Indiana American, Volume 10, Number 17, Brookville, Franklin County, 22 April 1842 — Page 4
ST?
MISCELLANEOUS.
j necessary for me to mention that I followed:
THE RUN-AWAY MATCH. Onp lnvelv evenin? in the summer of 18
was present at a large party assembled in the spacious and gorgeously furnished apartments
of one of the most splendid mansions in iiew j as York, owned by niy emplo-er. a very wealthy , the rc merchant. The fete was given on the occasion j v'on1'
i ihr lmfmrlilnatn and nnru lnt'ctv Marin In
grave, and saw the last sad rites performed!
over the cold clay that had once been animated , Estate of w llliam by as pure and warm a heart as ever throbbed ' Frost, deceased, in mortal bescm. I
As I stcod by the little mound that covered ;
J
f In the Probate Court of j ISltUXUHITIS ! BRONCHITIS!
Franklin county, Ind.
Feb. term 1842, 2d day
of March 1842. On comnlaint to settle as an in-
solvent estate.
-.
( remains of my fair but unfortunate country- a t " remembered that on said second day
:oman. and thought of the years of nmruish Ul fiarcn. comes Isaac rrosi, au-
ofhisTlydauo ad followed her unhappy nianiago. I ministrator of the estate of William Frost
teenth birth-day. How often during the eve- llllu Wi a"-' picturing w mysen now oim r-, -i " f; nine did I observe the eves of the fond father!" would have passed her life, had she wed-; praying that he may .have the privilege of set-
bent on the peerless form of his darling child some honest American niechanic, larmer, ; u...B M.u iuie as an insolvent one, anu pray
-however poor he might have
with an expression of mingled pride and pleas-jor mercnanture. And well might the parent of such a j been.
daughter have been proud of her, for never! havo I mft with nno vvliri imitf(1 Rn mani WOMAN
charms hnth rf mind and hod v. When I en-!
tA raina Ma, ;-, ,.-na cooimt fl : in behalf of the female pex. Have they not I
AND TEMPERANCE
I would appeal to every man in the country
room,
the piano, and beside her sat a young foreigner, touching a fine-toned guitar with exquisite skill. He was attired in the most fashionable style, and his large mostachios gave an additional annearanep of linncrhtiness to the aristo
cratic curl of his lip. I was won after intro-1 men has been the prolific source of most of the
duced to the Count de Clave, for such I learned ! '"".oics oi women lor tnousanas i years pa:,i
was his title. The most unobsorving persoi
suffered enough already in consequence of intemperance ? Sureiy every man who is a friend to woman will gladly and cordially unite
in an enterprise which has for its object the al- j the same,or a statement of the nature, descrip
ing generally for relief; and therefore it is ordered by the Court that the said administrator notify the creditors of said estate of the filing and pendency of said complaint, by a publica
lion for six weeks successively, in some week
ly newspaper printed and published in Franklin county, Indiana; and that unless said creditors notify said administrator of the existence
and extent of their respective claims by filing
leviation of her sorrows. The drunkenness of
in the company could scarcely have failed to notice the attention paid to Maria by the Count.
and it needed but little penetration to perceive that his exertions to win her favor were rewarded by many a gracious smile. I was not much surprised soon after, when Maria's father told me that the Count had solicited the hand of his daughter in marriage, adding that Maria had already confessed her affection for him. Mr. L was astonished he knew that the Count had been a frequent and welcome visitor at his house, since their return from Saratoga Springs the previous autumn.
and where he had been introduced to them by
the celebrated Countess V-
un ! tiimiv rt the millions that have been the innocent victims of oisipated connexions, that have toiled and strove, and hoped, and prayed, until a cold sad despair has fastened upon their
hearts. Misery is a slow murderer, but how often has its vulture tooth sunk deep into the female breast, in consequence of the neglect, harshness, and abuse, which springs from intoxication, until death itself has become ablessed relief. Who has not seen a lovely young female, that had been reared in the arms of parental tenderness, her heart swelling with the delusive hopes of inexperience, led forward into connubial life, with prospects bright and promising. And again have you not marked
a an Italian !,ne fdiul melancholly, the fading cheek, and
nobleman who had lost much of his property I ,ne. anxious look, which told the agonizing sus-
tion and date of the contract or assuinpset upon which the same may be founded, in the office of the Clerk of the Probate Court of said county of Franklin, previous to the final distribution
of the assets of the estate of said deceased:
which final distribution will be made on the second day of the next term of this Court, to be
holden at the Court house in Brookville on the second Monda) of May next, their claims will
be postponed in favor of the more diligent creditors. ROBERT JOHN, Cl'k P. C. F. C. March 10, 1842. 12-6w
nplIE highest cash price paid for HIDES
. anil O iv. 1 1 S , by
Metamora, Nov, 1941.
