Evansville Journal, Volume 18, Evansville, Vanderburgh County, 13 November 1867 — Page 2

Tlfii KVNVlLUi; 0 A 1 fA' U ! CN" A V: WEDlST tfS D:A. Y. KQVEMBER ,

. 1 i' i r I i

"WAIFS" FROM THE CAPITAL.

Indianapolis, Nov. 11, 18C7 Editors Journal: '- A. "Warrick correspondent and tour ist, who holds forth in your columns over the patronymic of the Wiggins family, with the more mellifluous hal of the alphabet ornately prefixed mercilessly plies the lash of sarcasm against what he evidently regards as " a custom more honored in the breach than in thft observance." to-wit: that form of egotism which is manifested in the use of the editorial we, or the " I," " your correspondent,'," etc. commonly employed "by epistolary contributors to the press, J.o a cer tain -extent, the strictures of the fa cetious " Wiggins '.' with half ." stick ful." of initials are just.' A.' writer should never thrust himself" between his subiect and his readers. An edi tor should sink his own personality out of sieht. rememberinsr that it is the paper on which ' he is employed and not : his indi vidual self that is supposed, to ad dress the public. With a correspon dent the case is materially different. His letters are supFosei to be the utterance of his individual observations, experiences or opinions. The paper for which he writes is not sup posed to endorse, and, except in case of libel, is not held responsible for hia sentiments. He addresses him self directly to the reader on his own responsibility, and any degree ot ego Usui that is pardonable in conversation is excusable and entirely admis--sable in newspaper correspondence. As a general rule, those correspon dents whose stylo approaches nearest to the conversational are the most successful in entertaining those for whom they reasons, and cogent, the write. For these many others equally sentinel whom you on duty ' " at' the have tolaced State Capital will continue to employ the personal pronoun in the hrst per son, singular or plural, as he may deem most- iq accordance with good taste, but will not fall into the hallu cination that the reader cares a continental" for Mr. Tapley personally. or in any other capacity than that ; of "your correspondent." Having no intentions as to candidacy for official station, never having for any pro tracted period filled the position of local ' on a city paper, nor traversed the rural districts, pro bono publico, an equine masculine egotism is not permanently engrafted in the nature of the undersigned: but he cannot incessantly strain and distort language merely to avoid the use of an "l,Tor a "we." The reader's indulgence has been snffioientlv taxed bv this lonar nreface. Let me repay him by a hasty sketch of MR. MILT. VT. BARROW, the "fast man " of the Indianapolis .Journal composition room, a printer who can -set SD.OOO a week in an office where "leads" are discarded, and oleaginous . or adipose matter is as scarce as it was in Job's cow pens or poultry yard, is certainly a legitimate subject for an item. V hen " Milt, came home from the wars (where he had all the " leaded matter he wanted, and plenty of " fat " on the porcine portion cf his rations) he was so slow and awkard that he found much difficulty in getting a "case." The Journal, always ready to favor a soldier, where the extension of such a favor is practicable, took him in, and he went to work with a will. He is now the fastest printer this side of New; York City. His recent marriage affords reasonable grounds for tfie hope of future editions of fast printers. OUR DAILY PAPERS are all in the full, tide of prosperity. The Journal, notwithstanding the "great reaction," (which has given the Cop.'s partial control of two or three fetate governments, furnished them a first-class fight over a single seat in the U. fc. Senate, added a few voices to the hopeless minority in the popular branch of the Legislature, and encouraged an enormous waste of Democratic time and money next year), is increasing its subscription list very largely. It is conducted with marked ability and with an outlay of money which can only be afforded on the basis of a large .circulation. The Herald is said to be in a tolerably healthy financial condition, and is, all things considered, a much better paper than the Democratic party deserves. The more respectable portion of the party sustain it, while . a much larger number of Indiana Copperheads prefer to pay their money for Brick Pomeroy's aromatic sheet. The Commercial is young and small, but may be considered a precocious youth. If its brain doesn't outgrow the other portions of its physical organism it cannot fail of a brilliant future. The Telegraph (German) is successfully managed on the co-operation plan. Of its literary merits I am not able to express an intelligent opinion, but should judge there were brains enough employed on it to furnish a good paper. REV. c. N. SIMS. The largest audience ever packed in Wesley Chapel filled the auditorium of the edifice last night, to listen to a lecture from Mr. Sims, in hi3 course of " lectures to young people.'' The subject for last evening was "Society;" for next Sunday evening "Courage" is the theme announced. The health of the reverend gentleman is far from good, but he goes forward in his work with unflagging zeal and irresistable energy. A new Church to replace the old

Chapel will be an early result of Mr. Sims' labors here.

