Evansville Journal, Volume 18, Evansville, Vanderburgh County, 27 November 1867 — Page 6

:vU &ci A J TI AUUCA Lt-WE ON ES D A Y.-NO V E M B E R r7 ri 867.

6

MACHINISTS.

rtDccPcuT cnnwnFRV : lYANBVlLLK..INDIANA Manufacturers of IT2AH ENGINES, STEAM BOILERS PORTABLE , ' r an ENGINES CIRCULAR SAW MILLS, Of tee most Approved Pattern. AIV kinds of Machinery appertaining to ; . Railroads, ' STEAMBOATS ... .... ( Distilleries, Flooring '' i Mills of a, 1 siees.wlta the latest approvements attached, . TOBACCO SCREWS, &c.i &c,, Iron and Brass Castings of Everj "... Description. Dealers In Steam Ouages, Gum Belting, rirs Bricks, Wrought Iron Pipes, uomn gloth, Ac, at Manufacturers' Prices. Repairing Done at Short Notice. "Workmen s?r.t to all parts to fit up work r Kniiars auU Macuinerv. Allorders wlllreoetve our individulatten lion, and wtlibepro tl filled on a most reasonable t erms. - Office and Foundery on the Cana4. comer gX ingia street; . oototujr BCHULTZE &COEleeljauio' Foundry Manufacturers and Builders of Steam Engines, Circular Mills. Saw rlfit and St a r; M ills, Tobs ceo Gumming Machies, Distillery and Mining Ma Swcre chinery, Malt Mills, Corn . BheHers, House Fronts, Cellar Urates. IRON & BRASS CASTINGS. Of eveiy description. Machinery of all kinds Made and Repaired. Dealeis In Belting, Fire Bricks, Steam Oauges, and Wrougnt Iron Pipes. Old materials bought We have the facility of the best Machinery and Workmen, and .will give alL work entrusted to us our individual attention. Oil orderM promptly, -warrant our Work, and charge reasonable prices. ; .. Office and Foundry, corner of First and X.M1 Streets, Evansville, Ind. . a. ts. w orttmen sent to all parts to fit P work and do repairing. Mb2J6m W.H ULTZE, TH UMA 4 CO JACOB 8I3ZIC. s . . JOHN J. SINZICH7 J. Slnzieh & Son, HO. 20 WATER STREET, Between Sycamore and Vine. BOAT STORES, GROCERIES JVtiVAUE; 'OAK UM, Hemp, Cotton, and Gum Packings . . Lath,Tarn, Twine, Rosin, Vf ought SpikeAJ Lard. Coal, and Lubricating Oils; t o,,, ,.01 .H i..M..Hn. ' :-.-'.' Orders prompt ly filled at lowest rates.' , ' usl8U j, ;, . j' ; '. . j. iz t roiTS'i -r , BEST N1X.C0U DiCA i L i v ..',.".'. TIIEAlV,!i---;:J-ht;g ff -a ccik' C'LOf;:;' 1 1 , . - ) ti . ! '. . A JOHN 4 le Agents i!r,Nw'Ti101if,: ) fi ) II II " U a22 ilSio

- MJ i)HurMrifl. J

From Every Saturday. Without Reserye.

