Daily Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1848), 1860-12-18 page 1 |
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1 - 'f ' ... a 1 . s v ' - . VOLUME XXIV. COLUMBUS. OHIO. TUESDAY MORNING, - DECEMBER 18. I860. NUMBER 151;:'; E'.ji 1 1 i 1 1 i imi.j nil i i i i -k. v, 1 1 v i iti , ! f ii i ii ii nui ii nr nil i i i ill hi 1 ssJSl H III v ' HUM y,n III elf WWW S a af WMWMMWMByMaMMMWMMMWMMMMOMMM INSURANCE. JOHN H. WHEELER, AGGIT FOR HOME, COWTI.IK JTTAI., MXHtTTAN, 8oun'fT,nd Iavixo Fiee Ids. Go's Now York; MB HUH ANT'S anil CITY FIRE of Hart-ord; NEW YOUKaodOOXSKOTICCT MUTUAL LIFE. ' Office, l High t-,Waves Block. mayl'Mlily HOME AND FOIIE1UW PATKSTB. TI). undersigned for many years engag-d in th. Patent Offlta preparing testimony In ennwaiad cam, baa r-igned to eontiaua his profession of aeenricg patents, American and Enroprai. PaloiKa obtained on new and unjustly rejected applications f ir contingent fees to ba paid when tha pat-nta are arranted, " desired. Exam, nations of new Inventions from rouuh pencil sketches, to determine their patentability, made prevtons to applying for patents, for Ova dollar. 8. W. WOOD.Oorn. wall. Orange Co., N. T. o" ? COLUMBUS BUSINESS DIRECTORY ReNtaurantR. J. M. ZIG1.ER, Ice Cream Saloon. Nell's New Building, corner Gay and Hlirh itreeta, Columbus, Ohio. Aleo Dealer in Confection!, Choice Liquors, and a variety of Fancy Notions and Toya. myl-dly a A rm nitvlTnR. tilted and Published by Sullivan D. Harrii, at On,"7'1" 0 h to. for One Dollar per year. JlUcellap?!!: n-j.,... n-.'-Io'ue, 0., Agent for Chlckering A Son,. pSiVJorbS, Mason tfaiolln'. Melodeona, and oaler In Sheet Music and musical merchandise. aniTMly-E,A.B. AttUI'IlCJ'N. S. B. HANNUM, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Notary Public and Commissioner of Deeds, Depositions, &o., for various States. Devotee special attention to making Collections, Convey- ancing and taking Depositions. Office, No. a Johnson Buliillng. High Street, Columhus, 0. Helen, by permission, to John 1. Martin, Kaq., Banker, Lancaster, Ohio; Chaunccy N. Olili, Kaq., C uumbue, 0; Messrs. Ciiporly, Hoover A Co.. City of New Vork i Henry 0. Noble, Eaq.. Columbus, O.J Messrs. Haines, Todd Ly t- tle, Cincinnati, 0. seplld F. A.. B. 8IJ1KIVS, Attorney at Law and Notary Public. Office AmlKte Building, Opposite State lluus. t'quare, Columbus, Ohio. maria-'OU-dly . " JAMK9) g. AUSTIN, Attorney at Law and Notary Public, Oolumbns, Ohio OtHoe, Room No. 7 in PostOlBce Billl'llng, on Statestreet Special attention given to fureigncollecttona. ileclilly wmTdkii Nis6irevrHr ore 'arrIhotok, Attorneys and Counsellors at Law, Uolunibus, O. OHlc. Noa. 1 and 1 Odeon Bnlbling. Special attention gi-cn to the Law of Patenta and Inmirance. apr'tl(lly.rA Itarhei-N. W.M. SCOTT BARBER, Would notify his numerous frienda and customers that he haa returned, and will hereafter be found at his old atand nnder Bartllt 4 Smith's Bank, Uifch street. He aollclts a return ol hia old cmtomcrs. oct26 Clothing. J.. GOODMAN V SON, Dealers in Ready and Uustom-m.uie Clothing, Oont's rnr-niahlng Qoods, Hats, Caps, Trunks, Valises, Ac, Ac. No. 1 South tih St., ooruor of Broad. myi.'tiO-dly l aDAK STIWART. . W. ST1MU. STEWART . STinSON, Merchant Tailors, No. M8 High Street, oppoelteOooilale Houne, Oolumbns. Ohio, deal In best grade of Cloths, Caaaimeres, and Vestlngs. Employ none but good workmen; insure good flta; do nofdiaappoint in time; charge fair prices, and require prompt pay. aprlVriQ.air2!Vrtly Grocers. K. A. SELLS, Wholesale and Retail Dealer in nr6oerlea and Produce Southeast corner of Town and Fourth ots., Columbus, O. Particular attention pfaid to Couslgnmenta of. and orders for, Produce. myfl'BOdy-EAB Hanks. BARTL1T SMITH, bankers and denlers In Exchange, Coin, and uncurrett money. Collections made on all principal eiUes in the United States. Ambos Bonding, No. 71 South High atreet. nn.vMly'Bn.B.t.g tVatcheN, Jew?lry. R. t. DUNBAR, Watch Maker and Engraver, haa for sale Watches, Jewelry, Spectacles, Thormomoters, etc. Agent, also, for Columbus and Franklin County Bible Society. No. 135 High atreet, one door south of Qoodiila House. apr2'Vfl-dly -xah Hardware. GEO. GERE ex. CO., Gxo.Okhi. J.M. McOcnx. E.T. MiTiiusr. M.H. Piack-No. 8 U wynne Block, sign of the Braae hacked 9aw, Wholesale and Retail Dealers In all descriptions of Hardware, Cutlery, HoiiaehufMIng and Housekeeping floods, Farming and Mechanical Tools, Wood and VS illow Ware. Cot-dage Twine. Paints. Oils, Varnlh". JanlS'llO-dly nook Binding:. M. C. I.ILI.KY, Boot-Binder, and Blank Bouk Manufacturer, High 8treet, between Broad and Gay Streets, Columbus, 0. mavB'BO-dly- E. A B. Di CJootls. PERSON, STONE fc CO., Wholesale and R-tnil Dealers In Foreign and Domestic Dry Ootids, No. 1 Gwvnne Block, corner nf Third and Town street. Oolumbns. O. apr22'iHl.rA. Hoots antl Shoes. M AULDEN t CO., Oacoessortn W.L.Morcer, Dealer In Ladies', Men's, Misses' and Ohlldren's Boots, Shoes, and Gaiters. No-. 1 Town Ht., Columbus. apr21,'0-dly-lA PHOTOGRAPHS. M. Witt, four doom north or the American notel.over Rudlslll's Hat Store, makes life sited Photographs, colored In Oil and Pastell, as well as lMguerrtcypea,Am brotvpes, and all kinds of Sun Paintings. my2,'60-dly-iiB W. T. & S. D. DAY & CO., MANUFACTURERS OF AND DEALERS IN PRINTING PRESSES, (DOTH HAND AND POW'ft,) . And all kinds of Printing: Nate-rials.Ho. 173, 175, and 177 West Second St., ciifcitrirA ti. Jan2S-dly CHARLES SCOTT, BOOT So SHOE 3VC AKER. Itrimd Street, KrKren High and fV at m ayt'fifld 1 y-r. A n AMERICAN BANK NOTE C0 (South-east Corner Main and Fourth Streets) CINCINNATI, OHIO. ENORAVEDIN A ST V LB ''OR RESPONDING IN EX cellence to that of Bank Notes, Railroad and County Bonds, Hills of Exchange, Checks Drufts, Certificates of 8uck and Deposit, Seats, Carda, Ac.,, Ac. The above offlce is uuder the supervision of aept.!7-dly iEO. T. JONES. Howe's Family and irlanufactur-ln Sewlnar Machines. GEORGE B. SLOAT'S NEW ELLIPTIC Lock 8tich Sewing Machine. Bradtbaw A Johnson's Improved Shnttle Machines. All the above fnl clou Sewing Machines at the STATE CENTRAL AGENCY, No. 117 High atreet, Carpenter A Weaver's Block. Blake A Johnston's HEMMING, FELLING, TUCKINO and SEWING OUAGK for all kinds nf Sewing Machines. The meet perfect and complete addition to the Sewing Ma-ehiueeverinvooted. No Machiuelsoompl;tewithontone. It can be applied to any Sewing Machine. Mas. W. r. EMMET, Agent. Gaiter Fitting and all kinds of Sewing done to crder. Spool Cotton. Twist and Needles for Sewing Machine. mart-'OOnolSdlT MISSOURI LAND!! Rfirt llflfl ACRES FOR, SALE AT OiU.UUU prices ranging from I2yC toMt per Acre. In any qnantltiea required. TAXES PAID, and PAT NTS procured for purchaser! of Land nnder the Gradual iion Act. PLATS FURNISHED GRATIS by enclosing a postage stamp. Fur further information Apply to WILSON, RAWLINGS 4fc CO. U. S. and General Land Agent; 65 CBESTNUT ST., BETWEEN 3D AMD 4.TH, ST. LOUIS MISSOURI. N. B. LAND WARRANTS bought, sold and located. oct 3m. " OTYD HICKORY. Parton'e Life ot General Jaskion, JTJT FROM THE PRESS. S VOLTMES. S3 ONLY THIS WORK IS ADMIRABLY GOTTEN op, and Is eewui le sell. His reminiscences of Sonth Carolina will be read with lively Interest about now. Old Hickory waa aopposed by soma people to fro In for tha Paioa. and was willing to admit emp, free of duty. Everybody must read it. KANDALL A ASTON. dec7-d2w. H. 3D3XaLHIIVtTJS, Central Machine Carpeutef.'Shop, AMD PLANING, SAWING AND General House Furnishing Establishment. " ' MANUFACTURER OF DOORS, SASH, BLINDS, &C.&C. ITAVINQ REMOVED FROM HIS OLD iA establishment, at Conrstockville, west of the Canal, and having built a new shop of large dimensions on Wal-tint street, between Bleb and Town atreets, one equate east ol the Market Houae, aud fitted it up wltb atw machinery capable of turning ont the bo r'a!lty of work on the shortest notice ; he wouU respectfully solicit the PATTtOJTAOa OF MIS OLD CUSTOMERS Ana Others, ' WHO WANT WORK DOXE WITH NEATNESS AND DISPATCH, To Give Him a Call! All orders for it 0U8E WORK OF. ANY KIND promptly attended to and Especially that of House Hull dlnff oct27dly " niCIIAIlDSON'4 IRISH ITJNTEJIkTQ , n DAMASKS DIAPERS. &C. OONaUMKUS OIT KICIIA H DSO.N'S LINENS, and those deairons of obtaining the GENUINE GOODS, should see that the articles they purchase are sealed with the Tull name of the Arm, J. N. ItlurjAUDSON, SONS A OWDEN, as a guarantee of the soundness and durability of the Ooeds. This caution Is rendered essentially necessary, as large quantities of inferior and defective Linens are prepared, seaaon after season, and aualeil with the name of RICH-Altl)."0N. by Irish Houses, who regardless of the injury thus indicted alike en the American consumer and the manufacturers of the genuine Goods, will not readily abandon a business so profitable, while purchasers can be mposed on wltb goods of a worthless charnctoK J. DL'LLOCKK A J. B. LOCKE, pt7-dly Agents, .14 Reade Street, New Tork. X3o,lxnoxVl JSlx.lxti3. The choicest asuoriment yet. exhibited. tO&'A fresh invoice jutt opewed in all Colort.'fjjH PETEB BAIN, mayll-nov21 No. 9t Soufn High St. HOLTON HOUSE, NEWARK. 0. J. L. IIolton .... Proprietor hoc8 d3ru E-TABLKTrED T31HTBES rBAIt. THOMAS ANDREWS & CO., Importers& Manufaoturers Nos. 13G & 138 CEDAR STREET, "Ezcehior Sleam MUU," Near Writ Street, NEW TORK. CHEMI'JAL WORKS, 48 to 68 IIokoan St., Jersey City. Bl Osrb. Soda, Imported in 112 lb. Kegs, or Packed as ordered, in Papers or Boxes. Cream Tartar, host, perfectly pure, In Papers, Boxti or Brls., or In Crystals. "Paragon," "Dietetic,"' "Excelsior," Donhle Refined, and Soda Sulnrntu, In all Styles. "Excelsior" Yeaat Powder,' best in use, In 1 lb. 8 ex., 6 ox., and 4 ox. ('una, in Boxos or Brls. Newcastle Sal Soda, in Caaks or Kegs, or by the Ton, in Store, or to Arrive. Soda Aah, Liverpool and other Brands, different Quail-tlea and Teats, loll in any quantity. Caustic Soxla, Prepared Pot Ash, and American Banned Soda Aah, for Glasa Mnkera. Soap Powder for Waahiug, Concentrated Lie, Bleaching Powders, Salt Petre. Indigo; Caraccas, Madraa, Menu's, and other Grades, neatly put up in Boxes or Cases. "Warranted," "Superior," and "First Quality" Cream Tartar, as ordered. We Bell to the Beat TradeAll Goods Warranted. nov3.1-d,trl-wtwenle-tw ' 8AWFOHD'8 LIVER IN VIGOR ATO R NEVER DEBILITATES. T IS COMPOUNDED ENTIUKLY FROM (funis, nna tuts become an established fact, a Stamlurd wenictue, known and ap proved by all that have to with confidence In all used it, and isuow resorted tile diseases for which it is It lias curod thousands who bar) given up all hope unsolicited certificates in The dose must be adapted recot., mended. within the last two years nf relief, as tho numerous my posaeriaion show. to the tenienimont ol the used iu such quantities as mumiitial taaing it, and to act geutlv on the Bow- Ids. Let the dictates of your Judgment guide yon In the use ol the LI VKH IS Vlth LIVER CO !H I' I. MKTS, UrsPKHSIA, CIIUONK. tiKAivu, and It will cure RILT.IOU8 ATTACKS, DIAHHHOEA, BI'MMEH teuv, VHopsr, fan it OOSTI VEKESS,CIIOL 10, MOllttCS.CtlOLERA IS-L ENCE, J A V N1IC E, Eft, and niny be used juc K FAMILY MEUI-HEADACHE, (a thou-tniHMtea, if tun er three Tea-mencement of attack. HIVIXG their testimony COMPLAISTS, DYSEX-l STOMACH, UAllITVAli VIWLEKA, CHOLERA, EA N T U if , FLA TVA FEMALE WEAKNESS-! eeaafully as an 0UD1SA-VISE. It will cure hC'K sands can testify) in fioenty pnonfth ire taint at cont- ALl, I1U USE IT AI!E In Its favor. Jlff.T WATER IK THE MOUTH WITH THE TXV10-ORATOR. AND SWALLOW HOT II TOGETHER. Price One Dollar per Bottle. AI.WI SANFOKD'S FAMILY BLOOD PURIFYING PILLS. COMPOl'DSED FKOM PPRE VEGETABLE EXTRACTS, AND PVTPPIN GLASS CASES, AIR TIGHT, AND WILL KEEP IN The FA MIL Y CA TUA RTIC PILL Is a iren tie bnt active Cathartic, used in hie practice more The constantly incroas-who have long uaed the tion which all express in duced me to place them The Profession well thartics act on different The FAMILY CA-wlth due reference to this compounded from a vrie-Extracts, which act alike mentary caual, and are cases where a Cathartic is RANGEMENTS of the NESS, PAINS IN THE C08TIVESKSS, PAIN THE WHOLE BODY, frequently, if neglected, ver, LOSS OF APPE-8ENSATI0N OF COLD RESTLES8NESS, HEAD. THE HEAD, all IN-EASES, WORMS in KMKUMATISM, a great and manydiaeaaeatowhlch which the proprietor has man twenty yeara. ing demand from those PILLS, and the satlafnc-regard to their use, haa in-within the reach of nil. know that different Car-p irtions of the bowels. THAKTIO PILL haa, well established fact, been ty of the purest Vegetable on every part of the all-GOOD and SAFE in all needed, enrh as DK-tTOMACH, SkEEPI-B A C K AND LOINS, AND SORENESS OVER from sudden cold, which end in a long course of Fe-TITE, A CREEPING OVER THE BODY, ACHE, or WEIGHT IN FLAMMATOBY DIB-CHILDREN or ADULTS, PURIFlKRofthe BLOOD flesh Is heir, ton nnmemus tisement. DOSE, 1 to 8. to mention in tufa adver- PRICE 3 DIMES THE LIVER INVIOORATOR AND FAMILY CA. THA RTIC PILLS are retailed by Druggists generally, and sold wholesale bv the Trade In all the large towns. 