Weekly Messenger, Volume 3, Number 156, Vevay, Switzerland County, 7 November 1834 — Page 3
' 1
tctial eft'irer so severely thai he died in fifteen minute. The deceased is reptesented as a man
of excellent character, highly esteemed by all
Eltplvt.ih lra.!.jatln, c,n Apples. A few ;in of a few w'iv i,!uul? ; and when tie was day ago two elephants" btiouie.g to a man pried, nut havhg money to fee. the jailor, he pgerie that had been in thi city, wrrc i:s -had rml the privilege of appealing and meeting
injr alon the road in the vicinil v if Middit;-1 hi accaer in hi own defence. The conjequenre ii ho knew him, ami we only wonder that he
town, when llicy snw ;i ni -l i.vUiiii, he "p of .wa, that a veidtet of ti'ty two dollais was up pies in an or hard. In an In-tan! the fei.ee 'found ngaiat him; and fir the payment of was protrate I by the. huge ai im.il?. and wi I h-: w hi h, he mot temain in prison and starve for not los of lime they na iled thoinclves on two month and ten days before judgment i en fruit to their ati.f.icti:n. We have not heard jtered tip, and f-mitren day longer for the bene, il Stated how ;real wa the (fianl'it v ol I ho Tit of die act, aoikiug in all, ten month and apples thev consumed, but it i said lliat the 'twenty fui day. elephants would not he, driven away tiil they Now fir, it wi nerted and nrgncd on the had appeased their exceedingly delicate III- : anthoi ily ofronitr.no sene and honianiiy, that tie stomach. S ich visitors we apprehend uch could not he the law in any civilized conn would be any thir.ir hui agreeable to mo-t of , try. and nmrli le. in this, our free and indepen
dent Republic. V. J. S. N- B. This is hut one case of many.
our liirmer, pai tuul.u ly , w hen the whole Mock of a farmer's winter apple, a well as those for cider, would be devo-ned at one breakfast by a couple of these Asiatic iiitors. Mtddleloien, Connecticut, J'lvoaits.
Wiulcv's YwUhmU, lwdivvww-
Fritlay Sonting, November 7.
PROUtRTE VOVJIT. Qj- The Probate court of Switzerland county will sit at ;lie court-house in Vevay, on the second Monday in November next.
The Patriot and Shield, of New Lisbon, O . has made its appearance iigain. The heartless vilain, who destroyed the old establishment by tire has not yet been discovered. We widi Mr. - Cable every success, and are pleased to see that " his enterprising spirit has not been damped by ; the foul liend that meditated his destruction.
LUNAR INFLUENCE. If the tides of the ocean are raised from their fathomless bed by the power ofthe silver moon, it is not too much to believe that the tides ofthe atmosphere are subject, in a great degiee, to the same mysterious inllueuce. In tropical climates especially, the power in the moon over animal and vegetable lite, is be lieved by many to be very gieat.and why not of other portions of the globe also ? It i stated by a learned writer that in Demarara there are thirteen springs and thirteen autumns every year, for so many times does the sap of the ascend to its topmost branches and descend to tlie roots. For example: the wallaba, a resinous tree common in Demaiara, and somewhat resembling the mahogony, if culdoon in the dark, a short time before the new moon, is one ofthe most durable woods in the world for building purposes; in that state attempt to split it, and with the utmot difficulty it will be riven in the most jagged, unequal manner; cut down anoth r tiee of the same kind, at full moon, and the
tree, it is said, can readily be split into the fin. ii smooth shingles, or into staves for making casks; hut iu this state if applied to building purposes, it speedily decays. Bamboos as thick as a man's arm, if cut the dark moon , will endure ten or twelve year ; if il full moon, they will be rotten in two or three years; and thus it is with most of the forest trees. If these statements can he relied upon, they would seem to afford an important practical hint to those engag ed in getting out and preparing shipping timber from the extensive forests in onrcountiy. Have
any experiments ever been tried, or any facts noticed by ship builders upon this subject? It
is true, we believe, that the timbers of dut pub
lic vessels of limes rot while yet on the stocks and before they are completed. May not the
circumstance be attributed to the particular sea
son and the particular age of the moon when
the timbers felled in the forest? Portsmouth Journal.
