Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 2, Number 29, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 13 January 1872 — Page 3
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[Frein the Golden Age.] DRIFTING,, BY Ittim A. BK9SD1CT.
1TX
We are out together on Lite's sweet sea, Bat a hungry paiu is bard In my heart, Por I know, beloved, 1 know It mast be,
We are drifting farther and fkrther apart. O I clasp my oars, and I strive to stay Th«* outward sweep of my fragile bark, But the tide Is high, and I float away
Over the billow*— Into the dark Is It an hour, or tail a year
Since iindi-r the heaven of stars we stood And yon whispered: "Though it m»y not beoKar
To yoor faith, my Isabel, Qod is good."
I* it an hour, or Is It a year? The words fell alow from your quivering lips, And I marveled mucb tf ycra knew I was near
The terrible gloom of the Maul's eclipse!
I call to you now! Have y« whimperings bland, And soothlngest balm for this hope's decay Would you dare to say that our Father's hand
Is bearing ray barque from your own Hwajf Nav, nay! 'tis nly the pitiless winds
Dropi out ot the clouds of our dmiiny Only the tt-rape*t of Kate that brings, Tbi* weariest wailing you and me!
S»'ll, still I am drifting away, away, Nearer and nuarer the shipwrecking rocks! Can 1 calm tny spirit enouuh to pray
In the heart of the horrible thundershocks?
Is licuveu above me? Is God still there? I HI but the bl ick of a bending cloud, An.l the fact of starlet—tar and fair, (.'old In Its calm ne«M,ttuU white HS a shroud.
Ah me! for my bark by the storm is driven! Will nuver a calm come over the sea?
4'
Will U'*ver tti»' sun shine up In heaven A ml -.wcct wind carry me back to thee?
Aye! for a voice's tenderest tone Steals Into the soul of my solitude:' 'fJo.ru hand is Ir-arilnx you. weary one,
Though you will not see it—and God Is good."
.'s
[From the Cincinnati Commercial.] OLD NEW YORK.
Colt'tn Speculation and a Race to Beat
the Mails—The Ingratitude of a Rich Man.
Tho cotton business furnished for
many yearn a tempting field of speoulation, and that oftentimes a moat profitable one. Take, for example, the arrival of the "Livorpool Liner," the 8t. j, Andrews, on Christinas eve of 1834.
She brought int. Uigence of an nnexpooled advance in the price of cotton. Old Nat Prime and Stephen Whitney received the new that night. They had re.iaon to believe that no one else Knew It. But twelve hours' time would aproad it abroad ou the winds, und what was lo be done muBt be done quickly. Letters of credit for fl.uOO.OOO wore proptred in the parlor of No. 1 I {road
proptred Iway. and Walter Barrett was ordered to leave Christmas morning for Now Orleans, by way of Wheeling, in order to outstrip the great Southern mail. The orders were to buy cotton its long as their was a bale in first bands in the city, and Barrett was told to spare no expense in order to beat the mail. It was now 11 at night. The letters were written, the credits arranged, the orders given, and Barrett all in .^readiness to start, when it was dlBCOvereil that no one had provided the "needful" lor expenses of the Journey.
All business places were cl- sed. It would not do to apply to a bank .cash'ier, least the secret should leak oat.
Mr. Prime wrote out
A
check and went
^with it up to the City Hotel: "Ilave you any money on hand, Mr. Wlllard -T» "How much, Mr. Prime, do you
f,
Wtaml in need of?" "One thousand dollars. You can't
M*!oash
my check on Christmas, but if you jan get along for one day without the money you will oblige me." "All right, Mr. Prime!" and Wlllard
j,counted out the money, handed It to Prime, who, taking it back to Number 1, immediately dismissed Barrett, with orders to embark at six o'clock Christmas morning on the steamboat for Amboy. it was a sharp race. The mails, which ,,, undoubtedly contained the intelligence bv lotters direct, bad twelve hours the start. In those days stage coaohing was at Its best. Oonneotlon with steam- *,,/• boats were almost sure to be made. To hasten lorward the Great Mail was the flrat duty of contractors. Oonseqnentlv it was no easy thing Walter Barrett had to do. But he was a wide-awake .'II boy, and what with bribing stago-driv-v*?«ra, hiring private teams, and touching the »Urns of steamboat captains hands with gold, he reached Bishop's
Hotel, at New Orleans, in eleven days Mfl-oin Now York. Before night one hundred thousand bales of cotton had tri been purchased at from twelve to thir^.^teon eeuts per pound. Two days'af* "terward, upon the arrival of the mall, ^that Bame cotton advanced in price lfcor profits, divided
morn than 930 a bale which were very large, were bot ween irr©tt A Co, and Hagan ft Co., of New Orleans^and Prime «fc Whiting, «of Now York. Barrett, for his success, received tue profits of 200 bales.
