Vincennes Gazette, Volume 14, Number 7, Vincennes, Knox County, 18 July 1844 — Page 4
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'i : - -Ti i I I i-r: vi School of Christ. T.o o- is .i !, d on :uth bo,-un Si.; j.-fr ! by the H.uy Our; Iff t-t-:-: !,;- Moments aii to prove, The of dying love. C, .i.f, (-!ie, my friends wher'er ye be, ' iv, will viu go to M-tuio! with iiit! I'l.ii-t Jesus is my ma-'oTs i.auie, I' !a, deaf and dumb, ci.'ii.: bhi.i and ia::o, IT- ,-!i..ol hooks are 'he scriptmc true, His b'ss,;,- are f tev-r lit ov,I ! i s f-i hol.tr- O'.l-ht to ! o ,ij;ee !, IVr ifs a l! .ed school in Jed. My mtt-r leuns the bund to ee, 'i'luii (i::).' ye blind, the sci'Ojl i-, i.e.; M; t-o r hunis the lar.ie to walk: Me aisj U..IUS the dumb to talk, 'o ::i.t-:-r learns the ;'(.;' to hear. T..e:i co ne ve deaf an.l leo.l an ear I o! :nv in i-tvr' plea-d..l vuia'; He'd la ke yoiu mourning -.ul n . :ee. 1I ! a:::e tho .ejrit.i !iin to ; .ay, Tni-i! e ::ie, j w.iai.e, without i!e!.ty, He'll i halite vour t-.issue t pra'se hi- name, Ah.', ipi- i"i a1.;... til i.iv mister's lame. 1u,i br"hiea ..le.ti. who art: at sih "til, ii.l tako the li'"!i tor yuui rii'f, 'l'ii he.-t lor all to niiii.l t'.i.ar ' !; Who hic all earn i! j ys toisook. W't- i iv tht'o cirn il wrapo-is by, Wi-I; j:rai-f ear master till we dio, We-l! keep the straight ,v,, turrow roa!, 'i'l. il ':cA.Sto Jesus Chri?t eur l.or.l. When we have tl.nie with all bo!ow, Home to h kia.'dom we s!ia!i ao, And bv hi. a'.'.-j-revutlin prayi r, We'll rat:, t v wi'U'H.ao i ri thi-e fi.ii! tenements si: i!I die. AaJ then e.e ',i 1 y oar scho il books Iv,We llreija with ma!er Jo-ui then, (W uy to tiod! glory, Amen. l'ro:n the M . V. !u:idny Mercury. Short Patent Sermon. In a:corda;iee with a particalar req-jest I will disco jrse upon ti:e fallowing: When eve br.aht woe to ail mankind, Old Ad mi called her let'.- man; 15 ut when h woo'd with love so kin i, He then rononneed her ?('.'o-man; And now with folly md with iride Their husbandi' packets trimming. The ladies arc .i fall tt' whims That people call them ?;'("-men. My hearers there is cerlainlv woe enough in the world to bedaub the whol . : . - I I (right surtace ot soeiai nappines;, were 1: only evenly distributed, instead of being concentrated in snot.- but can it be that woman, lov. ly woman composed of the finest, the most brittle of mortal material is the mother of all this misery? No. Hve m ght have bet n called a ?.,.; mn bv imprudently causing A dim to partake of the forbidden fruit, ant! thereby bringing woe upon alt mankind; but the extent of ih it woe c.i 1 not reach beyond a single individual, who, in connection with herself, constituted t'u o ii-hr-le of the human race, at that period All ie evils tliat hi.ve since b -en saddled upon poor mort J.ty. hive h-.vn generated in llio-e stagnan", poo's of vice whi :ii are eo fre p.ienty allowed to coll?ct before the doors of inn icenee and irtue, by the idle and dissolute habits e f woman's supporter an 1 protector, M".:i. Th.ue a no d o :hl but Vr her rastiii a:i '. ; t.'i tear as lug hs o ,w'ei ri'" m her e ves, implored ; ;e ta'.'Mi agaul into the ark of b.r bus ban 1 atlectioni, when the cold rams of his w rath tit seeiul ?d upon Iter unprotected Load: and there1 is also no doubt, my hearers. b.U he fondly clasp1 1 her to his bosom with a renewed ardor of love, and le.de the remembrance of her folly lie forever banished from his bosom; for, w hen woman woes, the gravy will star: from the lender loin of m m's alf-ction. m spite of!,;:, vdf. She was then no hunger a 7" 1 '- man. 'planting paradise with the prickly briars of disc en out and woe but a c-jo-tnan, cu.lir.g tie ilow. connubial 1 leu's ''.iv appiness from ttie bowers of 1 C'lrdon. and weaving wreatus ot joy to T r irntsu ner own an. her husbaivi's h.-.me, whte.u so uteuy nau oetu m.me ueso.ate 1.1 l ! I J - 1 I been m.b bv the ruthless invasion of sin. My friends at the present day the female of our speciej may b? called trot man in s nne lew instances, viz: when, whale riding in the matrimonii wagon, site snatches the runs away from her better bigger half insists upon driving herself and. finally, after jolting an I j ostling over the rough toad of contention, and tunning care'essly upon the banks of extravagance, she gets upset in the ditch ef povertv spills her own happinrss and her hosban i's hopes upon the ground and is afterwards obliged to journey on foot, through the w.rhl, poor, penniless and uubefiien ltd. IShe may, also, be termed u-cv-man, w hen, in her younger days, ehp loses from the casket t f her heart thai richest and most costly of all gems, Virtue when the blaze of her beauty, glowing in the surrounding darkness of vice, and lightened by the find of art and strata erm. attracts the foolish and unw arv insects of lust to their inevitable destruction.! oven a the toga'-mo'': courts' and kisses ho f iul candle, by which it diC-s. 1 earnestly a hive n;v o trig male ft tends n t to
be allured by those lalse lights of iemm-j ine attraction, lest they are burnt before j they are aware of it, and their characters; become scorched furever. An ! you ye
voint'' lemales, w! ose pure bosoms are yet u;i:arnis!ieu by world y wickedness, i an I at the b '-ttotn of w hose hearts tlte sedi m e u t ef sin has not yet begun to settle J 1 devoutly implore you to keep yourselves unspotted Irom the leprosy of that vice w!:ich renders loathsome an 1 di-gu-ting whaicver :t touches, and sweeps its vie-; bv t:m!o an earlv t-.nd unoblo tomb: tor re-on co. sret, t:iit. when the disease is once tat-j ened up ri v on, von can no more shake it ;i than a eraiunj; raven can cure itself . hoo stT;ess hv u-.kmj; iio irhoc.nd i r Soerinan's lozenges. My respected hearers an individual of! the fair sex may be termed M'oo-man when no u.? lavs tier chaste personal and ment il beauties to attract, and exhibits her vir i. tuous smiles to woo and win the pure and unadulterated love of mat:. Then she is entitle 1 to ad the honor, the praise and the glory that belong t the exalted of her sex then is she a blight and glowing star in the galaxy of temmine lowliness then is she a llowcr of fragrance as well as of amy then is she a bird of sweetness of song as weif as elegance of plumage and iheo is she like a crimsoned-cheeked a ach, as delicious to the taste as she is beautiful to behold. Then is she wooman in the strictest sense of the word a hciug foi med to love and be loved jus: such a one as I should have planned had I ! een tho designer and architect of her magnificent structure; and I consider that Dame Natuie, when she first formed her hke, made a m st decided hit. My dear friends the. appellation. incn, can be justly applie i to those only, upon the quivering waters ofvvlnse minis, such hubbies as fancies, whims, chimeras, an 1 fool i s : i notions are continually forming and bursting. These form no inconsiderable portion ef the community ; for though women, in some few respects have as much or more solidity more bottom lati men yet, lor xvm most part, thev lack that general soundness of judgement, fiat phi.ospiiieul reasoning, and tnat cool calculating turn of mind which character ize the nobler, the hardier and the rougher sex. In iii3!)v particulars they are no i i i it-ss yielding m th-Mr opinions, less perse. veriiig, or nave a less iixeu determination ef purp 'sc than men; for when they once get crooked crotchet? in their heads, vu might as well undertake to draw a tooth witu a poor man s p. aster, as to think of extracting them therefrom by either force or persuasion. A woman whose brain is crowded with w him- whams, is like an old ien 'she goes she go-as it, on, when she stops she is stationary. Women, my friends, taken as a body, are more incline 1 to the marvellous more given to superstiti' n more general believers 'm witches, ghosts. hob goblins, appartious, signs and dreams and more prone to fall into the fashions, the foibles, and the follies of the day, than men; and it is for this reason that some one has had the ungailantry to stigmatize them as vhinimen. My dacr females I hopa that what 1 i -i i.i nave saiu may oe tne means -t causing you all to try to become ?ceo-men in its literal sense; and you, unmarried ladies you must woo with your heart3, if you would have others woo with their lips. Siememoer that you were all created to ecome affectionate wives and fond mother s- i but 'recollect, at the same time, that there are several millions more females than males in the world, anil th;.t s me of yon must, consequently, go down to the grave unw ooed, unwed. led and unkissed. Xevetheit-ss if you will but decorate your ercnnial blossoms ot vir tue don't put paint on your cheeks, mar flirt with a variety of beaux all you who are worthy of husbands, wull yet be fortunate eaoiiih to iind them, and he made py through life. So mote it !vd Dow. Jr. SJiouur of Slorus. It is stated, upon good authority, that the farm ef Mr. Kelly, in Venango township, was visited on Saturday las'.. with a very singular phenomen m. i n family w- r male po le portion of Mr. Kel in t.ie lie! booing corn, wht n stones commence 1 ladling around them, si) thick" and fast that they were compelled to seek : I'.'ly in a precipitate retreat. Tin v retired to the heuse, and whilst ihev wee sitting Kitchen three stones i-"5;! u the ceiling, o? -asem O) ; oou the boor apparently from One of tho young men ha ro to the suble, and the same scone w as prcseute j mere, eon aionday, 1.1 . V 1 the 'dldi ins'., th. same mysterious and r.naee .tmtab'.e phenomenon occurred again. Some of the stones weighed seven, ten nn.l some as highas fifteen pounds, and were of the ce-mnion slate and sand-s-uie. We have receive 1 our information irom a source on which we place the utmost reliir.ee. although the description ef 'die scene is very imp rf eet. We understand that ten or twelve persons of unimpeachable charaet r intend giving their all'; lavits to the public in corroboration of this report. 3La 'vi! ( Pa.) Gaittlc, A SiN-ii'LAR Sru. in-.. Col. Thomas lhllcl.ro wn. hte of Winihrop, Mass., committed suicide by hanging himself en Friday la?:. Col. F. was M years of age at the time of committing the melancholy deed, and was a man extensively known and univer-ally respected. He served in the revolution was I't miny years a member of the Massachusetts Senate, before the separation and subsequently for a long time represented the town of W:n;hrop in the Legislature ot that Sta'e. He was a member of the dun- rent el ooral college? which elected .hdVk-rson, Madicon, Monroe. L (J. Adam? and Harris-n.
Erom th N, O. Picayune, Prairie and Hlountaia Life. The Old Man of the Mountains. The world should be made acquainted with
scmie of the strange characters who have uurieu tnemselves away Irom civtiizaiion among the rocks of the West, There is one whimsical old genius who is noted particularly among the trapper tribe as the prince of qneer ones. He calls h':m?e!f iniiaai S. WlHians, 31. T., and he is most resoluttlv determined upliavin? th title initials (. T.M atways abixej to hn name. Fie is the oldest man in the mountain?, having fully
resolved to live and die there, and more can-;droll anecdotes are tuld ab ut !iim than
would till a pair of volumes of modern size. 31. T. is meant to signify 3Iatcr I rapper and the old man has just seized upon the whim of insistimr that this distinguishing mark shall on all occasions and under all circumstances be attached to his name. He chanced at one time to fall in:o a mortal quarrel with a Blackfoot Indian, and upon achieving advantage, he at once seized upon the red fellosv's scalp-lock. Ihil Williams' shouted tho Indian, whose whole knowledge in Ihighsh consisted in the capacity of pronouncing this singular old white, man's name. '"William 8. Williams, ' 31. T., if you please,' said the old man of the mountains. as he coolly darted the point of his knife around the scalp-leek and tore it off ! This extraordinary individual i3 now about llfiv-hve or sixty years of ao-p, and he has lived more than half his life in tiie mountains. He declares that he was never any where else, but it is remembered that lie was once a Methodist preacher in the State?, and it is known that he is an educated man. with a cr it ical knowledge of Oreek and" Latin. I5y ins own worth, he was 'roFled out of a thunder storm in the mountains,' for he found himself there and don't remember any thing else. He is quite certain lie is not human, and has strong persuasion that he was 'translated from the Great lear for some particular and especial purpose that is meant to be made known to him !ier?af;er.' lie was never known to wear a hat, but once in the winter, finding his heal cold, he shot a wolf, scalked the animal an i drew the warm skin on his own head! For all such eccentric things this old man is remarkable, bur, pehaps, the singularity of his character may.be better shown by relating an odd meeting that he once ! l..'l M r . . nau wnn a young ttbovv ires'i trom t! States. Williams was camping alone when the young man accidentally encountere him. . r r, r - i .i ti i , iium: friiu me o;u man in eoiuoquy, 'here comes another enormous fool of young rascai to crowd us here in the mountain-! e shant have an inch of elbow room leh! Cook old cake! cook!' -aid lie. addressing a lump of dough that he was tu-ning over on the coals of his solitary lire with his naked toes, that pro truded through his enerable moccains Cod-c, old cake, here comes a white fool, and he's hungry of course. Now, you miseranie young o.ocuuiead 1 ! t 1 t do you know r i me: said the old man to the stranger '! guess I do,' said the boy. for he was a wandering sprig of Yankee land. " ou zucss, 'replied the eccentric 'you're a pretty samp!-' of a scalp block to come iiere guessing! Had you nobody to keep yuu at home, that you must come strolling out here among bears an 111 ackfee:? How do you know tne?' 'J reckon I guess." 'O, you're a big figure at mathematics! "i ou had better get rid ol vour guessing and your reckoning, if you want to live among the rocks. Take up that chunk of burnt dough there, and stuff i: down your ravenous maw!' 'Thank you I'm not hungry.' 'Don't come- here to tell lies, sir; we a.re honest men in the m Kintains and von mus'nt come here to contaminate us with your civil. z ition. You arc hungry and you know it, and you must eat that cake. I've got another. Do you take me for an anted. luvian, not to share my dinner with vou ' 'Aii. t you the man they call Bill Wil liams?' said the hungry lad, as he greedily devoured the cake. 'Jt'h.it do they call m: roared Dill, with I lie? gtowl of a wounded fear. 'W illiam Williams, I think!' answered the young aspirant in the trapping trade, with a half frightened tone of subdued respect. 'William S. Williams, 31. T., young buzzard's meat!' replied the Master trap per, drawing himself up with the air of a Julius Cesar. 'Look here, boy, do you see that bulic? There's a hole in it, and that's where 1 put my bones.' iIio)ics.r said the boy greatly bewildered at the words of the old man. 'Y'as i-cah!1 continued Bill, lifting his ride and imitating a shot, 'there's w here I bury my dead: that's my bone-house!' Why you don't ' 'Don't tell me I dent,' interrupted the old iiun, 'or I'll don't you, knock me dead if I douY. How would you like to deep there to-night? Eat away, and don't be gaping at a natural christian like a born loui! I always stow away my white bones decently. Eat away, you stupid young blockhead, and stop staring. I dare say you call yourself a gentleman.' 'Ye-es!' stammered the youngster. 'ilappy of your acquaintance. If you have done eating, just remember that you have dined with William S. Williams, M. T.' This odd encounter happened almost word for word as here set down, and il ma give the read r a fan' idea of one of f.e drollest beings Mat ever breathed. Surlev, abrupt and eccentric, the old fellow is vet noticed for benevolence audi
stern honesty. He once took off his coat! A Valuable Bustle. of deerskin, 'when it was almost the UtThe Stolen Ten Thousand Dollars Reremnant of apparel in his possession,; covered. and threw it over the shoulders of a poor, ! Nearly S10,000, belonging to Mr. Mcshivering sq iaw. He sleeps curled Up ' Kie, of Salem, Washington county, Xew by the camo-fire. with his head in the York, which were stolen from him at the
ashes, embracing an old rifle, that has been mended and mended again with 'buffalo tug,' until scarcely a particle of the original stock is left. He works hard, makes money, and gives every thing away to others who may happen to be in distress. He once threatened to shoot an old friend who sent him a letter with an olfer of assistance! Old William S. Williams, M. T. will accept of charity from no man breathing. Such a character is now pillowing his grey hairs among the snows of the West, and there he will live and die, while this rough sketch, no doubt, presents ail that the world , will ever know of The Old Man of the Moun tains! Desperate Players 'Texas or Disunion." A public meeting of the Locofoco party has been held in Charleston, S. C, in favor of ths annexation of Texas. Among the resolutions passed, the following sentiment was embraced: "That the only TitfE issue before the "South should be Tilxas or Disunion! 'That a convention of die slave-holding 'States take into consideration the ques'tion of annexing Texas to the Union, if 'the union will accept it; or, if the Union 'will not accept it, then cf Annexing Tex'as to the Southern Statcs.' In IS32, when the guns of the United States ship, Natchez, was pointed upon Charleston, and U. States troops wore pouring into South Carolina to subdue the Nulliliers, and compel them, even at the point of the bayonet, to obey the laws of Congress, the stoutest hearts tremble; for upon every southern breeze, was expected to be wafted the awful, the direful intelligence that blood bad been shed! that Columbia's soil was stained with the blood of Americans, in a struggle of brother against brother! L'pon the very pinnacle of that memorable event, Henry Clay stepped forward and averted the perilous blow, that would huva blotted forever a star from the Union. His language was 'SAVE THE UNION;" and it was saved by him alone. For the language of the bloody lion, Jackson, was 'By the eternal, I'll hang every one of them!' (the Nuilifiers Calhoun, Hayne, McDullie, Co.) There seems to be something singular in all this, in the changes of positions these men now occupy, and fully verifies the old Spanish proverb: 'That a spaniel loves a severe master.' We find all these men changed, and coinciding in the views of the 'Old Lion,' who would have hung them had it not been for Mr. Clay. We edso find the Lucofocjp party, in different parts of the United States, crying 'Texas or Disunion;' and if Henry Clay is elected, it will again be to 'save the. Union' from the hands of the same men, who have been seeking to destroy it since that memorable event. Truly have the Locofoco party been styled the 'Destructives.' They would pull down every institution of the country. Fur instance, ask one cf them what policy lie is in favor of, and he will evade the question, by telling you that he is 'opposed to every measure brought forward by tne whig?;' but he is in favor of the annexation of Texas to the Union, or else a dissolution of this fair Republic, to gain the purposes of the party. How harsh the word Disunion' grates upon the patriot's ear! Can such word be spoken in jest? No; the men w ho use it are in earnest they are TORIES now and would have been so even in the darkj day? of the Revolution, had they acted' as the grandfather of Mr. Polk did. j How can an American heart speak the word, and then think of the consequenecs that would follow such an event? Civi! war, murder, rapine, famine, pestilence, and all the horror that cursed ancient Rome in her downfall, but rests upon the hateful word 'Disunion, ll hrenziesthe niind---it congeals the blood of every loverof his country to hear such a word breathed by men who claim their birth in this land of freedom. lie who plays such a desperate card, as to cherish disunion, in the event of his opinions not being sustained by the peo ple will fail in his purpose. 1 here is virtue and patriotism sufficient yet left to 'save the Union' from the hands of such as would sell their birthright for a mess if pottige. Spurn the man w ho talks of disunion, as you would a traitor give him no countenance; he cannot appreciate tho blessmgs of liberty he knows not the word he would destroy; at a blow, all that was bequeathed to us by our fathers, and which they gained by enduring peril, privation, toil, tlm men never before knew and by pouring out their blood, as water, upon the altar of liberty. The sail beneath our leet has been Keeking, rich ani warm,' with patriot's blood and every sod is soldier's Sepulchre. Beware then, vou who tread the land so dearlj bought, how you spoak the dangerous word 'Disunion.' Compliment to Henry Clay. At the late locofoco meeting in the city cf Baltimore, Mr. William G. Read one of the orators, made the following allusion to the candidate of the Whig party: "I shall not attempt to deny the merits of Mr. Clay- He is an accomplished gen tlemen a man of talent an orator of whom not only his country but the world maybe proud a statesman of consummate ability and if he should bechosen President, every man of every party might look up to him, in his high office, and say, there is a ?)2'u."
City Hotel, Albany, have been recovered by two ex-police officers of New York. It appears that a few days since another robbery of 601), in fifty dollar notes of the Commercial Bank of Albany and Catskill, 111 of the Bank of St. Clair, Michigan, and $30 in scrip, took place. One of the bills on the Commercial Bank was change by a woman who was traced to her residence. She and an elderly man were next day arrested as they were about to leave in one of the boats. The man and woman were there searched, when an
immense roll of bank notes was found on her person, nicely enclosed in a 'bustle' that she had used for its adornment. The two were then taken to the police office, where the money was counte'd and found to be n9,19.) in notes of fives and tens of the Farmers' and Mechanics' and Ex change Bank of Hartford, Connecticut, thus answering to the description of money lost by Mr. McKie, and within s5f of that amount. The suspected rogue gave the name of John Daly, but his real name is said to be Henry Courtney. He is about 50 years of age, and appears to be an Englishman by birth. The woman is young and verv good looking, and says her name is Elizabeth Hanson. They are both in custody. Courtney, while in prison, the night after his arrest attempted to commit suicide by bleeding himself to death. He had made several openings in his neck, arms, with a small lancet. On Courtney's lodging room, in New York, being searched, a dark lantern was found, and also some burglar's tools; and on further looking into the baggage of the man the remainder of the money which had not been recovered was found. He says he regrets the act which lias placed him in his present situation, and looks forward with horror to that which awaits him as the penalty of his crime. The woman, Hanson, was perfectly calm until she heard that Courtney had attempted suicide, and wished then to see him. This request was denied as a matter of course. Dollar Xcicsj.Kijier. cr J 0 II NY B E A R . .o-j We copy the following from the Ohio Patriot of the 21st June, 1814, a paper printed in New Liebon. Columbiana county, Ohio, f.nd edited and published by Whn. Duane Morgon: 'LOCK YOUR STABLE DOORS! 'We observe by the Pittsburgh Post, that iC?John W. Betr,OS the notorious swindler and horse thief, has been lecturing before the Clay Club of that city. As it is not improbable that the scamp may travel this way, we deem it our duty to warn all good citizens to be on the look out.' We copy tho above in order that it may meet the eye of Mr. Bear, e hope the Whig papers will pass it round for the same purpose. If .Mr. Bear is really a 'swindler and horse thief 3 as charged, il is time his operations as a Whig orator had ceased. But if he be not guilty of the charges, it will be expected by his friends, that he compell his accuser to prove his charges in a Court of Justice. It e stem Palladium. 0 ft.'"' Ax Excellent Distinction. The Columbus (Ga.) Enquirer in a very able exposition of the duty of Southern Whigs in tho present contest, says: "Others may rango themselves under the name of Polk, Dallas and 7'exas. We array ourselves under the standard bearing on its ample folds, Clay. Frelinohvsex and the United States." A Small Mistake. Our good friends of thp New York Tribune sel down Lou. n aq .,0,.7,; for pauv iVb w , :,, do no u ., : Louisiana Lami. Iin(pr anv rirpumstsnrw. snnnnn j Mr polk an( w? dlslike t0 see hcr plac ! ed in any such caterorr. If we have been ; , " heretofore, if we have slent upon our arms, and allowed the enemy to take possession of our outposts, we have already been punished sufficiently. It is too bad to have Louisiana put down even as a 'possible' Polk Stale, and we insist that our friends will alter their figures by placing us under the banner of Henry Clay not 'possibly' but positivcljI 2s. O. Tropic. Measuring Corn. Hunt's Merchants' Magazine gives the following rule for measuring corn in cribs, wagons, boats, &c: 'Multiply the length by the width, then by the depth. The product multiply by 1, which will give the contents in bushels shelled. To get the bushels in the year multiply bv 8. In either case cut off the right hand figure, which is the fraction. EXAMPLE. Length Width 20 feet 2 ) feet 10 " 10 200 7 Depth 7 1,100 4 1,100 8 rGo, Bushels shelled. 1,120,0 Bushels in ears. e Pu"lc. A gentleman wished to cross a river with a fox. a goose, nnd a basket of corn. He had but one boat, and could take but one across at a time. Hut if he left the goose and corn together the goose would eat the corn, and if he took the corn the fox would eat the goose. How did he get the three across.7
W. W. CAHB. ALLEN &, CAR It. tttomcys and Counsellors at Lj AW, VlXCENXES. IxnfAV'4. "fSTILL attend. inintK- i l, f t J ' v' fci.w ;i duuLU nf fltptr iirnfacciMi Ir. .V.; .1 . 1 ..- -ivi.aivjj in una lfU UlU neighboring counties of Indiana and Illinois. May 11, 1S11-.. 49--tf References. Hon.Jno. W.Davis, ashington City. Hon. R. Dale Owen, " " Hart, Cummings c;- Hart, Philadelphia ; Woodward eV; Dusenbery, New York; H. C. Gwathmey, ") " W. & C. Fellows, Wm. Bell, J- Louisville, Ky. I J Jas. E. Pearson, C. T. Taylor, J, S.& W. J. Wise, Wm. Burteh & Co., P. Doran, Vincennes, Ind.; Hon. J. G. Read, Jelfersonville, Ind.; M. W. Foster, F. Johnson, Petersburg!!, Ind. CHILLS OB AGUE AMD FEVER, Cured in a feia hours l the use of CLEMENS' INDIA N T OMU, rpHE unexampled success of this PURELY VEGETABLE Tonic, in curing in a few hours, where ALL other lemedies hava failed, and that too, in cases of fix, nine, twelve, and eighteen months standing w arrents the assertion, that if taken according to the directions, it is mfallibk. Try it, anJ be convinced that it is the most pleasant, most certain, anJ the very IJEsiT u-m-edy ever offered to the public, far puttinc; a tpecdy termination to Chills or Acne unj Fever. Tho fact that the recipe was obtained frotrnc the RED MAN of the Foreot, silences a'l doubt as to any thiniT.but purely Vegetable NATURE'S OWN REMEDY anJ may therefore ne taken by eve ry one Willi the most petleet satety. He snrt to ask for CLEMENS' INDIAN TONIC, put up by OE'). NV. HOUSE, proprietor, whose name is written upon the label and rarper of each l ottie. None genuine without his written signature. Qj'Put up anJ sold, wholesale anJ retail I v (i. W. HOUSE, prepxietor, Nashville, Tenn. Price 1 jer bottle. Also for sale by . S. & W. J. WISE, agents it this place. March 2H.J, 1 H i 4 4 l-tf To TIiTi-Iiasit and trade; s OF THE YABASH VALLEY. rHE subscribers have erect si a large Paper -- M ill at Lafayette, In J., and having srartxnei cost in obtaining the most approved Mnchiriery eSc skill from the East, are prepared to supply tho Entire Wabash Valley with every kind of j.a.er wanted, on the most favorable terms. The Friends of Home Industry and Western Enterprise, are invited to cive us a call, arid to suve heir Rai?s, which will be received in ejehangn for Paper or Cash at fair prices. BARUEE, YANDE8& CO. Dec. 2, 1811 30 ly. COPPER,1 AND SHEET IRON Manufactory , i ii i: a i) . F. KO BIN SON has the pleasure of informing his friends and the public, that he will keep constantly on hand, a large quantity of I'opiK-r, Tin and SSicet Iron Always for sale wholesale or retail AT LOir WATER MARK. He is also prepared to do any kind nf .loh Work In that line on the shortest notice and in a li 11 7' 7' il il STVIjMI Than any other shop in the country. Shop on Market street, one door below W. J. Heberd's. Vincennes, April, 20, 18-43. 40-tf. COPPERjTlN AND SHEET IRON W A II I) , J"AXUFACTUKi:n at wholesale 1 T . "d retail on reasonablo terms. Also, a large lot of assorted Castings and Stoves. For sale by N. SMITH. July 21st, 184o 7-ly. Bedford W. Shelmire. John Robertson COMMISSION & FORWARDING rev Orliaiif la. m ij s-i J "ii a A. W. Tkacy, Esci., r v r nf5, ?- 9- - .r 1). S. Hon nek, " incennes, la. John Ross, " J. S. & VV. J. Wise. August 4, 113. 9. ly. WILMS. v & iumh:, FORWARDING & COMMISSION ISo. W2, Tchoupitouloas St., iXew Orleans. Louisiana. January lOih, 1343. 32-(m. KEGS best Pittsburgh WHITE LEAD, in storo and for sale by 3 J. SOMES. April 27th, 1911 47-tf thi: vinci;xni;s azf.tte 5; $ul)lts,!;cj rfcrtn iTfnirsoan 551 IK. Y. CAIIIA-TO.. TERMS $2 no, If paid in advance. $2 50, if paid during the first six months f 3 00, If not paid during the firs six months, 1 25, For six months. Papers discontinued only at the option of tlo publisher Ahile arrearages are due. (T--Advcrtisements making one square or les will be inserted three times for one dollni, and t.venty-five cents for every subsequent insertion longer advertisement in the same proportion, advertisements sent without orders will, in all rases be inserted until forbid, and charged accordingly. Five dollars will invariably be charged for aJ vertieins wives.
C. M. 1LLEX,
