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

f F D A IL V OT R A T.; FRIDAY. .KOYEMBER

4 THE

IE KVASSY1LLE JOURNAL PUBLISHED DAILY BY The Evansville Journal Company, lo. Locust Street, EransTllle, Ind. : SUBSCRIPTION TERMS. . IN ADVANCE.

Rally Journal. One year, by mall - Bttx mouths, by ml),-..-Ttree month, by mjl. iJy the week, payable to carrier Trl-Wekly Jonrnnl. Ore year ............. Bix months Wetely Journal. Oie copy, one year Five copies, one year .............. fen copies, one year . 1 oo & oo $ 7(H) 4 OO S 2 00 . 15 OO NEAVS ITEMS. Gold closed in New York, yesterday at i30)i. It is probable that the House of Congress vf 111 adjoarn over till Monday. Jeff. Davis Is expected to reach Richmond to-night. It is expected that his trial will Cjmmer.ce next week. Gen. Uiant's reports are ready and were submitted some days ago They are the fl -st Department reports ready. It is stated that the Judiciary Committee have reso'.vod at once to report on the Impeachment question. Mr.Kelsey, an able member of the House, hasprepartd a bill which he will introduce, trie eAT'eot of which Is to suspend officials while being tried for Impeachment. Chief Justice Chase is of opinion that the time Is not tar distant when the Government will return to specie payment, at Which time the United States bonds will be redeemed m specie. A dispatch from Denver City states that the Denver and Pacific Railroad Company has been formed. An early connection with the Union Pacific Railroad is deleiniine.l upon. Quite an interesting debate occurred in the House on the 21st, on the subject of admitting delegates from Tennessee. This session of Congress i3 likely to prove very interesting, if not exciting. A terrible accident occurred on the Cincinnati, Hamilton & Dayton Railroad on the 21st inst., at Lockland, by one train running into another. Four ladies and one man were burned to death, and nearly all the train destroyed, being buri ed to ashes. KESTUCKI ITEMS. The seven convicts who lately escaped from the penitentiary at Frankfort, have been captured and returned to that institution. The Louisville Courier learns that a gang of highwaymen held possession of the road leading from that city, a few nights ago, stopping several persons, and demanded their money or their lives. A large eagle, seven feet seven inches from tip to tip of wing-s, was killed near Carlisle last week. A Mrs. Vaughn fought a regular pitched battle with him whi!e alighted in her poultry yard. Tom Cantrell, who klllel Samuel Galloway last September, has had h:s 'trial at Princeton, and was sentenced to the pen;t .ntiary for a period of ten years. Two lads near North Middleton, a few days ago, chased a gray fox with two fleet hounds, in a circle of three miles, for five hours, without Intermission. A Mr. Kubach was stoned nearly to death, in his yard at Louisville last Sunday night, by unknown parties. One of the stones struck him In tiie forehead, and it was supposed his skull wa fractured. The body of a man was fouiid, about a mile from Louisville, on Monday, partly buried. The skull was mashed, and it was suppos-ed tliat he had b?en murdered lor his'inoncy. ' It was thought tliV murder had been committed s:x mouths ago. ISUJAXA ITEMS. Indiana has reduced her public debt during the 1-ist ye:ir over SljKXy.'OO. Wild geese are making ravages iii the cornfields in Kosciusko County. They are rr.aiiin;; nails at Xew Albany. Forty-one kegs of 10s and 2Us were manufactured on Wednesday. Royal y. Hicks, of Spencer County, is spoken of as a ;tEditL.te fo Auditor of State, on the Co; perLiad ticket. Eighty Encampments ot the I. O. O. F. are ri'prled in this State, with a membership of 3.0S5. A Mr. Mo-Quarter was robbed of his mouy. neir Indianapolis,. by some highwaymen, lat Monday night. 'A Democratic School Director in Sullivan ha.i locked a school house against re ligious worship. The Sullivan County Union csdls it a " meau trick." In anybody e e it would be, but in a Democratic ofiiclal, it ought not to be so considered. A inu.u named Carr, a resident of Pern, w&s killed at Logansport, Sunday evening. Iajuinrin;j from one car to another his foot sdlpped, and he was thrown under the wheel, which ran over his neck, almost severing the head from the body. A we-ilthy farmer, named Ben. Tee, who lived in Washington Township, Tippecaxce County, was shot dead in his door yard, on Monday evening He was to hr.ve had a settlement, at the time, with a tenant with whom he had some difficulty, and to fiat cause the murder may be at tributed. We desire to call especial attention to cur correspondence on the second page of this morning's paper. In the commercial columns this morning, will be found an article cn the Hog Trade, from the editor of the Cincinnati Price Current, one of the best posted men upon the subject in the West. It is estimated that the London journeymen tailors during their late strike and lock-out lost in wages 50,000, and paid expenses 20,000 anakiDg a total of 70,000, or 1355,000,