YVM.
RUBOTTOM. 45 if
and had been obliged to fly from his country in
consequence of being concerned in a conspiracy to give freedom to his countrymen but he had never dreamed of his becoming the lover of his daughter. His patriotism and his misfortunes, of which the Countess had given Marin a glowing and highly-colored narative, had awakened a deep interest in the susceptible bosom of the romantic girl, and she readily "sucked in the music of his honey vows," and loved him for the dangers he'd gone through. Her father expressed himself willing that the Count
should become the husband of his daughter, if he would give satisfactory proof that he was indeed the person he had represented himself to be, some circumstances having come to Mr. L 's knowldedge which tended to throwdiscredit on some of his statements. The Count
appeared to be highly offended at his veracity : being questioned, and indignantly left the house. In the evening he contrived to obtain an interview with Maria, and persuaded her to elope with him, and consent to a secret marriage. Having obtained her hand, the Count sailed for Europe with his young bride, without allowing her to have a farewell interview with her father. Maria L had a large property in her own right, beyond the control of her father, and the Count left orders to have the property immediaily disposed of, and the proceeds forthwith trasniitted to him. The doating father never recoverd the heart-shock occasioned by the flight of his darling daughter, and in a few monljis after I followed him to the grave.' As he could never" discover the place of his child's residence, he left the mars of his fortune to charitable institutions.
Some vears after the elopement of Maria L
. business called me to Paris. As I was
passing through an obscure street, one cold, rai ny day my attention was attracted by i
crowd which had collected around the form of
a woman, who had fainted on the side-walk. The instant I obtained a glance of the care-worn palled visage of the poor woman, I became convinced that her features were not unkown to me althoughl could not clearly remember where or when we had met. Impelled by mingled
feelings of compassion and curiosity, I pushed
through the crowd, and lifting the senseless body in my arms, bore it into the nearest house. A physician was sent for, and in a short time lie succeeded in restoring his patient to consciousness. She had scarcely opened her pale
lips to utter a cry of surprise at finding herself
m a strange apartment and surrounded by unknown persons, before I recognized in the wasted form and death stricken features the once
amiable, accomplished and beautiful Maria L
. As the physician declared that in her feeble condition death would be the conse-; quence of her removal, I made arrangements with the occupants of the house to have a room set apart for her and also secured the services of the medical gentleman, who expressed his fears that she was in the last stage of consumption, and would not probably live many days.
Poor Maria lingered several weeks, and before
her death she gave me an account of the results
of her ill-fated union. She very soon discovered that her husband so far from being an Ital
ian nobleman who had been a martyr to a love of liberty, had been by turns a valet, a gambler,
and at last a thief, and had been compelled to
leave his country toescape the punishment due
to his many crimes. Upon their arrival at Pa
ris, he speedily squandered her fortune in the licentious haunts of that gay metropolis. And
since that her lite naa neen nothing but one scene of continued suffering. She would have left her husband had it not been that she had
become a mother, and love for her child over
came all selfish consideration. She told me that they removed to wretched lodgings in the very worst portion of the city. That she rarely saw her husband except when he had excited the suspicion of the police, and was thus for a time prevented from pursuing his dishonest profession. Maria had contrived to support herself and child by working hard, until a fewmonths before I fell in with her, when she lost her child the last tie that bound her to life. About this time her husband left her. And she was seized with a violent fever, which left her. weak in body, wretched in spirit, without a
friend, and without the means of procuring
support. After enduring weeks of suffering, she at length determined to apply to the Amer
ican Consul, make known her destitute condition, and solicit the means of returning to her home. She was making her way to the residence of the Consul, when she "fainted in the
street as I have before related.
