The Columbia Democrat. (Bloomsburg, Pa.) 1837-1850, March 31, 1838, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Ifti'SOELLANEOTJS.
DEbLINE AND PALL OF THE
CITY OF DOGSTOWN.
From TVlterweU's Yankee Noliotts.
Dogstown is a beautiful place in tho in
ferior of this state. There is plenty of land
'wound , so that nothing can hinder it from
growing in every direction, and thus be
'eomo a great city. Ill fact Dogs town has
already a one story church, part of a school
house, and an elegant pond.
, Dogtown is finely and advantageously
'situated. It stands on Eel River, a stream
"of water which runs into another sticfam, and
that into a third, which runs into Connecli
cut river, which running into Long; Island
Bound, finally reachesi n the Atlantic; who
does hot doe, therefore, that Dogtown way
become a great seaport! Tho territory in
"tho neighborhood of Dogtown is remarka-
Io for its fertility, bating that part of it
which is covered with rocks, tho salt mead
ow, tho pine woods, tho clay ponds and
swamps. It is past a doubt, therefore, that
the territory, it well cleared drained, peo
plea, ana cultivated, would become a per
fect garden, abounding with the richest pro
ductions of nature, and affording a mine 6f
wealth to tho couutry. As to the facilities
'of communication with the creat Atlantic
cities and commercial marts, they aro admi
rable. Dogstown has Boston on one side
"and N. York on the other. Montreal and
Quebec are in the north, while in the east
is tho'rieh and thriving state of Maine, with
Bangor and Owl's Head to boot. Kail
roads can be made to connect Dogtown with
all these places,, and they will certainly
form such a connection, when they are built.
t That the place will , be a great focus of
trade when this is done, nobody 1 think
.will deny. The neighborhood of Dogtown
has; all the advantages that can be desired in
a young country. There will be as many
towns within thirty miles of tho place, as
people choose to build. Tho population
'cannot fail to increase rapidly, for a man
can getiarried for 75 cents, town clerk's
fees included. The attraction for settlers
must therefore be considered very great
The Dogtowners are remarkably industri
ous, for they get a living, although constant
ly grumbling of hard times, lhcy are
moreover ingenius. for they minufacturo
tixc handles, wooden bowls, birch brooms,
and white oak cheese, and invent mouse
traps and washing machines. Last of all,
the inhabitants of Dogtown are literary and
intellectual, for they talk a great deal of the
march df improvement, and the minister
and the lawyer take the Penny Magazine
between them.
All these attractions togethcrform a com
bination truly wonderful. But the reader
-will be astonished when I inform him that
the inhabitants of this favored spot lived a
' great many years without the smallest sus
picion of what I have been describing. They
thought very little of themselves or of tho
town they lived in, and continued to vege
tate from year to year without imagining
Ihey were bolter on than other tolks. in
fact, the world micht have continued to this
day in utter ignorance that Dogtown was
such a wonderful place, but for an accident;
an accident I call it, for the Dogtowners
havine lived for many years without open
nn their eves, the fact they did open them
of sudden, on a certain day in the year of
crace 1834, must be considered purely ac
cidental. Some people are inclined to as
cribe it to the approach of the comet, which
had a powerful influence in opening peo
pie's eyes to say nothing of its effect in
drivintr them stark mna. uui mat is neiiu
er here nor there. The people of Doetow
onened theirevM and saw; that was enough
thev saw in an instant their immense ad
vantages, and were astonished that they
nr.mr had seen them before. 1 hey saw
their advantages, 1 say, and were determin
"td to turn them to account.