Financial. We hear from various quarters that Secretary McCulloch is preparing a strong document to be submitted to Congress, in which he will argue the wisdom and soundness of his financial policy. We dare say he will, if possible, make the worse appear the better reason. How successful he will be, remains to be seen. Washington correspondents fill the : air with rumors as to what he will recommend to Congress, and business men are nervous and anxious with regard to his intentions. Among other things, "it is stated that he will ask Congress to give him power to consolidate the national debt in a new five per cent, forty year bond. The main trouble is upon the point of exempting the bonds from taxation. The Democrats will make a party question of it, and some influential Republicans say it is not right to exempt any new bonds from local taxation. The plan is, to declare in explicit terms that the new bonds are payable, principal and interest, in coin, then the fact that a larg" class of politicians hold that the six per cent, bonds are not payable at maturity in coin, will facilitate the exchange and will settle, in a satisfactory manner, a vexatious and dangerous question. Some of the strongest Republicans in the Senate wiSi favor the scheme of McCulloch, mi'l the President is expected to back it. The Banking Law, Mr. McCulloch will, if possible, have retrain as it is. We apprehend, however, that there will be a disposition on the part of prominent Republicans to amend the Law by changing some of its provisions. A. great muny very honest Republicans arc puzzled with the idea that some men buy Government bonds, deposit them in the United States Treasury, receive interest on them, and, in addition, receive for them circulating notes, which they can lotro'out to their neighbors at a rate of interest fixed by themselves. The financial problem is a difficult one, and while many think they can give a correct solution of it, their attempted demonstrations are usually failures. Congress will need all of its prudence and statesmanship for this question, and we hope it will be taken up early and discussed thoroughly and satisfactorily.

The Indiinapolis Journal says the I notorious Charles W. Hall, of il Jl.'U t'JUli ALL VCJV.UlilJ' lu a i V dent cf that city, has been selected by the Treasury Department to arbitrate certain matters in controversy between 'the Government and violators of the whisky excise law. With Risley and Hall in the Treasury Dsiavimeat, and Mr. Voorhees present in -Washington to instruct them how to act, there is a chance that Mr. McCullocu's heavy "accumulation of ; speeia may be materially decreased I without investing it in bonds. And j yet Copperhead papers have the efi fro ti eery to speak of the present as a llepuotiean administration. Still Iroppinj! Oui. The truth with regard to the meaLS by which the Democratic, majority was swelled so enormously in New York City, in the last election, is crop ping out in many democratic locali ties. .We have already cited Democratic testimony on this point. We now givu the testimony of another important eye witness. Fernando Wood, who is new canvassing the city i'ov M iyor, delivered a speech, a few days ago, ia which he saidt " I charge that at the late election the Tammany Hall organization imported thieves from Philadelphia to vote their ticket; and these thieves were organized in different wards of the city, and that bands of them voted in more than sixteen wards and in more than one hundred and twentyfive electoral districts. Cheers. More than that; it is known that several of the Inspectors of Election, after receiving the ballot from the voter, substituted another ballot and deposited it in the box." These thieves all voted the Democratic ticket, and as the Mozart faction probably practiced the same villainies they charge upon their rivals, some idea may be formed of the stupendous frauds perpetrared by the Now York" Democrats, which culminate 1 in a majority unparalleled even in that centre of corruption. The Xanie of " Democrat." We hear occasional expressions of regret that the name of ' Democrat" is retained in the present division of parties. It might have been better, for some reasons, that the opposition to the Radical rule had organized Tinder some other watchword; but the fact is, that the name of Democrat wat retained at the North, during the war, by the friends of constitutional

liberty, and hence the surrender found oar only allies in that quarter enrolled undtr that banner. Let our Southern iriends of the oi l Whig party remember that the word Democracy does not now mean what it did in by-gone days. Past issues are dead; old part3 lines are wiped out ; the true and only

meaning now attached to it is that Conservatism which is ecr.iced in the terrible struggle with the 'Jacobins of our distracted country. So says the Lynchburg (Va.) Republican, one of the boldest refcel papers in the South. Will the Democrats of the North and West consent to be called "allies" by the men who originated and prosecuted the bloody rebellion against the Government? The name '"Democrat " is preserved by the rebels because they believe it to be synonymous with their own. Periodicals. Harper. The December number is the first of a new volume. Its illustrated. articles are: A Pilgrimage in Sunny Lands, a rhymed narrative of a journey through Spain and Southern France; the Nurseries on Randall's Island; Tronville, a new French paradise; and a day's fighting in Queretaro, a half a dozen excellent stories, a capital collection of Scottish anecdotes, the history, of Benjamin West's love, and the always readable Editorial Miscellany fill the remaining pages. The new volume promises well. London Society. This republication, by Messrs. Hurd & Houghton for November, is somewhat in advance of its predecessors in illustrations and interesting reading matter. The contents are as follows: The Piccadilly Papers, (Illustrated); How I fell into the clutches of King Theodore, (Illustrated); More Metasrrains; The Private Life of a Government Officer, (Illustrated); The Aunt in Ambush, (Illustrated); Gossip from Egypt; Gone, (Illustrated); Sunshine and Fog; True. Blue; Two Brides; Without Reserve, (Illustrated); The Mail-Guard's Story, (Illustrated); A Quartette of Beauties . from South Kensington; Thumbnail Studies in the London - Streets, (Illustrated); An Autumn Reverie, (Illustrated); Playing for High Stakes; Chapter xxix More Family Affection ; Chapter XXX " And does not a Meeting like this make Amends?" Chapter XXXI In Troubled Waters; Table Talk, and Anecdotes of Society. Littell's Living Age. We never pick up a copy of this periodical without finding something ia it to fix the attention and charm the mind. For many years it has sustained its present advanced position among periodicals,' and seems now to lose none of the life and spirit of its younger. daysIts selections from cotemporaneous literature are always mide with such good taste and thorough adaptability to the wants oi"tbe people that frora the,, outset its admirers' have been on" the Increase, while all that once make its aequatntance . quickly classify themselves among its friends? ' - '''. Ali the 'tforld in Sew icrli. i ' The 'New'York ; JVutH ' states that the Germans in America are preparing f:r a vast International Fe.-livai, ia whicii the rifle club?, the singing socie.tiesv and ail the vast srray of orchestral unions of the Old World and the New," are to be reunited in the city of New York, in one mammoth exhibition of kiii and emulation, suc-h as the world has never before witnessed. The details of this magnificent festival, which have already been decided upoa, enable oue to form some conception of the entertainment which is in preparation lor the American public. The project, comprehensive and splendid as it is, originated about three years ago, at an immense meeting of sharpshooters from almost every European country held in one of the famous free towns cf Germiiay. ;, To this nearly every Sehufzeu corps ia the United States sent a delegation ; and, after the usual rifle matches had ended, with more or less satisfaction to the contestants, some one started the idea of inviting the organizations of the Fatherland to visit America. The idea, however, could hardly take a practical form at that time, owing to the still unsettled condition of public affairs, and the derangements of social life caused by late troubles; but since the United States have resumed that aspect of external tranquility, which, in spite of minor troubles, it now really enjoys, our Teutonic friends, on each side of the broad Atlantic-, have bestirred themselves to brinsr the great scheme to a I brilliant issue. STRAYED. STKAl'KD ln MOLES HOR"-E From my stable, at The corner of 1-ourth and OaS streets, on the niht of the i9tb inst.. a light sorrel mare, -1 years old, about hands high. Any one de livering the same, or any Information beins i-fi at the stable of Forth fe Bowles, or at my house, corner of Fourth and Oak Streets, will be liberally rewarded. nov21 deft HENKY HABENICHT.

MARRIED.

LAW BELL. Ou Thursday evening, Nov. 21st, by Rev. Dr. Strong, F.dwakd E. Law, Esq., to Miss Jeasjjie C. Bell, all of this city. We are indebted to the fair bride for a liberal portion of the wedding-cake. May happiness ever be theirs! St. Louis and Terre Haute papers please copy. SEW ADVERTISEMENTS. CARTER'S C O X B I IV E I Writing and Copying INK. This COMBINATION Ink has been awarded the llUillllST I' II t HI I' MS over all otiie.-s in Xw York. Boston, aud Baltimore, and proa unced by the most celebrated chemists the best Ink ever offered to the public. It Is used by many of the largest Commercial Houses, Banks, Railroads, nd other corporations ia New York. Boston, Cincinnati, and Louisville, and gives perfect satisfaction. The Advantages of this orer other Inks are First. It flows freely from the pen, and does not thicken by exposuie to the air. Second. It will give a perfect and instantaneous copy. Third. It will not mould. Fourth. Being equally as good for Copying as for Bookkeeping, it entirely does away with the ue of two kinds of Ink. Fifth. It is more permanent than common Inks. Sixth. The color, when first written, is a beautiful dark green, but in a remavkably ss.oi t 'line it changes to a brilliant jet black not a brownish black. Seventh. It is admirably adapted to the mcst delicate writing, and always "makes It mark." This Ink is warranted to flow as freely as Arnold's, or any other Writing Fluid now in uie ; tu give as perfect a copy as any Cppying Ink ; aud not to mould. I'iVANSVILLE JOURNAL CO.. nov22 du Soie Agents for this city. Dissolution of Copartnership. mri: iik.h of t. ii. irist v co. A is this day dissolved by mutual con-s-i)t. T. H. Crit will continue the business, and seti.e up the affairs of the old firm. T. H.CRIST.- ' ' J. D. LI NX WILE R. Evansville, Nov. 20, lyj7. nov22 ilw OHIO RIVER TELEGRAPH. Btxj. B:-!anskobd, President. C. 15. Hicks, Secretary and Treasurer. N. M. iiooTU, Superintendent. ,. OFFICES AT " HE)KKNO X, Evansville. Owenooro, Lewisport, Kstwesville. Cloverporl, Stephensporl, Brandenburg, Weil Pjint, and Louisville. Messages delivered at Cauneltbn, Tell City, and other towns on the opposite side of the river. This liue connects with the Western Union at Louisville. office on Water street, between Main and Locust, (over Hayhurst & WhiUaker's), Evansviilf, Ind. nov21 dim In Bankruptcy. THIS IS TO GIVE SOTItlE, that on the 13th day ot No vember. A.D. 18J7, a warra.ut.in bankruptcy was issued against the estate of Herman Dreier. of Evansville, in the county of Vanderoursrh, and State