The people's journal. (Coudersport, Pa.) 1850-1857, April 07, 1854, Image 2

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    THE PEOPLE'S JOURNAL, Paige ifimipkti-them_ thnnk-Ttalioph.
Will DM dentate to 44:n. the pri ce d e it.
;The nOtte . li t .loar to rid thee
_
_ iv " °I t oditift-or-t an emaire•
Tae Sandi his Kirin die,
s".:.;rm 4d will reap,lhe itiocusecioFoso
- = &rug ilave - littuncti wVI - End a warm
welcome North—probably a hospitable
reception from haul and steel: All the
Slaves hereilter"caught in 'the North,
will not pay the cost of blood-hounds.
powder and ball. We speak for one,
I,.when we say that we never shall by
o,pulsion or other ro
wise. become a nig
catcher, nor shall we refuse the black a
crust or a place to lay his head, though
the hunters s:aod at the door. Our own
home and liberty is sweet to us; and God
knows we never will raise a hand to rob
one who wears the human form of the
same u self evident" right,.
JNO. S. MANN,
EDWIN HASKELL, EDIT°4
FIDELITY TO TILE PEOPLE.
c(TDELSI OLT. FRIDAY, APRIL 7, 1854
MP' Governor Seymour has setoed
the Prohibitory Liquor Law lately passed
by the-Legiz.lature of New York. Thias
is sham democracy_ sealing i6t , owls
doom.
. I The winter Tenn of the Couder
sport Academy elated on Tuesday last.
The students have made 6ne progress
duting the Term, thus attesting the
faithfulness of the tescr. The next
Term will commence on Wednesday,
the 19th day of April inst. We trust,
the friends of eductrion will keep this
suhjectin . mind. Give the school under
Mr,. Bloomingdale a fair trial and we
wjtl„guaxaruee its succe s s.
The Gathering SlOrm.
There are a class of men in all ages
and in every community who are con-
Mandy crying " Peace, Peace, when
there is no peace." 'These men forget
that God has withheld this inestimable
blessing iromlhe wicked, which will ac
count perhaps, for the stupid blunders
of Douglas and his masters, the Slave
holders. These men.bought up. Duugh
fcces enough to force the odious fugitive
slave bill through Congress, and then
got ahie divines, and distinguished men
to cry peace so lustily, that they deceived
themselves with the idea that the peo
ple had submitted to the outrage. And
they very naturally thought if the per) ;
ple of the North would submit to the
fugitive Slave bill, they would submit
to any
_thing. Hence the monstrous
proposition to repeal the Mis.souri Cour
promise, and overrun all the remaining
Territory of the United States. The
pimple will permit no such outrage to be
cansuounated. A feeling will soon be
moused that will sweep away all Corn
praises. The old and worn-out cry of
Abolition, and the cackling of old fo
gies about the dangers of the union,
will not allay the storm.. The South
have trampled on all right, disregared
honor, and set the feelings of this Nation
at defiance- And now see the storm
that is portending. The Milwaukee res
cue is familiar to all our readers. Anoth.
er case has just occurred at Aubtirn,N.Y•
The follerming from the Cayuga Chief,
a paper which has heretofore said. very
little on the Slavery question, will show
the determination of the masses on this
question :
For some days past, the people of this
section hare been ezcited by the news
that a Southern slaveholder teas in town
and that a convict in Prison claimed as
O slave of his, would be arrested on his
release from that institution. The con
vict's eeri ' ceexpired en Sunday. There
many r afloat t but we believe
it was generall? ! understood that papers
for his arrest had been •macte out and
placed in the hands of the Thi:ed States
officers. Oue of that stamp Lad sounded
Sheriff Knapp upon the prospect of se.
curing, the Jail as a dart pen.
Strong delegations frrm Syracuse and
other sections came into town on Satur
day night, armed, and determined in
purpose. The Negroes of the city were
also thoroughly armed and prepared to
rescue the slave, if arrested at any cost.
The bell would have been rung, and
some of lighter skins would probably
have followed the example of Douglas
and the South, and trampled all Com
promises iu the dust. In the mean time,
the Prison was closely watched nights.
On'Sunday morning the negro was re
eased from prison about S o'clock, when
two'negroes, locking arms on either side,
_marched him boldly off to the East part
°Vibe city. A thousand people were
Rending about, very many of that num
ber armed with dubs and pistols.
