Evansville Journal, Volume 18, Evansville, Vanderburgh County, 30 May 1867 — Page 4

?llb L'AIVN I'l-iK J 01 It A L FUBUnHED DAILY BY ih-2 Evansville Journal Compeny. Jfo. Locust Street, EYansTille, Ind. SUBSCRIPTION TERMS. IN ADVANCE. Daily Journal. Ooe year, by mall 81 oo Six months, by raail.......-...-... 5 SO Taree months, by mail 3 OO By the week, payable to carrier 23 Trl-Wekly Journal.

One year .... 9 7 Six months.... .... 4 OO OO Weekly Journal. One copy, one year .. .. .. S 2 4to Five copies, one year H 7 a Ten copies, one year 13 OO Important to Advertisers. The circulation of the Journal in the City of Evansville is three times ax large as that of amy other newspaper. : ;. Our circulation in Indiana and Illinois is greater than any other newspaper published in this City. In Kentucky it is more than all the other Evansville papers combined. NEWSITEIUS. Gold closed -in New York yesterday at 13. " - ! - - The races near Cincinnati attracted a large crowd yesterday. Three races were ran. ' . ' . Reports frtm the West say that five deeerters were killed by-the Indians last week near Fort Hays, Kansas. A prominent citizen of Lansingburg, New York, has been arrested as an accomplice of a gang of counterfeiters. The New York Herald says the Reform Bill ot England has at last been adopted by Parliament in accordance with the wishes of the Government. . . Influential meetings are being held in England and Ireland, asking the Government to be merciful unto the Fenian convicts. Prayers are also being offered up n all the Catholic Churches in their behalf. The New York Herald of yesterday contained some important news from Mexico, which will be found in the telegraph columns. -rf. -(:: Gen. Thomasretnrns to Tennessee, it is stated by the New Yorlt World, with instructions to regulate theTennetsee militia. HoraceJGreeley has'written to Breckinridge, according to report, inviting that traitor to come back to this country and take part in reconstruction. A fellow named Degmlre was arrested in Erie, Pa., on Tuesday, charged with embezzling fifteen thousand dollars worth of revenue stamps. Senator Wade, of Ohio, and a large party propose taking an excursion across the plains at the expense of the various rail road and stage companies. They, also, of course, expect sundiy receptions, Jacob Barker, of New Orleans, was arrested on Tuesday, charged with embezzlement and fraud, but released on 10,000 bail. ' Extensive arrangements are being made to c-.anplete the Cable to the Island of Cuba. The Land line will be completed by the first of June. ' Our Government has sold the rebel ram Stonewall to the Japanese for JlOOjOOO, and the iron clad Mlantonomah, now in Europe, to the Einjieior Napoleon for &0,000. The yacht Vesta has arrived in .New York, aftei; a stormy passage. On the way ber crew mutinied, but were put down by the captain. The President received, on Tuesday, the record of the first sentence of a citizen tried by a military commission under the reconstruction act. Five thousand Camanche Indians are reported to be on the war path. Some bave gone towards Fort Belknap, and the remainder threaten Fort Arbuckie. The latest news from Montana is, that the greatest excitement prevails on account of Indian difficulties. Meetings have been held, and volunteers enrolled and armed. Gov. Meagher has called out six hundred mounted men, assuring them that they can have all that they can make. A bloody war is anticipated. INDIANA ITEMS. The Vincennes Sun says the army worm is reported to be doing the wheat severe damage in that vicinity. There are eleven lodges of Odd Fellows In Indiana, working in the German language. - Eainbridge E. Reynolds, son of General J. J. Reynolds, of Lafayette, has been appointed a eadet to Wett Point. The Martinsville Gazette, sajg the cold weather i making ihe corn look decided !y yaller. Wheat continues to look promising. ; ' : - The Richmond Hummingbird complains that the corn rots us fast as planted. Some of the farmers have planted twice, and expect to have to plant again.A boy named Addis Sylvester ,feli.fjom the roof of a new building at Jeft'er oaville, astride of a pailing fence, and was horribly mutilated. .He died on Saturday morning. '. ' !'' . ;' ; "The members of the PresbyteiJan Church In Washington, are making an effort to build a new church forty by lxty leet, at. a cost not exceeding three thousand dollars. The proposed railroad from Grand View to Vincennes, is to pass through the villages of Buffalo, Gentry ville, Dale, Ireland and Petersburgh. The levenue returns of Green County for the month of April show the respectable sum of 51,176 95 assessed. This" amount ' is principally on the manufacture of tobacco, which is carried on to, a considerable ex tent in that county. t f a i in. New A man named J.' D. : Roberts, castle, has been arrested and held to bail in the sum of S1.500,' for waylaying "some one and, robbing him-.of precisely five rents. ' I'. '- '' J

