Evansville Journal, Volume 18, Evansville, Vanderburgh County, 12 July 1867 — Page 2
! i
-1 ! il IsJI 4 I1I I 1 . M i if A 5 if f i
2
INDIANAPOLIS LETTER.
CRIMINAL MATTERS.; f, Indianapolis, July 10. " " Editors Journal : Dispatches . from this city have informed your readers that a most brutTmurderoccurred ! here on the Fourth. -Foullte and McCaw, a pair "of desperate scoundrels, had quarreled in a' house of ill-fame some time previously. Meeting at a picnic at Stiltz's Grove on the Fourth, they began to discuss their former broil, and mutually agreed to " settle it " by an encounter on the commons a few yards distant. Accordingly they started with a brace or two of "friends, " for the scene of the proposed "mil'," and while on the way .McCaw drew a long knife from a back pocket and plunged it to the hilt in the body of Foulke. Drawing it out with both hands aDd leaving his . victim in the death struggle, he "moved on"1 to such purpose that his ' whereabouts still remains a secret unknown to the guardians of the : public peace, although they have searched for him with unremitting vigilance. He is probablyconcealed ly some female friend in the city, but it is not- likely he will lone evade the efforts that are being made for his arrest. If caught, our Criminal Court will dispatch his case between breakfast and lunch. Judge . Chapman has "a peculiar knack" of dealing with such feilows, and our juries have a chronic, costiveness of their " bowels of compassion," when hardened wretches such as 5lct?aw are V nabbed", and proven guilty. : The Criminal Court is a " peculiar institution." It was established here two years, ago, and has done a large proportion of the criminal business of the State. It is not an uncommon occurrence for arraignment and sentence to follow so closely on the heels ot crime, that the author finds himself, en route for the penitentiary before the newspapers can chronicle his misdeeds. THE GREAT DEBATE. Your correspondent has' not attempted any report of the pending debase .between -lie vs. -Foster .and Lozier, which is exciting great interest, not only in religions circles; but among that very numerous class commonly designated as " the world's people." Why thu8 called it would not be an easy matter to determine, for the most restless and greedy seekers after; the things which pertain to this world may not be found outside of church organizations. The debate, fairly and fully reported, would fill your paper three times a week quite too much of a good thing. To cut and garble the speeches of the reverend disputants, would subject the reporter to unfairness towards one, and perhaps towards both sides. Four meetings have already been held. Two more will fill the bill. At the first meeting, Mr. Foster, champion of universal salvation, -won the respect of all present and the audience was immense by his courteous and gentlemanly demeanor. He has maintained his dignity throughout every discussion thus far, and being by nature and education a gentleman, no fears are entertained that he will forget the solemnity of the subject under consideration, or shock his hearers with ill-timed levity. Though making no pretention to profound learning or gigantic intellect, Mr. F. has shown himself an easy and .graceful speaker, always refined and often elegant in his diction, and sufficiently versed in theological literature to render him an able disputant, a very formidable antagonist for an opponent carrying any guns but those of the heaviest calibre. He may not do an extensive proselyting business in this debate, the interest in it beipTr of an intellectual rather than a spiritual character; but he will leave the arena at the close of the contest, with undiminished self-re-epect, and with the kind feelings and good wishes towards him, personally, of those among his auditors who cordially detest his theological sentiments. Mr. Lozier, well known throughout the State as ' Chaplain Lozier," the popular and efficient agent of the Indiana Sanitary Commission, took up the glove thrown down by Mr. F., and entered upon the , discussion, against the wishes and in opposition to the advice of many discreet" friends. He had a will of his own, and with manly independence and true pluck '.' took the responsibility " of running a tilt with or e who had poised a lance in many similar tourni araent?. ; -. y. i.r. -.u -t At the" first meeting Mr L.'did no! satisfy his friends. His manner wafe characterized by a degree of levity unbecoming in a preacher of the Goh pel r engaged in discussing the most solemn and : important question that can be presented for human consideration. He alluded to his opponent in terms not very courteous; to say the least, and seemed disposed to meet arguments with ridicule rather than logic. The Chaplain has a fund of humor, which tells to advantage on the stump, and he committed the blunder of drawing upon that when he should have risen to the digcity of his subject and drawn upon another department of his intellectual resources. - But at the second and subsequent meetings there was a marked change in his style.' j Levity and witticisms were abandoned and, having thrown aside his customary ' weapons, he grasped " the sword ' of argument." . ' 'h . o: i i -. i 1 r i i . " i
