Indiana Reveille, Volume 40, Number 27, Vevay, Switzerland County, 8 July 1857 — Page 1
THE INDIANA REVEILLE.
OOA NATIVE JjAKD —its prosperity.
VOL. li.—M 27.
VEVAY, INDIANA, WEDNESDAY, JULY 8, 1857.
SERIES FOR 1857.
THE INDIANA BE YBII/tB, IS PUBLISHED EVERY WKUNESUAV,BY prbdhhick j. wald6.
part of the city. Though Mr. It. bedlost all fiis properly, he hod not lost those’ passions that .were the cause of dl Bis mis-, fortunes. lie alill pampered the serpent that had stung him to the heart. He in* ilulgcd in bis pernicious habits optur every convenient occasion.' Hodelibcratcly sold all that remained of the wreck in a short time to supply his perverted wants; entirely neglecting hi« destitute andsuffering family. ■' All iBcir professed friends deserted them in their The young ladies had- no taorer gall ant and rich, - young suiters. They had lost all that for .which/ they had been sought. They, were poor, very poor and covered with the infamy-of haWg e poor drank* en father; hence, no body wanted, them. Their early friends proved the sordidtiess of their attachment, and unmasked the heartJcssaess of their professions. As i$ always the case, when they needed the toothing offices of friendship, they had them not. The destitute rarely receive gifts; it is the rich and prosperous that are overwhelmed with valuable presents. The hungry are never fed, it is the fall feasted.
of whose church Mr. U. had once been a member, to use his abilities to bring him hock to the path of honor and sobriety. But all his repeated efforts proved ineffectual. The weightiest considerations could not even induce Mr. ft. to relax bis me* briety, much less to abandon it altogether. * He was wedded, to bis habits, and they hod to leave him alone. . *'It was in his cops and tcith his companions that Mr. It. found a temporary release from all his- painful recollections and goading thoughts. Ho. could not, id his sober moments, contemplate his wretched, rained condition without experiencing the most poignant grief and keenest anguish. The contrast ho would then draw between what he then inu, and . what ha had fan almost drove him mad I His courago quailed beneath such agony. Nothing hut wine, or much more potent drinks, could quiet him, or reconcile him, to his self-chosen state. lie sought alone the paralysis of thought and the oblivion of memory. * Alcohol could affect these results.
floats down the Mississippi. -Yet it bolds thousands of noble, manly citizens;™ While it can count in its occupants thousands of no In re's noblemen, it can enumerate tens of thousands "that permanently, and ever and anon, prowl through its streets, reeking fn social ond moral filth, having centering in them every Vicious element of character. Here is a wide field in which missionaries of every description conld find abundanco of material on which to operate. Hero ore thousands of objects of Christian benevolence!, Indeed, this barren. yet fruitful field has been strangely overlooked.™ Thousands are perishing for lack of knowledge.
peace-destroying, degrading, and enslaving effects of intemperance, anti os its inevitable . bftjneatLmenls; than have nil others, and as vrillall others,' similarly allied to tbo same dark Prince; but, per* baps, in different forms,. This is not on isolated case, such os pecan once in a century; but of frcqnonf occurrence, especially in tbo fiery -South'' where' lifo so soon terminates. In support of this assertion we could ‘addnco'on opnloace of evidence, did wo deem it requisite, and • did our limits'admit of it.
For Term* o( Airertlslny, SuUeriptloo, &t-> ne lul column on ijiarth page. • ■ ■
The (llrl with the Calico Dress. : IT EOItAT JOSUXT*. A fa for jour tipper-tea girls, ,Willi their velvets and *aliw and laws, Their diamond's and rabies and pearls, • And thefY milliner figures and faces,• They maj shine at t parly or ball, Emblaioned with half they possess/ But give me in place of them all,My girl with.the' calico dress. She is plump as a partridge, and fair . b- i : • As the rose :n il« earliest bloom; Her leelh will with ivory compare, ■ And her Ueoth with Uie clover perfume. ’* Her step is ps free and as light " ' ' As the faWn>,whom the hunters hard press, And her eye Is as sort and a$ bright. My girl with the calico dress; ■
BUSINESS GAUDS.
IJ O. pi F. : INDIANA LODGE, NO. 136, I—0) 0. F., meeU, every Wednes-jaBBte day Evening, at Odd Fellows' Hall - Bujlding, VcvayJlndiana. V, Kessler, Scc*S. I Jons P. Doan, ICO/ Jksk Teats, | 0. S. Walpo, V. 0.
