Madison Daily Courier, Volume 1, Number 128, Madison, Jefferson County, 27 September 1849 — Page 2
DAILY COURIER.
?f . ('. 44 A li It f. IS. IMtlor. Tiif ki-' i:i.mg,i;pt 20 .iivuripr's Dramatic Wopv urh i tiUfiMUhuo i'..amaiic op.Kfc. s u c () is the titi'1 of a publication now in course of issue from the prers oi" Messrs. Phillip, Sampson, c Co., Eoston, in eepara'e plays, with full introductory remarks giving; the historical origin of the plot, and commentary notes at the bouom of each page, exp. aim r. g in clear and lucid manner the quaint expressions found ihrongnoui imp. .i entire modnrtmn of the " rnmortal bard." : If the copy before us of the first number, containing the first p!ay,"77tf Tempest," is a criterion of what we may expect in the succeeding numteis, we feel warranted in eainz that a volume of the en. ire works of Shakspeare is about to be laid before us which, for typographical execution, has no superior in tins country. It is the j
H feign of the publishers to furnish with j Satin day at midnight. The next meeting ! med gentlemen, together with many others, eneach number a tine piee! engraving of the j wi!l be held in Cincinnati on the 18ih of i tf,Ted ilUo aconsPiracy t0 destroy him politically.
heroine of the p!av. With the pre?ent one we have a mo-t beautiful and highly fTnhfd j ortrait of .Miranda. It is to be issued .Kemi-monthly. Xi. Jo--2; h Howard having been appointed agent in this city, will always be provided with the work immediately upon its i-.-rue. The price is 2.1 cents a number. 07"" The opinion prevails to a considerable extent in this State that Cincinnati is the Lest u e.-tern market for the purchaser of dry goo. is, and it is an erroneous one. We had an opportunity of judging of this one day ia?t week, and we thereloie speak j Knowingly. One o: our predecessor?, Mr. : John 11. Covington, who is engaged in the dry goods trade at Fusing Sun (a point nearer Cincinnati than this city), purchased a large bill of goods of Messrs. Shaw & Frothcr, on Main-Oross street; and we know that both in point of style and prices for we examined them he had a better I argain than he could have had in Cincinnati. We sppak knowingly on this subject; for the greater part of our life has been spent anion dry goods, and that not only in western towns but in Philadelphia jobbing houses. The inducements ibr purchasing here were theditferer.ee in prices, ibr better terms of payment were offered to the eame gent!eiati in Cincinnati than were obtained here. We mention this case for the purpose of pecifying and to show that it is not a general and indiscriminate pujf- The Messrs. Shaw have a very line i,tock, and their prices are certainly reasonable. We doubt not but other and piniilar cf, equally creditable, to other houses in the city, might be given; and wh.rh, if generally known. ,,1.1 ,tinTri t T.)cn r..'!' !! fit drv ! i foods trade of the Mate. A liberal system . m 1.-U l r II w - ..... i.-r. w i. u.. .... I g v 6 it m
c( aJven :sii;g -n the part of our merchants j try wUich has abandoned him through the treach would donvi"h toward bringing this at out; j ry flf j,8 cf,irf. Lt him come here and preach and the fact is worth rt-niemhering, that j a crusade againa the buf-h-ra and tyrants of the those who advertise most are these w ho do j human race. We will give him welcome, a thouthe most busmen. Th case above-Citeu sand times welcome.
is one in point; for tlie gentlemen mentioned, although opposed to the Courier in politics, have ever been auionr its most liberal patrons both in ad vending and job work. (-While the monopolists of this coun try are t!o:n; their utmost to revive the odi ous and obnoxious tariff of 1542, or of modifying the tariff of 1546 so as to substilute specific for ad valorem valuations, to enable them to fleece the consumer at home thf t m-J that they ara exporting same purc.i iseu iron tot t.ieir Koad of the Danville (Pa.) Iron Company, paying $5 per ton more for the American than the Engi i ...... .' lish art;c!e couid have been purchased for, because l!ie American iron was worth s!0 or SL3 per ton more tdnn the Englis-h. The following we have taken from the Philadelphia Ledger, a neutral paper,; w hose statements can be relied on: ! Amenm manufactures are finding their way into IM, g anu iiiore ruiriiMiru null wou u de 7 n,, .,,, i. r ' I, . , i ini.n . ill i. v ... i .1' i u t port; to Engi-ind from 1 tu,.u.e phi.i. They have L r . u i .. . . i ' .! hen found to be better tor several purposes than those (f English mauuf .cture. A large quaniity ef furniture n:ade in FhiUdrlphia, to the order of aa Eng'ish gentleman, was forwarded in a vessel w.nca saued on Saturday." 17 The Cincinnati Commercial of yesterdav morning says: "The sma'.:.-pox in our K-ster Cit es of Covington and .New-i-i N.uu.,kuii aua ir port is s .bskiirg, aad the Senral health is i 1 gOOd.