Sale of a Wife. O.i Wednesday morning
the village of Holme upon Spalding Moor was
in the greatest confusion, owing to a report that
John La.enbv, labourer, intended to exhibit for
ale the trail partner of his affection. About
I I o'clock a vast nnmher of people assembled to see the ti ansaction, and a more disgraceful scene
was never witnessed. The husband made his
appearance with anew halter in his hand, evi
dently laboring under the greatest agitation of mind; he slated that his wife had partly left
her children ami her home, and had joined her
self to a person of the name of Britain Etty, who had only about a week ago returned from
Beverly House of Correction, where he had been confined, ai weaie informed, fir receiving some flannel from the above Mrs. Lazenby, which the
husband had purchased for clothing for their children. The sale took place in the street, in Iront of .Mr. Iludsoti' public house, where Lazenby exhibited his much w orse half in the new hal tor. The first bid was Is, by a huckster, who was passing with his cart at the time; the next bid 2. by her old favorite Etty, when the poor disconsolate husband declarad it to be quite e nough for her, unless she mended her manners. The money was paid immediately, and the hap py"pair," to all appearance, left the ground arm in arm, amidst the groans and hisses of the assembled multitude. York Chronicle.
IroTcd ; and wc learn from a gentleman who I itely v isited North Carolina, that insooieof
the neighhoriim counties, as far a his obseivalion extended, the lot is very general. Some fanners who made 12 bale last year, and planted lo for this year, will caicely tuin out 3 hah s, &.c. There will not prob. ably he more than half a crop. Cluruio Gazette.
Price of Pork. Having been often ques
tioned concei ning the pi ice of pork in .Madi-
Louisiana, has on several occasions recently re- son, and not having the necessary inform ilion
fusced to receive any oiher money than on the to reluiti a direct answer, we nave iieen leu United States Bank! or the specie paying hank to make some enquriei on this subject. The
e prices now ottered are, lor
houhl not have bad more wisdom than to have
. i . . : ii. i . . i
clone uulv at me same ume in me p'i:iu nnu in
the constabulary We should think a minister
f the Ciospcl rather " out ol In bailiwick " in
serving civil process upon gambler.
(From the Port Gibson Correspondent Sept. 12.)
The Receiver in the Land Oilice at Monroe,
specie paying
in Louisiana, in payment for pnbhc lands.
tates that be acts in accordance with instructions
fiom the General Land Office. The editor ol" this paper, about two month ago wishing to enter a small tract of public land in Louisiana, look
with him for that purpose. Planter's Bank mo
ney never uieammg inai ine government nau
set the example of depreciating the paper ol it
pet institutions. The. money was refused at first,
hut an hour or so after ward, the acting recciv
Hogsavetiug 200, 3 00 per cwt. From 175 to 200, $2 75 From 1 50 to 175, S 2 50
Should the pi ices vary, wc shall mention it
in our paper.
. VENDUE.
THE mibsciiber will offer for j1p, nt pub" he endue, to the hisrheni bidder.
(hi Monday. Xonmbir 11.
The following property, (if nor sold before nt pri
vate sale.) viz.
One undivided hilf of a SWY MILT., in
;;oud order, together w:t!i tl, undivided hah" of
the privileges attn hod thereto.
One yoke of Oxen, one Ox Cart, one Mare, oii yearling Colt !; last spring Colt, one Cow, and eiht or ten llogs, from 10 In .50 mouths old. Particular made known on the day of sale. liberal credit wi'l be given, by giving appro
fd security. Sale to commence at my dwelling
house, in Jefferson township, at ten o'clock, on said day. SAMUEL DEAL.
October 31,
L,xtraordmaru Water Spoilt. On a rerv
rainy day in July last, a very singular occur
rence took place in Ashe county, N'nith Caroli
na. On the acclivity of a considerable monn
tain (a spur of the li.eer.ix) about fifty yards
liom a creek of the same name which washes ihe foot of the mountain, a discharge of water from the clouds stiock the surface ofthe mountain and swept every thing in its way to ihe creek, including large trees, anil rocks weigh ing at lea?-t a couple of tons. Scientific men who have since viewed the scene, have concluded that it wag produced by the bursting of a descending waterspout. The native mountaineers say thai thev have seen such orcurrences heretofore, an 1 they call it the falling of a clou .V. Inhl.
Fancy. We find in an oh! paper, a description of a singular freak of two young women i; England, who had been disappointed in mariiage and being intimate friends, formed a singular determination to lire together as man and w ife, in some place where they were not known. They drew lots to decide who should be the man ; the one it fell on assumed the name of James Han. They then set out on their journey, and at last came to Epping, leased a house there, and kept an Inn. James Han was sixteen and his pretended wife seventeen years old. They had a servant, but each performed the duties beUnging to their station. They tiaded
honestly, gained a good amount of money, were much respected, and lived together thirty-four
years, and at last the wile died, about which time the litoverv was made. James Ilao served
j in the offices of ihe place except constable, and
had been often foreman of juries, and was to
have been Church Warden, if the discovery had
not been made. Boston Journal.
