Friday Maruinif DM-cinber 1. Ing.l. SIORAE ASPFATS OF THF. RF.F.O CAKE. | From the day on which Jacob Grouse j met his fate until the present hour, we j have not published a single line in re gard to the unfortunate affair which ; resulted in the death of that miserable ! man, saving only a statement of the ( facts connected with the killing and a j report of the proceedings in the trial of i John P. Reed, Jr. We studiously re frained from defending the course of Mr. Reed and carefully avoided the expression of any opinion as to his guilt or innocence of the crime with which he was indicted. Our silence in this regard was owing solely to our desire | that the law should have its course un obstructed by any possible impediment which our discussion of the case might . throw in its way. For this reason our j columns did not respond to the foul slanders repeatedly uttered in regard to the Reeds, and for this reason alone, we permitted the base libel upon our j own character, "THE BEDFORD (SA- I ZETTE murdered Jacob Crowe," to go uncontradicted and unrebuked. Rut, the law has had its course and we can now speak without fear of defeating the ends of justice. Our slanderers have j had their say; let them not complain now that we shall have ours. The most conspicuous part borne in the trial of young Reed, was that taken by John Cessna, Esq., one of the coun sel for the prosecution. Fronithetime of the killing until the moment of ac quittal, like a blood-hound in pursuit; of his quarry, he was upon the track of the Reeds. When the fatal shot was ! fired, the crack of the pistol brought him in "at the death," and after young Reed had surrendered himself to the sheriff, he marched to the jail at the j head of a mob, and with the froth of his malignant heart boiling over at his mouth, yelled like an incarnate devil, "Hang him! hang him!" When the ; Coroner's inquest was held upon the body of ('rouse, he went before the jury as counsel and harangued them in favor of the finding he desired, a proceeding without parallel in all the annals of ju risprudence. When the case came up at September sessions, he resorted! to all the expedients of the jiettifog ger's trickery, to obtain a continuance; moving to quash the array of jurors, though the jury had been drawn in the same manner in a hundred previous i capital cases; and finally swearing the case off by making an affidavit to the absence of important witnesses. And just here, let us lf>ok at this affidavit of Mr. Cessna. We find him swearing that "John Williams," " Howsare," "Mrs. M. S. Hoke," "Win. J. Camp bell, "Lizzie Long and Lizzie Gordon" were "material to a trial of the case." Upon this oath of Mr. Cessna, the Court continued the trial to November ses sions. Now, not one of these witnesses, except John Williams, did Mr. Cessna produce at the trial, last week, though he had three months time in which to have them brought here. We are in formed that when Cessna made his oath, John Williams was not faraway, and that he uppeajwd and testified be fore the Grand JfiMat ttepteinlier ses sions. Wm. J. Campbell was in atten dance at the trial, last week, but this important witness was not even called 1 to the stand by Mr. Cessna. Why Mrs. Hoke, Howsare and the two Liz zies were not forthcoming, is,doubtless, best known to the "affiant" who swore j "hat their testimony was "material. o a trial of the case." But, the black it page in all the dark history of this an Cessna's connection with this lived j se, is yet to be written. Contempt • the meanness of the fellow's malig •y and pity for those who must share * shame, almost constrain us to for ar. Yet, why should we hesitate to 11 the truth concerning a creature, i ho faiu would blacken and blast the eputatiou of others with falsehood? lad all the evidence offered by the de fence, leen admitted by the Court, the Aiminality of poor Crouse would have ■een considerably relieved by the reve lation of the fact that he believed, that ifc an officer, he had the right to kill John P. lived, Jr. What gave Crouse tliis false and bloody notion ? Let us see. We quote fcom the bill of excep tions scaled by the Court to the counsel for the defence: "The counsel for the defence offer to prove that Crouse said he would kill lieed, if ever he returned to Bedford; that he had authority to kill him; that he was not acting blindly, but that JOHN CESSNA had told liijn that he would not be hurt if he Counsel for Commonwealth cteect; ob jfwthitis sustained bv the CouiTand hill of exceptions sealed." The evidence which the defence in tended to produce under this proposi tion, was that of some five witnesses, all respectable and worthy men, who were ready to swear that Crouse, at va rious times, in October, 1864, and at later periods, declared that he would when counseled not to do so, that he would say, "1 know what I am doing; 1 am not acting blindly; I have a right to kill him ;" and at least one of these witnesses would havesworn that ('rouse said to him that JOHN CESSNA had told him that he could kill the Reed boys and he couldn't be hurt for it.