Evansville Journal, Volume 19, Evansville, Vanderburgh County, 16 April 1868 — Page 2

THE VANBVTI.I DAILY '..'OF-ENAI : THURSDAY. APBIL 16. 1663.

A-Kterio-OD the MouhI f olive. . , , , . LETTER FF.OM CABLET ON.'"

i j l s . or Olives, Feb. 12. 1; SkMbe Hiiaoi ot the Boston Journal : j !Qqo more we ara upo .tha .Mount F" 'Olives' the sky clear the !ir perene Jerusalem before us the Kedron at our feet th hills of Bethlehem in full view if ix miles south Betheny behind n Ion the other side of Olivet. Iu imf agination I go hack 1,808 year to the "birth, of. Jesus Christ.. The legions toi Rome have been here under PomIpey and Mark Antony. Palestine is kingdom, with-Herod upon the throne, owing allegiance to Rome, jllerod has been lavish of his wealth 'toiiake Jerusalem a kingly "city, jeared a gorgeous temple and a magnificent palace. Beholding with the 'jnind's eye the city as it was then, we see the Temple on the eite now occupied by the Mosque of Omar. Great Jihe .contrast befweeu the two the Temple a rectangle, three hundred and sixty feet long, two hundred and seventy wide, with lofty walls of white marble, roof adorned with gold, and surrounding courts and colonades. Solomon's porch., is six htm-, dred I feet in length, with double rows of Corinthian columns, higher by two feet than the granite pillars of the Boston Custom House. There is an avenue of colums along the four sides of the area. Midway tha i porch of Soloman rises the grandest of all the gateways, of design so elaborate and proportions so magnificent that it is .renowned as the ' Beautiful Gate." i -In contrast we now look down upon an eight-sided structure, with a fl it roof surmounted by a dome modeled after the small end of a hen's egg, in appearance quite like a railway engine house ! ; ' Bat forgetting what is and think Ing only of what was, we see, at the northwest corner of the temple area, . a-strdog catle - called Antonia. - At the southwest corner we walk over the lofty bridge, which leads from the temple across the- Cheesemonger's valley to Herod's palace on Mount Zion, directly west, standing where Solomon's palace stood. The city is 'more thriving than it has been at any time since the days of Solomon. North IT i t t.. .1, vi uciuu c uiacc nun iai i:uui wc present northwest corner of the city, , outside, ot the wall is the place where murderers, robbers, pirates and jxuffians f all sorts are publicly exJecuted. So manv have suffered the suffered the penalty of the law at that v at is commonly talked of as th lace that e " place ;(Ci a skull. 4 Herod has made his way to the .throrje through a sea. of blood. Rijvals,' Tiis own wife Mariamne, his jVHfe's mother, his own sons and hundreds of men have been killed that he might make his throne secure, j We see him. an old man, his body eaten with ulcers, his mind tortured "with remorse for the murder of. his Qjeen Mariamne, yet ordering the bods of the chief families of the kingdom to be shut up in the hippodrome of Jericho, to be put to death as soon as the breath of life has left his own body, that his funeral may , not Jack for mourners f : THE JEWISH NATION. I Great. changes have taken place in the nation during the 53G years which 'jhave rolled away since the return of jjthe eaptives from Babylon. There is Bo longer an ark or a covenant in the temple. . Synagogues or meeting ihouses have been established in every, itown. The office of the priest has 'given place in a great decree to that of the scribe a man learned . ip? he foral law. That law is the reputed 'sayings of Moses JTbey have been jwritten out by the scribes in the book IMishna, the law book of the Scribes 'and Pharisees, which they endeavor ito for?e upon the people. They?conJfider the oral ' law "to beof greater (force than the written. The. doctors of law are great men, entitled to the chief places, at feasts, and public assemblies. The Pharisees look upon themselves as being very jholy, because of their observance of the oral law. They consider it a sin to eat with unwashed haads. The lawyers have givcu decisions on the manner of washing. The water must reach as tar as the wrist ; it must be pure water; there must be enough of it. and not too much; it ust never have been used for any other purpose; it must be in a dish, and not io a brook or cistern. .To use too much is as sinful as to use . 'none at all. Having washed, he canloot eat food that bus not been properly tithed which has not paid an internal revenue tax to the priests. Such a tax is holy, and for him to enjoy whatever is holy is sin. He cannot eat at the table of a man who does ,not ute such meat or bread, fr he is 'a sinner. The butcher who sl mghters the animal eaten, or the b.:ser who prepares the bread, mu?'. wah 'their hands properly or the food U unclean. So runs the endle-s web. .Countless questions arise as to what :s iclean, what unclean, and the lawyers 'sit daily in the courts of the temu e to fgive decisions, having a practice o ilte as extensive as that ot many ot the members of the Suffolk or any other bar in the United States. I It is an aire of philosophic thoueht and disputation. Athens, Alexandria land Home have h; d their schools of jphiiosophers, and here in Jerusalem there arc politico-religious schools. iThe Sadducees are free-thinkers opposed in almost everything to the jPharisees denyirg the oral law dejnying the resurrection denying the existence of angels or ,-pirits. There are a'so the Lsseenes, who live strictly,-do i'? penauee for sin, and other 1 BbCi aiiu parties, all discussing relig-

