Abbeville press. (Abbeville, S.C.) 1860-1869, September 21, 1866, Image 4
m, EfOUGH TO DO. V V
*aa blackbird e?*1y learea bjja naat
To matt Ibo smiling mora,;.
And gather fragment? for its taest . . '
From upland, wood and taws ;
Tha busy bee that wings its way
'Mid sweets of varied hoe,
Atev'ry flower would seem to say?.
"There's work enough to do.'
The cowslip and the spreading vine,
The daisy in the grass,
The snow-drop and the eglantime,
Preach sermons ne we pae*.
The aut? within its craven deep,
Would bid us labor too,
And writes upon its tiny heap?
"There's work enough to do."
To have a heart for those who weep.
The sottish drunkard win ;
To roscuo all the children deep
In ignorance and sin;
To help the poor, the hungry feed,
To give him coat and shoe,
To see that all can write and read,
I? work enough to do.''
The time is short?the world is wide,
And much has to be done;
The wondrous earth, and all its pride,
Will raniih with the aun 1
The moments fly on lighting wipg?.
And life's uncertain too ;
"We've none to waste on foolish things,
"Tlipr/.*^ VL-,.rl- -1- ? '
? X van vu,vwg?I WU UV.
Tlie planetf, at their maker's will,
Move onward in theirfars,
For Nature's wheel is never still.
Progressive as tbe stars *
The leaves that-flutfcer in tbe air,
And summer's breezes woo.
One solemn truth to man declare?
"There's work enough to do.'
Who then can sleep when all around
Is active, fresh and free i
Shall Man?creation's lord?be found
Less busy thou the bee I
Our courts and alleys aro the field,
If men should aoarcli them through.
rru _?. t?? ' - - - -
ju?urn me BWceiHof Jabor yield,
And "work enonghio dp."
IDLENK88.
There is too much idleness in Uiia country.
It is breeding rice and immortality.
Jt is filling our jails with criminals. Crime
Jias been on the gradual increase for six
months. Thi3 comes of idleness; and idleness
comes in a greaJt measuro of that
abominable idea that a white man cannot
be a gentleman and work. He most get
money, for that is indispensable. But how?
'fbatJa it. Young men Jiaye not the disposition
to work, and by patient economy secure
ft h?aio fnr ""
... vuoiuon uyviuf-iopa. J.uey
must Lave it now. This suggests expedients.
Tliese lead to temptation; and temptation
leads to crime, ' Hence, wo have murder^
horse thefts and breaches of trust
Why should a young man consider it degrading
or even undignified to svork?
President Johnson purchased his present
residence in past Tennessee with the proceeds
of his labor as a tailor. One of the
wealthiest bankers in New York commenced
the world n? ? ?us? *'
? ?? M ^Hiueugij DVlllll^ LU UIO
huckster the products of his own labor.
{3en. J^at Cleburn, at one lime tbe Lead of
tbe Arkansas bar, subsequently the ruling
spirit in a powerful army, began life as a
day-laborer. Judge Reagan, PostmaBter
General of tbe late Confederate State*,
was once a woodobopper on tbe banks oi
tbe Mississippi. Tbe world is fuj] of sucb
examples. But where can we point to a
successful man who spent bis early youth
in hunting business which be considered to
be more genteel than manual labor I Who
has ever beard of a man succeeding who
?pent his early manhood "waiting tor bowotfaing
to torn up V"
y oung man if yon would susceed. ao tn
work. If yon cannot obtain a clerkship,
uke something else. You had better be
roiling barrel*, or plowing, or building
fence, or chopping cord wood, pr carrying
the hod, than doing nothing. Quit de~ 1
pending upon yonr friends. Strike out for
yourself. Learn at once the greatest of
all lessons, lb at of self-reliance. Have a
bead, a will, a purpose of your own. Go
to v?ork and watch your opportunity. The
soil upon wbicb you hare been reared never
refuses a competence to those who am
willing to dig. Then, If you can' do no
it- SE'iffeI u ,?- ' --
uwor, uig. n wui pay to dig.-- Nor is
there anything andigoi?ed or vplgsr in it.
It is honorable if y&3 fibooee to make it so.
Then dig stod wafceh your opportunity.
