Indiana American, Volume 10, Number 49, Brookville, Franklin County, 2 December 1842 — Page 4
Lessons for Young Jleu.
TO A LOVER. BY WILLIAM COBBETT. Thrp re two descriptions of
whom all advice would be wasted, namely; those in whose minds passion so wholly overpowers reason as lo deprive the party of his saber senses. Few people are entitled to mure compassion than young men thus affected; it is a species of insanity that assails them, and when it produces self-destruction which it dos in England more frequently than in all
as to home and children, I had taken care lo , tbeu at she is now) having knocked up a dust provide myself with an inexhaustable store, I with Spain about Nootka Sound. Oh. how I of that ' sobriety" which I am so strongly rec-1 cursed Nootka Sound, and poor bawlinn Pitt
ommending my reader to provide himself with too, I am afraid! At the end 'of four years . i . . . . - .
and second marriage ho gave him up. . This.
" piece of grand prostitution was too much to'
he defended. And the truth Is, that Buona-' I pane might have dated his decline from the Lovers on day f that "marriage. My American friend
6aid, '-If I had been he, I would in the first place, have married the poorest and prettiest girl in all France." If he had done this he would, in all probability, have now been on an
imperial throne, instead of being eaten
worms, at the bottom of a very deep hole in he crosses the threshhold of his house carries
St. Helena; whence, however, his bones con-: with him doubts, and fears, and suspicion. I
vey to the world the moral, that to marry . do not mean suspicions of the fidelity of ins
or if he cannot do that, to deliberate long be
fore he ventures on the life-endurins matri-
j monial voy age. This sobriety is a title to : trust-worthiness; and this, young man, is the treasure that you ought to prise far above all
bv : others. Miserable is the husband who, when
the otVr countries in the whole world put to-, lor money, lor munition, or trom any oih-j wile, Out ol her care, frugality, attention lo nis nether the mortal remains of the sulTerer ouht er motive than the one pointed out by affection, t interests, and to the health and morals of his
to be dealt with in as tender a manner as
that ' not t,ie roa to S'orvj lo happiness, or
cf which the most merciful construction of the law will allow. If Sir Samuel Roinilly's remains were, as they were in fact, treated as those of a person laboring under "temporary mental derangement,''1 surely the youth who destroys his life on account of unrequited love, ousht to be considered in as mild a light ?
SirSimuel was "represented, in the evidence t aken bafore the Coroner's Jury, to have been
peace.
to children
Miserable is the man who cannot
leave all unlocked, and who is not sure, quite
Let me now turn fiom these two descrip- certain, that all is safe as if grasped in his
W . V - s
nous 01 lovers, wun wnom it is useless to rea- own nana, ne is me nappy nusnana wno can
son, and address mvsklfto vou. niv reader. 1 00 awav nt a moment's warnine. leaving his
whom I suppose to be a real lover, but not so house and his family with as little anxiety as he smitten as to be bereft of j our reason. You ! quits an inn, not more fearing to find on his should never forget, that marriage, which is a ! return any thing wrong, than he would fear state that every young person ought to have 1 a discontinuance of the rising and setting of
m view, is a thing to last for life; and that gen-; the sun, and if, as in ray case, leaving books
inc'riitfable for tht loss of his wife; that his loss erally speaking.it is to make life happy or, and papers all lying about at sixes and sevens
hii so d re .id ful an effect on his mind that it
miserable: for though a man may brins l is finding them arranged in proper order, and
heren him of his reason; made life insupporta-i mind to something nearly a state of indi.Tcr-j the room during the lucky interval freed from
b'e and led him to commit the act of suicide: .ence, nen mai is misery, except wun inose.ine enecisoi nisanu ins piougumau or e"
and on this srovnd alone, his remains and his wno can "araiy oe reenonea amongst sensitive i uener s ainy snoes
estate were rescued from the awful though just, beings. Marriage brings numerous rare., and wise sentence of the law. But, unfortu-, wh,ch arc amply compensated by the more nately for the reputation of the administration j numerous delights which are their companions, of that just and wise law, there had been only i n,u to have th delights as well as the cares, about two years before, a poor man at Manches- J the choice of the p rtner must be fortunate, ter, buried in cross-roads; and under circum- 1 say fortunate, for, after all, love, real love, stances which entitled his remains lo mercy j impassioned affection, is an ingredient so abmueh more clearly than in the case of Sir Sam- solutely necessary, that no perfect reliance can
uel Romi'lv. De Placea on 4ine juagment. lei, ine juug-
This unfortunate youth whose name was
! ment may do something, reason may have
; some influence; and therefore, I here offer you
in unn u nil whs ;i iii.iiiHKrfr. wrk ill iiivt i
with a young woman, who in spite of all his mY advice wi,h regard to the exercise of that mnrtrlnni(iaf!iitfl hia nmnfc arAnt nieeinn ! TeaSOll.
