Evansville Journal, Volume 18, Evansville, Vanderburgh County, 11 July 1867 — Page 2
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CTRlEJTANSYnif.R DAILYrJOURNlL. fTH RSP A JJJLY!!. ,1667.
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Kentucky Correspondence.
Organization .or the Union party Nominations-of Candidates Keso-lntIorrs,-r.- - " ITopkinsville, Ky., July 2, 1867 Editors Journal: , I. : On Monday, the lainsL, the Union Party of Christian Comity assembled in the Court room, in Hopkinsville, for the purpose of organiziug them- . selves and nominating candidates for the ensuing campaign. Joab Clark, Esq., was called to the Chair, and John Feland appointed Secretary of the meeting. Whereupon, on motion of J. I. . Landes, the following committee was appointed to draft resolutions and recommend candidates for the Senate and House of Representatives, viz.:; J. I. Landes. Henry Roberts, Dr. AVM. Brasher, Volney C. Clark, and G. A. Foster, who, after retiring for a short time1, reported the"resolutions .and nominations which are appended. The gentlemen nominated are well-! known, reliable and highly intelligent Union men, of the unconditional kind. They are'-every way' worthy of the great cause, and more than .matches for. their opponents, the can-' didates of the bogus Democracy. We, ihe Union menrof. Christian ' CountyVin convention -assembled, do' . 1 Resolve 1st.'- That we approve and endorse the platform of principles adopted by the Union State Convention, held in Frankfort. Ky, on the 20th day of February, 18G7. t ' -': 2d. That we pledge, to the nominee of that Convention our most cordial and earnest support. 3d. That, Muhlenburg County agreeing, we hereby nominate D.M. Wooldridge, .Esq., as the Union candidate . for State Senator from this ' District, and . pledge hiu our earnest
support. x 4th. That, having . full : faith and .. ..confidence in the patriotism and ability of Walter Evans; "Esq., we hereby nominate him as our .candidate for . Representative t in -the JjeginlatureY from this county. . . " w5th. .That : Jne .Frankfort QommontcealtJkJHOXagiovL 'J8tuleman, , DanvWW Gazette and Evansville Journal ' be requested to publish the proceed. . Jngs of this meeting. , ZilZl. . : Joab Clari, President. . John Feland, Secretary. 'SENATOB WILSON OX THE SITUATION
Senator .Wilson's Views on Recon--struetion, Confiscation, Congress, and Gen. Grant. Boston Cor. of the New York Herald. "Your correspondent has just had a hrief interview with Hon. Henry Wilson, and as his conversation was mostly upon current political and reconstruction topics, I venture to give the public the substance of the Massachusetts Senator's views. Concerning the conditions of reconstruction, Mr. Wilson, said that he held the same opinions now as when he returned from the South. -As to the matter of admitting the" Southern States to their former status, he claimed that if they complied with the terms laid down in the Reconstruction-Bill, and elected men who could take the oath, no member of Congress had any right to say that sew conditions should le imposed; for the law said that they shall be admitted when thev comply '.th its requirements, lie would like to have added another condition that it should be obligatory for every State to establish an impartial system of 1 common schools, but he felt bound to j say that he met no man, of whatever party, at the South, who was not in favor of establishing such a system. He believed that it would be estabi lished, because all intelligent men were agreed that now that the negroes were free it was important that'they should be educated. - He believed, he said, that all the Southern States could be represented in Congress beforethe next Presiuen-i tial election, that they would participate in it, and that it was very important, both from a party and national point of view, that they should do so.' If the Republican party went into the campaign with the South under military rule it would' be charged upon them with powerful effect, in - such States as Pennsylvania and New York, that while the military leaders had crushed the rebellion, there was not statesmenship enough among political leaders to restore" those cononerod