and; tfieldedfl itl with .skilli
and efficiency ? that surprised teven his f most, intimate' friends., Hehas antonishetrthose whothoughtwaggery and ridicule his chief. resource, by a very creditable display of theological erudition, and has shown Mr. F. "a foemanworthyoLto rison's Ooera Hall has been packed on every evening of the debate, , and mainly by the same audience that attended the first meeting. Which bf the disputants has made the better case thus far is a question , on which their auditors are divided ' according to their religious views or personal feeling.' Your correspondent does not court the favor of one side or the disfavor of the other sufficiently to in-' auce ine expression ui au upiuiuu. The encounter will doubtless have the effect to induce many to re-examine the grounds of their religious beliefs or creeds, but will not produce that deep spiritual feeling generally prevalent when churches are recruited from the ranks of the impenitent. ' " Maiik Taplet. 1 Union -'Convention at Hopklnsvllle. Great Rebel Sveakin a--General Outpouring of Treason No miua (ion ttf Union Candidates. .;r. r.i-.n .i . WoOLDRIDClE's Store,' ' t ; 1 Christian Co., Ky., July 2ndi '67i J Editors Journal: : You, are aware we have no Union organ .in; Southern Kentucky ; consequently, when one wishes to express a loyal sentiment, he must needs send it over to' Indiana and ask t the favor of having it expressed there. Indeed, to tell the whole horrible truth, it is becoming somwhat hazardous to utter loyalty, here. Christian County,, and all Kentucky, made loud professions of loyalty during the war, but to-day is, and all the time was, intensely rebel. And wherever slavery has crawled and left its poisonous slime, treason is . rampant, now that the sword is returned to the scabbard. And now to chronicle the state :of political feeling,' as manifested' and demonstrated by the doings and sayings at a rebel meeting which came off yesterday at - Hopkinsville, is a painful service for one who loves' good government, law and order, to Tender. And a true statement of what occurred would scarcely be believed by the most credulous of loyal men or even Copperheads, abroad. . Then be it known that yesterday was the day appointed for the Rebel candidates Mr. Pendleton, for the State Senate, and Mr. McKinzie, for the lower branch of the State Legislature to address their fellow-citizens generally, and the great household of rebels in particular, upon the many dead issues they keep before the country, including the past and present status of the negro. The Union party, having no candidates in the field, it was proposed to the rebels that they would postpone speaking for a short time, to allow the few Union men who happened to be present time to hold a hasty meeting, a request which was courteously granted and which resulted in the nomination of D. M. Wooldridge,Kgq.,for State Senator.and W.' Evans, a lawyer of our town, and a young man of great promise, for the lower branch of the State Legislature. Mr. Wooldridge then came forward and responded to the nomination by a conditional acceptance, but took the opportunity to deliver quite a speech, and his many sharp thrusts at treason evidently fired the heart and stirred the feelings of every rebel in the house. Mr. Evans then took the stand, and in a few appropriate remarks, accepted the nomination just tendered him by the loyal voters of the county, and added, that though the true Union party might be in the minority, in, the county, yet surely 'they were not ashamed of having aided the general Government in the suppression of treason, and putting topflight the armies of the rebels; and if the rebels so thought from the long silence and inactivity of the loyal men, that we would now, (it being about the proper time) dispel that delusion. Rebel blood being now raised to about fever heat, Mr. Lvans closed his remarks, and the Union Convention then adjourned. , . ; During all this the rebels behaved well, apd appeared more than usually respectful. But their dander was up; and now the squalling and hollowing for Pendleton at once became "deafening rebels running to and fro through the hall in search of. their champion, and in a few moments he .was borne upon the arms of his almost breathless friends to the stand. Mr. Pendleton, though a county citizen and candidate for an important State office, is not yet known