Evansville Journal, Volume 17, Evansville, Vanderburgh County, 1 August 1866 — Page 4
. THE E V AKS VILLE DAILY JOMML WEDNESDAY; AUG ST 1 . 1866.
TIIE EYAiVSYILLE JGIMAL, . . - PUBLISHED DAILY BY The Evans ville Journal Company.
3fo. G locust Street, Evansillle, Ind. "siFttscmPTioN Ti:i:jisr IN A.DVANCE. Daily Journal. One year, by mail .. $10 00 Six monthK, by mail nan Three months, by mail 3 OO By the week, payable to carrier.:.... 35 Tri-Weekly Journal. One year , 7 OO Six months 4 OO Weekly Journal. One copy, one year $ 3 OO Five copies, one year s 75 Ten copies, one year .... 15 OO Governor Morton's Speech. We are prepared to furnish any number of copies of Gov. Morton's New Albany speech, printed in large, clear type, book form, on excellent . paper, at$l 25 per hundred copies, or ten dollars per tlwusand. We urge the Union men in this Congressional District, as well as in Southern Illinois, to circulate this valuable campaign document. Orders solicite'd from all parts of the country. ... , r LATEST IVEWS. A late steamer reports affairs comparatively quiet In South America. We have a little New Zealand news of a religious character. See dispatches. The Atlantic Cable seems to be doing a good business. Four thousand words were ; transmitted through it in twelve hours. Another revolution had broken out In Haytl, but was easily put down by the Government. General Balrd has issued an order declar- . ing the city of New Orleans under martial law, in consequence of the riots. Several articles of interest on different subjects will be found on our second page this-morning. . i The Mayors of New York and London are congratulating via the Atlantia Cable. 1 ' The cholera is said to be subsiding In Savannah, Georgia. Nineteen cholera cases and seven deathsoccurred in New York yesterday, and. fou,r-. teen in Brooklyn.' "- - partial . law has. been declared by the agents :o( the Freednaea'si Bureau in ueorgia, in order to protect lue treeumen l ftm ,Ur-,. ' . 1 Hamill, the defeated oarsman, has returned to the United States, satisfied that the English ChauipIon,.Kelly, is too touch orhlin. j g Theiatest news from New Orteansi ports about 3D negroes killed during the riots. Only one white man was lulled, and he was murdered fy the same demons who slaughtered the negroes. j John Wilson has been re-appointed Commissioner of the Land Office. Cornelius Wendell has been appointed Superintend- ' ent of Public Printing, y ' Our telegraphic dispatches contain news that the cholera is spreading in New York, and becoming epidemic. Considerable alarm exists, and the most rigid regula-1 Uons will be adopted to prevent the disease from spreacUngmore extensively, ( f We havesonwftemrfbytelegaprr relative to the bountyequalizatlon bill passed Just beoj-e Congress adjourned. If our readers can yet make anything out of the dispatch they are at perfect liberty to do so. ' To us H appears unintelligible. ; . The New York Herald sends us its usual daily twaddle about Mexico, Maximilian j nd hif Q,neen.'fAccordiOg to Tthat paper I ' Max. has been 'leaving "MexiCo'for several months, but has not got away entirely at the present writing. The New York papers give nn, news from Europe daily. ; The Herald of yesterday announces an armistice of four weeks has been signed by Prussia, Austria, Bavaria and the other German States, embracing propositions that must ' result in peace throughout Europe. A dispatch from, England po the Tribune announces that the English Government is very willing to do the right thing about the American claims when they are properly presented by the American Cabinet. A'great riot occurred in London on the , 23d inst. The railing around Hyde Park -was broken down and several persons inf jured. The Horse Guards charged on the people, but did not use their swords. Head Center Stevens has issued another address to the various organizations urging them to work harmoniously together, and promising them that the fight for freedom will come off on Irish soli this very year. . A dispatch from San Francisco gives accounts of several marine disasters, th news of which was brought to that port by a ship from Hong Kong. On March 4th the bark Isabelle was stranded on an uninhabited reef called Wake Island, where the passengers and crew remained three weeks, but finding no water they started in the ship's long boat for the Ladrone Islands, the Captain and eight persons taking the gig. The former were saved, but the latter were lost. Madame Anna Bishop, the celebrated vocalist and party, were among the saved: The cargo was valued at S300.000. - The British ship Denmark was stranded on Gasper Shoal. The fate of the crew, was not Known. The Coolie ship Yeddo was burned off the Java coast on the' nth of April, and one hundred and forty, emigrants were lost. - Grapes in Ohio. The Sandusky (Ohio) Register 'says' many vineyard owners thereabouts are wearing very long faces this summer. The season has been decidedly unfavorable for the grape crop. The continued cold : rains of last month injured it, materially. The early rains, coming when the grapes were in their most tender state, caused blight and mildew to some extent, while the latter rains so affected them as to cause many to fall off.'- ; " ; ,'