I f States to their, proper position. Fif nancially,' andiu the interest or busi- $ .jK!8also, it is important that, as soon j as the South, on a basis of equal rights and protection for all, can be restored, Jv it should be done j., for .then the Rev ' public and the Republican party, with s " the Southern States ' in. Congress. would bGthbe stronger. He believed '. " that the Republicans would carry half of the Southern States, and he was quite sure of one-third, and he was ' also of the belief that at the rest elf c- . tion the Republicans will carry the country overwhelmingly; for inasmuch r as they have freed the nntioii they ought to administer it for some time to come. He had no doubt whatever that the speech of General Rawlins is an approverLgxposition of .the point . cal creed of General Granf, and lie wes equally confident that he will be the next President of the Uivfed . States. He ( had , the most: perfect faith . in .General ..Grant's, thorough sympathy with Congress and the .'.-. 1 principles of the Republican party, i" ; and spoke of him as" an Out-and-cut it!U Republican a Radical and said fur tLerthathe had always advised tie
Southern men who came to see him to go in for the-Gongressionalplatformi
1 .a A int. w i r r , n a nnnprj again tolerate in power. General Citafill, iOaid,"Vad: declared that -all his Generals who go South turn Radi cals, and that they will average' more Radicals than the Massachusetts delegation. Grant, he ad, was, ssquarely in favor of manhoVd-suffrage and has quietly given all the aid in his power to the Congressional programme. Congress, he thinks-oughjt to confine itself at 'the Ju$jfiessioa to the 'rjassage of an amendatory act and then1 adjourn; and he further believed that it would do bo. iwor In speaking bf Grant's antecedents, he said it yr&s an error, to report that' he was ever a . Democrat. He was' on old Whig, but voted for Buehdhari on account of; personal objections to Fremont. ..He supported . Lincoln in lS&t-.f, with all his ; heart: ! e; did not think- that .! the ' 1m peach men t of President - Johnson would ' occur, -' for ! the - proposition had failed to iake any hold upon 5 the country. ; 1 H was opposed- to confis-: cation, for it was too late-,in :the "day for that policy. We might' have' dotre anything ;after; Lee 3ilrrebdeTeq,ibut confiscation0 riow ' wbiild 'produce a regular .Ireland , in' the South. , The most intellisrerit negroes. that , he, "m'et were. opposed to it, and belieyed there was no need of it. ;We haye got fortyfive millions of acres '61, public la'nds in the South to dav. which were onened for the whites last January, arid for the negroes six months before. ; one-fifth of it is taken up. Border land gheap'anuiihejwages of the negroes so good on the average that any industrious negro can buy land to-day. It is easier for a negro to get a homestead f 0 in? frr4D 'indus trious working'man In New England. We could settle two millions' of negroes on our present public lands in. the South, counting five on every eighty acres, without disturbing anybody. In addition to this, the ;land in the South is heavily mortgaged and large tracts will soon be in the markets at cheap rate, f irf 1 In short; the Senator takes a hopeful view of the situation, and believes that the South will soon be clothed w its right mind again, and have a pi ice in the councils of the nation as an equal compeer of her recent conquerors.'