SONG OF THE TAXED. I= IIook•a bay hshy—your father's a slave To the fanatical fool and the Radical knave, And oven the cradle you sleep in, poor dear, pi n y be sold to pay loxes% lers than a year. Ile works for yon harder each daj thanbe fors, But snob night brings hit) home to a lessen ing gore For of all Mist bemire', there'a but little It leaves After feeding the negro and Liadical thieree. 10 ear Ile's tired on the hat that he wears on his bead ; 7b e boots on his feet, and the sheets on hie bed ; gym , rag that he wears, every morsel be enta, in, t en and Ma 0400 ; hja „bread and hie meat, ; The pot they are cooked in, the cup that be Mb, gyary imPlement used on the land that he ' Every tool that be works with ; the lamp that b, burns ; • The thin.; that he work. on ; the wages be earns; On the stove in the kitchen, the cool, too— still higher; Ay I even the mateh that sets light to the ere; On ble pipe of tobacco, his whisky and beer; Ofi the medicine he buys for you, poor little dean To the taloa be pay' we now lee no end— NO, not even Death, crushed humanity's friend, They tae e'en bie coffin, his shroud and hie rave ; And bit baby must starve and his widow must slave To We in the earth he has hopelessly tilled, The heart-broken huebabd wlltntil line have killed. Rory-e-Isy baby, sleep on Whilst - 0u ran, Thank 0.1,11 fur ; the years ere you grow to • map ; For though your poor lather to (lay Is kola a To the fanatical fool and the Radical knave, He'll vote fer y•u, baby, that you may be The oarse and the ruin your parents base shared. And pray that your life may be saved tram the nheme, And the blroaright of freedom be more than • name. Itoeli.a-Ly baby , deep aouud while y6u may Andy Ilu r (artier will wurk,,and your mothur wil' pray, That the Radical ?harlot, with their taxes and lies, May Le ewer( as a cloud from America's ohler And a new bow of promise be set in the air. IY b the eonquering banner of liepavur end Blair Money Against Life 'ilte - poor man, the workingman, was romprllyd n rink. and trl thousands of in .tances to lone in the 1141 , , what all Alen hold dearer than everug they pas- IP ;OW ' What was 'ht. rich man pntnpelled to do? Not mg.' , Not even to give hiv money, Though lyp poor on gave him life, of littlo 00l uc rvi the tanner won iu coutpail.o the l&uer But the rich titan Iw:rafd his motley, if it pleased him, or refatred to loan ti, It he 00 Please , nod did Iran it only when ho could 'exact such term Cl Nutted Id :mi;telous views. When he could con vert his onst donator gold into two dol lars, or Inure of legal tend, r 4, he made the convert/tun, and wttb his greenbncks thus übmined, wont .to the government , ttul exchanged them for one or more of 'ls b mdv, %111,',1 interept c%,,4 roads ittlyoble scant Illloll.llly In gold ' fly thi4 F , roci , is he irrido nure of re reivellg tin It10'11;st la gold, on Iwo ilol• !Ars or more, when he Lou! lent only the "Pim&lent of one dollar in gold, and what he hail actually honglit with one ',we!, 1 10114 r --Ibus getting from twelve lo /peen per Cent iniereel, in gold, on every dollar of got I which he °envoi-toil into greeuhaelen to lend to the govern ment Ma tie, will not all Ile took otr to ciao/ the Luther C , ll O hat he Hboultl ptly no 1/11.!H „ On hj.4 1, II thug d(i. P ' ll , ol‘ demands, that for every green hpolc &Mar that he lent the government. :01 , 1 which when hu lent it was worth on ly forty to filly cents on the dollar to gold, he shall receive a gold dollar, and Grim and the J cc thin party ire pledged n. xgyl tin 1111;1 111 0114 demand Vet ther e li toothiug wanting, and that is 11 thorough, complete nod power fulcetitral organit limn to concentrate, direct and Intl"! or 0,, this ,mtnewie poptirkr feeling. Till that is done, we are daily subject to the accident,' of pn- I Mica', and military camp tigns And should the cut rent be reversed, and the Demottrato party be finally defealedohe 6110 wile V 1111.117 will 1117 in the Willa 01 or ' ganization Let this be effected thou, and done at once. Lot there be concert concentra,ion and a general direction of' the campaign. Let the combined efforts of thp party be centered ypun'the doubt- ful States , end lot the conduct and exe cution of the campaign in each,be corn mitiedttAthose who