Evansville Journal, Volume 18, Evansville, Vanderburgh County, 7 October 1867 — Page 6
H E DAILY JOURNAL: MONDAY. OCTOBER 7. 1867.
MACHINISTS.
23GITZ & HA5EY, CtESCENT : FOUNDERY, ,:. : i-..- : : . a- b: - ' r -t. ! i ;.- Jt LNSVILi.E. INDIANA. Manufacturers of , f . ;.; f v. WAM ENGINES, STEAM BOILERS FOB TABLE ENGINES -AND mrp CIRCULAR SAW MILLS, Of tbe most Approved Pattern.
SUH kind of ;Machlnery appertaining to Railroads, , , STEAMBOATS Distilleries, Flooring f Mills of all sizes, with the latest .improvements attached,
(TTOBAtCO SCREWS, &c, Ac, -V ilron jmd' Brass Castings of Every 0 -iM - Description-' ' v ;
, - falers In Mtsn Uaages, Gum Belting, Yij Brick, Wrought Iron Pipes, Bolting t'&olh. A., at Manufacturers' Prices. 1 s2CpaIrlig iDan at Short1 Notice. Workmen sent to all parts to fit up work Be pair Boilers aud Machinery, asr AlT orders wtilreoeive oarlndiTidn- , attention, and wl 1 1 be prompt 1 flUed on ejf 2hs asost reasonable t erms. -jjOloa and Foundery on tbeCanat.Qomer ScXmgXs Street . . octti-dly ;.4j r.v i h -! ; j ,
iSCHULTZE. v i TZgchanies f oundry .... . . , .... i.ICannfacturers'and Builders of teaoIiEu vines, Circular Saw ; Mills. ' rlfitai;df;SDEar u anile, Tptacco Swcre Gumming Machines, Distillery and Mining Ma- . cnlnery, Malt Mills, Corn - ,.. ....). j Shelters, Heuse Fronts, Cellar Grates. URON & BRASS CASTINGS. 'i 't. Of every description. . alaohmery of all kinds Made and Repaired. Dealers In Belting, Fire Bricks, - ."-, Steam Gauges, and, j: . (Vxought Iron ripea.. Old materials bought : .:.( i: :) w - . -, , , !,--'--.!Um i' l ' ' " 0 .fl; . ' ',.!. i ; H !.; ! ,vi f,a,jv - "Wai hsve the facility or the bestfaBteineTy and Workmen, and wiireive all wwk entrusted to os our Individual attention, nil orders promptly, warrant our "'Work, and charge reasonable prices. vuiLTj uu ruuaarj, corner or f irsi ana TK. B. Workmen sent to all parts to fit p work aud to repairing. , . .w . iaiaai . i 8CHrii.TfcCkBirki & co aACOB aisziCH. , jpaw j. sinzich J J.'Slnzlcli1 86n, Between Sycamore and Vine. fXoAf'sYo&ES1 iB0CEHJE& -cordage, - ' OAKmr, ; ' HempVCotton, and Gum Packing. ! . .Ijath, Yarn, Twine. Rosin, W. dughtSntkek .' Lard Coal, and Lubrie&'tlng'Otli i4 j Orders promptly filled at lowest rates. " ngi3dir, tx yo.TV '?.nr) ' J. 4 P. COATS' ,'iiTHREAD. j - vJOHIf ' mrOrl ' ATJCHIIf ctxss, j 'k&22 d&tn.u.&fto- 108 nne 6rt.!
