fn it tier cession of Cali-fornia. So! *

PffiturfTTflfnr is auBBUBjlBBj diplomatic<• turtesies with Lnglaud and "die realo! the worl.;. Ua j N wi-i-iv !i. g!fcting thel llited .Slates. It wouldn't look well to!

Mas to get suublfd j.i-; yet. and he don'tmean to iucur the risk.

As we anticipated, tiie impcrialM victory>il IJawai waa un-.tiufa-tured to order. Wehave via Baa— a few more rei»orts of thesanu sott.

Sales of wven-thirlies, ^ *,«.. .. I -M i.

cioid, l!d!,.

It Is curious to notice the provisoes In afl

the rebel predictions of Buceeaa to their

The sum of them all is, in sub-

that if the people will only go to

work, and hurl back the invader, the in-

vader will be bulled back; if they will

only achieve their independence, independ-

ence will be achieved; if they will arouse

baas their despondency, they will no longer

desjxmd; and so on.

Robert Toombs, iu u late e]>eech at Au-gusta, tia., said that "despondency pervades

the army and people tu a ;;reat cien'."' Andhe thought it was high time for somethingto be done about it. The leading anil prom-inent thing, according to him, is for the

! pie to f/int their despondency, be resolute

and true to the cause whose inevitable and

bloody eclipse is precisely the source of all

Robert says, "we have

to whip forty Yankee na-

tions if ire could ceill back the *]>irits of our

dej>artrd heroes."

Boeb talk la intended as an appeal to

public spirit, a stimulus to drooping cour-

age. It suggests an inquiry of some inter-

Ml re-pecting the mental characteristics of

a peoule amongst w hom such a mode of ar-

gument and api>eal can be gravely re-

sorted to. If the method has any effective-

ness whatever it indicates a marked imma-turity a childishness of character in those

to horn it is applied. The resort to such a

method indicates on the part of the leaders

•he habit of despotic sway ovtr the volitions

of others, and of looking upon the masses

whom lbey have always held in un.-on-

rcious subjugation, as being scarcely less

amenable to their word of command than

the negro slave. The exercise of unchecked

dominion over other men s w ills, produces

at length the insane con.-eit of unlimited

Ken iu U\ l»a 1 «-.

The reader will lad in ta-4a j "s PUM the

very impoit.inl law regulating hank issues,

which was < it*, led at the ! •:. a >i<.n of the

legislature.

VI r. Pa—ili

The I) -niocral, thai now says Mr. Powellfaithfully and truly represented Keutmky,in 'tU questioned his fitness to represent

Kentucky in the t ". s. Senate, declared heutterly misrepiesented Kentucky, and pub-lished, with evident approval, SenatorWilkinson's indictment and resolution for

bis expulsion.

Dick rfarob tor S ^termination.A: meeting, the lo.h of October, ISill, of

the Unionists of Oldham county, this exter-minating resolution was prepared and pre-sented by the redouhh-.ble Col. R. T. Jacob,and parsed with the heartiest approval:That the Government of tin- United States

must and siiail be preserved, even thoughits preservation shall demand the extermi-nation of all its adversaries, which weshould deplore or, if neccs Nary, the annihi-lation of aU its sup|M>rters, for with thisGovernment expires the last hoj»e of con-stitutional liberty on earth.

pP*ttPJPj| Lee is reported by desertersto have gone through his lines recently en-treating the men to stand by him and notdesert. The Richmond Sentinel a shortlime |fji apjicah dto the public to replenishihe rebel BBBBBJay, by donations of money,plate, jewelry, and so forth. It claimed tomake the appeal at the request of the high-ent ".'.'Ihority.

When army and treasury become dilapi-dated V> th.> extent indi,--it"d bv these facts

eail •;

iaapnaal

<•!"». he whoely forcsha

n th

i' i a most. p war that

to entreaty,

from the aa>iron: coercion t.. suppiicat:on

BjaJai of a stringent and BBBBUm to cringing beggarv, the t

•ling sv. ifijy and lannr swat'I he -e unobtrusive items of

are full of mi aning andrebel cause. The wholebed in has been maiked by for.-e. Hum-phrey Marshall's • nape ot-tli<-n< ck" theo-ry has dominated ail its policy. So exten-sive nnd so utter a slump of tit u policynow therefore is the aaaal significant

y from.

F current newsPMHm* to thesrs.. f,\ tj,,.

power.

The old Danish King commanding tl

tides to stop rising beyond their appropri-

ate and accustomed bounds, was not morethoroughly crazed by this influence lb in

are the lords of the lash in rebeldom. Andhis fulminated menace ag.dnst Ihe sea wasnot a more authentic spasm oi lunacy thai:

these Southern desalts are exhibiting in

their denunciations of public despondency.

The kind of madness iu both cses is iden-

tical. It is an attempt to control by will-

power, phenomena lying wholly outside

the limits of will. It is the giddy frenzied

infatuation which springs from long-prac-

ticed,unbridled despotism suddenly broughtup against insurmountable obstacles.

We see the same thiug on a miniatureseale in the conduct of spoiled children whohave been accustomed to sec everything

and everybody luud to their will or their

whim. When they be^in to discover the

limits to their supremacy, they rage verymuch like one of our rebel orators now-a-dai s.

Panic and despair of the traitor-cause are

spreading like a consuming lire throughthe masses of Southern society, and their

courage and their treason are both shrivel-

ling iu the flame. The attempt to stop this by

orders or orations la nowise more sensible

than to attempt the quenchiug of a physical

c nllagration by the same method. Souiii-

ern leaders have yet to learn that there are

spiritual laws and elements not less inex-

orable and unmanageable lhau the lawsand elements of the material world. Aforlorn prospect will produce forlorn moods.A i.d to exclaim against the effect without

i' moving the cause is sufficiently absurd.

Hut to deuouoe the effect as being the aaaac

•/ ,tx ataja% is authentic lunacy.

1 ousrieiii c.

Mi always sin ink with excessive

alarm from dangers whose character andextent are unknown. Mystery added ioperil

aggra\ates the terror with which the peril

is viewed to an abnormal and unnecessarydegree. The supreme test of coinage is to

meet a mortal foe iu the dark.

Tiie editor of the Democrat is shudderingin these days at the prospective downfall of

ids idol—slavery. The cold sweat beadshis brow. The issue is inevitable, and onlytoo visible. Amongst the assailants of that

idol is the human conseience. It is the as-

sailant which the editor of the Democrats< ium least to understand. And accord-ingly he is more terrified by it than by all

the rest combined, and exhibits towards it

the maximum intensity of that wrath whichis born of fear.

We have no desire to mitigate his sufler-

iugs. We think he deserves them all, andwe hope they will continue till, i:i somesupreme wrench of his anguish, he exjwri-

enee repentance. He will then transfer his

allegiance, discover what conscience is, andtind how different an aspect it wears as anally from the one it wears as a foe. Hesays the "progressives'' tell us "that loyal

;eopie are determined that slavery must

die; that something they call conscience dic-

tates it. To judge what aarJ of thin;/ thin

t'nitlcsrrijit is called cinscicnee, we haveonly to recollect v hat it has done in Ken-tucky."

We think he would find it easier to

recollect what it has not done. There is atleast one f]n>t in Kentucky where it has notdone much beyond producing vexatiousappri hensious. and strange alarms. But it

would be well for him and for all of bis ilk

la aaai what the "progressives" tell himI

u;d ti.ei,i on this point. No human insti-

tution ever \<*t withstood the assaults of apopular aPtfMraiaaaj that was fortified and< BatgtaPJ by conseience. "That uonde-s- ript thing ' i- a subtle and a mighty an-tagonist. It is a host in itself, and becomestin leader of all th<- hosts with which it aa>operates. And it duplicates the power ofall the forces marshal l«-d under its banner.

No surer doom could be written ajpjaaj an

The Common Enemy.The question of slavery in Kentucky

does not belong to New England, but to

Kentucky.— LLou. Democrat.

Well, Kentucky intends to deal with it,

and to smite the abomination "h'p andthigh." We suspect the growth of opposi-

tion to slavery in Kentucky troubles the

editor of the Democrat a good deal more

than the abolitionism of New England.

Rut in the meantime slavery has murder-

ed a great mauy thousand New Englandsons, widowed a great many thousand NewEngland wives, orphaned a great manythousand New England children, levied a

tsemendous tax on New England wealth

and spread tne darkness of sorrow whichwill not lighten for many and many a

weary year, over New England homes.

It will be hard to convince the thoughtful

men of that section that they have no inter-

est in the extirpation of so cruel, perfidious

and dangerous an institution. They have

an interest iu it. The question does belong

to them, and to every man, woman, andchild iu the country. Slavery has inter-

fered a little too deeply and extensively

with the welfare of all the people in the

laud to put on airs now and claim exemp-

tion from being meddled with by outsiders.

It is the common peril and common nui-

sance of the Republic. And it is every-

body's privilege and duty to pursue it to

the death with all legitimate weapons.

Kentucky slavery has no more claim to

mercy thau South Carolina slavery.

The institution has done all the mischief

it could in this State. Whatever it has

failed to accomplish towards the overthrow

of Kentucky loyalty has been due to geo-

graphical poskion and not to the nature ol

the institution. It has been the source, in-

spiration aud life of all the treason in the

State. It is the potent magnet wdiieh still

drags Kentucky with a mighty energy to-

wards the brink where the abyss of rebel-

lion yawns. There is not a loyal person in

the country but has a personal interest in

its complete overthrow. Welcome the

blows agaiustthis arch-criminal from what-

ever quarter or distance!

Compensated Labor.i »r the Pafaa tmmA

It believe at least three-fourths of our ne-

groes, able to work, will, if treated right,

under a compensated labor system, prove

more industrious and productive than un-

der our slave system v. hen considered most

prosperous. There aaai be BO jostling be-

tween Boeapaajaatad white and compensat-ed colored labor. There is am [do room for

the widest capabilities of both. Compen-sated labor alone, without regard to color,

will develop the vast resources of our Stateand enable her at last to compare favura-bly with her sisters across the river.

Whites generally will certainly be benefit-

ted by the riddance of shivery; so will

blacks, under humane and judicious treat-

ment.Of course, proper laws, combining com-

pulsion with coni|H'iisation, should be ex-j

acted to protect the community against|

those, of any color, who rather beg or steal ;

than work tor themselves and their depen-j

dents. No willful public nuisances endpests, of any color, should be allowed.

Lei us of Kentucky weather the transi-

tion state tiki men. We can't go back-waid, nor stand still; iu either case, wewould inevitably be ruined. Our only sal-

vation is in moving on, casting overboard i

"the elfete and burdensome,''and ovacooan-ing as fast as possible all obstacles in the I

way ofa compensated labor system, bringingforth the fullest industrial capacities of Ihe

|

blacks as harmonious co-laborers with the;

BUSINESS NOTICES.Initials Stamped on Lertrr Pnr.<r aad Enrei

upea -without moOhm ( hnrf?.

Visiting and Wedding CardENGRAVING

ESTABL1SHMEN T-ANI>-

STATIONERYHo. 42 Wett Fourth 8t?Mt,

flm door cut of W»!ant street. Cincinnati.

_SIJII*LEY dk PMITH.8pw?al attention elTen to Ooloria? Initlaie Monogram

£nd Ore.its on Fapbr.mT8tf

SPECIAL NOTICES.Uowaep Association.— l»U uses of lit* N.noui, Ss-ml-

nal and lllinaiy Organs. Jicw mid reliable treatment.KeputU gout frer of charge in HaM euvi lope-. AdJrewDr.J. 8K1LLKS liOUUUToS, Acting Surgeon, No. 2South Ninth »»., PLiliidelphia, P» |BJ 2m

Da. Thomas A. ni aiJtt.—Dzc? have a«d youpof/ul*r Worm Canuy aud chi*rfully ciTo my U«tirn«nyIn ltd lavor, a* o&e of the most plejv:ant e-i well r.s eltlra-

cioua worm tmtttftn 1 have ever known. It hoJ tho de-

atred eSec: in relir.viuK the children of worms.LonwuiF M,.-i ,<). wio. n. Miiw.Tub Ladim' Kestcvky Union An. Society wish to in-

form the put. lie teat Mr. Philip Speed U the only personatthorized to collect money for them.Naflaa UMat all are aa much interested aa themselrea in

the cause in which they axe la!.orius, they preTer the con-

tribution! to be voluntary, and contribcticna of moneymay be a at to Mrs. K. W. liupcrt. Treasurer of the Society, liroadway, Corner of MHi stro.-t. All contributionsof clothing, food cr material to be f.laiuly <lir»ctod to the

La'ii'«i' Kentucky Union Aid Society at the ro-nia of theSanitary Lomruission, on Kifth street, between Main ai d&lark-t. lloip:UI committees are already loi i.ied for dia-

tribntinr »t ai. hoji-itala whatever mar be acnt. W tf

MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS.

THE G R EAT HillEVERYBODY TAKE NOTICE!

WEBERTHfi DIKKcrOBs OK TBI NATIONAT, I' I A No

ln-truction take t' i* opi» rtuney io anaovacr t-i thef lie relative saeritaWfbkb'*. arsnrwiViet n.l n? to en

t the various p auo- which have been•icaianas a, lie. mo.i r.\ eta.,

audid Hlatement of the result

IS

WEBER PIPRE - EMINENTLY THE

PIANIf ISHHHiK ant thine.K»»a save n» ikla« la »

It you wu. s IUard«v,,ou hav» I M( «B , n,|

i:v rOB Ml'o.UALI iniilrar i.mipari I >.f

lelooms. C< n-3t'ti« 'if

witli all oilier makers

AMUSEMENTS.WOOD'S THEATERaEXTRA NOTICE.

Want Hit aaa'awav rtaai ] h iu^tlv awfabratal fca it-

th» Drifesanl ofher fs— III f r pow r. Mm w • bi i Pianoand is ih- . iov ktwwa i- el rum- iit of Wale* it may, willof a perfect laysliataat via: a«as1 po\m.u, Mil IMMTY «T »ONt: mid nt'RAI ITT. , _PoAJtBorDtaai roaa—IMS —II I**™ ^'"'l- uloni- r. Pr« >i

dents Jno.i: white, Strtirv; .1 K WUIiuti*. 'In i-.-nn-r.

Ai.vis.k\ I'oxairtfe.-S. B. Mill^. Max Mani/. k.

Thomas. K- 1- rt a Mbrck. similar teatteoaiala RiaN0. Jeroaaa Hopkii a, Robt. U< i!er. «'t

a

raswt. Iwa.Baaaihr<. 9m. K. Baastaw, s. a. cut Kuiil Bran

L orismau-liii

MUNICIPAL ELECTION.HI Hon. JolIN H. 1:1 t.l-U, at there-im-tc: mini o -

MM I H /ens, has conneuttil to beco:: | acanlidate Tor the

Marcralty at the enming election. m..rs-le

FOBTF, A X U i ' N 8 BBVATipnHic that, aft r a Ifmru—h an.

I

allied a place iu the r W;etc.. t» shlee a careful couiparlM'icompels thtm to <ar thnt the

ANO FORTEBEST PIANO IN Al

ed by any in the World.

•wetMaaaf taaa*. Mat Chkkawtaa few laa arflBaacr, »n.icntaiiiH ail th«ie ile ir»l« e (jaalitiei hi the !..... si

truth, U- said that ir i. a.e ui.ile.1 ib- tix ur-a« nii-liu s

and atmaiajtcr, w.th an i i.a nc iw wrwn m au>

deut; Thiodore Mors anj LouU Sci.rciber, Vic f-seii-

l arl I nawt). J. N Pal i, ii.CiI Ansclml/, Tie . ! re

th.- Wcoec I'nvi Foam bavi .4 i ... t„. r. ciervad tnmBr&ude'a, Wni N -son, Jno. ZaMHasa, K. Mo/ ••. W. B.Ihe... Moellinx aL<i ..lie-.-.

Tell Ten Tlio«H.nd Pe«

Advertising in the

>le at tiuee by

WANTED.\\' A »w> "i .... s i s a .at ; \ na>i

V. :

["'" ir the. .f t),. t ujted State- Ho r|atari ta eael aaa :

o",,fJ'T.v;.

L.\l>»

w s

niarT et: 1 :

tmi

a •

T R I V P,(LafettMaa. :t-r..«. ini a i—a i,

t'Zl Fo irth sr.. f...ni.v ;::-. Ky.

:• «l Ll^rr.iue:.t turi*

ytie- for them atom tu

WASTfcL Jltl.K-» f are wanf A I . Iks

<• !». o:i 1BKB,• "ol , Kentucky.

Jv '- ; ' A II V ABULI

ine hat liasT.i

'•• -IN - i.KilM.iii'k--..-. >; irAiiLr. tofeV» .11 D V <„.. ,„„, .. hlu-r i ; Hi H!. ; •

T t.

III •! .'

r>vn.* Mi' NG.

HtLie-t IllA'ket prisound i

war-is.

:i I f h

..n.l- sij>ae , mrwh'.ipa-'i in cash. The Mnle^ ii.u.Tl j

r »! «I mea^crin ' 1 1 h »n"

>tVti A IU., "arkrt

MTl .ir ailthori/.. .i to announce Pill LIP TOM 1'1'k.K I-,

Sr., asa ( aiidi.ia;. tvi liiu M^ijoraliy at tLe April e'.ec-

tion. mart-te

WM. MODKSBACH is a candidate for re-election a-

.Stre»-t lispcvtor ih the Eastern District at the nest Aoril

election. marl-te

MAU> I! II li, HAS BKKNifiatnaiiial fur the

CJATVI III) A I KVKKtNi;O kindly aetaaatj hi the

BENEFIT OF SIDNEY SMITH.Tw o ICxrellent B ranias will be OHerttl.

Thegr-at tommWt drama of

MIRIAM'S CRIMES,Wiitt-n • xprcsnly for M'i* Ma'ilda II. r.m, and by her

eutedtoalr.Suii.il. Alao, tin- ever MOeftahla pfetv,> acts, of

I Hi: LAND \S IT \\ VS.

Louisville Theater.CAlii.Y & (JAl.Vr.liT Lessees and M.i..H^. r.i.

D, A.SaaaKDA^ „ _ _ Stage Manftger.i". J. Caret Trcrjurer.

aa-ll -n.-nt M M19B LBO HUDSON, wh.. ail] app -ar lalive characters, iutr<d>icin& severiil loiuhas aud abum Iftil dance.

tsTOn Kiilay Kvcniiu-. Man'n In, 1Nk'>, will l* actedthe loiuaulic draxa o' tl

\\ IZAhD SKIT ; or, the HsaUMWl io.

Ah x:: =}Mi^ Lao Uud^

onrli:de with the hr.i act ol

MA/.fcPPA.Mazeppi Mi-s Leo HudsonThe Wi d Horse by HMMtoaMTVBAUD MATIBBB evary d itarday ait. i mom at 2S

o'clock.

HfOaoaa aaaa al Vk a'asack fribfaaw eaaaaaaatoaiat7't pr-cis« !y. ilox ollice open daily from 1(1 A. M.to 4 P. 11., when aeats may be secured.

aarBEDVCTtox or Pai. i>.-Piivate r.oxea, t-i A Or-chtatra feats, «l no. Dress iBtoto and Pamr.i.item. raaUly Circle No. Colored Boxes, M»c. Ua!-lery, 2V.

MASONIC TEMPLE.l<or One »Vcek. C—itnetaa MomSay

Bveaiac, March 13th, ana' Fivefollow In-; \i-i.ts.