by, probably, one-half the "Voters 6f the district,' or even his own cvunlyrand : yet he- in his introduction, made no allusion to that fact, but, doubtless, partaking largely of the enthusiasm and exasperation of his friends now crowded around him, opened his mouth and said that he was for saving and preserving the Constitution of his country, and to accomplish that end, the Union party now in power, who were trying to elevate the negro above the white race, and disregarding every provision of that sound and adorable instrument, the Constitution ' the United States, must be kicked from power, and the Government handed over to the true friends of the Constitution, (that is, those who have been trying for the last six years to destroy it.) who would defend, protect, and preserve both. ,
THE EVANSVILLE DAILY JOURNAL. FRIDAY, JULY
Ye gods andf littfe'fishes ! get out of the way, and let the Southern chival-, ra Viavfl room, ind rfee Ifew the World
will move evermore1Mf.Pend!etTJn,fand ""cottages throughout this broad
after exhausting the English vocabu lary, in the selection of - the most abusive epithets, waich he applied to referred to the fact that the Union party, (or the" negro party as he called it,) met all the arguments of the Democratic party, by calling out Rebtl, Rebel, REBEL; and this extra effort at mimicry brought forth tremenduous applause from the rebels: Silence being restored, the speaker continued that he himself did not know whether he was a rebel, nor did he care, as the name was growing popular:; but said he. i4 vou can judge for yourselves, when I deliver myself of one sentimental leeung l nave ,ong entertained,and I will do so at a risk, ' and here the speaker loomed up and said : "In 1861, 1 saw a beautiful maid bloom forth in the South, her eyes snarkled with intelligence, every feaI ture was the perfection of art and nat . i - i 1 1 " 3 ture com Dinea,ner rosea ie iips, aim the health and youthful vigor that blushed upon lier cheecks, lured me to her and I loved her." The speaker halted for: anpiause, was slightly responded to. He then continued: "but misfortune has now overtaken her; she lies lowand prostrate at the foot of despotism ; and though now shrunk to a skeleton, and her eyes' all dim; health and youthful vigor no longer blush upon her cheeks; the rose has fled her lips; and her once flowing hair now all dishriveled and gray; ' (here the boiler was about to burst, and in order to save it the speaker cooled down; looked wise like Patrick Henry, ' and whispered in the sweetest eloquence,) but in spite of all I love her still." It was this last sentence that electrified the heart of every Democrat in the house, and it was followed by tremendous applause. Verily, thought I, has Andrew Johnson reconstructed these rebels? And being just then in a reflecting mood, I wondered if that judicial blindness with which a wise 'Providence smote these rebels for some wise end in 1861, would never be removed. Does not Pendleton believe that this 0!d Jlag, which he calls a young Southern maiden, is in existence still? Does he not know that this idol of his heart first opened her eyes upon this breathing world in South Carolina, in the year of our Lord 1832? And as soon as General Jackson heard of 'this monster, (for he was then : President.) he issued an order, that she should be smothered to death ; but in some way the order wa9 evaded by those who were charged with its execution, tnd by some means the vital spark of life was left, and she has been secretly nourished and strengthened by her deluded friends until the year 1860. Being twenty-eight years of age, she comes forth a full grown monster, with at least seven heads and ten horns, and says to Jefferson Davis, Pendleton & Co., " all these beautiful Southern States will I give thee if you will now fall down and worship me; and not only so, but you shall build up a grand, and magnificent government thereon, such as the world never raw before, and whose corner stone shall be human slavery, and all the powers of that old Lincoln Government, which, under Jackson's reign, persecuted me in 1832, and is daily oppressing you, shall not prevail against us; and if, indeed, the attempt is made, we will marshal the Southern chivalry, one man of whom can put to flight five of Lincolr's hirelings. But if it were possible that we need assistance, I wiir play the harlot with England and France, and if need be with three hundred thousand wooly headed negroes, and we will march over Yankee land, and to the very capital of the Abolition nation; we will possess the very gates of our enemies, and we will tear to shreds and trample under foot the Abolition Constitution and government, and we will have a Constitution, and establish a government adapted to the taste, and suited to the pride and ambition of young America; and