Evansville Journal, Volume 17, Evansville, Vanderburgh County, 27 November 1866 — Page 4
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THE EYAMSVILLE JOCMAL.
SUBSCRIPTION TERMS , x G 8 SL- iTv wwlM ml ft) f Daily Journal. One year, by mall 10 oo 5 50 m Mix months by man. Three mop wis, oy msu............ ar the ween, payauie w ojmitci.-.. Trl-weeKiy jonrnai. tone year.... J hit mum ns ....-, -x Weekly Jo One copy, one year 9 2 OO 8 73 , 15 OO IFlv rive copies, one year rien '.-iii'it-B, uuc jcm m-v County Printing and Binding. The Journal Company ia prepared o execute orders lor all kinds 01 plank-book work and legal blanks of every description. County, city and jtown officers, justices and lawyers, in Southern Indiana and Illinois, and Western Kentucky, can be supplied at our office with promptness, and the work is guaranteed to be equal to any in the West. An Important Item. Wo fall tVf nHpntion of merchants, advertisers, and the public to the fact hot thn to4 Tim a m the omce 01 the United States Assessor show that the Evansville Journal Company did SEVENTY-FOUR PER CENT, of the entire taxable Printing and Binding business of the. city for the year 1865. To Correspondents We never notice communications not accompanied with the nanae, the author, who must be made known to us if unacquainted. Write on only one side of the paper. Doirt write unless you hav something to say of interest to the public ; and be as brief as the subject will alCommunications should be addressed to the " Editors of the Journal," and not to individuals. LATEST NEWS. GoMosetf hi- Aew VoyteWy afr The Fenian excitement is Intense in Ireland. The Louisiana State Fair has been a Twelve thousand breech-loading rifles are to be sent by the British Government to Ireland for the one of ihejContbNjs. t The largesfV'dlspatcn transmitted over the Atlantic cable, was sent ou Sunday by a Government official of the United States. It coiiftiped over five thousand words. i
The Annual Conference of the Methodisrave Gentleman named above. In
Episcopal L nnrcn soutn continues in session in Norfolk. AdviPBs itom. Havana, to the 20th. an nounce the arrival of General- t&ierman and L. D. Campbell with their suites. An important bill relative to the Treasury Department will be presented to the next Congress. It will greatly increase the efficiency of the Department. A bill has been prepajwdfM?(JOIeading Congressman, that any officer on trial under impeachment, shall be suspended from !? deltas of his office during trial. . v Xi I '.' ' i ti 1 44 Maximilian is reported to have left Vera Cruz on Thdrsday last. He is enrou tf M tafu.ll fiMifatiti A destructive' Sfccarrwl V Selma, Alabama, on Sunday night. A large portions! the city is in ruins. The, Prussian government Intends to have a Consul General located ia the City Of NW York. ' "' Clio affJ ni aU Three robbers were taken from the Lebanon (Ky.) jail, on Saturday night, and li rmaail tur t twill A republican, otganlzaUon litis been formed in Paris. The Empress Eugenie and her son will spend Chris traaa at Borne. Advices from Jthe Upper Missouri state that the Indians are again becoming troub-
leeonalBfcttV y. , - - -Jerrect integrity, and1 a good ludge of W Frbm tn reTpxrtrt8e Aafut&tOefl eTanlnd- A11 These elements of his character
nf IlUi that th&t KtAfca fi ji u snijti m m. v nishen hk wfurai-ouvenimem m mi the war two hundred and fifty-six thousand p hudreqBij njnetyjevejf nen. It Is reported tnat tne nrm or Dehon, Clark & BrUla, ' 5Wrk SltV have feiled. Amount not known. A lr 1 In t Ivep Tap1. , f Saturday, night, destroyed five buildings on Thirdj Street. The loss is fully covered by insurance in Eastern 4aidJ kM -H . H During the past threadays about seventy postmasters have been displaced, nearly all of the smaller class Qf officers. Further arrests of suspected Fenians fcave been made in Ireland. The national troops aie ready to move at a moment's 'Warning. There has been renewed fighting in Candla. Tue Turks lve been badly beaten, and have stfrttrted greatly, T-.o' Tes3 than 3,000 having been killed, and 2,000 taken prisoners. , it In the Jovrmal. Supplement this morning will be fouid our Be view of a number of new and interesting works. ..! a h yVl Merchants ean be supplied with the Jocrnai,, ia wrappers rqady for mailing, in any quantity, by leaving orders eariy tnis morning. This issue will ba$t excellent one to send to sountry dealers and friends abroad. The New Albany Opera House opens this week. A Louisville theatrical company has charge of the institution. The people of course will patronize it liberally until the novelty -Wears off.