. . ". ; . , ' . Universal Suffrage' Convention., j The friends of. universal suffrage gathered on the Fourth in a grove on the borders of Lake Waccabuc, in the upper part of Westchester County. A large stand had been erected in the eroye,. with seats to accommodate about a thousand persons. A large majority of the multitude were women, many of them young, and pretty. At 2 o'clock the meeting was called to order by Edward Lawrence, Esq., President of the South Salem Equal Rights Association, and the Rev. George L. Smith opened the proceedings with prayer. Miss Susan B. Anthony then read the declaration of the mothers of. 1848, adopted at the first '" Wonaans' Rights Convention, " at Seneca Falls, New York, on the 19th of July, 184S. . The Hon. E. IX Culver having been introduced, said that he was not there to make a speech, but to show publicly that he gave his" aclhesiou to a good ' and worthy cause. lie paid a handsome tribute to the patriotic-devotion of the women of the Revolution, asserted that tlje war of the Rebellion had demonstrated that the women of our day - are equally devoted to the cause of their country, and avowed' that, in his' opinion, the women are entitled to equal rights in it with the men. When Mr. Culwer had concluded, Mrs. Elizabeth Cady Stanton', said that though the gentlemen who had just spoken had told the Convention many excellent things, he had yet forgotten to mention that "taxation without representation i tyranny," and that our forefathers had repeatedly declared that "resistance to tyrants is obedience to God." This logic many women are carrying into practice by refusing to pay taxes. Mrs; S. counselled the men and women of Westchester County to send up petitions to the Constitutional Convention demanding enfranchisement for women, since, if the-' foundations of the Government were to be remodeled on the basis of caste, all the wisdom and philosophy the. world has acquired in the . last . century would be lost. - 'But -r Mrs. Stanton will not be content with the sample enfranchisement of women. IW6men, sne tnmss, snouia oe jurors,'
iudses and lawyers, as well as tet87PTeTrTnlT1hTs" was
tors : for, ar WJt women liable to be dragged iooth! courts and tried and Eunished for their crimes, while their etrayers sit on the bench, or in the jury-box, or ministers at the 6acrecl altar. Therefore, it is necessary' that woman, should 'be juror, judge, or lawyer, so that- she may defend the interest and plead :the carse of her sex. Mrs. Stanton scoffs at the idea of the " ballot and the bullet always going together." How many members of the Constitutional Convention, she asks, went to the war? Are i!t clergymen arid Quakers, thong!; hav ing the right oi citizenship, aiways held exempt from military service r And if legislators ' -rcrr ri -. . n H ersvr Quakers, why not likewiae wouion : After paying her respects to Horace (jreeley for his report or rhe subject of impartial suffrage, JIis. SraDton continued her address .contrasting the political 6tatus of woman1' with that of paupers . and. negroes, atid adding tn'at her" ambition "is" no! to coninetc ciety, but to stand 6b the high mbun-
t:un top or humanity, eide by eide
with such men as Horace ' Greeley, I