CONFERENCE Madison District . A. Wiley, Presiding Elder, Madison Station. E. G, Wood. Vevay Circuit. James Jones, (one to be supplied.) iMicrenccburgh St. John Daniel.
LaiLirnceburgh Ct. C. W. Holliday (one to
e supplied. j Uhite Water Ct. J. W. McReytiolds, and J S. Harrison, Grrcmbureh Cl W.M. Daily rersailUsCt.S. S. Williams. Vernon Cl. Thomas J. Gunn.
An acre of potatoes in Ireland yields 82 bar
rels, of 20 stone, of 22,060 lbs. ; and an acre of
wheat4)ie!d f...ur quartes of 4G0 lbs., or 1840
lbs.; then if wheat goes three times as far as po
tatoes, and is equal to 5520, the potato crop
gives four limes more subsistence than wheat.
From Malaga. Cant. F.Hi?, who arrived
at New York fiom Malaga, whence he sailed
on the 16th ult. informs, that ju.t pr-viou to
er(Col. Friend being absent) consented to take his sailing, five hundred mounted volunteers
if in ii'ivmont nil I h f f nri il I tun i wit hp hnn d ana inrce nunureu retiuiar irooi-, ten uuu
be allowed a i.remmm of five ner cent. To this pUcc for the neighboring mountains, to exter
ii, twin..,- .o.j.kk. n.f..,i ruii,,r than liai-B IvU iniiiate the insurgents who had l.oiatad the
. . r. . , ii... r- .i..- i i-.- ...i.:..iv ti,..
Ions trio for nothing, and tor each hundred dot- oii v io u;iiiiiei , unuei m.i'; ..-
lars. naid down for land, another five dollars committing every species of robbery and plun
I i -. . . .:. . : Il
was added, to go into the pocket ofthe teceiver. acr, inereoy inieicepung or peevei....
Moie recently a gentleman of our acquaintance, travelling Oil the public highways.
wiahintr to enter ten eights of nublic land, took
with him one thousand dollars th Planter's Dank Destrlctive Fire. The large store houses
notes for ihe purpose. The receiver refused on the wharf at ilhiriebeck, Dutchess county ,
ihe money, except ll.ev were accompanied with New oik, owned by Capt. liergh, and Air.
' I r-. i I- . . I
ill- i - '-a - iiiv, 'j'ilHi'bUiraii jniu " j v m the fifty dollars oyer. After his return home, of grain and goods, were totally destroyed by he found that the land had already been entered, fire yesterday at 1 1 o'clock A. M. Fire sup
but from some cause or another was not so rep. posed to have been commnnicated by spa.ks
resented on the books at the land Uffie. He re - irom me nimney oi n oie.wu lo..i, ... siu,
turned lo Monioe lor his money, and with it P'cg at Ihe wharf. Loss about fclU.U'JU demanded the fiflv dollars memium. which the
officer at first refused to restore to him. hut fi- The Cholera prevails with great fatality
nallvdid restore it m many parts ol Europe ana pari.cuiariy in
I is . . tA.L fC. ..l U a I.
We mention thesp farla fnr th Infnrnt-.nnnf Sweden UplO Hie lm Ol oepieuiuci uieic
...... , . , .. r.i .
persons hiving business with the Land Office at hl,d been 3179 cases ana I n J vieaius oi utai Monroe, that ihev may nrovide themselves with disease in Stockholmcontaining a population
the proper kind of money, and thereby secure P les u,an
the eeitaintv ot lieintr am a In arrnmn nh iKtli I
business, and avoid the exaction of ih nffi. Hok. Ward Chitman, a descendant from a
cers Massachusetts family, has been appointed,by the
TAKEN UP,
V John Fray.ier. of York town ship, Switzerland county, Sa.
Jt HAY MA HE, supposed t he three years old last spring, a Ssnallstar and snip, a lum;
en his left hind lejr. No other marks or brands
perceivable supposed to lie thirteen hands hi"h
Vppraised t' twenty dollars by Douglass jlc-
Dikhill snd John Fenton. Before me, this 13th ay of Octodcr, 18."H. WILLIAM McCGRKIIILL,J. P. November C.