8. T. W. SANI ORD, M. D, Manufacturer and Proprietor, SI08 Broadway, New York. Sold In Columbus bv Roberts A Samuel, John Denig, and ft. M. Denig A Son's. oct25'ial-dlvwlj latp SAFES. FOR THE CHEAPEST, BEST ANT MOST DURABLE FIRE & BURGLAR PROOFSAFES Call at tho NEW SAFE FACTORY, S. W. Cor. Elm and Front streets, CINCINNATI, OHIO. rrHIS FIRM IS COMPOSED OF LEADING PRAO-X cal Mechanics, from the honse of Urban, Dndds A Co. We challenge the world to prodnce a safe equal tl ours for BEAUTY, STRENGTH and SECURITY. mh:il-dawly DtEBOLD. BAHMANN A CO LAND IN MISSOURI! f7Flf nnn acres for sale in I J 1 , U W l large or smalt tracts at VJ'c to 60c per acre. Choice fanning lands at ASc per acre, all expenses included. Bend for Map and particulars, inclosing stamp, to the Western Land Agency Olflce, (established 1866) of S. E. BILBROUGII, & CO., North-Weit corner of Third and Chesnut Streets, St. Louie, Missouri. Patents secured and Taxes paid for noo-residents. Land warrants located, Ac. una to CHAS. KBEMLK. Eq . County Recorder, St. Lonis county, or CHAS. EVERTS, Esq., Cashier of Mechanic's Bank, St. Lonis, Missouri. eu(2-di.wly BOOKS & STATIONERY. NEW OniO PUBLISHING HOUSE, J. II. RILEY &T. C. BOWLES Columbus, Ohio, NOW PUBLISH The Ohio Standard School Series! . . The Forest, Richest, best and Cheapest. SPELLING AND ANALYSIS. , IiT Salem Town. L.L. D. Town'sSpelleraod Dofiner; town's New Analysis READING. Br S. G. GoonmicH. L.L. D., (Peter Parley.) ((drich' Kew Ut Rvtvler. GuotJrich't New 4th Header. OtKMlrfch'i New 2d Reader. Ooodt (ch'i New Sth Header. Uoodrkh'a New 3.1 Kinder. OiKidricli'i New 6th Header. tl They are a decided improvement an all that I have teem. 11 Bn. J. W. Scott, If D,. katof Miami Unieirtity, Ohio. MATHEMATICS. By Benjamin Greknlkaf. A. M. For DvUrict School. . Ownleafi New Primer Arithmetic. Greanle&Te Iutollectual Arithmetic. OrceDlcafi Cudiidou School Arlttnnttlc. For High tichnohand Acndtmie. Ortwnlui.ru National Arithmetic,1 Green)eafs Tieatlseon Algebra. Green If afi Kleruentfl of Geometry. "Standard and Imperishable work of their kind; tha richest and mont otimpreheneive. an aurtei, thtt have appeared in tho current niuuteentU century ."Prof. Perry of Dartmouth College. GEOGRAPHY. By S. S. Cornell. CornirFlntt Step In Geography, Fr-ttHy Tllufltratcd. rornell'a Primary Geornphy. Beautifully Illustrated. Goruoll's lnturiniMliattteuKraphyt with New Mapx. Cornel T OranimJir-Schofd tieoirrapliy, I vol. quarto. Cornells Ilifih School Geography and A tint. "Much aupfrlor to any other GeoRruphiet with which 1 am aciualnted." Hon Anton Smyth, Superintendent Public liutruclion, Ohio. ENGLISIIGRAMMAR. By D. B. Tower. A. M.t andB. F. Tweed, A. M. Tower and Tweed's Klements of Grammar. Tower an J Tweed's (Amnion 8cho.l Gntnimar. Tower and Tweed Grammar of Gomp'Hiition. Tower,' Common School Grammar will till a position absolutely demands by the Kdncatiinnl wanti of the country." S. C, VrummbaHght Dayton High School. COPY BOOKS & B00K-KEEPING. Payton, Pnnton and ScrilmeM'd Com pie to Series. lUnafurd and Paysnn' Book-Keeplug, Double and Single Entry. Terms of introduction the most favorable. Teachers and School officers are requested to communicate with us. Single specimen copies furnished at one-half the usual rates. J. ii. in ley & t. c. izonxra., Publishers. Columbus. Ohio. sept -d 6m oiling at Cost PPEARS TO BE VF.UV FASHIONA' 2. I1KK, it we are to Juiliro bv the niacarda in the iho wlndovm. Now we do not propone to noil our Koodtiat Post, out we ao propose to ami many gooaa ut lon priceithan they coHt some others in the trade. JanlSdiy 0K0. ft til. Hi St C0! H. Mooro( Carriage 9Ianufnoturcr 'Ifiraer Third and Hirh tre-et, RETURNS HIS THANKS FO II PAST favors, and solicits a .ontimmncii of the same. Persons wishing to purchaso are rei nested to call and exam ine my stock and prices. Particular attention Riven to repairing. The attention of customers i invited to my Patent Spring handy-Wagons and Unjxgfes. All work warranted. II. MOORES. apr21-dly. Oolumbu), Ohio. S K WI NG MAC II I N S . The Cheapeat aud Heat, and Le(fnlly An tlinrized to be sold under the patents nf Kiltas Howe, Jr., Grover A Raker S. SI. Co.. and Wheeler Si, Wilson1! Manufacturing Co. rpHE V1RST PREMIUM WAS A WAR JED TO THIS 1 Machine over all others mHbing tba double lock stitch, at the Chicago Mechituics' Institute Fair, held at St, Lmii. I860, and at hundreds of other county fnirs It will do ai much and aa good sewing as tue $V2i ma-hlnes.For description, samples of sewing and recommendations, send three cent stamps to W. S. LUNT, Fremont, Ohio, dc.)-d1m (ienei-al A (tent fir Ohio. PH. HHOKIMNUR, X. BROWN Slioortingcr 5 Brown, MunufrtcturtTh and Pealirn In all kin-in of CABINET FURNITURE, Spring Beds, Chairs, Mattratites. Luokiiig Olaeees,&c. 104 South High Street, Cotumbun, Ohio. JtW Undertaking promptly attended to. mj4-dly-Ea 1860. 1860. 1860. FALL AND WINTER STYLES. MRS. IIOPPRRTON II AS OPEXKI) IIF.R FALL AND WINTER STOCK of FKENCH MIL. MNKRV. BONNKTS, KllinoNS, tc. 4c, No. ITS South Bligli Street. OOLUMDUS, OHIO. Mer frfeuffs are Invited ti call and pnrchnao. Mrs. II. lias some of thoae new style Star Frames which she will dispose nf liy tlie quantity to milliners aplM-dtjaiil'flln LITIIOR4IIIIiVG EXGHAVINQ. Portraits, Lm Jaoapns, 8how Cards, Maps, Drafts, Notes Certiorates of Stork, Honda, Iietterand Bill Heads, nild-nira, o. MlnDLF.TdN, STRHIIKIDOK CO., U'.l Wnlnut Street, (Odd Fellow's DuHcllnu.) sep'2d0m Cinciiiliatl, 0. HEN aYALUUb 5 ' BEUSTKAD FACTORY, NO. 100 PEARL Street, Cincinnati. Ohio. Larue aaaortmrnt of Bed-sleds on hand ; alao Mahogany Ui.ards ai d I'lnnk ; alsc Mahogany Illack Wa'"ut and Rosewood Veneers, all for ale at rerjr low rates. i2dwly E. A. B. A.S A HElVTErDI-A-L AGENT THIS DELICIOUS T0NI0 STIMULANT, E8PECIA1.1.Y nESIUNEO FOR THE nss ol the Jircfiral Profeteiox and the Familji, having superseded the so-oalled "Oins," "Aromatic," "Cordial," "Medirated," "Schnapps," cto , Is now eudorard liy all of the prominent phyairians. chemiats and connoisaeurs, as posaesalnic all of those itrinic medicinal qualities (tonic and diuretic) which belongs to an old and pure Gin. Put up in quart bottles and sold y all drugulata, grocers, .to. A. M. B1NIN 1KR 4 CO., (EitablUhed in 17"H.) 8ole Proprietors, N. 19 Broad street. New York. For sale by all the principal Druggists and Grocers In Columbus. - Our Ion i experience and familiarity with the requirements of Druggists, and our superior bttatneea facilities, enable us to turnUh them with choice Liquor for medici- nal and family uas. oct2vdwlTeodeow Onioi or the Coi.cmfus A Xf.m ft. R. Co. ) Columbus, December 12, li. ) rpHB STOCKHOLDERS OF THE CO-1 lumhns and Xenla Rail Road Company ar. hereby notified that the Annual Meeting for the election of Directors to nerve the enaulng year, and for other purposes, will he held at the office of the Company In Columbus, on Tueadav. the 1st Hny of January, lgtil, between the hours jof 111 o'clock A.M. and 3 P. M. dec!2-l3w CYRUS F '.Y, Secretary. MASOMC CALEKDAK. STATED MEETINGS. COLUMBUS L0D0K, No.:W Second and Fourth Tue.. dkya. W. B. Far, Sec'y. amasa jokm, w. ai. MAGNOLIA LODQK, No. JO First and third Tuesdays. J. H. McColm, Seo'y. Tnos. 8pabeow, W. M. OHIO CHAPTER, No. 13 2d Saturday in each mo. B. A. Emret, Sec'y. J. F. Pari, H. P. COLUMBUS COUNCIL, No. 8 First Friday in each month. E. WasT. Sec'y. A. B. Robinson, T. I. O. M. MT. VERNON ENCAMPMENT, No. 1 I.aat Thursday each mo. A. B. Roninaon, Ree. B. F. Marti 0.0. AHNHOTH STEAM POWER B1I . LIARD TABLE Manufaciery, J. M. Binirawici a R.a.. ProDrietora. Factory uu V. E. oomn'of Elm and Canal Streets. Office and Warehouse, No. 8 Sixth Street, atween Main and Walnut, Cincinnati, Ohio. P. S. GM Bnuuteick't Improved Patent Cofftc-iaoioa CWsai'm. eplToO-dSm (mm MUSIC. ETC Marshall, James & Travcr's PREMIUM PIANOS. rT'IIESE PIANOS ARE UNSURPASSED, I combining RtOIINFSJ and SWEETNESS; BRILLIANCY and VOLUMB of TONE ELEGANCE and BtAUTTof STYLE i DURABILITY of MECHANISM, wil h DEI. It ACT OF TOUCH and promptDMaof ACTION. This -Pauot Repeating Oran I Action" Is pronounced by tb.be.tjodre.to be the IMPROVEMENT OF THE AGE in Piano Fort, making. All Piano icerroa ed tc fire perfect aejieeition or the moaey refunded. AddreM E. L. TR AVER, Agent, 6TEINWAY Se SOIST'S 1ST PRIZE GOLD MEDAL PIANOS. Ill AVE NOW THE AGENCY OF THEIR CELEBRATKD r I A. TJ" o s . THEY P0.SEiS REMARKABLE CLEARNESS, SWEETNESS, BRILLIANCY AND VOLUME OF TONE, AND ALL OTHER QUALITIES DESIRABLE IS A FIRST CLASS INSTRUMENT. All Piano, warranted or three years. Written guarantee given to that effect. Addras. E. Ii. TBAVEK. Ag't, aug7-dlywly-lteam CoLunao.,0. KNABE'S GOLD MEDAL PIANOS THE BEST AND HOST POPULAR PI-1 AN 08 made In this country are from tha xteosiva and oeh biated manufactory of )Vm. Knabe & Co., of Baltimore. They are th. only Piano Forte, that dan issue a challenge to th. world for Volume, eTen8i and brilliancy of tone, elasticity of touch aud durability: To b. bad only of SELTZER A WEBSTER,-ug7-apr2l-novl8-dlyls Sole Agents. CHICKERING PIANOS. All Styles and Prices. Tbny hara iwfvd 40 Prizo 3Vgc3.i1j3 And hay madn and sold over 23.O0O INSTRUMENTS. Thee. Instruments uavo all th. Ileal Improvements of (be Age, And are, beyond comparison, tba Finest Pianos in the "World. Particular attention Is requested to SEVERAL NEW STYLES. J. 0. WOODS, Bole Agent for Central Ohio, dec2!'S9 Buckeye Block, Broad Street, Columbus. FANCY DRESS SILKS AT A C3-ro.t Iloduotion. ' Our immense stock now being offered at unusually low prices. PETER BA.T1T, mayllnoT2l No. 21, Sonth Illih St COinitHCIAL COLLEGE. COLUMBUS, OHIO, OyVniPiEJNJTEIa. II-A.TsXj. THE COURSE OF STUDY embraces Single and Don-bte hntry Book Keepinic as applied to over fifty different branches of trade, and is the roost practical given In the we.t. Plain and Ornamental Writings Commercial Calculations and Arithmetic, and all the various requlaltes to a complete bnsinoaa education, Trans. Tuition, S40. Board from 82.WI to O.UO per week. Buoks and Stationery, &5 to 87. Total cost about 178. NO VACATION the year round. Regular Students review at pleasure. For full particulars, address McCOY 4 CO., teb23-'60d&wlTieplS . Proprietor. CITY FILE WOHKS, WATER ST., COLUMBUS, 0". HENRY CHAMBERS, : : : : t i Proprietor. Manufacturer of all kinds of FIXiES AINTID HASPS. ttoolil e ilea Ke-cut and warranted equal to new for use "Letters of Inquiry, and work from the Conntry, will meot with promptatteutlon. myA-dawly-KA IDR. J BOVEE 3DOI5.S' IMPERIAL WINE B1TTERS1 ARE made from a pure and unadulterated Wino, which ti about dotitda the usual itrength of other Wlues, and if) imported ly only one houne in the United 8tate. Also, from the following Talimbl Itoottf, Herbs. Ac , Yiz: Solomon's Heal, Spikeinard, Com frev, Oamoniile t'lowers, Gentian. Wild Cherry Tree Bark, and Bnyberry. We Challenge the World to produce their Equal! We do not profess to have discovered some Hoots "known only to the Indians of South-America.' and a euro for "all diseases which the flesh is heir to," but we claim to present to the public a truly valuable preparation, which every intelligent Physician in the country will approve of and recommend. As a remedy for Incipient Consumption, Weak Lungs, Indigestion. Dyspepsia, Diseases nf the Nervous System, Paralysis, Piles, Diseases ptxuliar to Females. Debility, mid all ennvn requiring a Tonic, they aro UNSUnPASHBD, r or core Throat, so common muiouk the Cltrgy, they are truly valuable. For the aired and Infirm, or for persons of a weak constitutionfor Ministers of Ibe Gospel, Lawyers, and all public speakers for Book-keepers, Tailora, Seamstresses, Students, Artists, and all persona leading a sedentary life, they will prove truly beneficial. As a Beverage, they are wholesome, Innocent, and deli cious to the taste. They produce all the exhlliarating effects of Hrandy or Wine, without Intoxicating; and are a valuable remedy for persons addicted to excessive use of jlroiiR drink, and wish to refrain from It. They are pure and entirely free from the posions contnlned in the adul terated Wines aud Liquors with which the country i flooded. These Bitters not only CURB, but PREVENT Disease, and should be used by all who live in a country where the water is had, or where Chills and Fevers are prevalent. Being entirely innocent and harmless, they may be given freely tj Children aud Infants with impunity. Physicians, Clergymen, and temperance advocates, aa an act of humanity, should assist in spreading these trulj valuable BITTERS over the land, and therebr essentially aid iu lianiahlng drunkenness and Disease CHARLES WIDD1F1ELD A CO., Proprle'ora, 78 William Street, New York. And by RobbtsA Samuel, Uruggists.Columbus 0 aug 1-deod-lsdy muna 1861. 