Evansville Journal, Volume 19, Evansville, Vanderburgh County, 2 March 1868 — Page 4

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file Eyari3Yill3 , Joarn J Company. id. G Locust Street, Evansylllc, Ind. SUBSCRIPTION TERMS. IN ADVANCE. Daily Journal. ne year, by mall -- x month, by mail 5 oO 'hree months, by nia.ll.- 0 iy the week, payable to carrier. ... ss ' Trl-Weekly Journal. me year 7 0 tlx month. WeeWly' Journal. ne oopy, one year lve oopiee, one year - 'en copies, one year 4 OO h 7 a . 15 OO Indiana Republican Ticket. FOR PRESIDEJtT, GEN. U. S. GRANT. FOB VICE PBES1BEST, jHon. SCHUYLER COLFAX , FOR GOVERNOR, Colonel CONRAD BAKER, Of Vanderburgh Couoty. IX)R UECTENANT OOVEBNOB, Colonel WILL CUM BACK, . ' Of Deca'ur Co. FOR SECBXTAJtY OF STATE, Major MAX. F. A. HOFFMAN, ' Of Cass County. V' . , FOR TRKASUKKR OF 8TATK, - General NATHAN KIMBALL, Of Martin County. ' FOR A U 01 TO R Of STATE, Major JOHN D. EVANS, Of Hamilton Courty. TOR CLERK OF THE SUPREME COURT, Captain THEODORE W. McCOY, Ot Clark County. FOR REPORTER OF SUPREME COURT, Col. JAMES B. BLACK, Of Marion County. FOR A ITORJJET GKJTEBAI DELANA E. WILLIAMSON, Of Putnam County. FOR SUPERIfTmrDKirr PUB. LNSTRUCTIOH, BARNABAS C IIOBBS, Of Wayne County. Gold closed In New York on atnrda LGen. Sheridan loft St. Loals for Fort eaveoworth on the 28th ulu, to resume 'command of hla Department. Mr. Kettler, 17. B. Assessor at . Waterloo, (Illinois, was garroted at St. Louis on Thursday, and robbed of f3,000. ' ; ; In the Mass vcunsett II ue. on the 28th ultimo, the Uqoor License Bill was refused a third reading by a vote ol 152 to 6X ; ' , The amount to be paid into the Treasury from sales of oo a ft seated and captured cotIton, under the provisions of the bill which passed the Senate February 28, is nearly jtalrty millions of dollars. , I A Washington Special gays that on the SBth of February, at noon, a double guard was placed at all the entrances to the War Department. Two commissioned officers were stationed inside' the building, and a double line , of troops encircled the building. , I , General Meade has issued an order that In the case of the municipal authorities of Savannah, the charges of mal-adminis-tratioa not being sustained before the Military Commission by sufficient evi dence, the case be dismissed. About forty members have entered their names with the Speaker as candidates for khe floor on the discussion of the lrupeaclj(ment articles. The debate will accordingly kccupy ten hours, each speaker limited by nle to fifteen minutes. -The Louisville- . Courier, learns j that neither Governor Stevenson nor Jo'jn Y. Brown believe the : action of the United states House of Representatives has pro iluced a vacancy from the Second Kentacky congressional umurici, nuioriauing this opinion, the Governor If the Courier is rightly Informed will Issue no writ of election, 'neither will Brown re sign. The- District will, therefore, be un represented until another regular-election A Washington dispatch states that In the executive session Of the Senate on Friday, an important resolution by Mr. Sumner, was principally under discussion. It proposed that the Senate should hold uo intercourse with the President, in view lof the fact that the House of Representa tives had declared in favor of his Impeach ment. After considerable alscu-sion the resolution was voted down. West Point Morals. We publish this morning a letter from General Thos. G. PlTCHEE, Superintendent of the United States Military Academy at West Point, adVi j v:., i a aresaeu iv uis ulu cumiauc-iu-arnij, Major A. L. Robinson, of this city, in reply to a communication which irst appeared in the Chicago Tribune, ome weeks ago. The Tribune article has had a wide circulation throughmt the country, and its tendency was seriouly to injure the reputation of the Military Academy. We are glad to be able to make an authorized ind .icliable denial of the statemeuts con rained in the communication referred o. In this State, and especially in rhis cify and District, where General L'itciier has been known from childiood, no one would believe that he, is Superintendent of the Academy, would tolerate any of the irregulari ties and immoralities alleged to have an existence there. W e trust that 'he press of the country will pive the jecerai's denial as wide publicity as Was given the communication in the

i'.Ei;e;.ortoltheboara,ot jirc