.r. Ci':..' General Gresham Seems to be making a most gallant canvass in the Second Congressional District. His opponents are evidently alarmed at his popularity and the success that attends his efforts uponthe stump. . The other day the New Albany Democratic officials sent out the law partner of their candidate for Congress to debate with the General the' political questions of the day, and got him so badly used up that he is put upon the retired list aa being " permanently disabled." Realizing that something must be done to check the General, they next selected Cyrus L. Dunham to go out and do battle in their behalf. Col. Dcnham has long been regarded as one of the best orators the Democratic party has wifhin its ranks. As General Gresham remarked, if any man in the State could apologize for its short comings, and cover up its iniquities, with smooth rhetoric, that man, is Colonel Dunham. Dunham went to one of the General's appointments and coolly asked for a division of time, which was courteously granted. Colonel Dunham did the best he could , fdr his . party, and plead piteously and earnestly "to let bygones be by-gones," and. not to keep the people stirred up and excited by appealing to the record of the Democracy during the war. General Gresham, in reply, said that was all very nice, but we could only form our ppinion of men and parties from their past record. That if a man has always acted honestly in his intercourse with men, for that reason we feel that he can be trusted. If another man ha3 always been unreliable in his intercourse with men has been guilty, of larceny, perjury and other erimes we say that his past life shows him to be a dishonest ,jnan, and we cannot trust him. Colonel Dunham felt this thrust keenly, but could not deny its justice' Generaf Gresham then proceeded to1 give his' audience the Democratic record during the war,
i.- r, . ij ij (, showing how the- leaders had been in favor of dissolving the -Union. '- He said the leaders of that party succeeded in. making the Democratic -masses believq sthat the war was af Crimej and in "proof ofth is heintvbdueed Coll Dunham of 1SG3, in a letter to GovJ Morton, against Col. : Dunham, of to-day: ,' ' .'. l'i f' t ' n C-HliABQ.UAnTEHR2nBRIOADE,"l i lh'iii i jAC&gOX.vTKKKJEHblSE, Jr eoruary 4, ioo. Goverxob:-This will be handed to you by Maj. Atkian, of the glorious old 50th, who comes home to gather up our deserters ; I hope he will have all the aid and In;fluence,'yqu canfglve him: I Vigorous meas uresmust be adopted or our army. under the influence of the scoundrels and traitorsat home who Are, by tljeir letters, scatter. Ing discontent amongst our, soldiers,-will be demoralized and destroyed! and'ttie": scourge of this war will, in less thiihslx mouths, be rolled back upon the fair fields of our own glorious Northwest. ' 1 ' These men know what they do, and if they expect any general sympathy in the aruiy they are reckoning, without their host. .?.. .: ' ..s.-p: j ,.'!.. I hope you will use your influence atWashington to get law passed requiring 1 all the U. S. Marshals and JJieir deputies, ; all collectors of internal revenue, and their I deputies, to arrest all deserters and lodge j. them at the nearest military post, making j it also a penal offense, indictable in, the District Court of the United States, for any person to larbor or employ a deserter, knowing him to be such, and the knowledge that the individual had been n the service of the United States should be prima facie evidence of knowledge that he was a deserter; making, also, all contracts with a deserter void. Do not, for God'ssake, let this army be so weakened that we shall be driven back in humiliation to witness the desolation of our own home. Respectfully yours, , C. L. Dunham. We presume, before General Gresham got through with his speech, Colo-, nel DuNnAM began to realize that he was notdnjoying a lucid interval when he-wrote this latter, and that he jsrould give much to recall it Perhaps the existence of the letter is another reason why the Colonel is anxious "to let by-gones be by-gones." All honor to the young standardbearer of the Union party in the Second district! Although he walks, with difficulty, upon a crutch on acacount of a wound he received at Atlanta, his opponents find him clear headed, well posted, ar d fully able to declare, the whole truth to the people. ; We have heard of. no more epigramatic .and significant saying, in reference to President Johnson's course In politics, than that " he has" concluded to stick by those who made him 'President,' rather than by those who made him ';Vice President.' "
Something for the Ladies to Know. By the latest from Paris we learn that the long streaming ribbons that ladies wear on their bonnets and necksv are called, " Follow me home, sirs."" 1 We think we have seen some of those " streaming" ribbons " in our city, ' - ' ' " .