"i." DEDDINGTON REVISITED. There i3 nothing like going away from a place quite out of sight lor getting the true view or it. iNowthat.l nave uvea away irom Deddintrtonia few vears ancLtwenty years are bura few to look backripon I must confe&s I see it to be a place of ; no importance whatever commercially, archaeologieally, historically,-: or. in; anv other wav. " I used to teel somewliat aggrieved, when my letters came aaare3sea to " Deddington, near fchjretown, or Deddingtojj, JNortnsime; tor I never aouotea tnat every poat-omce clerk in the three kingdoms knew where Deddington was, just as well as he knew where Shiretown waor, for that matter where Nothshire itself wa3. I could admit that, forvcorres-1 pondnts writing from America, or1, the Continent, or anywhere Haeyond; seas, it was excusable to adi '"Jorth-: shire, or Lcgland, but ior-iorres-pondents dating from England, Ire-; land, Scotland, or Berwick-upon-Tweed, I saw no excuse .whatayer for: any addition at all. since then however, I have lived in many places consiaeraDiy "larger even than Shiretown; and it has hap pened so often within the last twenty years that I have met with respecta-j bly people, who could have no. possi ble inducement to insultttne, and who yet professed themselves: entirely ig norant ot the existenceMH Dedding ton, that, as I said at first, L hye now been brought to confess rny-native place to be a place of no importance whatever, . , Pef contra-, I remember time wherf I thought na other plaee could be of importance compared with it.; Let me try to describe it as it ap peared to me then. '.. : It was a place q incredible cleanliness, liveliness, ( and .architectual wealth. ' w, -' Its cleanliness was patent to every one; for were there not.twoold men whose .whole and s'ole duty it, was to scrape the mud to;, the-sides of the streets after, every day of bad weather? ;j, Its liveliness would have been sufficiently guaranteed by the simple fact of itsfjjaving a market jjnee 3i week, when4he carriers' farts came in from all tK3 neighboring-villages. But beyond this, tire omnibus Went to Shiretown so less than -threewday a week, returffing always ilihe hsame night. While, to crown gll, there were no less than four fairs in the yfiar, one of which lastied two days". "J" Its 'public Juildings were tb,e pride of all intelligent people. -Theihurch had the loftiest tower, and the Jaiggest windows, and the ugliest faces on its corbels, and wiis the.Qldestprobgbly of aDy church ill JliDgland. .lhera couid hardly be a doubt that at some time (about the troduetion toof Christianity into th?5 Island) it had "been a minister. The monument in the chan cel wfs proDably that of one-of the early vbishoos as 3fOuld have been easilyproved.if its head ad not been knocked off 2nd lost. - U The Odd Fellowa! Hall was "a verv large and well-proportioned building, which" would hold at lea9t a hundred thousand people w perhaps with a little squeezing, a million. ItTwas in this magnificent hall that we used to have "our lectures, for it "was the hall of the'Mechanics' Institute as well a.s the Odd Eellows.' Owing -to its vast wze, tliere was always-found some difficulty in lighting it, as well as in filling it. V The audieince used to gathecclosejto the"lectujer ind his candles, and leave a great dark void behind. And I used to think-that if ever I should achieve greatness like that of the lecturer and stand on little platform behind a little table. and have two.' candles and a glass of water -to mv-self, and a long stick to point out thefigures on the diagrams. and a vast assemblage of ;people (like that I nsed to-see) to listen to me for as long as ever 1 liked to talk, then indeed I should not have lived in vain, and could die happy. But" the noble dimensions .of the Odd Fellows' Hall were, perhaps never so apparant as on magic-lanteru nights., Thejjhiloso-phic entertainment of the m-rgic-lantern was one of which' we were vcryibnd at Deddington have pot, ot late years, seen ajiy n-strumeM-t 01 that kind tfSfarlyequa to the &ne we' use u hav, npr any figures!.nearly'o curious and interest ine. The figure ofcthe man'sJiead, with a-nose that kept onr growing as long as the enrtain ".wouljj, allow, and then was continued on -the frCarest wall, was always a great favoritJ and so wasthe og'.-heaij with' the rwlling eye, when theTyes Ka,ppened to arrive about th sarr time as-the Tiead. The ntdding,maD(iarin was hardly liked so well,-4erhaps owing tosome delect m the machioery, which a1was preventeil hiss head from getting within two or three Teet of his.iody, and thu produced 3 sorufwhat unreal efitjet. But the-tlist-otvingiews were always agre;tt success: ancTthat in whie'Ti oneX of tin iwrami.ls of X',.... . :T . .. zA '3 1' wus uism-uy tteii lingering uu the terface of '.Winder Castle, while nSr majesty and allthe rmal familv glimmered through t, was 015 justlV reSBticat art. garded -s a kiumph of 5 if iur me enromatrppes tney never fail to tjbrow us intolraptrjres, and I hardly remember a more painful and distressing accideut than that of the breaking ot tlie tape which held up the sheet on which our chnniat-ope was theJ.JprtiiK-ted-sJt ws not uiirely that thiehrorJatrtpe ittelf waithus could not admit it to be

as projected on

the enet ot.the hall behind us,) but the schoolmaster and 'his assistants being thus suddenly revealed behind curtain, were so flurried and put out that they went away without the vote of thanks to which they were so richly .tit'ed. It was only once a year, when the Odd Fellows' walked .in procession with a band of music, and banner?,, and gay rogetts and sashes, that you would have known them for what they were. At other times they counted merely as publicans, butchers, tailors, joiners shoemakers, and what not. They appeared, however,, .to be not merely odd, but good-natured fellows too, and lent their noble hall for all sorts 6'f purposes. '.'-;.:," '' v ; I Not only were the ; Mechanics' Institute tenants in . permanence, so many nights a week; not only did the -magic-lantern people the mesmerists, the ventriloquists, have each -their