. Our object in/giving this narrative to the reading world is, that- others, who may bo already riding upon tbo illusive, slow-moving whirl of tbo inebriate’s eh* gulphing maelstroom, may be lessoned by the sad fate of Mr. B. and family; that others may be induced to sever the ' strong cords of the inebriate’s appetite while it may bo dona; that others, yet within the compass of redemption, may bo/, assured that there is' still hope for them; and that the very moderate dram*' drinker andinebriate may discover that ' the inevitable.-lot and condition of such are those of the most abject vassalage, dependence aqd penury I The. sad injidrilance entailed upon the subject of tbia story, bis noble and inno* ’cent wife'and starving children, is a faithful presentation 'of- ’the hope blighting legacies of the inebriate 1 Let not tho fearful fate of this slave to the sparkling wine goblet bo gozed at with listless eyes, nor let. its warning voice fall upon heedless cars. .Avoid intemperance, ’and pprscvoriogly . practice total abstinence from all that-intoxicatesI | .Ohio, Jl’xk 6, 1S57.
5k j.jw. murpuy, ; PHYSICIAN & SURGEON. ' MT\ STERLING, c: girilxtruild Copaly, tail»n«.
Vour dandies and foplines may .sneer Atber simpleand.modest aUire, But the charts* she permits tai appear, . Would set a. whole iceberg on 'fire I ■ She can dsnee—but she never allows - The hugging, the squeeze and caress, ' She is saving all tbese'for.hM spouserMy girl with the calico dress. t She is cheerful, warm-hearted and true, : A nd kind to her father and mother; She studies how much sbeamdo For bet svyeel little ‘sister and brother. It you want a donjpanioa for life, To com foil, enjfvea and bless, . She is just the right sort for a wife—. My gill with the calico dress. . Jackson, Miss. ■ ' [ Vicksburg Sentinel
“As yon just have seen, Mr. R. it degraded to the profoondcst depths of infamy! He drinks more now than ever. If he can in any way secure Intoxicating drinks, ho never draws a sober breath.— lie is ingenious only in tho construction of expedients to which he often resorts to get his liquors. He is so lost to all manly feeling and nobleness of soul, that be will meanly, humbly beg '.for a drain of anything, so it will intoxicate! Never did habit and vice achieve a more distinguished victory, or vanquish a moro ’illustrious enemy! ’ ' ,
F. L. COURFOISJEIt, 1 , DWLEa IX : Dcji (6oot)s, ©rotmes, & Product, . Main Street, Vevay, ind. ;
UOBEBT If. LAMB,
ATTORNEY it, fcoUSSELLOll AT LAN, VEVAy, INDIANA, WILL promptly attend to business in the Common Ifleas and Circuit Court Vevay, Ind. . ] ! roarlMf
“ He was finally and altogether left alone by those who once sympathised with him, believing his case a hopeless one; and their attention was directed to the nobio family he had so meanly deserted. This 'family could have been placed in cosy and comfortable circumstances through, the munificence of its friends, at the bead of which stood Mr. Covet; bnt its members would not accept of the charities thus kindly ond deliberately tendered. They preferred laboring for their bread asmest they could. Still their friends did not relax their efforts to assist them. They were amply remunerated for their labor. A more than double price was paid them for all the saving they did. 'Ibis augmented pay emanated from a fund raised by their friends for that purpose.. It was the only way they could get any aid.into their hands. They thought they earned it all, and were thus encouraged to persevere. “It may be reasonably, supposed that no circumstances'with which they might be surrounded could mitigate their ■ anguish of eon).. They had fallen from too great .an elevation, and too sadly fallen, to be wholly comforted by anything less than an entire restoration of their former possessions and circumstances. Bnt their father could not be reclaimed, nor their lost property regained; bonce, happiness could not bo scented. A fatal necessity appeared to unalterably fix their miserable condition, and a deathless hand appeared to mix their dreggy, bitter cnp. Mr. S. drank on, and his plague-stricken family groaned on. Ho but rarely visited them, and when he did, they were abnsed much beyond their capacity, for endurance. “Conld not Mr. R,, who was an intelligent man, at least when sober, bo influenced by temperance men, with their powerful and almost axiomatic arguments in its favor?’? inquired Mr. Knight, who was himsclt a zealous advocate of total abstinence, ond bad succeeded in persuading many drunkards to become entirely temperate in life.