The u hounds" . had not the courage
to open the ball by arresting their man.•
Our city has been saved the exhibition
of a fearful tradegy and the effusion of
human blood avoided. The first negro
is yet to be hunted down a'id taken from
Auburn. Our citizens are yet to be
seen. in the damnable character of blood
hounds, tracking human flesh at the
bidding of the South. It is humiliatiug
,enough to know that there is even a TV
mor that there is one man who wears
the Sleth-hound collar and awaits but a
chance to appear in the infamous capa
city of •an official negro catcher.
It is miles to deny that blood would
not have been shed, had the negro been
attested. He would never have been.
taken from the city alive. With a day's
warning, the United States Government
has=not tools or power suflcient in this
section /o make our citizens negro catch
erion to muzzle them while imported
/wands do the work. No apology is due
fur mach a state of feeling. The Slate
La* was sufficient repugnant to the
freemen of the north—.too far outraging
the laws of God and _ humanity. Since
the enactment of that infamousineasure,
ihrSouth. madly bent on exasperating
and irouslng the whole North, has her
self scorned Compromises, and, in the
The Tender Mercies of Slavery.
Those ,of our readers who remember
the kidozpping of Rachel Parker, a free
citizen,of Pennsylvania, and how much
it cow the hard working people of Ches
ter county to restore this poor girl to her
freedom—the life of one man, and a
year's hard labor on the part of others,
besides large sums of money, together
with tvoubte of mind and vexation of
"spirit, will not be surprised at any act of
meanness, on the part of those who
think it honorable to lire in idleness and
lutury on the forced labor of others.
Then the startling and terrible sufferings
of Solomon Northrop, a free citizen of
New York, who was enticed into slavery
and held twelve long years in the
Southern prison house. This subject is
brought fresh to our mind at this time,
by the heroic conduct, and terrible suf
ferings of Edward Davis, a colored man
formerly of Philadelphia who was en
ticed into slavery, and could only get
back by clinging to the sides of a vessel
for three dayi and nights, and when
discovered, the captain of the vessel re
fused to take him to Philadelphia, but
put him irt'the i t New Castle jail, to be
returned into cslavery. Such are the
workings of an institution, which the
patent democrats desire to perpetuate
and defent—for which the Missouri
Compromise is to be repealed,• and the
plighted faith of this Nation is to be
violated.
The following from the Philadelphia
Duily Register, gives the present con
dition of Edward Davis: •
The facts in regard to the freedom of
the colored man, Edward Davis. who
undertook to make his wa a free
State in such a perilous positiorg, on the
steamer,' Keystone State, are ffilly es- 1
tatilished. He is a free man, and seve
ral
witnesses have gone to Newcastle to
testily to his freedom; among them Mrs.
Diamynd, who resides on Sixth street;
and with whom the prisoner's sister has
lived for several years. Senator Wales
is employed as counsel ,in :he case, and
a habeas corpus was probably taken 1
out yesterday. If the laws of Delaware
allow the freedom of a man to be proved
under such circumstances, be is, prof). I
ably, at liberty, or will be during to day.
In regard to his finding his way to
Savanna. we have obtained the following
facts: About two years ago, be was
employed by two white men, who took
him to Baltimore to work. Alter re
maining there for a time, they took him
to Savanna. They advised him to pass
as a slave, as free colored people were
liable to be imprisoned for being black
in that part of the republic. lie says
that the men who took him there made
no attempt to sell him that he was aware
of; but he found himself entrapped,
with no very flittering prospects of ever
seeing the City of Brotherly Lore again.
He found no difficulty in getting there,
but, like the road to perdition, which is
of easy descent. he found that once there
the portals of slavery were closed against
his return. The ponderous jaws of
slavery had closed upon him
:and he
was likely to be swallowed up by it.
He desired to return, but could get nu
free pass to come North, although a free
citizen of the State of Pennsylvania. In
this emergency be resorted to the da
, ring and heroic expedient of riding un
der the guards of the steamer, to a land
of freedom, or to perish in the attempt,
When found, 'he told his story to the
• captain, who, fearing he might be a
al ye, although he gave numerons ref
er nces in: this city, and - fearing also,
tha the same relentless jaws of Southern
law, might close on himself, took the
responsibility of placing the Pennsyl
vanian in . New Castle Jail to await his
return to Savanna, when he would'ac•
cording to Georgia law, be placed in
prison, and while there be required to
prove himself free. Happily, he is now
further North, where the proof is easily
obtained.
