Bradford reporter. (Towanda, Pa.) 1844-1884, October 02, 1844, Image 2

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    REPORTER :
Wednesday, 0et01er4,:044.
DEMOCRATIC NOMINATION S .
For Pesidept I'Bl4_
JAAIES K. 'FOLKS
• Or. TEZ4IVEBSkE.
No-Prefadent,:-
GEORGE M. DALLAS,
Kr
OF PENNSYLVANIA.
Etutors:for • Praidenvand lice . lqsident
WvLisoi
AsA Thitocx, • -
13., George Schnabel..
14: Nadel B.Eldred.
15. M. N. Irvine.
16, Jamei Woodburn.
17. AughldontgUmery
18. Isaac Ankney.
19. JOhn Matthews:'
20. William Patterson:
21. Andrew Burke.
22. John M'Gill.
23. Cbristian,Meyers.
24. Robert OR.
1. George F. Lehman.
2. Christian Mins.
3. William H. Smith.
4. John (Phila.)
5. Samuel E. Leech.
6. Samuel Camp. •
7. Jesie Sharpe.
8. N. 'W. Sample.
_9. WM. Heidenrieh.
10. gonrad Shinier.
11. Stephen Baldy.
12. Jonah Bretvater.
FO - y" Governor;
FRANCIS R.
OF ALLECHANY.
For Canal Commissioner,.
IIARTS1191!N;
10F. CHESTER.
TOR cow° RE.BS.
£For the unexpired term of A.H.Read, dec'd.,]
GEO.. FULLER ? OF SIPMeIf.A.NNA.
FOR CONGRFI3B,
DAVID WILMOT, OF BRADFORD
FOR REPRESENTATIVES. - •
IRAD *WILSON; OF CANTON.
JOHN ELLIOTT, OF WYALIISING.
FOR COMMISSIONERs
L. PUTNAM, OF GRANVILLE.
• FOR AUDITOR. '
J. M. BISHOP S : OF DURELL.
FRAUD !
ynsEßooD & FORGERY !!
The fraud, falsehood and forgery em
ployed to create the appearance of :de
mocratic nomination of D. M. Bull, for
- Congress, would demand the severest
denunciation if Justice did not lose her
balance in a fit of laughter at the harle
quin-character of the performance.
,This Jacob's-coated political actor mad'el
his first appearance for the season by is
trial for a Workie nomination—theni
nominated himself and others in the
Whig Argus—next nominated himself
alone• through the columns of the , Re
porter—then declared his adhesion to
democratic usages, and failed to get his
name mentioned in any county conven
tion of the district, and with an empha
tic silence in Bradford, even for the pur
pose of declining—next nominated him
self by a published letter dated Septem
ber 14th—then stopped our press on
the 24th lo announce that as " under
any ; circumstances I cannot render my
self obnoxious to the charge of attempt
ing to divide the democratic party to
. which I have all my life been attached i
and thereby giving our common enemy
the ascendancy, I withdraw my name
front the canvass, leaving the issue in
such a crisis for the people to decide.
‘, Hoping success in the great cause
in which we all Unite like a band of
brothers, I hold that all minor contd.
derations and selfish motives should be
overlooked for its accomplishment.
I am, very respectfully,
- DAVID M. BULL."
•.\
But now comes " positively his last
appearance on any stage," and Pviiica
beats all the monkey pranks of his life.
We draw the curtain, and ex fiibit a "De
mocratic Meeting held at Towanda on
the2sth." Chairman, DAVID M.
BULL ; D. M. BULL, Secretary ; D.
Munson Bull, Committee on Resolu
tions; David Munson Bull performer of
all parts, particularly to invite Col. D.
M. BULL to represent this meeting.in
the Congress of the United States, Gen.
Patton being at . hand there, as here, to
act as sense-keeper &confidential clerk.
Wieivef, Resolved, unanimousfy, that this
m eoting is highly gratided to recent, the an
pailacement of Col. Bull's consent to be a can
didateot the aids of the tariff, and that we IZI•
tlividway "p;edge our roost active exertions to
Socure his skt:lorf."
Col. Etat kaving thus ulapeetod
ly been called upra by so respeetabli 'a
portion 9fhis je4olo.eifirens." feehr "the:
inadequacy of. his abilit;es", and . "the
responsihility of his mulertaking", but
with " the whole energies of his istav!'
accepts ' and cimeeys '
to the
meeting his IA beet wishes foo their Pros
pirily and kitiividt!ai.;hapi
aftil&OSW
&age make.my kindesi re,
garde acceptable to &a snaltalieve me
as ev.er'''t 1 8 . DID YOV %YDS! !!