TRADE As samples of business transactions here the. following -reports.-of-.sak8 for the month of October, may be of interest to the commercial erapo riiim of Indiana: " Stewart & Mor druggists. $29,939: Merritt. & Cough lem.- manufacturers pf woolen c-noil. S3.J71: Waffle Iron works mncriinftrv. S4.000. and lC tons'of cast Alford. Talbott& Co.. whole sale grocers, $41,047. These reports are said to indicate Tumstiai activity in business, but the best showing tor this ritv is in the drv goods line. We h.ivft one retail house that reported sales of more thai .half a pillion last vear a sum C3reecuin.tr tue enure business of all the retail dry goods houses in vour citv.'aud greater than the business of any of your,wholesale n . i- ... ..: l nouses in mat line, wiui a sialic exception, if I remember correctly. . , A new house has recently 'opened' oil Washington Street, with an immense stock, backed by heavy capitaJiEts, and lively competition has, run prices down below JNew' York idbbing rates Possibjy a good thing Fat the public but not very, profitable tor the com petitors. ' A WRESTLING MATCH for $500 a side, and on which thou sands of dollars were staked in bets came off at Stiltz's Grove on Saturday A great crowd was present "-and in tense excitement prevailed. The parties (whose names I. do nxifi pro pose to immortalize) were , a huge Keutuckian and a small New Yorker Bets were laid on Keatuck," bit the little. Yorker "l. threw him read ily and pocketed the stakes, -: Luck is not always on the side ot the heaviest battalions." Science tells in these days. i ...... v. A good move.' ""Although this city .is remarkable for the number and beauty of- its churches, for th efficiency of its pub i i t . . t . nc schools, ana ior the extent and variety of other agencies supposed to be conservators of public morals, , it is scarcely loss notieable for the num ber of its houses of ill-fame. These establishments have flourished greatly in times past, but at last they seem to have nict with a " hefty" impediment in. the shape of an active police force and a righteous judge." Scarcely a day passes , bUt'scesCi bevy of 'frail women brought before Judge jScatt, by whom they are" fined: cbstea' and lectured to the lull extent of the statutes. Doubtless there are many among them who are as deserving of pity as of contempt, but they are not the less ht subjects ot punishment. A little more vigilance in the detec tion and punishment ol their natrons would be quite "as ' commendable as the present movement. . s ' snow: ' ' -' Since the conclusion of . sundry treaties with the noble red inert on our v estern irontier Mr. Jo s Summer ' -.j t j i u ui v i a - 1 -4 ' o has come to an abrupt .terjuitud the wild-winds and cold nation, a snows oi n inter are; prematurely upon us. J he 'second snow storm pt the seasou greeted us last night. A few hours more of sunshine wili re move all traces or it. but' r the air bites shrewdly," giving, promise, of a. speeuy repetition or tne penormance Mark Tapley. Financial Policy of the United States Specie Payments, ,m; The rapid extinction of the. floating debt, the reduction -of interest, and the diminution of taxes "that must follow the bountiful harvests, of the present year, facilitate our return to specie before 18G9. ' , . .. ' .- For some months .'past our exports of produce have been light, the cotton crop was shipped, and wheat and corn were required at Irome,' after the deficiencies of lrfCC- The. present year is liberal in its harvests; it presents a gain of at least 3Q .percent. in cotton it will furnish at least two' million bales for exportation., and give an average or two hundred thousand bales per month for' ship-. ment, for ten months to. come in place oi some twenty thou-; sand for the last quarter. The crops of wheat, rye, oats and barley are at least'a third in excess, jofciafet year while the crop of corn is a fair, one. California is shipping twelve milliotf bushels ot superior breadstuff:., worth four dollars per cental in gold at Liverpool.; The West can, furnish', east seventy millions more lor -export. Chicago alone- daily sends for ward nearly half a million bushels of breadstulls. Milwaukee, loledo, De troit, St. .Louis and other ports, as much more, while the South from an importer has become an exporter. ' There arc strong indications that our exports for ten monthu to come will average close upon fifty millions currency per month. !'..' Cotton, at the reduced price ot ighty dollars per bale, will give six teen million dollars.. Y,iiea,t eppmands in New York two and twothird dollars; Indian corn orieVnd one-third dollars, an average of two J dollars per bushel for 'the 'two. Twelve million bushels per month will give twenty-four million dollars. Gold must accumulate, and ' petro leum, pork, lard, beef, cheese, and other exports at full prices, add at least ten . million dollars 'luore aid. supply the place of corn, after .the canal closes. An exportation of fifty million dollars a month in currency will exceed our importations last year,- lyliieh were but thirty-one million dollars per month in gold, and will,redm-e the rate of exchange. . It will not be surprising ', if some part, of the three hundred aud fifty million dollars in gold in the banks

of Franco and England should come

this way in payment for grain or for investment m our loug.xj. per cents, With money-afeoae eritwq per cent in' Lrondon and: Pais with abundan cro'psaTtitr'th'e' regular payment' of in terest as weir as? principal, the ten dency of money is westward. The present high price of cereals in this country is not.' due , to 1 the action of speculators,' to the -Want : of currency or iailure'ot harvests, but to the Ju-ropean'.demand--a, demand most eon ducivejo the interests of . the , United States. .. , n'i ;,:;.!! Fob - ten- years past, , the average price of. wheat on the London Ex change has not varied materially from five shillings sterling a bushel, and corn has been down to three shillings and sixpence. ' The price- has now risen to nine shillings for wheat, and five shillings and eight pence for corn, so that the , former can be shipped with profit from New-York at two dollars and twohrds, and 11m?' latter at one dollar' arid ""one-third. The London price is , the key to our markets.' ' There has ' been a partial failure of-the ,6fops in France', Great in ancient times, sent forty millions of bushels of wheat annually to Home, but Egypt has substituted cotton for wheat,, and the shipments from the Black Sea will be chiefly absorbed by Spain, Algiers andithe- South of France- : Kussia and Prussia will find a .large market in .the North of J? ranee and Belgium, i Great Britiauj tis her papers osti-' mate, will have - this year: to pay two hundred and i fifty millions extra lor breadstuff, and will absorb the larger portion of our .surplus. The rise of .wages in Great rBntian of' forty per cent, in me last.ten years win enable the masses to, consume. ' "' JFor many1 years past Great Britain, under her system of iree trade and Cobden s treaty, has drawn her chief supply of foreign' flour and wheat Irom France.1- Sinco 1815,' France. not content with'' carrying her produce of wine up to twenty-three hun dred millions ot gallons, her produce pi beet sugar to tour hundred million of pounds, and her clip , of woof to one hundred' Jiand forty million pounds; s has - increased ' her ' pro duce of wheat ; by; improved cul tore and carried U from fifty million hectolitres to-one huidreu and eight million of hectolitres, or an average ot threei hundred million of bushels She raisosilittlc,! Indian1 corn; and the United .States, with a thousand mil lion bushels, surpass her in this, but uet.oats barley, rye and "buckwheat are usually sequal in quantity to her wheat.-vlhis year- i an exception,there is a deficit of at least fifty million of bushels in her production of breadstuns. Ihe dehciency in England is large, but less than that of France for1 the surface devoted to, graip m France exceeds the whole area of. Great Britain. 1 here can be : little doubt that we' may iind a market abroad, for eighty minions of bushels of breadMuffs. Nature, in her timely bounty' will give large returns; to our canals and railways,. -will circulate money ,through the West and enable it to pay for .imports and manufactures, and thus smooth our way as we re turn, to a specie basis, lit is a happy coincidence that at the. very moment that we are paying or funding the last of our floating debt, and canceling our legal tenders in, the shape of notes bearing compound interest, and depositing '.our r greenbacks " in the vaults of the banks and Sub-Treaoury a benign x rovidence ; should give lis harvests compensating for the de-J ficiency of Europa-7-while the forecast which guides our.finances by the extinction of our floating debt. and reduction of forty millions in annual interest, already tar advanced and to be completed :in 18G8. has enabled us to reduce our taxes one hundred milions, and will enable us to 'reduce them, if -we choosey one hundred and fifty millions , more , in the .ensuing year, consentaneous with our return to,. specie.' Then with the ordinary expenses of the nation thrown upon the customs as in former years with a sinking fund of 150,000,000 supplied auhually by a few of the ;present im posts, but slightly left, and interest of our debt paid by reduced taxe3 chiefly on' articles of luxury, with, manufactures and transportation ; liberated, with a tariff cailied half way back to the rates,", before the .war, and wages and prices conformed to the. specie standard wemay, on , the basis of a tthfe'and solid, prosperity,, resume dur former 6areer and honorably discharge all our duties. It will thea be, a matter of indifference , to the stockholder whe,thpr we pay our fivetwenties in specie or in legal tenders, redeemable in gold. Boston Journal. Honor Your Business. As the New : York Economist savs. it is a good sign when a man is proud L of his work or his calling, Yet noth-r ing is more common man to near men findfng fault constantly with , their particular ' business, ' ancf deeming themselves unfortunate because, fastened to it by the necessity of gaining a livelihood. In this spirit men fret, and laborously destroy all their comfort in the. work; ,or they change their business, Tind go on"mserably,- shifting from one thiDg to another, till the grave or the ,poorhouse gives them a fast grip.-1 Cut-f while, ioeeasionalIy man fails in his life because he is notin the place fitted for his peculiar talent, it happens ten times ofteaer tliat failure results from neglect and even eontempt'of an honest business. A man should put his , heart into everything ha dbps. . ., . , There is not a profession that, has not its peculiar cares and vexations. No man will escape annoyance by

fthanffinar business. No mechanica

business is altogether agreeable Commerce," ifl its' endless vaneUesw affected,, like other human pursuit? with trials.' unwelcome duties, .and spirit tiring" necess itiesTlt " Is th veiy wantonness of folly for a man to search out the trets ana Duraens oi his calling, and- give his mind every day to i the; consideration of them. Thev belong to. human life. They are inevitable. Brooding, then, only gives them strength;1 On the other hand, a man has power given to him to shed beauty and pleasuro.upon the homeliest toil, if he is wise. - Let a man adopt his business, and identify it with his life ' and cover it with pleasant associations; tor txOd has given us imaginations,; not alone to make some poets, but to enable all men to beautify homely things. Heart varnish will cover un innumerable evils and defects.3 tLook at the good things. Accept .your lot as a man does a piece of rugged ground, and begin to get put the rocks and roots, to deepen and mellow 'the soil., to enrich aud uJant it. , there is gome thing It the most forbidding vocation around which a man may twine picas ant fancies out of which he may de velop an honest pride. ' A 1 1 . .' from the Cincinnati Commercial. J A Third Chapter in a Murder History ' Arrest or an Alifgea flnraerer. 'J Nearly1 two . years since' we , pub lished the facts, so far as then known in connectieu with the supposed murder of a "woman of the town." famil iarly " known as "Frenchy," whose corpse was found, stiffened , by . the frigid breath of a severe winter. night, in an alley back of the ' court-house, in this' city. " It will be remembered tha.t all investigation failed to estab lish more than a very few . facts, and those unimportant as to her identity ana as to tne means uy wnicn ner murder had been., accomplished. Whether ; she had been drugged, or knocked insensible by a. fist blow and then left there to be frozen to death. was not established by the scanty evi dehce elicited by the investigation Deiore the coroner s lurv. . It . was simply ascertained that, up lo a late hour of the night bclore she had been walking through the streets in com pany with a man; that she waa nicely dressed, as if for a ball; that both were drinking freely; and that, they were last seen together at the Black Uear J avern. about two squares from where her body was founds . ' . '.Her companion ; that night, whose name was Stansifer, was familiarly known as " Ole. Bull." The verdict in the case was ."death at the hands of some person or persons unknown 'to. the jury," and an attempt was-made to arrest Stansifer, who, however! left the cityim'mediately, thereby strength-; ening the suspicion ast to his 'knoWf-' edge of the mystery.' About three months since, we published the second chapter of this affair being the identification of the murdered girl by her aged mother;- and in this ' connection we can give yet another, chapter of this long-drawn story in the matter or the arrest 'ot the man fetanslfer. alias "Vie. Bull." , 'At a late hour of Saturday night Lieutenants Siebert and Bicrbaum ar rested Tom: Leonard and an associate, at Adleter s saloon, corner of lour tecntn ana ucntral avenue, on sus picion of" their being of the party of highway robbers ' who have , been wording ine roaas leaaing into I.: ji i i a .i .ithis city for the past two weeks, and of having oi hand in the robbery of ' "I; J. Brown, ori the Colerain.pike.vFriday night. ; Thefee two prisoners were loobett within a cell -at the Bremen street station, Leonard s companion giving a fictitious name for Use on the slate, i E-Lieutenant'Dossman hap pening to notice them in the cells yes terday, and heannj .Leonard all his companion Ole.. asked him if he was hot "OIc Bull.' ;The -answer being in the nfhrmativc,! he asked him in his right name was not Stansifer. Believing that he was fully recognized. Stansifer acknowledged that such was thd case, and Dossman immediately gavo the mlorination to the officers. Stansifer will be brought before Judge fcitraub to-day. - . 1 FEED STORES. Western Feed Store. - . WJt. .TROUP & C0,f T , Wliolex&le arid Kelall Dealer tit I i ' II A V, J A V, CORN, OA TSS BRA A - ifKA HOMINY, HAT.T, 1.1 MK. A.-. ' Xos. OS nud HO, Corner Main uud Fourtti HUeeta, . , ' v: i BvajtbVh w, Id. WeS". Agent, fvr the CMeaoo Seal 0mmtnv.-.- -.i.-.t.i u r,u -.-.i BANKING. First Miilional Elanl- ; -'OP KVANfiVIHiE, tiUCD. '." ' '. ; ;IT. "H., DftpoHltoi'y. 1 . , 1 Organized Jnnc, Wfi. ; .- . : CAPITA I- f, , . SSOO.Otx J - John H. ifopKCNS, Preside ot; ' : -1 Jamk9 H. Cutler,, Caottlei.) , Directors, U. Maghee, John Ingle, J; Chax-ps Viele, M. J. Bray, Wm.' Bi-own,J. S. Hopkins, KoTiort Karuos, Ft Wj Hawyet C Preston. , . . ; . Doing a general Banking; Exchange,, aud Collection BiiKinexH. ' , '' i Kevemie Staujpo for a le, . i '"Wiv-ii iv : . , . i DR. A. WEBBER : 5 -.' ; ( formerly of Hopkiusvllle, Ky.) -Offers his proleRHlonal servlcea to the citi zens of KvaDRville. Resilience on Third, between Cberry and OakStveets. Office over the Post-Offlce. fseZTdSm

HARDWARE.