The steam boat Water Witch. Capt. VanderI dt, on her passage fiom Hartford to New Yolk, "a Wednesd.ay morning, when a short distance from M.iddletown, struck on a ' snag" and imme ''lately sunk, in nine feet water. No injury was i-fis;aii:c.d by the passenger , and it was expect td that the boat cou'.d I f taiseil.
Red ofoystcr shells have been discovered in varinn- parts of l),ot Florida, twelve or fif teen feet below thesurf.tce of the soil, showing ihat this legion as at one time covered by ihe eea.
NON IMPRISONMENT FOR PERT. Mr. Editor. Will you be so kind as to infirm vi'ir leaders ulmsher tbeie i no provi inn ro i le by Iiw I r the support of the unfir t-i-ia'e pii-oner in the debtors' pri-on i.f Nen Y rk. I w-mld not tro-ilde you with this own rn'i:.i::n !inri . Iml ihat vhi!e conversing with a !iv I'nenl o.i ihe .-u' j ct, il h a view to nht.tiu a sini'.l pittance fir a p'l'ir unf rtuna:e, though r-illy h-wic-i and ind'i-1 1 ion man, who, on a rh irge oi'yi.indrr.wa r.in'inued !'ir eig'il month bi-fiie a tiwil could 1) !ia !, with reilhing to -uh sit:l ou but the prcciiivj; and ii ngul.it d jna
King of England, Chief Justice ofthe Province
4 lesson for Dovs. A lad from Eucks county of New Brunswick.
was placed as au apprentice in one of the nows-
paper offices in this city a few veart since, whose Joseph J. Sager, of Gardiner, Me.,
has
short career furnishes a striking evidence ofthe been arrested on a charge of poisioning his wife.
miserable consequence of boys indulging in ir- From post mortem examination and chemical
tegular practices. His evil habits had their tests, no doubt exists lhat ner cteam was causeu
origin in an inveterate fondness for inoning out by aisenic,
at nights, which, as a matter of course, witness
ed every night, lounging about the corners of Cholera nt St. John, JVevt Brunswick. On
our streets, often swearin? and drinking-. He the 2d instant, th Board of Health repotted
le II gradually but irreclaimably into their hab. that eleven cases and lite deaths hart occurred its, and soon become a worthless boy; and notjsince the 25th of September. Only one new
long since made ins escape, went off to sea, and case had occurred during the lour day i-iocee
inoneol the West India Islands fell a victim to ding the 2d.
his own intemperate indulgences. So far his
case may he only that of many others who have! (r"The Milledgeville Georgian says We
been equally imprudent, and paid as severe a i learn, we know not how truly, that Judge Craw
penalty tor their follies; hut it is rendered I ford , before bis death had received and accent
more striking from the circumstance of his hav led the appointment on the supreme bench of
ing been sought for, within a few weeks by one the Uoited States, vice Judge Johnson, deceas-
wno communicated the intelligence to his friends ed
here, ol his having been bequeathed properly to
DR. Willi ON'S Vegetable Anti-13illious Pills. ril K convenience of a cheap remedy, in the
form of pills, suited to the commencement of
most of the indispositions to which we are liable needs no comment. Many diseases, in their forming stage, are easily arrested, by the exhibition
of proper cathartic medicine, and the consequent
siiflermg and expense are thereby avoided . All that pills can effect, in presenting or restoring
lealth and that, is much may be expected and
will ke derived, from the timely use of these pills.
They are peculiarly excellent in every variety of
lead ache, proceeding from a foul, acid or bili
ous stomach; ai.d in all feverishness of the system, depended on the same cause. In short, for
every derangemant of the stomach and bowels,
requirin; cathartic medicine, the Vegetable anti bilious Pills, admit no competitor. IViceSu els.
FOIl SALE by J. F. Stevens, Vevay, and
Lyman W. Mix, 3iountstcrling.
October 27. INFORMATION WANTElT
mOREKT MERCEIl, (son of James m-d Elizabeth Rleicer, late of St. Johns, IV.
Brunswick,) leil that place about the th day of 1C29 since which lime, bis parents
have had no certain tidings of him. lie is about 31 years of age, fair complected, and five feet, 7 inches high. The last report from him, says he was navigating Lake Erie, in a packet, and resided at Otter creek. Any information concerning him, will he most gratefully received. Letters to be addressed to the subscriber. Printer's Retreat, Indiana, near which he now resides. JAMES MERCER. Switzerland county, la. October 23. N. B. Editors along lake Erie, will much o-
blige two old people, in a strange land, by insert
ing the above once or twice.
the amount of forty thousand dollars.