Put don't stand id),!r and u9?h for some*
'j>L< iMnao' LartL^Jt*. amoot4*A ]&$',
py man who has not the lore and smile of
*pwm*9 MfCttmpwg hit* in srary department
of ilfau Tbe world may h*4wJc?4d
aatbax io
his ?MIM |irMC**tft4> v*he fat ]
*id*>*ad f?k &e ior?
b? fotgtbi.his Mfee and trdriWeBi and is a
hl^pre^d
taku not with him that {Hand who wil?
forsake him in so misignty who will
divide his som?< ' bmmi hk
Bft the reil Afros hitkeait, and ttovw aajsffft
S '4^: "^n:^ i''
' EMjoktov^Z h?va a Ml
rJeoc*," ?j* ? wrfcwy'% Ttmog" men who
h? i? often wrptfeed toMHooni off in
lite kn^, ?a4 that It wm only tfed, ofi to
*/**? tiiatt mirrntopmi, .
*
* i-"'.:. ' ''
V ' -.
. ' '.Jy". ... '; '
. . ? '"" '* "
MAXIMS TO QTX1XMTA YOUKO MAJT.
Keep good com caDy or q(Mae. '
Never be idle. If jour hands cannot be
usefully employed, attend to the cultivation
of your mind.
Always speak the truth.
Make few promises.
Live no to your engagements.
Have no very intimate friends.
Keep your own secrets, if you have
any.
"When you ppoak to a person, look him
in the face.
Good company and good convesration
are the very sinows of virtue.
.!.? ? -n it.:?
uuuu bua.iKiKi KVU<o mi LlllUgB else, j
Never listen lo loose or iule conversn- |
tion.
You liad better be poisoned in your!
blood than in your principles.
Your character cannot be essentially injured
except by your own nets.
If any one speaks evil of you, let your
life be so virtuous that nono will believe
him.
Always speak and net ns in tbe presence
' God.
ink not intoxicating liquors.
ver live, misfortune excepted, within
your-income.
When you retire to bed, think over
what you have done during the day.
Never speak lichtlv of raliorina
, W O
I Make no haste to be rich if you would
i prosper.
Small and steady gains giro competency
with tranquility of mind.
Never play nt any kind of 9 game.
Avoid temptation through fear tbat you
may not withstand it.
Earn vour money before you ppend it.
Never run in djobt, unless you see a way
to get out again.
Never borrow if you can possibly avoid
it
Be just before you are generous.
Keep yoorsey innocent if you would be
bappy. 1
Save when you we young to spend wlicn
you nro old.
Never think that wbicb you do for religion
ia tililA nr mnnotr
a ? w. Vf UUDCjrciH#
Always go to meeting when you can.
Read some portion of tbe Bible every
day.
Often ih.nk of death and your accountability
to God. Head over tbe above maxims
once a week, Saturday night.?Oa?
zelt? and Courier.
# ?
Start-ino is thb Woru>.?Many parents
toll and moil, slave, and even sin to
acquire money to enable their sons to have
what is callcd "a good start in the world."
It is vety doubtful if such exertion3 are
ever repaid by the gaining of the object
desired. "The gear that is easily gotten is
not like the gear that is won," the old
song savs: and an ? mattnr ?
? f ?? ? v* mwif no QDO
rich men's eons waste their own time and
their father's substance oti frivolities if not
in riotous living. The leading men of every
position in life?statesmen, professional
men, bnsio.ess-men, and mechanic*?are
not sons of rich fathers. They have mostly
climbed to eminence by their own exertions.
Thrown on their own mental resources
at an early age, as many of them
were, they would laugh to scorn the opinion
that wealth is necessary to him who
would succeed in any department of life.
It is not on beds of down that the mua-,
cles harden and the nerves acquire tension,
but struggling with the elements of opposi
tion and inertia. So let none of onryoang
readers despair because they are apparently
sunk in the depths of poverty and obscurity.
Th*? hrxvn ?"' ?* - ? -J? *-? 1
t - ? wiu iuo icaujr nana
can work miracles, and enable them to outstrip
this luxuriously bred who seem for
ahead of them now they are starting in the
world. .. |
<n?
Probable Origin ow Cju>.c*8.?Hsny
inventions of the greatest value sre sometime*
the most difficult to t/ace to their
origin. It is so with clocks and watches.
Neither the precise year of their invention, I
nor the name of their inventors, can be
confidently a'atod, fill the close of the
tenth century; no other mode of measuring
time than b)r the sundial or hou? glass appears
to have existed V and then we first
beard of a graduated maobanism adapted
for the purpose, Ibis invention being usually
Starfbed to the ittotlc
Pope fn iiome 699, under (be name of Sy]-1
vekter 1L Tbeee clock were otuabrou* roM
chin*Md it> not till the fotorUeoth
ceotnty the* we h?*r of pCrt* Me clock.
