The Democratic Watchman, , BELL4FONTE, P. OILY MEEK. HIIITOR a PROPIIAT on JOB! P. MT:WHEW& AJLIDCIATX EDITOR, FRIDAY MORNING, MAY I, 1866 TITAMS.-62 per year when ilaid in ad vases, 2,50 when not paid in advance, and $3OO when not paid hernre alp irntion et the year Democratic State Ticket FOIL Tunrrott. (16NFIRAL, HON. CHARLES E. ROM of Fayette County. FOR ! 4 I'RVIIYQA GENERAL, WELLINGTQN 11. ENT of Columbia flounly We Must Succeed on Principle, --- Allt It is not to be wondered at that the government has become surrounded , . by difficulties, when we reflect upon o the utter eareleisnoss of the people in selecting candidates for iniportroitt positions. I\he idea is widiNspread in this country now that there are (ter tai politicians who hold the dostiiiy of parties iu their hand=, and that to seture their •issistance is to secure tri umph and to lose it is to be defeated These men are 'neatly always the tin - scrupulous ones, who are ready to buy and sell and to be bought and .sold, without any 'regard whatever to prin ciple. In the first years of this govern ment,thcre was never' any such - thing known, and corruption in , politics has only been tee years. That such a system can be successfull at all, is a source of dis couragement to many, and has led some to doubt the capacity the people for self government. N,ov.we " hold that our people have 1)1 . 0/) cheat - ed by those in whom they had confi dence, and that they will in time thoroughly discourage the corrupting and destroying system by which the Mongrel orgariiiation is entirely con trolled, and nosh ich has been adopted to - some extentlik a fi'w members of the DeniocrAtie party. Those who,' hold in their hands the wire working i machinery trhich has so often been used to defeat the wishes of the we ple in the choice of candidates are far seeing and cunning, they have set their trete. skillfully and baited them ' well , but it is impossible for them to entirely control such a pasty as ours. when the people are aroused to the danger and watching ran oppor , tunity to turn it aside. The Abolitionists first introduced the idea that party success ought lei be the prime consideration with the members of a political party, and the selection of good representative 1111•11 only of secondary importaw, and we have observed with pain th at this rule has been adopted to some extent by our own party We believe that ours is not such an organization as, can follow this rule with safety to our own principles, or to the success of free government. The effect of mak ing success the only political vitttue is to put the entire control of a party,' , however numerous and honest its I memners may be, in the hands of tricksters and thieves, who insnipu late its platforms, handle its _purse, select its candidates from amongst themselves, and sell out the whole affair to the opposition whenever they get an opportunity to line their own pockets with the price of their treach ery and infamy. No wonder that honest men should turn from politics in disgust, when they see indleitions that the Mole thing is to be plunged into such a slough as this. Our par ty was never designed for any such purpose, and whenever politles be comes only a question between rogues, as to which. shall hold offices of re' sponsibility and profit, we are riot far from a despotism in,which the purse shall control the sword, and the most unscrupulops scoundrel shall control them both! But jtonest men should bear in mind that they are largely in the ma jority, and that it rests with them to put a sudden stop to all schemes of (rand and corruption, whenever they choose to avail themselves of their rights as members of the Democratic party and control its organitation freer the' selection of a district dele gate to the choosing of a candidate . for president of the United States. All this is in theliands of the people, and our party is such a one as cannot be used for Any bad purpose if the people really desire to preyent it, and. enter' themselvek into the work on which our existence depends. It is, to urge this duty upon our fellow democrats that we have introduced this subject. Let us-see that power goes from the peopkt to' their repre-' mutative', and, take care that we -do • cot fell under the of the 1., who -should servo and obey us. If we reverse the engine, we will retro grade as a matter of course, while if *e keep it running as our fiithors meant it should run, we will 1110 1 7 C right on' to success, and soon be rid of the few Mercenary men who desire to lead only that they may rob us.and betray us to the waiting enemy. We have always dcsAd what is known among politioinns as `policy" or "expediency," not because we do not approve of' using both in a proper way ; but