Really no other Democratic meeting
was held at Towanda on the 25th of .
September, and the one figuring in a
handbill printed at the . Whig Argus of
and in tie Argus itself fOr the 28th
is 'a• vile fraud upon the public and
iipon'the -mei whose. names "are there
used. It is notorious here that no such
meeting took place in any manner or
'form whatever. from-
ELI
GRAN'FEER, who is represented as
present, and acting as chairman of a
- committal° communicate with Colo
nel David M. Bull, the subjokneti lette6
- - Monroe, September 28, 1844.
To THE EDITORS OF THE REPORTER :
—ln au extra sheet from the office of the
Bradford Argus, beaded Ai PROOF," I
find Myself represented as chairman of
a committee, appointed at a Democratic
meeting, to invite the acceptance by D.
M. Bull of a nomination for Congress, I
find that I have been most grossly impo
sed on and thereforeask to make a plgb
and full statement of the facts. -
On Thursday, 26th day of September.
I was called on by William Trout and
asked to sign a letter on the part of a de
mocratic meeting, held at Towanda that
day, to D. M. Bull, drafted by Gen. Pat
ton. I objected, fearing it was some
Whig trick, and enquired why it was not
signed by some of the meeting in. Tow
anda. It was represented as a large
meeting of Democrats and all right, for
the letter was drawn up by Gen. Patton,
but that it was deitirable to have it
-come
from out of Towanda so as not to appear
as a Towanda meeting. I still asked
time.for examining the letter and consid
ering my course, willing to make any
honorable opposition to Mr. Wilmot to
whom I had objections of a personal, not
political nature. I was still again anu
red that it was all right, but that it would
take a considerable time to read the let
ter and that they were in great baste to
get the proceedings published. Unfor
tunately -I assented ; but on reading the
hand-bill [find both the resolutions and
the letter containing views entirely differ-,
lent from my own and whatl believe de
mocratic. I find moreover that it is all
a scandalous fraud upon me as well as
the public and that no meeting whatever
has been held and I think it the duty of all
good men to frown down such attempts
at imposition.
• ELI GRANTEER.
The following letter was addressed
o each one named in, ;he pretended
meeting.
TOWANDA, Sept., 28th 1844.
SIR :—The undersigned having seen
your, name, in a public hand-bill as an
,officer of a, Democratic Meeting pur
e
morting to ,have beep held in Towanda,
Sept. 25th, invitin g D. M. Bull, to run
for Confess, and being well-assured
that no such meeting has been held,ao
that the use of the names there employ
ed is unjust to their fair standing be
fore the community, We-respectfully
ask, for the satisfaction of the public,
whether you lifficiated at any such
meeting.
I. H. STEPHENS,
E. S. GOODRICH.
GEO. SANDERSON,
J. F. MEANS,
P. C. WARD, .
E. W. BAIRD,
D. F. BARSTOW,
D. V ANDERCOOK,
T. B. OVERTON,
E. W. MORGAN.
'The communication of Mr. Granteer
in another place, answers this inqui
ry. The followingis Mr. Brownson's
reply.
TOWANDA, Sept. 28th, 1844.
In answer to the- inquiry contained
in your friendly letter of the 28th, inst.
whether I officiated at any such meet
ing as described in your letter, I have
only to reply-that I did not. I cannot say
whether such a - meeting was held or
not. But I have only to say, I was not
present.
Yours Respectfully.
WYLLYS BROWNSON.
To Messrs. I. IL Stephens, Geo.
Sanderson, and others.
Wu. TROUT, and JOHN CASE, de
cline/ making any reply to this respect
ful inquiry on a point on which the
public had aright to be inforined. Mr.
Trout is a. partner in business 'with
Bull, and may therefore be entitled to
forbearance. Mi. Case is a Whig, one
of Judge Berriek'e thirty - signers to the
turn-coat secret circular, and hie becom
ing one of Bell's patty now, creates no
surprise, except that helot ashamed to
own it. 1 , R. V. Team, the only re
wattling one whose name is used, when
sueght was said to be absent; peddling
Bull's extras in Tioga.while Bull was
doing bis own peddling. in Busquehan
.oa. piste eels he is forced to do" his
owe writing') and the Sherri/ 4utiee
doing the venaing and venditioni ho
nor!° together in Bradford.