lurn in if ; it was also the place for speeches at election time in the lory interest (Deddington being a pollingplace lor tne Xiiaing,; wmre me xvaus. as tney were canea tnere, neiu uu ai the Temperance Hall. 1 hen. too. the missionaries used to come and have their turn sometimes in the'Odd Fellows' Hall. But the only occasions on which, it" was ever nearly lull were those . 01 tne grana tea-parties, for which at that time, the Deddinstoniaris were famous. .To these thnsty,, villagers .from round about flocked numberless, and thus., swelling the population1 of Deddington itself, even that monster hall waa how and then failed to overflowing The Temperance HalL' our other chief assembly room,: was smaller, but still a room of great magnitude. Speaking approximately, I should say the Agricultural Hall at Islington appears to me now about as large as the iemperance1 Hall appeared to me then. 1 don t know any bunding which appears to me quite so large as tne uaa eiiow nan us.ea to ap pear. r ... It was in the Temperance Hall that I made my first appearance as a pub lic character in ,"The Trial of John Barleycorn, a very exciting drama, which was enacted by sundry youths or tender vears and great promise youths of great promise being plenttni at that time in Deddington, though most of them have since turned out men of very-moderate performance. John Barleycorn was tried lor divers high crimes and misdemeanors. and. I having been called to the Bar a few days previously, and promoted witn unexampiea raniuity to tne Honorable office of her Majesty's Attorney "General; it was to me that the duty of prosecution fell. .. x was iunuuaie euuuiu id tucure conviction. Indeed, J oh q-Barleycorn was put down to be found guilty in the little books irom which we all learnt our parts. The'sp'eeenes wench I delivered on the part of the Crown, gained me so much applause, both on the occasion 01 the public trial and at various sub sequent times, when 1 repeated them at my father's instance from a table in ourparlor; and the whole business, in shorty was so pleasant to mfj that 1 had for some years afterwards a desiga of applying iu earnest for the post of Attorney-General. The duties cf that office I had already proved to be quite light, and I understood it to be a position-ot considerable emolu ment. .timittmg, however, to go in for the appointment at once, and to take the tide of my fortune at the flood, our committee (on whose testi monials 1 had chiefly . relied) was broken up, and 1 have never since seen my way to apply for the next vacancy with any chance- of Success This, however. i a digression, for which I beg pardon. .r It was of Ded dington I wished to speak. Of the Church, the Odd Fellows Hall, the Temperance .Hall. I have already spoken.- What more coul any one wish?" Well, besides these there were the chapels Ebenezer, Methodist; and Ranters', for we were great chapel people at Deddington And as if these were not enough you had only to walk two miles out of Deddington betore you came to the Captains mansion, which was gener ally admitted to be the finest struct ure anywhere outside the Arabian Nights: as indeed the Captain him self was the hnest. and the most 1m peripus gentleman. ; , 6uch was ueddiugton as it ap peared to me when -I lived : there twenty years go; and its people were ,a high,-' superior 1 ace, . suitecL. to.theix nlaee 01 abode. i I was told bys Ted Tyler that the .Uantaiq once , got a"boy. seven years transportation for ' not taking 'his liat off quick enoueh when he met him or for putting it on again, betore thvr Captain was out of sight, I forgel which. 1 And though no one else was quite so high as the Captain, I re member one " or ' two retired drapers and grocer?,- who lived utside the town, to whom I looked up with an awe which no .one else, however exalted, has ever since t-ucceded in inspiring within me. Two houses in the town were conspicuous above (ho re--t. One of them Was called " Myrtle House" (not that there were any myrtles Dear it, which indeed, were as rare as turtles in that part, of the country,) and was the residence of Miss Bellamy; a maiden lady then about fifty.. - , . ; ; Myrtle House was the largest house in the town a' massive square stone building, with a front near!y all windows, and a porch, withpillars of fine polished marble. . .-. Miss -Bellamy was knowu to k a lady of great wealth. Her father had been many years previously a successful barrister, and- she, his only child, had succeeded to her fortune