refused to marry h'un, and even discovered
herlikm2for another; and he, unable to sup- we are, i. chastity; z. sobriety; o. industry;
The things which vou ought to desire in a
ife are, 1. Chastity; 2. Sobriety; 3. Indu
4. Frugality; 5. Cleanliness; fi. Knowledge
i:p. : 3 1 .1 .1 La An
be'moin possession of any body but himself, of domestic affairs; 7; Good temper; 8 Beauty
put an en I to hir life by the means of a tope. -nasuiy, perieci moaesiy in wora, aeea, If, in any cas3 we are to presume the existence ' and even 'nought, is so essential, that without of insanity; if, in any case we are led to believe ! !t 110 female is fit to be a wife. It is not enough the thin without positive proof; ir, in any case ! that a 3'oung woman abstain from every thing there can be an apoloev in human nature it- j approaching towards indecorum in her behaselffor such an act; this was that case. Welvlor towards men; it is, with me, not enough all know, (as I observed at the time.) that is to that kne rast down lier eJ es or ,urn aslde her nv 11 of us who cannot wait to caiilai head with a smile when she hears an mdeli-
on the sains and losses of the affair: all of us cale allusion; she ought to appear not to un-
except thoe who are endowed with this prov
ident frigidity know well what youthful love is, and what its torments are when accompanied by even the smallest portion of jealousy. Every man; and especially every Englishman (for here we soldom love or hate by halves,) will recollect how many mad pranks he has played; how many wild and redicnlous things lis has s ii l an 1 done between the age of sixteen and that of twenty-two; how many times
a kind glance has scattered all his reasonings 1 and resolutions to the winds; how many times a cold loVv has plunged him into the deepest misery! Poor Smith who was at this age of j love and madness might surely be presumed to have done the deed tit a moment of "temporary mental derangement.'" He was an object of compassion in every human breast; h had parents, and brethren, and kindred, and friends, to lament his death, and to feel shame nt the "disgrace inflicted on his lifeless body; y;'., he was pronounced to be a felo de te, or
self-murderer, and his body was put into a hole by the way side, with a stake driven down ihrousrh if; while that of Romilly had mercy
extended lo it, on the ground that the act had
leen occasioned by "temporary mental derange
m.ent', caused by his grief for the death of his
wife!:'.