Eleven i Delia mam were-kifledt and nine wounded in a recent fight with the Indians at Black Hills, Colorado. They all belonged to the Seventh U. S. Cavalry, . A joint stock company for the manufacture of boors and shoes is being organized oy the shoemakers of New Albany. The thing if properly managed, can be made to pay. A child three years old, recently drank about a half tablespoonful of concentrated lye, in the town of Lagrange. The ufferings of the child were? jyeat, but 'were finally relieved by the application of remedies. The Madison Courier says an evidence of the fact that the notes of a broken are better than those of Bound national banks is seen in that the First National Bank oi that city is paying a premium of four per cent for notes on the broken banks. The Washington Gazette learns from reliable authority that the Western Division of the O. & M. K. R. contemplate moving their machine t-hops from Illinoistown to

Washington.. The Illinois Eight H6ur Law, and the fact that the shops can be more economically managed at Washington, is tbereason assigned for the change. The citizens of Huntington County are satisfied they have a gold mine, fand have brought a quartz crusher from New York to work it. They think over $100 in gold can be extracted from every ton of quartz worked over. . The Vincennes Bun says it is "assured, on reliable authority, that the road from that place to Indianapolis is now under con tract, and It is to be completed in two y ears from Riis time. This-road is secured' by a bonus of three thousand dollars to the mile as a gratuity to the company of capitalists who build it. ; .1 ..- A little' boy, six years old, fell into a privy vault in Lafayette on Saturday. His life was saved by clinging to a pitce of post until he was rescued. Alaboier, in trying to rescue the little fellow, fell In up to his neck, but was rewarded with a new suit of clothes and a greenback lining for his vest pocket. Railroad building is regarded by some of our adjoining counties, who have little or no experience in such enterprises, as a small matter. They talk of runn ug two roads, from different points on the Ohio above here, to intersect the Ohio & Mississippi road at Vincennes and Loogootee. The construction of such roads through the knobs of Dubois, Daviess and Pike counties, will prove very expensive. KETl KY ITEMS. The preliminary survey of the contemplatedrailEoaXCPm.fili7AbeUitowttt. Paducah has been, comple(edrbut the report is not yet "published i All Right Again. The bridge over Duck Creek, on the Louisville and Nashville Railroad, which was swept away by the freshet on Sunday, has been replaced, and trains are now running through as formerly. , .... The direct receipts of cotton at the port of Louisville during the year closing March Si, 1867, were T9,8S8 bales- The actual sales of tobacco during the same period amounted to 34,092 hogsheads, for which the actual cash paid out has amounted to $3,583,889 85; on this amount the warehouse men have paid a revenue tax of S-,909 75. One Honest Rebel. It will be remembered that the Congressman elect of the Third Kentucky District, Judge Hise, blowed his brain3 out, which made it necessary to hold another election. Mr. P. II. Leslie, of GlasgW, announced himself as a candidate, but his attention was called to " the iron-clad oath" required ot all members of Con gress; whereupon this JJemocratic aspirant published a card to hfs' breth-' ren of the secesh Democracy, in which he says : I have just seen and read the new oath, enacted and engrafted upon "the Statute Book of the United States in 1862, to be administered to each member of Congress before he is allowed to take his seat. If I should be elected I should be required to swear that I 'never counseled, encouraged or countenanced any individual in arms against the United States.' This, as a conscientious man, I cannot do. I feel that it is due to my friends to say at once, I cannot be a Representative In Congress for the reason aforesaid." We commend the example of Mr. Leslie to the conscientious consideration of John Young Brown and Judge Trimble. Brown, notwithstanding he has placed himself squarely on the record, under his own "sign manual," as a rebel, , in every, impulse of his heart, boasted in " the canvass that he could take the " ironclad oath ;" and Trimble has already manifested his ability to take the bitter pill. Yet we apprehend that the Congressional Committee . on Elec tions '"will 1 V6 famished !such "evidence - as. . will - induce Congress to institute itself ' keeper , . of" the consciences of men, who appear to be ,i -destitutes noE ? that su com modity so rare among rebels, where a fat office is to be obtained, even though it be in the " Rump Congress." The Pacific Railroad. , We published ah interesting arti cle a few days ago from a New York correspondent, giving a general view of the Pacific Railroad, referring to the progress of the companies" having in charge the divisions both on the Western, or California, division, and the divisions from the East: To.rlav ; N i l'-. .. . . : - l ;"v we puDlisn anotnr interesting article from ;.the':" jSe.w Jtork Independent, giving' more definitely4 and. in ; detail, the operations' 6f-the" 'Union Pacific

