The Ne wbernian. It ATE OF A DVFRTMSiXG t rrBLIKHED BY One Sqnare, one insertion. '..... .yl. 1.00 One Square, two insert Jons ..... l.-V) One Square, one month. . . : ' 2.50 One Sqnaxe, three monthHT . ......... 6.00 One SVjnare, six months ; 1 0.OO One Sqtuir, .twelve months 1 5.00 For larger aJrcrti-cmcnt liberal cor.traot will W mulv . . Ten -ent rr Hue chargM f,r first inWtioo Joravertifmf nU not Kpedallv contracted for.. AtlvertieHent mnut be! routined KtrictW to the businetw of the advertmT. " j M CARPENTER, TER3IS in advance j..... .$2.25 .1.25 . .75 . ,2'y THE OLD NORTH STATE. FOREVER. .i., ,'n advance. Months in advance PIoutb(Waavance... VOL. VII. NEWlBEBN, N. G., SATURDAY, JANUARY 25, 1879. NO. 4. Newbernian, "democratic Weekly Newspaper, ' 1 HE AN IN JDJ VV JLPJC fflHDLEY BROTHERS, South Front and Middle Street, Newborn, N. C. CIGARS, AND Tobacco ! Our Stock. Is now Complete, embrac ing every Article known in . the Liquor line. -: r . It is the Largest Stock ever i J : " exhibited in the South. IBE BEST I SELECTED STOCK EVER PURCHASED. The most Complete Assort -ed Stock known. Bought Direct; from. t;lo T31s ' tillers In Kentuoky and. Ohio, FOR OA8H We Guaranteed Sell as Low as any . . : ! . House North of Us. : : r"V:::-;-' ' v - Windley Brothers, NEWIJERN.N. C. Emeraia Cigar factory, C ERDMANN, Proprietor, Mi Street opposite Episcopal CM NEWBEllN, N. O., Hinufieturei choice : Havana and Domestio CIGARS of the following brands: CORONA, CHARMS, CROWNED, PRIZE, EflERALD, KIBO, THE PRESENT, OP ER, THEY ALL DO IT, DE JOSE, - BCLLY, FLOR DE ALMA, HARD PAN, FRIENDLY COMPET- T, ; IT0B,, SPORTING,. ' LAST IDEA. . i s ' anB Tobaeco Store under the Johu J s. Palmer. Thaw,.. - ".!''' S thew:.;.!.8 .0I na Tobaoco at retail prices alwayB on hand. B- M. GATES, r DEALER IN V hardware, - Tinware. i i Crockery, ,V kLL KINDS OF , SADDLES, HARNESS, 04 arid Willmrr wQ -.1 1 . ' PLOWS AND OTHER ' cultural Implements tots, 6ns and Yarnlslies, : "'PlE STREET, Newborn, N.C. ' Store, Brick Blook. LA t. House Furnishing Goods Beginning Again. When, sometimes, our feet grow weary, On the rugged hills of life The path stretching lot g and dreary ' t With trial and labor rife r We pause on the toilsome journey, Glancing backward in valley and glen, And sigh with infinite longing x ' To return and begin again. For behind la the dew of the morning, , In all its freshness and light, And before are doubts and shadows, And the chill and gloom of the night. -We remember the sunny places We passed so carelessly then, And ask, with a passionate longing, J- To return and begin again. Ah, vain, indeed, is the asking ! : Life's duties press all of us on, And who dare shrink from the labor, Or sigh for the sunshine that's gone ? And, it may be, not fkr on before us Wait fairer places than then, Life's paths may yel lead by still waters - Though we may not begin again. For evermore upward and onward Be our paths on the hills of life, And soon with a radiant dawning Transfigure the toil and the strife , And our Father' hand will lead us ' Tenderly upward then ; -In. the joy and peace of a fairer world He'll let us begin again. THE AVALANCFii. The following graphic account of the perils of avalanches in the Alps is frcm Hours of Exercise in the Alps," by the celebrated John Tyndall, the scien tist. A party of six were being con ducted by two local guides and a famous Alpine guide, Johann Joseph Bennen, ovgr the Haut de Cry, one of the Swiss alps. They advanced in the beginning of te ascent very rapidly. The peak was glistening before them, and hopes of success cheered their spirits. After a time they came to snow frozen upon the surface which would bear them a few steps and then break down. This, of course, delayed matters and was very fatiguing. Finally it came to a point that, in order to reach a certain arete, they would be obliged to go up a steep snow field 800 feet high, 150 feet broad at the top and 500 feet at the bottom. Louring the ascent they sank about one foot deep at every step. After mount ing for some distance the two leading men suddenly sunk abDve their waists. They were enabled to get out after some struggles, and presently found better footing and came to. the conclu sion that the snow was accidentally softer there than elsewhere. But Ben nen was afraid of starting an avalanche, and said so. They started forward againbut let the book complete thi story : The snow-field split in two about fourteen or fifteen feet above us. Tht cleft was at first quite narrow, not more than an inch broad. An awful silence ensued, and then it was broken by Ben nen's voice: ' "Wir sind alle verloren" (we are all lost;. His words were slow and solemn, and those who knew