GEO. S. SONNTAG CO, .. ...... itiiK LKHH M - Vises, ,;; : BcLlov8r Hand ami Slcdt; HaiiuniTF, Horse Shoes, ; Horse Xalls, Stocks and Dies, Butchers' Fllesi ; Coil Chain, r : Leather Ilellln U. M FIRST . TREKT. folilO :KVANSVir,.,K.lNI. PKA.hlC IN " Ilur ami SI--t . TlNl'LATK: U'MIK. ;: ''.ZINC, SIMlLNtJS . " ' ' ' AXLKS, &o.. Horse and Mute Shoes, : Tinners and Itlackstultlis' Tools, Hagoii and Bigg Woodwork ... W.VI Kit KTKEET, - . . jmil illy;; KVANsvT.. iKn.WIkoIIiijj' Iron Workn, " ACHESON, BELL &, CO, . - Muuu fuel ii rent and Dealers In all klndfto IIAIt IUOV AM) NAIIA. U.toj, Sheet, Plate, Tank Iron, Nail ,. ', iv ire, drc. , OHIm- aiKt WarelioiiHe l.t MAIN HTHKlCf iovJBlly ' .; WHKta.mii, W. Va, Iff. SC. IVI!1 -t'f lW VA I.H . :.iirOIl.' j ; ' ; ..,...'! ri .- . IriiMru;rs and Ik-iiIpm hi . '.,;, . -v - r i ' -; : CUTJLERY, Farmers and Mechanics' Tools, BUILDERS', HARDWARE. ',' CIRCULAU -. . i j - ' A. BSCVr SAWS, Falrlmiik' SouIph, au! EVAN8VILI-B. IND. DENTISTS, ItCHilcilt lOllllMt, Oyer Kind National Bank; ', . . . : t'ornar MaJa an Flrnt Street, i - - - . , ' I : : , ETannvllle, lud JLii. oum tiuru Work. Oold. Hilver, Vnl-i-jtuite.Corallte, and Amber Platen, Carved Work, Artificial Palatew, &c. '. ADMIN ISTRATO tt of Nitrous Oxide (an excellent and safe aneesthelic). Cbloroiorin, r.ther, and alo Heverm local paralyzera. .. . , , . - NEUItALOIC AfTectloua treated. MY KACIL1TIKH are as good and l eslabUstunent as large (couHitlng of nvk rooms) as any In the United fcHatea. I RETURN' MY THATtKH for the extensive patronage received during the paat : ' DRJ. C. BIERBOWER,' ; Surgeon Dentist, omce. No. 10 FIRST STREET, bet Main .... auu iocub, . " Tender Ills mrofesaional servicea to cikixeus of Kvansvilie and vicinity jfeiW if . Administers xx iiium uxiue uanjio alleviate pain In extracting teeth. WM. C. TURNOCK & 00BRASS FOUNDERS, Gas and Steam Pipe Fitters, ..':.-.... I . . Corner Pine and First Streets. '! Cash paid for old Copper and Bras. - -pv Dealers In1 all kinds of Brass Cocks Whistles, and Steam Ganges. Partlcnlaa attention paid to repairing and adjusting Steam Ganges f June8 tf

X)Ii, I.

DRY GOODS.

