sry-®ootls, etr. SAVE YOUR GREENBACKS: NEW FALL AND WINTER GOODS, just received, At J. M. SHOEMAKER'S Store, AT GREATLY REDUCED PRICES! Having just returned from the East, we are now opening a large stock of Fall and-Winter Goods, ; which have been BOUGHT FOR CASH, at nett ! cash prices, and will be SOLD CHEAP. This be- ; ing the only full stock of goods brought to Bedford this season, persons will be able to suit themselves better, in style, quality and price, than at any other store in Bedford The following comprise a j few of our prices, viz : Calicoes, at 10, 12, 14, 15, 10 and the ' best at 18 cents. Muslins at 10, 12, 14, 15, 16, 18, and and the best at 22 cents. All Wool Flannels from 40cts. up. French Merinoes, all wool Delaines, Coburgs, Ac. SHAWLS Ladies', children's and misses' shawls, latest styles; ladies'cloaking cloth. MEN'S WEAR —Cloths, cassimores, satinetts. jeans. Ae. BOOTS AND SHOES--In this line wo have a very extensive assortment for ladies, misses, ckil dren. and men's and boys' boots and shoes, all sizes and prices, to suit all. UATiv-A large assortment of men's and boys' hats. CLOTHING—Men's and boys'coats, pants and ; vests, all sizes and prices SHIRTS, Ac.—Men's woolen and muslin shirts; Sbakspeare, Lockwood and muslin-lined paper collars; cotton ohain (single and double, white : and colored). GROCERIES—Coffee, sugar, syrups, green and black teas, spices of all kinds, dye-stuffs. Ac. LEATHER —Sole leather, French and city calf &kins, upper leather, linings, Ac. We will sell goods on the same terms that we tiave been for the last threo months—cash, or note with interest from date. No bad debts con tracted and no extra charges to good paying cus turners to make up losses of slow and never paying customers. Cash buyers always get the best bar gains, and their accounts are always settled up. J. M. SHOEMAKER. Bedford, 5ep.27,'67. No. 1 Anderson's Row. . 10 per cent, saved in buying your ! goods for cash, at J. M. SHOEMAKER'S cash nnd produce store, No. 1 Anderson's Row. sep27 / 1 REAT BARGAINS! (X __ ! The undersigned have opened a very full supply of FALL AND WINTER GOODS. Our stock is complete and is not surpassed in EXTENT, QUALITY AND CHEAPNESS, j The old system of '' TR US TING FOREVER" having exploded, wo are determined to HELL GOODS LPON THE SHORTEST PROFIT j FOB • CASH OR PRODUCE. Lff To prompt paying customers wo will extend a credit of four months, but we wish it.expressly understood, after the period named, account will be due and interest will accrue thereon. BUYERS FOR CASH may depend upon GETTING BARGAINS. 00v1,'67 A. B. CRAMER A CO. I "V"EW GOODS!! NEW GOODS!! The undersigned has just received from the East a | large and varied stock of New Goods, which are now open for examination, at MILL-TOWN, two miles West of Bedford, comprising everything usually found in a first-class couDtry store, consisting, in part, of Dry-Goods, j * Delaines, Calicoes, Muslins, * Cassi tiiers, Boots and Shoes, Groceries, Notions, Ac., &c. i All of which will be sold at the most reasonable prices. Ly* Thankful for past favors, we solicit a con tinuance ot the public patronage. Call and examine our goods. may24,'67. G. YEAGEK , "\J"EW FIRM! NEW FIRM!! In GOOD GOODS ARE DOWN! j 8CH ELIjSBURG AIIE A D! NEW GOODS! NEW GOODS! just received and will be sold AT GREATLY REDUCED PRICES. 1 Call at BLACK & MARBOURG'S, in Sckcllsburg, IF YOU WANT CHEAP GOODS of any kind ! ; We have no big stock of old goods at big prices. 1 Our stock is nearly all fresh and new. Look at some of our prices : MUSLINS, from 10 to 17 cents. CALICOS, from 8 to 15 cents. CLOTHS and CASSIMERES at reduced prices. DRESS GOODS, all kinds, cheaper than before the war. ALL WOOLEN GOODS 25 per cent, cheaper than any that have been sold this season. Gloves, Hosiery, etc., etc., etc., very low. Groceries, Queens ware, Wooden Ware a-iiin<-iit Resolution, Feb. *25, 1866. 