. J* the w**ee<^*?t^,<Wy ^raeb
,nore comipoji, n?<i wer^jwrtof the fenlj
4v? *be?UrcUk &&/!#**
tong t* i?** ,?Mir ww??ieyb
regulated bpweigbUjux) tittM,; like, tbe
motive power, *n p*?ec of ? ll?e,
geve, e^ ef itfcf,#***# <MP'
lary,Oe#*t 'jfcnet iaptt>*?T>*et, tllilj
eow west on imU1j? end rmttifc# in U?
iowoiioft <tf Mii|<
*. ., '*
*.. "* % .?
V " ' *' *
* : j; "
* #;
Old Bonks.?The oldest remnant of
mortality extant is the skeleton of one the
eariess Pharaohs, (enoreased in its original
durial robes, and wonderfully perfect
considering it* age,) which was deposited,
about eighteen or twenty monts ago, in the
British Museum, and is justly considered
the most valuable of all its arcbajological
| treasures. The lid of the coffin whSMi
contained the royaf mummy w?3 inscribed
with the name of its occupant, Pharaoh
Myfeerimus, who succeeded the heir of the
builder of the Great Pyramid* about twenty-two
centuries before Christ. Only
think of it 1 the mouarob whose crumbling
bones and leathery intergumenls are exciting
the curiosity and wonder of crowds
of gazers in London, reigned in Egypt before
Abraham was born, and only about two
centuries or so after Mizraim, tlie grandson
of old Father Noah and flrst of the Pharaohs,
had been gathered to his fathers
Wlir. thft tiilrt?nriorVo of llm
- - ?j J ?.1>v MM. WW 1/1 tuv J/OiUgO CUU1U
scarcely have been obliterated, or the
gopber wood knee timbers of the Ark bavo
rotted op Mount Ararat, when lliis man of
the early world lived, moved, and had bis
beiugl His flesh and blood werecotemporary
with tho progenitor# of the great patjiarcli,
his bones and shirvelled ekin aro
contemporary with the nineteenth century r
and the data of the -Crucifixion is only
about midway between his era and ours.
What a gulf of Time is brieged, as it were,
by tboBe mouleering relics. Of all the res.
urreciions effected by the archaeologists,
that of Pharaoh Mykerimus is undoubtedly
tho most extraordinary and interesting.
When he flourislued, remote antiquity* bad
just beguq,
? i m
Bomktijin.o for the Ladies.?Colored
starch is the latest nod greatest novelty of
the season. It is made in pink, buff, the
new mauve, and a delicate green and blue
will soon be produced* Any artiole starched
with the new preparation is completely
colored?dyed we should have said, but as
it washes out, and the garment that was
pink to-day may be green to-morrw, and
buff afterwards, we can hardly SAy "dyed."
It is intended especially for (hose bright but
treacherously colored muslins, that are cost
ly, wash out and perplex their owners. If
the pn^ero baa been mauve, they only need
ill A in*liVA klarMi ? If nw>ot. ? ?? - L -
? | givoUf gicou OVUIUII J
and tliey cad be rendered one even and
pretty shade, thus becoming not only wearable
again, but very stylish. White antimacassars
or lace curtains may also be colored
in the same may, and infinite variety
afforded.
Two French peasants were discussing
the continental war. when one attempted
to explain to the other the nature of the
telegraph. After repeatedly failing, he
war struck with a brilliant notion, and exclaimed
: Imagine that the telegraph is
an immense long dog?so long tlmt its
head is at Vienna and its tails ifc at Paris.
Well, tread on ita tail, which is at Paris,
and it will bark at Vienna. Do you understand
now, rtupid, what the telegraph
..... vm, jm icpticu tun oiuer
"I have an idea now what a telegraph
must be/1
A Quaker Woman's Sermon.?My
dear friends, there are three things that}
very maoh wonder at. The first is that
children should be so fooluh as to throw
up stones, clubs and brickbats into fruit
trees to knock down Omit. Jf they would
let it alone it would fall itself. The second
is, tbatiqep should be so foolish as to go to
war and kill aach other. If let alone they
would die themselves, ?he third and last
thing I wonder at is, that yovng men should
he so unwise as to go after young women.
If they wonld stop at home the young
women jrovld come after thera.