trcTC: esp ; or a Median. -poken ot by the prornets : who--wlTr"1hrdw-friheac."iri'i :hets i leader inl-Tn'"6f Rome, and' re-establish the throne of David. - :: " : :".- THE BIRTH OP CHRIST. ' It is when the nation is at such a s'tate, four years' before1 the death of Herod, that we see a man and woman coming up the Bethlehem road, bringing a babe, and a pair of turtle doves to the temple,, Familiar, to all is the story of the birth of that child in astable at Bethlehem his presentation at the altar an old man and an aged woman taking him in their arms, and speaking Temarkable words concern ing him. A few days rater a caravan comes over this ridge of Olivet from the other side of the Jordan, and enters the city. The men accompanying it set all Jerusalem agog by their in quiries concerning tne place wnere the future King of the Jews was to be born. Startling words they are to King Herod. . What rival is this? We know what followed the babe taken to Egypt, and .weeping' and wailing at Bethlehem. " ' ' ' ' " . Goinar iu imagination with the crowd into the temple, we see the courts occupied by' dealers in doves, pigeons, lambs, sheep and cattle and moneychangers as if the temple was the city market.' We behold that carpenter of "Nazareth entering", the sate, walking through the magnificent col onades, gazing upon the scene. He is not an officer of the temple clothed with authority, pot a member of the Sanhedrim, lias received no appointT ment as police officer, yet he drives out the whole crew of stall keepers, overturns the tables and clears the courts. No wonder that the people want to know where he obtained his authority for doiog it. The festival ended, he goes up the road leading northward' to Samaria, sitting down to rest himself by a well just outside of that towD, and has a talk with a woman about a well of living water. . 1 - .",.' Tweivo years later we behold the clii'dln the temple, among the, hairsplittiDg lawyers, asking theni wise questions. We hear his reply to his mother: Hs must be about his Father's business. Mysterious words they are to the mother, and she thinks seriously of them as she goes with her son up yonder slope, northward, toward their distant home., , . . A SCENE IN THE TEMPLE. Fifteen years more go by. It is spring time; flowers are in bloom and the grain is waving on these hills. Jerusalem is crowded with people who have come to celebrate the Passover. Among the multitude is a young man twenty-seven years of age a carpenter from Nazareth he who questioned the lawyers in his childhood. He has been baptized in the river Jordan by his cousin, who lives a sort of hermit life, sleeping in the limestone caves ' of these hills east o u3,-eating locusts, and honey made by the wild bees, and who wears a camel's hair shirt, but who is highly esteemed by the people as a holy man, j A year later he is here again to the ! Passover. He has been traveling the 1 while through Galilee, and is known j now as, the Great Teacher, the Good j Physician and Wonderful Man. No one utters such words of wisdom, so ! full of beauty and truth. There is no j such physician as he in all the land. He cures all kinds of disease, fevers and b prosy, gives strength to the lame ' and sight to the blind. He never has ! studied,, medicine yet even, the dead come to hie at his commaud: " lie is a poor man, receives no fee, has the poor for his patients, and yet, b.c u?he sits down to eat with those who have not washed their hands, according to the traditions of the oral law and in accordance with the decisions of the lawyers, the Pharisees hate bim. I , ... BETHANY, i ...;; 71 w e pass over a twelvemonth and j think nt him dnrinfr thft In f. ve&&b nt I Tl' . , , his life, making ethany hi nome. Walk with me over superb panorama which is spread be V'1'- " a fore us as we stand on the summit the whole country eastward to the Dead Sea is in view. We look down upon hills, ravines, valleys here and there olive groves, in the distance the Jordan and the Dead !ea. How clear the dark blue water, reflecting the mountains! We descend the eastern slope, walk out upon a spar of the mountain toward the southeast, wind round its mmit, deseeuuiag again, and behold a miserable Arab vil age, the ancient Bethany, on the hillside, a ravine -in front, leading southeast. You will have to travel to tind in America such squalor as that before you huts of stone, Ithe earth for a floor, heaps of filth around the door, women with faces tattooed, wearing the dirtiest of coarse blue cotton sacks. This was the home of Lazarus, .Martha and ?"3Iarv. a wealthy familv. heart friends of Jesus, i We behold Jesus coming from Galii lee to attend, the feast of tiie Tabernaeles the national festival held in j the Autumn in commemoration of the , time when the Children or Israel j dwelt in tents. The fruits are gather ed it is a season ot thanksgiving continning a week. The air is balmy, the nighrs warm, and the multitude from the Cviiutry build booths ail over Onvet,- beneath the shelterinc bra n c h -es .it' tui! old olive trees, the myrtle and -willow. In the morning thev flock to the temple at the time of sacrifice, ring bfan'ehes ef-paltn and singing ii.e Psalms pf David. Id tt$ evening" !hv$l "draw- water from' 'the pool oi Siloamj commemoration of rhe water 'which their fathers drew