— We will give the testimony of this wit ness as taken down by counsel for the defence, at a private examination of witnesses. It is as follows: "After the election last fall (1804) I was talking to John I'. Reed, Sr., on business near his office; Jacob Crouse passed, while we were talking, towards the Washington Hotel; I afterwards met ('rouse, on the same day. He ask ed me what Reed had said about him. I told him he had not said anything; that we were talking about business. He said he believed Reed had said something about him, that he was not pleased with him, that he had heard some of the threats that he(( 'rouse)had made about his boys. He said he had threatened to kill them, and that he would kill them yet. I told him lie should not do so; that he might get in to hocutties. He said, no, he wouldn't; that he never went into anything blindly; that JOHN CESSNA had told him he had a right to kill him, as an officer, and that he couldn't, or shouldn't be hurt; and he said if he (John P. Reed, Jr.) ever came back he would kill him." This statement needs no interpreta tion; it speaks for itself. And, now, what shall be said of the lawyer who heads a mob, and, foaming at the mouth like a madman, demands that a prisoner shall be lynched; who goes before a Coroner's jury to plead for a verdict; who moves for a postpone ment of a trial, upon his own oath .that witnessses material to the issue, are absent, which witnesses, though with in his reach, he subsequently fails to produce; who advises as Jacob ('rouse declared he was advised? What shall be said of the po/ttieiun who goes over the State, traducing his neighbors by statements that they murdered provost marshals; making capital out of the blood of the man who declared that this mountebank had guarantied him im punity, if he killed Reed; electioneer ing at the expense of the reputation of a man whose guilt, or innocence, was yet to lie established? Nay, more.— What is to be thought (for tongue can not utter a just description of such in famy) of the Christum who sits in the pew just behind you, taking the sacra mental wine from the same cup in which you drink spiritual fellowship with him, and who, nevertheless, finds it in his heart to demand your blood, even though he does it in the garb of his profession ? What a libel upon the legal profession! What a disgrace to the political arena! What a shame to the church of the meek ami lowly Je sus ! The pettifogger, the mountebank and the hypocrite all combined in one nature; who shall describe the ineffable meanness, the contemptible trickery, the unutterable baseness of a compound so vile as this? 1,1151.1.S I'KMVKI). Time sets all things even. The un parallelled mendacity of the Bedford Inquirer in regard to the ("rouse homi cide, hasat last received a fitting rebuke, nay, futs been branded by a meant jury of the bed turn in the county, an a tibet hnt* falsehood. Time after time that sheet published in glaring letters, this I charge: " The Bedford daze tie murder ed Jacob < 'rouse /" Time after time ; this base lie was made the ground of an appeal to the credulous, against the GAZKTTK and the Democratic party. Now, people can sec how they were duped. It wan proved on the trial of J. I'. lieed, Jr., by eleven witnesses, and the jury no decided, find Croune 11*. 1S NOT MIUDERED A TA LL, but wan shot whilst in the act of trying to kill Reed WEth a stone. It was proved by these I eleven witnesses that ("rouse attacked lieedand injured him severely whilst he was retreating from ("rouse. The writers for the Inquirer knew this all the while, yet they persisted in saying that ("rouse was shot because he was a ! sort of provost-marshal, the BKJ>FOHI> I (JAZKTTK having declared that any per son accepting that office "could not live a peaceful life, nor die an honorable death." Now, eleven witnesses hav- ing sworn in open court, that ('rouse attacked Reed (and therefore courted death) and a jury under .solemn (Kith having found that ('rouse was not murdered, (neither because he was pro vost-marshal, nor because of the lan guage of the GAZKTTK applied to pro vost-marshals generally; but was killed by Mr. Reed, in self-defence,therefore, the Bedford Inquirer has been virtual ly convicted of libel in saying "that the BEIFOUI> (IA/.KTTK murdered Jacob ('rouse." Yet, more. The Inquirer published an account of the killing of t'rouse, which clearly conveyed the idea that John P. Reed, Jr., was guilty of murder. It declared repeatedly that Orouse was shot because he was pro vost-marshal, thus attributing malice to Reed, and plainly charging him with murder in the first degree. It assailed young Reed's character in the most shameful manner and demanded that he should be chained in his prison cell, iike any common felon. But now all this