because - they arc generally used among Democrats to repreetit •i ~ hjeh , • - adopted when they made success the cardinal political virtue. With us, the first. consideration ought always to be - the success at' principle. The first question should be how wilt we best put in operation the principles of our party ? Then if there is a ques tion of expediency, it must be decid es. But to make merotuccess at the polls the all absorbing question and risk ourprineiplcs in the hands of any one, honest or dishonest, who can carry an electivu, monsitou, aud rthi,t ruin our party, and with it the government its principles haN'll made. Let the propie be wstchful.and care ful,and they will secureparty summys as well as the success off prinerple,and rescue our e..untry from the danger by which it is surrounded. Objeot of Impeachment. The real object orate impeachment of the President is now , appal cot. ft wits to rr/irt r Mr. Borrwr,m, and the other managers, but especially Boir %slim.; who was in mortal pain to be delivered of the ponderous ideas which his mighty brain had begotten. But for this mode Of providing a -.4.; ty valve, who can tell v:hst -el Me con,equelleeg might have re-ulted these gentlemen, physirallr and ine.i tally What agony must Mr But 'WELL have suffered while compelled to earry with him unspoken the fol lowing eloquent passage ' What mortal man could long exit under, such a pressure 1 The mouse in the mountain was nothing to dirs. Surely some \atukce maker-of school books sill preserve this paragraph from by publishing it in a child's primer. Listen to it "Travellers and astronomers in _ us 141 t ihP S. itheru heat ens, near the southern cross, there is a past space which the unedueatcd call the hole in the sky, where the eye (if man, with the aid of the pow et, of the telescope, has been unable to discover nebula' or a steroid, or comet, or planet, or star, or sun. In that droary, dark, cold region of space, which is known to be only less than infinite by the evidence of erea tion elsewhere. the great author of celes'ttal ineeliankm has left the chaos which so, in the beginning If this earth were capable of the sentiments and emotions of ;ustice and virtue which in human, mortal beings arc the evidences and pledges of our pis vine origin and immortal destiny She would heave and throw with the combined forces of air * , fire and water, and project this enemy of two races of men into that vast region, there forever to exist in a solitude eternal as life, or as the absence of life, em blemittical . of, if not really„ `hat "out er darkness” of which the Savior of l man spoke in warning to those who are the enemies to themselves, their race apd their God," Yet, this very man, who is now to be banished to this fearful "hole in the sky, - where God himself has not penetrated, is the person whom Borrwri.i., and others of his ilk, de clared to be the President of' Provi dence, savage 'enough;to carry out I measures too cruel and bloody for the pure,humanp,and lamb like Lisn.:ol.N. But really, the fact that such silly bombast, can be tolerated by the American: people at all, and above all that should form part.of an ar gument in the most important trial ever had in America, shoafs how much we have retrograded since Mon grcliam attained power. A school boy who would "spout" such stuff in a society debate sweat to be hissed from the floor, yet:these very words were the utteragi&of IL Yankee law yer, chosen hyTongreis to prosecute the chief Magistrate of this Repub lic, and escaped him in presenbe of what ought to be the most august tribunal on earth, and on what should be the most important occasion that the world has ever seen. "Oh,' shame, where is thy bluish ?" The following burst of eloquenee Irons an Irish orator, who desired to "take oft' the bombastic effort of an opponent puts the grand effort of BOUTWILL to shame, having more sense in it,and being quite as rhetori cal. Said he- "I would that I were great enough to stand with one foot upon the South pole and the other upon the North pole of the earth, and reach with my right hand eastward to the extreme verge' of the world and tnie my paddle, and reaching toithe far west Iwould take my tar can, and greoe the gudgeons of the iiiverse." But, now that these rhetorical gem, demon have had an opportunity to get off the great ideas which No* has so long been crazy over, we trust that we may be excused from suffering another affliction of the saute kind fur some time. We have somewhere read of a bird,Which,after attaining matutity, awaited an oppor tunity to sing a most entrancing song and immediately expired. New ling- iii144414044,44r-leekk to 1 , 4 • ' - WELL may be a bird of thin spccies and having given titteranee to this grand