ArtemusWard aiiions tiie Mormons

BJ. O. KEASOB isa randidate for re liction lo the

olfice of City Attorney. marl -to

W. K IIVliK.-. ihe lateiity aiarahal. Ita l»at!lilate

for Mayor at the cm-uinu' election. BBBMl

Jo.Si.pil Ci.EMKNT i Hasiai rat • a . au-lidat for

Major at the . nsuirtt el«tion. He voted for, and is a

-in| IBM of the administration of tftaflUll t Lincoln.

BMMaDICK WAT 1 8 is a candid.!.- for the office ot ( ity As-eisorat the ensuing April el etion.

A. W. B. BABBH i- acanlidate for u-eiccti. n t .Iht

olfice ol City Assts»or. BBM M

aBOBfll W. DOANK is a candidate lor City Auditor.

feblT-te

WE are am hoi i/. .1 t .announce OMk A. M. » 'LT as

a can idate for<ity Attorney at the eusulug election.

trbH-tf

WE are ailthoriz d to aiinovuce WM. KAYK, the p; ^>

nt iucumh ut, aa caudidate for re-election to the office

of Mayor o th - City of Loui.-Mlle at the ojmiiu April

lectioll. f.-MOtd

CLOTHINC.

McGILL & MULLEIN, wAi :;

Ur:\.Mr.;-SlT!AI|oN!

v» .-"ri.-^ii;-.-., n

otooi^iun,.: in- -,. r \ u.s. '.,

l'e«t. n e n-

.

- D AN Ai'.J |LaitpedStaios Army. ,.j

ft- re,l. a. L. BKl.it NA P. N.

!. Ill- . Ill

Clothing

Late of Ma !!:»!t lb-Hi-, n .* BaaM on

Afreet, bet. Main and MajfBjH,

Are HBBB1 out their oBMl Oj

Gentlemen's FineAND

Furnish inj: GoodsAT*

t T THE ('.ALT HOl'SE U E W'EBE TlOf, Jt If HUBA local tlad-. Now tlmt am Imve a central -t mt, Weare determined to Mil out . .11 r ;.r. m nt rtoeh AT I thatare majr becomo b-tter auowu tu 'lie i--.pl I oui.i ill

niai3-Utis MctflLL « Ml LUBB.

'•r- », u.jaiati

10 . "it CttBJBfr

n -.1 IM-t- r. i

in-a .g ADEUto,ya»tt

-M*N FOB Illfclaa aeea ax-rvic - prc-aaattavt. .*3» it

.rir rt f»-. 'ems. •

»t:a :, I t»-eu lir.oQ »u .

*s-2J dt-.

FCW SALE.:>M.

. ri : . I . T>--.»\ MtliK ETim a to Cob i .t ..t, mvu,*''a and it rata atr • :•>. m><« u|i the "1 »r* : !.--u-e. Aop'j . lo||>

. I r .:.k:!ii «•••- I. ;. ai-i-la*

c*yobBAiva—Taia bbh k mucea. a. four r outs and n itia i i,i .;, i !>..• <••>• I .

.;d.l:.:i.| -_r .... . . KB.\> K ' «=:•

fibJS-tf

BEN. MASON,MERCHANT TAILOR

TKtt. or D.S BENi'iucT a ssiss.

DIM MALB- \ HOI it . WILL -1. ,LOX l.,:A>0>-1 lie- teoo, ... ... :-. iv- i : . v..,;,. : ... ...

r-'v-" ,: ' u

FCUIwD.ifosni* a it bi o» k bi aA aaare-ti li».|i.iie at this ofltc.-.

NATiOMAL BANKS.

Louisville City NationalAND DXALBB IB

LADIES' HAIR DRESSER.me. KM GENIA SUELlOlf,

rpHI ac oMpt i«ilKl> BAIB DBBSBBB Off C1S-A ci ii nut i, has arrived »rd will dovu'a s:...i I s. chi r m nt aolima I Inti inilii il] lades' hair dress ii

in the la est i'lirifian itjhia alia It aba re elvi , uionthliriaBew Font. LasHsa aarvesl at their reaideacesj at theshort, st i:.>lice by BtTtog aBlrtM .it Mrs. Mi \ > It s,

Malmii street, b tweea iioka-m ami BjoaooeB, opiamiteCit> rchlMll.

«rt» S.-s ::n. ni:irl-.;t*

CENERAL ORDERS.Ueau^i \arr.:: i 1). PaBTl

laWMtnLtaGeneral <>rd-rs Bo. 7.

rpai roar commabdaxt of lodikvilli will1 i t once suppress all slave p,ns and

tabllsl.nients lor the cunhnei. eni ol p

pi'ivai.

and will ilBaihorgi penoBt coaii: y coin in and oi Bajoi I* aond

city,ei.P.MMEn:

T, p. WAToOB,( apt. and .\. A. A. G.

GENTS' FURNISHING GOODS.ar»>ia naaaiaji iwrbb hand the wwnutt*IV i»t st; lao of

FRENCH AND AMERICAN

Cloths and Cassinicres.

BdbaBaloa N roata. I! r\iii sea's :s tents. Door.OtQB at 7: i ouini. nc. at I o'clork.Tlrkata mat ha had nt tin- ma io stores of D. v Kaulds,

Ma n stre<-t, Loni- Tripp t urthsti.-et tart WUBam Me-t'orrelL Joofeti aotfuaa; «u-> si the MtooBtol toOeio aadal tao hot nBlon Baanaln Teaaatr, whara rot rvea aeatican be o-cured mrlai each day from M until 4 o'doek.

'I he piauo and cabin-lit or.-nii mrt are from t:ewillknown ma—fcrterj of Maaara. Baaaaa i Bona,mar.i id

S( IIOOL F A I KAT TH I

Masonic Temple,For One Week, CaaBBBBBCBBg HbkB li,

to tr. Btm by Tin: ..oMJiiTTBrs of rnr.

GKBM4V BVAOiBW AII> Bf>CIETVAXI) SF. 1.1 l' AS SO ll.TV.

'IMIE PBOI'EKDSOr THE KAMI « !!,!, P. I i: »TXBA to the er rtion of a lie* school ho* e Admii le liceBI cuts; Bi as..!! li. ket- il M, ,„ rirl 71

wliitt.is iu the saute vast and iuviling liel.l.; Al „, 0v ,.,, ;l!ll , Tlip ,-r„w rBWhtatt and 8.1, LakaCH*.

AlAItcO. : Illustrated wiih cdos-al PaOBtiami • f Mormon Humex,ia» -

|and Mornio.i People. All of which will ha chrerfu |y aad

The fharleston Courier.e,-..:, ,,uhik,,m, i h> ,:, ire.tori teat baatorfct.

There was ralher a huinerous siene at the

aAea of tha CiMUflaaton f'ourier. The edi-tors had run away, hut the business manremained, and hoped to save his property,f'oionel Woodford called at the ollice at BBearly hour, and the following couversatiouto;>k place:

Col. \\\—"Whom have I the pleasure ofaddressing, sir?"'

Newspaper proprietor.—"Mr. L , sir."

Col. W.—"Will you do mo the favor, sir,

to loa.'l me a slie.-t of paper'.'"

Mr. L.— ( Looking at the Colonel's shoul-der strap-;—"Certainly sir, certainly.*'

Col. W.—"Thank you, Mr. L ; mightI trouble you for pen and ink?"Mr. L.—"With pleasure, sir."

< 'ol. W. Begins to write)—"Really, airI am sorry to trouble you so much, but this

ink won't How ; will you be good enough toget another bottle?''

Mr. L.—"Oh, crrtaiiil v; no trouble atall."

Col. W. writes:

"< M i l. i: I

'

i;i i. M ak. QBB. D. .S.. Charles-ton, S. C. Feb. liO—Special Orders No. LThe Charleston Courier estalilislunent is

hereby (Mr. L. saw the writing and lookedatartled and troubled) taken poaaaaalott ofby tha [Juited Btetea."Mr. L. could not endure tliis any longer,

for he was slily overlooking the manuscript,and burst out.

"< olonel, surely you don't mean to con-fiscate my property. 1 opposed nullidca-tion—in 1S30!

- '

The Colonel tells this story with greatzest, as the Bearaat approach to loyalty inCharleston that he bai met among the w hitepeople yet.— [Cor. N. Y. Tribui:c

Ueneral Wblfo invited a Scotch cflicer todine with him ; the same day he was alsoinvited by some brother oflicers. " Youmust excuse me,'' said he to them, "I am

jalready engaged to Wolfe-." A smart youngensign observed, he might as well have ex-

|

pressed himself with more respect, and taid<;>>t< ral Wolfe. "Sir," said the Scotch offi>

cer, with great promptitude, "we never s.iv

General Alexander, or General Casar."Wolfe, who wns within hearing, by a lowbow to the Scotch oflicer, acknowledged thepleasure he felt at the high compliment.

FUEL.

Pomeroy C oal.rpBOBI wisiunc • HBBOT U>AL Koli non«1 ins,- and

, -ir.oi am;***Mu, :irst ra*- PITTHBl'BGC'1 »AL can ha i supnli d h» h artel their i.r.b-s at

ol.VSf.A I) ,v U CoNMnl'S c.. ,i yfllc •

oa Third atrm t. b t. Mark, t aad J- Bmoa.Or South we- 1 em u i ol Broosan t Market,mar Mat

FURNISHING GOODS.

SPRING HAS COME!

AND WITH IT

NEW GOODSAT

PAPER WAREHOUSE.A. V. DUPONT & CO.,

Manufticturefs and Wholesale!>K.\L£BS IN

Highest Market Price Paid forRags.

10,000 Reams Assorted Wrap-plig Paper;

500 ileams siraw Boards;550 truss Bonnet Boards;100 rases Assorted LetterPaper;

1,000 Beams Manilla Paper;2,000,000 Envelopes Assorted.

FOB £ALK BYV. V. DUFOHT & CO.,

atll. !l Main -t.a-».

No. 107 i :iiii ili feat.

I o; f*\ ili ::, KT«

KAiI\ & WOLFaM v Mrs actus;m %m

CLOTHING,438 Main St., cor. of Fifth.

loi is\ ii.li^ r-.\.

vsri; win Lit IBVOU i i jraiKBBfl an» i t s.

Large and Varied Assortnicnt of

HUM ': »U«.:

u.c K-N-rHY, J a. »srassii»VJ. B. o BANBOK, TKUH7B^lSlTfl

i tkom „i a .. in -r I 1! akini; ho- ... -ror tiie p.-< seui : •:;!. b -at il hai.nii'-j II.

B. Warraa A Cav, MailA i all al felpaf Ml

1 y th^ Bins torn, a pri

e.'.t. lujablo 1st Jfay.

' " VABKBB, rBmBBai.•u '"' r - -

1 .

" it. ii—( t, 1 e »- „ »onrfh aad rifth.lie- cpfl s'.. Unin-,,1""W'U'N: A;r:la«.:.- '

r

K. -. >i

HATS, CAPS, .CUR3, ETC,

HATS A N D i \VsAM-

CENTS' FURNISHING GOODS

AT

UIH>LI>\l.i: \ »u KXAIla

} &B v. BBt'BlTIBli »^:> WILL t'uNTIM I•.

L rei. i\e thlfaah lb- kmw aU n- -i d-"v !-

• i f •;• -nU hi hit line lui r-[.r;.ie aiul»umm-rw rwhich ! la: : w,o ., ia«. ,.,:u fe.t »-|l«i.ow.

'

Br-B.-i .• PS, ... is fK\. CL-

IN!

GREEK & GREEKS.A iBTga and Varicil stock of

GENTS' FURNISHING GOODS,

Selrc.rd f on> Iho latut imp..rtat|.ini. it mf teadr.Ibeii we»t atytoouf ll Ai s, U4P8, and aU ithar arti-

e.es in their line a. w am toand at tliisi Uoui-.-.novl-Uly

Sambo had been whipped for stealing bilmaster's onions. One day hu brought in a

]

ikaak in his arms. Says he, •• Massa,'

liciv's de flbap Aat .steal de "onions. Whew, i

>)?u institution than lo Kiy llsat it bas cnlislet].1 weuki..-,h that «.-..uid po^ibJy be cxhib-

] the conscience of apaajBB)BfBBBBt M, Ann-r-an hlavery liita undoubtedly done this,

A BTaiBB KitMi . Kv m BB1BB1H Ak-KRstku ix Si. Loi is.—Th- s;. Ix>uis pfe>jMiU-h Siiy.*-:

Mr. Fred. Kline, a rather ubiouiiousjziKTi A'.n, baa raeaoUj beea incarcerated inliratiot la await trial ou tbe charge arbaBB>whacking. He came here h*«- ^uuiuterfrom Kentucky as an attache of the rebelarmy. He iBBBBBli BBBB1 parli.s in thiscity to

.i his c uiipanv. and after pur-chasing g'xnls of some of our merchant?NBanam] t,, ait legitimate avmraliou of nia-raodiaf, plaodering and murdering, ifeMa-,-,!. wBdc in theeitj, that he ha.l fallenout will, lot,-..s!, i.u lora.er commandc.-,

«..;., i,.eaf.ero„ bi l• - • M-u! to Mi neral

aud has thereliy made its own ovcrlhrowBBBvaaaMa.

Bui bhdg. . Kline mm* anaafailodged in liratiot.

' is now

Oar Malls.

.Kor the t'nion Pi ism.;

BJ cially our Eastern mails continuevery irregular, uncertain, unreliable. HawYork mails often ^Sto4s or more hourslong r getting here than to Cincinnati!Why is a city so large and centrally locatedand aa important, iu a military and com-mercial i»oint ol view as LouUville. so cutoil" from the rest of the country? lias niionot suffered long enough? Is she not en-titled o better treatment— to an immediatebm>rabla haartag al Washington? it looks

BBa I'ost Oflloa Dapattuiijui Bad. formany years, neglected this while invidu-ously favoring other cities. Granting thatother cities' mail privileges are no greaterthan their deserts, ours are certainly much

William IY.«™dili u.iiiH one day, when, at table wilh^end oib. ers. he op! -re ! on- of the waiters below our deserts. Let Hon. JaaT Speedto lak. ay .iy tuai marine there.' jK.imi,,^ and Jas. Guthrie do something fer their ne-

.mSHlW . V1 *'-- " V ' ;ur "rW5 I

"in

;

glec-ted and suffering city.• lu.re.l a • olonel of mane*, "do you com- ,°

.uare an empty b,,ltle to a memlK-r of our i xm * „ . „branch of the m rvi< -?M "Yes " replied the •Mark of Civn.ir.ATiox —A French

, l eldi. _in march, as ,f ;, sudden thought had struckhim: ' I mean to say it has ./,„„ ,t.H duh;ouce, and is ready to do it again."

»nr co;'.ntr_\ Vedly ite women; but its

husbanded.

areundoubt-

v. iitor i .nciudes an account of his ship-wreck in these words: "Having arrived ataa unknown region I traveled eleven hoursw ill, »ut discovering the least trace of anyhuman bemg. At last I perceived, to my

gibbet,civilized

i ^'Va

' i "-v -u v n *'' h *usi>cnded on a

ba -Ah: lexi-laiuHd/Iam now in a ci

CENERAL ORDERS.aumvaaRmjatMu. Hid orKsaram

Bll—il lim, Ki., Mann 1,1-.^.

BoMMl Order BaAn n matter O M p»M imp rt»in-.-, not only to the

t o- ps. t in to tl„ «..|| : r ,. ,,f the State, tlio Colpmal com-inai.diiiv, iu hi, uuiiiu' eoQiiii-ud within tiie i istrie', de--ii — flail? ta imp -f ml lojiili ana tha rnBrn * th,> m>• -sn . ,,r «trut distii lino and subonanalion on the pariol the troop i.

In main caws the a tion. of KeVial oflmjiBMBHtboaa aMMiaianit, hrtaflag diacrrdit uotouly rnrna them-"T

VV . .1 • Kimeuts tovhich they l», lorn;, hut *Uo to

Hi- t-de,al »an«e, b). the iiiiaiilliony d and illiiiecewaryei/.ii-, ,,l hois n.,ml property of all kind-; hi the Hu-rt rraatod aBi - • ol « s>d ctiaaaa.Tlie* in ii

f., ,si li i e!) 'orhiddeii and -an not ncr wi'l notl^-l-J,-rat m. * hi e B la expooted that « itli eare, pre, i^.ion and ,ii.k in nt ail ordi r. will be can hid iutoelleet at dlh" inter* »l« i X Ih - Mat, arid V- deral Government a .rn-aorB u • :

.at Uie aaaae eleaaa tBeae aawaaraal <l acta

of ,.lBi—m and i ild.er.-. In .Kt cease.The pr o tice of ooaamama otlio-i-H aoa4bM "nt «oout-

wtv, p*i tii with ratmaa, no |. m; t .,. haetl .inlnlced in ailo have hatOOi • a k> I mWI tne peoph an,l an injury to theaoldier. Supplies inn -t iu every iu-tai.ee. U. carii-d withaaaadBtoaa aiaal thamam iort not allowed t . p/aate ti.em,arwfe the know I dge that Ih y will he allowed to at ,o pii-vat- hoojaaa.

Ollict-rh a,'tuallr eominaid : n(r troops, both at p. • - nudM active duty, are roflraal to ri in tin w th theii c,.i„.mauds, the l.abit of bosmtiiiKat private liou-e, ,.u muchiudu'Ked in. ha. rem.teil iu much harmThe safety ot c mipi fhould not be entrusted to patrol

l u i d. Tick t lines should be e,tali!ishcd, and ,it nightiuvarialdy held.Loyal cfixens ha<e a liirht to c|«im cur i rotection.

v.-h oh -lo ii d • e oBoarflttl] siv,-u thetn. tBoMdialO] ,1 • i

iaotner words at enmity wiih the federal Uove nm ithave no pr ,p< r abiding p ace within Kenti.cky. 'li,-i-f re those fon d ii active eympst^y with thee irnt -s cfIh i aeral Ooverasaeat moat t tant t/itlua th" narrowscope ot the enen y lines. i

Otli, e'N w ,11 hi held st- icily accountable for th » pTeTTTexecution o! all orders and the cojtdnci of their n-sp<s-ti\ecoramanda. Any depredations eoromitt-d l.v thetn willha fern tt d OLt and the officer found guilty dismitsed t es-rvi. .-.

it isoirnestlv des red that both oiUcrs and soldiersW 11 lM>ineiKetie and aatchlut, aed ever I, ar theuiseh ,<in such a man n-r ? to met it Mm app-obaooi, of th, ir -u-periors aud demand the gevd will and co-operati n ol alle od and loyal citizensAnd win this co opt ration, which i- eertaluly xp, ct.-d

on the (art o all citizen . wnh the military autii ritns«v in .y c hi fid ntly esjaect that the lawbaa aodtoTiaabands which now infest the c uutry will aton lie eithera' nihiUle I oroaptlM and proapotltl a:aiu teitn aritl iii

tbe bordeis of K> ntneay.

LOAN.NATIONAL 7-30 LOAN.CM BB RimONfl TO Tills POM 'I.Alt LOAB BB.I

cu "viil o>' the I uited States I*epo.itoiy in tliis ,-:tv, atlusoffl, e tu the Custom I on e. I titer, s -t eal in? I . 2>

Not: -s lexcep. • omp ,nd 5 |« r cent . tak> n in pa« .rent.\V. D. ttAIibAUUEB,

mar8-tf A^eut f r J y Cooke.Democrat copy.

DRAFT FUND,

Subscriptions to the Draft Fund.

WK ARK APl'OI NTKI) BV TIIK JKll-KK-oNOOatutf Court, iu c;>iijii -tii.n with tin- pu sent Co u

mitlee, to rtc-lve amhacrlotloaa from residents of the• oun > outride of the city. No feiooai eaa have tin- l.-n-eiu of tbe County dralt fund w ithoiit painy Ut) tw.n ydollars.

rai mints ran le made at the Anzeiijer ili ,-, .1, flersonstreet, near Third: . I. O. Wil«>u'a office. Jefleraoa street,ear Center; or al tin- County Court CI-rk'B uflke.