V. S. Gazette.
Pivtn the U. S. Gazette. A MISTAKE.
As scon ns the nominalion of Mr. Seward as the Whig candidate for Governor of New
iork, was made known in a village rcmarka-
txemxan Emigrants. We see it stated that
the authorities of Bremen had instifnted enquiries, by which il was ascertained that the number of persons who had arrived in lhat city j early in June, for the purpose of emigra
ting to America amounted to about sixty thou
sand.
The Journal de3 Connaissanccs usuelles says
We nofice with pleasure, says Ihe Hartford
Press, that our friends of both parties in different states aie so much rejoiced at the result of the election in this Stale; the Whig of New Yoik have tired One Hundred (inns because their party has gained a victory here, and the Jackson men have lired a hundred nuns because their parly came so near gaining a victory. The fable of the man who ti ied to please all is no longer applicable; the CoTineclicut branch ofthe "univeisal Yankee Nation' have given toth"ir fellowcitizens throughout the United States,univer sal plcnsure, and they cry out withot.o voice. 'All hail Connecticut ;" verily a 'Glorious Victor)' has taken place. prince Puckler "tluskau, in his last work , tell a story of a shipwreck marinor who was cast away upon what he believed an uninhabited is land and, (ill suddenly beholding a gallows, he roared out in a burt ofjoj. (Jod be praised, I am in a civilized land."
Remachid, a Mignelite Guerilla chieftain continues his atrocities in Ihe mountain ol Atgarves. lie I itely murdered all the male population of Albury, 127 in number, and called his hiatal acts Sicied Furilications I
A Clerical 0ntab!e killed, the Reverend Aloiue M:dr, a Presbyterian clergyman, was killed lately in MrNiai couniy Tewreer, by a gambler named Waul, the Reverend .Mr, Wi dooi. in additi on o his parochial duties, exercised the fincti-m of Constable, and had the gamIder in custody. Ward, by some mean or other, g"t i"'fscs.joii of a knife and stubbed the minis-
M r .U . ... i . r-. ... 1
"h. a rcci principles oi us citizens, ,hat sugar is a complete antidote for poisons ob-
"-" icjoiceuig on me Mained from the oxides of copper and lead
iiniuii nnu iu. iii vv I in it guouiy sizea cannon
wits arawn lortDj cnargecl, discharged, and A trnn.l trur -Colonel c . who w bend
recharged, with great rapidity, And every and cars in debt, when stationed at the Tower,
demonstration of joy; the windows of many was told by his servant that a person wanted to houses were also illuminated. In the midst see him on particular business. Requirin- ades-
oflhis jollification, Martin Van Buren drove cription of the announced, the reply was, "A man
into the town, and had his horses put up. Pf color,1' "Oh, say no more, said the colonel,
Shortly afterwards, a friend called on the "! know wl,at corit la a dun:1
Vice President to pay his respects. After the
salutations
were over, Mr. Van liuren
proceeded to express his feelings: I am greatly pained," said lie, " that oar friends should have thought it neceesarv lo make
such a deinonslraiion of feelini! on mv ar
rival, or that they should have deemed my poor services worthy of such a reward.
The friend sat uneasy in his chair4 looked
out ofthe window , bowed ns gracefully a
i ucuinslances would permit, meantime, the
hllle cannon was poping away at a great rate.
.ur. Vim LSuien continued:
"It is really a matter of reuret. that so much
. - CT
The following is a literal copy of a billet sent by a clerk of a parish in Warw ickshire, to a neighboring friend ofthe same calling: 'Dear
John, Wul you bury my wife and ill bury yotini
ony utlter day when you want mc, 1 shall be ve ry hnppv one tima. I ham yours to be obligct J. '. K'j.mt.m,m " , i ' . l
STRAYED Oil STOLEN.
7,rR03I the stable of the subscri-
J3J her, living in Jefferson town
shin, Switzerland county, la. two
miles west of Vevay, on last Sunday
night
8
A TI XT I Inn 11
i...lliWJ - r -i ii war jjui i I in II I if HP ii If tS tin tlist slf- sr r- ..!. I V '
it nuite nnnre..... " - PI hrec years old last spring, black mane and tail,
. . .. tins n srnr fin hi! ni:ir imp I, ml (, Hen lwt-o t li
' beHevc, said Ihe visitor with some hes- hoor nn,i srar n his r,n hi,, i,;, u j .,....
it l brellevc' s,r'yu ,ny const,Ie )our- time ago. and ca..ly perceived nt a distance, has sell with reference to the caue of tlie rejoice ;, small star in his forehead, is tall and slim made lugs in the tillage the truth is, that this dis no other marks recollected. FlVE DOL-
play of feeling is called forth by the nomiua LARS reward nnd all other e.xnense oaid. for
lion on the part ofthe Whigs of Mr. Seward. he delivery of tho horse, or such information as
as their candidate for Govenor. will enable mc to find him.
