Madison Daily Courier, Volume 1, Number 141, Madison, Jefferson County, 12 October 1849 — Page 2

I) A I L V C O U It i E R . .-- . ri r. '-

Tf . c . H A II tt i: II . I .tlior. ritlOlV L'VK.M.', Ol'TUBKU 1 2. U Judge C II Test, of Indiana leading i IutiUna politician, and a prominent lawyer of" Mobile died at Cambridge City, Ind , a few da) I iuce Cia. Dispatch. i We noticed the above paragraph in the Cincinnati Dispatch kohio (jays ago, but as the Sentinel anJ Joutual a; Imiianajioiis bad not mentioned the nick news or heralded the death of Judge Tt .-si, we hoped that jt tntght have L-en a mistake of the Dispatch. We learn this morning, however, that John Test, Esq., lather of C. II. Test, Secretary of Slate of Indiana, died at Cambridge on the day mentioned by the Dispatch; and we regret to record it. rr7We !earn that over l'orty thousand dollars have been subscribed by citizens of this place, for the purpose oi' establishing a rolling mill, with the necessary fixtures for manufacturing all kinds of iron, at this place; and that the work will probably be commenced eoon. We learn, also, that Mr. George Peiennan, Jr., has made an offer for a lot on Weet street, and contemplates putting up a building and the fixtures to manufacture steam and locomotive engines. JSucces-s to both enterprise, say we. It is only necessary to have a few such establishments to make Madison the largest city and the most important one, in point of ttade, in the State. We understand that contracts have been made with good and experienced workmen for macadamizing '2r mile, next the city, of the Napuleon turnpike. Contracts have aieo been made for planking JJ miles of this road, at this end of the road, beginning at the end of the JJ8' miles mention td above. We regret that the companydid not decide upon planking the whole of the five miles. I'lank roads have succeeded well in other States; and this would have afforded & better opportunity of testing their durability and cheapness. Are You Insured gainst Loss or Damage by Fire! The frequent accounts of disastrous losses by fire in almost every newspaper and telegraphic dispatch, and those eilent but impressive monitors, the dilapidated warehouses on the corner of Ohio and West streets, renders this an important question. The winter season is approachinsr, and wuh it, the dangers from fire. Stove flues not rightly adjusted, carelessness on the part of domestics, may ruin the prospects of an industrious working- j man, or seriously curtail the income of the man of leisure. Are you insured, then! we ask again. If not, lo.se no time, in calling on Isaac Lea, agent for the Lexington Insurance Company; or 11. E. Stratton, agent for the Hartford Insurance Company. Both of these Companies are well-known. Their promptness in paying losses has become a proverb. .Mr. Lt a is now engaged in re-bui!d:ng the houes litbiroyed last 1 month on Ohio and West streets tor the j owners, as agent for the Lexington Insur ance Company.

(5-The female operatives in the mills j Capital, $5,000,000 half of which has dow n-east, in consequence of the continu j been subscribed. al clatter of machinery, have, like the deaf I , I Mr. Clayton s Ditlom acy r rightkmng the and dumb, taken to talking to one another j MERCHANT8.We tind the foilowing paragraph by aid of their fingers. The whole party . ju the New York Herald, a leading Taylor pacan thus go ahead at once, without the j j,er. tt discloses a fact which we had uo doubt lean confusion. Of course, the women j existed, viz: the alarm of the merchants at the must talk. j bungling diplomacy of Mr. Clayton. It also gives other good causes why the democracy of irrThe Pittsburgh Journal of the Oth ; lhe city of New york 8hou!d succeed at the apinst. says: "Business has looked up consid- pr0aching election. The Herald says: erably eince the rise took place in our liv- j As we have already paid, the union betwenn ers. Nineteen steamboats left this port for j the rival factions of the democracy is apparentiheir different destinations during the past j ly complete in, this city; but the whig are dis1WO day; the aggregate amount of the j united, dissatisfied, and discontented. The mera lue oi' the dry goods and articles of Pi its- cl,ants are iudiSDant at the attempt made by the v. u ..,-,.,,,.,,., t i .1 i cabinet to get up a quarrel with F ranee out of burgh manufacture shipped ou them, may ; r m