Old "Nat Prltne,"long senior partner of the firm of Prime, Ward fcKlng, was ,a superior man. Thick and short In bodv, stumpy in logs, obese In ftwe and ^neclc, he was, nevertheless acute in his and wonderfully shrewd ins. In early life he had been coachtuan to "Billy Oray," the groat Breton merchant seventy years ®£ago. Mr. Gray had loaned him a small -$suin of money with which to ooinuieuce the brokerage easiness In a small way. 'Tho ex-co ichmatt shaved notes, andgot on bravely. He was one day Invited to a dinuer party, where, among the other 'guettU), was a planter from Georgia.
•SIJBCK, 11 r? jpreoeptions, iu his bargali been coach tut
The oouversation turned upon the beet mode of investing money. Mr. Prime took part in the conversation, and after giving his financial views, added: "If I had 96,000 of spare oasb I could
quadruple it In a year.'' "Bat what security could you give for return of the loan
Mr* Crime was considered,- the richest man in the city, and yet no.oM rated his property above lion. At that time John Jacob alone was set that sunn
ftaws.
V*
ly the word of an honest man," Prime. ifh the frankness and
app* the pl tho in booaiM
Incerity of the young broker, the next dav loaned him judiciously used, of profit in h\s oper-
attorn, at the end of thi. the soale* lamed. rich and tb« planter -his need ihe latter •^flriead.
whiohtiWl Will est." •What security fjMd IMaw. •ty eroninf ip-
ed with Interest As lime passed broker became rrassed. In his old
he said "at
man." repll-
""Th it won't ao in Wall street," refined the broker, and, declined to grant the loan, turned
M*V.
The
planter became bankrupt. Mr. Prime owne and lived In the ^house standing at the eomor Bsoadway and Battery Piaee. Uia eona and dauvhters inter-marrled with the nret families of New York. Forty years
a in})Astor
down as
worth %bov*
1 'ALOES
DOMES TI04 TED VI
Th«Kansas Pacific Railroad has made a proposition to the Government which may result in-a series of experiments teniling toward the utilisation of boffu loesi The proposition ia, that the Government shall join the oompany in providing enormous "corrals on the reserve lahda, fencing and ditching so that barriers, impassable to the buffo loes, should enclose large tracts in fa vorakle localities. Into these the herds will be driven at the proper season, and used as shall be deemed best that Is to say, killed for their meat and hides, or kept and permitted to breed, inuch as .domestic cuttle are kept in Ten*. Some experiments have beeu tried in crossing the buffalo with domestic cattle, una the result is highly satisfactory, a breed of animals being produced which retains many of the valuable properties of both breeds. The ani mala are large and strong, the chief objection to them being that no ordinary fence stops them for a moment, and that they love the watei so much that they will swim and sport In It even when it is lull of llouting ice. We have heard of a cow and calf whose love for athletic exercise was such that they would jump from a bank ten feet high into deep water, when there was an easy path close at hand. These personal peculiarities are draw-backs to the introduction of buffalo-blood into the veins of family pets but, on the •ther hand, when properly cared for, these animals make most delicious beef, and their hides, when soft-tanned, are its inuch superior to the bnffalorobeof commerce as wool is to shoddy. The present writer saw the pelt of the amphibious cow mentioned above. It was much larger than any buffalo-robe which he ever saw before, was covered with a mat of solt, short, curly, brown h-iir, there being none of the long, shaggy hair ordinarily seen. It is thus seen that there are advantages, as well as disadvantages, in*the proposed domestication but it is beyond questiou that, if any use can be made of the vast herds of wild buffaloes, a valuable addition may be made to the wealth of stock laruiers.
IIA BITS OF THE RA T.
The rapid spread of the rat is owing to the boldness with which he lollows man and his commissariat wherever he goes.
