Indiana American, Volume 8, Number 19, Brookville, Franklin County, 8 May 1840 — Page 4

'"-A' TALE."

; From the Ladyt Companion: BRILLIANT PROtPRCTS OR, THH MARRIAGE A I.A-MODE. T IMlii C. KSPY. ' , V art . -opinions. - uTue htaa convinced aftiast his wtil, - - ta of tke same opinion still." ''Good morning, dear Susan; I suppose you have cme to tell me you have decided on Harriet's marriage," said Mrs Hilton, as the fashionable Mrs Arlington entered her neat, but plainly fura'shed parlor. "1 have "Alary ,V was the reply; and if voa can spare on hour from your nursery, I want to talk wjth you about it, and learn your objections.' ' 'You have Improved in the usu.il method, Susan,' Said her sister laughing, 'most persons ask advice, and then follow their own inclina tions; but you decide first, and then ask counsel.' 'Why, lo tell you the truth, Mary, though I was unwilling to mar Harriet's brilliant pros pects by our old fashioned notions, yet 1 real ly wisn 10 near your reasons lor not approving the marriage.' 'My first objection is so self evident, Susan, tiiatit cannot be refuted. Harriet is a mere child.' 'She is sixteen.' 'And pray, what but a child is a girl of sixteen, whose lime has been derided between the nursery and the school room. She may be a good scholar and possess great skill in music and dancing, but of the active business of life she can Jncvcr even have thought. It is nearly seventeen years since .1 was at that happy age; and yet I can recollect well how totally unlit J must have been for any serious 'Yet you ought to have been more womanly than most girls, Mary, educated as yon were, by the m-.sl precise of all venerable spinsters, annt Hetty lt is o cur annt Hesters strict notions f womanly duties, that I owe much of my present happiness, siiter Susan; but at that carlv age, I could have contributed but little to a husband's domestic comfor!.' 'Yoar experience is very different from mine, Alary; I can add leu years to your calender: for alas! it is seven and twenty years since I was sixteen, but I can remember how I longed to quit school, and have a house and servants of my own. 'Doubtless such idle withes often crossed my brain, sister, when aunt Neppy kept me at home, hour after hour, stitching wiistbands,or seni mc lino the kitchen to learn how to cook a dinner, but I n peat, that to the instructions I then thought severe, I owe many of my present enjoyments.' 'But the mini of omeVlevelone nr.uch more rapidly, pen.aps, Harriet has long been at the I:ead of the school. 'I thought you intended to leave her with Mis Hartley another year.' 'oo I did: she had only visited home for the Christmas holidays, and to tell you the truth, her trunk was parked to return to school, the very evening Ed ward Tracy made proposals to her father.' Kd ward Tracy' proposals at once completed her education. I iimnivw sM Mr Hit. ton. 'Well, sister. 1 hope it is all for the best; but I ainrio fwcnd tosucheaily marriages. I was married at eighteen, Mary, and hav never repented it, while you I know what )ou would say, Susan; you niann that you at eighteen, married a rich merchant, and have lived like a princess ever since; while 1 waited to twenty-three, onlv to wed a profession! man, whose talents procured a simple competence. Nay, you need not disclaim my Versions of your thoughts; we are each happy in our way. Tha eclat of fashionable life; the ambition of giving the best dinners; and-the most brilliant parties; the triumph of possessing the most stately house, and the richest French furniture, is, to a suffi. cieut recompense for the vexations attendant on such a life ; while I would nt exchange for all your splendour, the quiet, the retirement, thsdomestic comfort of my humble house. Well, you certainly seem very contented, Mary, and yet I wonder how you can reconcile yourself to such a life; your house is a mere bandbox.' . 'It is large enough to contain all my real friends, and I never give parties. 'Your furniture is very plain.' R i substantial, and as good $ cur f.uher's house ever boasted. betted1 ln ar falhert t5me w oeuer in use; now cwrrnwt..-.'. !v le displaj Brussels carpet and French chairs.' l am quite coniont to avoid all rk mm. t Hr.1 ewivesof merchants 17' S'vcsmc ,no pain tt return to -v -T.lrunems, after spending the day In VOUr luxurious rn 'But you have so few servants. ' ' ; ncnx wo does not di -i a . " " cnaree ol mr M urea, and my ood. li.Me KitiP iTl V wioml took into ,7 , , - , uh. ui i) nan -v imj wrren I was hist Vk.Vk ..,n8?,ome tttachedto fl 7 tb" f kindn o them, h is true I have na PrtnA -:.:r. . . TT " lrUe en llr .C: " ",Sin,er J kitch . . --wt; oi n steamboat; I whiskered lackey to put my friend. utmy friends pertinence to s to learn my have a well ordered housebM r J p,CT',ul 1 ..in.'. .' . nusch0,l d t. our old ch a dSSL"? obtaiaing, Iieve vou ar imia .rt. l.,. . . ,l ,. , - inau nan ngnt. . VoDrt liouse alwav l.vlr 6 . ..'",r 4 - v"M,u,aoi;your children j

