Daily Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1848), 1855-12-05 page 1 |
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i fftH U 1 i IS! Ill VOLUME XIX. IS POBLrSHCh DAILY, TRMVEEJCLT AND WEEKLY T TH1 ".illin STATE J0UM1L ..OMPOY. Iiunrpnrattd under the General Late. i;kms, invariably in advance iHilT $8 00 per year. By the Cairier, per k 12K ot. rai Wkeklt 00 vr rr, VVOltT 00 " flubs of ten and ovr 1 HO " IKHM3 OF ADTERTtSCra BY THE SQUARE. Ins mna or iw maii sqni.ni-) od sonar I year ..$20 00 : one square 3 weskn.. .$3 60 'III . . - , , , . I A l - A months 10 00 ; one 6 mnntha 12 00 ; one 2 weeks.. 2 50 I week....- 1 60 no ' oo Oo "' in. " Dn Pisplaye, It man ha ft 00 ; one months 6 00 ; one A ire6kfl t 00 ; one I month 4 60 one i advertisements half ' 6 days 1 83 4 dart ... 1 26 " a dam 1 10 1 Insert!, n 60 more than the abnr lCeR. Advertiennts, leaded and placed in tb oolamn of Special Notices," aoirtiK the ordinary rater- i 11 notices required to be published by law, legal rates. I f ordered on the Inside exclusively after the first week, lu per cent, mora than the above ratea ; but all suoh will .ppaar lu the Trl-Weekly without charge. Business Cards, not exceeding Bye line, per year, lu-t6e, ti.ftO per line ; outaide t2. . . Notices of meetings, charitable societies, lire cruj.a-cits, ftc, half price. Advertisements not accompanied with written directions will be Inserted till forbid, and charged accordingly. . All transient advertisements must be paid in advance. Weekly, same terms as Daily, where Weekly Is only ,edhair price where Advertisements appear In both papers. Burtwr the present system, the advortler pays so mo b fur the space be ooonpies, the chang being hargeablo with the composition ouly. It is now gen- rally adopted. Schroeder & McFarland, - WBOLBUlt A!tD RET.1II. D.limS IX FOREIGN & DOMESTIC CIGARS, TOBACCO, SNUFF, ETC., ETC. Jjurml Building, corner of High Strttt and Sugar AlU, COLUMBUS, OHIO. CHARLES S. HELL, Attorney1 at Law , CONSTANS' BUILDING, HIQH ST., apij-tf CoHrsnioa, igio. STAFFORD & SMITH, AUCTION AND COMMISSION MERCHANTS Volumtiul, Ohio. -alaol Real Kstate, Stocks, Household Furniture, Dry-ilooda, Groceries, Horset, Carriages, fee, ftc, attended lu In city or oonntry, on the most reasonable terms. Liberal advances on consignment! decl-dly I'll I L. D. FISI1EK, Ctvri Engineer, Surveyor mid llrauglitsman, ' Btabee's Block, over RudMU's, llleh Street, Columbus, Ohio. ALL KINDS OF LAND AND ENGINEERING Surveying aui Leveling; Mapping Plattiug; jlechanioal and Architectural Drawing, promplly and satisfactorily executed. Hefer to M. L. Sulliract, Ewj., JohnGraham, Rq., Col. Modbary, C. E. jySl-dlruwly Iron and Brass Founders, UAHirAVlLUb IV uuur.a, AND HAVB OS HAND, CI 2 STEAM ENGINES, Boilers and uiii-iiearing. WB ARK AI-30 PREPARED TO FURNISH Oast Iron Fronts, Bolts for Bridges, &o. 99 o Window Caps and Sills, Cat and Wrnnght Switches, 8wlteh titands, Frogs and Crossings, anting, Station pipes, sc. K?Mlll Irons of nil kinds always on hHnd.TJ J-NEW SHOP, Went end of the National Road Bridge.-U Columbus, Ohio, April , 1966.-dwly Si HUGHES & KEEBE, Manufacturers of Cabinet Furniture, Chairs, & Mattresses of Every Description, High it. three door South of Town tt., rOULD RESPECTFULLY INFORM THE nnhlls thatthev have constantly on band a fine assortment of Parlor and Kitchen Furniture of every description, which tbey wish to dispose of on the most ra. tenable terms. They would also call attention U a new Invention of their own that they are about to have patented, under fbe name of the . "Centre Hinge Spriug Bed." Au article that has won universal admiration by all who Lave examined lta superior advantages. The peculiar tdastedneas to the purpose desigued, the simplicity of iis construction, and the cheapness with which it can be furnished to customers, render the spring bed superior to all articles of the kind yet manufactured. The Centre Hinge Spring Bed can be fitted to any kind of bedstead. Relying with eonlidence npon the merits of the iuven. tlcn, they do not deem it advisable to send Agen ts into the deld to increase the sale, but they will he happy to ac-.vnnmodate ail who feel an iuterest In the matter with an opportunity of examining and judpng for themselves. jyadwly I.VCOIRIGE B031E Sl.Ml'FACTl'ftES. Butler's Mercantile Writing Fluid. TANTJFACTTJRED S VINfi STREET iVX CINCINNATI, OlllO.-rSince this superior Fluid Ink has been before the public, now nearly two years, it has been eoniitantly guiuing in favor, and is now preferred, by tuanv, to the f-r famed Arnold Fluid. During th past year, TWENTY THOUSAND QUART AND PINT BOITLKS, together with smaller sizes Innumerable, havo been sold to Bankers and Merchants in i.lnoinnati, Louisville, Pittsburgh, Buffalo, Cleveland, Detroit, Terra Haute, Lafayette, Vlncennes, Indianapolis, Efaoaville, Frankfort, Lexiogtou, Nashville, Memphis, St. Louia, Vlcksburg, Jackson, Natchez, and New iirlana. It has ilso bees adopted iu the State Departments of Kentucky. Tennessee and Mississippi. It has taken THRKF. FIRST CLASS DIPLOMAS at Mechanics' Institutes of Cincinnati and Louisville and Four Diplomas and Price Medals at Stat Fairs held last fell In N. York, Ohio, Indiana and Illinois. Tho following Merchants and Baukers of Columblli', heretofore using Arnold's Ink, have adopted Butler's stereanttle Writing Fluid : Franklin Bk of Columbus. Weekly Columbian OIBce. Clinton du do 'Columbus Machine Manuf. L'tcbangti do do j Company. Barttett at Kiulin. niiliKersiuuio rcoiienitui.v Am. Cxprcss Co. ! Ohio Tool Co. tmericnn Hotel. Nell House. U. fl. Hotel. Nat. Telegraph ODlce. Prob. Court, Franklin cn. '"o. Auditor do Co. Recorden do l'o Clerk do I. H.Conk. James 0'Kai.e. Ohio SUtesman Oflie. Pally Jonrnal do City Fact do P. Hay den. iJobn L. Gill. , H. C. Noble. Attorney . !V. A. ft J. C. McCoy John Burr. J. R. Paul. : Hanas k llecnye Wm. A. OIU. :C. Fsy Si Sons. ;Darua Adams. .I. A. Slnsser. : 1. W. B. Brooks. 1 OC20-dtlll4 iVEW GOODS. WE ARE NOW RECEIVING OUR FALL and Winter supply of Fancy and Staple DRY GOODS, Which we are determined shall not be undersold In this market, consisting in part ot CtOTHS, CA?9IMERES, "ATINETS, FLtNNELS, BLANKETS, . r..r . iir, PikTm, Oft TO TiL'T .IMVtl m.AlB. Ainu rAivi niuivcr, 4(r.,ni.Ti-.i . FRENCH AND ENGLISH MERINOE8, PLAIDS, CALICOES, GINGHAMS, LACES, EMBROIPERIF-S, SHAWIS, LINENS, TUBA I.ISEN-J, HUfEKS, CRASH, NAPKINS, UN FN SUEET1NOS, UNBLEACHED AND BLEACHED MUSl.lNrt, DAMASKS, RWUiS AND B0BINET CURTAINS, TOILET QUILTS, RIBBONS, DRESS TRIMMINGS, KlL il.liJ CLOTHS HOSIERY of all kinds, And few of those CARPETS at cost. uuA-dBm . - W. A. at J. 0. MoCOY ft CO. DRESS TUIMMINtvS. fPHIS DAY RECEIVED BY EXPRESS, A L large lot of Marabout, Velvet and Moss Dress Trim-Kings, at MrCOY'8, no9 ' Next door to the American. BEAUTIFUL ALL WOOL DELAINES, AT no9 MoROY'S. rpUREAD, LACES, SWISS AND CAMBRIC X - Trimmings, embroidered collars, sc., cneap at no9 sacw i ''8. AGENTS WAWTEO, ... EXTRACRD1NARY INDUCEMENTS I ' . tUE BE3T CHANCE YET tl&B0'B0anlmmml I . I iiAnrrn 1 XTT A TT - XT r "V I f T? 1 l T tH A T 1 (191)10 5$l)UC J0lUUrti wiim"! juiH.aajLJjiui, ij nraEPS NEW LAW BOOK. A YEli'S PILLS. GLIDE. SUGAR-SHOD. I TO MASS MONET I , ) Address CAMPBELL ft CO., noXt-aoOaO Philadelphia, Pa . i'I''W LITTLE MIAMI AND COLUMBUS & XENIA RAILROADS. Trains run between Colnmbus and Cincinnati, as follows : DOWNWARD. UPWARD. Leave Arrive at Cincinuatl. Columbus. Leave Arrive at Columbna. Cinoinuatl. 2:46 A.M. 8:U2A.M. 12:10P.M. 4:10 P.M. 8:S0P M 1:23A M. :00A.M. 9:6a A.M. 10K)0 " S20 P. M. 6:00P.M. 11:30 " The 2:4a A.M. Train from Columbus connects at Xenia for Davton. Richmond. IndlanaDolls. Lafett , Chicago, St. Louis, and all points west; connects at Morrow lor Wilmington, Circleville and Lancaster; and at Loveland's for uiilsDorouguanacoilllcothej also conecung av bin cinnati for Louisville by the boats. Tbe 12:10 P. M. Train, from Columbus, connects at bonuon lor npringueta, umyion, lnaiaoepous, e.c. ; cos-nocting at Xenia for Dayton, Richmond, Indianapolis, Lafavette. Chicaio.St. Louis, aud all Dotnta west; connect ing at Morrow for Wilmington, Circleville and Lancaster, anil at Loveianils, miUillsuorougli ana (.niiucoine; aaa at uincinnatl wi-.h tha u. at M. K. H. lor uouisviue. The 8:30 P.M. Train from Columbus connects atLoa don for Sprlngfleld; and at Xenia for Dayton, Richmond, Indianapolis, Terre Haute, Vineennes ami at. lAiais. Kg- For other information apply to T. Lorae, Agent, or M. L. Doubrtt, Tloket Agnt, Columbus: Wm. Wmight, Aent, npnLgneia: A. Vt . RTAKK, Agcui. awiii-; a. Ja. Liwis, Airant. or P. W, Pthapeh. General Ticket Agent, vmcinuai4, w. u. ,iincr . noSO SuptrinicntUnt MARIETTA AND CINCINNATI R A I LROAD. VPEN TO BYERS'. 23 MILES EAST OF J CHILI.1COTTIE. rasseueers leave Columbus on the Trains of the C. s X. Railroad, and change cars at Lnyg. land. Leave Columbus 2:16 a.m. Arrive at Chillicothe 10:46 a.m. Leave Byprs' 1 :10 p:in. Leave Cliillcothe3:3') p m. Arrive at Columbua 11:16 Arrlro at Byers' 12:30 p.m. p.m At Bvers'. Staiesto and from Athens. McArthur, rome- roy, Hamden, Galllpolls, Jackson, &o , connect with the Trains, and Passengers may make the trip in either di rection between any of these Towns and Columbus in a single aay. Leave Columbus 11:00 a.m. Arrive at Chillicothe 10:00 Leave Chillicothe 6:00 a.m. Arrive at Columbus 1:46 p.m p.m .sa-Throuirh Tickets betw-en Columbus and Chillicothe (3.60, to be had only at tbe 0. fc X. Railroad Ticket Of lice, Columbus, and on the Cars of Marietta and Cincinnati Railroad, m loaving Chillicothe. ami jutiii n Aunuj, ouj . GROCERS, .1. T. HE WHAN. BOBIKT VIUOS. NEW FAMILY GROCERY. fpiIE SUBSCRIBERS TAKE LEAVE TO X announce to the citizens of Columbus, that they have Jurit oponed a Grocery & Provision Establishment, On High clreel, Souih of tt Johnson Clock, and directly opjnsi'.t Ihe Exchange Bank, Where Iher Inlond to keeo every article in their lino, ol the best and purest qunlitles, and sell at rates for Cash which must give satisfaction to those who may lavor them with their patrouago. Their present stock consists In part of Black and Gruaa Teas of fine flavor, Klo, Java aud Mocha Cotfras, Sugars of ell descriptions, Bpices, sugar cured Hams, flue lamily Flour, Candles, Soap, and the celebrated New York Corn Starcb. particularly rec ommended for Cooking and Laundry purposes. Cheese, Maccaroua, Verinloella, Rice, Cum Drops, Fancy Canities, Jujube Paste, Pickles, Foreign aud Dritd Fruits, consist, ng of Raisins, Zaute CurranM, Citrons, Figs, Prunes and Almonds, Dried peacues ana Aimonas, uriea ana unruiou Fish, Salt, Brooms, Pails and Tubs, Chewing and Smoking Tobacco, Cigars, fie, &o. Please give us a call anu examine our goous ano prices. ocll-Smd NEWMAN i? Wlt.SnN. HADDOCK & FIERCE. GIlOOEnB, 030. , WOULD RESPECTFULLY INFORM their friends and the nublic. that they have re paired and newly fitted up the Grooery Store Room formerly occupied by Isaac Fisher, and that they will endeavor, as far aa lays In their power, to satisfy all who may tavor them who a can. Their itock consists of all articles usually kept In a Family Grocery, which they will sell as cheap as tbt cueupest. ?.ivil, JVo. 2. UeBhlei's iiaiiain?, men si. ell North of Broad. West side. Kuuirlor Uroceriee. JOHN BURR IS THIS DAY RECEIVING J at his8toriuthe East End or the HucKeye ijiock, BROAD STKEET, A VERT LAKCB LOT OF SUPERIOR FAMILY ItOCERIE8, Embracing every desirable article in that line, riun in ind HOI'St.KEEI'ERS desirous of having the CHOICEST ARTICLES that can be obtained, will find them at BURR'S. Everybody wanting Groceries are par ticularly Invited to call, and aee How muon a nine casD will buy. n4Vtf CARRIAGE MAKERS. JOHN GEARY. JOnN A. (SHANNON. Capital City Carriage Repository. TUW FIRM Tbe subscribers hating II entered into partnership for the Sale and Manufacture or carriages Rockawars. Rumries. Bnlkles. and all other kind of Vehicles, they have lust completed arraugementa to be Iramodlatoly supplied with The Largest ana men ratrivmanie STOCK. OF CARRIAGES Everexhlblted in this City. Their present stock consists ol Fine Family CarriHi;es, Rockaways, Barouches, Shifting-Top Buggies, Traveling Biiggioa, Trotting Buggies, Now York Business Wagons, bulaieJ, l,lg cseieiou n 1.1 Jt-J. Jnn Ti.a entiia of the above Stock have been Mauutactuied expressly for them, by the best Eastern Makers, all of which will be warranted to give good satisfaction. The reputation of the juutor partner of tuo lirm as a practical Carriage Maker, who has conduotod the business for the past ten years, and to whom a llmt class premium has been awarded at every Fair' in this State where his work was submitted for competition: is well known in tbe CanltalCitv as tha builder or too near venicies ever oi- fered to our citizens. CARRIAOES OP EVERY PATTERN AND HTTLK, itiaoe id orum n.v. v WREPAIRINO and PAINTING executed in the nfaikut !I1ANST."E lantiMlar r.or stock of CarriaKes. by Wholesale and Retail, on tbo most reasonable terms, to the ritlzeus of Columbus aud surrounding vicinity, we are determined to sell at the lowest possible shade of prolit, for cbh!i, or good Indorsed paper, at snort rates. ' r.rvn enddiamine our Stock at tha CAPITAL CITY CARRIAGE REPOSITORY, in Neil's New Building, High street, north of BroaJ, Columbns. OAAni s nuii-Tiivr.. Cantos fur Sale. rpHE UNDERSIGNED HAVING BOUGHT X. OWt J. A. WUflWUB. '"u,uc" oi manufacturing CARRIAGES, at their old atand. on Front atret, between State and Town atreets, Columbui, hand, and are constantly mann rkni.it.Ti. nvmrv flH.arlntinn of Carriages, such ns Top and Trotting Buggies, light Rockaways. namiiy carriages oi every atvle, Business Wagons, Omoibusses, sc. They nave aiso ior aaiw vueap, n..i Baggie. . , . I'nTn ilia loner exDerienco the ubeoribera liavehad. both In the manulacture and usoof Cartiages, they have no hesitation in saying without boasting, that they know how to manufacture good work and work that will wear and give satisfaction. . 