*? “Alas, alas I’ . Such men were very rare; for all in onr city drink more or less, from the - best, most refined, most intelloctnal, and most pious,* down to the most brutal and worst,“ replied Mr. OJementus. “Up to. the time of which we arc speaking, bat very little had been achieved by temperance champions.. The most popular and eloquent lecturer could rarely get a couple *( dozen to hear him. It was difficult to get a house for each purposes. The pulpit was at least partly silent on the subject, and its influence was very circumscribed. This is a drinking city. It may bo regarded always more than half intoxicated, AH the powerful and fashionable influences are in favor of the constant and indiscriminate use of-alcoholic beverages. It will be on age ere this becomes a temperance city. Our only hope lies in the rising generation. If we can mould it into a total abstinence one, then there will be some prospects, looming up, of changing the vion frame-work of the old customs of this fiery city. But too many of the young, as well os tho aged, are already indulging in this wilting practice, to warrant the expectation of an entire reformation hero. Too many make ‘ their bread at tho expense of and every domestic virtue,'to permit total’’absti-. nonce to prevail to atiy extent without a fearful struggle to prevent it. Tho permanent friends of debauchery are terribly numerous, and they are increasing with the growth of tbd city.- Indeed, the city, in this respect, is more of a trash trap, than the residence of men; for it seems to catch all the moral putrescence'that
A LFR\ED HHA Wi ■Maiae ix • Orn ©oobs aijb 0rotmcs, &c., $Ci , Comer of Ft irry and Market Streets, VEVAY, INDIANA.
“In order to secure the common, absolute necessaries of life, tho females of this ruined'household had to resort to their needles'. 'Had they been always accustomed to this method .‘of gaining their daily bread, it would not have Itecn so crashing. Yet they bore their calamities with commendable fortitude. By their toil they earned' a scanty subsistence. Had the husband and father been sober and upright, tho wife and daughters would have been even cheerful in their humble condition. But bis unremitting inebriety imbittered tbeir already bitter enps. How they wept over him!
fn Ifoiguuil Ifc.
“His wife and children continued companions iti poverty and infamy. They never recovered from tbeir fearful over throw; but, np to this day, are as poor as ever, end the unconscious, recipients of Mr. Lovet’s munificence. The hearts of each other are the only sympathising friends they recognize. Mr. R.’s sons, for want ot powerful friends and means, embarked upon tho rough .seas to burry through a rongber life as common sailors! The huge burdens they were forced to bear soon crushed their meagre, fragile bodies. That sea upon Which they purposed earning a scanty living soon received their wasted and lifeless bodies, and closed over them until the resurrection mom! It was hard for two men, so young, once so. Tall of hope and flattered by such cheering prospects, to’ thus early die; algno top,' and far, very far from the smiles and attentions of a dear mother, and sweet sisters 1 . They.. made their graves in the briny deep ! . From their mother, tbeir untimely and 5 miserable fate.was.kept. . She; however, 1 suspected that some dire ; calamity bod befallen them, else she should heard from them.in some way pr other. The uncertainty that hung about their memory, baniitedi her to a more distressing extent; than/-would a knowledge of their real fate have done.— Kvery recurring day would she sigh and weep over her absent boys—lief sons reared in the downy lap of cose and luxury, but were now grappling- with the cold, adverse world for tbo common nee*, cssnrics of life! Tidings from her tem? pest-tossed and ocean-buried sons never passed over; tbo thresholdof her ears.— Her sad heart-never bounded on hearing the returning footsteps of her boys. They never gladdened her soul by. tbeir presence. This was a fearful weight added to tbo already crushing burden on her soul . “This family will soon fall under its exhausting sorrows. Then mother, daughters, sons will bo freed from their physical and mental sufferings, ond meet again in a.more congenial' and lovely clime. With drooping heads, aching hearts, and weeping eyes, dragging, out a miserable existence,' they joyfally look forward lp‘ the grave os a 'sure retreat from the storm now pelting them. • “Now r my story is (old,'and a sod one is it! I would nptbavc (old yon, but 1 wanted to add one item to yonr already largo slock of. knowledges Now you bayo it. It is ir'ead 'illustration of- tbo frailties and wickedness of man. I would there was sot one drop of olcoholic liquor' in the-world. And I would be more than delighted to witncss'tbe oxtirpatibn pf all makers and venders of ibis withering stuff. The sad history of this family has done much towards making mo an uncompromising temperance advocate. X shall bo all my life.”
