Decatur Eagle, Volume 10, Number 6, Decatur, Adams County, 4 May 1866 — Page 2
THE EAGLE■ ! A. J. HILL, Editor. r 1 'll ' '■* I I I *ll I I I DECATUR, INDIANA FRIDAY, May 4, tSG«. ... ; — Democratic State Ticket. FECRETART OF STATE. GENERAL MAHLON D. MAXSON, of Montgomery. AUDITOR nr STATE, CHRIKTAING. BADGER, cfChrk.' TRXABVRT DF.TITE JAMES B. RYAN, o( Mtrion. ATT RNRT GENERAL JOHN R COEFROTH, of Huntington. .cfwurrssoENt of public ijwtrvcti ■». ii M CHAPMAN, of K: ox. COVSTY TICKET. F-’B RSPnSSXKT ITIVI, JAMES R. 8080. FOR TRXASTRER. JESSE NIBLICK. rrn RECORDER. M. V. B SIMEONE. FOR SHERIFF, , JAMES STOOLS, Ja.
NEWS ITEMS. There prev til in tziatnnee One J Ibeuawtid fire hundred nation.' br.nk«, with an aggr<g-.te circulation of 9269,• 0?S 940. Th* Twrl th I .tahtry and • pordon of. the First Artillery, ale enter orders for; issfpdrt, Maino. j The city of New York in anticipation ts the cholera are making extensive prepArrvioru in the war of asnitary measures. and for the r.-’cmmoJation of emigrants bare caused Casile Ca-den to be thoroughly ci armed and ventilated. *' Petroleum a’ounds in Cuba The whole island being one vast oil region, The wh< at crops in Pennsylvania,; Maryland- and Deleware. is represented to be in ekcete rt condition and promises ur. i bundant yi< Id. The Osnalia Renubllcan says that the grMTeat cxeiti merit pre. rile amorg the Mormans and th y have determined to drive out or exterminate ail Gent lies. Tie Senate will not confi m any appointments to fill vaennei a ocea-ioned bv removing officers for opinions sake. ( The S creiary of the Treasury lias or-; d.red his assistants to diseenCuus rc i ceivt-ig dep<.,i s for t< niporsry loans. The Govcrnaieul has retained Messrs Evarts, Clifford ant Rousseau to assist the Attorney G neral in the trial of Jell Davi«, which is expected to take place at rn only day. Sumcer has introduced » resolution in the Senate to.xpel Garrett Harris, of Ki mucky, for asserting fie was an enemy to the Guv* mment u d.r the Civil Rights bill. In the pe i ‘ n o ! Mi iigan for a writ of habeae eorpit before the Supreme/ Court, fire of the judges were iti favor o granting and ’ ur q-p ietd to it. I; i» understood ti nt <a:b will deliver an opiu-t-.ft a» to t t- merit* of the case. The latest news from Europe is of a warlike cl.ara- cr. The Pi ussian reply tulhe last Austrian ut.le, d-cltmd in 'a UK terms t • accede to the demands of. Austria. The Paris corr- apondent of the : Landon 7’cme* says that the hopes of pevc* in Germany are vanishing, and lie Hidmates th it the semblance of neutral:- v 6y Franee is I arJly sincere Tl>* Fen'aiis bare nearly all left Eastport. Me., So also tl.e British Vessels of war. and of o.uree the excite mint it at balding We Lc>« <>f comparing and regiments b-iug r.is d in all ths princpial towns and cries, an J it is un It rstond now that a move in r.l is contemplated in Mas Wbtlliei ; an.- a in ecir.est, or will prove Lie Ei- p it <!imonstration remains let ike future to disclose. lix'BNtE—A gen lonian who took the fiiaur. s from the offie d reports in Wasliing'in, g’ve* ’i e I. llowing as the revenue ccliuc'i.ii-, in tris State, fol .„e scar ei dir,g July I, 1865. Fir.ldi.tricts422,6l9 19 Fecund district 389,788 79 Third districtC33 400 14 Fourth tlisiri. t 1,007.755 98 Filth del ict307,250 23 Sixth district 622 014 211 Seven.ll dis riot 429.937 76 E gut district 444.552 79 Ninth district .. Trn.h district . . ... 205,901 46 Eleventh distil t 163,51144 The Fourth district, it will be seen, is j' largely in < xc-ts of the others. In addition to the r=« L I.lie paid Hl the dis- j 1 tiict. a great 4<ai of wbinkf ma h there 1 p«ys tax x i’. if t e distrin'. —■ 1 1