1861. VOL. 3C. FORM YOUR CLUBS FOR THE OHIO EDUCATIONAL MONTHLY Successor to the JOURNAL OF EDUCATION. PUBLISHED ON VIIE FIRST DAY OF everv month at Columbus, Onto. EVERY TEACHER SHOULD TAKE IT. It Oontaiua Discussions on all soBJEors pestaini.no to Educatioh. EXPERIEXCM or SDfCESSrCL EOSCATOSS OH FSACTICA Teaching. FINE STEEL-PLATE ENGRAVINGS. Ohis and Foriiox Educational Intelligence. It is the Organ or the Stats Teachers' A mociation. EVERY BOARD OF EDUCATION Ought to have it for each member. They are allowed by law to take it, and pay for it out of the contingent fund by the construction of the law as Riven by School Com mis-loners, Hon. li. U. Barney and ilon. Auson Smyth. Why T Becaune it contains The Official Letter and Opinions of the fctat School Comanlaaloner. Explanations of the principles of the Ohio School System Answers to legal questions on the new fedtkOOl It aw Si AMD FRIEND OF EDUCATION Should have It. It contains . Articles on School and Family Government by the best writers. Opinions of the best men In Ohio on Home Instrnetlon. Solutions of Practical Ctneations on Home Studies. PBEMIUMS. ' For J5, Five Cones, and os to the oettes cr or the Cira. For S40, Foett Copies, snd Worcester's or Webster's Unabridged worth S7.oU. For lion, One Hundbed Copies, snd the first 8 volumes New American Cyclopedia worth $24. TERMS On. Dollar, Invariably In advsnoe. Address F. W. HURTT A CO., no, 10 CoUunbns, 0. Mo eftate $ on vital... COO-iTJlvdBXJS : Tuesday Moraine, - Doc. 18. 1880. The London Times on Seeessloa and Disunion What Europe will think of a Severed Union. From ths Times of November 29. Democratic) institutions are dowoq their trial In America. It would be a strange coincidence if the same year should witness the accomplishment of Italy- unit under a Constitutional Monarchy aud the disruption of a far mightier Union uudor the dislocating agency of Federal Republicanism. Washington, like Alexander, was troubled in his last days by misgivings as to the solidity of bii own workmanship. He had found American patriotism strong enough lo brave in a good cause the armies of George III., but would it be proof against the selfishness of prosperity, the meanness of party and personal interests, the fierceness of provincial jealousies? Could the dignified and statesmanlike moderation of the founders of liberty be transmitted to their successors, or would later growth develop those harsher and vulgar qualities which too often appear in the Anglo-Saxon oharacler? We dare not say that the experiment is yet complete. Two generations hare amply sufficed to confirm and transcend the experience of antiquity as to the expansive energies of a democracy, but its capability of cohesion still remains open to question. At a crisis like the present the centrifugal seems more tbsn a counterpoise to the centripetal force, if we are to take tho southerners at their word. The proud traditions of the great western republic, the ties of laws, language, religion and national charaoter, the dictates of a higher and more comprehensive self-interest, and the respect of European powers, are to be cast to the winds wbeu they conflict with local prejudices and the salaries of a class of gentlemen who took their appointments subject to this uncertainty. The enemies of democracy have always asserted that it cannot rise to the conception of a great national idea, and that for want of this vivifying principle it carries in itself the germ of its own decay. The opponents of cotton have even denied the assumed liberality of the commercial spirit, and retorted that, if eircumstances were changed, merchants and manufacturers, would not show less blindness or selfishness than farmers and landlords. It has been reserved for the "fire-eating" slaveowners of South Carolina and Georgia to verify this lauut, and to seek for precedents of party warfare, not in tho history of the United Slates, but in the continental system of Napalean, in the Berlin Decree, and the English Orders in Council. We are far from considering the proceedings adopted in South Carolina and Georgia as irreversible, or taking it for granted that they will be imitated by other cotton-producing Stales, much less by those which, though nominally Southern, have natural affinities, with the North. Even the Governor of Georgia, though lie recommends tho imposition of prohibitory duties on imports from the North, the "repeal of all parts of the penal and civil code protecting the lives, liberties and properties of the citizens of the Slntes where unfriendly laws exist," and other mad and revolutionary measures, shrinks from the responsibility of sending delegates lo a southern convention. The resignation of their offices by the federal employees at Charleston has not yet been accepted at Washington, and the sanguinary rhodomontnde of Governor Brown sounds less formidable to those who hear it than to us who read it. We Englishmen are iparing of our words, and little know how far bluster may be carried before barking passes into biting. The threat of secession is the standard resource of a mob, and the Roman plebt often started for the Mons Racer, and . actually enramped there mote than once, without permanently sepa-ratintrfrom the republic Thtrj, however, the malcontents had the vantng vgroiind which here belongs to the established government. The security of the city and the lives of their patrician oppressors depend upon their co-operation against foreign enemies, whereas here it is the personal safely of the southern planters that is guarantied by the North. That great soeial question, which inspires an interest immeasur ably more Intense and absobing than a 1 the political watchwords of Europe, has a twofold bearing on the present crisis, and it furnishes a motive in favor of secession, it furnishes a mare overpowering motive against it. "It is a singular fact," says one of our American oolempo-raries, "that States in a position secure against injury from the non-execution of the Fugitive Slave law are tho only States making the non-execution of this law a pretext for secession." But are those refractory oitizens prepared to be closeted beyond the reach of call with their own "domestic institution?" It it certain that in such Statetat South Carolina and MittuKippi, inhere the tlavet outnumber the white population, the matter could dispense with the aid of their northern brethren in a servile wart Or, turning to another item in life same calculation of expediency, would South Carolina, whose exports exceed in value her imports in the proportion of seven to one, be the gainer by a system of mercantile exclusion ? Can any tane man believe tlial England and France will consent, at it now suggested, lo ttultify the policy of half a century for the take of an extended cotton trade, and to purohase the favor of Charleston und Miliedgeville by recognir.ing what has been called "the isothermal law, which impels African labor towards the tropics" on the other side of tho Atlantic ? Will the suspension of payments in specie improve the credit of the reousant States, and will an independent administration prove an economical expedient to States who have hitherto borne a very small share of the publio burdens ? These are considerations that may be drowned in the passions of the hour, but which will, we still believe, assert themselves as the movement becomes more regular and orderly. We have confidence, not only In the discretion of Mr. Lincoln, but in that of Mr. Buchanan, who in the remaining months of his Presidentship, may do much to mitigate these desperate and ruinous counsels. Of one thing the Democrats willjbe well assured that the character and prestige of th tev-eril United Stales in the eyet of Europe depend on their federal union. Lord North saw this when he skilfully proposed a compromise which would have had the effect of isolating some from the rest, and Burke resisted his scheme of conoili-tion on that very ground. " Hoc Ithacut veltt ;" the stubborn and mutinous spirit of the South is falling into the tactics of the enemies of Amerioan independence. Let there be no mistake as to English publio opinion on this subject. If we have paid a sincere homage to the rising greatness of America, it has not been to that which the southerners are so anxious to conserve, but to that which they are striving to destroy. All that is noble and venerable in the United States is associated with its federal constitution. It is notthedemonstrations of southern ruffians in Congress, or Hie filibustering agran-disement of the South, from the Mexican annexations downwards, or the Fugitive Mave Law, or the Dred Scott decision, or theKansas-Nebraska act; it is not these, or any other triumph of Democratic insolence during their ascendency of half a century, that has commanded the sympathy and admiration of Europe. We have judged of these things leniently, as the actious of groat men and great nations ought to be judged, because we knew the perilous conditions under which so mighty an enterprise as the civilization of America must of necessity be carried out, and have confidence in the practical good sense of the American character. A certain hectoring tone, arising from the exuberant consciousness of health and strength, is characteristic of adolescenoe, but no such allowance is made for deliberate acts of lawless violence. Even now, so long as the agitation is confined to bullying and insults, to "retaliatory laws'' and indignation meetings in the form of conventions, we shall not despair. High pressure, moral as well as mechanical, is thernlein America, and threat of civil war may be nsed there in a triotly parliamentary sense. But if this rough sparring should by any chance be carried too far, and the threat so often uttered in jest or wantonness should be reneated in earnest and lead to bloodshead. it is some comfort that the aggrtttort wi I not b the stronger parly. Mr. Lincoln viU in that cat command a majority in Congrttt, and will carry with him the support of all those who, hewever tolerant of slavery, will not tamely acquiesce in its becoming the basis of an illegal and hostile confederation. Captain Montgomery. A correspondent of the St. Louis Democrat, who has acoompanied the State militia in their Quixotio expadition in search of Montgomery's band, gives the following description of the now famous leader : I conversed freely with persons of all parties, and although a wide difference of opinion exists as rezards Montgomery's political career, the following will be found to be a true portrait of him, as seen by the anti-slavery men oi me Territory. , Take aotios (hat in Ots following, I describe Montgomery and Jennisonas they have been described lo me by their friends and neighbors. The former is acknowledged to be, intelli gent, aud strictly upright in ail business trans actions. Ue is represented as a man near xorty vears of aire: six feet hitch, standing very ereot; of light frame, weighing between 140 and 150 pounds; he has thick, blaok, curly hair and beard, neither of which be wears very long; his eyes are a very dark naiel, Having a snarp pen etralinir appearance; his nose is prominent partaking slightly of the Roman; although not physically strong, ne is very aouve uuu euer-cetic: he is a man of quick perception, a good indtre of human nature, reading in a moment the character or men witn remaricaoio accuracy; he is cool and considerate nnder the most trying cirouniBtances; he is, however, of a nervous temperament with great activiiy of mind, dis-Datchinir business of every character with promptness, energy and decision; he is a man of fine education, logical and clear in nis speecnes, argumentative and concise in his writings, and is a most polished and entertaining conversationalist. He is a strictly temperate man, never drinking liquor of the mildestcharaoter; never makes use of profane language, or even the ordinary slang by-words of the day. He is benevolent and charitable, always lending a helping hand to the poor and afHioted, and although very poor himself, has lightened the sad hearts of many with kind words of advice, and suoh of the necessities of life as his own circumstances would permit him to lender. He is a hard-working man, tending (when allowed to remain at home) his own farm, cutting his own wood, driving his own oxen, and performing all the different labors pertaining lo a farmer's life. And last year, to make money to pay bis debts, be cut logs and had them sawed at a mill near by, and sold the lumber. He is also a preacher of the Camp-bellite school, and although he does not preach regularly, he often holds sorvice in the neighboring towns, as circumstances will permit. He is an Abolitionist of the Garrison school, believing the fugitive slave law to be unconstitutional, nd