-W T It' . . - ton .Hous,lNrigara Falls One of Jeff. Davis' slaves has been appointed justice of the peace by Gen. Ord. jj Murdoch will, after retiring from the stage, open a school of elocution near Cincinnati. j KThe Empress Eugenie is reported as being afflicted with rheumatism,! the rjeiulfijf a g-JveteLcold. , liL The wife of Mr. Lee, who drew the Chicago Opera House, died on: the 20th at Prairie du Bocher, IllinoiaW SJOliva Logan is engaged-to write the operatic and dramatic critiquea of the Turf, Field and Farm. The wife 'of the notorious Count Johannes has sued for a divorce on account of the cruelty of her liege lord. ' y i Arthur Sketchley, the distinguished English comic writer, has lately arrived inrthis eountry. i The Providence -Herald has a col ored correspondent in Paris: his name is Henry Guinn. s I Nitro-glycerine was discovered in 1847 by an Italian chemist named Sombrero. - ? One Marv : Pvle has been fined $43 77it; at Philadelphia for being a common scold. ..: Georee Augustus Sala will probably become the next correspondent of the London Timet in America. Rev. George L. Williams, the Vir ginia clergyman accused ot pocicet picking in JNeW lork. has abandoned the ministry." 1 London Times John Oxenford has returned to England. His American Experience was -connned to JMew York. - ! Kirby Smith is teaching high school in Tennessee . under the auspices of the Southern 'Episcopal Theological university, r; j The Emperor of the French paid the funar'al erpensfts 5,097 franco of the late MPonsard, the dramatic actor. Zi ?1 j Sterling Price was5 fifty-seven years old. He died of ichronio diarrhea, which he-contracted during his experience asa refugee in Mexico. , Rev. ft. L..P. Thompson, formeHy of the -Second Presbyterian Church, of Cincinnati, has -accepted a call, to 1 the Presbyterian Church of Jamestown, New York. Joseph M. Dawson, the low comedian at the Louisville Theater, died iu that city night before last, of rheumatism. Mr. Dawson was born in Yorkshire, England, in 1822. j J. P. Parker, proprietor of the Phoenix Foundry, at Ripley, Ohio, was a runaway slave, who came to town with five- dollars in his pocket. He is now worth over $30,000. George- Francis Train's celebrated dinner speeches in London, which used to be reproduced at such length in this country, were delivered, we axe told, to a dozen boon companions in a chop-house down the Strand. James "Gordon Bennett, Sr., and Max Maretzeks have kissed and become friends again. It is also reported that the opera lible suit against the Sunday Mercury is about to be settied. All is well that ends well. Generat David Hunter has just purchased a $25,000 house on E street, ia Washington". The house is a very elegant one, and sold for much less than its origiual cost. It was built by Senator Gwmn, of Louisiana. A fashionable lady of Reading, Pennsylvania, a woman of culture and refinement, was found in the streets of that city on Monday, in a state of brutal intoxication, and uttering most shocking language. x gentleman ac quaintance happened to meet her, and, conducted, her away to her home. Thomas D'Arcy McGee has joined the Total Abstinance Society, not only tor the next Lanadean legislative sea-' sion, but, as he -says, "with the help of ijrod, lor all time. lie confesses to have been a hard drinker, and that the habit iold on his best resolutions The latest account from the grell tailors' strike in London show that on
Personals 5 A t ' !