of It.diana, who has been adjudged a naiiHrnpt, on his own petition; that tue payment of any debts and delivery of any property belonging to such biikrupt to him,- or for his use, and the transfer ot any property by him, i forbidden by lw; tbat a meeting of thecreditore of the said bankrupt, to prove tlie.r debts and to choose one or more assiguees of his estate, will be held at a Court of Bankruptcy, to be holden at the office of Charles 11. Butterheld, on Third Street, iu Evansville, . Indiana, before Charies H. La; tei field, Keaister. uu the Hth day ot December, A..D. 17, a. Iu o'clock A il. :.;: .- EKN. J. S POWER,. - U. fi: Marshal, District of Indiana. noviii U2t . Office Pevjcsylvaxia Railkoao Co., ) . Philadelphia, Nov. 1, 17. j TIIE FLXAfSYLVAMA U4ILKO VI Company hereby give notice, that they will receive proposals until the first day of January, for leasing separately or collectively the Union- Depot Hotel at Pittsbura. tue Lo?an House at Altoona, aud the Dining Saloon in the Ifrrisurg Dv POD, for a term of years, couiuieucing on or iieiure Ma;cii 1. la The hotels at Pittsburg and Altoona are furulsued throughout in the best manner. it must be expressly understood that the Railroad Company will require that nit of these establishments shall be kept iu a ktricliy first'Ciass manner lor the conv?nit in.-.; und com ort of passengers patron-i;-.i:)g its lii.e. Proposals will be addressed to John M. Kemieiiy, Chairman of Spf-cHl Commit tee, -no. 8iio Arch Street, Philadelphia, novii d t jaul'urf ARCHITECTS'. ALLEN iz CLA&KK, Architects & Superintendents. Ofllce Crescent City Building, second floor: entrance No. H:i Main street. Plans and specifications furnished on reasonable terms. se2 lKm E HUESLNNA, ARCHITECT. Office No. S CHANDLER'S BUILDING. Corner First and Locust Streets, Evansville, Ind. W Plans and specifications for all kinds ot Duildmsrs furnished at short notice, and on reasonable own (mclil.i dXm JK,olirt Boyd, Architect, XO. 7 CHANDLER'S BLOCK. Office i formerly occupied by the late firm of Mnrslnna Boyd. mch27 6m INSURANCE. EVANSVILLE IXSUJIAXCE CO. Attthorized CapitalPaid Up Capital Sl,000,0iO Hj.uA) FIRE, MARINE, & FLAT BOAT RISKS Taken at fair rates. John S. Hopkins, President. James H. Cutler. Secretary. DIKECTOKS: Charles Viele. John Ingle, Jr., William Brown, Dr. F. W. Sawyer, C. Preston. J. Hops ins, tiillison Maghee, Robert Barnes, Dr. M. J. Bray, J. N. Kdoj, Business Agent, who wlL also attend to Life and Accident Insurance Oflioe, corner of Main ami First street, in First National Bank Building. aplSfan