AMU.'KW MONROt:,i> kr:

m

AUCTION SALES.Hll'KS AM) TAl.l.oM

lit- an-iion at Ih-Wn,L BI SOLD AT Plill-I'nited States Uovi rnmcut

Jt«r House, at Nashvjll,., Tet i i-fsee. on \\ KU.vES-bAV, .Maui n i.'.th, isiV., H t Kio'clcck A. M.

:

IMM Wet !-hlt. d Hi 1. s, more or ha sMM l)i v Hid,-., more or !e-s;in Uarr.-is Tallow mora ..r la a.

Terms cash. 8. I>. HEMDBB80N,Uiar.s-.'.t Captain and C. S.

W. B. LEONARD & CO.,

AUCTION AND SALE STABLES.

Main Street, Brlwern Sixth nnd Seventh Sta.

Auction Sales Twice a Week,\vi:dm;si)ay and satukday.blC-tf E. I> IIITI'HKNS, AitrtHneer.

NEW PUBLICATION.just fvmmkmtx

WOODWARD'S COUNTRY HOMES.BY GEO. r. Jt f. W. WOODWARD. BKfcBvsBa

A BXW, PRACTICAL AM. oRlolNAI. WOaK ON

II I II A I, A K CHIT B 0 T D R E .

K egantly illustrated w.th 1?2 enaravluga, liowini? LV-

shjus and VXtnt for houses of moderate co t, «Bh Uirns

and u -I. nil. linns and maimer of conftnirtius Uallojn

l2mo , price BUB postpaid to any address,

ar -tf CIVILL 4 CALVKRT.———————————Best Brands ot rhewlug and Smoking

Tobacco

A jal7 Smina'

No. VO Main at., bet. Fifth and Sixth.

bonds-

COUNTY BONDS.ON TUfcsr.AY KSXT VB WILL Ut. BSABTTOBKU

County It m.'is, old red hf tlie O ut;t> C,.in ;iu>\ .11-

thorized hi Ihe Kcioucky I talslatari to proii t theCuaa>r Boaa draft. Theae hoMa are for tsaiaod *nasi.

iart pavahla bates at, ,1 .art la taaaij jiaio VTo willreceiw bid- from p rs.ns st the Anzei .-i oil., e or at th -

Coast] Court Clerk's offi As the C tl) OWta noother Ccbt, and he, taxes ..r > pl-sU. 1 for its redempt on,thii la oa* aftse aerj heat lares menu X -r eaaitallets.

ABDKKW MuBBUB,ti. 1'. DUEBB,

mart tf J. U. WlusOi*.

TOBACCO AND CIGARS.C. «. TACUAV. I.BW1S TAi I'AU

C. G. TACHAU & BROTHER,Wholesale and Retail Dealers in

CIGARS, TOBACCO, PIPES ANDSMOKING ARTICLES,

No. 3115 Main street, b, twee'i liith and BhtBh,

RBrBRBIBG TO TIIK AB >VK CARD, WK WILLat al! times be pn-i an d to eahihit lo our Ire-re aa 1

patrou-j a lari;e and well ass, i te«l st- ck. I hi' roods havebeen selected with itn-st care and our endeavor shall

aTUNfi&SIIIVfiRCUmilN.Mtaah) f r (BB and t-..nst.> trade, mrt we co lialivunite racrchautd t. t.iv;- u, a • ill .v-.il examine otir•fcMB

Mr. K MI N OWoOl s hla r. is,. r,a! att nth hi BM I

•flactTire ol o-.-.r r% thin* in Phibulel! h a. lie <* aprien e t hayer. parchasaas from cr i haada exrlaaitet]for cas'.., an i our inrinttes i? nerally i ; abe- ns la oBaiadvaataaaa tiiat eaaraw b > mrt wm I I i-: ot a aat.Tin- Bbotal axcoraaaodatiaa ato have hetataeava ci*.:!,

ve are vrlUiaa tot\i< ad ta nil nuam mkn iu the tra«eBaiT ilBall

SCOTT, DAVISON & CO.,

.Successors to Scott, K-en A Co.,

Wholesale and Retail Dealers

IN

MEN& B8YSP PINE I'LfFUIM

FU2HISHING GOODS,

C orner ol sixllt ami llaln streets,

Ijoviisvillo, Ky.febl«-lyia

H. HARRIS & ROSENAU,WaWBlUl —Alaaal I

Gents' Clothing and FurnishingGoods,

so. 4-js aiAiNiti rket. ui:r. vox. ;:tm a>: } :- ;•

: t:.

i :!..'**':•; JvV.

rts L<dd AT i t ST

V K.-s a ill U-s Id v ry V w.I. • I'H- : I ..- ; . ,

•-.

^Wxaa.- 37'-

SBBl 5i \ rj -T.. be":hUSZm

•M.LVSU AND TiiiKi".

HEETER & CHAUDOIN,m main i mma, bwh sidb,

'Wholesale I lealera

jimm

FIRM NOTICE.

Gents' elegastFur Hais.

Gents' eleg :nt black nnd coloredWoolen Hats,

Bcvs' elt

Hats,Gents' and Boys elegant Staw-Hats—Palen and Leghorn,

Elegant Laiiies' Trimming Strawand Leghorn Eat3.

fcVB OBVBB) OCa LABSfl MBei \t T:i»: L-iWf* eat prices, aaJ isvite r- taller* to give as a call aad

.-xanii-e i.t.23-iui

Fine Chewing Tobacco.THF DNDEB8IGNBD MABUVAOTUBBBS UKVV.

on hand and for sale a largo aaaortaaeal of ViNBCHEWING TonAt CO, mada Ihtai the beal BoatheraKentucky lea', put ii|> in lai k- and -hi ill ;-ackas- s »u,t-ab e to the retail trade, vi/.

:

Bright Empress Pounds,Bright Empress 10 Lump,

Cumberland 1-4 Lump, in caddies,Nectar Pounds, m half boxes,

Which we ofTer to the fad.- a! low rrices »t our Factory,on BwamJ street, between Main ami V-rk.-t.

X '

iaVT) it WHITB .* BBBD.

NEW T08ACC0 FiRf.l.T A.1I PLKASKD TO ANNi-LMK TO MY MANY

p tron . that 1 hav hanm ! a l'.\ BBBUU Mlf v BIMK. MBaVal A. BaWBBB, laraatB al H. Loin-. Mo.,

under the Uunio and st; le ,-f Kdmiuels ,v Krowder.

JAMK8 T. BMBBBBB)Falls City Factory, Nm. U\ 130 and i32 Third at.,

tnyrc-lw L iLls-VlLLlt, liY.

CO-PARTNERSH.P.WE. THK I NDKItsl' N Kit, 11 AYE A.--.- [ATEl

oii^el'ei t..<"th-r under the nam- and i-t, I.- ,.

Ill'TCUINCS. VI M AN A CO or the p,,^ „,' ,dactimra » HOLKBALBUaOCBBl ABU IMtsd. and hope, i.j prompt attet,merit a liberal portio;: t ! the pa-rona*

Mn ..M M IS 1

:on aahaaaaaaa, la

DAVID K iit Ti 1IIIB4HLJ. A. I I'M ANM. A. DOWSiNfJ.liKN. c. WBATBB.

I ID a HIT.-MIV.s,I t Loataa County, Kr.a nowvitsij,la'e,.f .Shelby Btaar. 1.

Ttaaeliiig footCigar Ca^es

rfl OBEAT VARIETY at C. O. TACHAU I BRO.'flL iaIT Smins No. Ml Main St.. bet. ITifth and Siiln

SUBSTITUTES

SubstitutesrpHBHIQHEBT PBIUE8PAID. CALL I NA tie und. rei me i at No. 333 ll.irdIween Market aii>IJeff«i*os. eaot side /flBUBOTlTUTES |*C llM.sHKD by the -ame _L-

HUTCHINGS, DUNCAN & CO.,

WHOLESALE GROCERS

COM >1 1 SS 1 0 \ ^ERt II 1 NTS,AND DK VLEU.s IN

Leaf Tobacco & Country Produce.North Mic naln St., bet. Tth and Mh,

I.Ol ISVI1.I.K, KY.H Het attention r.Md tottesaleo' Bacon. Lard, Pork.

Win at, a lotir and \Vh si.y. Uruo.aai.de nsnenm-nta ao

BaBai t. b.r. tf

|

Aarge Aaaortaaeal it BBiaraciaaai

IA^^^ii^,.- rirthand 3,th.

It ta not nexaaairy to pnUiah a lot* list of i

w'ukn the VKORit\ S1TVT.U* are a

KIDNK\>; In aU a* tlona o( the brain, d p.

.tpco «!era..< i.a-ut «.';he Monxii r B, w. I; ::: t;u%T

ailKt.HAVlS.il and \fct UALIilA, ana L:

VRVEK ami Alil B. it U destined to aam>:^de al

.dfcer remedle*. It Bffl onj, enrea three dtse^, but it

preTenU thetn. A wine »U a fail of the EaaT't +' 11 S.

aken en boor before caeh m*al. will obviasta lha ill af

Bets of the moat anh, althy climate, and secara ta. *»k-r

aitainst disease* aaaarr faeat trytsa aapa-iara.

PHEPAKED IIY

mi. joii\ m\VMs\uAt Itla laboratory ou 5th Croat* street.

LOUISVILLE. KY.

HURLEY'S POPULAR

•TifiR MOST PIJtASANT K vMNDT NOW TN T3K.1 as t in "r-ar-.u! iu iu • ifwt,, ut.r ly >t»si'7 J> n* ta«r«riu« in :..l *ie- v:id evpellmrf then, from 'he «vst**-aaan rarest shvnkl have tlie candy fat the hoeaa.

riW.^ A. rii it: «i, p. r -,rt r.

arc^n at., bet. Sii h and i

Page 3: LOIISVILLE DAILY PRESS.LOIISVILLEDAILY PRESS. VOL.L fCr LOUISVILLE,KY..FRIDAYMORNING,MARCH 10,1866. NO.273 CALYEKT,CIVLLL&CO PUBLISHERS.-PRESSBUI DAILYUNIONPRESS. peryear,f1000 …

THE DAILY PR]T<> AUVEH

Our circulation Is rapidly increasing,which rentier* tLe Presa one of th« bestadvfrfJFiuK mediums tn the Slate. We

will

city CorNrn..-Both Hoards of the City

Council met last night pursuant to adjourn-

L!!^

il,

I

i

*,l

A,tTI ud.

f. Tr..i , lu l.

T. B. Everett. H-f.iiiui.vii;,-, Ry.J. U. Duncan, Bacdad, Kys. m. rettitnnu A <>>., Htrk Kow, hw ye."D. G. > ouab .-, Krankfort. Ky.J. ^. Heau, bowline or.i i.. Ky.Tboaias Boardmati, I-'-.-w Albany.Cooe, TobiwII a Co., No. «s, (Wry —

'

Tone, Chati^novea, hn. aad"

1'ieas i* nit- Ofhrial Paper of the

States h.r the stete <-t Kritlucky

of

For SM^rapk, River

etc., see fourth

Two boys who have had i

I the case, Inquire at this OOnoS. tf

GLKKRILLAS A.Mi QwmtU Sl'IKS.—

Guerrilla bands st-eta to have undisturbed

IKwseasion ot'the region along the LebanonBianch Railroad. Hughes's band was at

St. Mary's on Monday last, and broke ojieu

aud robbed some trunks at the railroad sta-

tion, robbed the store, and <->mmilie-d other

depredations. There were thirteen of them.On Tuesday the s-ime band captured a

freight train at Chicago station, a few milesthis bide of St. Mary's, with thirteen goodhorses belonging to the Government, which"I" course they didn't hesitate to take pos-

session of. A gentleman «ho was there

when the train was captured, informs usthat the guerrilla* had evidently been noti-

fied that these- horses wauld be on the train.

They had been pressing horses in th->

neighborhood several days previously,some' from secession ri-s-idents, who weretold that their horse-, could be recovered

if they would make their appearance at

< 'hicago at a certain time and claim them.

These sccesh sympathizers and guerrilla

nbeliors were there and r»t-o\ert.-d their

projierty. Guerrilla bands ajas rating along

the lines of railroads, doubtk-ss have their

spies at different lniltrary jroi::ts, who in-

form them when desirable shipments are

made. How » be than through a spy end J

Hughes's gang have known several days

before that those h rsts would l»e shippedfrom Lebanon on a t-eiiain day ?

MMB Maoazini:.—The March luui-l*-r of this poimb.r serial is unusually in-

teresting. It is embellished with a be»au-

tilu'ly engraved portrait of the great

Russian Statesman and friend of the L'ni'.eu

States—Prince Gortchakoli". The editor

sdso gives a very readable sketch of this

"great and good man." Jmiicious selec-

tions are made from the> ieaeling foreign

maga/ine.s {Or tic "Ec'.clir" and the ar-

ticles in the present number will be foundsuflicientlv varied to suit the diffcienl

tastes of our leaders. The leading pajH-r is

-vorthy <<f a careful reading, Herbert Sjx-n-

v i "> new philosophy deserves the e-onside-

ration of s<-ientihV men. The* papers on

"Painters" and "Painting** are sketchy am'insmwtiw-. ••Ire land" should not be over-

looked. "Giuseppe aud his Timers"* tx>n-

'.Hius much of in teles I on Italian atlairs.

The lighter and the slmrt article* will

atnufce ami pleasantly occupy the sparemoments; while the article from the French—the Itattle of Lepai to—translated for the

J'cledic by a thoroughly competent pen

wo are iure w ill give sali.duction to ourreaders. Il is a graphic battle-seene pic-

tun d »o ;Jn- life by an eminent historian.

The* price of the magazine has not been

advanced; only s"> per year. Subscriptions

r-ce-ived by CMU A Calvert.

A MSIadu.inlste:. i

shal's oliice t

company ii,

and Geo. Wmtry, formerly

finOATH

keW. v. Q

Roberts,

! r'-<dden

tmnesty e»alh w as

the rVMMl M n>

Lre, 1 -t Lieutenant

y rebel cavalry.

Kentucky infan-

< iay <•mtity. Id.

A |>etition numerously signed by citizens,

was present -d in the lower board askinglhatthesystem of uniformed police be adop-ts*! in this city. Mr. Armstrong introducedan "ordinance to authorize and establish aPolice Department uuder a uniform sys-

tem, "A-., which passed by a voteof 10 yeas to

nays, The ordinance as passed is the .same

as published in yesterday's Pkkss, with a

feu unimjKjrtant amendments.A communication was received from the

Jcl!\ rsonville fbsjj Company, proposing

that if the City Council will authorize the

establishment of a new ferry at the foot of

Clay street, said ferry company will, within

a short time, run a separate ferry boat to

and from said landingMM the Ohio river,

and will soon prepare a landing on the

other side. The company promise, if au-

thority is obtained, to purchase a boat

for that purpose aud commence run-

ning within a reasonable time. It

was stated that the new ferry company that

had proj»osed to establish a ferry in compe-tition to the old company had become ab-

sorbed in the Jeffersonville Ferry Compa-ny, and had abandoned the purpose of es-

tablishing another ferry. The subject wasdeferred till the time within which the newcompany, as provided in the act of the Leg-

islature, were to apply for a license shall

have expired.

A resolution was adopted appointing a

spec ial committee to prepare a time-table

for the Jefiersoiiville Ferry Company, andto Is the rates of ferriage lower than they

are at present.

The ordinance abolishing the offices ol

Tax Collectors and creating the office ol

Receiver of Taxes, ade>pted by the CommonCouncil at the last regular meeting, waspassed by the Board of Aldermen.Adjourned to RSSOt next Thursday night.

Polk k Coikt.— Thursday, Marc/, 9.—

John McNulty.drunkenness and disorderly

. onduct. Fined tC, and security in *100 wasrequired for bis good behavior for three

months..lames Webb, robbing Abner W. Patter-

son of |ff ML Continued till to morrow.Jauifs A. Long was fined $T>, and held to

bail in NM for three months, for beiogdrunk and disorderly.

Kd. Xally, Forman and Arthur Con-nor, disordeily conduct. Discharged.

BttBim—One bundled convalescentswere ree-eivod, and one hundred and fifty

men freuu Springfield, Illinois, one hun-dred and seventy-two from Harrisburg,

i^hly-nine from Madison, Wisconsin, andthree hundred and five from Jackson,Michigan, ol the 11th Michigan. Fight

hundred aud eighty-one men were traus-

ferrerd to a ash viile, sixty-nine to Cairo, and. wenty ha imminence.

Fon TniAi..-

KenUn-ky, \va?

ft s[. rday, to 1

izrave charges,

de-struciion of

-John Rrady, e-o. A, Nthsent he re from New Castle,

e held for trial on several

He is charged with wilful

Government pro|>erty. set-

ting lire to properly with intention of de-

stroying the same, elisobedieue'e of orders,

and speaking disrespectfully of supe rior of-

iicers. He will U> Mai by court-martia!.

Four Xo. 4.—Christopher Cummings, for

carrying and selling liquor to soldiers, wassent to work on Foil So. 4 for Mm days;

tmi Mm ^V^;^t KfMN (Of live, and Doii-

nell Connelly for ten days, for drunken-ness.

''ia-Salurday afternoon Is set apart for a

benefit o! Mr. Sidne-y Smith, a well known•Ml exce'der.t actor, at \Ve>od's Theatre. Heiias a host of friends here, s;u<! his benefit

.•.ill doubtless be a sulislanlial on;'.

Ceu N i v Coi kt.—Tne Justices of JeH'ers( ne.;'.inty PMMMg out of the limits of Louis-ville are called by the jury to meet on Sat-

urday the J itii inst.

^-y-John Wills, company F. atth Ken-tucky, and David Wilkes, 4th Kentucky,were arrest rd in the city n< des- i ter-.

Ni;\v BPBnUORL—The 189th

.egimei.; HI -tr;;ng, ai rived y<

Left fur Nashville last evening.

Je>hu 1". Heeler, Jefferson county, deserter

Ml the rebel army, appeared at the Pro-

ve*! Marshal's office yesterday, surrender-

ed hiuiM-lf, and expiesse-d a desire to Lake

the amnesty oath.

The number tjf deserters from Kentucky

re'ut.] regiments, who liave surrendered

iheuise-l ve-s lately and taken the amnesty

oatn, i* unusually large. Many of them be-

longed to regiments that left this State

among the first to join the rebel army.

They are tired fighting; we hope they are

cL>lsH.- The baud of guerrilla rob-

r- and murderers, under Marirui, Haysand other leader-, are having matters pret-

ty much their own way in Rreckinridge

:tnd adjoining couuties. The e villians

shrink from the commission of uei crime,

however revolting. We were yesterday iu-

fornud by a gentleman from Dig Spring,

Breckinridge county, that some of Marion s

men rudely violated three women near tiiat

place last Saturday, two of them white,

and the other a <• dored woman. All feel-

ing of shame aud merey is dead in these

rv-oundrc!-.

CorM Y i;,N.,,._The farmers of this

all others who wi-h to retain

an.', mechanics at home, andi di*tre»s to their families, should

in the bonds issued by the county,

u -» avoid the necessiiy of a draft. Tnere are

over a hundred men in the county whocould, without the slightest iucouvenieuce,

take each a thousand dollar bond; and

>hio, a newderday anil

POBUC ICKKrara in Haimhn CorxTV.—\t h call meeting at D. B. Carr's, En.,Vieliei's preetaet, Hardin e-ounty, Keu-fu. ky, oil Tuesday, February 26, 1SG."», u\mtgB number of citizens being present, onmotion of Mr. James Samuels, I). B. Carr,Fs«j., was . ailed to the chair. By motionof Mr. .lobii Funk, J. W. Hays, Jr., wasap-[•oinle-d Se-cretary.