manufactures to England ye to Eiv-- ' l"rt- 1 heard a man at the fost Ui1.cn window And this is done with the fact staring it iu the I therefore recoiiiinemt that a Mass Convention be lani' the n v ,r, ihvwns to fon I n,,r ortJ ,hi8 afternoon ask for lelters-the addrasa being j fdCe from a quarters, that the neutral papers of he'n i" Court House in tins city, on Sati-r-laui. tne na. o.i liia. w as to nooil our poi ts , , , j 1 i dav, lhe l.iih day of October, at 2 o C ock. P. M . ii - .ii handed into the window on a slip of paper, and ! lrl(, eountrv were amour the very fir--t to soeak i e . - " i , ,! With her manufactures, particularly her , , me eoumrj w ere among uie vtr nr.i. io spear. f r the purpose above meiitioned. Matters will - , . , " , j was answered, we cannot attend to it. Can out up0l, tni8 8Uhjt. We need not again lefer ne brought before the convention .f Vital imuriron. A uav or two since we noticed that , , ,v-.. , ! . .. , ; . ......,.
, i, . i you lei uie R now lu-moi i ov : .-.o. c van uut , f0 tlielNeW I ork tJerald, tile IN ew lorn SUU, i w"r r"i j nmru, auu especirtiiv lO me lax- ( toe llarrisburgh Railu ad Company had i ri111ii .r will satisfy vou for vour trouble.' I .t,,. x .. m.i- n .... ...i .i. -r.,,.i : payers of this county. All ate therefore urged !
I O Thec;su.issai e! the French minister I ; ha had it effect upon tne etock market in J i New Voik The N. Y. Couriei of the
! io.n ,.E. ..It- i...n t, f ! rv annarent -nd ,ipr-i,1 1 t- , t- , r m , . u , . ej States eecuimes fell from one-halt to one per cent., and other lock in p,0;or- , tion. The most absurd rumors were current during the day as to the cause of this most serious and startling event." CrThe light draught steamers LadyByron and Allegheny Clipper have been t, I ,! :m .., 1 Liini Lf r i i vv n in r:' v p ti- aon j """"5 jw water. The Clipper having mounted the "biz W' between the chimneys, of course j
takes the Wisconsin's day, with Dunni ng Atchison, and a portion of our delegates in Conin the office, and Charley David and t'oth- ! Sre8s- No new llht as far a8 we can Percivei
pi one in the pilot-house. Ce-A telegraphic dispatch of the 2-lth in?t. from Baltimore, states that the Grand Lodge of I. O. O. F. adjourned sine die on ' September, 1950. Hungary has fallen! Napoleon's prophecy is fulfilled Europe is Cos-sacK! Where is the republican heart thtit does not beat with grief j and indignation ? Where is the free heart that does uot curse England and France, who miht ! have driven back the Russian horde saving the lad hope of liberty and who in turn may now feel the iron heel that tramples in blood the heroic Magyar? The. tragedy of Poland The partition and plunder is to be enacted on the plains of Hungary. Despotism laps its tongue in patriot blood republicans u, haggard, driven to the wall, expires amid the orgie pceans of barbarian victory. Can it be that glorious, gallant Hungary has fallen? And fallen, too, on the altar of apparent treachery. Can it be that the Gorgey whose name has inspired our eulogy, has yielded to the glitter of Russian gold .' Alas! we fear it is so. That he should, in the name of his nation, and at the head of 40,000 men and tO cannon, while Comorn was yet defiant to the Austrians, surrender without a pledge for the liberty or lives of his countrymen, looks fearfully like dark and damnable treachery. And now, let the nations who have witnessed and permitted this national murder this strangling of liberty, wait their share of the result. Let France and England, who lacked the manhood to say to Russia 'back from the slaughter of our kinsman II u ngary , or w e will make her cause our own" let these nations behold their own power threatened by