Evansville Daily Journal, Volume 1, Number 147, Evansville, Vanderburgh County, 11 October 1848 — Page 2
DAILY JOURNAL. . MINTED AND PUBLISHED BT WM. H. C HANDLER & CO.
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FOR PRESIDENT : GEN. ZACHARY TAYLOR, Of Louisiana. FOR VICE PK ESI DENT: MILLARD FILLMORE, Of New York.
WKIO ELECTORAL TICKET. FOR TBS STATE AT URGE; JOSEPH G. MARSHALL, of Jefferson. liüDLÜYU S. ORTH, of Teppecanoe.
nrrnrcT xlectobs: Jimcs E. Blythe, of VanderLurg. Johx S. Davis, of Floyd. MiLTox (J rem, of Denrborn. David P. Hollo way, of WayxiV Thomas D. WsLroob, of Hancock. Lovklx II. Uocsseac, of Greene, ' Lewa kd V. McGcahey, of Turk. Ja.mes F. SeiT, of Clinton. Da.mxl D. Pratt, ot Cass. Datid KiwoRt, of Delaware.
11 DUt 8i " JJ ith - atu 6th -Ith ein " :a " loth "
CITY OF IIVANSVILLE:
ITEDXESD AY MORNING, OCTAL To Work. We beg leave to remind the Whigs that from now till the day of the Presidential election U only four veeks. All that
is to be done to effect the election of Taylor and
Fillmore must be done within those four veeks.
iq the language oi acotemporary tne urns is
short; the consequence to follow the performance or the neglect of duty within those weeks are momentous and of long duration. For lour years at least shall we rejoice in the tri
umph of good government, or for four years at least shall we groan under misrule, according as the Whigs do their duty to themselves and their country. For four years? Yes, for more
than four times four years! Look at the re
eulu of the election of James K. Polk! A
war which has made thousands of widowaand orphan, corrupted the morals of thousands,
brought upon us a debt which will not be paid in twenty years, and precipitatedthe. slavery question to an issue which may even rend this
Union asunder.
Whigs! If you are content that this Locofoco policy ahall be prepeluated, fold your arms
in indifference. If you rightly feel the evils which it has entailed upon the coutry, go to work to hurl its authors and abettors from power. Cass and Butler are parties to all that
hat been done under this Locofoco reign; they
altogether approve of it all, and are determin
ed to "follow in the foots'eps. Taylor and
Fillmore are opposed to it all; to war, to conquest, to annexation, to debt, to extravagance, to proscription for opinion's sake. They are in favor of encouraging the mechanics and laborers of our own country in preference to those cf Europe. Above all, they are in favor of giving to Congress and the People their rightful and constitutional power in the Government, and against the practical usurpation of nil power by one man, the President.
A RrscLT Worth Contending For. The NUdison Banner well says the election of Gen. Taylor to the Presidency will certainly restore to the people of the United States the inesti
mable, blessings which they enjoyed under the
rule of their first Presidents. The hope of
surh a restoration is itself exhilarating. The
ultra ism ot parties receiving no encouragement at his hands, the asperities of political strife mut subside, and men who go iato public may serre their country honestly, without dangir of partizan obloquy. An administration such as that of Madison and Monroe is,
in leed, a thing to strive for. It might form
a new starting point in the career of the Re
public, giving her course a direction upward
and onward towards the glorious consumma
tion of the best hopes of the fiiends of free lom everywhere.
Bain's New Discovert. The Philadelphia
Inquirer has been shown a specimen of writing which has been made by means of Bain's Elec
tric Copying Telegraph, a new invention, by
which a person at one end of the telegraph
line, can transmit to another, an exact copy o
a signature, & portrait, writing, drawing, or
ny thing cf the kind. The distinctness of the writing U quite perfect, and the discovery may
be applied to many useful purposes. Mr. Bain is now in New York, and is anxious to dispose
cf his riht, to form a company.
(GpThe Prince de Joinville, who has his
f ither'a tsagacity in money matters, whhou his over-grasping avarice, is investing hii means in United States stock. For one item
he lately bought $20,000 of N. Y. atork in hi
0.10 ivifti'i nam?.
For the Evansville Journal. Gextlemes: In the Democrat of the 5th
inst., there is an article addressed to the Pub
lic, over the stguature of B. F. Dupuy, no doubtt by him intended as a reply to my communica
tion, published in your paper of the 3d inst.