Mr. D. B. Anderson made a few remarks•xplaining the oi.ject of the meeding.which!• set forth in I he resolutions below. On.otion of Mr. Thomas Funk, a commilte-e

• I' six were appointed todra't re'.solutions,to wit: Felix SaniueN, Harrison Langlev,H -nry Anderson, James BlMMll, Willia'mili:t.!>s, a n. | \\ m. D. Carr. The committeereported the following:Whereas, Judge H. (i. V. Winlersmith

hM ! e, n very active in promoting the wel-fare of o ir county amidst our preset t dilli-

cullies, drali, Ac., for vUflh we tender himourhearllelt thauks: there-lore

Haulfd Tliat Judge WTilllwUfc beoUoStod to baOOOM our candidate for Con-gress at the ensuing August elecliem.It—olred, Th.it we. the citizens gene rally

of this portion of Hardin county, earnestlyr. qu''st the other parts of the c .unty toun:ie with us in placing Judge W. l>eforett.e people as our next canetidate for Con-gress.Rexilved, That HmM proeee-dings be pub-

lish- I in the Lou svilK- Journal.The above resolutions being unanimous-

ly agu-ed to, the meeting adjourneel.David lb Cakk, Ch'n.

J. Wm Hays, Jr., SeH-retary.

- GUKIlRILbAH ON THE NASHVII.I.H R-VIL

road.—When th^ night passenger train for

this city, w as uraring Elizabethtowu, about

one o'clock yesterday morning, the engi-

ne Off discovered, as he supposed, the bridge

over Rolling Fork, to be on fire, but too

late to stop the train before reaching the

bridge. There was a curve iu the road just

before coining in sight of the bridge, widen

prevented him seeing the lire before getting

too near it to check the speed of the cars,

and the train sped on, and to his surprise

passed over the bridge salely. Just as the

train passed the bridge it was bred into by

guerrillas, but no one was hit fortunately.

The guerrillas had placed some cross-ties

on the track, but it cleared off them by the

< ov. -catcher, and the train arrived safely at

Flizabethtown.

It has since been learned that the bridge

was not burned, nor on fire at all. Theguerrillas had set fire to some cross-ties

near the bridge, but the bridge was not

damaged any. The regular passenger train

arrived on time If.st night. It is thought

the object of the guerrillas was to capture a

freight train w hich was coming up behindthe passenger train tired into.

^3S" John Kane, who hails from Montre-al, Canada, was arrested ye-sterelay for try-

ing to induce a soldier to ele-ert. It is ruth-

er «usj)K ted that Kmm has DOM in the sub-

stitute business, and his object was to in-

duce the soldier to desert and enlist again

as a substitute, expecting, of course, to share

in th. -proceeds. There is reason to sup-

pose too, that Kane is a deserter from the

4llh Wis. ,,ii-.;n regiment, and he will be

sent to that regiment to be identified, audif a deserter from it to be dealt with as

such.

^r-frGen. George B. Hodge, who left

Campbell county, Ky., over three years ago

to join the rebel army, has written a letter

to his friends there, in w hich he expresses

an earnest desire to take the oath of amnes-

ty and return to his home. About the lime

General Hodge left for the South, it washis habit to talk of marching through Cin-

cinnati at the head of a victorious army.

A change has come o'er the spirit of his

drea ut.

HUfUW AT TUK COt'KT HOUSK To-

NioiiT.— The meeting at the ( ourt House

to-night is for the purpose of taking into

consideration the best means to be adopted

to avoid the draft iu this county. Every-

one liable to draft, and all desirous of hav-

ing our quota Idled without m resort to the

wheel, should be prea nt.

_£^f-Thanks to Dr. Wheeler, mail agent

ou the Frankloit Railroad, for Cincinnati

in advance ( ,f the regular mail.

BY TELEGRAPH.The Death Battle at Richmond.

Cursing, Walling, Gnashing Teeth.

Sherman hid by Clouds of Cavalry.

The Bebels Can't Sec Through.

Confirmations by the Senate.

Sonora Ceded by Secret Treaty.

I)r. Gwynn to Cede California.

Gold Fallen over Four Per Cent.

McGill Club.At a meeting of the McGill Club, held at

Beck s Hall, March sth, a resolution wasaiiopted requiring all members of the Clubwho have not paid the li fly dollars on iheoriginal levy to pay the same on or lie fore

the l"<th day of March, otherwise they will

not be eonsidereel niemlx-rs of the Club.mar Bd2 S. B. MeGim., Treasurer.

$3 00 BOUNTYOFFERED BY

THE CITY OF LOUISVILLEIN ADDITION TO THE

UNITED STATIS BOUNTY.

[Fi>rti»e Luion I'niw.]

Km, /'/rs.v- We stated in reply to Mr.

MaOiira first communication that wo hadno di-j>ositiou t» enter into a newspapercontroversy with him, nor do we intend to.

We would stale, however, concerning bin

st 800)4 publication, that his statements

whilst making a profitable investment for !therein are not true, as can be readily seenbo any one who wishes to take the troubleto examine tie* papers in the Chancerv suitreferred to. It may be remarked ftlflo, thatMr. McGill keeps silent on the subject ofmm pr e edings before the United StatesCircuit UoufU Mr. McGill can make him-mir notorious, Lfhe chooses, by further pub-

We are done with' him on thit

Ives save the necessity of drafting.

The county owes no deb: outside of these

»K>uds, and th. means for their redemption

are ample, by the very slight tax levied

uj>on the people.

Lol'isvii.lf. Theater.—There was a

fair audience at the Louisville last

notwithstanding the bad weather.

To-night Miss L'.o Hudson will be the re-

cipient of a lienetit, aud a bill of unprece-

is presented for the occji-

will appear in the "Wizard's

e>r the Massacre of Scio," w ith an ex-

cast, and as Mazeppa, a part which

is made peculiarly her own. The

will doubtless be* crowded to over-

fiowiug.

Soudikrs' Home.—The Superintendent

of the Soldiers' Home, (Mr. V. Scott,) re-

ported to the last mo-ting of tb3 KentuckyBranch V. S. Sanitary Commission 11,317

meals furnished during the week to sol-

diers. By actual count 2,017 men were led

:;,K74 meals on Friday la^t. Transportation

for 43 was procured, 34 were transferred to

and 40 prescribed for.

HOOIIon , WO are done with him on thatscore, yet are prepared and ready to defendourselves in any judicial proceedingke maywish to insti ute. Gkhman <t Bno.

Contract Awaruku yon Beef Cattleat Baltimore.—\Ve h-arn by telegraphfrom Baltimore that a contract was let in

ty to-day for 1"),(kmi head of beef cat-tle at §i I M per IM pound* live weight foran average of l,bV) pounds, and ¥12 3g forMM R\ r* age of pounds. The contractM taken by Messrs. Morris, Wuixell, &

Jbi.neman, Ruble, Hvmau, «fc Co., andBankert & Fa I sett, of this city, 5,000 headeach. There have been alroadv some 3.000

The City of Louisvil'c will pay a bountyof | i o to each volunteer w ho may hereal-ier l*e enlisted in the United Slates military

errioo when Ihe e-ertilicate is presentedshowing that a credit has been given to the

City of Louisville for the person enlisted or

mustered in us abo\e.febtfrtf WM. Kaye, Mayor.

KOTIGBiThe Bonds of Ihe city of Louisville, to the

amount of $200,000, authorised to be issued

to raise a Bounty Fund, will be ready lor

*ale as soon as they can DO printe-d andidled up, which will lie in a lew days.Tin Bond- a; e for $1,000 each, with cou-

pons attached for semi-annual payment ol

interest; OB* hundred of the bonds heingpayable ten ye>ars after date, and the otherHundred payable twenty years after date.

That the citizens of Kentucky, especiallyol Louisville, may have an opportunity oi

making an investment in the purchase ol

the boajds to SUOh amount as the-y maywish, those who desire to purchase will

please, at once, address the Mayor of thety

,gi ving the ir name and residence', the

number and character of the bonds pro-posed to be bought and the highest price

they are w illing to pay therefor. This iuvi-

tation tor proposala is not, however, limit-

ed to citizens of Kentucky.Wm, Kaye, Mayor.

Feb. 23d, MM, dtf

Hha*M Department ok Kentei ky, 1

Lot isviLLE, Ky. Feb. 25, lseio.j

General Orders No. 4.

R liable evidence has reached these head-quarters that emissaries of the rebel Gov-ernment are engaged iu recruiting for their

exhausted armies in the State of Kentucky.Appeals are again made to the young menof the State to l1l0ICiPS.nl their duty andrisk their lives and honor in a wrecked auddesperate < ause, while men who have de-serted the rebel service and are now peace-ably at their homes are required to rejoin

their commands, again encounter the perils

of treason under the threatened penalty ol

betrayal to t bo Federal authorities, who,they are taught to believe, will treat themIS outlaws ami guerrillas.

To counteract these efforti to mislead themen w ho have, in good faith, deserted therebel Serviee, ad deserters from the rebelarmies, now in this Department, will, w ith-

in thirty days from date, report themselvesto the Provost Marshal of the county in

which they reside for registry. And all

persons wiio may herealter desert from therebel armies and come into this Depart-in. ol will, witiiiu live days after their ar-rival report themselves lor the same pur-pose.Provost Marshals will receive the report

of all persona presenting: themselves underthis Older, will rcgistei the name, age, resi-

dence, and the particular military organi-zation from which they have deserted.Such registry Will be regard, d by the mili-tary authorities Of thfi Department as alisiin -t renunciation of all further connec-tion with the rebel Government and as en-titling the registered person, who demeanshimselfas s pescosbfa eitisen, to militaryprotection.Persons who refuse fo present themselves

feetsals! ij ss required by thio order ariU!):• understood as adhering to the rebel gov-ernment, and, jf captureel, wjll bo treatedas piss, guerrillas, or otherwise, accordingto the circumstances of the case.

By command of Maj. Gen. Palmer,O. M. Bax'om,

UbSami Major aud A. A. G.

Qp'qnfl 2d Mil. Dis't oe Ky., )

March :>, L8A&, ]

General Order Xo. LIn compliance with orders from Maj.

Gen. Palmer, commanding Department ofKy., date,; Louisville, Ky., March 2, 1865. 1

hereby imnmt command of all troops in

the i [Military District of Kentucky, fromand including the line of the Louisvilleand Nashville Railroad to the Cumberlandriver.

Commanders of regiments, detachmentsand companies i unassigned ) will at oncereport to these Headquarters at Russell-

head bought here during the past week byIheM? pHrties to (ill thte contract. The cat-tle are to be delivered free at Baltimore andeafajed to tnsjoollos^Chioago Tribum-.-d Vide. Ky.', the station, strength and

lion ol their re'spective commandsA country man hearing the Cathedral bell

ringing for service, inquired "What thebell was ringing for." Being told that it

was L^nt, he anxiously asked, "Who thedevil borrowedIf It w&s sometime be-fore he could be made to understand that

j

me Lvnteu season had began.

mch l dC>

K. II. Murray,Col. 3d Ky. tav. Com'dg.

^^Subscriptions received for all of theReviews and Magazines, by Civill A Cal-

vert, tf

I^caped ! i isciier-.

Wasiuxuton, March !».—Within a few-

days past ten paroled and escaped prisonershave arrived at the Washington Navy Yard.They came from the stockade prison at

Florence and belonged to various vsssohlhaving been captured at eliflerent times.The OSOSpsd men state that w hen Sher-

man nurohed toward Florence they werehastily placed on cars and started towardWilmingt «L but when that plans wasthreatened they were sent back to Golds-boro, where they remained a short time,and they were then sent back to Wilming-ton.A llag of truce, it is said, was sent to Gen.

Terry, asking if they could be exchangedthrough him, to which he replied that it

couldn't be done lor several days. Whilethey were in Wilmington quite a numberescaped, and were hid by the citizens; sadthese men say that several hundred musthave gi.t away iu this manner by the aid ofLTnlon oitlsnns one of the eoosped prison-ers, George Anderson, of the I'assaic, wascultured in Warsaw river, on the 5th Of 1 »e-

cember. He onoapsd while being takenwith other prisoners frwm Wilmington to

Richmond, BO and fifteen others jumpingoff the train when it was about thirteenBlUeo from Wilmington. Two of thesemen were shot by the guard from the topOf the cars and killed, but all the Othersmade their escape and were in the citywhen our forces entered. There wereabout 5,000 prisoners brought away fromFlorence stockade, 1,000 sick being left he-

hind. This place bad boon in commandOf Col. Iverson, of the 20th South Carolina,aud it was said that he was a prisoner inRichmond for some cause when thesemen left.

Mure Mexican Canards.

New York, March 0. TheSteamer ESaglsbrings Havana dates of tbs 4th, dates fromMexico to the 19th Ot February, and VeraCruz also had been received.The rumcred capture of OOXSCS by the

Imperialists is not confirmed.The French claim a victory over Antonio

Rojis, killing Etojis, besides capturingvarious munitions of war.Romero is reported captured with MO of

his men and 200 killed iu New Leon.The Imperialists claim a victory over

Mendre at Barrel a 1.

A report from Ma/.a.l lau says :$00 Frenchsoldiers have been sent to Seuato.

Fifty emigrants intending to go to Ori-zaba report tint from 20,000 to 25,000 moreare coming from th*.- United States to buylands and settle.

The Imperial expedition to Yucatan hasbeen abandoned.Pierre Soule and his family have arrived

m .Mexico.

A. number of bioeksde runners have ro-omed to Havana, having faild to runInto Galveston.

MsXwNsx aud His Umpire.New York, March i.—The Fmperor

Maximilian, according to advices receivedto-day from Mexico, has received, at a spe-cial audience, Mr. PotM C Scarlett, theEnvoy Extraordinary and Minister Pleni-potentiary of England.Mr. Scarlett preoontod i<> tin- Bmperoi

Of Mexi.-o several autograph letters from(£tteen Victoria. The first of these letters is

formal— one ne-cDrding the minister. Thesecond is a repetition of the first, but is ad-diesBed to the EmpreesCharlotte, "My bestbeloved sister." The third ia an acknowl-edgement of the letter sent by the Emperorto the Queen In last June, informing hernfficiallyof his accession to the throne oi

Mexico.The Queen expresses her interest in the

welfare of Mexico and her belief that theestablishment of the Empire is tile begin-ning of a happy era tor the country. Shecongratulates the Emperor on his elevation,and clones with the usual expression ofcourtesy.The typhoid fever is raging In fhainlissaThe new railroad has so hir progressed

that the trip from Vera Cruz to Mexicocanbe made iu four elays.

The Mexican papers publish Ions; lists ofdiplomatic and consular appointmentsmade by the Fmperor to foreign govern-ments. No appointments are maele to theUnited States.

Fruin Charleston.

New York, M irch ".—The steamer Ful-ton, from Hilton Read of the 8th, has ar-rived.

Every thing was progressing favorablyat Charleston. Traders are beginning toopen stores.

Qeneral Hatch is in command of thethe Northern District, Department of thes nth. Gen. SchimmelAnnlg is is commandat Charleston.The railroad is completed to Goose Creek.General Potter advanced lo Ronton rivor

without opp sition.

News has been received of the total de-struction of Columbia.At last accounts Sherman had arrived at

Charlotte, N. 0, Beauregard was hoveringiu his front.

Tho 21st regiment, recruited in Charles-ton, has been mustered into service.The lights are soon to l>e lighted on Slim-

ier and Moultrie, and the channel is beingbuoyed for navigation.SeVeralsin. endiary tires have occurred in

l

Charleston.

! lUpedltlou Against St. Marks, Florida.

I'hii.adeli-iua, March 0. — The Unitedxates steamship Bermuda, from the Eastaud West Gull Blockading Squaelrons, hasarrived at the navy-y «rd. She reports that

on the 2lth of February an expedition, un-der the command of brig. Gen. Newton,consisting rd' all the Iroops, both white andblack, stationed at Key West, and the gun-boats Honduras, Magnolia, and HenelrickHudson, started for the purpose of contour-

ing Si. Marks. The result of the expedi-tion had not been heard at ihe time the

Bermuda sailed.

The Bermuda brings four hundred sick

and discharged soldiers and sailors.

Rebel Literature.

W asiiinoton, March ".—The CharlotteNorth Carolina Bulletin of the 2Sth ultimo,says:Everything we hear tends to increase our

confidence and lift our hopes from doubt,in w hich for several weeks they have boonburied. Our authorities are active and equalto the emergency, aud though the ta-kbefore them is herculean, we believe suc-cess- will reward its completion.The Examiner says it is stated that a few

days ago Gen. Longstreet communicatedwith the enemy under a llag of truce and

I that the obje*ct of the communication wasjto effect an arrangement for the return of

Ideserters ou both sides.The question of arming the slaves is ex-

1 pected to be decided to-day in our Con-gress.

More Mur'er.

Poughk eetsie, March 9.—A freight train

bound north, on the Hudson River Rail-road, about 9 o'clock last evening ran into

tho Peekskill draw-bridge, smashing sev-

eral cars and killing the engineer and fire-

- man. At the time of the accident a sloopi was passing through the draw, and the

necessary signals were visible. The engi-

neer's name was John Heflaud; that of the

fireman William I^nt. Tho body of the

latter has not been found. The body of theengineer was fouud on the top of the boiler,

four feet under water.

Geo. Payne Acquitted.

Cairo, March t».—It is reported that thecourt martial at Paducah has acquittedGen. Payne of all charges preferred againuthim.Gen. Payne having accused Dr. Alexan-

der, of Padue-ah, with giving false testimo-ny before the Military Committee, last fall,

was attacked by the fatter gentleman ou thestreet yesterday with a revolver. Alexan-der was worsted in the encounter and after-

wards urrested and loelged in the guard-house. ^

Conti mat leu of Secretarv Harlan.

W AsiiiNoiox, March!*.—The Senate to-

elay continued ttie nomination of Hon. Jon,Hariaa to be Secretary of tho Interior.This morning Hon". Hugh Me-Cullough

formally entered upon his duties as Beere-retary of the Treasury. The he-ads of theOvers] bureaus of the department waitedupon him in a body and au address of wel-come was maele to him in tiieir behalf by-

Judge Lewis Somer, of Internal Revenue.Mr. McC. responded in an appropriate-speech.

Cotton from BUvansah*New York, March !).—A number of ves-

sels with cotton from Savannah have ar-rived, making thirty-seven in all, bringing2:1,580 bales. Other ve sels, with 11,021

bales, are on the way.The Government has seized this cotton

without regard to private marks, becauseSavannah was not surrendered with its

garrison, but captured with all it contained.

Hicejbongn of Prisoners

Washington, March '•.—Informationfrom the Army of the Potomac says all is

quiet. The freshet is subsiding.The exchange of prisoners is resumed.A report is in circulation that Lynchburg

is In our possession, but it can't lie tracedto trustworthy authority.

Passport System Revoked.New York, Mar. h !».—The revoking of

the passport order by Secretary Seward, nofar as relate-s to Canada, has removed all

restrictions on travel through by the sus-pension bridge and Detroit, and unrestrict-ed travel via the Great Western railroad is

uow fully

steamer Imperial Sunk.St. Lor is, March !>.—Tho steamer Impe-

rial, St. Loons and Nashville packet, struckthe bridge across the Cumberland river atthe latter place yesterdav, and was sunk.Loss, $00,000; insured for ^2."»,000.

Fire iu St. Joseph.

St. Lor is, March 0, -The extensive porkhouse of Thos. Henry »fc Co., at St. Joseph,was burned on Monday last. Loss, £300,000;insured for §110,000.