• The Trenton Slate Gazelle has the
following additional pullet:liars in rela
tion to this interesting case:
Oti Thursday, 16th inst., when tbe
Keystone_ State was about twenty-foor
hours, out from Savanna on her way , to
Philadelphia, - - one of the officers, who
was on the afterviard 'engaged in
sounding, heard'eries of diStress issuing
from the wheel-house. Ho informed
the captain of. the fact, and.- after 'the
captain had examined into the matter,
the ship was immediately stopped. A
colored man Was diicoiered-4ying oh
tbstber which supports theouter esti
ophe • - shaft.4: One of the tutilou .
seat us*Nevilim. A ropls'ursips
lsit anlind the body of tbet /. auffering
ncgro fib° LS stowed himself away in
a tlaugerons pieit_kin for the "porfrose of
secunng a free passage to a free State,
and he was drawn in-board perfectly
exhausted and helpless. He was speech
less and hiis" hands ivere bleached almost
white on account of his frequent immer
aim! in - tbe Aftethe .bold sufficient
ly recovered to tell a connected stag,
he statedihat- he a free man, a na
tive of Philadelphia. - ,
Possibly the poor fellow knew noth
ing abo_ut the sea. and supposed that - the
berth he had selected would be as high
and dry bn the ocean as" at Savanna.
lien, he soon realized his mistake, mot'
shortly the res4el began to roll her.
guards under. and, -of course,
_he was
plunged in the water at every roll.
• When extricated, he was as we have"
said, helpl es s—the arm by which he
held himself in his perilous situation
was almost unfteshed from the elbow to
the wrist—and the• few crusts of bread,
with which he bid hoped to sustain
life until he reached Philadelphia, were
almost dissolved by the nauseous water
of the sea. He endured much and
struggled hard to reach free soil.
The Fully of Despots.
That the Slaveholder of the -South
is a despot, no sane man will deny.—
That be is in'sympathy with the des
pots of the old world, is easily proved.
One or twofacts will suffice fur this
article. When Louis Kossuth visited
the United States, the free States gave
bin) a generous reception, worthy his
sufferings and sacrifices in the cause of
European republicanism ; but the Slave
States treated him with the same cold
neglect as any other enemies of freedom
would.
Again. When the Pope's Nuncio,
who was obnoxious to alt ; humane men
far the cruelties he had been instrumen
tal in inflicting on the Patriots of 1848,
visited the united States some months
ago. he was treated in a few places as
be deserved;—with scorn and contempt ;
and the Slave Power in the United
States Senate at once took up his case,
rebuked the honest Germans for their
republican sympathies, and bespattered
the Despotic Nuncio with fulsome_lau
dations.
We might enumerate many other facts,
but these two show very clearly that
there is unity between the Slaveholders
Of the South, and the Despots of the
East.
The following extract from the Cleve
land Leader discusses this subject with
clearness and ferce, and clinches the ar
gument with' facts, which no sophomore
nourishes can sneer away :
But we cannot, and no sane man Can,
overlook the fact, that the elements of
caste or of Despotism are oz, the world
over : that they have been one in the
past, are one in the present,. and will be
one through all coining time. Vain is
it to trust in them in any - stage Of action.
It is madness to rely upon them in any
place, or under pledge. Whenever or
wherever the despotic element can strike
an effective blow, it will do so. and' no
fealty, no loyalty, no principle of honor,
no truce or treaty, can bend or bind it, if
the hour or the occasion promises to
strengthen it.
-Devil with devil damned.
Firm concord holds.
The Slave Perpetualist of the South is
ready thus to league with the Czar of.
Russia, and whatever the form of Union
or of Action, both will, be found, in the
hour of trial, to be together ; to be work
ing for the same end ; to be 'actuated by
the same spirit, however modified by
circumstances, places, or institutions ;
and ready to defy or break law- or Con
stitution, if, through such violence, they
may crush the people, and elevate caste,
or a special order.