The honorable ,manner in !high
Messrs.. , 2 ,140*1 11 9 14 ! ' A nd q 1 5 1.244 F 1 .
hoe diselsiosedrtba imposture, and ex,
posed the hind, is worthy of all praise.
The pretended' tneetinfiWaett rliAns;
the entire proeekdittgs;-tt - -,FAssno'on ;
the use of naMes; which tiOne.who - bear
them dare avOiv,;. , a virtual FOlp/EgY,
and the - hand-bill is ungbakidly' a
trOlgsas.ecermiLons and DISGRACE
FUL".IMPOSITION.
Mr. Wilmot and Hon. A.ll. Read.
In Col. Bu l'e handbill a charge is
'ado - against Mr. Wilmot, that he it.
envied to defeat-the A.H.Read,
for Congress."
The Colonel has allowed bis perso
nal animosity to make ""a ,mountain out
of a mole bill." We happen to know
something of this matter ourselves. Mr.
Wilmot was urged to go into the cob
vention of this county, as a candidate
himself, and obtained the nomination of
Bradford, over Mr. Read. When the
conferees met, they could neither agree
upon Mr. Read or Mr. Wilmot, and fi
nally settled upon 0: J. Hatam, Esq.,
the conferees of Bradford both voting for
Mr. Hamlin. We were in company
with Mi. Wilmot when the information
was brought here of the nomination of .
Mr. Hamlin, and that the conferees of
Bradford voted for him. Mr. Wilmot
was evidently as much surprised as to
have heard of the nomination of the czar
of Russia, and almost instantly pro
nounced the whole proceeding wrong.
He averred publicly, and unqualifiedly,
that the conferees should have taken one
of the names brought forward by the
County conventions,, and as Mr. Ham
lin'e name had not been brought forward
at any of the County conventions, he
had-no right to the! nomination of the
conference ; besides this, he stated that
Bradford, although she had expressed
her preference for him, was decidedly
in favor of Mr. Read as her nextchoice,
and that his friends ought to have gone
for Mr. Read as an 'alternative.
It was upon hearing these remarks
of Mr. Wilniot, and carrying out the
convictions of our own mind, That we
immediately placed the name of Mr.
Read at the head .of our paper, which
was finally done by all the democratic
papers of the district.
It is dub to Mr. Hamlin to say, that,
entertaining the same views of the case,
he promptly withdrew his name from
the canvass.
HORACE WILLISTON has de
clined running as the whig candidate
for Congress, as it was well known in
the convention here, he would, and the
trick is consumard of running a rene
gade.democrat. We call upon every
democrat in the district to beware of the
approaches of D. M. Bull—a man who
said of Willard, as can be fully proved
here, that he must vote for the rascal,
though he did cheatl him out of three
hundred dollars ; ;Oio boasted of elect
ing Sheriff Weiton, a whig, whose de 7
pnties are now employed to reciprocate
the favor; and who has been treacher
ous and factious at all times, with or
without.price, and is only particularly
distinguished for his political monkey
shines. -
If the whigs choose to vote for him,
it is their own matter whether or' not
they have had sufficient experience of
traitors but we exhort all democrats to
be on their guard, stand firm, and Sup
port the man who has concentrated up
on himself the affections of his friends
and commanded the respect of his op
ponents by a uniform, consistent and
unwavering support of democratic prin
ciples.
CONSISTENCY.-D. M. Bull said,
when he declined, under any circum
stances he could not render himself ob
noxious to the charge of attempting to
,vide the democratic party. He is
again running, of course, to insure its
union, and must accomplish it; for no
democrat could possibly hesitate to vote
for Wilmot against Bull. '
We had riot heard however of any
division until the Democratic meet.
ing9-cif FIVE, none of whom were prem.
ant except D. M. Bull.
Vion.ancz 1 vumutecr. Eternal
vigilance is the price of liberty." Re
member this, now that the day of trial
is at band. If you have omitted to or
ganize your townships sufficiently for
the October election, theie is a way by
which you can make same reparation.