C bit nary.

New York, March Mr. Watts Sher-man, of the firmOf Duncan, Sherman A Co.,died at Madeira on the .Mb of February.

Washinoton, March <».

Mr. Trumbull from >hs Committee on theJudiciary, made a report on the credentialsOf Mr. Snow, S -nator elect from Arkansas.The committee say that in IBM ths finnstituteel authorities of the State of Arkansas,so far as they could succeed, took the Statebeyond the authority of the United States,and that in pursuance of the law of Con-gress, the President, by proclamation, de-clared the inhabitants ol that State to be in-

c lueled iu insurrection ; therefore, the com-mittee recommend that the question of ad-mission be postponed til the next session,and until Congress shall take action in re-

gard to the existing State government ofAtkanoos. Report aiiopted.Mr. Doolittle presented the credentials of

John c. Underwood, Senator ftom the stateof Virginia for six ye>ars from the 1th ot

Murch, 1si,.").

Mr. Trumbull said the Committee em Ju-diciary had just made a report in the caseof Arkansas, which was in similar condi-tion to Virginia, and it was, tin refore, likelythe Committee would come to a similarconclusion.Mr. Henderson did not endoxo*) the Senu-

tor's views. He did not believe that thePresident'! proclamation precluded theSenate from taking action on the subject otadmitting Senators. We should encouragethe establishment of loyal State Govern-ments as a means of pulling down the re-

bellion and guerrilla incursions.The subject was temporarily laid aside in

order to execute a peoia] order, naineiv:The election of a Chaplain for the :>!ith Con-gress.Mr. Lane, of Indiana, renominated the

Rev. Dr. Bowman (Methodist) presentChaplain.Mr. Harris nominated the Rev. Dr. Gray,

Baptist) of Washington.Thirty-nine votes were cast, of which 2o

were necessary to a choice. Dr. Gray hav-ing received 27 votes, he was declared dulyelected Chaplain.The creelential-i of Judge Underwoeid

were then considered.Mr. Doolittle said the State of Yirginia

had been recognized by the Executive andby Congress; when West Virginia was setapart as a separate State, the Governmentadmitted Senators from the remaining partof Virginia. The further consideration ofthe subject was postponed till next ination.On motion tho credentials of Joseph Bo-

gar, of Virginia, and Michael Hsnu, ofLouisiana, were withdrawn from tile to bepreseuteel and laid over till the next ses-sion.

Mr. Morrill, from the Committee on Con-tingent Fund, reported against the n solu-tion referred to them to allow pay and mile-age to the Senators from Arkansas andLouisiana on the ground of a want ol juris-

diction, aud there-tore they asked to be dis-charged from further cousieleration of theresolution. Lie-s over.Mr. Nye ottered the following resolution

which was adopted:Resolved, That the Secretary of the Navy-

lie requested to organize board of not k'ss

than three competent persons, whoseduty it shall be to Inquire into andeletermine how much vessels of warand steam machinery, contracted for

by the Department in the years IMB-tS,cost the contractors over aud abovethe contract price anel allowance lor extrawork, aud report the same to the Senate olits next session. None but those who havegiven satisfaction to the Department to beconsidered.The Senate then went into executive ses-

sion, and upon the opening of the elexir at2::Jo P. M., adjourned.

Sales of Seven-Thirties.

Pilii.AKEi.rHiA, March !».—J. Cooke re-ports the sales of 7-30's to- lay amount of14,085,150 including 138,000 from Chicago,one million dollars from New York in sin-gle subscription, besides 2,84-J single sub-scriptions.

TELEGRAPHIC MARKETS.

Sew York Market.Niw Yon*. March I -l\ M.

CMtM heavv aail Sj lnw. r; MtOjOM M.Flour—State aii.l \V. uti-rn SMN MSI ..n o mnion

grade*. ao4 elo».-<l .lull awl declining on a'l dem.-ririti«na;

tin UJlM 4u t..r e»tra stile, MSSOSII Kr.xiraKlloawl Sll n'wil I ?'. tin' ira.l. I.randit.Whi»ky y,,-,v\ and lower; VeSmttAWheat dull an I SfOSfiBSJ HHsSSBt I cluh ?J Rye

dull. IN.rn heavy and \a2 lower; new i<jiili.. ru ;. llow• 1 H. Osta dull and henw; Wi .tern H 1 1 « 1 IS.W sol doll.Ki.i-dull. f. (fee turn Sugar. tail.Petrol, urn .

t ui.-t. crude . < i.;, rem- I iu I - u l

do fi

I'orlc hea\> and law; USNOUS* for new BMk I'

siok antra, awl 33 12 :«i for "ivVl do. rl->ai. | at :"t Bc*»h, •» :-.«.1m | ,r prime. a>:.| S3l .'h»«..1i 7.*. T»f ft mi-mess. Aimi :«i liLU new lu. ss for Msv, l.uvera opt . .11, ,t

$J7. Beef du I and liea\ y al ^Isu-JI '.j mr plain in-,-. „ii.|

OnOKa lor • xlra m ... Oral Iiihuh quint „t 27. Iir.—t-i-d bom .lull and nominal; Weateru l'.\«tlh H* ..11

lower; lu« for e'um her land iut, jn-..« jo'-, f,, r \.,Ui; ,,„,,ahort rihlnsl, awl -I lor l.u>r.Kar. Cut ne,i- 1,. .1 . .

aalea rci pk«M at I7v<.i;'i for >houiderd and .1:1 t..,

Lard ln-avv and lower at MSOX Butter Leavy an.,lowrr at M*M fi.i oino, an,l i-<<*^^ lor Mate. eiu.-.steady at l.".u It.

M..nt > Sein •• a' .1 til 111 ai 1 •< 7 per c ut. rhi tly at II.-

latter rate. St.-rlnm dull it lu;^. Gold hear) and I.. v. -

op.-iiini( at nt, wTauciUi- lo iwij,, aud deeming t-I*1*.

<i..v. rnuient »t..cka tirm; M A V I"; N W :\> : 1 I'

M HtS ..; ISaMuUtW T-. Hud—It II.'; Keadidg |-«r»,; M *

UO'i; .Ht lir.*; OA M certs :7' : , ID-ilia K)f; Mttcuu-|»>na 111^; d reipt td IM. ta tl .11pom 111%Mm in,. -I.,, k- U i: .11 >i; Central ji; Franklin 47-Uu.Uou it .. Copper Falls .7 UK Boyale 12-.; MiBix-nSi 1-.

eiN. iNXATt. March J-P. M.Flour unsettled; extra ofi.r d at OJUSJOIS, Sj

wheat *1 and dull l orn :'c low. r Oats l«wer •« 77S7s» in elevators. W hi-k> « ffered at id is: no tales. I'r rl

•ions dull: eity mi st pork oHer. d at *;• > aid no I ir •, >

Bulk ..lioutders I.".1

1 and sid. s 17' \:»n pieces slioui.l. r-•old at the iiuotatious. Coll. o 1 u I at i.'.«-M. Sutfar Jt»e

-i. Clover at*d i!3 and dul-: Tiniothv » . Th. riuomter 3n.

VMttTIWBrailllSMS* Mn-i A. M.

ew York Market.

New Yokk, March {•. — Dealings in railroad shares on the stret-ts to-day wei» abelt r rate-s, but l tie marked wi :tK» ned be •

fore the board. At the lirst session pric r

were generally steady, with a modern:-business.This P. M. gold w«s lower, anil ansouh *

tion lor a rise was broken by the Billtunnews. Sterling exchange dull. Mo:,

jeasy at 7 OM cent. Petroleum stocks quitland ste ady.

-Lay M Matdull."

Nkw Vouk, March !». -The MnhUSnndEntpiirer of the 7lh lias a reply to a <

ponelent who ii ipiircs what SlOStl th -

mors of a Senatorial committee and ap-proaching the PrOSidont to submit to t--rimof submission?

Is that report true? Are ltny Senate:- - o:

Representativ.-s srhinpodf Have tin \ approached the Pwidonl to press upon' hiuany such base propo>ii:on.' Is snjSitempmade by rumors to create the Intpres-sion that General Lee is ready !••

consieler terms for laying down nrmuaeler the pretext of preventing wuTeriagami sacrihee-, lore-e tl surrender, who mt*busy in their plans of surrendering to uitjugation? Sjteak out ! The crisis deuianosboldness and decision, aud dolonnined It

sistance to internal as well as extern i! . i.•

uiies. The worst enemies who now d. preaus arc whjnpod seeeders. fhis honi Ot

ony is no time for factious opnosill n, Kmfaltering with peace pro|x>sitions which e i

lead to nothing but despair, relax v.: >;. mu I

ruin. The terms of ree-onstrue t sowcoming from Congress are nothing - Mi::«.

subjugation. Let us know the wo--

tha summary rem vly may bssnplied.The Empiirer in response says it ess ;

answer all the questions askeei hvwanl .

information, and then goes on in reterhnble and significant language showin.unstably that tin- rebeilion is in its rj ,

throes. That ther- is a party of Whippedseeeders iu and about Richmond it ens nobe denieel. The< are cowed and OOWSI lly

,

miserable wretches who brought th

upon the country, anil who would n<.

render to the enemy. We have nod. n -

but that there was a plan on fo a

to force Mr. l»avis to resigu, an-;

that Mr. Stevens had OOOMSaOM to re-

sign, so that Mr. Hunter aspuwould become President. The plan, \v,

hope and believe has miscarried; at sayrate the conspirators may understand thaiif they should succeed they will have placet

a barren seepter in llu-ir grave*, theme t>. .

wrenched by au OSjaahu hainl; no eon <>

theirs succeeding. Robert K. i.e-e, by amiwith the consent of the army and people,will grasp the scepter ihey may wrem hfrom the hands of Mr. Davis, and w ield ulor the safety and security of his country >

liberty and indepeudetie-i*. No e tl>::.. t "ol

whipped OSOodoni shall ctipituhile thiscountry into slavery, ami crouch at the

footstool of Mr. Lincoln, t'ongre-ss utterly

failed. It is in<-ompetent, aud is doing in-

jury. It has neither the capacity nor tin-

courage, and is wanting in firmness endreatdution; it is unlit for revolution. Thevery men who were foremost to sec -de arefirst to surreneler. Single head and sing li

arm is now needed, ami if t'ougres*.

would consult its patriotism, it wouldentrust all power wilh the PlOoluVnland General Leo ami go home. VirginiaState bunks can furnish one or two Bullionsin golel ami this will »e-eure supplies OSSneeded. Let the Legislature promptly at;!

aud turn the gold over to tieu. Lee. t'on-

trress is tipInnot Mo one longer looks |o hft>r any aid in the struggle. Negroes havel»een withheld until it is uow nearly toolate. The currency is beyond their powi r

To help those who talk now of compromi-.means submission to subj ligation.

tiov. Vance make-s an e.iruest app.eul t

the people, saying that Le>e's aruiy BMOSLfor three or four months |o e-ouie, dtpe-iid

for food upon portions ol" Virginia ami N .

Carolina. lie himself has ilouated outhalf of his stock of provisions to the lehtiovernmeut, reutlering his own fa:..:

dopaad—i anon half rsHono, and he re-

comineuds that other citizens follow hit

A Ja-t Kebake.\V AsHiNi.io.s, March V.—Senator Sals-

I ury, or Delaware, iia» been ommitted fromthe nsnOSSC•unmiU* es, wh t h were arrang-oi intho Republican onnssnx Ho wae por-vidusIv on the < intnittees of Omiiih. ..

,

1'ateti;,. and funnioun,Senator Mcl>ougal, forui«rly mi th.- 'e»ni-

miit.- -^: roresjo MhVJnno, a s M>otuittedfroin sll e isBmliUtes.

Ti.eS.t.utt inext. uti\. >e-s ..!iitvtia\ e.. it-firmed large nmni^rs of mibtitrv m>iHone, Inehadinej Brig. uen. Kuwnngs i . i*.'•hii-t of stall to Lieuti Bsut Ueneral i

ThohnsHite eosthrnwd nwuiyotbef ru

buseoni nominations.Tns Preehiawl to-dsj natnonneed ^onM

I

Harlan. Seuafir from Iowa, to Ik- SeeretarvOf the Interior, in BlOOB of Jtldx'- I BBSW,

| who has endertd his resignation to i ;I k,.

etl'ect OU IhS 1st ol May, in order In themeantime to -ettl » certain business pend-ing in the tlepattmcnt. The nomiuat.on sfMr. Huilan wus contirmnl.Freeman t'lark, sf New York, OJt-Cbn>

gressman, was coiilirtueel Comptroi-ler ol the t tirre uey. The law provhtaSSJ : |

leetnitlnpj in rebel States for the nensfalof loyal States is repealeel. The PiowoatMarshal Genu, ul has notified oflic -rs andoosnmandasSj si isndanvwni accortbn.ly.Tho re e-ords in Commodore Ingraham's

•tliceshow that from the sth <.f K» t'ruaryto the ^'h of March l,7»5t> rebel desertersliave- Ik-ch ree.-ived in tin- city from tne at -

inks operating against Ricmnoud.

RichaaaaS Iteasa.

BbtW YORK, March !.'. The Virgiuia Sen-ators iu the rcVl Congress have b-vn ir>-

structrd to vote in favor of the bill tophyo negroes iti the army. The l»i;| vaa•lefeiUe-el wh« n before the Senate l.y onlvoue vote*. Both the Virginia SMOSSSa VSS>- d against it.

The Danvilie Register any3 the crisis ofthe war is rapidly approaching, ami thatin a short time bonvj aud rteniSfH buttiesa ill be fought.The Richmond Kmpiirev t>f the o'h su\s

that it is pmpi-enl to add another talkingipparatus to the two now as irrahlcd wthe capital of Virgitiia. Tho las» is to bethe supreme sovereign talking apparatusrailed a convention in the name and in'.ehalf ol the jMH;r distracted cause whichbaa been taik.-d to death Wc solerni»rotest.

s.innu Coondh] Secret Treaty.Nkw Yokk, March !».—Kennedy, tried

is a heitel burner, is still uoalined ol ForiLsaSjette-. The result of the trial has no.oeeu publi he-d, but it is umierst.KMl he hast

bOSn 0BUY1 leletl.

The Worhl's W ashimrlon s;.e» ial to-nightsays Senator (iwynn re. . ntiy stated thatnis departure for Paris was anUaUnl ky in-

fbsnaauon that he had isooived frnasworthy ooMoasthni tho pewvhaos el aaanosai id been ce-ded to France by a see-ret treatswhich would not DO BSSdo pwbtie till ul'ter

the entire paviticatioii ol Mexico ; \ the1- 1. m-h. He went to Paris to arrange plans• •:• the e.i. on, /.at ion and form an alliance ofCalifornia and BeaMMS for the Ktupire.

I ce's Army Changing » t-t

.

W ashi.n.. ion, Mareh h ftaj hundr-diuel twenty iteser-ers, the urcat'T portnmfrom North Carolina, arri-.ed to-da\

.

» jio i steamer.San FuANttsco, March y.—Arrived

steamship (i olden Age with ; « -:._from New York, Fob Ht

"Our Muti'ai. Fkik>-i>."—The |nnj|.u very dainty style and a: an stsionishiugly

low price, have issued ihe lirst part or

"Dickens' Last. ' It is lienu'.ifully iilua-

.rated, priutetl on heavy white-ontaiiw nearly LIU) p=iges, .>r

ndf the entire w nk. Price only f>y ceuwUiH A Calvrri. tf

HOTEL ARRIVALS.IMTKI) MVTI s.

I hitler. Krl - .ly K>V W II . r. UMo. Sukana,

' - SdM, X Ii It shop, t lii. a oS had«i k, ttia:: Ai. lain.. N I e

r v i ..ward. Kyi Bartavm. Ky

II. Kt

•>, ana

UlXoll.I Wt

till

-T.-. ri- .

i II ury. KtOiitu. T.mi

V K Slr^i e, t l 1, ;,j

it 11 Kokavta Ui-• \ I'h ricfc, Tl mi

• L«l !• tt, I m t

v\ au la,

il Kr.s-. IndIl I.e-Brdy, tnd

isaua, ". 15 M WD. lud• H rr.-e. bid

rv, I i A1

1

l li

.r »vi 9,

d.r, I.. i..iif.u

I il aatu

V Mitehe.l, lud'. I r ni. (c- r.

'*

II t aret. Ml Indsi;, hal-aitt, Kytill ¥ S iataaaaaitK, Ky

inimii. KyM .ilt wm. lul

; Amirewh, Ky

J Pt krr. tmiM - l- .r&er, I mlMia -i P:uk. r, Indii • h. I :. m,X K •tomb-s' Mr a rvn I

K.tUr. Ky(i Heater, in I

M * tmm : i-

.

L^h Maax K-K U ..an. KyM Buk uau i :.|

< l>t nCaS ».t. :. .tf, i si l

1. 1 A LtarauoVr, HOV 1

Oil toie.it i: WSaaa, KySJ Kin-y, oh aJ I uiuiu ns I- .o v I

I I. II!.,"

J W da. nt. KyI ll .ii- r. >1..

J V Inn—a, ludI >l il UN ln.1• B K , -, I .

Witty, h .

K J Kirtty, Ky< ast tlvlt) Id In t

II t> n r. In t

tj L lire. I n1L .in us \'r \~r K>

!.' 1I J 1 I»

Lt -i.uiiian.,

r Strattua, Kr.1 II sta-,-. Ky.Mis. tir ffith. l,.d

A t rtu I. k.

: OV

I

PROPOSALS.OVWIVK \*-\:T.WT <;t VIU'CRS AS I kK. Let l.s-

\ Ilia, M .i h f, l- '•.

I rat d pr.-> - i I • I "Pro^oaala |t»r »Vra;>-," will' 1 -io.: it i ".ni.- :• M.,..n ii.. ::t;. in.t

mr. i-hiMif !•». . hi I- „: . .ti-. m up in s, .-I at I.

•nti.ll Bur! i| - »•.. .„. i . ; ,. r ; ,i •..,», ru.i.em war -

. i iu this . i'.y.

tartiei. ah \. t r--.!- ir. , le t. w ill b>- r.. t u:p..lai»>-ac» wtrfelay M » Sjaaa aecas I

..i. -.!, and io ...ati.i t tl.- ,» :i. r> uim.u M ayaueiaaSy r.

Bi-a wit 1.- or. n-1 at -•"•i'ock P. .'t , ti : >T .

'

! eh, :-ii.l s«, in •. .'.I.-, , Miit, - ..

f. l<l« ra ara re.io- -t d to to pr**-ut ai t...

The> 4ht tt

Nkw York, March !». The steamer Ful-ton, fkNMn Port Royal, reports that thesteamer Illinois had ssiled for Point Look-out with rebel prisoners.Gold to-night 1«.»1>,'.

I.claim's Motel. a

Sarawoa, March".—The Messrs. behindA' Hros., have concluded the purchase ofthe Union Hotel block, which will be theenlargement of a line hotel now owned bytheui to elouble its present capacity.

Resignation cf JudgeBoston, March 9.—The

prague.

Hon. PelegSprague, Judge of the C. S. District Court,has resigned on account of failing health.There is a heavy snow stortn here to-day.

Resumption uf Travel.

Baltimore, March 9.—The Susquehan-na river is reported clear of ice to-day.Travel will be at ouce resumed.

CeM .Vlarket.

IfnW York, Marsh 9.—Gold dull and de-void of speciul movement; lack of confi-

dence causes delay, and certain holdersmay be obliged to throw on the market anamount that would materially put downthe price. Quotations opened at 19tf, fell to

194 and went up to 1954.