'd'ers, forms be; ting the comin

trotu the iountains which burst fortijkUv ; freeoing &loog i!-the -streets

ror them in the desert. Unon th stairway and in the courts of the tem

IP ' T sttxzing soiii- ot praise, nmlti u d e r in an l out while the a visa: their um:nii up'i'a tne altar. in tnar a the character of the good Physician is discussed. We hear their words " Where is he ?" ' " Wilt he come to the 9" "He is a good man." '" No; he is a deceiver." While the discussion is go'mg on the 'Physician enters the temple. Turn to the seventh chapter of John and you will find the narrative of what took place at that feast; the lawyers bringing die woman taken in adultery; the Physician writing on the ground; His answer to the lawyers. At night he is out here upon the Mount of Olives among his friends. Two month? later he is here at the feast of Dedication in December. lie walks in iSoloman's porch the great eolonade alongjhe eastern wall overanxious to know what he thinks of! himseli whether he is the iong-ex-pected Christ. Johu has given u$ the account in the 10th chapter of his Evangel.' ;. . .:. . . -We may think uf a -scene at Bethany, two mouths or more later the sickness of-Lazarus the sister sending a messenger' down over the hills, across the Jordan, to the Good Phyi-eian-who has gone over there. We maj imagine the painful hours the longing of the weary watchers for the sound of his approaching footsteps the earnest gaziogs down the valley to see if he is coming death hastening on the last pulsation the : burial. How little can we comprehend their sorrow! There has been no victory over, death. The ton of God has not yet passed through the gloom of the grave to pluck out the sting of the last enemy. Their brother has gone to the laud of the spirits, though the Saducees deny there is any such land. For the weeping sisters there is no such comfort as ours when we lay our loved one to rest. We think of them as" in a better world, where "All H tranquil and serene, Ca.m and uii-.lis urbest reoose; Where no cload cnu intervene, Where no angry te opest blows; . Where all tears are wipel away, Sius no more to heavp the breast, igiu is kost in emuess aay, . sorrow iu eternal rest. i . ! We see the Good Physician coming up the slope of th hill below us. I Martha going out to meet him, and then the gathering at the cave. It ) was somewhere here by ote of the f manv caves ia the limestone ledge. I Read the account how the Physician wept tears of human sympathy how the dead came forth; and fill up the scene with what followed in Jerusalemthe hatred of the Pharisees their plotting against his life. We behold at one view brought together ! in the same picture infinite tender- ! ness and love, and fiendish malignity and hate. j We pasi over a few days, to the last week of the month of Mrch. The ; Wiuter h gone, and the hills are j clothed with the verdure of Spring. The Good Physician has be ;n making j a last visit, to the country across the Jordan, and he comes up to Jerusai lem to keep the Passover arriving at j this quiet home of his friends on FriI dav evening a week before the feast. He.. takes, supper with Lazarus