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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #54834 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/54834)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Stephen H. Branch's Alligator Vol. 1 no.
-12, July 10, 1858, by Stephen H. Branch
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Stephen H. Branch's Alligator Vol. 1 no. 12, July 10, 1858
-
-Author: Stephen H. Branch
-
-Release Date: June 2, 2017 [EBook #54834]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BRANCH'S ALLIGATOR, JULY 10, 1858 ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by The Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
-http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images
-generously made available by The Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Transcriber Notes
-
- Obvious printer errors and missing punctuation fixed. Archaic and
- inconsistent spelling retained.
- The table of contents has been created and added by the transcriber.
- Italics are represented by underscores surrounding the _italic text_.
- Small capitals have been converted to ALL CAPS.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Bennett, Barnum, and Gerard. 1
-
- The Fourth of July—General 2
- Washington in Tears—The
- Decline of American
- Integrity and Patriotism.
-
- Mayor Daniel F. Tiemann’s 3
- Forced Seduction of a Lady
- on Randall’s Island—Simeon
- Draper’s Lascivious
- Propensities—Most Damning
- Revelations.
-
- Advertisements. 4
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: STEPHEN H. BRANCH’S ALLIGATOR.]
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Volume I.—No. 12.] SATURDAY, JULY 10, 1858. [Price 2 Cents.
-
-
-
-
- Bennett, Barnum, and Gerard.
-
-_Three precocious villains stripped to the skin.—Precious, and
- startling, and thrilling under-current revelations for the
- people.—Read! Read! Read!_
-
-
-_Bennett’s_ daily urgence of the immediate creation of a Tax Payer’s
-Party is one of his old tricks, and is the detected burglar’s hoarse cry
-of stop thief. Bennett got me to introduce Alfred Carson as a Candidate
-for Mayor, just after his exciting Fire Report of 1850. I wrote several
-articles in favor of Carson for the Mayoralty, and Bennett published
-them, when lo! one rainy morning, I awoke, and opened the _Herald_, and
-the hypocritical old villain had another Candidate. I asked him if he
-intended to drop my old friend Carson, and he said no, but he thought he
-would try to bring another candidate into the field, just for a little
-fun, and that I could write about three editorials a week for Carson,
-and flatter him as much as I chose, and he would publish them. This was
-on Monday. On Wednesday, I caught him closeted with a formidable
-candidate for the Mayoralty, and on Saturday, he very cautiously
-introduced a third Candidate for the Mayor’s honors. As these were all
-wealthy men, and as Carson was very poor, and perceiving that Bennett
-unquestionably intended to sell Carson, and perhaps had already done so,
-I went to him in a towering rage, and charged him with treachery to
-myself and Carson. He smiled like Richard and Iago, and assured me that
-he should support Carson down to the last hour of the election. But I
-could not believe him; so I went to Carson, on Sunday morning, and wrote
-his famous declination of the Mayoralty, which rocked the parties of
-that day to their foundations with infinite delight, as every traffic
-politician had trembled to his toes, since the introduction of Carson’s
-potent and honest name for the Mayoralty. When I carried Carson’s Card
-to the _Herald_ office, on Sunday evening, Mr. Bennett was absent,
-having gone to the country with Judge Russell and his lady. But Frederic
-Hudson was there—(his Aminadab Sleek Secretary,) who expostulated, and
-strove by every artifice in his prolific resources, to induce me not to
-publish Carson’s Card until I had seen Mr. Bennett. But I demanded him
-to let the Card appear on the following morning, and told him that
-himself and Bennett should be ashamed of themselves for striving to sell
-Carson through me, and that I believed Bennett had already received
-thousands of dollars for his contemplated sell of Carson, in favor of
-one of the wealthy candidates. My withdrawal of Carson led to the
-election of Ambrose C. Kingsland, a very illiterate man, and one of the
-meanest of the human species, and the oiliest and biggest conspirator
-and public thief since the days of the Roman Cataline. In 1853, Bennett
-asked me to introduce the name of Alderman A. A. Denman, of the
-Sixteenth Ward, as a candidate for Mayor, to whom I was imparting the
-rudiments of the English language, at his house in Nineteenth street.
-Denman was Chairman of the Committee that reported favorably at my
-request, on awarding the Corporation Printing to the _Herald_ at $3,000
-per annum, and the other journals at $1,000. Bennett seemed grateful to
-Denman for his favorable Printing Report, and I really thought he was
-sincere in his contemplated advocation of Denman for the Mayoralty; and
-I saw Denman, and he permitted me to use his name in connection with the
-Mayoralty, and I began to write articles, and published them in the
-_Herald_, strongly recommending Denman to the Mayoralty. At this time,
-Denman was one of the most popular men in the democratic party, and his
-annunciation for Mayor, confused the leaders and aspirants of all
-parties. Presto! Bennett announces another candidate, in a sort of a
-half-and-half black mail way, and I instantly withdrew Denman, who was
-sadly disappointed at the loss of the Mayoralty honors, and joined the
-most bloated thieves of all parties, in the odious Common Counsel of
-1852 and 1853, and he was soon forever lost as an honorable public man.
-And now this Scotch reprobate comes forward, without a blush on his
-vicious cheeks, and prates of a Tax Payer’s Party, in order to effect
-some hellish thievish purpose. Perhaps his object is to nominate Judge
-Russell, or Fire Marshal Baker, or Galbraith, or some of his roguish
-go-betweens and thimble-riggers for Mayor, so that he can occupy the
-pleasant relations of Peter Cooper to Mayor Tiemann, his amiable
-son-in-law. But how the intelligent tax payers of the Metropolis can be
-so easily and so often bamboozled by this superficial Scotch Juggler, is
-a mystery to me, when they all know that he has always favored vice, and
-stabbed virtue. And if there ever was a candidate for office, during
-Bennett’s long editorial career, whom he did not sell, or if there ever
-was a truly virtuous aspirant for public honors, whose election Bennett
-ever sincerely advocated before the people, without a cash
-consideration, I should like to see the most extraordinary anomaly.
-Bennett very ingeniously plasters his victims with disgusting panegyric,
-for a brief period, when he lets loose the dogs of Tartarus, and while
-they devour them, he fills his coffers with gold from every candidate in
-the field, to whom he has pledged his support. But he is very old, and
-the devil will soon have him, and millions will rejoice when old Nick
-drags him to his fervent realms, and begins his merited tortures. And it
-will require wasteless years to burn the sins from his infamous and
-loathsome and nauseous carcase. The creation of James Gordon Bennett’s
-Tax Payer’s Party, after his cash advocation of all the abandoned scamps
-of America to office for thirty years, is the most amusing proposition
-of the age. And yet the omnipotent ballot stuffers may come to his
-rescue, and adopt his plans. And why should they not? Is not Barnum
-again abroad, and about to shake the world with another humbug. Barnum
-has grown prodigiously affluent since the Hard times began, and since
-money became scarce, and since people began to starve, and since the
-elements of Pluto leveled his Oriental Palace to the ground, (which was
-highly insured!) and above all, since he took as partner, that cunning
-old rat, James W. Gerard, who, like Dick Connolly and Simeon Draper, is
-ever found in all political camps. Gerard was the real originator of the
-Joice Heath imposture, and all of Barnum’s humbugs, and has borne him
-through all his financial clock troubles, for which he has got enough
-from Barnum to enable him to sustain his chariots and postilions and
-magnificent establishment in Gramercy Park until he dies. It was Gerard
-who introduced Kingsland for Mayor, and other successful candidates,
-and, in the dark, advocated Fernando Wood’s course down to his
-disastrous exodus from public life. And it was Gerard who sustained
-Matsell through all his infamous career, down to the famous meeting in
-the Tabernacle, and in the Legislative lobby, even going into the seats
-of members, and coaxing them in various ways to spare Matsell. And it
-was Gerard who, after Wood had fallen, went into the camp of Tiemann,
-where he is now, in order to cut the throats of Tiemann and the Coopers
-the first opportunity, and is at this moment, in collusion with Bennett
-in the formation of a Tax Payer’s Party. “All things to all men” is the
-motto of Gerard, and he has played his card adroitly for nearly half a
-century. But he has now probably got his last set of false teeth, and
-his last wig, and will probably soon die of old age like his old friend
-Bennett, who have operated together in ambuscade, for thirty unbroken
-years, in all the political villainy that has been concocted during this
-long and eventful period. No matter who succeeds in the elections,
-Gerard and Bennett are in the triumphant camps, as now: Bennett in
-Buchanan’s White House, and Gerard in Mayor Tiemann’s confidence, and
-both playing into each others hands, like Draper and Connolly.
-Picolomini is the last card that these jugglers will play. Gerard is a
-snob and a dandy, and an Opera exquisite, and it was he, (through
-Barnum,) who introduced Jenny Lind to the Americans, and got Bennett,
-for a large sum, to abuse Barnum and Jenny Lind, as an advertisement.
-Bennett did not get less than $20,000 from _Gerard_ and Barnum for his
-daily abuse of Jenny Lind and Barnum. I was daily in the _Herald_ office
-in those days, and I often saw Barnum closeted with Frederic Hudson, and
-James Gordon Bennett. And Gerard and Barnum have already arranged with
-Bennett, and paid him the cash down, to abuse Picolomini, while the
-_Times_ and _Tribune_ and many other journals are to be paid to praise
-her. And such a yell as we shall have on her arrival, will frighten the
-rats and cats. For, in this funny world, blarney is regarded as sincere
-praise and evidence of merit, while detraction is persecution, which
-verdant people won’t tolerate, and especially when hurled at such
-fascinating creatures as Fanny Elssler, or Jenny Lind, or Picolomini.
-This is certainly a very curious world, and, like Dr. Franklin, I am
-curious to know if our spiritual existence is to be as curious as our
-material; and I am extremely anxious to learn if Bennett, Barnum, and
-Gerard are to have an eternal abode in Heaven?
-
-
-
-
- Stephen H. Branch’s Alligator.
-
- ------------------------------------------------------
-
- NEW YORK, SATURDAY, JULY 10, 1858.
-
- ------------------------------------------------------
-
-STEPHEN H. BRANCH’S “ALLIGATOR” CAN BE obtained at all hours, (day or
-night,) at wholesale and retail, at No. 128 Nassau Street, Near Beekman
-Street, and opposite Ross & Tousey’s News Depot, New York.
-
- ------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- The Fourth of July—General Washington in Tears—The Decline of American
- Integrity and Patriotism.
-
-
-There was a formidable mutiny in the Army of the Revolution, arising
-from the inability of the Government to pay the officers and soldiers,
-who assure Washington that, in order to provide food and raiment for
-their wives and children, they should return to their homes, and
-cultivate their neglected fields, and pursue their various peaceful
-avocations, if their salaries were not paid on a stated day. Washington
-invites the prominent leaders to meet him, and they accept his cordial
-invitation. The Hall is filled at an early hour with the bravest
-officers of the American camp, whom the village bell summons to hear an
-Address from their great Commander, and as its doleful reverberations
-expire on the evening air, Washington enters with unwonted dignity and
-gloom, and ascends the rostrum, and seats himself, and unfolds his
-Address to his noble and impoverished comrades. He sits, with one hand
-on his heart, and the other over his temples and unearthly eyes, and is
-apparently absorbed in grief and prayer. The silence of the tomb
-pervades the martial audience, and all seem to regard the hour as the
-most momentous in human history, as the return of the officers and
-soldiers to their homes, at this solemn crisis of the Revolution, might
-prove to be the funeral of liberty, and of patriots throughout the
-World. Washington approaches the desk, and stands like a statue, when
-neither whisper nor respiration can be heard, throughout the mournful
-throng. With haggard cheeks, and without repose for three successive
-nights, he wipes the copious tears from his blood-shot eyes, and
-moistens his parched mouth with water, and strives hard to articulate,
-but his big heart is so full, and his lips quiver so rapidly, and his
-tears fall so fast, that his speech is paralysed, and his vision
-blinded. The officers regret their rashness, and breathe heavy sighs,
-and recline their heads in silent grief, and some weep aloud, which
-kindles their feelings into a general lamentation, and the patriotic
-ladies thrill the entire assemblage with their piercing ejaculations.