while yet young. An early disap-

pointment, some said inability in the male sex in general to tmd courage to propose to so rich a lady, others said had kept her single, and single there was every prospect of her re maining . ,i For, indeed, when she walked out, on fine days with her footman behinp her, and her lapdog beside her, or when, on wet days, she brought out hef big carriage (for she kept a carriage, and even visited at the Cap tain's at -long intervals), he -would have been a bold, man, who, seeing herf could have conceived the notion of making an oner or marriage to Miss Bellamy. - : The other house 01 the two was the house of my uncle. It was not nearly so grand as Myrtle House, and it had no special name of its own, being merely known as " Lawyer Enoch's, in Broad Street;" but it was a good, substantial house, much bigger than most of the other houses in the town. Externally the most remarkable thing about it was that the front door was approached by a, series of steps quite a long flight it seemed to me with-a hand-rail beside them tor safety. And as my uncle himself happened to be or seemed to be, which was the same thing the tallest man whom I had ever, up to that time,' seen going .about loose, 1 imagined the steps had .been put there to assist the advantages which nature had given him in getting a good view of the surrounding country. He was my rather s jouuger brother Christian name Thomas my father's being William. And while I am naming names I might as well, on the chance of the reader's caring to. hear it, name my own. It also is. as mv rather s was, WillianjEnoch: ! At that time I 1 added Jan. - to it; but that, alas! is no longer necessary, my dear old senior having been gone these many years to the dear wife who had gone before him, and whom I hardly ever knew, and to the dear lads and girls (all gone, too, except me) who were. I hope, better children to him than ever I have been. Thomas Enochs my uncle, or, as he was more commonly called, "Lawyer Enoch," was a prosperous man; and, if honesty and goodness of heart, and strict integrity deserved prosperity, he had only his just wages. His practice had been a large and a lucrative one, (chiefly conveyancing) for many years, and about the time I left Deddington he had admitted my cousin Tom, his son, to a share of the business, which he hoped soon to hand over to him entirely. ' , 1 But what is our life? Is it not even a vapor? Young Tom (so healthy and strong he always looked) died years ago. Cousin Jem died within a year of him, and Charlie with almost as short an interval. It has happened that almost every visit I have made to my native town since I first left it has been on an er rand of death. Mound after, mound in the little churchyard, and a long row pt tombstone, .brat 01 .our own branch ot the lamily, then ot 'my uncle s, gives the dates of my journeyingsJ, .- ; , . , . . '. ' When' I went three' months ago though I went on a verv painful er rand it was a positive relief to me to think 1 was not going to a funeral. It was midday when I arrived, and market-day.- The town looked strangely deserted as compared with the old boyish days. - lhere were the old car riers' carts; there were stalls, (butchers' stalls and the like,) scattered here and there in the street, at which their owners waited patiently for the customers who stayed away as patient ly. I thought 1 noticed here and there in a straDger's face some traces of an old schoolfellow's features; and now and then, but not so often, the strangers looked hard at me, as if they, too, had some suspicion of old acquaintance. The church, though still a good one, did not look so palpably a cathe dral as I used to think; nor indeed,J was ashamed to admit, was its archi tecture without suspicion of later centuries than I would fain have be lieved. " ' The Temperance Hall was, though I could hardly believe it, converted into an iron founder's casting shed. The Odd Fellows' Hall whether the adjacent houses had been raised or it had been lowered and shortened looked externally only, like one of a row of houses of very moderate pre tensions. .. . - ' Broad Street belied its name, and looked, in fact, quite narrow, j I met the .Admiral's carriage, (he, 'was promoted from Captain long time ago.) I kept on my hat,' and though 'three months have -elapsed, no proceedings have yet been taken against mtv.-.i . :c .- .. . . i'assing Myrtle House, I- happened to strike my stick against one of the fine polished marble pillars. The 1 ring was: unmistakably wooden and, indeed, the paint sadly wanted renewing: ; -' - ! When I reached my uncle's house, j it: was no longer a surprise to me to fiud only four steps at ' the door in- I s-'ead of the old flight of forty 'or fifty, j and to. find . in him, instead qt'the very j tallest ' man, a man who hud never! been, very much above the average height, and who now, at seventy :two, stooped a little with years, and .more , with the weight of troubles that had been laid upou-binu' ' .. . TO BE CONTINUED. , bray &:day,. B'!ij iciaii uittl Surgeon. No. F!KST STREKT. VVUi nJe in '.'-i ccii-.try. j'ju'-S d :;c

DENTISTS.