a Czar who has sworn to crush revolution iu Europe. Lrt them behold Russia in the ase.Midant, dictating her policy to the nations. Let th U States look upon herself, and see the blood of this slaughter upon her garments. She is not guiltless. She C'uld stand and see Hungary immolated, nor raise one national word in defence. Not one word to encourage struggling fr-edf )ri iu Europe. For shame on the lands of Lafayette, Sidney and Washington! Burning and eternal shame upon the whole brood of recreant nations! But K''S?uth su rvives. If . L . I . L ... . I..:. lie c.innoi save nis coumrv o-i mm oring wun i him cr,wQ whater h , of a Coun. j , i ...i,. .,... i, . i r . ... i "O, bloodiest picture in the book of time. S.iruiH'ia fell, u n went . u it hou t a cri me 1 " . i . , , ,, , , ,i . , ' And so, too, has Hungary f-ilien fallen, but not forever. The spirit ot liberty is eternal and j cannot be quenched. N Y. Sun. ! SaH Francisco Post Office The Califor- j nians are U.ud in their denunciations of the pre- j sent management of the Post Office at San Franb cisco. The following is an extract from a letter dated San Francisco, July IS, received by a gen- : t'-man in Boston: j "I am satisfied there is no honesty in the Post j Office here, and shall not pre-pay any more let , Th(S a,Wer was, 'How much will you give?' j He replied, 'I will give you 10,' and was anj swered, 'Call iu the morning and you shall have ' them.' I am also credibly informed by men I know, that they have called for letters repeatedly, and were answered there were none, and by making
another call they succeeded in getting them." ! mojil aaive to budd up. This office is now as important as any under j The North American trie to create the foolthe control of the U S. Government, and a trust- : :si. IUir.i0 that because we have dciiouuced
i worlhv and competent Postmaster should be sent ' i i r .u on to take charge of it without delay - i n . , ,,f,uiiTimM i Gold A correspondent of the London limes ' r sys: " w'd hardly be believed that the whoie quauty of gold currency in the world, taking it al its u8Ual eslimale 0f 150,000 sterling, would ! only weigh about 1,150 tons; and that in bulk a S room 20 feet long, 12 feet wide, and 10 feet high wcu'.d hold it a'.!. 1 T-- T, T ..,,. j O The Lynn newssavs: "The shoe business ( muit good: for not a 'oair are mad and rot i ready for the market befjre thy ar: r lt-i.
THE CONTEST IN MISSOURI. So violent and embittered has Col. Bextoi become, in his contest with those who have the te-
meritv to noose hirn in Miouri, that his own j fri'"is c forward to protest against the per eonal waf he H waging The leading Benton of T n , L , ran in that Mate, me si. iouis tuiuu 01 me oin , . hi, recent publications arainst members of the Democratic party. The contest in Missouri, as the Union truly observes, his been made a merely personal matter by Colonel Benton: "In the last Booneville Democrat, appears two long document, from the pen of Col. Benton, each headed '-Address to the People of Missouri." We have read these documents with care, and find that they fafate principally to personal matters betweeu Col. Benton and Messrs. Napton, Birch, is thrown on the political questions embraced in Col. Benton's Appeal, as it originally appeared in our paper. The burden and point of ail thnt ColBenton says, throughout the.e addresses, appear t0 us as only striving to prove that the above na We believe all the persons against whom Col Benton prefers the charge of conspiracy, have heretofore b-.jen considered, and at this time claim to be, active members of the Democratic party. This is unfortunate, in every sense. The charge of conspiracy may be true, or not; bat whichever it turns