lihrst, be may disappear in this terrible "hole in the rky," and pull 11w hole in after him. The Ku. Klux Klan The Ku-Klux Klan is fri . ghtening many of the Mongrels whose hearts alone are black when it was intended to scare those with black iIICCA. "The guilty flee when no nian put suctit,•" and these cowardly whelps whoiald their bloody - It:1v+; en heavi ly Upon a vanquished foe,already feel the knife at their ribs which • their craven heart, have so well ilevrved We arc only sorry that the Ku Klux Klan t , not all tilat is said of it If them was a secret organization at the South of sufficient power to hold the aiiaSSIIIS knife OVlir every Yankee scoundrel who goes ninopgst them to interfere rith their ilex, ant leafs a nel Drell hrow their -Wes, we would be glad of it‘, and if such were the con dition of things at this hour we would bid the betrayed, cheated and oppre;,ed sons of the South to strike in the ne of God, and leave not one to.tell who 4leiilt the hl Sw bi heye that the hi•tury of the world ,hots no parallel to the man ner in which the Southern people have been treated by the Moogitili of the North, and if it were po.f.dble it would be well to record, side by side on histories pages, as a warning to all wen in the future, the unequalled wrongs which a great, free, liberty loving. people Ipiuu suffered, and an unequalled vengeance which they wreaked upon their nppre,,,ur-. We greatly fear, that the record will be only half written, as has to often thre—rinte io this week!, where wrong so often tramples down and overcomes right, and we have little idea that the outraged South is able at present to strike any certain blow to avenge the wrongs which she struggled 4 I long and nobly to escape. But the very fact that the mere dread of such a thing can fill the im aginations of the guilty wretches who have trodden upon the fallen,, with pictures of devils, and . goblins, and knives, and dagger+, is enough to in spire a hope that God will even in this world, use as instruments of His wrath the victims of His enern,y, and that the strolling yankeem who have amisud to ral,ish, burn and destroy the South. may find a terrible death and bloody grave in the land they have desolated. This dreaded secret association may ~exist only in the imagination of those who have the greatest reason to fear its existence But, it would not be at all remarkable if such a thing really had been organized, or if it accom • 'dished all that is feared of it. Such oppression as has been the rule at the South always begets such secret asso ciations, and they often become very powerful before they are suspected. When government fails to protect life and property, men naturally seek other means of self preservation, and the knife, the halter and the bowl be come the instruments in the hands of desperate mete for the'uncertain vin dication of rights which the laws ought to secure against all violence. [(the present order of things conti u ues, all government at the South must degenerate into that savage state of nature where men are "a law tint° themselves" , and all is merged in one mad struggle for exis tence. The great effort of the Mongrel party has always been to produce something new, and they led the people away from the support of Democratic principles because they alleged they were too ancient for the enlightened reascn of this inogres. sive ago. Yet with all their efforts they have not been able to produce a single now thing, tiskiugh they have succeeded in initiating nearly all the bad thiiigs which have been done by bad men in all ages.. In "place of ad vancing, they. lirive retrograded, and in their own pet schemes of recon struction, they have but repeated the example of ignorant, short-sighted, vindictive despots for the thousandth time in the worlds hplory. They at tempted in this instance to invest iomething modern, and have hit aye on a plan of government. as old-'and despotic as Itharosh. .The Result in-Oonneotleut We proniised a week or two ago, when the eMoke of battle yet rested on the field' oft victory, to give the official result of the election in Co'n ,ectiCut ae soon as it tiould be accu rately ascertained, and we are now enabled to fulfill our promise. The official returns, its announced fro'm the office of the Secretary of State are as follows : Total vote, :19,337; Democratic, 50,551 ;° Republican, 44, 779;• scattering 7, Democratic ma jority, 1,772. _ The vote last year stood • Total vre 151,154; Delincinfribe, , Republican,. 