Eyansillle Library Association

FIRST LECTURE OF THE SEASON. GEO. ALFRED TOWNSENP'S Great Lecture "THE LANDS TO TUE NORTH OF US," at CRESCENT CITY II ALL, Friday ETenlng, November 22d, 1SCZ. Tickets, OO Out. For sale at tLe Book and Drug Stores, and at the door. The Lecture will commence at 7 o'clock, novli dtd GRAND FAIR & FESTIVAL AT MOZART HALL, For the purpose of raising a fund lor the Widows and Orphans and Poor of tlie City. The Ladles of this city will hold a Fair and Festival at th above Hall on the evenings of the 19th, 20th, 21st, 22d, and 23d or November, FOR BENEVOLEXT Pt'KPOSES, Sparing no exertion to make it the GRAND FAIR. of the season, and pleasant and agreeable to all those who may attend. Committee of Hons of Temperance. , J H. Carlix. B. B. H4RT. Dr. H. Ct. Joxes. Dr. J. Magjcsis.. Dak. G. Mark. Theo. Russell. E. II. Eabcock. Jb. Committee of Cadets of Temp Trance. Philip Baker. William Ross. EllWAKD CrRNICJC. T. c. Uakdseu, HKSKY WHfcKLER. Committee of T emple of Honor, J. J. MARLETT, Jit. C. E. llATi JIAX. J. P. Wood. nov2 dtf Commissioner's Sale of Real Estate. BY VIRTUE OF A llECKEE OF the Vanderburgh Circuit Court, the undersigned will, on the IHili day of December, lsti7, bet ween 10 o'clock a.m and 4 o'clock p.m., at the court-house door iu Evansviilt-, proceed to sell at public auction the loliowing-describei leal estate, to wit: Beginning at the northeast corner of a pieco of laud conveyed by Abel Kullivan and wife to Alexander Farrell; running thence east to the sect ion-eorn.-r between said Abel Huilivan and Nicholas Loni;wortti; tceuce fouih nlonx aii m'fiir.nline to Adams Street, in the Northern Enlargement of the city of Evansvide, Vanderburgh County, Indiana; thence west alono; snid Adams street feet ; thence due north to the place of beginning containing fourteen acres, more or less in the northeast corner ot th southeast quarter Of rtec-tion ii), in'Townshij 6 south, of Range 10 west, Vanderburgh County, Indiana. Terms One-third cah, one-third at one year, nnd one-third at two v-enrx, with interest. H. NELSON. uov-I wit Commissioner. Street Improvement. THE COMMON (OlMlt OF THE City of Evansville will receive sealed proposals, until the 11th day of December, isii7, lor uradiug, graveling, an i guttering Eighth sstree' of said cliy from tiie southeast side or Main Street to the nort hwej-t side of Locust s-Street; said improvement to be made agreeably to specifications adopted by the said Council on the 7lh d;iy of May, lnfiT, vthicli may be eeu at the Clerii'K TifTife. - . By order of the Council. A. M. Met; RIFF, Clerk. Clerk's 031ce, Evansville, Nov. is, lb , 7. nov2l dvt J. C. HEIJSON z SOI?,Undertakers and Embalmers, Nj. L3 Jliin S'ru t, FAX'S VILLE, INDIANA. y TT7E HIVE Pl'K(HlSi: TIIE V . right ol nsinj ir. Chain'. erlalu's pr cess o: embalming, and are prepared to do work in that line at short notice; wari anted to give satisx'uct ion. A large assortment of the best METALLIC CASES, CASKETS ANDWOOD COFFINS Constantly. on band . i - angli Sm : KISS R L POWERS HA JIST REt'EIVEI A SII.E did assortment of Human Hair ol an lengths and shades. Braids, Curls, Foreperies, Waterfalls, Sc, at greatly reduced prices. Call and see bemre pm-chaflng elsewhere Also, IIAIK JEWEL.KV of all descriptions made lo order. LOCUST STUEET, Opposite the .Sherwood House. seJ dim New Firm and ew Goods. IBON CITY GROCERY. H AVISO Pl'HCHASEB TIIE above House, on Locust street, between First aud Second, 1 am now receiving, ami shall keep constantly on kand, a full supply of FRESH Family Groceries and Provisions, Purchased at low figures, and offered at a tmall advance. Every article warranted fresh and genuine. A liberal patronage solicUed. JAMES SNELL, Jr. novll d3m

STATIONERY. JOHN II. SCOTT, Ilooksellcr, fitatloncr AI NEWSDEALEK, No. 53 MAIN STREET, cor. Second. aulQ dly t von-ii u.lun, GEO. II. FISH & CO., Wholesale Booksellers & Stationers, SCHOOL ROOKS, BLANK BOOKS, MISCELLANEOUS BOOKS, PAPER ENVELOPES, AND Odieml Stationery, IVo. lf Mnln Htreet, ' EvansYille, Indiana. JulyDly