or.Umaha branch, wliich should receive the attention of all s our readers. The information as to the manner of organization of the Company, its resources, progress, and the, statistics

given, win strengthen the taith ot all who read it, that this great high way of the Nation will be built, and that it will prove a great success to the ; Company, as well as an incalculable benefit to the country. General Butler. i General Butler, in a letter to the Boston Traveller, gives the following explanation of his being u bottled up:" . In May, 1864, when operating against Richmond and Petersburg, General Butler received orders from General Grant to send away all the troops he could with safety spare, to reinforce the Army of the Potomac on the Peninsula, then about to fight the battle of Cold Harbor. In obedience thereto. General Butler sent General Grant 17,000 picked men of the 25,000 effective men, including black troops, then under General Butler's command. Whereupon, General Butier complained that the neces sities of the Army of the Potomac had "bottled him up in- Bermuda Hundred That complaint was repeated about his headquarters, and the very words will be foundto hare' been pabUsUed ia the correspondence from thence of the New York Times of that date. . This may be the correct version of the ' dasej but : it does I not; dispel 'the general impressions that iBctler's military career was not a brilliant one. As an executive officer he had no superior in the service, but, aside from his New Orleans experience, his record, from Bethel to Bermuda, is not enviable. Whether his legislative career will resemble more his martial or his executive and legal career remains to be seen. It must be admitted that from the impeachment and Sup.ratt matters, especially the latter, one is hardly justified in expecting that he will occupy a leading, although a prominent, position in the Lower House of the Fortieth Con gress. . , . . ....... We published a short time since jha address of the Hon. Samuel McKe, of Kentucky, to his. constituents of the Ninth District, .but we, .find .the following extract going the rounds of our exchanges, and; reproduce it as echoing the sentiment of a large body of the true Union men of that State. Speaking of Kentucky, he says: She is to-day the most disloyal of all the States. To-day she is more hostile to the national authority than any other State. To-day she openly and flagrantly defies the laws of the nation's Congress. If her people would set her right, they must go to work ; and if they will not do it, then the nation's Congress will do this for them. She is the only State to-day i which the doctrines contended for by Davis and his co-laborers are a success. The Nashville correspondent of the Memphis Bulletin writes very dgspondingly in regard to the prospects of the Copperhead-party 'ftf the approaching Tennessee election. In fact, he abandons all hone of Etheridge's success, and says the canvass " is regarded too one-sided to make it interesting or important.' He further declares that " many of our best Conservatives " already give up the contest as a hopeless one; but while they give up the prospect of success as to the Governor and Congressmen, they yet believe that by judicious management a majority may be obtained in the Legislature, and thus secure the re-election of Senator Patterson." - Mississippi. ; The question as to whether Mississippi will vote for a Constitutional Convention under the Military Reconstruction bill is not yet determined. The Jackson Mississippian, of a late date, says : " We have cheering news from all quarters of the State, which satisfies us that our people will reject;-with -a loud " voice, the proposition for a convention to accept the provisions of the Military bill. Men who but yesterday were advocates of a convention, ex necessitate, to-dayare re-considering their tboughtless'imprudencey and are willing to await the issue of pending events before they take the fearful leap." The General, Association of Congregational Churches in Illinois, at their session in Champaign, on Saturday, repudiated the N., .Y. Independent, as a had teacher of religion and an uncertain defender of common morality. ' : ' . i Democratic Convention. The Democracy of Warrick County held a Convention oa Saturday last and made the following nominations : Lewis Miller, of Lyunville, for Treasur--i . rii. . erj ltOBEiix lArjuoa, renominated for Clerk ; Thomas Scales, of . Taylorsville, far Recorder; and Henry Haywood, of Green Township, for County Commissioner. ' ' , ' ' .'.A Political Preacher. - :-We have read in the -Northern Democratic papers, " about politi-