Straiehtway Doctown was all alive; ev
ery body was confident that Dogtown must
heeome a creat place : and as every body
told every body else so, there was no doubt
abotst the'matter. Every man went to buy
ing land who could pay for it, and those
could not pay, bought upon credit, sure of
aellinr it again at ten times the cost within
.ri...i !.. !
a year, isoming was iuim-u oi um uk iui
mense advantages ot the place, i no rich
"es of Doctown were indeed immense, and
how lhcy could have been overlooked so
long was a mystery that no one could un
derstand The land within the limits of the
town was computed at 720,000,000 square
feet, which is cheap enough in all consci-
flnm. would amount to 87,200,000. What
a sum! Half this land was covered will
trees at the rate of one tree lo every five feet
nuare. orouadrannle of twenty-fivo feet;
this jrave a computation of 10,400,000 trees
and as each tree on tho average contained
seventy-five cubic feet of timber, it lollowcd
that thdro was actually within tho town
780,000,000 feet of timber, worth on tho
lowest calculation five cents per toot, which
would amount to $39,000,000. I his add
fed to the value" of the land as above, made
a grand tdtal of forty-six millions two hun
dred thousand dollars!
THe mention of these1 surds almost drove
Hie good people of Dogtown distracted with
joj7 he'y could hardly believe their eyes
or ears ; but there it was in black and white ;
fibres could not lie. They were mnazed
to think of their own stupidity, and that of
'their ancestors' in lettihg forty-six millions
two hundred thousand dollars lie totally
idle ahd unproductive; but they wore deter
mfnid not to allow their wealth to bo nog.-
4tlsd uny longr; A grand scheme of
speculation and improvement starled,
and all rushed headlong into it. Every
man in Dogtown wis how rich, or what
was lite same thing, was sUro. of being so
beforo lohff. Iramcnso tracts were laid out
in. building lots, anil speculators (looked
troni all quarters; from Uatsvillo and VVea
zletownand Buzzardsborough and Gander
field and Grow Corner and Upper Bugbury
arid East I'umpington, and Black Swamp
and the Bottomless Hons. Such a busy
time as the Dogtowners had of it. Noth
ing was talked of but buying land! build
ing houses, laying out roads, streets, squares
avenues, railroads, canals, &c. fce. Pcoplo
left off ploughing and hoeing, because ag-
lculturo was too slow a method of making
monoy; tor who would think ot raising
turnips to sell at twenty cents a bushel,
when ho could make a hundred times the
profit by speculating in land ?
First of all, it was determined that Dog
town should bo a ciiy. The want of popu
lation was found to bo serious obstacle Jicro ;
tho constitution of tho state requires ten or
twelve thousand inhabitants for a city ; and
as Dogtown', including the suburbs of Pup-
lyville and Skunk s Misery, contained :
population of only six hundicd and thirty
one, it was thought there might, bo some
difficulty in getting a charier without antici
pating the returns of the next census. How
ever, a city it must bo, somo time or other;
in this all were agreed, and it might as well
have the name first as last; so they conclud
cd to call it a city. It is astonishing what
a spirit ot enterprise these prospects infused
into the people of Dogtown. I lie school
house door was paintud green, uncle Joe
Stibbons mended the top of the chimney,
and it was voted in town meeting to put
chase three wheelbarrows for the public
use; and all in consequence of these pro
jected improvements. Nay, so widely did
their views or business expand, that Amtna
dad Figgins, the grocer, determined up to
give relailinr, and declared he would'nt
split crackers nor cut candles any loneer.
such was the thriving condition of the
city of Dogtown when I left the place in
the autumn of that year. I continued to
hear of it through the medium of the Dog
town Daily Advertiser, a newspaper estab
lished there by an enterprising printer from
Connecticut at the first dawning of the com
mercial prosperity of the city. It appeared
to go ahead rapidly. The newspaper spoke
of the Exchange, the Town Hall, the Bank,
the new Tost Office, the Hail road. Canal,
fecr House lots were advertised in Wash
ington Square, Merchant's Row, State street
.Market btreet, dec. 1 hui was Dogtown
m all its glory
Last August I determined to make a visit
to this celebrated place, in order to feast my
eyes with tho splendor of a city that had
sprung up as it were bv enchantment
When 1 reached the foot of Blueberry Hill,
winch overlooks the whole place, I walked
eagerly to the top, in order to catch a view
at a tingle glance, of the city in all its mag
nificence. To my utter astonishment in
stead, of spires and domes, I saw nothintr
but Deacon otumpy s old mansion, with
five other ragged and dingy looking edjfi
ces, which blood exactly where I had a!