be fairly computed at 3,000 tons. This is ! a good beginning, la truth, before the rise came business matters looked very 'blue." hvrn Beauty. The Louisville nanprc

j . . ,,nn-.r)s ... .' i cabinet, on account of the numerous blunders stated that upwards of two thousand per-1 , . . . , .... , . , , ' ! which they have committed in connexion wild eons visited the w harf on Mondav, to see I , . ,. , ., ,. , , . , 1 ou" foreign policy; and the ultra whigs, the the painting of the "Greek Marr' on the j working.mea of the party-those who toiled and wheel-house ot a new steamer of that name,! worked when toi, and work were necessary now finishing in that city. re indignant at the system of appointments , v--..- ii i which has been pursued in the custom house. y-r-A gentleman in New U: .. ar.s lately , . , , , . n , ' , . ' i Many of tha whig party will abondon the ranks received a 1,000 bill lor a check lor 100 . , . , . . . j rccr' ' i j i , on these accounts; and those elements, combined from th porter of a ban,,, during the ab- , wilh the unioa of flrraocrat8 wilI give lhe ence of the Teller, and refused to give it j atl(.r one of the greatest victorie8 iQ thi3 city up. He was accordingly arrestt-d, but in- j that thy ever achieved. ,ta upon his right to keep the b.lU a the , P,ovk a s dFiends h i r . Lo Te is the shadow of principle of banks is, "No m.stakes recti- the inorn:11Sf which dcreas as the day advanced after leaving the counter.'' The mat ; ce. Friendship is the shadow of the evening, ier if to investigated- j which strengthens with the setting sun cf life.

Shilbt Couvrv Wh.at. Almw t ..cry day now there are a number of wheat wagon visit

this place from Shelby couuty, coming from the j iiJiiiiri,iaie upiuwihwum ui w:i-tiy aiuss iiic Shelbyviile and Edinburgh railroad. The reason : i: .:l.k-,-l, 4 . ,S.....t.. ., .Li aligned fur hauling wheat to this market in wagons U that the charges oa the railroad from Shalbyville to Madison are to exorbitant that they can haul it to this place about as cheap as they can ship it to Madison, and then they get a a better price here for their wheat, and can always get a load back, of some kind of merchandise, which, altogether, makes first rate wages for their team. It looks strange to see farmers hauling their products to market, GO or 70 miles, in their farm wagons when they have a railroad leading to a market on the Ohio river, from their own doors. It is however true. And the reason iu stated above. When our railroad is completed to Greensburg, our millers will pay within two or three cents as much for wheat at that point as they will at the mills, and will pay the same prices when the road is completed to Edinburg. This will be of great advantage to the farmers in the interior of the State, as this point will always be the best grain market on the South side of the State, on account of her water power for manufacturing purposes. The railroad to Eainburg and Martinsville will become a rival to the Madison and Indianapolis road, and when it is built, the charges on the Madu-un road will of necessity be reduced from their present rates; goods will inconsequence be sold cheaper in the interior, and the farmers will get a better price for their wheat. Let the farmers then join and help ui to finish the road the sooner it is done the sooner they will enjoy these benefits; and we want to enjoy the benefits of daily corninuuication with them by railroad. The above is from the Lawrenceburgh Journal. We have never heard a whisper of exorbitant charges by either of the Railroad Companies alluded to. If ths facts are as stated by the Journal, the eooner these Railrotd Companies get a new set of agents the better for the standing of their block "on 'Change.' What say you, .Messrs. of th? Columbia Democrat and Shelbyviile Volunteer! ffvIt is not our intention to pufT the Messrs. Garratt they have been established so long in Cincinnati, and are no favoiabiy known to machinists, engineers, and steamboatmen, that it is unnecessary but merely to notice the establishment of a Bell and Brass Foundry in our city by a firm so well established in the great city of Cincinnati, to show the growing impor tance of Madison. Mr. Joseph Garratt informed us the other day that orders for several large bells had been received, and that the business, so far, had met their exnectations Their advertisement may be seen in to-day's paper. Remember The sale of city lots to-niot-row commences at ten o'clock, precisely, near the residence of John CoU'man, Esq. fjj-We learn from the Rushville Jacksonian that Mrs. Bovard, a widow, has been turned out oi the post-office of Vien na, Rush county, in this State, worth about $0 per annum, by the administration, and a Mr. Samuel Durbin appointed. fj7A new bank, to be called the Ocean Bank, is being organized in New York. Homing; auu me uiasra ui mo pany are averse to the whole tenor of our foreign policy since the present cabinet was organized, as well as their policy respecting the distribution of offices hereOur mercantile classes are in fact afraid of the