out to be, it is personal to Col. Benton, and should not disturb the harmony and efficiency of the great Democratic party. Let us be understood: Col. Benton may have been personally wronged by these gentlemen, (and we believe he has been,) but will this justify a total dismemberment of the Democracy of Missouri? To redress these personal wrongs, or, rather, in attempting to redress them, must the whole Democracy of Missouri be broken into fragments, and fall a sacrifice? Must the wonted ascendancy of this great party, whose long and uniform harmony has been the subject -r... 1 : e - M - c j oi auiiiirauou auu praise iroin ail quarters oi uie Union, at length fall before theever vigilant Whig enemy, whose motto now is, more than ever before, "divide and conquer ?" Surely Col. Benton will rather permit his wrongs to go unredressed, than witness this result as the consequence of his Appeal." A Large Establishment. The Harpers, the celebrated publishers announce the publication of five new works next week. The following statistics of their extensive establishment are interesting : There are 22 presses in the establishment, of which three are Napier presses, and 19 worked by steam. They work off regularly 70 reams of paper per day i e., 33,600 sheets, making 201, G00 sh-ets per week, and 10,533,200 per year This is equal to 1,000 octavo volumes of over 500 pages per d.iy, 6,000 per week, and 212,00 I per year. The fixtures iu the bindery are valued at 13,000. Here are annually used 52 bbls. of flour for paste, 42 bbls of glue, 1,000 packages of gold leaf, 60 tons of pasteboard, anil 750 pieces of muslin of 40 yards each. Then 14,40 Sheep muj-t be slain yearly to supply skins lor covers. Benath the buildings (for there are five tenements) are immense vaults where the stereotype r lating for 25 years, and now amount 10 S'lO.OOO pounds weight, worth 7j2 cents per pound. fcOO pounds of niftal are usi-d weekly lor casting mating 41,00 pounds per annum. Iu the composing rooms, there are from 60 to 70,000 pound of typ. The amount paid to tne employees, about 400 iu number, about one fourth of whom j are females, is 42'!0,0ii0 per annum. L The Rfgency and Royalty. The North ; American feels that the course of the R veijeiH'V in its eiicourgement of monarchy in three quartt.rs 0f the globe, requires to be defended. It fee!lS that the )ublic mind has settled down into lhe MW( that the Regency is guilty, aed it rel " "rl l"a1, 11 lv 6r"L. "S""1)'""11 -l I pori8 ,0 g0me of the most ext nontmary expe dientsto change the current of popular condemnation. It seeks therefore to convince the country that the Regency is denou need for party pur poses only, for its course in regard to Hungary. ?rS6e9t at cf which have spoken out against the ! relrogacist uoi,cy 0f the Regency. Two of these j paper"s did much to elect General Taj lor, and .1 . .u , j - I . r l, now that they are deceived in the policy of his min5sler9 they do not nuce lheir ,hr,s. Their ctiJet cannol ue charged to be a party object in denouncing an administration they were among the , ,1,,rT,rKri( f thrt ministration m reirard ; ----- - to Hungary, we have th-refore eubsted "uuoer j the baiiuer of the renegade of France 1" We presume the next attempt will be to show that I we have enlisted under the banner of the Queen j of Spain, because we do not thiiik the Regency i deserve applause for their insane eagerness to iu- j terfere agaiit the apocryphal descent upon Cuba. ; The one accusation would be about as wise as ' , I the other, but could cot more effectually prove ' ,k4 ...'.ln... nf fi,,. -v r.i .K. har,. ...v, .... j hand of popular condemnation is laid crushincly ., r , . upn thenv 1 ennsylvarjiaa.
BY TELEGRAPH.