Indiana Items. La t winter an accomplished* young lady of Washington, Indiana, met and llov-d a stranger of thst place. Indue ; course of time they were married. After ; Laving enjoyed a delightful honeymoon, some circumstances led to suspicion, and upon investigation, it was found that the gay Lothario had five living wives, iThis fellow should emigrate to Utah. He is a fit disciple of Brigham Young — EavaiomiUt Juurnal. A gentleman of this county named Barnes was to have been married on List Thursday to a lady bv the name of , ' Last Sabbath he called at the house of his intended wife, and that day both of them took sick. She died the same night, and he died on Thursday. The affair is as sad as singular. Our infi rmation is Mr. Johnsvn, who call at our sanctum to <iav, in competiv with our fri< n 1. Thomas Black, tn give the item — .Vaditon Courier, April 21. ■‘Tnx Fxxtxxs.—We have been shown a letter from the Assistant Inspector General of the Stale of Indiana ol the ; Fenian army, to Colonel Ed Baldwin, •o have bis r-gitnenl ready to move on itbe 20th of May next. This looks warlike, and as though the gallant Fenians meant fight, which is about the truth, as ''he English an'horit'es will discover to I thi ir co>t Success attends the gallant boys of tile Fourth and their heroic I commander." — Ft. TTit/ne Dtm:c a‘. Ths Wiielt Ca t —We are informed bv Cyrenius Johnson, esq , ot the firm of Carter, Johnson & Co., who has just returned from a week's trip through Montgomery. Fountain nnd Vermillion 'counties, and who, also has reports from j his agent*, triveling in Putnam, Vigo, . Sullivan, Parke, Owen and other coun ;ties in that section of the State*, that tlie present prospt c:s indicate a fair av ernge crop of wheat in those loc itioiu The late rains have male a vast chang ■in the appearance of the growing wheat, and it Juoks now about as well as two ■ years ago, wh-n we hid th* largest crop ever raised, and which, caily it. the sei son, was fulls as backward as it has been this — Lafayette Journal iGth. Ratlboad Accidk.st—Siavghteb cf . Fat Cattle—Night before lasts land slid* oceurri d in a cut on the Tule h>, Wabash nnd Western railway new ' Marshfield, carrvinji a l>r'e mass of earth trees an i etumps into the real bed, completely obstructing tie track A i heavily loaded stock train came along 'some h >urs afterward, an.l in the inky ; darkness ot the night ran into the vb ; st*notion at almost full spe. d. The cars wire pil d up in a decidedly promis- ! cuons fasliiou, nud between twenty and thirty i »ad of stock were slaught-red ‘in short ordei. The cuuiel of the defunct animals were brought to this city, Isn linsteid of the j iicy roa. ti nn.l first cun designed tor the G itliamitev, Whittier, K nils, or Ostendoff will convert ■ them into tallow dips or number oat mould.— Lafayette Courier. The Lafayette Journal, •>[ the 241 h in»Um. s its: “I ue Ffuiams—R-cruiting for the i Nineteenth Fei.isn regiment is i regressing avorably and we are informed that about tix hundred uarms have alreadi i been put down, nearly, if not all of whom ill be promptly un hand when :l e mom- • <-n: for action arrives. A company li .s' I been recruited at >n to the mixI mum number. Every dav sees ths num ■ ber o: recruits an ,’mnt eI. We underatacd, on what is de-med reliable auth•rtty, that orders have been rec ived by those in charge of the movement here, to j bull tin msefves in readiness for die field at a m- no n;’» no.ice, and we siioul 1 not : be supprised by or b-fore the fir*'of May, t > h«ar that positive marching or ‘4-is have ben received.' Sime of the X rs and a number o toe torn enlis i'v<l in ti e Nineteenth Feuiaus, are vet i -ram, d ihe old Tenth Indiana, and from i their reputeticn while membei» of th it jallant regiment, the new organizvtiun can no bu'take front rauk as so d. r» in ths i'ettian army.” Arß.tsT ox Add. Evass ns ths Chaksu or Mtnar-B—Add. Ev.