3-Giv ca A OAtl. BI.AK:, WIUJAM3 ft CO. ap!9-wlywe Kvw wnnn AND LUMBER YARD, WESTERVELT. OF THE LATE FIRM Vj. n wrTERVELT ft DARNELL, haa lust opened. on the northeast oorner ot Gay and Fourth st., a new yard for tbe sale of ; WOOD. ROOIT LATH. SH1NOLKK, FENCING HOARDS, POSTS, an4 OTHER LUMBER. a.0RDCB SOLICITED. ocl8-2ml iev-aum COLUMBUS. WEDNESDAY EVENING, Cleveland, Columbus Cincinnati KA1LKOAU. Winter Arrangement for 1855-56. Three Trains Dully from Columbus, In connection with Trains on the Little .Miami, and Columbna and Xenia Itaiirona. 1 EXPRESS TRAIN AT 10:0$ A. M.; 1 stopping at Delaware, Cardington, Gallon. Crestline, Shelby, New London and Grafton, arriving at Cleveland at 2:40 P. M.; giving passengers ronr Minims for dinner ana connecting wiia insssur. n. rasi oxpress iromuu the Lake Shore Road for Dunkirk, Buffalo, New-York, fee. This Train connects at Galion with tbe Bellefontaine and Indianapolis Railroad, at Crestline with the 1 :30 Express Train on the Ohio and Pennsylvania Railroad for Pittsburgh, Philadelphia, &c, aud the Ohio and Indiana Railroad for Fort Wayne; at Grafton with the 1:46 P. M. Train for Toledo and Chicago, reaching Chicago 8 o'clock next morning. 2. Mail Train at 8:30 P. M. ; stopping at all way station between Columbus aud Cleveland, arriving at Cleveland at 9:16 P. al., connecting at Crestline with .8:00 P.M. Fast Train on the Ohio and Pennsylvania Railroad for ittbnrh. kc. with the Ohio and Indiana Railroad for r on Wayne, sc. ; at Cleveland with the 30 P. M . Night Lx,ire8 iraln on tile IJia More nauroau lor ue aaet. i. Night Kxpresa at 12 :1a P. M. ; stopping at Delaware and all way bUMods North of New London and leaving pasaengersatallwaysUtlon,oonneetingatCreBtllnewlth the 6:00 A. M. Train on the Ohio and Pennsylvania Railroad at Grafton with the Toledo Day Expresa for Chicago, arriving at Chicago at:30 P. M., connecting at Cleveland with the Morning Train on tha Lake Shore Railroad for Dunkirk. Buffalo, New-York, Ac. ZiS-For through and local TicketB apply at the Ticket Office in the Passeuger Depot ot the Cleveland, Columbua sod Cincinnati, and Little Miami, Columbus and Xenia rtailroadCompanlos. E.S.FLINT, Colombns, Nov. 19,1865.-dtf Superintendent . Central Ohio Railroad. WINTER ARRANGEMENT CHANGE Or TIME. Tvo Daii.t Thaws Each Wat, (Scxbats Exczftsd,) A.VD BUT O.VB CBA5CI 0 VARA Hnwm COLCM-BUS AND BaLTIHOIU, ON AND AFTER MONDAY, NOV. 19th, 1356, Trains will run as foUowfl : GOING EAST. Leave E-iinresi JVat'n. UaU Train. 3:30 p. M. 4:03 " 6:65 " ti:38 " 1:15 " S:3S SiOrt Columbus 10:00 a. i Newark 11:10 Zanosville 12:16 F. M. Concord 12:08 li Cambridge... 1:25 " uarnesviue z:ij") Belmont 2:50 Arrive at Bollair 3:45 ' arr. 10 00 " GOING WEST. Slave Kxprest Train. .Mail Train. 4:60 a. x. 6:47 " 0:18 " 7:46 ' 8:i8 " 9:32 " 10:37 " err. 12K0 u. Bellair 11:45 a. u. Belmont 12:40 r. M. Barnesville 1:07 " Cambridg 2:30 " Concord 3:20 " Zanesvlllo 4:27 " Newark 5:15 " Arr. at Columbus 7:20 " The Express Trulu going East will atop to take up or leave Passengers, at Columbia, KJrkerkville, Newark, Zaoesvule, Couoord, Cambridge, Campbsll's, Karnesvule, and Belmoot, only. Goinq Wtar, will stop at all Stations U-on tigual. The Mail Train will stop at all the Stations where tne Man is to be received, or delivered, ana at all other Stations on Notice being given. GOING EAST. The 10:00 A. M. Express Train counects at Columbna with the Express Train which leaves Cincinnati at 8 A. H. aud with the train from the West on the Columbua, Plana, and Indiana Railroad: at Newark with morning Trains to and from Sandusky, Msnifieid and Mt. Vernon, and with Trains on the Steubenvtllc aud Indiana Railroad : at Wheeling with Express Train on the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad for Baltimore, Washington, FhUdeipbiaaud Eastern cities. The 3:80 P. M. Train will connect at Colnmbus with the second Train from Cincinnati: at Newark with Dan dusky, Msusfleid and Newark Railroad; and at WheeUn with Night Train on Baltimore and Ohio Railroad. Paa sengers leaving Louisville and points below Cincinnati and taking the 10:20 A. M. Train on Little Miami Railroad will connect witn tuts Tram at uoiumous. raseeogera leaving Indianapolis and Richmond by morning Train on Indiana Central Railroad will also connect with this Train at Columbus, and reach Wheeling at 10:00 P. M.. and leavo by 10:80 P. H. Train on Baltimore and Ohio Rail. road, arriving in Baltimore at 6 P. M. next day. GOING WEST. The 4:50 A. M. Mail Train connects at BeUalr with Night Train on the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad: at Newark with Traina to and from Sandusky, Mansfield and Mt. Vernon, and Chicago via Mouroeville; at Colum bua with the Trains for Cincinnati, ana witn lreiDS ror Xenia, Dayton, Indianapolis, aud Chicago, tia Dayton and via Ucbana, The 11:45 A.M. Enpress Train oonuects with the Express Train from Baltimore, and arrives iu Colnmbus at 7 :20 M., and councils with Trains going eoutu ana wesi, arriving at Cincinna ti at 110 P. M. JA51M l, ILAWIt, Acting Superintendent. ZaneaviUe, Nov. 21, 1866.-dtf New and Direct Route T.l STCEBENVII.LE, PITTSBURGH, PHILADELPHIA, BALTIMORE, NEW YORK, a a,l th.i Frineipal Eastern cities, VIA Stenbcnvilie & Indiana Railroad, Which i now completed and in mMPffflfnl operation be- ween Newark and stuebuvuio. PASSENGERS BY THIS ROUTE LEAVE COLUMBUS via Fxpress Train Central Ohio Railroad at 10:10 A. M connect at Newark with the above road to IStenbenvtUe, wbero they arrive at 6 P. M. ; leave im mediately on FIRST CLASS Slr.AMf.Ka running in ci- nection with the Mad; and altera comfortable night'a rest, reach Pittsburgh In time for tbo 7 A. M. Train of the PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD r Philadelphia, Baltimore and New York. . FARE. Columbus to iSleubenville 4 45 ' " Pittsburgh 4 76 " Philadelphia 13 W Baltimore 12 75 " New York 16 60 m-& I'asHMntiers hv this route have the advantage of mtucerl Tare and are noi suojecieu io uoui dims i Passengers ana Dsggare conveieu iruiu m. iu. ilepot f rre of charge. For through tickets, nless apply at the ticket . dice of the Central Ohio Railroad. G. W. FULTON, .VUJ' t. IiAfATms Dbvfnny, funeral Agent. nol'' Cleveland and Toledo Railroad nASSENGERS TICKETED TO TOLEDO. t Chicago, St. I aula, Cincinnati, Indianapolis. Dayton, Springfield, Bollafontaine, Tiffin, Findley, Sandusky, Mans field, Mt. Vernon, Newark, so. mx Daily Trains) irom sjievemiiu. at 7-nn a. M. Rxrress train, from station of C. O. P.. R. for Toledo, Chicago and St. Louie j stopping at Norwalk, Clyde, and Fremont. 2d. 8 A.M. Hall Train, stopping at all stations between Grafton ond Toledo. , , 3rd. 8.45 A. M. Express, (fruui Ohlocity,) tornauausay, Cincinnati, Toledo and Chicago, stopping at Olmsted Fall, hiTTT.i& Vormininn Fttiron. Sandusky. Fremont and Ejraor, This tralu counects at Sandusky with Mad River and Ijke Erie, and Mansfield and Sandusky Kaiiroaus, oy wuicn Passengers will reach Toledo at 1.05 P.M. I'sywm Bellefontain 2.18 ' Cincinuatl 7.00 " U..I..I.M nh " Indianapolis 10.30 " Ath o an p u Pioress. from station of C. C. ft C. Rail road for Toledo, Chicago and St. Louis : stopping at Obor-lin, Norwalk, Monrooville, BeUevue, Clyde and Frmont, C4U a on p u uu Train from Ohio Cvtv.i for Ban- A.h Thl. train eonnecta at Sandusky with trains of Had River aud Lak Erl Road, arriving at Findley earn evening, and stopping at all intermeaiaie siaiiou.. th. 7 46 P. M. Express, from station of C. C. ft C. Kail ...... .1 fnsTn arin.nll 1 hinUM. For Tickets, or contracta for Freight, apply to E. SHEL DON AKent, 66 Bank street, Angler noiei Dunuiog. Alio, Tickets for Toledo, Chicago, e. to be obtained al a.... r r. r. r n Rs.A n. D. BALDWIN. Agent. Those for Psndusky, Cincinnati, innienapoiis, tlona on Mad River and Mansfield Roads, at Ohio City Sta tion. E. B. FHlLLira, oupenmeuuenv. Olioe Cleveland ft Toledo Railroad, Cleveland, May 6, 1864. f lnn6dftw TRVINTtt'S LIRE OF WASHINGTON 1 Bvo Library edition, with maps and plates. Bribscri bers' copies ready for delivery, at RILEY ft CO.'S book store. ooia VIKU1L K. MALL., AKeni. WANTED a rixttatiON AS BOOK-KEEPER, BY A nttrrixi man. who cso give satisfactory ref erenoe as to oompetnicy, Integrity, ftc. Iuqulr at thl oiEce. ocl COLLECTION'S TN OHIO, IN ANY COUNTY, PROMPTLY x tnnda. on aenlicatlon to the subscriber Referenoe uhioBUU Journal Co. noS J. CASS. B00E. PLEADING AND PRACTICE UNDER THE CITIL CODE, BT IIOX. SIMBOtf NASH. IT WILL FORM A VOLUME OF ABOUT 700 pages, 8ro., beautifully printed and neatly and firmly bound in law sheep. In addition to brief Treatlseson the various provisions of the Code, it will contain an ample collection of forms of petition., answers, entries for Clerks, returns for Sheriffs, ftc. The work will show what changea have been produced by the Code. The precedents for petitions aud answers are so drawn as to deduce out of tha cases a clear and real Issue, about which all will be agreed as to ita meaning. The forma of entries and return! wlU render thb work especially useful, to county officers, as well as to the profession. Buchawork haa lonj been a, desideratum ; no book having yet appeared upon the subject since tha enaot-ment of the New Code. It will shortly be published bv H. W. DERBY, Clnelnnatl. RECENTLY PUBI.I8HR:D, Swan's New Treatise ON THE POWERS AND DUTIES OF JUSTICES OF TUB PEACE, EIC. 1 vol. 8vo. Swan s Revised Statutes OF TntC STATE OF OHIO complete. 1 vol 8io. Nash's Digest OF REPORTS OF SUPREME COURT OF OHIO. ool8 tf 1 vol. 8ro. J. H. RILEY & CO., COLUMBUS, OHIO. DEALERS IN jLaw, Medical and School Bootes. RLANK BOOKS, Any size, style and pattern of Ruling, ou baud aud made io orucr. Railroad and Insurance Offices, Hunks, Brokers, and County Officers, Supplied with any article in the Line of Stationery on tne Deal lunus, anu an wur& warraui.ru. Blank Notes and Drafts Job Printing and BOOK BINDING. A full supply at all times of valuable Standard Works. Foreign and Americao Editioua. A good stork of valuable Mechanical and Scientific Works ar. an urn... All the New Books received direct. FRKMcn, English and American Stationery, Wholesale ana neian. Also, Paper Hangings and Borders, 03-The most extensive Stook West of Philadelphia. Window Shades and Fixtures, Window Cornicos, Fine Mli-rnm from S to 8 feet. French Plate Oil Paintings and Enirravinirs, Portrait and Picture Frames, always on hand and made to order. Cutlery and Gold Pens Work Boies and Dressing; Cases, Card Cases ana rorie Monies, iioin. Hair, Hat, Nail and Tooth Brushes, Pocket Books, Wallets, Bill Holders, Ho. marO-wdmadtf POPULAR CIIUUCH MUSIC. 100,000 Copies OoM, Containing a great variety of Church Music, selected chleuy trom ineoiu Bianuaru Auiuurn, niiu many Ordinal Compositions, ou a NEW SYSTEM OF NOTATION, Designed for the use of Churches., Singing Sooictits, and 10UUVtllT-T, BT A. S. ITA YD E A. REASONS WILL CHIEFLY AC- rpVO X ConNT lor the ireat success of this volume: First The character of the Work. It presents a new and greatly Improved system of notation. In It much that is abstniseand difficult In this delightful science la so simplified that months are made equal to years In the common way of learning tbe practice of Musical Art, a fact sufficiently proveo by the att-statlons of acorea of teachers and performers, who have tested the system, aud given the work ita great popularity and constantly Increasing ealo. Second The Quality and Stylo of the Music. Many new pieces, destined to pleaie al long as muslo lasts, may be found on ita pages, and also many of the old and tried melodies, bellowed lrom asaooiatea recouscuous ci sanctuary delights, and far more welcome to tha heart of the worshiper than many frequently substituted for The publishers may add, mat in meouanioai execu tion of the work 1, superior altogethvr to the minority of Eastern Musio Books, and the price very low. A NEW ROUND NOTE BOOK: THE PIT A I HIE VOCALIST. BT GIBSON aC FMSSENDEN. This work is received with great favor, and is now the only muslo book used by several of the most sctentitio id successful weBtcrn teachers or music, in tne scnoois under their care. It ia the same size, and is pnbiisiied in the sainti superior style with tbe "sacred Mclodeon," and sold at the same low rate. rCoplei for examination will be moot oy man, pon paid, for 60 cents. Either may be had through the Booksellera or of the Publishers. MOUKr., W1L9TACU, UI3 I Vt'.. 