The other description of lovers with whom
it is useless to reason are those who love ac
cording to the rides o f arithmetic, or who mea
sure their matrimonial expectations by the rhain of the laid-s'irrevor. These are not
love and marriage, they are bargain and sale
oungmen will naturally and almost neces
sarily fix their choice on young women tn thei
own rank of life, because from habit and inter
course they will know them best. But if the
length of the girl's purse present or contin
pent, be a consideration with the man, or the length of his purse, present or contingent, be
a consideration with her, it is an affair of bar
gain and sjle. I know that kings, princes and
princesses are m respect of marriage restrain
ed by the law; I know that nobles if not thu
restrained ly positive law are restrained in
fact by the very nature of their order. And here is a disadvantage which, ns far as real
enjoyment of life is concerned, more than coun
terbalances all the advantages that they possess over tha rest of the community. This disadvantage ge:i3ially speaking pursues rank nnl riches downwards till you approach very nearly'to that numerous class who live by manual labor, Incoming however, less and less as you descend You generally find even very vulgar rich men maUng a sacrifice of their natural and rational taste to their mean and redicnlous pride, and thereby providing for themselves an ample supply of misery for life. By preferring"provident marriages" to marriages
of love, they think to'ecure themselves'againsl . all the ttvils or poverty; but if poverty come, and Come it may; and frequently does in spite
ot taeoest laid plans, and best mode of con
duct; if poverty come, then where is the coun
terbalance for that ardent mutual affection
wnicn irouoies ana losses ana ... crosses always increase rather than diminish, and
which, amidst all the calamities that can befal a
mm, whispers to his heart that his best possession is "Jstill left him unimpaired? The Worcestershire Baro let who has hid to endure the snesrs of fools on account of his marriage with a beautiful and virtuous servant Maid, vronld weife the present ruinous measures of
the Government to drive him from his mansion to a cottage, still have a source of happiness; while many of those who might fall in company with him would, in addition to all their other troubles, have perhaps, to endure the reproaches of wives lo whom poverty or even humble life would be insupportable.
. Buonaparte eould not be said to mafry for money, but his motives was little better. It was for dominion, for power, for ambition, and that too, of the most contemptible sort, I know an American gentleman, with whom Buonaparte had always been a great favorite; but the moment the news arrived of hit divorce
deestanrt it, and to receive trom it no more impression than if she were a post. A loose
woman is a disagreeable acquaintance; what must Fhee then as a wife? Love is so blind,
and vanity is so busy in pursuading us that our
own qualities will be sufficient to ensure fideli
ty, that we are very apt to think nothing, or at
Such a man ha3 no real
cares; such a man has no troubles; and this is
the sort of life that I have led. I have had
all the numerous delights of home and child
ren, and at the same time all Ihe bachelor's
freedom' from domestic cares; and to this cause
far more than to any other rmy readers owe
those labors which I never could have per
formed if even the slightest degree of want of
confidence at home had ever once entered into
my mind
But in order to possess this precious trust
worthiness, you must if you can, exercise your reason in 'the choice of your partner. If she
be vain of her person, very fond of dress, fond
of flattery at all, given to gadding about, fond
of what are called parties of pleasures, or co-
quetish though in thejleast degree, if either of
these, she never M ill be trust-worthy; she cannot change her nature, and if you marry her you will be unjust if you expect trust-worthiness at her hands. But beside this, even if you find in her that innate "sobriety" of which I
have been speaking, there requires, on your
part, and that at once too, confidence and trust
without any limit. Confidence is in this case
nothing unless it be reciprocal. To have
trust-worthy wife )ou must begin by showing
her, even before you are married, that you
have no suspicions, no fears, no doubts, with
regard to her. Many a man has been discarded by a virtuous girl merely on account of his querulous conduct. All women despise jealous men, and if they marry such their ino-
however, home I came, landed at Portsmouth,
and got my discharge from the army by the
great kindness of poor Lord Edward Fitzgerald
who was then the Major of my regiment,
found ray little girl' a servant of all work, (and
hard work it was) at five pounds a year, in the
house of Captain Brisac, and without hardly
saying a word about the matter she put into
my hands the whole of ray hundred and fifty guineas unbroken!
Need I tell the reader what my feelings were? Need I tell kind-hearty English parents what effect this anecdote must have produced on the minds of ovr children? Need I
attempt to describe what effect this example ought lo have on every youngj woman who shall do me the honor to read this book? Admiration of her conduct, and self-gratulation on
this indubitable proof of the soundness of my
own judgment were now added to my love
of her beautiful person.