are well trained, and . your dinner parties arc Lfrom its harsh discipline. . all this,4 cannot conceive. You woold be) PiBT E",E?

surprised, if I were to tell you the trouble I J nave wiin my eight Servants: - My fat bid cook divides his lime between experiments in Part gusirenimique and the billiard table; mv coachman starves the poor horses, and gets drunk with the money for which he sells their oats j the footman spends the lime tn trimmine his whiskers; and the waiter loses Ihe silver, ana orCHKs my Secret china: so much for tha : men. With the women it is but little better;, the nurse neglects my children w hile she flirts with the beaux who come to the house on Sunday, in yellow gloves and blue inexpressibles, the chambermaid borrows ny embroidered capes for her evening parties; and prat tling French governess has actually been detected in a clandestine correspnndence with one of my husband's clerks, a simple boy from the country. . There is no help for it;ifl dismiss them I. shall get no better; so I must hut ray eyes' and let matters take their course, could not endure a life of domestic drudee ry.' 5 Mrs Hilton did not lenlv : she knew it was usdest to tell her that whnt she called drudgery was in fact the duty of every good wife; and that, although mutunl labor may not always be necessary, vet the constant supervision of . 1. .. . : . i ...... .r. . . mc unsiresi is essential to the well being oi a family. The eye ef a master maketh a dilligent servant,' is a proverb almost forgotten in these days of luxurious and false refinement. 'Our discussion has led us far from Harriet and her fortunes, said Mrs Hilton, after a moment's pause; 'I should like to know something of her intended husband; he ,is a very handsome man, yet there is something in the ex presstenofhisface which I do dot like. 'He is the Son of an ol J friend nfmr hn. band, and by thfr recent death of his father, nas come in posession of a large fortune.' . What doyou know of his charater and temper, Susan V 'Very little, he has snent several var in Europe, and is very well assumed, lie ii said to be somen hat eccentric, nd his manners area little reserved.' 'Whatare his religions principles!' 'Oh, 1 suppose he is like other voiinc men. and thinks religion may better be deferred to a later perion of life. You shake your head, Mary; surely you do not expect to find young men at the present day, models of piety V 'How lone has he known Harriet r lie dined with us last year, whenHarrist was little more than a pretty child, but I think he has never seen her since, until about three weeks ago, when he met her in Broadway. Her extreme beauty seemcd.to attract him immediately, and he hes since'theu been a constant visitor.' 'Docs Harriet fancy that she has any attachment to himt I say fancy, because it could scarcely be a genuine affection already. I believe all boarding school girls are much alike n some point, Mary; they come home with imaginations excited by novel reading, and are ready to fill in love at a moment's warning, with any interesting youth. Harriet is like 'he rest, and the attentions of a man as handsome as Edward Tracy, soon prodnce an Impression. You look grave; you think me wrong In giving Harriet to one I know so little. 'I will be frank with you, Susan; to me the advantages of wealth and intellect are of little value, in comparison with good principles and sound morality. . Edward Tracv may be the most fascinating of men, but if he lacks steadiness ol character, Harriet will never be happy with him. She is naturally affectionate in her disposition, with warm feelings,and I should think, a strong tendency to romantic sensitiveness; she will attach herself to her husband with the most ardent tenderness: and if he be a man of high toned character ana strong sens,' he will mould her into the the loveliest w oman in society ;but if he is one of the votaries of excitement, a lover of pleasore merely, then woe to her, as soon as the charms of beauty nails upon his senses! You are giving in the hands of a stranger a chcri i t . . . . ... . muea piani, just wnen it is about to blossom into perfect bea a ty; if he watch over it with anxious care, ali will be well; but if he blight it in the bud. you will billerlv repent the haste wiin which you transferred it to another. - If she were several years older with a mind fully developed, and a strength ofcharactei fitted to endure the vicissitudes of life, she might be trusted to a fate so promifing; but at her age, she will be the mere plaything of a husband who has gained a deeper insight into this world's wisdom-and it will be hard to obtain in future the Influence which n wife ought always to possess, and which it only to be 6 .,., wtc unison ol Drm principles and perfect gentleness. He may delight in the beauty of his girlish wife, but he can scarcely be expected to respect her opinions; and woe to the woman whose husband doesnot regard her as his confidential friend. And now that I have finished mv lecture. Sn t.n m hen the maraiasre is to take nletv 'As soon as we can complete our arrangemcnts; probably in a fortnight.' said Mrs Ar"fcion sn rose fo depart. He -'. . .. nestness had started hr im. mam ..c... flection thaa she usually indulged, and she r sareweii witti a saddened count nance. But when she stennMl ?nt W.r rtage, and threw herself hack upon the luxu- , ner old HadiU of thonght re turned. Al.r n .l. . . ., : . urned. After all,' .aid she to herself, 'wealth ?l;Z7 w'Wr!:le hiB?? "" r "ever have such another Iirilli.m i... ZZc J. more 6r lesst-she must learn from experience instead of precept. , L?a,LhaTJUUe w hosw costly, . --.ii.ci acnrea,wno WiltinEiv transfer K . v ,,"",7 rhn h , K 1 . ' ferere a school 1 " .l,.tr ' o Knn Khi