cal preachers. The correspondent " Mack," in his Southern travels, came across a character at Selmal; who might possibly be of that class, if he was only a " Radical." He says: " It is scarcely within the province of a correspondence like this," to criticise any religious sect or denomination, but I cannot refrain from stating as a historical fact, that the Southern Methodist Church, after having done more to bring on the war than any other. organization,, political or religious, is now doing more to keep

alive the names ot sectional discord than any other agency upon earth, If , I ever had any doubts' upon this subject, they were' removed on Sunday last by a sermon in one of the Methodist churches of this city. I didn't hear the text, but judging from what of the discourse I did hear, it must have been from one of Pollard's editorials in the Richmond 'Examiner. The holy man of the pulpit was telling the brethren and sisters about the house not made with nanus, wmcn was in. store lor them in the next world. He had .waxed himself in ttf a great perspiration over it. "Ah, yes my brethern and sisters," said he, " that home cannot be burned by a barbarous and merciless foe under pretense of making civilized war." This was a gentle reminder oLj,he Wilson, raid. "-Yoa . will be beyond the reach of -the despoilor of your homes v and v firesides ' there. N incendiary torch can burn that home in heaven ,-whdrd1 JesVis. reigns." Here the brethern " Amen'd" viuorously.A.Sob after the reverried' ggn tleman made a detour t to-' attack political preaching and political preach ers, lie despised politics he said, as the worst of all sinfulness and un righteousness, and he despised politicians as the worst villains and wretches on earth. "Just: look at, what they have done and propose to do to; our beloved bouth. '. said he: Look at s the . Government ' they propose to put over us. -Jiut brethern and sisters, there is one consolation, that the people of God can live under any government which such wicked sinners can devise for us. x here was a great deal more ot tha same sort which I can not now re call but the whole sermon had onlv one drift, and that was rebel, although fart ot it was an anathema against poitical preaching;;" ..'He" denounced Congress n.ud Con&rressmen in ceneral. and especially the present CoDgress, as, wfth ' scarcely an exceptioncomposed of the vilest men on earth. He probably didn't think of Saulsbury, or he would have made a special excep-'' tion in his lavor. . Having concluded his "sermon," he went down from the pulpit and administered the Sacrament of the Lord's Supper to the congregation ;itwas so eminently fitting after such a discourse to commemo . rate the dying love of Him whose mission was peace on earth and goodwill to man. t Iinportant to Hay-JIakers. r ; WAKXER'S REVOLVING SULKY RAKE COMBINES ALL Til E AIVAXt"Kes of both the SULKY and OLD .EVOLVING RAKKS. By means of the lever, with its cams and stops, the driver has more perfect control over the Rake than can possibly be had over the x)ld fashioned Revolver. It does not, dust" the iay as wire teeth usually do: is easily handled by a boy; and the inclination of the teeth, is;jeasily regntaed-,60 as to pass over any obstacle, or dip into a swale. It is easily transported, and THE RAKE can be detahed from the Sulk.y 4n a moment, shou d the operator wish a light vehicle for running upon errands. The Wulky, being well built and w;th a good spring seat, will, by plafing a box upon it be exceedingly, useful, . Jor light, workulf the year round.1 Send for Circular to ' . ' BLYMEK, NORTON & CO., CINCINNATI, OHIO. Manufacturers of Cane Mills, Cook's Evaporator, Drag Saws, Church and Plantation Bells, Corn hhellers, Cntting Boxes, Horse Hay Forks, Hand Corn Planters, Garden Cultivators, etc. - rnayiJO dim Eleclion Notice. IT IS KOff HERE ORDERED by the Common Council of the city of .fc,vansville. that on Monday, the 17th day of June, 1807, an election shall be held in said city in pursuance of the provisions of uie luriietii viaum? ui Lije lujrueiu ftevuon of the Charter of the city, as amended by the Act of March nth, 1S7. The said election shall be held for the purpose of ascertaining whether the qualified voters of said city do or do not desire the Common Council aforesaid.' for and on behalf of said city, to subscribe for and take stock in the Evansville, Henderson and Nashville Railroad Company to the amount of Three Hundred Thousand Dollars. Said election shall be by ballot, and upon the tickets of those who desire said stock, to.be taken as aforesaid, shall be written or ' printed the words, " Take Stock," or other words clearly expressing such desire, and npon the tickets of those who do not desiie said stock to be taken shall be written or printed the words. iCTake no Stock," or other equivalent words. j ; ' ' In ail other respects.- said election shall be conducted in the same manner, and be governed by the same rules and r muta tions as the annual elections, for officers ot sajd city, except that no one can vote at said . election who shall not have paid a city w& wiiuiu bwcivcmuutuit vtriui e rttl election. ''-TIT 17' Said election shalKfce beld-tttthe usual places ot, holding feitje -elections, And -ry tice oi' the time and- places of holding said election snail rte ehtuilfcyl ublininK a copy of .'the. order six- days! in two daily newspapers pTinted and published -in said city, the last of which publications shall be at least five days before the time of holding said election. One of said newspapers shall be a German paper, and publish m translation cf this order in the German language, and no unimportant defect in such translation shall affect the valiJity of the notice. A. M. jicGRIFF. Clerk, City Clerk's Office, May 30, lj7. my30-6t Union copy. . Notice to Contract rs. . April 15, 1867. THE COMMON f CQVHilUi OF. THE City of Evansville will receive sealed proposals until rlie 24th day of June, 17, for grading, graveling and paving the Alley situate between Main , and Locust Streets and extending from Fourth Street to Fiflh Streeet. . , . .t. ; :, s , By order of the CouncM.4 .f f s - . A. M.MCO RIFF, Clerk.. ; City ClerJt's office, May 30. 18i7. . BU (Union copy.)