JOSEPH DOW. November 1.
ICNOINNATI TJi.UK NOTE 3IT. OHIO. I M WHIG AX,
Commercial 15ank Cin- (Bank of Michigan
cinnati pai
Franklin bank of do par
Bank of Zanesville Is
Bank of Chilhcothe Columbus " Lancaster Com. hank Scioto Comm'l b'k L. Erie Dayton bank Farmers &. Mec. bk Steubenville
Is
11 It
ch
dn
do
Farmers & Jlech'a do 2 Small notes 5 Bk of kiver ltaisin 2
All others no value VIRGINIA, Richmond branch 3 Valley and branch 3 N. W.B. at Wheeling 3
do I D1S T. COLUMBIA.
Bank of Metropolis 8 MARYLAND,
Baltimore Banks S eorgo Couniy li .Farmers b'k Annapolis 3
do
2
Ii
Havre de Crace
Frederic County
U .Westminster
do do
2
51 20
80
FitEn is the Pee Dee. A most destrucl ing inundation has visited us, sweeping off the fruits of another year's labor. The river com menced rising on Sunday night last, we be lieve, and continued, for some time with great rapidity, until Tuesday morning, coming to within three or four feet ofthe great swell which carried off our bridge in 1831. Tin loss of cotton and corn is immense. Add to ibis the rot we understand is very gencial ii the uphiiids. We have seen onc'lield in thh Oibtiict, in which the cotton is iicaily ulldet-
Stihvcll Heady a Estate. ALL Krsons indebted to the estate of Stilwell Heady, deceased, are requested to nake immediate payi'iicnt to the 'undersigned.
who has been appointed to anininiMer said estate; ind those having claims against the same, will resent them for oximinalion, according to law. The estate is supposed to be solvent. .
ll.'-IIVl V CJ 'II, I
ULUItut W. I1MU1) October '27.
lm r.
Farmers Mrch's b'k
of do Geauga Mount Pleasant Muskingum bank Marietta Norwalk St. Clairsvills
Urban a Banking Co do
Western Reserve do All others unrcrtain. KENTUCKY,
Bank of Louisville Louisville Hotel Co Bank ofConnnon'h Bank of Kentucky and Branches
All others no value TENXESSF.E, State bank & bran. Union bk Nashville do. payable in Phila. Yeatman At Woods ) payable at Nashvill ) do payable at Phil 1.
All others uncertain.
LOUISIAA, Bank of Ioui.iaiia do. Orleans Com. bk Louisiana City bk N. Orleans Consolidated Ass.n Louisiana State bk Citizens' bk of Lou'a Men &. Tra bk &, br
N. O. Canal bk Co. 5 Union bk of Lou'a 6 All others uncertain. . MISSISSIPPI, Agrieul. bk Natchez 5 Stale bk Mis do 5
Planters' hank 5 All others uncertain. ALABAMA, State bunk &. hran &
Bank of Mobile l. Ontario Bnk, Ulira
All clhcr-i uncertain ii tt Cnanduigu
Uazersfown
'DELAWARE,
iBank of Delaware 3
Farmers b'k &. branch '3 Bank of Smyrna 3 Wilmington and Brand v wine 3 PEN?iSYLY.1N1J1, Philadelphia Banks Pittsburgh !2 larrisburg 2 Chanibersburg 2 Easton 'J (West Chester 2 'viermantown 2
3jjMon(gomory " . i Farmers b'k Lancaster -
! Bucks County
3 ijcttysluirg
nrownsville Vork Bank
5j Northampton ,r Lancaster Bank
f,1 NEW JERSEY,
.r! 'State b'k at Camden "r
ut Elizabtthtow n ." Cumberland bank '
5 Fanners b'k Mt Holly f)iNTewaik Insurance co. i
Prenton banking co. 5 Bank of N. Brims'", ick 4 NEW YORKt City Ranks T Troy and Albany. .'i Mohawk Bank 5 Xewlurgb, .0 Auburn f ticneva 5 Utica and Branches 5