ways known them. 1 entered the citv
through State street, but discovered nothing
new except a small home without a chim
ney. Not a living thing was to be be seen in
Washington square but three geese who
wpre lazily picking a mouthful of grass
among the mud puddles. I enquired for
the bxehange, and found it in the use by
the Deacon as a cow pen. The new church
however, I was told had actually proceeded
as far as the raising of the timbers ; but all
was subsequently sold by auction to pay for
digging the cellar.
I had a check, on the Dogtown Bank for
t iree dollars, and wishing to dnw tho mo
ney, I was directed to No 10 Tremont
street. This turned out to be the identical
building formerly occupied by old Kit Cob
ble, the shoemaker. It was bank hours
but the bank was shut, and there was not
soul to be seen. Just as I was coinc away
I spied a tin horn by the door with a paper
over iij on vnicn was written "persona hav
ing business with the bank are requested to
blow the horn,' I put the horn to my lips
and blew a blast both long and loud. After
waiting about ten minutes I spied Isaac
i numper coming slowly dawn the road ; Ik
proved to be cashier of tho Doctown Bank
and after some difficulty I convinced him of
the salcty of cashing tho check.
Upon inquiring of Isaac what usa had
been made of the forty-six millions two htin
dred thousand dollars, he informed me that
most of it remained invested in notes
hand. Money was scarce, and was expect
cd to continue so until tho onion crop had
been got in. It was easy to pee that the
city had sadly declined from its meridian
splendor. In iact, Dogtown has suffered
complete downfall, for hardly any body
now speaks of it as a city. They havo as
much land as over, and so loner as it con
tinucd to be valued at their own price, they
wcro as rich as Jews ; but, unfortunately, it
foil in value, tho moment they expected! the
purcnasers to pay lor it. The Dogtowners
arc poor enough at present, but they are
not tl)0 first, and probably will not bo jhq
last people who tiavo ruined themselves. by
uujiuinga city on speculation.
Jlsk and Have.
Astoro kooper tho other day, stuck upoij
his door tho lollowing laconic advertisment
"A boy wanted, l ho next morning, on
opening the storo, ho beheld a smiling litt
uichin in a basket, with tho following lable,
"Hero he isr
. lswUhs Xtt Tik Express.
WHAT IS A GENTLEMAN!
This is a question more easily askcil
than answered, but it is a very important
ono it seems in New York City at least,
nevertheless. A jury was called here, hut
few days aco, t6 settle a rrcntlcman's
Claims', and they decided him a gentleman
but if thoy had( left on record the grounds
n iiiuu uuuisiun, u must ue as valuable as the
'andects of Justinian. Mr. Cholson. m. c
insisted that Colonel Webb" was no gentle
man, -and Col Webb onco insisted that
Wood , the signer, was no gentleman, and
Mr. Cilley died, because ho would not own
that Col. Webb was a gentleman. Suro
then, it must be very important to decide
what makes the gentleman. Blackstone,
howevor has but little on that subject.
Chancellor Kent has not a word. Judge
Story has not oven discussed tho subject.
Kecordor Hiker has not flnoken. but never-
thclcss, it is of the first importance to know
wuai makes a gentleman.
A gentleman Wears :i clean shirt, n hrnml.
cloth coat: and white gloves, somo one
says, and dress, thus makes a gentleman.
