Wintrb clothing, consisting of gentlemen's overcoats, real macintosh soate, are being' sold to suit all purchasers at Joseph Moses' Thames; Gloth Hall;—Advt. ; • The New Bedford Standard records a little incident of Deporation-day, which occurred near that city. The exercises were in the open air—speakers, musicians, and returned soldiers in the centre, and the public outside of a circle formed by the marshals of the day. The miliaary stood shoulder to shoulder, somewhat hiding the view from a genteel party in the immediate rear. A young man of the kid- glove persuasion, stepping from their midst, approached, remonstratively, the military, and addressed them thus : •' My dear follows, you prevent our seeing > y°n arc standing up there right in front of us. '' Answer by high private : "Yes, Sir ; and we stood in front and covered you all through the war. " Kemonstrant subsided. " A Mend of ours, " says the editor of a contemporary, " is growing .weaker and weaker every day. He has got so weak now that he can't wise five dollars."
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Thames Star, Volume IIII, Issue 1706, 22 June 1874, Page 2
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169Page 2 Advertisements Column 3 Thames Star, Volume IIII, Issue 1706, 22 June 1874, Page 2
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