Evansville Journal, Volume 18, Evansville, Vanderburgh County, 2 August 1867 — Page 4

THE ' VANSV' LE D ILY IOITR ATj. FRI A , AUGUST 2 1367.

EVAASV1LLE JOlitf AL

PVBUSHED DAILY BT The Evansville Journal Company. o. 6 Locust Street, Evansville, Ind. SUBSCRIPTION TERMS. IN ADVANCE. Daily Journal. Ob year, by mall lO OO eix montns, Dy mail. ..................... . Three months, by mail By the week, payable to carrier.... Tri-Weekly Jonrunl. One year ... ........................ tx months. ............ Wkly Jonrnnl. One codv. one vear 5 so it OO 23 9 7 OO 4 OO . 8 2 OO Five copies, one year Ten copies, one year 15 00 Important to Advertisers. The circulation of the JOURNAL in the City of Evansville is three times as large as that of any other nevcsjta per. Our circulation in Indiana and Illinois is greater than any other neicspaper published in this City. In Kentvchy it is more than all the other Evansville papers combined. Agents for the Journal. J amks U Thornton, Princeton. Ind. Capt. Levi Fekgcson, Petersbursh, Ind. Hakry It. Smith, Witshington, Ind. W. J. L. Hemmesway, Boonville, Ind. . R. DeISruier, Jfewburgh, Ind. - John M. Lot'KWoon.Mt. Vernon, Ind. J. M. Fostkr, Fort Branch, Ind. J. W. Weaver, Poseyville, ind. K. B. Corwin, Somerville, Ind. Capt. Whiting, Cynthiana, Ind. K. J. Rogeks. New Harmony, Ind. Q. A. HAppEK, Owensville, InU. Harvey Bond, Hazleton, Ind. Thos. McClTCHKN,8andersville, Ind. T'rhin Mai: km. Black Hawk Mills, Ind. They will also receive and forward to us Orders for Binding and Job Printing. WjDuring the erection of our New Building, the Journal Business Office tcill le, located in the rear of Cloud Skin's Drug iStore. Entrance through the Alley on Main Street, next to Marble Hall. To Correspondents." We never notice communications not accompanied with the name of the author, who must be made known to us if unacquainted. Write on only one side of the paper. Don't write unless you have some thing to say of interest to the public; and be as brief as the subject will allow. v The publication ef a communication is no evidence that the editors adopt its sentiments. The author is alone responsible tor them. j Communications should be addressed to the "Editors of the Joihnal," j and not to individuals. news iti:m. (fold closed in New York yesterday at 1W. Four cases of cholera were renorteJ in New York on the first inst. The reports from the Eastern part of Maryland, are unfavorable to the corn crop. Five