25 West Fourth St., Cincinnati, ool5-2row Wholesale Booksellers and Publishers. GOOD, ACTIVE BOOK AGENTS WANTED to sell by subscription, new, valuable, and attractive Pictorial Family Books. Certain districts of country will be assigned to each, and books furnished at wholesale, on better terms than can be offered by any other Publishers in America. A few competent, persevering youug iuu, by personal application, will be employed at liberal wages by the month. Address J. ft H. MILLER, post paid, Columbus, Ohio, or apply at our olllce in the Commercial College Buildings. aprll-wtt NEW EDITION OF SWAN'S MAN AL. SAAC N. WHITING, COLUMBUS, HAS . this day published a New Edition of a Manual for Ex ecutors and Administrators, in the Bettieinem. 01 tne Estatesnf Deceased Persons: Vt ith practical forms, no., to. By .losera R. Fwan. Fourth Edition, Revised and adapted to tha prenent Practioe; by H. C. Nobis, Attorney aw. Columbus. jan: .2o-tlAwtf muK Flt'Tll EDITION OF SWAN'S '1KKAT-X IES- ISAAC N. WHITING, Columbus, has published A Treatise on the Ia relation to the Powers aud Iiutle of Justices of th Peac and Constables in the Slate of Ohio, with Practical Forms," te., etc ny josepn n. m, l.t lM-iTlent of the Twelfth Judical Cirouit. The fifth lllli.n 1 rot. 8vo: naxea. In line taw Dinning. J iiw -i no To this edition has been added an Appendix, containing the new Code prescribing th Jurisdiction and procedure before Justices ol tne reace, auu oi toe nuues ui wubw bles in civil cases, passed march 14th, 1863. n. I,., .kn nnldlshed a new edition of SwAX'a Ma.ipal A Manual for Kxt-iUmn and Adminietraton, lu the settle ment of estates ol ueceaawa persons: wnurnwni!.iffiui. s,- Hv JOSEPH R. SWAN. Third edition, re- lsed. enlarged, and- adapted to the present Prartiee, by H. C. NOB1I, Attorney ai jaw, uoiumoiiB. . D..pj rnval 12mo vol., 442 pages, In good Iw Binding. Prioa, t on For sale by tbe dozen ot single copy by tb Publlhei il,. Bookstore of Randall. Aston ft Long, Columbua They may also be had at his pries oi ine louowii'g per Beach ft Cone, Circleville; Whlttemure rkiton. Will n..k.. b nii-liinsouliSon. Delaware: W. W. IteodftSon, Zanesvllle; at the differeut llookstores In Mt. Vernon ; B. f' TM.-n,.r Jb Cfi.. MaosUelU: .1. 11. Baiimraraiier, noomer Oanflerd ft Kimball, Esqe., Mtxllna; C. H. Parsons,Cleveland- W. H. H. Potter, Ashland: C. I Derby ft Co.,8an-A...1.'- r:i.. w a Ro. Norwalk: W. N. Porter. Warren, Trumbull county; Beebe ft Bkins, Akron; B. Little, Ra venna; William Bucnor, uassuion: r isuer, Auueruu w Canton. 8trk county; Oavid V. Graham, New Lisbon ; oounty 8. W. Mclioweii, Bwuoenvuie: niepaeu w,",s' at fnairavill: R. S. Oross It Co., Tiffin; K. ft C. Ash- . ' TT k Ca. DnllAr..ntr.lna. At thl Bonk- ton, zveniou; non """l stores In Dayton: Kyle Brother, Troy; H. Llmbooker ft Co., Piqua; J. VanMater, ureenvuie, uara county; Williams ft Uanlord, epnnguwai r rencu o. o., .,.u. F. Harris ft Co., Xenia; H. mown, usmuton, ouiier couu. uiAi.awi i hkrui. wasniuinon. Aavevie ooumj , a, u'ekland ft Co. Freemont, Sandusky eounty; and Jamea arler, Bucyrus Apruxi, mmusii f "AND LAWS OP OHIO. BEING A COM I i ..nHnr, nt the I aw.. Resolutions. Treaties an . .-.k. nt the Reneral and Stat Oovernments, which relate to lands In th Stat ot Ohio: Including th Lawa adopted by th Governor and Judges, the Laws of th Territorial Lcgislatur, and th Laws of this State to th years 1816-'18. compliea Dy in non. i n--..., and published by virtu of a resolution of th eeneral Aa, iT,. ....i I.,, . lavfi. l .ol. 8vo. The a'bov work will b eminently useful to gentlemen of the Bar. For sale by ISAAC N. WHIT1NO, LSTORY OF THIS OHIO CANALS A .T,iAt Documentary History of the Ohio Canala from the first measures taken for their construction down t il.. .lose of the session of the Legislature of 1882. la one yolum, 8 vo. A few oople. of th valuabl. work forby Over the Bookstore of Randall, Aston ft long "LULli SK'l'S OK THIS OHIO UtU'ORTS. ti.. .T,h.nrlt.or haa for sale, at a low price for cash, few complete seta of th Ohio Reports, in 20 volumes, fin law binding; or n wui sen rue sijimwiwiiw, ""iv""- by tlieraseues, aa purcnasers may """I .. Iu7-d.trl-ww ! N- WTTrnNO COAL I COAL! COAL I T AM NOW DAILY RECEIVING A GOOD A article or Coars Orat Coal, and will tell either at depot or deliver ooal on th short! notloe, t th lowrnt fifure of tb markt, nd warraa'. to give satisfaction. , JAMES O'KANE, oeS3 Sol igntof Zanesvi'j Coal and Lumbr Co. DECEMBER 5. THE POETKY OF FHYSIC. A YEA'S FILLS, GLIDR, SUGAR-SHOD, ii uviJK the palate, rut tneir eoergy, although wrnppe'i up, ia there, and telU with giuut force on tbe rery foundation or dirnne . There are thou hands of au.Vrers who would not wear their .Hitra-pera if tby kurw they could hecti-n-d for 25 cts. Try Ayer'i Pilla. and yon will know it. Purify the blond, aud dfneaee will be atarved out. Cleanse the system from imputilie and you are cured already. Take this bent of all Purgatives, andSmofula, Inr.fges-tlon, WeakneHR. Headacho, Backache, Sideacbe. Jaundice, Rheumatism, dttraDgttneuta of tuo Livr, Kidneys, and Bowels, all derangements and utl dippa?e!i which a purgative remedy can reacli, fly before them like dark ue ah before the sun. Reader, if you are Buffering from any of the numerous complaintM they cure suffer no more the remedy h.n been provided for you. and it is criminal to neglect it. That Ayrr' Cherry Peroral, it the beM medicine for a Cough, is known to 1b whole world, and tbnt A ytrys are the bent of Pills, is known to those who have uflf'd tfcem. pTopared by DR. J. C. AYF.Ft, Chemist, Loffcll, iuia and told bv all respectable rimfcjrifits erarvwhere. ' V. KCKSTEIX, Jr.. 'Ulneinnati, , ii. KOBFRTS & CO., Columbna, no!4 lw2n And by Agents in every town in tha West EYE AIVTD A 1. . DH, rNDEmVOOD, OF THE CITY OF I.OUISVILE, KY., OOULIST AND AURIST, XXfOVLD ANKOUXCE HIS ARRIVAL IN VV the city of. Columbus, Ohio, and respectfully tenders blfl profenninnal services to the public, in full confidence of reridorine eeneral satisfaction. Hujiax bad an experience of over five years in the treatment of dis oan ot tub k.t ana .ab, ne nan tne inuniie saiisiaction of knowing that he can perform the moxt critical opera-tiona and extraordinary cure;). All he asks is a fair and impartial trial of his new and painlofi remedies. His mode of treating diseases of the Eye U entirely new, perfectly sale, and has nerer been known to fall ia giving relief lu all cases of Opthalmia, (or inflamution of the Eye,) whether Acute or Chronic, wlietlisr Catarrhal, Purulent, Scrofulous, Gonnorrbosal Syphilitic, or Rheumatic. It will also remove all i'psuUies of the Cornea, whether of a Nebulous or Albuginous oharacter, or any other external scum, Dim, or extraneous sub stance from the sight of tbe Eye. Tills new mode of treatment has never failed of curing Pterygium, Staphy. loin a, and Aumarosia; and has even succeeded in removing Cataract from the Eye, whetherCapsulur or Lenticular, in a great majority of canes, without the vine of thu knife or needle. Ho has been equally aa successful in the trpitment of Diseases of the Ear, with his new system. He may be consulted at tbe office of Dr. Laiigworihy, on Town street, two doora west of High atreet. N. B. Having imparted to Dr. Langworihy my system of treating diseases of tho Eye and Eur, and having formed a partnership with him, I take great pleasure in recommending him to the public as being as cumputcnt ai myself to treat those diseaFOtt' oclSdw.'Jm J. T. IWDERW00D. THE MU;ir ENGLISH KENEDY. SIR JAMES CLARKE'S Celebrated Female I'll Is, PROTECTED Cy ROYAL LETTERS PATENT. DREPARED t ROM A JfREtiCRIPTION OF JL Sir James Clarke, M.D., Physician Extraordinary to the Queen. This invaluable Medicine ix uh. ailing in tbe cure of all those painful and dangerous disease,-; incident to tho feraal' u-tttntiun. Itmoderai- l'msc, removes a'l obstnu Mtins, and briny: on tl ' i-ariod with regula- - .. These Pills should b .t ".vo or three weks pre . n to con. Snement; the niy the constitution, and u-son the suffering duriu labor, enabling themothei iu perforin her duties with tafyty to herself and child. Thent Hills should not be taken by Females during the FIRST THRKK MOSTHS of Pregnancy, as they are sure to bring on Miscarriage, but at any other time they are safe. In all casus of Nervous and Spinal Afltctions, pain In the Back and Limbs. Hi-aviness, Fatigue on Slif.ht Exer tion, Palpitation of the Heart, Lowness of Spl iti, Hys-terics, Sick Headache, Whites, and ail the painful diseases occasioned by a ui8ordnrod syalum, these Pills will effect a euro when all othr means have failed, and nl- thougu a powertui remeny, no not contain iron, calomel, antimony, or aoy other mineral. Full directions accompany each package. Price, In the United States and Canada, Oue Dollar. Bole Agents for the Tnlted States, L C. BALDWIN ft CO., Rochester, N. Y. foe saie by ti. PKMG k SONd, wboeale and retail, and by Druggists generally throughout the State. Nel9-dwy COLUMBUS Water Cure and Medical Infirmary, FOR LADIES ONLY. THIS INSTITUTION IS NOW PERMA X. nentlyestablished, situated three miles Northeast of the City, and reached by Uroad street and the Uranvule Plank road. None but Females will be received as pa tlents. Neither will it be made a resort for pleasure. Open at all seasons. Ordinary terms seven dollars per weea. By success in tho treatment of disease, and attention to business, the Proprietor hopes to merit public conti lelice. IV. BUbTAHU, it. msrRO-dly PltOFKSSOIt tt'OOD'H Hair Restorative the Host Wood erfii! of all Discoveries. AFTER READING THE FOLLOWING testimony given after thoroughly testing, who oao entertain a doubt, but this wonderful preparation is a perfect Hair Restorative, and should be in the hands ot old and youug, Till lattvk to fbhsekvi, and the former to KtHroHs; but procure the Circular which may be had of all Agents, and a mats of evidence will be presented which none can resist. Road this as a bampli or tuou-hands I The first, from the Editor of the St. Louis Morn ing Herald, and the certificate from a distinguished clti- Ben, needs no comment from us: r" There ar many young gentlemen, as well as plenty of old ones, whose beards are turning gray, wbicb glvea the former a good deal of uneasiness, and exposes th age or the latter, to avoiu tees nine perpiexitie. we advise such of our readers to use Professor Wood's Hair Restorative, which will, in lh course of a few weeks, change the whitest hairto its natural color. It does not dv th hair, like most of the hair restoratives, but pro- duces a gradual change of color from th root of the hair to the final end, and gives itanneendgiossyappear anoe. We have seen many persons who have used It sac- eeesfully, and who pronounce it the only invention wbiob hae come up to their idea of a 'sure euro for gray heads. ' We commenced using it about two monttis since, aou it we ar any Judga ol ace and beauty, it has mad us a least ten years younger, in fact, w ar beginning to look quite young again, and feel very much like getting a youug wife. Tho change is miraculous, and it would be as difficult to find a gray hair now as It would be to find an idea iu the head of the Duke of Buckingham. We know aeveral old maids and some youug widows, whose locks are just beginning to assume a silvery hue, and who have been talking seriously about resorting to this remedy; and we advise them not to delay auy longer- 1 never fails." St. Louis Herald, " DkAK silt : Having used your Hair Kestorative tor the last six months, and with complete euccoss, 1 think It my duty to give you a certificate of ita wonderful effects Having been taken aick in Ualvoston, Texas, some four years since through which I lost my hair and having tried various articles uuu lumm uo uvuvui iioiu bu.ir uu, I was requested by many to try yours, and aitor using two of your quart bottles I found my hair growing very fast, which any person or persons can see demonstrated byoallingatNo. 