Income Returns. The New Albany Commercial. of
Monday contains the income returns of Floyd County, including the city of -New Albany. The incomes speak well for the enterprise and thrift of the business men of that city. One of them reports an income of $207,904. This is much the largest income re ported by any man in the State. Mr. W, C. DePaw has been exceedingly fortunate in his business transactions last year to realize so much money out of them. , Five men in Nejy Albany report incomes amounting in the aggregate to $375,805. This exceeds the aggregate of the five largest incomes reported in this city by $141,245 at least a third more. The ten largest incomes reported in New Albany, amount to $475,184. In Evansville the ten highest amount to $337,644 a difference in favor of New Albany of $137,540. The number of incomes of twenty, thousand dollars and upwards reported in New Albany is seven. Evansville reports eight. Of in6omes of ten thousand dollars and upwards, New Albany reports 10, and Evansville 17. " Of incomes of five thousand dollars and upwards, New Albany reports 24, while Evansville reports C5. Of incomes above one thousand dollars, New Albany reports 137; Evansville, 229 a large difference in favor of Evansville. : . In this city no two or three business men so pre-eminently stand out above all their compeers as in New Albany. Mr. DePaw himself reports an income very nearly as large as the incomes of all the business men of that . city ' reporting incomes j exceeding" ten .thousand .dollars in amount. : . . ; iY While speaking on this subject, we must express regret that out friends of the Ledger "mammoth printing establishment"' have not reaped 1 a larger returns for their labors during the1 past year. An ' office 1 that does such vast amount of work,J ought to realize larger! profits..' We sea by' (the returns that the entire profits' of the Ledger office during ; the past year, amount Only to $4,910.' : ,-.r.;; 1 '!-THE!;New'Vork''y(ms contains a protest against Rebels and ..Copperheads being sent as delegates to the Bread and Butter Convention.- By way of proving that they htfve! no right there, it quotek ii om the calllssuedby the " solid men" of Now York City for a State Convention to elect delegates, the following-: -: - " !'' . By the language and spirit of the call it will'be t perceived ' that those who refused their support to the Government inputting down fr6" WbeTlIdhrand those who approve of itfier&etion of Congres4n keeping loyal 'Representatives Out of their seats,' and loyal States out of the Union! are 'ex cluded from' the invitation, and ar notex-i pected to participate in the preliminary meetings, or to take seats in the Convention. .- ,:. . . : ;.;! r.' j No use for the Times to be fussy. TwOf fifths of thepelegates already appointed to that Convention areliebels aiid Copperheads. Not enough Union fmcn have.'. been 'appointed, were they all to attend, to give the , Convention the least semblance of loyalty.? What does the Timet intend to do about it? Off for Europe. This morning our much esteemed and very orthy citizen, Ed. Tabor, Esq., leaves by the 9 o'clock train on a visit to England, the land of his nativity, aid expects' to be ; absent for; about three months.1 ' Mr. Tabor has for some ten years past been book-keeper and cashier 'of the Evansville Journal Company, and has Von the respect and fullest confidence of his employers, by his fidelity and integrity; and of the whole community by his modest deportment and. excellent morals. We , cordially commend our young friend to the kindly offices of newspaper men everywhere, and to the world of mankind in general; but especially to the care of a covenantkeeping God, who holds the winds in His hand, and who commands the seas and they' obey Him. .May He grant him a pleasant voyage, and a safe return. 1 . : ' ! l, Friday Consecrated. Heretofore Friday has always been called ah unlucky day. That must not be so any longer. The day that witnessed the departure of Christopher Columbus from the little Spanish port, and his arrival iu sight of the shores of a new world; the day the Great Eastern set sail from the Irish coast with the Atlantic cable on board, and the day that magniffcent vessel entered the waters of AspyBay, on the American coast having successfully laid the cable cannot, in justice, be called an unlucky day. Let some other day be designated hereafter as hangman's day.1 ' ." .;. ...