have the capacity and the power and the influence to RC complish results. Without all this, the vast but scattered power 01 the Demo cratic party and its auxiliaries, may dissipated end wasted; and the mertien- 1 ury vetraits of the Republican party prove at lust Leo much for the undicip lined courage and overwhelming MllBlll6ll of our miluin Confidence In the mas ses is a powerful weapon ip political contests , tats over-coutidelace in politi cal leaders is often the forerunner of diatittier Let us haveorganization,then at once, and let thONO in the East whose duty and interest it. is, seo to the work. —Dayton (0.) Ledger. Bow does it treat the bondholders! Below par.—Grant stock. Though the bon 14 provide for pay meat of the prineip . al iu lawfulmoney, which greenhaeka are declared to be by fortdita taw, the Jacobin Congrte.lional majority her attentpie 1, at the ingligta ion and iu the itatero•t of the bondhol derp, to perpt tam e n, moo Si roils fraud upon the people, and rob them of six hundred millions, .of dollars more than the prost nt amou4 of the public debt, l i e taking up the outstioding legal ten der bonds, and twilling nu P u of them b° ll, , Xpresely ptyable in gold, which it %nthd take viz hundred ruiltons more of legal tenders to pay than to pay the hoods as they now stand. Now strike the Latante bettreen money and hfr What in paid for the poor mane which he wee oblige 4; by too Federal oonearipticm, to aneriliee le the tear? Look around among the widoWs and or phan's of those whose lives were immola ted upon Lh o alterofabolition fanaticism, and s In ,tbeir destitule and suffering con-ditinn , ht;holil the ov Menne. of liberty nod justioe_pf the Uovertiatent towsiile those from whom tt I ire their bread pro viders. c) ( VOL. 13 BELLEFONTE, PA., FRIDAY SEPTEMBER 11, 1868. NO. 36. It pays bim twelve to fifteen per °rut. interest on tho mane/ which be oonde soended to lend, during the lime the loan remain. outstanding, 'Ad when it shall come to pay the principal' of the loan, the Jacobin party insists i bat It shall pay him two dollars in geld for every dollar be originally lent. But snore than this! The bondholder is exempted from lak at ion on his bonds, and the soldier who came out of the war alive, and the widow and children of those who were slain, in oommon with all others of the working classes to which therbelong, are , taxed to pay bends and aimost the entire burden of taxation for the payment of the bonds falls uponthem. Then it comes to this! The workingmen gave their,livea,! The workingmen pay the tares! The workingmen pay the bonds! I The bondholders pay no tales I The bondboldern pay notbing I The soldier who received his prig and bounty, had to take them in greenbacks lent by the bondholder upon the bonds which be now ol.iinis shall be paid In gold. The Jacobins would now tax this same soldier, and make him pay back what he hue received fur his services. Stoll worse! They would make him ply it in gold to be hat ded over to the bondholder for the greenbacks lie lent the govetninent to pny this soldterlor risk ing his health, le 1 mhn , his life Th a the pittance which the govern meat paid the soldier, is taken back:lron) bin, to tszen—aye, double the amount— Co pay to the bundhel ler twice the sum he ever lent. Wore the bondholder now compelled to NI felt every , dol'ar of his bonds , would it bear any comparison to the vol lie of ilie liven w bleb were taken without tendering on equivalent • Or would it tnltiri rattly approach t) the inequality and la pewee of paling the hondn in gold, an.l'exemming the bond holder!' from nix .lion' 4ml t/o Is the .1a,,,h0t phltcy —N I/11110[ra( Prospects Wt. h•ive lereto tlll , l r..1)0,14. icn nn In the politic LI min I.llofl, trorn Northwent ern l) Ito, and (tout Illtuomet, low a cud Lso incousia. Nottimug cull , ' he more, eticont att mg pop' olar current rtina elreng fur the Demo era , It party The di,e0.0,,,t of the pri pie 111111 1110 llcpublican party and will/ the etaLo of ,boars generally, to universal and great Hverywhere ltse cry g u•n up for ,s "change " The feel ing t 7 lu Bleep even for those no try fiycl a:witty deutuustr.au tune uau.sl mu pulltacal camps/gni IL to a co /I, oalm,quiet, de termtned pttrpoNe of the people ilikt the party, which for never yearn uii mere now, 11ue rttled the c tuntry, tuubt, Lo turned out.' In livejely yearn we have never known anything or ne general or are d IA it not the 'let cc runh of the 111 hint I'll torrent, but Iho calm •well of toe utteatt, gt.tlt I PI its proper 'put+, awl over who Itutug to ILI, °award itrar[lir ttw+// //17 "STATE EIGUTS AND FEDERAL UNION." KEEP IT BEFORE THE PEOPLE The Publio Debt Increased Over One Hundred and• Fifty Millions since the Close of the War. The Publio Debt "at the time the War was Drawing to a Close," Estraet from Secretary 241'Culloeh's last Annual titeport s . TIIRAPORY DRPA Wastunuron, November 30. 