28 Olive street, St. Louis. To thu public In general, 1 have no hesitation iu saying this is a truly useful and wonderful article for the re.toratlon ol th htr, Morris IJojuso. St. Loula, May 23, 1864." M-Preuared 114 Market street, St. Louis, aud Broadway, New-York. O. ROBERTS ft CO.. Wholesale and Retail Agents for Columbus, who will sup ply tbe trad at Manufacturer's prices. feh21-dawly Hood iews lor the Ladies. SITAPLEY & HALL HAVE NOW THEIR full stock of Dress Goods, Cloaks, Shawls, Kmbroide-rles, Hosiery, Gloves, &c, ftc, which Is one of th lar-gest and best selected ever offered in this market. Ladles are Invited to give us an early call, and we are certain we can please the roost difficult. eel ft SILKS! SILKS ! Dhehs Hilks or all the dilferem. .tylea and colors, varying in price from ?5c to SO a yard, can be found at ,el5 MIAPLEY ft HALL'S. TF YOU WANT A PATTERN OK THK l handsomest Wool DeLalnes In this market, call at self) WlAribV At llsl.1!1. A GOOD ASSORTMENT OF STRIPED AND n. Plaid Valencia and ropuns can oo iouuu ai ,15 SUAPLKY ft HALL'S. Xn endless variety OF WOOL J. Plaids, Raw Silks, French and English Marino, Mohair. Lustres, Calicoes, Chluties, ftc, Ac, always on hand aud for aale cheap at ei5 SHAPLEY ft PALL'S. T AOfi CURTAINS A uoou assortment of i j Lace uuriains, varyingiu puce iroin eo io iu awiu-Jow. ean he had at se!6 KHAPLKY ft HALL'S. LADIK8 WANTING D Rhino AND CLOAK. TKIMMINOa, can find at, SUAPLKY ft HALL'S the best assortment wver ofliomi Id this market. seJft OHAPLEY 4, HALL HAVE T1!E BEST IO assortment of CLOAKS ever offered In this rearse, vaiying In price from S4 to 176. eelo T ADI1Z3 WISHING TO SEE THE BEST J J a-snrtment of Laoeand Muslin Embroideries, Floun-oings, Edgings and Inaertlngs, and fine HonltonGuimpure Valenciennes and English Thread Lac ever offered ia this market, can do so by calling at .,15 . SHAPLEY ft HALL'S. t g 1855. jfur $Mt onmal WEDNESDAY EVENIKG, DECEIUBER 5. Interesting Discoveries in Guatemala.Concluded.2 "This begins with the creation of the world, as given by Ordones, who took it here ; but there are pretty large discrepancies, and the latter las always been very faithful to the original. It is the same history of the semi-gods, Hunappa and Xcalanqua, but having the original narrative. I found out that with the exception of a few marvelous tales, the whole is a historical episode of the most interesting character. The scene is generally in the Quiche and Vera Paz most of the places and localities I have been already able to discover, and I must add that 1 have taken a copy of the whole, in Quiche and Spanish, with my own hand. After the semi-fabulous part of the book comes the- history of the passage of the Indians to these parts Ot America. they came from the east --not from the south-eact but from the north-east. I speak only of tribes of Quiche-Cakehi- quel and Zutohil, &c. for long before them these countries were peopled and civilized. They came from the northeast certainly passed through the United States, and as they say themselves, they crossed the sea in darkness, mist, cold and snow. 1 suppose they must have come from Denmark and Norway. They came in small numbers, and lost their white blood by their mixtures with the Indians whom they found whether in the United States or these regions, certainly there must have been a Tula in our North European countries. "But what is more convincing of this migration or passage, I find the same result by a comparison of the languages. I cannot speak of the structure of them, but what I have observed is that the fundamental forms and words of the lan guages of these regions (except the Mex ican ) are intimately connected witn the Maya or Trendal, and that all the words that ore neither Mexican nor Mava belong to our languages of Northern Europe. viz: Ji,nglish, baxon, Danish, Norwegian, Swedish, Flemish and German; some even appear to belong to the French and rersian, and altogether they are really very numerous and astounding. It is perfectly plain that the invading tribes adopted the language of the vanquished, who were much more numerous than themselves, and that some words only of their own language remained hence the Quiche, Cakchiquel, Zutohil, &c. JNowl leave your countrymen to make all the suppositions they wish upon these strange coincidences. Who knows but that the mounds aud fortifications found in Western New York, Ohio, Tennessee, Arkansas, &c., were not made by the same people, and by the colony of Northmen who were known to exist in Massachu setts ond disappeared after the tenth century? 'Beside the narrative of the passage of the Quiche, the manuscript gives the es-ablishmentof the Quiche empire, and a sketch of its history to the conquest far different from 1" uentes, although some names are the Bame. Here I end with Ximenes. "Beside the grammar of Ximenes, I have been presented with some others- Quiche, Cakchiquel, Zutohil, Chanabal, Pocomain, &c all manuscripts, and I possess five dictionaries of these languages, also manuscripts more or less complete, beside some other old papers on Guatemala and Vera Paz. I have also come into possession of a manuscript history of Guatemala, in Spanish, which is very good, with large details of the astronomy and religion of these people ; also of a manuscript history of San Salvador: also another of Vera Paz, another of the rebellion of the Tendals, &c. "The Archbishop of Guatemala has presented me with a magnificent copy of the original Tonalamath or calendary of Indians of Quiche as still used in secret by the Indians of Santa Catalina and Ixtahuacan. "But the most precious of my collection at present is one manuscript in the Cakchiquel language, written about three hundred years ago by one of the princes of Solola. The remains of this city exist near the Jake of Atitlan. it was never translated before, but I am now finishing a tnnslation into French and Spanish, it is full of details on the first passage of the Indians to these countries, of their early sufferings by sea and land, of the prodigies performed by their chiefs, of the four Tulas which existed one in the East in darkness, one in the West (probft. blythatof Mexico), one, God knows where, and the last in Xibibay that is to say in hell, says our reverend father Ximenes, bnt I have great reason to De-lieve it was in this very country, about the Vera Paz, Yucatan, or on the river Uzumacintn. 'After this the author of the manu-scrirjt aoes on in the history of his country, of the several tribes of his own blood, of the establishment and foundation of the Quiches, the Cakchiquel, Zutohil, ZokiJ, Rabanal. etc, he arrives at the time of the Conquest. Me saw Alvarado enter the capital Ximeche, now Tecpan, Guatemala. He was but a boy then, but he remembers how frightful were the Spaniards how much all the Indian princes and people were astounded at the sight of these strangers, ne tens oi an tne cruelties of Alvarado; of all the princes and kings that were hanged or burned by his order all things of which Fuentes never spoke. Very, very, interesting is the whole of that manuscript, which contains the most complete details of tho ancient kingdoms of Guatemala, lhe author O II. .L J ..... I says atthet-nd that, seeing the destruc-i tion of their books and annals, and that) every record was going to ruin, he assem-1 NUMBER 106 bled in his old age tho few princes that remained of his own family and of the neighboring countries, and from their books and memory he collected what ho wrote in Spanish letter to be preserved by his sons. After perusing the whole, I have concluded to give it this title in my French translation: Memorial tie leepan Mtlan escrit enangxile Cak-chiquelpar Don Francisco TiazGebuta Quele." Tecpan, Atitlan, is anothername for Solola, and Francisco Tiaz (Diaz) is the Spanish name of Gebuta Qiele, who saw the entrance of Alvarado into Tximecher. "I was appointed in May last cure ot Rabinal by the most reverend archbishop, who expressly did so in order lo favor my studies in the laniruafreg and traditions of these countries. My parish extends very fur in the Vera Paz, peopled mostly by a set of very quiet Indians, entirely the reverse of the warriors of old. I begin to talk with them and this serves very much my purpose. Very few understand Spanish. "There is no physician hem and some six weeks ago I gave to one of them a remedy that cured him of a pretty severe illness. From gratitude he came afterward to me and told me that ho was the lineal descendant of the kings of Tzak Pokoma. That by the order of his fathers he had learned by memory of one of bayles or dramatic dances in which he recited one of the principal parts ia the time that they still danced and played it. Knowing that I had vainly asked for that bayle from the other Indians, he pro posed to mo that I should write it out under his dictation. I accepted in spite of the difficulty, for it was to bo recited in the Quiche dialect of Eahinal, but im- probus labor omnia vincit. After twelve days of the most arduous dictation that I ever did even when I was at school, I got thew holeol the bayle. With the aid of my grammar and dictionary I corrected the orthography and now I can boast of pos- sessingtlie only original American drama in the world, it is a historical drama in which is introduced their heroes and princes, ana is lull of interesting details of their early history. The scene is laid in the city of Tzak Pokoma. The great riiins of this city lay within a few miles of here. In dramatic effect, scenes &c. this will compare favorably with the Ger man dramas of the middle ages. Yours, most truly, Abbe Brasseur Bourrotjro." . . . t BARKERl. O. T. BXEVZS, J . BARRERE & REEVES, Attorneys 45 t Xjavct. ASP General Land & Collecting agents for tbe West, BL0OMINOTON, ILLINOIS. Oolloctlons made and taxes paid in every county In tbe Stat. One of the above firm will visit Iowa and Minnesota aeml-annunlly, and oftenex tf neees.ary. for th Lurpose of making coUec tlona, entering laud ana locating and Warrants. Immedlat attention given to S.U business entrusted to our car. Refer to Ho. B. Galloway, and Ohio State Journal Co., Columbua, O. Hon. J. R. Hufcbell, Delaware, O. Hon. C. N. Olds, Circlevlll, O. Hon. Nelson Barrere, Hillsboro', O. no23-iadw JIBS. HOPPEBTOJi, UWcfCew-York, Successor to Mrs. Ssaplet, and oocupylng Store with Sdaplet & IIaxl, High street, Colutnbus, bet. Town and Rich, HAS NOW OPENED AN ELEGANT A3 HORTHENT OF Fall and Winter Millinery, Consisting of a most complete stock of Elegant Cape, Head Dresses, Feathers and Flowars, Ribbons and Laoes, Silks and Satins. Moss, hugenia. Royal, Unevi and Lion's Velvets: also, a new and elegant ai tide of Frieze Plush. Bonnets, of every variety, always on hand, and all or-ders promptly attended to with neatness aud eleganoe, at the very lowest cash prices. rJleaclitng and frosting, stamped Muslins rorr-moroi-1ery. Mrs. norrnT.TOH, Sole Agent for MRS. M. L. MURRAY'S Hair Preservative and Restorative. It will oause Hair to grow on a bald head, and turn grey hair to ltsoritflnal eolor, and effectually prevent the hair trom falling) fl i r turning grey, and ny its tnvigoiatiuu influence produce a new and luxuriant growth of hair. e SAWS! SAWS! SAWS ! TO MILL OWNERS, CARPENTERS, CABINET MAXCUS, BUILDERS, AND ALL WHO CBB RAWS '. CONSTANTLY ON HAND OF MY OWN manufacture, a full assortment of Mill Mulay, Cross cut, Circular, and all descriptions of SAWS. All nom warranted. sTPartlcu!ar attention given to repairing. Saws rotoothed, straitened, hammered, filed, and set at short notloe. JAI1E3 OHLEN, jel6-dly 8. W. corner Long and High its. SHERIFF'S SALE. James McQeary! vs. Franklin County Common Pleas. N. F. Banister. I BY VIRTUE OF A WRIT OF VENDITIONI exponas, to me directed from the above Court, I will offur tor sale at the door of the Court Hons lu the city ot Columbus, on the 8th day of December A. D. 1855, between the hours of 10 o'olock a. iu., and 4 o'clock p. m., the following property, to wit: Lot No. 3, In Osborne's addition to th town of Rejnoldsburch, Frank-liu county, Ohiu. Appvuised at liftydoilars, $&0 vo.) WM. L. MINF.it, Sierilf. B.y K. R. Jou-vaiuS, Deputy. Nov. fl, ISSS-ltdftAww SHERIFF'S SALE. rrajnui'l GuUovsy may ) V Frai ler,t al.J nkllo Co. Common Pleas. Charles G. Deshler. 1)Y VIRTUE OF AN ORDER OF SALE TO M me, directed from the Cnurt of Common Pleas ot Franklin County, Ohio, at the October term, A. D. lsJu 1 will oiler for .ale at the door of the Couit House, in lis city of Columbus, on th,! 15th DAY OK DECEMBER, A. D. IW, between the hours of 10 o'clock, A. M. and 4 o'clock, P. M., the Allowing real estate, to wit: In lot In tbe city of Columbus, Ohio, No. tbirtv-kix. (8H) Appraised at Sl.UOti WM. L. MINER, Sherilf. Ni.y. 12, 18f,6.' By R. It. Joh.vstos, Deputy. dltw4t MASTER COMMISSIONER'S SALE. Joshua Baldwin ) yg. V Hale by order of Court Iiaac D. Pounds. J TN OBEDIENOii TO THE C01I11AND OK X an order made by the Court of Common Pleas of Fiankliu county, and 'to me dirrcted, I will offer for tale at tbe door of the Court House in the city of Columbus, ou Ibn Kth day of December, A. I). WSo, batween the hours of lu o'clock . m., and 4 o'clock p. m., the following piopcrtv, to wit: The south half of lu-lot thre hundred and sixty-three, (S. oi Hfi) In the city of Coluinbur, aloreiiHid; alno, lots Now. lour and lire In Armstrong's subdivision of in lot No. 164, in the olty of Columbus, afore iaid. S-'outh half of iu-lot S(jl appraised at ,',00U, lots four and five of tn lot 8M appraised at MK). WM. L- MINER, Sheriff. By R. K- Jofl:T.W, Deputy Nov. 10, 18ia-lt'iA4vrr SHERIFF'S SALE. Wm. O. lshler ) vs. vCourt of Com. Pleas, Iranklln co. P. L. Hewlett, Hal. j BY VIRTUE OF A VI FA. TO ME Directed from the above Court, I will ofT-r for sslo at lhe door of the Curt llouso iu the city of Columbus, Ot the Hih day vt Ben'mltr,Jl. V. 186J, Botwecn tbe hju: of i f o'clock 1. nv, and 4 o'clock p m , thu foilowloj real otat, to wit: Lots Nos. 86, 61 and 87, lu tn townol Lock bourne, r rank. in oounty. aud rWl, "I ULW. wiuw, .Jljll.u.11 in vv, .i S0i.6e; No. S7,at 63.sia. By Hol'j. Ttov. 44, iso6 ltdtdww
Object Description
Title | Daily Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1848), 1855-12-05 |
Place |
Columbus (Ohio) Franklin County (Ohio) |
Date of Original | 1855-12-05 |
Searchable Date | 1855-12-05 |
Submitting Institution | Ohio History Connection |
Rights | Online access is provided for research purposes only. For rights and reproduction requests or more information, go to http://www.ohiohistory.org/images/information |