we will plant and. spread human slavery in every State and Territory of this great nation; and better than all, my worshipers shall always control this beautiful remodeled nation." And Davis & Cp., believed all these fahe promises and lies; and the greater r.he lie, the more they loved him, until n their madness to embrace her, thay raised their arms to strike down and trample under foot the great temple of American Liberty. . Then it was that , the DroDerlv constituted authorities, to whom the Fathers of our Republic intrusted its protection, marshalled their armies, and sent, them forth in defense of the flag and integrity of the nation;5 and see wnat followed. All these ; beautiful Southern States promised to Davis, Pendleton & Co., are now laid waste, and reduced almost to a wilderness. , Four million slaves' instead of being the corner-stone of this Southern maid's new kingdom, hae been torn from the hands , of their masters, their . value amounting to many hundred million dollars, and an equal amount of other property, has been destroyed in the strife. A debt has been saddled upon the nation, goading the- people down with taxation to pay the interest; and there is not a living soul now in the world, that will live to see the principle extinguished. But worse and worse aDd if 3Ir. Pendleton is already sick of the picture, let him shut his eyes not less than six hundred thousand lives have been lost in the terrible struggle to destroy a constitution and a free and most glorious government, bj one party, and to pre serve them Dy tne otner; ana tne
lamentation of thl widow and the cry of the orphan goea,upfrom thousand and multiplied thousands tf hamlets j , a 1 i. ' ii. :a v 4
land, and jhe maimedv the balt..and the bund meet our eyes in all the thoroughfares' and cities in this once of the deep has been reddened with the gore of the slain, and sharks and sea-dogs have been fed upon the sons of weeping mothers and mourning fathers. And, as if to cap the climax of wickedness and woe, and astonish Heaven and the earth, and to show the full measure of abominations of this mother of harlots the great head of a nation falls a victim to the mid night assassin, thus clothing the heavens with sackcloth," and filling an already grief-stricken ' nation with sorrow and "tears, 'and with all the ruin this ' monster of "iniquity "has wrought, and which stares' Mr. j Pendleton full in the face, he says he loves her-still. How strange that Mr. Pendleton should be soreaamor ed with this offspring of the most terrible ' freak of nature ; not subject to its laws, nor the laws of science ; for the last picture," drawn of her by Mr.'; Pendleton himself, which is enough to melt the : heat of a stoic, (much more, a rebel,) is "after taking." Surely she blights and ' curses everything A she - touches,' and everything iin - contact blights and curses i her; and - . yet Mr. Pendleton loves her stuL But his special : plea that he never em braced hert and - therefore he should have an office under that Government he and she conspired to destroy, will not avail him, for the highest judi cial tribunal known to the Universe, decided 1800 years ago, that " he that looketh upon a woman to lust after her, hath already committed adultery in his heart," and may the voters of this Senatorial district render their verdict in accordance with this high decision, at the next August election. I will spare Mr. McKenzie, and only remark now, that he is the son ot a noble sire. Ehlocofoco. FRUIT JARS. Fruit-'Jars. Fruit Jars. JFVii.it Jars. LETCO WGKTirS CLASS JAR, Tin top, rubber band, held by a screw. ADAMS'S GLASS JAB, Tin top, wire fastening; sealing wax euiu to CORK TOP. Glass Jan, with corks ; suit. Real' eg wax to BROWN EARTHEN JARS, Tin top, wire fastening ; closed with wax. SEALING WAX AND CORKS For sale extra. MARK & WARREN, IMPORTERS OF Queensware, Glassware, V. FANCY GOODS, &c, 18 Main Street, Jun20 d2w Q JEENSWARE. Xew Queensware House, LICHTEN & ICIIEMI AISER, IMPORTERS "OF ; CHINA, GLASS QUEENSWARE, , , x . ... : . and . . . HOUSE FURNISHING GOOD, No. 3 Sontli First Street." WE ARE KOW OPEJTIJSO THE most splendid assortment or Fai Articles ever imported to this city, and f StOCk Of . ; ,if ,(.;J . ; .,(; J '. .:. -T-. "f -.-f- : . . , ... ' WHITE GRANITE WARE' now complete, and only wants looking at to induce all to make their purchases ot us: and our stock of COMMON WARE is large, and will be sold bs low as the lowest in the United States. Bobemian Glass and SilrerI'lated Ware. Our assortment of Bohemian Glass and Silver-Plated Ware is one of the finest ever selected for the trade of this city ; and we have the advantage of our senior partner residing in the city of New York, and at all times on hand selecting the latest styles and patterns of ware. oeSd3m ' -" ' : ' - - :
12, 1867.