Now I do not say that there are not many
young women of this country who would under similar circumstances, have acted as my
wife did in this case; on the contrary, I hope and do sincerely believe that there are. But
when her age is considered, when we reflect
that, she was living in a place crowded, literally crowded with gayly-dressed and handsome
young men, many really far richer ana in higher rank than I was, and scores of them ready
to offer her their hand; when we reflet that
she was living amongst young women who put upon their backs every shilling that they could
come at; when we see her keeping the bag or
gold untouched, and working hard to provide
herself with but mere necessary apparel, and
doing this while she was passing from fourteen to eighteen years of age; when we view the whole of the circumstances, we must say that here is an example which, while it reflects honor on her sex, ought to have weight with every young woman whose eyes or ears this relation shall reach. (TO BE COKTfNCED.)
FOR SALE OR EXCHANGE.
A few excellent Breakfast tables and Bedsteads, just from the shop, either for money or
for almost any kind of produce. C. F. CLARKSON. Aug. 8th 1842.
THE SOUND CURRENCY.
r"H!HE Editor of the American will take the
followong cur rency at par, for subscrip
tion or advertising, to-wit:
any rate, very little of trifling symptoms ofjtivcs is other than that of affection. There
levity, but if such symptoms show themselves
now, we may be well assured that we shall
never possess the power of effecting a cure.
If prudery mean false modesty it is to be des
pised; but if it mean modesty pushed to the utmost extent, I confess that I like it. Your "free
and hearty" girls I have liked very well to laugh and talk with; but never for one moment
did ilenter into my mind that I could have en
dured a "free and hearty" girl for a wife. The
thing is I repeat to last for life; it is to be a counterbalance for troubles 'and misfortunes.
and it must, therefor, be perfect, or it had
better not be at all.
Sobriety. By the word Sobriety in a young
woman, I mean a great deal more than even a rigid abstinence from that love of drink which
I am not to suppose and which I do not believe to exist any thing like generally amongst the
young women of this country. I mean a great deal more than this, I mean sobriety of conduct.
The word sober and its derivatives do not con
fine themselves to matters of drink, they ex
press steadiness; seriousness carefulness, scrupulousness, propriety of conduct; and they are lhU3 used amongst country people in manyparts ef England. When a Somersetshire fellowmakes too free with a girl she reproves him with, "Come, be sober!" And when we wish a team or any thing to be moved on steadily and with great care we cry out to the carter or other operator, "Soberly, soberly." Now this species of sobriety, is a great qualification in the person you mean lo make your wife. Skipping, capering, romping, rattling girls are
very amusing where ah costs and other conse
fore, begin by proofs of unlimited confi
dence; and as example may serve to assist precept, and as I never have preached that which I have not practiced, I will give you the history of my own conduct in this respect. When I first saw my wife she was thirteen
years old, and I was within about a month of
twenty-one. She was the daughter of a er.
eeant of artillery, and I was the Sergeant-Ma
ior of a regiment of foot, both stationed in forts
near the cit' of St. John in the Province of
New Brunswick. I sat in the room with her
for about an hour, in company with others, and
I made up my mind that she was the very girl
forme. That! thought her oeautuui is cer
tain, lor that I had always said should be an indispensable qualification; but I saw in her what
I deemed marks of that sobriety of conduct of
which I have said so much, and which has been by far the greatest blessing of my life. It was now dead of winter, and of course the snow several feet deep on the ground and the
weather piercing cold. It was my habit when
I had done my morning's writing, to go out at bieaklof day to take a walk on a hill at the
foot of which our barracks lay. In about three
' mornings after I had first seen her I had, by
mi in 1 1 iuii j uiuaniuDi nuu it j v j gvt young men to join me in my walk; and our
road lay by the house of her father and mother.