; i .i? ? ?
Opposition to the Ocean Telegraphs?A
New .York inventon proposes to build a
ship for $8,000, which will oroM the Atlantic,
in two days and a half. His theory is,
that by means of a vactium at the bottom
of li:s craft, it will rest on the snrfaoe of the
water, and thus receive no resistance to its
motion. Probablv he is the, man who
once seixed (be straps of hia-own boots and
lifted himself into seat in his Stata Lact.
> ? . ,-Yf '.T~~ ?
ulature. *> ... . '' '<, ;<
Ha only is independent who can noaioUIq
bim*e)f by hisown exertion*. fe w
. Wby UVbUpering ? breaoh of good
manneri! Because it ? hoi' alopd.
- Ton bad betUr Had oatooaof. jrotp o?b
fault* tbantep of fo?f ii?%bbor,?.
ticoata, bonjD tbe otay*, aad crib tbe ba
|iaw^; ? fJ itvwi tifli r.t *fd tu? iS fl .
'' A*0rdof kfefoottkaekfo* apokrt an
it*** .it
f A^ntmm' Sf&fcpi *** bminiM
jftfc he*d? fA Ufr* for we that *? fiod
: r**\ lUtO *&(?*&*?* ' ^11
hff ' j. ' I
Tb? "as^Wi
b^eh-fe*4tt?"Mftp Aoor gups.
y
' ft''' '*- y-.
Household Tvjiant8.?History givos
us foil length portaiU of many of tbe colloessl
oppressors of mankind, but makes
little or no mention of the private tyrants
who have abounded in all ages and countries
among the 'undistinguished throng.'
Yet, in proportion to their opportunities,
the lstter are perhaps as culpable as the
former. There are fireside monarcbs as
ctuel as remorseless, as utterly selfish and
brutal as any crowned villain that ever
lived. The difference between one of these
family despots and nNero or a Commodus,
is simply a difference of sphere and of
nower. It is true, he cannot violentlv nut
to dealh his subjects?liis wife and family
without being held responsible by the
law; but he can kill them by inches without
the slightest danger. Qe can murder
by little and little, tho poor weak woman
whom he has promised before heaven to
cherish and protect, with aa muoh impunity
as the Sultan of Turkey can bowstring
a treacherous slave. "We rail at the lawless
deeds of kings and his emperors, but
many n household kaiser rules his family
as tyranically, as they rule their "hereditary
bondsmen.." If the annals of each do
raeslio despotism were patent to the world,
as they are to the world's Creator, we
' should all be compelled to admit that the
tyrants of history, black as they are painted
by historians, did not witness the torture
of their victims with more pleasure
than Bomo husbands and fathere seem to
taVe in tormenting their wives and children.
USEFUL TABLE.
In consequence of numerous inquiries
daily as to the price of Gold for Confeder
ate Notes during a certain period, we have
for the convenience of our citizens, who
may have settlements to make, prepared
table from our books, showing actual snle
from January 1, 1801, to May 1, 1865
which is at your service, should you think
proper to publish the Bame.
F. C. Barber 6c Son,
Exchange Brokers.
Augusta, Gft., June 9, 1805.
Price* of Gold for Confederate Notes
1861?January 1 to May 1, 5 cents prcm-itim
May 1 to October, 10 " ?
October 1 to Oct 15, 12 " ?
Oct 15 to Nov. 15, 15 " "
December 1, 20 " ?
December 16, 30 ? ??
18C2?-January 2, 20 " "
January 15, 20 " ?
February 1, 25 " '
February 15, 40 " ??
March 1, 60 ?
Mnroli 15, 05 M ?
April 1, V5 " '
April 15,
xi 1 <"* ??