>ns a former citiz n of Lafayette an 1 more re c- ndy of Logansport, where Le was Ute’y . married to a highly r< speCi-lbL. lady, w. sar es cd iu this ci y List evi nitig on a charge of mu.’dri. He was iu the city '■n buv’ne-s, and was evidently taken cuuij !e ely by stirpri-fc-a. lie proloecc • n ire ignorance of any foan lati >n fur die cl age, and seems confi lent of his abil-‘ lily to prove hisentire innocence upon (trial. He was lodged in jail, and will bt taken out on a writ of habeas corpus at [two o’clock to-morrow afurnoou: The prosecul'on witness is Mrs. Tittir, former resident of Lafayette, wlic alleges j 'hat some eight or nine years ago she nave birtli to an illegitimate chill, which i Evans murdered. C. 1 n 1 William C. Wilson anil Colonel R DeHart Lave been retained f»r the defence, and Judge Huff and F B. E.eielte for the State. — Lijayette Courier. 2Gth. £3TThe Ways and Means Committee of the House h.ss sbout completed its labors on the Internal Revenue bill. A larger number of articles has been trans lei red to the free lict and on many others the t-xes I ave been reduced. T e aim il the Comuii.tiC has b-en to reduce the aggregate income from this Butirie fitly millions per year. The income tax, ts fixed at tic uniform rsle of five per ten 1 , eb ajl sum* ever $’, n
—! 1 - W Spanish-Chilian Difficulties^TheThreat- , ened Bombardment of Valparaiso—The ' American Commander Protests—Let1 ting of Mail Contracts—Confirmation e . by the Senate—The Graves of the Union r Bead. I Washington, April 24.—The last mail t ' from the Southern Pacific has brought I the Navy Department rather startling ad- , vices from the seat of war on the Chilian . Coast. Accordi. g to a dispatch from Commodore Rogers, in command of the United S.ates squadron in the harbor of \ alparaiso, a collision between our ' forces at.d the English squadron on Um ' . one side, and tile Spanish iron clad Na- . marries and the frigate Branca on the other Sid*, is not improbable It seems that Cumiuodore Nun-z of the Spaniib vessels, notified the authorities ol Valparaiso that if an attempt was male to eni ploy torpedoes against his ships, he would at once proceed to bombard the city. The Chilian authorities informi-d Commodore Roger* and R.-ar Admiral Denman, of the English squadron, ol the no • tification. ■ I Thereupon the comm milers of die Uni . ted States and English fleets s'nt ajuint i prote«t against the proposed bombard merit, and informed the Spaniah cominan- ; der that they should insist under any ciri cu i stance, upon ample time b- in_r given i for the removal of neutral propertv, an.l of the women ar I chil lren of the city, bc’oee it was fired upon At ti e same I time they cliang-d their anchorage and took ep a position close to the shore, be- ,•! tween ths Spanish vessels and the city.— i Commodore Rogers expresses his intention of attacking the Spanish fl et in case liis demand should not be complied with. The L rited States fleet ip the barb r consists of tl.e monitor NonaJuock, with feur fifteen inch guns; the Powhattan, with 1 twelve ggns; the Vanderbuilt. with fifteen guns, the Tuscarora, with ten guns; and the Shawnee, with ten guns—in nil s'.xty-une f uns. The English fleet is smaller in the num b< ruf vessels and guns. The Spanish iron cla.l is a vessel of immense offensive i and defensive power, three bundled and eighty feet lung, eighteen fe t wide, end : mounts forty guns, nnd is plated all over • with five inches of Iron. Her cir.ari y is not less than 720 tors Nev. rtliel> ss, Commodore Rogers thinks he ct uld sink her in less ti an half nr. hour. In a private letter, the commodore l.umcrously remarks tl at he Las Lad a visit Irctn ti e Spanish Governor, who, he thinks, fully satisfied himself by a close inspection th 4 his m mitor is no ma'ch tortile Am-riean monitor. The commodore also writes that the Mmalr.ock w >s visited by thirty thousand Chilians in a single day. Washington. April 24.