It was hardly light, but she was out on the
snow scrubbing out a washing-tub. "That'
the girl for me," said I when we had got' out of her hearing. One of these 3'oung men came to England soon afterwards, and he who
keeps an inn in Yorkshire came over to Pres
ITlaplc Sugrar,
Country iJnen,
Jeans,
tJhicKens,
miner, Cheese,
Wood, Irfl Apples,
Dried Peaches,
or most any mechanicalproductions.
C. F. CLA KKSON March 2, 1 842 .
quences are out of the question; and they may j ton nt the time of the election to verify whether become sober in the Somersetshire sense of 1 1 was the same man. When he found that I
the word. But while )'ou have no ceitaintyl was, he appeared surprised, but what was his of this you have a presumptive argument on surprise when I told him that those tall young the other side. To be sure when girls are men whom he 6aw around me, were the sous mere children they are to play and romp like! of that pretty little girl that he and I saw scrub-
children. But when they arrive at that age bing out the washing-tub on the snow in New
which turns their thoughts towards that sort of . Brunswick in the morning.
connexion which is to be theirs for life, when From the day that I first spoke to her I nev
they begin lo think of having the command of: er had a thought of her ever being the wife of
a houe, however small or poor, it is time for , any other man, more than l had a thought oi
them to cast awav the levity of the child. It is' her becoming transformed into a chest of
natural, nor is it very wrong that I know of i drawers, and I formed my resolution at once
Corn, Wheat, Flour, Corn meal, Pork, Reef, Oats, Hay.
Flour Harrels,
Uncoil,
BRANDRETnts to.T
The following letter will be r.a tr ....
interest b, ihose favorable loth Br 1 RDm kt ' Pills, and particularly by persona who are a?-
m. pH wiinwe writer, highly rcspectable Baptist minister: ' pww Corhwail Orange co. N. Y. 6tb July, 1840. Doctor B. Brandreth Dear Sir.- In i fonw communication I addressed to you some time in the early part of 1836,1 stated tbe nature and length of time that I sufferd from protracted constipated bowels. tLit I Kt tt. .r..j
by repeated attacks of this dangerous diseaie, if I recollect rightly some twelve nr C(l.
years, (previous to my making trial of your valuable medicine.) and that, to this constipation of my bowel, I was also afflicted in process of time, with diseased liver, bilious colic. 6c tir
ana was oy mis compilation ot disuse reduced to extreme weakness and daily expectation of dissolution. on a trial of your Pilla tbe efficacy of which I doubted.) in tbe course of 6 or 7 weeks, taking from eight to ten Pilla tien
night, began to derive benefit from them, a4 continued to do so until the fall of 7, wke being absent from thecity, I was mncb ex pot-, ed to wet and cold. I wai again attacked with a pain in my 6iile, attended with the colic, and bowels bound with difficulty I reached my home, and had recourse immediately to tbe pills. In this attack of extreme suffering, I took, from 8 o'clock P. M. to 4 o'clock, A. M.
over aixiy fills keiore an evacuation after
which 1 was perfectly re'.ieved. I have not allowed myself to be without your Pills aince. I have travelled much, and have been exposed to all weathers, yet have bad no attack of my old di sense, though now and then feel retsrning eymptons, which are always removed Vy inking two or ihree large dotes of tbe Pills. 1 have not allowed myself to be for six, eight, er" ten days, (aa formerly, before I used your Fills,) without an evacuation, and io order to avoii
this, I have taken from on to rova on mi pills kvert hioiit (dcbino over two tkaii) without finding ant iNcowvaniKnc or ill effect from their con riHVAHcR; but on the contrary much BENKriTboth in strength, capabilitjt to endure cold, wet or beat aa well a ever even
lit mt best datb of HEALTH. Therefore 1 can confidently recommend them for their effiaccy
ana innocence ,in kny length of use, a to time
no quantity. I have also used them with de
ded benefit to my family in all cases, without
exception. I have invariably observed, where
I nave recommended tbia medicine, and tbe persona to whom I have so recommended it have pe-eervercd in it use that tbey have been either cored, or so far relieved a to be able to attend to their busineesi and by their continued
pplication, ward off efTectualy a return of their isease. Hoping thia utatement, in connection
with my former one, may have some influence in extending tbe usefulness of your excellent
medicine, I am very truly your.
