Evansville Journal, Volume 18, Evansville, Vanderburgh County, 3 October 1867 — Page 2

THE EVANSVILLE DAILY JOURNA! : THURSDAY. OCTOBER 3, 1867.

From the Indianapolis Journal.) 1 Word About the M Provoke w Law. The first consideration in framing s law should be to make .ascertain and definite. It is a monstreu injustice to construct a " rule of action " for the government ofta people, which is liable to i infraction by "the most law-

rule of action .prescribed rby rthe supreme power of the tate? "etdr It is an abuse of terms to name that a law which institutes a penaltjuyet.defi.aes no rule by which a man may know when he is subjecting himself to? its infliction. Such a statute is indeed notja la w at all, .lacking, as it does, one of the terms of the primary definition of law x ? n ; , It is a maxim of t"he courts that ignorance, of thj law doesnot excuse its violation; buff-this is a barbariou maxim wherever laws are, so framed that it is i m possible ot? to -be igno rant of their meaning. There is then no means of acquiring information no source trom which light may ema natei . This is. more particularly true of penal law3,f and it is to a ' law 6f this class, now a part of our criminal code, that we desire to call attention. The Legislature, at the special session ot igbj, enacted that Ji.very person vho jBball, by words, signs or gestures,5 provoke, or attempt tp. provoke .another to. commit an assault and bat tery, -or other . breach of the peac; ' shall on conviction, be fined in any eum not exceeding twenty dollars. It 1b only necessary to glance at this enactment to see that do one is safe for a moment from' accusation 'under . it. An; word, sign or gesture, though rpuacu or uune wun no sucn intention, that may - provoke a drunken bully or besotted bruiser to shake his nsiunaer a aecenr man s nose, is a misdemeanor under the law . and , in. volves a penalty 'of ' anything under twenty dollars. The crime is denned in the seared conscience pf the ac cuseraione. its measure is his ca pacity to be ' provokedv His tern per, disposition, judgment, malice mess; are me limits ot the onence. The practical workings ot this law' is just what might be .expected from its nature. Everv dav men are ar rested nd fined on Jtheoath- of. some provfked vagabond. The atmosphere of our inferior oourt is tainted continually with the breath of malicious prosecutors. - The law. is no Ttrnre. tion te the peace of the State: it is an ever present provocation to its breach. juen have an inducement to assault others when the vietims share the penalty. It is a premamfojr brawls and contentions - It is t a pity- such, a law' was eve? passed.'. ."It is a shame that a session' or thje legislature has gone br and it is nolrepealetl.: : - ..ur'J-Jm&il An ArsebbIb In Prison. :'- The--assassin Berezowsk! 'who at tempted" to kill the Czar, was taken to Touloaoa. the .llth-ult to erve out his isenWceTTA-Uttef wrifeXsayST" As soon as he entered the precincts of the bange, the jp-ay and yellow dress of a cellular prisoner was taken off, and the red jacket and green cap of those condemned for .life was put on. The unfortunate young man was then taken to i the prison forge. : His feet were already swollen . and painful from the long march he had just come" off. A heavy chain wa3 then fastened n his left leg by a massive rinr. He did not appear .to . suffer during the operation, and quickly rose from the recumbent ' position in which it is always performed, taking up the chain in his hand, which otherwise drags on the ground.' The head was shaved, as is jthe custom,, in squares that is one square perfectly bare, and on the next the hair is" left about half an inch long. . .: j In epite of this disfisrurine Droeess and ihagiea..cap1it-wa-reHMirkeI-that young iJerezowjMu had a.rertaki look, of distinction, and even agentle, Une of tne'jailers.wfid was not awareTp that his fingers -had. been .injured, asked him what was the matter with V-8 t"4 pietoV-hJTefj. piietn- i was curea m tnree wecKs oy the application of cold water." While his ten compajiiocs were having their irons 'riveted ' otf, Berezowski remained quietly in a corner

He wiffilnk be-. cValned ib tnotMe&P110"??11 pub tinnviff 9Sia nnniwi,. v..:u T"C worship tree of molestation oi

convict, as is usually the case, but will romotn in nl' 4 : . .u.tu au uui. j i me i.vu vivis rooms chained to a triangle of iron which is fastened to the camp bed of the prisoncjd, nuvi mrougn wnicn a Dar is

slipped, thus preventing Itheir movtFW 8ec observances and ing beyond the length;QAjieir chain.