RF.PORTSD FOR THI MP1MN PAtLY COURIER. U The Telegraphic reports published in the Courier are made up at 12, ., ech day in Cincinnati and published the same day in Madison. The Courier by this arrangement gives the ac counts of the sles in the Cincinnati market '24 counts of the sles in the Cincinnati market -24 j hours in advance of any other paper attributed j in the City of M.oison. ,ity ONE WEEK LATER FROM EUROPE. ARRIVAL OF THE STEAMER 11 A il l E I t I C A The America arrived at Hal. fax at II o'clock, A. M-, on the 25th iust. LiVBRrooL, Sept. 15. Business not so active as last week. Cotton steady with moderate sales. Prices a little changed. Grain. Market a degree firmer, holders anticipate that they have now reached the lowest point. Cured Provisions. In moderate request; prices generally well supported. Ft'NPS Steady, with but a limited business going forward. Accounts from manufacturing districts less encouraging; nevertheless a healthy trade prevails. Cotto.-. Sales during the week, 31,700 bales. For fair Upland and McHle h; fair New Orleans 5Jg. Stock on hand, 539,459 bales, against 555,230 last year. Breadstcffs. The arrival of Ereadstnffs is large; nevertheless, trade is getting firmer, owing to the unfavorable advices in regard to the Potato crop. Yesterday, both Wheat and Floor were in tolerably active demand. Very little Indfan Corn offered, as many holders have withdrawn their samples in expectation of obtaining better prices. A tremendous rain, accompanied with vivid lightning, prevailed on the line between Philadelphia and Pittsburgh, which pravented the transmission of the rest of the America's news.j Arrest for Arson. Mr.J. Drummond, keeper of a lace store in Grand street' New York, has been arrested on the charge, of inducing his clerk, Charles Larson, to set the store on fire , in order to secure the insurance. X3rJohn Smith was in Albany at last accounts John came from Buffalo with the man whosmokes in the omnibus. 0Geo S. Burtnelf, has been nominated for Governor of Massachusetts, by the Democracy of that State. Going it while Young. A young man aged 17, and a young girl aged 13, belonging to Providence, Pa., were married last week. Short but True. One of our exchanges justly ob :erves that "good newspapers are the only paper currency that is worth more than gold or silver," Genius' like the sun upon the dial, gives to the human heart both its shadow and its light. Fri ie may sometimes be a useful spring-board to the, aspiringsoul, but it is much more frequently a destructive stumbling block. Men of the world hold that it is impossible to Co a disinterested action, except from an inter' sted motive; for the sake of admiration, if for no grosser' more tangible gain. Doubtless, they ar also couvinced, that, when the sun is showering light from the sk) , he is only standing there to be stared at. A letter timely writ is a rivet to the chain of i hfferti.in; aud a letter untimely delayed is as rust to the solo ierMASS TEMPERANCE CONVENTION. j The Irien is of t-niper.n:ee in Indiana Imve rieterminal to n. Id a Stite Temperance Convention, '", tht" ci'' oi II" 'auap.,lU, on lb lbih ol Oci lOV"r' ' " r,0" ' vi.g tne Brat ineaus for suturressiiiv I he iQUor IrafTie. It is reci lenderl that a convention be held in each cm nt . prior to the 'tate Convention, lor the, purpose f bringing I hi" subject before the whole mass of the community , and of