Almost every thip that leaves port lor along voyage, takes its rats as regularly as its crew, and by this means "your traveled rat" has become by no means a rarity. He may land at some Asiatic port, or again take passage for a strange country, perhaps ending his voyage in some uninhabited island where the ship touches for water.
If no more convenient passage between ship and shore presents itself, he hesitates not to swim, making his entrance to or exit from the ship ty means of the iron cable by which the ship is moored. For the prevention of this, sailors are in the habit of stopping up the hawser-boles, or running the cable through a birch broom, which eflectually prevents their entrance. hey long as the cargo lasts, provided
en once on board they are secure
they can command the great necessarv —water. When this is well guarded, and no rain enables them to drink upoa deck, they are sometimes reduced to such straits as to attack the spirit casks, and get so drunk as to be unable to get home.
It seems strange that an animal so sagacious In pursuit of food, should possess so scanty a cerebral development as the rat. So cunning is he that his most common tricks are sometimes received ns mere fables.
Such is the account given of their way of stealing eggs: One lying his back grasping the egg with nlsforelauli
his back
Ey
aws an9 the other hauling him away the tail. But it is said that they will carry eggs from the bottom to the top of the house, lifting them up from stair to stair, one rat standing on bis hind-legs and pushing them up, and the other lifting them with bis fore-
The trick of extricating oil
rom Florence casks, by dipping in theirtalls, Is well known. -w» -i-£- 4
VINOS FOR OLD AGE.'
No one denies that it is wise to make provision for old age, but we are not at all agreed as to the kind of provision it is best to lay in. Certaiuly we shall want a little money, for a destitute old rpan is indeed a sorry sight yes, save money by all means. But an old man ueeds just that particular kind of ,h which young men are most
strengtl apt to waste. Many a foolish young fellow will throw -away on a holiday a
iS
oertain amouut of nervous energy which he will never feel the want of until he Is seventy, and then how mucb he will want it! It is curious, but true, that a bottle of champagne at twenty will Intensity the rheumatism at threescore. It is a fact that overtasking the eyes at fourteen may necessitate the aid of spectacles at forty instead of sixty. We advise our young readers to be saving of health for their old age, for the maxim holds good in regara so health as to money—"Waste not, want not." It is the greatest mistake to suppose that violation of the laws of health oan escape its penalty. Nature forgives no sin, ne error she lets off the offender tor fifty years sometimes, but she oatches him at last, and infiioU the punishment just when, just where, and just how he feels It most. Save up Tor age, bot save knowledge save the reooileetion of good and noble deeds, innocent pleasures, and pure thoughts aave friends save love. Save rieb stores ol that kind of wealth which time oanhot diminish nor death take away.
BE JABBBS HB CAN'T VOTE.—The Pennsylvania Railroad Company have been using fbr several years a machine fbr grading and ditching by ateaui, which Is described as follows: "This contrivance is named, fbr abort, the •steam Irishman,' and the hillsides crumble before it at a wonderful rate. The machine resembles a small coal railwav locomotive. It is propelled by «rv
QEO. D. ARNOLD, 7
rail-
steam,'and placed on a temporary rai road, and naa two arms and
1VTO)
a large
ecoop-shov^l prelecting In front of the
engine. When set opposite arising in the ground end operated, it levels and
Sepoeiting
it it- with inter*
givef" ask-
athers up the earth, at the same time it on the dump-cars. It ia said the 'irishman' can do the work of one hundred men, and will fill twelve oar* per honr. The price of auch a inachtne ta nearly tea thousand dollars." «. a-* 1
Ox the 10th nil., in New Orleans, while the circus of one John Robinson was parading in the streets, a dray collided with a car on the top pf which was a royal tiger. The animal was eo greatly frightened by the accident that he ruptured a blood-vessel and died In a few minutes.