does not hesitate, when negroes escape from Missouri, to help and further their freedom from slavery. He has never, directly or indireotly, endeavored to persuade negroes in Missouri to run away, and, in fact, disagreed with, and positively refused to act with, John Brown in suoh an undertaking in 1858. He looks on slavery as a Bin, and believes when a slave once esoapes he is entitled to his freedom, and would not assist to send him back. He has himself had nothing to do with? the hanging of Hines and Scott or the shooting of Moore, nud did not know of the facts until sev eral days after they ocourred. lie nas no organized band of men who are oolbetvM to freiher to do his bidding, but has, perhaps, IS or 20 strong personal friends living in nis neign-borhood, whose confidence in him is such that were big life in jeopardy could be brought together very readily. And as attempts have, up lo a very recent date, been often made to murder him, the knowledge of their presence has, no doubl, in a measure, been instrumental in saving him thus far. He has told his friends, and it is believed, that no arms have been brought from the East, or anywhere else, into the Territory since John Brown left; and as nearly every man was sup; lied with a Sharpe's rifle at that time, and many have left the Territory sinoe, thcte is little need of more at this time. Montgomery is an expert with firearms himself, as more than one can testify during the troubles of '60, '67 and '68. He is a man of undoubted courage and resolution, and has shown it in his course throughout the outrages committed by the mobocrats of the Territory, the ruffians from the border, his securing the aranasty act, and his defense of himself with several others, against an attack nf treble the number of United Stales dragoons in 1858, in Bourbon county, K. T. He was raised, as near as I could learn, in Ohio, and at a more recent date lived in Kentucky, from which plaoe he moved to Missouri about 1849, where he remained some six years, going into Kansas in 1855, where he has lived ever since, except at such intervals as be had lo leave the Territory to save his life. He has been married twice, marryiug the last time in Kentucky, and has eight children, the eldest of whom is an intelligent son nineteen years old. His present whereabouts is known to but few, if any, in Mound City. He left his home about the 23rd of November, and returned for a day or so about December 1st, since which time nothing positive of his whereabouts is publioly known. It was reported that be was in Lawrence and attended church last Sunday, and was ou his wsy to Leavenworth. Whether this be true or not, be has placed himself for the present, at all events, beyond the resoh of United States authorities or troops. He has said whenever be could be tried before an honest, upright judge and an impartial jury, he wns williugto answer all the writs against himself, and would cheerfully abide by the consequences. Suoh is the man who is reported lo be at the head of an organised band of several hundred outlaws, whose sole object is to plunder and murder unoffending citizens, invade Missouri and set all the negro's free, and set at defiance all the laws of peace, propriety and good order; whose greatest fault, as charged by his political opponents, is his violent opposition tond violation of the fugitive slave law; and who Is the terror of those ruffians who live by bullying, brow-beating, end cowardly oppressing nil who do not harmonize and sympathize with their capricious institutions. They have found their man. William H. Clarke, lbs editor of the Kendall (III.) Clarion loves a good joke, and never lets sn opportunity slip that promises a dish of fun. Here is bis last: "Disocised. We have lately got a new suit of clothes, and no man could be more effectually disguised. We look like a gentleman. Upon first putting them on, we felt like a cat in a strange garret, and for a long time thought we were swapped off. We went to the honse and scared the baby into fits; our wife asked us if we wanted to see Mr. Clarke, and told ua that we would find him at the office; went there, and pretty soon one of our business men came in with a strip of paper in his band. He askeu if the editor was in ; told him we thought not ; asked him if he wished too see him particularly; said he wauted him to pay that bill; told him we didn't believe he would be in ; business man left. Started to the house again ; met a oouple of young ladies, one of them asked ihe other, 'What handsome stranger is that?" In this dilemma we met a friend and told him who we were, and gol , ;m to Introduce us to our wife, who Is now as -M of us aa can be. The next time we get a auit, we shall let her know it beforehand. Bar.y avnd hi a Feroclosu Bent, CrnlMr. - Rarey, the celebrated horse-tamer, is, at last back in New Vork. Cruiser, the moat unruly and ferocious horse be ever conquered, ha been shipped, and is expected in ten daya. Cruiser ia now eight years old, a bright bay and full sixteen hands high, well formed, with a neck little arohing, but of th style of English blooded race-horses. - When only two year old he was th favorite at th Derby, aad bent all tb bones that run against him. H earn out so much ahead that the owner of tb other nags began to think that something was the matter with their horses, and to further test th question, placed weight upon Cruiser, and ia that way injured him, and were obliged to take lira off from the race. -t He has been used but little for any purpose lines until Mr. Rarey took bold of him. For upward of five year he wa confined ia hierib, no on daring lo enter. His stall was about twenty feet square, with a ceiling fourteen feet high. Hi feed was thrown into him by opening the upper part of a double-door which open ed into the stall; those having oharge of him would fight bint off with a cane until another person would get the feed lato (he stall, and w are informed that almost invariably Crnlser would in hi tnssel olos th door upon them. So ferooiou was this bora that it owner gava orders several times to have him shot, but the keepers, although not daring to enter the (tall, looked upon him as such a noble animal that they did not obey th order, but kept him ia hope that something would turn up, and th world have the benefit of him in some way, he being one of ibe best blooded animals in England. A a (ample of the power of this animal, it is stated that the ceiling of hi (tall wa fourteen feet high, and during bis angry moments in his confinement had left his footprints on the ceiling, which was marred and battered in all parts, showing very conclusively that he must hav been au exceedingly powerful horse. In this wild condition Rarey found him, no person having laid hands upon him for five years, and all the treatment that he had receive ed during that time was 'that of a cudgel to keep him back while the feed was thrown into his stall, the very kind to develop his vieiou nature. Mr. Rarey, however, al first sight fearlessly undertook tha task of subduidg him, and iu three hours after he first luid eyes upon him, had so completely obtained control of Cruiser, that he placed a person on his back, and in a short time had him as dooil a a pet , lamb. '. After being separated from the horse for months in his tour through the Continent, he came back and found Cruiser just as manageable as when be left. In one of his private ex, hibitions of this horse to the royal family, Mr. Rarey stood holding Cruiser by the bit for a half hour, explaining totbt Queen how he seooeeJed in subduing him; and the Queen patted the horse upon the bead as if she pitied him, and said, "poor Cruiser." Health Work Power. Emerson's 'Conduct of Life,' published by Ticknor and Fields, is rioll in thought, angular, sharp, precise. - Thus, of wealth: 'the art of getting rich consists not in industry, much less in saving, but in abetter order, in timeliness in being id th right spot. One man has longer arms or longer legs; another ices by the course of stream and growth of markets where land will be wanted, makes a clearing lo the river, goes lo sleep, and wakes np rioh. Steam is no stronger now than it was a hundred years ago, but it is put to better use. A clever fellow was acquainted with the expansive force of steam; ho also saw the wealth of wheat and grass rotting in Michigan. Then he ounningly screws on the steam-pipe to the wheat crop. Puff now.'O steam 1 The steam puffs and expands as before, but this time it is dragging all Michigan at it back to hungry New York and hungry England. . . ; "Wealth begin in a tight roof jthat keeps th rain and wind out; in a good pump that yields you plenty of sweet water; in two suit of clothes, so as to change your dress when yoa are wet; in dry sticks to burn in a good double-wick lamp; and three meals; in a horse or a locomotive to cross' the land; in a boat to cross the sen; in tools to work with; in books to read; and so in giving, on all ' sides, by tool and auxiliaries the greatest possible extension t our powers, as if it added feet, and hands and eyes, and blood, length (o the day, and knowledge, and good will. . , "He is the rich man who can avail himself of all men's faculties. He is the riohest man who knows how lo draw a benefit from the labors of the greatest number of men of men in distant countries, and in past times. The same correspondence that i between thirst in th stomach and water in the spring, exists between the whole of men and the whole of nature. . Nobody but Emerson, perhaps would have thought of putting the case thus, and screwing on ihe steam pipes to the wheat crops of Michi. ganl . Concentration and the virtue of work are sharply set forth: "the one prudence in life is ' concentration; Ihe one evil is dissipation; and it makes no difference whether our dissipation are coarse or fine; properly and its cares, friends, and a social habit, or politics, or music, or feasting. Everything is good which takes away on plaything and delusiou more, and drives us home to add one stroke of faithful work. Friends, books, pictures, lower duties, talents, flatteries, hopes all are distraotioos which cause oscillations in our giddy balloons, and make a good poise and a straight course impossible. You must elect your work; you shall take what your brain can, and drop all the rest. Only so, can that amount of vital force accumulate, which can make the step from knowing to doing. Here is the philosophy of power: "in every company, there is not only the aotive and pass ive sex, but, in both men and women, a deeper and more important lex of mind, namely, the inventive or creative class of both men And women, and the uninventive or acoepting class. Eaoh plut man represents hit set, and, if he have the aocidential advantage of personal ascendancy which implies neither more or less talent, but merely the temperamental or taming eye of a soldier or a school-master (which one has, and one has not, as one has a black moustache and one a blond), then quite easily and without envy or reiistance, all his ooadjutors and feeders will admit his right to absorb them. The merchant works by book keeper and cashier; the lawyer's authorities are hunted up by clerks; the geologist reports the survey of hi ubolterns; oommander Wilkes appropriate the results of all the naturalists attacked to the expedition; Thorwaldsen's statue is finished by stone cutters; Dumas has journeymen; and Shakspear was thsatre manager, and used tba labor of many young men, aa well as the play-books."There is always room for a man of force, and he makes room for many. Society is a troop of thinkers, and the best heads among them.lake the best places. A feeble man can see the farms that are fenced and tilled, the houses that are built. The strong man sees th possible houses and farms. His eye mak's estates, as fast as the sun breeds clouds. Success goes thus invariably with a certain plus or positive power : an ounce of power must balance an ounc of weight." A Minister, as much distinguished for , his eccentricity ss for his piety, dined one day with the senior deacon of his ohurch. The deacjn, who was in Ihe habit of asking blessings of a wearisome length, was -partioulaly prolix, and paused to get a new supply of breath and words. The instant he stopped, the minister sat down and commenoed rattling his knife and fork The worthy deacon looking down, exolaimedl "Doctor! Dooiorl I'm not thought yel I only hesiiated," "Hesitated!" replied the Dootor; "it is no time to hesitate when the turkey's getting oold." , He that aoswereth a matter before he hear-eth it,' it U folly aud shams unjo him. ,
Object Description
Title | Daily Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1848), 1860-12-18 |
Place |
Columbus (Ohio) Franklin County (Ohio) |
Date of Original | 1860-12-18 |
Searchable Date | 1860-12-18 |
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 | 10000000022 |
