Evansville Journal, Volume 18, Evansville, Vanderburgh County, 22 August 1867 — Page 4

THE ' NSW LTC D ATLV 'OTTR ' M,. THURS" 1 AUGUST 22 1867.

4

THIS LYAiUmLLMOLittAL PUBLISHED DAI1.T BT The Evansville Journal Company. e. 6 locast Street, KTansT Hie, Ind. SUBSCRIPTION TERMS. IN ADVANCE. Daily Jonrnal. ; One year, by mail Dt2 luuilbiio uimiitn w Three months, by mail. . O 3 s oo 25 By the week, payable to carrier-. Tri-Weekly Jonrn-J One year - fc&x inwnths.................. ' . Weekly Jnal One copy, one year Five copieK, one year Ten copies, one year..- - I 7 OO 4 OO I a oo 8 75 IS OO Agents for the Jonrnal. Jakes L. Thornton, Princeton, Ind.- - Cast. Levi FKRecBON, Petersburgn, Ind. Harry K. Smith, Washington, Ind. "W J. L. Hkmmeswat, Boonville, Ind. C. K. Df.Brui.er, Newburgh, Ind. ' John M. Lockwood.MU Vernon, Ind. J. M. Foster, Fort Branch, Ind. J. W. Weaver, Posey ville, Ind. . , . , B. B. CoRwra, Somerville, Ind. - ' - 7 ("apt. Whiting. Cynthlana, Ind. K. J. Rooms, New Harmony, Ind. f p , ti. A. Harper, Oweusville, Ind. Hakvey Boni, Hazleton, Ind. - .. Thos. McCutchkn, Sandersville, Ind. Urbin Marks. Black Hank Mills, Ind. They will also receive and e- -rd to ns orders for Binding and Job Pn ag. Important to Adierthers. (. The circulation of the JOURNAL in the City of" Evansville m three times as large as that of any otnr newspaper. . Our circulation in Indiana and Illinois is greater than any other newspaper published in this City. In Kentucky it is1 more than all the flther Evansville papers combined. B3F During the erection of cr New Building, the Journal Business Office, will m he located in the rear of Cloud & AMris Drug Store. Entrance through the Alley on Main Street, next to Marble Hall. NEWS ITEMS. Gold 'closed in New York yesterday at It is stated that General Sickle is likely to be the next victlnS of the Presidential guillotine. " It is feald to be extremely probable that General Howard will shortly be retired from duty as Commissioner of the Freedmen's Bureau. Bishop Joseph C. Talbot t, of the Diocese of Indiana, leaves on the 26th lust, to attend the meeting of Bishops at Lambert, England, in September. An order forbidding the exclusion- of colored people from the street-cars in Galveston, Texai, has been issued. The dispatches report the Indians becoming more and more troublesome. The Fenian Convention of the O'Mahoney Branch, in session at New York, proceeded to organize, and wasAiuite largely attended. .- , Garibaldi has again been obliged to defer the movement on Rome, and the preparations which were being made by the Party of Action throughout Italy, under orders of the General, have been suspended. It is stated that the statement relative to the feat suit at Albany ag urm the Merchants Express Company, is tiie only information yet receive 1 by ihg officers of the Company on the subject. Willie LUsey, of Joliet, sen of Samuel K. Casey, and nephew of Dr. N. R. Casey, of Mound City, Illinois, accidently shot oinl killed himself at Gardner, Ills., on Tin sday last. He had started out with a party of frie'nds on a gunning excursion, and after alighting from his buggy, was in the act of pulling his gun out from the bottom , of the vehicle, by taking hold of the ban el near the muzzle when the piece .was discharged, the contents taking -ffeet in the brain. Death ensued instantly. The deceased was twenty-six years of age. .INDIANA ITEMS. A new Democratic paper has bee'n started at Nashville," in Brown County, this State. A negro, living near. Madison, was sun struck a few days ago. Such coses are of rare occurrence. A company is being formed in New York city, for the purpose of investigating the extent of the gold mines in Boon County.' Cholera morbus is prevailing among the children at Terre Haute, to a considerable extent. v ; Two hundred and fif y men are now at rwork between Marion and Logansport, on the Union & Loganspoi t Railroad.A large additional force is soon expected. The body of RoniejVho fell overboard from the Rost Hite and was drowned, has been recovered. The sum of 8250 in gold was found on his person. , The Union Agricultural Society, composed of the counties of Rush, Hancock and Henry hold its fifteenth annual fair at Knlghtstown, commencing on the 27th Inst., a d continuing till the SOth. ' r John Alden, a citizen of Madison County, had his arm cut off on Saturday with a drag saw, at a saw mill five miles west of Anderson.'' The saw cut into and frightfully mutilated hi side before assistance reached him. He is still living, but is in a very precarious condition. . Mr. Jolin Ebner, brewer at Vincenns, had a preliminary examination at tLat place on Monday, before Commissioner Viehe. on the charge of. manufacturing Whisky without license. He was required to give bond in 11,000 to answer the charge. At a shooting match at Jkew Albany on the 19th inst.,says the Commercial, " among the sharpshooters was Bertha Auer, thirteen years old, daughter of Mr. Aper, of Louis ville, a very pretty little girl, who made some capital shots, fully as good as the average of those made by the ama teurs present. She was a general favorite.