45,574 Democratic ma jority, 977. .41L We have thus made in a single year, in a State polling- less than one hundred thousanirvotel4, the hatitl !tow gain of seven hundred and nine ty-five, and thnt notwithstanding all the efforts of all the powers Mongrel ism could muster in the whole Union which were emplo3ed to carry the State against us. All honor to gallant little. C mnec-_ ticut She led qff la,t year in a se ries of hi illiant. vletorics Tor the De mocracy, and her gun 4 o n ce more thunder flirt:li the first !oar of a battle which is to end in the total and over whehning defeat of Mongreltsin front ono end (.1 the land to the °thew Si t intrr tsoir, —Four years ttgo all Mongreli4m. big and little, old.. and young, black and white, wanted.to hang the "riece,h" Senator and - traitot - from Tenneto,ee, JEF FEitsti DAvis, en a "sour apple tree, - and denounced every hotly and all their rolatives 114 ware than trai tong who would not fall down and wor,liip the ' great - the "good" the "learle-,.'' the — rettrioric,“ the - loy: al Union" Senator front yenne.see, ANIIIO,W •1104115,1N.' Now .IFIFI,EIt 50,4 DAVIS with all his "treason," is ,erit out front court without a trial, while ANtnnEw JoitNioiNi with his abundant "loyalty" and "Yeunion ism'' stands arraightied before them as a eritninal unworthy the place they placed him in. Mott - elTiti.r. have Wort In the second number of the Altnomi Vmdienter, a strait-haired, stiff-baek ed, outspoken Democratic paper, Just started by our old friend — Cob JAME B F. CalmILL. Mr. Campbell is an experienced publisher, having beeb connected for years with different Democratic papers in this State, and his ability as an editor will insure to his subscribers full compensation for their patronage. The Vindicator looks well, promises well, and takes well. May it have an abundance of MEE --Aint it nice brother working men You pay about one half your earnings, either directly or Indirectly to feed and clothe, a lot of lazy ne groes and thieving officials—about one fourth to pay bondholders inter est upon the mortgages they hold upon your labor, and upon which, they do not pay a cent of taz—and the other fourth is ket you to feed, clothe and school your fainilie You admire this way of getting along, or you would not vote for Mongreiisin that has fastened this State of affairs --When the Mongrel Convention was called to meet it. the city of Chi cago. it was thought they would as semble in a city ruled by their Radi cal brethruu But Qle people of that city have returned to the God of their fathers, and Mongrelism will find it'. self in the camp of the enemy. Chi cago, like every other place wrote, white tutu love their race, „pas been avrept by a most complete Democratic revolution. --The party which claims that suffrage in one of the natural rights of man, is yet willing to grant that natural right only t) those who think as they do in politics. They are wil ling to give the ba1191„to half savage negroes, yet seek to ditifranchise the white freemen who were horn on another soil than ours ; because *Elite foreigners cannot be induced 'to vote the black ticket. -01 all the Mongrel leaders and papers who demand the removal of ANottew Jouttsow from office, not one puts their demand on any other ground than that his removal is nec essary to_ the success of their party: What think the people of this ? Is the samara of a party more to be de sired, than the success of Republican institutions ? —lf men desire to , see the rate at which we have been progreseidg towards ruin, het them compare our condition now with what it was eight velars ago. The principles of Demon in"gde, us what we were, opposite• principles make us what wo are. ; ,-The Central Pon .pitorating the exploded charges of frauds in the late Senatorial election, declaring the democtacy guilty of heinous offences, bursts out in eloquent indignation thus "They oven attempted to briho the Com r mittoe." The innocent editor must have dream ed of the virtue of-thr_harlot! Who would dare thus approach the virtuous and pions George Landon, the honest( and incorruptible Jake Ridgeway. the integrity and high-toped disinterested: nes4 of Brandy Fisher, or the sensitive and courageontiVaylor? Who would .are even suspect charrifiTorffie - p pure patriots, sittorn to decide itnyttr— tinfty, would allow themselves to be placed in ciicumstanees to - fall to the highest -bidder. We defend, them from any such imputation, add trust the-1 ?ems will not cease to protest their integritp,- until the public mind is disabused ';;l'any impreSsion of the kiwi it may have received by the siu gularity of their deciSitta.