DR. I. QEEA..A-S Kesident Deutiat, Over First National Bank, Corner Main and First Streets, ,.. i Evansville, Ind., MANUFACTURER OF COXTIVIT. ous Oum Work. Gold. Hilver. VulcuuiLe, Coralite, and Amber Plates, Carved w ors, Arcmciai .raiaieu, etc. ADMINISTRATOR of Nitrous Oxide (an excellent and safe anaesthetic), (,'hloruiuriu, uiuer, kuu a.i.-u several local paralyzers. NEURALGIC Affections treated. MY FACILITIES arc as good and my establishment as large (consisting of rive rooms) as any in the United tela tea. I RETURN MY THANKS for the extensive patronage received during the past EIGHT YEARS. mchil DR. J. C. BIERBOWER, Surgeon Dentist, Office, No. JO FIRST STREET, bet Main .. and Locust, Tenders his professional services to the citizens of Evansville and vicinity feliti tf Administers Nitrous Oxide Gasjto alleviate pain in extracting teeth. INSURANCE. EVANSVILLE IXSIRAXCE CO. Authorized Capital..... ...fl.ooo.ixw Paid Up capital... iio,uuo FIRE,, MARINE, 4 FLAT BOAT RISKS Taken at fair rates. John S. Hopkins, President. James H. Cutler, Secretary. DlHECTOas: Charles Viele. John Ingle, Jr., William Brown, Dr. F. W. Sawyer, C. Preatou. J. H. Hopkins, Cttlllsoa Maghee,- , Robert Barnes, Dr. M. J. Bray, J. N. Knox, Business Aeent, who will also attend to Life and Accident Insurance Office, corner of Main and First Streets, In First National Bank Building;, aplbtim CARPETS. FALL, 1807. WHOLESALE and IlETAIX C A R P E T WJEIEEEOXJSE Wm. . French & Co No. 10 First Street, ' BVANaVILLE.IND., II A I l CARTERS ..'... . or suppliks fob Families, Steamboats & Hotels. ' Also. AGENTS for the sale of GERMAN ANCHOR Eolting Cloth Velvet Carpets Brussels Garpeta Tapestry Carpete Three-Ply Carpets Two-Ply Carpets Ingrain Carpets Venetian Carpets German Carpets Printed Carpets Listing Carpets : Hemp Carpets Rag Carpets Window Hollands Window Fixtures Rustic Shades Favorite Shades Venetian Shades Window Cornices Gilt Shades Nottingham Lace Tamboured Lace Window Reps Rubber Sheeting Window Drapery Parlor Hassocks Carpet Bindings Table Linens Fruit Napkins Woolen Drusgets Curtain Hooks Table Oil Cloths Piano Covers Curtain Gimp3 ' Chinese Mattings Manilla Mattings Cocoa Mattings nauiDOO lUattiDgs Velvet Rugs Brussels Rug Oil-Cloth Rugs Velvet JMats Brussels Mats Rubber Mats Adslaide Mat3 Sheepskin Mats Floor Oil-Cloths Mosquito Bars Linen Sheeting Pillow-Casing Cornice Moulding Bed Blankets Cotton Sheeting Vestitmle Rods Carpet Linings Carriage Rugs Picture Nails Stair Rods Picture Cords Stair Plates Picture Tassels Counterpanes Stair Linens Carpet Tacks Window Damasks iCurtain Loops i&c, &c., tc. S.B.-Experienced PAPER-HANGERS and UPHOLSTERERS furnished when required. . The latest style.- of FBEJfCH LAMBR1QUI.VS , , , made to order. Carpets cut and made to any given measure. Oil-Cloths fitted and put down. vVindow Cornices mounted and put up. Shades of all kinds huu in a superiostyle and on short noti:e. ' All tcork warranted n tin factory, ' Prices guaranteed as LOW as iu ar similar establishment in the L'NITF STATES..,. ...- ' WM. E. Fit EACH k CO., So, IO Flrt street, selO UP-STAIRs. OHIO RIVEIl TELEGUAPII. B"vN'J. Bkan.-ford, Preslde-'t. C. B. Hicks, Secretary and Treasurer. N. M. Looth, auperiutendent. OFFItT-S AT II F. N I E K K O S, Efansvilte. Oweusloro, Lewispurt, Hawt-sville. Cloverport. Stepheus.ort, Brandenburz, Wet l'jiut, and L'puisvill. Messages delivered at Caunelion, Tell City, and other town on the ojoite sloe of t he river. This iue connects with the Western Union at Louisville. ' Office on Wuter street, betweer Main and Locust (over Hayburst Jc Vi.i-ta-ker's), Evansville, Ind. nov:i ditu ST!.F.-H)RsfFrom the rtabie of the umlesigned, u tin? litt inst;, a sorrel mine, ensi.y known l.y a lite iui'4 round her left hiiid lea. 111 id wayh! w.-cii the foot and knee. A;l ex pcusmt Hid a lair reward win be paid 10 anybody -ho w ill r t ive in?: tnu: ;o j where to tlnd h. ! uovHdtf . !Oil!iNJN. '