Glance at the papers of the South, at
this moment, and see who upholds Rus
sia. The. Richmond Enquirer, and
Charleston Mercury, with an affiliated
press in all Slavedom, claim the Czar to
be a man of justice : the rightful ally of
the American People. They defend his
serfdom as the wisest and best institution
of the world. They claim his rule, in
this regard, to be a model rule. And in
the United States Senate, without special
call, or any pertinence to the subject
under discussion, Senator Minya, of
South - Cirolina, dared, in discussing
Senator BADGER'S amendment to the Ne
braska bill, not only to avow these views,
btit to declare that Russia was our true
democratlc ally.
Slava°!ding Demscracy.
The folly of expecting slaveholdera to
be democrats will not much longer find a
lodgment in any Sensible mind. What
do they care for the laboring man, black,
or white ?
There are only about 300,000 slave
holders all told, and yet they constantly,
assume that'aiy are the South ; and so
demoralising and debasing this• insti
tiition;that the
number,
some
five millions in cringe aad fawn,
and submit to the 30b,000 petty tyrants,
suffer them to hold all important offices,
41 1 4 Strabapeiltn-lawseforAlte ;benefil . of . 'over A:J*oe: man who is_ sot
thefato to the Puri ttail num ;40 d eepal4s interested , di m e w a t i ona matte l it t e p : 1 1 , r64 4
°Ill :Z s- a sibeneipal (
elfedthedelnalarhokrgirdat:t 'holder *:
'41.-tita righlorii_poor milt...ink s honie, r ,decitispn of which in the wrotig world
e elig . ha 4 i i e n lin tb e e nee Se= he andttie
and the): repudiating all true iemocratic 'elan& free latint from the greatterri
' th e tones of : the West. But the patent
f Principle, take the following f rom e l democres, instead of proposing tok
Ri c hnl P 4 4.ingnirersns.tullte l'tbe general Sense of the people u p
onpn
of the Hcanestead bill. It says : ; this matter of vital importance, wish to
See utwerre trdispositiort =ibis:putt:refer it toe few office-holders, trappers,
of the Whig pren of theAtatei . tnrepre- i and squatter ' s
If they hate faith in ate
.. . ._ _., ....._
I sent the.Hontesteadiiilras 'a -- IWmcuatic . peOple, liiiliernprepctse to refFito th e
measnie. How - little fonfidation there ballot-bor the '
great question of Slavery
I is for this l
assumption will •appear_ from predominance in this republic. Such.
lan analysis of the vole,..both on the prop- I a, vote, we. believe. would
_settle the ••pe
ctsition ta lay the.bill on the table and on ' culiar institution" forever: Nine men
its passage: . i out, of ten Would vote ag ainstslavery,
. Vote to lay on the tabk.--Hreast— I and - its friends could then emigrate to
Democrats 46, Whigs 15, Independent i Russia or some other part of the world
1 - 4 0cid 62- ' . ' . I where despotism is more in.honor. it
Nays--Democrats 77, W,higs 43ii is high time now, that the world should
Free Soil 4—total 124. , 1 I know whether the United States is to
- Vote on the Passage of Me Bill-- be - the ally Of tyrants or of freemen—
Yeas—Democrats 70, Whigs 37—total i whetherit is to help freemen in Europe.
107. - I
! or fasten firmer the chains of slaves in
• !
Nays--Democrats 52, Whigs 18, Free ! Cul*. In the name of Democracy. we
Soil 2, Independent I—total 72.-), ask for a decision of the question by the
It is thin shown that the prdportion of . *hole people.—Phil. Daily Register.
Whig votes for the bill is greater than i Will
the proportion of 'Democratic totes. 1 ean our amiable neightsgi of the
, SrK N eves please to hand the above
We bare but little hope of the defeat . 1 ! •
of the bill. The conservatism of the i over to his learned friend of the elongated
Senate will hardly reject so plausible an I --Watch chain ;and ask him to give his
appeal to popular passion. King "eau- 1 views thereon. Not judicially, but pro
em; is no longerknonatch ; the snore soft, • r ess i vnally.
subtle, and persuasive Prince of Demo-
gognism now reigns supreme in the
province,of' politics. •
It is birely possible that the measure
may be arrested by Executiveveto.
FIRST FRUITS op NEBRABRA.—The
Ohio Star, Free Democratic, and Home ,
Companion and Whig, ptsblisbed at ;
Ravenral,"Ohio, have been united.