had struck, abiut half had obtaindd??10l JB 63.q1Avjj
work in other hopi. Some had de-. serted thejjLJnion, others had gone inioV had emigrated to America. a tTr ;xr? 1 A y est- lrginia corresponaent says that he asked one of the natives what he remembered of stonewall Jackson The man -"aid: He was pmted odt to me aprayin', and I went out and axt him for a geuard when he doDe. He-said: 'Geuard! Hlll' And I thftught they ruther over-di his religious views!" Mr. G..-L. DeGraffenreid and young man named Hudson were killed on-ithe edge of the County ot ayettef lexas, recently. lhe parties hada difiiculty about DeGrafr fenreid'8.jL0gagetti"ng into a frel d which the two young Hudsons had rented from him. Dr. DeGraffenreid was shot by the elder Hudson, and the latter by the former. 1 The Very Reverened S. V. Ryan V. C. M., of St. Louis, Mo., has re-r ceived the appointment of Bishop of Buffalo. Father Ryan is at present the Superior of the Congregation of Missions in the United States. Late Bishop Timon, and also Bishon T i f rr . f 1 1 ... . . ijyncn, oi loronto, nnea the position
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'rW hiU by 'FatheRyau at the-'time 1
. ' I . ' . !' ' ! 1 . .s ' J - "KeHepiy.Tar Betcher returned to'hf3"'c6rigregati6nla8t Sunday, at Plyrai,utJi.ctnrjch, after an abence of about "six ' teks f The' bo'rtse was packed in eyery pact, while hundreds went away unable to gain admittance. Mr; Beeehef remarked that his malady catarrh) would not permit him to preachin i the evening, and that, the jacxt. month. would complete his twentieth: year with.'Plymputh,church. A New -York letter says ; ' "Lester 'Waljack Is natty little man; ai eyery Tkwly knowgj '. particular as ; to the cut of hiacoat and his whiskersV unable to iwjdk-on eyenkfl if Jhere be a hairm6re on one side of his face than on the ohexi-and. every way finical as to his dress and demeanor. So you ,may. wellbelieve that when he seta out to : redecorate his. theater he does it with. taste." .:. .; ? ' " GiTueva nPeScT" Congress - letter saysf "' 'Garibaldi shows the sign of the work of time and trouble. His longv blond hair is pushed : further back than, of old from his high, but not -ample: ; brow;- his' fcheeks are sunken ana the lines are deepened about his close-set eyes and about the lion-like curve of his nostrils.' He seems to suffer, too, considerably still from his "wound of AspromontevV and leaned heavily on his cane as he turned to seat himself on the platform." - Adeliua Patti has engagements for two years hence, and entertains no no tioD of returning to America The Paris critics are not as sweeping in her praise as they once were. They say that she is merely a fine toned instrument without consciousness, and moved only by the instinct which inspires the song of the nightingale. They refuse her musical intelligence, taste, sensibility, style, passion, and above all, poetic sentiment. ;'" A young Scotchman, named Hugh Crawford Pollok, who arrived in New York about two years since, and shortly afterward enlisted in the Fifth United States Cavalry as a private soldier, has, by the death of his father in ScotIandj fallenlir tq ;a. baronetcy and 5,000 a year.,, r Through the intercession of the la te Sir Frederick Bruce, Goaeral) Grant has dfsebrarged Pollok from the tserviee.' ' For some months past-the youthful Varonet had been discharging the duties of farrier oi his regiment.i.u ' r- K Advices received from Archbishon SpauldiBg, by the arrival in this city Croskery, his Vicar-General, state that he is now at Aiz la Chapelle, a watering place in France, where he will stay, for a Bhort period., v He -will go; whence to HJnglandm-ad'wtH'be-the guest of, Kev. Dr. Manning, and afterwards will make a where he will tri?rtl1V?1ir;el.,,d' oe nieriamea oy var. dinal Cullen. Although his health is better, jbtii cot" what his friends would desire. Baltimore Comnvercial, Aug. .23.., . .' Queen'Mam1 Theresa.' of NaDles. who lately fell a victim to the cholera in,-Italy, wa3 the daughter of the Archduke Charles, the "celebrated leader of the Austrian -army during the'wars'of the French Bevolution and of Bonaparte. She married Ferdinand II. of Naples in 1837, because a widow in 1859, tmt continued to reside with her stepson till the ex-king was displaced by Garibaldi. Ope ot the daughters of the late Queen is the. wife of the present Archduke Charles of Austria, brother to the Emperor. CLOCKS.; '";;, a. a rosencranz, ... ' : '' .' Dealer In W - : Watches, Clocks, Jewelry, &c, t i UaAia SECOND STREET, ( . . . 4 Betwf en- Main and Sycamore. " - ' Personal attention given to Repairing finer Watches.' - - l janld3m 9 M p SI c B aetir,.- -.!! ST -r ? 5 .:S y. o o 4 iit naffv 9 O a 9 o a u 9 5X.n Stf-S SbTi 7i lb A, - ca r. SSHoT? 2 ft0' I L. r- . CD O 'dL I-i'.M a. 'BitlstrftJsoi . . : j A.I.-: 2CQ S3-' 2 wliiak& "ilS rr Z iiilC.a. ... ;i n'u- rju-w.(i.u , Mivl'U a mail -iinO .ltr mkuii!