On first reading the article I concluded not to
reply to it, from the fact that it don't disprove any of the charges which I made in my
communication of the 3d inst., on reflection,
however, I thought best to reply to it. The gentleman, after very learnedly citing the Post Office laws and regulations, points to chap. 7. sec. 63 of Post Office regulation., which, he says, instructs him as follows: When a mail
anives on Sunday the Postmaster will keen his
office open for one hour, or more if the public convecience require it, after the arrival and assortment thereof, unless it be during the time of public worship, in which case he will open
the office one hour or more if necessary, after . V. I 1 .
we same uas ceasea; now in my iormer communication, I stated that a mail had arrived on
the previous Sunday in ample time for its as
sortment, and delivery, and I again repeat it
bere. that it did arrive in time to be assorted
and delivered before the hour of Church meet
ing; now the gentleman states that the mail in
question did not arrive at his oCice until after 3 o'clock, P. M. on Sunday, by his time, and
not until after his Assistant had left for Church,
and any other statement is false; now I can
prove that the mail did arrive before the hour of 3 o'clock, and that by such proof, thdt were
he arraigned before a Court of Justice on the issue, it would consign him to a term of from
two to five years in Jefferson ville, now for the proof accompanying this, is the sworn affidavit of Wm. Green, who carried the mail bags
in question from the Wharf Boat, after its de
livery here by the Lewis Wetzel, on Sunday
last, and not until after he had delivered it at the Post Office, and returned to the Wharf Boat was it 3 o'clock, according to their time
on said Boat, and to this he has testified to
under the solemnity of an oath. Taylor & Butler keep a Register of the arrival of Steam
Boats at this landing, it is there recorded in the hand writing of R. Gill Harvey that the boat arrived at half past two o'clock. Now by the affidavit ot Wm. Green and by the fact that the boat is registered as having arrived
here at half past two, have I not made out a clear case without any other circumstance in
relation thereto, whatever. I will adduce some other evidence to shew that the mail did arrive as stated, before 3 o'clock, and before his Assistant had gone, to Church; now I will state that Jas. Lockhart and myself saw the mail on its way from the boat to the Post Office, and that it was then by our time half past two o'clock, and after waiting long enough in the office of the former as we supposed for the mail to be assorted, we left for the Post office, and on our reaching Main street, this Assistant who is alluded to as having gone to Church, came out of the store of the writer and was by hjm informed that a mail had arrived sometime previous, when he immediately hastened towards the Post office. Now thi3 Assistant is a communicant of the 1st Presbrterian Church, and a member of.its choir aud it is to be presumed if 3oclock huJ arrived he would be in his seat in that Church; still further when we got to
the ofüce we were informed by a member of
the Postmasters family.then leaving for Church, that the mail was being assorted, aud the otüce would be opened in ten or fifteen minutes:
now, in the face of all these facts, the centle-
man has had the hardihood to accuse me of
alschood through the columns of the Demo
crat. 1 now indignantly hurl back the charge of falsehood to the source from whence it came, and when that man charges any individual in
uns community wiui iaiaenood i would sav
o that individual to point him to the charge
of falsehood against me, aud then to the afiadavit of Wm. Green, and to the steam boat Re
gister of Oct. Ist, 1&18, kept by Taylor & But
ler. 1 lie gentleman states, when fault is to be found, toco to him in a friendly manner.
and complain of the grievance, and that he
would at once rectify it this has been done
by numberuiud what has been the consequence, a tornado of abuse, aud a reference to the Post office laws, chap. 7. sec. 63. The gentleman
nas worsted nnorell into the belief that he has
rendered satisfaction, aud made a very efficient
lostraaster. As Dr. Johnston tays, it may be proper to deceive other, but scarcely worth
wnile to deceive oneself in this rase he ecre-
giously deceives himself, and not others. Ask
every man, woman and child in this commu
nity who have had occasion to go to the office, and I will venture to sav, that uineteen-twen-
tieths of them have been, after asking a civil question, and expecting acivil answer, in place
tnereot nave been rudely repulsed, and the
writer of this, hearing so often how others had fared there, has ceased al most altogether going to the office, at the same lime having almost daily business there. But he states that his
persecutors and slanderers had no just cause o
complaint, and that was the reason why they howled so loud. How preposterous, what an
assumption. Bein told Dv a member of his
own family that the mail was being assorted,
and that the otiice would be open in ten or fifteen minutes, four gentlemen met at the office, and in the act of repealing what the member of that family had stated without knocking al the door "the Postmaster opens the door adjoining that of the office, aud in au in
sulting manner, slated that the office would not be opened until 5 o'clock, and tlat the Postmaster had as good a right to go to Church, as any body ehe. S-iuning under the insult,
so deliberately o ücred, the article was written without the assistance of any political Dm,;
gist, and for no other purpose than to shew this
community that their lute rests are neglected,
and their rights trampled upon by this self
styled, efficient Postmaster, who states thati
be was the incompetent officer 1 make him out lobe, that the present Postmaster General
would soon give him leave to retire, that he keeps in office no such men as the contemptiblt officer I make him out to be. It mu
well enough for him to eulogise Cave Johnson, through him he received the appointment, at the instance of a single individual, that individual well knowing that he was not the choice of either the whig or democratic party in this city; he knows well he was placed their against their wishes and without their being consulted in the matter he may well say, that if we cannot bite we had better hut our mouths, he knows he received the office against the wishes of the community and that they are for the present, powerless to remove him. He further states that he had some hint of this conspiracy, and that he will kep his eyes open on the movements of the conspirators lor his ease of mind. 1 would state that there is but one conspirator, he may call him a grand one if he pleases; that conspirator wrote the Recipe, compounded the ingredients, and through the assistance of your columns, administered the dose, and the prescriptioseems to work well. As the case is a chronic one, it is expected the cure will be tedious, but I am in hopes a few more equally judicious prescriptions similarly applied, may in time remove the disease altogether. The Postmaster says I am a young man who heretofore has expressed great regard for him in that ha is sadly msitaken and that I have deliberately concocted and published a fahe and slanderous tirade against an old man and cowardly sneaked from signing my name to the infamous production but he, magnanimous like, hands his card and address. Isow to th first of these charges. Although it may be a favorite theme with some to prate about their age, I would state for the information of the public, that the frosts of twentynine winters his passed over my head, and that there it has left unmistakable traces of its pre
sence, and in my youthful experience, I have
often met those whose as fell far short of
mine, who for firmnessand vigor of roind.would
compared with the unstable mind of the man of sixty. The comparison is ludicrous, in the
extreme. My heretofore expressions of regard,
are the same that rextend to all when they vis it my Counting Room, and most certainly I
have treated the Postmaster on Ireouent oc
casious, as he himself admits, with kindness
and regard, but I have never for an instant, af
ter his first usurpation of power, hesitated to
denounce his course as Postmaster. He says,
I cowardly sneaked from the signing my name
10 my miainous production old ne negieci to read the Editorial headingof mv commuuica-
ion; it was there stated that the writer was
responsible, and why not go to the EJitor and
ask for the author, and I'll venture to say, the
Lditor would have stated that 1 handed the ar
ticle for publication, in person, at the same
time stating that I would as soon it would ap
pear over my own tienature as any other way.
aut no, this would not suit the object intended. I must cry persecution says hp, an J that must be done by tdating that the writer refused to give his name. After statins that the article
was slanderous and iiifamou., and he never
went to ask who the author was, and never
pretended to reply to a single allegation charg-d
in that communication, except one which 1 have proved by a competent witness under oath
to be true this man hands nie Ins address
This is the third or fourth time similar publica
tions have been made by the same gentleman.
Eardcin cantilenenn Semper canert. Betttrhe
would sins to another tune, and that the ac
commodation of the citizens, anJ this brings
me to that significant postscript "Evervbodv
knows the Boxes are my own private property."
1 think there is in this postscript, a skulking of
the question, there are ten or twelve boxes
in the office, inserted m the door 2o. from
one upward, having a lock and key from the
outside three hl i tors of newspapers hold
three, the others are held by merchants, who
have been coerced into the payment of Two
Dollars per annum for them, merely from the fact that the office is closed here at sundown,
according to the dispensation of the Postmis-
ter General, for the especial accomodation of
this omce. The laws are elsewhere, that when
an important mail arrives, before (J o'clock, P.
M., the onice, after the mail is assorted, is kpt
open one hour for its delivery! How is it here,
the office is closed at sundow n for all unless the
outside box men, and for them the office,
through the potent two Dollars, is always open.
The Postmaster here stales that he performed a duty in not opening the office when a River
mail arrived at seven o clock. ow I u ill ask
all candid men, if closing the office against a
portion of this community or all, except mx or
eight Mercantile firms, who hold outside boxes
is not a breach of that oaih which he has para
ded and that he, as Postmaster has taken to ad
minister the duties of that office impartially.
He states that he has imrortant official duties
to perform; which roust be done with closed
doors. Did Mr. Gooilsell close the door? Did
Mr. Chute close the door, to attend to such im
portant duties? the answer of every one
will be an emphatic no So, nor is there
now, will be responded to by every one in
this communi tv, here we have a population of
between 6 and 7,000, aud oui Post Office is closed at Sun-down, before the mails arrive
trom tnat section ot tne country, wnicn sus
tains us as a city, and no malter what letter
may require a reply, utiles vou are a holder o
a two dollar out-side box, you cannot get the
letter, and how are vou to reply to to itf The
mails, 1 speak of.nre carried in four hore coach
es from Vincennes, where there is a distribu
ting office, consequently we receive letters
irom mere, iromevery point oi in; compass, mese
mail s arrive three um s per week, on Monday
Wednesday and Friday, aud, 1 will ius!ance
the box oiwrauon for example, on 1 ndav ev
ening the mail arrive, A and Bare doing busi
ness side by side, A has got an out-tde bjx, U
has not, both have letters of tqaal importance requiring immediate answers. A, by the mag
ic box, or two dollars if you plea-e, receives
an J answers his communication by return ol of mail nexi morning. B has got to wail the
movements ot the out -ul here, aud receives
his in due tinit from 7 to 10 o'clock next mur-
uins;, after the mail coa. hand allhasgon,and
what can he do quietly wait until Tuesdav mornings following, and that in these times of
lightning and steam, 1, far my part, think al
ought to nave an emul chance. 1 am now
done with the subject, promising, however,
that of a dereliction of duty comes under my notice, th community hüll ht-ar trout me
aain through the columns of vour very vain
able Journal, aud I aeaiu (requesting, however
that ihe Postmaster shall tail upon you fur the
name of the writer) subscribe nrnelf, Ä CITIZEN.
the Wharf Boat of Taylor & Builer. a Mail
Bag: said mail, bag being delivered hereby the
steam boat Lewis Wetze II, and that on his ar
rival after, at said Wharf Boat, after the deliv
ering of said mail bag at the Post office, it was
then and there stated to him that it was just 3
o'clock, P. M.
, WILLIAM GREEN. Signed and sworn to, before me, thisTlhdav
of October, 184S.
Joseph Wheeler, Justice of the Peace.
Statu of Indiana, Vanderbura county, net;
Personally appeared before me, Joseph Wherlef, a JtHtkv of the Teate, in and fervid
county, October the 7th, William Green
who being sworn. Mated tint en Sun lay the Ut in!., h did carrr to t!i lVt Office from
FisASCiERiso. The law prohibits the Sec
retary of the Treasury from loaning the funds
f the United States. We have SOO.000 dolars in strong boxes in New York, the Secreta
ry won't lend it, but he. has agreed to deliver
to individuals that sum for Treasury Notes, they agreeing to take them back aud return
ihe money whenever called on? What i pitiful Locofoco shift that is, to cover up a loan
f money which the law says he shall not
make.
MOMENTOUS FACTS IN RELATION TO
THE VETO POWER. BT CHARLES D. DRAKE, E-jQ. The people certainly have not f jllv investi
gated the weight, power, and effect of the Ex
ecutive Veto, or they would with one voice
cry out against its further us, in the spirit
and manner in which it has been resorted to
within the last twenty years. It is a singular
and deeply interesting lads, which thould arouse every man in the country to attend to
this grave subject that the eto was equal in power to two millions, six hundred and eighty-five thousand eight hundred and forty peo
ple ol this country, and more than equal to
four States of this Union! That is, whenever
a President chooses to interpose his single will against the will of Congress, in relation
i - i t
to any diu, it requires, over ana aoove a ma
jority, the representatives of that number of
people, and the Senators from that number of
Stales, to overcome that single will.
Attend, for a moment, to the facts and fig
ures by which this statement is proved. The
House of Representatives of Congress, con-
feists ot zdJ meraoers, oi wnicn 1 10 are a ma
jority, and 151 are. two Ihirds. Thd Senate
is composed i f 6U members, of which jI are a majority, and 40 are two-thirds. Now, if abill receive 116 votes in the House,
and 31 votes in the Senate, and be signed bv
the President it becomes a law. But it he put his Veto upon it, as the votes of twothirds of each house are necessary to Us pas
sage, it cannot become a law without 15-1 "otes
in the Houe and 40 in ihe S-naie. It takes therefore, just 33 votes in ihe House an I 9 in the Senate, more than a mijority, to overcome the Veto. Each of those 33 votes in the House represents 70,G30,and the whole 2,685,-
S 10 people. Every two of these 9 vyies in
the Senate represents the power cf one State.
and the whole more lhan lour S;ate. Hence
the Veto is equal hi power to that number of
people and Sia.es. Another fact most strikingly illustrates th-j
exorbitant power of th Veto. If is, that it
needs but oue vole more than on--third of ei
ther House of Congress, to nustain the will of
the President and make it absolute. For instance: a bill vetoed by the PresM lent, njv t
passed, notwithstanding the Veto, by ihe votes
of the whole Ju0 tnemoers ot the House ot
Representatives, and may receive 3'J votes in the Senate; or it may be passed unanimoiivly by the Senate, and receive lf3 votes in the
llous and vet in either case for the want of
one vote, lau to become a law, uiougn sustain
ed by an overwhelming majority in both Hou
ses. Now.as it is th mot l.nprobabie 1 1104 in the wot Id, that the President could not find in
one house or ihe other, a sufficient number of
men, impelled bv friendship to him Or bv con
currence of opinion with him, t r by, th hope
of preferment by him, to sustain his Veto, it
follows, that for every practical purpose the Veto is jus', as absolute as if it wore so declared by the Constitution. In" the light of thes facts the great truth stands out with vivid distinctness, that the exercise of the Veto destroys the very fir.t principle of our Republican System the right of the majority 10 govern. Whenever the
President chooses, no matter how foolishly or
wickedly, the resort to that power, government is by that act in that particular case, thrown into the hands of the minority. And, as every minority government is in principle a despotism, it follows that the exercise of the Veto establishes, in each . individual case, a
despotic power in the minority over the major
ity. 1 rue, the power mignt not be despoticly used. That would depend upon the object and
temper of the President in applying the V eto
and upen ihe extent of his sway over the minority; but whether so used or not, the principle is there, and may at any lime be brought
into artion, and that hould be enough to excite in every American freeman au intense jealousy of the Veio power, and an unyield
ing and sleepless opposition toils improper ex
ercise.
75 CI23TS. Dr. Champion's Vegetable Ague 3Iedicinc !
1 SAFE and warranted Cure for Fevers of every
." description.
Alo, Ur. Champion's Vegetable Anti-BilSious.
Anti-Uypeptie, 1 untying and Cathartic rill?, po.-s
es-injj lour important combined propei tie lor the curt oi"l)i-ea?-i9, carefully and correctly combined, one ar-
noie to assist tne tnect 01 anoincr xor me uen nt oi
the Health of Mankind.
These pills contain the tour lending properti for the cure ut diseases. There is no chronic alft-ction in which the Liver, the Htotnach, the Dowels or the
blond is not concerned. 1 herctore, these pills are carefully and correctly prepared to meet those several indications. - In all Bilious complaints they cure by acting upon the liver, and carrying ilF th redun
dant, or excessive but ; and at tue san;e tnr.e exciting the liver into lull action. In dyspepsia, ltu-y ranv
olf the accumulated nia.-s l acidity, and correct the
stomach aud cigotivc orguns. it h a tcct wed known and gci.e.ally acknowledged, that a prcat jtirt ot chronic dwas-a deix-nd upon impurity of the
iio.Ki. 1 hts-e pills possess the power ot purilying the
!!öod, even in the most obstinate ca. s of sorotulaoi fluct-id tempcrairtf nl; and as a cmhnrtic, they act gently u,n the tKwe'.s, removing all unhealthy acctiniulati.ni. They are mild in thoir nature, anJ may U
u--I with per:ect enleiy lit all ags, irom xntancy to
j;u ace. tor sale iy " c' iVlt1 W0ISey & ! Evansville la. lr.Thu Newman, Mt. Vernon la. K. B. llallock, Princeton la W.J. Whiting, Cynihianna la. W. H. Dnriick. Booiiville la. Dr. Joseph tk)vtr, Vinccanes la. -3 in w.
1 rrel Ktuhnwa fruit lor t-aic b I WW dec21-tl JOIIXSHANKLLN.
' FANCY CONFECTIONARY. : Augustus Ilisen ' " lT7"OULl res;ectf.illy inform the erizens f I Evansville that he ha lately opened a Fancy Confection ary store on Tirel street, above M&in, where he intends always to keep on hand a Jar
and splendid nsscrtment 01 l-ao.3, candies, Cor.oials, and other taihionable drinks, end alaoin th iruit season a varied assortment of Fkcits. Ii
would inform the citizens that as he is a Confection
er by trade every thing in the baking line will hu done by himself, in any .tdrnpe, size, or mode wished.
Having just commencrd m bu5ir.cs he reentctfcl'y
requests that iao?e wisiiin to purchase anything i-i hi line would pi ase ive him a call, and ei n.iua his Work 2nd prices before purchasing eist where.
Uct. ItMi MST OF LUTTERS " REMAINING in tne : Post Oiiice at Evtnsvü:Ind., on the lit day ef October. 1S43.
Ashley Wm Cul AdatiM Elizabeth Miss Aiinus diaries iieaty Hugh l5urkum L G-
lirewer L
fioun Jacob or
.Michael Kno:
or I lit i
Leach Elizabeth .Mcpherson Win V Mcliinder John Maxwell Reynolds Sc Co' . MtCormick llcnry . Mcämydcr John Marsh ihonia
'Mc-tks John
liushMr liootvV. Shoe- Maseey Nathan B
maker.
Dcrnard Grace 51 rs Ultvins Penelope .Miss Dlevins p Mb liopett Peter bowman Thomas R brown Thomas lirecd Rufus barker John W bates Elizabeth Mrs Ueyerly John caie of J Haft' baulscl John badkett Tbomaa Burress Julian Miss beach Joseph O bonn Jacob Bernard Adolphe blevina R Miss bilhnaii Adam Harth Casper ' liullcr Adam lieeler CL lire wer Louis care of) T. M. Johnson i C mer Mikel Conner James Cloin George W Cot kman John C'hisin Elizabeth II Cusidy Patrick Coiiins John S Com way Jav! Chnpi . Eiisliu 11 L'tnaoron Charles
Cambron Charifcv
Calloway If I
C'abeil Ali 3 C.arkif
Cial.ey Vin:-n Ciavucy Mrs
Cuuti.igs Willi-. n Ccj.'ll!.!' J.jtldnli.i'ä
L) vis John I) lo bruler Evciirn 2 Molloy Miluw A Duncuu John Dike Nathan C Uury Lorenz Duty Daniel II iUiicr &aiiiuel DobhmsT D Uoni ' in l eior Liehie Mathias Jacob tA'ens John Ka :ij Jt detiiah Li 1M011 13 G i- Co Elles Augut 1 Er-Midjfc VVlJl Eui?rtou Wm Ir Etderkin It E r.v:(is Paui French Jonn N" Fuller Ph 2 Fined lluh I Ulnan A I irh.s Kctilry Fi;;fi'n:iui Christopher Faiipia liiram Glazier ."ei-er Grant .Mary Aim Gray ham Chr.- t . oregury J tin 3 Gray luboit
Gr.hiih toward Dr 'l'h.m;M.n Nnnry Griffith Henrietta M Mrs TrilMe läuiiHlu.
Cui-c- J j col)
McDowell Wm G
Magarv Marrrarct Miller W U Meek Wm Morgan G V Mcpnerrin John Martin James W Clerk S Ü Western I Miller Simpson S Dr 2 Martin Sarah Mrs Money SPMaj Mail Solomon Martin W P Her McGrew Saml P Mariin Wm McGinnU Theodor Mclntire James McDonalJohnD Morris Wm Mclntire Edwin Maney Kobt li ; Mclntire Kmbtee Matthew John G NolbJohn Noble Mary Neef Andrew J Parks Wilharu Piilliuon N' P Paoücr W Price Elijah Perroud Cappe4t Price Frances Mrs Preston W C Praiher John J Porker Francis S Parker I. D Pageit Miil.uU . I'ai.iier Majccr uj L I hing Kjt-:e John Koaita A A Dr le vels Wi!iu l! i;..i...kr .. t..itn boat) v.u::r U i.hai. nickeMCl.arie.t h'4.-i:ig M.'im u U. Jiis I'ai-i'l Kiiit- frtrzj li i;ier Jö-ej.h Ka wiiiii J L KoasCliaiiii U Kuar Gcoig Seller Isaac Smith iianiicii Mrs Siuiih .Nu hoiis Stephens .Via !i-,.;t eiier bvi;j.-.j::iri Spurrier E f Dieven. etii Siiiutf Th'Hiins Elevens SKrah.Mi.oji ' S:nitn S Ei;z:it,i a Mrs fct-iiiborlun John. 'fcioele fcu.-'an fc:i;:nt Luvindi SpiMrJ Mm rk John II soc.Wj;ottr William . Mvtvaiijt John Siioi pCS Sta11.-I.eiy SÜrifor W.id Ml!: weil Air -ih eta Vv :u tears Wm Sanrmt tl 1.
Viretn .vlas ui F Giiin in 15 1 (i.-niKan ivcut)en S Gil'huns A K Mrs tilenii John G C tpt (ii!iert John Ihvea Daniel 2 Garri.-on Wm M Uarri.H.,n Jai.irs C Harrison J i Col It irrtson Eliza un I lough T Honl Keutw-n UmtUY ila'ford S'itnul llarmCa:l:e.-i:is tiod A T ctre of MrjEJiioii I Humphreys Wm Doc ' Hunt Sauiiison Humphrey Naih Hunt Thompson B Higinbjthain Francrs" iUrdeiiC A Mit larnson J b tlaitten Matthew Molis Harth'in ilart Kobtr. Hart Carolin Hart Eunice 3 Hotderly Victor M Huey Joseph Hord Biiyamin I lord benjamin T Jones Roheit lgiehan W T care of l John Erskine i Isrlz L Jarvis W n Jones An.-on W Jacob George Ingraham John W Irvinz Henry Jewell J uncan 3 KelleyJohn ' Keller &. Kohert Kirk Sc KandoJrh Lord K&lph 11 S Lrf'iiunon Mr Lindsay Alex J Leonard Amoa 2 Ltreaux V 2 i-iewisHenry James La Fon J M Dr 2
Ea ron John Doct
1 ravy .errw Ti! npvin iier'j. Taylor KuIiiü Tnbt'ie L nj F 'i'roi.t.'iivu Ezekid 'I rcbuc i t:eed , ei.ia tireen V eag-r D mi. I Wogf.ii John Wei.I Th-.-.dore? 2 Wuhatnj W ' Wool'olk i;,lin'J Wriie Joseph Vod Ann WoodinPlillipA Wooden Augustus Ward i"eth Vi ilon ThorriM Waidron Wm ? Wagnon Sarsh ' Japtip (ieorgt care of ' Wetzel Ward Sand Wallir.g Jesse Ward Haid . WheehrWmL White John , 5 Watt Jinics WiitshiruJames GERM AM LETTERS, buhl, Jot-ipli loiicngng, J J Ehnuaiiuaut, Join . I'ishcr, J G. . tiiul, Franz Houkraih, C Hackel.John Kippcnleoger, J Kroesen, Joseph Kramer, F I . T -T
.'irjur, joepn Miller, Peter W Messesehmitt, Wm Miller, Jaeole Eichaus, Hef1-.. J Keablee, EshaTi Roesler, Anton Schmidt, John Schibbs Robert Stckink, W tH.htij.Jchn Sisk.F
sttienkst.rl
tHherr, Joha
Sener.t. Iiv nK
Volmer. Pctrr
rersons enquinns tor anyol the above letters Itae tay they am "advertised." . . D K. DL'PUV Evansville. Oct. 5,. 12-15. -.
PETER KCOTT, . House nnd Sign Painter, TAS opf ned n chop in Evansvillo, at tfce Eichau c
t.j !inri,n iiiT 110 1 prenrta XO no 11 tinJ 9
iionsc, nifjn, uua vnrnaffc raintiDg, at the lowest rate3 He retpcctfuily requests a th
01 puciic airuinc, .
jy 29-tf.
B. 1) TO WX LOTS ron sale. I WILL cell ft private 6ab a tract of Lend adjein ir.g Evansville. contair.ing about twenty mtn icres; also, ten or tittoen Lots in the upper erdarg mem ot Evarwville, all of which I will sell on reasonable terms in quantities touit purchasers Thew wishing to pur?"i.a.-e Land or Lots, will find it to ihci jyl4, to apply immedintcly. E. A. C0RDET, AimV