Description
Title | Daily Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1848), 1860-12-18 page 1 |
Place |
Columbus (Ohio) Franklin County (Ohio) |
Searchable Date | 1860-12-18 |
Submitting Institution | Ohio History Connection |
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Full Text | 1 - 'f ' ... a 1 . s v ' - . VOLUME XXIV. COLUMBUS. OHIO. TUESDAY MORNING, - DECEMBER 18. I860. NUMBER 151;:'; E'.ji 1 1 i 1 1 i imi.j nil i i i i -k. v, 1 1 v i iti , ! f ii i ii ii nui ii nr nil i i i ill hi 1 ssJSl H III v ' HUM y,n III elf WWW S a af WMWMMWMByMaMMMWMMMWMMMMOMMM INSURANCE. JOHN H. WHEELER, AGGIT FOR HOME, COWTI.IK JTTAI., MXHtTTAN, 8oun'fT,nd Iavixo Fiee Ids. Go's Now York; MB HUH ANT'S anil CITY FIRE of Hart-ord; NEW YOUKaodOOXSKOTICCT MUTUAL LIFE. ' Office, l High t-,Waves Block. mayl'Mlily HOME AND FOIIE1UW PATKSTB. TI). undersigned for many years engag-d in th. Patent Offlta preparing testimony In ennwaiad cam, baa r-igned to eontiaua his profession of aeenricg patents, American and Enroprai. PaloiKa obtained on new and unjustly rejected applications f ir contingent fees to ba paid when tha pat-nta are arranted, " desired. Exam, nations of new Inventions from rouuh pencil sketches, to determine their patentability, made prevtons to applying for patents, for Ova dollar. 8. W. WOOD.Oorn. wall. Orange Co., N. T. o" ? COLUMBUS BUSINESS DIRECTORY ReNtaurantR. J. M. ZIG1.ER, Ice Cream Saloon. Nell's New Building, corner Gay and Hlirh itreeta, Columbus, Ohio. Aleo Dealer in Confection!, Choice Liquors, and a variety of Fancy Notions and Toya. myl-dly a A rm nitvlTnR. tilted and Published by Sullivan D. Harrii, at On,"7'1" 0 h to. for One Dollar per year. JlUcellap?!!: n-j.,... n-.'-Io'ue, 0., Agent for Chlckering A Son,. pSiVJorbS, Mason tfaiolln'. Melodeona, and oaler In Sheet Music and musical merchandise. aniTMly-E,A.B. AttUI'IlCJ'N. S. B. HANNUM, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Notary Public and Commissioner of Deeds, Depositions, &o., for various States. Devotee special attention to making Collections, Convey- ancing and taking Depositions. Office, No. a Johnson Buliillng. High Street, Columhus, 0. Helen, by permission, to John 1. Martin, Kaq., Banker, Lancaster, Ohio; Chaunccy N. Olili, Kaq., C uumbue, 0; Messrs. Ciiporly, Hoover A Co.. City of New Vork i Henry 0. Noble, Eaq.. Columbus, O.J Messrs. Haines, Todd Ly t- tle, Cincinnati, 0. seplld F. A.. B. 8IJ1KIVS, Attorney at Law and Notary Public. Office AmlKte Building, Opposite State lluus. t'quare, Columbus, Ohio. maria-'OU-dly . " JAMK9) g. AUSTIN, Attorney at Law and Notary Public, Oolumbns, Ohio OtHoe, Room No. 7 in PostOlBce Billl'llng, on Statestreet Special attention given to fureigncollecttona. ileclilly wmTdkii Nis6irevrHr ore 'arrIhotok, Attorneys and Counsellors at Law, Uolunibus, O. OHlc. Noa. 1 and 1 Odeon Bnlbling. Special attention gi-cn to the Law of Patenta and Inmirance. apr'tl(lly.rA Itarhei-N. W.M. SCOTT BARBER, Would notify his numerous frienda and customers that he haa returned, and will hereafter be found at his old atand nnder Bartllt 4 Smith's Bank, Uifch street. He aollclts a return ol hia old cmtomcrs. oct26 Clothing. J.. GOODMAN V SON, Dealers in Ready and Uustom-m.uie Clothing, Oont's rnr-niahlng Qoods, Hats, Caps, Trunks, Valises, Ac, Ac. No. 1 South tih St., ooruor of Broad. myi.'tiO-dly l aDAK STIWART. . W. ST1MU. STEWART . STinSON, Merchant Tailors, No. M8 High Street, oppoelteOooilale Houne, Oolumbns. Ohio, deal In best grade of Cloths, Caaaimeres, and Vestlngs. Employ none but good workmen; insure good flta; do nofdiaappoint in time; charge fair prices, and require prompt pay. aprlVriQ.air2!Vrtly Grocers. K. A. SELLS, Wholesale and Retail Dealer in nr6oerlea and Produce Southeast corner of Town and Fourth ots., Columbus, O. Particular attention pfaid to Couslgnmenta of. and orders for, Produce. myfl'BOdy-EAB Hanks. BARTL1T SMITH, bankers and denlers In Exchange, Coin, and uncurrett money. Collections made on all principal eiUes in the United States. Ambos Bonding, No. 71 South High atreet. nn.vMly'Bn.B.t.g tVatcheN, Jew?lry. R. t. DUNBAR, Watch Maker and Engraver, haa for sale Watches, Jewelry, Spectacles, Thormomoters, etc. Agent, also, for Columbus and Franklin County Bible Society. No. 135 High atreet, one door south of Qoodiila House. apr2'Vfl-dly -xah Hardware. GEO. GERE ex. CO., Gxo.Okhi. J.M. McOcnx. E.T. MiTiiusr. M.H. Piack-No. 8 U wynne Block, sign of the Braae hacked 9aw, Wholesale and Retail Dealers In all descriptions of Hardware, Cutlery, HoiiaehufMIng and Housekeeping floods, Farming and Mechanical Tools, Wood and VS illow Ware. Cot-dage Twine. Paints. Oils, Varnlh". JanlS'llO-dly nook Binding:. M. C. I.ILI.KY, Boot-Binder, and Blank Bouk Manufacturer, High 8treet, between Broad and Gay Streets, Columbus, 0. mavB'BO-dly- E. A B. Di CJootls. PERSON, STONE fc CO., Wholesale and R-tnil Dealers In Foreign and Domestic Dry Ootids, No. 1 Gwvnne Block, corner nf Third and Town street. Oolumbns. O. apr22'iHl.rA. Hoots antl Shoes. M AULDEN t CO., Oacoessortn W.L.Morcer, Dealer In Ladies', Men's, Misses' and Ohlldren's Boots, Shoes, and Gaiters. No-. 1 Town Ht., Columbus. apr21,'0-dly-lA PHOTOGRAPHS. M. Witt, four doom north or the American notel.over Rudlslll's Hat Store, makes life sited Photographs, colored In Oil and Pastell, as well as lMguerrtcypea,Am brotvpes, and all kinds of Sun Paintings. my2,'60-dly-iiB W. T. & S. D. DAY & CO., MANUFACTURERS OF AND DEALERS IN PRINTING PRESSES, (DOTH HAND AND POW'ft,) . And all kinds of Printing: Nate-rials.Ho. 173, 175, and 177 West Second St., ciifcitrirA ti. Jan2S-dly CHARLES SCOTT, BOOT So SHOE 3VC AKER. Itrimd Street, KrKren High and fV at m ayt'fifld 1 y-r. A n AMERICAN BANK NOTE C0 (South-east Corner Main and Fourth Streets) CINCINNATI, OHIO. ENORAVEDIN A ST V LB ''OR RESPONDING IN EX cellence to that of Bank Notes, Railroad and County Bonds, Hills of Exchange, Checks Drufts, Certificates of 8uck and Deposit, Seats, Carda, Ac.,, Ac. The above offlce is uuder the supervision of aept.!7-dly iEO. T. JONES. Howe's Family and irlanufactur-ln Sewlnar Machines. GEORGE B. SLOAT'S NEW ELLIPTIC Lock 8tich Sewing Machine. Bradtbaw A Johnson's Improved Shnttle Machines. All the above fnl clou Sewing Machines at the STATE CENTRAL AGENCY, No. 117 High atreet, Carpenter A Weaver's Block. Blake A Johnston's HEMMING, FELLING, TUCKINO and SEWING OUAGK for all kinds nf Sewing Machines. The meet perfect and complete addition to the Sewing Ma-ehiueeverinvooted. No Machiuelsoompl;tewithontone. It can be applied to any Sewing Machine. Mas. W. r. EMMET, Agent. Gaiter Fitting and all kinds of Sewing done to crder. Spool Cotton. Twist and Needles for Sewing Machine. mart-'OOnolSdlT MISSOURI LAND!! Rfirt llflfl ACRES FOR, SALE AT OiU.UUU prices ranging from I2yC toMt per Acre. In any qnantltiea required. TAXES PAID, and PAT NTS procured for purchaser! of Land nnder the Gradual iion Act. PLATS FURNISHED GRATIS by enclosing a postage stamp. Fur further information Apply to WILSON, RAWLINGS 4fc CO. U. S. and General Land Agent; 65 CBESTNUT ST., BETWEEN 3D AMD 4.TH, ST. LOUIS MISSOURI. N. B. LAND WARRANTS bought, sold and located. oct 3m. " OTYD HICKORY. Parton'e Life ot General Jaskion, JTJT FROM THE PRESS. S VOLTMES. S3 ONLY THIS WORK IS ADMIRABLY GOTTEN op, and Is eewui le sell. His reminiscences of Sonth Carolina will be read with lively Interest about now. Old Hickory waa aopposed by soma people to fro In for tha Paioa. and was willing to admit emp, free of duty. Everybody must read it. KANDALL A ASTON. dec7-d2w. H. 3D3XaLHIIVtTJS, Central Machine Carpeutef.'Shop, AMD PLANING, SAWING AND General House Furnishing Establishment. " ' MANUFACTURER OF DOORS, SASH, BLINDS, &C.&C. ITAVINQ REMOVED FROM HIS OLD iA establishment, at Conrstockville, west of the Canal, and having built a new shop of large dimensions on Wal-tint street, between Bleb and Town atreets, one equate east ol the Market Houae, aud fitted it up wltb atw machinery capable of turning ont the bo r'a!lty of work on the shortest notice ; he wouU respectfully solicit the PATTtOJTAOa OF MIS OLD CUSTOMERS Ana Others, ' WHO WANT WORK DOXE WITH NEATNESS AND DISPATCH, To Give Him a Call! All orders for it 0U8E WORK OF. ANY KIND promptly attended to and Especially that of House Hull dlnff oct27dly " niCIIAIlDSON'4 IRISH ITJNTEJIkTQ , n DAMASKS DIAPERS. &C. OONaUMKUS OIT KICIIA H DSO.N'S LINENS, and those deairons of obtaining the GENUINE GOODS, should see that the articles they purchase are sealed with the Tull name of the Arm, J. N. ItlurjAUDSON, SONS A OWDEN, as a guarantee of the soundness and durability of the Ooeds. This caution Is rendered essentially necessary, as large quantities of inferior and defective Linens are prepared, seaaon after season, and aualeil with the name of RICH-Altl)."0N. by Irish Houses, who regardless of the injury thus indicted alike en the American consumer and the manufacturers of the genuine Goods, will not readily abandon a business so profitable, while purchasers can be mposed on wltb goods of a worthless charnctoK J. DL'LLOCKK A J. B. LOCKE, pt7-dly Agents, .14 Reade Street, New Tork. X3o,lxnoxVl JSlx.lxti3. The choicest asuoriment yet. exhibited. tO&'A fresh invoice jutt opewed in all Colort.'fjjH PETEB BAIN, mayll-nov21 No. 9t Soufn High St. HOLTON HOUSE, NEWARK. 0. J. L. IIolton .... Proprietor hoc8 d3ru E-TABLKTrED T31HTBES rBAIt. THOMAS ANDREWS & CO., Importers& Manufaoturers Nos. 13G & 138 CEDAR STREET, "Ezcehior Sleam MUU," Near Writ Street, NEW TORK. CHEMI'JAL WORKS, 48 to 68 IIokoan St., Jersey City. Bl Osrb. Soda, Imported in 112 lb. Kegs, or Packed as ordered, in Papers or Boxes. Cream Tartar, host, perfectly pure, In Papers, Boxti or Brls., or In Crystals. "Paragon," "Dietetic,"' "Excelsior," Donhle Refined, and Soda Sulnrntu, In all Styles. "Excelsior" Yeaat Powder,' best in use, In 1 lb. 8 ex., 6 ox., and 4 ox. ('una, in Boxos or Brls. Newcastle Sal Soda, in Caaks or Kegs, or by the Ton, in Store, or to Arrive. Soda Aah, Liverpool and other Brands, different Quail-tlea and Teats, loll in any quantity. Caustic Soxla, Prepared Pot Ash, and American Banned Soda Aah, for Glasa Mnkera. Soap Powder for Waahiug, Concentrated Lie, Bleaching Powders, Salt Petre. Indigo; Caraccas, Madraa, Menu's, and other Grades, neatly put up in Boxes or Cases. "Warranted," "Superior," and "First Quality" Cream Tartar, as ordered. We Bell to the Beat TradeAll Goods Warranted. nov3.1-d,trl-wtwenle-tw ' 8AWFOHD'8 LIVER IN VIGOR ATO R NEVER DEBILITATES. T IS COMPOUNDED ENTIUKLY FROM (funis, nna tuts become an established fact, a Stamlurd wenictue, known and ap proved by all that have to with confidence In all used it, and isuow resorted tile diseases for which it is It lias curod thousands who bar) given up all hope unsolicited certificates in The dose must be adapted recot., mended. within the last two years nf relief, as tho numerous my posaeriaion show. to the tenienimont ol the used iu such quantities as mumiitial taaing it, and to act geutlv on the Bow- Ids. Let the dictates of your Judgment guide yon In the use ol the LI VKH IS Vlth LIVER CO !H I' I. MKTS, UrsPKHSIA, CIIUONK. tiKAivu, and It will cure RILT.IOU8 ATTACKS, DIAHHHOEA, BI'MMEH teuv, VHopsr, fan it OOSTI VEKESS,CIIOL 10, MOllttCS.CtlOLERA IS-L ENCE, J A V N1IC E, Eft, and niny be used juc K FAMILY MEUI-HEADACHE, (a thou-tniHMtea, if tun er three Tea-mencement of attack. HIVIXG their testimony COMPLAISTS, DYSEX-l STOMACH, UAllITVAli VIWLEKA, CHOLERA, EA N T U if , FLA TVA FEMALE WEAKNESS-! eeaafully as an 0UD1SA-VISE. It will cure hC'K sands can testify) in fioenty pnonfth ire taint at cont- ALl, I1U USE IT AI!E In Its favor. Jlff.T WATER IK THE MOUTH WITH THE TXV10-ORATOR. AND SWALLOW HOT II TOGETHER. Price One Dollar per Bottle. AI.WI SANFOKD'S FAMILY BLOOD PURIFYING PILLS. COMPOl'DSED FKOM PPRE VEGETABLE EXTRACTS, AND PVTPPIN GLASS CASES, AIR TIGHT, AND WILL KEEP IN The FA MIL Y CA TUA RTIC PILL Is a iren tie bnt active Cathartic, used in hie practice more The constantly incroas-who have long uaed the tion which all express in duced me to place them The Profession well thartics act on different The FAMILY CA-wlth due reference to this compounded from a vrie-Extracts, which act alike mentary caual, and are cases where a Cathartic is RANGEMENTS of the NESS, PAINS IN THE C08TIVESKSS, PAIN THE WHOLE BODY, frequently, if neglected, ver, LOSS OF APPE-8ENSATI0N OF COLD RESTLES8NESS, HEAD. THE HEAD, all IN-EASES, WORMS in KMKUMATISM, a great and manydiaeaaeatowhlch which the proprietor has man twenty yeara. ing demand from those PILLS, and the satlafnc-regard to their use, haa in-within the reach of nil. know that different Car-p irtions of the bowels. THAKTIO PILL haa, well established fact, been ty of the purest Vegetable on every part of the all-GOOD and SAFE in all needed, enrh as DK-tTOMACH, SkEEPI-B A C K AND LOINS, AND SORENESS OVER from sudden cold, which end in a long course of Fe-TITE, A CREEPING OVER THE BODY, ACHE, or WEIGHT IN FLAMMATOBY DIB-CHILDREN or ADULTS, PURIFlKRofthe BLOOD flesh Is heir, ton nnmemus tisement. DOSE, 1 to 8. to mention in tufa adver- PRICE 3 DIMES THE LIVER INVIOORATOR AND FAMILY CA. THA RTIC PILLS are retailed by Druggists generally, and sold wholesale bv the Trade In all the large towns. 