From the Washington Union. THE NEXT CONGRESS.

Since the 4tn of March t'htyite memberi j have been elected, ff..-!ite of whom are demo- ! cruts, and only thirty are whigs. Elections are '

yet to be held in Louisiana and Mississippi. he had recovered iQ Cass county, Michigau, ou Those twu States are entided to eight members. ' Friday iast ho wa9 arrCsted by a company of citThe democrats will certainly carry six of the lMna of thi)l town, by virtue of a writ of ;.a:as eight, and we have assurances which lead us to j C,T,,,, returnable before Frobate Judge Egbert.

nope mat we win carry au lour m JiMiMtppi. nd perhaps in Louisiana. But conceding two membf rs in the two States to the whigs, and the next House will then stand: Democrat 116, IVhigt 114. If we secure one gain in Mississippi, we shall have four majority in the House. The vacancy in Massachusetts will not probably be filled; and the vacancy in Virginia will, without doubt, be filled by a democrat; and the whigs will not be able to control either branch of the next Congress. No party, flushed with recent victory, has ever met with such reverses as those which have visited the whig party since the 4th of March. No President ha ever been confronted by such a formidable opposition as that arrayed against Gei. Taylor. Members etecUd before the 4lh of March. Democrats. Whigs. Maine - - - 5 2 New Hampshire Massachusetts New York -Nw Jersey Pennsylvania I'elaware -South Carolina Georgia Ohio -Illinois Michigan Missouri -Arkansas Florida

2 2 9 2 32 1 4 9 15 1 7 4 4 - 11 10 6 1 2 1 5 1 - 1

55 82 Members elected since tlie 4th of March. Democrats. Whigs.

Vermont 1 3 Connecticut 3 1 Rhode Island - 2 MarvlMud - 3 3 Virginia 14 1 North Carolina 3 6 Indiana .... 9 j Wibconsin 2 1 Iowa .... 2 Kentucky ... 4 6 Tennessee - - - - 7 4 Aiabama - 5 2 T-xas .... 2 55 30 One vacancy in Mr. Palfrey's district.