slipped, thus preventing their moving beyond the length of their chain. In a month, unless the wretched young man turns mad, he is to be sent to New Caledonia. ---<>--- A Specimen of Frontier Life. The Salt Lake <Vedette> details the following bloody incident as a com, mon-place affair: On Tuesday last a terrible shooting affray took place in Echo Canon. Two teamsters belonging to Kirkbat's train got into a -fight, and the larger and stronger one getting the other one down,, was beating him cruelly. The smaller one cried "enough!" but his opponent still kept beating him. Another teamster, whose notions of a fight were, that when a man surrendered, the thing should end, stepped up, seized hold of the large man, jerked him off, and at the same time telling him that the other one had called for quarter, and he had beaten him enough. This aroused the implacable enmity of the bruiser against the intermeddler, and drawing his revolver, he shot him through the head. At the same time number three had got his pistol out and fired

three shots into the big teamster, kill-

ing him instantly, and then fell over dead, as he was endeavoring to cock his revolver to fire the fourth shot. It was a sanguinary affair, and is a caution to violent, men to not permit their passions to get the better of their judgment. ---<>--- Kent tO.) correspondence 4SepW21 of the 1 Cleveland X-eeeJClU A Young Man Killed by His Father. About four o'clock yesterday our unusually quiet village was thrown into excitement by the report ofa murder having been committed in our midst. The facts are substantial ly as ioliows: a nrmily TJY the MTe of Harris; -conrsfsting orHjharf" Harris, the lather, his wile and an' only s6n. Alfred L. Har ris-, aged twenty-two years, have 4ived here about two years .Owing to the intemperance of the father their domestic, tranquility has been so disturbed during their stay here that the mother had commenced proceedings to obtain a divorce on the grounds of habitual intemperance and cruelty to the ranuly, the son AI fred taking sides with the mother against the father. Mrs. .Harris de pended solely for her support upon iier son, who was a faithful-boy, temperate in his habits -and attentive to his husiness. t: -a ? The father, in -his drunken ravings, ihad threatened to take the lire ot his son. for, as he' alleged, coming be twfeen him and Els wile; also, the life ot the attorney engaged by his wife to procure the divorce. -'ifo ope believed ne wouia De so insane-as to add to the "enormity of murder ' the crime of father killing his owe son;- Such he attempted to do, asuthe sequel will show. The father, Charles E. Harris, came into Kent Hast evening, as it is supposed, from -Akron, at 3:45 P.M., and proceeded at once tar; the shoeshop of B. W. Branch, where his eon was engaged a at" work called the attention of his son, behind -the coun ter, by telling him hef- had somethin for him, and handed the boy a box o Cartridges, at the same time savincr 'Now I have got you," and discharged the contents ot -one barrel -or a Colt i revolver into the left-.side pi his vic tim: The ball entered in-the region of the heart, and passed back of the heart into the lungs,1: an&in an upward direction, lilt was thought last night that he Jsould -:not Jive until morning; ho we ter, he sh6ws some symptoms of a possibility. of recov erji. I The father was immediately arrest edhod handed over to the authorities at l)avenba, and is now lodged in jail, wntjre ue win uav an-opportunity to renect over ine awrur crime ot Killing his only son and child, or-attemntinr lo qo ii. Aner -eis arrest -ne seemed absolutely indifferent, as to what he had done, and. '.only -remarked that f he had stood between him and his rite. ;- -r . I Jiew Icrk Politics. The Copperheads 'of New York have calculated on car rvinsr that State inie ran on me pronioition and Bun day dictation issue. Havinsr no Dros pect of success on national questions. . i v t .. . iney nave peen industriously nushins' forward local Questions involving the right of the people to enjoy public or private recreations and pastimes, and to eat and drink: what they like on Sunday as well as on any other day. They had reckoned .confidently on thes Republican Convention endorsing the inquisitorial and impracticable scheme of the prohibition advocates. But the convention ""committed no such blunder, but cave the CoDnerhead dead-fall aiwide berth, and resolved to eoutesfcthe field on national grounds. It waCunammously resolved ' that no person should by law be deprived of the right to public or private recreation er pastime on any day of he week ; provided, that no person in exercisinflSthat reht nhaU vn. la,t public order-and decorum, or the f A 5 t -"-i;"u woreuip; aui wan iu caucc law aLiU all iother existing laws be amended .accpraingiy. jinis resomtion accerps with the $ehtiments ot all fairmiijded men of all parties, creeds and nationalities. It is Ss much as the strictest member of" any sect has a right to demand ;it is all that tolera tion oi conscience requires. Ihe conor disturbance, and. every Republican citirens insists nr the -enforcement of this guarantee. The Cons ti tut on also protecta non-conformists from comthe ecclesiastical authority. In no cou'ntrv in the world do the churches flourish so well -as in the United States, where the voluntary principle prevails, and where every man worships God according to the dictates pf his own conscience: and in no portion of the Unites States are the principles of temperance so well obsetyea as where Hneir advocates employ moral suasioninstead of ?esortig to legal coercion and constables' clubs wherewith to pound total abstinence into men. z Sehiijler Colfax's Ticws on Impeachinent and the Duty of Congress. hoc-TH Bend, Ind., Sept. 27. til i tor of th4 Chicago Tribune : To the : W ooster, Ohio, eondenses my long speech there last Tuesday, into the following half dozen lines: " In regard to impeachment, Mr. C. said he longingly counted the days till Congress would again meet, when A-ndrew Johnson would bo brought before the Senate for impeachment; and in regard to the threat attributed to the 1'resident that he would