thousand persons, most of whom were colored, are attending the Republican Convention at Eiflimond, Virginia. Brownlow's m-ijority in the city of Memphis was 2,292, stnd in ClarksviUe 78. The election passed off quietly in both places. The Atlanta Era says that Ge"V;i i will give thirty thousand majority fur reconstruction, B. H. Hill's speech to the contrary notwithst Hiding. Judge Totten, formerly of the Supreme Court of Tennessee, died at Jackson Mississippi, on Tuesday. A match is made up at Springfield, Massachusetts, to row for the championship of the world, for two thousand dollies in gold. The time is not yet settled. Advices from Mexico confirm the shootiny of Castillo aud other Imperialists at Querataro, and of Vidaurri at Mexico city. Juarez Is apparently the unanimous ehoit-e of the people for the Presidency. Last Saturday, at Purdy, Tenn., while a colored man was speaking at a Union League flag-raising, an insul'ing remark was made from the crowd, whereupon a general affray occurred The Sheriff was mortally, and Sergeaut Harden badly, wounded. Three citizens were aeeidenta.ly shot. General Sherid m issued an order on tne 3JLh ult. declaring " J. W. Throckmorton , Governor of Texas, aa impediment to the reconstriwti'in oi that State," bnd there-f.-ie removing Uini from office. E. W. Pecsa is named as his successor. A good deal of excitement exists its Philadelphia among cotton dealers, in consequence of the seizure of nearly all their stock by Internal Revenue officers. Only three wholesale firms In Louisville, Inst year, did a business exceeding a million of dollars. The heaviest house in the city made sates amounting to Sl.-i'-JyujO Nineteen firms sold between t aX,i.(i.j and SI.OOO.'-OO. ... INDIANA ITEMS. Large standing collars, old style, are the fashion in New Albany. The volume of the Thirty-Six! Li Ind. , n Reports is now ready. The book lised by Gen. Hariison. The number of teachers In attend:;::'v u; the Normal Institute, at Trr Ha o:i Tuesday last, was 127. A young scoundrel, about twenty years of age, named Honehens, wa a few days ago sentenced by the Gibson Circuit Court to ten years imprisonment iu the penitentiary ;or attempting a rape on the .person ot a i'ttie girl six years olc A man. who re-ides n'.'ar Princeton, end i wo wns mari'U'.l fa'stSprJt:sr, lias uttempt- j 'ed to connrtfr" snlcid"Vtvo or three "dilf.-r-ent times be-t!U--ih: v.-if?? pr-i .-t.-. 1 in' , wearing short lsir g:tiut his vfih. He !