malignity on its oart so long ap parent to unbiased minds, ts laid open to the sight of all. Eleven witnesses have sworn that the Inquirer LIED, and the verdict of twelve jurors, under oath, brands it GUILTY OF LIBEL | upon John I'. Reed, Jr. Such is the character of that sheet, proved in a court of justice. Can people be any longer misled by its statements? Can its readers afford to risk their own rep utation for truth, by repeating what they see in its columns? Are its polit ical friends to he shamed in the future, a- they now are, by its falsehoods? If yes, then it does not matter in this country how great a liar one maybe, provided he belongs to the Abolition party. ________________ t'AX YOI I>> IT? We ask the blood-hounds in human shape who have been hunting down John P. Reed, Jr., who among them can show as good a character before a jury as hedid ? ('an Mr. ('essna ? < 'an any of the men who counseled ('rouse to pursue, insult, and attack the Reeds? John P. Reed never stirred up strife among his neighbors; never indulged in drunken brawls; never associated with rowdies ; nor did he ever, according to common report, furnish a railroadpa** to er mitted the demagogue Cessna to lug him into this case for the purpose of shielding himself from the odium of a defeat which he knew to be inevita ble. Mr. Smith is too good a lawyer to have risked his reputation as a cat's paw in the hands of John Cessna. Ac cording to the statement of the latter he had invited about a dozen of lawyers to take the position Mr. Smith was pre vailed upon to assume, before he ad dressed himself to that gentleman. Among that number was Thaddeus Stevens, who declined bemuse he pre ; ferred to remain within the line of pro ■ fessional honor and to follow the good ! old rule of the true barrister, nrnr to ' take blood-money. We doubt not that ! Mr. Smith was deceived in regard to {the nature of the caw?, for Cessna had J his own tale about it, and itoasted on the (sirs that the attorneys for the de ! fence did not comprehend it. Hut whatever inducements operated to bring Mr. Smith into the case, we are bound i to say that in the trial and during his i stay in our midst, he deported himself, i in all respects, like a gentleman. THE Franklin Repository talked very glibly of the murder of Jacob Crouse, some time ago, commenting with un necessary severity upon the course of John P. deed, jr. Will that paper do justice to Mr. Reed by informing its readers that eleven iritnessex more in open Court that Crouse attacked Heed, whilst the tatter wax retreating from him, striking him (Heed) with a targe xtone, and being altotU to strike him again with another shone when Heed fired f also, that the jury decided that there was neither murder nor manslaughter of Jacob ('rouse? The ßepository/ might likewise do justice to the christian virtues of its friend Cessna, by saying that the coun sel for Mr. Reed offered to prove (but were prevented by the ruling of the Court) that Crouse declared that John Cessna had assured him that he could kill the Reeds with impunity. ' WE ask the readers of the GAZETTE to refer to our issue of August 4, IKGo, and compare our account of the Crouse tragedy published in that number of our jiajier, with the testimony in the trial of John P. Reed, Jr., published last week. Then, we would, also, ask the readers of the Inquirer to make a comparison of the account of the same, published in their paper of same date, with the testimony as reported. Let the readers of the two papers decide which did tell the truth concerning the killing of Jacob Crouse. TH E Franklin Repository, of this week, has an article on the,subject of the Reed case, in which it says that "Mr. lteed was confessedly disloyal,"and that "he had no sympathy with the government' winch guaranteed him all Lis civil, re ligious and political rights, but, on the contrary, notoriously sympathized with its murderous foes." Was this proved upon the. trial of Mr. Reed? Was there! any effort made by the prosecution to introduce testimony to such effect? Not ! a bit of it. Did Mr. Reed ever confess himself "disloyal?" If so, has it been proved when and where he became j "confessedly" so? No, never! How, then, dots the Repository come to have so certain knowledge concerning Mr. Reed's "disloyalty?" Of course, that journal x ill respond, "Mr. Reed Hod to Canada!' Granting, for the sake of ar gument, that he did, the Repository I ought to he aware (as it seems to have pried into Mr. Reed's private affairs so carefully and diligently) that he went to CaiuuU long before the Conscription j act was passed, that when he left his home hedid so in thoopen light, of day,! announcing t< all his acquaintance that he intended to study law in an office in j Toronto, and that, therefore, hedid not Jiee to avYid meeting rebel bayonets, t/ la the immortal hero of "Rutherford's Lane." It is true that after a residence j of some years in < 