We like this movement. Why should
it not be adopted everywhere, in the
union of papers, and in union' of action
of all whr.; oppose the repeal of the Mis
;
souri Compromise and the extension of
slavery';in announcing the union of
the papirs at Ravenna, the
; Editor of
•
the Star - very truly says :
Iti the progress of political events,
particularly: those which partake, more
especially of a reformatory character, it
often becomes necessary to enter into
new combinations, in .order to sustain
and advance fundamental. principles.
While principles never change, the in•
strumentilities for advancing them may.
The cuntnt of. events has finally brought
his to the threshold of a more• general
co-operation, in resisting the aggressions
of the 'Slave power.- Freedom and
Slavery are, and must forever be, antag
onisms. The interests of Free and Stave
labor must forever conflict. In the
great struggle between these antagonist
forces, the slave power is at present tri
umphant, and by its bold defiance of
plighted faith, by its daring assumptions
and encroachments, it has filled the
country with sad forebodings.
• • • •
Trifles should no longer separate very
(fiends. - -The slave power must be met
and overthrown. Its insufferable arro
gance, its intolerable aggressions are no
longer endurable: Forbearance is no
longer a virtue. It is positively sapping
the flee institutions of the country, de•
grading labor, seizing upon free terri
tory, and -thus forever blighting the
hopes and prospects of the free, landless
laborers of the North.
Hence, all who are opposed to the
encroachaients of this hateful despotism
should unite and overthrow it. For this
reason, we ask the Whigs to - pave the
way for'union in this State, by advising
Judge Pollock to decline the nomina
tion, so that an Independent candidate
who would unite the whole opposition
to ibis Douglas fraud might have a clear
field and open fight.
What are the People?
• "The qurstion is, Shall the people of Ne
braska and Kansas decide for themselves the
character-of the institutions under which they
arc to live, or shall it be done by erntgressi
—[ cincinnati Enquirer,
The above is the try put into the
mouth of such democratic editors north
of Mason and Dixon's line as are willing
to repeat the phrases of Messrs. Weller
ana Douglas. The sacred name •of re
publican right is invoked to sanction
the degradation of the laboring classes.
Popular freedom is used as a cloak fur
slavery. What a pitiful trick it is, to
pretend fairness, when the advocates of
the bill know full well that all social and
politiesl power in Nebraska' has been
carefully placed in the bands of the
slaveholding faction ! The people would
- not decide the question ; but the office'.
holders and Southern ngents would.
And who do the Democrats mean by
the "people ?" • The bill disfranchises
the Indians ; it excludes _black persons
from the polls; and it declares that the
immigrating Irishman (or German shall
not vote. All these classes seem to be
special objects orproscription for the
Democratic leaders. Mr. Douglas and
his - followers , place Indians, Negroes,
Germans, Irishmen, &c., all in the same
category. These are not part of the
people"" as he understands the word.
By." people"' he means only such per
sons.as, receive the. permission of slave
holding •functionaries. to settle in Ne- :
brash. If it be, ,decided that ;the
peolile" should Settle the question Whetl
et Nebraska shall fie inhabited by slaves'
or 'free men, let it be referred to the
grand tribunal of the nation at the polls:
Our banner of stars and stripes does not
NEBRASZA.—The Galena. Jeffersonian
thus forcibly - remarks:
God made Nebraska a free territory.
He is not th 6 advocate of American
Slavery. The action of Deity was rec
ognized and afEnned by the American
Congress of 1820; and tb joint decrees
of the Cretitor and Uncle Sam are in
force to this day. Senator Douglas is
not satizfied with this happy conbition
of affairs, but would defy Heaven and
outrage man to pollute that virgin soit
with the unmitigated curse of human
bondage.:*
_l.j s$
WIN Abbott Township, Potter County
Pa.; on Friday, March 24,1854, By Da-
YID CoNwAY Esq., Mr. OLEF OLSEN
to MISS KAREN HELGESEATTER,
both of Stewardson Township.
Also; at :the same time and place, Mr
ANDRES BRONKEN to Miss DORA
VIA HELGESDATTER, both of New
NOrWay. • .• . •
=UM PROOLADLITION.
WHEREAS, the Hon. Robert G.