appointing delegates to the Stale CJ on ventio-u. We whose names are hereurfto affixed, wonld to be ureselit. We would also recommend, that meetings be held in every township aud neighborhood iu the County, at suitable places, on Saturday the 6lh , oi ui.iuuri, iui iue uuruusu oi r: iscussiuz ine ! , , . & IV" 1 aXtS;r a Z ; County Convention. David Waiker, Ed" gar Wilson, Thus. L Paine, James Greene, Jr.o. ". G. Sitnrall, John H. Taj lor, Moody Park, Wii i itn Randall, T. Fugue, Wm. H. Philips, Gam I l a lor, M.iton .tapp, C B Lewis, M. D Lott, L. J. A dam a. H. K Wells, Jer. Sullivan, John Smock, Robert Kiunear, Jas Y. Alhson, George N. W alt, John King, D. D Jones, JdiileS SiCddll, V in. Heuoricks, Jr. Joseph WiUon, Wm. W. Woollen, E. G. Whitney, M acisoa, Sept. '21, 1 -4U. I 1 H-1 . . j 'nun "e put) truer, iu i 1,1 . cjiy. i rk5at "' Ui6. ' m.-i. a re. Hrw i;o'.i ' -:h. a 1 oiii.i ak-a d I'-t-rinf ,i,i i..m . , , Ay (rs n iug afw ,,ornaUct cf ,,)e Uofte AU(t j '''i t iib'iaiiy re a tied. j ! IA.VC Il.T WIiR. t at rr Ear-rr ror-y rJA"i -
HORDING MEDITATIONS. IT THOM AS HOOD. Let Taylor preach poa a morning breety. How weifto rise KKii ii'ght and larksare fly iejr For my part, g-tlinj' op sees:- ?xit so easy, -ha!i, as TyWg.-
What if the lark does card :n tlA kr, 5,.tn . , . . , '' t J ' r ... ' g nd the'Ch to n h;nl oufneretore am I to rise at such a V,? I'm not a troutl" Talk not to me of bees and suoh like hums, They smell cf sweet herbs at the morning prime;' Only Ue loDg enoxrg-h, and bed becomes A bed of lime.' To me, Dan Pba-bus and his cars are nought, IBs steeds that paw impal'n&t)y about,Let them enjoy, say 1, as horses cughV The first turn out Right beautiful the dewy meads appear, Besprinkled by the rosy fingered girl What then if I prefer my pillow dear To early ptarl? .Vi, stomach is not ruled by other men's And grumbling for a season, faintly begs Wherefore should miser rise before the hens Have laid their eggs. Why from a comfortable pillow start, To see faint blushes in the east awaken? A fig, eay I, for any streaky part. Excepting bacon. An early riser, Mr. Gray has drawn, Who used to haste the dewy grass among, To meet the sun upon the upland lawn Well he died young. With charwomen, such early hours agret, And sweeps, thatearn betimes their bite and sup,But I'm no climbing boy, and will not ba All up all up. So here I'll lie, my morning calls deferring, Till something nearer the s roke of noon: A man that's fond precociously of stim'ng, Must be a swnrt New Millinery & Fancy Dry (ioods Store. 71 n s. s u 7i .ii i: it s. Fashionable JHillincr and Dressmaker, MADISON, INDIANA. Try RK.PK( Trri.l. n.t-.fms .lie l.diea of Jk f, jj Ma'I'son and v e nity that a r na niO- sXH vt-il fori inrit.ntti, and ;ei.ed a ta hion- L. ali.e uiilliiifry and lam-v ttr !;0'.!s s ore, on mret saee. Main street, whi re t.iie ir.vites ihe ladi- to -aif -ii I -xaiiiii,e her yioi-k of ricSi s.i.d ianc.t j: -orl. which U too numeroii 4 to All vertH. -e I 27 d I W W. G. WHARTON, REAL ESTATE AGENT, And Agent of the Columbus (Ohio) Insurance Company. Office opposite the Post UfSce, I 1 1 v , v V A . j OFFKIt FOR MALE, v. . j t lit-ap, a 1 lihii,i i...e t.ii .hi i e k i .