'anada, Mr. Reed was drafted under the Conscription act. He obeyed the law to its very letter, by paying commutation, just as did Col. McClure when that worthy received an invitation to tight forliiscountry. Why, then, should the Repository thus assail ! Mr. Recti? Had it not better, to use a | homely adage, "sweep before its own door?" For wherein is the difference j between one who goes to Canada, to i keep out of harm's way, and a period- | ieal "skedaddler," who scents the battle afar off, and leaving his friends and 1 • | neighbors in the lurch, runs just tar ! enough away "to save his own bacon?" Hut we cannot believe that Col. Met 'lure is the author of the article in question. It is beneath the standard of a gentle man. Vet, be the author who he may, let him not concern himself as to the conscieiuc of Mr. Reed. A creature whose heart is filled with such maligni ty as is exhibited in that article, will have enough to do to smother in his own breast, "the worm that dieth not and the tire that is not quenched." Let j him remember that "each of us carries his own bide to market," and if his is not as thi - k as that of the rhinoceros, ; lie will fed the force of this injunction. PRESIDENT JOHNSON, it is announc ed, will soon restore the habeas corjjas. Why not? Even the Abolitionistsclaini ed that the suspension of that great writ of right was demanded only in time of j war and actual danger to the govern ment. What is the matter now, that we muststill be deprived of this ancient and blood-bought privilege? 1 lasn'tthe war been "fought out," and isn't the "rebellion crushed?" "Yes,but the Un ion is ii< it yet restored," says some "He publican." Oh! we had thought it was. Surely you told us that all that was want ing to restore the Union, was to whip the South. That has been done. What is lacking now? AM, HAII. .MINNESOTA! The Demo crats have either carried this State, or come so near carrying it, that there is 110 fun in it for the Abolitionists. At last accounts the Abolition candidate for Governor led his Democratic com petitor only i!tgi votes! The "negro suf frage" amendment was defeated by a large majority, ffiistyear Lincoln car ried this State by almut 10,(MM). Well done, Minnesota! No wonder the Abolitionists carried the State. It now turns out that 01,000 Democrat* who voted last fall, did not i turn out t< the election, or were disfran chised by Abolition boards. Had these votes bei'ii polled, our majority in the j State, would have been 40,1 MM 1. Hence, let Democrats organize in such manner as will enable lis, next year, to poll our full vote. TAX on breadstuff's is the last wrin kle in the horn that is goring the sides of the people. The Assessors of Inter- I mil ltevenie are now engaged in noti jfyingall Manufacturers of hour, that <;:t cents tax will be assessed upon ev i cry barrel of this necessary of life they I produce. Who pays this tax ? The I consumer, of course. If things keep I 011 at this rtte, how are poor people to ' earn their bread? W.M. KENNEDY, Esq., has retired from the editorship of the Shippens burg Valley Sentinel. It is, we believe, Mr. Kennedy's intention to become one of the proprietors of a new Democrat ic pai>er in Carlisle. Success attend him. EDITORIAL VISITOR. —We had the pleasure, on Thursday morning last, of a call from Brother THACOH, of the Ilollidaysburg Standard, who, with some friends, was on a flying visit to our borough. Vive te good-looking ed itor of the "gay and incomparable" Standard! Tin; J'oitsville Standard lias l>een greatly enlarged and improved. It is an able exponent of Democratic princi ples. We wish the enterprising pub lisher much success. THE Abolition papers publish a pyr amid of States carried by their party recently. They forget to add JAMAi- j CA ! ______ For the Bedford Gasette. S4IIUOI. KKIORM-..X0. 4. CI.ASSI I'H'.VTTOX —A WoliP TO TEA- j en Kits. —Our common schools can nev- j er reach their full measure of useful ness, without thorough classification. Nothing is so necessary totheirsucress ; yet, nothing has been so much neglect ed. This neglect, up to the present time, has been mainly tin- fault of di rectors. Teachers were powerless. The variety of books used made classifica tion impossible. Now, however, Os good's Spellers and Readers, Rrooks' Arithmetics, Mitchell's Geogniphys, and Rrown's Grammars, are adopted in nearly all our districts, andtheir exclu sive use will be enforced as soon as the schools begin. The schools (except in a few districts where directors, in defi ance of law, still refuse to establish uni formity) can now he classified, and, it they are not, it will he mainly the fault of the teachers. The classification of a school requires skill and firmness. The task is both delicate and difficult; and many fail in its performance. If the teacher lacks judgment and knowledge of human nature, we can say hut little here, that will aitl him. He must read works on teaching, and