- ' 1 Another Rebellion. The Democracy of Pennsylvania a a great mass meeting at Reading, the county seat - of Berks, among other resolutions adopted the following Resolved, That the Federal ynion is composed of thirty-six States; tha under the Constitution each State is entitled to an equal representation In , the lower House'; that the Constitution is the supreme law of the land ; that the President is sworn to support the laws, and that we caU upon him in the name of an outraged and violated Constitution, to make the Congress what the Constitution requires it to be the representative body of the whole people. Will some good, constitutional Democrat be kind enough to inform us what this resolution means, unless it avows the principle that the President of the United States is to be the sole judge as to what makes Congress and when it is legal or illegal? Does it not go further, and assert the monstrous doctrine that the President may, and ought to when in his judgment Congress does not legislate for the whole people-displace that body and put other men there until it acts in accordance with his views?
We .are going lively! Passengers on . the old ship of State had better keep a 'bright , look out. Another mutiny is threatened. ."Piratical eyes are already selecting objects for murder, and piratical hands will soon be at the bloody work. We may be mistaken, but if Mr. Montgomery Blair is correct we are not mistaken. Fresh from the counsels of the President, that traitor politician used the following language at the, same meeting of which we have been speaking: If these States are not entitled to representation In Congress, they are not 'entitled to 'vote in the electoral colleges If they are not permitted to vote in 1808, and their vote combined with that'of either party at the North would elect a President, will that party submit to. the decision? Will it consent that the will of the whole country should be defeated by a known and acknowledged minority, and if it will not submit, will there not be disorder, turbulence, probably-war? President Johnson was the watch tower of the people. His 22d of February speech had admonished them they were On the eve of a new rebellion. Every 'man who considers will see tho same thing that we are On the eve of another fight. '.': There is the platform ' assumed by the Johnson and Democratic parties If the' Republicans triumph in October, and"'securing a majority will not submit them to their decision, but will aPDeal to force and already hii echo declares that we. are .on the eve of another ftht. - ' . "' ' :: ; i Wheat Crop. ! 'As considerable difference of onin ion exists as to the amount of wheat harvested in, this part of , the State this year, we take pleasure in publish ing all the evidence : bearing on the. subject that our friends in the coun try will be; kind enough to furnish us One' of the oldest and ' best ' informed farmers' in' the 'south-western ( part o , (jribson County, sends us the follow ing as the, condition of the wheat crop in his neighorhood : Mefisrs.tEditors: t , .' i !-iift ' i ? I have seeh a ataitement in some of the paper saying.; the -present wheat crop would be seven-tenths of an average crop I will give you some , statistics, knowing figure, won't lie., We have threshed 1ST acres, which averages seven, bushels and 128-187th part of a bushel, Some of the same ground two years ago made35 bush els per acre. , - ,.'.'. - What we have threshed, I. think to be about an average crop for our County the present year! ' . A. Wilkinson. Assassinated. On ' Wednesday last, Mr. Q. W. Chambers, an old and highly respectable citizen of our county, was found; in his tobacco field, prostrate and speechless from a wound upon his head, supposed to have been done with a hoe.- Hancock (Ky.) Messenger. MED. 1 GUNTON On Tuesday, July 31st, Harry, son of Robert and Eliza Gunton, aged 9 years. . : . . The funeral will take place to-day (Wednesday at 10 o'clock, .from, the residence of his parents at the upper end of Locust Street. The friends of the family are invited to. attend without further notice, v . ' 1 ,EW ADVERTISEMENTS. ELECTION NOTICE. Evansville ' Mercantile Library As- . ' - ,; sociationj' . 'VV.' , An Election will be held at the Library Rooms, in Marble Hall, on Friday Evening, August 10th, at 8 o'clock, for the purpose of electing officers for the ensuing year. ' .-' , ' BEGtXAR TICKET. ; For President, ' ' ' SAMUEL K. LEAVITT. For Vice-President, CHARLES HINKS. " For Corresponding Secretary, REV. W. H. McCARER. : For Recording Secretary, ...... JAMES L. ORR. ... , , For Directors,.' . ,r -' ROBT. A. HILL. ,.' ";' . B. ESS LINGER. ' , JNO. W. BUSSING. ' COL. SUTTERLE SMITH. DR. I. HAAS. -'..; DANIEL G. MARK Sec'y.
augl-dtd.