I Martha waiting upon them Mary j opening a box of perfume, no perfume of the Orient more eostlv, tad anointing his feet. His disciples are there ! Judas among them objecting to ! the waste. . On Sunday, the 1st of April, there is a crowd or people in the village. They have heard in Jerusalem of the Physician's arrival at Bethany that he is stopping with the man who was raised from the dead. The-fame of Jesus has spread wonderfully. ' Who but he shall deliver from the bondage of Rome? Thousands po'ur out from the city. We see the gathering of the multitude the long procession the branches of palm Jesus upon an Ai . n t tKi. tVii rK.ir tf,a r,,.a ! rouu-I the southern slo dope of Olivet, YV e hear the shouting, as the multitude pass ou. We see Jesus beholdj ing the ei'y, weeping over it, predicting its overthrow, entering the temI pie the children crying " Ilosanna to i the son of David!" In the evening ! he comes to Bethany again, and on i Monday morning again enters the ; temple, driving out, as once before the j market men. j We might follow on, noticing in i detail the events of the week; but who has not read them the la.' t talk j with the disciples, how he washed" I their feet. John has given us the account of the scene in toe 13th chap ter; and & a words so lull oi: tenderness and love as those spoken by Jesus at that supper. THE LAST SCENE. Going back now from Bethany to the summit of the Mount we look down j upon the Kedron and behold Geth- f semane at our feet and think of the 1 scene beneath the olives: the disciples asleep, Jesus in prayer, his low voice alone breaking the stillness of the night. We think of the agony, the bloody sweat, the angel by his side; and then the flaming torches, the approaching crowd of armed men, the Idss of the traitor, Peter's sword sleamins in the dim light, all his fol- ! r wers fleeinsr, . the lights ascending the slope from Kedron to the gate of the city and disappearing within the walls, the trampling of feet and confused climor of voices' dying on the ear as they enter the house of Annas'; the binding of the pris-oner there, takinff him to.the house of Laiaphas the high prie'stV Peter and' John timm the darkness to see what will happen, Peter plucking up cour-

pje'standr-tne great choir of

age enough to enter the courtyard of Caiapha' house and warm himself by the fire, the crowing of the cock as iriOTuing approached, that last look of Jesus upon the blaspheming disciple, the meetiog of the banhedrim just as the daylight is streaming over Oiivet, his condemnation there, then the walk to Pilate's house. It joined the castle of Antonia, north of the temple of Aria. We behold the scene in the judgment hall. We hear the accusation, the rabble.the questions of Pilate. We follow him to the palace where Herod Antipas is stopping, a visitor to Jerusalem to enjoy the feast. Again we' behold him before Pilate. The people thirst for bis blood; they demand his death; we hear their mocks and jeers; the crown of thorns is placed upon his brow: the de6.;sion oi Pilate has been made; soldiers lead him out to the place of execution, a little way beyond the walls, near the