It is not 100 late. Work on the day of
election. Look over your list of taxa
bles, and see that every democrat on it
votes. If there is danger of his or their
not 'amending the polls, send or 'go for
ihem- , iniprPee.l7o4 moment end eve'
. 0 1 3 PeTteeity'en thai4e37- . Be itileet
and untiring;; work," work. .work, from
this time until the polls close= on Toes
dap next. '
PROOFS POSITIVE ,
pins/ D. N. Bulla n o proof at edit
D. M. Bug ehargeri in a handbill from
the whig Argus Office,_ inserted also in
the Argus, that David Wilmot Esq., for
a bribe of the paltry sum of $500"
undertook to secure the election of Wil
liam Willard to !Congress in 1838 and
his PROOF le first as to the. nomination,
Mr. Bull writes to Wm. B. Storm that
he is . itinformed by :a'creditable source'
that in 1838; an agreement was entered
into by William Willard, late of Tioga
county, and David Wilinot, Esq., of this
county—that the :latter was to receive
$5OO, in the eventtthat he could procure
the nomination of the former, for a seat
in Congress, and that the money was ac
tually placed in Your hands, by Mr.
Willard, in pursuance of the agreement
with Mr. Wilmot—to be paid over im
mediately on his return from the Confer
ence at Covington, pro 'aided Mr. Willard
received the , nomination." --
1
W. B. Storm is represented as saying
in reply that he supposed that matter a
secret; that he did not feel justified in
paying what he might say of the arrange
ment referred to ; and that there are cir
cumstances where promises are made
which should not be broken. This dis
covery (of promises not to be broken) is
one which, if really made at last by W.
B. Storm, ought to astonish him as
much as the people of this district. if
the charge insinuated by him bad been
stated directly, or sworn to, not a man in
the three counties would have hesitated
to pronounce it false ; alit is, some i hope
is evidently indulged of credence by hint
ing a charge and affecting a return to vera
city. No innuendo herein contained goes
farther than to imply that Willard em
ployed Storm to\ bribe Wil mot to pro
cure his nomination and that he, Storm,
failed in his attempted villany ; for the
facts are notorious through the five coun
ties, then in the district, that Wilmot
voted to exclude the Potter conferees
friendly to Willard, that
-this was the test
vote in the conference, deciding the re
sult against Willard, and that Wilmot
voted for Morris, against every effort to
swerve him in favor of Tioga's preten
sion to bring forward Willard hamper-
y,
The idea of impeaching Deno
WIL
MOT upon - the testimony of Wm. B.
Stormis so,preposterous as to make
us feel ,theAegradation of noticing it;
- Dann-Wi f irsor, than whom there is
not a more honorable man in the three
counties; Wm . 1 ,8. Storm ! Cashier
of the Towanda Bank brought up to
prove, that WiLmoz, sold himself to
the U. S. Bank !! Wm. B. Storm !!!
a man now bound over, according to
the police-reports of Philadelphia, to
take his trial for a States prison crime,
a man who foreswore himself here, and
acknowledged it, by making sworn re-'
turns of a keg of cents as a keg of silver,
though he did not acknowledge who
had the Benefit of the change, and who
has escaped an indictment for perjury
only by public forbearance ; a man so
gross in Otis outrages as to have been
obliged to leave a public room, when
last in this boro. to save his° ears ! ! !
This is the man D. M. Bull brings as a
witness to prove a bribe upon an honest
man.
The other point in the proof is that
Wilmot tried to defeat the election after
the nomination. This is well known
to be false. We will only subjoin the
statements' of Aarod Chubbuck, of Or
well, Piothonotary, and some of the
beat citizens of our boro.
Towanda, Sept. 28, 1844.
MESSRS. EDITORB.—In answer to in
quiries in reference to the course of Mr.
Wilmot at the late election of Judge Mor
ris
to reptesent this district in Congress,
1 would just state, that late in the day on
Monday previous to the election, Mr.
Wilmot called on me at my residence, in.
Orwell, and infottned me that he had
come on purpose to ascertain whether
the tickets for Judge Morris had been
distributed in the eastern townships ; be
coming satisfied that they had been dis
tributed in all the eastern townships ex
cept HeriiCk, and fearing that no' tickets
for Judge Morris were there, he employ
ed a mai at his own expense to carry
some to lthat district the same evening.
He said that a' great effort was being
made to defeat Judge Morris, and that , it
would be necessary to make every proper
and honorable exertion to prole - tit his
'defeat., 'Respectfully yours, &c.
AARON CH BUCK:
The subscribers. Democratic citizen s
. of the boiough of ToWanda;"recollects' _
distinctly that on the day Of the'Getiar:'
al Elecon in 1838, David Wilnuit Esq.'
took an tive'pait foi Samuel W. Mor
ris the d moos& Candidate for COngress
tt ic
and furt er, that we have no knOwledge
'Of any attempt by Mr. Wilmot' to cast
off the
t ame of Mr. Morris and foist that
1
of,Williem Willard at the head of- the
paper in place of the regular nominee,
and we wholly discredit such an impu
tation.
D F Baratow,
IF Baird,
D; Bartlett,
J F Means,
B S Goodrich,
David. Cash,
Geo Sanderson,
7' B Overton.
Vandercook,
The
,subscribers. now and in 1838,
citizens -ol=-Mortroe township, where .
Gen. Patton has never been a chi
zen, have seen an, affidavit in the
Bradford Argus signed W. Patton, ex
culpating himself nnaccused, from a
charge against David Wilmot and oth
ers, carefully named, in relation to the
Congressional election of 1838. in which ,
he has voluntered the following state
ment- that no one 'revel , . told him,what
the plan was, and thi first intimation he
had of it was. his discovery , of , the .sub
-
siltation of the name 'of Wm. Willard
on the
-printed sheets of tickets in.Mo
roe township, and that he cut off and
burnt the tickets for Willard, and wrote
tickets in the place of these sufficient to
apply the democratic voters of Monroe
township, and distributed a large portion
of them among the voierwor that town
ship with his own hands."
It isdistinctly within our remem
brance, that Col. G. F. Mason brought
to the polls of Monroe township, in
good season the proper quota of votes
for Morris; that we and others distrib
uted them "with our own hands" toad '
who would take them ; and that ther
was no lack of regularlyprinted Morri
votes for all on the ground, the whol',
day.
H. S. SALSBURY,
G. F. MASON.
A. L. CRANMER,
E. MASON.
The charge by D. M. Bull that Da
Wilm - ot Esq., voted :as a delega
the County Convention for Chester
mas in violation of the positive int
ions of his constituents to vote for Ir
Stephens" is known to the undersil.
who was defeated at the delegate el
on this question as Stephens' ffie
be a gross misrepresentation.
. pept. 28, 1844. J. F. MEA
I fully concur in the above sta e
and beg to add, that I believe Bull's hi
charge that Wilmot attempted 7
Chester Thomas on the ticket for e:
under a bargain 'and sale arrange t
which he was to:be benefitted . t. lai
amount " a wholly unfounded s del
I. 11. STEP'
; The undersigned, who as ale
from Bradford met conferees
ga to nominate a Senator in • e f.
1843, when Mr. Sherwood w no
led, pronounce the charge by M.
that David Wilmot Esq., mpt:
defeat that nomination wholl boon
GEO. SCOT
STEPHEN RC
Sept. 27th., 1844.
The subscribers, confere from
ford co., to meet confere from '
for the selection of a Sen ial de
to the Convention for. no (sting
elidate for Governor in M h 1844
dare that they. carried o the views ID)
,
their constituency to t best of
ability And that the ch e by
Bull against David Wil Esq., c
successful attempt . to d ive Jol
Guernsey Esq., of a- s t in th(
Convention universal) conced(
Bradford to Tioga"' is- all par,
false. CHAS. S CHM'
E. W. M GAN.
Sept. 28, 1844.
'flu"
BE ON YOU
The desperation o he Whi
crisis, justifies us i cautiorii
democrat to be on zEzi;
ying. hand-bills an. circulars
by the whip on tlt eve of th
Democrats will r ,flember t
occasion the ivhig, issued fr
gusoffice an E ANAL'
circulated, them • "the day of election,
containing false I , .ds and forgeries. At
this impottantc .sis they are prepared
'to issue an Ex4as. REPORTER,. contain
ing perhaps (hi declination of some of
our candidateei;orsome other falsehoods.
We - warn out' friends to'be on their
guard; and - caition all OtherslO beware
of ImPosmoint .of this kind attempted
to be praCticed, when it is too late for
'llB to expose their_ TALI3EHOODS. Any
extra coming from this office will' have
our regular head,_the type of whiclican
be easily distingnialied - from theirs.
If further evidence is wanting to
prove that Col.‘ Bull, has gone over to
the whig party and is the whig candi
date, it may be had in the fact that. he
joined with all the :dig leaders of
this place on . Theraday last in a publie
dinner and-jollification at Raynsford's
- THE 'WHIG . HEAD QUARTER§.
" Ephriain_ is joined to his idols,
let him
After reading , the 4 , Pnoor " Tre
nto thereader will-not wonder thatD.