8. T. W. SANI ORD, M. D, Manufacturer and Proprietor, SI08 Broadway, New York. Sold In Columbus bv Roberts A Samuel, John Denig, and ft. M. Denig A Son's. oct25'ial-dlvwlj latp SAFES. FOR THE CHEAPEST, BEST ANT MOST DURABLE FIRE & BURGLAR PROOFSAFES Call at tho NEW SAFE FACTORY, S. W. Cor. Elm and Front streets, CINCINNATI, OHIO. rrHIS FIRM IS COMPOSED OF LEADING PRAO-X cal Mechanics, from the honse of Urban, Dndds A Co. We challenge the world to prodnce a safe equal tl ours for BEAUTY, STRENGTH and SECURITY. mh:il-dawly DtEBOLD. BAHMANN A CO LAND IN MISSOURI! f7Flf nnn acres for sale in I J 1 , U W l large or smalt tracts at VJ'c to 60c per acre. Choice fanning lands at ASc per acre, all expenses included. Bend for Map and particulars, inclosing stamp, to the Western Land Agency Olflce, (established 1866) of S. E. BILBROUGII, & CO., North-Weit corner of Third and Chesnut Streets, St. Louie, Missouri. Patents secured and Taxes paid for noo-residents. Land warrants located, Ac. una to CHAS. KBEMLK. Eq . County Recorder, St. Lonis county, or CHAS. EVERTS, Esq., Cashier of Mechanic's Bank, St. Lonis, Missouri. eu(2-di.wly BOOKS & STATIONERY. NEW OniO PUBLISHING HOUSE, J. II. RILEY &T. C. BOWLES Columbus, Ohio, NOW PUBLISH The Ohio Standard School Series! . . The Forest, Richest, best and Cheapest. SPELLING AND ANALYSIS. , IiT Salem Town. L.L. D. Town'sSpelleraod Dofiner; town's New Analysis READING. Br S. G. GoonmicH. L.L. D., (Peter Parley.) ((drich' Kew Ut Rvtvler. GuotJrich't New 4th Header. OtKMlrfch'i New 2d Reader. Ooodt (ch'i New Sth Header. Uoodrkh'a New 3.1 Kinder. OiKidricli'i New 6th Header. tl They are a decided improvement an all that I have teem. 11 Bn. J. W. Scott, If D,. katof Miami Unieirtity, Ohio. MATHEMATICS. By Benjamin Greknlkaf. A. M. For DvUrict School. . Ownleafi New Primer Arithmetic. Greanle&Te Iutollectual Arithmetic. OrceDlcafi Cudiidou School Arlttnnttlc. For High tichnohand Acndtmie. Ortwnlui.ru National Arithmetic,1 Green)eafs Tieatlseon Algebra. Green If afi Kleruentfl of Geometry. "Standard and Imperishable work of their kind; tha richest and mont otimpreheneive. an aurtei, thtt have appeared in tho current niuuteentU century ."Prof. Perry of Dartmouth College. GEOGRAPHY. By S. S. Cornell. CornirFlntt Step In Geography, Fr-ttHy Tllufltratcd. rornell'a Primary Geornphy. Beautifully Illustrated. Goruoll's lnturiniMliattteuKraphyt with New Mapx. Cornel T OranimJir-Schofd tieoirrapliy, I vol. quarto. Cornells Ilifih School Geography and A tint. "Much aupfrlor to any other GeoRruphiet with which 1 am aciualnted." Hon Anton Smyth, Superintendent Public liutruclion, Ohio. ENGLISIIGRAMMAR. By D. B. Tower. A. M.t andB. F. Tweed, A. M. Tower and Tweed's Klements of Grammar. Tower an J Tweed's (Amnion 8cho.l Gntnimar. Tower and Tweed Grammar of Gomp'Hiition. Tower,' Common School Grammar will till a position absolutely demands by the Kdncatiinnl wanti of the country." S. C, VrummbaHght Dayton High School. COPY BOOKS & B00K-KEEPING. Payton, Pnnton and ScrilmeM'd Com pie to Series. lUnafurd and Paysnn' Book-Keeplug, Double and Single Entry. Terms of introduction the most favorable. Teachers and School officers are requested to communicate with us. Single specimen copies furnished at one-half the usual rates. J. ii. in ley & t. c. izonxra., Publishers. Columbus. Ohio. sept -d 6m oiling at Cost PPEARS TO BE VF.UV FASHIONA' 2. I1KK, it we are to Juiliro bv the niacarda in the iho wlndovm. Now we do not propone to noil our Koodtiat Post, out we ao propose to ami many gooaa ut lon priceithan they coHt some others in the trade. JanlSdiy 0K0. ft til. Hi St C0! H. Mooro( Carriage 9Ianufnoturcr 'Ifiraer Third and Hirh tre-et, RETURNS HIS THANKS FO II PAST favors, and solicits a .ontimmncii of the same. Persons wishing to purchaso are rei nested to call and exam ine my stock and prices. Particular attention Riven to repairing. The attention of customers i invited to my Patent Spring handy-Wagons and Unjxgfes. All work warranted. II. MOORES. apr21-dly. Oolumbu), Ohio. S K WI NG MAC II I N S . The Cheapeat aud Heat, and Le(fnlly An tlinrized to be sold under the patents nf Kiltas Howe, Jr., Grover A Raker S. SI. Co.. and Wheeler Si, Wilson1! Manufacturing Co. rpHE V1RST PREMIUM WAS A WAR JED TO THIS 1 Machine over all others mHbing tba double lock stitch, at the Chicago Mechituics' Institute Fair, held at St, Lmii. I860, and at hundreds of other county fnirs It will do ai much and aa good sewing as tue $V2i ma-hlnes.For description, samples of sewing and recommendations, send three cent stamps to W. S. LUNT, Fremont, Ohio, dc.)-d1m (ienei-al A (tent fir Ohio. PH. HHOKIMNUR, X. BROWN Slioortingcr 5 Brown, MunufrtcturtTh and Pealirn In all kin-in of CABINET FURNITURE, Spring Beds, Chairs, Mattratites. Luokiiig Olaeees,&c. 104 South High Street, Cotumbun, Ohio. JtW Undertaking promptly attended to. mj4-dly-Ea 1860. 1860. 1860. FALL AND WINTER STYLES. MRS. IIOPPRRTON II AS OPEXKI) IIF.R FALL AND WINTER STOCK of FKENCH MIL. MNKRV. BONNKTS, KllinoNS, tc. 4c, No. ITS South Bligli Street. OOLUMDUS, OHIO. Mer frfeuffs are Invited ti call and pnrchnao. Mrs. II. lias some of thoae new style Star Frames which she will dispose nf liy tlie quantity to milliners aplM-dtjaiil'flln LITIIOR4IIIIiVG EXGHAVINQ. Portraits, Lm Jaoapns, 8how Cards, Maps, Drafts, Notes Certiorates of Stork, Honda, Iietterand Bill Heads, nild-nira, o. MlnDLF.TdN, STRHIIKIDOK CO., U'.l Wnlnut Street, (Odd Fellow's DuHcllnu.) sep'2d0m Cinciiiliatl, 0. HEN aYALUUb 5 ' BEUSTKAD FACTORY, NO. 100 PEARL Street, Cincinnati. Ohio. Larue aaaortmrnt of Bed-sleds on hand ; alao Mahogany Ui.ards ai d I'lnnk ; alsc Mahogany Illack Wa'"ut and Rosewood Veneers, all for ale at rerjr low rates. i2dwly E. A. B. A.S A HElVTErDI-A-L AGENT THIS DELICIOUS T0NI0 STIMULANT, E8PECIA1.1.Y nESIUNEO FOR THE nss ol the Jircfiral Profeteiox and the Familji, having superseded the so-oalled "Oins," "Aromatic," "Cordial," "Medirated," "Schnapps," cto , Is now eudorard liy all of the prominent phyairians. chemiats and connoisaeurs, as posaesalnic all of those itrinic medicinal qualities (tonic and diuretic) which belongs to an old and pure Gin. Put up in quart bottles and sold y all drugulata, grocers, .to. A. M. B1NIN 1KR 4 CO., (EitablUhed in 17"H.) 8ole Proprietors, N. 19 Broad street. New York. For sale by all the principal Druggists and Grocers In Columbus. - Our Ion i experience and familiarity with the requirements of Druggists, and our superior bttatneea facilities, enable us to turnUh them with choice Liquor for medici- nal and family uas. oct2vdwlTeodeow Onioi or the Coi.cmfus A Xf.m ft. R. Co. ) Columbus, December 12, li. ) rpHB STOCKHOLDERS OF THE CO-1 lumhns and Xenla Rail Road Company ar. hereby notified that the Annual Meeting for the election of Directors to nerve the enaulng year, and for other purposes, will he held at the office of the Company In Columbus, on Tueadav. the 1st Hny of January, lgtil, between the hours jof 111 o'clock A.M. and 3 P. M. dec!2-l3w CYRUS F '.Y, Secretary. MASOMC CALEKDAK. STATED MEETINGS. COLUMBUS L0D0K, No.:W Second and Fourth Tue.. dkya. W. B. Far, Sec'y. amasa jokm, w. ai. MAGNOLIA LODQK, No. JO First and third Tuesdays. J. H. McColm, Seo'y. Tnos. 8pabeow, W. M. OHIO CHAPTER, No. 13 2d Saturday in each mo. B. A. Emret, Sec'y. J. F. Pari, H. P. COLUMBUS COUNCIL, No. 8 First Friday in each month. E. WasT. Sec'y. A. B. Robinson, T. I. O. M. MT. VERNON ENCAMPMENT, No. 1 I.aat Thursday each mo. A. B. Roninaon, Ree. B. F. Marti 0.0. AHNHOTH STEAM POWER B1I . LIARD TABLE Manufaciery, J. M. Binirawici a R.a.. ProDrietora. Factory uu V. E. oomn'of Elm and Canal Streets. Office and Warehouse, No. 8 Sixth Street, atween Main and Walnut, Cincinnati, Ohio. P. S. GM Bnuuteick't Improved Patent Cofftc-iaoioa CWsai'm. eplToO-dSm (mm MUSIC. ETC Marshall, James & Travcr's PREMIUM PIANOS. rT'IIESE PIANOS ARE UNSURPASSED, I combining RtOIINFSJ and SWEETNESS; BRILLIANCY and VOLUMB of TONE ELEGANCE and BtAUTTof STYLE i DURABILITY of MECHANISM, wil h DEI. It ACT OF TOUCH and promptDMaof ACTION. This -Pauot Repeating Oran I Action" Is pronounced by tb.be.tjodre.to be the IMPROVEMENT OF THE AGE in Piano Fort, making. All Piano icerroa ed tc fire perfect aejieeition or the moaey refunded. AddreM E. L. TR AVER, Agent, 6TEINWAY Se SOIST'S 1ST PRIZE GOLD MEDAL PIANOS. Ill AVE NOW THE AGENCY OF THEIR CELEBRATKD r I A. TJ" o s . THEY P0.SEiS REMARKABLE CLEARNESS, SWEETNESS, BRILLIANCY AND VOLUME OF TONE, AND ALL OTHER QUALITIES DESIRABLE IS A FIRST CLASS INSTRUMENT. All Piano, warranted or three years. Written guarantee given to that effect. Addras. E. Ii. TBAVEK. Ag't, aug7-dlywly-lteam CoLunao.,0. KNABE'S GOLD MEDAL PIANOS THE BEST AND HOST POPULAR PI-1 AN 08 made In this country are from tha xteosiva and oeh biated manufactory of )Vm. Knabe & Co., of Baltimore. They are th. only Piano Forte, that dan issue a challenge to th. world for Volume, eTen8i and brilliancy of tone, elasticity of touch aud durability: To b. bad only of SELTZER A WEBSTER,-ug7-apr2l-novl8-dlyls Sole Agents. CHICKERING PIANOS. All Styles and Prices. Tbny hara iwfvd 40 Prizo 3Vgc3.i1j3 And hay madn and sold over 23.O0O INSTRUMENTS. Thee. Instruments uavo all th. Ileal Improvements of (be Age, And are, beyond comparison, tba Finest Pianos in the "World. Particular attention Is requested to SEVERAL NEW STYLES. J. 0. WOODS, Bole Agent for Central Ohio, dec2!'S9 Buckeye Block, Broad Street, Columbus. FANCY DRESS SILKS AT A C3-ro.t Iloduotion. ' Our immense stock now being offered at unusually low prices. PETER BA.T1T, mayllnoT2l No. 21, Sonth Illih St COinitHCIAL COLLEGE. COLUMBUS, OHIO, OyVniPiEJNJTEIa. II-A.TsXj. THE COURSE OF STUDY embraces Single and Don-bte hntry Book Keepinic as applied to over fifty different branches of trade, and is the roost practical given In the we.t. Plain and Ornamental Writings Commercial Calculations and Arithmetic, and all the various requlaltes to a complete bnsinoaa education, Trans. Tuition, S40. Board from 82.WI to O.UO per week. Buoks and Stationery, &5 to 87. Total cost about 178. NO VACATION the year round. Regular Students review at pleasure. For full particulars, address McCOY 4 CO., teb23-'60d&wlTieplS . Proprietor. CITY FILE WOHKS, WATER ST., COLUMBUS, 0". HENRY CHAMBERS, : : : : t i Proprietor. Manufacturer of all kinds of FIXiES AINTID HASPS. ttoolil e ilea Ke-cut and warranted equal to new for use "Letters of Inquiry, and work from the Conntry, will meot with promptatteutlon. myA-dawly-KA IDR. J BOVEE 3DOI5.S' IMPERIAL WINE B1TTERS1 ARE made from a pure and unadulterated Wino, which ti about dotitda the usual itrength of other Wlues, and if) imported ly only one houne in the United 8tate. Also, from the following Talimbl Itoottf, Herbs. Ac , Yiz: Solomon's Heal, Spikeinard, Com frev, Oamoniile t'lowers, Gentian. Wild Cherry Tree Bark, and Bnyberry. We Challenge the World to produce their Equal! We do not profess to have discovered some Hoots "known only to the Indians of South-America.' and a euro for "all diseases which the flesh is heir to," but we claim to present to the public a truly valuable preparation, which every intelligent Physician in the country will approve of and recommend. As a remedy for Incipient Consumption, Weak Lungs, Indigestion. Dyspepsia, Diseases nf the Nervous System, Paralysis, Piles, Diseases ptxuliar to Females. Debility, mid all ennvn requiring a Tonic, they aro UNSUnPASHBD, r or core Throat, so common muiouk the Cltrgy, they are truly valuable. For the aired and Infirm, or for persons of a weak constitutionfor Ministers of Ibe Gospel, Lawyers, and all public speakers for Book-keepers, Tailora, Seamstresses, Students, Artists, and all persona leading a sedentary life, they will prove truly beneficial. As a Beverage, they are wholesome, Innocent, and deli cious to the taste. They produce all the exhlliarating effects of Hrandy or Wine, without Intoxicating; and are a valuable remedy for persons addicted to excessive use of jlroiiR drink, and wish to refrain from It. They are pure and entirely free from the posions contnlned in the adul terated Wines aud Liquors with which the country i flooded. These Bitters not only CURB, but PREVENT Disease, and should be used by all who live in a country where the water is had, or where Chills and Fevers are prevalent. Being entirely innocent and harmless, they may be given freely tj Children aud Infants with impunity. Physicians, Clergymen, and temperance advocates, aa an act of humanity, should assist in spreading these trulj valuable BITTERS over the land, and therebr essentially aid iu lianiahlng drunkenness and Disease CHARLES WIDD1F1ELD A CO., Proprle'ora, 78 William Street, New York. And by RobbtsA Samuel, Uruggists.Columbus 0 aug 1-deod-lsdy muna 1861. 