him felt what they really meant when spoken by such a man as Bennen. , They were his last words. I drove my alpenstock into the snow and brought the weight of my body to bear on it. It went in to within three inches of the top. I then waited. It was an awful moment of suspense. I turned my head toward Bennen to Bee whether he had done the same thing. To ; my astonishment, I saw him turn round, face the valley and stretch out both arms. The ground, on which we stood began to move slowly, and I felt the utter uselessnees of any alpenstock. I soon sank up to my shoulders, and be gan descending backward. From this moment I saw nothing of what had hap pened to the rest of the party. ; With a good deal of trouble I suc ceeded in turning round. The speed of the avalanche increased rapidly, and be fore long I was covered up with snow and in utter darkness. I was suffocat ing, when, with a jerk, I suddenly came to the surface again. The ropehad caught, most' probably on a rock, and this was evidently the moment when it broke. I was on a wave of the ava lanche, and saw, it before me as I was carried down. - It was the most awful sight I ever witnessed. The head of the avalanche was already at the spot where we had made our last halt. The head alone was preceded by a thick cloud of snow- dust; the rest of the avalanche was clear. ' Around me I heard the horrible hiss ing of the snow, and far before me the thundering of the foremost part of the avalanche. To prevent myself sinking again I made use of my arms, much in the same way as when swimming in a standing position. At last I noticed that I was moving slower ; then I saw the pieces of snow in front of me stop at some yards distance ; then the snow straight before me stopped, and I heard on a large scale the same creaking sound that is produced when a heavy cart passes over hard-frozen snow in winter. - I - felt that I had also stopped, and instantly threw up both arms to protect my head in case I should again be covered up. I had stopped, but the snow behind me was still in motion ; its pressure on my body was so strong that I thought I should be crushed to death. This tremendous pressure lasted but a short time, and ceased as suddenly as it had begun. I was then covered up with snow coming from behind me. My first impulse was to try and! re-cover my head, but this I could not do. The avalanche had frozen by pressure the moment it stopped, end I was frozen in. Whilst trying vainly to move mv arms, I suddenly became aware that the hands as far as the wrists had the faculty of motion. The conclusion J t hey must be above the snow. I set to work as well as I could : it was time, for could not have held out much lontrer. At last' I saw a faint glimmer of light The crust above my head was eettinsr thinner and it let a little air pass, but I could not reach it anv more with mv hands : the idea struck me that I might pierce it with my breath. After several efforts I succeeded in doing so. and felt suddenly a rush of air toward my mouth ; I saw the skv attain through a . . v w a ittle round hole. A dead silence reigned around me. I was surprised to be ttill alive, and so persuaded at the first moment that none of my fellow sufferers had survived that I did not even think of shouting for them. I then made vain efforts to extricate my arms, but found it impos sible ; the most I could was to join the ends of my fingers, but they could not reach the snow any longer. After a ew minutes I heard a man shouting. What a relief it was to know that I was not the sole survivor I To know that perhaps he was not frozen in and could come to my assistance I I answered. The voice approached, but seemed un certain where to go, and yet it was quite near. A sudden exclamation of surprise ! Bebot had seen my hands. He cleared my head in an instant, and was about o try to cut me out completely, when I saw a foot above the snow, and so near to me that I could touch it with my arms, although they were not quite free yet. I at once tried 1 to move the f coi ; it was my poor friend's. A pang of agony shot through mejas I saw that the oot did not move. Poor Boissoult had ost sensation, and was perhaps already dead. Bebot did his best ; after some time he wished me to help him, so he reed my arms a little more, so that I could make use of them. I could do but little, for Bebot had torn the axe from my shoulder as soon as he had cleared my head. (I generally carry an axe separate from my'alpenstock, the blade tied to the belt and handle at tached to the left shoulder. ) Before coming to me Bebot had helped Nance out of the snow; he was lying nearly horizontally, and was not much covered over. Nance found Bevard, who was upright in