"1 lie Vincennes Sun. of the aoth, ays

i-Worlt will be commenced on the I 4 V Railroad to-day. Twenty-seven miles from Marinsville, towards this point, are under contract, to be finished by the Slst of December next. The bridge across White River, at Martinsville,, is to be completed in forty days." . The Princeton Democrat says: "From what we can learn from all parts of the country, the coming Fair of the Gibson Coumy Agricultural Society, beginning September 31th, promises to excel any thing of the kind ever held in the county, this, we know, is saying a good deal, as it is well known that Gibson always has had better Agricultural Fairs than any other county in the Pocket." , ; ; . , KESTl'fKY ITEMS. Last Saturday morning the country residence of Mr. J. H. Lindenburger, cashier of the Merchant's Bank at Louisville, was destroyed by fixe. ', Loss 17,000. . " A grand editorial excursion to Mammoth Cave, consisting of represen atives of the press from Nashville, Memphis, Louisville aed other cities of the South, took place on the 21st lust. ' " r . A negro named Bnrch, who resided near Glasgow, was called out of his bouse a few nights ago and shot. The murderer is at large. The Kentucky Central Railroad Company have offered, the unfinished portion of the Maysville and Lexington Railroad, lying between the former city and Paris, at300,000. The proposition to be open till January 1, 18ti9. Jackson County, Ky., gave, at the late election, Barnes, Republican for Governor, 511 votes, against 19 for Helm, rebut, and 14 for Kin'kead, Conservative. The brave mountaineers have done their best to redeem the State from its slavery to Rebel politicians and ex guerrillas. James Tulbard had a couple of ribs broken by a fall from the top of a house In Louisville, last Sunday night. He had gone on the roof to sleep, and while in the embrice of morpbeus, rolled off, and was waked by suddenly hearing ' something orop. which proved to be himself. .James Long, convicted for ravishing a little girl, has been sentenced, by Judge Andrews, of the Mason Circnlt;Court, to be hnug near Maysville on the 3d of November next. The jury recommended a commutation of the punishment to thirty years imprisonment. In pronouncing sentence, the Judge warned the prisoner that the power of the Governor to pardon did nut Include the power to commute. An old gentleman by the name of Jesse Thompson, a dealer a fruit, Scc, living near Smithland, in Livingston County, had his leg broken 'on Wednesday last. His horse run away with, his wagon, and he was thrown oat, breaking his leg between the ankle and knee. A correspondent of the Louisville Journal, writing from Leoanon, under date of the 19th, says: " One of the saddest and most unfortunate difficulties that ever took piace in our county, occurred yesterday evening at 7 o'clock, between George Hughes, clerk at Lebauou Hotel, and John Graham, son of John M. Graham, one of our oldest and most estimab e citizens, in which both parties were almost instantly Killed. The termer fought with a t-inch Colt pistol, and tbe latter with a large 8-incli blade bowie kuife. Neither lived exceeding three minu'es. Graham was shot at the top of' his breast-boce where the windpipe eaters the chest, the ball ranging down and lodging near the spina. Hughes received five slabs in the back or left side just under the shoulder-blade, three of which went clear through the body, and one cut on the head and one on i he shoulder, making seven in all. The difficulty commenced in a public room at the Lebanon Hotel over the price of a drink of whisky." t A- meeting of the Republican County Executive Committee is callj ed for next Saturday afternoon, as will be seen by notice on the eighth page. . - ; Enterprisjng. The ; yesterday publishes the Courier of old hoax, which went the rounds of the press two months ago, detailing the wager of an East India1 buccaneer that Wilkes Booth was still alive,- and that long sea voyage after the fashion of the blood and thunder pirate stories. ,r-'U' :'- i It alsp reproduces the item about the arrival of iron at Toledo for the Nashville Railroad, which we published more than . a week " ago, and which was copied into the Henderson papers without credit to us, aud comes back to the Courier. The "Social EtII", in EvansTille. Our citizens have seen ' much' in the newspapers about what is termed.the "Social Evil," tut they have been accustomed 'to regard it as an excrescence of the moral " impurities of our large cities, and . have no' thought that Evansville is maintain' ing establishments and practices which are worthy of companionship with New York or Chicago debaucheries. ' We have not regarded it as our special province as a public journal to spread before our readers ihe tales of scandal and the accounts of crime and lust which are so often current on our streets, although such items would be read with avidity by a large class of newspaper readers; yet in , our reports of the Police Courts and the daily " accounts which ' necessarily appear in our City News columns, the observant Lreader will have noticed enoueh to assure him that our own city is not free from the moral blight, which appears ""sV prevalent throughout " the land. Were it not that the subject is pressing itself upon the public almost daily, in various shapes, we would not, for the credit of the city, even allude to it. But when the evil becomes so