was discovered each time early enough to

prevent-the consummation of the deed. What a pity! ' , The Indianapolis Journal Rays that the Adjutant General, with his entire force of clerks, is busily engaged for the meeting of the Commission to audit the claims of the State against the General Govern ment on war account. It convenes on the 13th of August. As usual, General Terrell will have his house in order for them. A camp meeting will beneld at the Camp Grounds, at Acton, on the line of the Cin cinnati Railroad, on the loth of August. A lynx, measuring seven feet in length. was killed last Monday In White County. Last Monday night, a; love-sick fellow, named Smith, a clerk at the Commercial Hotel, at Indianapo is attempted to com mlt suicide by swallowing a big dose of laudanum. The doctors would not let him die. KEXTlCKr ITEMS. Lieut. Thomas R. Adams, of Barboura ville, Kentucky, and lately a graduate at West Point, has been assigned to the Fifth Artillery. A little child, a daughter of John Mc Cann, fell into a tub of water at Lexington a few days ago and was drowned. A man named Hoitzclaw was shot by a woman named Jennie Hale in a house of ill-fame at Lagrange, Kentucky, on Mon day night. Colonel Orlando Brown, a distinguished and worthy citizen o Frankfort, and for merly editor of the Commonwealth, died at his residence ir. that city on the 27th altHe was greatly respected by all who knew him. A little son of J. 8. Cave, while at t empt ing to cock a pistol at a shooting match in Louisville last Monday, shot his thumb off. Robert Breckhelmer shot himself in the band at Louisville on Tuesday, while care lessly handling a pistol, inflicting a pain ful wound. Mr. Heser, the proprietor of a German Theatre at Louisville, ai tacked Mr. Fernitz, editor of the VolkMalt, last Tuesday, and indicted serious injurieson his person. The attack was made while Mr. Fernitz was-sitting in a saloon at a table. Mr. Fernitz had his nose broken. One of h s eyes was so badly injured that it was thought he would lose it. The trouble grew out of an Insult offered Mr. Fernitz, and a retaliatory notice in his paoer. " Last Monday night a man narneJ Shook Abstracted from the safe at the Shelby House, in Louisville, 31,400 in cash. He had slept with , the clerk, out of whose pocket he procured the key to the safe. After committing the robbery, he teturned the key to the clerk's pocket, who was yet asleep, and in the morning paid a board bill at the hotel of 5100 out of the money stolen, and took his leave. He was captured nt Jefferson ville and the money almost all recovered. Letters from the Far West and from Kentucky, on the second pageSouthern Delusions. The Richmond Whig notices a series of delusions in which the South has trusted, only to find disappointment and ruin as the result from the primal belief that secession was to lead to political paradise, though every following subterfuge, each one apparantly less worthy than its antecedent. Among the latest has bee'n a trust in the President. That having failed, they took stock in the Democratic party . North, expecting them to revolutionize Congress. Finally, the Democratic party, having lost rather than gained in the elections, they looked to the Supreme Court, who would set up the Constitution as shield and buckler, and, with the awful frown of justice, would petrify Congress into silence and submission. " This, like the others, has proved a delusion," says the Whig. " Thus, one assurance after another of those who would lead us has proved false; one hope after another has failed. What remains? "Where next shall we look? Ask the Richmond Enquirer, and it will tell you again, as in substance, it is telling you daily, look to the' Democratic party! lias not that reed broken and pierced our sides enough?" Seemingly . satisfied with experimenting in oppcinsr the government, and weary ofhewtiig out broken cisterns, the editor hus concludes: What remains? Our condition as a people is a most unhappy one. We need relief, repose, security. We trusted to the President, and he was powerless. We looked to the Supreme Court, and ii availed us not. We have waited for a popular reac tion in the North till waiting is madness. There is but one recourse left, but it is an all-sufficient one. We must overcome the hostility of the party that controls Congress, the President, the court and the country. We must cease to make an unavailing, re-acting and self-hurting war upon it. We must accept its continued ascendancy, and consent that the power of the Government shall relimin in its hands. We mast ser-ure its confidence and good w;ii. We. ?ee no other hope. Rebel Trade The Courier yes-. terday. by inference, e ndorsed t ':e l-.t- ' tor of " J. M. Ayoht," to th Bow-: Hiig Green (Ky.) Dcmcer". whei-eiE -soaie of the special trade advances or Evansville, wera stated to be t.::t' " the business interest here i; I .".'!, ' represented by gallant officer an i - '- diers. of the Lost Cause, and thatueal-