the snow, but covered up to the head. After about twenty minutes the two last-named guides came up I was at length taken out; the snow had to be cut with the axe Jown to my feet before I could be pulled jut. A few minutes after one o'clock p- m. we came to my poor friend's face. 1 wished the body to be taken out com oletely, but nothing could induce the three guides " to work any longer, from the moment they saw that it was too late to save bim. I acknowledge that they were as nearly as incapable of doing anything as I was. V When I was taken out of the snow the oord had to be cut. We tried the end going toward Bennen, but could not move it; it went straight down, and showed us that there was the grave of the bravest guide Valais ever had, and ever will have. What a Practical Joke Cost In July, 1877, the newspapers gave an account of a practical joke that was played on William Webber, of New York, by parties who enticed him into a saloon on the pretense that a lifting machine was to be found there by which their respective strength could be tested. He asserted that they induced him to take hold of the rings and pull, and that, while he was exerting himself to the utmost, Stewart, from behind the bar, had the electricity turned on, there by giving him a shocking shock, to the great disarrangement of his! nervous system. Like the frogs in the fable,' it was almost death to poor Webber, al though it was great fun for the saloon man and the rest. The fun of the thing is not quite so apparent now. I Webber sued the saloon keeper, and the case has been from court to court, and has been finally settled after being over a year and a half in litigation. Webber gets $200 damages, and this, with costs, makes the little pleasantry amount to a $400 joke, which is altogether too practi cal for the saloon keeper to go into fits laughing over. , Cure for the Drinking Habit. A tincture of cinchona rubra is ad ministered by Dr. D'TJnger, of Chicago, with great success, for curing the drink ing habit. He says : I was a physi cian at Cambridge, Md., and gave the remedy for ague where quinine had failed, and cured the patient. Some time after I was In a billiard room, and this man came, and some friends asked him to drink. He said ' No,' and when they rallied him upon it he told them that Dr. D'TJnger had given him some stuff since he was sick, and that since then he had not wanted to drink. I spoke to the man about it, and he per sisted that he had no desire for liquor, and the medicine had done it. Soon after, an old farmer, who was a hard drinker, came to me and asked met to give him some of the same medicine, as the other had told him about it. I did so, and with the same result. Then I tried it on a number of cases in a pri vate way, and it never failed to cure." Killed by a Pet Bear. Two bears were fastened by four-foot chains in front of the stables of Wm. H. Thorns, a tavern-keeper at Parkville, Long Island. One was fastened to the stable building, the other to a poet near by, so that they could approach to with in a few feet of one another. A number of boys were playing in the road close to the bears. The village boys were in the habit of playing with the animals. They approached and caught hold of them with impunity. The bears stood a good deal of teasing, and never offered to resent the number less indignities which the boys heaped upon them. The more they were an noyed the merrier and more good natured they appeared to become; and while they rivaled their tormentors in cutting capers, they always remained harmless, and far excelled the others in placid forbearance. On a recent Monday afternoon there was opportunity for1 the boys to snow ball the bears, and they took advantage of it They had frequently been driven away an cf warned not to annoy the ani mals, but the warning ,waB made on principle, with a view to getting rid of the boys, and those who made it had no belief of its good faith. Among the persecutors was Peter Stretch, son of Samuel Stretch, of Parkville, a lad of twelve or thirteen years of age, and a bright, sturdy boy. It was about two o'clock in the afternoon. The boys had grown tired of their sport, and half a dozen had turned to pelting one an other. Young Stretch was standing near Ben, the larger bear. He was facing the boulevard, and his back was turned toward the animal. All at once the bear, With no especial exasperation and without warning, walked toward him and caught him by the leg with his paw. The boy wore thick leather boots outside his trousers, and the animal's claws, although they pierced, did not hold. But instantly the bear rose on his hind legs, and, throwing one of his fore paws over the lad's shoulder, caught