Judge Paiee, Theodore Dwight, and win:,- j i I i rpnrvp iv nam I uriiK. f w 1 r una ui -r y;i its Miss Anthony made an informal raSort 'of the condition of . the tqual eights Association, and a committee Was'a'ppointed to make a collection for its benefit. Mr. Chas. L. Remond also spoke strongly in ' behalf of woman's suffrage. Then a letter from Lacy Stone was read, approving the objects of the Convention. Next a vote was taken on the resolution, and they were almost unanimously adopted. N- T. Trihuue. L I ' ' The Treasury Debt Statements and the .. Receipts of Internal Kevenoe. ; Washington Correspondence . (J aae 30 .'of the New ork Times. ; ; The usual. Treasury statements for July 1 will be omitted, and no exhibit made until August 1, in ' consequence of the' close of the fiscal yearj. whiph occurs June30,; and , which renders necessary r the .accurate! and official compilation of all the accounts pf the customs officers arid, ' 6thers, some of which cannot be received until toward the close of .July-, The official reports are; based ; upon these exhibits made at the close"tof the fiscal 'year, hence the necessity for official accuracy, an of the consequent ; delay, in ..the statement. Nothing efiicial can be given ofj the movenlent of .the. Treasury1 for June, except such prominent, tacts as t,th5avmiLn.t0.ClargeS4iil)r cur rency interests ana maturing com pounds, which have materially J re duced the currency balance. 1 1 he customs receipts for June will probably reach, thirteen, and a half millions,' while the' 'receipts ' f ' Internal Revenue for the month show a footing of t20,400,000rin round numbers, an in cxesase of $3,p00,(K)0 pn;May and but $400,000 less than for the correspond-, ine mouth -in 18CC, - The aesrregatef-i L I ceiptsfer the fiscal year ending June n-301867,T are -$55,853. 194" 88, against fa05,Ot,IKi Id tor the fiscal 1 yea? e$di eg, June 4806rjThi8 shows ai 'decTrfiase of 46,000,000 for the year, and it is -just equal to the Commis8iQners eyjstj .'estimates- made ;aftejr the reductions in the tax law were, agreed upon. The folbwing tabular, statements of'ru'orithly feeeipta . for the fiscal years I860 and 1867 is interesting: j i ' - '1867.$27,079,103 38 .38,04.$,4O 81 3S,714,718 61 2.i,414,4-i0 29 21.107 22 59 20,050,82 IS 17.604,336 2 14,8:,411 90 15,183,226 21 14,414.O:J0 58 lfi.97i;207 81 20,m,3H2 20 Cl ,693.470 75 a4,087IJ9 69 37,930,415 82 30,4-r7,flS3 3 AOgUSU September October . .. Njvenihr.. , .' Decern ber. .. w : Ji.f&i.3?:i 34 07 20,4.")2,lt9, bO i2,4S,67 18 liMiS 851 2! 21.724,(j 40 January ..... February..... March........... . April. ,. May Z. June Total., 5,!4,182 18 , $26.3,853,194 88 The Treasury balance will be largely reduced during J uly. The inter Bal revenue receipts for'that month are estimated at twenty millions, but, besides nineteen millions of gold interest, due to-morrow, and -twenty-one millions of compound notes, with accrued interest, due July 15, there will be heavy payments made on account of the army, out of the appropriations for 1868. LETTER FROM 8E.VAT0R WADE. What he Said at Lawrence The Xew York Times' Report Incorrect. . . Jefferson, O., June 27. Editor's Missouri Democrat : '-I -notice in your paper of the &th instant. i an article on the remarks I made at Lawrence, Kansas, which have been so, severely criticised' by several papers, commencing with the. New York Times, commenting upon a letter of its correspondent, who was with the party, and who furnished an' abstract of the speech. There was rro stenographer present, and no one attempted to report the, speech literally, and while I can not pretend to give the. precise words I used on tba: occation, I am perfectly sure that 1 said nothing about the division of property, of the unequal distribution of it, or eyen that it might be remedied by legislation. I did speak 6f the immense advance that science had made in Tabor-saving machinery within the last half century, and the power that man had acquired over the "material elements in that time, so that the labor cfone man would now produce more of thinsrs useful than many could previo'Us to that time 'y4et I wis unable to see , that these improvements had bettered the condition of the lab'or-wrong-n imist do remeaiea. 