t northeast corner of the city. It is nine o'clock, the sun well up in the heavens. We see the nailiug to the cross, the jagged iron driven through the quivering flesh, cords and nerves separated, the cross erectel, the mocking multitude, the weep ing women and the mother beholding her son. Strange darkness settles over the land:" midnieht at noon. We hear the last words; the earth quakes. beneath our feet, and the costly eurtatu before the entrance to the holy of holies in the temple is rent from top to bottom! - We think of the scene at the sepul chre in the garden of Joseph. Mary at the tcinb, the stone rolled &way and the body gone. " Where were the peace. If that dark day of mounting O'er '.'alvery'a awful h:ll ne'er passed away: If our deep night had never known the dawning; Of that mysterious resurrection day?" One more scene. It is near the last of May. Reapers, are gathering the ripe grain upon the hills of Judea. We see a company ascending this mountain slope; we hear their footsteps upon the ledges, and the murmur of their voices; He who was crucified leads them; they pass over the mountain, go down the eastern slope ; we hear his words, blessed parting words, for with uplifted hands he leaves them and ascends to heaven. It was here, up through this ether, up into the sky above us that Jesus ascended to prepare a place for all who believe on his name. Amazing fact!. Sit down alone, forget all else and ponder that mightiest ewent of all time. Go over the scene, think why it happened, its necessity; let thought run on through eternal ages, and you will feel as never before that the Mount of Olives ia not only the Nebo of history, but the central point around which revolves all human destiny. Carleton. CHK, OiiCKKK. FRED. - JOHN . EK. DECKER. "O, C. DECKER & SONS, . Manaiat'turera of Bpokes, Wheels, iiu.. bhalts, Felloes, and Beat Work, and dealers in , Wagons, Drays, Carts, TMmbU Skeins,' " " and have always on hand a large assortment of ieaiOHftl Wagon. Makers' Sawed Material 146 and 14S Main Mtreet, corner Fifth , fJvuniwiKe, InduuM. 9T Price Lists iurnished-on application, taclilrl ly Hot Weather Is Coming I AXI IT IS XEfESS.tKT TO HAVE your houses vpntilated, which can he Uoue at a small expense by LACY & BART LETT'S PATENT BASH LOOK, by which yon can have the top sash to lower ju.-st as well as if It was hang with weights and cord, and your ash locked at ! tne same tune, at one suit) iue cowt. The undersigned have purchased the right of this city and county for the above j LdcH, and are prepared to put them on at short notice. - We refer to Dr. Kuncie, H. E. Read, Geo. I L. Dixon, F. H. Raiton, Prof. Genung, and I W. H. Wood, who have had them put on their windows. LAST BttusS. St CO. ap2 dim NEW IIT STOUE. F. A. WEBER & CO., Corner of Main and Second Streets, HAVE JIST OPENED WITH AST entire new stock of UA TS, CArS, & STEA W GOODS Our goods are made to order by the best Eastern manufacturers, and bought exclusively for cash. We are enabled to sell most of our u oods as low as the same quality wexe Kold before the war. trnarJS d3m ; Notice Of the Proposed Ojxning of an Alley in &fock'S5, Lamasr-o. OX 3IOT10.V or tCtIl.JlAX Kolle. seconded by Councilman Heiiruan, the following ordor was unanimouslv passed and adopted: Ordered, that six weeks public notice, by advertisement in the Evausviile Iaily Journal, be given thai on the 2Sfh day ol March, 13()S, the Common Council of the city of EvaDsvilie will make au order to open and lay out au alley in Block numi b.-r eighty-nve (,o. m the town ot LaI masco City (now city of Evansvilie); said alley to be of the width of twelve (12i feeL, ' and to extend from iSixth Slreet to Fran slin s-treet, and the west line of said aii.-y : to be one hundred and nineteen (119) feet ! distant from Sixth Avenue, and paraUm I with said Sixth Avenue. j And should any person aggrieved, at any time within six weeks, apply to the Coai- ! ruon Council for redress, by petition or rej monstrance left with the Clerk of tue : Common Council, and containing a t-tate-j ment of the injuries complained of and the amount demanded therefor, said petl- ! tiou or remonstrance will be considered ' beard, and determined by the Common I Council on the said 26th day of March. i lSdS. And it is further ordered, that the Clerk ! record in the Minute Book of tne Council j tiie f.lat of said Block No. 85, with the suri rounding streets, showing; . the location, i width, and length of said alley, as tne ' same is proposed to be laid out and opeuB.'Baiere.an, ciry Survejr. which piat has been prepared by C has. Bv order of the Council. i A. M. McGRIFF, Clerk, j Cit v Clerk's Office, February 10th, 18. febU d6w