- lie i f Mui e-r s.rert. 3 leet tr .nl hi if 2 de p toihealle. iii n Vn hrrr and" 'am b'h S ii lot i iii.niedi..telv npp.8:te Fit'ih treft. a d i-j lit w!ier ihat trel would rnn if fi ei rt'rt from' Mam n ' -nlherr. se I i? . G WiM'-TON, ihe nude gin' d liji to the 9t" inst , At th ofhee of S i vei s A. Kma on Main front si e'. M Cl-- n, for fradt z a"d p'ankiiiit -2 7 s nele if Uie MailMon and NajioI ii turnpike roai , in ai'iiilion to th '.' m-e al ady n.lv. rl'Re.l. ce;e -.0 S. . -1KVKN-. . LO III, rt.l.MEit' Mi. V STINGS,AT O R R 1 & C 1 o t i ii s Repot Fall and Winter Fashions fur lS-i9. luv n-pvip ihf most sjilfHijiil (ojlMof Clotbr' fAiiiPr. Vw inte '.-ak iuks Ml arknnaw, Urif1 tula ai d Kng l-h Blank 1 1 lit, sn rrhne for Overcoats. V, l,(Tlin!!! un are dad? a Mine si our ire-etii aree stock t rt&f i'le (i in- ts. he h f r.Tyl'" and work" ni.hip rm- " t.e i.irue.-!ert a I I w..rti i'f im offered at IH" v -i y lovv-i" (rii-e, w ii. ' , !e ,r r t-il Mo, an fit-isve i' iin f i of Hen'V fa'iit h!nf s;-iie t.i n .i ir ir wer o' eiiko i's und ishir's, .' eo va (f ' v ;! 'J. i rni j.-j a -pi.'l.d a lO-lmfttl, n'a'-. i'f -iv p 11,)-' l ain .'III (I 1st liai w -i. n t; Ii-aile T lr r & r a . el:- i ' t j e- f. ( i li fi io .11 I- l! It. Ir-.' .r I ' h lat! Hi. Ie, ei i win on t vrr bod? :,'. rt fc ii ..r,iii'u tas o e -j, rt' u-I n'' (ni'wiri--I'n'ii i -tor ti: iViver M ' I if- ' SR.. ri 2 ln f J N". . Ii m. k. . -if o .'" ! t n VAi.i'.-tiu,i: I'liv.i'i.si i v n.. AT AL'v; 1 ION. MSAL.K i''" e fcii on T:inrdiv nrj- 2TS. i' " v.iri' I hi' if. t .in.r oi" Walnut ?' . . er - ti l '1 hi k ' ' J. t n r,,, Va " ui h-. 1-5 f-et -n ThifJ f t A :-o--1 i-.e iik dm i i- e hoiiae on TMrd -n ri, lira' 'lea uv r i i erms . f Sa e; . i f ir h rh. te halenr In thre q isl .a; m-n' of 6 1 -i d H ni i' t'i. wi h in ercst f or;) date rtie to c u-n.e ,c a' l) oVKvk, M VV r H'lM AS. Ancfr. cr:i 21 (B n'enpij d3c JOSEPH GARRATT & CO , II II A N M. A N I Ii n 1. i. k f DEItS, Jh lStretynfn t'r , n l mid IPp t, MADI ON, INDIANA. "1 nnr.r u -of n i.uo- o C" ,' r, hr z'n ai1 am -f i t on Vt ni: N . i i . . . i . k-T-m I nri ii ii f ain''", i, lav n a' i ii'n i -e ei i, - tain, uiiii r. mm1. a-'fl ir ts I '. i and V ilvf. ii' a I a m-r,, ' limn ho e, . a l vneil ait4 o her I N j-jiet pr .-o ile , r.-ppr rilvei. &c Kpv ft m z ml l.ociv re. -.o hj Ai' for Fire proof' Sef s. a ii ' fifir ii a d 'as and lVama. N B l' '"irnl lira siamn m ntsnier pt 19 d:f CIVI." IT A TISI I. Vru wi i find it to prrT i r in .' e in ii. i- -, iii an,- ner not to be equaled, ii'ii-iiiwn" e.i. e t ti.ie Haapg eetebrate.l '. !a-.-e I.nj'l '1 Ha .r I'-e. h Lt H now efnraliy aiiinHTe.: t, j- iie n-.-t ai .Hr. l'- i lhe onl . anicl whlctt wi '1-.er.ie h-.ir in n n-.:e i :e u,Bru,er. without UM sl.s'.-t ii j ir, :t ,.r ti Kin. It i. entire'? ha'm'eM. ai d e' 'i ii v- t- re I or irey hnir th- m'M naniral and' 'i-n'i- entt'f. a'.l i. t.iif i-.J io all e'lrnpleiiona. k. t.-in. i-t rt,e., u- roir innv v. i"-ip,-aiierly rodure l ar d ' a i ' ol I e "!" I ' v i.-je act on of Ileal, iwr.pira i.m. vi a r, or oiii r r.os i e afeutg Thsaimpi an I nruli r.'. anif . m tniy tin r Iie which la eol-r-u'iiled in a -riei t f.c rnan .er. wsrrantfd free from ait ir j ,riuu nr-s a'.ces, at.U fi- i J-'ri of wnteh i, ir.ii. .. He dure to a.. i.r Jim H&rit'a Vt -irutl L15VJO IJata I ti, an ihere r many lmllaii in 11 1 -a e i 11,! m riirti iie i.ri,rw.ior of tne aNova wojid fp:'-iai ctu'ion the puhnc. it LEa HUEU IJ-V ('-e.Ti.;' -rei. Pru'aiel la, rl . :y F. F. r-ji. Ma-n rrtMa ft. Marl saw. rad
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