•••' .-<: •

exumple.In regard to Sherman the Richmond pi-

pers have nothing positive. They don'lKnow where ho is. His main column, be-

ing, as they declare*, hiilden by his a t\ airy.The Sentinel says : This new levy of Yan-

kees will not avail to overwhelm us. W<will surely wiu the light if we ilo our tiuiy.

None are more confident ol' this thasthose who have hael the opportunity of ohserving things at the North. None are in. t

enthusiast 0J none more buoyant withcourage and hop.-, and let no BOSS siij.i. ( ;-

that such is not the spirit of our people.Let no one imagine that t^e few noitroonawith lieards on, who are whip|H.-d with n

ever having been in a light, are samples .,;

our population. It is a shame that thesemiserable tremblers are allowed to vex pa-tience aud tire ears with exhibitions ol theii

graceful cowareliee. But we protest against

judging others by many. We protest nasinstjudging of Riehmond by these whippedcroakers, tilleel or un-tille-d. WoWsab outwomen woukl take their brooms aud ilrivo

them into the river. Wo tell them ou: s. i-

diers and people are as unequivocally ie-

solved as they, and will stand up to thenand sustain them Let them take ears ofthe Yaukees. Those who are intht tr.-> . li-

es will take care of the whipped aeon Hi

home.We don't intend to be sedd out by Ihnna

Ancient people had no laws against pari i

-

cide. We, loo, may not have provided RUsome crimes against our safety, supp obsfj

them imi>ossible'. But the people will notconsent to be distroyed by them, neverthe-less. Thia coutest, Bod willing, is surp, if

we do our tluty. Victory is ours, unless w e

voluntarily forfeit it.

There htnothing iu the situation to dofi at

us. We may say this on high auth iriiy.

If heaven wero to curse us with a naHMalof soul that would lead us to lononnea the

liberties for which a noble om>f sf martyr*have died and tling away the glori 'tism-

heritage which our lathers gave us, tiiat,

indeed, would be misery, for it would l>-

disgraceful, infamous, hopeless nun, the

very black ne-ss of eternal darkness ou ourcountry and our names.Proud we are now to claim.lackson as our

compatriot. We are not yet redu.-ed

to the necessity of taking courage from o i

pair. The enemy have indeed shut us upto that necessity i;' W khooM ever com<

.

But thank Heaven it has noiOOOsO.We have bright, natural certain hop -

hopes br'utht with victory and radient withsunrise if we will bear our hardships asgood soldiers a little longer; stand up likemen in this time of trial—the hour of dark-ness that precedes day,

ft aay orI l. • *, »ad it i« distinct y aaderatauj t .• uo aulaill lie acoi pte i lr. ni oth. r than r-a tl a total ,o tLe i ni-.1 M tt.-.

Fa lit- i.t- > .1! I. • nt t .. in »u. fu- ai maj >>

:

I f.r lit • j.nr-v^r hy :\.-.- I . s. f Pu nr..By ..i ier ot U. ii eieu K-.ht. Aill.x Co "t.

l». V. DtttlltK, I apt t I A . M.

AMl*T\-.r Vie lETiutaasraa's nrr;. v.,\

Lot i.v H tr. Kv.. M li ••. I- i. t

' KALkD PROPOrsAI.-i IX HI Ptll ITI WILL B:.O r - .-iv. .! at tUa uaVi until I : • • • I. . . M ,•• rfce Itth

:.t t.. I r oNk MILLION l.i»t o.-j PtirLAS ill N

-

OI.KS, be. t <iuali:y, to be SaUyend rt Ik* Goavraaa.alhMakar jar'. •Maia ten i<» 4*y. :r..-:i f i due.Xo bi » ~ dl !» tt a d Vr lean thi.ii oue »>an red Ikoaa-

aad ( IQa/IS) aad aaytlaa aakisa I- »:..u-i ii.tiu tl> .tatstit— nmmatlty taai pr.-i- aaasWal a awl iIh. aahM,The rieht to reaerv.-d to reject any bid*. ».- all, if

ila ii—

i

l aaaaaai n tbi-.

SiUa-i i I-. dandawar^a waJf o» |h» nth uai.Ii.- -id r«:u. i.:-u. Soar, aaaaa, Vaiat u

A. M. tteKKK,aaajMl > apt ami a. o. m.

ARMY MJPPUB8.BEET CATTLE! BEEP CATTLE!

I* S. i os a is vii \ or -1 -. -

. >•

LotiaviLLK, Ky., Uarttt a,'

OEALKD PROPOSALS IN P€PLK II UILL ti''.>~ n. iv.-d at th.s ooiee iiictl II o

-

rl. rk A M., oa :t C*-\>\\. the Win DA « i if MAttlH. ! -..r f.. .

'

.. it to tl.e t'nited .st*n> JabHi. tru e Urp.tr in ,.

oiut5,tKK> HEhaV t vtti.i:.

To b- ih- ii. rrd at lie- Uov mu;. ut I'ait'e Vir '-.

aprataSaak waMhad.Nore bit: sood s;>nr.d, f-t,, swooth *?eer. wWI }< re

vail, ami no st.er rhall weiiirl.™ ilia i !..««' p.i r •Uian l.".<i poiiit.U, and the a»era<.- of .a».l» MS tra-

.i-rl .h.:il be \.W i«.nii.la ero»«.I:. hull 1- »r indi-i n n-aa. »-— —

~

u »-•—•»•:-

alaaf kat awaS, thai r-i. h iu.r~-i t.oii mm I

HMfropo-.tU w Ille.nf.r'afnM :• r: oil up- t.d-, J

i. p*vn.. utwil beaittl- avIaaaU a 3

Th.- eal' le tall, d lor iimW ihi. ad u-rtMOttit to I* d. -

I y.-r- d ai I How -

:

n narca 2!-tan I M uAyril u: a- I Vp. ,| :t!..

Ap n -I > an.1 April 1 1 h.

I mu April l >:h and Ar-ril

MM " April l-.d ai d Apnl oil.

|-.,. in. nt - i t b> uia 1 in 'e 'tiiela n in . > •

Ft. i itil-ln- .li.-.i ur-t ui't.t. 1 ut t: tut. ii -i..i,..: ...

h n I, in- a • »voa af • i .i» fund* are uralwaS.1 11. riuit : i- re ei ,

. ,1 i iej,- t :u,y l.i.l to r>r. n :

a cup. uf lb la ad\e. t iarBK u t atOat be attatked to M*h

l.i ill In It • deli»t«fed

i ss •• •• *•

l tin •' '• '*

II. ' s v >i .i \ |

BUM '• -t • >-ajor ard C <zn i. iiaaiy o. S. .!.».-!.

i * .til.- Journal • mm laaea times.

Dissolution of Co-Piirtnersi:

r i* ii k fi km i r' ii SasMM I I WMnl r^ v• i.U. :!•. nt.-tual coiisru:, il. Ki-ritnann > uhl. >

lam A» <*-bt ' * and all * b • dar to. lite •

will be M»tt!ed t.y Da\U Vrrvoa«u, who a ill coatine

anUiai. aa BSnSstBa la the name vi B. ¥mrr~» n .

Sod U. t-Rn-.ll SON.

DA* 10 rCRiilSe \

it. I'**.

Page 4: LOIISVILLE DAILY PRESS.LOIISVILLEDAILY PRESS. VOL.L fCr LOUISVILLE,KY..FRIDAYMORNING,MARCH 10,1866. NO.273 CALYEKT,CIVLLL&CO PUBLISHERS.-PRESSBUI DAILYUNIONPRESS. peryear,f1000 …

BY TELEGRAP H.

The Adviuee ui tieneral Terry-

He is Con routed by en. Ilood.

ess Sheridan's Victory.

M np Tor the Lynchburg: Canal.

Public Again Excited.

VlHIHM March '.».—Richmond le-

pers Of I hi- Tih instant are at hand, but they

are entirely destitute of news from anyquarter.The <»old»l>oro Journal of the 4th instant

savs: From Kingston we have the assur-

ance that all is quiet. Not only has no ad-

vance been made by the enemy, but it is

now thought doubtful by outsiders if there

ia auy large force at Newbern.New York, March y.-The W. rid s Wii

mington cornsp )uden»-e oi the >th says;

Our advance under* General Terry is but

some twelve miles from here, on the north-

west branch of the Cai** Fear river, withHood's troops confronting it on the other

side. Sherman is r.-portcd to-day as MfftJw ithin sixty miles ol this place. If that

tin rase, a junction will be easily made be-

tween <i» ncral Scholield's troops and his,

and a forward movement Kichmoudwardordered at once.The Richmond papers still express the

belief that <iraut will attack Lee's lines

around Richmond as soon as the groundwill permit. The rehels believe that Granthas sent nearly all his cavalry from the ar-

mies of the Potomac and James to Sheridan.11 the Shenandoah Valley.

A meeting to obtain subscriptions of pro-

\isions f r l^ee's army was recently held at

D.;ii\ ille.

In noticing it the Ricnmoad Whig says :

General Lee's men mu«t be fed, <Jr welose all.

The Danville Register is assuredoes not enter into Lee's plans to

the rebel capital unless, as is very prudent-ly added, it becomes impossible to ho'd out

anv longer.Ttie Herald s Winehi-ster correspondence

savs rebel deserters who arrived at Win-chester, stat«- that they passed Sheridan ontheir wav down. He remind Woodstock,thirty miles from the starting point, on the

iiisi. ami. though rain was lading, the roadsverv muddy, and the streams much swol-len." h:s troops were pushing torward rap-

idly.

it was expe<;te«l the third day they wouldreach Staunton, ninety-eight miles up the

valley, and a short distance north of the

town whfie Karly was with u small rebel

Ion*.The Tribune's Washington sjm- iai says:

General Kiuory'a report of Sheridan's vic-

tory mer Lariy was more e .nijdete thanany r. Mat we have had. When last laBBfdfrom, he was pushing for the canal run-ning from Lynchburg to Richmond, whichhe had doul tl< ~- M liaai and destroyed lie-

lore this.

Xkw York, March !». < >n Sunday llich-

uiond was e.\cii< d with a rumor that Johu-ston had defeated Sherman, and was in-

\ opting th 8 {Ktsition taken up by the latter.

The next day, however, the Richmond pa-pers admitted the falsity of the report, but• -laimed that Hampton had defeated Kilpat-riek.

Tills report however was brought by arailroad passenger who was the only onethat knew anything of it. Th<- state ot feel-

ing in North t'arolina is plainly evidentIroiu the tune of the press and DM nt

events. Nearly a whole company of thei.th Norih Carolina cavalry deseried a fewdays since and c.tinc into New hern bring-ing th«-ir horses and equipments.Ni groes are coming in in large numlters.

The rebels are conscripting all the boysit:, v asM lay their hands on, and both thetr.s*»ps and |H-ople of that State are repre-sented as heartily sick of the war.The V'nion Btiaooera conlined at Florence

were sent to Salisbury on the approach oi

Sherman. On the way many » >cHj>ed, andreaclsed our lines at Newbcin under theguidance of uegroi-s and loyal whites.Arrangements have b en made to ex-

change ten thousand BaiBQfMtVfat Wilming-ton, and they are BOW being t awarded.The Tribune's Washington sjHK-ial says:

Ab ..it one hundred >ii serters look the oathof allegiance and started North to-day.More are taking the oath lhau is generallythought.

'i'hey report that Lee rode out throughtheir camp, promised them more food and• loth' s, and urged them to standby him;but they considered it would not pay.In the last thirty days there has been two

thousand deserters ni-eiyed, one hundredand forty of whom took the oath.

Cin< innati, March M.—River fallen 1

foot-", inches, with M *M <i inches in theYVtailn-r wet; light rain all

:; turning cold. Thermometer 45.

~ Fn-Tsiu it.;, March '.», M.— River 11 feet

by the pier mark, and rising slowly.Weathi r ch ar and mild.

HATTERS.

i Rw«, I'in-l'Uig.tb.-r»m ia.'r .

iWy Miller, Vi. k«»l»nr

DEPART

Major i

tiru Vu II,

Wa ablta.St.

Mai lafsaaiWl Cincinnat i. J Hi er, Cairn....u Itii.-lt. " Paiicr. "

Bos. Hite. S«i.b»ille. M». a> unk."

All*, Cai o. ilonift, "

The Rivkr at a Stand.—Last evening

the river was at a stand, having fine-, only

about two inches in daylight, and about

eight inches altogether in the previous

twenty-four hours. A high wind was pre-

vailing from the northwest, making the

river very rough, with a light rain in themorning aai MMMj in the evening, fol-

lowed by a Hurry of snow, which Wasrather uncomfortable for spring.

The river is now some two or thr^e inchesalK>ve the high water of ls*JJ, and we ex-

]| t M to ba falling Ut-Aaj, as it had lullen

some eighteen inches at Cincinnati yester-

day. The present Hood hsis not provenMi di.-asti -us her., though it has result-

ed in a gnat deal of inwmvenience andtrouble to the residents and business menin the inundated quarters. Business hasbeen almost wholly checked, as the facili-

ties for re<—iving or discharging cargoesare very mac';, t—tlifltot, in fact there beingnone whatever. The city very much needsa high water whail.The only point above the rising tide,

along what is considered the wharl, is thegovernment warehouse at the foot of Sec-ond street. Jt however, is surrounded withwater, and a further rise of a lew ir cheswould cover the floor with water.The present rise, or freshet, is fully seven

feet below the Hood of 1M7, and al>out eightfeet less than that of lXi'2, the highest stageof water ever known.Much property has been damaged by the

k slu t all along the river, but the greatestdes ruction along our wharf has been thatof the rats. They have been drowned bythousands.The river at Pittsburg yesterday was

swelling again, with eleven feet water in

the channel. The iron clad monitor, Mana-yunk, arrived from I'ittsburg yesterday in

tow of the Panther and Little Jim Ross,making a quick run. They descended thefalls together, bound for Cairo.The Onward was to have left Pittsburg

Wednesday for Cincinnati, the Kate Put-nam and Nevada for St. Louis, the Cameliaf.;r Nashville, the Anna and Silver CloudNo. 2 tor the Upjier Mississippi.The Cincinnati mail boats, General Buell

and Major Anderson, loaded yesterday at

the foot of Eleventh street, in the canal,where the mud prevailed very extensively.The General Lytle and the Nick Long-

worth are the mailboats to-day for Cincin-nati and the East. They willload at Eleventh street.

The tow boat Charleyof empty barges,yesterday

Ballard in command, and stars at I o'clock

in the evening.The Wren, Captain Saunders, is due from

Kentucky river this evening, and will re-

turn to Cedar Lock and way places to-mor-row. She is the regular Saturday packet.

The Cumberland river continues at a Hoodheighth, with thearrival at Nashville of the( Sara dunning, Pine <Jrove, Lawrence, andArmadillo. The C. T. Dumont went up theTennessee, the Robert Moore departed for

Cincinnati, and the Palestine for this port.The Monsoon, on her way up the Cum-

berland for Nashville, had run out over thebank of the river some 7.") yards, where shegot aground.The Madison packet, D. H. Blunk, did

not get away Wednesday, as she was un-able to di-. -barge her freight.

The Wauanita came in from St. Louis last< \ . nfag with a heavy cargo of corn for this

port, and was endeavoring to make a land-ing at Eighth stre. t.

The Duke of Argylewas dut Irons Evans-ville yesterday.

The Marmora has been taken to Paducahto be hauled out on the ways.The Minnesota and Hard Times were due

from Pittsburg yesterday, each with over:100 tuns of freight for this port.We learn that the Magenta and City of

Alton had a rac- between Memphis andCairo, in which the Magenta came off thevictor, passing the other under way.

IMPORTS BY THE RIVER.CINCINNATI. MBOCV. BOKL-atai sane . G i

11. 3 .1 1 druj;., V\ ilnuii .V Peter; Mi l.zs l-erring, Ghe. lis; MpkRs catting*, 1) Magtudcr; «'.2 l.xi ... Cupt Bewers;-II- MO I'lLga. W pfce. fruit, W bf hid* butter, 27 pkif) oys-tcia, 4uL««s L«cr, 3>i doz broom-.. Mi p:i»r. wod.-iiwan-, 40lis* yarn, 20 lit bl!> Imtar, I bbla li-h, in ph_- mdw, ixiu-Bli;ln-'s.

CINCINNATI, PU MA J. kMDKMMQB.—B barietnMOW. Moor.-. It a Co: 25 I.*- cheu«-. i ( Hpi drugn, KPkW »audrieii, Ci do iu.Ih.-, .L' l^-. tuuotliy MCM bairelapotatoes, 24 (urboyi, 24 l.bU appIrH, Hi h\t coffee, 75 bxaliuit, Ma >-xp pkti*, 311 la. aviaiuM, 2 eafli luainlla rop.', 2Uc Ml MOJlMa c./UhIuii ip; las a fruit, '>! l>bl« apples, 3D•Jo potato.!, T, Svii X Co.

•ST. Lot Ir, MB WANAMTA.-2.274 bags corn, J(-li Ull> & ( •; |M bx» Wmt .Irtt, O W J Old.

COMMERCIAL.OffVKB Of TIIK L N lsviLI.K DVKMI PBJNL1

THt USSUAY KVKMNU. Ma-ck ;•. SBk i

Tin- ni*ik»t was very iuauim^t. to-daj in all .l. part-

i- I buslines, tin- traiii.artioii» I., lligi uliflUL-d strict-

ly to the jobbing trade and tue dmiaudb of r. tailers. Tin

flood in the river .till continue*, chucking both rec< ipis

and <Uv weatlier waa wi t all the nioruinx

out-door b very disagreeable. Several

i\e been couipillod to tie up to await an abate-

ment of the water*, in HOW to ilMfeaOJi t!i. ir freight.

The money mark, t in ixtiem ly un* tiled and very

litfht, though we have n . new feature I.. iioti'e, except-

nig that loam are reati icWd among the banks to (trictly

flrat class paper, and that tlast. ru exchange contiuu.iscarce, while cev. ral ht a\> ontractors c.jiitiuue to preaii

th< market. Co\oiuuiiit stocks ar.- st'-ady, but rail-

road and others are iiuite dull. UtM i» on the de-

cline again, the opi ning late in New Vork to-day being

1'J6. The broker, to-day were buying and telling at

the following I atec, the figures representing currency :

tio'dBuyiu*,

Silver _ mKentucky BanksIndiana and OhioEasternS.aU- Uank Teuness.^-PIMM r-' Uauk.TeiiuLuioii Uauli, "V'nginia aud North Carolina...Georgia, South Carolina audKaeteru ExchangeS-31 < 'oilpou i

j-M iKmdsD. maud Note* _lievei umciit Vou. hers _ 7^10 dib.(MM* .li WatiiingU.uio-4o Bonds _.. ™„„ HalOur .juotations apply exclusively to the wholesale

trail.-, uiilers otherwise slatwt. Betail aud jobbing sales

arc at BJJJ advance on th. se rates. 1

OOl N 1 BY PKODUCK-We .juoU- greeu applea ati -p r bbi, f..r choice selected. Jjried apjilea

range from 12 to He loi new per lb; dried peaches 2V.Butter, ^o^^Jc, ic boxei or firkin*; choice, X'i^S40o. Beet-v. ax nominal at M(&*ic. Broom*, common,ti 5u^.*> 2i; beat

not i. »'>•«<«, 2Vf» doe. Oheeae—Western Beserve, in

'of- to th- tr..de. and 22c to

burg 22>«c. Uairy cht^se. choice,

dull, aud buyers are oflt ring '>7c. Flax seed buying at*2 4'<o.L' o. Ginseng nominal at

nominal at »2 lt<<t2 2*. for white.

Plenty at t* 2>.<m H * bbl, In Iou>.

ern command 64 mi.Onioni ni.-r.- plenty. »7 0 fe:7 2ft

P barrel. Ugg* are firm at HfJOl P«'r doxen tor Iresbpack-^l.