1 aiso remarked that the inadequacy of the compensation of labor' was creatmg an uneasiness and restlessness arhohg laborers everywhere, as manifested bY 1 strike?, 'bv endeavors' to limit the hours oflabor, and a thousand other indications, which led m to Leiieve that the question must be met, and that the man who should discover and be able to apply a remedy for these great evils, would be the greatest benefactor of mankind since the time of Christ, &c., .&c; but I did not attempt in that speech, to point! - In hort. your editorial has caught the pmt of f what I intended to say, and believe l aid say. much nearer than was done by the correspondent of the Tinns. who, it seems to me, entirely mistook what I rsa,':d on that occasion. iSeverel Senators were' present, anu not 'one of .them, that I have consulted, understood the jn, i'ut way I was reported by that coicfpii dent. Y-urs, with respvt, ii. F. VADE.
STOVE WORKS. J3 CiXJZEJBDEIi!N-
A r. STOVE works: r r ANT.ONl'HELBLING, ! t r:..y. (Successor to Brinkraeyer 4 .Co.,) . .i j MAUrjrACTrTBEJR OF COOKmjB1 HEATING 8T0VES, . For Wood and Coal; Skilleta and Lids; :?.. . 1 V ': Ovens and Lids ODD LIftS;'.,'" ; ,!: ,. . ( '.-'. SUGAR KETTLES; ..-' ' (, ! ..-.-i;. i - ; DOO IRONS; ; ' ', :t : i i:' JAMB ORATES AIR AND CELLAR GRATES; 3T ' , t WAFFLE IRON ,'. Copper, Tiii,. and Sheet-Iron - War 4c. iJ) Tin plate, neet-Iron, Copper, c., A , Also; Sole( ABnt- ttr i OM$U' . Ptin BroaU-GauKe, Indestructible Copper Poll toms, for Wash' and Coffee Boilers, dtc. , . . Sales-room, No. 3 MAIN BTREET, oppo- ' ftlt the Court-House., , ! u, - , f . , ... Foudry, near the mouth of Pigeon Creek: 'Orders solicited and promptly filled ' Excelsior Stove Woiks. BLEMKEH, TIIsTMJLS & Co. (Successors to Hn E. Blemker), I TTAH VFAOTBEBS of Ue one and EXCELSIOR .STOVE, S nil t ..-., U Jii.;i-t,.-i Uie 'most durable ; novi made.'', and tle CHARTER STOVE, c and the good' and cheap '':'!M . , ; . 1 .TO Armada. Stonewall. Kentucky! '' TENNESSEE, and PALMETTO STOVE 4, and a treat' variety' of ' -liEJiTIiTO STOVES, alt of the latest and most approved patterns. . r , Also. Light and Smooth Country HollowWare. Kkillets and Lids, Ovens nod' Lids, Dog-Iroas, Dinner Pots, Tea-Kettl-; and frartlcular attention paid to themanulacareof House Worlc . CAST-IB0X FRONTS, GRATES, AC, ic. . Also. . Tinware; - i and Dealers in Tinners' Stock. If desired. Cooking Stoves warranted for twelve months. Orders solicited before purchasing elsewhere. - Foundety, corner Sixth Street and Canal. Store and Sample Room at No. 14 Second .Street, 11. K. Kleuiker'a old stand. 1 - BLEMKER, TILLMAN & CO. ' -may29 . . . . FRUIT JARS. JTViii t Tars, Ii-nit Jars. IJVtilt Jars. lETCHWGKTU'S. CLASS JAR, "Tin top,, rubber baud, held by a screw. ADAMS'S GLASS JAR; Tin top, wire fastening; sealing wax to suit. , CORK TOP.. Glass . Jarg, with corks ; suit,. sealing wax ..to '.';..?, BROWN EARTHEN JARS, Tin topi wire fastening ; closed with wax. 'sealing wax anb corks, . .: ill I .oi ' t ; . ) MARK & WARREN; r IMOZTEBS OF s! Qneensware, ; ' GlasswariB, ' ;; CHINA, 'FANCY GOODS, c, 18 Main Street. Jun20d2w ARCHITECTS. , Robert Boyd, . Architect, NO. 7 CHANDLER'S BLOCK. Office' formerly occupied by the late firm of Murvinna A Boyd. -mch27 6m , . , fHfliUESlNNA, - .,! : AB-OIIITECT. 1 'c Office No.. CHAKDLKK'H BTJILDING, i corner e lr-i ana iocusi nireei". i: IS l.j- .T, ' i-. Kvn.llie. Ind. Plaoxand KpecificationH for all kinds of buildings furniKhed at Kbort not ice. ttud o&.reaeonab tera a. rnchlo d-im
iEW ADVERTISE.1IEXTS.