EV ADVERTISEMENTS.

SECOXD STREET -SHOE STORE! f; YJ0M RASCII, l THE OLD AND RELIABLE Boot and Shoe MERCHANT, OPEXKIt AT STAND, . HIM OLD No. 8 SECOND STREET, Between Main and Sycamore Streets, ? A New and Large jjtock of j ' 7 a BOOTS AND SHOES OF .EVERY Which Ite will sell at HeJail at OVIIOLESALE PjtlGES. HAvlng bought my entire1 rttock of Goods direct from the manufacturers, and selectd them personally with g eat care, I can assure the public that tuy will find at No. H HECOND BTREKT not only I he CHEAPEST, but also the FfNKST, MOST HTYLISH, and DUKABLE GOODS in tna city."- t Please call and nee ior yourself. - J0I1.V Riscirr may 30 dti, RAILROAD CO. Are now constructing a Railroad from OHAlI t, XERIMSKA, westward toward the Pacini: Ocean, making, with, its connections, aa . unbroken line ' ACROSS THE CONTINENT. TheCompany nowoffer allmlted amount oi their , FIRST MORTGAGE BONDS, . having thirty years to run and bearing annual interest, payauie on tne nrst uuy of Jauuaryatd July, in the City of New York, at the rate of SIX PER CENT., IN GOLD, . at Ninety Cents on the Dollar. Thia road was completed from Omaha 305 miles west on the 1st of January, M7, and is Juiiv equipped, ana trains are regu larly lunning over it. The Company 1ms now on hand sufficient iron, ties, etc., to finish the remaining portion to the east em base of the Kocky Mountains, 812 miles, which is under contract to be done September 1st of this year: and it is ex peeled that the entire road will be in run ning order from Omaha to its western connection with the Centra! Pacific, now being racldly built eastward from Sacra mento, Cal., during 1870. y Means of the Company. Eitimatlng the distance to be built by the . Union faciflc .to -be l&io miles., the United States Government Issues Its Hix ner Cent. Thirty-Year Bonds to the Com pany as the road is finished, at the average rate of about S.S.Z30 per mile, amounting to SM.UJS.UU". Tne Company is also permitted to isue its own First Mortgage BoDds to an equal amount, and at the same time; winch, by special Act of Congress, are made a First Mortgage on the entire line, the bonds of the United States being subordinate to them. The Government makes a donation ot 12,800 acres of land to the mile, amounting lo 20,032,000 acres, estimated to be worth S30.000.000. making the total resources, ex elusive of the capital, J1.8,J16,0U0; but the full value of the lands cannot now be real lzed. The authorized Capital Stock of the Com pany is one hundred million dollars, of wmcn nve minions nave already been paid in, and of which it is not supposed that more than twenty-five millions at most will be required. The cost of the road is estimated by com pel ent engineers 10 ue auoni one nunUred million dollars, exclusive of equipment. Prospects for Business. The railroad connection between Omaha and the East is now complete, and the earnings of the Union Pacific on the sections already finished for the first two weeks in May were 8113,000. These sectional earulngs