^EkR^HAUTK SATURDAY KVi&Nl^ii!MAliZSA&V^R^!i3jh'§^i.
is (.ft !«MUUdN PAT. I Human flit, to use a doolt expreeeion. ia bonaed fuel. It constitutes a hoard of combustible material, upon whioh the owner may draw whenever hiaaupplies are intercepted. Should any voluminous gentleman be pot upon short commons, or, worse siill, upon no commons at all this reserve rend would be silently invaded* and day by dai the sufferer would dwindle down unti reduced to an affecting state of attenu ation. Let all plump persons therefore rejoice. We offer them our hevrty, perhaps somewhat enviouSr oongratu lations. Ttiey, at any rate, are prepared to stand a long aiege from cold. Blest with such depots of fuel In their own frames, they are entitled to crow over the spare. Cassius-like Agures in which no bountiful provision has been made for thn season of privation. They, too, can afford to lavish their caloric when lankier mortals have none to sport. Partly in jeat, but partly in earnest, a military writer mentions a corpulent soldier who threw out so much beat that his comrades contended for the pleasure of lying near him while bivouacking in the field. It is even playfully alleged that some of them would come to warm their hand over him and it was certain that no uian in the army could dry up a puddle by force oi natural caloric with more oelerity than this portly hero. Is there not something positively benevolent in obesity? Under such circumstances, who would not wish to be phllanthroplcally fat itei
THE USE OF EARTHQUAKES.
The usefulness of earthquakes, to which one of the essays in this volume is devoted, was a favorite subject with he late Sir John Herscbel. Were it not for the changes iu the earth's crust which are constantly being effected by the action of subterranean forces, of which the earthquake is the most active manifestation, there can be no doubt that the action ot the sea beating upon the land, together with the denuding power of rain, would inevitably cover the entire earth with one vast ocean. "Had the primeval world been constructed as it now exists," says Sir John Herscbel, "time enough has elapsed, and force enough directed to that end has been in activity, to
.U-
TRAINS
1'
Clock*, Watches mnd J#teDlry.n
VANSVILLE,
E
iBAnub cmr
have
long ago destroyed every vestige of land."
Mr. Proctor shows most clearly the beneficent manner in which the restorative action of the earth's subterranean forces is arranged. Of course, every upheaval of the surface must be either accompanied or followed by a depression elsewhere. "On a comparison of the various effects, ... it has been found that the forces of upheaval act (on the whole) more powerfully under continents, and especially under the shore-lines of continents, while the forces of depression act most powerfully (on the whole) under the bed ef the ocean. It seems as if Nature had provided against the inroads of the ocean by seating the earth's upheaving forces just where they are moat wanted."
THE worst Coughs yield, as if by magic, to the wonderful curative powers of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. 597
163 Main Street 1 4
SELLS
Clocks, Watches,
And Jewelry,
AS LOW AS ANY OTHER HOUSE IN THE CITY.
1
SPECIAL ATTENTION GIVEN TO 'REPAIRING
'•IT
'22-tf
1
Hi
TERRE-HAUTE & CHICAGO RAIL lflP AY. *i ijj- '*1 •...,. I 7
LIAVI TBRRK-HAUTK. -,®
Accommodation
Express and Mall 4:15 p. M. TRAINS ARIUVR AT TKRKK-HAUTK. Express and Mail 9r45 A. x. Accommodatio .8:*) p.
OAL.
A
•.-a***:
BLOCK, IEELE1TILLR,. SUGAR CREEK,
ANTHRACITE,
ALL GOOD.
Bartlett Company,
ksskls't M«r»,
lA-3m Sixth Street.
N.
ANDREWS, DKAXaVRYW BOOTS AND SHOES,
Xm*
141 MR MMrt,
Snath ride, between Sth and 9th stuUa, Manufactures of all kinds—rspairinp pe«ly done. l&aa.
i^lLARIDGK, 4 &•:* -rf 4
1 4.
WALNUT 8TRKET, Near Market H«
LEO ANT and Colored PrtnOnt a specialty at the Tam-Hsaui TbenMwt nonpdMt workmen he city. Everything guaranteed Mti ry, 1«3 Main streeC O. J.
Smith A Cow
PLANING .MILLS,.
CLIFT ft WILLIAMS,
Manofkotnrers of
Sashr Doors, Blinds,
WINDOW
A
MOULDING BRACKETS
STAIR RAILING, BALLUSTERS,***
Newell Posts, Flooring, Siding,
)J* Andall-deseriptionsof J.
**'FINISHING LUMBER. •n fi w'
"ft
Wholesale and Retail dealers in
Pine Lumber, Lath & Shingles,
tr: slate Roofing,
AND ROOFING FELT.
I
Custom Sawing, Planing and Wood Turning done to order. All work warranted.
Or. Ninth A Mulberry Streets.
»-tf.