1867.} Inconformity with law, the Secretary of the Treasury has the honor to submi; to Congress, this his regular annual re port: In order that the tuition of ihte Seare• Lary, in the financial administration of the Department ['toy be properly admin istered, brier reference to the coodi lion ofrhe TTTILARTy AT TOR TTIIIII THY WAR WANI DRAWING TO A (MOOS, iind at . . -periods, *elm to-b6-41e sessary. Ou the 3lat day of March, 18 65, the total debt of the United States was $1,386,955,077 34 [Signed] Ilunn lllcCutLocn, Secretary of the Treasury. PUBLIC btur NOW. rEzirnet from Secreikry M Cullocit's Inst monihly report I DVI . 4RTMRNT, WASIIINGTON, Atiguxt 7, 1868 The following in a litAtement of the public debt of the United Stales on the leltiof Augural, 18G8 • t t t„t * Amount of debt less ettph In the Treasury 62,628,636,480 67 The foregoing Is a, correot statement of fhe public dOlit ea appears frnm the hooks and Treasurer's returns in the Department on the let day of August, I 868 . L'iigned I Bonn lirCtri.l OCR, Secretary of the Treastif. ==l • KY LBY FIRITAIIY M CULOM!. • 42 523 531,00 47 2 366,955,077 31 Increa.e... $156 579,404 3 Such is the effect of three years o Itadical rule in tuns of peace! - Cowardl ehout loudest when mos afraid. When they feel the sweat o fear starting front every porn, their pa naceay for relter is tile counter iritant of vociferation Anybody might know that the It ..11cal• give tip the election, front their noi.iy brwettingi that they were sure to eirry it ; .aud that they were ea peCially afraid of 110 alio Seymour as a candidate, from their reiterated declara tion of big total lack of strength. A revolutionary factiln always goes vtraight to thesti:Tei4ents of a 0111:1WIFN, too , never to the substantial facts of the general issue. They wont to cover up, o corift,e, to tulicat.l, to give the wiong ,cent, do anything In ! t ract, that hold 4 out c tante of escape for them. Nut a hit of noise was heart] I rom them until the Deanocrut to convention met, and at ter it presented un dtstinguehed co.ndt dates to the country, then their row be ia They h tve shown neither epiri our Clitlitinia9lll except through the chart eel of their (ears And when tlcey as sure one another train day to clay, am ILlmo.i frcrn hour to hour in every day that they htuall certainly win in the 0011 teat with the people, their hearts thunit theirlorth4 tit a qinternation, and they concert a richetne for arming the South ern negroe-i for help in their extremity. —Botion I oil the Prevost Marshal's Bureau and its agents were thus deserthed by a It wheal, :"..leuatur Conkling, of New York: Central and western New York have a right to feel, and do feel deeply on this subject My constituents and other con stituencies, remember wrongs ' done them too great for forgetfulness, and al most for belief, by - lhe creatures - of ibis bureau and its head. *.• * * * They turned the business df reortiltlng and drafting into one carnival of corrupt disorder, into ts paradise of coy:tombs and thieves. per. Seymour chastised these 001 combs and , thieves. Ile brought order out of. °linos. lie demanlisi and secured justice for the sone of New York in the rearuiting.and drafting business. lie prevented the monstrous injustice wlaiab was planned at Washington, and he re calved the thanks not only of s Republi can lipgislature, but of every citizen of the State , of New York for his hindrano , to that wrong as he received the thanks of the President, the Beoretary of War, and people of Pennsylvania, fat aheck ing on the threshold of that, Stile • for. midable rebel Invasion. ll!Miff ME What party raisetflour