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. I , iE : t - . ,1 Fruit Jars. .1'! Fruit Jars. 1-ST J Fr uifc jjfir s . AT ' t r 1 Mfirk & ,.Bteiiiing's, . SUCCESSORS TO MARK Jk WABBXN, Nos. 25 North First Street 18 Main Street. ih LXTCHWOBTH'S GL1SS JAB, . Tin top, rubber band, ireld by a screw. ' ' ADAMS'S GLASS JAB, Tin top, wire fastening ; sealing . suit. wax. to i i f C0BK TOP. Glass Jan, with coiks; sealing . '. , ,suiL . wax to . y BK0WK EABTHEX JABS, Tin top, wire fastening; closed with wax. SEALING WAX AND CORKS . - t For sale extra. MARK & HENNING, i - - IMPORTERS OF Queensware, Glassware, CIII.VA, FANCY GOODS, &c.' 25 N. First and IS Main Sts. nn20d2w STATIOII3GRY. JOHN H. SCOTT, j: if H)I 1" i I .is Bookseller, Stationer .it-" i .i l-tf.'.t .-'Ul WSD A t Eil, : No. 53 MAIX. STBEET, cor. 'Second, aulO dly. EVAKSVII.I.X, Iwn. IL Fi BARTER C0.t j K,'1!'.l - S,,ir.A:T,i ONERS. ! vvi s Wbolesale and retail dealers In ' ; Standard and ' Miscellaneous ''Book, ,V ' l BTATIOZTKRY, BLANK BOOKS,' MEMORANDUMS, ;r;S.1Vi.;,;v; foolscap; legal, bill, letter, note, flatcap . - . and - : : W all Papers, : Phbtograpli Aibums, Letter Presses, Writing Desksj Envelopes,1 and !!' ; Fancy Goods. No. 6 North First Street, EVANSVILLE ..INDIANA. .. . janltily - GEO. H. FISH & CO., Wholesale Booksellers k Stationers, SCHOOL BOOKS, ! 3 ' ' BLANK BOOKS, MISCELLANEOUS BOOKS, . : V, PAPER ENVELOPES, . AND Cr neral Stationery, No 19 31aln' Street, ! t-r-ffl -i:tr ! EvansViile, I Indiana i 1.IB..C n -Vd " -i ! ii'; Jl! I ' . - ' t 1 f I Ilirli T-1 TSirr fri TfAfof I'TiokfAr fyi '.lit ! i'il'l f.' 1 t 7in addlcM, Hiir n e al-oj fffnyiUARD "AJEt' .-ifo nit itfv.:f i (!: up S " Second, iSo.'M Mln Street, corner .'I .J.l'i'J ''I'll oi.!-.-: f tebie'dtf 1 WII 3. MISS VE. L,.P0WEflSrj-4 ; HAH 'JUST- RECEIVE! A SPLB.. ! did -assortment-of Human Hair of all lengths and shade.- --- ' '' ,., TSralds, Ouris, ForeperiesxWgi,exjIJ,Vfi,, rat greany Tedtrced" prlceaT Call and,see b4repajQiadslBg elsewhere. . Also, HAIR JEWEtBtof alldescrtpUOnsroade to order. . , t -,, "f ,,t "L6cVaT STREET, : :. .: u. .v.:i v v.iLi i .;: i .v j:i
1 1 if
.1 '!.; EVANSVILLE 4 CINCLWATI inf. .T '! FAST ' FREIGHT . .. .... i '.in' .1 . t TltlNIT ; C05IFY Controlled, by Ohio & Mississippi Railroad Co. and ETansTllle & CrawfordsvlUe - ;" ( Ilallroad Co. V Time and Rates Guaranteed; SThe above organization offers more favorable inducements to snip pers by this than any other route. .. . . . : - .,. - i Contracts Solicited. ;,l i.,.i i,.f V!,. M ii - .'S' ""' i.J ' -I -- ! i is.;-. ii.tf .'! i : i 4 i' e' ' 1 .) ' Ji F. II. EIIUMAV fc CO., Agents, -,.-:-'- ,i .' ' ' -i ' " v . .IS' Water St. "i ." ; Inn: " . i I v 4 . . ' . !' i' i ff ) ins -.it ft 'i . "! . u ; (ii -il-tM -' i;i-: K- -ill"' ! AB.-8hba'dbil '-: : cn'Z Freight Agt. E. & Q. R.R. ;n!i.. i i .. J. A. Hill. -. Gen I Freight Agf: 0:& M. R.K. r18 CARPETS. i T FALL, 1807. WnOLESALG and RKTAI I. CARPET WAREHOUSE Wm. E. French & Co. No. 10 First Street, XVANSVILLE, fXD., HEAD l U A It TEIIS A OF SUPPLIES FOB Families, Steamboats & Hotels. Also, AGENTS for the sale of GERMAN ANCHOR Bolting Cloth Velvet Carpets Brussels Carpets Tanestrv Canets Chinese Mattings Manilla Mattings Cocoa Mattings Bamboo Mattings Velvet Rugs Brussels Rugs Three-Ply Carpets Two-Fly Carpets Ingrain Carpets Venetian Carpets German Carpets Printed Carpets Listing Carpets Hemp Carpets Rag Carpets 1 Oil-Cloth Rugs V elvet Mats Brussels Mats Rubber Mats . Adelaide Mats - Sheepskin Mats Window Hollands Floor Uil-Ulotns Moequito Bars Linen Sheeting'. Pillow-Casing ' Window Fixtures Rttstid Shades ..' Favorite Shades ;.' Venetian Shades Window Corqices iGilt Shades:' Nottingham Lace Tamboured Lace Cornice Moulding Bed .Blankets, i Cotton Sheeting Vestibule Rods Carnet Liniars Window Reps Carriage Rags:'; , Rubber SheetingJPicture Nails Window .Drapery Stair l)ds Parlor Hassocks Carpet Biodiags i Table1 Linens;: 'A Fruit Napkins ' ' Woolen Dru2gets Curtain Hooka ,: ; Table Oil Cloths Picture iCordsT a Stair' Plates"---!' Picture Tagseli', Couaterpanei'tH Stair Linens1;1;;, Carpet.Tacka '. "-'( Window Uamasks Piano, Covers , .C ur Urn, :L oops VUttam, iUimps .Tffai zc.k-.&a.i ..i unit v.ii7 i-i ' 1 liJ .il w f.i " 'Ji'.tt'. Experienced PAPER-H.NER8 ana - u trtuuitutuuKai mrutshed when reQuired." , ' is,! '" The latest styles of i : . X . FRIKH i WINDOW LAMBRAQUXS made, to order Vi i; i . ; Carpets cat and made to any Riven mea sure. OilC'loths fitted and put-down. Window Cornices mounted ami out ud. Shades of all kimls huai In a KUDerior atyl and on short notice. , .- '-"' ' All teork warranted snttixfactory,' " Prices guaranteed as" LOW as in any similar establishment In, the UNITED STATES.- - ' WM. E. FIIEC'U & C04 no. aw xim aireei, 4j aeW ' "' Tjrp-OTAlRs:: U 1 1. 1 1
"HARDWARE