iEW ADVERTISEMENTS. - -Water Wheels! Water Wheels! JL VALENTIN E'H Patent Turbine. The best ia use. Manufactured hy Valentine 4 Co., Fort Edward, N. Y. Prices moderate. Send for circular. Agents wanted. 7 GRAND GIFT ENTERPRISE r ik O E 2V IX MO T EL AND . ninety ' Valuable premiums, To be given to the purchasers of either of the rouowing nanawmo ENG RATINGS, viz.:'':' " ' ASHLAND," THE HOME OF CLAY: R. E. LEE, U. 8. GRANT, aKORUE WASHINGTON. MARTHA WASHINGTON, and JOHN O.- BRECKENRIPGE. The following gentlemen .have kindly consented to take charge of and control the drawing, with the distinct understanding that we are to have nothing whatever to do with it, viz.: Ex-Gov. J. F. Robinson, Georgetown, Ky.t General John B. Huston, Lexington, Ky.; Hon. F.- K. Hunt, Lexington, Ky.; Hon. J. B. Beck. Lexington, Ky. ; E. D. Sayer, of U. A. Bayer fc Co., Bankers; J as. A. Grlnstead, 1 of Griustead, Bradley A Company, Bank frs; Judge S. S. . Goodloe, Thomas litchel, Esqr., Cashier of Mrt National Bank, Lexington,- Ky.; M. C- Johnson, Esq.. Preside ut Northern Bank of Kentucky. - Ten per oent. premium will be allowed to any person getting up a club of ten or more subscribers, to be paid either in Engravings when the money in received, or In money when the drawing is completed. All money us received will be deposited in bank and held until the drawing takes place. - If the enterprise should not b completed, the money will be refunded to the purchasers of Engravings. The drawing will take place ON THE FOURTH OF JILT JfEIT, Or sooner if the tickets are disposed of, in which event timely notice will be given. Write to us for prospectus giving full particular.!. Agents will be appointed In all parts of the country. ENGRAVINGS S3 tACH, And a certificate given to each purchaser of an Engraving, in the Phoenix Hotel Grand Gift Enterprise, FREE. OF CHARGE. Remit by drafts, Postofllce money orders, or in sums of one hundred dollars and over in Greenbacks by express to GHlGHBY ROBINSON, Phwnix Hotel, Lexington, Ky. LIST OF PREMIUMS, No. 1. Phoenix Hotel and lot, 160 feet front on Main, by 236 leet deep on Mulberry, ! SiM.ouo: . . And 89 other valuable premiums, ranging , iruiu i,.xa uuwa u sou eacn. NORTH AMERICAN STEAM- ' V SHIP COMPANY. OPPOSITION LINE TO California' via Klcaragna, ' SVKKY TWENTY DAY3, With Passengers, Freight, and U. S. ! Mails. . On the following first-class Steamships: On Atlantic , Ocean y A . m . ia n n I j.i ' BAN FRANCISCO' . NICARAGUA, i . DAKOTA. Connecting on Pacific Ocan. 1 AMERWA, MOSES TAYLOR, , NEBSt I8KA4 NEVADA. Passage and Freight at Reduced Rates. Sailing duy from New York : May 20th 1867 I July 20th... 1867 June 10th and 30th " Aug. 10th and 30th " And every twenty days thereafter, leaving on the Saturday previous when the regular sailing day come on Hunday. For further information apply to the NORTH AMERICAN STEAMSHIP COMPANY. WM. H. WEBB, President. 54 Exchange Place, New York. D. N. CARRINGTO'N, Agent, 177 West Street, corner Warren, N. Y. Z WAJITEI EVERYWHERE Salesmen, Ladies and Gentlemen $100 to 200 per month To sell the genuine Common cense Family Sewing Machine. Price only 118. This machine will stitch, hem, lell, tuck, bind, quilt,brald,aud embroider. The cloth cannot be pulled apart, even after cutting across the seam every quarter of an inch. Every machine warranted for three years. Send for circulars and terms to agents, or call at McDowell's Block, corner Fourth and Green Street, Ixuisville, Kentucky. BLISS & McEATHRON, General Agents. AMIS' Celebrated Portable and Stationary K tea KnsrlneH, ail sizes, and superior to all others. Call or write for circular. Depot No. 60, .