from $7 * bar rel to $l2 and $ll2 Answer: the "loji" robber party of proteoted bond holders. Answer: that the rich might get richer and the poor poorer. The price of t•loilty" is eternal taxa tion I The victory of the "Ioilty" is gold for the rich, and groans for the poor! The end of nloilty" Is grinding slavery, or the—gallows! Inflation is the bondholding lord's life blood; and fluctuation in prices, the puleatione of his heart. Each of these pulsations thrills the rich mane heart, and chills the poor man's pocket! The sick man's stomaoh ih taxed in the medicine which be takes ebold the stamp on the pill box ! This is put on as:a receipt to the hick Win that he is ...loll" and pops his taxes to the opu lent bo._d_b der! Before abolitionism and New England 'tloilty gained away in the coutitry,ibe people were at peace, were prosrerous and happy Gold, silver and' stable, convertible hank notes were the currency and a dollar meant 100 cents. Then $3 bought what it now takes $l5 to buy in money worthless and hard to get. Each farmer, no matter how much be may need clothing awl comfortt for his wire and children, pays yearly out of his crops in isles to the government, large sums to support lazy and ahiftles9 Southern niggere„.. in food, fuel and iranaporta lion. As long as the farmer is willing, the nigger ought to he con• lent —Exchange ' ' --Laboring men do you want relief (ran opprebeive taxation ' Vote (or L A Mackey fur 'Congress I Do you want one currency for the bondholder anti the working man, the Holdier and penaroner? Vote (or 1, A Mackey. Do you wink to be relieved from pay log if cente on every pound of tea, Ere canto on every pound of toffee, four mitt on every pound of auger, in order to pay the rn feral en gold on (be bonds held by the ariatocrota ? Vote for L A Maokey for Congrean, NI you &vire the proPperity oI (hitt country' Vole fer L A Mackey Do you nuth to Hee your totereoto presj er, y.or hanin,o, eecured, your country tustauled!' V o te for L A Mock Do you want high lazen, a @tending titgro Halt go, negro bureau, a bond or illiteracy, priviieged claetten, the poor loan dtsmeed and tuqueed upon, capital rewarded 1 Vote for Lord Arm strong Nlit . ckey says the soldier who risked his file, mod lust his arm, to save the oount•y, in entitled to the same pay an ae mum who stayed at home and loaned hie money. Armstrong, flay!" the bondholder 111t141 be paid in gold, the moldier and widow in a depreciated currency wortlt4o cents on the dollar; !donkey ma) it all property should bu equally taxed according to the value ' Armstrong imp the label et, the be 4i uc•e WWI, the rftdow and the 501d.i.3 MO. pay taxes, but the. bondholder must he exempt Latest Conversions ,Seu at ur R a)b, ut W tr , oousto, h* cows: out !or Bey moor and Blair. Rah for Grant'. Colonel D. 8 Curtis, of Wisconsin muntuander of ilie famous stxth regiment of that Stade in (be war, has coma out for Seytnour - and Blair. Itoh for Grant - ! Judge Wharton, Om Sato Senator of West Ytrgtuta, has oome out for Hey• toottr 6 Ansi Blair [UM tor Grant, lion W. B. Imre, elector „foc °rant iu RiatrOurib Congreillion . al dretriot..of Alabama,, deolinoo to serve, and will take the slump for Seymour and Blair! Roh fur Grant' llou. Thenias Atasterton, representa tive from Lawreuoe county, Ala., has abandoied Graut„and will support Sey mour and Blair. Rob for Grant, Radical Gov. Smith's vigorous veto of the bill depriving the people of Alabama of part ioipation In Abe choice for Proni domial a lectors will give that State to t h e D emocrac y by a very deoidtd ma jority, cud Georgia will go the mime I way. Roh for Grant s•--Council Ries r f octal. —The earpet-bag and negro ..ineur relation" in Arkansas, boa been pat down, and the civil Itutharldes lire in peaceable possession. _.)rw ittait:44; Ink Drops. Thege Pf — thei TeSdioal i;oliti eal 'lunation' which is to come if ti , Ciriit: sehithl slocied, "Let us lusts peace." --lion. John T. Guiliano, boa been nominated for Governor, by tbd .Nlsw York Deniocriiiio State Convention The people aro all singing, There's mesh:, in the air— ' The. burden of their melody' Is fioymour anti Muir I LAenoi. ItANT . P MAONANIAIiTr. —tie rolused Iv oxehangreprisoners,siof eilloil ed Union soldiers to Marro iu Andentou• villa und Libby. fie slaughtered:ls,oo6 man in the wil;lenuees, and Isla .at Pe-. ioreiburg until the Nar euiled„ for itthit of ntrn and gleams Ip the rebel army. —One of the Itsaiiiisal bids fOr votes: Fire hundred millions of dative - I.'year in taxation. • . 