Evansville Journal, Volume 18, Evansville, Vanderburgh County, 13 September 1867 — Page 4
THE 'V ASVH LEJ3AILV MITR 1 : PRTD ' , SEP rftMBE ! 13 m.
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THE JiVA V VUXt nHft.AL PUL,JtHKl DAILY BY The Evans viEe Journal Company. Mo. 8 locntt Strce t, KvansTlUe, Ind. SUBSCRIPT OJ?
IS ALVi.NCE. in tit Dally Journal. One year, by ma 1 i Six mouths, by mail. Three months, by mail By the week, payable to carrier a so S M SJI Trl-W-K Ijr Ion run I. Oae year Btx mantha..Weekly Journal. One copy, oae year .- five copies, one year - Ten copies, one year ........ too 8 7S 19 oo Agents Tor tbe Journal. Jakes L. Tiiorntou, Princeton, Ind. Capt. Levi Ebkgusow, Petersburgh. Ind. HiKKi It. Hmith, Washington, Iud. W. J. L. Hkmmbnway, Boonvllle, Ind. C. R. UkBbi'UK, Newburgh, Ind. John M. LocKwoon.Mt. Vernon, Ind. -J. M. Footer, Fort Branch, Ind. J. W. Wkavrk. Poeeyville. Ind. B. B. Cobwin, Somerrille, Ind. Capt. Whitino. Cynthiana, Ind K. J. IUkjebs. .New Harmony, Indi O. A. Ha Kent. Owensville, Ind. -Harvey Bond, Hazier on. Ind. Tiios. McCotchkk. .Sandersville. Ind. Vkbin M akks. Black Hawk Mills, Ind. They will also receive and forward to us rs lor Binding and jod iTintinn. Important to Advertisers. The circulation of the .JOURNAL in ike City of Evansvillc it three, times as large as that of any other newspaper. Our circulation in Jndiatia and Illinois is greater than any ether ;ietcspaper puttishe'd in this City. In Kentucky ft is more than all the Other Evanslille papers combined. The Journal Abroad. Our citizens who are absent from the city and want to see the Daily Journal, will find it regularly on file in Cincinnati at the Mercantile Library; in 1'hicago at the Board of Trade Rooms; m Bt. Louis at the Mercantile Library; in Indianapolis at the Bates House, and at St. Nicholas Hotel, New York. NEWS ITEMS. Gold closed in New York on yesterday at HV.t. Chamberlain's majority in Maine will be aboiuv 12,000. A New York Tribune special says (bat Andy will keep quiet till after the Fall elections. Till then no changes will take place in the Cabinet. General Hancock was to hare le.'t Leavenwoi tn for Washington on the 13th. General Sheridan will also go to Washington In a day or two. He has assumed command of General Hancock's department. ."some leiiow proiessrs 10 nave n;ui a t-ou- ' versation with Cxeneral Grant, m which he Is reported to have said that he hated poli- j tics, and did not deJr ? to be President. Several parties have been arrested in Brooklyn, New York, charged with complicity in the Internal Revenue frauds in that city. J. C. Allen, keeper of a warehouse, was1 art est ed and held to bsil in 20.ogft, o charge of complicity in the Illegal removal of a,000 gallons of whisky. The yellow fever is reported to bo prevailing to an alarming extent In Pen.sacola.. The work on ibe navy yard, H is feared, will have to be sus-irded. The Mayor 01 Hie city has appealed to neighboring ettlos lor aid. IS1I ANA ITEMS. The Street Railway Company at Indianapolis ha vo issued dally passes for the con-
venjeace of ministers attending confer-,,, theTTa'te, thus far reported, has fallen" ence in that city. QA about tllQUSand or ear. onettwZ&M m U, tlJMFrXMlfl Ib? no General Government, have been filled by ' means proportionately larger than it the appointment of John Hogan, of Mis-j was last year. It establishes, the fact sour Mn atn fcaldy H MtKij tfta djiferrtce The commission meets on the lth in-t. ; , , , . . Republican party in, .the,, elecForthe month ot August the passenger ,,,, re -eiptsof the Heiier, ti ine i r in rv weawjn. There were no Lon837,237 upon which a tnx of 1830 93 wagi-e.ssHfin to be elected; n'o Napaid. ,JlY,'fT2 H : ' IL: 'Z3 j tional campaign to give point to The Morgan Raid Commission will in- ' tbe canvass; n0 senatorial SUCCes-
cZTiZu rrom3:ionto be; settled. Relying upon .the
son, i.ipicy, uecatur ana jiicksou . ounties, from October loth to 17tb, inclusive. The organist at St. John's Lutheran Church at Fort W ivr.e h.'is brought suit against the Trustees of the Church for a claim due him for services as organist. The Auditor of State is busily at work preparing the annu il list of delinquents to the Sinking Fund, which is considerably larger than usual this year, several hundred names being already on the list. It will be placed in tbe hands of the printer soon, for publication. The saje 0 deliafracnr, property comes off on tbe 10th of December next. By tne late law all loans most be paid within three years in three annual instaljue ate,. , commencing with next year. A man named Hogeland, while driving home from MooresviH a few days ago, was thrown from his wagon and ihstnntly killed, his skull being broken by the fall. Another man, John McConnaha, was thrown out and severely Injured. They bad been drinking, and, as drunken men often do, weredriviug home too fast
The Base Ball Convention, which has:L. -,.., -p. ... just-rioseti ! Setm at f . lKtle lor Democratic boasting.
elected the following officers: President
Colonel James Tunis, of Lafayette: Vice,Lmoeu tide of last year, which delueed
President K km.. , iu, ui run way Treasurer M. It. Eddy, of I-.idianaelis; Corresponding Secretary Charles. Wentz, Evansville. A large number- Of clffbs were represented, and the next meeting is to be held at Indianapolis On the second Tuesday of September, 1S6&. KESTKHY in nv The mate Fair, to be 4ield Ht Louisville, beginong on tbeWh one Of the best exhibitions of the kind . ever iifi'.1, in, the Stete.
.J, !.- ft::-it-r, ihe Morganflfld Appea; i- sioifii f as a candidate for Speaker of ihe House of Representatives. The Lexington Staiewian say that the I ii .. s ;i:ea of "kenfucRywflr again vote foi -colonel BarnjeSjforjtoijepBqr, M ir T j Horse thieves are still operating in va ! ri ni parts of theSttte of Kentncky. They i have been making a, )ayin.g,busness of it, anl bat tew i4pWkreO. W90m
The Louisville Courier, after publishing J 1 various communications ieiative iojese D. Bright in connection-with the-rxk?r (ship oi the House of Representatives,; bow j announces, lipbn high authority, that Jesse does not seek- the honor. Jesse ts modest. The inauguration as Governor of Kentucky, of .loin: W. Stephenson, Lieutenant-Governor elect, took place at Frankfort, on llflQadajr, the 12th. An election for Governor has been ordered, to take place in Ocber next. The distatffce from Paducahtp Klizuiirthtownby the route which therrew railroad wlil lake, iji-M miles, and fronjj that Jjpint to LMBlsvlUi i: isgtniles, making tbJt entire dJstaneVTrom'Tducah te LouisVille, by ml i, 182 miles. SS A "ferrlble trajrer- was efracted near Newoastle.-lteiiry County, las, Thurjjay. Tbe victlrra0f th jjjpold blooded affair-was achFMof M. Wirt, tiiaves, aged 3 jars. While Mrs. Uraveamas attending to some domestic duties, tWwervwnt gfrl toofcthe child from tTTe hoarse to a tohaceo jgtch intnv learsr thlabie, and about one hundred and tl ly yaids fromtbe htftlse, nerek u anpearsti jiroiu . from he&wown "yon fessioti, sbemade tt.e child -lay Sown on the tffoinitk - and aftek crcj;in its hands onJlie hr1fi-.t, ami making iibid Its pa and ma guod-bye, tbe fleud selSd a ston&und cauhed its head almM to a jtJ'y. Hhe then sealed it by the ankle "and drag ged it over te stubbl- to some thick un growth, whtAe It was concealed fr.m hu man vie bold doing tp! During the war, when Gold was ra pid ly jnouja dnifj&e .scale. we all understood that it meant a rebel victory. Gold again is hasten ing upward toward 150, and as a con sequence currency Las less purchasing power, and prices advance. The cause is similar to that of war times. All the financiers agree that it results from Mr. Johnson's recent revolutionary and illegal acts the removal of Shkridan, Stanton and Sickles, and the late Amnesty Proclamation, together with the concerted attack which appears to be preparing by the Democracy on the public credit. Te President's insanity and the platform o. " sugar-coated repudiation'' of