EDUCATIONAL
OHIO FEMALE COLLEGE, AT COJLIjEGE llllili, FIVE MILES FROM CINCINNATI. TTTE NEXT TERM OPENS ON THE 3d of September. President Anderson will be assisted by a full and able Faculty. Expenses $00 less than last year. Omni buses for the College connect with trains of the Hamilton & Day ton, ureat western and Marietta Rail Koads at Ludlow Sta tion. Also four dally Omnibuses from the walnut street House, Cincinnati. Fo" Catalogues, terms, etc., address Rev. J. M. ANDERSON, President, " ("ol,lkqj Hill., Hamilton County, O. augldit. ..... . OHIO UNIVERSITY, ATIIES, OHIO. ' THE NEXT TERM BEGINS ON MONdayAugust 25. Tuition free to any honorably discharged volunteer, of .whatever State, for as long a time as he- served in the army under 21 years of age. Board reasonable. The University never more prosperous. The number of students large. The Faculty full and efficient. H. HOWARD, President O. U. Athens, O., July 25, 18ti6. augl dlw-w2t. . PITTSBURG FEMALE COLLEGE REV. I. a PERSHING, D. D., President. SUPERB BRICK BUILDINGS WITH all the modern Improvements. Twenty-two teachers and four hundred and twenty-six pupils. Unsurpassed facilities in alfthe ornamental branches, especially music. Next term commences September 4th Send to President Pershing for a catalogs , BISHOP M. SIMPSON, ; President ot Trustees. , Pittsburg, Pa. angl-lin. . HANQVER COLLEGE, r INDIANA. THE NEXT TERM IN HANOVER College will open on the last Wednesday ot August. A thorough course in the Arts and Sciences is offered to all young men who desire to obtain a liberal education. . JAMES WOOD, President. Hanover, July 20, 1800. augl-d2w. State of Indiana, Vanderburgh County, SS. In the Circuit Court of Vanderburgh County, October Term, 1806. IT APFEAUIXO HX AFFIAVIT on file in my office that the defendant, Eugene Van F.rden, is a non-resident of the State of Indiana, notice is hereby given him of the pendency ot the said action, (for a divorce,) and that the same will stand for trial on the 1st day of the next term of the Vanderburgh Circuit Court, to be begun and held at the Court House in the city of Evansville, in said county, on the 2nd Monday in October, lxoo. , " f ' ; "Witness my hand aiI the seal ISeal. of said Court this 31st day of . w . July.lijUu. . '..- . lUA'THEJIYNES, qgj . . l.i , c- - ClerlC-V. C.C. MISCELLANEOUS. Fire Limits. T&TOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT jLxj I will apply to the Common Council of jEvansviUej-on August 13th, for permission to erect airaine shed on Lots Nos. 40 and 41. Huston's Addition to the city'of Evansville. llENRY KLEE. " july31d2w STEE1LE fc TRI 111.13. fteconu uw.ween (..nestnut and Cherry ; and Che ' .cvmisvuie, ioul. Sash, Joor, Window Blinds, Dressed Lumber Boards, Laths, c, of every deception , constantly on hand. Packing coxes 04 an Kinus maae to order, Miwvmg of every kind-Uone on the jshortest notice. api-iy.. c n o m, i: it - f .x in -. Ten ; Minutes. v.- Thirty Drops 'Of GCYZOt'S CHOLERA SPECIFIC win relieve the worst case of this terrible disease. ' Don't fail to check all forms of Diarrhoea. The Doctor's Specific.acts like a cnarm. CaU ou your druggist immediately, . F CLOUD & A-JIN, Whoiesale Agents, No. o Main street. apr28 ; gfeuts Waiifcd A Lfor- T It E T TELL S , ONE-VOLUME - : HISTORY OF THE REBELLION, milE JIIEA1EST OIT AND QUICK J. selling nearly 70,000 already ilelivered to subscribers hus about 800 very large pages w use steel engravings. ..Also, lor Y The Loyal West? ,ri A State History of the West, with 208 en cravings a beautiful and most -valuable work. Also, for . , - The Bible L.ooking-GIass ; A Mirror for all People, - Reflector and Teacher of the Scriptures; With 138 engravings, illustrating every kind of character and quality of the human heart. For Circulars, with full descriptions and terms, address .: HENRY HOWE, , . July3Sd3t,w8t : Cincinnati, Ohio. Commissioner's Sale. BY VIRTUE OF A DECREE OF THE Crittenden Circuit Court, rendered at its July called term.iHo, in tne consolidated suits of Levi Wade and others, plaintiffs,' against Cook, Lewis & Co. and others, defendants, I will, on MONDAY, the 8th day of October next, it being . county -court day for Crittenden County, and the first day of the term, sell to the highest bidder, at the door of the courthouse in the town of Marion, on a credit of iweive, eignieen, ana iwenty-iour months, the following valuable property, situated on the waters of Tradewater, In said county, viz.: The Crittenden Coal-Mines, better known as "Cqpk'sMines,"embra,ing about 200 acres of8land; together with all mining privileges, improvements, fixtures, and personalty belonging to the same, consisting in part of the -following: One steam engine and boiler, one steam' pump,-one chain, one coal shaft, onn lot. of railroad iron, one lot of cars, one lot of car-wheels iiu uiies, one yoKe oi oxen, two noraw, &c, &o. ' " - .'.;' For further particulars, inquire of the undersigned Commissioner. Bonds having the force and effect of sale bonds at law, with approved security, will be required of the purchasers. i 1 W. WAGAR, Commissioner. ' July 23, 1866. JulySl wlm Notice of Order of Council diminishing the width of certain streets in Goodsell's Enlargement NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Common Council of the city of Evansville, at its session on the 2,'kl day of Julv, 18i, pwwed an order to diminish the width of Adam's street, Jefferson street, Putnam street and Campbell street from eighty (80) feet their present width, to sixty (60) feet. All persons teeling themselves aggrieved bv said order may have redress by making application to said Council within six weeks from the publication of thi notice. By order oi me council. A. M. McGRIFF, Clerk.
WANTED.
WASTED PERSONS W1SIIINC to dispose of Real Estate by sale oi lease, or those desiring to buy or'renl dwellings, &c, to call on J. H. G ARUN ER, Attorney-at-Law and Real Estate Agen") Third Street. . ' Julyotf AOEXTS For the Pictorial Book Oi Anecdotes and Incidents of the Rebellion. A beautiful royal octavo volume, containing over 700 doble-column pages, and illustrated with over 300 spirited, lifelike engravings. The most ample, brilliant, and readable book which the war has called forth. The roll of fame and story 1 The Camp, the Picket, Spy, Scout, Bivouac, and Siege: with Feats of Daring, Hand-to-Hand Encounters, Startling Surprises, Wonderful Escapes, Famous Worda and Deeds of Women ; Sanitary and Hospital Scenes, Prison Experiences, Partings and Reunions, Last Words of the Dying, Mementoes of the Tender Passion : Final Scenes and Events in the Great Drama, and all those momentous hours, acts, and movements the memory of which will live in letters of blood before the eyes, and bum like fire in the hearts, of those who participated in them these, sifted like gold, are here presented in all their attractions. Send for circular and see our terms. Address. National Publishing Company, 148 West Fourth street, Cincinnati, Ohio, may 18 dw3m d2t a w LOST. LOST POCKET-BOOK. On Sunday, the2)th inst., in the Conrt-House Exchange, a red morocco Pocket-Book, containing about $150 in money and several notes of hand, amounting to 5,000 or ?0,000, payable to the undersigned. A liberal re-, ward will be paid to any person returning the same to Preston & Menifee. . july30d3t W.C.RICE. FOR SAIiE. L FOR SALE FACTORY The Chair and Wool Factory known as the Indiana Woolen Mills, near the Crescent City Springs. The mills are in good running order, and will be sold cheap. . A. T. ADAMS, July31 d3t Near the mills. FOR SALE AXD FOR RE NTHouses and Lots, Dwellings, Ac. J. H. OAKDNER, Attornev-at-Lawand Real Estate Acent. Third Street. Julytitf rOK KALK I OFFER FOR SALE to the highest bidder, or otherwise, the building now occupied by me as a Chair Factory, together with the lot on which it stands; said lot fronting 60 feet on Fourth Street, running back 120 feet to Canal St. Possession given upon completion ot my new Factory. Ijul23m ED. (J,. SMITH. CLOAK - MAIiIX ESTABLISHMENT FOR SALE. Belmr desirous of retiring front business, I offer for sale all my stock ot Millinery una Cloaks, and will rent the store to the purchaser. MRS. CAROLINE SCH AEFER. Je30 on Third, bet. Main and Sycamore. Great Sale of City Lots IN HENDERSON, KY. n.x .i i ) i i t About 200 City lots to be Sold at Auction, ON WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 29th, 1800. ROVT TWO 1 1 UX I) It KB" LOTS, -embraced: .Ju wlnO. -Isj known as Alves's ' Enlargement" of the city of Henderson, Ky.,"will be sold at auction ou the ath August, lHWi. jLuiiMs or sai,e. jne-rourth cash, and remainder In three equal installments, payable at six, twelve, and eighteen months, with lien retained for the pur chase money. , Descrution of Lots. The-nroDertv is situated on th3-motut-.levie4 point in the . city of Henderson, nnd is dry, airy, anil perfectly healthy. The' neighborhood is most excellent, and this portion of the city is more improved than any other part of it. They are at a very convenient distance from the city, and substantial and durable gravel and plank sidewalks extend-- to within luie squiire' f thi property. A befiutifai grove of magnificent forest trees covers most of t he lots. They front upon wide streets, running back to alleys. Henderson Is now rapidly Improving,' buildings for business aud residences being constantly put up, and property of every description is greatly enhancing In value. -0nideriug the prospectsof the city, no befterlnvestment can he found than the purchase of these lots, for men of either la; large or small capital. jnlyiB d till angSr' JOHN W. ALVES. Statement of the Receipts and Expenditures at the County Trea &4rr Ibomim'ihlClBBB, to May "31st,1866, on'Accoimt of Vanderburgh Conntv. Indiana. ' Sundries To Snlanee Account'County Revenue of 1865. ..$ County Revenue delinq't of 1804 .. Ferry Licenses Estray Kales -....i....i.M....'. Redemption of Lands Erroneous Taxes of current and previous years lp.. t. Advertising and Printing Township Revenue.. Dr. 5,113 29 o'Jf 14 50 0 5 lit 770 49 2382 i 2,'.55 SI 14,l;9 90 '' 2,447 29 . 5,309 74 4 00 9 09 15 00 ' 1,807 70 7.0.VJ 04 29,4i9 98 Special School Revenue, Road Revenue (balance) ..: Revenue to provide for intereston County Bonds .. Docket Fees of Com. Pleas Court. Delinquent Taxes of 1804 and previous years Peddlers' Licenses .. .......... Dog Tax of 1805 ; .. Delinquent Tax of 18M5 Soldiers Relief Fund Tax for 1865 9153,339 51 Biilance Account By Sundries To expense of Advertising.,.and Printing 8 1,204.75 2,0hi 50 1,107 04 141 75 2,9-"9 94 5W) 00 204 85 4,050 00 To expense of Assessing ... . VUl.l.iUl.HnHIWIH.1 r 'f f .U '. Elections . .......... ' Interest , County Library .... Gas ... Interest on County Bonds - To exnense of Township Revenue of lWi -- 2,285 17 To expense of Special School Revenue of 1805 13,319 C5 To expense of Road Revenue of To expense of Fuel 37 W) . uuLsianuingAJountv Bonds .... 6.500 00 To expense of Deaf and Dumb... 40 30 ... . .uamagenon mgnwavs " 75 00 To expense of Bridges 4,1.3 96 neueiup. oi, ianus vu mi . ' Overpayment of Taxes 3.196 62 To expense of County Officers.. 7,4-19 53 ... f-aupers iu.vsi y ... Prisoners . 2.400 35 ... - - Specific Allow ances 5,430 81 8tW 73 1,111 88 631 70 758 13 1,5-58 93 1,415 36 900 00 4,054 10 2,548 68 19,776 30 , 52 75 21 00 1,867 70 45,312 94 To expense of Inquests I'uijiic nuiiuings.. Insane. . . . Roads and ways HighTo expense of Books and Staof ex officio Allowtionery .... To expense ances ....... To expense of County Commis sioners To expense of Courts.. linages Soldiers' Rel.Fund Enumeration Purveying Dog Tax, 1865 , To Receipts over Expenses ,!"'". 5153,33951 v - VICTOR BISCH. A. V. C. July21 dAwlw - -