ers can purchase, theirentire-stock here without patronizing a single Yankee." We venture the asserlion that the Courier will have some diffi culty in reconciling this endorsement with its relations to some of its patrons, who are not " gallant officers and soldiers of the lost cause;" but who are embraeed within the term " Yankee," or Northern men. It is time the Courier and all sensible business men were done with such twaddle. An EditoriaTon Buttermilk. The readers of the newspapers have doubtless learned that which is painfully-apparent to the editor, as he performs his daily duties, that the present is " a terribly dull time for news," as well as for business. One of our exchanges, the New York Gazette, has, it appea rs, in sympathy with the dull season, " soured " on such dry topics as politics, trade and kin

dred subjects, and wisely, we think, turned its editorial attention to the useful i and interesting subject of "Buttermilk." In the absence of any more startling news, it brings to light or revives some valuable facts, which constitute good reading during the heated term. It says there is a very large increase in the consumption of buttermilk throughout the country, and especially in New-York. It states that in the avenues to the east and west of Broadway there are numerous milkshops for the most part at corners where this produce of the churn is retailed regularly at the counters as a beverage, at two cents a mug full. Many of these shops sell as much as a thousand quarts per day. Early of a morning many persons who have no faith in mineral waters, aud to whom the matutinal cock-tail is an abomination, may be seen in the milk stores quaffing the pleasant and salutary buttermilk out of great white mugs, Numbers of women and children come with large tin cans and take away quantities of it for family use. It is an exceeding ly healthful drink, cooling to the blood, while it acts at the same time as a mild aperient. We published, not long since, the opinion oi a Kentucky physician that this wholesome beverage, properly patronized, would prolong life fully one-third. But it appears our Kentucky buttermilk doctor was not the discoverer of this delightful fact. Our coteraporary gays that years ago a French philosopher set forth this cu rious theory. He averred that in buttermilk he had discovered the secret of renewing the human constitution, and of indefinitely prolonging human life. The interior arrangements of the human subject, as well as of ani mals, is general, according to this philosopher, who might have been a French Horace Greeley, bear a strong analogy to steam boilers, inasmuch as, in the course of time, they become incrusted, or coated, with pernicious matter. To remove this nothing but acids would be efficacious ; and the only acid which would render this service, and, at the same time, exercise a beneficial influence on the health, is, as our savant tells j us, that contained in buttermilk. The j Gazette declines to investigate fully , this theory, but it does not hesitate to express the conviction that buttermilk would be more conducive to longevity than gin cocktails. This interesting fact is stated. A curious experiment has been tried with buttermilk by testiag its modest nnalities aeainst tli- "vpi! mim? ctrm of l,rpr ()M ,rh I. 1 1, i secret will bet wit!: ou3 who isn't. thn- thp hit tpr if hlin ItVJ.ln 1 cinnr.f ! distinguish claret from buttermilk by I the taste. Several glasses are f.d with claret, and an equal number with j buttermilk, and they are handed al- i tersately to the blindfolded person, who tastes them. For a few turns he ; will name the respective liquids cor- ' reetly; but after a while his sen-e of j taste becomes confused, and he insists j that buttermilk is claret, and ri ! versa. H e never tried tho experi- : ment, anu uou t now teat wo siia'l. ' Those who are curious ni:iy. We don't believe in mixed li ju : s. Bu if there is the long soucht ' e-ixir i life' m this itctuuiou-fiq-iia. as 3hiiosophc-r we are in clainieu.riy tue t rencu and the Kentucky due-tor favor. oi' but;?riniik. Dexter, the famous trotMr, was sc-i-l. : ilr-i p Cours' year, dete :; fi-mi and made his ; " -.r:iac-e oa the Fashion' r.:rc I-'-nd, Mi.y ''l, of "hat : w:-n a i.-r.-.v.j r.f -tVt, -r.e!! 'Jack -or'-'aad tir ii;:.. " - Since rr.cn he has wo:; over t'30.00y i.r his vners, and been sold for ?li,000. His wlarr'ng. this year, alreaJy amount to 511,000.

Literary Items. ------ M rs. R. II. Stoddard has a new novel nearly ready for publication " Tennyson's poem of " Dora " has been dramatized by Mr. Charles Reade. Longfellow luxuriates in the sea breeze at Nahant. Stoddard's Summer home is near Newburyport. Lotta has purchased a furnished house at New York, like herself small but handsome. ': ; Mr. William Cullen Bryant is in the Scotch Highlands.' He is expected to arrive home in a few weeks. ' Carrie Bell Sinclair, a Georgia poetess, has chosen " Heart Whispers ;