ot Kivani-viile is attracting veryiavur country. OurHbusiness readers will be interested in reading the lengthy article which we copy from the New Orleans Commercial Bulletin, on the first page. ... . i 11 -' ' ' We desire especially to call the attention of our readers to an editorial article from the Mobile Register, which we print this morning on our second page; .From it they will feaPn' what such rebels as John Forsythe, editor of the Register, expect from the DemofiraftV. " fiither at the balltt . - i , tf.l'Ji; ant L t"Iii dox or-OTt ine-batue-fieitf. -ine article needs no" comment on our part to make it intelligible- The restoration of the Democratic party to the supremacy it once enjoyed :-in the! Government would be fatal to free institutions. It i3 in view of this fact that the Register is m willing to trust io their hands the lost cause, and jthe-4 'conquered banner,' displayed, as was feared, finally at Appomattox Court House,-and : laid; away amid the la-' mentations of the ' truly1 loyal,'- the law-abiding, the Constitution-fearing, and Union-loving tveople of the South1-. r " t?' . The Crescent City Silver Band have started oo: a, )CQmpliroentia,rj trip 3o New "Orleans. The Captain of the St. Charles is the- man-that-treats a second-class "band .in this fir&Nclas style.5 'New Orleaus 'will survive. Indianapftlis Journal. What motive our namesake has for casting its slurs upon the Crescent City Band, we: are at a loss to determine. This Band, in the trying political canvasses of the past, contributed much toward strengthening the Union party upon which the Indianapolis Journal has been pensioned. The Band has been as noted for its patriotism as for the magnificence of its music, and it has never higgled about price when its services i have been asked for, either Jn ;beha!f.pf the Union party or any benevolent enterprise Ibdianapolis never had such. a,,ba,o& and we guess '! that's' what's the' mat ter." Whenever the Crescent, .Qity Band fails to play " Hail to the Chief," or any other popular atr;oaUed: for! because of its' appfopriaetness, as. did the Indianapolis Band at the last Republican Convention; or charges a poor widow thirty dollars for playing the dead march at the funeral of her only son, who had been killed by guerrillas, in Arkansas, and whose body, three or four years after its first interment, wa$ exhumed and brought to Iodianapolis for final burial, as is creditably reported of the patriotic baud at the capital, we will not object' to any criticism the Indianapolis Journal may make, nor snail , we : find fault with auy of its sneers. !' Thanks. Our Representative in Congress, Mr. Niblack, has been quite chary of his favors to U3 since the last canvass, and therefore when we are so fortunate as to get a u crumb " we are the better able to appreciate it. lie has not deigned to send us a single Patent Office Report or other interest' ing public documents during the Ses sion; but the other morning we were made the happy recipients of a large Government envelope .under the genuine frank of " William E. NiblaCIC, M. C.," and upon opening it found it contained a copy of the Congressional Ghbe. Veiy naturally ' presuming that it contained some record of Mr. Niblack's Congressional conduct of which he must be proudr and which he desired us to see and publish to our readers, we made a thorough examination of its contents to ascertain what our Representative had been doing. All that we could dis cover relating to Mr. Niblack or of interest to our readers was the contested election case from the Second Kentucky District, and the speech of John Young Brown, the rejected applicant. In the final vote the yeas and nays are recorded, and we Sad the name of Wm. E. Niblvck recorded among those who voted in favor of his admission to a seat in the Congress of the United States. Mr. Niblack is apparently proud of his vote ia the case, and is anxious to have us inform his constituent of his action. Our readers understand pretty fully the merits of the case of John ToTiNQ Brown, a noted rebel civilian of Kentucky, whd was elected by the rebel Democracy of the Henderson ; District as their representative in the Congress of the United States. In the early stages of the late war of the rebellion, Brown did all he could, by his speeches in different parts of .the State, to array Kentucky against " the

THE r VANS VI I LE DAILY .JOUR

