Evansville Daily Journal, Volume 12, Number 276, Evansville, Vanderburgh County, 27 July 1860 — Page 2
EVANSVILLE, IND.
FBIDAY MORNING. . ..jult c: PEOPLE'S TICKET. FOR PREBIDEST, ABRAHAM LINCOLN OF ILLINOIS. V" The Peoplk of these United States are the rightful Masters or both Congresses and Courts, not to Overthrow the Constitution, but to Overthrow the Men whd Pervert the Constitution." Abraham Lincoln. FOR VICE PRESIDENT, HANNIBAL HAMLIN OF MAINE. 19 " I Love my Country more than I Love my Party." Hannibal Hamlin. Presidential Electoral Ticket. Elector r th Stats at Large. WILLIAM CUMBACK, of Decatur. JOHN L. MANSFIELD, of Jefferson. District Elector: 1st District Cyrua M. Allen, of Knox. 2d District John W. Kay, of Clarke. 3d District Morton C. Hunter, of Monroe. 1th District John II. 7arquahar, of Franklin. 6th District Nelson Truslcr, of -ayette. th District Reuben A. Riley, of Hancock. Tth District John llanna, of Putnam. 8th District Samuel A. Huff, of Tippecanoe. 9th District James N. Tner, ef Miami. 10th District Isaac Jenkinson, of Allen, llth District David O. Daily, of Huntington FOR CONGRESS FIRST DISTRICT, Is. Q. DeBRULER, OF SPENCER COl'NTT. Opposition State Ticket. FOR GOVERNOR, IIEXRY S. LANE, of Montgomery. FOR LIEUTENANT governor, OLIVER P. MORTON, of Wayne. FOR SECRETARY OF STATE, WILLIAM A. PEELLE, of Randolph. FOR TREASURER OF STATE, JONATHAN S. HARVEY, of Clarke. FOR AUDITOR OF STATE, ALBERT LANGE, of Vigo. FOR ATTORNEY GENERAL, JAMES G. JONES, of VanderburgL TOR REPORTER OF SUPREME COUr.T, BENJAMIN HARRISON, of Marion. FOR CLERK OF SUPREME COURT, JOHN PAUL JONES, of Lagrange. FOR SUPERINTENDENT OF PUBLIC INSTRUCTION, MILES J. FLETCHER, of Putnam. Free Homes for Free Men. SPEECH OF KCOlsT. C3-. -A.. GROW, Of PENNSYLVANIA. Delivered in the House of Rep., Misssj 30, 1SGO. (CONCLUDED.) The prosperity of States depeaxfa not on the mass of wealth, but its distribution. That country i3 greatest and most glorious in which there is the gicatest number of happy firesides. And if you woi.ld make the fireside happy, raise the (alien from their degradation, elevate the servile from their groveling pursuits to the rights and dignity of men, you must first place within their reach the means for supplying their pressing physical wants, so that leligion can exert its influence on the soul und soothe the weary pilgrim in bis pathway to the tomb. But as a question of revenue merely, it would be to the advantage of the Government to grunt these lands in homesteads to actual cultivators, if thereby it was to iuduce the settlement of the wilderness, instead of selling them to the speculator x. ithout settlement. The revenue to the Government from the lands, if considered annual, is the interest on the purchase money ; which would be on a quarter section, at one dollar and twenty five cents per acre, the interest on two hundred dollars, equal, at six per cent., to twelve dollars per year. But as the revenue of the General Covernment (with the exception of the sales of the lands) is derived almost wholly from duties on imported articles consumed in the country, the amount collected depends upon the quantity consumed. On an average, each individual consume.-! of imported arti i les about eleven dollars worth per year ; and calling seveu the average number of a family, then each family consumes annually eventy-five dollars worth of imported articles, upou which a duty of not less than twenty dollars was paid. So the Government would be the gainer of eight dollars per yeur on each quarter section, by giving it away to a settler in preference to selling it without pettlrment. In addition, as you cheapen the necessaries and comforts of life, or increase men's means to pay for them, you increase their consumption; and in the same proportion as you increase the means to pay for import?, you increase the consumption of home products and manufactures : so that the settlement of ihe wilderness by a thriving population is as much the interest of the old States as of the new. The amount now received by the Government of the settler, for the land, would enable him to furnish himself with the necessary stock and implements to commence its cultivation. For the purpose? of education, building railroads, opening ail the avenue? of trade, and of subduing the wilderness, the best disposition to be made o! these lands .- to grint them in limited quantities to the settier, and thus secure him in his earnings, by which he would have the means to surround himself with comfort and make his fireside happy ; to erect the school-house, the church, and all the other ornaments of a higher civilization, and rear his children educated and respected members of society. This policy w ill not only add to the revenues of the General Government and Ihe taxablu property of the new States, but will increase the prod or tire industry and commerce of the whole country, while strengthening all the elements of national greatness. The first step in the decline of empires is the neglect of 'heir agricultural interests; and with its decay crumbles national powers. It is the great fact stamped on all the ruins that 3trew the pathway of civilization. When the world's unwritten history shall be correctly deciphered, the record of the rise, progress, and fall of empires will be but the history ol the rise, development and decline of agriculture. Hooke, in describing the condition of agriculture among the Romans more than two thousand rears ago, the process of absorption of the lands by the rich, and their consequent cultivation by slaves, furnishes the student of his tory with the secret causes that undermined the empire and destroyed it. liberties. I read from book six, chapter seven, of his History of Rome, volume two, page 522 : " From the earliest times of Home, it had been the custom ot the Human, when they subdued any of the nations in 1'nly, to deprive them of a part of their territory. A portion of these lands was sold, and the rest given to the poorer citizeus ; on condition, says Appian, of their paying annually a tenth of the corn and a fifth of the fruits of
trees, besides a number of great and small cattle. In process of time, the rich, by various means, got possession of the lands uestined for the subsistence of the poor. ' n Tbe rjcii an(i iQC mighty contrived to possess themselves of the lands of their poor neighbors. At first they held these acquisitions under borrowed names ; afterwards openly in their own. To cultivate the farms, they employed foreign slaves ; so that Italy was in dauger of losing its inhabitants of free condition, who had no encouragement to marry, no means to educate children,) and of being overrun with slaves and barbarians, that bad neither affection for the Republic, nor interest in her preservation. "Ttberius Gracchus, now a Tribune of the people, undertook to remedy these disorders." ' " Never, says Plutarch, was proposed a law more mild and gentle against iniquity and oppression ; yet the rich made a mighty clamor about the hardship of being striptof their bouses, their land3, their inheritances, the burial-places of their ancestors. ' " The poor, cn the other hand, complained of the extreme indigence to which they were reduced, and of their inability to bring up any children. They enumerated the many battles where they had fought in defence of the Republic; notwithstanding which 'they were allowed no share cf the public lands; nay, the usurpers, to cultivate Ibvin, choose rather to employ foreigners and slaves than citizens ot Rome.' Gracchus's view was not to make the poor men rich, but to strengthen the Republic by an increase of useful members, upon which he thought the safety and welfare of Italy depended. The insurrection and war of the slaves in Sicily, who were not yet quelled, furnished him with sufficient argument for expatiating on the danger of filling Italy with slaves." "He asked the rich whether they preferred a slave to a citizen ; a man unqualified to serve in war to a soldier ; au alien to a member of the Republic ; and which they thought would be more zealous for its interest ? Then, as to the misery of the poor : ' The wild beasts of Italy have caves and dens to shelter them ; but the people who expose their lives for the defence of Italy, are allowed nothing but the light and air ; they wander up and down with their wives and children, without house and without habitation. Our generals mock tbe soldiers, when, iu battle, they exhort them to fight for their sepulchres and their household gods ; for, amongst all that great number of Homans, there is not one who has either a domestic altar or a sepulchre of his ancestors. Tbey fight and die, solely to maintain th? riches and luxury of others ; and are styled the lords of the universe, while they have not a single foot of ground in their possession.' " Smith, in the second volume, page 291, of his Greek and Roman Biographical Dictionary, speaking of Tiberius Gracchus, and the reason for his proposed legislation, says : "His brother Cains related, in some of his works, thai i iberiOS, on his march to Spain, in (15. ''.) 137, as he was passing through Ktroriu, ofcoeived with grief and indignation tlio deserted state of that fertile country ; thousands of foreign slaves in chains were employed iu cultivating the laud and tending the flocks upon the immense estates of the wealthy, while the poorer classes of Roman citizens, who were thus thrown out of employ incut, had scarcely their daily bread, or a clod of earth to call their own. He is said to have been roused through that circumstance to exert himself in endeavoring to remedy this evil." Had the policy advocated by Gracchus, of distributing the public lands among the laudless citi.ens of the nation, been adopted, the Roman fields would have been cultivated by free men instead of slaves, and there would have been a race of men to stay tl.e ravages of the barbarian. The Eternal City would not then have lalleu un easy prey to the Goth and Vandal ; bat the star of her umpire might have waved in triumph long after the ivy twined her broken columns. With homes and firesides to defend, the arms and hearts of an independent yeomanry are a surer and more impregnable defence than battlement, wall, or tower. While the population of a country are the proprietors of the land which they till, they bare an interest to surround their fin-sides with comfort, and make their homes happy t lie great incentive to industry, frugality, and sobriety. It is such habits alone that give security to a Government, sad form the real elements of national ureatness and power. National disasters are nut the growth of a day, but the fruit of long years of injustice and wrong. The seeds planted by false, pernicious legislation, often require ages to germinate ami ripen into ttieir harvests of ruin and death. The most pernicious of all the baleful seeds of national existence, is a policy thai degrades its labor. Whenever agricultural labor becomes dishonorable, it will, of course, be confined to those who have no interest in the soil they till; and when the laborer ceases to have any interest in the land he cultivates, he censes to have a slake in the advancement and good order of society, for he has nothing to lose, nothing to defend, nothing to hope for. The associations of an independent freehold are eminently calculated to ennoble and elevate the possessor. It is the life-spring of a manly national character, and of a generous patriotism ; a patriotism that rushes to the defence of the country and the vindication of its honor, with the same zeal and alacrity that it guards the hearthstone and the fireside. Wherever Freedom has unfurled her banner, the men who have rallied arourd to sustain and uphold it, have come from the workshop and the field, w here, inured to heat and cold, and to all t'je inclemencies of tbe seasons, they have acquired the hardihood necessary to endure the trials and privations of the camp. An independent yeomanry, scattered over our vast domain, is the best and surest guaranty for the perpetuity of our liberties; for iheir arms are the citadel of a nation's power, their hearts the bulwarks of liberty. Let the public domain, then, be d apart as the patrimony of labor, by preventing its absorption into large estates by capital, and its consequent cultivation by "tenants ami slaves,' instead of independent freeholders. The proposition to change our land policy so as to acccomplish so desirable a result, by securing to the pioneer a home on the public domain at the bare cost of survey and transfer, is often rejected by those who have given but little thought to the subject, as leveling and agrarian. When was there ever an effort made, since the world began, to wrest from power its ill gotten gains, or to restore to man his inalienable right?, but it has been met with the shouts of leveling and agrarian i That is the alarm cry of the devotee of the past, with which he ever strives to prevent all reforms or innovations upon established usages. Behind such a bulwark, old abuses intrench themselves, and attempt to maintain their position by hurling against every assailant terms ot' odium and reproach, made so by the coloring of the adherents of prerogative and power. Until within a very recent period, the chroniclers of tbe race have been, for the most part, sycophants ot the reigniog class
es; and, being allied with the State, have glossed over its contemporaneous despotism and wrongs, while tbey have branded the true defenders of the rights of the people and the champions of honorabie labor as outlaws of history. Because the Roman Gracchi proposed to elevate the Roman citizen, by dignifying his labor, and restoring him to the rights of which he had been unjustly deprived by the oligarchy who controlled the State, their name was made synonymous with infamy, and as arch disturbers of all tiiat was good in society, till Nicbuhr tore off the vail of two thousand years of obloquy, and vindicated to future times their memories as true defenders of the rights of the people, and advocates of the best interests and glory of their country. Such has beeu the fate of the world's reformers. Is it not time to learn wisdom from the chronicles ot the past, and cease a blind reverence for customs or institutions, because of their gray age? Why should not the American statesman adapt the legislation of the country to the development of its material resources, the promotion of its industrial interests, and thereby dignify its labor, and make strong the prime elements of national power? Let this vast domain, then, be set apart and consecrated as a patrimony to the sons of toil; close your land office forever against the speculator, and thereby prevent the capital of the country seeking that kind of investment, from absorbing the hard earnings of labor without jrenderiug an equivalent. While the laborer is thus crushed by this system establishcdby the Goverumeut,by which so large an amount is abstracted from his earnings for the benefit of the speculator, in addition to all the other disadvantages that ever beset the unequal struggle between the bones and sinews of men and dollars ar.d cents, what wonder is it that misery and want so often sit at his fireside, ami penury and sorrow surround his deathbed ? While the pioneer spirit goes forth into the wilderness, snatching new areas from the .vild beast, and bequeathing them a legacy to civilized man, let not the Government dampen his ardor and palsy his arm by leglation that places him in thepowerof soulless capital and grasping speculation ; for upon his wild battle-field these are the only foes that his own stem heart and right arm cannot vanquish.
Foreign Itkm3. Advices from St. Thomas state that the Danish Government has sent a Commissioner to Washington to negotiate a treaty for the purpose of getting a new stock of laborers at St. Croix. The proposition i3 to obtain captured Africans for apprenticeship at St. Croix instead of being returned to Africa. Palermo advices to the 3d say Garibaldi had held a review of 90,000 volunteers most of whom were very young. Garibaldi had issued a decree threatening to banish those who should rise against the former police, and stating that special Commissioners had been appointed to discover those functionaries who had oppressed the people. It was rumored that Garibaldi had determined to besiege Messina. The Neapolitan Government had resolved to offer the Sicilians the Constitution of 1812. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. njIUKOJ SI'HMJ4m TAW Y-V M Alley. The proprietor ol th Pigeon BprimgB 1C leave to inform the pablic that bfl IM rix ntly erected ilnd rn tn pleteil a tint Ten-Tin Alley. Tli? Springe, un lit tie ted iut one milt Iron Main -tn-rt, City of KviiiifVille, a -I distance lr either a v a Ik. or drive. The WStMV of the Spring! pOHM ftwrpaeeed medical properties, and invalids and other vrovM do well to resort to then, 'there are also hatha on the pretiiirffH, and the gTOVPdi W8 heatitituliy shaded with trt and eejl I QlUhdod with a rtaluhrioii atmosphere. WJf . BATES, Proprietor. N. Bw An omuilMitf run regularly three time a day to and from the city. julyJi jryw avvt thm: mmgcm stohms JBl oeeapted by K. Sharp- & Co., 13d Main lit. Enquire of K. Bfcf i t Co., or jii.y2r.-lw ALLIS & HOWK8. Dissolution. wmm k i -mj n tjk stt sat iik u mcJm. teflon xiMiut; between the undermined, Hurler the name and nrrn ot II. ML Weil & IV., was thin day dissolved hy mutual count-lit. William Wotirj is authorized to receive all debts due the concern, and will discharge all obligations of the MSee. VM. WKI.LS, II. H . WELLS. KvHiisvillf , July 1Mb, IM0. XOTICE. -BOOTS AXD SHOES. The Boot ted Shoe bejeJyjoM will be continued by the undeiMi;;m-d at the old Mam!, No. 8 Pint ut., intending to keep a good aMportment of goodl in tbe line both fur the Wholesale and BotoH trad and would oeltcti a mf jofo offiftvon extended to the late firm. Small prulit and quirk return is my m ittu. VM. 'ELLS. j uly AGRICULTURAL. sV w Stockholders. The Vauderburg County Agricultural aud Horticultural Society will meet at tlM Court House on baturdar next, the 'ttth, at two o'clock P. M. A full attendance of uiemta-iii and stockholders is desired, as the Premium List for our next Fair will be reported, and a plan offered tor blending the S ietv and Land Association in ont under one -et of ofticern. Let all who feel any interest attead. C. K. DEMENT, PrrVt. A. V. CHi'TK, Set y julvJo-td GRAND JUVENILE CONCERT CRESCENT CITY HALL, O. v ntut.i - K vm. vis, j 1 'tilth, PsuC Kemmerer, asitu,l by apwsasss t-f oint huudrcd MirtSfs and MasSsjra will giv h MtsttesJ KntertHinment of MfcscellaSHcHM Music. The jroKrHtiiiae will consist cf:'.! tlin'eit ut piece?. Ticke Is S casts, children M ceats. Tu coauaeaca ut 8 o olock. ivAyiS 'M nni.fi. 1 1 in; it vusKtiJi it t9 that i-i Ciller Viut-Kiir. i :onk d l.anj:lo . hv in nturt 20 bbls Extra ttdft Vinegar wliicli ti.ny wiil warrant purj and fr' from .11 ucid-, au.1 tu keep picklis flue aud hard uh wheu tirst made. SBJP it l .VJK X .' rKVJVMS! FMVJVKSt B 500 tb. Kxtra Turkish l'tunes it pMC lb. t ( : julj-iSl COOK LAJSGlTKY'S. ffjfKi.rif-: .ia.tt.sT mtijYV to.. .., ML Buirer. i;,5ii Ihs t rime Tahle butter just r- ceived dim t Iron thaaatihaia Arnistronfnmitj , I'eiin., tu l rioacd ."ut ehean, t m:ike roum buf the MCObd hipllieiit, at july'iS CltnK A LANiiLKY'S. a SaSfe Hjt hh fiti.ni; lijifri; m99 W'li.ii Piuiir fir sate at the 1 .west, now Hellitir at ?2.T. -r sack, at jul-j!". COOK k r.A SULKY'S. 'A 8fJ, t'llttiCti MtmXSSB Meal ,il.st reeeiveil at JoIj25 COOK A LAXULKY'H. li Ikubm Proctor Qambl. German bu.it, . 15 " " Crown " IS ' ' No. 1 For sale at COOK d- LANGLKY'S. jr ! i.. i mi J t lion neu rit in, JtLd l.r saie il COOK Jfc LANGLKY'S. jeB.iiI.y il Jl ST MMCMtWUtO . Mm. Be stock of Gold and Silver Watctu-e, Superior Gold Ten, and I'iue Silver Spoon., we respect, fully invite all tu call and examine inall and prices. Persons buying now may- expect tu et great bargaiuH. All articl.s warranted. BITTBOLK1" i'.U'a jnlT25-lmd 48 Maiu strPt. g BOOTS ' .i -VII ' SH OK S HMi.i l tt BB Burrow, 15 Maiu street, have a good assortmeut of Boots and Shoos on hands, aud htc constantly in receipt of additiuns thereto. The It tail trade may ilways find iu their More a g. ol stock of uod Got da, and at toenail prices. julyJ4 t- k ji H o I, h tsj x. jti Mm m t m Jt JVMi fc1 V i,hs. Read .t li-.irow's WttuleMile stock oi Bouts aud ..... .- la LuM larg.' ! I .otoplrte with the mnt rto.'ra.lr paiSk of th t Sa Kttjtand nianufacturem. All of watch iiiey wilt H1 cheap for ca-h or pruojpt jiaper. I'all aiel e.v.,min'. MM OLJU Jl K it TS OjV 1 8 j S-"j9. ji.L persuus indebted tu Jacob Straiib a Sun fur the vear. KM 60, will please call aud settle JACOB BTKADB SON, Hardware Dealers, 74 Main street. jnlvM i ;....
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.
WJf.' A' f-" f. K 1 " 1'JLOU MS! MB. Flour, as tow as the lowest ai:d a good as the best. Tn the present cxritcd stn'o of ttic Flour market, wheu thu prices are chanii:s almost every day, if von wawt f" !M3 a vott arti' 1a cheap cali at VICKKKY'S jnlyO Star Family Grocery. rwH n sr Friend. 10 boxes Chemical Olive Eraive Sosp jiiat received at tti" Utar Family Grocery' at (july2') VICKKKY BROS. OLD FIRM IN BUSINESS AGAIN. M. inform the public in general and the rest of mankind in particular, that t'my have bought "Ut the Feed buinw-o of Mr. J. C. Doaovcfaett aud that tbey will be prepared from this time to till all orders for FEED ar.d EED of aaj kind. Uur Jlr. R. S. Klston having formerly been engaged very successfully in Ihe busiuees for over one year, but called away to England upon family business, bas returned to his old etnud where he s ill at all times be pleased to se his obi frifiids aud former customers and all otbera, and fill their orders foi anything in our line, with promptness and satisfaction. Feed delivered free to any part of the city. july20-tf R. S. RUHTOH CO. d f tB .B. H XT It J " If'JUJS W Flour" for s:ile lower than o-iu publUheil rates of this date, at VICK ERY'f, July20 No. 82 Main street. DEC L I N E IN FLOUR. rmutn j-jt w t uof ojf wmht is B. now coming in pretty freely, which enables us to reduce the price of our best brands of Extra White Wheat Flour ISoutliern Mills) to S2.T5 per sack, delivered in any part of the city. Inquire at Southern Mills or .lames Erskiue Co.'s, No. 47 Main street, j lyiO IULEHART BROS. N rWY0RK"Wi MTllT" T Wf.MfiJ A- Kit HMO.Vit. MAJiTUl W facte ran of and Dealers in WIKE OV ALL DESCRIPTIONS. Particular attention i;iv.-n to orders sent to their Warehouse, 81 John St., M Y., which will be filled PROMPTLY, and have speedy dispatch. Circulars foraisbed. giving d lacoant from List, or nett prices at LOWEST MARKET RATES. TERMS. Six Mouths' Note, payable at Bank, with current rate of Exchange ou Nsw York, or f per ren:. off for Cash. Wire Mill, 2jth Street, Warehouse, 81 John street, New Y'ork. jnl2'l lnul ker. Th- undersigned is fully prepared to manufacture all descriptions of Carriages and Wacons from the finest to the cheapest, all of which will be guaranteed of the best wo kmanthip. A constant supply of Carriages aud Wagons will be found in mv arerooms, at No. 14't A.sin street, Evansville. ' FRANK HAMMERSTE1N. fc. B. Repairing done at reasonable rates, with neatness and dispatch july20-3md.w" mmoTivK To t oj t tutc r tut . Qf W Staled proposals wiil be receive! ar the counting-room of H. D. A T. C. Taylor, la Hartford, Ivy., until the 8th day of August next, for the construction ota Lock and Damon Rcagfa River, at a point near Newton's Old Mill. A plan at d specifications of the work may le seen at tho above place iti Hartford, or a copy of them will be forwarded to any one appljing by letter or otherwise, to tho undersigned President of the Board. Q C SHANKS. Hartford, Ky., July 8th- jal20-td LER0Y P ACE. boon thoroughly repaired from attic to coDor, with th addition of tpocloao yards and cellars, Hnd is now calie I Leroy Place, and is tor rent on m derate term! to trood families. Apply to CONVKRSS CLKMKXfTS. ju.jl7-.rw CITY OF EVANSVILLE SCHAPKER & BUSSING. 9 ''Kiids'" have toen li toonrich us by an exorbitant assessment of our taxable property, and becaOM we irill oof make Oath tn un utu ertaiiit v, and failed to notice that we must attend to a part which usually was the Asnt nor0 duty , we baTO to nuLunit to an unjust taxation. Now, h-r fear that the city's fiuaiH ial attairH ar- in a condition to cause Bach a course towards the tax-payers, and in order tmake the "beat " out of a "had" bargain, and to attain the city's credit, we will take city and county orders for Dry Goods at a rate that no one can otfect to, and eell K'ds tor them and cash, very cheap in order to close out our eammer cto.k. BCIIaPKCB BUSSING, Snoot awcr to s. EmWeh tt Co., f 1 1 v 1 No. 4'J Main street. VWA SfU OOi 1 '0. W Woeea aud Musters PIS K. KKMMKBER, from Philadelphia, Pa., will give leasons in Vocal Musi oad 31 usi'-al Klocutfoa, eery d y at S o'clock p. m , at tho (.'reticent City Hall Tuition cents for 13 h-ssons. A concert to he gWon at too oloos of the term Iff. B. Me will Insure an to learn iug ihut will attend. t uh 18 Hiring to cloee out my present stock of Teas, Tohaeco, mid Candies, 1 otter the name from thW date at prime owt for 0a1, All these wishing bargains shonld call soon. Choice Imperial Te at onrjr 80 cento per lb. G un powder at T"f t".1 u Young Hyson at 8W)M " Buck Tea at 70A75 " JAMKS L. SPALDING, j illy lt Cor. Main and Sa JSS90JS jv aTr''.-.ri, e7Jvtde reigned would reepectfollT inform the eitIsens of the city that be is prepared to giro leaswos in mu-ic, on the Piano or other instruments, to all who may favor him with their patronage. Inrtruoeents f all kinds toned and put in order. He will also select instruments for those who ale not judges themselves and desire to purchase ou Tenons Ills terms. llosliVinro on Sycamore street, between S.acual and Third street. j uly 11 CHRISTIAN N A TTH IAS. Dissolution of Partnership. 3 fore existing between the undersigned under the firm of Brown J? Aikman is this day dissolved by mutual consent. Bit her party ii authorized to uso the name of the firm in settling the bnetneas. WILLIAM BROWN, W. St. AIKMAN. Evansville, July 10th, 1800. Hir ed will continue the business ofthe above firm, under the style ot V. 5t. Aikman Jk Co., and , would resrpectfuHy solicit a oontinnsuine of fiivors extended to the old firmand being fully prepared to extend every tacility te shippers, either by Canal, River or Railroad, we assure then that their Interest shall he taith fairy represented, should they he pleased to favor ns with iheir natrotuues. Reaped fully, julyic. W. M. AIKMAN A C. A. T- WHITTLESEY, ATTORNEY AT LAW, .N A R V PVBIilC, l N:-VILLE, INDIANA. Will attend promptly t,i the cdteerinn ot claim!, aDd to all desci ii tiuu at Lt.w and Nutarial baai tW 0:li-.., Locust. Willi i Third street, hetweett Main Med W. licBriSe, K. Jntjl3-dtljr fiO K.I It II H I. S K CK.lt Cider," iiii e qotriatj, tor f'n Ules, etc. S. B. GILBKBT i CO. jonotio ..Mi', .Mf.w f..i, jjru vm tth.s' Itt'dc-rils. iu doxensaad reel, fur ;!.- by luDe.'IO S. V,. GILBERT .t co. MftoK BwVar. Trie-J H'f.CL, UJ VtVJV M Store, luioly owned and occupied by Michael Gsviak, deeeaeed, an a grocery and provision eiore. corner f Main and ronrth Btrest.. Thera i?. a rir.-t-rate smoke house attached t- the store. Applv to John Gavtak, or WH. BABM, Jr. jarjrS-dBwtf MP Brm of Krskin. . Cnrnick S Co. Is dMeotved hy ihe withdrawal if Theophilna Curnick. James Krskiue will collect the debts duo said firm and discharge the liabilities ol the same, and is author -. iaed tu use the tirin name in liquidation only. .1 a M Ks Eli-K 1 S R. Jul 11 THEOPHIM7S C'UBNICK. Bef irrins to the attire we won'd return thank. Sr former favurs tu the Bra el' Rrskine, Curnick & t'o., and solicit a oontiBannee of the same at the old stand, 47 Main street. jnlyll JAMBS EBSKINE A OO. American Cutlery ami Piaieii Ware. W VOR l.K iiI!Sl-:ilT .iJ'ti B Table Knives and K -rks. Ivory haudie Dfwrt ami Tahle Knive. unlv. Plated " " ' Fork., Bsttor Knives, Plated Tea aud Table SpowB., Carvers tu match wicb Knive. and Forks, Slaw Cutters, Knameled Kettle, and Sauce pans. Tbe above ef beat quality and finish, received aud offered at reasonable rate, at .1 SCoB 8TB ABB .t SON'S, julyll 71 Main street. wmJinfitsT tools .it maovcKa MB rates. Gra.- and Grain Scythes, Sneatba, Cradle., Sickles acd Forks, at ery low figures to clofc-ont sti-k. JACOB STltACB & SON. fJl rv I V FKIZ i5 M40CMLMT8 r tor shU b 3. E. GILBERT CO.
MISCELLANEOUS.
gmNEss stl. us. I i.l ni i: stock MB of Black aud Fancy Dross Silks very cheap to clo-:" out, t the cheap Prv Goods Store of SCHAI'KEBA BUSSING, ialyS No. tS Main street. 7 Wit S. 11.1 STiJS'OS 11.1 a B ti.n O VK If &fa her stock of Millinery Goods from her old stand on First street, to No. bo Main street, next dour to Bittrolff Bros., where she will continue to keep a largo nad beautiful stock f Buuuets, Blbbons, and Millinery Good, generally. The Ladiee are invited to call and examine h-r stock before purchasing. jnly4-lmd BUST Hi'.t 111 VK1I. mB 400 lbs Mixed und IMaiu Gum Tacking, 500 lbs Cotton Kopo from 3-1G to 1 inches, 130 lbs Gum " " tot Inch, loO lbs Gasket Borad, 34 reels No. 1 Packing Y'aru, loz Gum Cutters, rdoz Lanterns from 10c to 5.00, .0 lba Nos. 1. O, and Flour of Etnari , i'J. j'airs Skiff Oars. Manilla Kope all sizes, Twines, Marlln, Spun Yarn , Ac. For sale wholesale or retail at jnne2-2 SINZICII PON'S. jri 0..VJZ TBI B O JVJV UTS.' I f MB uice stock of trimmed and untrimmed Bonnets un hand, and which will bo sold cheap to close out, at the Drv Goods Store of SCHAl'KEK ,V BUSSING, jnne2 No. 4:1 Main streei. For Sale. HK JHWi SJ I. E tJROCEK 1 Kl'SIV7 ness. The undersigned intends to retire from business after tbe 1st of Septemtier next, and in the meantime would negotiate forthe sale of ihe stock in trade and good will of the business of M. W. Foster to., and will also lease fur a term of years the store house now occupied by them. The stand is -one of the most eligible In the city, and the bouse U a new, substantial, mode u style four-story building in compa te repair. The present trade of the bouse is asafent d profitable one, und to active business met, having a fair aimmtit of capital, a more cot tain opportunity to build up a large and profitable business is ,eldom offered. Fur farther particulars enquire of Geo. Foster A Co.. or tbe subscriber M. W FOSTER julj4-lm l.Sw gBIiJit lit Hit O U", IS .?i..V v treat, have just reeeived a good assortment of tbe following description of Shoes, to-wit Ladles' Lasting Heeled Congress B.ot, ' " Gaiten, Kid " Boot., ' ar.d Goat Sp'g Heeled 1 " " and Buskins, " ' Slip's in great variety. Men's Kid, Calf aud Lasting Congress Boot.! Calf Scutch Boots, " M and Goat Oxford Ties, " Gont.Kn'd and Plush Pumps and Nullifitrs, " Fine French Calf Boots, Buys' Calf, Goat and Enameled Scotch Boots, ' ' " Oxford T.es, Youth's OxforJ Ties and Brogans, Scutch Boots, Child's Heeled Enameled Ankle Ties, " Fancy Colored Ankle Tie., " Ktd and Morocco ' M Cupper Tijt'd Boots every kind. All cf which were made bj tbe best nuBUfScturere Fast, and will be sold at very low prices. juue22 Eft('.f.'s.-30 ItiIXE. I ifoXMCJV, JB each "Ml ced " and ' Avorted." june.TO S. K. GILBKBT a CO. J. m. GLEICHMANN, EVANSVILLE. INDIANA. mw.i.vs t Jst TunEii .t- u-'iior.E 'M sale I, i!r in Pare Cider and Extra Fsltuily Vinegar. Orders from a distance will receive prompt attention. N". B. This Yruegar has taken the premium at the South-Western Indiana District Fair last Or. tober. Orders for Vinegar will be r 1 " it tb" Factory or at H. Eteiaoa A (7u. "s Ai Main street. Sixth str,--t, near Fulton Aveai ti Lama Jnuo8S dOo HUNNELL'S (FOI.MULV OF TEKLE Jt IIUNNKLL.) Ploormg Srlills, CORNEIt OF WALNUT STREET AND THE CANAL, EVASSVILLK. ISO, jB. in BxOSf in lull t'ltrrHtion, with BMTW and cnui-pl-t Mn- hiinTy of tlm latest style, for Pteniaaj sod lr"'injj LuinlK-r, IMniiiuy: ari'l Oroorfpg l'I(orin; miikini; Iioord and tasli Mofatdittg, W'fnduw Blinds, and rvt-ry otljer drriition off work dime 111 s-iucb tHtaMisliincnts. All work at th hh MilN wrrant-'u t VV wull sosisa and will bs offerL'l at the lowest OMsli priuse. Dry PoplssT Kicring and Wratlu'i hfardini: COSInt.ti'tly m band, and v 111 hv fold for cash. Bra. kct s and Scrolls unwed to any pa'tern. Btftttesj and all hliwts f fiSjSllSSj, SMSM to order, and iu the in'-rtt SppfOTed sftyls. jjrtt WM. lir'NNKLL fa NEV FURNITURE STORE Jt'HT OrBJTBB BY TH I ) TELL CITY FURNITUIIE GO. The largest and finest aflPortDMBt of Ft'HNITITKI AM) CHAIRS uf all kin. Is in the city, at WHOLESALE 0B RETAIL No. Water st., ie-t dour to H. Itarnc, KVANSV'ILLK, IND. F. Sr.11Lr.r7.KY. Agent. tanatactery at Tell City, Ind. j 1 1 1 1 1 fi M rgrt OIL E T .1 l T 1 c l 1; S M In gaaal rarlety , at the lowest price, at the New lrug Store ui feb-27 N. S. THOMPSON. SB O HH 3 lmibbls. Heavy and Light Jle-s. fin half bbls Pig Pork, ''." bbls Rump Pork, loo keg, Choice Family Lanl, Fur sale by GEO. FOSTER A CO., iunePJ Corner Locust at. and Canal. THe JEconomisi. VMS ST&fMi TMKMiJ TMiMZ ti n t it re mi a ms at every Fair where it haa been exhibited. At (he South-Western Indiana Iiatrict Fair, held here (trtober, IS.9, there vere ; but two prrm:un:H ofterexl for rooking wtoTes one for 1 the beset wood eoeking, stoTeaod on" for the b&tf cjal oookini! -itove. The Economist took the FIRST PRKMIVM FOR TH K UK ST OOKING STOVE FOKVO'D. Roelker, K Iu.-man Si Co took t ho first premium for their rtoking stove for coal. iN'o other premiums were offered. The lare silver m.'dul was aWiirded to the Ei;onomlst at tht New York State Fair; and the first premium at tho United States Fair held nt .'hicr.cr.. and twelve othi-r State- and Cocnty Fnira in 185s. In do brunch of niPohHnical art ha then bven a more SpfMUSSit advance th&n in tne manufacture of Stove. It i.-v but a few years since the very lutiue was a noTelty, repref-iitlng a hujco, shapelenN atruoiun-, almost ad devoid ot ute as ornament, These have ajraduHlIy triven place toylli'illis ol m, race ana utility, until the varieties our markets now present have almost exhausted the vocabulary of names; and the difftiretit phases the metal is made to abuiue, would astonish old Vulcan himself. In style and fhiian, the iiuprovel&rat has beeu real, Leaving nothing to bo desired wu that point, but the severe competition in price, to which thej havi been Hubjected, has deprived them of many of the more substantial qtutttties) tlesiratde. This snecas more especially to ha e been the cas in reference t ciiok st.ives an article of domestic economy that boWMftOre to do with scolding wives and CTOtcboiy rferarjts t ban moat people im!ine. Tho public have- long bought an improveiiient In this ivVticle, and we believe are re;idj to pay any Trainable price for a looklm? stove, if it only psieses the meriiH of size, weight, convenience, durability, wnowy. end perfection ot manufacture. Thee qtialitit-i he.-m to be BSSSBBSSM d SMMSt fully iu , the Rcon mini a new htove, perfeotett and brrnight , out the pswit seosottf by Slertrs. Tread well, Perry .t N'U tt'ii. oi Albany. We brd si much if this stove, and it IotkeU to much like a store inU nd-d tor nme, that we cincliMed to try them, and the resnmlt of the experime?it oinvincos BS tht the proore-l.-rs, in their uetafcmin;ttion to ninke the6eyf N'jr ui tee world, have succeeded. We regard the Economist as possessing all the merits above enumerated hh the great stove of the day fur in advance of anything ever attempted in the line ot stoves, perfect in all it appointment, sad true to ' its name in durability sad the eseof fuel. Among the many conveniences attached to it, may be nieutioned a large oven, with hooks arranged", tor suspending meat? while roastiiiir. A copper water tank, holding from lii to 36 gallonn warming ct obot. brtiiiing hearth, 4c. t Ac. The broiling hearth i one of the iuot noticeable features of this remark. ible stove. There never has beeu, to our knowItdge, :iuy broiling ttxture that was lej'llj satisfactory sj iis p ratit.n. The proprietbrs of this stove have been conducting a series of experiments ' upon broiling, eliciting some valuable facts, and resulting in the invention uf a gridiron adapted to this stove, which has Keen secured ty letters patent, ami is one of the most admirable things of the kind wo ever saw broiling without smoke, aud keeping toe coals in a constant glow. We are always iclad to do justice to mechatiKal imr rovements, and especially Mich as contribute eo largely to the general good, as the one above luentiuiied. The Economist, whh h id Com niaudlMg such a large sale, will be f.-id onsjf at SCANTLIN STE- i FHENS'8, Mn st., betvvstto Wstr and Firwt, Ev&QarjUv, Intv znarti
1
MISCELLANEOUS.
rBIHE JM. T TBJTTM OJS" Of HO IS UM. keepers is cal led to our large and well-selected stock of" Plated German Bilver, Brittani i , and Tinned 8poons, Soap Ladles, Tablo Knives and Forks in great variety, Enameled Kettles and Pots, j Brass Bottles, Meal Seives, Frying Pans, FireShovels and Tongs, Dog Irons, Sad Irons, etc. ' Cheap at GEO. S. SONNTAG A CO.'S. g it! i:.l l CUE A PUB, CHIMP HST. S Wishing to tnako room for the coming Fall stock, wear, determined to sell the balance of our ' Summer Goods at such a reduced price, that no one ; should miss the best opportunity offered fur many a dav, tn get a rcallv cheap Hat or Cap. VAUTIEB 4 MARCONNIEK, jnnelS No. ;U Main street. j roTeiySm:1traT'-- of magnesia, IN POWDER. rSVtE it JEST J1.TERJT1VK US' M the world for Cooling tbe Blood, Sick Head-a-he, Billon. Affections, Sickness at the Stomach, and all complaints incident to tbe Spring aud Sum- 1 mer seasons. It affords immediate relief after eating or drinking too f.-eely superior to Saratoga Water I as a cooliu driuk, and one bottle is equal to three (In its medicinal properties) of the Liquid Citrate of Magnesia. Sklltnu Rapioly Mm.ioss or But tlks Sold Amncally. For sale hy all Pruigists Wholesale by B. L. Fahuestock Co., Pittsburgh, Pa., and at the Manufactory, No. 193 Spring street, New York dry. Jua5-3md IWmTBB. WWSLOIfS HOOTBi.ytJ fM Syrup t THOMPSON'S DRl'G STORE. "jr TI J JV" t: O ft II I Jl I . T II E JLd best Medicine known for Diarrhoea. For sale at THOMPSON'S New Drue Store. IS B O IV .V ' S HBO .V V M 1 Ji Jh Troches a' THOMPSON'S Drun Store. 4,PJifl.V' i I. CE 9 At THOMPSON'S Drug Store. JOBlf.VCI, lIEK.yt.l.W KJ tti. IS If, Jc and American Chemicals, at june THOMPSON'S Drugstore. g7jkE it' E E B' tTBMM''TM lE. BB Just the thing for crying babies, at juney THOMPSON'S Druj; Slure. OII.E 7 ttOOllS, JVBW fresh, .lust received at june'J THOMPSON'S PrUK j'tor.. gf.tlt tJS.I.'ll .nEIIlCl.VES JUST MM receivej alargestock fur tb. SuBtBter, at jnnett THOMPSON'S Druu Store Mr 1 doz each, for sale by juue-2 S. E. GILBERT A CO. LADIES AND GENTS : rgMIE WO BLIPS E.I IB JB STILL M open at No. 8 Second street room for a few more. Come and look co troublo to show those cosy little dove and tan colored Gaiters. Give us a call, anil I know you will buy. Olave Kid, Freuch Kid and Morocco Polka Boots, of the most exquisite styles ever offered in this market. Misses' and Children'. Gaiter, of every shadi; aud color; Kid an .' Morocco of every style, with arid without heels ; Copper-tipped of various kind., of tbu improved patent. Gents' fine Patent Leather and Calf Boots made to okifr of the beet imported stock we have had fur years. Glove Kid. Patent Leather, Calf and Morocco Congress Gaiters excelsior, a la mode. Made by the most fashionable and best wurkuieu to be fouud our Eastern cities not excepted. Friends, come on strangers, give u a trial. JOHN BAScn, ina'.'.l N'u- 8 Second st . Evansville, Ind. .4 4 1 CAR PETS " - v Also, Lace Goods, Damasks, Pink Bobinet Bars, And an assortment af tbe finest DltKSB T It I M - MINUS ever IihibhIiI to the City. J. S. HOPKINS, apr5-dtf On Kli-m Street. Babcock&Go HARDWARE DEALERS, IIAVK UEiHUVED TO i COR. MAIN & WATER STS., AND HOW uFKKR FDR .-.ILL A Large and well Assorted Stock OF FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC HARDWARE AND CUTLERY, WHICH, FOR EXTENT AND VAEIETY, u UNSURPASSED! CITY & COUNTRY TRADE SUP PL IBB V THE MOST FAVORABLE TERMS. B A BCOCK & CO., Cor. Mainjfe Water sts. ZETVE-osla. Arrival. Wf JVBT BECE1 VE II JM wW large variety of fashionable and beautiful Lace Mantles, Lace Shawls, Lace Points, Lace Veils, White Crape Shawls, Stella Shawls, Figured and Plain Berages, English and Crape Beraees, SilkChaUis, Travelling Dress Goods, Plain and Fancy Silks, Silk Umbrellas, Recherche Parasols, .ISO, A Large Stock of Hats and Caps, Together with a complete and varied assortment of Fancy and Staple Dry Good., all of which we will sell at uniformly reasonable price. DUNCAN OOOKK. may No. S Main street.
CITY ADVERTISEMENTS.
gJPfEU JnBKBT.itVTCIlEBS L aud Gardners are hereby notified that six buteher.' stalls and all ofthe vegetable .tanda tm the L'pikt Market, will be sol 1 at pobUc anctlea on Saturday BrorntBK, Sngusl 14th, ISS0, ,, i..y,. o'clock . By order of th-- ' nun Oeaadl P. BUBKK, Clerk. ".tb. lRfiO. Clerk's OiTice, July tf 1 O B P O H.IT t O.V.Vif let. S Order for Brick Side-Walk. Council Chamber, July 17, 18UO. Aud now it is herubv ,,,.,! directed, by the Cummou Council of the City of Evansville, that the owners of all Iota or parts of ,ui.i. i.ui mmk wh or aiijuinin rue west side ut Clark .treet, from Third to Fuuitb streetn. in the Foiinl. Eulargemeut of aaid City, cause the sMe-nalk. thereon to be brought to the proper rade, and that they cause a Side-Walk of Class No. 1 to be laid down thereon within thirty days from th publication of this oricr. P. BCBKB, Cl'k. City Clerk's Office, July 25, 18W g-1 O B P O It .1 TM OJ- wV TIC E . - ! W-S order hr Brick Rida-Walk. Jul, 17, 18b'. jn'i nuw 11 is liirooy uruered and directed. by the C mruun Council ot tbe City of FraB. ville. thattbeovneisuff.il lots or parts of lets fronting un or adloiuing the north. wo t side of Gum street from Fust to Second street in eai I city, cause tbe side-walks thereon to be brought to the pruper graie. and that I hey emise a tU a.llr of class wu, 1 10 1., In n I soam thereon within tblty nays irum ine pi ' ru icatluM -r tins orti-r. P. Bl'RKE, Clerk. ItlerB. OWh'u, Jnty jsfi is o. eriORPoi.s f 1 o TECS, W-S Order for Plank Side-Walk. July 17, 1800. And now It is hereby ordered i,ad dirocted by th. Com no u GoaaeH 01 the city t,f EvanHVllle, that tho I uwncvsoi an tots or pa) ts ot lots Ironting on ot adjoining tbe south Bids of Hamilton street, from Washington street tn the eastern line of the Cor poration, cause the . ide-walks tliTeon 10 b. brought to the proper glade, and that they cause a side-walk uf rs' No. 2 to be laid do. n t hereon , within tbirte days from tbe publication ot this order. P BUBK K, Clerk Clerk's Office. July '5. Is W mmoTICE TO C 0.'T B.MCTO M B. w w Th" C nitaon 1 uuucil ut' ihe City of Evansvillo wiil receive sealed propueell until tho 28ih dayl of Ju y, 18110, for the fuw v. i tig work, viz. taking 11 pi the Division Streei Sever, from a point near tlel north-east line of Sixth street, beinir tbe p-Jutl vrnera tne eoaxracv t t.man ana Arnold ter minated, as i,.r ni,rtb a. any uurk has been tb-renn, and f'r relaying tbe same, and for fur ! ul-nlng the materials, and Dontlnulllg said Sewer to a poiui tony nan tl or 1 11 -east ut the upps r uno ol KlKh.h street. niu-UTs win state t r.e pn.o u.r exrave.tioa pstl lineal f. to from the place of brtrinnintr to the np-l per une ui nevenrn street, ano trum tuenre ?u the termination, tbe prieo id relaying stone ei peri hi aud bru ks rs-r thuusaii'l, as far as tb-j mutet ial Willi reach; aud for the residue of tbe Sewer, fn ma terials and work, the rice of .tone par perch brick, per thousand. All earth excavated to ht thrown back without further charge. Th vrnrkl to be dune accwrdii g to .perifll ! Infill nuM on tile in this office P. BL KKL, Ciei Clerk's Ofgce, July 17, f . mmltTlCE TO C.TJtliTOIIS0 W The Common Council of th. City of kvans-l vlilo "111 receive sealed proposals until Jniv Jbto, 1800, for gradinjr and filling the alley in 1 i . No I 1, stockw.ll s fcnlarrenirit, lsin tbe slley BeareM to Lilvislon street and extemliuc from Sixth ti. Seveatb street ; said ! to bo luougbt to tbu proper grade as the saoie may be shown by tba City surveyor. P Bl IIKK, t Unit Clerk's Office, Jul. 0. ISOO. AN ADDRESS TO FRIENDS rwnH m: ijmm m: hsi4-mh wvs la sT re fto.-ttiill v intoriu his frh'nds and fclb citizenii, that he tin- tl.i- day rommi-ncd i u-'.... I for himself at the well KiioMn -i.ud ol J'dm M Ap. I hav Jsssl riNivd a VWJ nice and w.dil frlectr-d stork f USSOHS , ."VI ifsen , Kyn , and C hi I drin Hho'M of everv ftyb- und f Mm besrt i uh I it v Ilopinz that bv ptrjet attrntiou to bniiieHH and tht I mamifat tnre and Mib- f a No. I article of Sh w and Rot.tH, 1 will nn-rit the natronat- of my new Wi II a- old IncmiH. LadirH' and (.enti Boot, aiterrt and SIi-h-i .q all kindr mad tc rdt-r in tht neatest Htvle and it th hhortftxt B ottos. t;i voor old frl-nd Kc. trial. A. V. McIKVITT . No. ' Main atrret, KvaiiHvilb, Ind. jiinel:i-tf DR. J. FLEAGER, a 0 e ef 8! H 0 MB-MB RETl lt.VEI7, .i.S'll STILLK MM. contiuueH to keen pare wall all tbe iniiiroveH meuti iu hi. lirofeaeion, at bU Hoouis uuder C'ityl Iacnerreau Gallery, 4r Main .treet. He 1. DOwl niakiui; tboNe bwiiutiful Hard Rubber, Vulcanib' and Amber plates, wbirli iu many reaper.tn, are su perior to Gold. Also, tbe usual styles of Gold audi Silver work. Decayed teeth permanently saredl by plugging. He i. nlo using tbe Klectriral prorl ress tor extracting leelli uitinmt pain. Clillilren m . teeth .traigliteubd, Ac. l'llcus very moderate,! t and work warranteo. juiyij-ti MMUBBJMIl MOB '.' .I.TIEKMM ira Kings! Flags!! Flags! Ye youngsters! and lovers uf Independence, if you wish to secure tbe election of your favorite candidate, buy yoijrl Hags at the Cheap lliv Goods store ol 8CHAPKEK& BUSSING, julytf No. 4'.i Main street. Oi. oust SHOES.' ! SHOES! a U'Ei A5 have lust received a large addition to uurktockl of Ladies', Misses', and Children's Shoe, of everyl V nil. u .r i u i ... an ,1 at t,r ces In anil ev.rr-l ; taj.lv. Call and i ml ire for vourselve.. at tho Choan Bar lry Uikiiis toie ot SCIIAPK KR BUSSING, July2 No. 49 Main street. i aVtTelYer. M B B ' HJUti'sT'lJV V BSA.'r'rUel, 2,000 lbs Shoulders, plain, 6Xi I . lbs hides, just received nnd for .ale at KLLIOTT'S FAMILY GROCERY . WBCBE WHITE LEJ11 -im KEOS for salo by S. K. GILBERT CO. gJIfJS. -VSOtt HALE MlBl'jns, tat O Oil m ana sound, lor sale by Jone30 S. E. QILBERT tt CO. BmBOOJtMS 0U BOXEJS-EOB HJLJv mLM to tbe trade at manufacturers prices By June30 8. K. GILBERT CO. TRESS AND SUPPORTER. rBMIK SE .VE W .1.lt jy tVJLITM. able Instruments are offered as entirely nv7 in action and principle. Having a combined inward and vpuard motion, they retain Bnpture with one-hal) leu pressure than other.. iti-ota the Instrument with a rigid spring. They will injure the back and cord, and from their oou- - : ' bbm painful pressure are troublesome. White's will produce RADICAL CURE if properly used Gail on your Druggist or send for a Pamphlet free to all. Address 11a UN ES PARK, New York J. D. PARK, Cincinnati. JuneT-.'iuiii.tw Or KKLLXR A WHITK, Good luck Needed for Young Beginners. THE FIRM OF MILLER & N1EHAUS STILL AHEAD. rg'HIM I IBM HJS JCST II ECE 1 1 - M ed a bran-new stork of Dry Goods, consisting of a great many articles in their line, too uuuierou. to name, which are now open for in.pection, and will certainly I old cheap 'or cash at their .tor.. 43 Jrtainjilreet. M ILI.KK ft NIEUACS. CHA8. B. KIKH.t's. LBI BECEMAN FIRM OF NIEHAl'S fe BECKMA.V MEW STOVE AND TIN STORE. VVOj7 OLE S.I I. E .1.V1I BE TJM M L WW dealer, ani Manufacturers of Tin, Copper , and Sheet Iron Wares, No. K, Water street, between Main and Locust, Evansville, Ind. Tbe undersigned have constantly on hand a full aasortrneat of Stoves of every variety and pattern, at the lowest prices, and beg leave to inform their friend, and the public generally, that they have the beat and neatest assortment of Tin Ware evei offered, and have constantly on hand a full auorttnent of Druggist Cans, c.,fc. T nose persons wisniug wor in ineir une nr. respectfully requested to gite them a call before pnr- I chasing eUewhere, as by prompt attention to their bu.inesa aud a thorough knowledge ot their trad e, thi-y hope to give general satisfaction. NIEUAUS ft BECUMAN. COPPER. A JOB WORK. Steamboat, Distillery, aud Brewery Work; Steam Pipe., Soda Fountains, Pump., aud general Coppersmithing and Sheet Iron Work, made and repaired. Metal Roofing, Guttering, Ac. R'orit warranietl to give perfect satisfaction, at th lowest prices. mnr7-4md BMHITK J .VII O B E I LIME, CM WW ment. Plaster Pari., White Sand, Wh it Shell., aud Plaat.riug Ilair, fo.- rale by GEO. FO.iTEB. CO., jnnelS Corner Locus; t. and Canal.
WHITE'S