"If there be one curse wh'ch Las come to the earth as the crow flies, and with the poisonous steam ofhell hot about it, it is that of an ill-sorted marriage." On the sixteenth birthday, Harriet Arlington became the wife of the rich and handsome Edward Tracy. The wedding was unequalled in splendor: the hrido Innk irr lilt in

. . " J - her loveliness, and queenly in the richness of ner apparei -what. more could a fashionable mother desire! A few weeks were devoted to festivity, and Ucn the newly wedded pair set sail for France, where they purposed spending their first year, amid the gaiety of Taris. Among Mis Arlington's parling lessons tt her daughter, was one, which Harriet vainly tried to understand. 'Be careful, mv rhilJ Mid her mother, 'that you never inquire into your ...w..u . cnriy aigiory; mere are a thousand adventures Which befal a man in th rnnn of his liie, to which he dislikes to recur; and it isaln-ays best for a wife to kuow nothing about them.' Harriet possessed a mind of such perfect purity, that even he contagion of a uwoiumg bciiooi nau lailcd to corrupt it; and therefore she was utterly ignorant of the vices of Society. To !rr T -..., oil J " f nt svl iiivw that she could desi.-e; and she did not dream mai ne could ever have kuown evil ; she would never, therefore, have thauh t of tiinuiriiitr in. to his past history, simnlv because she was j quite satisfied with him nt present; and yet, .... .v. . "viuj, implying iUal mere might be something to learn respecting her husband. l""'"7 r more man she would have liked to confess. Immediately upon theirarrival in Parley were .urro,,uded by T. friends, and Harriet foid h.rf . ofauraclion to the most fashionable circle of the Pleasure loving metropolis. IIer extreme W AtltK I ? V.' .V" -ing beauty, her winning simplicity of manners, and her frank demeanor, made her a general favorite; and Tracy had the satisfaction of knowing that the voice of fashion now ratified his own taste. Edward Tracy was one of the world's velanes and victhn. At an early ag he had been scat to scho.1 to England, ad frei thence he had entered ihd Ui,i.,:.... .. . fromhischildhood he had beW deprived o j , "6"." inuuence. His mind had been cultivated, but his heart neelectad ana me sweet chanties oflife, which grow up only in the quiet sunshine of dome.tif retire? ment,had never diffused their perfume around hishoyhood. Hi. mother haddied while he was an infant; and his father s the cares of business, thought that his duly was fully performed, wheaEdward w. nil ed at school, and well supplied wit). Sail, comforts. There was no hL . '"i.W could enter,lo learn the hp fafli'S ".J social duties; n. mother to-fU8e Tlove o virtue into hi. soul, by. her genii, prec' u -.-M. mc nad been dif traced bv no exCCMCl. an,tl.l1. "fiiwccB i. . . r i'Fruce, ius mo- ... v.-a.-vr was unimpeachable as his men tal qualities were brilliant; but it was wliu pered that hi, iU,nale fri.ud. could TeJ. different tale. In fact Tracv w. 1. T. .J mately .elfish For Ui. view, he had no the allv a. coid . d7X S","'"?f T". ct . ' . e ....v-.ow.nj n. ne nad numbered fourscore w inters: .nd in kS. . ,ur what passed a. such, L.dsd S because the rr. .1, i. . . praise, ted motive..' A" nZ'Z . tel., UMmHXSZZZS. .r. T a 'niy oDcy ne Ke dictii o inclination ; and ufce of ho" or and magnanimity forever on hi. lins. he was never knAn i a. j. f "u U,B I'PN Surh k s. ? "u,i,nteraslesl act. "d .r"5e..hM,nd lonely and "u:r, ?V"l Well might her to n i d t ft., r mU,, r drmi hr nqi7 fit K. f!r roor5 ""'I hate fear A udde. transition from " restraint, of a - .uiure conauct. I a ooardin ionalJolir. l-'wmcni Ol a las 1bv Mrs Trl5 I m . lhan WM POMesed wictv IX J-' B?wi4 i" lhe whirl of gciy, aid intoxicated h k. arnmn sai...i . . - lil "citement of a fashZSTk lilJWJ Pre. But 2 garth's fl0wers-if we are 2:iiiS",fe.fttr ar? d even wh la a JTr gMtttT U,em SSLi4!!. uch efi IVi", --F"ne,, "r rich perfume can onlv bnn tu..v j i -.. can only brine disease nA j..i. .A few short months sufficed for' her dream Offoltv.and ihn bii.i.. h . "wm ov.ri lh Iriumpi, of pe,,ini ... 1.... .. . f nee tAJT. every grie. oon a. VknVJT.V.r.J' made kni . .V.."' t-y allvennu.k Jj"Z7 ."1Mcm "mei, naturi.i. ' , ,Preo ine .me system of srirh S .kI h fnlCal nnerofa petted child, she reproached him r k. r " fjl re. been indole i. V - Fl,lne wnicnhad wofoUitnLrt; iiu: :. " I ,-