—1 n the great letting ol mail contracts, nbutit three thousand ruu'es hive been concluded.— Tenncssie, Indiana, Illinois, Michigan. Wisconsin. Minnesota, Dakotab, lowa, Kansas, Netr/sk i and Missouri, are the States embraced in this letting, besides ■ which there are over one or '.wo hundred more miscellaneous routes in New England, New York, Ihunsvlvatria, and MiryUn l, and points near here, which are 'et by t nder and special advertisement. In some State* ’he proposals were ma le considerably in advance of those dettrin dvd four years ago. In others, the <tl ers were in vie at low. r figur**, s » that ■ the average on the entire re»ul.s are in ‘ favor of the department. This is ty f«r the largest letting ever hel iin the department Tl.e eoinpeti . tion tltretjglioui was spirited, showing the mail service to be in high credit among men of intelligence nnd wealth within the ■ respec iveSfat. s The Preri >nt Las filled all appointmerits in Virginia for t' e int, rnal revenue with parties who, it is said, have ta- ■ k-n tb • test oath. The Quartermaster G. nerri says he has reports of the intrrment of neaihv 109,0U0 Union officers and suljiers, a . large portion of whom it will, perhaps, be n*c ssary to remove to oemettie*. One million us dullnis will be required to project them from desecration, and it is re- ; co stn nded that a g-nera! system be aiop- ! te l General Thoma* Las issued an order warning the people against plowing under :or disturbing the graves of our dead al Atlanta. Ti e Ser'it.% iu >x.cutive session, cun firmed the following nominations. Dennis G. Cooley, of Indiana. Commissioner of Indian Affairs; J. B. Rogers, of Missouri, to be United States Mar-lnl for the eastern district of Missouri; Leopold R Reeder, cf Wisconsin, to be Consul at St. Btit in. C?" The Parkersburg ZTmes is responsible for tlie following: “All the Wells Burning Springs are yielding some two thousund barrels per day, as near as we c n gather. The wells on White Oak , are yielding, us heavy oil, one hundred and fifty-nine barrels a day. The Lick Run three hundaed barrels, the Horse-1 neck one hundred and fifty. There are , outside wells yielding from two hun- i Jrcd to three hundred bands per day, ■ besides th* Hugher river legion, cf which we Lave very little knowledge, j The product of oil in this viciahv s about six thousand birrcis per day, the i most ol it fine lubricating oil that will run i from forty to one hundred and twenty ; per gallon. This shows that thj oil territory of West L irginia is the beet yeti j discovered, and yet uol one half the puffing bai been applied to it there is tn Pennsylvania. It is time w, ) e ij our cvuutry be known through the ■ tire ss 1
-li ,:- ””"”"?- 1 -" : ; ——■ The Cholera* ’ The Montreal (Luelte, of April 25. re ’ ports that Dr. Slayer, one of the physis cians who volunteered to attend the cholera patients on the England, was taken ill on Mondf.y evening and died of that ' disease on Tuesday uiglit. Two other '■ doctors, Garrie and Gossip, were attacked ’ with the disease, but recovered. Eight 1 us the passengers made their escape from 1 the quarantine ship, and it is feared may spread the disease. Three cases of chol ! era have ah o been reported at Halifax ' The latest advices from Guadeloupe' ' states that the cholera is disappearing.— The mortality has be n ten thousand ' i eight hundred and six, out of a poptila- ; 1 ttoti of one hundred and forty-nine thous- ' : and one hundred and seven ■ Nxw Yuks, April 23.