picions as to hun m whom centered all her
hopes and affections, were busy at her heart ; until the fatal truth burst upon her, as she found herself fettered to pollution, and clasped in the arms of living death embodied in drunken husband. And she may have struggled on against cruel disappointment and degrcdation, and anguish, until a kindly consumption gently led
her from earthly suffering into a premature grave. And her encircling kindred and friends
poured forth the copious tears of mitigated
grief, c.s they beheld this innocent victim of
another's gniit. released from the pangs of
tortured affection, and consigned to that narrow
bed
"Where lowly grief, and lordly pride, I.icdown like brothers side by side."
Every man that is afflicted with this worst of
curses throws his afflictions with accumulated
weight upon his female relatives.
It is calculated that at least 30,0ii0 die annu
ally in the United States of this destructive plague. Each one of these poor creatures has a mother, perhaps sisters, many of them a wife
and danghters, all of whom are subjected to in
describable tortures for an indulgence which
they have no power to control. What a fright
ful amount have we here of annual misery and
death ! For every 30,000 who die of drunken
ness it would be safe to calculate 70,000 female relations, Mho are in some way partakers in
their woes. Having already enumerated a
hundred thousand yearly sufferers, we have be
sides, all in our own country from 300.000 to
500,000 inebriates, with an equal number offe
male victims in the relation of mothers, wives,
sisters and daughters. So much for the rava
ges of each twelvemonth. Now let us go back
for a period of years and imagine if we can the
magnitude of this evil. Could we group to
gether, for generations gone by the annual sac
rifice of 30,000 human being until we should
have collected into one grand multitude the
hecatombs of the last centurj-; could we in ad
dition to this mighty throng call up from their
sepulchers the grief stricken mothers, the mis
ery murdered wives, and sorrow- blighted sis
ters and daughters of all these wretched sui
cides, our conceptions would still fall short of the awful reality. Our mental vision would have to reach back to creations down and embrace every quarter of the habitable globe; it
would be compelled to explore the depths of
every lake, river and ocean for the wrecked and slain that lie buried there; it would be obliged
to people the earth with skeleton witnesses a million times more numerous than nil the tribes
of living men; and even then alter having
brought into view this vast appalling best, we
should have but a poor and feeble idea, of the
aching hearts, the bitter moans, the bodily
pangs and the mental anguish which they were
made to endure before they sunk to untimely graves. What a horrid theme to dwell upon,
what mountains of sorrow in the aggregate.
It is said that we have at the present moment
in the Union not less than a hundred thousand
licensed dealers in intoxicating liquors. A
tanding army of 100.000 men quartered upon
the public festering upon its vitals. An army
more expensive and corrupting, and hardly less
destructive than that which Napoleon Bona
parte led to Moscow. Although the 30,000,
which are annually slaughtered by this arm),
and the hundreds of thousands that are poison
ed, depraved, and imbruted by them until they
are neither fit to live nor to die, are principally
men; still their warfare falls with remorseless
cruelty upon the peace and happiness ofde
fenceless woman. Where then is the man that
JLOOIv TO YOUIt INTEREST.
raMIE Subscriber having permanently loca-
ted himself m the town of Brookville
would inform the citizens of Franklin and the
adjoining counties, that he is now prepared to
do all kinds ot Tainting m the neatest and most
fashionable manner. He has had considerable
experience in the business, having for a number
of years worked m Cincinnati and other places,
As he intends to work on reasonable terms, and
take a part of his pay in the produce of the
countrj-, it will 1 e to the advantage of every
person wishing painting done to give him
call. He is also prepared to paint signs, and all
kinds of ornamental painting, mthe most fash
ionable manner. It is a well known fact that houses last much longer, and look a great deal
better when they are painted, therefore it is the
interest of every person to get it done.