RT EMPORIUM
And Music Store,
R. GAGGr
.n
No. 01 Main St.beilSd and 1th.
m*
PIC1URE8, FRAMES,
Bavk Gleves, Shaw Is, u4 VhIm
White Goods, Shirts, &c.. 140 Main St., V*
TXRREHA VTM, IVD.
Exclusive Agents for all Piece Goods mad* by the Vigo Woolen Mills. r,, Orders promptly attended to. »tf
JAS. B. TVBHIR.
NEW
.6:10 A. ME.
•f »»«H- ?lwn
K.
The following Important connections are made alDanville, Illinois vis: With the Chicago, Danville
Vlncennes
Railway for Chicago and the Northwest. With the Indianapolis, Bloomlngton and Western Railway East, for Covington and Orawfordsvtlle and West, for Champaign, Urbana, Bloomlngton, Peoria, Rock Island, Burlington, and Omaha, without change of cars from Danville. RWlth the Toledo, Wabash and Western all way East, for Attica, Lafayette, Port Wayne and Toledo and West, for folono, Decatur, SprltiKfleld, Jacksonville, Keokok, Qulncy, Hannibal, St Joseph and Kansas City, without change of ears from Danville. 21-tf" J08. COLLETT, Sopt.
JSAAC BALL,
4
C. *CJOakcy,!jAgcnt,
I
s-'.-t
.LOOKING GLASSES.
ti ARTISTS' MATERIALS,^.., Hi I MUSICAL ISTRUMENT& it«'
AND
P4etwr« rnmlDi dssc tm erder Low Prlfes. 47-tf
trRiAH fimm. BUSH A HAVKKS. JtOBEKT OKDUKS. "JJ JEFFERS & CO.T
Gommissi Merchants
And Wholes|)e Dealers In
Staple uid Fancy
N O I O N S
W. B. (HILLIT*. Vt rf fH
FIRM
TURNER &SHILLIT0
-r- SUCCESSORS TO Turner A Buntln.
V.
B. Shilllto, having pnrchased the interest of T. C. Buntln In the firm of Turner A Buntln, we have formed a copartnership nnder the name and style of Turner
A
llto, and will oontinue the^
UNDERTAKER^
A ad Eaahalaa«r af the Dead,
Is prepared to execute all orders In his line with neatness and dispatch, eoroer of Third and Cherry streets, Terre-Haute. fift-tf
WM. u. aajaa. x. B. runt.
ARR A YEAKLE.
I) .{ !•«..
'SOME"
PAINTERS,
mi g|rMhe«.' Mala OhAa, DEALERS IICf
Paints, Oil and Glass. ...
Specialties
1!,
DOOR FRAMES,
A
il#The
I
-ia
ipp-,
Shil
FAMILY GROCERY
AND i»,
General Produce Business, AT THE OLD STAND. Our stock Is tall and oar prlesa shall be as low as the lowest. We would be pleased to have on*- old fl lendr call and see ns as well aa new ones. JAMEM H. TURNKR,
WM. B. 8HILLJTO.
tt-tt. Oor. Main A Seventh streets.
"JJNION CHRISTIAN
VLT0ELL, KIPLEY & DEMING'S
FOR THE
s, J»
SWANSDOWN SCARFS, Latest Thing (Mi,,
Nguq of 8UU Searf*, *.
It roc he Cashmere Scarfs, j.
.-*****•• 4-
Ha perk LJOBS Telvcta fbr Naatlrs, Haa4aoa« Bilk Plaakea, MMk Beam, and Fancy Styles in Cloakinga, a pattern -of which would be a a^bstantial Christmas Present. »'m *.»* i-»
HILL DO WELL TO .^1
a a E an &
Lace p,nd Linen CdfUfi*#,
LACE AND CAMBRIC HANDKERCHIEFS,
I" Kre«t variety and very cheap. j-,
Magnflicent Black Silks, Colored Silks, And Iri^iJ^opUi^, jj,Patterns.
A Great Variety of New Dress Goods,
FASHION ABLE CLOTHSHADES for Ladies and Beautiful Plaids for Chlldna 1 4 1~S tarn'j iu. _1 SJ ffed!.. '. ,.S" .. .»{. ha
GREATLY lolJCED PRICES ON HEAVY FABRICS, —Sd
,,-i
be found in Santa Claus' illimitable assortment.