SKCONl) AHUIVAI. AT TUB mammoth iiorsi: i ... :'' "' of . '. HUJ)SiKTII, ADAMS & V ' ' 63 Main Streot CO.. W1 E NOW OFI Tit TO Till: l;ii lie a lurid and w;i-ki'1.m-i.wI i... . ot K.-ill and Winter Drv (l.,U iiVi bonirliL new crxxin rucuiitlv. ami tall our cniMU at prlcoH oiuy juiiinl ty Iirenciit low prison VmhI, wo rt-npi-. i hilly requmt the public to cll and e our hUm-U, In JieH U(nN. All tlic ncwi-t KliuUeit in Frencli aud Irlwli I'opiIiiH, Ki;n.-li nOH. Kn.piVHS CIoIIin. WIiih-vh. M. Iui,,,.. HcoUih I'iafdH. and All-Woo. IItiiik-h. Our KWx-k In Woolen Uom1h U Him lurui-st in the flty. In Nothn of all colors, i-uhxI-mre Hut Int-t j. TwetMln. JYumk n ml vini. nelK, we ar able to oiler lo custf.ii..'.- m Uix-t-monU no other house in the -liy -un. Uur MtiK-lc of NotlotiM Ih larure. iiiiih Ih1ii,. everytbtniiixrei;UHl to li found. We liuv. mrno mock or J.nit tloo.li., Hhlrl and Irwern. 1IooIii ant NuI.I.im, HhuwU hi.. I Hoop-Skins, lilanlK-lH, !. We have now In clock, In lilt-ached and llrown MumIiiih. l iiiiio.i h'mii.ui i.i... tTheckM, and Ill.-kory kiiIjm-h, kmmW of the lt britluU produced In till i-oiintrY. Thi Iiouh.- that will m II KoodH at marked value Js . . . HUDSPETH. ADAMS & CO., 63 Main Street. ioc2l SCHAPKER, BUSSING & CO.. Wholenalc and ICctall , ' ' DEALKItS, " 47niil 49 Main Nl., i:nii vllle, I ml.. Now ofTer lo the p.ihllc a laratr and Ik(tcr Io k of Fall and Winter Dry Goods Tl riian c 'J.SifM can lie foil ml In any OXi! KHTA ItUKX'J'Xn tlio Wesli in outitiy. vl. : floiiicHlIc Department, Under the oliaiKP of A. Vknnkmaj. run now be had the lwt anil iiiomI i.oiinlar makcM of ' allcxw. Drown and Blaclit-d MuslinB, K1ih-IIiih, Pillow (,'iiho MiisIIiih, CliikH, TU-kliiKH, Hickory MUm-. Ac, and. alwayM at lliw lowent market i Uw. ' ic Dress Coods Department, . Under the special charge of Prof. Uir.sTAV MATHIAM aud JOH. UtFA WUICIf. lH now S.:1-'..wi.tn. Noveltle- of the Kiianoii, at from ti to 100 a patt-jrn, and In whlc.U any I "Dd ovcrylKidy can b nulled. f - White Good- Department, In Clianra of .T. K. Dutchkr. Ih li.