O. W. RYAN. REFERENCES. John A. Matson, J. II. Speer, R. John. Brookv ille, Feb. 24, 1 842. 0-
Beware of that dread destroyer, n3THE BRONCHITIS Jr-rt
WHICH spares neither the Young, the Good, or the Beautiful, but is annually hurrying thousands upon thousands to a premature
grave under the mistaken name of Consumption. The usual symptoms of this disease ar.', Cdugh, Soreness of the Lungs or Throat.Hoar-
seness, Difficulty of Breathing, Asthma, Hectic fever, a Spitting up of Phlegm or Matter and
sometimes Blood. It is an inflammation of the
fine skin which lines the inside of the small
wind tubes or air vessels running through every part of the lungs. The great and effectual
remedy for this alarming and wide-spreading disease is the Rev. I. Covert's Balm of Life.--This new and invaluable Medicine is universally pronounced, by the multitudes who hai
used it and tested its healing virtues, to be the most wonderful and admirable rpmedv in llm
world for the cure of Bronchitis, coughs , so vere colds, croup, asthma, whooping cough and all diseases of the Lungs and Windpipe, which
negieciec, soon lead to real consumption. The Balm of Life stands entirely aloof from
the various Quack 'Nostrums of the day, having invariably won the confidence of Physiciars,
lergjmen, ano me intelligent of all classes, wherever it has been introduced. Philanthrcv
pists, and all who truly sympathise with human
suitering, every where hail its appearance with heart-felt joy: and look udoii the Balm nf T.iO
as one of those great and uncommon blessings
which a kind Providence occasionally bestow s on man, but which, like angel's visits, are few and far between.
jCf Circulars, containing numerous testimo
nials of the highest respectability, can be had,
gratuitous, oi ait our Agents.
The Balm oLfcc (One Dollar per boille,) is sale by M. W. IIAILE. Brookville, Feb. 10, 1842. 7-6mo.
rnuibau medicines ore indebted for -U- nam to their iiinnfr.ct nr,,i : .. .r lieir
. IIIHCnSltl ..:
in purifying the springs and channel,, orKr? enduing them with renewed toce and '
to the undoubted lact that at a very ear in tkeir history they had rescued wiffcrewT4 tnc very verge of an untimely grave.after .1 deceptive nostrums iftliedir n...:i. , . "
J iueu hi nl sicians.Lad utterly faiicd,in which cases tl . 1" eo permanently secured that uniform pn;
"norra tn i.
whirl, i:r
ui iieaiin. w 1 1 noil t U'lnrh ir --.im
partial blessing. So great indeeil .
cacy invariably proved, that it
!cs than miraculous in n.nc i arcejT
suaintca wiiu ihe beautifully
ymcipies upon wincii tl
It A
NEW STORE.
nSlllE subscriber wishes to inform the public
M. that he has iu?t received from the citv a
frch enpr-ly of GOODS, which he will sell on
very reasonable terms. His stock consists of
Cloths, Cac inetts, Janes, A.-C, dry goods of various descriptions. Queens-ware and Hard-wart1:
Young Hyson and Gunpowder teas, coffee, su
gar, molasses, Acc. Mens boots and shoes, boys
and youths boots and shoes. Ladies shoes and
stippers, Smooth, castor, fur nnd 6ilk hats, fur
and Seal caps. Salt. iron, nails and rust in nf
Uillcrcnt kind,&. Are.
He solicits his friends to call and examine his
stock and prices, and then consult their own in
tcrrst. WILLIAM RUBOTTOM.
Metamora, Nov, 3, 1841. 45tf NEW BACON MAMS and SHOULDERS, for sale bv RSL R. & S. TYNER. Feb. 2, 1842. JOHXSTOft & KELLY,
Atlornics and Counsellors at Laic.
M. JOHNSON & M. J. KELLY, hav-
W ing entered into partnership in the prac
tioe of the law, will attend toall professional
NEW STORE. N E: S A IV i It 11 it t ft iv
1ry,5,j,st recc'v from PhilaidclphiaI itt-burgh, and Cincinnati, a lnr ..
sortment of Dry Goods, Groceries, QneensWare, Hard Ware, and Cutlery, $c. $c. ii.I have opened their Hore in the room immediately north of the Hrookvilie Hotel. Their goods arc all entirely new. well Wt n-t
laving been purchased sinre the fll in t,r;
they can be sold upon terms more suitable to the
tunes.