-Washington strives to summon his wonderful self-possession, (which never
-deserted him till now,) and he rallies his resources like the dead of
-the resurrection, when he breathes these figurative truths, in the voice
-of a celestial being: “My beloved Companions: You know that I have grown
-gray in your service, and now you perceive that I am growing blind.” And
-while he utters these touching words, his iron nerve again succumbs, and
-he moistens his manuscript with the waters of his supernatural heart. He
-seats himself, and buries his face, and weeps as in his spotless
-childhood. The valiant officers, (who had never faltered amid the
-carnage and thunders of battle,) are utterly overwhelmed by Washington’s
-tears, and they depart for their respective quarters, and relate what
-has transpired, which infuses new fortitude and patriotism and
-unconquerable valor in the breasts of the desponding and mutinous
-soldiers, who rush to arms with the wild and irresistible impetuosity of
-Greene and Putnam, and the liberties of America are soon achieved. What
-a withering rebuke is this to the public thieves and traitors of the
-present generation. The only hope of our country is in the early
-appearance of a race of men like Washington, Jefferson, Franklin,
-Madison, Adams, Hamilton, Jackson, Calhoun, Clay, and Webster. With such
-corrupt and brainless wretches at the head of the American Press as
-Bennett, Greeley, and Raymond, with their gangs of mercenary scribblers
-in collusion with official robbers in the Municipal, State, and National
-Capitols, may the Good Being who heard the prayers of Washington (amid
-the snow, and blood, and hunger, and nakedness of the Revolution) have
-mercy on the great body of our people, who are threatened with general
-pillage and despotism by the vampires whom editors—in collusion with
-bands of thieves and assassins—fraudulently elect to the highest posts
-of emolument and honor. The official robbers of a nation’s treasury are
-the uncompromising foes of the toiling millions, and of human freedom. O
-then let the virtuous and industrious classes rally, and drive back the
-pernicious burglars of their firesides. And on the coming National
-Sabbath, let the pure and patriotic youth and meritorious age go up to
-the Altars of our Fathers and our common God, and swear a ceaseless
-crusade against the plunderers of our country, and the dastard monsters
-who would distract, and divide, and alienate the affections of our
-countrymen, on whose fidelity to Washington and the Union impend the
-hopes and happiness and liberty of the human race for eternal years.
-
- ------------------------------------
-
-
-_Let the Supervisors_ watch the operations of Richard B. Connolly, who
-has prowled around the Aldermen and Councilmen and Supervisors for
-several years, from whom he has had not a farthing less than $1,000,000
-since he has been County Clerk. The Supervisors alone voted him $316,000
-for the printing of his musty and worthless Records, which no paper
-manufacturer would have purchased, nor even carted to their factories as
-a donation. And they are of less value to the public in their printed
-form, than to the paper makers. It is a study, and a sad one for the tax
-payers, to see Dick Connolly and George H. Purser sitting in the Boards
-of Aldermen and Councilmen and Supervisors at almost every session, for
-many years past, watching and nudging and coaxing the members to vote
-for their plundering enactments. These two scamps have never been
-naturalised, and have perjured themselves, since they cast their first
-ballots. But they don’t perjure themselves any more in that way, as they
-don’t dare vote, and have not voted since I exposed their alienage,
-three years since. They have packed more Grand and Petit Juries, and
-condemned and imprisoned and hung more innocent men, and robbed the City
-and Albany Treasuries to a greater extent than any other two public
-thieves and precocious monsters who walk the streets of New York. And
-both of these precious rascals now announce themselves as candidates for
-Comptroller! And they intend to buy their nomination and election with
-the very money they have stolen and are stealing daily from the people.
-O that there was a Brutus or Cincinnatus to rebuke these villains, and
-to stab them down, and to thus shame and scourge the people for
-permitting such villains to go unpunished.
-
- ------------------------------------
-
-
-_I will soon show_ some of the mysterious currents of the Metropolis,
-and establish the friendly relations of Horace Greeley and Dana with
-Dick Connolly and Simeon Draper, in reference to the Alms House Spoils,
-and other extensive pickings and stealings. It is amusing to me to often
-see _Greeley’s Tribune_ whitewash the rakish and thievish Ten Governors.
-I will also show how Connolly and Draper hold their influence with the
-_Courier and Enquirer_, _Evening Post_, and _Commercial Advertiser_. And
-how Dick and Sim silence the mercenary growls of the _Herald_. Fred
-Hudson and Galbraith and Bennett and Fire Marshal Baker could disclose
-these little matters, but as they could not do it without implicating
-themselves in stupendous villainy, I shall have to show how the black
-mail growls of the _Herald_ are quickly silenced. The Institution of
-Death is a clincher to these devils. O, if such scoundrels as Connolly
-and Draper and Hudson and Bennett could only live always, they would
-have a nice time, but when they see a funeral, or have a deadly gripe in
-the direction of their wicked livers, they shudder with horror, and pray
-harder and louder than a stout noisy Methodist darkey minister, until
-the gripe has passed away, and they have a fresh hold on dear life
-again, when their nerve returns, and they steal more, and oppress the
-tax payers and poor consumers with less remorse than before they had
-almost a fatal gripe. But the worms and the devil will soon grab their
-thievish flesh and bones, and then, O Moses! what a precious feast they
-will have.
-
- O the grave! the grave!
- Mourns for the poor slave;
- But for public thieves,
- The grave never grieves.
-
- ------------------------------------
-
-
-The Lives of PETER COOPER and JAMES GORDON BENNETT are omitted this
-week. My Journal is so small, and my advertisements increase so rapidly,
-that I shall not be able to continue the lives of these distinguished
-men in every issue. But in my next number, the Lives of Cooper and
-Bennett will appear. These men have silenced those who have threatened
-to publish their wicked antecedents, but they will never silence me,
-only through imprisonment, or poison, or assassination, which I have
-reason to believe they contemplate. All the wholesale dealers stopped
-selling the ALLIGATOR three weeks since, lest Bennett would not let them
-have the _Heralds_ for their country agents. I strove to fasten the fact
-upon him, that he directed the wholesale dealers to stop selling the
-ALLIGATOR, and if I had nailed upon his forehead his Napoleonic edicts
-to suppress the liberty and circulation of the American Press, I would
-have deliberately gone into his office, and shot him dead. No foreign
-unnaturalised scab like Bennett, shall trample with impunity the
-precious rights, and the glorious liberty that George Washington and my
-Grandfather bequeathed to me. So, Mr. Bennett, and Fred. Hudson, just
-have a care, and I implore you in your persecution, to keep your keen
-eyes strongly riveted on the last feather that broke the poor camel’s
-back.
-
- ------------------------------------
-
-
-_It is very strange_ what has become of the stereotype plates containing
-James Gordon Bennett’s curious relations with Fanny Elssler, during her
-famous sojourn in America. Can you inform me, Ross & Tousey, where they
-are? If you will tell me, I will not tell Bennett that you told me,
-which will not give him a pretext to stop your supply of _Heralds_
-again, by which you told me you lost several thousand dollars. Besides,
-if he does, you can get rich fast enough by selling the _Ledger_ and
-ALLIGATOR. So tell us where these mysterious plates can be found.
-Perhaps they are on storage in Philadelphia. “Who knows?” as the amiable
-Dr. Wallace very often says at the close of his abrupt and hurried
-_Herald_ editorials, when he is thirsty or hungry, or wants to go to the
-Theatre or Opera.
-
- ------------------------------------
-
-
-_Mr. Erben_, the Trinity Church Organ Grinder, will please inform me if
-he owns a house in Baxter street, and if the character of the inmates
-are as respectable as himself, and especially the females. James Gordon
-Bennett will also please go into Baxter street, and ascertain and inform
-me if Mr. Erben’s house is as reputable as Helen Jewett’s old residence,
-at No. 41 Thomas street. Speak out, Satans Numbers One and Two.
-
- ------------------------------------
-
-
-I had to omit the continuation of my LIFE this week, which will appear
-in the next number of the “ALLIGATOR.”
-
- ------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- Mayor Daniel F. Tiemann’s Forced Seduction of a Lady on Randall’s
-Island—Simeon Draper’s Lascivious Propensities—Most Damning Revelations.
-
-
-Some years since, there was a lovely domestic circle in our city,
-consisting of a husband, wife, and three children. The father died, and
-the widow was cast upon the world, without means to feed and clothe and
-educate her precious offspring. She had been the favorite daughter of
-affluent parents, and was educated by the ablest teachers. In
-conversation, she was eloquent and impassioned, and her fluent and
-melodious words, as they flowed from her red and pouting lips, and her
-even and pearly teeth, fascinated all who had the envied fortune to
-linger on her luxuriant language, and pretty smiles, and dimples, and
-most extraordinary purity of expression. Governor Simeon Draper fastens
-his voluptuous eyes upon her, and her fate is sealed. Three years since,
-Gov. Draper proposes that she become a matron on Randall’s Island, and
-she accepts his proposition, and he procures her a situation. After she
-began to discharge her matron duties, Governors Draper and Bell (now
-Supervisor), entered her domestic apartment on Randall’s Island, and
-asked her what she had in the next room, pointing their fingers to her
-bed room. She said they might look for themselves. They replied: “What
-are you afraid of?” She said: “I am not afraid, but I do not desire to
-go into a bedroom with two gentlemen.” They then seized her, and strove
-to drag her into her bed room, when she resisted and finally screamed,
-which alarmed them, and they withdrew their hands, and said: “You need
-not be afraid to go with us into the bed room, singly, as we know that
-you have let a _friend_ go with you into your bed room ever since your
-husband died, and enjoy your fascinations to his heart’s content.” She
-said: “If my _friend_ has done the thing of which you speak, neither of
-you shall.” Governors Draper and Bell then retired, but Draper soon
-returned, and proposed to buy two cloaks for two handsome girls who were
-about to leave the Institution, and said that she should go to the city
-and buy them, and at the same time purchase one for herself, regardless
-of price, and send the bill to his office, and he would pay it. She
-objected on the ground that if she accepted the proposition, he would
-expect licentious favors in return. Draper said that he was so anxious
-to stay with her, that he wouldn’t mind giving her $50 in cash. She said
-that she feared her _friend_ would hear of it, and withdraw his
-affections, and might kill him, and perhaps her, as he truly loved her,
-and was of a very jealous and impulsive nature. Draper said she needn’t
-be afraid, as he could never hear of it. She then accepted his
-proposition to go to the city and purchase the cloaks, and directed the
-bill to be sent to his office, which was done, and he paid it. At this
-time, a fervent friendship was budding into bloom and blossom, between
-herself and Governor Daniel F. Tiemann, to whom she immediately
-disclosed all that had transpired between herself and Governors Bell and
-Draper. Tiemann affected great exasperation, and wrote her statement,
-(which terribly excoriated Draper,) with the design of presenting it to
-the Ten Governors in open session. This alarmed her, and she told her
-_friend_ what had occurred, and that Governor Tiemann was about to
-expose Governors Bell and Draper to the Board of Ten Governors, and to
-the whole world, to which he strongly objected, as it might involve them
-in a common ruin, and he urged her to request Governor Tiemann not to
-present the document. And he assured her, if she permitted Governor
-Tiemann to do this favor for her, that he might soon want her smiles and
-beauty and caresses and embraces, (like Bell and Draper), as a requital
-for his apparently disinterested and meritorious services in her behalf.
-She saw Tiemann, and the document was suppressed. Draper heard of her
-movements, and became jealous of her partiality for Tiemann, and he had
-her suspended. But Tiemann had her reinstated. When Bell and Draper’s
-time expired as Alms House Governors, Gov. Tiemann immediately resolved
-that her _friend_ should not visit the Island, as the first movement to
-his contemplated seduction of the beautiful matron. And he was so
-determined, that he resorted to the daring effort to exclude him, even
-after he obtained a permit. For Gov. Tiemann clearly saw that while her
-_friend_ visited her, he (Tiemann) would have a poor chance to gratify
-his own lust. Tiemann finally succeeded in ejecting her _friend_ from
-the Island, and on a dark and rainy afternoon, slyly meandered into her
-apartment, and after some loving smiles, and dulcet words, and melting
-sighs, and tender glances, he drew his chair towards her, and began to
-feel of her. She long resisted his extraordinary amorous movements, and
-struck him twice, and scratched and bit him, and terribly exhausted him
-and herself in their mutual struggles, and thought she had conquered
-him. But in his last desperate rally, he overpowered and vanquished her,
-and she had to let him go his whole length, and he accomplished his most
-hellish purpose. Her boy was living in the West, and wrote to her, that
-he was not only displeased with his relatives, but with the western
-country, and desired to return to New York. She showed the letter to
-Gov. Tiemann, and told him that she had not the money to spare to defray
-his expenses home. He asked her how much it would cost. She said $15,
-when he gave her $40, assuring her that he would not have it known for
-the world, that he let her have money to pay her son’s expenses home.