The Tariff. "The revenue is cheated, the American merchant is driven out of trade, and the American artisan deprived of his bread by Walker's tariff for the benefit of foreigners. There is no denying this fact, and the press bhould 'keep it before the people.' " Boston Bee Here are ihree statements. Thre is no denying either of them, ur rather no tied of denying either, their faUehood being notorious to every iiitelligeat man in the country. "'i'Lf reientif is cheated!" And yet, with a diminished rate of duties, the reveuue is greater than it was under the high tariff of 1842. We give the receipts from customs for several years, below: 1645, 1646, $27,528,112 26,712,063 $54,24U,7sO 1847, 1848, 1849, 523,747,864 31,757,071 28,342, 89 $83,847,624. The statement each year is for the twelve months enuing with the 31st of June of that year. The two first years, therefore, were under the tariff of 1842. If the reveuue is cheated under the latter tariff, how does it happen that it is increased under it? " 7Yie .Jmencnn merchant is dnnn cut of trade." In 1645, under the former tariff, the whole amount of American registered tonnage employed in the foreign trade was 1,095,172. In 47, the amount of our tonnage of the same class was 1,241,312. There has been a large increase since, of which we have no precise information at hand. If an annual addition, at the rate of 120 shipsof six hundred tons burden, lo the vessels employed iu our foreign trade, in necessary to enable our American merchants to abandon their business if just when they are "driven out of trade" they newd more shipping and build more vessels than ever there may be some truth in whig clamors against the tariff of 164-i. "The American artisan is drpriied of hit oread." There are no statistics to meet such an allegation as this. But if there is anywhere a mechanic who is deprived of his bread, who is hungry, in consequence of Walker's tariff, or any other tariff, we should like to know who and where he is? The people, who know no such case as this, who kno that the skilful and industrious machanics of every class are sure of a plentiful subsistence and something to epare in this country, will laugh at this statement of an over-zealous champiou of unequal taxation. It meds no statistics to meet it. They nor the the charge which it insinuates to be untrue and ridiculous. Laziness and vice may bring a man to destitution anywhere. Bat in this country, more emphatically than in any other, might the Psalmist have exclaimed, "I have never seen the righteous forsaken, or hU seed begging bread." Coos (N H., Democrat. O0ne of the difficulties of life talkiagto a dtaf person- iu an ommbu.-

Slavki DrrAi.MD it Michiga?. A corretpondeot of lh Louisvile Democrat wrtte as follows:

Socth Bend. I , Oct. 3d, 1S43. As a Mr. Norris, of Boone county, Ky., was retarainr home with four runaway sUvea which Mr. Norrw retoroed to town, under a pledee from these citizens that he should have a fair trial of the right to hispioperty. But when the writ came to be returned, the negroes were set at hbert with such hurry and trepidation on all hands, that Mr. Norris was in danger of having his slaves taken away from the court house without allowing the slightest chance of submitting proof of his claims upon them, although by this lime his cause was sustained by two of the ablest lawyers in the place. At this juncture, Mr. Norris and his friends exhibited their weapons, ana so, for the time, retained pos.-ession of his negroes, and they were lodged in the jail till Monday On Muday morning, before nine o'clock, the ha.'ttis corpus was again returned wilh better effect, and the slaves were formally set at liberty by th said Judge Egbert, and escorted back to Michigan by a large number of their friends, white and black, which had assembled, in the meantime, for their rescue Mr- Norris being prevented again from proving his property by his arrest and protracted trial upon a charge of riot. He was acquitted this morning, and proposes to return to Kentucky to-morrow. Mr. Norris, I understand, will now have his remedy in the U.S. District Court, against a certain lawyer of this town, and other responsible individuals concerned iu lhe affair. What's a Gentleman? We are constantly reading cards of thanks to the gentlemanly captain, the gentlemanly steward, the gentlemanly clerk, the gentlemanly bar keeper, etc, etc., and we iiave often asked ourselves what constitutes a zeutlemau of the present age? In old times it was birth, manners, gentility of appearance: then it was fortune, hviug without labor, and with ease and comfort; now it appears to be a title only conferred in return for some favor, and indiscriminatily bestowed. Thu, the captain of a ship is termed gentlemanly if h treats his passengers with courtesy; the clerk of a steamboat who hands the printers some newspapers, is gentlemanly; and the steward who pops you champaigne is called gentlemanly. We are the nation tf all others for titles, and we confound them all. Whenever we talk with Dr. Francis he always calls us doctor; when the recorder is speaking to us he calls us judge; the lawyer call us couuceilor; the general never forgets to call us mdjor; the countryman addresses us as "capting," and the downeaster as "stranger." The title last heard among us is mister. We were once dining with our old consul at Falmouth, Mr. Fox, and were, quite startled at a sweet Quaker girl asking us quaintly and demurely, "Mordecia, what wine wiltthou tlriuk?" Noah's Sunday Times. IL.T" The London Timet gives a verv flattering account of an experiment a successful one, if the Times is to be credited recently made in England, on the practicality of advantageously cultivating maize in that land of wet and cold summers. The description of the plant as given in the Times is somewhat novel. It says: "The apprance of the plaut is peculiarly graceful far more so, indeed, than tht of any ordinary corn fieid. The stems, which runup perfectly straight, are generally from four to five feet high, and are much thicker than the large wheat straw. They throw out from the root upwards a succession of flag-like leave?, the stern terminating in a little tuft, fom w''i(h springs the ais of t'f)ri9 somewhat irregularly clustered ; and in this instance, apparently not heavily laden." Indigo. Cwi-tut Fart. The Indigo p'ant w as a native of South Carolina. It grew spontaneously among it3 weeds and woods. More than one hundred years ago the p'anters there commenced its cultivation. In the year 1728, South Carolina exported to Great Britain 200,000 pounds, and the Parliament granted a bounty of twelve cents for its further cultivation. In 1787 j indigo was one of t;ie staples of South Carolina, and we believe Georgia also. Now, in 1849, not a single pound of indigo is raised in South Carolina, or af far as we know, in all the South. O A Frenchman proposes to domesticate, in France, the American Bt&on, or buffalo, for pur- j poss of husbandry and domestic business. The j bison, he adds, has been domesticated on the Red river, and the flesh fo .nd to be excellent after it has been rive years in that state. TAUING FLOWERThe flowers are drooping day by day, Their charms will soon be fled; But not befoie ourlovlieat, Our household flowers, are dead! The cold will flight their fading bloom, The wind wil! toss their leaves, When Heaven has bound her sister buds With all its golden sheaves ! f HE ''(ileal !, lor itl. weeli i-nrfnif Ort 13 a i .ii uii'ialiy I'.teiestirg nun. I er. Fo' nie hy lhe undersigned. cc: ri J t. HOWAKO. W 71 . OLIPIIA.M, WATCHMAKER, SILVERSMITH &. JEWELER, " J Two dijr lekiw the Bik. yt MADI.-ON, INWANA.