„iigainst the evidence and the laW in the ease: —lt is said that arsenic eater roach a point when,it is death ler Ahem to cease e;ttity4 the deadly min eral, and death for them to ontinu'e its use. to Just such a .tratglit the %towel party now finds itsoir It hes Gad upon negro to it greater ex tent than the cannibals who visited the island of Robinson Cruore, :and W finds it death to continue the feast, and deaths to attempt to shut Coffee out of their mouth. in the one case, they lose the hone.t white men, without whom they minuet win, and in the other, they 10.0 the fight ing melt of the party, without whom they can maintain no organizaton. Their dilemma is embarra,ing _and awkward enough to them, but it fur nishes a chance of e , capc to the coon try front the deadly gra,p of the mon sters who hold it —A few paws meter-I.llm to be democratic seen(/ terribly aft atd of ''raising any question about tinance;i But the question 14 rai,ed. The tax gatherers, who swarm over the land like locusts, hair , raised the que.tion, eft& keep it constantly agitated, and. thr per pie dmnand that the party which they support-shall meet it and solve it to the bottom. Democracy has never yet shrunk front duty, and will not now The diTe — tiftV is not of our making, but me are tea , ly and able to settle it, and will do so to the entire sati%fattion of Ike groaning, oppressed people, whatever maybe the feelings of the bondholders alto hold the scorpion lash with which we are being scourged —The scene now going on at Washington is the most disgraceful which was ever enacted in this coun tryKs: Mimics., and the thieves who plundered with hint in New Or leans, are using the money which they Stole from us to destruy,thc people's libertjeis i and to depo.e the lawfully elected chief magistrate of the Re public It is simply a high-handed open game, in defiance of the people and the laws, and the manner in which *c bear it wil 'decide what is to be our tate in the future. Are we to be ruled by such men as BEAST BUTLER, or have we a government of laws? —Let the Mongrels, -who take comfort to thernlelves in the thought that a people which hill tamely bear what ours have done will bear any thing, remember, that the more low ly a spring is bowed dtr.vrt the more swift and terrible will be its recoil. The vengeance of our people will be - measured by the weight with which they are oppressed "%Tao abliertioentents • IN BANKRUPTCY. In the District Court of the United fitates, Western D strict of P41.111'81. In the matter of William L. Musser, Book vtipt• In Bankrupt Cy. Western District of Pennsyl vania, es: At the Borough •f Bellefonte, the 29th day of Aril , A I). 1888. To whom it may (nascent : The undersigned hereby gives notice of his appointment as Assignee of William 1. Musser, of the township of Penn, In the connt i of Centre, and state of Penneylvonia,* n said district, who has udgeti a Bankrupt ilpop own pe • tit ono by the 'District Court p `ebaid Dis trict, NORMAN M. 111.)0VKR, Assignee. tN BANKRUPTCY, In the District Court of the United States, Western District of Pennsylvania. In the matter of William. Reed, Bankrupt. In Bankruptcy. Western District of Penn sylvania, as : At the Borough of Bellefonte, the 28th day of April, A. D. 1888. To whom it may concern : Thii hereby gives notice of hie appointment as Assignee of William Reed, of Milesburg borough,in the county of Centre and state of Pennsylvania, within said District, who has been adjudged a baakrupt upon his own pa- Mien, by the District Court of said District. NORMAN M. 1100%$R, 18-18-31 Assignee. ADMINISTIUTOR'd KOTICB. Letters of adodulstration ou the estate of David predertalc, deceased, having been greeted to the Undersigned; polies Is hereby givan'to all persons knowing them selves indebted_to said *orate to make im mediate payment, and those having claims against the same le_pnlient thaw. duly In. thienticatidfor settbenent. 0111/LISTAIN.JaI L , • 18-16 et, Admlolrtiatvr. Legat Noticeo.- DISOLI3TION OF PARTNRRBI.ITP. Notice Id hereby Oren that the per tnersh 1p heretofore existing betw een the undersigned, doing business under the wee f Leonard !Cohan A. Co., has this day been dlsSolued by mittual oqnsent. 411 par. ties indebted to said ffrm will plisse pay such indebtedness' to C. T. Alexander, nod all parties having accounts agaltist sald firm will present them to him for settlement. The manufacture Of "Satiny FildeLlie" wdl bo continued at the old piaco, under the firm name Of Janneii It. Alexander,' Co. C. T. ALVA ANDlilt L. MACKALL. Bellefonte, Apr 24, 1.8113 3t CIENTIthI COUNTY AOR'll. SODIETY. The committee appointed at itb t Tormaittnirarttnritdohnr- rttol improve ,the grounds for the fall exhibition are requested to meet at the office of Bush tt Yocum in Bellefonte, on MONDAY, the I Ith day of MAY, at 10'olook I'. M. consultetor. D, U. 11(.18n, Chninhen. my I -2t lIRItII 7 I , SA LB. By virtao of a writ of , F'srei orr hate,' out of the court of common pleas of Centre courtly and to mo direetea, will be e• posed to public sale at the court house in Itolleiouta, on -Pridey thu tat day. of May, 1861 i. TIM following described real estate, : that certain liot at grtmad Fault tea In the borough of B e ll e f on t e , „ may of t'ontre, State of Pennsylvania. Bounded on the north by lot of Hannah Ilan, on the itayt by Penn shoot, on the south by florr,wr alletr 4 nd on the wont by Decatur alley, Irontinit an Penn street IT) feet and exlen , l inR tote Opfer% to Decatur Seized taken in-xxecot ion and to be null as the itreperty of Rubino' C. Chee.emen Sole to eollltilenee at 1 ..