pro-

Johnson dare nof attempt it, for well

he knew the end would be that his teet would.: dance upon iir;?whUe the law-matins: oower'would continue ib I perform its functions. These senti ments were received wun great ap plause." K .;,.! U ( - ; f - .- . , r 7imT I - i - - t i -r -a but as, at a timejika Ibis, men .who are m public litedesire to- be JiMged on their exact positions, may I ask brief space in your columns to say that I counted the days till Congres would- agaiufv inet, . because in. twenty davs after ' that time Edwin M. Stanton, would go back aeain to the War Department, in spite &f4&eaguaBt Prident:wb; sought to expei mm irom ine position in which he ..had.' served the country so faithfully; that when Con eress resumed its lerralatrrTauthority', the House". iriaccordance with' the demands of the loyal masses' through out the land, would-be-required to place the. President before the, tribu nal Drovrded bythe Constitution, to defend himself there from the charges of persistent nsurpations and persist ent, violations ot tne. oatn wnicn requires him to take care that! the Jaws shall .be. faithfully iefecijrted andithat wnua a aio notrjpetieve xrvoneon dared-- to i ful fil the,' threats "again st Uongresis,;.; powj, cetng:V made, py .his; Washington organs, apparerttly in his ! namel yet' whoever jaidu dare-'o destroy.-- the .. Legislative .Department of thefCroyernmentby revolutionary, lorce.-wnetner president, vaDinetj Minister pr, , peni wonjdi ' ' be,: tried for his treason, 'and "punished as traitor' with hjs"feet. hot. 'like the traitors" of :threcnv .I.- i .1 . . , .... ine ear ta, outia iue air;-' if- ji!. 1 ..t I i mi ulit tn " Aew Queensware ousc LICIITEN & 1CHEN11 AISEK, ) IMPORTERS 6F QUEENSWARE, I and HOUSE FURNISHING GOOD, 2fo. 3 Sonth First Street.! TWt E ARE NOW OPENIH THE iw mofit kp most splendid assortment of Fat Articles ever Imported to this city, and i I WHITE GRANITE WARE now eomnlete. and' only wants looklnc at to induce all to make tbelf porehases of as ; and oar stock of COMMON WARE ...... rl; ', .. .. . .- Is large, and will be sold as low as the lowest la the United Mates. 1 - - : Bohemian Glass and SilverPlated Ware. Our assortment ef Bokeaalan Glass aad 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 residine In the city of New York, and at all times on hand selecting the latest styles and patterns of ware. ; SANDERS BROS.,' Dealers in .. B!, China, , Glass, & r Qneensware, Hedderlck's Block, South Jhird St., bet. Mftip and .feycamore, , ETAySVTT.T.E, IND. SO DOZEN Half-Gallon-"GLASS 'JARS, at