Mr. Olay then; is no gentleman, for ho is
very much of a sloven often, and therefore,
te can t be a gentleman. General Jackson
was no gentleman. Mr. Van Burcn, by the
same rule, when he first came from Europe,
was the first of gentlemen with a fine coach
livery boys, splendid horses, and all tho
paraphernalia of a gentleman. But the
pickpockets that ofteu thronir in crowds.
that make a push dt a dash to stuff a nocket
according to rule, are fino looking gentle
men, with ruffle shirt, kid gloves and gold
chains, all caparisoned as gentlemen. An
English livery scrvent is thus a gentleman,
and thus as he is often more brilianlly
than his master, his master often havinir
l -... i: i ? .i . . . P
auum mm soineining oi me slouch, the li
very servent is mote of the ccutleman. Tai
lor boys are always the best dressed mnn in
the world, and ergo, the most of the gentle
man, lyanuies are gentlemen m extremes.
which means the perfection of gentlemen.
'pi. . i . . i . . . ..
i ma rum wem wont. Aim yet what shall
wo do, for all the world knows thorn is
something or othor in the clothes, by which
the world judges of a gentleman. Go to
the hotel for example, m a homespun coat,
in cowniiie hoots, (without straps!) and
they will thrust you into Iho garret; (even
me waucr uoyo ioo; among meir Tom cats
anu Riuens, oui open your trunk, put on
...... i -i . t i t.
juur uiujuciuui, anu uon i lorgct your
siraps anu mey win say give the stianger,
u mayue apanor, lorie is a gentleman!
Ulothes there make the gentleman. Tim
broadcloth forms the man. A Chesterfield
in a frock, a Gnomon in Iiomcsnnn.
male laglionia in boots, none of these)
in a dance, could be a cent eman. Thn
first thing a laborer does on Sunday, is to
put on a clean shirt, and his go-to-mccting
coat and then ho is a gentleman. Now
go to a ball, without a close-bodied coat,
without a pair of pumps, and a pair ofclnnn
gloves, and every Oody m the room will
vote you aro no gentleman. A French
woman pretends lo tell a gentleman only
by his gloves, or his teeth, and if a wo
man was not well should ban ehaussc. anil
well clad bein mise, all Paris would crv out
.1 li.. j
sue was no lauy.
A gentleman, John Bull savs. is a mnn
of gentle blood. Blood, by the way, docs
noi amount 10 mucn m inn country, ex
cept lor hogs and horses. We are all of
the lioyal blood hero, a hereditary aristoc
racy, in wmcn every loalr.r has in him
lilt ol the King, and a parcel of the king
uuui. uhmci uiuuu, men, wnn US UOCS
not amount to much, to make out the gen
tleman. We are all Esquires, all Colonels
all uenerals, all something or other in
small way. As for penile blood, take li
President of the United States for example
wno can tell where ho came froml how
genue his wood is, or whit courses in it?
Henry Clay boasts that he inherited nothin"
but infancy, indigence, and ignorance?
Daniel Webster was but a New Hampshire
loafor boy, good for nothing to make stone
wall, or stump lence and so his father
sent him to school. IN either of them had
in them a bit of that blood John Bull calls
gentle. Ho we came to the conclusion1 t)at
however important mood may be for hor
ses, it is nothing concerned in making the
gentleman.
But what dots make the gentleman?
i rue it is the gravest question on earth
when men consent to be shot at by rifles
and seek to shoot every body that averse
they are not gentlemen. It is a crave fact
that a man can lie, and cheat, and then nass
off for a gentleman. Ho may have dono a
thousand criminal acts at homo and abroad
and yet pass for a gentleman. Col, Burr
was a gentleman, an accomplished gentle
man, all mankind admit, aiulycthis private
cnaracicr even "ine uid uoy m Specks'
passes wuiigui an cuempi 10 poiisu over,
George the Fourth was a Hind of a Col
ljurr. A man too, may be never so pious
never so upright and moral, and yet be no
gentleman, a ruritau was no gentleman.