(Written for too InJiani RcvellU.] TH J3
FBAIVCIS ADK1NSON, ATTORNEY % COVESELOR AT LAW, VEVAY, INDIANA.' WILL give pnmpt attention .to nil legal business U at may be entrusted to his rare. Office, bn Liberty street, back of Odd Fellows’Hall. ■. jt-’H
INEBRIATE’S LEGACY.
BY P. V. FERKBfi, M, D.
mmal DK- i. \V, BAXTER will cortinMaffireL uo to [jiaclice in Vevay, the first v .and Wednesday; Client, Urn fiml Thursday; Florence, the first Saturday, of each month, Warsaw, the Second Monday, Ticsda), nm\ Wednesday of f-ach month. Nov. 10, *53. _ tM-tf.
I CoficlwlJn. ]
"Cut dill not .Mr. Lovct visit her during her sickness, nml convince her of<his innowncy ?” inquired Mr. Knight, astonished that tbo cruel fraud bad not been exposed by the reputed author, Mr. Loyct. "No. His false pride and erroneous independence' kept him arfay from her residence from the lime ho received that note from Mr. H. Ho know-nothing, at that time, of the forged letter, purporting to have como from him, else bo would have acted differently!. Ifc supposed that tbo nolo sent him by Mr. It. bail hereoncurreaco, or; at least, silent approbation 1 . HtKjidnot dream of the existence of;the fncts ns they .wcre. Ho was designedly kept in profound ignorance of her sickness, as well, as tip* cause of it,” : ..
Washington's Farewell.
“Just about this period Mr. Lovet learned of the fraud that hod mined the peace of her whom he tint and truly loved. James, Mr. R.’s topi and clerk, through biting remorse for bis vile act, plangcd deeply into intemperance. He soon ceased to. attend to any business whatever, and spent bis time in attempting to drown the alarming voice of his awakened conscience. His small amount of .means, a part of which was the fruits of his supple villainy, was soon expended for strong driuk. Unring the prevalence of the annual epidemic of Now .Orleans, he fell a victim to Its death-dealing ravages. Before he expired in tho midstof filth and fames, poverty and pain,'as all inebriates dio,.homftde full .confession of his share in: tho frond! that rendered Mr. Lovet so odious in'the estimation of Miss R,, and that destroyed her earthly happir ness forever; for when a lady truly loves, she lovet forever; The menacing presence of grim death will induce a spasm of honesty in; the bosom of the most) reckless. Thus ; it ‘was with The besotted James. Death glaring upon him, led hip to make a. dean breast; of it, and publish ing own shame and infamy.- All are.’Willing to accord truth and honesty to (bo vilest when dying.; ‘ Hence James’s statement was regarded as perfectly reliable. No one doubted bis statement, though it startled every body..
The following extract is from a letter written by a lady upwards ot SO years old, . residing in Philadelphia, to her grandson. in Washington: ' “When General Washington delivered his Farewell Address, in the room at the south-east comer of Chesmit and Sixth streets, I sat immediately in front of him. It was in'tho room the Congress had occupied. Tho table of tho Speaker wasbatween the two windoivh on Sixth .street. THo daughter of Dr. C -, of Alexandria, the physician and intimate friend of Wnshinglon, • Mrs.• II- whoso bus-. band was .the auditor, was a ■ very dear, friend of.mine. -Her brother, Washington, was bn? of (ho secretaries of G'en. .Washington. VoungDamlridgo, ow of Mrs. Washington, was tho others I was ihclpdcd'in'Urs', -H--7--’8 party to . witness tho'angast,'- the solemn scene. C-~r-'doclined going 'with’Mrs. H—;. who had dot erminod to go so .early as. to secure the. fronl;bcnch t . It w.aa fortunate for * (afterwards Mrs. L.) that She would not trustherself to near .*heir honored' grandfather; My dear father stood, very near ! ho"r,-alio ■ was terribly agitated... -There was a nor: row passsgo from lho cTilrapcclp tho room, .which was on (ho easli dividing the rows of benches, Gen. Washington stopped at the end to 1 ct Mr:"Adamspasa to the choir. Tho latter alwayivroro a full suit of briglit drab,-.wiih“Blasb, or rather loose culls. Ho Wfist ruflles. He had not hif Jnshtons. ; Ho was a short man,* Vilh a good head,' With his family bo attended'.our church twice a day;' - „* • • • >; General Washington’s dress was p full suit of black. His military hat had;the blac)c cockade; ;there stood .the -of his .Country, acknowledged “the first in war, "firsV. in' peace, fitnlr' thejicarts of his connliymcn.*’ s ' Nomarshals; with gold-colored surfs; no-chart-ing. The must profound stillness grocicd him, as If,that great assembly .desired to hear him'breathe and catch hisJrreaih-Tr tho homage of-the'heart'. covered bis face with 'both' his‘hands. The sleeve of bis coat and his hands wore covered with tears. Every now and thou there was a suppressed sob. I/cannot describe Washington’s appearance.a I felt it—perfectly composed and self-possessed till the close of his address.. Then, when strong'men's sobs broke loose, when tears covered (heir faces, then was the great man shaken.. I never took njy eyes from his face. Largo drops came from his eyes. Ho looked to the grateful children.who were parting with their father, their friend, as if bis heart was with them and wonld ho to the end.** \
/.sm.ic nmiPiiUEA, House ami Sign Paluicr, Gltixlrr and Paper Hanger, Vevat, Isoiasa.
A LI. Work entrusted to his care will receive attention, and no pains will be (.-pared to give .satisfaction in oil A Mime of public patronage is solicited. jelU
ill!, [JAM FAULKNER ,
jusl’facto at: a of Harness, Saddles, Bridles, Gears, Collars, llamcs, Ac., Ac., Pike street, • Vecny, Indiums. KEEPS constantly on hand a general assortment of Saddlery, of his own monvifocture. • . r oiarl8-tf
EX OS LITTLEFIELD ,
“What heartless monsters this It. and Us ifiret. clerk mast • have been, to hivq acted bo unworthy of meal*' exclaimed Mr.KpightjUnalle to realize that a phristied father could so.romorsclcssly destroy his daughter!! - “But it was his iuloxtcated passions |hat were acting, not tho ohco temperate, discrete, and aflcctionate parcut. . How hll-powerful’and all-destroy: iog is alcoholic Yet Christian:men will make it) vend it;' or fnrnish tho mdtcrial oat ot which it is manufactured.;- The latter deed is. more'disreputable- and disconsonant. with the Christian, character than the two former ones. I f the praying farmer would not furnish the poison-m fiber with the produce of the earth for that purpose, the business would bo brought to a close, as inovitably as the want of fael would extinguish the fire of the smoking, recking still. It is the fountain that Js responsible for the stream that may inundate as well as'irrigate. If one person is more responsible than another, of those implicated, for the huge torrent of alcohol that rolls its destructive column through our plague-spotted earth, it is, ho> who raises his grain for, and sells it to the remorseless manufacturer of it. The earth and its products are prostituted to a wicked purpose; and man, instead of earning his bread by the sweat of bis brow, earns his peace-destroying drink. But, excuse me, I did not intend delivering yon this stricture.”
Denier In Cabinet Furniture, WILL keep constantly on band a general assortment of Cabinet Furniture, con*, sisting in part of Bureaus, Bedsteads,*Dj-fiV ning, Breakfast, Center and Card Tobies, uk» Stands, Wardrobes, Safesin fact, any- J V» tbing required in bis line. Term$, €atki _ N. U,—Funerals attended with Hearse to any pail of the country. 1 . Coffins kept on hand:
F. J. WALDO,
Ncjus)K&ptr, 53ook aiitv printer,
(f. H. Comcf or Main and Feny Stitrti, 1 , VEVAY, INDIANA.
AU. kindsaf Printing neatly executed, at short notice, and on the most reasonable tonus.' A large supply of Deeds, Moa-roiist®, Notes, and all kinds oP Justices* Blanks; ol* wavs on hana. roarl8-lf
“Mr.Lovct was overwhelmed with sorrow and crashed with remorse on receiving this intelligence! Ho then plainly saw that be had acted the haughty coward, and was the unconscious instrument of Missll.’s misfortunes and agony. Ho would willing have atoned for the wrong ho had done, but it was too late. The fatal deed could not bo undone. Yet he nobly resolved to mitigate the sorrow and poverty .of., that unhappy family as much as possible, without letting them know from whence their help came, or whom their benefactor was. Mr. Lovot communicated a knowledge of his intentions to his excellent wife. She heartily approved of them, and proposed aiding him to the utmost of her ability. This was both generous and .noble in these beings. They were in a condition to do ns they purposed. Ho had acquired a large fortune.