Goyeriiniut; and uuder lis ojti fig.-' I of the foilo vvirg report of hi& speeches and his position at that Ti-me a "Not one nan or one dollar will Kentucky furnish Lincoln to aid him in his unholy war against the South. If this Northern army shall attempt to cross our borders we will resist it unto death; and if one man shall be found in our Commonwealth to volunteer to join them he ought, and I believe will, be shot down before he Reaves the State." And during the entire war Brown was a recognized secessionist. And yet, when he presents himself for admission to th"e loyal Congress of the nation, our unworthy Representative pot only votes in favor of his admission, but glories in his shame, and desires that his political opponents should herald his infamy to his misrepresented constituents. Pendleton, the Delinquent Tax Payer. j We believo one of the Pendleton maxims is "equnl taxation," more particularly a:imiug at the bond barons, or holders of United States securities. Alasl how few doctors take their own medicine. George H. Pendleton figures, r.mong many other leading Democrats, in the Cincinnati papers as a man who refuses to pay the tax levied upon his National Bank stock. New York Tribuiui. i Mr. Pendlt ton last year paid his tax upon the small National Bank investment which he holds. The tax was refunded to him, because a Republican Supreme Court has decided that it was unconstitutional. Thw matter is now where it was left by the Republics H i Uomrrji-i.s'i d thcK Republican Supreme Cou.rt. Mr.? Pehdleton pays all taxes which they decide to be legal. Would the Tribune have him pay a tax which has been refunded him ? Cincinnati Enquirer. Will the Journal please copy? Evamville Courier; " The facts are that, owing to a technical defect in the first law passed by the Ohio Legislature taxing National Banks, the Supreme Court of Ohio decided it (not unconstitutional), bat. hot in conformity to the Act of Congress creating the National Banks. On this acjount, Mr. Pendleton, who is so anxious for equal taxation, escaped the payment of his National Bank tax for that year. But the Republican Legislature of Ohio at its next session very promptly pissed a tax law to conform to the National Bank Act, and to avoid the technical objection raised by Mr. Pendleton and the rest of the Bank stockholders, termei by ihh. CMrierl tne" Sh'yi locks." It is this second law, passed for; the purpose of reaching the National Bank stockholders such as Mr. Pendleton, which the Democratic aspirant for thePresidency is now resisting. It is a matter of legal record, which the Courier will not deny, that the County Treasurer of Hamilton County (Cincinnati) hainstituted legal proceedings against George 11. Pendleton, National Bank Stockholder and Director, for the taxes' 'due upon his' Bank stock, and that. ho refuses to- pay the . same, and proposes to contest " the suit to the last of art of; appeal.- Such is the consistencj' of the Democratic champion of equal taxation and anti-monopolies.. . ' : . ... : . ! "! j TIIK MORALS AT WKST POINT. Letter From tn ! Snperlntendent. Sen. T. G. Pitcher. Wiest Point, N. Y., Feb. 18, im. Hon. A.L. Hobluson, EvansvillerIndtana; Mr Dear Sir: Yours of the 24th ult., with newspaper slip, w"as duly received, and would have received earlier attention but for my absence from my post. . Permit me to thank you for the interest you manifest in the Militiiry "Academy, and may not the Superintendent appropriate a small share of it to himself, as on former occasions you have' been pleased to express more or less interest in my success? As I ?aid before, I am gratified that you take so much interest in the Academy, and I regret that the people generally do not take more, as well as some pains to acquaint taemselves with the history and organization of an Institution, in which all are interested, but about which so little is known. I am satisfied if they did, there would be less prejudice against West Point, and that respectable journals would ceas-3 to fill their columns with sensation articles on the morals of its. students. The letter which you sent me I regard as one of those periodical attacks which the Academy has. ever since its establishment been subject to. It is not belisved by any one here to have been written by a graduate of the Acadeiry, as it purports to have been; but is rather supposed to be the p -ductton of one of the many who-at.- ' nually fail to pass their cxaminati Mi--, and are discharged in-consequence, and who takes this method of gratify- ' ing a feeling of reveoge for a suppos- I ed injustice done him. But be the author. whom he may, 1 pronounce it -j a gross and unwarranted slander upon