White, President Judge, and the
Htm. 0. A. Lewis and Joseph Mann,
Esqs., Associate Judges of the Courts of
Oyer and Terminer and General Jail
Delivery, Quarter Sessions of the Peace,
Otphans' Court and Court of Common
Pleas• for the County of Potter, have is
sued their, precept, bearing date the 25th
day of Feh., in the , year of our Lord one
thousand eight hundred and fifty-four,
and to me; directed, for holding a Court
of Oyer and Terminer and General Jail
Delivery, ; Quarter Seasions of the 'Peace,
Orphans' Court, and Court of Common
Pleas. in the Borough of CouderspOrt, on
11.fonday,1 the' 25th day of May next ,
and to continue One Week.
Notice; is therefore hereby given to
the Corotiers, Justices of the Peace, and
Constables within said County, that they
be then and there in their proper per,
sons, at 10 o'clock A. Ml. of said day
with ttieit rolls, records, inquisitions, ez
amiaatioris, and other remembrances, to
do those: things • which to their offices
appertain' to be done. And 'those who
irs bound-by their recognizances to pros-.
ecute against the prisoners that are or
shall be in the Jail of the said County of
Potter, are to be then and there to pros
ec.ute.against them as will be just.
Dated at Coudersport, April sth, and
the 78th :year cf the Independence of
the United States of America.
P. A. STEBBINS, Sh'ff.
List, of Letters
Remaining in the Post-office at Cou
dersport, 'March 31, 185.1.
A Austin •Miry Ardny
C Blakeslee M Barber
P Brown. W P. Coo!
Mary Jane Clark Charles Cool
James Cagb-r Norwegian
J. A.Dwight W J Davis
H S Daiman 2 Judson Dery
T L Diner 2 E Diner
J C Chan:tins 2 D D Grovt
C Evelio 2 Margaret Earl
Julia S. Earl -- John Ervey or son
HarrisorrEdgecomb Mary French
Abram Franch A R Felt
D Harris Cordelia Hydorn 4
F M Hills Louisa Hamilton
C Haskens George Hamilton
W Hyett S Hunt
A Howe ! J.W Harding "
N Harvey ' Ann Johnson
J Love J Johnson
L Larsen ", A S Sansban
H Lent - G Sekman
A G Lewis 2 W Lyon
L W Lyman A S Latiton
C McNess W \V McDougall
J McConnell .S Neffe
De Witt 'Nicholson Henry Peet
Tobn Peet R V Post
S Reynolds "R. Reed
Julia,A.Ross • C Stearns
Mary G Smith Elizabeth 4mith
Sam'l Shelly Hannah Shelly,
Nelson Smith ' • ' B Scofield
T A McClelland J' Yam
0 C.:Warner • Hon Cyrus .Walker .
C,D, ROgers J, Weimer
Persons canine , for any . of the above .
latter's, will say tt ef are advertised:
\ J. M. JUDD, P. M.
,The-Peope's Cash Store,
• SAT COILTARSPORT.
4 . I
!Winething Se sr; and Soinetbing
Nranted,
IMHE subscriber has jolt received from
4 thAlßity of tfew-York, land opened as
I Cstore ToreeTi occupied, by Hoskin k
Smith, on the Borth side of the Court Home.
square, a odocied assortment cf Amu Goods,
comprising Day Goons, G aciceat cs, Caocx
sax. and Haiuwast. I
The mono of business; 24000.i5,
" the sure shilling and the !fire& six
The above Goods will thensfe“re be sal&
exclasixely for either (4sh l or ready-pay
band and' upon suits "ternis that therpor.
chaser cannot be otherwise than satisfied
that he bus made sr good birgaia—reeeived
.t quid pro quo"--:something for serriething
in value for his money. An exchange will
gladly be made with the I Farmer, for his
Produce: Butter. Cheese, I eggs, Grain is
any quantity. and with it, :ase more Cash
the better. The subscriber will st all dims
take pleasure in exhibiting his Goods lo.the
Customer, that quality andl prices may be
examined. L. F. MAYNARD.
Coudersport, July, 15. 1: 3. 69tf
OH ECK ED GIN Gil AIMS' in variety, sod
kiptices to suit. • ,
Dissoluti• • •
The copartnership- here are existing be
tween Ambrose Corey and P erre A. Stebbins
is this day Unsolved by inattial consent. Alb
persons indebted to the late firm of Corey &
Stebbins are requested toadl and settle their
notes anti accounts without C.elay.
- • P. A. STEBBINS •-•
A.MBIOSE COREY.
N. B.—A. Cores will cont ,C atie to tell good,
at the old , stand. - on: the sdi-pay system.