0 The Committee on Federal Relations reported the following: Resolved by the Senate and *House of Representatives , ss in terestsof the natio! n un 'to in cv n tlemnation of this effort tO impeach and remove the President for & n ap peal to law. In 1833 and 1834 question's of this character agitated and convulsed the contrary, a struggle that seemed to rock the nation to its very centre was initiated between Jackson, the Presi dent, and Congress, upon the question of rechartering the United States Bank and removing the deposits. The Senate of the United States but a day or two since adopted a resolu tion denunciatory of the President and asserting that his removal of Stanton was in derogation of the Constitution ! and laws; so, too, on the -Sth day of March, 1834, the Senate of the United States, "Resolved , That the President in the late executive proceedings in relation to the public revenue has assumed up on himself authority and power not conferred by the Constitution and laws, but in derogation of both. This attack upon President Jackson, it will then be seen, is almost similar i in character to that now made upon ! President Johnson. Wnat was the re jsult in 1834? What will be the result i now? Thou-the issue was made up ' and the President and Congress went to the people upon it. Intense excite ment pervaded the whole country, just las now, you would rouse the peo- I pie by sensation telegrams, lying dis i patches and baseless assertions. | Benton tells of the character of the i excitement in 1834, thus: "It will be difficult for the people in after times to realize the degree of ex citement, of agitation and commotion, which was poduced by this organized attempt to make panic and distress.— The great cities especially were the scene of commotions but little short of frenzy; public meetings of thousands, • the most inflammatory harangues, [cannon firing, great feasts—and the i members of Congress who spoke a- j gainst the President were received when i they travelled with public honors, like conquering generals returning ! from victorious battle fields—met by I masses, saluted with acclamations, es • corled by processions, and their lodg ings surrounded by thousands calling • for a view of their persons. During all the progress of this proceed : ing whi lea phalanx of orators and speak ers were daily fulminating against him—while many hundred newspapers incessantly assailed him ; public meet- j ings wore held in all parts, and men ;of all sorts, even beardless youths, haranged against him as if he had been a Nero; while a stream of com mittees was pouring upon him (as they were called) and whom he soon refused to receive in that character; during the hundred days that all this was go ■ ing on and to judge from the impos ing appearance which the crowds ' made that came to Washington to | bring up the "distress," and to give [countenance to the Senate, emphasis ! to its.proceedings, and to fill the daily j gallery, applauding the speakers a- I gainst the President; saluting with noise and confusion those who spoke on his side; during all this time, and ' the earth in commotion against him, j he was tranquil and quiet, confident l of eventual victory, and fully relying j upou God and the people to set all right. Nay, more. An attempt was made to I assassinate him at the door of the Cap ! itol by a man named Laurence, who | twice attempted to fire upon him, but failed. He was arrested and examin ed, but never brought to trial,and Ben- I ton says of the case: j "It is. clearly to be seen from the medical examination ofthe man,that the attempted assassination of the President j 1 was one of those cases of which history j | presents many instances—a diseased j mind acted upon by a general outcry j against a public man. Laurence was in the particular condition to be acted upon by what he heard against Gen. Jackson; a workman out of employ ment, needy, idle, mentally morbid, and without reason to argue regularly from false premises. He heard the President accused of breaking up the labor of the country, and believed it; of being au obstacle to all relief, and be lieved it. And coming to a regular con clusion from all these beliefs, he at tempted to do what he believed the State of things required him to do take the life of the man whom he con sidered the sole cause of bis own and! the general unhappiness." From these ex tracts it will be seen that the excitements of that day were equal to those of the present, but amid them all, the never erring, onward moving march of mind of the people found the* right. In that day, the people appealed t<> calmly investigated, deliberately judg ed and awarded their verdict. The re action came, and the resolution char ging Jackson with violating the Con stitution and laws was expunged from the records of the Senate. Men like Webster, Chalhouu and Clay were those who fulminated this thun derbolt to crush Andrew Jackson.— They were die giants of the Senate and they created and foil the excitement that was to impale the President; but their thunderbolt recoiled from the impregnable positicu upon which he had placed himself, and the people vindicated him. The pigmies of the Senate who now attack the President, when compared in intellect with the men of Jackson's day, are seen to bo lint "light weights." When they fail ed to sustain themselves, how can it lie expected that this attack upon the Government shall succeed ? The people want no more war, they have had enough of bloodshed, enough of recklesss expenditure of the people's money, enough of attacks upon the cardnal principles of the Government. A deep wide chasm has been dug bc t\V( en the sections and into it the blood of the Republic has been poured, the mangled forms and bleeding corpses of I thousands of the fairest and bravest of 0 y young men fill that deep and wide nhn "rn a** 4 !j >' >' our Persistent agitation 7 4 -tioa Of your power, for the porpeiu. - * 1 .. ' * 1 .. . . across that you preserve it unclosed. Chiasm we seek to throw the bridge o the Constitution, to cement the structure with concord, amity, commerce and mutual benefit, and upon it to rear a gain the magnificent temple of consti tutional liberty. In this, your appeal to passion and to the army against the peaceful settlement of the laws, we see another effort to precipitate us into bloodshed, to kindle the flames of civil war, to rouse the passions of brother against brother, of neighbor against neighbor atHi to deluge the north with the blood of our people. Against this reckless agitation, this senseless excitement, we protest. In defence of our position we appeals to the Jaws, and we demand that you will, as we do, yield submission to their decree. Let the laws determine, and let us frown upon every attempt that may seek to imbrue our hands in each oth ers, blood. Do not, I pray you, aid in placing us again upon the high road to anarchy. We want no war, but if naught but the destruction of the gov ernment is to come and you will precip itate us into a war, I and those with whom I act, will be found following the flag with thirty-seven stars and gazing tondly upon our avant courier, the old banner of the Republic i maintaining the Constitution and preserving the Federal Union of the States. Will this attempt at revolution relieve you or me of any of our public burdens ? Will it add to the security of the debt of the nation? Will it improve the condition of the business interests of the people? Reconstruction now enters into every man's business and every interest feels the necessity for stability and certainty in govermental affairs. llow much ! worse will it be when you attempt to j illegally impeach the President, when | you establish a precedent by which you unsettle the government to accomplish party eudst But suppose you continue this mad appeal to force, to precipitate us into a war of party against party and neigh bor against neighbor; what is your con dition now as compared with it in 186 i? The Governors of Illinoisand Pennsyl vania have sent forward sensation tel egrams and offered troops, but the great States of New York, Ohio and I New Jersey, have Democratic Legis- I latures, and the States of Connecticut, ; Maryland, Kentucky and Delaware, have Democratic Governors and Legis latures. Hence if you initiate war, and we are attacked, if it is to be an issue of party, against party, in what situa tion are you to begin the fray? Is this*£ignt, is it prudent, is it patri otic to attempt that which seems to be indicated by the telegram of your E\- I ecutive (Guv. Geary) the tender of ! troops to initiate war? Is this not o ! aeuing the door to internecine strife in ine north? We should deprecate ail such attempts and render implicit obe dience to the fiat of law. The proposition contained in the res olution 1 have submitted, is, that in judging of the Constitutionality of the Tenure of office law, the Presi dent exercises a power vested in him trv the Constitution, that he had a right to bring that law before the Courts for adjudication and that such decision is binding upon both Congress and the President. It could not come into the Courts without this action of the Pres ident and he is not amenable to im peachment for so acting. Can any man who professes a just sense of propriety sustain Stanton in his course. It shocks our sense of de cency, for it is in fact an attempt to force himself upon the President and into his councils when he knows he is obnoxious to all with whom ho should act. . He should at once resign. There is no substance, no great principle depen dent upon his retention, for without I him Congress is still potent. Shall we be plunged into war, that Stanton may draw his pay, and flaunt his ob stinacy in the face of the Executive? About the mere possession of this of fice the people cares nothing, but they