MONDAY. MARCH

th"eiiuFtituionJ Mt of Ihl fchanrell a r e ir r oss exakscr tian .." hil- otWf"4 are entirely, void, of, truth. When I state to-youhafc every 'hflnr in the day, from reville )n the. morning until ten at right, ' every Cadet (not sick in ho-pital) comes under the eye' of officer' of the army.- whosa continuance on duty at the Academy depends upon a faithful rcrformance of his duty, and" that the rooms of cadets are frequently inspected between ten at night and -revjlle, you will see how little opportunity there is for the practice of the vices and irregularities which "E. D," says pre vail here to so frightful an extent. It is not claimed that the young men of the M. A. are entirely free from vice and immorality. It would be strange if they were,; appointed as they are from all grades or society, but it is claimed that,, as a necessary consequence of our rieid discipline, and want of opportunity to indu'ge in them,ithey are as free (if not more so) from the irregularities charged-as the students of any institution, or. the same number of -young -men ia any enmmuoity of the land. As to the charge that all tendencies; of the system here are to J demoralize and degrade," I, trust I can ' be .pardoned if I refer you to the high character for honor and integrity which West Pointers have, as a body of men, always sustained, as a refutation of i-.- ' ' -v ' " There are. black sheep in .all flock, and bad men in every community. That the M. D has graduated some men who have brought discredit upon their Alma Mater, no one will deny, and that there are some vicious men in the Corps of Cadets, I freely adwiij but I claim they wefe tsorffor lees so when they came here.,, f. ., We read much in the papers of the immorality whiob prevails inour largo cities, and in - f aet in almost every community; jet I submit that it would be very uncharitable to conclude that every man and woman in them ts immoral. Is it, therefore, fair that because we have some bad young men amonjrst us. we should all be branded as vicious and "immoral? One more remark in this connection, and I am done. I do not believe you can find in any part of the" country a community of the same" size which numbers more communicants of the Church than ours, (including thborp3adets, officers, professors and if hair families.) And I assure you, without taking any credit; for, it to myself, that Jh institution was never so free from all the irregularities charged by " E. D." as at the present timo, - . - .Now, I have no desire to get my name in the papera but as the article in question doubtless had a wide circulatto jm the; regies pf.uiy boj-hoad, where it js known by some that I am Superintendent of .the , M. AM and. where I trust I am not entirely forgotten, I beg you will do me the kind ness, (as far as your confidence in ray . statements wUli permit,) to,-c6ntradict J the exaggerated statements in trie ' E. D." letter, and would be pleased if you would show this letter to any feeling an interek inr the Academy, and such of my old acquaintance who still beatimein kind remembrance. Begging your kind indulgence for this long letter, I am, very truly, yours, T, G-Pitcher, Suptf M Sunday Night's Dlspatcb.cs, Republican Generation at ' Reading, Pa.-' Delegates Instructed to go for Grant foe Pretaidetr..f; Great Democratic MeetiDg at Philadelphia. Resolutions Adopted Pre- ' testing Against the Action of Congress on .Impeachment., r . Andrew Johnson Endorsed Business of an Official Character Between the .Senate aid President' to be Suspended Daring his Trial. News by Atlantic Cable. The War Batween the Cretans and Turks. Another Battle Fought. TERRE. HAUTE. large Ratification Meeting fnlon State - Ticket Enthusiastically Endorsed. Special to the Evansvllle Journal. Terre Haute, March 1. A very large and enthusiastic meeting of t i e Union men of Vigo was held in this city yesterday afternoon, to ratify action of Republican State Convention. Hon. T. II. Nelson presided. Col. W. R. Thomason made one' of his masterly speeches in review of Democratic record. The Union State ticket was cnthTisiasticallydOrseaTmpeachment cordially1 approved.' - The fires of the campaign in the Sixth District are burning vigorously."