F. A* BOEUKEU,
Watch Maker and Jeweller
JUIS STREET, VEVAt, ISPlAItl, Respectfully informs the public that he has just opened a store Main street, in P. Uufour’s building, where he intends keeping on hand general assortment of Watches, Clocks and Jewelry.
“Yes, all yon have said is too trim of all the parties mentioned,’* continued Mr. Clemcatus. “Xonc but a drunken father, insensible to the commonest claims of others, could have acted ns did Mr. R, The great mental anil excessive physical sufferings bfhis amiable daughter did not iri tho least flwervo him from his horrid resolution, nor restrain him from.indulging in his recently acquired habit of drinking and gambling! .Instead of comforting, ho reproached her for want of independence of action and fortitude of spirit.” ■ “His continued neglect of business and ciccssivodisipationsoon embarrassed him to an extent far beyond his ability of selfextrication, His : family began to suffer from want. The cataslrophy overwhelmed them when they least expected it. They; were stripped of every thing upon which the law could lay its dismal claw, and were driven from their, family mansion,' They sought shelter in .an obscure
Jj* Particular attention paid to repairing Watches, Clocks,'and Jewelry. op23tf
Metallc Burial Cases. JESSE V. SHORT,
“Upon every suitable occasion he placed into the hands of the mother the means of comfortblc subsistanco for tho lime being, lie did not obtrude his charity in an offensiro manner, nor in a way that would display his generosity, . He was very solicitous to render them, if possible, happy under the then existing circumstances, bat he knew that in it his efforts defended upon his not being known as agent. Ho hid himself behind his benevolence, not his benevolence behind himself, as too many do. ' But so long as tho husband and father were an inebriate, there was no happiness for that family. To remove this source of agony, Mr, Lovet engaged tbc most.influential minister of the city.
“We heartily thank yon for your narrative, and wo will endeavor to make good use of your Information,” replied his hearers. “Wo have been ranch interested, oven thrilled, and wo-deeply sympathise with tho sufferers. We execrate the miserable wretches who had agencies in bringing about those melancholy results. But there is an avenging God in Heaven. The vile and guilty shall not go altogether unpunished. They most drain a bitter cup similar to the one they pressed to the pslid lips of this family.” ' ' . '
' Sthixcest Negho Law ik Miebodiu.— They have a vory stringent law concerning free negroes in tiro Stato of Missouri. It is os follows: ...
TTHDERTAKER, has and will continue to keep on hand all sties of the, latest improved Metalic Burial Cases, and also Plates with »U kinds of inscriptions, lie will also attend to cementing, ; and all calls in his line of business. He constantly.keeps on hand all sorts and sizes of HEADV-ttAUE COFFINS, lined and trimmed, clolb covered dnd plain, and will attend with bis Hearse all funeral calls. Havipg purchased his melalic oases of the manufacturer, and all his materials at ■wholesale prices, articles in his. line will be -disposed of on the most reasonable terms. Residence and Shop on Seminary street, north-west of Schcnck’s Flouring Mill. Jan. 1, 1856.—if
i , Section 1. Hereafter, if any free negro or mulatto shall'go, either on business or pleasure, into any free State nr territory, and return to this State, ho ebill, upon conviction, bo punished by Cpo-not less .than 8500, or by itnprisonpwnt jn the County Jail not kss-than one year, or by botUsuch fine and imprisonment: Provided, th at this qctsbaU not bo is o construed as to apply to freo negroes serving as hands or servants, or in any other capacity on steamboat*. This act to take died ami be in force from and, after its passage. ,. 1 ' Approved March 3, 1857.
CARRIAGE SPRINGS
AXELS, at F. L. GRISARD $ SON'S.
AH D
Remarks.—This grey-haired veteran of alcohol has realized'no'more, as the.
ItliACIiSMITH. SHOP I subscriber Continues to carry on the B. Ulochsmilhing Business at the same old Mand on Ferry street, where alt hinds of worh in his line, is promptly attended to. O* Particular attention paid to making Hay Press Irons, and Ironing Buggies and Carriages, etc., etc. A continuance public patronage is respectfully solicited. jy30 - : JOSEPH JAGERS.
And Faacjy Goods, MADAM E, MICHOT, French Milliner, Jias now open a Fashionable Store/\>] on Main street, where she keeps all kinds4*&* of Bossets, Oafs, Heah Dresses, Flowers, Kibasds, $c.» tjc. She will make Dresses, Mantles of all kinks, Embroidered Dresses, and Sacks for children. ap33-Gni