WAter,Wlieels! Water .Wheels! VALKSTIJiK'H Patent Turbine. The best in use. - Manufactured by Valh tine & Co., Kert F.d ward, N. Y. Prices tnoderate. Send for circular. A.ents wantod. GRAND GIFT ENTERPRISE " " ' -OF- - 1 HOE 3V,I X II O j?. KL '.;":" .: ri t-ANP-n; , KINKTY: VALUABLE . PREMIUMS, To be given to the purchasers of either of the fallowing haudootue .. .,y. E X R A V I Jf CS, vll. r I " A9HLAND," THE ' HOME OF CLAY: R. E. LKE, U. K. OKANT, OKORtiE WASHINGTON. MARTHA WASHINGTON, and JOhK C. BKfcX'KENKILKiK." , . The following gentlemen have kkotliy conBented to take charge of and control the drawing, with the dlxtlnct' understanding that we are to have nothing whatever to do with it, viz.: Ex-Govi- J. F. Koolnnou, Georgetown, Ky. ; (Jt-neral John-H. Jliigton, Lexington,- Ky.; Hon. K. K. Hunt, Lexington. Ky.; Hon. J. 11. Beck. Lexington, Ky. ; E., L. Sayer. of p. A. Sayr fc Co., Bankers;. , J:ih. A. Grlnxtead. of Grinatead. i Bradley, dr Company, Hankera; Judge S. tV- Gooilue, Thomas Mitchel. Esqr., Cashier of Kirnt National Bauk, 'Lexington, Ky.;. M. C. JoIiuhou, Esq., Preaident Nortliera Bank of-Kentucky ..(..( ' Ten per fent. premium will be allowed so any person getting up u cluU often or more subscribers, let be paid either in' engravings when the money, is received, or In money when the drawing is completed. AH money bj meelved wrfl be tleponited in bank and held until the drawing lakes place. If the enterprise should not be completed, Ihe. money will be refunded to the purchaKersof Engravings. The draw lug will take place . . , OX THE FOCRTU ;0F Jl'LI XEIT, Or sooner if the tickets are disposed of, In which event timely notice will be given. ; Write to us for prospectus giving full particular. AgeiUa will be appointed in all parts o.f the country. - i 1 i ' ENGRAVINGS ta EACH. 'I And.' certiflcaie given to each purchaser of an Engraving, in the Phoenix .Hotel Grand Girt Ent erprixe. I ' ' FREE OF CHARGE.1 . , Remit by drafts. Postofflce money orders, or in durai of oce hundred dollars and over In Greenbacks by express to i M ,i . UKIGSBY &. KOBINSON, . ,, Phumix Hotel, Lexington, Ky. ; :. LIST OF PREMIUMS, . . , No, L Pnoenix Hotel and lot, lt feet front ' on Main, by 24i leetdeep on Mulberry, :r. 150,0U);'-i - , And 80 other valuable premlnras, ranging from 1.5UU down tojQ each. , , NOR TH A M ERIC AH TEA M- ., SHir ,. COMPANY, j A OPPOSITION 'LINK TO i Cali oruia- via Nicaragua, ! ' 1 EYERY TVTEXTY DAYSy , t With Passengers, Freight, and U. S. .., 'ln ";' MaUs.:r ... i ':: , , " ..... On the following Urst-claHs Stenmshtpsi On Atlantic Ocean. i SANTIAGO DS CUBA, SAN FRANCISCO, ' - Nli'AltAGUA, ' OAKOTA. ; Connecting on Pacific Ocean. t AMERICA. MOKES TA YLOJl. NEBRASKA, NEVADA. Passage an4 Freight at , Reduced Rates. . .Sailing d;iy from New York: May 20th 1807 July Sth Ii7 Juue lUtii anuaoth " Aug. luu and :10th ' And every twenty'daytillierf'a'ter.'leavlng on the Saturday previous when the regular tailing day rneson Sunday. For further information apply to the NORTH AMERICAN STEAMSHIP COMPANY. . . , WM. II. WEBB, President, ' hi Kxcliange Place, New York.' D. N. CARIUNUrON, Agent, . 177 West Street, corner Warreu, N. Y. WA XTEI- EVERV WHERE Salesmen, Ladies and Gentlemen Stixj to KijO per mont h To well the genuine Common t-ense Family Sewing Machine. Price onlytlS. This machine will stitch, hem, tell, tuck, bind, quill.bruM.and embroider. The cloth cannot be pulleil aputt, oven after cutting across the wain every quarter of an inch. Every machine warianied for three years.1 Send forcircularn and terms to agents, or call at McDowell's Block, corner Fourth and Green Street, Ixiulsville, Kentucky." BLISi fc McEATIIRUN, General AgHita. A3WES 'Celebrated Portable and SlaUouary hteatu Knxines, ail sizes, and superior to all others. , , , . " Call oi write for circular. .' Depot No-li0, 'OUlh Canal Street, Chi cafjo, III. . AMES! IRON WORKS, Proprietor, , - Oswego, New York. Ladies, Discard Injurious Paddings. M1A!I