18i;8,

Li READING, PA. Berk Cbuaty republican Convention Delegates Instructed tn Vote for Grant tor President Daring Bobbery. f v v, - .v Reading. Pa., February 29 At the Republican Convention of, Berkes County, held this afternoon, selections were made for Presidential electors, and delegates ,to the-. National Convention. The delegates were instructed, to, support,. Grant for President. No instructions were given as to Vice President, but aresolutioq was adopted, declaring jex-Governop Ourtin the first choice of the Republicans of Berkes County. -';'? ilV. 'V'.1 A tfarin? robbery was committed last night at Kassioirtre's Mill, 3 miles from Readine'tjliB. Lone was attacked in bis mill by four men disguised. They thof af him 'with pistols, robbed him of $15') dollars, and left him tied. His house was entered by the same party and $5 000 in Government bonds, $2,000 in greenbacks, and $2,000 in gold taken !. No arresta. MeAIVILLe, Pa., February 29. Judged Pettit,"of Mead vtlle, wa unanimously elected yesterday for Senatorial delegate for Eria and Crawford Counties, to 'the Philadelphia State Convention. . ... t.O PHILAPE L.PHI A; o 0 V Democratic ' Meeting Resolutions , Protesting Against the Action of Congress on Imp arhment Gov. Curtln and the Vice Presidency r . PfllLAPEjLPHiA, February '29. An immense Democratic meeting was held to-night,: at which resolutions were adopted protesting against the usurpation of Congress in attempting to destroy the constitutional ' departments of the government, they being co-ordinate and co-equal, with! the legislative, and alike beyond its control, and declaring that we will sanction and support the executive and judicial departments against the usurpations of Cc-tigress, tQj gjve otlt bjj and comfort to the President in acts which are iodefense of the Union and Constitution against legislative treason ; that all persons who neck to pfevent this may justly be regarded as enemies to, the peace and welfare of the community, and all who (stimulate to violence, whether, they be Governor ff States tri" members of the Legislature, should bedenouoc. etfaa traitors to the Constitution and laws they have sworn to support; that the white race in the governing fourco of all political power, under the Constitution, and as people of the United. States we will never mbniit to any. policy of Congress which proposes to give the negro race either political power(or social equality. PniLADELPIIIA.March 1. Forney's Press having carefully ana'yz?d the names of the delegates elected to the Republican State Convention of the 1 1th of March,1 says that 76 of the 101 chosen, have declared for or been instructed to vote for Gov. Curtin for Vice President, 13 for Mr. Grow and 8 for Gov. Geary; the course of four is undecided. Of the remaining 32 delegates .yet to be. elected, Governor Cur tin 1 friends confidently Claim a' majority. BY ATLANTIC .TELEGRAPH. Fenian Tried and Imprisoned Movement of Worklngmen The Cretan War Another Battle. , , , , IRELAND. , Dublin, March 1. W. Johnston, a Grand Secretary of an Orangemen's organization, was tried last week on a charge of heading an illeiral procession in County Down, and was found guilty,, and .sentenced j to imprison-," meqt ana nne. t FRANCE. a. -Paris, March 1. The contract has been closed . between the; National Telegraph Company and the Societie Cable Trans-Atlantic of France. , PRUSSIA. Berlin, March 