Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, May 08, 1868, Image 4

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    The asMOcratic Watchman;
0
BaLLEFONTE, PENN'A.
P. Q.44.Y.!.!Ei1C, Eprrof L PROPRIZTOR
JOIN P. iIiTCAELL,ARIOCCATII EDITOR
FIUDAY MMININI3, MAY 8, 1868
pritsfs.—Et per year when paid in ad
vow, 2,40 when not paid in advance, and
AO when not paid before — the e xpiration
of all year.
Demociatiti Stet* Ticket
FOIL AUDITOR GENERAL,
HON. "CHARLES E. 6 BOYLE,
of, Fayette County.
YOR SURVFTOR GENERA(.,
GEN. WELLINGTON IL ENT,
of Columbl* County
The Impeachment-et the President.
• Men of candor and good sense, who
have examined the testimonypro and
i2na during the progress of the dis
g ceful trial of the President, must
convinced that on the part of the
(?) Managers it. in a coinnleto
failure—an stoorti-1 attempt to ac
complish an r injusti6able end In
all the history of small and great
trials, there was never a more , ignal
and disgraceful failure on the part of
prosecutors,
It is true /Vilius . JontistrN had
no business to be found in the ranks
of and fraternizing with that revolu
tionary, unscrupulous and wretched
party ; but when by the formk, of our
• government, which is one of law and
not of inn, he beearec the acting
President of the United Statos,‘the
people are bound, in duty and in hon
or, to Ettstaiu him in all his efforts to
protect and &fend the Constitution.
lt matters no who voted for or against
him, or whether he was elected fairly
sir unfairly, be became the ,irting
president, and is the - only person
known to the peopie as their chief
- Magistrate, and whom they are bound
to sustain so long as he honestly ad
ministers the government in accor
dance with the fundamental ? Inw
-- Nom, mgo:ask-ist siliariousness, have.
the people, the toiling millions, the
bone, sinew and tnnsele, either asked
,or,
,desired Congress to impeach the
president ? We all know they have
not. The people were satisfied with
his policy, for they repudiated the
dogmas of Congress' overwhelmingly
last fall. Then, who did demand his
impeachment, and for whit purpose
was it done ? We answer, a few de
signing, wicked and revolutionary
leaders did it of their own motion,
and for the accumiilishinent of two
purposes. Fiat to gratify a vindici-
Live, malicioninind revengeful spirit..
and secondly to remove from their
path a formidable obstacle to their
schemes of revolution and de.potmm.
A.revolutionary party al raiiito must
continuo revolution in order to main
tain power. Joavnittim, whether from
!God or bad motives, refused to go
with them in their schemes of wick
edness and anarchy, refused to be
yoked to the ear of juggernau which
was to crush ihe life out of liberty,
and grind our institutions to powder.
They therefore determined first to
pus its ponderous wheels over him.
But the American people were well
known to be dangerous to trifle with
when their bleixl was up, and an at
tempt to deceive them by the forms
of law became necessary
The Constitution gave Congress the
power to impeach the president, l and
to remove him front office on convic
tion. They would impeach, h int legal
ly, but convict htin with law or with
out, by means of a perjured Senate.
This was the scheme which was to
deceive and hoodwink the people,
and which a . Republican member of
Congress declared to be "bold, bad
and damnable." Being one of their
number, he knows with wtiat adject
ives to qualify their scheme, and we
know that men. capable ofconcoeting,
maturing and carrying it out ere well
entitled to be qualified by the same
adjectives themselves.. They are
dangerous men to follow, and if sus-
tamed, must lead us to utter and ir
retrievable ruin. .
That "when the wicked rule the
Nation mourns" is not strange ; hut
is it not surpassing strange that the
people do not see, as with one eye,
the utter ruin of all they hold dear,
if these leaders arolnot rebuked, re•
pudiated and hurled from power?
But to return to the impeachment.
To say nothing of ihe important
position hold by Mi. .Tontatow,which
'Snail* degraded by what ever de
grade him, he has rights as a Gideon
of this republlo y rights which his an-
Gators ale' ours fought 'for, which
might to le near turd dear to every
: American heart. Let. us look •Sit, the
Dimmer of tie trial from this s tud.
.point; - keepiog wind that his eon..
viction is intended to ha followed by
a punishment worse than death._ To
appreciate the position, let any one
ask himself the following questions
and answer them candidly to his oni
mind.