M MKSTICS, Ac.-We <)ttote a Bah- of In bale* GreatW estern Hheetings at .Vn-, which i* lower than standardsheetings ar.- held Ka«t. W e yuote c. tlonades i •«,::„ .

b- . in-' ..".</!.. Giusl.a.us :;:s.o...... I'nnlr 13^3- ...

MOM drills, standards K^oO'sc.t <<TION i COTTON Y'AKNS—Not much doing and wc

auote cotton at bu to 7oc Sales of yams at M to f.7c perdon-ufoi Na.ilun, and the other si7*s at the usual de-tlii..

.

FLOL'B GKAIN -The luark.-t continue! dull withfair stocks ou hand, and .-quote limited sales of super-tine at ».s to - 7... plain xtra t$ to u 20. extra family at

*i»2S to 4» 7:., as to brand, while fancy brun.ls nre retail-

ing at *11 :*> to 12. Wheat scarce at $1 7.1 to 1 M for. primled, and »: 'M for w hite, c m f. - m first haudfl wequoteati IN to 1 12 as to quality mid condition. Sales from storesat ii to 1 Jn. oats scarce at »i to y.V, aud sales of heavyat •!.

GUOCkBIES—Tlie market was dull to-day, at 43

S

to *:k for fair t.. pimi- §Ja cofi«-. Java coffe-e ftle. Islandsu-ar in hhds22 2 to2le. New Orleans fair to prime 24

S

to 2>.V, hard sugar, standard 27 to as.'ac, while otherqualities command 2-. '.-to 27. -. I'lantatioii inolasscs tl 34

to 1 3-j, as to quality and pks. Sirups »l 2:. to 1 45 perga'l-.u. Spic-s or Pimento, 3.1 to 37c. Pt-ppei 46 to 47c perpound.

M. i:i is -We quote limited sales at tl3 Ml to 13 61) perbushel tor clover, light sales of Timothy at tVi 25 to 5 in.

Blue glass and Bed Top #2 5ti to 2 75, orchard grass i;; to3 25, and Hungarian S.11I at 75 to »3.

Wo»L-W. qii.ite grease- at 56 to «Kjc, aud tub-washedat ync.

WIIISKY-W. quote raw nominally at »2 In, with noreceipts by the river.

I.OI ISVIM.E TOBAC; <> .MAUKKT.Tliurnd.-iy. -Tin- sales at the auction warehouses to-

day amounted to K>2 hhds at about previous rates thoughchoic- leaf was held a» l.U'b as tW. The following is the

range of prices:

AT TIIK LOl'IS VI LI.K Sales of 3 hhds trash at *5 15to '.-«>, .'. I. lids at M in to Ml li hhds at »7 15 to 7 .VI, 2

i I »- mtm K 2 hhds at MTSta 11 •£., 2 at »I3 Z.,2 atr!4 to is, 2 at MS 60 to 21 25, 2 at »23 25, I at «24 2". to 25, 2itn t - M, t hhds atW » to 27 and 2 at f.'J in to35.

AT TIIK BooNK-4 hhds at *7 10 to 7 55. 2 hhds at»s 40 i., 1. 2 at tlu to 12 5u, 2 at SI7 50 to IS 50, and 1 atH MlAT TIIK NINTH STBEET—2 hhds low gra.le at SO to

I To. I buds at $7 to 7 4", 2 at *> fti to 2 at t!3 to 14 Z'i 2at• 15 tola 25, 2 at * i .' .50 to 22, 2 at »23 26 to 27 tO, aud 1 at

AT Till: PICKBTT—I hhd trash at M «5. 10 hhdstrashy lugs ut s»i to t, 7.'). of light lugs at *7 lo to 7 35, 2at *s M to y 40, 2 of heavy lugs at fill £> to 12 50, 3 of lightleaf at Ml M to 14 2.5, I at MS to 15 75, 2 at $17 75 to Id 75, 2at *ly to l'J 5o, 2 at till 25 to 22, 2 at $22 75 to 23 50, 2 at*24 M to 25 -75, 2 a l *27 Jj to 37 50, and 1 of bright manu-factures leafat $10.

STEAMBOATS.

U. S. Mail Line for Cincinnati

MOBNINM boats.

octt dtf

1804. 1864.Louisvilleand Henderson

U. S. MAILBOATS,V»r Oweasbore*, KtrimtIIIo and Henderaaa

e*i>9eetlna; at Evauavllle wlih tka

Cairo and Evansviile Paokets.Tli. new and l-.cht draught steamer* MORNINGSTAB and TABASOON will leave eyery Toeada"

We4neaday. Friday and Saturday at 5 P. M.

NOTICE.All fretuhts and passtngert mast be at the Portland

whart before f> o'clock P. at., a* the boat* will not bedelayed i>ft«r that time under auy circumstance. Getter*bllis of ladicg, packages, Ac., muat be left wltli th«Agents, on ifr.nrtn ;re»t, between Main and the river,

for*, t o'clock P. V • H OI1NOK Hn»'t

SALT.

SALT COMPANY.JOHN B. SMITH, Sole Agent.

HAVE HAND AND AM (X)NSTANTLT BK-ceivingu of the liest brands of HALT. In superiorrerag... which 1 ..II. , t-j t .ty and country dealers at

WEEKLY PRESS.

LOUISVILLE

ONLY $2 PER ANNUM!!

Now is the Time to

Subscribe

!

Send in Your Names with the

Money!!

OF

OUR Gil LLANT ARMIES

find in the

WEEKLY UNION PRESS

ONE OF THEIR

STRONGEST SUPPORTERS

AND

STAUNCHEST FRIENDS

!

VIT1T1B

Weekly Union Press

UNCONDITIONALLY

THE UNION

GREAT INDUCEMENTS

TO

PERSONS WISHING TO SUBSCRIBE

ONLY FOR ONE YEAR

For a Club of

TEN SUBSCRIBERS !

!

TWO EXTRA COPIES

For a Club of Twentv

Subscribers!!

AMD A

SPLENDID COPY

OF

WEBSTER'S OR WORCESTER'S

*

Pictorial, Unabridged

THE TWO CHOICE ONES OF THEENGLISH LANGUAGE.

For a Club of Fifty

if

U. S. 7-30 LOAN.By authority of the Secretary of the Treasury, the un

dersigued hai assumed th-> General Subscription Agency

for ths sale of United State* Trenhury Note*, bMClag

•even and three-tenlh* per ceut. interest per annum,

These notes are issued under date oi Augu t 1

aud arc payable three year* from that time, iu currency

or are convertible, at the opti in of the holder, Into

U. S. 5-20 Six per cent.

GOLD-BEARING BONDS.Thene boud* are now worth a tremium of uim- p r

cent., including gild ictc-n-st from November, which

makes the actual profit on t 7-20 loan, at current rate *,

including interest, about t er cent, per aununi, beside*

ite exemption from State municipal taxativn, uv'itcA

add* frum one to three per cent, more, according to the tate

levied on other property. The intrf.est is payable semi-

annually by coupon* attached to each uote, which may

be cut off and sold to anv ' auk or banker,

tervst amounts to

One cent per «fny on a SSI) note." " " SlOO "" " " $500 "

i»0 " " u S1000 M

*1

Notes of all the denomination* named will I* promptly

furnished upon receipt of sub criptions This li

THE ONLY LOAN IN MARKETnow offered by the Government, and it is confidently ex-

CINCINNATI ADVERT1SEMTS

pected that its advantage* will make It the

Great Popular Loan of the People.

Lea* than *2no,oun,(»i0 remain ncsohl, which will prob

bly be disposed of within the next N 01 yu da> s, win u th-

notes will undoubtedly command a piew uni, as has uni-

formly been thecase on closing the subscription to other

In order that citizens of every town and section of tin-

country may be afforded facilities for taking the loan, the

National Bank*, State Banks, and Private Hank, i s

throughout the country have gem-rally agreed to receive

subscribtion* at par. Subscribers will select their own

agents, in whom they ha\e confielence, and who are only

to be responsible fcJ the delivery of the uotei f.-r which

they receive orders.

JAY COOKE,wownw agent, ru immn

SubecriptiouH will be reived by the Fitter NATION-

AL UANK OF LOIISVILLK. leblft-diwlm

THE NINTH NATIONAL BANKOF TH E CITY OK K\V VOII K

.

C WMTAL, $l,0(HMIOil, PAI1I IN,

Fiscal Agent of the United States,

MB MOM AoE&T roR jay cooks, si iisi bipti jh aoknt,

mm Deliver T-.IO \«tes, Free of Charffe,

by exprws, in all parts of the country, ami rc iv.-in

payment ihecktou New Vork, Phila-lelphia ami Ho t.-n,

current bills, and all five p< r ci-nt. llilereit Uot"K, withinterest to date of subscription. Orders sent by mailwill be pioiuptly filled.

This K:\iik receive* tin- acroun's of banks aud baukerson favorab'e iMHj also, of individuals keeping NewYork accounts. J. V. ORVIS. President.

J. T. IJill. CaMuer. m*r| 1*1 Ht

rU. S. 7-30 LOAN.

UK PLANTKliV NATIONAL Bitt H.WINGDinted an agout to receive subvcription* to

this, the only LOAN now offered by the Government, i ;

pre-paied to r ce iv.- snbscrip ious Irom pirties wishing to

invest, and re-<ommend it to all i-i.kso.ns ile-siring a per-

manent and safe investment.

The rot- saie payable on the l.'.th ol August, i r, andbear iute.eat at the rate of 7 3-10 p^-r e-. nt. per »nnmn,c nv.-rtable at maturity, at tin- tptioa o* the holder, in

the popular '.0.-, per cent gold bonds, aud are exemptfrom State and municipal tax:it- 11.

marl-tf J. 51. DI N'CAN. President.

Planters National BankOF LOUISVILLE.

DIUKCTOKS:J. M. PUN0AN, J. r. BVXKO,VYM. UIGllKS, V. P. AKMSTB ING,

LOI IS IIK1I ,1.

rpiITS BANK WILL OPBH TBI8 HI II M I HQ IN THE1 Pe. plea' Uank BaUding, HaaUtoD Ki . k i-ixtnstrpe-t, m-ar Main, for lln- | iir osc of transacting a g.-neral Uauking, Exeba; f* IM Ooilaetiag Ho - i-

Particular aud promp: Btla*>>ioa wH l» fp\*m t 1 Colleitions. J. M. DUNCAN, Pre . I, ut.marl -3m J. W. bAT< MELOB, Ca h.

PLANTERS' NATIONAL HANK I fL l ljMLL., *e:-. '-.'.'.. i

A CALL OF TEN (M) PEU CENT. ON TBI CAPITALStock of this Bank is ovdated, pa>abfe at their

Baakiog Hoaaeoa the loth of Marck.marl-lo* * --^ HAM, 0m hi r.

ENGINEERING.

Landscape, Gardening and Ceme-tery EngineeriDg.

BENJAMIN GROVE,ical and Cemetery En-

gineer.rpOPOGUAI'IU JAI. 81 RVI V:A tor Rni al < 'eim t ri

ANI> PLANS M A DBPublic Parks.Ple.isiiK lir< -m<!s,

Sul ui li 111 Gardens, etc. All designs staked and laid outaccording to pl iu, an I sup-lint mleuce --ivi n when ruejuired. Adlrea* BENJAMIN QBOVK,Mm KoiSm* l^«ii'vili... Kv.

STOCKS.

Qnartermasters' VouchersAND

CERTIFICATES OF INDEBTEDNESSBought at the Best Kates, by

C. L.RADWAY & €0.

•1*1 Main St., South side, fcet id an«l M.

INSURANCE.

Insurance against Less or Dam-age by Fire,

ON THE

Participation or Return Pre-mium Plan

!

TIIK

Cheapest aud Safest System of Insurance!

BEN J. dTkENNEDY,INSURANCE AGENT,

No. 'I l.'l >In1n Streetj Month nl«lr, brtwrrn111 th mid Filth, over U. O'llarc'a Trunk

Ktorc, l.oiiiBvillt', Kentucky.

I AM PBEPA HEP TO IriSJUE POLICIB8 ON BUILD-INGS. STOCKS OH' XXBCHANDI8K, Kf UN n CUE

IN UWKLI ISOS, BXST8, LEASKSaml other iii-iirat.ie

propertv, aeaiust lo,-s or damage by fire, at rurreii' rs»ies,

on the Participation or hetiim Pr< niium i^ii.n, bf whichthree-fourth* of the eutir. profits of the Company are re-

funded each year to the policy hrktor.

Continental Insurance Co., New York < ity. CashCapital *l/s»,00il

N .Tin American K110 Insurance «>.., N. w YorkCity, Cash Capital 625,000

Washington Insurance Co., Now York City,Cash( npital - HMN

HowMlaauraaa Co.. Ne w Bave«7C*ah Capital... (Wo.imi

B^«rAll loo*-.* fairly and liber 1U1 adiasted and p |-ompt:ypaid. BENJ. V. KENNEBV,

Agent.

MARSHAL'S NOTICES.

U. S. Marshal's Sale.

BY VIBTI'K OK VENDI8 EXPONAS ISSUE I) FROMthe D strict Co„rt of th- V S. for the Ko: t„, v

I)i>trict at LowtofiU*, the undersigned will, ou \\ El)-

NESOAY, M ABC H l\ ISaft, at 0* < u-t m House In the

city of LouiKville, offer for nale to the MlWJ Hlto the

f.Bowing article., viz: rri-.te, B'eached OottuM, Browndo. Poplin*. Luster-, OtAitaM, Linen Duck shee s, Be,l

Ticklrg. Satinets. Cloaks, Shawls sk.r:s ( ravaU But-

tons, Thread, Needles, Wpa. Pocket Kuives Uo*lery

Psper Collars, C^nib*, Handeri hief*. Steel I'ens L.-a I

Pencils. SoM U D|t Uutto Percha do. No e Pap.r t%uIngv'ard^, Breast Pi- s Port MoMki, Waneta, ,idns

Work Ba-kets. Ca-d Tlow, rs 1 reuch1

1 11 ar*

Krames, Photograph Flam' s, ljooktng Olaa-e., I ictarea,

TasseU, Clothing. Over Coats. I>rawe.s, ShuN, \\ Uakr,' Brandy. 8Urch.B. ..U. Shoes.Jtc. Terms cash.

U.8.M.K.D.

CROCERIES.

JAMES A. FRAZER,WHOLESALE GROCER

COMMISSION"°MERCHANT,

cLoll 7 lOUtll

special iuducei

Ciiiciimati,IOKKKES, TEAS. SUGARS, SIRUPS, SPICES. Ac.' Fiafa of all kinds and all si.ep pa> k

MILITARY.Hiary as Act. Am. Paovorr Makdual eniuL

Statk or Kemickv.KBAL,

):it, V

, Iw^. JUnnuu, Kv., Haii ii 1*4

Circular No. 2:».

By circular No. 24. Provost Marshal's office, BtCMnVr3Iat, 1n»>, further enlistments for cavalry ami artillery

were prohibite-d, ezcrpt iu special case* to ho designated

by the War Depai tiuent.

Two casus o r exception have been deaixtiated by that

DepArtment, vi/. ! the Ml an I 7t:: Kentue ky Cavalry, the

former being permit teel lo add by new enlistments »•»• mento its present (treugth and the litter 6.VI. Recruiting

aud iuu>te!it>g ofttcer* ami all other* concernatl are here-

by notified. W. II. SI DELL,Lt. Col. luth U. S. U ana A. A. Pro. Mar. Uen. lor Ky.mar2-15t

NATIONAL BANKS.SECOND NATIONAL BANK

Ol" Louisville,IMRECTiiKS:

JAMES BRIDOEFOBJ). V. B. BARTLETT.JAMt-SP'RKIULL, S. S 111 >li

« h I.K ItKATKI)

Mlses bi;- .u s.

WM. K. IllDAi bON,

rilHIS BANK IS LOCATED roll Til K t-RB: \.S \ ML the old stand ot 'I • ,\- i .. . a • ! . I

Fourth -tie t.l- i we. n Man, .1 the i iw r, ». d vvilltran*.act a 1,'ei.e ar hanking. Exchange, and ( oile.-liug l u i-

nes*. Piom; t attention ^iv. n t-i c lh, tii *

„ =. # ,JAS. BRID.iEH.HD, Pr -i l nt.

Gro. B. An iso<, ( a*hi-r. mmtI-SM

Planters' National Bank.

Uf AU-y'KS ACT'U ASST. Pl-.av.l-IT M V RS!lAL tiCNEBAL, )Statk oK Kknti CKY, fLoiisville, Kv., March 1, 1- E I

Circular No. 2-i.

By special direction or tin- War Department it is announced that recruits may bo enlUtei for the 1 K.vi-

ment of L'nitetl States Veteran Vwiuutecr Engiuoera. p«.w

on duty at Ch.ittanoog i, Tenn., unde r c< lutnand of Col.

W. W Merrill. Froveat Marshal* and ether .-nicers

authorized to enli-t and muster in men ar» hereby in-

stiucted to receive for that regime-nt any while McnUiwho may elee t to iein it in pret re nca to Keiilucky organ-izations, and who ar-jable-bodie-el, «ccc-n!ii.g to re-ciuitii-g

standard, aud have the uece ssary <iUalilicatious for the

(iuti- s of ensine.-r soldiers.

Credits will be given to the proper counties of thi- Matla the usual way, and the recruit" be forwarde-d to tie

gi ueial rendezvous iu Louisville, Ky,W. II. SI DELL,

Lt.Col. 10th U. S. L, A. A P. M. C, Ch f Mu-teriu^ andDishurslui,' Officer, am! Sup. rinii ..dent of Vol Recruit-

ing for Ky. marl lit

Recruiting for State Service.

TDK UNDERSIGNED IS AITIIORIZED BY TBIGovernor of Kentucky to recruit oue Regiment o!

Mounted Infantry, to 1- mustered into the service of theStaU tor the periesl e-f one >ear. Address.a TAYLOR,

Colonel l.'.th Ky. Vols.,.n if L.a.i.ville. Ky.

TREASI RY i i P\RTJIKNT.)OrrieE or CostrTttoixra or the Ot aar>- r, -WMM, F.„. -., iv... )

WHEREAS. BY .SA!l:-rA< .nllV E\ I D::\c|; r UK-seated t-. the uiider-iguel. it has | ... i, m ,,| . •„ ap-

pear that "Til K PCaNTi-.K.-* NATIONAL BAN!I.o|'!si'lLLE." iu the Ci»y ol UmiavU**, in th- c--u'.ty<>f Jefferson and State of Kentucky, has h en dnlv organ-ized under ami accorriingto the roiiiirem nls of th- *• t i

0 ugress, entul d "an a' t to BtasrHl* Na'f-.r.a! turn :i-

cy, secured bf a pie ice of United State* tomis, and t-.

provide far th- circulation i.n.l r. .'. mp-j-.u thereof," ap-jooved .iune ?, ise^, and has I inlhld with ail tl..- p-ovi<-ii.ns at «uj.) H , t reaju« .) lo be i oaaaOvi with before com-BMMtag ihe busin- saoi banking umtersaui act.Now. there tare, I. Rngll »! Cullaugh, ComptP-i'.-r I if

the Ccru-ncv. do ban**)* . . rt f • thai ••tl. • Planters'

national Bank ol Loui-.ill-. i.. the City of l.oui-v ilie, inthe County of J-|?er».,ii ami Mate of Kentucky, m au-thorized to r amine- nee the bus ncs* of biuking under th-act at.re-Mi I,

{l.s.Iof offi?