1. In his speech closing the Prussian Diet Friday the King expressed himself entirely satisfied with the legislation of the past session, and declared he was sure, no cause was now left for the disturbance of the peace of Germany or Europe. ... . .':'. ITALY. Florence, March 1. A delegation of the workingmen of Genoa waited upon Admiral Farragut last week, and presented him an address, saying that they desire him especial honor, as the representative of a country which sympathizes with the views of the illustrious patriot Mazzini. Washington, March 1. Accounts from Crete, dated February 8th, dt'SerTba the heroism of Corrata and his 1 1 imp, numbering according to the the GrahdfV'iser'rt own estimate, upwards of 2.0UO, who attacked Turk! near a fortified cemetery outsi le of the town of Canea, f rcing the Turks to fall back into the citadel. A number were drowned during the retreat. Fifty were killed by the Cretan troops, 100 wounded, and 40 taken prisoners. ' The Turks, as usual, attacked the non-combataDts, slaying; fifty, a' ter having robbed them of all valuables found in .their poasesbiooj .-; :Tha . ir. regnlar Turkish troops have also been guilty of similar . atrocities in tha vicinity of Phetimo. ' " jAd address haB been Bent to representatives of the Christian Powers de

claring that the Cretan pfnj? nre rSolvM to rfriain faitlifal lo flmir vi7 of nion with Greece. -A i J : ' fl Yesterday tlie Sf-crntary of Sute t-nt a telerum to Midi tif Baficrof: to which t!ie following antw-r was received this f in tJon i, "r 1 ; . ' '. ,. . . , , " Berlix, Marclrl. Thu treat was signed and' mailed on th 22J of February via Eneland. It provides that emigration shall . be, free, and that naturalization rharjjrfs nationals ty. Hasten the ratification. ' Signed " JiANCROFT." A few day? aco some of the most prominent member of the Diplomatic Corps expressed their disbelief in the cable dispatches on this subject, but to day a member of the Cor..tnittee n Fore'ga Affair py they have no doubt ot the truth that the treaty has been negotiated with the North Ger- " man Confederation,' Securing the objects above stated; and they and gentlfmea jocupyiog huth. positions in our national administration believe this treaty will be soon followed by treaties of a (similar character between the United States and other Governments, thus reeopnizinfr an American

principle. i i if : t i -- I 1 : WAiUIIJGTON. '! 'v f '.. : " : i i t ' t t ' i . Easiness of an OOrlal Character lobe Suspended between the 1'mldent and the Senate during hl Trial. New York, Maich :t--Tho Herald's Washington special states that business of an ofHcil character will irobably be fuspeoded between the resident and the Senate, until the conclusion of hi trial, j j i J J Fortress Monroe, .March. 1. A fire tb is raorolng- destroyed two larve frame buildiDgs, on the wharf. M. R. Swann. Agent for the Baltimore Steam Packet Company, in whose office the fire originated, was badly burned. There was no Government property destroyed. The loss is covered by insurance. New Brunswick, February 29. Rev. Sam. B. Howe, for thirty years pastor of the First Reformed Church of this city, died this morning, aged eeveuty-nine years. NEW Ai)VEUTISFui:TS. . i . r rIH UltEAT JIOOU lor ou. Grmit'rt JL.Ifo. Tt knew thfU, ttiAnrt or latt-r, the' true writer would nj,j,mr nm( ri-UU the true tUrry. We htivn not n-irl ittry lutif to M"lil, for the work tuliome till we )aue trt tloum uitove it hvnett, able, and a& urrtte to n ilffjree, I W a-hliigtoii t liionlcle. d. APPLKTON A CO., Nob. 44-1 and 411 Bkoadwat, rublmh tU'n day TIIK IHI. ITAIIT l IN TOUT , or - ' 'C yssE-i H. OKANT, ... . From April, lHfil, to April, li kt At1t HAliKAC. Colonel mi 'I A M -!. -' hi p (o t f n-rnl-lifcl'Uli-r. UrtAet llrliiii.luT Ui-naral United Kt4le Army. Volume 1. .K HI t4ortrltji anit tinmeroul Mapa. t.'A) I'HUf. i'ilo 1. 