SO DOZEN- Qar k(L-AH JARA tt 6eAn

per. dozen se7 dlni i I WiftTHrf fci .1-XiAHJH. V. P. IRONS & CO., ONE-PRICE CLOTHIN CI wrkTTdfr" t ;. :: a V -. STEEET. VANRVTT,?: - TNB: I ' ? j ail'.:!!-: lO iUlVlll'- r H '..!: . -t2 j CeaWln4-0 READY-MAdE CLOTHING and. FIRXISH1W GOODS, Have always In stock a large and "extensive assortment of Ready-Made Qarmeats for Mea'aaud-Boytt- WeaiymaaQfoetnsodnnder qnr QWUbpervisioa: and dlrection in accordance with the prevailing styles, by competenj and expeencedwojKnaea. All of our goods are, marked. In plain .figures. Sold at one price,- WITHQOT :CE-. lA.1lOUS ' '' ' '' ' 'f1 -''.-' "ii i. se!3

xmnm; pacific

ILraiCrod co. J. Their FIRST MORTGAGE BONDS AS AS IJfTESTMEST. I ' '. ' ' ' Railroad, now building west from Omaha, Nebraska, and forming, with its; western connections, an unbroken line across the continent, attracts attention to the vauue of the First Mortgage Bonds wblcb. the J Company now offe- to the pablio. The Dm question asked, by .prudent Investor is, "Are tbsebODdsecaret ' Texk, "Are they a profitable investment f " To reply tobrief:., i rti,f! i.fi,-.;i ! 1st. The eariy. completion of 4e whole great line to the' Pacific is as certain' as any future business event can be. The Gov eminent! grant f - over 'twenty ' million acres, i.lasd and fifty -million dollars la its own boads practically guarantee iU One-fourth of the work is already done. and the track continues to be laid, at the fate of two miles a day r-,;. ;! f 2d. The.. Union Pacific Railroad .bonds are Issued opou what promises to be one of the most profitable lines of railroad in the country. For, many years It mutt be the only Une connecting the Atlantic and Pacific; and ' being. 'without '.'competition, it can maintain remunerative rates. -i 8d. Four hundred and twenty-five miles of tbto roa are finished, and' fully equip ped- witn depots, ioooraoure'-ears, fto.-, and two trains are daily running- each wayr The materials for-4he remaining ninety-two? mlea tthja estefi.1af fiaa nuccr jnounuum are on nana, ana il Is wnder contract to be done in September. tb.rTh inet s4rbrgs-'Of th aeetiecs already finished art msoeraX'liMtt 'treat Uthan the fgold lntereit1 hpotf Ch - First Mortgage Bonds upon such-section; arid IX not another mile of the road were built the art already completed would nofc only pay interest arm expenses, but be.profltI aale to the Company; 5th. The union Pacific Railroad bonds can be-issned only as the Toad progresses, and therefore eaa never be in the market unless they re)resea fcono-W property. 6th. The amount Is etrlctly limited by law to a sum equal to what Is granted by the U. 8. Government, and for which It takes a-saeofui lien, am its aecurityi . Thhi amont-apon the first 617 mUee west from Omaha Is only 116,000 per mile.-1 7th. The fact that the U. &. Government t considers a second lien upon tiie road a good Inxfesjejaafld .UiajLome. flf-J.aa.1 shrewdest railroad builders of the country have already pfeid In five 'million dollars npon the stock (which is to them a third lien), may well Inspire confidence In first lieni .1 l kt a Htbi. Although It Is not claimed that there can be any better securities than Governments, there are parties whovoenn side a first mortgage npon such property as this the very best set-al'y in the world, and whtfluit Governments to re-ini Vest ! in these bonds thus securing a greater Interest. 9th. As the Union Pacific Railroad bonds are offered for the present at 90 cents on the dollar and kcerueci Inseresti they are the cheapest security in the market, being mot than 15 . per oenU less luan- U..8. Btocka. ' " J ' """ - 10th. At the current rate of premium on gold they pay . . The daily subscriptions are already large, and they will continue to be received In New York by the -f'iiv ' ''-:'; No..7Nawaa Street ; CiRK, Doscix & Co., Bankers, 51 Wall Street; johm J. Cisco A Son, Bankers, ' ; No. 33 Wall Street ; , and jby Banks and Banker generally throughout the United States, of . whom maps and descriptive pamphlets may' be ' obtained. They will also be sent' by mail from' the Company's office, No. 70 Nassau Street, New York, on .application. Subscribers Seill select their own Agents, in whom they have confidence, who alone will "be responsible, to them for the. safe delivery of the bonds. v " ' s ' JOHN Jii CISCO, Treasurer, . . , j ' .-'HBW YORK. jlGENT3 ZAT EVANSVILLE: ' E?ASVILLE JTATIOXAL sBASK. a'nlO dw3m 15 ll ,i! i: 11 INSURANCE. u Da tn ITn i ' a. d.t. a -r f flRi, MARINE, A FLAT BOAT RISKS i laKen at fair rates. Johh 8. UowEfwSj -tVesfdentl- . J auks ii. Cctlkk, Secretary. TfT' ikorb: 3? tteHlli tus: Charles Vlele, J. 8. -Hopkins," " Uillison Maghe, 'Robert Bamee,-'-Dr. M. J; Bray, John Ingle, Jr., William Brown,' - Dr. F. W. Sawyer' C. Preston.. - , . tin-- -. i J. N. Knox. Business Arent. who will also attend to Lire and Accident Insurance .f-Offloe, corner of Main and First Streets, ill x mi .L-Kitrou naft suuiuug. apxooxn -I .' . 1 -iWM P TTiSTTMBo - i iirisr- T "n . , -,nrl Scenic Artist and Fresco 1 ' j ' M Fainter. : All-orders left at Osborne A TilestcnV Faint Store ftiocnst SISrt,wJMJ)epUr attended to. - C A LSI MINIS BEATINGS neatly done Jy25d3m tt06ir!01A paper; 'in Samuel N. -Docker. - E. J. Morten. - DOCKER & MORTE, !- , .! :WE0CK8 ALB P A ' T 35 J? n F1 A T. t,TT? S! . ' x JL -A-J J A. ,4 J tj NoJll South' First Street, " :

Evansville, lnd.!

A GrcurDIsoovery. f

, Complete Revolution in Roofing! " TIiE FS7G, SLATE Aoonngana other purposes, Patented February 21st, 1863. rfHM INTEREKTIKO BISCOVEBT was maae Known to ine world by the Farmers' Club of New York, at their meek i jug iiivue iaiwr pn oi j une, w. ana 1U William I Potter .tof Clifton Parlc T. Y. bas been carefully experimenting with the ouwfiw mi- nmuy years, ana oas demonstrated its nUlity and practtcabilitv. . i After suffering many partial failures In compounas or ume in an its various forms ana pnafies -tn saaa, granite, piaster, inU. erai ooal, clay of. various kinds.- marfole dut, soap-stone, cement," coal-taiy vegataDie tar, aspnaitnm, etc. in all the" pro-M WIIUUUS KUU 11 cent and ln lor fourteen year:; lie tried the slate - tone also, In many combinations, before he dlscoverea laset nature's la w of rec-onntrnctlon was exceedingly simple, requiring only eluten to hold the Dariicles in connection - till time and the action of the elements nrmlr unite them, ----- If ever a roof leaks, it will be owing to oinec causes man vne aecay ei tue cover ing, it win oe- because the water goes rouna, not mrougn iu- kt is uneqwuea as a paint over new tin, and would preserve it many-years wtinoui runner attention, and k ho a Id be used for that purpose instead of paint. It will repair all defects in old ttn roofs, such as rust-holes, cracks, and DreaKs, mailing mem permanently waterprooi, ana more auraoie, at raoco less cost than a tin-smith could afford to do-it, even in his imperfect manner. Old -roofs of every description can be repaired, much more durably , and cheaply with, Plastic male than with any other material extant. . Coal-tar is found to be the visclous element alike of coal and slate; and it was Uncovered, not invented, and scientific investigation, as well as experience, fully establiHQjng the fact that its, exposure to beat and cold, wet and dry, serves only - to ivunu uci wi iwu meiucuu id Mirir con PLASTfQ SLA TB IS SUPERIOR to TI1T i. Because It M a better non-conductor of heat. The rooms under it will be .cooler In summer and warmer in winter. , . 2. Itrwill not mat. : ' -- - - - ' ' 3. It will not break or crack open like tin does where Jointed, i . .- , , , : 4. It is less danaerous. Dr. Tvnc'schuroh one of the finest In New York, was burned in jMovemoer. irxk cauninr a. loss -r Ejao.000, from a Are in its tin roof, from the braaiera of some raen who were repairing It. . 5. It needs -painting, which on tin amounts In a tew yean to the . entire cost of Jtanlie Slate Roof. . , ,w Because it cost half a much, and unit 1 have, at considerable expense, obtained front "The PlasUe Blate Joint Stock Com pany f9t New York, roan exclusive right for fivansvllle and Vanderburch Countv Indi and am Drenared to out on new roofs ana jemir oia un zsoisk reaair Lisuainx andeoDDr rmLLmrni , - : 't. i Present price for new Plastic Slate Boolk, eigni aoiiars per square or ten ieet; same applied to new. or old tin roof, four dollars MB sauare. (i utters reDalred at reasonable rates as to size ; and at tnese prices all work win ne Kept in oraer t accidents exeeptedi fve year; at the expiration of -which ,1 Una it wm ne euer man wnen. new, We have the, privilege' of referring lo the following narties for whom we. have appiiea the riastlc glate Roofina: K. H Tenny, Esq.: John J. Delg, Esq.; Messrs. neiis ana naney; w m. -iieiiman, tq.; Messrs. Gilbert & Co.; .Mark HUerwoodi rurmfDuwieii, A.ntnony IteiSL Mdiq, EvansvUle National Bank- . T7 Orders for roofing or repairing may be left at mv Ln saber Yard OfHoe. mm of Main and Seventh Street, or with, -my, svansvuie. ind., April 1st, 1867, (.apl dm 'jiu .. TV's t-f. .-ris -.; -f 'i II OTTH. NEWTHREATi" I Slx-Cordf: Soft-Ffrtfsh SPOOL COTTON t--i i .. l - .: i ,'!; i . .-. --.. . Every number warranted' 8ix-Cord to No. 80f Put up- in-s neat white boxes,'eoatainibg twelve Spools each a convenience to the retailer. A i ponaplete. 'assortment always7ii ?.?' 'r-ll 1V.'.! v. ni store! and for sale in Evansville byx !M. SWEETSER I 'O liain Street; CO.r.K ;! MA,CEEVNESB1TT '& $0. I , Main' Street; r ' ' i .. Miller, Gardner & Co., j -" FIRST STEET, And the trade generally. maya Tn.Th.Sat ' 7 PHILIP DECKER, Manufacturer of Compound - Lubricating :011s for all kinds of Machinery r-.il ; - r bu- "Alsosv LARD OIL, OAPSiloid CANDLES. i . PURE growth CATAWBA i i. : . 'i -' WINK ot 'vay Own im ,-Tmch21'dly EVANSVULE BUSINESS COLLEGE , i r.-ti.-.dtrt ;;i I i ;!.:.. -k (H4 ! EVAM8VII.I.IIir Wri-li SCHOLARSHIPS - iisned All axe invited to fall and tYnmino n course f instruo vh.or send address an receive by retnii. mail College Circular with specimens ol Penmanship and Flourishing. L. S. MAYFIKLD, R0CKP0RT COAL. XTTTC ARB JfOW FREPAKED TO Bcreened Hockport Coal to any part of the city. " ."itit i f Office and Yard, coraer CivlRlnn and Water Streets. SPEER A CO.

' Full measure guatanteed. ' 1 f au2S dtf"

. "TTDIXYT GOODS.

I ' SCHAPKER, BUSSING & CO. - Now offer to the public a larger and better stock ot . . Fall and Winter Dry Goods ! 'than esn te found m any ONE 15STAB-" usnment in, ice western country, iz.: In the r - - v . Domestic Department, t Under the charge of A) LANSING, can jiow be had the best and most popular mazes or CalicoeH, Brown and Bleached. MuHins, HheetlngH, Pillow-Case Muslin,' Checks, TlckingH, Hickory rfctrlpes, Ac, and always at the loweKt market price". ., i Dress Goods Department, Tinder special charge of PRO F OUST. MATHIUi. Is now klockad -1th NnTtllk of the 8eaon, at Irom 2 to llfiO a pattern suit ji& wuiuu oatj- auu trvrry uuuy can D9 'suited. li! Wiite Goods Department, in charge of J. E. DUTCH ER,1s being flaiiy teplenlxhed. and the assortment uowcomElete conflating of Bwlss, Jacoaels, Table inens and Cloths. Stand-and Table .Tow ers, Towels, Napkins, Handkerchiefs, Embroideries Edgings, Lacea i hot ft real and , lmitallonjr. Em'Toldered and Laee Cur tains, ana cnarrrlhir 'beantiea In Bui. spreads, tc Vr' I Notions Department

. This stock. In charge of A. VENEMANN, , is very eom plete, trom a Paper of Pi aa to a ' I. Pair ot Alexandre's Kid Gloves, or a Brass Button to a Paper Collar. Bat the most attractive in the celebrated Bigtow's LlnenFlnlsbed and "Star ol-Um-WMt'' m.uxi

Paper Collars, at 25 cents a box the most durable, best-fitting,-- nd cheapest ;ColUr- ' In America. - . . . , . . v - -k . j -. i-.r, I titi t l j. ; TT UUlOil LsepaxuucHi, Under the S u Deri n tend en a nf JOTT V TTTR. ENHAUEH. is Well assorted, and thru tn. search of Cloths, Casslmeres, , lHesklns7, !&vLe,5i;?ni ?.? iMiPJi Si S&V fj.y .w?r, would do well to examine I vnis r stoca Before purchasing elsewhere, and save money. Also. Flannels In all wool, part cotton, and silk and wool. ; , ,t Siawh and Cloaks,. -, , w An enaiess variety. J MOOTr-SairtS At a great reduction in "prfceaT

I Retail: Ie3)etfa3rtoa4; 'I'

fiuperlntended by Miss TTLTZA BELLAM, ume most complete in-tne west, ana new , -goods are dailv arriving; and by the 15th 1 of September the toek will-be complete, with every novelty thatlhe heart can wish and the eye desire. ' iil'i'-ir'll ' " ' i, 7 i .1 ; I. l I ?f '- j ' " ' t. . o . . ; .,..,-, We most respectfully call the attention

or the public to the fact that we make no -ridiculous pretension of "selling below cost," "cheaper than be lore the ar,' or ;

-cneaper man. anyDoay in the world;" neither do we sell three soools oi! CoaU'a Thread for 25 cents for the purpose of entiolng' trade, and - then charge it' up 'in goodH.in which they are not pooled. , Wei sell at the "ONE-PRICE SYSTEM," and always as cheap- as the cheapest, and aa low as the market wU afford, and warrant 11 goods as represented; - The salesmeu will always be found ae- , commodatlng and ready to show goods, wueeuer a sape is Haue ornov SCHAPKER, BUSSING & CO, .1 I: WHOLESALE AXD BET1IL DE1LEB8, ' and 49 Main Street, . ' V se4 EvANSvrLi-x, Ikd. HUDSPETH; ADAMS & CO. 63 '.Main '.Street "63 E ' KE8PECFI71.1.T CALI. ATtention to onr large stock of Ladles' and 1 Children' Hats. " We have Just received, from New York City, new Dress Goods, in Alpacas, Grenadines, ' DeLalns, Linen Goods, til njihams Lawn. C'hambrav-and r Crepe Mate,CrfplmeTes,1Cotto,nades,XJaen Panting and Coating. New lot of- White Goods, Jaconett, Naln sook, 8wlss,.IriHb Linen; Jad a large va-i' rletyla Ladies' and Gents Linen Hand-1 kerchiefs. Our stock of Hosiery comprises large variety, bought low, and will be sold cheap. . :.,-! 1 1 ; ; ...j Parasols and , Hup. Umbrellas, la Silk, , , Cotton, and Scotch Gingham. We have, &nd will keep a large assortment. '!" New .goods -bonght by onr honm la the : market, with, a special view to the lnteiest Ot jQur customers. . We will, receive beeafterj dally, and' call the' attention 'of all people to come and e-xamlne-our. stock . and prices,, .-, , ,, . .. , . , , HUDSPETH, ADAMS & CO.. J3 Main" Street: t i 'J ' 5 I I t-':"-.i ' i . Itl. Hi: -.;! JPall Trade. 1867. - i. t t; ! Jt' l it. i-zli'.-i i I L i n iAji Arturr & CO., A vs. mnuncc No. IS First St., j. Eransville, 'Indiana, r WHOLESALE DCALZR3 IX , , I i .. .... . i - ' i- ! 1 STAPLE AXD F1XCT DBT ' GOODS, BCNIRE TO t'AU-THK ATTEWtlou of the trade. 40 their large nd varied assortmehr of r seasonable goods,

Which they have Just received, and are offerlngat great barga-las. if: iJ', - , .uf

T1 GRAIN. BAGS.V 2, 2'4, and"3 bushel Seamless Bags on hand and for sale by ' ' G. MAGHEE CO. ' ' 3,000 Four bushel Barlap Bags jurt received and for sale by G. MAGHEE A CO, A.-, -i ..... 1 ;c , ii. r , 47000 Yards Burlapi Jusl receive1 and for sale by '

M '! I 11 IM IflVlFTr m III

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