1

, this u

GOLD mAMI'FACTORV

AND

BALES 1 0 O m\No.m Thiid St. near Jefferson.TU l»*»a<, Uavta* , a a-g P. „ t rtht> ^ ,„ ths

^y '>>- \,\s..,rr.;:

QOLD PENS KEPolAVfcu i • TS „ud .tamp.

Watches and JewelryThe best at :WI »' nlr.l itrset.

BATCHESRppair""! In *ka oe*t stvlc on short MflH bj ii|i ikaiaulworkmeu and warran:-!. T inr r-n iraatl* ne*M

wit:: .; ::.-. !i.m t -<vi —aiay ..r »cb iiaiy. I-WlUlLCII Mo -. UMVQB,

Colupiloile. of the I'm

CERTIFICATE OF AUTHORITYTO

The Second National Bank.IWWIIil B. KE % l l_ cKY.

TBKAW Kl DBrAjmtXBT.1Ornci or tm C<wirrsr.ii.ra or tbs CcsBsacr. VffMBMM,Mlw] ;it, )

LATIBBACTOBY BV1BBXCB l'i:i:-:i:ders;en. .1 iti. esbi—n nude to ai>-M- SA1 IOBAt BA » K U» LOU-< ity Of Louis* iile, in tk» Comtj oft Kaala ky, ha* be-:-n duly or^aniznl• ta th* re juir *aeat* ut Ik* Act oi

An Ac- to pr.-vid-- a aatioaa] Curreu-ol l llitl d St:et. I botla, and to pro.

In ai.-l r.-'emntiou {*.»!•• ..:,* Bptce/vad

BOOTS AND SHOES.

FALL GOODS!

I

BOOTS AM) SHOES2,000

AB .OB SAU* El

WBKBEA", BY- salad t- the

rear that THE 81I^VILLE." m thJenVrson ai el M*A* <

iiii'l-' and accord-n0m*BTCM| eniilie'.l

"

•>y. aecure-el by a phle lor thee iviil

R£AL ESTATE AGENCY.T. W. MVOT. w. s. rvr.a...a.

June . .1, 1 (A. and iix* c- mplied with ail the | iu o!

said act VMtnrwl to be coaapbed wttt befbtaithe business ..1 bank-nu u - uer said Act.Now, laerefore, I, :iuth McC^lloiigh1 Coinp»roner ol

th- Currency, da hereby certity l>*4 **t%m ftrcoad K»-tional Bauk af Loviav ui.-," in iMCity of ItoajaTiBa. >i>

the Daajrty af laffaraoa an I Ma:» af Keataek-, baatbo-rized ta i-ommeucu th: busiiie-s<> ot b.tniviuK uiek-r the A- t

ai'-T- I lid

,—. , Iv TnsTiMeiNv VaVWt witn— s my kan.l ;-.n i

| L.s. j seal of office this-ee.-u el" K-. l.iuarj, !- .'>.

HARDWARE.W. 13. BELKNAP & CO.,

IRON MERCHANTS,MO.m MAIN AMD TUBD « a.

TTAYB iu store

500 tuns Stone Coal and taTjrone" Ii'on

;

500 tnns Charcoal & Sligo Iron

;

3000 k'gs Nail3 from 2d to 60d

;

1000 kegs Wrought and CutSpike3

;

1000 kegs Horse & Mule Shoes;

200 k'gs Horse & Mule Nails;

Springs and Axles

;

Blacksmith's Tools;

Plowmaker's Materials

;

Manilla Rope and Oakum;Lead, Block Tin and Spelter;

Pittsburg Coal in Hogsheads,A II of which we are selling at very low price-s.

GOVERNMENT VOUCHERSTaken for (Mat In our line.

V I buy old m. tal, such a*

IRON, COPPER AND BRASSja2 de-odlm

COLLI* ORMSBY,Impori-. r and Whohxal.i an i Bc-tuil Baata in

FOREIGN INI DOMESTICHAED¥ARE,

tl(> Main St., y. S.,be!.. Fourth and —Hall.

LOUISVILLE, KY.fi-7 tf

Hardware and Cutlery.SKATEp. SI10VKL3 AND T0N08. COAL U0US-.

Kuive*. Forks. Spoon*. Ladle*. Iron*. Waitom. CoBc-

aud Spice Mill*. Nut Cracks, Foot Scrapers, Nails. Tacks,

Ball Miun. n mcculloi un,

Compuolier ol the- I urr-.-ucy.

Orr:cc r? the CneTaoi.i.».KWa:

WHK1.KW, r.v SA :. I'.'.' \

s<-ntt-d to the B8d*raim«4, ii 1«

acar that "the Loaivrille City >aticity of liiiaiiailBa. la •-!: Uoaaty r' JK-ntucky, has ba a duly ax*Ma*a*4 >

aa tha raqalreaseal

CHaarn taunnai']ub ar the veniMrv. tfaauiacTaa, fab. a, ImA. )

BBCB I'KK-n....:- 1. ......

hl n bmand Slat- afid arc>-rdin«

M eat t: .i. "anact to pro-. ;d • a N..lii-M M • on nc ' nrit! \,j a pi.

Uliiteel States 1». ii i,, mil' to j.ro\i.!,- |..r tii-- it. illationand r<-d- atatiea Itw-p-or. 1 appro-., ,1 June 3, Ua*. and ha*complied »iih ail t!i proTMaa* of *aU ad r qnlrad loa*cdupM- i aritu l<"iore cHmnieuc>n<{ the 1-uvucts of bank-ing unde r *aU art.Now. theie f re. 1, lliwh Mci"u"on«h, ComptroBar al

the Curreiiry. an hefebj certify that "toe LuaiMM*) I ;t7

National Uank." in the » ity »f I- ui.Mil.-, m Mi- . .nniyof J. ii-ison mid State .i Keatacky, n aatitoria ; i

af baitklaa) as*aat Mm act «for«

Real Estate & Collecting

AGSNOY.EPCOY & FEKKILR.

UFFU'i: -Urr»i:aa*'B SnlWln«, £4

JtKFERXllSVlLLE. I\D.

I> KAL B9TATB or EVKKV MBCB1CTIOB IKltiUIV ami se ld. and l ollrcimiii prQUipMy attend -1 t,

a*THDKB.-li. S. Uc-Uk.l. i.-r, IndianaHon. Ii.vi.l «.-n..aAld. In.li.aap. ii-. h;U» T *.•+il»«jn. B«t.. N.o ..ill- K». imT

L5VERY STABLE.

Livery and Sale Stable.

continence thtai-l.

In t

p* Jol ollicet

1 ery in 1 rale <»•»!•

"Sain and MarK-. t ai-ar tl

Link. ,.n

Hmi*

»;.. r . ..f witness tr.y l.a

h day of • ebraarvHUGH Mi < L LLUI OH,

Comptroller of t!i. Un i u ,

fnl'y anuonurc ?.»!.• pul.l,.- t'i i! th- v ..*>», by - • •

'. ?• t •«•> ... : iisii. -j-. ui-iu a !:U rai yi public

FUEL.

1 s< al pa'rouaKC.gmmm and Bnvei** a«i'l Sa.!d!- lie.rs.-* tor 1

Horses kept by Ineiia>, wr» k or month,ripwrial at-nti- a ({i»eu to the Purcha-* sni

B'.rse« an.) .>lu! s.

WABTBD.-UalS Borland Mnl—, fnMt niailr

TED.- i II..r* .an.} Mnl~., f ruh^li the hiKu-k. • pric-

;*.::u- »-.d. w. s. uailivNa'Y

iviiLK. Kt.. Ocfa.be* r. MB4 teW dtf

riA = LROADS.

Louisville asd NashvlUe

£aat «Mc Thiru Street, Hear Ma1b«

Wh..;-c_:. ».-..;.f in ti.. -juality of

PITTglOIfi COAL0 BDEBI c .

soli- it.-i.

ITKX w Mi--.- •

Hoc*, Bakes, Mattocks Spahs. Whe-elbarr, w.i, Bar

ti, n, Whole^U- and Retail l-j

A. aMHUMrtii Sm 221 Tlilrd street.

G. BAUBMANN,FOREIGN I MU£# SABDWABE.

OUTLKP.Y AND GERMAN GOOD&ALflO

GUNS AND PISTOLS.Nd. f?SU $l*\n Street batweca Vlxtk nui. Ka-rsaik

l>tf . til -'H it 5 K. KV

SUNDRIES.

MM abai priice New Or!eIn store and for sale by

D. BSMBZMfTT « HOBBL

rpuBAC<X>-TUBAUX>-

vi half butts Unci's hrii?ht pound,40 aarfb-tl* Valley Horn;123 c ei-in s Isabella l.ruht tens,3»l caddii -s Ul -ek Sweet lens,

M boxs Navy,2>»> radi.ii s Navy,li.ti cudeli. -. black isww't Ciwrl.-s,

^^^Rlllfa^ftMfefaVk* *-< Main -tr t.

gOAV-cMIAf-

«*) boxe s St, T onis Palm and Ce rnisn Soap,Just received and for salo at factorv price bv

\ Ulvlli il'S li i CO.,feb-IHm 4..H Main atreet

w II1SKV-WHISKY-

5iin barroU Raw,2Pi barreU new and old <.Vpp<-r

For sale by DOBB,*

leb2U-lni

^AFKS-SAFKS-

Wear.< agents Tor the best safe* in use, aud invitobayem to examine ours before piuchasine clsewlu-i-e.

DOBB, BABBUOD8B A Co.feb2i)-1m CBUT1EB-BU1TKB-

» pounds fresh roll Butter,I.YOd.udfJuat rece.vod .ud for sale b

DOKX, BAB&HOUSX .V Co.,f^b20-lm

QaBtBB ftjOABB—

A larce consigment or Ilie U-.t hrrnds jus* receivedmu

i)^]! BAKB^IOCSBA OCX,^" m Bala Mrek

tVisLITARY SOOKS.

Great Military Work of th?. Age.

LIFE OF NAPOLEON1 allalini JOMIM.

OKNIiRAI, IN C1IIF.K AND >! B€l III Ml TOTUE EMPEROR OK Kl ssIA.

TKA.NSLATED BMH TWA FltENCII, WIX I NOTES

I W. II. aUIUtXi k I.. f>..

Author of "Efceineuts of Milirnry Science. Interriit; -ualL:nv, and »h- Law i o; War," 111 Ml

l.'lumi-.i, wi!h

-AUH>-sctitfs Military IMrtionary,

It ei -', ii (I e~. BBlllj BRgaaMMM mid Artil-lerists ticport of Oiicratl-.-iis of the

Aim j ut' the i'oic-iaai-.

Mii7.tr "c.i Mala - -V.'.r

Cbau^e ui Time.

fmj AND ArCEB •Jt'NDAT. O. T. ja_BBJ\J vul luAro the Depot, co, u r oi V.t: tb

- m. ia*ut;.rf : !'.u..v:t . ?N n.n >Aru.rifk mm7 A. M. 'JAIL *NI> P^KN'GE-t ?';•.:!» »i«B

• ajavili,., l^.*liiif iirw.ii aod t lars.vi-.'e «iaily

A. Ji. V\l KKSS i ASrel NQKi; TRAIN n>B Li B.aawa. Ferr.- -rill -. i>aavi!le, H«rrodabur«, CaaipV '»» :"#(jaiCola™ . . dally, exeept SuaiUy.

: .. r. 1 I'll >'iGm T'tA I N Fott L." BANOH.3 P. M. ACCOBUIODATaUfl TKAtB F'jB FA ?.<(!•

"•WlleliJly. CiCvpi Slllll.. .

I. MAIL A PAisENOEB TRAIN rOM N.^UV I LLK dauy.

jtr. a.Tur.oc^B vrhoht tbain tor na.-u-aiiy.

aval I - -:r.-t .

11

.

PROFESS.0?,AL.

oi nrt t. l. • \Liiwi.i :, .>. -r-, „ 4?to Uu> uuibal Sta:.« Ucf.L l>::ice n nrs t

.-i

l P. M. jA^aa

"TkB. J. B. BCRNd (LATE SI B -EoN io SI. V. l »

1 f laapa libit] t i..i»rshia pro fwional servai- s to tba. iliz-;.- of Louisville Inn - ... '. • •

:

-

. nee, '•<!{ FuUs-treet, w^.t sid . L-tw-en tlr^a aa 1 B itaaA.It. Bur. m h.^i pre. »i,- ( -,l ti;.-.li.-ine Sit-. a >—-r-. tlr—

years of that t>.n« :ihc i:u>. aV.arc-^1K. Surgery. MBal

UND£RTAs<,i>.C.

KI1STG & OWEN,

UNDERTAKERS,At the Old Stan.!, South-cast corner 4el-

and Third streets.

H AVING TH0BOUSHL1 CHANI :;:!> TUB OLDIn.nse and fltud it up l'..r our Im-iiieai ia a »tyl«

heretofore unknown in tins city, wo will .1--t te our timeexclusively to the burial of th- de-ii-l, for whi, ii p..rooma» will haaa e eiuntamly ou baud a largi- assortme-nt of

I C. SHULER & CO.'S.Instly eelebrat.-l Air-Htht Galvanized Wronvht Ire>t« afk-t:: and «':;.•; ahic!t i'--r !--.<|.f •:i:r:iii::.t> , slv:.

ami finish, surpass an.' thine be for.- on. r.-d t.. tie- public.\V- also ke-o on hand CRA Nit, BRKEl> j; tO.'d ami

W. M. BATBTOBDACO.'S MetaBo Bari&l Caskets I

I'ases. Al*', a Uik- a--..|liii.-nt o| \».vii--n t Ihn an.lCeitfiu Mountings. All .alls att. i.d.-l t.. promptly nis'htjr day, in the city or country, by one of the liriu iu person.Th<- senior partn-r of C'i. a

8

—ae.ucy lor tin- ..t I.e. >m 1. m:Cases in th- Kaste-ru liivi.iou ol K'-i

at tin- mouth ofSi.lt Kivi r \ i-tn

counties where they ei- n<>w ^-i-i,'

furnish I'uilertaki rs wiin tiieiu by calling atcorner Third aud JeUe rsotis snet-ts.jau2 bUMBOBTBH,

I hr.s the exclusive.t < > "S 1 '»«'re. |s »udtucky, aeaaaseactag.. -.m- thrt- or t :urami is prepared tc

BT>. H. MMaVMaaj I Bfi I ve_axo.

KflrfOW & IM AND,fflMRI AT LAW,

H0PKIN8VILLML\ KY.W!!l ei»e9roa--,-.t ai r- • : k.

1 '. -in « » 1 1.:. 2

.• r a' an- \-B

TOBACCO WAR£HOU8E.:a«es :-hsl?«

VHSLrS, CALDWELL * CO^LOUISVILLt

TOBACCO WAREHOUSE,acr llnln natl Tt-nlhnad Mala and Klrvealh

SHraria,

LOLoVl^.L-5. BaVaWOSoa «oraw af Tentr. ?tt*»L

A V ». -.• .'

; r • >. - - • : »-H l .ck sales aud pn-oi-i i t

OPTICIAN.

W* WYATT,UNDERTAKER

s. w. oor seventh A JxrEisasos sr^,.

iOUlriViXIiE, ItY.

KEEPS conatant'.T ha=- a c. mplcta a

Crane. Rroed A Co.'s LaVsat InipiovwlTA1.L10 BURIAL 0A»n AM> 0A8BB

frb2.)-ln

100 doz Brooms. Sh.iker and imitation;Inaix.eaud :or sale by I). S. UENfclDIUl' St JOB.

««•« t»

UAR-»! bhd* prime Cuba !*u:ar;2« " ariaae Porto Bleo matanni " cboioa Bssr Orlsaaa auajarjIon bbls crushed .- upr;an " A ooffess SuRsr;

S " Jowdered'sueir;a store and lor sale by D. S. REN EDICT A SON.

i*u tr

1»ROOMSAJ dozen Shaker Rrooms,

50 dozeu pla u and fan I BlE>r *aleby A. ii. A

1 AVA IXIITII

a.O.GARHNKR4is Mala »traH

I M baes choice old <lov«rnuient Java OaBM,Forsaleby A. U. * >V .

0.«ABBNEB.

lOr-FEti-ct&Zttitm*"* 8. REN EDICT A SoN.

(JofSns fniuisl. i I , :.

ALL ORDERS PBOBUrT» ATTBBDBD TODAY OR NiGHT.

N. B. HaTln-'nad the co.ilract, sine* ihe mbb-ic*meut of the war, f r the burin! «f N-n<sl So!.'.: rs, I

enabled to keep a completer- ;t r : .-«.»! p< I

roKimentaud hcapital af all aVttucu joldiers in auJ aaot-Louistill-, Ky. . , ...K-ln.ve-. .ui fti-.nds can receive any ir:format.i,c ..^

aired by addroasine me at my offloo.

,

1 keep countantly - n hanJ inetUhc an1 tnc case. IJW

LOUISVIIaLKOPTICAL INSTIl^S,SAll ST REST. CBDER TBr? NAT .UNAs ii.IKU

E. S1NCF.KE, Ortie?aii,- aWSr^-. TSfKODi: »..- ;tt^ c-

f ' -V-%'^*a»« A Uij.'.iy iapr.-.» ;:

in.prwe"% the- ' "t ' ' "

i' -,. i-..- • -,c-

tioa of Steresrcasa andJ Vi«w i, Paiivramas,

M.i^ic : -.•;.-«-•. ..is*,

rivr Fwid and «-peraIn : BK rs,

y c ro-saafsmoc aet

Artificial Syea InsertedCausing Pain.

sWSphe-ri.iJaJ *!»*«. < » I i" !•! ir -m.s>*-s... :

.. Ia.-srs willb«-s.-ntto or.b r 'f tf ••»:.-»' rtheer rominent or sauk, aad what leaatbaf

esbavn , .-a n^.1 / -. .' -ill

fOUNDERY.

Arctic Reseaiehes and Life amoiigthe Esquimaux,

BY CII AUMSX m» n A LI/,

Wlfh Mas and Its) Illustrations. Prie'e M For

sale by ClVH.LAC.\I.VKi:r,dan* dtf

*** **

JOHN GODFREY'SirOETTJNES,BY HAYARD TAYLOR.

Price $2 S5. For sale b, CIV1LL A CALVERT,decil dtf *

mmwwNo. *S Tenth St.. bet. Mala and Market.

J. F. HAWLEY, Proprietor.

II

A CHOICE LOT OF JUVENILES,

I v INU SERVED OCT IIIR^K VKARS IN THEI aiiuy. I sm n..< inch .rceof th- ah.»Te n<ua*l foan-

,1.., • . i raavv to st.te that 1 have *--isr— 1 a c >..tinn-

ffhiasrViU.-.fMa Joll> L\WSO» Haraaaias.

who will still »»• ou h»>id t-> attend to the practical pa't ofi

r which : .- »'••" :u .u ,-i

Drri-i : thirl • »>ars.

I „,„ pr.-p.n>1 ta n annf-ctar» all kin is of Ura-s w rk.Part:<-ul if attention pwi < to Metal ic Packing and flab-

be! Mei.i's -I all ki- <U. Bras, ami t V>mp .-atioii Cartings,esc Cash paid f< r Brsws. Copper and oih-r old metal*,

las

i A OA LVERT,

BAKERY.HAVING LEASED TUX BUILDING LATELY Oi

cu-led by Messrs. Miltr Moore, oa Or-en -tre-t

aad erre'rd a RAKEBT, with saacioas (MM sa<l all

m-.'. r-i iniprovemi a*s. ta can at all time* urn:sh anyamount ot 1 RACBXRS, CAKES. Ao , of sap^riorqaabtr,i ii tin shone t p. veil- e n.-iice. Gi»e a* a cad a*Ar« poi-

rhaanig el*, a her.. ^UCc No 822 »"oarths«rjjet-^'J^