-it-J
'ft
,mth
In addition, we have a complete stock of Muallns, Prints, Flannels, Blankets, Oassimeres, Jeans, and other staple articles that are in constant demand.
TUELL, RIPLEY & DEMING
"COR. MAIN AND FIFTH STREETS,
Middle Room, Opera House Building.
•TOW I- *W 0 4
We Have the Largest and Best Stock
Clothing for Men, Boys and Children in the State, the handsomest selection of Furnislnng Goods of any house in the city, and pricea lower than any other. Our motto is to
Deal Fairly with all, and Treat all Alike." The prices are marked in plain Agnrea on the ticket of each garment, consequently any child can buy of us aa cheap as the best judge of goods. 0
Our Merchant Tailoring Department
Is well stocked with seasonable goods, and Mr. W. C. Miller, late of the Arm of Grover A Miller, is ever ready to give perfect hts to all. «*-.Shirts Made to Order. -**«t
CALL AND SEE VS.
COLLEGE!
Herom. SnlliTan Connty, Ind.
The Winter Term of this flourishing Institution will commence December IStk, 1871,
i.
At 10 o'clock, and will continue twelve weeks. Clane will be formed in Orthasraphjr.
BcallsK, Uewrafky.AmkiMlle,
The various brafiehes of Mathematics, the Natural Bciences, Latin, Ureek, French. German, all the higher branches of a fall and thorough College Coarse, will be taught aa laid down in the Oouraea of Study in oor at a an a
Ladies pursue the wme courses of study, are subject to the wme regulations, enjoy the same privileges, and receive the same honors as gentlemen.
RXNSMBB. -A.
The necesMry expense of obtaining an education at Merom does not exceed two hundred dollars a year.
Taltlea, per Tens.
In the Academic Departmeut i—J I 00 In the Classical Department 8 00 In theHelentftJe Department .. 8 00 In each Department, Incidentals 3 40 Instruction* on Piano, extra 10 08 Use of Pt&no, «ne hour each d»j 3 00
InstrucUkos in Vocal Music, gratis.
Both ladies and gentlemen will And good boarding, with furnished rooms, In privet* temiiiea, for 83J00 p« week. Some bean), themselves fbr shout 12.00 bemselves fbr anoutizeo per week.
Pof'efreulajiLor anyfurfhw iuformatlaa, addnas TUOMAB HOLMBBb PMl Merom, Ind., Aug. 3,1871. t-tf
..***•
S I
H1JDMON BAY SABLE, HIINK, SEAL, SIBERIA* SQUIRREL,
ALASKA SABLE, ALASKA MINK, BROWN AMD BLACK COMET, f,
Also, a a a
4
We are selling these goods very oheap and purchasers should exaotee onr stock before buying, s- .. -j ft rt, -w. «i
SHAWLS!
Paisley and Wool Shawls la great variety, inclading all the New Dealfan.
.... Terre-Baute, Ind.
OElsTTLEMEU
WAHTIKQ TO BUT GOOD ARTICLES is
In ReadyJMade CHothing,
I
"OWN*
1
,-*,** H'
*•'x .•£ $ tit.* A ajm
......_
1 t.
j'u Tyeooa Reps fbr Wrappers, at SOe per yard. Ladles* Balaaoral aad Fell Skirts, from 75« to §9.75 eack. Striped Flaanels of flao qaallty flbr darlkaldls.
Olores la great variety aad Stylisk Pattern*. Llnea Damask and Tarkey Bed Tabling, ent Paliim as desired. dee-*
above mentioned articles are aome of the most usefal and deairabla to
1
Mm
•?.-
ERLANGER & CO.,
Original One-Price Clothiers & Fashionable Merchant Tailors, 17-t/ IHMIs 0per» ••aa.
JAS. SIATB.
SKATH
Jf &
,\
/I
1
/. a.]
YIQO FOUNDRY
4
:.v
AND-51
x.|
TERRE-HA U7M
Car Works,
A
HAGRR, Paonlk, JManufacturer* of 2
Cars and Car Wheels,!
Of all kinds.
-i ,,
A I N E
AND HEAVY CASTINGS.! %~M[
1
Bigliasi prios paid for OsstlBcrap iron. v, |, 5
.fo':
WORKS OW CANAL, _*
Main aad Ohio Sis.
OMDMBA .IOLIVITMD. MATH A HA61