cirxnxjEs daiicock tt co.t - -i II- '. L .'. -.'l .- 1.! - .i, nil mi ikl'!"-il :-'m f : -3. i: " i -" '.; i i' : ' . ' ' : ' ' 'i vit . .!'- "... t-- : ! IMrOBTKB AMD DEALER IH y, , s j . . . . . Coach & Saddlery Hardware 'A'", till I M .-"" -r - r-i -i. i'.'i .. tn; -:.! JL Springs, Axles, Wood Work, Daraaska ,;i iHarnaisa, Enameled Patent Leather -A i Pad Bklna, Skirtings, tc, Ac i i Wo. S Malii Street. Eransnne, Jaly 2, lsefl. ' JelO BfETTICIIER, KELLOGG & Co. , ( (Bpecessora to Wells. Kellogg & Co.) ': ' i: ' i: i - j . ;- r f , ( IMPORT AND JOBBERS OF 13 ' irst Street, - ' SIGN OF TIIE BIG PADLOCK, AXES, AXES, 1 t 1 AXES, AXES, ' - . AXES, AXES, ' ; ' ' TABLE CUTLERY, . ... - . .-TABLE CUTLER yI TABLE CUTLERY POCKET CUTLERY, POCKET CUTLERY, POCKET CUTLERY, Trace Olialns, TraceChalns, Trace Cliciltiw, Planters Hoes, Planters Hoes, Planters lloes, ; Mechanics' Tools, 1 ; ' : . Mechanics' Tools, Mechanics' Tools, BUILDftRS' niltDWARK, BUILDERS HAKDVVAKK, BUILDERS' HARDWARE, rnrosr Asrn uooi. iarm COTTON AND WOOL. CAB ON BtC.i1'JltmitJBR BJtLTIXO ' BEST RUBBER BELTINO, BEUTRUBBJCK BELTIA'O, ' ': irr i.i. i.n.. J!JJ.5 ros-?i Saws, Mill and Cross-Cnt Saws, si , m:iv Mm and Cross-Cut Sawa. CASH buyers wni flud fe to their advantage to examine our stock before pnrcUaslngelsewbere.fi" i i At -theia tana;; 13 First St. I Ijiiim.irrt.n .r..'L: h . jywr T TTnrrno v. VI j. DRCTGS& CHEMICALS 78 -Main Street. 7S 1 SPARKS A PICQUET, WHOLESALE DRUGGISTS, Dealers In Patnta.OllH, 01aw and Putti. -, ' Physlctaas' At i carefully selected. anl4. i ..i ; OPERA DRUG STORE. "V, '-STEWART & BUTLER; ' (Suoeessors to W. T. Vouog & Co.,) PRESCRIPTION DRUGGISTS, . JTo. IS First Street, (Chandler' i Block,) Evansville, Isd. A new and complete stock of Drug and MedicinesChemicah, Perfumery, Toilet atul Fancy Articles. PrescrlDti ms carefullv nren-ired a.t all hours. j fau22rt:im JOII.V IiAVAJj, Wholesale and Retail Drag&.. . . , Dealer in Medicines, Paints, Oils, Brushes, &c. MAIN ST., bet Second and Third, KvansvlUe, lod. ' ' Particular attention given to CUTTING WINDOW ULAHX to any size, t Jun21 dtf T. C. BRIDWELL & CO., (Late of Owensboro, Ky.) DEALERS IK DRUGS, . MEDICINES, CHEMICALS, , PERFUMERY,: , TOILET ARTICLES, PAINTS(iDYES, &c. Corner Third and Main Streets, PrescriDtions carafullvnomnnumiAil Ha. or night. I novLl d3m CLOUD & ARW, ,'uA' !o '.: ' ' ' ' I Wholesale JDrugista Klt.i- 7fll-:i;-4lM.'".''. -n-J hI.-'I" Jtiot r'fO" -h 'ii !-":. I) MAXUFACTURIXO CHEMIST! No. 5 Main Street ------ '.lA'A'J'JJAQRTJS FOB VVA,V i GEORGE rB 'REEDS- DOMili I ii I OESERAIi AG1SNTS FOR trp :i DR.' ARMISTEAD'S- TONIC SYR Of ? DNWERSAIV OINTMENT, and i .v: ...;...-!.- :i j ,i, - ,i - r .: . - J,,:.; ... .:!'.) .:.lV'.H-'! i . - ' 1 . ' "All orders promptly oiled. apr
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