-She quieted his fears, by assuring him that she would never disclose it.
-She sent the money to her boy, and he came home. Gov. Tiemann then got
-him a situation, but the boy had seen Tiemann take improper liberties
-with his mother, and as he strongly suspected he had allured her from
-the paths of virtue, he very indignantly refused to accept the situation
-tendered by Gov. Tiemann. But in eight months afterwards, Gov. Tiemann
-obtained another place for the boy, and after unceasing importunity, he
-finally persuaded the boy to accept a situation in Broadway, where he
-now is. Last Autumn she had an interview with her _friend_ in this city,
-when he charged her with sexual intercourse with Governor Tiemann. She
-burst into a tremendous flood of tears, and cast herself into his arms,
-and craved his forgiveness in rending accents. He asked her why she had
-long permitted Governor Tiemann to use her beautiful person. She said
-that as he was poor, and Governor Tiemann rich, and had foiled Draper in
-her suspension, and had elegantly furnished her apartments on the
-Island, and had paid the expenses of her boy from the West to the city,
-and had got him a good situation in Broadway, and had made her
-magnificent donations in jewelry and apparel, and had let her have money
-when she asked him,—and fearing that if she refused to gratify his lust,
-he would instantly have her dismissed as Matron, to endure again the
-tortures of penury,—that in view of all this, she had let him have
-sexual intercourse with her whenever he desired. But that she despised
-him for his wickedness, as he was a Church Member, in good standing, and
-as he professed to be one of the leading Reformers of the age. Her
-_friend_ asked her how much money he had given her, and she said: “Quite
-a large sum, some of which I have deposited in a Bank,” and she told him
-the name of the Bank. She also told him where the chairs, sofas,
-mirrors, stoves, &c., were purchased, and showed him the receipted
-bills, which she placed in his hands, and he has them now. She then
-besought his pardon, and assured him that she would leave the Island,
-and come and live and die in his affectionate embraces. He forgave her,
-and she returned to the Island, and told Governor Tiemann that she
-desired to leave and return to her _friend’s_ humble abode, which
-alarmed Tiemann, who implored her in tears to remain, and he would
-protect her as long as he lived, and when on the eve of death, he would
-make ample provision for her support during her life. They were together
-in her apartment, for ten successive hours, in a most exciting and
-harrowing scene, when he promised to give her $500 on the following day,
-and she finally yielded, and remained, and is at the Island now, both as
-a Matron and as Mayor Tiemann’s Mistress. Her _friend_ was so
-exasperated with her double treachery, that he went to one of the Ten
-Governors, (who is now in the Board,) and disclosed in writing under his
-signature the entire villainy of Tiemann. The Governor in question sent
-for Tiemann, and asked him if the statement was true, when he colored
-into a ball of fire, and left in shame and silence. The Governor did not
-expose Tiemann, in consequence of his innocent and interesting family,
-and his aged father, and his numerous relatives, including the versatile
-Peter Cooper, whose adopted daughter Mayor Tiemann married. These
-revelations will cause the worthy citizens of New York to bend their
-heads in sorrow, to behold a man of Mayor Tiemann’s exalted professions
-of purity and piety, guilty of crimes that should consign him to the
-rack, and to an eternal hell.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- Advertisements—25 Cents a line.
-
-
-Credit—From two to four seconds, or as long as the Advertiser can hold
-his breath! Letters and Advertisements to be left at No. 128 Nassau
-street, third floor, back room.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-NOTICE TO FARMERS AND MARKET GARDENERS.—CITY INSPECTOR’S DEPARTMENT, New
-York, June 16, 1858.—In conformity with the following resolution, the
-space therein mentioned will be permitted to be used as a place, by
-farmers and gardeners, for the sale of vegetables and garden produce,
-until the hour of 12 o’clock, M., daily—the use to be free of charge:
-
-Resolved, That permission be, and is hereby, given to farmers and market
-gardeners, to occupy daily, until 12 M., free of charge, the vacant
-space of the northern and southern extremities of the intersection of
-Broadway and Sixth avenue, between Thirty-second and Thirty-fifth
-streets, without infringing upon the streets which the said space
-intersects, for the purpose only of selling vegetables and market
-produce, of their own farms or gardens, under the supervision of the
-City Inspector.
-
-Also, by resolution of the Common Council, The use of Gouverneur slip is
-granted to farmers and gardeners for the sale of produce from wagons.
-
- GEO W. MORTON, City Inspector.
- JOSEPH CANNING, Sup’t of Markets.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-NOTICE—TO PERSONS KEEPING SWINE, OWNERS OF PROPERTY WHERE THE SAME MAY
-BE KEPT, AND ALL OTHERS INTERESTED. At a meeting of the Mayor and
-Commissioners of Health, held at the City Hall of the City of New York,
-Friday, June 18th, 1853, the following preamble and resolutions were
-adopted:
-
-Whereas, A large number of swine are kept in various portions of the
-city; and whereas, it is the general practice of persons so keeping
-swine, to boil offal and kitchen refuse and garbage, whereby a highly
-offensive and dangerous nuisance is created, therefore, be it
-
-Resolved, That this Board, of the Mayor and Commissioners of Health,
-deeming swine kept south of (86th) street, in this city, to be creative
-of a nuisance and detrimental to the public health, therefore, the City
-Inspector be, and he is hereby, authorized and directed to take, seize,
-and remove from any and all places and premises, all and every swine
-found or kept on any premises in any place in the city of New York
-southerly of said street, and to cause all such swine to be removed to
-the Public Pound, or other suitable place beyond the limits of the city
-or northerly of said street, and to cause all premises or places
-wherein, or on which, said swine may have been so found or kept, to be
-thoroughly cleaned and purified as the City Inspector shall deem
-necessary to secure the preservation of the public health, and that all
-expenses incurred thereby constitute a lien on the lot, lots or premises
-from which said nuisance shall have been abated or removed.
-
-Resolved, That the foregoing resolutions shall take effect from and
-after the first day of July next, and that public notice be given of the
-same by publication in the Corporation papers to that date, and that
-notice may be given to persons keeping swine by circulars delivered on
-the premises, and that all violations of this order be prosecuted by the
-proper legal authorities, on complaint from the City Inspector or his
-officers.
-
- CITY INSPECTOR’S DEPARTMENT, }
- New York, June 18, 1858. }
-
-All persons keeping swine, or upon whose property or premises the same
-may be kept, are hereby notified that the above resolutions will be
-strictly enforced from and after the first day of July next.
-
- GEO. W. MORTON, City Inspector.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-FRANCIS B. BALDWIN, WHOLESALE and RETAIL CLOTHING & FURNISHING
-WAREHOUSE, 70 and 72 Bowery, between Canal and Hester sts., New York.
-Large and elegant assortment of Youths’ and Boys’ Clothing.
-
- F. B. BALDWIN,
- J. G. BARNUM.
-
-F. B. BALDWIN has just opened his New and Immense Establishment. THE
-LARGEST IN THE CITY! An entire New Stock of GENTLEMEN’S, YOUTH’S and
-CHILDREN’S CLOTHING, recently manufactured, by the best workmen in the
-city, is now opened for inspection. Also, a superior stock of FURNISHING
-GOODS. All articles are of the Best Quality, and having been purchased
-during the crisis, WILL BE SOLD VERY LOW! The Custom Department contains
-the greatest variety of CLOTHS, CASSIMERES, and VESTINGS.
-
-Mr. BALDWIN has associated with him Mr. J. G. BARNUM, who has had great
-experience in the business, having been thirty years connected with the
-leading Clothing Establishments of the city.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-THOMAS A. DUNN, 506 EIGHTH AVENUE, has a very choice assortment of
-Wines, Brandies, Cordials, and Segars, which he will sell at prices that
-will yield a fair profit. All my democratic friends, and my immediate
-associates in the Boards of Aldermen and Councilmen are respectfully
-invited to call in their rambles through Eighth Avenue, and enjoy a good
-Havana segar, and nice, sparkling champagne, and very exhilerating
-brandy. For the segars, I will charge my political friends and
-associates only five pence each, and for the brandy only ten pence per
-half gill, and for the champagne only four shillings a glass, or two
-dollars a bottle.
-
- So call, kind friends, and sing a glee,
- And laugh and smoke and drink with me,
- Sweet Sangaree
- Till you can’t see:
- (_Chorus_)—At your expense!
- (Which pays my rents,)
- For my fingers do you see
- O’er my nose gyrating free?
-
- THOMAS A. DUNN, No. 506 Eighth avenue.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-J. VAN TINE, SHANGAE RESTAURANT, No. 2, Dey street, New York.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-COREY AND SON, MERCHANT’S EXCHANGE, Wall street, New York.—Notaries
-Public and Commissioners.—United State’s Passports issued in 36
-hours.—Bills of Exchange, Drafts, and Notes protested.—Marine protests
-noted and extended.
-
- EDWIN F. COREY,
- EDWIN F. COREY, JR.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-MRS. S. S. BIRD’S LADIES’ AND GENTLEMEN’S Dining and Oyster Saloons, No.
-31 Canal street, near East Broadway, and 264 Division street, New York.
-
- Oysters Pickled to Order.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-S. & J. W. BARKER, GENERAL AUCTIONEERS & REAL ESTATE BROKERS. Loans
-negotiated, Houses and Stores Rented, Stocks and Bonds Sold at Auction
-or Private Sale.
-
-Also, FURNITURE SALES attended to at private houses. Office, 14 Pine
-street, under Commonwealth Bank.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-CARLTON HOUSE, 496 BROADWAY, NEW York. Bates and Holden, Proprietors.
-
- THEOPHILUS BATES.
- OREL J. HOLDEN.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-TRIMMING MANUFACTURERS.—B. S. YATES & CO., 639 Broadway, New York.
-
- Fringes, Cords, Tassels, Loops, Gimps,
- and Gimp Bands.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-WM. COULTER, Carpenter.—I have long been engaged as a Carpenter, and I
-assure all who will favor me with their patronage, that I will build as
-good houses, or anything else in my line, as any other carpenter in the
-city of New York. I will also be as reasonable in charges for my work as
-any other person.
-
- WILLIAM COULTER, Carpenter,
- Rear of 216 East Twentieth street, New York.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-GERARD BETTS & CO., AUCTION AND Commission Merchants, No. 106, Wall
-street, corner of Front street, New York.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-JAMES DONNELLY’S COAL YARD,—Twenty-sixth street and Second Avenue. I
-always have all kinds of coal on hand, and of the very best quality,
-which I will sell as low as any other coal dealer in the United States.
-
- JAMES DONNELLY.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-FOLEY’S CELEBRATED “GOLD PENS.” For sale by all Stationers and
-Jewellers.
-
- OFFICE AND STORE,
- 163 BROADWAY.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-W. W. OSBORN, MERCHANT TAILOR, 9 Chamber street, near Chatham street,
-New York.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-SOLOMON BANTA, Architect, No. 93 Amos street, New York. I have built as
-many houses and stores as any Architect in this city, or the United
-States, and I can produce vouchers to that effect; and I flatter myself
-that I can build edifices that will compare favorably, in point of
-beauty and durability, with those of any architect in this country. I am
-prepared to receive orders in my line of business, at No. 93 Amos
-street. New York.
-
- SOLOMON BANTA.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-ROBERT ONDERDONK—THIRTEENTH Ward Hotel, 405 and 407 Grand street, corner
-of Clinton street, New York.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-WILLIAM M. TWEED, CHAIR, & OFFICE Furniture Dealer and Manufacturer,
-
-No. 289 Broadway, corner of Read street New York. Room No. 15.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-TRUSSES, ELASTIC STOCKINGS, SHOULDER Braces, Supporters, Bandages, &c.