J. WELLSLAGER. Formerly of 27 3d Avenue, now aa above. The following are the only authorised amenta
n the places to which there name are attach
ed.
New Trenton, Z. A. Nye. Rochester, Thos. Fitton. Brookville, U.&S. Tyner. Metamora, E. Tyner, & co. Laurel, Sboup & White. Brookville, June 7th 1842. 24-6m.
WHEAT.
The highest Cash price will "be paid at all
times for good merchantable heat, by
N. D. GALLION Brookville, Aug. 11th 1342.
t:
Wheat.
cash price will be paid at
TIE highest
inie for merchantable Wheat, by
Brookville
BANF.S
An?, 12, 1841.
all
At BURTON
SALT.
t7afrBBLS. No. 1 SALT for sale low for
BANES & BURTON.
CORN! CORN
fipHE subscribers will pay the market price
for SHELLED CORN. BANES & BURTON. May 23, 1842. 11
for chlidren to like to "gap about and to see all
sorts of strange sights, though I do not approve
or this even m children; but if I could have found a young woman (and I am sure ! never
should have married an old one) who I was j the end of about si not sure 'possessed all the nnalinp omrocml ' I along with it, wei
to'marry her as soon as we could get permis
sion, and to get out of the army as soon as I could. So that this matter was at once settled as firmly as if written in the book of fate. At
six months my regiment, and
ere removed to Frederickton,
by the word sobriety I should have remained 1 a distance of a hundred miles up Ihe river of a bachelor to the end" of that life, which in that! St. John; and which was worse, the artillery case would, I am satisfied, have terminated were expected to go off to 'England a year or without my having performed a thousandth' two before our regiment! The artillery went part of those labors which have been and are' and she along with them, and now it was that in spite of all political prejudice, the wonder! I acted the part of a real end sensible lover. I or all who have seen or heard of them. Scores was aware that, when she got to that gay place of men have, at different times expresssed to me j Wood wich, the house of her father and moththeir surprise that I was "always in spirits;" i er, necessarily visited by numerous persons that nothing pulled me down; and the truth not the most select, might become unpleasant !S that, throughout nearly forty years ortroub- to her, and I did not like besides, that she le3, losses and crosses, assailed all the while should contimue to work hard. I had saved
py more numerous and powerful enemies than a hundred and fifty guineas.1, the earnings of
1 ever man had before to contend with, and per- my early hours, in writing for the paymaster,
the quartermaster, and others, m addition to
forming at the same time labors greater than
man ever before performed; all these labors requiring mental exertion, and some of them mental exertion of the highest order; the truth ts that throughout the whole of this longtime,
the savings of my own pay. I sent her all my money before she sailed, and wrote to her to
beg of her if she found her home uncomfortable to hire a lodsine with respectable people;
TAILORING.
IIIF. undersigned would inform tbe citizens
B of Itrookville and vicinity that he ha com
menced the above business in all it brancbe
in the shop lately occupied by Geo. Nafmjtue Havinir had considerable experience in the
business be flatters himself that he will be able to please all who may give him a call, so confident of success he i determined that no garment shall leave the ehop without plsaai; e customer in every particular- It i hardly necessary to ay that his charge will be in accordance with the time; he could hardly expect to be partronixed without they were. Cutting done in the shortest notice and o resonable term. He will recievethe latest fashion from New
York regularly. E. JOHNSON Brookville, July let, IS42- 27-6m.
WILLIAM BROWN.