&ront it. is rmr dutv. as wen as every go"od"citizen; to'call upon the officers of the law to suppress it, and to sustain and encourage these officers when they seek to do their duty." Evansville is no worse than many other cities around us, but bad enough to need the united attention of police officers, city officials and citizens to suppress the dens of infamy which abound, and which are leading the young of both sexes to debauchery and crime. One of our. city clergymen recently preached a sermon on "Licentiousness," ; and, gathering his facts from the police reports and the outbreaking acts which become known to the public, he drew a gloomy enough picture of city life ; and yet had he gone to the po ice offices and heard their narrative, or ' like Theodore Tilton, passed through the haunts of iniquity which exist in our City, he could have given his hearers such a revelation as would have startled them from their usuaL Sabbath ease, and shown them that there was a work for all Christians and good citizens to do. We can omit a reference to the sad effects of intemperance, or even to the gambling saloons, which no longer conceal their existence from the .eyes of the law or the public. The acts of licentiousness are those . which most pressingly demand attention. The houses of prostitution are becoming so offensive to good, citizens that tiey have in large numbers petitionei to the City Council to have these Jena abated. The subject is now beftre the Council, and there ought to be no question as to its action. Oaly yesterday we heard of a daughter of ,a respectable citizen of a neighboriig town one moving in good society and highly esteemed; who was eniced away from home and taken to cue of these establishments in our ciy. The public only hear of a few f the many instances of this kind, j The New Albanj Ledger lias a lengthy : article upm this , subject, which is so applicable to this city that we make liberal extnets from it. The Ledger, after referriig to the matter, says: - jThere are, hqwevir, evils existing more damning in their consequences than those named yils calculated to overturn the very bis of social order unless curbed or enirely suppressed. We allude to the maiy houses of illfame that exist, not in other places alone, but "in our city, in open violation of all law, hurcio and divine. It : is in these dens of pollution that the j sons and daughters if our people are ! corrupted, and it is the duty of every ' member of society p put forth their best efforts to crust them out whereever they may exist utterly regardless of the men who pitronize them, and the women who keep them open. There are those wio are diposed to defend these estaUishments upon the false assumption tiat the necessities of society demani them. The man or woman who wil favor the keeping up of such house in a civilized community has becoie so lost to all the requirements of Civilization as to deserve the conttopt of 'all decent people. It will probahy astonish many persons to learn iat in New Albany there are no Ids than thirty-five or forty dens of prostitution,' of one character or arother some of them openly kept, ohers secretly. . ,A list of these houseshas been made up by an otneer or tns city, and their sup pression is qow being discussed.. One thing is v?rjr certain: the "social evil " is a gnwing one .in our city, and it has reihed such proportions as to become ilarming in the demoralizing effects i is producing among the young. A rrtmber of tlie police force has told us tiat there were houses of evil-fame inihis city that were visited by mere lad boys of from twelve to sixteen yea of age that there were others when secret assignations took place, and j that . these latter were not unfreqtently visited by young girls, and jven married women, who passed as nspectable in community. They are lterally the pitfalls of hell evils of uch enormity as to make all parents ishudder for the moral safety of tleir children. They ought to be supposed, and if the laws now in force wil not suppress' them, let laws be pafeed that will. . I A corrIspondent of the Boston ITacfiia?isays:- " The day that I arrived in Liverpool I was saluted, while takiig a stroll through the city,, by a newstoy, who shouted out to me, ' Paper, si latest news from America, sir siicide of Andy Johnson, sir.', Ha it not been that I could not conscientiously reward dishonesty, I shorld .have liked to give the youngster something for making so good a guess at my politics." . The wife and daughter of T. W. Higginsoo "astonish the natives " at Watch Hill, Rhode Island, by their wonderful swimming, diving, and floating. They can remain in " water fathoms deep " by the half hour together.