1852 vs. 1868. The other day we picked an an old pamphlet, on the back of which, wa found posted a bill paid by a pedlar for a certain number of meals and lodging and whisky in the ybar 1852,' Here it le : for nine meals, at 121oenta per meal $1 121 ; eight nights lodging. 8i cents and three drinks of whisky, 9 cents That was In good old Democratic days of hard currently. It would be a curiosity to see this same pedlar, if be is in the bu siness now, foot up his hill at the pres time, for the same claim. of aeoonimoda thins. It. would run about. tans. - woe nine mekle, at ilfay 'leapt a meal, $4 50; for eight nights lodging, $4 00, and for three jiggers of whisky, 80 cents. This in the Radical day. of paper currency A difference of $6 28 more in the cost under Radical rule than under Demo- price. that ruled in lb. year 1862 and those that,now rule in this year of 18(38 How do you like the picture reader? Ain't you edified wh'en contemplating ii? And. don't'you *feel like throwing up your hat for Grant and Grab Tux? Not muohly we trove Danville Intelligence'. TELLINO 111 TRUTII —There aro a few Republican newspapers in this State_ which cause their party much uneasiness by their determtnation to tell the troth occasionally. One of the most influeu nal of these journals is ibti Harrisburg State Guard which diecources as follows : "There are men firing in thin city, profile et Mg to be Republicans, who mere compelled en open duvltghl to carry bark to the Trete... ry-rhe money whieJi they , makturfrlfy and - tift• hummed/ drew there) run, ned who were over sohelmatgly mount led in ,tiefemr ~`the he,9ts• (afore of •nmeketog to the Clerk'. drek of the llonee of Rept esetatottre•, there to after the fignree In on offiricti document The state Guard ought to know all about the matter, and no doubt it ,tells the truth. , But it in rather hard on the Republican party to yenOlate each ugly facts The people should put a atop to such raecaltly, by electing none but honest Democrats to the Legislature this year URN. lILIC 'Ol LtGISLATOR• -ll] • the Alabama Illaeln-and Tan Legislature are the following (Melee Radical epecimene One luau who has been confined in jail for bigamy, another who is, charged by his hired negroes with haring de• (minded them of Wages, epithet. alio is under indictment fur- stealing a mule, another who bus just openly been char ged wi h nreoo, another who is pronoun ceJ by his wife a lunatic, another who 11 charged openly with defrauding the Ooverhment, and still ■notherwbo has been in the penitentiary. Conimeni makes itself,—Erellanye -10pany portionr of the country mannedeoldiere, and 010 w idova of men killed rn the flatl of battle, hold the po,t offices, and Owe upon the poor 411101- unman To thew the corruption corn• mit tee of :he It.itilenl party have addres• fled CII - Clll2ll demanding money for tluc ti Q ueertug purpo+ce, threaten/lig awl., in elk..e ot ritfo•al, with removal rhould General GrAnt he eletted Thia i, Ited• I L A love for (Ito soldlerit. They would sled vo uvery ti,ddier'n widow in the InIA to keep ILetr plunder soiled hands in the ••11e.h pots of Egypt" for another l'teeideutinl tt rtu N1..610) ISt. IDATE3 Olt e.iNGIt We clip the following from time tele igroplite column of lbw: "truly 101 l sheet the 114rriturg State Guard: "The ueliro Bradley is ow an an ludo peut}eut candidate tar Cungrebe tram the First pleoreii J district against Cliii the regwar U 01101403 and the preseui repreeeptative Co. Cutigro.s. It is be• tiered that Bradley will be elected if be ruus Turner, uegra, 13 spoken of fur Congrese. in the (outfit.' E::: Expenses of s dead Congressmail: It•is generally - conceded that a live member of Congress is an expensive 'or oament to tho nation, but a dead one is equally so. In looking over, ••Ventila torte airing of that sink of iniquity", this Rump Cbogress, we find that-the total debt incured for the funeral'expen see of one member reached the enormous tom of $2,970 15. Let us ?amine aome of the Dims. For 18 white silk sashes for officers of the !louse and Wen ate $254 00. For 25i dos. kid gloves $762 00. Think of that tax-payers, you who foot the bill, $782 00 for kids for Congressmen to flourish In at a funeral. And then again $3OO 00 for 200 bleak crape scarfs, and further on we find for hack hire, escort, &o , $782,65. , Is this not sconstrys wonder our neighbor desired to diteredit "Ventilator" In mi mics. We wonder not that any radical should desire to throw the veil of seems, over such swindling tranesetions. ThA Rump Congress not only steal off the living, but maim the burying of this dead a matter of speculation.