Moy 15, 95 " "
June 1, 95 " "
June 15 to July 15, J2.00 for ?1
August!, 2 20 1
August 15, 2.20 M 1
September I, 2.50 " 1
October 1. 2.50 ? 1October
15, 2.50 1
Nov. 1 to Feb., 1, *C3, a.00 " 1
1803?Feb. 1 to March 1, 8.10 " .1
March 2, 8.25 " l Vl,
"<> March 16 to May 15, fi.00 ? 1
May 15, 0,00
June 1, 0.50 ? 1
Juue 15, , 7.60 ? 1
July I. 8.00 ? 1
Jo>V 15, 10.00 " 1
August 1, 14.00 ? \
August 15, v 15.00 " 1
Sept. 1 lo slept. 15, 14.00 " 1
October 1, 1J?.00 " 1
Octob?r 15, 12.60 " 1
PovemUor 1, 18.00 ? 1
December 1, 20.00 " X
December 15, 21.00 " 1
1864?January 1, 21.000 " 1
Jan. IS to PsJb I, ?1.00 " 1
February 15, gl.00 J.} /
^ March 1 to Marob 15, 20.00 *< 1
WlVi ' J?-?> " 1
April 15, . 21.06 ". I
May 1. 20.00 " I
]May 16. 18.00 ?' l
iuqe 1 to July 15, 18.00 ?: 1
July 16 to Aug. 15, 20.00 " 1
August 15, - 2'iOO M 1
Bept^.iber 1, 20.60 1
September 15, 22.50 '". 1
October 1, 27.00 " 1
October 15, 25.00 .** 1
November 26.60 ?.? l
November 16. 28.00 ? 1
December 1, 82.00 ? l
December 16, 88.00 ? 1
December 81. fil.oo ? i
1865?January].- rfiOjUO 1
January 18, 65.00. ?? i
February 1,;\ JpO.OO m i
February 16, 46.00 " I
. JJarch 1, ; 65.Q0 " , J
- Mareb 16, ' BO.OO ??/J
. April 1, 70.00 ?? 1
' April 15, -'401116
April SO, 100.00 " j
. eoo.oo' - r ?
April 87,* 90000 ? f }
April *8, 600.00 ?1 , t;
' April W, ftOOcQOtf*" -IT
April 80, - ' ' ""WOO.OO
. , M?y?. ' laoario v u ?,. j
Wliiah ?m the last actual ule for Conf#dflr?t?
*PH\T/nA T/f- 1 ..
CHARLESTON' MILT GOBMK,
idaptoftmd MU rigid j miktrt to lWfcUowlog
, -* *
v A-ifcL'YfrJ^ki-i. > --v
,
\ CANDIDATES." ?.
iTWe are authorized to announoe llENKY
S. CASON a candidate forSberilf at the ensuing
olection.
Mk??us. Entreat*: The numerous friends of
WM. G. NEHL. resmMfully nominate him o
candidate for Sheriff of. Abbeville' District at
the coming election. Wo sincerely hope liis
friends nnd creditors -will give him a BtronS
pull, along pull,-nnd pull together.
NOT a Qbumtor.
The friends of JOSEPH T. MOORE,
announce him a Candidate for Sheriff of Abbeville
District, at the next election.
Pnifno l'l ----- MtrrtVV.*
T. HUTCHISON as a candidate for Sheriff at
the next election. " Many Frjeni>s.
The friends of '3. W. COCHRAN, announee
him a Candidate for Sheriff at I lie next
election. .
ear The friends of JOHN W. LF*l.liV,~E*q
respectfully nnnounec hitn n candidate for
Clerk of the Court.
The friends o f m'aTTIIK.W MCDONald,
Esq., respectfully announce him as a can
didate for re-eloction to the officc of Clerk of
the Court. ?
tm- We ore authorised to announce DAVID
CRAWFOKD, a candidate fur Tax Colleotor
at the ensnini? election.
In the Matter of the Real Estate
of Sarnh Pnoo
m> uvv) wv W>i
SOUTH CAROLINA,
ABBEVILLE DISTRICT.
James A. McCord, Guardian, Applicnnt, against
John Davis and wife Jane, et al., Defendant?.
IT appearing to my satisfaction thai Thomas
Pace, tho children of Matilda Thomas,
decVI, (names not known,) the children of
Rich'd Pace, dec'd, (names not known,) some
of the Defendants in this case, reside oeyond
the limits of this State, it is, therefore,
Ordered, that they do appear and object to
the division or sale of the Ilea) Estate of Sarah
i Pace, decM, on or before the 6th November
next, or their consent to the same will (be enter*
ed of record
i WM. UIIX, O. A, IX
August G, 18GC, 17, Im-ftm
In tho Matter of tho Boal Estate
T" T 1-1
ux o iib. ?i. auams, aoc a.
SOU TH CAROL IN A,
ABBEVlLltH filSTJlfCT.
Rachel C. Adam?, applicant, ?g&inat Jqlin 3.
Adams, Geo. F. Adams, et al., Defendants.
IT appeariug to my satisfaction that JOHN 3.