-H. L. Parsons, E. D. Office, 4 Ann street, under the Museum.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-FASHION HOUSE.—JOSEPH HYDE PROPRIETOR, corner Grand and Essex street.
-Wines, Liquors, and Cigars of the best brands. He invites his friends to
-give him a call. Prompt and courteous attention given his patrons.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-WILLIAM A. CONKLIN, ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW, No. 176 Chatham
-street, New York. Any business entrusted to his charge from citizens of
-this city or any part of the country, will receive prompt and faithful
-attention, and be conducted on reasonable terms.
-
- WILLIAM A. CONKLIN.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-HERRING’S PATENT CHAMPION FIRE AND BURGLAR Proof Safe, with Hall’s
-Patent Powder Proof Locks, afford the greatest security of any Safe in
-the world. Also, Sideboard and Parlor Safes, of elegant workmanship and
-finish, for plate, &c. S. C. HERRING & CO.,
-
- 251 Broadway.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-JAMES MELENFY, (SUCCESSOR TO SAMUEL Hopper,) Grocer, and Wholesale and
-Retail Dealer in Pure Country Milk. Teas, Coffee, Sugars & Spices.
-Flour, Butter, Lard, Cheese, Eggs &c. No. 158, Eighth Avenue, Near 18th
-Street, New York. Families supplied by leaving their address at the
-Store.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-BOOT & SHOE EMPORIUMS. EDWIN A. BROOKS, Importer and Manufacturer of
-Boots, Shoes & Gaiters, Wholesale and Retail, No. 575 Broadway, and 150
-Fulton Street, New York.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-MCSPEDON AND BAKER’S STATIONERY WAREHOUSE and Envelope Manufactory, Nos.
-29, 31, and 33, Beekman Street, New York.
-
-ENVELOPES of all patterns, styles, and quality, on hand, and made to
-order for the trade and others, by Steam Machinery. Patented April 8th,
-1856.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-COZZENS’ HOTEL COACHES,—STABLE, Nos. 34 and 36 Canal Street, New York.
-
-I will strive hard to please all those generous citizens who will kindly
-favor me with their patronage.
-
- EDWARD VAN RANST.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-J. W. MASON, MANUFACTURER, WHOLESALE and Retail dealers in all kinds of
-Chairs, Wash Stands, Settees, &c. 377 & 379 Pearl Street, New York.
-
-Cane and Wood Seat Chairs, in Boxes, for Shipping.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-BENJAMIN JONES, COMMISSION DEALER, IN Real Estate. Houses and stores and
-lots for sale in all parts of the city. Office at the junction of
-Broadway, Seventh Avenue, and Forty-Sixth Street.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-FULLMER AND WOOD, CARRIAGE Manufacturers, 239 West 19th Street, New
-York.
-
-Horse-shoeing done with despatch, and in the most scientific manner, and
-on reasonable terms.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-J. N. GENIN, FASHIONABLE HATTER, 214 Broadway, New York.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-GENIN’S LADIES’ & CHILDREN’S OUTFITTING Bazaar, 513 Broadway, (St.
-Nicholas Hotel, N. Y.)
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-EDWARD PHALON & SON, 497 and 517 Broadway, New York—Depots for the sale
-of Perfumery, and every article connected with the Toilet.
-
-We now introduce the “BOUQUET D’OGARITA, or Wild Flower of Mexico,”
-which is superior to any thing of the kind in the civilized world.
-
- EDWARD PHALON & SON.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-SAMUEL SNEDEN, SHIP & STEAMBOAT BUILDER.—My Office is at No. 31 Corlears
-Street, New York; and my yards and residence are at Greenpoint. I have
-built Ships and Steamers for every portion of the Globe, for a long term
-of years, and continue to do so on reasonable terms.
-
- SAMUEL SNEDEN.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-JOHN B. WEBB, BOAT BUILDER, 718 WATER STREET. My Boats are of models and
-materials unsurpassed by those of any Boat Builder in the World. Give me
-a call, and if I don’t please you, I will disdain to charge you for what
-does not entirely satisfy you.
-
- JOHN B. WEBB.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-ALANSON T. BRIGGS—DEALER IN FLOUR BARRELS, Molasses Casks, Water, and
-all other kinds of Casks. Also, new flour barrels and half-barrels; a
-large supply constantly on hand. My Stores are at Nos. 62, 63, 64, 69,
-73, 75, 77 and 79 Rutger’s Slip; at 235, 237, and 239 Cherry Street;
-also, in South and Water streets, between Pike and Rutger’s Slip,
-extending from street to street. My yards in Williamsburgh are at Furman
-& Co.’s Dock. My yards in New York are at the corner of Water and
-Gouverneur Streets; and in Washington Street, near Canal; and at Leroy
-Place. My general Office is at 64 Rutger’s Slip.
-
- ALANSON T. BRIGGS.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-FULTON IRON WORKS.—JAMES MURPHY & CO., manufacturers of Marine and Land
-Engines, Boilers, &c. Iron and Brass Castings. Foot of Cherry street,
-East River.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-BRADDICK & HOGAN, SAILMAKERS, No. 272 South Street, New York.
-
-Awnings, Tents, and Bags made to order.
-
- JESSE A. BRADDICK,
- RICHARD HOGAN.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-WILLIAM M. SOMERVILLE, WHOLESALE AND Retail Druggist and Apothecary, 205
-Bleecker-st., corner Minetta, opposite Cottage Place, New York. All the
-popular Patent Medicines, fresh Swedish Leeches, Cupping, &c.
-Physicians’ Prescriptions accurately prepared.
-
- WM. M. SOMERVILLE.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-A. W. & T. HUME, MERCHANT TAILORS, No. 82 Sixth Avenue, New York. We
-keep a large and elegant assortment of every article that a gentleman
-requires. We make Coats, Vests and Pants, after the latest Parisian
-fashions, and on reasonable terms.
-
- A. W. & T. HUME.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-THE WASHINGTON, BY BARTLETT & GATES, No. 1 Broadway, New York. Come and
-see us, good friends, and eat and drink and be merry, in the same
-capacious and patriotic halls where the immortal Washington’s voice and
-laugh once reverberated.
-
- O come to our Hotel,
- And you’ll be treated well.
-
- BARTLETT & GATES.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-EXCELSIOR PRINTING HOUSE, 211 CENTRE ST., IS furnished with every
-facility, latest improved presses, and the newest styles of type—for the
-execution of Book, Job and Ornamental Printing. Call and see specimens.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-CHARLES FRANCIS, SADDLER, (ESTABLISHED IN 1808,) Sign of the Golden
-Horse, 39 Bowery, New York, opposite the Theatre. Mr. F. will sell his
-articles as low as any other Saddler in America, and warrant them to be
-equal to any in the World.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-H. N. WILD, STEAM CANDY MANUFACTURER, No. 451 Broadway, bet. Grand and
-Howard streets, New York. My Iceland Moss and Flaxseed Candy will cure
-Coughs and Sneezes in a very short time.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-JAMES GRIFFITHS, (Late CHATFIELD & GRIFFITHS,) No. 273 Grand st., New
-York. A large stock of well-selected Cloths, Cassimeres, Vestings, &c.,
-on hand. Gent’s, Youths’ and Children’s Clothing, Cut and Made in the
-most approved style. All cheap for Cash.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-J. AGATE & CO., MEN’S FURNISHING GOODS and Shirt Manufacturers, 256
-Broadway, New York.
-
-Shirts made to order and guaranteed to fit.
-
-J. AGATE, F. W. TALKINGTON.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-BILLIARD TABLES.—PHELAN’S IMPROVED BILLIARD Tables and Combination
-Cushions—Protected by letters patent, dated Feb. 19, 1856; Oct. 28,
-1856; Dec. 8, 1857; Jan. 12, 1858. The recent improvement in these
-Tables make them unsurpassed in the world. They are now offered to the
-scientific Billiard players as combining speed with truth, never before
-obtained in any Billiard Table. Sales-rooms Nos. 786 and 788 Broadway,
-New York. Manufactory No. 53 Ann Street.
-
- O’CONNOR & COLLENDOR, Sole Manufacturers.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-S. L. OLMSTEAD, IMPORTER, MANUFACTURER and Jobber of Men’s Furnishing
-Goods, No. 24 Barclay Street, corner of Church, New York.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-C. B. HATCH, HILLER & MERSEREAU, Importers and Jobbers of Men’s
-Furnishing Goods, and Manufacturers of the Golden Hill Shirts, 99
-Chambers Street, N. E. corner Church Street, New York.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-L. A. ROSENMILLER, DRUGGIST, NO. 172 EIGHTH Avenue, New York. Cupping &
-Leeching. Medicines at all hours.
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Stephen H. Branch's Alligator Vol. 1
-no. 12, July 10, 1858, by Stephen H. Branch
-
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-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Stephen H. Branch's Alligator Vol. 1 no.
-12, July 10, 1858, by Stephen H. Branch
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Stephen H. Branch's Alligator Vol. 1 no. 12, July 10, 1858
-
-Author: Stephen H. Branch
-
-Release Date: June 2, 2017 [EBook #54834]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BRANCH'S ALLIGATOR, JULY 10, 1858 ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by The Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
-http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images
-generously made available by The Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-
-<div class='tnote'>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>Transcriber Notes</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
- <ul class='ul_1'>
- <li>Obvious printer errors and missing punctuation fixed. Archaic and inconsistent
- spelling retained.
- </li>
- <li>The table of contents has been created and added by the transcriber.
- </li>
- <li>The cover has been created by the transcriber and placed in the public domain.
- </li>
- </ul>
-
-</div>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c000' />
-</div>
-
-<table class='table0' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='90%' />
-<col width='9%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c001'>Bennett, Barnum, and Gerard.</td>
- <td class='c002'><a href='#bennett'>1</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c001'>The Fourth of July—General Washington in Tears—The Decline of American Integrity and Patriotism.</td>
- <td class='c002'><a href='#fourth'>2</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c001'>Mayor Daniel F. Tiemann’s Forced Seduction of a Lady on Randall’s Island—Simeon Draper’s Lascivious Propensities—Most Damning Revelations.</td>
- <td class='c002'><a href='#mayor'>3</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c001'>Advertisements.</td>
- <td class='c002'><a href='#ads'>4</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c000' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/logo.jpg' alt='STEPHEN H. BRANCH’S ALLIGATOR.' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='double'>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c003'>
- <div>Volume I.—No. 12.]<span class='padded'>SATURDAY, JULY 10, 1858.</span><span class='padded'>[Price 2 Cents.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <h1 class='c004'>STEPHEN H. BRANCH’S <br /> ALLIGATOR.</h1>
-</div>
-
-<div><span class='pageno' id='Page_1'>1</span></div>
-<div class='column'>
-
-<div>
- <h2 id='bennett' class='c005'>Bennett, Barnum, and Gerard.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'><i>Three precocious villains stripped to the skin.—Precious,
-and startling, and thrilling
-under-current revelations for the people.—Read!
-Read! Read!</i></p>
-
-<p class='c007'><i>Bennett’s</i> daily urgence of the immediate
-creation of a Tax Payer’s Party is one of his
-old tricks, and is the detected burglar’s hoarse
-cry of stop thief. Bennett got me to introduce
-Alfred Carson as a Candidate for Mayor,
-just after his exciting Fire Report of 1850. I
-wrote several articles in favor of Carson for
-the Mayoralty, and Bennett published them,
-when lo! one rainy morning, I awoke, and
-opened the <cite>Herald</cite>, and the hypocritical old
-villain had another Candidate. I asked him
-if he intended to drop my old friend Carson,
-and he said no, but he thought he would try
-to bring another candidate into the field, just
-for a little fun, and that I could write about
-three editorials a week for Carson, and flatter
-him as much as I chose, and he would publish
-them. This was on Monday. On Wednesday,
-I caught him closeted with a formidable candidate
-for the Mayoralty, and on Saturday, he
-very cautiously introduced a third Candidate
-for the Mayor’s honors. As these
-were all wealthy men, and as Carson was
-very poor, and perceiving that Bennett unquestionably
-intended to sell Carson, and perhaps
-had already done so, I went to him in a
-towering rage, and charged him with treachery
-to myself and Carson. He smiled like
-Richard and Iago, and assured me that he
-should support Carson down to the last hour
-of the election. But I could not believe him;
-so I went to Carson, on Sunday morning, and
-wrote his famous declination of the Mayoralty,
-which rocked the parties of that day to
-their foundations with infinite delight, as every
-traffic politician had trembled to his toes, since
-the introduction of Carson’s potent and honest
-name for the Mayoralty. When I carried
-Carson’s Card to the <cite>Herald</cite> office, on Sunday
-evening, Mr. Bennett was absent, having gone
-to the country with Judge Russell and his
-lady. But Frederic Hudson was there—(his
-Aminadab Sleek Secretary,) who expostulated,
-and strove by every artifice in his prolific resources,
-to induce me not to publish Carson’s
-Card until I had seen Mr. Bennett. But I demanded
-him to let the Card appear on the
-following morning, and told him that himself
-and Bennett should be ashamed of themselves
-for striving to sell Carson through me, and
-that I believed Bennett had already received
-thousands of dollars for his contemplated sell
-of Carson, in favor of one of the wealthy candidates.