They have a fine assortment of clothea.caesi-
meres, and satmetts, of fashionable color n,l
qualities carefully selected in the Philadelphia
market-
Their stock of Q,uecnsware and Hardware
is very Urge, ana havinsr .been nurrhaspri fnr
Cash, thev Can EUnolv their frlnnA nn ..,, r
vorable terms.
Their selections of silks.
lawns calicoes, &c. &c, are such as thev think
win attract the attention and nlpnee the tnsti. i
r . i r , - I
ui me iauics.
ALSO A larsre assortment or Itnnta .m,n.
Hats, Cotton varn. Nails. &r.
They solicit nn examination nf their imn.'
and prices, and then wieh the public to consult
tneirown interest.
Brookville, April 22, 1841.
Was f.carc
pre una,.
pl'il0S0Dk';r
:iPV WPrn . 1
and upon which thev coneequentl v art THE PIKEMX BITTERS arcsoalkdh. cause thev noBsesa tl.P nn..f
expiring embers of health, to a ehTf1
mroi.gi.out thj constitution, as the Pi? 0 said to be restored to life from the mL?3 J' own dissolution. The Phmniv it;,,.. . "
t.rely vegetable, composed of roots , B V ,n.f P"18 r l.e western country tvc will infallibly cure Fkvers ad Acim J Kinds; will never fail to eradicate c,"rew! the effects of Mercury, iMimtely r ,. blood to the headnover S i'X Se:sf incident to young fcia!W; and will be a certain remedy in ail case, of nervous eb !
The proprietor rejoices in the opporlm.it j afforded by the univcrs.Uiffu.ion of the preflor placing egctable Life Medicine witLin the knowledge and reach of every individual in the community. Unlike the host of pernicicnj quackeries. which boast of vegetable inrrp,i;..
the Life Pills are purely and solely vewtabV . r..l nnnf.: : i r .
oiiu will-nil iiciiucr mercury. Antimony, Arsnic, nor any other mineral, in any fonc'irLat-
ever. I hey areentirelv composed niPri.
from rare and powerful plants, tic virtocg fo which, though long known to sevenllniisn tribes, andrccently to some cmit.ent pbsrma. ceutical cheilitis, are altogether untntma to
me ignorant pretenders tomedical fc'ence:and
were never Lclore administered ellicacious a combination.
i heir first
in sobippily
17-ly
DRUGS
PAINTS,
AND
MEDICINES.
THE subscriber would respectfully in
form the citizens of Franklin and the surrounding counties, that he has engaged in the business of the druggist in the town of Brookville.
I That he has on hand a eeneral assortment of
business ir the State or United States Courts of good and well selected standard MEDICINES,
this State. Business left with either, will re-
reive the attention of both.
Office opposite the Courthouse. Brookville Nov. 14. 141.
JOHN I). HOWLAND,
A llorn ey and Counsel lor at Lav
Buookvii.i.e, Indiana. March 1st, 1842.
THE SOUND CURRENCY !
rjMHE Editor of the American will take the
-- followong currency at par, for subscrip
tion or advertising, to-wit:
ITlapIc Sugar, -m w .
Country Linen.
Jeans,
CIIICKCIIS, Butter,
Cheese, Wood, Dried Apples, Dried Peaelies,
ormost any mechanical productions.
C. F. CLARKSON.
March 2. 1842.
Corn, Wheat, Flour, Corn meal, Pork, Heel, flats, Hay,
Flour Barrels,
izaeon,
also a great variety of the most approved and
popular PATENT MEDICINES. Also the
Botanick or Thompsonian MfeUlliNbs. A
general assortment of OILS and PAINTS, of
Dye Woods and Dye stuffs, &c. &c. Ana in a
word, ALL that propperly belongs to a wen
regulated and well supplied shop. All orders will be promptly filled. Prescriptions from
physicians shall be attended to witli prompt
ness, accuracy and care,
Physicians and citizens generally, are re
spectfully requested to call and examine for
themselves both the articles wanted and the
prices, zz I have no doubt but they will be not only satisfied but pleased.
