Vincennes Gazette, Volume 3, Number 35, Vincennes, Knox County, 1 February 1834 — Page 1
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VINCSNN2S GASBTTE, Ii Pm'nts'.cd firry nturdrti;,
V l-
Terms vb if pn id utirincr ti e j ear. '. ii n;u.i "mi alv;iire. .V-J 00, is iit :ii during the year. l i! . tor ?i month. F i-vrs di-ot.,t);U!'(l(M.!v at tin option of t';e
- ,T white arrearage n (inc.
n a man standin right between you and as they ltept him there, he would go along
'i n
s l I il-
the pe oj.de; what 1 am goin to say aint calcu
lated to make any on you change your opinion. o mufh as to make you know mine; you hive ptetl y much all on you had your turn, and now comes my turn ; if any thing I s;iv has sharp comers and scrapes the skin a little, it is because 1 hnint had time to (ile the edges smooth. I'll give you my notions pretty much as you get hread from the Bakers, and leave you to slice it
1 l I !., ....... ......
.'v.-!t.!.Mn:nmakiii.n.-!:j.nrcr.rlpss r cn,,n 11 :1S ""V 8,1,1 -v "u ' V." u.,r,-i.-j !hc. t i s f r on dot'ar, and every man may hutter his own slice jist - '.v. .-nt-lV every saast rn M insertion ;! tn rdo:ie his fancv: that aint KiV business
j so much as it is hisn. H I Wu ro nif !ioo tinf nnlv In flV Oil SO!HH
''d' , J r-ririrtti nut nl I rouble. I)llt
i li.e it.Kiut t price. Jcli i rt-.i la v m - . J ., , , 1 tfo ste how it ni into trouble; and ! am
!g'iin to ay a little on both pints Whet i chirnhly smokes at the rongeend with t!ic win I at north east, some folk may
SALT YOl'Nc; ( OH. j content themselves with openm windows Br.v.vn, ,f tl.i- vicinity. comm-inic-it".' I an J doors, to let the smoke out, but my
r.n.i;: on io u-, in conversation ro-i notion i 'uHt the satesl plan is to see imo
!hp cause on't, and correct it; so that the thimbly w ill only smoke at the right eend, let the wnifl blow any way. Now there i a lew tilings we must look into a little, and w hen we well know more about cm, and I am goin to examine What kind of niitur the batik of the United State laly i". Whether its nature is to do good or evil to the country, and then wiud up with Matters and things in general. Twenty J eats ago the country wa in trouble, and fill'd up with all kinds of bank paper nigh upon as bad as old Continen
tal ami a good deal was a little worse
..ilea arin
f-.rc.lv. w!'1 he
mei-t; in tl.o f trio ratio.
of pro-!:rr. r.? are i.i-d
I t-t-; . C' in .ivmi'iit for
r.tr
f.ai.f'.v Ind.l wsdi la:a, i' regard to ii: ip cf salt ia n'i irii t- ; nt mvny in lhp Inil;:. wluth i;:;-.) t int ' "t -a.i , to t;u- public, lie spiled tnat ho r- ( cii-.! last year a quantity of corn, v.hieh h- in ! j.ii cha-r I, in so wkI a st o that e was i-ppa .:Mi e it would spral He. rei'uunberfi.1 tn.it it v;i ;i cninno:i practice in IVun'vU :nia. win U liiyuas pat away s.unefthnt J in,,or n t lii iy uire, to sprinkle saJt on it, aa.'t that -".'h hay generally kept well, r.nd tiiat lior?e-i .md cattle were ven fond of it; I-tt th. refore i i-icn !e l to fry t!i experiment on liHcorn. IIh actordinJy, as his corn was thrown in a ii;' on h larsre tlonr, s;irinklet it witii s ill. n-O!: ir tn a half a bushel ti a hu-h-c t ol s l to five or frix hundred bushels of corn. T;e c ;rn kepi welt, never beeai:i musty, and r'W'T h vvt ".uy we-vol in it. Mr. I. still had of ...... .....ti 1.. , rw i ii II 1 lr ! t -i t Itlic tt
lion to us. aad he stated liru the bread wind, j H" any body amt old enuf to remember
i' then made so v.veel and ;ood. that it was esteem. J piett rable to that made of new corn. He iii-o si t',j that !.e was not under tli" necessity of jur. Uasiiiir any fodder for his working ei-nl i-t winter, th" fed upon the husk1 of thi" corn si lYce'v; and he a ! led that they ket?t in rtel e'it oner. Mr. 15. was so well ph ased wntti tiie eperim:nt, that he is puttnu u; all las corn tin 3 ear in tlir cume manner, udn rt ).l7i hah" a t adn 1 of salt to five hundred bt:ite!a ei ojrn winch tie thinks is en n.h. Ala Intel.
From tap .V; w L . Ai'i' farmer. poi'A ivi as roou i on masi:s. An hi?!) Aner on husbandry, whose name is Martin D ". le. and who;e woiks were published
ia I Viblm in !.', has the fol.owinj; remarks:
-V.!h r
rrcom:a-Mi
t to potiitoe-fer diiiir for lior-es, I
that time, and wants to see what kind ot
money I mean, let him go to the Treasury, and Mr. Taney can show him nigh a million and a half of dollars, not worth the cost of the aper and ink used every year in m akin a rejort on't but this is otdy a drop compar'd to what would be now there of the same kind of stutTil it hadn't been for the bank of the United States. All our wise folks of that day s aid we must have a Bank of the United States, and a good big one One strong enuf to do the work well, and to clear out all this trash and so thi Bank was made, and the first thing was, as there was a very little rale money in the country, the Bank, went
I it from an experience oi some j and bo't a good jag oirt in Kurop, and went
jc.ir-j. My bursts ere old (one oi thm at least J (n u.ori heie clearin away jest as we do tweuty year, of n,c), bat they a , em high spir- j QU , , (he g
its an
i c.Mi naon, H orn hav ni' ever) evetiiia; af
I1!' wo; 'i '
ptl!
nriii;
the soiling La uiths, j
ptetty considerably; and that warn t the worse otf I for the Bank. The Govern-
bpnng
It was a irettv dirty job to do so I tell
t I ..... ... 1 . . . . . J .1,. I... I - . . I l.pAiinl. ..-till
w arn :,r is id1, was cut an u carricu i.n in,; , on , miki uie imumiumi 1 get uinmii nu .mi aha;, i n.t .--.p.Ny f boikd potato.-?, wrtrui,!jt without scralchin and smuttin its fmt'ers
r?i ii .r v t;;vea to thnn; butastiie au'.nonty 01 C'ut.ee;:. r.,q. ll. T of Wtirkmnti Hall, 4 o, ... t .nl ii ii fiiottlv inore lalnah'io than
mine on tin-subject, I shall quote the following' mCiA made the Bank agree to pay titteeri passaees Pom hisVVcricultnral Hints ' jtinn Ired thousand dollars tor the privilege 'It refines from five to six hours for a horse 0f ( jj,, ,1,5 W0lit an rnade it agree P to masticate a stone (fourteen pounds) ot hay, care o( ,he people's money in all while he ill eat a stone ol pot itoes in twenty J minute? or h-s The savin- of four hours for j P rts ot the country . an 1 to pay it here reet, is alone sui'icient to produce the greatest , and there wherever the Government told difference in health and condition of the animal e:n to, and to pav all the iietisions, and to
After great tailzie, also, a uorscwoiun ot umpi- (lo ev ,(jn ju t,)e money ,Vay without
and do his study, jest as he had done
and it warnt right to keep stoppin him every day on the road, and trying to make him try new plans. And with that, all our folks made a regular battle on the squire; some took away out of his waggon a part of the bags and boxes, and divided it round among the drivers of nlber waggons, who was mixed in the scuffle too. ai d away they crackM off with it. 3'mie undertook to cut the Squire's traces, they tlvugbi they wa only leather and rop-.? tracps; but the Squire was too deep for 'em. for his traces
waa chains kivered with leather, and so they split their jark-nive. Some went on a head and rolled stones in the road, and dug deep holes, and tried all they could to make the Squire upset, and threw stones and mud at him and hi horses; but the Squire kept on, his horses didn?t flinch, and as they had draggM the big waggon over worse road? in their day. they went along wi'hout accident. Well now it turn out that all the w aggons that drove 01T so with part of the Squire's load are io trouble, for the fust piece of rMiddy road, they all tfur k fast and there they are now. One wanls th other to give him a pull and a lilt; but they say thv all "ant lilting; the squire lias jet come up with 'em, and now they watit him to hitch on to 'em and drajr Vm all out together; but he says that's impossible, the most he can do is to take hack the load they took from hiwaggon, and then perhaps they can git out of the mud: but it is more than hi team can do, and he w ml run the rik of breakin his harness or injure his horses to drag 'em all out together Widl now that's just about the condition of things, and the longer they remain so, the wore it will be; the longer the horses and wag gons ktand knee and hup deep in mud, the less able they'll le p get out met And now Til letveeui there a spell, and we'll lake a look into the nulur of the
showin me how he managed it
If lie and water Now I know wp hrt nf in
was to fasten down the kiverscf them twoicverlastin new country to clear up yet;
in...,,. v.-j.j.t-, iviinrs iiil9 H In nis;anu it an honest industrious man can git a boat, and blow his bellesses a spell, he ! few hundred dollars lent to him, he can go would sma-h every thing for more than ! and buy a good many acres, and clear it fifty acres round Does any body want to up, and sell it to the'se very foreigners, know why he don't do it he has been who are all the while coming cut here to in a Steamboat as long now as the Hank's'; settle among us, and they pay fifty time3 been goin and hnintscaSded no body--but more for it than the land firtd co-t : and so he can do it m a mioit if he druses well ,nur folks go on borrowin, and can well afI'll tell you why he don't it aint his ti-jford to pay interest, and find theinseive tcrestnnd he don't own no more of thelin a few years with mom to lend too.
"u;u man squire niooie uoes 01 me uanKiAnd a? long as this business aoes on, I for
me owners 01 me ioai employ mm toione am willing to say to foreigners, as the nmuigp it because they knowin he under- j Cape Cod fisherman says to the fjsh, when
Marine ins uc.-mess ne Knows 11 neoiun i pe gets on the hook, and is puilm him in, watch oyer their interest they'd turn him "So lonir as you hold on one tend, I will
'h:i ami jist so ineownsct the ianu j t'other " Hut folks abroad who have would sarv e Squire Bi idle And that aint j mony to lend, tWt know our folks who nil. Capl. Bunker knows if he hurt any J go on new land; and a good many ou body with his boat he'd ruu a chance of j old land nother Hut they know' our hoittr. i.im-elf too be knows too that it Hank, and our Canals, and Haii-roade, i" the miriest of his o -tn rs not to have.aml we sell 'em the slock, and make 'era any accidents aboard any boat! tor if peo-: pay good premiums too; and our lolKscan pie git scalded in one Steamboat, they'll; ler,d their money to our farmers Hut it we keep clear ol all on Vm ami tho' somego on, and no. k down this Hank when its folks think Hanks aint like Steamboats .charter is out. and bring trouble on the can tell Yrj that in the main thing they ; country, foreigners sav, "Ah ! thet c trou aie exactly alike fur unless folks havejb'e there!" hark thpy come with their ot confidence in 'em and feel safe in 'em stock, and git their mouey and keep it: i . .. : 1. :.. 1... .... 1 . 1 ..11! 1 . ... . '
n;ey nun v -i n nwimi nni w nm uiey an ;ann an our prosperity is nock d in the
go on and ir.ei no accidents, they are
putty good property and the largest, and strongest, ,. a.; cleanest, and quietest, nd be-l managed "tt the most business. Now I think that's enuf about dangerous monopolies for a spell. Let u now see what the Hank is about, atid what wee've been about Deacon Goodenoti Has been in that Hank as one of its directors off and on ever since it was a Hank, and I have heard him say 0 times, (and he'9 a man to be de pe ruled on) he never heard a word about politics in it till about 4 years ago and it all earns from our senditi every year since that time, some rale politicians to help
the ot.he twenty directors to manage the
ed to take, warm food when he would not eat hay. 1 h ive at this tune in my works, horses, which were 1 nichased six years ago ot a farmer,
who wnj st liin? out his stock as worn out, aim 1 the lianli .... ..i.l!
chargin any thing for it to the Government. This was a pretty tuff b.irgan Pr
far all it got m return was to
Hank, and what it te.ill) i, for to hear some . Hit); - the first go off, the Deacon says, folks talk about it, one would think it w,i thoy thought best to keep quiet, and m ike a most shocking monger, and that it was no -stir about it; tor it was pretty much pretty much uothin else but Squito Bi die, tike fnvlia skunks in the cellar the hest when it is no more the Squtie th hi that1 w ay was to let 'em alone, if they'd keep big waggon is, not a grain more. Look there, and run the chance of their goin out at this long list of names well these are when they found there warnt no egs to the owners of the Hank here we see in'suck but when they undertook to cum the first place the nation owns one-filth, tip chamber ami smell about in all 'he and the rest is scattered round, as you see cubbords, it wa time to snub 'em and here, among an everlasting batch of folks ! then came trouble; and that's jit about all about this country, and some in forinjthe wav now; and the deacon says, and coaniries; and I am glad to st e on the lin J he is about right, that politicians in a Bank here old . i.hv.vs and old men, and trustees: are iist a bad as skunks in the cellar
of children, who haint got no parents livin
and all our ovn people, they put their money in the stock of tin Bank for safe keer.io.sr not to speculate and jest so
1 c
there aint one grain of difference
Some on you say we tlont want a Bank 7io:c-weII that may be so hut when I eot up this mornin it was plasrv chilly till
wutr me innocent toreigners, ana me nesi j ROt mv cn;U on.l0w I am warm and it on't is they have paid our f-dka a pretty m;iv Lur jont nee(, cotlt hut 1 think it
miiii piciumui 101 y 1101:41 u 1 vcii thes are the folks then that compose the
cf tittle value, and which are yet able to ! n;ive ih(? keepin of the money, and when ( their work vrith the hiM hone 1 have I think enm)en fVMt waflt t (he ,.; J!lk
tiiere is nuie thiuin 01 u:e me 01 vaiiiai'ir
atiimal b. ins; considerably prolonged hy this mode of fe.nhnsr; 1 have begun to mix an equal quantity of cut straw ami potatoes; racks are, a cor.ln.j; to this mode of feeding, as uuntces E.irv as tticy are produi live of waste, for to save trouble they are abvay filled; and what is not eaten t aiw n so tainted with the breath of the ant.ii.il as to he wasted.' Probably leamed iu mgoM, wurtzell, ami other roots, would be v iluahie as food for hordes.'"
Hank ISow hat way do they want this Hank inauiiffed? the business of the Bank is to loan mony, and is jest tor all the world like any rich man whose business is to loan out his mony h it his interest to
I dabble in politics or to let politicians dab
with bun? not an atom on't
I take my coat off I'll feel chilly agin
and am so certing of this i rvout make a trial on't. Some on you say the owners of this Hank haint got no right to re-charter they have hail it long enuf and its time now to have a new snuffle and cut well
Vr-mi t.c .Via- Far.. Duly Advertiser. .UAJOkl UOWXIXCi'S OFFICIAL COM:h;mcatio to thi: cabinkt.
might lend it out It took a goo i many vears afore the Hank got things to work smooth It was like a wappin big waggon tlmt wanted a good many horses to drag if, and as it had 1 valuable freight in tt, it wanted none but the best kind ol horses real Conestog.is and it warnt
every one who knew how to drive such a team The owners of this waggon tour.d that out for some of the first that the got came plagy nigh oversetting it So t rights they got Squire Biddle. 1 sup pose they thought that seem that the folks in Pennsvlvanv have the best and strong-
1. 1 1 .,ii.i.. 1 pii ,,.11 . , ...1...
t . 1 nidi miii un uuuuii nun i 11 icii uu any
to Willi nun: not an atom on 1. 1 never i. , ,
. r 1 1 . .1 . 1 ' no mis naiiK was cnariereu ror twemv knew one 1 your rale politicians who ever i . J ' t O'irj if h'id n rvnnd nuh Io he iota 11 n
? w I t V 1 U W g U U I llll lJliW.
c -uld pay his debts, and they amt the kind of tclk people like to deal with any way who have got nr.ony to loan--they know
?. j ;.r n.ni r.inc. in Ids letter of Decern
PrVrrh. aler mentioning' the fact ofhi! ,,orses 1,0,1 the wapgons, they
having read htsi-vvs on the subject ol
he Hank, and the Depositee, to the Cabi
t:ct, cniue I to send a copy of the. document to this paper for publication. A de I of some days occurred before we received it. This we undeistand, was
ought to know best how to guide 'em
Well, they made a pretty good guess that timefor ever since they told the Squire to lake the lines, they haint lot a linch pin or broke a strap; and there warnt no com plaints made agin him by the folks on the
would renew its charter it' it behaved well
and did its duty jist as a Congressman
....n 1 . 1 . . .1 . .no'' iiiiui iu A if ri, 1 1 tuinil ticuij that talkm politics, and gtttm things into, . f ' . . . . . send him to Congreis afrin it he behaves
nans Jcti luaiunri pui 1 y puiposcsi .11111
the way to pay interest nor principal no
ther, and politicians 111 a Bank are the ivorst folks in the world lor tiie owners ol the Honk, for the most on Vm haint got nionv of their own to lend, out they are
pi.igy ready to loan other folks' mony to!
brother politicians of the same party. No, no, a man who has got his raonv lo ui'd out (and itx jest so with a Hank)
want to see every body busy and mdustri
well and its a good way to keep folks strait and make 'em do their duty: but if we arc to nock this Hank down, and have a new shuffle and a new cut, then I say that them folk- who make money out of a ne of stock in the new Bank, ousht to pay the loss that all these old folks and young children will suffer hy nocking down the old Bank to say uothin about the innocent foreigners who put their
.mony in this Bank, tbink'n it was safe.
caue
I bv'a wih that the Cabinet might " ,wl or t,,e country. AH the other wag-
hive an opportunity to re examine the
--e, and a hope that they might unite in
opinion o!i thi thorny matter. Having waited for sonic ttuie for the accomplish
ment of this iaiportant object, the Mnjor
became convinced that the present Cabinet w t far from being a "I'ntt," and considered it usele?s to wait any longer, and he therefore fulfilled h;s undertaking by sending us tho important document alluded to. We recommend it to our readers
as one n the moet interesting exhibitions
goners liked the Squire amazingly; he was always ready to give 'em a lift when he found them in the mud, and whenever the got short of provender, the Squuc
, ! never refund to turn out some of his to
keep their horses from suffering. Every thing was going on better and better, ami every body said at home and abroad there warnt such a team in all creation Well, about four years ago, we began to pick a quarrel with the Squire, and its been goin
on every year pretty mucn alter tins tasti
Olid inrl miTirl iKir litisinoA :inil inCrP;lse-
' " J .i'.'i i.iiii'. 111. it i-u:iii'.3i ." t . . .11 .1 .1 .1 c .u .1 11 1 i.ix. I A'ia let me tel you another thing the their nrouertv. mr hn fhev will be at e . J
r . , . , . j to pay interest and principal too; they ilont like to see things all mixed up with
of the subject that has been presented to 1 ion. The first go off some of our folks
the public.
2I.YJOK WOWMXG'S OFFICIAL VWrAl. Head to the Cabinet, and majors, auditors, and undersecretaries, and sub-post m isters, and the rest of the Government, on the 2bih day of December, A. D 1333--and printed for the uce of all the ciii.en? from Downingville to
N?vv Orleans along the sea coa-t, and up the Mtsisipj.i and Missouri, and so down tiie L.ker,and across by the Crie Canal to Albany, and along by the midtile rout over New Jersey, Hcuiilvany, and M.trj land, to Washington and awiv agi'i to all parts of cre.-ttiou, and to every body .
CiiXEll L and Gentlemen of the Ca
wanted the Squire to change some ol his lea lin horses they taid the breed warnt right he ought to put on the lead some Albany trotters that thet were the best horses on the lead he could have The Squire didn't like to change he said the horses he had, knew the road as well as he did, and they wouldn't bolt nor kick tip, and when they came to up hill work he could depend on 'em. Then agin our folks wanted the Squire to change harness--they said they had new patient collars, and a horse could pull as much again with 'em as with the old
hxshiouM collais. Well the Squire didn't
like that notion nother S the rights they told the Squiie he mu-i give up the
lines; well that he wouldn't do lie said.
. 1 . . 1 . . - . 1 .
i and the rest on you heie piest'jt,' wiuiout oruers uom me uwiim me cou.po.-ir. the Government; I speak to you! tiin; they had appoiateU him, and to long
politics and people quarrellin and dipuUu, and when they do. they git their mony back iu their pockets agio as soon as they can, for they know that politics aint pro titable business. Then it comes to this, that if the Bank is what I have said it is fand its nothm
else,) it aint sucti a monster as some folks try to make U3 think it is, and instead ot heir a dangerous monster. I see and i know every body else must ee, who dont sqaitit at it, tut looks it si rail in the face that its natur is jest like the natur of any
man who has got pioperty in the country, and that is to have every thing go on in
harmony and with industry an l with hon
esty and accordin to law no jangles and
talkin politics in porter houses and bar rooms, hurtam for this man. and pulWn down that mau that kind of work dont clear up new lands nor plough up old ones, it dont keep ihe hammer goin, aad the wheels turnm; and dout pay interest nor principal nother.
But some on you say the Bank has too
much power, and that Squire Biddle mtght do a good deal of mischief if he would.
Well, there is my old friend, Capt. Eiihu
S. Bunker, of the steamboat President,
runnia twixt New York and Providence
he's got about sich another monster
there is no tellm what a "dangerous mono
poly" of power th at crittur's got in that
are Loat. 1 was loouin into 11 wueu 1
longer a Bank stands, and the older it gits, the better folks home and abroad like it people who have got mony to lend dont like changes aud particularly government changes. Would any on you like to lend folks mony in South Ameri
ca? and
could make a Bank that folks would have
any confidence in? 1 dont think they
could jist because they keep choppm
and changing every year
Will any on you say that it aint a good
thing for a country to make folks all about
think it is a safe one to lend monv to? amt good credit worth nothm?
Well, how does any man in trade git
credit, and make folks think him safe to
trust? Will he break up his stand every
head! We charterM this bank tor twen-
ty years; and so we do Canal Couipanies, and Hail Boad Companies; hut did we mean when the time was up, to nock 'em all up too, and 6ay tve don't want no Bank nor a Canal, nor a Hail Boad? It aint common honesty to say so, and I won't fchufV tie and cut with cu after that fashion: for make what 1 might by a new shuffle, I would be asham'd to look one of Uu se innocent foreigners in the fuce to say nothin of this long list of Widows, an i Orfans. and Trustees of Estates, and oh: f .ika many on 'em when they bought the Stock at a high premium, I suppose never thought about the charter, or how long it had to run but trusted to the Government. And now if you can chizzle them out of their property, as you will by puttindown this Bank, jest to get a new -r.rdfle and cot al a new one without turnir. as red as a beet when you meet em, I for one say I cau't and won't . And now I'm most done if I have trod on any one's toes, it aint so much my fault as hisen; for 1 tread the strait line, and tread ony on toes that stick out beyond the line, and that's too often the case with folks now-a day s in office.
I've tellcd you now pretty much my notions, and 1 tell you for the last time you have made a mistake, and that's nodisgrace to any man unless he tries to tick to it after he knows he has made it. If you don't know how to git the country out of the scrape you've got it in, the people will tc'l you pretty quick, or J aint no hand at guessin. I have now done my duty if the people don't dotheirnit ain mj fault. If they say my notions are right they'll act on em; if they eay they arc wrong, then things will go on as they now go, and 1 hope they won't git worse but that I won't promise. If things come to the worst, I shall suffer as little as any on em, for I haint got no wife and children to support and 1 am sorry for those who have, if things are to go as they now go,) I can cut my fodder pretty much any w here. But I love my country, ev'ry acre on't, and it goes agio my grain to see any part on't suffer. And J know all this sufferin comes from party politics that has driv all our wisest and best men out of oflice; aod now to keep together wants to git hold of the big waggon and all the money in it My dander is up, and I hest stop nmv for the more I think on't and the more I write about it, the more wrathy I git. So no more at present, From your fellow citizen, J. DOWNING, Major, Downingville Militia, 2d Brigade.
WO X D VAl Wit CLKE. Eleazer Chase ol this town, some seven or eip-ht ve.irs aco. in cutlmfr stone, hi-ok a
do y ou think them Governments j off a iecp of jr0Q) some o Wa il.-o li inL- Mint fnlbd ivnn rt h:il'pl . . . ...
tools that Hew into one ot his eyes, ana caused the loss of its sight. The steel re mained, which made the eye extremely susceptible of cold, and caused frequentlysevere inflammations, with great pain and suffering. Last winter and spring he si: I fered extremely, and serious fears were entertained by himself and friends that he would go off in a consumption. One al. ternalive alone presented itself, to prevent its fatal catastrophe; and that was. to have
year, and change his business, and try new jhig eye cutout the steel that remained plans? I say that aint the way; and no jn, continued to irritate to lhat degree, man ever profpered alter that fashion; and without hope from any other means, but when he finds things go well with him, uud fast declining, and continually toitur-
he hangs on; or else he haint got no wit ed by this direful malady, heat last came
in him. Now, my notion is, that none on us alone can make folks all about creation think we are safe folks to trust But all on us together can do so; and that is Ihe reason a good big Bank can manage this for us. Folks abroad know the Bank; and the Bank know us; and so we can manage ihings through the Bank better than we can alone.
Some on you say it aint right to pay in
to the conclusion to submit to the advice of his physician, and have this shocking operation performed. About this time a friend of his, told him of a remedy, which was, to apply to his eye a magnet and draw out the steel. One was procured of great power and applied the second lime of application the steel came out, and relieved his eye from the irritation that had been so very severe; and he is now well and about hi
et to foreigners that when we gitlusual avocations, and saved th dreadful
money from foreigners, they keep drain-
came on w:lh him a spell ago, and he ivagjm us of iateiest. Well, that ii all chalkl
operation of having his eye dug out
Fall Kiv. liih