11. P. IURTEII& CO., BOOKSELLERS AND H T .A. TIONEUH. Wholesale and retail dealers in Standard and MUctllaneout Hookt, SCHOOL. BOOKS. ' STA TIONKlt Y, BLANK JIOGKH. MEMORANDUMS, FOOLSCAP, LEGAL, BILL, LETTER, NOTE, FLA TCAP, AND "Willi Piporw, Photograph Albums, Letter Pressu:'., Writing Desk3, Envelopes, and Fancy Goods. No. (J North First Street, EVANSVILLE -.INDIANA. . laulti ly CAI1PETS. FALL, 1H07. WII01.ES.1L12 and ISETAII. CARPET W.A .REEL OTJSE Wisi.E. French & Vo No. 10 First Street, . hVAKHVILLE, iyi)., , II EA I t 11 A 11 T li 16 H i OF SUPPLIES FOH Families, Steamboats & Hotels. A lo. AC ENTrf for the hale Of GERMAN ANCHGR Boltin? Cloth Vtlvft C.irpot-t Chinwc Mattioirs IJrus-el;-! Cariieta pUaiitn iMattiugs Taie.-try CVirpots 'Cocon JM ,i 1 1 i n Three-Ply Carj'C D I IJ.i ruboo Mat t i rigs Two-l'ly Carpets firain Carpets Velvet IWn Brunei Bu Venetian Cariit't.-j lOil-Clutli Kus (JiTtnan Carj'Cts j Velvet MuN , Ptiu;el Cari-vti' ,'l'rus-tl-i ?IatListuix Curj'Ot.i.. llu!b' r .M;it lleuip (Jarj-'uta - AJs'aif'e IhtU 15:i2 Carpet s j'hecikin M.'.H U'in.low 1 IpIh'ndV Fl-.or Or.U'iKs Wicdij'v Fistuic'.-i Pi a tic fc-La-lg-i ir oSh'-V'h PuYorite Shsi-lfr' j i',!!o;,v-l-:r-Vi-iii'tifln Shades (('onii'-o I' 'ti li-:; Whi-lov (Jorrjiccp Bel Jil.i rt (;' (Jilt b'lmJ. Cotton .:.tt.ti NottinL'hi Tatiil-oureJ J.iee Window ilcpi Knb'.er .heeting Window Drajrury Parlor Ila.-oc-ks Carpet Bindings. '1'abie IjiueriH Fruit Napkifji Woolen J)ru'-'get3 Curtain Hooks Table Oil Cloths Piano Covers Curtain Gimps Carpvt Llniii,:. Carnage lri.s Pictur Nails Slnir Bods Pietarc Cards stair Plates Picture Tas.els Counterpanes Stair Linens Carpet IVcks Window Iamask Cuitain Loops Ac., tie., Ac Experienoed PAI'EIHIA XdKRM and UFliULTEiailiS4 Inrnished when required. The latent styles of FRENCH WINDOW LAIIBKAQUINS . , . mail to oidur. . Carpets rut and inade to any given measure. Oil-'lolhS titled and put down. vV'indow Coiuk-es inounterj and put up. hhit'le of ail kindti hung In a hiipene" tylo anil on hoit notire. All v.'orc warranted wtistpictury. I'rices guaranteed as LOW om in at' Bimliar establishment In the UNITE STATES. W3I, 12. FIl i:XH A CO., JVo. lit I'lrKt Street, wel tlp-STAIIIK. Indianapolis Insurance Co., CHARTERED - IK Capilal, $300,000. WM; IIENDEII.SON, JWiJnt. IiiHnres aginf.t lo.or larnfine by firu. C!l and take ft Vullcy with BEN. STINSON, Agent, Office: Third St., Evansville, Ind. nov93rn