Captain Smith tho cavalier gay and gal
lant, who settled at Jamestown. Virginia.
passed tho world over, for a gentleman, bit
wo never nearu oi a man m tho May Flow.
or, that would havo passed in an European
court for a gentleman. But vhat on earth
docs mako the gentleman.
Go on a journey, and shoulder your
uwii nun, mm iuku n io your iioioi, end
all tho coachmen, and all the porters, and
all the byestandors will cry o,ut, that is no
gentleman. It is very suspicious even
bo seen taking; a valise along. In England
a man that travels pn foot will not be tree.
ted generally as a gentleman. If lis Inounls
coach and rules on the outside, ho is a
so-so sort of a gentleman. If he rides in
side, he begins to bo a gentleman, but if he
;ias a coach ol Ins own, and tho postillian
drives him. to nhotcldoor, out rush boots,
waiter and chambermaid, Jehu-like, and
the landlordjinglcs tho bell like thunder,
for there comes a gentleman.
Does monoy make a gentleman? Well,
et us sco. Our Southern planters will
lardly admit that a merchant is a gentle
man, merchandize in England, is not a
gentlemanly business every body knows.
it money made a man, John Jacob Astor
would bo the greatest gentleman in Now
York State, thn very Chesterfield and Beau
Brummel of tho day. But every body
knows that many a gcntlo loafer about
town, without a sous in his pockot, but a
borrowed one,) a Chevalier d'Inddustrie
sort of a man, that picks up an invitation to
dinner, and lives by going put a visiting,
Who cheats his taylor, and runs awav from
his washerwoman, what in tho West they
.i . . -
can aqunucrs mougn incro tnoy squat on
the public jands and hero they squat on
ottomans divans, $ic. at large; overy body
knows, we say, that such an Arab wander
er in Broadway is more of a gentleman
man Astor is or can ever expect to be
Money then does not mako the gentleman
Gold and silver won t establish the gcntlo
man. 1 hey may bo good for Loco-Foco
capital to trade off on speeches in Tamma
nay, but they can never make the gentle
man.
T , ' I .
iveaucr, you sec, we uespair ol denning
the gentleman. Every body seems to know
what a gentleman is, but nobodv can toll!
1 hat men should fight with pistols and ri
lies auout what makes the gentleman, when
for the life of them not one can tell, is droll,
very droll. 1 hat men should throw away
lilc rather than say another man had
broadcloth, the blood or the bearing of
a gentleman, is tragic and droll. But so it
is. 1 here is not a Dock Wolloper in New
l ork, that would not feel insulted; if told
le was no gentleman. Tom I) ck and Har
ry will fisticuff for hours about this point
i.uvu .i iiuiuw irom iJiuingsgate, to Urip-plcgate-,
or Newgale, and lie thinks
himself as much of a gentleman, in his own
way, as Lord Palmerson in his. The fact
Is, all arc gentlemen, in their own wav
they who livo by begging cold victuals, or
Keeping uoarucrs on cold victuals begged,
they who earn a living by sucking molasses
uirougn straws, or creep up a chimney
with a "sweep, oh, sween!" The I.awa
of Honor regulate the proceedings of all.
io genucman win oegcold viclnals on an
other's beat; No gentleman will steal an
other's story to beg with. He is a "black
guard, who sweeps chimneys, or blacks
ooois unuer price. "The man of honor
will not "prig" from a fellow "prigger,
for there is honor, they say, among thieves
rt5l.fr ."A rM in:nn,oi-n i
To tlic JRiBlrcsscd & Aff!SH..n
TIIFi.subsjribcr would respectfully announce to
lii friends nml tho public thntlio haa opened
general assortment of
Drugs & Medicines,
at lus Drug ami Chemical Stote in JJlooinsburg,
ami Hint he will be happy to supply the wants of '
thoso who may givo him a call. Among Ilia a. '
ie
I nn FmsTEn Many men; who have
acquired great lame and celebrity in the
world, began their carreer as Printers, Sir
i uiacKstone, the commentator on ws
was ri Printer by trade. Kino- G eorrre NT
learned tho art,1 and frequently sot types af
ter he ascended the thronu of Kiirrl..!.