1 JVtWi ti Evening Putt. It la a inattur of course thai whatever di)cumentary evldendJ coulfl t available to anybody ban tmi ojm-ij to Uu. limJuau'a In-sp ctlon J (l)Ht tie b mi li'i'l tha or il vta.wa of the ln-Nl oltlcvra iu tli army; uat la the pri-paradon of (il maim h Imil ttie l.t-Kl H8if,tuce to )e procurnd in th Kiixlneer department f the 'tvk'i-. ami. In a wrd,thal be Iim had all -he all aiid faiTilitteH IbitL auy oi oould have lor hi work. That he ha been truMtnd ho thoroughly by ko excellent a Ju-leof men kh (jiturr.l iirant Is the le-t prima ftwut evhJc-ace tbat he had an aptno-a for hU lank. ' BookHellera Khouhl aend their order wiiboKlitay,ft ontr thHt theri Tnay be uo delny In au plj Ing their order. Single cipli-M eeut trim by mall on receipt ol pric-i , fiwJ ti -i. TlicFranliUii Brick ' Wachlnc I Knamntemt. with elijlit men Hud two hOrsi-H, u niaka Hrtkt U ti,.Vn) tlrn'-.-liisH Hrl:k (er tiourj hii.I hy "i.-mn, 4 lp to ",' 00 er hour, aefofling to the fiicll:H-l for reinovinK theiti. 1 oiter to ilrnout rain thee lucl by machined ronilHinly woralll 111 this Nlr, H. W. JOI1 i-UN, Aeut, HI Wood waul A venue, Jjetrolt, iliili. f'-'JU dIIl 1 ft In Bankruptcy. Tn in in to mvi: TH'i:,tiiM,nii the aiiti itay or Februnry, A.I. 1W. a warrant lu bankrup'ey wax jHhued auliiHt ttie estate of John Micnard. of Kvanavllle, in the county of VAtidi-rtuirgli, and i-tiit of Indiana, who hn been adjn.lueil a bankrupt on hU own pel it Ion; Hint die payment of nnv ile.bts Hiid delivery of any roperty iM-lonijlrig u aueli biuiKrupt to iim.or for bt unr, and the trunxfer of nny pi oi-r: y by htm. It forbid' I en by 1 w ; t bat a meeting of f he ere-lllor" ol theenid bankrupt. l piove their tiebt and to booae one or mure uimirnei" ol li Is i wtale, will be held at a Court of Hankrupley, to be holden at the titlii-e of fhnrieH II. I'.ul lei lield, on Thinl Klreirt, between Main Mint LoetixL street-. In Kvannvllle, In (he Hlnie of Indiana, wtn.lu the llHim-t of Indiiina, before harlf-st II . I'.utlerfield, Kecl-ter, on the 31hi any of .March, A.D. lv,n, itt 1'J o'cloca a.m. IIKKJ. J. SI'OONKH, U. M. Marbhai, bimr ct of Xndbtna. meh2dJt Hinwiiicrf, Notice to CJoatractora. Tiik mioN rn:( ii. r tiik City of Kvannvllle will reeelve -aiel proposals, until April 2Hd. 1W, lor Kradlnic the alley In liiock , UinamMi (now eity of KvaiihVllle;, and extending from Hlxjh Htrei t Kranklln Avenue. Jly order of the Council. A. M. MKirUKK, Clerk. City Clerk'" Office. VVb. 17. lH. mch id:it ' on civ. Removal. 'AV m . 13 it c 1c , IVatcli laltcr au-I Jeweler, Han Ki:novi:i 'i Tin: nii.i;.. did uf hloro riOiU ol Warren Corj. i iiKton, Xo. 6 1 31 A I S S Iti E ET, Where he Is better than erer prepared to wait on customers, j M:iik tile fiuext hhow window In tli eltv l tot jtculiHi advamaKuit lor uuliK tepairiux- llie-ial atleutlou glvt-u U GitraiiiiiK and repiriug watches. " . , ,, , lubJudtf

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