Jl-JWEI.' Mammarial Balm aud Patent Breat Elevators develop the lorm physiologically. Uepot W2 Broadway, New York. Send stamp for treat i-e. Sold at Druggists and Ladies' Furnishing Stores. ... DR. J. 1. KTII.I.MA.V, Gynecologist, EormiiUi IHagiuvrit, and correspondence. Inhalations, Spray, Hypodermic, Electric, anit Dermainithic Embrocation, with constitutional treatment la the Diseases of Women, Throat, l.uugs. Heart, and Viscera. Instruments, Medicines. Bathing and Drinking Salts from mineral springs, with written prescriptions weekly, at for the first month, each month subsequently.- Daily attent ion at l.isoinc s at the same prices. , Address, with stamp, '6i and M Union Street. Memphis, Tenu. . ' HOKSTMAXX BROS.1 t 10., . ., ,' 1 Fifth and "Cherry Streets, ; ; . '' Manufacturers and Importers of '", REGALIA and, MILITARY, GOODS. ' A' full" assortment , of, properties tor Lorfges, Chapters, ' Commanderies, Oil lFeJlows, Sons of . Temperance, i A m.' Me chanlcs,. Hed Men,. nd other Itegalias always on hand, or made to order. MILITARY GOODS of every dectlptl6n. EL A yn A ND ! BANNERS. -Church Kmijroidet les. Bunillions, Spangled Materials tor Vestments, etc., etc. . ,r SODA FOUXIAIXS ALL 'M I'IKTE for 830 to IOO. Patented, latest improvement, displacing all old styles. A recipe gratis with each iount lor makipg bis: Soda Water and Syrups. Sold only bv J AS. W. CHAPMAN fc SON. Madison, Iud. . Address them for particulars. TEAM fc HORSE-POWER TIIRESHING MACHINES. We build team 'iiiteshers and Horse-Power Threshinn Machines of all sizes: also Portable Saw .iils of various sizes' Our Farm Engine is the best in America, and our Threshers are superior to any made. , . Si-nil for our pamphlet. JONAS W. YFO. i- Robinson Machine Works. . . . , j . Richmond, Intl. u THE BEST CHANCE YET.' AitXTS''WAXTK,''on a salary or , cnmmiwiloii, for m new ranp of the Viireat American Kepublie." shwing our recentlv HWiUiied Ruian PosCKsions, etc. Get your te: ritory at once. F. 1. DIBBLE, Wholesale Headquarters lor Maps, Chart, and Pictures, 201 Main St., Louisville, Ky.
New Advertisement. first thing yon ahetild do, after yoa read tins headinif, should be to put your band in voar pooler, taka out twenty-flre eenta. aAd aoad for a opy for yar. If yon do not feel like riskUig that big amount, wby. ask your neighbor to take it; but as an A5IEKICAN yoa should support an American enter frise. You ,wllV find our parer worth ten lines the amount we ask for It. Wit, humor, sketches, and poetry will fill Its colpmoii iwU R wllinake a WIT of you anJUll you relations. No use f delaying; the amonnt Is not lare, anil yy may as weU lnvesyour , TWENTY' FIVE" cents now as to wait six months It will save a doctor's visits, as no one can read 11 and get sick. It is filled with t-ene, nonsense, and innouenee, and twenty-five . CENTS will make you ns tneiry as a cricket for a year to come. We waut at least twentylive' subscrilMjrs from our town, and yoii mljhl a well head the ihi as . j . A
pybung man w know of , In your town. nena along your stamps the more the merrier; aua when our subscr ptton list runs up, we will rend for a -. YEAR , , h a paper twice as large m the one we now issue. Addree all letters to RICHARDSON A COIA.INS, 42 John Street, N. Y. v Tobacco, Users,, Attention! ' The Appetite for Tobacco Destroyed " by using v ' "ORTOS'S PRLTAKITIOV." CIIEWEKH AKD KMOKEKS, leave on this dlsgustine aud filthy habit. One box oTDrton's Preparation, used according to directions, is warranted to de(slroy (he appetite for "Tobacco in any Ierson, no matter how strong tle habit may be, iuoue month's time. No more haukerlug for Tobacco after using oue box. ai tins preparation. 4itUect it i mHUfTunted. Forwarded to any part of the country on receipt of one dollar. Address f ( ,.