or, Echoes of Song from the Harp of the South," as the gushing title for a volume of her poems. The O. P. F., Jeems Buchanan is in the lecturing business for next winter, and will commence at Cincin nati. The N. Y. Gazette asserts that one of the most prosperous writers now on the press of that city was three years ago so " hard up" that he went without food for forty-eight hours, too proud to ask for help, and too empty pocketed to have the means for purchasing a meal. This is not fiction, but fact. During the present year this gentleman has helped a score of poor people in distress, from his full pockets. The twenty-first volume of the correspondence of the first Napoleon has appeared in Paris, with a preface by Prince Napoleon. The undertaking will require eight or nine volumes more, and it will take two years to complete it. The present volume contains the documents relating to the years 1S10 and 1811. It is again intimated that the great English novelist will come to the United States during the ensuing season, to repeat before, the American public, those readings from his own works which have been so popular at London for many years. At a banquet lately given to M. Jules Favre, iu honor of his election to the Academy, there was quite a theatrical exhibition between M. Favre and M. Berryer, his " venerable master and friend," as Jthe latter was called, in the complimentary - speech of the former. At. the conclusion. M. Jules Favre took M. Berryer in his arms and kissed him with "effusion " a demonstration which was greeted with thunders of applause. The Illinois State Journal, of the 29th ult., comes to us with a wood-cut engraving of the New State House, authorized to be built at the last ses sion of the Legislature. It will be one of the most magnificent buildings on the continent when completed, if the present plans are carried into execution. The structure will be three hundred and fifty-four feet from north to south, by two hundred and forty feet from east to west, not including porticos. The rotunda from the principal floor will be one hundred and forty-five feet rty-ve feet. The ground plan of i ie building is that of the Greek th Cross, arranged to present four fronts of similar style. The style is in the Corinthian Order. Its total cost will be about two aud one-quarter millions of dollars. The St. Louis Board of Health, has forbidden the sale of fruit and vegetables in the public markets. The leading physicians of the city, have FuUished a protest against it as not only destructive of the interests of a large class of citizens, but as contrary t0 a11 Pc-iogicai Jawg ana aU the kws hygiene and common sense, The Boston Advertiser, referring to the late movement of Thurlow Weed, deprecates the efforts of played out politician to attach themselves to tne Coat tails of Gen. Grant. "Of the Republicans, " it says, " the mass are reajv, to nominate him upon a frauk assurance that he stands sparely upon their platform, and v.P(,r,ar.iv m:.iorifv w to ab his present record as that assurance." The Queen s Mind. The London correspondent of tLe Round Table says: "The announcement, I fear, cannot be long delayed that the state of the Queen's mind of which something used to be heard even during the Prince Consort's !;fct:nie is such as to make it v.-ry improbable that -ho can ever aeviin takeaa active part in public- itto. -4The Firs N'.ne "f tho- Resolute t la.-o Bit II Cu of" Evnc-rllle. have! ehallen-.-e-i :Ue Ciab at thi.-, p:ace for, a match game, to be played on their ! - pounds within three weeks, which hasbeen accepted, aau a lively game, ; broKen uoses. dee., may be ex: Oicensboro J'jh itvr. cteu.

Blackmailing by a Religions Journal. The New York Independent has of late gained quite a reputation as an independent religious journal. "It cut loose from its denominational connection, sneered at creeds and "orthodoxy," and placed itself on the platform of the " broad Church." Of late it has been advertising for " religious articles," and in order to properly instruct its contributors as to the composition or essentials of such articles, the editor, in the last issue, devoted considerable space to

a discussion of how to .write relig ious articles." There is apparent an earnest desire on the part of the editor to be sufficiently religious.'and yet maintain his independence of creeds and sects. . , , . . There has, however, been developed a fact connected with the manage ment of that paper, which may have as serious effect upon its standing as even blind adherence to creeds and sects. It appears in the shape of a deliberate attempt to blackmail the agents of a railroad corporation. The following letter explains the matter: "Ofeick of Lock wood & Co.. Bankers, " New York, July 15, 1807. " The foregoing cut fuom a West ern paper, suggests the propriety of our inuicating to tne irienus or tne St. Paul and Chicago enterprise, a ad to the public generally, the power that binds the pen of the financial writer for The Iiideprndcnt, Mr. II. C. Bowen, who is also, we are informed, publisher and proprietor of that paper. "On the appearance of the St. Paul & Chicago Railway advertisement, it was solicited for The Inde pendent, first throush its agent, then personally by Mr. Bowen. who called at our office, and finally by a letter from that gentleman addressed to one of our firm. On these occasions, Mr. Bowen 2)r0Poed to give the bonds a very favorable editorial noti'-e if they were advertised in his paper, offering that as a great inducement. " Soft words failing, some three weeks since he sent us a proof slip of the article which appeared in the issue of The Iixdepeudi nt of July 11 not printed until after he despaired of the success of his blackmailing efforts. " Lockwood it Co." The article referred to was a perfectly savage attack on the Sf. Paul & Chicago bonds. We have been accustomed to extract from the Independents monetary and commercial articles, regarding them as above the influences which too commonly warp the opinions of business writers. But such disreputable conduct on the part of a leadiog newspaper, professedly religious, deserves unreserved condemnation. Mr. Tilton is a spicy writer and a man of genius, and we do not question his zeal or sincerity; but he can not but feel his paper seriously compromised by such developments. It appears that he may more profitably employ his time and influence in another direction than in instructing contributors " how to write religious articles." TWENTY-SlXTH ANNUAL REPORTS. This volume of the Indiana Reports is now ready, and the members of the profion will be glad to see it. Indianapolis Journal rp. Ufiin;: fm Friwri 1 COUNTING-HOUSE CALENDAR MAST I'r.KSXS have tried from time to tune to invent perpetual motion, but without sur-ce-s. Prof. Jones has invented something better a Perpetual Revolving Calendar, which is indeed the Business Man's Friend. Is. is gotren up in a fine circular rosewood liarne, with a neat mirror in the face. At a glance you can sfe the month, the late of the -month, also the year, and it requires to he set but once a weeii In the back of thix Calendar is placed the slio tet and most eav method in the world for computing interest, which alone is worth Hie pil-e of the Ca.endar. It is just tne tiling for the merchant, mechanic, farmer, or business liiuu of every occupation, and should be on the wa I of every counting-house, o.'fice, steamboat, sea-vessel, and parlor. It is not. only au-ornament as furniture, but a gem in the way of calendars A sain r le is now on exhibition at tlie postotlic-, and the Aent., ti. W. BAKXAKD, is now in our eiiy for the purpose ef selling (State or County Bights, and may be wen at Jaquess, Hudspeth Jc Co.'s store, No. 10 North First istrect, Jroin 8 till 12 an i from 2 till 7. jy d;it CHK. DECKER. JOHN O. DECKEK FF.KT). G. DECKER. C. DECKER & SONS. Manufacturers of Spokes.- Wheels. Hubs, !?hlts, Fe. loes, a.nd i!ui Work, and dealers in Wagons, Drays, Carts, Thimble Skeins, -and have ul ways ou htmd a lare assortment ol seasoned Wuyoa Afaf:eri' Sawed Materials. 1 1G and I 1 Main .Street, corner Fifth, EcanaviUf, Indiana. Price Lists furnished on application, mr-lill l-( PHILIP DECKER, Manufacturer of Compound Lubricating Oils for all kinds of. Machinery. - Also, LARD OIL, S0AP3, as! 'CANDLE; PURE CATAWBA WISE or rny ovrn growth. pMrtiJI d.y

Who TVIU Be President? The Cincinnati Gazette says the following occurs in the testimony of a former aid to President Johnson taken by the Judiciary Committee: "I did call on him (Johnson) at Mr. Hooper's house, I think, on th3 night of the Cth of May, 18G5 Sabbath evening. In the course of the conversation I remarked: 'Governor, you look tired. Being President is hard work and small thanks, isn't it?' He replied : Yes, particularly when a man is lifted into it on another man's coat tail.' He stopped a moment, as if in thought, and continued : 4 The man who gets the McClellan vote, with the anti-negro-suffrage vote of the Republican party will get the Southern vote, and that will elect the next President.' " dii:i. BABCOCK. Au ;u-.t 1st, py, of dysentery, John Inolu, son of Klisha S. and Agnes H. Babcock, aed 2 years, 4 months, and 20 days. Funeral from the residence of the parents, on First Street (Ashland Place), this (Friday) morning, 2d Inst., at nine o'clock. Friends of the family are invited to attend without further notice.

