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CTftEV ENIN6 j CAPITA "L STOCK $210,000. J AMES M. MITCHELL, 'J HOJ1AH "WELLS Pkesidknt, Cashiek. sept'2. MArsriLLE.rcr J. T.CASSIDY. F. .M.YOUNG CASS-EDY& YOUNG, Wholesale and Retail GROCERS Produce and Commission Merchants, 59 Market Street, (B. F.Thomas & Co.'s old stand.) Ky. Dealers in all kinds of Field and Garden Seeds, Flour, Fruits, Potatoes, Bacon and Lard, pure Liquors of all kind, Can tied Goods n specialty. Highest market price paid eithei In cash or trade for alljkmds of Country Pioduce. Consignments solicited. J2:ily A TLV EXECUTED kl finlletin OfUcetS Grand, Upright and Square Pianos, also the best make of Organs at lowest manufacturers' prices; Tuning? and Repairing. n!7. Skin Diseases Cured By Du. Fkazikk's Maoic Ointment. Cures as If by magic, pimples, black head or grubs, blotches and eruptions on the face, leaving the skin clear, healthy and beautiful. Also cures Itch, barber's itch, salt rheum, tetter.rlngwonn, scald head, chapped hands, sore nipples, sore lips, old obstinate ulcers and sores &c. SKIN D1SEASK. F. Drake, Eq., Cleveland, O., suffered beyond all description from a skin disease which appeared on his hands, head and face, and nearly destroyed his eyes. The most careful doctoring failed to help him, and alter all had failed he used Dr. Frazler's Magic Ointment and was cured by a few applications. The first and positive cure for skin disease ever discovered. Sent Ov mail on receipt of price, fifty cents HEXRY & CO., Sole Prop'r, 02 Vesey Street, N. Y. For blind, bleeding, itching or ulcerated piles. Dr. Williams' Indian Pile Ointment is a sure cure. Price 31, by mail. For sale by George T. Wood, druggist. TILES! IMLES! PILES? X Sure Cure Found at Last Xo One Need Suffer! L A sure cure lor blind, bleeding, itching and ulcerated olles has been discovered by 'Dr. t William, (an Indian remedy,) called Div Wll- BULLETIN. " HEW TO THE LINE, LET THE CHIPS PALL WHERE THEY MAY." VOLUME i. MAYSVIIiLE, THURSDAY EVENING, MARCH SO, 1832. NUMBER HO. - - M ,, J)r. Frnzior's Root Hitlers. Frazior's Root Bitters are not a dram-shop whisky beverage, but are strictly medlclnnMn every kcu&o. They act strongly upon the liver and kidneys, keep the bowels open and regular, make the weak strong, heal the lungs, build up the nerves and cleanse the blood and system of every Impurity. For dizziness, rush ol blood to the head tending to apoplexy, dyspepsia, fever and ague, dropsy, pimples and blotches, .scrofulous liumors and sores, tetter, ring worm, white swelling, erysipelas, sore eyes and for young men suffering from weakness or debility caused from imprudence, and to females In delicate health, Frazier's Root Bitteis are especially recommended. Dr. Frazier: I have used two bottles of your Root Bitters lor dyspepsia, dizziness, weakness and kidney disease, and they did me moregdod than the doctors and all the medicine I ever used. From the first dose I took I began to mend, and I am now in perfect health, and feel us well as I ever did. I consider your medicine one of the greatest blessings. Alns. I. Maktin, Cleveland, O. bold by CJeoiiieT. Wood at Si per bottle. HENRY & CO.. Sole 1'rop'rs, 02 Vesey Street, N. Y. mmmtsramni anammncannnBuamni FIRST NATIONAL BANE. F. L. TRAYSER, . PIAHO MANUFACTURER Front St., 4. ttoor.s wcttt of Hill House 1 Hams' Indian Ointment. A single box has I cured the worst chronic cases ol twenty-five or thirty years standing. No one need suffer five ! minutes after applying this wonderful sooth ing medicine, Lotions instruments and do more harm than good. Williams' Ointment absorbs the tumors, allays the intense Itching, (particularly at night alter getting warm in bed,) acts as a poultice, gives instant and painless relief, and is preparded only for piles, itching of the private parts, and nothing else. Read what the Hon. J. M. Colllnberrj', of Cleveland, says about Dr. William's Pile Oint ment; I have used scores of pile cures, and it affords me pleasure to bay that I have never found anything which gave me such immediate and permanent relief as Dr. Williams' Indian Ointment. For sale by'George T. Wood or mailed on receipt of price, Si. H ENRY & CO., Sole Prop'rs, -morn" ii im m m ii m i 02 Vesey Street, N. Y. JOSEPH F. BHODRICK SV1AYSVSLLE, KY. Fire, Life and Marine. r A RPFTS UAIii Jj 1 IJ The largest and most elegant assortment of all grades of Carpets, Lace Curtains and UPHOLSTERING GOODS Is constantly to be found at our extensive warerooms. Special attention paid to non-resident buyers. ' Geo. F. Otte fc Co., YF omen's Mnscnllno idols. Every man -who fills nn effective pub lie position has an especially good opportunity of moralizing upon feminine frivolity and frailness. A handsome actor, a good-looking popular preacher, a charmiug singer, finds the 'women go down beforo him much as the ladies do before the hero of Patience. As very High Church young ladies delight in standing up out of reverence to very young curates when they enter the church, so there are many women who would be, charmed to go down on their i knees when one of the heroes of society enters a drawing-room. Good looks are not always necessary, though as a rule women prefer their idols to be handsome. Excessive notoriety will do instead. The men who, with no personal charms with, as in some recent instances, a positive unpleasantness about them go through society worshiped and adored by the women, must indeed bo inclined to adopt the true Guy view of the other sex. These ladies who sneak after Ihe man of mushroom notoriety, imploring him to come to their afternoons, begging him for his photograph or a copy of his poems, or an autograph