-lnu- .lallirepleulHlied, and the aMHrrrlinent In now complete coimiHlliie Of Hwl. J.uni.i... Table LlnenH and Ck)llmt Htami nnd Table Covora, TowelH, Napkluo, llauilkerclilelH, KmbroldorleH, IaIkIuk. Lacon (both real and Imitation). Kinbroldered and I.m-n CurtaliiH, and charming bcaullea in B-1-spreaUx, &o. ., Motions Department. This tttock. In chareo of A. IANrfn. i very complete, from a pnper of Plnx to a Ealr of Alexander' Kid Uloven, or a lirasi niton to a Paper Collar. But the inoxt attractive 1 the ci-lebm ted Tilglow'a Linen KlUiNhed and " Ktar of the Went" Glazed Paper Collain, at cent.ua box the iiiohi durable, bet IIUIiik, nud cheapem Collar In AmelCH. , ; Woolen Department, Liuler the superintendence of Joh. Uav.ijr HAl-SEK, in well ftHHortwl, and tliowe in Hearch of Clotba, CaanlinM-eH, IoNl(lnii, Bearers, Jeaon, or auytbiiiK for Men' or this stock before nurchftsliiu- eliu.wlii.ro. and nave money. AIho. KlauiielM in all wool, part cotton, aud Milk aud wooli ; Shawls and Cloaks .. Iu endJesj. variety, y ; - . i i Hoop Skirts ' At a great rod action In prices. Retail Millinery Department. ' , huperlntended by MIkmcs Emza :ki.um and IiAKBAKA IJkuuarot, Ih th miwt com. plete ia th VVext, and new troodM are dally arriving iu every novelty tnat Iho heart can wisti and the eye desire. We most "resnectfullV call the attention of the public to the fact Hint wn make no rjuiemotiM pretenHion of nellluif bi-low cohI," "cheaper tban before the war," or "cheaper tliap anylxKly in tlio world;" neither do we wll lhn- hh,h of CoatV Tbmad for iSnti for tbe purpoie of enticing trade, and then charge It up m (roods in whli U tlicvnre not noNtml. VTa aell at the O.VA' J'HICB HY STIC if, ami alvoay an, cheap an lb cheapewt, and an low an the market will a Cord, and warrant all gomls an repreHcrited. Tb wileMiiien'wIlI alwavH be for.nd nc. ynimodatiiii and ready to Hbow eoodu. whether a Hale in made or not. SCIIAFKER, HISSING & CO.. Wholesale and Eetall Dealers, 47 and 49 Main St, Evansvilli, Ind. OC2I JTall Trado, 1 SU7. G. MAGHEE & CO., iVo. ia - ipii-M fc fs t.; UtumkvIIIc, Indiana. WnOI.KHAI.E DKAI.EKS IK STAPLE AUD FAXCT DKI GOODS, DKNIKK TO f'AM. THE ATTKW. tioa of the trade to their large and varied OMtiortHient of seasonable goods, which they have Juxt received, and are offering at great bargains. ', GRAIN BAGS. Z,2, andp bushel Keamless P-ag; on hand andforsaleby O. MAOIIICK 4 CO, 3,000 Kour bBhhel Bni lap Ilis jut rwx.-tel and for sale by u. M AO II lili & co. 4,000 Yards Kurlaps JiiKt received and for sale by' aug26dtf O. MAUUEEdk CO.