Type | Text |
Format | newspapers |
LCCN | sn84024216 |
Reel Number | 10000000017 |
Description
Title | Daily Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1848), 1855-12-05 page 1 |
Place |
Columbus (Ohio) Franklin County (Ohio) |
Searchable Date | 1855-12-05 |
Submitting Institution | Ohio History Connection |
Type | Text |
File Size | 4931.22KB |
Full Text | i fftH U 1 i IS! Ill VOLUME XIX. IS POBLrSHCh DAILY, TRMVEEJCLT AND WEEKLY T TH1 ".illin STATE J0UM1L ..OMPOY. Iiunrpnrattd under the General Late. i;kms, invariably in advance iHilT $8 00 per year. By the Cairier, per k 12K ot. rai Wkeklt 00 vr rr, VVOltT 00 " flubs of ten and ovr 1 HO " IKHM3 OF ADTERTtSCra BY THE SQUARE. Ins mna or iw maii sqni.ni-) od sonar I year ..$20 00 : one square 3 weskn.. .$3 60 'III . . - , , , . I A l - A months 10 00 ; one 6 mnntha 12 00 ; one 2 weeks.. 2 50 I week....- 1 60 no ' oo Oo "' in. " Dn Pisplaye, It man ha ft 00 ; one months 6 00 ; one A ire6kfl t 00 ; one I month 4 60 one i advertisements half ' 6 days 1 83 4 dart ... 1 26 " a dam 1 10 1 Insert!, n 60 more than the abnr lCeR. Advertiennts, leaded and placed in tb oolamn of Special Notices," aoirtiK the ordinary rater- i 11 notices required to be published by law, legal rates. I f ordered on the Inside exclusively after the first week, lu per cent, mora than the above ratea ; but all suoh will .ppaar lu the Trl-Weekly without charge. Business Cards, not exceeding Bye line, per year, lu-t6e, ti.ftO per line ; outaide t2. . . Notices of meetings, charitable societies, lire cruj.a-cits, ftc, half price. Advertisements not accompanied with written directions will be Inserted till forbid, and charged accordingly. . All transient advertisements must be paid in advance. Weekly, same terms as Daily, where Weekly Is only ,edhair price where Advertisements appear In both papers. Burtwr the present system, the advortler pays so mo b fur the space be ooonpies, the chang being hargeablo with the composition ouly. It is now gen- rally adopted. Schroeder & McFarland, - WBOLBUlt A!tD RET.1II. D.limS IX FOREIGN & DOMESTIC CIGARS, TOBACCO, SNUFF, ETC., ETC. Jjurml Building, corner of High Strttt and Sugar AlU, COLUMBUS, OHIO. CHARLES S. HELL, Attorney1 at Law , CONSTANS' BUILDING, HIQH ST., apij-tf CoHrsnioa, igio. STAFFORD & SMITH, AUCTION AND COMMISSION MERCHANTS Volumtiul, Ohio. -alaol Real Kstate, Stocks, Household Furniture, Dry-ilooda, Groceries, Horset, Carriages, fee, ftc, attended lu In city or oonntry, on the most reasonable terms. Liberal advances on consignment! decl-dly I'll I L. D. FISI1EK, Ctvri Engineer, Surveyor mid llrauglitsman, ' Btabee's Block, over RudMU's, llleh Street, Columbus, Ohio. ALL KINDS OF LAND AND ENGINEERING Surveying aui Leveling; Mapping Plattiug; jlechanioal and Architectural Drawing, promplly and satisfactorily executed. Hefer to M. L. Sulliract, Ewj., JohnGraham, Rq., Col. Modbary, C. E. jySl-dlruwly Iron and Brass Founders, UAHirAVlLUb IV uuur.a, AND HAVB OS HAND, CI 2 STEAM ENGINES, Boilers and uiii-iiearing. WB ARK AI-30 PREPARED TO FURNISH Oast Iron Fronts, Bolts for Bridges, &o. 99 o Window Caps and Sills, Cat and Wrnnght Switches, 8wlteh titands, Frogs and Crossings, anting, Station pipes, sc. K?Mlll Irons of nil kinds always on hHnd.TJ J-NEW SHOP, Went end of the National Road Bridge.-U Columbus, Ohio, April , 1966.-dwly Si HUGHES & KEEBE, Manufacturers of Cabinet Furniture, Chairs, & Mattresses of Every Description, High it. three door South of Town tt., rOULD RESPECTFULLY INFORM THE nnhlls thatthev have constantly on band a fine assortment of Parlor and Kitchen Furniture of every description, which tbey wish to dispose of on the most ra. tenable terms. They would also call attention U a new Invention of their own that they are about to have patented, under fbe name of the . "Centre Hinge Spriug Bed." Au article that has won universal admiration by all who Lave examined lta superior advantages. The peculiar tdastedneas to the purpose desigued, the simplicity of iis construction, and the cheapness with which it can be furnished to customers, render the spring bed superior to all articles of the kind yet manufactured. The Centre Hinge Spring Bed can be fitted to any kind of bedstead. Relying with eonlidence npon the merits of the iuven. tlcn, they do not deem it advisable to send Agen ts into the deld to increase the sale, but they will he happy to ac-.vnnmodate ail who feel an iuterest In the matter with an opportunity of examining and judpng for themselves. jyadwly I.VCOIRIGE B031E Sl.Ml'FACTl'ftES. Butler's Mercantile Writing Fluid. TANTJFACTTJRED S VINfi STREET iVX CINCINNATI, OlllO.-rSince this superior Fluid Ink has been before the public, now nearly two years, it has been eoniitantly guiuing in favor, and is now preferred, by tuanv, to the f-r famed Arnold Fluid. During th past year, TWENTY THOUSAND QUART AND PINT BOITLKS, together with smaller sizes Innumerable, havo been sold to Bankers and Merchants in i.lnoinnati, Louisville, Pittsburgh, Buffalo, Cleveland, Detroit, Terra Haute, Lafayette, Vlncennes, Indianapolis, Efaoaville, Frankfort, Lexiogtou, Nashville, Memphis, St. Louia, Vlcksburg, Jackson, Natchez, and New iirlana. It has ilso bees adopted iu the State Departments of Kentucky. Tennessee and Mississippi. It has taken THRKF. FIRST CLASS DIPLOMAS at Mechanics' Institutes of Cincinnati and Louisville and Four Diplomas and Price Medals at Stat Fairs held last fell In N. York, Ohio, Indiana and Illinois. Tho following Merchants and Baukers of Columblli', heretofore using Arnold's Ink, have adopted Butler's stereanttle Writing Fluid : Franklin Bk of Columbus. Weekly Columbian OIBce. Clinton du do 'Columbus Machine Manuf. L'tcbangti do do j Company. Barttett at Kiulin. niiliKersiuuio rcoiienitui.v Am. Cxprcss Co. ! Ohio Tool Co. tmericnn Hotel. Nell House. U. fl. Hotel. Nat. Telegraph ODlce. Prob. Court, Franklin cn. '"o. Auditor do Co. Recorden do l'o Clerk do I. H.Conk. James 0'Kai.e. Ohio SUtesman Oflie. Pally Jonrnal do City Fact do P. Hay den. iJobn L. Gill. , H. C. Noble. Attorney . !V. A. ft J. C. McCoy John Burr. J. R. Paul. : Hanas k llecnye Wm. A. OIU. :C. Fsy Si Sons. ;Darua Adams. .I. A. Slnsser. : 1. W. B. Brooks. 1 OC20-dtlll4 iVEW GOODS. WE ARE NOW RECEIVING OUR FALL and Winter supply of Fancy and Staple DRY GOODS, Which we are determined shall not be undersold In this market, consisting in part ot CtOTHS, CA?9IMERES, "ATINETS, FLtNNELS, BLANKETS, . r..r . iir, PikTm, Oft TO TiL'T .IMVtl m.AlB. Ainu rAivi niuivcr, 4(r.,ni.Ti-.i . FRENCH AND ENGLISH MERINOE8, PLAIDS, CALICOES, GINGHAMS, LACES, EMBROIPERIF-S, SHAWIS, LINENS, TUBA I.ISEN-J, HUfEKS, CRASH, NAPKINS, UN FN SUEET1NOS, UNBLEACHED AND BLEACHED MUSl.lNrt, DAMASKS, RWUiS AND B0BINET CURTAINS, TOILET QUILTS, RIBBONS, DRESS TRIMMINGS, KlL il.liJ CLOTHS HOSIERY of all kinds, And few of those CARPETS at cost. uuA-dBm . - W. A. at J. 0. MoCOY ft CO. DRESS TUIMMINtvS. fPHIS DAY RECEIVED BY EXPRESS, A L large lot of Marabout, Velvet and Moss Dress Trim-Kings, at MrCOY'8, no9 ' Next door to the American. BEAUTIFUL ALL WOOL DELAINES, AT no9 MoROY'S. rpUREAD, LACES, SWISS AND CAMBRIC X - Trimmings, embroidered collars, sc., cneap at no9 sacw i ''8. AGENTS WAWTEO, ... EXTRACRD1NARY INDUCEMENTS I ' . tUE BE3T CHANCE YET tl&B0'B0anlmmml I . I iiAnrrn 1 XTT A TT - XT r "V I f T? 1 l T tH A T 1 (191)10 5$l)UC J0lUUrti wiim"! juiH.aajLJjiui, ij nraEPS NEW LAW BOOK. A YEli'S PILLS. GLIDE. SUGAR-SHOD. I TO MASS MONET I , ) Address CAMPBELL ft CO., noXt-aoOaO Philadelphia, Pa . i'I''W LITTLE MIAMI AND COLUMBUS & XENIA RAILROADS. Trains run between Colnmbus and Cincinnati, as follows : DOWNWARD. UPWARD. Leave Arrive at Cincinuatl. Columbus. Leave Arrive at Columbna. Cinoinuatl. 2:46 A.M. 8:U2A.M. 12:10P.M. 4:10 P.M. 8:S0P M 1:23A M. :00A.M. 9:6a A.M. 10K)0 " S20 P. M. 6:00P.M. 11:30 " The 2:4a A.M. Train from Columbus connects at Xenia for Davton. Richmond. IndlanaDolls. Lafett , Chicago, St. Louis, and all points west; connects at Morrow lor Wilmington, Circleville and Lancaster; and at Loveland's for uiilsDorouguanacoilllcothej also conecung av bin cinnati for Louisville by the boats. Tbe 12:10 P. M. Train, from Columbus, connects at bonuon lor npringueta, umyion, lnaiaoepous, e.c. ; cos-nocting at Xenia for Dayton, Richmond, Indianapolis, Lafavette. Chicaio.St. Louis, aud all Dotnta west; connect ing at Morrow for Wilmington, Circleville and Lancaster, anil at Loveianils, miUillsuorougli ana (.niiucoine; aaa at uincinnatl wi-.h tha u. at M. K. H. lor uouisviue. The 8:30 P.M. Train from Columbus connects atLoa don for Sprlngfleld; and at Xenia for Dayton, Richmond, Indianapolis, Terre Haute, Vineennes ami at. lAiais. Kg- For other information apply to T. Lorae, Agent, or M. L. Doubrtt, Tloket Agnt, Columbus: Wm. Wmight, Aent, npnLgneia: A. Vt . RTAKK, Agcui. awiii-; a. Ja. Liwis, Airant. or P. W, Pthapeh. General Ticket Agent, vmcinuai4, w. u. ,iincr . noSO SuptrinicntUnt MARIETTA AND CINCINNATI R A I LROAD. VPEN TO BYERS'. 23 MILES EAST OF J CHILI.1COTTIE. rasseueers leave Columbus on the Trains of the C. s X. Railroad, and change cars at Lnyg. land. Leave Columbus 2:16 a.m. Arrive at Chillicothe 10:46 a.m. Leave Byprs' 1 :10 p:in. Leave Cliillcothe3:3') p m. Arrive at Columbua 11:16 Arrlro at Byers' 12:30 p.m. p.m At Bvers'. Staiesto and from Athens. McArthur, rome- roy, Hamden, Galllpolls, Jackson, &o , connect with the Trains, and Passengers may make the trip in either di rection between any of these Towns and Columbus in a single aay. Leave Columbus 11:00 a.m. Arrive at Chillicothe 10:00 Leave Chillicothe 6:00 a.m. Arrive at Columbus 1:46 p.m p.m .sa-Throuirh Tickets betw-en Columbus and Chillicothe (3.60, to be had only at tbe 0. fc X. Railroad Ticket Of lice, Columbus, and on the Cars of Marietta and Cincinnati Railroad, m loaving Chillicothe. ami jutiii n Aunuj, ouj . GROCERS, .1. T. HE WHAN. BOBIKT VIUOS. NEW FAMILY GROCERY. fpiIE SUBSCRIBERS TAKE LEAVE TO X announce to the citizens of Columbus, that they have Jurit oponed a Grocery & Provision Establishment, On High clreel, Souih of tt Johnson Clock, and directly opjnsi'.t Ihe Exchange Bank, Where Iher Inlond to keeo every article in their lino, ol the best and purest qunlitles, and sell at rates for Cash which must give satisfaction to those who may lavor them with their patrouago. Their present stock consists In part of Black and Gruaa Teas of fine flavor, Klo, Java aud Mocha Cotfras, Sugars of ell descriptions, Bpices, sugar cured Hams, flue lamily Flour, Candles, Soap, and the celebrated New York Corn Starcb. particularly rec ommended for Cooking and Laundry purposes. Cheese, Maccaroua, Verinloella, Rice, Cum Drops, Fancy Canities, Jujube Paste, Pickles, Foreign aud Dritd Fruits, consist, ng of Raisins, Zaute CurranM, Citrons, Figs, Prunes and Almonds, Dried peacues ana Aimonas, uriea ana unruiou Fish, Salt, Brooms, Pails and Tubs, Chewing and Smoking Tobacco, Cigars, fie, &o. Please give us a call anu examine our goous ano prices. ocll-Smd NEWMAN i? Wlt.SnN. HADDOCK & FIERCE. GIlOOEnB, 030. , WOULD RESPECTFULLY INFORM their friends and the nublic. that they have re paired and newly fitted up the Grooery Store Room formerly occupied by Isaac Fisher, and that they will endeavor, as far aa lays In their power, to satisfy all who may tavor them who a can. Their itock consists of all articles usually kept In a Family Grocery, which they will sell as cheap as tbt cueupest. ?.ivil, JVo. 2. UeBhlei's iiaiiain?, men si. ell North of Broad. West side. Kuuirlor Uroceriee. JOHN BURR IS THIS DAY RECEIVING J at his8toriuthe East End or the HucKeye ijiock, BROAD STKEET, A VERT LAKCB LOT OF SUPERIOR FAMILY ItOCERIE8, Embracing every desirable article in that line, riun in ind HOI'St.KEEI'ERS desirous of having the CHOICEST ARTICLES that can be obtained, will find them at BURR'S. Everybody wanting Groceries are par ticularly Invited to call, and aee How muon a nine casD will buy. n4Vtf CARRIAGE MAKERS. JOHN GEARY. JOnN A. (SHANNON. Capital City Carriage Repository. TUW FIRM Tbe subscribers hating II entered into partnership for the Sale and Manufacture or carriages Rockawars. Rumries. Bnlkles. and all other kind of Vehicles, they have lust completed arraugementa to be Iramodlatoly supplied with The Largest ana men ratrivmanie STOCK. OF CARRIAGES Everexhlblted in this City. Their present stock consists ol Fine Family CarriHi;es, Rockaways, Barouches, Shifting-Top Buggies, Traveling Biiggioa, Trotting Buggies, Now York Business Wagons, bulaieJ, l,lg cseieiou n 1.1 Jt-J. Jnn Ti.a entiia of the above Stock have been Mauutactuied expressly for them, by the best Eastern Makers, all of which will be warranted to give good satisfaction. The reputation of the juutor partner of tuo lirm as a practical Carriage Maker, who has conduotod the business for the past ten years, and to whom a llmt class premium has been awarded at every Fair' in this State where his work was submitted for competition: is well known in tbe CanltalCitv as tha builder or too near venicies ever oi- fered to our citizens. CARRIAOES OP EVERY PATTERN AND HTTLK, itiaoe id orum n.v. v WREPAIRINO and PAINTING executed in the nfaikut !I1ANST."E lantiMlar r.or stock of CarriaKes. by Wholesale and Retail, on tbo most reasonable terms, to the ritlzeus of Columbus aud surrounding vicinity, we are determined to sell at the lowest possible shade of prolit, for cbh!i, or good Indorsed paper, at snort rates. ' r.rvn enddiamine our Stock at tha CAPITAL CITY CARRIAGE REPOSITORY, in Neil's New Building, High street, north of BroaJ, Columbns. OAAni s nuii-Tiivr.. Cantos fur Sale. rpHE UNDERSIGNED HAVING BOUGHT X. OWt J. A. WUflWUB. '"u,uc" oi manufacturing CARRIAGES, at their old atand. on Front atret, between State and Town atreets, Columbui, hand, and are constantly mann rkni.it.Ti. nvmrv flH.arlntinn of Carriages, such ns Top and Trotting Buggies, light Rockaways. namiiy carriages oi every atvle, Business Wagons, Omoibusses, sc. They nave aiso ior aaiw vueap, n..i Baggie. . , . I'nTn ilia loner exDerienco the ubeoribera liavehad. both In the manulacture and usoof Cartiages, they have no hesitation in saying without boasting, that they know how to manufacture good work and work that will wear and give satisfaction. . 