him with the other around the body, and drew him into his embrace. At the first touch the boy screamed.with terror, and the cry attracted the attention of several who were in the vicinityl James Carrol, Mr. Thorn's stableman, was near by, and he was the first to go to the lad's rescue. Mr. Thorns himself was in the barroom of the tavern, and he also hastened out. Both of these, coming upon the bear with! bale sticks which they caught up on ihe way, belabored him soundly, and John Conners, jump ing from his wagon, prodded the animal with a pitchfork. The bear, slunk away, leaving the-boy lying face downward on the ground. The three men picked him up at once aud carried him into the favern, but he was quite dead. The whole transaction occupied scarce ly a minute. After catching at his boot, and while endeavoring to throw his paw over his shoulder, the claws of the be.r ripped the lad's scalp from the forehead way over to the back of the neck, and made deep wounds ini his chest. Catch ing him then in a deadly hug, he buried his teeth in the boy's neck, and falling with him, drew him under his belly. The teeth of the bear cut through the jugular vein, and made a wound large enough to put a finger in. v The hug that the animal bestowed crushed in the ribs and forced the whole breast over to the left side. I 1 . X A Boy's Throat Cut ; to Save His Life. . A young lad named Henry Brinker, who resides in Cincinnati, while eating hickory nuts swallowed a piece of. the shell of one about the size of a dime, which lodged in his throat and resisted all attempts to remove it by coughing or otherwise. He did not experience much inconvenience! from it, however, and went to bed. About three o'clock in the morning he woke up choking and deathly sick, and rapidly became worse, finally becoming almost incapable of breathing. His step-father, Mr. John Schwarte, accompanied by his brother, started out in search of a doctor, but though at that time it was but half-past three o'clock, it wasj nine o'clock before they could get one to come to the house. They called on at least a dozen physi cians, all of whom, on one pretense or another, refused to come to see the boy, though they told them he was dying. Finally Dr. Davis eame, but on seeing the lad, the parents say, told them he was too far gone to do him any good. He gave them a prescription, however, for an emetic, which; he told them to ad minister, and left, promising to return at noon. In the meantime another mes senger who had been dispatched for a yhysician returned with Drs. Dawson and McMechan, and the latter, on seeing the boy's condition, determined to resort to a surgical operation to save his life. With Dr. McMechan's assistance, Dr. Dawson made an incision across the throat, and, inserting a dull probe, scraped away the tissues until he reached that portion of the windpipe called the trachea, which he cut open. He then inserted a wire, with which he felt around for the obstruction. It was found in the larynx, where it had lodged, and, being sharp-edged, had cut the flesh., and the blood had got into the bronchial tubes, filling them and render ing breathing almost impossible. After the nut-shell had been removed, the patient coughed up a large quantity of this .blood. The wound having been sewn up, he breathed quite freely, and the next night was resting easily aft 3r the operation. TIMELY TOPICS Lima went into mourning for eight days for Don Manuel Pardo, late presi dent of Peru, who was assassinated by a soldier. '" Denver, Colorado's chief city, is twen ty years old, has a population of thirty thousand, twenty churches, nine educa tional institutions, eight newspapers, four banks and one theater. A New York paper says that in New York city, alone there are more persons with $12,000 incomes than in all Prus sia. It estimates at least 2,000 such against 1,500 in Prussia, State savin gs banks in Maine have been reduced to fifty-nine in number, five less than three years ago, and of these thirteen have had their deposits scaled down bj the supreme court The electric light has been applied to the velocipede in England. The light is equal to one hundred and twenty candles, and it lights up the road two hundred yards ahead on a dark night The Vicksburg (Miss.) Herald print ed in ten columns a list of all the gifts that have been received there by the yellow fever committees, and has had a copy mailed to each of the places whence the contributions came. The home of Herr August Wilhelmj, the noted violinist, now playing in. the United States, is at Biebrich, on the Bhine, where his father owns many large vineyards, and next to the emper or is the largest vineyard proprietor in Germany. i King Ludwig's royal chateau, which he has set about building on the island of Herren-Ohiemsee, in Bavaria, after the model of the palace at Versailles, will find him, when completed, only forty-eight! years old; and he has set apart fifteen years for the building of it. Since June 30fch, 1847, 9,719,308,527 postage stamps have been issued by the United Stales government, worth over $280,000,000. For the first four years they amounted to hardly $1,000,000 a year. Now New York city alone takes $2,866,000 a year, Philadelphia, $995, 000, Chicago, $971,000, Boston, $946, 000, and St. Louis, $465,000. y The publio works of the general gov ernment in New England have cost, during the last two years, as follows : 1877. ..