- eaVoci( Of day li 741(1•INg, eheriff I't- I It 'lt AD.II/%1.s111.11'1)/ ME. Let6irs of administration, on lho estate o 1 Morgan Malone, late of Boggs township, .le , mased, having been granted to the undersigned, ailliersous know ing thou, selves indebted to said eatato will maim imam thole pilyitielit, end those has Mg einilni against the triune will present them duly Au thentleatoil- for settlement. \IAIIUAItSr NIA LUNE, Aden intstratrt 13 14 ft SEA LED PROPOSA LS Will be rereired until 12 o'clock, M. on Saturday the 2nd - day of May next, lor the erect of a Slone Building, fur the Public Schools of the Borough of Bellefonte Pions end eitecinelltloon of the Luling nifty he teen at the store of Win. McClellan. By order of the School Board. ' UEgltui If. IVEIVER 111-111 31 AL)MiNISTRATitI,X :NOTICE Letters of Administrates on tha estate of Win. Swarm, dee'd, late of Mile. burg borti% hating been granted to the undersigned, all penult's knowing theinielre. indebted to said estate are 'shimmied to make immediate payment, and all baring claims to present them duly •authent iced by Last_ for Wllernen l A(/ NES SWARM, Administrator 13-11-61 A DMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE. Lettere of administration on the en tote of Peter Breon, late of Oregg town. nap, tlelinelard, - 11eettloaritiod so she undersigned, notice is_lx&reloy given to sll persons knowing themselves indebted to said estate to make Immediate payment, and those haring claims to present them duly authenticated for settlement. JOHN GROVE. 13 12 ill, Amd 1)15:v0fliTION OF PARTNERSHIP The partnership heretofore existing betweed A. IS. Ilptchlson anti H. F Clark, in the'lnsuraoce Agency at Bellefonte, , is hereby dissolved - N A. B. Hutehison, will settle up all matter, connected with the bu siness, and enntinue the same. • 12 3t II OTCHISON o CI, kali. _ - FOR S LE. Valuable Farm for sole bordering on the town of Ilublereburg, In Welker town slop. Centre County, within live miles of railroad and two miles from cual mine, about ONE HUNDRED AND FIFTY &( S, cleated en.k in a good state of ruiti vatiori s The balance well timbered, the whole [met a first rate lime stone land with an apple and peach °relief& t hereon of ten acres bearing yearly, two dwelling houses thereon, a well of good water at the door.• Imp ',ink here, with power house attached Also an elegant water power for a gristmill or factory and plenty of ironsore thereon For further information call at the premises 13-13-3 m ANTHONY CARNER. B OALSBURO ACA )EMT. 110A1,8011RO, CENTRE CO, Pk • This institution will be open for the re iseption of pupils of both *exile on Mobility April 27th 184tt. Normal, Classical and Business departments will be established. No prescribed coq ere of study required Tuition front t 5,00 to $7,00 per term of ten weeks, according to Branches pursued. Boarding in private families fem. $3,25 to $3,50 per week For futher information ad , dress the principal. • 13 lb 31 -• LbaSilliii. W ALL PAPER, WALL - PAI ER' The subscriber lakes uloneure la lefurtu ng his patrons said the public generelly, hat he his jut received • •Vb IV ASSORTMENT of the LATEST STYLES Ole WALL PAPER, which be is selling at rity retail prices go has the LAROEST STOCK OF WALL PAPER, 'n the count", and is selling at such figures an defy ec6ratition. 13-162 a.• JOHN HItACKBII.L• IVPHOHD Aufbertypes taken at the Excelsior Csr by the Court Rouse as lowstr'• - ''" TWRNTY-FIVE CENTS. 4 t lard Photographs for 01111 DOLLAR, When sold by the Josen the charge ►ill be Icw as TWO DOLLARS AND FIFTY CENTS, J. S. BARNIIART. Marsh 18 'db Sas STOVES! STOV RS ! ! &Imo Haupt hen got alreadya DOW .up El, or Shears Antiduet Cook and Parlor '''toves• That Davi proved themselves to be the beet stove out for littintng either h'1,7 1 or . soft. coal they solve their own ashen, Inwo trio dust, economise fuel Ind are the hest ba kers In the world, and bale enure conveni ences than any Other Moves now In ilia. People In Want of stoves would do well to pall et his Ware Rooms near the Depot and, bla stook beton purebuiing elsewhere as by a milled of thts limy may be sorry as many hp, a been already. 12-30-ti. ISAAC nAurr,
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