Chinese laborers.

VI I rww. I .1 I) II .1 II 1 li IL I I .1 IJ II li 1 L a

'Th&"effort now being toade to Intro' duce Chinese laborers in various parts of the South, to take the place of the negroes, is attracting considerable at tention. The negroes vote, and vote contrary to the wishes of their former masters. This is a crime in the esti mation of the latter, and proscription and persecution is resorted to' in-the way of revenge. Experiments have been made in Louisiana, and coolie labor is already pronounced a success These laborers ' have been imported from the island of Cuba, the importer promising them wages at the rate of $14 per month. We find the follow ing sketch of the peculiarities of the coolies in the New York Evening Ga zelfe: They don't mind the sun while at work, but when walking out on Sun days use red umbrellas and fans Their color is a light copper, hair straignt ana Dlaclc, like the Indians, some shaving the head on the sides and top, leaving a cue behind. They name often, and wear a white blouse reaching to their hips, pants and h6p shoes in dry weather, and' when wet go barefoot. When working in the ditches or mud, they roll their pants above the knees. - Their beds are made of mattine. and the rtillows blocks of wood, with blouses folded and laid on each. They use musquito nets on tneir beddme, keeping the wnoie neat ana in gooa oraer. These coolies are abstemious neoLple simply half a pound of pork with one oi rice constituting tneir rations FPL!. .11. i , xnis allowance wouia not suit our darkies. They abhor the . luxury of the negTO, corn-bread, and will al most starve before they touch it They are fond of notatoes and vege tables, and will even cook weeds for greens, and really seem to be vege tariane. An oppossum; stuffed with raisins and roasted, also suits the taste ot these strange celestials. They are neat cooks, good earden ers, and ingenious, and whatever they ao is aone well, but not quickly. Those on the plantation speak Spanlsn, ana a ureoie manages tnem, acting as interpreter. They are alwavs quiet, working steadily the whole day long, and 'peaceable and satisfied, without murmermg, do whatever is required, working as freely in knee deep ditch mud as in the field. , . They cut up every weed with great care, (dinerent from any cardeners.) not permitting a blade to escape their notice; and with this caution, of course, they do not go ahead as fast as bambo, who is much pore careless in his task. Although it became Neces sary to work rapidly on account of the grass iDjunne the crOn. the coolies could not be induced to slight their work, lhey worked among the su gar cane with their fiDgers, pulling out all the g' ass and heaping the hills handsomely with their hoes hie iew iork Citizen may very properly be called a versatile paper. In the same number we find one arti cle gravely predicting that General Grant will be the next President and Senator 3Iorgan, of New York, the next Vice President; and another putting Stanton forward' as Mr. Johnson's successor. - We copy the following' suggestions, , i . . a as the best method or preserving complexions, from an exchange: If your face is tanned by your visit to the country, get a lresh lemon and press the juice out of it, with which mix the same quantity of neat gin, and apply a little with a sponge after going out in the'sun, and use a little oatmeal to dust the face with on going to bed at night. If you are not brown already, and wish to prevent it, you will find that a piece of fresh lemon rubbed over your face, and allowed to dry cfli before going out, will preserve your face perfectly white and clear. FoRTt" of the lately appointed Postmasters in South Carolina are ladies thirty-two of them single. There's a chance for the males. Boston is boasting about Its new saloon underhe new Masonic Temple, which has been furnished at a cost ot forty thousand dollars. Virginia, the present Empress of Morocco, was originally a poor Swiss girl, who went with her parents in 1834 to , Algeria taken prisoner very beautiful life spared Emperor s 1 son ' love and so: on, you know.' . ' " .. , N UW IS THE Tint TO LEAVE YOUR ORDERS for GREEN RIVER COAL. I am now prepared to 'deliver to any part of the city the best Green River Coal, Just mined and cleau from slack, at the lowest market price. Office o. 6 Kouth Water Street, over Hayhurst & Whittaker's. au21d2m- : A. LITER. Charles Stark. Louts Meszer. STARK ft JIEHZER, Dealers in SECOND-HAND CLOTHING, No. 5 South Second Street, Bet. Main and Locust, . , Evansville, Ind. Cleaning and Scouring done to order. X.B. Liberal prices paid . for Secondhand Clothing. fauSd3m STRAYED, CJTRAYED OK MOLES HORSE On the night of the yih inst., a ilghtby horse, six years old last spring, sixteen hands hl-h, with star in forehead, one white hind foot, and thin mane and tail. A liberal reward will be paid lor his return or for information that will lead to his recovery. M. J. BRAY. . Evansville, Ind., Aug. 19, 1867. . au20 dtf ' ' . . . '

J. is P. COATS BEST SIX. CORD CABLED TIIREAI. JOHN & HUGH AUCHINCLOSS, I . Sole Agents In New York, au22 dim Xo. IOS Dirb htret. . OPERA -DRUG STORE. STEWART & BUTLER, ' - (Successors to W. T. Young 4 Co.,) PRESCRIPTION DRUGGISTS, 7, Jfo. 18 First Street, (Chandler' Block,) Evansvillk, Ind. ' A new and complete stock of Drugs and Medicines. ClienuCals, Perfumery, loittt and rancy A rttcles. arfrescriptl n carefully pre pi red at au nours. , - - lauzi aim HI IHt HOOKER A MISS HOUGH will open their SELECT SCHOOL on the First Monday in Seftembee. School-rooms in the basement of the Cumberland Church. f an 22 d3w FECIAL NOTICES. The dearest thine you ever knew V within a human door" was Poland's White Pine Compound. Read the adver tisement, and if you are diseased try it. s Ladles, If yon. are afflicted with lassitude; if, on rising in ttie morning, yon feel un refreshed, with a bad taste in the mouth; a disgust for food: a constant desire to rest It ix time something should be done to slop the growing evil. We know of no preparation more highly adapted to all a mic tions or this description than . HOSTETTER'S STOMACH BITTERS. For mothers nursing this ereat tonic should always be taken, especially where the mother's nourishment is Inadequate j 10 ine aemawu 01 lue ctiua, consequently her strength must yield, and here it is where a good tonic. uch as HOSTET TER'S STOMACH BITTER1-, is needed to impart temporary STRENGTH AND VIGOR syti by all means try this remed and, before so doing, ask your physician, who. if lit. is ac quainted wnn ;is virtues, wm recommend 11s use in ail cases, as a MEDICAL AGENT it has no equal, while its pleasing flavor and healthful effects have made It a teueral favorite. It is free from all properties calculated to impair the ystem, aud .its operations are at once mua, sooiuinp, suu efficient. All who have used the Bitters ATTEST ITS VIRTUES and commend it to use. Colgate Ac Co.'s German Erasire Soap rs HAKtrAtiDREn ekom pike Mm materials, and may be considered the Jtajsidakd of ExcIXEce. For sale by UCgrocers. " may241y -The AMERICAN HOUSE. Hanover Street, Boston, Is the largest and best ar ranged Hotel in ;New England, ihe sleep.ng rooms a re spacious and well ventil .ted; '.he suites of rooms are well arranged, and completely furninhed for families aud large .raveling parties: and the house will conJnue to b kept as a first-claw hotel in every respect, LEWIS KICK, Jun28d3m . Proprietor. K9 DISEASE4 OF THE SCALP pro duce Olt AY HAIR AND BALDNESS. The use of Hall's Vegetable Sicilian Hair Kexkwer will restore it to its natural color and proour treatise on the Hair sent free bv R. F. HALL & CO.. Nashua'. N. H.. au!4 . . Proprietors. Moth and Freckles. The only reliable remedy for those Orown discoloration on the face called Moth . Patches and Freckles Is Penny's Moth amd Fbeckle Lotion. Prensred only by Dr. B. C. Perry, Dermatologist, iit Bond Street, New York. Sold by all druzists in EvaosyUle and, elsewhere. Price U per bottle. ' - . fv2 d;, . T Eatchelor'8 Hair Dye. This splendid Hair Dve in the best in th orld. The oaly true aud perfect Dve. Dtarmless. ReluiWe. Instantaneous.1 S'o lisappointment. No ridiculous tints. Vaturai Black or Brown. Remedies the ill ffectsol Had Jties. Invigorates the hair. eavmg it son and beautiful. Th Penn ine is signed Wdtiam A. Batchelor. Aliothrs are mere imitations, and shonM t,a voided. Sold by all Druggists and Fer

timers. Factory SI Barclay Street. New UTOVES; aXi of the Jatest nd most aprork. .. proved patterns, t i J- . k -(T BEWARE F A t'nrSTERri-IT .. . ,...J. . t,.h

BEWARE OF A tOIISTEHPriT. dec. 14 ly. Blessed is the man who invwiiwi says oancuo rasza. StUl more oiessea is ine man who invented the means oi remedying tne neelec.t and mrn. fortune that changed my locks erav before my iimf, or reapeu ine narvest of my a the harvest of my hair oeiore the season of m v dwav. To Ha r. reris vegetaoie iiair iiesu rati ve " must oe ascrioea merits possessed bv few or none of the usual remedies for hahlno na premature gray nam The testunolifuii of its emcacy are numerous and rreproacnaoie. jy6 w LIQUORS. (Sueces&or to Sonntag A Gamble), ; WHOLESALE DEALER IN . . t Foreign and Domestic i Liguort, Cigars and Tobacco, - - No. O South First Sl, : EVAXSVILLE, IXDIANi, found on hand an assorted stock ot imported Brandies, Foreign and Doiutil Wines, and pure old copper WbisKys, Scotch and English Ales. Especial attention will be given to the supplying of families for domestic use warranted pure and genuine. Ajcent for Walker fc Leonard's celebrated Tonic Bitters. The trade applied on liberal terms. may 27 uiy

ESTATE AGENCY.

The Place for Bargains REAL ESTATE U i at . t i .' ' t McNEELY & SCHUBERT'S Real Estate and Insurance Agency, No. I IIEDIIEKICII'S BLOCK, (Corner Room, Second Floor,) Opposite the Couri-Houte, , ; EVASSVIIXE, IND. ' t ' " : OVER 100 HOUSES and LO'JH in va rious parts of the city for mile, including ' some gooa BUKiiMfc; PROFKRTV, " EXCELLENT OARDKNINO LAND, i convenient to the city; also land suitable for Brick-making. fAUMINU UA.U, improved and un m. Droved. In this and other States, for sale or- : exchange for city property. Alo, TimberCoal, and Saline Landn. " iTAD eligible JUtfc.M KTASD.well situated for Country Trade and buy lair - produce, havlnx plenty of irround. aud a . storehouse, blacksmith shop, and dwell ing. or sale cneap. Several BUSINESS HOUSES TO LET t als a comfortable Lodging. Koom, near the centre of butanes.

A number of bargains now on our books. '

and several applications on Hie to pur- .. chase desirable property. Persons havine such for sale may find customers by apply ing at this Agency, w e nave a number or applications for renting dwelling, houses. persons navinw real estate lor saie. ex2hanee. or rent are requested to enter the details on our books for reference. No charge unless property Is disposed ofTerms reasonable. IXSIR4ME Of all kinds effected in good companies. Special attention given to LIFE IN8URmt NOTARIAL BUSINESS transacted at this ofiice. uU New Real Estate Agency. J. P. Elliott Jk Hon AVE OPK.VF.H A REAL ESTATE Agency for the sale of and renting of lauds, houses. Ac. Ac. Persons having houses or land to rent or sell, or persons wishing to purchase or rent, will do well by culling on them at their office on . their office, on Third Street, near Locust, In ISlllott'M junell tf Block. STOVE WORKS. souTECEnisr STOVE WORKS. ANTON HELBLING& CO., (Successor to Brinkmeyer & Co.,) MANUFACTURER OF COOKING & HEATING STOYES, For Wood and Coal ; Skillets arid Lids; Oveas and Lids ODD LIDS; SUGAR KETTLES; DOG IRONS; JAMB Of HATES; AIR AND CELLAR GRATES; HAM BOILERS.; MUFFIN MOULDH; WAFFLE 1RON8 1 Copper, Tin, and Sheet-Iron War. " Ac, Ac. ' Dealers in Tinplate, Sheet-Iron, Copper, tc.,L Aliio. Sole Agent for O'Neil's Patent Broad-Gauge, Indestructible Coppe" Bote toixis, lor Wash and Co lite Boilers, 41. Sales-room, No. 93 MAIN STREET, oppo-biieiuecouri-.iiou.He. Foundry, near the mouth of Pigeon Creek. 'Orders solicited aud promptly filled Jan21dtf Excelsior Store Works. BLEMKER, TIIXMAX & Co. (Successors to H. E. Blemker), 1 AISVFACTrKF.ns of the fine and . EXCELSIOILSTGVE tile most darablenow "made "and", the famous CHARTER STOVE' ' - - " and the good aud cheap , Armada, Stonewall, Kentucky, , TENNESSEE, and PALMETTO STOVES, and a treat variety of HE A TING Also. Lieht and Smooth Country HollowWare. Hkillets and Lids. Ovens and Lids, Dog-Irons, Dinner Pots, Tea-Kettle and , particular attention paid to uie maauiav ture of House- Work ' CAST-IROX FBOXTS, CRATES, tc, &c. Also - . ' . . ... a . ' Tinware ; . .' ' .:,',; I .; : J i. ' . and Dealers in Tinners' Stock. ,,Z t ! If desired. Cooking Stoves warranted for , twelve months. Orders solicited before purcb.lng elte- , where Fonndery, corner fii.ith Street and Canal. ' , Store and Sample Room at No. 14 Second Street. H. E. B'emker's old stand. BLEMKER, TILLMAN A CO. may29 1 ' BANKING. First IVatioiml XSanU OF EVANSVILLE, IND. U. S. Depository. , . ':, Organized une," 1B63. CAPITAL - 8500. OOL John S. Hopkins, President; James H.Ct-iXEB, Cashier. Directors. G. Magliee. John In trio l. Chsrles Viele. M. J. Bray. Wm. Krnwn i S. Hopkins, Robert Barnes, F. W. Sawyet C. Preston. Doina a general Banking. Exciinmro m4 Collection Business. Revenue Sumps for a le. nova) Is