-oulh Canal Street, Chi cago. III. AMES' IRON WORKS, Proprietor, Oswego, New York. Ladies, Discard Injurious Paddings. MiDAMJl'HEL'S Mammarial Balm and Patent Breaxt Elevators develop the iorua physiologically. Depot 907 Broadway, New Xork. Send stamp for treatise. Sold at Druggists and Ladies' Furnishing Stores. DR. J. I. STILLMAK, Gynecologist, Formula Diagnorit, and correspondence. Inhalations, Hpray, Hypodermic, Electric, and Dermapathic Embrocation, with constitutional treatment in tbe Diseases of Women, Throat, Lungs. Heart, and Viscera. Instrument. Medicines, Bathing and Drinking Salts Irom mineral springs, with written prescriptions weekly, at $00 lor the first month, t w each month subsequently. Daily attention ati.isomc s at the same prices. Address, with stamp, 34 and 36 Ueion Street. Memphis, Tenn. HORSTMAXX BROS.' & CO., Fifth and Cherry StreeU, ' Philadelphia, - Manufacturers and Importers of REGALIA and MILITARY GOODS. A full assortment of properties for Lodges, Chapters, Commanderies, OddFellows, Sons of Temperance, Am. Mechanics, Red Men, and other Regalias always on hand, or made to order, MILITARY GOODS of every description. FIA(J8 AND BANNERS, Church Embroideries, Bunillions, Spangled Material tor Vestments, etc., etc. . ; , SODA FOUNTAINS ALL COMPLETE for 830 to glOO. Patented, litest, improvement, displacing all old styles. A recipe gratis with each lount for making bts'. Soda Water and Syrups. Sold only bv .. , J AS. W. CHAPMAN SON. Madison, Ind. Address them for particulars. STEAM A HORSE-POWER THRESHING MACHINES. We build i-team Xhteshers and Horse-Power Threshing Machines of all sizes; also Portable Saw ilills of various sizes. Our Farm Eneine is the best in America, and our Threshers are superior to any made. Send lor our pampmet. JONAS W. YFO, Robinson Math ine Works, Richmond, Ind. THE BEST CHANCE YET. m OEMS WASTED, on a salary or commisslou, for m v new map of the I Great American Republic." showbiz our ! recently acquired Russian Possessions, etc J Get your territory at once. F. 1. DIBBLE, j Wholesale Headquarters for Maps, Charts, ' and Pictures, Main St., Louisville, Ky. 1
New Advertisements. THE first thinr you should do, after yon read this heading, should be to put your band In your pocket, take out twenty-five cents, and send for a copy for a year. If you. do not feel like risking that big amount, Wiy, ask your neighbor to take it; but as an - " AMEItlCAN you should sonport an American enterfirlH. You will find our paper worth tea. lmes the amount we ask for it. Wit, humor, sketches, and poetry will fill its col nmn4, and It will make a WIT of you and all you- relations. No use ot delaying; the amount is not large, and you may as well invest your ' TWENTY-FIVE cents now as to wait six months. It will have a doctor's visits, as no one can read it and get sick. 1C Is filled with sense, nonsense, and innocence; and twenty-live CENTS will make you ns merry as a cricket for a year to come. We want at least twentyfive subscribers from jour town, and you might as wellhead the Liit as A goung man we know of in your town, end along your stamp the more the merrier; and when our subscr.ptlon list runs up, we will send for a ... ..ii YEAR -v a paper twice as large as the one we now issue. Addrea alt letters to RICHARDSON A COLLINS, 42 John Street, N. Y. Tobacco Users, Attention I The Appetite' for' ' Tobacco-"'Destroyed" by using "ORTON'S PREPARATION." CHF.WEBM A9TD SMOKERN, leave; off this dlsguHtlnc and filthy habit. -One box of Orion's Preparation, used according to direct lous, is warranted to destroy the appetite for Tobacco id any person, no matter how strong the habit may be, in one month's time. No more hankering for Tobaeoo after using one box of this preparation. Recollect it it warranted. ' 1 . i Forwarded to any part of the country on receipt of one dollar. Address E. DOUGLAS, General Agent, Box 1,572. Portland, Maine. THE JIOKRftt PKTKOIEUM ' STOVE COMPANY ManufactureSummer Stoves, for burning Oils and Napthas, that prove a decided success, making a blue non-luminou Hume, burning like alcohol; cooks charmingly. Send lor a circular. WM. A. HOLLAND, Agent. 