He is maw receiving a full stock of goods
from New-York, is hick, Leiedgetlairuseit:in
,sell as low as th e ' , Avert, fur f.asli or produce.
Ulysses, Nov. 1: 18a3..` tr . A. COREY.- i
A HONG many other Arlie !. es for the
ladies, of fancy-and rie worth, aril, be
fot.t.d. at the,' Cash Store; fine
Worked Collars; cf dirre4nt designs a
patterns. - • •
DLEACHED Sheenng4 and Shining,,
ilillrown do., . Candle Wick, Sommer
Clod" for children's wear Bed Ticking,
Towelling, Table Linr.in. Brown, White
.:2 ~ a superior article of Damask, all pore
IC l i c —Table Spreads. An xamication will
recommend them better thin anythiag daft,
JT "The People's Cash Store" may be'
foond a selected lot of Prints. of Eng.
lish, French, asd American Goods,. quality
and price; agreeing admirably. : Please call
and see us.
Teas. r
BLACK and Green Teas, of excellent
flavor, and at most reasonable prices.—
sugars, White and Brown do: ' Rice, Gib"
ger, Spice, Pepper, Nutmeg!, Cassia, Rai
sing, Tobacco, in all its vXnety, to please
those, who love the is.d, and a sopt-tior
article of Coffee that cannot fail to pleas e
all the Dutch and some of ithe Yankees, at
the PEOPLIe: Casa SToar.
GROCKERY and Glass Ware, in variety,
tliat will please the ey on the first ha.
sf ettion.
' The Clothing D.partment
AT " THE PEOPLE'S C I H STORE."
REAU'S' Made llothing kept constantly
on hand by the subsciiber, made - op
and manufactured by the:best workmen,
from cloths selected for dur ability i and pal.
ity; the object being riot to supply the cus
tomer IN a Aussbug college which he niay
be induced to purchase, because it is so eery
cheap, bet which in the end is very -dear;
bat to give him in the first linatance an attic
ele which will du him honest and good
rice for a rersonable pnee. All those deis t rous of being so accomodated• at
.• The People's Cash Store:"
L. F. MAYNARD.
TTARDWARK—Sythes and Snaths, of
ff ;mums lon , -tried end (Gorki to br
go.,d,' Rifles , and Rik-Stones, Saw-Mill
Files, D3of Handles, Latches, Mineral
Kn'obs, (whit and brown.) Moriiee-Loeks,
Wrought Butts for Doors, of all sizes, Cut
lery, Knives of good quality for the table,
and for the pocket, at the
PEOPLE'S CASH STORE
APURE article of Soda, Cream' of
Turtai, and Ssleratus will always be
TYLEit 8
Bound at
TYON'S KATHAIRON and other
xcelleat preparations fur cleanns and
ukutifying the ILAIR, for sale at TYLEK`d.
I',ERSONS about to bond or repair. aillfind
a complete Atock of Window. Sash. Glass, Putty;
PaintsasjOils, for sale at fair prices by
T. IS. TYLER.
Magazines for March.
HHARPER, Godey, and Grahams.
i b a y st ' receLved and for sale at 25 cents per
No.
TYLER.
Drafting Instruments,
Water Colors. Drawing Paper, Pencils. awl
Brusbes, jail received at TYLER'S-
Babbitt's Yeast and Soap Pow-,
derg.=--These superior articles are war
ranted to save titno and money, and promote
peace and harmony in families.
For sale at
COLLIER'S Shakspeare ;
Poole's Indei to Periodical Literature;
Edmunds' Spiritualism; -
Spectator—a new and handsome edition;
fiat Corn—Life Scenes in New-York ; and
some books for the vonng people. at the
Jan. 13. 1854. JOURNAL BOOK-STORE.
1T •
iENTINES for ladies only,
pie JOURNAL STORE.
CANDLES.—Speym, Solar. Sperm,
IRefined Crystalline, and Tallow, Candles,
by the Pound or Box ; for sale very Low at the
DRUG & BOOK SPORE,
HECKER'S Farina abd Pulverized
Corn Starch for sale at TILERS..
•e can be found-at thi
• • shop of Jo. M. Bassett, formerly
owned by himself, whete he will 'Mend to
all calls in his line' with prortiptnets end'
fidelity. • 6-41 3ato ,
SIIOT and Lead at lower figures
than down town, at SPENC ER'S.
TYLER'S..