x sin, 
the afflicted General, after 
struggles for eae mae at jena articulated a 
desire that he m ight be allowed to die without 
interruption 7 
‘o have resisted be, fal peration of such 
pose imagine that 
: h 
He 
this v erable old ta, ought at least to have 
adie “the vigor of his earliest 
IGNORANT APOTHECARIES. 
The following remarks are from the pen of 
Dr. Allcut, a a regular physician, of Boston. 
«Do we not often see ignorant and vicious 
men in ie E Spcanceal shops of this coun- 
try, dealing out death and destruction to their 
yw cit place, what 
- m 
‘to hokup his head, and put back his shoulders, 
make a bow, ‘dance, and fiddle is not sufficient. 
That he is ‘able Je sel? aes Chambers’, - 
Parker & 
cap make mistakes a i best of them, 
= 
die 