$ 80,136. 70 .. 10,499.20 1878. t35.485.23 20,924.00 14,000.00 184,887.66 15,000.00 56.102.70 45,000.00 Maine. . .' New Hampshire... Vermont... Massachusetts..; Maine and Mass. 11,000.00 ..632,405 50 232 244.53 . 27,991 92 Connecticut..... lihode Island . . . Statistics given by Mr. Bichard Hall, secretary to the meeting of cattle im porters at Liverpool, show that there has been a very substantial growth in the cattle trade, especially in regard to importations from this country. The increase has been something enormous, and has occurred within a few months, instead of by slow accumulations. In 1875 only 702 cattle were imported, while in 1878, up to the commepoement of December, the number; was 50,000. The total j for the year would probably, reach 55,000, or, including sheep and pigs, not far short of 130,410 animals. The house in which the Emperor of Germany; prefers to live is filled with the paraphernalia of war. Portraits and busts of great soldiers, pictures of famous battles, are its chief ornament Models of cannon, rifles laud shells wooden - statuettes clothed in all the uniforms' of the world, fill the niches and vacant places. His inkstand is half a cannon ball, and. his paperweights the hoofs of favorite chargers. Military books and mapB fill his library, and his own imperial signature is given with a penholder cut from splinters of an Uhlan lance. j ! The Refined Way. The Music Trade Review has recent ly found out that newspapers generally do not like to mention the fact that a performance of an opera or a concert had a slim attendance, and it has dis covered that there is a refined way of announcing meager patronage. We do not approve of divulging the secrets of the sanctum, but, as a piece of public justice, the patrons of newspapers should j be given to understand what certain i terms and forms of expression mean, and we have, theref ore, com pleted a list of ' stereotyped, phrases," with accompanying explanations, and we advise play-goers to cut it out and use it in connection with the average newspaper reports of opera and theatri cal performances : " Select audience " A small audi- enoe,'including many deadheads. "Considering the weather j the house was well filled" Beggarly array of benches. ' Bespectable audience "Small at tendance, including critic's family. . Large and enthusiastic audience " Always used in connection with variety shows. " Critical audience "Slim and in appreciative, or the performance a failure- ! :J, '' ' Fashionable audience "Whenever the critic's lady friends are present Albany Argus. Fall. j The raow has begun in the gloaming And bu ily all the night I Hsd been heaping field aid highway With a rlence deep and white. Every pins and fir and hemlock, Wore ermine too dear for an earL And the poorest twig on the elm tree Was frioged inch deep with pearl. From sheds new roofed with Oarrara . , Came Chanticleer's muffled crow .The stiff rails were softened, to swansdown And sti'l nattered down the show. I stood and watched by the window The noiseless work of the sky, x And the sudden flnrries of snow-birdxj Like brown leayes whirling by. i " I thought of a mound in sweet Auburn " Where a little head-etone jstood, How the flakes were folding it gently, As did robins the babes in the wood. ' i Jarn-'K IiuseU LoirelL Items of Interest. People of settled convictions Pris oners. Meanness is a medal whose reverse is insolence. " '... The time that tries men's soles OILeary's. Even a marble will turn, when trod den upon. The population of the G erman empire is 75,000,000. j India contains 240,000,000 inhabitants and 20,000 priests. I New York belles dress mpre richly at the opera than ever. The two sons of Jem Mace, the prize fighter, are preachers. Mr. McOstrich is a magistrate at Cork and Mr. Whale a lawyer. Geographical contests are iow taking the place of spelling " bees." i The sale of stable manure has become a distinct business in Boston. I The latest census of jthe heathens numbers them at 700,000,000. ..American " paper manufacturers buy large quantities of rags in j Egypt About twelve hundred varieties of grasses grow in the United States. Real estate in San Francisco, near the Chinese quarter,, has terribly depre ciated. In the past two years 10,000 new buildings have been erected in Phila delphia. Captain Paul Boy ton secured forty two medals while abroad. He does a swimming business. , ,' j It is a rule of certain people never to growl at the price of an article if you will trust them for it. Indiana people feast on quail at a cent and a half apiece, and killed with five jents' worth of ammunition. The annual butter and cheese product f the United States is $50,000,000 greater than the wheat crop. The Paris Figaro says M. Hayes, President " of America, has forbidden the sale of wines at public; barquetp. The courts of England j have decided that when two passengers jquarrel about opening a window in a car, the decision of the conductor shall be final. Says Josh Billings : " I don't insist upon pedigree for a man or horseIf a horse kan trot fast the pedigree is all ricrht : if he kan't. I wouldn't give a shilling a yard for his pedigree' There is an bid nobleman in Peru who always asks his body-servant three ques tions upon rising in the morning : 1. How is the weather? 2. How are the horses ? 3. Under w$at form of govern ment are we living this morning ?- The Atlantic ocean, if jit were to be drained, would be a vast ! plain, with a mountain ridge in the middle running parallel with our coast Another range crosses it from Newfoundland to Ireland, on top of which lies the telegraphic cable. M. Paul Broca, the famous anthro polgist, is authority for he statement that the tallest man ever actually meas ured was a Finlander, nine feet three and seven-tenths inches high, and that the shortest man known reached a decimal under seventeen inches in his stocking feet . - Popular superstitions :! That butter is made from butternuts. Tiiat you must plant eccrs if vou would raise egg plant. That you 'can print what's, a curd in the dairy. That there was something of an electoral character in the count of Monte Cristo. That a tramp will refuse a trade dollar. Utica Observer, i The family physician was congratu lating the lady of the house on the good health of her six-year-old son, who, she said, had not had an ache pr a pain for a year. The youth spoke j to his father afterward, saying: "Ma! is mistaken about that ; I had a hard pain last sum mer, after she whipped me." Rom Sentinel. Widow Drake, of Muhlenburg county, Ey.t has in her possession an apple which has been in existence since the beginning of the Revolutionary war. A soldier, Mrv Drake, J received the apple from his betrothed just as he de parted for the army of I Washington ; kept it during the whole war ; returned oftjT tfiA anrrAnder of YorktowTL and married the fair donor. LAne appie is sacredly preserved in uio iudut, m. dry and shriveled, nothihg remaining but the woody fiber. The Firtt Soow 3,. GATESFOY & CO., South Front' Street, Opposite the Gaston Ilouee, NEWBERN, N. a WHOLESALE GROCERS I AND DKAIXBS IH General Merchandise, Ann RECEIVING FRESH GOODS BY EVERT STEAMER. Their Stock is Large and Complete. Prices Very Low. CLOSE CASH BUYERS WILL FIND IT TO THEIR IKTESEST TO CALL. ; AND EXAMINE BEfORE FU&CHASIXO ' EL8KWHX&X. OUR PURCHASES OF BAGGING and TTH3 Are Large and From first Hand. OINNEBS AND DEALEE8 WILL BE rUBNIID At Wholesale Prices. Strict pron HUntion given to the nta cf (jDttonln tbia market. 2ibnl eaan dvnee mad spea i ua to BtttliBAc r N Tork. BLANK & ULRICH. i - -- " . Foot of ZLXlcldle Street, . NEWBERN, N. O. Netc and Fresh Fa mill Supplies Constantly on Hand. THEIB LARGE SALES COMPEL. THEM TO ' REPLENISH THEIR STOCK DAILY. 111 FLOTJR OF GRADES. ' Veal Fre.h from tho Mill. ;" I SUGARS, COFFEES, TEAS, BACON, HAMS, SHOULDERS, SIDES, SYRUPS and MOLASSES. Fresh Butter Cheese, Lard. i SODA, BTABCH, lOAPfl, LI HNUPFH a rtd TOBACCO, PORK, MACKEREL, CODFISH, Solar and Ground Salt, EARTHEN, WOOD & WILLOW WARE, Spicei, Canned Fruit-, Crackers, . EVERYTHING IN THE LINK OT QBOCZBXB SHIP CHANDLERY. Ropea of ail Iron mad ' Spikaa, Si, Twin, Csrpv GalraJBiaed Valla; BLaeka, Hka, Osk Oils, Paiata. DRY goods; Cloth, Homeepuna, Sheetings, Tick ".. ings, Fl&nnels, Calicoes, Oing- hams, Muslins, Tarns, " Tapes', Threads. ' -; . j BOOTS; AND 8HOE8, HATS and CAPS, . ;: i : - GLOVES, SOCKS, STOCKIKGS. x Their good are bought aUh loweet earti pnota, md being ntiaaedi wita mall profit , tber eonS dently assert their aprtce, to be even lowar tiua tlx lowest in the Ctr. ; f ' OaU on them an4 for joarsslvea how roach too eaa boy for a Snail Amount of at oney. BLAKE & ULRICH, a. .4 StrAMt.