3-Giv ca A OAtl. BI.AK:, WIUJAM3 ft CO. ap!9-wlywe Kvw wnnn AND LUMBER YARD, WESTERVELT. OF THE LATE FIRM Vj. n wrTERVELT ft DARNELL, haa lust opened. on the northeast oorner ot Gay and Fourth st., a new yard for tbe sale of ; WOOD. ROOIT LATH. SH1NOLKK, FENCING HOARDS, POSTS, an4 OTHER LUMBER. a.0RDCB SOLICITED. ocl8-2ml iev-aum COLUMBUS. WEDNESDAY EVENING, Cleveland, Columbus Cincinnati KA1LKOAU. Winter Arrangement for 1855-56. Three Trains Dully from Columbus, In connection with Trains on the Little .Miami, and Columbna and Xenia Itaiirona. 1 EXPRESS TRAIN AT 10:0$ A. M.; 1 stopping at Delaware, Cardington, Gallon. Crestline, Shelby, New London and Grafton, arriving at Cleveland at 2:40 P. M.; giving passengers ronr Minims for dinner ana connecting wiia insssur. n. rasi oxpress iromuu the Lake Shore Road for Dunkirk, Buffalo, New-York, fee. This Train connects at Galion with tbe Bellefontaine and Indianapolis Railroad, at Crestline with the 1 :30 Express Train on the Ohio and Pennsylvania Railroad for Pittsburgh, Philadelphia, &c, aud the Ohio and Indiana Railroad for Fort Wayne; at Grafton with the 1:46 P. M. Train for Toledo and Chicago, reaching Chicago 8 o'clock next morning. 2. Mail Train at 8:30 P. M. ; stopping at all way station between Columbus aud Cleveland, arriving at Cleveland at 9:16 P. al., connecting at Crestline with .8:00 P.M. Fast Train on the Ohio and Pennsylvania Railroad for ittbnrh. kc. with the Ohio and Indiana Railroad for r on Wayne, sc. ; at Cleveland with the 30 P. M . Night Lx,ire8 iraln on tile IJia More nauroau lor ue aaet. i. Night Kxpresa at 12 :1a P. M. ; stopping at Delaware and all way bUMods North of New London and leaving pasaengersatallwaysUtlon,oonneetingatCreBtllnewlth the 6:00 A. M. Train on the Ohio and Pennsylvania Railroad at Grafton with the Toledo Day Expresa for Chicago, arriving at Chicago at:30 P. M., connecting at Cleveland with the Morning Train on tha Lake Shore Railroad for Dunkirk. Buffalo, New-York, Ac. ZiS-For through and local TicketB apply at the Ticket Office in the Passeuger Depot ot the Cleveland, Columbua sod Cincinnati, and Little Miami, Columbus and Xenia rtailroadCompanlos. E.S.FLINT, Colombns, Nov. 19,1865.-dtf Superintendent . Central Ohio Railroad. WINTER ARRANGEMENT CHANGE Or TIME. Tvo Daii.t Thaws Each Wat, (Scxbats Exczftsd,) A.VD BUT O.VB CBA5CI 0 VARA Hnwm COLCM-BUS AND BaLTIHOIU, ON AND AFTER MONDAY, NOV. 19th, 1356, Trains will run as foUowfl : GOING EAST. Leave E-iinresi JVat'n. UaU Train. 3:30 p. M. 4:03 " 6:65 " ti:38 " 1:15 " S:3S SiOrt Columbus 10:00 a. i Newark 11:10 Zanosville 12:16 F. M. Concord 12:08 li Cambridge... 1:25 " uarnesviue z:ij") Belmont 2:50 Arrive at Bollair 3:45 ' arr. 10 00 " GOING WEST. Slave Kxprest Train. .Mail Train. 4:60 a. x. 6:47 " 0:18 " 7:46 ' 8:i8 " 9:32 " 10:37 " err. 12K0 u. Bellair 11:45 a. u. Belmont 12:40 r. M. Barnesville 1:07 " Cambridg 2:30 " Concord 3:20 " Zanesvlllo 4:27 " Newark 5:15 " Arr. at Columbus 7:20 " The Express Trulu going East will atop to take up or leave Passengers, at Columbia, KJrkerkville, Newark, Zaoesvule, Couoord, Cambridge, Campbsll's, Karnesvule, and Belmoot, only. Goinq Wtar, will stop at all Stations U-on tigual. The Mail Train will stop at all the Stations where tne Man is to be received, or delivered, ana at all other Stations on Notice being given. GOING EAST. The 10:00 A. M. Express Train counects at Columbna with the Express Train which leaves Cincinnati at 8 A. H. aud with the train from the West on the Columbua, Plana, and Indiana Railroad: at Newark with morning Trains to and from Sandusky, Msnifieid and Mt. Vernon, and with Trains on the Steubenvtllc aud Indiana Railroad : at Wheeling with Express Train on the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad for Baltimore, Washington, FhUdeipbiaaud Eastern cities. The 3:80 P. M. Train will connect at Colnmbus with the second Train from Cincinnati: at Newark with Dan dusky, Msusfleid and Newark Railroad; and at WheeUn with Night Train on Baltimore and Ohio Railroad. Paa sengers leaving Louisville and points below Cincinnati and taking the 10:20 A. M. Train on Little Miami Railroad will connect witn tuts Tram at uoiumous. raseeogera leaving Indianapolis and Richmond by morning Train on Indiana Central Railroad will also connect with this Train at Columbus, and reach Wheeling at 10:00 P. M.. and leavo by 10:80 P. H. Train on Baltimore and Ohio Rail. road, arriving in Baltimore at 6 P. M. next day. GOING WEST. The 4:50 A. M. Mail Train connects at BeUalr with Night Train on the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad: at Newark with Traina to and from Sandusky, Mansfield and Mt. Vernon, and Chicago via Mouroeville; at Colum bua with the Trains for Cincinnati, ana witn lreiDS ror Xenia, Dayton, Indianapolis, aud Chicago, tia Dayton and via Ucbana, The 11:45 A.M. Enpress Train oonuects with the Express Train from Baltimore, and arrives iu Colnmbus at 7 :20 M., and councils with Trains going eoutu ana wesi, arriving at Cincinna ti at 110 P. M. JA51M l, ILAWIt, Acting Superintendent. ZaneaviUe, Nov. 21, 1866.-dtf New and Direct Route T.l STCEBENVII.LE, PITTSBURGH, PHILADELPHIA, BALTIMORE, NEW YORK, a a,l th.i Frineipal Eastern cities, VIA Stenbcnvilie & Indiana Railroad, Which i now completed and in mMPffflfnl operation be- ween Newark and stuebuvuio. PASSENGERS BY THIS ROUTE LEAVE COLUMBUS via Fxpress Train Central Ohio Railroad at 10:10 A. M connect at Newark with the above road to IStenbenvtUe, wbero they arrive at 6 P. M. ; leave im mediately on FIRST CLASS Slr.AMf.Ka running in ci- nection with the Mad; and altera comfortable night'a rest, reach Pittsburgh In time for tbo 7 A. M. Train of the PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD r Philadelphia, Baltimore and New York. . FARE. Columbus to iSleubenville 4 45 ' " Pittsburgh 4 76 " Philadelphia 13 W Baltimore 12 75 " New York 16 60 m-& I'asHMntiers hv this route have the advantage of mtucerl Tare and are noi suojecieu io uoui dims i Passengers ana Dsggare conveieu iruiu m. iu. ilepot f rre of charge. For through tickets, nless apply at the ticket . dice of the Central Ohio Railroad. G. W. FULTON, .VUJ' t. IiAfATms Dbvfnny, funeral Agent. nol'' Cleveland and Toledo Railroad nASSENGERS TICKETED TO TOLEDO. t Chicago, St. I aula, Cincinnati, Indianapolis. Dayton, Springfield, Bollafontaine, Tiffin, Findley, Sandusky, Mans field, Mt. Vernon, Newark, so. mx Daily Trains) irom sjievemiiu. at 7-nn a. M. Rxrress train, from station of C. O. P.. R. for Toledo, Chicago and St. Louie j stopping at Norwalk, Clyde, and Fremont. 2d. 8 A.M. Hall Train, stopping at all stations between Grafton ond Toledo. , , 3rd. 8.45 A. M. Express, (fruui Ohlocity,) tornauausay, Cincinnati, Toledo and Chicago, stopping at Olmsted Fall, hiTTT.i& Vormininn Fttiron. Sandusky. Fremont and Ejraor, This tralu counects at Sandusky with Mad River and Ijke Erie, and Mansfield and Sandusky Kaiiroaus, oy wuicn Passengers will reach Toledo at 1.05 P.M. I'sywm Bellefontain 2.18 ' Cincinuatl 7.00 " U..I..I.M nh " Indianapolis 10.30 " Ath o an p u Pioress. from station of C. C. ft C. Rail road for Toledo, Chicago and St. Louis : stopping at Obor-lin, Norwalk, Monrooville, BeUevue, Clyde and Frmont, C4U a on p u uu Train from Ohio Cvtv.i for Ban- A.h Thl. train eonnecta at Sandusky with trains of Had River aud Lak Erl Road, arriving at Findley earn evening, and stopping at all intermeaiaie siaiiou.. th. 7 46 P. M. Express, from station of C. C. ft C. Kail ...... .1 fnsTn arin.nll 1 hinUM. For Tickets, or contracta for Freight, apply to E. SHEL DON AKent, 66 Bank street, Angler noiei Dunuiog. Alio, Tickets for Toledo, Chicago, e. to be obtained al a.... r r. r. r n Rs.A n. D. BALDWIN. Agent. Those for Psndusky, Cincinnati, innienapoiis, tlona on Mad River and Mansfield Roads, at Ohio City Sta tion. E. B. FHlLLira, oupenmeuuenv. Olioe Cleveland ft Toledo Railroad, Cleveland, May 6, 1864. f lnn6dftw TRVINTtt'S LIRE OF WASHINGTON 1 Bvo Library edition, with maps and plates. Bribscri bers' copies ready for delivery, at RILEY ft CO.'S book store. ooia VIKU1L K. MALL., AKeni. WANTED a rixttatiON AS BOOK-KEEPER, BY A nttrrixi man. who cso give satisfactory ref erenoe as to oompetnicy, Integrity, ftc. Iuqulr at thl oiEce. ocl COLLECTION'S TN OHIO, IN ANY COUNTY, PROMPTLY x tnnda. on aenlicatlon to the subscriber Referenoe uhioBUU Journal Co. noS J. CASS. B00E. PLEADING AND PRACTICE UNDER THE CITIL CODE, BT IIOX. SIMBOtf NASH. IT WILL FORM A VOLUME OF ABOUT 700 pages, 8ro., beautifully printed and neatly and firmly bound in law sheep. In addition to brief Treatlseson the various provisions of the Code, it will contain an ample collection of forms of petition., answers, entries for Clerks, returns for Sheriffs, ftc. The work will show what changea have been produced by the Code. The precedents for petitions aud answers are so drawn as to deduce out of tha cases a clear and real Issue, about which all will be agreed as to ita meaning. The forma of entries and return! wlU render thb work especially useful, to county officers, as well as to the profession. Buchawork haa lonj been a, desideratum ; no book having yet appeared upon the subject since tha enaot-ment of the New Code. It will shortly be published bv H. W. DERBY, Clnelnnatl. RECENTLY PUBI.I8HR:D, Swan's New Treatise ON THE POWERS AND DUTIES OF JUSTICES OF TUB PEACE, EIC. 1 vol. 8vo. Swan s Revised Statutes OF TntC STATE OF OHIO complete. 1 vol 8io. Nash's Digest OF REPORTS OF SUPREME COURT OF OHIO. ool8 tf 1 vol. 8ro. J. H. RILEY & CO., COLUMBUS, OHIO. DEALERS IN jLaw, Medical and School Bootes. RLANK BOOKS, Any size, style and pattern of Ruling, ou baud aud made io orucr. Railroad and Insurance Offices, Hunks, Brokers, and County Officers, Supplied with any article in the Line of Stationery on tne Deal lunus, anu an wur& warraui.ru. Blank Notes and Drafts Job Printing and BOOK BINDING. A full supply at all times of valuable Standard Works. Foreign and Americao Editioua. A good stork of valuable Mechanical and Scientific Works ar. an urn... All the New Books received direct. FRKMcn, English and American Stationery, Wholesale ana neian. Also, Paper Hangings and Borders, 03-The most extensive Stook West of Philadelphia. Window Shades and Fixtures, Window Cornicos, Fine Mli-rnm from S to 8 feet. French Plate Oil Paintings and Enirravinirs, Portrait and Picture Frames, always on hand and made to order. Cutlery and Gold Pens Work Boies and Dressing; Cases, Card Cases ana rorie Monies, iioin. Hair, Hat, Nail and Tooth Brushes, Pocket Books, Wallets, Bill Holders, Ho. marO-wdmadtf POPULAR CIIUUCH MUSIC. 100,000 Copies OoM, Containing a great variety of Church Music, selected chleuy trom ineoiu Bianuaru Auiuurn, niiu many Ordinal Compositions, ou a NEW SYSTEM OF NOTATION, Designed for the use of Churches., Singing Sooictits, and 10UUVtllT-T, BT A. S. ITA YD E A. REASONS WILL CHIEFLY AC- rpVO X ConNT lor the ireat success of this volume: First The character of the Work. It presents a new and greatly Improved system of notation. In It much that is abstniseand difficult In this delightful science la so simplified that months are made equal to years In the common way of learning tbe practice of Musical Art, a fact sufficiently proveo by the att-statlons of acorea of teachers and performers, who have tested the system, aud given the work ita great popularity and constantly Increasing ealo. Second The Quality and Stylo of the Music. Many new pieces, destined to pleaie al long as muslo lasts, may be found on ita pages, and also many of the old and tried melodies, bellowed lrom asaooiatea recouscuous ci sanctuary delights, and far more welcome to tha heart of the worshiper than many frequently substituted for The publishers may add, mat in meouanioai execu tion of the work 1, superior altogethvr to the minority of Eastern Musio Books, and the price very low. A NEW ROUND NOTE BOOK: THE PIT A I HIE VOCALIST. BT GIBSON aC FMSSENDEN. This work is received with great favor, and is now the only muslo book used by several of the most sctentitio id successful weBtcrn teachers or music, in tne scnoois under their care. It ia the same size, and is pnbiisiied in the sainti superior style with tbe "sacred Mclodeon," and sold at the same low rate. rCoplei for examination will be moot oy man, pon paid, for 60 cents. Either may be had through the Booksellera or of the Publishers. MOUKr., W1L9TACU, UI3 I Vt'.. 