COMMISSION CARDS, - C. W. KERNEY & CO., -

Commercial Brokers, PRODUCE Aim COMMISSION MERCHANTS, So. 4 STCAXORE STKEET, marll d3m EVAN8VH.LE. WM. H. riSIIER. C. A. J. H. SWAAK BrSEIHK. FISIIEU, SWAAK k CO., Railroad Transfer Agents, ror-wtii-ilin- uxitl Commission 3 erclt'is No. 19 Xorh Water St., EVAysVILLE, IXD. Cash advances made on consignment. Low rates of freight to il points KiMt and West guaranteed to snipper by river and rail. Jieferencet Smith 4 Dunnloa:, New York ; Fairclilld fc Bingham, New OiImdi; Barton k ir'ool, Cincinnati, Ohio. rnar!8 dtf FEED. R. IIL.STOX & CO., No. 5 NORTH WATER STREET, EVANSVILLE, JNDIAXA, FORWARDING & COMMISSION MERCHANTS, GENERAL AGENTS White Line Central Transit Comp'y. AU property snipped by this Line goes through in locked and healed cars, without rehandllng or transfer. febll 8m CAUI. Having dissolved my connection with the late firm of R. K. Jonkert-on A Co., I Intend to devote my attention to the Interests of the above Reliable Line, and can prombte my friend quick time, caretul handling, and cheap rtit.es. febll ALEXAS1KK WILHON. AYEB'S HAIR VIGOR, For the Renovation of the Hair. The GREAT DESIDERATUM of the Age. A dressing which ia at once agreeable, healthy, and effectual for preserving the hair. JTwled or gray hair is soon restored to its original cofor, and the gloss and freshness of youth. Thin hair is thickened, falling hah checked, and baldness often, though not always, cured by its use. Nothing can restore the hair where the follicles are destroyed, or the glands atrophied and decayed. But such as remain can be saved for usefulness by this application. Instead of fouling the hair with a pasty sediment, it will keep it clean and vigorous. Ita occasional use will prevent the hair from turning gray or falling off, and consequently prevent baldness. Free from those deleterious substances which make some preparations dangerous and injurious to the hair, the Vigoi can only benefit but not harm it. I! wanted merely for a Hair IDreKsiujy, nothing else can be found so desirable. Containing neither oil nor dye, it does not soil white cambric, and jet lasts longer on the hair, giving it a rich glossy lustre and a grateful perfume. PKFPAKKD BY DR. J. C. AYER & CO., Practical and Analytical Clemists, LOWELL, MASH. PRICE 81 OO. fmchffdCra (2m C. WOLFF, Manufacturer of, and Wholesale and Retail ivealer In, ftadtllcH, IlarneHM COLL A RS, and $A DDLER Y ; : HARDWARE, - . Jfo. 53 Main Slreet, corner Second, KVA;VILI,JS, Iitd. febl6 dU