i destroy all domestic comfort. . - .... . Harriet, with a youthful imtartence of mel

ancholy feelings, endeavored to lose the recollection of her discomfort, by plunging still more deeply in fashionable folly. There were many among her acquaintances, who while they lacked her advantages in point of weaiiH, ana yeum, and beautr,wcre far her superiors in worldly wisdom. These gladly took her guidance through the mates of society, and by their aid, the equipage, the cress, ine entertainments of Mrs. Tracy, became distinguished for their splendor and miiucH. out in vain tne poor girl tried to cheat herself inlo happiness. The warm feelings of early youth were daily withering within her bosom, and no outward show could compensate her for their loss. 'I ha romance which belong rrore or less to the nature of every woman, had not been wasted by her upon school inendshins. or fWtdU .ttarh, menu, but had at once entered upon her hus k..wt M i I..- , . . r inivuraiion ei iiiicrest had ever ueea in her mind connected with her mar riage. one saw a man noble person and graceful manners, offerim; her ihe devoid attentions of an ardent lover, and her heart sprang towards him with girlish eagerness and fondness. When a woman lives a little while in society ,she learns, by sad experience, that disappointments must come, and bitter as lhay may be when afflicted by those she loves best, she at length lesrns to bear them with patience, and even to expect them. Hut sad as is the fate of her wbose first sorrow is the work of him who has sworn to love and cherish herto whose lips the chalice of disappointment is commended by the hand which placed on her the symbol of unbroken union. To all outward kind to his wife as most fashionable hosbands; but poor Harriet would willinl I, changed his coid politeness when ia society, mr a single look of real tenderness, while his capricious tyranny in private was such, as :o ings. Another and a still r. bitterness, was finally opened in the heart of the young wife. In ihe careless freedom of conversation with her Parisian friends, whose morality hung about them as Unset v as their opera cloaks, she had learned some of the dark secrets of her husband' i;r. i. the mind of a pore hearted girl, whose' ideas r. Uu...u iiaiare nave been formed after the .......c.oie models or heroes of romance, nothing can give so fearful a shock as the discovery that the object of hor innnn.1.1 1... - 1.