SEW ADVERTISEMENTS. Lime ! Lime ! mff IllltN. I'L'KIJ WHITE 1. 1. ME l3J for sale mt the Lower Wharf, on Hat-boat. au2 dlt Cheap Feed at the Cash House. CROSS & CROPT3, Wholesale and lie tail Dealers in FLOUR, FEED. HOMINY, Co i-ii-3XfMil, And I'KOIU t E GEXEKALI.Y, Third Street, Bet. Main aud Locust. Evansville, Isd. Rich Country Wheat Bran at SI Z per 100 lbs. liicli Country Wheat fchipstufls at 81 50 per UK) lbs. XXX Family Flour. Crushed Corn. Hay. Prime Old and N ew Oats. Corn-Meal, &c, ic-For sale LOW. Goods delivered to any part of the city. an2tllljanl'08 Sheriff's Sale No. 23. BY VIKTl'E OF AX KXECIJ. tion issued out of the office of the Clerk of the Court of Common Pleas of Vanderburgh County, Indiana, In favor of Hamnel Orr and against vVm I.LKirham, and John 8. Hnyder, I will, on the 24th Day of Acgdst, 1807, between the hours of 10 o'clock a.m. and 4 o'clock p.m. of said duy, at. ttie door of the court-house in the citv of Kvansvilie, Indiana, offer for sale at public auction the rents and prylitK, lor the term of heven years, of the following-described real estate, to wit: All thi i certain parcel or pi-e of ground situate in Lsimas'-o City, so -h:Io'I. known as that portion o; tiloek timnhe: one hundred and twenty-tour (li). and described as follows: Beiiiiiuu iu tue southeast corner of said block, and rnmiitiii west fifty feet; thence north one hundred und twenty-five (llii) feet; an I thence east fifty (") feet, and thence south to ihe place of beginning. And should said rents and profits not sell for a sum sullicient to satisfy said writ and cos's, I will, at the sumo time anc' place, otter for sale the lee simple of said premises. ALKXAXUKIl DAIlUNO, au2 Sheriff Vanderburgh Ciy-ity. Sheriff's Sale No. 24. BY VIKTITE OF AM E.E('I'TI(N issued out of the onlce of the Clerk ot the Vanderburgh Circuit Court, in favor of Willia'n M. Afkman and rguinst Fleming Uurham, I will, on the 21th Day ok Atrocsr, A.l. 1S7, Ketween the hours of 10 o'clock a. m. and 4 o'clock I. M. ot said day. at the door of the Court House In the City of Evansville, Indiana, offer for sale, at public auction, the rents and profits for the term of seven years of the following described real estate, to wit: The undivided one-third of Lot number eigfit (S), iii lilock number one tl), in the Northern Enlargement of the city of Evansville; a so, "the undivided one-third of one-.juarter of L t number twenty-five (25), in lilock number one U). in Lilleston's Enlargement ot Cieeity of EVHtisv-ille. And slxund said rents mid (fiofits not sell for a sum Kuiliciciii to satisfy said writ and costs, I will, at the satne time and place, oiler for wile tin" fee simple of saiil premises. ALKaAMiKU HAULINO, au2 Slier.il Van erourgli County. M. HK.V'.M.VO. V. I. VIETS. V.KS. ItUIUiS. IIENNIXG, IIIB3S & CO., (Successors to Hubbs & Viets ) Forwarding & Commission M ERCII ANTS, And WIIARFHOAT PROl'KIETORK, AOENTS E.AC, and PE.V.V. RAILROADS, and General Agents Star Inion Line, aul dtf Evansville, Ind. OPEN AGAI? I OEERA EXCHANGE, and Ladies' and Gentlemen's Restaurant. CH.'viLits EXE, Proprietor.' 2. Trr rs n i a cm i" i;i:stav1xt having he-n ovtrhnnled Hrnl refitted is again thrown open for the nceommo.in"ion of v.itorK. Ail tlso delicacies or' the season served ft al! rrmrs, in the most approved style. Fiiif: Wines and Liquors served wtn-L. oiuen :. LOffW ST., lx:. Fir.- m.l Second, anv d'3in Evansville, Itid.J