DRY GOOD

SCHAPXER, BUSSING & Co. Xos. 17 and 19 'Main St., EVANS VJI.LK, IND., Have now on band the 'most complete stock of . . Spring and Summer Dry Good; and MILLINERY that can be found inth West, and sell them at a uniform price, ai j. - , .-. - j ...... . . j . i , cheap the cheapest. Al-io, Agentsfor the ce!ebra'ed FLORENCE SEWING MACHINE, which we warrant ha no reperlor In the country, circular.! Call and ee thern, or eend .for, . SCU.IPKKR, tVSSDG & COj apr9 G. MAG H EE & CO., IVo. F I It 8 T H T., KrauHi lllr, Indiana, jnn sow 4i if:i44 a lakoe' stock of NEW ami DESIRABLE STAPLE AND FAXCY . .GOODS,, Hosiery, Xollons, HOOP SKIRTS, ' Ac, 4a. 7 ' 1 ' ' 1 '" Having bought this stock lor cash h1d ' the grfat decline, they will give spenlal inducement to buyer, and invite all ia ' In search of cheap goodii to examine their stock. O. MAO II EE & CO. novlS dU t IIY OOOIS. FALL H T C I . SECOND IttlCIVAL AT THE JIIMJIOTH IKUNK or IUDSrETH. ADAMS & 63 Main Street. WK 3VOW OFFER TO THE ITfU ' lie a lartfe and welJ-iwlitud Uk:K ot Fall and Winter Dry Oood. Having bought new good recently, and hUIiik ail our goods at priceM only Jutn!d by prewent Tow prlo- KaHt, we rtitsctliiliy lerjuefct the public to call and our tttock in ilreita GodH. Ail the newest aliadM In Krencli and lrih I'oplinx, 'renct 1erlnon, Eir.preKH Clotbst, Wlrjnevn, Mtlang Scotch I'laldM, and All-Wool I)ain!H. Our tttock in Wcxjlen UooiU in this lrMNt in tbe city, in 'lotus of all colfirx, i'idnieres. Hal iuet t, Twe-dn, Jean s and Kiauneln, we are aide to offer to ciiHtomeri inducemenU no other hoiife iu the citp can. Our Htock of NolioriH In lar', com wiiui everytliiuz expected to be found. Wefjave a lar;e Mx:k. of Knit joodt, slurta and Irwers. Hoods and Nubia), Kbawln and ' Hoop-Skirls, Blanket, Ac. Dome tie iooiIw. We have now in ftoclr, In Bleaclied and B-own Muflmw Canton K.aoneln, J'rinta, CtieckH, and Hii kwry Htrlrn, kmm) of the bet-t brands produced lu tnln country. The houHe that will hell good at marked value Is HUDSPETH. ADAMS & CO.. S Main mrret. oc2V DENTISTS. X R. I. IIV JEcsIcIciit Ileiitil, Over Firt National Kank, Corner Main and First Slrrtt, EvauHviiie, Ind. TrAMFACTIRKIl or ''T1KI! Hiiver, V uiJJJL ouh U jui Work, Oold cm n lie, Cora lite, h rjd Amber FlaU-, Carve Work, Ait Inciai Palates, &c. ADMIN .'STRATOU Of Nitrous Oild(an excellent and afe gDl iietic). Oilroform, tther, and also tieveral local pari lyzerit. NEURALGIC A(Ictiou8 treatL MY EACILJTIt-S are a rol and it etilahlishment ax large (cont my, ol Ft. rooms) a any in tuii United MtaU s. I RETURN MY THANKS for the j tensive patronage received during the ) KIUliT YEAR.-). mi. DR. J. C. EIERBOWER, I Dentist Offloe, No, JO FIltHT HTItEEX, MJ' and Locust, t;-ia 1. T.nit.m bit nrotfHhiotial twt vi t t' citizens of Kvansville and vicinity I"M AdminiHteni Nitrous Oxide uu.,t; kL.vlate pain in extracting teetn.