-. m . . . ! iu 1 v. una m er been the votary of vicious Indulgence. Ignorant of the tcmpUtions which assail n.anmou, and rightly regarding as crimes those excesses which the good n.iured world considers only as vettial errors, she feels that the shrine on which she offered her young affections, has been polluted by nnhollv fires: .d longer looks w,th perfect faith 01 00 the idol. H Z .1 continue to love her husband, iic.vn iMcrcnce of evil from whkh hersoul recoils and allow thedovedike plumage of her own Dire snirit in t - i.5t ed by the darkly brooding wing of the TempA woman at Im ril;n i 1 r , el. situation, would perhaps have resigned herself qu,etyf ,BI omferied herself with the external advantages afforded by her position -vr .racy rarely interfered in his wif pursults-and a little nuMnmM -..i 11 SStr0 .lhe. nt cene. of ..v..iiuon wnicn made her so vers ST rc u B,ul P-rr,el haJ t0 niuc tion lor her lnikKan.i 1.. . , . ii. . . ' uw "iiuc regaru lor those ivordly advantages which she had posseted from Infancy, to be content with such a lot. Candid, even to a fault, ,he possessed neither the skill which enable, a cunning wo man to manaze the ineni!;;A. r ? . ... 1 v. CcinnclOUS temper, n..r the tact which teache. L .nru. irtf "eJt Uk ntage of the faintest H ini ui rs 1 11 rn inm a., j sr. i:s .s . V ,ce,,nt5 that husband. &he was unhappy, ,he knew that her husband was the cause of hormiion- a.u 1 :J ed him with his cruelly in the same manner , iw months before, she would have reproached a school fellow. ,S3Cy ,ookrdtaPn tis young wife as a mere iriilLr.- h!,PPinc1M dreaded upon the gratmcauon ef her girlish waims; and so long SJ ,e!,!,?wed her 10 do he pleased, he thought he ought not to complain, if he a -sum-ed the same privilege. He did not know that woman happineu consists in the exercise of her affections, and that he might as well call upon a blind m-... . .t. . - i miiuire inc ueauues 01 nature, as expect a woman to bs content frZ ST?. 'ile?.al advn,M hen shutout Irom the hcht of love. II rn.M..j irItl. . 7 . w K K WM mm m J9 - w n W n ak -m characlerJie wnnM k... il ... . . , . . itaiucu mat many a pearl of price lav beneath il. ....r. rlk. I .. " - cxi.avc vi tile . u,ought which his breath so often uoieo. .... TK. 1.1.. t 1 1 . ,,T. "m re,"mS no uncommon one, -Who cannot point to some sixiilar instance of domestic estrangement, even amone their own familiar rViends! The world is witto some brilliant marriage; it beholds the newly wedded pair surrounded by affluence ii, pernaps, welcomes them to cenos 01 a-aietv. but n 1. until suddenly the tie s severed tik. .:r me nomeoi her childhood the husband becomes a solitary wanderer. Then of?HnntTrna c?"jectore8 recollectien. it 21. si TCCf be,twcen lhe Prlies,and teSTl ' rkind audacity- of hints," rir?5 i5h? m?tiro of W'forien a sepaITw" n? W,, ,ave'W sufferers themn disruption of domestic tics t Who can trace the course of the tempest from the "cloud no rot.. . L " . . "

cep nvc a constant irritation or temper on her part, which served as an excuse, though it was the result, of his neplert of her feel-

bigger than a wan hand,' to tLe fiery t) u derbolt, rendii:sr the chain which boujid 1