-My withdrawal of Carson led to the
-election of Ambrose C. Kingsland, a very illiterate
-man, and one of the meanest of the
-human species, and the oiliest and biggest
-conspirator and public thief since the days of
-the Roman Cataline. In 1853, Bennett asked
-me to introduce the name of Alderman A. A.
-Denman, of the Sixteenth Ward, as a candidate
-for Mayor, to whom I was imparting the
-rudiments of the English language, at his house
-in Nineteenth street. Denman was Chairman
-of the Committee that reported favorably at
-my request, on awarding the Corporation
-Printing to the <cite>Herald</cite> at $3,000 per annum,
-and the other journals at $1,000. Bennett
-seemed grateful to Denman for his favorable
-Printing Report, and I really thought he was
-sincere in his contemplated advocation of
-Denman for the Mayoralty; and I saw Denman,
-and he permitted me to use his name in
-connection with the Mayoralty, and I began
-to write articles, and published them in the
-<cite>Herald</cite>, strongly recommending Denman to
-the Mayoralty. At this time, Denman was
-one of the most popular men in the democratic
-party, and his annunciation for Mayor,
-confused the leaders and aspirants of all parties.
-Presto! Bennett announces another
-candidate, in a sort of a half-and-half black
-mail way, and I instantly withdrew Denman,
-who was sadly disappointed at the loss of the
-Mayoralty honors, and joined the most bloated
-thieves of all parties, in the odious Common
-Counsel of 1852 and 1853, and he was soon
-forever lost as an honorable public man. And
-now this Scotch reprobate comes forward,
-without a blush on his vicious cheeks, and
-prates of a Tax Payer’s Party, in order to effect
-some hellish thievish purpose. Perhaps
-his object is to nominate Judge Russell, or
-Fire Marshal Baker, or Galbraith, or some of
-his roguish go-betweens and thimble-riggers
-for Mayor, so that he can occupy the pleasant
-relations of Peter Cooper to Mayor Tiemann,
-his amiable son-in-law. But how the intelligent
-tax payers of the Metropolis can be so
-easily and so often bamboozled by this superficial
-Scotch Juggler, is a mystery to me,
-when they all know that he has always favored
-vice, and stabbed virtue. And if there
-ever was a candidate for office, during Bennett’s
-long editorial career, whom he did not
-sell, or if there ever was a truly virtuous aspirant
-for public honors, whose election Bennett
-ever sincerely advocated before the people,
-without a cash consideration, I should like
-to see the most extraordinary anomaly. Bennett
-very ingeniously plasters his victims with
-disgusting panegyric, for a brief period, when
-he lets loose the dogs of Tartarus, and while they
-devour them, he fills his coffers with gold from
-every candidate in the field, to whom he has
-pledged his support. But he is very old, and
-the devil will soon have him, and millions
-will rejoice when old Nick drags him to his
-fervent realms, and begins his merited tortures.
-And it will require wasteless years to burn
-the sins from his infamous and loathsome and
-nauseous carcase. The creation of James Gordon
-Bennett’s Tax Payer’s Party, after his
-cash advocation of all the abandoned scamps
-of America to office for thirty years, is the
-most amusing proposition of the age. And
-yet the omnipotent ballot stuffers may come
-to his rescue, and adopt his plans. And why
-should they not? Is not Barnum again
-abroad, and about to shake the world with
-another humbug. Barnum has grown prodigiously
-affluent since the Hard times began,
-and since money became scarce, and since
-people began to starve, and since the elements
-of Pluto leveled his Oriental Palace to the
-ground, (which was highly insured!) and
-above all, since he took as partner, that cunning
-old rat, James W. Gerard, who, like Dick
-Connolly and Simeon Draper, is ever found
-in all political camps. Gerard was the real
-originator of the Joice Heath imposture, and
-all of Barnum’s humbugs, and has borne him
-through all his financial clock troubles, for
-which he has got enough from Barnum to enable
-him to sustain his chariots and postilions
-and magnificent establishment in Gramercy
-Park until he dies. It was Gerard who introduced
-Kingsland for Mayor, and other
-successful candidates, and, in the dark, advocated
-Fernando Wood’s course down to
-his disastrous exodus from public life. And
-it was Gerard who sustained Matsell through
-all his infamous career, down to the famous
-meeting in the Tabernacle, and in the Legislative
-lobby, even going into the seats of
-members, and coaxing them in various ways
-to spare Matsell. And it was Gerard who,
-after Wood had fallen, went into the camp of
-Tiemann, where he is now, in order to cut
-the throats of Tiemann and the Coopers the
-first opportunity, and is at this moment, in
-collusion with Bennett in the formation of a
-Tax Payer’s Party. “All things to all men”
-is the motto of Gerard, and he has played his
-card adroitly for nearly half a century. But
-he has now probably got his last set of false
-teeth, and his last wig, and will probably soon
-die of old age like his old friend Bennett, who
-have operated together in ambuscade, for thirty
-unbroken years, in all the political villainy that
-has been concocted during this long and eventful
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_2'>2</span>period. No matter who succeeds in the
-elections, Gerard and Bennett are in the triumphant
-camps, as now: Bennett in Buchanan’s
-White House, and Gerard in Mayor
-Tiemann’s confidence, and both playing into
-each others hands, like Draper and Connolly.
-Picolomini is the last card that these jugglers
-will play. Gerard is a snob and a dandy, and
-an Opera exquisite, and it was he, (through
-Barnum,) who introduced Jenny Lind to the
-Americans, and got Bennett, for a large sum,
-to abuse Barnum and Jenny Lind, as an advertisement.
-Bennett did not get less than
-$20,000 from <em>Gerard</em> and Barnum for his daily
-abuse of Jenny Lind and Barnum. I was
-daily in the <cite>Herald</cite> office in those days, and I
-often saw Barnum closeted with Frederic
-Hudson, and James Gordon Bennett. And
-Gerard and Barnum have already arranged
-with Bennett, and paid him the cash down, to
-abuse Picolomini, while the <cite>Times</cite> and
-<cite>Tribune</cite> and many other journals are to be
-paid to praise her. And such a yell as we
-shall have on her arrival, will frighten the
-rats and cats. For, in this funny world, blarney
-is regarded as sincere praise and evidence
-of merit, while detraction is persecution,
-which verdant people won’t tolerate, and
-especially when hurled at such fascinating
-creatures as Fanny Elssler, or Jenny Lind, or
-Picolomini. This is certainly a very curious
-world, and, like Dr. Franklin, I am curious to
-know if our spiritual existence is to be as
-curious as our material; and I am extremely
-anxious to learn if Bennett, Barnum, and Gerard
-are to have an eternal abode in Heaven?</p>
-
-<div class='fancy'>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c008'>
- <div>Stephen H. Branch’s Alligator.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-<hr class='c009' />
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>NEW YORK, SATURDAY, JULY 10, 1858.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c009' />
-
-<p class='c010'>STEPHEN H. BRANCH’S “ALLIGATOR” CAN BE
-obtained at all hours, (day or night,) at wholesale and
-retail, at No. 128 Nassau Street, Near Beekman Street,
-and opposite Ross &amp; Tousey’s News Depot, New York.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/curlyline.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 id='fourth' class='c005'>The Fourth of July—General Washington in Tears—The Decline of American Integrity and Patriotism.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>There was a formidable mutiny in the Army
-of the Revolution, arising from the inability
-of the Government to pay the officers and
-soldiers, who assure Washington that, in order
-to provide food and raiment for their wives
-and children, they should return to their
-homes, and cultivate their neglected fields,
-and pursue their various peaceful avocations,
-if their salaries were not paid on a stated day.
-Washington invites the prominent leaders to
-meet him, and they accept his cordial invitation.
-The Hall is filled at an early hour with
-the bravest officers of the American camp,
-whom the village bell summons to hear an
-Address from their great Commander, and as
-its doleful reverberations expire on the evening
-air, Washington enters with unwonted
-dignity and gloom, and ascends the rostrum,
-and seats himself, and unfolds his Address to
-his noble and impoverished comrades. He sits,
-with one hand on his heart, and the other
-over his temples and unearthly eyes, and is
-apparently absorbed in grief and prayer. The
-silence of the tomb pervades the martial
-audience, and all seem to regard the hour as
-the most momentous in human history, as the
-return of the officers and soldiers to their
-homes, at this solemn crisis of the Revolution,
-might prove to be the funeral of liberty, and
-of patriots throughout the World. Washington
-approaches the desk, and stands like a
-statue, when neither whisper nor respiration
-can be heard, throughout the mournful throng.
-With haggard cheeks, and without repose for
-three successive nights, he wipes the copious
-tears from his blood-shot eyes, and moistens
-his parched mouth with water, and strives
-hard to articulate, but his big heart is so full,
-and his lips quiver so rapidly, and his tears
-fall so fast, that his speech is paralysed, and
-his vision blinded. The officers regret their
-rashness, and breathe heavy sighs, and recline
-their heads in silent grief, and some weep
-aloud, which kindles their feelings into a
-general lamentation, and the patriotic ladies
-thrill the entire assemblage with their piercing
-ejaculations. Washington strives to summon
-his wonderful self-possession, (which
-never deserted him till now,) and he rallies
-his resources like the dead of the resurrection,
-when he breathes these figurative truths, in
-the voice of a celestial being: “My beloved
-Companions: You know that I have grown
-gray in your service, and now you perceive that
-I am growing blind.” And while he utters
-these touching words, his iron nerve again
-succumbs, and he moistens his manuscript
-with the waters of his supernatural heart. He
-seats himself, and buries his face, and weeps
-as in his spotless childhood. The valiant
-officers, (who had never faltered amid the
-carnage and thunders of battle,) are utterly
-overwhelmed by Washington’s tears, and they
-depart for their respective quarters, and relate
-what has transpired, which infuses new fortitude
-and patriotism and unconquerable valor
-in the breasts of the desponding and mutinous
-soldiers, who rush to arms with the wild and
-irresistible impetuosity of Greene and Putnam,
-and the liberties of America are soon achieved.
-What a withering rebuke is this to the
-public thieves and traitors of the present generation.
-The only hope of our country is in
-the early appearance of a race of men like
-Washington, Jefferson, Franklin, Madison,
-Adams, Hamilton, Jackson, Calhoun, Clay,
-and Webster. With such corrupt and brainless
-wretches at the head of the American
-Press as Bennett, Greeley, and Raymond,
-with their gangs of mercenary scribblers in
-collusion with official robbers in the Municipal,
-State, and National Capitols, may the
-Good Being who heard the prayers of Washington
-(amid the snow, and blood, and hunger,
-and nakedness of the Revolution) have mercy
-on the great body of our people, who are
-threatened with general pillage and despotism
-by the vampires whom editors—in collusion
-with bands of thieves and assassins—fraudulently
-elect to the highest posts of emolument
-and honor. The official robbers of a nation’s
-treasury are the uncompromising foes of the
-toiling millions, and of human freedom. O
-then let the virtuous and industrious classes
-rally, and drive back the pernicious burglars
-of their firesides. And on the coming National
-Sabbath, let the pure and patriotic
-youth and meritorious age go up to the Altars
-of our Fathers and our common God, and
-swear a ceaseless crusade against the plunderers
-of our country, and the dastard monsters
-who would distract, and divide, and alienate
-the affections of our countrymen, on whose
-fidelity to Washington and the Union impend
-the hopes and happiness and liberty of the
-human race for eternal years.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/curlyline.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<p class='c007'><i>Let the Supervisors</i> watch the operations of
-Richard B. Connolly, who has prowled around
-the Aldermen and Councilmen and Supervisors
-for several years, from whom he has
-had not a farthing less than $1,000,000 since
-he has been County Clerk. The Supervisors
-alone voted him $316,000 for the printing of
-his musty and worthless Records, which no
-paper manufacturer would have purchased,
-nor even carted to their factories as a donation.