Manufacturer of Paltented Right and Left
Hood Acrew Hound Had Bedsteads,
TS now prepared to offer to the citizens, and public generally, the best article of furni
ture in the way of Bedsteads ever offered in this part of the Country. This newly invented
Bedsteads possesses ihe following decided advantages over nil others heretofore m use: They can be put up or taken dewa iu one-
fourth the time that is required to do the tame with others, and without the possibility ot a mistake. They are more firm and less apt to become loose and worthless; but on the contrary, are alwav-s drawing tighter and w ithout a single harbor for vermin. As soon as (heir superiority over the common kind becomes known, and duly appreciated, they must ef necessity take the place of those now in use, or at least to a very great extent. Those wishing to purchase Bedsteads are requested to call and examine them at S. & C. Coffin's Ware House at the Basin of the Canal at Brookville. where they will be kept constantly for sale. They will be sold for cash or country produce at cash price. He also keeps on hand at his ware rooms in Lawrenceburgh, on excellent assortment of Cabinet Furniture of all kinds, which will be
delivered at Brookville, or any place along the line of the canal, in good order. The above bedstead are for sale also by N. D. OotMon, Brookville. June 3 1842. 23Ay.
INDIANA STATE SCRIP. THE Subscriber will take SCRIP AT PAR For WRAPPING AND TEA PAPER. J. H. SPEER. Brookville Mills, May 6th 1842.
fTACON HAMS, Sides and Shoulder, for
ILV ale by BANES BURTON. Brookville, Nov. 25.
S
T'
NOTICE. I
HE subscriber hereby informs the public
penerallv. that he continue to tan hides
andskins on the share as heretofore. Also, hat they can be supplied with leather for cash, hides or skins. He also wishe to inform those indebted to him.to call and settle their accounts, as further credit cannot be given. GILBIRD VAN CAMP. Springfield Tp., Sept. 19, 1842 39-3m
of troubles and of labors, I have never known a and at any rate not to spare the money by any
single hour of rent anxtely, the troubles haye been no troubles to me, I have not known what lowness of spirits meaned, have been more gay and felt les care than any bachelor that ever lived. "You are always in spirits Gobbeti!" To be sure why should I not? Pov-
mAatia Knt In lAAir.nAJ aIaIViac tknA Ia
live without hard work until I arrived in Eng-1 land, and I, in order to induce her to layout the money, told her that I should get plenty more before I came home, j As the malignity of the devil would have it
erty I have always set at defiance, and I could we were kept 'abroad two year longer than
therefore, defy the temptation of riches, and our lime, Mr. Pitt, (England not being so tame
SOLE and upper leather for sale by R. & 8. TYNER. Brookvi He Kb. 17. 141 '
TAR. ff CANS Prime TAR for sale by V BANES & BURTON. NEW BACON MAMS and SHOULDERS, for sale by R. & S. TYNEB. Feb. J, 1842.
Fresh Groceries. HilDS. new crop N. O. n?r. 30 bids " N. O. molasses.
20 bigs Rio coffee. Just rceived from New Orleana, and for sale, low for CASH by BANES & BURTON Brookville, Jan. 13, 1842. Cheap GooJs for Cash ! f THE Subscriber has just received a variety of New and Fashionable Goods, suited to the present and approaching season, consisting in part, of Splendid London Prints, American do Aew Style, Plain and Figured Cambria, do do Lavns and JacJeonels, Bonnsts, Hoods and Bonnet trimming,
Handsome Figured I exls, Blk. Italian Hkffs. Blk. and White Cotton Hose, do do " Gloves, Silk Gloves, Lace, Edging, $ c. f c. A fresh supply of SUGAR, MOLASSES, COFFEE, TEA, INDIGO, MADDER, CO lTON Y'ARN, &c, all of which, will be sow unusually low for Cash, or given in exchange for country produce. . . N. D. GALLIONBrookville, May 3d, 1842. 19
BLANKS.
ON hand, constantly at the American tis fnriiwin tiiul f blanks; ,
Deeds,
Mortgages, Quit-Claim Deeds, Title Bonds, Notes of hand.
StunmonseSf Subpoenas, Executions, . Constables' Bond Constable'