as the road progresses will much more than pay the interest on the Company's bonds, and the through business over the only line of railroad between tne Atlantic and Pacific must be immense. Value and Security of the Bonds. The Company respectfully submit, that the above statement of facts fully demonstrates the security of their Bonds; and as additionarproor.lhey would suggest that the Bonds now ofi'erod - art- ies than ten million dollars ott MT- mi!eHaofJ'road, on wmcn twenty mini n dollars nave already been expended. On 330 miles of this road the cars are now running, and the remaing 17 miles an-aor'Jr completed. .At the present rate ot premium on goiu, these bonds pay an annual interest pn. the present cMtofin ' ''"'' Nine per Cent., 'Krl it is believed that on the completion I f the road, like the tiovemmeut Bonds, tney will go aoove par. i ne company in tend to sell but a limited amount at the present low rate, and retain the right to advance the price at their option. Subscriptions will be received In New York by the Cokti nestai. National Bakk, . Nok7 Nassau Street; 't.ahit. "Dodge &. Co.. Bankers. . . ' 51 Wall Street; John J. Cisco & Son, Bankers, No. Si Wall Street : and by Banks and Bankers generally throughout the United States, of whom maps and descriptive pamphlets may be obtained. They wH' io he sent by mail from tli Company's office, Mo. 20 Nassau Street, New York, on application. Subscribers will select their own Agents, in whom, they have confidence, who alone wilt be responsible to them lor the safe delivery of. the bonds,. JOHN CISCO, treasurer, .v.;.il'trmay 30 dw3m NEW YORK.

; Johw BRYA!, Late Arkenburgh A Bryan.

Picksow a. Watt Cua F. Tag. " BRYAN, WATTS & CO, COMMISSION MER CIIA NTS, 43 Broad, Street, , , " ' ' NEW YORK.

Reasonable SICJHT CHf'CK advances made on shipment of COTTO TOBACCO, and other Produce, g , ' R. K. DUNKERSOX & CO., Agents. NOTICE IS HEREBY UITi:X. that the andxrsigned have formed a limited paitnershlp, pursuant to the provisions of the Kevised Statutes of the State of New York : that th name or firm under which such partnership is to be conducted Is Bryan, Walts A Co.; that i.he general nature of the busi. ness to be transacted by such partnership is a general commission businesx ; that the general partners interested in Mild busines are John Bryan and Dickson CI. Watts, who fceverally reside lu th city oi New York, in the State of New York ; that the special partner Interested in said business is Charles F. Tag, who resides in the city of Hoboken, in I lie counly of Hudson, and State of New Jersey; that .aid special partner, Charles F. Tag, has contributed as capital to the common stock of such partnership the sum of one hundred thousand dollars In cash ; and that such partnership is to commence on the sixteenth day of May, is7, snit 1 to terminate on the .lx- r teenth Uay-of May, 1H70. ' Dated at New York, May 16, 18 7. . john bh Van. ' DICKSON (i. WATTS, Oeneral Partners.

iCHARLHH F.TAO, , , v I Special Partner.