-And they are of less value to the public
-in their printed form, than to the paper
-makers. It is a study, and a sad one for the
-tax payers, to see Dick Connolly and George
-H. Purser sitting in the Boards of Aldermen
-and Councilmen and Supervisors at almost
-every session, for many years past, watching
-and nudging and coaxing the members to vote
-for their plundering enactments. These two
-scamps have never been naturalised, and have
-perjured themselves, since they cast their first
-ballots. But they don’t perjure themselves
-any more in that way, as they don’t dare
-vote, and have not voted since I exposed their
-alienage, three years since. They have packed
-more Grand and Petit Juries, and condemned
-and imprisoned and hung more innocent
-men, and robbed the City and Albany
-Treasuries to a greater extent than any other
-two public thieves and precocious monsters
-who walk the streets of New York. And
-both of these precious rascals now announce
-themselves as candidates for Comptroller!
-And they intend to buy their nomination and
-election with the very money they have stolen
-and are stealing daily from the people. O that
-there was a Brutus or Cincinnatus to rebuke
-these villains, and to stab them down, and to
-thus shame and scourge the people for permitting
-such villains to go unpunished.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/curlyline.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<p class='c007'><i>I will soon show</i> some of the mysterious
-currents of the Metropolis, and establish the
-friendly relations of Horace Greeley and Dana
-with Dick Connolly and Simeon Draper, in
-reference to the Alms House Spoils, and other
-extensive pickings and stealings. It is amusing
-to me to often see <cite>Greeley’s Tribune</cite> whitewash
-the rakish and thievish Ten Governors. I
-will also show how Connolly and Draper hold
-their influence with the <cite>Courier and Enquirer</cite>,
-<cite>Evening Post</cite>, and <cite>Commercial Advertiser</cite>.
-And how Dick and Sim silence the mercenary
-growls of the <cite>Herald</cite>. Fred Hudson and
-Galbraith and Bennett and Fire Marshal
-Baker could disclose these little matters, but
-as they could not do it without implicating
-themselves in stupendous villainy, I shall have
-to show how the black mail growls of the
-<cite>Herald</cite> are quickly silenced. The Institution
-of Death is a clincher to these devils. O, if
-such scoundrels as Connolly and Draper and
-Hudson and Bennett could only live always,
-they would have a nice time, but when they
-see a funeral, or have a deadly gripe in the
-direction of their wicked livers, they shudder
-with horror, and pray harder and louder than
-a stout noisy Methodist darkey minister, until
-the gripe has passed away, and they have a
-fresh hold on dear life again, when their nerve
-returns, and they steal more, and oppress the
-tax payers and poor consumers with less remorse
-than before they had almost a fatal
-gripe. But the worms and the devil will soon
-grab their thievish flesh and bones, and then,
-O Moses! what a precious feast they will
-have.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c000'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>O the grave! the grave!</div>
- <div class='line'>Mourns for the poor slave;</div>
- <div class='line'>But for public thieves,</div>
- <div class='line'>The grave never grieves.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/curlyline.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Lives of <span class='sc'>Peter Cooper</span> and <span class='sc'>James
-Gordon Bennett</span> are omitted this week. My
-Journal is so small, and my advertisements
-increase so rapidly, that I shall not be able to
-continue the lives of these distinguished men
-in every issue. But in my next number, the
-Lives of Cooper and Bennett will appear.
-These men have silenced those who have
-threatened to publish their wicked antecedents,
-but they will never silence me, only
-through imprisonment, or poison, or assassination,
-which I have reason to believe they
-contemplate. All the wholesale dealers
-stopped selling the <span class='sc'>Alligator</span> three weeks
-since, lest Bennett would not let them have
-the <cite>Heralds</cite> for their country agents. I strove
-to fasten the fact upon him, that he directed
-the wholesale dealers to stop selling the <span class='sc'>Alligator</span>,
-and if I had nailed upon his forehead
-his Napoleonic edicts to suppress the liberty
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_3'>3</span>and circulation of the American Press, I would
-have deliberately gone into his office, and shot
-him dead. No foreign unnaturalised scab
-like Bennett, shall trample with impunity the
-precious rights, and the glorious liberty that
-George Washington and my Grandfather bequeathed
-to me. So, Mr. Bennett, and Fred.
-Hudson, just have a care, and I implore you
-in your persecution, to keep your keen eyes
-strongly riveted on the last feather that broke
-the poor camel’s back.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/curlyline.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<p class='c007'><i>It is very strange</i> what has become of the
-stereotype plates containing James Gordon
-Bennett’s curious relations with Fanny Elssler,
-during her famous sojourn in America. Can
-you inform me, Ross &amp; Tousey, where they
-are? If you will tell me, I will not tell Bennett
-that you told me, which will not give
-him a pretext to stop your supply of <cite>Heralds</cite>
-again, by which you told me you lost several
-thousand dollars. Besides, if he does, you can
-get rich fast enough by selling the <cite>Ledger</cite> and
-<span class='sc'>Alligator</span>. So tell us where these mysterious
-plates can be found. Perhaps they are
-on storage in Philadelphia. “Who knows?”
-as the amiable Dr. Wallace very often says at
-the close of his abrupt and hurried <cite>Herald</cite>
-editorials, when he is thirsty or hungry, or
-wants to go to the Theatre or Opera.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/curlyline.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<p class='c007'><i>Mr. Erben</i>, the Trinity Church Organ
-Grinder, will please inform me if he owns a
-house in Baxter street, and if the character
-of the inmates are as respectable as himself,
-and especially the females. James Gordon
-Bennett will also please go into Baxter street,
-and ascertain and inform me if Mr. Erben’s
-house is as reputable as Helen Jewett’s old
-residence, at No. 41 Thomas street. Speak
-out, Satans Numbers One and Two.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/curlyline.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<p class='c007'>I had to omit the continuation of my <span class='sc'>Life</span>
-this week, which will appear in the next number
-of the “<span class='sc'>Alligator</span>.”</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/curlyline.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 id='mayor' class='c005'>Mayor Daniel F. Tiemann’s Forced Seduction of a Lady on Randall’s Island—Simeon Draper’s Lascivious Propensities—Most Damning Revelations.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>Some years since, there was a lovely domestic
-circle in our city, consisting of a husband,
-wife, and three children. The father
-died, and the widow was cast upon the world,
-without means to feed and clothe and educate
-her precious offspring. She had been the favorite
-daughter of affluent parents, and was
-educated by the ablest teachers. In conversation,
-she was eloquent and impassioned, and
-her fluent and melodious words, as they flowed
-from her red and pouting lips, and her even
-and pearly teeth, fascinated all who had the
-envied fortune to linger on her luxuriant language,
-and pretty smiles, and dimples, and
-most extraordinary purity of expression.
-Governor Simeon Draper fastens his voluptuous
-eyes upon her, and her fate is sealed.
-Three years since, Gov. Draper proposes that
-she become a matron on Randall’s Island, and
-she accepts his proposition, and he procures
-her a situation. After she began to discharge
-her matron duties, Governors Draper and Bell
-(now Supervisor), entered her domestic apartment
-on Randall’s Island, and asked her what
-she had in the next room, pointing their fingers
-to her bed room. She said they might
-look for themselves. They replied: “What
-are you afraid of?” She said: “I am not
-afraid, but I do not desire to go into a bedroom
-with two gentlemen.” They then seized
-her, and strove to drag her into her bed room,
-when she resisted and finally screamed, which
-alarmed them, and they withdrew their hands,
-and said: “You need not be afraid to go with
-us into the bed room, singly, as we know that
-you have let a <em>friend</em> go with you into your
-bed room ever since your husband died, and
-enjoy your fascinations to his heart’s content.”
-She said: “If my <em>friend</em> has done the thing
-of which you speak, neither of you shall.”
-Governors Draper and Bell then retired, but
-Draper soon returned, and proposed to buy
-two cloaks for two handsome girls who were
-about to leave the Institution, and said that
-she should go to the city and buy them, and at
-the same time purchase one for herself, regardless
-of price, and send the bill to his office, and
-he would pay it. She objected on the ground
-that if she accepted the proposition, he would
-expect licentious favors in return. Draper
-said that he was so anxious to stay with her,
-that he wouldn’t mind giving her $50 in cash.
-She said that she feared her <em>friend</em> would
-hear of it, and withdraw his affections, and
-might kill him, and perhaps her, as he truly
-loved her, and was of a very jealous and impulsive
-nature. Draper said she needn’t be
-afraid, as he could never hear of it. She
-then accepted his proposition to go to the city
-and purchase the cloaks, and directed the bill
-to be sent to his office, which was done, and
-he paid it. At this time, a fervent friendship
-was budding into bloom and blossom, between
-herself and Governor Daniel F. Tiemann, to
-whom she immediately disclosed all that had
-transpired between herself and Governors
-Bell and Draper. Tiemann affected great exasperation,
-and wrote her statement, (which
-terribly excoriated Draper,) with the design
-of presenting it to the Ten Governors in open
-session. This alarmed her, and she told her
-<em>friend</em> what had occurred, and that Governor
-Tiemann was about to expose Governors Bell
-and Draper to the Board of Ten Governors,
-and to the whole world, to which he strongly
-objected, as it might involve them in a common
-ruin, and he urged her to request Governor
-Tiemann not to present the document.
-And he assured her, if she permitted Governor
-Tiemann to do this favor for her, that he
-might soon want her smiles and beauty and
-caresses and embraces, (like Bell and Draper),
-as a requital for his apparently disinterested
-and meritorious services in her behalf. She
-saw Tiemann, and the document was suppressed.
-Draper heard of her movements,
-and became jealous of her partiality for Tiemann,
-and he had her suspended. But Tiemann
-had her reinstated. When Bell and
-Draper’s time expired as Alms House Governors,
-Gov. Tiemann immediately resolved that
-her <em>friend</em> should not visit the Island, as the
-first movement to his contemplated seduction
-of the beautiful matron. And he was so determined,
-that he resorted to the daring effort
-to exclude him, even after he obtained a permit.
-For Gov. Tiemann clearly saw that
-while her <em>friend</em> visited her, he (Tiemann)
-would have a poor chance to gratify his own
-lust. Tiemann finally succeeded in ejecting
-her <em>friend</em> from the Island, and on a dark and
-rainy afternoon, slyly meandered into her
-apartment, and after some loving smiles, and
-dulcet words, and melting sighs, and tender
-glances, he drew his chair towards her,
-and began to feel of her. She long resisted
-his extraordinary amorous movements, and
-struck him twice, and scratched and bit him,
-and terribly exhausted him and herself in
-their mutual struggles, and thought she had
-conquered him. But in his last desperate
-rally, he overpowered and vanquished her,
-and she had to let him go his whole length,
-and he accomplished his most hellish purpose.
-Her boy was living in the West, and wrote to
-her, that he was not only displeased with his
-relatives, but with the western country, and
-desired to return to New York. She showed
-the letter to Gov. Tiemann, and told him that
-she had not the money to spare to defray his
-expenses home. He asked her how much it
-would cost. She said $15, when he gave her
-$40, assuring her that he would not have it
-known for the world, that he let her have
-money to pay her son’s expenses home. She
-quieted his fears, by assuring him that she
-would never disclose it. She sent the money
-to her boy, and he came home. Gov. Tiemann
-then got him a situation, but the boy had seen
-Tiemann take improper liberties with his
-mother, and as he strongly suspected he had allured
-her from the paths of virtue, he very
-indignantly refused to accept the situation
-tendered by Gov. Tiemann. But in eight
-months afterwards, Gov. Tiemann obtained
-another place for the boy, and after unceasing
-importunity, he finally persuaded the boy to
-accept a situation in Broadway, where he now
-is. Last Autumn she had an interview with
-her <em>friend</em> in this city, when he charged her
-with sexual intercourse with Governor Tiemann.
-She burst into a tremendous flood of
-tears, and cast herself into his arms, and craved
-his forgiveness in rending accents. He
-asked her why she had long permitted Governor
-Tiemann to use her beautiful person. She
-said that as he was poor, and Governor Tiemann
-rich, and had foiled Draper in her suspension,
-and had elegantly furnished her
-apartments on the Island, and had paid the
-expenses of her boy from the West to the city,
-and had got him a good situation in Broadway,
-and had made her magnificent donations
-in jewelry and apparel, and had let her have
-money when she asked him,—and fearing that
-if she refused to gratify his lust, he would instantly
-have her dismissed as Matron, to endure
-again the tortures of penury,—that in
-view of all this, she had let him have sexual
-intercourse with her whenever he desired.
-But that she despised him for his wickedness,
-as he was a Church Member, in good standing,
-and as he professed to be one of the leading
-Reformers of the age. Her <em>friend</em> asked
-her how much money he had given her, and
-she said: “Quite a large sum, some of which
-I have deposited in a Bank,” and she told
-him the name of the Bank. She also told
-him where the chairs, sofas, mirrors, stoves,
-&amp;c., were purchased, and showed him the receipted
-bills, which she placed in his hands,
-and he has them now. She then besought his
-pardon, and assured him that she would leave
-the Island, and come and live and die in his
-affectionate embraces. He forgave her, and
-she returned to the Island, and told Governor
-Tiemann that she desired to leave and return
-to her <em>friend’s</em> humble abode, which alarmed
-Tiemann, who implored her in tears to remain,
-and he would protect her as long as he lived,
-and when on the eve of death, he would make
-ample provision for her support during her
-life. They were together in her apartment,
-for ten successive hours, in a most exciting
-and harrowing scene, when he promised to
-give her $500 on the following day, and she
-finally yielded, and remained, and is at the
-Island now, both as a Matron and as Mayor
-Tiemann’s Mistress. Her <em>friend</em> was so exasperated
-with her double treachery, that he
-went to one of the Ten Governors, (who is
-now in the Board,) and disclosed in writing
-under his signature the entire villainy of Tiemann.
-The Governor in question sent for
-Tiemann, and asked him if the statement was
-true, when he colored into a ball of fire, and
-left in shame and silence. The Governor did
-not expose Tiemann, in consequence of his
-innocent and interesting family, and his aged
-father, and his numerous relatives, including
-the versatile Peter Cooper, whose adopted
-daughter Mayor Tiemann married. These
-revelations will cause the worthy citizens of
-New York to bend their heads in sorrow, to
-behold a man of Mayor Tiemann’s exalted
-professions of purity and piety, guilty of
-crimes that should consign him to the rack,
-and to an eternal hell.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c000' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_4'>4</span>
- <h2 id='ads' class='c005'>Advertisements—25 Cents a line.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>Credit—From two to four seconds, or as long as the Advertiser
-can hold his breath! Letters and Advertisements to
-be left at No. 128 Nassau street, third floor, back room.</p>
-
-<hr class='c011' />
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_0_4 c012'>NOTICE TO FARMERS AND MARKET
-GARDENERS.—<span class='sc'>City Inspector’s Department</span>,
-New York, June 16, 1858.—In conformity with the following
-resolution, the space therein mentioned will be permitted to
-be used as a place, by farmers and gardeners, for the sale of
-vegetables and garden produce, until the hour of 12 o’clock,
-M., daily—the use to be free of charge:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Resolved, That permission be, and is hereby, given to farmers
-and market gardeners, to occupy daily, until 12 M., free of
-charge, the vacant space of the northern and southern extremities
-of the intersection of Broadway and Sixth avenue, between
-Thirty-second and Thirty-fifth streets, without infringing
-upon the streets which the said space intersects, for the
-purpose only of selling vegetables and market produce, of their
-own farms or gardens, under the supervision of the City Inspector.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Also, by resolution of the Common Council, The use of
-Gouverneur slip is granted to farmers and gardeners for the
-sale of produce from wagons.</p>
-
-<div class='c014'>GEO W. MORTON, City Inspector.</div>
-<div class='c014'>JOSEPH CANNING, Sup’t of Markets.</div>
-
-<hr class='c011' />
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_0_4 c012'>NOTICE—TO PERSONS KEEPING SWINE,
-OWNERS OF PROPERTY WHERE THE SAME
-MAY BE KEPT, AND ALL OTHERS INTERESTED. At
-a meeting of the Mayor and Commissioners of Health, held
-at the City Hall of the City of New York, Friday, June 18th,
-1853, the following preamble and resolutions were adopted:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Whereas, A large number of swine are kept in various portions
-of the city; and whereas, it is the general practice of
-persons so keeping swine, to boil offal and kitchen refuse and
-garbage, whereby a highly offensive and dangerous nuisance
-is created, therefore, be it</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Resolved, That this Board, of the Mayor and Commissioners
-of Health, deeming swine kept south of (86th) street, in
-this city, to be creative of a nuisance and detrimental to the
-public health, therefore, the City Inspector be, and he is hereby,
-authorized and directed to take, seize, and remove from
-any and all places and premises, all and every swine found or
-kept on any premises in any place in the city of New York
-southerly of said street, and to cause all such swine to be removed
-to the Public Pound, or other suitable place beyond the
-limits of the city or northerly of said street, and to cause all
-premises or places wherein, or on which, said swine may
-have been so found or kept, to be thoroughly cleaned and purified
-as the City Inspector shall deem necessary to secure the
-preservation of the public health, and that all expenses incurred
-thereby constitute a lien on the lot, lots or premises
-from which said nuisance shall have been abated or removed.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Resolved, That the foregoing resolutions shall take effect
-from and after the first day of July next, and that public notice
-be given of the same by publication in the Corporation
-papers to that date, and that notice may be given to persons
-keeping swine by circulars delivered on the premises, and
-that all violations of this order be prosecuted by the proper
-legal authorities, on complaint from the City Inspector or his
-officers.</p>
-
-<div class='c014'><span class='sc'>City Inspector’s Department</span>, }</div>
-<div class='c014'>New York, June 18, 1858. }</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>All persons keeping swine, or upon whose property or premises
-the same may be kept, are hereby notified that the above
-resolutions will be strictly enforced from and after the first
-day of July next.</p>
-
-<div class='c014'>GEO. W. MORTON, City Inspector.</div>
-
-<hr class='c011' />
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_0_4 c012'>FRANCIS B. BALDWIN, WHOLESALE
-and RETAIL CLOTHING &amp; FURNISHING WAREHOUSE,
-70 and 72 Bowery, between Canal and Hester sts.,
-New York. Large and elegant assortment of Youths’ and
-Boys’ Clothing.</p>
-
-<div class='c014'>F. B. BALDWIN,</div>
-<div class='c014'>J. G. BARNUM.</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>F. B. BALDWIN has just opened his New and Immense
-Establishment. THE LARGEST IN THE CITY! An entire
-New Stock of GENTLEMEN’S, YOUTH’S and CHILDREN’S
-CLOTHING, recently manufactured, by the best
-workmen in the city, is now opened for inspection. Also, a
-superior stock of FURNISHING GOODS. All articles are
-of the Best Quality, and having been purchased during the
-crisis, WILL BE SOLD VERY LOW! The Custom Department
-contains the greatest variety of CLOTHS, CASSIMERES,
-and VESTINGS.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Mr. BALDWIN has associated with him Mr. J. G. BARNUM,
-who has had great experience in the business, having
-been thirty years connected with the leading Clothing Establishments
-of the city.</p>
-
-<hr class='c011' />
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_0_4 c012'>THOMAS A. DUNN, 506 EIGHTH AVENUE,
-has a very choice assortment of Wines, Brandies, Cordials,
-and Segars, which he will sell at prices that will yield a
-fair profit. All my democratic friends, and my immediate associates
-in the Boards of Aldermen and Councilmen are respectfully
-invited to call in their rambles through Eighth Avenue,
-and enjoy a good Havana segar, and nice, sparkling
-champagne, and very exhilerating brandy. For the segars, I
-will charge my political friends and associates only five pence
-each, and for the brandy only ten pence per half gill, and for
-the champagne only four shillings a glass, or two dollars a bottle.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>So call, kind friends, and sing a glee,</div>
- <div class='line'>And laugh and smoke and drink with me,</div>
- <div class='line in14'>Sweet Sangaree</div>
- <div class='line in14'>Till you can’t see:</div>
- <div class='line in4'>(<i>Chorus</i>)—At your expense!</div>
- <div class='line in14'>(Which pays my rents,)</div>
- <div class='line'>For my fingers do you see</div>
- <div class='line'>O’er my nose gyrating free?</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='c014'>THOMAS A. DUNN, No. 506 Eighth avenue.</div>
-
-<hr class='c011' />
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_0_4 c012'>J. VAN TINE, SHANGAE RESTAURANT,
-No. 2, Dey street, New York.</p>
-
-<hr class='c011' />
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_0_4 c012'>COREY AND SON, MERCHANT’S EXCHANGE,
-Wall street, New York.—Notaries Public and Commissioners.—United
-State’s Passports issued in 36 hours.—Bills
-of Exchange, Drafts, and Notes protested.—Marine protests
-noted and extended.</p>
-
-<div class='c014'>EDWIN F. COREY,</div>
-<div class='c014'>EDWIN F. COREY, <span class='sc'>Jr.</span></div>
-
-<hr class='c011' />
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_0_4 c012'>MRS. S. S. BIRD’S LADIES’ AND GENTLEMEN’S
-Dining and Oyster Saloons, No. 31 Canal street,
-near East Broadway, and 264 Division street, New York.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>Oysters Pickled to Order.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c011' />
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_0_4 c012'>S. &amp; J. W. BARKER, GENERAL AUCTIONEERS
-&amp; REAL ESTATE BROKERS. Loans
-negotiated, Houses and Stores Rented, Stocks and Bonds
-Sold at Auction or Private Sale.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Also, FURNITURE SALES attended to at private houses.
-Office, 14 Pine street, under Commonwealth Bank.</p>
-
-<hr class='c011' />
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_0_4 c012'>CARLTON HOUSE, 496 BROADWAY, NEW
-York. Bates and Holden, Proprietors.</p>
-
-<div class='c014'>THEOPHILUS BATES.</div>
-<div class='c014'>OREL J. HOLDEN.</div>
-
-<hr class='c011' />
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_0_4 c012'>TRIMMING MANUFACTURERS.—B. S.
-YATES &amp; CO., 639 Broadway, New York.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>Fringes, Cords, Tassels, Loops, Gimps,</div>
- <div>and Gimp Bands.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c011' />
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_0_4 c012'>WM. COULTER, Carpenter.—I have long
-been engaged as a Carpenter, and I assure all who
-will favor me with their patronage, that I will build as good
-houses, or anything else in my line, as any other carpenter in
-the city of New York. I will also be as reasonable in charges
-for my work as any other person.</p>
-
-<div class='c015'>WILLIAM COULTER, Carpenter,</div>
-<div class='c014'>Rear of 216 East Twentieth street, New York.</div>
-
-<hr class='c011' />
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_0_4 c012'>GERARD BETTS &amp; CO., AUCTION AND
-Commission Merchants, No. 106, Wall street, corner of
-Front street, New York.</p>
-
-<hr class='c011' />
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_0_4 c012'>JAMES DONNELLY’S COAL YARD,—Twenty-sixth
-street and Second Avenue. I always have
-all kinds of coal on hand, and of the very best quality, which
-I will sell as low as any other coal dealer in the United States.</p>
-
-<div class='c014'>JAMES DONNELLY.</div>
-
-<hr class='c011' />
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_0_4 c012'>FOLEY’S CELEBRATED “GOLD PENS.”
-For sale by all Stationers and Jewellers.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>OFFICE AND STORE,</div>
- <div class='line in6'>163 BROADWAY.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c011' />
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_0_4 c012'>W. W. OSBORN, MERCHANT TAILOR,
-9 Chamber street, near Chatham street, New York.</p>
-
-<hr class='c011' />
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_0_4 c012'>SOLOMON BANTA, Architect, No. 93 Amos
-street, New York. I have built as many houses and stores
-as any Architect in this city, or the United States, and I can
-produce vouchers to that effect; and I flatter myself that I can
-build edifices that will compare favorably, in point of beauty
-and durability, with those of any architect in this country. I
-am prepared to receive orders in my line of business, at No.