tbe Democracy are costing the country ! dearly in this sudden unsettling o i prices. ; Head the extract we publish on the second page from the speech of KiciiARD Smith. Eso . candidate for . , . .. . ... C "Srcss ,n .the Cincinnati District, on trie nnanctal question .Read the new advertisements. The Fall trade is camniencing with considerable earnestness, and to know who of our merchants are supplied with new stocks and fully prepared for business, looktpthe oiunius of the j city papers. The Maine Election. The returns by telegraph, this tr.cfning, establish the result of ihe election on Monday, with suffi- ' cient certainty. Tt appears that while i tite Republican vote in three-filths of sorni position oi wie oiaie in Union phalanx. Republican voters, as is too often their custom in locul elections, have stayed away from the polls. The Democratic vote has been Somewhat increased by the difficulties in the Republican party in question of State policy And ! purely ' local matters. The prohibitionists stitl adhere to the attempt to accomplish the impossible, and have pushed the issue so far as to cause a reaction in the local elections, which for tbe time swells the Democratic vote. There can be no question, however, that Maine stands as true as the North Star,unwaveriugly on the side of freedom. Ten or twelve thousand majority on the general ticket, with tr.ore than three-fourths of both branches of the Leirislature. leaves 1L ivilllVh lQal lne unprecedented fLotd tide of tfie count wj-,; is not reached but the res,:.: is u : so fax from. t the ratio in the National contest or 1364, when the, IfclfrHMlh najorrtiM was 16,283 Iu t'aj.ucak Xuiooal uampnign. when local questions will be. forgotten in the steatef duty to the country, the maj0-m of this year wilt be easilyj J. ; J , dou
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The New'Torc Iferald, which a week ago was the most bitter of the President's opponents, and was very abusive of Congress for noc causing his impeachment at once, has suddenly, and with its usual inconsistency, become Mr. Johnson's most decided and prominent champion. In its isla.tioftd6&Ti feaJ& with the above caption. It says that the radical Congressional party are bent upon the ruin of the country,
and will as completely as possible take
ail power irom the Jf resident altar or our interests. Itn jndustnand make him a complete cy- ; ous freed man desires to buy your land,
pher. It would" have him an ticipate his impeachment, and dethronement, by resigning at owe. It says it is the only thing which will restore the country to peace and prosperity. It would have him resign and dawisad,; convention pi all the States to take measures, agaiatt the political ruin which Congress is hurling against the Republic. It says he should tell the people that he is powerless to resist the attempts of Congress to assume dictatorial power and inaugurate revolution; and that he should show thernHrh"eterrible political picture as it exists. If the people do not accept him as the Savior of his country and their triumphant leader in this bold coup d'eta', " then is the country already dead, and naught but a long night of anarachy and revolution can, awaken it from its lethargt!" tVe entnusfastically endorse the programme of the Herald. We earnestly hope that Mr. Johnson will "see it in that light." and resign at once. We would be glad to see him try the temper of the people. And if the people do not accept him as a "leader'' there will be at least one good result to the country it will be rid of his Accidency. And besides it would be cutting the Gordian knot of impeachment so completely. Andy should follow the '-raid's advice. How Dickens Keads. It appears settled that Charles Dickens, the great English novelist, is comitigUa America for the purpose of giving a series of his popular readings in the large cities. It also appears to be conceded that he is to be extended a cordial, if not an enthusiastic, reception, despite his carricatures and ridicule of American manners after his visit several years ago, and which at the time caused a bitter feeling against him. Time and the reading of his charming novels have softened our indignation; and it is really suggested that his comic delineations of our characteristics were " founded on facts." At any rate, we have passed through too much of late years to remember the criticisms of foreign travelers before the war. His readings, which have been attended with so much success in Great Britain, will djOjubtlees secure for his manager erowded houses. They are thus de scribed-m the Philadelphia LeSg-'r: Ho takes one of his. works, " David, n ci.i e x ? ' ' t'- . . voppciuciu, iui example, auu m auuu ,au. uuui auu uan itiLj UV. whole m9 Of the bdokr,' occa'sionatly selecting a, favorite jass.age.i whlc.h- be, rep8Sts in full, making all the char-1 acters act and tajk precise y as? be fancied them ui ui me time 01 meir creJ iltL 1IU l Ml.-' atiqn in his own mind. , All thi- h orr Wlfh the finest dramatic vffeev as Mr, Dickens,, among, his otfyer iatellectuaf qualities,' : has those of a finished actor of tbe highest .grade. Hev-rmi too, the great adv'antaVe of knowjngall abopt the, charaoters le pesoliktris1, .rf readings. To use l. one of i : exprpssions, he. r man ners, it is on account or these I' elements that the " Di'ckefis read ings " are said to excel all other entertainments of the same general character. Practical Reconstruction of the boain. Some of the Southern people are awakening to a realization of the fact that there is a reconstruction of their .country fully as important as the political reorganization, which so many of the prominent rebels are persistently opposing the development of the agricultural and commercial resources of tbe States. And in this work every man, disfranchised or enfranchised, can do his part. A Louisiana planter, writing to the New Orleans Picayune, throws out some thoughts on the subject of agriculture which Southern people will do well to heed. He tells them that greater diversity of crops and the working of smaller plantations will , . . I : juone rtiSLore p: usperiij w sue;ruouu- j trv. lhey must convert. their planta- I rn . a mouinto small farms an ? rent them, f Nowher. in the world do we find-j planting on a large scale resulting in ! 4,y Enable profit to the phrnter ! .br my length of time. Neither i. Northern nor Western farmers, nor ! IHAHttU J .I.Kif "fOb
wealthy Bqlh Iryd-ownen1. work large numbers of hands. The En-
glish prefer the tenant system, because fhe plan of large gangs of laborers does not pay. He further sensibly remarks : " The tide! of emizr&tiontwiiich nbw flows Westward, will turn toward the South, and, before a creat while, the country will be thickly settled by an industrious and thriving race of farmers. But what is to become of the freed men. vou ask? They must take tbeir chances with the rest. We must sacriSee our nreiudices in some dej gree iu regar people, on the and has the. Weans, his money is as good as any body else's. We have them among ns, and our interest, if uothing else prompts us to benefit their condition. By renting them lands instead of hiring them to work fur us, they will become happier and better, and we richer: while, it we 1 persist in our Dresent system, the hos : tile spirit between the races will contiuue to increase." The New Orleans Times is enforc ing the same idea. In a recent issue it remarks: " The wisdom of experi ence is fast teaching the absolute necessity of a diversity of crops as the only means of attaining thorough independence. Strict economy in do mestic expenditures, with less of the besetting ambition to work large places with numerous hands, will' lead to that happiness and prosperity so long strangers in the homes of our Southern people." When the Southern people have mastered these ideas small farms, few hands, and homes for the freedmen they will have entered upon the highway to prosperity, socially, pecuniarily and politically. The California Election. Some of the more irresponsible of the Democratic papers are boasting lustily over the result of the California election as a great triumph. It is well known to all who have given any attention to the political condition of that State that the Democratic success was attributable, not to its own strength, but to the dissentions within the Republican party. The Journal of Commerce, of New York, one of the most decided and consistent Democratic papers in the country says of it: We see in it not the triumph of a party, but a protest against the corruption and the tyranny of party. The men whose votes determined it had heretofore supported the Radical ticket. In cutting away from their old alliances, they do not necessarily join a new organization. They may not be willing evea to call themselves " Conservatives." LOUISA OF PRUSSIA AND HER TIME An historical Novel. By L. Mulilbach. New York : D. Arw.ETo.N- A Co. FREDERICK THE GREAT AND HIS COURT. An historical Novel. Translated from the German by Mrs. cnapman Coleman and her daughter. New York: D. An I.: I OS Jk Co. The latter of these books appeared sometime since; the first recently made its appearanc. They are prt of a scries of hovels which are attrading more attention thau any others that have appeared for pev- j . .......... i eral years .and which will take their MnoW alonir with 1 P'dCe alu w,ltl J y alxeh . cott as '"'acknowledged clasrc those of Sir part of the literature of ,the world. These national works f'1 . clotbed with the inub itt nt, . e , . , , . : . . . 11 j , ,1 mance. whit?h have followed each ! i.dt . . , . 4 u'.n .1 iu u.'-11 irtuiu lueecesiuu, iie. .. , . ' ceruiuiy mot attractive and lasciua-t-Kjj- -41 m Urn. i i . y"i i .trip 1 r TT r. thn riiffaronf f ' courts with historical fidelity. They gjveus just that idea of the manners
10 UJAU,,C,S I .. jo tuir extensive stock oj rail (. S3 t$$if$ffltf$K hA Is-tnl seI3d3m the ph Mf ViWale td "WJ aWI te rounds of the Democratic press V-TF-which few would ever derive from the the North without comment, and C ' JlK which
.u --U8 --"- 01 , iuuK,.,,. iixv. - xneionowing SKetcn 01 tne author and her works will be recognized as not overdrawn, by all who read these char$$fstrels :.iri"I M ; Scottish history offered no fresher and more romantic material to the mag. ical working hand orSir Walter 1 Nntt tlisn chp finc in Am -ithe Gefawtn conKe. Ir ndiat 0f in- ! terest, and of historical fidelity her t books are not inferior to the Waved v series. Hut they are altogether 7& ferent from those, as from all other! historical novels ever written in the one reTOJckablftsespeetthaa, Iher. are the work of a woman. There is : son.Athiriir nhasfninD- , tv. ;,i. - woman, who adds to the zeal of the , historian the imagination of the nnui I
Rumaging among the archives and Die or the fnllowiog: traditions of courts, she is sore to ' Hate has always been th? govern -find a great quantity of things which ' ing potion of the copperheads And itno man would even think of lookintr I ia not stranee, therefore, that they
for just the thinas to trlve the last touches ot forical picture. uuuiiuiucas tvt iiil 1 1 i - - Ull l e learn from her rif m and h the: Frederick th T?rTat trStfnh Second., Voltaire, R u-au, Raron A.renck, 'fie lmprws Catharine. Ma, ntl Jte&a' talked in their rftf o?)rrjut haw they powdejed tbir,hair, flirted, and .Q'j A U liOAM .o
took tea. Nothing i to trivial as to escape Miss Muhlbach's notice, if in any way it cau add to the background of reality, airaioat which her heroes and heroines perpetually move. No writer not even Thackeray in his " Virginians " and " Henry Esmond " has more entirely identified hint pelf with the spirit of a past age. This is the only way that History can be mritUx? riW Mitef . WWt .koa not only about the great personages and events of the time, but the customs and manners, the dresses, the cuisine, the little tbibjst ae wel as the great vices, in' fact the who.e so cial by-play of a people. When one has finished. " Frederick the Great and his Court, ' or "Joseph the Second and his Court, " for instance, he finds that he has not only made a mjsLAgreeabiejonnejf. as if through fairy land but has unconsciously stored up a mass of important historical facts which every nne
ought to kaow, bur which most people would never learn if they were obliged to take them in a regular course of historical lectures, like medicine. Miss Muhlbach's .perceptions of proportion and relative distance, colors, and shades, are artistic. Her characters are not incongruous nor huddled together. Every person moves clear and unobstructed through his or her part. Her talents are va ried, and equjil to all occasions. She describes battles, balls, flirtations, love-making, law proceedings, diplomatic jugglery, with the same facility. Her conversations are exoejlent. For , the crazy old Frederick William, the I romantic Great t redenck,and those cynical philantiifbpisfs Rousseau and oltaire, she finds just the words that they might she exacted to speak. As conversations make up at least twothirds of the average novel, this art of infusing1 naturalness and lbgfcal sequence into dialogue is, indispensable for the production of a readable romance. Miss Muhlbach's style is perfect. Free fro"m mannerisms and marked individuality, it is scarcely noticed as style. This is because it is so good. The style of some writers is like colored glasses, which give an unnatural tint to everything hpon which they are turned, tier style is achromatic, showing things in their true colors, and is clear and translucent as an arctic atmosphere. The series, as far as published by the Appletons, make seven or eight volumes. The reading ot one will ensure the completion of the whole list. They can be ordered direct of the publishers, or can be found at the Book and News Stores., Price, iu paper, $1 50; bound iu muslin, 2 00, The "Veteran Observer" of the New York Times thinks the Democrats of Ohio wiM be beaten by si;ty thousand majority. He says they have put forward the following issues, to which they take the negative : "Whether the war was right?" "Whether the negro is a man?" and "Whether we ought to pay our honest debts?" Teltoir FeVer in Memphis. Considerable excitement is reported in Memphis in consequence of ihe arrival of the towboat Mohawk, from New Orleans, with eight cases of yellow fever on board. The captain land ed at the -wharf boat, which create ! 1 great commotion in the city. The i citizens were iirtteh enraeed at the eontempttble act. The Mayor furnished' Oie)atiwll nfliMie Ihi V doctor, a ui ordered her to leave the rWharf, and would Mot allow any! ireiirui mi asuore. .-v nassensrer mat 1 . 1 4 . ,j r J. r- 1, . , . r oau iorceu ni3 way on ooara at oew , x ,
m urnsBU ins way ou uoaru at ass t'IOW,bA.IN ST R E ET. he officers of the boat were all sick
vrieans , wl except the captain. 1 A rigid quaran- ! tiae has been established by the city authorities at President's Island. u is to be presumed ineataith their ; approval, it is a de cate gem of TUmnr-ratir. Mak.i..Hls. Graul has give voice, and atth sounds! A happy cross between the bark of a fox and the bray of an ass. Glass beads of demagofism set in the , ? ? lead of stupidity? We had a iatnt hop-e in l18 ia man eitner tnac ne was a lion who. ot his own will, would b,na t0 order Uie turbulent beasts of roTest, or a docile ass who would' SUDmit t0 being dressed by others in the skin of a lion, that wise men mlh Bee, iAW fa-M?. W But,hear h'm- e.w no,t a lon the hole wo,r d 19 efJD,vlnced he 18 iSSSjL JUrT j-wauts more Kadical to4u4r. - - The Chicago Journal is accounta should make Haiabr Governor of Californi Mr. t aire, who has been elected Governor of Vermont, is an able man and a stern loyalist. ' He will doubtless be a bright Page in history. When Andrew Johnson was a tailor he gave fits, but when Congress re-a-enable ia November he will probably get " fits 4: MM
SEW APVEftTlSEgEm New York Clothing Hoii-e.