25 West Fourth St., Cincinnati, ool5-2row Wholesale Booksellers and Publishers. GOOD, ACTIVE BOOK AGENTS WANTED to sell by subscription, new, valuable, and attractive Pictorial Family Books. Certain districts of country will be assigned to each, and books furnished at wholesale, on better terms than can be offered by any other Publishers in America. A few competent, persevering youug iuu, by personal application, will be employed at liberal wages by the month. Address J. ft H. MILLER, post paid, Columbus, Ohio, or apply at our olllce in the Commercial College Buildings. aprll-wtt NEW EDITION OF SWAN'S MAN AL. SAAC N. WHITING, COLUMBUS, HAS . this day published a New Edition of a Manual for Ex ecutors and Administrators, in the Bettieinem. 01 tne Estatesnf Deceased Persons: Vt ith practical forms, no., to. By .losera R. Fwan. Fourth Edition, Revised and adapted to tha prenent Practioe; by H. C. Nobis, Attorney aw. Columbus. jan: .2o-tlAwtf muK Flt'Tll EDITION OF SWAN'S '1KKAT-X IES- ISAAC N. WHITING, Columbus, has published A Treatise on the Ia relation to the Powers aud Iiutle of Justices of th Peac and Constables in the Slate of Ohio, with Practical Forms," te., etc ny josepn n. m, l.t lM-iTlent of the Twelfth Judical Cirouit. The fifth lllli.n 1 rot. 8vo: naxea. In line taw Dinning. J iiw -i no To this edition has been added an Appendix, containing the new Code prescribing th Jurisdiction and procedure before Justices ol tne reace, auu oi toe nuues ui wubw bles in civil cases, passed march 14th, 1863. n. I,., .kn nnldlshed a new edition of SwAX'a Ma.ipal A Manual for Kxt-iUmn and Adminietraton, lu the settle ment of estates ol ueceaawa persons: wnurnwni!.iffiui. s,- Hv JOSEPH R. SWAN. Third edition, re- lsed. enlarged, and- adapted to the present Prartiee, by H. C. NOB1I, Attorney ai jaw, uoiumoiiB. . D..pj rnval 12mo vol., 442 pages, In good Iw Binding. Prioa, t on For sale by tbe dozen ot single copy by tb Publlhei il,. Bookstore of Randall. Aston ft Long, Columbua They may also be had at his pries oi ine louowii'g per Beach ft Cone, Circleville; Whlttemure rkiton. Will n..k.. b nii-liinsouliSon. Delaware: W. W. IteodftSon, Zanesvllle; at the differeut llookstores In Mt. Vernon ; B. f' TM.-n,.r Jb Cfi.. MaosUelU: .1. 11. Baiimraraiier, noomer Oanflerd ft Kimball, Esqe., Mtxllna; C. H. Parsons,Cleveland- W. H. H. Potter, Ashland: C. I Derby ft Co.,8an-A...1.'- r:i.. w a Ro. Norwalk: W. N. Porter. Warren, Trumbull county; Beebe ft Bkins, Akron; B. Little, Ra venna; William Bucnor, uassuion: r isuer, Auueruu w Canton. 8trk county; Oavid V. Graham, New Lisbon ; oounty 8. W. Mclioweii, Bwuoenvuie: niepaeu w,",s' at fnairavill: R. S. Oross It Co., Tiffin; K. ft C. Ash- . ' TT k Ca. DnllAr..ntr.lna. At thl Bonk- ton, zveniou; non """l stores In Dayton: Kyle Brother, Troy; H. Llmbooker ft Co., Piqua; J. VanMater, ureenvuie, uara county; Williams ft Uanlord, epnnguwai r rencu o. o., .,.u. F. Harris ft Co., Xenia; H. mown, usmuton, ouiier couu. uiAi.awi i hkrui. wasniuinon. Aavevie ooumj , a, u'ekland ft Co. Freemont, Sandusky eounty; and Jamea arler, Bucyrus Apruxi, mmusii f "AND LAWS OP OHIO. BEING A COM I i ..nHnr, nt the I aw.. Resolutions. Treaties an . .-.k. nt the Reneral and Stat Oovernments, which relate to lands In th Stat ot Ohio: Including th Lawa adopted by th Governor and Judges, the Laws of th Territorial Lcgislatur, and th Laws of this State to th years 1816-'18. compliea Dy in non. i n--..., and published by virtu of a resolution of th eeneral Aa, iT,. ....i I.,, . lavfi. l .ol. 8vo. The a'bov work will b eminently useful to gentlemen of the Bar. For sale by ISAAC N. WHIT1NO, LSTORY OF THIS OHIO CANALS A .T,iAt Documentary History of the Ohio Canala from the first measures taken for their construction down t il.. .lose of the session of the Legislature of 1882. la one yolum, 8 vo. A few oople. of th valuabl. work forby Over the Bookstore of Randall, Aston ft long "LULli SK'l'S OK THIS OHIO UtU'ORTS. ti.. .T,h.nrlt.or haa for sale, at a low price for cash, few complete seta of th Ohio Reports, in 20 volumes, fin law binding; or n wui sen rue sijimwiwiiw, ""iv""- by tlieraseues, aa purcnasers may """I .. Iu7-d.trl-ww ! N- WTTrnNO COAL I COAL! COAL I T AM NOW DAILY RECEIVING A GOOD A article or Coars Orat Coal, and will tell either at depot or deliver ooal on th short! notloe, t th lowrnt fifure of tb markt, nd warraa'. to give satisfaction. , JAMES O'KANE, oeS3 Sol igntof Zanesvi'j Coal and Lumbr Co. DECEMBER 5. THE POETKY OF FHYSIC. A YEA'S FILLS, GLIDR, SUGAR-SHOD, ii uviJK the palate, rut tneir eoergy, although wrnppe'i up, ia there, and telU with giuut force on tbe rery foundation or dirnne . There are thou hands of au.Vrers who would not wear their .Hitra-pera if tby kurw they could hecti-n-d for 25 cts. Try Ayer'i Pilla. and yon will know it. Purify the blond, aud dfneaee will be atarved out. Cleanse the system from imputilie and you are cured already. Take this bent of all Purgatives, andSmofula, Inr.fges-tlon, WeakneHR. Headacho, Backache, Sideacbe. Jaundice, Rheumatism, dttraDgttneuta of tuo Livr, Kidneys, and Bowels, all derangements and utl dippa?e!i which a purgative remedy can reacli, fly before them like dark ue ah before the sun. Reader, if you are Buffering from any of the numerous complaintM they cure suffer no more the remedy h.n been provided for you. and it is criminal to neglect it. That Ayrr' Cherry Peroral, it the beM medicine for a Cough, is known to 1b whole world, and tbnt A ytrys are the bent of Pills, is known to those who have uflf'd tfcem. pTopared by DR. J. C. AYF.Ft, Chemist, Loffcll, iuia and told bv all respectable rimfcjrifits erarvwhere. ' V. KCKSTEIX, Jr.. 'Ulneinnati, , ii. KOBFRTS & CO., Columbna, no!4 lw2n And by Agents in every town in tha West EYE AIVTD A 1. . DH, rNDEmVOOD, OF THE CITY OF I.OUISVILE, KY., OOULIST AND AURIST, XXfOVLD ANKOUXCE HIS ARRIVAL IN VV the city of. Columbus, Ohio, and respectfully tenders blfl profenninnal services to the public, in full confidence of reridorine eeneral satisfaction. Hujiax bad an experience of over five years in the treatment of dis oan ot tub k.t ana .ab, ne nan tne inuniie saiisiaction of knowing that he can perform the moxt critical opera-tiona and extraordinary cure;). All he asks is a fair and impartial trial of his new and painlofi remedies. His mode of treating diseases of the Eye U entirely new, perfectly sale, and has nerer been known to fall ia giving relief lu all cases of Opthalmia, (or inflamution of the Eye,) whether Acute or Chronic, wlietlisr Catarrhal, Purulent, Scrofulous, Gonnorrbosal Syphilitic, or Rheumatic. It will also remove all i'psuUies of the Cornea, whether of a Nebulous or Albuginous oharacter, or any other external scum, Dim, or extraneous sub stance from the sight of tbe Eye. Tills new mode of treatment has never failed of curing Pterygium, Staphy. loin a, and Aumarosia; and has even succeeded in removing Cataract from the Eye, whetherCapsulur or Lenticular, in a great majority of canes, without the vine of thu knife or needle. Ho has been equally aa successful in the trpitment of Diseases of the Ear, with his new system. He may be consulted at tbe office of Dr. Laiigworihy, on Town street, two doora west of High atreet. N. B. Having imparted to Dr. Langworihy my system of treating diseases of tho Eye and Eur, and having formed a partnership with him, I take great pleasure in recommending him to the public as being as cumputcnt ai myself to treat those diseaFOtt' oclSdw.'Jm J. T. IWDERW00D. THE MU;ir ENGLISH KENEDY. SIR JAMES CLARKE'S Celebrated Female I'll Is, PROTECTED Cy ROYAL LETTERS PATENT. DREPARED t ROM A JfREtiCRIPTION OF JL Sir James Clarke, M.D., Physician Extraordinary to the Queen. This invaluable Medicine ix uh. ailing in tbe cure of all those painful and dangerous disease,-; incident to tho feraal' u-tttntiun. Itmoderai- l'msc, removes a'l obstnu Mtins, and briny: on tl ' i-ariod with regula- - .. These Pills should b .t ".vo or three weks pre . n to con. Snement; the niy the constitution, and u-son the suffering duriu labor, enabling themothei iu perforin her duties with tafyty to herself and child. Thent Hills should not be taken by Females during the FIRST THRKK MOSTHS of Pregnancy, as they are sure to bring on Miscarriage, but at any other time they are safe. In all casus of Nervous and Spinal Afltctions, pain In the Back and Limbs. Hi-aviness, Fatigue on Slif.ht Exer tion, Palpitation of the Heart, Lowness of Spl iti, Hys-terics, Sick Headache, Whites, and ail the painful diseases occasioned by a ui8ordnrod syalum, these Pills will effect a euro when all othr means have failed, and nl- thougu a powertui remeny, no not contain iron, calomel, antimony, or aoy other mineral. Full directions accompany each package. Price, In the United States and Canada, Oue Dollar. Bole Agents for the Tnlted States, L C. BALDWIN ft CO., Rochester, N. Y. foe saie by ti. PKMG k SONd, wboeale and retail, and by Druggists generally throughout the State. Nel9-dwy COLUMBUS Water Cure and Medical Infirmary, FOR LADIES ONLY. THIS INSTITUTION IS NOW PERMA X. nentlyestablished, situated three miles Northeast of the City, and reached by Uroad street and the Uranvule Plank road. None but Females will be received as pa tlents. Neither will it be made a resort for pleasure. Open at all seasons. Ordinary terms seven dollars per weea. By success in tho treatment of disease, and attention to business, the Proprietor hopes to merit public conti lelice. IV. BUbTAHU, it. msrRO-dly PltOFKSSOIt tt'OOD'H Hair Restorative the Host Wood erfii! of all Discoveries. AFTER READING THE FOLLOWING testimony given after thoroughly testing, who oao entertain a doubt, but this wonderful preparation is a perfect Hair Restorative, and should be in the hands ot old and youug, Till lattvk to fbhsekvi, and the former to KtHroHs; but procure the Circular which may be had of all Agents, and a mats of evidence will be presented which none can resist. Road this as a bampli or tuou-hands I The first, from the Editor of the St. Louis Morn ing Herald, and the certificate from a distinguished clti- Ben, needs no comment from us: r" There ar many young gentlemen, as well as plenty of old ones, whose beards are turning gray, wbicb glvea the former a good deal of uneasiness, and exposes th age or the latter, to avoiu tees nine perpiexitie. we advise such of our readers to use Professor Wood's Hair Restorative, which will, in lh course of a few weeks, change the whitest hairto its natural color. It does not dv th hair, like most of the hair restoratives, but pro- duces a gradual change of color from th root of the hair to the final end, and gives itanneendgiossyappear anoe. We have seen many persons who have used It sac- eeesfully, and who pronounce it the only invention wbiob hae come up to their idea of a 'sure euro for gray heads. ' We commenced using it about two monttis since, aou it we ar any Judga ol ace and beauty, it has mad us a least ten years younger, in fact, w ar beginning to look quite young again, and feel very much like getting a youug wife. Tho change is miraculous, and it would be as difficult to find a gray hair now as It would be to find an idea iu the head of the Duke of Buckingham. We know aeveral old maids and some youug widows, whose locks are just beginning to assume a silvery hue, and who have been talking seriously about resorting to this remedy; and we advise them not to delay auy longer- 1 never fails." St. Louis Herald, " DkAK silt : Having used your Hair Kestorative tor the last six months, and with complete euccoss, 1 think It my duty to give you a certificate of ita wonderful effects Having been taken aick in Ualvoston, Texas, some four years since through which I lost my hair and having tried various articles uuu lumm uo uvuvui iioiu bu.ir uu, I was requested by many to try yours, and aitor using two of your quart bottles I found my hair growing very fast, which any person or persons can see demonstrated byoallingatNo. 