-93 Amos street. New York.</p>
-
-<div class='c014'>SOLOMON BANTA.</div>
-
-<hr class='c011' />
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_0_4 c012'>ROBERT ONDERDONK—THIRTEENTH
-Ward Hotel, 405 and 407 Grand street, corner of Clinton
-street, New York.</p>
-
-<hr class='c011' />
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_0_4 c012'>WILLIAM M. TWEED, CHAIR, &amp; OFFICE
-Furniture Dealer and Manufacturer,</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>No. 289 Broadway, corner of Read street New York. Room
-No. 15.</p>
-
-<hr class='c011' />
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_0_4 c012'>TRUSSES, ELASTIC STOCKINGS, SHOULDER
-Braces, Supporters, Bandages, &amp;c. H. L. Parsons,
-E. D. Office, 4 Ann street, under the Museum.</p>
-
-<hr class='c011' />
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_0_4 c012'>FASHION HOUSE.—JOSEPH HYDE PROPRIETOR,
-corner Grand and Essex street. Wines, Liquors,
-and Cigars of the best brands. He invites his friends to give
-him a call. Prompt and courteous attention given his patrons.</p>
-
-<hr class='c011' />
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_0_4 c012'>WILLIAM A. CONKLIN, ATTORNEY AND
-COUNSELLOR AT LAW, No. 176 Chatham street,
-New York. Any business entrusted to his charge from citizens
-of this city or any part of the country, will receive prompt
-and faithful attention, and be conducted on reasonable terms.</p>
-
-<div class='c014'>WILLIAM A. CONKLIN.</div>
-
-<hr class='c011' />
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_0_4 c012'>HERRING’S PATENT CHAMPION FIRE AND BURGLAR
-Proof Safe, with Hall’s Patent Powder Proof
-Locks, afford the greatest security of any Safe in the world.
-Also, Sideboard and Parlor Safes, of elegant workmanship
-and finish, for plate, &amp;c. S. C. HERRING &amp; CO.,</p>
-
-<div class='c014'>251 Broadway.</div>
-
-<hr class='c011' />
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_0_4 c012'>JAMES MELENFY, (SUCCESSOR TO SAMUEL
-Hopper,) Grocer, and Wholesale and Retail Dealer in
-Pure Country Milk. Teas, Coffee, Sugars &amp; Spices. Flour,
-Butter, Lard, Cheese, Eggs &amp;c. No. 158, Eighth Avenue,
-Near 18th Street, New York. Families supplied by leaving
-their address at the Store.</p>
-
-<hr class='c011' />
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_0_4 c012'>BOOT &amp; SHOE EMPORIUMS. EDWIN A. BROOKS,
-Importer and Manufacturer of Boots, Shoes &amp; Gaiters,
-Wholesale and Retail, No. 575 Broadway, and 150 Fulton
-Street, New York.</p>
-
-<hr class='c011' />
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_0_4 c012'>MCSPEDON AND BAKER’S STATIONERY WAREHOUSE
-and Envelope Manufactory, Nos. 29, 31, and
-33, Beekman Street, New York.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'><span class='sc'>Envelopes</span> of all patterns, styles, and quality, on hand,
-and made to order for the trade and others, by Steam Machinery.
-Patented April 8th, 1856.</p>
-
-<hr class='c011' />
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_0_4 c012'>COZZENS’ HOTEL COACHES,—STABLE, Nos. 34 and
-36 Canal Street, New York.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I will strive hard to please all those generous citizens
-who will kindly favor me with their patronage.</p>
-
-<div class='c014'>EDWARD VAN RANST.</div>
-
-<hr class='c011' />
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_0_4 c012'>J. W. MASON, MANUFACTURER, WHOLESALE and
-Retail dealers in all kinds of Chairs, Wash Stands,
-Settees, &amp;c. 377 &amp; 379 Pearl Street, New York.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Cane and Wood Seat Chairs, in Boxes, for Shipping.</p>
-
-<hr class='c011' />
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_0_4 c012'>BENJAMIN JONES, COMMISSION DEALER, IN Real
-Estate. Houses and stores and lots for sale in all
-parts of the city. Office at the junction of Broadway,
-Seventh Avenue, and Forty-Sixth Street.</p>
-
-<hr class='c011' />
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_0_4 c012'>FULLMER AND WOOD, CARRIAGE Manufacturers,
-239 West 19th Street, New York.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Horse-shoeing done with despatch, and in the most scientific
-manner, and on reasonable terms.</p>
-
-<hr class='c011' />
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_0_4 c012'>J. N. GENIN, FASHIONABLE HATTER, 214 Broadway,
-New York.</p>
-
-<div class='clear'>
-
-<hr class='c011' />
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_0_4 c012'>GENIN’S LADIES’ &amp; CHILDREN’S OUTFITTING
-Bazaar, 513 Broadway, (St. Nicholas Hotel, N. Y.)</p>
-
-<hr class='c011' />
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_0_4 c012'>EDWARD PHALON &amp; SON, 497 and 517 Broadway,
-New York—Depots for the sale of Perfumery, and
-every article connected with the Toilet.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>We now introduce the “BOUQUET D’OGARITA, or
-Wild Flower of Mexico,” which is superior to any thing of
-the kind in the civilized world.</p>
-
-<div class='c014'>EDWARD PHALON &amp; SON.</div>
-
-<hr class='c011' />
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_0_4 c012'>SAMUEL SNEDEN, SHIP &amp; STEAMBOAT BUILDER.—My
-Office is at No. 31 Corlears Street, New York; and
-my yards and residence are at Greenpoint. I have built
-Ships and Steamers for every portion of the Globe, for a
-long term of years, and continue to do so on reasonable
-terms.</p>
-
-<div class='c014'>SAMUEL SNEDEN.</div>
-
-<hr class='c011' />
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_0_4 c012'>JOHN B. WEBB, BOAT BUILDER, 718 WATER STREET.
-My Boats are of models and materials unsurpassed by
-those of any Boat Builder in the World. Give me a call,
-and if I don’t please you, I will disdain to charge you for
-what does not entirely satisfy you.</p>
-
-<div class='c014'>JOHN B. WEBB.</div>
-
-<hr class='c011' />
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_0_4 c012'>ALANSON T. BRIGGS—DEALER IN FLOUR BARRELS,
-Molasses Casks, Water, and all other kinds of Casks.
-Also, new flour barrels and half-barrels; a large supply
-constantly on hand. My Stores are at Nos. 62, 63, 64, 69,
-73, 75, 77 and 79 Rutger’s Slip; at 235, 237, and 239 Cherry
-Street; also, in South and Water streets, between Pike and
-Rutger’s Slip, extending from street to street. My yards in
-Williamsburgh are at Furman &amp; Co.’s Dock. My yards in
-New York are at the corner of Water and Gouverneur
-Streets; and in Washington Street, near Canal; and at Leroy
-Place. My general Office is at 64 Rutger’s Slip.</p>
-
-<div class='c014'>ALANSON T. BRIGGS.</div>
-
-<hr class='c011' />
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_0_4 c012'>FULTON IRON WORKS.—JAMES MURPHY &amp; CO.,
-manufacturers of Marine and Land Engines, Boilers,
-&amp;c. Iron and Brass Castings. Foot of Cherry street, East
-River.</p>
-
-<hr class='c011' />
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_0_4 c012'>BRADDICK &amp; HOGAN, SAILMAKERS, No. 272 South
-Street, New York.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Awnings, Tents, and Bags made to order.</p>
-
-<div class='c014'>JESSE A. BRADDICK,</div>
-<div class='c014'>RICHARD HOGAN.</div>
-
-<hr class='c011' />
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_0_4 c012'>WILLIAM M. SOMERVILLE, WHOLESALE AND
-Retail Druggist and Apothecary, 205 Bleecker-st.,
-corner Minetta, opposite Cottage Place, New York. All the
-popular Patent Medicines, fresh Swedish Leeches, Cupping,
-&amp;c. Physicians’ Prescriptions accurately prepared.</p>
-
-<div class='c014'>WM. M. SOMERVILLE.</div>
-
-<hr class='c011' />
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_0_4 c012'>A. W. &amp; T. HUME, MERCHANT TAILORS, No.
-82 Sixth Avenue, New York. We keep a large and
-elegant assortment of every article that a gentleman requires.
-We make Coats, Vests and Pants, after the latest
-Parisian fashions, and on reasonable terms.</p>
-
-<div class='c014'>A. W. &amp; T. HUME.</div>
-
-<hr class='c011' />
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_0_4 c012'>THE WASHINGTON, <span class='sc'>By</span> BARTLETT &amp; GATES,
-No. 1 Broadway, New York. Come and see us, good
-friends, and eat and drink and be merry, in the same capacious
-and patriotic halls where the immortal Washington’s
-voice and laugh once reverberated.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>O come to our Hotel,</div>
- <div class='line'>And you’ll be treated well.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='c014'>BARTLETT &amp; GATES.</div>
-
-<hr class='c011' />
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_0_4 c012'>EXCELSIOR PRINTING HOUSE, 211 CENTRE ST., IS
-furnished with every facility, latest improved presses,
-and the newest styles of type—for the execution of Book,
-Job and Ornamental Printing. Call and see specimens.</p>
-
-<hr class='c011' />
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_0_4 c012'>CHARLES FRANCIS, SADDLER, (ESTABLISHED IN
-1808,) Sign of the Golden Horse, 39 Bowery, New York,
-opposite the Theatre. Mr. F. will sell his articles as low as
-any other Saddler in America, and warrant them to be equal
-to any in the World.</p>
-
-<hr class='c011' />
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_0_4 c012'>H. N. WILD, STEAM CANDY MANUFACTURER, No.
-451 Broadway, bet. Grand and Howard streets, New
-York. My Iceland Moss and Flaxseed Candy will cure
-Coughs and Sneezes in a very short time.</p>
-
-<hr class='c011' />
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_0_4 c012'>JAMES GRIFFITHS, (Late CHATFIELD &amp; GRIFFITHS,)
-No. 273 Grand st., New York. A large stock of well-selected
-Cloths, Cassimeres, Vestings, &amp;c., on hand. Gent’s,
-Youths’ and Children’s Clothing, Cut and Made in the most
-approved style. All cheap for Cash.</p>
-
-<hr class='c011' />
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_0_4 c012'>J. AGATE &amp; CO., MEN’S FURNISHING GOODS
-and Shirt Manufacturers, 256 Broadway, New York.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Shirts made to order and guaranteed to fit.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>J. AGATE, <span class='padded'>F. W. TALKINGTON.</span></p>
-
-<hr class='c011' />
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_0_4 c012'>BILLIARD TABLES.—PHELAN’S IMPROVED BILLIARD
-Tables and Combination Cushions—Protected by
-letters patent, dated Feb. 19, 1856; Oct. 28, 1856; Dec. 8,
-1857; Jan. 12, 1858. The recent improvement in these
-Tables make them unsurpassed in the world. They are
-now offered to the scientific Billiard players as combining
-speed with truth, never before obtained in any Billiard Table.
-Sales-rooms Nos. 786 and 788 Broadway, New York. Manufactory
-No. 53 Ann Street.</p>
-
-<div class='c014'>O’CONNOR &amp; COLLENDOR, Sole Manufacturers.</div>
-
-<hr class='c011' />
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_0_4 c012'>S. L. OLMSTEAD, IMPORTER, MANUFACTURER
-and Jobber of Men’s Furnishing Goods, No. 24 Barclay
-Street, corner of Church, New York.</p>
-
-<hr class='c011' />
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_0_4 c012'>C. B. HATCH, HILLER &amp; MERSEREAU, Importers
-and Jobbers of Men’s Furnishing Goods, and Manufacturers
-of the Golden Hill Shirts, 99 Chambers Street, N.
-E. corner Church Street, New York.</p>
-
-<hr class='c011' />
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_0_4 c012'>L. A. ROSENMILLER, DRUGGIST, NO. 172 EIGHTH
-Avenue, New York. Cupping &amp; Leeching. Medicines
-at all hours.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Stephen H. Branch's Alligator Vol. 1
-no. 12, July 10, 1858, by Stephen H. Branch
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