—There is noth-i ing later from the cholera ship Virginia. The cabin na«sengers of the Virginia are still oa boaid that vessel. Tney made an urgent request to the health officer to be allowed to remain, and no danger, whatever, being anticipated from the ship, which has beeu thoroughly ventila ted, their wishes weie granted. The scents on board the steamship England, when the diseass reached its highest point lof mortality, were said to have beeu of a terrible nature. Few on board could bv found courageous enough to bury the dead, and despite the entreaties of the captain, they were allowed to remain for some time iu . the «teerage, alter decomposition had set ■in. ' The ifi-queiicy el the deaths proven ted any list of the departed from being kept. Efforts are now making to secure the receiving ship North Carolina, now at the Brooklyn Navy Yard, foi service , as a quarantine vessel. The President of the Board of Health i is to confer with Mr Curtis, the quarantine commissioner, with 3 view of having on account of the progress of the disesse a list of the sick and dead 'uruisbed daily io the public. Contemplating the appearance of chol - 1 era in this city, the commissions rs of emigration have caused the Castle Garden to be thoroughly cleansed and ventilated. A committee appointed by the mavor have commenced a session to insure increased vigilance against the scourge. New Yokx. Aprii 25.—The deputy health officer reports twelve a iditiona] deaths from cholera un the hospital ship, jand the reception of live more pat'enta horn tlie ble-racr Illinui*, making the number remaining in the hospital s x. The President’s Spetc'i to the Hoidleis’ ai d Sailors’ Association. That politician mu«t have been short sighted who lias not seen tint great eftorts h tve be; u made by the star chamber tricksters in Congress to poison the minds of the Soldier*’ and Sailors’ A-so-cia ion against the President and bis pul ; icy ol restoration. To accomplish their' , purpose, the spontaneous sentiment us honor and gr .titude which wis entertained (or the Presi lent was sought to •be strangled by such, a variety of stale artifices tiiot it w s imagined by the contrivers of them that the President, with ' his k own views woul 1 iem ive a cold reception from those who might j in in the hands' me ovation <1 list evening. The President is not so far unintelli- j gent of ordinal v passing events a* not to hive penetrated at a glance the attempt I •to raise up barriers against him in the i i bear's of the soldiery. But casting all ' such cunsideratii ns to the winds, be at, once address; d himself to the hestts and ■ intellects of his auditors, and by a vigor, i boldness, earnestness and cogency of ar I gument s Idom surpassed by any speaker on exigent occasions, he carried >hat con vic ion to (lie minds of bis auditory which I was illustrs’e i bv the most enthusiastic responses. The President seemed to be alt 'geiLer at home on an occasion that would have badly emb-rrassed most pub-' lie rm n. Treating the common tnemy with utter contempt in respect to their policy or their assaults upon Imn he moved straight i on in his argument to legitimate con- | , elusions. It was said, in other days, of i the peculiar efforts cf mister minds, “they might often have been thought before, bin were never ro well expressed.” So of the President He seemed to be ' ; suddenly raised to a pitch of mental pow- j er that most happily grasped the merits; of the main issue beiore the people, and j scattered to ’he winds the delusions and snares of fanatical rage and bate.—_Ya . tional Intelligencer. Ths Briti-h Pbovinck*.—Apprehended trouble on the northeastern !>■ rder 01, .the United States, both from the Fen-1 ians and the Fishery question, has led both the United States and Great Britain ti send fleets to that quarter. Tie United Slates fleet consists of seven vet* els with utty-five gun*, seven thousand eight hundred and forty-two tonnage, and carrying one thousand and eighty- ( (live men. The Biiii»’u fleet, which has . been recently sent from tlie West Indie*, j ; consist of twenty-one vetseh with four' ■ hundred and forty-seven guns, and manned by five thousand seven hundred a,.d forty six men. - — CS'The assistant postmaster of St. Louis, Marshall Smith, esq, lifts inven-> ted an iron bound wooden, box, fitted f with adjustible partitions, design, d to j supercede the letter mail bag now ' io u*» O.i (lie order of the Postmaster G-neral, by authority of Congress, one; j thousand of them have been made, half 'of which are now iu use, with, ii, is rimned, very tatisfae’ory result*. i