( IE. DOUGLAS. General Agent, , ' ' ' ' ""' 1rtlanl( Maine. THE MLQHUII.I. I'ETKOLEVM STOVE COMPANY Manufacture Summer Steves, for burning oils and Napthas, that prove, a decided success, making a blue non luminous flume,, burnlug like alcohol; cooks chut mindly. Send tor a circular. u ' WM. A. HOLLAND, Agent. , .. . 46 Congress Street, Boston, Mass. TO THE IATUO!VN OF THE CLEVELAND WATER CURE The subscriber wl lies to say', thai, aa it Is now commencing its Tweuvietu Season, he Is better prepared than ever to give .health facilities to the needy. In addition to our Electro-Thermal 'and Turkish Buth Depurtiputr which wut )ive enlarged and perfected -during the" last year, we have also added Him Exhaustl ve Air Buth, which is Invaluable In many ces i' With these additions to. our Institution, we now command the greatest variety, the most complete balhin Jacluties that can be fotiud in any oie place in the world. ' ' T ' T.'T. SEEL YE, M.I).;' Proprietor. AoW OR ' ' CETT.' Ci.talogne p jtJ showing priced we Jay for coins, mailed lor 25c, Coin Magazine, 15c. MASON Ac CO., ' .434 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia. CAEEMEN WA: Z county to take ordei E igravlng, on which a .TKIl in every ers lor a fait selling a isre diM-ouul is Hliowwi ut nist-ciiws mn. a duress SOUTHERN PUBLISHING AGENCY, Louisville, Ky. WATCHES Sultablo for siK-euliUive ' and girl purposes. Gold and Sliver American Watcht-s, eheap Jewelry of every de-erlpl ion, Gold, nllver and Plaled Chains. Old established bouse, IS 5 Send for price lisU LIONEL JACOlis, ' -NO. 177 Broauway, New York. rTTXSTWM One or iwo VMlesTiien foe V this rauiili ii J vicinity, either male or female. Ait'liesx Immediiitely, ULlKS McliATHliiiN, , . Louisville, Ky. MAiilV,t"AniS fhe most umiiHliig thing out. tS)lt ii(i l ui i.cle Ir parlor aiiiusemeut. New thiny; .ttst out. Pi icn cenisapaek. Address . 'i. FOjHA Y, Box 1U0, Carmel, New Yur FOOT LATIIN, inanufiwtured by CJIAKL.r.S F. It" 1ST, 328 anl , 3u Dulancy wtreet. N. Y. Herring's - Patent Champion Safes. -251 Broadway, corner Murray Street, , Kcw ork. Till) MOST ItELIAItLi; SIA .i'MITY from Kire jiow known. Over lliirty tliousand lierrlng's SalVs" have b,-en h lil and are now in nve, and more than lut) have passed safely through a.;cidentitl fires Herring, Farrel ifc Siierman's New Patent Bankers' Sates, made of Wrought Iron, Sleel Bars, and the new metal, Njiii-grl Vinen, (or Pa;ent Crystallzed Iron), from the ore of Frankllnite, the only uiateili.l which equals the diamond in its haiduess now known to the world, and is the best resist' ant to a burglar's drills or cutting tool ever manufactured. . Also, House Ka'es, Pailor Safes, Sideboard and Cabinet Hfes for sliver-ware, valuable iiajjers, ladies'. Jewelry, Ac, Ac, made to represent handsome p eees of furniture. nd for llliw-t rated catalogue. Ileriing, Farr?l Jc Sherman, liil Broadwuy, corner Muriay Street, New York; Farrel, Herrine Jt Co., Philadelphia; Herrlng A o., Clucigo. -7 , . 7. T. CoiifeGtioiierieH II.' K. AHI-eftTHa. H. T. HAULER. AIIL'ERIXG , '&. 1IASSLER, ! , ' wiiolesale and Retail Dealers la Foreign Fruits, ... ' ,ti ! )'' i and-J ; -J 11 r ' -li. ttj:. . ! J ' ft' ' '' EVANSVILLE. - We nanufacture our own Candles, and are prepared to supply the Wholesale i ratio at me iuitci iic, uu waiiuiu ni nine oualitv. puie qui W keet We- keep a full assortment of Foreign FrulW and Nuts, Canned Goods, fine Preserves, Jellies, Ac. Toy 8 and Fancy Ware of every description, for presents and at tractive amusement. " HREWOKK 1 - n full supply and general variety, ; -Atfi.U lor . , b. ! Mallory AC'o.VOj'iUcrB. oe3t dly : . , i r ' -J '' -;;'::'' -with'- '. ',, jCillO. S. SUSXTAU A CO., Hardware, 8 I IBST KTKEET. maj BJam LVAK8V1LL1!, Ijtd. .