V. IRONS & ()., Xo. 40 Main SI reef. c -v i. n r "Ev-aNrvK, Iwd., m B m liDY-MADE CLOTHING ' - s 5 9 isjst . a id a Y a ' - ' FI'R XJSfXG G O f) f)S. "SI MSt J - Have always iu stock a large pd extensive assortment of Ready-Made .Garments for Men's and Boys' Wear, mfflhifactured undeVourown supers-Mlon aufl airection, In accordance with the prevailing styles, by competent and experienced workmen. Allaf our goods are mamed In plain figures. Bold at oiie price, WITMOUJ DKVIATJON. sell V. P. IKOVS A 4 0 EXTE8IV& WD IMPORTANT HALE ! - - T 0 Government Clothing, Blankets Ac,, AT AUCTION. To b sold by th- c ise. without reserve, -a FOR- CASH, " q'q By THOMAS JOHNSTON fc CO.. In Salesrooms No. 114 West TIMrd Street, Between Vine and Rac, CisciNxJPfx, Ohio. Wetlueattny. Nept. lth, commencing at o'clock, will he MOLD BY CATALOG UK QBOO Ciihom unci Hales, Comprising 12,.W Overcoais, - ' .14 01 a spleudld variety 01 Hiacic aim jsieei Mixed. All-Wool Doeskin, Black Ribbed and Plain Union Beaver do, oxford, Cadet, Black and Drah Mineral t- prtug Satinet do. wy-Jl jfiG -3,' 00 sky-Bliit Regulation Cavalry Overcoats; M 10.000 Ku per ivln dBloues; 10,000 Super Un lined Blouses; 'i.Hn Cavalry Hint Artillery Jacket; 3,000 Sky-Blue I'ants; 1,000 Infantry Overcoat'-; 2.000 Ulack Hi own sealskin Overcoats; 10.000 Heavy Gray Blankets; a 1th a variety ot other Government Goo-Is, such as Uniform Frock COfds. shirts and Drawers, Ac, all ol which will be specified iu eatalOgues, which will he reade for delivery Tuesday, 17th. N.B. The attention of buyers Is invited to the above sale. The 12,500 Over, oats will be fouud to be a very superior lot, all new and sound, as also all the other goods, which will enable buyers to purchase witli perfect confidence. ' (sel-'l PUTNAM & CO., hSuccesBors to MORGAN, READ & CO.,! W holesale I aN r in BOOTS cfc SHOES HATS AI) ( A .S, s 21 iifi -aV WouM call the attention of the Tra.!. to tla ir extensic stock of tall Goods. The Best Land in the Worltl may be bought at ffimm Tor HIO Awtef, iend for a circular, or call on O. R. BRoCSE. Indiana) olis, Ind. Office 1 W. Washington Wtreet. sel.i d.fvJm Election Notice. State of Indiana, Vanderburgh County, HH. IBI.TT1IE If lrJTKS. Clerk of theVanderburgh Ciicuit Court, do hereby certify to the Sheriff of said county what officers are to be elected at the next general election to be held on the second Tuesday in October, 107, at the different places of holding elections in said counly, to wit: A Prosecuting AtLoruey lor the i iltueuLu Judicial t'lr'-uit for the Slate of Indiana: V Jud.'eof theCoaimou I'.eas Court ljr the First roiifmon TleaS District ot tile State of Indiana, which District comprises the counties of Posey, Vanderburgh, Warrick, and Gibson : A -herlff for Vanderburarh County, and' oneOwiimlssioner lor the Tbbrd District ol Vanderburgh County And theBherift Is hereby directed to give due and legal notice ol such election according to law. Witness my hand and the seal of fx.s.J said Court, at Evansville, Uits STTth day of Augusi. A . I . 1S4I7. BLYTHe II YVES, Clerk Vanu-rhurgh ount.j : I'er H. VV. BlPPCS, Deputy Clerk. I. Alexander Darling, Sheriff pi Vander burgh County, ceiUly 41nt -rbe a4ove and foregpuijK., njqe ,4, Vrtia i cany of Ihe original on tin, in ABKXAN'DKR DA od tuipii'e , v my omce. IKUNU, lierrr anderb jurtfh (Jc County : i Pr A. W. chuxb Aug.,l-. .jauJO dw Pr A W. Ciiuxb, Deputy rtherlff. ourier, Union, and Demokrat oopy.
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