44 Congress Street, Boston, Mass. O THE PATKONN OF THE CLEVELAND WATER tX'RE. Tb ' suoscrlber wi lies to say that, as it is now commencing its Twentieth (Season, he is better prepared than ever to give health facilities to the needy.. In addition to our Electro-Thermal and Turkish BiU.li Departments, which we hive enlarged and' perfected during tbe J ant year, we have, also added the Exhaustive Air Bath, Which ' is in valuable in many cuttes 1 : : With these additions to our Institution, we now command the greatest variety, the most complete bathing liicilities that canbe found In any one place in the world. -T. T.HKELYE, M.D., Proprietor. &OCl FOR 17 CENT. Catalogues. . 3469 showing prices we pay for coins, , mailed for 25c. Coin Magazine, 15c. ' . MASON fc CO 434 Chestnut Street. Philadelphia. CJALENMEN WANTED in every ' 3 county to take orders for a fast-selling ETigraving, on which a large discount is. allowed to first-class men. Address SOUTHERN PUBLISHING AGENCY, , Louisville, Ky. WATCIIKS Suitable fur speculative' and gift purposes, Gold and Hilver American Watches, cheap Jewelry of every description, Gold, Silvertuul Plated Chains. Old established house, ''. Semi for price list, LIONEL JACOBS. No. 177 Broauway, New York. WANTEI One or two Kalesnien for this county and vicluity, either mule or femalu. Address immediately, BLISS A McEATHRON, lAHilsvllle, Ky. MAGIC t'AKIM-l'liu iiionI amusing thing out. tsplend.'d article for parlor
amusement. New thing iust out. Price H cents a pack. Address i. G. FOaiU '0.iiHAY,Box 100, Carmel, New York. HOOT EATIIN, in an u nurtured by . ciiAitijf.M r . iwtti, 828 and o3U Delancy Street, N. Y. Herring's Patent Champion Sales. 251 Broadway, corner Murray Street, New York. THE MOST KELIAXLE KECVKITY from Fire now known. Over thirty thousand "Herring's fcaf-s" have been sold and are now in nwe, and more than U0 have passed safely through accidental lires. ' Herring, Farrel A Sherman's New Patent Bankers' Sales, made of Wrought Iron, Steel Bars, and the new metal, Spiegel A'uen (or Paient Cryslallzed Iron), from tlnore of Frankltnite, the only material which equals the diamond in its hardness now anown to the world, and is the best resistant to a burglar's drills or cutting tools ever manufactured. Also, House Sates, Parlor Safes, Sideboard and Cabinet Safes for silver-ware, valuable papers, ladles' Jewelry, Ac., Ac, made to represent handsome pieces of furniture, fi lid for illustrated catalogue. Herilnv, Farrel A Sherman, 201 Broadway, corner Murray Street, New York; Farrel, Herring k Co., Philadelphia; Herring A Co., Chicago. CONFECTIONERIES. Confectioneries H. V. AHLKRISO. H. T. HASSLES. AULERIXG & HASSLER, Wholesale and Retail Dealers la randies, Foreign Fruits, ! r.l . . I - i I ; ."' ( 'fii!t,.l ; L'.U ii A. and Toys, FANCY WARE, 1 Xo. 15 South First Street, " .', '' '; ," EVANSVILLE. . We manufacture' our own CdrMies, and are prepared to. supply the Wholesale Trade at the lowest rales, and warranted of puie quality. We keep a full assortment of Foreign Fruits ana Nut, Can nod Goods, fine Preserves, Jellies, c- . Toys and fancy Ware of every description, for presents and at tractive au: useinent, FIREWORK n full supply and general variety. Agents for 1. I). Mallory fc Co.' O jfrters. ot2ldly
T. F. SH Kit WIN, With .. . GEOi S. SONNTAO dc CO., HARDWARE, 29 FIRST STREET, maylO 3m ' Kvawbviix, Iwd.
. 1
i:-V
If