may30 d3ml SOITIIERX HOTEL, Water Street, between Main aud Locust. ' ' EVANSVILLE, 1.VD. E. M. WHITE, PBOPKIETOR. - A Watch kept at all hours for Boats. The Deftt or fare at moderate prices. Free conveyance from the depot to the House. , my30-3m. IMaiios, Organs, cVc. AVAR REN & CODI NGT ON, Wholesale and Retail Dealers In PIANOS, ORGANS, . , , i ' ' MUSIC, and MUSICAL GOODS, of all kinds. , . , . . Xo. 1 3Iain Street, EVANSVILLE, ..............'.....INDIANA mcltf r. HATS AND CAPS. and S T It A M , ; o o i s. for; the to: SPRING TRADE of 1867. WE HAVE IV STOKE A FII.I. assortment of OwmIs in our line, which we purchased for CANII during the late panic in prices all of which we can and will sell at prices that will a Cord the Retail Merchant large profits. All successful ercbants know that the money is made in buying goods. As GOOUS WKLi. BoCGiiT AUK HALF SOLD, and us we do no luir;; anything for Bhowing our stock.we wnuiil lie plea'-ed to have everybody that deals in our line come in and examine our styli - and prices. . LANPHEAR & MITCHELL, ap3 No. ZH NORTH FIRST HT. AtiXE ABSORTAi KNT of Ladies' anI Misses' Trimmed Hatx, of the, latest spring Styles, Just received fit" ' ' ap3 LANPaEAH&Jkll-CJi ELL'S., AG II EAT VARIETY of M.n's and Boys' - Palm-Leaf, Leghorn, Pearl f-Uaw, and Panama Hats, fr the Spriri(f Trade,' Just received, and at 'greatly r du-d prices, at . . ap3 LANPHEAR A MTCVH BLt't. LARGE LOT of Shaker' Hoods just jea. received ana ior saie low r ap3LAHPHEAH & MITCIfELL'S. TH0S. GRANT, ... Carpeiiter and Joiner, TrrTiix. attf.xd PitojirrtY TO W any work that may be l rusted to hiH rare. Shop on Main Street, betw and Eighth. Post-OfUce box 0; Seventh Especial attention giv?r .0 Heavy or Intocate iTaming. febisdtf MEIM IIANTS' EXCHANGE and GENTLEMEN'S KESTAUKANT, 3Vo. 5 Flrt Mrcet. TRUNTZ & MhNTZEU, Proprietors. The choicest Wines and Liquors will be kept constantly ou hauu ; and special at teution will be given to the RESTAURANT, where all the delicacies of the Beaton will -be served in the most approved stylo making it a pleasant resort for the MERCHANTS nd BUSINESS M EN oi the city. A liberal piUJrunage in soin;iux;., ... oc23 d3m v .rr Notice to Contractors. THE COMMON COl'XCIL will receive sealed proposals, until luw lliui day of June, lSt7-Knidinr, guttering, and grav- .. leling the following steets, viz.: I Second Street, between the southeast euro Hue or uivision ireei auu ine nortliwest curb line of Elm Street;. , t; r Center Mreet. between the northwest curb line of Elm Street aud the east side of Leet Street ; Second t-Lreet. between ilifr nnt'MweL 0 , curb lirurfoili.s&uaii SCret'ltiA thi boTUm 1 west side of Cowan Street; First Street, between the nonuweit curb Hue of Chestnut htreet ami a point opposite the northwest side of Lid uyei-. , Third Street, between tnenortri wHcn?b line of Chestnut Stieet acd the sort.liea-t Hide of Gum Street; Leet Street, between the southwest side of First Street and the southwet side, of Center Street; ' ' ' Leet Sti eei, between the sounwest side of Centre Street and the suth side of F'ourth Street ; Fourth Stieet, between the east, side of Leet street and the east ide of Fulton Avenue. Specifications may te stt-n at the Clerk's omce. City Clerk's may& diot A. M. MRIFF, Clerk, Office. JW 2S i7. Coroner's Intnest, No, 8, HELD ON THf ltOJIY Ot BAR. bary Shultz, vho was found deal at. lier place of residei:e, in ttte city of Evansville, on the iSthJay of May, l-x.7. From the evidence tiiA Jury find that the deceased came to tr death by asthma. She was a native Bohemia, aged alxiut 00 years; was ah1 5 fei inciies high. ; .., n t . SAMUEL P.IiAVLlN,.M 1 t , ' r. ' Ctooer Vanderburgh County, ic may 29 w3y