28 Olive street, St. Louis. To thu public In general, 1 have no hesitation iu saying this is a truly useful and wonderful article for the re.toratlon ol th htr, Morris IJojuso. St. Loula, May 23, 1864." M-Preuared 114 Market street, St. Louis, aud Broadway, New-York. O. ROBERTS ft CO.. Wholesale and Retail Agents for Columbus, who will sup ply tbe trad at Manufacturer's prices. feh21-dawly Hood iews lor the Ladies. SITAPLEY & HALL HAVE NOW THEIR full stock of Dress Goods, Cloaks, Shawls, Kmbroide-rles, Hosiery, Gloves, &c, ftc, which Is one of th lar-gest and best selected ever offered in this market. Ladles are Invited to give us an early call, and we are certain we can please the roost difficult. eel ft SILKS! SILKS ! Dhehs Hilks or all the dilferem. .tylea and colors, varying in price from ?5c to SO a yard, can be found at ,el5 MIAPLEY ft HALL'S. TF YOU WANT A PATTERN OK THK l handsomest Wool DeLalnes In this market, call at self) WlAribV At llsl.1!1. A GOOD ASSORTMENT OF STRIPED AND n. Plaid Valencia and ropuns can oo iouuu ai ,15 SUAPLKY ft HALL'S. Xn endless variety OF WOOL J. Plaids, Raw Silks, French and English Marino, Mohair. Lustres, Calicoes, Chluties, ftc, Ac, always on hand aud for aale cheap at ei5 SHAPLEY ft PALL'S. T AOfi CURTAINS A uoou assortment of i j Lace uuriains, varyingiu puce iroin eo io iu awiu-Jow. ean he had at se!6 KHAPLKY ft HALL'S. LADIK8 WANTING D Rhino AND CLOAK. TKIMMINOa, can find at, SUAPLKY ft HALL'S the best assortment wver ofliomi Id this market. seJft OHAPLEY 4, HALL HAVE T1!E BEST IO assortment of CLOAKS ever offered In this rearse, vaiying In price from S4 to 176. eelo T ADI1Z3 WISHING TO SEE THE BEST J J a-snrtment of Laoeand Muslin Embroideries, Floun-oings, Edgings and Inaertlngs, and fine HonltonGuimpure Valenciennes and English Thread Lac ever offered ia this market, can do so by calling at .,15 . SHAPLEY ft HALL'S. t g 1855. jfur $Mt onmal WEDNESDAY EVENIKG, DECEIUBER 5. Interesting Discoveries in Guatemala.Concluded.2 "This begins with the creation of the world, as given by Ordones, who took it here ; but there are pretty large discrepancies, and the latter las always been very faithful to the original. It is the same history of the semi-gods, Hunappa and Xcalanqua, but having the original narrative. I found out that with the exception of a few marvelous tales, the whole is a historical episode of the most interesting character. The scene is generally in the Quiche and Vera Paz most of the places and localities I have been already able to discover, and I must add that 1 have taken a copy of the whole, in Quiche and Spanish, with my own hand. After the semi-fabulous part of the book comes the- history of the passage of the Indians to these parts Ot America. they came from the east --not from the south-eact but from the north-east. I speak only of tribes of Quiche-Cakehi- quel and Zutohil, &c. for long before them these countries were peopled and civilized. They came from the northeast certainly passed through the United States, and as they say themselves, they crossed the sea in darkness, mist, cold and snow. 1 suppose they must have come from Denmark and Norway. They came in small numbers, and lost their white blood by their mixtures with the Indians whom they found whether in the United States or these regions, certainly there must have been a Tula in our North European countries. "But what is more convincing of this migration or passage, I find the same result by a comparison of the languages. I cannot speak of the structure of them, but what I have observed is that the fundamental forms and words of the lan guages of these regions (except the Mex ican ) are intimately connected witn the Maya or Trendal, and that all the words that ore neither Mexican nor Mava belong to our languages of Northern Europe. viz: Ji,nglish, baxon, Danish, Norwegian, Swedish, Flemish and German; some even appear to belong to the French and rersian, and altogether they are really very numerous and astounding. It is perfectly plain that the invading tribes adopted the language of the vanquished, who were much more numerous than themselves, and that some words only of their own language remained hence the Quiche, Cakchiquel, Zutohil, &c. JNowl leave your countrymen to make all the suppositions they wish upon these strange coincidences. Who knows but that the mounds aud fortifications found in Western New York, Ohio, Tennessee, Arkansas, &c., were not made by the same people, and by the colony of Northmen who were known to exist in Massachu setts ond disappeared after the tenth century? 'Beside the narrative of the passage of the Quiche, the manuscript gives the es-ablishmentof the Quiche empire, and a sketch of its history to the conquest far different from 1" uentes, although some names are the Bame. Here I end with Ximenes. "Beside the grammar of Ximenes, I have been presented with some others- Quiche, Cakchiquel, Zutohil, Chanabal, Pocomain, &c all manuscripts, and I possess five dictionaries of these languages, also manuscripts more or less complete, beside some other old papers on Guatemala and Vera Paz. I have also come into possession of a manuscript history of Guatemala, in Spanish, which is very good, with large details of the astronomy and religion of these people ; also of a manuscript history of San Salvador: also another of Vera Paz, another of the rebellion of the Tendals, &c. "The Archbishop of Guatemala has presented me with a magnificent copy of the original Tonalamath or calendary of Indians of Quiche as still used in secret by the Indians of Santa Catalina and Ixtahuacan. "But the most precious of my collection at present is one manuscript in the Cakchiquel language, written about three hundred years ago by one of the princes of Solola. The remains of this city exist near the Jake of Atitlan. it was never translated before, but I am now finishing a tnnslation into French and Spanish, it is full of details on the first passage of the Indians to these countries, of their early sufferings by sea and land, of the prodigies performed by their chiefs, of the four Tulas which existed one in the East in darkness, one in the West (probft. blythatof Mexico), one, God knows where, and the last in Xibibay that is to say in hell, says our reverend father Ximenes, bnt I have great reason to De-lieve it was in this very country, about the Vera Paz, Yucatan, or on the river Uzumacintn. 'After this the author of the manu-scrirjt aoes on in the history of his country, of the several tribes of his own blood, of the establishment and foundation of the Quiches, the Cakchiquel, Zutohil, ZokiJ, Rabanal. etc, he arrives at the time of the Conquest. Me saw Alvarado enter the capital Ximeche, now Tecpan, Guatemala. He was but a boy then, but he remembers how frightful were the Spaniards how much all the Indian princes and people were astounded at the sight of these strangers, ne tens oi an tne cruelties of Alvarado; of all the princes and kings that were hanged or burned by his order all things of which Fuentes never spoke. Very, very, interesting is the whole of that manuscript, which contains the most complete details of tho ancient kingdoms of Guatemala, lhe author O II. .L J ..... I says atthet-nd that, seeing the destruc-i tion of their books and annals, and that) every record was going to ruin, he assem-1 NUMBER 106 bled in his old age tho few princes that remained of his own family and of the neighboring countries, and from their books and memory he collected what ho wrote in Spanish letter to be preserved by his sons. After perusing the whole, I have concluded to give it this title in my French translation: Memorial tie leepan Mtlan escrit enangxile Cak-chiquelpar Don Francisco TiazGebuta Quele." Tecpan, Atitlan, is anothername for Solola, and Francisco Tiaz (Diaz) is the Spanish name of Gebuta Qiele, who saw the entrance of Alvarado into Tximecher. "I was appointed in May last cure ot Rabinal by the most reverend archbishop, who expressly did so in order lo favor my studies in the laniruafreg and traditions of these countries. My parish extends very fur in the Vera Paz, peopled mostly by a set of very quiet Indians, entirely the reverse of the warriors of old. I begin to talk with them and this serves very much my purpose. Very few understand Spanish. "There is no physician hem and some six weeks ago I gave to one of them a remedy that cured him of a pretty severe illness. From gratitude he came afterward to me and told me that ho was the lineal descendant of the kings of Tzak Pokoma. That by the order of his fathers he had learned by memory of one of bayles or dramatic dances in which he recited one of the principal parts ia the time that they still danced and played it. Knowing that I had vainly asked for that bayle from the other Indians, he pro posed to mo that I should write it out under his dictation. I accepted in spite of the difficulty, for it was to bo recited in the Quiche dialect of Eahinal, but im- probus labor omnia vincit. After twelve days of the most arduous dictation that I ever did even when I was at school, I got thew holeol the bayle. With the aid of my grammar and dictionary I corrected the orthography and now I can boast of pos- sessingtlie only original American drama in the world, it is a historical drama in which is introduced their heroes and princes, ana is lull of interesting details of their early history. The scene is laid in the city of Tzak Pokoma. The great riiins of this city lay within a few miles of here. In dramatic effect, scenes &c. this will compare favorably with the Ger man dramas of the middle ages. Yours, most truly, Abbe Brasseur Bourrotjro." . . . t BARKERl. O. T. BXEVZS, J . BARRERE & REEVES, Attorneys 45 t Xjavct. ASP General Land & Collecting agents for tbe West, BL0OMINOTON, ILLINOIS. Oolloctlons made and taxes paid in every county In tbe Stat. One of the above firm will visit Iowa and Minnesota aeml-annunlly, and oftenex tf neees.ary. for th Lurpose of making coUec tlona, entering laud ana locating and Warrants. Immedlat attention given to S.U business entrusted to our car. Refer to Ho. B. Galloway, and Ohio State Journal Co., Columbua, O. Hon. J. R. Hufcbell, Delaware, O. Hon. C. N. Olds, Circlevlll, O. Hon. Nelson Barrere, Hillsboro', O. no23-iadw JIBS. HOPPEBTOJi, UWcfCew-York, Successor to Mrs. Ssaplet, and oocupylng Store with Sdaplet & IIaxl, High street, Colutnbus, bet. Town and Rich, HAS NOW OPENED AN ELEGANT A3 HORTHENT OF Fall and Winter Millinery, Consisting of a most complete stock of Elegant Cape, Head Dresses, Feathers and Flowars, Ribbons and Laoes, Silks and Satins. Moss, hugenia. Royal, Unevi and Lion's Velvets: also, a new and elegant ai tide of Frieze Plush. Bonnets, of every variety, always on hand, and all or-ders promptly attended to with neatness aud eleganoe, at the very lowest cash prices. rJleaclitng and frosting, stamped Muslins rorr-moroi-1ery. Mrs. norrnT.TOH, Sole Agent for MRS. M. L. MURRAY'S Hair Preservative and Restorative. It will oause Hair to grow on a bald head, and turn grey hair to ltsoritflnal eolor, and effectually prevent the hair trom falling) fl i r turning grey, and ny its tnvigoiatiuu influence produce a new and luxuriant growth of hair. e SAWS! SAWS! SAWS ! TO MILL OWNERS, CARPENTERS, CABINET MAXCUS, BUILDERS, AND ALL WHO CBB RAWS '. CONSTANTLY ON HAND OF MY OWN manufacture, a full assortment of Mill Mulay, Cross cut, Circular, and all descriptions of SAWS. All nom warranted. sTPartlcu!ar attention given to repairing. Saws rotoothed, straitened, hammered, filed, and set at short notloe. JAI1E3 OHLEN, jel6-dly 8. W. corner Long and High its. SHERIFF'S SALE. James McQeary! vs. Franklin County Common Pleas. N. F. Banister. I BY VIRTUE OF A WRIT OF VENDITIONI exponas, to me directed from the above Court, I will offur tor sale at the door of the Court Hons lu the city ot Columbus, on the 8th day of December A. D. 1855, between the hours of 10 o'olock a. iu., and 4 o'clock p. m., the following property, to wit: Lot No. 3, In Osborne's addition to th town of Rejnoldsburch, Frank-liu county, Ohiu. Appvuised at liftydoilars, $&0 vo.) WM. L. MINF.it, Sierilf. B.y K. R. Jou-vaiuS, Deputy. Nov. fl, ISSS-ltdftAww SHERIFF'S SALE. rrajnui'l GuUovsy may ) V Frai ler,t al.J nkllo Co. Common Pleas. Charles G. Deshler. 1)Y VIRTUE OF AN ORDER OF SALE TO M me, directed from the Cnurt of Common Pleas ot Franklin County, Ohio, at the October term, A. D. lsJu 1 will oiler for .ale at the door of the Couit House, in lis city of Columbus, on th,! 15th DAY OK DECEMBER, A. D. IW, between the hours of 10 o'clock, A. M. and 4 o'clock, P. M., the Allowing real estate, to wit: In lot In tbe city of Columbus, Ohio, No. tbirtv-kix. (8H) Appraised at Sl.UOti WM. L. MINER, Sherilf. Ni.y. 12, 18f,6.' By R. It. Joh.vstos, Deputy. dltw4t MASTER COMMISSIONER'S SALE. Joshua Baldwin ) yg. V Hale by order of Court Iiaac D. Pounds. J TN OBEDIENOii TO THE C01I11AND OK X an order made by the Court of Common Pleas of Fiankliu county, and 'to me dirrcted, I will offer for tale at tbe door of the Court House in the city of Columbus, ou Ibn Kth day of December, A. I). WSo, batween the hours of lu o'clock . m., and 4 o'clock p. m., the following piopcrtv, to wit: The south half of lu-lot thre hundred and sixty-three, (S. oi Hfi) In the city of Coluinbur, aloreiiHid; alno, lots Now. lour and lire In Armstrong's subdivision of in lot No. 164, in the olty of Columbus, afore iaid. S-'outh half of iu-lot S(jl appraised at ,',00U, lots four and five of tn lot 8M appraised at MK). WM. L- MINER, Sheriff. By R. K- Jofl:T.W, Deputy Nov. 10, 18ia-lt'iA4vrr SHERIFF'S SALE. Wm. O. lshler ) vs. vCourt of Com. Pleas, Iranklln co. P. L. Hewlett, Hal. j BY VIRTUE OF A VI FA. TO ME Directed from the above Court, I will ofT-r for sslo at lhe door of the Curt llouso iu the city of Columbus, Ot the Hih day vt Ben'mltr,Jl. V. 186J, Botwecn tbe hju: of i f o'clock 1. nv, and 4 o'clock p m , thu foilowloj real otat, to wit: Lots Nos. 86, 61 and 87, lu tn townol Lock bourne, r rank. in oounty. aud rWl, "I ULW. wiuw, .Jljll.u.11 in vv, .i S0i.6e; No. S7,at 63.sia. By Hol'j. Ttov. 44, iso6 ltdtdww |
Format | newspapers |
LCCN | sn84024216 |
Reel Number | 10000000017 |
File Name | 0531 |