ADAMS, UF.O. F. ADAMS, tho children
of Mrs. JULIA McCALLA, dec'd (names not
known), the children of Mrs. LOUISA YARliROUGH,
dec'd (names not known), Defendant*,
reside without this State :
It is, therefore, ordered that they do appeor
and object to the division or snle of the Real
Eatate of J AS. J. ADAMS, dec'd, on or before
the 6th day of November next, or their consent
to the same will he entered of record.
WILLIAM HILL, O. A. D. [t. 9.]
Ordinnry'H Office, Augiikt B, 18G6.
August 14 41 eom3t
DRUGS,
MEDICINES AND BOOKS.
ALWAYS n good nnd select stock of Cftnda
on liand, consisting of Drujjs, Dye Stuffs,
Spices of nil kinds, Patent Medicine*, Fancy
Goods, Brushes, Books nml Stationery, Tobacco,
Pnintp, Oils, Varnishes, Glass and Putty,
1$ randy and Wine for Medical use, Philo
token, or Female Friend, Sugar and Coffee.
KEROSENE OIL,
Chimneys and Lamps,
WITH MANY ARTICLES NOT MENTIONED.
Orders promptly attended to.
Money required to attend all Orders, at
the CASH SYSTEM is entirely in
practice. :'"'J
EDWIN PARKER.
Abbevni^% a, Teb'y 1,1$0G, 42, tf.
ifSj'
DRY6Q0BS,
' ;. ,?T-i-s^a ;
WHOLESALE AND BSTAIt
gffiffiS' ss>?..
_^g.'.8^,,UT,X ?,, , I
.ssafflsaR^
1 Ml l ' I I I?
lyC- | rV:
Stands for Clotliihg itlion fashionably made
1 lV . Jill
For Liglit Fabricn to suit the spring trade
p:- o
Our establishment, where please to call;
J.
Tidy garment* uliovild be worn by all s
H
Hot weather, coming rapidly without far;
r ! IV, ' - ; * '
Invite j-ou to buy yom clothing liera
N': '
I \ < |
New styles we aie receiving ever}- wcecf
G
Olatl to 8?C you wlien our establishment you
eeok.
? O
REMEMBER
I. SIMON & CO.,
Fashionable Clothing Emporium
2*4 BROAD STREET, AUGUSTA GA.
May 18, 180G, C?tf
FRANK. ARNOLD. liURWELL GREEN
F. ARNOLD & CO,,
DEALERS IN
GROCERIES.
\: (Y)':'s<p.
HAPnWADP ?.r
itniiu ?V niltij Ut.j
r. v ? > | j? 'i
AT CLEVELAND'S OLD STAND.
. i ?>-'.
E desire to call the nttention of Hie pub- . (
* \ lie to our complete Slock of I
GROCERIES, J
which we offer oheap for CA81I. Our assort*
raent consists of
sugars, coffees. teas. pickles, vinegar,
lorsteifs. oystrus, sardines,
Mackerel, salt, can.
NED FRUITS, JELLIES, FINE
WINES, PR AN DIES, ALE,
WHISKEYS, PORTER,
CANDIES OF ALL
. KINDS. SOAP,
PIPES, 4. ? ,
INK.
.. -r PAVER,
CORRAKTS,
FINE . CHEWING
AKp BM OK IN ft TO- ?
BACCO, FINK CIGARS, ' *
COTTON AKI) WOOL CARDS,
BLACK I NO, ALMONDS, RAISINS,
HARDWARE, IIOES, TRACE-CHAINS,
BUCKETS, TUBS, SHOVELS, SPADfc^
Axes, HstcheU,
File*, Screws,
Nails, Drawknires,
ri f-x , .Sifters, r, Padlocks,
' I f rBrooms, ? ' Smoothing Ir?ns,
i-.H Ii >J 'J^lieanv' \ , Bylfi* Blade* ; Knives,
Forts,' Pocket KnlTrt,
-? . v s. ^Measures,, Shot and Caps,
t c a i ?i Q',f V ?1A i *!
GMSSWAfflB
Mr Produce of all kind* taken in cxehango
for good* mt .tfia U10IJB3T n^kpt. prices.
A fine lottof BUMMER HAT3 ?ad SHOES ai
*' VMhingtoB, 'OMt ri,
ROCKYBttEB
^GrV^FlferfyKifftlBk ^Tlhimid8fc8M666Mii ^"
" w. * \yk
*"'X' * " * . .***
? r.:.' >5=SiSS ' z-. ,*