—Dansare fateifigescer. An'Eloquent Speech. Lewis, a big buck nigger from Perry. let oir the following able speeds on tits Electoral College bill: "I spook bakllesa and featly on Alta rootlet, de gemmen from Mourne bell 'poke • good speech on this subject—big he says some things which I do no! eon cord. I reference • large people of dp . in , and I belie., diet my stitueoey-1 die masses—wants or to vote for deem am ootopeiatit fur to Tote—our land is in bad condition, and de haiwis is needed** de fields, and, sir, de warm veins of blood now cussing tbTough point' of our bodies will be spilt on de ground if di paople is allowed to tote, cause dare will be tights between de extending part lea— Jarefore, I am in favor of us voting for Ginertil Grant in de,Legislatur.---/fo4- gowery Advertiser. The Live Man The live man Iv likes little pig, he is weaned young and begin" to root early_ Ile is the pepper ease of creation—Lbw allspiee of the world. Otis live man in, s •Ilisge is like • case of itch in a clistrikt school-he seta everybody tew skratchen at. anat. The live man tz az full of busznese a• the koutlyieepr of a street kar—be is of ten like tthor net, very bizzy, but about what, the Lord only knows Ile lights up like a kolton faktory e and hadn't got any more time thus • stool boy hex Saturday afternoons. Ile iz like a decoy duck, always aborw water, and lives at least eighteen mouthet each year. Ile is like a runaway hose, be geta the whole of the road. • Ile trout when 60 walk*, and lies down at night only because everybody else The Ike man iz not illwript a deep thinker. he jumps at noncturfons jirtt a frog duz, and don t always landat lLtt spot he to lookin at. 1I iz the American pet, a portent mystery taw I . 9renera ; but hat d.onta more [with elitiromil] law work on the greatness of this country than enny oth er moll is it. •lle don't alwuo die rdeb, but alarm. (ilea tizzy, and meet death a r ood (I eel ay an order duz, without any fuse -- ✓u4h h Mak Tua D--aer FonLti —Recently is •lek.thurg, there was a largo De . nooralle precenston in which were b , rue seeend Ilutted Staten flags, which at tho requM of several salizens, , had been loaned then by; the post quartermaster., The wade or y,t. , 1,1 being forge and imprrselre alarming the cirri baggf.r., several theta ciiitd ou General tla.leui, end euie plair,,,i Ihnt his officer hay furnished fl lg.l to a procession which woo “impe 4iug recousti uct ion." " said the General, "you are the il—deei fools I ever sew. I fought these people for four )rors to make them trirry the flag, and now )nu are mad bec.iuse they wild, to 'march under it " LOOK OUT ton Till --From now 011 till 'after the election looklout for Blank Republican lies, for if there is auythiai on earth that a Pullenl eon do to per fection, next to stealing, it iv lying At a general thing they have control of the islevaph ham auLl they make AL &lanai, neee jest before the election to flood the country with Iles. Especially.will it be so this fall, when they feel that their oausq is Bo desperate. All sorts of mastipulations, cheating fraud and falsehood will be resorted to fab the purpose of bolstering their rotten clause. The only mile way is L 9 bailer* nothing that comes from Radical sours► Demeertats, friends of the white mate' government, be on your guard. —la two months the national AAA has been increased thirfecn anillwge of dollata At ails tate we shill oire at tbs sod of thir :l iiStiotairy one Auria'rei hour more elfso we do sow. Ie .it ripe time for the people to pueb from pewit+ the meu who are thee robbing theta? BUbacribe and pay for tbe WATenus 3
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers