Lewistown gazette. (Lewistown, Pa.) 1843-1944, June 14, 1860, Image 1

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No, 2564,
BLYMYER & STANBARGER,
filLB I COMMISSION
I£3?.3KAITTS,
\>ar (anal Basin,
Lewistown, Pa,
U T.urcbase every description of Produce
at current prices,
A L H AYS O N H A N I) ,
niSTER, SALT, FISH. STOXE COAL
of aborted sizes, LIMEB URNERS
' £ BLACKSMITHS' COAL.
GEO. BLYMYER,
de , 2 C. C. STANBARGER.
w ALL
AND *
WINDOW
yP.A.T'IESIFtSS.
i lARUK assortment for sale bv
\ V. J. HOFFMAN.
riBOUND ALUM SALT.—A large lot
( X new full sacks G. A. Salt, just received,
fur sale at a reduced price,
tnv 17 E. tJ. HOFFMAN.
M ACKEREL, Herring and Shad, best
quality, at iow prices for sale by
my 11 ' F. J. HOFFMAN.
A FN DAY SCHOOL BOOKS —A large as
sortmcnt of Sunday School Library, Class
, :i ,j Reward B >oke, for sale at same prices as
ill by S. S. Union in Philadelphia, at
mv 17 F. J. HOFFMAN'S.
1 WTItA Bio Coffee, at 13 cents. AlsoSu-
I j gars aud other Groceries, low for cash at
,5V 17 F. J. HOFFMAN'S.
nONFECriONEBY, Crackers, Nuts, Ac.,
\ J Ac at low prices to wholesale dealers.
„ y l6 V. A. HOFFMAN.
r pOF> ACCO and Segars—good qualities at
I loir prices to dealers,
my 17 F. J. HOFFMAN.
OlloE FINDINGS.—A full assortment of
0 Shoe Findings on hand, sonic articles
much reduced in price.
mv 17 F J. HOFFMAN.
OGLE LEATHER.—A god stock jnst re
ceived. of tlie best Bed and Oak Sole
Leather. I have also a g- <1 assortment of
M rocco, Linings, French Calf Skin, Lppcr,
Kins Ac., all at low pri -s for oash.
my 10 F. -J. HOFFMAN.
V"AILS.—F. J. HOFFMAN has always
on band a large stock of best Nails,
and suld at low prices.
1 1 .'.KM r lt'S STORE. — I have on hand
L C ,rn Ploughs, Corn Cultivators. Ready
i urn Shelters, Hay Brags, and other Farming
Implements, for sale at prices warranted to
give satisfaction.
* my 17 F.J.HOFFMAN.
i '&, IrMrorai
LEWISTOWN, Pa.
T")0LISIIED Ling Handle Steel Shovels at
1 02; eta; common long handle Shovels at
from 37 to 50 cts, for sale bv
F. G. FRANOISCUS.
/BOALuil and Lamps: Merchants supplied
v with coal oil and coal oil Lamps, at low
IT rates than can be bought eastward. The
oils are superior in quality and lower in pri
ces than can be bought from eastern markets.
The quality of coal oil always guaranteed free
from smell and smoke, for sale by
my 10 F. G. FIIANCISCUS.
*)( 1 DOZKN coal oil Lamps, varying in
' prices from 75 cts to $5.00 each, all
with superior burners, for sale by
mylrt F. G. FRANCISCUS.
HARDWARE. —We bavo on hand the
largest stock of Hardware which we
have ever had, and will sell to merchants at
a? low rates as can be bought elsewhere (by
the package.) F. G. FRANCISCUS. "
|| | KEGS Ilarrisburg Nails, equal to
'/Uv.' the best ia the market, for sale by
mjlO F. G. FRANCISCUS.
\ A BUSHELS best Alleghany
Av/V/w Broad Top Blacksmiths Coal,
at 12J cts per bushel, for sale by
ay 10 ' F. G. FRANCISCUS.
SETS Thimble Skeins and Pipe
4-VV7 Boxes, assorted sizes, for sale by
aj 10 F. G. FRANCISCUS.
RED Wagon Harnes, at 45 cts per pair,
/(usual price G2J cts), with almost every
variety of \Y agon, Carriage, Buggy and Dear
horn (lames, at equally low prices.
m JIO F.'G. FRANCISCUS.
G' KASS Scythes—good articles at cts.
No. 1 strapped straw and hay Forks, at
low rates. F. G. FRANCISCUS.
OJ UNLOADING Hay Forks, wood head,
s ! ee ' prongs, patent springs, at ?7 each,
ht a , r^ c ' e i Q l' lo market, for sale by
®J IO F. G. FRANCISCUS.
rj.RIFFIN N. DARLING & Co'a broad
AA grain and grass Scythes—Hay Rakes,
% Forks, &c, for sale by
m J IO F. G.* FRANCISCUS.
SINGLE Pullies for unloading hay forks.
AJ 't W cts each. Ropes of all kinds and
' tes reduced prices, for sale by
"J l ® F. G. FRANCISCUS.
TIE MINSTREL
THE OLD POPLAR TREE.
When roses were blooming in May,
<>n the dark green shore of the sea.
May I meet thee, dear one, to say,
We've loved by the old poplar "tree.
cnoßcs.
The old poplar tree with its vines.
Its moss and its branches so bare,
We have often met there in old times,
Along with the brave and the fair.
The starlit sky radiant above.
A stillness is o'er land and sea;
May I meet thee, to-night, love,
'Neath the shade of the, old poplar tree,
Crokus : —The old poplar tree, &.i.
Our soft whispered words none shall hear,
And none save thy - William' shall see
The blush on tli) cheek, and the tear
That falls 'neatli the old poplar tree.
Chokes: —The old poplar tree, £c.
STANZAS.
! Oh ! they are golden dreams that light
The fancy of youth's joyous morn.
When young romance begins her flight,
On gayly-painted pinions borne,
i When thought embolden'd plumes her wing,
And rises to a higher sphere—
.(nd hopes unchained, exulting spring
Away to seek new pleasures there.
When earth is Eden-like, us on
The morn she sprang to beauty, rife
With song, and love, and gladness, one
Gay theatre of light and life.
Tis when the heart believes a smile—
The kindling of a laughing eye—
A tone whose music charms," the while
It weaves a tale of treachery.
When artless love would fondly speak
The phantom light so often driven
In magic wreaths o'er woman's cheek—
The beaming of an inward heaven.
When young affection deems the tear
That grief to beauty's eye will bring,
A mourner passionless, and pure
As droppings from an angel's tying!
Those hours! they shrine full many a dream
Of purity and happiness —
Jovs that were read, words which seem
E'en now to charm the heart no less
Than when they first wore treasured there—
Mementoes o*f a guiltless day.
Ere earthly things were false as fair.
And smiles and tears as false as they.
lISCELEAMEOES,
THE TWO FRIENDS ;
„K
THE PRESENTIMENT.
About four years ago a parly of travel
| ers arrived at a certain convent in J.erusa
! lem, at which you can put up for the night,
! and he entertained very much as European
| travelers who are crossing the Alps are re
-1 ceived at the great St. Bernard. Amongst
j the party who bad newly arrived was one
| who had got the lock of his pistol so de
j ranged that it was impossible to stir it, and
i as lie, and most other eastern travelers,
very much disliked the ilea of' proceeding
j on hi journey unarmed, he was anxious to
I have the defect attended to at once. It
! was easier to feel this want than to iret it
supplied, there being no one at the time
in Jerusalem who would he likely to un
derstand the pistol in question, which was
a revolver, and furnished w.thall the latest
improvements. At length, however, after
much consideration and casting about as to
what was to be done, one of the lay broth
ers of the convent suggested away out of
the difficulty which seemed promising
enough. There were, he said a couple of
German travelers, sleeping that night in
the convent who were 1 cksmiths by trade,
and he had little doubt that one of them
would be able to do what was necessary to
the pistol if anybody could. The weapon
was handed over to the lay brother, who at
once took it to the room which the two
Germans occupied, and explaining to them
what was amiss, asked if they would un
derstand to set it right. The traveler, he
added, would pay them liberally for their
trouble.
The two Gerfnans were sitting at the sup
per-table when the lay brother came in
with the pistol in his hand. The older of
them whose name was Max, got up from
the table, took the weapon from the monk,
cod carried it to the window, that he might
examine it more completely. His friend
remained at the table sitting with his back
towards Max, finishing bis supper in a
philosophical manner enough. The Ger
man who was examining the pistol had not
been so occupied a couple of minutes when
it went oft with a loud noise. At the moment
the poor fellow who was setting at the ta
ble, fell forward without uttering a sound.
The charge had entered his back.
He fell upon his face on the ground,
and when my friend, who told me the story
—and who as surgeon to the embassy was
sent for at once —when he arrived, it seem
ed to him at first as if two men had been
shot instead of one, for both the Germans
were stretched upon the floor, and he who
was the survivor, holding the other locked
in his arms, wore upon his ghastly counte
nance, the deadlier look of the two. Tt
was a quite difficult thing to separate them.
The wounded man had got the other's hand
in his, as if by that to re-assure him, and
to show him that he loved him all the
same.
The surgeon caused the wounded man
—it was but too evident that he had not
long to live—to be removed to the Infirm
ary and laid upon a bed to die. It was a
bed that stood beneath the window, and
across which, when the sun was setting,
the shadow of a cypress fell. A very
brief examination showed that any attempt
to relieve the wounded man would be use
less, and they could only staunch the blood
that flowed from the wound and watch him
with breathless eagerness —there is none
like it—with which men watch their broth
er when each short breath draws less and
THURSDAY, JUNE 14, 1860.
less often and seems as though it were the
last. As for the other German he was
sunk in a heap upon the ground beside the
bed, in speechless stupefaction. One of
his hands was on the couch, and the expir
ing effort of the dying man was to take
this passive hand in his. Those who were
around him, seeing such a change upon
his f.ce, leaned hastily over him, lor they
heard him whispering faintly,
' Poor Max I' he said—' Poor Max !'
The last act of the man who died was to
pity the man who lived.
For some time it was very uncertain
whether the man who had thus slain his
best and dearest friend would net speedily
follow him into another world—so fearfully
was he affected. For a still longer period
it was doubtful in the last degree whether
he would retain his reason And, indeed,
at the time the story was told me he could
hardly be said to be in his sound mind.
At that very time the man was haunted by
a fixed presentiment that he should die in
the same way his friend had died. No
reasoning with him had the least effect —
the presentiment had taken a hold upon
his mind which nothing could shake. Those
who wished him well—and there were many
had often tried to lead him to a happier
frame of mind, and to make him take an
interest in his own future They had urg
ed him since he had taken up his abode in
Jerusalem, to settle there more comforta
bly, to get into a better and more conven
ient a workshop, and since his skill as a
workman always ensured him the means of
living, to marry ; for they know that the
fresh interests of a domestic nature which
would follow would be of the greatest pos
sible sei vice to him.
'The day will come,' was his invariable
answer to all such advice—' the day will
conic when some one will shoot me with a
revolver through my back, just as I shot my
friend. That day will surely come; what
have I to do then with my wife and chil
dren—with a wife whom I should leave a
widow—with children whom I should leave
fatherless? What have Ito do with set
tling—with comfort, or a home? I shall
lie when the pistol bullet sends me to my
grave beside my friend,' said the German
locksmith.
So much for what I learned from my
friend the surgeon, concerning the past life
of the singular man by whose appearance
I had been so powerfully struck. Of the
remaining portion of his history the par
ticulars came under my own knowledge,
and with the circumstances of its termin
ation. I was myself to a certain extent mix
ed up. My revolver was sent back to me
prepared, and just as I was about to start
away on a short journey into the environs,
and was in some haste, I set off without try
ing it. In the course of the day, however,
partly wishing to ascertain how far my pis
tol was restored to a condition of useful
ness, partly from a desire to bring down a
bird which I saw on the wing, I lifted my
revolver to let fly at him. The weapon
missed tire. On examination 1 found the
defect this time was precisely the reverse
of what it had been before. The lock
went so loosely now, and had so little spring
in it, that the hammer did not fall upon
the cap with sufficient force to explode it.
I tried the pistol several times, and find
ing it useless, sent it again, on my return to
.Jerusalem to the German locksmith, charg
ing my servant to explain to him its new
defect, and above all things to caution him
as to its being loaded, as 1 had done on the
former occasion. Mark how it returns to
him again ! Why not have done its work
next day in a state, as I was told of perfect
repair. This time I took it into the gar
den to try it. The first time it went off
well enough, hut at the next time —for I
determined to prove it thoroughly—l found
that its original defect had returned, and
the lock would not stir, pull at the trigger
as 1 might.
' There is something radically wrong
here,' I said. *1 will go myself and see
the German lock-smith about it, without
delay.'
'That pistol again,' said the locksmith,
looking up, as I entered his miserable
abode.
What would I have not given to have
been able to say anything that would have
altered the expression of that haggard
countenance? Hut it was impossible. 1
made some attempts to draw the poor fel
low into conversation, though I felt that
even if these had not proved (as they did)
wholly useless, my comparative ignorance
of his language would have stood in the
way of saying anything that could have
been of any service. Our conversation
then limited itself to the matter in hand,
and we agreed that the only thing to be
done with the pistol now was to take its
lock off, and make a perfectly new one in
imitation of it. This, however, made it
necessary that the locksmith should keep
the weapon by him for three or four days
at least. lie took it from my hands as he
told me so, and placed it carefully on a
shelf, at the back of his shop.
' Above all things,' I said as I left the
shop, ' above all things, remember that the
revolver is loaded.'
4 1 shall not forget it,' he said, turning
round to me with a ghastly smile.
This then was the third time that pistol
was taken back to the German locksmith
for repairs.
[t was the last
The German locksmith, being very much
occupied, owing to the reputation he had
obtained as a clever workman, bad taken
into his employment a sort of apprentice
or assistant, to help him in the simple and
more mechanical parts of his trade, lie
was not of much use. A stupid, idle, tri
fling fellow at best. One day, soon after I
had left my revolver for the la>t time to.be
mended, this lad came in from executing
some errand, and, standing idly about the
place, took down my pistol from the shelf
on which it lay, and began tu look at it with
some curiosity, not being accustomed to the
sight of a revolver.
The locksmith turning around from his
work, saw the lad occupied, and hastily
told him to put the pistol back in the place
where he had taken it from. lie had not
time he said to attend to it yet. It was
loaded, and it was dangerous to pull it about
in that manner. Having said this, the
German locksmith turned around, and went
on with what he was about, with his back
toward the lad whom he had just cautioned,
and who, he naturally supposed had restor
ed the pistol at once to its shelf.
The boy's curiosity, however, was exci
ted by the revolver, and instead of doing
as lie was told went on prying into it. ex
amining bow the lock acted, and what were
its defects.
The poor German was going 011 wiih his
work muttering to himself, ' Strange how
that pistol returns to me, again and again.'
The words were not out of his lips when
the fatal moment, so long expected, arriv
ed, and when the charge from my revolver
entered his back. lie tell forward in a
moment, saying, as he 1011, ' At last!'
The foolish boy rushed out of the shop
with pistol in his hand, screaming for as
sistance so loudly that the neighbors were
soon alarmed and hastened in a crowd to
the house of the poor locksmith.
My friend, the surgeon, was instantly
sent for, and from him I gained the par
ticulars which follow:
Turning over the poor fellow on bis
face, and cutting open the garments to
examine the wound said to (hose who were
standing around: 'The ball has entered
his back ; if by chance it should have pass
ed around by his ribs, as will sometimes
happen, this wound is not to be fatal.'
' It is fatal,' said the wounded map, with
a sudden effort. ' Have I been waiting for
this stroke so long, and shall it fail to dq
its work when it comes? It is fatal,'he
gasped again ' and I shall die—but not
here.'
I have to relate a horrible and incredi
ble thin_j which, impossible as it seems, is
yet true.
The Herman locksmith started up from i
where he lay, pushing aside all those who '
stood around him with unnatural strength. |
His body swayed for an instant from side j
to side, and then he darted forward. The j
crowd gave way before him, and he rushed '
from the house. lie tore along the streets
—the few people whom he met giving way
before him, and after him with horror as j
lie flew along—his clothes cut open at the
hack, bloodstained and dripping, and with
death in his face. Not one pause, not an
abatement in his speed till he reached the
Infirmary, passed the man who kept the
door and up the stairs he flow, nor stopped
till he came to a bed which stands beneath ;
the window and across which the shadow ;
of a cypress fell, when the sun begins to
sink.
It was the bed on which his friend had
breathed his last.
' I must die here,' said the German lock- j
smith, as he fell upon it. 'lt is here that
1 must die.'
And there he died. The haunting
thought which had made his existence a
living death was justified. The piesenli- ;
ment had come true at last; and when the
thunder cloud, which had charged his bolt
upon his head, it seemed to us as if the
earth were then lighter, for the shade had
passed away.
Is death the name for a release like this?
Who could look upon his happy face, as he
lay upon that bed, and say so?
It was not the end of a life-—but the
beginning.
THIRDS.
There are three things that never be- .
come rusty —the money of the benevolent, I
the shoes of the butcher's horse, and a
woman's tongue.
Three things not easily done—to alia}*
thirst with fire,, to dry wet with water, to
please all with everything that is done.
Three things that are as good as their
betters—dirty water to extinguish fire, a
homely wife to a blind man, and a wooden
sword to a coward.
Three warnings from the grave —thou
knowest what I was, thou seest what I am,
remember what thou art to be.
Three things of short continuance—a
a lady's love, a chip fire, and a brook's flood. !
Three things that ought never be ab
sent from home—the cat, chimney, and
housewife.
Three things in a peacock —the garb of
an angel, the walk of a thief, and the voice
of a devil.
Three things it is unwise to boast of—
the flavor of thy ale, the beauty of thy
wife, and the contents of thy purse.
Worse than a thief—The slanderer
(Vram Brer.—As the warm weather is
approaching, we begin to think of refresh
ing drinks. 1 have a famed recipe which
I give. It is an effervescing drink, but
far pleasanter than soda water, inasmuch as
you do not havp to urink for your life, in
order to get your money's worth. The ef
fervescence is much more slow. Take two
ounces tartartic acid; two pounds white su
gar; the juice of half a lemon; three
pints of water; boil together five minutes.
When nearly cold, add the whites of three
eggs well beaten, with half a cup of flour,
and half an ounce of essence of winter
green. 3 lot tie, and keep in a cool place.
Take two tablespoonsful of this syrup lor
a tumbler ol water and add one quarter el
a teaspoonful of soda.— L. E C., in Gouit
try Centlevian.
French Pancakes. —Take six eggs, sep
arate the yolks from the white ; heat the
whites on a dinner plate to a snow; beat
four yolks with two tablespoonsful of sugar,
two of flour, and a teacupfui of cream ; add
a little salt, and a very little carbonate of
soda ; put in the whites of the eggs, and
mix gently. Put one ounce of butter in
a frying pan ; when hot, pour in the whole
pancake. Hold the pan a good distance
from the lire to brown it on the top. Hi.-h
on a napkin. Put any kind of preserved
fruit over it. Serve not.
To <jii:c Jjustcr to Silver. —Dissolve a
quantity of alum in water, so as to make
a pretty strong brine, and skint it careful
ly; add some soap to it, and dip a linen
rag in it, and rub over the silver.
HIpSSSI
Serving and Praising God.
Not a cloud which fleets across the sky,
not a clod of earth which crumbles under
the frost, not a blade of grass which breaks
through the snow in spring, not a dead
leaf which falls to the earth in autumn,
hut is doing God's work, and showing forth
God's glory. Not a tiny insect, too small
to bp seen by the human eye without the
aid of the microscope, but is fearfully and
wonderfully made as you and I, and has its
proper food, habitation and work appointed
fur it, and not in vain. Nothing is idle,
nothing is wasted, nothing goes wrong, in
this wondrous world of God's. The very
scares upon the standing pool, which seems
mere dirt and dpst, is all alive and peopled
by millions of creatures, eaeb full of beau
ty. full of use, obeying laws of God too
deep for us to do aught but dimly guess at
them ; and as men see deeper and deeper
into the wonders of God's creation, they
find in the most common things about
them, wonder and glory, such as eye hath
not seen, nor ear heard, nor hath it entered
into the heart of man to conceive; andean
only say with the Psalmist, ' Oh 1 Lord,
thy ways are infinite, thy thoughts are
very deep;' and confess that the grass be
neath their feet, and the clouds above their
heads—ay, every worm beneath the sod.
and bird upon the bough—do in very deed
and truth bless the Lord who made them,
praise him, and magnify him forever, not
in words, but with works, and say to
him all day long, ' (Jo thou, and do like
wise.'
Inexhaustible Fullness.
Mountains have been exhausted of their
gold, mines of their diamonds, and the
oceans of their pearly gems. The demand
has emptied the supply. Over once busy
scenes, silence and solitude now reign; the
cavern no longer rings to the miner's ham
mer, nor is the song of the pearl-fisher
heard upon the deep. Put the riches of
grace are inexhaustible. All that have
gone before us have not made them less,
and we shall make them 110 less to those
who follow us. When they have supplied
the wants of unborn millions, the last of
Adam's race, that lonely man, over whose
head the sun is dying, beneath whose feet
the earth is reeling, shall stand by as
full a fountain as this day invites you to
drink and live, to wash and be clean.
Nearly Home.
' Almost well, and nearly at home,' said
the dying Baxter, when asked by a friend
how he was. A martyr, when approaching
the stake, being questioned as to how he
felt, answered, 'Ne.ver better; for now 1
know that I am almost at home.' Then,
looking over the meadows between him
and the place he was to be immedi
ately burnt, he said, 'On!} two more stiles
to get over, and I am at my Father's house.'
'Dying,' said the Rev. S. Medley,'is a
sweet work, sweet work; home! home!'
Another on his death bed said, 'I am go
ing home a3 fast as I can, and I bless God
that I have a good home to go to.'
Mr. Adams and the Bible.
In a letter to his son in 1811, John
Quincy Adams says: 'I have many years
made it a practice to read through the Bi
ble once a year. My custom is to read
four or five chapters every morning imme
diately after rising from my bed. It em
New Series—Vol. XIV, No. 32.
ploys an hour of my tiiue, und seems to.
me the most suitable manner of beginning
the day. In what light soever we regard
the Bible. whether with reference to reve
lation, to history, or to morality, it is an
invahial le and inexhaustible mine of
knowledge and virtue.'
1 'ress on ! surmount the rocky stoops
that arc before the Temple of Knowledge.
Climb boldly over the torrent of difficul
ties which impedes your progress. Set
your mark mi high, whether it be on the
broad shield, on which fatuc loves to in
scribe the name of her worshipers, or in
the Hook where angels write the good
deeds of men.
GW.—There is a beauty in the name
appropriated by the Saxon nation to the
Doily. unequalled except by his most ven
erable Hebrew appellation. They call him
'tlod,' which is literally ' The Good.' —
The same word thus signifying the Deity
and his most endearing quality.
All bodies, the firmament, the. stars, the
earth, and kingdoms, are not ilia equal to
the most insignificant spirit; fur such a
spirit ! hmws all these, and itself; but the
body noil. i ng. — Pa seal.
Let tiic day have a blessed baptism by
giving your first awakening thoughts in
to the bosom of tlod. The first hour of
the morning is the rudder pi the day.
- r j s M-t '■> >-> * r -f rJ
(YFFICE on East Market street, Lewistown,
, / adjoining F. Q. Frartciseus' Hardware
Stare, p. S. Dr. Locke will be r.t his office
the first Monday of each month to spend the
week. my 31
Dr, Samuel L, Alexander.
Has permanently located at Milroy,
Wand is prepared to practice all thebranch-
GtL es of his Profession. Office at Swine
hart's Hotel. iny3-ly
:cr„ s a jvxartibi
If AS. tlirough the solicitation of many
tW friends, located in Newton ilatiiilton in
£& the room of Dr. Atkinson, who goes to
Lcwistown. He hopes by a strict attention to
business to receive the support and merit the.
approbation of a generous community. Ho
has the experience of twelve years' regular
practice, in which time he has had au oppor
tunity of treating diseases of almost every
species. Office in dwelling directly opposite
the Presbyterian church. npl9-3ui
SILVER PLATED WARE,
BY HARVEY FILLEV,
$9.1222 Market Street, Pliiiadeliliia,
MANUFACTURER OF
Pine Xivkel Stiver, and Silver Pluler of Forks,
Spooni, Ladles, Bitter Knives, Castors,
Tea Sets, Urns, Kittles, I falters, Hut•
(er Dishes, lee Pitchers, Cake
flaskets, Communion Ware,
Cups, Maps, Goblets, dV.
With : general assortment, comprising none but the
best quality, tim.ir <>f the lest inaterialg and heavily pta
tyl. constituting them a serviceable and durable article
for Hotels, Steamboat# and Private Families.
< >!d Ware re-plated in the best manner. feb23-ly
EDWARD FRYSINGER,
WHOLESALE DEALER & JIHYI'FACT! RER
OF
CIIiAKS, TOISARXI, SM'PP,
&C., &C.,
lPilo
Orders promptly attended to. jelfi
THE NEW THEATRE !
OPEN AT ALL HOURS! 1
ODD FELLOW 'S HALL CORKER.
New Play.---" Nat and Jim.'*
4 FTER which the edifying and substun-
J\_ tial afterpiece of " Something to Eat and
Something for Everybody," will be produced
in the way of another fresh arrival of
Sugars, Teas, Rice, Beans, Spices, Chocolate,
Molasses, &c.
Mackerel, Shad, Herring. Codfish, die.
Ham, Shoulder, Bacon, Dried Beef, Salt,
Flour, Soaps.
Queensware, Stoneware, Glassware, Cedar
ware, Hardware.
Boots and Shoes, Baskets, Carpet Chain.
GOODS,
Notions and Nick Nncks of all kinds.
Tobacco and Cigars of best Brands.
Dure Wines, Brandies, and Whiskey, free
from adulteration.
Everybody and anybody are invited to
come together, and see the sights. Don't for
get the place. Don't forget to bring along
the pewter.' and don't forget that we sell all
Goods at prices to suit the times.
N. KENNEDY, Proprietor,
JAS. FIKOVED, Salesman.
"s3&„All kinds of Produco taken in exchange
for Goods. my 10
(10FN BROMS, Washing Machiues and
J Washing Boards, for sale at
np2C> ZERBE'S.
A Fine lot of New Market Muslins are op
Zerhe's counter, for sale cheap.
CONFECTIONERIES, Crackers, Cheese,
/ Nuts, Fancy Baskets, Umbrellas, and
hundreds of other matters are always to bo
had at ZERBE'S.
ORANGES AND LEMONS for sale at
Zerbe's Grocery establishment.