fettered pair! Who was allowed to hearth angry word, the hnsty retort! Wl bel-Ai the cold look, the bitter sneer ! Who liei to the keen irproach of wounded n(T-,.;. the scofSng reply of incident hatred! Ah? so frail is human nature, that our very vino. sometimes do the work ef vices, ard evm 1 r .s-: 1 j....- r 111 a inuniimm mny ve prouueuve Ol as mucbci l as ia fidelity, our tenderest atfeatioiii.L injudiciously exercised, may bs assubveuit of domestic happiness as aversion. " c The two first year, of married life sr. j ways the most hasuirdoas; if we (scape iW wreck, then we may hope to steer our safely to a Ilavoii of rest." Such was ths It. utai vi viic now in uer grave, wno had pi. ed, not unscathed, through the ordeal; j u..j rneocc provs me iruin cl herasic 6ion. If it requires time and patience, is der to modulate two musical linst perfect harmony, how much more of botb . needed to produce exact accordance bef. two farlsrrfhose "harrs of a iheuss.i strings -which, when once wedded, can fortli the music oflife only when they unison. It matters not haw iniimai.t. .1 character of ease snay hare been studied I t ihe other before marriage; the tn iUr iaUi. couise of wedded life developcs a tbcoati niuing pccuiiariiier, and bait formed Into. Iherc was no opportunity forthcir.display "iiivu couia noi oea;scovcred esirlir L.-, 'KwgHa.uiui ivroearanceisUit ursi uuiy which we arc called to exercise. ai uie expiration ef the evealfiil tw a . .... Harriet wasenco mrn inm.. . the's house. The difference k-i-and her husband had arisen to such .S that nolhiog remained bt a separatioB;S unifer pretence of seeking renovated hrahkj, .... -. , aiIg. , rarj re(u j A . V I;" , m . nJ sliil the crci ment of thefansian circle ef fuJLuu. JLfc jected to the trials whkh reoulre woL.U uniiuuj iiarnei Had bca iA ... !- -1 -u B.. 01 cnaracur, and wcmanlv rsnt'I ntt?i d.e"e?nor- T Pty cliU,"fi from the indulgence of ,he nuriry, witk dl the waywardness of a school gjrl yet clingi to her affectionate nn ... 1. 1-... .". loeucounter the fate which awaited her. B ken iu health and spirits, and aufferine frga ueivous irriubilitr which ih..iM.li.. troy reason ilscK, she returned to the hoaJ w unnappy ycars,lhe mere shadow of benrit The joyous expression of her once beamifc face had given place to a look ofV-r. alien; her smooth forehead bore traces of lL oft knit brow, and she cet0ed permafsrilr death her mfaat, to whom she has l ,k" ,u.,,,r ce in her loneliness offieart completed the work whirl, ik- ;iirfJ marnage had began: and while TraCY ail remaiaed amid the gaielties of I'a,:S h(, fs wasfarf .,nklng j,l0 n f(ate of mcBi1 bk cihty. She would sit for hours in one tion; her hands hong listlessly by her shlr head tenldoan.bcr eyes fixed on vacsan. seemingly abstracted from every thi.g 1 her. The voice of her mother, the preW oT her father, were alike powerless to arm her al rach times from her mournful traarf.She required her room to be darkened; ul the admusien of a ray of sunshiae made kr shiver, as if the light of day went pcrfeclb abhorrent to her. Alarmed at her increaJ haired of life, her mother look guard her with the utmost vigilance; bathr 11 r e morning her altsa janl left ihe room for a few minuter , learinf Mrs. Tracy apparantly boriediasleen;cDt "-vurn siut was horror stricken to find bo prosirate on the floor, with the blood floiis; kTr. .Wound iu lbe tempfc. Whether iU had fallen against the chimney piece iosl tempt to rise or whether ihe more horrible suspicion which entered ih ,i.u..n. uoized parenls was true.could never be knowI tered not a word when she w.n .lacd ... wu n n uiired no answer to the eir tSASlSa . "..c.v. .,er parents, cor the question her physician; and thns, in apparant Dncos 1. "nV ,ne ""gcred several days,ere dci relieved her frcm the burden of existence. On the eighteenth birlhday she lay exUfr ded in her coffin, in the very room, w'hersiss Am mm L. ST . t . " iore, sne had stood, in cirlish lotrli .u .nuai array, to pronounce the isrevocable vows which doomed her to ditsf I'umimcni ana an early grave. . Years have oassed .1. 1:1 the silent tomb, lutit u mt wnce toward 1 racy ended a life ofprcfli X J- "y,7.luw unmitigated sutTerincmvuiii vi mi q'u vices. HOOT 4, SHOE STORE. rjIWE SUBSCRIBERS wish to infcrmtW Htts.U, n haad' " '-rtmen't of .r. ??t, SS?' and Slipper, ; aupanor to any ever offered int .1 f lb,r..OW11 nuftstnre-snd forssle. Work Wa r ran t ed. Ttcy wilUlm keep aa sswrtmeat of LEATHER J rrrrnr'no 01 ail kinds oa band and for ) t it.. hHi oil- . . . , - " . til. .WWV. I 1 via . ...... wwwilfl o xv ..." July SO, 1339. 3j Tirr k EW GOODS. 1 I IK subscribers : f . ' . , .1. Ewlern Cities.! l..'"!i ,T0B ,ro Poreij. aad Domestic " """"T' . JJICY ann n v HARD WARE, SHOES, PALM JUTS. ell Wltolesale or rp.;i ...L :...:... adding carriage. & 8 TY.N L'U. uroosriue', Msy 16, 19. -.. n -.- 21