The Grayville Railroad. We copy ou the- second page an abstract of the report of the Chief Engineer, Mr. p. D. Kennedy, of surveys made on the line of the proposed railroad, between Grayville, Olney, and Mattoon. Ills., together with his
estimates of its cost, as welJ as 01 us extension to Evansville. We regret that we are not able to speak at greater length in reference to it this morning. The report, however, contains sine substantial facts which it is necessary for our citizens to know. If this is not the proper time to enter into obligations to build this road, the value of which to Evansville is apparent to all, it is well that we should know what is being done at the other end of the line, and be prepared at the proper time to act in the matter as the interests of Evansville will require. We trust our Illinois friends will push on the work, and thus stir up our citizens to their full duty in the project at the proper time. The Indianapolis Herald certainly had no representative from its office in attendance at the late National Convention of the Grand Army of the Republic. If it had, it never would havp been so foolish as to state that the Constitution of the Order conutains provisions which it does not, because such statements can ao me Order no injury, and must, if such a thing can be possible, injure the repu tatiou of the paper for truth and veracity. The Herald 's statement, that the members of the Grand Army, jf their anxiety toneiliate " loyal but disfranchised .fetertives,'' insert - aA in fbotf fVntitiitinri n rlflnsA ad mitting those worthies as ' honorary'7 ?V members, is without lounaaiion. vju. the contrary, the principal objectioh urged against a proposed change of the Constitution by which Union men iu the Border States who had done gallant service in fighting rebels but who had never been regularly mustered into, and discharged from, the United States army, could become members of the Order--was that the proposed change might open the doors ;6f the organization to Governors and their .staff. . M ., I . Colonel George W. eale. Our citizens will remember among the active and intelligent young merchants of Evansville, ten years ago company with yielding johjssom, Esq., for many years a citizen of this place, he removed to Kansas during its early Territorial struggle. At the outbreak of the war he entered the . 1 -r-i t Union armv. and won distinction m the Nraw W9T- ft war he has been a resident of Topeka, the cnpital of the State, engaged in
mercantile jpuj-snjp?. His nunreroas r'poeed fos'laelfintry of tmb Ftufesiaa friends will be glad to learn from"fne roops into Berlin, following .efctradt from the TOpeka George Alfred Townsend, now abJitat&Recbrd that he was, at the late gent tb Europa as the special Jrres-
electio. -cHoseo 6r' represent the capi tal ajid Shawnee County in the State' Senate : Our Delegation. -Shawnee County will 'stand in the Legislature politically with the rest of the State. Not a taint of Johnsonisrn or of bolting in the delegation. 'This Is well. Her Influence will be much Unore than it could be If she was represented by men who owed their election to bolting the party nominations. G. W. Veale, In the Senate, will work with the ablest. Jibs acquaintance In all parts of the State and his popularity as a soldier and officer will give him prestige. He is a will be usee State, the 1 State, the Republican party, and his immediate constituents. jLr At Last.-t We are gratified to know that, the Indianapolis Herald has succeeded at last in finding what occa sioned the defeat of its party in the recent elections, viz. : the people were not willing to trust it with the settlement of questions dividing the loyal and the late rebel States. For once we agree with the Herald exactly. The New Albany Commercial says a movement is on foot in that city to commence the erection of a large stove foundry next spring. We think it likely one stove foundry will do well ;nNew Albany, as Evansville sustains threej 'or four mammoth establish meats of that character. The citi zens ot -New Albany are also talking of establishing a boot and shoe peg factory at an early day. Now thatMo.RKissBY, the prince of prize fighters, has got elected to Congress, Barnum, the Prince of Humbugs, is laying his wires to join him in Washington, by getting elected from the Bridgeport, Connecticut, district. The Chicago Journal iuggests that now Washington has secured the "tiger" of New York, it will not be amiss to send on the " elephant," or more properly the " What is it?"