M. W. HAIL.lv Brookville, March 17, 1842. 12-ly.
operation is to loosen fromi!
coats of the stomach and bowels, the '.varucs impurities and crudites constantly settling iround them; and to remove tbe hardened Imw which collect in the convolutions of the fir,i!l iiitGgtincs. Other mcdioincs only partlillv cleanse these, and loavc such collected masses uehind as to produce habitual costiveness, with all its train of evils, or 6uddcn diarrhoea, wiih it-imminent dangers. This fact is well known to all regular anatomists whoexaminetWhumn bowels after death.- and hence the prejudice of these wcil informed men against the nusrk
medicines of the ajre. The second effect of tl
vegetable Life Pills islocleanee the kiJnprs
am the bladder, and by this means, the liver and the hinrrs. the i.,i.i.r..i ; r
cntrely depends upon the regularity of the uri-
ie mood, which takes itsred coi,r 'from the a?ener nf r.... ii.i
,u,,r" "c'orVl Pacsi nto the heart, being thus nlinlipn It xt I. . . ' 3
, 3 win, una nourished by food coning from a clean stomach.coursca freely thrwl the veins, renews every pan of the eystfj:.
anu iriumpnanuy mounts ue banner of Iioa ftb
The following arc among the distressing rietyof human diseases, to which the edible Life Pills are well known to be infaV.ble: DYSPEPSIA, by thoroughly cleweiiigtbe first and second stomachs, and creating a flow
of nure healtbv bile, instead of tbe siaieano
ril bind- KInt iilonov. 1'a Dilation OI l"C
Heart, Loss of appetite, Heart-burn ancn cjii-
ache, Restlessness, III temper, Anxiety,
puor and Melancholly. which an Hie ccnei
symptoms of Dyspepsia, will vanish, as a mtn.nal rnnsrnucncc ofitscure. C'ostivcncss, w
cleansing the whole length of tbe intestines wiik
a solvent process, and witisout violence an lnairc the bowels costive within H
H,. Miarrl.m and Cholera,by rcmovinfflk
sharo acrid fluids bv which these compliintf
arc orraEioned. and hv promoting tbe lubrin
tiiro cpcrplinfianf llll mnr-nllS mCnibraHC 1 elCT:
nfnll kin:a. hv restnrinrr the blood to a regular
circulation through the process of perepuvion
in some cases, and tbe thorough so.ution oi
Dt.
BLANKS.
nas a spark oi humanity or genercsity m ins hand constantly at the American olTice!
nature that will not step forward and do whaj Vr.K- fii.: ;a nru,.i..
he can to dry up this fountain of bitterness to the female. Who in the view of this black ruin
will be instrumental in sustaining any longer this vampire horde, more desolating than the marauding troops of Ab ie the Vis (Joth, w ho
are deluging our fair country in tears and blood. Come then, you that would befriend injured and helpless innocence you that profess to value and admire this gentler portion of the community that would cherish and guard them from every blight come band yourselves together and wage a war of extermination a-
gainst alcohol their greatest enemy. Coii.e
salt & n:o.
& S. TYNER. Lave on hand, and for
salv. at the Cincinnati prices, adding ca
nal freisrbt, 1.500 barrels salt, 40,000 lbs. Iron
assorted. 1 5 kegs nails, 0,000 lbs Cotton Yarn
Also, a very extensive assortment of Dili
OOODS, Groceries, Hard-Ware, Cuttlcry,
Queens-ware, Tin-ware Ar Hollow-ware, iur
silk and palm leaf Hals; Bonnets and palm lea
Hoods-, Sole and Upper Leather, 4 c. 4 c.
They receive and forward goods and pro
duce at five cents on the hundred pounds, and
also pay cash for wheat.