GROCERIES.

Orent Attractlou AT TBI- . ;' " EUREKA IJVX.VVXi ! OCR MR. H. VICHEBV, IfAVIWU spent tbe pait four weeits in the cues of Chicago, New York, Philadelphia. Pittsburir, and Cincinnati, has nucoeedexi in celectfnt; as complete a stock of gouds in our line as was ever offered the good people of Evansville. Having bad an experience of seventeen years in the Grocery busmen in this plouf we think we know the wants of the trad : and having bought for CASH when gold wm at the lowest figure it has been tins season, ' WE CAXSOT BE UNDERSOLD. 7 If GOOD GOODS AXD LOW PRICES will bring trade, we are uVterrulued to make our store THE PLACE to buy ITYuiiil GroccrlflH, and HOUSEKEEPERS' SUPPLIES OENERALLY. v We invite attention to our stock of Baskets, comprising a large and varied :toit nieut of tancy iilack and Colored Traveling Baskets; also to our new and beautiful Market Baskets, Clothes Baskets, Hampers, Ac, c. We have paid special attention to tbe se.ectiou of Lamps, Chandeliers, Hhades, Burners, and Lamp Oood- generally, ml of which ue are vffering at e. yreal decline in price. Our stock of Teas cannot 1 e beat for price or quality in the ciry. We are offering choice Syrup at a decllO of 25 per cent, on former prices. Call and see us, and luiulie our pri ces, at the ' Eureka Baz-iar " V1CKERY BROS., novl'J 75 Maiu Street.' CHARLES V1ELE4 CO., .... -t 1 WltOI.ES A L E' & X OCER S, GOUTUWKST CORNER First and Sjcamore Street. Evans vill2, Ind. au9 dtf. New House! New Stoik! S. H. S. COOK, 1S3 Malu Street, Between Sixth and Seveuth, ,, ' HAH OPEF.D MflTIf A Fl'M, Hsortmeut of STAPLE and r ANCY GUOCEHIES. FEED of all kinds coastanMy on hand Uoods delivered free of charge. 1-53 Main street, nova dOui X. K. WHEKLER. JAKES t'. ftUXM, WHEELER &c RIGGS Wholesale Dealer 1 in GrROGERIES, SOUTHEAST CORNER FIRST AXD SICAMOBB STREETS, Evans vi llk, Ind. , , All orders promptly attended to. nova dtf 1 . ; . ' ISAAC HX1MANST. . DAVID HXIJCAWN. I. A. I). IIEIMANN, Wholesale Daalei-s In GROCER IE S, . Foreign and DonwMic Liqwrt, NAILS, COTTON YARNS, G LABS WARE, 4c, Ac, Xos. 60 and 62 Main Street, Between Second and Third, Evansville, Iwc FISH DEPOT. ovao dtf UOBNDUUOK & CO., DEALERS in Agricultural Implements, and Oils. Agents for Fairbanks' Scale. We keep on hand a general assort ment of these Justly celebrated Balances. They ar durable and -warranted accurate, and th cheapest, all tir hh considered. Sizes trom one drachm to liu tons. JanU itiui CRESCENT CITY PROVISION WTO It IT and MEAT HARKET. F. m BENNETT &i CO, Cor LOCUST and SECOND STS. fflrv7 d , " . ( r Potatoes! Potntoew! 1000 ,UMII,S Choice Michigan Potatoes For saje cheap for c.isli, whole-i-ale or retail, ui tiie CITY FECI) STORE. Xo. 10 Tlilrd Si reel. Between Maiti and Locrsi.. Also Choice Family Flour, r' Fresh Bol ted Corn-jleal, ,' -audAll kinds of Feed, Kept constant'? n hand. . All orders, delivered promptly fres of ' C,d:t t. VS.MTHHvY.