Bow would ho ilrlc'to have/Chosen
as his chief prosecutor a man whom
all tho world concurs in denouncing
as a beast, apd_whom another of these
same impeachers openly, in the halls
of Congre4 brands a thief. If he
were arraigned for high crimes, how
would he like to have all the brutal
.ounning which a beast may possess,
,all the arts which a thief has
studied that he may escape` ITiejiiii:
ishment of crime, employed before a
partisan tribunal to prevent the aim
i?le truth from being' known*, when
the simple truth would be acquittal
itself? How would he like to feel
that it was not truth, justice or right
which His prosecutors sought, bu t
simple conviction, right.or wrong,tid
the. infliction of A fearful punishment?
Where is the man who would not cry
out against such a proceeding 'o his
own case, and demand the rights
which his &mestere fur a thousand'
years had stintggled for and maintain
ed ?
Yet it is said that Bng. lirri.mt is
prosecuting for the people Did the
people have an opportunity, what on
indignant and universal' repudiation
they wmold give the traitor, coward,
murderer, thief and Pottled up beast,
who could not get a single respectable
paper in the whole north to defend
him, The fact is, the people arc not
represented at all in the great that
which involves RO many interests of
theirs. They have hod no opportu
nity yet to net on the question, except
Sr. they can express their disapproval
by repudiating the party to which the
impeachers belong, and this they
have done overwhelmingly wliemyer
an election has oce&vred
It is a well settled rule of law that
all men are presumed innocent until
proved guilty ; also that a Common
wealth never desires the conviction Of
- its citizens of crimes and luisdemean
ors. purely the people of this great
country are not desirous that the
ehia 1011astrate showki be- - pciavtaa
guilty of such offences. liticy an ,
disgraced as weltsetit he should such
be the resnit i ef the j trial , they are
well aware of this, and hence arc
strongly desirous that he be tried
fairly and receive justice, which will
acquit him. We deny,thetefore i that
the managers tit the impeachment,
before the High Court of impeach
ment, are representing the wishes of
a high minded, honorable people at
all, when they are unwilling that he
shall have a fair and honorable trial,
such as the meiatut =win the land
is entitled to when charged with
rifira2
The fact that BUTLER ham been
chief manager in the prosecution,and
(hat he has been unwilling that the
whole Jowl should be told on the
trial is to discredit to any One but
Btrrts.u. himself, the fanatical and
crazy constituency in .Massachusetts
which elected him to office, and the
wicked, vindictive and revolutionary
faction which selected him asir. pros
ecutor , for these only have been
consalted, and the wishes and desires
of the people have been no more re
garded than though they had no in
terest in the matter.
Thus has the impeachment of the
president of the United States been
conducted from first to last. AU
truth has been suppressed which pos
sibly could be, and all the falsehoods
which could be coined admitted.
Yet, at this hour, ne one dreams that
Jonsson has been proved guilty pr
any offence whatever against the law
and those who desire his removal
from office, hope for it solely on the
ground that there are Senators who
will disregard their solemn oaths ;
and the rights of the president and
people, aad vote for oonviotion for
the single purpose of serving their
party, and perpetuating is in power.
It is a sad reflection that so much has
been done by these men which was
revolutionary and wrong, that no
man presumes now to diny that, they
will be guilt, of this4et greater in
iquity. Btt ire am.epoident that
the people will 'not bear it. They
have been watering to trial with
intense interest, and let it go ae it,
may. they kaye seen enough' to con
vince them that tbey dare not longer
trust with power, seen so unsiirupu
lons and dishonest. Their doom is
already sealed.
—We are payiag vast aume of
money every year to , feed, cloth and
vote lay, soad-for•aotking negross,
and sustain atirmligg ; in or
der to beep the &id' from restoring
civil governaesat i
,'aisd paying their
proportion of lhe.thgoe. ',ll this is
14.h:indult* be contin
ued fa powaff.',
We oan Rule.Oursetves
•
We noticed repently, in a Radical
daily which wadrave.alwalre regarded
as among thi'meici decent of its class,
a long article, landing to the skies the
plan of reconstruction - (so-called) of
the Rum n Congress. We would have
paid no attention to it if the
. editor
hid contented himself with speaking
favorably.of tiro schemes he support
ed, in getreffil terms„ for ;kis he was
bound to 16, under fear or the party
lash. But he most particularly spec
ified certain features of these Mongrel
schemes, and while praising the' men
w'th black hearts who lievtlabored
so earnestly to degrade ireir toil FiCti;
he went beyend himself in praise of
those with black faces also. He re
newenhe old slundei oethe soldiers
I of the north, that they werr -unable to
conquer the south until they receiv
ed the assistance of the blanks, and in
the same sentence glorifies Coffee for
stepping in With the to settle
the terms of the peace which he had
so nobly conquered with-the bayonet.
We do not propose now to disetAs
those monstrous measures,which even
old Titan
for
considered black
enough tho the fiend he serves.
We have said a groat deal about them
in the past. and have a great deal
more to say about them in the future.
But we desire new simply to 5.a1l the
attention of white men who love their
race, and are proud of its achieve
ments to the low depth which has
been reached by even the niore coo
servative and decent of those who
have yoked themselves to the -car of.
mongreliam.
In 1861, we' found" ourselves gud•
deftly plunged into war. Whatever
may be said about the causes of thif
war, direct and remote, it was evi•
dently only the bursting forth of a
10:catio which had 'wig bureNl with
fierce internal fires. It was the result
of: long, •long antagoniSms between
members of the white race Yt was a
white man's war, and the negro had
no more to do with - rt
.than the car
cass for which the wild beasts con
lend has to do in deciding which it is to
fall to. He was a contented, happy
slave, and - knew and eared no more
About Lhe struggle which the whites_
were carrying on about "slavery,"
than lie.did of that almost equally bit,-
ter contest in regard to tariffs This,
we think, will not be denied. Taking
it far granted that the great civil war
which convulsed the world for four
years, was brought about by white
men, and that their difficulties were
to be settled by it, what do men of
Anglo Saxon blood think of the asser
tion that we could not fight out our'
quarrel without calling to our assis
tance the degraded race, which had
never exercised the slightest weight
in the political affairs of the world in
six thousand years. The Egyptians,
the Orecks, the Romans had fought
out their own quarrels, and partition
ed out the world, without consulting
entree any more than they did the
rocks and hills and valleys which
they contended for, and divided
amongst them. And even when Rome
had swallowed up all other nation»,
and began to totter to her own fall,
when the barbarian hordes of Europe,
Asia and Africa were pressing upon
her from every side, and dividing out
her rich sp3il, the race of Canaan
made no motion towards the common
centre of spoliation, but lacked even
the courage and energy of,the cow
ardly hyena, to press in and devour
the feast which a more lordly raoe had
left in their quest of more Arid
when these barbarians were erecting
the foundations of the modern gov
ernments of the old world, the negro
was consulted a» little and regarded
leek thin he had been by the ancients.
In fact, the whole history of man re
cords the same fact. Prom the days
of Nosh until now,tho descendants of
Canaan have made no history of their
own, they have invented nothing,they
have been nothing but what the old
patriarch declared they would be, "a
servant of servants unto their broth-
And yet in this progressive ago, in
the progressive American Republic, I
it is apoged by the wonderfully pro
gressive yankee, that men of the most
noble race which 'Europe has produc
ed, could not settle their own quarrel
without calling in the assistance of a
race so low sod mean that the lowest.
and meanest men who, ever had ca
pacity to maintain any form of gov
ernment whatever, ectir . Oed to ask or
weir° their assistance against even
the meanest foe.
What do White men think of this
Is it true duct a million 'of white men
could not mowed in a white mane
war without, tAo ,ot the,,blacks?
Do the soldiers who oerried the mid
het and the sword for roar long yearn
endorse this allegation, Air do the
Mende of those who'll, aittim in thin,
assertion? _Amain tiOette .Nit wren
niter Simla had conotere4 the peeve,
r us, we could not settle obr politi
-1 affairs without his ,valuable aid ?
White men of Pennsylvania, of the
reat states of the North, do you be-.
ieve it? Will you. acknowledge the
.egrading thing? Did the negro do
or our race what we could not do our
• I yes ? We can easily anticipate the
nsicet. The descendants of the men
ho wrested Rome from the Romans
- America- from the saVa4e and
yranny,while the negro took no more
• art In the-ratter than the monkey of
is native wilds, reply with ond - kindig
aut, No ! White wen can and wil
le thcsiselves, in peace and in war,
• • •
r pblieieal inTerences
may be, will not Consent that our pow
er ;hall be employed in any event to
degrade the white man beneath 'the
black. - -
We know what the sentiments of
our people are, and we wonder only
at their blindness. Their heart; are
all sight, bat they have allowed them
selves to be led by men unworthy of
the trust.
Turn to the number ,of the Pitts ,
burg ('ornmerrial of the Ist ; and
vcu will find the article wt allude to
in which the efforts of white) men to,
settle their owti quarrel are disparag
ed, and the assistance of the 'dub
Iliadie all in all. All of the Radical
papers do it, whether they believe
what they allege of not. and those
who lore the white race cannot con
tinuo too follow them without partici
pating in. the grime against brethren
of our own blood, and against our own
posterity.
The very same party which employ
ed the ballot of negroes in the South
to overcome the whites, has even
greater reason to employ the same aid
iu the North, for here they have a
toe as uncompromising, and far more
powerful Will the honest voters of
the country assist them in their work
of Iniquity? We already hear the
murmur of the emphatic Nor I which
in November next will crash over the
land in tones of thunder.
Indecency in Congress
LooAN and itstitsT &Tuts, two of
the impeachment managers, Wsstv
auntie., theineper
Dcrstsrmax a Radical Congressman,
have recently been furnishing exam
' ples of the ''propriety or speech," for
failing in which JouresoN is now on
trial. Old Congressmen of their own
political party declare that such inde
cency was never before heard in the
!louse.
These clowns are like the monkeys,
which being elugantly dressed and
masked, appeared at a tine partv,and
danced beautifully and to the great
admiration of the company. But
some one discovering the trick, thrgw
an orange on the floor before them,
when they forgot in a in oment their
clothing and dancing and commenced
a deadly struggle for the possession
of the fruit, by which their real char
acter became apparent to every one
in the room, and they were immedi
ately expelled.
It is just so with all the Mongrel
members of Congress. They are re
ally a very vulgar, ignorant and beast
ly pack. But fixed up in the finery
they have stolen from the people,
they were able to make a passable
appearance, until something arose to
excite their low and' brutal passions.
Then forgetting all they were fixed
up to represent, they plunge at once
into a- disgraceful scramble which
would nett be tolerated at an Indian
council-fire. Bat they have beenan
masked 'before,the people, who Jill
complete the pirallel with the danc
ing monkeys by hurling them from
the society of decent radii.
RZAD IT.—We publish-on another
page of to-days paper a letter from
Gen. JAJ. 13. BRINBIN,, formerly of
this county, in relation to the nomina
tion of "Oua ANDY" for Vice Presi
dent, also a letter from one of the
"rank and file," in regard to thtGen
eras atatda and feats. There is eon
siderably more truth, in both the let
ters than many may imagine. MUN-
I:Tee letter espeCially, is anything lint
airs. He knows Otrartm—has reit
ton to know him well—published his
home organ for him, when he - was
fitht candidate for Governor,—did hie
dirty work generally about this place.
perhaps, knows as much about
the moral and political integrity of
our aspiring towneman,as any man in
the state. We are no friend of Bats-
BM's, we know him well, and have as
little respect for, him politically, as
for anything that walks on two legs,
htit when he tells the truth, plainly,
as he does in this inetanoe,he deserves
at least-a fair hearin .
--The bloodluttl•thunder stories
about the K. K, K., with which
jtnarel Inputs areled, if true, are
A /9rry oeututeut upou the theory 'of
Witlitatlrnieraltsra •
o-.-
—JAY Comm, who is engaged in
selling the bonds of the government,
says in a circular addressed to the
people, that the capitalists of the
country refused to take these bond!,
and he therefor comes diredtly to the
people. Who is likely to know most
about this matter, men whOhave made
such things the study of their lives,
or the people who know little about
financial affairs? Something must be
wrong with the credit of the govern
ment when men with overflowing cof
fers refuse `.to let it have their money
at a heavy rate of interest. When
we remember that Congress does
nothing but legislate for the ,negro
Tresttlent;—iwz
stzad of divising means of raising
revenue and relieving the• overbur
dened people, we cannot wonder at
our condition.
—LottaN and BUTLER two'of the
managers Who arc prosecutigg the
president for lanuage used by him
in public speeches. recently- had an'
altercation in the House of-Represen
tatives, in which the epithets of liar;
coward, cheat and thief were freely
interchanged. pretty set they aro
to talk about unbecoming language,
anfl what an improvement we would
have on Jmnvsosi in the person of
BEN WADE, who prefaces every Ben
tenoo with an oath, and concludes it
with vulgarity.
—One of the beautiful results of
Radical reconstruction, (so called), is,
that jail birds, gamblers; and scoun•
drels generally, who have been driven
from the north for their crimes and
villainy, go South and get elected to
Congress by the negroew and black
hearted whites, and thus aro made
legislators for the people of the whole
country, north as welt as south. One
satisfaction is that they will get into
congenial society in Washington.
—No Definierat ought to buy or
countenance the cirenlation et any of
Harper's publications They are of
an incendiary character, and their
pictorials are calculated to do great
evil amtmg • the ignorant-- clawses.
Every effort possible ought to be
made to put them down, and if the
patronage7.ff - Tre - t - u - ocra
withdrawn from them, it will go far
towards doing this
—With money going out of the
treasury at the rate of over a hun
dred and fifty millions per year faster
than it is raised bT the m_ist crushing
taxation, what becomes of ther.bnant
of those who said we would MOOll re
duce the debt after the war 9 Those
who hold that n "national debt is a
national blessing" ought to give us
an answer. Can they see the way
out of the threatened anancial difileul
ty.
—What hope is there for the
poor man under the rule of the party
now in power ? In the name of suff
ering humanity, what inducement
can the down trodden and tax ridden
people see to mu wport Mongreliam any
longer ? The ast is an index to the
future, and .ve are daily treading a
step lower in the gulf of-misery, pov
erty and ruin ? What say the people
to again trying a change ?
—The party which a few years ago
desired to disfranchise all foreigners
however intelligent and honest. and
sought to prevent them from ever
holding office, now forces the ballot
into the hands of barbarous negroes,
and forces them into office. Will
white foreigners support them ?
—There will be a lively time in
thr Mongrel camp in making their
nominations, and there is a good pros
pect of a permanent, split ica•their
ranks. "When thieves fall out, hon
est. men get their dues.' '
—Report says that there is a
great political revolution going on in
the West, and the prospect is good
for valuable aid from that quarter in
electing a white president next No
vember.
—There are said' to be eleven
Republican Benitore who are accused
of having conecienctia, and there is a
fearful pressure on thew to force
them into voting for the conviction of
JOIINEION.
The Rude of this district have had
little to say about
,t 2 twl3ttutiticr ease
sine the public:jun of Mr..Bsttki
ltßeB address to the people,
WADE proposes, **soon as he
becomes president, to establish a per
manent standing army in mul of the
southern States.
—About fwd thirds of the money
woos from the people, is expended
uselessly or openly stolen.
Nun stook is, held st low
'lute j
-ut now., se - ,
—lt is reported of a certain pub
lic functionary, • once notorious in
Pennsylvania politics, that he was'
endeavoring to perquade one of his
associates of the propriety of certain
measures, when the ()they replied
that they, were dishonest, thinking
that was a sufficient reason w r hy th ey
ought not too be adopted. The first
flared up at this, and broke forth
with "honesty ! I hate the word, it
cramps genius and makes men poor."
The Mongrels of the present day hate
honesty as much aA did, but still
there is a little display of genius, and
fen thousand men become poor to
make ono rich. We think the gen.
• • alladud -ter-imrst---intyr—but!n
-
mistakent
iLegat Notices
D I LSOLUTION OF PARTNRRBIII
Notice is hereby given that the
pat tnership heretofore existing between th e
undersigned, doing business under the name
f Leonard Marken k Co.,' has thin day
been dissolved by mutual consent. All par.
tie. indebted to sold lfrm will piva4e pay
such indebtedness to C., Alexander, AleXander, se.'
411-parties having accounts against aald firm
will present. them to him for
Thl manufacture of "Sunny Hide him." wil
be continued et the old place, under the tire,
Mame of.latneo It Alexander 4- Co.
O. T. AIAXAIVJEK,
L. MACKALL,
11elleianta, Aptil 24, 1888 :IL ,
_ADMINISTRATORS NOTICE
Letters of administration, ,41
entitle of Morglth Melees, into of 13,,i g ,
township, deosased, having Imo granted tr,
the undersigned, all persons knowing them.
selves indebted to said estate will make 111.1110
dials, payment, and those hal mg clam,
agal.rwit the sates will present them duly YU
thenticated f , r settlement.
MAIM A RET MA LONE,
13 14 Ilt Administretri s
IN BANKRUPTCY.
In the District Court of the rotted
Statee, Whatern District of Pennsylcsoo t .