INDEMNITY. THE LEXtvGrov F-Brt. LiFP. AM) MARINE I.St:KAXCE"C03IA.Y,

illi,t Fin ec !. on t rm3 AS (OW ltll uf Ally Otfcef' I ..;. 1, ,1, A ic. Xl.l t IfliilVAIi Ail iMMfln tuitt and J teriii, A 'id nri t h 7r b fi surd at Late. I'l RECTORS: M a t-011 C .chimin, A. T liuir. fiiw 1 H arnaan. J fi H ear: BEJ Ml liRATZ FrenWent. ISAAC C LVA. Ant. 'ii: old:! Goi.toin ! iv. c." m it.g in part ..c H m - .Vii..1Ur jt ari-a-t piiti.. Kfi(f.j F.-r n.l Fit er rinf, rim.', 1 ornl.Sn !. Sp. .i.s, Gmd pet . Sitc'-iC and I s "nr-y of iv() r en cl"9 Par inHar au"tifn pud to watch rcinlrmg. Ca'h for' Menitinv and lepi rinsr Cleaning M r-fii in. i.f a I kintlsuf Lamps, Ctiandeuera, Ve , d me at ih !-iMpst 1 oiire hy jo-f.p!i t; kkat r & ro.. et 10 At the Bra and hell Foundry , Mt'l ftren. ' r I r.mm rh na tnrrdhin hor.tnf,... between ttie dm! K ed iM-liav d a ld hy mutual oiiet,t Al hi i r 01 trie co-cem in Madison will te set.le.i hy f, Marvin, wiio will alill conduc; 'tie bnairteag at the maud. H M4HVIN Oct ' dbi L. M'RVI.V. ArI Cpi! .Tlulf mm1 Utit:-VYe l""' irce.ve.iBi.)! a in.ei.i i.f ii e.i'a an4 oy rloih t ar; rh:ldrrii'niU eve Cap. Ato, laae and mitet' Muffi Vi-i..r,.., . .,.,( e,,, . ... t l6 tH oRM?TEI)T CO " r. . mi tun T I II HO. Ken, Milk IlratdM. &c.Jmt B aid. Riht. .11 BeHfi.iHii em ic i.anera. cln dreu'a Heae la le !' , wiKiliru Coais ai.il M oil ort III ilG tVVORM.-TCDT At O. ' tl.'i llonnei Vi lvi l A- MIU f ain an. I null uiari.it Tinum. fit'ur-dt.nnnHVfiver, PUm. Flowe a, Fiuroen. nd Caji B '.ler, l.luioua silk Miita. At For ale .y .ct M 6 WOhMSTtT At CO rlllkltrt ALn .1.1. . -1 s-aii. 1. tiaunelk and LimrT. ''en aiteortineia j.iii received and mr . ale cheep oettOiiG t v OR MTKfiT at t.O HAl.i: OFCITV LOTSAT AUCTIOX H" V I l.J. s?E-.L, in ,e huliM bolder. 011 latur4ar iL fexi. IS li i. si ai 10 ..Vlwk i-reti.-ely, TEN ftfly fuot 1. is, ui earh side m VVali.ui uireei; noriti aduiiion, near i.t'lf 1. an's ie-iifree J t ms: One. third down, tle 1'alanre in six, twelve,. eiKlUeei,, am twenty f.ur n omhs. 'i'lile gWMj; deeds 11 ade to iu cIia.eB hy J t L. Lai.ier and W. G. Wharton r frer tbrne are sId. I -IHcell a Let. iwent-five fcet 1 fr- nt an 1 Itlrifeide p, nejtt . u li to t,e cotton l. eior-. niol one haiii'; e z: neji 10 l oila'a planing and lath fae't I will at th aiiie t ine offer a handsome lot on tb a-t.- ile.f Mnltrw .rett 3r! te.. ir,.,il by lt2 deejs 10 lhe alev imwc 11 Mu herrv and Mama's r- a loi nniuediaielv Oii(M te Ki.tlistren aidij.i-i Uere tha s teet wunld run if t x'ei,U"d troin Mainio iHullwrr Hale to coiiohi,c uc J .hu C'offinai,' ledrnee. a 0 u clock , A . M . H'. THIUHH oct 9J d A ui;llone-r. aoii;in Kit ATX A. CO. BRASS AND BELL FOUNDER S-j, t lUCl-lll.i tl, Ollto. JOSEPH GARRATT Jk. CO. II R A K !S AND II I: Li Is I' O V' D E ft&, Mill Strt'.t, near the tial oid Depot, MADI-ON, INDIANA. M-,. 11' nu po,l ml k i,d of cnpfMtr, hr . tin , and an.