From Mexico—Battle between the i French and Liberals—Opening ol Telegrapn. San Francisco, April 24—The pa- : ; triotic Mexicans yesterdny celebrated the splendid victories said to have been achieved over the French at President and Golonel Regan, who.com-; manded the French at President, gives su official account o* the battle, in which . lie says his small expeditionary force was 'attacked by 3,200 liberals, who were re pulsed, after four hours’ hard fighting, with a loss of two pieces of artillery, 350 killed, sjo wounded and missing. , The Imperial iossis 160 killed and 67 • wounded. j The Imperialists were unwilling to remain longer wbare the putrefaction ol ; hundreds of corpses would breed pes- , tilence, and opened the way to MazatUn, bringing iu all the wounded. A letter, dated March 19, states that the French has abandoned Chihuahua in two columns, one moving to Monleiey ■ and the other to Sau Louis. j Potosi is to be garrisoned by impe rialists, the Mexicans having vacated. The telegraph cable connecting this island with the mainland was.lately laid , at Ladd bay, San Juan IslenJ. This fore noon, at ten o’clock, the signal wvs found perfect, ar.d direct communication was had with Portland, and New Westminister, after which, Victoria was cun inecied, and an announcement received, | amid the roar of cannon, ringing of bells, and cheers of the people. Congiatula . tory messages then passed (tom place to i pl>Ce. tnnther Amendment to tlie Couttitutiou. I The following joint resolution w»« of- 1 ' sered in the Senate, on the 27 h ult., which was ordered printed. Mr. Wilson offered a joint resolution for the follow ing amendment to the Constituton. “No payment shall ever be mad-- bj the United States or any State (or, or on account of, the emancipation oi any slave or sl >ves. or fur, vr on account of, any debt contracted or incurred in aid o the insurrec'ion «gain-t the United States. “Represtmation sh .11 be apportionsd among the several Slates which may be included in this Union according to their ' respictive numbers, counting the number I of white persons in each S.ale; but wl cn [ever io any State tl.e elective fittnchise ’ shall be denied any of iis inhabi ants, be- ; ing male citizens of the United States, above twinty <ne rears ot age, for any cause except insurrection or n-b.-Ilion against the United Stat*-*, the bari» oi representat'on in stsch S ate shall be reduced in the proportion which the num- , 'her of male citiz ns so <xcltlded shall bear to the whole number of male citizens over twenty-one year, of age.” The secon I clause of the resolution pro,l vides that whenever any of the Slate* ‘lately in rebellion shall rali'y the foie going article, the Senators and Il- presriilativis from such State or Stales shall jbe admitted into Congress. The resolution was uidered printed. Mexico, The diplomatic correspondence cunI cerning thu w .thdrawl us the French troops from M xico can not fail to be read ' with profound interest. Fiance, it will i be seen, at length yields without obtain- ■ i ing what she has all the time insisted on as a condition us the evacuation of Mex ico. No promise lias been held out to ■her that the Government of Maximilian will be acknowledged. Only the hssu ; rance, oft before given, is repeated, that i the chief principle of ths po] : cv of the United States is nun intervention, and that this principle wi’l be adhered to in the future nlations of the United States to Mexico.