Brookville, July 7, 1841.
inloalin.l nlial rll ft f f,n a in nlhprS. 1 16 1J'
Medicines have been known to cure Uheuics-
tism permanently in three week, and (Joutu hal f that time, bv removing local imflamniati't
from the muscles and liiraments of tbejoiw
Dropsies of all kinds, by frcc:.ng and etrerA cuing the kidneys and bladder; they operated
delightfully on thoie important organs.
hence havdevcr been found a certain rt'i1:
fnr Ihe worf t races nf fJravet. Also worm5?
dislodffinc from the turnings of the bowels tfc
slimy matter to which these creatures w
Asthma nd Consumption, bv relieving
vessels of the lung from the mucus, which"
slight colds will occasion, which if not rcrnt'
hprnmpR Iiiirf1fnpri- mif nrnrinrPK tliCFc crra-
, fc3 ITI J 1 .IriMl
diseases, ocurvy , u iccib.bhu '""' ' ,, by the perfect purity which these Life '
to the blood, and all the humorsco'"""- .
llm.o.nJH.J f'nnintoT hmo. l.r tllPir "-'""
rr. .,nn ,, fl.. (Writhe t-Vin.l'
nir.rk-.J .l.l nf nCCSSIOnS ll 1-'UI"
complaints, sallow, cloudy, and tber diMF ble complexions. Tbe use of these nil
very short time, will effect and entire core
Slt iM.Piim Errsinelas. and
Deeds, Mortgages, Quit-Claim Deeds, Title Bonds, Notes of hand.
Summonses, Subpoenas, Executions,
Constables' Bond
Constable Sales.
TF.nMS OF TUP INDIANA AMERICAN. fHIWO Dollars in advance, $2 50 in
months, 3 (XI at the end of the year, and
an addition of 30 cents for
Fresh Groceries.
8 II tlDS. new crop N. O. sugar. 30 bbls ' " N. O. mouses.
On hicra Rio coffee.
net received from New Orleans, and for
sale, low for CASH by
BANES & BUKTt'N Brookville, Jan. 13, 1842. 8-
six
every vear payment
is delayed thereafter.
, . . . - , , 3 - AUTcn i igcmK.n is. i wcnc uiirs vi
,.-r i -L r18"' """" ,m"ci be inserted 3 times for one dollar if payment
r " me. . uieaesiinyoi woman, oi , be mdc . ndvan-- 05 if -.-,-. 1- de-
, r j
man, and of civilization and social nrocrress is
embarked.
laved one rear, and Si 50 if delayed two years.
and so in the same proportion for the time payment is delayed. Larger advertisement or for
& 1. - . A
A OUnff Woman, nnmod Snnhin, Priol- turner : lOltirer lima will krrliTrrr0.1 nn tlio cm. mo nrinei.
V . . V. j, . C " - - - - - ..... V, ..l.EV..Wt. .11.
ph
It is scarcely j herself at Blossburfh, Pa. on the 18th
GOODS.
PRICE would inform his friends and
the nublic erenerally, that he still contin-
tinues to keep a general assortment of fresh dry eoods. groceries, queensware, hardware, tin
ware, nails, salt, cotton yarn, sole leather, car
peting, Collins & Co. axes, &c. &c. all of which he will sell low for cash or approved produce, such as wheat, rye, oats, flax seed, beeswax, tallow, feathers, rags, &c. Brookville, Nov. If.. 1841. 47
fcf
1 if
" r.i. akin. I
provemeni in me ciewii . - u j ..-.11 aiwin oe cut'
mon coiug aim iiiiiuunna, .elff v.r nn .lBP or hir tn. even in the ott
Piles as a remedy for this mort " . and obstinate malady, the Vegetable w'b deserve a distinct and emphatic rccom"'1 . : I. .. Unicn In liindrpdl in thl 1
that the originator of these invaluable P"1!!
! mm.taA ilna ninnlailit
wards of thirty-five years, and that he y .il.inthf'
vain every rcmtMiy jjictti comoass of the Materia Medica. Be1"' ,
at length, tried tbe medicine whicu (. offers to the public, and be was cured in f. short time, after his recovery had t
nounced not only improbable, but ;mr.nAa:UA k mnv l.ntnan mpans.
All that Mr. Moffat requires of his V. to be particular in taking the Life.
strictly according to the directions. r ' .- i- . tliiHC"" .
Dy a newspaper notice, or uj nj
liimsen may say inineir iavor, ma. - , t
gaincretiit. It is alone uy tue rcsu -trial. TI.a mjinna frtr eiltp. 1) V
W .1 IlVI.'llS Mnnnt Carnicl. Il"1
M.W. IIAILE. j Brook ri)i 5pt., 17, 1841.
.a1