1861. VOL. 3C. FORM YOUR CLUBS FOR THE OHIO EDUCATIONAL MONTHLY Successor to the JOURNAL OF EDUCATION. PUBLISHED ON VIIE FIRST DAY OF everv month at Columbus, Onto. EVERY TEACHER SHOULD TAKE IT. It Oontaiua Discussions on all soBJEors pestaini.no to Educatioh. EXPERIEXCM or SDfCESSrCL EOSCATOSS OH FSACTICA Teaching. FINE STEEL-PLATE ENGRAVINGS. Ohis and Foriiox Educational Intelligence. It is the Organ or the Stats Teachers' A mociation. EVERY BOARD OF EDUCATION Ought to have it for each member. They are allowed by law to take it, and pay for it out of the contingent fund by the construction of the law as Riven by School Com mis-loners, Hon. li. U. Barney and ilon. Auson Smyth. Why T Becaune it contains The Official Letter and Opinions of the fctat School Comanlaaloner. Explanations of the principles of the Ohio School System Answers to legal questions on the new fedtkOOl It aw Si AMD FRIEND OF EDUCATION Should have It. It contains . Articles on School and Family Government by the best writers. Opinions of the best men In Ohio on Home Instrnetlon. Solutions of Practical Ctneations on Home Studies. PBEMIUMS. ' For J5, Five Cones, and os to the oettes cr or the Cira. For S40, Foett Copies, snd Worcester's or Webster's Unabridged worth S7.oU. For lion, One Hundbed Copies, snd the first 8 volumes New American Cyclopedia worth $24. TERMS On. Dollar, Invariably In advsnoe. Address F. W. HURTT A CO., no, 10 CoUunbns, 0. Mo eftate $ on vital... COO-iTJlvdBXJS : Tuesday Moraine, - Doc. 18. 1880. The London Times on Seeessloa and Disunion What Europe will think of a Severed Union. From ths Times of November 29. Democratic) institutions are dowoq their trial In America. It would be a strange coincidence if the same year should witness the accomplishment of Italy- unit under a Constitutional Monarchy aud the disruption of a far mightier Union uudor the dislocating agency of Federal Republicanism. Washington, like Alexander, was troubled in his last days by misgivings as to the solidity of bii own workmanship. He had found American patriotism strong enough lo brave in a good cause the armies of George III., but would it be proof against the selfishness of prosperity, the meanness of party and personal interests, the fierceness of provincial jealousies? Could the dignified and statesmanlike moderation of the founders of liberty be transmitted to their successors, or would later growth develop those harsher and vulgar qualities which too often appear in the Anglo-Saxon oharacler? We dare not say that the experiment is yet complete. Two generations hare amply sufficed to confirm and transcend the experience of antiquity as to the expansive energies of a democracy, but its capability of cohesion still remains open to question. At a crisis like the present the centrifugal seems more tbsn a counterpoise to the centripetal force, if we are to take tho southerners at their word. The proud traditions of the great western republic, the ties of laws, language, religion and national charaoter, the dictates of a higher and more comprehensive self-interest, and the respect of European powers, are to be cast to the winds wbeu they conflict with local prejudices and the salaries of a class of gentlemen who took their appointments subject to this uncertainty. The enemies of democracy have always asserted that it cannot rise to the conception of a great national idea, and that for want of this vivifying principle it carries in itself the germ of its own decay. The opponents of cotton have even denied the assumed liberality of the commercial spirit, and retorted that, if eircumstances were changed, merchants and manufacturers, would not show less blindness or selfishness than farmers and landlords. It has been reserved for the "fire-eating" slaveowners of South Carolina and Georgia to verify this lauut, and to seek for precedents of party warfare, not in tho history of the United Slates, but in the continental system of Napalean, in the Berlin Decree, and the English Orders in Council. We are far from considering the proceedings adopted in South Carolina and Georgia as irreversible, or taking it for granted that they will be imitated by other cotton-producing Stales, much less by those which, though nominally Southern, have natural affinities, with the North. Even the Governor of Georgia, though lie recommends tho imposition of prohibitory duties on imports from the North, the "repeal of all parts of the penal and civil code protecting the lives, liberties and properties of the citizens of the Slntes where unfriendly laws exist," and other mad and revolutionary measures, shrinks from the responsibility of sending delegates lo a southern convention. The resignation of their offices by the federal employees at Charleston has not yet been accepted at Washington, and the sanguinary rhodomontnde of Governor Brown sounds less formidable to those who hear it than to us who read it. We Englishmen are iparing of our words, and little know how far bluster may be carried before barking passes into biting. The threat of secession is the standard resource of a mob, and the Roman plebt often started for the Mons Racer, and . actually enramped there mote than once, without permanently sepa-ratintrfrom the republic Thtrj, however, the malcontents had the vantng vgroiind which here belongs to the established government. The security of the city and the lives of their patrician oppressors depend upon their co-operation against foreign enemies, whereas here it is the personal safely of the southern planters that is guarantied by the North. That great soeial question, which inspires an interest immeasur ably more Intense and absobing than a 1 the political watchwords of Europe, has a twofold bearing on the present crisis, and it furnishes a motive in favor of secession, it furnishes a mare overpowering motive against it. "It is a singular fact," says one of our American oolempo-raries, "that States in a position secure against injury from the non-execution of the Fugitive Slave law are tho only States making the non-execution of this law a pretext for secession." But are those refractory oitizens prepared to be closeted beyond the reach of call with their own "domestic institution?" It it certain that in such Statetat South Carolina and MittuKippi, inhere the tlavet outnumber the white population, the matter could dispense with the aid of their northern brethren in a servile wart Or, turning to another item in life same calculation of expediency, would South Carolina, whose exports exceed in value her imports in the proportion of seven to one, be the gainer by a system of mercantile exclusion ? Can any tane man believe tlial England and France will consent, at it now suggested, lo ttultify the policy of half a century for the take of an extended cotton trade, and to purohase the favor of Charleston und Miliedgeville by recognir.ing what has been called "the isothermal law, which impels African labor towards the tropics" on the other side of tho Atlantic ? Will the suspension of payments in specie improve the credit of the reousant States, and will an independent administration prove an economical expedient to States who have hitherto borne a very small share of the publio burdens ? These are considerations that may be drowned in the passions of the hour, but which will, we still believe, assert themselves as the movement becomes more regular and orderly. We have confidence, not only In the discretion of Mr. Lincoln, but in that of Mr. Buchanan, who in the remaining months of his Presidentship, may do much to mitigate these desperate and ruinous counsels. Of one thing the Democrats willjbe well assured that the character and prestige of th tev-eril United Stales in the eyet of Europe depend on their federal union. Lord North saw this when he skilfully proposed a compromise which would have had the effect of isolating some from the rest, and Burke resisted his scheme of conoili-tion on that very ground. " Hoc Ithacut veltt ;" the stubborn and mutinous spirit of the South is falling into the tactics of the enemies of Amerioan independence. Let there be no mistake as to English publio opinion on this subject. If we have paid a sincere homage to the rising greatness of America, it has not been to that which the southerners are so anxious to conserve, but to that which they are striving to destroy. All that is noble and venerable in the United States is associated with its federal constitution. It is notthedemonstrations of southern ruffians in Congress, or Hie filibustering agran-disement of the South, from the Mexican annexations downwards, or the Fugitive Mave Law, or the Dred Scott decision, or theKansas-Nebraska act; it is not these, or any other triumph of Democratic insolence during their ascendency of half a century, that has commanded the sympathy and admiration of Europe. We have judged of these things leniently, as the actious of groat men and great nations ought to be judged, because we knew the perilous conditions under which so mighty an enterprise as the civilization of America must of necessity be carried out, and have confidence in the practical good sense of the American character. A certain hectoring tone, arising from the exuberant consciousness of health and strength, is characteristic of adolescenoe, but no such allowance is made for deliberate acts of lawless violence. Even now, so long as the agitation is confined to bullying and insults, to "retaliatory laws'' and indignation meetings in the form of conventions, we shall not despair. High pressure, moral as well as mechanical, is thernlein America, and threat of civil war may be nsed there in a triotly parliamentary sense. But if this rough sparring should by any chance be carried too far, and the threat so often uttered in jest or wantonness should be reneated in earnest and lead to bloodshead. it is some comfort that the aggrtttort wi I not b the stronger parly. Mr. Lincoln viU in that cat command a majority in Congrttt, and will carry with him the support of all those who, hewever tolerant of slavery, will not tamely acquiesce in its becoming the basis of an illegal and hostile confederation. Captain Montgomery. A correspondent of the St. Louis Democrat, who has acoompanied the State militia in their Quixotio expadition in search of Montgomery's band, gives the following description of the now famous leader : I conversed freely with persons of all parties, and although a wide difference of opinion exists as rezards Montgomery's political career, the following will be found to be a true portrait of him, as seen by the anti-slavery men oi me Territory. , Take aotios (hat in Ots following, I describe Montgomery and Jennisonas they have been described lo me by their friends and neighbors. The former is acknowledged to be, intelli gent, aud strictly upright in ail business trans actions. Ue is represented as a man near xorty vears of aire: six feet hitch, standing very ereot; of light frame, weighing between 140 and 150 pounds; he has thick, blaok, curly hair and beard, neither of which be wears very long; his eyes are a very dark naiel, Having a snarp pen etralinir appearance; his nose is prominent partaking slightly of the Roman; although not physically strong, ne is very aouve uuu euer-cetic: he is a man of quick perception, a good indtre of human nature, reading in a moment the character or men witn remaricaoio accuracy; he is cool and considerate nnder the most trying cirouniBtances; he is, however, of a nervous temperament with great activiiy of mind, dis-Datchinir business of every character with promptness, energy and decision; he is a man of fine education, logical and clear in nis speecnes, argumentative and concise in his writings, and is a most polished and entertaining conversationalist. He is a strictly temperate man, never drinking liquor of the mildestcharaoter; never makes use of profane language, or even the ordinary slang by-words of the day. He is benevolent and charitable, always lending a helping hand to the poor and afHioted, and although very poor himself, has lightened the sad hearts of many with kind words of advice, and suoh of the necessities of life as his own circumstances would permit him to lender. He is a hard-working man, tending (when allowed to remain at home) his own farm, cutting his own wood, driving his own oxen, and performing all the different labors pertaining lo a farmer's life. And last year, to make money to pay bis debts, be cut logs and had them sawed at a mill near by, and sold the lumber. He is also a preacher of the Camp-bellite school, and although he does not