THE EVANSVILLE DAIL JOURN
a LITERARY ITEMS. Mrs. Lydia Maria Child is engaged on a novel ; name and nature are not yet announced. . . William Gillmore Simnis is writing a histpuiafrSofltb Carolipajfiorruaeia j schools. T. B. Read has painted a fairy scene fronr fclie J"Midummer "Night's Dream." Lee & Shepard are about to issue a juvenile magazine called, " Our Boys and Girls," edited by Oliver Optic. John Stuart iviill is at his seat in Avignon, engaged in editing the posthumous works of Henry Thomas Buckle. Miss Evans, the novelist, is fifty-.six years old, and speaks three languages besides English. She has written six novels in ten years. It is likely that Boston will have a larger show of splendid holiday books for Christmas than on any previous year. Mrs. Jftrhes Hannay and Miss Elizabeth Thackeray are said to be writing a memoir of the late William Makepeace Thackeray. Messrs. Moore, Wilstach & Baldwin are preparing a history of the rebellion so far as the State of Ohio participated in it, and they appeal to the different military societies to aid them in their great undertakin great undertaking. Ticknor & Fields have in presa a volume by Prof. Stowe " On the Origin and History of the Books of the Bible : what the Bible is not, what it is; and how it is it." It will be a large, tbiWlSwOjlt) , ildSr'-.Ori Jean Ingelow's Poems, published v Roberts Brothers, have sold in the United States alone 27,000 copies of the Anferfcan edition. A hivifblyl illustrated and richly bound edition of her poems, is nearly ready for the market. The life of Josiah Quincy by his son Edmund Quincy, will not be published until Spring. The second and concluding volume of the life of John Wiothrop by Robert C. Winthrop, will be published next month. irs. narriet iseecner TX 1 1 Stowe's " Chimney Corner Papers " will be gathered,Lato a volume and published soon. She is now occupied on a novel for The Atlantic which will probably take up all her time next year. Wfftte CWHnseWtWof " Woman in White," " No Name," etc., is in Paris, negotiating about the " mounting," as Parisians say, of one Aflf S pltS at"'a " theatre No less than seventy songs of vie tory hymns and cantatas were comJteondent of the NewYork . World., will "f return to America by the 1st of De cember next. He has prepared & lee ture entitled." Europe Armed." Longfellow is still engaged on Dante. He has not only translated the whale poem, but has nearly all the - notes done and stereoytyped ; so that the work will certainly appear during 1866. James Russell Lowell is writing a series of articles, in prose nd verse V. i tit. .iV' nf riptt vpnr TKp statement that he is engagea on a . L .. . . n . 1 ovel is ificaftt jfr j i o JJT Oliver Wendell Holmes is writing a novel for the Atlantic. The first part of it will be published in the January number. It is called " The Guardian Angel." It is a novel of New England life of the present year. John G. Whittier is engaged in preparing for publication a new volume of poems, to be called " The Tent on he Beach." It has not left bis hands yet, but it will probably be issued in the Spring. James , Paof ; jej fllfff: i I f& West " in order to collect material for a series of articles for the all-dcvour-ingJ47oiff an the great cities oi'the Woit TL. been earnestly urged by Mr. Bedpath to write an elaborate life of John Brown, and will proba bly soon set to work on it. Bayard Taylor has been chartered by the Aliiiifir to make a trip to the Old World and write a series of papers on the " By-ways of Europe. The new Boston magazine, edited by Mrs. Julia Ward Howe, and Mr. GHmore, is to be called Northern Rights. The illustrations will be engraved by John Andrew. Among the contributors announced are Frederick W. Shelton, Fitzhugh Ludlow, E. C. Stedman, Wm. R. Alger, E. S.
AL, TUESD.
OVJGMBEIl 27, 1866.
Rand, Jr., "Petroleum V., Naaby," Kimball, Eugene Benson, Rose Terry and Jane G. Austen. The first num ber will appear in January. " Letters from Hell." Mr. Bent!y,'the London publisher, writes to the papers, in reference to the book palled " Letters from Hell," which he has announced for publication, that it is noU as some good people have suptinsftd'- an irreligious work. lb is the production of . a Danish clergyman, and has been translated by clergyman Mthe Church of England. Conclusion of Motley's History, Murray, of London, advertises the two concluding volumes of J. Lothrop Motley's History of the United Netherlands, from the death of William the Silent to the Twelve years' Truce." We presume that these will be issued here by the Harpers, the American publishers of the first and second volumes, and that in a few weeks the work will be ready for dis tribution. 5 The Boston religious papers are preparing to enlarge their dimensions. The Watchmlm and Reflector, the able organ of the Baptists, will be enlarged to as nearly the size of The Independent, as the mechanical appliances of Boston will allow. It will be a double paper like The N. Y. Observer, with a "secular" and religious department or, as the workmen 4ill say, a worldly and other worldly sheet. Nine editors and assistant editors, besides from twenty to thirty contributors are already engaged foT this our mammoth religious weekly. Let us hope that in imitating The Independent they will not leave Hamlet out, and fail to reach the splendid position now occupied by that journal ty &emg atraid to treeiy ana Doiaiy uttei their inmost belief on every LitteF s Living Age, published i,i ...' i. iu iijj: 1 .11. since the memory or man runnetn not to the contrary, is retaining its hold in the market. Some 90 odd volumes of this standard periodical have been published. Lattel lias, in oress Sir Brook Fossbroke:' a novel from Blackwood" s Magazine. Lee & fehepard announce a new weekly illustrated magazine to be ed1 ited by Mrs. Julia Ward Howe and f -i-t t XT" 1 flit 1. Bdmuna tvirke. ine.nrst numoer will be issued on New Year's Day. It will be " devoted 1 to tales, travels, poems, sketches and essays. Charles T. Congdon, Kichard B. Kimball, Postmaster .Nasby, . Frederick Shelton. Louisa M. Alcott. Jane G Austin. Rose Terry, and other noted writers are announced as contributors. The Daily Advertiser announces, with becoming gravity, that- this new periodical is. to fee called ' 1 he Jyorthern Lights," bejauee it is expeeted to ue a ruareri BANKING. First National Bank OF EYANSVIIE, .LXD. XJ. Ie5oasitory. Organized June, 1863. CAPITAL - S0,0. H. Q. Whbklbr, President ; James H. Cutler, Cashier. Directors H . Q. Wheeler, O. Maghee, John Inele. Jr.. Charles Viele. M. J. Bray. Wm. Brown, J. S.TIopkins, Robert Barnes r. W. Sawyer. Doing a keneral Banking, Exchange, and Collection Business. 1 Tl . I c 1 InnnOn 1 W. J. LOWRT fe CO., T A TWTTT) O No. 1 North First Street, X OA MOXJEY OX FAVORABLE J,4 terms. Pay interest on special deposits. Deal in Gold, Silver, Uncurrent Monpand in all descriptions of G O VERNMENT BONDS. Draw on the principal cities of Euro In connection they have an i w'in- xtiii.' .si?Tifl ''lit ii totifJilno t'. Insurance Department, in charge of HENRY S. BENNETT, Secretary, in which Fire, Marine. Life, and Accident policies will be issued on the most liberal terms, i Companies of the most undoubted strength and character. nova) dim i i j 1 1 " The Evansvitfe National Bank, (Successor to the Branch Bank.) CAPITAL 8TM),0O0. G; W. Hathbone, President; Sam. Bayard, Cashier. EVE38UE STAMPS for sale at Goyernmeni lates. AU( GTTST SERIES 7-30s converted into 5-20S, dated Jul v. lhfi. BANKING in all Its departments promptly transacted. nov.ajaim The Merchants' National Bank Corner of Main and First Streets, FITRN ISHES BOTI B ME 1ST Bonds and Securities at the lowest current rates. Purchases Gold and Sliver, Interest Couons, U. S. Bonds, and other securities. Collections made at all points. INTERNAL REVENUE STAMPS of all kinds for sale. nov20 dtf
Jl L K'Tt Ail Alii J I CUpn
FOUNDRY T, to i!fl ma X ti PKAPRIGTOKS OK 1 the o'dept and most extensive Stove and Hollow-Ware Foundry in the State, acq i ' J ' '"V are prepared to furnish STOVES. HOLLOW-WARE, SUGAR-KETTLES, DOG-IRONS, &e , AS LOW as any Foundry in the West. The fact that we are selling ana snipping every week large quantities of our goods to St. Louis, to be again sold there in competition with the large Foundries of that city, is sufficient guarantee as to prices. We are the only makers in this city of the Celebrated Coal Parlor Stove " JPe ex-less which is being so rapidly introduced here. RffiLKES, BLOUNT A CO., nov27dlm. Nob. 102 A 164 Main St. GET THE BEST. WEBSTER'S UNABRIDGED DICTIONARY. ew Illustratea Edition. THOBOUGHTjT REVISED AND MCCH KS- - I.ARGK1). OVER 3,000 FINE ENGRAVINGS. 10000 WORTS and MFANINGS not found in otner mciionaries. ANJJCKSSnVto every intelligent famllv. student, teaciier and profession aL man. Whaf liWiii.y in coTnpftte wltb.-ut me oesi n,ngusu jjiciionary : " Superior in most respects, to any oth English Dictionary known to me. 'Hoi cr Hon. George P. Marsh, Ji 'arch, UW. r In our opmlon it is the best dictionary that either England or America can boast. "-"'In-LI ,alio.nal Ouarterlu Review, 11s apnti aiNaoaur; . . . 1 t 1 f,rz rw .ri t r 1 1,' ii-Cl IZWpray, comiiletenes, the-work is 6ne and vtmsCRsmF nrrrity winch none who can read or write can henceforward offord to dispense with." Atlantic Monthly. 1 ' Viewed as a whole,' we are confident that no other living language has a dictionary which so fully and faithfully sets ortn its present ewmuoB as tcw ium eitlon of Webster uoes that or our Written arid spoken English tongue." Harper's JUagazine. "Ths Nbw, Wbbsw.e is glorious It is perfect it distances and defies competiitipn it leaves nothing to be desired. J'. H- Raymond, LU- L., President of Vassar College. ' '- 1 In one vol. 1,840 Royal Quarto Pages. Published b r G. & C. MERR1 AM, Springfield, M ass. Sold by all Booksellers. nov. 27 d&w2w. GROCERIES. Pkeston & Bros. F. P. CakSox. , F. A. Prestos. PRESTON BROTHERS, Wholesale Orocers, No. 9 First Street, evansvilLb, ind. m V.SA'Y7vh.A ni no iiwrrairri' Howard, Prestons 4 Barrett, tJ t THy. ii New Orleans. Preston & Bros., a .rftsonville, 111. New York? JACOB STRAUB & SON, DEALERS IN HARDWARE,.,, ERY, o. 74 Main Street, Between Second and Third Streets, EVANSVILLE, IND. nov27dlm. -r-r-r aa (iaifbi BEMENT Sc VIELE, Wholesale Dealers in .. . onoci;5iEs, T 'Yh 71 1 1 li 01 SOUTHWEST CORNER FIRSf A S1CAM0BE STREET, Evansville, Ikd. , 00 TKAHJx)! J l.U' nov26dty in' tn; ri i ' . ' i it h i n it r I Mtmt b.m !! "' la ln J : til"J llhW I . . ''r' !.r;! i ,. m E WKKEtWR. JAMES t. RIOQ3 WHEELER & RIGGS, Wholesale Dealers in FIRST AND SYCAMORE STREETS, ,li:i7 Hit ft A t fill f I Evansville, Ind. All orders promptly attended to. tY. IT JiT? I.I .1 I VT I i-tt". nov 28 dtf Gunnies. 5f ENNY BAGS JIJST .111111 received and for sale by 9 Sfc. DUSOUCHET A CO., nov28dlw No. 1 Water f treet.
OrHMAht Lettkbj. KK-tt AlQJ&$i&-J&$li the
iwupice at Kvansvllle, State 01 inaiauiv, the 27th day of November. 18tt6. T. nhtain an xr f tl,a If.t.t.prS. the applicant must call for "advertised letters, give the date of the list, and pay one cent for advertising. flwrTIf not called for within one montn, they will hi Mnt Krtd-LthVVPtrV Prie DelMHV 6T IMWW A- oaWMftf tUDet resi(Sence of owners, in cities of 50,000 inhabitants or over, may be secured by observing the following Rules: Direct letters to the street and number, iwifell as the post-office and State. I Z Head letters with the writer's postoffice and State, street and number, sign thein plainly wltn lull name, ana request that answers be directed accordingly. 3.: Letters to strangers and transient visitors in a town or city, whose special address iiniv hp unknown, should be marked, in the lower left-hand corner, with the word 4. PlaJetlfc ipostaje-am 1 1 on riifht-liaml corner, and leave space oe--tween the stamps and direction for postmarking without interfering witli the writing. U.K. A request lor tne reium 01 a ieii:r to the writer, If unclaimed within thirty i;iv or less, written or printed with the writer's name, post-office, and State across the left-hand end of the envelope, on the face side, will be.cfcnirbed "0h free of extra postage. Sec. 28, Law ofl863. LADIES' LIST. Baker M Mrs Mills Emily H Bishop Harriet Morgan Lucy Mrs Benden E Mrs Mc Kitrlck Corwm Mary 2 McN'aughten Mollie Clayton Kitts McWaters Geo Mrs Condy Martha Nany Dora Davidson Sarah J Polley Ally I . . D vaw Xfti.r.ri.i
Donnell Maggie ti B garne eatherine A M i
Erkine Lizzie 1 v 1 1 1 lit jauc Everett Elizabeth Evans Jane B Flakier Flliie Griffin Rachel GiUett Charlotte Harmon Jane Hascy S S Hi ft' Isabel 1 Mrs Harty Mary Hull Mary H HpbspiaUi Reddin Maria Russell Mary P Russell A 1 mini Read is Mary J Rowe Nellie Roach Mary Saltsman Esther Miss Shearwood Miss Soakland Alberdeen Stanley Mfcry Mis 1 Eliza wart Rachel kti'ix tonesay airs horn ton ind Mrs Mghtner t'lenon 2 Taylor Jennie Miss jjOCKyearj iuns Taylor Mary E Launenn Fanny A Williams D Mrs Lamlrum Eliza Weatherford Eliza J Link Mary Miss Watklns Julia A Mannell Ann Weatherford Lldia Mott C Mrs 2 Watklns MWry L Mlahael Susan Woodward Mary S Mountels Mophia Wood fenelope Matlu-ny Tilly x oungs inen Mahrier Elizabeth GENTLEMEN'S LIST. Adams 4 Suashall Hughes Joseph Aikin J P Haynle Henry Alford John F Hyde Homer AiUn Richard Hewinir C Ahderou 8 Walter Hazen Alvln Ake W H Jonfes Wm N Jones J H Knickerbocker P J Keller D Lewis Thomas M Lyon Ezra Lyon Dr 2 Millage Adrian Murphy Rolard Moreland J N Brannon Isaac Brope Jobn-jr Bradley JanTes M Uiancliard J A Badgcar John Brent J C Bennet George Buddy E M Biennon Edward Beard E . Bui in s Osker Banner Clarence C Morris H H Bonna, or felghton Matthews Geo F Mr Bowers William Beach William Cooper J J Collins James Cameron Jaibes ( anftdy John W Crofton Harry Carter H Collins F W Cox.ijhuix i Cookey Esickair Chandler W W camnel Edward 1 iCopelcy C G Carpenter Wright DormeyerU Dorson Charles G Decamp Elijah Dawd Frank Euggan John avles Matthew Dawson N Eastham Chas Exe Charles Murphy Chris Miner & wilt Miller A P McCombs H P MeGili James A McKarland H Jun Nelson W Owen H V Pi lchard B V Ppoh Geo P PatlersoB JoUfr C Porter J ojbn Pamplen ' Thomas Pen'ecost Bn f Russell Win Richards' n J C jmiich Mr Sugg pa Co Steele W Ml Smith M F
stickey Foshnau Sanson John Sullivan Charles Shemwell Jo H Tavlor Geo L 2 Tuoker Tames Taylor JZ ..AnOft Twvman NT 4 Taylor W S 2 Valine John Warpenbure Geo B
Fisher Robert Cf arrell P W owler Isaac amble Thomas Griffin Ottowa Ghiram Joseph ValjVrOo w u Wilson Johft L George HSeymourDr tiranT L nanes Wood Josephus S rjlanter Daniel Weed John Wood John Wood R E W'lnston A Bennett 2 juerensey J s Holt Thomas Humphrey Marion Hopkins L S Homes J C JAMES H. McNEELY, P.M. O. H. BABCOCK; DEALER IN & e e r s , Agricultural Imptements, MACHINE PLOWS, COTTON GINS, Ac, Ac, NO. 8 NttHSCH NFPST., J T ' A XS VI L L E, IND. tar Agent for Mowing Machines an Pitt's Separator. J. B. 11TII, M.D., Houio3opatlii- lh.yU'ian, Cffers his profeioni4Vt-1e1 to the e tens of Evansville and immediate vicinity in the general practice of medicine. Office No. Main Street. Office Hours From S to lv a.m.. and from 2 to i and t to Ap.tei. LK HWP tl:UM Fresh Arrival.s NEW Bl'CKWHEAT EI.Ol'K, SEW Raisins, new JCnrrants. w CUrpn, new Figs, netr'I.emon-Peflrt'W good i of in'ort- il.iviriiilli diana Soreho Syrup everything nice, rinimn unii some iii' urgl new, and cheap, cheap, at VICKEKY www., Eureka Bazaar, 06dtf raMktn Street. "Our Policy" IX antl n0t,ttunrtaj 'okt,''V any hw xn the fifty. This porlcj-eiplaftrrf Why trade is so lively at the oia - r ui "'i. "Jbodv wonders at the change. 1 he secret is. we sell for 90c. what our " forerunners " sold for SL No humbug! Come and be oc0 dtf . 75 Ai aln Street. Poultry ! Poultry ! WE HAVE HADE A K R A X O Einents by which we expect to be regularly supplied with Dressed Poultry, Eggs, Butter, etc., etc., during the winter months. We are In receipt of Produce nearly every day from our Vlocenues house. Our facilities for buying are such that WE CAN AND WILL t-ELL AT PHICES THAT DEFY COMPETITION. A good supply of Turkeys engaged for xnanKNgiviiig uay. i,eave oraers hi VICKKKY BKOS. oc9dtf 75 Main Street. Great Headquarters FOR LAMP OIL AND LAMP GOODS A Are assortment of Kitchen, Hall, and Parlor Lamps: also, a great variety of Chandeliers, suitable tor Halls, Churches, School-houses, Stores, etc. Call and see at VICKERY BROS., octy dtf 75 Main Street.
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