I Th* correspondence contains some interesting dispatches concerning the intended enlistment of Austrians fur the army of Maxatniliun. Mr. Motley is informed that lie cac not make hi* protest against any act of the kind on the part of the Austrian Government 100 emphatic. He is instructed to represent to Austria that such nn act be one of hostility toward the Mexican Republic, and that the United States in such a case would net engage to remain a neutral observer.— Sew York j Tribunt. They Lave been finding gold at the \\ bite Mountains ofJNew Hampshire and the Green Mountains of Vermont. In ■ Lisbon, New Hsmpsbirs, they are said to have rocky peaks which yield to each tun of vein stone S2B in plumbage and 820 lin silver, labile a vein of white quarts in that town has yielded (a little of it,) .$867 per tun in gold and $169 in silver , One batch ol samples yielded $.500 per tun. There are similar reports from various parts of Cana ia and Nova Scotia. If we have cholera in the cities this summer, some of us may turn to gold dig • f»* n gConsiderable excitement was created at Macon, Georgia, on Wednesday last by an attempt on the part ol the freedmen forcibly to release a negro , woman arrested on the charge of murder. The military authorities promptly in- - terfered, and about fifty of the freedmen were put under arrest, and confined at the barracks. On the day previous a negro coufied in the jail was shot by a white soldier on duty as sentinel. The soldiers said the negro was impudent to hi n, wbereapee he fired through the window of the jail' al him killing him instautlv.
‘Live and Let Live' : G. BOLLMAN (»tccs»«« TO »<«LM*a a antwtuu ~ ’ DECATUR, IND. HA.ff on Land, 4« L:s rooms, it New Block. Fast aide of £<s:o*d i a large and complete atwek of Pure Drugs & Medicines. CHEMICALS, PAIXTS, OILS. VAKXISHES. DYE STUFFS, WINDO O' GLASS 1 CUTTY, BRI'SHLS CURE : Peifumeiiesaud Fancy Article*, in great v ariety. Pure Wines & Liquors, For Medicinal Purpose*. Patent and Pronrietarv * % Medicines, iu great variety. Letter, Cap and Note Papers, Envelops, I’euß, Pencils, Inks, Ac . Cigars, Tobacco and Snuff Kerosene or Coal OIL. 2JK ■> Coal Oil Lamps. I lu fact everything uiu-.’.y kept in a “FIRST CLASS DRUG SHORE" CALL ASI> Str IM Prices—Cheap for CASH, :u:— M r w uuld svy to the puL.ic that we have**cured the service* of aI’HACIICAL DKL’GGIST; nnd Physicians and Customers can re ly upon having Prescription* correctly com pound 'd at al! hours of the day or uivlitDon't forget the place—Num>*r»’ New Block. Eart »'de of Second street, Decatur, Ind Feb’y 9. 1666. lyToilet Articles. \FIN'E aasortment —Baain’*. Lubin'a and Phalon’s Perfumerie*. Hair Oil*, Pomades. Puff Boxes, Cosmetic*, and Toilet articles. with a fine asaortmcnl of Fancy artic le ’‘“’ S. C BOLLMAN’S Ne'* Vru< -tor*
Coal Oil and Lamps. t>EST of Coal Oil. with a large assor'wrst 5 of Coal Oil or Kerosene Lamps, Ckim neve, Shades. Wicks, aud Coal Oil Fixtures, 1 of all kinds, at lowest rates, at S. C. BOLLMAN'S New Drug Store. Pure Spices. ' /Cinnamon. Mace. Casia Buds. Cloves Not V> megs, Ginger, Allspice, Pi per and spur* of all kinds at g c BOL7 MAN . S New Drug Store. Flavoring Extracts. T EMON, Orange, Peach, Pin" A W k ' I J Strawberry, »iuilla» Very fine and at lowest rates, at S C. BOLLMANS New Drag Sore. • Brushes’. Brushes! TA AIN’T and Varnish Brushes. Saah T«J'' 1 Scrub,Shoe, Cloth, Tooth, Nail, datr and Flesh Brushes, in endless variety, » l S. C. BOLLMAN S New Dr-rg Window Glass. qf " Jiew Prog B {jre ; . '■pi; USSES an.. Shoulder Braces, of the meet L approved make, with a large flor Surgical Instruments, at 8. C. BOLLMAN S New Drug Store. \rE lovers of the ‘weed;” ve who can j predate asd enjoy a good ccgar, <*i accommodated at 8. C. New Drug Store Y>LACKrCa7‘>iae and TndelDlde Ink*. “ |5 S. C. BOLIMANS