preach regularly, he often holds sorvice in the neighboring towns, as circumstances will permit. He is an Abolitionist of the Garrison school, believing the fugitive slave law to be unconstitutional, nd does not hesitate, when negroes escape from Missouri, to help and further their freedom from slavery. He has never, directly or indireotly, endeavored to persuade negroes in Missouri to run away, and, in fact, disagreed with, and positively refused to act with, John Brown in suoh an undertaking in 1858. He looks on slavery as a Bin, and believes when a slave once esoapes he is entitled to his freedom, and would not assist to send him back. He has himself had nothing to do with? the hanging of Hines and Scott or the shooting of Moore, nud did not know of the facts until sev eral days after they ocourred. lie nas no organized band of men who are oolbetvM to freiher to do his bidding, but has, perhaps, IS or 20 strong personal friends living in nis neign-borhood, whose confidence in him is such that were big life in jeopardy could be brought together very readily. And as attempts have, up lo a very recent date, been often made to murder him, the knowledge of their presence has, no doubl, in a measure, been instrumental in saving him thus far. He has told his friends, and it is believed, that no arms have been brought from the East, or anywhere else, into the Territory since John Brown left; and as nearly every man was sup; lied with a Sharpe's rifle at that time, and many have left the Territory sinoe, thcte is little need of more at this time. Montgomery is an expert with firearms himself, as more than one can testify during the troubles of '60, '67 and '68. He is a man of undoubted courage and resolution, and has shown it in his course throughout the outrages committed by the mobocrats of the Territory, the ruffians from the border, his securing the aranasty act, and his defense of himself with several others, against an attack nf treble the number of United Stales dragoons in 1858, in Bourbon county, K. T. He was raised, as near as I could learn, in Ohio, and at a more recent date lived in Kentucky, from which plaoe he moved to Missouri about 1849, where he remained some six years, going into Kansas in 1855, where he has lived ever since, except at such intervals as be had lo leave the Territory to save his life. He has been married twice, marryiug the last time in Kentucky, and has eight children, the eldest of whom is an intelligent son nineteen years old. His present whereabouts is known to but few, if any, in Mound City. He left his home about the 23rd of November, and returned for a day or so about December 1st, since which time nothing positive of his whereabouts is publioly known. It was reported that be was in Lawrence and attended church last Sunday, and was ou his wsy to Leavenworth. Whether this be true or not, be has placed himself for the present, at all events, beyond the resoh of United States authorities or troops. He has said whenever be could be tried before an honest, upright judge and an impartial jury, he wns williugto answer all the writs against himself, and would cheerfully abide by the consequences. Suoh is the man who is reported lo be at the head of an organised band of several hundred outlaws, whose sole object is to plunder and murder unoffending citizens, invade Missouri and set all the negro's free, and set at defiance all the laws of peace, propriety and good order; whose greatest fault, as charged by his political opponents, is his violent opposition tond violation of the fugitive slave law; and who Is the terror of those ruffians who live by bullying, brow-beating, end cowardly oppressing nil who do not harmonize and sympathize with their capricious institutions. They have found their man. William H. Clarke, lbs editor of the Kendall (III.) Clarion loves a good joke, and never lets sn opportunity slip that promises a dish of fun. Here is bis last: "Disocised. We have lately got a new suit of clothes, and no man could be more effectually disguised. We look like a gentleman. Upon first putting them on, we felt like a cat in a strange garret, and for a long time thought we were swapped off. We went to the honse and scared the baby into fits; our wife asked us if we wanted to see Mr. Clarke, and told ua that we would find him at the office; went there, and pretty soon one of our business men came in with a strip of paper in his band. He askeu if the editor was in ; told him we thought not ; asked him if he wished too see him particularly; said he wauted him to pay that bill; told him we didn't believe he would be in ; business man left. Started to the house again ; met a oouple of young ladies, one of them asked ihe other, 'What handsome stranger is that?" In this dilemma we met a friend and told him who we were, and gol , ;m to Introduce us to our wife, who Is now as -M of us aa can be. The next time we get a auit, we shall let her know it beforehand. Bar.y avnd hi a Feroclosu Bent, CrnlMr. - Rarey, the celebrated horse-tamer, is, at last back in New Vork. Cruiser, the moat unruly and ferocious horse be ever conquered, ha been shipped, and is expected in ten daya. Cruiser ia now eight years old, a bright bay and full sixteen hands high, well formed, with a neck little arohing, but of th style of English blooded race-horses. - When only two year old he was th favorite at th Derby, aad bent all tb bones that run against him. H earn out so much ahead that the owner of tb other nags began to think that something was the matter with their horses, and to further test th question, placed weight upon Cruiser, and ia that way injured him, and were obliged to take lira off from the race. -t He has been used but little for any purpose lines until Mr. Rarey took bold of him. For upward of five year he wa confined ia hierib, no on daring lo enter. His stall was about twenty feet square, with a ceiling fourteen feet high. Hi feed was thrown into him by opening the upper part of a double-door which open ed into the stall; those having oharge of him would fight bint off with a cane until another person would get the feed lato (he stall, and w are informed that almost invariably Crnlser would in hi tnssel olos th door upon them. So ferooiou was this bora that it owner gava orders several times to have him shot, but the keepers, although not daring to enter the (tall, looked upon him as such a noble animal that they did not obey th order, but kept him ia hope that something would turn up, and th world have the benefit of him in some way, he being one of ibe best blooded animals in England. A a (ample of the power of this animal, it is stated that the ceiling of hi (tall wa fourteen feet high, and during bis angry moments in his confinement had left his footprints on the ceiling, which was marred and battered in all parts, showing very conclusively that he must hav been au exceedingly powerful horse. In this wild condition Rarey found him, no person having laid hands upon him for five years, and all the treatment that he had receive ed during that time was 'that of a cudgel to keep him back while the feed was thrown into his stall, the very kind to develop his vieiou nature. Mr. Rarey, however, al first sight fearlessly undertook tha task of subduidg him, and iu three hours after he first luid eyes upon him, had so completely obtained control of Cruiser, that he placed a person on his back, and in a short time had him as dooil a a pet , lamb. '. After being separated from the horse for months in his tour through the Continent, he came back and found Cruiser just as manageable as when be left. In one of his private ex, hibitions of this horse to the royal family, Mr. Rarey stood holding Cruiser by the bit for a half hour, explaining totbt Queen how he seooeeJed in subduing him; and the Queen patted the horse upon the bead as if she pitied him, and said, "poor Cruiser." Health Work Power. Emerson's 'Conduct of Life,' published by Ticknor and Fields, is rioll in thought, angular, sharp, precise. - Thus, of wealth: 'the art of getting rich consists not in industry, much less in saving, but in abetter order, in timeliness in being id th right spot. One man has longer arms or longer legs; another ices by the course of stream and growth of markets where land will be wanted, makes a clearing lo the river, goes lo sleep, and wakes np rioh. Steam is no stronger now than it was a hundred years ago, but it is put to better use. A clever fellow was acquainted with the expansive force of steam; ho also saw the wealth of wheat and grass rotting in Michigan. Then he ounningly screws on the steam-pipe to the wheat crop. Puff now.'O steam 1 The steam puffs and expands as before, but this time it is dragging all Michigan at it back to hungry New York and hungry England. . . ; "Wealth begin in a tight roof jthat keeps th rain and wind out; in a good pump that yields you plenty of sweet water; in two suit of clothes, so as to change your dress when yoa are wet; in dry sticks to burn in a good double-wick lamp; and three meals; in a horse or a locomotive to cross' the land; in a boat to cross the sen; in tools to work with; in books to read; and so in giving, on all ' sides, by tool and auxiliaries the greatest possible extension t our powers, as if it added feet, and hands and eyes, and blood, length (o the day, and knowledge, and good will. . , "He is the rich man who can avail himself of all men's faculties. He is the riohest man who knows how lo draw a benefit from the labors of the greatest number of men of men in distant countries, and in past times. The same correspondence that i between thirst in th stomach and water in the spring, exists between the whole of men and the whole of nature. . Nobody but Emerson, perhaps would have thought of putting the case thus, and screwing on ihe steam pipes to the wheat crops of Michi. ganl . Concentration and the virtue of work are sharply set forth: "the one prudence in life is ' concentration; Ihe one evil is dissipation; and it makes no difference whether our dissipation are coarse or fine; properly and its cares, friends, and a social habit, or politics, or music, or feasting. Everything is good which takes away on plaything and delusiou more, and drives us home to add one stroke of faithful work. Friends, books, pictures, lower duties, talents, flatteries, hopes all are distraotioos which cause oscillations in our giddy balloons, and make a good poise and a straight course impossible. You must elect your work; you shall take what your brain can, and drop all the rest. Only so, can that amount of vital force accumulate, which can make the step from knowing to doing. Here is the philosophy of power: "in every company, there is not only the aotive and pass ive sex, but, in both men and women, a deeper and more important lex of mind, namely, the inventive or creative class of both men And women, and the uninventive or acoepting class. Eaoh plut man represents hit set, and, if he have the aocidential advantage of personal ascendancy which implies neither more or less talent, but merely the temperamental or taming eye of a soldier or a school-master (which one has, and one has not, as one has a black moustache and one a blond), then quite easily and without envy or reiistance, all his ooadjutors and feeders will admit his right to absorb them. The merchant works by book keeper and cashier; the lawyer's authorities are hunted up by clerks; the geologist reports the survey of hi ubolterns; oommander Wilkes appropriate the results of all the naturalists attacked to the expedition; Thorwaldsen's statue is finished by stone cutters; Dumas has journeymen; and Shakspear was thsatre manager, and used tba labor of many young men, aa well as the play-books."There is always room for a man of force, and he makes room for many. Society is a troop of thinkers, and the best heads among them.lake the best places. A feeble man can see the farms that are fenced and tilled, the houses that are built. The strong man sees th possible houses and farms. His eye mak's estates, as fast as the sun breeds clouds. Success goes thus invariably with a certain plus or positive power : an ounce of power must balance an ounc of weight." A Minister, as much distinguished for , his eccentricity ss for his piety, dined one day with the senior deacon of his ohurch. The deacjn, who was in Ihe habit of asking blessings of a wearisome length, was -partioulaly prolix, and paused to get a new supply of breath and words. The instant he stopped, the minister sat down and commenoed rattling his knife and fork The worthy deacon looking down, exolaimedl "Doctor! Dooiorl I'm not thought yel I only hesiiated," "Hesitated!" replied the Dootor; "it is no time to hesitate when the turkey's getting oold." , He that aoswereth a matter before he hear-eth it,' it U folly aud shams unjo him. , |
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