letter, or a lock of his hair must appear to him very " poor little beasts " indeed. But however he may despise them, he can, to a certain extent, understand their motives. They want other women to see him talking to them, to meet him at their houses, to be aware that ho has written letters to them and given them his photograph. The idea these women entertain must be that they obtain a distinction br being associated in people's minds with the idol of the hour. "Women have from all time regarded it as sufficient honor for themselves to bo the favorites of great men. This is but a modern rendering of the old story. They have made it the fashion to sit in adorning circles, around their hero, arid gaze upon him with meek eyes of wonder, much as if he were a Persian prince, and they his humble slaves. But there is none of the charm of danger in this, and perhaps not much excitement ; for it is all done in public, and has become a prominent feature in the programme of most drawing-room entertainments.' Congratulations. Peck, of Peck's Sun, helped an old lady off the cai3 at some Western station three or four years ago, and she died last month and ieft him $22,000 in bonds. Even as homely a man as Peck never loses anything by playing grandpa. Detroit Free Press. Very likely the editor of the Free Press thought he was doing us a kindness by starting that story, but if ho could see the procession of charity seekers that have filed up our golden stairs since, ho would be sorry. We never appreciated what an immense circulation the Free Press had until the people began to congratulate us on our good luck. But its circulation must be principally in poor houses. Peck's 8un. A Question of Mileage. Jones held an execution against a farmer and when he called for a settle ment the agriculturist took him out into a big pasture and pointed out a wild steer as the particular piece of property to be levied upon. Jones chased the steer around for awhile, and then sat down, and taking out his book began to write. "What are you doing there?" asked the granger. "Charging mileage," replied the constable, without looking up. "Do I have it all to pay?" gasped the ranoher. "Yon bet." " Then take this tame heifer here. I can't stand any such game as that." The Original f Rip." Hacket introduced this play upon tho Btage, and was the first person who acted the part of "Rip," the sleepy Dutchman. Tho writer saw aud heard him' at tho Eagle-street Theater, in Buffalo, over,' forty-five years ago, when ho appearod, in this comedy. It hns been improved or varnished up since that time, and is now (if I may use the expression) ' Rip Van Winkle with variations." I have heard it played by Joe Jefferson aud others. At the hazard of being called an old fogy, I will state that I have never Hackott's superior in the part of "Rip." He was, to use a trite saying, " he.id and shouldera" above any of his imitators. In the wizard scene in the valley and tho dreary tramp up the Catskill Mountains, carrying n keg of liquor upon his shoulders; in the long sleep of twenty years, the the search for his gun, which was found in a tree and above his reach, the sorrow depicted at the los of his favorites, Hackett was inimitable. How lifelike was the acting when he appeared in his native village after an ubsonce of twenty years, where he saw only a few of the descendants of the old Dutch burghers his recognition of his son, a chip of the old block his emotions manifested on hearing of the death of his "frau," ' Dame Van Winkle, and particularly hi old Snyder the change that had taken place in the village inii.' once his favorite haunt and where he often met his boon companions the new sign with the likeness of George Washington upon it instead of George III. the election at the old hotel where he is asked "who do you vote for ?" his reply, " George III.," not having heard the name of George Washington, are interesting scenes, and when Hackett acted were truly life-like to me. How successful has been that amusing comedy. It has netted to Jefferson and others thousands of dollars. Yet, as I learn, the original was written when Irving was in a happy mood, and was not considered by him as of much importance or as a good production. De- iroit Advertiser. "The wives and daughters of second rate Americans are quite as pretty, clever, and accomplished as their sisters above the line of but, owing to the fact of pa's pile ' being of only recent "formation, have not had tho advantage of being brought up in Europe and European ways. Hence, despite beauty, knowledge, and talent, they lack the rep jRe and other things which mark tho cast of Vere de Vero. Their toilets are apt to be amazing, and their diamonds to rival an exhibition of lighthouse iratus. Nevertheless they tower over their husbands, fathers, aud brothers. The latter have been sent into a counting house too soon to have acquired even the varnish of good breeding. They dress very much like a barber's block, and talk more nonsense than could be . imagined." "It is a little odd that the Western man, who supplies Presidents and leading men to tho United States Senate, should not be a success oil tho European grand tour. His cleverness is undeniable, for he has made a superb fortuue, but he is obviously out of his element in the old Continent. A life divided botween business and homo politics leaves little leisure for cultivating the subjects on which Europeans love to dilate." Edmund Yates. "Tins safe is empty call at tho house," was the card which burglars found on the safe of a Green Bay office. They called at the house and robbed it of $G00, and tho smart office clerk hasn't got the big 'head any more. "