- fr rt;on Catiri(a; ct urih 'etiiiixiai, tavern and Heiln, ;.ani. niaor, da, and w tier Cock and VaKeni.f all derrrirUoMa; )ioe. . a't we 1 and 01 tier Joint: gnelr 1 - , ier .-uld , n.pr ttivid, ae. Ke nnirif d Look repairing. jLfct - Atfeinn -or Fire orooi c-afra, aad Platlor . l o 1 ra e anil tM-ains N. R. C ( (ier an-1 lira s t,k. ri in exchange, aept 19 .tit' VAIL A W M I T K , CABINET MAKERS A N DU N D ERT A K E RS, It est tlrrrt, bet'iem Sccmd find High, (near the post office.) JffM. ,f s- - 11 ei,t nf CABIN ET y ."k f . ' . 1 1 . rv r. irn y -malic r k 1 t 1 r p V -ttf 1 11 on hand at all timea. a.d mane m o'der a the ahortftt notice CuMimi of all Mud ftons the piaient 10 tlie ftneiit They keep twn eoorl IM: R SF.H for the aeenntnoi'a ur n of ih..e v. ho lo-e m-.r 'ri' ui an1 relaiiven, with o eor.ihoi w iiir ihv will an. 11. i lhe luneral of all who 10 a v t v r lln in n . ' !i ine.r i.r,ieI'av na 1. 11 n,.,.in ift S-iou4 oi ririera!e Cemetery, h- mi .1 nriiP- v "i " " alt 1 erma a I perwn wh iire d i lni. their d ri-nd thee to rive; 'hem rn erlv i...tie- n tio-.tti(e or 'he grer. aecriai.pnni' it ' v U ! no. iif a1 o! a e. o.-e I dim D A V I D W II I T E, viiomaij: ;uo( 1 it, COMMISSION .M E R C II A N T And Dealers in Fltur, I'ork, ond Produce Oeil-e-11 1'),. No. 1 and 2 Commercial Row, j r Wil1 muke li'rl cn.-h 'dva?ir. on a I kind of I rn.t re 'i i !ri to l-nn for nale '1. ih market, H ilka j fn 1 1 1 J - -!i New Or'ean or ew York. I !-; 4 DIllCJ.H, PAI.Tt, DYW, Sec. APOTHECAR ES' HALL, MADISON, IA. inti part.rutarly in call ti e elt'ntlon of f'h . tictnrtt, . Merchant ai.d .iii-r to my a nrk of artleiea, he'ni one from which may l-e fiected. at the limp prleea, b-a'des the si-ma taple Me.". icin. jiupu'tr Patent .Medieoiea, ail other r irlf rmt-um'iii o!r) t y IlrujelatJ. The quahiier ' a l warranted a represent-d. and whe an aritcle a ol.i a. 'h le 1 ui uv.tj Ire'iaiee may 1 placed on H a -urfi. V -uit;; to nat ure tlie trade of I'm end t-unrt' al Nip-i in -urh th proper inducem"nt in renrd -o p'ifw wnl ' oifred. Al I nek is. for i.iwr. to luf r 111 5irme!vej oflbe mamet and c:, nrepaf it t 1 iiTtia, e r'nonlil my prt cenmn'.l w ifl ! hen d ai to do mv tart. The nun I mi the J"' uth irfe of Main Crura Ptreet,. re.'lv o'.pii e the riat k.at the -i; r. of -he KF.OS and .M(lf(TK. W M HUGHEj. . rt 3 il f It'll j!t. ! ( Mil 111 --l"ne threat ce!ei.ri y wiiicn my Eau. Lun'rale Hair reiiranv- ha af; .?re 1 in I'tii'adeU ! phia, and 1 1 1 r lulu.ut he I'm' d I'inp. a-d the freat ! demand thai 1 ti-v Hit ar i.: e. have prompt-d aome unprii ci,.! d ( er.-oi. to get up an arnrte 01 the Mi)i4 j na ne. and in eveiv outward appfararrr-e. perfectly mt- ! lar he ta'1 i a r-erf rt fa- nn!e 1 f ntv o-n. Th j -n' critr w n!d I at.ve notiflns :rch ha-ene . hut ! j oh: fed li do . t 1 t W-ii ur rter urein thei' fnard, at ' the h.i'tv le of iht a t'cle i well calcu a'ed to rtecete I B carefm to look that Itie imeof Jul Htil heWlU- : lane 1. ji i,i:s Il.tl t L, ! JO f:ii.ift a'reet. I'hl'adeiphta. Ff rsaic .a Hi.1.!'ii by F. K. S: ia, A-es.

1