study the subject as he finds it in the practical details of the school-room. Even when he knows what should be done, and how he should proceed, his task will not he without difficulties. Parents will refuse or neg lect to get books for their children; or they will buy without consulting the teacher, and thus frequently get the wrong kind. 1 11 this way books by the wrong author, or of too high a grade, have been put into the schools. It is true they have sometimes been bought bv the stupid advice of the teacher him self; hut they have generally come in to the school without his knowledge, and contrary to his wishes. Once in troduced, they can not be got rid of. Classes are multiplied and the teacher's time i- wasted. Pupils can not get a long because they are using books too difficult for their compensation, and the school is interfered with and injured in every way, for many years, perhaps, by what at first seemed a trilling and un important event. Three fourths of the pupils in the county are using higher readers than they require. They use the .Second in stead of the First, the Third instead of the Second, the Fourth instead of tiie Third, and the Fifth instead of the Fourth. Nearly all are a step too high for their age and capacity. Nor are all content with being one step too high. Some are two and even three steps: that is, some who are only capable of using the Second reader, actually use the Fourth or Fifth. A pupil who is using the propei - reader, can hardly be found. Almost every school has a class in the Fifth Header; when, in truth, there should not be a dozen such classes in in the county. We have no use for them, and they should never lie formed unless there are too many in the Fourth Header for one class. The Fourth, if properly used,containsenough to make first rate readers, and far more than our pupils will ever learn in the common schools. What has been said of Heading, isal so true of other branches. There seems to be a kind of mania for big books. Pupils begin the study of Mental A ritlunetie with the advanced work in stead of the primary. Dozens are study ying Greenleafs "National" who will never comprehend half that is in his "commonschool." Pupils begint>ram mar with the biggest book they can buy. Mitchell's Geography* are used and nearly all have his large Ge<>gra phe and Atlas—the largest and most comprehensive work, probably, that has ever been used as a text-book, in this country. There should not be one of them in the county. No one ever learns half that it contains. It is time that we put a stop to these evils; and the present is probably the most favorable time to do this, that we shall have for several years to come. New books are being introduced, and care should be taken that each pupil gets such as are exactly suited to ids age and capacity. Of the new readers introduced, very few, indeed, require anything higher than the Fourth. Of the (ieographys, the "Primary" and "Intermediate" are all that we need. Of the Orammars, few require more than the First bines. The Institutes should lie introduced, only where there are good c/w, and therearc at present, few really good Grammar classes in the county. Of the Arithmetics, a few will need the Intellectual and the Com iiion School, but far the greater number will do better to study the Primary Mental and the Primary Written. J. W. I)IC'KEItSON, . Co. Sup't. A New Bedford paper gives a list of forty-six American whaling vessels, with ten thousand two hundred and fif ty two barrels of oil, destroyed by reb el pirates during the late war. The value of the vessels is estimated at one miilion one hundred and fifty thousand dollars, and the oil at halfa milion dol lars. A getleman from Appomattox Court House, Virginia, states that there is nothing left of the apple tree under which General Lee surrendered but a red hole in tin' ground, and it is feared that unless the hole is fenced in that it also will be removed by curiosity s<-ek ers. ANOTHI R KKPIBIHAN VMTORV! Bring Out The UMHI-hHiinlfr!! Wlnit wus the matter with our neigh- j borof the negroorgan last week Why didn't he parade the picture of that wonderful specimen of spontaneous combustion, the 1000-poundrr cannon? Why didn't he come out in large job type,inflarinjicapitals? Didn'theknow that there had been another great Black Republican victory? that his ideals of perfect men, the negroes of Jamaica, ;}(Xl,ooO strong, had risen up against the whites, some 10,000 in number, and massacred a great many of them? I f so, why didn't lie rejoice? It is likely that lie postponed his re joicing until this week, hoping, that more of t he good news would come in. If so, he will be wofully disappointed. For 10, the tidings come that the rebell ion of the:> 00,000 bravo, intelligent, hu mane darkies of Jamaica has been sum marily and ignominiously suppressed by a few hundreds of white men, and thconce negro-worshipping British offi cials are hanging the niggers at the rate of over 1,000 in a single parish ! Alas! forthenegroorgan,and alas! for its idol, for the nigger has aeted upon the "idea" which the abolition press and speakers have for years endeavored to pound into his thick bead, viz: the extermination of the white race,and the experiment has ended in a miserable lizzie. Where was negro chivalry, when whites were massacred by three hun dred times their own number? Let the Jamaica insurrection teach i the Abolitionists the lesson they must learn ere long, viz: that the negro is in ferior to the white man in everything j hut that which is purely animal, aiui that lie is not to be trusted either as a citizen or a soldier. — POUHVHII' StuuiUu'd. Feiiiaii Meaiti s.__q loan who was killed had made -ey,.,. assaults iijion John P. Heed, Jr., upon his younger brother, a weak; defenceless youth. At the timet;, shooting occurred, ('rouse made;,,, sault upon John P. Heed, Jr., ~ lr; iiini with a stone; knocking him ff, and wasadvaiicingwitlnuiotherst(,i; his hand, when Reed drew a pi-mi him, and killed him almost instaiio The jury have pronounced tin. tifiable, as done in self defence. \\ hope the time will soon come wln-n; politiealnuimositics will have he, , gotten. It is said that <"rouse \vu>ur n on to his acts of violence by outside, .. ties in Bedford, if this he t j were the most eulliable. —Jjtwv Continuation of 1 11 dill II Uc|irwlaii o „ [Corrt-sponJeiiee of the Chicago Time- j Four LA KAMI K, I >ucotah Territory Nov. f.—For lhl) miles 011 each side. Fort Sedgwick (Juleshurg there hav been fatal encounters, almost ever day, between Indian- and traveller Isist week a band of delegate- tub,, end Sanborn's peace convention, on tli Republican, attacked a train near A kali station, hum-strung the o.\-i chained them and two men to then a: ons, and burned tlu* whole outfit, few days previous another party attic 1 ed a government train a short distant above Sedgwick, and after a fierce fig) of four hours, fell back, leaving si teen of their dead behind. A vege; ble train en route from CampCollin-: this place, was captured a so that we shall probably have a sear city in the market the coming winter. At present potatoes -ell for y w uninjured. llalxffkv < (ir|ius to W WASHIXOTOX, NOV. 24.—Preside: Johnson expressed this morning to : friend his intention to restore the priv ! ileges of the writ of hit/wax cor/no a ] the earliest possible time, and to dc i wav with the secret detective service. I * (lovKitxoii Parsons has returned Alabama with two hundred pani< I for citizens of that State. -a A IJLCXK K'S Pontics PLASTKKs. j Druggist said the other day. you have no BUM | advertise your Porous Plasters, for every on l '' | certainly causes a dozen to be sold, and a ' ; sells a gross, and so on. You will not he a j supply the demand soon. Hut we can -up '. 1 thousand yards a day. AFt'KCTIO.V or THE SPINK CCP.EI' Hartford. Conn.. Nov. 11. I s ' j Messrs. TIIOS. ALI.COCK & Co.—Please semi ; dispatch, twelve dozen Allcock's I'otoii ! Our daily experience confirms their very suV '• • • excellence. At this moment of writing. * 1U: "' : plies for one, who, by entanglement in flc B ,s " : machinery, had hoth his legs broken, spine se>' | ly injured, and was for nearly a year entirely if; less. This mau found relief very soon by the s, j plication of a plaster to his spine, lie wa->• j enabled to work, and now he labors as well a- 11 He would cheerfully pay for a single plttsie i they could not be had at a lower rate. lam | prised 'hat surgeons do not make use of these j j loratod plasters, to the exclusion ol all other"- their flexibility and adhesiveness are greatly •"" ' vanee of all other plasters with winch 1 *" | quaintcd ; while the perforations peculiar!" 11 rendered them greatly superior to all otiti c t ,r j dinary surgical uses. Knowing the Piastvis : so useful, 1 have tin scruples that my sentim should he known. J. W. .lOHNsUN. M Principal Agency, Brandreth House. New V I Sold by all Healers in Medicines. |"vt i Dit. TOBIAS' VKXKTIA.v Lim m n ; lias given universal satisfaction during the • : teen years it has boeu introduced into the 1 States. After being tried by millions, it to" • ! proclaimed the pain destroyer of the world, | cannot be where this liniment is applied . ! as directed it cannot ami never has failed m 11 gle instance. For colds, coughs and influn-'j can't bo beat One 40 cent bottle will cure 'n ■' above, besides being useful in every family t"' , den accidents, such as burns, cuts, scald- ; stings, te It is perfectly innocent to take i• • nally, and can be given to the oldest P er ' I ,'" youngest child. Price 40 and 80 cents a hot 1 Office, st> Cortlamlt Street. New York. isM " Druggists. Ort 20" \f AMMOTIL SALE BILLS, l ,ri "J' IT I ed at short notice. Large Bills make 'H, sales. Wo know it to ho so. TRV i'l • 1 ■ , much more than pay the extra erjMMseul F ing. Call at THK UAZKTTK JOB ÜBH-B