Wo scarcely need mention Franklin, for it
is well known to all who aro familiar with
his name, that he was a Printer. Alexan
der Campbell tho greatest Theologian that
uaa uvci igriicuu me cnrisuan world since
tho Apostolic age, is a Printer. Gentleman
oi mo "iralt," these aro gratifying facts;
but let us not be content that they alone be
huiu up io ine crcuid ol the profi'ssion
let us honor it ourselves, and do all we can
lo keep up, and elevate still higher, the
character of our beaulilul ait.
Ditto. "What's the meaning of Ditto
father, ' inquired a love sick green horn as
no was noeing cabbages one blue Monday
juiu uiuu, muiicreu mo o d man
"why booby, hero's one cabbage head and
there's another that's ditto." "That ditto
by hoky! dad then I'm done with Sal,
for as I squeezed her hand for the last time
about day-break this morning, and li'inled in
pretty plain English that I should like to get
married, shn. sin-liml nut illlfnt"
Latching the. Idea. A minister repeat
ing tho first line or so of a chapter in the
Bible, the clerk by some mistake read it af
ter htm. 1 lie clergyman read as follows:
"Moses was an austere man, and made
atonement for the sms of the people." The
clerk who could pot c.xactlv catch tho sen
1 ...I !. i, "..
ii.'iwu, rupunuu u uius; "moscs was an
oyster man, and mado ointment for the shins
b( the people." Again, "And the Lord
smote Job with soro boils,1' "And tho Lord
shot Job with four balh.
Way to If ealth."Nov Jacob, my son
you are about leaving home to go abroad in
the wido woild, and I wish to givo you
some advice, the fruits of my experience
And first of all, icmcmber that frugality iB
mo pniy true road to independence." 'Oh
but faith dad," exclaimed young ho'peful
"1 know better than that for when Jo and
I went to Independence we went the turn
pika; and 'spouse you'd go I'dllfor road to
save tho toll."
TOBIAS'S HEALTH EMPOIUUM
-Jlnd Family Drug Warehouse.
HIUI.TH,
'Tho poor mail's riches the rich man's bliss."
dortmclit are
Acid benzole
muriatic
nitric
sulphuric
tartaric
Anni seed
Acctato of zinc
0C9
Antimony (cruds.
Arrow root
Assafcctida
Alcohol
Alum
Arsenic whilo
Asptialtum .
Uark Peruvian red
cinnamon
Ualsam Copaivn
do malthd
offir
Barley pearled
Datcmnn's drops
Uismuth (nitrate) i
Ulackintr. far boots
Uorax refined
Urimstone
Uuuciindv nitcU
Dole Arincrnii
Uluc pill
Calomel
Carrosivc sublimate
Oalatmno
Camphor
Catechu '
Cayenne pepper
Cochineal
Cocculus IndicUs
Columbo .
Cologne water '. '
Conserve of roae i '
Cream tartar
Cubeh ,
Carawav nerd
Coriander seed
Chamomile tlowcri
Digitalis
Elixor of vitriol
Epjom aaltn
Essence of peppermint
' ot cinnamon
Extract of colocyntH
' of hemlock
of liquorice
Eyewater '
Fccniigrcek seed
'Gambogo
GnlU
Gintian root
Golden tincture ,
Godfrey' cordial
Gum Arabic
' Tragacanth
1 Ammoniac
' Shellac
' Kino
' Galbanum
' Myrrh
' Gauiacurri
' Juniper
ilclcborc, black
Iliera picra
Ink powder, black
iBinglass
Ipecacuanha
Ivorv black
Kcyser's universal plaster
joiap
Laudnum '
Liquorice root
Lunar caustic
I.ucifcr matches
Loco foco do.