M. Buil craves indulgence ihd
~~ryn.eptital illusions " of his.
Atr Falsehood.
. ,
lir written a letter, du
Sept. ,in which ha take s
.ti of the Bak i n r
V;_ ' d Argus.
Mr
burg,
agar
Schou
I
he a is absolutely and unc
. 137 f and the writer kn o ,
eha Mr: Skunk's letter k,
~ w was written expressly
, y j evious Slander to thane(
re i letter, prefaced by
na . master - intelligencer,
.t, rg Morning Poet :
A • • Calumny
rtj
p w o e Bl 7 c e o re nt g a o in in in g to
tt p h res e
101 l
in , r from Mr . Shunk came td'
an b, t cants:me a refutation of
andefiwegive it place.
ave jest returned from Nr
p. lvania,. and would acr
w and Clay friends agaiom
w ed folly of such conduct.
a tiring our tour, much tit
v d us ;hat Pennsylvaoia
olk and Dallas beyond a
by; a handsome majority;
the question of Governor, w
conversed-with numbers of
o will go for Shunk. They
nion appears' to be that his ja i
's in the North will be perfectly (
elming. How °select, thea,ii
sort to such a slander as the ato
'rota the PittsburgMorning Pt
Sept. 14, 1844.
We publish with pleasure th t ,
ing letter from Mr. Snuriz.
his friends will no doubt 'third ,
noticing the unfounded charge,
treating the hired slanderers vi
much consideration: But paha]
better that he should fora mower
to rotice them, and by a candi
.went crush the slander on wht
enemies build the hope to injr
with his fellow citizens. It the
bable falsehood has obtained
dence with the respectable port
the community, the following frai
manly letter will correct its evil
and show how unfounded is tt ,
that Mr. Shank was in favor
ling the Bible front the
it I Schools.
cr
PITTSBURG, Sept. 12,
;et
MESSRS. PHILLIPS -& Swim
b ff tlernen—The opposition papa
.4 crowding accusations-against me,
Pittsburg Gazette nowsays th
at
l•
hostile to the use of the Bible
editor draws, is, I am told; for
mon Schools, and the conduit
tees
no _ not seen his sheet, that lam ar
11 o f to the Bible itself.
dna- The truth is that lam friendh
Bull use of the Bible in Common
A to and among my first acts, aftet
elected a School Director in Har
in 1837 or 1838,1 proposed t
E . Bible should be read in the Sehc
our ward, which was agreed to'
Board. Ido not know svhetht
Brad- co'd of this proCeeding was ke
Tioga lam certain Dr. Fager, the
;legateand the other members of tht
a can- who were present, remember
%, de- In conversation 1 have no dot
vs o f because it is my opinion, thati
their n,
where the parents differ with •
J. M. the use of the . Bible as a Schein
of , this it is well rather than make tits
din W. book an occasion of unholy stril
to State to insist upon its use (or this la
ed by 'For the religious education old
liculars belongs to their parents and thf
ELL: bath School instructors, Ed it
common entrusted to the Stheal
whose Scholars generally 6.1"
rious denominations. 'floret
good men who conscientiously
that it is improper to use the Pal
ARD 1 . the purpose of teaching childreaf
because, it may be calculated
gs at this .their reverence for the Sacred
Vc
Now, although this is not my et
ng every
I against yet I cheerfully accede to othe
right to differ , from me, and I
put out think that this difference of
election. should-be made to disturb thel
lot on one
of a School, for our Common
system of education dependsaut
lm the Ar-
success upon the united efforts
people of the several districts.
opinion I have always freely I
ed. It is now made the groi
of a bitter accusation against Int
to be regretted that one al
his whole life and convent
renced . the holy Scripes ,
t are`
the good old way. was st .
vanced from Dilworth 's Sp
elll
to reading in the Testament ,
took rank with the head clot
ing in the Bible, should be
before the public as an ea t
'showing any the remotest
for the Sacred Volume. bed
epects the opinions of those
hove that other ,books shaul d l
to teach children the art of re ds
I anti yours, respectfully.
FRS. & Sgt:
EMEIE
ATAEND te.ir tr--Sotoe few
friends in each township mail
upon themselves to fold and'
gether the tickets. Each b un '
pining the whole ticket to be c'
By adopting this plan le
more uniform on each can
against the sale of the 'ols ic
Whereas by distributing sick
some arelost or unintentiooolly
Let this he cordons, ettendcP