In the matter of Witliato Reed, Bankrupt
In Bankruptcy. Western District of Pena
sylvan's, so • At the Borough of Bellefonte,
the 28th day 01 April, A. I) !Ins To
*born it may concern 't The Undersigned
isereby gives notice 01 hie
_appointment as
Assignee of William Revd, of 31ileshurg
borough, in the county of C;ttrerand state of
Pennsylvania, *tail • said istret, who bee
been adjudged • bankrupt upon hi s owe p,
talon, by the District Court of said Uistritt.
NORMAN M. HOOVER,
13-18 3t Aasignee.
A DMINISTRATOR'S NOT I C
Letters of administration on the
estate of David Broderick, deceased, hiving
been granted to the undSsigned, antics im
hereby given to all persons knowing them
selves indebted to wait estate to make in
•-• • • • • Lacing daunt
against Übe same to present, them duly au.
Giant catsed for settlement.
CIIRISTAIN
13-IR 61 Adm In ator.
MO
IN BANKRUPTCY.
. In the District Court of the toad
tales, Western District of Penn's.. In the
matter of William L Musser, Baukrupt. In
Bankruptcy Western District of Penuiyl
rants, cc • At the Borough of Bellefonte, the
28th day of April. 1. I) 1888. To whom it
may concern • Tbd undersigned beret',
glees notice of his appointment as Avrigne«
of William 1i Musser, of the township ”f
Penn, in the county of Centre, and smite
Pennlylvania, within said district, who has
been adjudged • bankrupt upen hid own pe
titbit', by the District Court of raid Din.
tract.
NORMAN %I HOOVER,
ku gore
13-18-3 t
FOR SA I.E.
Valuable Faun for Pale b or d ering o n
the town of Ilablersburg, in Walker town
ship. Centre County, within Ere miles of
railroad and two mile. from eiial mine
&bent 0746 HUNDRED AND Vila 1
AClllitS, Mewed and in a good Mate of eulti
ration. The balance well tioiberrd, the
whole tractie first rate lime stone land with
an apple and peach orchard, t herein of tea
acres beating yearly, two dwelling 110.1,
thereon, a well of good water at the door, a
large bank barn, with power house &umbel
Alm) an elegant water power fora grnt nu
or factory and plenty of iron ore therei-1
For further information call at the premier.
13-113-3 m ANTHONY VARNER
IN BANKRUPTCY.
It this District Court of the Uaited
States—ln the matter of RitZMILII rf Keller,
Bankrupts. Wagtail: District of Penns!?
cania, is ^. At the borough of Bellefonte, th•
28th day of April, 1888. The undersignci
hereby give notice of their appointment a•
assignees of altanari .8 Keller, of the pug:
ty of Centre, and State Zif Pennoylvanial
within said District, who bare been if,
judged Bankrupts on creditor' petit'. I ,
the District Court of said District.
LB 19 :it
DISSOLUTION OF PARTNERSHIP.
The partnership heretofore es rbung
between A. H. Hutchison and 1 4 Claris,
li. the Ineuninoe Agency at Bellefonte, ,
le hereby dissolved.—A. 11. Hutchison, ,elll
settle up all matters connected with (he bu
siness, and continuo the elms.
12 18 3t 11 UTCIIIBON • CIA BIC
W OLL PAPER, WALL PAPRR '
The Nobler Der tallies ole►tare In Worm
ing his patrons and the public generally,
that he 6LN just received a
NZ W ASSORTMENT •
of tie
LATEST STYLES OF WALL PAPER,
which he is cellinrat city retail prices lie
has the
LARGEST STOCK OF WALL PAPER,
la the county, and i► selling ►t such flgureA
as defy nompetition.
18-10 7m• JOHN BRACIIIIII,L.
RIMMED PRICZEI.
shabertypee taken at the Eze•lsior Cu by
the'Court House as low as
._
TWENTY-FIVE CENTS.
=!MS2I
ONE DOLLAR,
Whoa sold by the dosed the oharge will be
low ao
TWO DOLLAR& AND PIM CENTS.
J.' B. BARNHART.
Ifareh 18 '6B em
/ 1 10 RENT,
A two story'Stors Neuss well loos
-tad foilpusinsso, to nat. Apply to
D r 8. - DIMMEE,
- 86111plibuig, Pl 6
ADAM HOY.
.1 G. LAAIMER
Aui