Morphium
Magnesia calcined
do carbonato
Manila Hako '
do common
Mustard, Whiti
Nipple sheila
Nux Vomica
Opium
Opodeldoc
Orris root
Oxalic acid
Otto of Hoses
Ointment of mercury
' of Galls
of red precipitate
' of Spanish fly
' Citron
Wafers, White wax
Oil of Almonds,
' Amber ,
Anni seed
Caraway
Clovcs
' i Qopaiva
1 Lavender
1 . Origanum
' , Orange
' Peppermint
.Pennyroyal
' . ijoscinary
Ktto
Spiko
' Stono
j Sassafras
Tansy
Par -
' Winlergrccn
Woims'eed
Uritish
' Croton
Castor
' Ilarlcam
Pink root .
Pnragoric Ejixir
Plaster, adhesive
. do strenlrihrin'nir
Prepared chalk
r Pearl powder ,
..Pills, Anderson's, ScotU,
iloopcrs
' ' Iirtfs New London
German
Moron's
Evan's
Lyott's
, LciJics'
of Aloes
' of Assafatina
,v ' of Opium
' of Quinine
Quassia wood
QulckfcilvcJ
Quinine
Rhubarb'
Rochelle salt
Rotten stono
Rose water
Rust of Iron ,
Sago, pearled
Salarnmoniaj, erud's
Salt of tartar
SalVolatilo
Saltpans'
Sanders wood
Sariiupharilld
Sealing wax
Senna leaves
SenaVa snake root
Soap, cnstllo .
' shaving "t
" whito castila
fancy
Sodb, supar catbonats
Sub carbonato
Spanish fly
Spermaciti
Sweet spirits of nitrs
Soda powders
Spirits of hartshorn
' of Lavender comp;
' of Tarpcnrino
Seed Lnco
Smelling bottles
Sc'idlits powders
Sponge
Squill
Sugar of lead
Sulph'hr
Sucking bottles'
Tartar emetic
Tincture of Aloes
'. of AssafoMida
' of Peruvian bark
' or cinnamon
' of Muriate ofiron
' of Myrrh
' of Spanish fly
4 of Colcliicum see l
4 ofsenna
4 pf Valerian (
4 of Guiacunl
Tooth powder
4 brushes
Valerian root
Venice turpentine
Vrrdjgris, VcFinilliari
Virginia snako root
Vjals, different sizes
Vitroil, blue, grccn.whita
Whito Resin
In fino, his "Emporium of Health" will be found
. w.uu u.ujr ,unciy oi ,110 most Dpprovc,i
Drugs, Medicines, Paints, Dyc-StuM;
Oils, Fruit, Confections', yc. $c.
which are warranted of good quality, having becrf
carefully selected from tho best established ware
houses id Philadelphia; and which lid will SCH at
most reduced prices. He wilier every exertion to
accommodatH and benefit his customers, and there,
foro respectfully Eolicits tho patronage of a liberal
P"';1 c , D.8. TORIAS.
Jlloomsburg, January C,1S38. 37 It
WINE, BradyTtlTn, "CoT&TjuvJV
ccivcd, and rcadv for delivery to customers
at very reduced prices, by
. J- Ti Milsselmah; Co;
A school boy being asked by his teacher
how he should flog him, replied. "If you
please, sir, I should like to havo it upon the
Italian syBtem of penmanship, the heavy
itrohtt upwardt and the down ones light,''
Estate of Jacob IFmikr, late, tf Mount
Pleasant towtiship, Columbia county,
deceased.
WOTICB is hereby given, that Letters of Ad
1 ministration have been granted to tho subscri
ber m the cstato of said deceased. Therefore all
persons lwving claims agaist iaid eslato are io
quslod to present them, end those indebted are re
quested to mako immediate payment
Davtd Eves, Adm'r.
January 23 B38, o-fit